On this page
- Departments (2)
-
Text (8)
-
flnfoBEft 3§, 1M8-, THE NORTHEKti STAR. ...
-
• toionwUnU mxtme
-
w" ~ PBA50B. town edition of last week w...
-
P2BU.0CS Ao tbotdbe.—-A gentleman msked ...
-
• fuimfipominif^
-
MR JOSEPH BARKEr ' aND THE CHARTIST BODY...
-
THE CHOLERA,. THBMBTRo- ?ons.~Gi"^Ai Boa...
-
¦A'6 13'izen of-the WoRfin.'-—As the "na...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Flnfobeft 3§, 1m8-, The Northekti Star. ...
_flnfoBEft 3 § , 1 M 8-, THE _NORTHEKti STAR . 7 _yj ___ __^__ . _^^ _maa-aaw-a--a _*___________________________^_^^ r - _-mr— __^»«^ i _^ b _^^ _m _^ _mm , _m--- »» _- _« _' _- ** _*****» » m _^ -- ¦ ¦ _, I
• Toionwunu Mxtme
• _toionwUnU _mxtme
W" ~ Pba50b. Town Edition Of Last Week W...
_w " ~ PBA 50 B . town edition of last week wa announced the i V _"" . _^ e state of rfege , by a vote of the Assembly . _**** recorded the gnat _Damceratic barqnetheldin Se * * preceding Tuesday . On "Wednesday , ia j _» ii » _\ _L-j - y , that portioa of tbe Constitution relating a _*^ _rnal adminlstratloa of the country came un i _^ Z , _^ an , when several * articles' wero adopted . S _^ ftiaay _» considerable _smsation was created hy 1 _^ _Jsjjance , for the first thn ? , of M . Louis _Hsthien _^ _'S to 8 ntw 1 _- " e _* ecUd representatives for Gaada-( 5 * * jje is a negro pur _sarrg , and one of the blackest ¦ _ssJ'' _jjejt of tbo genus , but at the same time a » _*** JL ana _inteuigent-looWng man . On his entry he _i _*^ seat close to M . Bo » y-P « py , who is also co-\ Li ' stta vemaining with him for a short * tim * , _*^ Jb bp Ms position on the extreme Lift , among tke _F . _MIIOL in on
_^ _m discussion th * National Assembly thel 07 Ji ! L » of * is Constitution , _relative to military _sutstl-\ _a Wts brought to a close on Saturday . IS . Dsvillo i *! j bB amendment to thU tff = ct : —* The right to !«* . jn tbe _2 army fey « ofcsat 6 t « i U _Intetilclei . ? ' ' _£% } on being pat to the-rate , -sas _rtjestod by 66 S to ' _^ fbe _AKeaiMS afterwards adopted an amendment ¦ * ,, _U'slooErots , eon-aerating tte principle , and post . * * until the discussion « a the Organic L » w _, the 1 _^' eat of * ie mode and ¦ conditions by wbich _eeci ' f !! ljC 1 Bav -sberate himself from the military Krvice . _^?« - « tnYff next rejected an amendm nt ofM . Pierre _** % * ao _prepo-ed to _* Jxempt ' all dtfzsns profess-IS ' ' 3 w _ych reproved war as a _bsrbsrous _pricciple . _^" _^ ntrtry toDrriJM andtniBaa law * , ' and -rotea , _» - » _« nv _dUcussios _. _ths fitef Jlowing arddea of ths *• tl _""• _^ ascusrion of the constitution _tensnated on * ** Before tt •& finally proclaimed It will bave to S 5 d * ' ' a reTlsion . _Tbla revision wttltafce _placeafter " _' _^ _ral of five days , aad Is not expected to occupy _" _^ snadsy ct two . We noy , therefore , expect 5 018 r _titutfc _)** to be proclaimed early tre * xt Keek . 0
*? J" eB _.. __ v a # « n'In mm nntiw ftat ha _woa'd _Tuesday K . _Srandin gave notice fiat he wou'd 00 roe _on-stions to the government reUtive to the T _rtfic banquets . The Assembly afterwards re-B _^ . jon far an addition of 6 , 0 eo francs sum h _& T « larr of the PtesUent ot tke Assembly . A dis-10 '' _Aen rjase aa to the expenditure of tie Provi . _^^^^ mnniKcT . « _usrrast nnnouneed to the KsflenalAssembly en _* ;•« tbat the Committee oa tie Constitntion had * SL £ _ntie 119-Jh Article , _relate to the period of _ruction tf the President ef the _Ttepabllo , Ministers yL ass-Red the oommittee that , immediately after _^ _. a-p _Hoaof tbeConstiwtbr-., « _Oiey would present to _£ , A . « emb 1 ya project of deeree , _appointing the 18 th * JD ; R niber next for the election of the _Presidtn * . * SHE WA * A « AIS 6 T " TH £ MESS .
__ , 'Etd * journal , La _RstC _** h « . ce was seized — . T 5 « a » y weei . aad U to be prosecuted for an article _" _^ j Os cruel treatment to whioh the transportffi _SLrKBts of June aro Butgtctrf . Tmtnefitatety & _Votr . r . _^ _j -o ' eof the _Chamber Tairing tbe state of siege , _wifioister of Justice—tbe -renegade traitor , _Matfe _, _noivxd a new 1 & w _> , 0 totncr fetttr tIse _P _" * 5 ' f msfa tains the old and _nifarious right of _se- _' xare 'It _•^ . _j . _jje writer incalpatedto > b j tried hy the _jary _.-and _^ _35 _-jmmfasfcly . _^ _2 _# . 5 ? poiTiTioH O- ? _* rEB -waaB ; nra ctissEs . Oa Thu _rsday m _^ n _' ng another convoy of _emlgrcsts _^ _stisg of 815 persons abore tbe 8 ge of two years , cJ _tereoty caUdren uoder that age , left for A ' gerfc . m * E _R-c-acBTioa ? .
T . « _al _crooeeaings have * een directed by tne -Pro- ; a _-jj . of the B'publie _agsisst the president and _-eJ-ker _!*! $ _&* cf the bureau _oUsveral clubs . Oa _Thureday _^ _T-jab de Ciaronne , which held Its _elttingsia the _^ -t of tbat name , andthe < 5 iub _deSrosse-Te _ttj , * _aieh _« _Tin a court _beh * _-id _the'FdSssge da Cain " , were _.-jro-SoKsliy dosed , in virtue of ordoanauces _lssae « _l-by the _ILsto of CauncU oi t _* e Tribunal of Premiere _In-I __ % . On Friday evening the Club _dea Acacias , _Bne _?• tntotoe , was also dosed . " _-fEKCEiKCE orTE _-r-notoaioos _BOt-aeKJisis .
° _he first council of war at Puis wai last we \ Sz or . _tqita with the trial of eight insurgents charged with _tffioj b ; ea engsged la the _iasurrecuoa of Juno * t the _teri-ade St _Jacquet . i * ivher and two BonB ; _--camed _-jsriesalgnes Bruu , and Fleury . were present in _ast , whilst Boucher , I / _ansre , andMorea * z , < v * ho had _gtefSstrs in the _KA _^ _Leg _' -on , were absent , * - _having _^ _ctsfi ' ffbt . The eoartionnd ttemboth _^ _aflty , aad t __ -cti Bran to flea _ye-tP _leprifOBBUnt , _-asfi Chan . j ; _t « sts to two yean * . ' -The other three prisoaers pre . _txt irere acquitted . _iLs-to tbe thn e mea _wbo'tud fl -d , Easier and iamare were sentenced to twes * - ? _gears ' i labour at the ira & s _? aad Moreau totes .
