Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 21, Number 34, Vincennes, Knox County, 2 October 1830 — Page 1

BY EIiIKU STOUTJ VXCTC3STI?E3, (Zi.) SA.TUBD.aY, OCTOBER 2, 1830. VOL. XXII. KO. 3L

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BLACK LIST T .tlLience between the administrations 1 1 John Q Adams and Andrew Jackson, strong!;, illustrated by the following Hack list of con options and abuses practised under the former, which have been detected bv the latier It forms the best answer to the constant abuse which the mo; ocratic papers he ap upon the efficient public cificers brought h. 10 power by Gen. Jackson. No. 1. Fraud and abuse l March, lS:r, Tobias Wat kins, then 4th Auditor, the friend of Mr. Adams, and confidt ut of Henry Ciav, t ,d one of their most efficient supporters, " auto 1 a little moucy in ad.htion to the reee. ed !) him monthly as sa lary. He leoi - scnted to his friend, Mr Southard, the Stcret.uy of the Na, that Samuel IlamYieton. a purser of the Navy, then stationed at PensacoU, had addressed him a letter requesting that he would draw from the Treasury 8-0G0, and hold it subject to his order, 1 e excused himself from showing the letter to Mr.Southard.cn pretence that there was confidential matter in it; but he addressed a note to the Secreta ry, to the following effect: T will thank you to cause a requisite to be issued in favor cf P.rserS. Hambleton for S00. under the ieaii of pay afloat, made payable to my crdr, at the request of Mr. Hambleton, for the purpose of pa iog his drafts upon me to i;. it amount." Upinthis represcnTati u. wiUiuui. seeing the letter of Mr. Hambleton. or any draft from him, upon Dr. Wiv: s Mr. Southard advanced him the S: ( After the removal of Watkins, in IS 29. t vas ascertained that Mr. Hambleton had never made such request, and that Dr. Watkins had applied the S"000 to his own use. The Grand Jury found an indictment against him for a fraud; but the Court decided that the prosecution could not be sustained, because the law says that prosecutions for fraud must be commenced with in two years from the commission of the offence In this case, Watkins had all the evidences of the fraud in his own possession until after the two years had expired. Here was a fraud committed by the 4th Auditor, under Mr. Adams' administration; an abuse at least by Mr. Southard, who ought never to have advanced the money without a written order or request from Mr. Hambleton; and it developed a defect in the law. Certainlv apubPc officer who commits a fraud, and has all the evidences of it in his own possession, o.iht not to be screened from punishment by a limitatian. At least, it should not run in hi favor, in relation to his conduct in office, until he is out of office. Will not our adversaries admit, that it was wcorrufiihn and abuse in the ith Auditor, thus to procure and pocket S-Ot-'Oof public money? Phis was clone under Mr. Adams, and detected under Gen. Jackson. No. 2. Fraud and abuse. On the 28th August, 1S27, Mr. Southard sent to R. L). Harris, Navy Agent at Boston S-000 unsolicited. Dr. Watkins informed Mr. Parris of this remittance, and stated that it was made to meet his drafts, lie, therefore, did, from time to time, draw for the whole S-OOtMuul apply it to his own use. No authority whatever is found in the Navy Department for making the remittance, and Mr. Southard must have done it at the verbal request of Dr. Watkins. Is there no corruption or abuse in a 4th Auditor getting of public money in fhis zi'jy, and applving it to his own use? This is one of the frauds of which Dr. Wat kins has been convicted bv the verdict of a jury. It was committed under the adminis tration of Mr. Adams, and detected and punished under that of Gen. Jackson. No. 3. Fraud ar.d abuse. In July, lSw, aur. ocutnaru sent 10 j. iv. faulting, Navy Agent at New York. SlOCJ unsolicited. Dr. W atkms informed Mr. Paulding cf th remittance, and stated that it was to meet his drafts He accordingly drew it cut cf Mr. Paulding's hands, by two drafts of S5C0 each, and applied it to his own use. It was, doubtless, in compliance w ith Dr. Watkin's vetbal requet that Mr. Southard sent this money alo. Was there no corruption or abue in this? It was don? under Mr. Adams, and detected under Gen. Jackson. No. 4. Fraud md abuse. On the ith cf October, 1S27, Dr. Watkins advised Mr. Paulding that he ha.l drawn on him for SvOO, and that a remittance would be made to meet the draft, on the Secretary's return to the city. Accordir jly en the day cf November, the Secretary made a remittance ot FjVjQ to Mr. Pu'iMinupn no other authority than Dr. Wa!ki:. lTquct. This is one of the caes of fraud of which T)r. Watkins has b-cn convicted by the ver -

