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the 9th inst Thehews l iven for the bene...
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j^omfit t«te!W«* «v
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" ' • ' . " . FRANCE.: ~ J ' The followi...
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v Seize the vain pencil of the Gallic sc...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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The 9th Inst Thehews L Iven For The Bene...
THE NORTHERN STAR . v __ ± i _ January 26 , lggp . A - ——^ - ^— -. ——— » ^ ¦ — . ^^—^—^^^ ii - —• ' : ¦ f .
J^Omfit T«Te!W«* «V
j ^ omfit t « te ! W «* « v
" ' • ' . " . France.: ~ J ' The Followi...
" ' ' . " . FRANCE .: ~ J ' The following is ft report of Jictor Hugo ' s speech on thepublic hfstroctiou biH , of wmch a notice only appeared in lastSa turday ' s ' . Star . , Ii ^ be seen how brutally the orator was interrupted and abused by the'friends cf order . ' ¦ :- ..,. .- . - •¦ - .. ¦ M . "Victor Hugo said that , at that advanced hour he should bring what he had to say into the shortest possible space ; blithe nevertheless thought that the Assembly would grant him the necessary time on such an important question . In bis opinion , 'the certain object to which the bill ought to tend was th » t gratuitous instruction was obligatory . ¦ On the Mountain : Hear , hear . - ' ¦ ' ¦ -On the Right : Bravo ! That is what Proudhon demands .
- M . Victor Hugo : Gratuitous instruction was ok ligatory in the . first degree , and in all degrees . ( Laughter . ) Obligatory primary instruction was a right of youth , a rig ht more sacred than the right of living , and which was confounded with that of the State . He wished to have an extensive public instruction given and regulated by the State .., " On the Right : LikeLonis Blanc ! r M . Tictor Hugo : He wished that its starting it should
point should be the village school , and that rise as far as the Institute ; be would have the gates of science set wide open to every capacity . \ He would not have a commune without a school , not a town without a college , not a chief town without a facultv . ( Interruption . ) He wished that France should present a vast ensemble , a sort of network : of intellectual work-shops . ( Approbation on the Left , and interruption on the Right ) A ; Voice : And the means ' of execution 5
Oh * he Iieft : Monsieur le President , enforce silence ! -The President : Do you then wish me to prevent your applauding . ( Laughter . ) jtf . "Victor Hugo : France should present a vast network of intellectual work-shops , a group of gymnasiums , of colleges , and of libraries , without any solution of continuity . He wished that the heart of the people should be placed in constant communication with the brain of France . ( Interruption and whispering . ) He was aware that the solution of the problem contained an important financial
questHmv bntif the hour had not been so advanced he could have shown , bv entering into details , that he Perfectly understood it , and those who interrupted him would have been compelled to be silent . ' He should , however , now look at the question in its real point of view ; He advocated freedom of instruction with the surveillance of ; the State , but by the State exclusively laical , as was understood and wished for by XI . Guizot . : He would not admit as the personification of the State any . men who had an interest either of conscience or of policy distinct from national unity . He would not introduce into the councils xif surveillance either oisbopscr
delegates of bishops . On the Right : That is what M . Pierre Lerpux wishes for ! M . Victor Hugo : He wished for the complete separation of Church and State , for that would tend to the interest of bath . The present bill would be nothing but a weapon the more given to the clergy . The tendency of the bill was to place the country in their hands . He was one of those who wished for the amelioration of the condition of the people . It was the duty of all , whether poets or writers , to turn the attention of the people towards abetter world . He would , therefore , ardently support any plan of religious instruction , but he wished for the religions instruction of the Church , and not that of a ' party ; he wished it to be sincere , and . not hypocritical ; be wished the object in view to be heaven and not earth .
On the Right : Hear , hear ! In that case , we agree ! "" M . Victor Hugo : He would not have the professor ' s chair invade the altar , nor would he have the priest interfere with the professor . He would open the eye of the laical state on the seminaries , and , until the day when education' should be completely free , he would not have it watched over by the clergy .. The bill proposed he regarded as a strategic one ; it was the cAef-d "< euvre of the clerical party . He could not personify that party—he did not see it in the Assembly ; he did not see it in ' the government . God forbid that he should be supposed to make allusion to the Bishop of ' Langres , but he eould not help expressing his distrust at the clerical party , he would not entrust it with the development of the rising generation ; he would not confide in
its hands the future welfare of France . The bill had one great fault—it said one thing and did another . It was like the usual plan of the government ; every time that it forged a chain it called it liberty ; when it decreed a proscription it gave it the , name of amnesty . ( Apphuue . on the _ Left . ) In . theremarks that he had made , he did not mean to confound the church with the clerical party , for the latter was the disease of the former . Free religions instruction was the Sisters of Charity by the bedside of the dying ; the Brother of Mercy releasing a slave , Vincent de Paule sheltering the orphan , the Bishop of Marseilles in the midst of those affected by the plague , the Archbishop of Paris facing , with sublime smile , the furies of the Faubourg St . Antoine . raising the cmcifix over the heads of civil war ; caring little about meeting death so - that he cou'd
secure peace . ; - — -- * - — A voice : He would not have been killed if civil war had not been raised in the streets of Paris . M . Victor Hugo :: The clerical parly was an ancient one ; it had a past of several centuries ; it was it which discovered that truth was but ignorance and error . Its history was written . in that of all the progress of the human mind , bat it was written at the back of the page . It was it which put Catnpaneila seven times to the torturefor having affirmed that the number : of worlds was infinite . It was it which imprisoned Galileo , persecuted Colnmbus , and anathematised--Pascal , Montaigne , ' and Moliere . It had long sought to put a band on the human mind . " And now it would be master of public instruction ; but there was not a poet j a philosopher , or an eminent man that would . accept
it . There was a book which appeared to-be the emanation , of human united with Divine wisdom , which people called the Bible , and yet there had been Popes who had dared to proscribe that book , and this partyclaimed liberty of instruction , but the liberty which it really wished for was that pf .-jipf teaching . ( Approbation and laughter on the ' Left . ) The clerical party wished to instruct , and it would be , therefore well to look at ' what , it had done for centuries when Italy and Spain were in his hands ; Thanks to it , Italy , that mother of nations , of poets , of genius , and of the arls , now knew . not how to read ; Spain bad lost her rank among nations , but it was true that she had gained the : Inquisition , an establishment which some in that Assembly bad wished to re-establish . ., The President ; You cannot be allowed to impute neb an intention . to any one in the Assembly .
