On this page
- Departments (3)
- Adverts (4)
-
Text (6)
-
S " ' P ' '' " " " J thein that the safe...
-
. -forvifju intelligence
-
FRAXCE. THE BUDGET. The Budget of war ju...
- Untitled
-
n,,H?n?/!'! lg . t0t > c ^ m P ut - lti <>» ^ Mr. -, ¦**•• •' ¦ ': •' ;
-
. "' '* "<¦•'"•>j or considerable repute...
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
S " ' P ' '' " " " J Thein That The Safe...
' -, VV " * '' - - * " ' " - - _" x THE- _^ _Pt-io-J STAR . _ ¦ - P-avA- * , im . __ n ' ' __ , ¦ - ¦ _i ~ i i I ON physical disqualifications , _GBNKK-mvir 2 TvrM- * ' < -rrv _n-n rui > _--nm . _vvTO ~' _„ . ' .... ' !•) LULL .... | < _> _t . _--a _> _- _>» a _> _-i _t ON PHYSICAL DISQUALIFICATIONS , _GBNEK-mvm INCAPACITYAND IMX > EDLUBNTS TO
. -Forvifju Intelligence
. _-forvifju intelligence
Fraxce. The Budget. The Budget Of War Ju...
_FRAXCE . THE BUDGET . The Budget of war just presented to the _Assembly , presents * dim ' rauhon of 76 . 111 . 4 a 0 _f . _T " _effecti' _-e of the * rmv , which , on the lst of December , 1848 amounted to 502 , 196 men and 100 . 432 torses , wiil be reduced bv 121 372 men and , 8 , 022 horses , and would m-ke a total at the end of ihis year of cnlv 380 . 824 men and 92 . 410 horses of -which 78 . 000 men end 15 . 490 horses are to be emloyed in A ! e- * ria- The budget of marae is *»
-p nun _ished bv 22 . 073 , 029 francs . The active fleet to becompo-ed of 10 ships , of which two with floating battery ; 8 frigates , 18 corvettes , 24 brigs , ie _traHf-p-rts . and 24 schooners and cutters , manne bv 20 000 seamen . Besides these , there will be wo vessels tud five friiates , en _dUporibxhte de raae and 8 ships and 10 frigates in port _»«™ _- _** "J Tue steam vessel , belonging to the active fleet would be composed of 10 frit-ate * , 12 corvettes . . na 34 avisos . _Brides these 21 vessels of which J _frintes , 6 corvettes , and C avisos , wou _. d remam in
port _commission . . _* _r . w tctp ASSEMBLY ' S ADJOURNTIIE UUESTION or THE aioejud _MENT . On Thursday M . Gre _«* y presented thc report of the committte on M . _Ititcau _' s proposition for the dissolution of the Assembly . M . GREvr said that the proposition submitted to the committee had a double object—to have the present Assembly _disso ved , and the election of the Legislative AssrmWy proceeded to in the month of _Jlarch . Thi _raaj-irity of the committee bad come t > the conclusion that it ought not to accede to _eithf-r object . ( Agitation . ) Thc corHmittee was of op inion that the Assembly was called on to watch over the first steps of the Republic—that it had the task l ' _l-fore it of sating that in the raids' * of the _strucgles of parties _inseparable from a new order of
government , ihe Republic suff-. red no damage . Besides _, in presence of the language employed b y the ministry , the committee thought that the Assembly could not separate —( agitation)—as the propositi m demanded . ( Renewed agitation . ) In addition , the _intimidsuon and moral violence exhibit .-: d in . newspapers , and by petitions —( great uproar )—was another powerful reason with it not to yield to the demand made on it . The petitions , however , oug ht not to bs considered of loo much wei ght , as up to this moment oul y 173 , 003 signatures had been appended to those _pre-tnted . Yet the object of them was clearly t . _*> _abrogaie the authority placed in the National Assembl y by the mandate committed to it . For these reasons the committee recommended the Assembly not to take the proposition in consideration . ( G _* eat agitation . ) Monday next was fixed for the discussion .
PERSECUTION * IT THE REPUBLICAN'S . The government has transmitted orders to all the departments to proceed without de . ay to the drawing for the national jury which is to sit in the hi g h court of justice for tbe trial of Barbes and his accomplices . The functions of legal prosecutor will he exercised hy M . Baroche , procureur-general of toe Court of Appeal at Paris . The Moniteur contains the decree for the convocation of the Hi g h National Court for the trial of the offenders of the 15 th May , within forty days , on or before the 6 th of March . A letter frorn _Citizen Thore announces that a protest against sending the persons accused of being concerned iu the affair of May 15 , before the National Hi g h Court of Justice , is being signed in the _faubourgs , and at the offices of the various
democrane journals . The patriot Bavbes has addressed the followin g letter to several of the ultra-republican journals ;—* Donjon de Vincennes , Jan . 23 . _Citizsn Editor —As it is a common-place iruih that in politics one is always tried by one ' s enemies , I hsd intended since my arrest to defend myself infinitely little , before whatever tribunal I mig ht be sent . The decree for employing the arm of the Hi g h Court of Bunrges against the accused of May does not change much my determination . There , as elsewhere . I shall protest against the verdict of vengeance of a party appealing from the sentence of proscription which awaits me to the justice of the people , who have annulled many other sentences , and who will al » avs proclaim— my affection for them makes me
sure of it—that I am a good citizen . It is not then precisely for my own sake that I _no-r raise ray voice against ths decision of the Assembly—it is on account of the wrong which it does to those of _j-ny co-accused who had every certainty of being acquitted by a jury . With that exception—ma foi J so mnch the batter ! When eo many other brave citizens pass before courts-martial , it would have been repugnant to me not aUo io enjoy the advantage of some exceptional jurisdiction ; and since it is not known hon- to give us any other equality than that of condemnations by commissions , it is at least something we are gratified with that—with I suppose the hulks at the end for the representatives of the people as for the _p-ior represented , whom the gentlemen of the tnonarchia ! castes call , when they are not afraid of tbem . tie canaille !'
