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THE NEW YORK HERALD. r t ‘ 1 ir Vol. VIII—No, 210 -.-Whole No, 3061, NEW YORK, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST Price Two Cents, oe Ryne er | Mr. Cooley's Ne 2 sae SL arg ey ERIE ee eee - iy tee ie : peer err ? ‘yom geermanws Pee A SS So oy eS a papaya mge api Tipe: pr REGULAR PACKET: ir. Cooley’s New Work—The American tn i E- e f sm “ a xmple. Rounf the ladies, however, were inclined to — ee Egypt. WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN EGYPT indulgathiee y- NEW LINE OF LIVERPOOL PACKETS. Under the above title, Mr. J E. Cooley (f These endeavours at nudation proving abortive, the Va ailfrom New York on the 25th and Liverpool om the 13th above title, Mr. James ‘ooley (for- Egy puans next pro; the Juxuries of the bath. ‘This ‘each month, merly of the celebrated firm of Cooley & Bangs) totes, “an Beat re gh (9 ct Saataie’ + vated . ‘om ; she, not having taken a sinc Reg Ri has produced & magnificent octavo of 600 pages, and from England, and thigking ‘a warm ablation might! be 9 #3 containing 100 illustrations. : < beg oy to her, polealy Seenarele« pportu- , - D *‘Depeyster, 25th May. + is a y for initiation into the mysteries of an Egyptian bath. Ship SHERIDAN) Cs cain FA. “ape nl ‘The work is most beautifully printed and hand- it ges She entered thg bathing meus attended S¥ oh six Ship ROSCIUS,' Captain Johu Collins, 25th July. somely got up by the house of Appleton & Co., of ar Cae HAY b 5 ee RE black slaves, who somewhat co: disrobed her, and Ship SIDDONS. “Puow Livenroot. = ” this city. It commences with the author's voyage HHH \ Comncmenitied thelr operations in a manner that shoeked her Ship SIDDONS, ; FA; Dejevate, th July. from Athens to Alexandria, and closes plo ee 7 at Still weak from the eflects ot hers fury, she wane GARRICK, Skiddy, 13th August. parations to set Ci visit the Holy . } u ere bawble in the hands of the } and the P ROSCIUS C yihin John Collins, ' 0 set out from Cairo to visit th y Ht tossed, dragged, thumped, rubbed, "scrubbed, ese shuis are all of the first class, upwards o! Land; of his journeyings in which latter region are saat opera wih Sige Soonfort for jmengers Ecombine | promised a description shortly. Ribece catenin Me arene qiof thers accommodation: | ‘The book is one of the most amusing and enter- be provided. These, ships are commanded by experienced | taining that we have had in our hands for a very masters, who will make every exertion to give general satisfac: | 10) sine, and we predict for it a large sale, through Neither the captaing or owners of the shipy will be respensi- : bie for any letters, parcels or packages sent by them, unless re. | 2UMerous editions. Z malar ble of beding, ar ~ Cl As we intend to present our readers with very of is line ret 0 arn.ed, their peca- . '_ » of Tat chasnaction gives them seomi i possessed by any wther | Pious extracts from the work, and copies of many of LA oF inp the illustrations, we will detain them uo longer; but BSRCOLEING WED 5 ie saves a. Now York, orto | dip at once into the coutents of the work and leave Letters by the packots will, be clarged 123g ects pe MSnele | our readers to judge for theimselve wee Oe PORK AND Are panne: Entrance ivro ALExaxpuia—Womer of Eaxrr. ‘The people in crowds were creeping along, over raked, and scraped he ble plight ef, till the poor woman was in a piti ked ey Joint in her frame ; and king skill to bear upon her back and neck, she thought they were about to sever her head from her should In the mean time, the young Egyptian ladies, anxious to participate in the amusement, leit the saloon, flocked about her, minutely in-pecung ‘her person, and assisted the slaves in poaching her flesh to a jelly, After which they seized the various articles of her toilet, and com- menced a destructive investigation of every object in de- tail : petticoat, chemise, cape, cap, collar, shaw], bonnet shoes, stockings, stays, and satchel, all passed ui , niously from hand to hand among the crowd. ‘The began to rip certain articles to pieces, in order to study more satisfactorily their construction ! It has seldom fallen to the lot ot lovely woman to be more unhappily situated than was Mrs. Wrinklebottom inthe bath, Exhaus d faint with its frightful pro. cess ; still in the hands of her tormentors, who continued to pommel her poor frame ; no one near who understood her language ; and her clothes literally torn inghreds ! NEW YORK AND HAVRE PACKETS. SOND LE) ankles in mud, generally more than half waked, and ma of them had little more covering than our first parents fore the fall. All of them appeared to be about as misera- athesiprol thislne wall hereahterTeave. New'Womon the | ble as filth, cold, hunger, want, rugs, and no rage at all, Istand Havre on the iéth of each month, as follows : could make them heihunekt f hed > > “m ie ¢ thought her time had verily arrived. She resolved to The new ship ONEIDA, a m New York. From Havre. Our passage was completely blocked up and over- y'S dospereia. effort. (0. sestue:harselt, aad garments Captain b “ shadowed by a procession of camels loaded with lemons hands of the barbarians; an loth August stray t March 16th April t Ju N James Funck 16th December and oranges. Our limbs were scarcely safe from the She looked upon her ese itor: Ship BALTIMORE, 16th May ponderous jostlings of these u y, though patient and jected through the agency of some’ supernatural Captain ,.) loth September useful animals, when we encountered a platoon of camels power. When she was ushered back to the drawing mae La eee and donkeys loaded with goat-skias of water, which the room, she was an altered person. Her appearance wor Contain Int Septemb'r? 16th Oc A tay distribu 1B through the s of — doleful ing She could scarcely stand alone ; her gar Frederick Hewitt, Ist January ¢ t6th F AS, Seattie seniecowral) ay esey "Sues ere ede ments were in great disorder, and some of them hung in New ship8T-NICOLAS, § lat June 16th July dealt round from house to house in the. good ity of Go- tatters! The ladies immediately took leave, and returned apta Ist October sh November. | tham., Next came butt against us a large camel with a with her to her lodgings. foe, So erasey ( Teeearee huge date tree on his back, sweeping the streets, in his 7 arom nae ltilaitoadt dln cnaaiien’ hun weg De mrraeae di 6 unsteady motion, for a considerable distance fere and aft. the streets unattended ‘by th “Look out for heads!” Here isa knot of shivering Arabs, indii a little rude kind of mill, stuck flat in d by the | the mud, and turned by a donkey. ‘There is « hideous rr ually in- | looking object, bearing on her head a loathsome substance eurred on them, Kor frerght or passage apply ta Dread’ Out upon a greasy board, crying, in the ‘a ‘9 Tout king and jaw-breaking language of her cot Hot - ccm Ew ORT e ones: _ | cakes ! hot cake {here's your Spe hot cakes!” Now A NS or PACKETS, | We Pass a cluster of Arab women in masks, acc LOUISIANA AND NEW YORK LINE OF PACKETS. | the custom of the country, exhibiting little mo faces than a small space around their eyes, and painted brows, while their legs are bare to a more elevated point For the better accommodation of slippery it is intended to] than is even exhibited by the fair artistes of the ballet, at desyatch a ship from this port on.the Ist, 5th, Toth, 15th, 20th, aud wir own enlightened county. Here, 2th ot each month, commencing the [th October and_continu- ing girl, with testeoed chine, gab- ) supplied with every re Of wines and liquors, i jed vessels will be forwar subscribers, free from. the expen arems; and then they at smothered in Jong thick veils and cumbersome robe: ch conceal every part of the person except the eyes. So essential isthe veil to the Egyptians, that it is con sidered far more disreputable for a woman to expose her face to the view of strangers, t an any other part of her on! On this account, one not unfrequently witnes- sthe peasant women covering their faces on the ap- proach of aman, while their legs and breasts are bare, and little or no covering is seen upon their bodies. Indeed, if their faces are concealed, they give themselves very little concern about other parts. Women axp Cuitpren in Eever. rye: ing unit May, when regular days will be appointed. for the Te- h oF etek a 00s ise mh ooking dookkans contain valua- hisshoos offand feet curlel up, a mat under him, anda] ‘The estimation in which the wite is held by her hus- .! " : fod the. ese inthe mow, with scarcely a rag fo cover | with arnised floor about three or four feet from the ground, and some of those rade-looking ns contain valua- his shoes o P, q A hich th rid by her hus imal of the Year, miereby great delays and dispointinents | rheitnakednese : and there is adrove. of slaves: for sale, | upon which the merchant sits on « mat, with long pips bleand useful articles. Ava general thing, however, it large pillow, stuffed with cotton, at his back, and appa | band and acqaintance, depends in a great degree upon her thips will com his arrangement dragging their rattling chains through the mud, in his hand, and transacts the important business of his ¢s- struck me as being otherw chaps they have an ob- renily. regardless of every thing else. fruitfulness, and upon the preservation of her children. ‘Ship YAZ Comell: tablishinent. ‘The shop: or deckkencasit it called, is tele joct in appearing this poor, and showing little in their Ordinary customers drive a bargain with the shopman { By allclasses, rich and poor, barreaness is still considered Tusaranet ov Wives ix Carmo dom more eapacious than a small-sized pantry, and looks were they to more