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! ¦ p ^reigit t^teilt«?n«»
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; AN EFFECTUAL CURE >FOlt PILES, FISTULAS/ Ac... ^ : 'v ^ ¦y.A' BER.NE'i . Hy'S PILE OINTMENTS
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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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"What a painful and noxious disease is the Piles ! anrl , coniparntively , how few of the afflicted have leen permanent y eurodliy ordinary ajipenls toincdical skill . This , no doubt , arises , from tlie use of powenul aperients too frcqnenilj administered by Uie ' i'VofesEion ; indeed ; strong internal medicines should always be avoided m all cases . ot tins complaint . The proprietor , of . the ahovc Ointment , after years of acute suflering , placed Id msdt under the treat * irieiit of that eminent surgeon , Mr . Abernetliy ; was l > y him restored to perfect hcaltli , and has enjoyed it ever sir . ee without the slightest return of the disorder , over a period-of fifteen yeflrs , during winch time the , same Abernethmn prescription has been tlie means of healing a vast number of desperate cases , both in and out of the proprietor s circle of friends , most of which oases had Loen under medical ofli'e , and fame of them for a very c-onsjilcra We time . Alicrnethy ' s Pile Ointment w » s intvoihiccd to" the public'by the desive of many who hud ueen perfectly Healed oy its app . uatiou , and since its introduction the fame of this Ointment hiis spicad far ; ind . wide ; even the medical protession , always slow and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any medicine not prepared by themselves , do now treely and trankly admit that Abernetliy ' s Pile Ointment is not only a valuable preparation , but a never foiling remedy m every stage and Va Suffi ; rer 6 from Ui e raes wfil not repent giving the Ointment ri trial . Multituacs of cases of its efficacy might be produced , if the natine of the compliant did not render r ' those who have OCCn OUffid , unwilling to' publlSU loldVin " covered-pots at 4 s . 6 d . ' , or the quantity of three 4 s . Cd- pots in one for Us ., with full directions for i : se ; by Barcluy and Sons , Farringdon Street ; Edwards , St . Paul ' s Cl . uroh A ard j Butler , i , Chea ^ ule ;> ewDar . v , St . Paul ' s ;; Suiton , How-Church Yard ;¦ Johnson , 03 , Cornlull ; Sangar . 150 , . Oxford Street ; ANilfaughby and Co , 61 , Bishopsgate-Street Without ; Owen , 52 , Marchmont Street , Buiton Cresent ; Eade ,. 39 , Goswell . Street ; Trout , 229 , 8 trandrHnnnnyand Co ., Co , Oxford Street ; Preiitis , 84 , Edgcware Kond j and retiul by all respectablei Clicmistt nnfl Medieino Vendors iti London . ¦ ' ,,. ^ , . , . , * . : Be sure to ask iov ' ABEltNETIIY' 5 PILE OINTMENT . ' Ihe public are requested to . be . on their guard agaiast noxious compositions , sold at low prices , and to observe that none can possibly be genuine , unless tlie name of C . Kino is printeifon the Government Stamp affixed to each pot , -Is . Cd . ; wliich is the lowest price the proprietor is enabled t sell it at , owing to tlie great expense of the Ingredients . ¦ ...:.. _ .. ... ; CORNS AND BUNIONS .. ,, '' ' ''"' ¦ PAUL'S EVERY MAN / S FRIEND . .... . ' . ¦'¦ ¦/ ' ¦ ' ,--. ' ¦ . ' . ; - ¦ . Patronised-, , by the Royal Famil y , Nobility ; 'Clirgy , die . ¦ . ' ¦ ¦'¦¦ Is a sure and speedy cure for those severe annoyances , witliput causing the least pj , in or inconvenience , unlike all otlier remedies for Coras , its . operation is such ns to render the -cutting- of -Corns altogether unnecessary ; indeed , ne may say , the practice of cutting Coins is tit all times highly dangerous , and has been frequently , attended with lament ' able consequences , besides its liability to increase their growth ; it adheres with tho most gentle pressure , produces an instant and delightful relief from torture , and with perseverance in its application ,-entirely eradicates the most inveterate Corns and liunions . . : . : y . , ;\' ¦• .. ' . •' ¦¦ - - ¦ '¦" . | j ;; - - .:. ; : ;")•"; - ; - ¦ ,, . . - "' Tesfunonials have been received from npwarda of one hundred-Niysicians and Surgeons of the greatest eminence , ai ireH as frOHinJanjr Officers of both Arrpj and Navy , and rie « rlj p ") ie thQUSandprirate Tetters fl'Om the jreatry ill KWB 8 DlJ comitry . ' spifalJinjrinliigh ^ ermsbftnisvaluaWeremea ' y .. ';\ . . ; i ' y . . - :. l ^/ -i' ¦ ' ' ¦ . i . '"'¦ ' ; . ' Prepared by John Pox , in boxesat Is . lid . ' { or . three sinall boxes in onefar 2 s . 9 d ., -and " to' be had , with full directions for use , of all wholesale and retail mediciu * vendors in town and ceuntry . The genuine has tlie name of John Fox on thostamp . A 2 s ., 9 d . box . cures the most obdurate corns . ¦ '¦! ' - ' l ¦ "> ¦ ' . '; ¦• ¦; :: , . . ., ;' . .. ' . ¦ ¦ Ask for " Paul ' s Every Mau ' s Friend . " . . r Abernetliy ' s Pile Ointment , Paul ' s Corn Plaster , and Aberrietliy ' s Pile PowderB , arc sold by the . foUowinff respectable Chemlsls and Dealer * ik Patent Medic ' mes;—• ' ¦ . < . - . i * ¦ ¦ ¦¦ .. . :, ' -, ¦ . . ., ' :. ; ¦¦ .. :. . .-.- ¦ ; Barclay arid ^ Sons , FarringJon-street j ^ ^ Edwards , « 7 , St . Paul ' s Church-jard ; Butler , i , Chcapsfde ; Newbery , Sr . ' Paul's - ,. ! 5 < itt « iv Bow . ChuYch-yard , Johustoh , 16 , Greek-street , Soho , and G 8 . Coruhill j Sanger , 150 , Oxford-street ; Willoughby and Co ., 61 ; Bishopsgate-strcct Without ; Owen , 52 , MarclmiOTt-sU-eet , Biirton-crescent j Eado , 39 ; GusweBsti'eet ; Prout , 220 , Strand ; Himuay and Co ., 63 , Oxford-street ; Trentis , 84 ,- Edgewaie-road ; aud retail by all respect able chemists and medicine vendors in tandon . : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . . CoDNWit A . eENT 6 . —Baines , ind Newssnie , Heaton , Bmceton , Ueinhardt and sons , J . C . Browne ; * 8 . Briggate ; Denton , " Garland , ^ Uann Bean , Harvey , Haijjh , ' late Tarbsttem ; Bollandand ! Kemplay ; : Land , Moxom ,. C . Hay , lOe . Briggate J Khodes , BeH andKrook , Lerd , It . C . 'Hay , Medical Hall , LeedsiHimmington , Maudjand WUson , Rogerson , Staufield , Bradftrd ; Hartley , Denton , Waterheuae , Jepsca , Wood , Dyer , Parker , Jennings , and Leyland , Halifax ; Smith ; Elland 5 Hurst , Cardweli , Gell , and Smith , Wakefiekr- Pybus , ' Barnsley ; Knowles , Tiiorne , Brook , and Spivoy , Huddersfieldj II u ^ swi , . Keighley ; Brooke , Doucaster ; Matthews . Creaser , ' Driffioid ,. Cass , Go « lo ; JUlner , Pickering ; . StevensoB , Whjtby ; Boltoii ; Blanshafd and & » :, Hargrove , Fisher , Otlev , Limic ^ York ;\\' ainwi ^ ht , Howdwv ; Horsbjv \ Vran h : ham , Jefierson , Malton ; Buckall ; Scarberoutrh Smith ,- Furby , Bridlington j Adams , " CoJton , Pullen , SMby ; Oinbher , Mai-lset WcigUtoh ; Gledhil ] , OW Delph ; ' PriesUev , Fox , Pontefraet , ; ' Dulby .