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ieee 2 _ NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1808. evidence ‘Tee English Navy—Necessity of a Strong | A French Manifeste ageinst “Manifest Dee- | now appears to be out of th: iestion, ap? yet this is the bd Omannel Fleet. oad caly coamtien upen which the fow comm'ssions the! are afverwards, [Translated for the New Youx Hznatp from the Courrier Given for certsin epecial articles can be obisined. = be! | cetvea In the House of Commons on the Lah of April, Mr. W. do Paris of April 16, 1868.) The buyers are extremely cautious. They ge- persons by throw ‘Wu1ams rose to move that the aavy and army ostimales ‘The news which arrived ‘Yeoterday from America con- confine their purchases w a fow samples, sad that i went referred. to 8 eelect committee. firms all the previous information we had received with | walt for a regular demand among their customers. Bing Orsini, Pierri, Gomez and De Rudio. It must have oocar at pe ete ee an od ‘of the others pe ne Meeant succibia I walilory oy pa, part of the, Mow Sort, nating ouptinua in Rourn aod Alealis ‘tow buyers wo reek iy eegerer esos au sucagbint | Seog Sn wae comrah meena | Sf sc ard Gg Rog eet a Lett y 4 . me ways bea with om: net thereby the - | oul wo an Manvfacturiog towas the adv.0e8 ‘occasion, and that he was teking 10 in, or counselling, | he was engeged is an ay letter ‘of pon centinuous service men, whom we may it of the United for the English are more factory. Ther 3 . 4 a val at Lyom, ‘Or instigating that particularact. He, Mr. James, was not country, apd that the tought, of Ean. r {t producing the bad which the wep | Devt, “in epite of the . wramore Gee 7, taare is 8 aighs revive) at there Us tap oue word in palliation of the crime of coward: | peror Othe French bid never been proveat to his mind. | that Heel Preesdusetivoably did produce. Beyond | wnich tn sbie over all the other they foresee that wrought miks'are lixely to be nosrcs f pa 7, dark commisation. | wos 20) Pecoatun ot | wan ® tu eet see ~ f hak margin te prosent 6: in decidedly of immigte the United Sates, ‘still retains that apir:t of ambi- | atime. The movement wai: pore Pee a anes as Hacuss the question wbiod had attracted the attention of | was @ murder proved to have been committed in Paris, | f Pie forceof seamen pow Aled 5 ie one te woich we formerly noticed at ph sand others, whether it was right for@nop- | and there was no doubt that Orsini, Pierri, Rudio and tag eee ee ae service, ond thievery day i isn ond agarensian wales Searentecians te guoele of Whe a oe S racing gees on; the fancy taauos and o. re ie oar ge et vied eeot ack which anne r Somes Em ge gb provided bosom hate even Gieectase ves avery weaas Ores Saminte, Among tbese ausacious people cy Ir ing we are fe. the newesntes | hope Of Paris ‘capone snp dizcoss. but, the crime of ansaainaig Tt ORhyergotced | the Ea dient argos ti ain om ti of | cra rosso the number Of et So srato tone commits | {vera AON: cM moo are iosendventarossacscmes | Tenia Para go cirect Une mabdlaetaaer from wir ery Englishmen veiy propery shuddered, He rejoiced | the Emperor But should ee et ee fexbe opinion oi the present govertmest epon and- | ang bold atiempts made by such men as Kinnoy, Walkor | thoy get Certain articles wt a cheaper rate, Ii is oartl. to say that Uiderty of specch stilt lingered among ths bay of | The Orowe sought to maxe Cus, Oran” comnesion (te ther point, ia which opinion Tautioipate the concarreace | and other Slibusters, whose names have acquired » pain. | however, that such a system cannot beoume geuera!, be: Bronce alihough he I ot cf amanetnaion be d | whom the froodee oo. one pe for be. of every member of Wie House vis : Maal we COgtl Care ful and dlegrecetul coiebrit7. ‘These schemes aro always | cause the purcbaeer ‘who reauires protuce ef Y ; ithout a Channel feet. think ave ao advantage in buying in Pi do beuier than adopt the langoage of M. Jules Favre, | tween ‘end November, 7, Allsop, the tobe w Ae eae Caent). biomes phe) wipe, p= atefekion ry ying . Fe oe eit aveoate of Orsini, when he eaid—‘ If there | counsel for the Crown said, ordered the of Mr. & ‘naval force a1 ooh te in out, oe per shocta bea bation eo unfortunate as to fail into the hands | Taylor, of Birmingham, ddd tney were dclivered, to. im iy, {hat wane teak whoa ay Fight honorable ae Tr be Se a Te cr ae NY OF a despan, te dngrer WO OC a who geverse ail ro. eS Pie of Novae a meee Ser sald felend opposite pr Wy ee oe year be | qithe faise almost all the department markets. In Paris also sass a % tO ane! iron, on 80- | color effected with difficulty. The certaint: kere serves for sucha one afaio more miserable thanany wrich | tbat Dr. Bernard wont to Giorgi at the Outs Bios te tir theese of affiry ia China, {allow {no pres: tetas ire slerilal cupplica ic dae pevvecis lhe eater ee, ‘oan result f om the machinations of the agsassia.” That ‘and induced him to carry over the grenades in question to sure of affairs in Chica a} that tune was severe, but I “america pelon; right « was the remark nap merely of su sloaaee Sar te oe Brussels, and that those grenades wore afterwards cov © lo think that no ahould under aay | to ug Yankees, and wo aro the go ahead people.” This is (From the Paris Deb 13) ee ccoribonce, i ~d los ingorutabie pic hegh Crain ‘That th case on the circumstances leave the A without @ squadron. | the real arrela of all those invasions of Guba which Dave . * * * " * e ways, Ba ETTTer iat aititte wilcapin vo traeaye Over the Soere colirered le esl. 20h we 1 tks conaaal for Fe ean ET ere rset ton te aveed, toed: ee ee ered cae AE lho snclt Das ot length pose convenne® thet t00 menny new sia Hberties of afree people, there did remain for him an ine- | the crown was to have the link proved to the satisfaction Hivned, ‘not only for the protection of omr massacres alt waste ee Oa loam. | n undertaken, Bourse cen scawedg hich would reach him more certainly | of the jury beyond all reasonable doubt, that the grenades leah 0 Ranael snares. Se Pe Teer ead man. cho | moran tone exscaordinnsy of diploms” | wopply the funda required to meet the oe ee or Be poten Bos rans Ge could rene ry ny oni se Repeal a i and eset member a alee, tee auney large tne 0 tron hos bares howe feet Corte Gah eee Verne Greta of the =r} even in the case of a tyrant, was acrime which could be | nard. But he (Mr. James) contended that they had en- eee Mama Be ete Nee pe eat sod ont artful, CT rene ne by yg are aw a works. The various companios have commenced hoidig her She bares WA EAE AOE neh wore deg ot a oficere a Yeo suacgusine: to vuhat it is ames mpaonlig oak hy Ae ea) omen teats ary meetings, wha are the septs lake that the of ftaly hed been destroyed by « bi Ncle, cach haying two aides, the diameter of one side be- easential © should be a squadron evolutions and | pinated the seizure and occ by Yankee Miibusters Siieaey eae en eae Sores pening 4 4 Meee eties nes deat cater | fog. these ingee an of th olber four inches, ald with Dracica, which all enable fer and min to pooome | Sr tne talend of Navan, the strate betreen Jamas Parana Gas Parte te ee aireigu ot a bone aoeat sovereign, wh lived twenty five bolet Pore arag = ey abe Day We tare an example before us set by our oppose neigh: | sud anaexiation which deserves to be compared in ts a8- | bop COE oot Mideacay ct cod cutee, ‘deseen i Ure bearts of | people, oe leer ss satan were — r Ae Penta on ‘af. bors in France, which we cannot Detilenes sagient. vore with the occupation of Perim, in the Ked Sea, by the | maritime ‘of 6,000 ‘the Cad com 7 b a ant atten Le} einai ibree were ‘supposed to have been ex ‘The; 60 20h leg ie ee te left defencelesa, nor | pritish. 