On the Bight : Let-him go" onr ^ It is meant for effect—a tirade on the Inquisition ! M . Victor Hugo said he addressed himself to the whole clerical party , r because' he causidered it a public danger . He repeated ' that certain persons had wished to establish the Inquisition in their writings—that 'Inquisition ^ which ~ had caused five Bullions , of individuals to perisuin . tue flames , ; . On the Right : With pointed caps . ( Laughter . ) Other Voices : "'It is the- 'fifth act of Marie Tudor ! ¦ - ¦¦ ' ¦ - * tL ir : - ' - '"• " - "•'•' - < - M . Victor Hugo : The Icquiation— , ' M . deLarcy : We reject theTaquUitioo > and ise have never raised scaffolds : ,. ; < "' ] ' M . Richardet : Order , order , you defenders of the Inquisition ... ( Laughter . )
M .. Victor Hugo :. -There were in the Vatican library sealed manuscripts containing all the names of the victims . ' ' : ; ' ; , ' - '¦ - ' , '"'' A Voice : That doesnot prevent the earth from turning round . ( Laughter . ) M . Victor Hugo : Spain bad been endowed with the Inguisition . ( Cries . of . * Enough , enough / and / Question , question . ' ) \; -The President : I must call on the hon . gentleman to adhere to the question . - ¦¦ ' t ¦¦ M Victor Hugo : The clerical party had gagged he Roman , as it wished to do the French people .
p was a * neiaskrDut ~ let' thenrbeware . He rejected the / bill because it ontraged-French feelings ! —because it degraded instructidn : lowered thelevel ' of science , anddeba 8 edthehumaB-mind . He was one of those who felt the blood mount to his fore- ' head whenever France experienced a diminution of territory as in 1815 , or a ffimiriutidn of . intellect ; as rt was now -wished to impose on her . " 1 Hewonld givt the clerical party a little jerious advice •; let " it bewareof the darknesa cauied * in rnen ' a minds by theahadeof the sirjJice . vu : ; ^ ? 6 . -- <; -,:-. jjf iOn : tfae Right : It ia insulting to the -Catholic faith . ; . ; > i- - ' - ' " ¦ ¦ ¦ -i £ -:- * - '¦ -- ' - ¦ '¦ - - ' -. :.- ; :: ;¦ - \ On the Left : He is right in what he says . " I M . LeoLaborde : It is inf . mous .
" ' • ' . " . France.: ~ J ' The Followi...
On the Left : He does not speak of priests . On the Right i Whom does he ^ ude ^ to ,. then , when he talks ofctKeWrplice 21 ? P - i < 9 ' vr ^ -i M . V . Hugo i ^ the . clerical-party ^ iB ( alarmed at Socialism ; it sees the wayesrising , and it imagines that it will have saved societ ^ when it , shall hav e combined material resistance with social hypocrisy , and placed a Jesuit wherever there is not a gendarme . ( Explosion of murmurs , Jand ; prolonged bravos on the Left . ) Let it , however , listen to advice . The 19 th century was opposed to it , and _ it it continued . itscourse , „ it . would raise formidable eventualities . ; It ^ plftced ^ the government in the tacriity . '¦ ' * ""'"';' . " . J , ' - ,-.. " „ . -- -.., ? .- .-Onthe Right : Order , order . ^ A-Voice :- Let bim- go on ; ~ they are only
phrases . :. '" . ; . •¦ :: . _ M . Denjoy : it . is only old romantic nonsense . M . de Dampierre : I demand that the speaker be called to order . v , <¦ . - '« . v M de Larcy : He has insulted every . Catbphc . The President : I request the hon . gentleman to refrain from making such observations . A Voice : It is like the Porte St . Martin . M . Nadaud : It is the liberty of the tribune . -The President : The liberty of the tribune has its limits . - . '¦ " . ' . " . TheAssembly wasatthis timein aatateof great agitatioa .
M . Victor Hugo considered that he had a right , when a bill was presented which he regarded as a public danger , to closely examine it , —( renewed interruption . )—andhis intentions ought not to be suspected : He hid last tear defended order when it was in peril , as be now defended liberty when it was threatened . He was not suspected when he was at the barricades on the 23 d June . ( Agitation . ) - The President j Tou have indulged in too long a tissue of personalities , and you have done so with very insulting expressions . But you have beer treated in your turn so severely that it has dis * pensedme from acting as I migh t have otherwise done . .-- ¦ '• ' ' " . ' .
M . Victor Hugo : Was this the kind of bill that were to he produced ? Was France to be arrested on her onward course ? The intention ; was to petrify human thought . ( Laughter . ) 'In this stage of discoveries , " said i the honourable member in conclusion , * you proclaim immovability ; you pause on the road like men fatigned—fatigued with glory , genius , science , and knowledge ? Do you not see that everything is in movement around . you and advances —you want to stop short . ( No , no !) I declare to you , that if you repel progress , you will have fresh revolutions ; and to such men as deny the truth of that assertion , I repl y by the declaration" that the earth turns round . ' I shall vote against the bill . ' ( This speech , delivered with great violence of gesture ^ was loudly applauded on the Left ;)
The sitting of the Legislative Chamber on Thursday was occupied with the debate ¦ on the organic law respecting public instruction , and was again adjourned , after a speech from M . de Monlalembert . In the course of his speech M . de Montalembert attacked . Socialism with : great . vivacity , and ; declared that the readiness with , which the new ; subversive doctrines , introduced after the Revolution of February , had been received by the masses , was owing to the irreligious character of the education hitherto given . by the State . The remedy for the evil [ was , he said , to render education more , religious in its
tendency ; and such was the great object of the present bill . The debate was resumed on Friday by a speech from M . Cremieux ; The speech of M . ' Cremieux , which appears to be very imperfectly given in : the newspapersj- seems to have been a very telling one in the house ..-M . de Montalembert had on the previous day , addressed a sort of summons to France to give up . the care of public education to the clergy , and gave as the reason that the immoral and sceptical education given by the University was the cause of the revolution of 1789 , as well as those of 1830 , and 1848 ; and he held out the threat that
France bad nothing for it but to accept the measure now proposed , or tumble into anarchy . M . Cremieux destroyed the whole foundation- of that argument , that the University , as at present constituted , was the creation of Napoleon , and could not be made responsible for a revolution which occurred nearly twenty years . before it came into existence . He showed that the University , as it existed at the commencement of the -Revolution of 1789 , was merely clerical , and that , although neither clerical
