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THE MASSACRE AT JEDDAH

... Thle 31oniteur publishes the subjoined account of the recent massacre at Jeddah frmit the pell of M. Eierat, the dragomian and Chancellor of thoe French Consulate, whose gallant behaviour has carned him the cross of the Legion of Honour:- AiEX.N~n~cli, July 9. Monsieur le ?? the evening of the 15th of June the town of Jeddah was the theatre of terrible scenes of slaughter; twenty-three ...

Published: Friday 30 July 1858
Newspaper: Birmingham Daily Post
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1980 | Page: Page 1 | Tags: News 

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... ;J3PEUITALI PUUAJNT .-L ?? FRIDAY; -J~tYi3O heir ldlps me tfive -o'lc.i5 NOTICES FOR NEXT SESSION.RIIN L the ann Lord C)CIOVIEIJFL gave notice 9f Ji itnto nx dray segsioi~ to jiftiouduce two bill for tl~ mnmn f appi the Crinlinal Laiw. ,One 'wduld 'Pravest Persons& tiow from clandestinely going 'before grand juries-and th'eif ?? bills of indictmndnt fdr pesitryi, conspiracy, A. and other ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1858
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 7959 | Page: Page 5 | Tags: News 

INDIA

... VICTORY NEAR LUCKNOW. - DEATH OF THE MOULVIE. - GREAT RECOVERY OF TREASURE. The following telegram was received at the Foreign.office, from Acting Consul-General Green, on Wednesday Alexandria, July 23. The steamer Bombay arrived at Suez from Bombay this morning. The following intelligence from the ' Bombay Standard' of July 3, three p.m., has reached this by telegraph:- Sir Hugh Rose reached ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1858
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 6101 | Page: Page 9, 10 | Tags: News 

Two BLACK EYES, AND A BEUISED NOSE v. HUSSEY

... TO THE EDITOR OF THE CARDIFF AND MERTHYE GUARDIAN SIR,—Seeing in one of last week's publications your valuable paper assailed by one E. Hussej', for the unfair and one-sided manner in which you represented the case heard before the magistrates of this town relative to Harding v. Hussey, I think it my duty to say, as an eye-witness, and one that assisted in rescuing the lad from the grasp of ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... A SAD TRUTH.—What is harder than earning money? —Collecting it. COCKSHY ADVICE.—Don't carry your handkerchief in your breast pocket. If you do, you take a wiper to your bosom. A POSTHUMOUS WOKD.—Some one says, the lobster is a posthumous work of creation, for it is only read after its death. VBBY HABD LiNBa.—The two unhappy failures that have followed the attempt to lay down the Atlantic ...

THE ARMY

... The Tipperary Artillery has volunteered for Malta or x Gibraltar, and it ts p'obable their offer will be accepted rn by the governtent. They will forthwith receive from the l Tower a battery of qlx guns for practice. The grand total expense of the military force of all the r presidencies of India In the year 1is;-56 (the last return tl of the 8erie3) amounted to 10,974,2121-viz, 6,03a853o0 for ...

Published: Thursday 29 July 1858
Newspaper: Freeman's Journal
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 925 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: News 

SARDINIA

... THE political institutions of Sardinia have this 1 year been subjected to the severest trial to which they have been exposed since the late Sovereign, CHARLES ALBnUr, called them into existence. The liberal Government has bad to maintain the honour of the country against the vindictive spite of Naples and the t unreasoning alarm of the French Administration. Througbout the dispute about the ...

Published: Thursday 29 July 1858
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1448 | Page: Page 2 | Tags: News 

OPERATIONS IN THE PEIHO

... I DESPATCHIES FROM ADMIRAL SEYMOUR. We extract the following from an extraordinary supplement to the London Gcu.;ette of July 27, pub- l ished last night: Admiralty, July 27, 1858. A despatch, of which the following is an extract, has been received by the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty from Rear-Admiral Sir Miclael Sey- mour, ?? the Comm ?? of her Majesty's ships and vessels on the East ...

Published: Thursday 29 July 1858
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3112 | Page: Page 5, 6 | Tags: News 

A WORD FOR FATHER THAMES

... .A WORD FOR FATHER T'UM BB , To TIM EDITOR or THs MORNKIG CERO AKCLt SIn-Why do the people, members of Farliament-innu eluding both Ilouses-enginq'is. medical men, and all the~ world, so furiously rage at OQd Father Thames, and why, do the Metropolitan Board of Management hagier and thirst to mutilate and distort his banks andextravag&ntly waste millions upon mnillions-some say three, soisie ...

Published: Friday 30 July 1858
Newspaper: Morning Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1962 | Page: Page 2 | Tags: News 

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE

... LOCAL INTELLIGENcE. art Aersl Lr: 2VguPOOr, LAnotnOPEns' DWVELIINQE COssrA~{. ra read *.In compliance with the Limited Liability Act, a in tl Id general meeting of the cornan was convened on of a Id Thursday, at the Comm on Hall, Hackin's-hey, to Birh re elect two directors in the place of Messrs. C. Bushell resp and J. A. Cropper, and an auditor in the place of Mr. attc] min Drysdale ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1858
Newspaper: Liverpool Mercury
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 11643 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: News 

IOUTLINES OF THE WEEK

... OUTLINES OF THE WEEK. THE daily papers announce that the Royal Commissioners appointed to inquire into the state of the store and clothing depots at Weedon, Woolwich, and the Tower, have commenced their investigations, and are for the present sitting in No. 11 Committee-room at the House of Commons. All persons desirous of giving evidence are, in the first instance, requested to send a written ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1858
Newspaper: Usk Observer
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 795 | Page: Page 2 | Tags: News 

Scotland --

... Scotland A FEARFUL PREDICAMENT. — One day last week, while four little boys were diverting themselves by leaping in and oat of an old corn-chest that stood in the stable of a farm in the Carse of Gowrie, the whole of them got into it at one time, and drew down the lid, which, being furnished in the common way for a pad- lock, the holder caught the staple, and made them prisoners at once, ...

Published: Saturday 31 July 1858
Newspaper: Usk Observer
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 295 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: News