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4V - ,, , THE BLOOD . '•
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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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i ^ Ours bodies . have been entirel y formed , art lioiv forming , ' and will continue to be built up during Life fromihe'Blood . This being the case , the grand object istokeeptliispreciouS' fiuid ( iheblopd ) in apure and healthy stale , for mthoidthis purity , disease xvillshow itself in some way or the other . M ' -U ... ' . ; ¦ ¦• . ' . It is universjally admitted thai this Medicine will purify the Blood better than any other , and will conqilevdisease . . ' ,-, , / .: .
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EXTRAORDINARY SUCCESS OF . THEfNEW ; - ' | - ^ - ; - . ¦ ' ¦« ' ¦ '" ¦/;¦ -jllE-MEpT ' . ! •• •• ¦;• ' . „ ' ; ,: ; . ' Whicjihdsnever been Jciiowh id-fail . —A cure effected ¦ : " ¦ i . '• ¦ ' - -j or the Money : returned . ' ., \' . - . ; " ' '¦" . PAIN'S IN TIIE . - . BACK ; GUAVJEL ,.-LUMBA 6 ' 6 , SHEU . HATISM , ; GODT , DEBILIXY , STRICTURE , GLEET . ^ -c
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f ) N THE PREVENTION , CURE , AND V- / ; Genoral . character of SYPHILUS , STUICTDRES , Affections of the PROSTRATE GLAND , VENEREAL and SCORBDTIC ERUPTIONS of Hie face and body , Mei-curial oxcitement , &c , followed by a mild ; successful and expeditious mode of treatment . ¦ * ¦ .- i . . - ; . t . ' • • - ¦¦ " ¦ Thirty-first edition , . -:: .. - Illustrated 'by . Twenty-Six ; -AnatomicaV EngravinL's on Steel . Now : and improved Edition , enlarged to 1315 paces ust published , pri « 2 s . . Cdj or by post , direct from the Establishment , 3 g . - 6 d : in postuge ' stamps . ' " ™ SILENT FlUEND , " . ' alMcdical Yfork on Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Sceondai-y Sumptoms 'Gonorrlrci &c , with a PKESCRIPTION PQtt TklltSvENllON physical exhaustion , and decay 6 ttheifrhme , from the eftccts of sohtnry indulBonee ,. andi the injui-lous . conse ' eiuences oi ^ , ? " . eoiM 5 !; uF I"' 1 " 1 Observations o n thebbligatiom of JlAKKtAOE ami directions for
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agevyet , from what they have experienced in inquiring into thanature and causes " of thess infectious complaints ( from their most AmpU condition m » ft 0 { „/« , most dangerm jmHi ' ' they have always'entertained the possibility of their tbctentiok and removal . ; Messrs . B . and L . PEaEiand ; Ce-., - Surgeons , may be consuited as usual , at 19 , Beraer « -gtreet , Oxford-street , London , from eleven to two ,-and . from five to eiebt in the evening : " and on Sundays from eleven to ona . —Consul * tation Fee £ 1 . : >'•¦ ' : ¦ :
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Brother Chartists Beware ! " of Wolves in Sheeps * - , ' - ¦ "" . . Clothing . '' ' . . RUPTDB . ESEPPECTDALLY CURED WITHOUT A ' •'• ¦ " . , " ¦¦ TRUSS !! ¦ :-THE ' GRUEL IMPOSITIONS upon tho ' : unwary by agarig of youthful self-styled doctors , some of whom for obvious reasons assume , foreign names ,, and others . the , names of-eminent English practitioners , forge testimonials , from Journals which never existed , and have recourse to other practices : equally , base . Such for in 9 tanco ,. as profes 6 inn ; to produce Whiskers , Hair , &c , ia a . few week ' s , and ,. advertising under the ; name of females to' give 'the character of persons from their writing , should induce those afflicted with Rupture to use great judgment as to whom they apply for aid . ' " ' :. ' Testimonials from numbers of the Faculty and patients who have been cured of Ilupture , establish the efficacy of DR . ; DB ROpS' REMEDY in every ease hitherto tried . It is perfectly free from danger ; causes no pain , confinement , or inconvenience , applicable to both sexes , and all
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Brother Chartists ! : Beware of " Wolves in Sheep s = ' . : . ' .. . CloMng ! ' ¦!" , ; Sufferers are earnestly cautioned agavnst dangerous imitations of these Pills by youthful , self-styled doctors , who have recourse to various schemes' to get money ; such for instance as ' professing to cure , complaints for 10 s . ouly advertisng in the name of a female , and pretending to give the character of persons trom their writing , and what is equally absurd , promising to produce hair , whiskers , 4 c , . in a few : weeks ; but , worst of all , ( as it is playing with the afflictions of their fellows ) , daring to infringe the proprietors' right by makitig truthless assertions , and advartising a spurious compound under another , the use of which will assuredly bnnjr annoyance and disappointment .
