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^ FRANCE. Paris, Friday.—The public is o...
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; The budget of Spain presents an increa...
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DEATJTIFUIi HAIK, WHISKERS,
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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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^ France. Paris, Friday.—The Public Is O...
^ FRANCE . Paris , Friday . —The public is occupied with a new phase of the Carlier question . M . Lerauiier having demanded authorisation to prosecute 31 . Carlter , the Prefect of Police , M . Forcade , the editor of the « Messager . * and M . Virmaitre , editor of the ' Carsatre , ' M . Debelleyme has wven the authorisation demanded . The prefect of police is competent to decline ail prosecution before the tribunals not authorised in the first instance by the Conseil d'Etat . But M . Carlier has , I understand , consented to waive the privilege , and to accept the summons of the correctional police . MM . Forc & de and Virmakre will decline the competence of this tribunal , ami demand to he brought to trial by the Court of Assizes .
At the sitting of Ihe Assembly on Friday week the petitions for revision presented by members , or received by the President , contained 41 , 119 signatnMs ' - 1 MA The Revision Committee examined on bunday the propositions of M . Payer for tbe revision , by a Constituent Assembly , of tb § 20 tb , 21 st , 30 th . 41 st , 45 tb , 76 ib , 77 di , and 102 nd articles of the Constitution ; and of M . Larabit for an appeal to the nation ( aud consequently tbe repeal of the law ot ihe 31 st of May ) as to the re-eligibility of the President of the Republic . M . Payer declared himself a fervent and sincere Republican , and it was in order that a moderate Republic should be established in France that be advocated the re-election of the President . He maintained that tbe Chief of ihe
State was not- always master of the suffrage * of ( be people , and cited the example of General Cavaipac , who , wilh all the public functionaries and ascents at his disposal , and in sniff of his eminent services , could only muster 1 . 500 , 000 votes for his election to the Presidency . On tbe 24 ih 01 February , hi said , the whole of ihe public functionaries , generals , admirals , and all , gave in at once their adhesion to the new government , and they moreover inveighed in the strongest terms against the government that had just falleu . Though a Republican , be still felt indignant at such conduct . Not less than 30 , 000 of their letters , demanding places , were copied at the Foreign-office . All this showed how tbe functionaries were at the mercy of every government ; it was the crying scandal of tbe times , and the only remedy for it was
decentralisation . M . Larabit supported his proposition to consult the nation on the single fact of the re-eligibility of the President of the Republic . M . Creton supported his proposition for the nomination of a Constituent Assembly to decide between Monarchy and the Republic . The doctrine of the'Divine Right * of the Republic was , is his opinion , monstrous ; and , thumb he had bh preferences in favour of a Constitutional Monarchy , yet he was determined to abide by the will of the Countrv regularly expressed .
M . Bouhier de YEcluse also defended his preposition for the nomination of a Constituent Assembly by universal suffrage , and that of a provisional President , whose powers should expire when the said Assembly decided between Monarchy and the Republic . The Commission then adjourned . I may as well add that from all that can be ascertained at . present , the choice of Reporter of the Commission is likely to fall on M . de Tocqueville or M . Odilon Barrot . On Saturday the Assembly proceeded to discuss the bill for authorising the government to close clubs and political meetings of all kinds , the report on which was laid on the table on Fridav bv M .
Jules de Lasteyrie . Urgency was adopted . M . CbaufTour objected to the bill 88 unconstitutional . M . Pens-Tande took the same line of opposition . M . Madier ds Montjaa recalled to remembrance the eulogies which had been passed upon the Riitbt of the Assembly by the greater part of those who were now exerting all their efforts to destroy it . He dwelt in conclnsion upon the perils to which they would expose the country by giving to tbe government an arbitrary control over tbe power of meeting . M . Jules de Lasieyrie defended the bill . After showing the necessity of suppressing ordinary political clubs , organised for the express purpose of conspiring against order , he came to the mm delicate
question of allowing the goverment power to put down electoral meetings . After dwel'iug wilh emphasis upon the csisclesures with regard to tbe Society of tbe Dix-Decembre made in the notes of M . Carlier , and alluding to the manoeuvres of the government in obtaining signatures to tbe petitions for revision , he said that it was law which pat wide powers into tbe hands of the government , but the Assembly always had ibe means of revoking those powers , if it should Snd them abused for ambitious purposes . M . Sainte Beuve then moved tbe following amendment to the bill on clubs , as an additional paragraph to the 1 st article : — ' Nevertheless , ibs provisions of these laws shall not be
applicable to the electoral meetings held during the three months preceding either the election of the National Assembly , or that of the President of tbe Republic : '—if . Lson Fauctter oppo-ed 'he amend , menf , which would annul the law . —M . Bac supported it , and drew the attention of the Assembly to mi article which appeared in the ' Assembles Natior . ale , ' entitled , 'League for the Public Good/— if . de Kerdrel then occupied tbe tribune . The * Ybixdu Present , ' printed at SuAmaud , has been seized for prosecution . The celebrated M . Cabet has surrendered himself for trial on the charge of swindling brought against him hy some ex-Iearians .
