‘ squirm-avian“ " as...” ..p airs. .~ «haw.«4_ t | l l Mu»... wot-n- ’5 . ceremonial metal“. . /. ____'_..—__ POLITICS AND NEWS. FRANCE. We have received the Paris papers to Tuesday. The du- ties on foreign linens have become lately a matter ofserious discussion between the London and Paris press. The Moniteur of Monday morning contains the ordonnance for dissolvingthe Chamber of Deputies, dated at Neuiliy, on the 12th inst. , All France is now engaged in the general election, so that they have no time to think of amulet, infernal machines, or any oddity peculiar to this excitable people. The papers are terribly dull, therefore, to an Englishman. According to the Toulonnais of the 9th inst., a report pre- vailed on the 5th at Algiers that the whole province of Con- stamina had revoited against the French. Abd-eLKader was said to have arrival at 'l‘enez, in order to organise_tlie contingents of troops furnished by the eastern tribes of the re ency. . _ Pixie Paris papers of Wednesday are chiefly occupied with speculations on the approaching election which Will, it is generally believed, give a considerable n ajority to the mi- niaters.‘ The Manitcur contradicts the report oi an insur- rection in the province of Constantina, on the ground that the government has received no intimation of it. ' Loms PHILIPPE.—Some weeks ago there appeared an article in the Sun, in which we stated, on excellent authori- r ty, that the King oftlie French was labouring under an in- curable disease. This article attracted considerable atten- tion in Paris, but the journals, from prudential considera- tions, took no notice of it. Unhappily, the King’s disorder has so rapidly increased that it can no longerbe kept secret The members of the Royal Family have becmiie so alarmed, that they are ufi'aid to quit the Palace, lest they might never again behold their Royal parent. A l’aris correspondent, in a communication to a morning contemporary, says :—“In spite of an appearance of strength, his Majesty the King of the French has for some time past been a great sufferer, and‘ his ailment has been u source ofuueasiness to his (lccply-at- . tached and devoted consort and his affectionate finniiy. At a recent consultation of physicians, the features of his Ma- jesty’s disorder, as well as general health, were narrowly ex- amined. The conclusion arrived at by the distinguished members of the faculty present was, that the disease was dropsy. 1 make this'statement on ample authority. ‘ His Ma- jest ’s life may not be in any immediate danger, but the com- plaint has become painful and serious.” The peace of En- rope—aye of the world,—liangs upon the life of the King of the French. He it is who really maintains the peace of Eu- rope. }le it is who compelled France to remain neutral as the pasha was taking a ride in the neighbourhood, he was surrounded by a body of 1,200 sailors, mended the payment ofa portion of the arrears due to them. pnsha told them to eat that, pointing at the wood. The sailors took him at his word, and carried offu quantity of timber. The next day, however, the pashn ordered 300 ofthem tone flogged, in order to discover the ringleaders, four of whom Were delivered-up and executed, and ninety more were load- ed with irons.” been permitted to transcribe the following melancholy pas- sage from a private letter, bad, April 2?, 1842: intelligence has poor fellows have been about 25 officers and 700 men, sick could not hold their musketfi' ' the P. S. perceiving this, cl ‘, try, from quarters on which we can place the utmost ro- e who clamorously de- twenty- two months" Being then near the timber-yard, the Arrousmsrax.—Tus Ganaisos or GHUZNE‘E.