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HE TOCSIN, a er of Reclesiastical Allaire and Publifhed by pubtie fnsrustise, ~ - AUNEEY-E. Ni- Count'pe Guenson - CHAU has: wDIETONr» ~=-|-Tho-Minister -of B, - $+ - - CO TOT >yr-(jd‘PELi‘EJ «C RIDNES.-To village and mail subscri« Charles- By the Grage of God, King of -4)er.§|+ns‘§hflinjidmu,m$2.w_auhundofi' - s nome oona coun ne. = a . __ic France, and.. Navarre. To. all (hug: to\ * the year :-Those who take their papers at tha ofice, #2 00 :-To Companies of 13, or more, who receive their papers at the office, and pay ‘churilflld ce, gL Rates of Advertising.-50 cents per square for the first Insertion, and for every subsequent: iisertion 25 cents. VOL. IF. | -. COOPE 'ruption, the progress of which. becomes daily more sensible as the origin of tlie ca- it (at Europe is no longer subject, to a cruel slavery, and shamefol tribute, afe men, good citizens, and the friends of | order, raise towards your Majesty (heir RSTOWN, N: Y. MONDAY, SEPTEMEEE 1830. __. _ NO. 16. sung of one fourth of the. eléctors paging the _- *, * All communications addressed to _ itor must be free of postage; > : PRINTENG.--Books, pamphlets, hand- hills. blanks. cards, &e. &c. \neatly. executed the ed- whrchthreatin-tire-iiogdom- , Experiente, sire,\ speats than thoory, eplightened evon without doubt, whose patriotiem-cannot be suspected;car a-pengish \~T his was not ~endgugh.. . _By -a treason\ that shouldbe, amenable to our laws, 'the press has engaged: itself in poblishing aH the secrets of the armament, in making supplicating-handes They beseech rou to- preserve them from the return of those ca lamitigs under which 'our forefathers so long groaned. - These alarins arg too real highest tnx-in the department. 100 +6. The, present limits: of* the electoral , colleges of arrondissements are maintain- wd. Sov ale 7. Each qlggiornII‘QOllcge of arrondisge- whom (heat presen(s may coine, greeting: Io agcordapce with fhe royal ordinance, is_ da affre® to the organization of Colleges, up- <on the report of our minister Of the'Interi- or. - We-bave ordered and ordain: as fol- , lower *~ js kone © > 1. The Electoral College shall us- semble, viz, the electora? colleges: of .ar- rondissement the, sixth September next., and the cléctoral eplieges of Department, on new type, and .in -a mannef 'that will not fail to please. . #o. ~. . - * i‘ ~~ AGENES. Martin Bridges Nathaniel Pierce. « urens, Otsego ca. ' Hartwick, '\ ing people, have believed that the advin tages of the periodical press would balance ; the disadvantages, and that its successes woull be neutralized by contrary excess ' en. Itis not so -the proofiis decisive and the question is now determined. Lug,\ tortie stramportie-state-of-wor for: ces, the number of our (troops, that of our vessels; the indication of the points of sta- tion the means to be employed to over- gong the ifebnstance of the winds, and to land npon the coast, 'Every thing, cren | to the place-of disembarlsation, bas been \Dott be rein theso -wistroanare -two hr gitimate not to be listengd to. Whereis but one meaps of satisfying them itis to return >the Conslitution-if the terms of the eith'lh article are ambig- unus, its measore is manifest, It is cer- tain that the has not concedei qual to the number of deputies of d ment. . <. 8. The college of arrondissement will be divided into as many sections as it has a right to elect candidates. | This division will be made proportionably to the sumber epart- the 18th of the sand mouth.: 2. The Peers and the cham- ber of Deputies of Departinent are convo- ked for the 26th of the month of Septem- ber.next. 2C 3.. Our-Minister 'of the interior is char. ged with the executfon of the' present or- a «6 Gideon Cornell. At all epochs the periodical, press i j & . . gm?“ & G Eb S ueld. his P r bet press has divulged, as if to afford a surer means of the liberty of the press to journals and pe of sections and to the total number of elec dinance. to.. ; . urlington, enezer S.eldon. only been, and from its nature must ever defence to the enemy an unexampled ci jodi iti 'The li t ; Gir t Pal (S load Utica, Oneida co. Wm. C. Rogers. be. an inglrument of disorder and of sedi- | cumstan y ihe amp u flonhcnl writings The liberty of poblish- | tors of the college, having regard as much Given at ours Palace, 0 t. Cload, the Bridgewater, ** Esq. Blackman. tion. ’ false ahfe sum“? cyt \38d d\\“°“\ Uy'| ing our personal opinions does not certain- as possible to the convenience of local.ties 23:1“ of July, in the year of aur Lord 1830, - Florence; « Sabes nameramrand rreratabls are-the-|-encount mwcotnclernmg ‘f‘f angers io be ly imply the righ of publishing by way of and neighborhoods. _- ~ and the sixth of our reign. - : is R Scot, Courtland co. Zenas Miller. proofs that may be brought to support this discou “I\ * ltA 183 I?