The Times from London, Greater London, England (2024)

8 THE TIMES, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1850. 'WKDI8H PROVIICCIALMORTOAOKBOHDS. BMiaw HALI I BBB BWJI bttWatJw fit. PAID a iiamaa. ra DM, TWM.

ua. aa OAT. BM ry.ii i iimMiM irflore. Be Ima ewe nt4i wi fiiMM aaataae it Im WwOklL fcaac a Arwa raru. B.C.

itawMMMnumlahMni Met II its. 1... "ii a aw tr, iMiWrMli at moat ran- eU iw Xawutan br Mw. k.i warclnMnmiwwiilpiiifnwMil Ik AeJ liana Om IWHWMIMNMI ke nM I hlHtaMW Hlfn lit eMaaij end aa iMmwiUimm Ml. On 1 (Ml MUU hi B'aliaf, UMl ke 1MC I af tw Hh4fM enaai aw for BtadactKa erf the itnfi work La ranfaai rwnri ai la.

RrJ ibhw OeOT. caeean. the bmw a.aia. Kxlw tOotaa Oarrelao, dnturaliaail ia. a Ih TWAlaa Urkiae la Pan, ha a 4 arn mim cfcf rule ra th ahoie mm .4 Arai ari n'e MWrV(ni A4 AmiHli4 Mdlla IKM LaTraneaa It hurfa) ml Mat IL tor MM r4i rpm LA TEAVIATA.

Prteelr'al aerer wedaaie tMn thee wwwl iiowmw la ErarlaadV. aaa, w4njrL (h4r Nr Oa Taaonatad Wit ll.ru it. la wkM bUlle. Haa, MuXae. DeJeaeAUA, IV, aad Ml ana aaeaar.

I iOYAL ITALIAN OI'KRA. DRUKT tiANE. IL m4 kt. I. af tk ii'liiamM nrtf arlMm TiUrm.

MAI. nw an1 Meant to IITrrieeBiw. Hat br rm al Ihll a TSt KlllIrT ITtarfnL tt MUatt1! Hee Mb td Barter. V.rdl'1 tTaad aa ra. IL TKUTAT 'Kt.

an Ik Mlrariacana erfW.er Xrnaatn. MiJa. THM: Ajaarnn, MM. i Ian. Mdn.

IMT Ink; II tvate dl Lena. Siw IMali rVrreena, Knar laaanal: Rail. rVner. Marwarl1 Zawn. Cael; Bad Maari, Hlfaof OlafHnt Maeloal IAfi aa OMawr rVaeict.

Tn imalmU wMk a IUM HmttaHMt kf Mala. ftwkatll. M. Veartrtv M4IW MorlaarM. raaaK MaeearaMa, OarllU.

MauV. aad the Owe 4. IUIIK. To lad Mflearla aaara. II OanaaaL MJlla.

McnNndrmai kar lata eataat U1 U. kar on Ikal mHal Tkaaaal vUI tartaJa ISa follntaf aruatea Doina Anna. Mtla niaa; I) iinalPTHa. M.Ma. Vaial fW ttat aaaaaraiMi Ihla al tWNaa.

MUla. VlrMr Ualta ai OwranaL Hlaaf llaaiaO; IVftvK( Marlal Oiki ftrat am ra a at tba Boral IuHaa Ur' aana aawa, Unnu aiaanH bwot aavui airlja. Craait Maraiat PartDnaaaaa. aal lX axw kaaa laaa iaam vWaaj of Mm, wttk IM aaaarral i rrtdat. Mil r.

Tka pnanaa vtu Lka UBa at anuawu nam laa tot aha nun a i wink II Tra Ejf apalUaalnal to atam lin IIAYMABKET. TniS raoaaalaofTka Warm WKATKS KOTAU XTKXlaa. aattaHM lka' a. kataa ajumb tka laat aa bal aax ot Nawi and of la iiaii ui.ul of Mka Aa Srvtok. Ta i at aHtk THI WUILD UD TBI la num.

al Hi R. Waaa, aad Mi, a Walla vU ala aaaaat. Aftar wklA, lka al aaaaral azlraraoaaa. wtlk tka laaTHanam I ail tt OVbaaar aad Moni. aad Is aaaraallad laat am bf KWADKLPHI Til EATKE.

THIS EVENING, rrkUrV aad Satafdar. tb aenaaalnf AdrJpsltlt of Id ir tEX rKAKOAH: Mr. J.W AfWwhlv. in I Of TUB ItUUkB in a. a.

Wlcaa.anU Mr. 1 Ult. Mr BlUiurlnn. Mat 81 mm a. To aoaehid wMk iraad axwaaacaaa af AaMODEUS or.

Tb Data on Two Rucaa Aaaulaaa, Mt. J. Lv TWa Duo rtmaaaa, Mr. P. Radford Dm tavfcu.

Mha K. KaUr Doa Ooefeat. Mb Woolfar taoaywa Mwa KaT. Dnor oaa at anrlr pat I oaaaiamatT. (ITAL PRINCKSd THEATKK Ut Wraki of Cbartaa Kan Maaa ant.

THI IVEIL1J. koa dvtiaj taa aad MZti will aanad Hniayim1! aMortoal aiaraf HCXkTV. Ooraaaanataf at I aaloak. kUix Haorr. Mr.

fcaa; Ckora. Mn.a Kaaa. TCRRNCH PLAYS. Ml, Jarnn'i Thtra. Under tk an nil at M.

Jaka rteaMo. Lat Wk bal Thrra of tk Bna. lauiina (PridarU Mar to. tb wU 11 111. Uwna Afaar vhlok.

tha arrailfal aomolia TaatWrlll. MKKQIKC4 DC7 MAKLC Soaia. M. fldaiaat Ju Lniaalaa. K.

IkMikra. Oaulaiar. M. rraaaaaa La Bamnaa. MdO.

DrlphlD Maria. MdlKaatat Sard. Mi la. LaoaUa wlU rapaal tba abaractar of fVwrakala Uliaovraa daaEaoioB Maadaf wait. L(ohaj a Far Marti will aa arotaol Dall rat.

SsvUa, aLldfaal arrata, 4a. tat, aatakllhiaira aad aaOarf. la arlrata bnaa, HI. Jf3tt. M.

a. Bm ofAoi opaa froai II liU S. Prima kaf at all to rxaaatoal ttbrarlaoir tad attaaa. 07AL STRAND THEATRE. Great Bacons af tba Ifaw aaiitlll KaorMapBja laaia at Tb Maid aad la Man or.

Tb Fatal Hot with at.aMT.Iraa ana inaaai. xwia BVMiaii taaaaw aVK J. M. Morloa. WHICH OP TUX TWOI fc, ran Rr A Tursar.

Mdra C. Sarmda. M. 41nrane.r. Hatha, aad Aiaw arbtak.

THK MAID AHT THK MAUPIC; or. Tka Paaal Saarar Mnai. J. Blaod, Clark, Tnrarr, Prrratar, and Mart, WBtna Taaparalaiwttb la lwiaailllirarootVAICD Utowx, la wic mhb A. Bar ant arm appaar.

