On this page
- Departments (2)
- Adverts (2)
-
Text (4)
-
Untitled Article
-
THE POPUUll REMEDY. PAKE'S LIFE PILLS,
-
^Foreign tmelUgenr e
-
Untitled Article
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.
Untitled Ad
m w ? Li mmh tm&M& : ^ ¦ « H > fNiiif PB ^ ••'•^ - ¦ " ¦ ¦ ihijjil I fe'pM ^ ll ^ te ^ -- ^ : ; : ' . ¦ if j i ^ n ^ - . 'i !'' : Mmsmm&h .-: $ Qgj ^ $ st& &x £ ' * ' % H ^ : <_^ a _' - Paw introduced to King Charles I ( See " Life and 7 in < c-s of Thomas 1 ' arr , " which maybe h ; ul gratis of all A ^ cnte j Tiie Blood . —To a person who has at all studied Hit ' or - ganisation of the human system , the circulation erf - . lie blood will ucsessarily appear one of its most Hitvrtstiric and essential principles . When we reflect , for an instant on the astonishing niannev in which this crimson cwwiit shoots from the main spring ( if the heart ; when we cuivA duv it coursing wywl . v through its various chamitls , " ; iml branching out into a thousand different rtirectkiiis and complicated windings , for tin- nourislimriit of the frame v . e ennuot avoid being moved by ; uv iiwoknnary thrill of ;¦ i ; pnishment : — " . \ v « l v ; fc exclaim , - vrtiiie vrc survpy the plan , — How wonderful this principle in man ' . "
Untitled Ad
' JIAISE'S SCOUBUTIC DROPS A SURE CURE FOR SCURVY , LAD «• LKGS , AND IMPUUE HL 001 ) Another surprising cure by means of llalse ' s f-eorluuio lMips . DECLARATION OF T 11 E GUARDIANS OF MEST DFV 1 X Tin n " utU-r fS lletJ . solemnl y declare / that before Ihomas Uollms , ( one ot our parishioners ) commenced taking "llalse ' s Scorbutic Drops , " he was litenllv covered with large running wounds , some of them so ! ai- / e hat a person ffligliUiuve laid his fist in them ; ( hat btibie 1 ii 1 "" shed tlie h « t bottle he noticed an improveme-it " : l ! M ' . ^ . eo , ' , ui"Ktl'cl » for "me time , hcirot nnnpletely restored to health
Untitled Article
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY . ^ Yiesxa , Sep . 10 . —The « Wiener Z 3 itung' officially confirms the news of the surrender of Petervrardein , in the following words : — Ban Jellachich announces , on the 6 th fast ., from "Vinlcowcze , that the fortress of Peteraardein surrendered oa the forenoon of this day to the besieging corps . « Tbe Commander of the City . Vienna , Sep . 10 , 1849 . ' The emperor is not yet returned from Dresden . Comorn seems preparing for desperate defence . The garrison amounts to 40 , 000 men , a number which Otherwise sounds incred'Me . Ktep ^ a uao . issued a proclamation earlier , which declared in favour o { surrender ; but no sooner was the division which appears to have broke out between the Austrian and Russian governments known by the besieged , than negotiations were broken off .
Bombardment of Cumorn * . —A letter from Pesth , dated the Oth . inst ., states that hostilities had probably recommenced at Cumorn , as a heavy can-Honade had been heard in that direction , and a number of wounded had arrived from Comorn . The latest news is that Haynau has given orders for the erection of as many gibbets abeut Comorn , as he craves victims out of the unyielding garrison ; and the source from which this news comes forbids its being accepted as mere grim jacular invention . Before Comorn there are , according to the best
sources of information , at this moment 42 , 000 Austrian troops . Concerning the number of the garrison , the report which at first appeared improbable that it consisted of 40 , 000 men , is more aud more confirmed . A great number of dispersed Honveds appear to have found their way thither during tbe armistice . The most determinated spirit pervades these troops , and it is certain that their present intention is rather , at the end , to blow up the fortress than surrender . All the arrangements for putting into execution this desperate resolution have already been made .
Letters from Bialo reported that Gaorgey bad passed through that town on the 8 ; h , a notice quite at variance with the report of his having passed through Yienua , on his way to KJagenfurt , ob the 7 th inst . Several executions have recently taken place at Pesth , and among the other sufferers was a priest . "Vienna , Sep . 11 . —The great news here is the decided withdrawal of all the Russian troops immediately . Not a Cossack is to remain in any part of the Austrain dominions . Ga ' . icia , Transylvania , ell land where the black and yellow flag floats , is to
he cleared of Muscovite auxiliaries . The devil has been called in , and has done his work , and now he Is stnt about his business , perhaps to appear later ¦ with his little account . O ! thi 3 , 1 mean the Tethement of the Russians , there can be no doubt ; 7 , 000 troops crossed the Russian frontier from Cracow in a angle day ; and all tbe locomotives on the Silesian and Polish lines were taken entirely np with tugging back the Russian regiments to whence they came . In less than a month there will not remain a Rusfiian soldier in the Austrian dominions . The seat of war will be swepi ckar of them as a chess-board of the pieces after a game .
