228 THE See ee ee NEWSPAPER. [Juzy 17, 1858 
hat had marked its pro; sted that there we were valid ob 
hd Game ees more Beeta Bip] J. RUSSELL, as Pga a 
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o “the Peiho, in the Gulf of Pecheli, on n the 29th o peia 
would have hiia uld be an improvement if Patlia queen ae 
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n-boat 
had been sent e baakt o Hong-Kong for more gun-boa 3 
of the Ro Si Ën ineers ciples 
E troops, including ay . Bre h had Şa an- g the amendments it is intended to propose the Eao ent Ai been called to the aA a 
m pers. e Frenc o gu in committee. One of m will make the consent of Parlia- E aa Pie Fecia rocal proteetion, in pe impertarg 
ment necess: ary for “the application of any part rt of the revenues | States, regarding Trade Marks = mig atara with other 
of India ¢ o defray the expense of irei Ba pre beyond | not without hope that a measu t be sare and be way 
the frontier preia n cases of emergenc of actu: Ayaans the subject this session. The Hotes rod rae a ai 
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Government had named Commissioners to negotiate, 
but the letter e amnouncing the fact had been refused, 
owing to sumpt ion of prap on ims lai of 
the Chinese. ‘Her I ent wi under 
orders for the North. The } 
had arrived with 900 marine ear -Ten _incen- 
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red report 
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eoanibereal with the peace establishment of TIndia.— pA age Tind. "reana Bill, t the Medic cal 
Earl GRANVILLE t t y of the provisions of the ond the Lou ae Bill w 
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to fire the town. 
i £ nd- | MONDAY. — e Outrag —In reply 
ments. All that was original in the present Bill had been so | Mr. S. FITZGERALD sai dinat the Go Government nt 
thoroughly condemned that it had been, cancelled and with- | official intalligenne of the urrence at J; 
rawn. e differen heard 
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Parliament. 
tated se oP Peinat tot a D headded | this terrible outra; ice ce. Captain Watson had 
fat th the se Mas Tg aia Taniy be to sidere experiment, | been Woe y Bring hs three other “eel to its 
and that the question of the government of "india must shortly Slave r goi d 
come again under discussion. As "the Bill came before supply, Ma Bort seia the attention. St the House to the 
i ity of the Gove ten at eport on the slave trade in 
mi 
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aei a it to pa my proposi made from any | to proceed at once to Jeddah, and to 0 bring the perpetrators of 
likewise 
amistanco, 
H Me Ne SE OF LOR = x 
Frmay.—Lord Duncannon called attention to the 
factory state of the ‘hw respecting the ‘ilspidation of alae 
Houses ; and the Bishop of LONDON bg ok a Bill on the ect 
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Portman, duri short discussion Ex point n the Ja law of 
Church} Mia; ‘stated that before the close of tie ession he 
hoped he should be able to introduce a Bill on this oo 
or at least suggest some mode of settling the question that 
would be satisfactory to all ies. The “tr pate ee Com- 
mission Bill was read a third time. The report of amendments 
to 
A x = a suppressing 
the Crown, he could not have proposed the present Bill. He | slaves.” It w: ry A that pel 40 years’ trial, they shoud 
could not have proposed any scheme for the Government of | cease their abortive mpts at thus putting dows 
India that excluded the popular element of election from the | the slave trade, ich had only resulted in 
constitution of the Council, and that introduced the principle | ereasing it, as was Snow by the recent events in 
Monpay.—The Roya as given by commission to the | of competitive examination into the corps of Engineers and | waters of Cuba. The. slave trade in those 
Commissioners for pie a of 1851 Bill, the County Manage- | A h 
ment ten several railway and private bills. The Oaths 
Bill. 
tem ‘eelin, and applian 
btainin, 
“a d. The rg Foon avs gad di ffer ei fo m both the measures | of expense. He cited a variety of authorities, to show that, & 
pete rod t vatier the measure of | the atin of those most conversant with subject, it was 
the f Com: ime mon (oan è of the Ministry. In the two great | impossible to put down the slave bebo the means of 
cujonebor of the change it had failed ; it did not put an end to | pression which were at present employ The i 
oo double oi: Sve and did not a one sole officer | failed, and he wished it had done nothing worse. we had 
nsible to Parliament ; while b; clause inserted at the | increased the horrors of the slave trade to an enormom 
ia mitta. giving t = Mage of the Tain ne es to ue degree by the measures which we had driven the slavedealers 
Council, that body s constituted a Parliam But he | to adopt. The horrors of the middle passage had passed intoa 
admitted that by substituting the queer’ s name for ” that of the proverb, The sufferings of our sailors engaged in opposing 
Company, giving tr rarer of State the initiative in iapa thetraffic had aa been very great. Another uence of the 
Lair affairs, aa es and simplifying rg mode oe stem was that England had constantly been into 
lucting busi ractical advantages had been contests with the two great maritime nations, France and 
ips had taken. They had not ctainged their opini | gamed by the Bill. “Stil, 5 the ‘constitution of the 'Conneil, the | America, with Tei fe was our interest to remain on terms ef 
pory of admitting Jews to Parliament, but shay ball, er mode in which it was to be wed, and the which | amity.—Mr. Carp said that the effect of the a 
sake of conciliation, given a permissive authority to the | it was to exercise its a patronage, pan open iito os vobjecti on. fe ean oula in simply to fetter the hands of the 
a still competent | With these defects they might = in Committe, “but while to the instructions which it would have to send out 
bg m | discussing the home ernment of India, h express ‘a anh Ee Eg on the cot of Africa. We were now pur- 
the asxiety- with which he ‘yégurded tha on of|suing a policy for the promotion of Christianity, 
i d civilisati If we becar ad 
e aa in these reasons, ae 
ill, permitting Jews to sit in Par Hain nt, was very dov corns 
It would seem as if oe hay ye made a concession agains 
their will; and the House of Commons might retort on them 
that the fens required no reply, beca 
against a course that had actually been adopted. Of the rea. 
sons themselves three were neither eager | nor conclusive, while 
the others were gern is hae House of Commons, or insult- 
ing to those who to be admitted to Parliament.— 
The Earl of Densy defended ‘the reasons as embodied in the 
They were quite consletent ith the iea reis ee 
or 
the original e would Lena substitute 
another reason for the fourth in the a cae s anal omit the aeth. 
r on he rer ar pN d remove a sean to 
Marquis NSDOWNE thought the 
the host singular that th he ey he with a Bi Bill o 
heir table ore was really ‘Ag to Say ig to sit in 
that be required r reinforcements of the army/| merce, and civilisation. 
eee there than it would be possible to milage squadron, one universal stem piracy 
miskinga a material change in all the milii be the result. Our efforts had already are the 
€ witho yn with an army must also be sent a policy | sion of the slave trade in Brazil. The 
Satelaiti and : accep! ung to the natives. The first act-of the} committee of 1849, which had heard the even o of 
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t ings, still less mi fi . 
he platform, but to the people and armies of India. Above į to the House interests of the country if, 
retrace 
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ait they must have a he Gove’ an 
n | man possessing the confidence both of natives and Europeans, | of Re slave trade, we were now to our. pega : 
who could direct military operations, and by his sonal fess our defeat.—Mr. J. Tirzgenat said that 
as | authority compel all his subordinates to co-operate in his ike conduced greatly to the suppression of t 
licy a a that of the home Government.—The Masque of | The legitimate commerce Which Was pursued not 
'LANRICARDE and the Earl of oe LBEMARLE briefly supported the | Africa tended greatly to this end. wit we had put 
Bill, which te oh a second time stop to the slave trade, we had made its pursu 
FRID. King of Oude, —The Marquis of CLANRICARD z | and dangerous, and forced, those who fg 4 
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asked if tte ‘oon rs, t that the King of Ou Oude was about to th be it into other branches of trade. — 
brought to trial.—The .Earl of DERBY said that the ex-King | objects of traffic on the. aE of fries, atientign 
was now a State prisoner at Calcutta, under a strong susp.cion i of late y dra especial a 
of having promoted the Seer sore fain how i was about | lities the cultivation of cotton. 
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first, second, to. The H 
divided on the reason substituted for the fourth of the report, | in 
and the amendment was carried by a ome of 8; the num- | th 
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i hich w. thi in suj 
bers Contents, 50; Non -contents, 42. With this amend- | an investigation ais than 5 t would de md the fatre receive a vast su 0! dealings 
ment, and the omission o th reason, the report was | action of the Government in and to him. Th Chester and | entered into a varies of details to show ae 
to.—Th Earl of Lucan moved the t reading of the Hoi head Railway "Bill ‘and “tha London and Nord. Western Rail- | foreign powers on this subject would not, to ni roper aala, 
UNGANNON divided the House against the | way (Additional Works) Bill wes! read a third time and passed. | ment, be subject to risk or difficulty. k er evening tbe 
Sioi ion, when there appeared, Ce 33; Non-contents, 12. (Left sitting.] he repeated what he had stated upon à Oa despatch which be 
Majoriiy | oe oe aan reading, 21 A a proposed by subject of the right of ry satisfactory. assuranes 
Earl of HARRINGTON were withdra: $ had received that day containing V ed that there wasn? 
and the Billy H OF COMMONS. on the past of Genoral Gass which ShO shove d that county ani n 
Torspax.— Army, Clothing. A i mii ih Sai FRIDAY. step ie movedfan cane for a Commission to popen of any Lae nti Aigo tp ate erance in that just eat ne 
asked re was correct that when the s to preve! 
pied Aihe ah e clothing Sip: inquire into the present mode of maintaining the Public Roads | the United States to p had pursued for so man ree A 
y 
in Scotland ; but, T aitor a Lanny aly the motion was humane py. whiri 
withdrawn. —The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, in answer to | which he hoped the House would os Pe vy 
Mr. Griffith, stated that the Gtit had not taken into | Gipson said he was pr that the practic en up, and 
— | consideration the propriety 5 employing the Leviathan in | ships in the Cuban wate ie forsee tert carrying oat 
laying down the Atlantic electric cable.—Lord ELcHo put a ques- | that the Government was, to hich only sought to di 
tion relative to the reported unsuitable clothing and defective | principle of Mr. Hati ‘motion, a porto de under 
- | ammunition supplied to the Troops in India.—Gen. Peer said | continue the fe ran = bserved, 
] A réf e M 
Nor, een on its return from Canada was 
unpacked it was foun Se useless, being without any but- 
po cote occurred withi 
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in re ising the Jothi i tion for creating a D f | go 
ent of the army, and he had no doubt the result would be | useful legislations the supervi of passing Bills, and other | margin 
supply. Ch: Rates.— j i ity wi wy shi 
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ready to communicate the outli: 
bis plan to the head of tl ters “Government he Earl of Diisi of 
e announcement made by the Government would t 
deter Lord Po rtman from la; his Bill on the table. —The 
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adopt f .—The | Mr. RoEB' xK, while Toia in as many 
Sane opi Arti in w yh dem ns wg Pi pap said a ‘caked o gubi di ae aoe ‘our ends- 
that the present AR had not been furnished with any | she wanted? If so ; but, as of slaves to ke? ; 
satisfactory t: finition of the duties of the proposed Depart- rours had pelled liane 
er 
hi r the ` PECHELL, and 
nation of the hra without recommending Parliament io A. gA . GURNEY, Sir G. the slave trade as an pies 
urnis 
rol to Sir J. a ol! he as o ny Sera had been men ea the Soo hak ie : 
the Jet insisted that the operations i Stimate commerce in AINE ag 
they tia not relinquish | ee of ttime the ne questions, and ea at ty towards s Basle, hë said, to pai 
e Government of mbled > his 
Support the prayer of the petition, but tho it as | mig 
y a8 the Conmpany should han an opportunity 
tothe Tepe Mths | read 
because this was 
rong. He supported Ue motion, hied "tbat 
J: egy plished great 
y dhe se subject of jike es humane one.— had accom: 
ender the eonaidanstion = tee S errea 8 he sug- | had not done ail we wished, W 
x f. ‘Sai 
. i The AFTESBURY 
a petition from th i 
Be heard bet t o, East India Co mpany praying to | wou 
a 
