r r oj kingston w oy ms 2fec regti nec popu0 sbd utkoque vol 12 saturday february 5 1831 no 32 literature oiipiujl for the chronicle ct stuartff the royal line of stuart was as steadily unfortunate as any ever recorded in histo ry their misfortunes eonliouetl with un- aunicd succession during 390 year j robert 3d broke his heart hecauso his etdest sou hubert tvns starved to death aod u youngest sod jame was made a captive jame 1st after having beheaded three fhis nearest kindred was assassinated by bn fttvuuucio who ias tortured to death or it jjims 2d was slain by the bursting of a fhece of ordnance iamc3d when flying from the field of wattle waft thrown frum his horse and mur- jtttii cottage into which he had been 4hmvd tor rmistancet ftttcs 4th fell in floddeo field james 5th died of grief for the wilful tuia of his army at sol way moss henry stuart lord daroley was assas- ainated and then blotvr up iu bis palace mary stuart was beheaded jq eoglaod i james 1st aod 611 of scotland died not without suspicion of being poisoned by i ord buckingham charles 1st was beheaded at whitehall charles 2nd wn exiled for many years and when he ascended the throue became ashivcto bis pleasure ho lived n sen sualist and died miserably jatnc2nd abdicated his crown add di ed in hntmhmeni auoe aftern reign which though glo rious was rendered unhappy by party di- liuetioo died of a broken heart occasion ed bj the quarrels of her favorite servants the posterity of james 2ud remain pre scribed jwul exiled out ofi romau ernperors from julius ctrr to coilaniine the grenl only 13 of thorn encountered the las enemy in the ordinary course of nature pizovixcial parliament house of assembly from the york courier mr meardsley had no objection to the prukd enquiry but he did not approve of the alteration proposed by the attorney ge neral in the mode of joying the judges of the district courts he had never heard any complaint of the present mode of pavin these judffes by fees of court nor did he think that mode was calculated to encourage litigation idhe judgrs of the district court were to be paid by fixed salaries it would increase rtte patronage of the executive and there- jbre he ahoud resist uie contemplated altera tion altho he sliould support the motion for the address because he thought it very desi rable in ect l information sought for therein exhibited daily in the lobby for be informa tion of the public mr jcetchwn from the comntee to wait upon his excellency with the atjdic for in formation respecting the estate ofthc laic v weeks esquire reported the following ply gentlemen iwtll direct the proceedings mentioned in the address to be forwarded to uk house on motion of mr solicitor general or dered that messrs burwcll anf jcssup be a committee to draft an addtfrw of condo lence to his majesty on the death ol his late majesty and congratulating hu majesty on his accession to the tiironeo1 lis ancestors on motion of mf jones ordered that his excellency message on the subject of roads and the observation transmitted by his excellency in the same subject be referred to the standing committee on roads and bridge the marriage celebration bad was read a second time and on molion of mr attorney general j ordered that the bill be taken into consi deration on monday next and that it stand first on the order of the day agreeably to order the imprisonment of debt abolition bill was read a second time and referred to a select committee of the whole house mr- martin in the chair the house resumed and the chairman re ported progress and obtained leave to sit again on tuesday on motion made and seconded ordered that messrs elliot thomson duncomb and john willson do form a com mittee to superintend the printing done by order of the house during tc present session mr bercay obtained leave to bring in a bill to establish a registry of births marri ages and deaths i n the province the bill was road ami ordered for a second reading tomorrow on motion ol mr perry ordered that 100 copies of the bill jusl read be printed for the use of members mr jarvis gave notice of a bii declaratory of so much ol the 3l8t geor 3nj as relates to the qualifications of electors lor time in the province mr jarvis gave notice of a bill to alter the times ol silling of the quarter sessions mr j wilson gave notice of a motion for reading the journals relative to the petition of w thomson and others of the home and gore district living on the lake road between york and burlington mr duncomb gave notice of a bill for the better preservation of health mr mackenzie gave notice of amotion for an address to his excellency requiring a