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( kolonfal ana foreign rfTrtlrtttf ffl Sttn- ttflmrm
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^ _ timim Ww^m ^
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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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( Kolonfal Ana Foreign Rftrtlrtttf Ffl Sttn- Ttflmrm
( kolonfal ana foreign rfTrtlrtttf ffl Sttn- ttflmrm
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*^ ~~ ~ INDIA ; \ - ' r 7 -. " ^ " ^ Bombay ** £ » to ! ¥ l J ^ ' «?«* « uit an i . ttoo pt b * i «*« nade to attack Lucteow by a SUbourfcg * & ** . ¦»* flk ** £ ** tabm place near ^ er tpoie ^ mirTuekttierjj Aw defeated . The Si ' seountry was « fatl distorted , the Nizam him-Kcu pjwg teate mt&lde the walla of Hyderabad . gin Sciade or Lahore thera was n » intelligence of fr *** ' francs / de
ifg ^ thsfsadmg the ttaocntioiu of the Debits , *!* Reform agitation continues to advance . Several vorntb ^ * ? ^ ^ ** «* explosion is not ' Vpr t dftsat * and the Prsssb , a most zealous > dv-Ja&cprrat , ' c 8 B 8 idcn etea that the presert state r f gfiwrsisss grave and tartteme as mattes were The election ottwehs candidates for fte oSceof B ^ or and aajoiut of Ih 4 second orwicl 6 sie « ent of f His . which took place last week , has resulted in the ftiamp h of the opposition candidates , to the total ex-Wosion of the tmwstetuilist , '
• The A < rt «« a » fcabe « xprosectttedon three charge ? , Ki twaofwhichrt was acquitted , tat found guilty ra third . Tke subjectef this last was the reform banquet held at Orleans , and the offencechargedwas libel ag * inrt the person of the King . The sentence of the court was a fine of 6 . 0 W . francs and eight mo nths * imprisonment . ^ SPAIN . Nwwez m Bnspeeted by ti » Chtistino coterie of natiogsfcretconcilistory advaneestowards the Promsistas , iR order that he may have a reserveto fall back npon when his present patrons , the immcnlate dame an * Loms Philippe , dismiss him from their service , to make room for Mnnox and Mm . The paliticsef ^ scomb yhave become thoroaghly dema of raterest . . . ; PORTUGAL . ' ' LmbojLDkc 9
.= ..... . . The elections ( so called ) are over , the military force Has triumphed , and the national party willnot have even one solitary deputy nrthe r » xt Cortes . The prominent features of the ! a * t straggle most now be commented upon , and the ris dM « te , by which the Cabrals and eonrt have achieved a " seeming triumph , has yet to be explained . -The capital , with the foreign diplomatic body on the spot , scanning the acts of the government , conld not well be made the theatre of military ontragejsoherefraud had tb ' snpersede violence , and the disfranchisement of thousands of UDeral electors en the one hand , and ~ the intrusion on toe registry of a garrisia ' of soldiery , and Others having no votes in law , produced arcsiilt : fcnteven this
feat could bs . without difficulty achkyed , wr would it have been , if a sort "©! ambulatory proe ^ ' t ^ d ' sat been resorted to r ^ wlucfftte mffit ^ fo ' rcfe set ^ the question ( Lsi ^ lv from docuteetosran ' d ' lbSof an nnqueitionabfe natare ^ In'the i 6 « h'tUy » nl Electoral CoBkeithe Merces . 'tfe ( Shrals , towards theend offfiepo ^ WOTfarJbefendhaaitKereforl two hundred and sixteen oftBepettjofficers of the municipal guard « nd of Ue " 2 nd ° batteiiW of volu ^ teeri were marched fn stjjaads t 6 t&e poll . 'f'Merces , $ && . fere , returned CaSral merhbere : ; : In the' 'twentieth district , that of Jjpa ; Hiurigs iob ^' very ' Wanl : ; ^ feat seemed sure , when ; hurfafcTt&the ' rescae ! Ihe
tramp of many feet wereneaird , and upc > mean aijxii ' liary detachment nnmbmrijj two bondrectaBa twelfe , composed of a select party of the palate . H ^ i ^' seW vants , the Gmnan Gnard , and poucemen . " Oi ; e more instance : -Sao Mameda . Hera matters i&realad aspect , when , lo ! tie sudden apparitioa © f tbenoni commissioned officers of the 10 th Regt , tbe ^ and , the drummers , fifere , and all , ebanged mourning iato mirth , and Cabral * was the cry ; ' and so on throuehoot some eighteen out of the twenty-two Lisbon districts , and the fight was won . The tame thing oeenrred at Ciatra , the Windsor of Pprtaga ) , where the Queen 6 as her smnmerpalaoe . smdtheforeiga ministers their residences .
Horrible outrages were committed by the troopsat Aides Gsllega . By such means , the Cabraliatas have triuniBbed . ' -
SWITZERLAND ... ; - Under date December 5 th , the correspondent of da Times says :-- ' - - ' " - ' . ; -. „ , „ ' As the great Powers hare resolved to -take into their consideration the circumsJances of the civil war . now happily at ' an . endi . in . this oaantry , . afew incidents connected with it , which' &TOjbqme under my knowledge ; inay T . perhapa ,. be interesting to you , as servins to illustrate ita ^ feal characier , and : the moral raflaences nnSer whTchi . ih ' osawho foaght qu the side of the Sbnderbund were induredto act-, I have already informed you . in a former letter , that the priests in Lucerne had teen aciwely engaged in denouncing from the pulpit the Federal cause , and
sssarin ? their ignorant and mi-guided hearers that they bad cething to fear , as the Ho ] y yirein had declared that ahe . woa ) d , de ( erid . tBe dtjandparaJjse the exertions onts " b ? siegera . Thisls strictly true ; and the annouceemectyas accepted to , the letterby the people , to a much larger extent , ttan youwpajd believe possible iu an . enlightened age ' like the p ; re-Benfc . Yet _ the priests themselres , who , Vere ' foremost in | deceiving the peop ' e ^ Were "the first to acfaiowledge ' theirihiistalre themselves when | the time of proof arrived . Tne worthy cart of thehttlelTillage ef Eliken , midway between Roth and Lucerne , on the Sunday previous ' to the siege , told his congregation n » t to be alarmed even if they should see the
enemy advancing to their village , for that , onsrr : ; -. Ting there heaven Would . pour down its wrath upon them and destroy them .. SiDgular to relate , how : ever , when three days afterwardi the Federal btops were actually on their march thrbugh . EHken to take possession ef Lucerne , the worthy eur ^ came out . to meet them , bearinjr , not deniinciaiions " of JDinne veneeance , but a propitiatory oblation inthe , shape Of fifty bottles of champagne which . were cheerfully accepted .., I heard of one inau who , in the / ervour of his credulity , . declared ,, in "the presence ' of the gentleman who informed nie , that he " si Tally believed in the aBnouncementof the yirgin aprom {* a 3 interposition , that if she should fail of her . promise he would never believe in any thins 8 gain . , ' , V . ' i " .. .
