19 SEPTEMBER 1835, Page 9

From the newspapers of Upper Canada, we find that there

is not that perfect contentment with the system of Colonial Government which has been said to prevail. In the ?mud° Correspondent, just received, we find the following grumbling paragraphs.

" sir John (Colborne) and his Council have laid their covetous hands on the pleasant green C0111111011 west of the city, and sold and parcelled it out among themselves and their creature:. Such ronduct is dis,yaceful : the highway robber risks his neck, but the man in °thee in Canada takes away your money or your property in a pleasant sort of way, and retires in peace on a pension when unable to plunder von anv more. If Sir John and his Court, and the Board of Ordnance, and 14, liowning Street, were so far forgetful of the health and comfort of the citizens, and of the beauty and ornament of the environs of Toronto, as to seize hold greolily of the Garrison Continuum as their private spoil, the citizens, or the civic authorities they have chosen, 'herald carry their remonstrances to London." " There was a pleasant spot of four hundred acres, in equity the property of the people of Stamford. Our precious,: Tory Governor gave a deed of it, the other day, to the • Established Church' as a glebe ! Of such a Governor and such a Church surely the Canadians are every way worthy !"

Abolish slavery in the United States; what is to be done next with a black population equal or superior to the Whites in number, hithei to kept much on the terms of beasts of burden, flogged and fed, and which now, on the supposition, need not be fed, must not I c flogged, any longer? What are they to do? They will he railed Ii, e ; but not a white fellow citizen, from Maine to Mississipoi—nO, not the most zealous friend of Negroes—but will shrink from their touch, hat will shun all human dealings with them, but will keep clear of them as from pollution! They will find themselves abreast of a race of supe- rior intelligence, superior means, and rooted hatred to theirs. What , will they do?—fight, perish, or migrate : the last seems out of the ques- ; tion ; there is no part of the States will harbour them on the lowest terms of human commerce and charity. They will scarce perish without a struggle; they will scarce conquer in such a struggle, unless the dissolution of the I7nion shall have previously taken place, and unless the White inhabitants of the Southern States shall be more enfeebled in vigour and in numbers than they are at present, in com- parison with the progress of the Black population.— Globe.