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BLAIR'S GOUT. AND RHEUMATIC PILLS.—The following testimonial is another proof of the great'efficacy of this Medicine:— ' '
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dFomgn tmelltgimce.
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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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127 , New Bond Street , London . October 12 th , 1850 . Sin , —In acquainUng you with the great benefit which I have experienced by taking BLAIR'S GOtJT AND RHEUJIATIC PILLS , I feel that I am but performing a duty to that portion of the public who may be similarly afflicted About twenty years since I was first attacked by Rheumatic Gout in my hands and feet . 1 had previously been subjected to every variety of climate , having served in Canada in the 19 th : Dragoons , arid in Spain , under Sir John Moore , in the 18 th Hussar * . I always , procured the bast medical aid , but without obtaining any essential relief , and my sufferings can be appreciated only by thos * who know something of this disease . It was during one of those paroxysms , between twelve ¦ and thirteen years ago , that I _ was recommended to try BLAIH ' S PILLS . I lost no time in procuring a box , and before I had taken that quantity the pain had entirely ceased ; and in a few days I was in perfect health . From that moment whenever I feel
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DU BARRY ' S HEALTH-RESTORING FOOD ! ; for INVALIDS and INFANTS . ¦ : TheREvALraTA Aeabica ' , discovered , exclusively ' grown , and imported by Dn Barkt and Co ., 127 New Bond-street , Londou . ' sole owners oftheReviilenta Estates ^ and of the Patent Machine by whicli alone the curative principles of the pwntoa ^ he dev eloped , ¦ '• This lig ht delicious breakfast Farina ( without mp < li < une of any kind , without ineonyenience , and without expense , as it'saves fifty times its cost in ' other more experisiye remedies ) speedily and permanently removes dyspepsia ( indigestion ) , constipation / acidity , cramps , . spasms ,: fits , heartburn , ' diarrhoea , nervousness , ' biliousness , affections of the liver and-Uidneys , flatulency , distension , palpitation of the heart , nervous headache , deafness , noises in the
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:: . CURES FOR THE UNCUUedT ^ If TTOLi'OWAT ' S OlNTM ^ v § n * w * ° ^ * *^^ l }!§ I Extract ofaletter from Jt ' ''J . H . AlIiday , 2 oa ir , ' ICheltehhani , dated January 22 nd , 1850 . 8 n-3 tr « ~ \ SlRr-My eldest son , when ^ out tlireo vp ,. ' i -V « i was' afflicted with a glandular swei . ' . ' ng J ™* fe g after a short time broke out into an ulcer a ' WeS : ^ ' % medical man pronounced it as a very btt'i case np ClW | "ew ! SM and prescribed for a considerable time without !• ° « M » ¦ ^ 1 ( Uscaso then for years went oh gradua ] lv ^! fiee l ' K ^ W virulence , when besides the ulcer in " he mT ^ hZ ' HWk formed below the left knee , and a third uml » S' » te ' W $ sides seven others on the left arm with »» ttle c » i ^* ; i % >? the eyes which was expected to Snl ^ T ^ t W the time my suffering Ly had rec&fe ^'^ ft & # of the most celebrated medical centlomi ! " , ? tair ; ^ f * beside 9 being for several mnK '» >»* cZ ? &M
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/ SECREI SORROW . CERTAIN HELP ! is ' I Immense success of the New Mode of Treatment § H which has never failed . W , DR . ALFRED , BARKER , 48 , Liverpool * I : street , King ' s Cross , London , : \ M From many years' experience at' the various hospitals ia , * 5 § London and on the- Continent , is enabled to treat with * % the utmost certainty of cure , every : variety of disease fM arising from solitary habits , excesses , and infections , SUC& § 5 as gonorrhaja , Elcet , stricture , a " nd syphilis , or venereal i disease , in all their stages , which , owing to neglect or im- ?¦ proper treatment , invaviably ena in gravel , rheumatism , J indigestion , debility , skin diseases , pains in the kiilnejs , « back , and loins , and finally , an agonising death ! The ^ lamentable neglect of these diseases by medical men is Z general is well known , and their , futile attempts to cum " i by tbe use ' of'these dangerous inedicmes—mcrcurjr , co f paiba , cubebs , &c , have produced very distressing results , a All sufferers are earnestly invited to apply at once to Dr , < Barker , who ' guarantees a speedy and perfect cure , and § of . every sympton , whether primary or secondary , without any or the , above medicinee , thus preventing tiHspsssito . 1 lity of any after symptoms . This truth has been esta- \ Wished in many thousands of cases , and as a further gua- 3
