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JHTT' T X' and frozen to death } in woth...
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Ir lUNKit-o are liable to one iHseasemore tlian another , or if there aro anyi particular affections ofthe human body we requu-eto havea.knowledge of over the rest, itis cermat cia98 01 uisoraers ireatea ot tne and
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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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Jhtt' T X' And Frozen To Death } In Woth...
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3 " _^ _"fRAMCE . * . _-, _¦>*• . ¦' - '' ' ; ¦•¦ " - The following is a report of W _* j 5 jS on the public _instrucdon bill , ot _wnicb a _^ _ceody appeared in last Saturday ' s ' Star . lynU b _* seen how brutally the orator _y interrupted and abused bv the friends cf order . ' - _ _ _¦' - - ¦ > .- , . - * M Tictor Hugo said that , at that advanced hour he shonld brin _*{ what he had to say into the shortest possible space ; ' bnt he , nevertheless thought tbat the Assembly would Igrant him the necessary time on such an important question . ; In his _,. ppinion , the certain object to which the hill ought to tend , was th _» t gratuitous instruction was obligatory . On the Mountain : Hear , hear . On the Bight ' -. Bravo I That U what Proodhon
demands . M . Victor _Hogo-. Gratuitous instruction was obligatory in the first degree , and in all degrees . ( Laughter . ) Obligatory primary instr uction was a right of youth , a right more sacred than the right of living , and which was confounded with that of the State . He wished to bave an extensWe public instruction given and regulated by the State . On the Bight : Like Louis Blanc ! MVictor Hugo : He wished that its starting
. point should be the village school , and that it should rise as far as the Institute i he would have the gates of science set wide open to every capacity . He Would not bave a commune without a . school , not a town without a college , not a chief town without a facultT . ( Interruption . ) He wished tbat France shonld presents vast ensemble , a sort of neiwoik of intellectual work-shops . ( Approbation on the Left , and interruption on the Right . ) A Voice : And the means of execution ?
On the Left : Monsieur le President , enforce silence ! The President : Do you then wish me to prevent yonr applauding . ( Laughter . ) . M . Victor Hugo : France should present a vast network of intelleBtnal work-shops , a group of gymnasiums , of colleges , and of libraries , without any solution of continuity . He wished that the heart of the people shonld he 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
question , bnt if the hour had not been so advanced he could bave shown , by entering into details , tbat 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 , bnt by the State exclusively laical , as was understood and wished for by M . _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 of surveillance cither bishops or
delegates of bishops . On ihe Right : That is -what M . PierreLeronx wishes for ! M . Victor Hugo : He wished for the complete separation of Church and State , for that would tend to the interest of both . The present bill would be nothing bnt a weapon the more given to the clergy . The tendency of the hill was to place the countiy in tbeir hands . He was one of those who wished ior the _amelioration of the condition of the people . It was the dnry of all , whether poets or writers , to turn the attention of the people towards a better world . He would , therefore , ardently support any p lan of reli g ious instruction , but he wished for the religious instmction of the Church , and not that of a party ; he wished it to be sincere , and not hypocritical ; he wished the object in view to be heaven and not earth .
Onthe "Ri ght : Hear , hear ! In t _' aat case , we agree ! M . Tictor Hugo : He would not have the professor ' s chair invade the altar , nor would he have the priest interfere with tbe professor . He wonld open the eye of the laical state on the seminaries , and . until the day when education should lie completely free , he would not have it watched over hy the clergy . The bill proposed he regarded as a strategic one 5 it was tbe chef-d ' _oeuvre of the clerical party . He conld not personify tbat 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 ths Bishop of _Langres , but he couid not help _expressing his distrust at the clerical party , he wonld not entrust it with the developement of - the rising generation ; he wonld not confide in
its hands the future welfare of France . The bill had one great fault—it said one thing and did another . It wa 3 like the usual plan of tbe government ; eveiy time that it forged a chain it calied it liberty i when it decreed a proscription . it gave it the name of amnesty . ( Applau-: e on the Left . ) In the remarks that he . had made , be 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 Panic sheltering the orphan , the Bishop of Marsailles in the midst of those affected by the plague , the Archbishop of Paris facing , with sublime smile , tbe furies of the Faubourg St . Antoine , raising the crucifix over the heads of civil war , caring little about meeting-death , so tbat he coud secure neaca . ¦ . - .
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 party was an ancient one ; it bad a past of several centuries ; it was it wbich discovered that truth was but ignorance and error . Its history was written in tbat of all the progress of the human mind , bat it was written at the back of the page . . It was it which put Oampaue _' . _la seven times to the torture for having affirmed that the number of worlds was infinite . It was it wbich imprisoned Galileo , persecuted Columbus , and anathematised Pascal , Montaigne , and Moliere . It had long sought to put a hand on the human mind . And now it would be master of public instruction ; but there was hot a poet , a philosopher , or an eminent man that wonld accept it . There was a book which appeared to be tbe
emanation of human united ; with Divine wisdom , wbich people called the Bible , and yet there had been Popes who had dared to proscribe that book , and this party claimed liberty of instruction , but the liberty which it really wished for was that of not 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 poeis , of gsuiu ? , and of the artSj now . knew ; not how to read . Spain had lost her rank among nations , but it was true tbat she had gained tbe Inquisition ; an establishment which some in that Assembly had wished to re-establish . The President : Ton cannot be allowed to impute cch an intention tb _' auj one in the Assembly .
On the Right : Let him go on . It is rat ant for effect—a tirade on the Inquisition ! ,. - . M . Victor Hugo said he addressed himself to the whole clerical party , because he . _considered it a public danger . : He repeated that certain persons had wished to establish ... the . Inquisition in their writings—that Inquisition which had caused five millions ef individuals to perish in ' the flames . Onthe Right : With pointed " cap 3 . ( Laughter . ) Other Voices .: "It is tbe fifth act . of Marie Tudor ! ¦ V M . Victor Hugo : The Inquisition— , M . deLarcy : We reject tbe _inquisition , and we have never raised scaffolds : - M . _Bichardetr-Order /' _drdsji yon defenders of the Inquisition . ( Laughter . ) . _ . ' , „;
if- Victor Hugo : There Were in the Vatican library , sealed manuscripts containing all the' names of the vicdrhs . ; ' :. _;< -, " - " 'i ¦ - " - " A Voice : That does not _prerent the earth from turning round-- ( Laughter . ) - ¦ _f - - ; . i ' . _* i > i'i 7-M . Victor Hugo :: Spain had been endowed with the Inquisition . ( 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 . It was afine task ,. _butUet them . beware . He rejected the bill _beca-ise . it outraged French feelings —because it _degraded instruction , lowered the level of science , and debased- the human mind . He was one of those who felt the blood mount ' to his forehead _, whenever France experienced ; a diminution of territory as in 1815 , or ; a _diminntwn of intellect , aa it was now ; wished to impose on her . He would give the clerical : party a little serious ; advice ; let it beweof the darkness caused in . men ' s minds by the shade of . theis ' uviiice '; . _/ . — . _- ' ; . ; -- . . ¦ - . n :
On _^ _be-Hight-: _^ _It-isvinsnl ting to the Catholic fath . -. 1 ¦• _-: _¦ - •¦ " : _- ' / 7 ¦ ¦ _¦ _7---- _- J . i ° . M . - -- : _'¦¦¦ ; . - , OniheLeft : . He _* ia _' -ngh " tLin what he says . H . LeoLaborde : 'It is infcunouB . L "; -..
3 "^ "Framce. * . -,¦>*•. ¦'-'' ' ; ¦•¦ ...