return of clergymen or religious leathers of every denomination who may be in there ceipt of monies or emoluments paid out of the public treasury of the province or from the society for the proportion of christian know ledge together with the sums paid to each and the funds or sources from which they are paid adjourned to monday mokdav 17th mr jessup from the committee to present the address for returns from the treasurer and clerk of the peace of the niagara dis trict reported that his excellency liad been pleased to make the following reply gentlemen the district treasurers account will soon be prepared and shall be laidbefore thehouse the return requested in the address from he of parliament nv coqtem- jlr bijwtll would object to any and eve ry system which united ihe right of ecle hratiog matrimony to the ministers owu coogrcgntiuus or which would in any man per give a preference lo one sect over nim- kl uv- he agreed with the ally general j iu the necessity for alteriog the law which onw exited for granting licences hut he did not participate in the fears of that hon gentleman iu wganl to clandestine mar riages for ho tbeiljto lllrl lil apprehen sion need be coirtaicd on that score ho thought that s bit as i r merly passed by hoih libjfc would oostver all the purpose 0 platted and nothing less than hnl lc legislative council were already lewd to the support of that bill and therefore bii thought that the house should adhere to that upon the preseut occasion aodoot endan ger the passage of so important a measure by the introduction of new provision in which the other branches of the legislature might uotcoucur afr alty general said that he liked li berality in fact not in professions he de nied that the bill formerly passed was any thiog likeso liberal as that which he now proposed the framing nf that hill in order to give it the appearance of liberality had enumerated a great number of sects and some of those sects were described under two or three different names hut there were several denominations who were omitted altogether ia that bill which he thought was unjust and illiberal he would have no omission of this kind but would extend the right to every dcuomiuaiiou without prcfeieuce or distinction why he would ak were quakers omitted is that hill m hat had tbey done that they mite be excluded from participating iu the benefits of ibe hon and learned gentle mans liberal bill and why were jews of that gcutlemaus auomev general mosl nncoui eous particularly on the part of j tion iu questiou against sir folio colborne the hon ruemserlroin went worth mr vil- por did be thiuk such a fting could have 4 liber also left out of the pale liberality he tbo was au mlvocnh sion of the right llot be withheld v ney would never consent to tiny bill which excluded these or siuy other sect for creo though there might uot be the province ho belonged stje zsssz7eest sfis iftjfte disrict any w to let the attorney general bring in a bhi at once lor remedying those evils and far simplifying the practice in those courts mr mackenzie said a good deal jwr sic nab liad ru objection to increas ing the jurisdiction of the district courts and the courts of request and he should certainly advocate the propriety of changing the pre sent mode of paying the judges of the lor- racr which he thought was calculated to en courage litigation he thought the district courts as at present constituted were a curse to the country the jurisdiction of 9 wiy quite contemptible and ought to be rais ed indeed it was bis intention to bring in a bill for altering and amending the district court laws and for increasing the jurisdic tion of thai court the lawyers tecs had been complained of but he said thev were very contemptible not more than i2alio- fther while the disbursements were very avy he concurred in the opinion of the ltofney general relative to annual costs of litigation in the country which he had no doubt amounts to 30 or 40 thousands pounds no no front the solicitor general he should net vote for the address proposed by the atlofnev general for he thought it would be diilicult if not impossible u obtain the re turns required particularly from the courts of requests for he knew many very worthy magistrates who would be incapable ol writ ingour copies of the records of their courts the house divided yeas messrs attorney general berczv beardsley bucllcook w crook howafd jessup jones lewis kctchtim mackenzie randal uoblin shaver thompson and warden 17 nays messrs brant burwcll duncombe elliott a- fraser r frazer ingersfl jar vis bjfcallj a mcdonald d mcdonald mcmartin mnab macon mount robin- win samson sol