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THE BULLION ROBBERY . A further examination into the charges against Pierce and Burgess took place at the Mansion House on Monday . Evidence to very great length was received ; but it did little more than confirm the statements already made by Agar and Fanny Kay . Those witnesses were not again examined . In the testimony of W . S team , the landlord of the White Hart public house , Thomas-street , Borough , where Burgess was in the habit of going , some light was thrown on the manner in which the latter disposed of his share of the spoil . " On the 17 tli or 18 th of February last , " said JRIr . Stearn , "I received a p arcel ,
which was handed to me by my barmaid , named Sarah Thompson . In consequence of what she said , I put the parcel in my cash-box and left it there- On the following night , Burgess asked me if I had a parcel for him . I invited him into my bar-parlour , and then opened the cash-Tjox and gave him the parcel in the same state in which I had received it from Sarah Thompson . He opened it in my presence . It contained several banknotes , apparently valuable ones , as I could see they were not 51 . ones . I asked him why he had not mado me acquainted with its value . He said lie had not because he did not think it necessary , as it was perfectly safe in my hands . It was the savings of years , and ho wished mo
to invest it for him . I suggested that he should open a banking account ; but he declined that , and said he knew nothing of money matters , and should be bettor satisfied if I would invest it in the best way I could ; and it occurred to mo to take the money to Reed and Co ., my brewers , who would allow five per cent ., nnd lie agreed to that . The next morning I so deposited tho money , the amount being 5 O 0 £ , all in Bunk of England notes , and received an acknowledgment for it in the usual way of business . It was entered in a book , which I gave to Burgess , who kept it a few days , to show it to his friends , and then returned it to me . I have since received the interest on that money , and paid it to Burgess . " Tbe prisoners were remanded to next Monday .
It will be remembered that Mr . Lovvis , while crossexamining Fanny Kay , on tho previous Monday , failed in an attempt to draw from her a statement of lier prosent residence , nnd threatened , as his only resource , t < " watch her homo . " He did not , hoyvover , fulfil hit threat , but saw her at the close of the examination in a private room , to which she had retired , and where Ik promised to leave her unmolested . At tho close of the proceedings last Monday , Sir Bodkin , who appears for the prosecution , brought undoj the notice of tho Lord Mayor a fact which had occurred on the preceding Monday . A man who was in the both , of the court , near tho dock , leant forward , and wlusperoc oomo words , which , wero not heard by the bystanders
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reads—¦•• A pamphlet , published in French , is handed bout in diplomatic circles here , which contains an apology for ^ the conduct of Naples , and indicates some reforms which that Government might effect . Among them are mentioned the application of the military conscription to Sicily , the formation of military colonies for veterans and invalid soldiers , the calling in of the copper coinage , the substitution of charges d ' affaires for ambassadors , changes in the customs tariff , the release of Poerio , &c . It is thought that this pamphlet emanates from an official source . " Queen Christina of Spain arrived in Genoa on the morning of the 20 th , on board the Capitole steamer , from Marseilles , travelling under the title of Countess of Quinto . After visiting the town , she re-embarked for Rome .
" The Minister Plenipotentiary of the Argentine Republic , M . de BusshenthaL , " says the Times correspondent , " visited Naples two or three weeks since on some diplomatic mission ,, and curiosity was awakened to know the cause of it . From all I can gather , the object seems to have been to request the Government to give up a portion of the criminals condemned for life , to the number of some thousands , to be shipped off to his country . " The request was rather contemptuously refused . A man , named Serego , employed at the Grand Hospital , Milan , has been arrested and sent to Mantua by the police , who have some fear of a Mazzinian plot . Some other persons were admonished , and several houses were searched .
BELGIUM . A storm has blown with such violence on the coast at Ostend as to make a wide breach , which at one time threatened the town . The soldiers of the garrison , however , worked hard during the nights of the 12 th and 13 th , and , by means of heaping in sand and turf , the gap was filled up . A very -warm discussion , which is for the present adjourned , has taken place in the Belgian Chamber of Representatives . It arose on the Projet d \ Adresse , and
had reference to the paragraph relating to the system of instruction in the Universities of the State . According to the Brussels correspondeat of the Morning Post , " it has raised an issue which it is apprehended will terminate seriously , both as regards the position of the Government and the general peace of the country . The Minister of the Interior opened the debate by placing before the Chamber the correspondence that had taken place between the Rector of the University of Ghent , Professor Laureut , arid himself , with the -view of
defendhas forwarded a document to M . Tricoupi , the Greek Minister in London , with a view to its being laid before the English Government . This document gives a statement of the affairs of the kingdom of Greece at the present moment , and seeks to > show that that country is worthy of the continued support and en couragement of the great European Powers , and that its internal condition has been greatly misrepresented of late .