On Wednesday , _Citizen Bernard _condemned by tbe Court of Assiz » s to a year ' s imprisonment and SOOf . fiuc , for having , as a member of the bureau of the Club de Chateau des Brouittards , allowed a person named _Debonnard to deliver a _speech , ' exciting French ci'izens to hatred of each other . ' _Duponey , another of the club staff , was tried far the same offence , but acquitted . Debonnard did not appear , and was sentenced by _default to three years ' imprisonment and l . OOOf . fine . The club was in the meantime ordered to be closed .
The Club of Fraternity , which holds its sittings in the Rue Mattel , Faubourg Poissonniere , under the presidentshi p of M . Bonnard , and which w _* is noted for the ultra opinions professed in it , was closed on Thursday by order of the Minister of the Interior . At seven o ' clock a commissary of police , accompanied b y several guardians of Paris , entered and summoned the President to terminate the sitting . After a protest against such conduct the President and bureau withdrew , as did about 500 persons who were present . Some precautions had been taken outside by the authorities , as a battalion of the 5 th Light Infantry occupied the end of tbe street .
Another club , which held its sittings in the Rue Grenel'e , St . Honore , was also closed on Thursday . The government also prevented the opening of a new club , intended to have besn inaugurated b y the members of the if nuntain '
SIGKS OF AX _APrHOACHrXG STRUGGLE . ( From the Correspondent of the Times . ) _Taris , Friday Evening —Considerable alarm prevails everywhere to-day , and the opinion seems to be rniversal that we are fast approaching to a crisis . As the moment for the discussion on AI . Grevy s report comes on the public anxiety increases ; and there appears to be no alternative , in case of its approval by the National Assembly , but the retirement of the Cabinet or a coup d ' etat . The former would , in aU probability , be immediately followed by the accession of the men of the Red Republic to power , and the latter by an attempt at insurrection .
The importance of the present momentous crisis will be appreciated hy the fact , that several of the B _^ publican parly , who hitherto declared themselves opposed to hostile manifestations , and counselled peaceful agitation , have all of a sudden changed their tone . Menaces of the most violent kind are ottered not only against the Moderates , but against the person of the Chief of tlie State himself . Le Peuple , the organ of Af . Froudhon , in au article of much violence , has , amongst ether thinge , the following * . —
• Behold him , then , this President ! he who OHgbt to exert every nerve towards the strengthening of our Republican institutions , but who , by bis apathy and his intrigues , and scattering around him corruption and despair , is incessantly occupied in the disorganisation of the Republic . Behold him , this equivocating Republican , who complained of being calumniated , and who drives from their places all true Republicans , and hands over prefectures , the bench , Sec , to hordes of reactionists , to monarchist * , proved through thirty years of treason ! For hiin even the Republicans of the morrow are of too sombre a colour . Absolutists b y race and of the o'd Btocli are ihe men for him . Louis Bonaparte has set on foot the question ofthe dissolution of the Assembly Very good ! Monday next , the Asthe dismissal of the President '
The article concludes thus : — - Let us wait , patriots ! Let us wait now more than ever , and now more than ever calm and patient ! The _Naiional Assembl y will itself , and alone , complete the revolution . Our woes will soon be over . The President _thftis to say , lhe monarchy , corruption , _falsehoo d _priv-lei- P , oniric- * , aid the " exportation of cap ' _n-1 have become _impossible . ' __
Fraxce. The Budget. The Budget Of War Ju...