—-We have t addressed to one ofhis friends in infantry 2—“ Ahmeda- just arrived that these destroyed to a man. There were included. The sepoys the Ghazis referred to in u and destroyed them.” England, by an ofiiccr ofthe 3d native to be. found. _ of fin-ms, especxally grass manufacturing town's, No district has sufleret owned principally by Sir the severity ofthe times, never was so little domg. ofthe town, to make purchases. which indeed are ofa nature to speak for themselves. V ‘can Association for oil the 8th of ground was eagerly taken, there are no tenants No rents can be obtained from the occupants farms, in the neighbourhood of and the farmers are greatly distressed. i more than Osbaldeston, which iS R. Peel. . the metropolis, the last place to. experience the general complaint is that there The shopkeepers in the west end have in no season taken so little 'niouey as in f'visitors from the country in a condition very bit And even in si R his, from the want 0 \Ve have confined ourselves to bai‘estatements of facts,t si EMIGRA’l‘iON. ' consulting Council ofthe British Emigration and Colonizationtw June, at the house of the Association, New, Blackfriurs—the President (his Grace the A meeting ofthe Ameri- ' fl Bridge Street. . l' a ‘7 Duke- of argyll) in the Chair. _ , 1 “RE A [‘ iI‘AlN. The minutes ofthe fbrmer Council having been read’a g 0 DISTRESSED STATE OF THE COUNTRY. ( From the .Morning Chronicle.) The accounts which we receive from all parts ofthe coun- liance, are, we regret to say, of the most alarming character. The state of Mitiicbester may be inferred from a printed requisition, to which the names ofa number of respectable shopkeepers are attached, which runs thus: “ Ban TRADE AMONGST Snorxasrizns.—VVc, the finder- signed, impi'csscd‘with the necessity ol‘calliug p meeting of shopkeepers, &c., ofthe borough, to take into consiicration the present depressed state of their trade, and se ‘ing no prospect of‘escnpc from the generaitiinpciiding ruin which tlii‘bzitciis nearly all classes iii this district, rcspectiilil ' invite you to attend a preliminary meeting, to behold ut the‘dprcad Eagle, Hanging Ditch, on Monday eveningr next, the 13th inst, at seven o’clock precisely, to determine what steps should be taken in order to make kuowu their present alarming and distressed condition. “Manchester, June 8, 1842.” ' This brief document speaks volumes. From the great wealth of Manchester, the immense capitals and established credit of many ofthe houses engaged in business, it was one ofthe last places to feel the pressure; but now all is gloom, and the working classes'are suffering severely. . Onc fact will serve to give an idea ofthe intensity of the distress. There is an establishment for distributing soup, during the war in Syria. Whatever may be his political faults, and they are many and serious, Europe stands indebt- ed to him for the peace which it now enjoys. But’shail we have peace when the royal peace-preserver is gone? That, indeed, is a seribus question, to the solution of which the at- tention of the statesmen of Europe cannot be too quickly or too seriously directed. ‘For our part we confess that we ap- pi'ehend the worst. Vtht abilities the Duke of Orleans may ssess We know not; but from all that we have heard, he is at indifi'erentiy qualified to steer the vessel of the state in waters in which any heimsman less able than his fatherwould have foundered. Besides, the war-fever rages so madly, that war with him will be a political necessity. He will be compelled to fight orabdicate, unless the French oplo come to their senses before it pleases God to remove their present Sovereign. With the question, as to whether anothe.‘ revolution will take place, or be attempted, upon the death of Louis Philippe, we have here nothing to do.—Lon- donS‘un. SPAlN. MADRID, May ‘27.—\Ve are evidently at the commence— ment of serious events in Spain, for the whole system ofGo- ' vernment is so rotten, or. so corruptly administered, that it mass of speculation, bribery idle- and prostitution ofall kinds. it is and the whole hive of empleados(csla Carts) is in an uproar. What Perhaps the work- ing bees will drive the drones out to labour for their subsis- tlie palaces of Madrid _ v sh ll efflpltal, every one . rhe Worst of the pied with l p uce~buni- is dying of—an incurable ness, ititrigue, treachery, _ _ ‘ now brought to a stand-still for the want of maney, the result will be, Heaven only