On the Left : He does not _speak ; of priests . On the Right : Whom does he _iltade to , then , _Iwhen he talks _ofctheYsurplice ? _fC _^ _i _^ _- _^& V * I M . V . Hugo ii henclef '« _rparty _^ s alarmed at [ Socialism ; it sees the _Iwayes . _rising , and r tf imagines _jthat it will have _savedjociet _^ wheiviU -m all / bare _Combined matV _& ltesisfahce with social hypocrisy , and placed a Jesuit wherever there is not a gendarme . ( Explosion of murmurs , and , prolonged bravos on the Left . ) Let it , however , listen to _. ad : vice ; The 19 th century was opposed , to -it , and » it continued its course , Ifc would / raise formidable eventualities ,. _- It- placed the -government in- tbe Sacristy . ¦; -v _* ' _- ; _- _n- ? ' ¦ --- ¦ 3 ;;;; ; On the Right ? Order , order . _^ - _, -- > - A Voice' Let . him go on they _ are only
phrases . ' . - _, M . _Danioy : it is only old romantic nonsense , v M . de _Bamplerre _11 demand that the speaker be called to . order . . ' . ; . _yj _.-. - ¦ ¦ n X 7 . _^ M de Larcy : " . He has insul ted every Catholic . The President : I request the hon . gentleman to refrain from making such : observations _^ A Voice : It is like the Porte St ; Mntin . . M . Nadaud : It is the liberty ofthe tribune . The President : The liberty of the tribune has its limits . ; - . . - ; • " The Assembly was at this time in a state of great agitation . ¦ _, , V thathe had iht
M ; Victor Hugo considered , a rg , when a bill was presented . which he regarded as a public danger , to closely examine it , —( renewed' interruption , * ) - — and his intentions ought not to be suspected . He bad last year defended order , when it was 5 n peril , as he 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"You bave indulged in too long a tissue of personalities , and you have done 80 with very insulting expressions . But you have beer treated in yonr turn so severely that it has dispensed rae from acting as I might have otherwise done . " '"' .. "' "'" .
M . Victor Hugo : "Was this the kind of bill that were to be produced ? . "Was France to be arrested on her onward course ? The intention ., was to petrify human thought . ( Laughter . ) , * In this . stage of discoveries / said the honourable member in conclusion , ' _youproclaim immovability ; you pause , on the road like-men'fatigued—fatigued genius , science , and knowledge ? . "Do you not see that everything is ih ' morement around you and advances —you want to slop short . ( No , no 1 ) I declare to you , that if you repel progress , you will have , fresh revolutions ; and tosuch men as deny the truth of that assertion , I reply 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 tbe . organic law respecting public instruction , and was again adjourned after a speech from M . de Monf alembert . 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'irreligions character of the education hitherto given by " the State . The remedy tor the-, evil was , he said , to render education more religious in its
tendency ; and snch 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 newspapers , 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 tbe clergy , and gave as the reason that theinimora ! 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 had nothing for it but to accept the measure now proposed , or tumble" into anarchy . MCremieux destroyed the whole foundation of that argument , tbat the University , as at present constituted , was Ihe creation of Napoleon / and-could not be made responsible fcr a revolution which occurred nearly twenty-years before it came into existence . He showed tbat the University , as it existed at tbe commencement of the Revolution of 1789 , was merely clerical , and . that ,., although neither clerical domination nor clerical corporations were wanting to the ancient regime , they did not prevent the old monarchy from perishing . . He also showed that it wa 3 not influence on the part of the ; clergy , that was wanting during the restoration ,, but that . still that
influence did not prevent the _^ revolution , of 1830 . He instanced the fact ' of his ( M . . Creraieus ' s ) . appearance 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 tbat the revolution of 1789 was something more than a chimera '" and a dream . The old system of government'Which had then perished conld not be resuscitated , and the clergy should rest satisfied in limiting their efforts to tbe proper sphere —namely , religion .. ; There were other religions besides that of M . de Montalembert .. There were for example , those of M . Coquerel , and of himself—and he wonld ask if they had not the same rights with respect to education as anv other . sect ? . .. . . ...
M . Thiers declared that the bill was tbe inevitable consequence of the declaration made in the const ! -, tution , 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—namely , the admissiori ' . hencefofwafd , of the _pupils ' educatedatthe _sepiiHaires , or schools _conducted by the clergy , to the examinations for diplomas , in letters and sciences , and consequently lo the liberal , professions ,, was _tof necessity at . once removed , and . a . measure , drawn up . in a spirit ; , bf conciliation , to bring together' contending : parties , was a natural consequence . He avowed that . he bad completely gone over to tbe 'Right , ' in order to do his little best to stem the tide of Socialisra .
Paris , Sukday Evening . —In the sitting of yesterday , the Assembly terminated the general , dis r ; _cussion on the Public Instruction 8 _| 11 . ' The Assembly then divided on the question whether it should proceed tb a second deliberation , when the following was tbe result : —• ' ¦ "•' ¦ - ¦ '¦ ' - ' - i : ; ' ; ' ¦' ' - ¦( . Number of voters . ¦ ; r . 642 ¦ _' ' Fot the motioni . ' .: - 455 ¦ _Against-it _; ;• -: . ' _^ , 187 . : Majorityj . . :-vv -268-Mme . Dudevant ( George Sand ) has addressed the , following , _'letter- . tq the _, 'iPresse . ' .:-t- * _Several journals have been _received . as . possible , and eveji _, as certain , the stratige story of an order to quit ; jParis / which it was .. said . had been , lately , intimated , to .
me by . MI Carlier , I . should not : / have considered such a piece' of news as' deserving of contradiction , but , as the journals insist , 'I ' oWit . ' to _triilh to declare _. that it Ms " completely erroneous , the little fact which has ' probably given rise to- this story is this : —* M . Carlier , tormented bythe police ' of my ' chef lieu de canton , which has ; fallen into a chronic state of pialepene , as we _callit in my country / and perhaps , feeling on that day a want ofa belief in a conspiracy , sought for my address in Paris . I sent it to hitn . by one ; Of ; my friendsi _thihkingiit my duty to reply : to one . act s of politeness ; by : ; another . ? : I could not attribute to any other . motiveLthan a . wish to [ pay me a . visit the . pavns _\ which' the > Prefect r . of Police took to discpVer / my place of , abode . ' , ;
-: A disturbance , which . _fbraLatime threatened to be | attended with very , _serioua . _cphsequences ' / ' topk place" at Aries on' Saturday , week . _? ' AL ; Lpgitimis club , in that place gave a grand ball , ' which was ' attended by about 200 persons . - _'^ Tfie -Demobr ats' regarded tbe ' L _-j'T (>/ e ' - ' r ' a demonstfatibn ' _- . -against-ih ' * ' Republic , and determined to " interrn " pt 'the festivities . They assembled to the number of from 1 , 200 to 11 , 500 , ' and appeared -determined to force an' entry into the place where '" the- ball Was heldiL Some military . had been placed round" tbe building _^ for its prbte ' sVo * n , Lbut they were . 'on ' the ; , point _^ of being _pverrJbwer ' ed ' when' " a "; body Vpf cavalry ' coming np . headed by the mayor and' the 8 nb-pre " fect , made ' a charge , and the crowd dispersed without-any 1 _accidenti taking place ; i . ; ::, ; - _^ . _; .- . a ¦ 7 _uivl-: d . ¦ : ¦ . -. ;¦ . ¦ ., ' _. .
