342 THE NEWSPAPER. 
jis than the Queen and Albion, who never appeared | applied to the French for succour, declaring that al- | orders the Presidents of 
brag anything ; indeed, all the squadron proved | though pereen with some pieces of ordnance, they le uns ed'the limits o ge o_o suffer 
themselves such fine ships as to be incapable of being | must surrender Abd-el-Kader, unless —— ily re- | be wanti ing in due respect for the i k e publie to 
i y press of sail, except the St. Vincent. |inforceđ. The Aeterna tween Oran and the | mention the unexpected — sea enact ran Papers 
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weatherly, but slow; St. Vincent leewardly and crank ;{ chenes, Saile m A : er were éf ou 
and as the weather appeared to set in fine, and not ar — It was thought that it would first pro- | ae bi continued to be felt throughout C oa t 
deeming that any further trial d to Ora n, and thence + to the coast of -Morocco.—It The w ather was very hot, and the people st Cao 
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inst. for thi ge, ap 
omg I cee _ the squadron under my command | from the Cabinet. At a Council held on Saturda ay, GER t tokit from 
day, at 7 15p I beg to remark, for their lord-| his colleagues in vain urged him to continue at least cident whieh proves to what 
Ships En that all the agar deserve the | President of the Council, and to leave the fatiguing War in A 
atest eredit for the seamanlike er in which | Department to any person he might please to select ; g passe sed in the Kino? 
they ‘ecko sail, blowing in the or it did, 0 on the above- | the Marshal replied that he considered that he had juis ve been che ie erai Bulky 
mentioned occasions. I have, &c., S. Pym, Rear- omy TERN — of his s duty to his country, a and quickly, and eee na subject of 
Admiral. A few days after the above ge written, the | that tion, being nothing less than a EK a 
Superb 80, jga ke fleet, and the Vanguard sailed tend to his ieie health. Although 4 ge ate the municipal magistrates before the k 
for Portsmouth undergo some alteration in repeatedly, and with great firmness, Thi is manifestation i is = t eted against th 
dockyard. The Aa ralty, h however, h the Cabinet has again succeeded, through eg Ki ng’s zo 
termined that the ‘rial cruises of the three decked ships | intercession, in npg his resolution, Marshal | severance, a and by t the rece: which t 
shal inate for this year. The St. Vincent has gone | Soult’s anxiety to n his situation will, probably, ’s councils, where they are vepresented'p 
to Portsmouth as the fi: ag- -ship ; the Trafalgar will go | aseribed to the disgust ps ich be Feels. atthe ofu aspeet | = Thiele wud Bich hon. Stis to 5 
. f Vice-Admiral Sir E. er of affairs in Algeri and especi ially ; at t the indulgene: rty that are attributed all intoler: 
King ; the Queen remains at Plymouth for the flag of | which Louis-Philippe rigorous observance of the sabbath 
‘Adinival Sir John West. The two-deeked s paps ne gant con — ct of Marshal Bugeaud. she accounts from | tices hey nae by force on the s ee? 
Rodn ey, Sup erb, and Canopus, with the Rattler mer, | Ta ar so s upply a a me for much discussion := uptia 
q ish,” a Flotte. aes 
apiy inform us of an in. 
