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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^t^^^^^^^ f^^^^ dFowign intelligence.
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ENEMIES IN THE CAMP!! Brother Chartists Beware ! I
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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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RUPTURES EFFECTUALLY AND PERMANENTLY CURED WITHOUT A ! TRUSS !! ,- ,. . CADTION . ^ -Swiferers are earnestly cautioned against youthful impudent quacks , who copy this announcement ' , assume foreign names , adopt various addresses ,. forge testimoniala , place Dr . before their names , make assertions , the . most . extravagant and absurd ,-and have recourse to the basest practises to victimise the public . .. "P VERY SUFFERER FROM RUPTURE JJ ( Single or Double , and of , every variety ) is earnestly invited to write , or pay Dp . BARKER & VUU , &a In every case ho guarantees them a perfect cure . . ¦ ,-.. . . During ah > xtensive practice in man > thousands of cases , his remedy has been entirely successful , as the testimonials he has received from patients , and many eminent members of the medical profession , ampl y prove . It is applicable to both , sexes , old , and young ; easy and painless in use and most certain in effect . ¦¦ ..-.. ¦> .
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; ... ¦ ' Brother Chartists ! - ' ' BEWARE ! BEWARE OF . POISONOUS IMITATIONS ! EXTRAORpiNARY SUCCESS OF THE SEW REMEDY !! , : Which has never been known to fail . —A cure effected or the Money returned . ^™ THE BACk . / GRAVEL , LUMBAGO , RHEC MATISM , 60 DT , DEBILITY ; STRICTURE , GLEET , Sic .
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s&SSjSS EBSSSSk "SS TKirt firat edition ,, illastratedwith Twenty-Six ' Anatemi . cal- Engravings on , Steel , enlarged to 196 pages ; price .. ? s . Cd ; by . post , direct from the Establishment , 3 s ; 6 d . in postage stamps . ¦ ¦ ¦ - , - T HE S I LE NT P'R ' l E N D ; . A .: t a medical work on tho exhaustion ' ahd physical decay pt . tne system , produoad by excessive indulgence , the conse . qucnees of infection , er the abuse of mercury , with obser vatienri on the ' marrried ; st ' ate , and the disqualificatiODr Which prevent it ; illustiated by twenty-sbc coloured en gravings , and by the detail of cases . By R . and L . PERRY
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within reach and effectual . ' ThToDw ^^ ^?* ^ quaUfications . is fully examined , \* l \ £ t . « ct ^ ductivetmlons : sh « wn to b «; the ZBftUcit <> uj ^ H , The causes and remed ^ s for this sft ^ «» S consideration in this section of the work ^ » fiSS THE CORDIAL BALM OP Wa ^ S Is expressly employed to renovate the imn . C ° H hfe . when exhausted by the { nnuen ^ ™» w . indulgence on the system , iu action 1 ed • m ^ I its power in re-invigorating the frame •! p "J e'v ba ' a vous and sexual debility , obstinate SeeS " " » se >« renness , and debilities arising from v . ; "V ^ nc , ^ been demonstrated by its unvaryin g S f «* & S mvaluabi . Price m .-p-. taA oSftA THE CONCENTRATED DETERSIVP ^ ^ i"i , l «^" y /? rpuri ^ nereal contandnationarid lilB
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Brother Chartists ! Beware of ircfeTT " ^ Clothing ! ' ° lVes m Sktft Num « ous complaints having been receive Jn ^ p-n T ? deceiVed *> ™ tmtrt ?^ hese Pills , sufferers are earnestl y ¦ can « n a " "' 5 ; gnorant youthful quacks , who dare toinS' ° J agsdaS tor ' s ri ght by advertising a spurious S ^ ^ another name , the use of Wh can only fi "" «« 5 and disappointment , and to attract Datipn » . nno Ja » cs cure them for less than is reall y poisibie a s ™ ' n , prpfes 5 ^ enoush names , place Dr . before them and h ?* ^ to other practices equall y base . ' d hare "course HmomNAUT ^ oma oF THE K , m """" J ' Z ^ Mir ""** . PAINS IN THE BACK , GRAVEL Lmft , * ,, RHEUMATISM , GOUT , DEBILITY S TURE , GLEET , 4 o . "" ^ lY , STRlc
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T ) U DE EOOS' CONCENTRATED U GUTTiE VIT ^ i has , in all instauces , proved a speedy and yermanent cure for every variety efdiseass arising from solitary habits , jbathful delusive excesses and infection , such as gonorrhoea , syphilis , &c , which trom neglect or improper treatment by mercury , copaiba , eubebs and other deadly poisons ; invariably end in some of the following forms of secondary symptoms , viz ., pains anil swellings in the bones , joints and glands , skin eruption ! , blotches and pimples , weakness of the eyes , loss of hair disease and decay of the nose , sore throat , pains into side , back , and loins , fistula , piles , 4 c ; diseases of tho kidneys , and bladder , gleet , stricture , seminal weakness , nenwisand sexual debility , loss of memory , and final !} such a state of drowsiness , lassitude and eeiieral prostra . tion of strength , as unless skilfull y arrested , soon ends ia a miserable death ! Inthepr « oentio ) i and removal of the foregoin » symp . toms , and as a restorative of manly vigour , whether de . ncient from early imprudence , or residence in hot di . mates , &c , this medicine has obtained an unparalleled popularity . r From its properties in removing leucorrhoea , or whites , headache , giddiness , indigestion , palpitation of the heart , dry cough , iowness of spirits , barrenness , and all disorders of Females ; it is admirabl y adapted to that class of sufferers ; as it not only purifies and strengthens the whole system , but it creates new pure and rich blood , and soon restores the invalid to . sound health even after allolhf * remedies ( which have usually a depressing tendency ) have failed ; in this lies the grand secret of its universal success . Sent securely packed , to any part from the establishment only price 11 s per bottle , or four quantities in oue larga bottle for 33 s ., with full instructions for use , on receipt of the amount , by Post Office Order payable , at the Uolbora Office .