Tb baz offia ana fraaa dar. Bwla, ta. bona, 3a pit la. td. talVar.

tST; aaiiai rrnra, tu it aa aaaxj aa, apart lu. tKxKmf. NEW UKITANKI A Hoztoc THIS ETROXO. tba im.ajful nwaa, aatlahd BaXtXDA HEtGRAVK. Mlada, Hlja OaraUad.

Otnoladinf wtvkUXDKK AClmca Wgpax alra.a. laoa. Oraad Pa Ctlaolla MdO. CaUrVrViaia REAT NATIONAL STANDARD THEATRE; 1 VISOOXTTNUANOKwl HOUSEHOLD WORDS. Tk laat kTaaaaar af naaakrd Waraa arm walilabid aaaardaa.

Mar tttb, traaj aad afaar wblakaatUataaraMaaIW aartad kta ALaVTHS TKA a rV)DD. JI tka TBuaod aOa V. 11. W.Pba itraal aana, aana. FJOUSKHOLD WORDS.

Mtaarv DRADBURT (X aad rTAXI baf ta r. thai iWraraieatVia wtlk H.aih ilt Ward ra faara aad afaar tba MU laat. aad laat oa raardar. tb df JwrAtkgrwa waa.aaia aaw waaktr HI katit aariodv aaLtaiaai wuiah, M.m aawaaliaiiaaa tatlhaK aWili1iiitala U.toaiai raiail, Uadoa. E.CL TIOTAL MEDICAL BENEVOLENT COLLEGE.

It i. Hll 1 n' 1T nf riibliaraiM If al in I. i In MUTIXtl of tk Urrwaon ot Ik CMlai Tarara, Oraat Oiaja aut, a Tbaia. aav. rar ta aorpoar i anbolari.

Tba ballDl wlB a a a'oluck ti Irjlr. Aaa Goaaranr wba aw aol aaw ruari.l tba VaJVatlaa una ka i a ra aavHra rrn im ma aa awarai la Brtraaaryv wao win am aaarr, rarw.17 ai aaai aa laa That wttb Ik nrw of aaaaartlat taaOillrra. LadUa ba adralttad aa UtaOoranwwi. aa aataaaat of Prat Qalara. art ra tb IH of Haraara.

brtaatt. LadlrawbaaakortlMBatjr tba Ktb laat. will fcaanktlad to tow at lia alaraiaa aa taaloat. Br ordar rf tha CVwmrfC fUiRRKT FRKKaTAW. WaontaiT.

IIKKBCRr WILLtAMI. Aaautaot OSak K. falar. 1atdna. W.

Mar It ROYAL ITALIAN OPKTUL aiTRTTflARD tS, Kllra.VUht if lluruanr. THTS KVrmxnfTriurwIaj. May tba ru Kitra IfliM of tkr Sraam will late rlaon, aa which orcaalon will to prrf.wmail tlrrrr Irtaa rraad or rra. LK HUnCK.Xtnt Valrntlna, Madaiu tinai; MarranU dl VaWa, M.UI. Marai: Iaia doivaa.

Mailame TaUa kca; urtMvnn. Hajiri lrtiwv aarrua x. jiarr: iiuanr ui riaa Bru. KLrn Pulonuii II Ouola tU Jinrn. Him TaxUatiea Mrru.

Kicnrar Ntrkiaal; Tarana HWwa? R.iw4; II RrU. runnr Valru: Hnrtronl HnMkr. ruiiior uazinl Marai. t'oodnrVr viaaa tM It MOlaa. IVlroh.nl onrra win oaaiornn at half at I.

tkratrt MalU T. an I 9. anipbltbratm, lv M. IViim. atalla, and Ml UaaaU to be bad at tb InlaV lumlrr th uurvto) ut tb Ifwaaal.

aad ot tb prtnalpal naalcaallan aod Utranau. BOYAL ITAMAX'orCItA. DRURr LASTK. Hroil Tlrar thla Hraan of 11 Tm.at.a THISIINaVmliafTaoaorrra.lLTRijVATllRIS. Isovrx.

MilDa. Tltlrm Aronu. M.IUa. Uuanlacd Inra. Miltla.

DrU Ai 11 UoaU ill Luoa, Hlfwr llliali rerrandi Mtrvw Inaml IlitU. Anra Merwlaa I'a JUrarara, Mfmar Caalatll an.1 Manrloo, ir" GiasiinL Oanduouw M. lirocdiut. To onaclink with a Dalltt INNrtlaaimt. lit tlfkvta, fclj faOarira.

fa. and 1 Ufprr ura, traaiOaa pao dailr trumlltat. TREATRK ITAL. HATMARKET. TJada tb Manaaaraaolof Mr.

Ikiekatna. THIS mULNd, flit. tVuRLD AXD Tilt HTAOK Main, OaiiDloti. Hwa, W. Fwrrn Maalamra Aait Srdirartrk.

Maa Wartra, aad Wbil. With KLUTKA IN A NEW ELECrRIO LlliRT: Mr. (Vanraon. Ml. Wilaloa.

MUlM.Toruo, audMlaC Waatea. Aral 'TWAS Oomtumoa at I. KRW AD FX PHI TIIRATRK. nla roW and Mananc. Mr Wrtatrr.

TniS XVRSINtr 1CI ON I'ARLe RA.NCAU an J. L. Tiaar, CI tvlbr. HJl'InrVm Miaaa Ardan. k'.

Krllr. AlVrhi. h. TUK HOU8E OR THIS HOME? Mr. aod Mr Alfrrd 'ln.

to. Tocnacradawitb AHMOUKU3 or. Tba IVrtl im Two sticba Mi an Tooat, r. iinlturd MJaaat Kackr, Krllr. Wuulnr.

Qiinnno at 7. BOTAL PRINCES.TH THEATRK. TTrrW th Manarananit ot Mr. Cuarlra Kraa. THT8 ITVE.MNO wUl aa preKnUd rlhakapaarr'i hiakwloil idafot KING 11X3 Kt Y.

Klaf Uaorx Ml. 0. Kaaa Chorum Mr. A STLETi ROYAL AM PH ITH EATRE. Th tiMboonarrd aadlcatairaoa Fqaaatrlaa Troava, Alwactrai tb la a aaaibt ot male aod faaoaai aaanban ol tb0trraiwar en (arat la an aaaanf, tka uoota uauiy atona aaaoarrnf Brav na aroaVra.

bviailirK Jobs Hratr Oooka. tb I araaan aaacwat. add ad a a OYp Jrtd traaa all quartrnot tha cloba. Tk Baaa aroaeaau acaa or aiu aa oarnff. acsjaaaaoanai l.ra ana fraoa, larirra.

and rtiitin. aakarlaal br tha mibha aod tha tiiiaw eaaaol laU tetiaiat aaitaiBiad kf lama la, not Bal arttrta la taaal'ila rar. upr ary awaiag. JCHOLA8TIC. REOUIRRD.

for a UraUy of titli tm rnumrftE uutkiuia mum oa a got Aaaia rmealadr. waoaaa laa. Protaaax Blrar, CaaaMtatraet, SCHOLASTIC SaJiry 100. GERM AX OOYERXSiaj tor a mtlaataa'a taaulr. Maat Pi tank with a war aaaaat aad alar attaaaaiHr.

