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Damen ee Bias Panis, Jaly 13, 1850 powers; their sourees of income baing all but ex- | Intended Visit of Lord Broughan to the Cretinism In Sardinia, inj rs of yesterdat AFFAIRS IN EUROPH. preg TEN. ‘tea, si housted, and a general bankruptey imminent for United states. The Sardinian commissioners appointed for the sing their delight and AB Bering emt . ‘i ‘eg ge each vem, especially for Austria, And yet, July 20} __ | above objects have published some interesting re- | Sontag’s singing and acting. The audience were Our French Correspoader Though Paris is almost deserted, the fa not only did the preparations not slacken, but they d the rumor is | turns which throw considerable light on the | transported to the highest pitch of enthusiasm. At eotstnly oie de modes axe very busy in modelling new fashions | were pushed forward with a new degree of energy; | BOW confirmed by the party mi Y interested, that | nature of the mysterious disease that casts so much | the end of the opera, Sontag was obliged to come eure, July 18, 1850, | for the summer seasoa, ‘The strangers who visit | Russia fills up the measure of her armies, Austria | Lord Brougham will shortly visit the United States. | gloem over the district of the bigs Alps. three times before the eurtain tomake her acknow- v ‘aris, July 18, 1850. r s . completes her regiments, Prussia prepares for the Excitement is essential to the existence of this ec- The report commences by defining eretinism as ledgements for the reiterated acclamations from he New Air Ship—A | Paris, as well as the people who arrive here from -mobilization of the Landwehr, and arms her for- | Centric and extraordinary man. Notwithstanding | being always aceom) x d by cerebral defect with | ey, rt of the house. the provinces to buy their articles of toilette, are | tresses; employing for that object, a loan raised, his years, which have already reached the allotte ate k formation of the erantum, a small amount of Aecronaut on Horse Modern Leander—Arrival of Ainerican Men of 4 "1 5 ‘dioti A new one act operetta, the musie by M. J: c vue i hvdcale .. \dmaltiahe number to excite the energy and emu- | aecording to the Minister’s declaration, on coadi- | period of human life, the vigor of the ex-Chancel- Jar energy, impotence, and idiotism to a RO act pare. ic by M, Josse, War in the Mediterranean heatrical sufici wperornted y Had of being used only when Prussia, ls threaten {or hardly knows diminution. A man so learned | greater or less degree. The ‘result of very exten- | hes been Boxee ony nt Comttet, of Paris, Spendthrifis—A Matrimenial Alliance. latiod. of our marohents. Bees : ed with war. in the law, co famous as an orator, possessed of | sive observation tends to prove that cretinism is | See our last report of novelties there, Balloons and trains de plaisir are x the mania The large houses of Paris are also busy at im- New events, therefore, are ripening as the se- | such varied and extraordinary attainments—for | not directly connected with goitre; as there are a We copy the following from the American pa- of the Parisian popstation, Every Sunday, in | portati Ifyou adinire in the stores an elegant | qual to a revolution in France. They may be de- there is pardly = branch of human knowledge in | large proportion of the popu ation of the Alpine | pers:— myn is “ Hi | Aer ‘ pu nid dress, a garland and garaiture | layed for one or several months, but England which Lord Brougham does not excel—will, of | Sardinian States afflicted by goitres who have no | | An original drama. called © Virginia,” has beon pro~ Paris, (Nee Se See ee te 4 Wi hh the cute of oar beat mradiates, | CUEDL {0 be the more prepared to meet them, since | Course, receive in America marked and general | taint of cretinism. Endemic éretinism is confined | duced at the Walnut Street Tinta, in Ealadelpbie innumerable plewsure excursions out of the city which the gra at » | even upon her internal policy they will exert a far | attention, The bent of his will necessitates the | in Sardinia to the valleys and plains belonging to ee aeranal 4 — The most brillant of these trips have been, in the be remarked, be assured that you will be told: | from unimportant influence. performance of extraordineg