THE NEWSPAPER. 
“ar Janms Gaanam went | four hours in each day. With T 
changes, he could cons 
in.—Sir JAMES GRAHAM We four hours in each day. Wit 5 
rd ASHL ky Aep E the 
t of facts, contend! that no letter | to the second rae a of the ail Lor 
van Tae a aeres, datod at Corfu, had been opened by the | terms offered. aid he saw himself stenig | ER aloit; 
5 lof Aberdeen, | while the primb was supported by t eat 
of t ; i 
112 
that House would cordially join 
se persons w , he ekl 
at document, 
threatened to prosecute the Moniteur for this defamation of his | wou not al ea o ay e the co e ct a magistrates 
character ; bat as never instituted the prosecution which he | had pursued. “He yay sorry tba had not eard 
threatened. Soon after this transaction the French Govern- | of ny cireumstar RAS one These arite had face committed 
ment ordered Mazzini to quit Marseilles, and Mazzini took up | on the 5th March, so that "thelr period of imprisonment would 
his abode at Gen and commenced & aes of a rigues to | expire on Sth Apr il. He could only say that he would davise “Her 
disturb the peace on: Savoy. Sir J. Graham then read a des- Majesty to order the peng k= liberation of these persons, and 
patch from Mr. Morier, our Minister in Bwitercien. dated ne he known the — ooner he would have given the same 
January, 1834, giving an account of the entrance of an armed ice.—Mr. T. uae te gp that the committing magis- 
i the command of mission of 
rther 
bances in that cong A He did eee think t necessary to ost i inj 
w Mazzini from place place from the 1834 to the | inaviduals at House Base went into a committee of supply, 
present time. The date a ‘the paies ay him for the | and a resolution voting a number of men for the land forces of 
opening of his letters was the Pra March, 1844, and he re- Her Majesty, not exceeding 100, = in number, was agreed to; 
ceived a despatch, dated that ay, from Sir H. Seymour, | after which the Chairman repor rted progress. — Ón the motion of 
now our Minister iy bree EA Se the Belgian Govern- | Sir i a the Public Museums Bill was committed pro 
ment had refused one of the Bonapartes permission to reside | formd, with a view of introducing provisions to extendits powers 
in Brussels, crit ag the French Government liad connected | to all malicious injuries of wor of art in every part of the 
him with the disturbances in the Papal States. “We under- | United Kingãom.— The Lons doM 3 in moving for leave to 
R ” added Sir a one " rp Mazzini, the head of these | bring aa ats for the amen nt and better administration of | W 
be nant n me ngland. Ith mE m zl at si his associates | the lav ing to the T, of the poor in Scotla: oe entered into 
enturers, w. whos dings should be |2 ik ekor statement of the reasons and circumstances which 
prieks thei? "The Earl of Aberdeen had. ne that the | rendered it necessary. The ubject, which had previotialy at- 
warrant to open Mazzini’s letters had n ued at his beaters the peau pe of the General beep auf had been minutely 
desire. He (sir J. Graham) confirmed thst Per olin 5 in- | investigated by a commission appointed in Lin bead which, after 
mation whi e a ce see bo time i bm inquiry of ne: 1844. That 
that London, under Mazzini made the centre of a great report showed that the growth of population, inë tbe change in 
moyenant in Taly. which wn likely to endanger the na of | habits and condition, had left a large mass of misery in towns, 
Europe ; therefore it was that he did not shrink fro: suing | and some. rural districts unprovided for, calling for a legis slative 
his warran nt to op pares apr sepee oe. Ifany tai ee were | interference in order to provide a remedy. xplaining in detail 
thus committed, it w: s fault, tyrone alone. He gave the | the system of poor-relief in Scotland, he stated that the evn ting 
House his solemn ass ahot that ‘tha t warrant was not issued | law gave the power of raisin , by assessment, the amount requi- 
by him at the instance of any one, much by ot bs inysanee of | Site for the ‘‘ needful sustentation” of the poor ; but the defects of 
any foreign Minister, cer that it w. bea issu n def of | the law respecting the atatalerkiion of the poor-fund rendered it 
British interests, and of British interest: —" ae inadequate for the necessities of those who required its aid. To 
a warrant he was then merely Mini iv à 
