f - PRINTED ASD PUBLISHED BY v j JAMES 31. BILL, Nearly opposite the Market-house. , We readily comply with the re quest of "Albert' in giving pub licity tov his juyenile product ion: We admire the sublimity of his sen timents, and would advise him to 1 endeavor To itoproveand cultivate his youthful genius', and ere long, we have no doubt, but he will rank among the best of oar mdderh writers. We invite him to our columns, particularly , when he the following :' ; FOR THE CHRONICLE. " ; to woman. It is not the smiles of a pretty face, nor the tint of thy -complexi on, nor the beauty Vnd symmetry of thy person, nor yet the -costly . robes and . decorations that com pose thy external beauty ; no, nor that enchanting glance, which thou darteth with such lustre on the man thou deigneth" worthy of thy affection. It is thy pleasing de portment thy chaste conversa tion; thy sensibility, and the puri! ty of thy thoughts; thy affable and open disposition ; thy sympathis ing with those in adversity; com forting the' afiSicted; relieving the distressed; and above all, that hu mility of soul, that unfeigned and pure regard of the precepts of Christianity.! These virtues con slit ute thy loveliness, r Adorned but with those of nature and sim plicity, they will shine 4n compa rison with the radiant beams of the grand luminary Vbf Light, and dis play to man the, loveliness of wo man,and assure him that thy beau ty consists not in the tinsel orna ments which decorate thy person; but iti the reflection of the recti tude and serenity of a well-spent life, that soars above the transient . -. ffhv nqno 'oval AniiAii Iiava '4hn n py spirit will soar to regions of e ternal bliss. : : : ALBERT.. FOREIGN. Belowr we lay before our rea ders accounts from Liverpool to the 5th ult which are rather, in terestingj as they afford some in- uicHtiuus 01 ine uisposuion ana strength of political parties in England; and announce an event of considerable importance as ha ving occurre recently in France. On the meeting of Parliament, there was, of course, some shift ing of places while the Ministe rial benches received ; new occu pants from among the Whigs;1 many of th e Tory members who . supporteoTthe lateIihistry, took seats" pn the ;0)jbsite:s1de As was to harjeen - exped the discussions were vi61ent;but JlrJ Cannings is said to :bave put forth all his strength to encounter the storm, and doubtless he bore himself gallantly. V- ';, ; The order for the disbanding of tne ixatienai uuard ei Pans that celebrated corps which has existed through all the successive changes of Government, from tb first dawn of the 1 Gallic Revolu tion down to the present time is a strong measure on the part of tne t rench Alimstry; and the cir cumstances which led to it must either have been of a very alarm ing or most provoking character'. Perhaps King Charles X. howev er, in imitating the recent exam ple of the Ottoman Sultan in put ting , down the Janissaries, may find to his cost that he has less malleable materials to deal with, f 1 Pet. Int. j LATEST FROM ENGLAND. By the ship Hudson, Capt. Champlin, the editors of the Commercial Advertiser have re ceived London papers to the eve ning of the 5th of; May; and to tne politeness- ot Uapt U. they are indepted for loose papers to the same date. " I The new members of the ad ministration received from the King the seals of their respective smces on tno auta April. t r ariiament re-assembled j on on -Tuesday, the 1st of Alay, and the public curiosity tfas "at tho highest pitch, on the occasion. The avenues to the housb were crowded to such a degree; that it was only with great difficulty that Mr. Canning and Mr. Peel couid enter. . t .t Z ... " . "The House presented a sin gular appearance,' as to; the posi tion of nian)rof its.members. At fivetfclocic, Mr. Canriirig entered and 1 obk his seati ? ht his bsual place, oh the Treasury