_ ee ee mete i ates a ne sens seaside “ent aapac hegualls amu mene — oer ome 190 “er THE EXAMINER. se a } relation to the issue of notes, payable on demand, be) suspended, subject to such conditions a3 may be pro-| ‘worked there with the same effect as in ota he law of reliefis not,of 331 witnesses for the prosecution alone. The num- er districts. | ber of drunken persons in the streets unable to take care dition of the/of themselves, and detained temporarily, were 112, of but it is equa!!y certain that t What avast difference between the con vided by any act to be hereafter passed for that purpose ; but as Parliament will, no doubt, adjourn on Monday next until the beginning of February, this motion can last year. ecarcely be brought forward, and it is plain that the committee, if it assembles at all, will only have one sit-, ting, when the necessary papers will be ordered to be repared; and this question, about which the countiy fas been so long agitated to the highest pitch of excite-| ment, will be thus postponed indefinitely, only to be re-) vived, perhaps, when another crisis shali supervene. | sit The question of the removal of the sti!! remaining causes, people of this season and the corr ‘the mode of relief. circulated in King’s County, Westmeath, and Cavan, the parties to whom they are addressed. It is disabilities of the Jews, by allowing them a seat in Par- seldom the loud bark is panei td ees liament, was on T'hursday evening brought forward by we may hope, therefore, that nothing ] Lord John Russell in the House of Commons. ) ook lordship introduced the motion in a very temperate and ful than paper squibs.—Lord ae eloquent speech, going over the ground which has been! parties on whom a mission has been 2-8 go often urged in favour of a large selection of our fe low subjects, who as they contridute to the exigencies: of the state, are, it is contended, entitled to all the hon-| th ours society has power to confer,—in fact to enjoy all : the rights of citizenship. ‘The mere respectability and | popular private worth of Baron de Rothschild form but slender, vigorous , arlit parish priest of Strokestown, grounds for being admitted into Parliament, compared | p ms with the higher claims of equal citizenship; and it is murdered. The memorable words ‘He is worse than a> urged on his behalf that, with the keen perception he. \ ; ‘ has Of the value of the right withheld, exclusion is more: the public mind even before Lord Franham impressed to him than mere political disability—it is punishment. them still more deeply.—The language attributed to e Marquis of Drogheda has been also threatened, Of all the Catholic clergy who have fallen under the displeasure of England, none has been more ly denounced than the Rev. Mr. M ‘Dermott, ‘tion has appeared since its operation, however en pits of Messrs. J. and C. Bailey, Nant-y-Glo. The country journals contain several copies of notices j-|is that he keeps an obnoxious steward. Mr. Cole Ha- 3\milton, of Fermanagh, is another noticed proprietor, and | Mai | : where Major Mahon was| stratford Canning arrived at Berne on t ‘Oliver Cromwell, and yet he lives, were branded into. The debate was opened by Lord John Russell in an the Rey. gentleman left no doubt of the personality of able oration :and his lordship was seconded ina maiden the attack, whatever connexion there might have been preacher. wellas Mr. Romilly and Mr. Disraeli. opposed by the consistent champion It was ofcourse manner the heavy charge brought against him. His of the church, Sir| words are—‘I have now to assure the public, by the esponding season of which 46 were females. ; With all its heavy drawbacks, the poor law, ‘has Iinmensely contributed to the preservation of human | ‘life. In fact, no well authenticated instance of starva-| WALES. Another Colliery Explosion took place lately at the Seven ‘men were killed on the spot, and. the lives of eight ‘others are despaired of. ‘The circumstances attending some of tle cases are truly affecting; in one instance sme eel SOUS ; for various | . threatening with various sorts of vengeance, (OF Valls. father and his two sons were carried back dead to ‘the house they had left in health and strength a few ‘hours before. An inquest has since been opened, but, onthe facts above stated having been proved in eyj- His billets of Lady Book and Mrs Molly Maguire more hurt-| sence, the inquiry was adjourned, to await the fate of ithe other sufferers. SWITZERLAND. | The fall of Lucerne has put an end to military The King of Prussia ‘proceedings in this quarter. | insisted upon the neutrality of Neufchatel durin ‘the civil war, and that province was reper Sir ! e 8th, and ‘immediately had an interview with the federal autho- rities, The only news from that town is, that a note. from the Prussian Government has been presented to, the President of the Diet, and that the Provisional ‘Government of Lucerne had, after the example of that r ¢ lof Friburg, sequestered the property of the members of speech by Mr Fox, the popular and celebrated Unitarian! between the denunciation and fatal consequence. N OW, \the former Government. Mr. Gladstone also supparted the motion, as|the Rev. Mr. M‘Dermott denies in the most positive that the dissolution of the Sonderbund had produced A letter from Vienna states a profound impression amongst the