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READ DR . DE ROOSCELEBRATED WORK , THE MEDICAL . ADVISER , the C 4 th -1 . thousand of which is just published , containing 144 pages , illustrated with numerous beautifully coloured en . gravings , descriptive of the Anatomy and Physiology of tho Generative Organs of both sexes , in health and disease ; also Chapters on the Obligations and Philosophy of Mar . age ; Diseases of the Male and Female parts of Genera . on ; the only safe mode of treatment and cure of all ioae secret diseases arising from infection and youthful delusive excesses ; with plain directions for the rernoTaUi every disqualification , ana the attainment of health , vigour , ite ., with ease , certainty , and safety . . May be obtained in . a sealed envelope through most booksellers , or of the Author , price 2 s ., or free by post for thirty-two postage stamps . OPINION'S OF THE PRESS . Extract from the Medical Gazette and Times :- ' Fortu . nately for our country , a remedy for these deplorable com . plaints is at last found , and we hail the time as not far distant , when such diseases shall be comparatively unheard of ; we hope all persons so afflicted will lose no time in availing themselves of Dr . De Roos ' s skill . —This iv « rk is indeed a boon te the public , as it has the two-fold advantage of plainness , and being written by a skilful and duly qualified man , who evidently well understands his subject . ' —Time * . — This is a . work of superlative excellence , and one which we should recommend to the perusal of all ; in fact it is quite essential to those who contemplate marriage . —Record . Address Walter De Rocs , M . 0 ., 33 , Ely-place , Holborohill , London , M . B . —All those deemed isve : u » Ls are particularly invited .
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TilE ONLY RATIONAL REMEDY PARR'S LIFE PILLS .
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FRANCE . On Wednesday , the bill for granting pensions to the wounded and to the families of the victims of February and June , 1848 , was rejected by 372 votes to -226 . On this infamous decision the correspondent of the Morning Chronicle * observes : 'The debate which took place in the Assembly on the bill relative to the pensions of the victims of February , is a strong instance of the daily increasing boldness of the party now in power on the
Republic and its institutions . From the commencement to the dose of the discussion , insult upon insult was heaped upon the Republic , not only by the partisans of the Monarchy , but even by the Ministers of the Republic itself ; and these sallies were received with thunders of applause from the benches occupied by the party of order ; while the attempts made by M . Pascal Duprat and M . Cremieox , to obtain some show of respect for a form of government which all parties had accepted and sworn to serve , were drowned in groans . ' PROCDHO > f'S TftlAI" __
Fash , Sjltdmav . - M . Prondhon appeared JC £ terday before the Court of Assize of the Seine to take his trial for having , in an article in the Voix da Peuple , ' on the last election for Pans , committed the offences—first , of exciting to hatred and contempt of the government ; next , of endeavouring to disturb public peace by exciting citizens against « ach other ; thirdly , of having excited the army to abandon its duty * and to disobey its chiefs . M . Laugrsnd , the publisher of the 'Yore du Peuple ' was included in the indictment for having published the article . The case excited extraordinary interest , and the court was crowded to excess . '
la answer to the usual questions . Proudhon ¦ staled his age to be forty-one , his profession that of a journalist , his birth-piace Besangon . The advocate-general then read the article , and commented on it in strong terms . It was very violent , and . among other things , charged the government , almost in direct terms , with having intentionally caused the frightful disaster at Angers , to punish the army for its socialist votes , and it also threat * eneel civil war in the event of M . Ledere being elected in the place of M . Eugene Sue .