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FRANCE . Another proclamation , of which the following is a copy , was fonnd by the police , when they seized on the printing materials . TO THE DEPARTMENTS . « Citizens , —The Republic is in danger . In presence of the intrigues of the royalists—In presence of the concealed working of the reli gious societies ~ in presence of the insolent defiance of Louis Napoleon , and the exterminating preparatives of the government—in presence of the criminal cowardice
of & great part of fte clerks of the people—in presence of the slavery into which the republican press has fallen—in presence of the persecution which weig hs on the democrats , and the starvation compact which is sworn to and pursued with fury against the working classes—peop le of the workshops , inhabitants of the country , what ought yon to do ? Some say to you , ' Suffer all to the end , and allow it to pass over ; ' others say , * Prepare your scythes and your carbines ; the moment is come to raiee your heads / Which of these two versions ought you to follow ? To wait any longer
is to fall into the snare which onr enemies have laid for us ; it is to give them time to forge fresh irons for us—it is to allow the fusion to operate —to allow democracy to exhaust itself in consumption and enervation . No , no ; no more waiting . There has been enough cowardice and treason . There are / eie days marked by Providence to he also days of emancipation and of justice . Ve are on the eve of that day when from one end of France to the other one will alone should unite us , one cry
alone be heard ^ - 'Immediate restitution of the rights of the peopleV >»« picte annih ilation of the liberticidelaw of ^ . . eoU ? of May- let the voice Of the " people , tnerefo fe f make itself heard imposingly and energetically in each locality . To the universal cry of' A has la loi du 31 Mai ! ' be mingled the crv ot' "Vive la Republique Dernocratiquo « t guctale 1 " Saint et Fraternite . —Le Comite Central de Resistance . A certain number of copies had already been distributed , some of which were seized in the cammnne of the Batignolles .
One of the printers arrested is a press-corrector of a democratic paper , and the type used is said to have been abstracted from the office oi that paper . ' M . Guizot it is said has refused to be put in nomination for the Landes . The fete of the 4 th of May , the anniversary of the promulgation of the Republic , passed off with the utmost tranquillity . The crowds of spectators were very great . No accident whatever occurred . The intended Bonapartist banquet in the suburbs Ms been prohibited by the authorities .
On Monday thanks to the accord brought about by the Duke de Broglie between the dabs of Rue de Rivoli and the Rue des Pyramides , the fifth ballot for the election of a councillor of state was final . M . Caussin Perceval , formerly procureur of { he court at Amiens , was chosen by 278 votes out of 531 , and , therefore , proclaimed duly elected . M . Corne the tiers- parti candidate , obtained 228 . and M . Darcy 22 . The ministry has received an important cheek , at the dose of the stttinE ; , by the adoption of the amendment of Mr . - Sautayra , proposing a reduction of 9 , 000 f . in the credit demanded for decorations . The prodigal distributions of the legion d ' honneur were blamed .
The following statement in'La Presse' of Tuesday guaranteed as it is by the signature of M . Emile de Girardin , is so extraordinary that it merits Insertion . ' The flat contradiction , ' says M . Girardin , ' given by M . de Persi gny to General Changarnier ' ( on the subject of the conversation between these two personages , as noticed in one . or two of my late letters , ) ' and the unaccountable silence preserved by the ex-Commaudant-in-Cbief of the Army of Occupation of Paris , render important and opportune the publication of two facts
hitherto unknown . The first of these facts took place in the raonth of March , 1848 . The scene passed in the Ministry of the Interior , and in the cabinet of M . Ledru-Rollin , then a member of the Provisional Government and Minister of the Interior . General Changarnier entered , and proposed to M . Ledm-Rollin that if 12 , 000 men vrere given him , With the liberty of making his own selections , he would land them in England , revolutionise the whole of Great Britain , and cause to be proclaimed there the same form of Government as in Francethat is , the Republic '
• The second fact took place after the first . The scene passed in Al giers , on the 17 th of June , 1848 . General Changarnier was then Governor-General of Algeria . He placarded a proclamation to this effect : — ' The Governor-General has received the following telegraphic despatch : — ' The Commission of Executive Government , composed of MM . Arago , Gamier-Pages , Marie , Lamartine , and ledra-Rollin , bas retired . It is replaced by another Commission of three members—namely , MM . Arraand Marrast , Berger , and Cavaignac ' -Al giers ,
