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7 “also refused t ing his fleet to th empire—unlesm you bave the confidence of a #0 | and ground asterty 
saying that he intended to await orders from the home | Gircametanced, hm mer X 7 Emanet are 8 mannar. I e tf that LY À have 
care nt. The relati the American and | — - 4 ——— E rà handful of 60,000] the happiness te live—the Chilterns. 1 OH 
. British officers continued very friendly. You must believe that (ey on 8 g r — Ead wr ae —— LA 
| A; des to states that on that they have mà i ts like yourselves part im whieh greater pr to eee 24 
the 16th all the departments of the Government were | for f you pu 1 f ta A * ou | — ofthe Cives NW de 
f ey of th ind, you may so far | lands of the fi 
moved to Quebec, the future seat of t vernmen’ | reduce that necessary expenditure of your army—that you may | the land welds bas bees ec ERR, : -d 
and —— -— " on the day pre- | een Air within narrow and nable limits that expendi- i say that there is no part of e rt ooh dein the — 
overnment intend to proceed with the MV 
E. " 
Government buildings in Ottawa as speedily as ble. | an Wi — may, I hope, bring both ende te have shown greater progress nor can you find in any 
^ poem eet. regurd to ton A : “T think | Englaod b Í 
On the 13th ult. the 100th anniversary of the capture | those who have read the very interesting report of the commit- — — den a pet than to Buckinghamshire, 
- - gay that thare is no portion of it 
of Quebec wai lebra! h c be iu tbe loast dagroe it 
a » thí 
s cel ted in some parts | tee on Indian é&olonisation will have come to the conclusion | which you can ashamed IE 
o. Gorana Tinah bá appointed eed | which 2 — has - ease to—that it is utterly competition wit any part of tbe United — 2 
A — poin | impossible in the present or probable futu jon of Indi roslo "rb. indeed, 
of November as a thanksgiving day for the abundant | that Indiashould — pim. — dern Bure — ew ud — we dS 8 s 
bon 5 g of Buck shire, as the 
harvest. in th ry of the term ‘colonisation.’ I think | richest la: of in the word Hw this 
— a hey would come to the conclusion to which Sir John Te the extreme south, then. in the Chilterns, we find that it is 
eame, and to which the committees came—a committee com- | truly the Queen of land. Now, what has in 
Public Abdresses, of the most distinguished and enlightened men of the | the north —that perdon vili eti JUMP wanton Be 
bu cer —— subjects—the conclusion that | of in terms of comparative commiseration" You elt 
— — e profitab 
developed w ror ue * - 
f C upon these P "nm tà 
| h e way by which Indian production cam be] you have done much by a 
* Tug Rieur Hoy. James WiLSON has been visiti | pon av be by i —— by the — management is still gong 
r; * ^ K E, sapi e advice uro 1 aee, u 
Hawick, Manchester, aud Liverpool, previous to his by the attempt of — themselves to cultivate the land — y opor —. 2. m 
I t that plan of operation, wer, 
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to as well as on tha en In the first place, the wages of labour in are wo on sericea proceedings, end stum been in- 
p li to be given | jow that never could compete with it, — — have never been brought inte use, a 
e growth of co and wool in India. The aud it never could be worth the while of Buropean | Buckinghamsbire farmer Mr N Woolston — has out, 
following are extracts from these s hes:— | euer to go there with the view of becoming ias it w alian knot, and effected 
cultivators of the land. On the other hand, what you do want | philosophers have onl dreamed of, and which but few believed 
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meeting requirements. With regard | you can continue to bold the 
or pr were referred to, it | at present occupy,” 
seen no wool whatever 
India, that when we became possessed of Scinde a small Tux Rient Hox. J. W. HrwurY, M. P., at u meeting 
: quantity only was imported, and that in 1840 it did not much | at Wallington spoke as follows on the China question :— 
| at $000,000; d. that from 1851, when the fair ef Kusrasheo was | „ About a wosk ago ous 
If you cannot govern the country and the internal peace dh dh ini s lon po abetting hah — congratulated it on the and tranquillity which prevailed ; 
3 ee then tm Lenk net | t5 19,000,000 or nearly 20,000,000 in 1857, and was 17,000,000 | vanr Mag taron Ges im the Ra. um afer 
— ꝓ³dbl— should be poured out, ie anh And from a report be had reovived from to this country, for one-balf our vessel engaged iM 
0 rt, wi was now two m 
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that a great deal has been done in all parts of the world 4.4 Tn ty yur rd ener las 
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revolt—I allude to Caleutta other great markets, mutton being 
to the Gove ; I desirous above all things 8 — uu n 
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bedded in every Englishman every | wool, required , thing with 
Scotchman in all time to come, „in my opinion | pe been suggested, was the want of the means of thought —— i 
there is more wisdom, and statesmanship, and he should take an early opportunity on arriving pO cepe c rem 7T poy 
to brin, 
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under the notice of the proper | ourselves, allies to fight 
only say that in any measure he should He tamed that in going — — 
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to the interests well- 
— He believed that migas — 
regulations would ultimately devel 
untold resources of India to an extent 
to the and welfare of 
interests of were, to an extent, | made the following remarks 
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operations of such as are o to criticism ; | weight to considerations of 
to know what in this world is ; | force them in every dep: of the 
But, gentlemen, if there were only critics in the r — — 
society would soon be at a standstill. To animate | necessity under which this y 
to reward merit, these have | time pre-eminence. That desire had 
hie! emphatically shown throughout 
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you go to * Being a mem might be supposed that 
who. is looked as f the most skilful cul- | he could rise and make a speech at a moment's: notice, for it 
Gaston. of whom Buckinghamshire has reason (b be proud, was one of the most talkative assemblies in the world, and if it 
