The New York Herald Newspaper, February 1, 1857, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

3 NEW YORK HERALB, SUNDAY, FRBRUARY I, 1857. hee Deen » roggestion msde to give these men eo "He divisions Ipte actten;cn Mesters Adan, She- medal,” to be siruck 2or the ‘and Lieutenant Betknep, for their very able per- eh te seen eee op that mutton coment called @ how) ser, do themsetves the pleasure of ‘which sounded the death kue!! to wary e foe; om Captain Reavers. 1 was told to-day Marty | Simme sod bis gallant corre of Marines, who were ever og $0 exprese b wenis of big> eim'ration, patient and conciliatory, and his schoo! | ready to mete out te the foe bis deserts, aud to prererve the same time m handnome contribatior. Rnife of @ ruthless acenssm, bimeclf an of politics emimently liberal. Fis tithe dates as far beck | the bonor of that fing upteynished and, lastly, om the re some lour muDIES ago boas We! Bb ‘ther ‘as 1627, ag & Scotch peer, and if one may judge from the | maining defenders of the ships, who did thetr part aad or & revision of tbe Bivie, ihe ebawmec, fe1 rk wore eager for the fray. tosubdside alter passing through the vaca! ANOTHSR ACCOUNT OF THE ENGAGEMENT. gree 8 of datty and weekly mageuoes and Canton, Nov 1¥, 1866. reviews. Every vow and then, however we bear of ibe On Saiurdey, the 16th inst, the first cutter of the matter (rom some ‘ealated source, lord Panmure, cur United States abtp Portsmouth, cont Foote ‘War Minister, bas jcst dropped upon the maker at a per otbers, was pr g trom Whampoa t Caatoa, mectirg of the Edimbarg Bible Society, and ae he mates Pr hen she was Gred uj trom the Barrier Forts. li was statesmen duriag next session ‘aBusion to the Ame) ican version or revision Of the Sorip- | salvos of booming ro hali-pest 4 in the oon whem this ococrred. @f Parliament. We propose upon other cocasione to ex- bares, | seu: $ou an extract ‘cag Lis lordahip’s remarks, | the swelling orcas, cad. ts at the ‘The War in the Hast. American ‘lag wes in @ position that dors away wi al) amine it in its more extended bearings. 11 is a eubjeot After speaking of the open attacks upon the Protestant | the military within and withoct the sacred THE ANG@LO-AMBRICAN WAR IN CHINA. ‘chance of a plen of mistaking {t, while no less than two full of interest and importance tn its religion from the Romen Ostholing, and the imsidiour de- | sented arms, it wae casy to seo [From the Hong Kong Be Mail (Extra), Nov. 94} ‘shot, amd three charges of grape after the round merce, politics and philanthropy. figne of tractarial nese hearie, he says, are balf popiah, | the mos} unrefiecting were affected in no common man- The clipper steamer field, ta leave to-morrow, ibe | shot, were “red tnto the boat by the Chinese ‘‘braves.”” ‘THE CHINESE PEOPLE, BOTH CIVILIZED AND KOR AL—~ he goes on 1 say:—' Wo Dave heard islk im theeoun- | ner. They eodbed sioud, women fainted, aud the stern | 26tb, will reach Csloutta no doubt before tho despatch At tbe first discharge of grape the boat was turned for THEIR FREE PRESS ASD NEWSPAPERS, wy. anc we bave seen absolcicly put into practice im the | est seldier showed, by tho muscular contractions of bie | thence of the first overland mail in Janaary, and we avail ips, where abe arrived at 6 o’clock, and after an [rem the London Post, Jan. 16.) ‘Bnked Mates of Awerica, a me for whet ‘es called a | vieege, thai be was nos unmoved. oureetves of the opportt to furnish cur readers with | hour Commodore Armsirong decided upon taking pos A meeting of the Ethnological Society was heid yestef- new version of the Bible. Now, feeling very stroagty on At three o’ciock P. Ml. the canons re-sesombied et th | & repript of the news pubi: by us since the despatch @ the two forte, ana‘ihen advising the Governor day evening at their rooms in Cavendih square ; the Puoliciy stating } cathedra!, and chanted the vospers for the dead. Tow | of the mail om the 16th inst. The most mirring of events | of top of what had occurred. The insult having beer president, Alderman Kennedy, in tne chair. » ught with ite ct- | coffin wan atterwarte deposited in the vault desticed to | bave been an insane attack by imperialists om Doase from | avenged, the “property ” might have been returned to its Dr. Honan read @ paper on the character of the west capger Wo (he Protestant liberties of this country— | recetve ihe mortal remaine of the archbishops of Paris, | Un‘ted States ehips of war, and the we!! merited punish. | rightful owner, or retained, ceenoting 00 the reply trom Chinese, with a view to remove the notion 80 ocmmonly Bey, is 2 fraught with danger to tho Protestant religion | which ic situaied ai the entrance of the choir, [ais vault | ment which followed tho bri g 0D them, Governor Yeh might indicate « wiab for war or peace entertained of the debased condition of that people. This weil. (\ } 0k America ! am bappy tw fod thes ine | only coniaime Ave coffins—those of Mgr. de Jeagne, who ‘The barrier foris being entirely demolished, the Amo- | with ibe Americans. he thought advisable at the prasoui time, in consequence soheme shere bas been, | might almosi cay, citerly abor. | died ainco the first Kevoluuon: of du Belloy, who | ricans intend fo retire from the quarrei, it is sad, aad At daylight on funday the San Jacinto’s cutter com Of the bostilities in which this country is engaged with the tive is quite trce, and every man mcat edmit that ae bis resignation @; the period of the Concordat m | wait the is:ue of Admiral Sey moar’s demonstration before | menced sounding the river from Whampoa to the Bar Chinese, who bave been undeservedly abused «od mis- were are perhaps some slight things—some mistrans- , Det did pot de sili 1812; of Mgr. de Perigord, who | sgaimoperating. The French have also withdrawn toeir | rier, which was accomplished after the les of a man resented. Dr. Hodgkin referred to the recent work lations, slight in thomsetves, and net affecting any | died m i821; of Mgr. do Quelen, who died at tne cloee of | men-of- war's men frem the factories, and, report has it, | from a thot while tbrowicg the lead. At four P. M., orn, Meadows on China, frcm which he read copious great principie—which might ibe corrected in 2689, and of Mgr. A‘re, who was Kiled tn 1848. Too | have taken poesestion of the Liptat forte, on one of the | twenty-four hours alter the Portsmouth’s boat had been extracts, showing thai inthe arts of civilization and Wantiaiion of the Holy “oriptures, but they are so | bear. of the deceased is’ to be deposited in the church of | branches of the river. These they intend holding pend- | fired into, bat ship and the Levant were neariy in poei- f the drain of silver from China in | their moral conduct the Chinere are ‘ar advanced and 4 ccmpariton with the danger Of 1etting in those who | St. stienne-du Moni, where {t yielded ite lle biood, after | leg the arrangement o: some matiere which they, too | tion to open fre, With only water enough to ‘lost the | tba in consequence of, the drais or shiner Hrom Chiee Mm | Higniy praiseworthy ; ad that, when fghiing amoag ‘ovis make iterations, partly from the crisiciam of erc- | the ceremony of puridcation has been pervormed, which | bave to present