a 4 
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ted by large m ajo- | Paris by the announcement. of the discovery of another Loan Bill. The only peri ve aRincpys however in the a 
were proposed, bu oy Soe  epeey inal Aint plot to assassinate the King. Twelve periete belonging | discussion Pei , Peearped E Wege ae ech of Arguelles, 2 
rities, and the bill has thus far jiasal in its orig | to the labouring class were arrested on night of the guaran: e Queen, who ee e at considerable | length, 
with theexception of an addition ma ade by Ministers, extend- Sth inst., and a quantity of petards, arms, an nition | and w — i ated the cause of Min nis ers. ‘<1 have 
ing the proposed exemption of cathedrals and churches asinad ts thei ssession. Amongst the = persons aerated atentvely watched their proceedings,’’ he said, ‘ frou a 
Pig hE a al! places solely for divine worship. Sir R. Peel are said to be Considére, who had been twice tried and | the c ncem q an ‘ ave scans red a conviction 
has brought? forward the new i, Bill, and has entered acquitted before the Chamber of Peers, and Poncelet, who ee in 30. imstance ave they swerved from : prin 4 
was convicted of having been engaged in the conspiracy ers 7 saat pe tat ni a ard them con 4 
a lp that it its main object is the removal of all prohibi- the Rue des Prouvaires and amnestied. 1] we qnenty. un Gs sadn ead aw pobed one a : 
dees, and the general reduction of the existing tariff. rf aah mt an, pena es ap ists aed ia eae ron P withhold from it the trifling ona 
visl ’ ype : : 
Sir James Graham has obtained leave to bring in zs for larly in the alahibearbeed of sa Sanboures St. Antoine, saa Sear which it demands from the legislature. 1q 
the continuation and amendment of the Poor Law Com- f St. Denis, and of the Temple; and the keeper of a | never denies ae 89% adminis ation € resources which it ~ 
mission ; the chief features of t the proposed measure are wine-shop in the Rue des Marais du Temple was arrested. | s tood in inn do re) we on the stale his w 
the abolition of the Gilbert Unions, the education of | ]; js added that Quénisset still remains at the Concier- | is particulary felt by the —-s ca aes who ha still to 
‘pauper children, and the continuation of the Commissien | gerie, and that these arrests have been made in consequence obligations contracted t s the foreign legions, q 
fi 1 of information furnished by him. Private letters state | The pay of those wants is too well justified not to cons 
ee that the projetiles seized were of glass, and of the nature | vince me ap des nevaseity of enone “ sands 
ome f hand nades, intended for the assassination of t will, moreover, grant to Ministers the supplies they may 
. #2 News. 7 King by wise igh: into kale ae ng in his carria oy require for the expenditure occasioned by the events of — 
Wales andthe Princes & oe we wl" ‘The Queen The judicial UC acelleston into the affair i = 8 py ae cts and 1 aus he ote ia ative 4 biggies: i 3 
; ,» and t neess Se Ones . tivity.—-The King, Queen, and the ily re- | told you a e applying or 
rned t n fro day. sy! from the Tuileries on Satur rday to "their summer | 160,00 wees was to have alwa resery of — 
H. RH. Prinee Albert inspected the ro0ps in Wellington palace at Nénilly. The Duchess of Nemours and the | 50,000,0 This reason is Serfeckly just. Tt wale may 
cks on Wednesday morning, and in the evening y ince are reported to be going on very satisfac- | consider pes il war as entirely at an end since the signal 4 
sided at the dinner of the Literary Fund Society in Te torily. M. Guizot was so ill of a cold on Saturday, that | discomfiture of a rebellious prince, we cannot flatter our- q 
masons’ Hall. The Queen gave a > a goat ase : e could not attend pe Cabinet Council held that day at | selves to be altogether free from apprehensions of foreign 
Buckingham Palace on Thursday, ry ei the Tuileries—The journals State that ‘‘the King has | war. You have no doubt all read with indignation a 
: © particulars of his fe wil - found iven a significant reply to the Address presented to him | paragraph in the Augsburg Gazette, in which it is stated 
gi iven-aader oae Metropolitan ae a a. by the Archbishop of Paris, care to the desecration of | that the marriage of Queen Isabella II. could not be 4 
F onde and the ie vagy a ne behave succeeded Lord Lord the Sabbath, by countenancing the non-observance of the | arranged in Madrid, the Five 2b ie having undertaken 
pri on SOS te Ge ns ane r00™ | holiday of ompmts n Thursday), one of the days con- | to provide a husband for her Majesty.’”” M. Arguelles — 
