Aberdeen Journal, and General Advertiser for the North of Scotland from Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland (2024)

EN P- JTi' TAWS' N'T: LIB. MB. PEES. opposition, the attendance Russell of AshiesSmBlaedMT sou, Esq. of of BbsSSSSSSSSs MEMB ERS RETURNED.

NAMES OF MEMBE-aSi Graham, Sir J. R. Greeaall. G. Greene Grey; NAMES OF PtACES.

Ripoit Warrington Lancaster -Lancaster. Ty.nemputh Sandwich LIB.PEE-L.FBOT. Pinal Close of the PoU. Montrose Hue Greeal. 136 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Preston.

Grevi Sir Northumberland (North) 1 NAMES OF MEMBERS. Russell, W. Sadlier, J. Salwey, Colonel Sandars, G. Scott, Hon.

P. Serope, P. -Seaham, Viscount Seeley, C. Seymour, Lord Seymour, Sir H. Seymer, H.

K. -Shafte. R. D. -Shaw, Right Hon.

F. Sheridan. R. B. JJAHES Or PLACES.

Tavistock Carlow (boroogb) Ludlow Wakefield -Berwickshire Birmingham Stroud Tipperary Durham (North) Lincoln (city) -Totness Lisbonrn Dorsetshire Durham (North) Dublin University Shaftesbury Roscommon nrol Forfar Brechin Bervie Grace. 0. D. 124 151 195 14 0 NAMES OF PLACES. Lyme Regis Devon (North) -Wicklow (county) Staffordshire (North) Ipswich Cambridge (borough) co*ckermouth Antrim Surrey (East) -Bedfordshire Yonghal Lichfield Staffordshire (South) Kincardine (county) Fermanagh -Leominster King's County 530 Gross poll Majority-for Mr-Hume 231.

PEEBLES-SHIRE. Mackenzie. 160 80 Catne Shelburne, Earl of Peebles, Broughton, 84 73- Shiel, Rt. Hon. R.

L. Duugarvan Shirley, E. Warwickshire (South) Sibthorp, Colonel Lincoln (city) Slanev.R. A. Shrewsbury.

ponsiY, THE JUDGMENT OF CUPID. Betwixt Janetta's Lips and Eyes There.once arose warm dispute Each claimed of loveliness the prise, And Cupid sat to try the suit. The Eyes, a pair of richest bine, Darted him such a winning look That spite of all the God could do. His judgment they severely shook. The rosy Lips' delicious pout Arrested his attention next, ATid if he were before in doubt, He then grew ten times more perplexed.

The Eyesy who now about their case Began to have no trifling fears, Looked timidly in Cupid's face, And burst into a flood of tears. Their sorrow quite the God beguiled, And Eyes had won the contest then, But the sweet Lips so fondly smiled, That Cupid paused in doubt again And deeming 'twere of little use The contest longer to discuss, "When each could still new charms produce, He wisely gave his sentence thus Whoe'er does homage to the Eyes, The Lips shall pay his rich reward "Whoever dares the Lips despise, His worthe Eyes shall ne'er regard. Go, then, in friendship still combine, And cease to quarrel till you meet "With eyes that more serenely shine. Or lips whose nectar is more sweet. Thus did the God his judgment speak, And bound them in eternal ties.

For well be knew 'twere vninto seek Mr Mackenzie (C Mr Carmichael (L.) 240 163 NAMES OF 3IEMBEBS. Abdy.T.N,. Acton, Colonel Adderleyj C. B. Adair, H.

-Adair, A. S. Agliohby, H. A. Alexander, N.

Alcoek, T. Alford, Lord -Ansley, C. Anson, Lord Anson, Colonel Arehdall, Captain Arkwright, G. -Armstrong, Sir A. Arundel and Surrey, Earl of Ashley, Lord -Attwood, J.

Bat'shawe, J. M. T. -Bagot, Hon. W.

Baillie, H.J. -Bailey, jun. Bailey. J. Baldock, E.

H. Baldwin, C. B. Bankes, G. Barclay, D.

Baring, T. Baring, F. T. Baring, H. B.

Baring, Hon. W. B. Barklv. H.

Smith, Rt. Hn. R. V. Northampton Wvcbmba Smith, M.

T. Chichester Stirling (borough) Dumbartonshire York (city) mitn. j. a. Smith, J.

B. Smollet, A. Smvfch. J. G.

Stamford Durham (city) Chester Middlesex Merthyr Tydvil Kinsale Penry and Falmouth Hertfordshire -Leicestershire (South) Buckingham, borough Marylebone Hertfordshire Glocestershire (West) Forfarshire Tyron Dublin University Dublin (county) -Flint (Boroughs) Oxfordshire Colchester Christchurch Paisley -Glasgow Wells -Windsor Donegal ewcastle- on-Tyne Stockport Tiverton Hampshire (North) Rutlandshire Great Grimsby Devizes Granby, Marquis of Granger. T. C. Grogan, Grosveaor, Earl S. Guest, Sir J.

Guiness, S. -Gwyn, H. Haggitt, R. J. Hslford.tSir H.

HalL Colonel -Hail, Sir JB. P. -Hale, R. B. -Hallyburton, Lord G.

-Hamilton, Lord C. Hamilton, G. A. Hamilton, J. H.

Hanmer, Sir J. Harconrt, G. G. Hardcastle, J. A.

Harris, E. A. J. Hastie, A. Hastie, A.

Hayter, W. G. -Hav, Lord J. -Hayes, Sir S. Headlam, T.

E. Heald, J. Heathcoat, J. -Heathcote, Sir W. J.

Henege, E. -Heneage, G. H. W. Henley; J.

W. Smyth, Sir G. H. t.oicnester Smy the, G. A.

F. P. S.Canterbary Somers, J.P. Sb'go (Borough) Arundel Bath Harwich Harwich Hull Denbighshire Inverness-shire Herefordshire Breconshire Shrewsbury Totness Dorsetshire Sunderland Huntingdon Portsmouth Marlborough Thetford Leominster Monmouthshire oomerset. iiora i.

Somertoni Viscount Somerville. Sir W. Sotheron. T. H-Spearman; R.

J. St. George, Stafford, A. -Stanley, Hon. J.

E. Stanley, -E. Wilton Drogheda Wilts (North) Durham (city) Galway Northampton (North) Cheshire (North) Cumberland (West) Barnard, E. J. Greenwich etroua Barrington, Viscount Berkshire Stansfield, W.

C. R. Huddersfield For siceeier hps or brighter eyes. Bateson. T.

Derrv Anon. CTraunton, air yr. jrorcsmoutn Whitbv 1 ,1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 1 1 I 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 I 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 I 0 LITERATURE Ban don Rochester Bristol Leeds Thirsk Herbert: H. A Kerry btephenson, K. Stuart, H.

Strickland, Sir G. Stuart, Lord D. C. Stuart, J. Stuart, Lord James Strntt, Rt.

Hon. E. HerbertKRt. Hon. S.

Wiltshire (South) nerries.ixi,. j. etarniora Hervev. Lord A. Brighton Northumberland (South) 0 0 0 Start, H.

G. Bernard, Viscount Berhal, It. Berkeley, Hon. T. H.

F. -Beckett, W. J. Bell, M. Bellew.M.

Benbow, J. Bennet, P. Benett, J. Bentirick, Lord G. Bentinck.

