' ' ' t factions measure which any CD v " ] ders The pet . . . - f‘ h m t m , now proposed here more judicious and more tbeleas . _ - own Chartist ea ~~ . . ,. ~udket . Amved awhl - and if not oneo t ese ree, .0 .' adapted to promote the prosperity of the country than 9089- I" “'0 Presemfiawv "3"" “""0‘ I” \, mum“, of etght sturdy men, in lustian J T! mas Bum . to], gt’o [Dries but to have no “and, not,“ , . r - . ground for such an imputation. Genet-all . - - , a "megage was sent to Mr. 3 a y _ a . m “em Ho ‘ “ .tbomwhtch they wished to abolish. Here he met them, . , f 5,, . you ga es, ~ I. A "5%,. was gem hm,ch result, No man 15 _a p ‘ and h ' ll id “N " h ' d s r m'm'on.d°'3hml°ry 9““ “am 0 con ' - - whohad “greed ‘0 Present": . n a “Pl 1 etc " b l ' so story Wl” gen" “ndl‘Whl ' .“np “m. y.” 0’ m i e" lmipmw ‘ “909mm? 1'" ’llcsaludii'm9m "Po" the a" ’ " r. imalocous to tlic’fOI'iiiulu Within-doors, eds if nymE }. PW,“ uponpoinm ‘ * duties, and to their absurd corn duties: whilst he hinted their policy. hit Sir Robert P ~l's fortlico r ‘ in, it." i? The lobbies were crOWt several Mem; man: is to abus‘e ill; Ilggtdoiinlg be advances thI‘in protecting thither duties the present state of of a more specific_cliuractcr. the un bememhuiPh-a to see the monstrous documgm, Flllnfmyl 1t mengicensme, ‘aloy‘sbum do so, would sh ; a was such as to render the creating any ill fccl- nacity oftl.e \llfil‘pgs in setting up cfomlé: m was ceivgd by 011-. Diincorpbe andnhltr. O Conne , woo mgr: e that «he great crime of ' ' ' live to iuvui ute rei crater ver ic dime“ ty ,0 1.0 , m. n - - a tug towards England, at the present moment, most ac , lg. _ r m», . . RE i ~ " . d oftlie En lish but whose vs ‘ 4‘ I a]. N . .n t be u ‘ Wejhsvo Pkismhigfigougggg’ minim: Iliiiiglivlzngiiage. ’ M .0. in. . rum-1 TRADE; nounciiig on III- M?“ _ ° " ‘ {the Co, .y y W 0. ‘a- " ain AGITATXON m Iceman— 1'. Celtic , i ‘mtm 6’ an 3' Pin“ spunk—He showed mmbepw‘m ma co "lous‘ly up \ i231: mail-Stew wasnbtmnw, have up Est vdagfcalled the “People of lrclund’? ,in i{nether procl in a” of ,m \Tradp’ up” which the opposing Sir 1" "39m"! m e Fayrel‘, R. N., ‘ stance and bearing of which is, that the i. "eyatth .. T 'tnicommand of their . . . -. . u was reasonabl demiined to by Lord _ F rm_S,a * .1 cc fa rem andim om“ cfisissand . . M" PM giflab‘ha'e ":1" nztfiggw: "it: incolnshire acting) to pledge their “£19509” ,‘0 .n “I; cgowd assembled Tuesday afternoonatlflég :figrfigge ll;;‘;):sl_:d togshow the 21mg worthy, of the A ' .‘I‘lmmn- ,Q'e'nmen Pml’os , servant's A _ tstntion. Neither ; - $19.“. to the house of Commons, to Witness the airin h s borne 5w “veg, He 'thenlfiyeg them advice, . fordree trade, but, flown“ alteration and continuli‘ic; Of that fir Ro n’s motion is,in tinyt')l his? Chums: Petition with 1,300,000 SlgllaturegthlG; 3" er four héalés. , that the liberal constituencies of Intuitive duties: t, was not then a question 0 ice The mm; is, apart from .the great pu ic . on. ,0,» _ , m: but a question, whether- the duties which the ' flldln rous. «0n those dities, however, he ' i V Mfiuntil he was in possession ofthe utiicial ., .0 it’ll-“0n the sugar question his conviction on the injustice and impolicy of endan- w‘b" the success ofour noble efforts for emancipation : .mHIEO impropriety of neglecting our own Colonies to Wtbslave-holding markets: and on the fact that “I ” nt supply ofgtigar was great, whilst thp yearly , ~ increase from both the East and West Indies bid fair to render itiir tnore and permanently abunuant.