{ title: 'The tocsin. volume (Cooperstown, N.Y.) 1829-1831, August 16, 1830, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042153/1830-08-16/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042153/1830-08-16/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042153/1830-08-16/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042153/1830-08-16/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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- vf\ aur in brome ar CHAUNCEY-E:-DBUTTON: __ - . & rere m _| could even then- have scarcely had any utherefiect than to diminish the major- 7 wwvhwhfiaxheéirieg‘ga a ty the ity, without defeating the Tibefals. .T , Fut 1 p- CBB JUST NoT.\ +> - of : - ' -=To~viHJagé dnd rail. subscri- \R. ~ bers, $2:00 in advariee; Or (}2 30 at the end of er E 'r 3 R papers at the - cay his ' who reegive their pipers at the \ for themiin ddnarice, #1 50. | | - 8G Rates of Advertising.-50 cents per square Afisertlor 25 cents. 0.0, . PRINTING.--Books, . pamphlets; hand- . ~ Pills,. blanks; cards, &e. &¢. {mtg ther . (~- -f gflfix—dw type, and in a manner that-will-not gh€ , , fail to pleagel . ._ _. wos of inmmppnéminmecmenplanptcasinpmeemmmnipepemmademiie . tou I9) to $o \ dipknbl CL Is Laurens, «Otsego co. Martin Bridges. . _ Hestwick, (- \ -\ Natiiniel Place. ar» Ole?” o Gideon Cornell. Burlington, << Ebenezer Sheldon. Utica, Oneida co. Wm. C. Rogers. Bridgewater, \* Esq. Blackman, © Florence, « Jabez Green Scot, Courtland co. - Zenas Miller. the co,\ h.- til? the the with ty in nad bat- of isted t the res'd ship. anl in a em- by or > ' . as , ** addressed to the ed- | ground.was well calculated to 'give , ( Ren Phe-A1- 8 gerine§ had seyeral mountain guns car- exécuted | fied on camel's backs,\ which did great pim zy! yOr IL _- -c00 bettor marligm@hthan the French, The -ventege-to-irregular troops PERSTOWN, NaY. MONDAY, AUGUST 16, eral bundreds of persons. had availed themselves-of the: opportunity ; 6f not eceased Sovereign, [only seeing their d but of taking him by tlie hand; and, (- \o > bul rona * ar raion for the first Ingertion, and for every MOE the artillery. | The Arabs wore. morning until after eight; by which sev-; ed the conduct of m according th _ the: conedrrent account of anxl and my lamented -and beloved brother ; ahd I rely with the 4d vice and assistance of parliament, apd d Pr Sullivan, Madison do. Oreb Montague. Cazenovia, 6 Benjamin T. Clark.. _ Nichols, Tioga eo. __ Orson V. Stanton. ~ Esperance, Schoharie co, Wilbur 8. Devel. Cheshire. Berkehire co. Mass, A: &. Haskins. | tan Khalassi, the fort of the Emperor. 2 ind LATEST FROM EUROPE. Deatg or Groros tus Fovark, AnD accession or Witui«m tus FovarH, to tus or Enc- LAND: The packet ship Manchester, arrived\ at BlocksIsland om Thursday morning, { from Liverpool.. The passengers of the Manchester left the ship in a pilot boat purposing to proceed 'to Newport, and there tale: the steamboat for New York. io: whiclhtook them on board, and reached New Rie} pers - bring only a small letter bag containing a few papers. Among them are the London-Morning Herald of June 30th, and Liverpeol papers of the 29th June, and lst July: ; « Thx sggre fallen in with, however, by | stantia z Ail rfiwbowgugbwug; Livingston,athens, As whatever relates to the death 6f | of his Majesty's principal Secretaries of the late King, to his obsequies, or to the proclaiming of his successor, is matter of general interest, we give as copious extracts as our limits will permit on these heads. From what we find im the papers of the'latest dates, the Lon- don Herald of the 90th June; and the Liverpool papers of the fifst July, it does not appear that there will be a- ny material changes it the ministry.- We give amongst our extracts some-of the rumors on this subject; but the Courier of the 29th says those rumors are unfounded, and statos \upon the best authority, that his Majerty_took ) their opinion that his last moments were the earliest opportunity of expressing his unlimited confidence in the Duke of Wollington, -and-his~ determination to give the government his warmest and most cordial support.