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newspapers//0002194/1855/0328/0002194_18550328.csv
107
4 ,;,-A4J - BriTtr EMIT MO NT BLANC aci t s WILT, at 8 o'clock, apd Every 111,, , 1it . (but - SaturdaY)- k e Area, 23.; GaTlcry, ls.. The. 31ornnil ite‘orese , n , ta_t , t , ons 'facsttly, ThunAlay. and Satardkr, at 3-1) • 'Y u-04101 , OF LONDON. (By Royal uarte.r., .L,: --Prizeholder s select -!•cr thefreo.lre3 from the publte Gi apy Subscriber f GUINEA will hif , l3:o, IiEEVES the .11;,„` , 1 ze, cat Impresslon of a Plate of Yr ATER , 1 it of A.E.A:, after J. J. Chalon, R.A., aA a. Quarto Lr,rll.llrly Illustrations of Byron's Childe Harold.' The kb! 2d ,Y for delivery anl 1.11,3 volume may be rem at the 4cription closes 1 durd ay next, 31st instant. GEORGE Iknorary LEWIS POCOCK, $ Secretaries. trancl, March. -SYLUM LIFE ASSURANCE OFFICE, 12, CONNII(LC , London. • R . F'statili:hed 1824. , and Dlveased Lives. at Home and Abroad, for And Naval Employments.. The only Office on purely 'l:eld„ rj , th ' , il . , les, involving, therefore, no Partnership among .for prospectases, prapwal paper?, ap•)ly to - MANLEY DOPKI Hesldent Director. GUILDHALL, Ms.acn `i7, 1855. L Av ' O II.IMITTRE for LETTING the CITY'S 40,.'2 1) ftv,111 met at Guildhall, on Wes,inesday. the 4:h April Celock precisely, to 3 eceive Proposals for Leases of a 411'.; + . 12, Wood•street, Cheapside ; Two E0r..?0, No. 18 and ; Rouse, No, 9, F , outh.place ; a Iloive, No. 22, a House, No. 59, Great Leonard-street ; and a ood-street, Finsbury. al;articulari and Pla , s may he seen, and Forms of Tender the .Architect's Oftlee, Guildhall. FERDINAND BRAND, Comptroller. t R kNii IfIIECTORS of the ROYAL' BRITISH 1t of Prepared to receive, Appeal - ions for their New ofeelt, tinder the provislons of their 'upplement9l la st;ranted by the Crown. A pplica)loll3 to be made, with- (lead (lace, No. 16, Tokenhouse-yard, or at tho kran‘4,77, '. road, Lambeth ; 97, Ges:vrtll-road, miftesbury-terrace, Victoria-street. Pimlico; 60, &okthvrark ; and 32, Regent-circus, riccatlilly. IliJOti INNES -CAMEION, Ceaeral Manager. ,T IONAL PROVINCIAL BANK of ENGLAND. 11?., Tlishopsgate-street, London, Yard). 27, 1855. t e itim ,- s t o i f u the Natiosnal Pros incial Walk of F,nglan hereby constquence of the death of Almon 11111, Esq., ) /elnent of 81r John N. It. Campbell, K.C.11 , there wit' geANCIF:S in the Dire .tion to be filled np a' the 2 ,NiAtA.L MEETING of the Society to 1Y he:cl on n 7 Of nay next, and that every shareholder intend ug to 0 a ) Propm a carrldate ate for the €ffice of Director must i, 7 4 a 3 8 from the id by hereof signify some writing under o nd. to be left at the office of the Society in the City of ~ invention to become a candidate, or the name I Q :: the mode of the candidate interaled to be proposed by L3' ot9gr.of the Crurt ef Dime-tors. DAN. ROBEItI EON, Agent and Manager. Li•olrizter is eligible to be elected Director w ho has not q~t!titter ol at least twenty 1001. shares or one hundred 201. sa g esleniar months ; ,r to pr , :pose a cand'date unless a °fat least ten 1001. shares or fifty 201. slvms. F E ARDIAN F RE AND Li C--)2:11P4/ir, ASSURNICOE No, 11, I4m-ibarcl .-street, London. :TOES. MAT, Bart., Chairman. Esq., Deputy-Chainnan. Atewart Marjoribanks, Esq. John ‘iartin, Esq., J.P. P' Rowland Mitchel!, Esq. James - Morris, Esq. ' Henry Norman, .E• 4. henry R. Reynolds, jun., Esq. John Thornton, Esq. James Tuiloch. Esq. Henry Vigne, Esq. DILE_ q „,. ALTER B. FARQU ANCIS BART DYKE, 1 11; P r liaise Berens Esq. NI on, T. Farquhar, Bart. '5l l - jun. Esq., P Haney, 4%, 0 :' Hubbard, Esq. 1 ,5 V 4 11nstone, Esq. .111 4 41 Jouclu-re, Esq. Esq. ,47 AUDITORS. 4i t ti .obarts, Esq. . I Henry Sykes Thornton, Esq. LlO 3l, jun., Esq. John . Henry Smith, Esq. 11 ) George Keys, Esq., Secretary. Brown, Esq., Actuary. 01, ENT.—Under the provision suers an Apt of Par- tt'lB Company now offers to future ins Four-fifths of h t p gith Quinquennial Division, or a Low Rate of Premium iltl t ..; E clllaton of Profits. (‘4 l 4 l t, lat i' l L division of Profits will be declared in June, 1855, when t t t r ; i 4ti ng Policies which shall subsisted at least cue year 1554, will be allowed to share In the Profits. 6,veral past divisions of Profits mle by this Comp , any, the Bonuses added to the Po a licies from One-aalf the n'unted, on an average of the different ages , to about One ilqit•tber Annum on the sums insured, and the total Bonuses 111ti, 11 ' s ,rour Septennial Divisions exceeded 770,000/. RISKS,—The Extra Premiums required for the East the British Colonies, and the northern parts of tire irki t 'es of America, have been materially reduced. t i leph` l) , LIVES.---Persons who are not in such sound health as them to insure their Lives at the Tabular Premiums, y 46 their Lives insured at Extra Premiums. 11 1 1pn'anted on Life Policies to the extent of their values, pro- relicies shall have been effected a..sufficient time to have iii'll4ltach case a value not under 50 /. i t tliik, l l •lTS OF POLICIES.—Written Notices of, received 1 4 141 feel. paid by the Company, and no charge will be made for 014,4 1 hereby given, that Fire Policies which expire at Lady- it43,,, Et rSt.ew j ened within's-s fifteen days at this office, or with Mr. • I ,amestref - t, corner of Pall-mall ; or with the ‘ - Agents throughout the Kingdom, otherwise they become C4 used by Explosion of Gas are admitted by this Company. AGNETIC TELEGRAPH. ` LONDON OFFICES •t. _ t. Old Broad-street (six doors from the Royal Evehange.) O kt B est End-7, Charing-cross (opposite the statue.) r, 4 4 0f ; - ',l sll lTriunicatlon by underground wires with the principa ZT., , , I Lie Kingdom. ~ ,,t( ) L..for Twenty igords, including delivery, and address not , • i ,,T 1 , 4 11 e) ° , Of f ice, 2 Exchange-buildings - • • • • • • • ..... 8 1 it, later, ~ Exchange-arcade ..... . • ..... .. • , • itlin,,,!, „ 22, English-street N ta guar,' lOl, New-street ...• ...... ....... . , , , 4(l— Glasgow. °Mee, 18, Elchange-squarc .. ••• • . . Greenock, „ Cathcart-square... ...... , . qc: 4'4 —ublin, ' Dumfries Iligh-strekt ~ 23. College-green.... .... •• • • Delft at I. Donegal-street . ..... • • • i Cork, Pembroke•street Queenstown,: The Quay . ........ •••• • • • • • ' 'EDWARD B. BRIGHT, Se, ? 2s. 6d . Is. Od, 4s. Od, ;ret ary VIAPPIN'S RAZOR. /,, Sold everywhere. Warranted geod by the tnakerS, JOSEPII I IN and BROTRERS, Queen's Cutlery Works, - shefleld ; and oorgate-street, City, Lutalon. APPIN'S SUPERIOR TABLE KNIVES, as made for the Crystal Palace, Sydenhsm handles cannot 1 3' become loose : the blades are all of ths very first quality, their own Sheffield manufacture. ' ll3- suopiled at their London 'Warehouse, 37, Moo rgate-strut, 44 c 1 . Queen's Cutlery Works, Sheffield. V l - I) RRSHOT CAMP.--KIT for the CRIMEA. „Yo u Will go, of course, in the first place, to Benjamin Edging- ,—.‘Ablishment, across London-bridge, where•you will choose a %,_ 4I2 QP ket.le, waterproof blanket, bedstead, Month 'n ,7 11 v 1 , before Sebastopol. Tents obe seen erected at the mann- Netf a '. 2, nuke -street, across London-bridge, or 32, Charing-cross. I 'uPPlied with every requisite. • etiN' g ts t xrr . ER G H OUGH d s e p li A v y er t a h n 2 o 9t ß h ORATION 4) , o ' f ign Seven; AT et j Al o r n t Len t at Eigh ' t o'c e lock. the nap., ; Seats and Platform, ls. May be e Offices of the London Temperance League, 337, Strand. 1 --- It. N tt Ort of SEVASTOPOL.--GREAT GLOBE. 461 y the uew Approaches and Siege Works arc placed on °f l - evastopol, including Inkerman, Balaklava, and the !, at the Great Globe, Leicester square. open from /Zlth oo ,_ Admission to the whole building, one shilling. Children 1 % IV-if-price. A large collection of Russlan Trophies from ati 1 0 '. KAHN'S ANATOMICAL MUSEUM I, -.kb-OPENED at 4, COVr NTRY- , MtEET, LEICESTER- ()Den (for Gentlemen only) daily from half-past 11 till 44,t^' - I °,l l 7 till 10. A NEW SERIES of LECTURES, by . Dr. 114, x ',„' ‘ 'lt•G.S., & c., at 12, 2, 4, and half-past 7in the e ventn a g r ._ tilti;::H IL Anew catalogue, conialning lectures ou the t I tre;:l 4 branches of Physiology by Dr. Kahn, illustrated price m b y Post . 6l. extra. 4lt A.V ESEND ST., h 4 ooti l PACKETS. th e i c e ta r P,aperlic at the l p a ie t r t s h as e Greenhithe and ath Purfleet permit FROM TERRACE 'TER, GRAVESEND. aFat DAYS. SUNDAYS, \,___. FROM TERRACE PIER, GRAVESEND. \ \._.: l :___VEsx DATE. SUNDAYS. etr :4. F 4 t 1 f: 5l Time C i „ - i: f.l -A a. n ..) . a . ''s* _I. s , - 8 Zi w (4 4 A a I ___ 1 ~--' , .• 1 tom Fenchnrch-street Station to all parts of Londo, If an hoar. wrIARF, BL&CKWALL, on the arrival of the fo Trains from the Fenehurch-street Station. Vte K 10 Winx Trains from the Fenehurch-street Station. _ t5.... 1% . E . !it DAYS. ... SUNDAYS. N; . , tt i g 41; i '., 0. I Fen- ti - ' 1 1'1"'. .s. . G .2 ti, church 5.2 T.., 1 0 g ...' * 1 'g Street, i 8 r, s . '.' A.. . 4 N _... I 4'i -- -- ll—— -- N , , • et. Foro Cahn. Set..on o • r i 'lla Gravesend end Loudon.. • • ...... 103. .. Is. 2 . 1 al'eaend and Blackwell or Woolwich Bd. .. Gs. 101 Q(:irevesend end Intermediate Piers.. , rlcKETB.—Twolve Months, 5:. Os.; Six Months, 37. Os. ; 4 1 4 , 4,0 rith5, 21. Os. • to be had of the Collectors on board the •ti ov or of Mr. Monk, Terrace Pier, Gravesend. • 13 . 1854. Ita t SECRET INFIRMITIES OF YOUTH AND MATURITY. t O price 25., illustrated with cases ; free by post for 30 N., R , stamps, t 8 V 0.17 S DEBILITY; Ota ni Causes, Symptoms, and. Cure.—An Essay on Sper- a4,'%R.%ea, with Practical Observations on a safer and more if . kta, a . mode of treatment of the diseases of the Generative tr Obtained by the use of the Microscope in detecting and iY, 4l4l ing, by urinary examination, the real (Anse and efect of cariety of complaint, whether arising from solitary habits, t w r , accident, or climate, followed by practical remarks, founded l4 Vo ri t Y years' experience in the treatment of Impuissance, t ' a t kie Debility, Local Weakness, Spermatorrhosa, &c. which Commentaries on the Physiology of Marriage, with pre- hints on the evils emanating from empirical practice, t htt:a th e dangerous remedies advocated by various writers on ''portent disorders. a_ B7 By SAMUEL LA'3I.II2T, M.D. t,: mEDFORD-SQUARE, LONDON, t, Qr of Medicine, Matriculated Member of the 'Culvert ty of Edirt• 1.4 f, Honorary Member of the London Hospital Medical Society, 1 :11 a , 14 •Iate of Apethecaries' Hall, London, etc., fee. :qtl aa sential object 01 this treatise is to point out the fearful con- reeultbag from certain habits, irregularitiee, and excesses, have • procured more misery in Youth, degradation in Man- t.usr Premature decay at all stages of Life, than, perhape, any • 481 of disease known to modern pathologists. Its perusal is tll,4t,,al,arly recommended to persons entertaining secret doubts of 4,:i W sical condition, and who are conscious of having hazarded. -4 in a l • l, , happiness, and privileges to which every human being is i lt% • a,,,i m absolutely necessary that'll man should know, that the re are 111 Of personal management which cannot be violated without ,g grievous penalties, and when wisdom and regret succeed ‘,. 4 3 , 1;4 1 , a ' it 3'. of inconsiderate self-indulgence, how these ponaltios t' , 445;ated, how the sting of their bitterness may bo removed, ~ the evil end its conaequenees may be avoided, and ahovo 'ibra,:;7e le a:lamely any dearee of physical infirmity ar functional Lea' t ' i '." - 'ent to which the timely all a science cannot apply a cure. fori, ! etaqleor has for a series of years been engaged in au exteneive the treatment of these delicate complaints, which have s Tai aately teen - too generally confided to the care of ignorant t lith i . r , c '•who inflict great injury on those who are induced to place •Nl , l rans. r ettl t ..: ° Uti -Prete DEBIL io ITY may be had, price 2s, of Messrs. Piper, aad 3 Patcraoater-row; Hannay, 63, Oxford-street ; e, 10 L C • t•s st • e.cester-satiare; Mann, 39, Cornhill; or free by post for ' 4 6-t a ,.. 4 ' Ps to any address from the Author's retie ice, 31, Bed- At t ' ar e• k h ome f till Vat, f or a consultation daily from Eleven till Type, Ind from
newspapers//0002194/1855/0328/0002194_18550328_mets.xml
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1228/0002194_18551228.csv
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THE ROTAL PICTURES AT OSBORNE. THE ART JOURNAL for JANUARY, 1856, price 2s. Gd., contains :—"L'Allegro," from the Picture by W. E. Frost, A.R.A. ; Bay of after W. Callow ; and Gibson's Ba•+-relief of Cupid and in the possession of the Queen. The principal literary contents Artists' by F. W. Fairholt; by R. hunt, F.R.S, ; A Few Words on Beauty Soirée at the Pavilion at Brighton The Art Publications of M. M. Goupil British Artists—No. It , S;r A. W. Calcott, R. A illustrated ; Suggestions of Subject to the Student In Art The Country of by F. W. Fairholt, illustrated ; The Architectural &c., &c. Now Ready, price It. I Is. 6d., cloth gilt, the Vo:utne for 1855, being the first of the series containing the QUEEN'S PICTURES. Virtue and Co., 25 Paternoster-row, London ; and alt booksellers. The Third Eiltion.—Just published, price 155., by post, tree, ss. Cc. N TRUE & FALSE SPERMATORRREA, with the View of distinguishing the Imaginary from the Real Sufferers under this disease, and Correcting of wide-spread Errors in relation to their Treatment and Cure. From the German of Dr. PICKFORD. With an lntroluction by the Editor, containing a complete exposure of the system of terrorism and extortion pursued by the advertising quacks of the metropolis towards those who are credulous enough to seek their aid. Pickford 4 .8 known to English readers by his frequent practi- cal contributions to German medical literature. This is the first Vine, he informs ns, that ho has addressed himself to the non-medi- c:al reader. We trust this may not be the last, if be shall detect any other equally flagrant evil which it may be In his plwer to cor- Medical Gazette. The tribe of Quiet sympathl3ers,' and 'Medical Friends,' are mercilessly exposed; and if this bock could find its way Into the hands of those who stiffer from the com- plaint of which it treats, wo are satisfied that many hundreds would be saved much needless suffering of body and mind, and what is of less importance, though it is that which the quacks most prize—- much money...... This volume is well qualified to put an end to tin empirical system of treating Spermatorrhcea, and to place the treat- ment upon a more rational and physiological basis. It is, therefore, likely to do much London: IL Ralliere, '219, Regent-street. EVENING CLASSES.-CROSBY HALL, 32, Bishopsgate-street Within. —LENT TERM will com- mence on WEDNESDAY, Jan. 2d. The fee for each class is 3s. per term. A subscription of 14s. per year, or 4s. per quarter, entitles the subs •riber t ) the use of the Reading Room and Library at Crosby Hell, and also to attend any ono Class each term. Prospectuses, with lists of olasses, &.c. , mad• be had at the Library. MACKENZIE, A.M., lion. Soc. Spirit of the Public Journals. (From the Times of this day.) The fall of Kars has had, at any rate, this good result,—that it has at last drawn public attention to the theatre of those operations to which it has succumbed, and taught us the importance attached by a vigilant and skilful enemy, thoroughly ac- quainted both with the ground and the people, to a remote position, with which the British public has scarcely cared to make itself acquainted. No- body can doubt the vast importance attached by the Czar to the preservation of Sebastopol and of the fleet which sleeps beneath the waters of its har- bour. The unceasing exertions and dreadful sacri- fices of Russia attest it only too well. To save the place was the point of honour of the empire—the one object, compared with which all others seemed puny and insignificant. Yet, even in this crisis of his destiny, the Emperor of Russia could despatzli probably his best General and an army whose bravery is only too well attested by its enormous and almost incredible losses on the 29th of Septem- ber, not to defend his own frontier, but make a hostile inroad into the Turkish territory, and to possess himself of a city situated in a mountainous region and exposed to an inclement climate. So eager was Mouravieff for the prize, and so deter- mined to win at all costs, that se soon as lie heard of the fall of Sebastopol, attributing to the allied Generals a degree of foresight and activity which they were very far indeed from possessing, ho deemed it necessary to anticipate, at whatever cost, the expedition they wore sure to make, and so sustained a repulse which cost him a third of his army. Had ho known the easy and comfortable tactics of the allies ho might have saved his even, and taken the city just as well ; but it would be ungracious to blame an enemy for thinking bettor of us than we deserve. What now presses for consideration is whether we are tamely to sit down with this loss ; whether that which the Russian General has gained through our negligence he is to be allowed to keep through our supineness and want of enterprise. If we are ■ot to have peace we must seek out some vulner- able point in which we may strike Russia between the joints of her armour,—some place in which a victory may give us something more than a barren triumph, and draw after it other results than inter- minable catalogues of killed and wounded. While Sebastopol was untaken we considered it so indis- putably the first object of the war that we were well satisfied to sacrifice everything else to its