adluent aspect, standing in front of the stall; whileold, established “pa- | inthe East a’ curse anda reproach ; and it is regarded os graceful ina man to divorce, without some cogent rea- on, awite who has borne him a child, especiaily while trons of the house,” or persons of better appearance, invited to take a plice beside the merchaht on the mat ; As we passed by these women, and drove along moder- | shout ay elegant as & countryman : votato-bin fitted up with ible pretext might be devised by those in ately, we soon eame to a large gathering of hi aked | shelves. It rarely contains more goods thana man could thority for disposing of the proprietor, and turning o rath: i people of all-sexes, shapes and colors, who were standing } carry on his back and these are not always worth taking hiselfects to the account of government, That m and if they make purchases to any amount, they are treat | uer child is living. If, therefore, @ woman uesire mer E, Captain Mumford. around a poor woman, with her hands tied behind her, | as agift. Still, dignified as an orang-outang, and patient may not be the ‘any rate, these they sit, the tur- ed to a pipe and a cup of coffee. But to “go shopping” in | ausband’s love, or the ‘respect of others, her giving birth Gaptain Leavitt. and lookinig on very indifferently, while a large, ugly | as a stagnant pool,the Turk sits an! smokes his days away baned merchants of Alex ttle stived-up a Turkish town, with a view of purchasing any thing, is | o a child is a source of great joy to herself und him; and Captain Dickinson. Arab was whipping her with acorbash in the most cruel | oyer this little mess of worthless trash, quite satisfied with confused boxes (for they erally a higgling, arduous, disagreeable business. her own interest alone is a suilicient motive for maternal " a Kaight. and unfeeling manner. We supposed that this woman | ¢},¢ important part that he is playing in the world’s myste- name of shops), @ he merchant usually asks full twice the sum thathe | ‘enderness, Very little expense is required in Egy pt for Were'all Tilt inthe city of New York, express- | WS criminal, suffering the penalty of some offence, and Hous tron bale g sincerely in the infallibility of is very willing, in the end, to take ; norisheto be brough' | he maintenance of a numerous offspring — lnuced, 80 € 4 ‘ orbitant position atonce, Consequent- lasses, in their little mercantile transac- rof words, and appear to be just on the ealing to bloody noses to enforce their ar- ave recently been | thatthe man who had tied her up, and was then laying on | the Py ophet—that the ‘accommodations | the whip so lustily over her back and shoulders, was the | Jestiny of their existence | jornassengers umeqaifed for comfort. ‘They are commanded | proper officer, appointed by the Pacha to perform this dis- | je pleased in another world for the good they ha ¥ experienced masters, who will make every exertion to give | agreeable duty upon his subjects w ban : ; ee is pic wok) Larrea ere ‘They will at all times be towed up and | Commit certain hefoo ry cryiig oo ay, inthis, There are, of course exceptions to this picture; sits quite in the front j ‘steamboat. ala Con Neither the owuiers oF captains of these ships will be reaponsi- | f0Ur astonishment, when, upon enquiring into the occa- greata blessing and honor is the bearing of many chil- iren considered by both sexes in the East, that a higher or nore flattering compliment could hardly be paid to a young lady than to wish her weil marred, and that she vay be the mother of a large number of children. On the birth of «child, it is usual forthe imends of the laces of business, ¢ at noon oron Friday kans. Th han rt of his Itttle stall, smoh fully working out rth, and that they yfor packets, are of light draft of water, hi 4 wly cappered and put in splendid order, w ble fy ry, bullion, precious stones, slated sion of this public whipping, we were told by one of th " "4 ‘ IT < * nother to make her presents, in proportion to their means orth dhy'lecists, parcel ‘or yackages sent by ox pat on board of | bystanders, that "it was only’ aman whipping hie wife !” TURKISH JUSTICE. tnd standing. ‘This. is generally tm money ; and if the them, unless regular bills of lading are taken for the same, which was a mere matter of every-day occurrence. I ex- hild happen to be a son, 4 youu piece of money is given, marane seereon ceca pressed my surprise to Mrs. Firkins at » state of things so n m " 1 "| i nd if adaughter be the issue, it is the custom 10 present a on trong! tor paseeees oi ts & CO,, 56 South st,, or revolting to humanity, and told her fh | Ny i My \ N i a vid piece, or one of very trifling value. HULLIN RWOODKURE, Agaut is, New | possible that such shomineble cute NA } if ane One would naturally suppose that the importance Ork who will promptly