\ It is said in one paper that the king on-havine the resimnati -| The second, bag e was fought near Sidi - in-Count -Bournmont's- official mote af orcign Antelligence, 800. execution, . ' ~ al -| troops were thrown into great disorder. They had a campin the rearfor which they, retreated in horrible confusion, hot- ly pursued by the French; who carried the camp on the same-day. On the 20th the pursuit war resumed, and a second battle took place. - Of this it is only said that it was as brilliant as the first, A third engagement was expected. Khalef, whence the road leads to Sul- | THC Diuniber of the Wounded is Stated. ~] On the refreat of the Algerines, the many of them,%that hand was warm and pliant \three hours after his death. It.is said this exbibition of the royal rg- mains was strictly in accordance with a wish expressed by hissilate, Majesty on the evening preceding his dissqlution. Immediately. after the decease of the King, the servants of the Conynghain family were sent off to the seat of Mr. Denison (the brother of the Marchion- ess,) neatDorking, in Surry ; and the: ladies of the family, between eleven and twelve o'glock in the forencon, fol: the Castle by the private entrance. and lowed in-the-same Jesty was deeply affected. us d, - th Reformed religion established by law, to protect the- rights and liberties, and to promote the prosperity and happiness of all classemof miy people.\\ ~> - - Whereupon the Lords of'the Council made it their humble request to bis Ma- jesty that His Majesty's most gracious declaration to their lordships might be made public, which: His Majesty was pleased to order accordingly. James Buruex. While receiving this address His Ma- ~ _The membors-of-the-r 1 y revered father, | ¢-4d~Lment. upon -its.-zealous=co-6peration tii - my-| George Gayler, king of arms, with the an A blesging--horaids-and-porsci 'of. Divine Providence, to maintain the' of ofiee, and eight officers of arms; on] {detachment of the life guards were 1880. - - NO. 12. At ten o'clock 'the firing of a' double royal galute announced the. commence. fan his Majesty King William the IV, Sir horseback, bearing'. massive silver ma- ces, were in attendance\ in the court- yard at the west end of the palace. A drawn up opposite to the palace. - The public were admitted into the court yard to witness -the ceremony. A few minutes after ton o'clock the window of the presence chamber was thrown open, and the King came for- ward alone, habited in a suit of mourn- ing, and wearing the ribband'of the or- der of the Garter, | His Majesty bowed expedition ~dock finf‘m?‘ to. so splendid or so definitive as was at ticipated. - The officiat bulléfiti doesnot mefition‘ghq‘nQpEgrog illed ; but rere, is groufd to infef that the: slaughter was very great;, Although Count,. do Bourmont anticipated §0 speedy'a cons quest.of Algiers, yet from. the. unpx> pected Figor 'of the.; resisfan | withron-the place of dissmbarication;, is to be presumed that the' city -will . yield twilthoutjn brave. strugg] f which- wilh necessarity éénsumeynme, and, without entertaining a doubt that the Algerines. will fall, probably have - fallen, befbre-the superior power of Eu ropean disciplinérand tactics, yet in the, interval before the news-did reach, or. could have reached France, the elec- tions were doubtless decided, and de; cided with an overwhelming majority. against the ministfy, , The latest ag- count of the actual results of the, tions, is that given in the second edi- tion of the Bfessager de Chambres, dated June 29th, which says of the 193 dep- . ~ An official bulletin from Admiral Du- perre is also given, in which it is stat- ed that the landing of the materiel con- tinues to go on with activity. The weather is spoken by bath Count Bour- mont and Duperte as \magnificent.\ 'The slaughter among. the Arab infan- try is said to have been great. | The conduct of the French troops is highly extolled. The spoils captured are eiglt brass cannons, 400 tents-those of the Aga of Algeirs and of the Beys of Con- the. Ar [From the London Gazette Extraordinary 4 , . WurrzHaut, June 26. ** A bullétin, of which thé following is a copy, has been this morning receiv- «bd by Secretary Sir Robert Peel, oné state :-- \ Windsor Castle, June 26. -It has pleased Almighty God to take from this world the King's Most Excelicht Maj: esty. . R 1 «His Majesty expired at a. quartér past 8. morning; without pain. (Signed.) \H. HALFORD, _ \M. J. TIERNY.* In the course of Friday evening, be- fore nine o'clock, the physicians inti- mated totheir royal patient their ina- bility to give him farther relief, and rapidly approaching. | To this commu- nication \his Majesty | replied, \God's will be done !