domination nor clencal corporations were wanting to the = ancient regime , they did not prevent the old monarchy : from perishing . ' . He also ' showed that it was not influence on the part of the , clergy that " was wanting daring the restoration , but that still that influence did not prevent the" revolution of 1830 . He instanced the fact ofbis ( M . Cfemieux ' s ) . apr pearance in that Assembly and . , his taking part in a discussion such as this as an argument ; ' which proved to the friends of clerical domination that the times
had changed , and that the revolution of 1789 was something more than a chimera and a dream . ' The old system of government which bad then perished could not be resuscitated ; and the clergy should rest satisfied in limiting their efforts to the proper sphere —namely , religion ; There were other religions htk sides that of M . de Montalembert . ¦ There were for example , those of M . Coquerel , and of himself—and he would ask if they had not the same rights with respect to education as any other sect ? ; . f > M . Thiers declared that the bill was the inevitable consequence , of the declaration made in the
constitution , that instruction was henceforward to be . frre in France . -As that was to be the case ,, the . ' . great ' cause of dispute between the clergy and the " university—riaraelyi the admission henceforward of the pupils educated ' at the seminaires , 'or' schools' conducted by the ' clergy ^ . ' to ' the ^^^ ' examinations for diplomas in ' Ietters and sciences , and consequently to the liberal-professions , was of necessity at ' once removed , ' and a measure , drawn up in a spirit of conciliation ; to bring together contending ; parties , was a natural consfquence . He avowed that he bad completely gone . ovet .. - . to the * Right / in order todb his little-best to stem the tide of Socialism ; :
-Paris , stoday Evening ;—In . the sitting ; of yesterday , _ thefAssembly terminated ^ the general , dis . enssion on the Public Instrpction Bill . The Assembly . tben'divided on the ^ ^ question whether it-should proceed to a second dehberation , when the following was the " result : — - ''' .. "'*' , ' , ""'' _ " . " . " . ;" " Nu ' mberof ' voters . '; ' , " ^ ' V . ' 642 : * ; ' ^ Pot the : mbtidn . ;• ; 455 - ' : V' AgauistU ' . ' ' 1 : •"• . ! . ' -187 . V . ¦ ; : Majority ^ ' :: J V * ;• ' ; -- ^ 268 I -Mme .- Dndevarit ( George' Sand ) has addressed the following letter to ithei' -Presse ' : — « iSeveral journals have been received as possible , and even as certain , the strange story of an order to quit'f Paris ,
which it : was = . - said , had ; . . been -latelyi intimated So jmeby M .. Garlier , ;; I should noAnhayeVconsidered such a ! piece : of news a s ^ ^ deserving of contradiction , but , as the journals insist , I owe it to truth ^ f to ; declare that it-. , 15 . compJewlyjerroneoBS ^ The little fact which has . prqbably ^ giyen vise to . this , § toryis , this : — 'M . Carlier , tormented by ~ the police of my ; cheflieude canton , which' has' fallen into a chronic stats of' ^ malepene ' , as we ' call it in niy country ' , ' and ; perhaps , feeiing 6 n that daya want of ia ' beiief . ' in'i ; conspiracy ; soughtfor ^ myaddr ^ ss ' iii ; Paris ; ' Y . sent it ; td him' by ' one of ray"friends / tbinWing it-myduty to reply' to one ' act br ' polit ' eness * by'anbtber . '—I ' could not attribute to ' any other'rtotive than ' a wish
tqpayime a vmt the ) pains . ; which ; the .-Prefectof iPolice took to'discover myplace of abdde / j f bis . ; ; A disturbance , which for : a a time threatened to : be ; attended . with -very , serious Jconsequences , ! took place ; at-Aries on Saturday week . .,-AnLegitimist cluh . in that placagave . ftgrand ball ,-which , , * as , a ^ tended by about 200 persons . / The i Deinomt £ ^ regarded . the fete r as ; a demonstration * agains ^ the Republic , Jand determined " to interrupt . the . fes tiyu tiei ^ " They " assembied- tb ^ the ^ numberoif frbm"l ' , 2 : pO to 1 , 500 , and appeared determined toforce " an entry into ; the place wher ' e " the ¦ ball ' was . held . Some
military had been placed round the building for its protecti on , ; but . they were on , the point- of , being overpowered when a body pfcavalry . ' coming ,, vop , headed b y the ^ . niayor jahd ^ the . sub-prefect , made . a charge , and the crowd dispersed without " any ac cident takingplaci .. ^ ^ W' / . / L * ' " . "¦'" . % " . '' . r . ' * . ' ,. . ' ' A house pdrUr . ' named Rou ^ victed beforetbe ^ Court of Assize ' .. ojf ^ Pa » C 9 f ^ y . " ?! taken part in the insurrectionary mbvemeni of the ' 13 th of June last ; - Heww sehtenced ^ o imprisdnJ mehtibr five yeairs . j- ^' y ^\ - ^ ' ^ - --f }' } \ " M . 'EmiledeGirardin , ^ as chief editor : of the - * Pres ' se . ' has written' to the' Probureur-General of
the Republic , declaring that he' ; is- the " author ••? rof the article for ivthich : the responsible ; editor of the , ' . Presaeliis to ; be 'trledi and has : transmitted the manuscript . .-. „ ¦ ; ' ;;';¦> ;; j ) r Letters from the departments : are still full of accounts of intense severity of weather , particularly from the ' Pyrenees , j lfchejHaute ]' GaifonneiiLfqnt ^ i ^ le , ? pie ^ amyed at ' Lypns from ^ ^ ^^ several dead 'bodies along the Way ; ' in one ' spot a man wrapped up in his cloak , lying on the ground
" ' • ' . " . France.: ~ J ' The Followi...
and frozen to death ; in another a traveller also dead and his body . in a sitting posture ; and further a woman standing ! in ^ theusnow up to ^ her niiddlei her hand s clasped and raised ; as if in ^ the act of recommending her soul to . . Heayenr-she also was a ¦
corpse . v .- - '• - ' v . / .- ; "In Paris the thaw still continues thought the weather is far from mild . Hundreds of men are employed in clearing ? the snow prom the streets , thoughSthe ^; passages are - 'still ;' much incumbered . Carriages , However , move , about freely . . § Ij '"\ „„ Paris ,. Mokdat . —This . day thel Assembly , in the discussion opened on the bill " relative to " the transportation of the insurgents ? of JFune to :. Algeriai . The urgency having been demanded ; ' * M ; Lagrange opposed it , and insisted on a proi position he made on the 12 th inst ., ' to institute an inquiry into , the condition of those insurgents and theirfamilies ; being previously examined . ' ; ' ' M . de Croaseilhes asked that the government bill be first discussed ^" - ' -., „ -.
