Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

6 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

rautrDay to moiitsiif's Uoste.

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

rautrDay to moiitsiif's Uoste. LONDON, SEPT. 2. rpHE Paris papsrs to Thursday's date have reached JL town. They are chiefly occupied with the visit of the Queen of England to the Royal Family of France. Every preparation has been made at En for the recep- tion of her Majesty; six pieces of artillery have been sent for to welcome her arrivals, and every thing calcu- lated to give eclat to the Queen's visit appears to have ijeen provided, even to the sending to Paris for the plate used on state occasions and the full dress liveries of the servants of the Royal family.—M. Guizot, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, and Count de St. Aulaire, the Ambassador of France in London, left Paris for the Chateau d'Eu on Wednesday evening. Lord Cowley set out for that royal residence on the following morn- ing, on a special invitation from the King.—The Paris papers are ingrossed by ridiculous speculations 011 the visit of her Majesty. The National mistrusts the English Ministers, and sadly suspects those of France and is in great fear lest, under the disguise of amuse- ments, concerts, fetes, and pic-nics, the interests of France should be betrayed by some dark plot to be hatched by the two crowned heads among the groves and avenues of Ell. As the extreme journals of both parties have all, more or less, taken this view, they seem bound to maintain it.—The Moniteur thus de- scribes the almost miraculous escape of King Louis Philippe and his family, at Eu, on the 28th ult :— The King and Queen of the Belgians left the chateau at three o'clock in a char-a-banc drawn by six horses, to drive to Treport by the new road, called de Mers. Having arrived at the sluice of Assas, at the head of the canal which communicates with the sea, four of the horses were on the bridge, when they were frightened by the firing of the cannon at Treport, and likewise by the noise of the water rushing from the sluice-gate. One of the leaders plunged and broke the slight chain placed as a protection, fell into the canal, and dragged with him in his fall the two middle horses, whose weight fortunately caused the harness which connected them with the carriage to breAk. The postilion who rode the wheel horse, with mnch presence of mind and great physical strength, turned his horses so as to bring the pole of the carriage against one of the posts at the entrance of the bridge, by which means the further progress of the carriage was stopped. The King, Queen, and the persons who accompanied them, alighted from the carriage. His Majesty, after having ascer- tained that no person was hurt, proceeded to Treport on foot." Madrid journals to the 24th ult. have been received- The electoral meetings were s'ill proceeding. The Espectador continues to give credit and publicity to the unfavourable reports current against the Govern- ment, although the members of the Junta who had arrived at Madrid had come to an understanding with the executive.—It is affirmed that Mr. Aston has been instructed to recognize the Provisional Government.- The accounts from Barcelona state that reinforcements were beginning to arrive, and that Prim, who had entered on his functions as Governor, had received assurances from the officers of the battalions of the garrison that he might rely on them and their men, should he find it necessary to reduce the Junta and its partisans by force to obey the Government. The Patulea in the mean time appeared determined not to surrender the fort of the Atarazanas but the Governor of Montjnich was understood to have declared, on the evening of the 21st, that if a shot was fired from the fort against the citadel, he would throw shells into that edifice. The Secretary of the Supreme Junta has resigned his post, two other members have left for Madrid, and only two remained at Barcelona. Astrong feeling prevails against the Government in many of the large provincial towns, and that the accounts from Cadiz are most alarming. A private letter asserts positively that Mr. Aston was to leave on the 1st inst. and that no new ambassador would be appointed until the Cortes should have met and revoked the illegal decree of the ministry against Espartero and his adherents. The last accounts from New York brought by the Royal mail-steamer Arcadia, state that Christina Gil- tnour, the woman who had been followed, and under arrest, charged with the murder of her husband in Scotland, has been given up to the custody of the con- stable sent after tier from Scotland, and will be con- veyed to England for trial forthwith. There had been a long argument in this woman's case as to whether she came under the provisions of the treaty for the mutual surrender of offenders: she having been taken into custody before the Act of Parliament in England had received the royal assent. There is also the following notice of the apprehension of another offender:- 41 Win. G. Knight, a member of the London bar, who absconded in January, 1841, and came to this country with a larare amount of monev, 'he proceeds of sundry forged bills of exchange which he sold in London, has been recently arrested in Iowa, by James Young, of the Philadelphia police. A suit was brought against him in that territory for twelve thousand dollars, and judgment obtained for the full amount. The whole amonntofthe forgeries istwenty seven thousand dollars. Nintv-one of the forged bills of exchange, uttered and passed by Knight, are in this country." The news- papers contain accounts of several deaths in duels and other similar rencontres.

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