general vankoughncu while and w- wilhonl the question was lost majority i on motion of mr jarvis seconded by mr robinson the clerk read the journal oflast ssion relating to the petition of alexander wood and thomaa stowed and mr jarvis obtained leave to bring in a bill to vest in cer- tim tntktms the public property in the tnwil f york known by the namo of tile mariceteqnnro iuiday january i4th83l ci molion of mrw crooks seconded by bran orclrcdthat acopyoftho journal bo ommittec on the marriage bill mr berczy in the chair the sltty general proposed the adoption of the preamble of his bill which was des cribed as a bill to authorise persons of all re ligions denominations to marry within their respective societies 6w when we entered the house the ally- general appeared to be alluding to objecti ons which had been adranced against the lim itation of the right to the societies to which the ministers respectively belonged and he argued that if the right to marry persons of e- vcry denomination was conferred npon a ii mi nisters without limitatioi it would in that case benecessary in order u guard a gainst clan destine marriages to ettablish a system of li censing and to make it hcumbenl on agentefor selling marriage licences to satisfy them selves of the eligibility of the parlies and that there were no legal dioiualificatjons to the marriage before they issued any license which might be done by a certificate from tbe parents or guardians if the parties some security of tnis kind tgainst clandestine or improper marriages hecontended was indis pensable for it was a veil known and crying evil that abuses of ibis kinddid exist that persons are sometimmamed three or four tunes over which was tot only a religious and moral but a civil cvil the legitima cy of children and t hi rights of property against which it was thrinterest of every per son in the country to ftiard the existing provincial statute undui which ministers were at present licensed to giwtmto the marriage ceremony was exceedingly vague and indc- finite it limited the privilege to the church of scotland calvinislsxutherans mcnonists and tunkards thus excluding not onb the methodists and other but in fact itfree fourths of the presbyterians uf upper canada if the law were strictly adhered to inasmuch as the latter did not bebng to the church of scotland the only wv in which they could obtain a licence was by representing them selves to belong to one vfthe sects numed in the shttule which wasis bet a misrepresen tation and wascalculatfd to give rise to dif ficulty and embarrassment tbe necessity thpreforc tor olleringaivj amending the laws of the province on thi ibjcct was uite ob vious and hn wonhl dn u in the mostcfleclti al manner uot by odah4c he names of iaddi- lionaljiects or denominations hut by confer ring the right upon ml religious dcnuininn- tion without dbunction 2u pcrsous iu to those sects they should bo entitled to the tame right as those which had the most uunterous ad herents why he would again ask wero calvaoist notoamed in tbe bill in ques- liou aud fur what reason were catho lics to be excluded from a participation iu the benefits nfibac bill ihe knew that it might he said ihat tho latter wero already legally okiijm to celebrate the marriage ceremoiy but ho was of opinion that as the fcw now stood catholic ministers could marry any persons unless both parties wluuged to that church and evou in rhesifiases he was not satisfied that such marriages were legal but he was quite satifiedthat marriuges celebrated by ca tholic ijfieatti between parties i one of whom nily belonged to that church were not legdl aud thorefore in order to re move alldnubts on the subject it wasae- cessary if religious sects were enumerated at all thh catholics should be included for theiieasons tborofore which he had adduced it was evident that tho hill which had bee so much eulogised by the hou and learned member mr bidwell was not fio libera as that which he the atty general proposed to introduce the for mer cofifiocd the right to particular sects therein enumerated while the latter ex tended t every sect without distinction ho wow not deny that the bill advocated by the hw- od learned gentleman em braced areat majority of the people of upper uuuathi4mfircmjut wapiti ways able lo mind themselves it was the mi nority who more particularly required tbo protection of that bouse and he would oot consent to that bill which did notconfer the son who would have been the very first to been reported with regard 16 the que have crienotit in a voice of thunder had such tiou before the house he rfpeatod that he ft course been pursued