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' NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1858—TRIPLE SHEET. 3 —_ te cious resources that storm baided; ever arrivi re at a monopoly of their com- | Campbell, of the Bays, crosred on the 4th (as 1 wrote in | The Late Attempt to Ascassinate the United Kingdom—whether within or without the King’s | \onista, and in Portoga! the conservatives promised the commercial horizon is Pe a bat os teat? | Soeres Arig Leng hob ling addi cay ‘ob. | mY inet), compencd of the Tih hussare, 79M Highlanders, ofthe Commitzai of Ber: dominione- “it shall be lawfal’ for any justice of the peeve | © diminution of the tarif. ¥ aad % will soon become serene again, an : ject which you have never ceased to caress. ‘and Major Anderson's troop of norse '. [From the Loncon Post, March \6.) to take coznisance of the offence charged, and to proceed For two years paet England has had the miafertane to ba will, a8 we firmly hope, speedily resume ita ‘Whether the Haytiens continue to enjoy credit in On the 6th wens over the ob lancers, ist Bengal fusi- ‘The sixth and final examination of Simon A» nard,on | thereon o# if the same bad been committed within the | 1p opp sition with two 0: the ideas whichfhave created most course, . 7 the United States, or whether that credit will be Jeers, and Remington’s troop of Bengal horse arullery. On | the charge of being an accessory before the faxt othe re | limits of his ordinary jurisdiction.” It would be the fra, | sympathy in Europe—we speak of the intersecting of the coy pgp fon 6 , oy, thoy will not | te, 10th, the 42d and 934 Highlanders, Hodgon’s horse, | cent murders in the strecta of Paris, took piuco as the | duty of the Crown, in seeking to establish this chargo. | Isthmus of Suez and the upion of the Danubian aw el can provisions, on account of | shut against them by your intrigues, they will not | aod ancther troop of horse artillery. On the 12th, the | Bow street Police Court, before Mr. Jardine, 0a Saturday | to show that a murder had been committed abroad. Upon | ties She had at first been im favor of the acion of tha rarity, show a tendency towards a rise.” the less continue—their intelligeuce and their capi- | dute of of our latest acuounts, Sir Colin had returned trom | last—the day on which his alleged accemp icos, Orsini and | that no difficulty could arise, because several lives | principalities because she saw ia it an obstacle to tha very clever. It means this, if it means | tal united and fortified by abeaevolent and powerful | Allahabad, bus had not yet crossed into Oule. The report | Pieri were executed tn Fr suce tor the capital offence. bad been sacriticed by the explosion of these terrible ‘ussian ambition, Why bas she changed her mind? She anything, “Send us consignments, to ua who alone pevecionio offer you the most determined compe- | that has reacbed us atrributes this delay tw the non-arrival ‘The court was crowded w ususl, Br acid sup | shelis in the streets of Paris. It was true that the lifees | did not conaescend to state the reason, but it in easy to fed ition; that competition that you fear so much, and | Of the siege train and convoy from Agra, and adds that | posed for a moment that ths wor:by mi oy pecially aimed at was happily spared, but our law and | guess that it is out of regard for the possible covevousness the ruins of this ” ° neta ndeavored to fr considerable anxiety wes felt for the safety of this impor- | seriously to exclude the pub ic, how: pt the law of France concurred ‘ding the offence as | of Austria. “How phe oe. Will hats to fail in eats puke sg er in your ower Yitco | tet addition to the attacking force, Bat this, I think, jaa | misconduct of & few chartists, rorugeos idtera | the same, even though it nigh te res that there was | England tock part in tho Eastern war to defend the ‘n- of this deplorable state of iis wake ‘April, 1848, up to the present time, mistake, for the convoy appeira to have been but two | who have attended the proceedings throughout, appa | no intention on the part of the murderer to kill the per- | Wgrity of Turkey; but that does not prevent her frore des i 7 vy affairs say, U y hi fe ‘tte: ith what msrcbes from Cawnpore on the 4th, with tue siege train | reply from the abaerce of eny other occupation, and to | sons who bad fallen by hisact. [This being go, the next pss her ¢! on the isiand of Peria, which belongs to besides it is difficult for firms to fail in Hayti; they ou have not, perhane, forgotten with wi onty one march in its rour, And wa officer, writing from | whotneueh ebullitions of feeling were exstusively con- | question, and he main question, arose, was the prisoner | Turkey, in order to command the pastage of the Red Sea , may be a hundred times bankrupt sombre colors your pencils were charged at the un- | the Chief's camp on the Sth, states expreesly that the | fined, On the bench were obsorved, indepeudently of thy | Bernard, eupposing bia complicity to’ ba established, a | in the event of the success of the project on the Lathmns id 8, air; I at you here ina | fortunate epoch above mentioned, in order to pro- | train came in on the 7th, and was to crose about the 12th. | Police Commissione:s and the Solicitor of the freasury | British subject within the meaning of the act? The | of Suez, hatentepriee of kuch universal interest which barefaced falsehood and con You know | ducea picture sufficiently fearful, sufficiently hideous, Teonchide, therefore, iba: Sir Colin was ouly waiting to | Lord Curzon, Sir Geo. Armytage, the Hon. Hl. Powis, M. | Karned counsel then quoted several passages from Fos | sbe now opposes with a view to ber private interest. well the number of houses that have failed; have | for its aspect alone to bring about the accomplish- | se¢ the whole force over before he bimself crossed, and | Bouillat, the French Vice-Conmul, Me. Martineau, Colvae) | ter’s “Crown Law Discourses,” and other authorities, to ‘That national interest sbould be the motive of each gov- mu not ized them to your correspondents a | ment of your most ardent desires, the realization of | ‘het within a day or two ater the dave of our latest as- Maye, H. Stanhope, and other gentlemen. show that an alien whose sovereign was ia amity with | ernment, je all right, and cannot rcandalize any one, Put j lines lower down. They are not Haytien houses, | that dream of your every moment—the ruin of Hay- } S0UBt8 be once moro vet foot in the rebel province at, the Mr. Bodkin attended ag counsel for the Crown, and Mr. | the Crown of England owes local allegiance to that coun | ifthat national interest does not endeavor to acoord with \ Y, y! be pane’ wos agi h head of probably fiom 12,000 to 15,000 men and about 149 | Sleigh defended the prisouer, On the adinission of the | try while he resided in it. Thus a foreigner living in | uviversal interest; if it prefers ite own to that of the rest You know perfectly the number it seems to me. It | tien credit. You recollect, without doubt, with what . “ a is difficul ith what feverish ard h guns, some 89 of ‘hem pieces of heavy metal and the re | public, England was subject to English law, and differed in uo } of mankind, and takes its position without regard tw them, vel It for firms to fail in Hayti you say, | perseverance, with what feverish ardor, you have | maiping 60 flelpieces, the whole number under the com- | Mr. Jardine sald:—Ibave ordered the doors t> be throwa | re#pect trom a native in his obligations thereto. To take | if, witbout impulse or sympathy, it deliberately exciies This true and proves something in favor of | constantly