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eee BEE SS SE AON ATRL FOE RREN RL OM DALNG DOBRO AL SOT CERT ET PRS will be sented, and then to attack it with all | every year to the National Assembly, is ready, but | ny, and I left Peris in the same train, where I met | of the Restoretion, and since 1830 till 1845, when Risley & F——, of New York. I attended the With thirteen thousand French soldiers the Font his eloquence. | it mae ae been yet read, on account of unforeseea | Meers. Rothechild, Dele boque, Emile Pereire, Hot- | he died, is in rehearsal, and will be produced in a | two reheersule, and I feel persuaded that this | wpon in cere of need, the Papal venice nies Prince Kallimaki, circomstepees.” Every thing leads us to believe | orgeur, Dalton, and several other shareholders ef | ehort time. exhibition will have great success umong my coun- | it has little to apprehend i teeare from the people. 1is,was presented, the other day,with the cross of | that he will be sent to the House, after the law of | the Northern railway. We arrived at St. Quentia at The Hyppodrome was filled during all last} trymen. Banvard is also here with his panorama. | To cleanse Rome of the bandite, and Drignade, the legion of honor; and, it was eid, yesterday, that | the three millions, if there isn the ambassador of Turkey to and ge of cabinet. | eboutene o'clock, end there the ceremony of the | week, as weil as the circus of the Champs Elysées. At the Theatre des Varietiés, two new vaude- | ruffians, who infest the dark alleys and moulderi he was on the eve of leaving Paris, recalled by the he clectoral Jaw will soon be put aby activity, | reception took place. The assembly was, indeed, | The foreigners who are in Paris are the beat cus: villes, called ‘* Le Chevalier de Servigny and | ruins, the work of proscription “has penne ig Sultan, who had named him Prince of Samos. His | ard the Mairics of all the wards, counties, villages | very Bumerous, ond the aspect of the tout tomers of these two places of amusement, as Well | “Le Fontome,” have been periormed with much | and the hounds of justice, it is said, in their hunt lace would be tilled by M. Mussurusthe same po- | and himlets of France are besieged by those who | meguificent , The authorities of the city had made | 98 of the Jardins ‘* Mabille,” Chateau des Fleurs, | success. Meedames Ozy, Marquet, and Page, who | of vengeance, are daily denouncing individuale Kaieian who had some trouble with Lord Paliners come upto produce their titles as electors, But a) ihe oe recherché preparations for the ceremoay, | Chateau Rouge, Ranenegh and others. appear in it, ere three very pretty women, of much | who did not participate in the recent revolutionary ton’s agents in Greece, some years go. Bui this yeiy curious difficully seems to arise from the law | which was in # very imposing style. The * bless- Arras of balls.” ‘The Jardin d’iliver announ- | inielleet, and whose hisirtonic powers are really | movements. To be gecessory to this persecution, very reason renders the probab. ot his now inelf, Itappearsthat the general impression is that | ing” of the rails and locomotives was made by the | cer, a ball for the 22d instant, and all the prepari excellent. Mr. Thibeaudeau is, indeed, a lucky | is not only a cruel and unjust policy, but most un- tion to Paris very unceriain, f nominated, I the electoral aw is only reetive to the elections of | Bebop de Garsignies, and immediately afier it | tious lead me to believe that it will be a magni manager. wise, also. It would really appear as if a fatality— understand that Our ministry will request the Porte | members of the National Assembly, ond not to the | the President mounted on horseback, and wentto | cent affair. Of course you Will have a repert of it. ae The Hypodréme and the Circus are nightly | an infatuation, attached to several Italian govern- ¢ ns forthe Presidency, Levis Nepoleon, itep- | a review of the troops and National Gwards. There I have heerd of the formation of a very talented | filled by a soctéré d’élite, and Mobile le chateau des | ments, by which they were prevented from profiti The diferente, or rather the “quarrels” between | pevrs, is under that impiession; fer he expressed | I heard, for the first time, the most deafening eries | company of dancers and pautomimists enlisting, or teal chamere, le Banelagh, le chateau rouge, le | by the loos of ‘experience. Barely “escape. France and Lord Palmerston, has ceased to eccu| burself ia that mannerto Mr. Royal, one of the | of * Vive Nepoleon!” “Vive le President?” amidst | yasher enlisted, pra fpuiney through the United | chateau d’ Asniére, and many other public gardens | from great danger—the greatest thet has ever yet the public arention, though itis not yet finished. members of the Naticnel Assembly, Whe bad ceme | very few eries-of “Vive la Republique? which | States. Mr. Robert Kemp, well known in New | are the rendezvous of all the amateurs of fun, fire | menaced the Pontificate—the Papal authorities, The socialist newspapers have thrown aside their 10 sce him in order to engege bun to notice the law | were utiered by the lower cluss ot the popu- | York, where he firet eccompanied Mademoiselle | works, pretty partaers, excellent music and fresh | by the infliction of uomerited punishmentsy are maske { they no more conceal their understand- | before ik wes persed, ‘Yeu were eleeted by | lation. From thence we proceeded to the Ab-| Blangy, has engaged a troup of comic dancers, breezes. certainly exposing themselves to the hazard ing with the eabinet of St. avs. What hashap- — ¢ix millions of Frenchmen, onthe l0thof Deeem- | bey of Fervagnes, where Louis Napoleon ve- | and artists of all sorts, to visit the principal cities 1 heard, on Friday last, at the house of Mr. Me- | of a second revolution. 