at- tainment. The struggle was so gigantic, our in- terests and our honour were so obviously at stake, that no success, however great, could compensate us for any delay or any failure there. But, Sebas- topol once taken, a campaign in the Crimea has no other object than the capture or destruction of the Russian troops encamped within the penin- sula. The Crimea itself, except as a battle-ground, is utterly worthless, and we are only justified in remaining there on the supposition that there we can inflict more serious wounds on Russia than elsewhere. Whether this be so or not we cannot judge. Unless the coming campaign is to open with a spirit and a brilliancy very different from the close of its predecessor, 200,000 men could not be more entirely thrown away than in occupying the plateau between Kamiesh and Balaklava. Of this, at any rate, we may feel confident—that an expeditionary army can well be spared to-coperate with Omer Pasha in the Transcaucasian provinces, and to redeem the fallen honour of the allies in the estimation of the semi-civilised Courts of Asia. We are making war as mach against Russian pres- tige as Russian power, and cannot afford to allow her, by easy Asiatic successes, to obliterate the effect of European defeats inflicted upon her at so tremendous a cost. We know not what other field is left for our enterprise. To march into the deso- late interior would bo to follow the steps of Charles XII. and Sweden to certain destruction. The capture of Nicolaieff may hardly repay its cost while we hold the narrow passage through which alone the ships built at its dockyards can find their way into the sea ; but in the rich and beau- tiful valley that lies between the opposing ranges of the Caucasus and Ararat, with its glittering streams, its emerald meadows, its waving beech woods, its snow-capped mountains, we have a land peculiarly adapted for the operations of an Euro- pean force. In the north towards the Kouban are Mussulman tribes who, it is supposed, would fly to arms if a Turkish division were sent among them, and the banks of the Phasis and the Cyrus are inhabited by races ivh o would gladly welcome and heartily sup- port a Christian deliverer. To cut off the garrison , of Kars from all communication with Russia, to close the passes of the Caucasus, to scale the ascent which leads to the tableland of Georgia, to drive the Russians before us through Teflis to the very shores of the Caspian Sea, are enterprises the re- sults of which would be enormous, but the difficulty of which would bs by no means so great as those over which we have already triumphed. Resting on our fleet and a friendly population as a secure basis of operations, it would be easy for the allies to wrest from the hands of the Russians the com- mand of the Caspian Sea, and to restore to Persia that of which Russia has deprived her—the right of navigating what must in all fairness be considered her waters. Either we must be prepared to enter on some such enterprise as this, or to leave the Emperor in possession of his present conquests, and in a condition to push them further so soon as he shall be relieved from the vast concentration of his forces which the contest for the possession of Sebas- topol had rendered necessary. The affairs of Asia cannot be left as they are ; there, and there alone, Russia is still able to assume the offensive, and will infallibly attain more, unless we take away from her that which she now has. Lot it not be supposed that in suggesting a cam- paign in the Transcaucasian provinces we are , actuated by any desire meanly and selfishly to employ the power of France to carry out merely English objects ; we repeat what we have so often said—that we have no fear whatever from Russia for our Indian empire. Nothing that she has done in this war raises our opinion of her as an aggressive Power, and in India she would be en- countered by a combination of obstacles far more formidable than any which she has hitherto been called upon to surmount. We have no wish to in- volve ourselves in the maze of Central Asian in- trigues. We have no wish for any increase of territory to the north of the Himalayas. All our objects would be strictly common to us with our ally. We wish to strike Russia in the most vul- nerable point. We wish to oppose to her future aggression the rugged barrier of the Caucasus and the still more rugged valour of its tribes. We wish to prevent her from practising upon Persia those arts and those menaces which so nearly suc- ceeded against Turkey. We are no more disposed to tolerate her presence at Teheran than at Con• stantinople or Hammerfest. We would not allow Russia to turn the left flank of Turkey by the Balkan—we must not permit her to turn the right, which now lies open to her by way of the valleys of the Tigris and the Euphrates. We have stopped her external commerce ; it is time wo applie d a tourniquet to he r main artery,—the vast flood of the Volga. Th ese thi ngs mus t be done, not in the interest of England alone, but in that of the world. A solid peace can only be founded on the conviction of the power of the Allies, and that conviction will then be most surely pro d uc ed when we employ our strength at those points, not where our enesty is most, but where he is least, prepared to receive us. The Pkare de la Manche announces that 30,000 or 40,000 men will probably be encamped this winter i❑ the neighbourhood of Cherbourg for the purpose of being embarked next spring for the Russian Baltic pro- vinces. The establishment of another camp of 20,000 men, near Brest, is &aa talked of.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0529/0002194_18550529.csv
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WOODIN'S ENTERTAINMENT. Mr. Woodin, already so favourably known to the public by his and at the Regent-street Gallery, has st‘rted a fresh concern' in King William-street, Strand. This new entertain. ment he has named Woodin's Olio of It takes a more ambitious range than Mr. Woodin's pre. vious performances. It comprises an entirely new corals entertainment, and a moving panorama of the romantio lake scenery of England. This new speculation of Mr. Woodin's is a decided and one that seems to be highly appreciated by the public.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1023/0002194_18551023.csv
106
No. 19,675.] PUBLICATIONS. NOTICE.—MR. PRESCOTT'S NEW WORK, HISTORY of the REIGN of PHILIP 11. of SPAIN, will be publishel by Mr. Bentley, New Burlington- street, Immediately, in 2 vols. Bvo. MISS SINCLAIR'S NEW NOVEL, CROSS PURPOSES, will be publish,cl on Friday next, October 26, in 3 vols., by Mr. Bentley, New Burlington-street. SCOTTISH WIDOW'S' FUND AND LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. Founded A.D. 1815. Upoa the Principles of purely Mutual Assurance. The INVESTED FUND or CAPITAL arising from the accumu- lation of Premiums, and which belongs exclusively to the Assured, now exceeds TWO MILLIONS EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND POUNDS STERLING. During the last seventeen years alone, Assurances have been effected with the Office to the amount of more than EIGHT MIL- LIONS SIX HUNDRED THOUS AND POUNDS, being. on an average, upwards of 11-I.LP A MILLION STERLING in each year ; and notwithstanding the slatya competition among the nume- rous Life Assurance Institutions existing and constantly springing up, and the great inducements, in the shape of comm ssion. offered by many of them for the introducti , t) of business, the Society have obtained the large and steady business above indicated, without to my extent altering their practice of allowing remuneration, at a fait and reasonable rate, to the Lccal Agents only, —no Commission being offered or given to third patties. The representatives of varh us Original Members of the Society who have died within the last few years, have received In no”us Addtions more than the Sams originally assured by the respective Policies. Forms of Proposal, Prospectuses, and all necessary information, rnay be had on application at the Head Office, or at any of the various Agencies in the three Kingdoms. JOHN MACKENZIE, Manager. WM. LI N DE S AY, Secretary. HEAD OFFlca—Edinburgh, 5, St. Andrew-square, 29th September, 1855. LONDON HONORARY BOARD. George Young, Esq., Mark-lane Charles Edward Pollock, F,sq., Barrister, Temple David Hill, Esq., East India House John Murray, Esq., publisher, Albemarle-street Samuel Laing, Esq., Chairman of Brighton Railway Sir John Thomas Brings. Admiralty Leonard Horner, Esq., Home-office John Taylor, jun., Esq., C.E., Queen-street -place LONDON AND THE SUBTODS. CENTRAL AGENT. Hugh M'Kean, 4, Royal Exchange-buildings, Cornhill. DISTRICT AGENTS. Captain R. R. Ridge, 49, Pall-mall, Agent for the West End Distric Benton Seeley, 2, Hanover-street, Regent-street AGENT FOE KNIGHTSBRIDGE AND PIMLICO DISTRICT. James Harris, Estate Agent, 29, Lower Beigrave-street, Eaton• square.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0501/0002194_18550501.csv
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THE,A.I RE ituY AL ILAYMA.BahT. It of Mr. Backstone. THIS EVENING, Will be performed THE BOHEMIAN GIRL. Characters by Me , sr4 Sims Reeves, Weiss, Manvers, and Farquharson; Miss H. Gordon, and Mrs. Sims Reeves. After which, a now Extravaganza, called THE NEW HAT MARKET SPRING MEETING, 1835. To conclude with POPPING THE QUESTION. ROYAL PRINCESS'S THEATRE, OXFORD-STREET. under the Management of Mr. Ca.taiss THIS EVENING, Will be performed LIVING TOO FAST. To be followed by FAUST AND MARGUERITE. princip al characters by Messrs. C. Kean, D. Fisher, Raymond, Cathcart, and Saker ; Mrs. Wlnstan'ey, Misses C. Leciercq, Daly, and K. Terry. To conclude with (16th time) a Romance, in two acts, entitled THE MULETEER OF TOLEDO ; or, King, Queen, and Knave. TILEATRE ROYAL ADELPIII. Proprieta, Mr. B. Webster.—Directress, Madame Celeste. THIS EVENING, WU be performed KING O' NEIL, Characters by Mess - e. C, Selby, Garden, Parse' . e, J. Bland, L. Murray, &c,; Mrs. L. Mur- ray, Miss Wyndham, Ste. To conclude with A NEW EDITION OF VIE FAIRY TALES Or MOTHER GOOSE, with numerous highly-coloured Illustrations. ROYAL OLYMPIC THEATRE. Lessee and Manager, Mr. A. Wigan. THIS EVENING, Nrod be performed TUE WEL9II IRE:. Characters by 3f, ears. Emery, Leslie, and Danvers ; lldiss Stephens, arid Miss Ternan. After which, the Comedietta, called LAW FOR L ADIESI. Cha- racters by Messrs. A. Wigan, G. Yining, H. Cooper, Danvers, and Miss Castleton. To be followed by the Fairy Extravaganza, called TAE YELLOW DWARF AND THE KING OF IHE GOL..) MINES. ROYAL STRAND THEATRE. Under the direction of Miss Rebecca Isaacs. THIS EVENING, Will be performed Donizetti's Opera of THE DAUGHTER OF THE REGIMENT. After which, KING QUEER AND HIS DAUGHTERS THREE. To conclude with THE WATERMAN'. ASTLEY'S ROYAL AMPHITHEATRE. Lessee and Manager, Mr. Wm. Cooke. First night of a Grand Hibernian Ballet THIS EVENING. The Interesting Equestrian Drama by Nelson Lee, called, THE FIELD AGAINST THE FAVOURITE ! After which, the SCENES in the CIRCLE, including Mr. W. Cooke's Dwarf Elephants. To conclude with, first time, a Grand Ballet, by Mrs. G. Healey, Called, THE LAKES OF KILLARNEY. A new Military Act Drop, painted by Fenton, has been added to the Embellishments. Box-office open from Eleven till Four. =Stage Manager, Mr. W. West. Acting Manager. Mr. W. H. Cooke. Equestrian Director, Mr. W. Cooke. Jun.
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newspapers//0002090/1855/1127/0002090_18551127.csv
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BEDSTEADS AND BEDDING. THE cheapest and best IRON, BRASS, MAHOGANY, and BIRCH BEDSTEADS, AT H. R. WIGNALL'S, 54, LORD-STREET. BRANCH FOR IRON BEDSTEADS:-17, 19, AND 21, ROSCOE ARCADE WORKS :-TOXTETH PARK. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES GRATIS.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0120/0002194_18550120.csv
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lhOi 4 4t4billh ed b 1 ' St • .ie t ttk th ch (I N1 11 Pe P4_TB00146 ' . I tt i l 0 ' ( h o ttorated '-' .' ~ to jAboutenienc - t -, !, * ofd - ~,- • ittiodr e e(Lper* CO UNTR Y Mil REIE TS• \ t i , ,, a ,, or IA ~ . 4 tan(lo -- 4- tol l , wwn a . . emai l ts . re, LIVERPOOL—JAN. 19. , .1 041 , u nsof a The Corn-exchange this morning opened $ 171 , 4 : 3 , , ' ,..7 x otim pas, and holders of wheat and flour regal!. ?, ; ,„ 77 , o k e ale"' '. Lae prices ; the millers and dealers, however, 11 _4 0 1i4 i ii:,_ Ticta r i, sparingly. In a few instances ld to 2d per bu'_,,,,„a . 1 u cir ,..., went was made on wheat, and Gd to is per !ef' o ol. . , ii; on flour. Indian corn sold at fully late pri c 4444,1 34 a NI as no alteration in any other article. i 1 , 1 , 1 1.11 - ----- WAKEFIELD—JAN. 19. I,,atiO . .':tt nti PL' ol n - 1 The wheat trade has recovered to some ei' ro w , . s ; - t , wh o 7;ghte panic which existed last week, and this me 00 , ~ ; . ol ,,_ n ti generally demanded considerably enhansed Pr o f . 7 ?,•43-C v .. checked the sale—ultimately a moderate ext.o_L„ tof % t u g ' was done at 2s to 3s per qr. over last veek's 0 '" -- ; 4 4 /tsppy 1 • 44 '4 a cill „ Nth EXETER—DEC. 17. 4 .,, a fib 14 ,2efe ren l ' a COIIN.—In our market wheat may be ( 1 11 '!'i i tlinti 11;r 411 :t. ' to .Ss 9d. Malting barley, 4s 0.1 to 43 Gd ;.01 IP tr itiett,: Od to 3s Gd. Oats, 3s Od to 3s Gd. ' ' Od. Peas, ON Oil to 60s Oil. P C4 ' i OY4 L FLOUR. —Fine, 52s Oil to 53s Od ; l _ ,, Lo t% Od per sack. vi P . - RIK a nd the CATTLE.—Prime beef, lOs Od per score ; C , _ lb.. . I ;rgsa b y 121. to 161. ; butchers' calves, G. to 7d, Plost! , ktil4 . teice et , .lves 00s to OOs each. Sheep, 5Ad to 5i d . , or) , '' iDi *Re Od per lb. Store hogs, large size, 00s to wi , 60 Cl it :4l Ap 20s to 32s ; small, Os to 00s. Bough i' We Cs Pork carcases from 9.3 Od to 10s Od per score. .71118to r ; 31. ---- ( 44 11I 'ratar seconds, ~ il INVERNESS.—JAN. 1 6 . INA ' ' -le i excei CORN.—Wheat, white, per qr., 70s Od to 7 1 0, 110 . li ley, chevalier, 30s Od to moils oil ; ditto, 0 0131ra° ' , i c , 30s Od. Oats, 28s Od to 30s Od. 4., 0 2.5 0°' '' kOltb 4N' r MEAL.—Oatmeal, per imp. boll 24s 6cl i i - 0 , 1 ,0 ' - -,0„/, second, 00s Od to Os Od; barleymea l, ''''' OOP , ~, .' 7 41 ea peasemeal, Hs 8d to Os Oil; bran, per stetrito, ' • :-(.,„ 111 :elt Ist flour, per 2801 b, 503 Od to 56s Od; 2d e 1.!;,, i , ‘ 44, OOs Od ; oatmeal, best, per st. of 141 b le_ ,' to Os Od ; ditto second, Os Od to Os Od ; "' O O, 31 - ' 11% ) 741..._ O , to to 00s Od. ; peasemeal, is 8d to Os Od; let_!tlit„.: :, °4 'lst 3s 6d credit; 2d ditto, 2s Gd cash, 2 s 9d e ,' ..„ 115 . .T . 9. BRISTOL SUGAR—J- 114 ' 1 J 'i - The market quiet, and transactions , io c oif„ . ' to a limited extent. For refiners' goods nights% (Iv PAN demand, and tho currencies of this day s ell "' 11, - +ll, --' tained. ; ih ok ' , 1 / I .....0 0 , 3' • I k tb rt ______. ________-.----- . 1 , `V Ito k 0 COAL MARKET.—JAN. 19 '• 0 1 44 4 si* the • ) , ss , Prices of Coal per ton at the close of - 4 , .} toNV4 vo gso l ,,t ' t A I / 4 h . s. d. .. 0•'" ; ' $1 111 4 4 Burnhope lB 0 Gosforth . ............. .. • ' 41k 11 , Chester Main 20 0 Harvey Vi r Y l '" .. , ON ' l 4 Howard's West Hartley Hilda ............ • V, Netherton 2III 6 Riddell ............. ..* O h . r,., i Ravensworth Hartley 2l 0 Hartlepool ..... ;„..' . lti tt rt'N'' f Stobart's Hartley ..... l7 0 South .„ , k rth e , Taufield Moor Walker Primrose ... 1 1 6 7 LWohwitßwieti.etblibu.o..• • N a .... 4.... frit Grey's West Hartley 2O 6 Cannel ........ .. Wylam 19 0 Ci ' ,• - ti, 4t , .._ _______ Avei r- o • t' ' . 4 11 COURSE OF EXCHANGE.—'r-- ..',.' 0 t l Ani5terdam............ 11 15% Gibraltar ..,:ii. j, Ditto, three months .. 11 18 Leghorn •• ' ..,' e . ) k ., a Rotterdam ............ 11 18 ; Genoa • • • ... ::,••`‘'# 4 o'st,„! e Antwerp .............. 25 30 Illilan •••• ..... 0 0 1. 4 1: :k0g., ,r Brussels ..............25 39 Venice.. •• • . ...!' , ,0 ; t, ' ; llamburgh .......... - 13 5% Naples ...... • ..,.,,, ja a Altona ................ , Palermo '. ... # • ), Cc E, Paris. . 't Ditto, three months .. 25 32V, I Lisbon .• •••••:.•'',' Nk t „,_ ,_ Marseilles ............. 25 323( i ' Oporto .• . ..'„, 4,4 li t i' e f tur to. Bourdeaux ...• ........ inio Janeiro.,..'d 13 F. ankfurt.on M sine .... 117%, B u enos Ayr,l•Stie ~., Berlin New Yorlt,w' • ••',,, ' t h Ap . ,.._' ). 'Vienna..........•• .... 12 34 Philadelphia ';;;Ill 47 Claw a Tri , ,5te........ • • •..... 12 36 PEICF,s or e . , 001 4,, ail 0 Petersburg .... „ ...... 36 Fore i gn Gold ;of , ' Madrid ............... 50% Portugal Gold _LL ~.• I , . ; Cadiz .......... Barcelona ............ ,-:Asv Donal ';‘,o 5evi11e...... ......... Shyer in ball ,•. ,
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1129/0002194_18551129.csv