_ _Ha-ecamt _BJot . one cf tho 12 A Legtoa of-the Na . _foad Guard of Paris , was tried by conrt-iEarti-J , on _-Jdaesasy week , for h _« te- _teken en _aesiverl-art in tirhsur-ectioa of Jnce . _iHa was _fouaigraltj , and _jstse-d to hard labour for tea years . Gc _Thursday en srrtist- tamed Picard , agecVtwenty . _e _« -fss oondemned to t _» e years * imprisoe-Eeat , and to ti £ . t : tcrdic _* ion cf dvE rights for ten years , for having _tsiapart In the _insarrecttoa of _Joae . On < _Sas- ' 2 S-d of _Iw _* h « _prisoaer was in the garden of tha Palais jnsJ , exridnj : _groupi-toslcla tbe insurrcctkavand emausket
p Wc _; very violent langaaira . He carried a , _ _JSs pockets were £ ! te & with _caitrWgee . _± At hit _bd-jo-s many peUticai . papers and _docussents were fea 3 tome of them _-eoaatei in violent seems , and ethos celling _fotth different plans fcr the prorao _** on of _i-s-tKiion . The prissaer- was proved to bave taken _jsctfc _tie invasioacf _^ _heSKaticaal _AsseaAIy-oa the i ; -ijrSj _. aad he was oce-of those who were * rr » sted _hthsFeiional Guard _ia-the attack ' oa _Sohrftfs _^ ouse . " _iwaiftha iasnr _« tBte _< _f--faae wera tried . by < c-. _urtraitislia Piris on Saturday , tad foaad guilty .. One _-wwstaced _ts hard l & _brsr tot life , and _tfceseoond to
_Jss-cs-arsimprisoDineiit
THE RE ) ifi _^ UBIIG . _Tisfcl ' _ORmg proclamation , drawn np by _fce-Zbbe I » _= En-is . has beea _eigctiiiy aU the R * 4 E _^ pQUi-aa _Haitrstf the Assembly : — ...... _t . _'ITeare far _fcoin the _dsy-aa-which , after heroic-ecatei _tit-Eepablic , i _*» alE _« _i- « l _^ nt and g _* orioa * £ » -n _faEito _^ _-rictCTy . _di-plsye _** _*' 11 to the world anie _fci-iosgaofL-ierty . _Eo oaIiiy , aad _Fraterait-- , _aa-tfca teal _^ _yrcbol of sdl the hopes for the future . Teem _eaerrecci'y of Europe to _t _& _e-otber , the _aatioaa-salawd s-Sti their acclamatloas , ea & f _peaetrated by _difiiaew rjiit _, by tie regenerating _fcesth , tbey broke _tkeir old _thaaicttsaameef the right-ihkh _Fraaeehadia-t-itssiei . _« b 3 herself _ImraeeiateJy . _gathered _thefeaita _*
SroSfetl-crder , the aboKtionfir _nrrrflfSe _" . _—& _*—* - eal _safffjse ; in social order , the enfranchisemeotef v _^ an _. _' & _sisoBdition of _thattraBsformafioaeflaboar tef , to £ frive * t _ajuster divisaaa _oflta products , tothe _piuuee ofthe We of all In a _society one and _J-rfsitly _Etp-atte . _^ _aon , however , _tSto _± mnqp .- ? e & parties eM ins _oisa-ilsedi _Ev-ajwfcr-reUliat tielr _icfiomca « s ! JttteEd . tiiAyflpplfesl _thtnaalvuto exciting fry _fatryissadcalcisy enemies to < be % S * _pnblic snd _ob-Eitl-s to i » _goverament . Cieeptag _lttfe by little into _festainisiratiaa , they there _infffodaced their _priact--iiEiiihea-pasiiaas , end made -of the revolutionary _p-a wbicb t & ey had c ? Eg . uered aa _arciEgainst the re--nMonitselL f _&* exe driven _bsefe to _tbegstes ofthe _asHchy , and it la .- _* iere that we no-rare ; it la to the S 3 of the _raosaichy ' 4 faat ths destiale « . of Jibe Republic
" at ; jast beea « oa & j £ ed . We _andeetzasd the _ftars of fc people aod their _isdigaation , _& r _-sbfen certainly - ' -re is too much cants . let tbem , _bocerer , < sot alarrn £ _^; l _Jres bejoDds * ea _* s- _» , asd e-peciaSj- _Itiihsxn take _* t cot to C 63 e to per £ ( 2 aus _provscitiooa . - . _Whatever _ECbedonetodriretfeea to _ectsof _ditutraasfmprc-&»* _, let them remclrt u & m and firm , matters . oi themt _& t £ , lnsraertobemest « ri ofthe futsre . _itiathus Ua _itiey will prove tbefe _strength , and that _tljay will f _^ _itanlnjuita , invincibly . * y anion , if it tfeoaW . £ gain _^ toeome ia aid of right . Por ourselves , _hoaosred _hti * _-tae of tbeir _« p- « _$ _st 6 _tives , we know to _^ _bit feat title obliges ns ; we fees w our duties , end will _fcStisa . Sent by tke _peep _^ , naited to the _peopie , _*^* k ! 1 _als-sgle _^ s nd it _1 _« ass belief we shall _eoogc-e * * 4 Uk * _d : "
_ffepoisi tore tbe above _fross the walls , _Eeiisdthe * - ? ' _*< _stereTer found , aad _arrested the criers who sold tiniie _ttrecU . _^ e rai fci Ahe _tTaioa : « It appear * that the _Sodaliets •** _asi / j _iotejsd to try their strength Ay " janging forward _^ _Sfpal as a _. _eandfdase for the presaieBcy of the refc _^; _fdthoagh the dnb of the' _Aesosiation Oaniero ' _^> > 3 opted in fan ' s tbe _c-ndMatet & ip of M . Louis _-aupsjtc , a great cumber of tha _workmea have resolved _^ { he their votes _ts tbe prisoaer ef ¥ _iac-. cne « . 'A
_^* r frora Ijons _stetes that tbe Socialists of tbat dty _^ feeism- _intest ygj ; M . Raspail has a chance of % siopted in tbe great manufacturing aad _eommer-^ tout ! , ii which is exercised , with ths greatest * ' ** % ¦ _theKvelutioaarjand communist propagaadism . _^ gOTircmtnt isadoptins precautions agafast eny j _^ _sent on the _partof the "Red R"publicaBs' in Paris . ' V _^« crdaylsst a ll tha eras of every description _depo-^^• 4 * _Masium of _Ardlkr y . were remored _andera fi : o - ? « _£ !« to the _fortresa of ytBCeants .
_SXofet-jccJjj _aDd democratic banquet took place on _U / _m * 1 ' esJlsathe bst " _3 ' - etofP- _«* y- Tnere _* aefrcm , « _Jto 5 . _0-fl ptKonspresent . Tbaonlyrepresentatives _gaiat _'tr * MK . Xfceodore Eac , Greppo . Pierre _Lroux , -jt _^' tT . Smin _Barcard , Laurent , aad Fargin ; r _' 3 s . The tOEg ' s Btre cf tke ntnal _sodel and do-° c * 6 tie characUr , tbe only _rtmerkabla ones being , _otat Ritum ef the Exiles ; ' aad _« To the Speedy _g _^ t of SxisJiim , ' The latter _preposed by M .
_RttHEauoa 0 ? Rekewei > _DisroaaascES w _Paais . _^ _e _Tihes ef Wednesday con tained the _fottowicg _feta _0158 ' ~ The _sppiintment of the new Ministers heB fi « * _-ea with all the fury cf tbe Rsvolutlonery te ? ° _^ . the _^ _tta-Bepablicaa press . A _sprcita of _j T _*^ tio ! ' . rigntd by LameLBiis , Ltd . a _Ro . lin , and , _fc » _ir _Moaiarair _' s , has bten _dislribaUd , ia which jar *?' _"" _atives of the people declare ttat the R . W _*! _^ Kadtd t 0 *• "" B _** * of the mD-iarcby _, * and _( _j _T **! the people will prove its force , and fiad it „ talitvisd fcle . _lf _ttatforps baaealn reanlred in
• snath ih ' ' Ue PKPR « _« ' « « * ° Knewal of the t _^ J _? fcy -be extreme R -pabHeinB have ctrtaftr ' y been _fe ' _^ _' t Ubln the last few days , with increased _ecti . _Uj _^ _*« ret manufsctories of Eowder are known to _sstfiW _* * _- " _* * 8 of _thednbshaa _beoorasfar more * _no-JfcTr a -prtu _* xoreinenacin" { . Tbegovernmtnthas _^« Jr t _ttautita d KBOTiarUie _vbolt _ooUfcttoa ot
W" ~ Pba50b. Town Edition Of Last Week W...
arms irom the Maseom of ArtUlcry toTinceonea . Itis asserted a » a matter of pultlie notoriety , tbat the organisation of the secret societies was never more complete . The same journal says , wiih respect _tb'Qie'V rarde'lfo & iJe , amounting to twenty thousand mm , means have been employed to keep alive amongst them a sentiment of _aUtgianse to the _revolutionary leaders by no means consistent with their dnties to the present ml « _rs of the Republic . _rouaiEaisx bixquet , A Socialist bacqaet took place oa Saturday at the Jardin _d'Hirer , ia the Caamps Elysees . The guests which might nnmbcr from 700 to 800 , _compued of both sexes , sat down ti tbeir feast at six o ' clock . At halfpast seven a Bomber of persons were admitted oa tickets as auditors and spectators . A _tribnao was erected , adorned with flowers and earmoanted by a bast of _F-iurler , _fram wbicb a series of _toas's w _: re delivered and
illustrated by the favourite orators of the sect . These _, touts were oaly the reprodaction of those which have been given at otber similar celebrations , _; including 'La _Repnbllque democratiqae et rociale !' . 'Le droit an travail ! ' x L ' orgaaisatioa da travail . par association !' io . _AtBoag the persoas who presented themselves _sucses . _sively ia the _tribaoe were two coloured men , members of the Assembly , and representatives of tha 'West la € u cotooieB . These _individasls did not speak , bat had between tbem a gentleman who delivered a written address for them . Oa tbeir appearing ia tbe tribune a aamber ef persons sear it rushed forward aad grasped their hinds wMi much apparent warmth . The series of toaBts aad _speeches _wascosdnded by an address from H Victor _Considerant , the editor of the _Dehocisiie Picifiqcb , aad tbe great apostle ofthe sect , after which a coUectioo was made for the families ut tbe insurgents of June who had been transported , and the meeting separated .
