The New York Herald Newspaper, July 5, 1858, Page 3

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NEW YORK HBRALD, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1858, 3 1 . motive in lan- | what had been uently stated other | this of France; but I ties and friendly socities, t! f : AF EARS IM EUROPE sas a8 the ta th | Comutadaner of the Donvdation who had “been in ape necked Soci. ad ce ns eT | the deposits to EiSas it. Tha mere Tos do, | 10;0 dealers i thore article, "0" “™*°7® "pom 3 their loyalty crown, | Brittany. would interest readers uainted |, positors of and under; 399 of £5; 176, thorized Inside Views of France, which is indisputable, causes them to be looked | The weakness of republicanism in France has con- | with. T may, at a Time enter" upan. thove | £10; 128,000 of £155. 74,309 of 207 Lav asd at 290+ | an eanre a fo comtaet totmaliy, and’ cat Divan (Cotes da Nord), May 28, 1858. | upon here in sisted In ite willingness, whenever it bad the | topics, Meanwhile, rest amured that tiie form of | 106,009 of £40; 52,065 of £50; 98,560 of £75; 41,634 | suyn the Nord, the rumor spread by come, tent Dinan— Political Opinions of the Bretons—Real Mo | _ Perhaps more illus. | power, to prosecute rel com ; and the ment most agreeable to the mam of popalsr of £100; 27.988 of £125; 16,351 of £150; 25,820 of | joumals, of Desttiien Raving: teckcs ont ae tive of the Intended Visit of Napoleon 111. to Brit- | ‘ration of the dislike entertained here of the main strength of Bourboniam (that is, the principle i Bebtey t t which now exists: that the £200; and 1,470 of £200 and upwards. Assur between tha Ukinese and the Tewslane, Tae tany—Antiquities of Di Iie Walle, Castle, | ¥ aaa oval of ao teany English Be with- the belief that a ee = — s on to iperor is one Tn consequence of the great mortality which has | statement has no sort of foundation; the most com- Churches, Memorials of Duqueselin, Anne of Brit- | taking up their abode Dinan and its neighbor: | science "sake would cease with its restoration to Breton es ages ig the proposed sty, mien pee Mice ota i an Sicmemetie enonaoey Bh ieeer aes not having ceased to prevail in % hood:— to ‘id ry “ Fg ee a al “The Rance,” (says M. Favat, in one of his latest are. certain, circumstances commtoted | Ipeakes'as ten coun) 2 (MM | VeRO See a ee tae nae | aa Th Landon News has the following:—-the wi Breton Hatred of the English—: ‘auses— | productions, L’ de Fer;) “is a river taken | with this subj ligions persecution by the suet 7 Abe ivan, han set i, the Société | marine cable between Portland and Alderney will Prices of Living in Brittany, §¢. possession of by the English. From St. Servan to | French republicans hich are well remem- Foreign Miscellany. 4 Acclimatation proposed to introduce into Francethe | not be much above fifty miles long. Cherbourg can Of the millions of readers of the New York Hznaxp | Dinan you see nothing but white cottages, in which | hered in this of the” empire, and | . The Paris Patric crntaina the folvowing observa: | shd which lecectiy: fed on the leaves af The fieinum, | Ugemectualy Watched, from the neighborhood, of we a handel tnt ever heard of Dian, in| Ohne, Be, ayiion, Bry ‘levenson Fac Aa | tat tet, Bs Yorn oan ce | into he ren of M Jee Pr neo ie | te eis of whi far th aperant tar | ate ca. vn toa partaof aguno ay ! Brittany? Of the Leia of your pee who | of a Miss ‘Anna, ce sighs and pines. I have myself | tion did not cease. I shall ony Ba neko of the Senevareien es Pp re Ostia pane. weatane bin es i and pete yeep he bape boar yg Sige The a have from time to time visited Europe, is there a | seen upon the door of a public this brutal en- | massacres of the clergy in and elsewhere in | This gentleman has placed the boldness and elo- | in France, particularl ye We wren ih “ - aoe Re 8 ay maple, oe we ie fi r ” single person who has stood upon the ramparts of conquest—‘English ape, 1793; and T only allude to the mee les of Nantes by | quence of his speech at the service of principles ow | question have succeeded perfectly well inthe French | j, this ancient city? I suppose not one. it ip printed in the oh final it ee Rata Bod ine oie the Piast pre Mot ee Pat ht pelea ey pay preva onsen wel ee erg Spe F ‘tte : "have Le cod sent to ) “aeeteaean ts tacked beak lately seized Permit me, then, to make you acquainted with | rious specimen of the Knglish language. Here | clergymen on the 16th of November, and again of | ship, swore Obedienceto the constitution and fidelity | yariment has perfectly succeeded the new species of by Seats belongs to Yemen, oF Arabia Felix, this place; for despite of its obscurity it deserves to | itis:— seventy-four clergymen on the 10th of December, | tothe Emperor. This oath was a divorce from those Rims being found universally hardy and enduring, | ¥0 een oe gored by fie Tpeemict ens ; rc e “J? ai vu sur laporte d'un cabaret ce brutal insigne | 1793. In four months of the year 1794 there were aussions which had reck is abil be known; and the time, poriapey: not far distant | 2, 19 con te—Ingliche mg!” twelve clergymen slain in Rennes alone, whilst in a The Wat “Atri ay boone on ¥ or ph C The proposed alterations of the army esti- | long line of monarchs, ‘The Turks had then no foot- when the opinions it entertains.will—because they Tn justice to “lea .A .? 90 ingly re- | other places, such as Nantes, Saint Briene, Saint | Coast, publishes in its iasu f Roby sini ie lets mates are as follows:—There are additions tothe | ing whatever in Arabia, save in the northern are the opinions of a large section of Frenchmen— | ferred to in the preceding extract, Tam bound to | Malo and Guingeamp, the most awful excesses were | describt g an attack naliia epa, Sk initedicees er | original estimates for 1858-59 of £10,000 for the | of the Hejaz, in the immediate vicinity of the Holy tend to modify not only the existing condition of | £aY, 0 far asmy acquaintance among them extends, | committed. On the 6th of January, 1795, there | the factory of M. Regis, of flee (Prone moi, | purchase of iron ordnance, and of £10,000 for the | cittes; and it was not until after the conquest of that they do not provoke by their conduct the hos: | were 760 cie confined on the vessels at OF Bee mee: les (French immi | Royal Military and Staff College, making £20,000. | Aden by the British, about thirty years later, that airs, but also the future government of France. — | tile feelings entertained with respect to them. | Rochfort- In 1790 and 1707, the whole of Brits Bin nevway aurprision and ennets tarit povane | The deductions from the original estinnte on the | this province became a part of the Tarkish empire. ressin, “ : 5 3 1 hare two objoste in view in addreming efew | Dinan i ne reapect ike to ule or tt ay hot ake | Bazaar way of M. Chiles, the azent, in-Gealing | amount of the nedution into’ entinaton ‘wil bo | uur ‘athe sntjee foreign rallway secures letters to you from locality—first, I desire to seccatorum’— it is not the haunt of runaway debtors, they could @lscovered, On 12th of March, 1798, with tte 28 ives. He is said to have attempted to | ¢119,639, stimates will be | tewr on oe subject of ieee railway securities. . 