Qct cf a jury. 1; ws ccs.iiittcd underlet four thousand dollars, for a claim' wh

Mr. Adams, and detected under Gen. Jack-

son; j Thus, in the year 1827, did Mr. Adams's 1 4th Auditor defraud the Government out! of S5.3CO, with the culpable aid of Mr. . Adams's Secretary of the Navy. In less au.e than three months after Gen. Jackson can into power all this was detected, ahd the I perpetrator in jail. No. 5. Fraud and abuse. On the 1f th 1 January, 1828, Dr. Watkins advised Mr Paulding that he had drawn on him for Sr50, ;:nd that a remittance would be made to meet the draft. On the 18th, Mr. Southard remitted to Mr. Paulding S'-50, at Dr Watkins request which was applied to that object. Thus did Mr. Adams's 4th Auditor apply to his own use S"50 more of the public money. It was committed under Mr. A dams, and detected and punished under Gen. Jackson. No. 6. Fraud and abuse. On the 8th of October, 1828, Dr. Watkins procured an advance of S300 to be made out of the Treasury to one of his clerks, received it from him, gave a receipt for it, and charged it to Ed. N. Coxe, a Purser, who w as then in the Pacific Ocean. The advance was made upon a representation of Watkins that Coxe had requested it, and that it was intended to meet cert --.in drafts Coxe never made such a request, and thus did Mr Adams's 4th Auditor apply to his own use S300 more of the public money. No. 7. Fraud and ubue. On the 13th December. 182S, after the people had passed sentence on the late administration, Mr. Southard advanced to Dr. Watkins ST50 more, out of the Treasury which was cuarged to Silas Butler, another Purser, then in the Mediterranean. Upon what reprten tation this was done, dees not appear. Mr. Butler never gae any authority for it, and of course refused to recognise the charge. Thus did Mr. Adams 4th Auditor apply SriO more of the public money to his own use. Thus, in two years, did Mr. Adams's Fourth Auditor commit three dtUhryau frauds on the Treasury, appropriating to his own use seven thous and three hundred dollars cf the fiublic money. Thus did Mr. Adams's Secretary of the Navy most obligingly aid and enable Mr. Adams's 4th Auditor, and Mr. Clays's confident, to pocket seven thousand three hundred dollars of the money given by Congress to .support our glorious Navy. I his was all done under Mr. Adams' administration, and detected under Gen. Jack;on s 9 Yet. there are men who say that there was nothing to reform! and that this administration has done nothing for the country !! The same men, when Dr. Watkins was apprehended, pronounced all the charges against him false and malignant They then knew he was guilty as well as they do now. So firm was their conviction of his guilt, there was no man, or association of men, among them, worth SOOO, who would hazard it in being his bail. After making application to all those who had been his associates, ate his dinners, and drank his wine, he sent his son to one of the new cab inet, and, painting in pathetic terms the abandonnient of all his old friends, besought that act of humanity from him. II js request could not be granted. Yet the very men who knew this, who would not risk their money upon his appearance at Court, so fi; m was their conviction of his guilt, proclaimed, far and wide, that the irmocnit and hih-minded Watkins refused to have bail, so indignant was he at his oppressors' They attributed the whole to the malice and falshood of the present 4th Auditor, and have not failed to pursue him with unre lenting abuse trom that day to tins. aw had fo there, in consequence ot tiie peace Their contract price was 9u c ents per gallon and die price of the casks. At the close of the war, the price ot whiskey declined about 50 per cent.; and at their own request, they were permitted to complete their contract, b delivering the balance of the whiskey in New York, at the original contract price, They did ko, and we repaid for it In 1S21, however, they set up a claim for difference of transportation between S u kett's Harbor and New Yoik, amounting according to their own statement, to'aboiit S3.500." It was decided that nothiug was due to them. In 1S22 they petitioned Congress, and claimed tor ddTercr.ce cf transportation S4i33 Sr; for extra loss by leaking, 334 CS: and for extra expense of delivery, $750; in all Sj,-il-5 95. It docs not appear to have been acted on at that session; the application was renewed at the two succeeding sessions and twice rejected Sy the Cora niittce of Claims. Nothing more seems to have been heard of the claim until January, 1SS when it was presented to Mr. 5outhard, Mr. Adams's Secretary of the Navv, It then contained the following items: For difference of transnortation on kj,5oi '.rallons ot wniskev. S't.332 67; for leakage, 92; for ex penses attending delivery, SO; and for duference between common glass proof whiskey at Sackett's Harbor and hydrometer proof at New York, Sj4 iS 91; in all 11,0j1 dollars 50 cents. llovv marvellously age had increased this claim, as stated by the claimants themselves! In IS 19, it was about S VOO 00 In IS::, it was j,-115 34 , In lS:S,it was 11,031 50 Mr. Southard submitted the claim to Dr. Watkins, for a report thereupon, who strongly recommended its allowance. Mr. Adams's Secr etary acccrd'mglv allowed the new item in the amount, or the Mire of 4,999 gallons of whiskey, at tV cent p.-r irailon, and 3 cents tor casks, am'?untinir (, S j - C 19 OT, which waspaal to the claimants oot t f the Treasury. Thus did Mr. j Secretary of tiie Navy pay away upward h :