The Austrian government has , on the ground of existing treaties , reqaired Turkey to opoose the entrance of the Hungarian rebels into her dominion , and to give np all such as are already there , among whom are Dembiuski , Kossuth , " Perczel , and Messaros . Bern and Guyon have latterl y also taken refuge in the territory of the Porte , so that all tbe leading men of the Magyars revolution are in the hands of ths Turks . Intelligence from Ssrnlin of the 5 th states that the Russiau General Lovcin had left Belgrade for Turkey on . the 3 rd , with the sultan ' s firman , to affect the arrest of Kossuth , Dembinski , and 19 ! other marked persons . 650 Honveds , who were brought to Seralin , although almost in a state oJ nudity , were in no want of money , for a Honved gave twenty-four imperial ducats for a Turkish chihuk and mouthpiece .
The Wiener Zeitang' publishes a manifesto of Jellachich ' s , address to the prpulations of the united kingdom of Croatia Sclavonia , and the military districts , which is highly eulogistic of the new Austrian constitution , a boon , ' says the Ban . that has l ; een received with gratitude by all the provinces of tbe empire . ' The document in question is dated July 23 . Viesxa , Sep . 12 . —Legal Murders Br the Austrian Despot . —At a moment when it is understood thai the Austrian government is about to adopt a lenient policy , and to deal mercifully with the prisoners taken in the Hungarian , war , the colums of the ' Preshurg Gazette' are daily fiUed with such official notices as the following , which anpear in tte latest number : —
' Norhert Auffinburg , native of Dehreczin , in Bohemia , aged thirty-sis years , of the reformed re . ligion , but formerly a Catholic , married , without children , as lieutenant in Count Leiningen's 31 st regiment ef line infantry , condemned in the year 1817 for high treason by participation ia the Polish revolution . to incarceration in irons for fourteen years , and amnestied by the grace of his Majesty last year entered voluntarily into the ranks of theHungarian
rebate , was aid-de-carap of Kossuth , and later colonel of the 1 st Jager-corps of the rebellious army . The same having been convicted on the clearest evidence of repeated hi gh treason , was according to the existing laws and proclamations , in the court-martial held Aug . 22 nd , 1 S 49 , condemned to death by hanging , aau this sentence execated upon him the same day . ' By the Imperial Royal Court-martial . ' Head quarters , Arad , Aug . 22 , 1 S 49 . '
Julius Hurby , Knight of Schwanenheim , native of Werschetz , in the Banat , twenty-three years of age , Cdtholic . single , upper lieutenant of the imperial Kaiser Ferdinand I ., Hussar regiment , has , by the support of the Hungarian rebels with . armed hand , incurred the guilt of hi gh treason , and having been on this acciunt , after establishment of the facts , unanimously condemned by the court-martial held on the 20-h of August , 1 S 49 , according to the existing laws and proclamations , in addition to the confiscation of bis property and loS 3 of his lieutenant's commission to suffer death by powder and lead , this sentence was executed upon him the same day . * By the Imperial Royal Court-martial . * Temesvar , Aug . 20 , 1849 /
Samuel Murmann , native of Oedenburg in Hungary , aged thirty-two years , Evangelical lieutenantcolonel , on half-pay in the Imperial Royal service , yrent over to the rauks of the rebels , and took part in the insurrection . Tbe same having been convicted of high treason , was unanimously condemned , by the court martial held on August 25 th , in addition to the confi-dtion of his property and loss of his commission , to suffer death by po ' wder and lead , which sentence was executed on him the same day . 1 By the Imperial Court Martial . Temesvar , Aug . 25 , 1849 .
Vienna , Sept . 13 . —The followiiig important particulars concerning the new organisation of the Hungarian army are gathered from a good source . Henceforth there will be no Hungarian regiments . All the Hungarian soldiers and officers , from ealonel downwards , will be emptied into the Austrian army as privates , and dispersed throughout the same , so as to lose their nationality as much as possible . The efficers will be , as far as that is possible , German . The same system will be pursued towards other nationalities .
More Murders . —The Hungarian mails cease not to bring daily the accounts of fresh executions . The last news of this kind is the shooting of the brave CoL Kiss , the Commandant of Peterwardein , and Gen . Lenkey , formerly Comman < JaBt of Comorn , who were seut prisoners to Arad . This intelligence is not , however , yet conSrmed from official sources . Two very remarkable letters of Arthur Georgey , which form valuable historical documents , have been published in the Oesterreichische Correspondent . ' The first of these is addressed from Arad on tie 1 lth of August , to the Russian General Rudiger , to whom two days later he surrendered unconditionally . The second letter written from Grosswatdein on Aug . IGtb , to Klapka , is undoubtedly the most valuable docaments which has been published upon the latter events of the war . In it two main facts are
brought ont which throw the strongest light upira the personal schism between Georgey on the one hand , and Kossuth and his Polish friend on the other . Kossuth is accused of havingsecretly appointed Bern to be coramauder-ia-chief , while his answer to the diet's motion , naming Georgey for that office , was so evasive as to lead them to suppose that he had complied with this proposal . Then again , Dembinski ' s extraordinary move in retreating to Temesvar , a fortress garrisoned by the enemy , instead of Arad is attributed to jealousy of him ( Georgev . ) '
Advices from Bucharest , of the 4 tb , announce the arrest of Bern by the Russians . A report to the same effect from the Russian authorities at Bucha rest had reached Cronstadt ; adding that Bern had escaped from the Turks , who probabl y sere d ad to Q ? reli eved of all responsibility , and caught on the
Untitled Article
WaUaehian territory . This intelligence require 8 official confirmation . A letter from Ac 3 , of September 10 , insetted in the' Soldaten Freund , ' says that the aggressive has again been taken up before Comorn , and a general advance of troops in order on Dotis , Pupta-Ezem and Herkaly , and the Acs forest ; then in Schutte Major to Sz-Pal and Ujfa ' . u . All this took place without eppssitiou being made . In like manner Pott ' s brigade pushed on to Ekel and Koszegfalva . The Russian general ( Grabbe ) has a concentrated position between the Waag and the Danube , on the table-land of Heleny , facing Comorn , while the Cossacks do tbe outpost duty . Klapka has released all Russian prisoners . The state of siege has been removed from Trieste and the Istrian coast .