\ and in a few moments after, he asked, \Where is Chiches- ter 1\ - 'The Bishop of Chichester was instantly stmmoted to the royal charn- are 100, rge quantity: of pow det.] going round by the long.walk and so away into the great road through Bish- opgate. Sir Henry Halford, as sooh as the royal corpse had been properly attend- ed to, left-the Castle, and proceeded di- rect to Bushy. . |_ About nuon Lord Mountcharles came down from London, and, by virtue -of some of the offices he holds took posses- sion of the keys of his late Majesty's valuable wardrobe, &t: In the evening about sight'o'clock, his Royal Higliness; the Duke of Cam- berland; apoved/ : compartied, by #0iM6.. Of the meinbefs of he Crlitle, . . C - x 6 iu f royal-family; viz. the Duke of Cumberland, the Duke .of Sussex, the Duke of Gloucester, and Prince Leopold, knelt before the King, and took the oath of allegiance. - Their royal highnesses then rose, and were sworn in members of His Majesty's pri- vy council. _ 'The Archbishop of Can- terbury, the Lord Chancellor, and the Archbishop of York, went through the same ceremony ; the other members of bis late Majesty's privy council sever- ally knelt before the King, took the oaths of allegiance, and then rose and Were re-sworn | members of the privy Pga 5 TTA he Lord Chancellor administered to gracefully-three-times-to- the namerpus assemblage in the court below, by whom he was greeted with the loudest acclamations. || ;A band of fifteen trumpeters, who ap- peared in their splendid state dresses, immediately struck up \ God save the King.» on the appearance of his Majesty._The Duke of Chamberland, the Duke of Sus- sex, the Duke of Gloucester, Prince Leopold, tlie cabinet ministers, and the great officers of state formed themselves into a semicircle round the window at which hlnm.%sty appeared. SimGigrreth his Majesty. After which, his Royal Highness immediately returned to his residence at Kew, On Saturday evening, the Lord Chamberlain issued sur@¥honses to Sir Henry Halford, Sir Matthow Tierney, Majesty, Divine service on Sunday | inorning, those gentlemen all arrived -at-the-pal- ace from town, as did also Sir Astley Cooper, by whom the operation was to be performed. - Mr. O'Reilly also ar- rived at the palace. These gentiomen having all assem- bled, Sit Astley Cooper performed the operation of opening. the bodyy-for the purpose of ascertaining the cause of his late Majesty's disease, - The operation occupied two hours, and the result fully justified in every particular the expect- ations of 'the late King's physicians, both ag. to. the .complaint, which had proved fatal to the King, and its mel- ancholy result. | The heart was consid- erably enlarged, and adhered to the neighboring parts. _ Some-of the valves RBS,. c \__*~ athes the rsh rre; ern this kingdom acgording to its laws and customs; the King then took the Scotland, and subscribed two instru- ments, which were witnessed by some of the privy eouncil. oath | for the security of the Church of | and the accession of the present majes- from his station in the court-yard, 4 -e oc King stood, ther read the proclamation, announcing the decease of the late king, ty. Sir George was more than once interrupted by the cheering of the mul- titude. SirGeorge repeated the words ayler, as King of Aims; ~ uties efected on -the-28d-iden,-ait- had been heard from but four, and of that number 144 constitutional deputies bad been chosen. There remained 109 de- puties 'to be chosen by the adjourned colleges on the 12th of July, and it is scarcely possible that such a reaction of All the assemblage uncovered public opinion could be produced in that interval, of only: twelve days as to chan'ge the majority in favor of the min- istry. Todoso, it would require thatthe liberals should be defeated in the elec- tion of every deputy but two. ' . ._- , _ _ Hfifigxfitfi g? Mustai p ll os ent ¥ & cuses s & s zna\ who is well known and respectable in- habitant of this county. | Jt may be re- garded as another illustration of the \beauties of free masonry.\-Liv. Ateg. During the summer and falt of 1809, | the residence of thé undersigned was Mr. Brodie, and Mr. Nussey; to attent|- His Majesty_in Council, then order- at the opening of the body of his late|ed the two stamps, the one containing After the performance of| George R. and the other, the initials G. R. which had been, under the authori- iy of an Act of Parliament, applied to official papers, as the King's signature, ly broken in the presence. His Majesty in Council was pleased to order that the coinage should contin- ue inthe same state until further or- deres ~ -> <-- The Privy Council gave orders for [tomed places, King of these Realms, by the style and title of King William the--Fourth. -The ceremony to take place on Monday. Mr. Buller was the clerk of the Pri- vy Council in attendance. After the rest of the Privy. Counsel« to be destroyed ; they. wore _according-=| repeatedly, .and then retired. proclaiming his present Majesty, with| ward, and knocked with his bagon at the usual ceremonies, and at the accus-| the gates, demanded an entrance in the \Kimg William the Fourth'' in an ex- alted tone of voice ; and the acclama- tion was then redoubled. The band! then played \God save the King.