.: A house porter , named Rbuginat ; has been convicted . before the Court of Assize of Paris _^ _of-having taken ; part in the insurrectionary [ movement , of the _I 3 thof Junejast .: He ; was : _se ' _ntencedito imprisonment for , five years . ¦ „ ,. ' _- . ! .: ' ,.. - ; i ..., | <¦ - ¦ ¦¦ _' <\ _'i ' _.- ; M . "fimile " de : Girardin , as ; chief , editor of , the 'Presse , ' has written to ttiej ' Procureur-General of the Republic , _^ declaring ; that i be ' . ' is * . th ' e ; authorL , of . the article for whicli'the' responsible' editprof tlie _, _' , Presse' is to- be tried , and 'has ' transmitted the manuscript . , . . , ., _; _,..,, ' "i '~' 7 '" _$ ;¦ , . ' Letters . frbin the / departments - fiie / still full / of accounts of intense severity of weather , particularly from the Pyrenees , the" Haute _"Garonije _. _'S'ii ybris , L _^ le _; -Dieppe ; - _and-olher _^ parts ' . i'"Ti avellers - who arrived at Lyons froin therPoy ; record that ' they saw ssieral dead-bodiesIalong . ! the _tw ' ay ; : in ! one spot _ahiwjwrappediuprin . hh . Qleakj-lying ' onthegrouhd
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and frozen to death } in _wother _^ a traveller / Wo dead and his body in a sitting posture 5 and further a woman standing in # e : snow ; : up to , ber middle , her hands _claspal _^ and raised as if in the act of recommending _% ¦ ' _» _$ ; t 0 Heaven-she also / was ; a / In ; Paris the thaw still continues _thought the weather is far from mild . Hundreds of men-are employed in clearing , the _buow jfrom the streets , though Ithek passages " are itill much incumbered . Carriages , However , move about freely . | f _> / " Paris , Monday . —This day the Assembly in the discussion opened-on the bill relatire to-the transportation of the insurgents of June to Algeria . The urgency having _beenideinanded , _? 7 . ' i ' 7 7 ' j 7 . M . Lagrange opposed it , and insisted on a . proposition he " made on the . 12 th " itist ; , to instituie an inquiry into the condition ; of those insurgents and their families , being previously examined . ¦ ¦[ " v
M . de _CroHseilbes asked that the government bill be _fitBt discussed . vx '< ' ' : M . Pierre iLerpux concurred inthemotion of M . Lagrange ; but the Assembly on being consulted ' gave the priority to : the bill . . The urgency , was similarly pronounced . , _"; . .. ,. . _/ - ; - ; M . Lagrange then rose , and said _thatthenuraeroua checks experienced by his proposition , uot only , in the present Assembly , hut also in the Assembly that preceded , it ; proved that his perseverance equalled / his conviction of the _injusticei / of ; the 'Draconian decree which had _plunged-80 many of his fellow creatures into the most atrocious ; misery . Tbe Assembly itself had been . ' moved by their . wretched / 'fate ' , ' , when
it . ordered , 14 , 500 of the 15 , 000 prisoners , conr demned without judge , or \ _: jury , to be restored to liberty .- He never supposed' that the Republic would re-open the dungeons closed by the _' reyolu _; tion of February . He had long grpaned'in those of Royalty ! and having been asked- by ; its / agents if lie would consent to accept his . pardon on > _condition , ' not of becoming ' its friend , but merely : ceasing ; to become its enemy ,, he had indignantly ; rejectedithe offer , reserving to . himself the liberty of combating Royalty , with arms in his hands , whose downfall he anticipated as proximate . None-of the . nien /' about to he transported had been sentenced by _ a " civil or military tribunal ., They had been arrested ' on _\ the
denunciation of the individuals ; who bad . remained concealed in cellars during / the collision / and been detained because they were well known for their republican principles previous to the 24 th of February . He . . was personally acquainted with four of the transported , and he defied the Minister of the Interior to adduce a single act of theirs to tarnish their . characters for honest y and patriotism . / Yet M / Dufaure himself had not been ashamed to propose their , transportation . It . was ' only . when ' an emeute was . fomented atBelle . _IsJe to _serve ; tbe pur _^
pose of the government . that the committee came back on . its decision . He defied / the Cabinet to ini s ' ert in the ' Moniteur' the names of the'insurgents and the motives of their confinement ; - for the public could see tbat they were honest citizens and honourable workmen-and fathers of . families . / In conclusion , ; M ; ' Lagrange reminded the _Asseinbiy , that on this day the head of Louis XVI .,, the victim-of reaction , had , fallen on the , scaffold , . and added ,: tbat a period would ; come , when the . _eountry would ask the Assembly . what it . had done with its brethren . <
-I M . Ferdinand Barrot ; Minister of tlie Interior , contended that the . decree of tbe 27 th / of June , 1848 , had been a measure _pfj _' public / safety . aiid 0 / national justice . . It had been / issued on / the . motion iof M . Pascal Duprat _, ' w _, bose _^ republicanism was not suspicious . - That , decree enacted , that :: those i meii who were arrestedi : with . arms in _theirAhandsjahd still covered with the blood"of their fellow citizens , should be transported to the Transatlantic possessions of France . _^ - Those men _^ ' were ' the same / 'wiip . had overturned monarch y / to thecry ' . of '! _yiyelaRepubli qiie ! ' who , in June , attempted to overthrow the Kepublicin the name of Socialism , and _vrllo , if Social ; ism should triumph / for , ' tbe . destruction of France , would take arms against it in the name of some Other folly . ; .-: . ¦ ¦¦ y- ~ .:. . ; : ;> i ' . ' . _- _i- _-- - ' : >;// X \ , :. <
: M . Jules Favre said , that he wa 3 a member of the committe at whose recommendation the decree of the 27 th of June had been enacted . The general opinion then was , that / the insurrection , liad been specially directed against" society entire , and _tHe committee was under that impression when it prepared the decree . Now , for . the honour of his coun _^ try , be felt justified in declaring-that the charge was unfounded , and that in June , 1848 , there had'been no conspiracy against society . ( Loud murmurs' 00 the Right . ) Since that period ho proof / had' oeeri / adduced to establish the . existence of that " savage conspiracy , and . he would be rather ' / inclined "to be- ' lieve that if _thereexisted a conspiracy it was on the
other side . ( Loud murmurs , on the Right . Cries on the Lefti ' Tbe , conspiracy : of the _JKoyalists and Suonapartists . ' ) 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 bad been the cqntrecoup of the revolution of February . ( Murmurs . ) M . Jules Favrethenproceeded to describe the sufferings / of the . insurgents after their arrest , and the injustice of the , summary manner in which they had been disposed of , in violation of all Divine and human laws . It was _necessary he admitted , to strike at the time a decisive blow ; but society , if . really attacked / could have as eft ' ecluallvsaved itself