—On the my question he had ri’othing to add or to change in the ' sentiments he expressed last year. The proposition of In 8e, fixed duty he felt was wholly inadequate for pro- ' action to the neitish farmer, and altogether inadmissible.‘ To a fixed duty of Q kind, he certainly objected: it could not ' be maintained in a time of real scarcity {soot inflicting deep misery upon the poor; and in a ' ofabundsuce, both abroad and at home, it would admit foreign corn when our own markets were already 'tob low; and would then add to our difficulties. A fixed duty would thus aggravate the distress of the poor in times of scarcity, and the distress of the farmer in .. ' , ol’abtindance. The sliding scale, on the con- w » 4 'fl' " V 3 years,” b. , ry, accommodated itself admirably to both contingen- cies: when com was too dear it threw the is open ; corn was too cheap it shut them cl 7‘ " : court- ‘ 3!,“ supply when it was really needed, and cutting , . "Ill import when we had already too much. He ,~ quoted the wine conviction of the late Mr. Huskisson, fl ‘ t nixed duty on cost; was impossible. Whilst 5w- f - . , maintained the , d inadequacy of the pro- . I tecti'mt’ ' trad by govern nlpand the superiority of , the-pr sliding scale, he did not hind liinisclfto all 9&0 deal of the present duties, or the present system of even cs.—Sir Robert tbcii alluded to the general m ft ecountry. Distressiiig as were the accounts "came [rout manufacturing districts, and de- , ticilbreports, he saw no reason ey. lle ex 'ned our reports, and found had. fallen ofl' 'ng w' in the last three ing in otir trade witlf' merica. This he “the eating embarrassments of that country fully He next examined the which palpably dent grossly and point the Hon country. harl arrived at Osteu King and Queen 0 Lieiitenant-Colot nda st, it! t on, in ‘ o the Belgians. t consequently, in her 67th year. Rear-Adiniml Samuel ll! Portsmouth. Bevront. been residin a of his health. that motion prooeeds, a vote of non—con their dismissal, a principle, ratified by u long series of pre = geronst violated» of Commons are now cal . their -bonest opinion. That Sir Robert oflice in 1836, in spite of adverse divisions, , ,. l’ar' allel or precedent to the existing tenacity of the Wings we pledge' ourselves to prove, to the complete satisfaction of the The insoleiit and interminable manner in wliwh the \Vliigs have played 011' the Royal prerogative against 8) the spirit of the constitution, is highly dangerous to the liberties of the realm. It is, therefore, more than time that Parliament should speak ooh—Times. LON DOfi, JUNE 3. The Duchess of Kent embarked at “’oolwicli, last Thurs- day morning, in the Firebrand steam-vessdl,for the conti- nent. The Queen and Prince Albert were present. She nd gonefio Brussels on a visit to the v 0n 0 Hon. Henry R. Molyneux, expired ion of the Dowager Countess of rlington street, Landon; He was the third son late Earl of Seflou, ntid brother of the present earl: Lady Frances Somerset expirrul on Thtirsdafniorning. at Tiiubridgc-wclls. The deceased. who wasthc second daughter ochnry, the'fifih Duke of Beuufordi. and aunt 0f the present duke, was born the 3d of April, 1774, and W118, ottley rlied on Thursday 1:3) at W ‘Ve regret to have to record the death of another linive British ofliccr, ii victim oftlie'bnucfiil clinic of Syria, COl- Bridgeman. in command of the British detachment at He is succeeded by Lieutenant Colonel Rose, an. officer oftlie highest promise, and well known at Malta as major, formerly in the 92d Highlanders. _ Marriages iii high life are ofliite the order of the day. The next on the list is Lady Caroline Stanliope (sister of the Duchess of Imiflfilel‘.) who will be led to the hymencal nlter by E. A. Sanford, Esq., M. P. Dora, the only daughter of \Vordsworth, the poet, was married last week at Bath, to Mr. Edward Quillinan; of Canterbury. The venerable poet has for sometime past g in the city of Bath, principally for the benefit A Meeting ofnoblemen and gentlemen connected with the British North American Colonies took place on the 22d ' the workingqiien in processr 1- éck the procession appeared, headed by some Wel ition was carried on the ma ed, with some . ’ i ’ m- The HnsuNT CRISIS.