side. Mr. Peel was on the second seat near er the bar' on the ministerial side of the I house. : Sir Francis Bur- dett and Mr! Tierney, were on the Bench immediately behind Mr. CanHing,. Jiavtflg quitted the pla ces -which ihey formerly occupied on the opposite side ofXhe House. VHf; lirougnam was" at the further s . ena ot tne thurd bench behind JlJr. Canning: and JWr Calcraft. on the floor,- near r that fight Honorable Gentleman, Sir Robert Willson also took a JWInisterial , seat, i Orf the opposition' benches were .se veral JVembers in the habit of sit ting on the ministerial side of the liouse. ; In the side galleries, ; to listen to the debate, were seated the Efshops of Litchfield; Coven try, Bath, and Wells; the Duke of JNoriolk; the Jlfarquisses of Sligo ana Aylesbury; Lords Seaford, Byron, Ravensworth, Roden, Hardwicke, Bexley,, and Farn ham; Earls" Fitzwilliam, Darnley, Carnarvon, and Cooper; and seve ral other .Members of the upper House." ' ' - 'I j . -. . "The Debate 1 was opened by the late Mt Secretary Peel, on a motion to issue a writ for the elec tion of; a member to supply: the place of Jlfr. Sturges Bourne, who has taken Mr. Peel's place in the ministry. . JWr P. ; took this op portunity to sexplairi. the reasons which had prompted him to leave the Jf administration He quoted often from a speech of Mr. Clo ning's, when he resigned his seat in the Cabinet, in 1807, to show that he Mr. Peel) had been go verned by similar considerations in the step he had now taken Jlfr. PeeFs speech, was distinguished by a display of much talent. 4 , v Sir Francis Burdett , and JlJr. Brougham made eloquent speech es," explanatory-to-their- ? icvvs, and avowing ; their determination to support the new administration If they can. ; , .-.M Sir . . Thomas Lethbridge -and Mr. Dawson, who? have gone to the opposition benches, assailed the new ministry." They expres- wu, mut-u cuagnn, ana stigmatis ed the union of the' Whigs with flfr: Canning one of the basest co alitions, which the country had ever witnessed, and attacked the Press as being " corrupted to the very heart's core.0 Mr. Canning made a most tri umphant speech; , and ; we shall hereafter , invite our readers , to peruse it with the attention it de serves, not only as a piece of elo quence, but as containing the true view to dc taken ot the subject by all the sincere friends of catholic mancipation He has not made at a cabinet question: but as he informed the" house; the very fact .01 nis being Injomce.rmust pro mote 'its ultimate -success. Nc thing, says the editor of the Sun can: now injure it but treachery Ton tne part ot itsprotessed friends 1 he Kight Hon. gentleman enter ed into a history of his political life as connected with the Catholic Question, and proredithe consis tency of his conduct in the most unanswerable manner. x ne eoiior 01 tne aun con cludes his. notice of the debate thus: . The whole scene was such as to leave nadoubt on any imDartial mind, as to the sentiments enter tained - towards him and his Gov ernment by. the Representatives of the English nation, and of the feeling out of doors, it requires no ordinary obtdseness to have a ny doubts as to who is the favor ite of the people." ; The sitting of the .House 'of commons on the evening of the 3d of Afay, was one of the most stormy that, has been witnessed for a number of years. Party spirit seems again to havereach ed no inconsiderable heiffht: and in. the words of Jlfr. Canning the standard of opposition has been now tairly unfurled," v .. i In the House of Lords, on the evening of the 2d of Jlfay, the ex- ministers entered on' their de. " W fence, and proved such a tota want Of .'concert ; on theib ; parts, that . the .bun doubts, whether Nr. Canning was authorised in cal- imsr tneir simultaneous . se.;sinn 'i stranere coincidence." 