prosecuted the execution of your infernal } mand of sir Archdale’ Wileou. The road to Alumdagh he | open, because I am very anxious that all the procoodiogs | an illustration. He might suppose apereon in Engand,a | und without reason, ardent paasions, reasonable hopea very t the good faith, and the integrity of the Haytiens in conspiracy. Nothing has ever been able to arrest | would find quite clear, siroug bodies of troops Doing sta- | in this court should be made as public as possible; but I | foreigner, writing toa person in Paris, and ouclosing « | and sacred self devotion, which it will after wards forsake commercial transactions. It proves strongly Be you in this purpose—neither the geueroushospitatity | tioned at Oonao, Busverutgunge and the Buanesdridge. | must appeal to the good sense and to the good fesling of | deadly poison under the protenco that it was a modicine | on an afterthought ora shrewder calculation, it in cer- vor of the good sense of those who trade here. ry | exercised towards you, nor the frank cordiality that | From Alumbagh itself our iatost news is of the 12th inst, | thore whom I sec before me to abstain from avy exhibition | It is taken, and death ensues. Now such a person could | tain that the pation whose egotism will have manifested one will understand that deprived as we are of those | hus been unceasingly testified towards you. You when all wae well, No attack had been made by the ene- | of opinion in reference to what takes place here, Sach | not be proceeded against under the conspiracy laws, the | iteoif with that kind of candid sadacity, will have loss all erful establishments of public credit which ren- | have constantly exploited in an odious manner all | ™Y Since their bloody repulse on the 16th of January; but | conduct is insulting to the prisoner and to all the partiea | combination of two or more persoua being neces. | right tothe sympathy of oiher nations; its prestige will } earee ch Ba evi in England, | the unfortunate events which have afflicted the coun. | Be Was expected on ubat very day, aud the writer of the | conceraed in this inquiry. What may be ususiand per | sary to constitute that charge. Noither could he be | have vanished, and instead @ valiant knight rusiing to France cnt the United States it is teroadbleto ex. | try. ‘The failure of the campaign of the East, the | iter to whic I am revorring—am oilicer of tho 78h— | missibie in a debsting socioty 1 altogether out of place ed by any extradition act, for they only referred to | the Jetence of the oppressed, we will have only a mer nce and the United States, it is impossible to ex- | try. e failure e campaign of the East, the | gaye, « We are ail in harness.” here; and if there is any repetition of the scone which oc \gitives—pereons who fle1 from the land in which thoir | chant in search of « profitable bargain. One may wieh rity whicl remar! cy» nh for ircumstances that yo lying before Fyzabad, eastern Oude, bul, for var cleared, no doubt, design m ia ans or cases of it France also han had too often the fatal mission of dia- other count have welcomed with joy, as favorable to the success | want of ammunition, was unable to take the place, Mr. jleigh, the prisoner’s counsel, hoped he might be | description. It was quite uanecessary to remind his wor- | turbing tbe world, but it was, at least, when she was her. Favored by every kind of institution, discount | of your infamous projects. After the .example of | Supplies were concequently erdored for him from | allowed to express his entire concurrence in the views ex | ship that the law in regard to accessories had undergone | #elf disturbed her agitations re-echoed maroad; the tra estal nts for loans en goods, is it possi- | thoze islanders of Inagua, who rejoice when the tem- | Berares, aud, pending their arrival at his camp, tha } preesed by his worship. He was himsclt di ted at the | considerable change eiace the early part of his worship’s | lighted in ner midsts road to her neighbors, ‘She is a ble for French, English or American traders, with- pest bursts forth and lashes the ocean, in the hope march of Brigacier Franks on the road from Jaw uns¢emly manifestation of feeling whish took place, and | career, when it was made compulsory first to try aod con | revolutionist oy paroxysm and by impulse; England is 40 out bein, all Krupt, to be vented from | that a few shipwrecked vessels will be cast upon pee by Suitanpore to Lucknow was baited at Budlapore. | be regretted very much that anything which he nad said | vict the principals. Nowa man may be convicted asan | by calculation. The latter his the burning brands S eer ey Base “eatatnly thar | thete const von ae datintiied ad eit tka wisfortes ene were tho respective pouitiont—wnen last we heard | should have been made the pretext for conduct whoily | accessory oven if the orime, in which be was an sccom: | 'n her band to.et fre to ber neighbors, while she careful paying to time or at ict ta y | their coast, you are delighte al Mmistortunes | of them, about the 7th of this month—of the two anxiliary | inconsistent with the dynity and solemmty which | plice wea not carried ont. Hoe did not want 10 say any- | ly oxtinguishes the flaue at bome. must in such a case be clearly insolvent. Bat here, | with which the country has been stricken, and which | forces destined to aid the Commander in Chief 1m the rd. | should always characterise the proceedings of a court of | thing to the prejudice of the prisoner; but he submitted ‘These tactics, pow Wo well known, have for many as every one is aware, there are no such institutions, | have been of a nature to shake the credit of Hayti. | conquest of Oude justice. that the evidence in this case had shown thata murder | years been sibguiarly prejuiicial to estiga of Bag and ev one is left to his own unaided resources. |} Why so much persistence in evil? Why so much Tarning to the northweet cf Oude, where tho groat pro- Tt is right to add that the magistrato’s injunction was | had been committed in a country whose sovereign lived in | land. Other goverpinents dread bor a the disturbar of With a ion of assets in merchandise, or in good | blackness in an American soul? What is the cause | vince of Rohicund yet remains to be tranquillized, we | obeyed to the letter, not the slightest interruption having } amity with us; that the murder was perpetrated, as tho | the order established by the treaties; the nationaliies rtain periods f this ps logical phenomenon? The ig | find that kh regents of foot, with horse and artil- | occarred throughout the inquiry. clause specified, ‘‘on land,” that the prisoner had assisted | which aspire independense haye too wel) underwood debts, it is impossible at cer pel to obtain | o' psychological phe: reason is the smallest money accommodation to meet one’s | that amongst all nations the influence of climate lery, are moyiog down jhe roada from Lahore; and Mr. Bodkin then proceeded with the examination of wit- | and instigated, and he feared, in the case of Rudio, had | that they are on}y used as @ political instrument. ta, Would it not be, therefore, absurd to | united to education causes to predominate Blready within the boundaries of the province, and with. | Beases, even hired one of the murderers; and, finally, that being Stripped of that usurped prestige Knglana remaing un- eee eee the failure of bita wh Np Allg F ota tutheut hist, | Sut the aid cf the Sikh force, a considerable blow hes boon | Police constable Rogers produced some lotters and | aresident in Englund, and amenable to the lawa which | doubtedly a great nation—full of every, «f revources, of