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486 T H• E__I ^ E_ A ^ DJE R ; [?°iAT 4 ...
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STATE OF TRADE. The trade reports of the...
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CONTINENTAL NOTES. FRANCE. The Emperor, ...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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America. Despatches Have Been Received A...
Young openly defies the Federal -authorities , and incites the Indians to plunder and murder all who do not belong to the Mormon community- Mormon murderers of the Gentiles are acquitted by Mormon j uries , and open rebellion is threatened . " There are also signs , " writes the Times New York correspondent , " of further troubles in Kansas . The Free State party have not decided to take part in tbe a pproaching elections , so that it is certain that Kansas will apply for atlniissiou to the Union as a Slave State . The ground upon which the Free State party justifies its neglect is that the offices are all in the bauds of those who tyrannized over them in the days of ' bleeding Kansas , ' and that they cannot expect fair dealing at their hands . The question must then come directly before the next Congress -whether Kansas shall be admitted A 3 a slave state ; and , although there will be much dis-Qassion , I apprehend there can be but one result—its admission . " The railway riots near Baltimore have been brought to a close , but not until very serious conflicts with the military had taken place . Tbe latter were sent in large numbers by railway train ; and , as this passed along , it was fired upon by a body of the rioters stationed in the fields . The fire was returned with great effect from the windows of the train , which continued in motion ; and several of the-rioters fell , while others made off . Further on , a brass swivel was posted against the train . Here a very raking fire was poured in by the military , -which did not a little execution . It was intended that the military should then alight from the train , and charge the mob with fixed bayonets ; but , the engineman . ha ' ving made a mistake , or purposely disregarded his orders , the train went on , and was only stopped by an obstruction some way in advance , placed there by the malcontents . Two of the soldiers were seriously injured , together with the eagineman and fireman . The riotera have since submitted . The western farmers are suffering from a hog distemper , caused by eating grain from which whisky has been made . It appears that in America strychnine is used in the manufacture of the spirit in question . A most singular incident in connexion with a murder at the town of Newburg is related in the papers . The dead body of a very handsome young w oman was found in a field early one morning by a labourer going to his work . It was nearly naked , and had been subjected to great violence . Three persons recognised the corpse as that of a Miss Bloom , who had been missing for some days ; and the sister of that young lady testilied to the same effect with the most perfect confidence on seeing the body . Identification , indeed , was not difficult , for a Bear over the left eyebrow , a sore upon the elbow , a mole above the right knee , and a very unusual formation of the little toe of the right foot , were there , and were also known by the living Miss Bloom as marks peculiar to her missing sister . The face , also , as far as could be recognised for the discolouration , was the same . The dead woman was found to have been pregnant ; and , as Miss Bloom was known to have left Newburg some days before with a married man named Jenkins , since which time he had not been seen , it was thought the man had a sufficient motive for getting rid of her . He was therefore arrested , but denied his guilt . The body was buried in the midst of the assembled village ; but , at the moment when the funeral train was leaving the church , there suddenly appeared the very Miss Bloom who was supposed to be murdered . The identification , after all , was at fault . On this , Jenkins was at once set free .
486 T H• E__I ^ E_ A ^ Dje R ; [?°Iat 4 ...
486 T H E __ I ^ E _ A ^ DJE R [? ° iAT > J ? - ^ 5 Pa . y ,
State Of Trade. The Trade Reports Of The...
STATE OF TRADE . The trade reports of the manufacturing towns for tho week ending last Saturday show no material alteration , but the tendency in many casea has been towards a further diminution of activity . At Manchester there ia considerable dulncss , pricoa of goods being scarcely supported , even in the lace of another advance in the raw material . The Birmingham accounts describe steadiness in tho iron-markot , aud a good American demand . For the general manufacturer of tho placo there have been numerous foreign ardera , and an increase , of activity ia expected from tho wjcent . reductions in tin aud copper . In the woollen districts there has been a alight revival , but great caution continues to bo exorcised . Tho Irish linen-raarketB have boon , heavy . — Times , ' In tho general busine » a of tho port of London there has been aomo improvement during tho name week . This ia owing to tlu > change , of wind . It ia supposed that there wore more than 600 ehips weather-bound in tho Channel at tho beginning of last week . Tho number of ahipa reported inward was U > 2 , being 61 more than in tho previous week . Thoae included 51 with cargooa of corn , Hour , rico , & c Tho number cleared outward waa 141 , including 17 in bullaat , showing an increase of G . — Idem . Mesara . Lawa and Co ' s Bank at Preston ban stopped payment , owing , according to au announcement posted up at tho premises , to tno sudden death of Mr . Lawo who waa in fact the aol « s proprietor , and who had uindo no arrangemonta for carrying on the concern . The bank had branches at Ormakirk aud Southport , Tho PreaCon Guardian , a totes , on what it considers excellent
authority , that the depositors are not likely to suffer any loss , and that ft great portion of the estate can be realized with ease , almost immediately , by the representatives of the deceased gentleman . The stonemasons employed at Liverpool have struck for an advance from 28 s . 6 d . to 30 s . a week in summer , and from 26 s . to 27 s . in the winter months . They complain that the rate of wages is higher in the metropolis and in Manchester , and they also plead the increased price of provisions as one reaaun why they are entitled to an advance . There is also a strike among the carpenters , who require a similar advance—from 28 s . to 3 Qs . a week . Some of the masters have given way , but there is still an almost entire cessation of work .
