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¦yo, , 4^6 , Ootobeb 9,18580 ,_ Tg EL, E...
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...«^ page Braz il . 1057 Weedon 10fU ME...
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T HE country is fast warming oir the sub...
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CONTENTS:
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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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... «^ page Braz il . 1057 Weedon 10 fU MERCANTILE AND COMMERCIALREVIEWOF THEWEEK- «« B ^ SJ Indies ... 1057 The Russian Imperial Agitator . 1005 India ...:... ; ., . ' . 1072 - Political Foreshadowangs .. 10 .. 2 Amcrica 1057 Portraitures , of the Royal Family Tca and Coffee , t , Himalayag . # . 1072 The Education Movement Wo 6 Miscellaneous 1000 of Prussia 1005 Notes on Indian Progress 1073 Lord Canning Defence 10 ^ 3 Postscript 1062 Trifles Light as Air 10 G 6 Taxes on Trade „ 1074 S & ii WMiH ®^ :::::: ; : ; :::: ; :::::: ioS original correspondence- literature- - SKffffi ^ jff 6 m ! Accidents and Sudden Deaths . 10 o * France 1053 Mr . Carlyle's Life of Frederick the Home . Colonial , aAd Foreign Pro-Irolaad Y " -Pniw Germany 10 o 9 Greafc . __ 1 ( w 7 duce Markets' 1076 Gatherings from Law and 1 once in < i , a , 10 j 9 Notes on Cherbourg IOCS Money Market and Stock Ex-Courts „ " inv ; China 1059 The Quarterlies . 1069 change 1077 Criminal Record J " £ j PUBLIC AFFAIRS— The Magazines for October 1070 Ordinary Shares and Stocks 1078 Continental Notes ™» _ > ocs France Meditate War with ARTS- Railway Intelligence 1079 India * . : io > 7 us ? . 1062 THE ARTS— Bank of England 10 , 9 China * £ ' The PriissianRegency ... 1063 Theatres and Public Entertain- London Gazette ..... 1079 Cane ' of ' Good Hope V . V . V . V . V . ' . V " . . . " 1057 Lord John Russell and Lord Derby IOCS inents 1071 Books Received this Week 1079
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T He Country Is Fast Warming Oir The Sub...
T HE country is fast warming oir the subject ol Reform ; the word is becoming a cry , rising louder and louder every day . Reconstruction oi electoral districts , extended suffrage , and the ballot , these are the elements of the popular programme * as far as it is at present arranged . How far will Lord Derby ' Reform Bill go towards satisfying the demands of the people ? Up to this time , Ministers have succeeded in keeping their reformatory iuten-• tions entirely to themselves , not without exhibiting a somewhat comical timidity on the subject , as when Mr . Disraeli and Sir Edward Bulwer Lyttonthinking discretion the better part of valour—stayed away from their customary dinners at Aylcsbury and at Hertford ; the turbot , if not the wine , might have set them talking ; it was safer to fly from the risk . But whatever the Government Bill maybe , it must be in the main a reasonable approach to that wliich public opinion is making ready to demaud , if Lord Derby and his friends are not bent on flinging away their offices and their political vitality at the same time ; for Sir George Conic wall Lewis no doubt saw correctly into the future when lie ' said , at the Radnorshire Agricultural dinner , the other day , " In whatever form a Reform Bill may be introduced into the House of Commons , it will come out of that House a real Reform Bill , increasing the popular character of the Legislature . " In the meantime , and in the absence of the least word of intelligence from Ministers , rumour is as busy as a bee , buzzing about possible and impossible stones of the parts to be played by various great actors in . the coming drama . The most prominent of these stories is that which relates how Lord Derby and Lord John Russell have been in consultation on the subject of the great Bill . There appears to be . no truth in the story , and its promulgation lias not done much as a party move in the way of damaging Lord Johu Russell with the Liberal section of the country . The animus is strong , however , in that direction , as we see by another move which has been nmde to give an appearanco of friendly understanding between Lord John aud tho Government . A fow days back it was stated in certain circles that Lord Bury was goingout to Canada on " a mission of great commercial and politioal importance , " for no less a purpose , in fact , tlwu . to obtain for tho Colonial-oilico tho opinion of tho Canadian Legislature and poople on tho ra-opoaod . confederation of the British North American provinces , which Mr . Cartior , and some othors of tho Canadian Administration , have coino over to this country to negotiate Lord Bury wna at ono time privato seorotary to Lord John Russell , and ia ^ oll known to act in concert with him ; tho inforouco intended to bo suggostcd , thoroforo , wast , that , in ftpoepting an appointment from tho Tory Govommout Lord Bury was aoting as Usual with tho ooueurronoo of Lord John RussolL Tho fact . on whioli this canard has boon , founded is that Lord Bury has gono over io Canada with his , wifo on a ¦