'The crin cipai speaxers, were,tne Jari ot luidon, the Duke of Wellington, the Earl of Mansfield, .Viscount Goderich, Earl Bathurst, Lord Nelville, the Marquis of Lans- down, and Lord Ellenbbroueh. It is :; rumored that Parliament will; be dissolved at' the ' close of the. present session, in order to givo iue new. mraisiry tne aavan tage of a new election. ' - ; The Duke of Wellington; has issued - a bnet ueneral Order f on retiring trom the cbmmahd'of the army;- " assuring thef general ofii- wrs dnuiroops 01 nis constant so licitude for theiri honor atid wel- fare."- ' l ' Di$bhnihg bfeXtUionaGuards. "i The French papers brine intel ligence of the Disbanding of the National Guards of Paris, in con- sequence of the disgust' expressed by them, ) ( accompanied bv the departure? from, the strict rule's of military discipline, at tho minis ters wno attempted to invade the liberty oftfre press; 1 " 1 - iThe Etbile.in giving the7 ; par ticulars, commences by a long de tail of the revinw of the Nnti Gnards pa Sunday the 29th of xxiu.jirestriuiogm glowing terms the ? animated exhiliatine scene put aaasr-r" unhappily the con clusion of the day did not answer to the begining." The Journal des Debats says A cry of ha tred of tjie minist ry resounded in the, crowd." It cren proceeded irom the ranks of the National Guards. Three or four legions uttered it reDeatedlv: ,. A j - - i w h of those which, in the presence of ine nuig, naa only given vent to acclamations f gratitude and loyalty, pronounced loud exDre's sions of blame against the chief minint k A 1 1 . mtutsiici, mey passea near nis hotel:. It is. said .that 'the king uaviDgv remarked t - one - of the Guards " who forerot his ntlriit presence, to think of the ministrV, approached, made him quit the ranks, or ordered him to be ra. shiered, and expressed his Royal ui.caauju. iy terms SO OfgUined and so firm" that the company ? to which he "belorigkl, shewed their approval by cries of Vive le Roi I" - The Mgemeine Zettung of April 29, . contains advices from Con stantinople to the 1 Uh, of April, wnicn siaie tne f orte to have re mained up to that period, adverse to any concessions in favor of the Ureeks. It is, however, added, that if the reports of the Greek successes", which have been re ceived should be confirmed, the Divan itself would be likely to claim that interference on the part pi ine cnnstian powers, which it now declines. V v; Brussels papers are to the 2d of JUay. . 1 he only thing: worth ex- iracung is tne spirited and wise aaqress 01 L.ord Uochrane to the Greeks previously to his joining ineir cause. ... - .. 7 Hydra, March 21. ; , The following ' is what Lord Cochrane, oh his arrival, said to the Deputies of Hydra, Spezjia, and Hermione : r . ,j , --, X Europe ' contemnlates .WitK' joyful participation your noblest ciiuusi u aoes not tear that you he again subdued. I am come to co-operate with you in your deliverance. I leave behind me in Europe powerful and gene rous men, who are ready , to suoi cor you. The - steam-boats will soon be here. The several Com mittees will send you money and provisions. The only thing that I fear is, the discord which I hear prevails among you. I will not listen to what any of the parties say, I only tell you and announce to you that if you think fit to a gree .together, and to act in uni. son with me, Greece will be deli vered, and that in a short time. By acting otherwise you will he ruined, and I shall soon forsake you. Lord Cochrane then an nounced the speedy commence ment of the naval campaign. ; FOREIGN. Arrivals from Enrfand nave ta. cently been in rapid succession; and our Liverpool dates at pre sent are as late as the 16th nH They furnish intelligence of con- huuauj lucreasrag interest, parti cularly as respects the naWt affairs of Great Britain. As the session of Parliament has progres- sed, the tiiture of the opposition to Mrl- Canning's Administration, has gradually developed itself, until at length it has assumed the most uerce and uncompromising cnaracier. 