M . Pierre Lerouxconcurredin the motion of M . Lagrange , but the Assembly on being consulted gave the priority to thelbill . The urgency was similarly pronounced . ; ' ; V M . Lagrange then rose , and said that thebumerous checks experiencedby his proposition , not only in the present Assemlilyj But also in the Assembly that ' pre -: ceded it , proved ; that . ' . his 1 perseverehcel tequ » lled ; 'li » conviction of the injustice of ; the Draconian ! decree which had p lunged so many of his : fellow , creatures into the most atrocious misery . The Assembly itself hadTieen moved'by their wretched fate , 'when it ordered 14 , 500 of the 15 , 000 prisoners , con *
demned without ' judge or juryj J o be / restored , to liberty . He never . supposed , that' the Republic would re-open the dungeons closed , by the . revolution of February . . He had long ' groaned in tboseof Royalty , and having been asked by its agents if he would consent to accept his -pardon on condition , riot of becoming its friend , but merely ceasing to become its enemy , he '¦ had indignantly . ' rejected the offer , reserving to himself the liberty of cpmb ' atiiig Royalty withfarms in his hands , whose downfall he anticipated as proximate . None of the nien about to be transported had been sentehcedVbyi a civil or military tribunal . They had been arrested on the denunciation of the individuals swlio had remained
concealed in cellars during the . collision , ' and been detained because they were ' well known for their re . publican principles previous ' to the 24 th of February ; He was . personally , acquainted with four ' of this transported , aiifl lie- defied the Minister of the Interior , to . adduce a single act of theirs ; toi tarnish their . characters ; for honesty , and patriotism , u Yet M . Dufaure himself had not been ashamed to propose their-, transportation .- It was only -when' an emeute was fomented at Belle Isle to serve the purpose of the' government ' : that the committee icame back on'itB . decision ; ' ? He defiedHhe / Cabinet to insert in : the 'Moniteiir' ihe names bi'the insurgents and the motives of their confinement , for the public
could see that they were honest citizens and honourable workmen and fathers of families .. In conclusion , M . Lagrange remindedUhe : Assembly that on this day the head of : Louis XVI ., the : victim of reaction , had fallen on the scaffold , and added , ' , that a period would come when ihe Bonntry would ask the Assembly what it had . done with . Hs brethren ^''' M . Ferdinand Barrot ,. Minister ; of the ! Interior , contended that thedecree ' .. at ; the . . 27 t . hof June , 1848 , had' been a measure of public safety and of national justice / It had been issued oh the mo ' iion
of M . Pascal Duprat , whose republicanism 1 was not suspicious . That decree- enacted that ' those men who , were arrested . with arms in J their ; hands ; arid stillcOvered with the blbbdpfitheir fellow , citizens , should be transported to the Transatlantic possessions of FrahceV those men . were the ; same ; who had overturned monarchy to the cry of ' Vive'la ' Republiquel ' who , in June , attempted to overthrow the Republic in the name of Socialism , and who , if Socialism should triumph for " the ^ destruction ' ' of ;* Francei would take arms ' against it' in the ' name ¦ of ' some other'fblly . ¦ : ' •; : ' " ; '" .. '• - ' ' . V ' "' . ' ' . * ; '"' . ; ' ^' , ' . ' ~ t ' : " ! . ' :
M . Jules Favre said , "that , he was a member of the corninitte at whose recommendation the decree of the 27 th of June bad been enacted ,, The general opinion-then was , that'the insurrection had been specially directed ' against society entire ; and' the committee was under that- impression'when ; it prei pared the'decree . 1 Now ; for thbhohour of his coiintry , he felt justified in declaring that the Chargelwas unfounded , and that in June , 1848 , there had been no conspiracy against society . ( Loud murmurs : on the Right . ) Sincerthat period no proof ; had been adduced to establish the existence of . that ' savage conspiracy , and be would be rather inclined ^ td believe that if there existed a conspiracy it was on the
other side . ( Loud murmurs on' the Right ; Cries on the iiefti ; The ; conspiracy , of . thefioyalists and Buoniapartists . ' ) The events of ] June were ' actually brought . about by the miserable advisers of Monarchy , who refused . all satisfaction to / the ; just claims of the people , and they- had ibeen » the contrecoup 1 of the / revolution of :: February . ' ( Murmurs . ) M . Jules Favre theuproceeded-to-describe the . sufferings of the insurgents after , their arrest and the injustice ofthe ' summary manner ihVwhich they bad been disposed ^ of , " in violation . o { all Divine and human laws . It , was necessary'he ( admitted , to strike ; at 1 the ; time a decisive : blow ; :-but . society ,- . if really attacked , could have as effectually saved itself by remaining within the limits SoHegality ; -. The
philosophers of the nineteenth ' century' were all uhahiiBOhs in brahdihg the injustice pf ; commis ^ sibhers . ' Mohtesfjuieu ; had denounced' it' in most forcible terms . " Whe ' niJw became obnoxious to the Sovereign , he caused him to be tried ; by a commission , and he thus sent to the ; scaffold ten Peers he wished tO'getrid : of . ; yM . iFavre would tell the government 'By decreeing the trial of ; the insurgents of Jurie"by : commissioni you have sent ' 'to ; theBagae : ahd' transportation'' the wen foil regarded , ' as your ; enemiesJ ' . . Th ' ey " wM victifiis ^ immolatedI to" ; pqliticaljrengeaW | ceVY ^ C ^ e ' . 9 '' discussed various' clauses bf the J bill , and particul ^ reproved ' tneVparagraph added-by . the committee , which condemned the transported to imprisonment in a fortress on the land of ;' exile ; He ; could
motconceive the state ' reason that commanded such' an abapdohment ' of-all the seritimehts of humanity and ' fall iegargurahtees ' amidst '' the r ' pr 6 f 6 un d ' peace : the ' 'country . now enjoyed ., Aot ' 8 ( .. single member had inseribe'd ^ his ^ namelo defend $ e bill ,, ' . [ The jinajpfity , ! iheknew . i . wished ;; t 6 , ; Vote . it ,, and ; . npt : to defend-it . Fear . was ; the great argument ,- but . that apprehension , was affected , and those who invoked it ; were bypo-i crit es of fear . ' Socialism " was'iiot' '; a !' periFto , which i ' all . that had been hitheVtb'fespSbted shouldbe ' sacri ^ ificed . ^; ' Insteadof ^| . deBtroyin ^ t . ^ - ' tUey / ' ^ dye' 'it ^ dail ^ ' greaterimpM . tahc' ^ iri" \ l i '» i . 'i ; p . ' i liti :. V , , viil V ) jui ' i . lU i ' TiiV : . ' . ' !! J ' ^ A . ill ••¦•' . ' . ¦; i tnesov
n sending insurgents connnea at oeiie isle ,, 'beforer . the . regular , tribunals , pfj . the . country ? , Can ( the prisoner ; ofl Ham sleep ^ quietly ' iwith the keys of the citadel of Doulleiis and the hulks of Brest under jhis " pillow ? T -: In conclu " slbn ' , 'tie eaYn ' eatly ^ , erttr & Ated " ! bi 8 "coilea " g ' ues to reject so q'diohs a'law . ' ' '' ^ ; !' r " \ '~ M ' . Antony Thouret ' prbdiice'd spine . effect'by rea'd ring ah ' extract Jfrpm . the . ' . third . volume ' of M . ^' TneirsI ; ;• History of the ^ Consulate and Empire , ^ the . conduct of the , First Consul ; is .. severely stigma Itised ,: for . decreeingithe deportation of the political jcriniinalsofithatdaywithoutfpfm'bflaw . " M . 'Sau * jteyraproposed atf r ' amendm ^ ht ^ Ifect ' - —f All theindividuals ' iiow imnriifnni >/ l ntR ^ llfi
! lsle | ' ; ah ( awho ; werebrdere ' u . ^ the j CoristitUent Assembly , shall ' be , & mi before a jury for Itrjal . o ^ set- at liherty . ^ 'r ¦ ¦> . ^ . w ^ v ^ : ' . ; , ^ - ' , r " I ' i " , The Assembly " after ' . " hearing ? Mjiidei Crouseilhea against ] this ; iamendmentj' arid , M . ¦ < 3 k Favre in y its favour , proceeded to adivisioni ' of which the following * was ^^ siilt V- ^ Ayes , ; 265 i . . Noes , ' 382 ;^ niajo ritjr , 17 7 / 'In ; co ' nseguehce ; the a ' mendme'ht ' was ! deolared ; reje fed ; . and ; the . House adjourned / at * a ; qU ' ar ^ pas ^ six ^ cipcif ; " ;; v j ¦ ';;¦• - " ¦ , " ¦ , " ; : ' ; ' * ^; i : !;; j , 1 ' lt . isTeporte ' d- that a republican . bair ! quet isbeing prganisedfor : the ; 24 th of , February ., , ; lt jg ' said '¦¦ . that Colonel iUharrat is active in' directing the
preparations , and that he intends to adopt the programme ofthe-farndhB ^ anquet Vhich was l the ' immediate caiisje ; 6 f ' th ^ Revolutioii ' of 1848 ;! that i ^ js to- take '' place'inthe ' same place '; - an ^ be fbfraed ' , " composed of Nationai / Guar ^ presentatiyes , ; precisely- hvthe . same manner as ' the ! procession , of . which ; M . Odillon'Barrotwas to ; bethel leader ,: and ; for . stooping which anvaete d ' accusation ] was presented'tb'theChamberof ! Deputies , * - ^ signed ' by M . Odiilbn ' Barrbt himself , Ml ' TJeonTFaucherV and a number of the . present « friends ' o'f ' orderM
thereis ' nb . donb t ^ | by tbe ! p 6 li . ce \ but'the Republicans ' reck p ^' niw , ' the unpppulajrityV they ^ President of the . Republic ., ;^ , .-. ' ' ~ ,. ^ J . 1 ~ ., r . iCi'i j Pabis , WEDNESDAY . —The sitting in ' tlie iLegisi lative Assembly yesterday was , of a most- stormy character . ¦¦ . M . ^ Leon Faucher , injhe Icourse of thi discussion onthe < bill relative to ! the . transportation td' Algeria < 6 f vthe insurgents of - June , niad « a very severe attacfc ' oB < M : JuIes !; Favre ; ' for the ' doctrines which he | !> kad f defended ; the '' day- before , as well as for his inconsistency in now bppbsing ' what he' had virtually supported before by his silence . Eventu-
" ' • ' . " . France.: ~ J ' The Followi...