DENMABK . Another Pan-Scandinavian demonstration has taken place at Copenhagen , where the students of the neighbouring Swedish University of Lund gave a concert , followed by a banquet , at which the chief toast wag , " To the union of the North , which demands not merely a moral , but a political brotherhood . " All the speeches took the same complexion . The Danish . Government has sent Count Moltke to Paris , to request the Emperor Napoleon to mediate between Denmark and the two great German . Powers in the Holstein-Lauenburg question . .
PORTUGAL . The political elections in Lisbon have gone against the Government , the Radicals having obtained a majority . The result in the provinces will probably be different . THE DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES . The European Commission of the Danube was officially opened on the 4 = th inst ., under the provisional presidency of the Prussian Commissioner Bitter . At that meeting , the Turkish Commissioner , Omar Pacha , -was appointed president in . his quality of representative of the Sultan , sovereign of Moldavia . It was decided , on the proposal of the French Commissioner , that a French gunboat stationed at Galatz should proceed to the banks of Aljani , at the mouth of the Sulina , and that the Turkish war-steamer off Sulina should leave for the same spot , to render the river once more navigable , and remove the obstructions which exist .
In defiance of an order to the contrary from the Kaimakanof Wallachia , Prince Stirbey , the ex-Hospodar , suddenly made his appearance in Bucharest , summoned the members of his defunct Government , and caused them to reply to some accusations made against him and themselves by M . Soutzo and Soutzaki , the Wallachian Minister of Finances , who has published a memoir , in which he accuses the late Hospodariate of financial malversation . Copies of this exculpatory document have been sent to the different Consuls-General .
ing himself from the charge lately made against him , to the effect that , while publicly proclaiming the right of the professors to the most perfect liberty of opinion in their -writings and publications , he had privately censured-M . Laurent , one of the Professors of the University of Ghent , for publishing a certain work , entitled Etudes Historiques . " To this charge the Minister replied by what was in fact an admission . He said that Professor Laurent had published a book which attacked the religion of the country , and therefore he had urged that he should be censured . In the second day ' s debate , last Saturday , the Minister said that he was of opinion that science in the Universities of the State should be independent of every dogma , but that at the samo time it ought to show its respect for every kind of religious worship .
TintKEY . Aali Pacha and Redschid Pacha were not able to agree , and accordingly the former resigned , after only being in office four-and-tweuty hours . It would appear , however , that he has since returned . Arrangements are just now being made in the Dobrudscha for the return of about 1400 Bulgarian families , who had Hed into Bessarabia at the time of the taking of Matschin and the siege of Silistria . Six hundred wooden houses have been destroyed by a fire at Pera . The authorities and tho Sisters of Charity have taken charge of the families who were left ' without an asylum . Another extensive fire has broken out at Adrianople . A catastrophe at Rhodes , occasioned by lightning having struck the immense store of gunpowder which was placed in tho vaults belonging to tho Ancient Knights , has destroyed the whole Turkish quarter so completely that only three children were saved .
The Journal de Constantinople states that a Russian Company in the Black Sea , has purchased forty steamvessels .
CUSRStANY . The Mecklenburg Diet lias rejected the proposal to join the Zollvorein . In the sitting of the Diet on the 20 th inst ., the representatives of Austria , Prussia , Bavaria , and Baden , informed the Assembly that tho Envoys of their respective Courts at Berne had taken steps in reference to tho Federal resolution with respect to Neufchatel . HOLLAND . The Minister of Foreign Affairs has announced to the Second Legislative Chamber that the Government of Holland has given in its assent to tho principles of Maritime Law wliich were laid down by tho Congress of Paris . GREECE . The Minister of Finances of Greece , M . Rangabc ,
. him the Prussian despatch demanding the liberation of the prisoners as a preliminary to all negotiations . This despatch vas backed by the representatives of Austria , BAvaria , and Bad « n , in writing , and the subject of the liberation of the prisoners was taken into consideration by the Federal Council on the 19 th . At the audience that Herr von Sydow had of the President on the 18 th , the question of the sovereignty of the King of Prussia in Neufchatel was not touched upon ; the business of that audience-was confined to the subject of the prisoners ,
with regard to which the Frankfurter Journal expresses the confident opinion that the Federal Council will not accede to the demand in its present shape . The offer to liberate the prisoners on condition that the King -would also , at the same time , renounce his claims to the sovereignty of the Principality appears to have some time back been made on the one side , and refused on the other ; and it was in consequence of this refusal that General Dufour was sent to Paris , for it turns out no-w not to be true that the Emperor Louis Napoleon invited the General to coraie to him at Paris on the subject . "
The Smss Federal Government is resolved , in the pTesent uncertain state of affairs , to take every precaution that may lie within its power to protect itself to the utmost against any possible contingency . It is strengthening the fortifications , organizing its forces , and placing everything in readiness . We find it stated that the Federation can bring into the field as many as 162 , 943 men and 700 guns . In case of an emergency , also , it could call out the cantonal troops , consisting of upwards of 40 , 000 men , and would probably ( says a writer from Paris ) recal the 12 , 000 Swiss who form the nucleus of the army of the King of Naples . Switzerland could prob ably put on foot a force of about 214 , 000 men . General Dufour left Paris last Saturday evening for Berne , to lay before the Federal Council the result of his mission to the French Government .