Who , ' asfcsM . Girardin , * could have sent from Pans to General Changarnier , Governor-General of Algeria , th « telegraphic nespalcb ? orwhoon the loth of June , 1848 , was Minister of War ? That person was General Cavaignac . "tt as the re , then , at that penod an understanding and a plot between Generals Cavaignac and Changarnier ? Were the events which covered Paris with blood OB the 23 d , 24 th , 25 th , and 26 th of June already prepared from the lath , and behind the scenes ? ' M . Girardin then , quotes the paragraphs of the « Presse' of the 22 nd of June , in which it was intimated that that
sanguinary insurrection had . been got up for the purpose of rendering the dictatorshi p of General Cavaignac necessary . He quotes the resignation of M . Marrast of the office of Mayor of Paris a if it were that he might be more at liberty to take the places of MM . Lamartine and Ledru-Rollin , and fie reproduces the evidence ofM . Trouve Chauvel , Prefect of Police , M . Armand Marrast , Colonel Itebeiliot , of the Gendarmerie , M . Francis rago , M . Gamer Pages , M . Lamartine , and M . Ledru-Kolita as to the repeated disregard of the orders of the governmentto put Paris in a state of defence ff ? ie"sn ? cieD 7 ° i employed against
, >^ the insurgents . M . Girardin thos concludes , No one iu France , or in Europe , has bow any doubt that if General Cavai gnac wished he could have prevented the blood y drama of fonr davs which had for its denouement thae months of martial law and the transpor tation without trial of li . OOQ Frenchmen . But what remained unknown is the telegraphic despatch transmitted from Paris on the latn of June , and placarded at Algiers on the 18 th . This despatch throws a new li ght on the events of 1848
June , , and implies an understanding between General Cavaignac and General Changarnier-an undemanding which , if it existed , would constitute a fact of the greatest gravity . Now , how will ;^ M- i . ? . ngan ^ ^ that * hi > * Wch is established to all appearances ? Will General Changarnier also deny the other fact ^ namel y , that he proposed to M . Ledru-Rollin , in March , 1848 , to effect a landing in England , and to proclaim 2 Hffiffi ?" He ^««™* ayaword
WEDNESDAir .-. M . Lacrois , formerly Director-General of Cml Affairs in Algeria , bas addressed a letter to the ' Presse / explaining the appearance of the strange telegraphic despatch . M . Lacroix says that no such , despatch ever arrived , or was communicated to him bj General Changarnier . But the publication of the despatch in . the « Moniteur Algenen' was attributable to two Wanders . The captain of the Sphynx , which arrived that day at Algiers , declared that he had seen such a despatch posted np at Marseilles . Hence M . Laerok , to whom Cbangarnier , the Governor-general
commn-, nicated this information , deeming it hazardous upon 11 ' «/ tbe el . ectIon 9 to kee P back 8 ° important 2 ? I "'* ' Watructed the edifor oi ^ e ' Mo-NSggfKs that the facts , as givenin thu fl *™ s , tory s 8 ys untouched , andleaXft ^ JS F ' esse ' remains truth , from * JF < £ iI ^*«^ to Algiers on the 22 ud rftli liepatllIe from of ? heNatio ^ S oS ^ * " command
„ ulSKMANY . Haxbdhs , May 2 —T £ i , committed on May 1 st by Austril n ? anlt was Marr , the editor of a weekfcS !? ldiers on M " * Mephistophiles . ' wSeKJ llcatl 0 n * the Msfather'sVtaenVs , a £ 5 ? ?*? alone in trian officer fnteringh -UZ ^ ST ** ' whether he bad fhe iononMo see J ^ ?" being answered in the affirmativeThe ' cated ' £ * t hemian , on three rauk-and-file who 111 ' ¦?' and all the fonr laid on him To £ ZS& 1 £ SisasKiteriSSS fefensffira-ttS
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lawyer , Dr . Versmann ( they were both members « f the Constituent Assembly ) went to Altona to lodge a conplaint . with Field-Marshal Lieutenant L-gedicz , the commander of the corps . The latter promised to have the matter sifted . The non-commissitned officer bas since been recognised in the person who bad been calling at the house where M . Marr lives several days previous to the attack , informing himself of the situation , and learning that M . Marr , senior , was from home , and that bis son was spending his evenings by himself . There is no doubt but those soldiers were acting on orders of ( superiors , but as their trial will not be public it will probably never be known who they are .. If the non-commissioned officer will be punished at all , be will no doubt be indemnified by those whose-com * mand he was executing .
AUSTRIA . The traitor Georgy is living at Klagenfurt in complete retirement ; he is scarcely ever seen in public . His chief recreation is the National Museum and the laboratory of the Polytechnic Institution ^ where he pursues the study of chemistry with bis former predilection for that science . The Gazette of Breslau' states that ne statesman being : willing to ^ take the responsibility attached to the post of Governor-General of Hungary , there is a question of calling thereto the Archduke Irtjopold , aged twenty-ei ght jeare , son of the Archduke Reniger .