by _remainiug within the limits of legality . The philosophers of the nineteen tb century were ; all unanimous - in branding the injustice of : commissioners . Montesquieu had denounced it in most forcible terras . When , under ; Henry VIII . ; a Peer became obnoxious to tbe : Sovereign , be caused him to ; be tried by a commissiohi and he tbHS _se ' nt t 6 ' the scaffold ten Peers he wished to get rid of . M . 'Favrc would tellthe _^ government / By decreeing'the / trial of ihe insurgentsi ; 6 f June ! by commissions you have sent to the Bagiie , and / transpprta ' tion _, the men you regarded as your - ( enemies . ' . They were : human victims , immolated to political vengeance ' - He : then discussed various clauses of the bill , and particularly reproved the'paragraph-added -b y the . ' _cbinmittee ; which condemned the transported to _impvisonment in a fortress on the land of exile . He could / not
conceive the state reason that' commanded such an abandonment of nil the sentiments of humanity , and all legal gurantees amidst ! the profound peace the country now enjoyed . Not'a single member had inscribed his name to defend the bill .- ! The majorityj he knew , wished to vote it , and not to defend it . Fear was tbe great arguiriehtj but that apprehension was affected , and those ' ; who _^ invoked- it ' . : wer . e ' hy ' pp ; elites of . fear . Socialism / was , _noit a ;/ peril , to which all tbat hap * been hitherto respected shouId . be _sacri-( iced . / Instead _pfn destroying it they ,, gave it daily greater _importance . What danger " would there be in : sending the 460 insurgents confined fat Belle-Isle , before the ' ¦ regular tribunals of the- country ? Can the prisoner of Ham sleep / quietly / with the keys of the citadel of _Doullens and ttie ' hulks of Brest under His pillpw ? In / conclusion , ' he earnestl y . ' _. _enlreated his colleagues to reject / spodipus alaw . ' /' , /' . // _'' . ' //
- | M" Antony , Thouret produced some effeptbyreading an extract from the / third volume of Al ' Theirs ' 'History of < _the-Consulate " and Empire ;/ in / which theconduct : of _the-FirstGonsul is severely stigma . ' Used--for decreeing the-deportation of the political criminals of that day without fofm _. bf la ' wil "Mi Sattteyra jifo ' _jjosed an -. ' amendment , to . the / foliowing ' effect : ~* All the _indtyiduals now ; 'imprisoned at / Belle _lale _^ and who " were ordere ' d foHransportatipn by the Constituent Assembly , shall be sent before 1 a _| jury for , trialpr set at liberty . ' ., ' . ¦ . ¦ ¦ , _;¦ . ! - ; . ' ; . _; / / / , /¦ ; . ;• /;
, The , Assembly after hearing M . ; de -Crdiseilhes _agkinstithis' amendment ; and _/ M _^ J ;!/ Favre-iii ; its favour , proceeded to * a'divisipn ,- of ' which the '' fpUoviV ing was the result : ~ Ayes ; 205 ; i Noe _^ r " ity , / 177 : ; _Irilcon ' sequence ' tHfe ' atn _^ _ndmentJ _^ as declared rejected , ahd the House adjburnVd al " a ' _'Quarter . past six p clock .. _-.-, , •;¦ _,, ¦; , j _« , ; . :, , , ;¦; _ : ,. . - ' It is repbrto ' dtliat a repubiicani bar . quet . iis / being organised _forjthe / 24 thof ! Februaryilit : is / said that _Colonel Charrat is active in directing the prepara _^ _tionsjand that be intends to- adopt the programme ofjthe famous banquet / which / was . thevimmediate caiise / pf tbef Revolution 1 of ; 18 4 / 8 _^; * / _ttttat ' > i t / 'ia ; tp _^ a / lt " e place in the _' _same ' pla ' ce _j / and . that / _Za _' be formed ,, composed . ofVNatibnat _^ presentatives , precisely . in . the . same manner asithe prpee 8 siou of . which M _^ _Odiijon _^ _arrotwaSitobethe
leader , andifpr . stopping which _antacid' ' accusation was _presented'tO'ithe Ghahlberof ' ' Deputies , signed by AI . Odillon Barrot himself , AI . Leon Faueher ; and / . a / number-pf / t _^ There : is ; no '' dpubt _thafc . the banquet' will / be stopied liy tbie , police ; lint _the'Repiiblicahs reckon much pn Vhe ' / unpopularity the jproceeding will heap oii the President of the Republic _^ . ; , / r ¦ ¦ _¦/?;• . ' _-., " , ' : ' : _IPabis , _WEDNKspA-r . _^ _ThesittinginitheLegis . lafiye Assembly ; yesterday was' of a most stormy _^ character . ¦> M . Leori ; Faucher , -in the " _conrse of the _discdssioii on _' the bill relative to 'the transportation io _^ _SfP ' l _^';' _^' . 5 _nsu- 'gents of _Juneim ' adb Wverv ' _*& _% W _^ _W _* _J # 3 _^ e ;/ _Wi ; , tiie , doc _^ hes r or _^ _inconsistency _. in . npfff . _wt . _uaUy . _up _^ rted : 'befoxe by , his / silence _.-, Eventu-
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_aliy _^ _Art . 1 , simply _authorisjni the . transportation pf the / insurgents to Algeria _^ as adorted ? , as _proposed' by / the / coinaiittee ; an amendment presented hy M ; Denayrouse to have such of . them ; sent for trial ; before ' a * court ; of / ijustice _; a _» bad ; not been arrested when-the decree of the constituent assembly was passed , being rejected by a majority of 114 ; the numbers being 358 to 244 .
_7- - -. v- _^ _SPAlNv / "• , -9- _r . tyi 1 % bur _accountslfrorii Madrid are of tlae 12 th inst . A seditious proclamation / _addressedto tbe Senators and _diputie _£ of tbe kingdom ,, was m / jcirculatibn . The Ministers _^^ were described inir & sTmiorsio the Queen _andcohstituUpn ; _, and their inipeachment was _accordinglf'demahdedi The authors of that _publicalion-wereuiiknowni - -.- _•^¦ _^^ - ' ¦ - _^^ _-f .-., ' _- _^ _-.- _^ . _..-Letters from Catalonia say that a tremendous hurricane has occurred in that province , uprooting trees that bave / _atood , for centuries ; and doing immense damage _ip-, ; ithe " country . ; The cold is very general throughout ; the country , and ' ' ; ' ; even ,. in / Andalusia where winter , is scarcely ever ' severely ifeit , sentinels have been frozento death at their ' . posts . "' .. " / '"''
; . "v // , . ;' ., / . ' /; , _rrALY . / _/¦ : ... _., ; : ROME , Jan . ioi—Horace / yernet had . arrived here to ' study the localities of the / sceno of war- _^ he will work them up , doubtless , in some fine paintings forthe gallery of Versailles , 'in which the vanity of the , victors will be , of course , sufficiently flattered ; To see , Vernet _, debase ; his fine . ; . talent byperpetuatib g the memory of so unjust and unprovoked an aggression as the French expedition to Rome makes one , indeed , exclaim ., , , . ' ' // : - , _¦;; _, - 'Confusion and misrule ;