knows! tence, instead of living at their ease in ' ' - ' - - ' d. Posstbl 9 provinces. are so occu their rang-(mm in one politician may do. as he pleases in th {nutter is, that the deputies lag, and the gratification of that not one oftheir patri skghtest wish to re -’ ’ a I 6y are evmhmgiy exposin them. It see " g ms as if a party squabble Spain. who' _ pow ’ were at" hand. wherever the y ' they are ready 0 applaud it, two executed “on account.” With these propensities and these necessities at work, it strikes me that we shall see some in:eres:iug doings shortly. Barce ona otters ofthe 8th state ti -' ' Catalonia were on the increase Felipllliiutlhliiglliliesrittiind'ilm mwnpripoll, seized its garrison, and ) e w contributions, without being molested. Accoupts from Madrid of the 11th June have reacl d Parigwhich state that the ministry was not vet formed 11:1: that nodoubt—was entertained that it would. include Count . Almadovar and Senors Landem, Ramon Calntravu, Labola da Capaz, and Vadillo; and that General Rodii would be its president. The Prom directs attention to the f' - act that non of these persons were members of the coalition which over? _- ll'pW the Gonnies government, or took any part in the re- 1 M ution of September. For these reasons it antici t ‘ h mt Will be com ell d t - '~ - pa a“ at k p e o tame a few days after its appoint- Rent. . In” June 7pm PORTUGAL. ‘ . I , rom our own corres ) — grap icvdespatcheis from Oporto and Coimtirgngt‘iiliz)thalt‘£ile- government capdidates have carried the primary electiole there by a considerable majority. ln Lisbon, as far as tlileS Ireturnsare known, there appear to have’ been 34 districts in which the government candidates have got elected and 24in which the combined opposition has gained. the day The elections ‘_have one off quietly, as far as the accounis have been received. here was an attempt to make seine disturb~ once at Santa Isabel, where Costa Cabral is candidate but the firmness ofthe latter put a stop to it. ’ *— our pfv t8 'IAURKEfY AND THE EAST. i a a Vices rom Constantino is of the 27th gate shut the accounts received by the Ports from Syria cldlti? troughs; légpighlyqslansfactory, and that there was every 3" that coymtwanqui ity and oidei being soon re-estabhshed ,. The news ii‘otn Persia is satisfactor V rum-[y abandoned all intentions ol‘encdiira'giiiir illizhAhig'shfrls by a march of troops towards Herat. The aRussiansghave _ mgards us, behaved well in that quarter, and their rcseni diplomacy in PerSIa appears to be open and fair p Eerr'rf—Our correspondent says—“ They write li'om Alonndm, uigier date the 26th ult., that a few days before, t 011in _ . ll"'t|ie ‘ties were directed to cherish abuses, and to secure the exclnswe maloadministration thereof for their own benefit. It is a great misfortune for Spain that Espartero is notcr'uel. The very idea would frighten these tricky politi- ciansinto honesty, or at least into decency. Now they have no fear and no check to their intrigues, corruption and trea- son. Between these habitual tendencies and thehnonetary “pressure frat Without” (administered so perseverinoly by the Family In Eat-“4 should not be surprised if ~Zti5rbano felt, humelfcou'elled, er necessitate, to become dictator in . _ He isflusfiie stump of man to succeed here—an tili- beau ng hyphen. like Minn, Cabrera, or Zumiilacarrevui _ uglit teething of human life, and would not wgstd and shot'ou their victims while bayonets or liutclicts . l‘hese people convince their countrymen that the are in earnest, and then thcy are feared obe 'ed follows ,admu‘ed, Well served-—in short, carried bu toytri: um h: I‘he mess of the people—the industrious honest, su ering people—feel the oppressions exercised tliizouwh the knavery ofthe employésso severely, and know so \Velrtvllat a mass ofsiii there is iii authority “unwhipt of justice ” 'but ar of what we would call cruelty in a,chief- and receive it as so much JUS: 3‘" 0f}; tiller levying which opens at six o’clock in the morning. Several ltull- dreds ofpeopie surround the place by four o’clock, in