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Notembbr 11. Ifc4i: THE N6!lflWW STAR. 7
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&0(omal an* ffovtiwn
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BOMBARDMENT OF VIENNA. , -fjgu of Saturd...
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$anttttipt&
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(From the Qasette of Tuesday, November 7...
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THE C HOLERA. Thk Metropolis.—The Board ...
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iKquEsis, Saturday.—Alleged Neolboi o* a...
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Transcript
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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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Notembbr 11. Ifc4i: The N6!Lflww Star. 7
_Notembbr 11 . Ifc 4 i : THE N 6 ! _lflWW STAR . 7
&0(Omal An* Ffovtiwn
_& 0 ( omal an * ffovtiwn
Bombardment Of Vienna. , -Fjgu Of Saturd...
BOMBARDMENT OF VIENNA . , _-fjgu of Saturday gave the following _account cf notidoa of the enemy according to the reports re . * _fJ aop to that time . i iithoug _* * tbe _kipograpby of Tienna differs materially that of London , tome idea may be conveyed to onr _^ jgrs of t he nature of tbe siege operatitns by com-J _*^ _, » t he poiWons ef tht Imperial army with _eorre-P _*^ » p , fot 8 in the vicinity o ? this metrepolls . . The _•^^ _o of the _potition nnder the oommand of _Windisch" ! . „ _jjjnwelf rests at _Hetawadorf _, behind the Palace , of _aAsabruun _, _whista holds mwfc the tame _relati-re past . _*~ Tienna as Hampttead Hill does to Loudon , From _ , _poiat let it be supposed that the left wing of the jlgy extends by Brehensce and Lerchenfeld , whioh Si c _orraipoad to _Horatty and _Isliagton , nntU it rests _rtJjn ( he river at Foplar _, where a flying bridge connecta
• j | with the _eppotite htntc . Adopting tae aame Bpea . es of \ _gag b comparison , we may imagine that the right wing « f | S army drawn np in similar array against London _-alld extend from _Hampstewd across the great western n ) tdf , pressing the oity on tht tide of _S-nsingten and _tbePt-kf _, which correspond ia a measure to the Prater t t Tieana , and reachin g to the rivar at Chelsea . Such Is tks petition occupied by JslUchich sad the Croatian gtny _. who _tnuswmmini the main road to Huaeary ; tad the main attack which oommeaoed on the moraing 0 _{ the 2 S-A was directed _agaiaat the _onbarb of the 1 * _8-poldstadt , separated from Tienna hy a small branch of t & s Danube , which intersect * the lew ground and the prater . Oa the opposite shore of the rutin ttream of the lbnn . be considerable forott have also been collected , bnt the c ' ty of Yienaa itself lies at tome little distance from tie principal chaanel . The outpost of _Florisdorf , which
* jts more than once been mentioned , holds an analogous position to Deptford or Eotherhitht , aad the couneof the rsilirays ( the points ofthe compass being inverted in the whole p _loa ) resemble those of the Dover and Southampton lines . _TtUdescrfptlotimnit of coarse be anderst * od aslant mutondil . as Yienna lies on the right bank of the Tjinuba and London ** _rtnoCpoIly oa the left btak of tbe fhtmet . and the whole _droalt of Titans , end its _tahurbt is probably aot above one-third of the British metropelit , hat it mty terra to convey tome idea of the position to those who are not familiar with the Austrian capital . The put peculiarity of Yienaa , in which it dift \ rs from all ths other cities of Europe , it the prodigious breadth of the gltcii , row converted into pahUo walks , which inter-Tents between the eld dty and the suburbs . At these inborbt ore entirely open , the only formidable resistance which c » n be offered is in the Harrow streets ofthe city itself . '
After varioas statements affirming and denying the _bcasardm-nt of Yienna , at length the news reachad _ _* __&_ ths latter end of last week that the _bomtnrd-0 * nt hod positively oommencf d . The corKspoBdentof thelfo * _- * mroC _* ao _* ncLB , writing from Bsrlin , on the SOth nit ., _tsppliedthe following partfcaisrs : — ' We hear frora sources ta be relied an that ¦ _ffindUcigra't- —after postponing the time accorded for tabmlssloa thirty-six hours , daring which he , of coarse , Taatur * d hit plant , and ttrengthtned hit meant of attack —shrew forward Ma columns o » the 2 ? ch . His main
¦ Stack , directed « gala « t tha _LcODCldtttdt , Wat lnp- > Mted ty a second attack apoa the Nasadorf line , and by several filie attacks npon intervening aurtert . The result wis _thit the _Lwpoldstodt _tabarb , at far at the church , fe ll into his hands , and , it was presumed that the whole snburb wonld be cleared of its _dtHtoders b-f jra nightfall . Tha atttcks were supported by a beary ire of shot and shell , tome of which , as above trarmised _, fell into the city ; bat it is the evident _detn-t of the imperial general to Unit tbe bombardment to the suburbs and _extrenittes of wist ara termed the Bate , which ( upon an average ) are _aafle and three-qutrtertfrora tha foot of the glacis . It ft stated that the people figkt _, and are resolved te fight tt the last _extremity , " The stringent _aeatuTesadopted by Windiatagratx , in _matting off aU _commHnJetttons with Yienna , hoc inter _, ropted the _prozrest of numtrous dcn * . _o ** rats * _from France and other parts , who % ae on their road to Join the insurgents .
A . Berlla 3 samal , * _neoraint ; _fta _teoAiew of ths bom- * * s ** -dmentfn > tothB _^ ightofthent * _a-aU .. gave the fol- ; lowing - _^ _'TnatHoggnlti railway was very warmly de- ; ftnded , hit was taken by the troops in * the course of tbej SSrh _, as-were also the whole of the outer lines on the : -cithers and _eestaen tide * , as well « t the suburb -otf Wdden , wh ' ch it said to be the principal hold of the ! opposr 9 _oupsrty . In the _La-tSitraste the Yagers , it ic said , _tofdrthi- _^ yharricadea tethe course ef three boars , andthe _regimentef Hassan greatly distinguished itself . _UssySttioaal'Saerda threw dowa -their arms , snd a great uuniber of-weapons were found *!* the caaal . The workmen , on tha _eeatrtry _. ditplayea great valour : ; -no students ware _observed , asd it was , therefore , -eoojtc . taxed that they had laid aside tbetr peculiar dlstinotlve - _** _-tt &* 'far the-purpose _of-remaining bttog . The -large tad valuable machine _tna-rtftxtory at the _Ologgatts _atir-rsywisUn flames , fe the night « f the ' _?*< - -only stogie shots were fired . _
The following paragraph appeared in the SnuKis _atrro-fe-HsiS-J of _thtfaltt _^ t ,- * — * Windltcbgrats bad issusdonthe 27 thaproda * nationto the elect that «• : the forty-eight houra' trace _hadexpired , he * _wsoid-no : long € r rest eatisfied with the-former condition-. , but ¦ wou ld wauire tie hes . 'ls of _'Siatral Bern , _Taleky , and _iDrSehutte , _-mdwe » -Mmakee--try houieowner _« _tpontible for whatever occurred ou bis premlset . -Should s shot _twored from-any house , _or-un attack _bs-awde from itoa the _ImptrUl _trosf i _. _' . all the persons foand _ie-lt shall be pot to the sword aad the house itself burned . In * - * plytothkprocIa * na * ion , Dr-Sehutte tet a price of . 3 , 000 geld _docatt on the head of _WUdlscbrratsT
_YEHfSAlKtPLAMES ! The * R « io » Ai _.,-3 f _* r id _* _V-PubHahed two letters from Yi-nn * of the 27 th end -88 th ult , from _whleh'we make tht feBowmg extracts . Thefirttat doted the afternoon of the nth . It say t :: _—« Yesterday , at six O ' clook In tte ; moraing , the cannonade commenced at the north and the _westofth 8 te-m , from _3 rigiitenean to tha-cemetery of Leiehenfeld . To this attack of the army the _inta-gents _-Rtpcmdriwrihr-re courage . The bolls erossed each ether in all directions , ttsd _ncaaneaergefio defeace was far from _b-dcg expected . After combat of twelve hours , the exterior line of the faubourg of -Leopoldttadt , ' -fiat U , tbs _Brxter _, the 4 & _ssar * eo , Bnd _Brigittoaeaa , w «« ¦ _oeettpitd-b ; _hearsay . ; bat tha _fsnboErg _itsdf . bristling with barricade * , snd eoarageoruly defended by the