In compliance with the demands of the Porte , the Austrian government has prohibited the exportation of arms and munition along the Croatian and Sclavonian frontier , in order that the Bosnian insurgents may be deprived cf this resource .
GERMANY . PRUSSIA . —Berlin , Sept . 12 . —The news of the Grand Duke Michael ' s death has reached us today from Warsaw . The first answer to the categoric question , put latterly by Prussia to the German governments , whether they will adhere or not to the league of the three krags , has been received from Bavaria . The cabinet of Munich has met the Prussian proposal with a direct negative . The death of the Grand Duke Michael has affected the czar deeply . The violence with which the emperor has been snatched suddenly from the excess of joy to extreme grief , has lent more than ever a
countenance of reality to those fears which have beenlattetlv entertained , lest the reason of this extraordinary sovereign should give way . The violence with which the symptoms of his grist burst out was equal to the extravagance with which he manifested tbe opposite sentiment , upon hearing of the decided successes of Russian arms in Hungary . The physicians exhausted the resources of their art to tame the furious expres . sion of the passion of sorrow -which dominated this overgrown will . Only by the continued application of ice to his head during a whole ni ght could the Emperor be calmed ; or rather , but for this remedy , it was the opinion of his medical attendants that he would have fallen a victim to the same malady which struck his brother .
Berlin , Sept . 14 . —The Prussian special envoy that was sent to Warsaw , has brought back such accounts of his interviews with the Czar , as have produced a most painful impression upon the mind of the King . The tone of the Russian autocrat was exceedingl y harsh and haughty . He disapproved of the steps taken by the Prussian government in the matter of the Bundestaat in terms of arrogant displeasure , which have been deeply galling to royal sensibility at Berlin . It seems that the Czar refused to listen to the representations made to him of the ineviiable necessity of these steps in consequence of the unconciliatory conduct of Austria . He recognised no urgent ground whatever for the concessions in
favour of popular institutions , which had been made by Prussia , and condemned unequivocally the draft of a German constitution drawn up at Berlin . Finally , his mood was most ungracious , and he said several things which were deeply wounding to the Kin ? . Nevertheless , on General " Neumann he was pleased to bestow the order of the While Eagle . The Russian losses have been considerable in Hungary , insomuch that a new recuittntnt of eighteen to the thousand has been proclaimed . All who a > e not ' adscripti glelse , ' all who can get out of the way of this galling conscription , fly . The Russian proprietors have thsir incomes pared prodigiously by shese levies , for every man is worth to them as much as the slave to the planter . Large dispersion of troops will be necessary to carry this oppressive measure into execution . -
The court of Berlin go intoraourning for fourteen days for the Grand Duke Michael . This prince was remarkable for a singular union , of brutality and kindness . The same man , who would put under arrest for a deficient bu ' . ton or a wry stock , and visit pipe-clay peccadilloes , with intemperate personal abuse as well as punishment spent a princely fortune in pensions to poor retired officers aud their families . To-day the Chambers did not meet . The next steps of th 3 government on the German question are awaited with impatience . The attitude of the
democratic party on this sub ject is apparently passive , but really a great hindrance , for their present aim is to play into the hands of the Russian party whom they wish if possible to bring into power ' , feeling sure that after General Gerlach ; revolution has once more a chance . Hamburg , Sep . 1 ? . —It hai been decided by tlie commission in Schleswi g to refuse the Schleswig-Holstein paper-money as payment for taxes-the decree says ' till further arrangements . ' The natural consequence of such refusal will be , that the commission receives no taxe 3 at all , the paper-money will be taken as hitherto in mercantile and other transactions , and the comaission will become bankrupt bv
its own act . The merchants and dealers in the different towns of the duchy have declared to take such paper-money as payment . The order of the regency of the 18 th October , 1848 , by which Danish vessels are treated as unprivileged in the Schleswig-Holstein harbours , has been annulled by the commission , likewise the payments to the compulsory loan of May 2 nd . 1849 ; most of these have been made , and are in the hands of the regency . The campaign against the civil officers goes on . The city of Husum has been threatened with a fine of 2 , 000 dollars , to receive M . Davids as burgomaster . Troops are sent to Tonning and Ftidrichsladt tc
introduce the new civil officers there , and to force the old ones to send their cash to the central office inFlensburg . Eckeruforde is certain to receive a similar visit , for the authorities there refused to deliver their cash to such office . M . Wiggcrs , customhousa-officer , inPlessburg , has thrown up bis office-He was to alter the Schleswig-Holstein arms on hoard the Sehleswig vessels , which he refused . The redoubts ; near Doppeln , which were to remain untouched during the armistice , have been destroyed by disguised Danish soldiers from Alsen , the -few Schlestvig police officers were obliged to run away , and the Prussian troops did nothing to prevent such demolition .
FRANKFORT .-The' Cologne Gazette , ' of the 16 ih , gives the following , under the date of the 1-tih , from us Frankfort correspondent : — The proposals of ths Vienna cabinet have already reached Berlin . Austria and Prussia are each to appoint two members , and Austria is to preside . In cases of difference that cannot be settled bv themselves , the governments of the other four German kingdoms , in their turn , are to decide as arbiters .