\ His majesty who had been agifafed during the ”reading of the proclamation, bowed 'The'pro- cession then moved from the palace, in=-tho city of Albany N. Y. whl there, he became acquainted with a man by the name of Loring Simonds, a join- er and sash-wright by trade: ho ras in the employment of a Mr. Lucas Hoogh- kerk, a respectable master-bufldgr, un- til the time of his mysterious death.- By degrees, after our first acquaintance, and proceeded towards the city. . | In this order thgy proceeded slowly along the Strand, and shortly after 11 Church, the York Herald was sent for- name of our Sovereign Lord King Wil- F'liam Fourth, in order to proclaim his accession to the throme:; The City Mar- shal supported by his men, opened the gates just wide enough to allow the York Herald to eviter, and then closing them, conducted the Réyal Herald to Mr Simonds and I became very intimate and friendly fowards cach other. He: related to me occasionally, many of the --- St. Clements Daney | most interesting-incidents of -his-mord juvenine years, from which it appears he had been a subaltern in the United States service, at different stations at the west until Sor 4 years previous. , Mr. S. occasionally hinted confiden- tially, that he would communicate to me a very important and most interest- ing secret. After exciting my curiosity to the highest pitch for several days, he commenced by teaching me speculative yer nation-of the-mints ters tendered to hin, restored the seals, and behaved to the Duke of Welling- ton in the most cordial manner. The king and the Duke of Wellington went ap to London from Bushy together. The distresses in Ireland bave led to ber, sud at his hands the dying sover- eign received the Sacrament. During (the administration of this rite his ma- (Jesty was much less troubled by the | cough than he had been previousty, and nflcrwar? it gradually subsided, and , towards inidnight he sunk into a state were ossified, and some water remain- ed in the chest. - 'The immediate cause of the sudden demise was occasioned by the rupture of a vessel near the stom- ach. - 'This organ contained some dune- es of blood, and more was found in tho bowels Tors had retired, the Lord Charicello?, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Arch- bishop of York, and the Bishop of Lon- don remained, and altered the prayer in the church service for King William and\ Queen Adelaide. The- the Lord Mayor, who was sitting in his state coach opposite to the Temple gate. The Herald having delivered his message to the Lord Mayor, his Lordship gave orders to the City Mar- shal to open the gates, and the caval- free-masonry. The reason for which be said, was, that whtn he firstarrived in Albany, he put into the possession ({for safe keeping till he got ready to build) of two of his brother masons, merchants there, all his money, [I think a dj teade-entered; -sword-in-hand;~drums~ - some great and terrible riots. Tho par- ticulars of one at Limerick aro given at tinued until about three o'clock, when great length im the London Morning Herald of the 80th. humber of lives\ were Tost, and much proporty destroyed. | The latter is esli-anllcm they instantly, attempted to - mated -at £6,000: were! Ordered out, and at last succeoded in'cd; but they had scarcely commenced \quelling the rioters. The extracts fromthe French papers ly motioned them to desist; and, plac-| [erald of Oth. _ The scarcity and ; wished to have his. head placed in a consequent high price of potatoes was moro elevated position.-Previous to the immediate causo-that fod to it.-A this, all the attendants had retired, ex- ; of apparently quiet repose, which con- ho became rather restless, and feebly a ' cept Sir M. J. Tierney agd Sir Wathen , afford his Majesty the relief he request-| When the operation was concluded, spices were introduced into the body, and it was then closed. - Four of the late King's pages were present, in addition to the above named six - medical gentlemen, viz. | Messrs. Whiting, ~Kinnaird, | Batchelor, - and | Loodes. THE ACCESSION OF WILLIAM iY. the attempt, when his Majesty sudden- His Majesty William the IV, arrived at St. James' Palace a few moments be- furnish us with sone additional particu- ing both his hands upon his breast, hei fore twelve o'clock on Saturday, and Jats otr the two great topics of interest: ejaculated, \Oh ! this is not right !- appeared to be it' excellent health. in that country -the expedition against , this is death !--Ol, God !-/ am dying!