More—I have seen some coridns Uttle . trass amn lets , with the effigy of the Virgin ' on one side " and , the Crass , on the ether , which were sold in ' great numbers to the people 33 charms against all possible injuries in battle ! Thcee sold . at seven and , ten batzen [ about 10 d . and 153 . of our . inonejy were efficacious against musket and carbine balls ! , those at twenty hafzen ( about half-a-crqwn ) . ' were i prjpof against eannen shot also ! The pujishaleis of these aedals were also presented with a c * rd , of which the fallowing is a , translation—if indeed I may be exensjd for profaning the honest English tongue With " sact blasphemy : — , ..- . .. ¦ . ¦¦ . ^ -
'Oh Miry ! -H » ncelved without Bin—pray fqr | ns who have recourte to . you . Any one carryini ; ' a miraculous medal , who ncitej with piety the above in- ; vocation , becomes placed under $ he especial protection of the Mether of God . This ia a promise made &y Mary herself / " ^ I told yon . in my first letter from Lucerne , tf the paqr Valaisians , who had been lured from their canton , and compelled to fight , and after wards , left to starve but for the mercifui consideration of their captors , aided in the first instance by casual contributions from individuals ' . Many of these men tried ( 3 escape some days before the nepe , rnd being re . captured wereseTerely pnnlshed . I . was ' mtriidnred to a gentlemana citizen of the town ,. who , having
, given asylam to tbr ? e of these nnhappy ^ wretches , iursuedby their tormentors , was thrust ' into the Suneeon where Dr Steingerd had previoBsly lan r goished . and remained there three days , when , on ffee entrance of the Federal tnwps , he was ^ eased . BEEire , Dec . 7 . -The Diet jnet this mqrnmg at « k o ' clock , accordin- to appointment . The sittings £ ftfea body are held in a large square . room , hunB , vitk « mber draperies ; there » nothing ornamental Itte apartment except two truncated columns , . ^ x „ ottrfed by helmets and other martial lnsignw . The P . videafs chair is placed upon . . " * « t * S * to Zl ^ htiree stefscevered with green doth lead . The ?* . ^ m of the twenty-two cantons utm a sort . cf
2 SS eirde , with tables before . themi covered witn SS , dS . They sit according to the rank of their gre ! a Tilfcrnately right and left of the chair-^ rieh W fi ™ ' ««*• rf ** - ' Lucerne first onlthe S " Th V ^ M 8 ident , M . Ochseubcin , isa fine looking „ « « trently somewfott turned of fortj . . . T ! l « f « L «* « wJdof the last day's sitting having J ? 5 £ ? - ^[ confirmed , the Chancellor wasealled * J * i &e note of the French government , signed by M-- ^ T ^ hen ' raen « on was made of the Pressed laasht J gM 0 B Messed th * « m * mc pun with - *| * _» aaEaiB when mention was £ If i * & ^ « 5 S « dj «!«» rf * , Sonderbund- ¦; , " -m ^^ dutvit was to jpre ' Dare
TfaedepuW « »* ' * k after a few obserratioo ' . ateply i ^ ^ ° SeJ ^ ch was rery lepgtty ; we proposed the answer , - ^ iJSJ ^^ ^^ # ^ extract the pnpapa i p . fa Diet , was'to ' put aa proposed medjatiflnl , *!^ , ^^ , ' and effect * ws ^^ &ttsasssasR JSsSSStosastt
sassstiSSi ^ aas t ^ a ! Ife . ^ 'SK ^ j&SSKSW ^ Si S ^ Tof tto f « Jdefenid # irritated . ? gain 8 t ^ ^ SStaSwtti ii totteitrmn byfenatic ^ ing ; ^ ^» S £ lpfele of . the fifleredoediafion . - that is to say , to treat on equal terms with the Son-SSand . wSldbeto comproaise the integn ^ r of ^ SS ^ tS ^ SS ^ SSUSt
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fairsin which the compact does not ^^ " reonir ^' a fll ? ssssrffl'iifffi ^^ sfiasmsss Ste ^ iTS ll Swha C < afedera « on en » " £ SffiS ^ fe * T e King ' s government is plevaSS wmauifaithfal . In a word , it would be te divide Switerbwdju to two confederationB /^ ich 3 endinitsrmn . tndinake * dwtatbance in the bif . ; - ; .. - ^ yi . rt fuinifiTiiirf ^ i .. ' Tr < " '" '"' ' " * - '
J £ * L ! ° ™ mat € d cliacassioB , in which the nt-S ^ P ' * " c ^ ttased towards the French ^ S 181 ^ Tta ansirer io the French « note was ffiv ^" ^ ft "t ** w * S . A * e Dtet unammonsly decided that pensions shal h « accorded to ^ widows aad cbildrefof th ^ Jho hwefalJen a the eervice of the country * ^ Complimentary andresses to the Dietfrom several towns in Germany wereread . and sub » criptions from the same pbces were received on behalf of the friends of those who fell fighting for its cause . — wd on
n . !*?*^" * W " ¥ ^ tte morning ef the 7 th at . NeufcnateUnd immediatel y had anV terview with M . de Sydow . the envoy of Prussia to the Confederation , and with General Pfuel , the eoveraor of the principality . "Sir S . Canping left the W «* oi » K *« ' Berae / * here he" arrived ; on the mghtof the 8 th . Hehadaconferencewith Mr Peel on the morning of the 9 th ; and afterwards an interviewwith M . Ochsenbein , whkhmtintfetfto ' alate UOUr . ' . ¦ ¦ ¦ ' - ¦ . -t :. - ji-A ... ' ^ : irif . , j- ! 5 ?« tj . . - ¦ - •• The general assembly of the' -peapla of \ M carilim of Zug adopted on the Stlr . TesoluKoiSminilar to those adopted by the other cantons-ef-tHS SoWerbund , renouncine the League ; aoknowledginr ' the authority ef the Diet , and appointing a ' provisiOnal ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦* ¦
eovemment . ' '• -:. ¦ .: <• • : . ' -- •• The provisional government' of Lucerne haVe issned a decree ,-ordeniis that the Jesnito , arid the orders affiliated with them , particularly" the" Ureulines , and the Sisters of Providence at Lucerne and at Sursee . are for ever baniBhcd from the ' canton ' . Tkose who are absent shall never be admitted aeain to croaa the frontier , and those who are still within ' the territory shall quit it between thisthne and the lOih , at th » latest ; - The ancient funds of the Francveana shall be again administered as they were before thfrrecall ot'the Jeseits . a ¦ ¦ . .: . ¦¦ ¦ In the Va ! afa ; the assembly of-the people has ' actuaHy taken place at Sion ; . { Four thotKand . ' citifens were , present . M .: ftIaurice"Berman , <» ne ' of the prpajrihei , under-U » eirlate-r « gjnie .-o « ened
tltt'ttdceeding ? . , Mi Jona then proposed a series of resolrii ' . npns .. / T ]» followiBg ;* re : themort'importafttwbieh theu assembly adoptedi—l ^ nThe dfesolaS 6 H of-tbe existmgGrand Council and CouBcil of State »> 2 > The sappresaioniot- the privileges - ( immunitie 9 ) 'bf-the dergy . 3 . The incompatibffityi * f eml and'eccteU astic ^ l faactioaB . -4 That the Grand ^ CouneHshatt ¦ be named in tka course of December ^» nd « hall ; : b 6 ! d Qffi » fot ! fiTe . yea « . j . & ThfterpulwonoPthfeJesuifc 6 . Tiie expenses of . tbe watto be borne by suChr . reli . giouscorporations andotber persons as votedfor it , advised it , or preached in its favour , o .: ? : • a ' - " - - ^ ' Letters from . Milan of 4 he-4 th gay , thaV-a-preat numberof the chiefsof the Sanderbund had arrived in that city .. who had been , well reserved by the Ans *
tnans , butanfavourably by the Italians .... ' -.- ^ r- ' . AdTices jEeonySerne to , theilOtb , report that Sir Stratford . CanniugJ » d , anticipated' tie decision of Xord Pahaereton / as to the coarse to be pursued inthe actuaLs ituation « , f parties in theConfederation . The ambasjadpr- ^ xtraorduiary delivered his credentials at the , interview , which he , rhad with Ochsenbein in the 9 th , but aiEnified his intentien to- withhold any nete ' tn the subject of the , contemplated mediation , until he should receivafurtherinstructionsfroni Londen . He . is . reported tOfha . rea 3 ? ured UiepresFdent ef the Diet that ,, in conGenting to share in the
proposed mediation , the more especial-purpose of the Britisb cabinet was tooreyent any encroachment on tbeindependenceqftheSwiss . nationbyotherpowers ; anduofctointerfereunneceEgarily with : the internal affairs of the Confederacv . ; . j Tt , - Cm -.: vs » r . " ¦• Sj m On the litb the Swiss Dietheld astttinft at which , after a long ducusaion , it . adopted a resolotionio the effectthat the canton of JJeufcbatel Bhouldpayas . aa indemnity to the other-cantons fornothayinesonplied its contingent oMrQops ,, tnei sum . of 300 , 000 Swiss francs , t ^ e whole ef which will be applied to the support of the widows andorphaaaoi those . who lost their lives in the war . - . .-: . * . - >¦ ¦¦ :-. si ' - -
. -The Federal council of war haspublished . a report of the killed and wounded . during th ? late _ war , from which it appears that the total numbers were , eighty , eight kiUia , and . three hundred and eighty-five wounded , en the side of the GoverBment .. ' -The loss ea the side of ^ the insurgents has not been ascertained ,, batis Euppeaed to bethree or ; four ? times greater . >'; The estimate pf . tb&exDensea . of the war . have nowbeengiven . in . from whichit , appear 8 that , including theichirgeof fifty thousandmea for , a month hence , the . whble . coat . willbe . abaut . seven millions , ^ French fcancs .. " -,-- .-,, * ; ,.,- ! -. ¦; ,. -.-. „ j-i < :.., ~ ' . ; i ,.. lt ? ,-.-sl !•; - •;;«• . ¦ Th ere is a great deal of talk . abont < important docomenta , discovered at ^ ribourg and at Lncenie , and which throw . predoua light , on the , proceedings , and