“ cared to throw speculation, the opinions of others. The 9. The sections of the electoral college \. C) [(\; _. - CHARLES: % b Sullivan! Madison co. Oreb Montagu. troth. Ir is by the violent andP’uninlu- for its ’l\ film’r\ into ll he “Immanddo markt one is a use of a focalty that the law is at of arrondissement may be assembled in The Minister oflhe Interior, ngfiglflilfiq\ e« genlm‘vngg, (gunk ”5d retion of o ® freractint we any t- for its hatred even the .c “dill-ex! outers liberty to grant or to submit to restaictions different places: _ . The followi Count oz PEYBONNET; ichols, Tiogs co. tson V. Stanton, Anta Rasa maces bas as 100] PZT] 11 fas so to spoils excited tihe Sof -the other is a speculation of industry T0. Each section of the electoral owlog-is-the-ordinance-for-the---- v t - att to 4 ; s ; I (0. E n of the electoral college ; vias. . Esperance, Schoharie co, Wilbur 8. Deucl. ribute (hose top sud len and tou frequent diess to raise against bim the standard of which, lie all others, and more than all of arrondissement will elsct a candidate the Chginber of Deputies. Cheshire, Berkshire co. Mass.. A. A. Haskins. AFroveign Xntelligence. Rem mnm | LATEST FROM EUROPE. From the New York American of Sept, 4. By the arrival yesterday of the prelset ship Hibernia, Capt. Maxwell, from Liy- erpool, whence she sailed on the 4th Au gust, we have received our regular files of London papers- to 3d, asd Liverpool to 4th August. REVOLUTION IN FRANCE,. The Hibernia has brought nows of the Sbverthroww of tha government of Charlos X-, the flight of him and hig ministry From the Capital and thereall of the DoF, Jof Orleans to the head of a Provincial Gov- erpuient. - ~ 600 'The amount of the intelligence receiv- \xd bythe Hibesnia ([the details. of which the reader will Gad 'in' seems to be, that on the police attempting to.en- force the decree for abolishing the liberty of.th@.press, the populace inféerfered, and being fired upon by the »King's troops, re- sisted the oggression with the most heroic determination, | The ci. devant National Guard was regived, and foroishing them- soles with arms from théagsenal, which they broke open, under the of a changes mown -It tra nor permitted a regular and siable system of government to be established in France, por that continued and strenuous efforts\ should be made to introduce into the vari- «ous branches of public administration those ameliorations of which they are susceptible ~ Every ministry since, 1814, though for- med under different \Circumstances and «actuated by different impulses, have been exposed to the same altacks, and to the same unbridled expressions of passjon.- Sacrifices of every lind, concessions of power, alliances of party, nothing bas.peen able to protect them from this common destiny. This fact alone, so fertile in re- fection, suffices do assign to the pross its (rue and unvariable character It labors - by continuous and persoveriog efforts dan repealed, to- all the bonds of obe: debase it in the opinion of the peéoplesaiy to create for it every where embarrass» ment and resistance. © Its art consfsts not in substituting. for a credulous submission of the mind the' healthy liberty of examination, but to re- . duce the most positive truths to problems: not to invite a frank and ustfal controver sy upon political questions, but to present them in a false light and to resolve them by sophisms. ' dfufizndrmhnuhnauwmumfiifizhfihmg {: spriggs of public silthori(y, 10 sink and I § revolt, or to casert their colors. _ This rs | what the orgatimof a party, pretending it- sell national, have dared to do. What it dares to perforin in the interior of the kingdom, tends to nothing fess than to disperse the elements of public tran: qullity, to dissolve the bohds of society,an4 unless they have desoited themselves, nake the earth to tremble under our feet. Lot us not fear to reveal the whole extent of our (ronbles, that we may the better appreciate the extent of our troubles, that we may the better appreciate the extent uf our resources. - Systematised defaina: tion, organized upon g grand scale, and directed wi Hi nnexnml‘ed perseverance ; extends even to the inost humble of the .public functionaries. No one of your subjects, sire, if he.receives the least mark of confidence or. satisfaction, is secure 'a they appea a inanner shut out from so- _crety ; gone are spared but those whose fidelity warers; none are praised but thore ~whose fidelity falls a -eacrifice-the rest are marlsed out sooner or later to be im- nolated to popular vengeance. The press bas not manifested less zeal in attacking, with its envenomed darts, our religion and our clergy. fis object is to root out the last germs of religious sen- authority. The meaning of the constitution in this particular is exactly explained by the law, of the 21st of October 1614; we cao place the more reliance upon this, as the law was presented to the chamber the 6th of July, that is to say, one month only after the adoption of the constitution. In 1819 an epoch wha a contrary system prevail. ed in the chambers, it was openly pro claimed that the periodical press was not governed by the Sib article-This fact is «confirmed by the laws even which have imposed the necessity.of a censure upon | the journals. - Now, Sire, it only remains to be decid- ed how this return to the consfitution and the law of the 21st of October |_of affairs has dissolved the. qnesffB-\\ ct Acas lnpoipie Th rooger conditich a fepreseatative government. The princi- ples upon which it was established bave not remained untouched amidst political, vicissitudes. A turbulent democracy which has penetrated even into'our laws is substituted for legitimate power. It dis- pesss of the majority pt. elections through the means of these journals and df socie ty constitited with similar views, it paral yses as much as in its power the regular others, sapposes the snpervision of public proceed separately . complished? 'The present. |- fest p the-Pavris-Monit Z* rom-tite-E aris- AMonrtew:-of <Puty 267 11. The Presidents of the section of the electoral-wollege. of arrondissement. will be named by the Prefects from among the electors of the arrondissement. . 12. The college of department will elect the deputies. Half the deputies of depart- ineat must be chosen from the general list of candidates proposed by the colleges of arrondissements; nevertheless if the num- ber of deputies of department is odd, the division shall be nade without reduction of the right reserved to the college of de- partment. 18. In case, either in consequence of omissions of double nominations, or of no minations made void. the list of candidates proposed by the colleges of arrondissement -& \Tio all- grwhour these preseats come-greeting. © Considering Art. 50 of the Constitation- al Charter - Being informed of the maccenvres which have been practised 10 thany parts of our kingdom to deceive and lead astray the e- lectors during the late operation of the e- lectoral colleges. Having lieard our council, we have or- 'dered and do order, . ~-* Art. 1. The Chamber of deputies of de- partmonts is dissolved. ~ Art. 2. Our Minister Secretary of State for the Interior is ctfargad with the exocu- tion of this ordicante. , * Given at St. Clond, the 29th day of Ju- requisite: hathol th Pha. dase: fe the college department may elect the whole number of the deputies of depart- mont without reference to the lists. 14. The Prefects, eub prefects and ge- neral officers commanding: the military divisions and the departments where they exercise their functions. 15. The list of electors will be deter- mined by the prefect in council of prefa- shall be indomplete iftbislist is thus redug\ ) l umber |_ a. ourth, ly, in the year of opr Lord 1830, and ofour reign the sixth. CHARLES® -By the King. - nos a rior. +The Court PsvrogNEr. ltappears that the Chamber thus 'dissol- ved, for the assembling of which on the 24 of August, special smmonses had been sent to the members elect, would hare cohtained 270 members of of whom 202 were amang the 221 who vo- ted the address which produced the disso- lution of the late Chamber. The Mibiss, terial streogth would have been 145; and the aid of the Ecolo Polytecnicque, or- ganized themselves into: a regular milita- ry force, and by unanimous acclamation elected Gen. Lafuyetto their general.- In the mean time the dismembered Dep-. uties declared theméel¥es a National As- sembly, chose Ministers for the several departments, appointed the Duke of Or- leans Lieutensot General of the kingdom, 'The King bimself who abdicated and fed from Paris; was, with his ministers, declar ed a traitor to France, and the allegiance of bis subjects transferred to the Provis- ional Government thus organized. | And this we believe is the brief history of one of the most glorious Revolutions ever ac- complished. * REPORT TO THE KING. 