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Daily News (London)

LONDON, MONDAY, JAN. 26, 1846. There was one passage in Sir Robert Peel's explanatory speech, which struck ..

... honest. It was where he touched on the difficulty of combining the elements of an ancient monarchy and a proud aristocracy with a reformed House of Commons. Every one felt that the reference to the difficulty of managing a proud aristocracy came from the heart, and was welled up from depths of intense bitterness by the resentful feeling of the moment. If ever Sir Robert Peel gave utterance ...

We have received files of Ceylon papers to the 16th December. They bring the intelligence of the arrival of Sir

... James Emersox Tennaxt and family at Colombo, in the steamer Hindostan. All the journals of the island augur great advantages to the administration of affairs in the colony by the appointment of Sir J. E. Texxaxt. Subscriptions had been entered into for the establishment of cathedral church at Colombo. ...

RAILWAY MEETINGS

... SOUTHAMPTON, MANCHESTER AND OXFORD RAILWAY. At two o'clock yesterday afternoon, a meeting of this company convened by Mr. Parsons, solicitor, at tho desire of a number of shareholders, was held at the Hall of Commerce, to take into consideration inter alia position in which the managing committee have placed the shareholders the amalgamations they have formed with the Oxford, Southampton. Goo ...

The Count Trapani. —The Spanish paper, . tepagnoly says,— 44 At this moment, the Queen, herself, individual in ..

... is ignorant at tne Frince they wish to give her as the companion and f. » a child who has scarcely left school, of * disposition, soul without elevation, and with habits siuted to the noble character of a prince, or the dignity of a PJJ the following anecdote of him :—When \f . JjT his relative, the Duke a'Aumale, to go with him to Si u n t receive his christening of ball and powder, he ...

There is a highly exemplary Police ease in another part of our paper of to-day. The majesty of the law

... has, perhaps, never been so proudly vindicated, or triumphantly asserted. The town of CHELTENHAM, it seems, is blest not only with a sage code of bye-laws worthy be written on tables of gold, but with Bench of Magistrates worthy to administer them. Here is the proof. Michael Smith was coming down a certain quiet street in Cheltenham, at four o'clock last AVednesday afternoon, with a basket of ...

LONDON, TUESDAY, FEB. 3, 1846

... Several petitions were presented to the Peers, last night, in favour of agricultural protection. Lord Kinnaird moved for a return of the amount of fees incurred on Railway Bills introduced into the House last Session. His liordship referred to one instance of a railway, the expense of making which was 200,000/., and the Parliamentary expenses 15,000/. The returns were ordered. •'! In reply to ...

COURT CIRCULAR

... The Queen and Prince Albert took their accustomed early walk yesterday in Clarcmont-park. Their Royal Highnesses the Prince of Wales, Prince Alfred, the Princcss Royal, and the Princess Alice were taken for pony and walking exorcise yesterday the pleasure-gr lunds of Clarcmont. Her Majesty and her Royal Consort took an airing the afternoon in a phaeton, the Prince driving, attended by the ...

IRELAND

... (From our Special Correspondent.) DUBLIN, Feb. 3, 1845. THE WESTMEATH VICTIM. It win with vory great satisfaction that I found the Irish press, of all parties, adopting simultaneously the views I had taken on the sentence of death passed upon the prisoner Seery, for the alleged attempt to kill Sir Francis Hopkins. His guilt was never satisfactorily proved. The Evening Mail of a few days ago, ...

It is impossible to conceive an arrangement more preposterous, than that of Express from the other side of the ..

... with the incomplete intelligence of battle being in the act of being fought, and its fortune undecided. If a plan or a trap was deeply conceived and carefully laid for awakening anxieties, public and private, shaking and disturbing interests, doing all the harm which the worst rumours can do, and none of the good that clear intelligence must do, no mode could have been invented, more perfect ...

Rumours arc afloat in the political circles that Ministers will be beaten the sugar question. This will be ..

... to those Tories who, for the sake of retaining office, abandoned their opinions on the Corn-laws. The Agitation against the Militia continues and increases. We have reports of meetings Carlisle and Slough, at which, particularly the former, called under the auspices of the Mayor, strong resolutions were passed against serving in the Militia, and against the Militia laws. have not room for the ...

We have Spanish papers to the 31st ult. They do not contain the slightest news of interest. The Chamber, in

... the sitting of that day, had been occupied with some explanations given by the Ministers in reply to an address from M. Orexse, on the liberty of the press. The proposed new Electoral Law was read to the Chamber, which then adjourned for two days. Matteo Serra, the insurgent chief at Gerona, was executed on the 26th. Catalonia was perfectly tranquil. Madrid Bourse, J ax. 31.—Three per Cents, ...