Lord Berkeley, Maurice Berkely, Hon. G. Beresford, Major Bernard, Lord Birch, Sir T. Bedford (borough) Preston Marylebone Newark Ayr '(district Derby Dorchester Newark Stafford Banbury Reading New Ross Dablin (county) Leitrim Belfast Abingdon Wigan Tower Hamlets Majority for Mr Mackenzie, 77 Wigtownshire The election Wigtownshire in ParliaLent ace on hn8 bang no opposition to the return of the laS rV proceedings did not excite much interest taseart proposed Captain JoilQ Mr M'Kie of Bargaly.lnd nooThe? cand Mfe5? ated I the Sheriff declared Captaif Dalrymple to? Mr Dalrymple then addressed the electors! rAs PAROCHIAL SCHOOLMASTERS INSCq1xa From an explanatory letter to her Majesty's augmentation of teachers' stipends km obtained certificates. ate Among the conditions of such auRtnentations their T' ships require that a further salary be provided eual Wattle amount of their srant.

A. Inquiry has been made whether, provided the trnw or managers guarantee the payment of the requisite S6? hey are at liberty to include a part or the whole of thtS pence as a means of reimbursing themselves for awnSfer of this outlay My Porooa Their Lordships will allow the school pence to into account to the extent of one-half of the JaK must be paid the teacher as a condition of their SSw grants. Thus, as a condition of the payment bvth1 mittee of Council of an augmentation of salary to 15, the managers must provide the teacher with of 0, and their Lordships will require that SlitI of this salary sliall be derived from subscription tions, or collections, either local or from a general snhS TheirLbrdshipswilU however, be disposed to receive a corisidea special report favour of any school which may appear to merit admission as anexwSS8 to this rule. epuoa The masters of parochial schools in Scotland are hvu. secured a minimum stipend, amounting to about 25 Tv salary may be augmented to about .28 or 3iby assestimoi? which the heritors are required by law, under' certain cirTnm stances; to raise.

It may also be raised by the schooUenS of the scholars, by voluntary subscription, or, which is-wTr; valent, by voluntary assessment. The Committee of Council are of opinion, that in as ft, as the stipend required by law is not discretionary butenm pulsory, it cannot be taken into account in fulfilment nf their Lordships' grants augmentation of the salaries nf teachers who obtain certificates but that if the heritor others, in the eerciseof their discretion, raise thestiSnS above the minimum required by law in the case of each nsh, the excess of the assessment beyond that minimum msv be accepted in fulfilment of the conditions of their Lordships Feints If, therefore, the master of a parochial school, upon exam! nation, obtain one of their Lordships' certificates, theSpS condition of their grants would be fulfilled if the following contributions to his salary were made For the augmentation of 15 and for that of 20 iiuuui i.uuuniy; Dudley Snffolk (West) -Wiltshire (Souths King's Lynn -Nottingham (North) Glocester (city) -Glocestershire (West Essex (North) -Bandon Liverpool feutton, SA. Sidaey, Alderman Tancred, H. W. Taifourd, T.

N. Talbot, J. H. -Taylor, Col. -Tenison, E.

K. Tennent, R. J. Thesigef. Sir F.

Phickoesse, R. A. 'Tfrosnpiscn, fe -Thompson, Col. P. Hey wood," Hildyard, R.

C. Hildyard, T. B. Hill. Lord M.

-Hill, Lord E. -Hindley, C. -Hodgson. W. N.

Hodges, T. HodgesT. L. -Hogg. Sir J.

W. Hollond.R. -Hope, A. J. B.

Hope, H. T. -Hope, Sir J. Horsman, G. Lord Honldsworth, T.

Howard, Hon. J. K. Howard, Hon. E.

Howard, Hon. C. Hudson, George Lancashire Whitehaven Nottinghamshire (South) Evesham Down Connty Ashton-under -Lyne Carlisle Rochester Kent (West) Ho niton Hastings Maidstone Glocester (city) Edinburghshire Blackburn co*ckermouth Yorkshire (East) Nottingham (North) Malmesbory Morpeth Cumberland (East Sunderland Carnarvon iiiackhau. Jjongtord Blandford, Marquis of Woodstock isradiord a 0 0- 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 1 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 which is extremely startling in its support of the doctrine of fatalism, it improved and reported in the proees verbal thst a great part of the missing bronzes waasold to a contractor for the English market, audbought to melt for the statue of the Duke of WeUingtoii.rMlas. Electric Machine.

The Electric Telegraph Company have invented a machine which will communicate intelligence simultaneously to all the towns in the empire, from Truro to Thurso, and it is thus described "It is capable of transmits ting from one thousand to two thousand letters a minute. It consists of a metal roller, upon which presses a spring in connection with the wire extending between the two given points of communication. The roller being attached to one pole of the battery, and the earth to the other, the electric current flows continually down the wire, and if aslip of paper, which is a non-conductor, be placed between, with a series of holes punched out upon it, as long as the springs are separated from the roller by the paper no current passes, but the paper being drawn rapidly along as the spring comes in contact with the cylinder hy passing a hole, a current of electricity traverses the wire producing upon the paper at the other end an analogous black mark. These rollers being set in motion by machinery so as to pass three or four thousand perforations a minute, arranged according to a system, beneath the spring, a lengthened correspondence may be completed in a very short time. The machines will be so ar-rangedthat the message will tiy from one to the other, so as to transmit to more than one place at the same moment.

Mark Lane Express. A French Beggar. Sometime ago we gave an account of the capture of a man named Gonjon, for obtaining money and other aims from charitable people in the public streets, by pretending to full in fainting fits from want of food. His face was lank and pale, and when a little painted represented extreme hunger with striking fidelity, whilst the wretchedness of his dress, and the cleverness of his acting, left no doubt on the minds of the spectators that he was really more than half famished. Yet few men really lived better than M.

Goujon. Before commencing his day's operations he look a substantial breakfast, washed down with exquisite wines, and cheered by the joyous society of his young wife and he wound them up by an equally substantial dinner, and equally exquisite wines, whilst his evenings were passed it the theatres. When not engaged in business, he was dressed as a dandy of the very first water. At length his doings came to the knowledge of the Police, and he was watched. Proof of his guilt having been obtained, be was brought to trial.

After the evidence against him was given, he urged in his defence that he was a workman without employment, and had been compelled to act as he did that he was not, however, in distress, was proved by the manner in which he dressed and lived, and the fact that a sum of 248f. was found at his lodgings. I he Iribunal condemned him to four months' imprisonment, and ordered that after undergoing that sentence he should be lodged in a Depot de Mendicite. Galignani's Messenger. Extraordinary Operation of Tracheotomy at Gut's Hospital.

Tuesday morning an operation of a most extraordinary nature was performed, by Bransby Cooper, in the anatomical theatre of Guv's Hospital. It was one of a very rare character, and is called Tracheotomy," the act of making an incision in the windpipe. The operation alluded to was performed upon a boy of fourteen years, age. It appearsthat, on Friday last, the boy, whilst onSn errand for his father, pieked up a small fiat stone, which he placed in his mouth, after which he commenced running along the roadway with great speed. He had not reached far before he suddenly swallowed the stone, which he endeavoured to bring up bat his efforts were all in vain.

He was taken to Guy's Hospital, where he was put under the immediate care of Bransby Cooper, the eminent surgeon, who made arrangements for the removal of the stone, which had lodged the trachea, or lower part of the windpipe, being firmly fixed in a difficult position. The little fellow was placed on the operating table, in the presence of a large assemblage of the medical profession. An incision was made on the lower part of the throat, about an inch and a-half in length, where the stone was at once found by the operator. The poor boy was instantly relieved, and bore the operation with the most remarkable presence of mind and fortitude. He was subsequently removed to the ward, where the incision will be semi up, and in a few days he will leave the Hospital perfectly cured.

Sun. The Chinese Junk, Keying. The Junk Keying, on her voyage to England, left China, 6th December. 1846 arrived at tot Helena, 17th April, 1847 has had very light winds nearly the whole voyage, having been at anchor six weeks in the Java Sea and Sunda Straits, with light southerly and SW. winds.

