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We note a few fresh facts concerning the lock-out in
The Spectatorthe building trade. Messrs. Allen, one of the larger firms, have conceded th e men's demands, and are now employing about forty masons. Messrs. Waller and Sons also for a time...
The Hungarians have replied to the Imperial rescript by a
The Spectatorsecond address, which offered, as it is, to the irritated master of half a mil- lion of soldiers, is a specimen of the purest political courage. Mode- rate in tone, and clear in...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectatorr E week has been singularly dull, and the cannonade of speeches which usually distinguishes the Parliamentary recess has not yet commenced. Dropping shots are heard...
The Association for the Promotion of Social Science was opened
The Spectatorat Dublin, on the 13th instant, in a speech from Lord Brougham, 'which traversed almost the whole field of labour, and wandered at the end into a discursive review of European...
The American news received during the week is only important
The Spectatorin this, that General Beauregard does not intend to assume the offensive. By the latest accounts he was fortifying himself at Fairfax, and bringing his army into thorough...
The Archduke Maximilian was entertained on Wednesday by the town
The Spectatorof . Southampton, but the Miniskers, although invited, declined to attend. The.most prominent speaker was Mr. Roebuck, who spoke of the Emperor of Austria as "that great monarch...
The condition of Southern Italy appears, from local accounts, to
The Spectatorbe somewhat improved, and, in consequence, the priests, not being able to announce victory, have taken to abusing the extreme severity with which the repression is effected....
The reports of the harvest are generally encouraging, though there
The Spectatorhas been wet weather in the north, and the breadth of land sown everywhere is slightly below the average. In the south and east, however, the farmers are cheerful, the wheat...
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Stahl.—Cialdini continues his measures for the restoration of order in
The SpectatorSouthern Italy. His first object, it would appear, is to conciliate all classes capable of being conciliated, and his second to crush the Bourbonists by aid of all the sections...
Inina.—The new Boulevard "Malesherbes" was opened on Wed- nesday by
The Spectatorthe Emperor in person. It is a magnificent road round the north of Paris, and, like all the new boulevards, is intended to divide Paris into blocks, eat surrounded by broad...
ilitthiff.—The Hungarian Diet has replied to the Imperial rescript. After
The Spectatora trenchant reply to the Emperor's allegations—a summary of which will be found in another column—the address concludes by announcing the following resolutions: " We are...
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Ilsossiz.—The good people of Berlin are occupied with a "Turner
The Spectator'fest," a grand gathering of all the gymnasts in Germany, and an occasion for a grand holiday. About 5000 "Turners" attended from every part of Germany, and the national...
lrm Ssalanit.—War has recommenced in New Zealand. The na- tives
The Spectatorare determined to draw their organization closer under a native king, and threatened Auckland, so that on the 21st of May the Go- vernor issued a proclamation, announcing that...
Ssbia.—The latest accounts from India announce a heavy fall in
The Spectatorthe price of opium. Mr. Laing estimated the probable price at 1740 rupees a chest, but it has fallen to 1400 rupees, leaving a de- ficit on his calculation of 1,200,0001. A new...
lurnira.—Our intelligence from America reaches to the 3rd instant. 'The
The Spectatoraccounts of Southern movements are, as usual, very obscure and contradictory, but it appears certain that General Beauregard has occupied and is fortifying Fairfax, 14 miles...
entnif,—The Pasha has recently adopted most rigorous measures of economy.
The SpectatorHis debts amounted, it appears, to about 7,120,0001., besides 2,810,000/. owing to the Canal Company; and he proposed a loan to Messrs. Laffitte. They agreed to furnish one of...
c ur itni.—The British Ambassador, Sir H. Bulwer, has had his au-
The Spectator.dience of the Sultan; and expressed in terms most unusually strong the pleasure of her Majesty at his accession, and her confidence " that, ender the auspices of your Imperial...
tam
The SpectatorMONDAY, AUGUST 12TH. THE following statistics give a startling idea of the vast importance to the prosperity of this country of a wet or dry summer. For the six years, 1854-9,...
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of England, the Mint, the centre nave. The 30th of
The Spectatornext month is the last day for the recep- Honourable A. Hood, on behalf of the Queer left the Swedish and
strongly to any oil being called paraffin but their own.
The SpectatorThe verdict The Duke de Montebello, General Codrington, and General Willisen was as follows : " That, on the 8th of August, Montmorency Durant are expected here. Stokes did die...
'64r enurt.