1 was present last week pened is nothing but a new aspect of the dreadful do not deprive them of their rights.” | viewed the produets ot industry in the Depart- | of the Unien. Nothing soj astonishing as those | cathi, a very talented musician, the famed colored | ata very interesting ceremony—the presentation disseqsions excited in France e jealous ha sword Levis Nepoleen, “the law is | mentcf La Somme, emong which were several | actors has yet appeared on the boards of your | Dona’ Maria Martinez, who sang several Spanish | to Major Cass, our Charge d’Affuirs, by the priests of our political ri n order to seize from he ¢ of cur dceputies,and notfor that | things werthy of very greatattention, At 6 o'clock | country. Among the principal artists I will name songs, ccompanying herself on the guitar. Dona | of the Propaganda, of « token of their gratitude, in vernment its influence upou the dest refore tix millions of | we proceeded to the theatre, where the dinner had | the wonderful Spinosa, of the Porte St. Martin, | Martinez is twenty years old, possesses brighteyes | aclnowle dament of the protection he aflorded to Leould explain this t ts,,whea they | becu prepesed, and which offered the most peculiar | end the comic dancer and pantomimist, Débureau. | and @ fine profile. Her figure is beautilul; she | them when their institution was menaced by tho correspondence we Now is it | and bilient ecup d’ett 1 have seen since my re- | A machinist of the first order will accompany the | Jocks as graceful as acreole, and dresses ala Fran- | Trasteverini. Latin addresses were delivered on ald~-and not a sit sed in such a | tarn tiem the United States. The boxes were all | toupe, and they will produce all the wonders of | aise. Her only fault is her dark complexion. But | the occasion, and two richly illuminated volumes, Russia, M. de Branow, has decided er is able | adorned with pretty ladies, und the most enthusi- | the “Sept Chateaux da Diable,” ** Le Pied de | we have no prejudice of the kind in Europe, andno | resembling the old missals of the middle ages, to recall him. e think to ele thet the ele clora against the behaviour of England in Greece ! | Jomrhe such a polities! Munder?t The spirit of the | astic npplauce welcomed each speech which was | Mouson,” “Le Mirliton Enchant,” ete. This | doubt she will be as courted, admired, nnd applaud- | were then brought forward. One of them con- hia» n has n accepted by Empe w isto confused, that it hes not been understood | uttered, emhe i Ube President or by his guests. | dramatic compony will arrive in New York in the | ed, ug if ehe was a8 white as alabaster. Talent has | tains invocations for the happiness of Major Cass, Nicholas. sis ay complication which wil by him. ‘Thus, there is undoubtedly a new para- Hy the side of Louis Nopoteon I remarked the | beginning of September next. No doubt either | neither rank nor color—and Dona Martinez is an | written in sixty-eight different languages, by indi- pethaps bring also new light upon this questi graph to be added to the law Moycr of St. Quentin, the Bishop of Soissons, M. | Mesers. Niblo or Marshall will secure them at | artist of the ‘ first water,” a diamond set ina piece | viduals of sixty-eight diflerent »ations, priests of the Ve shall se | © The deportation law has been also voted without | Baroche, Minitter of the Interior, General d’Haut- | once, and make much money with them. of mahogany. Propaganda. “There is scarcely a tongue on the The famed Mazzini, the dread of the v | a great contest, by a majori gainst 313; | poul, Paron Rothschild, Messre. Rouher, Lahute, Mr. Wells, of the firm of Livingston & Wells, ‘Since fun epeaking of singers, let me give you | wide globe, which is not there spoken—searcely a and Italian ntates, has arrived at on. I} end the Marquesas nds ha ea decidedly | wid Lueien Murat, The banquet was served upon | of Wall street, in New York, and the Place de la | the news I have received from the whereabonts of country which is not there represented. I have understand ceording to the request of the | ¢ s the place where the political exiles | ten tables, covered with the best delicacies of the | Bourse, in Paris, will sail for the United States, | Jenny Lind. She arrived on the 224 ult. at Stock- | looked over this volume twice, and from curiosity E foreign ministers, erlebrated man will | willbe transported. The law ageinst the clabs » At nine o'clock we proceeded to the ball | with his lady and daughter, by the American | holm, where rhe was received by a procession of | have noted down a few of the languages which are shipped in a steamer forthe United States. Very been veted by a majority of 469 against h was offered to the President by the com- | steamer Washington. A ? oung girls, dressed in white, who came to offer | therein inscribed: prebably you will see hir ere before long. of St. Quentin, and which wes a very bril- Annexed is a list of Americans recently arrived iy bouquets of flowers. She was carried to her Cingalese, Ilyrean, Ethiopean, The journal La Voix du Pew which had been credit for the achievement of the tomb of | liant affair. The President danced with a very | in Paris:— hotel in a carriage, to which wes harnessed four Arabian, Sanserit, Chinese, erushed by the government, re-app ! Invalides was vo i pretty young lady, who was called the * Pearl of ) lady and children, D. Murray, from New York. white horses, and during the evening all the neigh- Chaldean, * Coptic, Phoenician, ago, as a specimen, under the title whilst the preject of | St. Quenun,” and whore face is one of the most ion end lity, honk Sn tos yr) boring hotels were illuminated in her honor, whilst | Celtic, Calmue, Koordish. 1860. The first: number is writte: those who have beautiful | ever saw. Louis Napoleon retired at york ms Sam. ED de the amateurs of the city were giving a serenade to Samaritan, violence, Which proves that the *t8, and the | ubeut ene o'clock, end the party only ended at half- inbarn, Philadelphia. | her, Jenny Lind will give six concerts in Stock- | In the other volume there is given to Mr. Cass, to eal course of the journal will not outof season.” Who | pust three in the morning, at the first appearance of “parang le holm. According to custom, the tickets have been | him and his, in perpetuity, the right of asylum and rthe future, The paper is poblis t time, Mourir pour la | the dawn. The President, on Monday morning, | ¥ ppleton do sold at auction, and they were all sold at very high How strange, in the history of Euro- publishers will find money enough to carry on | y iT - Quentin, and arrived in Paris, at the Ely- | am. H. Oliver do prices. Jenny will leave Stockholm in the middle | pean governments, have been the vicissitudes and ublication dai ish question is epparently set Af- |: onal, by half-past eight o’clock, after hav- | 2. Beltecua | de sof July; she will spend a month at the watering | mutations of the last two ye: Thrones have The debutes of the National *rance | or pped at several cities, Where he was address- | ¢: pay ** do place of Ems, from which she will return to Lon- | tumbled about the heads of , and repablies very dull. for th three d the | ed ty the ecmmon councils and authorit Jawes Wetmore do do tas Alabama. don, and thence to Liverpool, where she will sail | have taken the pluces of anc portant bill presented to the ho though In thort, the visit of the President to St. Quentin | {Be Dreper do do mghby, Brooklyn. for America. ‘Thus she will be in your city by the | the convulsions which have shaken ftaly h ci .S.Wermore do do Dr. it M. Graham, N. Ocl p ve sh u & project of law upon the thea erhas not yet returned to London Lord | was # very og fair, not only for himself, | Jokn's Dunra €o do end of September next. storms and pests Which have swept this fair of the Interior propose Normanby has decidedly left Paris. He catled on | tut also to his guests; end I felt much pleasure in | W. HL €o do J.Mortim The fumed Arubian chief Abd-del-kader—who | land, rending society to its deepest fonadations— theatres is passed, po dr Nayoleen on Tuesdsy afteraoon last, and Ithe opportunity of uceompanying him | ¥ 2 2 Bae ich who is prisoner in the Chateau d’ Amboise, has been | no stronger, more striking, illuetrati be ad- formed without the aut ae friendly leave of him: [told you that he tful journ GW Bratt do do : * “Yo | very sick for the last five days. The nostalgy has | duced, than'the ceremony to whic just al- . 