toward him he ob jeebd to the aty generals bill for two rea sons first because it limited the right to th congregation of the ministers who performed the marriage cere iony and second because it did not provide for the confirmation of mar riftgee already celebrated he tliought the attorney generals bjll was less liberal u its provision than whicl he mr p had intro duced and therefore he should persevere i his support of the latter he entirely concur red in the view which had been ttfkcn of um matter by the hon member from lauirk my moms and was willing to adopt suggestions of that gentleman with regard to the introduc tion ito the bill of those seels which bad bet nerly omtted there were some however- munitarianschildren of peace c ihe iiro w might require sone tiwmlwmj but if it ws thought proper tly might be named also with these alterations be trusted the house would vote for bis billki preference of that of the attorney genera mr john wilhon approved c tbe gene ral provision of the attorney generals bill although he could not consent to some of tho details particularly that wb re- rod marriages to be celebrated betwixt hours of 10 nod there was no kind tiou of this sort ties particularly those who had a great distance to travel to much inconvenience and therefore he would not consent to it be would have nil religious sects put upon a par in this respect with he church of england under the present defective laws marriages voi often performed which was not legal die knew an instanco in which a presbyter ian minister in the gore district n mr king had married a cou ple one of whom was a methodist preach er and the unman not a member of bis own society now ibis was u marriage which would not he considered legal un der the present law some amendment of the law was therefore necessary- it was to him a matter of surprise aud regret that tbe act which passed tho provincial legis lature two years ago bad not been nsscoted to which be thought was a great hardship that act was to removo existing penalties and disqualification and he could oot per- reive wljv lli majestys government bad nut assented to it he extended howe ver that tbe two objects embraced in tho former bill bad better be separated so that each should stand upou o own ground he had particular reasons for desiring a quit the for the most libera exteo- in question which could from any sect without do ing an injury to the country thousands of emigrants bad beeo induced to come u his province from an impression hat here no religious distiociioos existed but that nil denominations eojoyed equal rights in regard to marringes as well as every thing euc and yet when they came here with their families aod their properties aud em barked their all in the couotry they disco vered if they did not happen to belong to certain denominations they wero cxclud cd from an equal participation io those re ligious rights and they in cousequcuce be- come dissntisicd and disgusted wirh the country this was a state of things which ought not to exist nnd rbich be should ex ert himself to remedy mr bidwtu was surprised to see the hon member from wemworlh gt up and argue at such groat length about the neces sity for a measure which every member io the house except the solicitor general had long ago admitted to be necessary tbe preamble of the attorney generals bill was then put aud negatived wheu y mr perry proposed tbo adoption ofthe d 4 o clockshe thought i p of the former bill which gave of necessity for a limna- r to a desultory conversation on que which would subject par- of order and relative toftlrjobo cjmvcmq hjc but to have which sum rights upon that minority were secured the majority mr morris proposed the bill which had for merly passed both houses of parliament to that which was now proposed by the hon and learned alty general he gave the grea test credit to that gentleman for the very liber al sentiments which he had expressed upon the subject in question and he was sure that the country would also feel indebted to him but he thought tbe liberal opinions in the bill which he bad now prepared which he certain ly conceived as inferior in point of liberality to that which passed two years ago he hacl a particular objection to thatprovirion of tbe attorney generals bill which required min isters io go before a court of quarter sessions to obtain a licence and wbichlicence could not then be obtained unless at least sewn magistrates were present it was notofien that so large a number of magistrates attended those courts and hence ministers might be snh jijrfl to much inconvenience and delay if the bill of be hon member from lennox