provoxe the of Dim who possesses, perbaps, | certain a8, certain sentiments, — which | infiicted upon the rebels of Bareilly. Three large bodies papers which he d to having found at the prisoner's govern Engtishmen, he was to all intents and purposes a | Perseverance; but her cause nas ceased ‘to be that of ie aseeta double and even treble the amount of his lia- } form the destructive characters of th | of these mon wero, at tho beginning of this month, sta- gs in Park place, Bayawater. (They were handed nish subject within the moaning of this act cemocracy, in favor of which ahe has dove vo:hing, and of bilitiés? Yes, it would be absurd in the extreme, } nations. Thus, in the English the dominant | tioned at three several points between Bareilly and the | in. Mr. Sleigh said he had listened to his learned friend’s | civilization, which she has made war against io Egypt and and no one can view it otherwise. It is for this rea- | sentiment is the duty and the love of jus-| hills. One party, under Fuzl Hk, held the road to Pr ir. G. Morrison examined—I am a conveyancer, resid- | exposition of the law with that pleasure and delight which | on the Dapube, son, Mr. Yankee, that these simple suspensions of | tice; in the French honor, generous and elevated | Sieebhect, at a point fourteen jeg from the bottor . | {pg at Reigate, in Sarrey; I kaow Thomas Allsop, who | he always felt on similar occasione; but his frient was If we look now upon her internal state, we percetve that payment are accepted by every one; it is for this | sentiments, and devotion to humanity generally; in | the Nynee Tal bill. A second was at Rudaporo, turihor wo | used to hve at Nutfield, near Reigate, and I am woll ac- | mistaken in supposing that he intended to jotn insue with | not only her policy of taking advantage of distinctions of reason that the rigorous ‘presesptions of our com- } the Haytiens, if we be permitted to class ourselves pe Dylmgs ee one 90 i the aeatre on a pale Gare Ni his heehee A tears the tere pro him on any Po her) tA oe ef _ inquiry. ae Tees exciien in India Seed pect Loge oper ro- ? , Bareilly road, twenty four miles from the Nynee ty juced ave been written 5 one of m, how- | worthy mag! 2 mated intention to s e | volt, but the very position of parties in ent soma mercial code relative to failures and bankruptcies | in this moral order, love of our neighbors, goodness | or raiher, from the camp at the bottom of | Will, where | ever, ia signed “Thos.” (short), which was not bis usual | cage to the jury; thet was enough. It would be « sheer | to reveal @ condition of weaknens aud senility. rarely find an application among us. You will, | of heart and sensibility developed to an extreme; Jay Coione! M’Causiand with the 6étb Gho: 4s, some 500 ature; he generally signed bis name ja full. waste of time, therefore, to digcuss the legal f a ¥ e x ; ‘ : » legal question | could now-a-days ray what is ® whig, a tory, or even & therefore, agree Beg Mr. Yankee, that you pass | in the Americans personal interest, excessive love | Nepaulese and hilimen, and goute irregular horse and four . Joveph Taylor examined! am an engineer, and | now. He should simply content himsel€ by entering his | radical? Everything is mixed up, obscure, undecided. \ s high eulogium upon us in saying that failures | of gold, and the contempt of humanity—hence ego- | light ticld piecos—in all about 1,200 men, live at St. Martin’s place, Birmingham; the grevade pro | protest, as the counsel tor the prisoner, against the | Power passes from lord Jobn Russell to Lord Paimerston, are rare in Hayti; it is as much as saying | tism, narrow and exclusive ideas and absurd preju- ‘All is quiet in. the Punjab, with Sikh regiments march- | duced was manutactared by me, with five othere—two of | course’ purs yy the advisers of the Crown a4 | and from Lord Palmerston to Lord Derby, as in France that those rascalities, those frauds that are else- | dices. This hatred of the American peti us ig | ing down into Zindostan and Eagileh ones coming up from | them being the same eize, and three about an inch larger. | inconsietent with those great principles which regulajed | previous to 1848, it went from M. Mole to'M. Thiers, and jhe i i Kurrachoo to take their place. Sir John Lawrence arrived | I made thei to the order of « person who camo to tho | the jurisprudence of this coubtry, and which made the | from M. Thiers to M. Guizt, thers are soune things Sar we toker pres a an thanks for this ie Wile meee dahon bed = the 17th pee ey, Be Loeb: on Soy org 44 gh ght hy aero ast, | think, aad wno gave lew of ‘Boland fr an — tf coer ag and the ye oye ge Foon gm ma Se ems honanven. on his way to and Agra, istricts latel: rr name ; the four letters produced are those | admiration civil: rope. One of these prin- '¢ do not yet perceive the germ of life whish ws wo renew tribute which has escaped you, in spite of yourself. | But, Messrs. Yankee merchanta, you who show | Over tohis management, “From Mooliau the itt’Fusioors | which Lalterwards received from himupou the suuject or | ciples was thal uo man could be ‘charged with. two | that old poiley. We continue:— yourselves so malevolent, so hostile to those amongst | hag arnved at Lahore, settin, re : " rt . 1g freo tho Bist, wno go up w | the order. offences at the same time; and least of all could ap; We are not among those who believe in the decline of The business done by New York and Boston | whom you have found a convenient asylum, and the | reinforce the somewhat crippled garrison of Pedingan Mr. Sieigh—Before these letters are read, I must really | British subject be arraigned for one offence, and out ot Eapant but it seems that her policy wants renewing; will have to undergo serious modifications. I have | bread which you perhaps could not obtain at home, Further to the eastward in Central India Sir Hugh Rose | agalp ask my triend what is the epecific charge which he | the evidence of witnesses examined in ite support accused | 2nd if we remember, as we stated above, that Eugland often been astonished to see that zones, men, with- | do you not fear that we may be tempted to imitate | and Gen. Whitlock aro pressing on, helping to contine into Ewe against my client? Is it eonspiracy, aa at first | subsequently of another and a gravor crime. Evidence | is the only country of Europe in which the Freuch ideas of ut acent of capital, could go to nited States | you? Do you not apprehend that this freedom of | #n ever narrowing circle the yet blazing or smouldering ated, or is it the more serious one of being an acces. | had been received in this case in support of the charge of | 1789 have not penetrated in any shape, we Will, perhaps, and obtain credit,” &c., &c. commerce which is annually accorded to you by tl fire of rebellion. Sir Hngh after relieving Saugor, before sory tw the crime of murder? misdemeanor which could never have been legally enter- | have reason to surmise that England |3 destined to be, in ‘Ab! here we see peeping out the ears of the ass; | kindness of government may be withdrawn {ro proceeding upward moved to the eastward agaivet a ir. Bodkin—The latter, or rather both, in point of fact, | tained in a case of felony. He had been surprised at the | 4 short time, the theatre of important events. here steps in the Yankee and his iernal combina, | you--from you who pay this benevolence ty so in. | Srovely situated fort cated Gurrakota, some 25 miles of, | because I prefer two charges. course taken by the Crown, and had expressed bis senti- pl x ps Pocnte or Ae — bs : De yee thi, hospi. | S2PROSeG to be occupied by tho remuins