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THE gUri, LONDON, THURSDAY ENTEN;Nn NOVEMBER 29, 1855. LINES !, SED KI XNIr RAlLwx7h. Compan C l'4lllL yester la). Bedford and Bletchley Buckghamsh. Clydesdale Col. Stour Vy. Sud. and Hal. E. Lin. g. 6 pc E. Un. H. Sh. Glas. Barr. & Neils. Direct Do. New._ Glstr.dr Dn. Fr Hrtlpl. Dk. & Railway London ic N. Wc.A. CaMon E. Un. E C Gt.Nrttin E. Count Caldonian 90 - 93 95 - 100 128 - 132 Hull & Solby Do. Shares. Do. Shares. Lon.&Greenw Do.Preferewe Lon.,Til., &S. Lowestoft gr. 4 per cent. Do. 6 per ct. Manch. Bxtn. and Matlock Middlesbro' & Redcar. . Midld.Bradfd Newmarket Bury Eaten N.& Est.s p.c Do. 6 rer ct Do. Fixeds p Prest. & yre Do. Shre. A Roystn.& Hit. Shof. Roth and Goole g. 5 p. c. Shrews.&Her. S. Staffordsh. Wear Valleygr 6 per cent Do Wilts&lorerst Gt. \Testa Yk. New. & Ben*. Y.&NM Do. Do 168 I S. Bastes- Do Peto Js Co 12i -: 13 d 1121 —117 k Norfolk Do L. & N . W & Midid. Stckton & Darlingt. Midland 24 - 24 89 - Gl all all all all all 1.00 18d En. COlll3. I E. Count. D 0... id E 5 b 7 Do.. L. &N.W Do fis iii Gt Northn Lanoash & Yorksh. T. Brassey M. MClean Stoat. & Darlingt D 0... ...... ltWes tn. 71 - 3 - 2i I 294 - 304 83 - 85 SHAKE, 107 -- 109 104 -- 106 80 - 83 90 ---• 92 1 100 5 100 all 93 - 95 15 - 16 ii 2 6. par 11i 121 57 - 59 112 - 114 104 - 106 96 - 99 i i d n 91 -9/ tO St. 20 50 all 100 10 100 1100 100 all all 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 all 511 all 100 all all 100 6 -- 6i 85 -- 90 80 -- 85 60 -- 85 15i -- 1 6} 94 10 67 . 69 17 -- 18 8} -- 9 1k -- 13 id 1;10 - 132 20 12i 25 20 10J 25 10 ..0.6 JO 5 St. 25 all all 11 an all all all al l •• • .... *IN • •4 , 1 ... 129 -13' 92 - 11 - 4 - 4 ••• ---- •N 1 11 - 2i - tom Fria „. Anglo Austria. Gold Anglo Californian knatralian 144 5 97 - f 9 88 - 90 21 - 34 •• ••• f fd 93 - 95 12i -13 i id - Pa' 9') 93 9 - 96 ... - *.- .Buitnes, this ...ay 18 die ••• - • •.. 4 -- ltr ••• -- ••• 2/ - 2ikl 'ES. instraliau Cordillera Ave Maria Baden (Gd. Duchy of) Shonarvon Iron and Coal .. British Iron. grazilianlmp.(isamx: at £5 pm.) 4 - 5A Do. Coaes k Culab k Do. St. John Del Rey ellarendon Cons. Mi•• Co, of Jamaica....,' Cobre Copper Colonial Gold Copper Min. of Eng Do. Pref. 7} p. cent , Copiapo. Fortuna General pni 13 Gt.NuggetVeinßog. Groat Polgooth Gt Wheal Vor United Liberty Linares Lusitanian Mariquita Now Granada Nouveau Monde Pontgibaud Silver Lead Min. & Smelt Port Philip quartz Rock Rhymney 1r0n..., Do. New - lantiago de Cuba >math Australian Do. Scrip Do. 10 per cent Pref Pin Croft... United Mexican Waller West Mariposa Worthing Mining o 1 Australia Yuba 2 - 23 - 2/ -- 31 30 -- 32 W - iP 63 - 67 27 32 3 id 18 20 par 13 —l5 1 - z 1 • - id 1 7i 1 13 - 14 I - 1 21 - 23 6 - 8 3 - 4 1 - I , .. all all all 129 3 3 / 4 - 4 - 1 ipso "''' woe x d MISCELLANEOUS. 25 173 Australian Agricult. 26 27 27 le all Amaraln. Royal Mai - 4* 5 10 83 Berlin Water Works 7 73 d 60 40 Brit. American Lane ' 1IX) 323 Canada — 140 140 5 St. WO Canada Gov. 6p. ct Jan. ana ;idly 1073 1084 109 5 all Crystal Palace. 2* 21 2* 5 5 Do. Preference 4 all Crystal Pal•of Franc( 1 Duston Iron Oro 20 11 Eastern Steam — 5 all En.&Aus Cop Sm Co 1* 11 25 24 Electric Telegraph 176 •-• 183 1 '.ll Electric Teleg. of Ir. 5 all Gon. Iron Sc Collier .•• 15 14 Gen. Steam Navigat. 1Z all General Screw Steam 20 10 Irish Beetroot Sugar 20 10 Magdalena St. Navig . 10 all Aecliteran. Elec. Tel. 8 -- 10 10 9 Vrexie,an&S.Amoricn 64 1 all Nat. Pat. Steam Fue, . 10 5 Netherlands Land.... .1/ 10 all Do. Do. 5 1 Do. 8p c P iss at 1 d die— par 2 1 NT. S. W. Coal do Inter . Steam Navigat. Co. ... 100 80 New B. & N.S. Land 1 all N. B. Australasian — 20 15 Nrth.otEuropeStaan 1 all Oriental Gas 1 2s. Do. New 5 all Peel Rr. Ld. & Minrl. 2 24 2 4 50 all PeninsularScOrienta 683 50 10 Do. New ...p 15 2 all Portland Iron Co 100 60 Royal Mail Steam ••• 1 ,a 1 Scot. Austral. Invest. 1j 1 1 Ditto New I 25 all South Australapod 34 3 1 al; Submar. Tel. Scrip_ A 1 all Jo. Registered I — 3 20 5 I'rnst& L.Co.U.Can. 100 284 , Tau Diontonerland 13 p 15 14 ANNIVERSARY OF THE POLISH ISSU RECTION. This day being the 25th anniversary of the Polish in- surrection of 1830, the Polish exiles resident in London attended the funeral service at the Roman Catholic chapel, Sutton-street, Soho-square, for the repose of their countrymen who fell in this and other national struggles, after which they assembled in Sussex Cham- bers, Duke-street, St. James's, where a meeting was held. Colonel Chevalier WIEROINSKI occupied the chair, and in opening the proceedings warned his countrymen to be on their guard against the Polish doctrinaires, who maintain that the present is not the time for the Poles to take any part in the war against Russia. Eighty-six years of the most dreadful national calamities—four par- titions, and the dungeons of the spoliators are filled with Polish martyrs ; and while in all parts of the world the bones of Poles bleached on every battle-field, and the Polish blood flows profusely everywhere, these cold cal- culators tell you now it is not yet time. Oh ! my brethren !—(continued he)—Now, and now only, is the right time to show to Europe and to the world that Po- land is not dead—that she is ready to perform her old task of watching over and shielding the liberties and the independence of the civilised part of Europe. Captain CHAS. SZULCZEWSKI proposed the first reso- lution, which was as follows : That the Polish exiles in this meeting a'sembled de- clare solemnly and conscientiously, on behalf not only of themselves, but also of their countrymen, whether dragged unwillingly to serve in the armies of the Czar, or subject in their homes to the degrading oppression of his govern- ment, that the resolution of the whole Polish nation again to constitute itself into an independent State, openly asserted iu arms this day 25 years ago, so far from having been shaken or diminished by the unparalleled civil and religious persecution which the Polish people have suffered in the meantime, has become, on the other hand, oven yet more deep, unwavering, and immutable. In proof of which solemn declaration they appeal to the indisputable fact that Polish prisoners taken during the present war, to wh ttever class of life they may belong, seize with avi- dity the first opportunity offered them of entering the ranks of the allies, and fighting against their former After observing that the vitality of the national spirit, and the devotion of the Poles for their country, have not suffered any diminution, continued thus : Since the ultimate downfall of Poland in 1831—since the event that made us all exiles, we have never met to commemorate that event under such important circum- stances for us as the present. There have been, since then, it is true, various periods of great commotion in Europe, which have. raised our hopes and made us put forth new energies ; but at those periods the wisest among us were always fully aware that if we were to succeed it would be in spite of governments, armed with an extent of national power which their sympathis- ing subjects did not possess, and that, therefore, our chances of success were so much the less, and were, indeed, dependent upon the overthrow of those governments. Now, however, it is very different. Though not avowedly, and not even designedly, the mightiest powers of Europe are now leagued to- gether to do battle for Poland—for whoever fights against Russia fights for Poland ; and, though timid politicians may shrink from acknowledging it, the restoration of Poland must be one of the consequences of the present war, or the war will prove to have been waged in vain. Now, therefore, it is not only the popular sympathies but the governments of Europe that are enlisted in our cause, and the governments of Europe, backed by the enormous strength bestowed by the full and hearty con- currence of their people, and the restoration of Poland has become one of the essential conditions for the resto- ration of peace in Europe. But, if this be so, fellow- countrymen and fellow-exiles, the part we have to per- form and the duties we have to fulfil are also different, and it behoves us to take a serious view of our position, and to make up our minds to consider no sacrifice too great to secure, when the time comes, the open and willing aid and co-operation of those who are now perhaps only fighting our battle because they cannot help it. While addressing you on a recent melancholy occasion, when we had met to do honour to the memory of the truest and noblest friend that any oppressed nation could ever boast of, Lord Dudley Stuart, I took the liberty of alluding to the unmerited reputation for disunion which has ever clung to us as re nation, and to the diversity of opinions entertained in the emigra- tion as to what ought to be the form of government in Poland, should our beloved country ever be restored to independence. I would now fain dwell further upon the subject, and beg you to reflect that if the hopes which have been so frequently frustrated should at length be realised as a consequence of the present war, our country will, in this ease, have been restored through the aid of a European coalition ; and that, as has been truly observed by our countryman Count Valerian Krasinski, in one of the many works which have made his name illustrious in exile—we cannot, therefore, expect that the form of Government to be introduced among us will be left en- tirely to our own decision. What we have to do now, in expectation of the propitious event is, therefore, to train our minds to acquiesce readily in whatever neces- sities the conjunctures of the times may impose, and to sacrifice even cherished theories and predilections in the cause for which we have made so many other sacrifices. To do this will, I think, be the more easy, if we will but , take an unbiassed survey of the world's, history ant ob- serve, that no nation was ever founded and no state ever developed itself according to political theories. The principles of a nation's growth, the elements of its great- ness, lie hidden in the innermost recesses of its being, as, also, in the nature of the country which it inhabits. To seek out, to recognise, and to nourish these, is the task of the patriot and the statesman—- and we have all been so long absent from our country, so many forces of which we have hardly any know- ledge have been in action there during our quarter of a century of exile, that, should we over be restored to it, we would have much to learn before we could be in a position to judge what would be the best possible form of government for us. That, in the first instance, it would be sufficiently free to allow of its being gradually improved we have a guarantee in the principles that govern the present war, and render it so popular throughout Europe ; and with this assurance we ought to rest contented for the present ; for, to recommence our national life with dissensions on the subject of preconceived theories, whose adaptation to the circum- stances of the country we had had no means of test- ing, would, indeed, be to prove that the early dis cords that have made our intestine broils proverbial in Europe did not spring from our old absurd constitution, hut in reality had their root in the national character. On the other hand, by discarding all subjects which have hitherto proved apples of di,cord amongst us, by work- ing together with one heart and one hand, and bringing all our energies to bear on the first great task before us —the reconquest of our country by faithful service iu the armies that are now combating Russia —we shall,on our side, be giving the best gu a r a ntees for the fut ure, we shall be acqui r i ng th e esteem of those Governments without whose aid we can hope to achieve but little, and we shall be gaining the confidence even of those who have chosen to number the Polish emigration among the rankest revolutionists and firebrands of Europe. In saying this let me not be misunderstood as wishing to cast any blame upon those peoples, who, having in vain exhausted all other means to secure their rights, trampled upon by foreign despots, have atlength had recourse to arms to free themselves from the hated yoke. To number ourselves among such has ever been our greatest glory ; but I do deeply deplore that, owing to the aberrations of a few members of the emi- gration, the name of the Poles should have become, in the minds of so grew a number of persons, identified with the cause of those visionary politicians of all na- tions, who would subvert all existing governments and overthrow all established institutions in order to create a new world out of the chaos ; and it i 3 because I think that irreparable injury is done to our cause by allowing such impressions to gain ground that I have taken the liberty of addressing you on the subject, and that I would implore all of you who think with me to seize every opportunity for proving that not only is the restoration of Poland an event necessary in the conservative in- terests of Europe, but that the Poles also deserve to be numbered am eng the conservative and progressive nations of Europe, inasmuch as they wish nothing more than to be put in possession of their country, and quietly to develope its resources and capabilities according to the laws which nature and history may have pointed out as the most appropriate. It is by acting in accordance with such principles that we shall be most effectually aiding the cause of political liberty throughout Europe, and help- ing to promote the liberation of the other nations, who are sighing under a yoke similar to that which weighs upon Poland ; for nothing has contributed more to rivet the chains of these nations than the wild schemes with which their names have been associated. The eyes of the Western Governments of Europe have at length been opened to the fact that R uss i a is the great revo l u ti on i st of Europe ; and, this truth being once recognised, it will not fail to work out its consequences, which must plead advantageous to all oppressednatemonusn,trayndt,ofinitasilyfo,rlmeaedr to the restoration of our beloved independence. Col. PRZTIRMSKI Seconded theanresolution. LuslKowsKl Lieut. JACKOWSKI proposlutiFd,on seconded, the followi n g evo : aaseru eled on this national anniver- o that the will soon find the Poles, sary, have some reason to land under tyheirown to themselves on their na tive 6 consider it their duty lenders he the s Y 'th e eir illustrious chief, bief Prince and commanders, and ex- press their gratitude t through his unremitting labours, wh° ' . sa •ulties, has succeeded in pl ac - Ad am Czartoryski, and amidst insuperable di on so elevated a footing ing the cause of our be- forecountry the civilised world- ed andL ieutenantGLElNlcH F. N. ZABA, Esq"ll7°tsion' seconded, the third re which. was as follows : . exiles, in retern for the it is the chit,' of genearous hospitality which the English re their righteous war against Russia e c i o n n g se c q o u m e p n o ce sed of of at p l o e l a e s s t ) Allied Governments the efficient assistance whimacrheran(yioubf one-fourth of the gnss ian Polish troops officered by proved devotion to their contribute • and therefore this meeting country, can 'aloe° tenders its sincere thanks to ' the English Government for to perform e this service, by decreeing enabling the Poles the formation of a distinct Po i l l is corps under the com- a Ilene°illustrious in the annals of mend of ZamsYski , and Major Giolgud Li eu t enan t Jlakowiez proposed, seconded the following resolution, which is as follows: That this meeting offers its grateful ack now l e d gmen t s to the most noble the Marquis of Breadalbane, tho Presi- dent, and to the Council of the Literary Association of the Friends of Poland, for their unceasing endeavours to keep before the eyes of the English public the real condition and just claims of the Polish nation, as well as to alleviate the sufferings of Polish exiles in this Mr. Golczewski, a young Polish gentleman, who has recentle escaped from the clutches of the Czar, and came to England as a volunteer to the Division of Cossacks of composed by hirapelf, breath: , the Sultan, recited, a poem, ing most patriotic senthaesga,ancl readiness of the young generation of the Poles to shed their blood for their much-oppressed country. After a vote of thanks to the chairman the meeting separated.
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missioner. The results may be very briefly summed up. Lord CLARENDON declares that the inquiry which has ended in the complete exculpation of Sir J. BROOKE from the charges made against him, has, at the same time, brought to light abundant evidence of the beneficial results of his administration of the affairs of Sarawak, which are exhibited by the establishment of confidence and the increase of trade, and are such as to de- serve the approbation of her MAJESTY'S Govern- It may be assumed that the very unpleasant controversy which has so long been carried on has now terminated, and that all unprejudiced persons may rejoice in the unequivocal and honourable acquittal of a very meritorious public servant, and the clear and distinct acknowledg- ments of the benefits he has conferred on his country, and those in whose affairs he has so energetically and usefully concerned himself. THE STAFF IN ME CRIMEA. The Head-quarters Staff is now as follows : Commander-in-Chief—Sir W. J. Codrington, K.C.B. Aides-de-Camp to the Commander-in-Chief— Captain the Hon. H. W. Campbell, Rifle Brigade ; and Captain Ponsonby, Grenadier Guards. Chief of the Staff—Major-General C. A. Wind- ham, C.B. Aides-de-Camp to the Chief of the Staff—Major Lewis and Captain Erle. Quartermaster-General—Colonel the Hon. Percy Herbert. Assistant-Quartermaster-General—Col. the Hon A. Hardinge.. Deputy Assistant Quarterma3tors-General—Cap- tain Willes, 77th ; Captain Torrens, 23d ; Captain Vacher, 33d ; and Captain Hammersley, 14th. Military Secretary—Lieut.-Colonel Blane. Assistant Military Secretary—Major Coyle, 89th. Surgeon to Commander-in-Chief--Dr. Fowler Smith. Adjutant-General—Colonel Pakenham, C.B. Deputy Adjutant-General, and Deputy Assist- ant Adjutants-General—Lieut.-Colonel Kennedy, 18th ; Captain Thompson, 4th ; Captain Luard, 77th ; Major Dowbiggin. Principal Medical Officer—Dr. Hall. The escort consists of a troop of the 11th Hus- sars, under Captain Vansittart, and of two com- panies of the Rifle Brigade, under Major Fyers.
