The New York Herald Newspaper, May 24, 1850, Page 2

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th a he passengers hoped that the two sel pr nently furni were the gene- Cur Berlin ‘Our Paris Correspondence. misunderstood at Warsaw, or anywhere else, and hodeast | rea Wee buy, snd the reesengers, ol seed the Ohio | rlteyic of everuble cammnent The attendance on Beruix, May 6, 1850. Panis, May 9, 1800, | itis that independence’? and, nationality are aaa to ‘ie mont ee ’ oh cter of being the fastest steamship | the passengers was by not the least com- . 5 . ope eer 4 . two noble symbols, which ought to respec! amot net on di eee py nt the Atlantic having avd | plaint was made on that score, or in relation to the The Poem of the Ge mane— The Exfurt Parliament | The Elections—The Socialist Party- Reform in the everywhere, and for which a great people wiil | Boulevard, on horsebacky in the Cees. fullest confidence even the Ohio could not | cooking, during the trip. In selecting Mr. Charles The Prussian Policy—Prussia’s Representative Electoral System—A Conservative's Opinion of | push towards death without difference of opinions | general, esgorted-by about a hundred horseguards, excel her in that respect. By the time we had got | Wright, late steward on board of the Crescent | Assemblies and their History—-The Condition df | France—The Power of the President's Party— | and parties. : ‘ 3 _ | commanded. by. ihe~Minister of War, General d° the Adantic’s head towards Sandy Hook, (she | City, as steward of the Atlantic, and Mr. Robert Germany--Marriage of Theresa Ellsler—The |The New Ministry—The Seat of Goverament—| The Emperor Nicholas is to arrive at Varsovia po Reg hbo word sas Wogerd on onthe 7th of May: great preparations have been made for his reception. F z having swung round with the tide) the Ohio was | Bums, late of the Astor House, as head waiter, . a : ; one mile and a half ahead, and according to ap- | the company have consulted the comfort of their Marriage of Prince Albert of Prussia—The The Pope, and his Secretary of State, and a New £ Were retarmed: with a salute. That was pearance, at that time, would in a few minutes be | passengers. Prince of Prussia and the Czar of Russia. Bank—Germany— Rumored Project of Insurrec- | A rumor, which comes from a reliable source, is, | Alas! poor» Lamartine, whom. I met, a few out of sight, the weather still being thick, as sail- | must say a few words in favor of the captain The adventures and _peregrinations of Calebs in tion—The Electoral Law—The Future. that the ineurreetion of the socialists of Fnsope has | minut after, also on horseback, ‘on the been decided to take place at the end of May, at | Boulevavd’ Montmatre, did not meet ors term it, but not thick enough, then, to prevent | and officers. Were it not for the order, regularit . ‘ both vessels from proceeding. ‘Phe Atlantic hav. | cud punctuality with which the duties’ of the ship | £€8rCh of & wife, or the crosses and losses of the | _ The result of the election of the Department of ing headed towards sea, the race commenced. For are performed, one would suppose that there were | rencwned Doctor Syntax, are os nothing in the Seine, was proclaimed on Thursday last, 2d aw Nie pyr was no petpeptihls difference in the | no officers on board. ae is wo eu reine, the Tea comparison to those of Germany and the Germans | inst., at the Hotel de Ville, in the ordinary mode, eed oratne Hve vessels. | Soon, however, it | nor *d=—g all bands and the cook” —nothing of the | in search of a constitution. They will affordafu- | but the people there were not numerous. The was evident that the Atlanuc was gaining. | kind. Captain West conveys his orders to his offi- “ey . sali + : " In about twenty minutes it was evident nf | cers in aoe tones, and they in their turn direct | ture Homer a fine subject for a new Iliad, or rather | socialists, satisfied with their great triumph, had we hed gained consideraby on the Ohio. | the crew to perform theirs, without making unne- | for a second Batrachomysmachia, or War of the | thought it prudent to abstain from any public de- The race proceeded, and, to cut the narrative | cessary noise for the purpose of evincing a little Frogs and the Mice. This delectable epic has just | monstration. The government spared no means to short, the Atlantic was abreast of the Ohio | self-imiportance before the passengers, It seems ‘ i fi H when! this Maeaciaa’ the Horse-Shoe, ee err ee ina Mution aad te willing and | been enriched by another canto, The Parliament | augment the chances of its candidate, M. Lecleray with @ better reeeption. They only looked i and thisavas far from the triumeb which heen after the revolution of 1848. Sic transit Y mundic By-the-by M.de e, whom | told ou was about leaving Paris, on a journey to urkey, has renounced his intention. The present sition of France detains him in Paris at the National Assembly. We have had several new plays this week at the three diflerent places at the same time,which are at Paris, Berne and London. The Central Democra- tic Committee ot Cologne has published the result of the subscription for Germany, which amounts to a very large sum, and no doubt could reach a larger sum, if necessary. No matter how and when the socialist movement will take place—it will begin one day or another, and, I fear, for its members, it will be the last of them in Europe, for those who are against it are more numerous than one would excelling the latter vessel! in speed at the rate of one | anxious to perform them. at Erfurt, one of the most curious and misshapen | These means, which were against the socialist | jelieve. has been the drama performed at the theatre of La mile and a half inthat short distai As soon as ! to being in a reliable ship, oarelties gd monsters in the annals of parliamentary history, | party, were so extravagant, that one would have The ney project of Cy slorien bed ohn ely a Laster Vai at Leah The sane t ofthe Ohio, she, tmag- | the cuisine of the greatest importance. In the ‘ ‘ ‘ . i‘, presented to the National Assembly, and it created }, lays in lreland, an e pl which describes the ae leeward, esr eatity. Atlantic it is ell the most fastidious could desire, | bas come to an untimely end, after a tedious, brief | supposed that M. Carlier, although he fought for quite a sensation. The tribune and galleries of the | awful poverty’and famine OF the islanders, is writ- building were all filled with ladies, and political men, and reporters of the press. I was scarcely able to find my way in that immense crowd. I have no time to reproduce the contents of the new law pre- sented by M. Baroche, the Minister of the Interior; r rwish for. Butthere is no need for particulariz- | existence of about tive weeks, like the tale of Py- | the party of the wnion electorale, against the elec- ing that the ampionsbip” was due to the Atly ing it to say, that many of my campag- | remus and Thisbe, full of tregical mirth. The | tion of M. Eugene Sue, had only the design to see tic as being the fastest of steamships, the former | nons du who are in the habit of crossing | qrollest part of the business is, that the Prussian | it succeed, in order to force those who were still Ma ge pe ae Mo obhying sag at r which pee p achgpand wen | Ly eo then vesoel eam ie | goverment has suffered a defeat by having its own | hesitating, to throw themselves in its ranks by fear vutstripped her, and acknowled ten in a splendid we bg full of incidents which will, no doubt, be much appreciated by our quvriers in these days of socialist principles. I will send a copy of it to New York, as soon asit is published. Arnal, the famed comic actor, met with another that the Ohio was amile ahead of th found the innumerable comforts which are enjoyed | propositions accepted. You will recollect that in | of socialism. But he has failed, as you see. you will find it, undoubtedly, in the English news- } success, in the play of “Ada Bastille,” a very fine tic when the trial of speed commenced. 