veritable views , of tbe chiefs of the , Sonderbund , These . document * Shaw , ; with , the , fuHe « t , eTiclejiee r . that the . existence of . -tie , Jeagn ^ . ' attributed - , to the fonnatien of . the corps francs , preceded by . more than twoyears the two fatal expeditiona which took place against Lucerne , and that . it had _ been even . diBap pwred ofin ' i&i . etigu j by Bale ^ MllVahd Ifeufchatel . ¦ r ,: ¦/) - r : \ ' : " v ^ , ;! | K rsP- - «• . '¦ -. " ¦ ^ ¦ - ^ • •« [ . a Sicily is . in full insurrectioq i against . the hated eovernment of Naples . ^ Ifc iafsaid that , ihe people haTe proclaimed the Cdnrtltptipn ^ f ? 812 . ^ . - - . , - .: The success obtained j by . theiSwiss , Diet's forces would appear to-haTe created a great sensation in July . On the 3 rd instant , jeheathe news of the fall
of . Lucerne arrived , a jtracd : demonstration took place at Rome . The people , w . bom a band of music preoeded . proceeded , to . the ^ wisaCoiisz ^ Ijsjresidenee and cried ,. Tivathe . Swigs Cfijnfedecation I ' ^ vyi ^ a the : Italian CpDftderatioii , ! ' 5 yi ' vi-thej capture of Lueerne !' ,: * Viva- ^ i Bs IX ^ ' ; ^ Th > igople , had . first assembled onjhe Jiaiii . de ^ - gopfll ^ , and crossed the most freqneHt ? d Jttorpneh / arespf Rome , whfeh . were liehted npV , on thelfccasian . ' . The . flags of , the Swiss Confederation ^ and %$ & ' Italian ^ tri-colpur flag were displayed . in . great ' . BUmters . ^ , The , ^ eclawatioES ; of joy for the captare . of . Lacerne ) . wer 9 especially vociferated inireaVof the college of the Jesuits . . ¦ ,. . -.-,. - ¦
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. SPEECH OP P . O'CONNOR , ES ^ m fe , ' Apinst the second reading of the Irish ; Coercion ¦ BiijL , on Thursday evening ; December 9 . l ? Kit o £ ntfttttr excluded » hl » ' epeech ; , iEi « ai our . lag * ¦ - • ' number , ] ,., ,.. •¦ Mr F . ; O'Conkor said , he would not follow the ion . member for Montrose into tha confessional , because , upon that point ,, the hon . gentleman had answered himself , for he had remarked Upon the facility With which absolutioH for thVse murders could be obtained , and in the very ' ' same breath had spoken of the hi gh character of the Roman Catholic
clergy ..- If one reason more than ahothec could be shown for producing remedial measures . contemporaneously with this proposed Coercion Bill ; it war to be found in the statement of the hon . ineniber for Montrose himself , when he raid that ; at every- great public meeting he had attended , the pedple ^ of Engr land , when the question was mooted , had always denounced tbe tyranny and oppression . exercisedby the government of this country overihfi Irish people . He ( Mr O'Connor ) would , however , turn from the remarks of the hon . raembet . for Montrose' to the bill , which he could now show even better grounds for opposing than he had done at first . ' The bill was a constructive Coercion Bill ,, and so it bad been admitted to be . b y Jhe ri g ht houourable baronet himself , in answer to the ri ght honourable gentleman , the member for Tamwortb , whom , the
right honourable baronet had told- that the hill embraced all the previous acts of coercion that could be put ; in operation at the . wijl of the Lord-iLicutenorik It . was then that he ( Mr . O'Connor ) ' recognised in tkis measure a great legal . draw-net , and that its presumed , mildness was , no thing but , V mockery , a delusion , and a snare . He rejoiced that he had . not subjected himself to those taunts which had been levelled , and he thought pnjoBlly , at other hon . members , who had given their support to the bill . He ( Mr O'Connor ) not wishing , ^ disturb the unanimity of the Irish party , which was indispensable for the redemption of his country , could , perhaps , make a better apology for those gentlemen than they could for . themselves . His : apology was this—that from the right hon . secretary ' s first description of ¦ the bill , ' and from the fact that tbe hon . member for
Limerick could not be supposed to possess that legal discernment which would lead him at once to the malignity of this bill , might be taken ; as ' an apology for his assent to . the first reading ; while he '* ( Mr < 3 'Cpnnor ) had , given it his most decided opposition ' in the outset , because , however mild it might be de ^ scribed -by its parent , wait till an ingenious hired lawyer , making its severe constaucUon ^ his' ^ aii ^(^ tion for patronage , cxm& to expound it , * wi ' d . then % t would HeJliredyered that it was a , Kind ! of ^ lescopifi ' measure , to be . collapsed and expanded . at ; the , wiil of : the Lord Lieutenant and his minions . ( Hear , hear . ) Yes ; it was a short knife in the hands of the Lord Lieutenant , with as many blades as were ' reqliired
/ or ; lrhh- ' pOTecuU 6 n . \ / ( HeaT ,: * hear . )"; 'it \ f ' as ''' a ' Christmag box' for Ireland , the outside' shell representing the ' sexagenarians ; and ¦ the inside ,, the children of sixteen , who were to scamper , witn even pace across the country after their , famishing , friends and relatives . ( Hear , hear . ) The right honourable baronet , the Secretary of State for the Home Department , had gained courage from the ferocity of party . Therig ht hon . baronet , the member far Tamworth , asks one question , and receives an answer to his taste , that the bill in that instance can be made , more stringent . Then comes the hon . member for Buckinghamshire , be asks another question , and the right hdn . Home : Secretary gives a solution of , one
of his former declarations , wholly differing from his former statements , as it struck him ( Mr O'Coniqr ) and every other member who had spoken upon the question , and-Vfho were nevertheless allowed to remain in their ignorance until the strength of party emboldeued the ri ght hon . Secretary in his course of hardihood , and presumption . The motto— ' fees r dcgwrit eundo , ' may be well applied to the bold daring of the right hon . gentleman , but he would remind him , that tbe course now being pursued by the British-parliament would only strengthen Irish hostility against even the ordinary law . There was no better way of answering a Whig government than from its own lips , and , he could do so effectually on this
occasion , but , - unfortunately , was not prepared with the formaj . indictment j for he had searched the library in'vain for the 85 th volume of Hansard , con-^ aming the speeches ' of the noble lord opposite atthe ' time the right hori . 'baronet , the niemberior - Tami . wprth ^ nirpdijcei his Coercion Bill . , However ; he ,. ha 4 a vp . rettygood , memory , andiremembered perfectly well ! the sulstance of the speeches' made by the noble j ordand right hon ; gentlemennowin the ' government in opposing the introduction of ' that meal sure . -The ground of opposition was lit ' bat . reme dial ^ measures we re ; not- at the same time iritroduced-r Xhear . 'hear )—a ^ 'hbn ^ gentlemeh hbwia the . govern ment'declared then that until that , was done thev
wquldKsist flie bill in every stage . < And whatwas the state ; df Ireland atthaUinie ?• It was described Jby the noble lord the member'for Lynn ' as'iri a more riotous anddisordered condition tbau it was represented ^ o be at'the present time ; "tu t still the ., cry was that the bill should not be passed until remedial measures were produced . And if he ( Mr ^ Coanor ) required further :. reason for opposing ' - the - -. present bill , lie should find it in the tactics then pursued by the hop . member for Buckinghamshire and his partyi but which would probably not be the' ianne now ' as whenthe object was to turn ' qut' ^ goveramenh He ( Mr O'Connor ) would ask the house ; whereVas tfie'duTerence between th » two casesi . further than
the difference of the . Whigs sitting here , and- the J ^ hi gs sitting there , " and . where were the remedial measures now ? ' ( Hear , hear , firon * Sir \ V . Somerviile ; ) , The ri g ht hon . secretary for' Ireland cries ' . hear , hear , ' but he ( Mr O'Connor ) replied , where , where . ' Was it in Pandora ' s box . and atthebpttbm ? ( Laughter . ) And would such ari ' announcement have reconciled that right hon . gentleman to the bill " proposed last year by the "ri ght hon . rneraber-for Tamworth ? ' Nb > but unfortunately that right hon . f iecreiary appeared to forgefcthat : it was he himself who moved the amendment to the Arms' Bill of the right . hbn . member for Tamworth , and not upon the ground thattemedial measures' were simultaneously
proposed , l ? ut upon the grounds that remedial measures had not been enacted as a means of suppressing the cause of crime . ' ( Hetf , ' " and cheers . ) lit wasimpossibie , when a country was Jo ; be deprived of even the semblance of a constitution , that such a bill sh 6 uld : pass . . this house without any attempt to supprea ? : crime ,. by-a redress of those grievances which led to it ; but the noble lord at the head of the government , when at this ' side of the house ; went even farther than * thei ri ght hon .- secretary ' for-Ireland ; he nqronly ; ' advocated remedial measures ' bHt be shpwedih ' e ^ ouie ^ ow . ^ heiihfi ^ bst strin-^ rat measures . of coercion were required in 1833 ,- he : ' arid his party had made the remedial-measures prei
