294 
THE NEWSPAPER. 
[Serr. 13, 
that the tid 
eyacht agroundi in the mud until mor: ning. 
} +} 
sty to. dine oops “shouted “Vive le Roi!” “ Vive 
aie Reine ‘Angleterre 1 !” A considerable number of 
Here t 1 joined in the cheer- 
5 
The distance from zs to Tréport is ve 
»| which now stand i in the oe -book of | that 
the next se _ There 
gr oe 
Star 
} 
e al toge ther 
H 
1 3 
mpli 
s tha n Heart pour 
y } túdas 
mt 
eo a —OnSus 
hold } 
ual ee and. iaei 
eus 
without pany re ale e-em towards Trép ort. 
eta the di 
rk 
ation ; infa ll t} stranger: 
Py 
1 sath susie 
ineluded, seemed to have passe dow n to epee. “Às 
were fired, which 
On Mon morning, as 
m early a M., 
report of c cannon in the 
offing from the French war 
Tréport 
ere answered “from Eu. All fishermen of Tré- 
the 
port and their fair ra anions seemed to 
ne 
cage ang 
in 16 Th 
Crimin 
i 
steamer Pluton announced to the inhabitants of have poured | just beea issued, containing an account of 
e Queen’s yacht was in sight. All , and the pretty costume ¢ offenders in Engla and and Wales in tł 
immediately afterwards. Ti oot ERE the line, the women, with tlieir characteristic caps and sho Ita appears that, in 1844, the commitments num 
Cuirassiers, the Chasseurs, all the military p ts, ; g part of the Laval 26,542, which was consi ` 
e town, were placed at their posts, although it was | seene. Tréport looked quaint and pretty “in the sun: | compared with’ the preceding yez 
evident that two hours’ m elapse ere the Queen light, and sea was cz a n aad pet as a lake. The | me nts amounted to 29,591. In 184 
could land. At 8 o'clock the King and Queen of the | Victoria and Albert lay off the port, and lack | commitments for trial; in 1 : 
French, the Princess delaide, and all the mbers of agle, Fairy and a at alittle distance.” The il 3; and in 1] 44, only 26,542. Fo ast je. ve 
the royal i avaa in the grand char-a-banc, fol- | French steamers, Caiman Courrier, and Plu uton, aa years, however, the numbers have hiidet, ; ka com- gi 
lowed b, to ther hing ay filled with their | lay off the port, and there I i i mitments for the last five years ma berit Pee 
distinguished gues ts and oth r high je —— The | and other vessels. As the royal carriages dro i fiv ve years 1 2,864. Fr the p 
King t than e has done | preceded by an Jepet of dragoons, = chard “pelle pendice: the 
for six month peal, and salutes were fire A band sta- | port, sat ‘aid sn Parliament, it ‘appea 
to the salutations with whisk, ne yas ree eiv ved. Half an | tioned at the ianding place struck God t 1 number = causes — on ile circuits 
hour afterwar: itish steamer, with the royal Que en,” and get more the King of | as at present arranged, o an aver on 3 
standard of England displaye Frenel Victoria into a pare ad is 1303 ; f pr rs tried 
shore. King Louis- Philippe joan sox entered a|lying alongside, aare inedites pulled ou sea. | bef pot fia ges, 3561 5 ih ore other commissioners, 381, 
with a few attendants, and proceeded to the|In the sam barge with the Queen were the King, the e of Mar —It appears from an i 
Courrier Tao = Mar he approach ed the Victoria | Prince de Joinville, Prince Albert, Lord Aberdeen, M. Fotin. that the gutter ‘of marriages ia E 
and Albert. From the Courrier His Majesty descended | Guizot, and Lord Liverpool. The other members of | Wale es has greatly decreased of late years, though the 
Bie a bens fully cies, and pulled to the Victoria and | the suit rape in other boats. The vessels } is annually increasing. Th 
Victoria and J were dis- | 0 TT Fraye salutes were fired from the | there were 1 27 marriàges in England and W 
tinctly visible on the deck, ~ immediately after King batteries, : and of the people were desteni in 1834, 1: i z: e 
in 
hilippe was seen to ascend. Some little bustle 
By half- -past A = sre party were on board, and the 
p! 
place, = Ages all the = party ie seen | King of the French and’ the Prince de Joinville took 
don end barge, which they were their leave, and returned to Eu. The Victoria and 
rowed to he's 5 Magi An unex ESR ADE now | Albert lay to during the night off the Fenek coast, in 
occurred which caused great amusement to the|order not to. make the land before morning.. At day- 
‘Queen. Asit nearly low water, it was not practic- | break, on W EDNESD. he was under weigi , and the 
to land at the basin, and the nd was distant | passage from Tréport to Spithead was made under eight 
from ther curious but simple expedi -> | hours. The v re was fav i extreme, 
iate this diffic lty suggested itself to the fruitful mind | and the water smooth i At an early hour 
of the ens ge Majesty ordered that a horse be at 
= 
The 
g 264 4 AAQ ENAN E nin 
" Beelighous Instruction in the pia Foma 
e Ho 
in the morning the Pore reupine l 
1 
a i Re 
ap ca reed = royal arge: i At a anan ep 9 
that Her ajuar; D be pape |* 
to arrive abont llo vcloek this morniag: Prani. 5 
t Victoria and Alb 
use of Lo: a it a 
that, according to a scliedule of the grants, endowments, 
and approprititions, made for the purpose of rge 
instructi ion: or of | educat tion in the co lonies (the gross 
e 
ban 
our — landed, and was receiv 
the 
ch, who warmly embraced heh _ Never did 
the 
Albert, with the i i 
dard fying from anie 
] jesty w re a violet dress, a black maiia and a 
yellow % drawn” bonnet. kins nee. 
