The New York Herald Newspaper, May 11, 1850, Page 4

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=~ Cur French Correeondence. ter, thie great event happened on the 12th inst. at | toilette was one of the most unapproachable there ey ony, ; oo pees » dice ; 7 ns. 4 o'clock PM. V to say, it that it. in my polit . Ti Me died — "Bia. Apa 25, 1850, dey, it the same ‘hour of it, phen rogatan nae The emium cf 2,000 france was won by Mee- | is so in our city of Paris, ‘hat I had i ob sine, @ M. letter ng the seat of the great Carolinian’ vacant. There is probably no country m the world where | in the very act of lifting his gigantic and heroic ie mn "saad, 7 that Pius IX. left, as a fugitive, the holy cig 8 years old, belonging to M. h no time to collect many but my next few inonuments of art, taste, or patriotism have | arm in defence of the native institutions of the ‘The Porig Eleeticn—The Cand da Eugene Sue Keme, where he Pony A psy * amidst ‘4 i. ‘The apie of 6,000 france, founded by the | will give you the total list of eaten, re " sreted to great public men, asin the United | country, and in defence of the constitution. Mr. | (4 44«lerr—Prewdhen's Fate—The Deportation | conven, und the acclamations of the ple, who cyt Pasi, wus won by a heme 3 years old, ek no doubt, it will be to all those who States. On the continent of Europe, at almost | Benton, who is pompously called the Father of the meg es “eRe rete oe op mae ecemed to be desirous to eee again bien of whose a belonging ea rot pa at Pe ae ee ah dilbe siti every step, the traveller has his attention arrested | Senate, has dwindled frem the dignity that oace pores wa ho eee itical Questions— wine ree a Wich Sass Se seer Sant | EE Te Bs iowa’ AOC roe, | Nas >» G05 Fe. : - ‘The weather continues to be fine, and all the | | Poughkeepsie. Mr. by the sight of some monument, statue, painting, surrounded him, into a drivelling hock of the y ‘ ii oraiaae of distinguished characters and grest mennest party that this or any other nation ever | — Gtest preparntions are preceding the election, | hed been erected, all along the road from ‘ a reg } " z . Y which will tske place on the 28th inst. In three | tiers of the Neapolitan Bagios te 5 Cc Valentino, La Chawmier?— ins Tramt, New York, ie, Walter events. This sentiment of veneration for illustri- | had the honor of holding—the nigger party. It dave moth. Wtiee will kacw if Paemeae to | Cbthucissm was general. 1 ng the two days pre- thoee * Schools for Scandal” of the French Baby- sa hengdon, and ous citizens manifested itself among all the early | seems to be the height of this gentleman’s am- ns ° : se vicus te the entry of Pius 1X into the holy city, i ‘Suydam, N. York. Mr. ? and »mong all the | bition to kiek up a row in the Senate, and see how | °FdeF er to enarchy. The sholen oe eee seme petsone. he see every taeene, in their | vieited Ly all that youth of Paris, which is called M. Suydam, New Mr. Rider, New ¥: republice of antiquity, more especially, it seemed | much consequence he can borrow from a quasi | Www (he first experiment to be made, and How the | Jewitt Te Mutt he Pereeiad nuumerous bills | at dhece bella belong to thas class comme fx Adieu, B. i. R. to constitute one of the principal national charac- | seuffe with Mr. Foote. As for Mr. Seward, the h bs ae er “eae oy “a ¢ ~ | ccnteining the most bitter langage against the | of Paris; and many strangers, Americans, ——ererremeemrnnnereenners-npsiens ' teristics. Hitherto, very little respect has been | world knows his history so well, we can afford to | CU°*e® + Dupent de "Eure, a man of great probi- | Pepe, the church, and the French army, and their noticed sneng Naval Intelligence. let hi Humbug has been the secret of his | 'Y* universally and highly esteemed in the country; | genersls, had been posted on the walls of Rome. rs. 1 could, if I would, se: The U. S. ship St. Marys, with shown to the departed sages and heroes of the | let him go. Humbug has been * | but this gentleman had been President of the pro- | Great numbers of torpedoes and infernal machines | to you many names well known in New York, | Geisenger, late commander-in-chief of the East revolution of "76, and their descendants probably | ¢levation, and humbug will be the cause of his} i) t, and the ultra leaders of the | bed been thrown (fortunately without effect) in | which were noticed at Mabille the other night—en- | India squadron, sailed on the 22d of February, for feel that, by imflated, bombastic and ridiculous | downfall. It will carry any man along for a while, | rer eit igh ibe hi ination. He then | ‘7 centre of groupe in the cafés and public a joy the polka, as that which you may see, in | the United States, Fourth of July orations, they have discharged sa- | but the faster he goes, the quicker will be his party did not with to ratify hisnomination. of the city. Ail these things were without and Pe ‘e| The nations, in a vanety of form tidectorily, atleast othemcelves, the debt of grat- | journey ; aud the higher he rides, the deeper he | "ae displaced by M. Engine Sue, the sdvaneed | ii, NEN tps Sere lov ned ceclnmnations megeunene paar namie? The U.S. hip Plymouth, bearing the broad tude they owe to their fothers. A great many in- | will full. Mr. Webster, at the most exciting period | F°pUnE! Of the party, the moe! Aas ‘These. detaila I have gaibsred from two Ameri. Franconi as you call it in New York, | pennant of Commodore P. F. Voorhees, sailed on effectual attempts have been made to raige mation- | inthe history ofthis negro Congreas, came forward, | Yimin, Ja rue did the motetely SETS ORAS | cam gentle men, my friends, who were present, and | which ie now in the okilfal hands of M- Dejoam: | the 22d of February, (or Coch Ce sae al monuments to the great men of the past age, to | and occupied a sublime position, and pronounced had ne power, adieven M. Emile de Girardin had | and the behaviour of his subjects. All the neigh- | last, and it has been still, as it will be for the w! is the list of her officers :— whom the nation is so much indebted for its exist- | not only one of the greatest forensic efforts ion no influence. He has been defeated, and, very toring people of Rome had invaded the city 5 “and omens opened to the public. The | horses are | | Commodore, P. ¥; Voorhees; Pin ey em i i iti »d h 1 ty whan f . e sight of thote masses, dressed in their et e 3 vi pretty, exercises ;, Ldeutenenta, 4 brgy 2 nd doting ongt ees republic sad ee eee ec pitist rar Udisesdseac 12 Beirne likely, will not