158 THE NEWSPAPER. 
[May 17, 
mar- 
a 
ial train of the South Western Railway. A _ Her ing of fo necessar ve 
Maj ch aga io à | ti anded the ‘attention t y knn r bya 
v long and vehement spee ae gps the | 
Bill, but against = fortifications thems elve 
go 1 the event accomplished in en n 
years had tended to 
te and 
Då the chief officers |v 
diately in ire “Tighning et steamer we paast: Beinsa, | 
er = 1 salutes fr rom tke Pige me ships of 
Isle o Wight e 
He “M 
raising Soe Pari 
a, France 
we. 
e 
brook Castle and other places i in the nei ‘ighbo 1bou ae Tie lice 
N, Her Majesty tions. -ih 
ss Ro, oyal a and the Prince of ‘Leiningen, returned to tow n, patriotic 
with tke Prin- 
so 
rder to 
Sa the Court—to commence ge fortifica- | 
nere al decree d to terrify a 
blindly sanctioning Machia- 
ar erst od in “the boldest 
1830; he dwelt on 
ot 4 bike ful and so generous, 
ach enrapturing but w “ee ily 
deS of Jits people in the Pri 
ed 
ma on os eee 
vellian a scheme. M. 
language the policy mettre a 
the “revolution, which he | eam 
se to Buckingha m ring lace in four and whic ch had given rise’ 
grin evening sie Ibert ho- — 
¢ 
ig byt the South Western Railway, performing the jou r- 
sel from Osborne Hou 
hours and a half. 
pe 
Waiting to the e Que suppressed—and on the firs 
tention of Her Majes sty to pay a visit to the Earl of | which had been ı betrayed he 
; Ellenborough, at Southam-house, during the coming riad urged tha i 
sum 
n- 
ae 
Ep 
Q 
King, a 
whole coun 
oS Movements.—Lord Francis Egertoz | liberties - 
has announced his intention of retiring from the repre- = ety ue 
d of 
the 
eria hope \ was confirmed o 
of the si iting, wh ien the Pr 
Lamarti ine >and M. 
fe 
thie 
expression of a ocal regard. 
Th r frie 
his areias 
ceived with general Ro. a: 
applause,and M.dela chejagediel 
t article of the Bill oe sa 
the fortifications came imme diately after 
sideration. ‘As it wd w a ver little su 
sion took place; b - Be thmont apr mo ied 
amendment, whereby th } 
armi 
nder com. 
no divi. 
d from Bourges to a 
enacted for th oa 
without a special law being | 
of isie o 178. The second pera ‘a the +g 
e sums which the Minister of W ar 
pe pet 
to dispose 
846, pted 
ird article, introduced by the e a 
ordnance hj seen for the arming gf 
Paris shall be deposite jia and shall be 
moved to Paris only i ri 
ut” S att a 
ments 
nt, were successi move 
Mapes de la Rochejaquelein 
Pn ws of som’ cal offen to th sance 
the dissa- | the ee of hb ; that m Ps agente and blind eeg 
e | among his constituents | strengther all possible f po t 
by supporting the Mayn noo} oth Bill. It is s rumoured t that ana, at the expense of me other had kee aweh ingly mad 
of 
; 
this art of E dist 
ae 
his lordship will be 
ords. 
