The New York Herald Newspaper, November 20, 1863, Page 2

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NEW YORK HERALD, FRivA\ , NOVEMBER 20, 1868—-TRIPLE SHELT. enna enilonentitimenen! Daron Bramwell—There is no ap) eal except on a matter | Viack people. Yonge came from @ country where such — riv If we should be of opinion that the verdict was things coulu take pi.ce. Lie would aes hook wpon a trio — where su wrong, that there was no misdirection, but that the jury Of the kind 1 the may have acted upon some wrong opinion, and we grant rate States Yongo would bave bocu @ goed withess, but establistment of a@ river po Ould wot be competent to there they do not allow a black person to be examined as | in putting a stop to those 4g that delay the Polish question may rece »pment which, in tae opinion of Napoleon irgently demands. tou News says:—For the Emperor's sak be hoped that his policy may take a better figure in the speeches of bis talking Ministers than it does in bie o must bewudered, wetfectual baraugue he bas yet do siderable ant significant fact ip favor of November 6 M. Havin believes there is | 3 #peech. if the kings y of war expre i » do pot give just Satisiaction to their subjects 4 gow trial on thas ground, it the defendants to xppeal. On the other band, if we @ witness. The written documents pat should be of a different opinion and refuse a rule aad you agency. ‘Ihe sole purpose for which that witness had — p desire to take the opinion of the Exchequer Chamber ou bevn prodaced Lad not been tou the question, it would not be open for you to doso. | wish manner in which he had been d »pression in Part journals of the 7th inst. r views of the Empe: stemporaries—some regarding it as sig 33 | ‘Tho London Heraid has a leader saying —We are not Fs speech | paying an iuie compliment to France or her Emperor when ert Chat Europe will breathe more treely now that rest of my learned brothers, that these mattors should , who had the truth in view to baye been misiod by have poiated out that 9 London ‘a body exisis acts of violo eo tant that we dx In the Conieds.. much Joss troquent thi 1 Liv ond other poets THE WRANE-PALMERSTON SCANDS* art wt or got the Letiers fcom Mrs, O'Kane oo effectual TO THE BRYON 0 Sin—I have wday read your case; aud us atc, Walia, the 4 to deoy that avy’ compro had proved the | question that the tabi river, Wi hed by the vituperauve | fe is andl this petition for a divoree, J merely ait with by the earned | to disorderly co: aware th wouicitor (or t for my part, avd | believe Lexpreas the opinions of the counsel on tho other side, It was impossible for any jury | and owners had a body of men ready lO | yoow perfect! whe wrote—naney, U F coe with avy idination that might t ‘ compromise bas beea soughs, or even suggested, d the observations of Sir Hugh Cairns, Woe jor the Crowa Ap Mousiration (which might have ied t is) | part of the respondent ouly wholly aud bolous é, and others the very reverse. | tho oracle has spoken ‘The London Advertiser thinks that the speech will pro: duce a profound and universal feeling of dissatisfaction in France, and will, t{ we are not greatly mistaken, give a heavier blow aud greater discouragement to imperial ism than anything that has ocourred aince the notable 2d of December, 1852. ‘The Loudoa svar says there is but too much truth ia of the alternative—either this will acteunwisoly, indeed, if she again to a Napoleon when he offers to initiate be clearly understuod—viz: first, that the bill of excep tons ts ‘abandoned; secondly, that the court would take | wanted to prove the written documents by Yonge, | of the noces my lord's report of his direction to the jury; and thirdly, | and) the end for which he had been called | occurred yesterday that there should be no appeal from our decision by either | had been fully answered. Cnapma side except on a matter of law ‘The Attorney Goneral said he was entirely bound by | 4 licutenant in t that, when he spoke of misdirection he must be wader ney General) w: Opinion of the English Press. {From the Lo peech of the Emperor French on the open- most remarkable State 7 fallen to our lot to peruse. This ex ry man is master of asmany styles a3 of lines of We have seen him at one moment descending Luvg Us aS the very dove of peace, at another as the ai- » and we have found in his both of the propositid oa which new trials had been granted ia various | 02 the subject ho was called to support. With regard to 4 of thi cage3s—the omisaion to give a proper direct also giving a direction which im one sense might | the jury hud beon proporly diroctod, the evi the Emperor's desoript declines to list y of war and cong a genera! pea metimes the most mont river police rican ehip Webster, com: | the estabi donies eve: tue weyitable bad preiend- | manded by Captam 1 < { beioaging to New | Gosirous to bris ed to be a sece-siouist, when in trath be was not, but | York, is Iyiuy im ue river bouud for that port with pas- | yin as you a apast olathe tah United States Ni He (tue Attor- | seagers and cargo. ouly ‘object is to give an abs al to apy ide) hot there ¢o defend him, neituer would | Yesterday a complaint was seat to Mr. Le Costa. shin- | eoeavromiae having ex from the respoud be doso. Tho evidence he bad given did not @tand | ping master, Warerivs road, that the crew on bowrd tue | po ayy As for the co-re t, his boud which he percaived from the books bad boca grounds | alone, and must be taken in relation with other evidence | Weuster wore in a slate of mylar Paving rob) od oe re porteciy 8 ring ; aud bh ew sens® « 0 sta the 6 of the ter ritte, on the mere ap and | the summing up, 1 say, sid the Attorney General, that if ship » dotectiv 1a Dale | Unrate’ cin has beso. show nee! | op Tas to be | (ouudation, 1 am, sir, your ol refully balanced and guarded ‘nh every one might interpret and at other Limes a degre i Ment or reticence, such * writer or speaker of the day ean venture to De justified, but whieh aa it waa given had a tendency | bave road, mot, a> it was, by no counter ovideuc to miglead, and might have mislead the jury. Tue loarned | dence upon which the crown was clearly eutitied to a r Attorney Generai then stated that the vessel in question | Verdict, and that a verdict taken in tho face of such evi | i regard vo the matter, doctfed that \artisie suouid go had boen seized io May last, in the hip building yard of | denco is a verdict that Ought not to be allowed to stand. | to The inturmation | Tamfully aware that I must now direct my observa | sp t counts, that number being ren- | tions to the Act Of lariiament in order to show that fam | be wet dtr. be Costa and Captain Lawr: jo complicated atructure of the clause | Fight as to the effect of such evidence. My Lorda, the | were not aware of the serivus nature of ‘The loading papers of the 7th inst. again recur to the Speech and epeculate upon points of view. tts meaning from vari mystery m which the Emporor’ ing is shrouded may be gathered from the fact that while some writers regard the speech as eminently pacific, others look upon it as indicative of war. The London News opposes the idea of England's joining a Congress, and argues that the calling for one is purely & signal tor the retura of political chaos. The Times expatiates oa the difficulties in the way of a Congress, Messrs. Miller & Sons, at ‘Liverpool. contained ninety dered neceasary ‘ Of the act of Parliament oa which the information was | actof Parliament w to be regarded in its entirety, we | on b: founded. ‘Tho persons who wore charged in the ia(orma- | Shall havo to look not only to that particular clause, but ‘ tion with various acts against the seventh section of | also to all the other portion of the act which throw light | De Costa, luspector Mawdsley, the We do not pretend to have the least difficulty in under i the Emperor of the French Others more ingenious We are. satis. sianding the d regurd to Polish affairs, 2 in them an oceult meaning. first and most obyious sense, the { at Kehoe, after hen: some particulars | No. 2 Srapne INN, Wednesday night. ‘Yne Londow Standard contains