0 the Interior in Paris, ris with a brilliont eun—we_ retu nd the fact D.W. Mathiew and lady a. attacked him, and he is not expected to live. luded. The haughty, imiccessible Pr nda—the ndon on private busines priva Chas. Abborwithy do” do 2d. Con Very likely the message of 1m. It was accom confirmed ution of the Catholic I saw yesterday, at the store of M. Fabien, | oldest, most reverenced ia partments Y be apjoin he President will give us the interpretation of that , which bas been t Beaune ae ae out, Connectient. | tailor, the cloak of Emperor Soulouque the lat, | church—the nucleus of ils clergy—the pride of the A credit cf dd x the savants of our Academy of Scie | W do do bile, Alsbama. | of Hayti, which he will wear on the ceremony of | popes—with its soldiers—soldicrs of the cro 3 en theart for the émevte, Tthink it crashed down, at ted in a very brilliant light—a sort opt t alice Boe F his coronetion. This cloak, which cost 50,000 | tered through every lund, from the snows of Siberia mem of 1 | least for some time. Lteld you in my preceding | of Avrora Vorealis, which sppeared in the sky in a | JitmaeG Stearn do do franes, ($10,000) is made of velvet, embroidered | to the sands of Saniarcand, is menaced by the fierce, letters what pertuibatic would come if the so- | northwest direction. This aerial or rather celestial alists hed ep fight; Tam able to-day | predigy lasted about minutes, and produced a to give you the particulars of the strategic combi- | great sensation in our city. A sort of earthquake nation by which General Changarnier would have | wes feltall! over Paris and its neighborhood, and Walter Fuller do do P. Lorrilard Renalde do George G. Hactivgs de do with gold and diamonds. lawless men of the Tiber, and demands protection The director of the Museum of Paris, opened | from the representative of the United States. That Jast week a very interesting ery, filled with | that protection was rendered, and well rendered, | American antiquities, brought irom Yucatan, Mex- | myself beard officially announced, some weeks. The news from Belgium Bar as akon ee ‘explosion had taken place, the three | "Lola Meurer, the fond woken, ihe Lonees of | 7h Weather—President's Buirker—Theatricals— | io, Poru,olivia, and other countriegof the Nev | ego, on e public oceasizn, in the ld tne- warn party have been triamp! creat u of Paris would have been occupied | the town, Was piesent at the ceremony of St. deny Lind--Abd-el- Kader, §¢., §¢.5 $e. by the whole press as well as by those visited the | senators and princes of Rome. ‘ - mbly in Belgium, a by troops, for it is impossible to barricade them; | Quentin. Her splendid carriage, her righ livery, The warm weather has arrived, and, at the very | Louvre on this oceasion. : ese There eee rauively few sreneas now ia form in Belg of the msde or the cutede of Pans, and the lines | ef al beheldess Tt was sald; cmong Zertaia people, | Wo™eRE of our writing, the heat is really verrible, | , 1 cannot close this letter withous Gluing Yonube | Rome, Of Ameticons, the number lees. than ‘orm in Belg 2 outside of Pari > lines all be . It was 8 1 certa : a ew ole t » te 4 eee ay 8D Sang, daily diminishing on, the shores of the 5 The Tuil- | that this adventuver was trying to aitract the atten: | Every thing leads me to believe that we shall have | Gc auy! on the Ist inst., and in which four American when the malaria from the Campagaa_ renders it Ta Italy © most importent fact is the dis- Hote! de Ville, and t [ ton of Louis Napoleon, in erder to play with hii | @ very hot season; thus we have not lost anything | sailors, belonging to the ship John Holland, were | imprudent for strengers to remain. The hotels covery of # plot formed to the Pope. under the com the seme uieks that she enjoyed with the old King iti vhi ‘The winter has been very | the pnncipal heroes, a quarrel having tcken | are nearly deserted, and the artists are in despair. c 4 3 by waiting ewhile. y 0 ‘ y pe that Pins 1X, receive anonymou cipul forts of Paris, would have ef Bavar Nevertheless, she will have much to a oe will be vecee wieel place between them and three Norwegian ors. | The last year was an unfertunate one for the arts. y which be ; Ode She NN ee : Inhey were fighting together, when the landiord of | Infuet, there is zo branch of business which has ed by the t Mrs. Il—, of do, in order to succeed; for the Bel rm sion of La Féte would nish the m ty ’ ore, who holds the sce nd who will The Pre ident of France closed the series of his | the jayern came to separate them. They imme- | not suffered in consequence of the want of a stable aseaesinated. he Pope ¢ h interest who have be not give it up without a great contes propos of | scirees on Thursday, 30th ult., by a large ball, at | diately rushed upon him, and stabbed him till he pravciment ‘Thousands, among whom are not a in this warning, and wou the fight, vey only wished to be pro- | Lola Montes: A bookseller has published an ad- hich | was present, and where I met many | Was dead. The four murderers were taken and | few families of ancieat title and noble blood, are had not been tected by the law vertisement, by which he announces the very im- | ¥'¢h bal chun pale Sand! will be sentenced, of course. Their names are | said tobe in actual want; and when to these you which fell d A very severe erdinance about the strangers now | mediate publication of “ her confes , together | Americans. At nine o'clock, Mr. San lford, the | John Young, Branch, James Hequem, and Thomas | add the list of those who by amercements and con- @ Man Was arre 5 in Paris, has been promulg for the last three | with those of Madame George Sand. ‘These avewals | attaché d’Ambassade of cur amiable