—— l‘he 011mm i this mo iitg contains reports of numerous Anti- orn:Law. meet- fiin‘s. At BilSton, the Rev. .H. Bonner, Baptis‘t’mlintstrilr, apcpearcd to propose the third resolution 1—" l iat it: corn and provision laws of, this country are contrary- the Word of God, inimical to morality, and productive of benefit to none but the rich landholders; and there- rfit is the duty of every Christian minister, arng eyery stand forward against them.- I‘lle nsidered lhe.Corri laWs the devil’s own y class of society, He sla~ to God’s d, would d cheers.) philanthropist, to rev. gentleman co . _ . give—(cheers) and injurious to ever ave certain needy landowners. (Hear, led that, because the Corn-law was law and God’s WORLdle', as ad n'ist never rest content until it was rtfid. —Palriot. . ‘ _ _ DISSOLUTION or PARLIAMENT.fIl.may be interesting to our readers to state, i the eve of the forthcoming general election, the number Missolulions of Parliament which have occurred duringtlie last’fifteen years. _ A dissolution took-place in Dpcember, 1826, in the reign of his late majesty George IV. ; a third dissolution was resolved on_ by the Earl Grey's Ministry, in April, 1831, in consequence of the non-success of the New. Ref/arm Bill; this dissolution was considered a coup d“ etal. rliameut was again dissolved at the close ofthe year 1832, for the purpose of havinga house of commons ac- cording to the provisiéns ofthe New Reform Act. The first reformed Parliament lasted about two years, tbavmg been dissrilyed in December,1834, by the new ministry, of which Sir Robert Peel was the Premier. Sir Robert Peel’s Parliament existed about two years and a half, when it caine to ” an untimely end.” in consequence of the lamented demise of his late Majesty Vlnlliam IV. It will thus be seen that the average duration of each of the six Parliaments which have been elected from 1826 to 1837 inclusive, was not more than aboth two years and four months, (under two years and a half.) The present Parliament, if dissolved, as isexpected in a week or two, will not have lasted four years; it. has sat during four sessions, including the present one. endeavour, in the event of_a single 01:3 . return a repealer if poss1ble ; if not, a radical; senible tories; and that the tory is than exaggeration oi all w'liig faults, wltbon ‘ ny merits.” He further says, repealing the :. feretitWOi'ds, “ Get repealers wherever you ,where you cannot get repealcrs—Whigsyv get either, and oppose-the tones everywhe thing.” He then goes on to show what the they were in power, and what they would a oflice again, aiid‘oncludes by calling on um land—brave, but gentle—ii'ioi‘al, yet merry, shrewd, but, above all, religious and'tern . with him “tranqiiilly, legally, constitunonalljr, as to-morrow’s sun shall rise, the Irish Parl assemble in College-green.