1 wished | in the ape If onary a in he state-room, | Muy, 1849, when all Western Germany was in The Department of the [Seine et Loire has met, papers, Let = her tell — ae in my ee farce, iar Mase orn dat the Varietés, and to be as accurate as possible, and not to make | and need anything, all you have to do isto ring a nant 7 il vii iali in i i t as well as in that of many political men with whom | received with much applause. exaggeration of the qualities of the Atluntie, pre- | bell at the side of your berth, and Jackson's Enan- | “@mes when the Hungarians were yee at [:8lo, wie napa Seay Ne ee a Thad occasion of sper"-ing about it, it is the most | At the other small theatres, the stock of dramas the gates of Vienna, and the streets of Dresden } remember that the National Assembly hadannulled | a yomaious law ever thought or dreamed of, since | and vaudevilles haa not yet been changed. We ark, than over it. Ivon- | ciator informs the Waiter whois in want of his ser- ‘ . * s. Ina momenthe is with you. This isthe | were still encumbered with smoking ruins, the | the previous election, under several pretexts. In had been caused by the poli- ferring to be under th versed the same ev officers of the A mous that the « some of the Others made it this country was established as a republic. Re- member that, in 1848, the cause of the insurrection of the French people was the electoral law, which was to be reformed, for it was not liberal enough ; and now, in 1850, the same government established by that revolution of 1848, demands the restriction ofthe electoral law, which is too free and too much shall have atthe Theatre de la Bourse, to-night, the new political play, called “ Suffrage Premier,” which is said to be full of allusiou to the present position of our government, and which, of course, me attract an immense audience to that fine theatre. with the assengers and | ue i ei : ; rl pat ns The officers were unam- rst time, I believe, that this capital invention has lan of a e itution for the United States of Ger- | Spite of. » whiel u was a tile anda haliwhile | been applied to ships—but all passenger vessels | PHN 01 & Cansltition for the ull ee dalay | Heal opinions of the elected candidates, they have 1 it at three miles. | should have it. The state rooms are large and | M@ny was drawn up by Prussia, an: acceded to bY | been again nominated and elected, and thus the ad a one mile and a half, | commodious; there is amagnificent saloon, inthe | Saxony and Hanover, which, though far inferior in | government, which had been the Ce tigator of that to be on the safe side, and to | nature of a vast drawing room, where the passen- | all the essentials of liberty to that issued by the de- | Measure, has, as we say in French, craché en lair, nt, even by accident, you will | gers can ait of recline, if they do not choose to go and nething else. Messrs. Madier de Montjean, The ‘Chariot d’Enfant,” will be represented at » Atlantic injustice in saying | on deek ; is another beautiful saloon for the inet National Assembly of Frankfort, and rejected Esquiros, Charassin, Dain, Hennequin, and Cal- | extended. Two years ago, the government of | the Odeon, Saturday next. ween the points above n he gaine adie y; there is a forward saloon, | by Prussia, yetcontained many of its most valua- | favrn, have already taken their seats in the very | France was Opposed to advancement and improve- | At the Theatre Frangais, the tragedy of Mme. hio only a mile, when in fact it was . and | ble privileges, and might have satistied, for a time, | midst of the Mountain, making, with M. Eugene | ment of any kind, and this caused its ruin; now, | Emile de Girardin has been revived with much a 'f, which is @ very important d elves; there | he wishes of the nation, if it had not virtually Sue, six new socialist Tepresentatives—a strong ad- | the actual government of Louis Napoleon wishes us | éclat. Cleopatra is beautifully personated by M’lle at hort race, and within such smoking saloon for the gentlemen, on deck— : dition to the ultra-republican side of the chamber. | to draw back. Will itbe triumphant ? In 1848,the | Rachel, who, though she has not that kind of ndersuch as th na Word, every thing that is requisite for | #bolished the right of universel suflrage, by the je- | M. Sue took his seat yesterday in the Assembly. people wished to change the public suffrage, and | beauty necessary to represent the Egyptian queen, take her first trip ac! ort of passengers. suitical institution of the Three Classes, the par- The object of this socialist coalition against the | pow the government has taken its place. Let me | possesses nevertheless the talent, which makes us our worthy Uncle tlantic will probably sail on her return to | ticulars ef which, I explained to you ina former | Elysee, is to show that its attempts at changing | tell you tharGeneral Cavaignac, the only true re- | forget everything. More passion, more soul, has ; w York on the 29th. W. ©. Hd. snaienmaionll . the republican form of government are the greatest pubhiean of France, protested against the urgency | never been embodied by a woman. Mlle Rachel, barhhaia oh! vad whanasiaail. payroryescayrneray ; x would be; | (at cf the socialists. “Why? Because the party | of the presentation of the law. ‘This was undoubt- | 1 understand, is about leaving Paris for two months, Sr. Groxar's Cuanxer, May 10,1860. > Tg, (fue devil fell sie the devil a wonk would be; | knows very well that, with another form of govern- | edly a protestation against the Iaw itself, and I do | to make a professional excursion in Germany. f On board the U. 8, Mail Steamship Atentic. 5 en anee ene aeF sf i‘ ment, there would instantly be made laws which | not think that the law could be voted and put into Alboni has attracted large audiences at the ook, allow | Ata preliminary meeting of the passengers, called | As Soon as all immediate danger was over, the | would surely cause its ruin. execution, without producing a bloody contest.