cede . coercion . ; And . now what were his Words ; they weiy , /; That Lord ; Althorphad ' laid bills upon the tab&of . ; thit"house"for the ¦ amendment bf Grand Jury , laws , ' fopthealjolition ' ' 6 f ChOTch'CessVfbrthe extension ' of MunicTpal Reform , " and other salutary measuresfefgh' t ' days ' 'befbffW ' CqercioX Bill was intrbduce ^ . ' ., ( Heaf , \ heay , andcbeeK . ) But that . was . not all , that was . ^ what had been done in 1833 , but what , did ; . the , noble ^ 88 /^ 1846 ; whyj lhayingtdiseovered ; the ^ deficiency of his reforms of 1833 , he opposed the MUof the right hon . member for Tamworthi becauseithad iibfbeen' preceded—mind , nor ^ accjDmpanied ^ utpr ^ ed-b'f a . Tenant Bight Bill
, '^ and extended ; m ? mc » par " cofpbratioh reform , andMextensiori of the political franchise . ( Hear , near , and cheers ^ Now then ^ he would ask what iad . b ^ come . of . those : remedial measures , and if he was told that the circumstances' of the present case were vdiffeirent , -he would ask in ' what ; except in ' tbe difference between the two sides 'bf " the house Q *^ &J % WrWi M ^ M member for Tamworth , . had told them nqito parley with assassinsj-it was echoed from all sides of tbehousebut let them fl 0 W 8 ee if they had , Bot parleyed with aspassmS i when assassination was a Whig auxiliary . ( Hear , tear . ) And let him see whether or no the present advocates of coercion could be itnorkntbf
the then , state of Ireland ; Thenoble lord , the member for Xptn , detailed the theB state of Ireland thus j he ih qwedthe house ^ that more crimesand of am f ; h lnous and wvage nature had been comnutted withina certain : period ^ than had ever been eomnuUed ia Ireland before . ( Hear , hear ) He showed how a poor woman , one < Mary Fennelly , had been shot . How another woman in the familyway bad . been shot . How the family of : Mr Ryan had been fired at , while performing their religious duties , when the whole group mi g ht have been destroyed ! He showed the systematic resistance to all ordinary law , the destruction of social order , and the general reign ; of terror ! and yet you parleyed with the assassins / or five whole mbnths-your inr variable answer being , where are your remedial
measures , yoitr tenant right , your , extended municipal reform , and your extension of the political franchise . ( Hear , hear , and cheers . ) Now , he ( Mr O'Connor ) ie . ccnoed the Whig * cry , and asked where m your
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~ j ^ ?*^ -: ? fi-r . ; - * - <' ' v--. - - , .:-.... -- .. - ,: ¦ : :- " :. - ••¦ --j-. *«« ,. rw remedies ? The hon . member for ^ Buckinghamshire had justified the tactics of his party in " opposing tbe right hon . baronet , ' after a ; five months' parley , and he ; ( Mr O'Conn 6 r 5 justified that policy upon ihe grounds that it was better- * o deatroyit . he cause of disease , than to pick ; ' the pimple , and irritate . the « ore . " - ( Heat .. ; . hSari ) He justified the course on , these grounds , that when a party in opposition became sufficienUy strong to oust a ministry whose general policy was considered dangerous and obnoxipui / that in : his ^ ( Mr O ! Coni nors ) opinion , it Mattered not the question upon which th at ministry was defeated—it was the
removal of the cause , ' and . the cure of the disease may follow . ( Hear , hear . ) Up to this hoiar ; . where were the remedial measures . that had been ' promised ' for , Irelatid ? The hon . member fbr . Montrqse ht ( d , said that he would oppose the giving ' ; an equals tUW ; to the tenant and the landlord ; . buUhe ; Landlord and Tenant Bill that he ( Mr O'Connor ) fwbuld-support was one which confirmed the property bf tW 'land- - lord while it enforced the performance of hlstlUiies * as a landlord .- At th « same tira « , he wouW makfe ; ejectment more easy than now . 'He . ^ oM ^ rioti only give an interest in the land to the JandlpnJs } but to those who cultiyaited -it ; He wish ' edl ' the house now toconsider what-had caused the ^ two
last Coercion Billa for Irelandi and be could show i that the conduct of .. the ;¦ landlords and » the Protestant clergy in that , cquntiry 'h ' advbeen' the direct-cause of the-two-measures ° bf i 823 amf 1833 . What' produced ; the 'butrag'r ' and ' coh- ' fiscationof p « pei ^ : ^^^ ^ ' ; b ^ fe ^ es ts had taken place ; -M ^^{ Mre MVabl e to ; pay war rents , and yet ^ tte . landlpr . tiB ^ ccu&to ' med'to : receive , them wo . uld--Botiabate (; one } ffarthing-sb ' Jongis a particle of j properly !; remdinea to- be" ins ? trained upotf . - ^ Atdhe-sa ' mij ^ crfodfftqo ^ eb' ^ drela ^ fully hostile were the ^ rofestant cleVgy ito ' the neonle of lreland , tfiat : «; the ;^; iithe B ^ d 15 ^ recovered by jthemsel Tes ; the / parson ? " let thelitbes
to . the p rpctors for threc . f 9 urth 8 ' , of theirivalue / upoh ; condition , th ' aithey did , not remit : the . Mother fourth ; ( Hear , hear . ) - Now , letithem . analyse ' . tne course which led tothe Coercion Bill of 1833 , ; and which never had been developed to that heuse or . to the country ! : It was ¦ 'this •¦ the bill \ of the right , horn member ; tor the ; University of Xlarabrid gVwhicVre . pealedttie ^ Act ; pf the ; lrUh . p ^ rliainentopasBedKinv ' ^ Vhegan toJe M ^^ gras « lands / werc ^ bypthat moasure of i the ; ri £ bi : hotf ; ^ entlenun , r ; brpiighti , fo ( ,- , bear ,. theii ' J jnst l proportion ot . . lithe , ; while , t pfeviouBl y ,. ^ ili was "; pW ' -Jjy > > tfig miserable Calholic' / cottier . Frott 1 173 5 ' to'lSSft —' uyuijTB ^ uiuij— itiairrnjtes
"" = Rim 8 / a 8 ianulord 8 ; ind , 'captairis " 'df ^ yeoroanry ^^ W the iirtOo . ¥ P&iW& MrMmV ^ t ^ m ^ * ud « grand Juro » m . i % Wi , t . ra . l . sported ; thein ^ bro thJri , wise , 4 ier «( sited . them . , ( . Hear , hear . )^ , Then e ^ ery 'village ofpialMwa 8 ; a staffobfllcen : and evety ' -little ^ tfctestant . Orangeman'was'ConBtHut ' edajudge ' an ^ ¦ exiscutioneK'i ; But ^ as sobtt as ever the-proteataiit ilandlords ^ werecallednpori i 6 pay thV . " ministera of !
j theif owh ; ch " urch , 'thatmbment , ' 4 ike ^ the vbl . unteers , of . ^^/ the CatKolic soWiers were again enlisted to figh ^ th ^ baltle of the , Protestant , ;; offieers ~ - ( hear , hear , ; . and I cheer , s ) : ^ -and ,. sor . popular had these : Prote 8 tants ^ made , llbe resistance to tithes , that Sir Edmund iNagle , the - Honourable Pierce Butler , and other Protestants , who -were deprived of < appointmfints by < the minister , were returned to that house b ythe popular voiced ( Hear , hear . ) And one remarkable feature " of Jhat agitation ; , wasf - that % everyantUtithe meeUngProtestant landlords and Protestant farmtrs . claime ' dthe honour
of moving , seconding , and supporting , the strongest resolutions for ; the abolition of tithes . ( Heaiyhear . ) And he ( Mr . OIGonnor ) , as : ' a Protestant ;/ was tried in 1832 for-taking part in- that agitation ; ' Now , such were the causes wfiich led to 'i ' . the Coercion ' Bills of 1823 arid 1833 ; while ^ tnei jajosettt ' theijVcsent Coercion Bill jwpuid be . . fou ^ d-in'the ' ih ^ ar . tle 8 sness , of the landlords , ' , whbj having dabbled' arid speculated in railroads , and other ; ganiblirig trah sactipns ,,. took vengeance ; uppn ; : theirieunfortunate'tenantry for their own , imprbvidence ^ ahd ; Aisdeeus ;' and they looked upon ' this ' cbpst ' rucliye 'Coercion Bill , not as ^ a ; mewuryft ^ lifp . hilf . no ft Wioartc hf pnnirt ^ At '' 4-Ti » t « Aii ' . lLi ir £ . ii * il .
the hovels of > he Irish ' Catholics ; and : s 1 rjiung 4 err 6 r ^ to the hearts , of . the- Irish people ., " . gut j " ¦ hei . defied them ,, as , the loye of , country , of . kind , -Jindlreligioia ,. wpuld . su ^ tain 4 h em , i . evehramid !! 'the = 5 glpo rii ' ¦¦•' of .. famine ,, until thes . day f . of > retribuiiph » irriy ^ d ;; ( Hearj hear , hear . ) This - . bill wo ^ ld 'have !; th ! e eflfect ^^ of- « UencingHhe 3 uisi ; cbinpiint / of ; the ' - '& = jured man ; leBfresiStajSce lo ' oppression' mighV be ; construed into resistanckagainst ; thelaw ; " a ' nd . tlius ; the little of . liberty ' tharr 6 raaine ' diui 4 reiaii ^ would receive another . stab irpm , its . old 1 and implacable eneraies ,,. the ; ^ hi gs ,, ^ With / respect to the ipreserit bill ,, he maintained , : that : it was-afc once folly " and : 'intowards
justice the Irish landlords to give the Lord Lieutenant this shut-up knife / with as ^ many bladesin \ t as he chose to open , for he Waa ; certairi that the Irish landlords would find inthe end that they had been the greatest sufferers , by , it , and they ,-as well as * e English landlords , would beled tpexclaim , " Why aid we not look to remedial measures instead b ' f haying the agxicultural'labourers ' thrown upon tyfor ? their bread . " He referred to the case'b . f , the cpiiiers in-the north of England , whose'disoVder 8 were , wbrit 'to ^ be only increased bj . 'bx ' tra prdinary . ' . me ^ sury ^^ ba ' t who ' had become quiet and jpeaceable ^ bya mild administration of the ordinary , jaw . . Now . whatwas their case : —magi 8 trates who were their masters , sat in judgment upon them , and so . constant and .
