THE wrth i 
ed upon wit ith Russia in their treaty with | the rates of duties would be gre h plantation | House g resol ae mit 
Quincy Adamsa chief leader of the Wh ig | eee rated at 24s., cae hes fo! ect at 34s. with the | means, Li aed Jonn R ‘aid € that tev 
ereet aa 
“was the line agre 
ower. Mr. 
si go as far as and to uaa | additional 5 per cent. On colonial brown Muscovado, he nee | In ae oral na only suited ¢ A peA fore 
bed °, 40) effect paregra of 11s. 3d., that is, = duty woul d be reduce à | of w satity, yexation, and fraud were eres 
t fell unequally upon income; 
circumstances in assessment and 
d evaded 
—‘* Lay on, M: 
een held in Michigan and nea her 
to memorialise Congress to ih va ‘with the 
rnment for the sale of Canada to the United 
tates 
New SouTH Waxes.—The | Sydney Gazette, of the 
f Sir James Dowling, 
colo ony, which to e on the 
intention to attend the funeral, ge invit 
e Civil Government also to attend. 
3 s atac i itherto Me egl 
z j itions. T x on cotton wool was opposed to all sound 
hoe me poe ul S. the re from the aband i pre; ini oval, and of the excise on 
ti ell ass, he concurred. But he di t see why 300,0007. should 
i be thr i The duty on fire in- 
F made a mi 
as anot! gren ip! =$ Si 
alpole wae entirely ignorant, w aught by Adam 
Smith, had been admitted by Pitt, Grenvitie, Huskisson, and 
he of s 
and fersoned Sa feionamig might pe aae and anna nid beib h iird- opre would iyi $ Aprl 5 
was the fact or not; butit was his m Erta i the sale | turned it from Si its proper snbjects of wena he eae 
—Lo O 5 mherent right ol 
ery was the efit should m oe fe mci on more 
though we had | rational grounds. po on E Brazilian commissioner fn this 
proposing the introduction of the sugar of his tty. 
s | Th mMM id say im, mit coffee, cotton, 
and tobacco, the e of slave labour; nay, we have poob- 
hich | jection to senti you ‘our zen nse sia a exchange for 
ar, xport stries ; an 
- | sugar, which we will € 
ere better for | treaties of reciprocity we admit ‘the waves grown sugar of Vi 
zuela, and other countries; bu t sugar, the produce of slavery, 
we ci . 
to the Criminal Daman annot touch ourselyé s. Would not the commrissio: 
= them. carefully, report their and ir faces? On these false principles we were a t 
: tof a Bill.on the subject. He had a nie gaid,-aavieed [one to sacrifice no less than 1,300,000/. of revenue, which might be 
er Slaay fo pes fia Ewan Ryan and Mr. Richard n the value of the article i endered wholly unnecessary by a re-adjustment of the sugar 
Pathe co: Sap pects ERIT free H to our pow ‘oduction. i uties on correct grounds. But Sir R. Peel, by a 
8 i ES i nae was p window- | nearly the whole available surplus, put the Income-tax in tha’ 
nast vor kon rd Cann es pean eee ae na toes: Re AOee pat were e— position that it could not be got rid of without national insol- 
e bank-note miom established in'Se ilend fo: Teo ea 1,300, 004. ; Coal, "118,000. ; on raw vency. He thought that the Government were bound to mak 
O.which was so well regulated aot = fu n Ki a including Staves, 320,000/.; Cotton Wool, 680,0007. ; Aucti ome declaration on this point; for if the t ax were to be made 
hief to the p blie had i S ult gs it on Duty, 300,0002.; Giass, 640,000/. Total loss to the Revenae, permasent it bugtt to © be referred to a committee, in order to 
-Thursda in scald 3,358,0002.; which would nearly absorb the estimated surplus ascertain if some portion of its inequality could not be got rid 
aussa Da np Cuaxcauioslaid 0 m the table a Bill, | of 3,409,000/. Sir R. Peel conclude i But Sir. R. Peel, while he repealed duties on principles on 
ct of bail i was ancillary to eae id eat yaan on the sub” that, though the proposed sch bold one, the success | which everybody was agreed. shrunk from meddling with those 
n error in cases of m meanour. The Bill w of the ex) im to ich affected great interests that could make a stir for them- 
az ly touched upon one of those great inte- 
nother he did not 
ties, which had been as 
å been h 
ted that protection 
satisfied that, if you 
ou must improve the 
ut new markets for our 
rt Income-tax, and 1 
im to effec’ w rasho 
tions or aatia mld ten: of all m oly; bat Sir R. Peel had put his 
asses, ul in that sh 
LIFFe promised of industry and en plage benefit all clas: a not see how he could 
ring, and e gaj either; m pec position for f It had been 
N GLE a was i wi ini c rendered eosa by the nature of the proposed reductions, 
i m whic e ndment; but he 
ay prevalence 
The righ 
solution on the subject., T 
after he me _conctaded. 
bi t rose again, and said 
sion, but he pp moore the confide at a 
at the beginning of next 
COMMONS, hn 
t the of Sir ca Perer’s | | oniy” be levied 
and ex- | a person had 2 
hehe a aS [Mr.C = ae A i 
in i ean d to givi s possib and after a Deer a onversation 
nng portion of th aia aien p | several members took part, the resolution for continuing the 
n of taxes, ter the partical erty ead, and its further consideration postponed | 
am 
day. 
‘Monda, jay.—Sir R. PEE reply to Mr. Labouchere, intimated | enveacbed | maaan 
that = poparte with sae tos aha h ees not intended asa | detail the Farioù 
tlement; bat m gre gs pete yogin the -end f tended that S ER: 
Annela] ‘year Sine Tauti e hitherto f calculations, while a re-adjustm 
And in reply to es Borthwick, he a that there | principles would Leu e peat birt ch ney © 
t which Se appeared in the | rev: pose Sir el Con oh | 
pain hark Prince’ Albert f the 
ki 
ry measure of | been unani 
‘oduce of our | tiom, as pela a dangerous precedent, an: very inexped 
okt Rogsvck said it was current mas city that the Board had | 
divided, and that the dec! cision had been arrived at by the x 
casting yate of the chairman. It wo ad not do, neha to | i interest, 
Mths oe ion- that is, erent sar Dekam a ie the most ample investigatio a wi Bi és, g ére hot aD 
jifferential propri ae Y SAIMAN ‘conversation followed, and then, the | much as mentioned. Do we complain of But then 
