Newspaper Page Text
—■l !"■ fumwyijt ;
l 4 cv\fc from V'.n^Vtmd.
By (he ship Simuel Robertson, Captain jj
Griswold, d e Editors of die Journal of Com-,
meice have received London papers of the ;
gist and Portsmouth paper* o( 22d ult.
London, Aug. 21. j
It is reported that a misunderstanding
prevails in the Cabinet respecting the late
alterations in the Reform Bill. We trust
that this difference is not of a serious nature, i
For (he sake of the country, may it be
speedily adjusted, for without unanimity
there, the great measure must fall.
London, Aug. 21.
We shall not disguise our deep regret at
the result of the division on Thursday eve
ring, when Lord Chiuides carried against
the Ministers, and to the serious injury of 1
the Reform Bill, hi-, amendment, providing!
(hat tenants that will pay 501. per annuml
r it, shall be entitled to vote for county |
membei*.
London, Aug. 20.
We received last night the Pails papers
of Wednesday and Thuraday. They arc im
portant only as containing 'he long protract
ed isaue of the debate in the Chamber of De
puties upon the Address to the Throne,
which was to came on Tuesday, when the
fiienda of Ministers carried the ensemble ofl
the Address, diffeiing but in a very trifling!
degree, from the copy which we have already
published, by a majority of 282 against 73.
The closing debate appears to have be.en
conducted wilh greater decency and more
regularity than that of Monday ; and even
something like an amend was made to the
outraged feelings of the President of the
Council. This result is generally looked up
on in Paris as a fresh guarantee for the con
tinuance of peace—pence, however, to be
maintained at the sncrifice of pror deserted
Poland !
It is now certain (hut the French Govern
ment has not sent any orders of recall tc
any part of its troops in Belgium. We art
told, however, by one of our contemporaries
vvh i i» generally well informed, (hat the
King is to pledge himself, in his answer fc
the Address of the Chamber, (bat ho will
withdraw his army when be is assured that
there remains no probable clanger of the
D itch returning. This, ns w • expressed
before, seems In be the gov ruing anxiety of
(be French government, ami considering the
pailies lh*y have to deal with, ii is neither
impertinent nor unreasonable. Wo have not
seen as yet, any tiling to shako our faith in
the honest intentions of I,ours Pbillipc as tc
the sijourn of his troops in Belgium, The
Ftcnch squadron has returned to Toulon
from Lisbon.
London, Aug. 19,
We are nb*c to announce lha* the answei
of the K..i g ol the Ficucb to the Address ol
the Chamber ol Deputies will contain rel a
tive to Belgium, the following tvenience
"1 hope th, »oi army will be, able to returt
speedily to France. Iwd hasten to rec.d
it os soon as, in accord and concert with ths
Powers who are guarantees, like myself, ol
the independence of Belgic neutrali y. 1
shall b.-assured that his return will not ex
pose Belgium to new aggiessioos.— Courier
London, Aog. 20.
Twelve o' duck. —-W o have heard that an
express bom Paris has arrived,but i s coo
tents luve not as yet transpired, in oonse
quence of which our Fuuds at present arc
stationary.
Half past I, ---The contents of the express
from Pans nor Ore price of the French Rents
are yet suffered to transpire, nut we under
stand it is not of importance. We
heat that all is gon g on well in the above
Capital, sod the Hebrews are purchasing
C n 'ill in an icipa'ion th A t the Fieoch will
soon wi hdraw In m Belgium; & heF'«och
Ministers, after their groat majority in ihe
voting of the address to (lie King, will re
m.iii ii min their situations. Consols buv
be fl u un'ieg dining the moining from
,i 4 to 83 1 4-, at 100 latter price they
are a {litsent.
\> ' have i further accounts from Poland
or tn m I), assets.
In theFaieigi market little or nothing
doing,
A icpurt prevai s that the island of Ma
deira has suirendered to Villa Flor, and
which is believed by the Por'uguse mer
chants.
Th n e o’clot k—Consols 82i.
Loss of ihe si 'tuiiei Ruihsay Castle, pas
«enge s and crew. A 1 a late hour last night
vve received lb.' lo.lowing melancholy an
nouncement from Liverpool :
Telegraph Ollice, Liverpool Aog. 18.