4 G32. oP call attention to a district in France which is 90 wel or same or blacklegs. It has no attractions for | there were 155 clergymen transported from Rochfort peach fag ag 1s so fe ers The London Examiner of the 17th ultimo says:— p plioctyromnede pone hee fase 4 ~ 7 worth visiting, and has hithertoremained unexplored | any such classes. It has no places of public amuse- | to th sai T have before me a list of clergymen | town have been com, Moana tioremarbicatp meee The niceties of ciroumspection are riot to be lcoked companies of railways constructed out of Praneeie by Americans. Next, I wish to give you informa. a Me ruagort ee ter} bo degitieny Lae a re peared in Pe wale Gackiargeag By on igi — compensation. M. ier was also ordered to Great | forin the commanders of cruisers, while on the other | subjected tothe laws and regulations applicable to tion, as from an eye witness, of the condition—physi- ea anes hcsinediogns would ind rigs ilcult to | M. Georgelin, “whilst attending a dying person,” James Town. A fine of $500 was also laid on the | band we have to lay our account with the most ex- | French securities of the same kind. The compa- al and moral—of the agricultural classes in France, |} obtain admission. A man without res Notable ‘ante | and M. Thral’ “whitst 6 pHa Ning Pe Ther f le of James Town, which they agreed to wil- | Kerated susceptibility on the side of those molest- | nies must prove that they have been constituted ac- ' le spect . ,! going to a bap! ere | lingly enough, so glad were they at the enforced re- | @4 by any breach of interference. Raise the block- | cording to the laws of the country in which they and then of the political opinions they entertain; | cedents would soon see it was impossible for him to | were at one time in 1798 in the Isle do Ré no less } tirqnent of M. Cartier. ade before mischief is done; and that is not all, let | are formed, by the presentation to the Minister of and how it is probable they will conduct themselves | remain in Dinan. He could find no one to associate | than 1,200 clergymen confined in the citadel, and on ss a England give notice to all nations concerned in'the | Finance and to the Synodical Cham'er of the P te arine, be forced the | With him. The English here are, without, I believe, | the 1st of August 101 of these were transported to A table by Mr. Haywood, engineer to the City of | slave trade that she will take her share in the work | Agentsde Change of authentic copies of the sta- ould another crisis arise, or be forced upon the } 2 ino tion with families, and they | G The f the dittere Lordon Board ot Sewers, shows that: the total traffic , Hi i i me Ms e by tbe B notabilities. a single exce i ns and they | Guyama. names of the nt clergymen sent no oes an tees Grice cae Gx of humanity if they will contribute their quota of | tutes, cahiers de charges, de. country by ‘arisian are attracted to this place by these two considera. | ds prisoners to the Isle de Ré in 1798 and 1799 fill (twelve growues. DEUS © 'Y | assistance, but that she will no longer consent to | ‘The Portuguese government, which for upwards , : : hours) of th f last year, amounted : ti : What importance the Emperor of the French | tions—the beauty of surrounding country and | six closely printed pages of an octavo volume. But | to” 95, “ppedl wind etery kin de By ‘Corghill bear the whole burden of the task. of three years has been endeavoring to induce the attaches to the opinions of the Bretona is proved by | the cheapness of living. The rents here will, I } the patent proof of this persecution, and the manner | (7p ya1 foxchan 256: The London Times of the 15th ultimo remarks:—~ | formation of steam lines between Lisbon and the A 4 imagine inhabitant of New York. 'A | in which it was carried out, is the undoubted and | (Reyal Exchange), 5,256; Temple Bur (a great ob- * fs ‘i the fact of his contemplated visit to it at a ve pid on } 4 : , r 33° Tudga i Nobody can seriously imagine that such a country | Azores, and Lisbon and its possessions on the West TY | house, with rooms, cave grenier a good garden, | extraordinary fact that in the our Pa of the year striction), 9,883; Tudgate hill (Pilgrim street), United Kingdom would shrink from a ped Coast ot ‘Abrica, have jnst issued a decree declaring 10,4263 ion. bridge, Phe as the hou of the enn traffic Le it mr ee eed flict with the United States if justice were on our | void the two previous concessions granted—the one was 15,204 at twelve no ff 54 | Side, and the war were forced upon us. Butin any | on the 26th of January, 1855, to Low Brothers, of mas "A.M. One of the’ pane Mesh G Ma case it would be a serious calamity to the world, and | Lon ‘ton; the other on the Lsth of April, 1856, to F. forned corporation of London will be to increase the | ¥¢ Df bee to see that, generally speaking, the tone | 8. Philippon, from their inability hitherto to carry street facilities, especially by the purchase of the of feeling throughout the States is in favor of mode- | them out; and have renewed the grant in favor of Southwark iron bridge, which may be obtained for rate counsels. Me y other Portuguese capitalists, who purpose, in con- £300,000. a. oma Le ee of pe pomercy tn it —_— — Mr. Se to carry A pamp A i as war should come, whether from France orelsewhoere, | out both the projected lines. states ‘that in Germany, excluding Austria, the tearm, a Aracion of ont, et are at | desirable with regard to the future extension of the amount of such securities is 135,371,000 thalers, and pling bs aa nt e experiment. We do not expect | telegraphic system, that it should be most distinctly that 87,429,000 thalers of that sum have been issued | jt. iw thealoe 1 encourage thom to try it again. 1 understood that the possibility of submerging tele- since 1818.’ These figures are, b wer, only ap iat in the abseace of ¢ ay assignable re ason, it would raph cables in great depths of water must not be proximative; the banks of Brunswic!s, Dessau, Leip- iad with the k to suspect the good faith of our ally: | judged of by the resulta of the attempt about to be He and Rostock not publishing aby return of thelr | 20% with the knowledgo-we have of the resources ot | made by the Atantlo Telegraph Company. notes, France, following our example, has i eye to the | » The revenue of the London Court of Bankruptcy ‘A Parliamentary return shows that the British | efficient drilling and numerical strength of herarmy | fF the year 1857 amounted to £100,752, and. the mint cained in 1857 gold to the value of £4,859,000, | and navy. cane fa or A lag ng Ls of Ww! £364,000 was in half sovereizus. The silver | * nde; D from Conta, coinage of vhe year amounted to £ 1000, cI ii Tye Jean Dest, of she he of dome speek. b kos ial assignees, £19,109 from stamp duties by of the metal sed being £363,000. Of thesilver | ME Of, the establishment of a steamslip, line | Commiasioners of Inland Revenue, and £12,728 from coined last year it appears that £167,000 was in bell, the ‘Lord Chiet Jeailen yo panache yr interest in the Bankruptcy Fund Account, yey » » ‘ pore eke oe nag Fe tos in rary Barna estates, which adjoin the town of Galway, The Paris correspondent of the London Telegraph pac ee age a ily er in | His property will be doubled in value, and that may | observes:—The subscription for the establishment porn gh tee 12 pein the 31 " tyr give him some secret satisfaction for the displace. | of Orsini’s children is said in England and America Looe ene te OG Maka aed 23.494 000g | mentof Lord Palmerston. In the improvement of | to have reached @ very le sum, by , 1887, 239,000 in gold, aud £2,434, his possessions in the west of Ireland Lord Clanri- | means merely of private solicitation. 1 this to be , early period—the pretence being a visit to the Brest } poultry yard, stable and house, can be had for | 1800 there were no less than 5,621 refugee French , fleet—but the real purpose being to canvass for popu- | £12 a year. A house, not a quarter of a mile from | clergymen receiving small pensions from the English Jority amongst ‘!:e descendants of those who fought the town, containing sixteen rooms, fine large | government—that 1s, an allowance barely sufficient ” a rooms, with stables, outoffices, two gardens, and two | to save each of the recipients from dying of starva- for years against the republic, and who, when the | acres and a halt of ‘ground, can be had for £16 a | tion. first’Bonaperte had been overthrown, were amongst | year. A very large house, with twelve rooms, two By whom was this persecution put an end to? By the most eager and zealous of their countrymen to | yardens, both stocked with the best fruits, and the | Napoleon Bonaparte—not by the Bourdons. The welcome back the Bourbons, to repudiate the eagle, | pasturage of twenty acres, can be had for £10 ayear; | first had power, and was raising up a throne for him- and restore the lily as the emblem of their country | this last being three miles outside of Dinan,and in | self. The latter were in exile—wanderers from and its goverament, v a pretty village. Iam describing to you places I | France—dependents upon other monarchs. Before I enter into matters of political importance, | huye myself looked at. Here is alist of the prices | As republicanism was unpopular because of itsin- I wish to say something of Dinan itself. I know of no | charged the day 1 wrote this letter to you. Bear in | tolerance, #0 Napaleon I. won great popularity by place (and my knowledge of the Continent is by no | mind that in giving these prices the French pound | the manner in which he commenced his reign. His means slight or confined) that, 1 think, would be | contains eighteen ounces:—Best bread 1d. per lb., | concordat with Pius VII. was deemed to be a mea- more interesting toa person coming from the New | butter 8d., beef, mutton and veal, all the same | sure equally wise, timely and temperate. World to visit, than this city, which is in itself an | price, 5d. per Ib.; pork, 64d.; spring chickens, 15d. | At the downfall of Napoleon, this, like other parts brite of the Old World ina most marvellous | the pair; eggs, 4d. the dozen. of France, was exhausted by his constant wars; and, state of preservation. A single illustration of its] Here are the attractions to the English to take | as it was suppoewt his d. y had forever disap- Fy age will suffice. There are but two churckes | yp their abode in Dinan and its neighborhood, and | peared with route at Waterloo, the Bourbons the town, St. Malo’s and St.Sauveurs. The first | here they live, rec regardless of the feelings that | were welcomed back to their throne by the Bretons, was erected at the aame time that Canute, the Dane, may be. entertained respecting them, indifferent | who conceived that so long as they reigned there was King of England, and the foundation of the | alike to love or hatred, and only, in rare instances, | was a bulwark to be found against the of second was laid in the very same year that William | condescending to know or keep up an acquaintance | intolerant republicanism. the Soeanerce landed in England and fought the | with the French. Charles X., the legitimate king, was overthrown battle of Hastings. The churches are, notwithstand- | | have only fulfilled in this letter one of the ob- by bis cousin of Orleans, and the triumph of Fouis og, Se Ray eee oe ty ene ts a had im view i in writing to yon Na of direst, Fh lippe was won by the pwards, pikes and gone of walls parts ding— | ing the attention your readers tow: inan ani red republicans in, imongst the ear! adorned, not defaced, with ivy and wilé flowers—and ittany. In my next I shall enter into other, | acts Sins new King was one of Tmpeoroed reli- as firmly erect as when their Is, ballista and | larger and more important topics, to which I have, persecution in this part of France—the expul- | sil their t glan / ' gio iA — carde may find ampl nsation for the loss of | regarded as a demonstration, or a4 @ mere act of Fhe pei Sep 2, parte King, Monet, cates as yet, but slightly glanced. ee Seicomn Dame aod mew b rger ‘The government of Holland has presented to the | the privy seal, hich 90 suddenly coca Ded bis sr0p- charity? In neither case is there any reason for the . , t00, is - i apes eis . pevnr . e country. In @ | have not yet n Tew: ith the wel ited | much of a man as , Was © e - e only e still stand- | potitical Opinion in Brittany—A Part of France | Brittany; and so long as the conilict for power lay | gen of expenses amounted to 70,012,195 | baton of a-maruhal, will be pleased with the pro- | ble, and, ia'his way, equally courageous—should ‘be ing the house of ‘the ladye love” of the bravest, best A between legitimists and Orleanists, the great bod, ine traest of knights in the great days of chivalry | Always Remarkable for Maintaining an Indepen- | of the people here were ready and willing to range echt cut conquered’ cretl ait trensberae Hing: | Sent, Cpinie Some Portis te Brito’ oe | 'ibet ste of things ie. pow shagether chan Eng- istric pi icanism it it state o' is now er 5 tah’ champion, yeleped “Thomas of Canterbury,” | Other Districts of France— Red Republi in | mhe republicans who made Louis Phillippe ine ty