OPENING OF THE LYNN AND ELY RAILWAY

... The line from Lynn to Ely, where it joins the Counties, was opened yesterday, and twenty, first and second-class carriages started from the station, at half-past ten o'clock, filled with ladies and MBtlemen, comprising many of the principal inhabitants of that lirge mercantile town, pay visit to Ely. The carriage- which are painted chocolate, certainly present ny an handsome appearance : they ...

PORTSMOUTH POLICE

... id SATURDAY LASs.-Present the Mvovr i--~ kins, J. 0. Travero, E. Cahr, and Wc-i, I' es Esqrs. P~kwo,'oaOsas uxw-kax.-A man, giving, vario,_ anti now stating his name te be Demnpsav, %v tic by Mr. Emanuel, pawnbroker, of Bortnea d ion defrauded him of 30lls by pledging With loin W te presented to be a diamond ring, lout which ,0, uir nothing more than ant inmitatian nc-rto 2aeoul w ie b crwnt ; ...

IPSWICH, Saturday, Mary 29, 1847

... I P S W I C H, Saturday, Woay 29, 1-47. SUMMER ASSIZES. Thejudges of the different law courts met in the Ex- chequer Chamber on Thursday, and chose their respective circuits in the ensuing Summer Assizes. The following is the arrangement:- MIDLAND ClaculT.-Lord Chief Justice Denman and Mr. Baron Rolfe. I WESTIRN.-Lord Chief Justice Wilde and Mr. Justice Williams. HoME.-Mr. Baron Parke and Mr. ...

SUFFOLK QUARTER SESSIONS

... UPFFOLK QUARTER SESSTONS. IPSWICkI, Saturday, March 13. (Concludedfrom our last Journal) Before Sir A. B. Henniker, Bart., and a lull bench of magistrates. Zachariak Childs, 25, and William Durrant, 33, pleaded guilty of having stolen from a barn at Mendlesham, a uantit of peas,the property of the Executors of Mr. Win. Wilson,dec., of Mendlesham - six months imprisonment. SamDel Bice, 29, ...

PORTUGAL

... By the Peninsular and Oriental Company's steamer amv d y est erday at Southampton, we have intelligence from Gibraltar to the loth, Cadiz 16th Lisbon 21st, Oporto 22nd, and Vigo 23rd inst. ' Lisbon letter, published below, it will be seen that the British envoy and admiral, though promising, at first, merely to protect the person of the queen xrom violence and her palaces from fire, at the ...

The Court

... Her Majesty and Prince Albert, accompanied the royal children, and attended the ladies differ^iMe 1 PCCted - 'A The Duke of Cambridge visited her Royal Hiehhouse Gloucester yesterday, at C . abinet o ...

FRANCE.—Parm, April 17.—The Seine continues . rue -. Friday the water was up to 5 metres 40 centimetres by the

... scale, covering the wharves, and overflowing ua. 6 j v°!l . 'ides of the river, including those of the Hotel de \ ille. All the low lands are inundated, and the piers of the Pont du Carrousel submerged to the capitals. 1 hose of the Pont de* Arts have also nearly disappeared. river has never risen high at advanced a period of the year since 1836. The Loire also has become very mueh swollen. On ...

COLONIAL

... CAPE OF GOOD HOPE.—We have • Cape Town papers to the 17th of June. The onK general interest they contain is, that heavy rain. 1 *!??' of in the eastern and central districts, along the ,., ' pretty well into the interior. The great rivprtik?' tnil higher than usual. Mr. Macquecu'a . ri a steam-mail to Australia and New Zealand ,t®T? nttll T Buenos Ayrrs Cape of Good Hope, and Mairitlu' I .*' ...

COLONIAL

... CEYLON. —Lord Torrington, the new governor, arrived at Galle on the 28th of May in the Haddington. He reached Colombo next day at 4 p.m. He immediately proceeded to the council chamber, where he was sworn in in due form. One of Lord Toirington's first official acts appears to hare given (and most deservedly) general satisfaction. Mr. Smith, a member of council, having resigned his seat on ...

COURT OF SESSION—HEBREW CHAIR

... COURT OF S]ESSDIDN-111-FlREW CHATR. ?? ?? L IS 1 .1ii (Cerntinredfrom ?? prrge.) ed lirjr'dqv. Nor. 16. ins The discrsteion was resumed to-dae at elevcn o'clocl. it- Mr. BIAre1nr, in contirutitiorr ofiisarg-ument of yesterday said r0, that the formtla denoririded to he signed sins not in terms of the1 Act 1707; and hence, if the demand made upan 'Mr. Mateedorrall Was an il leg-al demird. he r ...

THE POISONINGS AT TIBBENHAM

... The ilvestigation relating to the death, of Mrs. Mary Pearsom and Mrs. Elizcbeth Everett, was resumed on Thursday nmorrinig at the Greyhounsd-ini, Attleborouglh, bhfore Mr. Plgrint, the Nosfolk coroner, and he jury previou sly etopannltled. Hannah Ever-tt, a nice of the deceased, said,-I live in Norwich. The day my aunt Elizabeih Eve- rett Wn; buried I went to Tibbenhase. Nothing ...

ASSIZE INTELLIGENCE

... ASSI4~j1r rThETLLIGMNCEL WES9TERN CIRCU~IT.IBltisovL AUG. 23. GOULD 0. StIR C1 ?? Evtof;, ''AiT.-CR015 Co..-Mr, Cook, siM.Buttcsnd Mr. Feoks, for the plaintiff; 'Mr Sergeint Kinglake and Mr. Stone fat the deftdat.Mr Ccibtr, inoeigteCdone. stated that the plaintiff Was a0 jottithoyrnan,5hoem5aker, at, Cl'sedo anid the defendant was a gentleman of h Igh station and large fartusie,, ,regldlog al ...