We have received ihe molancti iy i cl
ligence of ths total loss of (lie s earner R.nh
say Castle, from lienee lo Beaumaris. S
struck on the Dutchman’s Bank, off Puffin
Island, ut 12 o’clock un Wednesday night,
in a heavy gale of wind at about N, N. W
Upwards of 120 passengers must luv bee:
on board, including the crew, and many fe
male passengers. Oir first account s ates
•hat nine passe.geis only, and three of the
crew, were saved, but subsequent communi
cations say :
-»e may still hope that more may hav •
o«u saved, but the loss of life must have
been dreadful indeed. Owing to the very
heavy nea, the signal man at the island ha
been during the day unable lo read, the l
mam land io obtain further intelligence. 1
Despatch Office, Saturday itvornii »■ We
t.avs just lea..hat among the sufferers in
he above dreadful accident, was a Mr Tin- ‘
, Jlar. t,e rV :Se fi ”" Sa, " ba: <*. iinniei
w
M the entrance of the Menai Straits, near I
!(he suspension bridge. Our correspondent i
says that upwards of a hundred persons were
on board, of whom only twelve were, saved, i
| No other intelligence than that received by
'telegraph had reached Liverpool on Thuis- <
I'lay night.
Pi iva*e Correspondence.
Brussels, August 16, Tuesday evening—
A courier arrived here yesterday evening
I svi(h despatches from London, which are
considered of the highest importance. Their
contents have been communicated to the
King and the Government by the British
Ambassador. U is conjectured that they
relate to the introduction ot French troops
into this cotiutry, And to the occupation of
all its strong places by them, both of which
facts are supposed to be highly satisfactory
Ito Great Britain.
The lielgi in ministry have holden several
'councils on the subject, and have had va
rious communications with Sir Robert A
dair and Bclliard. It is affirmed by some
of the influential members of the Govern-*
rttent, that they cannot do without the
French troops, which are daily increasing,!
and which are to be completed, as 1 under
stand, lo the number of 50,000 men.
The Belgian Government, now fully con
vinced of its weakness, and fearful of ano
ther invasion on the part of Holland, open-;
; ly States its intention to obtain the delay
of these troops until peace be concluded.
| The Prussians at Ait-la Chapellehave
began to make movements in 'heir army.
( The Governor of that city arrived here this
morning, and has had interviews with the
' French and Kuglisli Ambassadors, also with
Jih > B'dgic Minister. Pr paialions are at i
ted to have been made for (he defence of
v Aix-la Chapelle, us if au a 1 ack on that
j city was expected. The Dutch fleet near
Antwerp has made a retregade movement,
like the army. The gun boats have gone
o jdown the river, so as to be no longer in view
Jot that city. It is also said that the four
t small Belgian trading vessels, taken last
e week by the Dutch steam boat on the Sheldt,
* have been restored.
|( The Emancipation, newspaper altogether
( ,in the French interest, is laboring to raise
J« party in their (aVor : but the Belgians, it
,1 they could make pe-ce with Holland, do
I uot wish to submii to their yoke.
p Five o’clock in the evening.
r Between hopes and fears the Belgi'an
( Government his not yet, as 1 have heard,
() come to any determination respecting the
detention ol ihe French army. Nothing has
e yet been decided, but an English courier is
n in waiting in rd«*r to take the decision to
London. The D i'Cb troops, it is laid, must
be wh' Hy removed from the country before
if the F ehch army is to quit.
} f Tin* city and ihe whole country, is in the
( most perfect trai quilpy
The Dutch army it is expected, will soon
n have entered into their own territory—to
ll morrow or neat day at furthest.
e POLAND.
,1 VV srmv is s'ill but by ihe Russian armies
1 from the eyes of Europe. The Poles how
ever, an* said to be prepared for a terrible
•.resistance. they have undermined the
whole of Warsaw, and are ready, if uver
n powered, to bury themselves and their in
vaders in one common iuin. It is said,
| however, (hat the Russians are disposed to
’ treat with them, and allow their, a separate
M aib" al existence, io b ■ governed by a Vice
s roy of their own people. General Rudiger,
, who had ciossed ihe Vistula to act with Pas
1 kewitsch, has recrossed it, which shows that
[jihe cause i f the Poles is not so d specie as
I might expect. We look wih anxiety
Jfor every arrival from the Continent, ns like
i ,'y 10 fjnng news ol the fate of this itutnam
“tnoua people.
„ RUSSIA AND POLAND;
BaitLlN August 10.