— | opera. She appeared at a concert last week, and met with the most enthy tic success. To- morrow night she mokes her début as an actress, and appears in the part of Fidés, in Meyerbeer’s Please to remark that for the last two years the so- cialists had only employed for weapons their votes inst the government; and now, if rm be any dispute growing | for the purpose of expressing their opinions relative to | insurrection in Baden and the Palatinate had been | _ In ~s of these movements, the ministry of Louis nt of the trial of d between | the ve her officers, &c., of which Mr. Bdwin A doen Jie bayousts: ‘aul dhe online Napoleon has thought it indispensable to present to tie two it was fairin every respect, | 5 t New Jers J. sill, | Putdown by Prussian bayonets, gallant | the National Assembly a project, in order to reform , Was chairman, and M, one on both sides, and that | © Iphia, was secretary, it was resolved. on the | Magyars had succumbed to overpowering numbers, | the electoral system now in practice. Preliminary | taken away from them, no doubt they will seize | ‘* Prophete,” which is one of the mostditticult roles ly entitled to the palm.’ The At- | ™ Bed uttatte nant committee of five be | or to Muscovite gold, the crowned trio began to mertings have taken place for the last three days, | iron and steel. and gunshots will soon be heard in | of the opera. [ have been told by some persons advertised to sail at 120’clock onthe | *? > SESE’ BENOINS See ne, ee ere and after several speeches made Messrs. Mole, | the streets of ‘The effect of the presentation | who have heard her at rehearsals, that she is ad- unmed gentlemen were appointed such committee:— 4 | consider how they might best elude the fulfilment Thiers, Barr (foe ee oe ; . dele . v » yer, de Montalambert, de Vatismenil, yin: John. Dulany Viginia: A¥an Kenscelaer, | of Si0se promises that had been wrung from them | de la tochejhgvelein, and. others, it was decide S or agents knowing that the | Philadelphia; James M’Tlvaine, Virginia by the fears of the moment. Saxony and Hanover | with unanimity, that they would vote in accord- on the same day. When the On motion, the meeting adjourned tothe 1th inst., | easily found a pretext for withdrawing from an al- ance with the immediate urgency of the case. Ohio we unced, it was said, by persons con- | at noon, On the 1th, at noon, the meeting was con- | |. A si tee Undoubtedly, as the point de vue of the govern- nected with her, that the Atlantic selected twelve | Yened, and the committee, to whom the duty of drat | liance, which had been entered into with the o& } ment, that law will be just and unavoidable; but, "clock, instead of three, fearing that the Ohio | ine yeselutions was sanramed, presented the following, | tensible view of embracing all Germany in the non- pres a the republican opinion, it isan attempt ld er in going down the bay. Under the | Wich were unanimously adopted:— accession of Bavaria, Wurtemberg, and above all, | against the constitution, and no one can tell what | 1 mirable. M'me Laborde has decidedly secured the favor of the public. Her appearance in “ Lucia di Lam- mermoor” has been a real triumph, an ovation. Bunches of flowers, bravos, shouts, every mark of approbation, has been bestowed upon her by the duettanti of Paris. The Cirgue of the Elysian Fieldsis the rendezvous of fashion, now-a-days, and it fis nightly filled by the most recherché people of Paris. "There is a dis- play of toilettes which cannot be seen anywhere else except at the Opera. There was present, the other night, (Saturday last,) the famed Lola Montes, who drove there in a splendid carriage, to which were harnessed four white horses, driven by two powdered coachmen, dressed in crimson vel- vet. During the performance, while the carriage was Waiting at the door of the theatre, several men, who were looking at the richness of this ve- hicle, began to grumble, and to call the masters and the servants * aristocrats,” who insulted, by their splendor, the poverty of the people. The servants, who were asked to whom did that earriage belong, answered that it was to M. Eugene Sue, and in- stantly they fled, when the aame of their candidate was uttered to them. And thus, by the wit of her servant, Lola Montes had her carriage saved from the fate which another of her vehicles met in Ba- varia, when she was in it. , The show-case of Messrs. Goupil & Co., of Pa- ris, was adorned, two days ago, by a splendid piece of art—a picture by a DaneJMr. acoun- trymen of Thorwaldsen. It represents the battle Fredericia, between the Danish Generals Rye and Mega and the German , during the war of Schleswig. This picture, a ef d’euvre in its style, will soon be engraved, and ‘copies of it will be pes, sent to New York, where, no doubt, they will meet with much success among the amateurs. California companies are ‘ing up on all sides in Paris. We have — sort of in that line.” That which is not humbug, is the emission of $2 gold pieces, (ten francs) made by the govern- ment, five days ago. small medals, large as a ten cent piece, are pretty, and will, if na- merous, be of great use to the French nation. In the news received from foreign countries, I have collected various facts relative to the United States, which will find their way in this letter. A Miss Luciana Paddington, daughter of one of the richest merchants of Baltimore, married, on the 29th of April last, (at Hambourg-esMonts, in the kingdom of Hesse) Mr. Pharamond Blanchet, a tead of being favorable to the gov- roduced a very bad effect on the public min he stocks of the government, and of all kinds, have fallen at the Bourse, and no doubt the panie will soon spread. What future is left to France? I dread to look forward. We may soon witness terrible bloodshed. B.H.R. uth of April, without reference to the steamship, and without, I PARISIAN GOSSIP. Panis, May 9, 1850. The Fourth of May Festival—Incidents of the Oc- casion—Louis Napoleon’s Movements—The New Plays in Paris—Rachel—Alboni—Laborde—Lola Mentes and her Carriage—New Picture—Cali- fornia Enterprises—American Marriage—Com- modore Morgan's Ball—The Countess du Cay- la, §¢., &e. The greatest event of the week has been the féte of the 4th of May, given on Saturday last, in commemoration of the proclamation of the republic in 1848. The preparation made by the government on the Place de la Concorde, the Champs Elysées, the Barrieré du Throne, and other places, were really magnificent. But the most splendid coup d’wil was on the Place de la Concorde. Its deco- ration was one of the most complete, the most ele- gant order ever seen anywhere. Four arches of triumph, drawn from the model of the monument of Vespasian in Rome, and tnited each to the other by columns adorned with vases of flowers and gar- lands of lights made of globes of flint glass, offered to the spectator the most fairy coup dal. The obelisk of Luxor was also really admirably de- corated—four immense lions and mammoth Egyp- tian statues had been added to it, and the whole was also trimmed with lights and flowers. The Madeleine and the house of the National Assem- bly, richly furnished with lights and ornamepts, completed the