to the goverament of China, the recent | Portsmouth, abe was towed up to her berth by tho Wil | Immediate payment for the opium, the l ‘turned | *hemselves, they expibit great physical cowrage, though» @hion, partly for tue purpose of getting in dogmas of tho'r | will be to reel tartare and murder of the iesienery Chapdelaine | lamete, im the most galleut style: em Gnevgie' | De Susen hiseruatey and eg de: apetemed desploable ‘as dombatanis to Buropeans. Dr. Bodgkilt own, that I think it woula be the most dangerous and Verger, the assassin, Laving been asked, according to | baving yet to beexplained to the authority qcalified wo | part who was for many miautes in the midst of a ho: | into one of barter, iy aa agp pact adverted to the various articles of manutecture im wnich moet disastrous thing the: could occur to this country if | law, if be bad made a choice of av advocaie to defend | receive the explapation~—-M. do Montigny—aow on bis | fre from the forts, whion bad long before the aby] ig ba @ Jove) Ce paren : me Chinese bad long excelied the most ‘civilised nations 0° We were to permit thove words io be tampered with, | him, bas suewered that he did not require one, an it was | way bere from Cochin China. abip was bear enough to aut Capiain Foote. After the | Pet ead: tne eet adia Company in continuing the | EUFOpe, and tothe produce of their vast territory, 60 use ‘whicb bave been household words in many e plousfamily | bie tention todefend himself. 1u consequence, the Prosi Disappotnted in the hope of vringing the Canton gov | stcamerj bad been ordered to ‘cast off and take care of | opinion that catangy 5 eet - yey fm ful and ‘ing sable to us, ae affording additional reasons for upwards of 300 years, and I hope will be the hovse- | dent of the Ass!zes fer the session \n wich be ‘s{o be tried | ¢rpment to a proper sense of dety by the harsh mean: | kerself,” Captain Foo:e dropped with the ‘ood for five Farge Wry L. ak Ww ate ans _" ge gpd poh a ‘amicable relations with ¢ ‘oic worde 0° al! the families of the world before 300 | has cficiully directed M. Nogent Saint-Laurent to sat ac | reported in our Inet summary, Admiral Seymour now re | minuice ti] within 450 yarce? distance of the nearest damon, en hy EE. EK. ented | (MF. Moxzooury Mamnx, om being on by the . his advocate. 1; pas been dec.ded that M. Delargie, First | lice, apparently, and with reason, ov ooereion by the peo | fort, ( fe one at ihe right end of the barrier.) | Tie tom eugasing in any deseription of trade, Me ai. | CPAITmAD, favored the meeting with his experiences of President of the Imperial Court, eal! preside at ine trial, | ple. With this, or some such view, his Excellency le in Se || toda te tne deat ined: aptinn, teas eave om 4, and | China, and gave an account of the popalation and of thelr im eens A he omen, | sna: etme, Proven Gone eappor oe po. | Eebeg i Mra cure, Bel Bad cere Jenks = estosed. ay cvcummaaseimplsning ioe home | Svat, mh tly omirmed the myerane mace ol mar! an © \@ 2 the | secution. 1 4 = went of lows. He noticed * eaters of these; and, raiber thea'riak the removal of | Altogether tis impossible to exaggerate the intense | ing them in thone parts of the river where danger from | short, the sbip fired 290 eight inch abells in the following | government, tbat an armed rors 2a % | Mon of the Chinese tn civilization at ‘a persed when the eno gieat landmarks of our Protestant \est tutions, ! | sympaiby which !m a)! circles has been manifested about | Ore-ral as to be apprehended— coming off those tracks | two bours ard fifteen minutes. at od ea like pirates. ” whole of Europo wat in a state of bar! im, and be laid ‘woald submit w those Httio impertections which may exiat ‘Bis terrible tragedy. rom the bighest perscnages to | which it may be found necessary tc open on an carly o0- Ail were well pisced at their nearest neighbors and a: oe fo man (ig a ar articular stress on the fact that a stop scemed to have im eur present version, leaving {tas part of the calliag of | the bumbiest, no over sabject bas been suffered to divide t that spproaches the factories | the Kovnd fort on the left, some 1,400 yards distant. At | | The Hav. Conon lessee thee Meet ae opiuce im Ching | BéeR pat on their furtner improvement eight bun- our mahisters to sitdy the Holy Scriptures ‘m the origical | the inte The Conferences have been wound up; ibe ince the Niger has been guard- | dark firing ceased, the forts keeping it up till fifteen min ——_ te the ace at Get ae Sapatenea tothe | dred years ago, at which they were, ss he ex- Sengucr,to ft them to explain totbose whos; under | Hetvetio "russo ccestion been arranged; and last, not iy t© come within reacn of ber | utes before ibe ship stopped. nos eens: sample of what pay Mt the lo pty sad Pate y ore erage reased it, ‘stereotyped, Of progressing, thew wherein thore little differences exist. 1am quite | least, the famous oration of Sir Robert Peel, wherein all ia in store at the French Folly at this time. The twoforts | sprond 0 Aus.ccospee s Lag ny Bp ge dy they lost the knowledge of some of the arte in which they eercin of this, that if we hed pot an authorized and con- | soris of atrange things bave beon said, have ail flattered A covered way from the British factory to the south | are said to be flied with Engiah guns and jankmen | s0cial bee od na . ‘commented upon an ar. | 2ormerly attained great perfection. Mr. Mariin conaider- firmec vervion of iho Holy Seripicres we should never | ou ibe suriace ony to ve absorbed af once in ibe greai | west corner of ihe city wall s in contemplation, too, is | erews, and certainly we have never seem anything in the Tele ox the ‘subvect which hed appeared in this journat, | €4 this check as a visitation of Provideaco in eve arrived ai this day with Protestantism so therough!y | current of eympathy this ‘earful aot of sacrilege has | reported, so rendering the noxt atisek on the cy @ work es Coinese Lg ness j before equal tothem. = sg on me Cg obey aL, eer ae (raha of the Chinese refasing to receive the Ohriciian and rtavncb!y «stno) shod as it ie in this country at pre- | awakened. Now that the tomb hes received ite victim, | of comparative case and saiety. In place of the withdrawn ing this time the it was aground, out of fre, “4 begs | Siena * bet ™ {timate trade | Ut, at the same time, he was of opinion thai they are sent. Thereicro, 1 do hope tat if any agitation ie made | deubtiess these sub cots will again enjoy their brief bour of | French and American guards, some companies of her Ma- | and cou'd not take part in the action. The Porismouth mye aie oe yer axe it he taeeaee a ed to take ® prominent part in the affairs of the tm the country for the purpese of disturbieg the present | interest, but up to .be present moment this alone br= bad | jesty’s 5° » Regiment nave been sent henoe, though but | was bulled three times, one marine mortally wounded, = Lie “ af a * ae catan pe oy world through which they are rapidly spreading. The @athor!.ed vy rslon of the Bibie; the Corissian community recedence. There ie also cv.dent a secret dres.,anl | few are required, 100 English bayonets, properly disposed, | and her rigging badly cut. an anges ~ oe, =, . ee. A bet tne | Population of China, he sais, amounts to three bundred will rize up as one man in its defence, and wil! maintain \Mi@vated ix one of my former letters, lest the imitative | being quite suffcien: to keep at bay as many Chicene as can Arter the fire it was not deemed pradent to send away | was, besa prover , Ly they | and fifty m: ‘and as the total population of whe world © imtact, seeing {8 is 20 dangerous to touch is.” facalty sbouid be deve! by tbis occurrence, and other | be brought agaivet them om the land side; and !t would be | boats from the ship, ae the latter required their whole —- ing’ of the ~~ Solas tan y | te estimated at po et hundred millions, the Chinese Tuo foregoing extrac: trom Lord Panmare’s specen | game be aimed at whote ‘all would betar more important | quite possible for Admiral Seymour, oven with the force | orcws to ake care of "hem in the position they eld, and | wished to put down, and would leave the suppression | COrreed about eno fifth ol we whole. They are, ‘be ‘tally bears ous my remerke upon the siate of Britieh feel- | than that of an eoclesiastic, however exalted his position, | at present under bis control, to take possession of and to having no steam to move down with. Oa Monday morn. | of the bind :. e edgy md poten Sap peli indboe a Said, tho ants of the world, and, notwithstanding the img on this subject, and men usuaily of a placid—even an optimist tone of | hold securely all hat quarter of the new city extending | ing the Cum-fe embarked the balance ef men from ene pee ene ry —— bad treatment of them by the English and Americans, by 48 my lass let | mentioned the fact that the newspe- | mind—aro found 10 of the fetcre with more than | west from the Governor General's official residence, ano | Canton, for the purpose of manning boats and taking poe- | Hallo as ono of gross cowardice, in treating the helpless | whom they are considered as an inferior race of beings, pors btre bad taken my obeervations upon Lord Palmer- | ordinary eolicitode, if not apprehension. north up to the wall of the eid city, distant but «few | session. oa minten OF Aumarion, they establish themselves ‘n all the colonies, and arc sten’s rule of Epgiand from the Hers, and repobfished fire acy yards from the extremity of the building spoken of [From the London Star, Jan. 16 } Unite - Lee] tt | Fapidly tmoreasing, Mr Martin gave am wteresting them here. The Glob: bes taken up the subject and dub Pume, Jan. 13, 1657. as 8 syeciwen of Yeh’ still continued obstinacy, we bi From the last Journals of ‘the United States wre come to mS R anode poner desu seconded the motion, tt | Gebcridtion of bis’ travels throughs orthera Chine, oe Premier, Palmerston, then, isa er sd Cae ive below * ited e made acquainied with a compiicity pan! » r ‘considered - oe. rreie anne pune soe eens Cereromy of the Purification of Qe Church of St. Etienne “ PROCLAMATION, sprung up between the American and British merchants My, RB. N. Fowrrr then moved, and Major Genera ae ey and aro. treated with creat dete. ense, the title i# to be altogether repudiated. When did the — Death of Another Member of the French Episcepacy— | Yeh. Governor General of the Two Kwang, issues this edict | at the and whioh may possibly enable | Aiaxanrar seconded, agg fegeoeeene teases Mi x rence. He extolled the cookery of the Chinese, whe are Bowrans ciccts a dictator’ When thetr consular and seas Sir Rolert Peel's Bepout of the Morny Sveculationga—a | for the soldiers and people. ince T have taken charge o! | America and England to act together ‘the Chinese. | thas the opium ia, by wi cont ir | even more rt than the French cooks in varying the torial system would not work well. Whom did they make |, dts i tre my office T have been indebted to you—the people You | One Mr. Cunningham, it appears, an American subject, | band traflo was was tothe laws of | dishes mad the same material. They eat every- @hoice o'? The man designated b; pow bone French Journalist's Idea of * Soft Sawder'—The New have looked upon pe as your father, and X Reve looked upon was killed in the great city of Foo-chow-foo, and theCon. | this ceuntry, to the commercial int sig rate) Seene na thing, frem a rat to an elephant, and have thus exter- Now the circumstances that peatoiek Lard ‘Pa\mersten’ British Minister (0 the United States andrede oF thousands, and “you ventured with coived | sul of the United 8, in Anglo Saxon fashion, required peratle nialfggehinran Hpanboss net Hes Toe minated all the savage animals, and oven tke serpents. mocession to power were very analogous to those which The ceremony cf the purivoation of the Churob of &. | strength to resist them. which was very meritorious, net | the authorises at Shangbse tojdeliver up the murderers. . 1 y al ‘Ata grand dinner given by a mandarin the table wae fed the “omars to appoin' a dictator. Party combinations jeaving a fragment of their remains. Even until now you | Suppose the case were reversed, and that « Ohinaman 01 eq | covered with dishes; and, as he did not understand the —even @ combination of ‘‘a!) the taienta’’—had faiiea to | Steume-du Mont, which took place yesterday, did not | have manifested your merits in behalf of the country. Now | had beem murdered in New York; and suppose that the This motion having been also uranimously approvi lap; fhe pointed toe’ dish near him, and inquiring! Jere & ministry strong enough to resist exterral attack | fall to atiract a very large assemblage of percons. oe tee cokes, pe. yh Oy Catnese onthariies me made x demand = the se = cae ty sal be larcameen "UD- | uttered, Quack, quack?” His neighbor shook his and tnterra! disonion axis. Bonn: a - f repub! erican citizens who were ogy “ "and Other dishes were Sheably ndcetet ove mus ata shied repreneuinave; | _ ME" ¢© Bounechose, Eunop of Evreux, prided. The | sei mating wit ou ite az. fhe eexiy on wuesceauat | Guiny. be amswer. would ave bows, ‘Witt | To ree Hoonssx tm Coxxors oF rnp Utrren Kixcnox | Snazupled, “Row, bow’, and zo oles dae ware and no doubt in ancient Kome, would have hailed bim | Porchand side walle of the church were hung with | 7 thMic0 as been aroused, Now, 1 have received the ica- Zour om, basen.” No mater; because the | or Grea BRITAIN AND IRELAND, IN PARLIAMENT ASEM” | Chinese even make vse of earth worms, which they dry @otmmtor.”’ mourning. The chapter and cures were in full camon!