, According to letters fr. m Warsaw, of the
n . a Ist ult. the P ties laughed nutiightat the
yjidea of being starved inm submission by so
inadequate a force as that of the Russian*,
j They had provisions enough to s and a siege
of four months, and the town was too well
g fortified on every siite, to allow of anjr tear
that the enemy will attempt to take jr by
. storm.-—There was a ejjular army of 40
I 000 men wi hill the ci y, and agr it number
.ot undisciplined mops, who were in 'he
course of training; ih e whole of whom, as
well as the ii habitants, were animated wi h
. the best movements of (he Russians have be
t tra J' ed ~,uc h indecision This is by s-mie
. attributed tu he mania ion, and even ta
ken as a proof that it has begun to on«.
rate. a y '
Cerbiin it is tha their original intention
was to occupy he v. h e part ..f the Duchy
| which is surrounded by ihe Vi»t„i tt a(l d ,b e
IPi ussian frontier, ai d to establish a pmvis
' tonal O vernmeut a' K i-ch. But they are
suli at one hundred n ilea distance from
Warsaw, and they have not yet occupied
iK.ilish. Most id the public roads, however,
are infested wi h parties of Cossacks, who
| extend their excursions many miles beyond
“jthe line of the main aimy, a d stop, harrass,
jor plunder all who have ihe mi-fortune to
ilail within their rear h.-•-They have brought
the iholera morbus wheiever 'here has beer
• any kind of coinmu'iicaiitm with them; bo
[destruction invariably attends their progres
j without tinning their own riu.ks.
Warsaw, August I,
Extract of a letter: •• In my last I in
formed you of the Russians, under the cum
miind of Paekewitsch, advancing towards
j Warsaw, and according to news airivei'
['yesterday, his advanced posts are already n
SSom haciew, forty miles (English) from here,
but the corps which was under (he ctiritnan'
of (j nerala Chtzanowski and Romaniro,
passed through Warsaw yesterday and to
day, from the other side of the river, to
wards WoUki Rogatki; and the Cumntan
der-in-Chief leaves town to-day,to meet P.u
--k-witgch, but it is expected that the Russi
ans will not give battle, but retreat,
i “Since the Council of VV 8 r has been held,
the greatest unanimity prevails, and perfect
confidence is established between the Gov
ernment and the nation, and the Cornman
dcr-in Chief.
"We are expecting a tremendous batlle
soon.”
St. Petersburg July SO.
His Majesty has received from Count
Paskewitrch a detailed account of the suc
cessful passage of the Vistula by the Russi
an army.
Abolition of Quarantine in Russia.•••'The
Russian Government lias done away with all
quarantine.---Fite reason assigned for this
jis, that the whole empire infected,
nothing remains to be gained by the restric
tions, which weie in other respects incon
vtnient and imperfectly fulfilled.
From the London Globe, Aug. 20.
Some days ago a report reached us (hat
the Emperor Nicholos was dead. This was
said to be a fabrication of the Jews at Ber
lin, and we disbelieved it. There seems,
however, to hang a mystery over the news
from Petersburg. That capital, exposed to
the ravages of the cholera morbus, is left al
i most without a government. The Emperor,
. 'he Minis'etS, even the thfil of Police
, have withdrawn to Peterhi ff and, it seems,
the rabble, not the Sovereign, is autocrat for
I the day.
In the meantime, he Grand Duke, the
r only surviving brother of the Cz r, is sud
denly called to the 5-eat of Government, 1
. and a Prussian physician, eminent for cur- 1
) jtng mental disorders, is coifilently report-i
red to have been sent for from Berlin. Wei
t|donot vouch for these rumors—they may
, be idle stories ; but many coincidences seem
to give them probability, and the unexpect
r e-t mactivity of the Russian army on the
• Vistula, where we were taught to expect a
f decisive battle three weeks ago, may be an
vindication of irresolution, change, and dis-
I may in the quarter from which all orders
must emanate.
* Liverpool, August 12.
, The Fame, of Liverpool, was taken by
t pirates, 9 h April, in Loanga B ty ; three tis
s the crew escaped ; the master and five men
s were left on board.
' Antwerp, August 16.
1 The Belgic vessels which were taken poa
e session of on the 4th iust. by the Daub,
have been liberated,
a —•O*—
ii From the Boston Cenlinet.
Leopold ami, the Prince op Grande.