antics; but it is | the loftiest Alpine elevations, having for their tcl ai Polievins “who venew : esto London, that to Russia, the other to undeniable that he will please, perhaps astonish, | centre the three culminating points of Monte air, that of Mtr, Poit = WO, Tem Cnited States Navigatio the transatlantic world. Lord Brougham never | Viso, Mont Blanc, and Monte “#6. geds—the pledges of love from Teilius, and her flowers riment on *orseback ; and on land, the journey to ) We oe : STEAM PROM LIVERPOOL TO THE MEDITERRANEAN. | does anything by halves, If his reception on the The valleys where the disease is most prevalent | and bridal garments, was one of those things that can Havre, ir Which four Among the prettiest novelties T have remarked Very shortly we shall have some fitteen screw | other side of the Atlantic exhibits a tithe of the en- | are the deepest, the most confined, the darnpest, | never be forgotten ; it was nature itself. produced by and wheh was so suce whilst «the stores to collect my fashionable | steamers plying between Liverpool and various | thusiaem which awaited a popular novelist, who is | and those possessing the smallest circulation of | the genius of the netross. The description of her o3- por's in the Mediterranean, This is a novel fea- | held, according to American opinions, to have | air and the least amount of light. The targest | cape from the house of Appius. and of her defenes of ture in the trade. Two years ago there was not | made an ungrateful return for the hospitality which | proporticu of eretins were always found in ihe | BéF virtue from the attack of the tyrant, —— nt intelligence, I will deseribe the following articles: the nilwey have arnounced that ev a “ t A dress made of taffetas-glacé of pink and sky b ‘ r ben cally eloquent and produced great applause. Ter last for tae future, there will be a special traia 6 one 3 F e experienced, the House of Lords will resound, | most wretched hovels, standing apart from other Magers Pp ik PP senrsions, ir Poiteyin succeeds, oa Suaday , blue color, Long waist, tight to the body, without | ‘This new phase of the traffic to that interesting | on bis seturn, with brilliant declamation in favor of | habitations, end often near Tarshy ground and | See, Where she urges her father to takeher Iferethoe Must, in his second experim . nseback, in a | any plit, low necked and tied upon a ficher of crape ; | pertion of the world, the cradle of human kind,and | yepublicen institutions, and the working of the surrounded by trees. js iven, and when Virginius hesitntes. and she exeltes Peron im ROCHE CAPERS ne | white, and covered with small embroideries. Oa | !be theatre of all that is greatin classic story, owes | American constitution. Punch is fearful that the In towns and large villages, the cretins were | fim tothe act by declaring that his irresolution proves balloon, met with no t. Heowent up | ine stomach of the dress, there is a beau of gauze, | its existence to the spirited enterprise of four com- | Jearned funchonary may insist upon being natu- | not found spread over the various quarters, but | that “she is a slave and nct his child.” the climax Mars, and came | jn the centre of which is placed a very small boa- anies, or firms. OF the first ° ‘these, the “Anglo- ralized, and enjoying the privileges of an American | only in those localities furthest removed from | was complete. We think the new play better for the lun, about twenty- | guet ofroses and forget-me-nots. tulien Compeny,” Messrs, M’Kean, M’Larty, and | citizen; and our facetious contemporary refers to | commerce and civilization. Taking the popula- | stage than the old one by Shoridan Knowles :—it ie at six o’clock, from the Sh ' - | a eeilother dress, composed of tWo skirts of white | Co, of Wuter street, are the representatives ; and | the claim which Lord Brougham made in the in- | tion of the Serdipian States at 2,651,106, the fol- | not ro tedious, and the effect, is greater and moro pa seven. In the | gave, trimmed with werratlind of clematites. At | their neat vessels, the Livorno and the Levantine, | fancy of the French republic for a similar honor. | lowing figures show the number of persons afllict- | tara), belng centered im the daughter instead of the ‘ry pretiy young | the eid of the small leaves there is also auotser | ply to Italy and Sicily, the ports visited being Gib- | Our trensatlantic friends will laugh at the idea ; | ed with goitre and cretinism:— ™Eurely this must be the translation made for Mrs ‘scending from the ainphi- | garland of the seme flower ; in frontof the boddice, | Teltar, Genoa, Leghorn, Messina, and Palermo. | but the noble personage himself is hardly likely to Goitres: | Mowatt by Mr. Oxenford, from, the Virginie” of sodrome, and alighted from | tht clématites ure placed in small bunches, and the ¢ leaves Liverpool regularly on the fifteenth of | prefer such a claim, seeing that it would cost him 21 $83 | Mc Tatour de Saint Ybare, in which Malle, Rache! podrome; and. alig Oe ere a Gorpoced of @ wreath of the same. | ech month, Another vessel, the Genoa, is build- | some £4 or £5,000 a year in hard British sovereigns, ieee | coe ye i : : .tla Malmaison, without having | eee ee etd can united together with a-chain. | ing for them at Dumbarton, und will be ready to | the amount of his retiring pension as Lord Chan- eh aie te ‘ experienced any disagreement. | "The robes of meglige or rather * walking dress” | assume her berth on the 15th of the ensuing month. } cellor of England. Had it not been for this trifling 5 Ee | ge at Mite. Cesring. Tenge, Semmmanee 0 ziost Mz. Retin, with his aerial ship, of which I spoke | are made as follows :— : | The Livorno, of which the new vessel will be con- | drawbuck, there is no foreshadowing the extent to ‘s'witheut Geiires. «| Shecensfal engagement at the Theatre Hove. Dub- 4 1st A Kedingottepeignoir, in printed nankin, | £07, is w splendid craft, und lately made the eut- | which his tordship would have gone in res lin, on the Och inst. Asit wae undersood thas the to you in one of my last letters, has posted ae ikr | Ge With vwants bordered with embroideries | Ward passege to Genoa in ten and a half days, the | under the stripes and stars, the popularity which 4 n unig never 8 Yo Laon duties of management in their new speculation at ki ‘S| has forfetted under the union-jack. But whatever Cretins with Goitre: the Princess’s Theatre would for some time at least f Paris, with | culled valenceennes. The boddice is opea, adora- | goods for Sicily being delivered in sixteen cd with four small ruches made with the goods of } from leaving Liverpool ; and returned here, after | may be Lord Erougham’s follies, it is useless to be the dress, and also trimmed with embroideries and | making the whole round, in forty-five days, includ- | yexed with them. They form part of the man— mense number of bills on the wal alithogreph of his machine; and he demands a « 1,958 preclude their annual visits to the Irish metropolis, their performances acquired an additional interes ‘ : 1,989 national subscription, in order to build the tirstair | Hos. ‘The sleeves are made large, with | ing u detention of seven days by quarantine at | we cannot have one without the other. Hisspien- | 8& 2° 3) 161-5073 | with the public. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kean ay- ship. I understand that different experim two rues equally trimmed with broideries, and | Palermo. [tis only when it is rememberad that a} did talents have always been acknowledged, but spent ob Be Fug | peared in Limerick lost Monday evening in the which he made before the members of the Aca- | having under a pair ot sous-manches of muslia, | very great proportion of the produce brought here | his stability was always questionable. Ie never ib leg yc Sp Fa 087 | tragedy of the “Gamester.” demy of Science, have been quite sat ly) 24 A silk dress of blue color, spotted with | from Italy, &e., is fruit, or other material of an | could be relied on. Years have not diminished | Relatively to the intensity of the disease, the | Basal Beker is engaged atthe Lyceum for the Li cceat AMA’ gh ai it, | White bunches of roses. It is made a la Pompa- equally perishable character, and that the his mercurial buoyancy, nor, let us add, his eccen- | Cretins were thus sub-divided:— next reason. such a plan should ever come to any ult, | dour, the waist being only marked on the form of | schoouers, clippers as they are known to be, gecupy ticities. It has been siid that * genius to madness | In the most