E 
ty ay e ecent 
e sities from the Pacific nae which has mmunicated to es of the 
the command ge eoe afi nce Asipa Mra ` 2 us :—The intrigues of the English Gonde, geni are daily be- | COnSis The ese acts ta 
pus; ¢ anguard has complete a ma me itis tren br elin has left Otaheite i in county ‘against the domination of the Pietie an and the 
her alterations, she is, to join them at the appointed | o n the English Admiral and negotiate with him. : es 
rendezvous, and Cap‘ain Willes, being senior aptain its protracted deliberations it has Been bind eet En: | ¢ wine Se 
. . . FiIS. e e 
Moresby, will try their rates and qualities. ates these $ Eng lish Admiral ses eome ‘to Otaheite, and will salute the ting a ‘let r, in which y men ret | aes against the 
our trials, under different, officers, the > Ad dmiralty w ill Protectorate flag,’ in order ine i ee fv Kec and cordial | Pietist nas and attack personally M. de Thiele and 
probably p of the two nations, As swill be n one ed, | M. Eichorn. It appears that the address of the magis- 
t as the Ki 
NEA in “tise name of England and "Fran to Que: with A eet 
the view of making her immediately paein to gii Protectorate trates, which was sent to the King uring his journey to 
apem. ate A her pa | 2 her Pa sande ViN be D- a e Rhine, had remained ‘in the hands of the minister, 
claimed, an rance wi t lil rty to em oy her orces in i a 
France.—The Paris papers d ting the past week bringing her * sphjection.. What new Majesty is, in virtue of rafts Thiele, hot sat nei I thigh dispense with trans- t 
Have been enga in diseussing a a variety of to pies of of | this convention, to rule over Otahéite, is not said. yë marca. _it-was probably supposed 
inro r Jess publie interes and atii attention me alleged circumstanee 6 “os Hiaasen iadiwviog that the mate would rest there ; but a journal discon. _ 
oe zoma his plan, and ‘the vi i 
P n 15-carri- 
u “ Some months ago,” says the Réforme, ‘the English joined, cae ae in ‘that he had 
ig a eit ‘novelty, hy za that thsi to |, in the African'seas, one of our frigates in an attack against not — their adres hat he not heard of their 
‘sha! Bugeand arrived Marseilles on the 11th, and gasean gen of of our former neess ea àre P roceëdings y the Jornais; mà that he could not 
‘embarked the same evening on board he anama for | yet tobe seen. To-day, our accounts from the Pacific Ocean Eo ae of oth soaduek The King expected an apoogh 
Algiers, where he expe to"wrrive’on “the 15th: “On Iatorm us that the commander of the: British forces at Tahiti nothing of the kind was given. Far from it, M. d 
> u ; 
? the Marshal was ma i. Bench s 
ith tite faet of the publication of his letter to ithe ‘Pre. | bility of Marshal Sebastiani—in‘other words, that at Tahiti, as read the address: to the King-; his Majesty being visibly 
fect of the dep: he Dordogne ; shortly yon asat au ear, Vos Feon 7. a. prsseasions, ates ol chlis asas an 4 own. “When ti e reading was concluded 
“after his arrival, i attired on following ef to higur owt eritenity. <Aethatteysse and, and thereby mutilate | he spoke, and i “répl ding fi 
If that system shoul tin 
‘the editor of the Marseilles Courr soon permit the fi ngish to join us in “xigeria, Why a e shai = bec og si what right iy: meddled wih a 
“Sir—T have just read in i a pur journal ee vablidle rélati¥e to | not M. Guizot wa his calles ues concur in sueh a combination ? | gious ws a could n 
the letter which I Tonnes t of Dordogne: and whieh | Their policy evidently tends ‘to bring in the English every- | pir compete: uch m serie opin :— 
Beni ns nari this 5 Tefter, whieh "The. Jour l d Débats has a | tiel th ~ Kings aione that belonged the direction of reli "i 
was entirely’ confidential, was not destined to Lover y You she a Po meet rop in id pach 5 o3 Ba he kass an — ` the heaviest burden he had to 
owe wetly right. Iwill add, that not only tipati Wio to'have | & 7E a rex 1 po aint f view he could ‘not allow 
gemained seeret, but that the indiscreet person erson who published ‘he failare emi object of this arti ; eura is to'prove that either that the fossa of Soa were fit to’ viol 
e sens: 3 
fen erecting t g E enaps. on ee i accompanied | of so inportant an art cleo consumption as | in's uéh g grave ‘he —- ite ot eae opinion, of 
e, all the citi kin om, it was tlia the-most | 
iy ig me nee m Dog aurance ‘of my ‘distinguished | jnited R si to supply'the loss by importations of | Seal eds ine « Under my pag PY 
_. Aseeond letter was subsequently. addressed hy Marshal foreign grain, The i resse follows i be the SNOR line, and gra ndfather, > a e Kig * Berlin tore 40,000 
Bugeaud tothe ‘Semaphore de Marseille, which affirms inhabitants nil 50 preachers. mt present t he population 4 
still more-strongly than the former one that his first of England, and the enpeli spirit for railway spe- | Aio nts to 500,000 souls, ànd you u hav = even — . 