PRUSSIA . ' .. . The commission of the Second Chamber has struck out some of the most stringent provisiens of the press law as it came down from the Upper House . It proposes to release reli g ious and scientific periodicals from khe obligation , of depositing a sum of money as security , calculated according to the frequency of publication and the population of the cities p * tuwns in . which they appear . Tbc power of prohibiting the sale and circulation of books published in foreigu Statec h y an order of
vhe Minister of the Interior is also cancelled . The prohibition is only to be issued after a judicial dec | 8 ion . The destruction of a periodical seized , if it contains a punishable article , however , may . be ordered , even if the author is acquitted on the prosecution . The alterations may make the loss of the bill altogether a matter of comparative indifference to the government , which has always the decrease of June , 1850 ( the present actual law , ) to fall hack upon , and they are severe enough for all piirposesi as late events have amply proved . Parliament is to be prorogued on the 10 th inst .
A number of landed proprietors and oftkials iu Silesia , indignant that the President of . the Second Chamber should have ventured to call M . Von Manseuffe . 1 to order in a recent debate , have signed a document which is something between an address and a remonstrance , and sent it to Count Schwerin for bis edification . They deny that he has the same right over a Minister , a depositary of the power of the Crown , as he has over a mere ordinary
deputy , and assert that the call to order was an invasion of the authority of the Soverei gn , ^ which it is the duty of every honest Prussian to resent and resist . They therefore collectively . ' call Graf Schwerin to order himself . " The conclusion of the document is positively insolent in tone , and conve > a a direct insult to the Chamber ; that body ; however , did not appear at all surprised f lhw it ma presented , nor was even a single remark made on it .
¦ . .: HANOVER . , .,- •¦; . . The two Chambers in Hanover-have latel y adopted organic laws regulating the constitution , and the furture attributions of the provincial councils of the kingdom . Amongst the changes which ther have made , they have deprived the possessors ^ of feofs of all their , feudal . privileges , such an exemption from taxation , military service , and other things , and the right to exercise justice . The noblesse have organised themselves into an opposition ag&inst any attempt to put these new laws > n vigour ; and a meeting of the equestrian order ,
as it is called , has been held in Celle , at which resolutions were passed to the . effect that the enactments of the chambers should not be recognised as valid , and every means should betaken to prevent its introduction , into , Hanover . A deputation bearing these . resolutions has had an audience of the Kiag , and aaottet deputation is to go to Frankfort to petition the Diet , when it meets . The middle class , however , are fully alive to the encroaching character of tlie noblesse , and meetings have also taken place where most energetic : resolutions ' have been passed in favour of the Chambers and the present ministry , whose existence is threatened by the movement . .... *
SCHLESWIG HOLSTEIN It is stated that Count ReventiowCriminil bas . not brought any satisfactory news frora . Copenhagen . The report is , that the count has informed some Schleswigers that he has failed in effecting any good for them or their companions in misfortune . It is also stated that , the energetic notes which , according to the ' New Gazette of Prussia , ' have been addressed by the Cabinets of Berlin and Vienna to the Cabinet of Copenhagen have had no effect on the Danish government .
DENMARK AND THE DUCHIES . . . , Austria has been induced to send a note to Copenhagen complaining of the dilatory manner in which the Danish cabinet proceeds to the settlement of the affairs of the Duchies . A remarkable article appears in the - Angsburg Gazette' of the 2 nd instant , in which Austrian views are advocated , and in which it is asserted , that . Russia now sees with umbrage the influence gained . on the Elbe and Eider b y Austria , an influence , which , says the journal , it would not do to . give up . Dresden and Olmutz have furnished two victories to the cabinet of Vienna over Prussia , and their fruit would be
lost , were the Duchies to be given up . Russia , however , only wished Austria to take the Duchies , and not use a sword to weigh down the scale in its favour . The Auf trian occupation of Holstein , says the All gemeine . Zehung , ' has been so firm , and its acts so vigorous , that they have allayed the hatred and fears at first occasioned . A note has been sent to Copenhagen referring to'the treatment to which theunfortuuaie Germans in Scbleswig have been subjected , and steps are about to be taken to strengthen tee Kronwerk atReudsburgb . ' wbich will not be given up . Nay , says the ' Allgeineine , ' had there been better information in thehigher quarters , the Danes would not have been allowed to occupy the Kronwerk atall . Such being the state of things ; the policy of the Copenhagen and Petersburgh
courts has been changed , and they are endeavouring to alter the question from one standing on the basis of the Bundesact to one of general European importance . A note has lately been sent from Petersburg to Vienna , in which Austria is called upon to convoke as speedily as possiblefa European congress for the settlement of the Schleswi g-Holslein question . It is further certain that the Oldenburgb Princes have declared their resolution not to assume the succession to the Duchies so long as the iniegnty of the Danish united monarchy ( gesammt monarchic ) is nof guaranteed—that . is , so long as Schleswig is not ; incorporated . It Ms " not doubtful that tne mission of Here von Pechlin , from Copenhagen to Berlin , Dresden , and St . Petersburgh , has reference to this questiou of a Congress
. Such , then , is the state of things at present , as put forward b y an accredited organ of Austria . Russia , seeing Austrian influence too preponderant , is , a 3 usual , taking means instantl y to counteract it ! We shall see how she succeeds .
