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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorONE thing appears to be settled in the opinion of all parties on the eve of the general electionâthat Lord Palmerston is to have an increase to his former majority. The...
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13tttAttg isu r £riq ill Vartinffiruf.
The SpectatorPRINCIPAL IIII2liNE210 OP THE WEEK. , . Ironic or Lonna. Monday, March 9. Royal Assent to Marine Forces Bill, Chief Constables Bill, Ionian Subjects Commissions Bill, and...
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FOREIGN POLICY.
The SpectatorThe CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER moved the second reading of the Income-tax Bill. This gave rise to a long and desultory conversation on foreign policy and taxation. Mr. Manama...
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RELATIONS WITH CHINA.
The SpectatorThe Earl of ELLENBOROUGH moved for returns respecting the observ ance of the supplemental treaty by the British. As we are so strict with the Chinese, it behoves us to...
THE NAVY ESTLNIATES.
The SpectatorImmediately after the second reading of the Income-tax Bill, the House went into Committee of Supply. Sir Charles Wood was about to make a statement, when Mr. GLADSTONE said he...
TAXATION AND EXPENDITURE.
The SpectatorWhen the report of Supply was brought up on Tuesday, Mr. GLADSTONE, in a very thin House, moved the resolution which, he said, Sir Charles Wood had compelled him to postpone....
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THE INCOME-TAX,
The SpectatorIn Committee on the Income-tax Bill, Sir Frrzaoy KELLY, "making a stand in favour of the act of 1853," moved that 6d. in the pound should be substituted for 7e1, After a speech...
THE ARMY ESTIMATES.
The SpectatorThe Committeeof Supply, Mr. PEEL moved that the number of men for the ensuing flnanical year should be 126,796. This, he explained, gives an apparent reduction of 120,000 on the...
THE OPIUM TRAFFIC.
The SpectatorThe Earl of SHAFTESBURY, on Monday, exposed the evils attending the trade in opium, and explained his view of the state of the law on the subject. He condemned the trade, as...
THE CRIMEAN COMMISSIONERS.
The SpectatorEarly on Thursday evening, Mr. J. EWART inquired whether the Government intended to make any further recognition of the services of Sir John M'Neill and Colonel Tulloch in the...
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PROCEDURE.
The SpectatorEarl STANHOPE called attention to the report of the Select Committee on the Minutes and Journals of the House of Lords. The Committee recommended and the House adopted...
q.tt Court.
The SpectatorArran her brief sojourn at Windsor Castle, the Queen returned to Buckingham Palace on Thursday afternoon. Prince Albert had already, on behalf of her Majesty, held a levee at...
'tie 311,ttrnlintio.
The SpectatorA special meeting of the Court of Common Council was held on Monday, to express an opinion on the commercial consequences likely to arise from the vote on Mr. Cobden's motion....
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ruttiuti111.
The SpectatorMr. Ellice, the senior Member for Coventry, and a voter in the minority on the 3d March, issued an address to his constituents explaining his reasons for giving that vote. "I...
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IRELAND.
The SpectatorGreat electioneering activity of course shows itself in Ireland ; but it will probably not be found so profitable an investment as formerly for enterprising place-hunters. The...
ENGLAND AND WALES.
The SpectatorABINGDON. Major Reed retiree, as he intends to contest Finsbury. Mr. J. T. Norris, a London Common Councilman, is a Liberal candidate. Mr. H. D. Burr, late High Sheriff of...
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fintigu uii eutuuirtl.
The SpectatorITIIIIITâThe Government has met with a check from a quarter where it mi g ht have been least expectedâthe Council of State. At a meeting of that body on the 6th instant, the...
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Biortilnutritts.
The SpectatorThe Earl of Elgin has accepted the office of Plenipotentiary to the Court of relit', and will proceed on his arduous mission as soon as he has been made sufficiently acquainted...
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POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorSATURDAY. In the House of Lords, last night, the Earl of CLANRICARDE moved for some correspondence connected with the Persian war. This gave the Earl of MALMEABDRY an...
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t4t tOratrrs.
The SpectatorThe playgoing world of the West-end is at this moment occupied in rubbing its eyes, that it may recover completely from the dazzle of Thursday last, when, amid the acclamations...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE APPEAL TO THE COUNTRY. NEWER since the Reform Act has a general election presented to the constituencies an issue in one sense so simple, in another so obscure and...
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THE SPEAKER.
The SpectatorMR. &Enna LEFETRE will stand conspicuous in the list of Presidents of the House of Commons, for the very high position which he takes on retiring,âa position undoubtedly...
PERSONAL GOVERNMENT.
The SpectatorA PARAGRAPH in the papers tells us, on the authority of "a letter from St. Petersburg," that the Count de Willy, who is quite domesticated in the country of his Russian bride,...
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ANTIDOTES TO OPIUM.
The SpectatorWHEW Lord Shaftesbury proposed to arraign the East India Company before the Judges of the United Kingdom, asking whether the cultivation of opium is not a breach of the East...
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CIVILIZATION IN CHINA.
The SpectatorTim Chinese are a wonderful people for the exquisite good sense of their propositions and the surprising results in practice. In a letter to the Registrar-General, published in...
A CONVICT ON CONVICI1SM.
The SpectatorA num, tract,* one of a series giving an account by Mr. John Frost of his experiences as a convict in Van Diemen's Land, forms a remarkable appendix to the blue-books on...
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ithr grmti.
The SpectatorFROM THE LONDON 0AaRTTE, MARCH 10. WAR OFFICE, Pall Mall, March 10.-Cocafry--Royal Regiment of Horse Guards -M. B. B. Adderley, Gent, to be Cornet, by purchase, vice Sir S. P....
intr.
The SpectatorFROM THE LONDON GAZETTE, MARGIN 10. Partnerships .1)188o:red.-Norton and Co. Sheffield, iron-founders; as far as regards '1'. Ward jun.-II. foal T. Croseley, Manchester...
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riator $witintnt.
The SpectatorMARCH 14, 1857. BOOKS. GOODRICH'S RECOLLECTIONS OP A LIFETIME.. A PERUSAL of these bulky volumes does not sustain the expectation which a cursory inspection raised. There are...
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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorBooxs. THE circumstances of the time render Sir John Bowring's book on Siam the most remarkable publication of the week ; and the most attractive part of that book is the...