Many of our readers will remember that
soon after the fall of Napofion, and the re
s Storation of the family o( Nassau to the
. throne of the Netherlands, the Prince of
e Orange, with dll' laurels gained at Water
e lon as Aid of Wellington yet fresh on bis
- brow, became a suitor for the heart and hand
-of the. late Princess Charlotte, thenabmt
/twenty years of age. and heiress presurep. I
a tive to the crown of Great Britain, The
e (proposed match was generally considered
- as a very suitable one, and atone time it was l
, considered all but settled. The heir of the
cn.wn of the Netherlands was regarded as on
t a rank with the heiress of the British isles.
» But soon afterwards Leopold, of Sax Co
r burg, a G-rmau Prince of comparative ob
. scuriiy, came and presented his claims, sue
- ceded, end the prelimi aries were a once
settled. The speedy marriage, and subse
quent simultaneous de .th of the Princess
and her son, --re well remembered. This
. B«me Leopold fi now on the throne of de
" c.tiledly the fairest px- ion of what was
’ then the inheritance of ’he Prince of Ora:ig-,
and the last accounts left the Priure march
-Ifi g against the King. The Loudon Globe
I has 'he following ar'icle ;
r The fortunate Youth.— Prince Leopold,
y if would appear, was born to thwart the
Prince of Orange—not «ly of his lady love
r the lamented Princess of these isles, but of
t Bflgic ctown. Prince Leopold owed his
# fi si m roduotion to the Princess Charlotte,
, to the then Dutchess of Olifinburgh, a very
. c ever woman, who being ambitious of mar
rying her sister to the Prince of Orange,
. Commenced by prejudicing the young Prtn-|
/cess’s mind against her mu-in end lover—
(then artfully painted herfriend the aspiring
, soldier Leopold, to a youthful fancy, in the
most glowing colors; and having thus
. wrought up the imagination to a proper
. height of excitement, she quitted these:
. shores; and the rival of the Prince of Orange
, was sent ( ver with an au'ograph letter from
| the D chess to her illustrious vonng f iend.
, The first introduction made a fixed impres-j
, stun upon a mind so predisposed in his fa-j
1 V'tr. Nature had given him some external,
, advantages. .The King was anxious to see
, hi* daughter married, and, like a kind fath
er, sacrificed interest to affection--they were
'quickly united; and the wily Duchess as
quickly succeeded in carrying the other
point, by the union of her sister with the 1
Prince of Orange. Oi l Baron S.ufiz, the!
ailor, had the impertinence to tell Prince
Leopold, who was objecting to some heavy
cln ge» in his bill, that hi* highness ought to
I bp more liberal to English tradesmen gee
iug what the c-umry had done for him.(
Your highness’s liveries (says Slultz) an-'
oaally com* to mors money now than the
whOie produce of your prineely income,',
when you first arrived in England*”
Baltimore, September £f,
FROM RIO DE JANEIRO.
The brig Arctic, Phillips, at this port
yesterday, sailed from Rio de Janeiro on
the sth August. By this arrival the editors
of the American have received files of pa
pers of that city to the Ist of August, in
clusive, A' the time the Arctic sailed, the
diiturbances among the soldiery, which were
in agitation at the date of the previous ad
vices, had subsided, but business remained
mud) depressed ; money continued very
scarce, and a universal distrust prevailed a
mong the mercantile community. Assas
sinations of the Portuguese inhabitant* were
constantly committed.
September 28.
It is stated that Judge M'Lean has de
clined becoming the anti-maauoic candidate
for the Presidency, and that the convention
will makes nomination to-day. Various
names are mentioned as likely to be nomin
ated, but we decline mentioning them, as
the result will probably be known.
Chief Justice Marshall, Judge P. P. Bar
hour, of Virginia, Senator Forsyth, of Geor
gia, Mr. Wirt, and other distinguished gen
tlemen, have visited the anti-masonic con
vention.
New Tor*, September 26 — Hayti.-- '
By the brig Bunker Hill, we received Port
au Prince papers of the 4th inst. They are
filled wi h the mo«t heart-rending details of
{the destruction caused by the late hurricane
in Aux Cayes, J .cmel and Jeremie; at the
latter place the b;ig Evergreen, of this port.
Captain Fletcher, and the schooner Henry
Clay, of Baltimore, Captain Hayes, were
driven on shore and totally lost with the re
turn cargoes which they had taken in. Each
ot them lost one of their crew, and the Mate
jof the Evergreen had his atm broken.