irksome was the oppression . of . these coal kings , that the colliers—a kind of under-ground"race , ^ 'living- 'in villages together—and finding the law an oppressor , instead of 'protector } ' in' I'foi ^ dder ' ' 'time ' s ' . they sought to avenge tfremselves'byr to bleVwas the recoll ^ cti pri bf ^ thbifppwer , } nat . the noble lord ,, the . member for Lynn , ^ had ' told the , ; house .. ; that the - relaxation ,. of the .-Bank Charter Act of 1844 was caused by a visit from Mr Pease ^ onaerlya member of this- house ; to" Lord Grey ; and at which interview Mr Pease * assured the
noble lord' that ; a' stoppage of the collieries of Nbrthumberknd arid DurIiara > occasl pned .. by want of money , would drive .. the , . colliers of tnosecouDties into revolution .,. ( Hear ,. hear . ) . But he ' ( Mr O'Con . nor ) begged to inform . the ( house that reliance upon the ordinary law , and finding protection in the or . dinary law * -had seduced the colliers ' fr ' om ' ndt ' tq ' obedienceto the law , and for this ' sirriple fea ^ ohj'bei cause they'had'secured th ^^ an able solicitor , Mr Roberts ,, ^ 1 io ' taiighjt } Jjiie ^ i ' to ^ respect the . law , arid .. j rely ^ upon " 'ijje ^ J ^ jr ^ aiicj :: the ; Result ^^ was , as . he ^ MrjO ^ C pnnorj . Belieyedj-thatiwith . ' out , ' isinglei exciptionV . ihejudgfts ,. of tlie-land « over- ruled the coercion and : the tyranny of ; the 'inaster
magistratesv : and -to this ^ gentleman ' s'professionW skill , was dae the merit of having turned thKTibtQua race into ; a ' peaceable " and orderly ' class ?;'• If ^ inen ,, a system of relaxation and the .,, habit ,, o | tqaching . ^ h ? people to « ly upon the ordinary , ' law , had had that effect in England , why , not . try-. ' . the ' -saiae thing in Ireland ? ; It was because they thought they were a strong . government ,, and that they cbuW do ^ as they pleased with Ireland . The goverament' liad been asked in vain to produce their remedial mea . sures along with this measure of cbercion * T ? heir answer was , that they Intended .: to , Bfing ^ fbrwavdia Landlord and Tenant bil . l ,,, but . ther ^^ ere ( such difficulties in the way , that they musthavembre time to
consider it . ; "Well , suppose they had rib Landlord and Tenant bill ready—baa they , no ' other . bill ? Were they so incapable that they cpuid ' . dohothing for the Irish people but . coerce them ?; There was the hon . member for Rochdale ( Mr W . S ; Crawford ) an IiMhjlanfllo ' rd :- ; .. ; He ; did .-Jirt : ; ask '' .. tfcem :-for- a Coercion ; Bill ; and , just as ; he believed the thirteen Irish mepbers who had voted against this bill to be better representatives . -of Ireland than the other ninety-two , so he believed the . hbii . member for Rochdale to be abetter representatiye of the Irish landlords ihan thpsewWhVthe gofernrnent were in the habit of listening to . It was a ' . curious fact that when there ' was ; any thing required ' to be done for England i there , ; wa 8 . an .. easy , way of doing it ; but when anything was required , for Ireland it was felt tobe such a complicated . question ^ that it re quired
tw . ? nty- » Te years to lookat the principle , and other twenty . five . years-to look at tbe ; cletail 8 i He abV mitted ' thatthe present bill was mild in appearance , but it was cipable ^ fbebjg stretched to any purpose the Lord , Lieutenant , chose to apply it to . ; He asked again , where were their remedial measures ? Now he ( Mr O'Connor ) did not ask the government to bring in ; their remedial , measures first , he merely asked that they should proceed paripassu with their Coercion-Bill . The reason why the government were so : tard y in introducing remedial measures , was that ' they did not understand . Ireland , and were afraid that by chance they raight trench upon the rights ofthe . landlord ; . but he maintained that they could not by possibility do justice to . Ireland without at the same time doing justice to tha landlords . The government showed extreme sympathy with the Poles , and with tbe people of everV nation on earth except the Irish j but when the history of
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t >^ .- » t » # »^ . V > V . ..-- < :. -W-A-.. rt- ' ,. — .. ; ' *„ . V , i ; w ,... ^; . . ,. ,, ( . . ! P' * 7 . >¦ .- ' ¦ * ' \ eVf their own day and their own rule came , to ) 6 wtitte . fa , " . it ; should be charac ' teristicaily ' wrHten in bipod ; for they , ; had -made , a Golgotha of Iraland , ' and destroyed its . peace ! arid prosperity . . It was strange t ^ at the law-officers : of the Crown were not presentrohj that bqcasion to telL them whether ; or not this bill embraced all the previous Coercion Bills , as . be ( Mr O'Connor ) asserted it did . With respect . to the Catholic priesthood of Irelandto whom allusion had so often been raade ' itf ' tne course of these debates-he as a Prbtesiiant begged ,
to say , that he had had mora ' intercourse . with themthah any Catholic in Ireland ( laughter ); and for this reason , that the Catholics had intercourse only . Vfith ' the priests of their : immediate neighbour ^ hood , while he had mixed with them in all parts of Ireland ; . arid he defied hon . members to point out to him a more piousi ; forgiving , humane ' ; ' religious ^ or exceJleht body of men . In fact , the fault he ' had ; tb find-with them was . that they . were top suhseryient to the landlords in their neighbourhood .. . Whenever they happened to be anything good at all they held them up ;; to the admiration of their flock ; but he did iiot believe that thev denounced them from the altar .
If ; the . conduct of the landlords merited denunciation ; it was sure to be known sufficiently to th ' e pebple , who would npt require the priest's word to urge them on ' . " Now one word of comraent iippn the only tw . d points worthy ' ° bf . tibtice in the speech , of the hon . member for ' Bridpbrt : ' That hon . gentlemen said , let the government cultivate the , resources of- -Ireland as ; a means of securing tranquillity , while he appeared to fprget that jt was the very groundwork of all refbrms recoiriraended'by ; ' liim ' ' ( fvtr- O'Connor ); ¦ ' For years he'hatl : beeri sayihg'thatiiie'first 'duty ; 'bf ajol ' vernment % as ; to . Cultiyate _ . tK ^ re ' sp ^ t iy v but' n ^ forthe'jfandlMdji ' onjyj . nb r for . ' tjbe jandford ' s ; and ; tenan ^ h ^ t . 0 i ^ ; pax't ^ r . e ' nt . ( Pf . Aherfone ^ nWh ^^^ ( Hear , ' hearO ^ . W i hat % wi 8 ^ he landlord ' s 4 htereat in theiaw . material . c 6 mpar « d tpithe amountofiprdduce secured bythe-husbandman ' s toil' ? ^ The landlords
had advocatesliin - ' that hbUSe in abundance , bWthe , labourers . had but few . The" right 'hira . blironet l ( ad tdld' them'of , 'the asmsinatibn . of . a fe ^ . iandjords " and there was ' sympathjr for ; therh , ' He ; h ' ail trumped up anony . mbui qommunications to serve hispurpose , bu ^ he hVdnot ^ akeUvBubstantial ; cases which ' he mig ht ; haye gathered from "legal proceedings-in the irishrCQurts , ;} heihad-notirelaied a pitiful casere : Centiy . heardrbyMasttr'Murphyib Dui ) Hii ; 'wh ; erein th ! e '> ir ' ec ^ ver and' « 6 Sns " el ; fo ' r '" tne if espondent ^ applied to -the masterforpermissionltp give a paltry * 150 . 'id tnWihKamtant 8 > l Mole ' districtlio induce them , iaaoauuonrae \ r ^ mise . rahl ^ pme 8 . > -He had inptt pldi } ti \ e , | j ^ i 8 e ^ i |^ S 2 Q pi th ^ ose ^ rniserable . creatures were iunf d j m " onejhole 4 n Bearhayen ,- and ? tbat the ^ surA , v iyor , 8 , ' . dreadingTthe' 8 amefatej'have . wa r assa 36 matiort ; berws extermination . ¦ Those whtfhaye ' SUrviyed : ^ he '; plaguftj- ' pestilericeVahd- famine ^ Kye learned an awful lesson from the fate of their