of the mutinied | Mr. Sleigh—Then I object to these letters being received | ments with that fearlessness which he hoped would An American Shipmaster In Trouble, tion. American commerce must henceforth undergo | famous a return? Do you not fear that this hospi- | 504 Bengal native infantry. He was procoeding to iuvest | m evidence, No complicity with Allsop had pon yet | always ctaracterize his careor at the bar; and he would | At the Mariborough Police Court, Loudon, ou ihe 13th serious modifications; and to arrive at them, | tality which is granted'to you (in virtue of interna- | the place when it was abandoned by ite vccupauts, —- shown. The case of Allsop was pot before the Court, now tell his friend Mr. Bodkin, much as he respected him | instant, Louis Beavan de Craon, a captain in the American sir, “age simply prveese to your compatriots of New | tional obligations, you will say,) may be some day | — Whitlock’s force was expected to leave Juboulpore on | Mr. Bodkin—My friend muet have forgotten ail that has | in public and private life, that’ he would not allow him to | merchant service, described aa of Morris stroct, Now York and to close all credit against our | refused to you, miserable intriguers, who, by reason | or about the }6th, and would Sivance in two divisions—~ | passed. Ihave shown that the shell produced was made | impute improper motives to him (Mr. Sleigh), ag he had | York, was charged with presenting a loaded six charge small Beaten | Cages sireene vies ey and ca your auntie pre} wep pe vga 9 already | one on the one — to tas Gauges, the other to Sau- Py the bg or Aneop, § and =H (a, sore ee = dns on the becom Bale impunity. a a revolver at Cladio Celestine, lieutenant of the laiante Don by ‘imbaud bank- en civi nations under the b: if | gor, by way of omoh ‘ance. am now showing w le the shell, an y Some personal 8 having been exchang’ etween the Le teame! L at Black wail. . teed - isto may, you tell ‘them clearly “only | thia Ang prehicake held law? Well, tremble hence. | _ the Bombay Presidency uothing has occurred of | whose direction it was manufactured, learned counsel, followed as usual, by mutual expros- | “the complainant aud Le was sitting 1 the Café Chantant Keep up business relations with. us, for we ‘alone cax | forth, wretches! Quail, we say, for you have thrown | ™¥cb importance. Mr. Jardine—The letwers may be read. Ifany question | sions of civility And respect at the discovery that noihing | in Leicester aquare, last evening, when the defondant, uM % KD 4 is wo their being legal evidence, it can be suomisted | in the slightest degree ollensive was meant on either bo wi periect stranger, cams to him, and, after offer you desirable tees, capital, morality and | down the gauntlet to us, and we pick itup. You TRIAL. OF THS BX-KING OF DELHI bys » who was a stranger, e up to him, and, after Phy taee A rrr 5 ve Pag aaty; pat tiy attacked beng pI . Re poe The Delhi Gazette gives an intercating account of the | the Judge at the trial. This is only # preliminary in- | side— insulting his uniform and bis country, conciuded by pull- capa lere, at least, is pure Christian charity; | ha’ jus and rest assured - ne quiry,end! ought not to exclude thom, even if [hada | — Mr. Jardine said—This is the most important investiga. | ing bim by bis beard and mouataches, He p: the and is the manner, Mr. Yankee, in which you | now about to take you seriously in hand. trial of the old ex King:— Goudt as to their belog strictly aamissible. tion that ever came before me, or probably any other | detemdantaway, whereu ies tahanain Week ane profess the sublime doctrines of that Bible ———S ‘The trial of the ex King of Delhi commenced on Wed- Mr. Burnaby, the chief cierk, then read the letters. | magistrate—most important in its character and its re- volver and hold it Wo hia face. Defendant, Seaguesber, which you hug #0 closely, and which nesday, Jan. 27, inthe Dewan Khas of the Palace. It | They were dated from “Gingor’s Howl, Westminster,” | suite. My duty is a very clear andsimple one. Even if [ ed Wo bave been drinking. you present to every one as the noblest LATER FROM EUROPE. was half past 12 oefore the prisoner was brought in. He | #2d signed “Thomas Allsop.” They bore the post mark | saw difficulties, which I do not see, in the legal bearing of Fie defendant, in reply to the charge, aid he thought present which heaven has made to humanity? Is appeared very infirm and tottered into court supported | of November, 1867. In the first letter the writer said, ‘I | the case, I should not be justided ‘in stopping it; it would | he felt somebod the manner in which you practice that divine "ghand in his pocket, and be palied ous on one side by the “interesting youth,” Jumma Bukht, | 8 ip receipt of your note, aud regret to learn that the | still be my duty to submit the matter to a higher tribunal, | his pistol to defend himself, He was an ‘america oftizen, 4 and on the other by @ confidential servant, and coiled him. | Models are not yet completed. I was led to conclude that | where those points of law which have been raised can be | although born a Frenchman. text of the Evan a, peg which Ma il peg ARRIVAL OF THE HAMMONTIA. | fiir ition suall ccdie upon the cusLiou assigned to hin, | this litle matter woula have been faished off hand Tho | and must de fully and fairly diacunged.. ‘Then with regard | "'Tnetuier Clerk, Mr. Lewliey, asked the defendant if he better acquainte than we are:— e were He preseuted such a picture of heipieas imbevibty as, un- | time you have taken is altogether disp: oportionate to tho | to the second and more serious charge, upon which Tam | had any explanation to olfer why he went about in this same sentiments, full of com) one towards the THE FUNDS IN LONDON AND PARIS der other circumstances, must bave awakened pity.’ He | work done. It will be impossible to doter it beyond this | asked to commit the prisoner. I have never doubted lat- | country with a #ix barrelled loaded pletol. other, aiding each other fra ly; be gentle and i A NDUN AA o at coiled up on a cushion on the left of the President aad | week, the other work being all suspended through your | terly that it must come to this. I have been taken by eur- The defendant made no reply. merciful. If you love your life, if you that wn ww to the rigpt of the governmont prosecutor, his son Jumma | delay with these models dat the latest on lay | prise at the magnitude of the facts disclosed asthe Crown | —_ Inspector Coombs, C division, proved that the revolver your days may be happy, keep your tongue from Bukbe sfandivg a few yards to his left, and a guard of | evening to say if they will be ready by Monday se Proceeded, step by step, to develope this case. Tne diffi. | wae loaded with four balls and a proportionate qaaatity of ‘evil and your fips from MR lohood oh News from India—A New King Proclaimed, | rites beyond ail. or I shall be put to the expense of # journey down.” cuities to Be surmounted by the prosecution were ver: wder. Five of the barrels were charged, aud one bad But, My. Yankee, with your band on pia inks Orc tare ia ‘The prosecutor read the charges against the prisoner, | the second letter the writer intimated. that he was coming | great, owing tothe witnesses being chiofly resident abroad; | been recently discharged, Pe. » Mr. es tha’ Page aren rind a ar Commenced-— stating that although the prisoner might be fully convict: | down to Birmingham, and “would see about the models tn | andI take it for granted that the Crown was not itself The complainant eaid he seized the pistol when it was Eras gs Lindon Aogger as Union a Yellow Fever at Bio Janeiro, ed by the court, no capital sentence could be passed upon | person.” The third contained another compiaint, relative | aware of all the circumstances which have transpired | presented at bim and threw {: on the floor, wham one of sent your compa jon & very him, in consequence of his life having been guarantied to | to wituees’ delay in the execution of the work—a delay of | sinee the commencemento* the inquiry. Ihave nothing to | tne barrela went off, owing to the fail. true and a very accurate description of kon kon &o. him by Geners! Wison, in & promise conveyed through | tree weeks, and the fourth letter, which was dated No- | do but commit the prisoner for trial on both the charges Mr. Bingham told the cefendant that Lynch law would rce?