ally ^ Art . 1 , simply authoriainj ; the ; transportation of ^ the insurgents to Algeria ^ was adopted- 'as proposed by the-committee ; an amendment presented by M . Denayrbuse to shave such of'them iient for trial before . a court' of justice as bad -not b « en arrested when the decree of the constituent assembly was passed , being rejected by a majority of 114 ; the numbers being 358 to 244 . ..... . . ' rn T I spainV / ' .. f v . / . Our accounts ; from Madrid are of the 12 th inst . A seditious proclamation , addressed to ihe Senators and deputies -of the kingdom ^ was in "circulation . The Ministers were described in : it as traitors to the Queen arid . conatitution , and their impeachment was accordingly , demanded . , The , authors of that , publicationwere unknown ....,,., -.., ? . ¦ ' ••; . : ; ¦ ..
Letters from Catalonia say that a tremendous hurricane has occurred in that province , uprooting trees that , have stood for centuries and doing Immense damage , in the country . ; The cold is very > general throughout the country , and even in Andalusia where winter is scarcely ever severely ; felt , sentinels havebeeh frozen to death at their posts . ' ' - ' ¦ ' '* ..... , .. ... , . ¦ ; . _ . ¦ . ¦ i' -J ! r . - ; - ¦ ' 11 t : r : t ;! : l ' ¦ '
; - . " : " " . ; ; : i ; . - '^ italy ; ; " ;;;; .: ;; ; . ;' : v 7 . ; RbME ; Jaw . 10 . —Horace Vernet had arrived here to study the localities of the scene of war—he will work them up , doubtless ; in some fine paintings for , the gallery of Versailles , in which the vanity of the victors will be , of course sufficiently flattered .-To see Vernet debase - his . fine talent ; byperpe . tuating the memory of so unjust and unprovoked , an aggression as the French expedition to Rome makes one , indeed , exclaim ' " '; f ¦ ¦ ¦ -. ¦ ; ........ " : . "Confusion and misrule i
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v Seize the vain pencil of the Gallic school . " ,: NAPLES , Jan . 10 .- —Since , my last communicatioh nothing lias occurred to alter the position of the Pope . The latest communications from France do not ; X aminformed , by any means'favour the designs of the camarilla : ; It has been stated-that the'financial difficulty of f the Roman . States alone prevents the return ot his HolinefS to . the Vatican , ; , but I am assured other and more weighty reasons retard that event . ' Some important ' despatches have just arrived atPorticv whichdo not appear to have been accept table . But the truth > is . > the strange mystery observed by . all who surroundv Pius IX .-r-even among ; them-8 elves--perfectly bafileB the possibility of arriving at any ; conclusion . One fact alone , may , be perfectly depended upon , viz . ; the priestly conclave endeavour to combat , by every means . the ' progressive -mb .
vement . of ( Europe . 'The cross-keys are to be supported by bayonets ;;;> Christianity is to ¦ deliver , ; its laws from the cannon ^ smouih—the Pop e , to beytheshuttlecock of diplomacy . " ,. .. " .-. ; 7 > , ; -,, . .-. -v- (? .-The official journal ' contains a long list of officers and privates who are to receive medals for the " glorious expedition in Sicily . ' - ' - ¦ The military print prefaces the names by > saying , " Our magnanimous and august sovereign never allows an opportunity to pass without expressing to , his faithful and ; devout army , that'heis ever ready-to respond ^ to- their increased devotion by his munificent generosity—an army not the last amongst those of European fame which has conquered revolt .,, , The generous sovereign therefore decoiates , & c . Ac . " ¦ What '; a sad . : Co ' medy ! ^ . The Neapolitan soldier decorated for cutting the throat of his Sicilian' brother , and foi ging the chains of ; his own slavery . ;; O . tempora ! , 0 mores ! -u ^ -: ' - ' ' - ^
¦' . ' ^ ' - : ?' ' * ' ' : '' ' ; GERMANY ;' ; ' ¦»> . . ,- ... ^ . ^ i . - J " BERLIN , ; Jan . ] 6 . V ~ 'The committee of ' the Second Chamber has rejected the peerage by fifteen " votes against six , and the" power to entail'estates by twelve against nine . The High Court having been previously . thrown out , ' it appears scarcely possible that , any of-uhe leading ^ propositions in the KingJs'mesBageishould-passin the House . -. : ¦ : ' : ) The democrats were in ecstaciesj as they thonght that the game was being- played- 'into ¦ their own hands . They met ' on . the 14 tbj- ' crowhed . the bust 3 of Jacoby arid-Waldeck , and , sang songs'in their honour . The ' police ;' . b ]^ rfer . ed --and-fdispers ' e ^ Ivthe a 83 embly , ' arresting ' several of the varties . present . ' /
HUNGARY AND AUSTRIA . ; ' ; Letters from Pesth ,, state that . 1 he ~ taxation of Hungary has come to a stand-still , it being impossible to collect the taxes , on account of the prevailing want of a circulating medium . The inhabitants of the counties on . - ' . ' the banks ' of the Theiss and of Transylvania have no money , except Kossuth notes '; , and though the Austrian government' has ordered that these notes should be given up and burnt , ' no ' more than fi'e millions ; have been surrendered but of a circulation of sixty millions . :: ¦ ••' ' •"'• ' - ¦ '
The Vienna papers state that in Turkey the bfli . cial communications between the Russian' and Aus . trian Ministers and . the Porte are still discontinued , and ; that 1 the ; two ; Ambassadors confer with ' . the Turkish Minister only in ,, a I few special cases , of ex treme urgency . That the aflfairs of ; the Orient are still out of joint is satisfactorily proved by the concentration of masses of Russian troops in Bessarabia , and by the armament in-Turkey . It is expected that ( he first cause , of the conflict will be foundinthe reorganisation " of the panubian ' principalities , , '
.. The' Magyar Hirlap' contains an account of the tales current among the poor . 'peasantry of Hungary ; who still . . believe that'their cause uiiist ' succeed . ' Every day brings Kossuth nearer , whose power is greater than in the best'days , of the revolution .. At his side rides a great hero mounted on , the creamcoloured steed , his " < name is unknown , . but they bring the crown of-Hungary with them , and ' are f ° ' - Ip wed by , a mighty host ; , such as - the' world never saw . It ; is ., composed- , of -Magyars—of those : who 1 first came to Europe under Arpad—of Turks , Sole- - vonians , and- Wallachians . ' . On the other side
arprostch whole herds of Russians , who have quarrelled with the Austrians about their pay- ^ Russians in jjreeri coats—six feet high Russians , the greatest and strongest Russians that could be found . On another side the- English' are coming with all their ships ; and have already cast 'anchor before Debretzin I ; The French , again , all in red coats , by sea and land , are at Sarospatak , and the Prussians have shut out all retreat' on the other side . ! . ' And for talking of such dangerous matters have two poor citizens of Blausenhurg been piibh ' cly flogged ,- by order of Colonel Urbahi ''' " ' :: ; :: i ' ;; - ;; ' ' ' . ;'¦ ' / ' : . ; " r ::- \ . ;' . ; , ; '