No 8 f tv- r ;; ' ;v T.-.rc pai i 01 uie u; Jin. v , ne er 10 oe l epaiu, vvc i . , . . T , . , : - . - - - Ucn and Leonid oi e' 'co m -ictor r t he a,!mit that the people ought-net to re-j lf Pcol; f.Ct !f 'culcu1; , l V (!d 'l lhf terday Paris was tilled V.ien na i.eon ird u co. tiaetoi . .or the eorr-ot c-dtion.-bi- to try 1 l'esc':t anJ thc'" tun'ed their pioces on ; with 1.0,u',0 rich engaged in mortal rem!ehvery o 40 000 gallons otgdvdrrskey --t I ! their oolonel, waiting with snrruhir coolns . bat. Yesterday mommeall was calm. The

l....'.' i, in iju, .vtiei lilt i .. . . 1 iov t vo:l! '!ire " i, 'icr-r n,mfili. n,Mi:,rv c Tvim tnc ..-rm..." t. ;, . -A

etivcred t000 eallons. they were in- s L"r.V. J UII1I,-UK' -...-r i.-.-.v,;., ,,.-...i ,.,, ux. ...v; ...,.r i... - . -

.... J ii i ! l io amotmt timr"rpr .v vi.. A ' t! wV-4 j"viu u iii3jt..1i1j,(..ion'-i iicaMun i iu.oo'j men, who never rmed that no more could be received ' T.. : ) ,"J ' Atta!i4i enaulettcs. and retired. Th- turoo'e ! hefriV r',U v.rM:' nA a:. A,.

. . t 'i.i . mi 'ii in ill vfi "t .'.'.' . i ii i i - i- . .... i t - - . - ...... . - v r a . . v.

