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392 THE LEADER, [No. 422, April 24, 1858...
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CONTINENTAL. NOTES. That narrow and -unc...
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STATE OF TRADE. In all the great seats o...
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ACCIDENTS AND SUDDEN DEATHS. An eccentri...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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The Sardinian Conspiracy Bill. This Deba...
meanwhile was without a general , and lacked confidence in its chiefs . You may imagine what I suffered . One dav , the general in question said to me , 'I cannot accept . ' And , as I insisted , he at last told me that he had seen a report to General Cavaignac , in which it was stated that we had only 10 , 000 or 12 , 000 men . Now , our 120 , 000 were not all good ; many would have been better at home ; but 60 , 000 or 70 , 000 good soldiers we certainly had . It was the same thing as saying to him , ? obtained last audienceand
I will not let you go . ' I a ; then General Cavaignac , after many shifts { girt ) , said to me , Enfin , nous ne voulons pas nous brouiller avec 1 'Autriche pour voua faire plaisir . * ( Sensedion . ) Subsequently , I had other missions to the President of the Republic , Louis Napoleon , and was always received as the representative of a sovereign ; and the language of that head of the French Government was always marked "by the greatest sympathy towards Piedmont and Italy . Signor Tecchio , in supporting the measure ,
observed : — " Let us remember that we are not upon terms with Austria , and that we have France for our ally . France also is evidently not upon good terms with Austria . Whilst , in Austria , the celebration of a funeral service for Daniel Manin was prohibited , in France a subscription in honour of him has been allowed . M . Jules Favre , by the Emperor ' permission , lately read the letter of Orsini , which was regarded in Austria as . a
revolutionary publication ; and Qrsini ? s second letter has since been printed in our own official journal , which would certainly not have published it unless it had been received from the French Government . It is also to be observed that the Austrian journals are employing very injurious language against France . For my part , I do not look to foreign arms for the salvation of my country ; it is only by our own arms that I expect it to be gained ; but it would be folly for us to despise the support and friendship of others . "
392 The Leader, [No. 422, April 24, 1858...
392 THE LEADER , [ No . 422 , April 24 , 1858 .
Continental. Notes. That Narrow And -Unc...
CONTINENTAL . NOTES . That narrow and -unchristian , feeling is to be condemned -wnieti regards with , jealousy th . e progress of foreign nations , and cares for no portion , of the human race but that to -which itself belongs . Dr . Arnoid . FRANCIS . Xhbee persons have consented to stand oh the Opposition interest in the approaching Paris elections . Those three are—M . Lionville ( Batonnier of the Order of Advocates ) , for the third electoral district , for which the late . General Cavaignac had been chosen ; M . Ernest Picard ( Advocate ) , for the fifth district ; and M . Jules Favre ( Advocate ) , for the sixth district . They have made the formal declaration on oath , required by law , that they will be faithful to the Emperor and the Constitution . The sittings of the Congress of Delegates from the French provincial scientific societies which have met for the last fortnight in the rooms of the Socie ' te d'Encouragement , Rue Bonaparte , have been brought to a close .
The state of Marshal Bosquet s health will prevent him from entering on his command before the end of the year . It is probable that a Lieutenant-General will be appointed ad interim . The Emperor returned to Paris on Thursday week from Sologne . The Emperor and Empress visited , last Saturday afternoon , without escort , the Boulevard de Sebastopol , to inspect in detail the subterranean works which are being executed beneath that thoroughfare . The acquittal of Bernard has been criticized very indignantly by the Imperialist papers . . The Univers is fierce in its anger , and the Constitutionnel has the following short article : — "The acquittal of Bernard has excited deep
indignation in France , and the animated sentiment expressed by the Univers on the subject has been understood by everybody . Nevertheless , we must remark' in strict justice that this is not the moment to attack the Times as the Univera has done , since that journal supported with energy the ' Conspiracy Bill , ' denounced the assassins , and vindicated England's honour . We will not dwell at any length on such an acquittal , which throws an unheard-of scandal on public morality , for what honest man in France or England could entertain a doubt of Bernard ' s guilt ? We will merely inform those of our neighbours who desire the maintenance of good relations between the two countries , that if , by misfortune , the address pronounced by Bernard ' s counsel—that address
which was allowed to teem with calumny and insults against the Emperor , against tho nation which elected ^ - ) nm ,. against _ tho _ arni . y ,-and ^ ugiiiji / it ™ Our _ Jns ) tit , utiQJ ( Mr = wore to be circulated in tho towns , barracks , and rural districts of Franco , it would bo difficult for government , with tho best intentions , to stay tho consequences' public indignation . " With respect to this urticlo , tho Parts correspondent of tho Daily Nu % 08 remarks : — " Did tho Conatitutionuel never hear of tho renpect exacted by French law for tho choae jwjkti f It knows well that it could not ntako the slightest reflection upon tho judgement of the smallest polico-court in Franco without being punlahod , and yet it daros to any that tho British jury ' who tried Bernard aro not honest inon I "