POPULAR PROTEST AGAINST T 0 * MOCK TRIAL _OV THE REPUBLICAN CHIEFS . # „ , i . The Socialist papers publish the follow ing _^ _protest _agamst the decree of the Nationa _^^ £ __ S Barbes and his associates for trial before themg Court of Justice : — _ AgsemblT Urt 15 th of
- , _L after he facts of the _May-JLSSVS SSi . attacks _rig Vts _. _nteriorand uS to the positive law recognised m the Con-Son itself-the peop le of Paris protest agamst sending the accused of May before the exceptional tribunal of Bourges . They imp lore tbe prisoners of Vincennes to reject that political and retrospective jurisdiction , and to abstain from every collective or individual defence . They request the accused who are contumacious not to _surrender themselves to be tried by the enemies of the
Republic . ' PROPOSED ATROCIOUS LAW AGAINST THE CLUBS
National Assrmbly , Friuay , Jan . 26 . M . Leon Faucher , Minister of the Interior , announced that he had been directed b y the President of tke Republic to present a project of decree against clubs . The Assembly , he said , had already enacted severe penalties with a view to repress excesses and remove dangers alarming to society , It would have even pronounced more serious enactments , and prohibited clubs altogether , if it had not hoped to be able to _resirain them by its law of the 28 th of July . The experiment of the last six months was decisive , and the insufficiency of the law was now demonstrated to the least clear si g hted . The
government had ordered a number of clubs to be closed in the capital and the departments , and denounced the oft-nders to the tribunals . It had exerted itself to defeat the machinations of the anarchists , and to reassure the honest aud psaceable citizens . Those clubs , closed oo one point , werj re-opened on another . It was impossible for a regularly constituted government to tolerate any longer the expression of doctrines and passions calculated to dissolve ¦ mcifitv . In the clubs hatred and rebellion were
preached under every form . They were the hotbeds of secret societies , and both lent each other mu'ual support . It was impossible that confidence could be restored whilst clubs were permitted to exist . In a country enjoying liberty of the press and public discussion , and where Universal Suffrage was th « 3 foundation of the government , there was no possible pretext for the establishment of clubs . In this conviction the President of the Republic had directed the Cabinet to submit the following bill to _« he deliberation of the National Assembly : —
' Art . 1 . Clubs are interdicted . Every meeting , held p _-riodicall y or at irregular intervals , for the discussion of public affairs shall be considered asa club . Art . 2 . The presidents , chiefs , secretaries , & e . of such meetings shall be sentenced to a fine of from IOOf . to 500 f . ; to deprivation of civil rig hts during a year at least and three years at most , indepen dently of the other _penalties they may have incurred . ' Art . 3 . Individuals who shall lend their houses pr apartments for such meetings shall be sentenced to a fine of from IOOf . to 500 f . Art . 4 . AU the provisions of the law of 28 th of Jul y lest , relative to clubs , are abrogated .
The Minister afterwards observed that it was urgent that the bill should immediatel y come under discussion , and be referred to the bureaux with the least possible delay . Several members cried out ' To-morrow , to-morrow ' when M . Gent ascended the tribune , and protested against the bill as violating the first liberty recognised by the Constitution . He knew the _aversion of ministers to the right of meeting , but did not believe that they would have dared to present such * a law to the present Assembly . ( Cries of * Order , order _!*) He accordingly called on his col . leagues to _reject without discussion a bill containing au attempt against the 8 ih article of the _Constitution .
Tne Assembly , however , on being consulted , referred the bill to the bureaux , and decided that a report on the urgency of its discussion should be presented to it on Saturday . [ Mark ! this atrocious law is reported to have been presented b y the direction of ihe _President ] Take note of that , all you wbo put y # ur trust in princes . Leon Faucher is a great free-trader;—the Cobden ot France ! Take note of that also , you who are throwing up yonr caps for the ' model ag itator V—Ed . N . S . ]
alarmixg state of fart ? . Saturday Jan . 27 . Alarm and excitement prevail throughout the capital . —At twelve o ' clock a vast multitude was collected round the Pantheon , and shouts of 'Vive la Repuhlique democratique et sociale , ' were heard . Most violent propositions were made by the leaders , who declared that the Assembly must be supported , that . the ministry must be dispersed and driven from o tics , that the clubs must be defended and all attempts to close them resisted . The Pevple of yesterday was seized at the Post Office . Tiiis proceeding , however , appears to have in nowise discouraged the zeal of Af . Proudhon , who returns to the attack to-day with the following article .
We Baid yesterday , - The struggle 13 between the _Nrtional Assembly and Louis Bonaparte . Louis Bonaparte has laid down the question of the dissolution of the Assembly . On Monday next the Assembly will lay down the question of the dismissal of the President . ' The Procureur of the Republic , a subaltern of the President of the Republic , has considered this judgment disquieting for his superior , and has seized our number . Let him seiz this also ' . for we cannot refrain from saying , - The fiction of royal inviolability was abolished b y the constitution of December 4—the President of the Republic is responsible . ' Yes , and it is not we who s % y it—it is the force of tilings ; on Alonday a decisive battle
will take place _between the revolution andthe counter-revolution—between Ihe revolution , represented b y the National Assembly—aud the counter-revolu . tion represented by Louis Bonaparte . Is it impossible to deny this ? If tha Assembly were dissolved the counter-revolution would meet with no more obstacles : the _constitution would be destroyed—two chambers would be re-established—the inviolability and re-eligibility ofthe President would be declared —his civil list would be increased ten-fold—monarchy ba restored—corruption reconstructed—and the people again enchained . On the contrary , Louis Bonaparte conquered , having resigned or being dismissed , the counter-revolution would be cast
down—all its hopes be ruined irrevocabl y and for ever . democratic protest against the new ukase . The Reforme publishes the following protest of the Republican journalists agaiust the bill for the suppression of clubs : — ' The undersi gned , considering that the ri ght of meetim- and association is a natural right , anterior and posterior to all positive law , and recognised , moreover , by the Consti" ution ; * Considering thatthe law presented by the Ministry has not for its object to regulate the exercises of that ri g ht as the Constitution requires , but that it suppressed it in an absolute manner , and thus deprives the soverei gn people of their most important political prerogatives ;
' Considering that the Ministry , hy the mere fact of the presentation of that law . attacks both the Constitution and the natural ri g hts of raan ;—¦ Protest with all their energy , and call on the Assembly to impeach the Ministers who have dared to attempt that coup d ' etat . ' ( Signed ) The Reforme . —Charles Ribeyrolles , chief editor - V . Leoutre , director ; Alexis Lagarde , Cayla , P . Coq . 1 Repuhlique ;—Eugene Barest ? , chief editor ; Cliatard , Herve . ' Peuple . —Daritnon , sub-editor ; Langlois _, Faure , Vasbenter , Duchene , _Aladier de MoKtjan _, senior , advocate of the Pevple .