embellishment of the place, which is always one of the most admirable in the world. ‘The Garde Meuble and ministry of navy, deco- rated in the Venetian style, had also a peculiar appearance, much remarked by the amateurs of art and decoration. The large avenue of the J * ag) The undersigned, passengers on ‘board the United tas D ‘ th deal i tea i re, it is very probable, if not | gaan " of Austria; but Prussia, who, though desirous of | will be the result of its promulgation, in case it id her best, and this view Saantreseieameaaes perigee ‘am | retracting the concessions granted to the people by | should be voted by the National Assembly. To of the matter is confirmed by the firing of the gun | not separate without @ distinct expression of their | the proposed charter, was unwilling to forego the | deny to many of the citizens of a country to vote, to leeward, and the cheering of the crew and pas- | views and feelings selative Yothesuperb steamer which | advantages she would derive from being at the head | when the time has arrived to do it—to prevent them sengers on board of the Ohio when the Atlantic | has sufely conveyed them over the Atlantic. of a coniederation of the German States, remained | from choosing their delegates to the Assembly of overtook her, as she did with ease. They regard this ship as the pionver of a new and | in a pitiable state of vacillation—anxious to extend | the nation, and to have their opinion triumphant, by Your readers will perceive by the following log, | ¢fiicient line of steamers, originating in the private en- | her dominion, and ye e to carrying outa con- | a legal balloting, is anti-republican, and, of course, which | kept during the passage, that | have aimed Prize of citizens of the United States, and tostered | stitution far more democratic than is at all consist- | it cannot succeed without overturning the form of to render it as intelligible as possible to them, omen States overseas. and heme Myre ent with her present system of polities. While she | our present government. It is well known that eiving, accurately, the number of revolutions | Fresige yor Des tar gr hy poriyer, these voacele ner | aimed at attaining the reputation of a liberal pow- | France is far from being a republican country—we minute of the wheels, and the number of miles | fron tenlifying to the guneent elegance with which they | €Ty it Opposition to Austria, she endeavored to im- | are not born to live under such a system: Our run each day, tc her with the state of the Wind are adorned, and to the manifest comforts which | PoS¢ upon the rest of Germany a charter similar to | manners, our habits, our necessi of life are al- and weather. As for the accident which occurred | abound in their spacious saloons, dining rooms, state | the one just accepted by her own servile chambers, | together opponent toit; but, in such a case, it would to the air-pump, and which, together with a severe | rooms, &e. Feeling thus, they deem it their duty to | The difficulty of conciliating these two objects, is | be necessary to make an appeal to the nation, and gale from the eastward which assailed us, no mor- | Captain West, and to the officers of the ship generally, | the only clue that serves to explain the equally dis- | to decide whether we must change, or remain tal could have foreseen them, and, although they | t0 express the satisfaction and pleasure they have had | graceful and impolitic line of conduct pursued by | we are. It would be the wisest thing todo. It prolonged our voyage by some two and a half days, | 1 their present passage Mie Atlantic, and to say, | this government towards its own creature, the Er- would, perhaps, avoid much bloodshed. the passengers are unanimous in declaring their | 1m Addition. that they are fully persuaded that this | furt parliament; and, even then, there is much in| In the present condition of affairs, the restri preference for the Atlantic over any other vessel. | being prepared, will meet the highest expectations of | 8 action that ‘remains inexplicable. That body | of the universal sufirage is of doubtful success. The following is a copy of my log :— their owners and the friends of the enterprise. They | W#S Composed entirely of devoted partizans of Prus- | Take, for instance, the last election, at which the he Tien ofthe <Adlend | therefore unite in the following reselutions:— sia, not one-third of the electors having voted, and | government made more than twenty-five thousand .— Lath doo Sos of Ganal clvect 1. Resolved, That in Captain West we recognise a consequestly none but reactionists having been re- | erasures in the department of the Seine alone. The Average revolutions 1144; distance | *Xilful navigator, and a gentleman whose urbanity, | turned; the sot disant liberal party was under the | object was to prevent so many friends or emissaries Lat, by dead reckoning 4017 North, | Civility. and politeness, are entitled to the warmest | guidance of M. de Bodelschwingh, the most ob-| to take part in the voting. As for the National 25 W. No observation, weather cloudy | ¢°mmendation, noxious of the anti-revolutionary ministers—which | Assembly, it is very uncertain whether its mem- 2. Resolved, That the thanks and good wishes of | is something like Guizot being at the head of the | bers will Rave a majority to adopt the laws. ‘The Average revolutions 13; distance | the passengers ere also eminently due to Mr. John W or Colonel Sibthorp | law against the mayors has been again repulsed, Lat. by dead reckoning 41 44N., long sagen Se. 6 » | caginens, | , #1... geen = figuring as leader of the Radicals in a British | as well as that for the translation of the P ytech- t... eres Cees. & | 5 mikis dicnninertaats <e bok Goenee under the | House of Commons. The Brandenburg Manteutiel | nie school out of Paris, which was presented the » sdoemne ae Ld ~4 Nie: Aintaties 3. Kesolved, That the officers generally have won nation were yorniped as the re of | other er Sala fa I fear, that [4 re Lat. by dead reckoning 42 44.N, long. | te esteem and regard of the passengers, both for | Germany; the utmost contidence was expressed in | Louis Napoleon wil once more defeated. trong breezes from SW. and E., aud their gentlemanly demeanor and for their strict at- | their patriotism and the rectitude of their intentions; | A very curious fact to be mentioned, is, that M. No ebservetion. tention to duty; and that we cannot part with them | and finally the draft ofthe constitutton was accept- Dupier, the Speaker of the National Assembly, has rage revolutions 14; distance ran , Without biddin, Ley py speed. diet . ed, with such amendments as destroyed almost | demanded and obrained a congés, under the pretext Lat. by dead reckoning 43 & | nd, Det ved. Unat they fee} fully Justified in stating. | every vestige of its original character, and reduced | of his health; and he has left Paris for the depart- 3: long. by dead reckoning 62 U OF | Nota anes oF Me tuscanner Atisntle, with | the liberties of the people to the slenderest mini | ment of La Niévre. How is