minister, Mr. | Kool. fiseations, are deprived of their revenues, you may pare loaded with bu gger— | d Allthose whose presence would be of such | will be written in the style of those of Jean Jaque’s | Rives, was in the saloon of Louis guys and An American citizen, Mr. Ilenry Walter, from | conjecture somewhat of the misery existing im lis appearance and de: to that | a the public safety, will | Rousseau; and the lives of these two heroines, re- | introduced to him ali his countrymen who desired | Boston, has also fallen in the hands of justice for | Rome. A subscription is in circulation, to allord iven by the anony toteresting fi bank bills of bile. E It appears that he | relief, as far as possible; and [ observe that the adt, Where he had | Spanish Minister, and Mr. Casa, and also the Aus- nd released. [le | tran and Russian Ministers, have each contributed ing lessons in the | five hundred dollars to this object. Heaven hel us letter writer. No other try. Many people have | lated in all their details, their adventures of every oned in Rome, but that the | left the city, without having been forced to do it. | kind, their bad or good actions, their thoughts ublic are replaced by new | The political nof France has much influence | unveiled without disguise, will he a piquane: upon ee money market of the Bank. The last | which will make the book as interesting as it will to be acquainted with the President. Dr. Velen- | 4 cause not yet known in publ tine Mott and his two daughters, Miss Olivia and | arrived at Sirasbourg from FE Mis. Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Breeze, were present, | been accused of high trea 5 and graced the bail by their fine appearance. 1 | was residing in the city, giv f 1 In Switze e liberal party has conqu' Jr, d’Argout, announced that bills | be profitable. How many sins will be confessed in may say, Without too much flattery, that the | English language, when, on the 3d inst., he wes | the poor in Rome, I say. Waat fares badly in a the radic al party. The newly ituted govern- have been returned to the amount of | these two books, if they are written conscientiously! | American ladies ranked big, the: prettiest of | seized by the ee, and sent to favre in the hands | communities, but nowhere ego hardly as in Italy. mentat Berne is decidedly moderate, and it will 10 franes, and are now only at 35,392,000 | Will Mme. George rs and Lola Montes be | those there presen! Mr. and Mrs. Rives, their | of the gend’arms. : ‘The niultitude of professional beggars, by whom exercise a salutary influence upon that country, This in the lowest amount ever scen since | courageous enough to accomplich thelr task, withe | terect daughter, their son, Mr. Astor, and Mr. | Duels have been very numerous for the last six | every street is infested, have rendered the public which has ¢ been so much weakened by th braary, 1848. The circulation | out distorting the holiness of truth? If so, the | Armstrong, Were utnong the guests of the Presi- | days. Among the most remarkable, I will mention | mind cold and callous to the demands of Coy ag parties. Swit of ep shed to three millions, and the | bocks will coon be popular ull over the world. dept. In the diplomatic corps, 1 remarked the | that of two representatives of the National Assem- | even in cases of dreadful extremity. Heaven help pean movemen t these new steps will | deposits to seven millions. This kind of depres- ‘The Boulevards have beca, for the last six days, | ministers of Turkey, of Russia, of Austria, Pied- | bly, M. Bouvet (a member of the “ Congress of the | the poor, I say agein. And the ruined nobles, who be loc ked upon with much favor by the other cu ‘ hor much influence on the market, and shackles | in the moet ewful state. As Lteld you in my last mont, Prussia, Denmark, and Spain. Messrs. | Peace”) and M. Roger, of the North. They fired | have been dispossessed of their fiefs,in consequence ne's of the continet every branch of trade. letter, the Minister of Public Works hes orderedthe | Thiers, Lemartine, de Lasteyrie, de Montalambert, | each a pistol without injuring each other, and the | of the eeditious conduct and eternal plottings, what : Thiers ‘eft on Monday evening last, accom- | whole length of them to be fixed @ la McAdam. ute, La Boutie, Béchard, and many other members of the | witnesses declared their honor satisfied. The second | isto be their fate? Proud as Lucifer—di N | Seem GRY : panied by M. Mignet, for St. Leonard, to meet | Therefore, all the square stones have been taken mbly,'werein the parloir deconversa- | | will relate to you had not such a lucky termiaa- | vain, and sopercilic without education, d that of German © resolved to follow | there the ex-king, Louis Philippe, whose health is | awe d they have been replaced with sand and ued ina low voice their debatesabout | tion. It took place between M. Fiorentino, re- | resources, there is absolutely nothing left for them the execution of the t telative toGermany. 4 Anetria, the Prince of Swatzenbe ies of ISEA and 1815, | eaid to be very low. ‘The aim of M. Thiers’ jour- | bitumen. The storeheepers of the two sides of the vis is also the policy of | ney isto re-otganize the party of the Orle s, | Doulevards are complaining of that unnecessary re- net with the | which is said to be destroyed ‘by the political will pair, Which was not at all called for, and the pas- uation of the country. Theuniforms | porter of the Corsaire, and A. Achard, of the As- | but to die. Pins Nioth, than wh om a better man is I} the regiments of France, were to | semb/ée Nationale. This last gentleman was pierced | not to be found in the ranks of private life or in the and one of the friends of my family | through the lungs, and he is ina very dangerous | list of living sover@gne, hes repeatedly endeavored the presen of all rank: be teen there; mort kind reception from the Czar. Emperor of Louis Philippe. He certainly will tryallinhis | sengers and premenaders are not more satisfied om I promenaded amidst these celebrities, | state. Un coup d&g ée pour un coup de plume. This | to meliorute their condition, but they have uni- Nicholas posinvely declared that he woul! con- | power to prevent this document being made pub- | than the bot thers. With the heat, the dust is psi lame that he had seen the parties givea by | is very expen Ire. “Sher é ‘ IL R. formly proved themselves unworthy of clemency. sider as his enemy, any one who would break — lic after th ath of its author. insupportuble, and with the rain, the mud is insur- | the ror Napoleon, and that those of his a Allthe nobles, however, are not of this stamp; an these treaties. He also