The Debats of last Saturday has the following : — 11 We have just received the Globe , which contains Mr . Edwin James ' s defence of M . Simon Bernard . The general tone of this defence is such , that we dare not reproduce it . " " According to returns lately prepared at the Ministry of Marine , by order of the Emperor , " says the Times Paris correspondent , " France will possess in the year 1859 an effective force of one hundred and fifty warpaddle and screw-steamers of great speed , independently of the sailing ships of war fitted with screws . These one hundred and fifty war-steamers will be composed of ships-of-the-line , frigates , corvettes , and cutters . Neither gunboats , steam-transports , floating-batteries , nor fireships are included in the number of one hundred and fifty . M . Key-bell , Chief Engineer of Hydraulic Works , and M . Dupuy , de l'Orne , Director of Naval Constructions , have been sent to Cherbourg by order of the Emperor to ascertain the precise time at which the new dock can be opened . The Emperor inspected the works on Wednesday morning which have been commenced in the gardens of the Tuileries , by which the portion open to the public will be considerably curtailed . " The Emperor has completed his fiftieth year , having been born at the Tuileries on the 20 th of April , 1808 . The letter of M . Henon , one of the opposition members , declining an invitation to dine at the Tuileries , was as follows ( according to the Continental Review ) : — " Monsieur Ie Grand Chambellan , —I have received the letter by which you invite me , in the name of the Emperor , to dine at the Tuileries . 1 should be greatly surprised , M . le Chambellan , to find myself at such a meeting , and my constituents would not be less so , at the moment when my friends are on the road to exile and transportation . " AUSTRIA . Dr . Zugschwerdr , lately a member of the Board of the Credit Bank at Vienna , has been tried and found guilty of fraud and embezzlement . He has been sentenced to six years' imprisonment in chains . ITALY . It is seriously in contemplation by the Neapolitan Government to form a camp at Gaeta . Count de Trapani , the brother of the King , has resigned the command in chief of the Royal Guard in consequence , of some differences which have arisen between his Majesty and himself . The reply of the Court of Naples to the last Sardinian Note was officially communicated on Thursday to Count Cavour . It is couched in moderate terms , but contains a flat refusal of the Sardinian demands . SPAIN . The Queen is stated to be in a condition promising an augmentation ' of the royal family . A . person named Ribera , belonging to a respectable family at Granada , and formerly Chief of the Secret Police under the Sartorius Ministry , plunged a poniard , or short sword , in the middle of the day , on the 14 th inst ., into the body of Colonel Verdugo . The crime was deliberately and openly committed in one of the most frequented thoroughfares of Madrid . Having struck two blows , the assassin coolly walked away with the reeking weapon in his hand , and finally flung it down an area , after which he lit a cigar , and began to smoke . He was shortly afterwards arrested , when ho nsked , with some indignation , " Am I a criminal , that I should bo treated in this way , and have my hands tied ? " Ribera had been associated with some scandalous transactions during and after the time that he was at the head of the Secret Police , and was more than once imprisoned . He afterwards went to Cuba , and sent home to Spain an attack op the administration of O'Donnoll in that island . Returning to Spain in 1856 , he was again made Chief of tho Secret Police by Narvaez , but once more lost his position when that Minister fell . The motive for his present act is said to bo revenge against Ycrdugo for some alleged severity towards him when ho was a prisoner . The victim , however , i « universally respected . Ho is the husband of a lady of some note as a poet and dramatist . It is thought impossible that ho can recover . The journals announce tho approaching presentation of a law restoring to the secular clorgy tho church property not sold . TUitKicr . A religious disturbance at Aloppo is reported in u letter from Constantinople which appears in tho Turin Univers . " Tho Armenian Bishop of Aloppo , Mgr . Nicholas , who is a . learned man , 1 ms long manifested a Roman Catholic tendency . Tho now patriarch , wanting to got rid of him , obtuined from tho Porto an order that J > o . Bhuuld _ be . exUed , ^ TlioJL ! i !* cU ^ to execute tho order ; but , when ho sent to have tho bishop arrested , tho latter culled on tho consuls of Franco and Russlu to protect him , and sought refuge in tho convent of tho Capuchins . Aftorwurds , when tho French consul and a congregation woro attending divine service in tho church , Mgr . Nicholas entored , and , walking up to tho altar , deposited on it h ' ia crucifix , and proclaimed himself and all his nock ( tho latter conniats of about throe hundred families ) to bo Roman Catholics . . Tho Russian consul , who wuu present , then withdrew ! and the French consul then wrote « n account of tho affair to
Constantinople . Mgr . Nicholas has been summoned t that city to give explanations . " The Presse d'Orient announces that the Porte ha severely punished the Armenians who obtained passport as naturalized Russians . It was desired at Constanti nople that this lesson should not be lost on the Armeaiai population of the empire . The son of Sefer Pacha hat discovered , by means of intercepted letters , a ' plo organized in Circassia in favour of Russia . The Hungarian Bangya , who had taken service with the Circas sians , confessed his share in the plot , and was conde mnei to death , with several emissaries of the Russian Genera Philipson . The Sultan has decided on augmenting the pay of th < troops .