-Wetherby ; : Slater , Bedale ; Dixon , Northallerton ; AVard ; llichratrid Ward , fetokesley j Foggitt / and Thompson , Thirsk ; Mbiikhousei Barnard Cast lej ^ . ease , DarUngtoa Jennett ; Stockton ; Ballard , Abirigdon ; Thompson , Armagh ; Jamieson , Aberdeen ; Potts , Banbury , ; . King , 'Bath ; Winnail , Biriningliam ; Par 5 sihsori , Ulackbu ' Bradbury , Bohon ; Noble ,-Boston ; Beaeli ; ' and Co , Htldgewater ; Breiv , Ui'igliton j Fei-i-is and Co ., Bwstol iraiues , Bromfigrare Sirett , ' . Uuckinglittm- ; Bowman , Bury : Coopfli ' , ' Cnutei-bui-y ; Jefterson , Carlisle ; Eagle ; Clnilmsford ; Fletcher , Chester ; Smith , - < Colehester , ; aioUasou , Coveutvvj Bowman , Chor « ley ; Pike , Derby ; Uyers , Devonpoit ; lirooksV Doncaster ; Upllier , . Dudley i'Duiiciui , Dumfries ; pruinirtohd , Diindeej Bakeri' East Ketford : 'Evans anil Hodgson ^ Exeter ; Qarbutt , Gateshead ; . Raimes , Edinburgh j . Henry , Guernsey : Nfl * - son , Glasgow ; Simple , Greenoclc ; Weyiiiss , Hereford ; Butler , High Wycomb ; Cussojis , HorncasUe' ; Noble ,-Hull ; Fetcti , Ipswich ; Tunch , Inverness ; Green , Jersey ; Miluer , Lancaster , Ilurper , Leamington ;; Butlcr , Dublin : Cooper , Lciecgtei' ; AspinulLLivprpool ; Colemiin , Lincoln ; CockingIudlo > v ; ffigg , Lynri ; VViight , Macclcstield Lessey , Man Chester ; La » sJey , Maiistield ; Butler , ilarlow ; Campbell , Montrose ; Kidge , Xowark- ; Sutton , iNottingliam , Mease , North Shields j JarroW and Co ., Aorwich ; btump , Oldliam j Mennie ,- Plymouth ; . Go ^ aiis , ^ Fer th ; Yint and Cai ' , Sun « dcrland ; Leitder , Sheffield I'Deighton , Worcester ; Froud ,: Doi-chester . - And by all j-espectabl * C'hemiiis jn every Mai K «« lowii ^ throughout tlie United Kingdom . . - - - ¦ ' - < ¦¦ -j . ; , u :: . ;> , ; :. ^ :. , .. i ; . - -.., ; . . ,, . W « oj , es * ie Abents . —MesBrs , BoHonBlanshardandCo :, Druggists , Micklegate , Y ^ k . " ' " ' ¦
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If Hankikd ?» re llaWe to one disease more tTian another ,, or if thcro aro any particular affections of the human body we require to have a knowledge of over the rest , it is certainly that class of disorders treated of in tlie new and ira « proved edition ot ihe "Silent Pnend . " The authors , in thus sending forth to the . world another edition of rheis medical work , cannot refrain ftoxn expressing their graA fication at the continual success attending their effortgj which , combined with the ' assistance of medicines , excBaL sivelv of tlieir oivn preparation , have been the Imppj cauae of mitigating and averting the mentaland physicalmiserfe * attenianton . tliose peculiar disorders ; thus proving the facfe that suffering humanity : must always deiive the greatsst advantage from duly qualified members of the medical p «)» fession sidepting a' particular clase of disorders forthehr knowled of
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:. " FRANCE-^ m ^ MSB SS ^^ SoKs Lrruptedand abused ^ c ^ oSW that a dvanced hour Be should bring what hehad to say into the shortest iwssible space ; but he nevertheless thought that the Assembly would grant him the necessary time on such an -important - question . - In his opinion , the certain object to which the bill ought to tend was th » t gratuitous instractioa was obligatory . On the Mountain : Hear , hear . . On the Rig ht : Bravo ! That is what Proudhon demands .
- M . Victor Hugo : Gratuitous instruction was obligatory in the first degree , and in all degrees , ( Laughter . ) Obligatory p rimary instruction was a light of youth , a right more sacred than the right of firing , ' and which was confounded with tbat of the State . He wished to have an extensive public instruction g iven and regulated by the State . On the Right : Like Louis Blanc ! - " - ]«¦ . - "Victor ¦ Hugo : He wished that its starting
point should be the Tillage school , ft » d that it should rise as far as the Institute ; he would have the gales of science set wide open to every capacity . He konld not have a commune without a school , not a town without a college , not a chief town without a faculty . ( Interruption . ) He wished that France should present a vast ensemble , a sort of network or intellectual work-shops . ( Approbation on the Lett , and interruption on « he Right . ) s A 7 oice : And the means of execution .
On the Left : Monsieur le President , enforce dlence ! The President : Do you then wish me to prevent yoiir applauding . ( Laughter . ) M . "Victor Hugo : France should present a vast aetwoikof inteUectnal work-shops , a group of gymnasiums , of colleges , and of libraries , without any solution of continuity . He wished that the heart of the people should be placed in constant communication » ftu the brain of France . ( Interruption and whispering . ) He was aware that the -solution of the problem contained an important financial quesif not been so advanced
tion ^ but the hour had he could have shown , by entering into details , that he perfectly understood it , and those who interrupted him would hare been compelled to be silent . He should , however , now look at the question in its real point of view . He advocated freedom of instruction with the surveillance of the Stale , bnt by the State exclusively laieal , as was understoodand wished for by M . Guizot . He would not admit as tie personification of the State any men who had an interest either of conscience or of policy distinct from national unity . He would not introduce into the councils of surveillance either bishops or
delegates of bishops . . On the Right : That is what M . Pierre Leroux wishes for ! . M . Yictor Hugo : He wished for the complete separation of Church « u ^ State , for that would tend to the interest of both . The present bill would be nothing but a weapon the more given to the clergy . The tendency of the bill was to place the country in their hands . He was one of those who wished for the amelioration of the condition of the people . It was the duly of all , whether poets or writers , to turn the attention of the people towards a better world . He would , therefore , ardently support any plan of religions instruction , but he wished for the religious instruction of the Church , and not that of a party ; he wished it to be sincere , and not hypocritical ; he wished the object in view to be heaven and not earth .