DRESDEN . A plenary meeting of . the conference took place on the 2 nd of May , at which it is stated that the reports of the four great committees were distributed to the plenipotentiaries , in order that they might be sent on to taeir several governments .
PORTUGAL . By the steam packet Monirose we have accounts from Lisbon . Although the Portuguese govern * ment pretended to know nothing of the movements or successes of Saldanba when the Montrose left Lisbon on the 29 th . ult . i the Count de Thomar resigned on the 27 th , and just as the Montrose was leaving he went on board and placed himself under the protection of the British flag . He was landed at Vigo , where he will remain until the next packet arrives from Lisbon , when his movements will be
governed by the news . be receives . If be is allowed to retain his office of minister at Madrid , to which he bas been appointed by tbe Queen , he will proceed to London tesee the Exhibition , and after a short stay there go to Madrid . If be is not allowed to retain it , he declared that he should be unable to afford to visit England . He asserted that he was comparatively Bpeaking a poor man , notwithstandmg the charges of corrup tion and peculation that narl been brought against him . He offeted a year aim a half since to gire up all his property for fourteen cantos of reis . and it is stated , that Alfeit , the poBsess « on of which was considered to be his crown-«! W ^ 'J 1 * does not P ° 38 eM- J « rt before landwfRi ; 1 L . ewMmuch ^ pressed in spirits , and w « s very anxious about the fate of his wile and 1 family , whom he had left in Luhon .
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On the resignation of Thomar , the Queen sent for the Dnke da Terceira , who was with the arm ? under the command of the King . Saldanbah objects to Terceira , and it is asserted at Oporto that he caused a message to be sent to the Queen rivimi strict orders that it should be respectfully addreased to her Majesty , which was to the effect ' that the DukeqfSaldanah did not draw his aword merely to allow the Count de Thomar . to return at the head of the government in six months hence , and that the prime minister onght to be the choice of the majority of the nation . ' The Duke of Saldanah
entered Opotto on the 29 th , the civil and military authorities : marching out with a few followers Nothing could equal his ^ triumphal entry into that town . Neatly the whole population of the place went out three leagues . to meet him ,.-. They strewed the road- with flowers , and , the windows of the houses ; were covered ! with waving damask . The King was retreating , on : the .. capital . Part of his body-guard , joined Saldanah at Oporto on the 29 th . The King left Coisahra on the 27 tb , with only a regiment of soldiers ,. which attended him . as an escort , and who intended to march , to Oporto after . wards
. — . Tojal , Coirabra , Braga , Vianna , Vimiera , Guemaracos , and the strong fortress of Valencia , have all declared for Saldanba , and troops from those places were marching to join him at Oporto . According ; to a private , letter received on hoard the Montrose from Oporto dated . April . 29 th , and to intelligence received at : Vigo on the 30 th , Valencia pronounced in favour of Saldanha on the morninz of the 29 th ult . . ,,, > . :-One of the regiments of Ca ' gadores stationed at Oporto had shot their colonel for refusing to deliver up the colours of , the regiment .... They also shot the adjutant , who aasiatcd the colonel in protecting them . The .: colonel shot two men before . he was killed , i .:
It . waa rumoured at Vigo that the Spanish gpvernraent had ordered an army of observation to assemble , at Teria , on the northern ' frontier ol'Portugal . . Oneregiment had already ' . arrived ; and two other . regiments , as well as the captain-general of that province and staff , would arrive at that place on the evening of the 30 th April . ' ' . ' . .... . ¦ ,. ; ' ,.. ' . ! - ' SPAlN . i-. ¦• ¦ ¦ . - . ¦ ¦ ¦ - « . Madrid letters of the 29 th ult : ; inform us that'a Carlist conspiracy has been discovered in Catalona . Seven persons were arrested , and , on their way to [ triaon , were shot by the soldiers , on the plea of their attempting to escape . , , . . .. , , ¦ , It is thought that the majority of the elections Will be favourable to tbe Ministry . , <
! ... ,- ' , - ¦ ¦ . ' ¦ ¦ TURKEY . ;• ¦ ¦¦¦ . ., ; ' ' ; . English- policy has ¦ been defeated again by , , M . Titoff . The question of the liberation of , Ko « uth was transacted in a coiaference of the Grand Vizier , Sir Stratford Canning , and General Aupick , and they advised tbe Sultan unanimously to set the Hungarian refugees at liberty , as the . last term of their detention bas elapsed ; on the anniversary of their arrival at Kutaya . But tbe ambassadors / of . Russia and Austria entered a protestation against this decision , pleading a supposed , secret understanding between Kossuth , the 'German revolutionists , and the Italian patriots . A visit of the . Prince Frederick ^ Schleswig-Holstein paid to kossuth andthe presence