was purely confidential, and was never intended culation which at ion smd n Great ëk ritain ; and |. of i increasing-t 
1 ‘publication. The following is the letter :— om oF ‘the present year will | church. Is — showing great 2 zeal for aslaiont ts s 
å ‘I have gead in your journal a letter purporting | to havebeen | bring with ita financial ag of which itt is ee tothe Pietis and fa ithfu l a bre: i 
essed by me tu the Prefect ‘dogne. It sa ns A 
“that on hearing of the oceitrrenees in Akie I ateis that “ tore oe cage ee ee ee od and their ANNE j 
oe is t hi x ne i e nded at cee ta. They were wading party, i il he si aa i 
‘Send me,post-horses to Excideuil ; and I communicated to him | diately taken prisoners by the police, anda portion of | ¢} ri ri mi pe the 
at th i f i rg 1 X . hem ; the 2 dia not recognise any suc ig 
: e el oe the artisio I had reċeiv ed respecting them were lodge inthe barracks and others in the pare clar: ia part of the n ew Catholieso uot tl these 
Ae ‘an D Ja ignei 
‘and who touk-upon himself to enter siderations whieh | bout’ a other’ emigranta» e expected ‘by the | to reply to them ; but he could not forget the'proofs of | 
Mosher unl goo ete : Dah a publica ation. I banhos ent om mer from Gen 2 te de Rothschild, | tsp to, fidelity which had cemented the “union p 4 
‘ite effusions of an old friend to re Kii aia A ti a and other pane vatios. väh ete oe of | the house of Hohenzollern and the city of Berlin. a 
: t it should tiatcadds pas j reat Northern E rasara > a i 
eireumstances that led tothe publication uf a fie the eon | A Paris to Clermont (upwards of P miley on „Sunday. Vered lite ka mip te farther SO a diate al 
done con i cipal couneil n Berin ise prepar ped” if develo, 
ddress, w 
ened, its a 
taan i a reet and a individual,” ae Toe accounts fro: Ta saa a of the 10th 
Pe rn te do ot appear to attach — eek inst., on Switch day Queen Tsabella “completed her 
the Marshal’s diselaimers. They-are in 15th year . The oc sonnet was celebra o M. Ronge, at w 
BE aak e of an opinion that this-e elise isia | a besa- en which was 'b rilliantiy pena ey The. new | amin which ‘he concluded with fi fo! 
a = oe n the ones = the ‘plan adopted b; y the oe = F vibes: of taxing'the | — is three centuri 
— ` the Ia necessity of a on the Exe > failed so completely | ated by the lords‘of the land. 
that Xhe M = tter against him; and i they infer that it was to = modifed forthwith, dt is-said ‘that the | have taken the initiative ” Aceoun 
al | modification is.prepared, and merely [abs ounce th aoe ofM. : “int 
$ of Justic ére he was receive i 
of the poe cena away = stare a È afai: Mazzaredos tlie _ Captain- General of “Mad R A hee | keeseen eag He had celeb Pegi syi 
e D Sth, and was said to be the tear of full | likewise preached in the German Silena, i 
ao to a 
will bel may’ h, but tł w rs fr the Madrid and „Bilboa Railro: d Com mpany | that city, ‘He then 
t +1 + 
he 
Boat of Marshal agen pier a a de rep 
g ing, tl St Priest und Fezengac, and_o who | publishes a official LD tig eth 
journals: profess to be c so-amused by a they eall i intended to undertake the- pirer of Pie Madrid memg $ ‘The report 
fea more satirical than | and-Bayonne line. ‘The n-Ge hadib seg yA soldiers ‘to fire 
yg PRC mak ey Gen eral alt bop ‘say by whom ‘the ord 