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newspapers//0002642/1855/0113/0002642_18550113.csv
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HER MAJESTY'S THANKS TO THE FRENCH TROOPS. The Times gives the following u a translation of a general oi4er issued by General Canrobert upon the receipt of the Queen's I)eepatch upon the con- duct of the French troops at the battle of hiker- mann : GENEHLL °RIAU. The Commander-in-Chief is happy to have to communi- cate to the troops the expressions, moist honourable for our arms, in which her Majesty the Quern of England appro. elates their conduct at the battle of lokermanr. The Queen has remarked with grateful eatiarattiot the vigour with which the troops of her ally, the Emperor of the French, came to the assistance of the divisions of the English army engaged in so unequal a combat. Her Ma- jesty is profoundly erosible , of the cordial co-operation of the Commander-in-Chief, General Canrobert, and of the valiant conduct of that distinguished officer, Gen. Bosquet. She behold. in the cheers with which the soldiers of the two nations mutually encouraged each other during the action proots of the reciprocal esteem which this campaign and the traits of hr yit has produced have given rise to on both sides. Her Majesty the Queen of England could not praise in • more fisttering manner the attitude of the army at the battle of lukermann. In marching to the aid of our brave allies we fulfilled a duty which they themselves would fulfil towards us with that valour we know they possess, and so many proofs of which wit have witnesse d with our own eyes. Head-quarters before Sebastopol, Dee. 28. The Commander-in-Chief, CANROBERT. (Countersigned) Tan GINZILAL Cuter OF THE Sian. FOREIGN ENLISTMENT PROHIBITED AT HAMBURG. OP Tall DAILY reswa.) HABIBURG, JAN. 9. • What I wrote you in my last in denial of the newspaper paragraph, cite Tartare, of the formation of a British enlistment office in this city, I am en- abled to-day to confirm folly. As far hack as the year 1816, the Senate of Hamburg published a de- wee forbidding the enlisting of soldiers on Ham- burg territory for any foreign government, under heavy pains and penalties. It is probably in con- sequence of the false reports circulated in the Ger- man papers that the Senate have thought proper to publish in their official gazette. the Hamburg Carre- Cart, a renewal of the prohibition, which settles u f ee l4 tion. The decree rune as follows : The supremo t3saate of the free flanseetic City of Ham- burg finding It nassmary to renew the repeatedly published regulations eigaimet die enlistment of men for foreign mili- tary N o maims so ibliews. I. No ems Is genaltled to enlist men for foreign military monMe in this oity and rri its tetory. Whoever is convicted ef enlisting, either publicly or in private, will be immedi- ately arrested sad imprisons!. and if he should happen to be a stranger, his_will be haaished from the territory end severely muddied if Mover return again. Any person not baying d and irectlyin enlisted reernita, but convicted of haring sewed/ directly erstravened this ordinance by aid ialf_sti elsellallot _sabers is the en listment of troops for a meg pewee. sem be raddled is the same moaner as if a Ibe WINO a sebrilpel. Strangers against whom even a well. groaadadlimpielia al mintraveniag this ordinance be enter- tained. will We be permitted to remain in the cdty , mil Alld lis I S. ierel inhabitants of the city s ad territory, more isepeetauy OWSUS of hods sad lOdliarbOnees for (raw( Till
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newspapers//0002642/1855/0219/0002642_18550219.csv
54
, 19. 1850. Tb. following Mtn is from Mr. William Grilllth, al Port Ma Aos, Cataanomoblze, now en beta H.K.S. Pori Albert 11.11.8 ! Royal Albert. of Sebastopol, lan. $O. dear Cousin,—Ever also. we arrived here the wea- ther has bees anything bat cheer*, heavy falls of snow, With awful squalls from the N.H. owarriag for the loot three days, but this mogul cent ship behaves like a risk; although s►e had a twist of the rudder from very leery pitching one night. That was fortunately very shortly pat to rights. We are now moored, blockading the entrance of artheatepol, about throe miles dktast—that is, within rang• d oar pivot guns, of the same calibre as those we walked from the Edinburgh's flouter at Borausuad. How soon we may lave Ike pleasant of Wolin our metal here is kept profoundly secret. Something, however, awed out lately that Admiral Lyons (charming fellow be is, I like him uneomasoaly) had, after • late eonsultation with the generals, hinted when all was ready at • • sad his complement of wow •hips had arrived • • • he would • • • We are massed •pprivy their largest three-deeker, the Twelv e Ariake. You would be amused at the calculation made by our lads as to what she is worth as a prize, for we are at a sad loss to have a tag with her. No doubt that will colas sooner or later. Thank God lam happy to say I enjoy ea- eolleat Mettles lanai, bet from what I hear and Geo through my glum matesionally of the conotry around, my deer liar own is shore must be suffering beyond precedent. I hays nothing farther in the shape of news, bet thank you for the letter of Des. 3, and the papers. My seat letter will bring you, I suppose, the tidings of a cork leg or a gold chain.—Your affectionate ocoasin, 'I Vitt. Clairstra, C. G.. 11.11.8 Royal GENERAL RINPSO24.—In the first notices of this dilates appointment in the Crimea army the command of the Sad Division wee assigned to him by repute. Lord Palmerston's explanation on Friday night, however, shows that he will exercise no military contstanti in the field. Ste lordship thus defined General Simpson's duties Wet have not hitherto had in the British army an officer simile to him who, in foreign armies, bears the title of Chief se the Staff.' The consequence has been, that all the details of the quartermaster's and adjutant-general's departments have bees brought to the Commander-in• Chief, much to hi s aaa.isenience, and have tended to abstract his sues- tios -on from matter; of greater importanos. Major-General Simpson, an officer of distinguished genies, who is well keown for his Bermes in the Peninsula, at Waterloo, and in India, Is going out immediately as chief of the staff; to have the control and command of the quartermaster's and adjatant-generePs departments, and with power to recommend to Lord Raglan say changes which he may think ought to be made with respect to the persons belong. Log to those departments; and Lord Raglan will no doubt feel it his duty to adopt any ressommeadations which Gen. Simpoos may make to him upon these
newspapers//0002642/1855/0219/0002642_18550219_mets.xml
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0612/0002194_18550612.csv
91
Thirteenth Edition, fcp., 4s. 6d., cloth lettered. STORIES of OLD DANIEL, for the Amuse- ment of Toting Persons. With Frontispiece and Vignette. London: Bisapkin, Marshall, and Co.; Whittaker and Co.; and Houlston and Stoneman. pgREN - OLOGY APPLIED to PAINTING and SCULPTURE. gy EtEORGE COMBE. Bvo., pp. 178, 3s. 6d. boards. London : Simpkin, Marshall, and Co., Stationerstew '-hall-court. Edinburgh: Maclachlan and Sart. New Etition, with Eight Woodcuts, and a new Frontispiece, by J. Morin, Fcp. 3s. 6d., cloth, lettered, THE SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON, com- bining the FDLIT and Siam Scams in one veltune, without any abridgment of the narrative. The Friar and Sworn) Slams, dcmy 12mo, 5.1z0s type, 58. each, cloth, lettered, are also on sale. London : Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. ; Whittaker aid Co. ; Sou l- Ston and Stoneman ; and S. Low and S on. Of whom may bo bad STORIES of OLD DANIEL , with Frontisp i e c e , &c., 4s. 6d , cloth. lettered. KEEPER'S TRAVELS ; the Adventures of a Dog in S ea rch of his Master. Frontispiece, &c., Fcp., 4s. 6d., cloth, lettered. ____-------- THE FAVOURITE HIGHLAND CLOAK so justly celebrated as a guarantee against wet and cold. — Have you got one of MACDOUGALL'3 favourite Highland Cloaks? If not, you should at once order one ; they are size th e r, height of person is a suffi c i en t measure. Patt erns of what tkey are made can be sent by post. Price , from 255. to 465. These cloaks, and Macdougall's Highland Twe eds, Tartans, sc.,gro., may be seen at 24, Brewer-street, in a line with Glasshouse - street, Regent•streat London, from 2 to 6 o'clock, until 151 July. when Macdougall return; to Inverness. ROYAL OPERA, DRURY-LANE. Lessee, Mr. E. T. Smith. THIS EVENING, Will be performed Donizetti's Grand Opera, called LUCIA DI LAMMEMOOR. Characters by Madame Gassier, Signer Gassier, and Signor Armandi. To conclude with a . Gra n FRENCH BLET, supported by mdllo. Palmyra. Mdlle. Paolo, if. Triant, &c. AL Prices of admission:—To the two galleries, 6d.; second circle of boxes and pit, ls.; dress circle, 2s. 6d. ; stalls, 4s. ; private boxes to admit two persons. 10s. 6d.; four persons, one guinea. Box-office open from 10 to 6 daily.
newspapers//0002194/1855/0612/0002194_18550612_mets.xml
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0425/0002194_18550425.csv
94
VISIT of the EMPE] This magnificent event h; worthy enthusiasm ; all the people and voices in a hearty welcome ; skill and industry have appeared, the resources et the nation have b; GARMENTA made by F. MOSE: universal commendation, as the ul broadest commercial basis. The newest Fabrics of French and English Manu acture are ready for inspection at E. Moses and Sox's Establi,hment. French Novelties i i Ladies Dresses, Mantles, Hosiery, &c , are just received be E. Moses and Son, and their elegance will give as much p easure as their su- periority and cheapness French and Engli,h Hats and Caps the perfection of style. ROR of the FRENCH.— as passel off with the most praise- le seemed happy to raise their hands ; ma y manifestations of English , and in the most pleasing forms; ieen held up for admiration ; but the 8 and SON have been the su.ject of inion of France and England on the employ of E. MOSES and Sort, and their Sprint and summer Attire dispia , s more novelty than any previously exhibited. French ffovelt es and Fngllsh excellences In the most bu-iness- like arrangement at the establish- ment of E MOSES and SoN Emigrants' Outfits to all parts of the world. The largest Wholesale Clothing, Shirt, and Boot and Shoe Depart- ment In the Kingdom. French and English Artists of the greatest distinction are in the E. MOSES and SON are Merchant. Tailors, Clothiers, Flatters. hosiers, 'hlrt Manufac- turers, Bolt and Shoemakers, and General Outfitters for Ladies and Gentlemen. C&uTToN.—E. MOSES and Sorg beg to state theyhave no connexion with any other house in or out of London, except their own Esta- blishment., a.; follow: London dity Establishment, corner of the Minorles, and Aldgate (opposite the church). London West-end Branch, New Oxford-street, corner of Hart• street. Country Branches—Sheffield and Bradford, Yorkshire. Colonial Wholesale Branch —lf elbourn e, Australia. The establishments ai c closed from suni.et on Fridays till sunset on Saturdays, when business is resumed till 12 o'clock. IMPORTANT.--Should any article not give satisfaction it will be ex- changed or, if preferred, the mor.ey returned without hesit4tion: All goods are marked in plain figures, the lowest price, from which no abatement can be made. A New Book, with lists of prices, system of self-measurement, and other information, may be had on application, or post free. An Illustrated Almanac for 1855 gratis, on application, or post free. Ici on panics Francais. I Qui si paria Italian. Hier spricht man Deutsch. I Aqua se habla Espagnol. fHE SECRET INFIRMITIES OF YOUTH AND MATURITY. ost published, price 25., illustrated with cases; free by post for 30 stamps, VER VOVS DEBILITY; Its Causes, Symptoms, and Cure.—An Essay on Spar- matorrhcea, with Practical Observations on a safer and more niecessful mode of treatment of the diseases of the Generative 'ystem, obtained by the use of the Microscope in detecting and rstinguishing, by urinary examination, the real pause and effect of very variety of complaint, whether arising from solitary habits, xcesses, accident, or climate, followed by practical remarks, founded m twenty years' experience in the treatment of Impuissance, Cervous Debility, Local Weakness, Spermatorrhata, &c. To which tre added, Commontaries on the Physiology of Marriage, with pre- •autionary hints on the evils emanating from empirical pr: ctice, sod on the dangerous remedies advocated by various write. 3 on these important disorders. By SAMUEL LA'MBRT, M.D. 37, BEDFORD-SQUARE, LONDON, Doctor of Medicine, Matriculated Member of the University of Edin• burgh, Honorary Member of the London Hospital Medical Society. Licentiate of Apothecaries' Hall, London, &c., &e. The essential object of this treatise is to point out the fearful con- ,equences resulting from certain habits, irregularities, and excesses, vhich have proauced more misery in Youth, degradation in Man- mod, and premature decay at all stages of Life, than, perhaps, any Other class of disease known to modern pathologists, Its perusal is . tarticularly recommended to persons entertaining secret doubts of their physical condition, and who are conscious of having hazarded tne health, happiness, and privileges:to which every human being is e ',titled. It is absolutely necessary thatall men should know, that there are •rinciples of personal management which cannot be violated without incurring grievous penalties, and when wisdom and regret succeed the heyday of inconsiderate self-indulgence, how these penalties nay be mitigated, how the sting or heir bitterness may be removed, trod how the evil and its consequences may be avoided, and above all, hat there I .s scarcely any degree of physical infirmity or functional terangement to which the timely aid of science cannot apply a cure. 'heAnthor has for a series of years been engaged in an extensive iractice in the treatment of these delicate complaints, which have nifortunately been too generally confided to the care of ignorant empirics, who inflict great injury on those wh are induced to place faith in their pretensions. NERVOUS DEBILITY may be had, price 2s, of Messrs. Piper, brothers, and Co., 23, Paternoster-row; Hannay, 63,‘ Oxford-street ; cfcrne, 19, Leicester-square; Mann, 39, Cornhill ; or free by rest for t sirty stamps to any address from the Author's residence. 37, Bed- f rd-sq tiara. home for commltation daily from Eleven till Two and from Si. , tin Right. ROYAL NAVAL SCHOOL, NEW CROSS.— Sir Charles Wood, the First Lord of the Admiralty, has handsomely expressed; through Admiral Bowles, the president, his intention of continuing to give annually, for competition among such of the students of this institution as are the sons of naval and marine officers, the marine cadetship, which was first granted by the Earl of Ellenborough, and continued by his successors in office. Prince Peter Dolgorouky bas just issued, at St. Petersburg, two volumes exhibiting the genealogy of the entire body of the Russian nobility, with authentic par- ticulars as to the origin of their families, the part they have sustained in history, and the services they have rendered to the throne and la Patric The "Irnperia' Government favours this work, its policy just now being to humour the noble classes,
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newspapers//0002642/1855/0928/0002642_18550928.csv
49
MINCING-LANE.-THIS DAY. Fluomx—The market opened on Tuesday with a firm and active appearance, and extreme prices were paid, but to- wards the close of the week the demand was lees animated, and the result shows a fair go amount of bovines dons at last wetk's currency, the transactions in cargoes of foreign afliat have been few. The refined market has been swirly, good brown lamps Ms., grocery 55t. to 565. CorrEE.—Thers bavo been large quantities of plantation Ceylon offered in public sale tbi. week, and a portion was bought in by the importers to suetalei prices. TEL —The telenraphic despatch received this morning from China has canoed some excitement in the market, and. holders very generally refuse to sell at yesterday's prises, although there appear to be large buyers at those rates. Medium Coupe is inquired for. RICE —A very large amount of business was done at the commencement of the week, at a slight advance ; since when the demand ham been limited. Rum —A large business has been done during the week at fully Id. advance. Leeward., 2s 4d. to 2s, sd. proof; fine Demerara, proof, 2a. 81. ; Jamaica of high strength, 31 10d. to O. 2d. B.tuarlerkE.—The demand has been limited, and prime have with difficulty been supported. Smits —A fair business done this week at full prises. COTTON.—The transactions have boon low sad unimpor- tant this week; prices are unaltered. JUTE hag sold at previous rates. Inox —Scotch Pig declined to 784. 6d. FAVlT.—Currents : The market has been rather inactive, but prices have been supported. Raisins, Valeocias : a large business has been done to arrive, at 41s. to 425., importers now refusing to sell at 435. New muscatels of fine quality sold at 801. to 105 s. Pim, sew Turkey, sold at 80s. to 87e. In other articles no material alteration.