' Rero ' _ulion Democratique et Sociale : —Charles Delescluze , chief editor ; Araable Len : a ' : te , Goumain _Cornille , D . Pilatte , Martin , Castille , H . Delescluze , A . Carre , H . Biji . * Travail Affranchi . _*—Toussencl . 1 Cluls _.- —Tessier du Afotay , Bernard , Garnet , E . Madier de Aloutjan , jun ., J . B . Bocquet . ' THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY—SIGNIFICANT
MANIFESTATI _1 N OF THE LAW STUIJEXT 3 . At half-past 2 o ' clock AI . Marrast , president , took the c iair . C JDsiterd ) e excitement prevailed within and without the Assembly . At 12 o ' clock a deputation ef about thirty students ume ited themselves at the
Fraxce. The Budget. The Budget Of War Ju...
Palace to hand a protest to M . Ledru _Rottm _against the reinstatement of M . _L'Herminere in the chair of legislation at the College of France . The questors , on being informed of their intention , had ordered the gates to be closed , and the garrison of the Palace to take arms . One of the officers of the Assembly went out to receive the petition from the hands of the students , who afterwards quietly retired . That deputation , it appears , had be _>* n sent _forward by a body of about 1 , 000 students , who had repaired to the office of the Democratic Pacifique , in the Hue de Beaune , to request its editor , M . Considerant , to insert their protest in that journal . The young men were waiting in the court the result of their application when four gardiens de Paris arrived and proceeded to arrest the individual who
acted as commander of the column . His comrades interfered , and rescued him from the hands of the gardiens , one of whom was severel y beaten . A large crowd had in the meantime assembled before the house , and the porter deemed it prudent to close the gate . The alarm , however , had been spread throug h the quarter , and in a few moments two companies of infantry of the line occupied the extremities of the street , whilst another advanced and drew up in front of the house , the gate of which was opened to admit tbe captain , a detachment of his men , Bnd some city sergeants , who proceeded to arrest twelve of the ring leaders and permitted the remainder to depart . These formed into several bands , and returned to the Pays Latin , singing 1 Down with Falloux' ( Minister of Public Instruction ) to the tune * Bes Lampions '
PROSECUTIOV OF CITIZEN _PROUDH-iN . The President : I have to inform the Assembly that a demand has been sent in by the Procureur of the Republic for authorisation to prosecute M . Proudhon , representative of the people , for two articles published by him in the Peuple , on January 26 th and 27 th . ( Great agitation . ) The Assembly formally _acknowledges the receipt of the demand thus made by tbe Procureur General , and the bureaux will assemble to examine the question of the authorisation applied for .
AL Proudhon : Cit ' z < = n _Representatives—I ' am anxious to protest at once against the accusation broug ht against me . I ara the author of the article of January 26 _* . h ; I had forgot to sign it , hat I accept all the responsibility of its contents . ( Loud approbation on lhe Left . ) The Assembly will decide what it p leases . For my part , I was anxious to bring forward in the press , as before the Assembly or the country , a question altogether novel for usthat of the responsibility of _thePresident of the _Republic , I will give explanations on the point before the committee , as before my bureau , and , if necessary , in this tribune . ( Voices on the Lift , ' Bravo ! bravo ! ' )
DEFEAT OF THE MINISTERS . Af . Senard presented the report of the committee against the urgency of closing the clubs , maintain _, ing that the question was an extremel y difficult one , requiring much previous stud y , and that , therefore , the Chamber ought not to proceed preci pitately . M . O . Barrot , the President ofthe Council , spoke against the _repo-t and in favour of the urgency . M . Ledru Uollin I support the conclusions of the committee . The Ministry declares that the question when brouiht forward , ought to be resolved at once . But it is not tbe Chamber which brought it forward , but the government ; if , therefore , there are some inconveniences connected with the question ,
the responsibility of them ought not fo be imputed to the Assembly , which desires to examine the mea sure with due deliberation , but to the cabinet . As to the ri g ht of the clubs to exist , it is laid down in the Constitution ; and I maintain that thc Constitution ought to be iespected in all its provisions . The whole question , therefore , amounts to thisdoes the Constitution authorise the suppression ol the clubs ? The rights of meeting , of association , and of petition , are guaranteed by the Constitution . You say that tbey must be regulated , in the interest of public security . But is it to regulate a ri g ht to suppress its exercise altogether ? ( Loud approbation on the Left . ) By the bill , the chilis are not
regulated , but _suppressed . There is also the press , which _greaily displeases those who do not desire the lig ht ; would jou venture , under pretext of regulating it , to do away with it altogether ? ( Movement . ) A word now on the question of urgency . When the committee , which has seen all the documents on which the Ministry founds its application , declares to you that there is no good reason for urgency , can youths Assembly , which has seen nothing , declare that the urgency ought to be granted ? ( Loud acclamation . ) I said just now , and I repeat it , that it is the very text of the Constitution that is designed to be annihilated . I maintain that there cannot be urgency for a bill which is the absolute negation of the Constitution . ( Ag itation . )
_IMPKAClIMEST OP MINISTF . nS . AI . Ledru Rollin ascende *! the tribune and said , I have the honour to present a demand to authorise a bill of impeachment to be brought in against the AL ' _nistrv [ _J-u i _^ htei' on the Ri ght , . _imitation , loud applause on thc Extrcme Left , which then rose with a cry of " Vive la _ltupubliquc ! " ) A Voice on the Ri g ht : You ought also to impeach the President of the Republic , since ho signed the bill . Several Voices : Read the proposition ! It ought to be read ! The President : The sittin n- is at an end .
