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RUPTURES EFFECTUALLY AND PERMA NENTLY CURED WITHOUT A TRUSS"
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dFomgu intelligence.
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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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' A BLESSING TO THOUSANDS !!! 1 ? VERY SUFFERER FROM RUPTURE J-J ( Single or Double , and of every variety ) is earnestly mvitedtowritc , orpay Dr . BARKER a visit , as iu cverv ease he guarantees them a perfect cure . . .. .. . ... ' _ Duiing an extensive practice in manj thousands of cases ms remedy has been entirely successful , as the testimonials lie has received from patients , and many eminent members of tbe medical profession , amply prove . It is . applicable to both sexes , old and young ; easy and painless in use qdmost certain in effect . .: The remedy is sent post free on receipt of Os . fld by poBfcoffice order , or cash , by Dr . ALFRED BARKER 48 Liverpool-street , King's-Cross ; London , where he mav be consulted daily from 9 till 1 , and 5 till 9 ; Sundays 9 tUl 1 only . , '
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« i ™ l ? 25 L BA < JK « GRAVEL , LUMBAGO , RHEUMATISM , GOUT , DEBILITY , STRICTURE , GLEET , 6 ic . ¦ - ¦ ' ¦ DR . BARKER- S PU R I F I C PI L L S .. ¦ have long been well known as the- only certain cure tor pains in the back and kidneys , gravel , lumbago , rheumatism , gout , gonorrhoea , gleet , syphilis , secondary sytm > toms , seminal debility , and all diseases of the bladder and urinary organs generally , whether the resultof imprudence or derangement of the functions , which , if neglected , invariably result in symptoms of a far more serious character and frequentl y an agonising death ! By their salutary action on acidity of the stomach , they correct bile and indigestion , purity and promote the renal secretions , thereby preventing the lormation of stone in . the bladder , and establishing for life the healthy functions of all the eorcans . iney have never been known to fail , and may be obtained through most medicine vendors . Price Is . ljd .. 2 s 9 d and 49 . Gd . per box ; or sent free on receipt of the twice in postage stamps , by-Dr . Alfred Barker . —A considerable saving eftectcd by purchasing the larger boxes . ¦¦ ¦
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onlrJu ^ W u «» medicine so benign and mild in its E 1 ™ a"d effe « ts . and yet so effectual in searching out ftof Ms aSct- SeW a " d a th ° t 0 UEl 1 kUM " None arogenuine , unless the words "PARR'S UFE } ILLS' > are in Whwe Lmm on aRw > Gbound , on tb * ^ f' ^ nt Stamp , pasted round ewh box ; also the Z ^ e ° * e signature of the Proprietors , « T . UOBERTS ag Ofc , Crane-cousb , Fleet-street / londcV' on tteDbec tlS" h ° " i ? ** lia u , ' 28 ' fh and fama » P ^ a * the id respectable m *< ficin « vendwitoouglumi
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«« ' ^ ¦ ¦ . ' .. REMEDY !! *^ k Which has never been Mown to fail V ' * TW de " moPS ^ g sal ^ blotches and pimples , weaknes of tie elVCS m t e and deoay oflhe nose , sore throat' Ioss S side , back , and loins , fistula , piles ft Pains jH kidneys , and bladder , gleet / str cUirc VJ- ' ^ s « ^ nerveus and sexual deBility loss o SeSSl 1 " 1 * 4 > such a state of drowsiness , lassitude anT 5 ' " ^ tion of strength , as unless skUfully arrS eileral PhS a miserable death ! ' ""«««! , soon ^
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AN THE PREVENTION , CURE , AND VJ ^ General character of SYPHILUS , STIUCTOllN . Affections of the I'KOSTRATE GLAND , VENEREAL and SCORBUTIC ERUPTIONS of the face and body , Merourhl excitement , &c , followed by a mild , successful andeipedi . tious mode of treatment , * ' 1 'hirty-fivst edition , Illustrated by -Twenty-Six Anatomical Engravings on Steel . New and improved Edition , enlarged to 196 page * , just published , pri « 2 s . 6 d ; or by post , direct from the Establishment ,. 3 e . 6 d . in postage stamps . "THE SILENT FRIEND , " a Medical Work on Venereal and Syphilitic Diseases , Secondary Spmptoms , Gonorrhaa . &c , with a PRESCRIPTION FOR THEIR PREVENTION ; physical exhaustion , and decay of the frame , from the efte « ti
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FRANCE .. In oar last number we announced the introduction of the bill prepared for the DESTRUCTION OF UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE . The following is the text of the bill itself : — Art . 1 . la the twelve days which follow the promulgation of the present law the electoral list shall be drawn op in each commune by the mayor . Art . 2 . It shall comprise by alphabetical order : 1 . All Frenchmen twenty-one years of age , in the enjoyment of their civil and political ri ghts , and residing in the same commune for three years at least . 2 . Those persons who , not yet having attained , when the list shall be drawn up , the conditions of age and domicile , shall attain them before the list shall be definitively closed . . '
AxL 3 . the electoral domicile shall be determined and proved : — 1 . By inscription on the list of personal tax . 2 . By the . declaration of the father or mother in wliat concerns sons who , being of age , reside in the paternal house , and who , by application of Art . 12 , of April 21 , 1832 , have not been set down on the lists of personal taxes . 3 . By the declaration of masters in-what concerns servants or persons working habitually in the same honse with them . 4 . By the exercise of public functions in a determined locality . 5 . By the presence in the army or navy . Art . 4 . The declaration of the fathers , mothers , or masters shall be made in writing on forms delivered gratuitously . This declaration shall be given to the . mayor , and renewed each year from December