order, by being first, to have a chance of receiving some, as the soup, though extensively distributed, is quite insufficient for the numbers who crowd to partake of it. Several failures have taken place this week, which, from the respectability and high character ofthe houses, have thrown much gloom around the place. The Manchester Guardian, a remarkably cautious paper, in its state of the market on Wednesday last, observes, “that the condition of the working classes gciic- raily, through the districts in which hand-loom weaving has been extensively carried on, is becoming worse daily; and the patience with which these privations have hitherto been supported has of late greatly diminished." But if matters are in this state in Manchester, in other towns they are much worse. Some idea may be formed of the distress in Bolton, when we state, that though the rate- ablc property is £86,000, there is actually £36,000 which con- tributes to the rates. The rest of the parties are utterly una- ble to pay anything. in this place there are 14,000 persons on the books receiving support. In Stockport the poor’s-rate on the real rental amounts to eight shillings in the pound, which is at least equal to 165. on the old convoutional rental. In this town twenty-nine concerns have failed, and the works are unoccupied, for however low the rental of the works may be, or the price at which they can be bought, the rate to'thc poor is so formid- able a§ to deter tenants or purchasers. \Vith the breaking up of every concern, the evil becomes more remediless. : In the township of Marsden, between Burnley and Collie, rfiififltmft , -' 3le .one shilling 5 month. in a“; district 2000 “ownsbip is ruined. Of 5,000 people i , zuc Without any means ofstipport. then rate. One lilifjflPQ=rlyLdv 1- —'—-xrr1.:eeds, {Him beginning ofthe distress, the poor-law guardians bad a saving 0f£10,000 to fiili back on blit that has long ago been exhausted. A number ofhands ai‘e thrown out of employment, and the difficulty ofsupplying the ne- cessuous wutli food is every day increasing. Some time into £7,000 was rinsed by the wealthier classes to meet the 03i- gcncc, but all attempts to raise more is given up. The pau- pars actually beset the houses. They go in bands demnudiiur relief in a tone which implies it must be given. The dish-es: of what may be called the better classes, who are ashamed to soiiCit charity, and conceal their stifl‘erinws, is awfiil In some of those houses which have been e‘niaered the pee do have been found boiling nettles to make a meal ofthem rlu this, as well its all the other towns iii the i‘nauufacturiuri dis- tricts, the pawnbrokers have advanced money till tiiea cab advance no more—the articles pledged are never redezmed Enlpdththe trade ofthe pawnbrokers cannot be carried on. 5:2“: e woollen .uid flax trade are in the most depressed 1n Macclcsficld one great n‘muufacturer is discharai'io hands at the rate of'ahout two hundred a week, and beach: peptsfisomli toihave 2,000 persons thrown out ol'empioyment. dcsglfggggmt , both in the west and east, the distress exceeds Tile letters received yesterday from several parts of ire- land all concur in representing the state of thinvs to be alarmng in the extreme. Potatoes were 10d. a static and the price of meaihas risen considerably. In the soutlf-Wcst of lrelailid there is no employment for the people, and they itiilréhpp‘tailpti: means of making purchases for the supply df In all the maiiufucturinc towns ofEncr ’ ' numberfif' persons who heave what is calibeiiflitdit3:33:13; tlemeut, ’ and who must be thrown on their parishgs ' in i there is nothing which these poor creatures dread so dumb as being sent back to the agricultural districts. Such is their horror oftlus, that they suffer all manner of privations ["1- ther than expose themselves to the chance of beinv seht back to their parishes. In Stockport, for instance thdi‘e are at this time above one thousand heads of families who have settlements at a distance, chiefly in auricuiturai parish- es; but there is'no catching any