The Paris papers of yesterday have reached town. Among the
usee mass of details indicating the chronic perturbOqn of the country, we no- tice meetings in Paris of Germans and BelginiBepnblicans, for purposes of drill, in order to join any further movement in. their native countries.
In the provinces, the arbitrary conduct of many Government Commis- sioners had excited the greatest irritation. At Lyons, for instance, M. Emmanuel Arago, proprio motn, had doubled the taxes, and had forbidden the egress of silver coin from the town. At Bordeaux, the arrival of a new Commissioner, M. Latrade, to supersede M. ChevaBier, who had won the liking of the citizens, had provoked a tumult; and M. Letrade was fain to fly.