and here, too, precisely the same in walls, floors, | © Towns—Why Brittany is Supposed to be Devoted | their own hands discrowned him. They occupied Sawa eee “ —— to the Bourbons—Contrast between Republicans in ble Position fora eet, and oo, ped oo Ay be Anne “ the United States and France—The Latter Per- | fore the legions who, for the sake of the Cesar they stone chair of state, in which she sat as sovereign, : wedge . jo ag GeO eg ale sign, te “Cwil Constitution of the Clergy”— we loved, supported the pretensions of the modern a. dts Consequences—Struggle for Freedom of Wor- t is the feeling of the Bretons as to these Tt tie poe in ae ——— ae come at ship—Persecutions from 1790 to 1800-—Authentic | several claimants to power? an see—as dist as they see s : ’ . Broadway in New York-—the things of which ty | Misstrations — Persecution Put an End toby | prance, lertimista, Orleani, republicans, Bons: have read in histories and romances—plain to the | Bonaparte—Louis Phihppe—The Legitimists— | partists. ‘The adherents of these various names or vision, palpable to the truth. Here are standing | hei Respectabitity—The Orleanists—Their Di- | principles are amongst the educated and intelligent memorials of the times—and here are, too,in | jemma—Claims to Popularity Analyzed—Repub- | Classes, The legitimists wish for the restoration of the very persons who jostle you as you walk along, Their Ve Sha Henry V., (the Duc de Bourdeaux,) because they the living representatives of men that might be sup: | écans— ‘arious jades—Bonapartsem— say that the country can in no other way be secared posed to have died out centuries ago. Here are the The Clergy— Their Differences— Intended Visitof the ra of repeated revolutions. gigantic Gauls as they were in the days of Cesar— | Napoleon III.to Brittany—Probable Reception, §c. | Tue maintainers of this opinion are, without a “Nam plerisque hominibus Gallis, pra tudine | 1 wish to commence this letter with the observa- | Single exception, excellent, respectable, virtuous corporum suorum, brevitas nostra contemptui esi. ‘ persons, of unimpeachable honor and exemplary in- lere ay are, still as hulking in size and gait, and tion that the statements contained, and the opinions tegrity; but years and circumstances are wearing still es to undervalue the general race of | expressed in it, are to be understood as applying | them out, and telling against them. Years are car- Frenchmen as their fathers were to despise the | .olely to that part of France which stretches in one | Tying away the most devoted and distinguished of short sized Romans. Here they are as eager for ; +" 0@ | the legitiosts, and circumstances are beginning to news, as impetuous in their feelings, as ready to re- | direction from Nantes to St. Milo, and that lies in | Siow that, so far as legitimacy in Frunce is con- sent a supposed wrong, as prompt to repent of a | another, between Rennes and Brest. You are not to | cerned, it is a principle on a’ life annuity, for the fama — now Eg en Sey yd judge of all France, nor, indeed, of any other part of legitinalst Fleer ae V.is slide, and. his heirs " Y a , Ww first time by their Roman conqueror. Even in their France, by the state of things, the condition of men have held is own, bechine thay Gaslgiel hagba outward habiliments they are little changed from | or the notions prevalent in the section of the French | ag q bad and wicked principle the Very principle of pon Ghesyeorrmene Tak he a bet ay “4 empire which was once known as Armorica, then as | legitimacy. bh y" ', ing whic ‘i ti A latter nt Tacitas casts an additional reproach Brittany, and now inaeden +> sraperend sanest, no Lh ‘4 ‘ne ba barman hy Ay siagianer red upon the memory of Vitellius. Here, in short, is the ments as the Cotes du Nord, Finisterre, Morbihan, | Jeanism, when Orleanism (personified by its founder, pure old Celtic race in all its L epepe simplicity, Mlle et Vilatne. Louis Philippe,) would have punished hiia as a traitor with ail its virtues.and all its failings unadulterated; | qis section of France has always had an indepen- | had he openly manifested his allegiance to his legiti- for this is an out of the way part of the Continent, ‘ mate prince? and there is as little likeness in appearance, or | dentopinion of its own, and that more frequently at } “Tere is the weakness of legitimacy and Orleanism similarity in feeling between the Breton and the Pari- | variance, than in accordance, with the predominant rs be in France. The one cannot survive Henry V. because florins, or nearly 141 millions of trance; and in 1857 | spective improvement of his Galway estates. forgotten. His wife and child are now absolutely the amount was 94,155,079 florins. This augmenta- A starving in a miserable lodging in the Rue d’Kafer, tion, however, presents nothing alarming, for the There has been a cessation of the exportation of | Could not some small per centage of the Orsini receipts have increased in an infinitely greater pro- British Oni to France, inconsequence of the al- | fund be applied to their reiief? 1 object altogether portion, having been seventy-six millions of florins in | teration in the French laws last August sanctioning | to munificent provision being made for the 850, and being at present not less than one hundred | the use of grain im distilleries, and imposing a duty | family of a regicide. A subsistence would have been and thirteen millions. upon A epoelcoire ‘naen det Yone Se _— sufficient. ‘The various orders of Druids in England, Ameri- | ® ne oo4d worn Bey hy count ca and Australia, peaing the advantaes of ‘a mem- | Ws 3,624,866 gallons, — 5,717,529 gallons in FE alm natn ie po Fs tee the ber finding himself. ag it were, at home wherever | the year ending the 31st March, 1557. month of March was £3,017,246, and for the first his order chances to have a lodge, they have deter- The Society of Friends in England rezently ad- | three months of the year £10/251,24 minedif possible to re-unite them into one grand | dressed a memorial to the Emperor of the French i 98d : h I order, so that the above advantages may extend to | on the subject of the African slave trade. They A proprietor of ine works in the Landes, France, every part of the world where Drnids sre to be found. | say:—Deeply impressed with the enormity and has discharged five hundred be ge pent finaing it im- Their privileges do not only include the Masonic | sinfuiness, in the sight of God, of buying and sell- | Possible to dispose of his stock of wrought iron. principle of nllenthrogy but also embrace the ad- ing our fellow-men and treating them ‘a8 the beasts The Bury (England) Post says:—An accident, vantages of friendly societies, and extend to paying that petite we do earnestly entreat the Emperor of | likely to have been of a serious