The secret societies are rapidly gathering strength . Meetings take piece rightly in the faubourgs at which some ef thetaost ae _ive leaders take part . One of tbe most pepalex of these is Bernard , of the late dub _Bcnna _NonvelK Another of the _cba-exters which figure in these _reunions is tha son of M . _Hadier de Msm j _* an _, for . merly a councillor of the Court of Cassation , wbo resigned bis office after the circulars ef M Ledra _Rcllio . This individual rinla the _popularity of U . Bernard , Another ef _tbesa leaders is Caanrelot _, who it is said imitates Robespierre in his -costume and manner oi speech . He figures especially in the Qu < rtier St Denis aadfhe Baa _Konfietard , _aaS _-th-re the name of
_S-ofcespiena never falls to exdte tfe « _atbarat of _cnthnslaem . _^ IL Louis Napoleon _Bacsparte baa addressed th afol-( _owlog note to tbe _jouraal 8 >— ' P _. rsons of gocl _informa-Von having informed the _* repTescntative Louis _"Hepo ' eon Bonaparte tbat insensate-people were covertly working to get np a riot in his -name , with the evident object of ¦ compromising bim in the eyes of tbe lovers of order and -sincere republicans , Louis _Napoleon bas'felt himself % ound to nuke these reports known to li . _Bufaare _, Minister of the _Interior , adding that he _energetically re' _pelled the idea of _blstsving aay _particlcadan ia plots so _-compUtely opposed to'his political sent & _nents , and the oondnct he has pursued since the 24 th of _February ,
• GERMANY . ST _* . _TE 05 VIBSHA . On the ISth in tbe evening sitting of the Diet , _Schnselka reporter trf the committee , announced tbat the state of affairs ti tbe dty had not-yet undergone any change ; tbat _theposItirnB of the army , and likewise of tbe Burgher Guard were still the _sasi ; that probably oaly the outposts of tbe Hungarian army had crossed the Austrian territory ; tbat at this moment tke noise of the _caanonade was heard in the distance . In the interior of the dty the _exdtemeat had decreased ; the general organisation was _excellent ; the works Ofthe pablio defences _, were admirab _^ yeonstrncted , and the _aompesition of the staff extremely-good . That the state cf Vienna was exactly identical with its eituatknr-at the time it was besieged by _tfc _^ _Torks .
The army Of Auersperg amounts to 15 , 000 men , that of _Jellechlchto 35 , 000 well oriraniseS troops . They ar ? reported to have dispersed the HongsrianLandeturm , end to hare devastated Oedeaburg by _^ alleging it and setting fire to it . Prince _Bouss is _marthing'fofTienna withlO _. WQ menfroat _Kmvia . General Bohto , who served in -the Polish war , and a Pole , were , in --onjunction wlth't . _Ueeienhaueen _, eS ; trusted with the defence ef the city . ' The editor of ons of = tbe--lost violent" democratic ; papers of Titcna , Herr Ha _^ her , * _^ bad been _arresttd at Stein , in _3 Jpper Austria , ( whither he had proceeded to raise the- - peasantry , ) and ttbea to the _fortrets-tf Olmii z .
It _afptars { torn the _proese & _t & _gs ofthe Diet oa tha 18 tb , that the deputation seat to setk an interview-fftth _tbe £ _* aperors £ 01 mul 2 & aw _Ferdlcand on tte 15 _A . Ek answer was vague ; he said he < _waa glad that the 'Diet was _nsicgallots endeavours to-oppose anarchy , _endia would try von his part to _do-the _* ame . This answer seemi d _cosatisfactory to the Bietj-which 00 the 17 ihaer . t a third address , stating the removal of the troops from ths wbolaof Lower Austria , and the nomination of-c ** espon * ll ! snunutry , werethe 4 » _hf-otutnonofm _% intenaaco of peace a _^ _-Tienna . _Thas matters are still in doobt _. HeanwbllB-ao engagement bstwetn tho Hungarians aad Cro its Teas _ts & en place . Jellaehich on the 164 had mi dea reconnolssaccetcwardsScssdorf , which is on _the-Daaube _, higher npthaa Vienna . * Ca the 17 < h he was moving through _Scltwechat , tbe place whero the BocJurBtUe falsely anaousc-d the Hungarians to have pitched their tents .
Some -aeabers of the Hungarian Students' Legion , whs feadjust .-arrind at Vienna asserted that the Austrian frontier was swarming with Hungarian troops ready to . advance , and amoaadag to 80 , 000 teen , with 120 _piessa of artillery . There was no other reason for delay kat .-the rumour which that prevailed that tbe Diet of Vieacaobjected to their-marchicg on . Kossuth , _Messaros , _andHega were at the head of the Hungarian army . In _tneaitUag ofthe 18 th , Sebawlia _annouaced . tbst accordieg to -the advices reoetved the Hungarians had re . uot « ed tbe frontier . a 1 _LetteceS _' _iaiu ' _-Tienna state _thafctbc _Hongari na wasa I within two leagues ot Yienna .
The members ofthe depBtattan appointed by the Left of the Fraokfort Assembly , to proceed t ) Yienna , ia order to express sympathy with _tbevYiocoeie , have not only _Eccompli-ieJ the ot j _= ct of tielr . _mlssioD , but hare gone one ttep -ftrther , and have takea _. _a ? arms for the good erase . -On the 17 th they _eoaas their appearance , amidst entkasiastic cheers , in the 4 aU of the academy , where ( _Rsbert _^ Ekm particttlarijj tiey declared that the causa of tVisnaa was the _eaosaJof Germany , aad that Yienna must conquer ; others-dee 'tie entire _populatioa ( of _Sermaay ) most rise up _lo-o man . Ia all parts of Ger-canyitiere existed the eama feeling in favour of the * goonVcaase . ' At the eaaclcslon of their _speeches t ' aey _fferoiavested' ( af ur the _tanner of the old knights ) with the-. inflgnia of the AcademicLrgion .
PixsBCXQ . _—A'Breilau paper of thei & h has tte fo' - _iiowing fKra Prestos * **" ' The troops _karo left their barracks and freteraised with the people , .-Some of the ¦ _cSctra who _eadeB-vasred to restrain the -asa were hissed aad scented . Oe _tbe' ? tb , a letter was _brcaght frora _iJillfchich to Geaeral _£ * i £ br , commander of tfaa brigade a _|? re « bnrg , andtbe _^ messengers w ere arrested by tbe Burgher wuard and taken to tlie HotelceWille . ( General _Xteebrwas « ought io < read ahe letter , buthe _^ ou ld not be fosad . The letter _« _as then opened , and _^ coved to have . beea written by _fiensrsl Zdsberg , in tbe <* : tme of Jellaehich , in nearly the following terms , from bead quarter * , ia Altenberg in-E _^ cgary : — * Yoa have , tsken
_-sossessioa of the bridge of Preeburg _, and in what aan narf . « Seadme sachtraona as you can spare . _Havajau received ay letter of yesterday _^ * _ _, _& me know tke e * ts . _paaitioaof the people of Pretbarg _, and the state of . tbjags there . ' _Jja eoonaa this letter sea * read , the people . eet -boe ' tto-c 4 s ~ _hfcr _O-neniJKatsb _*! _, thai thty mifht bang bim . Bat tte _iroops immediately abandoned their posts j _aadretired-fjam thed « y , aad tbe ,-g'nsral was _Hawhera ' to be fanad . A portioa of the sddlers came back aadjoined the _Kattonal Guard , after having shot their colonel and captain , wb » endeavoured to «* nsjrain them . Tbo other troops , U-ls stated , are watched by tbe Ceoopurl infantry aad tbe . Joseph regfmeat of _jkagoons . There ' are in PretbnrgS QW peasants armed _wtta scythes .
Bohzku _, _Psmscx , Oct . 1 G—Twenty-two thousand men and tix bstteciea ara to be _dtq » tobe £ to _Tlonaa . Tbe solilers tna-dftJt dltpleanira in _macohise fcr a civil war , and the greaaikes _, who are not liked , had been . -ordered on quitting _Prsguc to make a da tour , instead of _passing through the dty , on their way to _tfe _railroad , { Kotably to avoid a conflict with the people . THE _D'STFSSdJfCES IT BEBUV . Tne _Pasjsua JfosriTo * : of the lSJx _annooness tint a judicial investigation into tbe circumstances of tbe late _dUtarinnces at Berlin baa been commenced . Tbe dumber of _persons killed is stated _officially to ba eleven . Tke city was perfectly _traaqail oa t & e 18 Ji . In tke sitting of the Katjonal Assembly on tbat day a petition , signed by 14 , 009 -sorkmen , was presented , _prayitg for the _pncUt _m-. nt ef tbe National Guards wbo fired on the people , and tbat the victims might be interred at the cost of tbe State . The assembly having decided on a judicial investigation of tbe circumstances passed to the order of
the day _. On the MA , the unfortunate victims of the recent collislon between the dtrfe gaards and the labourers on the Canal were Interred with considerable pomp and solemnity . Tho _fuetral of Herr Schneider , of the civic guard , was attended Try deputations of _tholabourcrs _. snd the dvic guard followed in turn the coffins ' of ths deceased _laboarers to the _tntiol ground .
BECIGSaIIOH OF THE _PHUS'IAS _iimsiRT . _Bsaiin , O _^ t . 22 . —Yielding to what may be termed the impossibilities cf kis position , General Pfnel tbis morning tendered his _ruigna-Jon , aad that of his colleagues , to the King . Hie Ksjrity , thrown into great embarrassment by this resignation , requested the General to withdraw his resignation , bnt was met with a _pwitive re * fasti . BAVARIA . THE fHilX _BEEK _BEVOIDTIOW .