The Assembly adopted on Saturday evening by a large majority , the bill for renewing for another year the act by which political clubs are suppressed . The Minister of tbe Interior promised tbat there should be mi interference witb electoral meetings carried on in an orderly manner . The speeches of MM . de Broglie , de Tocqueville , and O . Barrot on Tuesday in the committee on revision are important . M . de Broglie feiesaw tbe re-eleciion of Louis Napoleon ; be admitted the legality of a resolution of the assembly which shsnld refuse to confirm an unconstitutional election . But it was not sufficient that a resolution shoald be legal in order to be capable of execution . The resolution wonld be annulled beforehand by the country . M . de Tocqueviile deemed revision the sole means of salvation for France ; but he
thought tbet -, beir determination to make the consli-tlmn ff-ijiectjd ought to bs expressed in the rspor ! . If hr was to believe what he heard the initiative of the petition movement had come from the % -iw . nvraent . If ihe administration had exceeded its duties in this respect , that also ought to ha mentioned in the report . The report ought likewise to contain a declaration in favour of the maintenance of the republic , and a public assertion of their belief that at present it was impossible to think cf re-sstablishing the monarchy . M . Odilion Burnt said tbat the two propositions of MM . Creton and Bouhier de l'Ec ' use , which opened the question between monarchy and the republic , were revolutionary , and for that reason he rejected them . Counter-revolutions were effected only ivy arms .
Ater the rejection of the propositions of Payer and of the Rue des Pyramids , M . de Broglie propped tbe following : — ' The Assembly sees article 111 of the constitution , and declares that tbe constitution may be revised canmrmabiv to this article . " This resolution was adopted by 8 " to 7 votes . Tocqueviile has been named reporter by 8 to 5 vc- ~ 3 given to Broglie , and 2 to Barrot . Moauiy last being the anniversary of the insurrection ' tf Son ? , 1843 , reli gious ceremonies were performed in all the churches in Paris , in commeaior & tioa of the numerous victims of that sanguinary conflict . Tfce churches were well attended . On Tuesday the President reviewed ; in the Charop-iIe-Mars . the second division of the garrison of Paris , under the command of General
Guillabert . The ceremony was more favoured than tbe list review by the weather ; hut the President ' s return home was the signal for a noisy manifestation of ihe republicans , who gathered in one dense mass alongtha Qnai , between the Pont de Jena and tr « Chan , pS Elysees . and kept np deafening cheers « wr . v "" P nMqnel * until the Presidentand his stiff reached the Alice des Venves . smhi \\ t- . f ne , vs circD , at «* ^ «* As - fSe ualr ^ ^ ' cdit « of the > Saf-Stlsrks tuV J ** - ™*** ntour with sab »*
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^ France. Paris, Friday.—The Public Is O...
by citizens ; of . Paria . JJ , Went ^ de PArdebbty presented a petition against the law of " May , signed by a great number of citizens at the offices of the ' Repubhque * newspaper . The petitions pre » senttd by M . Ducos on Saturday in favour of revision bear 23 , 757 signatures : those presented by M . Laurent against the law of May are signed by 20 . 767 citizens of Paris . The ' Constitutional' attempts to make the most of the petitions for revision , the signatures of which amount to nearly a million ; 30 , 000 have beea furnished by the Meuse , and 15 , 000 by the arrondissement of Rheims ; 13 , 000 have signed at Saintes . The review in the Champ de Mars passed of with perfect order .