21,000 eee ee cenline of 30 oan S eager igre Saito | edo cy tor edn ch spi ee eoeamit” ee rend ps | pestered sera’ ama” Shara | ened ee mete a soto Ue sixth. They Pretence, ond El a rages, the Bar of he u in ace | of banda in the gourne of the onzrang yaar; while the 16 ibustorism on @ large scale; they arc laud sepperiea soe millona of the city of Paris will doubtless 5 E ‘Burope, came a demand on the France for | those which wore said to have been conveyed to Brussels d who read them. “ Sreetealer shoes exten whe oy reed au captors on | by Giorgi, at the instance of the prisoner, was pierced with public men in future ae hee pepped. evar. 7 we Lory Pp bave the best But the consequences of such deeds a ‘the shores of England. Then came the threateving lan- | a similar number of olen, and ‘that they were in fact the - gets into med A ne! ae liens ho} by She England ris Pt ore of avery pecione chareckee. rs politon! eet io - 7 Foreign Miscellany. ee assem! same thereby, great over. ‘of the French colonels, published im the Momiteur. | very projectiles used in Parison the night of the 14th ys upon a etray letter ‘Cuanixs Narn said—If, es be before We | equilibrium between the two worlds is threateued with cloth taken to the fair was eoud, though towards the close ‘ on Y » iscreet a ‘came the speech of Louls Napoleon's ambassador to | of January. Ii the Crowndid not estabiish those propo. | pamphlet, couched in violent or ind! language. fulng disturbed, if not with being altogother destroyed. mika ie ursconce, Whe aad a further depreciation ia If we reflect apon this simple fact, of the seizure and | colored fisnnel sold tolerably well, that article being in the citizens of London, succeeded by the proposal on the | sitions, failed in supporting the charge against tho ‘Adverting to the letter of Orsini found in Bernara’s lodg- 1 ‘that Lord Palmerston’s government of the Conspiracy | prisower. That Simon Bernard took, or caused to be taken, | ings, Mr. James contended that that letter, relating as itdid | paval was absolutely necessary that we i Bil’ ‘Se traced: there events up one after the oer, sna | over to Brussels certain instruments which were intended chrelly to the leotures in which Orsini was then ed | should have a Sapien p Shae] eccupaticn of a desert rock lying between Jamaica aud the | demand for Germany, Tialy, Swizeriand and Moldavis, be asked the jury whether he was not justified in asserting | to be used in a general tor the axpowe of the re. adel ivering, served A orn Interpretation of Sa ~ | manned, and if the present by ao bo ee ed we shall flad fn a seh poche aod Woollen and halt woolien articles were negiected, though 5 “ it to an e: of as to bis a y hear. assertions. From ‘il | prices were reduced. ‘that a political pu ‘was to be answered by this proge- | generation of italy he (Mr. James) wo admit, but he DORE xpress! Pp ver od t 10 eay that if the Firat Lord of the Admi boldly | te dap the Aatilos have besa wed partly OE NAD saint 2) 309 ol sued Ot cution, and that it been instituted at the dictation of a | denied altogether that the prisoner had either hand or part giad to hear of Orsini’s progreas.”” He cont’ yeleo, foreign despot. To eatiafy the Emperor of the French | in the sending of these instruments with the view an reference to the statement in the letter Lord Palmerston introduced the Conspiracy bill, which, | attempt on the life of the Emperor. The counsel for the Orsini as to the “Red & Company prog: ‘upon an amendment proposed by Mr. M. Gideon, was re- | Crown had endeavored to tempt the wituesses to false. | with extraordinary _rapidity,’” toat in the Jocted ys the House of Commons; aod a statesman, whose | hood, for the purpose of proving the prisoner bad taken | time of Lord Eldon the agitation waged to bring about 8 name ould never be mentioned without voneration | such part in the transaction, but theevidence went directly | reform in Parliament was regarded with a3 much disgust and respect in the presence of any assembly of Eng- | to negative the imputation. ‘The first witness called to | in tory circles as some peopie now aifected to feel at the by European Powers, and partly by the which now 4 constitutes the Empire under the government of the Empe- ipa er | Maeees fom Sore Peg re He ror Faustian I. They have afforded hitherto no field for the vessels of war are not 10 exceed: a ce ioe a American altack; atd ehe haa had and has made 80 UF: | the Grand Duke Constantine has given orders that all Ue ce L. 1, sailors who were in the sery'ce of the government shall France, Spain and Eeglaud havo always repetiod with | fe sonton board merchastines, and be subjected to the Lord PALMERSTON 6aid—I entirely agree with my honora- ss energy every effort made to deprive them of these beanti- | same discipline as before, and have the same pay. ble friend the member for Surrey, the honorable geatieman jlighmen attached to the principles of civil and retigio establish the identity of the grenades was Giorgi. He | mention of red repubilcapism. He now came to that por- Naan ee ee Maat ataed that’ he stouldcoa, | (Mr dames) abhorred the idea. of imputing perjury to | tion of the cage on which the Crown mainly rosed he the member for Nori, and otera who barcepet 2 | ful qnauies The Hapten government-andeven tne Domi | "A'S 710 ere as been pul ah between Ca jt s t m it the er lence 0! rs. bs cal givit pw wi 088, e,as sider ft a shame and a lastirg disgrace to the people of | any man, unless driven to it tn the strict ‘ge of an ean a eir oase was this Raval wenyion or the. doer the try. yp . 4 meen aera es ry ner Gary weeknees, ber = oie wet an, Tete Formerly tales repon England if they were to pass thai measure, which was | imperative duty; but he would remiad the jury that } Rudio was a man in distreas; he was likely to be a ready humiliating to them, upon the d.ctation of the Emperor | Giorgi came before them as a witness ‘under most peculiar | tool inthe hands of the prisoner, and he was hired for ofthe French. That bil, therefore, was rejected by the | circumstances, and it must have occurred to them that he (be purpose of this particular murder, That must be the House of Commons. The generous nature of the English | was@ person witha most elastic memory. ‘At this mo- | case of the Crown, or it was nothing. futored as Mre, people rebelled against it. Lord Palmerston’s govern- | ment, too, there was a mandat d’arrit, or State warrant, | Rudio had been by the potice, she bad nevertheless given ment was wrecked upon it. The House of Commons re | impending over his bead; and he hoped after his evidence ber evidence ima way that was infinitely to her credit. fused the dictation of an “ally,” as he might be called, | bad been given to assist in convicting the unfortunate gen- She had been constantly under the coguizance of the and truly called, but of an ally, it must be remembered, | tieman atthe bar, to go back home, ‘aad—to use his | police; she hai been scarcely a free agent since sho who was dictating at the same time in much stronger | own expression—have the matter ‘‘ arranged.’” How they | bad frst gone tothe Bedford Hotel to resido; and the jury terms to the comparatively weak States of Switzerland | ‘ arranged” such matters on the Continent, thank God, we | must look with scrupulous