_ Do you believe that all the sain Hodson. vember = 1857, contained @ Post Office order for £2 éa. | preferred against bim. not de in this country whatever might be lta authority in ‘ yercha: ‘and wiped out, as you ‘he prosecutor then put tho question throngh tho inter- | 6¢.,‘‘which,”’ said the writer, “will Dalance the account The prisoner, who seemed quite indifferent as to the | the country of which he called himself a citizen. they incapable of henceforth The steamship Hammonia, which left Southampton on | preter, ‘guilty or not guilty’? which the prisouer either did | between us,” result, Was then removed from the dock. To questions the defendant replied that be Lad not had ft ing their engagements? Can you be t | the evening of the 20th of March, arriyed at ihis port on | Rotor alectednot to undersiand and there was some dalay wosdie mace Penge my atagers Me Regge ee t a sti de four mente, ant the Tat h venoal Bowes ip ex] itt him, jo then declar "1 eo rom. receiv a wes EAS, ween jor i fF remains to all those who have had | qhorsday night, bringing London evening papers of the | jovuhi meen ot um natere nr ab ares saumelt rO- aren ima nr against him, | samplo or model of the nipples whion were alnoto be made; On Friday, March 19, a law was laid bofore tho Logisla | York ani . the misfortane to be duped by the miserable Reitt- | som uit, and London morning papers of tho same day. | although a transiated copy of thom was furniahed und | Iwas to get tbe latier made, as I do not maaufacture | tive body, Prohibiting ihe making or selling of percussion | Mr. Bingham—i have now heard the whole case, and in dise, Consols closed da: read wo him in the presence of witnesses, some twenty | them; \here were 26 holes in the shell for the insertion of ft Iminasi in my opinion a more voked assault ‘an unof- estate, to be easily converted sp cipsaceaag vere ng heed ace a rg M+ | Gaya previous. After some more delay ‘the prisouer | the nipples; T made some Improvement in the form of tho | towettain| atin partite, anda tax of COper cent cd ve- | fendiog stranger in this country I have never’ betere bad Can you be ignorant that | * 96% for money, an: pave om pleaded ‘not guilty,” and the business of the court pro- | nipples, as wanufacturers often do in carrying out inven- | Jorem is laid on the article itself, which is valued at ag an | to deal with. Lshould be very sorry to bel traders, to use your own ex-| At Paris on Satarday, 20th ult.,the three por cants | ceeded. tons, but Mr. Allsop was dig with them, and lor | pual product of 800,000. to the exchequer. is any community of men, either on this aide of the Atian- have only been able to obtain amongst | closed at 69f. 60c., an improvement of about #y per cent. On the second day the sitting was closed in consequence | fered to change them ingly; he Aald thad he would The conspirator, De Rudso, whose life was spared, is said | tic or the otber, where it ls necessary to go about armed “ of the indivposition of the prisoner. take them to a gentleman in London first, and if they suit. | ¢ nch governmeut » | toa place of entertament with such & weapon as you your countrymen eredit by BOE roy recom, | _ The Bombay mail arrived at London on Saturday morn: | “On the third day, while the evidence was boing taken, | ed {sbould be paid in full; the order waa completed by | fugees in Loudeu who are plelged lo Mae ciemtaitionts | (ioe aetowsubn) exkintins, Seth cundumt eacees be iste. mendations, and that Hage iaoradity, of | 126; 20th ult., but the details of tho news give little of :n- | the prisoner, culled ap easily upon bis cushioa, appeared | the 2840: November, on which day Allsop took them | tne Emperor. Fated in this country, As #oon as you arrive in this sal and exact had convinced them of their morality, of | (re addition to the full telographic despaichas al. | ost iu the land of dreams, aud, excopt wien’ auything | away, tending down the Most Ofice order thortly after? | “usreEiloe, itis aad, will oon have a population of bait} snd'froo land you must'be taught to lay aside such bar their aptitude in business, and above all pe ‘A letter from Allahabad, 11th of Feby particular struck Bum, coutiuued wmindful of what was | wards. a million. Darous habits, aud not to intimidate people by such en- cnniary guarantors that they offered either 5 ec ready published. A le ’ Ora | paRbiNg EFOund bie. Mr. Sodkin=Waat sort of a person was Allsop in ap- | | The originator and editor of the Biagraphie Universit, | lawful weapons as you bave used. You will also leara to selves or throu; relatives’ 0, Mr. ary, say8:— On the fourth and iifth days ho waa aroused from sleep | pearance! M. Michaud, has died, aged eighty, at Thernes, (not | kuow © police are suiticient fer all purposes - are not wee of all this. You know well + A Whole force is to be in motion to morrow. They | ‘ bear tho evidence read. A professional artist was in al- Witness—Ho was about 60 years of age; tall (about six | Thermes,) botween Paris and Neuilly.’ ? tection, and are all we want here. You are a very tendance on the latter day, making a sketch of the priso- | feet high), rather stout, stooped a little, spoke very quick, A letter from Marseilles, of the 17th ult. tg that | gerous man, and! shall commit you to the Quarter Ses. confidence and credit do pot atcord very easily Fy Tf P » report in ‘where tie 40 got baye been crossing the river at Cawnpore for the last fow | por as ho lay on his couch. and scemed a little bard of hearing. thirty-reven individuals, arrested under the new penal | sions for trial next Monday, whero a higher tribunal will your country, days, and talk of the attack beginning on the 20th inst. ‘Ou the sixth Jay, the trangiation of a lettor, dated the | _ Mr. John Gorard Wich, Vice-Consal for Belgium, sxid— | law of general safely, were embarked on the preceding | convince you that you oufnot act in the f Sir Colin Campbell bas hadan interview bere with the | 24th of March, addrosed to the late Mr. Colvil, L.eutenant | My office is in Bury court, St. Mary.axe; I recollect @ | day ou the steam packet Caire, to be transported to Al- | done with impunity Goverpor N. W. P., was read, disclosing the tact that aa | foreigner applying to me for @ passport, {a the namo of | gicria. = Governor General concerning Oude aifairs. There is & | fr back aga year aud s half ago secret emissaries were | Auother person, on the 26:h November; | told him chat, | "4 lettor from Parie to London, dated on the 18th ultimo, report here that a relation of the old King has proclaimed | gent by the King of Dolhi to Persia, through the agency of | sccording to my regulations, the party waatiog it must | suya:—The Emperor Napoleon was yesterday in the Bois himself King of India, and given orders to the insurgents | Ove Mabomed Hursun Uskberee, the ovject of which was | apply | pacar ; he went away and returned with a past | de Poulogne without escort, and walking about with the ," evidently to obtain agsistance to complete the overthrow | port; I poluted out to him that it bore no signature; he | fxopress aud the Loperial Prince. 