' . Great ' excitement has been . created in Pesth by . the arrest of ^ tho Bishop : of Grosswardein , which took place immediately after the publication ; of ; the loctrbyed ; constitution for ; the ; empire of Austria . ' ; Complaints ' are '¦ ' loii ' d throughout . ' , Hungary ; of the great increase in the number of . wildsibeasts , and the inability of the inhabitants to destroy them inconsequence of their being deprived of their'arms . r 1- ;; 'i . - Madame \ EossuthJ—;\ Ve ; have much ' pleasure J in ' lanhouh ' cing , that ' the' wife . b ?'; Xosau th . has ; escaped from Hungary , and had reached Belgrade on her , way to joinjher husband at ; Shumla » -r : Z' «« "fy New , * ' ¦ ¦* m ' i i j ; j : The > . * own correspondent ' -ofthe ftmes . at Vienna ; lis a teacher of langnagesi-. wh p ' wbulddoi inueh better to stick-to his Lindley Murray , and his quoimmr ' ibiis , he
I than , meddle ; with politics ; , ' p'f . ^ which / knows about ias ^ 'inucblas a . Greenwich pensionerof tight-rope danc-\ ng .- ^ DailyNews . !> : iii-, :. i » . i-s . ' . ' -v . ' -. . ¦ ¦ -. ! - ; m ¦ ¦ . , -. ; y .. - ^ . U .-a ' ^ Another bundle of Kossuth'paper has been burned ; at Presburgi Tt'is calculated that , of thesixly'imil r lionsput'iu circulation , by the revblutionarygovern ^ IrnVnt ; . only . five millions have beerigivehup ... - ¦<¦' - -, ! , ;; The " PestkZeitunghContms forty-threetisentenoea Iwhichihave -beenipublished-byi . the ; Oourt * Martuil at Arad . AU those ' condemned were Austrian ; bAtcer s who ; had fought ; , to the' last' in the'Hungarian ; arfe y ^ £ twehty-, three ^ of ' t ^ ; weie sent ence ' d ! to death have had their ^ unishment commuted' to sixteen ; years' > imprisonment' ;' the others , will be ! confined in a fortress for six ; ten ; ' and twelve years . - ¦/ ' ^^ 'J ^ iJ . ^ ¦¦¦ ¦ ,- ; , ^'; ' ;' . ; "; - .- ;' . ;';; ; . ! f , , . ThB ' : 'SKRnB . —The ; . «; S 6 ufh SbJavoniah ' , Gazette '
contains a long . < article on . the state of the Woy wo . dina | from whichw ' e'quote the ' cohclusion . ll During ; the last few . days , the . repqrts : ; ha \; e , ' , been , repeated respecting the increasing discontent of the Serbs dn the' Woy wodina ';' ' 'It' -i ' si ' -said that . ' the lower orders - ¦ " ¦ . - ¦ ¦ ti * : ' » -. i . i . ! : a , ~ i . ' i . ' . ' -. .::: ' . f ; i <•;¦ ii' . i'i-.- '' . iny Viiiiiii . ( . -. . .. .,:. are m , a ; state of . ferment ; . then . that , there wasa p lot against one or . the btherof ^_ the jndgesj ' and'then anOther against-General Mayerfipfal ; ¦ The other day we were informed that Coram ' is ' sione r'Stojcevich had caused twb advocaites '' in Ruroa ^ BilciBvichand Pbp 6 yi ' ch 'to be'arrested ; and ' their '; papers ' ^ seized ! Very ' sbpn ; ^ atterwards tt was said that ' Judge , ! Mfiriitt Kovich , bf ' Irreg , ' ; bad-. b fi en murder ^ lace . ' Later again , the same was said ' ef Judge Santa , at Ruma . . The standard . of revolt is said to have been raised in Senilin . i ; ! ; : : <* ¦¦ . ' ¦
; -iTBANsi , YVANiA . 'i-i'Transylvahia' at the present time exhibits the extraordinary aspect of a country j without ^ ersons : c & $$ }' fffi- willing ' . tri ; fill' all'the ! onice ' v ' ^ adminiatfationV ; . in ' transylvania particularly ^ accq ^ Deutsche Post , ' the ^ allack ' s being totally , incapable ( rpm Ignorance , and ; theuMagyara xe [ u 8 ingrhecause | they are unwilling to aid in destroying theconstituJ tiori of their country , ' the Austrians have 'been ' obJ ligedto'brihg In Germatii ' . ' 'fr 6 in' ^ ^ Galliciaf ' tthd ' -tjie ' B ' ukovirtaj : whb : i »? e' ^ totally 'ignorant' , of bo ' th' the Wllirtfnr' - nWHi'Wi > li ' ii <> t '< : la'iimiaoaii J'' -AriJ '' 'iV , « ik' -lU . UJ
have the alight task Imposed , on therd of introducing an entirisly pewVco' ^ tore ^ in fact , of reyoluiiohising ! the , institutions of i whole nation . The consequenceis . that thecouhtry i * in a complete state of anarchy , ; apd not one of the miwy-nations who cbmpbae it but are discontented From Hermahnstadtwe - heartbtt cattle have been attacked ; by' the murrain iaTrahL sylvahia , and 7 , 051 have died in consequence : ' ' I An occasional correspondeat , writing from Vienna
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on the 9 th inst ., says : —'' The : hews frbmkTransyl vania ia highly distressing . ; Shouldit Teafly come tc an open ' rebellion , it mustJeridiwithMhe murder ol all the Saxonsi « s tW Rumanians , "Wallachiant , and Czechs , have all united against tbeni , and mil have nothingmore { to do | with the court of Vienna , by whom they have been so often betrayed . POLISH AUSTRIA .-On the 1 st , a battalion of the regiment , , of . Nugent marched from Lemberg , where they had } bemstationed , to enlist recruits , through Preskow , a , Gallician , town , with 20 , 000 inhabitants , omtheir way jtoiVienna : they were officered by Germans . . Tq ^ expVess their scorn for . the Gallicians theseibflicers fastened tberPolish cockade _ _ . | . _ « ., . __ : _ _ ii '; ' ' '' . lki £ ' ^ lS' ^ L ri ''" i Li-L ; rp „ . „„„ l"
on to the collars of their ^ dogs , a ? scandal which was admirably ca lculated to fan the'hatred smoulding in the Polish ; province „ against . tbei . Austrians . to . the fiercest pitch , and to give a fresh , impulse to the disposition' daily growing among tlie Gallicians to throw themselves into the arms of Russia . On this same march an officer was quartered in the mansion of Count Zelinsky , where he was treated with hospitable attention ; ' After he went away it was discovered that . he i had / offered to his entertainer such a beastly . ahd ruflianly insult as cannot here . be described . -The mere occurrence of a single outrage of the ^ lfiud ; speaks volumes ; 'for the spirit which animates tho Austrian officers . :..: I
, ; , >!' ^ TURKEY AND RUSSIA . CoifSTANTiNOMiis , Jan . 5 . ~ Austria Has not yet renewed diplomatic relations with the Porte . A few days since I wrote , to you by the French mvaof-war steamer ; ' which was suddenly ordered to Toulon by General Aitpiek with despatches for the government at Parisi' I then told ' you that the difference : between Turkey and Russia-had ceased , to all outward appearances , to exist ; for that M . de Titoft' had , > n the . usual , forni ,, re-established friendlyr relations , jvith the Porte .. '' The Turkish government were / willing to expel the Polish retuJEre ' es ' { concerned "in ¦ the' - ' late insurrection ^ * in