M . Proadhon then- presented his own defence-He read it from a manuscript , in order , as he said in the beginning , that , if be should hereafter abandon the principles set forth in it , he might incur the responsibility of violating his word and his opinions . The' Voix de Peuple , ' he said , had been seized ten times in three and a half months , its printer had been deprived of his license , and , for a mouth past , the journal had ceased to appear . ' I thought , he continued , ' that , after having killed us , the government wonld have bad the good taste to Jea « e us quiet , and I did , I confess , expect that this prosecution wonld not have been followed up ; bnt vtc live at a . period in which words and things
seem to have changed their meaning , in which love and respect to the government are measured by the contempt and hatred felt for the Republic , in wine ** a man is reputed an enemy of family and society if he dues not admit the re-establishment of privilege , in which the enemies of order invoke no other reason thai tbat of the sword , in which it no longer suffices to brute force to be braial . but it makes itself hypocritical ! ' The defendant then entered ir . to an elaborate argument to prove tbat the charges against him and his co-defendant were unfounded . ' It is always the same silly accusation which is made against us , ' he said , ' that of desiring to overthrow the government of the republic .
theagh we are occupied alone in defending that government ; of causing division in society , though we preach the fusion of interests ; of corrupting the soldier in order to secure impunity for revolt , though our principle is that under the regime of universal suffrage , insurrection is not only a fault but a crime ! In truth , we are tempted to believe , that v the government proceeds against us with so much severity , and for offences against which we protest with all the energy ef our consciences , it is because it requires expiatory victims for its own attacks on the principles of our institutions ? ' After tome further observations , M . Proudhon said that M . de Moutalembert , a few days ago , accused him of
supporting the republic as a means of arriving at Socialism ; and yet the accusation now made against him was of attacking the republic ! He declared that he would consent to accept any constitution , and even the restriction of the , suffrage , provided the government would undertake to respect the' fundamental principle of equality ; for that principle would , he said , of necessity lead to equality in work , and equality in fortunes . « What we seek , ' he observed , ' is to realise Socialism , and to do that the constitution suffices . Any government , indeed , would suffice to lead us to Socialism , for the revolution was social and not political . A retrogade government , 'he continued , ' shrinking from the
consequences of its principles , interdicts a certain road to the social revolutiou , but it will seek other paths —it will pass , be assured ; you can no more drive back Socialism , than you can prevent the Seine from flowing towards he ocean — you would do much better to try to direct it . Re-establish , if you will , the old worn-out privileges , the rights of primogeni ' tare , feudal rights , corporations — all that will lead to nothing so long as the economic revolution shall not be laid down ; take us back to the commencement of the world , to the terresttal paradise , do over again the work of sixty centuries-and all that will lead to nothing ! ' Proudhon then protested that he had never intended to accuse the ministry of having
premeditated the catastrophe at Angers ; that so far from dividing society he sought the reconciliation of all classes , and thai his opinion was , that the object of the revolution was to efface old distinctions of classes - — . to make a better division of fortunes ; and that so far from wishing to seduce the soldiery , he thought they ought to obey their chiefs and march against those who should attack the law . He concluded thus : —• I know that political justice is always of a political character , but I dare to hope , notwithstanding the enormous distance which separates j our opinions from ours , that
you will not be too severe . What have I done during the last two years ? I have endeavoured to establish the economic revolution on the political revolution and if I have changed the dispositions of the people , the change is that formerly they went to the barricades , and that new they do not . I have endeavoured to create a movement party , advanced in speculation , moderate in practice , enlightened by the lamp of economic troths—I have endeavoueed to found economic liberalism , and political and religious liberalism . '
M . Madier de Montjau then presented some observations on behalf of Proudhon , and M . Cremieux pleaded for Langrand . After hearing the reply of the public prosecutor and the summing up of the President , the jury , after twenty minutes' deliberation , 'returned a verdict of 'Not guilt ,. ' , . ,. - .. ' . The acquittal of Proudhon is considered as a great blow to the coercive * system of the government , and a highly important manifestation of public opinion .
Sunday . — -The decision of the committee on the Dotation Bill is at last known . Yesterday , after a sitting , which lasted from noon till six o ' clock , and a fresh conference with MM . Baroche , Fould , and Ronher , all the measures of transaction proposed by the minority of the committee , and sanctioned by the government , were rejected in succession . The committee then decided by nine votes against six to move the assembly to reduce the government ' s bill to the following proposition : —« An extraordinary
credit of sixteen hundred thousand francs is opened to the Minister of Finance for the expenses iu 1849 and 1850 , occasioned by the installation of the President of the Republic This sum shall be charged by halves upon the credits of 1849 and 1850 . ' Singular to add , the members of the com-Milteft who were most forward ia urging this conclusion , M . Cretan and M . de Mornay , both shrank successively from the responsible- post of reporter , which was voted to them , and after their refusal devolved upon M . Faudin , by whom it was accepted .