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newspapers//0002090/1855/0703/0002090_18550703.csv
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FURNITURE, WINDSOR-STREET. By Mr. BRANCH, On FRIDAY next, the 6th instant, at Eleven o'clock, on the Premises, No. 66, Windsor-street. THE valuable HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE of a Lady declining Housekeeping, comprising Sets of Mahogany Chairs, Sofas, Mahogany Card and other Tables, Brussels and Kidderminster Carpets, Mahogany Camp Bedsteads, Feather Beds, Hair Mattresses, Mahogany Bureau, Mahogany Chests of Drawers, Gasaliers, Painted Chamber Requisites, Kitchen Utensils, &c. To be viewed on the Morning of Sale. when Catalogues may be had on the Premises, or at Mr. BRANCH'S Offices. FARMING STOCK. &c., MARSH-LANE, BOOTLE. By Mr. BRANCH, On TUESDAY next, the 10th instant, at Twelve o'clock, on the Premises, Sandfield-villa, Marsh-lane, Bootle, near the Railway Station, THE Undermentioned FARMING STOCK and IMPLEMENTS, the Property of a Gentleman giving up Farming and leaving the Neighbourhood, namely, Two valuable Cart Horses, Broad-wheel Cart, nearly new, Cart Harness, capital Milch Cow, Calf, and Stirk, Iron and Wood Harrows. Turnip- cutter, the Stone Erection of a Stack Bottom, Two Ploughs, Pig Troughs, Iron Hurdles, Cucumber Frame, Hand Garden Glasses, various other agricultural and Garden Utensils, and Miscellaneous Effects. To be viewed on MONDAY next, the 9th inst., when Catalogues may be had on the Premises, or at Mr. BRANCH'S Offices, in Hanover-street, Liverpool.
newspapers//0002090/1855/0703/0002090_18550703_mets.xml
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1126/0002194_18551126.csv
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I xi,ooo I .fs o 0 £503 I £3 0 0 Forms of Proposll, Prospectuses, kc., may be obtained at u, ',lief Offices, 42 and 43, Poultry, anion, between 10 and 4 o'clock FRANCIS COBHAM, Registrar, THE NIGHTINGALE FUND. The noble exertions of Miss Nightingale atd her associates in the hospi tals of the East, and ihe services rendered by them to the sick apt , wounded of the British forces, demand the grateful rec , gnition of th. British people. It is, therefore, announced that, with the view to s nubile subscription, in order to render a tribute of national respec , and admiraticn to that laity ' and, at the same tim e, g reatl y eolarre her sphere of usefulness on her rtturn to England a PUBLIi MEETING will he held at illis's Room, King-street, St. James'x, on THURSDAY, Nev. 29, at Two o'cloct, at which His Royal Highness the Duke )f CAMBRIDGE has graciously coniente ' to preside. The attendance of ladies and gentlemet is, therefore, requested a' such tu , eting, where a series of resoluticrls will be proposed, and s. public subscription entered into. Meanwhile subscriptions will be received by any of the London Provincial, Irish, or Scotch Bankers. The tight Hon. SIDNEY lIERIERT, Hon. Secs. S. C. HALL, Esq., F.S.A., .6 pro tern. A list of the provisional committee ani all requi.ite information may be obtained at the office of the Nightibrale Fund, 5, Parliament street, where cards of admission to the mettin , t will be issued. ORPHAN GIRLS.-NATIONAL ORPHAN HOME, Ham Common, Blchmond. The next ELECTION will take place atthe Home on MONDAY. JANUARY 21, 1856, at 12 o'clock. Appieationa on behalf of can- didates must be sent in on or before Saiirday, - December 8, ad- dressed to The Honorary Secretaries, National Orphan Home, Ham This institution supperis and educates orphae children of all ages, and from all parts of tie kingdom. Life Subscriptio a, 101.; Annual Subscription, 11. JOSEPH BROWN, 51. A., Rector of cirlstchurch, Blackfriars, RICIID. WHITTINGTON, M.A., Chtpter-house, St Paul's, Honorary Secretaries. November 26.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0503/0002194_18550503.csv
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THE SUN, LONDON, THURSDAY EVENJNG, MAY'3, 1855 LAW INTELLIGENCE.-(THIS DAY.) CHESTER RACES. COURT OF CHANCERY. (Before the Lord Justices of Appeal.) (THIS DAY.) (BY ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH.) ETURGE V. THE EASTEEN UNION RAILWAY COMPANY. . The arguments in this part heard appeal from the de- cision of the Vice-Chancellor Wood were resumed, and occupied their lordships the whole morning. The facts of the case may be thus shortly stated :—ln .December last, the Vice-Chancellor Wood granted an njunction restraining the Eastern Union Railway Com- pany from making a dividend among the ordinary share- holders until the claims of the plaintiff and the other 6 per cent. preference shareholders should be discharged. In the month of March last, the defendant appealed against that decision, and that appeal motion having been ordered to stand over until the case was ripe fur bearing—the cause and appeal motion now came on for hearing. DEE CUP. Orson Helmet Seven ran. WELTER CUP. Georgium Sidus Dalkeith Three ran. LATEST BETTING. DEE STAKES. sto 4on Corcebus 4to 1 agst Lord Alfred sto 1 agst Claret Mr. Bolt and Mr. Hawkins, who appeared for the plaintiff, were heard yesterday, and The Solicitor-General, with whom was Mr. Selwyn and Mr. Webb, addressed the court to-day. (Before Vice-Chancellor Wood.) HOLYOAKB V. BATES. DERBY. 9to 2 agst St. Hubert (taken) 6to 1 agst Lord of the Isles (taken) Bto 1 ag , t Rifleman (taken) 9 to 1 agst De Clare (taken) 14 to 1 agst Cruiser (taken) 15 to 1 agst Wild Dayrell (taken) 16• to 1 agst Dirk Hatteraick (taken) 16 to 1 agst Kingstown (taken) 25 to 1 agst Flatterer (taken) 40 to 1 agst Rylstune (taken) 50 to 1 agst Benhams (taken) 66 to 1 agst Bonnie Morn (taken) This case came before his honour upon motion for an injunction to restrain the defendant from selling needles and wrappers, with the name and similar to those used by the plaintiff. Both parties were needle manufactu- rers, carrying on business at Redditch, Worcestershire, and the real defendant, Mrs. Gardner, who, previous to her marriage, was a Miss Hoiyoake, supposing that she had a right to use her maiden name of Holyoake, had sold the needles under that name, and with similar labels to these used by her father. MEETING OF THE BRITISH RESIDENTS IN PARIS. The Court refused to grant the injunction, but gave the plaintiff liberty to bring such action as he might be advised. A numerous meeting of the British residents in ARMY BEFORE SEBASTOPOL COM- MITTEE.—(THis DAY.) The committee reassembled this morning at the usual hour. Sir Thomas Hastings was recalled, and his examination was resumed by Lord Seymour. He in the first instance stated that he was not pre- pared to say whether the requisitions sent to the Ord- nance in June last for a supply of warm clothing, to be sent out to the East, were made verbally or in writing. Communications of that description from the War-office were frequently made verbally. When the Duke of Newcastle was in office, all orders were covered by a general sanction. In reply to Mr. Layard, the witness stated that he did not know whether there was any record of the in- structions in his office, but there certainly was the record of the execution of these orders. By General Peel—When he did receive a written order for the warm clothing, he acted upon it without delay, as he was fully alive to its importance. By the Chairman--When a requisition of that sort was sent to you, do you think it ought to depend upon your memory when you are asked about its execution ? The witness replied that the record of it if sent would not be in his office but in the office of the Secretary at War. The Chairman—l suppose, therefore, if we sent there for it we can have it ? Witness—Undoubtedly. Examination contiaued—When this requisition ar- rived he (witness) was in the country, but he was sent for, as the authorities at home said they were getting into a state of perplexity relative to the warm clothing. There was a difficulty about enforcing a contract—but he informed the Board that it had been entered as a minute of the Board, and that it ought not to be quashed or rescinded. He did not inquire into the cause of this because it might have given rise to an unpleasant feeling. Lurd Seymour—We are not inquiring into questions of unpleasant feeling. We wish to get at the manner in which business was transacted at the Board of Ord- nance. Did you inquire why the contract was to be quashed ? Witness—No. The Chairman—Why did you not Witness—All I thought of was to carry out the con- ;met, and to insure a speedy and proper supply. Lord Seymour—l wish to ascertain whether or not the contractor had received orders to stop the supply ? Witness—l believe he had. Lord Seymour—Did he tell you so ? Witness—No, he did not inform me himself ; but I inferred that he had bad orders to stop the supply from what Mr. Stacey, the storekeeper, told me. He told me that the contract was stopped. Lord Seymour—Did he tell you on what grounds. Witness—He did not. Lord Seymour—By whose order then was the contract stopped ? Witness—l cannot tell. The Chairman—Do you not, then, see what takes place, or have you to depend merely upon hearsay ? Witness- -Generaily I do not see what occurs under the Board. The contract might have been stopped by Mr. Monsell, or by the united order of the Board. General Peel here suggested that there were surely minutes kept of the proceedings of the Board, to which the witness might have had access. The Chairman—Do I understand that you were not allowed to see the minutes ? Witness— Oh, no ! When any of us leave town the minutes of the board are not forwarded to us. The Chairman—But when you came back you might have seen them ? Witness —Certainly, but I did not. I was satisfied with what Mr. Stacey told me. I had no official infor- mation of the fact. _ . Mr. Layard—But minutes are usually kept of all orders, are they not ? Witness—Minutes until lately were kept regularly of all proceedings of the board ; but I will not undertake to say there is a minute relative to the matter now be- fore the committee. It being the duty of the clerk of the Ordnance to communicate with the Secretary for War, and he was in the habit of bringing verbal orders from the War-office, which were at once acted upon—a course which was never used antecedent to that time. These orders were binding on the Ordnance although sent by word of mouth. I was there, and am still of opinion that public business of that kind should always be re corded in writing ; and although the ♦erbal order of the Secretary for War wat binding on the board at the same time, I thought it was ,important and essential that a written order ought always to be given, with a view to its being properly recorded, and in case any question should arise, that the original order should be there to verify the execution of its directions by the board. In reply to General Peel, the witness stated that, under a Secretary at War no order of that sort could have been taken except through his positive directions. lie did not think the abolition of that office was any improvement. By Lord Seymour—lt was probable that the whole proceedings connected with the contract being irregular, DO minute was kept. It resembled correspondence rather than an official act. Some further conversation ensued respecting the de- tails of management at the Ordnance•ofhce, and the quantities of warm clothing ordered last summer, after which, The Chairman said—l have heard it stated that at tLe hospital at Scutari socks of a size for children were issued to the men. Would that be possible, accord- ing to your mode of conducting business ? Witness—lf we had proceeded as we do in ordinary times, that would haw° been impossible ; but in thin case there was great hurry ..nd confusion. The Chairman—Do you think it possible that it occurred? Witness—lt is possible, but Ido not think it is probable. The Chairman—Did you never hear of such an occur- rence ? Witness—l heard that the socks were not of a full size. (Laughter.) Mr. Layard—Did you ever hear also that the shoes issued to the men were not of the full size ? Witness—l think that is very possible. Examination continued—On the 7th August he ap- plied to the Admiralty for tonnage fo r a l arge quantity of warm clothing. They did not reply immediately, as it is not the custom to reply until they had tonnage at their disposal. They had no tonnage at disposal until the 16th October. The Chairman—And you remained quiet all that time Witness—l made no less than nine applications, [LEFT SITTING.] OXFORD, May 2.—By the death of Sir Henry Bishop, .Duc. M as., the Professorship of Music in the University, founded by Dr. Heather, has become vacant. Sir Henry was appointed in 1848, on the death of Dr. Crotch. The appointment is vested in the proctors. The price of wheat in England during the first quar- ter of the present year has been more than 50 per cent. higher than it was in the quarter of 1853 that ended on the 31st March, but Os. 7d. per quarter lower than it was , in the beginning of 1854. Beef is 25 per cent. dearer than it was in 1853, and 7 per cent. dearer than it was in 1854. Mutton has been cheaper than it was in 1863, and so have been potateee. Paris and its neighbourhood was held yesterday at the English Embassy for the purpose of voting an address of congratulation to the Emperor and Empress on the escape of the former from the hand of the assassin Pianori. Lord Denbigh presided. The proceedings opened about three o'clock, when the Chairman rose and spoke as follows : Gentlemen,—My own heart tells me that it would be an insult to any assembly of Eng- lishmen to suppose it possible that any per- suasion could be requisite to elicit an unani- mous expression of the utmost abhorrence of a dastardly attempt to assassinate even the humblest individual in this or any other country. Can it therefore be necesssary for me, at such a meeting as this, and on such an occasion as the present, to endeavour to excite feelings which, judging from my own, I am sure must burn in every breast—- feelings in the first place of deepest gratitude to- wards a beneficent Providence and the Almighty Disposer of all things, for having so mercifully pre- served a life of priceless value—feelings of deepest indignation at the atrocious act which has im- perilled it, and feelings of congratulation towards the whole of civilised Europe, but more espe- cially towards this great country and our own, at the preservation of a life the value of which no estimate can measure and no language adequately express. Need I remind those now enjoying the hospitality of this magnificent city, so embellished by the taste and munificence of the Emperor, and who are dwelling in security in this happy and prosperous country, how lately it has been raised, by the Emperor's energy and wisdom, from a state of almost hopeless anarchy, misery, and danger, to its present high pitch of prosperity and happi- ness? Need I remind Englishmen, who have so lately witnessed the unparalleled enthusiasm evinced by all parties and all classes in England towards their Imperial Majesties, what the Emperor has effected in extinguishing, I for ever—- that hereditary enmity between France and Eng- land, hitherto supposed to be inextinguishable How he has converted a heretofore mere conven- tional alliance between the two countries into a hearty brotherhood—an affectionate union hence- forth to be deemed indissoluble, as being cemented by the best blood of England and France, shed by our brave armies, fighting side by side in the cause of justice, freedom, and civilisation ? Need I enlarge on the fatal blow which would have been struck at that sacred banner had the assassin succeeded in his distardly attempt ? But we may join the Em- peror in his recent noble reply to the French Se- nate, and assure him that we, in unison with his own chivalrous feeling, fear no assassin while en- gaged as lie is, heart and soul, in accomplishing the glorious mission committed to him by Divine Pro- vidence. He has nobly fulfilled the one part in restoring the great country to her present exalted station of world-wide glory and power, as well as of internal peace and prospe- rity, and can any one doubt that he will, through God's help, fulfil the other part, and that so righteous a cause as that of establishing an hon- ourable and permanent peace throughout Europe must and will continually triumph ? After con- gratulating ourselves that this attrocious at- tempt did not happen, as might have been the case, in England, we may likewise con- gratulate our French brethren that it was no Frenchman who raised his cowardly band against so precious a life. Dear, however, as that life is to England and France, and precious as it is to the whole of the civilized world, we must not forget that there is one illustrious person- age to whom, above all others, it is immeasurably dear—even still more precious—and, however, feeble any language of ours may be to convey to the Empress any adequate expression of our deep sympathy and sincere congratulation, we may hope that her Imperial Majesty will graciously accept an assurance of these coming from the heart,as I am sure that ours will do. There is one other topic of con- gratulation as respects ourselves, to which I will briefly refer, and that is, that out of the many millions whose feelings doubtless respond to ours on this occasion, we English residents in Paris are alone graciously permitted to enjoy the highly gra- tifying privilege of expressing to their Imperial Majesties those sentiments of veneration, sym- pathy, and congratulation which will be embodied in the address now about to be moved for your adoption, and which, I trust, will receive your unanimous The Earl of Donoughmore said that, after the very able address which had just been delivered by the noble chairman, it was unnecessary f or hi m to expatiate on the object for which the meeting had been called. He was perfectly convinced that there was not an English heart here, or in any part of Europe, that did no t f ee l t h e d eepest indignation at the base and dastardly attempt that had been made on the Emp eror N apo l eon ' s lif e, an d which, had it succeeded, would have ruined the cause for which the French an d E ng li s h troops are fighting so gloriously side by side. (Loud cheers.) It had indeed been whispered about previously to the departure of the Emperor for England that from the number of discontent e d re f ugees collected in England from every country, the visit was not a safe one, and some cowardly attempt on his life might be apprehended, and disgrace thereby be thrown on England. He thanked Almighty God that such fears hack proved unfounded, and that the Emperor had returned in safety from the Eng- lish soil. It was also a source of great satisfaction that the late base attempt at assassination had not been made b . y a Frenchman--(hear, hear)—a n d the brave allies of the English were no t sta i ned with the reprobation attached to such an act. (Cheers.) He would not dwell longer on the subject, but express what he felt certain was the un an i mous feeling of the meeting, his heartfelt gratitude to Providence for having stretched his shield before the Emperor, and preserved a life of such infinite value, not only to France, but to all Europe. (Cheers.) I now most heartily move that the able address drawn up by Sir Henry Ellis be adopted. (Hear.) Lord Mayo having seconded the motion, the ad- dress was read and unanimously adopted by a show of hands. It was afterwards signed by all the per- sons present. The following are the names of the deputation to wait o n the Emperor with th e a dd ress, on the proposition of Lord Gray, seconded by Sir H. Bulwer :—Earl of Denbigh, chairman ; Earl of Mayo, seconder of address ; Earl of Donoughmore, Mover of Address ; Lord H enry Lennox, M.P. '- Viscount Fielding ; Lord G ray o f Gray ; Count Testa Ferrata ; Hon. Major Feilding Coldstream Guards ; Honourabl e G eorge Barrington ; Hon. Spencer Cowper ; H o n. S ir Fl eetwood Pellew, Rear-Ad miral ; Sir Joh n H arr i ngton, Bart.; R i g h t Hon. Sir Henry Lytton Bulwer, G.C.B. ; Right Hon. Sir Henry Ellis, G.C.B. ; Lieut.-General Fox ; Sir Joseph 011iffe, M.D. ; Mr. Lawrence Peel ; Mr. Evan Baillie, of Dochfour ; Rev. Dr. Hale ; Rev. Robert Lovett. The West India mail steamer Atrato has brought 180,0001. in specie. ADDRESS TO THE EMPEROR OE THE FRENCH. —At a Court of Aldermen, held yesterday, Alderman Sidney proposed a resolution indicative of the profound sorrow with which the Court had heard of the recent attempt to assassinate the Emperor of the French , and tendering to his Majesty and the Empress an expression of grati- tude to Providence for having frustrated the diabolical design, and preserved Fra nce and Europe from anarchy. Mr. Sidney, in making the proposition, expressed his admiration of the heroic and manly bearing Mr of he Alder dis- tinguished monarch in the hour of dang a er. .t '- mn Farebrother, who seconded the proposal mi , said he agreed with Aldermen Sidney in his ad ration of the con duct of the Emperor when the late atrocious attempt ;.made upon his life. The proposal was unanimously agr eed to, and it was determined that the resolution should be presented to the French Ambassador by the Lord Mayor and the mOver and secoAder, as a deputa. tion from the Court of Aldermen.