PIEDMONT . In its sitting of the 17 th the Chamber of Deputies of Turin passed , by 103 votes to thirty , the bill authorising tbe government to contract a loan of 75 , 000 , 000 of francs for the construction of railways , with the proviso that the said sum shall be placed on mortgage on the railway lines to be constructed . Count Revel quilted Turin on the 19 ih for Lon . don , for the purpose of contracting the government loan of seventy-five millions .
In consequence of the following circumstance the political offenders confined iu the Roman prisons will no longer be allowed , as heretofore , to receive once a month the visits of their relatives . On Sunday , the 8 th last , the notary Appolini obtained , after eight months' entreaty , permission to see his son . The emotion of the poor father was such tbat at the moment he encircled his child in his arms , ne was struck with apoplexy . M . Marc Evangelists , the Chancellor oi the Tribunal of the Con . sulta , remarkable for the harshness of his temper ,
was present at the scene , and opposed the sending for a surgeon to bleed the father , but insisted on bis instant removal lest he should expire within the prison , and his daughters , who had accompanied bim procuring a coach , removed their parent in his then unconscious state . On Sunday , tbe 15 ib , M . Evangelist ! , in leaving his house , received from an unknown hand a blow from a poignard at the bottom of the abdomen . The wound thus incurred was very serious , and appears to be a mortal one .
Two French officers on lighting their cigars which they bad just then purchased , were wounded in the face hy their explosion . One of them has , in consequence , lost the use of one eve . .
BELGIUM . The treaty concluded between Belgium and the Netherlands , for the abolition of the navigation dues on the Meuse , consists only of the two following articles :- — , - Art . 1 . Tbe navigation dues established on that part of the Meuse which serves as the boundary between the Netherlands and Bel gium , the levying of which is regulated by Art . 3 of the Convention of the 20 th May , 1843 , will cease to be enforced after the 1 st July , 1851 . " Art . 2 . These dues cannot bo re-established till after tte expiration of a delay of six months after tbe expiration of this convention , the ratification of which shall be exchanged within sis months , or sooner , if possible .
The chamber resumed its sitting on the 23 rd inst ., and a great deal of interest was necessarily attached to this the first meeting after the ministerial crisis . The Minister of War appeared in the chamber for the first time . In a concise speech , he declared that bis sentiments coincided entirely with those of the Cabinet , and that the army might have tho fullest confidence in the solicitude of his colleagues . The explanations of the Minister of Finance regarding the late crisis were worded in a spirit of considerateness , and quite , calculated to conciliate the Liberal party . —Brussels Papers , June 24 .
SWITZERLAND . We leam from Friburgh that the Court of Assizes of that place bas delivered its verdict in tbe case of the three brothers Garrard and their thirtyseven accomplices , who were tried as the principals in tbe late insurrection . The three Carrards have been declared guilty of the crime of high treason without any extenuating circumstances . Six of the prisoners were found guilty of the same offence , bat with extenuating circumstances ; twelve were found guilty of aiding and abetting in the crime ; one was condemned for exciting to revolt , and sixteen have been acquitted .
SPAIN . Tbe Chamber of Deputies was crowded on tbe 16 th inst with persons anxious to hear the debate on the vote of censure against ministers , moved by D . Manuel Berrattdez de Castro . Tbat deputy is one of the most vehement members of the old moderado party of Sartorius and Narvaez . Owing to tbe long financial statement with the budget of 1852 read by Bravo Murillo , the motion of Bsrmudez de Castro did not come on till nearly four in the afternoon . M . Manuel began by attacking , the violent and arbitrary acts which had disgraced the elections . This accusation , it may be observed , would have come wilh more propriety from the
mouth of one less intimately connected with a party notorious as that of Sartorius for its unscrupulous maveeuvres by force and fraud upon electoral occasions . Therefore , when D . Manuel spoke of banishment of candidates of the opposition , dismissals of employes en masse , with appointment of relations ot the ministers in their places , threats of assault , and fire and pillage hy hired ruffians , he enumerated no more than what every one knows to be the invariable accompaniments of Spanish elections under the moderado rule , and which disgraceful aids to tbe ministerial candidates bad been used by no government more freely than that which had the complete approbation and support of the speaker .
