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British Traveller And Commercial And Law Gazette

   British Traveller And Commercial And Law Gazette (Newspaper) - July 14, 1832, London, Middlesex                                PROM THE LONDON JULY 13,1832. Lord Chamberlain's July 12. for the Court to go into on the 15lh instant for her late Serene Highness the Princess daughter of their Serene Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Saxe niece her Majesty the viz. The Ladies to wear black fringed or plain white necklaces and black or white fans and The Gentlemen to wear full or plain black swords and The Court to chango tho mourning on Sunday the 29th viz. Sunday 8 t0 wesr black or coloured and or white and or white and with black The Gentlemen to wear blackcoats and black or plain or white and or white and silver stuff full swords and oh Sunday the 5th of August the Court to go Of DECLARATIONS OF Christopher Dunkin 10. Thomas City U. George John's King Snow commission 13. BANKRUPTCY Samuel from July 17 to Aug. 22, at 11, at the Court of BANKRUPTCY James BANKRUPT to surrender in Charles July 28, at 10, Aug. 24, at 11. Willey and Bank BANKRUPTS to surrender in the John linen July 30, Aug. 24, at at the Court Strangwayes and Barnard's or Mr. Charles July 31, at 4,-Aug. 24, at 11, at New Royal Mr. Holborn Gray's or Mr. John July 26, Aug. 24, at 12, at the and Co. Great Ormond or Mr. William July 27, at 1, Aug. 24, at 12, at the George Sharp and French July 25, Aug. 21, at 11, at New Royal New Norton and Gray's Inn London or Hawkins and DIVIDENDS made in BASING W. sen. and jun. St. 3, at 1. J. Southampton Aug. 16, at 11. A. St. Helen's Aug. 8, at 12. DIVIDENDS made in the T. Aug. 4, at 2, at the Bush Knowles and Co. Aug. 4, at 12, at the Office of Mr. J. cabinet Nov. 20, at the Three Cups W. cloth Aug. 4, at 1, at the Office of Mr. J. Bradwell near the beer Sept. 14, at at the Three Cups T. Sept. 21, at 12, at the Waggon and Horses H. jun. harness Aug. 4, al 1, at the Hen and Chickens 3. K. H. Vinson and W. of the J. linen T. dealer in J. Ebury J. cotton J. machine Co. Pall G. Co. C. Nun Head Peckham patent brick R. H. St. John's stago coach G. late of Vere Oxford 5. Blackwell hall G. cattle DISSOLUTION OF Powell and Laurence wholesale and Old Thomas and Dimes and Princess Wood and Wood Bilton and High tea I. and W. Gawthorp and T. and J. Borough fruit Fenton and Co. Castle silver Edwards and T. and G. Falcon brush Brown and Smith and Newcastle upon T. O. and E. Gilby and Thurston and Upper Berkeley J. and J. cotton cloth SCOTTISH W. veterinary and Co. IMPERIAL HOUSE OF July 13. The Remedy against the Hundreds went through a and was ordered to be read a third lime on Monday Lord SUFFIELD presented a Petition from the Rev. G. on behalf of the congregation of Brunswick Mile end against Negro Mr. Bernal and others brought up from the House of Commons the Valuation of Lands and several other which were severally read a first Earl GREY moved the third reading of the Scotch Re-form On the motion being The Earl of FIFE considered that many of the harsh expressions used against the measure might have been as lie considered the one that was likely to lead to great practical The Noble Earl commented upon the tendency of the which he cordially approved of. The increased rights conferred upon the people would promote the general prosperity of the The Earl of HADDINGTON entered Into an tion why he should say not Tho LORD CHANCELLOR eulogised the conduct el tho who had most discharged the duties confided to them in laying down the boundaries under this The Duke of expressed his disapproval of the and regretted that he would not be able to sign a protest against as he was obliged to leave town He use his influence to carry the into The was then read a third and The Earl of HADDINGTON gave notice that he would sign a protest against the Hill on The third reading of the Anatomy was postponed to The House adjourned at Six left at the complement of 25 what would be thought ef the Government who would bring such a proposition He knew what would be thought of but give the Bight Hon. Secretary a and he would get a report declaring such an establishment well suited to the and entitled to The Right Honourable Secretary was wasting when the interests of the clergy might be well and properly but the Right Hon. Secretary depend upon that he could do that this year which it would not be possible him to do The Hon. and Learned Gentleman the object of the Union was to deprive Ireland of her He contrasted the condition rf that country prior and subsequent to the and contended that it was then as flourishing as it was now borne down by distress from one end to the He pointed the injustice of the tithe - - i - HOUSE OF brought The average price of Brown or Muscovado computed from Returns made in week ending the lUlh day of is 28s. per hundred THE July 13. and 270; 04; 1S5; 1,086.