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Entrance Up the Steps, GOOD KID GLOVES, In every Shade of Colour, THREE PAIRS FOR 4s. 6d. The very best Paris Ditto (System de Jouvin), 23. Pd. per pair, AT THE NEW LACE WAREHOUSE, 50, BOLD-STREET, Corner of Concert street, WILLIAMS AND CO., SOLE PROPRIETORS. J. WR E FO R D HUNT, (Successor to W. PENN SMITH'S GAS FITTING WORKS,) CHANDELIER AND LUSTRE MANUFACTURER, 28, HANOVER-STREET, LIVERPOOL. The LARGEST STOCK of REALLY USEFUL GAS FITTINGS, on view from 8 a.m., to 6 p.m. GAS FITTERS SENT TO ANY PART OF THE KINGDOM. 28, HANOVER-STREET. GREAT REDUCTION IN PAPER HANGINGS, AT - . . 22, GREAT CHARLOTTE-STREET, NEAR RANELAGH-STREET, LIVERPOOL. ESTABLISHED 1842. R. J. STAUNTON returns thanks for the very liberal patronage lie has so long received. Having recently purchased for Cash, from the most eminent Manufacturers in the trade, 60,000 DOZEN of SUPERIOR ROOM PAPERS, he is now enabled to offer Goods of the best quality at prices that will totally defy competition. Builders and other large Cash Purchasers will find R. J. S. can give them better value than can be obtained in any Shop or Sale-room in town. 'OBSERVE, 22, GREAT CHARLOTTE-STREET. NO CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT IN LIVERPOOL. EXTENSIVE ALTERATIONS AND ENLARGEMENT OF PREMISES,
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(Pion the Dailg News.) If the Manchester soirée of last Friday evening was intended to be a demonstration iii favour of what are called ,peace principles, it was a signal failure. The senior member for Manchester himself hung fire. He explicitly declared that the world is now consti- tuted war may be And even with regard to the war in which we are at present engaged, Mr. Milner Gibson confessed that he does not see his way clearly. with regard to the he honourable friend of mine said to me, We know—we have heard your hunourable colleague on the war, and we know what are the views of the honourable member for the West Riding; but where are you ? We should like to know where you are on this question.' Well, sir, there is such a thing as a man not knowing exactly where he is. I know that is the case at sea sometimes, with ships under the command of skilful navigat )rs, in thick and foggy weather. When they have not had an observation for some time they have a very vague idea as to their actual Mr. Milner Gibson, accord- ing to his own account of the matter, is exactly in the same condition as Punch, in the puppet-show of the Deluge, when he halloos out, hazy weather this, Mister And the company addressed by Mr. M. Gibson appear to have been quite conscious that,like him, they were, in so far as the war was concerned, at sea in a fog. They received his confession with a tolerant and approving laugh, and they wound ti:s the proceedings of the evening by voting thanks to the members for the City fur their honest and eloquent advocacy, on all occasions, • of the great principles to represent which they wore returned to the House of Not a . word 'of the war—a question which had not been mooted at the time of the last election. The Manchester soirée is a more effectual rebuke to Messrs. Bright and Cobden, for the course they have of late been pursuing, than even the meeting at Leeds. At Manchester, if anywhere, these gentlemen were likely to be surrounded by a host of entirely sympathetic and approving friends. Yet even in Manchester they have been unable to get up a demonstration in favour of their anti-war policy. The members for Manchester have not met their constituents to render an account of their stewardship and ask the electors to declare whether they were satisfied or not with the manner in which its duties had been discharged They met a number of personal friends at a soirée held in their honour, where any language but that of laudation would have been impertinent and out of place. As an inducement to their friends to rally round them, it was urged that the strong feeling of disapprobation so prevalent in Manchester, with referencce to the language held by Mr. Bright about the war, was an insidious at- tempt of the Tories to divide the Liberal interest. A. fear of breaking up the Liberal party, and a kindly feel- ing toward the members and Mr. Cobden (associated with them in the honours of the evening), were the mo- tives that brought the assemblage of Friday evening together ; and, to allow these motives full play, it was found to be necessary to leave the. war open ques- This, in a demonstration where .Messrs. Bright and Cobden were concerned, was leaving Hamlet out.of his own play. It was as if a soiree bad been got up in Dublin in honour of the late Daniel O'Connell, with a tacit understanding that not a word was to be said about The soirée of Friday evening contrasts remarkably
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THE CAVAN ASSASSINATION. Up to the present nothing has transpired, at least publicly, which would afford hope of the speedy arrest of the murderers of poor Miss Hinds. Save to the con- spirators the perpetrators are unknown, and, doubtless, walk abroad and unmolested in the face of day, confident l o b e e a n n t of perfect immunity so long as the terrors of the a ß n 4 system are potent enough to deter even the inno c ent o _ .he from affording the slightest clue in furtherapc t t really guilty. The meeting of magra r t e e sidini : Lace when a Cavan on Tuesday, the High tied of which the following efforts of the authorities to trace home theetonort. series of resolutions was adopted, o are the principal : That we view with feelings of Resolved unanimousl sanguinary outrage m p e , to the in the utmost abhorrence the late _ and coma. of Miss Charlotte Binds. . whether result of a deeply-root e d this outrage was an isolated case, or the conspiracy, we pledge ourselves, individually and collectively, to use our best endeavours to bring the perpetrators to justice; and this meeting recom- mend that an additional pohce-station be formed in the immediate vicinity of the late outrage. That a subscription be entered into, and that the resi- dentmitted in this county in the brutal cowardly murder magistrates of the county be authorised to receive such sums as shall be subscribed. That we cannot separate without expressing the high sense which we entertain of the services rendered to the pea ce mad security of the county by our excellent Assistant B a rrister (Mr. Murphy), in his admirable charge to the qu arter sessions grand jury in Ballyconnell, and that we will cordially co-operate with him in giving the;widost cir- culation to tiat charge:,
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txrl -14^4 V •11 11 T h 'Lk . • It 0,, It 1/4 L 6.ti13V71(1 • •.. , , f.9.770,4tti laT try ;31f.1.179. 1e...2 4 : I t of c•hr:!, 4111111111 k .RRIVE THE SAME , - • . , 4, • • • • e ny STATION on ths EASTERN ' eei \' ;f/441i vv.-0 ,vui) • '4. I Free, by CLAYTON and SON, A - • ng Agents, 265, Strand, London. • • • y 41.1143-41 K ' A y 4 ar. OF 1855-6 will be at the - - *V/ - lOW ' • . + r 101' '4 - COTE NT-GARDEN. ArEv m, w,l\p , „ , . • ogoTJ 9J..2 ,!M!; an:, stoma MR. ALBERT SM to 7s. HOLLAND, UP THE every evening (except Saturday) taken from a plan at the box-, Without any extra charge), Ss. ; Itepresentons take place ever Third. at a o'clock. 13a Od Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly. - o.r •-s Od ALRGYLL ROOMS. —8 Od NOW,QPEN for tt - Od a Piston, M. HWetourt.—Doors Laurent's new Varsoviana eve; Prime THE NIGHTING] other to issue a Second Subs ne. A December. Subscriptions wi of London, the provinces, trel 13 0 ; Secretaries will be obliged 1 pe set- subscribers previous to the 22 , hat; `I? D 48s Od . Office of the Nightingale Decembe LAS' ROYAL LYCE EVENING, s week, the GRAND ELI '• • and MYSTERY, by ' ~.21 6 Wizard of the North, in ...2,1 3 of incidents, continuout ...22 0 effects. ~.22 0 Magic and Mystery i —.20 6 sassing distinctive ch ~,21 6 amusement. It is lot _2l 9 selves perform their pa ~.21 0 them on the stage and ...20 6 for though everything ...21 0 eyes of the visitors ...21 6 one thing; but it is ...22 0 pany ; a melodrama T.( ...20 9 pected denouements •, ~.21 9 ' the paha° every nigl ...20 3 travagansa, in which ...21 6 the bounds'of probat 21 6 Professor Anderso _2O • fashionable audience! ...22 0 Theatre to overflow, ...20 0 . has been enabled tc —lB 6 . tlnuous repetition. ...IX —.20 6 6 has at any time ci amount of success He would attribute - in his present enter the results of a life perfected skill in has travelled the g - spared no trouble the stage in the T 'est ofttee of the first mocha that, while ende who honour him When it is possible to dine In ' tunity should no ..r land. ever it has been - resorting to the lee. 17 the designing lee. 14 icedulous. The 937 letty )ee. lb feseor Anderso . theatre up to terest taken on many of them Tnc erten attend a belie )ec. 6 Ju( resulted, Profi his illustration )atty, duced a sensa' alt. Ito pose a mini 11,11. Is for Professor Itcartals communicath an. 11 that many of who, from tellectual att 'n.Th.Fist • been conver . easily suscer 'an. 4 evening, fro spirit-rappl Nei t. • Lyceum, 1 and elucid; public exp Anderson's multitudin names of Dec. 16. • have beer Daily from the 6thoimen tracted fr )ec. 20 ber 20, ILI tteal Tele! rwisedsli. spirit-rat fan. 1h frankly c • witnesse thorougl the who Dee. 70 solution actual b Dec. 16 . who thi rial ohj ties Uncertain above, who, s D'neerteM in Ital withoi lfclamon • the At York l /410 mese • be b reins and' sill be de acce In lir (51s itch. d tt Of lc his He ere on. tai ed has not nil bout ail in n, fil tl t( 3as been r lower. 52i to shire, 3i rem were RE quiet, -Dovers, ,ern, 524 t Banks nit)! EBi et Cent. my, 89' yes), 24 oer cent. and and Eastern, • liesh, Of r one is Lds, and Oakley' lace for ancient a pall' knottier ,d much • d found recentlY mud wog to were Er gild& on the a of the be Bola' 3edmin• 'Andsay ',raster, ie Hoe. went'n- went'n"iaptain inghter York' nel De Oppen. re. , Ceov , Eeq's logere DO. W ed 13 ni rehil stth er C of If : t stones to 7s. MR. ALBERT SMITH'S MONT BLANC, HOLLAND, UP THE RHIN% and PARIS, is now Open every evening (except 9 tturday), at 8 o'clock. Stalls (which can be taken from a plan at the box-office every day between 11 and 4, without any extra charge), la. ; area, 2e. ; gallery, le. The Morning Itepresentations take place every Tneeday4 Thursday, and :iaturdity, at 3 o'clock. Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly. No, 19,724 j Third. I3i Od - 01 -•5 Od -•••Id Od - 0(1 ARGYLL ROOMS.-LAIIRENT'S CASINO NOW OPEN for the winter selsen. Prin Cornet a Piston, M. Bidffeettrt.—Doors open at 8. Admission une Lament's new Varsoviaria every night. Prime other ne. A THE NIGHTINGALE FUND.—It is intended to issue a Second Subscription List on Monday, the 2 ith of December. Subscriptions will be received et ais of the bankers of London, the provin , cs, Ireland, and Scotland; and the Honorary Secretaries will be obliged by being furnished with the na nes of subscribers previous to the 22d December. 43 0 1 ; .peset-d, D 488 Od SIDNEY HERBERT, I Fon. Secs. S. C. lIALL, Office of the Nightingale Fund, 6, Parlia vent-street, December 17. LAST FEW DAYS. R OYAL LYCEUM THEATRE. THIS EVENING, and every evening , during the week, the GRAND ELEUSINIAN SPECTACLE of MAGIC and MYSTERY, by Professor ANDERSON, the Great Wizard of the North, in 12 acts, with ever-changing variety of incidents, continuous surprises, novel and extraordinary effects. Magic and Mystery is an entirely new entertainment, pos- sessing distinctive characteristics and peculiar phases of amusement. It is Rot a monologue, for the audience them• selves perform their parts with the principal actor, some of them on the stage and others in front ; it is not an exhibition, for though everything becomes metamorphosed before the eyes of the visitors zo one can be positive that he sees any one thing; but it is a comedy really performed by the corn• pant; a melodrama replete with startling positions and unex- pected denouements ; a magnificent spectacle, with 2,000 of ...21 6 ...2' 3 .22 0 -.22 0 _2O 6 ...21 6 ...21 9 ...21 0 ...20 6 ...21 0 ...21 6 _22 0 ...20 9 ...21 9 ...20 3 ...21 6 .. 21 6 _2O II ...22 0 _2O 0 -.18 6 ...1A 6 ...20 6 the public every night to appear as auxiliaries ; and an es• travaganza, in which all that seems to be is entirely beyond the bounds of probability. Professor Anderson returns his thanks to thronged awl fashionable audiences which have nightly filled the Lyceum Theatre to overflow, and by means of whose generous aid he has been enabled to announce Magic and Mystery for con- tinuous repetition. He believes that no professor of his art bas at any time •r in any place been honoured with an amount of success so extensive, se decided, and so unusual. He would attribute that success to three causes ; first, that in his present entertainment he has placed before his visitors the results of a life sedulously devoted to the attainment of perfected skill in one peculiar art, and to perfect which he has travelled the globe in every clime ; secondly, that he has spared no trouble nor expense to put this entertainment on the stage in the most elaborate manner, by the employment of the first mechanicians and artists of the day ; and thirdly, that, while endeavouring to provide amusement for those who honour him with their presence, he has not forgetten that it is possible to afford information also, and that the oppor- tunity should not be neglected of exposing conjuring wher- ever it has been used for nefarious purposes, or whenever by resortieg to the conjurer's arts, in an illegitimate manner, the designing have succeeded in making dupes of th ►ee, 14 credulous. 'ost office When due in t land. The 937 letters on the subject of spirit-rapping, which Pr fessor Anderson has received, from the time of opening th theatre up to the present date, bear witness to the great int terest taken on the subject of this singular delusion ; whilst many of them bear melancholy evidence to the dangers which attend a belief in the superstitious nonsense of the Spiri t Judging simply by the correspondence which has resulted, Professor Anderson's exposé of spirit-rapping and his illustration of the so-called table phenomena, have pro: duced a sensation unequalled by any previous attempt to exs pose a mischievous and impudent juggle. It is impossible for Professor Anderson to reply at length to a tithe of the communications which reach him on the subject. He regrets that many of these should come from ladies and gentlemen who, from their position in society and their well-known in'- tellectital attainments, he would least have expected to have been converts to a belief so preposterous in itself, and se . easily susceptible of being controverted and disproved. Evert evening, from the Lyceum stage, Mr. Anderson's opinions or spirit-rapping are expressed, and every evening, within the Lyceum, how tables can be made to rap is exhibited and elucidated. It is respectfully requested that this public exposition will be accepted generally as Professor Anderson's only mode of replying at full length to his multitudinous correspondents. He regrets that the names of the great and learned of the land should • have been made to figure in the documents emanating from the spirit-rappers, as for instance the following, ex- tracted from the Morning Advertiser of Thursday, Septem- , ber 20, and taken by that journal from the New York Spiri- tual Telegraph. It purports to emanate from an American spirit-rapper, Mr. D. D. Hume Sir David Brewster frankly confesses that he is sorely puzzled' at what ho has witnessed, and Lord Brougham acknowledges himself to be thoroughly nonplussed. Both of these noted men brought the whole force of their keen discernment to bear upon the solution of the phenomena; but the presence of substantial, actual hands, and the demonstrative strength of the spirits who thus clothed themselves for the time, and moved mate- rial objects about tho room, proved to be too much of a ques- tion for them to Mr. D. D. Hume, the author of the above, has recently left England, and the following account df who, and what he is, occurs in the Family Herald, No. 648: This young man, who is a Scotchman by birth, and now in Italy, is a remarkable medium for all the manifestations without apparatus. Barnum, who is well-known throughout - the Anglo-Saxon world as a splendid humbug, offered him 2.000 dollars per annum if he would perform at his museum in New York. Barnum then took it for granted that mediums could be bought. He was somewhat astonished when his offer was ' refused. Hume, on telling the fact in London lately, simply and honestly renaarkcel, that the money would have been very acceptable to him, for he was poor, young (under 24), an or- phan, and in very had health : but he would have been afraid of losing his power as a medium, and ho would sooner lose his life. The refusal, however, made Barnum thoughtful. Be inquired into the subject; and now Barnum, one of the greatest humbugs in the world, and withal a conjuror, ie one of the firrnast believers in It is cer- tainly surprising to find such a paragraph as this in the editorial article of an established journal, the editor of whoni might be supposed to be sane. Even if Barnum does believe in spirit-rapping--does spirit-rapping gain or lose by this accession to its adherents? and, with Barnum's endorse ment to it, is this bill, drawn on public credulity, more likely to be negotiated Professor Anderson would believe not ; but, when he finds that educated clergymen of the Church of England have the temerity to subscribe their names to so gross a swindle, when he finds that the Incumbent of Wortley (the Rev. N. J. Godfrey) positively asserts his belief in it, and writes a book on the subject, he considers it t' be time for him to state that which he knows of the mechanism by which it is effected, and the mischief to which it tends. In the Morning Advertiser of October 3 appears a letter from Sir David Brewster, relative to that which he saw at Cox's Hotel, in company with Lord Brougham. He distinctly states that which the Wizard of the North proclaims every night—that spirit-rapping is nothing more than conjuring applied to bad purposes. In the Morning Advertiser of the following day, however, there is an answer to Sir David's letter from one who was present when he and Lord Brougham had their séance with the spirits, in which the writer says, that the table (a large dinner-table, I believe) moved about in the most extraordinary manner, and, among other things, a large ac- cordion was conveyed by an invisible agency to my hand and then to Lord Brougham's, in which, held by his lordship's right hand, apart from any person, it played an air through- With such a statement, printed for the edification of . the people of the 19th century, with the facts before us that . the most talented men of the day aro permitting themselves to be deluded by these juggling spirit-mongers—that the greatest novelist of the age is now engaged in making it the subject of a new work, and that a spiritual has actually been advertised to be held in St. Martin's-hall, Professor Anderson trusts that his exposures of the spiritual- - fists of America, as given by him nightly at the Lyceum, will be received by the people of England as genuine honest at- tempts to provide an antidote for the bane of the spiritual ugglere. In the course of the last five weeks 100,017 persons have visited the Lyceum Theatre,—a larger number, it is believed, . than has ever before been assembled within its walls in so short a period. Magic and Mystery is repeated every even. ing, the programme being continually changed. Grand fashionable Day Performance, or Saturday, December 22, at 2 o'clock ; the programme being thus arranged ; Part L —Act 1. The Mesmeric Couch : or, the Clinical Capabilities of the Atmosphere : in which the Wizard will do by magic that which some suppose to be effected by mesmer- ism, and illustrate the possibility of sleeping unsupported in he air. Act 2. The Aqua-Avial Paradox; exemplifying the power of producing animated nature from fire and water only, and the possibility of eliciting from the simplest elements the most complex forms of ornithological existence. Act 3. Le Livre des Beeueils Choisies : or, Puck's Own Pocket Book, with Puck himself within it. Typifying the evening's entertainment in the production of the very volu- minous from a small volume, in the extraction of magnitude out of minuteness, in developing bulk where no space appears for its existence, is discovering odd things in odd places, and in bringing forth unexpected wonders from the most unlikely place for to be found. Act 4. Magical Locomotion ; or, Transition without Trou- ble. In which will be comprised—the Adventures of a Wed- ding Ring, the Peregrinations of a Bank Not., the Transfor- mation—black into white, and the Discovery of every Article in the position which would seem the most inappropriate. Act 5. L'Ecrin de Verve; or, the Casket of Crcesus. Into which, though made entirely of? glass perfectly transparent, and suspended so as to be visible to the eyes of all present, the Wizard will cause the money of his visitors to transport itself, and rain into the casket, though its lid be closed, locked, and the key in the possession of the audience. Act 6. Clairvoyance Extraordinary ; er, the Transparency of Opacity. Act. 7. A. New Bottle of Bacchus ; or, the Novel Wine and Spirit Store. An improvement upon the inexhaustible inasmuch as the Wizard's bottle will net only be in- exhaustible, but will change its contents, ad infinitum, at the word of command, producing soda-water, butter-milk, Epsom salts, Port, Sherry, brandy, gin, rum, whisky, *oyeau, or any other wine or spirit required ; and finally proving to be felled with pocket handkerchiefs perfectly dry, and occupying the whole space when tightly packed. Act 8. Half an Hour with the Spirits ; or, an Expose of fipirit-rapping. Introducing the spirit-rapping table and tocsin of the invisibles. Act. 9. Grand Mystic Amalgam, in which the property of the Wizard's patrons will undergo some strange metamor- plisses, and, amongst others, their handkerchiefs become transformed into the flags of victory—tke haw sers of E. g l a nd, France, Turkey, and Sardinia. Act. 10. The Enchanted Chair of Comus, in which he who seats himself will be under the magic spell, and appear to the audience, under circumstances least expected, in a posi- tion as peculiar as perplexing. Act. 11. The Mystery of the Charmed Chest ; or, the Nucleus of the Night's Wonders. To comprehend which the audience will have the goodness to observe, in an earlier part of the evening, the chest suspended (like Mahommed's coffin) in mid-air, into which all things will travel, and out of which all will be produced. Act. 12. The If o raological Evaporation ; or, the Slic.tast Route to the Antipodes. Illustrating the easiest mode of ridding ourselves of a troublesome friend, and the advantages of the newly-discovered dia-terrestrial passage from the west- ern to the eastern hemisphere. Doors open each evening at half-past 7 ; commence at 8. Private boxes, li. lls. 6d. and 1/. ls., to be obtained at the Box-office, or at the principal libraries; stalls, 4s. ; dr ess 'circle; 3s. ; upper` boxes, 2s. ; pit, ls. ; gallery, 6d. The Box-office is open daily, from 11 till 5, undei the direction of Mr. Chatterton, jun. Grand fashionable Morning Per- formance on Saturday, December 22, at 2 o'clock. Doors open at half-0 at 1. Jr( ertait >ec. ii )atly an. lb an. lb Mortal', an. 1) .u.Th.Ps t 7wi daVY :'wleedsin )ec. 16. )ally 6thnlntoil )cc. 20 Nvieedail , Fan. V• )ee. 20 Dec. 16 Uncertals Ltheartant l $l6 mai I &I 6 mos vill be ev ln'i, (vi° tch.,i ham not bout any n, 51 ;h, las been r lower. 152 i to shire, 31 .res were n 3 quiet, -Dovero, ,ern, 524 t Bank, iut), EN et Cent. ry, 89-- - yes), 2 4 for cent. '—Royal ,rd ant Eastern, liesh, of r one in iflR, and tiaklav* lace for ancient a pelt' Utother , d much rl found recent) ! Lnd was La were Er glirb on the 5 of the he solu• ledmia - •Jinds97 3r3ster, is Hon. •vint's- - 21tptain tughter York- nel De Oppon- , Cara' l o gere► Po. NV• ate• )r, Irshire, I,ttheo or CO' [ PRICE 4D. STAMPED 5D-