Oft' the Mauritius experienced some very heavv weather on the 22d and 23d March but found her to be a most beautiful sea-boat, and easy, never having shipped a drop of water since leaving China, or leaking. Her masts and rudder are of immense size and weight, being made of iron wood. Her rudder is hung to three large ropes, and drawn into her stern by two others, going underneath her bottom and coming over the bows, and when the rodder is down draws twenty-three feet, but when hoisted, only thirteen feet. It sometimes takes twenty men to steer but in tine weather, running before the wind, she goes so steadily that the tiller rarely requires to be touched, and then two man can steer her. She is built in compartments, having fiteen, several of which are watertight she has a main deck, raised quarter deck, two poops, and a raised forecastle, with a high verandah above that again.

Her main deck is arched. Her anchors are made of wood, and the shanks about 30 feet long; the cal les are made of bamboo, the ropes of bamboo, rattan, and India grass: she has three water-tanks built on her decks her sails reef themselves by lowering the halyards, so that one man to each mast at the halyards can either reef the sail, or take it in in a minute; her stern and her bows are open, but she is so very buoyant, that she never takes in any water at either end. Her main cabin, or saloon, is 30 feet long, 25 feet wide, and 12 feet high, painted with various beasts, birds. She has also six small cabins on first with the joss-house in the centre, in which a light is constantly kept burning. Her stern is 32 feet high out of the water, Thb Chinesf.

Junk, gone to New The crew of the Chinese junk, so long expected in London, have, in their search for the metropolis of England, contrived to arrive at New York. The following description of her is given in the Nmo York Express She is unlike a ship, brig, schooner, sloop, steamer, canal boat, or any other craft. Her stern appears like two or three poop-decks, piled one above another, nearly fifty feet above the water; and her rudder, which is latticed, weighs eight tons, and is in shape something like, only much larger, than a canal boat's. It takes forty men to steer her in a gale of wind. Her prow is nearly square, and open in frontwith a larae wooden anchor Blake.

M. J. Galwav CboMmph's Thompson, Alderman Westmoreland Thornelv. T. Wolverhampton Blakemore, B.

Blackstone, W. S. Blewitt, R. J. -Boldero, H.

G. Wells WaUingford Monmouth Chippenham Koiling, w. oolton Bouverie, Hon. E. P.

Kilmarnock Bowles, Admiral Launceston tiugnes, w. B. Hume. J. Montrose (district) Humphrey, Alderman Southwark huse, w.

Gateshead iseveriey Grantham Cheshire (South) Cambridgeshire Caithnesshire Carmarthenshire Tavistock Lincolnshire (South) Devonport Truro Coventry Bridgewater Essex (North) Stafford Durham (South) Armagh (county Queen's County -Bedford (borough) Cirencester Wolverhampton and South Lancashire Truro Swansea ingestre, -Iniilis, Sir R. Ireland, T.J. -Jackson, M. Jervis, Sir J. -Jervis.

J. Staffordshire (South) Oxford University Bewdley Newcastle-under-Lyne Chester Horsham Bury St. Edmund's Bolton Coleraine Frnme Staffordshire (North) Essex (South) Hertfordshire Barnstaple Manchester Hastings Yorkshire (East) Bridgewater Macclesfield Warwickshire (South) Fermanagh Hythe Salford Tewkesbury Lancashire (SonthY Jermyn, Earl, -Jocelyn, Lord, King's Lynn Jolliffe. Sir W. G.

H. PeterRfipld Bownng, lr -Boyd, Dr Boyle, Major Brackley, Lord Bramston, J. W. Brand, T. -Bright, John, -Briscoe, M.

Broadley, H. -Broadwood, H. Rrocklehurst, J. Brooke, Lord -Brooke, Sir A. Brookman, E.

D. Brotherton, J. -Brown, H. Brown, W. Brnce, C.

Bruen, Colonel Bruce, Lord E. Bruges, W. H. L. Buck, -Burreli, Sir C.

Burrougbes, H. M. Busfeiid. G.W. Buller.

C. Sketches of Scottish Church History. By the Rev. Thomas M'Crie. Fourth Edition.

John Johnstone, Edinburgh. The admitted excellence of these Sketches has recommended their adoption for issue, in a cheap form, by the Committee of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland for the publication of the works of Scottish Reformers and Divines. This circ*mstance alone may be deemed supercessory of any recommendation of ours of this admirable work to public patronage. We may be permitted to mention that it embraces one of thejmost interesting periods in the history of our Church tha namely, which extends from the Reformation totfae Revolution. Its style is popular, being chiefly intended to create, in the minds of the young, an interest in the Church of their fathers.

With this view its object is rather to exhibit the more prominent and characteristic features of. our Church than to enter into details, or to de-velope the internal character of the Church in her ecclesiastical acts and proceedings. In the attainment of this object, the author has eminently succeeded, and his labours have been favoured with a commensurate measure of success. The Journey of Life. By Catherine Sinclair.

London: Longman Co. Miss Sincl air is already favourably known as the authoress of many ingenious and esteemed works. The present possesses a peculiar interest, as bearing on those subjects which deeply affect the present condition and future hopes of every rational, reflecting, and accountable being. It is emimently calculated. to induce reflection on what we now are, and what we must either hope or dread to be.

Without being a professedly religious work, its tendency is to beget serious reflection as to a future life, in the minds of those who may have been hitherto careless of so momentous a matter. It is likely to be peculiarly acceptable to those whose hearts may have been prepared by afflictive visitation for the sweet influences of that faith which sanctifies, for the holiest purposes and happiest ends, every afflictive visitation with which it may please Providence, in mercy, to visit those whom he has destined for felicity in a future world. Much of the work is devoted to the demonstration of the sweet uses of adversity," which, however the worldling may dread, the better instructed welcomes, as admonitory of less dependence on fleeting enjoyments, in which it was never intended that his real happiness should consist. Adventures of the Gordon Highlanders in France and Belgium. Mr Grant's very attractive work, The Romance of War," exhibiting in graphic terms the doings of The Highlanders in Spain," was received with general and well merited favour.

The sequel to the story, namely the proceedings of the Highlanders in France and Belgium, comprised in thi3 fourth volume will be welcomed, we doubt not, with the like avidity. The hero of the tale, after many moving accidents by flood and field, comes home to enjoy his wellTwon laurels and the crowning favour of his lady love. The main claim of the work must ever be the truthful outline it presents of the heroic devotion and dauntless daring of the heroes, in the garb of old Gaul," during that momentous conflict ending -with Wellington's last on the plains of Waterloo. Caledonian Mercury. Johnstone, Sir J.

B.V.Scarborough Jones. T. Derry 1 Northamptonshire (Sth.) 0 i tie minimum stipend re- Kv 1- Helston Elgin Nairn (counties) 0 i) 0 0 25 or upwards. 25 or upwards. Towneley, J.

-Tollemache, F. Tolleraache, J. Townley, R. G. Traill, G.

Trevor, Hon. G. R. Trelawney, J. T.

Trollope, Sir J. Tufnell, H. -Turner, E. Turner, G. J.

-Tynte. E. K. -Tyrell, Sir J. T.

Urquhart, D. -Vane, Lord H. Verner, Sir W. Vesey. Hon.

T. Verney, Sir H. Villiers, Lord -Villiers, Hon. G. P.

Vivian, J. E. -Vivian, J. H. K.

H. Vyvyan, Sir R. R. Waddington, D. -Waddington, H.

S. Wakely.T. -Walker. R. Wall, C.

B. -Walmsley, Sir J. Walpole, S. H. Walsh, Sir J.

-Walter. J. Ward, H. G. -Wawn, J.