he Making on her Majst wecenen b septa A b ‘ortmen employed in | concluded by vindicating the Ministry against the ch 
fe—Her Maj ay bee supareree Sys prey ee : * 8 On the & 
Gasette Announcements.—-Her of Ci y Log Fapaistine the "Chatnat of St, Clo of pusillanimity and indecision. On the following day the 
Fe He, Mastic, 3 Faq.» te ied ano ae m of So re rh The p Cabi net. elt is stated ‘that the Government has eens was resumed ; and after a few ase rom ie 
a reser eng cease Sunt ea-aainniee ge Cantero and Mendizabal, the pope of two members 
eselons af. tip Cope meester a Sete! in Au The “Te f the Fi ce Committ tee, whi ch a thorised the govern- — 
ugust. emps’’ states as a rumour, of the Finan 2 govern- 
recently ass umed the'command of the Chester district, that the Cabinet intend to ratify the ra eaty ea to the ds tof 160,000,000 
Bae fap the appolatieeat fe Seseens oF Fae Slates ies right of search, immediately after the elec ; but pri- | reals, was. di scussed ; but fro om the 1 number. of amend- — 
carne fg genth of Sir Lionel Sith. The: Queen has vate letters declare this statement to be u eae ments to the bill presented on that day, it was expec 
well, Sagifode uray Justices of os Majesty's Cotictot The Chambers,—The journals ‘continue to be much | that the debate would ehcp longer. The GH 
nawion 2 Sea occupied with the adjourned debates in the Chamber of | appeared determined not to reply to any anestions put 
Parliamentary Movements.—Lord: A. H rt Deputies on the Railroad Bill. The first vote since our | the sys cage n until this bill should be voted by the 
1 ban’ re ct rere os Poke f uP, last has been respecting the railroad to run south, through | Cham The period, for — poe | of the Infante — 
Wign och Leo ee eee, tee Tove er Sr, the centre of France. . This railroad, executed as far as | Don Frenci de Paula t yet sss, 
Sinope Kloster spills hearts Fates mes Pies Orleans, is to be continued to Vierzon, on the canal of | Onis and Alvear, who had es n commissioned bring 
; en Berry, not far from Bourges. The extension of the rail- back % Madrid his two sons, at present in Germany, ~ 
pect : thaies ; tei Web a a road to Clermont, as well as that to Toulouse, was re- | were to 8 age a few days. nquet was given by — 
of rhc = N. they rth eg abe jody tate wed jected. On Saturday the Chamber nea the ensemble the pies o the Infante ane fini. © n the Ist 
mittee have declared ed that the “e léati Ae “ “g of the firs tate of the bill, classing the railroad lines as | Grea ae had been made for celebrating the 
far as it regarded J Ant ome gots orovg ’? | follows :—1. From Paris to the wre frontiers. 2. | anniversary of the ietvaecuce 4 of the people of Mad: pee 
peti vie: yt ee ee Meese ge Paria to the Channel. 3. From Paris to the fron- | against the French, on the 2d May, 1808, a the muni- 
tion ; that the said J. Q. Harris, agent 6 
ilty i st thatit did not Cvocar bevhe esticna, | tiers of. Germany, ‘by. Naa ey ee ipality invited the wet = the’ victims w perlihe a 
Ity of bribery, but that it did not appear by the evide: : Mans. :P¥ rg pality 
agg this with Mr. , sapeone t 2 Paris to the Mediterranean, by Lyons, Marse illes, and | in that insurrection to a at the funeral coreg 
new writ bee ondared te the xs t vy ear Cette. 5. Fi Paris to ta tha trsartets o! of Spain, by Tours, which passed off satis story and without any 
Si Re ant * | Bordeaux, and Bayonne, 6. From Paris to the Ocean, | turbance. Accounts receiv m Barcelona ‘ i a7 a 
in the room of Sir R. Bateson, who has accepted the ; 
Chiltern Hundreds. The New Windsor Election Petition by Tours. and —e 7. From Paris to the centre of | inst. inform us that som ¢aitation prevailed in hat cae 4 
has been abandoned. France, by Bou 8. From the Mediterranean to the | in consequence of a tumultuous scene which q 
Rhine, by ey Dijon, and Mulhausen. 9, An astly, | at the theatre, where “ seditious cries’’ had bie een ut igre 4 
cee from the Mediterranean to the Ocean, by Toulouse and | against the Regent. bac military poate had been doub a] 3 
. FForeian. Bordeaux. The debate then commenced on the mode of | and other measures pted to prevent disorders; but — 
France.—Accident on the Versailles Railroad.—The | execution of all reat railroads. The Government proposes subsequent secedakese received to the a h inst. state 
capital and its Sielgtibonrtioda were on Sunday evening | a mixed plan, combining the assistance of the State with | the tranquillity of the city had again been entirely restored. 
