ingre 
Bets trite fre fire was opened upon her fro 
came ‘evident that tha 
~ company ud offic 
ar rdingly, b e 
to her lower deck, . — n an vr feris 
ead foremost. 
ropean instru ction. 
with eloselv cropped hair, and with Russian features, — 
ter was u q 
TR e - only what we — 
of that kind, but, unfortunately, vor — : 
discover in its conduct anything that Nees! 
Nothi y opinion “spent inn 
9 A not a representative 
T e 
For i pos ast, whatever may 
ns of the 1e people “the pine nage made by th — 
majori 
arliam * 
Government oi e tora 
ya — — 
as rendered it 5 . if 
n the iir ple of Hud- 
sequence 
distressed, so wear — — i and i 
that I often at the "i of a useless a per think 
aboy 
myse: J 
e all other fools for spending s e, my labour, my life 
in the House of Commons, pee d resolved, as à E to 
eh and my family, to seek the oat “office that bly I 
r hold—the office of steward of the beget) —.— 
to take m; 
All that we have done of late y 
millions of mone for which you have 
ores of — that under a 
ape a ained in your 
edi is true, taken 
some off; we have shifted an e te . ‘burden from one | 
shoulder’ to a other, but the burden It grows 
and if you do not stagger 
t g, 
shines. 
with a listless apathy 
toiled. We have — — 
distinctly visible in the batteries, and the 8 Ai of the fortifi- | larger, and E ‘beneath it, it » 
cations 8 evidently of Ew designing. me of those | beca — resolutio 
who advan: — pu — and — ce surpass those other xr people i d 
» that they heard men callin e powder,’ in Russia: worl A ow me to ask your pid to one or two quar Asia; but O 
andit is — red that two Seat bodi bodies — vt of — s river, tions. Look, for instance, at the — Church eA composed almo 
— — but having inco 
The — s, though they T 
were extremely kindi [^ de the — — =e on towing 
veral of our boat 8 05 
ained of th h g being still 
With such — as the Chinese, - 3 pr e ecu 
mstances of the case, all such hope is out of the 
ptain M'Kenna, 1 the 
Lieut. Greaves, R.N., Roe o n killed on shore; 
Lieut. Clutterbuck, R.N., dns ea ke, Med m ene Lieut. 
Rason, R.N., Plover, midship- 
man, Chesapeake, killed on o ce Lieut. Woolskige due! 
Ii AN ne Brigade, killed o; n shore; Lieut. Inglis, R. M., Highjlyer, 
iier nn dmiral Hope, severely; Captain Van- 
read eee loss of left leg balot, the knee; Captain 
Plover; 
5 
po 
Pow ett, mid Fury wW 
Smith, mate, erm E sen opa Mr. Phillips, second master 
Capital slightly ; Lieut. Longley, Royal 
and Brigade or roker, an 
n, n 
val Fury, sligh 
master, , Chesapeake, slightly; 
Y Wataon, E S 
Winter Park S rod, arnore tly slightly, 
arker, r, Nim g 
Sou uthey, seco or, peut ur 
The latest news states that the Plenipotentiaries have 
returned to — — ai with ES of the worst cases of 
the 1 Cap n Vansi was scarcely expected 
leg KT hess sii utated beneath the knee, | m 
to li His ri 
and it was thought that another amputation would be 
necessary ording the only chance of saving his 
eer was doing val pag. the French 
—— say oerte had atte: 
to the North 
fens ible eus n — bg of }* 
on "Ae voyage 
lantic, in search of a 
hi 
At 
telegraphic communica 
Europe, by way of Labrador, 
betw and 
G ih ad, 
Faroe m reen n ps the | & 
d, and Nor 
* 
contain notices of the brilliant —— mee of the aurora 
realis. Fortune, in a le o ion ee ashington 
Constitution, says that his i tivating the 
plan ca far ex ost sanguine 
[x seam. and that the tea * plantations ín Upper 
India are succeeding admirably 
Parliamentary Adresses, 
the — it was only In the ast —.— Cla 
Mn. Bri within —— e om ii or <a f shi ded 
in . at the Huddersfield | there were no shine ta y in ihis buihling ot ating and : 