character, has oc- and receiving money for each other, and iso to | the French'so to exercise the power intrasted to | curred in this town, owing to the unyielding nature watching over the necessities and conduct of mem- | him that no proceedings on the part of the French | of the materials now used by; the ladies to extend bers when from under the surveillaace of their own | government may in future open the way for a re- | their dresses to the requi faxhtonable state of — vival of this trade in human beings; t all at- | expansion. A lady in alighting from her vehicle he official correspondence between Lord Malmes- | tempts to introduce intothe colonies of France na- caught the steel spring of her petticoat on the step, bury aed Count Carafa shows how sudden and com- | tives of Africa under the name of free emigrants, and was precipitated with great force to the ground, plete has been the submission of the Neapolitan i on may henceforth be absolutely prohibited. where she lay on her back vainly endeavoring: to vernment in the question of the Cagliari and A letter from Rome of the 26th May says:—M. de ppm beens aa [rey my the English engineers. Ki , 4 i isseleff, the Russian Minister to t) ‘oly See, t am 4 a] ns The traffic returns of railways in the United Sag this morning te Naples, povdd i oa he Gietance Denes bad cam tee. dom, pablished for the week ending June 1%, | mission from his court to the King of the Two | 4 statue to General Pep>, distinguished by his amounted to £445,670, and for the coi nding | Sicilies. Yesterday alarge party of the French resi- efforts for the liberation of Italy from Austrian pre- week of last year to £471,40, showing a decrease | dents here went to Ostia to visit the numerous dis dominance, has been inaugurated with fitting pomp of £25,870. ‘The gross receipts of the eight rail- | coveries made in that old city by means of the ex- | 4 Tarin. ways having their termini in London amounted, for | cavations ordered by the Pope, and directed by Com- The Gazette de France, in commenting oa the the week ending as above, to £188,922, and for the | mander Visconti, On reaching Ostia the party | large standing armies of the Continent, which it corresponding week of last year to £199,948, show- | Janded, and were conducted by M. Visconti through | declares necéseary on account of the “ revolation,” ing a decrease of £16,026. the excavations, and the greatest surprise was ex- | casts the following reflection on their practical utili- Areport which the Porte communicated to the | pressed at the compitte manner in which the rain pias is worthy of remark that those nations of foreign ambassadors at Constantinople on the mili- | of that once splendid city have been brought to light. | Burope the armies of which are the weakest in pro~ tary events which occurred in Montenegro has been | The fountains, the public squares, the baths of An- portion to the extent of their territory and to the received at the Foreign Office in Paris. This report | toninus Pins, with their fine mosaics, the statues, | number df their inhabitants effect and preserve the agrees with that of the Ea: an Consuls, and is in | and the columns constitute the finest group of ruins | greatest conquests. Has not England saeceeded contradiction to that which Prince Mirko made to | that can be possibly conceived. The chateau of with her sixty or eighty thousand soldiers in main- his brother Daniel. It has been determined that | Castel Fuzano, with its wood of fir trees, was after. | taining her rule over islands, kingdoms and empires sian as is between a Connaughtman and a Cock- | opinion at Paris, whether such was embodied in the | the other cannot accept a succession it has alread, ney. The men retain their nationality in their cos- | s.5, ecthahh tneethtls, Gr Giatetiobel ane re crated Oriente ban warn the crown because | Montenegro shall not be represented at the ap- | wards visited by the party,after which they returned | dispersed over the globe, and in protecting a com- tango cond Chale whens and. Cashiers ane worthy, of code rth Pe ce , ongss | jr cknowledged popularelection as the only rightfal | proaching conferences at Constantinople. P | yo Rome, delighted with thelr excursion. > metce three times more ‘considerable than that of gach hasbands and fathers. ir costume—I refer | @ number of untitled citizens who sat in conven | source of power. it cannot new, for its advantage, | The London Times of the 19th ultimo, remarks:— | Another letter from Rome says:—What is still more several great Continental nations put together ? to the peasantry—is the same as you may see on an | tions,, ded over clubs, and brought disgrace upon | turn back on what it had previously, for its advan- ancient marble or Pompeiian painting--but still | the n@ ye of “republic” by their crimes, their tyran- tage, repudiated. And Gee ca the her side, thet all didering from each other in one particular; that | ny ap’. their corruption. which it acknowledged as “the source of power” has be in she extraordinary shape and form ef their snow Tt#, fll then, I'nm sare, be a matter of interest to | decided against it, ead chosen as the ruler of France, ite caps- —< pomene ba Ne a cap of a peculiar ‘ readets of the New York Henra.p to have, | not an Orleans, lata Bonaparte. In politics, how- nee lie ee joafs, otf Ike a mili m an int al witness, a clear statement asto | ever, it must He recollected that men do not guide officer hep ; ~s - _ wees turn ‘Bt are thi Me feelings here prevalent; and | their actions Ly the strict rules of logic. In such wa e " p fA od ead, ah #0 1 the women | i@ what so i ey bear for or agninst that form of | cases their {yassions and their private interests are Sue pecallaity * wicca tela” by | gM@ument, which was establ by the coup | the strodizest motives for thelr conduct, And 99 a \e mber. Orleanitin 18 a highly respectable party—that is, it Pree or bee Mr ten f i persons, and contrast | ‘Thereare here, asin all parts of France, Legiti- has getned the namesof the most cmingnt men av its : © oe, ing through a town thatis the same | mists, Orleanists, Red Republicans, Bonapartists. supporters, because it has identified itself with what . -E. Ww. sprearenee, as it was six or seven hun- Of these different parties it is necessary te say a | is oriled “a constitutional system of government.” — zone —_ - wo surrounded with | few words; and to understand the present must } Strong in other parts of France, it is the most con- gy ae mS y feet high; its broad | cast a glance back atthe past; for ont of the events | tenptible of all ‘ies in this portion of the empire; —, Sank ote (Fy vp ep gates, and | that have occurred in this pois of France have | for those who had been, when it reigned, the ‘nm remember tha: placed on the top of | arisen the