Alao a Praoeh Ladr. wka oaa ararh anatt aad aiactaf 10. Oomtm InaUtala, 5, Ooo inOVERKESSES. A GORNESS is RE VT QUIRED, far a aaatl aa't farallr la th aoanlrr. far tbra BlUriM.

Praaot Pnoch aod taaale iwraimd. fWarraM. Affrr a i l(r to Mn. Skaltoo, loiTaaai taatrtuOoa. ltt Vafoflaaalrara, nad OVERN ESS, IUridmt or Dailr.

A roanr lady, of th Fatabimiad UHnraa. KEyUlKES a KaVEHUACEMENT i a ParW aad aad dra A. Bwabri QUarr. Oraal OVERN ESS. A Udj, 30 to of are, who hsa VIkadnaablTrariaraaalratRaVaAOUENT.

Eh Ifnallrb Praaok flucotlr. aauaia. alnrln aad drawioa. A tbra laii1 ulanaata trraa a otatrraiaa'l faaailr. Balarr Alao bar aaw, EdraakVaTnaZ K.W.

Mr. lAjQtraj'a, arnioaar. PgrtmanjJa. OVERN ESS. A ladr, who hu had tome Tears' airraWu ta tnlUoa.

oarinoaof a RE EsnAOEMEIrx. la tba daarhtar at a aratmaliwil raaa. aad ra addiaina to tka waaal tnookaiof aa EaiJah adacaOoo. tairkt riwiuh. Oarmao.

IlaOaa, annate, aod drawiat. Addnai B. aod Bao'i, ttallonary GOVERNESS. The frirndt of an officer's widow wtakta pmcor. for bar a RirUAnojf aa OOYUUTESa orao tatatUohartaof afaaiUr daprlrad ot BUrol oar.

Bbe la hlfhtr aaoaar'akad. aad woald aa aoanataoa to any faaulr raqalrtai tb aaaataac or a fasatowoaua. no aranls a4 rapr. RESIDENT GOVERNESS. A roanr ladr, accnt tuaaed ta taltloa, wUbaa lor ka ENG AG tMZXT In a aefml or taolr.

Afoalrtneiit EnfHah. fwjd Baoaic, drawinc. flowar palDtroa aodtbradlaaatiat rmk Bad Oarmao. Addraai W. it, Caott AILV GOVERNESS.

North west District An 1 1 ruiKjrd and acoraa abad ladr. whariaarratdad abroad, and laiPitaattaloatrnatBdTaBead tmrlla wtahra tor a RE ENOAOE. Bl r. T. aaqmiaiaama ariaia laraia nia, am.

prtei.a AILI or aiUBlUAlj WVEKBi. A TOanf aumad ladr. a oraal naiad to talttna, daalra aa EEO AORMEXt. id. par bflor.

Addraaa Epalon, pa oOoa. EaUaf At ORNINO GOVERNESS AT A faaailr taaldlu lath dtr. Matlb abla to teach brUL Prarra. and ajtoM. AAdnaa, wtUi all aartlealara.

to Alpha, sTXaid farallr raai. arid aiiaaa fata hll rWarr U. raw waat. WANTED, for Maat ba abl lo teach To, ivi UrUMSitx uuviKHras, a Tounr French Swit XI PVoltaaa, wan adaoaard aod wall raoawinarafaiL L. Mw NURSERV GOVERNESS WANTED, to take tba aotira aharta nf ttirar chlidran.

of tba trr of alxlit alt. aod thraa. El private, to tha naacafranaTit ot ahUtlTao, atonrfratb taow aifa oj uruao, aoo arauir ao araca toe romoMBU ot rraooh aod rawaia aearaoai. aooo aaiarr woua flTro to a tnotaet prmt Addreiair. Mr.

rroorr, raootaaOrrraca, OapbacaTd. FAMILIES. A Itdr, 33 rrn of are, with Crst raU tntrraorilaav aow REQUIRES a BrrUATIO V. hb I Haaol ta tb Praoek aod OaiiH laaaM. taaebe Boala, rinftes, ml rfraw I A.

A. 10. UroUnottreat, Badford q. Inf la rariona rtj ka. Addn NE INSTITUTRIOE FRANCA ISE.

Protar aii la. dairrrait an war dam no raajOl, pour a AVmar or1 UNE DAME FRANCAISE, arant nne trtbtUs aronamrlarlmi. at Dtaot daat ana da (morjra paaalooia BrUhloa. dealra Iroaaaw aa facailla, poor EXSEIOXER LAtfODE at riu.uui (aaiaaai raoaacat a Jala. H.

Uuraar. library, FINISHINO GOVERNESS. A ladr. of high atlerriaaeoai aad Vaiatpatiaru wlr bat raonrtr. lafl taaaUr ot dlatiaatloa, iVarlra.

a RaVDrOAOEMENT la a notjrman'. i rarilr Bibb'i faanilr. with hi atllra ot Lnodoa. He aoirinramaet are arraaa, auarnt. drawtaf.

Parlalaa ranch, Italian, and Gorman. Tk hirkart tafaraoea ofTrrad aod a Ubaral ealarf raaoirad. L.LJ), poav oaaea. o. ta af aan aaaat arpc TO GOVERN ESS ESWANTED, a LADV, to rvparlatcwl tor aara aad daol.nf thraa or foar ablklm nnoaa IS.

She an4 abl to Impart a rwiod idaoaaloD, with tba Latin, aod tela tba entire ear of bar aaplla to aod out ot Bsanoi bnari. AoauanpUaoMrrta aot raqalred. On who haa a aaar Load jo. TJIANOEORTE TAUGHT, br ladr. Terms.

12 A laams tor I Ol. UL 3. Y. pcaVoOal. OraarUlaatraet, BruD.

A VOCALIST and PIANIST, of the ImoeriJ afV Aeadaaar of Made. ParK rtraa tltrTRVCTtCnr BrRorsO a.PLAKCI, aad anraraa tor aorrtaa laairaka or danaaat. Addraaa Maa. E. Mr.

iaaar i Kotal 8. Jiiaf attaat, 4V W. rHOAW, PUnoorU, Hartnonr. On QaioM ctjwS 9nii7imm PKOPaSSOH ATTEfDS or EE Oraa aaplla ar alioarad to araroa du at umi. Arw.x.turf.Mi.atrm3rtttrmM,Kjo.

ti aiaJili1w0j tESSON SINGINO, th 'iJHithtodaa aH, S'w'iS fOPORTB TAUGHT by aaiaa i del aaaaia, WXX aa a. Aarwaa BOTAL OLYMriO THEATRE. ra. Mrawa F. R.itauo ami W.

S. EmAra. Tins ITMINaNlNEroISTllOF THE LAW: Maaan.Addlana. r) Mr nurtinr. tiu runur KNOT: Mran.F.

Kobauo, tt Vlnlnc. W. tionlal Mlaa Mra. LrUh Marrat. FASHION ABLKARBI VALH Moava.