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P | R . : DE ROOS' . CONCENTRATED U aUTT ^ E VmE has , in all instances , proved a speedy and permanent cure , for every variety ef disease arising from solitary habits , youthful delusive excessc . and . mfettion , such as Bon ^ vrhoeaj . ; syphilis , &c , which ! T » v ?\ H l ° m 'Tf t ^ traent-by mercury , copaiba , " J , ' ! ° "' deadly poisons , invariably end in some of te following forms of secondary symptoms , viz ., pains and * » " i ^ JT es ' . ' 3 P ? ntB and . gland . , ' skin ' eruptions , blotches and pimples , weakness of the eyes , loss of hair , S » Lf ' decay of the nose , Bore threat pains in the W ^ , n « 'T ! i ° " ' , « . pUes , fa ., diseases of tlie kldlieyS , Jind . bladdoi-, gloet , etrietvu-e , ' - seminal weakness , utoveus and . sexual debility , 1 OSS of memory , and finally f ?™ % ! ° f . ' owslness . lassitudeandu'CMeralprostraf uiisSKahu Unte skilfuUy nested , soon ends ia ' . 'Intke » reoen ( 2 gn and remosarof the foregoiiiL' symptoms , anil as a restorative of manly Yigour , whether debcient lrom , early imprudence , or residence in hot dimatesi &pv this medicino has obtained an unparalleled popularity . . ' - .,:-. ¦ ¦ . ¦ . ' . ¦ ¦ -.., ; From ifs properties in removing leuc ' orrhcEa , or whites . headache , giddiness , indigestion , palpitation of the heart , nf ^ w 5 « T ' "! ° f J ' i ; "its » , n"' ™ ne 6 S , and all disorders S'f » le ?; . it > sadniu-ably adapted-t 0 > that class of suf-« . f ' l / v tOn 1 / punhc 9 i " strengthens the wholo ^ & ^ k ** Ti ? new l \ uve ' » a Heh blood , and sooa lcstows the invalid tp- sound health even after all other l ^ frfj— J ,- v ^ y a depressing tendeacy ) have failed j in this lies the . ' grand secret of its universal ; Sent seeureiypacked , to any part from the establishment only , price lls per bottre , or four qudutitieB inoue Inrga bottle - for 38 s :, - with ull instructions' for use , on receipt Office m 0 Urit ° ffice Ol ' ^ at the Il 0 lll 0 rO
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' - HEAD DR . DE ROOS' CELEBRATED -ffOKK , THE . MEDICAL ADVISER , tbe G 4 th ¦ ¦*• • thousand of which is just published , containing 1 U pages , illustrated with numerous beautifully coloured engravings , descriptive of the Anatomy and Physiology of the
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THE WAR IN SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN . Rexssbcrh , July 31 . —The head-quarters of General Willisen have been here for two or three days , though the main body is in position some miles to the northward , and the avant-guard still remains * in Schesvedt and the neighbourhood . Having arrived here late on Monday night , I made it my business yesterday to visit the several places at which the army is encamped , in order . to judge of its condition and feeling from personal observation . I yesterday visited different localities , some in this immediate neighbourhood , others at a greater distance , but , putting all together , I believe I saw up . ¦ wards of eighteen thousand men . and in hot a single battalion did I perceive the slightest trace of diECOungement or want of confidence , even ini thosei Dana-Eons which suffered most on Thursday last . -One at
the latter , a corps of riflemen , entered the field on fbO morning of the 25 th with 1 . 2 oO sen . ana is at present able to muster bu t 900 . Several other corps wffered very severely , bnt in not one single instance w » 3 the slightest reproach or disafectwn evidenced . The four guns lost ( not five , as stated in the Danish general ' s report ) have been replaced by others . The whole army may now be said , with one exception , to be as comp lete and as numerous as it was on the morning of the 25 tb . The exception is an unfortunate one , but it is not without a remedy . It is the paucity of officers . Several corp 3 of from 900 to 1 , 300 men have at this moment not more than six or seven officers . The remedy , however , is at hand . Applications are daily being made from officers from varions parts of Germany , whose devotion to the cause of their country and a sincere appreciation of its justice has led them to abandon their foraer
ser . The town of Rendsburg presents a scene of great bustle and activity . In and about the fortifications there are encamped and quartered about 5 , 000 men . \ Gthout the fortifications large bodies of men are busy throwing up field-works levelling hedges and other necessary operations . At some distance to the / east and west of the town are the camps of several battalions , the white tents of which have a greater realitv of war than the snug green huts in which the men housed in the woods of Idstedfc . Rendsburg is very strongly fortified , and would be able to stand a long siege should the fortune of war bring the Danish army further south . ^
When the Danes advanced into Flensbnrg . it was expected , and indeed in fact announced by the Danish general , that the inhabitants would be well treated , and that none should be imprisoned or sent off to Copenhagen . The expectations have not been fnl-: filled , and the promises made have ! been broken . Wherever they can lay their hands on an unfortunate official of the Statthalterschaft , or a prisoner whose German tendencies are known , the harshest measures are instantly adapted . Without a moment's warn-; . ing these unhappy individuals are seized , handcuffed , ; and hurried off to Copenhagen . Even . old men , : women , and children , are not respected . Among . _ . the prisoners carried into Flensburg is an old man of
.. seventy-three , and a young girl of twelve . The former is accused of having shot General Schleppegrell , and the latter of being sister to a young man who guided a party of Schleswig-Holstein dragoons - through a moor a day or two before the battle of Idstedt . Though the accusation in the latter case may be true , it does not justify so barbarous a measure ; in the former it is utterly unfounded . The Danish report of the battle , which you will have seen a < Jay or Wo ago in the Hamburgh journals , asserts that in tbe attack on Oberstolk the brigade under the command of the fallen general was suddenly attacked from the cover of the houses by a 1 , 000 rifle-.. menand peasantry . Iftrue . it would not he to the
honour of the Danes that a whole brigade should be repulsed by 1 , 000 men , a greater portion of which were undisciplined ; bnt , singularly enough , there is not one -word of truthinthe whole story . First of all , there was sot one of the inhabitants remaining in the village in question but a frantic mother with a child five 1 weeks old in her arms , who were placed in safety by one of the officers of the four battalion of rifles ' ; and secondly , the mist and rain which prevailed so completely interrupted the sight , that the two hostile brigades crossed each other , the one under General Horst and the other under General Schlep pegrell . After a murderous struggle , in which the latter officer and many or his comrades fell , the
advances body of the Danish brigade was completely routed , and a couple of hundred prisoners were made . Not a single fanner took part in tbe conflict . The Danes , however , have seized twelve of the largest farmers in the village one of whom they assert is the murderer of the deceased general , and the Danish Commander-in-chief has ordered them to be tried by court-martial . If the Dane 3 expect by such measures to terrify the inhabitants in other parts of the duchies , they are woefully misv taken . On all sides , nothing bat the bitterness hatred and desire for revenge are generated by such unseemly and unjustifiable conduct . I could narrate a hundred instances of cruelty of a different
tana ; let one suffice . The widow of an officer who fell on Thursday last at Idstedt , and was buried during the battle , ventured from Kiel to Schlesvng , in-the anxiety of her widowed heart , to recover tbe remains of her husband , and give them Christian burial . Will it be credited , that on applying at head quarters , her simple and touching request was not only rudely refused ; but the man servant who accompanied her was maltreated ? And this in the face of two hundred of their own ¦ wounded lying in the Chateau of Gottarf , having been carefully brongbt in and attended by the Scbleswig-Holstein surgeons , and therefore so many living testimonials of the humanity and kindliness of their opponents .