fixed opintons and the settle’ convictions | imaost remarkable of its supporters, have given their How, if it should tarn out that, save in the abolition | important than all that, is the possible, if not yet The Friend of China says:—A report is current of negro slavery under our own flag, we have during probable, fall of Cardinal Antonelli. The late | at Fatshan that the Emperor Heentung, whose the last half century done more evil than good~-that | changes made in the higher offices of the adminis: | health had been waning for some time. was so af- we had not benelitted, but injured the African? | tration have displeased him. Prince Orsini, dis- | fected on receipt of the news of the capture of Can- Thoughtful men are begtoning to say that we have couraged, has given ia his resignation as Senator of | ton that he “collapsed,” and is now among the been mistaken in this matter, as we mistaken ; Rome. Seine Aiaeae ee eae pony he Ne genii. about close boroughs and close ports, We have | not preside at the Jouncil of Ministers so long as M. " m Showk jclose, boronghn, AD close, pores re are | Antal the Dew Minister of Public Works, should ait | tee aveton, Pest romana. Prom tte we renshod not upon a well matured opinion. there. The new minister, on his part, does not wish | thiy country it does not seem to have deep-seated Lord Palmerston it was who brewed this storm | see C ‘ardinal Antonelli. conviction for its basis, and to be only one of those (naval difficulty), which like other of his ditticult nasnening tes reper’ just published of the mara- | outbreaks of religions excitement regarded by legacies, will be amicably and satisfactorily ailayed | time movement of the port of Suez during 1857, the chologista as epidemics of slight in<anity, the by his successor. Much reason have the exponents vessels which entered amounted to 55, measuring | two main characteristics of which are hysterical dis- ot public opinion in the United States to rejoice 71,650 tons, and having a total of 18,065 horse power. | order and evanescence. over the political downfall of a statesman who ex: | The departares were 56, measnring 72,850 tons, with An annual repert states that fh 18,535 horse power. The number of passengers who | yijed and 738 injured on railway: arrived were 3,042, and those who left 3,672, exclu- | Kingdom in 1857, of whom 48 killed and 646 injured persons were the United a high, steep hill; at its base on one side a deep val- | of the great mass i and equally strong are their reasons mw Jey, and onell the othere enclosed by the Bright Whatever rrongth the repubtions have in Brit- ee ee eters Tioos it en- Brae a nnder a Minister like Lord Derby, the | sive of 2,762 English soldiers who had taken the | were passengers. waters of the river Rance: end then that the whole tany is confined to the towns. If the information” euvend roy? hae t M. Odillon Barrott and other lomestic and foreign policies of Great Britain as | overland route to proceed to India. Jooks out upon a scene of infinite variety and beauty— | have collected be correct, the nember of repr¥i- | “reformers” making speeches at a public din- | fume a more really liberal, equitable and generally | 4 very interesting report upon the Equator waste Superior Court—General Term. on pee oe on distant bills, and far off | cans in of the towns, with the exception of | wer; Orleaniam, which enacted “the September | SAtislactory character. lands, assigned by the goverument of Equador (0 | petore ron. Jadges Bosworth, Hoffman, Sioeece, Woodratt steeples of old, old clairches, and you have some | Nantes and Rennes, is absolutly despicable, ‘aad | iaws” againat journalism, and Orieanism, which con- | The Yondon Post of same day observes: Ie could | he lanitatien of i beastie bonds or land war- poi | Sloreen Hdea—and after all a very faint idea—of what a | propacandism by secret doctetios amongst the agri: | trived to have a Parliamentary system based upon | appear that the British syiadron js tf be withdrawn | rants, has been published by the Equatorian Com- Merrepont. Feeas those wind teal well worthy it is of | cultural popu! has utterly failed of success. jobbing, with more places to give away than there | from Cuba. In adopting this course the government mission of Agency, in London. The lands are situ- DRCIRIONS, by, an@ wish to behold tn al Pye in times gone | The of Brittany—physical and mora!-—isde- | were electors to make representatives; that exme | has undoubtedly acted with great prudence and die ated in various parts of the republic, and, ncuseiang Jeny 9 —Nathan Rogers, &e., against David ©. Mur- Ja a ‘clin tm the foling oh pope @ gennine in its agricultural population. ‘Tht popu- | Orleanism is now, it appears, sustained on the | cretion. A large propertion of the commerce of the to Mr. Pritchett’s account, are admirably adapted | pay —Jadgment reverted and new trial granted on pay- Pm ly vot peer Hem —the central object tion is remarkable for ite jttachment to itesellgion. ‘ound that Orleanism is to be ientified with “fres- | United States must necessarily pass through the | for colonisation, extremely fertile and weil of conta of the trial and subsequent proceedings, ex- . uJ epinions of arms, t) vie ims for a and nol ct of suppressing the slave mn faci jorma- on, : rn OOS | Ce ee Ee ee eure meaee | tele creer a aoe eee a eee ie to be put | fiom of a port which in the course of time would. | cause and abide the event. it of Dunkirk is as little disposed to say | to whom the peasantry are devotedly attached, | herents. Th pretensions to larity are not re- he is a Breton as a native born Dinanese is inclined to | would have freat influence. The cler: y however, coguiaed Pimoged oy therefore, ofa 1 the, the least, call himself ebnan. Cf his nationality: ond Te fo Tie eee tees rou | are not a umited body. Before L close. this letter 1 | the smallest and the weakest in Brittany is Orlean- to the fof her right to wear the national colors | from its situation and advantages, divert a large Kleavor Mesercle sgainst William J. Archer et al.— under Thich she calla? proportion of the trade of Guayaquil. The produe- —— affirmed, with costs. aforee the | tions are gold, silver, copper, cotton, tobacco, woods, Parestt etal ve. The Ortent Matos! Tewarance al } poast that from the | shall pointont to you— tall i . Joba A. Clessmen vs. lense H Merkle.—-Jademeat re first attempt made on the independence of his coun- whidl th one, nol the points on | iem. The London Chronicle says:—If we coa, bark and if whi indigenous, | Company.