thrown into a state of great alarm and excitement by the | the competition private companies and the assistance o PorTuGAL.—We have received inte eta ence from Lisbon 
ser accident on the Paris and Ver- | the localities interested in the lines. On Tuesday the | to the 2d inst. The suspensi on of the n rages = for the 
left b ank ra It appears that Sunday was fixed | Chamber voted as far as to the 9th article of the enon discomtude at Oportoy 
for the orth ae of the King’s fée at Versailles, by the | Bill; an amendment of M. uvergier de Hau to | fresh representations had been sent in to the Home-office, 
painky reat waterworks and fireworks ; and on this | article 2, to the — that — ane totally. « or in | and Senhor Maya, the ee of the Commercial ~ 
nee was crowded to an unusual extent with | part, may be given up to private industry, on conditions | Association at Oporto, had been urgent in pressing upon — 
i Cha he Duke its speedy concit- 
ach line o ‘ red in 
road, there sit Fay — and a th helt adbnat for Paris. | on the Versailles railway, demanded a law for the pal ce | anxious wish that both. the projected treaties with Eng- — 
The train of the left bank was unu usually long ; it consisted | of railroads. M. Teste said that such a law existed in the | land should be concluded without delay ; and that the 
of 17 aeets impeie bat ‘th ei angen 5 van ee nveyed | 8th article, giving the Government power to make such | Duke of Palmella had informed them that he saw 20 
from 1,500 to 1,800 passe ving beter en | regulation. M. Dupin said this did not suffice. It was a | reason whatever why both treaties should not signed 
Meudon ed ‘Waller ee the Poh tree oft the first engine | good point to start from, but was not that at which he during the course of the present month—a result which 
broke, and the body of it, with the fire, fell to cag ground. would arrive. The Government could not establish or appears to be anticipated as certain. At the same Council a 
The second engine, so great was the i ay roke it in | inflict new penalties, or any penalty more than five francs. | a project was submitted for the reconstruction of the 
pieces and passed over it, when the boile Fars, throwing | Such a fine was illusory in cases like the disastrous one of | Council of State upon a more effective and intelligible — 
th ir to a great height. The sever He | basi at it will imilated in’ 
‘ 7 te . sepese 
carriages, as they came up, passed over Ms wreck, when | demanded a penal law to act asa sufficient check on the operation in some respects to the British Privy Council, — 
axe them were immediately set in flames by the fire of cupidity — speculated on the lives of citizens. Such pte in others to the Conseil @ Etat in France. A dif- 
en : 1 . - . s : S 
vi pidity. r e: ly consumed, : nt with regard to 2 
pinged gto f without the possibility of escape to the | aware of the necessity. M. Teste agreed, but said the | to be empowered to grant dispensations in cases of maf 
passengers, who, as usual, were lockedin, The sent was not the fit moment. The Government had riage within the prohibited degrees, and th negotiations. 
scene that ensued is described as one of a most painful prepares & law, which the late terrible events need not | were in consequence expected to be su 
Se ose and the rn ae vy that prevailed w as extreme. | hasten. The English nih Seriya which was before the iaabrensiona were received fro 
of the neh i tters, had inquired i n were 
oy The num iously esti railroad Govern neral a sa 
mated ; but it is stated that upwards of 100 persons were | question; but the interval of a session was not too much | an audi had b iven to two travelling agen 
killed or burnt to’'death, and 150 wounded. Among | time to prepare it in. The subject ba dropped, and a Aili Mences idle LE ain ib gove 
these are said to be several persons of distinction, includ- | debate was resumed relative to tke a 0 be awarded those gentlemen of their desire to put dow 
ing two Deputies ; but as a great number of the bodies | the —— of the lines already m iseonh the Portuguese dominions by every means int 
are so burnt and disfigured that it seems impossible to Phe Pre —The journalcalled the Courrier des Théd- | It appears that the principal reason why Ba 
mtity: t consideral uncertainty at present prevai’ ed on the editor | plan of conversion had been opposed by f 
as to who the unfortunate individuals are. It appears | by the Court of Police Correctionnelle to © pay a fine of | State was, that no on means were shown 0 
hat M. Guizot was on the line e time. He went to | 10,000f. for declari that the money deposited as security viding for the necessary increase of e i 
might be guilty was not his | occasion. The Duk 
ments of troops were ity 5 posal, which tly 
off the populace, who were greatly excited, who made oneal ita erous precedent, calculated to inflict a se- eer The 29% gt ge es kept as 
‘anattempt to destroy the rai a nee _ which, owere, bagel Bn us injury on any ne which might incur isplea- | being the day which Don -Ped 
Were prevented doing. The sensation produ n Paris | sure = agit : charter. The Queen held a levee, and the officers 
the announcement of the seed nove anit Spa at: intelligence from Madrid extends to the Army and Navy dined together at the Naval 
fell 20 franes. 4th fests; but is notofgreatimportance. On the 29th ult. The Commanders and some of the officers of the 
has been created in | the Chamber resumed the debate on the 160,000,000 reals and French ships were invited to the dinner ; 42 