Ito 31 .. Tne fathers , mothers , and masters , who cannot make their declaration in writing , are to present themselves with two witnesses , resident in the commune , before the mayor , to make their declaration . Every false declaration shall be subject to a fine of from lOOf . to 2 , 000 f ., and an imprisonment of from six months to two years , and the interdiction to vote or to be elected during five years at . least and ten years at most . Art . 5 . Whoever shall leave the commune on the list of which he is . inscribed shall continue to be borne on that list for three years , with the condition of justifying , in the manner stated in Art . 3 of the present law , his domicile in the commune where he shall have fixed his new residence .
Art . 6 . Shall not be inscribed on the electoral list —1 st . The persons mentioned in Arts . 1 , 2 , 3 , 5 , 6 . 7 , and 8 of the law of March 15 ih , 1 S 49 . 2 nd . The individuals mentioned in Art . 4 of the same law , wl atever may he the length of the time for which they have been imprisoned . 3 rd . Persons , such as envriers , avocats , && , who have been condemned far illegal acts . 4 th . The persons guilty of violence to public agents , or of offences against the law , or rioting , or in clnbs or secret societies . Art . 7 . Soldiers shall continue to be distributed in each locality in sections . Their bulletins shall be collected and sent to the chief town of the department in a sealed packet , and mixed up with the votes given in the sections of the chief towns .
Art . 8 . No person can be elected on the first ballot , if he has not obtained a number of votes equal to the fourth of the electors inscribed on the tablets of the lists of the department , and one half , plus one , of ill the others . On the second ballot , which is to take place the second Sunday after the proclamation of the result of the first ballot , no person can be elected if he shall not have obtained a fourth part of the electors inscribed by the relative majority . On the third ballot , which is to take place the fourth Sunday after the day of the proclamation of the result of the second ballot , the election shall takeplace'by a relative majority only , whatever may be the number of votes obtained .
Art . 9 . In case of vacancy from resignation , death , or other cause , the electoral college which is to fill up the vacancy is to meet at a distance of six months . Art . 10 . In case the towns where the contingent personnel et molilier is paid in part or wholly from tiic municipal funds , the list of the tax payers for personal taxes ; drawn up by the collector and his assistants , and which serves to determine the sum to lie paid by the commune , shall be each year submitted to the municipal council . The inscription on the list of the tax payers shall lie oquivalent to that of the personal taxation .
Transitory Article . —For the preparation of the electoral lists , drawn up in virtue of the present till for the year 1850 , all the regulations prescribed toy the law of March 15 th , 1849 , in what regards delays and representations , shall be observed , and the lists shall he closed three months after the promulgation of the bill . The declarations spoken of by Art . 3 shall be made within twenty days after the promulgation . Every individual who shall not have three years' residence in the commune where he shall happen to reside at the moment of the promulgation of the bill shall be inscribed in the electoral list of the commune where he previously resided , if he can prove three years ' residence in conformity with Art . 3 .
The annual revision of the lists for the other years shall be made at the periods and according to the lules determined by Title 2 of the law of March 15 , 1849 . The provisions of the law of March 15 , 1849 , shall can-inne in ' force for the elections of Algeria and the colonies until the promulgation of the organic laws spoken of in Art . 109 of tbe Constitution . _ Tiie urgency' of the . Sill was voted by an immense majority . —The division list , published by the ' Moniteur , * puts us in possession of the names of those members who consider the bill as a violation of the constitution , for this must be regarded as the meaning of the votes of the " minority . The number of this minority , only three short of 200 , and the presence of Genera ! Cavaignac among them , prove that tbe uncompromising opponeuts of the
bill want neither strength nor authority . The declared blame of the measure by M . . Gustave de Beaumont , who nevertheless voted on the side of the majority , shows that important alterations will be proposed by a section of the tien-parli . On the other hand , the decided pra ? se awarded to the project by the 'Ordre' has led many to believe that Odillon Barrot will waive all opposition . Neither Lamartine nor Victor Hugo voted , nor does tbe name of Larochejaquelin appear in the division . Xamoriciere voted % ii « i the government on the previous question , and with the opposition on the urgency . A look of surprise and umbrage was visible along-the benches of the Right , when Cavaignac , Lamoriciere , Bixio , Dufburnel , and other members of the Constitutional Club rose up with the Mountain to vote against the urgency .