miserable friends and relatives ,: ; whb had . been sent . to . SheirTlast-Vacd 6 unt , ^ unhouseli'd , unappointed , ; -unannealed ) without " / pity , sympathy , ox remorse ; The right hon . gentleman-has not told' the house . that these miserable creatures were forty shilling freeholders , imtU by the Emancipation Act they were , disfranchised , up te which time they were looked upon as political engines by their lord , but when their political powers ceased to be of service there , as throughout the rest of Ireland , they were scattered upon' the wide world , in order to gratify their tyrant-master ' s lust by knocking numberless little labour-fields into one large farm , to correspond with the then parliamentary franchise . - " . Theni " they fell in arrear , though they gave good ' value to the lord in * patronag e , and now ilO . OOO ' arrear $ , ; are sought to be recovered from these perishing slaves . ( Hear ; hear . ) Thehon . member for . Bridport had yentured upon another question , He had asked whal the state of Ireland would be in six months- after the
Union had been repealed ? He ( Mr O'Connor ) would answer himlikean Irishman , thus ; let him ' try-u ' s , anS ' he shall see . ' . ( Laughter . ) In coriclusipn ^ he-woiild make one more appeal to Irish members whVreprei sented ^ pop ular feeling in tbatco ^ try ^ , an 4 ^^ ojilf again implore them to abandpn ; that , equiyocal pbsii : tion \ yHich they occupied as flag ; company .-oKthe ! enemy , ' and , . likei . , him , face ; it ] b . e , ' ; . foes- . C ! f ' , Ireland « -i actingjpbn a defined principle and recognised policy ^ r-that of eradicating ! the cause ' as thebesft meaha ' qf : cUringrihe ,. 4 isease by ' hurling'frora i bffice e ^ riy ' aBd
any | ministry that dared to violate the little that re " - mained of the British constitution , t &ud that feared 'to-do justice to a peoplej ^ Iest thVjf" should offend a clay . ' Again he repeated , that if he stood . . alone , he . yfould oppose any government'that " 1 ¦ dare ^' t ' o ' goverh his country by : other ' than constitutional means . ^ Cheers . ) - — - . - \ " ^ Z ^ Z \ ^ y . ¦ ¦ ' • ' Saturday , picEMBBB ^ l .: ;^ . \ . ; , v ;) TheHouse of Commofas . Bat for . a 8 lior . jk ' time , ( whea the report of ttao Crime and Outrage ' ( Ireland ) ( Bill wa » received , and the third reading fii ' ed for Monday , "' - ' , "" . vc-i / )' : ' :- ¦ ; MONDAt ; 'i ) iiciEiaBEB-l 3 . ' - "' ¦ - . ' , '""
"HOUSE OP LORDS . '—Afttr ioineHaik on i theJplH ! tunl destitution of Dgvouport , occasioQed ty . the ' . preseri . tationof a petition oni that ;! 8 u W « 9 , f » ' '' li e ''' 'fioft ^ -- ^ - ' - ^ P ? open , arid a few lords waited upwa ^ i oTt ^ o ' fiours and a ; half for the Crime ijnd Oatrflges ^ ( Ireland " ) Bill , ' whieo waspa » Bing the ordeal ' * f the HKlrd reading , in thso ' th ' es h 9 U 8 B , ' . fit came at last » t twelve minutes " past ( eight p ' oldoli jionOl the Bwlof Shaftesfeury ; having ; takeii Jhe chair , the 'Honae , ' consisting of the Dake of Richmond , th « i ; Dbkeof Gr » fton , andJiBrdCampb ' eU wc ^' jhe bill a fitiiijimeiand ; adjonrhed . at thirteenmimic ' ipast eigU . ' ; ,. ; HOU 9 B iO ^ iC . OMUONS . ^ THB 6 by £ i » MBNX . Leitbb to j * hb . Bank . —Mr ' Fattisor ( » sid t ^ at ' an ' axpreaitqn had fallen from ? the ¦ Chancellor of thV 'Exchiqper , the other night in alluding to the letter ,, of the itovernmont
to the , Bank ; of England , and the blame which had been / cast on themifdr asking for a participation in the profits , ofloaris made by the Bails , to the t-ffect that the fuggestibn ; . hadi emanated from : the wthoritUs oi i tfceiBaniC " Sebeggeatoask tho right ' tionV gentleman . ivlip ^ tli . oBe ag ^ ritUBwere ? ' ' ;' ¦ ¦¦¦ ¦ ; , ' ; . . '* . ' . " " ^ .,.: ' | . " , ' . !' ,, t A . ; , " Th e ; Chakoiiio » of tho ; ExcniQwi complained ' thai Mr Pattison had not gWen him notioe of ' his qugstion , NevertheleBS , he had rio objection td say that he was at , thayime constantly in commdnicotion withthegoyernor , and depnty-govetnor of tWe ' ; Bank ; and m " . ihj »^ eojan » e . ' pil conyersation , 'it Was agreed-that" it would be better ' if . r thaVcondltioD wereinsertedil ^ the lettef . ' ^ ' j , " . !'; „! ' ,. . . ^ ATTisoM Wouia'hoVbav ^ put ^ tfie ^ u ^ saw those gentlemen-that ' morning , and thej . aBBured him
. thattheywerono ; parneiio theafrangement , ' , ; . ' , V . , ' , ' . .. , ' . AdjodbsmiSt roi ¦' tibT- HotsB' ^ Lord * J ,, Riq Bwii saiirrl bVg . 'to give ; riottoe '{ fiat " _ c 6 htiSgent on ' the , . pro . . ccedingg of ths'housi'fifid th ' fe prosre ! 8 , of th « bill no w beforoit 1 > I fhall ' 6 niironday / pcxVmoTe tfc aC ^ el bouse at its rising do " ^^ iid 3 our ^ to'Wd ' ' * e bra ary . ' \ ( Hear ,, h ' . 8 ar , andcheiMi ^ ' * ¦ •^^^ ^ ' ^ kZit i ^ A-% Qfi , i >* Mcii- Mi'rt ^ r . HDMi ; begged "tp jaslt ; * rhit , mVtJures ta 3 been ' taken'by tne-Board ;(? f . prdnflnca , to vipfij-iHe-puWfo' -wltn oranapc ^ TOiibfl-at-a ,, ^ ea « qnable >| ar ^ . ! ! He aiWd ttiii ^ bMauso ' h ' o h * ld in ' his hand an accoujit > biGhWted ; ti ^ in ; i 8 orre y * jn # oglan ; dJ Irefatfd /^ and iubliOiwere » tiUii ^ oralit of ^ hat'fia ^^ pljicej ^ . " ¦'¦ wr Col .-A « sos ' « aia ^ Supply . ^ bep ^ bye ^ with '« a " pVat a lbwer ip > ice-than they were Bold'&t present .-and'he-boped ^ thes ' wouia Bbartlr be is-1
* ued at naif tne pnqe , "" XhV eight abUling sheets would b ^ charged four shijllngs , and the' quarter ,. she « ts oae Bhilling .: ' - " ^ i : J yW *" ' 3 i ? ' >' •' ¦ ?\ "J : ' ?' ; ' "' , ' . '" ..: ¦ . ' ,.,. ' li , Mr . Hbms : I . o 6 aI 0 fsrip ' pfy a > m'fo r ' C ^^ i ^ Ordery -i&MJt 1 )*?^^™'' KtX ^ ti r . - . . Jiittucu ot'OTB .. OtroBiK ' . sipra . ^ . Rtjbjbsll ; ealJ ¦ ttiat the iiohi'ni ' emb ' or for'Miaai e ^^ ad ^ a ' jiio ^ ice ofinp . tlon'on the pap ' eVj t 0 Whieh '" iicf day . ^ ag . ^ ed , V ? l » t ] f 8 ,. teK thej de ' fericei'i ' o / the' coaritry ; - ; . ; . Ar . tw ^ he rec ^ be ( Lord J . Russell ) propostd , on the pirtof the giprern ^ mentiito enter into a 8 tatem « nt jf ; wbaVbad . . been done , and what was intended ' to . be' done In jhat ritpect ; and be thought that such a qneBtion had better . be brought forward'by some memoer " of the ' goverpmsnt than bv . an JndeptDdent member * If the hon ,. meajber was Dot ¦ satisfied with his ( Lord J . RusEeli ' sJt tatement , U wasi gtiUopen to him to make a motion on tho subject . He wished to ; ask the hon ' ; member te defer his motion . Until after'he ( Lord J . Russell ) had made his statement . >
• Mr B . QsBoaKE , » aid . that after . the . atatement of the hobleiord he should not have the slightest hesitation Id poBtponin ' fr his motion . ( Hear , hoar . ) . .. ; :.,..,.. < Riv 8 » PtiTB . T-Iord TiiuntroH , in awwtrtOrMr t . Baring , intimated that the French government had manifested a strong desire to co-operate with Great Britain in putting an end to . the present state of things inthe River Plate . Tbe French authorities had tent out instructions for raising tbe blockade ; and that object effected there would bo a fair prospect of thetcr . minatibn of hoitllttieB .
Emomiok of ins jBsniTfl mom SwiiziBUBB ^ -Mr J O'OoMNKti , begged to ask the noble lord the Secretary for Foreign Affair * the follo * in ( t qnestions of which he had fivennotlce-r WhethMhehadrecelvedoffid ttHB&rmttion of . the decrees of the provisional governments of the can touMVr ^ vmM **™ , baniihing . forev . rtlie JeaultBithBLIgaorlBM , the Brothers of the Christian DocWne , ' tbePrauHn Nun ,, tba . istw . Si ! 5 £ and . other denominations of / religionists , male 21 fe ma e nnder pretence of their Mug- affiliatedtothe Je . « ais ; gl . o ^^ confiscating th . irentire pSy . S > n >
made ' of it during nearl y two months previeus to the surrender of Pribourg and Lucerne ? and if the noble lord had also melted official Information of tb « enor-< npu » demands made npon the cantons of' the . Sonderbund for the espeuses ot the war , 1000 ^ 000 of francs being dsmandtd by the 20 th inst ., and two millions more within -a , brief jpaoa afterward * , be » J 4 e » other charges and exaotiom f Tbe hon . member wai thon about to proceed with the following quiiUon , which was cAntained on the notice , t ! e ., whethir , tonsidering tbesa acts of a tyrannous majority in Switzerland , tbe insults oud outrages to the clergy , and tbe religion of tbe ml
