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&Atur&ap to RAoitl3aplo lIoøt..

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&Atur&ap to RAoitl3aplo lIoøt.. T LONDON, JULY 25. HE Paris papers to Thursday's date inclusive have been received. In the journals of Tuesday, it ^as stated, that in consequence of the Queen Regent of having given the Royal Assent to the Municipal Reform Bill, contrary to the opinion of the Duke of Victoria, the General proceeded to Barcelona, and remonstrated with her Majesty; and that finding her remonstrated with her Majesty; and that finding her not inclined to revoke her assent, he had tendered his L% resignation, which had been accepted. Thursday's Papers state, that a revolutionary movement bad taken P'ace at Barcelona, of which the Moniteur Parisien Of that evening gives the following particulars "Government has received from Perpignan telegraphic des- patches of the 21st and 22d, which give the following news from J,ar £ the 18tb Espartero, after vain efforts to force ne Queen to revoke the sanction given to the law on the Moni- f'palities, announced that he would leave the city. Van Halen aving been sent for, arrived at Barcelona with Ayerbe and lh whose divisions are cantoned in the neighbonrhood. In evening a sanguinary tumult took place, and the military »«•. disclaiming the anthority of Ministers, did not prevent *e disorders. Espartero returned to the Palace, obtained the revocation of the sanction given to the bill and the formation of a ew Ministry. He armed the battalions called the Blouze, and 18 said he named as President of the new Ministry, Onis or anjpuzano.—Barcelona is in the greatest excitement. The Vjieen Regent is mncb incensed. M.Perez de Castro, General p eonard, and others of the old Cabinet, took refuge on board the rench brig M £ leagre, and arrived at Port Veodras on the 22d. pOur Ambassador the Count de la Redorte, who left on the 21st, earnt this news at sea. Government will forward to him to-day *Qch instructions as are rendered necessary by this change of circumstances" jW We regard this-dMprajjfce between the Queen and the Commander-in-C&usi' its unfortunate on many ac- counts more especially as we now have reason to be- hev-e that Frttnce is disposed to support the Queen and •be Spanish policy of rile Perez de Castro Cabinet, p whatever may be the result, the present triumph of jksparterois the triumph of the Constitution, and there- fore we rejoice at it. The news created an immense sensation in Paris. The number of Spanish refugees 7«o have consented to enter the French service for Africa is «uch smaller than was expected; out i>f u,000, not 1,000 had enrolled themselves at the date the last accounts, but it was supposed that the num- ep would soon increase, as the government had given or(tels for assistance and encouragement to such as Were willing to enter the service, and withheld them from the rest Marshal Vallee's account of the military operations in Africa during the month of Jnne occupies the columns of the Moniteur of Wednesday. With a cool indifference, which makes us involuntary shudder, the Marshal informs his Government that "all the Kabyleg who attempted to oppose his march were slain, their wives and children made prisoners, their crops Utterly destroyed, their houses burned to the ground, y a and all their cattle driven away or butchered Oil the spot'—leaving the country through which the army I? y Passed a sterile wilderness! And this, then, is the boasted civilized system of warfare in the nineteenth century We need not wonder that Socialism is on *he increase in France, when such spectacles as this are Contemplated with approbation by the Government, and *">t discountenanced by the Ministers of the God of eace and Love. The Journal des Debats publishes a ong article to prove that the differences between the iceroy of Egypt and the Porte, which a few days Previonsiy had presented a most pacific appearance, ?. become more than ever complicated. This com- P ication arises from the revolt in Syria, which the ebats asserts had been a long time planned and ably lxecuted, and ascribes it to Russian and British agents. After giving a history of the country since its occupa- tion by Ibrahim Pasha, the Journal des Debats de- uces from it a belief that it would be found impossible y Ibrahim Pasha to extinguish the insurrection, and ultimately the Ottoman Empire would be divided between nreat Britain and Russia. Private letters confirm only that part of the article in the Debats which represents ilie affairs of the East as having become on a sudden "-more complicated than ever," The Madrid Gazette of the 16th contains a decree arpointirig Don Baldomera Espartero, Duke of Vic- toria and Morella, Commander-in-Chief of the Royal JfUard, an appointment which had already been con- on him by a decree dated December 11, 1838, ftut which appointment the Duke had resigned in con- 8eque; ce of the military operations in which he-waa then engaged, and "which required his undivided at- tention. The Cape of Good Hope papers received yesterday Rffirm that the second division of the squadron, con- sisting of H. M S. Blenheim, of 74 guns, and the Isim- 1'Orf and Columbine sloops of war, being part of the ficet intended for China, was expected to sail from Simon's Bay on the 16th of May for Singapore. The sa.me papers report that the Portuguese brig 1losn, ^ith the equipments of a slaver, outward-bound, had heen captured off Cape Frio, on the Brazilian coast, by H S3. S. Fman, 0:1 the &th of March, and sent into pinion's Bay, and that the Portuguese brig Pade afan, of 156 tons. !:id, after having been detained on the east co vst of the Mozambique by H. M. S Cm lew, y arrived at the Litter port on the 10th of May.

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