_NsHooal Quasi and the _werkmin , was not broktadnto . At the west , that it , from the harrier of _rKentsdorf _4 e that of Uarlabilfer , the army ia _tnoster of tbe exterior line , bnt the faubourgs have not gives up a single bouse . The defence is really incredible . In ths attack -oe the cemetery of Leiehanfeld , whioh the people occupied , the _ormy-eusttJsed inKienae losses . There waa at one _xaomeataqusstien of abandoning the position—Jt . _cott to dear to tha _aitaila-Kt ; _battheinorol tffecton the troops wat feared ; the attack was accordingly persisted in , ba » tbe victory wot dearly paid _for . The palace of the Prinea de Lichsteastein , which _^ _mbarrasstdtiie defence of tte cits ; , has been reduced te ashes . _A-sast mill , in whieh was a depot of-corn and _aioar , was during six
hours _thesoene of a oust _violent combat , defended by two hundred students against sis hundred _aeldlera with esnnon . _Sventually , teeing all defenoe _impotatble _, the ttudenU effected their retreat on tbe faueeurgs , carrying with _themallthe com and iflour . I he army temedia _telj destrayed the mill . 8 i the whole , neither the city nor the faubosrga have thus far ceded a single _ioch of _grtund . Ao _^ pBtaUon _, he « _4 B-lbyH . * Paiers _4 orff , w * lted _jeiterdsy oa WiEdiechgratr , _demondisg more humane _$ repositienf than those contatsed in tbe proclamation of the 23 rd . _Windischgrate wa » inflexible , 'Well , thea j ' « _oidlf deFiilertaorff _, ' may the responsibility of all the blood shed fsJi « n your head ** ' I accept the _respo-u _fdoiliry of all my asfa 1 ' replied tbe _General . H . _Ersust also went to bim , tat received the aame _eefusol , —the
_to * se answer . The second letter ta the NaTiosu . states that _Wlnditchgratx had demanded tbe bead ef General Bern , of _DrSehatw _. and of _Falssky _, the Hungarian minister , and thatSchutte hod _rrjilled by offering _tao t _& ousand ducatt tor the hsad of lie General . HarUal law wat proclaimed on both aides . The Emperor had called on the Diet _tcsome to Cremt _, bat the Diet hod refuted to _1-tve Yieuca . At tea o'cleek oa the moraiag « f the 28 th , tbecoKetpondentof _thaJflxlo-MK _scyt , the troop * had _coanneaeed throwing shells aad Congreve roekftt . Tke stae writa teyt , ' -that tbe cannon of the people , btiag pointed by old srtUlerytnea , Wtre better served than that ofthe army , and was csftiing terrible slaughter . ' At half-put six o ' _clock in tae evening , the fight _, fog was still going on , and no _Huogsrion army had ap . pesred . The troops had so _^ however , gained any furtker advantage beyond what they had obtained the day before . The writer continues : —
'Kiear _o'Cmci _, _BtepHIb : —My _apprehensiont are unfortunately realised . Windlschgrat *; , not being able to tsir . ) on tbe town , bas detailed upon setting it on fire , and immense red flames , which rise tothe horizon , enable us perfectly to dis _& _gnishthediff . ientpeinu ofthe fiubowvs to which he has tat fire . You may expect some desperate act of despair , and may suoh a erime aot mt unpunished ! 'P . S . _Vnsi-i _. Oct , 28 th , Bight o'Clock , Evening — At I told yoa , the faubourgs are burning ie six different points . * CAPITULATIOK OP VIENNA .
Bmrsi _j Oct . 30 , nine o ' clock p . m . —The following telegraphic dispatch bos just been transmitted by the _Prutiisnsnvoy at the Court of Austria to the Minister _« f Forei gn _ASaha ia Berlin-. — ' Hdtxiag , near Vienna , Oot . 29 tb , one o clock p m . ' Daring thu night neatly all the suburbs of Vienna _havebeen taken hy assault by the Imperial troeps . The Crmosade as well as the firing has ceased . The city Is _eviiuUtrng . ' The Uthogiaphic report ef thebosrd of correspondence In BtriJn , of Oct- 28 , says : — 'M . Arago , Minister of the French Republic , has jo- rtce-T . d intelligence that Prince _Wiadlschgratzhas «« ered Yienna . ' The _Ptostus Stuts Aaznou contains ths following _tcco-uit of these important eveata — 'We have rtcelved from Vienna the following _prtclamiitl enfroin the _cammnnal _autbertits : —
* ' _Citlsns , _—^ The _Commander-in-chief ofthe National _Baard hat communicated to the Communal Council tbe _in-elli _geece that the National Guard and the Mobile 0 isrd _, at well as the Academic Legion , have _resoiwd io tt ' _- _» do _^ n astir arms snd submit tothe conditions im-Jfostd b y _prjncr _windiscktraU _,
Bombardment Of Vienna. , -Fjgu Of Saturd...
" a . deputation , composed of the membert of tbe C _« m _» mnnal Council aad of the National Guard , bat repaired ta the prises for the purpose of making this communleatioa to him . 'Tax C _oKMosttCoBKeiiior tic Cm ev _Vu «» i , •* Vienna , Oct 2 * , 1 K 8 . " The following are some exact details which took place at Vienna _tinee our last report . Oa the morning of the 29 th a deputation of the Com . _saunal Council repaired to the head auarttrs to engage the general in chief to _dssitt front his resolution ef patting the city ia a state ot siege even after its capitulation . Tbe prinoe , however , refused to entertain the proposal , and _demasdedunconditioaal submission . He , ntverthe-Itn , promised that he would not fire a shot against the oity throughout the whole of that _mornisg , in order that the inhabitants might have tbat time for reflection . At two o'olock , and again at _holf . _patt two in the _sfttrnoen . the firing commenced in several quarters , but this demmttratioa toon ceased .
Oa tbe evening of the 29 * . b , after the return et the de . pnt » ilon _, the _Ctmmuoal Council assembled and called to itt _seUberation the _commaaderxin-chief and all the -mJb-cemmanden of the _Kattonal _Qoards , ia order to deliberate whether the city oould be any longer _defended , and whether , If it could hold out longer , the capital would not thereby be exposed to the most _dsplorabls contequtnest . H . _M-tsenhautr declared that he waa quite ready to continue the defence , if the Communal Council woald command bim to do to , but that the potldon of the Imperial troopa wat such aa to give tht elty no possible ebanct of an _effectual defence _. The Council then proceeded to vote , and the resolution ta tubmlt immediately wot carried by a majority of twothirds of the votet On the aame evening a deputation repaired tothe prince to inform hira ef this _resolutlra , and the proclamation above quoted was immediately posted abaut the atreett .
The deputation waa to entreat the prinoe to command the Imperial troops to lend a strong force to the _CsnmunaJ authorities to effect the dftaraataent of tbe dty Ia _contmjaenoo of this declaration hostilities hare o-ated , and on the the Sim the troops occupied the glacl * without encountering any resistance . On the same day the Inhabitants in the environs had already , in a great measure , laid down their arms ; and in the _evrnlng tweaty-sevtn companies of the National Guard had de posited their anna in the suburb of _Wieden . It is alto stated that the National Guards ia the oity repelled the attacks made by the workmen on the castle , and that General Bern haa been carried wounded to tbe Hotel deliondre * .
Nothing _whatever wat positively known with respect to the Hungarian army . On the 80 th the Imperial troops made a movement in the direction of Kaisers Ebersdtrf and _8 chwachtt , and the sound of cannon was heard in that direction _. On the Slat it was reported at Breilau that the Hun . gariaaa bad advanced towards Yitnna , but that thty had been beaten , and obliged to fall bock upon the Danube , and that a part had joined the ranks of the Austrian army . roams _PAin-ratits—aiwwsn _nsBntro .