When the Danes entered Eckernforde they obtained an opportunity of humiliating Prussia , which they have not failed to take advantage of . The Gefion frigate , captured last year , lies , in port there ¦ w ith a garrison of 100 Prussian soldiers on board . When the Danish advanced posts entered the port the German ' national colours were hoisted by the military lubbers on board ; this displeased the . Danes , and the Prussian colours were ¦ ¦ i ¦ substituted . Since then , I believe yesterday morning , orders were sent , from Schleswig requiring the . Prussian colours to betaken down , and a white flag ibisted in their place . The officer in command appears to have complied with this request without hesitation , for tlie flag of unspotted neutrality now flies on board the Gefion . :.:
A slight engagement between the outposts took place yesterday afternoon close to Wohlde , a small village to the past of Freidricbstadt , without much . loss to either side . : Sixteen officers have arrived sines yesterday with offers of service . , . . The following is from tbe correspondence of tbe ' Times ' : — . Hamburgh , Aug . 1 . —There are now in the town at Altona alone , according to public admission , the number of 1 , 000 wounded men , the victims of the operations int _ SchIeiwig during the short period of one . week ; , but if the truth were known , - this number falls short of the real amount , and
another 500 may , without any fear of contradiction , be added to tbe above , besides a vast portion \ of r ick . This number only includes the slightly ' wounded—those who have been able to reach the Altona hospitals from tbe field of battle . Another lot , again , are in the hospitals of Rendsburgh and . Kiel , and some more have been left behind in care ' of the enemy . Should it , therefore , turn ont in the ' end true that there were found in the hospitals in the town of Schleswig 2 , 000 sick and wounded , tbe .: loss suffered by the Schleswig-Holstein army must have been : considerably greater than has been ¦ hitherto supposed . A great number of officers from all parts of Germany have arrived and gone : down to Rendsburg , the HoUtein head quarters , and among them five of the Hanseatic Legion of
the garrison of this city . The senate having refused them leave of absence , they resigned their commissuras .. I hear that many Prussians who had only a leave of about six weeks granted to them have been refused by WMsen . From all sides I hear of the . arrival of these gentlemen patriots in this city , en route to Rendsburg . From various places in the ¦ interior large sums of money have been , announced in the papers as having bsen sent to Kiel in sup port of the cause . Among these may be named Leipsic , 2 , 000 thalers ; Oldenburg , a second sum of 2 , 000 thalers ; Harburg , 600 thalers ; Bremen 5 , 000 marks banco ; Frankfort , 3 , 000 ditto ; Augs ^ ¦ burg , 1 , 791 florins ; Brunswick , 3 , 000 marks banco ; and some Germans from Yorkshire the sum of £ 51 ; from other pieces equally large or smaller sums ..
•» Rbhdsbukg , Aug . 2 . —In my last letter I described the results of a tour of inspection through several of the battalions of the Schleswig-Holstein army ; In the course of yesterday I extended my route , and ventured over , to the _ Witten See and , ' , . ' ¦ , ' Sehestedr ; where . the outposts' of " the army are lo->>/ . " . catefl . ' The fonrar five thousand men . who ,, . form ; ..... thcr ajvjncsa : gniid ; . pf the aroy / ' are under " tKe
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command of Colonel Gerhtrd , jl finejold soldier , a Prussian by birth , who saw-much service daring the last war . Colonel Gerhard has great , difficulty m restraining the imp » i&o ^™» f for the unfortunate iesult of the . battle , of Idstedt has roused the rSchleswi ^ Hol steiner from his usual methodical phlegmatic existence to a perfect state i of fury , and General \ Villuen- -wiIl find it a hard task to quiet the whole army , during the period which must elapse , ere he can leave Rendsburg , in order to entice the Dane from his fortifications about | Schleswig . It will be impossible for him ' to undertake anything whatever , until his little army is more numerously officered . ' - ' - "" : ~" :: v : '" " ¦• _ ¦« - .- ; «¦ - »¦ ¦ ¦¦¦¦ _ - - — ¦ _ - .
, From all parts of the Duchies men of all ages , men exempt from military duty , are hurrying to Rendsburg to enrol themselves in the ranks of the patriotic army . The students of Kiel have long ago become soldiera ; several of their professors are now . about to follow their example . Lawyers and government officials are laying down the pen , the farmer his ploughshare , and the labourer his flail , to assume the musket and the sword . At the present moment the army is stronger by a few hundreds of men already disciplined and organised , than it was on the morning of the 25 th ult ., while the reserve brigade ol
recruits is even more numerous , ; and will be still larger in a few days . ; . 1 have remarked , tooj with some astonishment the great willingness , nay , cheerfulness , with which the thousand andI more peasantry whose carts have . been put in requisition , perform the unpleasant duty assigned to them , at a moment , too , when , their presence at home and in their fields is of the greatest importance , The Danes will not be able to subdue such a people . without enormous exertions , and if their next victory be attended with equal loss to that of Idstedt , General Krogh , may me inclined to exclaim , ' Another euch victory , and I am lost ! ' " .