forward all goods to their address. | the part of am v vn || i HARE i i vhich Egyptian customs attach to fruittulness of mothers, ps of this line are warranted to sail punetually as ad- any country, it Mi H é \" Hii i cad the preservation of their offspring, would induce Tottised, and great care will be taken to have the goods eorrect- | Why,” staid \ nothing is more common r me yu Ne em to be exceedingly watchiut over their heulth and ly measure ae m_ | in Egypt than fo an to Whip his wife. | inquired of mt i] til they were no longer under their control. RPOOL PACKETS. one of my neigh the other day, how his wile did. lieve, dmong the move wealthy Egy ptiuns is “ £0,’ says he, «s! y well, very well indeed : ; ve case; and Thave been informed that their children are her a sound) ds « few days ugo, and she has been ten spoiled-by confuement acd effeminate Snavigence, SHE SEO EINE: of Pate Liverpoctenthaeatter be | Very good ever sut the chiidven which are seen running about the villa- vA dgrearcbod is ee following orders exceruing that when ihe | _Mrs-F. continued: The Egyptians must be whipped pm, olten in estate of n@dity, present the most f sailing ‘on Sunday, the ships will sail onthe succeed- | pretty often, or there is no geiting on with them at all. prevrance imaginable. ing day For New York. Vert 1 4a the corbash is freely, there is no difficulty, il mine ogee is stn have gor very IN to bin ii - ‘or New York. ‘or Liverpool. | and they go on famously. H uiliren in Egypt wing to the Warmth of the The SOUTH AMERICA, (uve Fes | N tndeed limate, they required few clothes, und ) oung children "1D. G. Baile: Feb Ma “ Yes,” rep! ‘4 al i vere in the habit of going without shoes, and with litte eS seen a 9 pped—and are not got well dress fi A war weno covering to their bodies; and so trifling was the ex- sired 5 down, once or tw! ‘oftener, each Fie ne wnse of bringing up a child, that it never need costa _B. L, Waite. 7] month. And servants who do not get whipt occasionally, { AS ' au thirteen shillmgs, English, unl arrived The OXFORD, 1) | think that they do not give satistaction, and that their at man’s estate. one aM tathbone, 19 | masters are displeased with them.” : ‘s up their children,” says Diodorus, * with ‘The EUROPE, i 7 p 7 ery little cost, and are sparing "pon that account to ad- 610 tons, 7 Bue Cine ves anp Memuoons in Eorrt. tion, for they provide for them bro:h,-made ot mean pC. Marshall 7 | The Memlooks were introduced into Egypt early in the ad poor stuff, that may easily be hav; and feed those EK. The NORTH AMERICA, 19 | thirteenth century. Their name imports militory slaves ; hat are of strength able to bear it, with the pith oi bul- GM tas wh 19 | and euch in fact they were originally, Circassians, these fire paso sly dea The NEW YORK, 7 | Mingrelians, and Abazans, who, as the spoils of war ‘ea raw, and sometimes boiled, and ‘wo 7 | among the barbarians of the Fast, had been crowded into fol.” Must ot viele children go 7 | the slave-markets of Asia, and were bought by the rulers 19 | of Egypt and formed into military corps. 19 The Circassian slaves of both sexes have ever been held varefuoted and naked, the 'T. B. Cropper. limate is 60 Warm and tempe- The CAMBRIDGE, £50 ton Itcosts not the parent, to bring up achild to man’s @state, above twenty drachms.” 19 19 i?) 1 1 rT) 19 19 1 1 1 iT 19 : W.U Barstow. 9 | in the highest estimation’ of any by the Turks.“ ‘The Such seems to have been the mode of treatment pur- The COLUMBUS, Sent 7 | Abesane cand siest te favour winteears the Mingreliaus ded by the audlaat Egyssigna towards the cbiiceens He G. A. Cole. May 19 uty 7 | next fter them the Georgians, then the Russians and s much the same with the moderns; and, judging from Punctuality, as regards the day of sailing, will be observed as | Poles, next the Hungarians and Germans, then the Ne- ppearances, [ should say that in the common run, heretofore, The price of passage outward beet’ ar Ore | groes ; and, last of all, the Spaniards, Maltese, and Franks, vardly cost more to raise a child in Egypt at the p Hundred Dollars, for which ample stores of every Gescrintion | whom they despise as drunkards, debauehces, idle and than was required for that puryose two thou will be pro with the exception of wines and liquors, | Dutinous.” ogo: Which will be furnished by the stewards. GOODHUE & GO , 64 South C,H. MARSHALL, 38 Burl jet tyh BARING BROTHERS & ( It is a fact worthy of remark, that of the many thou- sands of slaves of both sexes brought from the borders of the Caspian Sea and the region of the Caucasus moun- tains, and settled in Egypt in marriage with natives of their own country, not a soul has been able to perpetuate its kind. Every family, after the first generation, has be- come extinct. “The same iy also true of the ‘Turks, who : can only secure the