OATMEAL

... Wanted, the Parochial Board of Fobgue, OLLS Best OATMEAL—to delivered at Fitend- URAHOHT. Offers, per Boil, may be lodged with Mr W tins ter. School of Forgue, before the Bth December. ABOLITION OU REGULATION OF BELL AND PETTY CUSTOMS; AM> and liegulation and Gas Works. GIVEN, that it is inteuded, th ...

SELECTED

... SELECTE]D. -NIRS. HAR1IS'S SOLILOQUY WHLE THREAIDING HEl e NEEbLE. t BY LADY DUFFERI. ( '(Frolm FisAers Dralvinie-yRoOe Scrap Book.) n Ah dearv me! what needles! well, really I must say s All things are sadly altered (for the worse too) since my day s The pins have neither heads nor points; tie needles have no eyes, And there's ne'er a pair- of scissors of thle good okd-fashioued size e The ...

Poetry

... Iloarp+ o lE Thy ANNEXATION OF CRACOW TO AUSTRIA. eave much pleasure in giving insertien to the ollng spirited lines and also to the author's pre. fol.inar5 remarks, with every word of which we licttiljy concurkd. N. S.1 iwth IeanrilY pinion, the annexation of Cracow is, with- nt txeption, he most barefaced combination of l ence and tyranny, recorded in modern history. ins. is a question of ...

CANADIAN SKETCHES

... CANADITAN SKETCHES. (From S~ir Francis fhead's 1En-riqrani.) IMajE T HE1! S A S oys. N'orf Tin the sumnrner. the excessive heat-the violent paroxsrens of fl Xed thunidir-the parching droughlt-the occasional deluges of rain- L aj e The sight of bright red, bright blue, and ether gaudy plumaged agair birds-nt theO brilliranrt humiming-bird, and of inunmerabledire-flres some tiliac -at ?? ...

WALES

... Education* ix Wales.—lt anticipated that the report of the Government Commissioners will be ready for presentation at the commencement of the ensuing setsion. The inquiry will extend to the hills and mining districts of Monmouthshire, where a large proportion of the miners and labourers speak only the Welsh language. J. C. Esq., commissioner for the midland and part the mineral districts, has ...

THE CRY OF THE HEART

... THE CRY OF THE HEART. Bread I bread I bread I oh father-father, dear I The pining children faintly said; And every pang they bear That father feels, who stands like stone In ghastly, grim despair; A hopeless, foodless man-undone, Opprest with mortal care. It. Bread I bread I bread I oh father-father, dear! Better that we this day were dead Than perishing slowly here I Each small, shrill ...

LITERATURE

... -- 2LITR TUB RB7 BLACKWOOD FOR NOVEMBER. The number for this month opens with a paper entitled ,it rlhboroufhs Dispatches, which gives a clear and in- terelt 1g detail of the campaigns of that celebrated corn- oander in teo years 1710 and 1711, as well as of the party ~riguesCat home daring the same period. The fame and of Marlborough excited the envy even of his own perareetle W~higs; but it ...

THE RIVER PLATE

... Falmouth, Thursday Evening.—Her Majesty's steam-ship Gorgon, Capt. Croutch, put in here to-day for coals her voyage from Buenos Ayres for Portsmouth. She left Monte Video on Sept. 12th, Rio de Janeiro 22nd, and Bahia 30th. Of course the chief topic of inquiry on the landing of her mails related to the definite settlement or otherwise of the River Plate affairs. It is said that Mr. Hood the ...

JOHN BRIGHT, ESQ., AT MANCHESTER

... * Manchester, Not. 19 . A meeting of the liberal dec tore was held last nioi. mthe Free Trade Hall, to the nomination madeta*.' Reform Association of Mr. Bright, as a candidate representation of Manchester, and to hear from him .1 position of his sentiments. There was a verv la»r_ George Wilson, Esq., was called to chair* W Mr Absalom moved, that this nf*. liberal electors of the Wrough ...

THEATRICALS, &c

... T.RFEATRICALS, &c. D- HAYMARKET,-A now comedy, in five acts, is, at all times, a subject of interest; but the production of a cosoedy which will last, is a matter of astonishment and public congratulation. The want of dramatic ability, in a tangible shape, is sometimes said to be the fault of themanagers, who refnsc to encouragethe legitimate drama, preferring rather to please the eye than to ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... Oil Wedlneslay Btiwee's nielo-draniatic comedy of -1i0eey was played at the Theatre Royal; and the careful exetlitlia- tion of the pie, e, thus by another performance atfoirled ns. but went to strengthen all old conviction that it belotirg to the very lowest class of its althor's imagiunise writlligI. Totally delicient in that meanest vet for a modern comedly indispensable dramatic requisite, ...

Public Amusements

... 3Ult Zi-o - - clft-tsi e ASTLEy's AMPHITHEATRE. An equestrian drama called Le Cheval du Diable, which has been played with great success at Franeoni's, has been adapted to Astley's, with the title °d 'tlhe Demon -lotse. The human hero of this drama to a young miller of ambitious views, who, by a compact with the powers of evil, becomes poszesse of a deoan liorse, on co0dition that every ...