T. -Wellesley, Lord C. West, F. R. -Westenra, Col.

Westhead, J. P. Whitmore. T. C.

Williams, J. P. Williams Wilson, M. Wilson, G. Wilcox, B.

M. -Willonghby, Sir H. Wodehouse. E. Wood, Sir C.

-Wood, W. P. uj ,1 A further contribution by as Cheltenham Waterford Athlone Lymington Eye Down patrick Surrey (East) Worcester est Jones, Sir W. -Keating. R.

Keogh, W. -Keppel, Colonel, Kerrison, Sir E. Kerr, R. King, P. J.

L. -Knight, F. W. Knightley, Sir C. Knox, Colonel B.

Hon H. -Lacy, C. -Lancston. H. anuw kcounty; Marlborough (North) Shoreham Norfolk (East) Bradford Liskeard sessment or sunscripUon, and also whatever might be required to raise the school fees to 15 in one case, and to .20 in the other 15 From school fees might be derived 15 Northamptonshire (Sth.) 0 Marlow 20 Buller, Sir J.

Y. Devon (South) 20 Taunton Bodmin Oxford (city) J70 .85 Lascellea, Hon. Kipon Maldon Suffolk West) Finsbury Bury, Lancashire Salisbury Leicester (borough) Midhurst Radnorshire Nottingham Sheffield South Shields Grantham Hants (South) Denbigh (district) King's County Knaresborough Bridgenorth Marlow Macclesfield cl*theroe Westbury Southampton Evesham Norfolk (East) -Halifax Oxford (city) Buteshire Lascelles, Hon. W. S.

Knaresborough -Law, Hon. C. E. Cambridge University Lawless, Hon. C.

Clonmel Lefevre, Rt. Hn. C. S. Hampshire (North) Lemon, Sir C.

Cornwall (West) A. Yarmouth Bulkeley, Sir R.B.W. Anglesey (county) Bunbury, T. Carlow (county) Bunbury, E. H.

Bury St. Edmund's Burghley, Lord Lincolnshire (South) 'turke, Captain Galway Buxton, Sir E. N. Essex (South) Byng, Rt. Hon.

G.S. Chatham Cabbell, B. B. Boston Callaghan, D. Cork (city) Campbell, Hon.

W.T.Cambridge (boro'i Carew, W. H. P. Cornwall (East) -Castlereagh, Lord Down (county) 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 I 0 0 1 I 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 Lennox, Lord H. G.

Chichester Lennard. T. B. Maldon Card well, Liverpool Leslie, CP. -Lewis, Sir T.

F. Lewis, G. C. Lincoln. Lord.

Monarfian Radnor (district) Herefordshire Falkirk (Burghs) Winchester Peterboronh Carter, ts. Cavendish, W. C. Lindsay, Colonel, igan Buckinghamshire Uavendish, Littleton, Hon. E.

R. Walsall Wortley, S. Worcester, Marq. of Gloucestershire (East) Loch, J. Wick (district) Locke, J.

Honiton Lockharfc, W. Lanarkshire Lockbart, A. E. Selkirkshire Long, W. Wilts (North) Northallerton Wrightsbn, W.

B. Cavendish.Ilon. G.B.Derbyshire (North) Caulfield, Arnvigh (county) Cayiey, E. S. Yorkshire (North) Chandos, Marquis of Buckingham (boro') Chaplin, J.

Salisbury Charteris, Hon. F. Haddingtonshire Chichester, Lord J. Belfast Childers, J. W.

Malton Cholmondely, Sir M. Lincolnshire (N.) Lowther, Hon. U. V. Westmoreland Wyld, J.

Wynn. Sir W. -Wyviil, M. -Yorke, H. R.

-Yorke, Hon. E. T. Young, J. Lewther.

Cumberland (West) Bodmin. Denbighshire Richmond York (city) Cambridgeshire -CavanXcouuty) A double return. Westminster Worcester (West) Lyminston Peebleshire Glasgow Cork, (city) Lushington, C. Lygon, General Maokinnon, W. A.

Mackenzie, W. F. Macgreaor, J. -M'Carthy, A. -M'Naughten, Sir A.

STATE OF POLLS. 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 I I 0 1 0 1 0 i 0 0 -v i 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 I 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1. 0 0 1 I 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 ,0 0 1 1 0 I 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 9 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 Antrim 1 0 0 0 10 10 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 0 10 0 10 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 10 0 10 0 10 1. 0 0 0.0 i 0.1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 10 0 0 10 10 0 0 1 10 0 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0: ,0 0 15 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 ion 0 0 1 0 10 1 0 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 1. 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 10 1 0 0 10 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 I 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 10 0 1 10 0 I 0 0 0 10 1 0 0 0 .1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 010 0 1 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 10 0 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 10 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 10 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 I 0 1 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 1 0: 1 0 0 0 1 .1 0 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 1 0 10 A 0 0 0 10 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 1 0 0 10 0 loo 10 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 .0 1 0 1 0 i 0 0 1 1 0 0 I 10 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 0 1 10 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 fi 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 9 10 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 ft 8 0 0 0 i 1 fi 929 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 I 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1.

1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 I 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 747 666 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 I 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 I 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 6 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2055 2530 Christie, S. Christie, W. D. Clay, Sir W. CUf.J.

Clements; Hon. C. Clerk, Sir G. Clifford, H. M.

Clive, H. B. Clive, Viscount Clive, Hon. R. Cobbold, J.

C. Cobden, R. Cochrane, B. co*cks, T. S.

co*ckburn, A. J. E. Codrington, Sir W. Collins, W.

Coope, E. Coles, J. H. Cole. Hon.

Henry, Colebrooke, Sir T. Colville, C. R. Comnton. H.

C. 1394 Newcastle under-Lyme Weymouth Tower Hamlets Hull Leitrim Dover Hereford Ludlow Shropshire (North) Shropshire (South) Ipswich Stockport and West Yorkshire Bridport Reigate Southampton Glocestershire (East) Warwick Yarmnuth Andover Enniskillen Taunton Derbyshire (South) Hants (South) 737 M'Neill, D. -M'Taggart, Sir J. ilagan, -Maher, N. Mahon, Lord, -Mahon, O'G.

Maitland, T. -Mangles, R. -D. Manners, Lord C. Manners, Lord G.

March, Earl of W. -Marshall, J. G. Martin, S. Martin, C.

W. J. Masterman, J. -Matheson, Alex. Matheson, T.

Argyleshire Wigtown (Burghs; Duajdalk Tipperary Hertford Ennis Kirkcudbrightshire Guildford S. Leicester (North) J. Cambridgeshire Sussex fWest) Cumberland (East) Leeds Pohtefract Newport Tewkesbury London Inverness (burghs) Ashburton Ross-shire P- 568 547 jeetinsr out like a figure-head. She has galleries or walks outside, extending from the stern to midships. Her stern is nearly square, and she is guadiiy painted with figures.

We learn from her commander that it is 212 days sinceshe feft China. She has floated, drifted, and sailed along, stopping at the Cape of Good Hope and St Helena. She was boahd to England, her captain being an Englishman, and the speculation English; but, in consequence of the passage, her course was altered, and she put into this Iport, where she will be exhibited for several weeks, and then proceed to her port of destination in Britain. Her bottom is very foul, which has prevented somewhat. her sailing." Squatting in Canada.