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Mr. Mazzini as ry of a t man, unable to Fa onen 5 ae oT ps og hal whom are to ` es ser- 
fend himself. The 1 pu sablication { in the Moniteur San a forget, vants of th the other be ex officio, and to be com- 
and a paper which had copied it had been proceeded against by posed of the § Solicitor. Gebers: en Lord Provosts of Edinburgh 
Mr. Mazzini for defamation, and had been convicted, the e- | and Gla: mgt and the Sheriffs of the shires of Perth, Ross, and 
fence set up being that there was more than one Mazzini in the Re nfre' This board is to be armed with powers which will 
World, and consequently that he could not have been the party | Dring shout uniformity in the administration of the poor-func ; 
Teferred to. On the trial of the Italians for murder, a verdict | enable its administrators to a! site md to th si gtd bed bg mst, 
had been returned of homicide without premeditation, it being | Casual Fag provide be the ksd e pauper lu prs end 
clear that the transaction originated in a momentary quarrel.— | the ac of the law of settlement.—Lor a "Da i Er- 
D some observations from Mr WARBURTON, there was a fab. je , Mr. Hu ae ma Mr. iw nig pices ar) their ee 
ivision, when'thé motion was réjected by 52 to 33.—The | tion of the con wo A Government i ngr appli ng with a difficult 
After some discussion on the subject of allowance for draw- remarks from Mr. Fee d Sir J, Grama, lea iven 
backs, the resolutions were agreed to, and a bill was ordered to | to bring in the Bill. as 
be broueht in for repealing the anaa n glass. Thursday.—Mr. Dopp moved that the report of the Board of 
“re or ‘ay.—Mr. MACKINNON moved the second reading of | Trade against the Bill intended to be bed mt in by the Croydon 
e p “= ern = i Earl of Lilitoaie: while wish- | Railway Company, to authorise the construction of a branch 
ing the emen i s Bil be the general measure for | railway to Ashford, be referred back to the Board of Trade, for 
sanato: lag Srclations: a lee ge to should be introduced by | recomsideration.—The SPEAKER raised a question whether this 
Government, eimetia to the second Bross on the under- | Motion should not be considered a public, and ‘not a private 
standin: feos rig the Bill s so epes bes referred to a select committee, | One, and a discussion ensued thereon, after which Mr. T. Dux- 
—Mr. H Haw. „ân ae ral members, spoke | COMBE divided the House—For the motion, 78; against it, 123; 
against the acta readin a, gory vitiata it hones read a second | majority against the motion, 45.—After the preliminary business 
time, and ordered to be referred to a select c: tee to con- | Was disposed of, the Sreaxer announced that the time had 
< Sider whether its provisions codd. be pets oea. —Lord | now come for the presentation of petitions on the subject of the 
AsHLEY moved the second reading of his Bill for the Regula- | grant to'Maynooth. On this intimation va “cloud” of mem- 
w bearing petitio: i 
o ir 
quiry into the subject, through the agency of | excitement rarely witnessed in th Hou of Comm: 
h y at Government had come to a de- | Petiti i st rant, pre: a ted 
ision on it. They acquiesced in the general principle of inter- | by Mr. Hawes, Mr. S. Wortiey, Mr. Greene, Mr. Vernon, 
ehea - g that it was right to introduce some regula- | Mr. Pakington, Sir onara Douglas, Si Inglis 
e labour of women and children employed in print- Lord Palmers Mr. Darby, Lord Worsley, Lord J. Stewart, 
orpe, M fs 
In print-works the Lord H. Vane, Lord Howick, Sir T. D. Acland, Sir J. Hanmer, 
i in the | Mr. rg Mr. Blackstone, Mr. T. Egerton, ot E. Ellice, 
iods in 
and “ slacks,” involving jun., Lord Ashley, Mr. Adderley, and Mr. Baring. Many of the 
and, therefore, | above p! ions were pe be nes bodies, and rested hon the 
i Bat pefuckie that Fay cores tablishm should not receive any 
, ani ipot ia e Stai rear e Hou aprir resolved itself tate a 
might | committee ah y whole House, ‘Mr. Greene in ioe chair. Sir 
R. mane and a to develope the plans of the 
Psa © o Maynooth. He h he of 
the peculiar nature of the 
iat they cou uld ae than a 
days year it would | presen! consideration of the sab ect of academical educa- 
t persons to school for three cr tion, which would come before bet them again, on 
upie ed 
the same seh ‘büt the halad bed. The nas ae ofa 
dec 