AikUaat. H. WUao Mn. Kraden. Mlai Wndhara.

Uummruo at halt paw 7. BOYAL STRAND THEATRE. Lraara and Ptrrctrraa, Mia. Hwanburoofh. THISEVENINO.

WHICH OP TUKTWilt ht Mr RlaoAMtaiM. WUkm. ho. After which, THE MAID AND TUK MAiiPIK; or. The Fatal Rpooa Maao.

Bland. CUrta, Turner Meadtna a oUrrr. Hrlbr. M. Kimrano.

aod at. Wlthm. Ta omdiale with VANDYKE HKOWX Mr. Uart. Mba A.

liunlrtt. Crannwoo at T. ROYAL 8CRREY THEATRE, Piw tha B1NKFI To! Mr. BAXIL IDTTEB. THIS EYL.NI.Sll.

th Pint lart of HENRY IV. Hotipor. Mr. Orewtek 1 Prinra if Walra, Mr Khrphrnl Kir Jnhn Palataff. Mr.

Vollair Kin llmrf. Mr. Ilarjl INwr Pan. Mr. J.

Frtnandrt Pranoll. Mr. H. Whlllenoib; Ladf Prrrr. Mra Hil.ai Klrlw.

Mr. Chlpiao'l 1 upiU. Mr. E. Mackory.

And THE CUl'UIEil UP Lk'UNo. ROYAL GRECIAN THEATRE. THIS KYENINU. THE C'UOL'D IIP LIKK: Mraan. Mrad.

Haatlrby, MloeUir Mlaara Owenry. CVmqural, ihllaVrue A new battrt. AN HOUR AT THE CAKN1VAL: Mrv Cuaqawt PupiU. ASTLEYo BOYAL AMPHITHEATRE, Lraara, Mr. Uu.it.

THIS EYENTNO. th rmaaotM pclcle ot ITANHOE. Kln BlchaMI. Mr. Il rbrrt; IiaaeofYark.

Mr. J. Hollnway Irai.rra. Mr. R.

Phllllr Rebrora. Mlaa Batharak With Xoeore la tba flrroj John Haorr Cvoka, to. To euoclad with RAISING TUX WIND. TO CORRESPOND RNTS. BOttoi tu taken of aaonjmotij oomrnTmicatlofUU White rar lainded for Inaertloa must be authenticated by the Bama sad addrrst of the writer not neoraaarily for but a rrahrtatee of good faith.

eaoBot andertak to return rejected oommiuiicatloBS. Adrertiarn are rrxjnrartrd to make their Post office orders parable to Mr. Francis Goodlae the Chief Offlce, Th of TBI Tubs eummanead at I rclook aal a lay Bacrnioc, aod nnlabed at 90 minute pat 7. 10SD0S, TBURSDJLY, MAT 19, 1839. Eren in these dajs of wars, re rotations, and elections, we hare not seen anything so amazing as the report of the French Minister of Finance on the subscription to the new Loan.

Unless it were the Railway Mania of 1845, when scrip was issued and accepted to the nominal amount of lereral hundred millions, we hare had nothing like it in this country. The figures are incredible but for the authority unaccountable except on the strangest suppositions. The Loan for which subscriptions hare been invited is confined to This, even to our experienced eyes, seems a very large sum and, if France has to begin with such a demand, we ask, naturally, how long is it to go on Indeed, it will be remembered that within three years France pleaded exhaustion for wishing to bring the Russian War to the quickest pos tible end. The Emperor said he could get no more money ont of his people. No doubt, he said the truth.

Averse as all nations are to be taxed, the French seem to reach the bounds of their endurance quicker than others. Yet what do we now hear Subscribers hare arisen out of tho earth. The whole nation subscribes. The whole nation is found to be overflowing with wealth, and a rusty lamp brings to light the treasures of Golconda and the mines of Peru. For week subscribers poured in the clerks wcro overworked, and, do what they could, when it struck 5 on tho 15th inst.

there remained many whose sub scriptions could not bo taken. Thecapital subscribed was no less than32, 000,0001. Of this 62,000,000. was for Paris, and 30,000,000. for the depart ment.

Tha number of subscribers altogether exceeded 525,000, of whom 244,129 wcro for Paris, and 281,000 for the departments. Of tho subscribers, 375,000 are of the poorer class, entering for or 8s. of Rente, and tho subscription amount! to 3,200,000. The sub scribers for larger amounts were 150,000, and tho amount they subscribed is 89,000,000. It is evident, however, from the fact of there being so many subscribers for the very small amount of that there are probably many other subscribers for larger amounts, but still very small to our notions.

The Loan thus becomes a subscription from the working classes of France. But when it is considered that the accumulations of our savings banki have not yet reached 30,000,000., wo believe, and that the working classes of this country have very few other forms of safe invest ment, one is lost in wonder at the thought that a population only one third larger than that'of these isles should subscribo out of its labour and poverty so large a proportion of to enormous a sum as 92,000,000. It must be admitted that such figures are greatly at variance with any preconceived opinions, to aay facta, about France, When French financiers have been cJiallenged for their protective duties, and asked why they did not follow onr example, and emancipate trade under the shelter of a good income tax, the answer haa been that Franco wsa a poor country, and could not pay an income tax. France, too, looks poor. Her small towns and TQlAgei look unkempt and untidy her build ings an slovenly, her byroads bad, and one seldom soes thoee neat fences, clipped hedge, or smooth foot pavements that line for many a mQe eren own country roads.

There are few forests, tvt least few that are rjermitted to grow to a natural tixe and form. Even with national taste for dress, frw French women of any daaa appear to spend nail as mocn upon it as Eragliah of cormpcaainf ranx. una hnt few grotlemea's caxriagei or horn no hormds scarcely any evidence cl.wh, wsj eaQ trie. French amusem*nt are generally cheaper than ours, nnlesa it be gambling, the cost of which can not be estimated. Eren the Frenchmen one meets on the raiL and who talk a if of the middle class, or even better, har what we should think shabby ways, wearing blouse and carrying in baskets their dinners of bread, aausase.

apples, and rin ordinaire, so as to save the exnenditure of 3s. or 4s. for dinner at the faWe d7rf. But, of course, these people must be poor. They go on dividing and subdividing their bits of land for ever.

They have not our trade, our manufactures, or our com merce. They can make a few ornaments, for which, of course, they do not find a regular demand. vi'ace. wo know, are low. The servants of the State are all ill paid.

There are, it true, an immenso number of tmjJorfi, but the stipends are ridiculous yet the subject of much rivalry. Tho army is ill paid. The stylo of things, except at the Court and with the highest functionaries, is mean. Putting all these things to rrether. we conclude that trance must Do poor, She belravi her oovertv she proclaims it.

She spends nothing she has nothing to spend. Yet sho has just subscribed a Loan of 20,000,000. of our money to enable her Emperor to wrest Lom bardv and Venice from tho hands of Austria. She has entered subscriptions to that amount, and has actually deposited by way of guarantee more than 9,000,000. We have to account for tho fact, Nobody who has lived any time in any part of France, whether at Paris or in the departments, will be at all surprised.