D . Manuel then said that if any one doubted his word for these facts he was ready to drop the privileges of a deprty to maintain his assertions , lie was surprised that no judicial investigation had been ordered by the government into the violations of correspondence which had been committed , and no employes of the government prosecuted . Two royal orders had been despatched forgiving a district its whole debt of arrears to the treasury , which had bee i revoked as soon as it was known tbat the same district bad voted against the ministerial candidates . He charged with base ingratitude those who , owing their position to Sartorius , iormer Minister of the Interior , committed a thousand illegalities to insure his election . He then accused Bravo Murillo of
trampellvn ? upon and insulting ihe press by the daily confiscation of newspapers , which he accused of falsehood . His harangue was listemd to wilh great attention by a crowded home . The sitting closed with the reply of Beltran de Lis to Bermuda de Castro . On the next day the d"bate having he * n resumed , Pidal attacked tbe ministry . Barzansllana made a disclosure which produced much sensation , declaring that Beltran de Lis had intercepted a letter addressed to him ( Barzanallana ) ; by TJrias . and having read it , dismissed Urias from bis office , Ekllnsn de Lis made a very unsuccessful apology for having read the letter , and met with loud marks of disapprobation from all parts of the house and tribunes .
The senate has been occupied with discussing the mode of procedure with regard to the concordat , nhirh is to remain , as usual , three days upon tbe table / The Minister of Grace and Justice , Gonzales Ravero , made a speech in eulogy of this treaty with tbe Holy see , which was regarded as an ivopnriant pledge of tbe adherence of the present Cabinet to the most retrograde measure of the preceding one . For the rest this Minister ' s speech was a complete
failure . Madrid , Junk 10 . —The committee on the debt has chosen for its chairman M . Flores Calderon ; and for secretary , M . Maquieria . The chamber has rejected the motion of M . Borrego for a new law ot the * press . It was about to vote on a motion that the cnacordat & hi > uld be submitted- ' to tbe examination of the legislature . Then it would discuss the motion for a vote of confidence in the cabinet .
PORTUGAL . By advices from Oporto up to tbe 20 th we learn tbat all was quite tranquil in Portugal . ' A French squadron was expected to remain in the Tagus . Like every other branch , the Portuguese naval officers , not Cabralistas , were proscribed by Cabralism ; and , from tbe aroallness . of their pay when unemployed , manv of them were in a state of
semistarvation . The Ma-quis of Lcnle , Minister of Marine , has done an act which reflects credit upon him—namely , ordered a strict observance of former regulations , by which no naval officer shall be embarked more than three continuous years , which opens the advantages of -the service to all alike ; the pay of the officer when afloat , together with his other advantages , being very far superior to the miserable pittance which be receives while on shore and unemployed .
It was mentioned in a former number that the promoti ons made b * the Duke of Saldanba in cone ^ quence of tbe recent movement would not cause much expense , inasmuch as the pay of the rank would only bo received bvi few , but theduke
^ France. Paris, Friday.—The Public Is O...