it that M. Dupier is rr 2 OF W. | Weather clear and smooth sea, | © thorough knowledge of the cause ee tactory | mum; in short, never since the creation of the deserting his post under such grave and difficult - ~ aan hehe map Mh ag r ‘o ne ye ag that my ee oes world, haye any unfortunate wretches werk- | circumstances? Would he not like to be ~ Baccn ds my aap eats wlan 7 | only of that which she i «form, believing her | ed £0 bard. 30 secure the good graces of their | when the law fe presented’ | # K that he es ne" instead of being greedily embraced; and the Parlia- | the author of the new law, and it appears that ment is dissolved, or rather adjourned sine dic, to | when he read it to the private council, it met with make way for a congress of princes, which is to | the opposition of three of his heme gag Benet re, meet int jal on Wednesday, the 8th instant, | end 4 will be, against its contents. This is de- and will probebly be a prelude to the reinstalment cidedly the best ro of a future change of minis- L long. by with dense fog Left in a Wrench Assembly reckoning 47 2 roe | to tke Weoaincs by dead recko oo x but closed clear, with heavy ped ot) just pride in the first movement of this * &, Reno 2 N udy at head sen and ew rly win May 4, 12M.—Average revolutions, 133s; distance d, That. for comfort and convenience. the 1 that could be desired That the proceedings of this meeting be run. wiles. Lat. by dead reckoning 45 43 N., long. aap A. | shoenemstes 96.1) W.. HO. Senden) be vapiain | of that Léce noire of the Germans, the old Bunde- | 1 d it is well known that M. de Persigny, who | Champs Elysées, planted with poles painted | F i porte pa _—" stroug gales from the east, accompa SFeushieh and beceetee co tee ken seg. ' = we ‘about Te ag Paria yesterday, on he way to | red, and bert Ay with gold lances, were sur- Meet oy oe oe uied wit y This is the fifth time within three years that his | Berlin, where he goes as our minister, had received | mounted by immense banners of the tricolor The newspapers of Naples give the description ot emblem, upon which the initials of the French republic were emblazoned in gold. Garlands of lampions were unittng each pole to the ether, and, between them, were also trophies of tricolor lights, imitating bunches of na- tional flags, put together symmetrically. The * National” street was very simply decorated. Twenty columns, surmounted With vases of flowers and tricelor flags, had been erected on each side of the street; cal ch the lon of the church of the Madeleine, six globes of a colossal size were throw- ing the most intense light ever seen upon the immense crowd which covered the ground. All Prussian majesty has been unable to get along with | orders to remain, and to wait further orders. This @ representative assembly. The first experiment | leads me to believe that this alter ego of the Presi- was with the Diet of 1847, which, although elected | dent will soon have a situation in the new ministry. exclusively by the privileged classes—the nobility | It is said, in the political circles, where are several and the municipalities—was svfiiciently imbued | members of the National Assembly, that, in case with the liberal ideas of the age, to oppose a rous | the new law is rejected, all the cabinet will retire, resistance to the dominant system of paternal a with the exception of Messrs. Fould and Rouher, tism, and was, therefore, dismissed in rather an un- | the best friends of Louis Napoleon. gracious manner Pas at same Bodelschwingh, Another very important fact to be mentioned, is whois now—mirabile dictu'—the Magnus Apollo of | the unanimous demand made through the press, for the self-styled Constitutionalists.A few months later, turning the seat of government out of Paris. Ver- the thunders of revioution suddenly resounded from | sailles is named for its location. The immense one end of Europe to the other, a popular insurrec- | public buildings around the chateau would be very asplendid ball, given by the American Commo- dore, Morgan, on board of the fri Independence, which anaes on the 22d ult., and was a very fine afiair. The entertainment, which began at eight o'clock and ended at half-past two, was very brilliant, not only from the number of guests, but also in the magnificence of the reorplion. The United States squadron, which is at anchor in the bay of Naples, is composed of three frigates—the Independence, Cumberland, and St. Lawrence; ‘and also three ships for transportation, which ar- rived on the 15th ult., from New York, with stores of biscuit and salt meat. r appended to the above resolutions Sionen wy THe Passevorns This is certainly the age of steam. We are no longer satisfied with “ten” and “eleven days’ pas efforts are making to reduce the time toa week or less! The new Cunarder, the Asia, left Li- verpool last Saturday, the 18th inst., and is expected to-morrow at Halifax; and the Viceroy, of Dublin, is ew se. it was found that | to leave Galway for Halifax and New York on Sa- out of ‘oder, that the grating attach+ | turday, the Ist of June, “to make the shortest pas- lent gale from the east prevailed. which qualit of the Atlantic as a sea vessel. lerseit equal to any emergensy. The « ehigh.” When the gale somewh: was stopped, for the purpose of repairing uteen of th ° n Was broken, That engine was thea eeiseret red ‘ Asem tion deluged the streets of the Prussian capital with | useful to give shelter to all the public offices, bu- | the Parisians, all the strangers, arrived in great I will close i Fane oer Har iy mre bes Po preety here: cyte ‘a on ddanaggep of | blood, the throne of Frederick the Great was sha- reaus, ain lateral faee ot telegraph would be | numbers two’ days previous to the festival, had | q tpleadia feta ginet oe scot ars ‘lutions #» distance run 140 | the Viceroy, from the Galway Vindicator -— ken to its foundation, and the King was too Lappy | organized on a la e scale, and, in case of anin- | taken stations on the Place de la Concerde and its | the Countess du Cayla, at her eastle of St ‘Ouen. fing 60 80 N.; lat. by obser- | STEAM BETWEEN to appease the tempest by convoking a Consti- | surrection, the fortification of Paris would be very | neighborhood. It bad at indeed, a “sight” to be- | one of the finest summer residences near Paris. ad reekoning 25 31 W., long GALWAY AND NEW YORK, tuent A, by elected by universal suffrage. | useful to abate the rioters, who would be besieged | hold. 600,000 e d glasses semieetng te spot, | Every year the amiable lady ves a party, on oc~ Weather clear aud wind | CALLING AT HALIFAX But soon nge came over the spirit of t in Peris, and soon overwhelmed by famine. The | as if by enchantment. Never did the “Thousand | casion of the blooming of the five and ehe invites and One Nights” record a more fantastical and dream,” capital of France,would be commanded by a mili- de all sail ‘The splendid and powerfu fervor began to abate, government the élite of the Parisian nobility. Though T do not ‘addle steamship HIN, 4 engine inte VICEROY, OF DL recovere iis panic, the