rak Lord Ca .—This venerable peer die 
T lastly, ution,” of a repub 
but and Soke. on stone an 
ultimately crowne 
Ha 
1e Chamber to 
ak ti 
m created by the approach, or rather 
and 
rhery tt 
on Monå or his Fasdat, Castle Freke, Guy of | mere "appearance o! of public perils, the scheme so long 
viy ier karpen was born i in 1765, married 1783 paien ‘are cat W vei 
the dau f the Earl o 
in the ace in tes a ‘his. cousin in the peerage 
in 1807, and was 80 years of age at the time of his 
d The title Saa 
was the excitement created by M. de La- 
t 20 elapsed before 
ae Due chatel, the Home Minister, could obtai 
Brakenbury, Esq., late Consul at Cadiz, 1pon Ten aes — aban er gry or mon gre 
les Fellows, Esq., of Russell-square, to whom = da aaant ke HAL sche | OE 
res 
public are indebted for the Xanthian marbles, now i 
ritish M nag 
ga mia 1 Bai TE 5 reia of the National Guards of Fra: = 
of th ast spea! e Repu blican Member, arn 
gpn int Admiral Se Robert w poeg aiga and Vic Pa ages order vin iiir 
C. R. Owen, Knights Com- that soy tte and Lafitte had successively giic 
manders of the Onder; and the Bath, e be eip er use the promises made to the country in 1830 0 had 
ale Kt., ee ; “uk Ò vies i nf Knight not been fulfilled. The g 1 debate was then closed 
Ae bory + night | amidst immense confusion, ten a discussion on th 
icles = the Bill adjourned to t 
The Chureha- Sar Rev. Samuel pense 
sea been in 
mace’ 
the oar a4 The io of London has | 
rat 5s Gretede ed the vote was rendered interest- 
ing by some remarks and Bree weno rather of a 
alton, M.A., Fellow of Wad- personal nature, which pass ed betw: n M.T 
than that of wa 
se 
violati n 
* article w ia: however, aiimately adopted, a 
n the division taking place on the whole Bill, 
rried by the majority of 227 to 13!1—a far arger 
was anticipated when Ministers presented it 
than 
al the Chamber m Dep uties. 
had adva 
afayette’s resignation of ärm 
| kirk. 
= od ree ee de Paris, “ that several cro 
uaa is daily more and more 
a a 
in 
Vell. font ons affirm 
al’ sov reigns wi will tak 
Duk 
the King of) Tais ane the 
the King of Holland, who will e 
Bie order to give a suit tabi 
repaired an 
The hea sii —, 
end in his ` place in th 
ae olee, Giel “chaplain of Tinedlb’ s-inn, his M. de Lamartine, in res init pn: | 
Profesor of Casi pept wont . R re in oe res latter on the previous day, ie Mees of the | Affairs i ot journals have accounts from Algiers t 
e Rev. T. G. Hall, M.A. Prof 6 ~~ Government of which M. Thiers was the head, in 1840. | the Ist inst ps of French troops WaN 
Eiin in Kings s T llege. ph and Heelan af of | ME- Thiers said that if had done his e pajki a Mili Ma farshal Bugs 
St B 5°, ring the 15 — rs a: ui mixed in its affairs, was to set out next oa accompanied y the Dake 
i 
ne felt 
pally on the day when, on his 
| Sat 
fA stay The Marquis _ of ieee | own res ponsibility, Rat tja. called on the Governme 
e the 
n order to assum 
pursed 
lon 
5 to | expedition, which was likely to Pes a pro tracted $ 
See ces ndertake the fortification of Pa aris His conduc on | as was s fè ared, A paaie pps me 
pees pions Te i is stated in the Irish pa apers AR Sigg ke from Madrid of 
ihe Mr. se be Ban = ae era p n if expressed as they iad sc the day before. “He vane "The k bate in the n e a Deputies e 
DE trom, ion Royal l Bounty Fun d, and has ,forther deare on x what M. de Lamartine stated were true, | ways and means, which has been going an 
engage à to, place the Cham of Deputies who voted the fortifeation of days, FER little interest, but the specul aie 
cancy o “ dupes or trait rs,” ” inste: olsa we in a state of great excitement, = 
of being, a ip hem ere, honest ~ , acting from con- | quence of a combination of capitalists, 
a aa satenring the test benefit on their | been formed for the purpose of brin ng d 
oreign. country.—M. de Lamartine replied, that, the very | of the furds. neen Mother had 
France.—The M; ynooth grant and the debates in | | violence of M. Thiers justified the doubt and uneasiness | tainment at Vist legre, which 
Patines, both on that Subject and on the new plan | of the country on the subject of the fortifications. He | interest in fashionable circles. 