jbavirig found Jhat much injustice had been done to old ^ nd deserving officers by tbeir having been laid upon the shelf , and their prospects blighted in consequence , be made a general promotion , placing 1 those who are incapable of serving on the retired Hst ; the consequence is , that tbe country is burdened with a vast additional expense , which is estimated at upwards of 350 coatos of reis ( nearly £ 100 , 000 ) annually . A regulation has been made by Saldanha relative to the municipal guards of Lisbon and
Oportothat iu future they are to he officered by officers of the line , and in order that the officers of the former force may not be prejudiced , they are to pass to and take their rank in the line , being eligible for employment in either force ; this is a severe blow to Cabralism , as the officers of the guard in question were totally distinct , and formed an exclusive body , which made intrigue tbe more certain , a disaffected officer can therefore be now removed and placed in another regiment , withou affecting his individual advantage and
proapects . v GERMANY . The « Spener Gazette ' of the 18 th states that Austria , Prussia , and Russia are now agreed as to the manner of settling the affairs ol the Duchies These three powers no longer demand that Rendsburgh shall be declared a German fortress , as the consent of the King of Denmark to that project cannot he obtained ; but they will be satisfied b . r Rendsburgh being garrisoned by the troops of Schleswig-Holstein . It is not known whether
The ' Cologne Gazette' of the 18 th says tbat the Austrian soldiers who occupied the faubourg St . Paul at Hamburgh without having obtained the consent of the Senate , were to be withdrawn , the a uthorities having given an assurance that they would take severe measures to preserve , order and tranquillity . The posts were to be doubled , and tbe police , reorganised . The l German Gazette of the North / however , says an order has been received from "Vienna by General Legeditsch , requiring him to demand of the authorities to suspend the exercises of the Burgher Guard , and that tbe posts occupied by them should be taken possession of by the Austrian troops . . , .. . ¦¦
By intelligence received at Berlin up to the 16 th it appears that the provinces are generally opposed to the ministerial ordinance for the convocation oi the provincial states . From an article which appears in the ' Prussicbe Zeitimg , ' the ministerial organ , it would seem pretty clear that the resolution which had been , if not formed , in process of formation , for the permanent revival of that institution , has been abandoned . Still , the temporary restoration of these assemblies is very tenaciously persisted in by tbe ministry . '•¦ ¦ - ¦ It is said tbat the Diet at Frankfort has . prolonged for six months the plenary powers of Austria and Prussia to settle the Hesse Casssl question .
The question of the provincial , states or diets is likeiy to become further ' complicated by a ministerial decision meddling with the states of circles , or parts of provinces . . Government has , it is said , determined that in the meetings of these states of circles no votes will be held valid except they be unanimous . Numbers of the revived provincial states and states of circles continue to declare their incompetency to deliberate . The Hanoverian correspondent of tV . e ' Deutsche AUgemeine . Zeitung , ' a particularly . well-informed
person in general , in giving an account of the Olmutz conferences , says that the Czar most cordially , approved of Austria ' s centralisation plans with respect to her non-German possessions , and tbat several schemes were discussed for effacing the different nationalities , and placing all power in the government at Vienna , making landed proprietors , the nobility , and the courts of law , as much as possible dependent on the central administration . Tbe same writer says that the annexation of the provinces alluded to to the Bund was a project not cnt-red on at ail .
One of the consequences ol the reinstitution of the Diet has been to give fresh energy and vigour to the plans and intrigues of the aristocracy in the minor states in which the revelutioit of 1848 overturned tbe old representation by estates or classes , and introduced parliaments elected by the people . Foremost among tbe host who are attacking this in . road on their privileges , are the nobility— ' the knights' of flanover . They have in vain petitioned the King to restore the old class representation ; their petitiont and their threatening meetings have .
been alike disregarded . But the Hanoverian government has assisted to re-raise an institution whose power is greater in some cases than its own ; and to that power the knights turn for help . The nobility or knights ( Ritterachoft ) of the province of Osnabruck , in Hanover , have petitioned tbe august Diet to employ its power to the restoration of what they call their just constitutional rights . The petition is in the form of a complaint against the government of Hanover , and is accompanied by an oninion in their favour , drawn up by one of the most celebrated German lawyers . . This mode of
proceeding on the part of the knights gives to the Diet an opportunity of interfering more boldly in the internal arrangements of Hanover , and may br made the handle for putting down parliamentary in stitutions , wherever they exist . There are plenty ol individuals to be found in every state of the confederation willing and ready to make the same complaint as tbe Knights of Osnabruck , the moment they discern a chance of success .
HAMBURG . The Austrian commander of Altona has consented to withdraw his troops from St . Pauli , if the Senate will guarantee the maintenance of order . The same functionary bas insisted on the suspension of the Hamburg civic guard .
AUSTRIA . Letters from Vienna of the 15 th inst . announce that the mission of Count Dietrichsteiu to Paris , for the purpose of urging at the Elysee the policy of admitting all tbe Austrian states into the confederation , has failed . We learn from Vienna that the Austrian Minister of the Interior has called upon all Frenchmen in the states of the Eropf ror to make a declaration of their being there , and to state whether they are residents or merely travellers . This orderjbas brett issued at the rf quest of the French government , in order that the new census of tbe population oi France may be complete .