On the Right : Hear , hear ! In that case , we agree ! : M . Victor Hugo : He would not have the professor ' s chair invade the altar , nor would he have the prioot interfere wim tne professor . He would open the eje ot the laical state on the seminaries , and , until the day when education should be completely free , he would not have it watched over by the clergy . The bill propos ° d he regarded as a strategic one ; it was the cltef-d ' ceuvre of the clerical party . He could not personify that party—be did not see it in the Assembly ; he did not see it in the government . God forbid that he should be supposed to make allusion to the Bishop of Langres , but be could not help expressing his distrust at the clerical party , he would not entrust it with the developement of the rising generation ; he would not confide in
its hands the future welfare of France . The bill had one great fault—it said one thing and did another . It « ras like the usual plan of the government ; every time that it forged a chain it called it liberty ; when it decreed a proscription it gave it the name of amnesty . ( Applause on the Left . ) In the remarks that he had made , he did not mean to confound the church with the clerical party , for the latter was the disease of the former . Free religious instruction was the Sisters of Charity by the bedside of the dying ; the Brother of Mercy releasing a slave , "Vincent de Paule sheltering the orphan , the Bishop of Marsailles in the midst of those affected by the plague , the Archbishop of Paris facing , with sqblime smile , the furies of the Faubourg St . Antoine , raising the crucifix over the heads of civil war , earin ? little about meeting death so-that he cou'd
secure peace . A voles : He irould not Lave been killed if ciril war had not been raised in the streets of Paris . M . Victor Hugo : The clerical party was an ancient one ; it bad a past of several centuries ; it was it which discovered that truth was but ignorance and error . Its history was written in that of all the progress of the human mind , but it was written at the back of the page . It was it which put Oampanella seven times to the torture for having affirmed that the number of . worlds was infinite . ' It was it which imprisoned Galileo , persecuted Columbus , and anathematised Pascal , Montaigne , and Moliere . It had long sought to put a band on the human mind . And now it would be master ' of public instractioa ; but there , was not a poet , a
philosopher , or an eminent man tbat would accept it . There was a book which appeared to be the emanation of human united with Divine wisdom , which people called the Bible , and' yet there had been Popes who had dared to proscribe that book , and this party claimed liberty of instruction , but the liberty which it really wished for was that of not teaching . ( Approbation and laughter on the Left . ) The clerical party wished to instruct , and i t would l ) e , therefore well to look at what it had done for centuries when Italy and Spain were in his hands . Thanks to it , Italy , that mother of nations , of poets , of geniu « , and of the arts , now knew not how to read . Spain had lost her rank among nations , but it was true that she bad gained the Inquisition , an establishment which some in that Assembl y bad wished to re-establish .
The President : You cannot be allowed to impute nch an intention to any one in the Assembly . On . the Right : Let him go on . It is meant for effect—a tirade on the Inquisition ! . "Victor Hugo said he addressed himself to the whole clerical party , because he considered it a public danger . He repeated that certain persons bed wished to establish the Inquisition in their writings—that Inquisition which bad caused five millions of individuals to perish in the flames . ' On the R i ght : With pointed caps . ( Laughter . ) ' Other Voices : It is the fifth act of Marie Tudor « M . Victor Hugo : The Inquisition—M . de Larcy : We reject the Inquisition , and we have never raised scaffolds : ¦ - ..
¦ M . Riebsrdet : Order , order , yon defenders of the Inqnisitioa . { Laughter . ) M . Victor Hugo : There were in the Vatiean library sealed -manuscripts containing all the names of the victims . " " A Voice-: That does not-prevent the earth from turning round . ( Laughter . ) _ - M . Victor Hugo ? Spain had been endowed with the Inquisition . ( Cries of ' Enough , enough , ' and 1 Question , question . *} The President : I must call on the hon . gentleman to adhere to its question . ' . '¦ . ' ¦ '"¦ . ' ¦ - . ' .-,.
X M "Victor Hugo : The . clerical parly had gagged he Roman , as it wished le do the French people . Jt was a fine task , but let . them beware . He rer jected the bill because it outraged French feelings r-because it degraded instruction , lowered the level of science , and debased the human mind . He was one of those who felt the tiood meant to his fore-Jicad whenever France esjerienesl a diainution of territory as in 1815 , or a duninntion of intellect , 84 it was now wished to impose on her . He would give the clerical parly a little serious advice ; let it iewareof the darkness caased in . meo ' fl minds by ifee : Bbadepfthest r . 'ice . ; . . ;
* : pa ; the ; Right : It is insulting | 0 fljg . Cataolic Uitbim ^ r - ¦ ¦ - -:- : ' - ¦ " ' ¦ ¦ - -.: . - ¦ - - OntheL'ft ; He is right in what he says " , Ji : LeeLjborde ; ftisinfcmous . • -
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On the « L » . ft : He does not Bpeak of priests . On the "Right : Whom does , hej ; allude to , then ; when be talks of the surplice ? - " ; - = M . V , illujo : The clerical party is alarmed at Socialism ; it sees the waves rising , and it ; imagine s that it will have saved society when it shall have combined material resistance with social hypocrisy , and placed a Jesuit wherever there is not a gendarme . ( Explosion of murmurs , and prolonged braww on the Lsft . ) Let it , however , listen to , advicei The 19 th century was opposed toM , and H it continued i ts course , ft -would raise ¦ formidable eventualities ; It placed"the government in l&e sacristy . ' - ¦ ¦ " s ? v ' - ¦¦ '¦ - ¦ ' ¦" - ^ OntheRights Order , order . ^ -A Voice : Let him go t on ; , - they are , only
P ) enjoy : it is only old romantic nonsense . M . de Darapierre ; I demand that the speaker be called to order . ¦ . ,. M deLarcv : He has insulted every Catholic . The President : I request the hon . gentleman to refrain from making such observations . A Voice : It is like the Porte St . Martin . M . Nadaud : It is th « liberty of the tribune . The President : The liberty of the tribune has its limits . ' ,. " .. ' \ i " * ' ' \ Toe Assembly was at this time in a state of great agitation . - _ ., ; ,. " .....,..,- . .,. ht
M . Victor Hugo considered that he had a rig , when a bill was presented which he regarded as a public danger , to closely examine it , —( renewed m-. terrnplion . )—andhis intentions ought not to be suspected . H e bad last tear defended order when it was in peril , as he now defended liberty when it was threatened . He was not suspected when he was at the barricades onthe 23 d June . ( Agitation . ) The President : You have indulged in too long a tissue of personalities , and you have done so with very insulting expressions . But you have beer treated in your turn so severely that it has dispensed me " from actiDg as I mi g ht have otherwise done . ¦¦; . - .