the following arth . addresae » the edit: raccordingly weatdown to the lauding stage, where | @ dressed w - Seana th aaceaston! “ef on ‘Y | evening edition of to-day, and in the Kventny Star ot y r ue disturbaace | go, aiy, under the above heading, Iam compelled to browk the vessel tbey onty took three mon aod 8 silence by declaring, as soLcitor of the respoudeat, that [ » When Cas Me. | beseve the whole of the statements in tho petition ‘aptain and Che off | iy ye unutrus, ag my client solemnly deciares them i versel ad see what was the maiter, aud the In- tor Mawdsiey with them in the ten: Miller & Sous, | on tho object or policy of the Legisiature in | cers wout ou board the vessel five won were picked | i) be, As to the noble ov-respondent, he is im highly the sbipbuilders; Fawcett & Co., manufacturora of | Passing it, and in that point of viow it is not atallunim- | from the crew and charged by the captain with | respectable hands, who are quite able to take caro of theur the Foreign Kulistment if the Emperor really moaus that war 13 Jodoad, appears to carry upon | “Sevitable without one. ‘the Emperor of the He fairly states to us the 1 (he impress of candor and truth. French is ina great difficulty. embarrassment in which he (inds himself, and points out means of extrication which have occurred to His candor is, indeed, something surprising. He machinory at Liverpool, who appeared as claim- apts of the Opinion of the Austrian Presa. Trenhoime & Co., Almost ail the Viennese journals consider the speech of | who wero the general agents ‘for the business of | ticular gubjoéts which ere montioned in it, to enforce | ship Lai to sicep all the the Emperor calculated to create uneasiness. the so-called Confederate States at Liverpool. Cap- tant to look at the other clauses of the act. | mutinoua conduct and attempting to stab the drst | ciont's honor; and should not baye thought it necessa policy was to enable the crown, with regard to par- | oificor. ‘The captain stated that ‘the olticers Of (he | py t gay a word on behalf of the respondent butgor the a evious night with arma, pre- | ria which the case has boon most unjusciably within the territories of tho crown, as against the aub- | pared and the hatches battoned down, as thoy feared an | cagy ire ob the (aith of the more filing of a re tain Bullock, the special agent for the business of those | jects of tho crown, the noutrality which it professed as @ | attack upon thou from the crew. Whea Carlisle weat | which not one word bas been or (as 1 believe) o tamed Tessier, who was also em- | government. Thore are many things 15 to which govera | on board. seeing tho state of ailairs, he advised (he me8 | Heoyved to be inte. Lhave been always taught that ey. The official Weener Zetung of Nov. 6 referring to the fom settee Mthae, rw Reiae novia hare it ployed in the like capacity. Those persony, together with | ments do not attompt to enforce on thir aubjects what | to be quiot, rowarking that they were i tae port of Liv. tolls us what we very weil knew, though we should Soarcely have ventured to assert it 80 broadly, that since tho ead of the Crimea war Russia and France have been States, and @ person mou justice demanded an absence of comment on a cas ‘count of the in. | they themselves profess; but there ave other things asto | erpool, aud if they had any grievauce to complain OC | vot ater une trial, How bas it been observ st yiolation of the | Which, for the poxce of tho kingdom and (or the honor of | they would recetve justice. Tho crew, howevor, did not | iq hia instance’ Now, sir, tn reforeuce The eoparate counts wero | the nation it is uaportant to provifto against, suck as tu- | at all seem inclined to foilow bis advice, aud some Of | your gator of to-day, ' would beg to ask § Others unknown, wero charged in formation with different acts ia Foreign Enlistment founded on the 7th section, which wag directed against | fractious of neutrality by subjects within the realms, or | them shouted out that rather than that the five nm ceased to exist, because according to international atipu- lations they have been partially modified, or because their service upon isolated points have been shaken. Tho fact is that Austria has always honestly fulfilied the trea- on a footing so friendly that he does not scruple to de- acribe it by the name of “alliance.” had some right to complain of the support which Russia Feceived {rom France, and the Emperor himself calls We thought we who | Whether you can ur any way ify you the oquipping, Curnishing, ‘itting out, orarming of a ship | by foreign belligorent governments using the ageacy of | had been picked out shonid be take on shore thy Would | feronee to tho curespoudent aj “the hoary or canal or auatrtan > Pye with the Tatant of om. | those gubsescta, If permitted w grow, thoy will bave an | “cover the deck with blood," Carlisio romonatrated | auto The very nents boon 06 anasine Hult coat ploying such ship or vessel ia the belligerent acrvice of a | inevitable tendency (whatevor may be tho technical | with them as to the folly of thoir conduct, polatiug out | @og you gay “a respectidlo firm of solicitors vou Even her endeavors to bring about German reiorm have been based upon European treaty rights and were specially directed to appease the agitation of Germany, Austriacan perfectly acquiesce in the main idea of the speech, viz'—a mutual agreemont between the Powers to | Majesty was not at war, remove the eventuetitios of war, to the sincere aud cordial of Russia in bis own annexation of Nothing but the popularity of in France could bave iad 60 valuable an alliance. to take up the questioy pat ail thy moral pressure she could upon Russia, and Nice and Savoy. the Polish question od the Emperor to compromise France did not feel called upon She endeavored to forign country or State against porsond wit! whom her | Fulea laid down by writers upon international law) to | that if thoy had anything to complaia of they would get | ihe pending suit in the Divorce Court will, under n& Tt waa to bo observed that the | iavolve the nation in war with other nations, amd to | ample redress. The five men who had boca picked out | cumstances, bo compromi Now, first, who arg of the mutincers, and whom (he olticers | recpectabls firm of solicitors” Are you aware, Bir, information only charged eyipping, {uraisuiug, or fitting | damage and discredit tho good faith of the country. Such | a6 Mo leador out, or attempting to do so woutd bd the inevitable ettect if a government professing | proposed to take ov shore, si 8 Lay A that they would 96 19av8 | ty Arm," otherwise the attorney to tue petitiong ‘The Lord Chiof Haron said that his impreasioa was that | Neutrality permitted ita shores and its ports to be used | tho vessel. Others Of the crow shouted oub that if tho | tno Mr, Wells who daily advertises reiief *to the em Eugenie and the Pi Legislative Hall alignani’s Messong ‘ono cheers were drums at the samo time beating a salute, and almost im- mediately aftera Master o all, announced © the whole assemblag: now sbe finds that her interiercuc re Imperial in the of England and Aust; , together with ‘that instead of putting av end to the arming waa not ¢! The Attorney Gon ing and fitting out wore sopara parately elarged the attemp! furnish and it out, and the replied that equipp rer statement of the difficulty and “What, then, is to be done” d_ to the alternative of deavoring to oqnip ea, advancing and at once te and the Prince Im perial the next moment appeared at the entrance and pro- ceeded up the ball, preceded and foliowed by the groat housetiolt, and, as they ad- d with loud cries of **Vive P’impera- the “disnaetive, once by the statata The Emperor thiu! to us, and that ¢ course is opel trial had entirely exiatence of these provisions agai ing, and kaow ingly aidi: ‘They of course charge ia cach vase t acts wer done With the intent mentioned ta tly 5 ata hended, woutd be found mct by Fawcett & whole of the informatio: ho manner ia which ovides shall be dove I then proposed to go through Ui given on the trial, taking the effect of it ment in his owa way, to support that ground of his motion whi verdict being against evidence, ‘ A to the direction of the learned Judgo, and whou he did 60 Mr. Raron Bramwoii—That is clearly so, otherwise you | dove them vo harm, when Lynch agaia remarked, “Oh, Nov. 4.1808 he thougat the Court would ba of opinion thatthe jury | would 3 had no opportunity whatever of giving a verdict on the | that uo offence would be committed unless you at the ce in reforence to the viow of the act | Same time onlisted a goldier and Mited o ly form the subject of con kuow whether the > French nation has b mperor make r European Pow- looked 19 blooming health after her x 1in, took her seat with the Prince ina tribune on the right, clos ing near her the Pr and the Princess and which, he iamentinto his it has not, it a fidence as to a ems e(uatly str leon a SUubjec i its way into the bands ess Clotilda, the that must ulti- of diplomacy, auiform aS a corporal of of the Guard, THE PRIVATEERS. 