, j Seize the vain , pencil of the Gallic school . " ; . _NAPLES , Jan . 10 . r--- ; Since my : last / communication nothing has occurred to alterthe position of the Pope . / The latest commudicatiohs , fi ; om . France / do not , I am informed , by any means favour the designs ' ofthe camarilla . ' It has been stated that the financial difficulty of the Roman States alone prevents the return . of his ; Holiness to . the Vatican ; but I am assured other'and more ,. _^ weighty reasons ; retard that event . Some important despatches have just arrived at _Porticij which do not appear to have oeenacceptable . Butthe'truth'is , the strange ' mystery observed by all who surround' Pius'rX .--eveh among themselyes ~ _-perfectly baffles the possibility of arriving at any . conclusion ... _ 0 ne faot . alone , may .., be perfectly dependediippn , viz . ' , tiiepriestl _** . conclave _^ ndeavour , to combat , by eveiy means . ' ; the prPgrbssiye / _Tmoye
ment of Europe / The cross-keys are to be supported by bayonets ; _' _; _Ghriatianity . is to _deliver' its laws from the , _cannonlsimouth— -the ' Pope , tobethe shuttlecock ofdiplomapy ., _,, / . ' . . ;; . ; _, ' ' , ¦ - vni ; : ;; : The official journal contains , a long . list , of ' _ofBcers and privates who are to receive medals / for tKe ? , _' / glorious expedition iii 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 array , that' he is ' ei ' er Veaily / to ' respond * fe' their increased devotion by his munificent generosity—an army not the last amongst those of . European fame _/ whicb' has conquered revolt . /( The generous sovereign therefore decoiates , ' : & c . he " . , / _VYhat _; a / sad / comedy " ! tTbe Neapolitan soldier decorated ; for'cutting ., the' throat of his Sicilian brother , ahd Jprging the chains of his ownslaveiry ' _Otemjiora ! 0 mort 3 , ' " , ' , " . ' : " ' //• '
. ' . / / . / . _-. _fiERMANY . _, , ..-,- _.,. _;; .. .: 1 BEULIN Jan . 16 . -r- The committee , of the Second Chamber has rejected the peerage byj fifteen votes against six , and the power to entail estates by .. twelve against , nine ., Tbe : . High , Court having been previously thrown but , it _. ap / pears , / scarcely possible _, that any of the leading . propositions in . the Kiiig ' s messa ge / shbuid pass in tb _^ , House . // . / , . / 1 The democrats / were in _ecsttcies , as they thought that ' , the . gam ' e / . w _. _as ,: being _playediinto their iowii bands . They , met ontbe ; 14 tbj " crowned , the busts of Jacoby and •• Waldeck , ' and / sang songs in their honour . The police inter / eredj ' and dispersed the _assemhiv , arresting several bf the parties present . /
HUNGARY ANI > .. AVSmiA . i Letters from Pesth state that ' Ihe . taxation of Hungary has come to a starid * _-still , it being irapossible to collect the taxes , on account of the prevailing want of . a circulating ; medium ; rThe inhabitants of the _coanties on : the _blanks of the Theiss and Pf ; Traii sylvahia have no ; nlbneyl / excepi Kossuth notes ; and though the . Austrian ; government / has _^ ordered ; that these notes should be given up ' and burnt , no nibfe than / five millions have been surrendered ; out of / a circulation of sixty millions . : / _:. . _i : ¦
- The Vienna papers state that in Turkey the _officiaV ' cpmniunicatiphs between _^ the Russian and Austrian Ministers and the Porte are stilt discontinued ; and . tbat ' ihe-two'Ambassadors 'confer ; With the Turkish Minister , onl y in a / few special' cases of ex ¦ ( reihe urgency . -That , the affairs of ; the Orient : are still out of joint is satisfactorily proved by the concentrationof masses of _^ Russian troops _^^ in ' . Bessarabia , and by the armament inTarkey . Itis expected that the first cause of the conflict will be found in the re * organisation of the Danubian principalities ., _,, i / .,
. The ; Magyar Hirlap " , contains an account ot the taleB _. current among the poor peasantry of Hungary , who-still believe that' their "caiise ' inust / succeed . Every day brings Kossuth ) nearer , _^ whose power is greater than in-the best _days'of the revolution . - At bis side rides a great hero _^^ mounted on the creamcoloured steed , / his ' ' name' /' is / unknown , but : they bring the crowri . of Hungary with thero , and arc foilowedby a mighty host ; su ' ch as / the . worid never . saw . /* . It is ' . . ' c ' omp t-sed / : ' of _Magyars--of those who first came / to . Europe under . Arpad—of Turks , Sclar vpniansj - and-Wallachians ; On the other ' side an .
propch whole , herds / of Russians , who have quarrelled with tlie // Austrian ' s ; about , their ; pay—Russians- in green coats _^ -six feet'high _Rnssiaiisj ; the greatest aiid strongest Russians that couid b _^ 1 found . , On another side tbe English arecomingiwitb ' all their ships , and have already cast ; anchor before Debretzin !; The French , ' again , all in redcoats , by sea / and land _. are at _Sarospataki and the . Prussians have shut : out all _retrt-aton the other sid'e . V And for talking . of such dangerous matters have t _^ senbur ' g been publicly flogged , by order of ; Colonel Urban ; . • ¦ : ¦• _.- ¦ ¦ " - ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ - 'iy _> _- _- ' ' / - ' - ¦¦¦
' _i Great excitementhas . been createdin Pesth by the arrest of the / Bishop , of drosswardeiii , wliich took place immediately after the publication , of _: the octroyed _constitution for the empire ; of- Austria . Complaints _'¦ ¦ are loud throughout . / Hungary of the great _increase in the number of wild ; beasts , and the inability of the inhabitants to destroy them inconsequence of their _i being deprived of their arms . ; Madame KossuTH ;—We have much pleasure in announcing that the wife of fKossuth has escaped from Hungary , and had reached Belgrade on her way to join her husbjand at _Shumla . -- af " _y , i \" cU / s . / ' . // _:,,. __ j'fhe / . * own correspondent' . of the Times at Vienna , is a teacher of languages , who would , do much better
to . _stick-tohis : Lmdley Murray , andhisquaimanbus , than meddle with politics , of which he knows about as much' as ai Greenwich pensioner-of tight _^ rope / dan _^ ing : ~ -DuilyNews . ; . 77 7 // ., •// . / .. ¦ ' _X . _^ X _^ _, AnptUer . biiridle of Kossuth paper has been burned at _Presbiirg . It is calculated that ,- oLthe sixty millions put in circulation by the revolutionary ' government , only rive millions'have been given / up ;/ .,: ¦";';¦;';; ' [ . The _^ _esdl / ifet _' _traa' / contains ; forty _^ Kree _^ aPntphoe ' s which haye /' . been ' ; published "b y \ the / Cpuiyt _" "M artial at Arad . / All those condehined wereAustrian officers _; who had fought to the last in the ' Hungarian army ; twenty-three of these _unfortunate men who were sentenced to death have had thfeir punishment '
commuted to : sixteenyears' ; imprisohriientl ; , ; : the ' others will be confined in a fortress for _siXj / _tenj /' ahd _twelve . _yeaivs / ' - / . _( ' / _, / _, ¦// /¦ _::. : ¦ „' ,, _iv . :- _;¦ :: _¦; : _-.. - " '¦ ¦ . /¦ _j The Serbs . — -The . ' -South Sclayoniari Gazette ' epiitains a long article on . the state ''"" of the Wpy woj i ' diiia , ' from / which _^^ we quote the conclusion . ; ' During the last few _idays the -reports have : been repeated respectingHhe / increasing discontent / of the ; serbs . in the / _AYoy vyoriina / , 11 is / said ;; that the . lower- orders _Ja _. re in . a state of ferment ; then-that ; there was / a plot against / one or the other of the judges _/ and _then anjother ' against' General Mayerhofa , / _T'he _, other day _, we _, w , ere ; infornqed that _Cprnmissipner / Stpjceyich had caused / twdj . advocates ,: in jturoa ; _Bilcevich and