dare again to preeent himself at the | att colors of their costumes, adorned wach varied— the public deligh dtenant ¢; the gaud) . ny Aoting Lew But there are other forms, through which the . - : cleeti i is opinions to those of M. | with sienna iceman the Contadini, the Tyune- | Such are the amusements of Paris for the mo- | &.P; Welsh, C.H. Wells, and J. Lee Davis; Acting gratitude and admiration of a nation can speak, | * Sudden, universal, and inexpressible aston- pessip ba ey ned Jad ennicehd that he | feverins, and all the different classes of ‘inhabitants | ment. ‘The soirées and concerts are over. It is | fitet Surgeon, J. Hopkinson; Purser... Warrington. Jr. besides monuments, and forms which are often | islment; because nobody supposed that ae pie socialista; but | Of, Rome and its vicinity, formed a remarkable | now the epoch of the great dinner ies and of | G. R. Goldeborough; MI Breg would conquer the aficction of the 5 but | spectacle, which cannot be forgotten by any one | the amusements of Parisian | Cornwell,and K.P. W more enduring and better adapted to the condition | M9 whose greatest achievement had hit he made a vain bow ; the salute was not returned; | who saw it. ne 18 guve, the other day, th thata | t junner, J. C. Davis; Carpenter, H.@. ‘Thomas; and habits of a republican prople like our own. been to make a powerful speech for a cliant that the politeness and acquaintance were declined. It | Pius IX. entered Rome in a post-chaise, sur- n Gener ae guta had taken lace at the Elysée Beifaaker, B. B. Burehsted. fi The invention of printing has enabled one age | Paid kim a tremendous fee, would be equal to an is eaid M. de Girardin h ‘ocd memory, and, no | 'Unded by the French troope, and escorted by the | National. The most considerable men of the go- | | Paste ee A. a ae pad Ralomatio fo transmit to all coming times the sentiments by | ¢mergency like that, and acquit himself with such | '* S016 |. Ce Girardin has 8 & pian. tien, who kneeled on the place of the Seale yernment and the National Assembly were there. | sent to i Rev. Dean, < ili doubt, the red republicans will know it one day or | Renta, (the. holy ladder) and demanded. to The Vice President of the Republic, all the minis- i which it was stirred and guided, and the art of en- | "anscendent honor and ability. Buthe hascome | | Anyhow, the publisher of the Presse has | blessed : him, ‘He alighted in front of thechurch | ters, General Changamier, Mi. ‘thiers, Mole, Sirs and spr fh bese’ cam unk ae ab ao, Capt. Siaaghter, were “ im. < forms, has, i tion | £0 Very near bartering away the fame he acquired 8 of St. Jean de Lateran, and was there received Berryer, de Montalembert, Duke of Broglie, de z pice pare beeniriam by that speech, that the public confidence which | °° lost all hope. ‘The democratic oot aes have all the Sacred College, the authorities of Raat Remuset, Piscatory, Lamartine, Merode, Mignet, S23 Leroi the prise ge te bound 08 leswares . was so rapidly centring upon him, has now taken | Promised to elect him in 1862, at the gene | the diplomatic corps, and all the eminent persons | ‘Tracy, de Beaumont, de oes, Lord ‘Do a 4 another direction, and the idolatry of the nation is tion, if he bebaves till then as a faithful defender | of the city. When Pius IX. entered the church, he Montebello, Lag tien hho ae pier pang ee slowly returning to its ancient idol, and Henry lard, and aay coher, notables, | ws, Commenter i Clay now reigns triumphantly in the hearts of the immense in raving, in all its var With typography, b tion in our times, that there has probably never been a period in which such complete, satisfactory of the party. But such a length of time is very | S#w four French priests, who were standing in his | no, de Corcelles, he . passage, and he went to them, saying, “Ah, there | lier, Abattnis, Vie gal UP, ls j » ao cooghe:: Siu through many trying crises, ‘Two candidates appear on each r whom ¥ deal, for the honors of this day belong | the most magnificent style. On the next da: ‘it | Naval Hoepital. ed from Genos March 6th, and own. We venture to assert, that no nation has 4 ‘ cade of revolution and order—they are the leading | to them,” and he gave his hands to be kissed by | was whispered at the National Ameatiy, in | passed Gibraltar March 19th. The following is a list ever existed, which hus preserved so clear, in- | butie has always been found equal tothe occasion. | 1 svesses Leclere and Eugdne Sue. In'the | them. A_ religious ceremony took place in the | the political circles, that Prince Louis Napoleon | of her officers:—Samuel Mercer, Keq., Commander; structive, and authentic records of its early his | N° man in the country has acquitted himself ng h dif. | Church of St. Jean de Lateran, and after it the Pope | had demanded the hand of one of the Infantes of | Licutenauts I. K. Thatcher, H. W: Harrison, W. Ross : aa od : ¥ with so much honor, on so many occasions.— | &t#goniem of these men, selecte oie retired in a carriage of gala, which was escorted | Spain, a sister to her Queen Ieabella. The | Gardner, M. Carrington Watkins; Purser, H. M. Hies tory, as the United States. A vast number of ws --. | ferent conditions, there is a lesson well understood by his private guards. From this moment the | great Sultan of Turkey has sent our President the re Pasced Assistant » Lewis J. Williams; works, of great Around no other man’s head have 80 many civie | ang ppreciated by all those who have intelligence. | French army receded, and left all the honors of the | order of the ‘ Nitcham Iftikhar;” eee je ayou Pin yg rmed Passed Midshipman Edward Barrett; ey, taal history Rave boon published; and teean | S20 sis secp hes beat totenich slanted and ee | SRGRDRERAEDecctc acts Berehipenal | Resexgeesion eer cen | pouleere eon ote W. i Wileor, John Van Mecollumy, Captala's Clerk’ aj P es i i i ici leon would have no Rat whatever, and ™ time to time, even during the infaney of the fine | When his step has lost = avick resenee sescetrntd ypeee talented man, but his moral is always di- The banner was hoisted on the Castle St. would, of course, challenge all the other pow ee ee Se ae be — arts in this country, several illustrated editions of | “ *¢ar and yellow leaf” is rustling to the first blast of reoted by the meet extracrdinary fashions. When he Ange, ian a salute of hundred and one cannons was | exce}t that of the socialists. geod Ee eee ees pea “ince. M. Orookir; Car- the national history have appeared. Among these | Winter, the old trunk still stands