'society a confusion of principles which fa- vore the most disselrous attempts. Anar- chy in doctrines is a prelude to anarchy in the state. . Itis worthy of remark, Sire, that the periodical press has never fulfilled its most essential condition, namely, publicity. It may appear straige but it is no less true, that there is no publicity io France, (ak ing this word io its just and rigorous accep tation. In the actual state of things, facts when not entirely suppositions, are only prosented to many millions of readers, curtailed, disfigured, and mutilated in a most odious manner, A thick cloud rais . ed by the Journals disgaises the truth, and in a measure prevents a perfect under standing between the government and the j occupied the political nrena, wo caunot derision and contempt upon the. misters and altars of our holy religion, that it will accomplish its purpose. No force we must avow, is capable of resisting so energetic a dissolvment of the press,, At all periods, when. its shackles have been stricken off, it bas burst forth and invaded the State. Notwithstanding the diversity of cireu nstances and the nu merous changes of individuals but be forcibly impressed with the similar- ity of its effects during the last fifteen years- in a word, it is dostined to re com monce (he revolution, the principles of which it has so openly proclaimed. Placed and re placed, at differeat intervals, under the discipline of the cousure, as often as it tion of the state is shaken-Your Majos ty alone retains the power to preserve and establish it upon its basis. The right as well as the duty to assure its maintenance is the ingeparable attribs uto of sovereignty. . No government upon earth would be stable if it bad not the right to provide for its own security. This law is pre etistent to all other laws, be- cause it is founded in the nature of things, These are, Sire, maxims which acknowl- | edge the sabction of time and the avowal , of ull civilians of Europe. But these maxlins have a more desided sanction, that of the: constitution. itsell- the 1 tth article has invested in your | Ma jesty, a sufficient power not certainly to change our institutions but to consolidate Paris, uly 76, 1830, Sire-Your ministers: would be unwor thy the confidence with which your Ma- jesty had honored them if they longer do layed placing before you a concise slate. ment of our internal situation, and to indi- cate to your Highness the dangers arising {eom tho cerlodical press : people. The Kings, your predecessors, Sire, have been desirous freely to commu nicate with their suljects, but this is a sat- isfaction which the press is not willing that your Majesty should enjoy. A lcentionsness which has outstripped all bounds, even upon 'the most solemn poo has regained its liberty it has recommen- ced its interrupted work, - To insure grea ter success it lins been. sufficient'f axed by the departinental press, which by ex and render them immutable. Imperious necessity permits you no lon- ger to defer the exercise of this supreme | 'power. | The moment has arrived for a citing jealousies and local hatreds by sow ing consternation in the bosoms of the tim- id and by tormedtiag the authorities with terminablé-st hare. lagoins recurrence to measures which are in ac- cord with the spirit of the constitution but which are contrary (o legal order, the sof which have'heen . man-. | | At no period during the last fifteen years \has this situation presented itsolf under a - more serlous and afllicting aspect. | Not. withstanding a prosperity unexampled in the anpals of +yhistory, sigas of disor- ganization and symptoms of anarchy. nre manifested upon almost every point of the kingdom. The successive causes which -have con- pspand-reithor-r press wishes of the King nor the addresses made to them from the throne. The one has been mistaken or perverted and the others have been-the subject of perfidious commentary or bitter derision. It is ths that the fast wot of ropat authority, the proclamation, fell into general discredit oven before: it was known to the electors. 'This is fot all--the press has a tenden« an almost decisito influence upon the c lections. Theso last effects, Sire, are numerous; the more durable resulta may be remarked in the morals and character of a nation.- A vinlent lying end'passionate polemic school of scandal and. hcentionaness, pro duces serious and profound alieratiens; it gives a (@lse direction to the minds ~~ dugéd t6 westeo the springs of -the-mor archial government, operate to-day to wl. tor and change its oature-\eprived of its moral foree, the civil authority | within the capital and in the provincial. maintained but an unequal contest against factions.