of these opeople in any act of vagraucy which would subject them to removal. When it happens that any of them are sent off, they are sure to find their way back again, so dreadfully xiii-aid are they of the tender mercies ofthe rural districts. Their languave is that they ivould._sooner die than remain in their parigbes. In Leeds fifty persons were sent last week to their parishes and more. would be sent, but the overseers cannot succeéd in catching the people liable to be sent away. They keep lingering, more like l'shadows than anytiiinw else about the places where they once were employed. a ’ We understand that in a few days a report will he receiv- ed from Manchester on the state of tiie retail trade contain- ing the most astounding facts. Many shopkeepdrs of the second grade have not for months taken as much money as would pay for their gas. Charlton union workhouse (Man- chester) is filled with the wives and families ofmen goinrr or-whp have gone, to America in quest of'employment. This: privatiotis of the poor maybe conceived from this, that those who receive out-door reliefdo not receive half so much per head as the cost_ of a pauper in the work-house. At no time in the memory of man,‘ was there ever in any winter so many persons out of‘ work in Manchester‘as at this season, a time when employment is usually abundant. Emigration is‘ gomg on extensively. a But distress cannot long be confined to particular branches pf industry. The distress is now extending to agriculture. I‘he demand for farms begin to oiacken. 1.; Suffolk, for the first time, there has been rather a want of tenants than of forms. In the country round Saddlewortli, where, till lately, report Was submitted from the .Board of Commissioners, showing that since the last meeting ceeded to Scotland, for matiou and objects iiig \ able the _ I . had been read, moved, and unanimously adopted, expressing that, in the opinion ofthe meeting, the destitution in Scotland, which has been gradually increasmg smce the peace, has i ‘ reached an extent which demands the vernmeiit, and ol'all persons interested ciai welfare ofthe industrious classes; that her a mill is meant it ’ ' i , 0 one Will venture on t ‘ _ v _ 1‘7 i‘lEfi’a' U 1115' Report huvin a deputation had pro- the piirpose ofmakiug known the for- of the Association. that at a public meet- held at Edinburgh on the 24th of May—the Right Hopor- Lord Provost in the Chair—a series of resolutions i attention of the go- i in the moral and so- Majesty’s possessions in British America present an inexhaustible out— let for the redundant population of the United Kin rdom, whilst it is a matter of national importance that their re— sources shall be made available; that the British American six years of agar PHe iiilariped ll: lsvglllotlzeheelde“ Association for emigration and colonization is entitled to pub— the first ling oP 0itfir(li]i(i),;tlolr:,mi;tl' conglem hit. ' 'Ol fidence 'lll(l su mm as an institution calculated ma— t e on. 0 ti arne . - _ a? _ he L I ‘ pl ’ children. His late lordship succeeded his e v teriully to advance the opulence, prosperity, and peace of the mother country alid the colonies, and that contributions to the Benevolent Fund ofthe Association should be solicited, for the purpose ofnidiug in the erection of'churches, schools, and other such charitable foundations its concern the re- ligious and moral welfare ofour British American fellow- subject's. ' Further, the report proceeded to show, that at a public meeting held in the Town Hall ofthe city of Glasgow, the Right. Honorable the Lord Provost in the Chair—it was, on the motion of Mr. Sheriii'Alison, seconded by the Rev. Dr. Norman M‘Lean, declared that the destitution in Glasgow, the manufacturing districts, the west of Scotland, and the Highlands generally, has reached an appalling character and extent, and cannot in the opinion of the meeting be effectu- ally remedied by any measure short ofemigration on a na- tional scale; that the resources ofour British American Provinces, if'drawu out by on extensive infusion into