English residents always bring home stories of a general diffusion of wealth, or rather a general hoarding, past all our notions. If you live in tho country, the small proprietors all about you have their hundreds and thousands, which they only confess to on an emergency, when a house or a bit of land is to be sold. They shrink generally from speculative investments, even if such offer. They are saving to buy the land they rent, to get rid of a mortgage, or to buy their brothers out of tho patrimony. They have always some long game of this sort in hand, and meanwhile, with two or throo thousand pounds perhaps in the bank or their strong box, they live worse than our English lalvurcrs.

Of course, with such a climate they can live worse, and not be the worse for it. Such we conceive to bo the great substratum of wealth which has been opentd by this new Loan. The Emperor has tapped tho spring that flowed before, and finds it yield more abundantly than ever. True, Rentes are low. ith Three per Cents, at COf.

85c, this is a good time for investment. Perhaps, too, the classes who constitute the chief contributors to this Loan do not sufficiently consider that there may be another on more favourable terms to the public in the course of this very year, or early in the next. As little, too, may they bear in mind that tho dividends on this new Loan must be paid out of an increased revenue, and that thus every franc they lend to the State involves an increase of taxation. Borrowing must have its limits. How, then, is tho dividend then to bo paid, except by laying on some new tax, certain to be odious With the offer of tho Emperor is likely to draw deep.

His Minister encourages him to do so. He will be moderate at first, contenting himself with the 20,000,000. asked for. But tho war will soon exhaust that sum. An army of 150,000 men cannot be maintained, with all their requisites, in fighting condition under 20,000,000.

a year, and this will not bo tho only expense of tho war. many sources of industry and profit will bo wholly or partially dried up and the revenue will suffer, while tho expenditure is increased. We have small hope that these con siderations. will now have much weight. France is bent on victory and conquest, and she is ready for the present to pay for her' whistle.

pensed with altogether, so that there is aa end of I Council is very much changed from the time when it was a most noble, honourable, ana revo rend assembly where the King doth sit at hit pleasure." It no longer inquire into all offences against the Government it no longer sits as a Star Chamber and a Court ot Requests and since the day of William IV. all its duties as Court of Appeal have been delegated to a the handwriting and knowledge of languages of the young gentlemen who aspire to bo our future diplomatists and, of courte, a prtcis of facts or historical events is a very different affair from reducing into order and a small com pass the contents of a collection of papers. As regards paid attaehft, they htTO hitherto been required to know the Ianguarre of the country in I Judicial Committee, who have their own chamber which they were employed, with a view, we and their own officers. It was not an nnreaaonab'e apprehend, of giving them something to do and I suggestion, therefore, that tho Joint Clerkship testing their industry. They were also required to correct writing purposely misspelt.

With these two requisitions Lord Malmescury has also dispensed. We do not think that the opinion of the public will ratify this decision. The Diplomatic Service of this country is not highly esteemed. It was left for tho Turks, whom we look down upon as barbarians, to point out the true meaning of the Russian note to which we had given our assent, and we do not think tho time when we hare just been signally duped and over reached in most important negotiations is happily chosen for lowering tho qualifications of our Diplomatic Service. Not only do we want men who can spell, but who can unravel things harder to be understood than a common collection of papers, and it is with little favour that tho public ill regard so humiliating an estimate of the capacity of those to whom the weightiest interests are to be trusted.

The appointments for the Indian Civil Service have been placed this year for the first time in the hands of the Civil Service Commission. The number of appointments was 20 the number cf competitors C5. Twelve of the successful candi date came from Oxford and Cambridge and six from Trinity Collcce. Dublin. We now corao to what is tho most interesting aa well as the most gratifying part of tho Report, because it is tho first instance we aro awaro of in which the head of Department has thrown open its inferior appointments to absolutely unrestricted competition.

The experiment is exceedingly interesting, as beann; on many objections which have been raised against the system of public competition. Lord Stanley should bo allowed to lapse at tho first vacancy, and I that one Clerk to the Council, with one salary, should be the regulated public expense of this office. The Commissioners appended to this obvious recommendation a proviso that for absolute seearity against inconvenience from tbo illness of the Clerk one of the Clerks of the Committee of Privy Council should be autho rL' ed to act by delegation in case of emergency. So the matter hung. Other recommendation to other offices accompanied thi, and these recommendations havo been carried out as cf ordinary routine, when the occasions for their opera rllVomi I Inft of the present Joint Clerks in Council, after an I will act in with a feeling of ahamo for humanity, "they are perpetrated in an obstioatrfy "fended town that has been taken by nuj, a Wo turn to our letters from Mortari, and 1 there find it asserted "that the orders tatr tho inhabitants well are peremptory, and they are obeyed willingly.

Indeed, thacondnct the nativci is such as to secure good treiataiej. even from a less goounaturtxl follow than the An triaa soldier certainly is." We by both tcoxtA before our readers as we rccuivo them, ne adding nor diminishing one tittle, that the pdfy having both sidd represente I before it, nurll able to arrive at a true decision. Tho fact really is, that from th position inwiiiri they are respectively placed tho Austrian spondent will hear almost exclusively of the atrorj. ties or said to be perpetrated, by Franco Sardinian forces, while his colleague Turin will be diligently informed of every Uulapvrj, act committed by the Austrian troops. Foroiirova part, we do not belie vo that in the long ron'tis will bo found much difference between tie duct of tho troops on either side in these rospe I We bclievo that tho French Algcrine li.rwEt, honourable service of 33 years, is about to re tire, and the recommendation of the Commission of 1853 would naturally come into operation.

The rumour runs, however, that Hkb Majesty's present advisers are penetrated with a conviction that the office of Clerk in Council cannot be performed by less than two ablebodied men, and that they are therefore about to fill up this highly lucrative, but unnecessary twin office, by the appointment of a young nobleman, whose talents and energy deserve more active employment, But," we think we hear some one inquire, how doe this help Mr. James Stcart Wortley, 14 unless he is to have the office!" Not directly, we must admit for it is not suggested that tho ex Recorder of London, himself a Privy Councillor, is to be Clerk in Council. There is, however, a borough called Stamford, which Li supposed to be so greatly influenced its choice of a member by the judgment the had vacancies in the Indian Department for eight I of tho Marquis of Exeter that it has not The Report of the Civil Service Commissioners of the present year ought, we think, to be regarded by the public with more than ordi nary interest, as containing a faithful history of the struggles and vicissitudes which wait upon the career of a new and increasing department, against which is array od so much honest prejudice and so much interested opposition. It is curious to observe how often and how emphatically principle may be recognized by all sorts authorities, legislative and official, before it can obtain the real and hearty concurrence of the very persons who profess to bo its supporters. The pro sent Secretary for the Treasury is one of those from whose Report the system of competition took its rise, and he appears to have rendered to the Commissioners, as in duty bound, every aasist once in his power.