- _ Pornigions & subversive doctrines openly cy to subjugat» the snvereigaty and usurp the powers of the state. - 'The pretended organ of public opion, it aspires to direct the debates in the two chambers, and il incontestibly exercises an influence upon those debates, no. less baceful than deci This demimon .io ibe chamber of site of men, filly thew fom and- prejudices, diverts them from serious in- vestations, injures also the progress of \rts and the Sciences, excites among us a con- tinually increasing fermentatin,and main hed trot lessly expeaded _ These measures, Sire, which ought to insure success, your ministers do not besi- tate to propose, feeling confident that jas tice will be assisted by power. Your Majesty's very bumble and very faltfil subject« The President of the Covncil of Min- | i I i I | i Sinister of the Laterior, Minister of Marinc. APmister of Finances, Minister of Eectesiastieal Affaire, tains, even in the bosom of families, fatal disseotions, and may gradually dondact us Minister of Public Works. i serutator will be exorcised by the uldest aclnowledged by the Prefects, shall be determmed by tbe Chamber of Daputies at the swine time that they shall determine upon the valiity of the operations of the colleges. 17. In the electoral colleges of depart- ment the two eldest electors and the two electors paying the highest taxes, shall perform the functions of scrutators-the same rules will be observed in the sections of the college of arrondissement composed of mare than fifty electors In the other sections of the college, the functions of rnd bighest taxed of the electors The soctetary will be named in the college of the sections of colleges, by the president and scrutators. 18. ~No-one-will-be-admitted-fo-the-col- lege or section of college if he is not en- rolled on the list of electors for said see- -al-or-soini-; Gap. Gerard.and Lafitte the y | C . ; p - iure-it shall be published five days before and there were 15 mon committals. By { 1 Tire press has: thus disordered the-most \ ait noty sire; |- exercise of the most essentral-prerogatives- \ ~ xgcccufixlly encountered go b‘ upright -minds_shalken -the the bath af om falth. -torrupting-the--of ha crown; that of dissolving the elect ihe mecfmIr: of the cull‘cges. - another ordinance of the same dite, the e- diers. The victorious citizens thet, bY yictions and produced in tlie bosom of sources of public morals and by beapiog rivechamber. By thit even the constitu- 16. Claims to the right of suffrage, not lectoral colleges are required to- most for the choice of Deputies; the colleges of ar- rondissements on the 6th of September, & the colleges of departments on the 181b. The Chambers of Peers and Deputics are ordered to meet on the 28th Septemt:ar. Tho following is the ordinance respect» ing the liberty of the Press; - Cnarnes, &c. To all to whom these presents shall come-Groeting. Upon the report of the council of minis- ters, we have ordered and do.order the fol-. lowing: Ari. 1. The liberty of press is susponded. Art. 2. The dispositions of Article 1, 2 and 9 of Titles I, of-the law of October 21, 1814, are again put in force. In consequence, no journal or periadic- indi iting, established ___.... ___. .__. or to be established, without «distinetion of, matters treated by them, can appoar, ei- { the periodical tion. - This last will be given to the presi dent. and will remain posted in the cham- ber of sessions of maid college during its operations. 19. All discussion or deliberation what- 'evec in the clectural colleges is forbidden. 20. The police of the csllege is invested in the president. No armed force can, withont bis demand, be placed in the vi- cinity of the place of sessions. . Military commanders will be held subject to lis re- quest. P 21. The_clectons in the colleges nod «ertines of colleges will be decided By an isters. ' al te whol ber of |__ & _| absolute majority of fhe whole number o Minister of Julie, ~Drotes given.. if the elections ara. not terminated after twice balloting, the burean will determine the list of those trung. ol naimes thal the c remain to be I «persons who shall bare obtained the great. | appear without the anthorization of our ; ¢ t onmber of suffrages at the second ba' It shall contain doubie the number ; (her at Paris, or in the departments,but by virtue of the authorization which the author and printer shall obtain from us separately. . This authorization inust be renewed every three months. lt may be rerotred: * Art. 3. The authorization may be provis- ionally granted & provisionally withdrawn by the prefects, to the journals And period- ical or semi periodical works published in the departments. ‘ 4. The Journals and seritings published in contravention of art. 2, shall be imme- dintely scized. The presses and iypes which may, have been used in priffing thein, shall be placed