gicety—with a view to the ‘and Sardinia. Lord Derbys government eucceeded, and | in Fngland knew nothing. (A laugh.) Let the juryremem- | liberty of the subject—to her evidence. Four police the present Attorney General had then confided to his | ‘ber what the witness Giorgi had at stake. He been ar- | agents had been proved to bave called upon her day after care the prosecution which had been already commenced. Dg in the attentat, and | day at the Bedford Hotel, and one or otner of them was Lord Paimerston’s government was overthrown on the ~ in prison twenty-six days; he had now come before an | aimost constantly with her. She knew nothing of French 19th of February, at ‘a time the prisoner ho bad jury and given his evidence with a Brussels State | and little of Italan, and po person could tell what was the been arrested op the 14th of ruary, was being pro- | warrant han; over his bead, and, perhaps, at the insti. | object of biripg Rudio, except Orsini, Pierri, and the pri- ceeded agains} on the charge of conspiracy; and it was | gation of the government, and his direct object | souer. The mouths of all these persons were closed, but not until the 13th of March that the counsel for the Crown | was to do what he could in convicting the prisoner at the | Rudio might have been brought to England by the stated for the first time tn the police court \bat the charge | bar. Giorgi, while giving his evidence, was shown one of | prosecuticn to prove the fact; because the threat that for conspiracy was not, indeed, abandoned, for it ts still | the grenades found immediately after the explosion, and | if Rudio had been brought here be might have been ‘over bim, but put aside for a while, in order that | he said, “The articles which he (the prisoner) brought to } discharged under habeas corpus was mere idle talk. he might be charged upon an almost obsolete statute with | the Café Suisse, in Tichborne street, as apecimens, were | With reference to the materials for composing the ful: the crime of wilful murder, as accessory before the | like the grenade produced, but they bad not the ecrew at | minating powder, it had been proved that there had been fact to the crime of wilful murder. But what | the end. He showed me five, but they were not all the | enough purchased to charge 500 or 600 grenades, end it any treaty baving for ita object to open the road to the | munication between theas places was vw ubbesieane of the United Pa to get a footing on their | Bombay. An alteraative line is now provided conneotix territory. Kach of these Powers saw plainly enough that | the three presidencies: and in tho event of the line b any establishment of euch a kind made by the Amerionns tween Calcutta and Agra, vis Cawnporo, broke, would give them a formidable and dangerous point of sup- the government of India can communicate with the nort port fer avy fatore project of annexation or conquest which ‘west provinces and the Punjab via Madras and Bombay, they might epter into, which they did not even give them- The receipts of the Home Treasury of the East Ina selves the trouble to deny as being their purpose. , | Company from the lath of January tothe 30th of Apr, ‘The ruin of csetly catablishments, the destruction of all | 1858, are estimated at £5,156 023, ana the disbursemex Furopean commerce with North America might result | at £4,206,065, leaving a balance in favor of £850,958. Te from the pursuit of such echemes by the Americans. disbursements for the year ending April 30, 1589, are 6 ‘As to the special! act to which we refer,and of which we } timated at £11,186,026; being—for Iudian railwag, are pow speaking, the Americans, in order to excuse their | £2,511,008; payments to government £1.474,111; anni seizing upon the island of Navaza, pretend to say that it is | ties, &c., payable in England, £1,403,430; stores ad an island which never belonged to any Power whatever. | tradsport £1,099,442; loan from the Bank of’ England, ‘The sbsurdity of such an explanation of their act does not | payable lst of October next, £1,000,000; minimum amout stand in need of any proof, This island is a dependency | required to be held in cash £1, 000; dividends and 2 of the Island of Haytl, and was given up to her by France | terest £960,000; bonds notified for discharge £653,040 when the latter Power renounced all her coloniai rights 25,800; amount repayable to securty and claims upon her former colony of Hispaniola. If ilayti find £316,000; aod bills of exchange homeward, &c bad not been unwilling to consent to such a measure | £152,600. France would most certainly have kept possession of the The public income of the United Kingdom for the island. For the position of this rock, ee as it does In | 1857 (endod on the Slat December) amounted to e103) the channel which the Black deed, quite obvious that it is ey ae for our security that our mavy should in an efficient condition. There are threo great naval Powers— France, Russia and the United Siates. They are all of them constituted almost withcut colo estadlish- ments, and 60 far independent of naval warfare that even a paval reverse does not materially affect them; while, on the otber hand, our ingulsr position makes naval protection essential for our security, aud we have vast colonia! possessions scattered over face of the globe which also require naval protection for their defence. In considering, however, what should be the application of the {finds which Parliament may placo at the disposal of the government for naval purposes, it seems to me that between providing a large number of men and what may be called materials of de“ence in ordi- is ‘no immediate danger, if the amount of your shipping, the state of your dockyards, and the quantity of your stores be not such as they ought to be, | think it is a wiser and more prudent a} jon of the funds at the disposal of government to apply them in building ships, in o1 izing the dockyards, and in filling them with stores, ri than was the position of Lord Derby's government? On | same size. The specimens he showed me consisted of | must be evident, from ths circumstance, coupled with from the | 342, and the publ diture 5 ‘ the 19th of February the piracy Dill was | five balves of the instrument produced—three of the up- | the other facts, that the undertaking in which the priscnor having a greater number of men actually employed. And | isiand of Jamaica, is altogether too ppt ad to admit | trifing rede oteacant. Ptbndling oo.) ab: thrown out—the House cf Commons declared that the | per half of the shell and two of the lower half. The lower | had et was a vast organization for the restoration | the reason is obvious: You are not at all the more seoure | of loging sight for a moment of its vast importance excise, £17,472,000; stamps, £7,269,228; mag ‘ English people would not have tt, aud Lord Palmerstou’s | halt had holes in it—five or six perhaps—bat not so many | of the liberties of his oppressed covatry, and that Orsini pext year in consequence of having bad « greater number It is, in fact, this very importance of its position, and not | assessed), 25,104,020; the income—or, as the government—the strongest that had been seen for years— | as the one produced.” Then, in his croas-examination, | ina fatal moment had yielded to an impulse, and had of sailors employed in this year; but youare more #0- | 9 few lod; ts of 0 on its top, has tempted pers persist in calling’ tt, the “property ata, 216,157 shattered upon that question. Lord Derby, a most | be swore that