\ | Afgiers, and the elections. nal du Commerce of the 26th says, that tinct words he uttered after having re- he King entered the state room, in i o'clock. of 175 nominations which -were then | ceived the Holy Sacrament; and from | aD admiral's uniform, and took his sta- known, the opposition had'obtained and the ministry 58. One hundred vo- ters of the address had alreatly been re- elected, and had been reinforced hy 22 deputies, who were not of the last cham- | ist. {-Chidiaeré i \4 Fnk inieferial-let leted he- 43 deputies of the 181 who opposed the {bets of the royal household, with the i address, and of 10 new deputies.-The complete success of the liberal party. The second edition of the Messager | his Majesty calmly expired. The prin- of the 28th-sa7s;-that of the 193 depu- ties elected on the 234, but four remain | of Chichester, the Physiciatis, the Mar- to be known, The constitutional dep-! quis Conyngham, Sir Andrew Barnard, uties of every description amount to | Sir William Kai 744, to 45. - | - The same paper contains an sctGunt 6f an engagement that had taker place Between the French and Turks before quietly and so gradually, the physicians. | had some difficulty in ascertaining pre-' | cisely at what moment he ceased to ex-| lu the mean time the Bishop of t-ell-the-priveipel- mem-} pages in immediate attendance, were j out the slightest indication of suffering, ciput persons present wers the Bishop el, Sir William 'EKnigh. ton, Sir Wathen Waller, Lord Strat- haven, and Colonel Thornton, and when the physicians had announced , this fime his dissolution came on so'linn at the thrope.-The whole of the Lord-May or arrived -at the pat- ace about 12 otclock, accompanied by the Alderman Sit P. Laurie, Sir C. Flower, Winchester, Brown, Shaw, Copeland, Key, YVenaples, Thompson, Scholey, Wood ; the Recorder , Sher iffs_ Richardson and Ward : Under-Sher- iffs Richardson and Young, and the The Rev. Dr. Cary, late Bushtgp of 5 | beating, trumpets sounding, and colors flying. - © Having arrived at the end of Chan- cery lane the King at Arms again read the proclamation. #t was received with l on-Sergeant J tion of loyalty and affection. . A £ | Comm The pfmeLiW-m‘ proceeded to- | prudence and his ability would permit. Exeter, was introduced to his Majesty, | wards St, Paul's, the civic authorities We usually met [on Sundays and Fri- and did homage on being translated to/ in their state carriages. the See of St. Asaph ; as did also the The troop of Life Guards, having ar- loud «cheering, waving of hats, hand- | Os. LC mgsonty A nc kercliiefs, and every other demonstra-] Aim and he was determined to expose for years industriously accumulating. These men soon after failed, went on | fo the limits, took the beriefit of the, [ insolvent act & paid not a cent dividend, either to Simonds vr any of their credit- Mr. S. said masonry had ruined its sccrets and its villanies, so far as. days generally] in an old uninhabited wood building, on the north-west cor- Rev. Dr. Bethel, late Bishop of Glon-irived in Cheapside, the proclamation ; nor of Yan Schaick. und Pearl streets, cester,_on. being Aranslated-to the -See; was again road at the end of Wood st., | Bear the Presbyterian church with two. of Exeter, ' The Jour-; These were the last, and the only dis- twhiflh the throne lifl placed, M70)\ one !~ The proclamation acknowledging the - ; His Majesty was habited in new King, having been signed by the: Privy Councillors, was signed by num-, bers of the nobility and gentry, and by and nextat the Royal Exchange. The band of music at the close of each Pro- clamation gave the national anthem of , \God save the King.\ This rare and splendid pageant ended about 1 o'clock, , | spires, Mr. S. had Taken Three degrees in masonry, and was at that time mem- ber of a lodge in Albany. At length, one Friday, [I think in November,} when he was giving me iflustrations, a members of the late King's privy coun- | the Lord Mayor and corporation of Lon- at which time Temple-bar gates were Mt Wobb, whom we both knew, an oil, who had arrived at the palace, were (don, and by all who attended the court., thrown open to remain so, probably, | Englishman by birth, perhaps 40 or 45 assembled in this apartment. His Ma-; jesty read the following declaration, participate in the affliction which I am. maintained during war, its ancient re-} putation and glory-has enjoyed a tong i -and has possessed the friendship, re- [spect i \In addition to that loss which I sus- tain in common with you, and with all who lived under the government of a that his Bajesty had ceaséd to exist, | Algiers: ~The positions of the former! they retited--leaving the pages in at- were 3 3 strong, on the Ith of June. The French opposed fighfing men, the rest being necessary to protect the Tanding of the materiaf frofi the feet. The Afgerities made the attack with the-enemy, 