hi . Victor Hugo : Was this the kind of bill that were to be produced ? Was France to be arrested on her onward course ? The intention was to petrify human thought . ( Laughter . ) , ' In this stage of discoveries / said , the honourable member in conclusion , ' you proclaim immova bility . - , you pause , on the road like men fatigued—fatigued with glory , genius , . science , and knowledge ? Do you not see that everything is in movement around you and advances —you want to stop short . ( No , no !) I declare to yon , that if you repel progress , yon wi'l have fresh revolutions ; " and to such men as deny the truth of that assertion , I reply by the declaration that the earth turns round . I shall vote against the bill . ' ( This speech , delivered with great violence of gesture , was londly applauded on the Left . ) ';
The sitting of the . Legislative Chamber on Thursday was occupied with the debate on the organic law respecting public / instruction , and was again adjourned , after a speech from . M . de Montalembert . In the course of hisi speech " !! , de Monlalembert attacked Socialism with great vivacity , and ' declared that the readiness with which the new subversive doctrinesiintroduced after the Revolution of February , had been received by the masseB , was owing to the irrelig ious character of the education hitherto given by the State . ; The remedy for the evil was , he said , to render education more religions in its tendency ; and suctf was the great . object of the present bill . The debate was resumed on Friday by
a speech from M . Cremieux . The speech of Al . Cremicux , which appears to be very imperfectly given in the newspapers , seems to have been a very telling one in the house- . M . de Montalembert had on the previous day addressed a _ sqrt of summons to France to g ive up the care of public education to the clergy , and gave as the reason tbat the immoral and sceptical education given by the University was the cause of the revolution of 1789 , as well as those nf 1830 and 1848 ; . and he held out the threat that France had nothing for it but to accept the measure now proposed , or tumble into anarchy . M . Cremieux destroyed the whole foundation of thtt argument , that the University , as at present
constituted , was the creation of Napoleon , and could not be made responsible fcr a revolution which occurred nearly twenty years before it came into existence . He showed that the University , as it existed at tlie commencement of tbe Revolution of 17 S 9 , was merely clerical , and that , although neither cltrical domination nor clerical corporations were wantinp to the ancient regime , they did not prevent the old monarchy from perishing ,, He aUo stowed that it wa 9 not influence on the part of the clergy that was wanting during the restoration , but that still that influence did not prevent the revolution of 1830 . He instanced the fact , of his ( M . Cremieus ' s )
appearaccs in that Assembly and his taking part in a discussion such as this as an argument , which proved to the friends of clerical domination that the times had changed , and that the revolution of 1789 was something more than a chimera , and a dream . The old system of . government which bad then perished could not be resuscitated , and the clergy should rest satisfied in limiting their . efforts to tbe proper sphere —namely , religion . There were other religions besides that of M . de Montalembert . There were for example , those of M . Coquerel , and of himself—and he would ask if they had not the same rights with respect to education as anv other sect ?
M . Thiers declared that the bill was the inevitable consequence of tbe declaration made in the constitution , tbat instruction was henceforward to be free in France . As that was to be the case , the great cause of dispute between the clergy and the university— -namely , the admission , henceforward of-the pupils educated at the sminaires , or schools conducted , by the clergy , to the examinations for diplomas ; in letters and sciences , and consequently to the liberal professions , was of necessity at once removed , and a measure , ' drawn up in a spirit of conciliation , to bring together contending parties , wag a natural consequence . He ' avowed that he had completely gone over to the' Right / 'ih order to do his little he&t to stem the tide of Socialism . '
Paris , Su > -dav Evening ;—In ¦ ' the sitting of yesterday , the Assembly terminated the general discussion : on the Public Instruction Bill . ; The Assembly then divided on the question whether it should proceed to a second deliberation , when the iollowing was tbe result : — ' . - ' . .
Number of voters . , , , . 642 , Fot the motion . . . , ; 455 . ' , * Against it . . ' . ' _ . 187 Majority . ... : __ 268 Mme . Dudevant ( Gaorge . Sand ) _ has addressed the following letter toVthe ' ^ Presse' i- ^ - ' Several journals have been received as possible , and even as certain , the strange stoiy of an order to quit Paris , which it was said had been lately intimated- to me by M . Carlier . -1 should not have considered such a piece of hews as deserving of contradiction , bat , as the journals insist , ; I owe it to truth to
declare that it is completely erroneous . The little fact which has probably given rise to this story is this : —* . M . Carlier , tormented by , the police of my chef lieu de canton , which has fallen into a chronic state oimalepene , as we call it in my country , and perhaps , feeling on that day a want of a belief , in *' & conspiracy , sought for my address ; 'in Psris / J ' sent it to him by one of , my friends , thinking it my duty to reply to one act of polHenesr ' by another . I could not attribute to any other motive than a wish to pay me ; a visit the pains which the Prefect of Police took to discover my place of abode . ' '
A disturbance , which for a a . time threatened to be attended with very serious : consequences , ^ took place at Aries on Saturday week . A Legitimist club in that place gave a grand ball , which was attended by about 200 persons . The - Democrats regarded the fete as -a ; demonstration against the Republic , and determined to interrupt the festivities . They assembled to . ' th e nuraber of from 1 , 200 to 1 , 500 , andappeared . determined toforcean entry into the place where the ball was held ; ) Spine military had been placed round ' the ' building for its protection , but they were on the point of being overpowered when a body of cavalry coining ' up , headed by the mayor and , the sub-prefect , made a charge , and the crowd dispersed without any . accident taking place . , , : ' J-.. ; ,.... ' . 1 ''
" . A house porter , named Rpuginat , has been convicted before the (^ urt of Assize of Paris , of having taken part in the insurrectionary movement of the 13 th of June last . He ' was sentenced to imprisonment for five years . . - ' ¦ ; ' - M , Emilede Girafdin , as chief editor of the f Pres 8 e , 'ha 8 written to the . Procureur-General of the Republic , declaring that be is the author of the article for which the " responsible editor of the ' Presse' is to be tried , and has transmitted the manuscript . .: ; v
u Letters from the . departments , are still full of accounts of intense severity of weather , particularl y from the Pyrenees , the r Haute Garonne , Lyons , LUIe , Dieppe , and , otberpartsi Travellera who arrived at Lyons from the Puy record that they > aw : aeterir de ^ . bodies along tbe ;; w ^ y ; intone spot ; i'maa * wrapped Up h . bis cloak ; lying on the ground
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and frozen to death ; in another a traveller also dead and his body in a sitting posture ; and further a woman standing in the ; snow up to her middle , her hands clasped and raised as if , in the act of r ecommending hersoul to Heaven-she also was a ° In Paris the thaw still contipues though the weather is far from m ^* Hundreds of men are employed in clearings the snow ; from the streets , thoiig b ' the passages '" > re / 8 tiU ' much ineumbered . Carriages , however , move about | reely . | $ ¦ '¦ ¦ . » Paris , Monday . —This day the Assembly in the discussion " opened " on " thebill ' relative ^ to'the ^ 'transportation of the insurgents jpf June to ; -Algeria . The urgency having been demanded , ; ! / l ^ 0 ' ___ - ¦' - .... .