he saw no bail among those given him | made the attempt on the life of the Emperor, ‘which, in { Cure next year if in the present year you increase the | the am No nclae dpatt the island. Tt is true tha! the | 996: post office, £2,998,000; and crown Vande, £378, A number of ships and place your dockyards and stores in ® | igiand of Navaza is destitute of inhabitants, but It is not | much as £1,677,(95 accrued from unclaimed ee! was —- statesman, knew very well that he could not | by the prisoner with twenty-five holes; there might be one, ite consequences, was so much to be deplored. Rudio’s gubmit tethe House of Commons again the bill which | be ssid, with five or six holes, but he never cou life had been spared, but he had not been called upon this bad been already rejected. What was to bedone? A de the holes; he added he might bave seen one with | inquiry, and in his absence the jury could not conclude mand bad been mace by the Emperor of the French, and | five or six holes, but he could not swear. Then the At- | upon the evidence which had been adduced that he had Bot ‘was imperatively called for. An experienced he wae sure there was not | been hired by the prisoner for the purpose of agsassi- criminal lawyer was eet to work, and he raked up an old holes, Et musty ect of Parliament which was no more intended to | of mandat d’arret, like the sword of old which Cheney had been examined as to her belief of where apply to @ case of this description than it was intended wo y hair, flasbed across nis } Orsini intended to go when be le& London, and she stated mind, and he swore to twenty-five. (A Inugh.) | that she thought he had ome ia Rely, sition that when more efficient condition. I think they are very right in saying that there ought to be a channel fleet, that we ought to bave the number of men which they propose to provide for by the estimates; but I think the re- duetiens which they are making ia the amount of shipping to be built, in the stores to be provided, inthe improvement and enlargement of the dockyards, and I cannot con- apy means an unoccupied island, in the political sense Of the word It were to, alluhe mal isade afound | lane oofatund ew Pong de of Sabaslopl mo Hayti, by the same reasoning) aeiiwe: oppouiie Cazes, | fortress of tho frat rank. As, nays a letter, the nort® sit cup’ ds—such as the Isle of Cows, site Caves; | i.not apoken of in the treaty of Paris, and there is no dt the Isle of Gonava, opposite Port au Prince; the Isic | of constructing @ maritime fortress, these works will & Of Turtles, opposite ky &e., &e, Ke. From | ‘be in any way an infraction of that treaty. to bave been policy of the Haytien government ‘The number of emigrants who left Hevre in Januay ag » ‘That was tbe man whocame before an Eoglish jury witha | Dr. Bernard upon her after the attempt he ex- | Celve that there is any financial necessity for any of those | not to permit any setvements or establishments for America was 600, of whom 153 were born ia Frang French or Brusscis State warrant hanging oven bie head, much surprise on learning that Orsini had been in | reductions, because it ts impossible to ine thes the fo be fortsed on any-of these small islands, whether from | Of the whole number, 162 went to New York, 304 to Ne right honorable gentiemsa., Chancellor of the Exche- | the desire of concentrating all her population on the main | Orleans and 44 to Buenos Ayres which was probably to be “ arranged” according to the | Paris, because boalso believed that Orsini had gone totaly. , ir Me 4 ' x pas, wil ted wee A ree his budget that that dif- can materia! 6 make any E meade fa wich be seve bis ovinekes, ane rea Once more let him remind the jury that if the facts Jand, or whether tt may be from not wishing to have to Sho Trenehs betes of 1000 lo Senn compen et 919,114 franc ‘Was pot satisfactory to his superiors jorgi would pro. | as proved were consistent with the innocence of erect fortifications to protect the inhabitants + an 707,277 francs; i Dably have twenty six days more of it when be went back | the prisoner, as well aa with the case for the Crown, they | in the means which will have to be provided for the year. or whether for the purpose of preventlag them Sivcias sat bet fmson” Feceipta, 1,7 to Brussels. (A laugh.) ‘Mr, James) was just remind. | could not find him guilty of this that | With regard to building ships, my noble friend, (Lord C. from be made arefuge for malefactors or for smug: } Accounts from Constantin sate thet ed that he bad made a m: ¢ in impul wo 6 that | Orsini written to Bernard, saying :—'Send jo over | Paget,) to whose s) ‘the House has listened with the glers, we it. Pa Bai Paneer ge Barn the new M- be had sworn on his re-examination to ‘twonty-five | io me to assist in carrying out some great enterprise for interest, and whose Knowledge makes |" Aur'thege islands, however, have nevertheless Been de- | he Oicn of that ~4 men A iat Boles. He was now told that, when questioned by the At- | the regeneration of our common country,”” what would very high'authority, has stated that the building of | pepdencies of the’ great island, and every constitution | :20 Polvoe of that eapieal on the Breach symeny, eke oF torney General, be got Tifteen holes, That might | there have been in thal inconsistent with the evidence or | line of-baitle ships is aa ‘antiquated prejudieg. With all | which has ever been framed in Hayti has always declared | )9"799 SeaL te Sa, will be guarté beso. The Lord Chief Justice would read the evidenee | the innocence of the prisoner? It was clearly contem- | deference to him, it seems to me until {see other | the Baytien to consist of the whole of Hayti and 7 700 po! o the jury, and be (Mr. James) would be corrected if he | plated that the absence of Rudio would be more protracted nations have abandoned that practice it is not yet auti- | of all the adjacent ‘The nurses and servants in the itals of Vienna tre bad misrepresented tbe witness in that particular. Then } than was for any vemporary atiack upon the quated, and thet it would be very in for this | In this respect alone the of the island | received strict orders not to the pationte “teay he came to the evidence of Julien Founnarier.@ waiter at ieee of ti s an was | country to act upon a different principle, and to allow | of Navaza by a gang of American fil ‘and in the | of sing” anything which could offend against roligk or the Cafe Suisse, in Brussels, who said:—‘i remember for the payment of a certain vm weekly to Rudio’s | England to have no adeqaate supply of ‘line of-battle | name of the American government, is in iteelf'a grave vio. | morality. M. de Giorgi coming there th December last, On the | wife. 1{Rudio could have proved that he ha: abipe when France and Russia are multiplying their of international law. Under a more gencral view of | The Rhine now presents the most curious day after he came I saw some half bails on (ahem: for the Of assassivation, he would have been a | Meets of that deseri . (Hear, bear.) My noble | the case, it is matter of high importance to the European | In consequence of the drought which bas perce’ ws piece in the smoking room There were ten halves, mont i qitntes for the prosecution, and tho ab. | friend tells us that he has been informed by naval officers | powers not to suffer the Yankeo to plant his foot—no, not | last summer, the river Keb! bas no greater wii they appeared to be of three kinds; twoof thom had smal! | sence of that that they consider line-of battle ships use | even ‘ aingle desert rock of the Antilles. for, from | than the ordinary one of the Il); and all that remains€ holes in them. There were 60 many as twenty | would the ut bted ‘and parposes manifesied by this race the stresm is entirely on the aide of the rivi. or twenty-five of tbese holes in some of penne Moonee J of people—from its avowed tendencies which it does not | The old bed forms a wide of sand united bo & them. Five of these holes were about the | not be imagined noruple openly to prociaim—these people would not | French fiank. All the boats which support the Frea size of the one now produced, ead I think there was « man to perpetrate hesitate a moment at seizing upon and swallowing up | half of the bridge are aground on the sand, ané thirte screw in every one of them.”’ He &. James) was | The jury must be the whole Archipelago of the West [odies. or fourteen Baden boats only remain afloat. quoting now from the 7imes newspaper, in which the pro- | the guilt of the The two questions are intimately connected with ‘The Ministerial budget of Prussia estimates the revote coodings on thie trial Red besa reported from day to day was certain they each other, and cannot be separated. The #0°- | ortne revenue for 1858 at 126.409.778 thalers, oreiee with the greatest ekiliand accuracy. Founnarier,in his | ed the ernment must protest against the epoliation committed ‘The total M ‘ examination ia chief, spoke of seeing from twenty to | the benefit of it. & large fleet of line of battle ships. It is better for you |» araingt it. Europesm governments must support her Sbalere more than tn 1987. bony ire is to ie twenty-five holes in’ some of the shells; but when | which bad been found upon prisoner, but not one | t0 bave very few, or perhaps none at all.” {languier) Gime for their oro eakes and in view of thelr own inte. | Same amount, but it includes 6,119,003 thalere of extrw- u hare oat id r fen fitee Wie ohenn tes potions * yrs oF Gomes, ie ster of ting ot baile, ships it ta cancatial that . . fe ve . } wi er WAS ‘2 Communi pom! Or" we With ct to this sulssect the inquit ight well b ‘The London Herald, 00 the question of the wr What would our feel. |“ cation. It was Dot competent Mr Fameemamat: | theuld be provided with ships of that description. (Hear, | maie'wherber ine te not now coma, wien, comsider, | i2 Ulah, aaya:—DiMicult an the enterprise may be sot our cous. bear.) It may be quite true that, great improve iy condition of anarchy into which Dominica has for from the base of , the United States troops liberty extia- ments have been made of late years in the construction of a bong time past been plunged, 18 would be proper to give ‘undoubtedly be able to giv: © geod aceon of Bi. BE conatitational pn, ores enone TS remain to be made, | greater strength tothe Haytien empire by restoring Do- | bam Young and bis f they really siw jary per- (Mr. James) took the 5 and more especially az regards the bows and the tings con- | Minica to it. Such a policy would put Hayti in a better | Sight; and we feel perfectly sntisfed that should they dew sentiments | evidence Sepa; sot he not only failed to support | been the case if he had been concerned in a conspiracy | ected with their rapid transmission through tho water, the invasions of which we see this seiz- | it pradentto shake the dust of the North American @ ‘who were | the case of the Crown, but he did the very reverse, with them. With all the power of the French police, | No doubt those improvements may be made, but | should be only the prelude. This q tinent off their feet, need tot lock to any British gs dearly atachea to the free institauons of their native | ghensi had not a State warrant hanging over him to be | which was aa perfect now, probably, as in the ‘of the | hope that the government will not be led, even ‘bas been offen enough discussed so as to | Besaion as & place of refuge. country; but be contended that they must look at this pro: " is tr wi ‘of Safety, when the wife of aman’s bosom | by the opirion of my noble frien!, to discom | jeaye it undoubted how it ought to be settlod, must not at | The Paria Constitutionnel, commenting on the revi Widenoo against him, mo letterfrom | tnae the provision of Noeofbatiic ships t& store faced liberties of his country by tee organi: aay’ He stated that be made a drawing from resollection of found upon any of those men. cope with these which other sations are conasiranting tion of a warfare against the tyrant who obliterated | one of the grenades be had seen in the Cafe Suisse at Brus- learned gentloman proceeded—I have now com. | (Hear, hear.) We know that the Pench government are them. 80 much for the Italians, He asked them next to | sels. But when one of the hand grenades found in Paris gy ew bd facta of this case, and I ask whethor it in | ‘aeing measures which, in the course of a very few years, one in w present engage our attention, What wo want ts tosettic | tionary pamphlet lately printed im Loudon, eaya,—Nit the point whieh we have boon discussing, An island bas Eewiana at lei Leen 001 that assassination is opty been seized upop—has been stolen (the i) iw strictly | preached on her territory? Wil the insult infiteterry correct) from @ recognized and protected by the | those to whom abe has given her hospitality sufllce tosee the part of the prisoner as an attempt | {ook at the state of France, and to consider whether they | on the night ofthe 14th ot Jan’ was put into his you will stretch the law and Verdict | will give to France a fleet of screw line of batile ships very could not ‘eclate the sentiments of Frenchmen who oc for the Crown’—whether the evidence ix ‘ee as should nearly the number we shall have at taetene time. (Hoar, em ny ry ro Sanger far allt tho neighboring colce beblee: ae with boners sole viotiaa a St poi ont oh they belerse Conse joattentions vtenee syeunet ¥o fone sed Ye 2. peeoner at the bar? I penn Jo rege toat we var tye ” “ep om rior. | *tbreatens ruin also to a great part of the trade and the monsters who dare to treat ber uehthote scoomplie j iy ¥ a ve rd when, under the dim twil it | ernment are as fastas cama uli’, hat m twiligh! ing commerce of thore Powers. All this constitutes a rupture | the German States, eufferers by the Stade di pot. Ever since the mighty revolution of 1789, the coa- morning, Orsini and Pierri expiated their crime | fleet of large line of baitle ships. it would be the bamane the most extreme it, throw jitical imprudence for thi country to lay eons ns over of the political and commercial equilibriat | shout to bold a conference to decide on means for .sit ‘screw sequences of whieh every philosopher and every nev Wy the guillotine at Paris, enough had been done to tan most deplore, which ‘overtines the dypeay. of abe | sbetch ihede by the witness, while the hand grenate | vindicate (oe demande of Freush justice. Ihould have | sll Kea of increasing the very inadequate sumber vate tenth cuostite fos tke maritime Powers of Rarope | *ztinction. Bourbons, there bed been contending for the throne of | which was put ite hie hasd to look at when giving his thought when they were defeatei upon their Conspiracy | !ine of battle ships which we bavo at the presat moment. | yo suffer such an act ax this to pass without protest Colone! Ciaidi, an officer in the Pope's service, tas bee pb mag ane of the Bourbons, of the Orleanista. | «ridemes, hed twenty-tive. Then he came to the evidence | Dill, which they introduced to please the Emperor, whose | (Hear, bear.) againet