private visit to Sir Alan M'Nab , his father-in-law . He , also , lias some affairs on his hand as a Director of the Gal way Steam Company—a very different thing , however , from the turn given by some to the original report . As to . Lord John , he is as silent as ' the gentlemen in office as to what he is going to do on the Reform question ; nothing is known of his i plans ; it is , however , supposed that he has plans , ! though he has not explained them . j : I The two documents received from Lord Canning , ! in answer to the famous Ellenborough despatch are i such as a thoroughly honest and earnest man would j write under similar circumstances of provocation . -Lord Canning ' s defence is powerful , and will- be to , his friends and supporters in spite of its length , satisfactory . It does away with Lord Ellenborough's j direct and pointed censure , and it throws upon him ! and upon those who gave effect to it the responsibility | of muchlof the difficulty which at this moment has to ' ¦ i be dealt with in Oude . By the . letters of Mr . Mont- i gomery and . other Commissioners he shows clearly ; that great advances were being made in bringing j the rebellious-talookdars-to tender their submission : under the terms ' of the censured proclamation ; and , I that , on the other hand , the pvvblication of the ! i Ellenborough despatch not only all but put a stop ! J to the progress making towards pacification , but j ! was taken as an encouragement to continued hos- j tility by many of those who were wavering on the j borders of submission . But , like a man who feels j that his case is clearly made out in his own favour , j Lord Canning states his determination not to ; dc ' sgttkkis post in consequence of any mortification whicnlic may have felt : the great want is British j troops to defend those who may submit to the j clemency of the British authority , and he says , i " When the season shall arrive at which the troops I can again movo rapidly over the country—when . the largo police force now being raised- by the Chief Commissioner at Luckuow shall have reached its complement and received further organisation , and when it shall bo manifest that wo have the moans of protecting or supporting thoso who return to their allegiance , I cannot doubt that tho spirit in which the proclamation has been accepted in many quarters will doclarc itself gcnorally through * out the province . " Among the meetings of tho week one is specially noteworthy ; it took place at Worcester on Wednesday ovoniug , and the occasion was tho oolcbration of tho union of fourteen Mechanics' Institutes around Worcester . Tho scheme of this union , which promises many advantages , was set on foot some mouths since by Mr . J . S . Pukington , a son of the First Lord of tho Admiralty , and tho meeting on Wednesday evening was addressed by Sir John Pakington . Ilia views on tho subject of popular oduoation are woll known , and his speech at Worcester contained nothing remarkably new in tho way of argumoj . it or illustration ; but it was an carnost recognition of tho duties of all " as citizens , as philanthropists , and ns politicians , to promote education , and the goiioral diffusion of knowledge" as a security against tho headstrong passions and prejudices of iguorauco—tho true " root of ivH oyil . "
¦ If any of the poor shareholders in the Western I Bank of Scotland were hugging themselves with the I comfortable belief that they knew the worst of their { calamity , they have been unpleasantly undeceived [ within the last few days ; the publication of the report | of the liquidators conveys to them the miserable fact that hundreds of them are ruined . Every calculation of the value of the assets has turned out to have been beyond the value realised : the consequence is , that , after paying the call of 25 / . per 50 / . ¦ share , the unfortunate shareholders are now called I upon to pay another 100 / . per share ' . —nearly a i million pounds of liabilities remaining yet to be ! liquidated . And the authors of this havoc ?—of the corruption which , as the Times says , will leave its taint for many years on the mercantile character of j the entire city of Glasgow ? - * they are , " as the world ¦ goes , " very honest gentlemen , who may get up I another Bank at their convenience ; "justice , ' ! meantime , being done on the legally liable shareholders . Stern justice , we take it , will be meted out to some other gentlemen who have incurred liabilities of a somewhat different kind , Discoveries made at Birmingham and in London have brought to light the fact of a well-organised conspiracy to defraud the Turkish Government by the manufacture in this country of a large amount of spurious coin . Another ease discloses an attempt to manufacture fictitious Russian bank-notes , and in this instance there is reason to believe the work has been successful to an enormous extent . Two Frenchmen and a Greek are in custody for the Turkish fraud , and it is expected that some persons of much greater consequence will be found connected with the transaction . The decision of the Lord Mayor in the case of the man Johnston , whose brutality drove one of his daughters to attempt self-destruction , has given universal satisfaction . We are all too well aware that there arc brutal husbands and fathers enough in the world , but happily we do not often sec a case of such peculiar- ^ blackness—we do not hear of fathers in Johnston ' s position in lifo , not only neglecting his children , but driving them from his house—telling the girls to " go upoa the town" for a living , and tho boys to steal . Tho month ' s imprisonment with hard labour as a rogue and vagabond is but a small punishment with reference to his doscrts , but it has a morit from the uuuinching way in which tho Lord Mayor determined to indict the severest chastisoment which tho law allowed him to award . For tho poor girl , the hcroino of the dark domestic history , public sympathy is ilnding substantive expression in subscriptions which already rcaoh to between two and three- hundred pounds , which aro to bo applied to her benciit , as tho Lord Mayor may think best ; probably & ho will be established in business , and so put beyond tho need of becking or of receiving assistance from her bruto father . In foreign politics tho most interesting topic at tho present moment is tho attitude taken by , tho Ein- t pcror of Russia on the subject of ' sorf-omawcipation . During a tour whioli ho lias latoly made through several of tho governments of hia empire , ho has
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Oct. 9, 1858, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_09101858/page/3/
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