Farther accounts have been received from Yienna . It remltefrom these tbat the surrender of the oity , alreid f _lgreed upon , and the disarming of the populace aires dj commenced npon the 29 ih , was suddenly _interrup _*^ and the armistice broken by the populace . Tbis _« , _{( fortune wat occasioned by the advance of a cor _p * of Hung-riant , who at the _eleventh hour moved f jrward upon _Schweohet with oa intention of cutting in ' _eetrreen _Jellichlea and Winditchgrtss , whilst Messenbr _^ _nsertnd the armed population , taking advantage of the , truce and ne _* _oti-. _trsss , treacherously attacked _< tfn troops from the
town . Tke consequence was , that Ihe Prince _iSB-oedi ately ordered all his batteries to -open upon the city , whilst he commanded _Jdtachicb . te thro ** himself apon the Huagarian army , which constated < al about 30 , men _. ef whom 809 _JwertTegulars , with twenty-lour field pieces . _JtlHealoh lest no time in eb eying this order , and-tor tbispurposa drew off 18 , 000 infantry , slJty-foiff _neia-pieces , and forty squadrons of cavaAry , perfeotly fresh . The result , was that the Hungarians were re . pulsed with severe loss . Tte greater part of _Iilchtea _tnein _' _thassora Setened from the Hangsrhmt during the _'osmbat .
Whilst tbe _b-tetle with _tlse HungariMts wat being-car-Tied on , ' the people ef Yienna , the greater part df whom bad alreadjlali down their arms , tedbthem'S _* . again , recalled _theltottsges who were _otsentbted , and Instead of surrendering the oawnoa turned them upon -the Imperitl troops , drawn np at the foot « f the glacit . Winditchgratc * tmmediately opened hie batteries , anS continned the * firing daring the whole night , until at length a dtputstion _arrived'again _offering to surrender . . But Bern aad ** he armed 'people refuted to assent , attaoked the troops with fury , and aa a portion df the-suburbs still remained in the han _* da of the-insurgents , these were bombarded wi > hout ? avour or _intermitsioa _.
fPHf AL -CAPIT 0 LATI 0 S OP VIENNA . Ten struggle in the streets of Tienna waa of short duration—the whole town was in the possession of the Imperial troops on the lst of November . It-was oa the _evening of the ~ 81 tt that the Imperial troops made their first enteranca into the inner town , after having takes all the faubourgs . Advancing toward * the bastions , upon which white'Sags bad been raised , they were suddenly received by a shower of bolls . Sheila and rockets were upoa thia thrown into tha town —the _Impertal-Librtry and _abortion of the "Palace were eooa in flumes . The town submitted , and the Burg , the Karat _bwrttraise , aud the Stephen's-Square , were occupied by tbe military , * a'brisk fire was still kept np upoa them from the windows . TheBurg-and Karnthner Gates were stormed and battered in bj the troops , and the Burg carried by assault .
Tbe are ia the Palace aad "Library wat extinguished , ; snd it is hoped that the inestimable _tresssres of that _nsWe collection will not be lost . The studeatt fought like madm n . ; and < whenthe rest . of the city bad given in , still defended _tbemselvit In the vicinity ol the aula , supported < by a psrdon-of the workmen . _On-thelst of _Noveosb-r tbey still hsld out in the 8 alsgries barrackt . The Aula wat taken by the Imperial troops , acd al aeon the barracks were carried by storm . -Oa the 31 st , -599 prisoners were mode . On the tomt day the _Hungarians re-crossed the Leltha , and with _, drew . Their conduot still remains an enigma for the solution of _th-rftrture .
The principal opponent to sufmtissioa -has been the Polish General Bern , who , with others of hit nation have obtained great _inflatneo over tha workpeople , and given in their own parsons those proofs of activity and desperate valour which ore the _characteEUtict of hit daring reckless _countrymen . Many of these are among the killed and wounded .
OCCUPATION-Off VIENNA Bf THE IUPEBIAL TROOPS . The accounts received in Berlin , oa the i b , direct from Vienna , fullycoafirm the above statements . The imperial troops totk fall possession -of the inner elty about 11 AM . on the Itt last , without aay further retltttnce . The Aula held oat the longest . The _sta _^ _entt aad a pordon ofthe inhabitants of this part of tbe city seemed Invincible . < _in the Itt , bewtver . it was ia the possession of tbe Imperial troeps . 'The Aula wat occupied by them , and at noon tbe barracks were stormed , and many were seised with their weapans ia their bands . Another ac count «» j » , that the whole of the democrats taken in the Aula were cat dews or h-saced _.
The Viennese were _betraysd by an Adjutaat-ef General Bern , who pointed out to _Windiscbgrali tke most advantageoas point of attack against the city . On bit return tue traitor was shot . It ls positively stated that the Hungarians did not advause to far as Vienna . Jellaehich it said to hare driven 1 , 589 into the Binebe _, and completely routed the rest .
BEIGN OF TEBBOB IN VIENNA . All tbe bouses from whieh the people had fired oa the troops were taken by assault , and pillaged without mercy , and _ati the inmatet pat < o the aword . During the day ( the Itt of November ) several hundreds of persons were arrested , aad Windisehgratz issued a proclamation , in which he declared the conditions whioh be bad at first agreed to were null aad void ; that the _aead-mio legion ia for ever dissolved , aad the National Guard disbanded for an unlimited time . AU newspapers snd political associations ore suspended - all assemblages ot more thaa tea persona ate forbiddeo _, cad a strict search is ordered for concealed " _annt . WiadUcbgratz bu _refastd to recognise the Diet la Vienna at tha legal oae . The membert , however , assembled oa the Itt inst . ; bnt Prises Felix Schwazenberg ordered all the entrances to be guarded by military , so that the sitting wis a secret one .
The city it in a frightful ttate . Treachery and informations are universal . _Ftnont of the leattiaflaeaet are arr . sted in the streets . The gates of the city are closed , aadalloommunicatioi with the Faubjurgi prevented . Tbe battle between the Hungarians and Austrian * , wbicb ended in the repultsof the former , is said to bave bef n very sanguinary . It was supposed that the Hungarian army hod proceeded against General Simonich , who though once beaten had reappeared with 10 , 000 _Aastriacs in Hungary , coming from Galieia .
PBUSSIA . Bsbhh , Oct . 30 . —Ib the sitting of this day the commission of priority proposed an extraordinary sluing to deliberate on a proposition concerning the events at Vienna , coaveived as fellows : — ' Te invite the mluUtry to use for the protection of liberty , compromised at Vienna , all the mtans of tho etate , ' The motion was carried t > y 181 against 168 votes . IBB _SIEOE OF _VlMta—rOPDXA _* IXCITEHM
7—WHOCXtTIC DIKOKBTStTIO **—ABOLITION OP THE NOBILIfY _!—VOlt OF 1 KB ASSEHBLI IM _PiVOTJS _6 F TBE _PE 0 M . E OF V 1 _SHHA . This afternoon ( Oct , 31 st ) , an immense proceition took _pltxe consisting : of some _tboafsads of tbe members and fri nda of the Democratic Clubs , who proceeded _, in perfect silence and order , through the streets , to tbo _Ch-mber , with the intention , 1 st , of demanding thatthe Vienna students and _othersjonesled yesterday for trea _sonable language atthe meeting ef Sunday should be 1 _bvatcd ; and 2 nd , to demand that the Chamber should direct the government to take instant measures to send troops to tbe relief of Yienna . Upon the arrival of tke procession at tke honse they fonnU the sitting over , but ss an evening ' sitting will take place , tbe leaders in-
Bombardment Of Vienna. , -Fjgu Of Saturd...
• _" _ot _^ edthestcretoriei that they should , return at night , aad xp-ot a categorical answer . Tbey are then to be joined by the corporation of workmen , the excitement Is great and general , aud this has been increased by tbe Issue of this morning ' s division npon the question of the nobility , which has terminated , _oomtraryte general _ootidpation , by the house _rejeotlngall asstndmenti and tbe proposition of the oentrslcommlttee , and by its adopting , by a considerable majority , the original paragraph of the ith article limply and plainly , and thus abolishing the nobility . The words adopted are these : — ' The nobility is abolished . ' So the 4 th artiole of the constitution runs that : — « All Prussians are equal before the law . There ae _' ther exist distinctions of rank aor privileges of rank in the state . The nobility is _abolished . ' The Kin ; seems to have displeased all partiti , and the day ' _t vote , which has produced a most profound sensation
throughoat all classes , tbe more bo where it _' was little anticipated , appears to be specially directed again > t the King himsilf . Atthe same time it must be obterved that the vote of tbit morning wts pitted whilst a demooratio procession was in progress towards the Obamber , _wbtlit a democratio congress wat sitting within a few hundred _pseet , tad whilst the walls snd trees were betog covered with placards more violent , more inflammatory than anjthing we have yet seen . Oae of these , addressed to the people ef Berlin , calling npon them to take _warning from what la passing at Yienna , rnd to be prepared for similar attempts against their liberties here , ends wltb these words : — ' Cit _' r-ns , workmen , _soldkrs . let u > have no mote quarrels , no more listening to evil councils tending to produce division amongst as . Let _vs jsin in one bond . Bat if treachery to our cause should be discovered , then death and destruction to the traitor ? ' _t
SEvEitT . it . — The Chamber liho'di _rjfc eft extraordinary evening sitting . It hts Toted tjoiat the U nlsteri Bhould address a memorial to the Central Power , requiring it to interfere , by force of _sxms _, in _favourof tbe people ef Vienna . Tbe procession , bas net t * k < m place but the petition hat been presented . The different clubare filled to suffocation , bnt t * aere are no appearand a outwardly of riot .