Popoyich to be , arrested , and . their papers fseized . ' Very . 8 bon : _iafterwards > it was said that Judge Marin Kbvicb , _of-Irregy'had bt ' en ; murdered 1 , by the _prjpui lace . ¦ ' Later again ; the saUie was said of Judge _$ antaj at j Riirnai _1 // The ) : s ta ' _ndtird of ' r ' eVol _^ h _^ _ijaid / 'to / bave _lieen / _i-aise ' _l'in-S _^ _miim ¦¦'¦ 7 rX _% ° '" ' - _. _' _; _' _. _- _" _. _"¦' . ' . _' - " / ' _^ iTratsslyvania . ! — Tran 8 ylvariia / , at time exhibits the extraordinary .. aspect ; of a . country without , persons : capable , or . _willing ; to fill all the offices required for- the i civil-. administration . Jn _Transylvania particularly / according _' ' to ' the ' _Ost . DputschePos . t / _ahe ' _Wallacks being totally incabable frpnvignorarice , m _< _thW'Magyarr refusing ' ' because they _^ are _. unwilling'tp _' aid in ; 'deVtVoving the ' constitul
tion of tbeir country , ' ihe Austrians . have bee ' nobhged to bring in ,-Germans ' ; froin _^ Gallicia aiid , the _Btikovina _; : who , are ,, totally ¦; _, i gnorant--of : both the . Magyar :, and Wallack , languages . raAnd ; these men : have the slight tfUk . imposed _^ on them oi introducing an entirely new" code-of laws , new forms of judica !" ture ~ iii fact , of revolutionising ' _the'institutions _' of a whole nation . The' consequence is tliat the country iS | in a complete state / of anarchy , andnot one of the raany nations , who / compose , it , but , are discontented . From .. Herm ' _anhstadt ' . ' we hear that . 14 , 125 : head -of cattle hav . e heen . -attacked by . Hthe i murrain ; in « _Transylvania , andi 7 i 0 oi baye died > in consequence . ¦• -K 1 An _occasionaUcoriespondent , writing from Vienna
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on tbe Oth inst ., says : — * : _o _*" ie | iMwa . ' irom _iransyi vania is highly _distressing ' -. / _Sfiofild'tt-rea'lly come to an open _^ rebellio % i _^ nst _enditathltKe murder of all the Saxons _^^ _bBlRuman'ani _Wacbian _* _. and CzechB , have aUjunitfeoJ _^ gain _^ _tp _' em _^ ilh _. ' i will have nothing more t tp ; dr _||* ffith ; _jtha * c _^ r |! iM Vienna , by whom they bave been " 8 & oft * _en-bem" < ed ' POLISH AUSXRIA _^ -On _-ie-rst , a battalion of the regiment of Nugent marched from Leraberg , _where-they bad _^ been stationed , to enlist recruits , tHrough _Preskow , _aGalliciaJj town , with 20 , 000 inhabitants , on ; their way ' to | Vienna : they were officered / by Germans . _'To express their scorn for the
_Gallicians 4 _hese officers fa 8 tened » the Polish cockade on to the collars of tbeir dogs , a scandal _^ which was admirably calculated tojfnn the ha > red ; snjoulding " . in the Polish province _againsfc the- 'Austrians to / the fiercest < pitch ' r and- to- give- a-fresh' impulse to the _disposition daily growing / among the _/ . _Galliciansi to throw themselves into the , arms of Russia ; , .. On this saraemarc _^' an _bficerwaij quartered . in ; the mansion of _CountZelihsky , where . be was treated witb hospitable attention . ' ' After 'he went away it / was , discove red that ' . _he'Kad offered' to his-entertainer snch a beastly and _ruffiaulyjinsult _^ s cannot here be'described . The mere _Recurrence , of _aisingle outrage of the ' kind , speaks '/ yplumes _, _jfpr / the spirit which animates the ' Austrian officers , ' .
vTURKEY _ANDRl-JSSIA , ., , . , _ ,. Constantinopi . 'J , / Jan / / _S . _' rrAustria ' , has hot yet renewed diplomatic _^ relations with tlie / Porte . A few days since I wrote toydiiby the / French manof-war ; stearaer , which was suddenly ordered to Toulon byjGeneral Aupick with despatches "for the government at Paris .... T then told you ; that ; . the difference between . _jTurkey and Russia , had / ceased , to aU outward appearances , to exist ;/ for that M . de Titoff had , 'in the usual form , ; re-established friendly _relations _' . with-the Povb . The-Turkish government ; were , willing / to : expel _;; the'Polish refugees . concerned in . the .. late ; insurrection ; in Hungary , ' _^ ith ; ihe exception of rthose , who had become Mussulmans : but all Poles resident in the
Ottoman' Empire since / the revolution of " 1830 , and who have not _sincetheh been guilty of anypolitical offence , should , it was stipulated , , remain- ; nnmblested _; _., To all these terms M . de _. TitpS consented , ! and , ori . tho 31 st 6 f tDecember , diplomatic . relations ! were renewed between the Porte and the Envoy of the Czar , and'all ' political ' and commercial prpceedings between the / Government of the Sultan and the Russian Embassy , are . now carried on ; in the same manner as before _. the question _of ; extradition existed . ' .:. / ,,,... _, „ ¦ .,.: ¦ _,.-,,,,, : ,,, ; _,.,. _.- ,, ; ; , , ¦ - _¦¦¦ Austria had demanded thatthei , Hungarian refugees should be confined , to a town in the . interior ofthe Ottoman Empire _^ ' To this the ' . Ministers of the Porte consented ; : and Kutiah , in Asia Minor ,
was agreed ; upon , as j a . safe ; and proper- place . for thoir _residnneo ., ; Thus ; a , diffioultios _goomod to _ba _dorip ; away / with , and when ' M / de Titoff announced that he intended to re- ; establish' relations with the Porto , few doubted but that' CptintSturmer would follow ; his ' example :- The Austrian _•; government , however , ' though they consented /; that / the . Hun-/ -arian _refuffees shoujd be . confined to / the . town of Kutiah , " made kno _^ h " to the , Sultan ' s / Ministers , th ' _i-bugn their Envoy ; at' Cpiistaritindple , that / they would' not renew friendly relations _unless _. it' / was left in their hands to determine the' _-lengtli ' of time during which Kossuth and his friends shonld be detained as prisoners . in the . Ottoman Empire . ;; The Porte , animated , by a spirit of justice and humanity ,
as well as from a sense of its own ; dignity , refused to give such -a power * to' / Austria ; for if , in the first instance , ; it objected to beirig assistant executioner . to / the . '; government of " Vienna , it is quite as little disposed ; in the ; present / instance , to act tlie part ' of jailors . > The / Ottoman / Ministry , made known _^ p C / ouni , Stiirmer that they were willing , to confino the Hungarian ' ' refugees to' ! .. tho _^ town of Kutiah , tilt " order should' be * established in Hungary , and ,-that country once in / repose ; they would then ; restore / Kossuth ¦ and ,. his . companions to liberty ; ' , and tbey added , that tbey would reserve entirely to themselves the right to determine , the period at which these refugees , should bo . set at liberty .. ¦ ' _¦¦ _•' ¦ / : _- " --: x- :: _-:- '• _^ - ; ; ; . : : A special courier , arrived at the Austrian , Embassy _, on the , 3 d : inst . with : despatches from the