j had not the slightest foundation in justice,

and seems never to have been thought ot fur twelve years after it originated. Per the balance of their claim, the Secretav referred them to Congress. They pc-; j t:tio:,cd that body, and obtained a report jfrcm the Committee of Claims, declaring that, "if the petitioners have any cUim.it can be adjusted at the proper Department;" j which was adopted. The Secretary of the Navy sent the report to Dr. Watkins, w ith a letter, in which he said. "Icjnsidrr the rt i'otutbn as authorizing and directing c sett'nucnt rf the c!u:m.' Dr. Watkins accordingly took up the account, increased it somewhat by corrections, and the amount stated to be du" was 30; which Mr. Southard paid out of the Treasury. The first allowance was S4,649 07 The second w as (3,391 05 SH.040 12 There were papers in Mr. Southard's office, showing that the original claim did not exceed 3,500 dollars. There were papers with the account, shewing that, when it was presented to Congress originally, it did not exceed 5,415 dollars 95 cents The Hies of his own office and the papers with the account shewed, that it had been once rejected by the Secretary of the Navy and twice by the Committee of Claims. He knew that the claim for difference of proof, allowed by him. to the amount of 5, 4-1-S dollars 91 cents, had never been set until twelve years after the contract was iei -formed and the account closed. Tlu.ue was abundant ev idence in the paper, that tiie contractors had agreed to deliver rht whiskev in New York at the same p'i-ctlu were to receive for it delivered at .-iickttt's Harbor; and that it was to be 'good whiskev," without regard to the manner of p.a.of. With all these facts before him, did Mr. Adams' 4th Auditor re'omnr.er.d the allowance cf tiie whole claim, Mr. Ad:;m's Secretary of the Navy did al low, of the new item, 4,649 dollars 07 cents. And the same Secretary did, without the slightest reason, take a decision of the House of Kepreset:jtiv s that, "if the peti tionershave any claim it can be adjust- d al the proper department," as "authorizing or luvcted in a settlement of the claim," when it contained no such direction, but left the validity of the claim to lie invc-ligated and decided by the Department. B this authority did Mr. Adams's Auditor allow the balance of 6,391 dollars 5 cents. Thus did Mr. Adams's Secretary of the Navy and 4th Auditor, in l.S'JH, take from the public Treasury Ei.Evr tiuh'SAXD FORTY DOLLARS AND TWU.VK CKNT Of his money one thousand ('( hats wasimrneiatf.ly Urt to Mr. Adams's 4th Auditor. .-'! h;. never been paid!! The loan was o ;'-. zrdly made for facilities granted in s tiling the- account; and it is not probable that either party expected it ever to be paid. The in an who made the loan says, he did it with the kii"vv!edge anil approbation cf Mr. Adan.s's- v ecret.try of the Navy. Thus c.id M: Adams's administration pay away, fo: a groundless claim, dated in 1815, cl vi'i thousand forty dollars- and tvjclve cents, allowed them by Conprcss to buy provisions tor the avy in for it was all taken out ot that appropriation I lira was done under Mr. new claims, trumped up after the accounts to which they belong have been closed t weh e years, or alio wing groundless claims, twelve years old, tit at W'c already see eighteen thousand dollar.-, ci the money given Mr. Adams by Cong:e3 to support our navy. But this is cnlv a deo-inninT, r-:.m the Lj::;:j:: Morning Herald. DETAILS OF TIIE L ATE CONFLIC !: IN PA HIS. i.KTTER KKOn A CO'Ut F. S POX DENT, DATED P.vais. july oO, 1830. ' " A poster ipt to my priva'e note to you on Tuesday evening, July 7th, was couched in these terms: " VVe are in for revolution." On Tuesday evening matters began to wear a cry serious aspect. The gens amis posted on the place du palais royal, were inciss.ar.tly attacked, by what you in London would cail a mob of dandies, with a perseverance and desperation of which all the riots, revolts, tumults, rr revolutions cf England, afibrd no example. They were supported, it is true, by young Hour geos, and by the J lower fiascos, but the m. joritv.bv 5 o'clock were Paris fops, with rattans in their hands and pistols iu their pockets. Some of them were killed. Wishing to sec something of the matter, I took a cabrielet and attempted to drive through the place du palais royal, and get into the thick of the fight. The cabriolet driver had been a chasseur-a-rhe-val of the imperial guard. When wc tea ched the tails of the horses cf the lint cf g'.nd-ami, potted opposite the Hue Froidmaute an, the excitement was too much for him. The people were charged by the cavalryfired their pistols in their face, retired, and retained to the attack, with cries cf vengeance.' Libertir! .1 baa It r,w l'tve la Charter: five Vernon rear! 1' i sr. Va il ! La Ma: a PJnac'La M Pc ,rori7ic ::J.;hrr!r uu U ALrt.' This vva-j too much ir my .e'ur. He lst iiis he.i 1. and charged th- gcndaim tn arw:t'i ht ni! r..a.. reins and clu Ue h he was oj '...; a in vain, lu-; !. . . : ' ii a a -e I s a , itt. 1 . iii . i. l.r. : ov , io.'., -odd

mimsr.-oion :-,fi h-sh.-n rW,-ro,i ,--,w 1 wcre v cnaear.s,; they were the hrst soldi- all the lov.er classes. I he i.evv spapi rs

Gen! Jackson's " ' ers who fired on the people cn Wednesday. give you other particulars.