succeeded in forcing the Another difficulty has taken place between | snountable—two evils which are certainly great nephew were the same, but only ona smaller scale. Our Italian Correspondence, one, who stands first of all of his order, in rank, in Prince of Prussia to understand that his country | Fran Louis Napoleon does very well the Dace of a Rome, May 30, 1850 sare grea en is seg hac show, that ~ palace. He was simply dressed ina black suit, a . z ‘ hy P addition to se qualifications, possesses goo mane a, eaale ‘walsttont, upon which he had his | Religiows Ceremonies—The Pope's Part in Them— | taste also. . , : large —— ot the legion ~ been ie ane Lament for the Dead—Blessing the French a ene CSE cept) ae and: rscns, and favore a Rai ae! Dy : D Sou es, ie Le we ¥ had received good news from Prescription—The Prieta of the Propaganda married to the Count of Frangipani, the chief of u cand Kgypt. It appears that the Bashaw | enough to be put im comparison with the dangers ri r ought to keep peace with Austria. Never will ch | of the berrieades. Nevertheless, the Minister of Austria consent to a German Parliament; and very Public Werks will * go ahead,” and the Bneantage, shortly will be annihilated, as well as in Prussia, presented to him by our | os this new procedure is called, will invade the the freedom of the ; hich has never been put i coin, that this gentleman | Boulevards, the quaw of the Seine, wand all the execution on account of the state of siege. I “ ught proper to stop any intercourse with him. | pubhe thorovghfares. vh persu by 1 see and all I hear, that our government will do towards Abba Ba- |" The second races of Versailles, though not fa- | New York; how were Mr. and Mra. Bennett, and | @¢ Mr. Case—Destitution in Rome— Marriage | cidest house in Itely——a house that takes prece> ussia is progre s with a shaw, I will let you know soon. vored with the presence of the President, were very | Mr. C——t, his friend; and, after my answer, of an American Lady with Count Frangipami— | dence even of the Colonna race, who elaim their single aim to overturn mobu In Africa, our possessions in Algiers are also | brilliant. The crowd was imumense, the equipages | bowed te me, and passed to another gentleman Austrian Power, §c. descent from the Emperor Trajan. In my excur- proprio, and to Germanic Diet ned by another war. ‘The King of Merocce, | filled with many rportemen and pretty ladies, and with rome modifications. Time will prove if [ am y y, commandedby two | the horses behaved in the most elegant manner. right in my maniére de voi yeverals, which is advancing towards our frontier. | went to St. Quentin, and, therefore, was unable to ‘The conspirac inst the life of the sovereigns *y will receive another “licking,” simi- | see them; but, as my family are hving near the of Germany seems to be a well understood fact. ven to them at Isly and La Smala, by | race course, 1 had & very aceurate report of the Another murderer las been taken into custody ia | General Bugeaud. whole aflair. The premiom of the Administration Hanover, and he has confessed that he was sent The Prin aurice, of Holland, seven years old, | of the Studs (1,000 francs), was won by Want, from Lenden by the club socialists. He died on the Sth inst., at the Hague, and his loss | magnificent bay horse, belonging to Mr. Latache had pasted through Cologne, and had had an inter- i ate, of whom he | de fi y. The premivim of the city of Versailles, Tiew with the most enraged leaders of the party », Who shared the | (1,000 francs), by Téndbreuse, a beautiful gray mare, The man did not acknowledge whom he had the nd queen. f the property of Mr. Fasquel. The premium of the nu Italy is still dull. Nothing pars | Seeisty of the Keces, by Cloture, belonging to Mr. jar has teken place at Rome, except the Avmont. Hlusion, the inost adiairable animal ever y up the stores of two booksellers, wh born, won for her master, Mr. Curter, the premium = pe agains: the demegogne | of the President—a set of tea in gilt silver (en ver- of Italy These gentlemen received but slight | met!) The race of the fences, ran by four le- wines to A wounds, and escaped os if by a miracle. . riders, Was won, after many incidents, by Co- guarantee. ‘The Grand Duke of Tuscany has the intention of belonging to Mr. Layer. : The steeple chase terdiction, created moch sensation among the mer- retiring from public affairs, and to leave his govern- icers of cavalry of Versailles, was also ext by me. The orchestra of the Elysée is led , ai, sions through the Papal States, I have passed by the famed Tolbeque, one ofthe bet musicians pcdllped ici g Be jailing prada thrwugh several ef the ffs belonging to thie young "aris; the ic which he iveres a * | nobleman. is domains are of vast extent. 1 re- pel Sdn ther 1 aech regretted not being | The splendid displays of the Romish Church, with | member well, in particular, one of his castles, a dancer, to try either a polka or @ quadrille | its pomp and unparalleled magnificence, have | Which is celebrate ame its feudal beauty. It stands with one of the fair eS an President. eclipsed the usual sights and spectacles of the oy lonely fo re of the age pom oad with its efre: r the buffet, as it is tall towers, barbican, moa! porteullis, carries mee Sy pg on, and the best | Eternal City, and the stranger traveller, who comes | you vividly back to the days of crusades and chi- wines, ice cream, coflee, tea, sugar plu to Rome haunted with bright dreams of the past, valry. Bey new . dy of the pe will i re gake ® -” ce tg argeogepes putea with the | #24 brighter visions of the future, hears no longer vccliatanane = pest, and strange wi the preeesa pg he receives from the government. Be- | of erts, and monuments, and ruins, but of churches, I was in Florence during the commencement of sides all these things, the dinners, private presents, | and convents, and cathedrals. We have priestly | this month, where I found every cafe and ee, remunerations, and other expenses, which ure indi | processions ail day, and priestly processions ail | &d promenade—ell places of publi Tay fille penseble to 4 rey gk pe postion, ren- night. It falls strangely upon the ear, to hear at be SP eine, uultornen of Anstis. * Ces som ted i iu jarge to °4 “| chiens, ea. ol ine murmear, play ie T'eouuo ance. “The party ended atabet ons midnight, or later still, when every other sound is | on the word— Autrichieons—“ Cet Autrie rbd clock, but the President had left the saloon by the full, heavy tramp of the bare-footed | (rowvent partout.”” The stately palaces along the o'clock, 4 by | hushed, the . y P ng helf past eleven. The next season for parties will