them of capital and population, will aflbrd an immediate and ef- fectual remedy for the distress prevalent in the United King- dom fi'on'i redundant labour; and that the British American Association,.which has been formed for these combined ob— jects, is entitled to the support ofali persons in the kingdom desirous of advancing the moral and social welfare of the la- bouring classes. The report detailed a similar meeting held at Paisley—the Provost in the chair—which was very numerously attended by all classes, including niembers ofthe various Emigration Societies in that town, at which, on the motion ofthe Rev. Robert Burns, seconded by the Rev. Mr. Baird, Resolutions were passed by acciamation, declaring the thanks of the meeting for the gratifying information conveyed by the de- putation; of the great satisfaction felt by the meeting at the formation ofthe Association; and appointing a cemmittee to correspond with Mr. Andrews, one of the deputation, in order that able-bodied men, willing to emigrate, might take advantage ofthe facilities thus placed within their reach. The report then proceeded to advert to the various steps adopted since the last meeting ofthe Council, with' a view to carrying into effect the joint objects proposed by the As- sociation. It referred to the financial arranrremeiits ' its operations will be sustained, and‘conc ll 9 . _ the expediency of combining with the Associatio dent iustittgg_,}Vllsmhs,9._fimrla ' ' , . g been read, and the Council haviua de- liiiiiliatiil-ti‘lwaCTdileMaline’ and M“.l°1"Gellel‘nl Sir James Chock- anam ‘ D'IZ R”, , a comb ES(]-, 0f Portulloch, the Marquis ._ , . 0 pa, J. H. Peters, Esq, Solicitor-General for PUNCH Edward Island Sir William 0011' d l . ing severally ex Wess’ed t1 .. . I bl He, an at leis, 113w- passed “do mm]! h ‘ ieii OPIDIOIlS-tleSOllIEIOIlS were ’ l B l e leport; that subscriptions should be mi ng n a prom- nrflf‘ii'e 'l‘e- ' ' f a steamer and '1‘ ’ river on Sunday in tow o , afternoon of? the Victuailing-ym-a, at pep _ . V was towed into the St. flying at her . hoisted at her niizen. -iosit i5 fr ‘L I lime Arid) horses and other presents, from the K cat, to her Majesty O l' 1 null for I A 1 nIlike Z. powder-horn, and is elegant], border of the thistle, with a silver thistle, .. lield On the escutcheon is as by the Queen’s command, to Donald Royal Highness the Duke of'Sussex, in com" noured ,with similar presents. Clapbam, a romantic village about two mil“ .Bedford, together with recently totally destroyed by fire. The deceased Henry Brooke Parnell, Lord was raised to that dignity by the Melbourne in was the second son 0 daughter Bart. the baronetcy Katharine-dock. maintopmast head, and she’had . This vessel, which om Zanzibar, and has brought Queen Victoria. The v to that of onelof our trier-chin _ tons burden except that s is cornea (on . a??? Majesty has,been pleased to present oynl liiirhness the Duke ofbusaex With a .flr a his performance at the be] . . milar appearance splendid cairngorm, an.“ chased in silver. “The our I having a large amethyn in the following inscri ackay, . A“ ' lver; on the top is a ' having )layed before her Majesty at t, > iilen at Bulckingliam Palace, 12th May, .o. ftlic Dukes of Buccieuch and Sutherland, The whole of Lord Ashburton’s homest'e‘agp twelve houses in the SUICIDE or Loan CONGI.ETON.—WB regret bat Lord Congleton (formerly Sir tienry' ieriod to his existence yesterday evening, at n Cadogan—plnce, by hanging himself with a fSir_John Parnell, Bart, and co-heir ofthe Right Hon..Sir Y He was born in 1776, and was con -. in 1812. He was chairman of committee in 1829. In 1833 he was appointed the excise inquiry commission, and filled the- tary at War in 183]. In April, 1835, he Puymaster-Generai of the Forces and Treasu nance and the Navy, which oflices he cont until June, 184L His lordship was author , work on financial reform, and of a great iium ‘ lets on currency and banking; also ofa_ and road-making. His lordship was a desce Archdeacon ofCiogher, the author of the ad. “The ilermit.”—Morning Chronicle. , rt Posraea.