.. M .. Lagrange opposed it , and insisted on .-. a . proposition he made on the 12 th inst .,, to institute . an inquiry into , the condition of those , insurgents and their families , being previously examined . -. , M . de Cro Hseilhea asked that the government bill be first discussed . y ? M . Pierre Leroux concurred in the motion of M . Lagrange , but the Assembly on being consulted , gave the priority to the bill . The . urgency was similarly pronounced . . - ¦ ¦ :, - . .-. r \ . ., ¦¦ .-M . Lagrange then rose , and said that tlienumerous checks experienced by his proposition , not only in the present Assembly , but also in the Assembly that preceded itt proved that his perseverance enuslled hi ?
conviction of the injustice of the Draconian ' decree which had plunged so Many of his fellow , creatures into the mostatroCious misery . The Assembly itself had been movedby their wretched . fate , when it ordered . 14 , 500 o ( : the , 15 , 000 prisoners , condemned without judge or jury , to be : restored to liberty . ; He never supposed that the Republic would re-open the dungeons closed by the ; revolution of Fehrnary . He bad long groaned in those of Royalty , and having been asked b y its agents if be would consent to accept his , pardon , op condition , not of becoming its frieiid , but merely . ceasing , to become its , enemy , he , had indignantly rejected the offer , reserving to himself the liberty of combating
Royalty with arms in his bands , whose downfall he anticipated as proximate . None of the men about to be transported had been . sentenced by a civil or miiitary tribunaU They Had been arrestedI oh the denunciation of the individuals Who - had . ' remained concealed in cellars during the collisjon ,, and been detained because they were weli . known for their republican princip les previous to the 24 th of February . He was personally acquainted with four of the transported , and be defied the Minister of the Interior to-adduce a single act of theirs to ^ tsmisb their characters for honest y " and patriotism . ' . ' 'Yet SI . Dufaure himself had not been ashamed to
propose their transportatioh . ' ,, It' was . only ; when atf emeute was , fomented at Belie Isle to ' serve the purpose of the government that the committee came back on its decision . He defied the Cabinet to insert in the Moniteur' the names of the insurgents and the motives of their confinement , 'for '" the ' public could see that they : were honest citizens and honour . able workmen and . fathers of families . * In conclusion , M . Lagrange remin ^ td , the Assembly that on this day the head of ' Louis XVI ., the ¦ yic ' tim of reaction , had fallen onthe Bcaffbld , " and addedf ; that a period would come yrhen the country would ask the Assembly what it hail done , with . its brethren . "
M . Ferdinand Barrot , Minister of the Interior , contended that the decree ' of the 27 th of June , 1848 , had been a raeasurejof public ; , safety and of national justice . It bad been issued on the motion of M . Pascal Duprat , whose , republicanism was not suspicious . That decree enacted that those men who were arrested ; with arms in their bands , and still covered with the blood of their fellow citizens , should be transported to the Transatlantic possessions of France . Those men' were ; the same"Who'had overturned monarchy to the cry , of Viye la R ' epublique ! 'who , in June , " attempted to pverth ^ public . in the name of Socialism , ; and who , ifIJSpcialism should triumph for the , destruction of France , would take arms against ; it id the v \ ame of some otherfblly . , ;; h ; . : ; ¦ ¦ ,
M . Jules Favre said , that he was a raemher of the committe at whose recommendation the decree of the i 27 th of June had'been ' enacted . The ; general opinion ; then was , that the insurrection had , been specially directed against society entire ,, and the committee was under . that impression when it prepared the decree . Now , for the honour of his country , he felt justified in declaring that the charge was unfounded ) and that in June , 1848 , there had been no conspiracy agaiust society . ( Loud murmurs ' on the Right . ) Since that period no proof bad been adduced to establish the ; existence ; of ' . that Ravage consp iracy ) and he " would be . ratber . inclined , to
believe that if there existed a conspiracy it was on the other : side . ( Loud . murmurs onthe Right . Cries on the Left , ' The conspiracy of the loyalists and iSuonapartista . ' ) The events of June were actually brought about by the miserable advisers of Monarchy , who refused ; all satisfaction to the just claims of the peopled and they had been the conlrecoup ot the . revolution of ' February . ( Murmurs . ) M . Jules Fayre then proceeded to describe the sufferings of the -insurgents , after their arrest , and the injustice of the summary manner in which they had been disposed of , in violation of all'Divine and human law ? . It was necessary he admitted , ' to strike at the time a decisive blow : but society , if
really , attacked , could have as effectually saved . itseli by remaining within the limits ' of legality . The philosophers of , the , nineteenth century were all unanimous in branding : the injustice o £ : commissioners . Montesquieu bad denounced it in most forcible terms . When , ; under Henry VIII ., a Peer became obnoxious to' the Sovereign , he Caused him to he tried by a commission , and lie thas sent to the geaffold ten Peer 9 he wished ( 6 get rid of . M . Favre would tell ' the government' S y decreeing the \ trial of the insurgents of Juneby comniissiona you have sent to the Bagne and transportation the men you regarded . as your : enemies , '! They ; were : human victims , immolated to political vengeance . He then
discussed various clauses of the bill , and particularly reproved the paragraph added by ' the committee , which coridemried ^ ^ the transported-to imprisonment in a fortress ori ^' the land [ of exile . ; , He ; could' not conceive the' » Vate reason ' ^ that ] cpmmandcd such-an abandonment . of . Hll the eeatirnents of . humanity , arid all'legal gurantees amidst ; the r , profound peace the country now enjoyed .. Not ! a . single member had inscribed his name to defend the bill ^ The majority , he knew , wished to vote it , and not to defend it , Fear was the ' great " argument , but that apprehension
was affected , and those whoj ; , ihvoked it were , hyppcrites ' offear . vSocialism ; wasBot ' a peril to which all that had- beenhitherto respected should be sacrificed . Instead of dealroying it they . igaye . it daily greater importance .. "What ; danger would there . be in ; sending . the . 460 insurgents confined at Belle Isle , beforethe regular tribunals ' of-the country ? Can the prisoner of . Ham . sleep quietly with the keys-bf the citadel of Doulleris ' and the . hulks of Brest . undei ; his pillow ? / In conclusion / , iie earhesti y . ' entreated his colleagues to reject se odious a law . . '' ;"
M . Antony Thouret produced some effect , by reading , an . extract from the third volume of ftl . Theirs ? - ' Hietory of the Consulate and Empire , ' ia ; which the conduct of' the First Consul is severely stigmatised , for decreeing the deportation of the political ¦ criminals of that day without fprmoflawT . 'M ^ Sau ^ -. teyra / proposed an ^ ' amendment . to the 'Yellowing ' efr ifect --r : ' All . the individuals ' novy ! imprisoneid , at Belle Isle , and who were ordered for transpprtatipn by the . Constituent Assembly ^ shall be sent before a jury for trial or set at liberty . ' i -. > , ¦ ¦ - S'S : -: ¦ .. \) . r . « :.- ; . ., ¦¦ I The Assembly after hearing M ; de Crouseilhes againsV this amendment , ' and M . ; J , Favre in its fayour . proceeded to aidivisiorii ' of which the following was th ^ result - ^ ei ; ia 05 ; i ' ; Npe 8 , ; 382 ; rriajo ^ rity , lZ 7 . j Incpnsequenc <; th ^ araehdmei ^ . was ' de-l dared rejected , and thei House ' adjourned at a quarter-past sis o ' clock . ;; , .- " . ' -. ¦ . . ; , '' . '•¦; . ""
, It is reported thai a republican banquet is being organised for the-24 th of February . ^ It is said that Colonel : Char ' rat j 8 l active in directing the preparations , and that he intends ' to . " adopt the programme of the famous banquet which ' was the' immediate cause of . the . Revolution of 1848 ; , that itis ' to take place in theiame . place ; and ' tUat a ' proceBsion will beWmed , composed of National . Guards , and representatiyes , precisely , in the same manner as " the procession of which M . 'Odillon Barrot was to be the leader , ; and for stopping which art acts if ' accusation was presented , to the Chamber of TJeputie ' s , sighed b y ; M ^ Odillpii Barroit Jhiinself , M . r Lepri Faucher , and' a number ; of the present : , ' friends of order . ' - There is no doubt that the banquet ; will be ' stopbed ' by the police ; but the Rqpublicans reckon much oni the ' unnopularity the proceeding will heap on the President of the Republic .: ; r [ . :. - : ; .. .