Asa ' matter of course' theperlodicaldlsturbanreslo Munich , on the occasion of the _ralslag of the price of beer , were renewed on the 18 th ( the dey on which the new tariff cane into operation ) . As usual , many brew _, erie- bakers' shops , and public houses were attacked and _demaged * and , as usual , a nnmber of persens were wounded or otherwise injured during tha _collision betwecn the rioters and the poliee . Up to half past 3 p . m ., on the 18 th , tranquillity was not restored . Numerous publicans were compelled to give their beer gratis to ail comers , A number of soldiers took part in the riots , BUKGABY . Tbi National _AmcbWj oi _fwitb 01 ft * _lii _luitttt
W" ~ Pba50b. Town Edition Of Last Week W...
resolved—1 . That it would recall all . tbe Hungarian troops employed ont of the conn'ry . , 3 . 1 Tbat tbe Archduke Stephen having abandoned ihe country of whioh be was Palatine , should be deprived of his digni ' y * . 8 . That all Hungarians in Anstria ' _shenld return to tbclr native conntry within fifteen _dsjs . A Commlttf e of the ] _Assembly wUl fix tbe period for the return of those not residing In Austria . It . _TJngerbofer , the Austrian Cansal , had-passed with 4 , 000 serfs to the side of tbo _iasur * gent Rii' _. _xers . Kossuth had been appointed _President of the Committee of _Dsfence , and invested ' with the dictatorship . He had fonhwih ordered the ' commanders of all fortresses to raise the Hungarian tricolonredBtan dard within seven days , and to send to the committee the assurance of their obedience , under pato of being regarded aa traitors to their country .
ITALY . A letter from Turin , of the 16 th Inst ., In the National Sivoisiin , BBys : — 'By newt received from Milan , i * - app ; srs that the Hungarians of the army of occupation ara le a 7 _lag ia small parties for Hungary . Inscbbeotiok . —The National _Sayoi'Ien of the 19 . h inst ., annouuceB , from a private letter , tbat an insurrection has broken out at Cotno . The psnple have _drlren ont the Austrian g & rrison but the same letter states tbat 10 . 009 men had been directed to the epet by RadetE _* ty .
INSURRECTION AT MILAN . Intelligence from Alexandria ( Piedmont ) ' of the 19 th last , states , that on tho _18-. h an iatnrreotlon broke out in Hllan against tbe Austrians . Radetski had mined the palaces and the cathedral , and threatened to blow tbem up . Tbis did not , however , prevent the exasperated people from attacking the military . Several liveB were loEt , acd . the whole cl ' . y rose in arms . The tocsin was sounding from every _tswer _, and complete confusion prevailed , :
SPAIN . THE BllTEfc FBU 1 TS OP H 0 RA 1 OBT . A letter from Madrid on the 15 th _ssys : —• * The courtmartial at Monjuich , Barcelona , has coneluded tbe first act of its tragical mission . Three captains , _Ciavljo , Yasqucz , and Valterrs _, were shot in the glacis of the citadel at sevea on tbe morning of the Sih . Six others have been _condemned to creiidi ' os fer terms varying from eight to t * n years . On the 7 th a sergeant of the regiment of Bourbon was shot for having taken pert in tbe _consp'racy recently detected at Conmna . The ' -news from Yulencia to-day ii as horrible ss that from Bares lona . In itria , ' five Montemellnlsts have been shot ' ia cold blocd . In Bsgnol two , accrued of killing a soldier , faeva-euffered tbe same fate . The council of war had also condemned to be shot-some ' of the prisoners taken in "Albsrlquella Sept , last , -when the CabeclUa Cardona wesktllled .
The barber jus executtoas by'General Cordova at Bacelona , -aad the severe measures adopted by tho French government against tbe SpantshTefu-jees wko have taken _refogein Prance from tbe tyranny of _Nwvttss , to'far fr . i-n intimidating the insurgents in Catalonia , seem , on the contrary , to have made tbem more resolute acd daring . Oa the 12 th the * Pregresitta Colcnel BafWra entered tbe province of'Gcrona , and was immediately joined by 200 deserters from tbe Spa-ton army , 130 armed _psaisn's from the district of _Figtreras , and forty frtm tbe parish of _Cetntallojis , headed by their curate . The _Foxento _Biroeldca journal , of the _Wthinst ., _annouBCes the ezecnticn-at Bunal , on _^ he ' llth _. of three "Republicans taken with -aims in thet ? bauds . ' Three other Republicans -of the'band of _CittJona , experionced the same fate on tbe' _& ca .
About fifty persons have been arretted _at'lfadrid , in _constqience of the dlicovety of _a'RtpobHcan'plot . A Chest _containing _tbeftaoney of tbe conspirators was discovered in an old bonse of tke Caledo'Toledo _^ alled the palace of Charles _V . _^ POLAND . Tha Poles In Lewioerg , ' and ta'faat aU'through Ont Gallcia , are actively at werk _ia'furtheraase ot their canse . GeneralDwernickl and-General Beta are busily engaged ia organising a stroBg Polish army . There ap . pears to be no lad * Of money . It Ib stated that General _Dwernlcklhas joined the Hungarian arecy wUh _^ 8 _, _« 300 Poles .
_'tlNITEirSTtTES . By the arrival of the British and- ' _3 fo ? th -American steam-ship America , we learn that an _irtcurrectlen . kad occurred at Tobago , but no _« _2 rlous results were _ap-vre . hended . A _trtffiendons gale bad taken place in _the-5 _ulf of Mexico , the efffect of- which was _to-sub-Qerg ' etheisknd ofBrasos to the depth of seven feet fine inhabitants were rescued by « transport ship . _Therehavefceen dreadfnl'eonflagratleca _afPensssola asd Grlena _, _dertroying ; nearly 150 houses 'Jn- the two places . Five _^ persons _werertrflled by the accidental
explosion of kegs of _gunppwder _at'Woodbluc _, _neatt _^ altlmore . At HsTalltoa - 'Cinada , a littlo _^ bl _namedr-SJar goret Yfcod , had been murdered under very revolting circumstances , An attempt had been-made _at-S » I . oalF , to burn a Cathbllo and a Presbyterian church ; _butthsp _. plly the _£ amee were discovered in time to prevent the destruction of the _bultdlagr _, A ' _promlneat-Germen republican , nsmed HeirHocker , had arrived at Ne-r . York , with the bbjset of examining and-reportfsg bpoo the practical working of R _-publloanism in tha United-States . He wesreceived wih honour by thad ' y authorities of New York , and also by the German population . . - r
* X 5 AP & 6 F « G 00 D H 6 B 33 , Cipe of Goad Hope papers to the 15 th of < Augusc confirm tbe statement regarding the capitulation entered into betwea Pretoria- aad _Mnjor Warden , tke . Brit Ish Resident at _BleemVPont-in , by whioh the latter consented to withdraw _beyoni-the-Orange River , thereby _carren . dering tbe Qae * n " s authority to tbat portion of the coloay over which he bad presided . DEFEAT OF PRBTOBIBS _.-AB _3 THB BOSBSlBY _EIBfiWaBY -SMITH . The Rosamond steamer arrived at Portsmouth on-Wednesday from the _^ Ddpe _, < wlth news to tboUtbnlt . -A-severe
action had been fought between Sir Harry-Smith ' s , ferce and the Boers . The latter were completely routed , with rfifty killed . Fretorlu 9 _eecapad . Sir iEt .-Smith and eight English _cfltoers-.-wCTe wounded . _Captain _Morray _>« absequent ! y died . > Of the soldiers engaged eight or . ten were killed . Tbe engagement took placo -On _thejSSth of 'Angus * . Tbe Boers arete , strongly posted at _aplace called Eloe PlatB _, and sifter a sharp conflict of three boars were defeated . Sir Harry-SraHh was wounded in the knee , aad had a horse killed under him . Tbe last _despatches frora Sir Harry Smith ' s headquarters , six miles . northi _« m : of Bethany , are dated _August 31 .
ESRSIA _. D _? iTH CF THE SBAH . —The _JOCBBAL SE Co »« _TA _* 7 _l aoPLC has the following : —'/ Letters from Persia , . via Trebiwnd , which arrived here , announce an important eseat . The King of _Persia , * Mohamaie 4 Shah , died at Tebcraa from a violent attack of goat , to which he hai long been subject . _HobammedVShah , sen of Abbas , acd grandsea of Fetti All Sbab , wbo died in 1831 , and whom be HigCHded tothe throne of Persia , wat the third eove . reign of the _dyaasty of the _JKadjan , -founded In 179 * by Ara IIo & amBied Khan . He was born in 1806 , and his heir , _tfatbua Salthanet , _goreroor of Azerbaifijin . ia eighteen years of age . If the _cewa of the death of the
King of _Persia be confirmed , it isprobat Is that the Salar who Is inarms near Khorasan , will march npon Teheran while the princes , who bave _^ aken refuge on tbe frontiers ofjTarkey , in _conseqaenoe . of events wbich have taken place in Persia at different periods , aad among nfaom are Assafed Dewlet , the Shah ' s maternal uncle , and Esil . _as-Eoaltban , who reigned tfor several months after tbe deathaf Fetti All Shah , _onder the name of All Shah , will probably make some attempt on the southern provinces , where they have numerous _partisans . These two last princes . are at tbis time at Kerhelia , living _upan a pension granted them by the _Ott-TOangOTernmeat ; It is aaid that _thefoz-uooolcatioos _batweeo _£ _cuxl » and Teheran are already Intercepted . '
P2bu.0cs Ao Tbotdbe.—-A Gentleman Msked ...