Our fellow citizen, Mr George Dugaari, told me an anecdoteof a settler, an Irish emigrant, a few days ago. At the time the township of Monaghan was heing granted, he met with this man, who began his lamentations, and wished he was at home in the old country. Nonsense, said Mr Duggan, 'goto Captain Fitzgibbon, and draw a lot of land in And please your honour, vhat will I do with a lot of land? I hav'n't what will bny me a bit or a sup till I get a Never mind said his kind adviser, 'go upon the land, get a place to live in, if it is no better than a fox hole work with some farmer for a bag of flour take it home on your shoulders; when it is esten up, come out again and work for as ranch more, and I'll warrant you will get on with your He was ad-dressel by the same man some years afterwards. Arrab, Mr Duifgan. do you remember the man you sent to live in a fox hole, in Monaghan God bless you, Sir, it was the best ad 388 155 151 151 135 Connolly, Colonel Matheson.

James BELFAST. Robert James Tennent, -Lord John Chiehester, George Sufferin, DENBIGHSHIRE. Sir W. W. Wyna (C.) -MrBagot (C) Col Biddulph(L.) DUBLIN UNIVERSITY.

Hamilton, -Shaw, Napier, MacCullagh, DROGHEDA. Sir Wm. Somerville (Whig) -Mr L. Murray, BUNGARVAN. MrSheil, Mr Maguire, SOUTH ESSEX Bramston (C.) -Buxton (L.) -Smythe(C.) ESSEX (NORTH).

Sir J. Tyrell (C.) -Major Beresford (C.) Redbow(L-) Harrison (L.) WEST GLOUCESTERSHIRE. Hale(C.) -Grantley Berkeley (L.) -Grenville Berkeley (L.) WEST KENT. -Hodges (L.) -Austin (C.) LEITRIM. Godley(C)- -Tennyson (L.) Lord Clements (L.

Salaries of 70 or .85 would therefore be secured to pa-rochial schoolmasters in Scotland who obtained certificates of the third or lowest degree of merit. It is to be hoped that the lower of those two stipends would enable parishes in the Highlands and Islands to secure the services of a master who had obtained this certificate. If certificates of the first and second degree of merit were obtained, the master's salary would undergo a proportionate increase. This stipend might rise to .00 for the second degree and toHSfor the first degree of merit; but the examinations for such certificates would secure a high order of at tainment, character, and skill. In the Lowlands of Scotland the school pence would sometimes considerably exceed the sum required as a condition of the grant in augmentation.

These-salaries would, therefore the Lowlandslprobabiy range from 90, as the minimum stipend of a master holding a certificate of the third degree of merit to or upwards, as the stipend of a parochial teacher who had obtained a certificate of the first dec-ee of merit. a- v. The assistance thus granted to promote the efficiency of the parochial schools of Scotland is such as to induce their Lordships to give some additional force to those conditions of permanency previously indicated. The heritors will he required to secure for five years at least the augmented assessment or contribution to be made by them as a condition of the augmentation. Their Lordships will not be satisfied with the minimum accommodation to be by law provided in the teacher's hous.

They will require: that the house shall consist of at least four rooms, each containing 140 square feet of area; or, when the legal provision alone has been made, they will accept as a temporary asrangement, until the house can be enlarged, an -annual contribution of 6 in-addition to the accommodation otherwise required. lu eertaih parishes, the heritors' stipend is legally divided by them among two or more schools but they are not required to provide more than one teacher's house Thir Eord-ships will aeeept, as a temporary arrangement, a contribution of .10 m. every such instead of a house and garden, when they have not been provided, and will also agree that, addition to the stipend legally allotted to the school, the heritors shall secure to the master for five years a further salary, equal at least to twice the amount of their Lordships' grant in augmentation. One-half of this further salary may he derived from school fees. It has been represented to their Lordships that the parochial schoolmasters in Scotland have very generally the adjunct offices of session-clerk, heritors' clerk, collectors of parochial assessments, or inspectors of the poor.

The average value of these offices to each schoolmaster throughout Scotland is supposed to be not less than 10 but to many of them it is much more. For example, to the schoolmasters of Ayrshire, Mr Gordon reports that it amounts lo .20 and in particular cases a much larger augmentation of stipend is derived from these sources. The Committee of Council have, therefore, been called upon to determine, whether masters receiving the augmentation offered by their Lordships to those who have obtained their certificates should he allowed to retain any of these offices. This augmentation removes all plea for retaining such offices on the ground of an insufficiency of income, and increases the cogency of the reasons for requiring that evt-ry precaution should be adopted to secure that the schoolmaster shall devote his whole time and energies to his school duties, especially as those duties will now be extended to the education of pupil teachers during one hour and a half daily before or after the'usua! school hours. The office of session-clerk is connected with the keeping of the records of the session and it has been customary, and is convenient, that these documents should be deposited in the house of the schoolmaster.

Their Lordships are informed that the duties of session-clerk occupy no part of the usual hours of school keeping, and that in the great majority of parishes they require little time for their dae performance. On these grounds, my Lords are disposed to make an exception in favour of the retention of the office of sesMon-clerk, grounded oil usage, convenience, and compatibility with the primary duties of parochial schoolmaster. In parishes containing less than 400 inhabitants, the duties of heritors' clerks would occupy little time and, as in small parishes the difficulty of finding a competent person to discharge this duty might be great, their Lordships will not in such cases object to the holding of this office by schoolmasters. But they consider it necessary to declare, that the other offices enumerated above are not to be retained by any schoolmasters to whom they may award an augmentation of salary, or an annual gratuity for the training of pupil teachers, and that the office of heritors' clerk is not be held by them in any parish containing more than 4C0 inhabitants. Endowments.

When the funds of a school are wholly or partially derived from endowment, and the master has obtained their Lordships' certificate, inquiry has been made to what extent these funds may be taken into account in the fulfilment of the condition of an augmentation of salary. Their Lordships are of opinion, that it is not expedient to take into account, either in England and Wales, or in Scotland, any local or general permanent endowment. With respect to those schools in Scotland which may derive esdow-ment from the Dick bequest and from Milne's charity, this 2158 1727 Maule. Rt. Hon.

Fox, Perth -M aunsell, T. P. Northampton (North) Conyngham. Lord A. Canterbury T.

Stoke-on-Trent Corry, H. Tyrone Cotton, Hon. W.H.S.Carriekfergns Courtenay, Lord Devon (South) 1693 Uavan -Waterford (city Hertford U-reenocK 2472 2292 Cowper, Hon. W. Cowan, C.

Craig, W.G. vice I ever had in my hie. I have got the deed of. my lot, and I have eighty head of cattle and sheen feedihe on it TMo 1555 36 is very liKe the history of thousands and tens of thousands of 4252 2755 2130 Edinburgh Edinburgh Rochdale Cirencester Guildford Andover Northampton Rye Wigtonshire Wycombe Dorchester Haddington (Burgh) Carmarthenshire Monaghan Kent (East) Aylesbury Malton Surrey (West) 3222 3133 Urawlord, is. Cripps, W.

Currie, H. Cubitt, W. Currie, R. Curteis, H. B.

Dalrymple, J. -Dashwood, G. H. Darner, Colonel Davie, Sir J. Davies, D.

A. S. Dawson, -Deedes, W. -Dering, J. P.

-Denison, Ji E-. Denison, W. J. Dftvereux. J.

T. 3087 262 Hertfordshire Bristol Somersetshire (East) Pontefract Wicklbw (county Bridport Dartmouth Southwark Yorkshire (West) Monmouthshire -Wexford (county) Clackmannan Kinross Carmarthen Flintshire Penryn and Falmouth Scarborough Derbyshire (South) Birmingham Renfrewshire Chippenham Cricklade Salop (South) -Newry -Cardiff -Rutlandshire Oxfordshire Malic Dunsrannon 261 248 Maxwell Hon. J. Meagher, T. -Meleund, Lord, Meux, Sir H.

-Miles. W. P. S. Miles, W.

Milnes, R. M. -Milton, Lord -Mitchell, T. A. Moffatt, G.