The 'Voix dn Peuple , ' punished on Friday morning in large type , the names of the committee ef the seventeen at the head of its number with this introduction * * It is important for France to know the names of those seventeen members of the royalist committee of public safety , who have governed the country for two years , and have just revealed publicly their sinister power in proposing the violation of tbe constitution , and the confiscation of universal suffrage . The new cry of the democrats is ' oragnisation of refusal to pay the taxes . '
Two cases , writes ttw correspondent of the ' Chronicle , ' were decided in the Paris tribunals on "Wednesday week , which afforded a curious exemplification of tbe ¦ manner in which , justice is administered under a Republican government . The first was ' that of M . Laugrand . the editor of the « Voix da Peuple , ' who was brought before the Court of Assizes of the Seine , for an article in which he chose to make some sharp , and sot at all untrue , strictures on M . Fould ' s financial scheme . The article was entitled Budget for 1851 . ' An attack , " however legitimate , on a Minister of Finances , was not to be passed over . The jury found M . Laugrand guilty ( by default ) of' excitation to hatred
and contempt of the government of the Republic ;' and . the court sentenced him to two years' imprisonment , and a fine of 4 , 000 francs . The other case waB before the correctional police . The action was Drought by M . Bareste , a tailor , against M . Chenu , the notorious author of ' Lss Conspirateurs . ' M . Bareste charged M . Chenu with having accused him in his book of having asked the provisional government for two bombs and other eombustaWes for the purpose of setting fire to the Marche da Temple . M . Chenu was found guilty of having defamed M .
Bareste , and for that offence was fined 25 f ., and ordered to pay . lOOf . of damages . It is evidently much less expensive and less dangerous in France to make an ' attack npon the honour and consideration' of a tailor than to criticise a Minister ' s budget . Rye members of the society called Solidarite RepnWicaine were sentenced on Saturday by the Court smT ^ f / " * ' two to one year ' s imprisonment , £ » . % **** al deP ™ ation during five years of fSSfSS " threeto « k months' impri Oyu righto aanng three jean .
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M . Napoleon Buonaparte has presented to the President of the Legislative Assembly the following protest against the Electoral Law . ' to thb electors of the d epartments of the sarthe and the charkntb infsbib 0 rk . ' Citizens , —( The executive power , has presented a law which is a violation of tbe Universal Suffrage , in asfar . as it strikes from the lists several millions of electors . -In these circumstances I how come to explain to yon my conduct , because , after the part which I took in theelectien of the 10 th of Vee ., I should appear in the light of an accomplice of the government , if I were not its adversary . - v , ¦ Deriving my convictions from no other source but my own conscience , I have fulfi led a painful duty in depositing the following declaration on the hnreaux of the Assembly : — _ '; ' ' . . le is
« Considering that the sovereignty of the peop embodied in the universality of the . ctti . zens ; 'C onsidering that the sovereignty is inalienable and imprescriptible , and that no fraction can attribute to itself the exercise of that sovereignty ; . 1 Considering that the representatives of the people have no other powers but those which the people have delegated to them ; < Considering that the mandatory law cannot annihilate the right of those granting the mandate without destroying the mandate itself ; < Considering that the right of universal suffrage is a primitive right above all others \ ' Considering that the project of law for the reform of the Electoral Law , if it were converted into a law , would deprive an important fraction of the people of their sovereign rights ;
' The undersigned representative of the people declares solemnly that he persists it * the line of conduct which he commenced , in demanding the previous question . 1 That in consequence , faithful to the principle of the sovereignty of the people and to the constitution , and not considering himself entitled to violate universal suffrage , tie protests against the measure , which he considers revolutionary , by abstaining from taking any part in it . ( Signed ) ' Napoieon Buonaparte . ' The address to the electors of the Sarthe and
Charente concludes by stating that M . Napoleon Buonaparte still hopes that the National Assembly will not consent to follow the advice given by dangerous councillors ; but that , if it should be otherwise , it will then be for the people to consider whether they should make arrangements to organise a system by which they can refuse to pay the taxes . The' National' publishes a table showing that the number of persons assessed fcr the personal tax is less by more than three and a half millions than the citizens at present entitled to vote . It makes out the same total of disfranchised voters at four millions eight hundred thousand . REPORTED INSURRECTIONARY MOVEMENT IN THE ' SAONE ET LOIRE . *