¦ Hungary ; ''with ; , the exception-of : those who > had become Mussulmans ; but all Poles resident in the Ottoman jEmpire sincethe re volution of 1830 , and who have not sihee . then been guilty of any political offence , ^ should , it ' / was -stipulated , ' . remain unmolested . ^ -To " aU : these terms -Mi : de-Titoff consented J ahdioh'theSlstof'December , diplomatic relations ! were ; renewed between the Porte and the Envoy of the Czar , and all political and commercial proceedings between the Gpvernme nt of , the Sultan . and the Russian , Embassy ' are now carried on in . the same manner as before ^ the question of extradition existed . 's ' .-. ' . /' - ' if-ii ' - 'iv " ' - , ¦ : ' '" -us :: ; , «' ¦ - ' ¦ ¦ ' :- ¦¦ : ..: :
Austria had demanded that the ; Hungarian refugees should bo confined to a town in the interior of , the ; Ottoman Empire . , T 6 this ; the' Ministers of the Porte consented , and Kutiah , in , Asia' Minor , ' was agreed upon as a safe find proper : place : Lfor their residence ; ' ; Thus all difficulties seemed to be done away with , and when M . doM'itoff ; announced that he intended , to re-establish relations ; with the Porte , fesvdb ' ubted . but that Count Sturm ' er -would follow his example . " ¦¦ ' The Austrian government , however , though they consented that the'Hiingariah refugees should be confined ; to the town of Kutiah ,-made ,: known to ; the-. Sultan ' s Ministers / through their iEnyoy at Constantinople , that , they woultTinot renew . friendly relations , unless-it , was
left in their hands ' to determine the length of time during which Kossuth and his friends should b ' e'detained as prisoners in the Ottoman Empire . - The Porte , animated by , a spirifrbf justice and humanity , as well as ; from a sense of its . own dignity ; refused to give . such j nVpower to Austria ; , For if , in . the first instance , it' objected to being assistant executioner foi ; the-government , of Vienna , it is ^ quite as little disposed / in ' the present instance , to act the . partofyailors . 'j TheiOttonian Ministry made known , to Count Sturmerthat they were willing to confino , ther Hungarian refugees to the town - of Kutiah , till ' order should be established in Hungary , and , that country once in repose , they would then restore " . Kossuth ' 'and his companions ' to liberty . ; -. and- they added j that they-would-reserve entirely to themselves the right to determine the period at which these refugees should be set -at liberty . ' " : '" . ' : ' . ' ¦ '
A special courier arrived , at the Austrian Embassy on- the 3 d inst . with despatches from the Austrian-government-. ifoi ? . Count Sturmer ,. on the following day the Internuncio had ; a long interview fwith , Ah ; Pasha , the Minister of Foreign- Affairs , and he had- another conference : with ¦ . the Reis Effehdi this morning . Whatever eloquence M . de Sturmor' may have employed the Porte ' still con tinues firm , and , as far as the Turkish Ministry-are concerned , Kossuth and his companions are safe from : having the time of thoir . captivity determined by . General Haynau . V ' N . . " V AdvicesfromShumlahave reached us down to the 17 th of-December . -Kossuth was suffering in health .. The ; Turkish population behaved to the emigrants with the greatest kindness , but the obvious good-will ofthe . Porteiwas cramped , by fear of Russia and distrust , of British support in resisting it . It was reported th ' at an attempt had been'discovered to assassinate the late president governor .
I " . .. . .. ' . ., ' OTITED STATEg . ; -- , -The royal mail steam-ship ^ Cambria , Capt . Leitch , arrived at Liverpool oh Tuesday morning , having sailedfrom New York on the 9 th inst ; : ' ; . WisHiHaioN , Jan . ; 10 . —The House of . Represent- ' stives has been employed the whole week in ineffectual-attempts to electa clerk . The senate came to no resolution yesterday , on ; General Cass ' s motion , to suspend diplomatic relations with : Austria . Mr ; Seward proposed to-grant lands to the Hungarian : refugee ' s . ! , ¦;¦ .: ¦ . ¦ -. . ; : ¦ : > ^ : < : l V ; : ; - o " - ;; -I , ' ; - ' .-. s More ; Rbfcoebs . —Two other , refugees ,. Nicholas Imber and Briokmeyer Fehrkaseb , whom we understand , once , belonged to the unfortunate Students ' Legion ; have arrived in the ship Gladiator . They were deceived on landing -by Herr' Bernhardt of Greeriwieh-st ., and shortly . aftor their arrival paid their respects-to the Governor , Ujhazy and Mdlle .
Ugello , who . receivedthem with open , arms . —New York Tribune . , . ;/ ,. ., ' .. ^';• ,: --.. , '' ' , ! A Nkw , Artist . —Among the passengers' by the Cambria ' oil her last trip were Edward Kemeyni and hisbrbther , Htingiirian refugees . ; ' Mr . . R . is a vio- ' linjst , who , as we are assured by letters of introduction which he brings . us from Hamburgh , is worthy to be named along with the celebrated virtuosos of Biir 6 pe . - During the'warof Independence he laid aside his violin for the sword , and served under Klapkai ; and afterwards under Gorgey . Ho was presentiat the -fatal- surrender , of ; Vilagos , but not being . wUling to . participate in it , fled in disguise with his violin as his companion . " As a wandering musician he ' 'made his' -wa . y without difficulty-through Hungary and -Austria ; "From ' ' Viesna' be went to Italy , and thence Lto . Englandj and afterwards ; to Germany ; At , HamburghTie performed in a concert
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given for the benefit of the exiles whew Jenny l ; j also assisted . He proposes to give one or more con cbrts in'New jYork / j ^ hen ^ e ^ rejewfidehtithat not only his position but his uncommon talents willao sore him crowded and appreciating audiences ^ aL , Yprk Tribum . . ' ,, ' . '" . / :,: " '¦ &? 'Among she emigrants that have ' lately arrived in this country , is ; Dr . 'Fiorina-Moerdes , late ' Minister of the Interior of the Government of Bavaria and BadenVduring its brief . Kopublican existenc e , ru , is at Galveston , accompanied by his lady , daughter of the Count Armansperg / how Prime Minister of the kingdom'of Bavaria ^ and his brother , Maim . Francis Moerdes , late of 'the' Fh ^ t Kegimcnt of Dragoons , of Baden . f \ : ' nivan A »» 4-ha hanaGt nf tha nvilnn ^ . KVlU " t _
WEST INDIES . HiiTi . — "War is again devastatmg this unfort u , nate island . The Dominicans had taken some small towns and villages belonging to the Hay tians ; which they destroyed by setting the houses in them on fire . It is thought Soiilouque will suffer a defeat The Dominican aquadroh had captured a fleet of Haytian vessels . General Baez had addressed another proclamation to the Hay tians , threatening the whole of the . towns with destruction and . pillage and altogether a war of extermination and of revolt ' ing bloodshed appears to have again commenced .