Mie te he resolution mentioned in our last Number, | called upon Mr Goblet 21 3 yg ay fecently | New India 
3 UM affairs. The following | frw rescue the country from this vast and profigate Indian n 
is hec cary of dE — — 3 — me has said that if I would only chequer 
paves onam ment th pryfesses to be constitutfonal | which I delight to the oo Ar pes and a Hal * 
i as to cha- | paper. : wo: make 
Ra t has, in fact, everything in the world that you could what is this great work! ff ae Book tt Half per Cem 
e Directory of the Compan 
the 
Des over by one of its own mem 
ec 
Whig and 
statesmen “Were not 
arishes 
issenters ished for a change, then leaders of 
Whi ig pet found out that ar. rates might as well be 
eople had already abolished 
| do the Churchmen u 
salaries from 50007. to 15,0001. a year. It is well kno | rai this year 
same time that there are hundreds of meritorious clergymen, | thing near it, — 
m em € have = " t 
families est degr 
now — ay is, ax rer we should haven — » Established C Church i 
or not, but Whether the vas of — Church sho —— 
be allo 
e - worke with n moderate degree rein 3 to t E et Her 
— in that vineyard whe [to our is the kingdom. You vernment with all 
* | highes oat hon ch can befall a man. t be necessary absoltite government, t, but. without the esp 
have an Established Church with milliong t revenue, 0 * it | 4 solute governm. vom BE: as 
is just that those revenues should be — tributed — about 40 N all of 
regard to the wants of the c ymen aj the amount "et | | = they are To assisted and buttrosstd up by. 
service they perform. Our Church is stil in the fe fetters | ritorial throughout the United 
that were forged for her by the grievance < rt ? spend 
and I know not oi hat distan pect | N. 
— reap 
ething to remove the —— — P 
ties are x with the distribution o 
her exes fun 
We are — of talking of e$ € ages, but the 
m ne — exists am. at $e — dà ay. If 
mA gnrodmer g landed, or vt they call real property, 
m it without a will his eldest son steps quietly into the 
ion o Aus whole of it. Younger sons and all the 
ughters are cast upon the world so far as that property is 
concerned. "A who has himself suffered 
used to say that if younger sons 
those who A them 
in narily | ad 
“kittens, 
from the inj a 
and daughters are thus to 
into the world ought to adopt E enis which is 
| taken when DM s a pies or too iis 
cannot get Parliament to it. ment tou is 
+ Serna as * it was going caught a trap. 
othing equals obtuseness of a landed proprietor about 
land, and every landowner fancies t you make its transfer 
more easy in some way or other, it will slip out of his grasp, 
and therefore he is st ed proposition for improvement. | 170 
As to our military affairs, can tell you that over the 
12,000,000. expended by the Horse Guards Parliament bas 
voted the main 
s 
fair- 
erment are very ry little con- 
ke this I wonder that certain 
to procu: e PR — Dotained at 
length às GMDUN g- 
when memorial -— — — 
Aal had be — his 
and the Duke of pia — which 
ed to in —— 2 fashion, -— 
got your son he barrack: 
n rep 
be y We have 8, 
oath, he — taken i shiling and be he man 
others—f: ere 
parents to the Horse os 
orials have 
and memorials, 
y of 14 can be brought back 
kantr But you have seen within 
oy - ir their recruits — they |i 
account of the 
00 
and rem 
again to the bon home, of K 
the last day or two — 
get them, and h 
rutal fi 
— Re main d 
E 
the people 
and would 
demand ter and 
ess o 
M it with 1 your consent? Do you believe 
ncies of land, polled man by Rae would 
aon of any one of 4 electors to have his back 
and lacerated, and try- 
toa tion which 
E fash of ay by that 
A 
grandeur of 
that w which we — 
people in the parliament of 8 
4 