THB _DBHOCBA _. TIG CONGRESS . We learn from Gaiitr- _. AKi , that at a meeting of tbe Democratio _Oongrett at B-rHis , on the 27 th October report were presented _tj _ the progrsts of democracy in _different _portt of Ger .. _» 9 _nyH kt Hanover , it wis ttated thero is only one ' _Republican club , ' and there are few in Hamburg , _Bretr _^ . Solstein , and the Grand Dacby of Oldenbargb . All . the speakers distinctly declared that the object ef the . ( -Into was the establishment of the Republic , and tor _jsj _aaaea the Red' Republio , which ex . olted great r _^ _h- » e , A Deputy of Electoral Hesse said : _—« C «* _ _sk _, * fT 8 shall have it repose until all the German P .- far * . - Asui be driven from their thrones ?
This ire jit _fonk tremendous shouts of _approbatlsn . The Cop _^ _t _^ _, _*} M resolved to nominate a central commit . tea for _BtpnbMcanpropatandismln Germany , andotbtr oomTT i '* _rsess charged to report on mattert affecting tht RsP dfeBean « ause . On tbe 39 . h thefollowing resolution w A adopted : *— ' The Assembly _conslderi tha cause oi _T it-ma itt "own . An appeal shall be made In the nama ' et the Assembly . ' Robespierre ' s 'Declaration of tbe Rights of Van and of the Cltitta' wat read and excited boisterous applause . Much ezoittmsnt was created in Berlin o » the 80 th by tbe atrest of two _meetbers of the Oongrett , According te another account , the persons arretted were a Vienna student , named SUnerstein , and a Hayeses professor of languages , named Servin .
* FOBTa * CB AHD _IUPiRUar FB 0 H BK _50 . _III—MOBSaSED ¦ x _* oi tiueht---ths bed ma ' _-wfusled—cohtliot B-nwnit ran wobxman and the _subs-ber guard . Btrausr , November 3 . —The intelligence of the bombardment of Vienna bat _ctUBed the utmost excitement ia this city . Sinoe the arrival of that intelligence the ttate of tht public mtnd here hot been inch at to _occasion the most serious apprehensions . The very next day after the news of the _comrnencemi-nt of the bom bardment reached here the excitement bad beoome Bach , that though _dlsttrrbancss have occurred already , It It a matter ot surprise that more serious events have not yet taken plaoe . A great demonstration , for the purpose of req-drlng tbe National Assembly to decree that the Prussian government should without delay take all mea .
tares to ta * _- e « he population of Vi _» nn » from the invasion of the Austrian troops nnder Prince _Wiadlsobgrata , had been made already In the morning of the day b' fore yes . tertay . The Democratio Crab , _conjointly wltb other de mocratio societies here , had arranged a procession , principally-consisting ef the members of these societies aad of workmen , for the parpote of presenting a petit ion te the _National Atitmbly to the above effect , A _depu . tation , by which this petition was to be delivered , wat tent in to _fhe -National Assembly . The reply given wat , that the petition would be deliberated at aa extra sitting , tobelje'd on the erasing of that day . TJatil , then , therefore ,-matters remained io suspense , though tbe ex . citement wat Increasing every hour . Wben tbe sitting _wn-onned lathe evening , the hall of the National
Assembly was _tnrrenndsd by thousands , wbo seamed de . termioed that they would now for once not give way to the National assembly , let it decree whatever It would . Some inflammatory tpetchet having been made , the building of tba National Assembly was formally besUg-d by the crowd , and all itt entrances closed , so as to prevent : the escape of any member who might _ftel disposed _= to tprak or vote against those out of doors . Torches hawing been procured , tht hall waa lighted outside , and a red flag planted at itt principal entrance . Mean _, while , and , at it would teem , urged by thlt threatening -state of things , _awiolutiorj wat passed in the Nations ) awembly rtqairisg the _Central _Gorerniaeat at Frank _, fort -to adopt measures for the purpose of offerlnt ; protection to Yieana from the invasion of tbe Austrian
troops . This resolution was earned principally because it appeared to be-the only meant of preventing _teriout 'Seourreacet and preserving peace . The announcement of the result of the deliberation -nevertheless produced little satisfaction among the assembled crowd . The Burgher Guard having been ordered out , however , thn members ofthe National Assembly succeeded-in effecting their escape , though not without being insulted In fasting out . The « rowd remained on the spot till late at night , and every attempt of the Burgher '*' uard to disperse them proved */ aia . In a-charge by the _Borghtr Guard with the bayonet Beveral workmen were seventy wounded . In consequence of these evtntB the Minister of the Interior bat issued a proclamation , in which it it stated that at tbe late occurrences had endangered tha safety of the National Assembly , and threatened public order , the authorities bad bean directed te-call Into re . qaisition tbe military If the Burgher _Gatrd wero notable
to preserve order , Ihe excitement wbioh prevailed hts been deepened by this proclamation , and at the present moment it increastdte an alarming degree In _con < e _queuce of en announcement of the _National Assembly in the sitting of to-day , stating , that the President of tbe Ministry , M , Yon Pfuel , had asked and received his dis missal of the Sing , and that Count Von Brandenburg bed been commissioned by His Majesty to form a new cabinet . A note addressed to the President ef the Na . _tioasi Assembly by ( Count You Brandenburg ' , desires the former to propose a suspension of the sittings until the formation oi the cabinet . Thia proposition was however not entered into by tie National Assembly , and it wat resolved to hold aeotber sitting this afternoon , at whioh it was demanded that the new ministry should be present . Tne appointment crfCount Yon Brandenburg , who Is a general in the army , and devotedly attached to the aweiett regime , it regarded as a reactionary step of tbe government _.
At lids moment , six p m ., the evening sitting of the _Auemtdf is not _oonoladed , The Ministers are present , having been _resnlred to attend in consequence of a motion to that effect by Messrs Elener and Berg , The whole of tbe theatre it enveloped by a cordon ot the Burgher € _uords , wbo permit no one to enter the cirole , or to traverse the Charlotten Street . The mob Is collecting lu great numbers outside , bnt the notice published this morales ; by ths Minister of the Interior , declaring tatt the troops should aot in ease ef tumult , hasten _, dered tome mere cautions , whilst it has served to exoite others . _Huadrede of the workmta are moving down to the vicinity of the Chamber , and apprehensions are _entertaiaed of _aoeittiion — more espeefaiUy as the ma . chine makers' union have published a placard , In whioh they declare tbat they were fallen apon in a scandalous aad barbarous manner by the Burgher Guard , although obey ( tba workmen ) were uaarmed , and bad merely interfered to preserve order aad save bloodshed .
Half-past Seven . —Tho house , whioh met at one , con . continued sitting until four , aad again adjourned aatil seven , "Burned the debate on _Shaer and Berg ' s motiea , 'Urgeai ' qa « stlons were also addressed to M . Blebmaaa , relative to hit manifesto of this morning . Thedlious . sioa wot mott stormy . The Burgher Guard commander has this _mement published two addresses , the one to the corps , _deelariag Eichmann ' s manifesto threatening tbe iBtsrventiou of the troops , to bean offence ( _virfetetutj ) to the Burgher Guard , and direct encroachment upon ita rights , of aot permitting military interference wit !* .
oat the asttnt ef the Committee of Safety , and ending by protesting against the Minister's proceeding . The second is an appeal to the people , urging them to remala quiet , aad to unite with the Bargher Guard ia maintaining peace , whlob , if Interrupted , can only lead to military interposition . The aspect of the town it gloomy , bat up to this hour there are no symptoms of outbreak . The guards are doubled , especially at tbe Palace , where the Committee of Publio Safety is assembled . The troops have been confined to barraokt all day , and the garrison of the arsenal bat been augmented by two more companies . .