-Total cases since 17,578; total 6,649. Board of July 10-New 609; 202; 316; 1,328. an a received from in answer to one sent by a surgeon in London last summer to a a surgeon in slating that the cholera was prevailing in and describing the remedies and asking how they treated the or four men a I or saw all who and was voluntarily in the hospital 15 hours out of the 24, never leaving the men in my ward till they were dead or till 1 was compelled to leave off such my legs becoming so swelled that the superintending surgeon of the Dr. thought they were I send you a prescription of which I have found most not having lost a patient by cholera since I used it sal of each an of 30 drops Give one teaspoonful in brandy nnd and repeat the dose as The water of and salad of each one Apply well to the part affected with cramp or as the Bottles of hot where The thirst is allayed by applying vinegar to the palms of the Acids were used here with great but it was the and not the as stated in your letter to be used in ik considerable of cases of cholera have occurred in London during the last and the disease Is still slowly on the though there is nothing at present which can be regarded as amounting to an epidemic return of the The influence of a diet consisting of an unusual proportion of fruit and has been manifested here as and the effects have clearly shown where the predisposition is the subtle causes of the whatever these may still exist around us in sufficient intensity to produce the disease in its malignant Our readers cannot be too energetic in their efforts to enforce tho most rigorous attention to regimen at the present the safety of the metropolis may depend upon It. In till the countries which cholera has Us most fatal irruptions have been among thoBe whose diet is at once impoverished and stimulated nor is it possible to conceive any thing possessed of these characteristics more strongly or other raw and half-ripe with copious libations of adulterated Of how many among our poorer brethren do these constitute a part at and often a very large of their daily If their pittance were spent exclusively upon meat and how different would be their state of much greater their comfort and their One of Mr. Watson Taylor's a gentleman whose practice has bern worth from 4,0001. to 5,0001. a unfortunately became security for him to the amount of 75,0001. Immediately upon Mr. Watson Taylor's leaving the country he was called upon for the unable to pay executions were put Into his stared him in the brain became and he is wc are leaving a wife and nine or ten amiable to the mercy of a rude Such is one of the sad consequences of Watson Taylor's July 13. Mr. LAMBERT presented three Petitions against Irish tithes from parishes in the county of Lord G. BENTINCK presented a Petition from against the Irish and Scotch Vagrant Lord MORPETH presented a Petition in favour of the Government plan of Education in from the Dissenting Congregation of a place in the West Riding of Lord ASHLEY presented a Petition from the Coroners of praying for an increased The Irish Linen Manufacture was read a third and Sir T. BARING presented a Petition from praying of the House to pass the for the better observance of the Mr. HUME presented a Petition from the of against any lax being imposed upon steam car particularly those that run by rail a Petition from a place in against and a Petition from against the tax upon He had now to present 46 The Petitions related to stopping the and were agreed to at the time when it was doubtful that his Majesty's present Ministers should continue in He thought it was but justice to the petitioners to present the The Petitions were then laid on the Mr. presented Petitions lit favour of the Government plan of Education in from places in Ireland also Petitions from various places in Ireland against also a Petition from in favour of an equal measure of Reform for Mr. HUME presented a Petition from in favour of an extensive measure of Reform for Ireland also a Petition from praying that a longer time might be afforded under the Reform for paying the rates than was now set Lord ALTHORP Baid that the provision of the relating to this matter was fully and was at well known as any other By this provi sion it was necessary that the person wishing to register on the 31st of must have paid the rates due on the 6th of April on or before the 20th of No change could now take place in the as there was no clause of amendment in the After a few words from Mr. Mr. and Lord the Petition was laid on the Mr. wished to know if the Government intended to carry through the Bribery Mr. KENNEDY said that the would be forward this Mr. in reply to Colonel admitted that the before the House relating to tithes not meet the difficulty relating to the valuation of tithes in It would meet the matter the valuation could not be taken in the It must only be done by taking the or former Lord ALTHORP reply to Mr. said he in. when bringing forward his motion respecting the sugar to make his financial statement for the year to the He could not state the but it would be sometime next Lord ALTHORP reply to Mr. who verted to the death of the present Governor of said that it was not the intention of Government to do away with what the Honourable Gentleman called military those places which were given to military men for past irish Upon the m tion of Mr. the adjourned debate on the tithe question was Mr. D. CALLAGHAN said that the present measures of Government respecting tithes would not give to He paid tithes with any because he thought it a cruel He should however not oppose the single measure proposed by the Right