continuance of their families by mar- Tee NA eA CRW TORR [izying Rgyptians. "A fresh supply of slaves from the East o has usually found a ready market in Egypt, from the time Cue Autuon’s Apvice ro Amenican Lapirs wo Tua Tuy NakeDNESs oF THY ProF One good substantial bonnet is quite enough, until it is vorn out, and even then, as the Turkish ladies wear nono bemselves, a lady from Europeor America, travel hat country, would run no risk of being thought ia her dress, to go without any bonnet at all hanges of plain, strong dresses, and their acco nenis, made with a view to pri pani- rough work, rather BELGIAN STEAMER BRITISH QUEEN, ty were Shee Tee ey ee eee eae deat; end much ‘more sppreprite far travelligg, in that ST M. M. Kuang; Co} (a I — spe Gerene ee pir gg Cee teins nl Ee and astranger in the place, for Tcame rity. Is not a cow worth a hundred and tibocit dd cude and barbarous part of the world, than a wardrobe palo wia “oo ip, Yalued by Turkish grandece tnd Mr. Lane intorme ©6 | rhe Governor of E-Menoo short time before lage; but the nazir had no iuore? And he has sold this for sixty rials; This ist)” | cuffalto bursting with the tragile dresses usually worn From Aptwerp, .” From Southampton, From New Yo Fpl y % P my present visit to Egypt,” § veollecting are become beggars, and bav Have mercy ranuy toward the owner” The defturdar the SY ladies in the cliiee of Hardpe arid Aimerton, To the ou: ions, and sometimes their wives ; and being generally xe the nazir, and strip him and ant the sun me justice; L implore it by thy har to some of the soldiers, * verlatively refined ladies of the “ literary emporium,” a village, deine rk, On 7th Jane, 1942 | preferred by them before the free ladies of Egypt, the | the taxes On 4th May, 1842, On 7th May, ° sara at meted 4 o« king alot x cause e be pind him.’ Th he said tothe butcher, ‘Butcher, | " dabl e of. it > Tih Beye. * tanh Be slaves hold a higher rank than the latter in common opin- | ofsisty rivals (ninety fuldahs each, Mek a a ocak Te a ea eo rer cRiTeliat® dest choc oot. fear Gear Thew bast willed the GoWus- | Settecs'et Noten cations won Gtoeoagh Gupiae Price of passage, meals not ‘on or | ion. They are richly dressed, presented with valuable | &hundred and thirty-five piastres, which was then equ s “wor b ch? 'F 1 that he was obliged to f who Chingl Geeceud We tie volgiahy of Cok 4 Antwer, Steward's fees, $2 62 he meals will be | ornaments, indulged frequently with almost every luxury J Valent to about thirty shillings). ‘The poor man urg petty ee de hay { dafintss, | iC VD othouabeyny morereveliin nhatetesamirsertiteg.* q , a a4 “ ~ essed nothing but a cow. which barely af- hy did you killit and sell it? ‘Heowed obey the aid the defturdar, 'if aloons by any more revolting name than “inexpresstbles, served om board, on the plan of'a continental hotel, iu the best | that can be ured ; aud, when it is not their lotto wait | that he possessed nothing y ; Y a 1 tanner, and at fixed and moderate prices, passengers being ouly | unon others! may in some cases be happy + 1 forded sustenance to himself and his family. Instead of T took his cow and killed it, -nd order thee wit thou do it?? [would beg leave to volunteer my advice not to goto Sharged when partaking ofthe same. upon others, may in some cases be happy ; as latterly has | Pursuing the method usually followed when 9 fellah de- sold it for the amo ‘nt.’ ‘Where is the butcher that killed will do it,’ ier. ‘Kill the nazit!’ saic | ceyptatail. Fer there, vulgar old Nature is exhibited in ‘The price of passage to either Of the above ports can also be | been proved, since the termination of the Greece, 4 y and brought. the urdar. several of the toldiers <style more obnoxious to good taste and refinement, if pos- ¥ ii declares himself unable to pay the tax demanded ofhim, it? ‘In Meuoof.’ The butcher was pent i tian | which is to give him asevere bastinading, the nazir (or The defturdar said to him, ‘ Why did you Kill this man's prese ° gress if preferred, with meals and steward’s fees included for | by many females of that country, thy 5000 t seized the nazi hrew him down, and ible, even than Greenough’s statues. Don’t go; by all posing themselves to poverty.” It is no strange thing to | buy it. The ea ee pera ipie deg an aap A, itinssof ie wernor), in this case, sent the Sheykh el-Beled to bring cow? ‘ The nozir desired me,’ he answered, ‘and I couli butcher cut his throat, in the regular orthodox manner © J neans stay at home; make petticoats ana ineapressibles,” For freight or passage, or agy further jntoriaat tate of thefr parents and other relations, or the fear of ex- fite poor man’s cow and desired some of th not oppose him. If{ had attempted to do so, he would killing animals for food. d i | osend to the Garden of Eden; and attend to your * biues HW. T. & A MALY A doe Drsants caventy: ing that they had not sufficient mo n me and destroyed my house; I killed it, and turdar, ‘into sixty piec the peopl | gut whatever might have been our opinion in reference 41 Be y , "ish? eail y others, looking on : bu P 22 6m*r “he ' . d_ desire 0 kill the co hazir gave me the head as my reward.’ ‘Man, eail concerned in the affair, and many others, looking o the good or bad taste of the Egyptian costume, we had EREEY RATE — = | see poor parents in Egypt publicly offering their own | he sent for a butcher and dusired him to Kill the co! lefturtar, ‘do you know the persons who bought the ing to speak. ‘The sixty peasants who had bough | Iready advanced too far,to retreat with satisfaction to our- NEW JERSE RAILRQAD AND TRANS: | children for sale; though it very rarely occurs, except in | Which was done. He then told him to divide i lied th lid. Th were then called forward, one alte: ly ithout going still further, and seeing more. We PORTATION COMPANY. cases of extreme distress and destitution. pisces, Ths Batch an naked ie his pay aes was nivott the meat Ke The mien on AR, aid. a u Lb Ohad Iota hess artis beak ot we ody rot in 5 Mists ine Count 9 hs > 4 cow. y ee ‘e then jed tog? en desired 8 ame t f aul ; NEW ‘XORK AND NEWARK. Youxa Grats axp Mararony in Eoyer. eryand each of them wes compelled to purcban ‘i men, and an order to the sheykh of the village, to bring zir, and to pay for it two ryals; $0 Leap ities osee its inhabitants, its antiquities, and otner peculiari ‘Among the laborers upon Mr. Larkin’s new building at | @ piece of the cow. ‘The owner of thecow went weeping them to Menoof, where this comp asmale. ‘The and twenty rivaly were obtained fromukem. They were | jes. If our eyes occasionally fell upon other than ite Alexandtix, we saw a large number of young girls from | and complaining to the superior of the navir, the late Mo- nazir an! batcher wore placedin confinement till tke nest then dismiseed 5 but the butcher remained. | The Ckedes, venti Ha foctlty; I ther, someting, dropped down . “My master,’ he,‘ 0} orning; when thesheykh of the village came, with the as aske at shou be the d 4 1 Innd— id Se tne ten to fourteen years of ago. | We were surprised to learn | Oecd and in misery; Thad no property Lutone cowra sixty fellaheen, ‘The two prisoners were then brought and answered that he shoul! be paid as he had been paid | Treumstance, a suticient barrier to deter us from pene- From the foot of | pete streat. New ork. how very young the Egyptian peasants ‘marry. ne or | milch cow; and Fand my family lived upon her milk; who said to the sheykh anitsixty by By nazir. rhs sient tur pee ordered thet tne | rating still deeper into the mysteries and the strange ma oe capaney Se Rtlead Sool - a | ees Serene etre oeaiaies faced her and killed her potest deptgre ie sent forthe ckadve of Menoof, vf that he had not been more unfortunate, and The scene before us was every way novel, peculiar, and a & && & & 33 ge. objection to the conjugal estate, that they get married as | taken her an Deeobe a ad pest Sane tm cas A piece him, ‘0 ck here is a man oppressed by th ¢ ing himseifto have so easily escape, until interesting. ‘Although first day upon the Nile’ wi do. y do. ind as soon as possible. i ah “1 r eae bot ak Cie che: aot his cow and killed it, and sold ite fi he arrived at his village. ‘The money paid for the flesh | Cainy and. disagreeably cold, which necessarily com de Ww do. Being married once is only a beginning of matrimonel | ye at cette cow war algndred ani rivals. Whatis thy judgment? ‘The ckadee repliod, "He of thenazir was given to the owner of the cow.”, Selled us to keep within our little stived-up prison of a iom fre foot of Libery street MRE oat Common thing Inthe cork Ig | twenty riyals, or more. Iam oppressed and in misery, isa cruel tyrant,who oppresses every one under his autho- cet ASAP Ee line yet: ater tie. frst shock, we dls vom the foot of Liberty street. y 5 . ery, ; aot regard the numerous bugs and other creeping plagues Leave New York, weave Newark. addition to which, there are almost constant and continual vith which our new quarters were infested, further than 9A, 13% B. M._ At 12 Noon and 10 P.M Old wives are being devoreed, end new ones * . ; i * . r’ of 4 A ‘ann al They ei lessy h: parted in front, and silk dress, a short jacket of fine cloth or velvet, richly em } to brush them off as they felldown upon us from the ROT A EN iLL Pils eit places; sothat the matrimonial ceremony, | A LAVENTINE LADY AT CAIRO. FRET sathcroun Mit thichlty speneled with gol or- broidered’and faced with gold lace. These showy habili- } ceiling, or erawlod up from the floor. . rea in some of its various forms, is almost continually passing + cow : e bac ents of the ladies seemed to be in perfect keeping with a evening, however, closed a ai " before thei A : M naments, and hanging at fall length down the back. ment) tl i to Pr ping When the shades of evening, , aroun Lezve New York. ave Etizabeth Town. Bete areciscany Sed intermingled: a0 it wore with thelr Overa red tarboosh, with long tassel spangled with gold, the red caps and flowing dresses of the gentlemen ; and, | us, ourreal troubles commenced. A scene indescribably 9 A. ug A. M. a Srocetiony fs : they wore a ly embroidered turban, alorned with all combined, they formed one of the most singular groups | srirring was now opened to our astonished gaze. Where ahi rr jo ad eooentneasse ae fig hemp elhg’ fbn pc hig brilliants.. ‘They also hadon, over their loose striped raw that I have ever witnessed. vay here and there an insect was discoverabl farough 4% P.M 5, FM Egyptian, therefore, wao has fo h : ; fond A, geno ; ox ee » woo has four good hearty youn; THE LADIES OF A HAREM.—A LADY IN A BATH pearance as soon as we struck a light; blackening the gue etal ten tener ws ith these | Wives is looked upon'as aman, as the English say, “we > LA us iM.—A L N A B: 5 een Pe satiny aie Gobten OF lines each we} daily, Sunda Hhemnetr wages i. pee bod the wor! Macubinn bee would express them- ae athe alg cabin, pouring down upon “ansengers are requested to purchase tickets at the office. foot | selves, “in a very flourishing condition.” ‘Theseare bles- r eno “humbugs.” They were all genuin of Liberty street, sings, 1 suppose, which those who find it hard to work to | Thete were 1 Bs g e Kare between New York nd Elizabeth Town 25 cents support one, would hardly wish to enjoy; still the fellahs pe oe Oakes rs ef the’ Ssiochiot that te ia NEW YORK, RATIWAY AND NEW BRUNSWICK, | ofthe vale ofthe Nile think otherwise; and if they can their power. ‘They were every where, on all sides, tarn Fare reduced. Sn * | keep out ofthe army, and evade the suspicion of the ‘Turk- which way we would ; look up or down, before or be- sph Rice fee feos of ivery syst, daily. isk wovernors, they bn Ln bape SE eaciees: sind, on the right hand or on the left, there was nothihg aro Ra ym ao Oy + hind pe ST deriv : Mirebengee » that “poor but Bugs, bugs, bugs! ‘They were not of the diffident or AM. P.M: "W vocial kind either. They made themselves ith us as though we had been old acquaintances Like the frogs of Moses, which came up into the houses and bed-chambers of the Egyptians, into their familiar ‘ 0 PM. ADny Goon Stone 1x ALExaxpnta, Rahway,’ tt New York and New Bronewick, 75 cents. | ‘The bazars of Alexandria are mostly skirting littl nar- ents r q ‘The fare in the 736 A, M, train from Now Brune iM | row, muddy, unpaved passage-ways, #0 mall and con- i ; : M en re | tracts to render it impossible to pass a carriage throngh ue ee ovens, and into their kneeding-troughs ; that‘covered the FM Oni vy Warn col Rowe Sraavelehr tee coees oman : , fi inne" and, and came both upon Pharoa snd hie servan nawiek, to 50 4 them; athing, indeed, which is never attempted. It is cents. | the ing am ipon all his people—so those legions of tormenting bugs same upon us, covering our Dacks, legs, arms, necks, hands and faces ; crawling deliberately into our bosoms ; tual even to ride on horseback or on donkeys in ; though when we were in Alexandria, it © been quite ont of the question to have passed | not cy and Ralway to a On Sundays the 736A. Me tripe from New Branswick ted. "Passengers who procure their tickets at the Ligketofftce, re- | bythe con: ceive a ferry ticket gratis. Tickets are receive | dry-shod in any other manner than mounted, and even e entering into our pockets; running down the back of our ductor only on the day when pu a then, the little low animals slumped into the mud so vecks, and rumaging over our persone and effects with all FARE AND FREIGHT much, that one’s feet were not always clear of the mire ho vile gilance “ the London custom-house oflicers and water. sxamining a Swiss jeweller. jast our case be ‘The passages of the bazars are generally covered over iesperate. We could endure itno longer. | We rose with Frith s Mat ‘roof of loose boards or maiting, extending \ determination todo something 3 but what, we scarey irom the tops of thejbuildings on eith«r side. This cover- cnew. it was a new and strange enemy ; old 3 LGULAR MAIL CINE FO) NCE A} ing merel. ‘i lari 1 he siege in so pertinacious / .D i 2 | in ly affords a shade and protection against th jaring in attack, and pressing the seg’ te woe ON. fallowine vanecigratramer, MunRIne fe chien: | Piercing rays of the sun, without even an apology for a ind determined a style, that we were really more amaced tion with ro Stonington and Providence, and Boston and shelter from the drenching rain ; consequently, when the han indignant. At first, we sought to od tenho at vidence Rasiroad ; ng come, the water pours along these litle narrow ‘om their