P 2 BU . 0 CS _Ao _tbotdbe . — -A gentleman _msked to ( _feave in his _posaesaion a living specimen of the _ii & ongh , or Cornish _ore-v , a bird whiok is now besom ,-. ing rare , and wbioh always builds in the _preeipitoaa _sicjeiof the cliffs . Two brothers engaged , _to-furnish bim with young birds-fran the nest . They Accordingly provided themselves _aith a rope , and proceeded to a _.-pacewhicti ' tbey ikaaw jto _befrtqaenfred _fythese btrds :. One of tbem tied as end of the rope ronad his wf tis 4 , and his brother lowered him over tfce _^ dge of the -olif _, holding the _xopexa hiB hand . ' When he had armed opposite the nests he foimd . that they were built finder an overhanging ' rock , ee . as to be beyond Mb reach . Nothing daunted , he set the rope swinging , nstil he was carried inU the hollow , when
he held fast by ihe rook , bnt finding the rope too short to allotviim to , gain the nest , ie untied it from his waist , climbed into the cavity , asd secured his prize , which he _stowed away iu nisbasom . Meanwhile the rope had swung back to the { tsrpendioulsr , and wss resting motionless . Without _joeaitation he called to bis brother above , ' Stand by the rope , lam going to leap to it ! ' He did so ; but the rope , as might have been expected , slipped tbreugh his hands , and he fell into the sea . The brother felt the jerk , and looking over the edge of the cliff , saw Mm neither dashed to pieces nor drowned , bnt rubbing the water from hia face , and exclaiming ; 'Carry my shoes * round to the cove , John , I'll be round as soon '
as thee wast . ' And so he was , andmorever , bringing \ his birds safe with him . _, This perilous _adjeuture is aid to bare happened inthe parish of Breage . . ¦ _, - _RfPBKSBSTATlON OP THB _WlSt KjDKO , _*—At ' U _meetins of the' _Libsral electors from various parts of the West Riding , held ' at the Hotel , Noroanton _, on Taesday , it was resolved , on the motion of the _Maysr of _Leeds , seconded by the Mayor of Wakefield , that the Hon . Charles Wentworth Fitzwilliam , is a fit and proper person to represent the Liberal _eleoters of the West Ridieg , provided that he is favourable to Free Trade ,, to ; _eppuoroical _/ efora , a gradual and safe ' _exfensio ' nqf tHe suffrage , and op posed to any further endowment of religion by tlie state .
_HcspiiiL pob _CorrecMPTiON , Brompxon . —Frem the medical reports just issued regarding this _im-titotion , it appears tbat there exists a most painful itflux of applicants , out-door patients exceeding one hundred daily . Fatal Acciobni ex the La . tbbh Counties Railway . * -An inquest waa held yesterday , by Mr W . Baker , at the Jolly Weavers , Wheeler Street , _Spitalfields _. on the body of _Riihard Elliot , aged twentyfive , a labourer ia the employ of the Electric Telegraph Company , when tbe jury returned a Y & idJo . of _. _AccidjutalCsat _^
• Fuimfipominif^
• _fuimfipominif _^
Mr Joseph Barker ' And The Chartist Body...
MR JOSEPH BARKEr _' aND THE CHARTIST BODY to TKTS _EDITOS . or THB _UOaTHMN _STAU _. Sta , —A lecture was delivered by . Mr Barker in tho _Tempsrasca Hall , on Monday week last . MrRawson , town councillor , in the chair , The subjeot of his address was * Aristocraoy and pauperism , ' In which Mr Barker _andeavoureu to show that the landed _aristooraoy are tbe cauBeoftho pauperism , whioh exists in this oountry . At tbe conclusion of bis address , Mrd . Roberts proposed tbat ftDjfenoe and Victim Committee shonld be esta . blished in aid ofthe families of tbo imprisoned Chartists . Mr Barker objacted ; and said tlie meeting was his meeting ,
and wonld not allow himself , to ba identified with tbo Chartists , or as he styled the ' rb _, ' physical force men . 'Sir Roberts attempted to reply , bat was Inter * upted by , the _friends of Mr Barker , upon which Mr _Jtiberts desisted . ' Mr Barker then announced the name of a person who would receive subscriptions for his defeuco from the moral force men , and said that tbe physical force men might act for themselves . Tho UBual sale of Mr Barker ' s tracts wa- tben proceeded with , and after a V ( it 6 Of tbftt k » being given to the chairman , the meeting began to separate ; upon whieh Messrs Alderson and other _. membersoftao National Charter Association , called on all who were in favour of Bppointhw a Victim Committee
to remain . A g-o ' dly nnniber obeyed the xe ' _qnest _, and _oltimately eight Chartists were elected , with pawer te add to their numbers . Tbey will meet at But . terworth . _bulldings every Monday evening , at ei ght o _' el . ck . Mr Barker then left the hall , accompanied by D . Lightovsler , and otber friends . It _» pp 3 * , rs from what has occurred at Bradford , and the fact of separate committees being formed by professing Chartists lor Mr _B-rker , in various places , that the unfortunate " Chartist prisoners snd their families are doomed not only to aeglect , bnt that tbey are ' to bo held up to the government as legitimate objects of _psrsecution , nnder the sweeping and unsciupulousapprllation of ' physical force men . ' Itithlgh ' _tioaefor the veritable Chartists to
open their eyes ) for under pretence of the cant abont p hysical asd moral force , tbe soul and opirlt of the € a artist movement is _rnpldly departing . Nay , more ' the Char tist _coansUs generall y " have assisted in _brmgiug thes < parlies beforo the pablio . who now r _. ? 'i upon them . undtr the paltry pretence of the worn-out and back ' nled phrase ' _pnysloal force . * _Matk well , then , Chartists . We who have stood by the National _Coarter Association since 1310 , have been stigmatised cbntibaally aB . * physical foice _' men , Take heed that the resuscitation et tbe ol' terms _beioti used as a pretext to hand you _« v _, r * o the oatihtng knaves _against whom yoa have so long been - battling . * R ; _member tbat Mr _barker has
openly _avoided himself a member ef tbe league , and not only a member , but one of its council ;; for proof of which sea foe last - page of the narrative _coacernlag his arrest , kc . 1 am well aware that this statement is calculated -to draw down tbe opposition df Mr Barker ' s friends , _<* 5 ut _Tfetl it an _imperative duty to endeavour te put my brother'Chartists on their guard , I trust you wilt isretrt tuts • fa tke Stavw it ' _ia the only . means _% y whioh the Chartist bo _«' y oan be _madencquilnte ' d with tbe tbove facts , and justice be done to our suffering brethren , and tbeir helpless'families . Hoping the _ipeo . pie "will not allow a _scoond-Stepbens to swallow np their subscriptions , to the crcksion of _othars as Well worthy their support , _Iremaln _, _tonrs'traly , ; Bradford / Oof . 18 . _Seoboi ; _WIbite ' .
_;* P . S ; w-Hsw noble it the _contreat _effwrtd by 'G . J . _^ Holyoake . He _refustdto lecture -on Moral Force , lest -it should _^ imply a censure on ths _imprisoned' Char . _tlsts , or thoso anaitine trial . —*} . W . [ _This'letter waa ' reaeived too late for insertion last week . —En . K . S . ] ¦ '
The Cholera,. Thbmbtro- ?Ons.~Gi"^Ai Boa...
THE CHOLERA , . _THBMBTRo- ? ons . _~ Gi" _^ _Ai Board o » Heai tf—Only one owe was _reported on Saturday at _Gwjdyrhouse as having occurred in London , and that was _Snbjeined u the return issued on Monday by the General Board of Health , in conformity with the ro _gulations made for a dail y notification of the state of this disease in all parts of the kirigdom so far _m the statistics oan bo acquired — 8 ' 0 j r M
CHOLBRA . One case at Swansea--fatal . Ono case at _Rickmansworth—fatal ; One case at Edinburgh ; two deaths since last * e « port ,. Two oases at Newhaven ; two deaths since I'M re . ; port . * Four oases at Leith onedeaih since last _reguxt , ! . One case at the London _Hcspkal—fatal , , ) i Ociobkr 24 Two oases in Henry Street , Kent _Street . . One case in _GlaBshouse Street , Rosemr _, ry Laiw . A fatal case at Sydenham . A fatal case at Hull , unconnected w jth thu " shipping . A fatal-ease at Bedford ; along * t \ fh whioh it Is reported , that there have been five c i _^ mm the parish of _Kempstfln ; one of them is sta ' _jefl to have been fatal , and the termination of the test is not communicated .