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If Mankind are liable to one disease mere than another or if there are any particular affections' of the human body we requireto hare a knowledge of over the rest , it is eer . tainly that class of disorders treated of in the new and Ini . proved edition of the "Silent Friend . " The authors , in thus sending forth" to the world- another edition of their medical work , cannot refrain from expressing their grati . fication at the continual success attending their efforts , which ; combined with the assistance of medicines ; excJu . sively of their own preparatiwi , ' have beeri the happy _ cause of mitigating , and averting the mental and physical miseries attendant on those peculiar disorders '; thus proving th » fact ,
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; . " , ^' .. . . " ' - - ^ ' AN ; EFFECTUAL CURE FOR PILES , FISTUtASjici ; ; ' . ; ^^^ j / ABERN & THY'S ; 'Pr : 'What ipainful and noxious disease is the Piles ! and ; comparatively , ; how few of the afflicted have been permanenuj cured by ordinary appeals to . medieal skill .--This , no doubt , arises : from the use of powerful ' aperients too frequenUj administered by the profession ; indeed j " strong internal ; medicines " sliould '' nlwaj 8 beAvoided in' all cases of this complaint : The- proprietor of the -above 1 'Ointment ,-after '' years of acute suffering , placed himself-under tlie treat . ment . ; of that . eminent' , surgeon , 'Mr .. Abernethy ; was by him restoredjto perfect health , and has enjoyed . it ever since wfljoiit the slightest . return , of the disorder , . over a period , of fifteen years ; during which time the same Abernethian prescription has been thelinearis of healing a ^^ Vast number ^ of / desp ' orhte ; casesVobth in and out of the proprietor's circle of friends ; most of which cases had been-uud ' er medical : car ' e , and seme of them for , a very considerable , time .. Abernethy ^ s P . ile Ointment was . introduced i to the public by , the desire of many who had been perfectly healed by its appliiation , and since its introduction the ftime of tliis Ointment has spread fer and wide ; even the medical profession ; ahvnvs slow and unwilling to . ackiiowledge the virtues of any medicine nodprepared by themselves ,: do now freely and frankly admit that Abernethy ' s Pile . Ointment is not only a valuable preparation / but a never failing remedy in every stage ana yariety . of that appalling vemedv . ^ V ' ., ; . '" . '' ' ¦ -: "' ; . ¦ ' •'' " *''' . "'"'' . " " i ; ' •' ¦ 7 Sufferers from tho Piles will riot repent giving the Ointment a trial ! Multitudes of cases of its enlcacy might he produced , if the nature : of the ' complaint 1 did not ' render ; . those , who ; have been-cured , unwilling to publish tneir - ¦¦ -- ¦ ¦•¦
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- , . ' : V '' - '' ;; ;" ' - 3 ; V ;; : ^ C ' O ^ NS ^ A ^ I > / B'UNidN- 'SV ' ;'' ' - - - ^ £ > ' ::. ]; ¦ : ; S . ' ^ i . ; .--i . ' . /¦ -:-, :. ¦ ' -. ¦ : ^^ $ ™ $ efybg ; the ; . Roydl Family , Nobility , ' ' Clergy , ' ' " & . ' " ''" - !; ' Is a sure and spc ? dy cure for ^ tliose Sever ' eauhoynnces ,- without causing tlie least pwn or inconvenience , unlike all nSrtS ^ P , ^ , ^ ' . * " ? . P ? ac »? 6 Of cutting Coras Is a ^ . ' all times highly dangerous , and has been frequently attended with lamentra ^^^ a | S ^^ *^ - ^^ ^ * ' Kstmioiuals hayo ^ en rtceive ' d'from upwards of one hundredPlo'eloiajiSand Surgednsof-therereatest ei ^ aence , as cmmtrv ^ am ^ wXit ^^^ country , sptaKinjin . niga terms of this valuable remedy . > ! -v ( i .,. i . i . n ,- . i . "ij ... ! » ,: < .. ; ... ., . te S ^ Affil ^«?^^ % ^ ^ ? - ' ,, ^ ono f « 3 « - » o ; Vand c to be fiad , with full directioas £ K •^^^^ ' ^ ' ' , l ! ^^^ O TlI , l W ¦^ * ^ ' Th . . geauin * hasthenai . eof John Fox on tho stamp . - A Js . 9 d . box cures the most ofcdurato corM , ¦ * , , . < , *• •¦ -- - -- ' - ¦ ,.- — - .-,..- ¦ - ., ; ;• " . '¦¦¦ \ . : , ' - -Z . ' V' ' J ' y ' *¦*'"¦»' ¦ ' Ask for "VPaul ' sKwry Mam's Prieha ;** . '¦¦ - - > - . •; ... ' ! ' '" ; , ' ! v . 'i : '! . o • ¦ ; ; C ; :..: c 4 SahVD eSe ? s 1 ^ S ^ * M 't ! l ! u ^ ^^ f on ^ street ;¦¦ KdwftrHn , « t , SW Yik \\ V » Wureh ^ ya ' rtl ; BuUer ; - 4 , Oheapside '; Newhery ^ -St ® I Su «« n ^ Jo w / Chureh-yiml ; J * h »* tw \ 1 * 1 , « r « cW ^ r « et , 8 o 1 uk an * W , Ci ™ hM ; Singer , 150 , Oxford-street : , . W , OUgnpy ; amdOo . t . 61 , ^ lsho » sgAU ^ tr « et WlHiout « 0 w « n , JW , Mwflhiuout ^ treat , Burton-creseont ; Bade , . 39 , QoswoB-- ? 2 ? W lrout , ; 239 , Sta-aad ; llamu ^ ' huiIV ; 4 ^< k » r 4 ^ U s « i ; ft-ouUs , 84 , Edgeware-road j and retail by ; all respeet . ahhichgmists ^ and ' meQlclno ' vtuauwbb ^^ ,. - , ' * * > •' ' ¦ - ' " ^ «¦ ; i , ^ h \> !; :, <¦ uum r-iir :. ¦ - - .. * i . t uroi 5 onuiaiw wi xiru
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 26, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_26011850/page/2/
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