—The large increase of revenue'u ter in the post-office department is ascribed, ' the quantities of donning letters addressed ' tradesmen to their customers, for a settiem ’ counts; and in Ireland, to the enormous multit cations which are showered upon the govern in individual connected with it, for places ,- church and state. Ofthe extent of thin crease, ab uno discs omnes. Mr. Emerson-T to have received fifteen hundred letters from ing his interest to obtain for the writers th. , deceased gatiger in that patriotic town. a , dead body of Patroculus was a trifle to these THE KHYBER Pass—The following" to the pass, and the operations by which it , umphantly carried, are collected from the » and other sources :——- ‘ This defile, one of the most impenetra line of military defence, extends from Jo thc‘direction ofJelinlabad, without interva I 28 miles, throughout 22 of which it has hi cued impassable for an army, when the ' termined to o pose them. From Jumr , . opens on the Teshawur side, to Ali M and uninterrupted ' and i - _ .- e " _ ‘. . - ..e ull,in the. in e ofthe defile, completely comrnalldi so sickly that the troops we have ende "v’ the fort have from time to time been neat For about seven miles bevond Ali MusjithG what uniform till it arrives near Lundee K a : (aptiple of miles it stretches out to the face ofa x (“Dicey llke the galleries by which the Simplon‘ General Pollock had mustered a force of iienrl M P€Slanlll‘ by the end of March, but was nnx movmg, that the two brigades tinder Colonels v immediately opened for sl ' ‘ ' E ‘ i _ iaies iii the ca ntnl stock ofthe As- FifildllDl], conveying the thanks of the iiieet'mg to the Lords PilogOstsroi Ldinbprgh and Glasgow, and the Provost of Drisily, ot gprCSIdiiig at the several meetings; and also to 08.”) “$13151; ir iViltiam Drysdaie, the Honourable Sir John Dr Aim! , 1 art, the Very Rev. Principal Macfarlan, the Rev. SIP. W“), sane Buchanan, Esq., of Canada, the Honorable l l tam Dunbar, Bart, Mr. Sheriff Alison, the Rev. Dr. lish waters, came up the riousi y won 3 Bolton, then on their way tojoin him with no force ofabout 4,000 tnen, consisting ofher Mates goons,_the lst light cavalry, her Majesty’s 3lst f -’ native infantry, with artillery and irregular her I‘ river This, however, was impossible, as J elittla immediate succour. The 3d dragoons reach oirtiie 30th March ; the lst cavalry, and 6th - infantry, were left behind; while Colonel Bait M‘Loml: ll": HOW-"able Sir John Cunnin'rham Fairlie B- rt tclons'ét-il'llgpfher Majesty’s 313‘, the 6“] mm“ c the Honorable Sir iVillinm Alcxander Tile w ll B. ’. d " le'am ely.and I'Teguhr horse, cannm ‘1er ' ‘ Re“ Du Bums, and the Rev- Mr Baird “’le e ,’ 31L, the 20th tiprril. A pecuniary arrangement had. conded the resolutions adopted 0;] meagocc smote or se- by which the Kliyburrccs agreed to secure a n .l A vote of'thanks was also ~ ‘ 'aswng' 7 for us on payment or 5 COOL—‘2 000 h r0 h “ Sir RichardB_ - ‘ passed to Sir Allan N. Macnab, balance after we 13 l ’ l ’- E m A t‘ . lowu. Dr.'Ihomas Rolph, W. Andrews Es th t m mac led- A“ Mus‘lld' ‘ u the Depumtion to Scotland, for the very eflicient and, sat'qt" b -ek W9‘Sllms was “many paid to them; but fi factory planner m which they had discharued th l. is: to e faith, or found themselves unable to con the" nusswm , o 9 (“Jews °l tribes. and are said to have returned it. N - .B _ century before, in“; paid them 100.00% for ' Ct RXOTS iv GALW T - its: i-and Ehe kmgs 0f CubOOl had, allowed t, B Publishes a letter p‘IED—Ght'a Dublin Iftlot of Wednesday night bfihisolr all? passage through their country ;t ’ '1'; OHS character took )1) I a .way, statmg that ,iots of, a se,.,_ On th 2 [3| Payment we had sanctioned two mob, iconsistinvr nflni‘lsg bmlPhat town on TueSday’ When ‘1 Obstru‘hlfidl Atp'n!’ the army mm'ed into the de h boys, broke imp, the huitergtlies ‘offishermen, women, and The mind? lIts entrance by heavy bar . I I b‘ everything they met whys glues in?