Monday . — The semi-official Constitutionnel contains the following important notice on the decision of the committee on the Dotation Bill : — 1 This decision , notwithstanding its gravity , has not , if we are correctly informed , produced any very deep emotion in the head of the state . A new credit , deemed necessary to the legitimate action and dignity of the executive power , had been demanded , in the measure indicated by experience . The same opinion prevails to' day which prevailed yesterday on the subject of this credit . The President of the Republic indicates what he deems suitable , very indispensable to the elevation of authority . The Assembly has the right of feeling and judging differently from himself , if the bill is not votei as it has been presented the President of the Republic , without renouncing tbe canvictionB which experience bis girea him * will xeitrict himself with-
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in the barrow limit of the , present " allowance , the country remaining judge / " * : "~ i'C ' - The 'Opinion Publique' reports that the ; President has made up his mind to accept' the offer of the committee on the Dotation Bill ; This allegation , as you will see , is indirect contradiction to the notice given above from the Conatitu ttonnel . Girurdin has been elected for the BirBhurty an immense majority . , , ..... , , M . Lombard Morel , director of the' Nat . onale , has been tried before the Court of Assize of Pans , for havingrin ' an article published mi the-tfrtr of April last , libelled the President of the Republic . He was acWted by the jury . . sentenced
A Socialist , named Herpin , has been by the Police Court of Paris to pay a fine of twenlyfive francs and to be placed under the inspection of the police during five years , for having manufactured fire-arms clandestinely . ' . M . Galvan , a printer , has been sentenced by the Polic 8 Court of Paris to pay a fine of l . OfjOf . for having published a * political placard without deposit ; ing a copy " with the Minister . A private in the 42 nd regiment of the Line was sentenced by . court-martial yesterday to imprisonment for two years , for having on the 19 ih of May last , cried in the rue des Fosses-du-Terople , in the midst of a mob , 'Vive la Republique Sociale !' A bas Napoleon ! ' and for having resisted the guards who arrested him .
M . West , Prefect of the Bas Rhin , has suspended M . Hans , the Mayor of NiedertronneB , from the exercise ef his functions , for having signed aa mayor a petition against the Electoral Law . A Socialist named Septfort has been sentenced by the Police Court of Ceret to fifteen days' imprisonment and 3 , 000 f . fine for having in bis possession a quantity of ball cartridge and gunpowder . Two printers , named Brault and Mapiez . have been sentenced by the Police Court of Paris to 3 , 000 f . fine each for having printed two songs , en * titled ' The Foreign Invasion' and ' The Cry of the People' without having put their names to . hem .
A private of the 5 tb Regiment of Light Infantiy was sentenced to death by the court-martial in Paris on Monday , for having violently assaulted a Lieutenant at Courbevoie on the 22 nd of May last . M . Guilbert , the democratic candidate , has been chosen member of the council general of the Lower Alps by a majority of 528 votes , against 372 obtained by the government candidate . Wednesday . —A telegraphic despatch from the French charge d ' affaires in London , announcing the adoption of Lord Stanley ' s motion , has thrown' the
royalists into a state of ecstacy . Already they rub their hands over the presumed fall of the Whigs . The moderate Conservatives , not less rejoiced at the blow dealt on Palmerston , profess some , regret for the damage done to the cabinet . The Reds would bail a Tory ministry as affording a ground for . pro paganda in England , and giving an impulse to the revolution throughout Europe . ' At the end of his despatch , the French charge d ' affaires adds that this result exceeds the expectations of those who were most disposed to believe that a check awaited the government . . . . .
The President of the Republic addressed , on the 10 th ( the anniversary of the death of the Marshal ) , a letter to Madame Begeaud , expressive of his profound regret at the loss which France sustained in the death of that distinguished commander . The letter further announced that her son-in-law , who was Receiver-General of Finance in the Haute Loire , had been promoted to a more lucrative appointment in the Finisterre . * ' ..: [ Bugeaud was one of the most pitiless ruffians and bloodthirsty scoundrels that ever breathed the breath of life . Happily , on the 10 th of June , 1849 , the cholera sent him to' glory . ' ] \ SWITZERLAND .
The municipal elections for Geneva have terminated in the defeat of the ultra-radical party , an immense majority of conservatives having ' been elected . The electors have felt the necessity of uniting against the administrative system of M . Fazy . At Berne the triumph of the liberal conservative party is also complete ., The election of Colonel Kurn to the presidency of the chief council by 117 votes , and those of such men as MM . Blosch de Reichenbach and Moschard . men who
have figured in the Sonderbund , prove that' the socialist party have to expect a strong opposition . The alarm is very great in the ranks of the revolutionary party . It is said that another note has been received from Prussia on the subject of . the presence of the refugees in Switzerland , and complaining of the conduct of tho 3 e who inhabit the frontier cantons . The Swiss government is called upon to put an end to the socialist propaganda , and threatens in case of default to close the frontier on the whole line . '
GERMANY . BERLIN , June 14 . —M . Martini , director of the lunatic asylum at Leubus , who was directed by the government to investigate the mental condition of , Sefeloge , has reported his opinion that the prisoner is not only at present incapable of rational self-control , but was under the influence of monomania before 1848- The . ' Westdeutschen Zsitung * was again seized on the 12 th . there is reason to expect tbat the section of the Maine and Weser railway , which extends from Marburg to Lollar , will be opened to public traffic in the course of six weeks . An experimental train has traversed the line with success . The works between Lollar and Giessen are proceeding with great activity .
The'National' and 'Urwahler' were confiscated yesterday morning . Several other journals have been stopped in the post-office . A vendor of newspapers has been arrested . ' ¦ ¦ " ., The first journal to which an official note has been sent under the new law from the post-office , apprising the editor tbat the " p 3 Stmaster . will not receive any orders or subscriptions for it for the ensuing quarter , i 3 the ' New Konigsburgh Zeitung . ' The editor is simply informed , that the journal « belongs to tbat category of papers not calculated to have an account for them opened at the establishment . ' ¦ ....