t were drawn | tary governor, under whose authority would be all | astonishing sight. At nine o'clock, a mammoth | belong to ‘ our way Tobert F . er, SO tons burthen, and | into Berlin, and the delegates of the} people sent to anon forts around Paris. This is certainly a orchestra, bilagosed of five hundred musicians, from the aus Commas : rp ay purpose of relieving the sound 20 horse n experienced surgeon) | the right about, having been saved the trouble of | bright idew, but it is impracticable. It would -be | began the concert, and, at half-past nine, the fire: D’Heaudouville La Rechelosceatt, Gah otuer a hg niin, er z I York calling st Kailfax. | freming a constitution by one being issued ready | the ruin of Paris, and, 1 dare say, the rain of | works, which had’ been established in front of the at names in our hist The weather wi ant ake chee ae ae — > ci Reni De ody tor Amo. | Made, in which, though a census was fixed for the | France. Arch of Triumph of 1’ Etoile, was lighted. The | beautiful, the lunch cage > cane “sad Weather clear, and wind from the westward, 1: rica, over any other port in rent Hiritatm, isco com. | first chamber, universal suffrage was retained for The news from Italy is of a very pacific kind, | fireworks, arranged by the famed Ruggierri, (the | the ne plus ultra of refinement and peo omg ear distant 510 miles siderable, Pro A a character of the ship for «peed and | the second. The third parlioment had no better nek | The Pope is quietly established in his palace, and | very Edge of Paris,) was one of the richest lever short, we all spenta very agreeable afternoon im ol Distance Tun safety has been so fully established on her own lines. | than its predecessors. | need not recapitulate how | enjoys all the devotedness of those who are dwell- | beheld. Two gentlemen of New York, Messrs. B. | the most beautiful spot of la belle France, There . ~ N long her passage may be expected to stand the shoriest on | the second chamber en ae = some of on ing a Reme. ie oe _ — Antonelli a A sane, vee Loncmnies — = = Imet «charming Indy, whose name (as well as and wie od most important members arrested; how universal | was about to be sent from Rome, with a mission to amps Elysées,decla: at this spectacle was that i i cotling. cans Cape Giese Naw York, 4 suflrage was de facto abrogated by anew law ofelec- | the four powers by whose troops the Pope has been | most magnificent thing ever beheld by thern. of medion ‘scenes. Sackae these oe provisions, b a tho pa at ng ee Langage fo tion, founded on the aristocracy of wealth; and how | replaced on his pontificial chair. The Secretary of | The end of the fire-works was the end of the | widow of the famed thist doctor, whose 1 ore or ‘ the hberal party having refused to elect, a fourth | State of Pius 1X. is not on very good terms with | séfc, and, by half-past eleven, the crowd had aban- brother, Mr. D°H., lives i 3 Gute pissen cos getemng tech wits tee trem; theleay. | cecnmneemnees assembly met, composed almost entirely of conset- | his Holiness. What is the cause of ict Noone | doned the Champs Flysées, although the lights | ti. isu noble. heafted wenn, Yincrnag ee paceengers are | cies. and the gentlemen smoke | afford every comfortable accommodation vatives. Yeteven this obsequious body had their | can tell; but his successor is to be Cardinal Della | were still burning all around. Besides all these | to’ the consolation of the poor, by whom she is xery rapidly. to bring their stock of segarstoas small The Viceroy's cabins are Mtted up in the most eu. | docility rewarded with disgrace and contumely, | Gengu, one of the members of the ex-Union of the | public amusements, an innumerable number of | much loved and blessed. Adieu, —-&B. HL. R. quacks, ‘mounteban & COMpRss Ae porsible perior style and were only saved from an ignominious dismissal ernment. it is said that this nomination would , showmen, dwarfs, giants, . May @.11), A. M Cape Clear in sight Passengers will be conveyed free from Glasgow, | by committing a moral suicide—reversing their oh very bad omen for the constitutional party, and | monsters and other uriosities, had taken pase asion ‘The Electoral Law of F: May W, 52. M--Anchored in the Mersey, at Liver. | Liverpoot inst, Bristol, and Dublin, to Galway, om | own votes at the command of government. Erfurt | for the influence of France in Rome; for the Car- | of the larger squares on the two sides of the ave- LEGISLATIVE ASSEMNLY —sr 8 pool applicati hie respective agents was No. 5, and I have just informed you of the re- | dinal is an old, infatuated and obstinate priest, | nue; and they were fully rewarded, I hope, forthe | Gen. Bedeau, one of the Vice?) caidonts took While we were coming up the river, we were vigh a, Se Ves mnenonaymnett, ot delhi whose opinions and politics are “ behind the age,” | noisy exertions they made to amuse the badauds | the cheirar Mitten <-: co 7 saluted by several vessels, and loudly cheered by | which « sing h*™ Mf put om board at | "The present state of Germany is the most anoma- | and of course anti-progressive. of Paris. Two immense balloons, in the boats of | “"The public tribunes were rowded rh hundreds of persons on the dock. Our arrival was | Publin. “d baif ton (measurement) of | lous one on record. Instead of the union proclaim- | Pius LX. has become an object of love and vene- | which M. and Mdme. Margat, the famed wronauts, | hour; those of the Prestione ab the — lio and looked for with a great deal of interest, and the | jyctnce! ed with so much enthusiasm in 1548, the country | ration to the French troops. Every soldier of the | had taken seats, rose in the afternoon, and soon dis- of the diplomatic co were faed with lad Atlante is the observed of all observers . he vessel will be under the fommand ot Captain | is broken =p into half oven separate leagues, army, either officer or tingle trompicr, who fer. svpeared in the immensity, amidst the shouts of the | (reat animation was poreapebte ae Ded of the On perusing ¢ above log, the reader will per- Ewing. who originally com ied the Weert India | each mt i against the other, abusing one | merly indul in mockery and sarcasm, is | crowd. ; ; gy Sragh ane how of him with respect are admiration, All the | ‘The Grand Duchess of Baden had taken pos- | OU, Where the members were collected in another thi prese, with all the eloquence and elegance of Billingswate, end apparently ready, ceive that, ering all the circumstances under mail packet, from Southampton, so that everything d knowledge of the Atlantic roups; discussing the bill to modify the electoral session, with all her courtiers, of the great baleony w, which, it was expected, wi be» ted , resen| wives of the officers of the French army have been lef! New York, she being hardly that seamanship, #kill, a ready, this being | in reality, @ trial trip—the , navigation can contribute towards the suecess of the | 9: « moment’s notice, to resort to open hostilities. | received by him with much cout and he dis- | of the ministry of the navy and war—the admired