Honourable Secretary for Mr. W. PEEL said that he was determined to support the measure of because he was anxious to see the Protestant clergy maintained in their just What was the state of tho Protestant clergy in Ireland many of them were in a state of Was this right He hoped that the Parliament would not break up until some certain measure was passed that would give com. fort to the Protestant Mr. BENETT considered the measure of the Right Hon. Gentleman a just and fair He contended that tithes the property of the and landlords had no right to lake advantage of the physical force of a misguided people to Belze on tithes on which they had no or to refuse to pay which was a just He thought that a very great boon had been conferred upon the Irish landlord by his being allowed to his tithe for 16 Lord KILLEEN denied that tho landlords of Ireland had any improper motive in their opposition to the measure proposed respecting tithes by the Right Hon. Secretary for Their opposition to it was that it would not satisfy the people of and it was his that the best course to adopt was to satisfy the in tho first and from would flow the best Ho should certainly support tho resolu lions of his Hon. Friend the Member for nnd Would vote against the measure of Government Mr. J. CAMPBELL would support the measures of because in the brought in by the Right Honourable were considered as and in the resolutions of the Hon. Member for Wicklow they were considered as a Tithes were the property of the and not the property of the He must give his most cordial dissent to the resolutions of the Hon. Member for and support proposition of the Right Hon. Mr. O'CONNELL must give his cordial dissent to the proposition of tile Right Hon. and support to the resolutions of his Hon. the Member for The whole course of the Right Hon. Secretary was a solemn in this discussion the interests of Ireland were altogether If Ireland had her own the tithe system have existed for an hour It was clear that it could The Right Hon. Secretary and the Noble talked ef and of combinations but the whole course of the Government had been one ot insult and degradation towards The only good tho present Administration had done was the introduction of the new plan of but what had become of the Jury The Jury was before a nameless Committee of the House of for as yet no Committee had been The Hon. and Learned Gentleman complained of the apprehension of respectable men on bailable and said that the object of the proposed was to support the Established But could any man suppose that laying out 9,000,0001. in the purchase of land for the Church would tend to tranquillize Ireland He also complained of the of the and said that his objection to the plan that it went to keep up tho establishment on its present Attention ought to have been paid to the labour of the The Hon. and Learned Gentleman enumerated 84 in which there were 76,570 Catholics and only 76 so that if the Protestant clergymen were to be paid according lo their ho knew what they would There were innumerable other parishes in the same and this was a system the Right Hon. Secretary proposed to keep op. In the last Government there were several military and suppose they had proposed an establishment of 14 field 100 200 and a full complement of Inferior while the whole aimy was and the determination that not not to pay but to cut down crops that were The Right Honourable Secretary might think that he could put such things down by an act of but the Right Hon. Gentleman would lind The people would not violate the law they had set at defiance the Wellington of and they had little to fear from the Right Honourable But the plan was If the Right Hon. Secretary had desired to make the landlords join with the wished to convert the booted gentry of Ireland into and he could nat have devised a better It was idle to suppose that isting in Ireland could be put down by any person in but the people of Ireland were now to a measure ensuring to the clergy their present but providing that as the incumbents dropped their incomes ' he Wh schemo to answer his the combinations existing in I There were should no vested rights in these and therefore there could be no hardship in the he When the extinction of tithes was talked it was never intended to deprive the clergy of their The clergymen of other of Christians were as well entitled to support as those of the Established and be therefore called upon the Government to recommend these He recommended the Right Honourable Secretary to apply for a vote of credit for any deficiency that might but he implored the House lo reject the for they might rest assured that it would prove no better than so much waste Lord J. RUSSELL had supported the cause of Catholic but he thought it most unfair of the Catholics of Ireland to their numerical strength to defeat the and tyrannise over their Protestant fellow The Noble Lord defended the policy of his Right Honourable and denied that there was anything like conciliation in the observations that fell from the Hon. and Learned Member for It was admitted that tithes could not continue on their present and then came the question how could the alteration be best The plan of his Right Hon. Friend he thought was the fairest course that could be and the objection raised