AMERICA . In the case of Scott , indicted at Boston for the rescue of the fugitive slave Sbadrach , the jury were unable to agree upon a verdict . Although agreeing as to the conitifutionalJiy of the fugitive slave Jaw , they stood equally divided on the question of con . vicsing the prisoner . The district attorney has announced his intention of putting the case on trial again in a few days . The Postmaster-General has announced an arrangement , to take effect after July T , 'by which letters to the West India islands , ports in the Gull of Mexico , and on the Atlantic coast of South-America , can he sent through the United States Post Office or . pre-payment of the . United States postage toaay such por ? s in the British possessions , and with the addition of ihe British postage ,-when destined for ports belonging' to other governments . ''"
The Mississippi river has risen so high' at St . Louis as to oveiflow the level . A large amount of pro . duce has ken damaged , and the difficulty in shipping and landing goods has nearly caused a suspension of business . . . ' ; - ; ;¦?' .. : ¦ Mr . George Thompson has announced bis intention ofleavir . g for England in the steamer of the 17 th inst . -It is said that be will resign his seat in parliament , and become a permanent resident in the United States . '• '
CALIFORNIA ; ¦; The 'DebatsV publishes , the following letter from its correspondent at San Francisco , May I : — : A deplorable confPet took place last , week at ' -the Placer of the Mokelammee , between the French and the miners of other nations ; ' Th « rich plateau had been for some time occupied byJlie French ; who bad discovered it ; bnej two , and' sometimes three pounds of " gold were found in ^ a dayi The report of the riches of this spot soon reached the neighbouring encampments , and some of the miners came from them ' and established themselves near the French station ; bu ' t ' not being successful in finding the precious metal , they determined td come and take possession of ihe part belonging to theFrfncb . ' \\ - '"'_" - •< - '• ' : ;
A desperate struggle took place , " when one oi the Frenchmen in a rage took up . a gun and shot one of his assailants dead oh the spot . The . had ) was taken up and carried by his Comrades ¦ to their camp , when cries of vengeance-were- > immediately raised . A general rising among" them took ' place , ' and the . y came well armed , ' ' to the number ' of between 500 and 600 , to attack aiid drive out . tb * French from their rich holding . '' , the latter , uho were only sixty' in numher , made < a vigorous defence , but were aUeBgtb overpowered by . numht-ro ud compelled - to abandon ihe ground , and Mire
^ France. Paris, Friday.—The Public Is O...
into-a sort of enclosure , ™™ T ; SmV Smselves : . When there , they ^ S ^ SZ Their assailants had during th » ^ jg ™ French tents and burnt them . £ tox" » f , £ their success , they then offered the most dwgraceful terras to the French , who . refined them , and resolved to evacuate the place , which "J ^ y jw > fkhting , however , every inch ol the way , utfW tMj reached the Placer San Andres ; News of the affair having reached San Francisco , Mr . Dilhon , tne French consul ,, immediately sent an express to the government of . San Jose , begging it to use its efforts to put an end to the conflict . The prompt intervention of our consul , bis moderation , and the
esteem in which be is held by all classes in aan Francisco , had its effect . He was about to start himself for the mines , when a courier reached him with an account of the quarrel having been brought to a close , in consequence of bis communication to the government . During the retreat , the French lost none of their party , one only received a wound in the leg . This conflict has not originated with Americans , but with a band of vagabonds of all nations who support themselves by pillage . Mr . Pillion has left San Francisco for the mines , accompanied by some superior officers of the American army , in order to restore perfect harmony among the miners of different nations , and to adopt measures for the punishment of the band o £ brigands .
ALGERIA . Letters have been received in Paris , fromKabvlia , dated the 16 th inst . At that dnte the expeditionary column had returned to Gigelly , after having extended its operations in the direction ol Bouoia , from which it was only distant two days march . The French troops had met no opposition . On the contrary , the Kabyles had made their submission in every direction . The sanitary condition of the troops was excellent , and it was intended that after a short rest they should march agamst the Kabyie tribes to the east of Gigelly , towards Collo . It was believed that the most difficult portion of the expedition had been accomplished , and that the campaign would not he prolonged beyond the 15 th of July . At that period the troops would return to their cantonments .
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; The Budget Of Spain Presents An Increa...