¦¦> : Paris , ; WEDNESDAv . ~ The sittinjg in the Legi g . lative Assembly yesterday was- of a most etormv character ., M . Leon Faucher , ; ia the course of the discussion on the bill relative to tHe transpdriation ti p Algeria ; of ttie insurgents . of . June , made a very severe attackipn . M .. Jules Javre , for ^ thedpetrmes which he , had , defended the day before , a 8 wellas for . his inconsistency ,. in now opposing what h-had wrlually supported before by his silence . Eventu-
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al ^ Art . 3 , simply authorising the transportation S ^ urgent . to ^ l geri . |; was adopted , . s proposed by ? the comraittee ; an amendment presented bv M Denayrouse to have such of them sent for trial before : a court of justice as had not b « en arrested when the decree of the constituent assembly was passed , being rejected by a majority of 114 ; tbe numbers being 358 to 244 . jr ^ rZ ^ T ^ i ^^ . ttftn . w ^
. . . . ¦¦ . - . - i SPAIN . : ' \ '¦ : ¦ ¦¦ ¦ - \ J Our ftceountg from Madrid are of the 12 th itist , A 8 editioiiS ; proclamaUonj addre 8 sed to ; the Senatoi'S and deputies of thB ... kingdom , was in circulation . The Ministers were described in it as . traitors to the Queen and ; coristitution , and their ^ impeachment was accordingly demanded . ' Tlie author ' s of that publication were unknown . - ' - ^ , - ,. „ .,. Letters from Catalonia say that a tremendous hurricane has occurred in that province , uprooting trees that have stood for centuries and doing immense damage in the country . The cold is very general throughout the coiintry , and , even in Andalusia where winter is scarcel y ever severely felt , sentinels have been frozen , to death at their posts .
ITALY . ROME , Jan . 10 . —Horace Vernet had arrived here to study . the localities of the scene of war-rflie will work them up , doubtless , in some fine paiotings for the ' gallery of Versailles , in which the vanity of thet victors will be . of course sufficiently flattered . To see Vernet debase his fine talent by perpetuating the memory of go unjust an J unprovoked an aggression as the French expedition to Rome makes one , indeed , exclaim ' :: : : . — - ¦ . ¦ ' ¦ - ¦ ' ¦»" . Confusion and misrule . : Seize the vain pencil of tlie Gallic school . "
NAPLES , Jan . 10 . — -Since my last' communication nothing has occurred to alter the position of the Pope . The latest communications from France do not , I am informed , by any means , favour the designs of th * camarilla . 'TthaV been stated , that the . financial difficulty of " the Roman States , al-Vne ; prevents the return of his Holiness to the Vatican ; but lam assured other and ' more weighty reasons retard that event . Some , important despatches have just arrived at Portici , ' which do not appear to have been acceptable . But the . trutu is . the strange my 8 tery ; obferved by all who surround Pius IX . —even among them- selves—perfectly baffles the . possibility of arriving at any conclusiou . One fact alone may be perfectly depended upon , viz ., the priestly conclave endeavour to combat , by every , means ; the . progressive
movement of . Europe , The cross-keys are to be supported by ' baybnets ; Christianity is to deliver . , its .-laws from the cannon ' s ' mbiii ' hr-th ' e Pope to be the shuttlecock of diplomacy / > ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ . ;/ - : . ; - " ¦¦ ¦ [ The official journal contains a long list of officers and privates who are to receive rnedala for the " glorious expedition in Sicily . " The rnjlitary , print preface ? thenames ' bj ^ sayinsf , "Our " magnanimous and august sbvereigniiever allows an opportunity to pass without expressing to hi ^ faithful aqd devout army , that he is ever ready to respond to their increas ' .-d devotion ; b y his munificent generosity , —an army .- 9 *> t tlie 'last ' ahibngst ' thoseWEuropean fame which has conquered revolt . The fienefous spyereisn therefore decoiates , &c . Ac . " What a sad comedy !* The Neapolitan soldier- 'decorated for cutting the throat ot his Sicilian brother , and forging the chains of his owhslavery .: 0 temporal , 0-mora ! - .,. ; .- ' , ' i-.. " ,
., = -, „ ¦ ; .. - . - _ -.: . ' GERMANY . r ; - - ¦ BERLIN , Jan . 16 , ^ Thi comniiUee ' -of ithe Secohd'Chambernasrejected the peerage by fifteen votes against six , and the power to entail estate ; by . twelve against ' nine . ; -The- Hig h Court having been previously thrown out , it appears scarcely possible' that- any of the leading propositions in the King's message should ; pass in the House . The democrats were . in . ecsUcies , as they thonght that the game was ' being played into their own hands . They met on the 14 tb , crowned the busts of Jacoby and . Waldeck , and sang songs in their honour , The ; police interfered , ' and ; dispersed the assembly , arresting several of the parties present .
HUNGARY AND AUSTRIA . ' Letters from Pesth state that the taxation of Hungary has come to a stand-still , it being impossible to collect the taxes ' , ' on accburit of the prevailing want of a circulating ' medium . , The inhabitants of the counties on the banks of the Theiss and of Transylvania have no money , except Kossuth notes ; and though the Austrian . ' government ' - has ordered thai these notes should be . g iveri iip and burnt , no more than , five millions have been surrendered out of a circulation of sixty , millions . / ; The : yienna papsrs state that in Turkey the official communications between the Rusfian and Austrian 'Ministers : and the Porte are still discontinued , and that the two Ambassadors confer with the
Turkish Minister only in a few special cases of ex ' ( reme urgencvt That the affiirs of the Orient are stillout of Joint ia satisfactorily proved . by the concentration of masses of Russian troops in Bessarabia , and by the armament in Turkey . It is expected that the first cause of the conflict will be found in . the reorganisatioii of the D 3 nubian principalities , The 'Magyar Hirlap' contains an account of the tales cuirent among the poor ; peasantry ' of Hungary , who still believe that their cause must succeed ; ' Every day brings Kossuth neareiy whoseipovrer is greater than in trie , best days of the revoluiion . ; At his aide rides a great hero mounted , on . the creamcoloured steed , his name is unknown , but they bring the ' crown of Hungary with them , and are
followed by a mighty , host , ; 5 uch as the world never saw . It is composed of Magyars—of those who first came to Europe under Arpad—of Turks , Solavbnians , and Waliachians . On the other side ar . proc . ch whole herds of Russians , who have quarrelled with the Austrians about their pay- ^ Russians in green coats—5 i ' x feet high Russians , the greatest and strongest Russians that could be found . Oh another side the English are coming with all their ships , and have ^ already ; cast anchor before Debretzin ! Tr . e French , again , all in red coats , l > y sea and land , are at Sitrospatalc , and . the Prussians have shut out nil retreat on the other side . ' . And for talking of such dangerous matters have two poor citizens of Blausenburg been publicly'flogged , by ^ order of Colonel Irhari . ' . ' ' . ' . ' . ;¦ ¦ - . " ' . " . ' ' . " ' . "" ¦ ¦ ' . . '¦ " ¦ ' ' . " . ' ;' . ' . ""
Great excitement has been created iaPesth by the arrest of the Bishop of Gi'osswardeiri , which took place ' immediately' after ; the publication of the obtroyed ^ constitution for ; the empire of Austria . Complaints ' are . loud throughout Hungary . of the great increase in the number of wild beasts , and the inability of the inhabitants to destroy them in consequence of their being deprived of their arms . Madame ' ; ' . . Kossuth . ^ We ^ . - 'b ° avt | much pleasure in anuouricing ¦ . tu ^ t . '' ih ^ yjfef of'iKosp . utliVhas '' e 5 caped frornllunVary . ' aiid had reabli ' ed Belgrade ' on her way to join her husband at Shumla . —i ) a % News . ' . The ' own cnrresppudeot' p { the Timesat Vienna , is a teacher of languages , whp ' vvoujdd p i much better td ' stick to , his Lin'dlcy . Murray , arid i&a ' quasmdribua .