and addington omitted any sects which ought to be entitled to the rigid in ejection he bad no objection to adding lb- names of of those sects quakers for vasiance might introduced but he did rot think it necessary o name catholic i ihat bill because they already conceded themselves entitled to that right as well by the canons of their church as bv the constitution of the country lie bad a particular objection to the preamble of viie attorney generals bill because ifhe understood it right it insinuated a doubt as o the legality of marriges which had been already solemnized by ministers of the church confirmation of former warriages as a member of his owu famii having been married by a methodist w placed in the doubtful situation to which be had before alluded nevertheless he ftould not allow these persons to go to the united states as some did to get married 00t would he allow them to go to a chweh of england to do so which would be ft degradation to which be would never submit he re peated bis surprise ihat his kajestys gov ernment bad not assented to the former bill which he could oot account for un less it was to be ascribed w the misrepre sentation of certaio faciious pftfaobsi who were prowling about the cwwji pretend ing to preach the gospel of peace but in reality to propogato inischi doctrines about grievances which t no here hut in their own distempered imaginations and to et -siwiawrcs- lo iwlamatory peti- 1i0ds with 1lse gtdtaraatorypoti- purpose of sending iliorim for home government to makptinoos to the the people of the colony mi appear that with aod almost io open pre dissatisfied the provincial governmenb n iy it was notorious than j reali- peaceuhle contented nrm pplewere towards that government deposed ar burivclt was in favo liberal extension ofthe rigr of the most the marriage ceremony lilt to perform important for the house j he thought it ihat the bill of the hon g bear in imod lenoox and addiogtoo ifipntleman from assented to by both branch already been laturennd that therefore if of the legis- lifcelv bill to pass upon tl wfl the most siont lie present occa- the willsons motion lo separate tbe two pro- visions ofthe bill u when the solicitor general again rose he repeated bis objections to ihc bill in every shape which be should oppose ei- titer separate or together ijo tuid that the solemnization of marriage was a rite of the utmost importance to the country and upou which the titles lo real estates and tho rights of property depcoded the laws oo this subject therefore ought to be clear aud well defined in england the right belonged exclusively lo tbe establish ed church and so satisfied were the dissen ters uf the propriety of ihi limitation that they did not seek or desho imy extension of that right aud ho bolievcd would uot accept it were it offered them bocause they considered the present system afforded the best security for the rights of properly bo believed however that the unitarians had applied for au alteration ofthe law in ujluvnutjuevir lo right of marrying themselves n ccilain part of the marriage ceremony dispcoscd with when perfoiuied between persons of that denomination by a church miuistcr aud be thought a similar sys tem ought to bo adopted here because it af forded the best security for property which he believed would be endangered by the proposed enactment he alluded to the nose stale of marriage laws in scotland which were productive of the greatest evils by indreastug the number of persons v sects who perform this ceremony they in the same degree increased the difficuliy of proving marriages aod to some instances rendered such prnof utterly unattainable every body knew that there were persons calling themselves ministers going up aud down the country who were exceedingly ignorant pcrsous some of whom were iu- cnpable ui any thing more than merely writiog tbeirown names and who would be utterlyjiacompeicot to comprehend the nature or execute the duties ofthe proposed enactment and the consequence would he uliat eretansrthfc jfrtktatuw ivwf hctf- that erelong tbe legislature would be car- be cat led on to confirm more illegal marriages but if ight he pass upon solicitor general exp m j at the introduction 0 his 3u the hon nod learned aup for notwithstanding all thtfjej general io its favour he could uotf had bo wld necessity for it and on lift p rn because it would interferon mcojidi and of other religious denomitt yvi not approve of it he ihdv ney generals bill the mwt m ofthe two and be should 4 objectionable that most decided lyho rfrypp ver to amend the existiois u uliog how- extend the ri of murry m law auu lo which did