abject state of crotinism, and bereft Tddbert, of ie AdgiMe dabsssas' titles tothe there will be an immense change in the way of | the body, but not cut asin the other dresses. In | an average of from thirty-eight to forty days is allied.” Had Lord Brougham been less gifted, of all reasoning powers osm Hi ran et pM, Ys travelling. Well, it may happen, and perhaps we | front of it, cunning from the stomach down to the | coming from Leghorn, that the truevalue of the the probability is that he would have been more | Half Cretins, enjoying eo but jaymarket, f ‘ . fect, ure four ccurdonnes of white silk twisted with | new mode of cemmunication by steam can be duly | sedate. ‘Taking him altogether, he is the most ex- Pet omarion ulties limited to their Harley and Ryder go to the Princess's. requirements. . are nearer the discovery than we believe. | x ibbe dress. reciated. The Osmanli, likewise a serew * 9 . wee eeeececceesscees 8518 iC 2 I went, the other morning, enticed by a very | oF inst pe ee pice a4 ranks ‘ol ae eater. for which Mesa. Moss & Co. are agents, Fe aes ie eanttion otis te timan ae Gietins, wiSas Sntettostan) Faciticn one lass kn Pay PORT ere Rekacusmet witty article of Louis Deenoyes, in Le Sidcle, to | couillomné, ‘The boddice is, opened in the form of | pliesto the same ports as the two vessels we have | ment toall who donot come under that category, | _Erraes’. ne Tne ere capable of being tanght |. | S87 “Macrendy was applied to to perform for Mra Visit the workshop of Mr. Daras, aa upholsterer, | & V» and high necked. Under it there is a chemé- mentianeds and several now beats Smthat BMAD) Bord Brougham and the late Sir Robert Peel + 980 | Glover's benefit; but Ine medical attendant did not living at Quai Conti, and there I saw a splendid | #(/Z¢ Of Plltted cari ceis wit eco ro have the hair | ‘Then there is the “ Cons:antiaople line,” which pain dase Hind oe aged Raiser. Rings OA mane “Toe, f Comments eset EE eae assortment of furniture, consistmg of a large | fixed “la Pompadour,” which is rélevé around | can boast of a few months greater antiquity than | thrown into ve Mieniniler positions; but the ea. | It appears by the foregoing figures, that out of | _ George Bennett has been giving his lectures on number of chairs, armchairs, sofas, &c., including | the head in the form of a big rope. the ltahan, The “ General Screw Steam-Shipping | reer of each, rightly considered, shows how talent, | the total pebaletion of the Sardinian’ States, the | Shakspeare at the Clarence Theatre, King’s-cross. a throne and its ‘top, the fabourets around it. | Although the mantilla or caraco of the same | Company,” for which Messrs. Bellas L & | worthily employed, is superior to genius, unaccom- | Humber of cretins is 0-27 per cent, and those having | Mr. G. V. Brooke has left for America. These pieces of furniture are secretly ordered by a | goods as that of the dress are much en vogue, the | Owen are aarp are the owners of three fine | panied with ballast, While the empire, from one | goitres is 0-62 per cent. It was M. Saussure’s | Miss Louisa Pyne, Harrison and Weiss, hive prince, or ior a privee; and their ornaments, which | pardessus of black silk uimmed with éfilés are | serew steamers, the Bosphorus, the Hellespont, | extremity to the other, is mourning over the loss of | Opinion that cretinism did not exist in places 1,000 | heen drawing toletable houses at the Theatre fre those of the Napoleon family, are the sudject | Mech in favor, as they are considered the more | and the Propontis, of about 59) tons burden each, | the greai practical reformer and progressive states- | Metres, or 3,280 English feet above the level of the | Royal, Liverpool. They have appeared in “Tho of much gossip. Who has ordered a salle du | fashionable. ‘ which call at Gioraltar, with passengers only, and | teqwhile subscriptions are being raised in every | 8€83 but this is entirely disproved by the commis- | Bohemian Girl,” “ Mariana,” Ae trone during our sphere of republic? Who is go- |. White mantillas of embroideries are less fash- | convey to Malta, Constantinople, and Smyrna, | town and city to erect monuments to his memory, | iner#, Who found numerous cases Of cretinism in | ‘The new piece announced at the Adelphi, under ing to wear the sceptre and the crown? You can | ionable then they were last Those of the | both passengers and goods. These vessels get &| irq thousands regard his withdrawal from the | localities elevated 1,600 metres, or 5,248 fect above | the title of «The Emigres Daughter,” is by Mr. front as a shawl. | cago for London, generally, at Sm: , or else- age of life in the light of a personal afilistion, the | the sea. Indeed, in one village possessing this ele- | Boyle Bernard. 