The royal manufactories are more than usually busy in the construction of arms . A battalion is supplied with the new Zundnadel musketevery three weeks ; rifles on the same construction are also constructed for the corps of Chasseurs and Riflemen as the'Guard . The proprietors of the 'National Zeitung ' have at last received a notification from the police authorities of the article which was the cause of the first seizure . The notification was accompanied by the information that the sentence of the court might be expected in a few days . It appears then from this that the last paragraph of the new laws , which withdraws offences against the press laws
from trial by jury , has already been brought into operation . The government are determined to lose no time then in putting down the democratic press . The police , too , are equally ready , and still more officious . The Constitutional' has an account of an occurrence which happened in one . of the public gardens before the gates of the city the day before yesterday , for the truth of which it touches . It appears that a gentleman , a government officer , was walking quietly about the gardens reading a number of the 'Constitutional . ' Just as he had finished reading , and bad transferred the paper to his pocket , he was stopped by a constable , whb demanded the immediate surrender of the 'National , ' which he declared be bad seen in the
hands of the gentleman . ; Tbe gentleman ; denied tbat he had a' National' about him ; the policeman insisted that his eyesight had not deceived him , declared that he had been ordered to confiscate all papers read in the streets , and compelled the gentleman by threats of force to produce the paper , and show that he had deceived himself . The gentleman in question ' endeavoured to procure some kind of apology , but in vain . . The suppression by the police of the mechanics ' unions continues , together with the examination of the member * « f those which have already been suppressed . The police are nofyet satisfied of the non-existence of the vast political , conspiracies which have troubled their digestion , and nightly repose , since the attempt on the King ' s life , by the prisoner Sefeloge . ..
The parliament of Hesse-Cassel was dissolved on the 13 th instant iu consequence of the opposition to the ministerial proposal to grant the taxes for a period of three years .
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY . VIENNA , Jonk 12 . —The ' Gazette' of to day at last contains tbe long expected ordinance for abolishing the Hungarian Austrian customs frontiers . The wbole empire is divided into two customs territories ' , one of which is formed by the kingdom of Hungary , with Croatia , Slavonia , the Woywodesehaft , Serbia ; and the military frontiers with Transylvania ; while the other consists of the rest of the empire , with the exception of Dilnutia which still posseases its particular tariff . On the Wof October , however , this division will ceue to
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exist , while certain modifications are already introduced , particularly with respect to the ; importation of cattle ' for slaughtering , The j'iltempts made by the government to obliterate every memorial of the leaders of the Hungarian insurrection border on tbe ridiculous . A lithographer at Pesth , in whose workshop a stone was found with an un finished likeness of Koasuth upon it , has been seized and imprisoned by the police ; and the whole impression of an engraving of Kossuth ' s childreni has been confiscated and burnt . . "" ' ., ^ C ., ' . - ¦ ' - ¦ " ¦ ¦• - . - ^ itv ; - - ¦ - " ----- ¦¦ -
-PIEDMONT . —It appears that a party of Italian tefuaeea who had Served in Hungary under . KossHth , have arrived in the'island of Sardinia , under the command of Colonel Monti , formerly iri the Austrian service . General La'Mormpra , comman d ; antof the island , having received Colonel Monti and his' legion with great cordiality , arid pronounced a speech professing his eBteem for their valour , the official ' Milan Gazette ' . of the 10 th , devotes , a leader to the circumstance , and comments severely upon General La Mormora's speech , expressing astonishment at the manner in which the latter has received " a party of deserters , and adding that if such an example should nod imitators / there would lie an end to fidelity in armies and they would degenerate into hordes of adventurers . '
TUSCANY , —The council of , the Tribunal of First Instance of . Florence has pronounced a decree ordering the case of Guerazzi and his accomplices to be brought before the royal c-urt . ' /
RUSSIA AND THE GREEK QUESTION . The announcement made by our Paris correspondent in his letter of Friday last , tbat the Russian government bad protested against the manner in which' the Greek affair was terminated by Mr ! Wyse , is fully confirmed by accounts subsequently received M . de Brunow spontaneously protested against the forced solution , effected at Athens the . moment it was known in London , and that protest has been approved and ratified in a formal manner by tho Emperor Nicholas / '' ' . .
INDIA AND . CHINA ; Latest News . —India is tranquil throughout , No further disturbances have occurred on . the Affgban frontier of the Punjab . The passes between Peshawur ami Kohat still remain unsafe . It' ia generally considered unadyisable to attempt anything further against the Affredees without a regular hill campaign . The hill country itself j would have to be occupied in order to keep the passes open , . ' as posts could not be . maintained in , the ., passes them , selves on account of the deficiency ' of water .