- | peris! commands “tirmly to hold and resoluely to fight aad ines The bambie petition of — showeth. That your petitioners | aud grind into powder for snuff Mr. Martin spoke at the ‘Bois Is rather amusing, especially when it is consider- | cais, with viclet stole. A little before 10 o'clock, A. M, | mAinlain the war fromthe public treasury. to blockade the | ab: are informed dat the contraband traffic in opfum in China and | great freedom of the people, of their free press, newspa- 4 that the Glove is « government organ. See PA Be Sb get gen ate pg gg the Bast is onthe increase, and that it is principally carried | pers being found in every town, and of their a Mr. E. © Holland here from the Usited | te Metropolitan Chapter, led By the Archdeacon of St. | in benalfof the empire, exert Your strength a0 brave see suecigarmet volt an i dest vcauge | S4ucaion, The spoken age in the north of (lina ix lectures on -‘American Poets and Poetry.” | Genevicve, ant accompanied by curés of the diocese and | main. Incase there should be any speaking 6! the oe oe, mae eee femeerene ce || amie Sree of, the South, but the writter well of by the prees the superiors, directors and pupiis of the Diccesss | speaker shall be dealt with according to martial EN OE ihe Euperoc or Chins, and of the procla, | Characters sre the same, and’ it is customary ‘ net love the people as children the barbarian reb ly Sum tusued thereon; that this iliclt tate inflicts desp in | With thems to carry slates, so that when a Ohina- Beminary, left the church of St. Genevieve and proceeded | woulddeceite them, You must be faithful, aud, Wits ap Jary upon Obie, to di to God, and brings disgrace | man from the South travels northwards, Re carries to St. Flienne, A body of mounted municipal guard and | heart, tremblingly obey. ‘on the British name, both in China and ‘among the nations on his communications wiih the people by . Tae a dotachment of Infaxtry of the same force preceded the Europe; that this opium is chiel'y provided by the Fast Indis | rebellion in Uhina was noticed by Mr. Martin ae ran . prece: Company by menue cad fe, virwe of 8 menopely w to be of great advantage, if successful, as the people im ierary world we have had “Boswell's Letters" | Procession. While al! partion were ranging themselves op- | would induce a chance in the present bold and wise ca. yer etieners are Jed tobeleveis illegal, and 8 om tic | Yebelllon'are inclined t>cuvens chante wae eee te amuse os, and really amusing they are, You will | posile the principal entrance and along the sides of the | reer, returned to the colony yesterday, and it is hoped wae task neanuah spine oeamabend orale iseontrary to | Peans. Thero iss printing prees in the army, at which donbilean get's reprint of these, either for the benefit of | oren space, the lourdn, or great bell, of Notre Dame wil! keep aloof from matters which are quite above his ike lawn of God. injurious to legkimate commerce, and-ruin- | portions of the Bible are prinved, and in their version they ‘he porsestor of the copyright or for the beneft of some Eti aa ve imagination aad ability to comtrol. Until the ous 1 the socia! condition of the Chinese, who are demo- | add to the seventh commandment the probibition of optums waecrrpu ous publisher, as the case may be. Bozzy | Toke solemnly onthe car. The bells of St. Etienne arrival of reinforcement: matters are expocted to remain drog,’ your eating as leading to tho worst of vices. The people ot ‘somes ovt in bew colors, and we get what a little startles | not ring until the purification wae accomplished. The | im «atu quo. humbly pray thet your benerable Bouse ‘will be, pleased te | Canton, Ms, ~~ FA. ‘inimical to the dhe demure people who have been wont to delight in | presiding Bishop was in full episcopal dress, with the | CAPTURE OF THE BARRIER FORTS BY THE AMERI- treaty with the Emperor of China, put an end to the monopo- | English, and im walkir through the place he waa mobb- Boowell’s talk about Jobneon, viz:—Bozzy’s youthfal mitre on bis head and the crozier in his hand. CANS. iy of ‘ned Kant Tala Company, ‘and’ the illegal trade now car | ed and and spat upon; but on rushing at them with his Qmourr. Ving been agreed ried on in opium. stick they immed! ran away. ‘Trade in London is deplorably bad. but frog the trom, | The ceremony commenced Py & Frofuse sprinkling of ag tote balks weigpre diy Sowa aly my {rom the London Post, Jan. 16 The Oua:nmag, in ing Mr. Martin for bie obeer- he cloth, the Ince and the hosiery district: we get better | poly water. The Misere was chanted, during which | Qum.fa towed the Levant into position much nearer vie A directed attention to the alluded to the olycumstance that the spice c:nna- aeeounte. fs the forts, the Barrier stakes alone preventing further pro for Opium the name of which is derived from Okina, whence the biahop and bis attendants moved in full procession | Freee, The boats of both sbipa were then manned with just saved by an Edinburg missi came, was mentioned by Moses, thus prov- Our Paris Correspondence. round the church. From time to time holy water was | foi oricn, and the pture of the fort at the en. “the abolition, speedily forever, there was a trade carried om betweex Egypt and Pam, san, 12, 1887. sprinkled on the exterior ef the chureh by the Bishop. | trance of ler’e Reach senstves, =. ms A.M. the od ‘with Chips.”’ From the report of the — i pane \ hd arts—, Ler ertii we the cl of St. Ettenne | tle Cum-fa (under the ireotion unaer Captal then 2 Peoquicr F the Archbishop of Paris—Deeply Iniereting | Then the litanies yore canted, ergy withe | WM Robinet), with the launches and cutters in tow {From the London Star, 16.) @naracter of the Ceremony—Approac ting Trial of Verger | and the Metropolitan Chapter being on their knees—the started for the fort under cover of the Levant’s guns, * ry ° —Intention of the Prisoner (0 Defnd Himself—General | Bishop \eing engaged st the time without. Watle ia the face of a galing fire from he arree forte, ‘Tas het Ad, Snally, it is the East India goveramens who noto- Fon eboding the: His Ezanple will find Imitators, dc. the litanies were going om, however, he re- | whistle roared over and around ker, b Tloualy and habitually connives at ine proscedings of the ‘Again we are reapited from the sipping rigors of win- | turned, springling om his entrance water. eait, sahce and | Puthout wiry and rawr Siaey ee or “praruen ox nur ton Ones eet eames ala eae aes eae ‘fer. The weather has suddenly relaxed, the sharp frost | wine on the threshhold. On arriving at that part of the — the none sane one See ~ ye ome part, and that in direct violasion of the supplimentel 7 m rocession, it not so with 5 large eg’ shot strack ar of 1842, whi: 6 that ab PI \. ‘and biting wicd Lave disappoared, and I write beneath & | save where the crime was committed, the p: the San Jancinto’s launod, in charge of First Lieut, Lewis of the agitatie : pid open a the British penis! sun, which carries onc’s thoughts forward to diay | with tae Bishop at tts bead, cmelt down and sung three | 14, ‘ship, on the starboard bow, killing one man instantly, Calcutta and Bombsy. Tne Chinese advices, nes v society a'ready referred to—the annihilation poh I subjects aun aaa oo cee and ita sweet epring flowers. times the are Domine. In the meantime the altars w Iwo others.’ who ‘lied suortiy after. | full details be rertngann aad rfectly legitimate object ; | endence; and in the event of any smuggling transactions The poor Archbishop, whose fate in atill the engrossiug | were arranges! and « procession was formed to go for the | wards, snd wounding two oF tenes slightly. th hag i | Bor Yeb, who, ypotwhbatanding the destruction of the | or repadiated. | But we capnot agree with the members a was eur oneal lta a en eek theme of interest and sympatby, was consigned to bis sacred vessels, which had beer placed ine | TO" here of the boat, quietly revosed there, and re. | Begue Forte by the Engiish and the Barrier Forts by the | of the * Society for Suppressing Oplam Sanuggling”’ that pg Fe coun > aa Pa with ‘watimely grave on Saturday. The weather, aa jf to accord jetached from the church. Oe their arrival | mainga ive to , The landing was Americens, had issved « proclamation threatening maria! | any cal! existe at this time for interterenoe of Par. nasere, thes tony have Bony binning thelr value o “ Zou placed on the principal altar, anda mars was | effected without furthor trouble, and although the men | aw to any of the people who might venture to of | lament. ‘There is something really loathsome in the Lypocrisy ‘with the occasion, suddenly threw aside its and icy peace, bas cawed an increase of (rmoces in the don All ies are opposed to the spirit of British law, performed. This terminated the ceremony, which lasted | had to cross a deep ditch up to their knees, and some to d d | Which atiects to bo indignant at the Chinese for » reas: aspect, and broke into showers, which gave au additions! | yhou: two hours, I cannot say that !t seemed to be very | their waisbands, the stars and stripes were upon the | ‘8 market. The Shanghse exchanges on this oocasion | and we hold them to be utterly indefensible upon sound | CY ireaty in potusing to admit foreigners 10 Cantor, whil t ‘The lan: arc leas unfavorable, the rate haying receded from 7s. | commercial principles. 'e wo say that, when the y tome of sadness to the solemnity of the day. As early as | imporing. fort in ten minutes. we dg Sy ote ny of al of the Kast o it Das not one w condemnation ths . ‘ be Freneh Episcopal bench has just lost another of { | with but ome man injured bys rocket the retreat | &¢.t 3344. question of the renew: tia Company’s | Gearing, i eight o'cleck A. M. the bells of the various churehes of | ot." wer, a'aramoles, Arcab! of Aix, 1a | Img Chinese, ‘About £390,060, principally silver, is alroady engaged | charter 's again under consideration, it will be whe duty | OWa"Escnt ven along. the whole the cap'tal began thetr doletu! totonations, to which the | Province, expired on the Gib, at the Sreniortocngei paises, Mie party entered the fortat about © o'siock, and the | {© be shipped by the Feninsular and Oriental steemier | of Parliament to abeliah the Compsay’s lucrative mo- | R00 So cacuot seo in what respect deep bourdon of the Cathedral of Notre Dame added ‘ta | shortly alter recetving extreme unction. work of destruction commenced. The buildings wore all | Sort, a Meapambols bes ie the Mitsui of cbunininy | satiny Gh cmpenses brings inc. dor revenue ed thres | sere difer from privateers. ny ferave and sonoros volume. All along the route marked ‘The speech of © r Robert Peel, in which Count de Mor- | set to and Gestroyed; power and shot thrown inte | an adequate supply. Dillicte sterling per anpum. To ‘to termi. | 'b¢m in this country, equipped and teeth, . By end other diplomatic functionaries of the Continent ere | the river, and everyihing that could be burnt was ‘The deli TTX. netin letters thts efterncen may, it | mate this mon at an earlier peri by _apply- expressly for the purpose of res! by vivience the out for the funeral cot: ge—the Rue de Gremelie, the Rue 0 jauntily treated, bas happily arrived to dissipaie tne | stroyed. #uch guns as cuuld be burst were sent into Pa. wipe Basher daWoual chipmente, Owing wae z ,. doubttel” ieierpretstion 4 y my, Chinese revenue cillcers who may to intercept de Bourgogne, the Place du Palais Bourbon, the Quair, | gravity caused by the late ecclesiastical tragedy. What fragmenta: these that could ogee yen a orders known te be on hand. it is believed tho amount by | 4in William IV.,(# to attempt an impoesibility—it is their pofariousirafic. And thus, as Mr. Baptist Noel the Pont Neuf, the Quai des Orfevert and the Rue Notre | ver may be said in England, auch am orstorical escs | blown off, and so defaced as to the mext mail to India and China, om the 4th, will beat | oseless expenditure of energy. We y remarked | tly observed at the meeting at Freemascn’s Eall, the ° - pace fe anything b’ aweloome here, and iteely hits a: | fort mounted 48 guns, none of which were less than Teast £600,000. ” that ‘we hoped to see the day when from ia, In place opium trade is rothing else but te of war- Dame cp to the Cathedral—the windows, balcoulet, | yorsy’s ousiness speculations in the midst of hia diplo. | 24 £600, A fare the Britiek " ‘The principal feature in spice has been the sales of | of from America, our cotton milis should be supplied roofe and porches of the houses were lined with specia. | maik relations, are appreciated by all parties; for ever | of cassia lignes. The per Chinserah, from Canton, , ‘we Bonapartisi—particularly tf ne had no share in the pon 4 5 aun tere; the causeway was thronged; @ touching silence | Oo “binsbes at bis Brammagem style ot enriching the . ‘the being held much above the previous value, was all taker Rng everywbere pervaded, end there was 8 marked ahewses | new, scanty Of the second empire, and Sir Revert \ i val aan, Sciain on saraace of Ge: &2 Os “Or ten only 8 very call MmENt PORSATes O! through. and beneiotel of any of the usua! addenda of great street masses, sucha: | Peel's pithy —— from the poet Burns, | work of demolition oooupted till fy’ noon, when It ‘oportion of the late arrivals bave been offered, and | out ite territorice, We agreo with Gen, Aloxander, when the jar to de so, ie on the imponsibility of creating, at @ jump, an | camo necessary to take measures for furtaer proceedings, Li 4 i . Dy the Beate. Provision venders, toy seilers, or bottle holders, with ih have realized full prices. M Kareow do- | he says,—''Most deeply are our manufacturers and mer. Benes man ond 0 gentiomen, Ras Rand ee many Wines | ane tho cngtare of Be Cy ey ri uch inquired for, and deoome very | chante interested in question, for there in not aa « rule that the usual rogers and verve) liquewr, Ae the body was | tients among the republicans ae the legitimisis. The | determined upon. Through the able advice of a gentie- | %° oto orem re sacesaios ington comand, | poppy Sele in, waidh 0ten might BO be, grows carry on oom- earried by, the mon uncovered and bent low their bonds, | quertion which is on every one’s lips 's-—Will Lord Pal | man volunteer prosout, well skilled in Chinese warfare | fosioe. Kosnled orange paced sue AiO i Eeas Neneaer, | POPPY, chest of opium provi Seal ee and to reguiate honorable baronet im his ministry ef. | apd lece! information, » plan was decided upon, and at 1@ public a on ‘the And there ‘While the women crossed themselves, and in many in I ech About 3 P. M. the troops saltied out of the western gate, | #!i the congous were withdrawn, while grecn teas of fine | does not render Manchester and trading cities im 4 raion wih ‘road o _ jualities sold at bij rates. Letters from | and towns of Grost Britain more dependent upon the iperious tances repeated prayers. clined to believe that l’aimerston wif not trocble him- | and. under cover of the raised bund or road slong - ~ h than 3 to ong, dated the 25th of ember, have been re | American market for slave produce from the shores of xolude f ‘Tne tollowing wan the order of the procession'—A | selfaboutthe matter. Ine Premier bears Russia no c00d | ver's side, marched up to a Cy a tae i the news { considered favorable to an | the Mirsissippl.”” (Pam) . 