-—Jadg ig by Clovis, in 509, his ane ey are divided from each other. "As to republicanism—althongh there exe repabli- | claim of “visiting” suepicions vessels, all the for. | Cocoa, bark and guine, aff of whieh are tadligen ts, eee = <i, try by Clovis, in 509, his ancestors, for no less a period At the time of the frst French revelation all Brit- | cans of fix ey hues—republicans of the pure, old, Sesnnet and discretion ‘which the governinent could | 4nd most easy o| cultivation. e quantity of land versed: ever of teteret ischarged: new trial ’ i ” granted by the Equatorian government amounts to ith ‘the enjoin, or the commanders exercise, would not ob | 't 533 204 acres, which, at the ment price of the Toe ee asemneeier, ve, Jeogh Snatt, » vent. ‘is ince i e i sti Fae ne ot ac aasion the charnpion of ne: | land warrants, Is worth from 44. to (2 Bxvcutor, Ac —New trial crdered, éowia 1s 40 enfranchisement practically surrender the ques- Last year 24,143 tons of British copper (ore ex ey ee open vs Dines Carolin et at —Jedgment fon, They admit that England cannot a complish | clnded) were exported from England, includia, 46 ives Tectomatd ve. Richard D. Fenby +t al.—ede- than 1.023 years, fought against the usurpation, ever | tan 5 ry was in revolt. The ular hertes were rd- i Junius Brotas school, like airoting mh hei ar. ere dng, with | sry of th ded Rrwrbona nd eno | tha Gene Cavagnaete nae the strength to fight it cefused pb ‘ ies oh ad the | Brittany kas beer considered as thet part of France | Paris reds—republicans who are also communists, and when the period came that it was too weak’ te 5 ry vy ty ee ey s most meme like Louis Blane and = emperor d who al a! ime - rialiste, . Barbes . Prondhoa — seieaea fora /er Ged tes kataden te Uae ane p—y- Aya ty the Honrbene Did i take up | seit tn Prttany the name. at repablicanien excites archs on condition they would, as allies, aid it in re | movely from an pm rma monarchy and { but one idea, and gives rise but to one feeling; the " q , . ot hatred of ism? “ " hatred.’ sisting Franee. Such, ina few lines, is the pistory | The genocal belief ie that it aid 80; belie Gan pe on prover re pt hey haere Ditod ain thle anything of moment to frustrate the Cuban slave | tons of unwrought copper, 151 tons of coin, 6 é eid snything of moment to, frewtrirorse than those we | tous of sheets, rails, fe, and 3,103 cwt. of other | Swarever™ sew (rel ordered, wae Sue 0 8 can hope to cure. wrought copper. The countries to which the great- ‘Samuel Allen et al. ve. Garret D. Ciark —Judgment est quantity of copper was exported were the Hanse | affirmed with corts. of this large compertment of the empire ruled over . A letter from St. Petersburg tells us that literary . > by Napoleon Il. The frst thought, then, witha | “Mwere cre, many “circummadens, to. diet Tetfigence and elghborboot in TAK, when 5 | ett now prevals in Raa, of ws the S | i oe Gh ees | ae ee ton is not “the power,” “the greatness” or “the the North American—from the Fi ate 5 be ag oot - a ietron ro a was never seen before. A great many fi rapt ‘1 ~ 4 +a 333 ton . British = ates on | Ot miphen Fr Gardner vs. George Genice. —Jurgm@ent af. of France, Vat whit tends to the welfare, the | Tution; Wit of all these thore is none #0 strong. wor | 20. be Te ea” tan ”with one sentiment it | temporary suthors of renown have, Just been trend ported from London last’ year, and 9,179 tous from | &™ ’ rerram o ol vi ny. 3 ein are jacaniay, (rote, al he ae@ “Geen oder! 2 Hamle r - a however, for one moment be supposed that, if the | dependent States wes the work of how S0 ma ay in- | bear arme for the purpose of crushing the insurgents. | announced. An Muatratek St, Petersburg News | Ye Nore mported into the Uni ingdom Last Meech agel tal ve. Willem Nelevm ot alm om has not all the sentiments of a pure Parivian est mer 4, who | This fact I have from an English gentleman resideat | 14. heen established, Theatrical, literary, scientific, year. Jndgment reversea. New trial ordered. Coste to abide s France, respected the rights of conscience; whilst th eo . He assures me he never saw such ie roqurde France, that he lacks in general feting Tutlon in France, wfc dethroned and dee. ‘itsted | heTssntbition. ot papular enthosiasm as was then tablished rival of France that he Tika te, Old es | # king, was the work of irreligions men, who ‘soght | manifested. There was an eager desire to avenge ecanse he loves England more. “On the contrary, | © the ecpeen ej consciences of others, the crueltics of 1793, 1794 and 178 upon the parties I believe there is no part of Pr othe text leaders of the French revolution ¥ sere not | who would imitate, if they had the powe™, the policy ings of dowuright axhnosity tor Tegtucre, the feel: | content with fashioning a State. They a iso took | then parsed. tensely felt and <0 undisguisedly meat sted” so in- | apon themselves the task of constructing new re 1 reserve to the last the party of the Bonapartists. this portion of the empire. +4 Bretons : 2S ligion, which was the work of what was « alle’ “an | Like the Legitimists and the Orleanists, they have English; and the inhabitants of that portion of 4 Ecclesiastical Committee,” under the pre aidency of | thetr adherents ainong the intellectual and higher British domiuions “which °appfonction the’ moet | froued what ws designated “siechrn c cummieee | classe of solety ; but ih the earn casos T oat 8 desi “the Civil C " icultaral classes, nearly to the Hreton const--that In, of ‘the | of the Clergy,” and then came the deere, cauttution | Bonnpartiam rests with i cet’ to aman Rona- ilitary, maritime, and economic journals have been A report lately presented to the Emperor Alex- | event - c started, periodicals, containing voanal tales and | ander contains the following statistical returns re- Lather ©, Carier ve. Fimor ©. Halsey et al—Jadgment translations, are numerous; even mild imitations of | lative to landed property and serfs in Russia: —Che to peget ot Getmore ve. Willams Hi. Kissam, be.— Punch are not wanting. a bg won coe Heereaee ameant wo ‘SMirmed with conte ts i t » hese 2, yasesa from 1,000 to ri iprand va. the Eighth Avene Ra:iroed Com- Tak Fatrird wt of foreign sugar were. talned {10,000 serfs; 2,000 from 500 to 1,000; 14,000 from | pany skew trial ranted, wiih conte to aide event, for home consuption in the United king’om, against a nag ao from yw angg Sym tay Jere pa 5X . Lyme v 1,618,750 ewt. in 1856, and 2,321,434 ewt. in 1855. than 21. total num! peasal ( joreed with Coste, given Hhecaantity of refined augar and candy so retained | the nobility amounts to 11,760,000, and those of the iinet prejadize to 0, application was 297,551 ewt. The aggregate quantity of foreign | Crown to 9,000,000. There are therefore 20,760,011) “ve, Mahlon Mattesta.