1 Watt and Bol Captured by the Georgia—Ninety Ves- sels Boarded by the Pirate. {From the Liverpool Post, Nov. 7.] Telegraphic advices wore reccived in town yesterday, announcing the capture of the American ships Jon Watt and Bold Hunter by the Coufederate cruiser Georgia, now at Cherbourg. The Georgia had, wo believe, shortly bofere arriving at Chorbourg, boarded upwards of ninety vessels; so the above are only a tithe of what may be expected soon to ummouing of a European con- ems, bas said that to the act of and "jnterprets ud then afterwards con Tne Ships sok whola question of her relations with , that country is to continue a part of hor ompite or aot, to the decision of a cougress, provided ‘only all othor questions which as ted to the same authority. collect of the evid of Varliament’upon which the crown proc infact, uot loft to them at all a i left to them so as to preclude the oxercise of judgment by | june! thom on what the crown regarded as the true aad sul | have stopped the caso at once, bec ‘Tho cage divided | in the injunction complaining of armiag of attom)tiug to | those who said they would not remain on board the ship quippias yt tate Europe are submit We cannot help thinking this rather a forced interpretation of the very vague expres- We know, on the other band, that Russia hus distinctly refused to submit the Polish queation to the consideration of the five Powers, and clared that the only thing she is ready to do is to delibe- rate concerning Poland with tie other tw @ers, like herself, ia the great crime of the partition. ‘Those undoubted declarations on tho part of Russia ap- pear to deprive the declaration soized upon by the Em- Poror of the French of the high significance which ho the case bad been | Cquipping, &c., { think are sion cited by the kmporor, stantiel question to be determined itself substantially into two point nishing and fitting ous; and, secon do 60 with wes imtent of employing: the ship in ner against which the act was directed, and both "those points the evidence was wholly one way expressed in the act, viz.:—that these things may be pro. | the neck, ia the in March. and in’ April she | Sudicial to and tend to eutiengor tho peace and wellare of | surgeon stated that if the man bad wished to inilict fatal Powers, part. ‘The vessel was launched was seized by Morgau, the officer, Bho was incomplote, but | this kingdom. [am sure my : had three masts in ‘her upon whicn were lightning con. } Comes to be reminded of @ passage ia tus summing up, | duce such a result. Cartisio himself regards his escape as ductors: part of nor machinery and other fittings were | which, a0 doubt, was uttered coder tho intlunce of the | an on board, With regard to the character of the ship, the | powerful address be had hoart showed that sho was a gunboat, | will scarcely recognize Lis own words the knife to siaut to one side thor \l a rudder aulapted oaly, and pec liarly fitted, for « vessel of war. been employed tor mercantil been used as a Yacht: on boar ot a week's rk, Ww land and the pret tl Al ear ulape bor top the seryiee ¢c perot adbere to what I fiad in the shorthand writer's notes on | aud the others with mutiay on board ship. @ The Lord Chief Barou—Cay vessel might have beew fitted as a vessol of war. . ‘The Attorney Generai—{ have already said so; but be | buildingim another yard for tho United States, and that ) vance nores were desivous of leaving the vessel. and to ‘The Joho Watt was a sitip of nine hundred and seventy- our tons, built in Bath, Maine, in 1356 Messrs McClollan & Larabee; when capture COL Mopimatn to Coe e unter belonged at Boston, and was the pro- porty of Messrs, I and had bulwarks an seven hundred and ninety-seven tons rogister, and was ou a voyage from Dundee to Calcutta. It ia easy for the wnt he Emporor of tho French to oxpatiate on 19 Advaniages of a congress, and to desi Ing as the commencement of & species of political millen- We are as willing as he can be that a new era of It 1s well to take note or It is certainly be its meet- evidence of her bull , ofgthat port. order and peace should arise. i that which is irrevocably accomplished. desirable that, as the treaty of 1815 s:ems to have lost its binding authority, a uew Kuropeaa pact should be in- ‘A congress ‘tin which self love and resist- Anco sould disappear’? would be inJeed somethu especially if it met ‘without a preconceived system, without exclusive ambition, animated by the sole thought of establishing on order of things based henceforth upon sovereigns and of We waive for a moment the question or Russia would submit to the decision of such right to govern if sho would, are there any symptoms in the history of tho present tine that Europe is likely to produce an as- sembly poskessing tho wisdom, the virtue and the un- soitishiness which the Emperor has ascribed tu bis ima. ginary congress y Wo cannot, of course, as a great Power, refuse to join purposes, but could havo | being fitted out s0 as to make any port Of this country a | neers, nineteen ia number, aud just oall of tho Although there uild have been The Trade Between En Rebel States. {From the London Post, Nov. 7.) The Mersey Docks and the Harbor Hoard havo this week igsued a return of the trade between Liverpool and the Confederate States inthe year 1861, from which it appears that the tgnunge, dock and town dues amounted | said the titting her asa vessel of war could be done at | when taunched, and before they got out of British waters, | facuitite this ob,¢ any time, anc those things would be left to the tast that | the two might come into coilision. I knew very well | to “kick up ae wards (rom Confederate ports was 789, and outwards to | were most equivocal as to her character. Her machinery | your lordship would aot adhere to that Of course I did | belore the magistrates to-day, wheu tho matter will be ope tive bot expect that you would, but bere it is tp the shorthand | inquired into. tain Inglotield said that the | the’sort of misch. i eden jut ahe evuld bo | this—that there might be @ vessel buildinggin the » ard of | nad occasion to pay attention to afew of the men that to £156,749 The total number of vessels cleared in- a body her Confederate ports 472. By far the largest shipments were New Orleans. UKT OF COMMON PLEAS, Heap vs. Dobson—Shigments for the Confederate States — ‘This was an action to recover £1,377 Ge. for goods sold, but at the trial at Guildhall the verdict was for the de: ‘was in active preparation, and ina enabled her to go to se LONDON, NOVEMBER 6. learned Attorney General, having proposed to divide bis volume of Air. Snell's shortharyt as arsenals (or ovhor belligerent V’owors which have | jwlice took oue on shore they must take all, aod that | paged? by m: onnection with @& .farnish. | Bone of their own, in order that war may be carried on | before (ey would allow them to do so they would “spill | Woston, who. | believe. 