tbanmeddle with politics , of . which he knows about as much us a Greenwich pensioner of tight-rope dancing . — Daily ffews .- - ¦ '¦ ' . - . ;'" , - ¦ ; : r ; Another bundle of Kossuth paper lias been burned at Presbuig . It is ca ' culated that , of . ^ the ' sixty mil- ' lionsput . incirculation'by ^ the reyplutioharygoverhnie bi , onl y five millions have been given up . Tho Fesili . Zeitung contains forty-threG sentences which have been published by tlie ' Couvt-Martial at Arad . ' All those condemned were 'Austrian ; orh ' - cors who had fought to the . ' last in" thbllun ' giiriiih army ; twinty-thrce . -6 f ^ " men who were sentenced to death have had then . punishment commuted to - Bixtcen years ' ' iinprisoninenV ; the others will bo confined in a fortress for six , ten , and twelve years . ' ¦ : ' ¦ h /' ' ' .. ; ' ' " ' :: \ V ' : v
.. The SERBs .- ^ . The , . f Sbiiih ; Sclavpnia ' n , Gazette . ' contains along article on " the state of ihe-Wpywodina , from winch . we quote the cohclusipn . ' During the ,. last fe ' w ; 'days . . ! the ' ^ reppris ¦• "have ' ., ^^ been . repealed respecting the increasing' discontent of the Serbs in the Wpy wpdina : It ^ 'is ; said ! that ' the lower orders areln ; a state jof ^ ferment ; . theii ' , 'that vthere Jim a plot against one or the other of the judges , and then another against General MayerhofaV 'The other day we were' iuformed that ¦ Commissioner Stbjcevicb had caused two advocates . ; in iRuroa , Bilcevicli and Popovich to be arres ( e ^ d and . their papers seized , Very ; , soon afterwards it was . said , that Judge Mann Kovicb , of Irreg , had been murdered by ttie populace . Later again , the same was said ef Judge Santa , at Ruma . ' . The standard of revolt- is said to ' have ) een raised inSemlin . ¦ - - ;• •• . ¦
^ Translvvania ^ —• ^ Transylvania ' [ at the ' present time ; exhibits the extraordinary ^^ ' aspect of a country without persons capable ' or .. willing toM all ihe ( Bees required , for the civil administration . In Transylvania particularly , according to the ;? Osi-Deutsche Post , ' the Wallacks being totally incapable : from' ignorance , and the' Magyars refusing because they are unwilling to aid'in destroying ; the-constita-j tioh ' of their country , ; th ' c Austrians"hove 'b . eeri oh- ; liged to bring in ^ iGerrnansV ' from ' Galiicia ; and ; the Bukovina . who are totally ' . 'i gnorant of both !' the
Magyar and Wallack languages . A . nd these , men have tbe slight task impoued on them of introducing attentirely new code of lawa , newfurrps of judiua . ture—in fact , of revolutionising the institutions of a whole nation . The consequence ia that the country ; is in a complete state Of anarchy , and hot one of the mainy nations who compose it hilt are discontented . Prorn HermannstadV we ; hear tliat : 14 , J 25 head of cattle have been attacked bj ' the murrain in Transylvania , and 7 , 051 have died in coneequencer . , / , An occasional ddrrfispondent , writmu from " yienna
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M . n January 26 , 1 S 5 O . THE NORTHERN STAR . : _ . . , ; , j ^~ S —— -- ^ —
; An Effectual Cure ≫Folt Piles, Fistulas/ Ac... ^ : 'V ^ ¦Y.A' Ber.Ne'i . Hy's Pile Ointments
; AN EFFECTUAL CURE > FOlt PILES , FISTULAS / Ac . .. ^ ' ^ ¦ y . A ' BER . NE'i . Hy'S PILE OINTMENTS
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on tbe Oihinst ., »^ - % Seigio « ft Twnsyl " vaniais highly distressing :- Shpuldit really come to an open rebellioii , Jtmust e | idjwithftbe murder of all th £ Saion # » s the Rutbanmtis , ¦^ allachisns , and Czechs ; have BU ' uriUedUgainsttliemi'land mil hare nothingmoVe ^ tb do ; wiilr tKe ^ courtvof Vienna , by whora they have been so dffenijbetrayfed . POLISH AUSTRIA .-On-thc'lst , a battalion of the regiment of Nugent marched from Lemberg , where they had been stationed , to enlist recruits , throug h Preskow , a ^ aliician town , with 20 , 000 inhabitants , on their way . to ;? Vienna : they weie officered by Germans .- ' " To express their scorn for the Galiicians- these officers fastened : the Polish cickade
on to the collars of their ; dogs , a scandal which was admirably ca ' culated to fan the . hatred smoulding in tiie Polish province' against' tlie' Austrian ' s to the fiercest pitch , -and to'give a fresh impulse to the digpo-ifionifdaily growing- nmong . the Galliciaris to throw themselves into the . arms of Kussia . . On this same march an officer was quartered m the mansion of Count Zelinslty , where he was treated with hospitable attention ; After he went away itrwas di . coveretl ' that he bad offered to his entertainer such a beastly and ruffianly , insult ns cannot here be described . The mere ; occurrence of a , single outrage of the kind speiaUs yplumcs , for the . spirit which animates the Austria ' s , officers . ' . ' ; , ¦
'¦;¦ ; TtJRKEX AND RUSSIA . ' - , CoNSTANTiNOPi-K , Jan ., 5 . —Austria . has not yet renewed diplomatic relations with the Porto . A few days since I wrote to you by the French manof-war stcnmeri'wliiclivfas . suddenly- ordef&d to Toulon bv General Aupiekfwith . despatches for the government at Paris . , 1 then told , you that the difterence b ' etffecn Turkey and Kussiti ; had ceased , to airoutwiird appearances ^ to exist ; for tbat M . do Titoff had , in . the ' usual form , re-established friendly relations with 1 : the '¦ Porte . Tho Turkish "overnment were , willing' to expel the Polish re-Fti"ees concerned -in , tho ; lato insurrection in Hungary , Svith the ' exceptipn of those who , had become Mussulmans : but all Poles resident" in the :
Ottoman Einpii'O-since th >' revolution of 1830 , and who have notsincethenbeen guilty of any political offence , ; should , it was stipulated , remain unmolested . Tp . all these terms ; M . de Titoff consented , ! and , oni the . Slst of December , di plomatic . relations ! ! werW renewed between : th « s Porte and the Envoy of the Czar , nhdall political and commercial proceedings between the Government ' of the Sultan and tho Russian . Embassy are now ; earned' on in 1 tho same manner as . befpro . -tho question sof extradition existed . /"" ' . " . ' . ' ¦ " , " •¦ ' - " . ' -.-- - -. - . . , ¦ ¦ ' ¦ .- ¦ .- ¦ :. , ¦ Austria had demanded ' that the Hungarian ' refugees should be confined to a town in the interior oftbe Ottoman' Empire . To tliisi ; the ' Ministers of the"Porte consented ; and rKutiah , r . in ! Asia Minor ,