of academical cage on in Ireland, introduced by Si | read extracts from the despatches of M. Thiers at | jected Carlist movement in Spain has 
J. Graham, have excited interest in Paris, and | that period, to show that he had real intenti f of the satisfactory asp 
two dnensubes ere nerally ed as a grea ing to war, and argued from that circumstance | tions now going on between the Spani 
je — march of toleration and civilisation. ‘Ihe | that the cause assigned for the fortification of Paris was | and Don Carlos. tters n Bourg 
kregi whieh was a t first i i nelined find |® mere pretence, and that the measu as nothing ncess de Beira is for 
EN with wp d by Sir P ore nor less tha act of Ministerial dictatorship. | Her ical at mts ngly 
ecause d ba iope to carry i it out “by the | With r respect to the expression n made by M Jimate ; they recommend Naples, 
vse of his natural Singer ” now thst Sine the plan Thiers, it was one never a serie fore, and he — upon ind that another pu 
aeus a rae! vo merit of | should call upon that gentlemen to explain it. On hear- | at Bourges like the one she has just e° 
having sa the first to a dn Sclseighen whieh | ing the explanation, | he would know what reply to make. prove fatal. The Princess is 
are at length tardily raare out by the English The d, but it is preotin’ + place 
Government: | Sensation, ; assuring both parties that the Chamber saw shortly he e permitted to leave his present p 
“The measures,” says the Débats, “are based upon the | Ot in the political views they ent for of ihe W 
inea sa ag ger ge r Sominaies in France—viz., the neu. fortifications. remat from nig 
| had taken of the M. Thi ined 
silent, but his ally, M. de Remusat, vindicated the con- 
ch he 
Pra ko s 
inform us - the Prime Ministe 
iged 
gious $ 
inciples of the philosophy of the eighteenth century, whic 
were consecrat: by the revolution of 1789, a t which are the st of his a administration, of whie > a member, se mmea ht vai t to 
very foundation of ‘the constit tion of our e On these | and e lastically gloried in ae a aco ne official duties, hes was ee is health 
~~ ae gy peat entire for ce wc reetion of the tee Gen aie her some months, for the jemet a a ir 
an his r 
pi us be Contestat cnt these measures A agnar in w a | cussion, M. Allard, the report ter r of the committee, hee appear that cane of ps eon neti: cei 
tion in the spirit of English legislation, er shat the principles presented i in its name the » which Pee his Brother, the w Cabral 
are Mags soar 4 piece y to those upon which the ponant tion of fi se The artillery Lisb Senbor Jose prup p Á 
— Britai a _ re rested. We must not forget me I intended for tl I he p by the i ent 
m ca = on nai and e religious revolutions, w] Bo i i a is ee othe ” accompli 
: ee icalrevolutions. That on the oe side ? emoved to Paris “eh pe epai etp gente of the 
it was the principle of Protestant supremacy that triumphed, amendinent was postponed =~ the 4 alec as to oe ‘him appoin ent 
of the. te other reg die mg thet Exetel Pronar ene TA T30/000E at t tite Miter of |x Or Dusios ati rl tion. The 
now a ons. The State which, since the nae of tHe ong War for supplying the matériel ati ury fo * inst The 
mation, had become Protestant, is now become laic, and the'| fence of the fortifications of Paris, was then c pos ak die, on the 5t r 
capi ple, a soe onl l principie “of the forget the chair and carried by 227 to 181. In jately exported for ‘oreign port ted ¥ 
„Briti ‘» ror Dan aO the rena President summoned before him | 19,135 pipes, ad tee 
- Phiers and M. de Lamartine, who were accom apeaited ETZBRLAND 
great pa gh on the Paris ee eo. a their | ‘ive friends, M. de Rema musat and go pi in- — settled. 
ieee ten After a desul | Laidet and M. de ejaqu | mne, ba ae 
A the sinne pae tap Owing tothe President seasonable and friendly m sedi vention concluded betw pes 
required aanas | ation, it ‘was hoped that ‘the angry words exchanged by —_— of Lucerne tor 