DENMARK AND THE DUCHIES . The question of the flags and marks to be carried by Schleswig vessels , so as to enable them to enter ports under the same advantages as Danish vessls , has been settled , in a certain degree satisfactorily to the Schleswic ers ; inasmuch aj a secwd decree of tbe commission relative to the subject orders that ships shall carry the Danish flag , but that the Schleswig arms , with the two lions , shall be worked in upon the upper part of the field , close to the staff . This interim flag will entitle to the privileges of the mest favoured nations having treaties with Denmark , and the same tights as Danish vessels in Danish ports .
FRANCE . PARIS , SATURDAY , —One department only has demanded , through the organ of the comeils yeneraux that the constitution should immediately be revised . This wish has been put forward by too few amongst the mass of the French peopleto render it possible that any weight can attach to it , but it must be remarked that the department that has signalised itself by putting for th an eccentric desire , is that of the Gironde , which in the old revolution" furnished so many remarkable men to the Constituent Assembly . M . de Tocqueville has protested in energetic Ianjuage cgaiuBt the bastinadoes of Milan .
The circumstances under which M . Furet , the editor of a republican journal , was conducted from bngade to brigade , chained like a felon , to take his tnal at Rouen for a political offence , are nothing in S on 1 ** treatment to which has been sub-& i i ? i 1 ' » r was arre 8 ted on the nw / % > m lhe IWP ™ of a political Mnnn ?? ' ° , tra « fitted from Paris to Dijon on foot , and from bri gade to brigade , chained to criminals condemned to the galleys . He underwent this punishment for forty-five days , and reached DA * on the 4 th of September , \ fc hS amval , and after remaining two or three hours at Dijon , he was set free , without an explanation being given as to the reasons of his arrest . Government has ordered aninqiury .
M . Foacault , responsible editor of the « Gazette de France , appeared yesterday before the juge d'intruction , and was told , that , in consequence of the
Untitled Article
publication of an article by M . Remy , recommending an appeal to the people ( for which article tbe journal was seized ) , he would be prosecuted on the charge of exciting to hatred and contempt of the republican government . Paris , Sunday . —It seems that , after all , the resignation of General Rostolan will not be accepted . General IUndon ' s protestantism is said not to be the real cause of his non-departure to Rome . Gen . Changarnier , when he heard of the nomination , opposed it energetically , anil it was then that the lucky chance turned up , and it was found out that General Randon was a protestant . M . de Falloux ' s illness is bad enough to cause the gazetting thi 3 morning of M . Lanjuinais in the interim of his ministry .
M . Andre , a barrister , against whom a warrant had been issued on the 14 th of June , and who . had evaded the pursuit of the police , was arrested on Saturday at the Barrier of the Chopine-tle , and placed at the disposal of the Attorney-General of the High Court of Justice . M . Andro was a member of the Committee of Twenty . five , who replaced the Socialist Committee after the last general elections . The Court of Cassation has ordered that , to prevsnt disturbances , the trial of the persons concerned in the entitle which took place at Montlugon in June last , shall be tried by the Court of Aasiz ; of liiom , instead of by that of the department of the AHier , in which Montlugon is situate . The accused in the outbreak of Albi are , for the same reason , to be tried by tbe Court of Assize of Tarn-et-Garonne , instead of that of Toulous ? .
Paris , Monday . —The Exp edition ts Morocco . —Letters fto * Toulon , of tbe 13 th , state that tbe French fleet , which had wei ghed anchor on the 11 th , and was ready to sail , ' had been countermanded , had again anchored in the roads , and the troops and military stores on board landed . M . Merrier , Secretary of Legation , who has been several times employed on mission * to Rome , was despatched on Sunday morning to that city with fresh instructions to General Rostolan , who remains in command of the army . The health of M . de Falloux is improvin g under the care Of Doctors Reoamier and Blache .
The Attorney-General has ordered the ' Almanack du People' for the year 1850 to be seized , and the editor prosecuted for having published an attack against property , and excited the hatred of one class of citizens against the other . Several arrests were made at Lyons on the loth for political causes . A clandestine manufactory of gunpawder has been seized at Toulouse , in the house of an operative machinemaker , who has been arrested and committed to prison .
The President of tbe Republic , on the proposition of the Minister of the Interior and by the advice of the Coramision des Mises en Liberte , bas ordered the release of 225 of the insurgents of June , 1848 , confined in the pontoons of Brest , Cherbourgb , and [/ Orient . In consequence of this release there are now no more insurgents in the naval establishment at L'Orient . Paris , Tuesday . —There was a council of ministers held to-day at the Elysee , at which M . O . Barrot was present . Despatches received from Rome were laid before it , the substance of which generally was ,. that tbe pope was ready to accede to the desire expressed in the president ' s letter to M . Edgar Ney ; but that , 'if the French government urged their demands with the least appearance of force or coercion , he would again draw back .
Letters from Naples , received from our corres pondent there , under date the 10 th inst ., state that the greatest anxiety was visible amongst the Camarilla at Portici at the attitude of France , and our correspondent himself expresses the fear that Pius will stick out against diplomacy which cannot do anything , The Pope has already been from Portici to Naples once , to be present at a religious
ceremony . The ^ accounts given of M . de Falloux's health were net altogether so favourable last evening as the day before . He was seized during the day with a shivering fit , afterwards followed by fever . A warm hath was then prescribed , which gave him re lief . He is to he removed to the country as soon as his strength will permit ths fatigue . The' Eveneineni * states that the illness of M . de Falloux is a nervous intermittant fever . ' It is certain , ' adds the ' EveniaeoV ' that M . de Falloux will not retire from office before the discussion in the assembly , in which he will defend the line of policy that he has pursued . '—Daily News .