1 happened this after net to fight us, but to disperse in bands of forty or fifty | 6 Brith power in india. The perusal of the letter, | wished me to return it to him, but I retained i; he went | noon to be a witness w the almost rash way in which he and scour the roads and kill the English. 1 think this i# | which bears both the Delbi and Agra postmark, excited | out, and in afew minutes returned with another porson— | boty at aught precautions which most mon in bis etuation the worst news we have had yet. cougiderable sensation in court. atall, stout thy looking, greyien hair, and | would be likely to take. Passing through the Tulleries most A their akin be white. No, this; but it was ne- cessary for the success of your fine projects for the modification of American Commerce to multiply all these calumnies. And you have the audacity to call Reimband a ecoundrel and @ wretch; and you, sir, what epithet do you apply to yourself? How do you : ‘On the 7th and Sth days the prosecutor examined, | apparently a littie deaf, as he put his hand this ear when | gardens, botwoen three and four o'clock this afternoon, 1 = | o0 walify yourself’ You, an adventurer, cast on our | The Parla Patric announces that eovoral small veetola through the interpreter, a person Damned Jutmull former. | 1 apoke; he said he was the perscn wanting tho passport. | aw the Funperor alone, etanding on We slepa of the itile “ j Tow. | ar Shores, by the desire of accumulating wealth; received | are now arriving at different porte to reinforce the French | ly newswiiter to the Lieateuaut Governor at Agra. His | Mr. Bodkin—Did he give any name? | staircase leading from ‘his study to the reserved garden, ‘A Me LW. | 30° Admira) in Chipa. evidence confirmed all we have already heard coacernisg Witness—ste gave the name of Thomas Allsop; be was | which is only fenced off from the pablic promenade by a of his the cold blooded atrocities committed absolutely under | an Englishman—I may eay a thorour’ specimen of ‘bo | railing not more than forty yards from the palace, aud a Marshal Canrobert bas taken possession of his com- | t14 dreonor's own apertaveats in the palace. The canal | Ball,” because the first thing he di. vas wo grumble—(a | railing which anybody might Jump over. For at loast a mand at Nancy. water, which ran through the |= odd cxesation, wen, it langh) —a boing ey rho pp ing ne waeets hese ome Ey beer & . oF content ieaning a — rm France and Fi 8, used for the purpose of washing aw: traces | &! ec 5 Lee ; ap ie ny wi ae ees Coats aye SS ant tegen | Tus tiony a sa an old ove, baving been granted by Lord Palmerston in | crossed, and smoking « sogar. The day being vory Gao, fare agreed upon the following points: — Commissary of Ordnance, was | 1861, and Bad travelled a great deal in Italy and Beigmim; | thousands of people were walking in the and cordial! and generously by on nteree - rsa in despite of all your prejudices 4 ~ who have been Je under favor of the benevo- Tent protection of their laws to realise an honest lh 4% 428 g Forrest, gardens to the misfortunes of your hosta a of consola- | Fyrst—The Porte must suppress the insurrection tn Bos- out On the Shand %h days, ard on the 10th Sir | the foreigner who was with Allsop was about 30, ‘ark reat numbers leaned over the railings to stare at him. vB | 63° tion, have exploited them in a manner soinfamons. | nia and Herzegovina. Theophilus Metcalf, ©. S., gave evidence, The “sooth | beard, care worn and thoughtful in appearance, and most ‘hon at length, being summoned by an usher to gi M | — | 60” ¥f, according ‘ion, the miserable Reim- Second—It must faithfully execute the Hatti Honma: | sayer,”’ Hussun Uskhoroo, was oxamined, and denied all | polite, as the Italians gonorally are, Ho looked ike an | audience to some one, bo went into bis study, he loft ue} BE | 62° baud is a scoundrel for havi lundered so many | yours. that bad boen said of his wonderful powers, Agent oF commiasionaire at some hotel. 1, | Outer door open Whatever may be said against him, uw. | Ww. | 60° families many hi ast Leeders of a portion of | should these tions be complied with it it will not | The prisoner was then referred to, and noswithstanding | — William Burford, assistant to ® pawnbrokor in Ryder's | truth commands one to say that pusillanimity is not one | NE | 58 = a agree oo . Jed statem f his firm belief in the court, Leicester square, proved that a coat and waistcoat | of his characteristics. their fortune, will you not yrith me that you | he necessary to consult, the Paris Conference on the sub- Miribuved to te whnees, ho denied ail Kknowledgo of hie were’ pledged at his employer's shop, and on the #1h of a x i NE - are a much viler, # much more infamous rogue; 400 F isos, etherwine the Conference will be formally called on | Or his powers. He was’ reminded of his statement made | Jaouary lagt taken out again. The name given was Eliza | ‘The Postion of England in Europe. Set ls who continue your work of destruction, not, It it | 1 iu. the question. put afew days previous, but ail to no purpose. he com. | Rudio, and the amount was 4s. and 1s. 6d. respectively. | (Translated from the Maris Preese of March 17 for the Pim | x. | 60 | true, in pl our capital, bat in what amounts ty aq | plotely ignored bia, and Hassum Uskberes was returned | (This evidence waa in corroborsilon of 8 previous #talo- ‘New York Herald.} pul wi ee | to the came, in endea to confiscate for your | The China mail was expected at London on the 224 | 1) 11,’ aiace of confizement much to the diagust of those | ment by the witness Rudio ) ‘The French revolution (of 1789) has not only changed Aw |NE] — own benefit the credit we aiay Sen. ultimo. who expected rome intorenting revelations from him. Cross: ° sen the woman Radio, but oouid | the politcal condition of the French from top to bottom: aM | oN. | 65° It is very evident, Mr. Yankee, itia your de | Letters from Ia Plata and Rio Janeiro report the yellow The next witness calied was Bukhtawur, & poon in the not her: had Ba recollection of we person now. M0 Das also radiated abrosd and has more or Joss iv pM | Nw | 68 re eee 5 pag hE CUE misfortune: | fever raging noveroly among the ships’ crows. An lung. | POTN? Oe Jets eees of tke Lithot Avy. | by biden to the dats or & botice served upon Bernard to right of merit rabauivuted Tor that of birth. for advance SEIEE! = coum monster; you place ns under the necessity, | sh veeel of war, after mffering dreadtully, was evacsa. | “the court wan occupied the wholo of the eleventh day | produce the passport referred to in former depositions, | ment in public ofices, the equality before the law, the abo- SI ler bh apo Fa of examining your ted by the thirty men who wererpared. Several other | with the examination of a person named Chunee, former- tae a Ittton S ee en oe ee oe Aare te atae vs of all pations were evacuated. ly editor of @ tative , entitled the Deihi News, co0- Mr. Bodkin banded in one of the letters addressed ne ee eS by con. of New York, viduality. are you? You who assume to | ships ” dusted on & novel ple, the editor's duty being to | by Allsop to the prisoner, and proposed that it should be es ‘example, or introductions of our laws aan op tun ROAALD. opal a's fished merce wal Ss The War in India. cee ee ae sana mama | Tiegh aid wan bi duty frmaly wo prot | more sr ines Sen mirluced among ale nabs of | Omen