( No accounts had yet been received from
the city of Santo Duiningo, but it was ex
pected that the tempest in passing over the
{eastern part of the Island, had also com
1 mitted there the greatest devastation,
1 Courier.
A Poet Mistress —Our politically knee
i deep immersed rotemporaries have mutual-'
ly indulged in party-colored pleasantries,
on the appointment of a Miss Rider as post
master at Coventry. (R. I.) Her appoint
-1 ment was indisputably a glorious •• loop to
1 a” joke upon, but we discover no per
tinency in the remarks elicited by the cir- 1
cumstance. We know no part ot ti e duty!
. of a pos'master, in towns of the magnitude
, in( l importance x Coventry, (R, 1.) which
may not be filled, as well by women as by
men, and one thing is certain, that females'
are more likely to he obliging and attentive;
than their self sufficient finds, who would
monopolize all the means of living, even to
t the right ot retailing pin* and needles.
Boston 7’rumcript,
•••"
r ANOTHER INDIAN TREATY.
We learn from the Onio Monitor, that
Mr. James B. Gardener, the agent appoint
ed by the Government, has concluded eve
ry important treaty at Maume Bay, in
Michigan, for a cession of s!! the lands
owned by the Ottawa Indian* in Ohio, a
bout fifty thousand acres. The conditions
(of this treaty are very similar to tho-e o’
Lewistown and Wapaghkonetta. with this
exception, that the surplus avails oftheir
lands, after deducting seventy cents per
aCre to indemnify the government, are to be
appropriated t>r paying the deb g of >h^• r
nation, amounfi g to about twenty thousand
I dollars. The balance, if any, accrues io the'
tribe. Seventy thousand acres of land are 1
granted to'hem west of the Mississippi.
The Oitowas are thd most depredating/
drunken, and ferocious Indians in Ohio.—
The reservations ceded by 'hem, are all ve.
ry valuable and those ou the Miami of the
lake embrare some of the best mill privil
ge- tit the State. This treaty, which was
concluded on the SOth of August, will afford
great rpiiaf to the settlers in 'he northwest
part ol Ono. The Wyandot tribe alone re
main to be treated with, and they are now
■ ready and willing to commence a negotia
tion for a Sale and exchange of all their
lands in the S'ate of Ohio.
The following short and beautiful quotation it from
the page* ot the elegant, the benevolent, the inspired
M'Kenxie, author of the ‘Man of Feeling ’ Speak
ing of those who profess a disbelief in Keligion ho [
expresses himself in the following heart-touching
maimer : ;
“ He who would undermine those foundations up
on which the fabric of our future hopes is reared,
seeks to beat down that column which supports the
feebleness of humanity) let him but think a moment,
and his heart will arrest th t cruelty of his purpose.
Would he pluck its little treasure from the bosom of
poverty > Would he wrest its crutch from the hand
ot age, and remove from the eye of affliction, the
only solace of its woe t The way we tread is rugged
at Dest; we tread it however, lighter, by the pros
I pect of that better country, to which, we trust, it
i will lead. Tell us not it will end in the gulf of eter
nal dissolution, or break off in some wild which
fancy may fill op as she pleases, but reason is unable
to delineate) quench not that beam, which amidst
the night of this evil world, has cheered the despon
der.cy of ill-required worth, and illuminated the
darkness of suffering virtue "
Absence if Mind. —An old woman who sold ale,
being in Church, fell asleep during divine service,
and unluckily let tier old fashioned clasped Mible
fall, which making a great noise, she exclaimed,
bu ke'> a * te ' '*° J ° U there ’* » nother J u £
!„ Curious Caution...- John G. Miller, in the Cherry
a ey (i zette sayi, 1 All persons are hereby for-:
bia marrying my daughter Betsey,”
■ r i 1 •mmimrnir*'
CONSTITUTIONALIST. ,
jiUousrjTT
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1831.
FURTHER ELECTION RETURNS.
BCDEL COUNTY.
For Governor.
GILMER, 595 LUMPKIN, 118
Senator -HARROW.
Representatives—t)ye, Burke, Roberta.
COLUMBIA COUNTY.
For Governor.
GILMER, 392 LUMPKIN, 364
Senator —AVERY.
ifcpreien/altUf*.—Crawford, Clanton, loott
NANCOtX COUNTY.