Wednesday . —A case entirely similar to that in which Mr . More O'Ferrall has made himself conspicuous has occurred at Ancona . Four vessels arrived there the other day with 800 refugees from VenLe ; they were refused an entrance there , and went on to Peseova . The Neapolitan authorities there refused to allow them to land , and the unfortuna ' . es returned in a state of destitution and famine to Ancona , where they arrived on the 11 th . They were again refused an entrance , and have been sent back to Venice .
SWITZERLAND . We have news from Berne to the 12 th inst . The federal council has determined that all the refugees who have figured as chiefs of movements in Germany shall leave the' territory of the confederation within three days . Other refugees also are comprised in this measure . France allows them to pass through her dominions .. The refugees who are at Geneva will thus be sent away . The ' Suisse' of Berne says , that , according to the latest accounts , the Austrian troop 3 on the Vorarlberg only amounted to 10 , 000 men , most of whom were in barracks . This was an answer to the exaggerated statement of the 'Deutsche Zeitung . ' It is admitted , however , that the Austrian garrisons on the frontiers of the canton of Tessin are ou the
. The Swiss government has ordered the expulsion of Heinzen , Struve , Brentano , and Mierolawski , chiefs of the insurrection of the Grand Duchy of Baden . They have the choice of passing through France , or going to Genoa .
ITALY . ROME . —Acconuts of the 6 th mention the arrival of M . M . Ds llayneval at Rome , with hopes that an accoraoda : ion was possible with the Pope , who was brought to make several important concessions in the sense of the old Staiuio . But the Code Napoleon still stuck in the throat of his Holiness . Pius has created Cardinal Oudinot Duke of San Pancrazio , and has pensioned him . The' Nazionale' of Florence , of the 7 th , states , with all possible reserve , that it has received letters by express from Rome , announcing that the military commandant has definitively taken the power of the stats into his own hands , and deposed the cardinals .
The ' Naaonale' oi Florence of the 8 th inst . publishes the following letters from Rome : —• I have politico-theatrical news to give you . The singer , Madame Rebussini , had been loudly app ' auded for some lime past by the French " who crowd the Argentina Theatre . The rondeau of Marino Faliero one evening excited the most enthusiastic applause , in the midst of which a French captain threw a bouquet on the stage from his box . The singer did not pick it up , but as soon as she had retired behind the scenes she sent a servant to pick it up ; she reappeared afterwards , but without the bouquet . The French officers were offended at this , and
resolved upon revenge for the affront . Tbe next evening the theatre was nearly full of French j there were only about 100 Romans in the pit , and very few in the boxes , Which had almost -all been taken by the French . After tbe rondeau the bouquet as before fell before the feet of the singer , who made her exit without picking it up ! Immediately the French drew whistles from their pockets , and commenced a most terrific concert mingled with cries of'Take the bouquet ! All the Romans who were in the theatre , on the contrary , applauded and cried . ' Bravo ! bravo 1 no ! no ! Show them our sympathy ! ' At last the Romans , seeing that the French officers persisted , left the theatre ; the French desiHed . andthe act of « Co \ nmetta' began . About
fifty Romans then re-entered , when the French recommenced their clamours ; a Roman then exclaimed , ' Let all Italians leave the place ! ' But instructions had been given to the gendarmes who were at the door , and who prevented the Romans from leaving . Meanwhile some French officers , having taken the stage by assault , forced the singer to appear with he bouquet , the cause of so much tumult . Madame Rebussini appeared pale and dishevelled , with tears in her eyes ; she held the bouquet in her left hand . The French then loudly applauded , in the midst of the whistles of the Romans , and of the violent apostrophes they had addressed to the si nger w ho had been weak enough to give way . This litlle history , for the present , has had no further con sequences . "
Tne' Piedmontese Gazette' of the 10 th instan says , in a letter from Rome , dated tlie 8-h instant tfaitlhetcttimatanof the French governmei S been reduced lo the following demands : Council It
Untitled Article
State with a deliberative voice in internal affairs , partial amnesty , and payment of all the paper TflOUCV * ROME . —The' Piedmontese Gazette' of the 10 th instant says , in a letter from Rome , dated the 8 th instant , that the ultimatum of the French government had bsen reduced to the following demands : Council of state with a deliberative voice in internal affairs : partial amnesty , and payment of all the paper money . ... . , „„ , of
A letter from Rome , in the' Nazionale' Florence , states that the direcior of the Argentina theatre had been obliged to close it on account of the late disturbance about Mine . Rebussini , hut ( hat the theatre was to be re-opened on the 8 ih . Great ill-feeling , according to this letter , existed at Rome between the French and the Romans . Tims at the theatre Valle , in a new piece , one of lhe actors having a pun calculated to cast ridicule upon the inconstant character of the French people , the public encored it with frautic enthusiasm . The ' Riforraa' of Lucca , of the 10 th , states that the Holy Faiher intends taking up his residence at Benevento , after the festival of Pie de Grotta .