in a public depot na- der seal, or shall be put out of use. 5 No writing onder twents sheets shall Minis'er Secretary of State of the Interior at Paris, and of the-prafects io the depart- |_ men's. Frery writing of more than twer- - professed are spread and propagated a -mong all chassis of -our population-dis- quietudes top generally accredited agitate the public mind and torment society. From all quarters a guarantee is demanded for future safely. depoties, especially for the last taro. or Three yours, has neumed a manifest char acter ofoppression and Iy ranty. We have seen in this interval the journals pursuing with insult and outrage numbers whose vote appeared to them cither uncertain A malicioueness, active, ardent, inde- fatigable, is at work to overturn the foun- dations of order and to deprive France of the happiness which she e or suspected. . Too often, sire, the free- doin of the deliberations in this chamber, - back to a state of bar bariem Against such a variety of evils, engen- dered by the press law and justice are c qually compelled to acknowledge their in- potence. 1t wonld be superflzons to. in~ vestigate the causes which have. arrested and insenmibly rendered nseless a @eapon in the hand of power, . It i1 sufficient to | nr‘r‘ulflrsi or THB KING. Charles, by the grace ef (ed, King of Trance & Nevatie. To AT Thots To whom ~ \ these presents may coms, greeting: av- ing resolved to prevent the recurrenee of © mossnres, which have exeraiced a peroi- {scions rofl sence non the lare bocrations of the clectoral colieges mihing in cones ina e At the thind balloting the suffra grvrim only ba pieen io tho persons in- firs the li-t and the nomination wili be m aln hy the relative majority, 22 The electcri will sote by. tinkets, |batletin« de liste} nach veltet ili contain as mang names as (.re are elections to be soul's ( ty sheets whieh shall not constitute a com- - plete work of itself, shall be also requires ! to be authorized. Writings published without authorization, shall be immediate- , Iy seized. The presses and types wlich | shall have been used in printing them shail + be placed in a pablic depot and under seal © or put out of use. ‘ <r form, according to the mos s n a sacrifice to the renewed at- ; interrogale experionce and to rema; k the > queoge to r - id . . 1 njoyed under , 12:12? the press 1 pzesrnlgcondlhin of things. pleeof the Constituhan, those rules of alea 21. The electors sill write. their vote ,_ 6. Memoirs of learned or literary socie Aotivo-th } prose f Lichich experence has (aurht the ar ihe bucgon or thes it tn be ties shall be submitted to the previous au- hark g Ling disconteot and stirring up hatred-it foments among the people a spirit 'of defi- ance and hostility against government, and seeks every where to sow the seeds of dis- cord and civil war. And, Sire. recent events have alread; . tofore to the higher ranks of society, are beginning to be more generally felt, and to excite the popular mass. - They have proved also that this mais is not always agitated without dunger who strive to secure its repose. - A multitude of facts collected doring the course of the tate éfectorut operations, conficm these statements and afford a too certain presage of new commotions, did not your Majeity possess a power of reme-_ 1 We cannol qualify in more moderate | terms, the conduct of the opposition jour- i pals, in relation to recent erents. - After | having themselves provoked an address, | attacking the preregatives of the throne, | they bave not seropled to consider the re- election of the 221 depaties who voted this adds inci j standing your Majesty objected to thn | address as offensive ; it attacked prblic ' reproach to the re'nsal of concurrence which was there expressed; it announced its coshakeo . resolation not to defend the rights of your crown ro openly comprom- ised. - The periodical puts have paid bo aitention to This-on the contrary, they hava considered it a duty to renew, to \ perpetuate Aud to aggravate the offence. | Your Majesty will deenle if this rash at- 1 nish with difGionity an efficacious repress- ion. - This truth, verified by observation, has for a loog time bean anparent to goos minds: if bas {ately required a more mar- i ked character cf evidence, to saints the | necessity which gave rise to it, repression ighnnijh'c‘ugmg-t and powcrfol--on the 1 contrary, it has remained * ' and almost void; when if fappene, The m- | jnry is commite ' and the paotshment far from repairing 'he injury, adds to it the scandal of debate. Juridical proceediogs tire ; but the se- ditious press never tires. The one is em- barrassed because there is too mach to