On the 4 th of May the ' ship Seitha , 600 tons burden , was burnt at her anchors in Bombay harbour . She was just ready to ' sail , and there seems to be no doubt that her destruction-was the work ' of incendiaries . This is the tenth vessel belonging to the . port of Bombay which has thus perished within these last ei g ht years , ¦> -. , - ;;•• . ;¦• , , r- i > . -r . v ¦ ' ¦' , Cholera prevails in the interior of the Bombay Presidency , butno further ¦ deaths from that i cause have occurred among the European inhabitants and soldiers in" th ' e island of Bombay . . . ; . ' " ¦ A suttee is reported to have , taken place , in the Bombay Presidency ,. within fifteen miles of one of the' Hon . East India Company's ^ ative " Courts of Justice . An . inquiry is being made into * the circumstances ' of the case . ' " : : ' ' ' ! ¦
AMERICA . ' ¦ - ' ¦¦ >¦¦ ' THE CUBAN EXPEDITION . ! ¦ ¦ ¦ The Europa has brought' intelligence regarding the Cuban invasion confirmatory of former accounts , though the details are somewhat contradictory . ' One report states that a portion of the invader * had landed on the south side or Cuba , and had taken possession of Cienfuegos and . Trinidad . Great excitement had taken place at Havannah on the receipt of this news , snda large number of troops had left for the supposed scene of action . :, In fact , scarcely a soldier remained in Hawmnah . The brig Zenpbia lately arrived at Savannah from ; . Cuba , reports that all the troops had again left for Cardenas .
On the other hand it is stated that intelligence had reached the Spanish legation in Washington that do less than 1 , 500 prisoners had been taken in two large Vessels on ' the south boast of'Cuba , most of whom were Americans ; who were allowed to return , those of other countries being tried by court-martial . Despatches had been received at Washington from the American consul at Havanriah , stating that he had demanded the 105 persons taken by a Spanish sbip-of-war on tbe Island of . Contoy , . tbat being a neutral territory . The men who had been taken on that island bad not engaged in open hostilities and were engaged considering the propriety of abandoning the island and returning home when they were seized upon ! The Governor of Cuba not haying replied to the consul ' s demand , that functionary had
sent'for additional power to enforce it . Accordingly , despatches had been forwarded ' from'Wasbirigtoh to such portions of the squadron / as could be immediately collected at Havannah , to assist the consul in pressing the demand . Should the Spanish government refuse the consul is to report to Washington , when orders will be at once given to obstruct communication-of all vessels with the port of Havannah . A Washington letter states . 'tbat a council of the United States cabinet . had . been , held in that city , when it was determined upon to hold ; the authorities of the island of . Cuba rigidly accountable for their treatment of all American subjects ; . and : to carry out tbat determination a special agent was to be at once despatched with the necessary . instructions to Havannah . . "
A correspondence is said to have passed between Mr . Clayton , and the Spanish minister relative ; to the imprisonment of certain Americans at Havannah , upon unfounded suspicions of connivance with the invaders , and also with respect to the forced enlistment of Americans into the Cuban " ' . volunteer ' bands . The Spanish minister assured Mr . Clayton that the course which , would'be pursued by the authorities . at Cuba would be such as could give no cause of complaint to the Cabinet of the United States , and that no American citizen should be imprisoned , or put to death , unless an ample proof being given of the violation of , tbe laws of Spain , Cuba , and also of the United States . ¦
A letter from Washington , dated June 3 rd , says , that official information had just reached of the execution of four Americans , and the imprisonment of nearly 200 others ' . The ' four who had been shot had been amongst those left behind at Cardenas . The Spanish authorities had refused tbe commander of the' United States squadron permission to see the prisoners , or permit them to be sent home for trial . . : The United States frigate Congress had sailed for Cuba , to intercept ; a" Spanish , y . es > el , containing a number of Americans , taken prisoners in an island near Yucatan . ; The Congress was followed also ^ by a Spanish , man-of-war . .. Captain Randolph , of the Congress , is determined to rescue the American prisoners at all hazards . ¦ . ¦¦¦ , ¦¦¦¦ , ¦ .,.
Despatches have been forwarded from ; the'United States government to the Cuban authorities , ¦ that the arrest of Americans on any other' Island , save Cuba , will not be . permitted . " ] ' ' ¦ ' " ., The . Spanish . ministe r at Washington hail remonstrated against the refusal of the American authorities at Key West to deliver up the money which tbe invaders had . taken . The Spanish commander had demanded the surrender of . the Creole and the money . The reply made him was , 'We have no force
, and the invaders will not give up the money , ' ' The Spanish commander then offered to put himself ' and his entire force under the commaud of the civil authorities at Key West , for the purpose of taking the Creole and the money . This ; was declined , a promise being made that the money would be returned by order of the United States government to the Cuban authorities . It is generally believed that the invaders have in their pay many members of the American press . ..