80.) We cannot, toe: ‘ror eur shores: se erm door of the Round Fort aad in the line of the ceived, an sows fs of cur famishing Squadron cf the Guides with its band, « battalion of the Fort, while the boata were being tracked fu slong advance in prices, however, samit that ibe hiatus which must be | Doon tyotowetieally Gratvenate of the Rages Sess end ene Po rgnest | aay adore. While waiting boats to come STE OPIUM TRADE OF ENGLAND IN CHINA—ITS RP: | Caused by the sudden or erinand thereiee we snocia C4, each ovendaré, 7 some Chinese FECTS ON MORALS. i “4 pra marge arog heey fang Tasaenes both the Frosch and English diplomatists that it | at ‘me Lae | rom the London Jan. 16.) like to see the projects, now being sealously carried ont | poison & tho people which it is estimated destroys Guveleped in crepe, and cach commanded P; Jeut. | may be a question whether Sir Robert has noi done good | rows and ; Yesterday & public meeting was held at the Froema- | by the company for the developement of inélan agricul: | a4 least two millions of them every year, ard what Ws Weione!. Then followed files of drammers, wit! wer) ce to both countries by showing them Spite of | driven baci b's bo sons’ Tavern, Great Queen street, Lincoln’s-inn-felds, iy yey oun views, with confidence in | Worse even than this wholesale destraction of life, sinks diroms, beating at intervals their soleme roll; ( everything that may be said against it by the opposition | zer, and made y for the purpose of denouncing tbe opium trafic with | th. correctnees, we cannot but admire the high tone of | MUititudes of them inlo an abyss of sensuality and de- bers of the Metropoiltan Chapter, in carriages; ther | /ourpals in England and by some of the press Bere, the | this time the boate had arrived at the embar\. seeing | China, and to take measures for ite suppression. In the ep we ‘onbounded confidence in the re- | Basement where they are transiormed from men into o—_ - ° . French are vot slow to perceive that the young Lord ot | which the ( binese troops in the Round Fort, knowing thai | absence of the Farl of Shaftesbury, who was to bave pre ia with which Gen, Alexander treate this | Wort than brutes. “An eal a eye six priests, bareheaded, carrying the crozier and crecifix | tne Admiralty bas in this instance eviaced talents fer it was all up wih tem, speedily took 0 their heels, oe the chair wae taker by Mr, Thomas Chambers, branch of the subject. Heaays: “Bat % may, and 1 Lge ay Hy A ows ‘dece! insignia jignity, recetved it. vhie ok forces ‘Without opposition st ad * p ways pode ds parm yn bomagere eee eee) ae ere ding Wanoale't oxplanation oF your “oft | SP M. "Thus inree of the four forte were ceptared, with | _ Major General Alexander, having read a letter of apo | Preumet will beasked, what ws tho last Indie Company saw on bib vish to one of Cnisese men Covered with crape, and then the hearse, drawn by six | 1 0 0't cuss not be forgosten. fein crite iiled ‘and tive woended bu vost and | logy for Bis loability to allen, from Lord Mhaftoebury, | 10 do for the Tevenue derived from this soarce! 1 might | and women, old and young one common richly omparisoned horses, in which, vurmounted by ® | "1:4 gil soft sawder.’” This, eaye the French jour- | shore duty. and two wounded on board the ships. The | in which rdship condemned ihe trafic in question Senin’ knetgor thal nucetion,’ or, taking higher ground, | Nerd, wallowing in their eersval, devil- farge crucifix, was the coflim. It wae covered with porp'* | mal, is rather am American than au Fagiish expressi: Levant suflered bat litle two shots in ber bull, one | corruptand ruinous, and alike jmconsistemt with sound point to am example in our Bibles, Teseréed tm the ‘jab. nd jv aifieult to transiate literally. Soft sawder trane- | through inio the berib ¢eck, and | trace, commercial intercourse, the Christian religion and a Of the men who are content to draw the wealth by velvet, without @ pall, and was fally exposed to viey§ | fuels Clown Moa, signidcs a euayer wae oan: lazily | one tirty two pou common jog trot honcety; adding that nothing coul’ be | S¢oond book of Obronicles, xxv., 0-—\ And Amaniah said, | which they are enriched {rom this foul sink of debsuch- After the hearse came crowds—without any par saw and gels ibrough very litte work. A soft | shot striking the muzzle of the gun and splitting it to the | worse than |i enve the sanction of |t by this country. but what shall we do tor ayy able to give thee | °TY. What can be said’ (ir of what avail will it be to say {cular order or clasaification—of wel! dressed persone: | rawlor, in the of workmen, means “un lam): ', | movie ring. One man lost the calf of his log by s can The Chairmen rore to address the meeting, and afler | the Meu of aoe aretha the autnertay of Tandy apyihing’ If their consciences wore not dead alrea. hal licha, wine poule mowiller, (uw drone, waluggard, | nen ball. This Inst fort contained thirty eight gues, | xpreseing his regret atthe absence of the nobie lord who | much more ; ~ one would imagine that, even in the midst of the ep workmen, invalids, priests, <oldiers, stademts, &c.; and | un grand idole, tne poule " * | Some ot which were of cnormous eallbre, and the cast: | was to bare Jed, proceeded to say thit the object | wrested In the prevent system, “i <. opium agents, wove | mansions built and garnished out of the prof's of thie then followed the private carriage of the deceased, ia |“ Yiic,. Seren mak Taows (he checks whieh « ern embrasure or approach from Whampos was defend. | which bad brought thom together was one of more Panne navde in iocia for ite cultivation’ ea? in a'plam, | most accursed trade, they woali be nightly Kaamted by which were roverai indies weeping bitterly. A carriage | of ihe Pnglieh character wil! sustain at an cecaps werltable levisinan gen, made ef brave or cop. | national im for \f they were acquainted with the | the richest lands in India for lia cultivation, Z visions of the ghastly and cadaverous wretches, who by of the Emperor, containing am aid-de-camp and other | Unprecedented a character, eepecially {rom the heir of « Inches in the bore and twenty fo Biatory of the rabect for the last seventy, years, they pn ge 5 hanger m naa rena: Shae sguney ore costtentt hurled into utter pordition of taping remarked! sore, ‘construction showing marks of | could concur whh 2 ‘nee he fico, in (ll uniform, and ope of the Frinoe Jerome, | {oan for bis high Goalies at ataseaman: et, “ompura | ing (within a tow years.) and ‘pone Christian community of Fagland, or of India, vhat should | Of see AROUTT O Mccited to Ite growin athe bestadape | THE WAR COMMENCED IN ORDER TO AID TE EMPR r’tended; alo the private carriages of other parsons; the | muanier ee not mo lamnur.”” ciiab It would well repay one to visit it, and it le to be hoped | feel tmierested in the al the contraband optum | COWet Te iotet productions of the pike ‘nuch aa sugar, ROR=-THE REPUBLICANS BE REPRESSED AT been o initers will ure ev fort to bear away euch | trade with China, bet th: prod . ic TO BE le cori-ge closing With & battalion of Imiantry and a | ing st the thought of peace having snapped from | that the y m4 7. 