The Paris correspondent of the Chronicle' writing on Monday states that the French Government has received serious news from the department of the Saone-et-Loire . A ' movement which broke out , originauyin the shape of a strike of the miners of the Creuzot , has assumed a political character , and , at the period of the latest accounts from that quarter , between five and six thousand of them were in full insurrection . The Government has despatched a strong force to Macon , the seat of the outbreak , and declares itself to be quite prepared to pnt down the affair . STATE OF PARIS ( From the'Daily News . ' )
Paris , Monday . — Reports of a serious character hare circulated to-day with regard to the hostile attitude of the population of the faubourgs . The Mountain and their organs , with the exception of the' Yoixdu Peuple . ' continue to protest . against an appeal to force ; but the tail of the party is uncontrollably fierce , and threatens to poniard the socialist leaders who refuse to throw themselves into the movement . The plan of the insurrection as revealed to ministers is this : —The insurgents of the 11 th and 12 th arrondissemenls are to break out at night , and to storm all the gunsmiths' shops and depots of arms . These having armed themselves with what weapons they can get , and being joined by the main
body of rebels , are then to march on the third , second , and first arrondissements , where the attack is to be vigorously conducted . Fire is to be set to the houses in these quarters . Meanwhile the minis , lers have persuaded Louts Napoleon to retire to Fountainbleau . Therefore , unless some fresh incident shauld intervene , we mast be considered on the eve of an explosion . The government is perfectly well-informed and wide awake . THe most effectual measures have bsen taken , withont the least outward display of force , for the suppression of any emeuie . On all this , we may remark , that insurrections thus circumstantially announced , n . ever take place .
The petition praying tbe Legislative Assembly to throw out the Electoral Bill , which was drawn up at the house of M . Goudchaux on Sunday , appears this morning in all the journals of the opposition . It is signed by the following members of the Constituent Assembly : Dupont de l'Eure , Marrast , Goudchaux , Carbon , David ( d'Angers , ) Degousee , Hingray , Jules Bastide , Landrin , Legandre , Martin de Strasbourg , Perree , Recurst , Reynault , Yaulabelle , Walferdin , and others , as well as by several thousand-citizens . The ' VoL \ du Peuple , calls on all France to petition . The'Patrie' mentions that a regiment of dragoons , in passing through the department of the Saone-et-Loire , was attacked by the peasantry , who boated and threw , stones at them , and that the regiment was obliged to charge its assailants .
Tbe municipal council of Marseilles has adopted a petition praying that , in case of disturbance , the seat of Government maybe removed from Paris to some other town . . The Greek Question . —A great sensation has been caused here by an article in the' Patrie' on the recent conclusion of the Anglo-Greek quarrel , and the position in which the Erench Government finds itself in consequence of that solution . The article is the more important , as it . is evidently derived from official sources , and may therefore be considered as the case of the French Government .
To-day the affair created a complete panic at the Beurse , and , as usual , gave rise to a variety of rumours . Among others , it was said that the French Government had given orders to M . Drouya de Lhuys , its ambassador in London , to demand his passports , if an immediate and satisfactory explanation were not given . This rumour gained more credence from the fact that the Minister of Foreign Affairs ( General de la Hitte , ) in his speech on the Affair on Saturday last , had declared that he had demanded explanations on the subject , and that he hoped to be able to communicate them to the Assembly on Thursday .
Wednesday . —Last night , by a decision of the Minister of the Interior , M . Boule , the great printer of the Rue de Coq-Heron , was deprived of his license as a printer . M . Boule was tbe printer of the ' Yoix du Peuple , ' the « Repoblique , ' the' Esta « fette , ' and several other papers . The authorities have seized all tbe presses , and placed seals on them . In consequence of this arbitrary exercise of power , the editors of the 'Estafette , ' ' Republic , ' and 1 Voix du Peuple' have issued a joint letter , in which they explain the reason why they cannot appear today . The mayor and the two adjointsof the 3 rdarrondissement of Paris , and all the officers of the National Guard who signed M . Goudchaux ' s petition against the bill for the reform of the Electoral Law , have been dismissed .
The editor of the ' Voix da Peaple' was brought once more before . the tribunals yesterday for at . tacks an the government . In the one case the sentence previonsly pronounced against him of a year ' s imprisonment and a fine of 4 , 000 f . for an attack on M . Fonld ' s budget was confirmed , and for the other he was sentenced to a year ' s imprisonment and a fine of 5 , 000 f . In the sitting of to-day MM . Colfavrn , Mathieu ( de la Drome , ) and Anthony Thourert , presented numerously signed petitions againBt the Electoral Reform Bill . A good deal of noise ensued , in consequence of which MM . Bourzat and Pean were called to order .