firmly rooted inthe | was a young man, the famed writer used to love com- | fire: by the French artillery. When the Pope en- Our friends and pelghbora cf, Great Britain have Henry M. . ‘Pheodore Thompson and earth, for ever defy ing every thing but the last hur- | fort ; but now luxury is his only passion—a habit of | tered Place St. Pierre, the coup d’eil was beau- | announced another visit at Paris, which will take Fae Durant, seamen, on the passage home. ty and value, on her na- may be mentioned a national Portrait Gallery, , A - f c - ‘at q . ‘i i which he cannot be deprived. Fullof refinement and | tiful indeed. My two American , who were | place in a few weeks. Great preparation are ma- | P ‘ol. J. Rowan, late Affaires at published some five-and-twenty years ago, by Silas sigan rane i ee ae could speak to-day, elegance in his taste, 4 has built and created the | on the top of the Dime told me that they had never | king in Paris for their reception, and no doubt it —— —_ gr fier be eoaee ae io i Herring, the painter. It embraced the portraits of | #24 its voice be listened to, it would be a chorus | ost magnificent villa, or rather castle, ever seen a sight more im) and less to be ten | will be a splendid affair. Lo ppb Leg cog me ed oo Norfolk ae agreat number of eminent Americans; and al- | bUzt of applause, and the last honor of the repub- | scribed by « romance writer in a tale. "The Cha- | in the life of a man. Cries of Viva i Papa! Lc The festival anniversary proclamation of the re- | y414, Moy 7. though the work displayed little of the luxury or | 1i¢s Which his brows have waited so long for, would | teaw des Berdes, situated in that part of France | evita al Pio Nono ! were uttered almost by a public on the 4th of Yay ee, will also take . ——_-— Sue's datauian* te Ubeanahaee a oe ee be accorded to the great statesman. To show the srlied La ¢, Which he has depicted in hig | voice, compoeed of more than twenty per- | place in twe weeks, and 200,000 francs have been Commen beret El 5 ae 4 ois ea lemoirs of Martin the Foundling,” is considered | ons. It was with such a general joy that the holy | voted for its celebraticn. BOARD OF ALDERMEN. yet it was a contribution of very great value to | S¥blimity of his present position, it is enough to say | one of the most magnificent residences of this age. | pontiff entered the Quirinal. [During the evening | ‘The annual exhibition of pictures which used to | Tuxsvay, May 9.—Present—the President and @ the archives of our national history, and to our | “at from the moment it was known that he was | There are the mest eplendid horses, the most nu- | the city was illuminated, my fri told me, | open at the Music National, at the middle of this bf Rode pray odo meeting weroread end approved. Seas ob ouienebeet chairman of the Committee of Thirteen, all agitation | merous packs of hounds, the most costly wines, | that it seemed {to them that another Joshua had | month, has been ed until the 15th of No- wad " hi A 4 the most Juxuriati n houses, the most fash- | stopped the sunJfor'the night was as bright asa | vember next. at number of pictures are phase? 4 ‘ on the slavery question ceased, and the entire sub- ionable ‘ecoletariane Eareting, comfort, ete.; and | beautiful day. ail a day Por Pius IX, for Rome | ready for it, and mene them I will notice those of PA Beod ogg caheladh ae Dt oda ila ject became still. Not a state in the Union, nora | the master of all ese superfluities of and for France! Jt will not be forgotten in the an- | two American painters, Messrs. Powell and Healy, | Of T. M. Gerry, tohave asuit against him discon- Bur hitherto no work had appeared, in a style 3 man in the Union, but knew and felt that Henry | man who has written that no man should be al- | nale of hi . Several cries against the Pope | of New iad now living in Paris, and who are | tinued— which could rival the magniticence of such works published in Europe. ‘The announcement that a : v i joy: fluous things, while | were heard, during this solemnity, but they were two large pictures for the United States. I | OfJ. F. Butterworth and others, for the rescinding * Gallery of Iustrious Americans,” which was Clay was the safest, and greatest, and best man in there hy Wibelde pigs Mewar a piece of | uttered, it is said, men, of anon led vill A you the Stecrintion of thetr pictures in my | of the ordinance directing sewer to be built im designed to fill the vacant niche, was about to be | ‘8¢.¢oMfederacy, for that business, or for any other. | bread. Yes! this Sybarite of our modern age, this | that they were not of any account. The return of | next letter. Fourth avenue, near Twenty-sixth street. Referred. We shall, from time to time, trace the progress | Lucullus in kid age and patent leather boots, | the Pope to Rome, is undoubtedly a great event, Horace Vernet, the celebrated artist, leaves ina Bs er dating wach et nr a @ Ane for eclling published, was cordially gre of this gallery of illustrious Americans, and speak | this Alcibiades of the novels, this Brummel of lit- | and a proof thay democracy cannot reign in | few days, for Russia, where he goes to represent mevonrs, Etc. ed in all quarters ; but there seemed to be some apprehension, lest a - - ” . : 9 erature, this lion of Paris, this Lovelace of our bou- ju) . It is said that the government of Chili, | the last wars of Ilungary. ‘The Emperor has call- treets, 7, work, involving #0 many difficulties, and co much | °Lit8 Portraits and biographies ; and, in closing, we | Goire, is the candidate of the democracy. the dominion of which the Pope } Mastal had visited, | ed him there to do thet work, which’ no doubt, will ing’ Tana’ epping Thirtyecrud poi od je: ger peo po ‘We have will say that, if it is completed as well as it has be- The other citizen, M. Leclerc, isa manof the peo- | when he was young, has sént him a bar of gold | be*one of the most brilliant the French painter has | Broadway and Third avenue. Ado} ted. gun, it wili be the most valuable work ever pub- pies an old soldier of Napoleon, who reddened with | worth 30,000 dollars, in the form of bread. ever done. Communication from the Chief Mogincer, relative to lished in this country, and will. secure for ite his blood the ground of Waterloo. Atthe peace of M. de Raqueval was spoken of as if he was to be M. de Lamartine will also leave Paris in a | 8 complaint made by Hose Company No. 40 against : i . er 120; Leclere exchanged his musket for a tool, | sent to Rome, as our Ambassador, but itis now | month. Ile goes to Constantinople, either for his | Engine Company No. i. Referred. " jectors and those who are concerned init, the most | and he became as good a workman as he had been | about certain, that the Cardinal Du Pont, who is | health or on a mission. The reason of his depart- bee polenta ey ogg liners or 8 neglected any special notice of this work hitherto ; but the numbers are now being issued with se much regulerity and rapidity, and with ; 4 5 d from tho Fire D. yi eu sik 3 enviable fame, a courageous soldier. 