1767 the whole of cotton, indigo, and others for which this dountryeangive | CANTON. them just when, after great exertions, they wore pre- | a magnificent prive. Everything ning to this fort quantity ber manufactures in exchange. It seoms to be an insult to To the Editor of the London Star. ment of cavalry pared to deal Russia & heavy blow and great disco. | was destroyed as far as pr: but the work wae | bad not been mero than the administrative wisdom’ and moral feelings of our Sen eae teas oe short time. age fr At Notre Dame tbe preben it and honorary canons, the | fagement, and they do not forget that they owe this very | not accomplished. ‘There remained one fortification to | went there in the legitimate nation to entertain for @ moment such ® supposition as | pee | ove band couuaen'te ono as be to ie courts and other cler:y of the parishes of Paris and of the | much to the tribe of Morny & Oo. The young Baronei’a | be captured, and the Chinese coul:! be ser reinforcing it Catasse tbat in the undeveloped resources of the portion { Star and the cheap pres of Fo from whom the thor paris of ibe diccess, the superiors and diresiors | *PeeGh, coming freak aa It does, Krom O86 eeotets ot ee ee pmation to wraintain e vigorous Termance, fo of the globe, inhabited by 0) ‘of one hundred and | Dational party in Chins (ibe ea Jour government d ‘fon house show is )s S Mm Of seminaries, Ceputations of the Trappiets, the Jowuits, | Eoeness of the land the Bantionl coguetting of the Grand Mog Bey Se the India had made it ® monopoly Fe'keresy humbly soleited " py We hve sen and other religious orders, with the Sure de Charite | Duke and Sir Charles Napier, the Liliputiae self impor 3) operations, and by 19 o'clock at night the ce be os ead th bad y coustneet :0. With the ing to forget that sir John Bowr'ng, before quitting Furope, and other fomale communities—all wearing their peculiar | tance of the Boigian Ambaseador—whose master is teach fort waa Cg ey total foros quietiy bivouac! 4 Aad F ‘of that monopoly < up all the at- | It is uncertain, ””—(Pamphi 7870) ® concur | went to Paris, and had covered’ conferences wiih the Em- robes and comtumes—-were assembled. There were like. | thougbt to have considerably too much importance ai the fn the island fort. A Anwy tH — =o ‘evils of such © epeem Fou hor ite * | with General Alexander and Phie da in earnestly de. | peror, Thence, even then, the affair of China was de- wise the Pope’s Nuncio, the Bishops of Chartres, Ver. | Court of Queen Victoria—' ungcrupaious time serv nigh Chinese soldiers might be seen hurrying to fection from emuggling, anf the Fast India ‘om firing to nee the agriculture of India expanded, the | cided on belng not a merciy English, but an psi sailles, Orleans and Menux: several of the Ministers, the | ing of the French Embasny, in the hope of outpidd » lished an ordinance for ite reguin! on con. | gover#ment moropoly in opium abolished; but we think | one, I trust, therefore, that you will recelve the - Prefect of the Seine and the municipal acthorities: Mar. | Eeglisa, aro all matters likely to be nichiy y . Gale's of which 68 imposed pena‘i.oa on the latter object musi be brought about at a fitting | ing statemonts, even if it wore at present ne merc bal Magan and x number of oMoers of the army: depo. | the Kagiiah public at the present moment, w every person concerned, not only in bringing opium into | time—which is not the present, hypotheses — tations of the Senate, of the /egisiative body, of the Cou. | too giad of the information it has thus derived to oe by but in ite growth manufactere, or ie ‘The extinction the company’ 1. The bombardme nt and partial occupation of Cantor Beil of State, and other public Dodies over nice about the mecium through which {t comes. respect! preparations were made 9 4 ‘ot | Would not abolich the ira do not omanate trom tho Knglish authoritice in China The Archb hop's vacant throne was completely cor ir Robert is decidedly gro & faeter young man x India and Obina, but it alone, ub e@, and the interior of yA, - tral wae day. La Ay Ay ae «4 e- s my y. th ‘so | The same a fay 2. Being afraid that the natioral party (ihe rebels), Dinck f; ed white, aad besriog at in tor s—a clergyman name Henderson, who re. one source wou ” m! finally obtain possession of Canton, this it wee | Serves eecuicheous wish At Messing, in Eosex—his career was onc full of good | 6h. 46m. tho boats pushed off. As they opened out from | many tharos and pitialle fer the unwary. To guari againet . Tk would, moreover, tobe prevented under aay (Vacifeo) pretext and ka tafeique was placed between the nav ns, but with rather important results. Fora few | the fort the order wae given to tire, and, sates corer maintain 0 large arms ‘of officials. wltore and’ to our commerce both at bome and | sacrifice of human life. ‘mort in the contre of the charch—and was a lofty strac Would be like plastic clay in Mr. Hender- | the three howitzers, which yf witheriog boy pty 4 (general practice d and pe But the “Society fort he suppression of oplum ; national party should continue to ve victori ‘ture ip Diack anc white, with statues at the corners, an’ German. be full of wise | shrapnel smuggling’ wish |’arliament not only to abolish this mo- ipput to (oat move surrounded by innumerable wax tapers. Over all was fortnight’s relaxation at Drayton | through the retreat sepel et once, but likewise to restrain our merchants vert peror in < etretcbed a Se canopy of cloth and ermine. Per. bis father, where al! the world was | the boats ite ba 4 from taking opium to the British stations on the coast of ‘ French, and Rusrian (the la ape of a!) Public botiet which met on thie occasion | gathered to share the Naromet's heepitality. Ip four and | posed to China, because opiom is @ contraband commodity in Amur) will boaorded wo the Ta fo show respect to the remaine of the murdered prelate, | twerty hours the work of the totor was crombiing in | sbot and grape, China. Such ® proporition may please the uninformed; | tar dynasty until ‘‘ order shall reign in China,’’ mone added 80 much to the general sympathetic oflec\ at | reins. This exottable being threw himseif in! Mion the fi pon the ramparts of bot it is pot sound. Where there is a demand, an However, 300,000,060 of people, sti'! aocemtibieto th the members of the [caf and Dumb tum. For thi scorn the dull max- hold. sweety, will go the supply. Our government might | excitement of enthosiasm, may be found more than unhappy Class of suffering mortality the Archbishop, Sedulously sioring up. | over, about and monopoly; then pete of ordinance to that | compel ' our own mercbants to abstain (rom convey: | match for the meshos of the present Knglith Miuietey, ‘ever since his elevation, had always exh\bited unceasing entious clergy: island Fort kept weet | morepoly, then an army of unreliable officials to en | ing opivm to the coasts of China, but what would With many apologics and deep salutations, interest, amd maBy Solid advantages whick they now pox ; oly de Ae My! Seoh was the history of the | that avail? Ae the British Enyoy, Sir Henry