Letters from Leghorn of the 9 th announce the arrival there of twenty-four of Garibaldi ' s men . The famous priest Maineri is of the number . The ' Concovdia' of Turin contains the following from Rome , Sept . 17 : — 'Several Spanish soldiers lately entered a house at Zigarolo , ia order to carry off a young woman . Her husband defended her some lime , but at last , seeing that resistance was vain , he killed her with his twn hand . Several peasants , attracted by the noise , hastened to the spot , while more Spaniards came to the assistance of their comrades . A fray ensued , in which the peasants had the worst of it ; three of them were seized and shot on the spot . Since \ h '\ s event , Zigarolo has become a desert , every one having retired to the counirv to avoid similar scenes . '
Things are still going on unsatisfactorily—wholesale arrssts take place without the observation of legal forms , and are effected by sbirri frequently in plain clothes . The Concorilia' of Turin quotes a letler from Genoa of the 12 th , stating that it bem » known that Garibaldi was to leave for Nice on the 11 th on board the San Giorgio steamer , crowds assembled at the port , and many persons occupied boats for the pur . pose of seeing anil cheering him . The boats had been in waiting for upwards of an hour around the steamer when she suddenly had her steam up , and moved towards the mouth of the port . On being questioned , the sailors declared that Garibaldi was not on hoard . Before leaving the port , however , she stopped ; a boat left the St . Michael frigate , and approached the steamar . The psople in the boats , perceiving this , cried : ' There ' s Garibaldi I make haste , ply your oars ! Vive Garibaldi ! ' But before they could . reach the steamer she had resumed her course , and they only arrived in time to learn that Garibaldi was really onboard of her .
Ancona , Sept . 10 . —There is at present a garri . sou of about 1 , 500 men here , commanded by Gen . Pfanzelter , and consisting of part of the Hohenlohc regiment ? with detachments of artillery and Hungarian cavalry . Martial law still prevails , and an tinfortunate wretch was shot a fortnight ago under a combination of most horrible circumstances . It appears that his wife , in order to indulge more freely in an intrigue in which she was engaged , resolved to get rid of her husband by cancealing a musket ( belonging to her son ) in his room , and then de .
tiouncmg him to the military authorities . A search was made , the gun was found , and the presumed culprit was immediately shot . His son , however , struck with remorse , gave himsslf up as the real offender in having the gun in his possession , and revealed the plot of his mother . The commandant was rather puzzled what to do , as one man had already been shot ; but he ordered both mother and son to be well bastinadoed meanwhile . At the third blow on the stonnch the woman died , and so the tragedy ended .
SARDINIA . —The ' Concordia * of Turin , of the 10 th , odds some particulars to these already known concerning Garibaldi . His wife , it appears , really died from fatigue , in a state of pregnancy , on the sea-coast , after landing to escape from the attack of the Austrian fleet , as our . readers will remember . The peasants sent to Ravenna for a physician , but he came too late to save her . Garibaldi , after this heavy blow , wandered for thirty-five days , under different disguises , in the fields , " among the woods and mountains of the Appenines , sleeping by day , and travelling by night , sometimes a guest at the table of the Croatian , at other times walking un .
heeded among the very men sent to apprehend him ; till , at last , having crossed the Tuscan Maremme , he succeeded in embarking in a fishing boat , anrl in the disguise of a fisherman arrived at Chiavari . The intendant hail the simplicity to ask him for his passport , legalised by the Sardinian Consul ! Garibaldi unhesitatingly gave him a passport which a frendhad forced upon his acceptance , and ubsema that he had unfortunately met with no Sardiuian Consul in the forests and ravines which he had crossed . _ Our readers know the resf . At Genoa GaribaLli inhabits an apartment belonging to the
questor , where both he and his companion , Captain Leggero , who had served under him in America , are treated with every mark of consideration , though in fact they are under a sort of arrest . —This arrest has caused a fierce sceue in the Chamber of Deputies at Turin . Liberal orators demanded his immediate liberation . Pinelli , the minister , pleaded that Garibaldi by taking service under the Roman Republic , had ceased to be Piedmontese ! He could thus be treated as an alien . In despite of this mean and beggarly defence the chamber voted that the arrest of Garibaldi was an outrage on the rights of a cit ' zan , aud an insult to the Italian nation .
A letter from Genoa of the 11 th inst . states that Garibaldi had been placed on board the frigate Saint Michael , to be conveyed to Nice , his native plaep . NAPLES , Sept . 10 ,-The King , who has shut himself up from public gaze for nearly eighteen months , appeared in the streets on the 8 th , to celebrate the great national / este of Piedigrotta . It was a well-chosen moment for the appearance of his Majesty , since the whole of the road on tbe present occasion ( as is usual ) from the royal palace to the church , at the extreme end of the Chiaja , was lined with soldiers , and beyond this every precaution had
been taken by the police , who obliged the owners of houses to give a list of the company they expected to witness the fete . Some few arrests took place on the occasion ; buildings were examined , drains searched , and every possible means taken to protect his Majesty from the assassin . The cortege passed with solemn pace down the Chiaja , and his Majesty having received the benediction of the church , the l > ious pageant returned , without any unusual mani . foliation of enthusiasm . Many families had left Naples expressly to ' avoid the show . Duniciliary visits of the police were attempted on the apartments « f British subjects , but , in most instances , very properly resisted . 1 .