“ se'zed l’o'atoes and heiflhts covE at duhrtmn Of our "OOPS we!” “ "bl (“filling to the same authoii-t 1e military and police: 30' ne]? fi'o,m teele ' y a tr‘eme'udous fire orgmp.‘ as the commaudiuw oflicer I y,l‘ilere unable to quell the riot, occupied ld iileces 0f amnery‘ so 80°“ "q ‘4 v I the people‘ The; went :vou ( riot allow them to fire upon column “,3? u lebdefile elel‘re‘l by the gum» i" metin breaking the windoowusldtdliiihl: etleumg’ and com‘ Ali Mquid tlielfbligigtgage movgd alonglihfilde” Ix u." onto their hon _ _ Z . . a e 1e owners illumi- mg evenmg W“ ‘W furthers &c seq’ ‘blifyay ofthOIFIng at the success. The The enemy were supposed ‘0 han “Insure” In” a ., are .ifiaid to come n v' i - 10,000 men but find' ' ' ' ' " 1'" potatoes whatever cattle in this (i ‘ It] the” Nuance—no they seemed s e l'img their posmoni m in" _ , v r a , , ett v , . ' Th? Icliort gains currency that Lord D G- . ' I‘lle remainin p13 myl to nve‘ “St a" co ’ pm speedin to retire from th e .leymeans Very the head f hg les’ leading on to. ’V 1 Duke of'Buccleucb it - e EOVBI‘llment of Ireland. The mm b l0 t 8 Pass. Wns traversed almogt Th successo,._ ’ ‘5 SUPPOSEd, .Will be Earl De Gray’s reachgltffafizimpfi Emilie 9ft‘b- On the 2; . -. . . _ heigi mi es urther . ' milifipiilv: 523123? "1’ Tm" ‘be ladies and children ofhis fa- lv’lcfhls ""16 “'8 Khyburrees had 1::mt "" Jordan, and thel Rei‘s‘ {e'rt‘iilr .‘° Thebes» Syria, the River 5.53351? fl-‘e 7“" “"‘l hm“ WWW"- i and Constantinop'e ea, an we now proceeding to Greece Vance ares sli';°1”ire(ll In the course ofthis w E ‘ 1 u ' ' I n l t - l I MARRIAGE or THE Paixcs ROYAL H Hers ofthe astxgeni“): mSIgm-hcum m “M V 4 > Majesty has siwnified her . b « 0.? . {NOVER"‘H” It is rob bl me now Viewed as t H" l ’ . ance, the Roy; Mum a leluo anon of this intended alli- A rupth 3. e that Jellalflbad Will be I - '_ l a step necessary 18 “labia, .i.t, we pregnine’ rendering such mg” 1,17 e'distance to be now travelled ova , ‘ Qu succession to' the thfonduiicfe (1,3)“! is m Elm dire“ "Ge 0f meme 'miies' Thys’ by ‘he udmlmbl" 3“: "I" whom his Royal Hiuhiiess ' 1 mm Emmi" The lady to troo h, in the pat'ence’ valour’ and M“ cess Alexandrina Mari ~‘l;_llll)0lutlt0 be‘tmite'd is the P,.in_ “rpm ias the Khyber Pass, hitherto belie l'ih Theresa Henrieua Logisa IPie ilniua Catharine Charlotte oft'ha} 8m the face ofopposition, beeni . Ch Georgina, of Sax-e Alteubour mi'ma .Lhzalmlh Frederica dahai-s ‘gu m once be fen throughout cc“ ‘me who has lately completed her Erme'ly HElbourghausen), mod ’ [lznee’ and Cabool, ha , within-R the on the 14a. of April 1818 H I syem" “av-mg bee" 1’0"" mie e-mlinsmry’ one" yielded ‘° "Mm" are eldest daughter ot'his Serene fifohewne nghness is the be is, t [8 Khyb‘er Puss was never fgrwgifi Jen! Ernest George Charles Duke ofl§ Hess Joseph FrederiCk Of India that With "hese Splendid “flung . I hm born on the 27th of'Auirnst 1789 axe Altenbourgi Who was 6 n "1 WI“ reSt sat'sfied' Should "9 it " El“ Duke Frederick, on “re 2,9”1 f, grid succeeded his father, stifieérnte to Cabooi by the fearful Teze‘eu Hot been married on the 24th of}; fiptember, 1834, having ed d efore us, and strewed by the remain; ; j ' T Amelia Theresa L01 " W‘ P” ’ 18.17, t0 the Princess eadi ‘0 remind us ofour PBS! diam“! '°7 V Louis, Duke of Wirthltbrzilbe ghlflmma Ph'nl’l’lml, (laughter 0f find" What has yet been accompllsm ' l t ' v MARRIAGE IN HIGH L111: 235111011 illie 215th of:lUiie, 1799. big: “'0”, but throw ourselves further ‘- I“lit was, on the 8th inst., married at {V1 . a:‘(lmsfiof \Vnteri‘ord Sa'el‘e $lthOSltlon was restored by (I . . His Hon‘ Miss Stella”: the accom i’ infim" bhapel’ ‘0 the mined alle' uveif'rom the Present “brink” he” Staten de Rothesay. p ls “3 dEUghter 0f Lord rational lidiriicirhe wily onetrieml 0f 0‘": more" ii" . can ~' - _ ' or ' V ‘ e , surE.é?.‘§?fiiiififlrilfi‘hl?im°3$i°§43°““‘”’"“We trim" r3- s'wgiié'reor This; or FRESH,” F a 0“ t l .000. "’lg to} rWe the invaders of their 60" "in the first that evgll:PEPIiaa1ileAdTSTE—An Amman man'Of‘w” iii‘thelr faith baCk Within their own H,“ I '9’!“ 111 ng ’ 8y chance to throw away the laurel! W9 . Jen}