was agreed upon as ; a safe ana-proper place for their residence . ; . Thus , all difficulties seeined . to , be done awjiy with ' , and wheirM . de ' Titoff rarrnounced that he'intended "' to re-establish relations with the Porte , few'doubtedbiit tbat Count Stur ' mer-would follow his example . The : Austrian government , however , though they consented that the "Hungarian refugees should be confined : to . the ; tpwn ; of Ku tiah / made . 'known rto the . . Sultan ' s Ministers through their ; Envoy at ; Constantinople ; that they would riot reriew'frienSly relations unless' if was left in the ' irhands to determinVthe length of time during , whichJKpssuth and his friends , should be . detainea as prisoners in the . Ottoman Empire . ; The Porte , animated by a spirit of just-ice and humanity , as well as from { iienso of its own dignityV refused fo give such' 'hi nowev to -Austria ; for if , in the it to
first instance ^ objected being assistant executioner to the government of Vienna , it is quite as little disposed ; in tho present . instanco , to act the part . of jailors . , ' . The ' . "Ottoman Ministry made known to Count Sturmer that they were willing to confine' the ' 'Hungarian' . refugees ' to the town ; of Kutiah . HiU ordci should be established in Hungary , and , that country once in repose , they would then restore Kossuth and his companions to liberty ' ; and , they added , that ' they : Jwould ^ reserve entirely to' themselves the right to determine the period at which these refugees should be set . at liberty . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦•¦¦• : . ¦ " yy \ i r ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦( ¦ : ¦ . - ¦ . < . ¦ . <<; . ¦;¦ ; ¦ - )[¦ ¦ ¦ : . ¦ . A special ' courier 'arrived at . the .- Austrian Embassy , on the 3 d inst . ! with , despatches , from tbo Aiistrian government . for Count Sturmer , on the foljbwi'ng day tlie Iriternuncjo had . 'si' long interview with Ali TastiaV the Miiii ^ ter'of Foreign , Affiiirs , - rind" hn had nhother ' ' eonfercncG with- the Reis
Effendi this morning . Whatever eloquence M . dc Sturnior may have employed the Porte ? still con tinuesfirm , and ,: as , far as . the Turkish Ministry , are concerned , Kossuth " and his companions aro . safe from' having the tiriieof thoir captivity 'determined by General Haynau . <;; ' ¦ •' ¦ ¦ " ¦ ¦ ¦ '' Adyicesifroin Shumla have reached us down to the 17 th off December . : Kossuth was ; suffering in he : ilth . . ThG . . Tui'kisli population behavGd to . tho emigrants vrith the greatest liindne ' ss , but tho obrious good will of the Porte was cramped by . fear of Russia and distrust of British support in resisting it . It was reported that'an attempt had been discovered to assassinate the late president governor .
-. . UNITED STATE ? . , The royal mail steam-ship , Cambria , Capt . Leitch , arrived at Liverpool on Tuesday morning , ^ having sailed from New York on the Oth insfc . ^ Vasiiisoton , Jan . 10;—^ The House of Representativej 3 lias been employed the whole week in ineffectuiil attempts to elect a clerk . The senate came to no resolution yestorilnyyoi ^ Goneral - Ca ' ss ' s " -motion , to suspend diplomatic relations with . ' Austria . Mr . Seward proposed to grant lands to the Hungarian refugees . ' .- .-. .. : , ' ' . . , . ¦ " .. Moke Refugeks . t-Two other refugees , Nicholas Im bcr and Bricknieyer Fehrkasch , whom we understand bnco' belonged to the unfortunate Students ' Legiorij'have " arrived in-the ship Gladiator ^ They vvere received on landing by llerr Reinhardt of Grcenwich-st ., and shortly after their , arrival paid
their , respects , to the Governor ; TJjhazy and Mdlle . ' Ugellb , who received ' them \ Vit ) i- open arms . —New York Tribime . " ' ¦ - ' - '¦¦'¦ . ¦¦¦' ¦ A New Artist . —Among , the passengers by . the Cambria on her last trip were Edward Rcmeyni and his brother , Hungarian refugees . Mr . R . is a violinist , who , as we are assured by letters of introduction -which he brings 113 from Itani \ jurgh is worthy to bo namod along with tho colabrated virtuosos of Europe , . During tho , war of Independence he laid aside his violin for ; the sword , and served xmder Klapka . and afterwards under Gorgoy . IIo was present at thefjitaT surrerider of Yila ' jros , but not being willingitb participatojn it , fled in disguise with his violin as his companion ; As < v wandering musician he made-his . . way without diffioulty through Hungary ; and Austria . . From ; Vienna he went to Italy , and thence . to England , and afterwards to G > ermany . At Haniburghlie performed in a concert
„ given for the beneflfc ' pf the exilefiwherp Jenny land also assisted . He propoKes to give one or more con . certs inNew . Xork >> when we , are confident that not only his position but his uncommon talents will as . sure him crowded and appreciating audiences . T-. A e «; York Tribune . , , I Amongthe emigrants thai hare lately arrived in this country , is Dr . . Florian Mderdes , late Minister of the Interior of tho ; Govwriment of Bavaria and Baden , during its brief'Republican existence . He is at Galveaton ; accompanied by his lady , daughter of the Count Armanspergr now Primo Minister of the kingdom of Bavaria ; . and ; 'his brother , Alajor-Francis Moerdea , late of- the First , Begimeiit of Dragoons of Baden . <• , • ., •; . ; ? ;
WEST INDIES . ; - . nATii . —War .-. is . again ? devastating this unfortui hate island . TheI Dominicans , had taken some small towns and villages belonging to the llnytkns , vrhich they destroyed by setting the houses in them on . fire . It is thought Soulouque will suffer a defeat . The .. Dominican squadron had captured a fleet of Haytian vessels . General Baez had addressed another proclamation to tho Haytians , threatening tha whole of the towns with destruction and pillage ; and altogether a war of extermination and of revolt , ing bloodshed appears to have again commenced .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 26, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1558/page/2/
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