The SpectatorOSBORNE, AUG. 9.—The Queen drove out yesterday, accompanied by the Crown Princess of Prussia, Princess Charles and Princess Anne of Hesse, Prin- cess Alice and Prince Arthur....
pany was 820. r. Woods, from whom the deceased had
The Spectatorbought Subscriptions to the " OvEncatrn FRIEND OF' INDIA," Will be received by air. A. E. Galloway, at 1, Wellington-street, Strand.
FROM THE LONDON GAZETTE, AUG. 13.
The SpectatorBankrupts.—Edward Henry Cogswell and George Day, Peterborough, Northamp- tonshire, builders—Thomas Wills, Alverstoke, Hampshire, licensed brewer — Charles Humfrey and Charles...
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY AFTERNOON. THE directors of the Bank of England, yesterday, reduced their rate of discount from 5 to 4} per cent. It was generally anticipated that this...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorCULTIVATED LIBERALS AND POPULAR LIBERALS. T HERE is a superciliousness of thought and demeanour about the dominant Liberalism of the day in treating the old popular notions of...
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won. supplies of men, and the modification of the laws,
The Spectatorthe 1. And first, as to the merits of the'reply. The Emperor, supreme power has belonged to and been exercised by the it will be remembered, never absolutely denied the...
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THE EMPEROR AND THE NEW BOULEVARD.
The SpectatorP ARIS this week has flocked to witness the inauguration of a new and splendid boulevard, and to listen to an inaugural address from the lips of its imperial founder, which was...
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SOCIAL SCIENCE IN IRELAND. T HAT Lord Brougham's first acquaintance with
The SpectatorIreland should be made on occasion of a mission to observe and promote the progress of Social Science, is one of the most significant of symptoms of the rapid growth of the...
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SOUTHERN ITALY.
The SpectatorTWO remarkable letters have appeared this week on the condition of Southern Italy. The author of one, Sir George Bowyer, is an ultramontanist of the most advanced description, a...
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THE KNIGHTS OF THT1 GOLDEN CIRCLE.
The SpectatorJ UST before the descent of Lopez on Cuba, the American papers were full of allusions to an association called the Order of the Lone Star, said to be organized for the purpose...
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FUAD PASHA..
The SpectatorTT is curious, considering the keen interest felt by politicians in 11. Turkish affairs, how little we know of Turkish statesmen. They have histories like other men, and...
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rtttrt tII t4r (ANL
The SpectatorTHE BUILDING STRIKE. Stn,—The question now at issue between the master builders and the workmen on strike seems to me so important that I venture to trouble you with this...
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Fill' 3110.
The SpectatorA PUGILIST PAINTER. INSTANCES are not wanting to prove that the study of pugilism and a love of the arts are compatible. Byron affectionately refers to his " old friend and...
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B OOKS.
The SpectatorTHE LIFE OF MAHOMMED. 3 To say that these volumes complete the best life of Mahommed ex- tant in English, is, perhaps, but feeble praise. England has supplied her fair quota of...
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A HALF-POET AND A PSEUDO-POET.*
The SpectatorNEITHER of these books indicates any very conspicuous merit. The latter of them is, as Lord John Russell says, conspicuous by its ab- sence, nay, conspicuous by the presence of...
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MR. LUDLOW'S THEOLOGICAL DIALOGUES.* SOME of the deepest things which
The Spectatorhave been said in our own tion on the relation of Doubt, Secular Morality, and Sceptic nem- Philo- * Tracts for Priests and People. No. : A Dialogue on Doubt, by . Ludlow; and...
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as fresh as ever, for it furnishes the key to
The Spectatorevents still recorded in arfin Michna, a butcher, ennobled by Ferdinand for his cruelty, the telegrams of the day. It is the only narrative which explains in popular language...
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GLENCREGGAN..t.
The SpectatorAMONG the most noticeable peculiarities of the existing aspect of English literature is, we are inclined to think, the great and daily increasing importance of the position...
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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorA Histong ofAmerican Manufactures from 1608 to 1860. By J. Leander Bishop, 11i.D. In two volumes. 'VOL I. Philadelphia : Edward Young.—The present volume, which extends only to...
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BIRTHS.
The SpectatorOn the Mb inst., at Canton!, the Lady Louisa Ponsonby, of a daughter. On the 8th inst., at Bedgebury-park, Kent, Ludy Mildred Beresford Hope, prema- turely, of a son. On the...
Cohelelh, commonly called the Book of Ecclesiastes : translated from
The Spectatorthe ori- ginal Hebrew. With a commentary, historical and critical. By Christian D. Ginsburg. (Longman and Co.) Arithmetical Examples for Home and School Use. Part I. Containing...