The President of the Republic , on the proposition of the Minister of War , has removed M . Terchon from the command of the battalion of sapeurs-pompiers of Paris , and replaced him byM . Vives , who was sent away by the men in a sort of emeute in the days of February . M . Terchon , on that occasion , was named to the command by the men themselves . In a report to the President on the change , the the minister , says : - A double cause has induced me to propose to you this measure . On the one hand ' , it will consecrate the restoration of the principle of the inviolability of command by the recBll of tbe superior officer in whose person it v » as disregarded ; on the other M . Vives possesses in the highest degree the aptitude which the reorganisation of the new battalion requires , bj the profound knowledge which he baa
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acquired of the wants of the service , and of the interests of this corps . On the whole , . the recall of M . Vives will be a lesson of high morality , which will place in evidence the value ef dismissals pronounced by . revolt , and of appointments it may make , and at the same time it will be a pledge for the . good and prompt reorganisation of a corps destined to render great services ? i .- . . ' : ' . - ; Riots , "but not of a serious description have occurred at Pamiers ( Ariege ) and Thuirs ( Eastern Pyrenees . ) n ' . ; ; Some disturbances have taken placo at Sedan . The workmen met'to protest against the invasion of the right of universal suffrage . The' military , however , cleared the -. streets , and restored order 5 seven or eight workmen were arrested .
Tke latest news from Creuzot ' says that the workmen continue the strike , ' but have not proceeded to any act of violence . ... . .. .,,. -. .. The following case , which is given in some of the Paris papers yesterday , shows to what extraordinary lengths the government and th ' 6 tribunals of France go to prevent the circulation of the opposition-newspapers . A Madame Hourseaux , tho wife of a farmer at Fontenelles , near Nahgis ( Seine et Marne ) , has a son in Paris who was in the habit of sending her newspapers occasionally . In April last , being at the fair of Nangis , she went to the Post-office , where she found a copy of the ' National ' and one of the ' Voix du Peuple , ' to her address .
In leaving the Post-office she met a friend , to whom , in the course of conversation , she lent one of her papers . A gendarme who saw the proceeding instantly made a prom-verbal of the circumstance . Madame Hourseaux , much to her ' astonishment , was brought before the correctional police : for hawking newspapers without a license , and great was her astonishment to find that , though she explained that she was no hawker , that she was the wife of a farmer , that she had never sold a newspaper in her life , and that she only lent the paper in question to a neighbour whom she met in the street , she was sentenced to a month ' s imprisonment , a fineof 2 of ., and the expenses . An appeal MB WWW V - *^ ^^™ ^» ir - ^ - ^ —™ ^ r ¦ ^^ ^^ —1 ~ ~ ¦ _ — -
was immediately entered against this judgment , and the case came on last week at Provms , when M . Riviere was sent down specially from Paris to defend Madame Hourseaux . The efforts of : the advocate were of no avail . Tho judgment of the court below was confirmed . Madamo Houraoaux was forced to pay the fine of 25 f . with tho expense of the two processes , but she she was exempted from the month ' s imprisonment / In another case a gentleman in the-department of the Pas de Calais , and who has recently filled the office of Mayor of Boulogne , was fined 200 t . for giving his friends copies of a pamphlet which had been sent to him as a present from the author . The pamp hlet had never been ' tho subject of a process . * . ITALY . The correspondent of the ' * Times , a bitter enemy to . the Republicans ' , and the eternal calumniator of Mazziui is - forced to mak e the following admissions : — , ROME , May 4 . — The whole vi gilance of the Government seems to be exercised in stopping the English , French , and Italian newspapers at the post-office , which contain articles severely criticizing its policy or conduct . One day the ' Times 'is excluded ; then comes ' Galignani ' s , ' which has indiscreetly copied an offensive article ; next the Turin and Florence journals are suppressed in a mass ; so that often it occurs that not a single
foreign paper is to be had for . love or money . Of course , the Papal government recompenses the faithful by an immaculate publication of its own called the Giornale di Roma , ' wherein is most faithfully recorded every prayer that the Supreme Pontiff has uttered during the ' week , every church he has attended , and the edifying things " done by one Cardinal or the other , or by Monsigaor This or That . All political news is very properly excluded from this VGiornale ; ' for what do the citizens of Rome want of news or is there anything moire necessary in . this world to be learnt than that we are to have high ' mass next Sunday
at St . Peter s , or that vespers are to be chanted in full force at St . . John de Lateran ? 'Givete Cesar , ' our Lord said , the things that are Cesar ' s , and to God , the things that belong to God , ' and that doctrine is literally acted on here j for as the Pope is Cesar in a temporal , and the representative of God in a spiritual sense everything belongs to him , and is given to him , or to the Car . dinals , which is pretty much the same . Still , all these precautions do not answer the end proposed , and I am eternally reminded by all that takes place of that bird who , when pursued , bides its head in a hole in the sand , believing that as it cannot see its
pursuers its enemies cannot see it ; for , do whatithe Camarilla-may , ! every offensive article finds its way to Rome , and public curiosity is only quickenedthe more because a day ' s delay has occurred . We may be Roman Catholics . respecting , our religion , and anxious that its temporal government Bhould respond to Us divine mission , bat we fare no better on that account , and we are as rigorously excluded as if we were the avowed enemies of our faith . The Camarilla careB not about public opinion at Florence , Turin , Vienna , Paris , and London . What is it to them that people are indignant at what is going on , provided nothing is said ait Rome ? and so the voice of truth if never heard , and the same vicious course
is pursued as if there was no echo beyond the walls , and the Eternal City was one great tomb , over which oblivion ever reigns .. You may judge from what I say that we are making no progress , and that the return of the Pope has been marked by no great act for which so many anxious souls were impatient . I am sorry to admit the fact , and to unite my very feeble voice to the general lamentation that is heard at every side . It is the absence of reforms that gives strength to the Mazzini factions , and makes the Republic still desired , and which maintains a fire that one day will break out with more than ordinary furyif a foreign garrison be removed .