Austrian government , for , Count _Sturmet ' _, on , the following day / the Internuncio had a long interview with' Ah 'Pasha , ' the / Minister of Foreign Affairs , and : he had another ' conference with the Bcis Effendi this morning .: "Whatever eloquence M . de _Sturmor may have . employed the Porto still continues firm , and , as far as theTurkish Ministry are concerned , Kossuth ' and his companions are safe from having the time of thoir captivity determined by General Haynau . >/• _; - ;'* - ; Advices froin : 'Shumlaha _** e-reached us down to the _lTtht . of December .: Kossuth was suffering in health .. The Turkish population \ behaved . to . the emigrants with the greatest Kindness , but the obvious _gpbd-wiil ' ofthe Porte was cramped by fear of Russia and _distrust of British support irf resisting it . It . wasreported thati am attempt had been discovered to _assassinateithe late president governor .,
_' !' . : _¦< : . UNITED : STATES . : .-. : ¦ : ¦ . The royal mail steam-ship , Cambria , Capt . Leitch , arrived alt' Liverpool on Tuesday ; morning , ; having sailed from New Xork on tho 9 th inst . . Washinoton , Jan .. 10 .--The . House of Representatives has beeii employed tlie whole week in ineffectual attempts to elect a clerk . ' The " senate came tb no resolution yesterday , on Ocneral" Cass ' s motion , to suspond diplomatic relations with Austria . Mr . Seward proposed to : grant : lands tp . the Hungarian refugees .... ' .,.,-, ' ; :., -. ' _,. / ' , /'¦/ . / , ' . / ' - AloRE Eefug ** es .--Two other refugees , Nicholas Imber and BrickmeyerFelirkasch , ' whom we understand onco belonged 'to the unfortunate Students ' Legion ; 'have arrived-in the ship ; Gladiator . They were . received , on landing by Hevr _Reinhardt of Greenw _^ ich-st .,, and shortly after their arrival paid their respects ; to the Governor Ujhazy and Mdlle . who receivedtheniwith
Ugell . o , _^ ; : open arms . —New _YorK Tribune , i '< 7-r ' _- 'K ¦ / ' : /' ¦ _' ''¦ ¦ A New , ARTisi .-rAmong ; the . passengers by the Cambria on her last trip . were Edward Eemeyni and his , brother ,. Hungarian refugees . Air . " R . is a violinist , who , as we are assured'by letters of introduction wl } k \\ he brings ws from Hamburgli , is worthy to be named along with the celebrated viftuosbs of Europe . ;; During . the war of Independence he laid aside his oviolin . for the sword , . and . served nnder Klapka and . _^ afterwards under , Gbrgey . r He . was _presentfa ' Uhe f atal _^ _suiTende ' r of Vilagos , but not being willing ' to p ' _alrticipate in . it , fled in disguise with his violihaVhis companion . ! Asa ' _wanderihgmusicianlhe-made , ' his . way . " without difficulty : through Hungary an ' d , Austria . j ; From . _Tienna he went I to Italy , and ' . thence . to England , and afterwards _, to Germany . Atirahiburghhe perfprmed in a concert ; _- . r . ; .. _¦¦• ¦ ;¦• -J an EFFECTUAL CURE F . - ' ¦• ¦ : ¦;¦¦• " . AN EFFECTUAL CURE
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given jur mv _, »* w _wupreyenny Lind also assisted . He ' _proiroses tbgive ' one or more concerts in . New York , wh . en _/^ _ejaje _/ _cpnfident-j that-not only his ' _positfon but his uncommon talents will assure him crowded and appreciating audiences . — _-iVfew-York TribuM . ¦ ¦ - ¦ _-. , ? , <' , " - 'Mil l 7 " , ' ¦ Ampng , the 4 emigi ; ants . that have -lately arrived in this , country , is // i ) r . ; Florian > Moerdes ,. late ,, Minister of thV'Interior " of . the Government" of Bavaria and Baden , during'its brief Republican existence . ' _jfe ia _atiGalvoston , accompanied-by his lady , ! daughter of the . Count Armansperg , how ; Erime . "Minister of therkipgdom ; of-Bavaria ,: and his , brother , iMajor Francis Moerdes , / late of / the -First Kegiment of _Drajgoons of Baden . , '; / , 7 ' ' , / _-: '¦ _'"""* ; ' /"
_WEST _. INWES , ;; / Hatii . —War is again / devastating : this _unfortunate island / Tbe Dominicans had taken some small towns . andvilia ' gesbelph ging tothe Haytians , which they destroyed 'by / setting the houses in them on fire . . It is thought Soulouque will- suffer a defeat . The Dominican , squadron . had captured a / fleet of Haytian vessels . General Baez . had _audresaed another proclamation to the Haytiahs , threatening the whole of the towns . with destruction' and : pillage and altogether ' a war oYexterihina ' tion arid of revolting bloodshed appearsto have again commenced .
Ir Lunkit-O Are Liable To One Ihseasemore Tlian Another , Or If There Aro Anyi Particular Affections Ofthe Human Body We Requu-Eto Havea.Knowledge Of Over The Rest, Itis Cermat Cia98 01 Uisoraers Ireatea Ot Tne And
Ir _lUNKit-o are liable to one iHseasemore tlian another , or if there aro anyi particular affections ofthe human body we _requu-eto havea . knowledge of over the rest , itis cermat cia 98 01 uisoraers ireatea ot tne and
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tainly m new . Improved edition ' of the " Silent Friend , " The authors , in thus sending forth to the world . another edition of their _inedical work ' cannot refrain , from expressing their grati . fication . at the continual success ' attending their efforts , which , combined with the assistance of medicines , excki . sively of their own preparation , have been the happy cause of mitigating- snd averting- the mental and physical miseries attendant on those peculiar disorders ; thus proving _tba fact ,
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; _- . r . ; .. •;• -J an EFFECTUAL CURE F . - . ' ¦• ¦ : ;• ; " . AN EFFECTUAL CURE FOR PILES , ; FISTULAS , he . ; : _'T _^ _Ibernethy's PILE ; ; d _^ _; * _tVTiat a painful and noxious disease is tlie . Piles ! nnd , compavatively , how few of ' the afflicted have been permanently : cured by ordinary appeals to ' medical skill . This , no doubt , arises ' from the use of powerful aperients too frequently administered-by the profession ; indeed , strong internal medicines ! should always be avoided in . all cases of this complaint . TKe ; proprietor . of the above . Ointment , after years ' of , acute suffering , ' placed himself under the treat * ment of that eminent surgeon , Mr . Abernctliy ; was by him _restoredtoperfect- healtli ; And has enjoyed it ever since without the slightest return of-the . disorder , over aperiod of fifteen _ijears , ( during which . time the same Abcrnetliian prescription _hasibeen the means of healing a . vast 'number of desperate cases , both in andout of the proprietor ' s circle of friends , most of which cases had been under medical care , . and some of them' for a Very considerable time . Aherhethy ' s Pile Ointment was introduced to the _publicly the desire of many _Whohad been perfectly healed by its _appm-atipn ; anilisihceitsintrbductiPn _. thefaihe of this Ointment has ' _sproaifar and wide ; even the medical profession , _aluavs slow . and unvrilling to . acknowledge the virtues of any medicine not prepared by themselves , do noyv freely and frankly admit . that abernethy _' s _Pilo Ointment is not only a valuable preparation , but a never fading _remedyin _evei-y stage and Tarietyofthatappallingremedy . " > _- _'i'' _>) _fi-n-. •; . is :-.. . . _' i ; i ¦ ' , !;¦; ¦ - ¦ _- . - _,-.. •¦¦ : . ; ¦' .: , ! . •• • -..