Condition of the weather, the strong easterly gales | ¢xperiment, will be ensured What will be the upshot of this “confusion worse | tributed to them many presents Uy Ris | Of all admirers, As for Loute Nepoleon—in the sad Siepenans tes een aiiit in the Assem- which prevailed, and other mattete—! say, taking We learn that the Viceroy had quite a number | confounded,” it is impossible to predict ; but I pre- | hande. ‘ we g Haroun al Rashid, ; had disguised bly, and every eye was ‘isectta Sobcles caeur te a retire ante consileration, and making | oF passengers engaged, including one or two mem- pe a Ay x ‘runing Lond, tens - rad ponte 1" Reeethiste Agee st > oy a ig a ig Ag ry AU | back seats on the first te the bee tt termes and much better than could | bers of Partiameat. @ scattered | stipulated by them, two months ago. In order to | lowed on foot the first street by the side of the | OUtte be that M. Eugene Sue hed just entered, and and projects of the diplomat done reynarkably w was being warm! tulated by some of the I members of the Mountain He afterwards, how- oe ian ia " Were it not for the The arrangement for the renewal of the contract | to the winds. aoa to mee however, the seoetalien se ny of Sarvee, ae on wd pew a into the wary aides a the accident to the which could not be ree stl y, acl So most absurd results may be expected; for in politics, | isters of t “ope have the constitution | crowd. at oceasion—subject ie subjects * medied t sea, we would have made the shortest | “ih the Weer indie Stall Stems. Fosket Conyany although a nation of philosophers, the omens of anew bank. The pelocipal comptoir will be in | —he was among them, list to their propos, pbs ane hited the Chamber, and ge on record between New York and Liver- has been completed. The communication to the the sea made West Indies and Central America is to be twice a month. The Brazil line is to be establiched by the same company, and is to be an independent monthly hearing their sentences ; and, though his polities are not those of the people, I do not ‘think his ears have been ofiended by any disagreeable gossip against him. Everybody seemed only to think of the ‘nt enjoyment, and not of the awful politics. Rome, and it will have two succursales, the first in Bologne, the second at Ancona. al will be two millions of seudi (about eleven millions of frenes.) The shares will be either nominative or fe yable to the bearer. The bank will be estab. te appear to be at utter variance with lowie, and all their proceedings are based on a non sequitur. With more practical good sense, they would never have been reduced to so low an ebb as they are now, nor have allowed themselves to Ke bound once more by the The Minisver or ur Lwrerton thea ascended the tribune, and, in the midat of the ee oe ileace,~ said :—Geutlemen, | have the honor of preseatu to you a bill to modify the legislation now prevail- at Litt f heavy it was inte hing head foremost Instead of he rolling waves, she gently dipped her bows tie w s a i That ing in electoral matters. Shall I read thee and then rode over them majestically, creating no communication, The full particulars of these ar- | Philistines who take sport of their blindness. ed as soon as a million scudi have been deposti- ve been told that when he was returning home, | |S pon = more foam than she would in calm water. From | rangements we will give in a day or two Quite a sensation has been caused here lately by | ed. Its charter will be for ten years for a million | by the National street, he was recognised by a few pend ye! Hi 4 yes!) The Hon. Minister then the t'me we left New York, we did mot ship a single | -rhus we go. ‘The great struggle fur the supre- | the marriage of Prince Adalbert, of Prussia, to | five hundred scudi, and of twenty-four years for | persons, who uttered the cries of vive Napolér “Gentlemen, we thing we are obe the most sea, mocwithstanding the viclence of the gales whih Me i" ; Mile. Therese Eissler, sister of the incomparable | two millions. Every year the bank will have | and fearing, very likely, to be followed, he entered | imperious duty im calling, the nite need hone twe had to encownter: and there was not a time | Macy of the seas has commenced. Fanny. The Prinee, who is first cousin to the | four hundred thousand seudi, either in gold or | the hotel of the Turkish embassy, where he re- sembly to the state elon cacian i? mache u ‘tne ing the whole trip, when the decks were wet, ex- King, has been attached to the lady for many years, | silver, struck at the mint. The maximum of the | mained till a late hour. All the public buildings country hes been most ansiow pk, as meee > by vain. You will perceive, by the log, that | and the fruits of their intimacy are two children, | discount will be six per cent. had been illuminated ; but among them, the most | the uncertainty of the preee : itiedl baer no in y violent gale from the east- Licvos, April 29, 1850, | who are now ted. ‘The bride is said to be | If from Italy you follow me to Germany, you will | brilliant was the Hotel de Ville, where M. Berger, weighs on every mind-—te te. a? i ward, we at the rate of ten and eleven ch Th 4 War with the | ®¥GY, amiable m, although not quite in the | vee, that the partiament of Erfurt, having been pro- | the amiable Prefect of the Seine, was giving alarge | iyzes commerce, and depres ah tate ote miles an } p that ever wan built could | The Americam Claim——Threatened War with the | test bloom of youth; people are even ungallant | mulgated, the members have left the city, but will | ball to the numerous guests of his house. luce, to the great prejudice of the agri frist In Go the seme, wey manner. Even as Cited State, §e., $e enough to insinuate that she is forty-six, bat that, | very likely meet again on the 16th of June next. | Such is the short narration of the very remark: | ‘rvechte ei ike wolahiones cea ate Suse with all our d mishaps, we bh You may look for very stringent communications | of course, is a gross libel, She will bear the title | The Gazerte of Cologne, an always well-informed | able féte of the 4th inst. Several papers had pub- rences are taking vefore ws, the Sleaticn is asked, if the sacred prin- ciples which the constitution proclaims in the pre- amble, finds in the electoral law a sufficient pro- lished falee alarms, saying that they knew that newepaper, asserts that a Congress of the Princes measures hed been taken by the part of the of Countess of Fischbach, after an estate of the ° belonging to the German Union will meet at Ber- made a very Prinee’s in Silesia. Another misallianee in the our time being the averege « Swnard vessels, from your President to Congress, in relation to going the claims made by the United States on Portugal, em | poyal family ie &: (to take place shortly. | lin during the first part of May, in order to protest Repsieton, in. order to begin a riot in the crowd, | tection 1 wader th bracing the case of the “General Armstrong.” It | Prince Albert, the linge youngest ag Ba 7 the pe 5 — ia, ae isto give ee bid ° LB