Some conflicts have occurred at Rome between the Austrian soldiers and the people . . LOMBARDY . — Popular indignation has again been aroused by the repetition at Milan of proceedings similar to those , which occurred in August last , when several persons were publicly flogged with sticks and rods on the Piazza di Castello . A similar punishment was inflicted on the 27 th ult ., by order of the military authorities , on an Italian woman with this difference , that the bench on which the unhappy creature was fastened ' was placed in the courtyard and not in the open street ,
GERMANY . The trial of the 122 persons charged with participating in the insurrection . and riots at Elberfeld in May , " 1849 , has just concluded . The President submitted at the close of the proceedings , which bad extended over several days , 365 questions to the jury . Of the 122 prisoners eleven were found ' Guilty , ' some of sharing in the insurrection , some of inciting to it , and others of destroying property . named
A man Von Mirbach , who was the chief agent in the capture and imprisonment of M . Von def Heydt , the brother of the Prussian Minister , for two days , aa a hostage , with the threat held over him that he should be hanged instanterit the government sent any troops into the town , was sen : tencedto two years' imprisonment ; Henselen for inciting to rebellion , to ten years' deportation ; and the other nine to five years ' ' imprisonment with labour .
- . AUSTRIA . Vienna , May 5 .-The « Neue Mundiener Zeitung' has lifted the veil of secresy which hung over the terms demanded by RussiaJor the military assistance afforded to Austria against the Hungarians . The object of Count Zicb y ' s njiS 8 ion to St . Peters . burgh was the settlement of the terms , and the mode of payment . Austria pays for the Russian in-U ?!? e « i « S ! 8 arjr 3 > ° . 000 silver roubles , or about £ 500 , 000 sterling . Seven hundred thousand roubles are to be paid in salt , and the other three millions are to be paid in three equal annual instalments , with hve per cent , interest until the third instalment is paid ,
POLAND . Letters from the Polish frontiers state that the project of fortifying Cracow is determined on , and some of the details are given . Near the city , and in the direction of Podgorze , a strong entrenchment will be thrown up to protect the bridge , and on the left bank of the Weichsel , near Padgorze , a ete depont will be constructed , the works to be completed with as little delay as possible . The fortress on the right bank will be extended so as to join the already completed works at Krzemienia , which will describe a considerable circle . The cost is es timated at 300 , 000 florins , which seems scarcely enough for all the Works laid down .
SPAIN . Royal Fooleries . — Madrid , May 7 th . — Besides the numberless religious solemnities that have taken place to propitiate the Divinity in favour of the Queen ' s-hopes , other sacerdotal steps have been taken . Yesterday , the holy girdle , which tradition says the Virgin Mary herself presented to the city of Tortosa , and which is devoutly believed to be a specific in difficult obstetrical caies , was solemnly depoiited bdoq the altar of the royal
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chapel , after being duly prayed over by an archbishop and two bishops . On the 28 th of last month , it had been demanded by the primate , pursuant to the Queen ' s request , and was pro ' cessionally carried out of the city of Tortosa , followed by an immense crowd of people . ' It is to be . placed on the Queen s bed for some hours before the time of her expected confinement ., The . general juntas of the Biscayan provinces have had a solemn sitting under' the old tree at Guernica , ' according to ancient ^ custom .. They have appointed a commission to ' go to Madrid , to do homage to the Queen as Mady : ' of Biscay ,, at the birth of the child . > . ; ' . :. ;• •
. ; . . .. .,.. „ ....., :-.-. vGREECE . - ¦• --: ¦ :: ¦ We learn from Athens of tbe 28 th ult ., that the mission of Baron Gros had entirely failed ; the negotiations between that plenipotentiary .. and , tne English minister ( Mr ! Wyse ) were conjequently at an end ; and Admiral Parker immediately ordered a renewal of the blockade , with a threat to bombard the Pirajus . The . former was carried out with rigid effect for two days , when the government of Greece submitted unconditionally to the demands of England Mr . Wyse then returned to Athens ; and the country was perfectly quiet when these accounts ^ The Minister of the Interior published the follow .