1 nose who began with professions of moderation appear not long to have abided by vucir jruuiises io- give tne; new Cabinet a fair trial- and. th row. ing off all diseuises, lantiae as violent as vulgar-is attributed to some ot the would-be leaders in the Houses of Lords and. Com mons individuals who, if not dis tinguished for talents, yet speak ia a tone ox commence which would seem. to imply a conscious ness of strength in, some of the o ther essentials of political warfare Such a state of things has not ex- wwv . u mat iuviuu ior many years. 4 The ' excitement would seem to he universal, and to nir- vaae an classes and conditions-of men,'- -y.v'-fv-;. '.-'t--' l f ; ' While the euardian power' is thus agitated, the belligerents of w cumsura uave seized tne on- portonity to strike n blow at each oiner, possibly tor remembrance sake: It becomes England at an early day to taker ; a derKivA stand in relation Ho t Spain" and Portugal-eithW to adiost ters finally and permanentlv be tween them; or leaye them to set tle their differences in their own way, -' .-' ; .v :r . . .. - ' In France, the disbandtocr of the National Guard,, although1 . it came upon the people bv surori yet from a similar measure" bavin? .... , o uccu auopiea aoout tne same time j io a neighboring Kingdom, would seem rather to have been tho exectttioB of a perfectly ma tured plan than the-result ofanv sudden resolved The French Opposition lay it at the doot of the new Head bf the Holy Miatict, the Emperor of Austria.V and re proach their Ministers with being ficui, 10. joreign . xnjiuence. However, be "this as it may the proceeding was extremely "harsh; and? has given a shock to public feeling. Which; ere it cease its vi- pralions, may be productive of important consequences to France and to Europe. V'- From the Greeks ' 'and Turks, there is no news of moment. The Commercial advices; , we think, upon the whole, are rather more encouraging than our previous accounts. : - ; TPet tnt' r THE CROPS, ETC. - Wei and those of . oar fcllnw citizens who joined with us, in commumcatmg to the world, tnrougn the columns .of this paper, the scarcity of 1826. orra. sioned by drought, inciured at tne time, the censures of the proud and the selfish. In the whole course of our editorial m- reer, there is nothing which upon teueciion, gives us more sincere pleasure, than that tve have been, unoer providence, one of thn greatest causes of mitigating the distresses of the oeoDle bf thU and a part of the counties adjoin- uunug . tais iime 01 scarcity, which may now be said to h t 9n end. One class; of - peoDle ba been disappointed those nim noarded up the necessariM nf life, for high prices-and a few of anotner class may have been in duced to purchase at prices a lit tle too high at first. The over timmid and cautions will crenerallv do wron-the usurer,' the extor tioner and the opcresser desert to, be disappointed; and'we have met satislaction ol knowing that many of thoso who 'held tin far monopoly, ha ve the misery of see ing tneir Hoards or gram. upon hand, with a . prospect of never getting clear of them, except by me aid 01 tne worms. IJat to our generous and enterprising fellow-citizens, above and below, and to the North and in particu lar to the high minded and bene volent merchants of Petersburg and Halifax to the sturdy and persevereine: waErsroner of Orano- and Caswell and Person we de sire to express our rmhaimrforl gratitude and of the irreat bodr of our fellow Citizens, for their constant and reasonable" relief in ime of suffering and tribulation Much is also due to the self deni al, the econemy and the benevo lence ot most ot the wealthy inha bitants amomrst ourselves. The v have wiped the tear of distress from the eye of the mother, cry ing for bread for her starving children.'