1s ant at the ‘samch “ practically direct from those ports oa the bign seas | their bigod dress? | olla advert toin prot inst other mations. ‘The learned Attorney General bile Car\tale waa attempting to persuade the mon Lo | ton trom £5 3 i g tp Adress, and, baving stated the cea- | teave the vess. © of the crew, 1 ring, | procesded with bis a thet Aleo, that “divog ci ied in | fone Cor which the Lo vista act had been | made a spring at hun, aad drawing i J. pasate * boing | pissd, be proccesed to comment upor atuie as fol | flictet an inciaod wound in the m as Mr nee rusted into ji { parti: | lows.’ After reading i!@ title and preamble he con. | youn, saying al tho same time, “Take that ya wealpwn ae nee cused ints nar the | tinued:-—My Lords—The disjunctive word Sor,’ which | will do for you.’? The captaja of the vorsoi ae id be wo find in the rev i Joes uot occur in | attack made upon Carlisle, took out bw revolver and @, but f think it that the | asiod woetuer he sould shoot the man? Carhale bexted nd” hos exactly the the cay t to do Ko, and the crew thea drew their r tbat is, (pat i , Made & rusa at the oliice the vessel will by | aud the policoman, an petled thom to take refaze tn ‘or auggeation of a compromise, had come ta the | the peace aad we | the cabia and rigging o: ’ it was only by wn the reanondel i will qaieth Lad ‘ ment or eb wp) A Sheoap n and the offic and await (he petitioner's exposure himself, when the cus port. | foreign serv Ths | tureatening to shoot the men if they Mi them tint | Comes into court. I Lavo only to state in conclusion, tha 2 Com Lipping of VB Wels. Thacon | the mutincers were bold at ba polther wa olorgvmaui, as stated. aor (to ive Attor. ive ister of the dis t vetor MiwdeLoy, secing the «6 ous aspect of affairs, 3 ho woar the robes -of the Christian sall those | ge nd that #8 q s vender on shi evidence | preamb'o, SDE, ssietinen, eon ry," Am not misinformes, he is now in the plying | Unmgs aud every one o them emischioc | their assistance, when the man who ltd stabbed Ga-asie met tho: Weaken adhicetieas tavagie Wate calmme wo ae heat | which the statute ded £0 t when wo | remaricad Laat he had made a vacancy vi the force (or Mucigmasatecin: Caray ainicticemans Geaatoaieee sts-on the | come to the seve. ae (ae ¢ ned 1ato | sombody.” Mawdi among (he ime, atvioing | Verte arene and the *‘and" beeomes sor." 0 badd a disjunctive wo: them to belive thems saywg that Carhs i Solicitor to tho respoudent, No, 2 Stuple’s fan. ake the whole connocied, and thar: it would read | you don't fret, 1t han made a yaucn to Mawdsloy that if th for vou.” Others of » poiee attempted 12) A Word for the Premicr—Party§Politics moilld to mats biood flowing oa ional ge sisandke el) nly to be read tm tho dis- | the decks than thore was water.” Assistance having | ah’ ton of this newspaper scandal te vie best com Thad thougbt 60,1 ought to | been procured ia the shape of somo thirty policemen, In aes Rate Hiee Erighe'a little clits stmnel ag there was oo count | gpector Mawdsiey called exch mau to him sparateiy, and tae A ra Daasina peda hate of euvy aguiast the successful statesimauship of our covuiry, picked up «dirty rumor, framod it on a model purpdeely adapted to excite public curiosity, and placed it in editorial prominence before its reagers “The phrase- ology employed pointed, with subtle and siwislor definive- hess to the Prime Minister, who thus, at eighty years of] ge, was sligmatised by a dastardly inveudo as a co- deat without a deleace ia a divorce suit. The were lod to expect revelations of a more than ordinarily spicy and racy character, b a statement naturally provoked touch attention; and for once the; Sta und oager purchagers—a fact which reudered the opic ono of not less value to the hungry pro, prigtors than interost tw their halt starved but ambit Thorefore. in two er three days, a second an- nont anpearce to the fect that an arrangement u mado, the co-respendent paying a larro sam of} money down by way of compensation ty the toured hus- bind, who was said, by the way, t .be a clergyman, bat naliciously added that this todo of setting the would wot prevent important p: liticul changes ron These chimes wore just what the unscra- seg of tho paper in question wished to bring about, and to ronder thom the tore certain,| they resolved that thougt the edings in the Di- vores Court they bad promised to the world were not to tako place, the hoary old winner who was most & vessel. I those four matters about | the ship's offi it was, | ‘The Lord Chief Baron- ‘and, indeed, uni tyr | arm. wore handoulfed and placed on board the —tonder 1g to ‘The Attornoy General—"ach of them t5 within the | for the purpose of boing taken oa shore. Carlisle was at. ‘oman. | mischief, and, therefore, are ail meuti ned. ‘Then ! beg | tended to by the surgeon of the Ship, when it was lound Upon | Your lordsbip's attention Lo what that mischiel is as itt | that bo had received a wound about am inch in length cinity of the jugular vein, and the rd Chie! Baron, when be | injuries he could not selected a more Likely piace to pro: racie. Tho map made a most determined rush at nd had it aot beea that the collar of his coat caused 6 little doubt that he Tho Lord Chief Baroa—My apprehension was that the | would bave been strucic on the jugular vein, and that the ve | object of she statute was to prevout any hosttie vessel | injuries woud have been of a iatal charactor. The mati- row, port of discharge were taken ov Shore and lodged in the main bridewell, ‘The Attorney (ienerai—I knew your lordship would got | where they wore charved, Lynca with stabbing Carlisle, rom Sir Hogh Cairos, | nim the subject, because what (ell from the boach was (hat No cause can be assigned for the aliack upon Mr. Car- ¥ coutempiated by the act migut be | lis ¢ otaer (wan that in bis professional capacity be has and another | woro Mr. Miller, for instance, for tue Confoderate mm board, who, It is said, Baving rocetved their ad ought their best course vould be ibe men in custedy wall be brought hettings } writer's notes, and tt may bave misled the jury at the PRE NS orned inthe dal should m the penal time of the trial. Whe Burning of the Amazon. coucerned in the scandal slould not caca ponaltiog ee ee ae un arr lage 8 Like | Tuo Lord Chiof Haron—No doubt that was ons of the (irom the LiverpooMerenry, Noves 1 (| whicl BP we wore srtasel: tos loditer the tie eae address into two or turee heads, went fray vory carefully | tmischie(s intended. A fearful disaster has bo‘ullen the xpleadid packet ship | Accordingly wo ae ee ee ee into @ detuil of the evidence of the ship's structure froin Tie Attseney Gucnersl beh tity ga mrss pod Amazon, veariy 2,00) tons register, wich lett Gravesend foetl importa eign gto the | Tdon’t believe such a mischiet ever w:ster min Oo Saturday last for Now York, with passongers anda | [cil iapirance, and oc a eae ae the other great Powers if they all choose to go into del ‘oration on the affairs of that groat difficulty would arise even in of recording what is irrevocably accom- ‘things may bo done past recall to which Mr. Lush, Q. C., now moved to enter a verdict for the Gres witness touched upon urope; but we plainly foresee ‘the appareatly . who | any human being, because it was a thing tuat aever had | general cargo. wriler was Limscif excopsionally guilty. Then camea laintift. In May, 1862, the defendant, Mr. Pearson, and | had been an engine driver in the employ ef Miller, the | happened. f When olf the North Foreland on Tuesday night she was ar 7 ; Sir Corawellee eo red tnto an agreement, which stated | buidder of the dasanire, ho stated Tost he remember. ‘The Lord Baron—You will find it meutioned in | discevered to be on fire: and although every olfort pepe Re ote tg Fo) Pet: oner"” "ait the case, “the Rteamer been this | ed three gunboats being Out in bis mgsMr'ayard—twe | Kent's medo by the officers, crow, Jagd to oxfin- | Stating that ne eyes on ne Lt ae w chartered by Mr. for the British government and the vessel Alexandra, ‘the Attorney Nathing wi tetr sort, fagenre | gush tho flames, & was to ~ba-. 