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A RUSSIAN-GERMAN CHEVALIER D'LNDUSTRIE. ...
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NAVAL AND MILITARY NEWS. RicronTED Dancu...
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£39 THTE I^EABiBnK, [Saitpbpay ,
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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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Continental Notes. M. Guassot, Tho Well-...
rapid as that of the tropics . But , though the summer has begun gloriously , and the heavens are -without a cloud , yet peatilencfr stalks among us , and darkens the ? 6 v of the people more than a -wintry sky . The cholera , which has lurked-all the winter in the lanes of JPera and among the villages which-stud the sides of the ravines which run down into the Bosphorus , has now ( May 7 th ) come forth to attack high and low . A fewdays since the deaths were about one hundred and fifty a day on the Frank side of the Golden Horn . Happily , ¦ within the last two days , the disease has somewhat abated in this quarter . It has steadily directed its course aldng the * main street , until it has reached-the low-lying purlieus of- Gtalata , where , while I write , its ravages are chiefly-felt ; The funerals that pass on their
way to the great burial-ground'indicate that the victims belong to a lower class than those of the past week . Then the death-psalms- were chanted by richly-clad choristers ; bishops-and arch-priests , in all the pomp of their antique vestments , passed the door hourly , preceding the decorated coffins of wealthy victims . Sometimes a procession-of little girls , clad in white , each bearing a taper , proclaimed that one of the conventual schools had lost a young pupil ; sometimes the French uniforms which crowded round the bier showed that the pestilence had been busy in the camp or the hospitals of our allies . As will be observed by the returns from Scutari , the British hospitals are absolutely free from the sickness , the deaths not numbering more than from four to six a day .
A very curious affair , says the Senttnelle of Namur , is about to oecupy public attention in Belgium . In the siege of Bouvignes , in 1455 , the Duke de Brabant made prisoner a nobleman named Legrain , but instead of taking his life , as he was entitled to do , the Duke consented to spare it on condition of receiving all his estates and property . Legrain made over all he possessed , but stipulated that at the end of four centuries it should return to his * family . * The Duke made no objection . The four centuries expire in July next , and already a great many persons , representing ^ themselves to be descendants of Legrain , are preparing to claim the property . It is foreseen that the claims will give rise to numerous lawsuits .
The resignation of Redschid Pacha is attributed to his interference with the French project of cutting a ship canal through the Isthmus of Darien , no less than to the recal of Mehemet Ali . M . Lesseps lately obtained from the Egyptian Pacha a concession for the above-mentioned object ; and , when this concession was brought before the notice of the Sultan to obtain his sanction , the English and French ambassadors disagreed npon the matter . Redschid Pacha , therefore , under the
signature of Kiamil Pacha ( whom he induced to put his name to the letter ) , wrote to the Egyptian viceroy , requesting him not to press the concession , as any rupture between France and England at the present time would be unfortunate . This interference came to the knowledge of M . Benedetti , who upbraided Redschid Pacha , and finally rendered it necessary for him to resign . Such , at least , is the story now current in Constantinople . Kiamil Pacha , who held the office of President of the Council of State , has since resigned .
The Convents Suppression Bill has been finally voted in the Sardinian Senate by secret ballot . The votes were—63 for , 42 against . The result wag received with great applause in the galleries . The last accounts from Archangel mention that the Dwina commenced thawing in the middle of April . Since the commencement of this century , the river has never but twice before freed itself so early from its icy fetters . The Spanish Cortes have voted the seventh basis of the Constitution . The English Government approves of the conduct of Lord Howden in the affair of Seville . The appearance of a Carlist band in the province of Avila is considered as insignificant .
Some inquiries into the anarchical condition of the Austrian army in the Danubian Principalities have been made by M . Doria , attache" to the Prussian embassy at Constantinople , who was sent into Moldavia for the purpose . From his report ( which is dated from the Principalities , April 22 , ) it appears that the Austrian soldiers , consisting chiefly of Croats , have been in the habit of conducting themselves "with a brutal ferocity which has acknowledged no law but that of its own pleasure . Robbery , murder , savage assaults , violation of . women , and perpetual intimidation , are proved to have been committed by those desperate soldiery , who seem to enjoy perfect immunity from punishment . One of their most audacious feats—an attempt upon the
treasury of the local government—was thus related to M . Doria : — " An Austrian soldier had obtained entrance burglariously into the apartment where the money and valuable papers wore deposited , and was apprehended there by the Moldavian sentinel , who handed him over to his superior oflicor . The following morning , an Austrian corporal came and demanded his liberation . The soldier was-at that time still in confinement in the apartment in which ho had been detected . The demand was . refused . Later in the same day , an Austrian officorj with a guard of twenty men , arrived , and demanded again the liberation of the prisoner , which demand was again refused . The Austriana on this made uso of their arms , serioualy wounded the Moldavian sentinel in . the
head , and carried off the prisoner . The Moldavian soldier is still in the hospital , suffering ; from the consequences of his wound . To my inquiry as to . when this occurred , the Governor answered that the papers connected with the matter were in hischancellerie ; in then absence , he could not give me the exact date , but he believed it was the middle of November . No satisfaction or atonement had been given , nor bad the-soldiers been punished , the Austriana affirming that a Moldavian has no right to arrest an Austrian . " The Austrian Government , ashamed of this state of things , has been making a few feeble attempts to put a stop to it , and a slight improvement has taken place ; but the Principalities are still in a very wretched'and dangerous condition . The Croats are so ill disciplined , that their officers are afraid to reprimand them .