am Rpm rg Tervedos “We do not think #0, gentlemen,» We look on are the j r e v0 e t been divorced from first wife, a Prin- | to the meetin, Frankfort the title of ‘General | and terrible bom! were to be thrown in the * jemen. the Atluntic, the eral of them intend ret haa leaked out here that your minister will be in- | hee just beet «4 r : 4 middie of the people, and during the tumult and that law as defective in many pointe, and we do not hesitate to think that these i ‘etions con- ee Se. 4 yout 7 spread all over | tribute to a gised eutean to tov agurtionemens whieh lace: end the yeece Wee tavintentcly, took | the firmest minds feel relative to universal suffeage. i ace a We ~~) pasedienden” im spite Of | ‘The constitution ought to be respected in letter and 4 On the nant Ory, te bricks ven oh spint; it cannot be either infringed or eladed. Bat , hich had fa- | Jepislators can use loyally, and with eourage, the wored the fete, disappeared behind dark clouds, the | rights which the covstitetion affords thes 10 de rain fell im torrents, and. as there is no féte’ san fend society wh ced. lendemain, the dulness of the weather prevented “Of ail ike pevvislans of the present bill, the may people from returnihg to the Champs Elysees. most dangerous in our opinion is that which coa- The- pleasures of the beaw monde have been fers the right to eleet in a determined place, under quite dall for the last six duys. No wate | the only condition of a teal habitation of #x ae ey a ee. im saloons of the Elysée | months--a simple residence. i en shut, and will be for another week. “ mporary ngeable fact, The fact is that_politics are not very favorable to euliferlte the araeel Soxtene a fhe agi: amsements. The President knows it; for he had trate who draws up the electoral list; a fact which the intention of leaving Paris, for a voyage of aflords room for ah kinds of fraud and felsehoods. pleasure to Fontainblewu ; but thie journey will not |“ «jy to six months that condition, the take place. It has been counterma for the | law gives the tor the right of anecessi' ly in several departments, ducing cees of the Netherlands, is going to marry Mile. de Ranch, daughter to the general of that name, a connexion which, if the ch omigue scandalense may be trusted, was the original cause of his divorce. Thus, you see, the morality of princes and courts has not mach improved since the last century, when France was governed by the King’s mistresses, and the Emprese of Russia chen, her lovers as regularly #s Louis Bonaparte does his ministers, or Count 1 Orsey his cravats The Prince of Prussia, (heit to the crown) is expected here in a few days, from the Rhine, on his road to Warsaw, where he is to meet the Caar, where he intends fixing his residence there during the summer months. Srhis interview shows that the entente cordiale ween the two powers continues as firm as ever, in spite of all the rumors to the contrary; in feet, there can be no doubt but that Se acts as a sort of umpire between ia and Austria, to prevent thelr ocensional bickerings from assuming » more Assembly,” and to take for itself the right of pre- sidence, founded upon the treaties of 1815. Prussia will not egree with Austria, if that government desires to do more than to vote with the other pwers. In such a case all will be right, but if not, Praseia Will oppose its reto to all the acts of the Congress, and nothing will be done. The eabinet of Berlin seems to foresee such a result, and fear- ing #lso that Bavaria will abandon the German Union for the Customs, ministers are ready to make proposels to the States, Mecklenburg, the Hanseutic Cities, and Hanover, to make them unite with the Zolverein. The chances of success are pumerons, if the tariff on the eolorial goods is lowered a little. The destiny of Germany will, besides, be settled at the Cor of Warsaw, where the Emperor Nicholas will ——— The princes of the Ger- manic Confedera will meet there to pay their respects to the Czar, whose relations are all Ger- man, and there will be decided questions relative stantly withdrawn, unless all these claims be forth | with satisfied and paid. It is also well known here te the P ee go pool, the would have made, asthe is capable of that out government (the Portuguese government) dong and will do, the shortest trip that was ever has offered to leave the question of these heard of. The Atlantic w oughly repaired | claims to be decided by any friendly power; or, so and overhauled P iM halt for as regards those of a mereantile character, to Pack ia ber Tehell give a'deseription of the ‘jas competent high-minded men. Your government, enge, not only hoping, but reliably expecting, that | however, in this age of peace-making, is impera- she Will du something worthy of herself and of the | tive, and positively refuses soto arburate! How company to which she belongs; in fact, that she | fer its great *# shown in heetoring a small, ho- will do, on ber return trip, what she would have | norable nation, which has been, for so many years, secemplished on the passnge to Liverpool, but for | afriendly power, isfor your lings mateet Ges think: the notoward acetdent to the ait pamp. Her mo- | ing, fearless citizens to say om may rely on what tion is exceedingly easy and uniform. When she | l say: things are, at this moment, made most serions Tolls in « heavy sen, she does so without thamping. | Rd warlike by Amerien; and a first arrival will, “ She is as stiff asa chureh.” most probably, withdraw your young minister. ‘The admirable arrangements which Mr. Collins | We, here, feel it a satisfaction that, in your coun- de for the comfort and convenience of the pas | UY, the head of your government and his cabinet pemne= cannot declare war, fer we feel sure that if Con- in her to New York, in preference to steamship. If she had been ge trip, for a week, before being di Moment, #8 well as the it review of 300, men, which was to take’ place to-day, in ‘the ~ sadn ¥ same a orked t beautifully during the pas r serious chareeter, and ending in an open breach, | to the order and safety of Europe. It ie impossible | Chemps de Mars, The troops have been confined . 4 i . The lists aan the iraiiating and heating ‘seperatee are | gress be appealed to, she will net with more mag- | which ultimately Would onl to the ad te believe that the present dteation of out ovetinent | to their barracks. The government is on the gut | are ae ape by and in all : nanimity than appears to be the wish of some of | oftheir mutual and most bie enemy—the | is not to be looked at with much attention. But | rite, and waits for more safety and quietness. | the crowided centres the reeult of the election de t harm; complete. and answered their purposes to a cha | the cabinet. revolution. A. B, | there is also something certain, which cannot be the aecoumpedations fos travellers wluch Orders haye been sent to all the forts out of Paris, | pends on a floating mass of electors,. strangers to theetres of Paris. The most remarkable of them. ' '

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