put now enjoy secl that he would not go hdi but beyond of scotland a doubt which be now rne in his life expressed for tbn first ti beard and to which he certainly would never give bis assent for ihis and he other reasons which be hn named be would oppose tbe hill of the ag as it now slood in every stage mr perry requested that the proposition which he made the other instant to have the bill ofthe attorney general printed had not brrii concurred in because that voum have enabled hon members to have made hem- aelvea more thnroufthty acquainted with ihc provision of that bill helhoughl be bad wa- son tu conjp in ofthe course which was pur mied towards him whon he made the proposi tion n hh ho tcaeciwd tc tc occasion to notice some uk which had c nbroad reldj why the b vnultl take this reports alluded to hr l0 he c to inltucoc wny ine oui nimueu io n j the sanction of his mujcsi j2j22 p s government one of those reports wad ocllcncysir john couorn lts t that bill mil that ho bob ww with the british mwrpoiet hs prcv itssanctiouthis rjhj lhciho solictor ceqerp i t c- r ua natl tnc ex press au horny of sir john vi a 1 ir c v i i a co boioc turn- elr for declaring it to bo fc not an atom of foundation f v m he trusted therefure tk x aain be pruponted ho but the british govcrtuneut sntis of their owu for uot bill which he thought ww ovoh in plenso tbo people aud bo should therefore opv lhl cuunlr mr john tnitson dcdnrep ihcfir ol tho tmputa ii it would not tad no doubt had rood rca- auctioning that not cidcuhiicd tvhich such people had celebrated it were determined to extend the r would at nil events not grant that right to persons who deuied tho saoctity of the christian religion he would go ooe step beyond this however and one only he would allow the jews that privilege be cause thoy were acknowledged the peo ple of god although they had fallen from their high estate but be would neter al low it to every class of infidels who might spring up under some designation or other for he could neither answer m his con science or his god if he did so thcro was a sect in this province who called them selves the children of peace but they ought rather to be denominated the chil dren of wrath for they were not inheritors ofthe word of god and ought not there fore to he allowed the privileges of christi ans would the house contcr that privi lege upoo every illiterate wanderer who might prowl about the couotry and having harangued a parcel of pmple up ancas- ier and theo perhaps again at port ho would call himself a preacher and detnand tho right to perform the marriage ceremo ny he trusted that they vruuld not he had no objection to such people going a- boiic the country provided tboy preached the word of god but he wold never con- gent to such an indiscriminate exteusion of the solemn right io question from which dothiug but the most mischievous conse quences lo the rising generation and the rights of property could be anticipated he had often hchrd the united states quo ted as an exsniple of the good effects of religious equality hot he saw there the mostiudiicriminate liberty he had lately beard tiiol the posthumous works of mr jeffctsqu had been published ia that coun try by bis relative now though mr jef ferson was a great man an illustrious man no doubt yet these memoirs were calcula ted to do tbe utmost mischief on account of their infidelity they were more excep tionable thnn tho works of tom paioo rind if they had hceo published iu england the publisher would have hecu prosecuted nod so ho thanked god thoy would in this provioc but in the il 9 tbey were published with impunity- there woi a wumao hy tho name of fanny wright too who was propngating her diabolical doc- uiac all over that country without res traint or hindrance and was making thoo- sanda of proselytes to her infamous tenets would or ought such doctrines to he tole rated hereno watsure they would not if ahe attempted to do so she would cud herself iu the great brick building he in ferred therefore that tbe example of the l- states was mischievous and ouhttobo shunned rather tbao imitated io this coun try and these were his reasons for believ- 1115 that religjoo ought to be protected by law should the bill now before tbe houc be passed it would give a reljpotia character to persons who were not entitled to it which he would oot consent to with regard co the methodists although he was uo member of their society he had offfeo coutribuieo to their support aod lo therrf he wa willing to concede the privilege re quired beeottld not forget thru tbey were the first to convey religious instruction in to the wilds of xlw province