“ ~ , - MURDER or ROBERT HALL, ESQ, or Me? An inquest was held upon the bodyI-oeruH * _ been shot on his own estate,) on \Veduesday, % ' Carroll, Esq., Coroner. Two persons who had sessed from the land held. by Mr. Hall“. I from the jury. The first witness examined w ‘ nell, a coachman in the service 0 flied. posed that he left Merton Hall in the morni accompanied by Mi‘. Hull, whom he drove , arrived at Uska‘iic at eleven o’clock“ Mr. H the house, and witness heard a shot in the d, he went Mr. llull was shot about200 yards lie‘ (witness) was standing. A man Wigs p field when they first came to the place. ‘, fired there was no one with the plough.‘ There ‘ ‘ ral men in an 'tdjoinirig field and they must I ' shot. They did not stir from their work. _ .W to the deceased he found him lying on his his face turned totvards the ditch; he w t He had a wound under his left car. lie 0 and found the bullet at the other side of his 1: Hobbs, of Borrisokaiie, deposed that he exn ceased and found wounds under his ear and ' as be supposed, by a pistol bullet.. He CODC u _ Mr. Hall died instantaneously. The jury return u of “Wilful Murder.”...........1t did not appear in t that the assassin was near Mr. Hall when the sho but the fact of his having been so is to be infeir circumstance that the grey hairs of the de 1 singed with powder. The ploughmair. allude. witness Council is in custody, but the suisp' him is very vague and trifliiig..... Hollis f age. He was married to Miss Litton, sister , ' t shippifig returns, and Lord Cardigan was ballottcd for a few days since for LinemEsq.’ M_ I", for “brain, a member ofthej tilt., at the Colonial Club-house, St. Juines’s. The Earl of l m " “end, yearly increase or tonnage for lhe “'5‘ Mottntcnslicl. on takintrtlic cliair,cxplainethat the North admin“)th “I? senior UDHEd servwe CIUb; he had Chalfll’ alld of liberal Politics’ l‘avil‘g‘ voted‘ painful ‘ sheep-rs, Without any check. He did not therefore American Colonial Coiiimitteeluid called it special meeting “ft-“me “Mk balls‘ . . elecnons m three. commas for the .hber‘.“ ' " dissatis ~ ‘" that eithflr our manufactures or our commmco, to determine what stops it might be advisable to take iii ' The annual P'Pcfmsmn of file d‘fi‘erent handles 0f “fa? fiquemly heffrd to boast thathghyed "1 H “was; ‘1. v firm.“ or if“.anle injured ; and he fell opposition to the proposed ulterudplu oftlie Timber-duties. Temperance Societies, amounting to several thousands, Eglllfiflzlekflq‘x‘t'lyt ‘i'lfioco‘flg glee}: ops; - «the, ' . *h.“ r 60 . once "mt, if “wed from the contenh Itwonld,lic said, he must proiiidiciii to the Mot er-country, andtaccompanied by bands of muer and banners, took 6 ’y l m e wa‘ “0"” A ' other outrages have been committed in Tippe v ii the last few nights, such as serving threatening ' persons to relinquish land, appearing in arms, dwelling houses; but the magnitude of the in Hall places the other outrage'scompletely in the Aiiotl’i'nr murder, arising from the system 0 Il‘elfllld,‘ was committed in the County" of We > 27th of May. Mr. Robert Butler Bryan, who pit palace and deinense ot‘tlie deceased Bishop of‘_ shot on the evening ofthat day, while ridinga wood near the house. Some uants who huddi . expired leases of the late Bisli , having refused ' ' dor to Mr. Butler, he was obliged to commence in destroying a nursery for her scnmcni and it would be destructive to emigration to the colonies, since the slips employed in bringing home timber were those which afforded the greatest facilities for cnrryiu out the emigrants. Sir Duncan M‘Dotigiill, the Earl ofDevo , Mr. H. Bliss, Mr. Robertson, and Several other gentlemen, joined in depreciating the proposed change. The two following resolutions, pro- posed by Sir Duncan, were passed unanimously ; and i1 Committee was appointed to prepare petitions to both Houses of Parliameiitz— \ “ ]. That this Committee have observed with deep regret that her Majesty’s