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^^ & ff ^ msSB ^»^^ - viduals » ' meng that minority , whale only crime was to • ¦ ¦ ¦ . discharge faithfully the duties imposed on thorn by their ¦ fellow-otfiMns , « u urgent oaie had not aiiien for th » , { QterVentibn of the ' poweri who gaaraBhed , is 1815 , th » . th 9 tant 6 hBlindependeneof ) f Swltii « rlancl ! -. when ¦ ¦ , ThiSntiKW inttrpotedana uld the kon . membeff . mu'M ' stop ' at the last paragraph : of his Botlce . - .. . - Mr J . O'CdNiriLtsaid hebeileTeaitwas compstenttohlm ori » motion fortho adjournment of . thehouseteast that language lii the » hapo of remarks . He ther « -r fora moved { that the house do naw adjourn .. ( Upon thi » thehon . member went on frith th » paragraph in q « es > . tton . ) - - - ¦¦ ••'' '¦•; : " - " •'" . '"• . ;¦ ¦•¦ - . .. - . ¦ ¦ ¦ ' .... •¦
Tiicount Pa 1 m « 8 Tos laid that the government had re «» lved offlolaliy the decrees of tbe new . govwometit of Friboure , bantsbin g tht Jeiultfl and the orders in wm . n ' exlon with them fromFribourg ; bitthey baajnotreceived offlcisllythe decree ! of thccantoB ef Lucerne , nor ha * theyreeeivedth ' a infdrmatlsn mentioned in the second , queition of-the heii . member . With regard tothe eonoluaiBgquestibnj'he ' btgged to say ttat it did notap . pear to the government that there ware any grounds tojmtlfy the lnter ( eren& * of the powers who . guaranteed the independence of Switzerland in 1815 . Dr BowiiHo regretted that th « hon membw for Lia > - orlck . in putting ail question , had vituperated , the Dietof Switxerlahd ;" . * : ( Order , ordir . ) . - The Spbaeeb must remind the hon . member thatt here w ^ ai Bo ^ questiAnbefore the house . . ¦ ¦ CoRBBNcr' ( BANK . iKo ) . —On Sir O . Gbby morlng that tbs brdtr of the flay be read for the third reading ef the-1 Cfimenna'OutragearelaBd J Bill , ' . "
lTrTy . ' T 7 flQin » A » T'to&k tba opportunity of . Tladicatisffhimself froni' the attack made upon him a ifewaightSF , ago by Sir R ; Peel , ' for hariog suppressed a portion ot tbe ' word ' s ' which SirR ; Peel had used in 1814 respecting ' the Scoitiih ; b ' anklng syBtom , His knowlsdge of that-» peech was derired from tbe report in the Times , which , - did not contain the paragraph on which Sir Robert ie >' lied . He thereforecontendaa that he was perfectly jastifiedin asserting'that Sir R . Peel b&dnot given dueformal and public no tic * of bis intention to legislate at ' ib'&Vttrae for the banks " of SAotiand / and that be bad noright tb'say that he had misrepresentedhig words . ' ¦ ' ¦ 8 » ' '^ R ' i PBBtrasserted that , there , cou \ d . . no . fc be" sny doubt ;>)' - . th « timi of tho intenUonj of the ge » - Ternwent with" respeot "to the . i banka' of Scotland ,, for it bad beon hi * duty to moya eertain resolutions iocommittee , and one of tho « e resolutions relatsd to Scot * land . ' Th » banks of Scotland understood that their
banking relations were nob to be interfered with by theaot ' ot 1844 , but they also oadtntood thai no new bank » - i ng institution cf issue would be permitted after the passing of that . act . : . ' Cozbciov Bui , . —The order . of the day was thenread . - ' On the question that the bill be read a thud time ; ' . » ^ . ' :- \ 'L " ' : ' " :. UX . . „ ' , ' ,. ¦¦ ' : , '¦ ¦ Mr J . O' 0 oNHBiL , inredemption . of bis / pledgp , move * khatiibereftd a third time " that day'ii , mon the . la-( biceurso of his remarks hs ^ retracted ihe oBsertioBa which . "' ' he haa made ? fre ^ sjecting ,, the . appointment' of ' Mr "Ryan , 5-jand " IreadV , a-j ; jejteic , from . the pariin J jpfriest ^ bf SftokestoVnV' aipytng " that Major Mahdn b » u ^ ever been ' ; denpjinced ., fi ; om the altar 6 ' f ; ats ?' chap ( jl , or from any ' altar in any chapel withia twentymHes of'Strokesto ' wn ' . kf ; . M . 'Deimott ' s state * ment ' wasas -followsi : — ' If , as ^^ ft gratuitously [ asserted ,
any OathoHc . clergyman BasdenouGcad any one of thOB 9-obnoxJou * landlords from hi » alt « rpr « Tlous to the fatal 1 - event la which he has fallen a victiin . to the wlid justice' ofretenge , the legal proc « 4 of ; rend « rln ( r that clergyman amenable tothe law , andreiponsibleforhiBtedi .-tioui preaching , is neither expensive nor difficult . May I ask why suoh steps are nbTt 8 keBby . tie ; fifilicte ' d « la « tifes or by the Inheritor tf the ' pro perty t ' Oh ! the inferrae r wUl noicome forward-lirseouraga . eozestbronghi nil DBger ' s , He ' ekalks SntoKl ^ lurkiBg hoie ^ and laughs , ' at the credulUyl ofjib ' og » wk | . eimpWd him after he ie « - celved the reward ^^ bls t ^ rpitu | ei' ; There may be founi is a G »» h ' olle ;' cdi ) gr ( iga ' ti 6 n Bome , hireling serf
whetdembarrassment tempiB him' to court the , patronage of his landlordrk ^ po ' offer £ isBerTlces ;" as ' a ^; o ^ perer . ^ foF ^^^^ ^ iU . ^ But ' whyP ' al'fi ? a ' qes ' iKe ^ eme' / such . character cdme ^ rwaratosubstanWate' ^ ba' ^ aiouscWrges ag ^ tbe : piie&ts i : - ; xio , * he stanas bock ,, be ; ause he kaows bis ' perfidy wduld ^ be ^ electeS ; aBd ^ that ^ he ' then sSonid be Beld up to" pjiblif s % : fe « l ^^ nlator . [ I ; tfa ' Te ifow to assure tbe '' pSblio , by itho . mest solemnhis' iBame-imentio ^ MrfiSr ^ ViW / tJte - ia
' aea ^ H ' i : 'Jc ft H ? 5 Onae ' r' " tneWfeLpd ^ de ! eHre ? tBrt ^ ifngle ^ oiitiKH ^ aV ccr « r s ' ^ n irom ^ tJio ¦ -Viar ' wh'le ^ bfm ^ conAr ^ cWoii oPptfiw . n ^ 16 Btirfldla'WIfirp ' eWa ^ W &W t [ qK W 8 ; be e > l $ r >^ 'tfteflantry-whSmeellng ^ wrtPJilreaoy ^ wQWi ' iUDto . w f ^> -aiven | ef « eMr * l « t ^ lMs , oTthe ¥ , « Ued opWWtf ^ ay be ^ rfg ^ SaThSira di . -setrou ' i ^ e ^ rtafta ' B ' - ' ock ' rred ^ 'feaw . ^ uapelsity for tbjPiai » Hai 4 play ^ alVie niilIl > ri iHifbKe surrWtfara * tH ^ 6 to m 8 n s M roof ^ wU ^ B ^ rVe-Mif- ^^ U ^ nuiio tne
. muuigiucriBj pruairaie on tnrjiinoio . writn * login agony , and the lieorftjroCon ^ athei * ' remained sup > - pl . icatiag on his kneci . ^ Iisiwy io fljficf ibi % h aeroonj Stration of physical forcejjnor ^ ld I see any ' Heea forVra-^ al . triampb ' and exultaUon ^ when ^ turpiDg af ter these feats , were nobl ; performed ;' nof * can i * eonceive that the ' ftfiing of , humanity should permiTVuy man to send his bailiff to rerieit thoBeficenesqfjb ' o 1 r ; j " aj | d ^ ongagratlop ,. withan ' orflo r , if tfieVtouna a MS built prianmiiifbtcd im . thomurtyrulns . todemoiiVh'irBe ' ^ eandcitiigmsb . be . « , tb'asMeaVi ^ tb ^ wrStcWfca WaSS i ^ j ^^ W Ai ^ £ ^! -of whieh I can only draw fvsry teealcfent portraife bad norV k-teifo * M j ^® Mi $ M $ A ' p * '
the'thundering denunciations of tHeTatUianQguld effect ,, „ r naa > hey ; been roned % tfb ^ fiea |; ^ M ^ IfKtb ^ , ; pVange press ; that theirfab ' ricWed ^ lj ' firgrof dennncia . \ - " : ¦ > tio'ri ^ against the ^^ , . »¦ > u »; andflaglUoni calumny : ' lMVno'i ; tru ^ at , the , ex-. ' . ' .. terminated tenants of tho ; late Major llahon have beea - airsenttp . Amerioai 'There artf fiundreds / aVjetjwhQ ; 1 . i ; surylTed their eipulslon . afteFs ^ Dg , ^^ away frora . thiir . doow add aafely depqai ^ dl ^| U ) iu the , ; , landlord ' s ! haggard , —left ; to sub ^ s ' fon . jthe tjreca " rion » , V -, alms , of their i : nelgb . b 6 ur 8 , - 'foyiB ^ . \ aVquta 8 j ^ ow WandoreraV without ' a-frleaa !' -to ' ; c ^ ,. ' ; ., fe wherepntoOaythalr ' > Mn btoeB . eTh 6 | tsMM . lt
Hughe 8 : Wflp hadi been accusea of a 8 lmilar , sffenqe , ( hadll : , { t , ' expresslyideniedvhaviBg used th ^ o ^ aV ' ajttrit ^' d B to . i ( . ' . ¦ him ;; The-atcryagainsthimhaaoyi gi ^ atea ^ bar ' . Conservative -paper , wti 6 se bi ^ cV'it ^ wai tp , pas , t » . ; , y ^ slur ^ upon .. \ n 9 iCathoU 6 ? prie 8 thep ^ fy ^ ndwi himself fromiimputei incoiiBistciwyJn haVipg ¦ ¦¦¦ > l . voteji . fpfjhe first j rei dtug < jf tlic'tfU . ' ; ^ Ta ^ . ^ , a ' o . iVr ^ o ¦ ¦ belUf that remedial raeaaurea wpiridI ] ' bf , prpdVce ^ snd -.-' proceeded . witkviwrf ^ tii n- ' stn " ' the i&vc ' ire / j ^ TeBsur ** ,-.., ' He'ijoyf implored' th ^ iiouae to ^ pass ¦ intkiuTii , $ i ~ z » ui . f . < , ! S \ fw ^ iroUndwltbout ^ delay ^' KuheyvijlUd solelyp » i the , ¦ . Poor ^ Lawsithey , would tr'rtfto . a ^ bVoircn- . iiepcl ., ' l ^ i ibtf , m ^ antimef . lheilmplored the jofSiiaiepi . tpJKw-tpVth'S , . utmpftltbem ' ianBtiieyBad inihwrbaudsof ^ iyDgiobj , ' ¦ ' ,-. tojtb ^ people . ic-lottthera do ' ttj ^ VdofJnjj ' ^ hij r . wej ^ Vjni . ., ¦¦