nod the couix- try therefore owed them a load offrai- tuto there might be hud meo among them ut as a body he conceived ihem to be useful and loyal people he wftf wil ling too to place the cboreh of scovhnif upon a par in this respect itftbtha choreh of england because it wa ue of tbe es tablished religions of the empire fro would allow other presbyicriads rbe riu too because they already possessed- irini he did oot wish to take iny ihiog kttay from noy sect but tho english weslejurf methodists ha thooghf bad a greater ctam to ihe right io question that the ainvreff presbyterians because the former acknow ledged an english head and wero mot respectable and truly britiflb in their pfi ciplcs they tlid oof like some sects irt thiscouotry derive their power from aol acknowledge a foreign head aud receive their support from foreign aources hv could not help exnressiog himself in tw strongest terms of condemnation at tbo conduct of some persons in this province who calling themselves ministers ruo a bout the country interfering wirh politics ascending tbn hustings and using their re ligious functions iu propogaling the motr tediiious doctrines for the purpose of pol- liog down other sects aod of setting them selves up iu their stead it wts impossi ble for him adequately to express his iwl- ingsof indigoatiou at such diabolical con- dnct aod if there wore aoy membert of tbe society to which he alluded in that house or if there were aov tf its preacher ivltw tin liqr wtwliftj bocuudcie4lwiu- selves wo understand there were tno or three of tho ryersons present he wished them to understand what bis sentiments and feelings were toward then- he would dow conclude with n repetition nf hisoppo- sion to the bill dow before the house afr mactcemie said chat tbe learned s licitor geoeral had talked a good deal a- boot ifnorance but he mr mck really thought that tbe learned geotleman hitta- telf was the most ignorant man in tho houe tothcr day he got up aod told us that new york was govcrocd by a mob now he couldntlet theashesof poor mr jeflerson alone but roust need inform us that had his memoirs beeo published here or in england ths publisher would bato beeo prosecuted i when infect tlme vo- ry memoirs had been published in eug land aod reviewed by she edinburgh uo- view and the moroiug chronicle vhicu praised them to the skies thea tho learned solicitor must attack the metlto- duls for interfering with politics uul waa oot it very strange that dr stracban could iwi iife iimff rf tte ismjfh s lifetime aod yet no other preacher dared do so twas but tho oiber day that h mck saw dr strachaodowo atthodoo bridge surveying a whiikey ill but he ightsurvey whiskey still waoyne 0lw he might interfere io poiiiics andif io ifce legislati aodxcculipecoaf3v but the poor mtlhodista darenbtcyel talk about their political ribuiwithopt be i k abused for il then the itaroctigcu- tlemao must fetch ljwj wo thu floor what did lw want with her jsu posed thai if she jwd come her the iojmii- ed solicitor ffoflm have clapped hose ikthf creat house why didnt be conae dwii upoo mrs aoue royall the other day when she was holding forth ip the town o- ver whose desuuits that gentleiau parti cularly presiaedshe was ten times worse ihanpannf wrightl r but tbe d- her day that he mcr saw in tnepiffere that a rev mr bell ut at streftuvillo had heoo marryidg people io esquestn although he had no liceose to many any where except to thisdislrictl tfafaf we brought into a bourt of justice th ges would bo declarod illegal pss was auother rev person a mr- ayjrsf n i q vittoria who refused to djjrv couple because tbey didot come gw right time o day so they had toatbpall aod the fteujnormtt ight oight at a tavern they hadot mooeyeooogh to pay fdrftw breakfast then again there was an fc- ristocratic church of england mwilnerw- they call mr logger up at pmwjw married a couple tbe other rfey w cause they were not very wen dresse m into his house eet pflfet em eoelr inrtt the e eever in wouldotlet es- into the stable a table ben married em there assooo u thenusi was done the man knocked lb lw dow broke it au to pieces and then gave rev aristocrat suob a u eothefore in his lifer the distinguished legislator favored the house with a good deal more of eqnau interesting matter which we must leave iho readers imagination to jupplytor we imvnt room for imy more of it j afr bimi roso to reply to what had fiilloti from the hon- and learoed soilrttor general whilst absence he regretted mr hflkermaa the hwiso imntediatejy t tor ho had finished speaking tho ob jections which that hou nod leoroedgen- llcmanhad eprcsed against ibe billtoiv