Several Members on thc Right : But you ought to read the proposition . ( Gre . it agitation . ) The President : It is contrary to tho regulations to do so ; besides , the sitting is over . The Assembly then rose at half-past seven in indescribable agitation . The _Piiesidext : Upwards of forty members having demanded ( lie ballot , that course shall be proceeded to . The following was the result : — Number of voters TOO Absolute _majority 381 Forthe conclusions of the committee 41 S Against it 342 Majority —7 fl
The Puesidext : In consequence , the quest-Ion of urgency is rejected . The bureaux will be convoked for Alonday to name a committee on the bill . The result was received with loud cries from thc Left of " Vive la llcpublique !" The following is a copy ofthe proposition for the impeachment ofthe Ministry : — " Considering that the anti-republican policy of the ministry has just manifested itself by a fact wllkh is nn _tvtt'vck " upon the ri g hts of citizens and on the fundamental principle of the sovereignty of the people;—" Considering that the ri ght of meeting is a natural riirht , and a political _l-isrlit written and
consecrated in the Constitution ofthe French ltepub lie;—" Considering that , by the project of Jinr presented yesterday , the 26 th of January , for thc suppression of the clubs , thc ministry have rendered themselves guilty of an act which is a fragrant violation of Articles 8 and 51 of tho Constitution ;—" Considering that thc ministry is responsible for its acts , according to Article 08 ofthe Constitution ; the undersigned representatives of the people demand the immediate impeachment of the ministers , and thoir trial before the Hi g h Court ofthe Nation , to be there judged in _confoi-Kiity with Article 01 of tho Constitution . ( Siirncd ) " Pierre Leroux , Astaix . Alartin Bernard ,
Oliivicr ( Demosthenc ) , Gent ( Alphonse ) , Pyat ( Felix ) , Clement , Brives , Mathieu ( _lironie ) , Benoist , Grcppo , Ledru Rollin , Doutrc , Gambon , Proudhon , Pogot-Ogier , Alule ( nine ) , Joigneaux , Joly ( tils ) , _Joly ( pcre ) , Cliolat , Bcrtholon , Farp-in-Fayollc , Terrier , Left-am * , Buvig _iiii-r , Dcville , Bruys ( Amedec ) , Afenard , Mathc ( Felix ) , Baune Sigtmrd _, Robert ( Yonne ) , Ch . Dain , James Demontry , rdlctior , ( Schu * lchei _'( V . ) , Detours , Th . Bac Bravard-Toussnint , Eugene Raspail , Vigncrte ; Germain _Sari-ut , Lamev . nais , Dubarrv , A 16-cham , l ' crdiguiiir _, Alatlct , " ' Pan ' s , Jan . 27 , 18-19 . "
_PROGKESS OF ALARM AND AGITATION . Paris Jan * . 2 Sth . — The correspondent of the _Ti-nc- -writes : — " We received from those charged with the preservation of the public peace _a-jsuranecs that it will not bo disturbed ; but within thc last twenty-four hours those assurances no _longer , as before , bring conviction to the mind . With respect to a hostile movement , I have already said that it was made to depend on a certain _contingency that contingency being the adoption of the law for the suppression of the clubs . Such a motive no Ion "or existing , it might be presumed that all fear of such an event ought naturally to vanish . Such , however
uniorimiateir , is not the case . Tlie public mind , not many days since comparativel y tranquil , has since Friday become much excited , ' and predictions ofthe g loomiest kind are announced . The only escape that _sewiis possible is in the retirement of the Cabinet . Should a coup be attempted , and a demonstration be made from any quarter against the Assembly , it seems impossible that a collision ofn most serious kind can be avoided . Should thc Assembly triumph , there would bo nothing extraordinary or unexpected in thuir undoing most of what has been done . * and , perhaps , instead ofa President and National Assembl y , such as it is , wc may have a Convention .
_ThcJvunirA < h > . _rciiplc announces that it was seized again on Saturday . It publishes an address to the people , beseeching them to abstain " for the present" from all species of manifestation , to avoid collecting in crowds , but to suiter their representatives to continue the course thev huve coamieue < _-0
Fraxce. The Budget. The Budget Of War Ju...