' * To the tbe Nomarks and Eparks of the state . — You have no doubt learnt from private letters and the journals of tho re-cotnmencement of hostilities by the English fleet . The gevernment , gentlemen , considering that the interests of the country command it to put an end to the lamentable differences , is now engaged in removing existing difficulties . I am happy to inform you that every thing has been arranged between the governments of Greece and England , that all coercive measures haveceased , and will not again be put in force . You will immediately make this news known to the inhabitants of the Communes in your district , to the intent to tranquillise their minds . Athens , April 27 , 1850 G . Notaris . AMERICAN AFFAIRS .
Mr . Calhoun ' s Funeral . —The funeral of Mr . Calhoun took place at Charleston , on Thursday , April 25 th . Business was suspended , banks , stores and public offices closed , and the buildings along the streets arrayed in mourning . The mottoes , 'South Carolina mourns , "The Nation raourns , ' 1 children of Old Ocean mourn for him , ' &c , were appropriatel ; displayed . The remains , attended by the , Committee of the Senate , arrived in the morning , by steamboat , from Washington ; they were received at the landing b y . a military escort ; the remains were placed on a magnificent bier , twenty-three . feet high to the top of the plumes , and drawn by eight horses clothed in mourning . ¦; On the arrival of the bier at the Citadel Yard , the body was formally delivered over to the Gove ' r-
nor of the State by Hon . JMn Y . Mason , Chairman of the Senate Committee , and by the Governor to the Mayor of Charleston . In the course of , his reply to . Mr . Mason , on receiving the surrender " of the honoured charge , His Excellency alluded to- the attention and devotion paid by Hon . Mr . Venable to Mr . Calhoun during his last sickness , and . thanked him for . them in the name of the State . In reply , Mn Venable : gave a hrief account of the last moments of the honoured dead ! ' . ' '
: The hody was then taken to the City Hall , where it lay in state till the next morning under charge of a ^ guard of honour . At . ten o ' clock on Friday a civic procession was'formed andproceeded with the remains from the City Hall to St . Philip ' s Church , where the funeral service having been performed by Rev . Christopher Gadsden . a fuueral address was delivered by Rev . ' James W . Miles , to a crowded auditory . , „ Outrages in . Arkansas . ~ We copy the following from the Washington ( Ark . ) ' Telegraph , ' in addition to which , it is reported at Little Rock , that Mr . Jonathan Irons was h ' uiig up by the mob , until he was nearly dead , when he- was cut down by some of his frjends , and resuscitated . * There is a
rumour in circulation here that a company of Regulators in Montgomery County , in this State , a few days since ordered some persons , residing in that county , amongwhora was a man named Taylor Polk , to leave the county ; and on their refusing to do so , endeavoured to enforce a compliance with their requisition by a resort to arms , and that two or three persons were killed or dangerously wounded , in the contest which ensued . Polk , it is stated , was mortally wounded , and a man named Hughes and one other killed . ' ¦ FRIGHTFUL AND FATAL ACCIDENTS .
The 'New York Tribune' of April 30 ih reports that ; yesterday morning , at a few minutes past ten o ' clock , while a number of labourers were at work in the upper part of the old Chemical Bank building , removing the walls , and also a number of carpenters engaged below in the work of demolition , some of the props were cut or gave way , and a great portion of .. the . walls and ceilings came down , hurying a number of persons in the wreck . News was
instantly sent to , the Chief ' s office , the adjacent Police stations , and to the Mayor , and prompt measures were taken , to rescue , the sufferer ? . Seven of the unfortunate men were shortl y dug out of the ruins and found to be still alive , though severely injured . Almost at the same , moment came that the walls of No . 35 , Water-street—the United States Bonded Warehouse , adjoining one of the warehouses burnt on Wednesday night—had also fallen in . This report proved but too true .