Later News ; — A telegraphic dispatch , dated . Rendsburgh , August 2 , stales that General Willisen has issued a new proclamation to the army . The general announces that the extensive defensive works at Rendsburgh will be completed in a few days , and . anticipates that ,. since the enemy only succeeded in winning his- small advantages . with great ; loss , he will not seek the Schleswig arm in its present entrenchments . It becomes now certain from this dispatch that the Statihalterschaft have resolved not to renew the warby offensive operations until the complete ; re-arganisiftion of the army . . - ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦•¦ . - ? . ¦ ¦ ¦ ,.. ; . ¦ - •;¦ . . . ¦ . . ¦ , '• - ' ¦*• Just as the above communication was leaving Rendsburg intelligence arrived of a skirmish of out-poats at'Breckendorf ,- ; midwiy" between -the head-quarters' and 'the' city of Schleswig . :: ¦ ' . : ' . \
The Duchies array is getting 'daily : reinforcements . ; the Hanoverian" government have ' given leave of absence to a vast number of their soldiers , who are arriving in large : numbers-to . join the army at Rendsburgh . : Travellers from , Copenhagen were reporting at Hamburg on the-5 th , that the guns of a battering' train were brought tnituer in Russian vesselSi Heinricli von Cagerni the chief of the ' Gotha parly , has entered the Schleswig army as a major . ' . ' . '' , " ¦'""
• FRANCE . : ; , ' . ¦! .: ¦ ¦ . ' . I .-. ' On Thursday all the newspapers made their- ap i pearance witt the stamp ; for the first time . Se veral administrations have , suppressed the numbers which were distributed gratuitously , to public officers and private persons . ' ! ¦ .. ¦¦ ' : ¦> The director of the ' Narbonnais / a Conservative paper of Narboune , announces ' that' in consequence of the stamp-duty imposed by the late law on the press the paper can no longer appear . .. . The National Guard ofSaulieu has been disbandedand disarmed . ¦ : ¦ . : ¦¦ .. ¦ ¦ ' !"¦'¦¦ - ' ' ¦¦' ' The ? Democratique du Var , ' prosecuted for' a seditious libel , has bejn acquitted for the 17 th time . A private of the 56 th-Regiment of the Line was sentenced to death by a court-martial- in Paris bn Thursday , for having struck his superior officer . •• ' :
The following are the main features ia ; the new bill on the organisation of the National Guard : Complete control is given to the executive over the nomination of the conseil . derecmement . ¦ This council is to be composed of members' appointed by the sub-prefect , half in the municipcl council ,. half among the National Guards , in numberequal . to . lhe half of the number of the municipal council . The revising juries do not preserve their jurisdiction , relative to the appeals against the elections of officers , which are now to be carried before the councils of prefecture . The bill suppresses the cavalry , and restricts the corps of ' sapeurs pompiers , ' of artillery and marine within narrow limits * . These corps
cannot be assembled m battalion or legion , and are placed under the orders of . the commander of the communal , or cantonal circumscription . ' A minimum of votes is fixed for the election of officers . The votes of half the National Guards inscribed are necessary for the election of superior officers , and the third for other officers . Moreover , for the election of superior officers , the bill introduces a double system of election , by the formation of a college of delegates of the companies , composed of half officers and half , of National : Guard * e ^ cted . " for "this object . The adjournment , of the reorganisation of the dissolved National Guards , is fixed for two years instead of one . ..-, ' ' -- ¦ .:,.,. - ' ' :. '
The growing differences' between tbe moderate and extreme Legitimists have , it seems , determined M . Berryer to repair to Wiesbaden , in the hope o recovering at the hands of his master sufficient au thority to keep the mutinous and impatient spiri of his party in due subordination . The great ques tion on which the two factions split is the amount of support to be given , to the President . The Ultras have thrown themselves into decided opposition , while the Moderates pull pretty well with the government . The Ultras fear the ambition of the President more than the agitation of the ' Socialists . The Moderates hold it essential to support and strengthen the President , in order to keep down the * Reds . Hence they voted the dotation and the electoral law , both of which measures are deeply regretted by the Jeune Broile .