It tells thein that the safety cf tne people and o the Republic depends on their obedience . _SsriFKCTION OF THE OARDE M 011 _ILE-STMPIOMS OF MUTIXT IN TIIE ARMY . The National states , that on Saturday General Changarnier summoned the commanding officersi of thc twenty-five battalions of tho Garde Mohle . to thc Tuileries , to exp lain to them the measures about to lie adopted -with _rcspect-to a -reduction of then-corps . After some observations relative to tllO superior claims of thc regular troops , hesaid , "I am told that the Garth Mobile are dissatisfied , and that thoy propose to meet to-morrow in the Champs Llysees . tot them take care ; if they stir , I will have them _sibrcd . " After some moments , during which the ¦ _~ . „ _xi * i .., _f _ ,. o-. fi-. fw nf the ueoule and oW
officers observed the most profound silence , General Chan « arnicr ordered four of thc chiefs to be confined In the military prison of the Abbaye for one month . This order produced some remonstrances on the part of the officers , when thc General rang a bell , and a detachment of gendarmerie entered the room and seized the officers—one of them , Al . Aldenize , who had joined Prince Louis Napoleon when ho landed at Boulogne , instantly drew h is sword , broke it , and declared that he had entered thc service as a volunteer , that he would resign , and that , bcin no longer restrained by military discipline , he would express himself in strong language on the conduct of the General . He was forthwith sent off , under a military escort , to thc Abbaye , and , in the course of the evening , four other Commandants , MM . _Duseisneur , Arrighi _, Biissac , and Camcrut ,
were arrested and committed to the same prison . La Liberti announces that the 0 th Regiment of Lig ht Infantry , the 48 th of tho Line , and the Snd _Dra- _'oons , have been removed from Paris . It says , furtner , that eig ht sergeant-majors of thc 9 th Regiment of Lig ht Infantry have been arrested and committed to the military prison of the Abbaye . The same paper states that a grand dinner was given by Af . Ledru Rollin on Thursday , at which several superior officers ofthe army were present . The same paper mentions , as a report worthy of credit , that the superior officers ofthe ith , Sth , anil 9 th Legions of the National Guards of Paris assembled on Thursday evening to consider what course they should pursue in consequence of the agitation which at present prevails in Paris . They arc said to have pledged themselves to support energetically the National Assembly , and to protect , it from any attack made on it , no matter from what quarter .
GREAT MILITAltr KXCAMrMEXT . Paris , Alonday Eveuine :. —Thc correspondent of the Chronicle writes as follows : —Since the period of the June insuvrection Paris has not worn so -warlike an appearance an to-day . Tho whole of tho National Guards are under arms ; every street is crowded with soldiers ; the shops arc partiall y closed . Upwards of S 0 , 000 of the line—cavalry , infantry , and artillery—are bivouacked in the Champs ElysOcs , the Place de la Madeleine , at the _irdtc-1 dc Ville , on the Place de la Bastille , along the Boulevards , and wherever else danger is to be expected . The whole of the approaches to Ithe National Assembly are strictly guarded by immense bodies of soldiers , and , in short , the whole of Paris has exactl y the appearance it had in tho midst of thc insurrection of June—with this difference , and the difference is important—that there are no
barricades , and no _eoiips dc fusil . During last ni g ht the Government got notice that a plot waa ou foot , by which thc Garde Mobile were to join the Socialists , and march upon the Assembl y . It appears that a deputation of the officers of the Garde Alobile went , at two o clock this morning , to thc office of the Reforme newspaper to express tlieir wishes , and to ask the editor to be the means of communication between them and thc Socialists . Fortunately , notice of this step was immediately sent to General Changarnier , who at once gave the necessary orders , and sent for all the troops in the villages round Paris . The Government , fearing that tho insurrection might be a formidable one , has taken the precaution of sending Marshal Bugeaud to tako tho command of the army ofthe Al ps , with instructions to march upon Paris in case of necessity . Marshal Bugeaud
left Paris this mornin-r . left Pans this morning , The Government has resolved to dissolve thc clubs . The rappel is beating in all parts of Paris , and the alarm is very great . A battalion of the " Garde Mobile , which was ordered to remain within its barracks at Courbcvoio , has escaped , and is said to have conic into Paris . Several officers and privates of the Garde Alobile have been arrested in the course of to-day . It is reported that AI . Caussidiere has returned to Paris , and that he was arrested this morning , Dckl . —A duel was fought this morning between AI . Clement Thomas , tho _latc commander-in-chief of the National Guards of Pari *; , and AI . Coetlogon , editor of the _Corsuire . Both the combatants were desperately wounded . _COWAItnLT VOTE OF THE ASS ? : M _* JL _** .
On Alonday the Assembly decided , by a majority of 110 to 405 , that the proposition of AI . Bateau , fixing the day for the dissolution of the Assembl y , should be read a second time . AL PnouDiioN . —Tho majority of tho commissioners appointed to examine the demand of the Attorney-General for permission to prosecute AI . Proudhon for a seditious libel have decided in favour of the demand . [ Of course !] AIIUEST OF _» ' ALTON 8 HEI 5 , AU 1 _*** I * T ROCHE , _ANn SIXTT OTHER _IIBPCBLICAS CHIEFS .
On Alonday the Minister of the Interior having been informed that the loaders of the society of the SnUdarite Rcpublicaine were sitting in conclave in the Rue de Faubourg St . Denis , commanded that they should be forthwith arrested . A battalion of a regiment of the line was instantly despatched ' to the spot , and having been drawn up in front of the house No . 50 , a number of police officers entered and arrested the members of thc society to thc number of sixty , who wore marchod off to prison , singing the hymn of the Girondins , and shouting at intervals Vive la Rcpubliipte ! On Tuesday , tho late Peer of France , Count d'Alton Shee , now an ultra-Socialist , was arrested ; so also was M . Auliert Roche , one of the rc-fac _' _eur- _* ofthe Reforme , and one of tho chief founders of the Solidariti RepuUicainc , a society which has ramifications all through France .