1 told you, in my last letter, | the friend of Pius IX.,will occupy the post at Rome. | ure is not yet well known. named poreans from the Fire Dey pete ae inca ceaange renin f RMA Be ne ren gg What a remarkable heroism was’ displayed by this | His choice is universally approved. "M. Thirton, of the firm of ‘Thirion et Maillart, of Phen mer teen 0 dots om tice. It is to be com- ur Froop at Frrensure, Mass.—The Fitch- | gentleman, during the awful insurrection of the Asyou see by the preceding facts and news, | New York, died in Paris, three days ago. This ger, and Thomas Churchill, from Engine Company No. plete in twenty-four numbers, and the proprietors | burg Sentinel, extra, of the 8th inst., gives the Sth of June, 1848. The narration of this glorious | everything is quiet at Rome; the revolutionary gentleman had many friends and sppreciators of his | 4s,’ Adopted. hope to finish it before the present year closes. following further particulars of the great loss of | deed leoks to me like a page of the story of Sparta, | spirit has now taken refuge in Piedmont. Under the | fine character in our city, and he left many regrets | Returns of the Chief Engineer for the month of 2 a e pro peay incurred by the breaking of reservoir dam | asan heroic action. Yes! the soldierof Waterloo, | pretextof the freedom of the press and the repre- | behind him. c April. Disposed ef in the usual manner, Each number contains a large, faithful, and ex- | 2 Ashburnham, on Monday morning. The reser- | the workmen, the national guard who gave his two | sentative government, the party of Mazzini A very curious enlistment has taken place in rom the Street Commissioner. in fay or of regulating quisitely engraved portrait of a distinguished man, oid ee eat oat acies, 4 and ite destruction ia sons to the republic, is the candidate ‘of the bowr- bean avs ived at Turin, and no doubt tere will be, Parte fer the laa eight ueye, The suchen! Repub- fn peo street, from Third to Fifth avenues. Ke- biographical sketc! “ beh *§ ised mot F ¢ to property ecisi¢, the party of order in France. — 2 fore long, another attempt at a revolution in | lican Guard of Caussidi¢re are enga; yy an as- 4 and _ raphic . k 4 aide two sheets of draw- | has ever occurred at one time fa that part of the Threat fg the position of this last party is Piedmont.’ The young vy i everything, | sociation to go to California. More than two hun- aoe pak teal nm Ase a omgry te erga ing poper, printed en large type, making altogether | State. The Sentinel mentions the injury or entire | the best for the elections. The Union Llectorale | because he is not fiee. He fears to be obliged, in | dred of these men have already been enlisted. Also, submitting proceedings in relation to a set- the most superb specimen of typography that has | destruction of no less than twenty-six manufactur- has a very excellent chance, and it is hoped that | case of a revolution, to impose new taxes upon his They cre promised with a fine part in the its, | tlement with the contractor, for loss sustained by hina been seen in this country—and, so far as our ob- and other establishments in Ashburnham and | their candidate will succeed in being nominated.— ople. You have no idea how much money the | when at San Francisco, and three france a at are | in abandoning contract for addition to pier 12, North servation goes, in any other. Each number is co chburg, and adds: “ There was much other | No one can tell what will be the result ef the elec | last war with Austria has cost that country. The | allowed to them till they will leave France. ‘Their | River. Adopted. bs gee, alin per is con- | damage done to property in Ashburnham, the par- | tion ; but if the government keep quiet and employ | dead king, Charles Albert, who was a sparing man, | paseage will be free, and when they arrive there, From the President of the Croton Aqueduct Board- tained in @ cover, which serves the double purpose | ticulars of which we were unable to gather. Every | no means to excite the people, M. Leclerc willbe able | hud amassed 160,000,000 of franes, and all that has | they will be furnished with tools and every kind of | s*king to have the ordinance in relation to contract, ing and le of a portfolio for the engr is e!so a journal of urt imperial fol especie, aid dam on the pou a the reservoir to Rockville, pent week to take hie seat in the National Asmably. been devoured in the last twoyears. This situa- instruments, Thos far they have et boda Wane | ee carte west S thy Seeertennt, ae eee Be. 7 4 rid: ross it, as low | Unfortunate! . Carlier, the chie! fet of Po- | tion cannot remain thus a ime ; and jiecover what is the object of ign. tepher tad cyan The | down as West Fitchburg, is swept wen A The lice, the carve individual who gave orders for the | government of Turin does not Ay out the party of “Great activity has taken place in the of well py See & ery 4 teat u by twenty-three | people of the town feel their loss very sensibly, and | cutting down of the liberty trees, and the spoliation | Mazzini, it willbe lost. Austria is wang mons | Baise, Snes Bee het me a the Grand Opera we | curred in. ie inel The first number con 1 the porteait | €prees their opinion that they can never recover | of the wreaths of La Rolonme de Jurilet, is now | der to oceupy with troops Genoa, Ale: and | had the pleasure of hearing tone Tn favor of issuing duplicate certificates of assess- and biography of General lo oan with | from the effects of this terrible Tdienster It is es- | trying another Shia tick with the very 4 jo } Coni. pal A the of Vienna ie Barhoillel, who has been re- by M. Roque- | ment sale to Robert W. len. Adopted. tog’ y . timated that the loss to the town ol Ashburnhain | view of excitmg the w furnish fr. ed, and the posi is rn 4 that, in case of a riot, | plan, ard made his debut on Satu last, ina In favor of amending the report tor building in great brevity and power. The second was devoted | will amount to $100,000, and that Fitchburg will | vernment