punish, the other multiplies its: forces by moltipiying its delinqnences. Under different cireums: ances, prosecu- besa hacd-t o of. T dorg=b. Foble | . inconvenience, we have reengnized' the necessity of employing the power in ns vested, to provide hy acts emanating from i os, for the cecancdy of the state and the cupproscion of every enter) rize mtocw a> | gainst the dignity ef tha crown. Por theses reasons, onur council being lic and, we have | brdgred ant wat unhimo ~~~ nos AMT. t. to the 1614, 3618 and 30th articles of the Consfimationthe (ham ber of Deputies will be composed on'y of Deputies of departmonts. an elector and the income necessary to confined to cums for «bich the elector abd the elsgible shall be personally enregister ed 17 the rolls for the imposrien oi direct and personal L.xes in quality of proprietor g. Thoinesme necessary to constr'n'e . coostituts ehgivity shall be exclusively | there watten by 21. The name, the qualifications, and fhe reuden. e ofeach elector that deposites hre ty kau vo e, shall ba inscribed by the «npectary moon a Sst destined to ver.fy the nember of rotars. 25. Each baleting shall be coptinged .: uring «ix hoor, and The: vats: shall be conned T6 cessions, ~ tn A statement of the resalt of each session thall be sirafted. shail he signed by all the members of the Rarean 27 Conformabh'y to the 4th article of i | I nade to a list in the chamber if it has been proposed ar consented to by as, and if it : has eat been retoroed to or discussed in . i This statement | tho consitution, no amendment can be ° ~ thprization, if they treat in whole or 1a © part of political matters, in which case the measures prescribed in art. 3, shall be ap- phcable to hem. 7. Every disposition contrary to the pre- sent or Jnance shall be vord. - B. The execution of the present ordin ince shall ate pl 8 formits } the Ath article of the ordinange of the 27th ~ Nov. 1816, and of what is prescribed by that of Jan 19, 1817. 9. Oor Ministers, Secretaries of State shall be charged with the execution of the present ardinance, . Giren x1 cur Castle of St. Cloud, the 25th of July, 1830, and the sixth of car reign. CHARLES. Ry the Ring {signed by the Mroister] 1 g the eate _-_ To anattentive observor, there every where exists a necessity for order, force and permanency, &nd the disturbances which appear the most Opposed to such necessity, are in reality bot the express- shed. But of all the excesses of the press, per- { haps the most serions remaios to be men | tioned. From the very commencement of tbe expedifion tbe termination of which and an eclat Taek should a fouger tape unpun~ f actmity or relaxation |- Bot what inparts to the press zeal or lakewarindess on the part of the public mjarster, it seekte in an : increase of its excesses a guaraofee to | their tmponify. .° Th or reaunt. of the Coostitation. 4. The electoral so'leg + 3 The Deputies will ba alected and the Chamber will be ro apeced in the form , asd for the time fixed by (Ge 37th article | os will be divid- ; cmmmuies 28. All regulations opposed to the pres ent ordinance are aanolied. execution of the present ordmance. | Giy- , 20. Oar ministers are charged with the en at St. ( loud, the 25th of Joly, in the the Fourrates-Delals . THE PROTEST OF THE DEPUTIES The uoderngned reguo.arly elected Dep- nties by the college's of acrondissement, by vistee of the Hoysi Ordinacce of the-, ° and conformably to the | Coostitutional r, and to the laws relifive to elect- € of -- has thrown Assam ans on - eurhieen tmipdr ap h cannot be in. m durable. upon the | of the preczottons P departments alsaes excentimy | their, and the sixth of our reign ars of i , 26d who are cow <-- -- instars? Pome mepres mmentensh, mb a mores, ion | iy cement extern of defamess to . tf ee oen C | pree oongen by tbriite tes % Magne ich on ae depary n assignes 4 1 he fresitent of the Coonpot or Miicterny- | by- snd hain\ a pfimfi g’ergzegfiu'va. not: of 3&5: the paws; fsgllrummum ”Wu’wi‘t; B “is,“ 1:41”:ng eff-catalog? gmlhsb Mister ef __ Prasce pz Porrax ac, 4 73:72:30” Tfigfigm - s ir Wikout & r co thsuigr mm that om does -|-arresi-rt ges ==. sie _] meats will be compaed elect '_ s fi Bars B Frees: i claimed for the ever efibe Tegal m to malstain Thenighat we ost de. cot peisato Caraiched mith the ipsalla of a Laven, Sire, to this profaciged ory of n- | abo bate ‘fiw’iflt \The electoral Miz. of Imerios, Coun be Perronyet , tem of the election and the rnigof the 7 . B¥ ibe ear idrice not to tea in beibartad. to the great inter..| dignation ami Consiertal oa sens will be compored Min. of Froances, Mowress. 1 __. (For remainder , ) % ib £ : > t 7 G d sat ~Moier m