VENICE . —By a decree of General Garzkowski dated . Venice , the 31 st ult ., the province of Venice is restored to its former limits , and the political administration of the districts' comprised in th-m again belongs to the provincial delegation of Venice . The Swiss Consul at Venice has delivered passports to the refugees who from that city desired to seek a refuge in Switzerland . They are about 150 in number , and have iu general sufficient means to live upon . The Federal Council consents to receive them , but reserves to itself the right to place them in towns in the interior of tUe country if it thinks fit . —Times . ,
The Free Harbour of Venice now extends no further than the borders of the island of St . Georeio Maggiore . Goods warehoused elsewhere must be removed to within the limits within three months or hey will have to be introduced for consumption and pay the import duty . —Daily Neios TiuesTE .-Six shiploads of refugees ' from Venice arrived here a week ago , but General Pfanzelter P H ren f T ? ' efusetI t 0 let them 'and . Two of their bodies , the surgeons decided that their malady was not cholera , as was at first apprehended The refugees received their clearances for Cor lt and Pcdracca , ahuieportonth e Neapolitan c < S At the former place they will certainly not be received and will most likely be repulsed also fromthlS England or Turkey will then probabl y be the desti nation of these political outcasts
INSURRECTION AT CORFU . The Vienna paper of the 14 th inst . co ' ntains the following later particulars ot lbs insurrectfon at ^^¦ Sr ^ c ^ w : SS 35 ES ouCak ' S ? hB ein n f ment 8 ' tothe s oene of the ou . oreaic , whither all disposable iroops froro Zsnte
Untitled Article
were also sent . It seems that Mr . Ward had anarrow escape , a soldier having been shot at his side . The courts-martial are in full s * ing : seven insurgents have been shot and hanged , and four more are to-morrow to suffer the same fate . The government of the Ionian isles has allowed the debarcation of the Venetian emigrants Manin , Toraasco , and othersi which arrived by the French steamer Pluto ; but on account of tbe prevalence of cholera in Venice all passengers from thence were subjected to a quarantine of twelve days .
The Lord Commissioner , in a note to thfe French consul , expressed the willingness of the government on this occasion to make an exception in favour of the refugees ; but that , as a general rule , fugitives would not be allowed to land , on account of the small force present in the islands to remsdy any raischiet that raiglit arise from the agitation of such dangerous gnes ' s . Tomasco and Manin were going to London , Pcpe to Paris ; many of the others to Constantinople and Alexandria , but the majority remain in Greece .
MALTA . The Roman Refugees . —Sept . 8 . —The poor Roman auxiliaries are still in quarantine , supported by the benevolence of private individuals . A few pounds from some of the numerous London committee , in aid of foreign refugees , would be well app iied to the unfortunates now lingering out their wretched existence in our quarantine harbour . — Daily News .
AMERICA . The Royal mail steam-ship Canada , Captain J " - kins , arrived at Liverpool on Monday afternoon . All fears for the safety of the Hibernia are at an end . The following is a report of the accident which befell that vessel :-On tbe 31 st . ultimo , the Ilibernia was proceeding towards Halifax at low speed , the weather being foggy . She had a sea pilot on board , and at six a . m . received a harbour pilot , under whose charge she was then placed , and continued to proceed on the same reduced speed . At 6 . 30 a . at . she struck on Chebucto Head rocks , and sprang a leak forward . The engines were
immediately reversed , and the ship triramed by the stern . At 6 . 55 the port anchor and fifteen fathoms of chain cable were dropped under foot , and she was backed off , and proceeded up the harbour to her station . After undergoing repairs she resumed her voyage on the following day with her passengers and the mails . On the 4 th inst . she experienced unfavourable weather , which caused her to labour heavily , and the leak to increase to three feet an hour by nine a . m ., up to which time her four bilge pump 3 , with the aid of one injection every hour for eight minutes kept hsr free ; she had now increased nine inches in fifteen minutes upon the four bilge pumps , being at the rate of Hires feet per hour , as above stated . Circumstances having rendered it necessary to use the injection for ten
minutes every quarter of an hour , an attempt was made to place a thrummed foresail over the leak , hut it was unsuccessful . A consultation was then held between the Admiralty agent , her commander , and the chief engineer , who having maturely considered the imminent ri > k of continuing on her course , ' agreed upon the urgent necessity of hearing up for Halifax , where she arrived at 5 . 20 a . in . on the 7 th . —On the 8 ih inst ., at 3 30 a . m ., the Canada arrived from New York , and after having taken on boatd her own maiU and those of the Hibernia , proceeded on her voyage to England , at six o ' clock the same morning . —A meeting of the passengers by the Hibernia was held after her return to Halifax , and a series of resolutions were passed , exculpating Capt . Stone from all blame , and expressing the greatest confidence in the officers anil crew .
Our accounts by the Canada are fourteen days later . The subject of most interest ib the anticipated insurrection and invasion of Cuba . Tins matter has assumed more consistent proportions , the time fixed for the denoument having arrived ! A fortnight since Colonel White , with 400 or 500 of his followers , went from New Orleans tj Round Island which lies off the mouth of Pascagoula Kiver , not far from Mobile , to wait for the time of sailing . There is no doubt the government has more thorough information of tbeir scheme . The assemblage under Colonel White at Round Island had been ordered off by the naval officer commanding in that vicinity ,
and at New York the sailing of the corps had been delayed nearly a week by unexpected hindrances Wo understand that the expedition is t'j consist of 1 , 500 men , who are to land upon a part of Cuba where there are no troops to oppose then . Once landed they will proclaim a provisional government ; those among the people and the troops who are favourable to their cause will jo ' n them ; with tlie increase of their numbers they will move forward ; and , lastly , if aU goes according to their anticipations , drive the Spanish government , from the island , proclaim it a free and independent state , and take the measures necessary to establish a Republican Gomvitntion and government .