an occasion to act against them at the Austrian teops would be at Turin within six at gela night. Rachel, M’mes. Laborde, Ju- | Thirty-first street, so as to read from Third to Lexing- to Job C. Cathoun. — It was published some time | be an equal sufferer, making a total Joss of moment of the elections. For the last, six days, xe lenne, ond r, (of New Orleans.) appeared | ten avenue, Concurred in, before his death, and contains, not only the best | stead of $50,000, as at first reported. In Fitch- | the sule of the diflerent newspapers, 1’ t, any questicns are daily settling on the conti- | on the cecasion. ‘Fanny Cerito ‘and St. eon | 18 fuvor of building @ sewer in Thirty-seventh street, sea maid de, Gi burg, the woollen factory occupied by Henry | La République, L’Estafettc, La Voix du Peuple. | nent, end in a few months Europe may have a | daneed in the ballet, as -_ A the celebrated actorg | fr°™ near Fifth avenue to Sixth avenue, aud thence of the man that ever has been made, (in | S, Fyior, was entirely swept away, loss $16,000; | ond others rovges journals, 1s prohibited on the pub- | more standing end firm constitution than during the | and actresses of Paris, who made a grand gall bate h the oe i eae with the sower nof his friend»), bot the most able, | the building was owned by Col. I. Phillips; the | lic way. I. de Girardin, it is aid, ia the proprie- | years which preceded the revolution of Febra- | in the bull of Gustave’ ‘The entertainment, which | SLMey-#%h street. Coneurred in. lowing account of his history. It wasa of Alfred White was carried away, loss $4,000; | tor of the Lrénement, and although that journal is | ary. There was at that time either blindness or | began at seven o'clock P. M., finished at half past | yor purchasing the ground in the Sixth ward, ocou- on te hel a and alt? “at ge of $400 to Whimey & Bogart’s paper mi more advenced in its opinions than se, | weaknees in the cabinets of Europe. With the | two in the morming. Never have I seen more | pied for arsenal purposes. Referred to special com- ate to that gr A; and wl one * | dom; the store and cotton Tactory of Col. 1. Phil- | he bag the superintendence of its i exception of the Czar, Nicholas, and the Prince of | bouquets thrown upon the stage; never have I | mittee, consisting of Aldermen Franklin, Smith and ared while he w and while the 5 royed, loss $20,000; the paper | The Dvénement (a penny paper) used to Metternich, every statesman looked at the revolu- | heard more plaudits bestowed on the actors and | Kelly. of fanaticism were | rled at hie pure | waged $600; scythe factory | vold every night on the ulevards, near | tionary principle toe carelessly. They did not see | actresses. M’mes. Laborde and Cerito had the RESOLUTIONS, and lofty character, yet it might have been pre | mn, $ he dam and canal of | the theatres and public places, and its circu- | that radicaliem was hidden under the plots of the | lonor of the soirée. Both of them were received | _ Reselution 57 A lderean Vibiee, Gsocting the Reaper iedenpsidihsiew Mbechahor- eae fanectl | wuagedl and 20,000 feet of lum- | laticn was immense. Never a single mandat | representative cloak, and that the liberty of the | with the highest marks of approbation. Alboni, | °f the City Hall to furnish refreshments to committees prot hes as a funeral sob the dam of Fitchburg Woollen | d’amener, or seizure, had been operated against it; | press, the chambers, the philosophers, the novels, | the famed contralto singer, made her first appear: | Of 0h" pte rovers foo: inane ty. ‘ihe third No. is taken up with Daniel We partly carried away and building injured, | not a single article had as yet been incriminated; | fiwilletons, history, everything, in short, were drag- | ance last night at the opera. ‘The house was Ald. pony moved to refer It to the Comt ittce om ster, the Colossus of republic, the greatest | } (00; one of the workmen wags in the dry | and, nevertheless, in spite of the article of the con- fing the powers and the people to the abyss of revo- | crowded. | had only a chance to hear her sing the | Repairs and Supplier whee Ka Shes vin helld, und an who, if be is found | when it broke in two, and was obliged to n of 1848, its sale is forbidden ‘ton the pub- | lution. Now the bondage has been removed. The | “Brindisi” of “Lucrezia Borgia,” which she de- | Ald. Say moved ase substitute that the Comptroller efuge in a tree, from which he was rescued | lic w all over Paris. Many rassemblements | people have seen their saviours and new masters | livered the most beautiful style, and which wi be directed to report a detailed tof s true 10 ihe whole nation, dluving the pveseut sea | by ihe ald of a rope’ and. basket. “A paper ail, | have ten place for he Inst six days. M. de Gt | {nthe cellars of Neuilly, the ergies of the Hotel de | of course, encored, I think that her engagement | thd ths cout of taut furnished. der the head of sion of Congress, will leave noth: e his | cwned by A. Crocker, was damaged $500 or $600 ; | rardin tried also to make an émewte on the corner | Ville of Paris, the murder of General Brea, the as- | will be ver fitable to that theatre. ‘*-room supplies. as exhibited in his report of the con- dian: Xkie Miamaunalen: douse the man, | '¢ Woollen mill of Hon. J. W. Mansur was dam- | of Café Tortoni; but as vet, nothing serious has | eaesinations of Vienna, of Berlin. ‘They have seen | ~The Ttaliaa opera produced Donizetii’s “Lucretia Seen socllc Coneniens eo ean eRe Bes Re sar * | aged to the amount ¢f $1,000; the duck mill at | occurred. ‘The affair will be brought before the | these inebriated sensualists, who thought they had | Borgia” on Tuesday evening last, under very un- ae ee that has ever been made. The last nun & | South Fitchburg was damaged to the amount of | court, and very likely the design of M. Carlier will | the power to regenerate the human ies. “ The | favorable circumstances. ora Ronconi, who | j bog ne hdeg Fd ave Key Piordenv of taeehe lished (the fourth), is devote Silas Wright, and a . LS eh takin Reservoir Com be defeated. His crusade against the press willhave governments, also, have understood their true mis- | is one of the most splendid actresses and singers Reterred, Ee ene ean oe the same remarks we have made about the others, Re my i} -Ma len, chair no result but to render him more unpopular than | sion insueh a difficult epoch. Mingled princi in the part of the famed Duchess of Ferrara, sud- Resolution to inquire whether the fees of the Assos apply