--Jadgment for mogar of all sorts so retained, 1857, was 2,913,713 | Persons anxiously waiting for an improvement in | 19, the verdict. ar imp rted | their condition. ‘rien Sharp vs. Augustus A, Whipple —Jodgment for Island of Jersey-they actnally abominate, | who wou t those . “ . ald not accept of this “constit ” ‘ jenry V. was | cwt. The quantity of unrefined a A ge Mer Tater OO Dew creed, should t magna 'l Tee hand o's oso nals, wate Ray V was | ora the Raut und West Indies, the Manriting, Guia, | _ A despatch from St. Petersburg announces that a / piw'atit oR verse idan a a). Jadement r6- causes for. this dislike are rarions—the old qu Best by deprivation of their liviag: sub 2.0 take | thom their allegiance, would now fight to the death | Da, c., Inst year, amoanted to 5.311.339 Russian detachment had occupied the heizits of | | Jome Hoyt ve. Henry Selden et 7 dem Sense Te, Lae Ganlibe aro varsone-—the G8 Gaara ie eamaie worn ed to imprison joutsthen to | to uphold Napoleon Til. ‘Those who would ander | against 5,654,608 in 1856. The quantity of molasse Dargo, which wns the only remaining obstacle to | vermed. | Now tris) coders. | Soe 0 Guile nore sedg- with it, but a great deal more. the cmd 6 fo fe we = nt; last, to death; whilst a’ J'iany persone | other circumstances be Bourbonists will now be Bo- | #0 imported was 300,153 cwt. their operations against the Circassians. A "OW | gO Sh order appeated from. Aillemed, with costa. English daring several (ntoads made im this part tering Sr in sak ten them asp: ators, ar shel: Dapartistn and no change can ever make them te] 4 comparative statement of pauperism in Groat eee hooey aes ae = trem cut direct into | Francis H, Salta vs. Sydney 4, Goal a Judgment “ v + i 4 mow a ereed. rs . of France—inroads that it may be said began with | ishable by deathy 2 SSNs them, — qerovoo pens | gard the Orleaniste with good will or ametith Britain, In Pebroary, 1857, and. Pobraary, 1858, | a ana eet Parle bs daily to provide | "Sc Bennett vs, Duaiel Drew etal. —Judgment aemed, shows that in the fourth week of February last the total number of paapers relieved in Eagland a Wales amounted to 977 464 against 021,488 in 1 the triamph of the Norman Kings in England, and Such were ‘The reason for this is intelligible, and can be told that we tir : the proceedings that f \ of finence of the clergy. at were continued up to the time of the last war | into revolt. Had the Parisian rev = cn! Ia ade thot tact Prats retection that it ‘would be for the paving, macadamizing, sweeping, watering, | 1b costs, grating [re sta coor, nal | ad gah Sant nares ped th of 334,665 metres, with Bonaparte. The crimes and atrocities insepa- | tepted themsel reaae ire Jorden ™ ble from all wars have left a lasting, an almost | probability 1 ves with political ch jnges, the great | difficult to tell whether the clergy look with greater | thus exhibiting an inci ot or 6.07 per levards, forming » total le = loppock. te ineffuceable impression here, because t ost | probability is that the hundreds a ad thousand tion to power of the repab- | |. ° Oe ber | and presenting a surface of 5,500,000 square metres. decni 1. Mare va. Lis Judgment procton Here, becuase they Rare In And peasants who gathered phn a Soom OS Ocenia Overve , however, That i teh ie ny opts ge 4 There are in the streets 13,000 gas burners, which — New trial ordored. to abide event. Bit per cent, Kod dat in tho ew work ofthe tome | S&e Tebted in the course of boxe Ywenty minute’: | | Wumse, ergss vs Rony 4 Wess —JStgnes of ees J 4 e len: of t 4 pipes is 485,000 metres; tha’ firmed, with costs. month 3.04 par cant, The increase, takiog the lat | of the water conducts 100,000 metres, and thatof | | Coarse Bugck ch. rm Wms ©. Wontennp—Jettaens the districts except the metropoliian, where there | the sewers 163,000, The city couteine between 0 100 wMjicer’ Hoste, the Now York Mutual Life Insurance wes a decrease of 5.03 per cent. and 33,000 howe. tied te a pose wiring | Company. —The like, A Wanna letter ta. the Stleclan Gasette cages | De ey ed by & population requiring | “garauel B Albans va. Wiliam Rede ot al —J A Sannamube pocet baa toen femme ta teneoee | Lato surveillance. About 157,000 persoms area | reversed and jetement ordered for plaistift, with fyane' thantn to Uae ooaperstion of the aeray, | Min aitenn00 petvons per antmay and yet tere the peasants have not only enrolled themselves en Oy occurred last year 390 accidents, of which only Taaxertn iy twe Anwy.—Captain J. F. Gilmer, masse in ita ranks, but generally shown themselves | twenty-four proved fatal. Every year the popalation | U.S. T. B., has recently been transferred from the very faithful to their engagements. of Paris consumes 80,000,000 kildgrammes of meat, | charge of the government works at Savannah to There were, on the 20th of Noventher Inst, 1,241,- | 970,000 hectolitres of wine, 240,000 hectolitres of California, to suptrintend the construction of de- 757 individnal depositors in savings banks in Great | beer, and 78,000 hectolitres of brady and liquenirs, | fences at San Franciseo, Lieut. Wm. H. C. Whiting Beitain, to the awount of £82,994,023, besides enari- | The police has to verify the good quality of all ! has suceeded Captain Gilmer a¢ Savannah. been so often peereet, and, in most cases, were, | flag of the Bourbons firely muprovonety de i hee en- | blood in sustaining real vel have an ae we clergy, although * pore: fale not an united fobs remembered, that the non-combattive popula: | Pont pamcascmPoraneons with —,“Ceeation of ell | sentation ofthe Tate of Hittany. Dinan contains bat a ee seer — 4 greatest sufferers by these An extract trom an official re two parlmaee, snd the Ag the ae any ey an enue Ly spirit of ani- | will suffice to justify assert, _Pablican document | an avowed - re w See unease rope a Aw ac inst the Eng! ish, there is at “Sach is the sti blind = ™ ‘Here it is:— other: it epee te nown, ; yoy fo moment subseriptions collecting in all parta of | that there is no possibility 0 saa of these people he iat. ld the occasion ai ag > ae Irnndnt ta nite fale at Cast tage oral | Roce; ia cabjction. bat by “aflowting thom the | could command” 0 vont” either a republican gov. there tat an engtlsh tavading army, wich tact ayuen an, Ghee mii an, eduinicvered 9 oe being inetalled, cr an Orleanist again arp commmenhee,. vere ieeeel tonne’ with thelr | clergymen in whom they ave talllineee Ee reat threbe which Wf ancient rights and lon commander, were forced wo surrender prisoners of | lire pratique We Teur cube ex Saar des ‘eieiras. L cobetahed cumbeme ame. te prevail, ooreld We filled aed Wa os Poy ary ‘y ce of Brittany, suddenly | msermenties. wete par des pretreo nee ere = prevail, Pat the Dretons hatred of the J Such are the words of the? — enicide Tie ‘Tt Yas lhed'T am exeveding the epace allotted to me. “T As¥ the Protons’ hatred ofthe Jersey people, tbe | Minister cf Robice, and bey j'pre but tw webu of | have given you's ourface View of politkal partes ia

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