higher circles of | ‘that capital. It is added that if the Diet oppose the Robert Inglis, who was seconded by Lord Ashley, Mr. most solemn asseverations a clergyman can utter, that proposed mediation of the five great powers, more After the late Major Mahon was never denounced, nor even an interesting debate, on the motion of Mr. Law, the | his name mentioned, from any Chapel alter in Strokes- Recorder of London, the debate was adjourned. It is| town, or within twenty miles of Strokestown, in any di- the general impression out of doors, that a considerable rection, on any Sunday before his death. This is a majority in the Commons will be in favour of relax-| decisive answer to the charge of persona] denunciation. ing the laws so as to enable Jews to sit in Parliament;| As one proof of the depression of the times, the Lime- but the hitherto unsuccessful attempts to pass a similar] rick paper states that the attestation of the service of 16 bill through the House of Lords, make us still doubt) writs on various gentlemen had been made before a sin- whether that assembly will, as yet, consent to ‘un-/gle master extraordinary of that city during four days. Christianize’ the Parliament. In the present temper of The same paper records a more pleasing symptom of the a large mumber of the bishops, that powerful section of times, however, in the fact that the Marquis of Water- the peers will not feel very much disposed to favour ford keeps constantly employed eight hundred men. any measure emanating from Lord Joha Russeli ; and) — accordingly, the eventual success of the bill, if it should, pass the Commons, would he very problematical in the! upper house. The vast majority of public writers in| England seem to be greatly in favour of admitting the and has done an gone particularly on we east Jews to a seat in the Legislature ; and, indeed, the ©°2St The Frith of Forth has an exposure to the sea . . . a . . . ’ | } ™ 3 i ¢ Ww main argument which is adduced against it is, the nearly north-east, and the wind, for the most part, was inevitable consequence, that Pagans and Mahomme- !'0™ that point. The first effect was on vessels riding dans, of which creeds we have millions of fellow sub- ete . ee a ' iis Gad, seehet ehereenhs comnaily be cx-(* OO eee ee ere © Soe, : ‘Port Seton, a sloop at Cockenzie, and two at Berwick. eeneee. — ‘Crews all understood to have been saved. But at New- CONFESSION OF WILLIAM ALLNUTT—REMARK- haven alone, 60 boats were injured—three-fourths of the ABLE DREAMS OF HEAVEN AND HELL. ‘number, probably, being total wrecks. All along the On Tuesday considerable excitement was created by | Cae: Sone = vag vielded tthe he jury at the Old Bailey, “? eer le stg te the production before the grand jury at the Olc ¥* of the storm. The railways in the neighbourhood have ofa written confessi fthe boy Allnutt asthe mur-! re : 7 y also been injured, but not to such an extent as to im- d of Mr. N . e substance of it was to the “~~, ro =<, . Nome. 55 pede traffic or telegraph communication. And not the effect that after hearing the chanlain of Newgate on f ~~ : ; Sunday preach on the subject of confession, he feli him- least remarkable consequence of the hurricane was the self accused as the inurderer of his grandfather. When ‘°2"!g up of an old grave-yard, near Trinity, by which he went to bed he dreamed that two angels were stand- teeth and grinning skulls of the olden time were mixed ing by him, who said, ‘ William, confess, and your sins) Ss 7 — of broken oars and masts. will be forgiven’ He then awoke, and found it was a, + @@¢ 18 beginning to improve in Glasgow, one large dream, and he was then ina dreadful fright. After a factory employing 1,000 hands, which had been shut up short sleep, he dreamt again; he then saw Satan, who for some weeks, has again commenced work, and is on ae . full tig laa ; said, ‘ William, if you tell the truth, you will be hanged,’ -"* time. Others are soon expected to be in the same G. Bankes, Mr. Goulburn, and Thomas Acland. SCOTLAND. He thought he saw the place that had been represented position. In Greenock, ship building and machinery are to him—a place of punishment and torture. He then a dull. : awoke, and again it was but a dream. The epistle pro- ever and death will soon supersede the cry of fever ceeds :—‘ Dear mother,--Had you known the state of and filth unless some change speedily takes place. my mind at that moment, you would have felt for me. The hurricane that visited London, has been north,’ serious measures will be adepted, of which the execu- tion will be intrusted to Austria and France. From the state of the chest of the canton of Lucerne, recovered from the fugitive authorities of the Sonder- bund, it appears that the treasury of the League de- rived its chief resources from loans supplied by Austria, and from an examination of the arms and artillery captured or surrendered, it appears that the League, derived its arms from France—the cypher of Louis |Philippe was found upon the artilery. The cantons of ithe defunct League were proceeding with the elections of their respective grand councils and other cantonal authorities. ‘The popular assemblies of these cantons respectively had passed resolutions in substance similar to those of Friburg and Lucerne, renouncing the |League, acknowledging the authority of the Diet, and