ofM . Revis , an Italian liberal , < at . Kutaya , are the facts to which the ambassadors allude in order to give weight to their insinuations .- Now , the Prince of Schleswig-Hahtein .-is an accomplished and amiable man who has no connexion . with . the German democrats , but he Is the man Vhbse birthright to the duchies was put aside by the , famous , convention of July last , when the representatives of ! Russia and England declared ia , London , that « the integrity of the Danish realm , prevails against all the treaties , and had virtually deprived , the prince , who has no rights to tbe Danish crown , of his eventual just claims to the duchies . The Sultan , yielding to the views of M . Titoff , rejected the proppsitions of Sir Stratford , and ' Kossuih remain ^ . therefore in prison for a couple of months more , as they say ; but it is
now just a year that all the . diplomatists'held tbe same language , that ; the detention of Kossuth was to last a couple of months—sot longer ; and this means . in the diplomatic language till , May , 1852 , if poison will not despatch him earlier , because Austria fears too much , his presence in Europe at the moment when the crisis'in France will probably arrive-Though the Turkish government will assign another and a healthier fortress than . Kulaya , to the detained patriots , anS tbough ,: she treats them with every re-« pect , 5 et everybody knows at Constantinople that English influence is checked entirely b y Riisisia , and that therefore the Russians will always find some pretext for tbe extension of the time of Kossuth ' s imprisonment . Those of the Hungarian ' s who turned MuBselmen and entered the army are about to be placed on active service .
• ¦ ¦ <• INDIA . Despatches from Bombay up to April 3 d and Calcutta March 26 , have been received . . ' , .. . British India is generally . ^ tranquil , and , the improving state of its public finances ; is at present the prevailing ' topic of , the Indiaa press . Sanguinary murders were , taking . place almost daily . < Most summary measures were , however , being adopted for their repression ^ > . : Martial lair was to be declared paramount until the depredation and murders so prevalent ' , were put an end to . The hill tribe * on the Indus frontier south of
Peshawur / are disposed to be troublesome ' the Vizieries having , been hovering about the Bunnoo frontier , for some time , - ready . to pontice down on any unprotected pan of the line ,-at last assembled in force at the foot , of the Goomuttee Pass on the 14 th : of March , on which , Capt , Walsh Commandant- at Bunnoo ,. / took the field against them with three of Hammond ' s guns , a squadron ef : the 2 d Punjab Cavalry , the . 2 nd Punjab Infantry , and 200 police , horse and loot . On the approach of this force , the enemy showed no inclination to await Us attack on the- plain ;¦ , but took to the hills on- each side of the head of the pass , occupying them in groups , which we re soon
aispersea oy artillery . As the force was , howeVer , insufficient to follow up the advantage thus . gained it ; was determined to withdraw it ; which wasac- ' cordingly effected . A gaol emeuteoccurred at Deva ' Ghazee , Khan , on the 2 nd of March , at midnight . The prisohers took advantage of . the inner door of-the , gaol being momentaril y opened to make a rush past tbe sentry into the outer , enclosure of tbe building , and then threw themselves over the enceinte wall , the drop of ; which ( being twenty . five feet ) had been considered sufficient to preclude the possibility of such an attempt ; fifteen were shot dead by the guard and one wounded in the attempt , some were recaptured , and . parties of horse have been sent but m all directions after , the twenty-six who got clear off . A court of inquiry was investieatine the matter . .
M ' . litary ., preparations are quietly going on at Pe 8 bawur , a force has been ordered to hold itself in readiness to raove on the frontier at a moment ' s warning , provisions for two months and the requisite carriages are being collected ' ; trie destination ( if the force is unknown , but it is rumoured that the Governor-General las offered the Vizieries a certain «^» iatem ,, which if . they refuse , coercive measures will be immediately taken . < = »» urea
UNITED STATES . _ The < 5 team 6 hi p Africa ,, bringing the mails from the United states and Canada , 187 passengers , and papers to the . . 24 th ult ., and . * 130 , 000 in speck arrived in Liverpool on Sunday morning . A violent North-east storm had- swept over thP coast of the United States from Main to Pennsvl Tf >; o Ca S ^ . de 8 trilction ' m Carves of Ll % nft a ™ ' Portland ' t <> Philadelphia , rS ;!? Sf . ^ V . ^ ma e done ; MiSet ' f *^ ?!"" ' 8 , Xtee , i miles from Boaton , was swept with
away , persona in it . The steamer Ame nca ai ; nved off Boston a few hours after the-lSht was gone , and very nearly went on the reef . . Thev fortunately d . 6 covered that thelight-houae was gone Telegraphic communication-with Halifax had been cut off by ihe storm . . It extended over NoS Alabama and Georgia , on the night bf the 7 th an ! 8 th un .,,, The . Chatahoochee .. river rose forty S Sjx horses attached to the mail coach were drowned mattemptmg . to cross the Caney branch , she m £ below Montgomery . Tbe passengers and S escaped by cVimbing a tree .