Government have expressed their inten- tion ofproposing extensive alterations iii the existing duties place on Monday, and from the orderly behaviour and respectable appearance of the members, frilly “justifies the belief at “ teetotalism” has been, and will continue to be, pro uctive of great benefit to the working classes generally. r There are in London and the suburbs fifty total absti- nence societies, with twenty thousand members, ofwbom three thousand are reclaimed drnnkards; in Scotland, one hundred and fifty thousand members, and in Ireland, five millions five hundred thousand: An autograph of Shakspeare, the signature to a deed r (a, isterittlinfliction, the country would rise out ' present depression and recover her buoyancy. ' H lling.Lord John Russell's charge of factions ‘tton, he asked the n‘le Lord to remember in how men cases he, Sir Robert Peel, had assisted him in lib buses; and delivered hint from his own bliindeni '5“ he ought to h'are'oVerthrown him :-—-He alluded to the Jamaica case, for the help in which the noble Wad since frankly thanked him—to the case of Psi" ge—to the settlement ofthe Cnnadas, and to the question ofllie Poor L'tws: in all which his conduct "had been the opposite to factions. Besides, he added, the very principles of the sugar question, which lie was charged with friction for supporting, were precisely those which the government itself last year most strongly declared to be the right ones.-——Ile then hit home upon the Ministry in a most masterly manner. They had be inflicted all the 'l‘ on timber, by which the prosperity oftlie North American Colonies will be iiintcrinlly retarded, their trade. commerce, and maritime interests seriously impaired, and lasting injury ransiitlaittic subjects ofGrcut Britain. This Committee. entertaining these opinions, feel it their duty to petition Parliament against the alteration. “2. That the proposed measure of Government above of bargain and sale for the purchase ofa house in Black- friars, was sold by Evans, oti Mondayiveek, for 155 gui- iieas. It was bought by Mr. Elkins, it is supposed, for the City Library. Not very long since the British Museum botiglit Shakspeare’s autograph, on a fly-leaf‘ of Florio’s Montaigne, for. $6130. ings in ejectinent against them: these succeeded, tenants were dispossessed; and Mi'.‘ Butler was sh venge. Aii envelope was found .lying by him, A T to him, but containing no writing: it is from v ‘ jectured, tliat'a stranger, brought ‘froin a distance, culprit, and that he had taken the paper to uses ' indentity of his victim. Mr. Butler was liberal in H "" now be. ten ears in war—the had the benefit of referred to has the further serious ob'ectioii of bein intro- The President steamer had three months’ ratim and is said to have been of a v miable n -’ Le" Y P0 .l’ I _ . _ , .i, . g is on cry a u d Meh I. reformed Home of Commons, and of havmg cnmcd duped ntn moment the mostinconvonicnt and impolitic, it board when she left New York, on the llth March; enamel“- e' mm, “mm,” political changes; a", as they announced. t2211:2221:\tgtii'lnilifwfigitppgfl‘l342::fiflfllnceag]: urllllon moreover, lier cargo partly consisted of a large quantity 31:35:] ' ' ' ._ , ‘I . ', .. , w on . ' . ~ ‘ . 4 an?“ m3: 'mmfili'mivzenefi'i] lo we cdoumr-lfi.