_Half-pttt Bight . —The Chamber is still sitting . Tho crowd outside is vociferous , but is kept at bay by the cordon , of Burgher Guards . Nlaep . ro , —A deputation has proceeded to Potsdam to wait npon the King , to protest against tbe _« omi . nation of Count Brandenburg , ss dangerous to the monorchy and publio peaoe . Tbe House declared itself en permanente . ,, . . . Nov . » rd .-The King , ia reply to the petition ofthe Chamber , had refused to withdraw the mission he had entrusted to Count Brandenburg to form a Ministry The latter , however , has declined the mission , wbicb saves the royal dignity , and M . Grabow wm _tpoken ol as tbe new premier _.
PRANCE . THE _CoHSTlTOTltM , Oa Thursday the constitution was brought before the Assembly for _revlsaL Aocordlng to Ihe report drawn up by M . _MorraBt , It was laid down tbat there should be no return npon the principles that had been debated and settled , such as the rights ot labour , abolition of oapltal punishment , presidentship , io ., end tbat tbe objictofthener * reading should be to make tke seme
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ef seme artiole plainer , especially with regard to amend _, ¦ _ents that had bten introduced snd adopted Inthe heat of diiouislon . Itwas found impossible , however , to _obftrve this rule , and a scene of tremendeus confusion ensued oh M . _Ptlix Pyat , making a violent speech in favour of the rights of labour . M . Pellx Pyat attempted , to revive the discussion on the right of thelabeurer to have work found for bim by tbe state . His address caused the greatest _exoitement _. He contended tbat , though social conventional _dlttinoHeBB had ceased , there yet remained the two great divisions of rich and poor , of those who tolled _txcesslvely and of those who used men for their « wa _edvas .
tags . That system shonld be amended by the re . cognition ofthe righto of the labourer , which ho da . mended to have recognised in the constitution , He we a several times interrupted by shouts of _disapprobation which rose to perfect fury wben be . vindicated ihe . \_ l _surieats of June , and denominated the _Insurrection tho protest of misery against Injustice . _Several _membrrs rushed to tbe tribune In the greatest state , of excitement , but the _President interfered by calli _ng M , Pyat to order , saying that g reat as was . tbe _latitude allowed to _theetpMStlon Cf _opluloo , yet it wa * , Bo ' intoleraMo _liosnee for a member to make himself tb . B apologist of _insurreotinn .
M . Tasoberau said tbat was not enough . He would demand tbat the _KoMiTina should not print . _saoh _atpeech . r _MGraedln express . * himself with great warmth . He declared that he could with disunity master bis indignation at the language he had heard from Pyat .. He really felt that if _he-Tttve utterance to Ills sent ' - stint * he should be tempted from the reserve he deter _, mined to Impose on himself . ( Here a voice from the nslgbbonrhood where sat M . _L-dru Rollin told M _flrardln to take oan what he said , which exoited great tumult . ) M . _Aremtatdt'i-it he belong'd to the working olasses —( load cheer «)—and he would affirm that he never knew in the course of his experlenee a good , welLoo _* 1 ducted workman seek io vain for employment . Wages he _oonfested _, did sometimes fluctuate ; but what he would -. flrta was , that a well . oonduoted man need sever I want wnrfc _tven in dull times .
M , _Pxltctier , another working man , said he was sorry he coutf not affirm the statement ef his brother workman , for tbat he himself had bten for eight months togeth-r out ef employment . He bsd been compelled , In « rde * to find tbe meant of living , to turn butcher then pedlar , thai hawker of calloo . ( Loud laughter . ) fie oantended that there had net been sufficient care taken ofthe interests of the working olasses in the _constltution . After a Bp * ech from H , Corbon—M ., Dufaure severely blamed the speech of M . Pyat , which he declared to be tht more reprehensible as it hadbeen written nut , studied , and prepared . It wat an essay dtrtoted against society Itself . It waB tool ; ty that was attacked , M . Pyat : I attacked royalty reprtiented In your per . ton —( Load marks of disapprobation . ) M . Dufaure then proceeded to vindicate the preamble as it stood .
Tht cries for a d ' vWon became so vehement that tbe ballet-boxes ware produced . ' Tht _beuse would not even allow the tm _* m ' mentto be reed from the chair , ai « B arto / _Ifteirawempl for it . On a division tbere appeared : — F » r tbe amendment ... , „ 86 Against it „ 638 _Mejorlty . „ ... ... 552
THE CONSTITUTION ADOPTED , Ou Saturday a ballot en the whole constitution took place , and gave the following result ' . — Number of voters ... ... 169 Absolute majority ... ... 885 For the Cons -itution ... ... 719 AgainBt tt ... ... ... SO This result waB hailed with cries of ' Vive la Repub _Kjtre , ' * Vive ta _Conslftulfon . ' Tbe President tben declared , in the name ef the French people , that tbe National _Gon-titaont Assembly had adopted the Constitution of the Frsnoh Republic
H , Dufaurt , the Minister of the Interior , next ascended the trtbnne , and stated that tbe government was of opi alon that this gnat aot should not be promulgated in the ordinary form , bat that it should be tht occasion rf a national solemnity . He accordingly proposed _Jhst tbe Assembly should Immediately retire into itt bureaux to appoint a _conmt'tee to regulate , with the government , tbe forme of that solemnity _. The Assembly acquiesced in the demand , and adjourned amidst new erles of' Five la Republlquc . '
Til _PIISlDlltj _**—DISTCBIBD STATS OV FABIB . The clubs are marked by especial violence on the question of the presidency , Oa Wednesday speeches were made , ia wblob the _popotylon of the departments were menaced in oase Prince Louis Napoleon should bt returned ; - and the right of tht minority to rite and maintain their opinion by violence , if neoessary , waB declare * amidst loud applause . In fine , it was proclaimed that Paris wonld aot be controlled or thwarted by the departments ; that Paris , whioh had made the revolution of February and proclaimed the republic , without thinking it necessary to consult the departments , would maintain its conquest , and that the people for this _wsro ready to take their muskets and descend _ieto tht streets . Raspail hat written to tba journals to say that he does not withdraw from the csndidatesblp of the preildencof the republio .
Oa Thursday an extraordinary display of _mllltar ; fores was exhibited within and around th < t Assembly . The capital waa muoh agitated ; - Collisions between the soldiers of the Garde Mobile and tboie of the line eon . t ' nue to take plaoe in the northern faubourgs . A deputation of the wives of the condemned insurgents at . tempted to go in procession to the National Assembly to present a petition for an amnesty . At tbe Pont de Is Concorde they were stopped by tbo Serf ents de Tills and the petition was carried tothe Assembly by one of the ofioers . Thty then dispersed quietly . The alarm throughout Thursday was _intense , and the words , ' Another revolution Is at hand , ' were frequently pronounced .
_Ataut seven o ' olook on Saturday evening , upon an order teat from the government , 101 guns were fired frem the esplanade of the Invalides _, to announce the adoption ef the constitution . As no notice of the cause of this had been given , and as the population in general were unaware of the ' proceedings of tbe Assembly , this firing produced the greatest alarm throughout Paris , and anxious groups _tllambled _eloag tba Boulevards and ia otber phoos , _ioquirlag whether another _intarrectloo had broken oat . It wat not until the appearance of tbe evening journals , at a much later hour , that the cause was knows , When the firing was heard in the Faubourg St Ma-was , the populace imagined that a new _insurreo tion had broken out , and the operatives prepared Immediately to erect barricades . It was remarked that the places selected for this operation were _thost at whleh the barrioadet were ereoted in June . _nrUNCUL _oEiBis .
Pabis , Moaday , 0 SO _r . . —We are la tbe full tide of a fiaaticlsl crisis , produced by the present political situation of France . From day to day the funds have fallen with frightful rapidity , To-day at one moment the Threes dropped to 4145 . and only recovered 10 centimes at closing . The fives fell to 65 . 50 , and reoovered < -nIy 25 centimes , closing at 65 75 for account , and 6 * 5 40 for cash . Bank shares have fallea 50 francs , dosing at IS 60 . This , no doubt , is oaused by the uneasiness felt > n _consequent of the probability of Louis Napoleon ' s election , and the determination ofthe Republicans not to submit to suoh a stultification _.