appropriately to thie. Ha aukeag Fact mye $10,000 ; Plete' ever; and | am persuaded that for the same reasons my have no more power in our days. ‘Ti denly token ill, was not able to sing her part,— | sore, &e , in Street Commissioner's Omee, cannot bere? ) ¥ wall, tanners, lose $15,000; O. G. Caldwe which made the socialist party endure the de- | perfectly understood by the King of Prussia, in the | Neverth« less, Ronconi, Mariani, principally, dveed without prejudice to the public good, Adopted! f tl facturer, $500; Day’s Grist Mill, lows @2) It has always been regarded a matter next to | Dia ; struction of the liberty tree, and the carrying off of | aflairs of Germany. He is at liberty toamuse him- | M’lle. 1’Augri, the elegant Orsini he pla’ % 1 impossible to write, without p ce or passion, | w ehenter fe Bares 5 pr ey “ pen gag sage tend ep mg | | = GM ne with his aya soy, The were in good epitit, oad partition of the reat . oe satin Manan 4 pill 27 AM) : s hs, $2, excitem no ice will be publicly en of | Ki russia had not the er to trouble t ‘stro W ven in full, to the it satisfacti Of ew ‘sons, to have Chrystie st about oae’s own cotemporaries, and it certainly is >. Winchester, chair manufacturers, $3000; these new’ attempts of the government against — poane and security of Ge: Why his political fan- Sf all the dacianti, ‘The posh gre en te | Grand and Divislon, and Mpeslee topetlcnattoen tt no casy task; butin this case, the editor of this | Blackburn’s cotton factory, $8,000; L. 1. them. There is no wise man in Paris who has not | tasia of Erfurt. t Assembly will have thesame | repeated. But you must ki that M. Victor | Bowery and Allen street, lighted with gas. ) work seems to have achieved that point success | tannery, $3,000. In Westminster t's grist | the opinion that this new measure of the govern- | fate as that of the Diets of fort, Kremsier and | Hugo, fem whose play the libretto is borrowed, C6 vontenen, markeimen, d58 ethers, agetaes any em » ental f his c re! mill Was swept away, the hands having barely | ment is altogether useless and unpopular. others. I em really astonished to see that serious | refuses to let it b f for | fi clusive privileges being granted to sleambonts in Ful- fally, for the opinion ies - were hen beep | time to eseepe. Loss, $1,000. M. Proudhon, the famed publisher of Za Voie | men are thus ney ie the part of puppets, at ‘the | hight This is sue Mehr aad pre ot gf be — ee ae sg ge ne om the — expressed through the press, in every part of the | plone aint ew sonic du Pevple, has been sent to carcere duro at Doutlens, | very door of the great political “play” which is | Mr. Honconi will be able to allord that price. ‘The | Ry. t@iuanee providing for damages occasioned by nation, with perfect una ty. Itisthe only good Bioopy Traexpy at Havana, N. Y.—Two for having forfeited his word of “honor not to write | operened in Germany. new comic opera of the theatre Favart, Le Songe ” “ REPONTS aportED, thing we ever heard of, that everybody liked; but | Mex Snot.—Horace Bailey, a young man about | “"Y more about politics in his journal. If the | This great political “play” is the re-building of | d'une Nuit d'£té, words by Messrs. Hosier and | Adverse to stay proceedings for regulating Pifty-fifth it would be hard to find anything to say against so | SeVemeen years of age,a brother of Dr. G. D. ene, See 4 ny cane, to es oot | ce clerme o mo ee en teen ~ 4 de Leuven, music by M. Ambroise Thor street. trem Tenth sia on findson ives, end noble and national a nas the grouping toge- bon YA an noes yo fac op Rampage Feeution makes heroes, whilst indifference produces | were ia. existence for the last twenty years.” The te CONUEDNEOA seagencT, a and, nesee Sonatas ‘of ‘Thirty-ninth street, betweew ther, into a splendid gallery, the portaite of twenty | shanties on his premises which had been abandon- | ™€2 £@"# conséquence. gen re-constitution of Germany will be the diplomatic | ‘The poem by M. Rosier, which produces Shak- «Wap Ray! piven: In fiver of ex- four of the most illustrious citizens of the republic | ed by the Irish. While thus employed, he found | , Another means employed by the iniaisters (of | werk of the yest: ‘1 continued in Rssete, | erates Felstad and Queen Elizabeth, is altogether tect. In favor of renewing the lease --paiticularly at this time, when fanatics and | &™ augur under the floor, which was claime sey etre g plang ened Great armaments are still continued in Russia, | interesting and favorable to musical efiect. The | of pier at the foot of Hoboken street. to the Messrs put forth all their Hity of the Union bigots of all descriptions ba several Irishmen who were near at hand. Out of | N@tional Assembly of the Law of De; ation, | and the general opinion is, thata campaign will | writer hes neither translated nor adapted Shak- | Stevens, for a term of eight at the rent of this there arose some dispute, and ‘iene t . oF | which is called by the press the “Law of Anger." | be opened this spring, to stop the revolutionary | epeare’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream.” He has | per ‘MABUm. Also « resolution to Tight Twenty-1 5 ith gas, It has been voted, in epite of several rema en to ¢ pb the tranc Andrew Sullivan and Sinan Hickey being two of , | movements in Germany ,and perhaps also in France, | made a new plot, in which he personifies the Bard | treet. from Second te Third avenue, psc nal peejud them, made demonstrations of attacking him. He { *Peeches, among which that of M. De L | ry: - : ___ | of Avon himeelf, having for his friend Falstatl, and ——— , , g ‘ warned them to let him alone, and retreated back- | #8 the most conspicuous. — for the future, | The last news received from Greece, is not satis- | for his mistress, the Queen in person. If not cor- Supreme Court. inflerne one portion on against th: wards, at the same time drawing a revolver. But | * political criminal will be sent to the Pacifie Ocean | factory. M. Wyse and the Baron Gros have not | rect to history, It is able to the and to the GENERAL TERM. and ¢:. courage en in bigotry, which, they being strongly under the iniluence of liquor, | ands, Where he will be kept in custedy by the | yet settled the question. M. Wyse wishes that | ear. It looks as well as it reads. ‘He Lefeb- | May 10.—Avwrson: tae Ban.