‘ “,1!!! according to a report ofu recent specclioftliegSecretary for3 (if figur ’ naming “Oilhy or cred't’ we regret ‘0 Say, has SCOTLAND- ' {anneal Ik wasw (lilresu . r en " ey entcre on 0 ice 1 'e the Omani“, in his ppm. 3,, pmunnmm {twassmed that yet 'een heard of this ill-fated vessel, and nothing be- This General Assembly ofthe Church of Scot .hd be u e or e '."8‘°": a ‘8' hmng “admit”! [he Pnl’l‘c the Governor-Gorich of British North America hiid ex- longing to her has yet been found “float at Lgmhurgh 0” the 20”) Mil.” Lord Bemaven cend ttwenty millions, and the annual charge one million, pressed an opinion that the proposed "mus,"-c would em_ SlNGULAR luAllltlAGl-L—On Monday week, Patrick as the (hiccups Commissioner. The proceedi ' ,at “ left them a yearly surplus on the budgct of.£l,600,000; barrass him in his administration in Canada.” Cowan, bachelor, and Sarah Ann Dowers, spinster were earlier days 0‘ lhe 59550)” were confine" chiefl!‘ ’ any? . no u ",8 end one“ you", of mfmmed and cconom,_ Ala recent clmrtist mociiugin Bristol. Vincent expressed united in the bands of wedlock at the church of St 0t form' D1" Robert Gordon: 0f Edinburgh; \ the l" cal government. what did they see? v An increase in the "n 00""0" "mt he Emmi” fih‘m'y ‘00 the charter and the | ' Moderator' public debt of £7,500,000, and an annual deficiency of £9,500,000! This was the issue of liberal economical finance! We 881- also a government in that very position which Lord Melbournesoetnphaticallypmiioun- nod to be the very worst and most deplorable. “A round in the Mediterranean, be thrown in the way of his oi Mnrylcbor-c. rctum oflt‘rrist nutrlo cabinet llll‘nfilll‘t‘s. Commodore Niipicr, on Friday last, resigned his com- in order that no obstacle iiiiglit aspiring to the representation The British Qticcu steam-ship has been exhibited to the Dun'slaii’s, Stcpiiey, by Mr. James, the curate. parties were both young and goodlooking, but both deaf and dumb. Fortunately both had been instructed in the schools instituted for the education of persons thus afflic- ted, and, by reading the service and writing their asseiits to the questions .propoutitled, The The case of the seven Mini‘ters of the Strathbogic, w b _ ho were suspended by the Geri for the _pi'olcrence which they gave to the the CiVil Courts in supporting the presentation words to the livin of M- - ' F V 0 Assembly on Thug .irnocli, came betbre that _ ‘ I . the artie . min" the 1' " peanns' government which does not possess stiflicient public public in Liverpool for several days at 6d.pcr.liend. The undersmnd “10 nature of the solepmn firmer; mad? to “the Assembly- Thgy, wet}: (111:1:[iidZdIby Mr; 32m oonfidonce to be able to army us own measures in“, proceeds, which are considerable, are appropriated to the used in the Church. Cowan is acoal-wl‘ mnmige as advocate; Who Spoke for upwards °ftw° 5 W9"! mm.» This was we issue of ten years of cominumj rcliefoftbc families ofthc President’s crew in small weekly capital workman. upper’ and IS a were the“ reinm'ed from the b3": and the ‘ “ “ills” political refornis!—-llc tlieii solemnly addressed Lord paymems' to prayer“ am" John Russell, as the representative ofthc Government:— Birminglmni has been alarmed byndisastrous fire. It 'In the course of a paper drawn up by Mr. Rowland which Dr. Chalmers, in a 10‘ moved that the relevancy of the libel be sus ‘ . -., - . . H'll a ' u v t . v . . . “ill “ «Throunh your mismanagement these evils have brake El!!! opdl‘liiirlsdny night, the 21th ult.,at'M:-,. Wiclifl‘c’s’ Al , nd entitle’d _ he Results of the New Postage Olhpt‘ nerds, that tpe seven numsters be {3, : Teapet] come upon a‘hc.coun"y ’1 h is "0‘ rig“. or comm"- Wh 2i: “:‘plu cr, \‘t 1iercsomc mcn wore “ringing _a carriage- rrangements, which was read to the Statistical Socie- it‘lctnigan contravention ofthe acts ot-the Gen » m c tionll in it representative government that the House of thecpremlisi-sutlisfre“doggingrcdndTgi'zihl’hgilignbir and 