meeting of the Cortes, ib.; the Queen Regent's speech, [456]; vote of con- fidence in the government, [457]; the new electoral law, [458]; military operations in Catalonia, &c., [459]; Mina marches against the Carlists, [460]; the British auxiliaries under Lieut. Gen. Evans engage in the war- fare, [461]; the Carlists deterred from attacking Bilboa by the arrival of the royal army of reserve, [462]; auxiliary force from Portugal enters Spain, [463]
Sp rits, bonded, fraud on the revenue in regard to, at Liverpool, 174 Stanley, Lord, his speech in support of the address, [74]; remarks on the Marquis of Londonderry's appoint- ment to St. Petersburgh, [129]; speech in support of Sir R. Peel's motion relative to the Irish Church bill, [305]
Stanynought, H. murders his son, 133; commits suicide in the Peckham Asylum, 179
State trials in France before the Cham- ber of Peers, [396]
Strand Theatre, information against,
Suicides; J. S. Clason and a female with whom he cohabited destroy them- selves, 46; extraordinary suicide at Jersey, 161; J. Mac Kerrell, Esq. 164; H. Stanynought, 179 Sutton, Sir C. M. his character as Speaker of the House of Commons, [18]; his speech in the debate on election of Speaker, [23]; on Mr. Abercromby being chosen Speaker, is made Viscount Canterbury, [36] Swift v. Swift, appeal from the Arches court, for restitution of conjugal rights, 299 Switzerland, complaints of Berne and Lucerne against Zurich, [483]; reli- gious differences in Argau, [486]; dispute between France and the Basle country, [487]; fall of the Dent du Midi, 130; J. Rizou murdered by his family, 173
Syria, complete subjugation of, by the Pacha of Egypt, [498]; severities and cruelties practised against the inha- bitants,[499]
Tables: public income, 242; public expenditure, 244; disposition of grants, 245; ways and means, 254; unfunded debt, 255; funded ditto, 256; trade of the United Kingdom,
Thunderstorm, violent at Manchester, 88; at Preston, 90; near Dublin, ib. at Cambridge and Newmarket, 93 Timber, its liability to tithing, case respecting, 14
Tithes, plan for the commutation of, in England, [143]; by a corn-rent in lieu of them, [145] Tobacco, committee in France to inquire into the monopoly in, [390] Town-councils, lord Stanley's proposal respecting, [260]; Mr. Grote's for their election by ballot, [261]; lord Lyndhurst requires a certain qualifi- cation in town-councillors, [278] Trials: G. O. Irwin, barrister, uttering a forged letter, 19; G. Knowlton, arson, 37; two Black sailors, piracy and murder on board the Amelia, 38; J. Greenwell, murder of T. Grisdale, 43; Norman Welch, murder, 50; J. Orrell, do., 54; W. Dollman, N. Hedge and J. Gough, do., 61; W. Hall and Martha Handcox, robbery of jewels, 75; Patrick Carroll, mur- der, 77; de la Roncière, at Paris, 99; J. Burgoyne, &c., rioting, 110; Fras. Beard, arson, 111; S. Brown, mur- der, 120; Lacenaire, &c., Paris, 155; Mary Ann Burdock, murder, 283 Trueba, Don Telesforo, death, 237 Tucuman, attempt at a revolution in that province, [516]
Turkey: the influence of Russia, [494]; armed vessels of Great Britain or France refused admittance into the Black sea, [496]; insurrection in Al- bania, ib.; quelled by Vassaf Effendi, [497]; military operations against the rebels in Kurdistan, ib.; a constitu- tion established in Servia, [498]
United States: the dispute pending with
France as to the pecuniary claims on that country, [425]; the president recommends reprisals upon French property, [426]; Congress declines
adopting such strong measures, [428]; the bill for the liquidation of the debt carried in the French Chamber of Deputies, ib.; proceedings regarding the dispute with France, [501]; ex- tinction of the national debt, [503]; the president's continued hostility against the national bank, [504]; re port of its affairs, [505]; bill for the expense of fortifications, [506]; dis- turbances in the slave states, and vio- lent proceedings against slave eman- cipation, [507]; pretended negro conspiracies at Livingston, ib.; sum- mary proceeding against suspected persons in Missouri, [508]; attack on the editor of a paper at New Orleans, [509]; failure of a bank at Baltimore and violence of the inhabitants against the shareholders in it, ib.; attempt on the president's life, 17. University, London, Mr. Tooke's mo- tion for an address to the crown to grant a charter to it, [152]
Veil, ceremony of taking, at Kildare, 175 Venezuela: Paez again accepts the office of president, [512]; military insurrection, [513]; the rebels sub- dued by Paez and by Montilla, ib,
THOMAS CURSON HANSARD, PATERNOSTER-ROW.
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