4 bis solicitor? In deference to aw , Lam re- Might be loth to extend her confirmation. inatanco, bas annexed Nice and Savoy; but she can Rardly expect England to give any ratification to a step which she Russia may overwhelm Po. hardly be expected that England, ho was in the sorvice of baweett « Co., the who were making the machinery for 2 vessel | Baron Pigott—I think I have read something tothe | the destruction of his abip was inevitable, an- Kuown ta the foundry as No. 2,209, said chat the ship Al exendra was knowp by that number. Black, asbip car- | OF to the effect that it might lead to such a couse | at once lowered. A heavy sea wi be for the joint account and named parties, be Isid on for and despatched to Nassau and Bermuda, or Beaufor', or in the Confederate Sta’es. The steam the steamer to notwiousty disapprowd. land, but it ¢: sume other open port ; ean strained from answoring the question | have wynell anked . oe | ro. ble, and the master (Captain Hovey), seeing (Bat | e's isiory of Mr. Welle is not unwritten; abd \his reia- ind tho boats were | “ons with a Mr, Weston are of a kind almost same effect in some of the writers on international law, mo o vi jo ‘nounced his intention to abandon her runnitg, and the | 8 preseut individuality. Who, then, wv pentor, among other things, said that he examined the | quence. wind blowing a gale from the northwest, which readered | H0 i# 8 gevtloman who makes a living by rolieving the) to be loaded to the extent of nine thousand pounds on tl each of the above parties contributit Dir. Pearson ordet and Austria will register tue doom which they havo striven 80 carnestly to avert. harmony could, we think, be expected from this, bulwarks of the Alexandra, and they were not those The Attorney General— Outward voyags, of @ merebant ship; they were two and a half feat | blo, but that I believe it never has three thousand pounds therete jon’t say that it is impossi- | the task rather dificult, but ultimately the passengers | Cmbarrassed; who advertises u the oowspapers for pened, and crew were safely got into the boats. The captain did who are in difficuitios, that he may take Bo! high, and her decks were pitch pine, and the vessel The Lord Chief Baron—Not only possible, but it is a | not teave the ship until the fame drove him away. By | rough the Bankraptey Co He pins on to big an- tof the plaintiff, aod having subsequently become bankrupt, it was now sought to make the defendant liable, upon the ground that the goods f Gee more easy ‘and tees contentious function of con: | Some of his goods for shipmy gross. But what prospect of success would there be when for war purposes, to be used as a gunbo: was uot qualified for mercantile purposes, but adapted } fact. midnight (uo ship was complotely in flames. Qouncements a tail, to the effect that divorce cases are “ " Mr. Green, | The Attorney Genera!—I am not aware of auy instance apne fp he on the bre Palos Cpecrved [rote Margate, | Conducted on onsy terms. And this Me Weston bas found i Kingsdown and Broadstairs, the life boats wore launched, | client, whose enemy 14 no less @ person than tho Firat ‘tho Congress came to exercise what the Emperor cails the Would Russia submit fo relinguish Poland, Austria to withlraw from Venetia France from a shipbuilder, stated that the planking of the bul: Baron Pigott—Was it not very neariy lied accoul a nership transaction Tormecn the Guaes an ail ‘s works was three inches inside and out in the lower part, | the care of the Confederate and federal vex supromo arbitrament’ between the throe part and made for the bru ship to render assistance. at | Ministor of the English crown, and perhaps tho best known aod two aod a halfinches in the upper; her rudder was | ampton? eight o clock on Wed y moraing tho ship was .attil in the whole world. Mr. Justice Williams said each party was to supply cor- oy, because a majority of the Kuropean States | tain goods, and then afterwards it was to be a partoersbip thought th ight to do ao? also very strong, unusually go for any vessel to be used as The Attorney General—No, my Lord: the one vessel | burning florcely, and was drifting towards Broadstairs. ou; ey Ought to do so? ow, sir, supposing the story which bas been told with In cross-examiuation be said that } might have followed the other out of the port, and, no | 4 guraber of boats wore round bor, but it was impossible | Such til-cocceived suttafaction, and dweit upon with suc If so, war is at an end; the @ mercantile vessol. thick bulwarks had a tendency to weaken vessels gene. | doudt, for that reason an order was made by her Majesty | to get noar the ship owing to the great heat. The fore Amplictyonic Counct! of nations is established, and man. It was an unnecessary weight uuless (or the re in council; but that has nothing to do with the Fore! and main m: Kind are content tu be governed by reason and persuasion. What are the grounds on which we are to assume that Rule refused. Premature harshness, be truc; suppesing it be actuahy the fact that Lord Ialmorstan 1a cied to appoar in tbe foll by the board about one o clock. sistance of shot, The next witness, the Attorney General | Hulistment act. Alli say is this—that any one who | Nothing appears to bave been saved from the ship, the | (ivorce Court, accused of the dire offence which has after the Privateers. The Vanderbi! from Simon's Bay, ar- The Vanderbilt, federal steam rived at tho Mauritius September 24. such a moral revolution bas taken place, and why are we to think that an aggregation of states, euch of which is undoubtedly actuated by self-love, ambition and covet onanoas, will produce decisions free from all these cor- rupting influences, and actuated only by pure reason and We can imagine such reveries filling said, was Captain Ingletield, of ner Majesty eman whose evidence was appreciated sides. Tho captain said that he liad examined the Alex. | it does not belong to any court in t andra, lying in the Toxteth Dock at Liverpool, and bad The Court having adjourned for a short time, upon the manatee fittings ag far as they had gone, built of teak, the upper works beiue of she wag a strong built vesset reantile purpose: The Rebel Rams. Taverroot, Nov. 7, 1863 ‘The Laird :ron-clads bave boea valued by order of English government:—FI Toussoun at £108,000, and the | | FI Mounassir at £80,000, It is said that government | wishes to buy them. THE BLOCKADE. tunbiaaaed justice? ‘tho mind of the poet or the recluse, Dut they cannot be | Boriousiy entertained by the abie. enegetic and ambitious monarch who goverus the destinies of the most warlike fation of the world and declaims against exaggerated ai maments at the bead of 600,000 men. We noticed yesterday the most serious part of the peror of the French. the only escape from the dilemma of silence or war, he tolls us that ‘two ways are open, the one ‘ber material. Ibe Lord ( nief Baron said that (hey bad availed them certainly not intended for | selves of the interval to consider among themselves the ed and was easily | matters which the Attorney General bad brought before A strength as would adapt her’ being she had accommodation for men and was only stownge room enough for her crew. were n0 gubs or immediate preparation for g where no ringboits at tt which pivot guns son! used as such. | of a speech of the Having proposed os on the decks on | take @ rule to show cause why ihe verdict should not be Majex. | should soek to limit the object y both | declared io such a way would be 1 policy of this statute | passengors and crew losing everything they poasesaed | been imputed to him, what, i ask, bas tie Siar to doy King 4 liberty whioh | Sxoeptsne clothes they had om, They were landed at wih it The acts of tho cain aro ait before tho world. kingdom to do, ° , e uestion of the guilt or innocence of the co respond. rm Margate about uine o’clock on Wednesday morning. She commence Sak Pe eee dace. ae tes : may have been pitched upoa as the most like'y ono 0 dake Naximuliau ie to leave Miramar abont the 16th of ha promt Sagthy.” Tin’ somiaatdce eomoroente ieatt November, and, in his quatity of commanterin-chief of - a ‘and without in the least saying what the opinion Y- ; fn nal—has participated ip its crime against good tasie and ny member of the Court was as to the ultimate iate | *he Avstriam