—The following haved oer anal nd stinwilated by an old grudge, advanced, when | J#iler of the republic. It is, as you see, the penalty | 180,000 drachme be paid to M. Pacifico, and that | vre sings beautifully, as well as Messrs. Couderc, | #¢ntl men were duty admitted to practise as 4 e attorney: Sullivan clinched und strck him, which was | of death reinstated under another name. {t had | a security of 200,000 drachms be also given till the {Stahepeste), end Bataille, (Falstaff). M. Bou- | #4 counseticrs. in ‘the several courts of the State o° ri the nation to “ ~ q din 1848 ; it is recalled in 1860, | f be paid by the v" of o t ckly followed up by Hickey. While in. th | Deen destroye ; ‘ | amount of money be paid by the government lo, the best tenor of the Comic Opera Llouse, has a ceive that th next h 5 | CViolling, Boiley dlecharged gue barrel, shooting | _ Ourfevolution and our republic of the last two | Portugal to the same man. If these tions | very pretty end graceful rile, which allows him to . = ry, ‘f Pee snd liver of Colonel Fremont | Hickey ditectly through the heart. Sullivan con- | Yet isto be compared, in some respects, unto | be not accepted, the intention of Admiral Parker | display all the qualities which he pomenes. The nh scope of our | Unwed the attack, and was in the ect of that of 1798, ‘The sans cullottes of the last century | js to keep the Greek barks and ships, captured dur- | Songe d'une Nuit d’£té, will certainly be stereoty- hiee blow, when @ second barrel was had their Simnamary at Cayenne, in Guiana; the _ ing the last assault. ed_on the bills of the Opera Comigue. , istery took effect in Sullivan's bres moderate republicans of our epoch will have their | Among the last nominations of the order of the Nothing new at the Francais. M'tle Rachel isa J, haa | heart, whoeteggered back and ‘ Novka-Iea at the Marquesas Islands. | legion © T have remarked those of two | plays there alternately with M'lle Judith. Pou- ——— achieved dae Col. | M8 Immediately followed up, but was restra In spite of such measures, the socialist party | featlemen well known in Washington—Mesers. | fard’s Charlotte Corday, and Racine’s works, Law Intelligence. 5 | by a couple of citizens who Were near by, and | Mekes immense progress in tag gy noonecan | Gi Serurier as officer, and Semgeve so Che- | are daily seen on the bills. Turontava Jr pictat, Deeiston.—Judge Nelson, of the Fremont ‘inary an | eoched the spot at that incinent Dr ii. hewn. | tell what the future will bring forth. 1 | Valier. ‘These two menibers of the diplomatic | ‘The vaudeville, with two new blueties, called | United States Supreme Court. yesterday al ! faguacy in ‘the ‘ | fered severely from the depredations of the Trish | €XPIain What a terrible responsibili corps have been in the United States in the capaci- | “Le Baiser de l'Etrier,” and “| | ie Settee St Oe eee eS ae See qutile Of tae POU ge Jloyed onthe public works, who have destroy. | Weigh opoe those troublesome men, Ww ty of Attaches, during the embassy of M. Fageot. | @ameurs,” has resumed the periorm Snel eee SGalicd states Aemiratty Court at Ken young, so powerful | fences, cut down several acres of his timber, | {ion is the ruin of our —_ ooensy. «J | Adieu. B. H.R. | socialist play, called “1 a pesertes, | West, Florida. A libel was filled by Porter aalnst the j , nd on cevetal occasions, armed with weapons, had on! , Tr 80 many disasters, | cum cs cuat of Pam. which had such a ron at Burton's Theatre. ‘The 1846, to recover the amount of » bill be If Colonel Fremont, hove chased him and his brother from his own | 0D Could forget the past and hope in the future ; | >. myee't houee is nightly crowded. juraished by him toa wreck a tive of Calté iremites. ‘There was anold grudge existing, and bes watereunately, Se Jae ned up with so many | Panis, April 24, 1850. | At the Variétés, a vaudeville borrowed from the i? tb alélity, Grime liveretion which | /#iley was armed in consequence of these demog- pee be p bathed with so many tears, has be- | rhe Secial View of Paris— The Sportsman Louis— | Works of Mme. George Sand, and called “La | veseel they note ge Ah “ n whe | Sistionus. A boat captain Who passed shortly be- | ‘Wweathed to us a future of the most threatening as- |“ p-+4 palte—Pranconi"»—DinnerParties__Din- | Petite Fudetic,” will have, also, a long run. ‘The | § ae oe ee le ce rivciae. Sin tied es cana have hi his movements, he siliay, heard Llickey and Sullivan threaten | Peet—a futare which is, only in thought, the dread cer — Balle . 7 : incidents are clever oud interesting, and the actors | PRICT IPE Wenliee tow. and a decree given fre the imap becor a the as he | to toke the hie they had an opportunity, | Of the stateemen and the oldest soldiers. There is | erat the Elyste National—Lowis’ Marriage | excellent. pd By vA of supplies. J.D. Westeots asi has Leen in the wilderness. The final decision of | OF these threat yeas mot at the tuo. enfade, — onl gong od oy before usthe “un- | _Artiste—Lamartine—Enliatment for California M. ibe the celebrated play writer, has Met | P. Gilpin, In behalf of appellants. moved to reverse ¢ Californ estion wave o do with | Lililey has delivered himselé up for ti » . Seth = — 7 - | With onother success at the Gymmase. new | the decree, wpon erveral unds; the fret of which the California question will hav to lo with | ocdthe meticr new ta. the heads of Catt: | it was rumored yesterday at the National Assem. | —Opera and Ballet — ee ee vaudeville, entitled *Tleloise aad Abeilard,” is & | wes, that the court was defunct when the salt was tne his future rey and add the finishing and de- | wy—Marena CN. ¥.) Journal, May 3. bly, that Mesers. Baroche and Rouher were about | ‘ian Opera— The New Plays o: ir Succes | wetut chef d'ewere, which will add another diamond | stittted and the decree made, and the Judge without Galve ctvebe to hic fame, if Caltteraia ean eee | ; sensling their resignations to the President. Ido | the Samscrit Drama, &., §. to his already very rich literary crown. Ter Gah tatlotintine. Goguns Weleer bem cman into the Union, Ly vome grand pacific and harnio- | Tier Vircisia Got Mives.