. W ;Sw: 1 Heaven once more bee-ins to smile t upon the people of this beautiful region.. wheat of Oats, of poW ;il f. ry garden esculent, arexcjcVt and ' abundant, beyonduj sah'guine. calculal ions. ' - 'it---:'i;'.pnthe combg 1th of jjj. ptople should meet in aplansjfji. ! . and return thanJis to,him;0 'gireth and who can tr&e awJ tlw .41.13 uiuugm us so iar sas throcgh the year of famine. ! V should- continue those Lnlrfa n industry and economy which.ac r - vcojiiy uaa imposed upon u' trxx in a few years wo may hope! tfist r with abundance, confidence- be- tween creditor and idebtor it-hii r . ww. uugdliuu VUl CeaS-f fJtKj : money become as plenty as now scarce. ' ! Yi ; '-Knowledge -is all ihniU i-r: sue to produce confidence, r Our people can work out if the fcni wiuci UlCUllOrS Will hitrn - ozienceProperty will risifed - . stored. Warrtnton RrpoAeiv. 10 ourn a house ol whir h " : ' 5i i win, is ant- tal; bat if be has a lease, it is 01 It- t tt misdemeanor ". Tr ,1 JL ' ..w m wpiiu crrmc-rto wounH a maa is only a misdema comedian, who performs in a tUe ':' aire rovaf. 19 a rnnt lLj' J it the same comedian V lire same cnaracter in ; a the'rb ' which wants the stamp of ro'yajlr ''u A gentleman of lanre -nrninv - 4 may hunt on the ground of a mau: r 01 small property, while tb ex njaa v . 01 small property mav nnt-hri ...... - . a 0 4 umuuvii; .7 ' w v mm r m u L4. I u w-t- Frt 11 mm bers; of Parliament canrmf ' r rested for debt, but their crediiort ma2' : , : t London 'PatieZ' ' 1 & Simmary of 'SuTmixai. h - : militia company at the e'ffstwairaa iuy7 marcnea lrom one town td.tm. maran many excellcxiW. tcnus . 'Jour men in RocheTuf have tumbled from a cotton faetSy. A murder in Pompey a sxMlL Tuscaloosa, a breach of prowiSia troninOMo. The .JA-.: Uedford. peoDle htrv Auljri-d keep sober on the 4th of Juli tai&s ot rye in Buck' county fW grown to the height f VAit great ryes Caterpillars a?e cuftin PUT?n surgeon "rifttM iiazette Bars, in- mbf ukt good newspaper is a good thm: bo nV4 Wtero editor exclafeak. Oh! for an ounce of common 4cn)ei: a SIXGULAR WILL. . Droitwich was a few daysl disturbed from the even te&V' of its quietude and industry.luer the following singular circumsan. -ces. - An individual, . who S iuxA been .for some time hundred among . its ' inhabitants and who having attained the. agjof nearly three score years, thought ' it high time that he was nm-bered-'-elsewherercnt sbcytgJib thread of life by cutting his tifeat: i Xer,;AoweTr aGcomplisgioj the direful act. . b m,? kv r -3:: lowing v extraordinary arranW ments to be observed at his fiane- ' ral,: especially, enjoining anol4 woman, livim?' nhnnt r. -J:- lrom the homnrrh i cale them nftpr k; .k iiii .heirs and sucrManr.'. '.f take care that they were scrgpu Iously attended to, upon pdnv3f a K . visit from him hereafter, ?Vaftli palo - hmses of the moon;,, rechm ? mending hen at the same timi.. come and see the " cn" Hftlbo ay was to be deposited in thereof On with k; cnA . V , v-wca uu, a penny io be placed in onohand, andJa5ialC penny in-: the other;'by.his ;ide was to be put two minatultitfi-d the sheet upon which his mbLcr was laid out; and upon his bret a ; siUc -bag, formerly belonging to ... J .a,t body being deposited in thejfhh the mourners arid carkrs-4vr$ in stantly to AnfTiht.: Mk?-'.:'2ii' -uv.ujvu au it. i j iirn Mil,. menu, disperse and atrain ; the bridge; from thence they 4r to run to a public-house; ulcere .uej were , io sing one song r.nd -two psalms, and aftemards drink "to his manes " cotllil drunk! The whole ? of I these strange injunctions wre afteli'ded to the last, as will be gues$M,-to the very letter, and in the; Pres ence of. numbers, whomllieir whim and eccentricil v hak'-cnl.' lected to the scenes at wfciefcibey wmch surrounded her coffin bn v , were enaaed.-wrcrfrrr?nzdj it I :. . ";' fir;- "i'-V . 4 . ? taV'. ; it-