V!u-n ,t shr,!! !,n e1PWn w r.o,, Tift- ! 0 n the uay tiicSapeurs Pompiers sur- j i he tietpsare asscmblirg in the p

w v.. tori. ,vi;tnro i?"' ; rendered. A large proportion of the gend-1 du Carousel, to march upon St. Cloud

L J

. f . , ... t. . . -l v.cic o -UV..CU iu .ia-e roauv to r.re on . oroifarv r.Ttinrj (- u t ir , t,n .tn

. I - ' I ,'-"7 Vi r .I :-rvc- i 1 - . . C . i ....,4. . .... . ' . 1 1 1

r,rt of; i niv.i.wviioiii.u li ,;u;..i in u.e iiu-; uui tuoi icigncu every wnere curing Phe amount wrongfully naid A1- ' ' ' j diets, w'uo received their embrace, but the day. At every instant u ere to be met leu and LeonaW' was " 1 1 2 i iained ther position. "Vive la lignc!"' men carrying on biers s'.ich of the w.-,:ntlcd

(regiments ot the line; wa, m conseqaencc, as could be transported to the hospital with cis r; .ti io during the night, and ever yince, a constant j safety; 1500 t f al: parties arr in the Hotel xui,ov. ,t ( declaration with the people. j Dieu alone. The dead were also hmora-

; rishir.g his cassette over his head lie reared

' with all hi power, Vvv Vrinf.trcurl IIe:i en knows I am in r.o humor f r pro- ! vokintr a smile, but tl lis :i few r.'hcrtri fling incidents, will better prove the snte cf1 the city, and of the parties, than a full dc- ; scription. Determined, as seme imagined the gendms to be at that time, I fancied I saw thus ar

early, symptoms ot fear and indecision a- j The cannonicrs cf the guard ga e their piemong them. Still they fought with certainty j cts an angle of elevation which spared the. and desperation, but every moment their as- j assailant-" who spared not them, for their sailants were reinforced by boys, workmen, j intention was not ascertained, clerks, students, coachmen, and in sho:t all j The cav alry w ere cut up in a hundred classes. The firing became every r.n ::.c..t ( charges. The tri-colcured flag soon tbateel mose sharp. j on the tower o: the hotel de Yille, and on t ,..,i n- ....,. a, .r v.--.s ; tu- f the Cathedral fNc trc Dame.") I

king my I met a bcarins e comrades. wnere there was ( ivas indeed! a awiss do; thrirrrie nfvr ,,M!,r, utt. frit tnl 1 .... - o 1'hev took the hodv to th nlacc de la

way again to the palals royal, w h-:. u supena my detail treni num .

. band of n.en in the Rue Viviennc. v UCJ ingiu prince 1 ungnae nai-

; the corpse of one of their unhappy j ;'"v escfi,ea l P'rT- , Ui

As thev passed to Rue Odbert, ' ' ru' w " ,LH""-

Bourse, stripped and exhibited it, surround- j during that day, i he ministers all ran cS. ed by candles, and amid unceasing cries of j save Deoellemc, wno was thrown into Pn- , ! sen for allowing seme ci the journals to be

t . miu aiu ai ills, tu. ai ma. rhe report of an odd shot fell upon the ear J . , . , , . . . at intervals; but although the streets were crowded, no other sound was heard, save tiiose above mentioned A little later and I the lamps were smashed, their long cords j left dangling in the centre of the street, j ringing to mind the dreadful use made of them forty-one years before. At 10 o'clock the wooden guard house of the place de la Bourse was attacked, the gendarms expelled, the guard house itself set on fire. A party ot sanours pompiers (firemen) arriv ed to extinguish the flames, but they would i in;: be allowed to act. and suffered them-: selves to be disarmed. Later al! the armourers shops ia Paris were attacked and every weapon carried off. At 11 o'clock comparativ e quiet rcigned throughout Paris; but the nature cf such . a calm could not be understood. At 4. o'-! clock in the morning the people began t , . assemble at manv points, but principulh in 1 the Hue St. Honorc. The well dressed !