ARREST OF COLONEL FORr . STIF . Il . On Alonday cvenin- * _- , M . Forcsticr , colonel of the 6 th legion of the National Guards of Paris , at the Aiairif of the Cth arrondisscment , was arrested by a squadron of dragoons . ThcAIayorand AI . Bonvallet , thc lieutenant-colonel , were taken along with him at their own request . It appears that , an hour previously , Colonel Forcsticr had addressed to the captains of thc companies of his legion , who were stationed on the Boulevards , an animated speech , in which he requested their assistance to maintain order and sustain the Republic . It was on account of this speech , and a letter addressed to the President of thc Assembly expressing similar sentiments , that he was arrested ! " _ounKR nmcxsix rAnis ' "
Paris , Tuesday . —The Paris of this morning forms a remarkable contrast with the Paris of yesterday . All yosturd _.-iy tho capital had the appearance ofa vast camp . To-day everything has resumed its ordinary appearance . The commencement of thc sitting of the National Assembly to-day was exceedingly animated . Al . _SSarrans demanded an explanation of tlie want of consideration shown by the government tOW . _li'iis f ho Assembly in placing an immense body of troops , without notice , round its p lace of meeting , and in arresting Colonel Forcsticr , of thc 0 th Legion of the National Guards . _ I . Sarrans deulared that it was not Colonel Fovestier , but _General _Chsnigiiviiiei _' , who ought to have been arrested ; and lie terminated by movin g that a committee should be appointed to inquire into , and report on , the events yesterday . This motion created an immense tumult . Ultimately the Assembly passed to tho order of thc day .
Pauls _Wj- _dxesbay . —Tranquillity continues . Nn nierous arrests continue to be made . Troops con t . imip . to arrive .
GERAIANY . PRUSSIA . — A number of Berlin compositors have been sentenced to a fortnight ' s imprisonment for having struck work some time ago , in order to obtain shorter hours . So strictly is the state of siege observed , that on the evening of the 20 th ( not forty-ei g ht hours before thc general elections ) , a small meeting of twenty persons in a private house was dispersed by the military . The state of siege has been raised in Dusseldorf . Arrests and trials for political offences are multip lied to such extent throughout tho country , that thc prisons and fortresses arc crowded , to such an extent , indeed , that , according to the iournals the judges do not know where to send condemned prisoners , and commandants of fortresses declare they have no moro room vacant . In one or two instances , whole villages have been prosecuted .
THE PRUSSIAN' _ELECTIONS—TIlIUMl'H OF THE DEMOCRATS . By letters from Berlin of the 25 th wc learn that thc victory of the Democrats at the primary elections iu Berlin is complete , not less than SOU out of the 1 , ' 225 chosen electors in tho second degree being their partisans . In Alagdeburg the Democrats returned 237 out of 275 electors in the secondary degree . Every post brought to Berlin fresh accounts of victories of the democrats . Even iu Westp halia they have gained tho upper hand .
_Ilic grand primary elections terminated at Cologne on the 22 nd , in the all but general triumph ofthe _Democrats in the sixty-four electoral districts into which tho city and nei ghbourhood arc divided . So strongly , in fact , has the tide set in against the e-actionary party , and even against those who are m favour of the new constitution , that , to make doubly sure , the electors in several districts chose not only extreme Democrats but _thorough-soin _" _Socialists and Communists , as electors in the sT'coiidary ilegrei \ that is to Bay , as thc direct _ck't'tovs of the deputies . Even the Commandant of _Coloirno , Col . Engels , was defeated in the -J-ith district ! " his antagonist , a Republican and a Socialist , boiim ; _ivtui-ued . Iu IWnn , also , tV- _' victory of tho Democia _' s
Fraxce. The Budget. The Budget Of War Ju...
is not loss signal , their partisans having been elected in not less tfian eig hteen out of twenty-one deput cs In fact , thc Bonn _Gazette declares that it is the _Republicans who have triump hed . Executions of the patriots continue in the Austrian capital , - , ¦ _i _fi , _„ i ,. „ ai . fi _* _q-i _* i ' ' _« haviii' -been elected is not lessmsnnl , the _irpaitisansu . i \ m _uauuww
ITALY . ROAIAN STATES . -The TrMne of _^ _rMOftbz lothwVt ., awvowcesthat asmallarmy ot 8 , 000 men , consisting of Swiss , Keapolifcms . and _Spaniards , is concentrated at Capua . _~ ... , „ ,, The Constitiientc Italiana of Florence , ofthe l / th , quotes letters from Rome , stating that several countr y curates arc actively engaged in paralysing tne electoral operations . To counteract their influence , commissions arc sent from Rome to instruct and persuade the people . At Gonzano , a town of-about 0 , 000 inhabitants , the curate had the enoyclic letter ofthe Pope posted up , but it was immediately torn down . , , Tlie battalion of students lias arrested General
Zambonr , a creature of Austria , with two captains . They had on them considerable sums of money . They have been confined in St . Angclo . _( IMPORTANT DECLARATION—ONE , FREE , ¦ . ' . SITED ITALT . Advices from Rome , of the 17 t ! i ult ., bring a proclamation ofthe Provisional Commission of Government , addressed to all the people of Italy , which savs : — "The hour is come when Italy must cease to be a geograp hical name , and become a nation . " It then proclaims that the National Constituent Assembly of Rome will assume the powers of an Italian Constituent Assembly , in so far as it would form a part of tho Assembly . It shall not havo tho character ofa partial or local representation , but of that of twenty-five millions of Italians , all united in the same sentiment , that of developing in common the era ofthe great regeneration . Roine will thus lav tho first stone of that edifice which
shall unite in one end , m o : e _existence , m one nation , thc different people of tht _a-icicnt Queen of Europe—thc Italian Constituent _Assembly . lVlicn this proclamation waa read at Civita Vecchia , the enthusiasm was unbounded . ' TUSCANY . _-Tlic Alba , of Florence , of 22 nd ult ., savs : "The Chamber met this morning , and received , with unanimous acclamation , the decree presented bv thc ministry as to tlw immediately sending Tuscan deputies to the Italian Constituante about to meet at Rome . These deputies , amounting to thirty-seven , will be elected by universal suffrage , and will have unlimited authority . It is useless to add with what enthusiasm the peop le hailed this proof of patriotism in the ministry .