—We aaw yeatentay | fethusebemon a high positon MBaroche beasit | SPting has decidedly taken possession of France, | | Teussaint ouverture” ie nightly played to | {56 case fer appellee. ‘The fupreme Court reversed the nizing mesure, and our illimitable resourees, now | <7 bars ef gold, weighing, as we learned, nearly | to be like a leech, and no doubt he is no and principally of Paris—that fashionable sun, the | [YY (Aree audiences, at La Lorte Artin. | decree upon the first ground taken, and did not, there- 5 RY a c 5 iy jt tke a h, and no is not yet fall Notre Dame de Paris” enjoys the same success, lortd: #0 rayidly in process of developement, all properly #000 awn. Treame from the Luekingham golt | of bleed. As for M. Rowher, he is not yet full | rays of which are enlightening the whole of Lu | at the Ambign Comique. "Urbain Crandier” ree | fgmitt iste the the Colon te ia ont ao Guided and guarded by safe legislation, and a wiew | L210 each, cmd ware exporeecaty, cal = oe | aoa eae mo Pe icis's rope, and aleo the New World, with her modes and | cvives the utinest epprobation ot the Théatre Histo- 4 March, 1845, The Supreme Court, we policy, probably five years will not go by, t his money was made in the course of echo all eter Watos. The President went woe ben ton. It is a pleasure now to promenade, in the ne to Gee renee Fi gh gr veroment and its ofeets she will poseces «population more vast that two moriths, On the first and second day cuy, Crd wos present at the funeral of the two | afternoon, at the Bois de Boulogne, or in the vr which was performed but once, danmatied. and that on the other State in the Union, and wealth absolutely | "/0n'l, eighteen hundred dws. were made, being | | dred unfortunate faldiers who had been drowned. | Champs Elystes, abd to admire the elegance of prohibited, on account of & caricature | 77 of Mareh, 1845, the Ualted states Admiralty Ooars at t 47 he force employed is thirty-three |.in the + of La Maine. He distributed ma i Politi «Phi | i, T poke I ee Booms y | Pep sg pln on » inealcvlable | slaves, and five White men, the latter acting as | Ireveis of the legion of honor, and was tolerauiy, | Mf ladies and young men. Politics have nothing | of Louis Uhilipe which aypeared init. “This new | “ame eatinet; and though, by the State constivation of California, at the present moment, however, ey. | OTE TECETS, engineers, de. ‘The depth of the deep- ‘not enthustusticnlly, recrived. On Friday | (0 do with dressing ; and no one could believe, by | PME Meee oP the Oleon prepares a great so- | Florida, the territorial courts wete continued se State sete anothet name, which, for el uae hal —e| haft at these mines is nnderstood to be about | norming last he had returmed to the Ulysée. four o'clock in the afternoon, that the most im- | jenmity, whieh will take place in a few days. It a Ly “ed prota onmase ws x vs mised and g omen ondagloersage ite ty feet, and he vein is fifteen feet thick. It is | i.«d net give you the particulats of this sad event | portent discussions have taken place at the Na- | is the representation of a play of the ludian Theatre, | terial Seger tere wiphoud sutheeity wo met te any wise bil. pach gehinpnly _— E sige —_ Ame- r is te pally | ere, fF B A oe ef An i A wilt only state thet oll parties seemed | tional Agsembly—that the socialists are, perhaps, | which was first performed a thousand years ago, | in causes of federal e cler and juriediction. sen peapley ich now stirs the pulse in th ed ) . « engine of sixteen | to have forg heir political dispute, to deplore f gninii vietory. TI ¢ 1 vient ital of India, ington Republic, Mey ¥ v water, &e. We learn that the entire ex- | diers. Many fv poco] have been opened in | before I the dresses, toileties, jewelry, &c., | from the Sanscrit language, by the learned Dr. | No. end no dot boeom of every man who loves bis country. Tienry | mr Covet ov tur t Clay now occupies a proudet position in this repab- | penses ef the whole establishment do not exceed | I reucr, ubt that charity will makea | & r ver. Th jeasness, | Williem Tores, has been put into French thy spent trom tie Ch lie than any man who has lived in it since the time s6Ane 8 year, so that they have been already ve ty handgome harvest in our wae bonevolens pe A heey green acai postion’ Oy Maem tery “and Gi rerd, de Nerval, ad States tor Micotsipp Ste ier Crier delivered the of Washington. He it was to whom all cyes | (eared, and eli that is made for the foot of the pee Fronce. The bridge of Angers will be rebuilt, and | are as congpicuous as they have always been. In | will bea very curious study of Indian manne opinion of this court, reversing the deeter of i pe pn eo the great peosomeher, in 1008. | ‘Sht The w net profit. Richmond (Va.) Whig, | will teke the name of the Ith regiment of infantry, | short, the French nation is always stamped with | fremed in a very splendid amount of ery, ai Cirewtt Court, and reapers — s ie Without | ‘ ln ieee | atatty: o« « monument of this terrible event of the Leth of | the geal of fiivolity, which has made us so popular | with n variety of costumes. ‘The panorama of the | [*EhGtalnas in conformity to said opinion, Gee regue te pay oF svenen, . Domestic Miscellany April, 160. - throughout the world. Great India will be developed to the eyes of our y ° { have united in placing him at the head of | The Heeiisture of Rhode Island met at Providence The great event of the fortnight hos been the | Such were my reflections the other at risian people. The title of the play isthe “Cha- the most important committee that has existed , © the 7th inst return of the Pope sey ey te His first visit | ihe race cgare, Which took place, as visual, at the | riot of the Child,” written by the =. | since the organization of the tution. och | Th hip Ametien teft Boston on the Tat inet, | Deemer been made to the rich and splendid Chureh | Champ de Mere. crowd of sportsmen were | Which was considered, by the celebrated critic ganiz consti . § anée t rane oh the 24, making the ; | of St. Peter, but to that of St. Jean de Latran, the | py us, ond, among others, was the Sehlegel, as a most admirable theatrical concep- tras the moderation he had displayed in those times, in twenty-nine hours" ihe sbertea'ever wads ne” | 86 fg pl EP RG iene iN Sie piesenl oh, che Meamietiae en |: -WhN siliabes of! Annorie in Paris is utterly used up almost everybody else; | Two snakes, eighteen and Aft wer = y 4 oes = eer Oe \- Siva tingle ghanve over the Senate eramier wit, cur tan the iomesk of Sly io Wenn fa io Vatians stove the eatecotubs ; and fortunate eoldiers who had lost their lives inthe | Inrge. A great many have arrived by the last ‘was making bets, & /a | steamer from the United States, and those who his a . nt ri yet he ished it ble strophe, 1 days sinee. Fira eevee She | juity wast ol a iets x Pats Hearn, at the Long Island races. His | were travelling in Itely have returned from the show what has become of the reputation of most bad suffered with idl health for previously, | howble ee powmble, As I told you in my last

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