A Socialist banquet took place on the 31 st ult ., at the Bridge of Louel , on the limits of the Herault and Gard . There were upwards of 800 persons present . Some disturbances' have taken plac ^ at Fabregues , Herault ., They , were repressed immediately by the authorities . . . . ' . ' . '" , The municipal counsils of Alles .- and Tarascon have suppressed their schools and surrendered the buildings to the Bishop of Aix , who is about ; to convert them into ' ecclesiastic seminaries . The college of Brignolles ; and that of Draguignan have been surrendered to tbe BishiJp for the sauie purpose . : The director of the 'Cpurrierde . Loir et Che ? has been sentenced to . six , months' imprisonment and l , 000 r . fine for a seditious-libel , entitled'Guerre au -Travail . ' ¦ : ' -. ¦ •¦ : ¦ :. -,
Some disturbances took place at Marseilles en the 31 st of July , and are thus described in the local journal of the 1 st inst .: — ' Our city witnessed yesterday au imposing manifestation against the sanitary measures adopted by the government , inwhichi citizensi of all classes participated . At half-past three o'clock , immediately after the close of the Bourse , a number of-merchants repaired to the Prefecture to demand the withdrawal of the " decree by which the members of the Sanitary Board weie superseded in their fanctioris and replaced by an Extraordinary Commissioner . They were Joined on their way by other citizens , and | he column might amount to about 2 , 000 persons when
they reached , the Prefecture . They , entered the building without opposition , and soon filled the Court , the staircase , and corridors ^ M . Dunoyer , tbe Secretary-General , acting . W interim as prefect , appeared at ihe balcony , and harangued the crowd . At the same time that he blamed the irregularity ; of ttie manifestation , he . declared that the ' authorities would take into , serious consideration the wishes of thepepnlation . Tbe noise , however , prevented us from completely seizing the tendency , of his speech . Long pourparlers then took place , " but as it was found difficult to arrive at an understanding a citizen at last demanded what , the authorities intended to dp . General Denis , who commaniis the . military di yision in the place of , General Carrelet , now engaged in inspecting , the troops of the different . gartiBons under his orders , returned an angry reply to an
interpellation of winch he evidently mistook the meaning and object and retired in a ; state of visible irji ? tation . Those dispositions of the general preduceu an uafavourable impression on the crowd ; who , perceiving that their pacific demonstrations was badly interpreted , londly expressed their discontent ] Shortly afterwards a . detachment oi'troops ' ot ' thk line debouched from ] the Rue deParadis , and drew up across . the Rue-Mazade ; Although the Prefecture had been partly evacuated ^ by the people , numerous groups , nevertheless , continued to crowd round the hotel A few moment *' afterwards arrived the Mayor . pf MarseUles ^ . 'M ? de ' . Chanterac , who' sue ceeded in allaying ; the public " effervescence by a few re-assuring , w , ords , and . a : aeclaratipn that 'the authoritwr ffould ^ abiwdpa ;^ tbj ^ circumiiaace
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the dearest interests of the city , Jhe speech of the Mayor had the effect of inducingtpe people to retire , snd it was not without surprise perceived ,, after eyerytbingtwas ojer , thetquarter bf . tWFre * . fectiire travenea by heavy patrp ] s of gendarmes and husstrs . ; In the evening an Unusual agitation prevailed in the principal streets , arid we need not add ttiat the events of the day formed the subject of every conversation . The city afterwards resumed its habitual calm , / or the authors of the . manifestation had no , other intention th ' an to protest peaceably against measures reproved by the entire pupulation / - & -- A " - - ^ - " -- ^ ¦; » . * r - Paris , SuNDAt ;~ The committee of initiative has rejected unanimonsly the motion of the Mountain for the repeal of the electoral law of May 31 st . J
.. Monday . —The , pilgrimage ; , cf the Legitimists to Wiesbaden to pay . thtir . homage to . , the . Duke of Bourdeaus is about tp commence ' in . " good earnest . M . Berryer leaves Paris for that place the day after to-morrow , and tbe Marquis de Larbcheiaduelin on Thursday . ¦ ¦ - . ¦ ' ¦ - \ ; . s' . •?•* , ^ - ^ The National ' Guard of Ravalaud La Linde , Dohdogne , has been dissolved and disarmed . The 'Silhouette , ' a satirical " weekly journal was seized on Sunday at the Post-Office in consequence ot its feuilleton not being stamped , ii . 3 , 000 numbers had been struck off , and as the proprietor is liable to a fine of 50 f . for each number : the total amount of tbe fine will be 150 , 000 / ,, which must be tbe ruin of the paper . ; ¦ , ' ¦ . . -
; The Prefect of Deux _ Sevres has , prohibited tbe circulation , of the ' History of the National / Assembly f'by a Socialist . . ,:.. ;; V , . ' . ; '¦ ,, . ., ¦ . ' . ' SWlTZERLAlSiD . ; '" , Letters of tbe 2 nd inst ., from . Berne , announce that ' a stormy . sitting took place in the Grand Council on the 31 st ult . -M . Stockmar , ; a radical ex-councillor of state . had been elected but , after a violent debate of ten hours , his election was annulled by Vfl votes against . 87 . : >; i .,, ' . / ... ' >/ ' ,, ! . : : ' , \ . - ;; GEBSiANYix ¦ .., ' !/ . ; . ¦ . ; ' ' ¦; -. SAXONY . —The so-called diet of Saxony , now sitting at Dresden , will grant to' the government the right . to raise the taxes . It will be seen , that though the diet . does grant . the permission , the taxes will be refused in many places . ,, s . -. . !•• ¦ ,:: •¦• : ¦ :, '
BADEN . ^ he . Criminai Coufrof Carlaruhe ; in the sitting of the 2 nd . ' condemnEd Gustayus Struve to . close ¦ 'irap ' risonmee . t for life , foe ' ' ¦ participati ' bn in' tbe revolutionary ' events of iast ' yieari ' , t Struve is inEngland . ] ' ' - '• - ' ¦ : : i ; i : ^;; ' ; ¦ ¦ : •; ;; ..:. ; , .- - ITALY ^ ^'¦• ! j ' ' ; ' ; ; LOMBARDY .-The « O fficial Journal of Verona ' publishes the following proclamation' : ¦¦ - ' It has been remarked for some time past-that many yonrig people arrange their dress so as to compose the national colours .. As such demonstrations cannot be tolerated those ; who give way to this caprice , or may be tempted to . imitate it , are , warned that it is : completely prohibited ; those who may persist in the practice need therefore only attribute to their own disotiEdience the disagreeable consequences they may entail upon themselves . by it , . ., . " i , , ; . ;¦ , .. 'Major-GeneralDERussi ..,,... .. ' . VeronaJuly 26 th . ' . ' ¦ . . ¦ ... ¦
, ' NAPLES , Jpi , y 24 , —The state , trials werere ; sumed yesterday , when the . accusations , against the ex-minister , Baron Pderio , were read . The government ' charges the constUutional minister as guilty of high treason oh two counts-fist , as belonging to a sect called theUnita ; Italiana ; and , 2 ndly , as having conspired to upset the constitutional form of government in the kingdom of the Two Sicilies : The case of Poerio is one of ihe most barefaced examples of what the Neapolitan government is capable ; it is one of the most cruel proofs extant that : nothing can save an able and honest supporter of open government in Naples from persecutions which belong rather to the middle ages than the present day .. r