aveanit, rather than come to, a, pisehed battle at SSA HUSETTS, Captain Comstock. ‘v8, which have no di nage or pavement, and are con- mee, and manfally ahide the inene. ra the lamb RAGA NUE TY tins Wat stantly under the poaching tread of a multitude of hoofs : ted om and kept up with such vigor, that even the lam AGANSETT, Captain Woobsey and human feet, until the veriest slough or mudhole in a Tre Lavtes or 4 Harem -A Lavy x a Bor thom ving been easily arranged, the | jxcmembers of the “New England Non-resistance So- One of which will leave New York daily, (Sundays ex- | *tnken marsh or swamp can hardly be worse, or more \ The ladies returned at alate hour; ani, with o la lies, sounds of the tambourme an: J sjety,” had they been placed in similar circumstances m vs ry lifficul peed set tho ‘ 7 been justified before th egpted) from Pier No.1, North River, Battery Place, at five | ‘ifficult and disagreeable to pass through. Yet, bad and = ception, all were delighted with their r Ha #! the mazy dance. The yonne | vith ourselves, would have been j e o'Bock, P.M. miry as they really are, they are crowdel to suffocation i we coveries at the harems. They foand th laties, es Wrinklebottom and Rimtnper iv | world, and heaven too, in girding up their loins, buckling ARRANGEMENT, : by an almost infinite multitude of wretched beings, splash- i, these establishments niorned with precious jewe parcicn ei themselves with infinite credit, an: 'n the armour of war, and taking the field. BRS Bs, #P ‘The NARRAGANSE’L, on Monday, for Stonington, and | ing through the mud, a great part of whom appear to. be = costly attire, seaved upon the floor, with their pipesin amused t tians beyond measure. Barus 1x Geamany. Typredey foe Stonington! rrort Tuesday. int Stonington, | 8¢ctuated by no motive or view, other than to mingle with = their mouths, listening to the soft murmurs of gushing ‘The Mi rand Wrinklehottom were all tall ‘The Germans are very fond of the bath. They fre. Hateamaik Pacticee: a Wtierie Mecduaten + | the throng, and idle away their time in listless, snmean- 3 ca fountains, and surrounde: ves, all without any protuberances of surface, and of nearly the J caily indulge in itfor honrstogether. Thave witnessed ‘The RHODE ISLAND, on V S yep tion, and loud, vacant laughter. Over this At lazaling cost and same circumt theonghout their entire altite seed ofthe watering places twenty or thirty Ia lies and Saturday, for Stoningt Newnagt, ind Providence. sink and corrupt stew of filth, dung, mire, and misery, the though the *, This sty pleveed the Egyptian ladies wo wotlemen in a bath at the same time—all seated, envel- Passengers on the arrival of ers at Stonington, cross-legged Turks sit from day today, and from year to Indeed, that may her 1 d-vaety, an thoy propose! dae chine ih water, There they the morn- ba! Se Fp Reiroed ¢ ‘ars and procee mediately to Provi ire opposite a i, epee swt that they might A Laventine Lapy at Caro. bellvs of the harem are ally immoveable mountains of d emant!s on nklehottom, ey Ire i, discussing the incidents of the times; taking their joston. ho ight their pipes he fire of each other's mustubeh,with- . of the theatre, and all the “rank fat. tence of shion of dress. T' fe t ing the pane emoking. ht tak: 1 follo duced rates : . eh wi This was the first night of th - ‘ Te; reading the panere , and smoking. ‘Vo Boston. on. goods “weighing forty: pounds or upwards to | OUt Faising themselves from the floor of their own little | and fashion” of Cairo were in attendance. ‘The scene was _ In one house, after sherbet and coffee had gone rowwnd, young lots col. Desieting from | “Inthe metropolisof Hungary. 1 recollect seeing a bathe the eubic foot, at $5 50 per tou, and ou measurement goods 7 oi poe a of Turkish gimeracks, drags, gewgaws, | truly novel and exciting. ‘I number of the guests were invited to dance. The Engl h ladies ¢ieir imporcunitics with Mise Wrinklebottom, they too! ng house, where © warm bath may be hed for e sum leve cents per foot, and scents. ine went, 8 was wor. realily assented to this propesition on condition that the of theirownj y and many articles of theirclothing, | ‘cant | bath, however, was supplied by a fo at foTiuce, om mensarement goods S eeuts per cubic | ‘These stalls or shops are formed (rom a kind of recess, Neate sie Prorei meofthem were beautiful, "All inmates of the harem, or rather those whose obesity aid exhibiting ove thing after another to thelr gaeata for thelr J, \tn one cman, bis Palle, Monster the Rena wing road wa mieten aa per wil wo be oveamedsitéme °Pening out in its whole extent upon the passage way, ! wore gorgeously arrayed in brilliant and rich costume, not constitute them “ permanent fixtures,” would joi , whom they expected to see imitate thelr eX | yatned jn ft promiscuously, without regard to age or sex