0tw nioml'a‘y’ the 17th May, h was Stated’ that the Pre' Shi‘fi‘alullffimifllbcmde in this finding the p“ ’ hi’n'llr Commons should be we“ m Mum,” its confidence buildiugswem injured. so g‘armifiga fire. it is stripes; per: glans; ice-crease all letters lstwenty-one per cent. tioti of guilt S’llotlhtdulyg “(1.103235% sugiested' ' . ism; from ‘ Minisuy' and yet no, influence “5 flue: ,, is no, never occurred in Birmingham. except at the riots in ,1791 number. a’m, ,lipwllg {or forty Pf—‘r cent. on the original fined tb that, and so carried at ail-:21: fwo 0a " ‘ 1],. m: .d'wmfcm“ mum monarchy mu “5 servants should The damage I, u, to amount to £10,000 or Md eaéh ‘ “our tits rate ofincrease be maintained, day morning, bYamajority bf 222m 125. » itH be “Mb 8 ,0 any,“ measures, which, in me name or T, . .N ‘ . twentv-one luccee "'g Year bang an augmentation of tlieu made a motion, that the ministers-should law the Sovereign they recommend: it is not fair to impor- forcélgflcwpn [ftx'PE:ITlON.‘—Tllc Albert and the Wilher. the c6") I tit?" Cent. as compared with the year 1840, 30m the office ofthe holy ministry. A long . I “Shel. “1“ union" measures, even were they beneficin,’ mm m ham) at “or is" estiuution on “ediiesday evening last, 6.. Re ‘3 restoration of the gross revenue will be 18 case was read at the bar by one of the "' V1,. .b c h . , , ya. .i.\. aptuiu I‘rottcr and his brave companions ‘3 (.cted iti about three ea d Allal‘dyce, of Rh *nie- ft '. m “1‘ t ey should lyAproposed for party purposes. it is not, take wuh them the prayers unrllmst wishes onhe' l 1' time y rs an a half from the Present Was agreed t in ’ a er whmll’D“ ch‘l ‘ 111%. believe me, good for your own high characters that you toms of this town, :1an of iho nation at large, for theirnlidiiliii The Polish 0 1' carried" 13“ 860k iiaffnrtence 0f deposmon ’ fie“: h". Proposed In such a manner, such "5, measures as um, success In the highly interesting mission in which they with the Princeava yer, who ran away a few days since which it: was stated that hiuifitzistlof Protfisl , won, mgpwgemy (And he added m”, a power or "um. are eligugcd.—D€ronport Independent. Don Fm . SS 0 Spill". “We daughter of the Infant teSt along With hiiii Would co t' lose w as ' _ u, .’ ' ’ 9h ough to currypomiclion’) “1 d0 not deny your ijgfs Coxs‘wux.__0,, gamma-v last this “Mfume by bein nlpisco, has received the reward of his audacity as ministers of the ChurclioflSdtdilintg r2nd ' lint . h when ,pcakmg from ym" present poshions' of tar an only expired, at his little hslimonger’s shop, in - g uncured WM] the consent 0f the Prince and that Church aS‘Sul’ported by the condiitutionii I!“ raising the stormy elements of agitation, and exciting the fierce conflict of o . pposing interests; and that, amidst the collisions of such passions, you may hope to gather Church-passage, Greenwich. oi age. Sykes was a most d Lord Nelson during the deeds. He must of all He wus_npwards of 80 years aring fellow, and was with whole oi the time ofhis glorious rincess to his legal m weak-hearted young lad he smugg arriage with the headstrong and Y- ' lers on the Swiss frontier have adopted lthe oni the land. he protest was v I to Assembly having again enga tater pronounced t ery numemlfl 1» god in prayer,& he sentence 0 ' , distinguished liimsclf‘at t] e l m Ian of - . seven church s fdeposmon’l ‘ up t'hetragmenis of yarn strength; but, depend upon it, ofTrafalgnr. llis bravery deszrved greater reward tliiiln ibe fmnfoanyl'1g “gm Parcels of valuable articles over sentence to b: "iii-die? .Osed Vacant: 80,11 *‘ You will read the lesson that, when authPrity coude- rec‘jivcd- Peace to his liittties l—Keuh‘sh Marni . loo . 