orn Matuartan amu nna, ety ee other people? Where is your ? | ORR SRPOTS AT LUCKXOW—aIn COLIN CAMPRELt's | fons that ihe Mabomodans of the city’ wore tothe habit | againat ua, and be nero 8 a ‘eatinenal yaad have made’ a bresah into 2 pita. bad Youx, April 2, 1868. a in MARCH ON OUDB, of poarting that the Persians, aided by the wore The letter was read eSarnaby as ows: — institutions: ‘mouing feudalism. " ‘our paper of today makes charge againat us wh: pF = ae Mistal "we | (Prom the second eduisa af the Tondsa Times, March 20. | scaming totirive ine Boglien Sut of he cuuutry, and gare Rivensean, Kent, Jan. 1 1858 | Holland, Switzerland, « part of Germany, pains faiy’ we have denied over and over again—a mos: unjust ber that and the majority of persons like By the arrival of the overland mail we have received | it as bis firm bolief that the Mabomedans were very | My Dean Docton—Wany thanks for the two silps enclosed, | possess already, or aro ‘mood to adopt institutions charge—and one which no act of ours will warrant acy peg fog Fit, ot ror ntroos ta | OUF private correspondence and Journals from Bombay to | much excited about the Persian war. The Chuppaties | whieh Inow return. Ihare not yet received suy comman! | more or less sitailar to the principles which emanated oe, landed on our shores without cravat ot the Sath of February. The following ia tho lottor of our | which were circulated wore, he said, for lke purpose of | eaten in reply tomy sppeal to the ‘of taiy, bat LBope | from our great revolution. Austria herself—that constant | one in repeating. - It is that we “endeavor to extors Hos So Tete Beek te tho other, You were dex: | uTeP=NSESE— ringing gether a large bouy of ten’ for nome Vaninow | SOUR SMITE RANG Oe? corse wcoafuet caster pune | feetay of oUF armies and of our priaciples—as, Deen | money trom our dealers by reusing to furnish gat to any note » you were Bomnar, Fob. 24, 1868. to be explained to them hereafter, and ho said they ori , ‘nity of action ianeoas | © o a ” aes FeO hee ee ere i Dene af PLL pane ad ny LS fans tor ear Kersa ‘Ceeee concinded bis xt Differences exist in every army, but u Psgiece inte Peasants, and to enter, by that measure, upon the ground pnts npc cnrinpaaresire np ae ca fame one ivered acknow Commander tn. , ence rep! a“ oe tion Fresch po! cy. giving benefit denis your =n house proba ire anticipated, from the direction of Fattyghur and the | prosecutor, as teubs ave ibe race to maneee ie banene pt mh mpi Cg Pm for gaa realized large amount of nga, but along the direct road from Cawnpore, by Eeropease “Tho king himecif ; who else could give the me mean consumed , the notice # printed ov ‘consignment: pnrchased in the , On the track of egg wpb cle ag ty order?” on ma ‘even if be escapes the retribution ve ceaasmetemane eater te on ae ’ ‘ already marched to victory, Sir Colin advantes upon On the twelfth day Gol was examined ve California T wonld Customers wi!l ¢ lease mak ication at the office for public inited States, the only | ary Mcity. The evans beforebim x perhaps 100,000 | some partieiars of the taaaracre of Faropeass mside ibe | ore No the man wh> should per: use of the gas betore igatog tana itive satice when eerie eapitol that are, no doubt, at | strong the most part trained to arms by Engiiab b he was an ness. form an act of justice to etched caltif, and so’end tend to remove or cense burning, thereby avoiding all Ls it in tie “enjoyment of a comfortable ease. | Secipline, or innred to ‘heir use during the courlay jours re cuore Hakeem, He must de killed. It is some consola- ttle were her people aware | bility for gaa consumed by other parties. ‘our metamorpboses is therefore You | of the dethroned dynasty. called ip and examined on oath ' ore going abr ond \o | that they bad the | IL prosume this notion must hate arison from a practica have no longer a pale and cadaverons Good | — The city which they hold is mid to have been groatly | ought to be ant might be, but for evident * bins,” Show ato Ureiat’s pi Srot aay to'wmen | West. which prevailed in Philadelphia, where the gas work living, horse exercise and the pure and fresh air of by them sinor the masterly movement of | esting and important, always broke down when coming | we are interested. He Rind eneach to assure Uraini of my The Crimean By | belong to the city. The gas bill became a lisa on the vii that reside in have a little | the Commander in-Cnief withdrew from their tiger clutch | to a certain point; viz , crimupating the prisover, warmest aympathy and alfectionate Yours frater- struggle of | puilding—the same as the charge for the Croton ix ne flesh on your gheunhen coche ent tare given them | the long imprisoned Hnglish garrison. 1 00 lea maeraie | She prmoner wee more lively thas useal today, do. | BAIT, _ s nese tts year will eve he tno Ae ALLAOE. | Berope, Rass the feebleneas of 0 military orga With re baytoa'e Dill, which you anprow it 5 th only, but of solid masonry. } clared 0 times, an: =I bepe Loves 4 a touch of color. To, the «mail poictet of t cones Pee ceines tae’ rebels will iterapa to hold them coe | aie tea — Fsey scart tband | done towards a mew iawn of life for the peoples. permaae bs necessity of | the pas AF » ies diate oan combs te LA Tinen has & coat fine n+ | the tremendous fire of the Fnglish artillory is at least | bis head, and aak * occasionally. Many of the in this letter were too obscurely easing the emanci- | Dayton and his supporters will have accomplished their you - oY wees aes by neat boyy doubtfa:. Many men in Sir Colin's wee were A a ‘A deapateh received at Bombay etates, dhat the prisoner = to ae es 7, semen. es comcaniies an Md ad a oujeet; vat, althougs pan Ry fo AT compenies, mhoes. woul again recog: istans offere : Book: completed middie clams; point ome light, nise you. T should not be ‘eatoniohed to see you wentanaly vo, however, bet tat by we on mail that | Was fouod guilty and sentenced to wansporiation for life | aa this er — was Co fd, ry point in LA vr or ‘lave it Tornisbed wader the Om mins ODE rm soon precede you! by that of the great ro | \eaver tta you will receive, from the practiced ant | to the Andamans. wo y atten! enterprise of to be appointed at Albany. piace. y > mance writer you ee. the author of the | well known hen KC C) Sunes, gree rd Intelligence from Talia says the Mann Singh has pre | nares. wou! one me it might not be Sosa? Nut wale a, fe under the control of the >< con . ning ne, on Cl Bouse wa aa ape Ge beghas of Inkermaon. served nd rent from J.acknow some forty or fifty Fng!ish | the matter came before another tribunal, but if any such * distance x 6 ole tsiranet = Hayti, ps oad el ‘On the Tat of this month the Commander in Chief broke | or Anglo Indian men, wounen sat ame, come thy = ~ Cem ee Sy wy who eomre' 1 aa A Spy oe city Ponds. u Paity nd marched Cuwnoore. | hed reached Gorrack pore. aun Singh bi it wn ae at 5 instead of loving Kerishing the Haytiees, who Himecit with General Mansdotd and other sire, | far an ¥ysabaahvmgelt He haa ackod Juv Dahadoor | poreved, and ample nouc given to him of what dheaatory | movement, and ts some | THE KANSAS QUESTION AND Dave contribu ish gh so many little ed unin advance of the army. cacorted by the Oth | for a pass ito Nepant, to end bis days in retirement, |) ofthat Co Lyn bp pT bey ami a:mnew + enjoyments, arse them pon them, J horee artillery, and, cover. | The Rareilli rebele’ lost 600 killed and wounded an ;he hoped . meeting Ye evil 4 our wih fab- yw = ee arrives tA Cavbpors o " the | three guus in the stair of the 19th of February. been calmly and fairly conducted on the part of the Crown, | tries