Molesworth, Sir W. Morpeth, Lord Morgan, CO. Morgan, G. Morrison, Gen. Morris, D.

-Mostyn, E. M. L. Mowatt, Mulgrave, Earl of, E. M.

Muntz, G. F. -Mure, Colonel Neeld, Joseph, -Newport, Viscount Newry, Lord, -Nicholl. Dr J. -Noel, Hon.

G. -Norreys, Lord, -Norreys, Sir D. Northland, Lord Nueent, Lord, -Nugent, Sir P. -O'Brien, T. O'Brien, J.

O'ConnelhJ. -O'Connell. D. 4900 4110 exiora 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 D'Eyneourt, Right 3436 Hon. C.

T. MIDDLESEX. Grosvenor (L.) -Osborne (L.) -Wood(C.) MONMOUTHSHIRE. Morgan (C.) -Lord Granville Somerset (C.) -Captain Somerset (C.) NORTH NORTHUMBERLAND. Sir George Grey (L.) 2327 2235 Lambeth Exeter -Buckinghamshire Carlisle -Maidstone Warwick Divett, E.

-Disraeli, B. Dixon, J. DoddvG. Doualas. Sir C.

Douro. Marauis of 2188 men wno are now ricn ana independent, who will tell you they have had hardship and difficulty but yet who, in the whole course of their struggles in Canada, never met with any privation half so great as that of an Irish labourer in full employment, or any discomfort half so bad as a week's residence in an Trish cabin. I was one day riding out towards the Owen Sound settlement with a gentleman now dead, the late William Chisholm, whom we used to call White Oak for his truth and honesty of character, and genuine soundness of heart. At the township of Garrafraxa, a place with scarcely any inhabitants, after getting over a detestable road, and having been long without seeing a house, we fell upon a large and handsome clearing of one hundred acres, with herds of cattle grazing in the pastures, sheep clustered in the shade under the fences, wheat ripening in the fields, and apples reddening in the orchard a good log -house, and a better barn and stable, in the midst of all this. Inside the house was a respectable.looking man.

his wife, and erown-up dauuhters. Their house was clean and comfortable, foad abundant, and we fared well. They had books on the shelves and one of the girls was reading, others spinning, churning, or knitting. I asked no questions, but. knowing that my friend could give me the hist iry of the settler on the road in the morning, I waited.

My first exclamation was Well, ChistiGlm, 1 do envy you your countrymen That man must have-lived here many years without a neighbour was the answer, 'he was the first settler in these parts and when he came, there was no white man between him and Lake! He must have been very toor, or he would not have come 1 Yes' was the answer, he was very He must have educated his children himself Yes, there was no school within many miles of mm He could not have employed 'No; all this was the workof hisown hands Then again I said, 4 1 do envy you your countrymen This is Scotch prudence, Scotch energy, Scotch Well said he, 'it maybe just as Scotch as you like to make it, but after all the man is an SimmontTs Colonial Magazine Jenny Lind and the English Public The extraordinary success which has attended the performances of Mademoiselle Lind, at her Majesty's Theatre, is now matier of notoriety -nay, her attraction seems to endure, notwith-BtHndt'inr the discouragement arisim; from the hoat hf'tha Norwich 1366 1247 Drax. J. S. W. S.

E. Wareham Lord Lovaine (C.) 1236 Drummond, H. H. Perthshire Drummond. H.

2263 2058 1464 SOUTH NORTHAMPTONSHIRE Knightly (C Vyse Henley (L.) NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE. Close of the Poll. Mr Adderley (C.) -Lord Brackley (C.) Mr Buller (L.) MISCELLANEOUS. Maxim Picked up at Ipswich. No man no householder at least knows his real value till an election.

Punch. Ships Moktgaoed. A return moved for by Sir H. Douglas, shows that the number of ships wholly mortgaged in 1846 amounted to tonnage 79,7 the number of ships partly mortgaged tonnage "Valuable Recipe. The best cement to fix pieces of metal while cutting, as in a small hand-turning lathe, or to secure tools in their handles, is common resin and brick dust melted together.

This cement grows harder and improves every time it is inelted. Pharmaceutical Times. Jenny Lind Potatoes. A fine sample of potatoes, with blue eyes, were eried up with this name through the street last week, atlOd. per score.

The idea of a score of Jenny Lindsfor tenpenee Swedish nightingales are getting cheap. Exeter Neics. Novel Scareceow, During the meeting of the Royal Agricultural Society, at.Nottingham, an inventor exhibited a self-acting gun, which is intended to scare birds and game from corn fields. Twelve barrels, loaded with powder, revolved by mechanism, and one of them explodes every hour, with a report as that of a gun. When the barrels are loaded, and the machinery has been wound up, this novel scarecrow may be hung on a tree, and require no further attention.

Carlisle Patriot. Interesting Facts Regarding the Salmon. Two years ago, says the Dundee Advertiser, a number of foul fish were taken int-he Tayr-by orders of Lord Glenlyon, now Bake of Atholl, and marked by having a medal attached by a copper wire to the dead fin, or fastened to the tail, the medul having the name of his the number of the fish, engraved. One of the fish was retaken last season, in the Tav about three months after ithad been marked, when' its weight was found to have increased from lb. to 21 lb.

17 lbs. in three months Another of the marked fish was taben'on Saturday last, in the same river. Its weight was 18 lb. The reason assigned for this fish not having grown better, is, that the wire round the tail was too tight, the skin being cut all round. Awful Death of a Tyrant.

Quite recently, on a Sabbath-day, an overseer, tied up a man, and began whipping him, as he said, to make him confess some fault with which fee charged him. The slave refused to confess a crime committed, not improbably, by others; and the whipping continued all the morning of the Sabbath day. The close of the bloody scene is known only to God, who interposed to brina it to an end. When the neighbours came from meeting, the slave and his brutal murderer were alike silent in death the one from burstings blood-vessel, theothcr whipped to death This occurrence I have from a most worthy Christian lady' residing not far from the plaee where it occurred, which was" in the State of Kentucky. Recent Letter from New York.

The Rev. -Dr. Cummino, of London. This gentleman now conducts worship in the large room of Kxeter Hall, pend -ing the enlargement of.his church. I attended yesterday evening, when there were nearly 4,000 persons present.

The Hall was crowded nearly as much as at the most popular of the May meetings, and the congregation was evidently respectable. Dr Gumming is a dark coreplexioned man, with hair and whiskers, and a grave expression of-countenance. From the notices of him in the public papers, 1 expected to see a person of vulgar mind and violent manner On the contrary, I found in him a speaker of highly-euUivat- ed mind, good taste, sound judgment, Scriptural theology, of clear reasoning powers, and considerable eloquence. His discourse was the first of a series of lectures on the bo.ok of Revelations, in which he had some good and striking points. He follows the interpretation of Mr Elliot.

Correspondent of Nortk British Mail. The Satellite of the Planet Neptune. Mr William Lassell, writing to the Times from Liverpool on the 2d August, states that he has been able to prove discovery of the Satellite of Neptune. He says, the fullest confirmation I obtained this morning, when, watching the planet together with its hours; I found that Neptune in his orbital motion had sensibly carried away the satellite from the position in the sky it occupied when I first saw it Altogether, during the last month, I have seen the planet accompanied by its satellite five or six times, and in every instance the satellite has been, with respect to Neptune, either in the north-following, or south-preceding quadrant, generally forming a moderate angle, about 40 or 50 degrees with the parallel From this it would appear that the plane of its orbit is not very greatly inclined to the plane of the ecliptic." A Discovert in Westminsteb Abbev. Jn making the alterations-now progress in Westminster.