I hear from Sicily that the grand festa of Santa Roselieu , in Palermo , \ va 3 accompanied by seditious cries , which occasioned the arrest of several young men : " My letter state ' s that the greatest gloom arid discontent is observable in ' every class of society . Filangieri very' seldom appears in public , and never without a strong guard . After dark , noi . ' a eoul is seen in the streets .- Travellers give a similar account of Catania ; and Messina . ¦ : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ • ¦ * The Paris'National' announces ¦ that Cerneachi took his departure from Civita Vecchia , for France , on the 1 st instant , on board the French steamer Narval . : .. ' ¦ . :-.,-:. ¦•
AMERICA ^ ( From the'New York Tribune . ' ) The Compromise Bill has been : resumed in the Senate , and called forth an able and elaborate speech from Mr . Webster , after which an amendment introduced by Mr ; Benton , allowing a larger territory to New Mexico ! than was provided for in the Bill , was rejected . Mr . Crawford , the Secretary of War , laid a communication ; before the House , requesting the commencement of a legal suit , in order to test the validity , of -the Galphin claim .. '• . The delegate to Congress from New Mexico has been refused a seat in the House by a majority of eleven votes . . The . effcct of this ypteis to deprive New Mexico of a , hearing on the vital questions which are now pending ; and in which ker interests and even her existence are deeply involved . ; , ; ; ,
; Subsequently the house refused to . admit A . W . Babbatt , delegate from DeseretVby 104 votes to 78 . : The new Cabinet under- the administration of President Fillmore has been ' completed , and having been transmitted to the' Seriate on Saturday ^ was cbnfirmed without debate . , ; It consists of Daniel Webster , of Mass . Secretary of . State , Corwin , of Ohio , Secretary of the Treasury , Pearce , of Maryland , Secretary of the Interior , Bates , of Missouri ; Secretary of War , Graham , of North Carolina , Secretary of the Navy , Crittenden ^ of Kentucky , Attorney-General , and Hall , of New York , Postmaster-General . These are all men of ample political experience and eminent ability . .... . " ,.:. ' ' I- ! ' . ;
A violent gale occurred on . Thursday . . nigbt , the 18 th of July , causing great damage to vessels in port , and other , injury both in this city , and to a great extent along the Atlantic coast . A Philadelphia ship from Leghorn was wrecked near the en . trance of this harbourj and eight out of twentythree of the ship ' s . company , including . ' 'five ' . ' pas - sengersj lost their Kyesi '; ' ;; .. ' . ' ' ' '¦ " [' . ' . . "'* , The steamer ' . Cresent : CUy ' arrived at this pork yesterday from CHagres with dates from . California to June 18 . She bringB ; gold jo the amount of 180 , 000 dols . in the hands of passengers . Another destructive conflagration : has taken place , at San ' Francisco , consuming four large blocks in the heart ' of 'the - bti 8 ine 8 S' district , with a loss estimated at 5 , 000 , 000 d . ols . . The , disas ' ef . has taken the . city by surprise '; and paused great s opsratiohs . of business ., ' , '' ,. . -. ' . ' ¦ . ' .. .
. The Governor . aud . CpuhciLof Massachusetts have decided against a cpmmutation . of the . punishrnent in the- case of Professor .. Webster , ' and have assigned Friday , the 30 th of August , as the day for h } s execution . ^ . - . . The American prisonera at Cuba have been' released . by the Spanish authorities and are -expected to arrive soon in the" United States . iWe have news from Guatemala ; to the . 10 th ult . Several petty chiefs had . been assassinated by their own followers . The States of Salvador , Honduras , and Nicaraugua are bent on the project of forming-a Federative Union . Delegates have been appointed by the . Legislatures to represent the . States in the General . Government . ' : ; ' . ; , - * t .
The Tehuantepec , treaty with Mexico has been completed by , the efforts , ofrMr ., Letcher , the Uaited States Minister , with I provisions similar to those of the Nicaragua treaty , and . enabling . our citizens to build a railroad between the Atlantic ' and Pacific , which will bring New ; Orleans within twelve days' travel of San Francisco ., the treaty was concluded on the , 24 th of June ,. ahd has be& dispatched by a special messenger to thereat of goverhmerit at Washington . . ; / . -. ' . " , ; . !;" :, >' :. I . ( r ;» - ; . fj ; :-
Our , latest dates from . New Mexico announce the continued ravages of : the Indians . A' treaty '' was made by Major Steen with the Apaches , which they violated within three doys . A detachment ; of soldiers was immediately sent out for their ichastisement . The audacity of ' . the Indians in attacking : the people and property of-tbeTerritory is , almost'incredible . They frequently come within one or two miles of the military stations , killing " persons , and driving away : cat . t ! e . '•'¦¦ - . -:: - " . - , ¦ . : .-. ; ''
- Philadelphia , July . 27 . —The great speech ' of Henry Clay , in the Senate , in . support of his wellknown Compromise Bill , has been the popular arid political theme ; fpr the lastfew days ' j . not so much for any'hoveJty of . argument that was introduced , as for tbe bold manner in which , the distinguished statesman denounced the disunion principles that are spreading in the * South land particularly the speech of Mr . Rhett , of'South Carolina , one of the fact . onary leaders .-It appears that Mr . . Rhett , in a speech recently tBade : at Charleston ,. «? . " } ? £ ? H ^* S ! ? lln . consifleration ofyour ' coridition m the Union , in order , that youi SnroS ^ . ^ mMmm ^^ S
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mmt ——** - ——^— - —^—^— - — which it appears to me rauVfctiake place at no distant day . ' » Mr . Clay ) in his ^ pech , denounced these sentiments in a juBt and bitter philippic , which closed ^ vvith ttliese remarkable words : ' Ijbave known -Mr . Rhett , and Esteemed ' him , but if ^ he carries ; . out the sentiments uttered by hirnjat Charleston , he is a traitor , and deserves a traitor ' s doom I' When it is remembered that Mr : : Clay represents an important slave state , it will readily be- admitted that the disunion ; , ' feeling does not extend overHbe entire'South . ; Still , it is ¦
spreading , y \ % ? i ¦> , ^ ' t ; ¦ A" dreadful instance of mob-law has just oc curredit f Culpepperi Virginia . Afree negro ) " riaiiied Grayson , had been-twice tried , and convicted by a jiiry / ofihaving murdered Mr . David A . Miller , of that place , and . on each occasion . the court granted him a ; new trial , on-, the ground , that , the testimony hardly justified suspicion , mucb less guilt ., A , mob rose ,. and , headedby seyeralj men , of so-called respectabiniyi broke ppehthe ' gaol , placed a rail across tiro ~ trees , > nd'ijung him . Before j be was strung up , ' they gave him . one minute , to' confess , when ^ he solemnly declared hirihhocen ' ce . Such an instance of barbarism is adisgrace , to Virginia ; and a hope is universally expressed that the ringleaders will be brought to condign punishment .