which has from the | rooms inst evening, the followingr. oy you desire to heap pon, from 7; ‘4 Mi potutely to drive us al from the theatre of vate letter from an officer of the staff de The Melwa Gootingent, ¢, ae the greater part has + Bd fp pin fy teh pene ba French ideas. ne by Mr. Spencer W. Cone, andalryt commercial operation: : ent health and spirits. potinied, is to be f abandet arg nnd, lal operations. Frankly, thie e ingrativade | seri unole ant baling place before entering Cawa: | "The Rajah or ‘mjbera, ne of the original daturbors, | prinonet ‘would ullmately sarees graver agpect han | sa We German y which nakurs | Resolved, That the Young ( 32 ~ Fe eeenn Gaytlen traders have damaged A pore-at or neat Shoorajpore-the party hed vatellicense | was hanged co the 10th Febroary. thatot a simple misdemeanor, He tnougtt it ight, how. | has matitated wus of the two | Club have sustained the oie ‘These small oe en ee ome pied an Of our detested enemy, Nena Sahi, Accordiag t» the ts The ‘ort of Gurrakota pees ‘abondoned by the rebela Sse toe vo nye ot of eourtey to bis triend aly png Roy my oy ry = 4 rican commerce forced sales 5 . dde of the river Onde, t | gud emai eben hy the Fneliel ALCS prisoner, beral freedom | dations former latter sometimes even below it.” Bee eee ei et aeepalt, Daworted by or | toe. a ita re commu sunt out from Jubbalpore on | of the Crown to proeed upoh the more serious charge, | sho grants to the land has re. to them to be wise, stamemanlite, and caleaiated Every time that sales of thie kind have taken | having himself diemiased, all bi ilowers bat afew Mah. | ue rew teerora) villager f order that he might be prepared to meet it by ar ; mained feudal at domineering and aristocratic out- ‘an end, mort he win deaigna of “ lace at Port an Prince it is you who pare seca ratte rreguiag intantry. hé wandersntout ihe country #ith rebe a tack oo the efllage of Steewunbed had been [Room Pico shee ror fort on side. Ay thing contrasts acerenive | en of cae ae iy hy ery, ana fmm] them by your im) tions of and | such precipitation and impatience of deiay thet. in the | i we CHAE TE. us | Ce 4 ayer pt 45 ee tee wen vig 4 a iwtae toetry; 028. OF tg admission a8 a Stale, refer stinking. articles, which have generally been | Creer Rents eeeaether.’” fay tur oumstantty shitty ang ge om lf asplca placate tee tien was first dirrotes, it was miedemesnor at com- | Saxon bave remained enemies; ihedt laws are different, | to Sate sovereignty the settlement of ail questions of ran in our salerooms. You do more. | tins positionand by equally constant chances in ble | prisovers were av hut s moo law, and he apprehended there could be no doubt | no code has resumed the of legislation. Every, | local law, thereby disabusing, ag tho @vent would inevi. All these nastinesses that you bring U8, | Gre aha nccodiremonts be seeke to lemon or vantaract Tho. Calpe he . » tied beaten, loosing ia | about it.’ Tt had been decided in several cases Already TO | thing is traditionsl, tort Sreytng which | tadlp do, the public mind, and disembarrasing the federal and which in your country only serve 5 | the increasing chances of capture by an enemy against | both affairs over 200 killet ferred texthe cages of Meitier, Lord George Gordon, Aza. , among ua is a sommon right, in the of Priviiogs government, and, it Dieaeen manure for ir soil, you imy merely for the | whom he knows that he has sinned too deonly to be for A emal! government foros at Tallowan hed eustained an | pard: and others—that it was an offence to plot against | among them. If the ‘sits in Parliament it is not Resolved, That we are party purpose of polsoning our population. This unwhole- | given. etiack of ecveral hovrs, though ooly ten men defended it. | the life of a foreign sovereign living in ammy with th's yy virtue of the general Principle of civil equality of wor. | of the Empire State unite with us in thie view of the quos- some food is perhaps the cause of the epidemic which | "Sir Cotin having, as T hare said, pushed on from Putty. | The aseaulvers thea moved off taking with them the wives | county, even no overt act on the part of the ip, but by virtue of an act of Parliament of 1880, which | tom, and seo with profound oe phe at this moment decimates our towns and rural dis- | chur for Cawnpore, the troops followed him with all poe- | and children of the defenders who were in the village. accused could be Then with roxpoct to the | has prejudged aotbing in favor of the Jows. e — roe aie — — sible 8 42d, with Sikh horse and foot, ro- There was no change to note in the Bombay export | more serious , that of beimg an accessory before In the army the ranks are the privilege of birth; ve wo . bey that mained at Fottyghor. Walpole’s Drigade was withdrawn | market. ” the fat to o committed ina foreign land, he the Oolens! oul ‘ag in France previous | jority of = the United States, aan tories, + etter im the isigmacrcn™ Commerce will do much | frogs the Gaggen from the Fight bank of the Remi 9c8, : true ihe subordinate Resolved Delleve the democratic Tide recalls to out mind a he; 7 quotation: om the furthef bank of which river be bad been watching | , Great Beteatm. ae juotation:— large ve body ilound rebole, and the war mentioned by the Persia reporta Alors cher eineas, victorieux, contenta, feidge removed to Fattyghar. Hope's brigwis, wich, on | convent an cviogater given from day #0 day in Nout pourross vite a Vaiss & prendre da bon temps. the otth of January, overthrew, "with Yow, fa duly. or | ir london Tina were accertatned to be a hoax, The Yes, Mr. Yankee, after that, like P. can | Huseniman fanatics ‘at Shamaatas, Mhow, Swonty.ovs | | lw ine. eo ueined tn ® ceapateh to the London Bepress Jangh at your ease and enjoy Tine Ly from har, marching om the fivet, reashe vening ine he London News) is probably the . true all Spposition destroyed, WoerBice wil eee Seveere See tn. Wwatpote “ atler ‘wribgae m4 ; feat allege hogy d From Soaaes pane tenes’, however, it was clearly { has seen in such revolutions the means of enfesbling and ? commerce, the future,and the country itself. | bridge from the Rammunns, ehed h, and ar wage ‘of Tari ‘fre langhing at th on ‘the to an accom. | embarrassing rival powers. She loves revolutions in Who knows? You are so Fst ody yonr ‘ives: | rived on the 10h una 21d whe the 2) an! } the London papers, which have attention to the | every country but her own. [0 1847 she agitated [ialy io Jt not so quiet. Gently Mr. Yankee you | 2A battalions rifle brigate, toe 2 seers, ad Punja | ines of fadnions Malian delegate me ~ iy, the 9th of Se eaney Levi, bs me erties Valera con, ‘ 4 “ hores, four of © , ” Farrini, . enice, were: nytel RA A tS ey hag VAAN ieee ered two fehl poleriee OF Meee, Sur ‘iriooy tt the Beith. motropolta, Now, trian reson nadsnraig fo. the teatie. Sho hse pub | Tho Ubied hgreed Te, 0 ‘ c hh thre a Je Cutles just e sastained a 7 jaytiens engaged in trade are not entirely jin went down on the Sth to see and confer with b attending Wis a just pow in =| Soceaniny oad 8 a gg Boy al Governor General at Allabadad, bot before that da. HMedmontese Zenate; Farrini, Correntt bridges had been thrown across the river, and the mr Im thete places of Parliament every evening; Dandoli w at ment into Oude had commenced. A Drigvie writer Gul. | No, sud Curioni ie mt Genom ‘Phe ruined as you bebe: fon mag them. They have the anme time revo ationist in Spain and conservative The sloop of-war Marien wag to @m ist inst, from still in tueir possession capital to prevent Alrica, Portugal, for the coly reason that in Spain the reyola- ' Norfolk for the coast of