Abbey Church, the supposed tomb of St Kdward has been discovered, at least such is the opinion of some' of the abbey dignitaries. This tomb is situated exactly in the centre of the cross, it I rectangular, eight feet long, east and west, five feet wide, north and south, and two feet three inches deep The bottom is formed of concrete, the sides and ends of rubbed stone, and it was originally covered with a slab, six inches thick but the -covering disappeared ages ago, and the tomb has retrained filled with rubbish. Let no one, however, imagine that thin is the original tomb of the Confessor. It is stated, by the oldest authorities, quoted by Widmore, that St Edward was buried bene.ith tba high altar. that his remains were removed to a higher place, and then again to another still higher while no doubt can possibly exist that his dust atill reposes in the shrine prepared for it by Kinc Henry the The Buildey.

The Hotel ai Caiko Such a scene I never saw as the inn yard. Imagine a small court containing a hulf-stiirved ostrich, looking like a spectre, a monkey, a lynx, donkeys, innumerable camels, dromedaries, Arabs, couriers, dragomen, waiting to be hired and in the midst of all, "arions specimens of the John BtiH tribe, starting for India by way of Sucx, in Mackintoshes, straw hats, jsa jackets, and every variety of costume. I must not forget a bevy of ludies in green voile and poke bonnets, waiting to be shut into buxes like diminutive sedans, to be jolted across the Sue desert, or looking in utter despair st the broken-down donkeys on which they were to trust themselves, if they preferred a quadruped to a packing case. In spite of all the noise, crowds, and scramble, we found capital room and good accommodations for this country, where, in genera), you have four walls, a stone floor, and a divan as yerar stock of furniture. Lord Vastlereugk's Journey io Damascus.

Startling We have been arouaedby the fraudulent bankruptcy of M. Soyer, the great French brass-founder sad Government coutrauur for public w.yfcs. Information bad been given to the Minister of War thai the whole cannon, to the value of 500,000 francs, which have been voted by the Chambers last session for the tomb of Napoleon, had been illegally disposed of by the contractor. A visile aomieiliarewtts forthwith made to M. Soyer's atelier, and the cannpa bsfinsf missing, a war rant was made eat for he appre-aensjoa.

He had already ab-coaded, but was arrest-! at th tbateaa of Ftrald, at Polssj, and brought back to Paris tec wise bis trial. By a most extraordinary coincidence and one Aylesbury i Westmeath i Cashel i Limerick (city) i Limerick (city) 1 Tralee i Waterford (city) Kerry i Kilknny (Borough) 1 Nottingham 1 Galway (Borough) Northumberland (South) 1 Newcastle-on-Tyne 1 Middlesex 1 4083 4071 3350 Surrey (West) Dumfriesshire Exeter -Banffshire Elgin (burghs) -Boston -Dundee-Bath East Retford Finsbury Yorkshire (North) Oldham -Greenwich Linlithgowshire Portariington Buckinghamshire Winchester Ply mohth Halifax Drumlanrig, Lord Duckworth, Sir J. Duff, James, nnff.G.S. Duke, Sir J. Diwan G.

Duncan, Lord -Duncombe, Hon. I Duncomhe, T. S. Duncombe, O. Dnncuft, J.

-Dundns, Admiral Dnndas.G. Dunn, Colonel -Du Pre.C. G. -East, Sir J. B.

Ebrington, Lord KgerioiiW. T. Egerton, Sir P. SCOTCH ELECTIONS. O'Connell, M.

Ji O'Connell, J. O'Connor, F. -O'Flaherty, A. Oele, S. OsborneiR.

Osanlston, Lord Oswald, A. Owen, Sir J. Packe, Sir C. W. Paet, Lord A.

Northumberland (North) 0 0 Pembroke (District) Leicestershire (South) Lichfield rule has a relation which deserves particular notice, on ac- i 1 r- 1 1- weather. The range of part's in vHfieh Paeet. Lord Sandwich Cheshire (Norths- Lord (. A. E.

Beaumaris .1 a TT; r. de eouni. or me extensive jiiuuence 01 inese morcincscious. Schools so aided must, in order to fulfil the conditions of their Lordships' grant in augmentation of salaries, be. a house for fcheSmaater, of the extent before mentioned, or an eauivalent monev contribution, and a further M.

G. Cheshire (South) Eilice, Right Hon. E. Coventry Ellice. E.

St. Andrews salary equal at least to twice the amount of their Lordships' grant, without taking into account either the heritors' minimum legal stipend, or the endowment granted from the ranuersuui, Aivenon Palmer, R. i- Berkshire Palmer, R. Plymouth Parker, J. Sheflfield Packington.

Sir J. Droitwich Patten, J. W. Lancashire PatfisomJ. London- Paulet, Lord, St.

Ive's Pparsnn, C. Lambeth Pechell. Captain, Brighton Peel, Sir R. Tamworth Peel, W.Yates, Tamworth. Peel, Col.

J. Huntingdon Pendarves, E. W. W. Cornwall (West) RAILWAY INTELLIGENCE.

Elliott, Hon. E. Emlyn, Viscount Euston, Earl of H'vans, Evans, Sir De L. Evans, W. Ewart, W.

Fdgsn, J. fa*gan, W. -Farnham, E. Farrer, J. Fergus, Ferguson, Colonel Ferguson, Sir R.

Ffolliott, J. Roxburghshire Pembrokeshire -Thetford Haverfordwest -Westminster Derbyshire (North) Dumfries Wexford (county) Cork (city) Leicester (North) Durham (South) Fifeshire Kirkaldy (burghs) Londonderry (city) Sliiro (county) Kent (West) Lewes Pennant Carnarvonshire Argyles i ire nomination took place at Inverarv on Friday. Mr M'Dougall. of Gallanach, came forward and proposed Mr Duncan M'Neill, as a fit and proper person to be their representative in Parliament. Mr Campbell, of Auchindarroch, seconded the nomination.

The Sheriff having taken a show of hands declared Duncan M'NeiiL Dean of Faculty of Advocates, to be duly returned. Mr then addressed the electors at Mfsonsiderable.length. Ayr District of Bitsghs The' nomination for these burghs took place at Ayr on Monday. Mr Campbell of Craigie proposed the late member, Lord James Stuart, which was seconded by Provost Robertson of Irvine. No other candidate having been nominated Lord James was declared duly elected.

Buteshire On Monday, the Hon. James Stuart Wort- i ley was returned, for the third time, for this county, without any opposition, Sheriff Hunter, having read the writ and Bribery Act, called on the electors to nominate candidates, when Mr Campbell, younger of Stonefield; stepped forward, and proposed the Hon. J. S. Wortley.

Baillie Stewart, of Rothesay, seconded the nomination. No other candidate having been proposed, the Sheriff declared the hon. gentleman duly elected Mr Wortley then addressed the meeting. Clackmannanshire. On Friday General Morrison was this day returned for the counties of Clackmannan and Kinross, there being no other candidate in the field.

DUMBARTONSHIRE. The folio wing was the state of the gross result at 4 o'clock, when the polling closed for the first day Smollett (C;) s3g Robertson (L.) 294 Majority for Mr Smollett 242 Mr- Robertson then retired from the eontest, as he did not deem. it expedient farther to prolong it with such a majority against him. FIFESIIIKE. Fergus.

Balfour. Cupar, 88 159 Aachtermuchty, 133 119 St. Andrews (at 3), 64 162 Kirkaldy, 280 93 Ehe (first day), 86 114 Dunfermline, 183 113 Firmer, Sir E. 0 0 1 I 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 I I 0 0 0 0 1 1 I 1 1 0 1 Fitz Rov, Hon. H.

Fitznatrick. J.eW Qneen Connty Fitzwilliam. Hon. G. Petprhornni.li i.