leet, Inspect the nova ectablatments of | Rocial justice. Tho Standard bas given its tevtimony to there | of the rule, they were of opinion that what had fallen tarew 11 visit prior to his departure for Mexico. the “respecuability’ of Messrs. Wells and Weston, has The o | from the Attorney General was unquestionably matter fit A totter from ‘Trieste. states that the atenm (righte taken fo ted the guilt of an untried maa, has been Lhere | to be discussed. If the Attorney General was sarisiied (0 | pyicanetta and the sc-rw tte Arehiniue Frederic rere | more zealous to ruin a political opponent than to protect aa pelt ardors to propars fora lone voveee, These ves. | eve national character frem humiliation; and has boon ‘et aside as contrary to evidence. or as not being war. | Teceived orders to propare for a long vovnie. ¥68- | impertinent enough to call upon the Queen to dismias bor She was | return of their lordships into court, sucu | th dinwry arrangements now a day of men-of-war of ber size, she | ranted by the evidence, and on the gronnd of misdirec- | 018 are. It is sali. to convoy the Archduke Maxitnilian | minister on the mere authority of a vague and disgusting s through conciliation and peace; the poner or later, conducts futally to war, by the ‘acy of maintaining a past which is rapidly rolling congress which he proposes actually moots, ‘and unless its deliberations are crowned Success which he anticipates for them, ‘here is Does he mean that war Yeads to progr would probably carry two If the guns were of Capture of the Anglo-Rebel Trader Sir William = Peel—Fre ment of the Effictency of the Blockade. It is stated’ that the agent despatched by Lloyd's Sal vage Associative to inquire into the capture of the steamer or more, on | ton by the certain dimensions t would be no ports, as they would be pivot guns, would Gre over the bulwarks. but sinilar to the bulwarks of gunboats In cross-examination the captain said that Unioss, then, th y no alternative but he was capable and the Archduchess Charloite and their suiles to Mexico eon tho trial, or on the ground that newspaper paragraph. I ant utterly aslamed of your ‘The departore will not take place, it is thought, before rane although there might have been no positive misdirection, \ h conteinporary WARDER, nd that there was 4 want of information furnished to the the end of Jaousry of boginning of February. ae The bulwarks were low, | jury to enable them to discharge their duty fairly—if he os Ps yr = “~ Liverpoot vie were content to take a rule on those two grounds, di 2 {From the Liverpool Cour! ov. 7.4 vitable, except upon one condition, and thatahe adition upom which alone war can be avoided ix impos. t state of human ni g, the vision of bis imaginary congress the scene opens behind it, and discloses an wn up ip order of battle. (From the London Post (goverament organ), Nov. 6} Tho treaties of 1815 no k ‘words of a Napoleon. of being used as a yacht, but uot sofor me bee.tuse she had bo st Wage for merchandise. cabins for five officers, In answer ©) the qu tween the cabin be found in ay for that purpose” The next part of the ev) fitting, furnishing and equipping of antile purposes , William Peel by a Union vessel will proceed, in the firat instance, to Washington to Lyons, and will afterwards go ts to New Crioans, where be will claim the ship and cargo t to be held there. A Paris telegram had bean posted in th room at Liverpool to the following effect: — “Don’t ship anything to Matamoros. inere were cabin and & mess plice. What was the difference be 44 saw and the sort of cabing that mig sing she Was going to be used | the present imperf ommunicate with Lord this bo his mea: underwriters? Such are the dence touched upon the That he uiters truch is proved by hit position on the throne of rence, no less than by the flagrant violation of the stipulations of the congress of Vienna in every country of oa very well, accepting one r sacred document, till at last tranquility of the chuffomnier of the Charivart, who, a few days ago, finding a remnant of the treaties of ISi6 in the guts 4, passed by it. refusing to whip his crook inte tf or fo mak it up! as being absolutely worthless the coagress of Vienna are our only lawfu and, as men and brothers, baving sym. ce of Dabomeyan customs, tion at the horrors of tue ship as distinet the engine driver, t stated that, although he could ‘not state who had bro boilermakers were on board the ship and about the boilers, as well as the propeller said he had been sent te Blockade effec Stil, we might jog after another in the once darrive at the facile plin Express, Nov. 4 } year blockade run (Queenstown 18 seldom 8 among its shipping, and at ‘One of them, The witness Ho cet & Oo ’s yard for m: 0 for clinéhes ai known asthe Alexandra weral,, ix the 1 ourt to bear in mand that ha have an especial co Morgan swore that whe men were on Board her, and the for the hammock nettings peaking of the hammock discovered iron stanch Notwithstanding th seems to be on the mit 4 vosse! of this present there are two anchored there. which bad to put in during the gale of Friday, is of extra The other. which came in’ on Monday 4 fitted with a ¢ They can be easly wt number 2,209 was the officer, said the At ald be import Mock hetiings ction with Warlike purposes, and he seized the Alexandra work were fitting the stau- ¢ withers Green, had said. “F e in the sides But the arrangements of ordinary length night, is very large, superior workmanship. their long, black, rakish-looking two-funn by an ostentatious display of the Hritiah flag. The larger of niggers and abhor: swe cabnot repress a shout of ox a Mouraviei?, and a8 comfortable, decent and wealthy plo, we cannot view without alarm the spreading | steamer is bound to Bermuda, the other to Nassau. irit of tarmoll and revolution in Eastern Europe. tion i the curse of timid statesmen. ry, who precipitated the Italian war by bis he right side, comes to the support ermorable peac , 48, in case of ‘more than her | all accounts the trade is very profitabl capture, the vessel is insured (or far d, in case of success, the immense profit yielded cau well adord the extraordinary premivms charged thing was very seldom s p the merchant service. Upon cross-examination be stated that yachts’ hammocks were seldom put in bammeck racks, but when the: put there it was simply t mocks on hammock racks usiaily wos to resi*t musketry The Attorney General said he would pow rever vo the ev) 8 that went to show that the guns aud gun carriages were intended for the Alexandra 10 the evidence of Captain Ingiefie! ry to be employed ow such a ship. ce was to the effect that three can carriages were being made (or pivot guns, and alto that gans were being prepared at the time that the machvery was be ng ‘Tbe carriages were made of both obtained from great caro hot to take Of Lord Russell, the hero of the Lord Malmesbury thinks the Poles expected us take up arms in their cause, and he believes that the apoleon is disappointed because we would not hand with bim in a Buropean war. right does Lord Malmesbury think anythiug of the kind’ nxiety for war op the con trary, bo porsists In accompanying England even in her We wrote votes for Those notes were met with partial acceptance. An idontical note was prop sed, which, coming from threo Powers determined to back it up, must have attain. ta objest without any war, The Kear ge at Cork. rom the Cork (Ireland) Examiner, Nov. 4. | night the federal iron-p! Kearaarge, etght’ guns, steamed into the harbor chored a little to the eastward of the Spit Light. run from Brest in forty eight hours Her speed is considerable, a formidable craft, whether for a fight or a chase. present occupation’ is said to be in search of the Coufede: rate privateer Georgia. evening the Admiral despatched Lieutenant a boat's crew to the Kearsarge, with instruc tions to leave the harbor in twenty-four hours. stated that the captain has refused to depart. whole of Inst evening the Kearsarge was enged in coaling this evening we shell know whether it is the intention enrsarge to obey the Admiral’s injunction, ommander