_Paais , _Tobidat _EvsMiNt—The panic en the Bourse madefearfal progress today . The French Funds , within the last five day * , have come down upwards of four per cent . The Times correspondent says : — 'The _impres . slon—warranted er _othernhe—is general , that we are oa tho eve of a new collision , but how it Is to begin , and between what parties , seems not to be known . On in . quiring ef tbe best informed parties tbe reason for the terror with whioh the Parisian world _steme _tolssed , I received for answer—that It wat all all ascribsble to ( he approaching eleounn for Pretident oi the _Repnblio . Tbe
success of Prinoe tools Napoleon Is deemed all ba- certain _, the Republicans of all colours are _dlsoontentud at this probability , and will , it i * feared , resort to arms to prevent it . That the Red Republicans are resolved on anew , more desperate , and even an early effort , is known to the government . Tout Ut hommei d ' aethn et tiwltt eUftsont iijharrives ( all the fighting men and _chieft have already arrived ) , say my Informants . ' It it even btlitvtd that M . _CautBididre is here . ' Considerable quantities of _ormt and stores have been found and seised within the « e f » w days , bat It is possible that but too many and too much remala undiscovered .
THB RED REPUBLIC . Prondhon has brought out his journal , under the title Li Piuru , but the amount of caution-money deposited only enables bim to publish it weekly . It is , ho never intimated that hereafter it will be published daUy . On Wednesday , a democratic banquet , called' Binquetof the Seine _Infeileire , ' attended by 690 or 70 S per . sons , took place at Gravllle , near Havre , M . Baowat expeoted , but did not ge . Toasts were drank to ' The _Republic , ' to ' The Intellectual Emancipation of the People , ' to 'The Enfranchisement of Oppressed Nations , ' _'Cltlsen Ledru Kollin , ' ' the Montague , ' and ' fnlvereal Peaoe , ' Everything pasted off _wltr order _. On Sunday evening a democratio banquet , which took the title of 'the Banquet of the Federation tf thu nations ef Europe ' wss held at the Barriere _Mootpamasee . About 801 persons were present .
The following are the principal toasts given : — ' To the abolition of _wng > _-. , » by M , _Snrnett ; ' To the Soolal and Democratio Republic ; to the People of _Juombardy and _Ttrice , and success to tbeir glorious cause , ' by M Bohbo ; ' To the Htrolo Dsmoorats of Vienna , ' by M _Jonatine ; and ' To UnivarBsl Fraternity , ' by M . Con stent . But the most extraordinary toast of all was one given by M . Saint-Just . It is what the Perls papers call a _. _toott _mwltipZie , and they " state that . tho giver _wasfn . _quently interrupted by tbo i » ud , losg _, and unanimous applause of tho company . The toast is so long thatthe reporters do not appear to bave been able to _cato | 'he whole of it , but the following fractions were caught , aa the papers say that eeveral of the fractions wero encored ' and saluted with treble _eolvoes of applause : — 'To the strong men — to those men who are courageous and valiant in the cause ol humanity—to those _whece names serve as a guide , a support , end an example to ba < tar _dlsedo . eatum—to ell those whom history denominate * ai heroes .,,.,,.,. To Brutus , tt _Choline , to Jesus Christ ,
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to Julian the Apostate , to Attilat , To all the thinkers ofthe middle ages ! , _- , To the unfortunate thinkers ! , To Jssn _J- _. cqaot Rousseau—to Ms pupil Maximilian ; RobeBplr , _rrs _}» Toe toast so far was received with _en-rmout ' applause and cries of Ml . The speaker _tteordltgly repeated it , adding tbe name bf 'Saint Just , * upon _Wblchthe _upplausu waa redoubled . He then oontln \ . » _d : « To the Democratio _Republlotnaof tht present _^ 6 nwat i _ t 0 iQnii Blano _> td Rggpall ) to Barbaei ( lc ; aa obeers ) , to Ledru Rollin , to Proudhon , to Thore ( renewed _acoIommatlouB ) , to all the _Brutusesof Royal - ey , to all tbe Graoohl of property , tothe general _association and tho universal federation of nations . ' This < _- * * tT «> rd * nary _tossthaving been _drutk with tbe wildest enthusiasm , the following'toasts _tutceeded;— 'To tbe accord of ' Interests by universal association ' by M _JuoIub ' To tbe union ofthe Democrats and _Soohll-ts of all ceuntr ' es , ' by II . L . 'gendre . After this , _several _revolutionary 60 ng- were sang in full chorus , and the company then qu _' . etly dispersed .
ITALY IN ARMS 1 I Lake ev Coko , Oot . 27 . —A great fermentation is manifest throughout tbe whole of our v « l ! cj » . M * b ; of the villages _arooceuplod by . the Croatian * in -. military manner , Chlavenn . t bas been taken by a body of volun _teers , who have entrenched _themselvofc there . Bsrrt . cades have bern erected in tbe streets ; tbe _brldfft _evi-r the Merra bus been destro-ed , and the road from Chin _, _venna to _Colli'O r ' _ndcred Impracticable . Up-n tinreoelpt of this Information , 600 Austriana set out in three steam-boats , _lenviBr , Como unprotected . Tbe inhabitants of Argegno , situated about six miles up Como Lake , have likewise risen and disarmed twentyfive of the soldiers , whom they made prisoners . The whole of tbe valley beyond Argegno ( between tbe lake * of Como and Lngono ) Ib also np In arms , in const quern e of so many ef the refugees frcm _Tesiin having entered that place .
Oa the 25 th , two steamers presented _thamslves Uelore Argegno , when a terrible encounter _tneocd , tbe oity was sot on fire , and the inhabitants sought sbelttr iu the mountains . The insurrection ailll « Uu In the valley of _luulol where the _Austrlans met with tho mott determined resistance . Boats filled with the wounded bave be . n breugbt In from _Cniovcnna . The rising has extvndid t . i Soodrlo , and h _« s developed Itself throughout the en . lra portion of Valtellne . 8 lmll . tr Intelligence ta * also been reoeived frem B ? rgamo , The valley o ' Upper _Seritno ls also up in arms , and likewise C > - monloa , According to the _Monmca , G _. noa was , on the 29 h _, in full insurrection . The following proclamation has been issued by _Mazalnl , calling all Italians to arms , in the name of the ' Central Junta of Insurrection' : —
• NATIONAL INSURRECTION—CENTRAL JUNTA . * The horn has sounded . In tbe name of God and of the people , rise , Lombards j rise and _advtnce . Let in . _sartectlen spread with the rapidity of thought ; let the tricolour flag float from tbe summit of tbe Alps , frcm mountain to mountain , until our victory shall be assured from one end of Italy to the other . ' * God and tho people , ' _« W ar on Austria , ' « Long liv * Italy , one and free . ' Such should be onr cry ; let it bo _repeated from town to town , from village b < village Sty to Europe that Italy rises and will not again fall . Let the tocsin _snnonno- the extermination of the bar
_btrians , and ths Insurrection of the people ; let all priests and cures preach a crusade . Light _flrts on tbe hills , in order tbat the valleys may know what is going ou . Two fires shall be the signal oi combat , three o ' victory . Divide the enemy in order te destroy them wore readily ; prevent their r-llying of dttaohed corps wherever an Austrian _dttaohment may be , _attsc < it ; surround it with barricades , and shower down stones and boiling water on their heads ; fight them with mas ke ' B or with knives strike tbeir chiefs ; out down trees ; war up rotds and destroy bridges ; place yourselves lu ambush , and strike wherever an opportunity ofivrs .
' _Bvsry kind of arms and ammunition taken from _fte enemy _bslongt to the State ; consequently , every thing of t * a * , kind must be banded over to the civil er military au . _tboritloB . Money and otber articles belonging to soldiers or _offioers , belong by right to those who kill them or take them prisoners . Spare all who surrender Immediately eu * have no pity fer those who resist _,-« The post-houses are to be used exclusively for tbe Bervloe of tbe insurrection . _Churohes , hospitals , asylum- , and mills are placed anner the protection of tbe _oUiz : ns ; the women and ohildren are confided t > the honour of the people . ' All offioers and employes who shall remain in the servio * of tbe enemy are declartd traitors to tho country ; they merit death . 'Let direct means of communication be organised with the neighbouring country , and With the neighbouring InBurreotlo tary authorities _.