a Power whose citizens commit, in the name of | #cnt to London to receiven couple of small steam vel napartivte, and of the republicans. Thank Goa | of Gassitaer Zeguers, who accompanied Orsini to Paris commands hal gone in a different strain to the Sir J. Paxixorow, in reply, observed that Lord Palmer. | heir government, acts contrary to the laws of nations which have been constructed by order of the Pouticw we could bot appreciate such a state of things in this Coun. | with the Sorre, and carried with bim in # carpet bag the courts of Sardinia and Switserland, that the | ton had falien into an error in supposing thatthe present | which acts are not even repadiated nor disowned by their | @¥erement, and which are intended for the navigati: o” pA BL ad —> ey t Roy =s —— at the on Sane ja Renee Toguers Crown ae jetora would have Been satiefied. Dat, ne ey agg about to stop ship butiding; they bad no | government. The great Powers of Kurope have to'waich | ths Tiber, between Ostia and Rome. ig om ed aad revered. bul 7 more opportunities neeing perhaps | al charge is still hanging over | Such intention. o P ce od in nitate of perpetual excitement nd uneaniocer. “Tae | any other witseas who had been called before the Court. | the prisaner, Its sought todd bias gaity exta theses | Mr. Homan lnsisted thet, although a wer with France | (etna tunes rascta the tee Weetdi on well an is the | aan ee a senate conrey ot veimeon Great Beale vari mand the Orieanist might be plotting against the | He saw them on the mantel piece in the smoking room of | of wilful murder under au a°t of Parliament which is not | was highly improbable, we should be secured agaist ac | Gi, apd more eapeciaily Gah teem aes a | Ree eee Emperor of the day, while the republicans of the Bona | the café; at the frontier again, on the journey to Pari, be | spplicable to the case, and which | believe to be, sofar | cients and possible contingencies. There was no CAU® | 5, when this rare of people give evidence of fron f 4 ritain and Kast Indies and Chipa 2 632,000, Partiets were endeavoring to assert their views. Such | took them out one by one from the carpet bag and pat | es the law is concerned, & mockery and a sham. The | for alarm, but great reason for procantion. dering propensities by veining ‘arst upon Perime the | ,, 4 iter ftom 8 Petersburg to the Paris Débats say. was the state of things that followed upon the revola- | them back again one by ove with his ows hand; aad | great object of the French government is, if possible, to | | The vote and certain money votes to complete the est! foture Cibvaiter of the Red Sea*and then upon Navaza, | {ti well known that Admiral Putiaune, who commas tot of 1708, In 1848 the reign of loule Philippe was | again, om arriving in Paris, be took them out of the bag | establish through you, gentiomen of the jury, tha: an | mates were agreed to, when the chairman was ordered to | situated in the very contre of the Archipalego of tha An. | M6 Russian squadron in Chine. had received positir brought to an end, he ‘sn exile from | in the corridor of the ote! aod laid them upona beach. | exile ia net to be protected in thit country. th has been the | Teport progress. tiles. . 2 AD- | instructions to observe the greatest circumspection, France, and he sought ap asylum on the shores of | Now, what did he t Why that he did not noticeany | pride of this country to be, as was said by Cicero of Rome, - - i to carefully avoid everything which might disturb « & Whe Mexican Minteter at the © friendly relations which, for the inst twe centurt England. His Majesty the present Emperor of the French | holes porilorwm, nationum, portur ef ” The Reviv Je tn bad also enjoyed an arylum ia this country, bot iq 1845 | made such @ statement, it wat ye to ascer. | true bas that been of thie country! We tone tea ented ee view need 4 . Russia bas kept a7) at Pekin through the medivm of 1 tie two sovereigns changed their sitintions—Louis | tain the extent of the opportanition he had of sesing | kings Bere, an exile! picebond, an exiled nobility—we | (Translated trom the Paris Pays of April 12, for the Naw against the Euteage G ‘Yorn Herat e ‘ernment. ‘ : ecclosiastical miseon fn that capital, Not) (Travelated from Le Courrier de Paria, of April 12, for the | i, diplomatic skill and i diapl wa m7 i « Napoleoo relied nae ta will, or. mye tanhieg " biel Segeee ‘na of seeing and handling ting seninat the throne of ba ~ y oe mS Bow Vous Ranmao | 1, be bas not been able to meelf in relation wt oe ro Mt, or, be of Louis Philippe; and now bis ob The American people furnish us @ new example of the Ihe last news received from Mexico 00! eee = put himeel? it upon the ‘sovereignty of the je.” He was retarn- | them, it was not a ite remarkable that he not only did | ject is to destroy that very asylum which afforded a re | moral and intellectual disorder wi e hare had but grove, poem i foreshato: wa * stormy fate for the Phas clave ton ba, of his off cers to li 4 % an ed by 5,000,000 votes as President of the republic. In | noteucceed m establishing the identity of the articles, but | fuge to himself. Will you allow the laws of Fag- often Cant position —at the bead of @ conatitut‘onal government, | disproved the sugcestion that they were the name articles | lazd to be perverted for such a purpose? T trast shes cheer vesoen and teat? govt 4 oad wetsing the oo o eee ae eens etal. That was the position in which that part of the PoP be I pe tnd pe he LO A J you will | are to speak is of such a nainre that we truly do not ~ fee enough in this case which will compel you to ot ae him to that condition. the halo which surrounded pay that tho orime charged in the indictment bas not yeen tomas the rehot mapel haven wan poh a4 pn a coomgunine him thither and there, ‘perched upon proved against the prisoner. I need not remind you that | cause in effects unti! now unknown, of an unimaginable at- = me bis political bition,”’ be swor: maiotan , was accordingly sent for, the wife of Righensi, | it has been of the greatest nvantage to this country that | mosphere. mow y and freedom of Fran.” He had hen Brussels by the ever busy | ber free shores have been = to exiles from other A mysterious fever, of the most cingular nature, has ous Philippe’ So much for tue right of asy hich | and ¢ quitoas Mr. Saunders. (A laugh) What did Ma- | lands. The requisition of Phillip ; ; Lord Paimerswon's government had invited the House of ated Commons to cestroy, and which the jury were asked ut- terly to annihilate, ‘Louis Napoleon bad been an exile here, he had been exiled in Switreriand, and the Switeers | had refused to give him upon the application of Louis | Philippe; and be had been an exile also in America. From ‘the Danks of the Rhine; from the fastneswes of the 5: couniry. Two decui vel, thereiere, reversed wih bar ft eB lished in Paria by Mr. Lafragua, the seus, § M = ms . J Kong, where he observes the strictest neutral: the Ce 5 y part of Spain, throw ® more gloomy aspect POM | warching the Proceedings of the French and Kaglis 1 Maire. ‘eh of February 1, from Mr. Lis G. Cuevas, an. | Cbioa. nounced to Mr. Lafragua that the government established The Canton correspondent of the London Times, te in Mexico bad ended the mission which had been entrusted | *cribing the Chinere execution grovmd at thatcity,saya— to bim at the court of Spain. There 'e nothing to Aix the attention amall exto On the 16th of March following, Mr. Lafrngua answered | ture, except that you stumble spines