TheNew York Legislature adjourned on the 22 nd ult . ^ The question on the enlargement of the Erie Canal was bdore the Senate , when twelve onoosi tipn members of that bod y resigned their seats in order to prevent the passage of the bill , b y lea 4 i » the senate wnhmi M : quorum . The necessary ap . propnations had not been voted , and the govern ment was thus placed without the means of sustain ' ing its operations . An extra session of the Lecialasure has been called b y the governor for the Wih of June , the people meanwhile filling the vacancies caused by tbe resignation of the senators . From California we learn that business has revived a little since former advicee , and it was believed that the lowest point of depression bad been
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passed . Tbe amount of importations bad fallen off considerably ; but owing to the great lack of rain , the miners were doing less than usual . The legislature has prohibited the sale ef lottery tickets , appropriated 200 , 000 dollars and upwards for the pay of persons engaged in military operations against the Indians , and authorised the treasurer to obtain a loan of 500 , 000 dollars , which has net yet been obtained ...... ¦ ....- - -- ¦ ¦>¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦•¦ ¦ = On March 12 lh , a . fire broke out at Bavaria CHy which originated-in a bowling-alley , and was sup .
posed to be the work of an incendiary . The flames extended in all directions with great rapidity , and continued to rage until the largestpart of the city was destroyed . Upwards of 200 houses were either burned or torn down to stop further ravages . By this terrible calamity ; over 2 , 000 persons , including many families , have lost their all . - The total loss sustained is estimated at 1 , 200 , 000 dollars . This does not include the gold dust which was in the possession of individuals , and which is estimated at 100 , 000 dollars more .
- Letters from Charleston , South Carolina , in the ' New York Herald' describe the movements on foot in that Slate to sever its connexion with the Federal Union , ' communicating . ' The important fact that the first movement in favour of secession , or revolution ,-in the Southern States , will bd made in the city of Charleston , by a convocation or convention of all the States' Rights Associations of South Carolina , which is to be held early in this month for the purpose of discussing the great question of secession ;
. President Filmore bad issued an order that the tracts of land in Iowa , occupied by General Ujhazy and the other Hungarian exiles , shall be withheld from sale until the end of ., next session of Congress with a view to making application to that body for a grant of tlie lands . " The- Legislature of-Michigan at their recent session abolished' all laws for the collection ' of debt . Anumbftr of mercantile firmes had announced their intention of- publishing the names of all delinquents . The Grand jury of the United States' District , Court , . ; at , Boston « had brought in new , bills of indictment against Elizur -Wright , one of the editors of the . ' Commonwealth' newspaper , anfl otherB , for aiding in the rescue of the fugitive slave ) '
- - MEXICO . . The latest news from Mexico gives gloomy accounts of the political condition of that country . Several members of the bouse , whose support was expected for the reduction of the tariff and the abolition of the prohibitions , have decided to vote against the bill . It has been stated by the Cabinet tbat those were tbe only measures on which any dependence could be placed . > ¦ - ; ¦ , : : ¦ ¦ -CUBA .. ' - t ¦ ¦¦ - ' : A letter , dated New York , has appeared in a Phi . Iadelphia paper to the following effect : — ' If the
information which I received to-day ^ from a gentleman who , knew all about Lopez ' s movements , in connexion With the expedition to Cardenas , is to bs relied upon ,. there is a great deal of reality in these rumours , and another Cuba expedition is on foot . Arrangements have been made to start from Yucatan , New Orleans , Apalaehicola , Mobile , and other places on the same . day . He ' says that the city of New York will ; furnish three . hundred men ,-and that the bulk of the expedition will be composed of Southern men . I am also informed that some of the'principal men connected with the movement have sailed from here for New Orleans , in tbe steam-ship Union . '
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A religions service wasperforined on Monday last in the Chapel or the Invalided , in memory of the Emperor Napoleon , that day being the anniversary oi his death . The President of the Republic , accompanied by an escort of about twenty mounted carabiniers , two of them acting as . out-riders , with pistol in hand , and the finger pn the trigger , reached the Invalides at a quarter past twelve , He was received with the accustomed honours by the inmates , drawn upialoog the avenue in two rows , in full uniform , and bearing lances in their hands . The surviving
veterans of the Imperial army were , as usual , in full costume , and received ' with profound respect the nephew of ¦ their old chief . A squadron Of Hussars kept the ground . The court-yard and the approaches to tbe Invalides were crowded to excess ; and the moment Louis Napoleon issued from the chapel he was received with shouts of •• Vire Napoleon ! Vive le President ! ' in which the provincials most heartily joined . A very few cries were heard of ' Yive le UepuWiqufiV Most of the members of the family of the Empsror were present , as also the Minister ' s and the General Officers in Paris .