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newspapers//0002642/1855/0628/0002642_18550628.csv
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(c. 3 BEAT WES TERN RAILWAY.—CHEAP G s zcV OWN to OLOUCI D, STE CRUCIAL...SnaiI, Rosa, .irryesw.-0a SUNDAY, July I, a Train II W lasso Pd. Iret 7 am-.lfturaial tbe mit ••••: 11 1. float Ross awsl Chepstow 7.1 S ; and Olowai.ter. at 7.4 e, p a : a los er %M: - A y e s,lee and es. ; lbws. lee. Id. sod la. ed.; sad Chep. a ad 16. No lunar allowed. R. DE JONGHI LIGHT BROWN COD Win OlL.—Lawaat from the 7iedicsl Cfreigar, lllay 111. Ws unhesitatingly recommend Dr. de Jongles LlightDam A wl low Od en Ws beet tur !mike, most owe, asd well elteardesess =relate el the PrO Iled otly Wlm V leakine. Sat, es. 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II mat Is br • MID s) vim* Elbows all lEM•M imileilt:Qua: JobiarboralidMty Paw DmllmilewstraiL ILLUSTRATED TIMER—The First Chimp awl,/ sad the Pff ... sch= bi ll i C Cher.r ... ht Ur Peers. hes eh= Frielty ciersehesa et heer ' .. 7111•C rtlithiese Wwa giss all hes IN rrtre stre as hems- the Iles et Asof—st E esel la diet „ T end ell the TED TIN = l =llol Timm is GessZ niw oris. 1 r RAS - • 6 halite , . heshillik ce Pfir t zl e Nem eta seenicress arer i tellstee do Them ; Mew& Up tees The ~.,...... ell Ihe cheep _ _ in irsdheeeeper. Thu Me* A DAILY ONE LONDON NEWSPAPER, FOR SHILLING PIE WEEK. The Proprietors of the DAILY NEWS ham deteratteed that apes the Repeal of the Compulsory Stamp. , beir Eveolup Paper, the LIMO, Prise twuratica, IINiTAMPED, shall be prodaesd emblem is all the Imam of ea Imperial Newspaper. The EEPEE3B will report Pub& Weeded , . the Mosey. Etwell. lbw tad peace Mirkets, the Courts of Law and Polite. toe mills ed the day, and all matters of general Interest to the boor of pabil- The Wu and Porno tateuirsee of the Ezprest will be full, late, and tellable. The Lames will antes at least Twenty-two Colombo of Newsome latellimene and soy i-rrea•ed least) by adin-rtlessients as Its Mtn TIE be met by au lowa., to the else et the Peps?. It Imbibe published le so to teach any place with is &west, Mee it Leaden by hallway, by an early hour on the mew Or hem the Country tor aratuared copies anse i t da % emu through Is *rut la the Comely Town, sod easy be addremed to the POW er, W. KING HALES, at tbo Offlos, 10, souverinairsel. limeetreel, UNISOII. 0 16' lier T HE DAILY NEWS: LONDON MORNING 'Ana, pries ed. - it • Loft/ Liberal Joanal, ties advocated tees eastaeres sad Mal mad reams. la the eataat and Taloa of Its general news—ta tEe sesame, at tta law mart; sad is the varied mercantile and eoreateestal Wormer # l4. "t'taAsdiw dry, railway. sod lug artistes—We paper tuasoosssol — SPECIAL 00116101PONDEI1T8 AT I' Et It 964 T OF WAR. ITS POW:ION It lISVIS Id RNLI SALIt AND ISIPAIITIAL. As omissive, early report o ppins is the Wisp dim Is sap SAN W avow Overland M.S. sad It oostabis TINS ONLY DAILY YINING NIZORT. bib Ibt betais - W IT =MOM ALL orrvilive aiVERTUSIIIII3IIIII. Midday laisymAest. sal Wart yobbior we dos thu yorelbss limessespotAriesh ads payer by saasimassy alles* addreslbr Wolf obassater rig veld= bog War ism. Ts bbbliodaiZalbsireer or sambas is do Webs cir at Osseo, new* not Lesko. ILL Win*M aype l s ossi obristbl lk ei the yore by swim MI6 islomd gylmobe plillikar vll4 sa moolisas. 110 .. ism d aisespels yolk iymply it, At ibi.s4. quirtsr. lam lb @Sum tabdilie aft. PALIN NEWS lan TO READ, from 8 a.m. M ran, at Ir. tar work: orrolloa to tor n roooky, Ala., kw N. iloy, or lb. (oarkroPOl per vla WALIM. Orin M. Tomolookrtr. Wkkoltirro. 11ALLY NEWS FORWAILDEDtoth•COUNTRY by nuns° I'OBT, at lila ad. par tioupa k.lloolmile retat is ;TOM MADDOI.I% Upper trfar mai PM Agraa. PnAHA NEWS LENT TO RE AD, in Loadoe, 99 Mk NI vazter.--11/..`“ by moarliso itial.. al SI Met ymicibn., iss. id. to 19.-11. ADANA 9, 99999•99 9919199 Irortaismat. Nam boat. ____--.—..------- bAY6WATIALLI DUMB LINT TO 1/1 MD; awl swami is Ur m in gt= l , o4. ra......., is 'Norm 111. e& argeopit.
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newspapers//0002642/1855/0209/0002642_18550209.csv
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newspapers//0002645/1855/0721/0002645_18550721.csv
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STATE OF SEBASTOPOL. In a letter from the camp of the sth inst. we are told . The deserters and prisoners report that the Russian line-of-battle ships anchored in the roadstead opposite Fort St. Nicholas begin to suffer from the fire of the mortar battery on the side of the Quarantine Bay. On the 27th a shell passed through the three decks of the Tchesmi, killing and wounding several men, and then bursting in the hold set fire to her for a short time. Some days before a projectile, fired by a French vessel, berating in a work- shop near the Artillery Bay, caused the explosion of a number of loaded shells, killed several artillerymen, and caused such damage that the Russians have not since dared to collect together such a quantity of combustibles in one place. The shells from the allied vessels occasion much damage to the place and severe losses to the garrison. Their effects are more feared than those of the rockets. The number of naval artillerymen in the place has been reduced from 111,000 to 3,501), and there are now only three artillerymen for each gun. The rations of vegetables and brandy have been diminished one-half on board the Russian vessels, and the captains of them have received orders to economise their consumption of salt pork as much as possible. The commander-in-chief has ordered the inhabitants to quit the town. The opinion that the place must infallibly fall into the power of the allied armies is more and more general among the besieged, and that feeling has greatly increased their discouragement, parti• cularly during the last few days. THE BALTIC. The news from the fleet, which reached Dantzio yesterday, announces that Admirals Dundas Sey- mour, and Penaud were at Nargen. Admiral Baynes, with the rest of the fleet, was before Cronstadt. On the 14th the Raby gun-boat, with the boats of the Arrogant and Magicienne, had a sharp affair at Wiborg. One officer and one man were killed, and ten wounded. According to a correspondence from the northern parts of the Gulf of Bothnia, inserted in the Aflonbladel, nu vessels of the allied fleets had arrived as far nurth as the Umea by the 4th inst. In Wasa there were at that time 200 to 900 Russian troops, and in Ny-Carleby only twenty to thirty Cossacks. Gamla-Carleby, where they louk forward to another visit from our countrymen, has a garrison of 2,000 men in the town and th 4 neighbourhood ; earthworks also have been thrown up round the town. All pilots that formerly had their stations in the outer channel had been compelled to take up their abode in the town. The fortress of Svartholm and town of Lovisa were destroyed on the sth by an English squadron. The latter was burnt by accident, it appears, although the Russian journals speak of the occurrence as an act of wilful and useless barbarism. An authentic account of the affair is transmitted by the following despatch Duke of Wellington, Tolboukin Lighthouse, July 7. The Magicienne returned this morning from Lovisa, and I have received a report from Captain Yelverton, of her Majesty's ship Arrogant, who has been again successful in destroying a well•constructed fort at Svartholm, in the entrance of the Bay of Lovisa; but their lordships will observe with regret that, notwithstanding the humane desire of that officer, the town of Lovisa was unfortu- nately destroyed bt fire, which occurred acnitlentally, on the night following the visit of her Majesty's ships. Cap• tam Vansittan. informs me that the authorities of the town have themselves admitted and explained the accidental origin of the fire. SIR CHARLES NAPIER received a summons to attend at court for the purpose of being installed. He, however, declined the proffered boon. The United Service Gazette adds that the reason assigned by the gallant admiral, if not officially given, is well known to his friends. I have he says censured and degraded, and have been denied the opportunity of clearing my reputation. Yet am I now offered a Jny 21, 1855. THE BALTIC FLEET. (From our Own Correspondent.) OFF CRONsTADT. JULY 3.—This morning we heard, by the arrival of the Lightning, that the Magicienne has destroyed twenty.six vessels of the large description of coasting traders. In all these affairs, the Russian troops Who are distributed along the coast decamp rapidly, not choosing to come within range of grape anci canister from our vessels' broadsides ; so that, when there is no landing indiscreetly attempted, we have it our own way. There is no change in the position otherwise of the squadron to-day. JULY 4.—The Cuckoo arrived this morning from the Gulf of Bothnia, and reports that our block ading squadron there have destroyed thirty thousand tons of shipping of all sorts and sizes. The in- habitants in the islands, and on the mainland in the neighbourhood of Uleaborg, deserted their villages on our ships coming in sight, and but little could be procured in the provision line at any price. This is to be accounted for by the poor wretches who, to save themselves from absolute starvation (which would have been their fate, from the coasting trade being stoppod) sold their little stock to provide for their families, and who were barbarously punished for so doing on the allied forces being withdrawn from the Baltic. This last affair—viz., the destruc- tion of their vessels—must have been a severe blow to the inhabitants; but it is one of the melancholy effects of war, and I fear, if looked on in a right view, is unavoidable. There has been considerable correspondence carried on lately between the com mander.in-chief of the allied forces and the Minister of War to the Emperor of all the Russias, principally regarding the Hango Head affair, which of course the enemy wishes to repudiate. A flag of truce has always been hoisted, and great ceremony been ob- served, on the part of the officers charged with the correspondence, as to keeping at a respectful dis- tance from the guns of, on our part the batteries at Cronstadt, on theirs of our ships. Mucti good- natured badinage has passed between the English and Russian officers, and they appear to have been very friendly in their manner. Two soldiers, who had been made prisoners at 13otriarsund, and ex- changed with English prisoners in the East, were then returned to their country. They did not ap- pear to relish the idea of the change they would experience in their diet fiom beef and pudding to sour bread and oil. JULY 6.—The James Watt and her gun-boat returned to-day from her blockading position on the north side of the Gulf. She has dispersed all the encampments of troops that were collected along the coast, and burnt four telegraph-stations, with no loss on our side. On the south the Royal George has been employed in the same manner. Her gun- boat got on shore : one gun opened fire upon her, and others were being brought down at an immense rate by horse artillery, when she fortunately was got off—having gained her object, which was to destroy a large telegraph. This evening Much excitement was caused by all the gun-boats being ordered to prepare for immediate service. All the launches and pinnaces were armed with the brass guns, rockets, &c. The captain of the Duke of Wellington was ordered to take comtnand. Every gun-boat weighed immediately alter the signal was made, and, taking a string of these boats in tow, steered in to- wards the barrier on the north aide. Everybody was in a state of excitement and expectancy—the Rus- sian gun-boats began to move abmit—signals innu- merable were made by the block-ships outside the harbour—when, however, the gun. boats, &c., were within two miles of the enemy they were painfully reminded that we warriors of the Baltic fleet are not seriously at war, by the recal being made; and back they all came. JULY 7.—To-day, at four o'clock in the afternoon, two Russian gun-boats, I presume encouraged by our hitherto pacific proceedings up here, came out, and, after dodging about for some time, got into a posi- tion which cer',ainly endangered their being cut off by our light vessels. Two of our captains (I won't mention names, as opinions are diverse concerning the result) went on board their gun-boats, and, in spite of the recal being hoisted on board the flag ship (the admiral was away, reconnoitring on the south side), they (our gun.boats) went on at full speed. At last, all hands were certain that shots would be exchanged. The Russians moved but slowly, apparently waiting for us. In a quarter of an hour our vessels were within shot. They turned their heads towards the enemy and tired. There was a universal cheer throughout the fleet, as every- thing looked like business; when, to our astonish- ment, we saw them turn back, and steam at full speed for the fleet. I shall make no comment. All I hear are expressions of disappointment at the re- sult. The Russians steatned quietly into harbour. Had the lieutenants of the gunboats disobeyed THE PRESS. openly the signal (which was enforced by four guns), and then, having taken the responsibility on them- selves, not given some account of the enemy, they must have been cashiered. With captains (unfortunately for our service) it is very different. The admirals have been reconnoitring in every direction lately. We hear that Admiral Baynes (without his squadron) is coming here; so I suppose a grand council will be held as to our future proceedings. The weather is most beautiful, though hot, and the crews of the ships are all well, generally speaking. Admiral Seymour has nearly recovered, though he still suffers a good deal from his eyes having been affected by the explosion of the infernal machine. Apropos of machines, they are now a dead letter, though there must be plenty of them close to us. I regret that 1 cannot give you more interesting news. Indeed, we are all heartily nick of this inactivity; and many a man would give a quarterly to exchange to the Black Sea fleet. Several experiments are being made in the long range, some of which are very suc- cessful ; but it is better not to expose them as yet. THE NEW FRENCH LOAN. THE plan to be adopted by the French Govern- ment for raising the new loan of 30,090,000/. is to be the same as on the last occasion—by a direct appeal to the nation, who will have the option of taking either the Four-and-a-Half per Cents. or the Three per Cents., as follows :—The Four and a- Half per Cent. Rente at 92f. 25c., with interest from the 22nd of March last ; and the Three per Cents. at 65f. 25c., with interest from the 22nd of June. The capital subscribed to be paid as fol- lows :—One-tenth at the time of subscribing, and the remainder in monthly instalments, in eighteen equal parts, of which the first shall be due on the 7th of September next. These conditions will give the subscribers various advar t ages, equivalent to 2f. 79c. on the Four-and a-Half per Cents., and of If. 98c. on the Three per Cents. Those who pay up at once will receive a discount equivalent to this profit. These combined advan- tages reduce the price of the Four and-a-Half per Cents. to 891. 46c., and that of the Three per Cents. to 631. 27c., and are calculated to give to the sub • scriber a profit of 3f. 29c. on the former, and of 21. C3e. on the latter. In case the amount subscribed should exceed the sum required, the subscriptions of 501. of Rente and below are alone to be exempt from reduction, and all those above 50?. to undergo a proportionate reduction. As in the former loans, the minimum of the subscription will be fixed at 101. of Rente. THE PARIS EXHIBITION. TEE fbreign commissioners of the Paris Universal Exhibition, at their sitting on the 10th inst., under the presidency of Baron James de Rothschild, unani- mously passed a resolution that the Exhibition is now complete, that it is in every respect worthy of the hopes which had been conceived of it, and that it presents interesting improvements, the study of which cannot be but useful both to special men and to those who examine in a general manner the development and the progress of the human mind. Special trains are now being organised between London and Paris, to take to the Exhibition the greatest number possible of Englishmen workmen. It is al,o said special trains will go from Berlin, Vienna, and Frankfort, to Paris. The Exhibition is giving a great impetus to trade, not only in the French capital but elsewhere; in tact, many of the large houses of France are unable to complete the extensive orders which have originated from the exposition of their goods in the Palms de l'lndustrie. IN addition to the honorary distinctions bestowed on some of the colonels of the regiments in the Crimea, Lord Hardinge has conferred, in several instances, the more substantial token of a good- service pension. Colonels Cameron of the 42nd, Shirley of the SBth, Cobbe of the 4th, O'G. Hely of the 47th, H. Daubeny of the 55th, Hon. A. Spencer of the 44th, and Lord G. Paget of the 4th Dragootis, have come in for 1001. each, as a reward for dis- tinguished Ax exclusive concession for a submarine telegraph from the Dardanelles to Alexandria has been granted by the Turkish Government. The communications from India will be accelerat d from five to six days when this and the general system of telegraphs now constructing in European Turkey shall have been completed. Proposals are on foot for extending the project to India by carrying the communication via Suez and Aden to Kurrachee, at the month of the Indus, where it would connect with the lines already in operation, et in course of construction, by the East India Company throughout the various Presidencies. The entire line to India may, it is estimated, be corn pleted in two years. THE probability that Lord Melville, at present Commander of the Forces in Scotland, will go out to to the Crimea to take the command of a division is stated by our contemporary the Scotsman.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0105/0002194_18550105.csv
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• P5_TB00161 „,..„.... b ,._°IAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION. -- '.Ur."..„ following REMARKABLE NOVELTIES have been 1,4,-;•,Lity.pREPARED. I tberr by J. H. PEPPER, Esq., on Professor Wheatstone s t *Rto r Z,n„ts an the TRANIM ISSION of SOUND through Solid Con- ,ltm.p!strated by a TELEPHONIC CONCERT. ' 4I .L b p .f.: l -R f of an ENTIRELY ' NEW and SPLENDID OPTI- 4A/LoicitAMA. illustrating the VOYAGES of SINBAD the 11313t0 Pria'.- w .:.9 1 Beautiful PHANTASMAGORIA. EFFECTS, and lIoi);:.„lus!c arranged by Mr. Wand. TRIAL 0 - EVENING, the Bth inst., LECTURE to the INDBIT,SN- SPIcta. ir v,,: On PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, by Day= - Great InCria' tte. . s .. l i. siE ( -, -- ~‘ , l e in the 'VIEWS of the WAR : the BATTLE , of the '''' c '' ° cc. -''' of SEBA.STOPOL, the ENGLISH BATTLRIES, LECTITIVe: o n , War, the STP:kut NI IN . TB RIFLE, and that powerful implement of been erected by 3,1 tr,,,. Droiecting Sixty Palls per Minute, Aventno. -4424 4 and will be discharged daily and in the LECTURES on EEE.,. Mr. CRAweeen's VOCAL -ern' by Dr. B ACHHOFFNEA. _ __ _ BONGS of SCOTEAND DAVlS'Sm otis. Fo r r th e , a d n-Itory, I'ICTERTAINMIINT of the PATRIOTIC Ail the other LECT UR KS, t atrS pedal Amusement of the Juvenile I :Tesh decorations. M AR lONETTES will b_e e e xh_ i e b . it a e c ci . . R EIIIIITIONS of MODELS, Bt. . & X 4,- .1411 % VAR NoottnEN's e , ulir; 41 ' i v llusical Game, the POLY-HARMONl- pialue4l Daily b y the Inventor. Ills Large Theatre. Is open on Saturday Evenings, from Half-past :1 4 .91. Ten, with Mr. Cralrfor,Ps Vocal Illustrations of the ntic Bon d gs of Scotland, the A merican Entertainment, end Mr. 411 Ran, , ~..-._ P5_TB00162 HENRY RUSSELL, THE V37ALIST. Will shortly be published, AM AGNI FI OEN T LITHOGRAPHIC PORTRAIT (24 inches by 20). This distinguished Cotnposer may justly be entitled the of the age, from the many beautiful QOngs he h.:14 written, amongst which may be ranked, Boys, and which have cheered many a brave heart in ~be Crimea. Proof copies, is. 65. Garcia ard Co., Regent Gallery, 71, Regent-street. P5_TB00163 ;hire. P5_TB00164 idy. P5_TB00165 oudy. P5_TB00166 Cold. P5_TB00167 ondy. P5_TB00168 Time
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newspapers//0002090/1855/1009/0002090_18551009.csv
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TEETH ! TEETH ! ! R SAMUEL JORDAN, Surgeon Dentist, 72, Rodney-street, Liverpool, may be consulted on all Cases of DENTAL SURGERY, Daily, from Ten till Six, at the above address. Mr. J. has availed himself of all the New Improvements from Paris and Berlin. His method of constructing and adapting Artificial Teeth is uperring, whilst his charges will be found exceedingly moderate, and! quite as low as a proper exercise of professional skill and the employment of none but the very best materials and first-rate workmanship will admit of. 72, RODNEY-STREET. (DIRECTLY OPPOSITE MOUNT-STREET.)