Pottia ‘ONE OF THE CHINES! NATIONAL PARTY, eens are entirely attributable to his active benevolence trafic as regarded India. He would now point out to | gér, remarked to the High Commissioner of China Tavistock 2qcaRn, Lonpon, Jan. 18, 1867. There wae lank buliariy touching im thore hat had been the evil effects of it in that coun. | When arranging the torms of the treaty which concluded = mpoechions signs of grie disriayed by these anfortanater 'y. Nota single could be grown thero withont | the war—‘‘Your people must become more virtuous, News from Russia, — BS coumion, and the camamies of B bad move 0 |e nen the permission of the government—« state of things | Jour officers incorruptible, and then you can stop the | yi ,nniage OF COUNT DE MORNY TO A RUSBIAN PRIN- ‘about ft than all the priestiy and military pomp | in the private cabinet at White Hall Gardene, rest which would not be for s moment tolerated here, The | opium coming inte your borders, Other will bring CRAS— PROBABLE EFFECT ON THE AXGLO- FRENCH be aly Tioees, ane owes, preseded by & Tihs once, bet Nt ime bs Ae oy the Sige wit nf eyeter emer whe grew ihe opium, enter cuss eer thle Vabdewbiomty enon ome the wos bol thay ALLTANCE—TH® COUNT'S GREAT WEALTR—KIND ervothx, oame to the grand d0or to reoalve the body, second time, Rather than repeat were defendea by guns of enormous calibre—aay from & | noe survathenes, [=f th ae ere ee | pion to ebook optem aceencbery ia ato give olher | FEELING OF THE OZAR TOWARDS NaroLnon-— accompanied by the canons who had brought \t from od his on to be advertised twice to 11 inches, and the Iabor of destroying them in earnest wan scarcely enough to keep ody and ‘soul together. At | and better tastes to the Chinese. This ond can best be FRENCH INTERESTS IN THE ASCENDANT af gr, srchiepiscopal paincs, conveyed it with measured jewspapers agae outlaw. Lord Pal- | cannot well be conceived. They were— Dowever' in the government salerooms, it wat | promoted by our government, In conjunelion with other | TRRSBURG—TH TRADE OF ASLA—RXGLAND’S fread Lo the catafaique—the obaniers meanwhile chant. | merston at thir time gave him a diplomatic appsintm Guns. | Onion trom abort 12,000°t0 18.100 rupese per chest, | governments, obtaining for morohante greater freedom of | nULR IN A RUSSIAN POINT OF VIEW, Ing the hy ma for the desd. The mitre, crocitxand crovier | #' Berne, and over proved & most indulgent prince. | Barrier fort...... oie and thos the Kast India Company and (ts officers derived | intercourse with the patives. Our government ought . 1) correspondence of London Times.) ol the deceased were (hen placed on the catafalque, and | pel / hit s.bordinate, and ft is x remarkable fact that | Fidler’s Reach fort. by income frem it, while the unfortunate ryot who | alo to continue to urge w China the ety of ad- the Independance Belgr of yesterday an- the funeral service was afterwards performed in the cur. | aitiough few pubiie mon of bie time were ever more | Jeland fort........ it was loft to starve, Here he might show the con. | miiting opiom on the pay maob | nounces the marriage of Mi. de Morny with a daughter & tomary manner, the Bishop of Mexox officiating. | have | completely oppored to the late Mir Robert Pest than Pal- | Square fort......... 6000+ in the trae by mentioning an etactment the demoralising business of smuggler | the Princess Troubetskoi. remar before thal to fives all deserved | meraton, he bas renred twe of his sone in hie ministry, ‘mes ad: ¢ from the public purse | would be destroyed, and the now universe) corruption of When M. de Morey was firet aT mon fan preseiveness the occasion must be real. Walter Scott | certain!y not receiving any proportionate politionl support Crand total... ... eeeges epedeeve sever vere ee ce Hy 5 Tor any lever those unfortunate men might | the const oficers by bribes would be putan end to. Beyond | to Russia, the nows was rece'ved with{some ai observes, in bis “Ivanhoe,” that when the knighte at | ir retcrn, lam afraid “ir Robert Peel's gambling pro- | —which are either towlly destroyed orrendered tain he land on whish thie op! ‘wae rained wae | contending for the legalisation of the import of opiam into | unmixed with incredulity. Persons wninitinied im the 8 the tournament touched their adversaries’ abieids with | ponsiiien are not yor cured: and | hear that he bets | further service. The fortifeations were materially injured | te pest in India, and could Tugar, coon, intigs | China, om payment ot a doby, we do not think that thie | orets of state-craft supposed, perhaps wrongly, that (he the point of their lance, and not with the but, in token | heavily on the ‘ari, and moat uawiseiy. an | by the ship's fre, and the lowe of 106 guns and the des | the ible Metso ommodiifes, the production of countty can prudently take Any step at present in rela: | representative of w great empire, under fuk circu that ihe combat they challenged was one t0 the death, | bicod which he ‘nheriie trom hie mother’s side, com t defences in the very srone. | Gould baye an \mmense and « direct indiuence tpon tion to the opium trade. stances, should be a distinguished statesman, a'o'tizen of there waravery Unmisiakeable @ifferance in the atten hea pro. | hold of the empire must tench His Ses, Bone? trade, end upon other pablic questions of the | A good deal wae seid yer about our 6 Incontentable merit and talente—one who’ bad al then eocorded them by the thourands ageembled to fee - Of the Privy Counell, Mr. Yeh M lensoa of fo- ‘rest fmportance, and make British capite! ow in new , seis being armed. Now Ahi ie fret in, rendered eminent services to his country, or, in the at arme—that even the softer sex, deap'te i mated in one of my former letiers th E reign diplomacy he wil! net ar. ‘ apnele. 1 thes Sot ‘only avected the commare'a! prow. ] abondance o pirates inthe Chinese gens, ali ships fre | of tbese qualifications, a gran’ sisgnuer, with the thet gentler mature, gazed on the | with a tremcious | Ambaseader would soom o¢ sent to the Un’ All the officers a well ae men with each, eo ty Of India, bul [algo wa deterso acd degradng | « to carry considerable means of | whieh popular prejudice attaches to this Inst cistin og HE murary, You Wil be wall ene See te Commanders Foote, Sel, und MMMM for | Goo naiona: charncter fo nach en oxien’ that the mItary .o.the | The Rusaiane seemed to tbiaK that there wane det cleney : we, however golden | said tc the contrary, yoo Hii & be pd > ihe A otheors in the Madras orev lence were Soropla’ning thet J je Frencl jor, and the 6} ‘hen all ie seid and been sein ted. their corageour determination of lieutenante Lewie "from which the army bed iberto is ate leitere trom St. Potershorg, fi . | rere ng on forty youre of age, boring been bore ® 1 Watmanghk, Gotarie, levenport, Anglieh, Carer, ant the sins of men a 4 wea # J ecthoritier of ) friende in aris wae, (bayw! J ene, sed tihe part of their im. ane ’ Gapee hr We Guliant MABNET IB Wick they Jec their | Fupplied wae Ro longer euitee He mary EArT ce Suce ' im ier (Daw whale veriqualition Rg might . ; joning epiendor, bet ‘hich '* —" ® Wee Ocoe- } anc #8 geriieman of apelent jamily aed ef very

Other pages from this issue: