1845.] 
Por 
ts from Lisbon state that on the 
THE NEWSPAPER. 67 
[i ere to be removed immediately. —The serio ous ; di sturb- | where the practices objected to were of lo ong standing, th ne clergy 
ht “of ‘the Teh a nap ond from the Castle of St. George, | ance at Hong Kong in consequence of ~ fesyen had been Compeed tojabandon them. The Bishop, in making 
ther witht the firi ing of roc cke ts and ringing of bells, | decree ued by ecineent’ haa sed great | | cee a had provoked this sto the letre had professed to 
to rs Chinese traders well as the| < 
the co n. The g t t en- | Europeans, in consequence of an article in the decree | that t 
ed more welcome fro ‘om a varying reports which | obliging all Chiness venli to repor! themselves | 22%), butt 
d been in circulation during the week pay Boss the | immediately, to register ts Tape sg gil within | enjoined 
“ote poser The birth ofa Prin oe quieted | twenty-four hours. The conseque ving wi ~ |p kinen 
ety which prevailed, and the official bulletin | while Macao was crowded with jun pe 
tthe 18th i is of the cus oe aA 
d events in Madrid of a 
erial Deputy pad ce 
—The un- 
ent date involving 1 Ue 
come to Hong-Kong. Most of the Chinese oe “eft the | 
island had, however, returned. „The repor! ort tha t the Em 
Qui na 
peen followed in Lisbon range én occurrence similarly 
eeable. zA Ministerial Depu aty was convicte di in 
sterial party to 
y D: ese grounds he 
ued that it was the duty of Parliament, by a distinct legisla- 
tive enactment, for which there was ample precedent, to re: 
withou nfirm | th ese di ties, and to declare how much the Rubrics 
Ont t ferier: a rd —The supercession of Colonel | really binding. —The Bısnor of Exefsr, although declining, as 
Outram is altoge ra ope by th a spiritual lord, to enter into any defence of his a 
ult., whi ch s l ceeded to explail i 
The Min 
charge, shaotved their colle 
un: 
count Sa had bro 
e 
ague a prol 
als to proceed further’ against the apt 
rfp ught t for ward 
rown, on the subject of 
a the e province ‘of kosila, revealing a syste em 
‘vance of the Rubric tothe n sity for establishing uniformit: 
hibite ted the the rahe coun! ony The « court-martial on Colo el int ‘is pang He found a Siverstie of practice, a had ies: 
Moseley had ones a sia deal of peepee in the rae a change only to those who were acting in c vention 
press. One o o papers c contend that the ente noe w as of the liturgy. He referred to the pri ings at South Molton 
and a Meget t ntended that the statute of Henry VITI. 
ia | contr upon n wile had power or jurisdiction, but 
whic 
orities 
of ara carried on under the eyes of the e Portuguese 
nly a CATENA ee utho ri 
d was then rightfully restored to 
the possession of all 
pes first 
ty, ppeeainst th spo expel the 
ere}; 
aay piritual supre: „and 
WITZERLAND.— —The Grand Council of Lausanne, Briton, the ‘ovint from London wit ith recruits, ae ‘the change ep ae ad ras sh tghatalmbor to TAA aa sor d 
r discu: ussi. ng in two long sittings the nature „of the lak from Syd ney with. a detachme' nt ¢ of H. M.’s 80th tion Lord scue had presented, explaining his o 
. Regiment, and adist in refere! them, and commenting unfavourably 
Enay Diet, decided last week, by a small majo- had caused ry uneasiness, and ery fears were enter- pee ae Ey Eas ba oe 5 S08 someon by Siit te 
e who wishe d at on 
po ioe of Pa 
onsequence, and 
ent 
Enter- pianadk with the Church, 
prise had been sent in search of them, 
er j 
which res a eir 
_ Some of t the ex- Fordship by the unhappy result of their ancestors’ experiment in 
wi f fire from a neighbouring hill err ph eta 1641 t o aaura DRDI oani of religion rd 
ay ovanan eed in every point with the Bishop of Exeter, ex- 
eener the people from all parts of the count in so px as the power of Parliament was concerned. He held 
pvernment resolved upon calling together the jitia daya Bp the Bib tte of vom mr "The vetoed th vane amount in everything; but he anxiously de- 
ding the protest of the minority. The drums | steam-sh’ ip, from London, arrived at Calcutta on the pened its intererence in the controversy by which the 
ag rg di = pa oy aire hastened the | 25th Dec r average speed rote eri ont the | Grete ee SONE a mel =e, ereed 
refused to turn out, 8} knots an how revi 
f the 
t TA = i had lost all power, i it Eoy ee 
ith 
mber. Her 
voyage rori Southampton was 
the 
Unirep STATES. ship Patrick Rea wi 
he At rejoiced that the laity we: 
have accounts from New Y. ork to the 8th p The in- | What was going forward, and trusted that the spirit which had 
telligene Stis important, inclading the pass A the induced 3000 persons in one town, in a temperate and calm man- 
Hou __of Repre esentatives of = Bill extention 
illeg: eans for. compelling 
to Tavoit its decisions. Ge- 
ed this let 
that hag fi ha ave obtained from 
Argovie, 
over the territory or ie 
Orego ñ, “and the gratifying sei tr Pen 
vania bas paid the ees interest on her de 
ee the House of Represen 
clo se on t 
a e ind by 
be obey brie. Bo by t vows? 
proceedings in aly in ys #: y, no f them obeye: Rubric. hey had never obeyed 
t ause they neve: Jd; and if they talked of a stringent 
tion with the Oregon occupation, ies brought to 1 | Yow he did not see what right, in that case, any man had to say, 
the 3d ult., whe en the e Bill pass cg Sb A 
shall not enter Luce cerne, or, to speak more 
ey, that all operations a) their part shall be sus- 
until the e to a decision. This 
me i 
S O 
, have aia strong representations t 
late must have m: istake im ; he stated that there w parts of 
was said there was no chance whatever of the Senate the Rubric which the uld obey but did not. t was what he 
agree’ ny measure hostile to Great Britai ae id, and what he repeated; and he thought they had no right to 
Texas annexation scheme passed A the Hou re- their choice as tothe parts they would obey, if the whole 
ported against by the Co amittee on ‘Foreign Relations à to lie up 
7 
measu 
received of he revolution in the Canton de Vaud, 
ders of the Free Corps met at Herzogenbushzee 
l = ad resolved to ent upon ~ On 
outer 
0} 
but s, in their unfortunate expedition from Corfa 
of the Confederation. as to the necessity of putting one exception, unanimous, which _also recommended te Calabria rl of ABER 
ifthe circumstances, as affecti in oe nga oer the British 
t. Re tation: 9 
the President has intimated his full concurrence in | resolutions of state legislatures and petition a ety ps a| Go Teie tt Mr. Mazzini; nt is thai ce tee a adn, 
views of the bcos bow ers. Lucerne, however, has | the table. As stated ae Pennsylvania Na Leth the municated to fore ig Apor ers, which kire Soaig or did com- 
i sed. f | promise the safety of any ‘act 
a tor n sare D; sie et al a v Tafona on A ed ori z e Bill pas bye - i ‘aim "te Indu ced his friends to abandon their contemplated enterprise, No 
> J d beei 
ult. The payment took place on information ha é 
nalised by the firing of cannon, 
has risen consi idera bly. 
the 3d, and w sig- | spiracy, because the mment had bee! 
Pennsylvanian "sii it, and he believed it to be wholly untrue that the Austrian or the 
The Governor has signed the Neapolitan Governments had entrapped the parties, by ge ake 
eee 
Rin 
A pi to undertake their e: ition. miian A his keen eatin 
news being rece he unjust Bg wore which had been thrown upon him, he 
‘the Govern ment called ie ea a he body | creditors’ Mee which places above 100, 000 dollars ed shat he & , that when the day shoul ia comei which 
ay s 
account for all his anig that byes, charge 
dless 
hoes aples, and tesa he nye of on 
lic "tae Kinai of the cantons of Uri, 
Unterwal 
i 
Pikas gan pon as (eraris present one, —Lord 
be improving; owing, no against hima expressed his satisfaction. 
doubt, to the caper scotanioe of capitalists, that 
and Z ha 
ot War a 
HOUSE OF sagen go 
i debate on 
mena 
at the dish onl ofthat e canton. 
aay and in aes 
vod Acco rding to the lo 
P e Post-office 
d also met i in a Legislature in regard to the interest on. the State debt. T. by Pa Counter; who tused oe Homé by rinii 
Tt fi A after | Government of w z —— set ripe in the Court of Ex- 
Fri k i l lses before Puebla, had made | chequer, when Baron Alder for th een of 
iburg avving recer P 2 s ” » who st i 
ntry the utmost agitation | his submission to the new Government. ; ie rate ae Member To tor Finsbury, ATON bee. 
cal papers, Luce BO TRON combe,” them to look, not merely into his “mouth,” but 
artamen - his face.—Mr. R. Cotporns was willing to support the 
MA: RKE. —À t elegraphic despatch OUSE OF LORDS. rng and Mr. RA 
cae France, stating that the affairs 
ith bee: 
nen a mark with Morocco ne n ar- 
Lby the mediat stion of France and Great Britain. 
R ma nced the he tribu ute, an and the Danish 
JAth 
H 
ere riar laid on the table a Bill for the cer 
the Bill.—The Earl of parnovsis Taid on the table the aarts of | produced by it, he tthe ordinary 
A AND Catita The first attempt to establish the Railway Board on the Newcastle- upon -Tyne and Berwick and | of opening letters, if peste res vets ought not to be 
adian mail twi the Manchester and Leeds fiati —Earl Firzwittram remarked, to remain in its present e; he would provite some 
news by the fi ails fr that if the labours of Railway Board were not soon concluded, | checks, a as assimilating the proceedings to those in the 
a så w iret of the intermediate - om their advice would come after liament had ided. He | case of asearch t.—Mr. Cotqunown, Mr. B. COCHRANE, 
c arrived this week with intelligence only eight expr his opinion that the Board had very hardly |-and Lord C, HAMILTON, oe m and amend- 
an oiak bitonght Hr the gria beniveyanes, wih oes a ty sre Aiia Ort the “nallway Board, ai eNA eria par diemi vigri- prieisim 
x < Ti o e 
il ed London at the mg of the month. the distinction which should be inclined to take would | into a legal argument to versie ms j ity of the Secretary of 
ui was brought to Suez by ind on the | be ¢his@-He should say that whenever the Railway Board | State’s warrants.—The Soricrror-Gawerat argued at consi- 
g left Calcutta on the 8th, Madras on the | re inst a m , that decision ought to be considered | derable length in support of their legality. With respect to 
Ceylon on the 18th, and Aden on the 28th J conclusive against it; ved he did be Fay Se od on r ae ~~ ov eee be the 
: š, of the Bi in favour of the measure co -~ | terms in wi e amendm noble conceived, 
-e by this conveyance may d ma NENET for tie one case the only effect would be to postpone | it would not at all ch: the i which Mr. Duncombe 
> Another revolution place in | the measure, and the parties might a Se nares had assumed at the ing of the debate do the 
- Ita i i dis- t approving, however, of the conduct of the Railway Board, | before the House was a party . l 
= SaR ne mag tar ae few | he tooti smh to its constitution, and complained that the amendment passan up aa Hesia. (Smee 2 ten times 
z fthe Committee were not Pri unsellors.— re personal.—: . Resseen admi ha! e Secretary 
i risoner shortly after, at Davee: r= could not say when the labours of the Committee | of State did ‘not possess detaining and opening 
count mentions his death ; but | were likely to terminate. He knew that he had no right to com- } letters, then to unlearned oe age a 
Merely aaya that he Has been pent to prison. [pian of shear Tht hal PS sta "Fcicaear pec |in amitan ca te testo en te Temet shuld Set mame 
i è. No 
e Maharajah, therefore, is zos ee in office, Sat a right to complain of anything; but cer- | the law clearer. As far as he could see, the co: Sir J. 
3 although this revolution tainly the ‘committee had been dragged forward as forar bee andas Pee po ee had been similar to that of P 5 in office, 
in India, it is not likely to ything | culprits condemned. servations of his:noble e he power had been used to defeat conspiracies the 
A revoluti place also in Nepaul, ee doubly pleasing, from their ey a public peace, Soe - : aa ey ey a 
f A 3 .—Lord Brovesam power, they shou! consi they leave 
PH it is generally believed that ak he should introduce his Bill tra Anieri p jurisdiction place. ? Lord Sidmouth con: sary for 
ffair. The Rajah had promised to abdi- divoroe'a wm a pranoni- et cae to the Judicial Aee = ae acre deias: ie e ann e ae 
yO ce versation took l Droug tate, abont 
on which ~ buz Whar bed Loge gg am’s petitions against the London Conaiasioners of Bankrupts, | the disturbances they pretended to discover. He acted on this 
The Bal a i 7 some chiefs, de- | Thin the Lor Crancetton thought had better not be pressed | principle when Poe ores Can oe saa rejected the 
espe a on ears O! an for the posals of a cal t who come to 
eater 1 be to grinte vw in “presenting ‘certain petitions | ao an offer me mi services a betra: ates, At this 
The from f Exeter, a in ra revision of the Rubric, went | moment he did not believe that siès. existed in this country. 
war, ere was dat se to be one of teas the diocese paneed z Ete lately attracted so much | | The melancholy fate of the broti Bandiera, who, with their 
than of arms. ews harra attention to that part of the kingdom, and described the un fear | 20 companions, had been lured an rayed by a spy, did not 
E Pei at Sukkur were | irritation of feeling which ‘the is of the rye: + | afford as any encour: reer pt to paene the practice of opening 
the le. Their ion: was, t - } letters on the any foreign power. For if, under 
t preas SA 200 men, bene and j duced pear a TE a pe ency to produce an pinia ede to | threats which ae ee beer be seriously intended to be realised, 
arrival. The survivor the Church of Rome; and so strong was this impression, that even | we gave information respecti 
ig Poles to the Emperor of 
Russia, 