; The budget of Spain presents an increased deficit . The total expenditure for 1852 is 1 , 484 millions oi reals . The total of receipts is 1 , 289 millions . The Court of Assizes on Saturday last passed sentence by default against Ledrti Rollin in the matters of the publication of two pamphlets entitled respeiv tively , ' Le 24 Fevrier—Les Elections , ' and ' Le 13 Join . ' The former was lithographed at Brussels , and the other printed in London . Tbe author was sentenced to two years' imprisonment and 1 . 000 francs fine .
The ' Madrid Gazette ' of the 16 th publishes an order from the Queen for one of her ministers to proceed to Seville on the approaching occasion of the accouchement . of . her Royal Highness the Duchess de ; Montpehsifir . The corps diplomatique and a deputation of the grandees of Spain are invited to attend , in order to do honour to the event . An ordinance has been published at Altona , abolishing martial law in the upper part of the Duchy of Schleswig , and promises to do the same in the southern part of that duchy as sooii as circumstauces will permit .
A furioui hurricane , accompanied by torrents of rain , took place in the environs of Charkoff , Russia , on the 13 th inst . It came from the west , and covered fifty versto . It bas occasioned fearful devastation ; all the corn , the gardens , and the fields are destroyed , mills have been thrown down , bridges and sluices carried away . The fields are completely inundated ; several persons were killed . Tbe huricane lasted two hours and a half ; the damage is estimated at 21 , 000 roubles . The ' Breslau ifeitung' speaks of a treasure which
dorgev on his retreat from Komorn , in the summer of 1849 , sunk in the river Theiss . This consisted of seventeen waggon loads of golden ore , which he found too heavy to transport further . The fact and the place were no secret , yet the treasure has remained untouched till lately , when tbe directors of the Hungarian iron mines proposed attempting to recover it . The attempt has heen made . A good deal of the ore- has been already drawn up , and as it is very heavy , and the stream by no means rapid , it is supposed the whole treasure is recoverahle . The value is calculated at between
300 , 000 and 400 , 000 florins . The following details on the progress of crime in Spain are not very satisfactory . The numher of men in the penal settlements , in Spain and her colonies , on the 31 st of December , 1850 , was 15 , 927 , to which we have to add 4 , 250 ( among then ) 1 , 394 women ) who are undergoing other minor punishments , say 20 , 177 in all , aeainst 17 , 438 in 1849—showing an increase of 2 , 739 in 1850 . The number of persons awaiting their trial in December , 1850 , was 11 , 300 , against 9 , 589 in December , 1849—say an increase of 1 , 711 ; so that , taking both itRris together , the increase at the end of 1850 over the same period in 1849 was 4 , 450 . The ' Prussian Staats Anzieger' says that there will henceforth be a steara boat communication twice a week between Siettin and Copenhagen .
On Simmjut Last A Numerous And Highly Re...
On SimmJUT last a numerous and highly respectable party of . gentlemen assembled at the Royal Hotel , Derby , to do honour to their townsman , Mr . Charles Fox , the builder of the Crystal Palace . Mr , Paxton and Mr . Henderson were invited as guests on the occasion ; and it is the intention of the town and county of Derby to pay a similar mark of respect to Mr . Paxton very shortly . On SittiBDAV evening last , the dinner given by the war officers , subscribers to the testimonial tb be presented to his grace the Duke of Richmond , in token of the high and grateful sense entertained by some of his successful exertions on their behalf , took place at Willis ' s Rooms , King-street , St . James ' s . The day was the 38 th anniversary ol tbe battle of Tittoria .
Church Boimmno' Amendment Act . —On Saturday last Lord Carlisle ' s bill on the Church Building Act , which has passed the Lords , was printed by order of the House of Commons . By this measure tho churchwardens of parishes will be empowered to apportion pews for tho accommodation of the deserving poor .