OasAs sinoe las , fc ** Bport . Deaths : ., Edinburgh 10 „ , ., „ 5 Newhaven ... ... 1 , _^ , ... . 0 . Leith ... 4 ,,. , „ 3 Thk Rboisibar Gibjbrai ?* Wbekly _; _StsEOiBT . * _---The number of _deaths in tha - metropolitan districts , as- was the caso daring the _-rrevioua week , was iu that which ended last _Fjaturday muoh below the average , namely * 033 , while the weekly average derived from the , _'"numb' / r of-deaths which occurred in the correspo a tfcng _wuekBCf the . _vtastfiva year * is 1 , 1 H _, or 171 more tban _oecurrod last week . The tatsl « _asesof cholera _fitnoucted to forty-five , of which the followiD' _£ ; partioulari are given - : —
' in Woolwich _Aruenal , a convict _^ years , 'Asiatio cholera ( Ml hours' duration ) ¦ , ' a conviot , 58 years . < A-siatio _Cflolera ( 16 houro' duration ); ' a oonviet , 62 years , * _Aaiatic ' oholera ( 100 houra' duration ) ¦ ' a convict , 25 _lyear " , ' Asiatic oholera { fi tours' duration );' aconvic , _tv $ 5 years , 'Asiatio ciokra ( i days' duration ) ; ' & conviot , 23 years , « Asiatic oholera ( i days ' -dnrati' _- m )? In Chelsea _Northeast , a man 51 years , * e ;» _idt _iniio oholera - ( 3 days' duration ); ' and a boy , 'f 3 years , ' epidemio cholera ( 9 hours'duration )/ 'In Islington , 'East , son of a paper-Btainer , _5 _year-s , ' _^ cholera epidemioa ( 18 hours ' duration ) . ' Ira Chi _. _-i _stchurcb , Marylebone , seaman 22 years , ' _mali _g'aaut cholera { 2 * tiay 8 ' duration—secondary fever , ' 8 diays ) . ' In Whitechapel , North , . seaman , 43 years ,
' 3 , days'duration ] _T . ' In _'RatoHS , Stepney , en board a collier in the river Thames , M .,, 1 J > years , ' _diarrltea ( 4 days' duration ); Asiatio ! Oholera _(^ _houra ) . ' _Iji -St Paul ' s , Deptford , Greenwich , Mi , 68 yoars , ' 'oholera _Asiatic »( 18 hours' durationj . ' _^ In Islington , Eaet _. _-alabourer . _'IB years , 'diarrhoea ( 5 days' duraties ) spasmodic-cholera ; ' and a boy , 6 years , son of _> _i panper _stone _^ treaker , ' natural , with symptoms of spasmodic oholera ( 11 hours'duration ); ill-fed and poorly clothed ? - _'IoGoswell-street , Clerkenwell , P ., * 24 years , _* Asiatio cholera ( 36 hours' duration ) . ' In Cripplegate sub-district , M ., i 5 years , ' Asiatic cholera ( 4 days' - 'duration ) . ' In South-east _sub-distrlot , City of London * M , 27 , ' cholera _Asiatioa ( 12 hours ' ' duration ); ' Ik Aldgate Bub-district , M ., 50 years ,
'diedby _the-visi-ation ' of God from Asiatic cholera 420 hours' duration ) . ' In St Saviour ' s sub-district , a boy ,. 7 years / ' Asiatio oholera ( 15 } hours' duration ) , ' Jq St James ' s , Bermondsey , _M-, 20 months , 'Asiatio oholera ( 20 hours' duration ); ' M „ 26 , years , * Asiatic cholera ( 60 hours' duration ) . ' In ' Camberweii , a spinster ,. 21 years , ' _spasmodie oholera ( 7 hours' duration ); ' another ' spinster , 25 years , ' spasmodic cholera ( 11 hours' duration ); ' widow of an Italian warehouseman , ' - _^ years , ' Bpasmodio oholera ( 13 hours ' duration ); ' another widow , 45 years , ' spasmodic cholera ( 40 hours ' -duration ); . ' the' above four cases occurred , in _Feokham House Lunatic Asylum . In Chelsea South , !? ., 46 years , ' cholera morbus ( U hours' duration ); ' a girl , 10 years , ' oholera morbus
( 9 days' duration ); fever consecutive ( 7 days ) . ' In Islington West , a labourer , 40 years , a pauper in Islington workhouse , ' cholera Anglioa ( 1 month ' s duration ); dysentery ( 7 -days ) . ' In St Paul ' s , St George in the East , a girl , 10 years , ' natural death by the visitation of God , viz ., cholera ( 18 honra' duration ) . ' Inquest . Iu Limehouee , Stepney , M ., 25 years , ' cholera _biliesa _; cerebral congestion , ' In St Saviour ' s , F ., 15 years , _'amcuia ( 4 months' duration )* diarrheal ( 2 _J days ); _rpasms and eramp ( 24 hours ) . ' In Christohurc a , St Saviour ' s , son of a weaver ,-5 . years , ' _deaUtwlTOii , _onolera ( 12 hours' duration ); ' the wife of a weaver , 36 years 'destitution , " cholera ( 6 days ' . duration ); ' daughter of a weaver , 3 i _jeara _, ' destitution , oholera ( 96 hours' duration );' , and the daughter of a weaver , 1 . year , ' destitution , chokra ( 34 hours' duration ) . '— -Tke above four cases occarred in _Christchuroh _Werkhouse , all of one family , —Jn the same _subdistriot 59 .
, John Street , daughter of a tinman , 8 years , ' cholera ( 12 hours' _duratio- )) . ' In the Leather Market , Bermondsey , . M , 51 years ' oholera Bpasmodica' ( 18 _J hours' duration ); aud _ female , 35 _yeirs , * _spasmsdlo oholera , ( 46 hours' duration ) . ' In Kent : Road , St George , Southwark , son of a harness maker , 21 months , at 5 , William ' s Place , ' cholera morbus ( 6 hours' duration ) . * , Ia Lambeth , a waiter , at 61 , Devonahire Street , aged 41 years , ' oholera , accompanied with spasm , cramp , and hiccup ( attended 12 hours ) ; disease existed . 5 days . ' In Battersea , daughter of-a carman at Nine Elms , aged , 1 year aad 8 months , ' cholera , 9 hours'duration ) . ' In Greenwich Weat , in Dreadnought Hospital abip _, M . 39 years , ' _bronchitis- ( 4 > eeke ! duration ); cholera . ' In St George , Camberweii , at 4 , Thomas Street , _Wyndham Road , wife of a fish-vender , 58 . years , ' spasmodic cholera ( 15 hours ' duration ) . ' ¦ ¦ : ¦ : _{
Mr Rixon , the registrar of the sub-district , Woolwich Arsenal , makes the following statement : — The seven deaths from Asiatic cholera , registered by me latt week , _cccnrreii in the Unite HoBpltal Ship , among- _convlvts if out the ' _Jastiiia bu ' . k , lying off the Royal Arsenal wharf . The surgeon attributes the dls ease tothe unhealthy state of the a ' ttaospbere and to the locality , a oommon sewer being in tho _Immediate vicinity . Tbe captain of the ship ascribes It to ta « _rott-a _coaditlon of tbe halk , and to neat generated during the night bj so mnny . mea betn' closely packed together , a ward baring from ten to tnen ' y foar men sleeping in it , aocor ' . Ing te its size . Tho laBt two cases were of athletio young men and lasted fonr _dajs . The former patient was
pulseless from tbe first and' comatose during four hours previous te death—the latter was sensible , to the l & _st _. They were carefully attended to , visited every hour nikht and day—and were'treated with mercury , mustard _poulfloes , Bt ! mulantB , _' ' and all the usual remedies . ' The _' whole of tho _convlots _irere' _removed yesterday ( the 20 th ' last . ) from the Justitia , and put on board the Hebe and Sulphur reoeiring vessels , opposite the'Eojal Dockyard—which arrangement , I find , bas created some alarm in the yard . Tbis morning ( Saturday , 2 _lst ) a rigger WAS taken home frora tbe dockyard very ill , and afterwards a sbipwrig ' it , aud both cases are prunocnoedby the surgeons bb ' decided oholera . _OtbeirwlBOtbe town remains free , Scarlatina Is . still very prevalent ' . J
Mr Smith , the registrar of the north-east _Bub-d ' _iBtriot of Chelsea , . states j—Tbe two boys belonged ta the same family . The elder was employed onboard a lighter at _Islewortb , and had esiton heartily of muscles on the day beforo the attack , Finding himself ill he returned home under heavy tain wfaioh wetted bim to akin . His parents , who are in poor _clrcnisBtances , proourea . _modtoal aid , but were not able to provide the comforts neceqsary for his oase—and to the ' want ef these ) , , the . Burgeon thinks , is principally owing the fatal termination . The younger wbb constantly In the room during bis brother ' s illness , but was not _selzad till after his death . His illness is attributed by the medical attendant not merely to contagion , but to miasma generated in a badly ventilated and _oomfortlesB apartment , and increased b y the presence of , a sick _person . ' ; ' " '' ''' " " , ' _a " : ' ¦ Mr Bu tterfield , tlie registrar ef east sub-district of _Ialingtqn , states that
;—The bey , who resided at 15 , Lower _Qusen Street Now North Road , was taken ill _athalf-past . 6 a . m ., with ri . gors bilious vomiting , and purging with _rloe-coloured [ evacuations , and all the . symptoms of _truo oholera . Me . _diesl advice was not . ! obtained till half . _past 12 , when it , did not avail . , Tho patient . died at half-past 1 a . m . on Saturday , after , an illness of _elghloon hour _« . _lliBsma ibsuia _^ _ft-om an , open , offensive drain ia the baok yard , _seemed , to . be the primary cause , ' Dr Bossy itwho attended the above , bad another decided case in an adult , which has not be « n _fn ' _al , ., i Mr Obre , the registrar , states : — ' That the deceased was _asea-aan whohad arrived from Sunderland , In tbe' brig Marsden , on the 10 th ; had febrile symptoms with diarrhoea till the _lS-. h _, when he removed to _fiiu ' on - Grovei These symptoms continued till the 15 tb , when the oholerafo poison showed itself , and he died on the 17 tb ;' ' Dr Miller adds that : — ¦' _..,- '
' , The patient was brought borne on Friday eveniug in a state of _collapce , and _. died of' Asiatic oholera , ' in the stage of , secondary ' fever . . . . . Mr _Cbapmani the registrar , sta ' . es that : — ' This sailor was brought from a _lodglng-hoaso , No , 118 , _Rboemary Lane / to tho Whltechapel _WorkhouBe , on _the ' lCth Oot ., and died oa tho 18 . h . It appears he bad sot been man ; days from on board ship , Mr Wells ,, the registrar of Ratcliff , mentions that : —\ ; ' , ' „
_Bssldes the above esse , he had , three others ( ene _EogllBb , two Asiatic ) , on whioh | nqueetsha d been held ; bnt they were not yet registered , as he had not obtained the coroner ' s signature . The four _caeesooourrtd on bQ » rdv 9 lU « _I 8 lmtl _5 Xllft » fB . :
The Cholera,. Thbmbtro- ?Ons.~Gi"^Ai Boa...