Bet still we are very far from having what the public understood that they wcro to havea fair competition for all junior appoint ments in the public service. Thus, for instance, during the last year 958 persons were nominated to junior appointments without any competition at all. The number of appointment for which there were competitors was 258, and to com pete for these 833 candidates wcro admitted, or little more than three to each place so that those who wero. appointed without any competition stand to tlioso who were appointed after some sort of competition really in tho ratio of four to one. We ought also to mention that 292 persons appointed without competition were rejected altogether, 280 of these being rejected for defects in spelling and arithmetic, and only six for incompetency in other matters.

These figures do not speak well for the manner in which Government patronage has been exercised, nor is this the whole of the evil of which we have to complain. The greater number of these competitions wero between throo candidates only, and the result of this system is, as the Commissioners truly observe, to introduce great inequality into the service, by making a man's position depend, not on his merit, as tested against a large number of candidates, but on the ability of those competitors whom fortune or perhaps a bene volent and well disposed patron has awarded him. Thus, out of C47 competitors 275 are above and 372 below the standard which would entitle them to any certificate at all. Thus, to use an University phrase, the larger number of thoso who are sent in to try for honours are persons who ought to be plucked for an ordinary degree, and this not so much from the presumption of tho candidate as from tho improper selection of the Minister. The remedy proposed by the Commas sioners for this state of things is to throw a consi derable number of appointments together, and open the whole to the competition of the candidates ap pointed to compete for each.

This has produced good results, and saved the public from the infliction of some very inferior servants. But we cannot hope that inch a practice will become general, at least while the heads of our offices withdrew three appointments out of four altogether from competition, and name persons to compete, half of whom are not entitled to a certificate of competency. While we are on the aubject of Ministerial delinquencies we must call attention to the case of Lord Maucesbubt, who seems detenained that the Foreign office shall not be alarmingly efficient. Unpaid atiachi have hitherto been required to write good bold hand, with distinctly formed letters, to make an accurate and good translation into English of a paper written either in Ger pan. 7 aHn Spanish, or Italian, aad to make ft prfcu, or abstract, of a collection of papers.

The first two requisitiona Lord mvntzvxx tu dis writerships, tho salary of which is with an allowance for "extra work for tho first five years, and increases gradually up to 200. Their principal business is copying, but they aro also employed on accounts, Tho candidates wero examined in hand writing, copying from manuscript, orthography, arithmetic, English composition, geography, and history. Tho candidate consisted of sons of naval and military officers, clergymen, barristers, soli citors, clerks, physicians, surgeons, merchants, fanners, and artificers. Tho Universities sent eight, the public, schools 62, only 32 ap peared to hare been at no school at all. Tho I of Salisbtp.y his father, varied from 1C to 25.

339 'sat down for th) first examination, and from this competition tho Com missioners draw some very reasonable and interest ing conclusions. They consider it to bo proved that there is an ample supply of persons willing to enter tho public service and more than sufficiently qualified for it that such candidates pro ceed from the upper classes that there is no difficulty in conducting so large an examination, and that success does not depend upon age. For theso very interesting results we are indebted to tho public spirit of Lord Stanley, who has set an example to all heads of Departments which we greatly fear they are by no means prepared to follow. He has shown most clearly how vast tho opportunity for the' encouragement of education, and how great tho reward which might bo held out to humble talents, by throwing open tho public service to the nation at largo. While 292 persons have been appointed to clerkship for which they were unfit, whilo 375 persons hare been sent to compete for offices which, without competition, they were unworthy to hold, whilo tho Com missioners havo been compelled to re examine rejected candidates two, three, and even four times, it is painful to see what a mass of patient industry and sterling ability the gift of only eight appointments in the public service, and been known within memory to return any man in whom that nobleman did not take an interest.

Tho present representatives of that borough are Lord Rodert Cecil and Sir Stafford North cute. The latter wrr know signed the import of 1853 the former, we are informed, the happy man who is to bo appojnted to the place which his colleague had doomed to abolition. The next step which is to lead to the withdrawal of Mr. James Stuart 'Wortley from the state of obscurity into which he has fallen is now obvious. Lord Robert Cecil is tho son of the Marquis Lord President of the Council, appoints him to the vacant Clerkship Lord Koeert Cecil's appointment to be Joint Clerk in Council will make a vacancy at Stamford.

In consideration for we beg pardon, we mean availing himself of the opportunity offered by the appointment of Lord Robert Cecil, Mr. Stcart Wortley will, it is now said, at an early day seek the suffrage of tho independent electors of Stamford. Such is the rumour, repeated so generally, and in such well informed circles, that it would be affectation to ignore it. If it should turn out to be true, it is as strong an experiment upon the endurance of the British public as ha been made of late years. We have no objection to see Mr.

Wortley in Parliament, and we quite agree that his new party are bound in gratitude to find him a seat. But, if this be done, let it bo done with their own private money, or thotr own private influence, and not at the annual expense of the people of England. rPuxbtl Lombard village pretty much Croats have acted in Piedmont. 7r is a fearful thing at best, and tho gnilt shame of 'what is to happen in Upper Italy ta ti, course of the eusnirg summer must rest upon tie heads of the politicians who hare plunged Eurrraj into an unnecessary war for the sake of carryiDjout their own aeliiah views, as much a with the Lvrx soldiery, who will certainly do jnst what aol Lm have done before them upon similar occasions. The guilt and shame, we say, be upon the pIoMei and contrivers of this war, not upon the brat! instruments they employ Thus it is that tnea start back from the consequences of their own acts.

The partisans of a war policy she airr at a few isolated outrages at the commencement of a conflict such as this. Let them wait a tule, tOI the plains of LombarJy aro saturated with human, blood, and the towns and villages of Italy laid waste, and their finer feelings will be blunted. They will soon be reading cf tie slaughter of thousands of their feUow creatsres with comparative, indifference. The French, tai Sardinian, and Austrian bayonet will all It red enough before the work is done. Meanwhile, if the English reader would arrirt at an approximation towards the truth of events, wo know not what better can be done for him than to lay before him bod stories.

Perhaps neither will be absokM; true, or will tell tho whole truth, though we are very confident that the gentkaei who are acting for us would never write a syllable which they believed to be1 untrue. Wi hare deliberately chosen, as the best alterna tive under the circ*mstances, to procure the best accounts we can from either side, and to' publish them as we receive them. If the consequence is that T7wr 7'iWi is called Austrian to day, we shaS with equal justice be called French or Italiaa to morrow. In the meantime, our readers will hare the best information we can procure fot them, and will, no doubt, be able ta make proper allowance for the position of the writer from either camp, COURT CIRCULAR. It is a first principle in the administration of justice to hear both sides.

Every disputant is prone to exaggerate the strong point of his own case, to pass lightly over the weaker portions of it, and to imagine that his opponent has no case at all. If this bo true in civil life, how much more precipitate and unjust must bo tho judg those of a very humble description, has called into I ments of nations engaged in deadly conflict The activity. Cannot tho heads of Departments spare fiercest passions of human nature are aroused, something for the nation, or must everything be I and under the influence of those passion acts given to connexion and interest and is this to I are performed which must be hard indeed of bo allowed to go on under a system which professes I endurance. The sufferers, smarting under the to open the road to the public service, if not to I effects of intolerable injury, never stay to consider free and unrestricted, at least to honest and real whether their own friends have not been guilty competition What is to be done for the Right Hon. James Stcart Wortley I The Tories are not strong enough to bo ungrateful to deserters, and lie has given proofs of a devotion which challenges a conspicuous reward.