Deatjtifuii Haik, Whiskers,
DEATJTIFUIi HAIK , WHISKERS ,
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y ETEBROWS , & c , maybe , with certainty , obtained by using a very small portion of KOSALIE COUPELLE'S PARISIAN- POMA . DB , every morning , instead of any oil or other preparation . A fortnight's use will , in most instancei , show its surprising properties in producing and curling Whiskers , Ilhir , iSc , at any age , from whatever cause deficient ; as also checking grcy ' ness , & o . For chii . dreti it is indispensable , forming the basis of a beautiful head of hair , and rendering the use of the small comb unnecessary .- Persons who Iwyb been deceived bv ridiculously named imitations of this Pomade , will db well to make one trial of the genuine preparation , which they will never regret . '
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fremoving superduoua hair will therefore ha very aCO * P * able and useful . Price 4 s . per bottle , sent post free , with direction * , on receipt of fifty-four postage stamps by Madame CoupelkPi and to be had through alt venders . N . B . —See to the stamp round each package . TJr , Ure . — ' I have analysed your four preparations , viz — Depilatory , Hair Dye , Pomade and Solvent , and find all of them excellently adapted for their various pur .
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Beware ot Guinea , Foreign-named Quacks , who Imitate this Advertisement . Pains in the Back , Gravel , Lumbago , Meumatism , Gout , Indigestion , Debility , Gonorrhoea , Strieturt , jff BARKER'S PTJRiFIC PILLS U ( of which there arc useless imitations under other titles ) have in many instances effected a cure whet all other means had failed , and arc now established , by the consent of every patient who has yet tried them , as also by the faculty inmSEtvES , as the most safe and efficacious remedy ever discovered for discharges of any Kind , retention of the urine , and diseases of the Kidnevs and Urinary Organs generally , whether resulting from imprudence or otherwise , which , if neglected , frequently ending in stone in the bladder , and a lingering death ! For Gout , Sciatica , Rheumatism , Tic Doloreux , Erysipelas , oi
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IN SIX LANGUAGES .-FORTIETH EDITION , Containing the Remedy for tho Prevention of Disease — Illustrated by One Hundred Anatomical ami Explanatory Coloured Engraving , ou Steel . On Physical Disqualifications , Generative heapaeity , and Impediments to Marriage , A N *> w and improved Edition , enlarged to 106 pages , price 2 s . 6 d ; by post , direct from the Establishment , So . ( id ., in postage stamps . *„* All communications being strictly confidential , the Authors have discontinued the publishing of Cases . THE SILENT FBI END ; a Practical X Work on the Exhaustion and Physical Decay of the S ystem / produced by excessive indulgence , the consequences
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, , ^ SaSSS of nmvous and sexual debility , fo , J ^ s monstrated by iti unvarying iacoeii « In twH . of cases . To those persons who art prevented entZNi married state by the consequences of early " rrore i > "ii rsduable . Price lis per nettle , or four ounnHi '; . Sht fbrSSs . i « "u « uji ij ^ The CONCENTRATED DETERSIVE ESWi-c anti-SjrphiUstic remedy , for purifying the systemT E H tamiai'tion , and is recommended by any 0 f ¦ , l " *\ forms of Secondary Symptoms . Its action is nuJii to sive , and its beneficial influence on the system \ . *"« able . Price lis . and 33 s . per bottle . m " Bute The £ 5 cases of Simoon or Cosoj }( TB . n Essence can ouly be had at . 19 , Deruers-su-g ,, ^ ip , street . London , whereBJ there is a saving 0 f c i V * W the patient is entitled to receive advice withoutafr " «« i nrivunfase is analicabte only to those » hn » . _ ,. > r " fti
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Brother Cliartisti beware of youthful Tm v ; - > 7 Quacks who imitate thu AdverUtmL tf " l PAIN * IN . TUB BACK , GIUViVi r-IDcbility , Stricture , « Icet , etc . l 4 t * t oo € AUTI <» N .-Aycmthfi » self-styled ten shillin „ , ( unblushing impudence being his only qualification ! ° C , 't advertising under different names highly injuria ,, ! ^ tions of these medicines , and an useless aborevia , l " ^ of Dr . De Rons * celebrated Medical Adviser 7 , 3 ) changing its title ); sufferers will therefore do ntl \ ™ 1 that the stamp round each box or bottle is a to * , * ' ooTEBsatENT stamp ( not a base couiitsrieit ) , and t « , ^ against ' the truthless statements of this individual S ?* are published only for the basest purposes of de « w ?^ invalids and fraud on the proprietor . "' 8
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 28, 1851, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_28061851/page/2/
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