should take it into his head to disobey, it is a question whether the Admiral has the meane at his com- mand to compel bim. The fleet in Queenstown is not & mean one—on paper It consists of two sixty gun biockships, the Hawke and roapectable old timber vessels: six gunboats, | aiso timber, ber Majesty's steam tender Ady Months ago we were able t0 Say | gun brig for school training Northern | that the Kear not be a maich THE ALEXANDRA TRIAL. Court of Exeheque Sittings in, Bai une, accord would be use Emperor haa shown no and put in short of she looks a rather Poland strongly manufactured for the slip. English elm and the Messrs. Fawcett's yard 1 Dave now, continued the Attorney Gener dence enough to convinee avy or cially constructed for wariike rurposes, and able to take the seas as such at th She was prepare of the Contederat here for this particular purpose, and pn WAS 00 & Nike 1 Hut “I dare not’! proved rend evi that be would never go 1, were sent, Throo notes, inaterd of of €o\vod io answor three slaps in the face smartly appt Why can wo not, after that satisiaction, leave t Why not, strictly following a re noo intervention, let the Poles be massacred, ¢ Lord Russell has 1 at Liverpool oof the agents wn Bullock bad been sent {is euMevently ob Frazer & Co. the vessel by one of w office wae made (he ey in this r of (he Confederate Navy Captain Tessier wae proved to have been connected with the service, and had taken out stores to the ship Alabama, e is a direct admission by M rg built under a © n the service of Ciareoce Yonge and Chapman bgth proved the nature Jer the superiniend u yet written intervening 1 their partners. ni resort of all those who bad to country from the paym indies good, the liberals of Bngland, and echoed by extury on behalf of the tories. (ha’ he mean- positive ly nothing b ‘that three x diplomacy has triumphed roworn wore and the quowlam allies The Emperor makes no allusion vo united ,and, in much bewilderment as to what course to pongress to settle all dificult # this proposal by a bold pro- | e's irom sides and eight heary guns would 1 the whole of (his fine squadron | by Fraver & Co Purses, angges their employ paymaster on with Bullock 1D the service of the Lurnily interfered very pected with that service. for ‘a general London, Nov. 5. the Lord Chief Paron, Mr. Baron Brainwell, Mr, Baron Chanpell and Mr. Baron Pigott, The Attorney General vs torney General ( Doard the Alabama, and bis connective | showed bow active bul ederates, and bac materially in all matters co Frazer & Company, made large monetary advanees to Yonge, who was acting as paymarter under Bullock's ap: pointment, and who paid the Confederate officers at Liver. pool, Hamilton wae s lieutenant \u the Confederate Navy, ‘and drew his pay as such at Weisman's office, out the private characters of the Chapman, and he (the Attorney General) was not there to say that be agreed with all they But his learned iriena Mr cross-examipation of Yonge, bad gone much into the se. with which he appeared to be efeotly well acquainted: sod it turned out that Yonge mau, aud after having ba thought after. may posaibiy lend result when the time while the Polish question The mam qy thorefore, 18 that of a Congress. effect, even supposing that Russia gave ber assen : Had PEngtand, France and Austria “Geverm! ned yo ‘waa waa fair and lawful for Poland of bait a million of men and teelf renders tion we have to deal with, What would a Congress disermament x and others.—The At. with whom were the Solicitor General, the Queen's Advocate and Mr. Thomas Jones) moved at of the Court this mornin @ ground of misdirection before whom toe caso was tried, and also upon the ground that the verdict was against evidence Baron Bramwell—tIn order to avoid apy mistake jet it declearly mnderstood that you move on the ground of the inst the evidence and misdirection, aud | had done. xceptions Is abandoned. ‘The Attorney General—Yes, my lord. Let it be also understood that wo of his direction to the jury and act upon it, and further that supposing that upon the ground of the verdict being in any sense uosatisiac- Lory, for any reagon, we, in our discretion. grant or refuse 8 rule, let it be understood that no appeal witl lie from it under the rules discussed y a Attorney Generale Unless you think @t to art for a rule for anew y the learned Judge 4 eked it at the head dred vessels of war, bt have obtained what they wished: But they could mot agree. and they did not act hope, then, is there of their bringing their divided coun- goles to any better reault across a green baire table? The Kmperor's words ere words of peace and conciliation: tioned, we fear they will prove of which, in the worda of Napo- y,"’ will continue to crumble, and | must take my lord's the subsidence of ite ruins twill give us hocks of which we omarquences, the more #o that by ob- @ervance of 4 due precaution and @ bold policy we might hive obviated both the immediate danger and its remoter “the t on Pelegreph irks that ptory refusal ndoa remat A peremy 0a tho part of Russia insures @ delay of come weeks, and deal had beeo said two men, Yonge a Karslake, in hie Wat, though well ia crets of bie private life Baron Bramwel ad married a Wack a child by ber deserted her, and then money’ might be made by the anid that the Inte toon, la crumbling a may bitieriy rue the o fale of the black boy Attorney General in bis reply at the trial had attempted ash (bis witness, (hat was not so, he required In Kngiand everybody wi swore unaccustomed bo the gelling of white people or free. Here + direction, be might take a rule to show cause attempt to hush up the matter. Our contemporary also ; | intimates the important political charges that are likey | Several—That, mv lords, is alt Thave |. T8® Landon Gazede publishes a despatch from Ear. | to follow —Unlese the charge be satisfactorily repelled — | ka aaaaantnies te axe Russell, dated October 20, addressed to the British Am | as we anxiously trust will regu re can be po yrdinely granted r " ommenoel question aa to the course w Majesty wil ee agua. sechpionl Gonrversation about dpawiag up bassador ab ®t Petersbarg. It ts short and commences bY | Heceagary to sdopt. In that event, equally a eas going to be tive | atte, stating that hor Majesty’ govornmeat have no wish to | o¢eourse political chatives must. be oxre | ! The Lord Chief Baron said—1 may prolong the correspondence with the Russian Cabinet for | meanwhile there is no end to the rumors ‘bat are veing 0 you, Mr. At the mere purpose of controversy. aud concludes by as- | circulated ia connection with this most painful y General, that! imagined that 1 hed taken pains ane hoped that! had laid dow Nicetetuod | xerting that the Emperor of Russia has special obliga. | They involve persons of the highest standing, who are tte be laid down by theth: ‘ihority, at | Uns with regard to P said to be entirely innocent. Th: monstrous assertion even ast now, In what is called auother piace | land plained in the sam ts made that the petlmer was offered a bichopric by way of Attorney General— Your lordship my be sware | tutes fhe Emyeror of Kussia King of Poland.” compromise. lu y authority to which | may be refer ing 1 sncapae | A Copy Of the despatch was given to Prince Gortscha. — | bie of defending bimsert hi as to what be bat end 1a | kom, Lord Paimerston at Windsor © nterpre. It is stated on reliable authority that the Grand Duke (From the Dublin Freeman. Nov. Constentine will be relieved of his functions as Governor The following passage of telegraphic news possesses Poland and will travel abroad. General Berg ts to be | Obvious interest in connection with the pending Livoree definitively appointed his successor. Court seandat an piace, or vindeating that from 1 Lord Chief Baron— ¢ 10 taking that course, after all) may luve thought that | was remarke biy « wrong The Polish national government had published a procla. Viscount Palmerston arrrived in town yesterday lhe Attorney General—if | can divine the sentiments | mation eucouraging the Poles to persevere aud confirming | (Thursday) from Broadiands, and