Two vessels , with reinforcements for General Lopez , and which were commiwioned to land at different points of the island , were still at sea , their fate and destination unknown . In the event of i ? SLrS \ bein 8 ca P tured L by ^ e Spaniards , tbe United States squadron" had been instructed to demand them of the Spanish command r Sd „ the event of refusal to seize them by force . The steam-sbip Southerner had arrived at Now York with several of the returned * paSiot , The British-steam-shi p Thames arrived at MuMI * cUnbe , ? ^ Campbell , the American consul , stated that the Spamardsat Havannah were much embittered a » the American authorities , and refused all in SonuS to the number , names , and probable fate of the nri 8 oners , who were very closel confined P
y outheSst , T Zaddre 8 1 se . . thecitizensof Mobile dSnf * t VUlm 0 ' ,. . P lainin 8 .. the causes of tbe Dubtlv „• % **? t ^ The 8 u «» ate officers hSi tZ fv l 6 g 6 neta 1 ' ^ -opokein ^ e Kin i mil 0 f h " ^^ ^ skill . Lopez was in New Orleans on the 4 th inst . J ? ,- BWnd J « nr at New York charged within : Testigations relative to the connexion of pereoiw with the Crtan invasion had reported that no evi-
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dence had been presented to them sufficient for the indictment of any person in that city . Advices from New Oirelans report the arrival there of tbe steam-ship Alabama from San Francisco with dates to the first of May ; eighty-two passengers , and 62 , 000 dola ..: in gold dust . The steam-ship Panama had reached Panama on the 21 st ult . with over 1 , 000 , 000 dola . in gold duat from San Francisco . Business was prosperous when .- ; she left . Great activity prevailed at San Francisco , and prices of . produce , and merchandise were advancing . . The emigration to the mines was said to be v ; ery greatly oh theincrease .
v T ; he Indian ' s ( PaWnees ) were still attacking the California !! ' emigr - ants ;'' 'The latter had .. found a desirable ally in a' great PottoVatamie chief ; named Wanasah , wbo had ina" skirmisK killed a Pawnee chief . on whose person were found four white and nine Indian scalps lately taken . 800 Mormons had left St . Louis for California . Caravans of emigrants extended between . 200 and 300 miles . Grass and water ; were abundant , , but small pox and cholera were reported as very prevalent . .,.,. . , Fires bad occurred at Baltimore on the 4 th , and Cincinnati oft thestiine day , Violent atom s had been experienced in , Georgia and rioffda . ' A great . meeting in favour of sustaining the union was held in St . Louis oh the 4 th inst
. The Nashville Cohrentioh met ' all Nashville ( Tenessee ) on the 4 th inst ., Judge' Sharkey presiding . Nothing important has been transacted . ' Nashville was greatly crowded ; ! ' ' ; . The jury in the Rey abduction case at New Or . leans , after being cori ^ ned three days and nights , were discharged without coming to a verdict . ' Tbe prbsjpectUB of the new southern prp-slavery organ has appeared in , the Washington journals .
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COUNT NESSELRODE ' S NOTE TO LORD PALMERSTON .
The following abstract of a note addressed to Lord . Palmerston by the Russian government on the question of Naples and Tuscany , has been aent from Paris ; M . de Nesselron ' e begins by observing thai the cabinet of St . Petersburgh completely identifies itself with the principles which have served as the basis ' of the' conduct ; of the cabinet of "Vienna . ; , ' 'It is too much int ' er Woye ' n , 'be . say s , with the
maintenance and' independence of states of the Becond order , ' and of the internal tranquillity of Italy , not . to identify itself without reserve in tife sentiments and political views of Austria . In virtue of the principles of public law , as understood in the Russian policy , it can never be admitted that a sovereign , forced , ' as the Grand Dukeof Tuscany has been by the obstinacy off his rebeliiou 8 ; 8 uhject 8 , ; to retake ppaession of points occupied b y the insurgents shall be bound to make compensation to foreign resfdent 8 who may have suffered ¦ certain losses or
injuries occasioned by the assault of the city where re * brllion has been . When people establish themselves in a foreign country , no matter where , they are bound to accept the chances and tbe . casualties to which ' such country ' may '; be exposed . Leghorn revolted , and it , became necessary to employ . force to reduce it to obedience . ' If certain English proprietors have Bharedin the injury suffered . by the proprietora , natives of : the place , have they a right to demand idemnity which the Tuscan government refuses to its own subjects ? Such are ' the motives that have induced the Tuscan government to address itself to the Emperor and demand his arbitration . The Emperor , notwithstanding thetivelv interest he
(' . eh for Tuscany , ' has not considered himself bound to accede . to this . . request , it ] ia . not on account ol a sum more or less important in amount , but on principle , tbat the Emperor cannot admit even the idea of an indemnity of any kind claimed as a legitimate right , still less exacted by force , because by doing so he would appear to give it an implicit sanctioh by granting his arbitration tp ' bbih parties in the event of "England consenting to defer tp it . ' | AsTuscany is disposed to enter into conciliatory explanations , it could form no part of the intentions of the Russian
government to attempt to offer any impediment to an arrangement a I ' amiabk with the English government .. But theJEmperor has a right to expect from the justice andnipderation ' bf the English government itself that it will not employ ; forthe parposeof arriving at that ' arrangement , any means but those of an equally cenciliatory character ; and the imperial cabinet thinks it its duty , in what concerns itself , and from the present moment , to reserve its own judgment as to all that it regards comformable to the recognised maxim ; of international law .