Continental Notes. France. The Emperor, ...
CONTINENTAL NOTES . FRANCE . The Emperor , Empress , and Court , together with their royal visitors , continue to ruralise in the embowering shades of Fontainebleau ; and the Pari 3 papers treat their readers to long accounts of imperial and regal personages in their forest wanderings , and at their stag hunts , their- grand banquets , their picnics , and their other recreations . The theatre attached to the palace has been newly decorated with great splendour ; and here tbere have been performances by the actors of the Theatre- Francais . The Grand Duke Constantino , having departed from Fontainebleau , spent two days incognito at Paris / While there , be left his card at the Turkish Embassy . On the card were the words " The Prince Oonstantine , " written in his own hand and in Turkish , which he speaks well . Last Saturday evening , he left for Creuzot . Here he visited the celebrated iron-works , with which he was much interested . He was afterwards entertained at dinner by tbe proprietor . On a subsequent day , he went to Bordeaux , where he had a very enthusiastic reception . The expose des motifs of the bill presented on Wednesday to the Legislative Body for modifying Art . 1 of the organic decree relative to the election of deputies , assigns the following as the reasons which call for the change : ' According to the terms of the constitution , there must be one deputy for every 35 , 000 electors . In attributing , according to this provision , to each department one deputy for every 35 , 000 electors , Art . 1 of the organic decree of the 2 nd February , 1852 , states that departments in which the additional number of electors amounts to 25 , 000 shall have one deputy more . It is on these bases that the elections for the present Legislative Body , which reckons 2 G 1 members , took place . Since these elections , however , the number of electors has changed in several of the departments ; in some i t has increased , and in others diminished . Thus the departments of the Seine and of the Loire , in consequence of the augmentation of the number of their electors , have each a right to one deputy more . Nine departments , on the contrary—the C 6 tes-du-Nord , Gei-s , lnclreet-Loire , Puy-dc-Ddme , Haute-Saone , Sarthe , Seine-et-Marne , Sonnnc , and the Var—have had their electors diminished , and must each lose one deputy . Following , therefore , the provisions of the . organic decree , the next Legislative Body would only consist of 254 members , instead of 261 . That result , which would deprivo nine departments of a . representative , excited the attention of the Government , and it conceived that without infringing on the constitution it might by a simple modification of tho organic decree maintain the present state of things and even enlarge the bases . It therefore proposes to lix at 17 , 501 instead of 25 , 000 the surplus number of electors giving a right to an additional deputy . The result of this modification would be to maintain for the above-mentioned departments , with tho exception of that of tho Cotea-du-Nord , their present numbwot representatives It would , besides , give an additional one to the departments of the AUier , Corsica , the Loiret , and tho Meuso . Tho adoption of tho bill will therefore open tho doors of tho Legislative Body to three new deputies , and , as the departments of the Seiuo and tho Loire have n right by tho increase in the number of tlteir electors each to one deputy moro , there will in the whole bo Uvo more deputies to elect , and the number of members of the Legislative Body will be 2 ( HJ instead of 261 . " A most atrocious murder has boon committed at the village of Olivet in the department of the Loiret . M . Leclmux , the murdered man , was a retired builder , sixtyfour years of ngo , and a member of tho Municipal Council . He was paralytic , and this natural misfortuno was heightened by tin unnatural feud between himself and hia Bun , a man of forty , relative to tho partition of fcho property loft by Madame Leehaux , who is dead . A fow clnyn ago , as tho father was getting out of hii carriage , tho son approached , angrily nukud hia parent how ' he darod dlspoao of noino timber without his permission , and , after some altercation , soissod the old man by tho collar . Tho latter ntiaod his cane , but tho son dragged him into the workuhop , whoro ho aoizod an uxo , and , notwithstanding the utmost oiFortn of M . Locihnux ' a daughter , killed hia parent by repeated blows , llo then locked himself into hia room , and vary coolly began to ai-rungo certain mattoro of account . Tho police , having bcoi * summoned , demanded admittance . Tho munloror ropliod , " In a . few mimitea ^ Hare patience : I will not