o human akall ow by & refusal to obey the orders of & government which | and then as you walk along it. is 9 the Aceldama, be was not yet the government of the Mexican repablic, for, | Seld of blood, the execution ground of Canton. The upp says be, very judiciously, such a government could not | part of a shop ts the place where nearly | et be considered as a legitimate one, as it itself acknow. | the European residents have, at the price of dges that it may be a oational adminietration or only the | Witnessed the wholesale massacrcs of which Earope te overnment of several deparments of the republic. | heard with a hesitating sceptichm. It was within th words of the authentic | yard that that monster Yeb has within two years destro Il. of Spain ted to | just broken out in New York and in most of the States of [—— im the Netherlands, and comduced to the | the Union; it is well calculated to give « true idea of those z establishment of in this | people, who pretend that they are civilized. aa Gio ofthe Edict of Nantes drove to From whence are the facta published inthe American oar ebores Eaptan the Romilly, and the Laboucherce | journals derived? To what sentiments do they attribute who baye shed s lustre on this country. Will you, then, | their existence? Whatremorses have inspired thom? That eee saapet, destroy the axylum | it difficult to say, unless it is to be found in a repentance wl ene tiherto enjoyed? No.1 am satisfied that | as extraordinary as the very fault of the financial misiakes i i Mountains, r a y xe pee dpb ae nt pond con = 0 Poy] will not. ih © you at least to pause before you | of that nation. Whatever may be the cause, the fact ie | documenta, as long as the republic has not pronounced its | @d the lives of 70,000 fellow beings. The criminals wo’ Bane, ind. ae om — ! eo, bem} ‘hs eve, conecient 5 do not | that for some time a fwrore of prayere—aud what “ois Sa decision, the government established in the city of Mexico | brought down in , if they could walk, or broug* pny on naa ee + od te | a gem y —_ g ‘ reren Jee thet ony flow proceed | —bas taken bold of the population of the Union; the p! ig pot the national goveramnent. down tn chairs and shot out into the yard, Theexecutio toquubte tee Sceunien af a come K§ ——_ ne few oa a have done. I have my | of worship are daily overcrowded with people, weep! Mr. Lifragua thinks it bis duty to protest agains! any | ¢re then arranged them tn rows, giviog them a blow ly Fiend @ Ge had @ 6 a “ “4 = = Sao bs Ao oe at the Dar to the | over their sing and demanding absolution, each to measure taken against any convention conciaded | bind which forced out the head aud neck snd laid the; ans © cane ¢ “am py my yh nee \ 1 bave cua s a8.an Roglish | own God, and in the midat olting and ridiculor outside of the government of the State. Te informe M. | convenient for the blow. Then camo the warrant of deat. before the cath was cold pom his lips he violated it. (Some | fitness tk roe val believe, ought to baye ged jess. | mimickries. Cuevas and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Spain of his | Mt isa banner, As soon as it waved in sight, without ve applause, which was immediately checked.) Me renlabes y ai ry ly an a Let me urge you discharge | And it is not only in the places of worship that those | protest, and of the motives on which it is an- | bal order given, the work began. ‘There was a raphl au for bem tune tm Premenas of @ Crane oe, | bey! on hand f rarlely, firmly apd cvnscioa! , You will | exercives are practiced; public places, coffee houses, | novncing at the same time that it is his intention to carry cession of dull crunching sounda—chop, chop, chop, eho, Chie Gun Gen en tatamton of cor many os re ly, } 4 - PI vy) ye cane ‘eft in your hands, after an able from | theatres, concert reome are the where thore per- | out to the letter the instructions which he bas received | No second blow was ever dealt, for the Wexteroue man, queue, whieh in theory might be said to a “A ‘nn | = the Attorney General, by one who will hold fhe ecales | formances called revivals take co. They obtain a | from the former government, because he thinks it to be | slayers are educated to their wort. ‘ S tao horsey To moo ae with thay J And impartial hand. 1 sagtere to let the | succisde vogue, and this rogue is well deserved. bis duty. Mr. Lafragua adds:— In the Horse of Lords th instant, the Rar! png MA “yt. oan & (she |. Coreee i of Verdict be your own, uninfluenced My the ridiculous fears | jin fact, ia there anything moro singular and more cu “The day when the government of Gen. Zaloaga will bo | Carnar eee rhiek had been eee inflicted by the varenng Ge premter be | San FT epey hed ad 8 ite Sone ght by 4 Ro pene Oak ee ee ore | — than Led — , Ensen) Sarat tee of — 4 acknowledged by the people I shail obey; for, be it or not | him bs Tied Brougham betore the Banter recess, pat what were wounds like those contrasted with ihe | there to.deny that Orsini was collecting arms for same | tiumldsted by foreign dictation to. ‘ See ee in remen'arteek Wao Vaee et cn | tbe povormmestt of the feputie’’ Bat creecins ince | ab anhengh the fuumereuen) Dib welch bed Tesn riod when a drunken French soldiery were a | poillieel saccute ta ltalp, 0nd ‘ante Berwerd Gen | Woe Ad you ih wes to the et to | groans, and where at once arises the voice of an | the government of the republic. But meanwhile I can- | ceived from the pormy re of Jt contained great . . soaffol: ill no wroet (| orator who rolates the sins of which he has been | not recognise it nor execute ite ord i ; r jouee upon Ao dnresisting mass of men, women and chil | 10 that object; but he did utterly deny fab d vo please 0 foreigt dicteon Wh. ’ , —_ orders, because, as it | valuable provisions, still, aa there wero in it twoer thr; qnat "tue ye Bt remem | oe ~— fF es vist uy a | Gale sate care thas = ‘ ator. NO Tell ye. | guilty? Another oe oe he i¢ v unhsppy, and | doesnot represent legitimately the people, the present | objectionable clauses with to immigrants into un any longer. There were then is the Assembly over which | tho life of the Fmperor, 1h saying what ho wan Lot iberty. Tell him’ thet on ante op Thy A gy Ae RIE EE for that sub. | colony, the government had had no alternative but to ag he presided men who were more attached to order than ing him from any responsibility which might attash to bm Solan tere vebieted the arbiraty pot Cr crows, Heiy'thanke God that hie 8 iy PURE ceieng Whicker, | Grete cote ar (ad bantam, Bee allow the whole monsure. (Hear, hear.) himectt—men who hed ‘never been guilty of treasmmanie | fof the part hemight bare taken in bringing abouts gane- | Packed by the influence of crows" very! fn, | licly thanks God that his ¢on has leftoff drinking whiskey, | present stato of thé negociations between Mexico and . } \ of crown Aid time | aod has forsaken the barroom for the place of worship. 