' Let every man capable of bearing arms Join the _insurrection ; let all tbe women cot as sisters of charity . Let insurrection , in a word , be the life and law of the Lombardlan peo _*> le until the enemy ls entirely exterminated , Lat one ory olone be heard , War with _Auttrla and national Sovereignty . ' The nation alone will proclaim Ub laws after It has achieved viotory . ' Lombards ! It is tbe peoplo who make war ; and tbis time you shall not be betrayed . Inhabitants of TenetU l You who have kept alive tbe sacred fire of _independemwj . leave your _lagunes anrt jo ' . n us . ' Come to ns Lombardlan and _Taneiian soldi-- * . Cross the frontier whioh separatee you from your bre . tbren , and come and de . ' end our country _.
'Rush forward to gala yonr Independence , citizens i . f Italy I The horn for a national war haB sounded ; let one faith , one flag unite as . It will depend on your--elvee to be great and powerful . Long live Italy ! 1 Signed for the Junta , * _Msazwi—Bohetii . ' Valley of _Inotlvi , Ootober 29 . ' A letter from Lugano ef the 28 h states— ' The _vallies of Inoelvi and Menusina aro still free . Yesterday tbe enrmy attempted to effect a landing , but tbey were compelled to desist by the heavy fire by wbich they were reoeived _. The people have been equally successful at _Chittvenna . It Is in vain tbot the Austriana sent for re _inforoementa from C « mo , Tbe lnBurgents have beaten he enemy at _Almo . ' Twenty thousand Austriana are obliged to b _: kept at Milan to hold that town
The _Ohhione of Turin , of tbe 3 rd , states that mt--r ithitandiog tho entrance of the Austriana at Chlavouna , the _insutrectlos extends in Lombard y . Colonel _Aploe has taken the steamer on the Logo Maggiore ; 1 , 000 of bis men drove the Austrlans from Lcoino oa the lst , and a part of that force then proceeded to Como , General Pepe is said to havo driven back the _AuBtriaas as far as Padua , and taken eight cannon .
8 PAIN , Ths _Progresistas la the province of Gerona have met with a terrible reverse , their forces , commanded by _Brigadier Ameiler and Colonel Bar-era , h viog heen completely routed near _Figneras , on tbo 28 sh ult ., by the columns of G _. n'ral Novllas and Colonel _Rlos , who , afttr a short combat , made _prisoners of the latter chief , together with the bead of tbe staff , Altamira , and twenty ethers , _besides killing six , _Progreslsta risings in other parts oi Spain have taken plaoe , and slaughter is the order or tbe day . All the Spanish em _^ _res ofthe _Progresieta par ty have cro ° sed tho frontiers , and entered Spain by Navarro and Aragon . Ugarte , who was formerly a political ohief , _cemmonds the insurgents who have entered Aragon . General Iriarte is at the head of those who entered Navarre .
UNITED STATES . By a late arrival we learn that tbe Whigs have carried Pennsylvania , Florida , and probably Ohio ; this gives them a gttn of tbree United States senators . Litters frcm Madrid are _published in New York _announcing positively tbat negotiations ere on foot for the ale of Cuba to tbe United States .
$Anttttipt&
_$ _anttttipt _&
(From The Qasette Of Tuesday, November 7...
( From the Qasette of Tuesday , November 7 j BANKRUPTS . Joseph King , North _Audley-etreet , _Grosveaor-equare ceach _builder—Meshach Sheen , Lower-marsh , Lambeth potato merchant—John Cramer Chappell _, Great Marl _boreugh-street _, surgeon—George Ainger , Green street Groavenor-squarc , hotel keeper—Walter Wilson , _Tavis _tock-place , _Tavlstock-square _. a pothecary—James Holliek DaviB , Windmill , btreet _, Haymarket , livery stable keeper -Joseph Ivon _Winstaoly _, King Willlam . _Btreet _, City , hosier—Carnaby Thomas Ansdall , Barnett , coach proprietor—John Walton , Coventry , baker—Thomas Wright ,
Hanley , Staffordshire , tailor — Thomas Robert _Jenks , Birmingham jeweller-Andrew Smitb , Sbrewsbnry , dealer in marine stores—Josh . Kirk , Caunton , Nottinghamshire , licensed victualler — Edward Taylor , Rookfield . Mon . mouthshire- miller-James Wait , Bristol , stockbroker-Charles Allen , St Ives , Cornwall , ironmonger- Willi-, m North , York , jeweller—Henry and John Smith , Sheffield , common bve Brers—James Thompson , Leeds , tea dealer-William Moore Hortfall , Huddersfield , coal merchant-George Hughes , Liverpool , hatter—Robert Lewis Evans , Liverpool , tutcher—Joseph _Berresford , Birkenhead , flour dealer-Adam Armstrong , Sleaford , ironmonger .
INSOLVENT PETITIONERS . " wDllam Rose , of East Retford , Nottinghamshire , inn keeper—Jobn Payne , of Street , Somersetshire , tailor-William Culph , of Liverpool , blacksmith — George Roberts , of Cheltenham , innkeeper—Edward B « wden Spark , of Exeter , tailor—John Lowry , of Manchester , bootmaker — William Greaves , ef Leeds , commission agent-Charles Wright , of West Retford , Nottinghamshire , jobber—John William Hawyes , of Ramsgate , tailor —Richard Stockley _, of Ramsgate , cabinet maker—George _Frederick Webb , of Margate , seller of drapery goods—James Lewis , jun ., of AsMord _, Kent , draper _^
assistant-Nathaniel Shade , tf Haleaworth , Suffolk , bootmaker-Joseph Terrington _, of Brandon , Suffolk , waterman—John Breomhead , sen ., of Liverpool , butcher—William Bigginson , of Liverpool , out of business—ThomaB Talbot , of _Gislingham , Suffolk , railway porter—Edward Robinson , of Manchester , journeyman silk dyer—James Thomas , of South Norten , Fembrokeshire , farmer—Thomas James Young , of New High . town , Northumberland , clerk to a ppirit merchant-Rev . Henry Andrew Paull , of Derby , oltrk—William Whitehead , of Wellington , Shropshire , charter master—Roger Palmer , of Milton Abbott , Devonshire , out of business—Robert Morrall , of Dawley , Shropshire , puddler .
SCOTCH SEQUESTRATION . P . Martin , Glasgow , goldsmith—A . Davidson , Glasgow sewed _musUn warehouse — D , Anderson , Kirkcaldy , 0 p _* her .
The C Holera. Thk Metropolis.—The Board ...
THE C HOLERA . Thk Metropolis . —The Board of Health report , on Saturday last , six new cases of cholera , and three deaths . Two of the fatal cases occurred m K _* . « Street , one of the dirtiest parts of the Borou _g h , and the third at the Hulks , Woslwich . At Edinburg h and Leitb , seventeen new cases have occurred , seven of thera being fatal . - - The cases already reported in' London ana 1 _* _^" cinity , the provinces , and Scotland , amonnt to 393 . Deaths 213 , recoveries 52 , under treatment , or . result not stated 128 .
Nov . 6 . The Board of Health received mforma ioa of the following new cases : —Lambeth 6 . 3 fatal ; Camberweii 6 fatal ; Southwark 2 fatal ; Greenwica 2 ; Kensington 1 fatnl ; Wandsworth 1 ; Stepuey 1 * , Westminster 1 . The Provinces & c , viz .: Feltham Hounslow 3 fatal ; Sunderland 1 _; Edinburgh 12 , 6 fatal ; Loanhead parish of _Lasswsde 23 , 9 fatal . Total new cases 59 , 30 fatal . On Tuesday , the Board of Health received report * ofthe following cases : Lambeth , 7 . 1 fatal ; _Isling . ton , 3 fatal ; Camberweii , 6 fatal ; Wandsworth , 1 ; Edinburgh , 25 , 13 fatal ; Leith 24 , 4 fatal . Total new cases , 66 27 fatal .