against it seemed to proceed rather from name than from any reason better some further observations in support of the the Noble Lord concluded by hoping that the House would concur in his Right Hon. Friend's Mr. LEFROY deprecated all appeals such as those made by the Hon. and Learned Member for and expressed his pleasure at finding that it was tho determination of the Government to support the rights of the He maintained looking at the whole number of benefices in the clergy of the Established Church were not loo highly The average congregation to each benefice was 1,000, and the income of the clergy 2991., and was that any proof that the Church wus too highly He would not object to church but he should The plan of administering the affairs of the Church through corporations he was inclined to prove for although it might not be advisable to equalise the incomes of yet much might be done to get rid of the disparity which at present existed The and Learned Gentleman alluded to the improvements which had taken place in the Church and said that the resident clergymen of Ireland had been more than doubled within 20 He did not think that the Irish Bishops were at all and with respect to the assertion by the Hon. Member for that many parishes were without Protestant pa. he decidedly denied for which the Honourable Member for Kerry could not advance one jot of nor had he furnished any data whereby his conclusions might be borne He defied any man in that House to prove that the Legislature had ever transferred any part of the Church property from the except in the instance of tnc which was handed over to the laity by the Church The King's nation the Act of and the Catholic Relief all the maintenance of the Church property of With that fact before him he could not but express unfeigned astonishment to hear Hon. Gentlemen calmly and coolly talk the necessity of overturning the Church of and applying its revenues to public The House Was told that Ireland would at once be satisfied and pacified if a land tax were substituted for Such a tax would by no means differ from the Tithe Composition and the only object sought by the was to do away with church property The Hon. Member for in. urging the necessity of acceding to this spoke as if he had been appointed a deputy from the defunct Parliament of Ireland to confer with this House on the The Hon. and Learned Gentleman concluded by hoping that the House would come to such a vote as would show to Ireland that the British House of Parliament would never consent to the wild sition which had been proposed aBan Sir J. BURKE denied that the object of the Catholics of was to seize upon the revenues of the Protestant He never heard such a wish expressed by a single Catholic in 1 When he saw Ireland agitated from one end to the he was satisfied that every effort would be useless to force the payment of no matter in what shape they might be attempted to be He very much doubted that the compulsory measure brought forward by for Ireland would have the effect and he thought that the third of the Right Honourable Gentleman would be much more likely to succeed than the Mr. H. GRATTAN regretted that a question of so much importance should have been brought forward in so thin a He was convinced that the Secretary of State for Ireland had totally miscalculated his own strength and his own when he reckoned upon forcing the people of Ireland to pay in opposition to their avowed and determined declarations to the He could tell the Right Hon. Secretary that the tithe composition act had and yet lie would endeavour to enforce that act by a new compulsory Any attempt to enforce the law respecting tithes would only tend to increase in a tenfold degree the excitement and disorders of He denied that the object of the amendment proposed was the spoliation of the Church of The Hon. and Learned defended the conduct of the Irish and insisted that all they wanted was a fair and just settlement of the question at They were desirous of preserving the rights of the Protestant but at the same they that the revenues of that Church pressed most unjustly on the Catholic population of Many of the Irish Protestant Bishops had died worth three and four hundred thousand and yet when those Bishops were called upon to subscribe towards the exigencies of they subscribed only 3,5001., while five or six Roman Catholic noblemen and gentlemen subscribed more than 4,0001. Yet this was the liberal and enlightened Church militant which the Irish Members were called upon to The measure proposed by the Right Hon. for Ireland was miserably Ho called upon that Right Hon. instead of listening to evil to throw himself Into the arms of the Irish although excited upon this never yet disgraced themselves by an act of violence or outrage and The Hon. and Learned Gentle man said he would oppose the acts of Henry the and stand by the Irish Mr. STANLEY Baid that he was always anxious to put upon the best footing the connexion which existed between the Irish people and the Irish The question of the Church Establishment of he was well must very soon come under discussion in that but he begged to observe that the which he had now the honour of introducing left the House wholly free and upon the general question of Church properly in The Hon. Gentleman referred to the evidence produced before the Tithe in order to show that the several res which he proposed to introduce were fully in not only with the commendation of the but the opinions of several of the most enlightened witnesses who had been examined before that The effect of the amendment which had been proposed was merely to postpone the question of tithes until the next The plan which was that of an was in fact the tithe composition act under a new A land tax in lieu of tithes would act and lead to endless litigation and The Hon. Gentleman who proposed the amendment appeared desirous of shifting the burden from the landlords and tenantry of His proposition was to take a vote of credit out of tho fund Eng. and and leaving the Government to repay themselves how they out of the disjointed property of But the fact could not be that the if not the object of many of the Irish Members was to extinguish tithes whatever shape they might If the resolutions were the property of the Church might be appropriated to the use of the and thereby tho necessity of the introduction of the poor He contended that he removed by his a and provided a which a future Parliament might apply to ether purposes if it thought His object was to relieve the occupying tenant from the evils of the present he held out a bonus to the landed proprietor of 15 per to redeem the which would remove from the country a source of great discontent and He contended that by he left the question still open to a future and trusted that he would be allowed to bring in the After a few words from Mr. in opposition to the Lord said he felt anxious to say a few words upon this to which he gave his most cordial and unqualified After having attentively listened to the arguments upon the he had heard no substitute for It had proposed to levy a tax upon all descriptions of property in lieu of As an Irish he protested against such an effort to relieve the land from the payment of He was aware that there were persons in Ireland whom this measure would not but if there was anything like social order good government to be it was the duty of the Government to enforce the and to put down illegal The Noble Lord referred to the combinations that deprived Mr. the coach of the services of his anil which prevented the people from cutting the hay belonging to Lord If such a system was allowed to go no description of property could be considered Absentee rents would next be and then the resident landlords would equally He would assist in arming the Government wit it power to put down this state of He was at the same time an advocate for a reform in the Church of and he was most anxious to see that church reduced to a proper The did not pledge the House to tho of the and he was of opinion that those funds might be rendered available to the and subject to the regulation of Ho pledged if no one more undertook the to bring the subject under the consideration of a future for the purpose of proposing a thorough reform in the Irish Mr. G. DAWSON gave the Right Hon. Gentleman Secretary of State tor great credit for to the but he did nut consider the measures proposed would have the effect of attaching the people to the payment of tithes or securing the properly of the Tithes were effectually extinguished in and the Right Hon. Gentleman had to thank himself for their The proposition to transfer the tax upon tho landlords would totally and it was most certainly absurd to think of collecting tithes by such indirect He denied that it was the wish of the landlords to put the amount of the tithes into their It was most unjust to put the landlords into the situation of tithe He considered that it would be better to levy a and make the Government the collectors of and not place the landlords in the distressing of incurring all the odium of the Ho looked upon this measure as a fatal blow to the church of and felt astonished how any man could delude himself into a belief that it could be carried into effect in the present state of that The Right the Secretary of State for was accountable for all the combinations in slid all his ingenuity would not reconcile the people to this He would not commit himself by voting on the and would not be accountable for the consequences of the This was not the Parliament to take the question into and so far the Resolutions bore the semblance of Mr. that he felt surprised at the speech of the Hon. Gentleman who had just sat The Right Hon. had declined to vote on cither with a view to avoid all It was unfair to accuse his Right Hon. Friend the Secretary of State of having been ihc cause of the combinations in Ireland against The Hon. and Learned Member contended that the combination against tithes only extended to two provinces this combination was directed against the law of the and it was the duty of the Government to vindicate the not only for the preservation of the but for the preservation of society and the tranquillity of the The combination did not exist in Protestant Ulster or in Catholic and he was satisfied that the combination existed for purposes different from the abolition of as every description of crime had been committed recently under that He had received a communication from the Attorney General that from which it appeared that six