mob of the preceding day reappeared, and 'PI')" Swiss guards were car ried in the reinforced, but outnumbered by the terrible course cf the day, and the Swiss (having remen from the F&ubourgs cf St. Antvine and : tUiCd to surrender) cut to pieces A regiMarcean. The Tudlenes were approach- i nient of Hussars of the guard marched hi ed, but no act of hostilhty occurred up to 10 : 't in Orleans yesterday mcrmng, but Learo'clock. In the mean while the brave cf j ir,S f ll'c retreat cf these above mentioned, the cidevant garde Nationalc beean to as- I tl;ey halted in the palace Louis XVI, a; d

semhleon the Boulevards, 111 the place de Grev e, and in other places, with the certahiiy of death if defeated. At the same moment a new and most importunt incident occurred. The students of the Kcole Polytechnique, Lav ing been dismissed without their swords (lads of from 15 to 23 years of nge,) joined the people to a man, then separated, proceeding singly to different parts to take command of the people, or rather to receive it from them; and nobly did thev repay the confidence so placed in them. In an hour an immense force was brought to bear on several points. The hotel de Viile was attacteel, carried, ar.U became? the; point d c.fiui The depot of artillery in the lieu du Pac St. Thcmas d'Aouin was e::ual ly carried, and the cannon carried oif to the most important points, and worked with a - mazing coolncns ami effect for twelve hours by these heroic youths. I he I uiUenes; :tacked, and defended bv the 3d re giment of the garde royale (all of whom arms scon afterwards followed their exampie. f thr.uld have said earlier th.at the whole garrison of Paris had been ordered i'i:e 5th ror't. At 10 o'clock I went to the place du Ca rouseL In the Rue Richelieu, and all the neighborhood of the Rue St. Honorc, the parties were en face. The 3d guards maintained the appearance of determination to fight. The people were accumulating frightfully. Not a word was spoken. The garden of the Tuillcries was closed. In the place du Carousel I found three sciuadmns of lancers of the garde royale, a battalion of the 3d regiment of the garde, and a battery cf six pieces, also of the garde. The Tuil leries and Louvre were occupied by a reg'i. of Swiss guards. They have perished. A few soldiers of the garde were eating their breakfast all the rest, to whom 1 have referred, were on tiie (juizive, ready to mount or fall in. I passed cn to the Qaci du Louvre. The Pont des Arts (a wooden bridge for foot passengers opposite the Louvre,) and the palace of the Institute, w ere so crowded, that I turned, fortunately, to the pent royal. At that moment a dreadful tiraillade was heard in the place de Greve. It was answered by a rolling fire in every direction, and in five minutes 15,000 of the finest troens in the world found themselves engaged with citizens variously armed. Here w as a par ty cf elderly men. National G uards, who, with a sar.g frcid only equalled by that of 4the beardless students of : the Polytechnic school, cpeneu their tire cn tr.e garde roy ale hore and loot, ai;d aruuerv, Fren ilery, French re to avoid inand Swiss taking especial ca iuring the regiments cf the line, who re mained grave spectators of the slaughter that ensued. In another direction might be seen the ferocious Ftdercs cf the cruarters St. Antoine and Marccau, with their spikes of 1315, or other less terrible looking weapons thousands of women and unarmed people liv king on, and encouraging the popular par ty. i "i . e . . . . i i i oi it a ii'iui'i mr otr raroo. ;nrr ssa' tlv

I rv-it r-! t t' ti'f C-.!iti ni rbt

i0!,:; how ! ()a everv hand, without e.ti r.oi rimi .-.-, bat j setry rolkvl,'r:u:uons tiol!;'"red, -h'iot : a'.,'.