her pig a the Fairy 
Black Eagle, and followe d at a little distance 
by “the French steamer Pluton, ho ve in sight t thro ough 
EE 
gate to 4,705,739 s souls), there was 
a total sum of 22 6,9027; to tet clergy Pf ‘i 
churches ‘of England, Scotland; Lange pee 
pale, but was evidently in 
only elapsed hy 
till 
high 
elapsed when they ounce: ‘ike s carria amid | 
„and the st ges 
unted on the Ki ing’s Bastio on; tie Vie. 
tory, peen i hoisted flags at her masthead, and, to 
firèd'a royal salute i as the 
ped, of the batte y close by, and of call: the — 
n the offing. f p 
st 9 th 
| royal ee slowly — aetema ae towards 
past J 
lé before 12. It 
TAA as 
as paid 
the British Treaty, anà 178 oooh from acl Su 
e gran uri 
of w: 
whieh w were Her Binjesty, Prince Albert, the King a and 
Tat 
the least 
Pa 0, &e., entered the grand court of the Chateau e 
The Queen most ani imatedly acknowledged _ the 
rileged fi 
her len paie a journey, extending over 
eas i. ea but that on the looked | 
exceeding’ ly — nd roved in h ti 
aud some other persons o. of distinction were at 
Impro 
not yet known what stay’! her ' Majesty 
will make 
¢ Roman Catholie, 2, 024l.” 
39300. g lonial funds, 118, 
As ones 29, a bn. 
sleyans and Disse 
sats 
at Osborne, or near 
or a | Cotas Council is to 
n Mond t. 
be held at Osborne Hous onday next. During 
her Ps absence tha “infant Punan and Prin- 
the the Queen's arrival at Eu. After a moment or two 
Her Majes esty, piesa by her illasivionsi hosts; ap- 
peared in the balcony over the entrance, an nd again, 
ent 
have 
are in excellent he: 
Official p sae eam —The Ear 
addressed a letter to the Lord Chancellor resigning the 
re ala Se Fme C EE Noik 
; at‘all events she will | thu 
pi 
been reš E e Isle of Wight, and 
alth, Jam 
1 of Winchilsea has | Bar 
hearty ipie with which all aromak had cheered ie 
A déjeuner was then. se 
rly diun 
ilitary awhorities of the 
ampton, and — — milar sarar d kp lieute- 
nants of the sam sates resignin ce of 
fg p ean His lordship has: taken tiss a he 
n account of the “arbitrary and unjust” conduct 
missa a, and pag 
eet hitnself to similar treatmen n the 
course coy eer ay í deem it his du uty to pursue i in kai 
company yw the King: had sent for from Paris pe 
rmed in theatre 
Scie" pir 
fen 
of a3 Frenel ai Quee 
n TUESDAY | 
party left the Chateau 
char-a-bano. There were the King 
etori > the 
Albert 7 
per- | his 
| Chancellor a AETA the letter, st 
directed the necessar: ve 
ich are, in 
The » Lor 
is estimation, “beyond al 1 earth y value.” 
3h; e detailed state 
has upersedeas as to issue, at _ 
same time saying that ery much regrets that 
m has taken this as 
pe 
pir seats were the Feini ot Salern 
the mother of tse Duchess d’ Aumale, an 
¥ 
a s erya by puis troo 
the K Kio ag of the French 
a Sine i 
its.—The election of a mem- 
m of the late 
for Sir. W. _Molcswort, L 943 Mr. Pilcher 
> 1,182 
3 
ace n munts i 3 neatly 80 f folio pages of pn i 
lla 
of all awards for the commutation of tith 
tithe com mmissioners 
ih lst ead ai oon the lst 
re ae of Mr. Mr 
ars 
? 
i| by order of both Howes of se rem it appears that 
the royal p 
6697. ; decrease of rent charges, 
iek fi T meN; wer than 666 different documents either in the | for which the ae ope aue i return, 
forest an aud meadows which ean the > Chakas pa of oF 1000 and blue blooks Oea ex tending to 27697. ; fe ees i the OFS 425; ale 
and Raras Albert afterwards walked in the g I e been p to be are by te poset team 2At, 2134. i 
_ Shortly before six Pw, Her fajas, By nen 
House of Camions alone. 
ese 
par in the kierr and Albert, on their 
foreign. 
papers, wi th scarcely an e 
return to T A body of infantry xn ke i is 5 the __ FRANCE. —The Paris yi tlie A sir i 
the eourt-yard of the hatea a anda ine (four o band oh ane persis e papers of re o , regard Que eS a ae > ig of vet 
Beans e commencement o sepie a ee | the B= ao ure. _No fewer than 22 reports, t 5 Her 
re the departure. fC They express regr 
ee z 3 mr ti land 
FOARA arash rt ne for pain 
é satisfaction at 
20 ee ele che Queen” 
he 
Tuileries, and surv ey. = 
dd that, in spite 
the journals 10 this country, the. 