Franciscans, returning from midnight orisous to banks of the gentle Arno, heve been di cased ule, but in Por- tagal and Oporto, where it exe taken plece on the %h + on acco decree, published relative to the expo d tvaders of the city. mentin the hands of his son, fourteen years old, jiant, and elicited much applause, begin in October, atthe Elysee. During the sum- “vss - of their ancient owners, to make room for the fa- Teer) cor sidheg hin tell on how the press of | ‘Thir | BE Leopold of Tuscany, ia consi Vhile these amusements are taking place out of A al and the autumn, Lagi Nepoleon retires | their silent cells ; or, more strangely still, the low | yored officers of Radetski, Tn the govern ns Paris bas spoken of the expedition of Lopea againat | here very astonishing, for he hos always been bes | Paris, the theatres are very dull. Many of them | to St. Cloud, to enjoy his Otiwn cum dignitat ant of the gentle monks of the order of St Mag- | Tuscany, the Grand Duke has become a mere cy- Cuba. I will only tell you that they have generally | Joved by hin su ; and you remember that when | have requeeted the government to authorize | who will be the * deity 1 Lcould tell, if tw lena; und looking down from your window, to pee, and many years must elapse before he can blamed the government of the United States, for | he fled to Geéta, to avoid the rioters who tried to | them to shut their doors during the summer sea- | pabbler, but I will abstain. eee a long line of clouked and cowled figares pass- | regain—that loughing prince—the affections of his having been +o blind as to allow these baceaneers — revolutionize his. dominions, he was immediately and it is not yet known if this will be granted. The iaces of Versailles, which took place on | ing from one shrine to another, each carrying in | people. He was tried, and found wanting in the to erm themselves in the American territory r hful eubjects, The Duke of public belle, the parties in the fields, ure very last, in the Plain Satory, are considered | his hand a lighted toreh, which flings a gi jour ofperil. In an evil moment, he ealled upow Adien, B. if. R. the properties which be | in urious to the theaties, nd principally during the | jhe bet of the season. ‘The crowd was immense; | light upon their wan and macerated features. | Austria for help. The legions of the North came the number of carriages, of horses, the toilettes ex- | very religious order, from the young nobles of | at his cry, and while reinstating him upon_his hibited by the elegant and fashionable society of | the Jesu, to the poor and beggared Dominicans, | throne, have taken possession of every post in Tus- Paris and its neighborhood—everything, even the | has made a pilgrimege to the shrine of the Altar of ag from San Lorenzo to Maghiano, and there presence of the President and his ministers, was | Heaven, on the Capitoline, in devout gratitude for | is little probability they will ever be restored. toflicient to render that equestrian festival one of | the return of the Holy Father—and such hetero- | They are in the grasp of that fierce, relentless * the fineet ever behe!d. Lord Normanby and Gen. | geneous gear never have I seen before. Luther — which has sworn the subjugation of ail Cavaignee were present, and the me, Raf oo wees oy oe ye when a = aad italy. JIBP. «¢ da long conversation with the Presi- | church of the scarlet woman resembleth a mighty Ficlpne races tegen, at halepast two, by the Pinct, which holdeth all manner of things.” Opinions of the French Press on the Loper y evenings, their mside is the very it eof ert. The Theatre de la Porte St. Martin is closed, es well as the mn, and the National Theatre of the Cirque Olimpique. Very a the follow POLITICAL CORRESPONDENCE. Panis, June 13, 1950 eyed at ogee te The Three Diillions of Francs for Louis Nipoleon— ¢ Congiese of Warsaw is finished, Theatre Historique, andthe Ambiga, will Sector — The Deportation Law—The — left the city on th inst., returning to & - | the come course before long. rd canygg endive in jee ity 4 o Paris— burgh. We have not y secived particular de- | ‘The Theatre de la Nation, the Opera, is always Grecian Quesiton— ihe Frote : tails upon the conference of Warsaw: bat itis als | filled by Atboni, M’me Laborde, and Fanny Cerito. ~~ Money Market —Thrers—FPrance and Ex ready certain that the Emperor Nicholas declared | Aiboni, every time she appears in “ The Prophet,” rbates of the National Assembly have been that he could not decide the question pend - others arownd her a crowd of admirers, and the ium of 1,500 francs, given by the minister of | Iu returning te dewms, the Pope has himeelf of- 2 bay vr pa be ot week: The ent tween Prussia and Austria, but. thet he would try Teceipte remount to from 10,000 to 12,000 ftancs.— aericultare and commerce ; the distance run was | ficixted on several occasions recently. The last Lance inden tee anomie pe mage em Fo very dull during the ja ae 4 all iu his power to prevent the war between those | M’me Laboide, who was taken sick a week ago, | two kilcmnetere, ard the premium was won ty service of this character in which he thas part reception and his arrest at Savannah, &c., the conversation are the project of law of the three fy, het he would take the part of the | made ber eecond appearance in the “ Roasigaol,” | Marly, a splendid gray horse, belonging to M. | puted, took place in the Church of St. John o Divats vays :— pierces: roposed by Mr. Fould, for the ould be the last to brea sidency. That affair has taken, | with the ether. As for the ave aspect, by the thre aguinet the intrusion of the — - Hany, nothin been yet an journals, Thatang- the ultieal ures. ly demanded, but The King of Prussia is decidedly it ie exacted by the p e President, who | We" d which he te fl put it forward as a question sine qua nom, for Li egret af thea eneiety « d Napoleon's stay at the head of our goverament. proimived sums of @ those who would kill | duced - _— ina sy vee nge g au " t this de dd is alt herun- the potentates of Europe At the Theatre Frangais, the new comedy, in wie vac ‘pd ge h ; roonnigesh ul dat every ‘The aflairs of the Duchie’ is not yet settled, and | one act, and in rhyme, of ‘Mr. Viennet, * La Mi- popular, and that it has been p - ¥ the plenipotenteries of the Congress of Frankfort | graine,”” was performed on Friday last, and met with inopportune moment. After the promulgation of bre litt deer ng the question with mach obsi- | the usual success which has always accos milhons of france expenses of the F all at once, a kind of ¢ ing declaration of the bk mentation of salary is ne y last, and was received with the most use. She will soon make