Blair's Gout. And Rheumatic Pills.—The Following Testimonial Is Another Proof Of The Great'efficacy Of This Medicine:— ' '
BLAIR'S GOUT . AND RHEUMATIC PILLS . —The following testimonial is another proof of the great ' efficacy of this Medicine : — ' '
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DU BAltRY'S HEALTH HESTOR 1 NG FOOD ; : THE REVALENTA ARABICA HAUTION .-i-The most disgusting and ih-\ J ¦ ¦ jurious compounds lieing sold bv unscrupulous speculators upon the credulity of the L ' ttblic , under close imitation of the name of DU BAUKY'S REVALENTA AHA . - BICA FOOD , or Wtilm pretence of being similar to Uiatde . licioua and invaluable remedy for Indigestion , " Constipanon , Nervous ,. BilUus , and Liyw Complaints , Messrs : DU BARRY and Co . caution Invalids against these- barefaced attempts at imposture . There is nothing in the whole jgetablekingdom that can legitimately be called suht , au to Jtt Barry's Revalenta Arabica , aplantwhich is cultivated by Du Barry and Co . on their estates alone , anil for tlie nre paration and pulverisation of which their own Talent Machinery alone is adapted . LetCorn Chandlers seUtlieiv pease , beans , lentil , and other meals under their proper names , and not trifle , with the health of Invalids and In . fants , for whom DU BAHllY'S REVALENTA AltABICA alone is adapted . ' ' .
i ) uBavry . and Co ., 127 , NewBond-street , London . ' . It has the highest approbation of Lord Stuart do Decies ; the Venerable Archdeacon Alexander Stuart , of lloss-a cure of three years' nervousHess ; Major-General Thomus King , of Exmouth ; Captain Parker D . Bingham , R . N . i of iSo . 4 Pavk-walk , Little Chelsea , London , who was cured vftwenty-seveu years' dyspepsia in six weeks'time ; Captain Andrews , lt . N . ; Captain Edwavds , R . N . ; William Hunt , Esq ., barrister-at-law , King ' s College , Cambridge , Who . after suffering sixty / years from partial paralysis , has regained . the use of his limbs in a very nhoi't time upon this excellent food ; the Rev . CU&vles Kevr , of Winslow , Bucks ^ -acure of functional disorders ; Sir * . Thoma 3 Woodhouse , 'Bromley—recording the cureofaJady from constipation and sickness during pregnancy j the Rev . Thomas Minster , of St . Saviour's , Leeds—a cure of five years ' nervousness , with spasms and daily vomitings ; Mr . Taj- , lor . coroner of Bolton ; Captain Allen—recording the' cure ofcpiieptic fits ; Doctors Ure and Harvey ; Jnmes Sliorland , Esj ., No . 3 Sydney-terrace , Beading , Berks j late surgeon in the 90 tJi Kegimcnt ^ a cure of dropsy ; James
Porter , 'Esq ., Athol-street , Perth-a cure of thirteen years ' cough , vftCn general debility ; 0 . Smyth , Eaq ., 37 Lower Abbey-street , Dublin ; Cornelius O'SulHvan , M . D ., F . R . C . S ., Dublin—a perfect cure of thirty years' indescribable agony from aneurism , which had resisted all other remedies ; and 20 , 000 other well-known individuals , wholiave seat tha discoverers and ijnpovters ,. Du Bavry and Co ., 127 New Bond-street , London , testimonials of the extraordinary manner in which their health has been restored by ihis useful and economical diet , after all other remedies had been tried in vain for many years , and all hopes of recovery , abandoned . ' A full vepovt of important cures of the above and manj other complaint ' s ; and testimonials from parties of the highest respectability , is , we find , sent gratis by Du Barry and Co . * —Morning Chronicle , Iu canisters with Full instructions , weighing lib . at 2 s 9 d . ; 21 b . at 4 s 6 d ; 5 tt > . at lls ; 121 b . at . 22 s ; superior refined quality , IOlb ' 33 s ; 51 b . 22 s ; suitably packed for all climates . Canisters forwarded by Du Barry and Co ., on receipt of post-office or bankers- orders ( the 121 b . and lulb . canisters free of car riage . ) tach canister bears the seal and signature of Du Barry and Co . In lull , without which none can be genuine , Dtt Barry ana Co ., 127 New Bond-street . Londofi . As > i
Dfomgn Tmelltgimce.
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2 ' ¦ ' J . . v v .--: THE NORTHERN STAR . ¦¦ - - ¦ \^ - ^ ; - : - ' * _^ : i .. ' - ^ -Ma " y 1 ^ \ 85 i :
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 10, 1851, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1625/page/2/
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