For Governor,
GILMER, 643 LUMPKIN, 135
fIfenofor—DEVERBADX
Representatives— QraybilJ, Vinion, Carnet.
Baldwin county.
For Governor .
LUMPKIN, 375 GILMER, 33*
Senator— BOYKIN.
Representatives —Calhoun, Howard.
WILXIS COUNTY.
For Governor.
LUMPKIN, 534 GILMER, 445
Senator — WOOTEN.
Representatives -Willi*, Irvin, Brown, Thurmead,'
• ** * !■
OtLITHOHYa COUNTY.
For Governor.
GILMER, 634 LUMPKIN, 307
Senator—COX-
Representatives—Young, Collier, Hubbard,
taiiNN county.
GILMER, 779 LUMPKIN 38
Senator— STORKS.
Representatives— Cone, King, Matthew* $
TALLUYIRHO COUNTY.
For Governor,
GILMER, 405 LUMPKIN, It
Senator- THOMPSON. i
Representative - Mercer.
Tho new Professor* in Franklin College will aptmi
mence their duties on the lat of January next. Th*
The Rev. Mr Olin tke Professor of Ethica and
Belle* Lettrea is expected to be ahortly at hia port,
Mr. Bbxrti* has replied to Mr. Eaton. Wo
are aorry to see him engaged in such an affair with
Branch and Ingham and Eaton—he is very superior
.to any or all of them!—He disclaims having beera
the partisan at any time of Mr. Calhoun —We
thought it was impossible for ua to mistake on this
head.
j The eitie* of Savannah and Charleston, have ha 4
the terrible Cholera under serious consideration.
The Athenian inform* ua that the Effigy, about
the burning or hanging of which ao much noit* hat
,been made, was got up by two men t some aay c
Trouper and a Ctarker, and others-Jort Clarkert.
Wi hope the authors and publishers of the Liber.
(Far and such like publications will be presented by
our Grand Juries. Let ua see if the law will no*
reach them. If a villain atand on the South Car*,
lina shore and throw sfire ball into our city with !*>
tention to do mischief— will the law hold him guilt,
lew f
The Anti Masonic Convention assembled at Ba!<
timore on the 26th ult. |t i, said Mr. Calhoun
would have been supported by this precious set tot
the Presi lency, had he no* nullified hia own, pro*,
pecta by advocating Nullification. As it ia-they
support Judge M'Lean !—To what a forlorn bop*
mqat the aspirant for Presidential honors be rc-du*.
ed when he throws himself into the arms of the
Anti Masons ! And yet, tho crusade against "»•
sonry is not to be disregarded, when such men u
\J- Q Adame take the field. The fraternity should
themselves—hold a Convention—at Washington
next spring, and vindicate their order from obloquy
and reproach the most unmerited.
Mr. Clay's proepeots are getting worse k wore*
—Mr. Calhoun has no prospects at all—who is lc
oppose President Jackson '-Judge Marshall and
Judge Vi Lean are spoken of, and if we remembac
right, the name of Lorento Dow, was mentioned
some time ago.
" on Mr. Pettieru concluded his argument ott
the Bond Case, he was enthusiastically cheered by
the audience.
Every where Mr. Calhoun's doctrines are eo®,
demned by the sober minded and considerate ) the
(Telegraph and other old anti-Crawford prints yield
(them a cautious support. There are some, indeed
.that warmly advocate them, but these are “cm
nantes ." *
The affairs of Europe are in euch a strange slats
that while we are announcing one event anntheS
. has succeeded baffling our speculations and contra,
ry to our expectations. Our last informs us tha?
Caeimir Perrier retsina office and while he makes
some sacrifice* to the spirit of the times, he wiU
probably retain Me pacific policy. He should r«-
member that the French people have their heads
lull of Belgium and Poland, and his politics! reaur*
rectinn ia probably owing to the late military move*
ment upon the former. Looking at Prance from »
great distance and ignorant of many circumstances
proper lobe considered by those who would judge
correctly—our opinions are but little worth, never,
less we think the maxim of the Gallic statesman
should be " a foreign war rather than civil commo*
lion.” — Toe sessions of the Chamber had been iter.
‘ my and Casimer Perrier had been forced from the
jtnbune by a threat of personal violence—but «
eah n succeeded.
, The character of Belgium is at a low ebb t those
who boasted so much have performed very little.