'The cabinet ^ London cannot but'understand that the present is a question of the ' gravest kind for the independence of the w'h ' ple ; of the continental states . In fact , if the rights sought , to , be established by England ' at this moment' with respect to Naples or to Tuscany be once admitted as a precedent , the result would be an exceptional position for all British subjects—a position far superior in advantages to that enjoyed by the native inhabitants of other countries ; while the governments that bo received and admitted them on their' territories would be . placed in an intolerable situation ! In place ; of being , tas hitherto , a source of benefit ' far the countries where they establish themselvesand
, where they transport with their establishments those habits of industry , of morality , and of > order , which so honourably characterise the English people , their presence would become a perpetual source of annoyance , and in certain cases an inevitable scourge . . Their , presence would become for the agitators and perturbators an encouragement to revolt , becau 8 e behind , the barricades , would continually appear the menacing { eventuality of future reclamations onbehalf of English subjects injured in their property in consequence of acts of repression . Every sovereign who , by the' geographical
position of his territory , or from his relative weakneas , would be thus exposed to . measures of coercion from an English fleet , would be' struck powerless in presence of / rebellion ; he would never dare ' to adopt measures of coercion against insurgents , arid if he adopted them . he : would be obliged to examine the details of every operation , to estimate the necessity or the inutility of . such or such a strategic measure which may expose English subjects to injury , and to recognise the . English government as supreme judge . between tbe sovereign and his sub . jeqts in matters relating to civil war and internal
government . . .. ;' . The Emperor cannot subscribe to such a theory , however disposed he may be , and may have always been , to receive with benevolence persons belonging to < the British nation , for-whose character his Majesty ' s esteem is well known , if reclamations such as those now made oh Naples and on Tuscany be supported by force , He wilJ feel himself obliged , by . necessity , to indicate and explain in the moat precise and . formal manner , the conditions oh which ) in future , he will consent to grant to British' subjectB'in his territories the right of residence and of property .
• The Russian Government hopes that the . English cabinet' will receive . its ; observations in the same spirit of Impartiality that has dictated them , and that it will act according to the same spirit in the conduct to be adopted towards the courts of Naples and of Tuscany . The cause of these courts is that of all weak states , whose existence is only guaranteed by the maintenance of the principles thus invoked . At the present moment , more than ever ; respect for ihpse principles by the great powers , can alone preserve Europe from the gravest disasters . '
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Boileu Explosion , at Marseilles —Tho Journal desDebats publishes the following communication from Marseilles :- " A great disaster has just visited our town . At half-past three o ' clook this afternoon a . fearful explosion > vas heard in the foundry of MM . Pny , Brothers , on the road to Rouot , and at tho same instant a portion of the establishment was seen to fly into pieces . Such was the . violence of tho explosion , that fragments of timber . : and . of the roofing were projected ,, together with masses of cast iron , hot only as far as the adjoining houses and premises , but to . the Toulon road and the Jewish Cemetery . The explosion was caused by tho bursting of a boiler . Several workmen were unfortunately buried in the ruins . Accordingly , the first efforts of those who hastened from all parts to the scene of the calamity were directed to rescuing these unfortunate individuals .
sovorai or tnein , as noa been learea , were severely injured , but , up to the timo we are .. writing , none have perished . One alone is considered seriously in danger . It is impossible to describe the different scenes of despair which occurred in every direction amidst the ruins bestrewn with wounded persons and from which the most heartrending ories were issuing . Tho shock produced by the explosion was so violent that , one , of the fragments of the boiler weighing about 300 kilogrammes , was hurled as fatas Mr . Taylor ' s manufactory , others fell into thn Cour 9 Gouff 6 , in , the Rue d'AuBterlitz sSnersons who were in a house at a considerable distance off felt a violent commotion similar to the ahook bf iSffei ? 1 ft * 110 dooiiof their fiis oioaea of itself . The gas works neat the foundry were laterally covered with fragments ; fortunately no damage was done to the fpparatk A beaS
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hurled into the yard . was driven into the earth a depth of one foot . Np idea can be conveyed of the complete destruction which the foundry has undergone . ¦ Among the workmen who escaped unhurt is mentioned a stoker , who was close to the boiler when the explosion occurred , and who has not received the slightest injury . " Louis rPaniPPB . r-A Boulogne correspondent , writing ; on Sunday ^ saya t —• " M . Guizot and many of the late ministers of Louis Philippe hare gone over to-day by the steamer Queen of the French ; they , say 'to take leave of the ex-King of the French . '" . ]'
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^T^^^^^^^ F^^^^ Dfowign Intelligence.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ t ^^^^^^^ f ^^^^ dFowign intelligence .
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o THE NORTHERN STAR . - f ; - ^ m ^ ' , ; ' June 22 1 ^ ¦
Enemies In The Camp!! Brother Chartists Beware ! I
ENEMIES IN THE CAMP !! Brother Chartists Beware ! I
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 22, 1850, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1579/page/2/
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