persons had been found guilty of violating the law as respected He could assure the House that the Government of the country was determined to uphold the Church Establishment in Ireland Sir R. PEEL but was called to by cries of After a few words from The House then when the numbers were- For the motion For the 3a Majority Mr BENETT consented so withdraw Franchise the Liverpool bought and ordered to be read a third time on Monday the Day were and the House adjourned at a quarter past Two NEW YORK Mr. Lambert and Colonel Sir R. PEEL could assure the House he would be He conceived it was necessary to show to the people of Ireland that the Parliament of England were determined to support the The whole of Ireland was in opposition to the law It was necessary therefore that Ireland should know Parliament would support the law by existing if they would be sure to pass other Acts to enforce the law upon the subject of His only object was to support the Government in the enforcement of the He had heard of but the most ignoble of conspiracies was that which went to rob a man of his just Mr. after having adverted to the he maintained it the Right Hon. went on to observe that he hailed the anxiety which the Right Hon. Baronet had evinced to palm upon the House a second address upon this as a good omen to the cause of those who opposed the He must independently of his allusion to Madame Roland's which had no reference to the the Right Hon. in his speech of that had said instead of introducing the Oh what crimes are committed under your he had Oh what anarchy do you ho certainly thought it would have been much more to the The only way to do away with the or combinations as they should more properly be which at present existed in was to remove the grievances which had given birth to them Mr. rose amid loud and continued cries of It wub not his intention to detain the House for more than a very few although if he had had the opportunity of addressing them earlier in the it certainly would have been his wish to have entered somewhat at length into this most important It was true that it would be brought under the consideration of the House on many subsequent occasions but as this was the last opportunity that he should have them upon the he was anxious to observe that he should give every support in his power to his Majesty's Government throughout the whole of their measures upon the subject of Irish He rejoiced that the Right Hon. Robert below him had in spite of the interruptions he had met in repeating the declaration that his valuable and powerful support would be given to Ministers throughout the whole of the discussions upon this Ho denied the assertion of the Hon. Gentleman who had just sat that the Right Hon. speech contained no argument in favour of the proposition of In his that speech teemed with the most powerful argument against the illegal combinations which existed in That those combinations were Incompatible with the peace and welfare of the country must be obvious to every man who would condescend to think upon tho Those it must be were the more because they were supported not only by the the and the but by the the and the rich When he saw a man with a supposed mitre on his man of learning and of high repute among his those combinations by arguments as subtle as they were he maintained that he was justified in that the the and the had become parties to these as well as the the and the low ( He that the measures now before the House would effectually put nn end to a system if allowed to would render Ireland one scene of anarchy and The agitation in Ireland upon this question was not confined now to the peasant or the but had spread to the to the owner of the and the man of education and influence in This circumstance in itself ought to arrest the attention of and tench it to pause ere it forced this system upon the reluctant people of that He traced the origin of resistance to tithes to the organization of the White in 1755; and concluded by denying the statement of this conspiracy being confined t* two provinces of The fact was not the organised resistance to tithe had extended itself through the province of Major in the opinions expressed by his Hon. Friend the Member for Ireland had never got anything but by a display of her physical Free trade and the Catholic Relief had been only obtained by agitation and physical and lo the same means they he still unless relieved by the Legislature from the oppression of the tithe Ihc following are extracts from the New Yoik papers which were received at Liverpool by the John in 17 days from that Latest from I he schooner at New brings Tampico to the 24th ult. By this arrival the editors of the Bee have received intelligence that on the night of the the army of General which wub besieging Vera raised the siege and marched into the This fact is announced officially by General who commands at and whose proclamation to that effect is published in ihc Tampico Gazelle of the 22d. We learn further that intelligence had been received by the latest mail from Vera Cruz that General Sunta Anna had sent a detachment of 200 cavalty in pursuit of the fugitive army of and with an army of 1,200 disciplined together with many new set out immediately on his match for This intelligence is aiso