40,0004 ine Troms the ttables, their families and ac- | tentions to the Royal corpse, under the supgrintendance of the physicians. E to the couch on which his Majesty us- | ually reposed throughout his illness, and covered with a fine linen sheet- to the view, fot souly of the whole of domestics off R tL, but to the out-doof servants resident hate. | They wers freely ad. mitted from about five in the tendance to perform the necessary at- fand afectionats brother, with whom I The body was removed from the bed!rupted friendsHip, and to whose favdr most beneficent and gracious King, 1 ave to lament the death of a beloved have lived, from my earliest years, in terms of the most cordial and uninter- abd kindness I have been most decply indebted. » The King gave an andience to the ds, as firs o reas- for some years to come. £44. he Marquis years of age, and who was said to be a viz: ; s ! _ The Peers ttendante on the waster mason, came softly and Slillup Duke of Wellington, when his Grace e Peers were in attend Post. stairs, poimed «thr. 8. ia, P w - - B ury. The other Ministersand Officers, ' poned the consideration of the Forgery onds, you villain! you are a putjured suffering on account of thé loss of *jand also the Members of late King's bill to the Ist July. : Journal du Commerce anticipates theicaned in, and, in their presence, with- | sovereign, under whose auspices as Re-g household, who attesded the court, to office, lu . The court broke up at half past 4 0'- period of happiness and internal peAE®'vigep, wretch: I have caught you in the very Livenrgoot, July 7.-Proclamation act: if L should mest you in the dark [ gent, and as King, this country b2§ kissed hands, on their re-appointnient of Hilliam FV.-Yesterday his Majesty | should be nume foo good toput a knife in- N R f pPo | William 4th,was proclaimed in Liver-! (0 you!\-turned upon His Keel, disap- 1. At an early hour the space in peared, and I saw no-more of hrm in ront of the town-hall was filled by a Albany. After a short interval of as- The King left the palace about half; large assemblage of persons, who wait- tonishment and silence on the part of past 6 o'clock, on his returt to Bushy witness the ceremony. At1l2 0'- both, we agreed to meet at another - i i - . The next morning ed b detachment of the | clock, his worship the Mayor, and «oth- place, and parted iy baie 1 9C | er members of the Corporation, appear- , Saturday, about 10 o'clock, word came Life Guards. After the breaking up of the Kingis{ed, and the town clerk, William Stat-. to my residence, Mr. Buckbee's, court the cabinet ministera re-assembled fham esq. proceeded in the usoal man- in~Van Schoick street, that Mr. Sum- at the Foreign office ent the Lord Chancellor, the Duke of Wollisgton, Earls Bathurst, Rossifn, and Aberdeeh, Viscount Melville, Lord | Ellenboropghy Sir Robert Peel, Sir; George Murry, the Chancellor of th Exchequer, and Mr. Herries. - The Ministers retained fo delibera- chisign of which the cheering was loud and énthasiastic. FRANCE.-The intelligence from is highly important: H{Felation to the elections lavesScarce- | office ; there were pres- $6540 read the proclamation, at the con- onds was dying in the Colonie, I bss- tened to the spot and found him =t w house of gambling d‘étonety,_tbree or four doors north of the city limits, of an The news ' old straw bed, in the same street with the Methodist Episcopdl chapel, 40 or a doubt that the liberal party wilt 50 rods north of it, and on the samdé side have an enormous majority, and that a of the way, grappling with death-fat- -ing tn his bleody : froth \After- baving x gamed: my life in the cost, iniforms F acdedas the a; 6 ful subject and the King, I called _undér the dispen- sation of Almighty God, toadejarier the government of this greateimeire, I aur ~fally sensible of sens the advanlage of having witness- ore the evening.| rome the departmenis. not ® R : which P have to encounter ; T pos-! on Monday morning, June 24th, from . PROCLAMATION. Hi®: Majesty, accompanied by the Take Gloucester and tbe Earl of Er rol, arrived at his palace in St. Fames's bis ressdence in Bushy Park. chanes Ci ministre mus tike place ing ir matter cezing from I Hamoxtriz and - pposition to the ministers was cx imouth mest copiously. . Bly stay was 22505113?“th King himself was (1:2; 25 or 30 minutes. While there, some with disrespect. | Had the nows of the Sor 10 persons came into the room, and. victory at. Aigiers arrived carker it among them was a Ema-m who, deliberately pertags have fu some diverted-the-attention of the people told the bystanées‘thm was tot the ' from their internal grievances thbugh it | least hope of saving his Efe. -MF. SZ . 1