NAPLES . —Advices from Naples , of the 15 th ult ,, announce that ft levy of 18 , 000 soldiers , to march on Rome , which was to have been drawn b y lot , could not be effected . At Nap les the government was _obliged to suspend the drawing . In the province of Avelino , and particularly in the valley Claudina , the urns were _ln-okcn , and a solemn protest made . At Salowio , tho Basilicat , and iu Calabria the results were similar .
HUNGARY . Comorn was bombarded on tho lGth ult ,, and the fortress , garrisoned by from 8 , 000 to 10 , 000 men , was entirely surrounded . Military terror reigns in Pesth . Ai ' ilitary executions have commenced in Presburg . SPAIN . Desultory fig hting continues in this country . A number of Republicans have beon cut to pieces by the Queen ' s troops .
Ar00208
Ad00209
rpiIE EXTRAORDINARY PROPEIi-JL tics of this medicine arc thus described by an eminent phvsician , who says : — " After particular observation of the action of _Pai-u ' s Pills , I am determined , in my opinion , that the following are tlic-ir true properties : — " First—They increase thc strength , whilfit most other medicines have a weakening effect upon the system . Let any ona take from three to four or six pills every twentyfour hour *" , and , instead of bavin- * weakened , thoy will be found to have revived the animal spirits , and to have imparted a lasting strength to the hoily . " Secondly—In thwr operation thoy go direct to the disease . After yon hare taken six or twelve pills you will experience tlieir effect ; the disease upon you will become _Icfs and less by every dose you take ; and if you will persevere in regularly taking from three to six pills every day , your disease will speedily be entirely removed from the _vsti'til _.
Ad00210
YOU MAY BE CURED YET ! HOLLOWAY ' S _OINTMENT . CURB OF RHEUMATISM AND RHEUMATIC GOUT . Extract of a Letter from Mr . Thomas JSrunton , Landlord of the Waterloo Tavern . Coathiim , Yorkshire , late of the Life Guards , dated September 28 th , _ISiS . Sir , —Vov along time I was a martyr to Rheumatism and . Rheumatic Gout , and for ten weeks previous to using your medicines I was so bad as not to be able to walk . I had tried _dnctoi-in- ; aud medicines ot ' cverv kind , _lrnt all to no avail , indeed I daily sot worse , ami Mt that I must shortly die . irom seeing yonr remedies advertised in the paper I take in , I thought I would give them u trial . I did so . I rubbed tbe ointment , in as directed , and kept cabbage leaves to the parts thickly spread with , it , and took the Pills night aud morning . In three weeks I was enabled [ to - \ v : ilk _itfjout for : ui horn * or two in the _tljiv -with u stick and in sovon weeks I could l _* o anyivlii'ii' without one . I am
Ad00211
__ ON physical disqualifications , _GBNKK-mvir TvrM- * ' < -rrv _n-n rui > _--nm . _vvTO ~' _„ . ' .... ' !•) LULL .... | < _> _t . _--a _> _- _>» a _> _-i _> _t-ON PHYSICAL DISQUALIFICATIONS , _GBNEK-mvm INCAPACITY , AND I . MX > EDLUBNTS TO _MAIUJIAGBES Twenty-fifth edition , illustrated with _Twcnty-Six Anatoronn cal Engravings on Steel , enlarged to 1 % pages . ' priull 2 s . fid ; by post , direct from the Establishment : > i , _- , e , in postage stamps . , ' '" • '
Ad00212
MO MORE MEDICINE ! A 0 _MOlIi _* : 1 _\ DELICATE CHILDREN!—Dyspepsia ( _Indige--ri _^ . ) and Irregularity of Intestines , the main causes of Biliortness ,. Nervousness , Liver Complaints , Flatulency , Palpitation of the Heart , Nervous Headaches . Noises iii the _Hcj _.-I and Ears , Pains iu almost every part of the Bod y , _Astlinw . Gout , Rheumatism , Scrofula , Consumption , Dropsy , Ik' _-s- * - _bui-ii , Nausea after eating or at sea , Low Spirits , Spasir . s . Spleen , A * e ., effectually removed from the system , as a :- ' Constitutional Debility , by a permanent ros toration of ;; e digestive functions to their primitive vigour , without _\ _i-aying , inconvenience , pain , or expense , by
N,,H?N?/!'! Lg . T0t ≫ C ^ M P Ut - Lti ≪≫» ^ Mr. -, ¦**•• •' ¦ ': •' ;
n ,, H ? n _?/! _' ! _. > _^ P _- <>» _^ Mr . -, _¦**•• •' ¦ ' : _•' ;
. "' '* "<¦•'"•>J Or Considerable Repute...
. "' ' * _" _<¦• _'" •> j or considerable repute up" - l " 1-voc _cus _lur-tal _* _. th ,- total value of the whole ¦ j . _""" _- ' - Ui \ hi Luropi _* , m im , was mil . !*** r , m
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), Feb. 3, 1849, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_03021849/page/2/
-