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protocol ; of the London conference ;';_ v on danish affairs . / . . !; - The protocol 'signed in Londoni ph . . Friday contains some alterations from that which was initialled on the 4 th ult . by the representatives of the powers which , in conjunction with England , have thought proper w join the new attempt at intervention . , ¦>¦•"¦ ::. • ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ .. •' . ¦ ¦< ,: i . ; ' ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ '' ¦ --A : It begins by stating that the governments of the republic of France , of the kingdoms ; of the Queen of Great Britain , of the Emperor . of ; Russia , 0 ° the Emperor of Austria , of the King of , Prussia , and of
the King of Sweden and Norway ,. considering that the maintenance of the integrity of the ; Danish moriarchy , with reference , to the general interests of the balance of p ' oyyer in Europe , is of great importance to the . preservation of peace , . have met ; on ' the invitation of the ! King of Denmark , ' --to ' confirm the' perfect agreement " which subsists' be-J tween tbeir cabinet ' s oa the necessity of '" upholding ; tb ' at principlei and [ have " -authorised their plenipotentiaries' to ' affix-their names to a series' of articles ; - ' ! . " •¦¦'¦!' .. : ' •/ . : ;¦• ¦ ¦ ' . ¦ •^¦• - '' "¦ ¦¦¦'¦ r- " " " "¦'¦ " '¦ '
These articles " are four : in-number . 'The first affirms that it is the unanimous deeireof the powers that the i integrity of : the Danish monarchy shall remain intact . ' i 'i- ^ - 'ili-.-h 5 r-In the second the powers acknowledge the wisdom of theJyie ' ws which " , determined ,, the King of-. Deri mark to regulate the order of succession in his house in such a-manner as should facilitate ! the arrange , mehts by means of ;" wbicb the above-mentioned qbr ject ( namelyj ' trie integrity ' " of the Danish monarchy ) ; raay"be' attained ' without altering-the . relation ' s r ' e ' xr istin ' g between tlie Dueliy of Holsteinjattu ' ^ e ¦ ¦ Gm > manic : confederation .- « M ' ¦; •; < $ : w \ u . '' " }' ' ' -:. ' : ""
. . ; With regard , to the : third : article , the alteration in it is ; merely such a ? was called far in consequence of the concludpii ;; 'Of : peac 3 .. be . tween Prussia arid Denmark . - ; -, .-. . . . / ,., „; . : - . v , , ¦ . , (¦ . ; ,,. !"•' ' ¦ '; : < : ; - ' V-: The fourlb article is virtually the same as tlie one previously initialled . ..: ; ' i ' , , The protocol in this shape , both Austriai ; aml Prussia haye refused . to . sigh . '' The envoy of . the former ¦ powerydecjared / t ^ t '' hie ' wbuld refer the . matter . to his government ., . ^ ' ; : ''Chevalier Bunsen did not limit himself to a mere absence frbai the conference , lie " sent in on the morning of- its . 'sitting , ' a' vote , in ' which ., he , stated that he had peremptoryinstrnctioris from his government hot to sign any such 1 protocol as that . propbs . ed by the powers . ; . : ¦¦!• ¦ ¦ ' ; :: ; ' :: ;'; t . I : " , " " ' ' ¦
: i With regard to the alterations made between the initialled document of . thej 4 th bfWJuly , and . that ' of Friday last ,, the latter . only materially differed from the first in bo'far as the proviso in the second article bearing on . the relations of Holstein and the confederation was . concerned . ' The assurance' there given was in itself vague enbugb , but when coupled with tlie expression . so ! , often used of ' the integrity of the' Danish monarchy , ' ' it' became " = . completely
neutralised ;' . for . ; what otter' inference ... . could ; be drawn from that expression ; but that the ,. duchies formed part of the Danish monarchy ? Such a pretension as this was , however , quite preposterous as well mjght . llollandclaim to call the Ducb y . p f Luxemburg an integral part of the , kingdom of Holland , ' which every one knows it can never' be ; inasmucbas vfere a new dynasty to succeeed to the throne at the Hague , ' having no hereditary ri ght to Luxemburg , the principality must necessarily revert to Germany . '' " ^ - ' . Hv' y . : >' .: " . ¦> : . ' ! ' • •'" i " - " ; / ; / . 1 ;
The case of Holstein with regard to Denmark , was exactly parallel ; a new dynasty having no right of succession in the Duchy , could not he allowed to rule : over ¦ Holstein . . Yetit was in the face of this positive state of things ; that the powers talked of the integrity of the Danish inonarcbyi ¦ v , . , It could notbut be . borne ln ; mind , further , ; that the treaty of peace , concluded ¦' . at . Berlin was quite , sufficient to regulate the future march of events , and rendered quite superfluous the participation of the powers in . any protocol like ' ttfe present .,. ! , '" The above is . the subisjance of the reasons assigned by Prussia for / riot signing ! " Austria and Prussia refusing to participate ; the protocol' was consequently only , signed by Lord Palmerstbn , ; Baron Roller , Count Reventlow , Drouyii de L'Huys , and Barons Brunnow , Rehausen . ¦ : - . H' .-: i . !^ :.:-. ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ ' . ¦