'n, Might produce exces ‘ Practices aquinct an existiog govern there were tere ral riging such ae be (Mr. James) bad mentioned, bat he | serving Jodges. Tel! him that under every ‘and | A woman implores the Almighty that He should mo the Kr the rig ta and wand iste Markets. pe pee me fy J ag n= pro ouvir, tear | Con ren bad not proved the charge Predecessors have secured 8 po I ibor. | heart of a young man whose indifference causes all her | This new incident in the Hliepano-Mexican dilferonces THB LONDON HONEY MARKET, r freedom— Chani q ire ‘isoner, because it was pot the fact that he | tes of ople. Tell him that the vertist Pogliah | troubles, the last one claims the care of a disease, and | presents nothing to astonish us, Permanent revolution | (From the London Globe ad Paper, City Artich, April 17 } Lamoriciere and Bedeau, On the 24 of December what had counselled or incited any one to the commiseion of the | juries are founded on the eternal and immutable princi. | inveighe againet the doctors and the advertisements pub- | alwa, V8 expores the States to political disrepute , increasing 6i0 lowe Napoleon do? Without case and without | murder sow imputed to him as ah accessory bef jee of justice. U ied hat arm: PA} ‘Tran! ret: reason be occasioned tho vere 7 'y before the | p' 4 Tell him that, panoptied in that jot, | lished in the newspapers. from day to day, until a strong hand shail take ho ‘There i a fair demand discount both in I he cossioncd thowe members of the Repreecntative | fact That he was, with others collecting «large namber | pore of Armament oF invasion can Awe FOR. Tell | "We would never’ Holsh. shoud we quote ail the sean- | the reins of power. Between the two shadows ot porers, | street and at the Bank of Fagland. Owing to tho retars gD arme in defence of their liberties was not doniet, and | him that, though 600,000 French bayonets gil be. | dalous stories told about these meetings. where it acems | mente dividing Mexico; between the two chiefs who have | from the bank last Wednesday, and the approach of M ut case and without reason he drunken soidiery to enter the Cour de Onesation placed themeeives at the head of that republic, the ques. Dieraeli’s bodget, the funds openell heavily this mornity that was consistent with every part of the evidence which | fore yon, though the roar of French cannon thandered in | that an entire population bas lost its good sense. It is 2 ve remained #0, but there is very litte bad been adduced inst him. How were the your cars, you will retu o . i the J * 4 7 5 urn &,verdict which your own | a trait of manners to be added to the portrait of Brother | ton is still pending, i, jorday), and Apis, upon os omy acts | yy Paris? Accordio to the witness King, thi 4 renete arid consciences wil! eanetify and approve, care. | Jonathan. Hypocrisy could not be found wanting in him. | the cost of a divatn which, whhont hosor for liberty aad tf progress. Tt is generally imagined tha wh: @n wmarmei and resisters mob: h- hotel himerlf tab @ | nate Southeastern Railroad Company, when Dr. Ber ae whether that verdict pleases or displeaces a foreign Aespx, In the meantime, while this religious forvency seized | justice, will alfect the union and integrity of the Mexican | the finances of the country for the current yoar are know Ghvetie, and thon he come Garouah she olor imsrlf into @ | nard, whom be bad known for yeart,came to the booking | or secures or shales and destroys forever the *hrome which a | the inhabitants of New York and other cities, they gave rerritory. v . and ision is made for any deficit that may appoa) He sent all wlio oppose: me Penn 44 of an election, | office with the parcel for M. Outreqain, he opealy de | tyrant has built upon the ruune of the Wherty of a omat free | an example of the comedy which they play for an end - n frealer activity will prevail at the Stock Exchangs. ce tartans ot Ape m8 French (prison, to the | clared the value of the revolvers contained io and gave | are! miphty prople. ((¥stincs elaoping of hande and other | which we aro unable to guess Genes ob Beeien ‘The money article Of the Hepres saye:—The funds t° Gund, aad be erected for himeei? bre A morasses of Gay- | his own name and address. It was remarkable that, ex- Mmptoms of approval were manifested by a portion of In one of tho streets of New York, and about the foneral [From the Paria Presse, April 13.) day are very quiet, but somewhat firmer. Prices a* Gf eb Reerben of 6 eighty preyle. "bee tate | the address he gave to Mrs. Rudio, throughout the | the auclerce at the conclawion of the learned counsel’and. | of a rowdy killed by 8 pistol shot in a barroom row, a | The partial revival of trade, which we noticed last week, | quoted About one-sixteenth per cent higher than thé line of the history of France pred ane was 6 brief out- whole of these transactions |r. Bernard bad ma cifess, and {t Was some time before the ordinary aapbet of | quarrel arose between two members of the fancy. One | is maintained; but our position ie atill far from normal. | closed yeateriay. Conrols for money are quoted at 96 }- }— Aa in oon when thit prose. | tempt toconceal hie name or address. The pasa the court was restored.) of those honorable gentlemen pretended that the rowdy | The improvement, auch as it is, consiate mainly in the fact and for the 6th May 96%. e pay J Y. St Row ine orieoner wae obarged | which he travelled to Brussels bore his own na The Attorney General then rummed up for the prosaod. | Paudeen bad been murdered in A cowardly fashion. Tho | of there being forced sales to supply the wanta of home | | The Amount of gold nent into the bank yesterday w Sue oy a the wilful mar- | address, as did algo the £20 bank note given t» b 4 | tion other maintained, on the contrary, that he bad only got | consumption. There is no symptom whatever of activity £32,000, making a total of £50,000 since Wed: A bf = bapent Salento tale aad murder must when he took the age coptaining the pistols to the Loré Chief Justice Campbell delivered a fatid Charge | what he deserved. in order to come to an agreement, a | in the export trade, Foreigners are bu, nothing, there ] provincial abare markets are rey flat. At Liverp: - Toga be procured, oF eousselied” by by Office of the railway company the: he samo | to the jury, who retired. duel was decided. Seconds armed with revolvers ordered | being still an accumulation of French merchandise their | a specuiator for the rise i# said to have failed. ; ust was Ghe Charge Which the government nel” | openmens in that respect on his part. With regard to the VERDICT OF ACQUITTAL. the crowd to stand aaide, aa if @ performance was in ques. | warehouses, The two iast packets from New York brought Loxpow, Saturday, April 17—11 A. Mf charg. ent hed letter from Allsop found in bie posreasion, the tion, and the two men conscienciously beat each | no orders either for Paris or Lyons, It is, moreover, to be Covaols for money Pet8 bo 967 ig to 96 ‘natural consequence of the late crisis a Do, account (6th May) tant of confidence prewalls amon Our manntactarerswhich | The three per cents closed in Paria on 17th of April | is likely to prevent them for a long time to come from ex- | 69. 40. for the end of the month, and the four and » bh ecuting orders freely for Amerignn houses, Long credit ' per cents at at 99f. 600, ot taken to prove, and before the jury conld convict that charge they most be satisfied fot only that the prodneed in evidence were consistent with the ca @vbmitted by the crown, but that they were A telegraphic despatch reesived ia Southampton oP 188 | G0) anmercifully, to the great merriment of the by. evening of Baturday, the 17th of April, from Tandon, | sanders. ‘The police, as is always the case on euch occa tes that Simon Bernard, who wae tried for attempt to | pions, was pot present. They wore undoubteriy at the nt Reaperer Napsteoa, was acqitted. Here Is what New York as come to that the prisoner had ever been seen with A! July, 1867, when Allsop was about to rais setate. If that letter from Allsop, dat \ bored, so far back as the Let of January, 155 : : e