Mr Marohant , the registrar of St Paul _* s , DeptfMd _states-tbat : — """ '" " ~ This person _residftd in every healthy , airy iltnatlon , and _wasof stoody habits ; by trade a carpenter , bat only nothing at his trade ( _coaslo ' nally , _havirg other re _« Bourc ' es . He ate a hearty dinner of boiled mutton , spi . naoh , and potatoes , on the day previous to tbat on which ho died . Mr Buttttfield , tbe registrar , states that : — _The-o two were brothers , and died in _^ _V ' * . 0 I 0 B 8 , confined , _badly-ventllated place , off the Lower Road .
POUCB _SiBITART PBBOATJIIONS . _^ _M-STROPOllSl Ootober 22 . —' The several police divisions , within ten miles of London , sent round to the several Burgeons within the prescribed limit , experienced < _fficers to ascertain if any and _howmanyoasen of cholera occurred during the week . This was don 9 bv-order ofthe police commissioners , for the pnrpese of testing the correctness ofthe registrar general 8-report , and for the adoption of precautionary mea * _"aures against the spread of this frightful disease . Itt _cowequenoe of this order , the _a-sistanta of Mr G . A . _Walter , of Druty Lane aud St jBme 8 ' BVlace „ were ) all yesterday busily engaged in inquiries respecting the health of those district 9 . Although they found several cases offerer and English cholera , they did
not discover one positively deoided oase of Asiatic cholera . The reports of tho surgeons throughout th « other metropolitan districts were , we are happy , to state , equally satisfactory to a late hour . The _commiesioners of police will adopt similar precautionary measures until all cau _* e of alarm has been removed . Wo regret to add that the above inquiries disclosed an awful amount of the most heart-rending and unmitigated destitution . > _DsAtu j / _rou Asiatic Cholbba . —On Saturday afternoon an inquiry was proceeded with before Mt Baker , at the-Queen ' s Lnnding , Wapping Wall , 01 view of the body of John Madden , coalwhipper , aged thirty-four , _whodiedof Asiatio cholera , —Mary Hayes Bister of the deceased , living at Ne . 6 , Wapping Wall
said that her brother resided in the same house . Hi waa in good health till Wednesday morning last , whei he complained of slight pains in his bowelB . He lef his home that morning about nine o ' olook to attorn to bis work on board a vessel in the river . He re turned borne shortly after live o ' olook the same day He was then extremely ill , and had violent pains ii his bowels and cramps in his limbs . He called on M Henry , surgeon , Wapping Wall , who gave him soni medioine , and he went to bed . His feet were put ii warm water , and mustard poultices were applied _t his extremities . As he was getting worse witnes sent for Mr Henry , who promptly attended , and ad ministered to his relief , but witbout effect , and he diet the next mornine about nice o ' clock , —Sarah Grace
daceaaed ' _s sister , stated that for two days previous t < the Wednesday deceased had been drinking freel y . Ii answer to a juror , witness stated that both the sewen and the drains are in a shocking condition . Whei there are heavy rains the ground floor ofthe house he lived in overflows with filthy Sewerage , whieh comei out of the oommon sewers and drains . The rmell it so dreadful that they are obliged to shut the doors am windows , —The foreman of thejury and _sererelof th ( jurors stated , that between seven and . nice o ' clock ol an evening the tf & uvium in the neighbourhood wai most dreadful . —After other witnesses had been examined , the jury returned the _following verdict : — That the deceased died a natural death from Asiatic oholera , and that thejury request the Coroner to write
to the Commissioners of Sewers on the defective _atatt of the sewers and drainage . of the neighbourhood , which was highly injurious tothe health of the locality . '—The Coroner said he sbould atteud to the request of thejury . Two _Ikqubsts at Millbank Pisnitbniiary . —Od Wednesday , Mr Bedford , the corone-, held two inquests at tbe Milibank Penitentiary , and in each case it was found that the immediate cause of death was Asiatio oholera , the symptoms being distinctly marked by the disease being most rapid . in its fatal progress . The first case was on the body of Duncan Turner aged 50 , who was received into the prison on the 20 th of March , and who died yesterday morning in the } nfirma » y . — Atkinson Woardley , warder , stated that at half-past seven o ' clock on Tuesda _y
evening he perceived that deceased had exhibited a signal ' for assistance . Witness went to him , and aBked him what he wanted . He replied that he was very ill and that he wanted to see the doctoi The dootor saw him in about an hour and a half and he was then removed to the infirmary , Taoma . ' Dillon , the infirmary warder , stated , that when h ' received the deceased he said that his bowels had beet relieved four times _sinco supper time , at six o ' e _' . ock About an hour after his admission , cramp io thi legs came on . He was sick and purged , but then was nothing in his appearance before tbat resein bling a severe attaok of cholera . He died at sevei o ' olook in the morning . Dr Baly , eaw the _deceaeet shortly before ten o ' clock on the even ng on whiol
he was attacked . He did not think at that timi that it was an attack of cholera , but the remedie which he prescribed had reference to the possibility of the disease beicg cholera . At two o ' olock in th morning the deoeased having gradually got worse was reduced to a state of complete collapse , at it was then evident that he was suffering froi Asiatio cholera . Witness remained with decease two hours , and the assistant surgeon _wsb with hit all night . He died af , 7 o ' olock from Asiatic oholen . The Coroner : Do you consider that earlier remedie would have been of any avail ?—Witness : I do not I prescribed a warm cordial mixture , opiam an brandy , with application ? of hot bottles and mm tard poultice to the stomach . In consequence _c
these cases of oholera ; . another surgeon has bee : added to the establishment , an additional quantit of spice has been mixed . 'with the gruel , half a pin of porter daily is allowed to each prisoner , and I hay recommended the substitution of solid food fer _gTUC in order to fortify the prisoners against the disease Means have baen adopted also for keeping the pri son wall warmed , and other measures of a preoau tionary nature have been taken . The coroner bavinbriefly summed up , thejury returned a verdiot , thai the deceased died from Asiatic Cholera .. The second case waB that of Georgo May aged 2 . who was first attacked about five o ' clock in ,, tht morning , and who died at twenty minutes to ' _twt o ' olook io the afternoon . In this case the svmntnmi
were purging aud vomiting . Brandy and water am the usual remedies were applied , the body was rub ; bed with w & im cloths , and he was constantly rubbet until the time of his death , ; The . Coroner inquire * if there was any local cause to acciunt for thest attacks ?—Dr Baly replied , that possibly , the proxii mity to the river might ' have something to do wit ! it . The first case which had occurred in the metro polis took place near the" _riyer / exactly opposite thi prison . The jury found , aa is the previous oase , thai thedeceased had died from Asiatio Cholera / _Wbolwioh , Oot 21 . —A rigger in Woolwich Dooki yard , named Mealey , was _carried out ofthe yard thii _, _^„ ; - _ . — — - — - ¦ - — — _jan- _*» _HiAAS
forenoon labouring under a severe attaok of thi cholera ; he had been at werk on shore opposite thi station now occupied by the Sulphur and Hebe , wittl the cenviots who were removed from the Justitia on board . Almost every person now admits the conn contagious nature of the disease , but many have thi impression that the oholera poison , or miasma , ii conveyed to other ! -, according to the direction of tha wind over tbe plaoe where it emanates . The _numbee of- cases were certainly far less on board the Juatitii wben tbe wind was ' north-east or _easterly than whet ! it was from the south-west , the latter wind carryjnp tbe vapour of the sewer in the Royal _Arsenalonboarr _tbevesael .