The statement , which furnished a little temporary excitement last week , of the resignation of Count Nesselrode and the appointment , as his successor , of Prince Yermaloff ; is totally unfounded . A letter from Bucharest of the 9 th gives some details as to the facts which have induced General Coronini , the officer in command of the Austrian forces , to proclaim martial law in the Principalities . It says : — " The numerous arrests which have taken place here during the past month appear to have been caused by the discovery of a / vast conspiracy organised by some Hungarian emigrants , in concert with a number of revolutionists . It is said that all this has been done at
the instigation of Russia , with a view to excite a movement against the order of things established since the return of the hospodar into Wallachia ; it is said also that attempts Tiave been made to lead away from their duty the Austrian troops of occupation . All the interrogatories undergone by the persons arrested have been perfectly secret , and the persons set at liberty have been warned not to speak of what has occurred . In consequence , scarcely anything has transpired abroad . But owing to what has come to light , Count Coronini has published an order of the day declaring martial law established . " v New Aggrandisement of Russia . — According to
letters from St . Petersburg of the 11 th , Russia has profited by the troubles of the Chinese Empire to effect an easy extension of her frontiers in Southern Siberia . Means have been found to induce four Mongol Khans , long subject to China , to ask that their lands may be annexed to the Russian Empire . The Mongolians in question are miserable tribes , without agriculture , arts , or even . towns , and well understand that they cannot hope to maintain a position of independence . Of course this request could not be refused , and the Khanates , late the possessions of China , are now annexed to the Czar ' s dominions . —Daily News .
The Eruption of Mount Vesuvius . —Much of the land belonging to the village of St . Jovio has been already destroyed . Should the eruption continue , the course of the lava will lead it over the railway into the sea . It is to be hoped , however , that it will not reaeh so far . The summit of the mountain is so riddled , and the surface is presumed to be so thin , that it is feared it may fall at any time ; and no person is allowed to advance beyond the Observatory . Indeed , it would be madness to attempt it . The spectacle which the mountain presents at night is remarkably grand . Its sides are covered with the fiery fluid , which one may imagine to be blood oozing out from the wounded giant . — Morning Post .
A Russian-German Chevalier D'Lndustrie. ...
A RUSSIAN-GERMAN CHEVALIER D'LNDUSTRIE . At the Middlesex Sessions , on Monday , an amusing case of roguery came before the notice of the jury . Henri Scherr Thoss , described in the calendar as a gentleman of superior education , was indicted for obtaining , by false and fraudulent pretences , from James Baker Pyne , a picture of the value of sixty guineas , with intent to defraud , He was further charged with obtaining , in like manner and with like intent , two dressing-cases , value 4 C / ., from Thomas Charles Hanniford ; one dressing-case , value 40 ? ., from Francis Kennedy ; one ditto , from William Gregg ; and a gold watch and gold chain , value 40 L , the property of John Mitchell and another , from James Murray , their servant .