If he has had gains on the Liberal side, he has had losses on the side of the Tories if ho acquired honour and promotion from Lord Palmerston, he has suffered defeat for Lord Derby. For Lord Derby he deserted the ready, uncoy constituency of Buteshire, and committed himself to the more difficult and untract able wooing of the West Riding. Lately he was mounted upon these two high curveting and gently cantering horses, in full confidence that ho could manage both with equal skill, and could bring which he pleased first to the goal. Now ho lies on his back in the Slough of Despond. It is impossible that tho seducers who have tempted him from his old paths of prosperity can allow him to remain there, a jest to every passer by.

What is Lord Derby, of similar acts towards their opponent. The rival nations will never eren pause to sift the truth of reports, but accept at once as true those which ore most prejudicial to the character of the enemy. We have had a very memorable example of this in our own recent history. Beyond all doubt tho native chiefs, the mutinous Sepoys, and their camp followers did perpetrate the most awful atrocities at Cawnpore and elsewhere but who will now say that the number of such acts was not exaggerated during the first few months of the conflict Had the opportunity been given us of reading Indian account of such matters, we doubt if the narrative of many of our own military executions would hare received the same colour as it did from the pen of a European writer who judged tho whole transaction from an entirely different point of view with other prejudices with other national and religious senti ments with other standards of truth and false hood, of justice and injustice and, finally, with other opportunities for observation. The old story of the knights with the shield, which was red on then, about to do for Mr.

Jasies Stcart Wortley Of course, there is an arrangement on foot, and we I one side and white on the other, is true for all are told that it is just now ripe for accomplish 1 time. mcnt but, as these matters, like the arrangements of Messrs. Wagner and roquiro somo com plicity and preparation, and as the preliminary steps have not yet found their way into the Gazette, wo will have consideration for the public sympathy with the ex Recorder of London, and state what we hear as to the steps about to be taken for his advantage. The reader of Horace Waltole's Ltiters and of other memorials of political jobbery are not ignorant of the fact that it was in tho last century the practice to appoint two officers to tho same office. There wero Joint Tellers of tho Exchequer, Joint Paymasters of tho Forces, and there were also Joint Clerk to tho rrivy Council.

The excuse was, that if ono of the officers happened to be ill the other would be at hand to do the necessary work tho object, of course, was to provide for two friends, instead of for one. In addition to tnis precautionary system of a duality of appointments it was also the custom of those days to grant the reversion of these offices, probably to provide against the At tho present moment we have a corre spondent at either camp of the forces gathering for deadly conflict in Piedmont and Lombardy, moro strictly speaking, wo have ono corre spondent at Tunn, and another with the headquarters of the Austrian General. The gentlemen selected for the ducliarge of theso most important duties bring to the execution of their respective tasks every qualification of ability and impartiality but wo warn our readers that they must be pre pared to hear the story of the same events told in two very different ways. Thoy differ in their accounts already, and the divergence will increase from day to day. Tho one in the main will be an Austrian account of each event the other will represent tho Fran co Sardinian ri We publish this very day two contradictory stories as to the conduct of tha Austrian forces in Piedmont.

From Turin we hear that their exac tions have been carried to a barbarous extent from the Austrian head quarters at Mortara we are told that discipline is so rigidly maintained in the Austrian army that General Ben ides had two danger of a vacancy occurring during the exist men ihot for stealing property worth only a few enco of a Ministry unwilling to make official I francs. From Turin we have accounts of violence appointment. However this may be, the system I offered ta families of women, of daughters out continued to bear its fruits down to the year 1853, 1 raged in the presenco of their parents, from when a commission which had been appointed to I Mortara we are told that the Donulation rectify it anomalies laid their Report upon the I of Piedmont regard the Austrian! as libcra table of the House of Commons. This Report, I tors, welcome them with open arms, and that which is guaranteed by tne names oi bir C. I nothing would be easier than to raise the popula Trxtelya, Mr.

Seville, and bir bTATPOBD I tion with which they have come into contact again North CX3TE, explained that the office of Clerk I the Sardinian Government. Now, if the allegations to the Privy Council was held by two gentlemen, do not exactly disnrove each other In the sham each of whom drew a sufficient salary to recom 1 tecnnical way which would recommend Itself to pense the whole of the duties required to be per 1 the appreheruion of a special pleader, at least they formed. It could not but occur to these Commii 1 are in violent contradiction, and the presence of rioneri that, however strictly in accordance with I one state of facts would seem to imply the absence raoedent these appointment were, yet that rircura 1 of the other. In one account we are informed stance had rtAdered such double official power I that the Austrian havo been already guilty of so longer necessary. Ths cosjtf tuticn of the Privy "crmea of which oae hears with a shudder, and Her Mtjsrty the Queen held a Court yesterday afttnoos at Backtajiara Palace.

Conn! da Penigny, Ambaoador from HI Imperial kV ty the Emperor of the French, had aa aodiaac ot tht Qaeen. tad delivered his credentials. His ExceUencv was Introduced by th Earl of XI anbury, the Queen Principal SMretarr of State for Forairl Affairs, aod' erradaetnd by Mtjor General the Ua. 8a Edward Cut, K.CJL, Her Majesty Master of the Caramon it. Her Majesty wa attended by Lord Croftom, Lord tt Waiti4r.

and the Hoc Martimar Sackvillt Wrrt, Groom is Waiting. The Queen and Prince Conaort rode oa honeback In tit morning, attended by tha Hon, Eleanor Stanley, LcH Cbarlea Fltirey. aad Lia.tr ant Colonel Pooaooby. Their Royal lllghncaww Prinos and Mnotm Otiti tt 3xony and hi Royal Hlghnea th Dak of Oporti arrived at Buckingham Palace at 25 minatea before o'clock yvaterday af wrnoon on a visit to tba Queen. The Prince and Prince and the Royal Dike war eeirad on landing at Southampton by Colonel FraacJt Hugo Seymour, Equerry to the Quran.

Their Royal Highnesses travelled to London by a ipteal train on the South Wrtem Railway, and upon arririar it the private station. VauxhaU, wrra met by his Royal Hijh nea the Prince Conaort, attended by liretcoact CoIooel Pooaooby. Tha Royal party entered serenl of tb Qieea'l carriages, which were at the station, and, aaoortrd by a detachment of life Guards, prootedeil to Buckingham Palace, where the Queen, accompanied by th Prueusea Alice, Helena, and Louisa. Prince Arthur, and Prince Lrooold. attended by the ladies, great officers, Itnd gentlemen of hrr Court, repaired the Pnno and Prince and tha Oak of Oporto.