' The Federal C&uncil unanimously refuses to comply with the demand of Prussia to set at liberty the Neiifttiatel prisoners . The Council declares , moreover , that it is ready to negotiate , and that it is willing to reopen the relations of friendship and good neighbourhood with Prussia . Preparations are being mad « that justice may take its course with regard to the prisoners .
¦ ... . . . -. , . . ¦ ATJSTKIA .. . - -. ¦ . - . . The Emperor and Empress arrived at Trieste on tie 20 th inst . The " General-Convent" of the Lutheran " Montaa-Superintendenz" met at Pesth on the 19 th inst ., and discussed the merits of the Ministerial draught for a constitution for the Protestant Churcli . Several of the provisions they objected to . The Hungarian . Protestsots are making a stand for their liberties j and the members of the same community in Bavaria have entered a formal protest against the recent ordinances of
the Supreme Consistory . But the bigotry of the Roman-Catholics does not relax . The Austrian" Field . Bishop " Xeonhart , has forbidden Catholic field chaplains to give their blessing to a dying soldier who is a Protestant , and has decreed that the heretic shall be buried without airy service whatever if a Protestant clergyman be not present . ^ The Bishop of Linz has ordered that all those Austrian soldiers who go out shooting on Sundays and holidays shall l > e excommunicated . These and other instances of bigoted oppression contribute to make the Concordat every day more and more unpopular .
Jellachich , the Ban of Croatia , is seriously ill at Agram . It is now denied that Sir Hamilton Seymour intends to accompany tlie Emperor of Austria in his Italian tour . Sir Hamilton still remains at Vienna .
ITALIC . " The King of the Two Sicilies , " says a letter from Naples in the Cattolico of Genoa , " has just pardoned two political prisoners—Pasqualo do Rosa , condemned in 1851 to nineteen years' hard labour in irons ; and Vincenzo Farina , condemned to twenty years of the same punishment . Tho sentence of the latter had been commuted by the King , on tho 12 th of March , 1856 , into Bix years of exile ; and on the 18 t » of June following his exile had been again commuted into imprisonment in his own house . " The Marquis Giorgio Pallavicino lias wri tten to the National , of Brussels , to deny the truth of an . assertion to the effect that he advocates Muratism in Naples .
The Preussisclie Corresjpondcnz explains that the commercial treaty , so frequently alluded to in tho press as having been lately concluded between Russia and Naples , is nothing more than a form of declaration exchanged by the two Governments on October 3 , similar to the declarations that have been exchanged thia year between the Neapolitan and . all other Governments with wliich Naples is connected by commercial treaties . These declarations havo reference solely to the equalization of the footing on which the direct and indirect navigation of the two countries stand to each other .
__ " Sir Hamilton Seymour , " aays a letter from Vienna , » n the New Wurzbwg Gazette , " recently gave to our cabinet tho positive assuranc e that England would not undertake anything with regard to tlie Neapolitan aiTair , w a nature to Borvo the projects of a revolutionary party in Italy , or to disturb the tranquillity of the peninsula . " In another Utter , printed in tha Weter Gazette , we
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November 29 , 1856 . ] THE LEADER . 11 SS
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OUR GIVILlZATiON . ¦¦¦ . ¦ ¦ - ¦ '¦ ¦ ¦ , . - ——?—— - ' . ¦ ¦¦ ¦ .: ' .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 29, 1856, page 1133, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2169/page/5/
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