an- “Barbier de Seville,” and also in Cerite and her husband, St. Leon, are always the chief dancers of the theatre of Monsieur Roqueplav, the most skilful monoger of Poris. The opera cf Seribe and levy, * The Tempest,” which obtained such suc- men who made a plot a cess, on Saturday last, ia Londen, will also be pro- “No doubt the government of Washington have committed a great fault in being, or in een | Lupin. The ‘premium of the city of Versailles, | rusalem, and it wi 1 not coon be forgottea by those 1,200 francs, was won by Connie eats an ca wh Ml it. — — was founded by ee t imal, belonging to Mr. Aumont. eo te of St. John, those stern warrior-monks, ot rat Day Saal, eeclcan for heres thaes Yonts'|' endlera: TenoWe, ak earthen, Uy the ransten of to (be; ignorant of such an expedition, o ld; premium 1,600 francs. An the ‘nine | their captives. All of its wealth was eed on | HPae the ret a soe aan ne horses, ‘Tertius, belonging to Mr. d° Tiédouville, this high occasion; and the ransom of half of the | a es ee gore pe nt pr was the vietor. The great premium of 2,400 francs, | kings of Europe would not equal it. To judge cor- i wees Wak, auee eS foots are wabapplly rod given by the city of Versailles, for eutire horses | rectly of the riches of the Catholie clergy, one poner wh) duty totry, by may and mares, three years old, was won by Predes | must witness a ecene like this, remembering, the | 1201's salutary intimidation, add A mtr 0 had tine, belonging to M. Beauvau. The race of the | while, that this is by no means the wealthiest of attempts 20 deplorable tor tonne ripe rot sea gentle en riders, Which was announced, did not | the four hundred and twenty churches that im them. It ie to be eo cain omne teke plece ; but it will be seen on Sunday next at | within the walls of Rome. All the ecelesi gh the laterest of pay ee dy Sales Ee the eecond journée, in which the officers of cw dignitaries, ns well asthe high officers of State, | Joos ss ty how. in garrison in Versailles, will have a civilend mi ae, aes present on this occasion— p t ia da Sitele, after giving the facts, taken from the such @ law as that on the elections, which had neey. Adieu. B. H.R. the of that amed acadareci ay of their horses ina ul race, for wlueh a | the cardinals, in ir purple robes ; the bishops, in N. ¥. Weekly Herald, ways :— been forced in the National Assembly, and voted PS —The National, aecnsed of “ high treason,” | Rac tar’ of that theati very rich horsewhip has bee: numnously oflered | their ft ving menteletiog; and the friars, in Le “The Government of the Union does all in ite ‘ he government was for en article published a month ago against the | Of Paris. Her persenation of I. Tisbe, inthe drama | by the Society of Encouragement. coaree brown rerge. ceremony proceeded. | ,ewer to maintain the Americans in the course of only because the chief of the governmeni Xu 4 ent, Was tried to-day and acquitted. of Vietor Huge--* Angelo,” —is the ne plus ultra of Versailles, which is, are know, a very desert- | accempanied by the pealing of the organ, the waiv- | the law of mations, but it is overflowed by an im- aadly exposed to riots and émentes, it has been con- Mr. Fini tdin bas, ot last, obtained the | pathos and bretrionic science. She is on the eve of | ed city, is on the eve recovering its ancient | ing of censors, and the chanting of the plangi; mense conspiracy. Justice Betts presented, on the ple of the time of is XIV. The games | and when the bell was struck, and the multitude goed ly that ‘saraclel for it appears ‘that the | prostrated themselves before the elevated Hest, overment has decided to re-open the saloon of the | there was presented to the eye that strange an: fia, and Frascati, in the city of Versailles. No | picturesque juxtaposition of plumes and crosses, doubt thet the attraction of the faro tables will | mitres and swords, princely apparel and beggarly Kecllssper a large number of Parisians and of | rage, only to be seen in the throngs that bend be- 2th of May, a report to the Grand Jury of New York, on the subject of the Act of Congress of 1915, relative to the armed expedititions against the countries with which the United States are at peace. 'y with the common sense and the general law of nations, those expeditions are sidered as something unusual end injurious, to ask seat et the Nutic nal Assenbly which he has been | taking her comgé, and she will go, [understand " Q > results . | to London, where ehe is engaged by Mitchell. i boldly such a large amount of funds. A fraction locking fer eo long a time. The results of the | 10 5 : by M premade jority has proposed not to allow the wh: election of the Bos Rhin, just arrived in Paria, aco | (4W her last night at the Theatre Historique, where q — je de Gira 32,000 4 . | che played Virgin, for the benefit of Mrs. Person, amount demanded by the executive power, but to i cone =: eSge0 votre,” Thee ne poeeore | the beautiful and ialented actress, and she met with pay all the debts which have been, till now, con- | of the journal La Presse is elected. We shall see | the most enthusiastic reception. 22,000 votes. r ‘omni i ith the fore a Catholic altar. Last night, | was so fortu- 3 tracted by the President; but this has been rejected what he will do—a Cenrre on connait Cartisan A She Users Comes, oat pet enetaed ih he fovelgs a ae tn elas of the, warm woather, | pave pute gut cuupiatea Wi the’ Onavent of the gennraered as acts of piracy In Socures with much contempt, for it would lead to the sap- cherons,” “ Le Val d’Andone,” and t musical | dein; business. The Théatre Francais, | Burning Cross, to hear the famous “ Lament for tote ber —_— ae oy 7 & Jury. ition that the Presidency was in the hands of the TUL CHIT-CHAT OF PARIS. cme, ie preparing several novell which will econ witen te Rachel and her sister Rebecca, is the | the Dead,” which is chanted only once in every a A beens “ane this will be without power. sawabtehers Nevertheless, it isdoubsful whether | yg Parr, June 13, po me eed its able manager, Mi. Perrin. “ An- rendezv ou. ct ia the itera ot Paris and wt ' Ty tS eu ev ervenamen pena creo with 4 population Who donot desire the restrainte ol, tes laine 4 “ sure Secking—St. Quentin Railway Féte— | gelina,” by Adam, wi . Europe. itimate drama comed . rpowering, sheng bad gtd «4 aie oye oe? ae Description of the Scene--A Celestial Phenome- At the Vaudeville yo 57 de Ye o ple ed there : a! are Pre one po ul tones not deepal ring anguich bas seldom been The Prevse relates only a esis. fre certinly a large amonnt for a single man. “It | mon—Lola Monte and her Comfeasrome—AMfac- | [eeu etgues in two houres-hae attreeted crowds | (aice®, Brett Pleaeute 1 eine ae peanty ot | memes lifes butt have 0 wish to be present | Re Comatituionnel wayne youd be ieee sean Sets wth on Tha adamizing the Boulevards—The Second Wer- | for the lect six days, and will oonsiane a the sotreasen: thety sumnie and artical ieel rae sreend time, it jocet <i = realized the fable of the mountain giving birth to a ache ot obliged - P i 9 » WA. le peeses, 00 i p many people coming to ask for | sillee Racee—The Theaires—Opera—Aiboni— | @ long time. {a EP at cae ae well as the fineness of their acting. Mr. 0 was there jong ng . ty axception, Hi the néw manager, deserves great credit, | longed almost beyond mortal power, seemed work of an American artist, and, ot the end of € ii oer . alms, either pglitieally or personally; to give re- Laborde—The Tempest—Rachd—Smith's Pano- mofe like the waili of lost spirits tham utterance ; and he is the enfunt géié of the whole press. The some for the audacious pirate, the un- ceptions, &e., ke ene things are not deemed | rama of the Mississiypi—Banvard—New Playe= | th after the first performance, he was called med oe, Leon Gorlan, “ da | frem human lips. Heads were bowed down to the pone meceseary for’ the American President, amet, | Ballet for the United States, § Sehte the curtain, and received With the most Chien Aled ” is nightly recelved much | cold marble floor, and from all FF ary od that had . ~) Se of Loges bea provoked, in their Ko Noho h ® the ten stodied our manners, ‘The heat is intense, political questions are burn- | deafening applaure. onpener. a prin been sealed for | yeas = om ae ie mn Row against Lopez, and Temeaeh, Knowe very well that ‘ivquie Napolron could not ing, and monchalonre about everything, hens ~ tion to Sanit tod Joist c, vere espa pastaeee I denen et Wi sc reyen bere the first days of Whereteeers were peu ng down like fain ;and iq | him for his Senge aS ae i White House” at the Champe Bivséet, | neasmre, seems to have invaded our population. It | paw bim two days ago, and gave him the advice to | Se heard sobs, shameful defeat. A them, those which were the ambassadors of the ee nations in | ie, indeed, @ very curious sight for an observer to | leave for the provinces, where he would do a better }. the low pauses of the “4 comic opera house the repertory b nightly | convulsive breathings, hong drawn sighs, as if teset of the right Geman ~~ pti om small parlor, riding in a barowche, and giving only duel eed sd f king. in y. The renowned Sinners to his iatinte friends und relations. ‘Tie vist, on any Thursday ot Sunday, the places of this ind ad oan aad ee Pinely ‘he willbe ihe a hte pen oon sokcpabat « guaand of flowers, gure ea ‘of the Sistine C in St. Peter's, which TS Presidvas otis United Staten we must more payee now groans ~~p eee amusement out of Paris—as the Runelagh, Chateau | cufferer by his obstinacy Desides all thig, his pic- | mixed up With y bravos. hae heen called the a wonder ay Mehl render § on he r ls re rou “Ami Femeal [he wot man: justice, has not hesitated, SC aca out Prestecat i¢ @ Amicrer, Rambouillet, St. Cloud, Versailles, | ture is far inferior to that of Smith's, and be canaot Me ’ yh ae ¢ eae ieee and which has given yey i: moment, to fulfil Me daty, and he bas given to " " 1 Si pI 7 enter into competition with his rival. be wae living in such a simple and retired life. 1 | &e ope to ol poem dines apt "At the Vareiee, & weries of tableaue vivans, ‘ink, democratically speaking, that such a sump. | prompt answer to ca y called Les Divyutes Aeriennes, will be all the go tous style ia not that of @ true eae can ke them out of Tris. Who would suppose that we | for the summet season. These “living statues” trate; is is ich” by all — a . x ‘are on the brink of an abyes, when we see the | gre beautiful, tastefully arranged, Ce doubt, 4 a ew wr} anewer to ty fee y yy * crowd thronging these palaces, and forgetting, they will prove Cop aye to Mi bedenu. it ie doubtfal as yet, if the law wii 4A a, the rounds of delicious and bewitching rae At the Gymnase eaeeds the “ Prawan tional Assembly, bat it it not to be rejecte: | qrve politienl question of the moment ! ©. | de Tours,” written for but of the son of the for then it would bean insult to France, ia the per | Preochmen, have euch # frivolone character that | femed comic actor Potier, met, om Tuesday last, raged ean Mt | re we Sen | "mes, gem, ee . | offers to ue tl ‘ast motive és Aw e iver, rhe < Whe of the House, geletiog 00 this | seifuiners. firet performance of a drame, called * Le ot de long da: n ‘aad dirge. T have no wish to hear it in. kine,” is a very interesting play, aoe! had great er Mort tune eince, on the piesa of St. Peter's, Weo'ston ta tunes the novel of Dumas, and at the hour of sunset, of « fine spring day, the followe it cleeely. incidents are numerous, Destewods hie blessieg ween the 5 wry T dialogue rgwant and the acters excellent. | whole army—#morale neon the tw ee ‘inn i Pech, 1, - : I with thetr A he el tT, and wae very . 5 Teo, oman, the dro, with horses. When the it te tke Sat ree spphctasy ha the part made hie appearance in the balcony, in front of of, . the word of The Theatre of the Vaudeville wreteerh, le page Ta 8, ge asan act of treason, the ct of & oF sustain- i om the ritory the nied tates an caver. pre or military Papedition directed aguinat the pA cara of a foreigngpower in peace 0 nion. “ Nothing is elearer than euch a text; and if the ve , General, was given to kneel, wha a y do youcompiain,” @aid he to |" The President, Louie Napoleon, left Paris on ” be . tie, called the ** Le one man, fapk to the outetreiched | eatiefection to Spain. Aa for ‘defend iw. Feader of the mountain, shout the“ auppression we | gunisy! inci or nine w’clock, Jor’ the jommey | Lames mieepe, greeny Tyr “00 ewes es Deux which | arma that old. man pron ‘pon them a bles cusation of piracy, he will have aley'to defesd Bins have just made of 8,000,000 of $000,008 mentioned in my last letter. THe went to the city the Theatte of La Gaite the play calted re, Leusen, Brunswick, BS) and, egein, : Py It was a | away the money of the oustom-honse of since we now propose to replace by 9,000, of St to witness the inauguration of the ‘hodrue * being the history of the Kie Beauple Bo te bee ame of ts with the precision of a . in | SURE ‘single trophy ‘and single reeult of his inve- Pe} t Indeed you are aot reasonable.” nite ‘ . Lbad | ‘he celebrated f ‘eho wes the wonder Panorama of fy seene to Iny awey i mnersory, to be reeulled in | = ube Pf oem ne the President presente | received ap invitation to be present at the ceremo- jhe galleries of the Paluie Keyl, during the epoch pow im the afier days. expedition.