confirmed by a letter from merchant at which we give Colonel formerly Charge of the Mexican Government at had arrived at charged with a special message from the object of it is was to ascertain the state of the city and its means of Ten thousand sent by Santa Anna lo the had been received at Extract of a letter from a respectable American merchant to a friend in New received by the dated May 25 brighten on The invading army at Vera Cruz has raised the siege and and Santa Anna is in full On the receipt of the news here we fired a salute from all the forts and vessels of and on hearing the ran and has not since been heard of. His troops were all deserting our friends a great number have already come and the whole division is to inarch on Monday up the Santa Anna says in his letter to Colonel S. that he will be in Mexico in eight days from this have in favour of Santa and rumours are afloat that Mexico is also in his All goes is kicked and Prieto is administrator in his Extract of a letter to a gentleman in New dated May 22 The mail from the interior towns to this city is now and all business of course remains at a We have hitherto remained peaceable in the unprecedentedly since Jail the military e now taken up their quarters in the different A Mexican arrived the other day from Vera with a supply of 12,000 which was no very 3 express has just arrived from Vera bringing important news from General He lias defeated his opponents and General commander of the Government has leaving behind him his and We have received from a correspondent at Kio papers to the 5lh of On the 4th the General Legislative Council was and the following was delivered by the in the name of the August and most worthy Representatives of the The in the name of the Emperor Don Pedro congratulates you on your hopeful always agreeable to the real friends of public The empire the friendly relations with all nations of the new and of the old Don Pedro is almost universally recognized by all and this act of justice has been omitted by only a few of the States of hitherto unhappily agitated by internal commotions and in Europe by Prussia and Spain tranquillity has been several limes disturbed in different provinces by various all which succumbed to the generous exertions of the numerous friends of order and law but it has not a9 yet pleased Providence to confer upon us a tranquillity which promises to be The Ministers and Secretaries of in their will inform you very circumstantially of Ihc state of the public administration in its various of what the Government have done during your and of the most urgent necessities of the Brazilian August and most worthy representatives of the the in the name of the Emperor Don Pedro offers you its frank and loyal co-operation in the urgent and important undertaking of tranquillizing the and rendering it he hopes you will render your On you depend the destinies of our and it is that they are confided to her who possess knowledge and Tho session is DE LIMA ii JOSE DA COSTA JOAO BRANLIO The news from the provinces is stated to be favourable to the public General San President of Now is to embark this morning to return to his own His return has been urgently solicited by the who sent on Mr. Acosta and Colonel some weeks since for that hereafter speak more particularly of the peculiar offer we has been made to this distinguished friend of freedom and by the President or Secretary of the Navy of the United offer which we think can hardly fail to be viewed alike by all men of enlarged views and commendable Suffice it to for the that not being inclined to accept a proposition totally at variance with the high regard publicly expressed for him by many citizens of the United and particularly by some of the most respectable inhabitants of this General Santander has been supplied with the best accommodation for his which were at the d of a private Mr. S. E. proprietor of the line of has been employed for some weeks in preparing the fine brig Montilla expressly for the transportation of She was yesterday hauled into the where she to sail this with abroad flag flying from her mast with the name of in large This we is to sail for Santa where preparations have been for some time for the reception of General on a plan corresponding with the public respect and attachment entertained for him by his We have received Frankfort to the 6th Their contents chiefly relate to Rhenish for restoring tranquillity in a long ordonnance has been by the Bavarian amongst other all trees of liberty to he and all tricoloured cockades and party badges to be laid An article from Manheim states the arrest of 47 whom arc some and some 11.-The Quarter Sessions were mi Monday before the civil The Thomas was put to the on the charge ot shooting his the particulars of which we laid before before our readers at the There was nothing of interest excited during the whole of the at the close of which the Jury found the prisoner Guilty of the but insane at the period he committed it. The Recorder was of opinion that lite prisoner would be confined for  

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Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
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Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!