- J ! Sufferers ' from . the Piles will- not repent giving the Ointment a trial Multitudes of . cases of its efficacy might be _^ produced , if the nature -of thocomplamt did not render those who have been _curedi unvrilling to publish tlieir names . . ' > i : > : •; ., ; : ? -p ..: " _,- \ i _..-. ; .. ; _,-, _,::,,-- ¦¦ _:-,: j . ¦ ' ¦ ¦ 1 :. _.- -,-., ' ¦ : ; : ' _¦'• ' ' - ' - ' ¦ ' ¦¦¦ ¦¦ ' ' - _* _- ' ' > _: _' . J : i : > i . _,- ,. : ' fi , y . Besure . to ask for ¦ _ABEKNETHY's ' . PILE ' OINTMENtI '; The public , are requested , . to be on their , guardagainst noxious compositions , sold at low prices , and to . observe that none can possibly be genuine , unless the name of C . King _isjprinted onthe Government Stamp affixed . to each pot , 4 s . 6 dj ; which ' is the lowest price the ' proprietor is enabled t sellit at , owing to Uie great expense of the : Ingredients . _;!^; . ; ' t ; 1 ; : ? , _j- _> " , :, ¦ ' : _- ,. ¦• ... '
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' - ! _-:-l _^ '! '' _:-V ' ' ¦ " _" y ' _\' ' ; _r _^; _V : _;; . c Q RN ; S ; and ; _Mnlo-n-s , _;;; ' _: _' ; _.--: ' - ¦ _" - ¦ ' : I ;• • . '• ' ¦¦ •¦;• . - - _Patronised b y _^ ie Royal . Family ,. Nobility , ¦ Clergy _,-d' 6 . ; . ;;<> . Is a sure nnd speedy cure fdr _. _^ hose ; severe ahndynnces , without causing tbe least puin or inconvenience ; , unlike all _other-reraedies for Corns , . its operation ; is ; suchas tb render the _cutting ,-of-Corns altogether unnecessary -indeed , we may _say _^ the . practice of cuttmg _Cpi-ns is ' at ; all times highly . dangerous , and hasbeen frequently attended with lament-? " ? 1 cc "i se _lHj '"|? e _? 'i ' ' ; 'f \ e . fits , liability to mcrease _; then- growth '; it adheres with ' the most gentle pressure . produc « s an " ' te _cbr _^ aho _^ _luaoii _^^^ ' _^" '' _' _^ " ° _^ _> y i _* _^ _rsevw-iiice . in its application , . entirely eradicates the most invete" ' , _- ? _yN _^ _* _- _^ _flav ! _" _bj 8 n _m _from _^ pwarfebf _oneh-m _^ ed Physkan _^ and _SuigeonsW ' tht _fereatest _esalnenoe _, as W _W * _WW aa' -y . PfccMs of both ; Anny aad Navy / and nearly dne thousand private letters from & gentry in town and _cogutry , _sptiakijigmhigli . tcrms of thisyaluahle remedy . ' "' .. : ' / : -f _t-v T / _'pfi 1 , _; - ... ; . Prepared . by John , Fox , mboxesat . _ls . ljd . _ior thre * small boxes in " one fr > r ' 2 sV 9 d ., and tube had ; with full _directioas _^^^ ¦ ¦ _"W _' _-flT a d reta"l , ™ _edicin « i vendorsifi town and countiy . _^ Tho-: _'go-iuirio has the name . of John Fox on tho stamp .. _A- . 2 _s . 9 d ., box cures the most _bbdurataicoras . '' :: t _: {} , -X ' _.-,, _.,.,..,...,, . _) ... _-liV _- _-iw _' _rw _^ " ' ¦ " ' _*'"'¦ ' " - _Abernethj- _s _^ _de , Omtinent , _^^ . Paul _. _' s Corn Tlastor _/ ahd _Abernefliy' _^ _-Pila Powders , are sold by the following respectable Chenusts _andDealersiaPatentMedicinos : — V t : i : ' ' " i bl _) 7 : » v , - ri _w . ' r ¦ _,-.,, . _?¦ • _...-, * ¦ _.- „ .. _* ,. U _P-Jf' _^ _' _^ _S' _^' . _^^ n ' B _*^^ St _/ Paul _' _sighurcb-yard ;; ' Butter , , 4 , Cheapsiae ; _. _Kovbery _, St . Paul s . ; ' ffltton ,, _,- _^ pw Churoh-yard ; . Johnston , ' . 16 , Greek-street ; Soho , ' and 68 , _ComhiU 5 Sanger , 130 , Oxford-street ; , ¦ y _mouglipy aad Co ., 61 , Bish ' _ojsgate-sti-eet Without ; Owen , 52 , Marchmont-street , : _Burtonwe ' sceat ; : Eade , ( j 89 ; _sGoswoll-, ; reet ; . Pr ? ut ,, 239 , Strand ; HannaV arii'Co . _- , 63 , Oxford-Btreet ; Prentis , S 4 „ _Edgeware-road ; . aud reUil _. byjall . respect . _aWochem-stsand medicin * vendors in _^ London . •' : ' j , ' " " ' 7 "' . ' """'' :, , ' ;''"" '"'" , _*" ¦ ¦ _Codntrv Aj » EOT 8 . _-iTBames > nd Newsome , Heatdii , 8 meet « m ; Roin . har ' dt and sons ; J . C . Brownoi 48 , Briggate ; Denton , Garland , Maw , Bea »; Harvey , Haigh ; late Tarb _^^ Khpdes , _BoHand Brook ; Lord , 'R . C . Hay ; Medical ; Hall , Leeds ; Rimmington , Jfaud and _WiIson _^ _Hogerson , Stanneld , Bradford ; . Hartley , _Dentom-tYate _^^ Hurst , CardweU , _\ GeU ; and Smith ; Wakefield ; Pybus ; Ba rnsley ; _KhowIbs , Thome , Brook , and _Spivey , _HudchjrsfieUi } . _Hbdaon , Keighley _; _. Brooke , Doncaster ; Matthews , Greaser , Dri _^ eld , _^ Stevenson , iWWtby } Bolton ; Blanshard and CoM Hargrove , Fisher , Otley , Lmney , York ; rram _* rngh _^ Howden ; Horsby , _Wrangham , Jefferson , lialtbn j Buckali ; _ScMOoreigh- ; Smith , _Purby , Brid _^ _Woightoa ; . GledhUl , ; OM Delph : PrioslSey , Fox , Pontefract , ; _Mby _Wetherty ; ; Slater ,. Bedtde ;;; . Dkon , Northallerton j Ward , ; Ric _" wnoneV ; Ward ; Stokesley ; Foegitt , : aid Thompson , Thirsk , ; Monkhouse , Barnard Cast le ;\ " " ease , Darlington JeB « iott , Sioekto »; Ballard , Abingdon _;; Thompson , _^ Armagh _^ ; j ; a * meson ,. _Abe * Si « en ; Potts , Banbury ;< Kirig , ' Bath ; Win-BaU _. _Birtmigha'h ; _TarWisbh , - Kackburn ; Bradbury , Bolton . ; _^ oble _; _iBostORijt Beaoh ; iandiCoj Bridgewater ; ' Brew , Brighton , ; Porrisand Co . ; 'B _^ stol ; Haines _)^ _Bi-oaiesrove . Sn _> 6 tt , vfiuckingham _^ Bowman , _^ u ry ; . Cooper ; Canterbury ; Jefferson ,, _CwUsle '•/ . E » gle ;;; Ctelinsford _¦; Fletoher , ( _Jiiester : Smith ,. Co Chester . ; . _RoUaspn , Coventry f Bowman , Ohor . ley ; , Pike Derby . ; Bjers _. _- _. Devonport _^ Baker , East Retford ; Evans , i < _n-i . ; Hodgspn ; E _^ ter _r Garbutt _. _^ ateshead ; ; Raimes , ' _iEdinburgh ;; Henry ,- Guernsey t _NfJ son , _^ Glas gow . ;! Simple , Greenock- ; _^ _yinjs , Hereford-Butler , High Wyoomb ; Cussons , HoWstla v NoWe : ' Hull ; Fetch ; Ipswich ' : Tuach , Inverness ; Grebn ; _-Jerseyj _^ _Wner , Lancaster , Harper , LeaminBton _t ' Butler Dublin ' - CaeBer , : _LeieeW _Aspinall , Liverpool ; Co e _^ i » _n '' JJ _^ n : _Gookln _^ L > dl w - Wigr , Lynn _; _WrilhtMacclMfieldh _^ LessevTsn ohes ? er . ; L | n | ley ; Man 8 6 _^ NbrtH : Sliields J _* _V"" * Lm 4 _& _j *& _Q _' i _^ _ti _^ _zm _' / , } to _** iie ( vPlymouth ; Gowans _. _M _fef th Sand Can _Sun-, - ¦ wa _&^ Ais _Aoiaria _;—Mesars _. _^ _BQltoiC BAunsbw : 4 ; anaQoii 'ij ' ro _^ te _^ _'ffi «| -i _^ _.. , -X _<^\ _-:.
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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/ns3_26011850/page/2/
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