A number of men—variously estimated from seven to eleven—had been engaged since an early hour in the morning in removing the burnt cotton , and clearing away the ruins of the store , and had made good headway in their work , when suddenly , at about half-past ten . o ' clock , the gable of the buildingwhich had neither been removed nor braced—fell over instantl y burying the unfortunate workmen under many feet of bricks and mortar . In less than two hours five bodies were taken from
the ruins . Four of these were found crushed down into a hole where they had beea engaged in getting out cotton . They were jammed closely together , aud their heads and faces were horribly mangled . The bodies we ' re yet warm , hut were bent up so as to be difficult to straighten . Two men had been previousl y got out—one dead and the other still alive . The latter was taken to the Hospital . His name is John Driscoll . Both of his legs were broken in several places , and his body is horribly bruised . He can hardly survive .
Before ni ght all but two persons were extricated . These two men , Michael Conner and Patrick Barry , are pretty ; surely under the ruins . Horrible Steamboat Disaster on the Ohio . —We find in the Cincinnati . Dispatch' Extra of the 23 rd ult . the following details of a terrible disaster on the Ohio : ¦ - ' Our city was thrown into gloom on yesterday afternoon , by the arrival of the heart-rending intelligence that the steamer Belle of the West , on her way to St . Louis from this port , was burnt to the water ' s edge on Monday ni ght at twelve o ' clock , two miles below Warsaw , Ky . and that in all probability from fifty to one hundred persons had perished in the flames . The Belle had on board one hundred
and fifteen registered cabin passengers , not including a number of children attached to families , whose names were not registered , and on deck there were about one hundred emigrants and others whose names had not been taken down . The fire was first discovered in the hold , by the smoke issuing from the aft hatchway , aud is supposed to have been occasioned by carelessness in leaving a candle burning-Prompt efforts were made to suppress the flames withouf giving the alarm , but the fire gained so fast that the officers and crew were compelled to yield to it . The engineer called to the pilot , through the trumpet , to run the boat ashore , which . was immediately done , and the alarm was given . The greater
portion of the passengers being asleep in their rooms , the officers of the boat rushed into the cabin , into which fire and smoke had already commenced pouriiiK , and those that could not be awakened by the alarm , were dragged from their beds . The doors were burst open ; numbers , who were insensible from fright , were carried out by the crew , and , in fact , as we have it from an eye-witness , all connected vith the boat periled their lives to save those on board . The boat was totally enveloped in flames , fore and aft , in less than four minutes , and amid the crackling roar of the consuming fire , the shrieks of
the hopeless , the doomed to certain death , were distinctly heard—the voices of men , women and chiS dren—mothers , fathers and offspring , mingling in the roar of death and horror . The eteame a Her . mann and Visiter brought up a number of the survWors and a portion of the frei ght that waa saved Tho houses in Florence were filled with the sufferers ' , and every . attention to their comfort was beBtowe ^ by the etas . Mr SaUbury , o ( Hanging TfocV , who was . on bond a deck passenger sayUe knows of two families , one consisting of four and the other of ^ even , who penshed . They were from . p « nnsyU ypi , NraherBleanedoverbowa and ^ ewiowaed
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while others were awakened top late to escape the horrid death which surrounded- them . The scene , as described to . us by Mr . Thos ., Rutherford , of this city , who , in company with Mr . Tho 8 . Lawson , had retired-to his ¦ berth but ! a short time before the alarm was given , - was ' . awful / and heart-rending . So rapid wtt the ; prbg ^ ewpif ; the '' iBre l that notwi thstanding ' the communication with tne shore , it is estimated that- not leu-than from fifty to one hundre d passengers perished by fire and water .
Steamboat Explosion and Loss of Life An extra from the office of the ' True Democrat ' announces that the steamer Anthony Wavne h \ Z up-. opposite Vermilion on the 2 ht Auril ThI Wayne" came to Sanduiky with ten stePragV pasaen ! B £ SStfSSfc £ * ffi is ? s ^ a 2 ?'; ' " the ctew and tWrl y of the passengers ffere saved , and are in a fair Way ; of * £ ¦
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•¦ IIV — 1 TO SIR GEORGE GREY , Secretary of State . til 7 ^ ybody is Wiring what those deputations of Doctors that are constantly with you demand ? It is a ] 80 asked , do the Doctors require to physic the public by act of Parliament , and that their fees shall also be paid by act of Parliament , or what is it they " want ? In short , Sir , theae conscant attendances upon you make many , people think " that there must be something rotten in the ' state of Denmark . " We have the honour to be , Sir , yours , &o . ¦ Tub Members of the British Colleqb op Health . New-road , London , May 7 , 1850 .
Ruptures Effectually And Perma Nently Cured Without A Truss"
RUPTURES EFFECTUALLY AND PERMA NENTLY CURED WITHOUT A TRUSS "
Dfomgu Intelligence.
dFomgu intelligence .
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2 ' THE NORTHERN STAR , M" " 1 ^
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 18, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1574/page/2/
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