1 u:o:-(

1 tjuartt r cf the town, which I found quiet z

is cn urd'marv occasiens. j I h d at for two hours at a window cvf r-l'-,okinr tin i i?v with n n.K nrl rf r.hl tir.ne rial rtiaid. "lhc first wcrds burst f rem his i lips w ith a tone of triumph "Nous a or, ! un -jch.t ct'appui la." The hctc! c!e Villo had surrendered. 1 he "unc ft red no shct dtine tie da v. The 53d refused to act. "uui V i icrmepous; w as arrestee:. ai 1 a!UI tu' u" H1 lSS;s PPrec . . Pi mtea' A. in . At 10 o'clock the Tuillcries and Louvre still held cut, but at that moment I saw march along the Boulevard part of a regi inentcf lancers, whose appearance indica ted extreme fatigue. They were quickly al lowed by a portion cf a regiment cf infantry cf the guard. A regiment (or the remains cf a r egim't.) of Cuirassiers, mixed up with gendarmes dc Chasse next followed the horses cut up, and the men fainthvg. Lastly, a portion i i 3 regiment cf the line followed with a melan choly air. The remainder t f the thrte regimcnts first mentioned were dead; the sur vivors, with some soldiers of a regiment ci the line, were on their way to join the kin at St. Cloud, where thev arrived in a most. confused state yesterday. The attack en the Louvre and Tuil!cric v -3 renewed yesterday, and with success, but with great slaughther. The pallace was pillaged. The different barracks of the un111 ine course 01 tne clay retreattM upon bt. Cloud, receivine a heavy fire on their way. 1 he tri-coloured flag waved once mere over all the public documents. The joy wui universal. The appointment of gen. Lafayette to the command cf the National guard was a happy circumstance; eighty thousand will be organized to night. At thi instant the dis arming ci the rabble is in prorres. There is a larj'C boat at this moment receiv wv the melancholy freight of dead from the palace of the Lcuvt." The cue d'Orleans wdl be king. His son a marching to Paris iri aid of tU B-utgeois, L .it the head of his re$ fieri. Gerard is at the giment ot Huss.iis iea of tl atn.cd ' force under Lafayette. The rey.d tndt m ' an.! everv mention of royalty "havt- c -an- : peered every where. The king 01 Flt.;.ce, whoever he shall be. must be a eiv l:i:,ietl monarch to receive the approbation of the people. Nap'leonll, ism the months cf will ?ace but there v. ill be ht:le righting. At the moment - I wiite, there are 'placards posted, with j these words '-no more Hourbons!" Julu 31 This is surelv the most rytn. '... a- ..i.r 'ri i .1 i u.'y e.!opeseii oi. i ne numner in me iouvre was immense. Eighty were borne to a spot eppesite the carte rn gate cf tliat luih.ing yesterday, ar.d buried with rnilit iry In nors. Nearly as many were on boar d of a lighter, and brought down the Seine to the Chamr de Mar?, and their appropriately interred. A considerable number, among whom were fuur Englishmen, who Ml on the preceding day, were buried hi the Marchedes Innc cens. The evening was, if possible, more interesting ar.d imposing. Already had the principal portion of the Garde National been, reorganised, and with "the people," the per sons dignified by the bupeiicr orders a; car.aillr, been but in posctsion of all the military posts cf the metropolis, and occupied them with the air cf veterans. Along the quays and streets the female inhabit.-T.ts were to be seen seated in groups preparing bandages and lint for the wounded. The passages, (arcades) aff- rded strikirg in stances r,t this benevolent dispc.-iticn. the milliners, and their shop women and workwomen, were to be seen sitting outside their shops (becau-e those, tying closed, afforded no light,) busilv en fired in rnak'r lint. Paris is so fortified inter ierly that a million cf men would hardly suffice to carry it. I forget how many thousand streets it contains-, but every street cf thrm is capajble cf long ar.d protracted defer.ee the j means for which, however. I do not feci a: l.uerty to describe. The Ecole Militaire surrendered yesterday. The artillery from Vincenne-s marched upon St. Cloud. The fortress itself remains 'm possession cf the King's trocps. The Due de Bordeaux is s-id to be there. Poor child, I am sure he would net be molested. If menaced, he would certainly be preserved by the Garde Naticnalc. iu the expense of their liv es v ea, evci, the cm-lo-i .e-t laborer would answer for hisdVty, it he v. ere thrown upon him for prctc.tiat. Th Pi.ei-.shi.i ilWlsappeartd, cr, if

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