re-organising their governments, | The genera] assembly of the people of the canton } | | j | | | } | } of Zug adopted on the Sth resolutions similar to those ‘in the Frith. Three sloops and a barqne were driven|*40Pted by the other cantons of the Sonderbund, re- nouncing the League, acknowledging the authority of the Diet, and appointing a Provisional Government. The Provisional Government of Lucerne has effected a loon of 180,000 francs in Austria, 100,000 at Bale, ‘and 36,000 at the convent of St. Urban. From official returns made to General Dufour, the commander-in-chief of the federal army, it appears that the loss of the federal troops during the late opera- tions has not been very great, as the total only ‘amounts to about 50 kited, 200 wounded, and 50 missing, SICILY. The Daily News, of the 15th ult. gives the follow- ing: The Vesuvio sailed on the morning of Wednesday the 1st inst. Then, and for several days previously, the greatest agitation prevailed throughout Sicily. The organisation ofa civic guard was called for at Messina, Catania, Syracuse, and other towns. The government, fearing the consequences of leading the SS SO The troops against the people, had withdrawn them within usual mortality bill for November has not yet been issu- their barracks, where they were retained. According I again went to sleep, and again I dreamt, dear mother, | °4: but the Mail states the mortality in the Edingurgh to some accounts the government was unwilling to in- I dreamt I saw God sitting upon His throne. In my dream I saw the angels in glory standing around Him, ae to have been 170 during the past month, while cur the odium of a popular massacre, and according to daring the corresponding month last year it was only others, it feared that the troops would refuse to act, or when He said, ‘ Confess, and your sins will be forgiven 95. Since the beginning of December the deaths have perhaps join the people. you.’ ‘There were large numbers of sinners standing been 75, nearly 11 per diem. The same authority round him: those onthe right hand had confessed, an q states that about GO privates and several officers of the was exhibited in Palermo. were in Heaven ; those onthe left hand had not con-| ‘Oth Regiment have died since the Regiment was sta- fessed, and were going to eternal torments. When y Uoned in Edinburgh Castle, and adds, that this mortality awoke, deat mother, it was light, and [then wrote that. exceeds that experienced in the corps during its stay in which you now see.’ Other rambling sentences follow, | the West Indies. and then he states, ‘I thought then, dear mother, I! he mortality in Perth is rather decreasing, and not would confess. On the 22d of October I saw grand-. without need. Ninety-one deaths in sixteen days, ina father go to the bureau where the arsenic was kept; [|W of sixteen thousand inbabitants, is a frightful mor- afterwards took one of the keys, got some ofthe arsenic, | “lity. The cholera did not devastate the fair city in put it inapiece of paper, and afterwards placed some! *"Y thing like this proportion. iu the sugar-vase which was in the cupboard, and In Glasgow, the extensive mortality among poor-law elso puta portion of it ina glass; and I now hope , Officials has led to the idea of their lives being insured after confessing, J shall go to Heaven, dear mother,’ jat the public expense ; and as gratuities are almost al- | Ways given to their widows and families the plan has IRELAND. cer . ~ —. _ , ae __ 4€ Scotch iron trade, lately so flourishing and Jucra- an dates from Ireland give the following prs Oe, a = — depressed —particulaly as saan ; of co : : pee ene ecko, in ate ok to the Gee Jour- noe of — Sere eon a nan, gives : Ount of the state of the poor, Crime in Edinb is i i in parts in that country. He states particular Aigneipocs! the past week th — wagutnaen 535 4c ae of starvation, with namesand dates. That there i "eae —46 for theft, ’ . at there is great fraud, reset, &c., 33 for assault, 90 breaches of the Segtitution along the sea-coast of Clare is very certain. peace, 48 begging, &c. They involved the examination — | | | i i | On the 27th ult. a scene of extraordinary enthusiasm In Theatre Carolino the audience rose and uttered various patriotic exclama- tions. The popular demonstrations of the 27th were repeated on the 28ih, 29th, and 30th. The theatre rang with shouts in favour of Pius [X. and the Italian Union. The population of Palermo, including the most respect- able classes, demanded the immediate formation of the national guard, the surest means of maintaining order. Several of the most influential inhabitants of the town, including the professors of the university, had written to Naples on this subject ; but the answers received were unfavourable, and a revolution, accord- ing to some, had become inevitable. Besides the letters received directly from Sicily, other advices have been received from various parts of Italy, which all tend to ‘corroborate the reports already given. Letters from Leghorn of the 4th say that a steam-frigate had arrived from the British squadron lying off Sicily, which brought despatches to Admiral Parker, informing him that Sicily was in full revolt, and that the insurgents had declared themselves independent of the Neapoli- tan government, and had placed themselves under the |protection of England.