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MARKET NEWS-(THIS DAY.) The show of English wheat in to-day's market was limited, yet most of Monday's unsold samples were cleared off at that day's currency. There was only a trifling inquiry for foreign wheat, the supply of which was moderate, yet holders generally were firm, and the quotations were well supported. The barley trade was dull, yet we have no change to note in prices. Malt moved off heavily, on former terms. Oats were somewhat firmer than on Monday, and prices were supported. In the value of beans, peas, and flour no change took place. ARRIVAL! THIS WREN. Wheat. Barley. Malt. t Oats. i Flour. 220 1 70 i 540 i 2,810 133 1 120 English .. Irish .• • • Foreign .. BOROUGH HOP. Our market is steady. In prices no change has taken place. WHITECHAPEL. The general demand ruled inactive today, as follows : —Beef, 3s 2d to 4s 4d • mutton, 3s 2d to 4s 2d ; 4s 4d to 5s 4d; pork, is Od to 4s 6d per 81bs. by the carcase. •
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newspapers//0002090/1855/0925/0002090_18550925.csv
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TITHE REDEMPTION TRUST. THE ANNUAL §fiiii6Sfloiiiign; preached by the Right Rev. the BISHOP of MORAY and ROSS, at Christ Church, St. Giles. Published at the request of the Annual Meeting, by RIVING- LoN p s r , oc W u a red terl b oo y -p N la o c n e .rn ; e J rn o b li e N rs, L n s d m o E f , t s h El e , G sE r c ea ß t ET Q A u ß e y en :a st t re t e h t e , London, where Copies of the Society ' s Annual Report may also Trusts' Office, 'So. 1, Adam-street, Adelphi. THE COLOURED NEWS , P r i ce One Penny. Published every Saturday, contains the Latest Intelligence, and is embellished with Richly Painted Engravings, illustrating the most recent, striking, and remarkable of the London and Provincial Fires 1 Earthquakes ! Insurrections ! Murders ! Duels ! Robberies ! Bottles ! Trials ! Executions ! Storms ! Accidents ! Plays ! Shipwrecks I Elopements ! &c., &c. Now ready, (to be continued monthly.) Price One Penny. Splendidly Illustrated. No. lof PETER PARLEY'S JOURNAL! Its contents will embrace striking points of Natural History • Accounts of the great Works of Art in Sculpture and Painting— Description of such Antiquities as possess historical interest— Personal Narratives of Travellers—Biographies of Men who have had a permanent influence on the condition of the world—Ele- mentary Principles of Language and Numbers—established facts in Statistics and Political Economy, &c., &c., &c. If I was the happy father of an indefinite number of children, I would cheerfully commit the lot to the tutorship of Mr. Parley. No man has so cleverly blended instruction with His Grace the Duke of Wellington. Also. price Id., with a highly coloured Engraving, THE BOTTLE, or the DRUNKARD'S DOOM, aed the SEVEN POOR TRAVELLERS, founded on the Work by CHARLES DICKENS, Esq., as represented nightly at the principal London Theatres. The above forms No. I and 2 of the Coloured Acting Drama, to be published Weekly. Price Id. Each Play unabridged. Also, Price One Penny. THE COLOURED SONGSTER.- Containing all the best Songs of the day. Buy one number. London FREDERICK HARwoon, 183, Fleet-street; to be bad of all News Agents in Town and Country.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/0530/0002194_18550530.csv
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Monthly, No. 1, Jane 20, gjee 4d., CLERICAL EXPERIENCES during the last QUART) , 11 of a CENTURY. Addressed to Incumbents , Curates, and all Interested in the Church. Edited by CLEEC SMITH, Formerly Proprietor and Sub-Editor of the British Magazine ; now Proprietor and Secretary of The Church of England Club and Eccle- siastical Registry, 36, Southampton-street, Strand; to whom Orders are to ha addressed.
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1015/0002194_18551015.csv
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FOSTER'S BOOKKEE i' ENG. Just published, sixth Edition, improved. To which is added, en Appendix on Partnership ettkmenti, (Mc al B.Jance Sheets, Fxamination of Government Cie Cs, 4t0., price Ss 6d., cloth. D OUBLE ENTRY ELUCIDATED. By B. F. FOSTER, Accountant. This work contains a scientific exposition of the principle. and practice of ilookkeepine, and will be found alike usefhl to the teacher, the learner, and the man of busine,s. Mr. Foster has produced a treatise which, for simplicity and clearness, far exceed anything of the kind extant."—.3anker's Magazine. Lon•!or,, printed for John Souter ; published by C. H. Law, 131 Fleet-street ; by Aylott and Co., 8, Paternoster-row ; and sold by al Booksellers. fhe Third Edition.—Just published, price 55., by post, free, s. 6.1. N TRUE & FA LSE SPERMATORRII(E2, , pith the View of distinguishing the Imaginary from th. 'teal , ufferers under this disease•, and C rrecting of wide-spreau Errors in relation to their Treatment and Cure. From - he - 4 - Traar rr Or PICK frtfitt , . With an Introduction by the Editor, containing a complete exposure of the system of terrorism and extortion pursued by the advertising quacks of , he metropolis towards those who are credulous enough to seek their aid. tiicstorc is known Lo Rug Ugh readers by his frequent practi. Liontributions to German medical literature. This is the fir,f: he informs as, that he has addressed himself to the non-rnedi- ..i.l reader. Pic trust this may not be the last, If he shall ;etect an) .ther equally flagrant evil which it mny he in his mwer to tor. - —London Medical Gazette. tribe of' ' Quiet Rympathisers.' ,nd • Medical Friends,' are mercilessly exposed; and it this boo} mold find its wily into the hands of those who suffer from the com• 'stint of which it treats, we are satisfied that many hundreds ;Tout,: invert mile' , needless suffering of body and mind, and what is of ass mpor'ance. though it is that which the quacks most prize- ,•uch ;matey ..This volume is well qualified to put an end to tlii ineirtcal system of treating Spermatorrhatia, and to place the treat • ~ ent. upon ~ note rational and physiological basis. It is, therefore k r' much ondon • it, ttalltere, 219, Regent-street. REAT WESTERN RAILWAY.- CrIE% r EXCURSION to Reading, Oxford, Katibur. , , Leaming- ton, Warwick, and Birmingham. On sTINDAY, Octoher 21st, a TRAIN will leave Paddington at 7.30 a.m., returning the same even- ing trom Birmingham at 6.30; Warwick, at 7.5 ; Leamington. 7.15 ; Bantm, 8; Oxford, 8.5 0 ; and Beading at 10 p.m. gams there and back —Oxford, 6s. 61. and 45.; Ban , ury, 8s and ss. ; Leamington and Warwick, 10s. 6d. and 6s. ; and Birmingham, I2s. and Is. Children under twelve half-price. BANK OF LONDON, Incorporated by Royal Charter, Threadneedle -street, and 450, West strand. NO FILE The rate at ;owed on deposits has been raised from this day to 4/. lOs. per cent. MA PTHEW MARSH ILL, Jun., Manager. October 4, 1855
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1008/0002194_18551008.csv
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aSi Lartc2-altire. Edinburgh& G 1 go r. Ed inb. and Peebles..., Edia. Plitt &Dur dce Forth & Clyde J n Furness . Do. Extension.. Glasgow & S. West, , Great N. of Scotlnd. Great Northern...... ' Do., A. Stock Do., B. Stock Gt. Sth. &West.(lre ) Great Western Do. Stour Val. Ital Gna. Stk Irish South-EaF.tern. Lancaster SI; Carlisle ;Dn., Thirds o. New Thirds hnoaBh.andYorksh Dn. Wet. Riding.Un. Liv:Crsby.&Southpt London & Blaokwal.' Load. Bright &5.C, , ,t, I Lond. and. N. W os.th iDo. PHU:a Do• Eighths London andS. We 3tal Do., £&U ... 'Do.; .L4ll La I .,nd.rry& Col erain , ' Lndadri r. & Ennink Kanch.Fh e f. k Li rici Do. Shares, No. 1 5 ,, ., Ma , Lin. Un, Metropolitan Midland Do. I iirning. 4tidld.G.%est. (i re, ! I tio„ Hall Shares Noweastle& Carlisk Nwpt.,Aberg. &Hrf' Newry & Newry Warreupoir, and Rostrevor... Norfolk N or thn. Countie s North British ...... j North Devon, No 1 Do,, No, 2 A Deferred Do., B Gum-anther? ' Eastern—Berwie: Do. do. Extension Dodo. G.N.E. ?arch Co. Leeds Do. York North London N . & S. Wstrn. , Hami stead, and City Jn North Staffordshiy North Western., N. & S. Westrn. Junt: Nuneaton, Hinckley, and Leicester......., 10x, Worc_ L'tz Wolv. rortgr_aonth o .fish Central ISeoitish Midland Shropshire Union South Devon South Eastern South Wales S. Yrksh. 4 Rig. Duo Do -3tainos, Wok. &Wok Stockton & Darlir itoArton tai i~ :1 tlCpl Taff Vale 'Do. Pref., No. 1 Names flay. P.& R ITlverstone 4 Lanes Vale of NeatL• Waterfd. & Kilkenny Waterfor.ln:merick West Cornwall West End of London and Crystal Palace.. Do. A Do. B West London._ Wimblodn & Croydon
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newspapers//0002194/1855/1217/0002194_18551217.csv
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William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London. MR. MACAULAY'S WORKS. THE HISTORY of ENGLAND, from the Accession of lames 11. By the Right lion. THOMAS iiABINbYOI MACAULAY, M.P. Vols 111. and IV., Bvo., 36 5. *** Vols. I. and 11., Tenth Edition, price 325. CRITIC AND HISTORIC AL ESSAYS. Library Edition.... In One Volume, with Portrait .. •• square crown rim, 21s. In Volumes lor the Packet . 3 vois. fcp. rive., 2 s. The People's Edition .. ...... ••. • „ 2 vols. crown rivo., Ss. LAYS OF ANCIENT BORE. .• •• • ...... Fcp. 4t0., Ts, With and . 16m0., 45. Si!. sPEECIIES, corrected by him5e1f........... • Bvo., 12s. Speeches on Parliamentary Reform in 1831 and 1832, 16m0., Is. • Leaden: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. DEATH OF COLONEL- I 3 11110B1). ____ , - It is our painful duty to announce the decease of the well-known Colonel Sibthorp, member for Lincoln. The name of the gallant Colonel has long been a household word as the embodiment of honest but unreasoning Tory prejudice ; down to the very last he showed himself a politician of the extinct school of Lord Eldon and the late Duke of Newcastle, whom he thoroughly revered, and consequently, in these days of divided parties and allegiance, he found himself as frequently opposed to the great Conservative party as the late Frederick Lucas to his Liberal allies. The deceased gentleman was de- scended from an ancient family settled upwards of a century and a half at Canwick.hall, near Lincoln, many of whose membere from time to time have repre- sented that city in Parliament. His father, the late Mr. Humphry Waldo Sibthorp, sat for several years at the commencement of the present century. His son, Charles Dalaet Waldo Sibthorp, was first elected in the high Tory interest in 1826, and with the exception of the brief Parliament of 1833.4, chosen under the ex- citement consequent upon the passing of the Reform Bill, he continued to represent Lincoln to the day of his death. The Colonel's iufiuence was great among the registered electors, upwards of 1,300 in number, consisting of free- men resident and non-resident ; but it did not extend so far as to be able often to secure the second seat for a Tory friend, the predilections of the constituency being rather personal towards himself than based on any political grounds. Thus, although Col. Sibthorp could generally reckon on the support of some 600 voters, and in conse- quence was usually returned at the head of the poll, in 1835 and 1837 he was unable to prevent the then Radical Sir Edward Lytton Bulwer from being chosen as his col- league, while in 1847 Mr. Charles Seely and i n 1848 M r. Thomas notihouse were elected against Tory candidates, and Mr. G. F. Hereage aecnre d the second seat at the general election in 1852. Once, and once only, did the gallant Wooers good fortune fail him, and that was, when a majority of 83 dis- e have said, in 1833, i p as laC v ed him to make room for Sir E. Bulwer. The gal- lant Colonel was born, we believe, in 1782, and in 1813 married Maria, daughter of the la te Mr. Ponsonby Tot- tenham, many years M.P. for the borough of Fethard, 'n the Irish House of Commons, and by whom h e l eaves issue several children. His brother, the Rev. H. Waldo Sibthorp, late Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, be- came a Roman Catholic some few year, since, but soon afterwards returned to the English Church. Col. Sib- thorp was for many years a magistrate and deputy-lieu- tenant for the county of Lincoln, and i n 1852 was ga netted to the Colonelcy of the South Lincolnshire Militia. H e s trenuously and consistently opp ose d i n a ll t h e i r stages Catholic Emancipation, the Reform Bill, and the Aboli-ion of the Jewish Disabilities, an d was one of the minority of 53 who censured free trade when Lord Derby was in office in November, 1852. [ADVL fISEIIENTj —Holloway's Ointment and Pills peculiar ...temedies for Wounds or Tumours.—Mr.Clark, druggist, of Bowling, states, in a letter to Professor Holloway, that a young man residing at Laister Dyke, with whom he is personally acquainted, suffered severely for a long time with a large turaour on the side of his neck, which seemed to be incurable, as he tried various remedies without any good effect ; but, by the use of Holloway's Ointment and Pills, a sound and perfect cure was soon effected. The !accuracy of this statement Mr. Clark can vouch for, as he was an eye-witness to this marvellous cure. Sold by all vendors of medicines ; and at Professor Holloway's establishments, 241, Strand, London, and 80, Maden-laneNew York ; by A. Stampa, Constantinople ; A. Guidi c y, S m y rna ; and H. goods, Malta,
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