CANADA . From Canada we have no news of special interest . A nev ? paper is about to be undertaken there for the express object of advocating the independence of the British North American Colonies , with a virw to ultimate annexation to the United States . Everything was perfectly tranquil . Lord Elgin visited Montreal on the 2 nd . Messrs . La Fontaine and Merritt were at Halifax on a mission touching customs reform . The verdict of the jury on the body of Mason , killed in the attack on La Fontaine ' s house , reprehended the neglect of precautions by the authorities .
' Five hundred houses are vacant at Montreal , and rents have fallen considerably . Many labouring people are finding their way to " the Uniied States , not being able to get employment in Canada . 1 Montreal , August 31 . —The opinion is hecoming general that differential dmirs will be imposed on American goods , unless the government of the United Ssa ' tes will continue to reciprocity in navigation-laffs .
THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE . ' In consequence of the resolute opposition evinced at the Cape agauut the government plan for tbe introduc-. ion of convicts into that colony , it has , wo believe , been determined to send out further in siruciions for the guidance of Sir Harry Smith under the existing emergency . The following extracts from the Cape Town papers , received by the Inflexible , will put pur readers in possession of the proceedings of the co ' lonuts , as well as of the measures adopted by the governor to allay the popular excitement : — ( From the ' Zuid Afrikaan , July 12 "> On Tuesday , July 12 th , contrary to expectation , he Legislative Council met for the transaction of ousniess . n J ^ T" ?!" tated that the vacancles » Weh l" » n Hari JLi ^ ^ Messrs . Ross and Fin Jim y I d 6 CeaSe of Mr - der B >' > lia ( i iSnJ uIT 7 ersons C PP ° inted king J «» b wh Si ' eler Laurens Cloete ' > d Abraham de Smd TheseatofMr . Ebden . who has also resigned , remains open .
tprV . ^ r , f " ggOne abroad that Me « rs . Let . Z t f' 1 ° J De Smi ( H hRd re « to accept the seats offered to them , in deference to the po-S Vn ' ih ' Y V 6 ry large concourse of P » Pta Present on the above occasion were not a little stag-£ n . i , k ind'Rnant at their "PPearance to take the u usloath and assume their seats ; the consequence 51 tKmS ! BVpnor t ? ' al lhs conclusion 2 ly Wslt y werethoro » 8 hlyand conlinuauSioe ^ E 01111 ^ ' ° L fl " J ourn « ent , the SS rt fflthdre ^ S ^ red in the yard , in front of he council-room , whereafter a short while tai Excellency , the Governor , m de his appearance ' e r M ° n the T ° aide - <^ a p , ? olw ™ ft T"fl ^ > ™ ° »* t who ' i were th
, g stWiTr' r . s-MftSSSSSK Ppsssi for a colorabl timehe *
e , wa atSedto T msmm spm
Untitled Article
where he was placed on the table . ThTchT ~ "* were most deafening . Silence was at lens ^ 0 * cured , and , after the spectators had been ad \ ^ ° * by Mr . Ebden , sen ., Mr . Sutherland , and mTS ? locate Ebden , the crowd separated , after h ' again and again cheered the worth y patriot fo j ? S manly resolve to resign his situation , and ti 1 (] Is off all connexion with a government inca-iabl / f protect its own honour . ' ' to Up to the' 16 ' . h inst . the colonists were led to h lieve that they had to grapple with civil c ^ v' t only ; bur , lo ! by mere accident , it was discovert that military convicts from Hongkong were to i transported to this colony , and then carno the )/ 6 bsolf , which told them that they would have to ' ^ ceive those from the Mauritius also . We shall v * l
dwell upon the unwarrantable proceeding of Ea ! Grey in telling S . r Harry Smith , in his despatch of the Hhh of September 1 S-18 , that convicts fio ^ a Mauritius only would be sent , and then , a few , ] a . aflerwards ^ rdwingtheGoveniorofHonglcoii ^ t oianj the convicts thence also . We desire to come toThp fact that Earl Grey , in his subsequent despatch of the 2 nd of March , 1849 , thought nothing of again violating his promise of the 10 : h of Septttmbe * 1848 , and ordered , that all white soldiers fro ^ Ceylon and the East Indies , should also he trasportsd , to this colony—in fact , maki ;; g this country iv , cesspool of moral corruption .
What is most strange , however , is , that when tlie dacuments relative to the convict question generally were laid on the council-table on the 10 th of Ju ] y las « t , Sir Harry very pertinently asked Mr . Montagu , whether all ( papers ) were there , as he would have no secrets or mysteries in his Government ; and this , mark , in the face of the fact , that the military despatch with the reply , for the first time published in the' Gazette' of Thursday last , had then been in his possession for a space of twenty-eight days ! In an official notice dated July 25 . h , and signed John Montagu , Secretary to ths Government , his Excellency savs , that 'he entertains no reasonable
doubt whatever , that it will be within his power , in point of law , to delay the landing of the convicts expected by the Neptune until her Majesty ' s pleasure shall be known . ' The notice concludes withthe assurance that his Excellency will i \ ot land them pending the announcement of her Majesty ' s pleasurein regard to the whole question , respecting which , her subjects of this colony are at present filled with so much anxiety and alarm .
The Popuull Remedy. Pake's Life Pills,
THE POPUUll REMEDY . PAKE'S LIFE PILLS ,
^Foreign Tmelugenr E
^ Foreign tmelUgenr e
Untitled Article
3 THE wnPTff ^ OJJ AB ^ September , 1840 .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), Sept. 22, 1849, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1540/page/2/
-