Count Vitxthum, Saxon Minlrter at th Erituh Court, attended Prince and Prinoea Ceorge of Saxony from Llihon. The Chevalier CorueOler to tb Portagiem Lemtian. received the Rural vtrtv apoa thrir landtag at Southampton, and attended their Royal JUghnoaur I Buckingham ralace. The suit of Prince and Princess Gocrrr of Saxony ceo. istrdof La Comteate de Holxendnrff, Grand Maltrrwe; Mademoiselle doZedlitr, Dame tlonneur M.

de Aoen netitx. Chambelfan andM.de Helldovf, AUa de Canip. The Duke of Oporto wa attended by Iiratenant Genertl Vlaeonde de Campaaha. Captain Sergio, and hf. Samper.

Her Royal Highnt the Dachau of Kent viailtti tbt Prinoea! George of Saxony soon after her arrival at'Boek ingham Palace. The Queen had dinner party last evening. Tb onr pany included their Royal Higruiee the Prince Aha, tb Duke of Oporto, the Prince and Prince Geeneof Saxony, and the Duke of Cambridge the Dneheaf of Mifl cheeter, ComteHM da HolundorlT. MademolarU de ZcdUtt, th Duke of Beau fort, tbr Saxon Minister, the Marquis ol Exeter, the Marnuis of Abercorn, Earl De La Warr. arl or Derby, Earl of Maliueahury, Cheralicr d'Olrrein SiIra, M.

de Koennetitx. M. de Heildorf, Colonel f. H. Seymour.

Lieutenant General Visconded Campanha, Captain Sergio, M. Sampayo, and the Equerry in Waitisgl the Duke of Cambridge. The band of Royal Hons Gnards attended eans dinner and played tb following piece March rjrjerfaUL Orrrtura. Barcarolle" Aabrr. Talaa, laaortaDea CaatL Selection.

AUlle VarsV Galop, Antelope Tisnry. Mr. Thomas Stirling Begbte hail In bterview with ti Earl of Donooghmore yesterria at th office of the Board of Trade. Despatches were srat from the Colonial office yctterdty to the Governors of the Anttralian Colonic, the Mauritiat, and Malta, and the Lord High CommiiiiiitneT of the Ionia Miami a. Tfi Chancellor of the Exchenuer the receipt of a banknote, value CL, on account ef unpaid taxes, from The Channel IsLANtrs.

Telegraph. Teleursphk communication between England and the Channel laUrl was restored yesterday by Mr. W. II. Preec.

the eoopaay'l engineer. The cable, which hail parted few miles from tbt Portland coast, wa underrun and fully repaired, ready for plicing, anon after the breakdown, but the strong tide tad rough weather had up to yesterday morning prevented the connexion being core pitted between th two ends. The Nine Hoces Movement. Last evening a meeting of the building trvlra was held in Exeter hall the jnrprm of making the "Nine Hours Movement" general throughout thoae trades, Mr. Osborne, in the chair.

The chairman, in opening the prwaeu higs, said the meeting had been cea rened by the raited building trade, in HWTiene of th matter builders, tt their medio; at the Freemasons Tavern on the 2(W harlna naaanrl raaolution aartn? that the workmen did sot join in the "Xb Houn Mo mneiit." Mr. Grey, tnen ntovea we nrw reaoinium That tht awanaf rlew wttb rrfrat ta MU aaarareu anTta natnat arlaaiaaw lead down hi tkrW nrtioEt 1 Jooklns at th oaoreBt la ks pcualary atpactAtorr lliil ilia iinwil BrraAfernerrt at hoar I aoaaatneai lo antinly waortnf to ru of surra us laoour aoa rcyaoai hJna marhinae. Diana I tbm pabrte anra lhaa 19 pea ml. by ooocadlnt tie ana aoar laaa aad tka 10 aae aara. Bi tttl.

are rjerjon etal torta lootaaaaa ina aano ana naaa a a iiaai ClffonL brleUaver. ascended th Mb Quirk, a raUstarer, npnorted the reaohition, which wi eaxrled UBanimcuaiy Mr. George Potter, a Joiner, me the mona reentstloa Tbatt LTwTrMryea a attar a I J02 tae XlaTlloar Ml 1 1 Baartrae of otBa ration an a oaMtnt totteajl bom IZZTmi rarroaaaf brtalaaltaaail.aiatll. 1 lrr'lW. amendinapl wa traeieid and SMded, noting not taeern Ut wuaue ataa ctctwd IM awog..

The Times from London, Greater London, England (2024)

References

Top Articles
Tennessee wins the 2024 Men's College World Series
Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Miami Marlins Live Coverage, Stats, and Updates - September 6, 2023 Gametracker
This website is unavailable in your location. – WSB-TV Channel 2 - Atlanta
Hotels Near 625 Smith Avenue Nashville Tn 37203
Inducement Small Bribe
Violent Night Showtimes Near Amc Fashion Valley 18
Cvs Devoted Catalog
Truist Drive Through Hours
Declan Mining Co Coupon
Alaska Bücher in der richtigen Reihenfolge
Top Hat Trailer Wiring Diagram
Sport Clip Hours
My.doculivery.com/Crowncork
Dexter Gomovies
Non Sequitur
Pac Man Deviantart
Bend Pets Craigslist
Spergo Net Worth 2022
Violent Night Showtimes Near Amc Fashion Valley 18
Keurig Refillable Pods Walmart
SF bay area cars & trucks "chevrolet 50" - craigslist
Hewn New Bedford
Sullivan County Image Mate
Dtlr Duke St
Betaalbaar naar The Big Apple: 9 x tips voor New York City
Sunset Time November 5 2022
Construction Management Jumpstart 3Rd Edition Pdf Free Download
Play Tetris Mind Bender
Bill Remini Obituary
Jermiyah Pryear
Jamielizzz Leaked
Till The End Of The Moon Ep 13 Eng Sub
Barbie Showtimes Near Lucas Cinemas Albertville
Lininii
Www.craigslist.com Syracuse Ny
Roch Hodech Nissan 2023
Shaman's Path Puzzle
Vitals, jeden Tag besser | Vitals Nahrungsergänzungsmittel
Bismarck Mandan Mugshots
Michael Jordan: A timeline of the NBA legend
Craigslist Ludington Michigan
Final Fantasy 7 Remake Nexus
Guy Ritchie's The Covenant Showtimes Near Grand Theatres - Bismarck
Subdomain Finder
Thotsbook Com
The Quiet Girl Showtimes Near Landmark Plaza Frontenac
Dineren en overnachten in Boutique Hotel The Church in Arnhem - Priya Loves Food & Travel
Strange World Showtimes Near Atlas Cinemas Great Lakes Stadium 16
Diamond Desires Nyc
Strawberry Lake Nd Cabins For Sale
Uno Grade Scale
2000 Fortnite Symbols
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Laurine Ryan

Last Updated:

Views: 5899

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (77 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Laurine Ryan

Birthday: 1994-12-23

Address: Suite 751 871 Lissette Throughway, West Kittie, NH 41603

Phone: +2366831109631

Job: Sales Producer

Hobby: Creative writing, Motor sports, Do it yourself, Skateboarding, Coffee roasting, Calligraphy, Stand-up comedy

Introduction: My name is Laurine Ryan, I am a adorable, fair, graceful, spotless, gorgeous, homely, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.