Mortality in London . — -The weekly tables just issued by the authority of the Registrar General , give the following _resulls : —Deaths registered in the week— -males , 565 ; female ' , 550 ; total , 1 , 115 . Births registered in the week- males 734 ; females , 727 ; total , 1 , 461 . The number of deaths from cholera greatly exceeds that of any previous week since the incursion of the malady ; the present tables g ive 65 fatal cases , all of which , with the exception of five , were certified by the medical attendants , and the remainder underwent official inquiry by the coroners for the respective districts . Mean temperature of the week 44 cleg . § min .
Death _frou Asiatic Cholera . —A long inquiry took place last Saturday , before W . Carter , Esq , the Coroner , at the Smith ' s Arms , Park Street , Bankside _. astothedeath of Jane Caroline Smith , aged _twenty-six , which took place from Asiatic Cholera . The case also involved a charge against the parish surgeon . James Smith , the husband of the deceased , stated that he lived at 6 , Pleasant Place , Skin Market , Bankside . On going home on Sunday morning , he found his wife very ill , having been attacked , as she said , with vomiting and purg ing . She continued in this state , and got much worse . At one o ' clock he went to Mr Woolridge , in Union Street , who is one of the parish surgeons .
He was from home . Afterwards Mrs Plate went there , but Mr Woolridge was still from home , and his assistant gave some medicine , and directed her to go to Mr Hall , another surgeon , who would attend for him . * Mr Hall was out when she went to him , and at six . in the evening he got Mr Caudle , of Guildford Street , to see his wife , who gave her medicine , and Mr Woolridge then came in . Witness considered there was great neglect in Mr Woolridge not attending before . — -Mr Edward Woolridge , of 171 , Union Street , was then examined , and said , that on Sunday he had gone to dine with his brother , in Jerrnyn Street , and had arranged with Mr Hall to attend to any patients who required it . On his return he heard he was wanted in Pleasant Row ,
and he went there . Mr Caudle was with the deceased . He remained with the deceased up . _ards of four hours , and administered the medicine he thought necessary , as well as brandy and other ati-. mulants , but she expired in the course of the night . The Jury returned a verdict that 'Thedeceased died of Asiatic cholera , and they wholly exonerated Mr Woolridge from all blame . ' The Coroner said in all his experience he had never seen a place more fit to engender , and , indeed , to create disease , than the place where the deceased died . It was a court within a dozen other courts , so that fresh air could not get to it . The doors were all open to admit the noxious stenches which were created , and a dirty gutter passed by them .
On Monday , Mr Bedford held two inquests , at the Milibank Prison , as to the respective deaths of John Stokes , aged 62 , and Charles Shepherd , aged 28 , convicts in that place . In the case of Shepherd , it appeared he had been once or twice punished for irregular conduct , and had been some time in the infirmary ; and at the end of last month he became much alarmed at hearing the _cholera was iu the prison , and it had a great effect on his mind , as he repeatedly asked if he was likely to recover . Dr
Baly had no doubt this accelerated the fever of which be died on Sunday . The Jury returned a verdict of ' Died from continued fever . ' The prisoner Stokes , though 62 years of age , was sentenced to twelve yearB' imprisonment for sheep stealing . He was . taken ill of dysentry , of which he died ; but Dr Bary > said tbis was wholly distinct from cholera ; verdict ; . Natural death- ' In answer to the Coroner , Dr Baly said tbat there was no fresh case of cholera , and those who had been attacked were well .
Halifax . — -This fell destroyer has made its appearance in Halifax . The victims were an engineer , in the service of Messrs Akroyd , and his nurse , a female of the name of Wood , both of whom resided at Range Bank , in the northern and most _unwholesome parts of the Borough . Hull .- —An elderly woman , named Mary Stubbs _, residing in Sewer Lane , was taken ill of Asiatic cho _^ lera at four o ' clock on Saturday last , and died on Sunday afternoon . She was attended by Mr 3 ibaon , surgeon , — -A keelraan , named Henry Mallison , seventeen years of age , on board the keel Twist , lying at . the north side of the Old Dock , was also taken ill of Asiatic cholera on Saturday , and died on Sunday . He was attended b y Mr Hardy and Mr Munroe , surgeons .
Edinburgh . —The returns of the number of cases of cholera in _Edinburuh last week give the _following result : —On Tuesday , 11 cases ; Wednesday . 16 ; . Thursday 19 . In Leith , Tuesday , 1 ; Wednesday , 5 ; Thursday , 2 . No new cases have occurred in Newhaven . At Portobello , however , the epidemic has made its appearance , and several fatal attacks have taken place .
Ikquesis, Saturday.—Alleged Neolboi O* A...
_iKquEsis , Saturday . —Alleged Neolboi o * a Rmjevikg OFJiCBR _. —By Mr Baker , at the Captain Man-of-war , Ui _^ h Street , Popl » r , _respaoting the death of Dwid Ross , aged _airty-six , a broker ' sman , who was alleged to have died | rom want , arising from the neglect of the relieving officer of the Popiar Union The widow of the deceated stated that for some months they had _restived parochial relief tothe extent of two loaves , two pounds of mest _, and _npiundofmeal weekly , _whisiu was couliaued until the last _manth , when they were both too ill to attend and get the relief , aud it was thoir impression that unless they went themselves tbey oould not obtain it , in consequence of having -shortly before sent a female , who was told the deceased must _csme
himself . They had both ofthem lived in the pamh all tbeir lives , and witness had on several previous _ocoasions reoeived parochial relief whtn _soewaa ill . She fully believed th _* , t if relief had been afforded the deceased , ha would have' still been alive . —Mr O . JeJf , _auotioneer , said he had known deceased and his wife for years , and about three weeks , _apo he wrote a note to Mr Waddington _, tharelievini * _offioer _, describing their distressed _condition , and stating that their case required immediate reiief . bur . none bad been afforded . He sent several times _shb-e . queniy to Waddington , but with _liko _effect , and on Thursday he addressed a letter to the po _<» r law _iommis'iimors . On Friday the deceased died without tbe parish ductur or the re'ieving officer _eesiDjj him .
Helhad no doubt that ho would bavo _bseu alive now had relief been Riven him wh * n it was first applied f or . —Inquiry adjourned for further evidence . An Irish VTbddikg . --Savaok _AssAowr . —On Monday aiternoon last , as _unlice-oonatab ' e D 79 was on duty in Chorlt' _-n-on-Medlook , he _ascertained that a disturbance , was taking place in York _Strwt and on repairing tbithtr taw two or three meu _t . fftring to fight , and a crowd of several hundred persons gathered round them . The disturbance , it appea * er > , arose out o ! _flomedispulo at a weddini * parry , at tbe house nf an Irishman , named Connollv , in _Lee-stroet . The policeman having remonstrated wiih tho disputants _, ard _ordered ( htm to leave the place , he waa assanlted by several ofthe men , _knocked down , and kicked se * e _.-eiy abont the head and body . Tbe men then ran away into Cotinoll . v ' _a house ! . _kspeotor Hull , ofthe A division , was soon ou the spot , and / n ascertaining what had occurred , went with tbe other
j officer in starch ol tho men who had o ? mroitt < ti the I assault . On their arrival at Connolly ' s houeo they found that the men were inside , and w _? re _sudfuvoiir . ing t _» fasten the door to prevent _% heir er . torin ? . In a abort time , _uowever , tho offiors eff cted an _eniraiios _, . and found twelve or fifteen men inside . armed with pokers , _candlesticks , iron _bsre , ' and othei _weapenB . whioh they were not backward in _ufling . They knocked the officers down , took away their staves , a _; d brutally assaulted them . Assist . ante _wambs ' . _quectly preenred , and six ofthe men vere apprehended—viz _, Jame « Connolly , Connor Igo , Patrick Connolly , William Conno'Iy , Thomas Spenc _? , and James Connolly , juu . These ( with tie _sxce . _tian r . f the last-mentioned , who wa--. eo severely injured in the affray , that he was _convei-edto the _Infirunry ) were biounlicup atthe Boiou _^ h C <> nrt on _Tue-day ' nilrning , and , the circumstances of v . e case having been _detai'ed in evidence , wire committed for trial at the ae 3 > ior > 8 .
Class-made Idlkr ; . —In Aberdeen , in _npopu atioa not probably _exceeding 75 , 000 , there , ae s » id to !>•> 5 000 _iv- rf on out of employment .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Nov. 11, 1848, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_11111848/page/7/
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