111 IUC7I MlllUUGl, lUUipFlaeS RO' small amount of dramatic variety, such as qualifies the public to judge how far she possesses the capacity for exhibiting dissimilar characters. The pious mission undertaken by the stout-hearted the love-sick sorrows of the gentle Amina, the vehement passions of the revengeful yet sympathising priestess, and finally the chequered adventures of a heroine of our own times, offer a series of impersonations de manding considerable versatility in the artist attempting them and to say that Jenny Lind is charming in all is not too mueh. That we have hot yet beheld her in more than these four operas, is nowise surprising, if we bat consider that she has had to her parts and rehearse the operas during the time she has heen in London. But whilst I for me entirely comprehend the attraction of Jennv Lind's im- ing and aetmir, I am nevertheless somewhat surprised to observe the amazing extent to which she has captivated the town, or you find the most opposite classes concurring in the general enthusiasm. The old oper i-soer, stuffed full of reminiscences qf bygone glories, and jealous of their eclipse -the crusty critic, on his guard airainst raptures-the apathetic fashionable," of both sexes, long disused to emotions of admiration-the grumbling tenant of a high-priced seat, haif resolved to resist being pleased-the malcontent, disliking the management-the geaiaUover of true art.

open at ah pores to the ravishment-al! these and many more varieties of the public, seem agreed in pronouncing Jenny Lind to oe a new coinage of nature's mint, a girl of unquestionable jjenius. Weh, but if the expression of snch universal praise be prnof of Jenny merit, it is equally valid as an evidence that the English people are profoundly accessible to the touch of a master hand in matters of art. After what has heen seen in London for maDy weeks past, let no One affirm that our countryman and countrywomen are glow to acknowledge the power of genius. Their nice and sensitive sympathy with Lind best effom-rehshinsf; as they do, not only her Hchtevements in vocal science, but also her refined though unobtrusive passages-attests beyond diapute their possession of a potive feeling for the beautiful in musical art. reputation of Jenny for goodness, feminine general worth, lends to her person, in the eyes of our moral countrywomen, an interest rarely felt towards the members of her The furore for Jenny Lind is, to my mind; a subjeet for rejoicing with those who connect rSPi-HiUy t0 elevation of sentiment in a people.

Her example, too.of the possibility of firm self-control and moral rectitude, thoogh engaged in the most perilous of female careers, cannot fail of producing a salutary effect upon youthfal aspirants to similar -honours. There is but one drawback to the delight of possessing Jenny Lind i whwh is, the fear of never hearing her again. For it is cer-T tain that she qnits the stage at the end of iha year, to enjoy the well-earned repose aha longs to attain after nine years" incessant toil and excitement, P. in the Spectator? Fioyer, J. Dorsetshire Foley, J.

H. Worcester (East) Forbes, W. Stirlingshire Fordyce, Captain D. Aberdeen (city) Forster, M. Berwick Fortesuue, Hon.

J.W.Barnstaple Fortescue, Louth (county) Fox, W. J. Oldham Fox, R. M. Longford Fox, S.

L. Beverley Lewes Norwich Poole Biackbnrn Bridgenorth Reading Somersetshire (East) Newport (I.W.) Kent (East) Waterford Hereford Susses (West) Cardigan (District) Montgomery Berkshire St. Alban's Armagh Windsor Suffolk (East) -Berwick St. Alban's -Dublin (city) Stoke-on-Trent -Dover -Richmond "Worcester Merionethshire -Cornwall (East) -Poole Perfect, R. Peto.

S. M. Phillips, S. R. -Pilkington, J.

-Pigot, Sir K. -Pigott, F. Pinney, W. Plowden. W.

H. Plumptre, J. P. Power, TV. M.

-Price, Sir R. -Prime, R. Pryse, P. Pugh. D.

Posey, P. Raphael, Rawdon, Coi. J. D. Reid, Colonel.

-Rendlesham. Lord Kenton, J. C. -Repton, G. W.

J. Reynolds, Rieardo, J. L. -Rice, E. R.

Rieardo. O. Richards, R. -Robartes, T. A.

J. Robinson, G. R. Rollestoh, CoL Romillv. J.

York and Newcastle Railway The half yearly meeting of this company was held at York on Monday Mr Hod-son in the chair. In their report the directors declared a dividend of nine per cent, per annum, with a surplus of 260. The Newcastle and Berwick. Rais-wat. A meeting of this company was held immediately afterwards, In their report the directors declared a dividend of five per cent.

the holders of the (guaranteed) shares in the Newcastle ana North Shields branch. The York and Newcastle, and the Newcastle and Berwick Railway Companies are now united under the name of the York, Newcastle, and Berwick Railway Company. The traffic returns of the consolidated line amounted last week totne large sum of lljSSl 2. lid. Edsnbcrgh axd Northern Railway.

The official inspection of this line, preliminary to the public opening, is fixed to take place at the end of the present month. The works on the line, from. Burntisland to Cupar, are allbat indeed there only remain a very few yards of effi-banking at the latter town to be finished. The permanent rails are laid throughout, with that exception. At tw Burntisland terminus, the offices and station sheds areaIo finished.

They are handsome and substantial erections. A portion, of the locomotive plant, consisting of five engines, aoa a large stock of carriages, has been delivered, and ready start whenever the line is opened. Caledonian. The portion betwixt Carlisle and BeattecK will be opened about the end of the month. So certain are the railway officials of being able to do this, that the contractors for horsing the mails betwixt Beattock and CarittiSj have got notice from the Post Office that their services joi not be required after that time.

Mr Croali hascontreo with the company to forward passengers, per coach, msn Beattock to Edinburgh and Glasgow, betwixt which pK the line will not be completed for a considerable time. Railway Traffic From official rstarns it appesajwas the amount of traffic, for the last week, on upwards miles of railway, was HSSiKthm accounted for 4 for the, conveyance of passengers nage of goods, and a remainder of ,545 for paa5S? goods together, not respectively apportioned crease of 35J723 over the xtrrspondiiis weekof je7 Preestnn, Colonel Weymouth French. F. Roscommon Sussex (East) Snssex(East) -East Retford Leicester (borough) Frewen, C. H.

-Fuller, A. E. -Galway, Viscount Gardner, Richard 763 Mr Fergus (L.) -Mr Balfour (C.) 834 768 uasseii, J. m. enipcK Majority for Mr Fergus, 66 A V5T it UiDVi.m.n,A ran .1 Lf Gibson, Rt.Hon.T.

M. Manchester Gladstone, W. E. Oxford Uniersitv Glynn, B.C. Kendal 0 i.

i ue election oiare- presratative orthe htewartry tookplace at Kirkcudbright on Monday. Shenff Dunbar read the writ of election, and the kSE" xv rferDe5nte the bribery act. Mr Kennedy yr. of Nottinghamshire (South) 0 Devonpdrt Rothschild, the Baron Vs? aaauiana as sue representative London- L-de. RuSbraVF.

Gooch E. S. Snffolk (East) Cricklade Godson, Kidderminster f- Gore, Shropshire (North) farore, O. Sligo (county) Goring, G. Shoreham Gordon, Admral Aberdeeh.Ccnunty) GoolbiwnJRtoa.HCambeiaverdty Cower, I- Derby -V -v other candidate appearing, the Sheriff declared Mr Maitland amy elected.

Mr Maitland then came forward and addressed Rntherfnrd-, A. Rsrethcut Cast- 1 0 1 i Worcester LethBfKh London- viixyvrs great jen'gia. i Ar. ciiecnou lor ice county 01 oeiKirK took ace at Selkirk on Friday. It being well known that jiu uvuian, vasjav meet waaao.

Aberdeen Journal, and General Advertiser for the North of Scotland from Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland (2024)
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