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WRECK OF , A SjTEAMER .--LpSS OF LIFE . i . A'fearful casualty occuri-ed off . Soufchportj b ' ri Sunday evening ;' . in the total wreck of a steamer laden with passengers . " Oneiof ; the ^ passengers fotnishes the following . , particulars : —Shortly after eight , o ' clock on Sunday , morning the Prince Arthur , an iron steamer , described as , being of . 100 horse power , left ' the'Quay at Preston , with about eighty passengers , tor the purpose of making an excursion to the Meriai and . Tubular bridges .. -. About noon , just .-after ; , getting . v . clear of the- Ribble Banks , some twelve orfourteon miles from Lytliam , it was discovered' that the ve ' sser ; had sprung a leak . Her liea'd' was ' imrhe'diately turned in' -the direction ' Of Liver » 6 ol ; - with the viewof getting ) to land as in 1
soon as possible : ^ and themeantime all' Iiands were urged to exert themselves to tbe utmost in bailing out the . water ; which , speedily beca . me a , foot"deep in the hold . ' The { r labours , however , were Attended with but very little success ; the ' . water gradually gained upon thern , and by one o ' clock the engine fires were extinguiiihed . i- A-jib ( theonlysail on board ) : was then hoistedi and the . vessel contihtiedv . tq , make : a little way through the . water , ' though not more ^ than a , knot per Hour . The passenger ' s continued in the greatest suspense until half-past fiyei when tlie ' ship struck upon the sarid , between Fbrmby ¦ ¦ Point and Southporfc , intwo fatlionig of water , i She . went to pieces almost immediately . A . ' arnalUboatiithe .- only one the ,-vessel possessed ,, conveyed . seven of the
passengew to the shore j . the . rest . lashcd themselves to portions of the ; wreck , and remained in tlie water acorisiderable time . The two' firemen and engineer made an attempt to land-byclinging-tb a plank ; the latter succeeded , but'botlv the firemen perished ; At length , two boats , each manned byseyen or eight brave fellows . , pnt off ; , from , Southport ; and fortrinately ' . . iicgeedfd in resott ' ng' tliei . wh'ble ' pf- the people reniainiiig , on thetrreck , " Most'tf them lost various articles ' . of- app'irel , indeed , ' one ' or two were landed in : a -state otv nudity' ; : ¦ and 'several wvere cut : and bruisedcfrom being . ' struck by'floating , pieces . of timber .- Had the catastrophe . happened in the night , the probality is ,, that all must have been lost ; . ' . ' ' Deposition of Samuel' Webster : masler ! of the
steamer Prince . Arthur , but called in the rogister ; the Dumbarton Castle , of eighty-two tons burthen , ' forinerlyerhployed as a passenger vessel on . the Cly . de ; rjine . yenrs old : — " Sailed from Preston this morning at a . quarterbeiore nine ; on ; a pleasure excursion to the Menai-briuge , with ; about fiftyrtwb , '' passengers , in addition to the crewVconsiatihg of ^ . nine seamen in all ; Proceeded to sea-through'the -New Channel , wind S . WbyW . v blowing hard .. ' About one , p . m ., theivesselbegan / to make w ^ tef , ; having broken one of her injection pipes ; set the pumps ' to - work , and all hands turned to . bailirig the edbm and engineroomrFinding . th ' e ' vess el ' could not make " way s acked the fires out yet jib , &o ;\ and run : her , on shore . ^ Yanted ^ the Preston pilot to bear away for Southport Roads , but he saidthere . were no buoysto M ^ " )^! e jcfore ho durst not attempt : iJand her shorestem
^^ ran on , W ^ The ^ reCnnd ftS gers . were saved by the Southport boat rand the ^^ s ^^ ^^^ jsi& hsS oCo Ail H y 8 ' thi !? 'J ( Mf ? "M - The : steamer onlytew v 7 a ? pr ^ h " half feet ! of : water ' -t ^ Buring the . gale'of yesterday the master , counted sixteen fishing boats snugly at anchor in the roads . . It . appear 3 .-most . ex traordinary that this ' vessel Bhbuld'have a certificate of seaworthiness-: to carry i passengprsi-havingiionly one pu ' ntwithtwo oars in-her , IKer . !; scantling being evidently only , adapted for river nw 6 rk .,, ; Th 8 bodies otybej ^ G ptokers yrere ! fo ^ iidr 6 rjL the ator ' e . ' ftlany
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of-the . passengers ' were almost in a state of insensi-, biHtx whM ^ eiiueid , ^ but h ave since recovered . Amongst . thel ( Vwas . a son of the late Maypr . M iPrestonjI i ¦ j ^ % y .. .. ; •; Much surprise iB expressed that no assistance was rendered by the ; Formby life boat . Great credit is deserved by Mr . Cbapraan , the agent for Lloy d ' s , for his exertions . ?' : ' ' '
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o THE NORTHERN STAR . August 10 , 1850 .
4v - ,, , The Blood . '•
4 V - ,, , THE BLOOD . '•
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Aug. 10, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1586/page/2/
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