destroy myself ; I will not do my family that honour I will die on the scaffold . " The door was presently opened , and the criminal said to the officers , " It must have happened sooner or later . " He is a verv powerful man , is unmarried , and possesses an independent for tune . Murders have recently been very common in France . . - The session of tho Legislative Corps has been pro . longed by Imperial decree to the 28 th of May . "According to reliable reports , " says the Dail y News Paris correspondent , " the dissolution will probably im mediately follow the closing of the session , and the electoral colleges will be convocated for the 20 th and 21 st of June . The 20 th of June fulls on a Saturday , and on the following day will be accomplished the general examination of the votes . " We read in the same letter ;! - " The proposed law to make the previous sanction of the police authorities requisite for the publication of non-political journals and other light fugitive literature , is likely to be defeated , since the' Corps Le ' gislatif appears almost unanimously opposed to it The Government , however , already resorts to indirect means for effecting the same object . For instance , the editor of the Triboultt , being a writer whose antecedents made him not agreeable to the powers that now be , has been ordered to relinquish his connexion "with the Triboulet Avith a bint that unless he did so the journal would be . suppressed at the first opportunity . The proprietor of the journal has been advised by the police to alter its name , and it is henceforth to be entitled L & Rabelais . " The Emperor has sent to Alexander Humboldf , through Prince Napolecm , the decoration of grand officer of the Legion of Honour . The ^ King of Bavaria arrived at Fontainebleau on . Sunday evening . The accounts from the agricultural districts of Franco speak , very highly of the line appearance of the growing crops . The apprehension of a failure in the silk crops ia passing away ; and under these cheerful prospects trade is becoming more buoyant . The Cour Impe ' riale , aft ^ r a lung deliberation , delivered its judgment in the affair of the Napoleon Docks on Tuesday morning . The sentence of imprisonment against MM . Cusin , Legeudre , Duchesne de Vere , and UeiTver , as pronounced by the Tribunal of Premiere Instance , is affirmed ; but the fines to which they were condemned are reduced to 30001 " . for Cusin aud Legendre , to 2000 f . for Arthur Berryer ,. and to lOOOf . for Duoliesne de Vere . M . Orsi , who v ; as acijiiitted on the former trial , has been declared guilty of complicity on account of his participation in the ngremuent with Fox and Henderson , and has been sentenced to ihree months ' imprisonment and 1 U 0 : ' . line , and , moreover , to restore d 400 dock shares . The prisoners are condemned to the costs in different proportions . M . Viuillard , senator , who was tutor to the Emperors brother , died on Tuesday morning at Paris . Louis Napoleon visited him during the last day * of his illneaJ . Tho Marquis de Pas tore t , senator , also died on tho same morning . A certain number of Hungarian refugees , who have resided in Paris since lfeli ) , have presented themselves at tho Austrian Embassy to demand passports to return home , in consequence of the amnesty granted by tbe Emperor of Austria . M . Charles Thurneyssen , a Paris banker and sharcdealor , has absconded to America , -with , debts variously stated at au amount equal to from SUU , UOO / . to 1 , 000 , 000 / . General Wrangel , Director-GoncnJ of Artillery oC the Army of tho Mexican Confederation , lias just arrived in Paris , charged with a mission from his Government . nmr ., Gii 7 M . Tho Belgian Government contemplates a revision of the laws and regulations bearing on tho importation ot foreign goods into Belgium . The object id to assimilate the Belgian system as nearly as possible to Hint now m operation in England , under tho Customs Consolidation Act . Towards this end , tho Belgian Minister of Commerce lately made application to tho English Government for such information as could , bu consistently applied , and tho matter was ruforred to iho Commissioners of Customu , who luivo shown every anxiety to nllorii assistance . Au official in tho Customs was specially appointed to prop . iro and fill up tho various books mw documents in uso , und to report upon the general pi at lice . —— Times , I'KUSSIA . Tho betrothal of Prince Frederick William of I ' rnsB'ii with the Princess Hoyal of England is published ait hi ¦ jlorlin lilMiU-Aiazi . ( official gnxott . s ) of fcJumluy ad pieuo of mosL gratifying iut . olligi . Micu . Thursday l ' rinco Napoleon left JLJuriin lor Dnwleu on \ liumu'V week . At Dresden ho was received by the [ ^» w ' Prince of Saxony , with whom ho drwvo to 1 IHiiim ' " a deputation from tho . lh-Hish branch () f < ll ° i ^ 'Su llcnl Alliance bad au i . Uorviow with tho " ^ monarch <» i Friday wcok . Tho gentlemen w « J £ cordially receive .., nn . l wore naked to slay J » after which tho King talked a good iloul wiih Uw » English . A mooting of the Alliance itf to bo hold at lin next September .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), May 23, 1857, page 6, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_23051857/page/6/
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