ofthe ^ pei alstate of Ireland , ' Tkera wire difiicunlf . s ia . , ¦ ' the ^ ay , ?» adoubt f-eut a , gopd ' . bea ^ n ^ g ' 'W jl | , ialf airi / . " . ' H ^^' ^ iaswaUB elB ^«« rj V , ; v , : ^' vd t . ^ . 'V ¦ vMr . i 8 . vp'B » iEk' ' ieWidea ' th > . amonamentlw ,, Ha » in »; 1 ;> been . absent froni the dlBouM upen- theibili ; in cdnicquenco of ' indjipiosii tto p ^ i he hoped ¦ ! he . ghouiabe ' permUte ' d ' to' ^ tf , ttieygr ^ undr . o . n whieh - he felt bound , to giro thfrneasvire-ail ' tlie oppositioi ia - blSiPowcr ; though he ' wrt ^ ultMenifcjeltiM thVhoose- • - ¦ -, was ; thorongbly weary of ' the ! sn > JpptV ^ ( Hearji-bear- " ) . -, ' Among the majoritywhd ^ vour of . the'measurp'he ft ( dri , i ( a lsrge ' pqrjion ^ ofithfr < members who ' were the representatlires of irel 8 i » d » rand ' ' . he . was not prepared to say that . al | . due attention " should not be paW to ^ the expression of th ' e ] r " 6 p | niun . v ^ At . the- " " - ' some time , he ^ haa S alw ays feitit ' his ' . auty to aot uBon-Bj * - - of
¦ o ^ nsTiewB-measures ,. - . Mo h ' on . niember , mho iras . bul , imp «* feeily beartllnith ' a gajil ^ y , " o ' wing ' to the bos » pf ! cQnTerjation whiohprevaiIcd"int 6 efepu 8 (' ,. procceded , to , as 8 urothehon . gentleman that ha , should ' despaire * bisrap ? and of his country , if he did not lelleTe that the outrages' ^ whlch haajrecently-been committea in Irtland wire the 6 oneequeacer 6 f misgovernment fer mapy centurieBdown - to tfiiei ' present hour ,... There was boi man Iri ' -the ^ hdase' who iroulfrgo further than lie ¦ woui < $ itowards the supprrtsipn of those outrages , ' if any-, me » Bures could be pointed out to himi which would mitigate insteaa of aggravate the evlle of which eomplaint had bees made . ' ' ' The * plan pro ' ppied b ythe right hoo baronotthe tnetaber'forTamwortb , asysteniof eipionlage , under ! the-name ofadiitectiye ' ppiice , wouid-onlr lead tomore ' grleTbus evils ; thanHbose ^ whiehialreadj ex . Jsted . .. ^ iv ; itb respect to tnis ' inVasure be ^
seemedito him to'be ' UaWe tp ^ rdauce grik&rmisebieft than itproposedto' ^ TemeuyteWnifft heav * Bemerlt .. of being tffec ^ lTe ^ It nndertobk't ^ alsarm tha whole pppnla . tion of Ireland . Kow . ih ' e a ' afest way of RutUngdown onU rage wouldbVto < pntarms in ' to . the handi of , the ; . well , aisposed , thus creatiag a moral power which oould not fail to have a beneficial resul t ; ' With ' reference to the poisesslom © farms by the peasantry , ' the government had not derlt quite fairly with tbis subject , beoause the fight hon . gentleman ( Sire . Grej ) had emitted to remar ^ a most BtriWng fact , namely , that there had beca » greater ambuiii of reiistanoe offered to armed attach * Ihan had taken place at any former perioa . Hethought it would have been but fair , that the right hon , gentleman should hare mentioned some of the nnmetou » -in .
stances in whichthefarmers ha a defended their dwellings 8 gaJnst'rte- »* 'ac ls 8 « f midnightmarauderi , The ' bifl Impoied ttrge pecdnJary penaltieB upon the occupiers ia a proclaimed district , in the shape of expenses incumdr for the maintenance of the comtabulary . He ventured to submit to the hoase that they were proceeding on a wrong principle altogether , ' and that they ought to < & courage ailnmeh as passible the principle of « elf-TeHancc , and abandoB amilitary system like that based on the employment of the police , As an Irishman , and a » anindlvldnal member o ( the house , be tendered his best thanks to Ae people of tbia coaritry for the exertions wnich they had ' made for the relief of Irish distress . He must , hewever , say , that la the last tummtr hun . dreds and thonsands of people 1 b Ireland were suffered to die , wb 9 night har&bcen kept alive if the government
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"' . Thb' Couktxes Gracciou . —Thename of Lori ; Byron ' s ' celebrated favourite appears " in tne Paris paper ? , as about to enter once more into tbe bonds efihatrimbny . * . Arriong tbe ffiirriages published at the Maine of the' firrtarroDdisseihent of Parjs is that of 'If : EUim ^ EtieniDieOcKve ? buil ?§^ Marquis de Bbissy Sa CbrirJraisi' pfeer of France , and Chevalier of . the iiiegionnf Honbnr , ' widower , to Madame The : resoFraiisoife OlyrnpieGaspera Gamba , daughter of the ; Count Ruisem Ganiba GriBelli , arid widow of Count Guiccioli : ' . The Marquis ye Boissy , like his fair bride , baa arrived at an age of decided maturity . He baa been for roveral years a widower , having been married in the first ' -instance' to' Madsmoiselle de
MuanTer de Folleville , who , we belieTe , was granddanehter and joint helms nf the millionaire Marquis r d * AHgre . By that marriage the rnarqoia had an only daughter , who was married in 1843 to the Prince de Leon , eldest son of the Duke de Rohan . The Gountesi Guicoiolir therefore > beec < mea . not only allied to some of the noblest families in France , but the wife of one o £ the . wealthiest- ^ - the nobility im that OOUhtry . <••• . « .. •¦ rii-j ' . vis s . - : it : aK ^ n : w : ^ s « J ( 3 ThB B 0 CI 9 ADVIRIIBEa . 'AKD ATIS < BnKT ^ lNEW 8 , '' of Dei ; . 11 th , fipeaking-of ^ tfeeEiniriority .: who voted ; against Coercion , ao 4 for ; ' Repeal' thus ' . sjrites ^ t-Feareua is . withal , the ; BKSt . nsefnLofj the -batch .-Hestahd&nplike , * manandlelbthetroth . ; Friend and 'foe he powders into-dust with- theterrilia
we < sbC of hia 8 ledger . hain . m . er , tQngue ^ ; Both . thedead and the living are beyond the palo ' . of his ; mercyv ; It 13 quite true that , Mr ^ V ? alter ,. of , iPrintirjf :. house Fquare , trieiJ t onTnesday ,. to putj . hinudown withra little extempore thnndet ; -bufc . he decidedly suffered for it , loBt his temper , and retreated . in shame and confafiion . . JFeargnssmashed him at % single blowy > MisttiBOSE . —At the meetiHR offtheWorkinB Man ' s Association for the promotwn of nsefnF f political , agricultnral , and social kaowledge , held at the Princess Rojal , Circus-street , New-road , on Monday evening , Mr Corduroy intheehair . 'ItwaresoWita , That the thanks of the members be given to Mr Stallwood for hiakind donation of books ; and that he be elected an honorary member ef tbe BOciety . 'A ' co ' n-
siderableacquisition . was made to the members , " also to the volumes ia the library . The meetiBgs fake place every Monday evening . The Nobthkbit Star and other papers are provided for the use " of member ? , as well as ansefql and instructive library of books . Mr Gaest ( the secretary ) attend on " each night of aeeeting , to give information and enrol members in 'The National Co-Operative Benefit Society . ' -- - • •" ' ¦¦ ¦ Thb EtBcnuo Tbxqusb . —There are now 2 , 000 miles of electric telegraph in Operation , and the p ( Onv-a- ! iBer »« efearfiil that they will be snperfeded by the meohanieal mode of Bporting . Th « ir fears are , however , groaadless , for the electric telegraph « aanot give very c < jpkrasdetaa « vtb « reports fished jby its agency bein « naturally rather wire-drawn . — ¦ ¦
Putick , ¦' :. '•' ¦ ' ¦ : ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' ' ' . " ' - - ¦ " ¦ '• '¦ SraGuuaDiscttTEEr . — -Workmen have been re-Icently repairing the interior arcfies of Durham Cathedral . In the thickest ef the transept arches they have found a fire-plaee and chimney of large proportion ! . •_ .- "¦ - ; Aaptber agreeable oocapation for seaside lodgers is in counting your lamps of sugar , in the morning , and counting tsem again in the eretdnfc , to see how many the land'ady has helped hersetf to during the day .-Rmch ' s Pocket Bool . ; ; . The LiaeriC , Chronicle states , that a gentleman , ^ he was unable to get writs served , dressed a bailiff io female attire and thus effected his object , for the aeL iing woman was admitted , though the bailiff in awr . ^ jH MWM had YainlydenHjufed entrance .
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^^^ , THE- ^ itfgRfe s ^ rt " ¦ " > - ^— ' •¦ y ¦ ' ^ - ¦ - ¦ - _ ¦¦ . .. . ..- . ¦ . * . _ . ¦ ¦ ¦ - -
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Dec. 18, 1847, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1449/page/7/
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