'er I"? or customs Stallons by means of a bal- bylel'y 0f Slratbbo i’sje Hnom a” the pull?"- h _ agenda to call the unruly elements of agnmion ,0 "-5 I luleciioneering movements are taking place throughout fr 0, they frgight the aerostatic machine with a load of acquaint the panofsfiffl 6 Was ulterwar . . a n.finds, no doubt, apowerful ally for the moment; Eliedgf'z'l'tr-‘i. It “gum "YCl‘l’i' ‘00 "well 39068 to give them born 160 1° "‘00 E”gl‘3h Pounds. and then gnidino it ceediugst that they mi 1.15.581?” Chm-Ghee m a“ . I, an an" whwh m” soon be “3 master, and not do" .i‘ic‘mglurl‘ .Olgéiutnus are to be started for Lon. Ta rope, take advantage of a favourable wind and °lk 0n 1-idtty evening agdecrge :flifwgrese _ ~ m due... v ,- . h. s _\u , inpmnll, Mastering“, and Alderman iiiih their aerial Vehicle into France ’ .wa ' served on the Mod 3 ‘8 oun- 3'" - ‘ Y T"? v I trio. ' In every quarter the number of conservative caud- ‘ execution of 1 mater 0f the Assembly’ i' ' ' ' "Me q. Robe "co'rzm‘ c. .0, . ' 3"," {wraith} ' dates is greatly increased. 1? K t 1e sentence OfSuSPGHSlonr ‘ '1‘n ' “in?” "told: I‘lhtziiist{mfgour:iiictiai’ist nuditiz’ct voildgrilf‘ 1‘?"ch fr?!" constanlimplc to "'9 27‘“ April, have been IRELAND case“ of coufi. once in her Majest ’s present advisers. This, no $22,203:“ I‘llgiiggmfifif:"ggll “m'edl’nfligipution ofFrtitice ,1,le Lord'I’leulenanl Of Ireland was to m i . SPAIN- - fl'Oriis doubb Isa bold ate but it we manly and honest one. In 'e " 0" L°nferencm and of “CSd‘IY‘ the Dowager Lady S “’3'. 011 Al Madrid on the 9th Mav, all the Ministers the present state of e country, when it is sup d that an her adhesion to the Treaty destined to adjust in a difinitive omcrville, late Sir Marcus S widow 0f the General 14“ . reparteio, . . . . . . manner the all" 't . . . OlnerVillei and st. - A to con'rmtul t hi 5' 3 ‘ - asirabtrharggos': crews at: n. 1.3.: £~"fl:.“l€.lli§?.2fii§él§3.3y .13 "r"! a ma... ... Darrin" drill” 33§1§°$£f£i$3§ 13;" 03‘1"“? in“; W “a: z P . . _, _ e mrcy eten'nlne 9m had produced on the Ottoni n bl' ' ’ an 6 ea '5 young and beautiful 1 d a ' I e n e. T i , uu er the-pmsmeuc 0f mom I to » adamant): dissolved. Irish 1 . . .. n .l’“ '0 genera" the t am escribed b ‘ll’est'ou 0‘ the re «r ' ‘ y - ' mu ‘ _ . yno meanatie same motion favourable unprcssmn n, D , b 3’, most markable for he, a Y all as re- d . organization of th C h, at llieu um’pmposed by Sir John Yards Butler. The difference modifications of tl i'i -qe l‘?" ad acceded to the °°°mphshmems and fascinatl ‘scussm”; and ’1 “Etof th it' 'e a' n ' n i in in of time es '1“ the (“Te . _ ,0 an, dyer"! of ,he 13"] MP b ners I, _ "g man. the next Adm- . , . e Iintstry like}! to. . At; “sigma since m'e'mkpefiod “Sir lghfinggsnfit‘ teveifgld: pastt mguized by l1)i‘:.ehemet Ali, and it new Haiti Schgril’l‘aig . It “115 Slaled by the secretary of the 1 - . These were Schrbliilgii); lwas c-"culated ."3 . v’el‘a mitted divers aggravated delinquencies, which their sup- de‘ iczgdwgsAlex'l-‘gddfnw'lrzl’, which would be shortly Its last meeting that there are about 60 rIsh society at nineties, Pitta, Pizarro sideblmamest (Emmi. W on am won my be perked, justified in do. cogls’aend entirely mm: c hgyptian question is now Ireland who have‘no knowledge what 0.000 persons in th'lbe Officers ot-the grirrison bang; . .1 I . _ i , r languageflnd about two m'll‘ ever “the English 8" dgvmrs 0" the same n e "owl w l I 1 was more who have so'm energetically to def-em, day. The Regent I . e nauonal independence‘ the throne, the commute, ‘ s . i ' r. n \_ 4i; _ , '