SWITZERLAND . Two hundred and fifty men have been sent for , to pul down troubles which had broken out at Hegburg on the occasion of the municipal elections . A red flag had been displayed . The public-houses frequented bv the radicals are closed by authority . The Conseil d'Etat of Fribourg has just published the following proclamation : —" The communal elections have given rise for some days to culpable manifestati ons . The Conseil d'Etat has taken a large share in the excitement of the moment . But it will not allow it to be prolonged . Two companies have entered the capital , for
the purpose of protecting it against any rash attempt Let the good citizens be assured . We watch over their safety , and guarantee it to them . Disorder is impos - sible , when the country and the authorities lend a hand . " Seditious cries and symbols are prohibited , as well as all parading in the streets and public places . If companies are formed , they will be dispersed by armed forces . The taverns where these tumultuous reunions take place are already under the surveillance of the police , and the Councillor of State , Presset , has been arrested , with thirty workmen , under a charge of having projected an insurrection .
GERMANY . A rare event has occurred in Saxony—the release of a convict after not fewer than fifty years'detention . This man was condemned to imprisonment for life for having formed part of a notorious band of brigands , and was sent to the prison of Waldheim . He remained there until a few days ago , when he obtained a pardon . Notwithstanding his long confinement , he is in good health , and he has returned to his native village of Leutersdbrf with a sum of two hundred thalers , the product of his labour in the gaol .
State Of Trade. In All The Great Seats O...
STATE OF TRADE . In all the great seats of industry there were slight signs of improvement in the various branches of manufacture during the week ending last Saturday ; but the increase of business is in no place considerable , though promising better things for the future . The number of unemployed poor is diminishing . In the Bradford Union , the number of persons in the receipt of outdoor relief at the present time is about 1200 less than it was last February , when the pressure was greatest ; but nevertheless the present number is more than 2000 in excess of the number at the corresponding period of lust year . The suspension has been announced of Messrs . Robert Browne and Co ., a respectablo mercantile firm , chiefly in the Australian trade . Disappointments in remittances from tho colony have been the cause ottue difficulty , which it is hoped will be surmounted , ine liabilities arc supposed to range between 80 , 000 < . ana -10 . 0001 .
Accidents And Sudden Deaths. An Eccentri...
ACCIDENTS AND SUDDEN DEATHS . An eccentric old maiden lady , named Maria Suter , living at Blissett-street , Greenwich , has met witu a very sudden and horrible death . Miss Sutor w « 3 possesscU o sufficient moans to enable hor to live comfortably ana respectably ; but for tho last few years her ™» " gj become so very strange and peculiar , that two gentlemen related to hor recently went to hor house , in wok to ascertain the precise state of her mind , in * wa deavour they woro aided by a coup le of ^ mod cal men , who wore each to furnish tho relatives of tho I «» yj " a certificate to place her in « omo I" ™" , ? ™ " haf"JJh it be found necessary . Accordingly , the doctor * m cac an interview with Mies Suter separately , and ll 0 / wau that they both came to tho conclusion li « t «« of unsound mind ; and they , therefore , deto rminui signing the required cortiuciite , wltli u view to ""T ^ hor into im asylum an speedily as paaaiuiosame night , at u late hour , itu unusually Jo made in alining the tire , was hoard by tl . e »«| B % ! WnoIITfiiiflnorow ^ lowing morning , when the postman uniiio wii " for Altai Sutor from her brother , ho rccolvuii "" , ta to his knock . As , however , the lady wan fteq uti / tho habit of not firing until two or three o clot > middle of tho day , nutliintf romttrltiiblo w «« u ™\\ . this circumstance j but , "bout four u oloelt hi •¦ ^ noon , MIhh Suter ' a brother himself culled at u donee , und , us tho house waa still iinononoil , |» obliged to make ivn entry by tho back u » tno |» ^ Ho immediately proceeded into an w » -flt « ln »
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), April 24, 1858, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_24041858/page/8/
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