That charge to casting for perfinout. What mention of fold will be palpable complicity in the plot or whether any fuention of it will be made by the Court, in quins surment tourens no man can say. But Counsel for morning on fixed two days since by the forest for that propose: - and Caldwell has used the interval to procure from his John Bowring an inter-countory communication to the court, of a very significant import.

The Court, governed by the authority of a Magistrate, has considered cases collected by Mr. Oke in his last edition, (8th ed. 1858.) GR M-20-3. His Lordship advised Caldwell, but on suy speconding to protest on the Bench decring against his being proceeded where the chiefly implicated Jensen was evidently none but "Roomself, and where the Chinese were the only witnesses against him, with the single exception that of Mr. May (with the Civil). I say adorsed buin to avoid the objection by retiring from the Bench to the place below when Mr. Mary, himself a Justice of the Peace, had felt it his proper place to sit. Caldwell refused, threatened the Court with ease of the Governor, and, in a most the vengean insulting manner left the suit; albeit again trassed by me how duply the evidence appun likely to criminale heim. He never appeared again.

Soon after he learned that Bridges had, in a manner, abandoned the prosecution of the case of the chief prisoner, by declining to speak for him before my ring go into evidence, and that the case of the second prisoner had, in the opinion of all, botten down, than he wrote to complain to Sir John Bowring of his exclusion from the Bench. It will hardly be credited by any one who does not know the iniquities of Whitehor this place, that yesterday and today Mr. Caldwell has been in a manner under trial before his Excellency for this offence: - the Governor having called upon him to answer the charge; and this too, before the giving of his own decision apore the case of itkeen, without which it must be impossible for any defence to be offered!

Whether the intimidation will fall idly upon the Magistrate, or curther the decision manner therty алу tomorrow will be affected in remains to be seen. It will also be seen whether Walter Caldwell will be required to explain to the Governor the startling facts dicited in the evidence, - not sufficient indeed to set him in the dock with his tung kung allies, but more then sufficient to occasion a revival of the question of this fitness for office.

"It is now proved by oath and fourth rand that the chief Jerigoner lives in an alley belonging to Caldwell or his nominal apignu, the brothel moprietor.

Share This Page