in the course of the / auy person to whom your lordship may be aliiding, | | the order (or ladies to discontinue wearing mournmg. ternoon proceeded to Windsor Castle, where be will re- y take the liberty of saying thar I und (that | An inscrgent corps, eight hundred strong, is reported | tain till to morrow, on a visit to her Majesty, His lord to have vind cated the conduct of bis own pow. | to bave laid down their arms to the Russians in Galicia, | sbip and Lady Palmerston have accepted an invitation to ot in that “other place,” and 0 *al time to Numerous engagements continue ty be report the city banquet on Monday. aid that in his judgment, althougn | may mot be A large number of ladies were arrested f - the Alavama bad offended agaiust the law of | mournin the land proclamation advising ladies to cease wearing mourning a After anotber discussion between the Leueh and the | to avoid the bratalities of the soidiery. (From the Liverpoot Journal, Nov, 7.) vor ae (0 the precise terms in which the rule was drawa | The exasperation of the population was extreme. Scandal is relished tn the metropolis, A letter from aan tho respondent's solicitor in Lord Palmerston's case yar. ven above; and, according to the gossip in the clubs Fore Urnee, nad one of his lordship’s ready and eloquent aide in the Chat when the late Attorney General presented to me the | ‘The following despatch bas’ been addressed’ to her | House of Commons baa given great pain to an ex-member Dill of exceptions | made (he mnstant objection to it, which | Majesty's Atnbassador at St. Petersburg — of Parliament, who ts about (0 seek relief in the Divorce 4 } bave made all along Forsiay Oerice, bet, 20,1863, | Court. The cause of scaadal has been traced to Naples The Attorney Gereral—Yer, my lord, we are quite | My Lorp—Baron Brannow has communicated to mea } uring & recent visit, aware of t despatch from Prince Gortachakoff, dated August 26 (Sep- aa E G The Lord Chief Baron—I enid | ce to your Rueslionay, = and | do pot believe that! have done it, aod if the | No, 178, of the Lith alt. of which you were tustructed to Fthink I ought | give a copy to hit Excellency Heenan and King’s £2,000 Match. tw bave been, @ little earlier, and if ay intimation bad | ” Her Majesty's government have no wish to prolong the Fret 1 Life fe tonto Nov. 1-1 been gives to me | should have corrected it at end | correspondence on the subject of Poland for whe mere} This important match i¢ going on satisfactorily, and should bave said, “Gentlemen of the jury, it is supposed | purpose of controversy. both are in strict traling. Both were at Newmarkes that I have eaid 20 and se, | mean nothing of the kind Her Majesty's government receive with ratisfaction the | during the Roughton week, and much curlosity was Op my own bebalf} must say (hat the learned At General now remembers that (he moment the pap tm woaring ‘The Polish town captain of Warsaw issued a euch a of the Premier were bam The Lord Chief Haron said It and it may be quite right that | su hould be observed, id etate it in public, } tarniy did mean 1 objection bad een taken, as} must « spe roey | sssurance that the Emperor of Russia continues to be ani- | exhibited to get aglimpse of them. There was a good deal wes | mated with inteotions of benevolence towards Poland, | of anxiety expressed om all hands leat anything unfos pot into my bande Isaid, Mr. Attorney General, that is | and of conciliation ip respect to all foreign Powers, seen should prevent the mill coming off, and some over not mine.’ Her Majest: government acknowledge that the rela. | zealous a) ob oe day attempted to arrange mat The rule, we believe wae ultimately drawn up io the | tions of Russia towards kuropean Powers are regulated | ters f ringiog it of there and then, as there war a terms in which the Lord Chie! Harou offered to grant it | hy public Iaw. But the Emperor of Russia bas special | clear coast. Liberal offers were made to King’s managing ( Some day will probab'y be sre: fined for the ari obligations in regard to Poland, director, bat they were refused—and, we think, with ment the rule | , Her Malet goverament ‘have in the despatch of the | reason-—ae all bets would have been void. A meeting of 1th of August - } . é wid preceaing Cg ane in | the friends bebe men will shortly take place to arrange regard to this peculiar question, the rights land are | ne to @ place of fighting, at which, we trust, such mea AMERICAN AFFAIRS Contained io the same fascrument whieh conetitutes the | gures will, be decided on’ as will elfectually Keep out the the builder of tho bmperor of Russia King of Poland. RUSSELL. objectionable and riotous classes, and will enabie ontract | Rebel Sympathizers Advoc a Pe P.8,—Your E: x ; cellency ie ee to give a copy of ce who have found the money on both fides ; this despatch to ’rince Gortschakom!. to bave @ comfortable view of the coptest. We ha Movement from Europe reason to know that the majority of the battle money @ found by gentiemen and trae sportemen, none of whom have the slightest wish to make money out of m tray ce) any other means of transport, and, therefore, there can At @ meeting held at Stockport, Pngiand, on the éth of vi The War in Japan. November, under the auspices of the Manchester Soutn RSINPORCAENTO Fou SED DUICE SQUADRON. ern Independence Arsociation, after very stormy proceed: | 1 hag been decided to reinforce very materially the | te'ho reason why the match abould wot be brought ap Inge, & resolution was carried, urging the British govern. | Duteb oayal squadron in the waters of Japan. ‘ comfortably. We believe that the hints recently thrown ment to concert some measures with the Kuropesn Powers | _ The Staats Courant announces ‘ ay ii ni ‘Kooptosn, | out to the Imating f aternity bave had a very - feoad vettee Ijamba, sixteen guns. Vice Admiral | ble beneficial ef and that a relect few of the hes, for the best means of bringing About pesee, Anament. | fourteen pune, Citadel of ABtwerp, fourteen guns, and | men have come to & conclusion that the only chaces ment in favor of coutinued neutrality found very limited | Amsterdam, ‘eight, paddle wheel, bave already | pow really to put dows with » strong hand the ruffian support. been despa Fro treo men tat oy eice | which hae eo nearly upeet the whole profession i ae po ee A final deposit of £100 & cide for the match 18 10 be ‘The American Mercantile Marine. ton gun ecrow corvettes Stavoren and Teitayl to | MT. "8, Of @ day to be hereafter van SERIOUS MUTINY ON BOARD THR SHIP WERSTRR—AT- probed Crew ely, tO Japan, and the follow. | *iNs's colors inay now be bad at Richardson's j great THR CHAMrionsmr. TRMPT TO ARREST THE MEN—INSPRCTOR CARLIELE, | Jog ships of war arenow being fitted ont with the it * a OF THB LIVERPOOL POLICE, NRARLY MURDERBD, | | possibie despatch for the same destiaation. At the royal noel ater and Reel whe prams ta rendy: HOR (From the Liverpool Mercury, Nov. 6.) dockyard at Nieuwe Deep the steam frigate Admiral van | gine op y, Nov. 18. Both are ‘a he ‘The necessity of having a river pollce for the Morsey | Wassenaer, 45 guns, and the screw corvettes Princess ‘ i , = . Ithas been alleged that the | Amelia, 19 guns, and Metalen Krots, 16 ‘at Helvoets. tran are Aborted an ard an oa ‘Twere has merous stabbing felony cases whieh take place on | lays, the fourth class screw corvettes yk, 10 board veeseia leavi Wesabe len, prepare expe. | and gh PR on ahem cially on board the ‘* Yankee liners" —would be in a grea doiph jansan, 51 guns. measure checked or guarded against i the aid of auch | fia these reinforcements comprise an imposing force | A LEXINGTON Ky Ay body a2 a river police could be called in when disorders | of twolve vessels, with 223 guns, {From Inadon Star. Nov. 5.) 16 guna, will probably be Wonceeren Covesm, Nov. 4—The various duced egeollent cupbeste, the Gragd Natiamat has been frequent! The E ooout on board vessels while Iying in the Mersey. The The rorew corvetio /oatman Advocates for the establishment of A police force for the added to the Syuadrom,

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