Mr . Parry appeared for the prosecution ; Mr . Ribton for the pr isoner . The case stood for trial at the laat session , hut was postponed until the present in consequence of the prisoner claiming his right to bo tried by a half foreign jury . A mixed jury wus accordingly now ompannelled to try him . It appeared from the evidence given in support of the prosecution , that the prisoner , who was stated to bo a nephew of General Rudigor , commander of tho Russian Imperial Guard , had for some time been an
accomplished swindler , and , notwithstanding that the indictment'contained five charges against him , a number of persons were present ready , if required , to substantiate others . The evidence as to each charge was nearly identical , and showed that he had curried on hit * plunder on a rather cunninglyrdeviBed plan . About tho end of March , ho went to tho shop of Mr . Pyno , picture-dealer , of Maddox-atreot , and asked to bo furnished with tho ' names of Home of tho most eminent miuiuturo painters <> f tho day . Mr . Pyno mentioned the name of SirW . 'Ross and one or two others , but' he could not give theiti
addresses ; and the prisoner , one of whose representations-was-that he was concerned for a foreign fa mily of distinction who were coming to England and would require the services of a < nrst * -rate artist , requested that he wouldiprocure the information he required , and transmit it to Hrm at the Prussian Embassy , in Cailton-houseterrace , at the same time giving him his card— " Count ThOss , Prussian Embassy . " Mr . Pyne did so ; and , a day or two after , the prisoner-again made Ms appearance at . the shop . As he produced the identical letter and envelope which he ( Mr . Pyne ) had sest to the Prussian Embassy , addressed to : him , Mr . Pyne of course never suspeeted that the " Count" was not connected with the embassy . In a conversation that took place
the-prisoner said he had waited on Sir W . Ross ,- whose terms ( two hundred guineas ) were too high , and that he had agreed with Mr . Thorburn to paint his portrait for eighty guineas . On the afternoon of Good Friday , the " Count" drove up to Mr . Pyne's private residence at Camden-town in a brougham , and said he wanted to purchase one of his pictures , and at his request Mr . Pyne got into the brougham , and proceeded to his shop in Maddox-street , where the prisoner selected two pictures of the value of 407 ., promising to pay for them in a month . He said he must have the pictures there and then , as he wanted to present them to a frie nd on that day , which was his birthday ; but on the succeeding day , he returned the two pictures , and selected
one instead , of the value of 60 ? ., which Mr . Pyne parted with in the . full belief that the person he -was dealing with was a real Count , and really belonged to the Prussian Embassy . The only person called from , the embassy to disprove the prisoner ' s representation was the under-butler to Count Bernstorff , the Ambassador , and he stated that the prisoner was in no way connected with the embassy , but he had been in the habit of calling there some months ago to see Count Euckel , who was then one of the officials , but had since gone abroad , and letters addressed to him as " Count Thoss" had been received there , and the prisoner had called for them . By this means he got possession of the letters -which he induced his victims to write to him on the
pretence of seeking information about miniature painters , and which he afterwards used to show that he belonged to the embassy or he could not have received them . He resorted to this trick in each of the five cases now charged against him . In Mr . Hanniford ' s case , he got from that gentleman ' s shop two dressing-cases , one of which he said he was going to give to a lady residing in Langham-place , to whom he was about to be married ; and the other to a friend of his at the Turkish Embassy . On the 12 th of April , the prisoner was detained at a pawnbroker ' s in offering a dressingcase in pledge , in consequence of information which had been given by the police , and he was taken into custody . lie then gave his address at the . Star and Garter , Eichmond , hut he was not known there at all , and he -was
traced as lodging at 2 , Northumberland-street , Strand , and it was stated that he had been living at a private hotel in Liverpool-street , King ' s-cross . In his posses . sion were found a number of letters . Among tliem was one from Mr . Benjamin Bond Cabbell , in answer to an appeal for pecuniary aid , declining to do what was asked , and one to the same effect from the Secretary to the Duke of Devonshire ; another was in his own handwriting , and related to [ an application for permission to dedicate a musical composition of his own to the Duchess of Sutherland . A passport signed by Count Bernstorff , and made out in the name of Count Thoss , was also found upon him . It was available for fourteen days from the 3 rd of April , and was for Belgium and Silesia . At his lodgings in Northumberland-street , he was known by the name of Ernest .
The prisoner was found guilty , and aentenced to be kept in penal servitude for four years . Mr . Parry , the counsel for tho prosecution , Boid , there was not the least question that the prisoner was one of tho greatest swindlers the metropolis had ever seen . In January , 1854 , he was discharged from Coldbatli-ficlds House of Correction , after serving twelve months for an offence committed by fictitious cheques . In tho course of tho case an allusion was made to the prisoner ' s title of Count , upon which Mr . Ribton , the prisoner ' s counsel , said : " Well , we all know what these German Counts are . "—The Assistant-Judge : " Ob , yes ; discounts . "
Naval And Military News. Ricronted Dancu...
NAVAL AND MILITARY NEWS . RicronTED Dancuokous Cukuicnt in tiik UivAcic Ska . —A despatch has been received by tho Lords of tho Committee of Privy Council for Trade , through the Secretary of State for Foreign Affaire , from Mr . Noalo , her Majesty ' s consul ut Varna , enclosing tho copy of n despatch uddresscd by him to Sir Edmund Lyons , respiting tho existence of a dangerous current which prevails uortnward of Knlakriii . It appears that vessels navigating from Odessa or tho mouths of tho Danube , to Varnn , or tho Bosphorus , or from tho Crimea to Varna , liavq l » een frequently drawn upon tho shoals at Shabla . JSo 1 i « h , indeed , than « ix vcsscIh have been wrecked durintf lll ( j last month between Slmbla and Miuigolia , nil u ° , , from Kumiesch to Varna . In December , 18 /> 2 , thu'teon vohbcIh of different nations wont on shore within n iveoK . iMr . Nenlo atatCH that ho has found it general l > ol » ot pre-• vuil among seafaring men with whom he luw wmverBCii
£39 Thte I^Eabibnk, [Saitpbpay ,
£ 39 THTE I ^ EABiBnK , [ Saitpbpay ,
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), May 26, 1855, page 10, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_26051855/page/10/
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