Two or three cases of oholera , said by tbe _surgeonr who attended them to be _Asiastio , have occurred ii the town of Woolwich . In one ewe , a lad wsb brought from on board a collier lying off Woolwich , to Mil Prater , surgeon , of Thomas Street , who , after admmuii tering remedies , directed him to be . taken to bin " _friendsin London , as it was tod late forhi ' m to obtain ; admission into th ' e Dreadnought Hospital , Tbe Iphigen ' a frigate , formerly appropriated to tha Marine Society boys , has been ordered to be taken tb her former _statioa near the Dreadnought , ' at Greene wiob , to be used exclusively 1 as a hospital for persona attacked with tbe cholera , that they may not be ini the same vessel aB other patients . ;
Woolwich , Oot . 22—The oases . reported'as add mitted up to twelve o ' clock yesterday were thirtyy seven , and one new case today , which the dootor rea ports will be a fata _) . one , makes a total up to twelvv o ' olook today of thirty-eight admitted , twelve deathtu twelve , discharged ; and thirteen convalescent , to thas there Ib only oce case now having a tendency to be 0 c a fata ! oharaoter . The rigger , named Mealey ; who was attacked yesterday forenoon in tbe dockyard ; died thiii morning , shortly after sixq ' clopk , after about _eighteen hoars illness . He was one of the riggers who had asu sistedin navigating the Unite and Wye hospital _ahipJE frcm opposite the' Royal Arsenal to moorings opn ' ositit the Dockyard , trad in taking the ' convicts from ow
_uuaru vne _oustitia into the Hebe and Sulphur _veaseleli and removing the m to thoir ' present ' station ' , ' b ' et # ixs CharltoB pier aud the east ead of the dockyard . " OO the some evening he went to enjoy _himuelf _atOharlrl ton fair , whioh , owing to _, the great quantity of rainni wa * very deep with mud , and gettipg wet , with tutu other exoitements bf the fair , was enough , to bring _. onu an attaok of cholera although he . ' had _no _^ been _^ mni ployed en board the conviot ship , during the day . M » experienced naval officer remarked yesterday ' , _thatit ; although he did not believe the disease was contagious "J he had noticed in many instances _thafpersoneitisiD-pi the same _water-oloset as oholera patients were verjr _; liable to be attacked , owing to the foul poiionotiB _aiai in them .
Moxdat , Oet . J 23 . ; - Therechave been no _frestsl deaths on board the convict , hulkB , but several _nece _* cases , three or four of which are stated to be _vervw dangerous . The system of hulking , even in theh _. hospital ship , is ko bad aa hardly to admit _ofpropeuei ventilation , and on board the Justitia there werem many of the berths into whioh the sunlight _neverei ; could enter , _whilit in others the only aperture for _thdhn admission of air was a few square inohes in _areaw _Themortahty is not nearly so great now as it was _inis April , 1811 , when bronohitia aud pneumonia pi & _erailed in the hulks , and wben at one _jimo nine _iaioi * l _^^ _u _« _ktiioawftikW iu mi _» it _«^ . _to-titt *
¦A'6 13'Izen Of-The Worfin.'-—As The "Na...
¦ A' 6 13 _'izen of-the _WoRfin . ' - —As the "nameof Rossi seems destined to figure in Papal ' -feistory , it may _benight to give a few biographical _motions of this personage . Ha _wasiiornin the little town of Massa _" -Carrara _,-afr-tbe timeft was governed by the Archdoohess Mark Beatrice , about 1 _^ 90 ,-and hence was ushered into life an- Austrian subject . In 1868 a decree of Napoleon made him a . Frexekman , by converting Carrara and the duch y into a department ofthe empire . We soon * find liirri at Bologna a practising lawyer , and in _. 1814 a _snbject < $ f thePqpe , but heving cast-his destiny with Joachim Murat , ' we suddenly discover Mm . at Naples -a ¦ _* natiiralite & Neapolitan , _antf-joined with Salfiina revolutionary attempt . After Murat ' _s discomfiture he passed the Alps , and- settling at Geneva , married ¦ ¦>& Swiss wife , auA hecame >/ i : naturalised { Helvetian ia 1820 . iHe
goti .-a-- seat . at the cantonal council board and the federal diet , and sowed the . germ .-of * central _authorkyi'out ef which sprang the Sonderbund . Having made acquaintance with the Due de IBraglie at the Chateau _ofipopp ' et , so famous fer the -. various . great men « 8 nd women who have met there ,, he managed to _negotiate through him with 3 uisot for a professorship , of jurisprudence at the Sorbonne _. and got it , becoming , naturalised at Pans . -He was a constant contributor to the press , and wrote the ' summary of politics' in the -Revue des _deuxMmdesj was made peer-of iFrance for his successful embassy to Rome Of course he had a hand inthe eleetion of Pio _Nono " and is nowrhi 8 : prime minister . . What next 1 '
Conning qf ; _Juvjsnijle _OifyjsNBERs At a dinner recently given to Mr Armitage , Mayer of Manchester , Mr Maude , the ¦ stipendiary magistra _' e of that _^ ity , referaing to the recent statute giving summary ; powers to justices in the case of petty larceny by _* hildren--a law , he observed , if judiciouslv administered , _lively to be very _lieneficial—gave an amusing instance of the rapidity with which changes in the law became known to those who are -likely to be amenable to tbem . One of the penalties inflicted by the Act in question is that of privatel y whipping boys under fourteen years of age . _£ ithin a veryshort time { he said ) after the Act became Jaw , little urchins apprehended on charges of this description , though scarcely able to ' look over the dock , when asked by the magistrate their age , invariably answered . ' Going 0 ' fifteen . '
Description of the Rio Bravo , —Imagine four of the _crookedest things in the world , then imagine four . more twice as crooked , and then imagine to yourself a large river three times as croofeed as all these put together , and you have a faint idea of the crooked disposition of this almi ghty crooked river . There is no drift in , it , from . the fact that it is so crooked that timber can't- find its way far enough down to , lod ge two sticks togetheribut few Bnakes , because it ie not strai ght enough to swim in , and the fish are all in the whirlpools in the 'bends , because they can't find their way out . - Birds frequently attempt to fly across the river , and alight on the same side they started from , being deceived in the different crooks ! Indeed , you may be deceived when you think you see across it , and some of the boys-say it is so darned . twisted there isn ' t but one side-to it . —American Paper .
Esecution _Extraordinartt . —Pursuant to his sentence , Thomas Brennen was hanged in front of the gao ! yesterday forenoon . The hangman gave him less , than the usual fall—about ten feet—but , strange to say , the jerk actually severed his head from bis body , and both fell to the ground . We do not remember having heard or read of a similar occurrence . The rope used on this _occasion was of the ordinary thickness , and the decapitation in all probability was in consequence of disease . —Niagara Chronicle . —Qet . 5 th .
• A . Sign < h ? - * aE TiMEs .-The registrar of births and deaths for the Broughton West district , inthe _uiverston Union , last weekreceived f tit returns ' from the three officiating clergymen of Broughton Kirby Ireletb , and Seatwaite , showing , that no marriage has been solemnised during the three months of July , August , and . September in the _above-nameiplacea . This seldom or never was the . ease before , showing that the old maids and bachelors {¦ of which there are a very great numberespeciall
, y ia Broughton ) are as determined as ever _, to remain ia iheir unenviable pasitiov-—Utverston ilAdvertiser . 'Am we _MAK-EAiaasr' asks the Standard op Fmsdom . is our _gracieua young Q , ueen a canni-£ 1 ! I i ° t , Jihatmean tho terrible words which fell fromithe lips of the Lord Chief Justice in senfencing Smith 0 Brien ? We _esn well believe that a thrill oi disgust and abhorrence went to the heart of every one ef . our _fellow-subjects , who , inthe morning papers , read , thia iwnlt to : the common
senee and common feeling of the country . That the | wretohed ; man shonld be sentenced to _. death at all is I bad , enoufih in the present _stptoi of pnblio opinion . against aU death punishments ; buUt wonld B eem I tint , it is not enough by satisfying th ** . ' ends of justice , 'to choke the hie _. _out of him with a halter , but his lifeless body , must be mangled , must be cut into four quarters _,, and placed , forsooth ; atthe disposal of the Queen ! _Isit possible to imagine a _grosser insuit to a young and humane , woman than this V ¦¦ states that Sir John Cam Hobhouse was on Monday ¦ week presented with the freedom-of , the _buwh of Dingwall , put of respect for hi 3 consistent advocacy of _Liberalprmcipjes . Sir John-had been ona visit a few days to K . s , Mackenzie , Esq . ; of Seafortb . ' [ Sir John , it will b _^ reoollected , was cne of-tha mn ,. t
violent ot _. tfce Whig agitators for . the Reform Bill and talked repeatedly in his speeches in those feverish times of marcuug the Bruramasem button makeis and physical _foi-ce Trades _jUnionists to London to _overawo the House of Lords and tho Sovereign . Now Sir John is one of the government that hangs , draws , and quarters - those who havo . only ' done the same thing . That _beiM the ordinary _and _. _historical course of _WluMiem , the Diogwall freemen haying had their admiration or Whiggery particularly excited of late by the T . Y . correspondence , now delight to do honour to / the _consutentadTQcaoy of Liberal principle ** # Y » C 94 _bySufhHGmMhom . l _, _. * .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 28, 1848, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_28101848/page/7/
-