4 “7 ven, as well as 1, whose ambition these nick- | 7 are Chae g eta ae vfs pies a ealaal semana netararear = “5 ‘ine’ '90 tps r1 Oss r eae nacks would suit. Let me only say that th ‘They are trimmed wit 's, festooned and bor- | where, and, ni y com th destitute of all moral influences, is with vation, 90 cases of goitre and cretinism were foun: ‘ pn rae «apt eculpiured by Mr. Vourdincke: oer | dered with lace. 4 Liverpool direct. They always, however, sail from pcate i pariiamen at diw'ovaat 7, aad hao ony in every 1,000 of the population. hana alle My oo ee Later oo the designs of Mr. Daras, is really splendid. The last attempt made by the fashion, for the | this port, one being despatched about every third | since outlived the larity which bis early efforts « Hamlet,” * Macbeth” Claude Melnotte.’ ‘The newspaper of the Calvados contains a very | mantillas,is ealled mantelet-écharpe, (scarf man- | week. e round is made in about six weeks, | i, favour of education and law reform created. ‘Theatrieals in Eu: n ‘The Austrian Government is about, we are told, curious fact Which took place at St. Brieuue, and | tile.) Itisa light and elegant thing, which covers | sometimes in less. Competitors with this line are | }fow is this to be accounted for ? Did the relativ i intense 4 ty Which renovated the aneedote reported of Leander, | With Mmueh grace the shoulders of its bearer, and | some three screw auxiliary vessels, worked by | powers of the two men produce so marked a cae PR Band sili 24 team in the pe aE ery epee aanaaiins the lover of Hero, and of Lord Byron, in our days. | #!!ows the waist to be seen with much ease. They | Messrs. Henry Dixon & Co., of Chapel street. The | trast? The mystery is solved in a word—the one | room and on the Stage of her Majesty’s Theatre— | Canobbiana Theatre—at Milan. A soldier, named’ Boislorieux, 22 yeurs old, went | are made ofa band of tafletas or silk, and trimmed | first two of these, which bear the formidable names | was practical end did his work; the other talked | the ecenes of her triumphs in former days—was | Mr. Buckstone and Mre. Fitzwilliams have been to bathe at the place called the Ei Point, and | all around with a ruche and lace. of the ae and the Pirate, were formerly en- | },u¢ left the work unfinished. On the score of at- deeply interesting, but somewhat melancholy. No ing at Richmond. They proceed to Bir- there, dragged by soine submarine currents of the |, The bonnets and espottes the more a la mode, | geged in Glasgow trade; and the third, the | tinmente, m was Peel's superior, | one dreamed of such a thing ; it had penny oa minghamn, Liverpool and Glasgow. They will also #ea, he was obliged to save his life by swimming | for this season are called ‘+ halfand-a-half.” Let sirologer, is a very handsome piece of naval ar- | put on the score of ut and the power of im- | for some time that Pasta was in E1 gland, but it | play Leamington. ‘ during one hour end twenty minutes, till he ur | me make you understand what I mean. Take the | chitecture, which it became our duty to notice is e, the two were ‘wide | was said that she had been drawn from her retirc- | Miss Julia St. George is ei d at Dublin rived, exhausted, at the Cape called Cape Hiilion, | front of a straw hat, of any color, description and — last week. The Astrologer is of one » he poles asunder.” ment mainly by solicitude to watch the progress of | Mr. Munyard, of the "Adelphi Theatre, is still l= = viens ae -_ — a branch of eon phic br te gated - s rer oe ha oy ae inpows cate See tenet painful tosee a man of Lord Brougham’s | her young friend and pupil, Parodi. This, we | boring under’ tevere indieposition; bat sanguine vee miles in length, which is twenty yards longer | them together, and you have a fashionable bonnet. | di ! \- i i 5 4 i then the détroit of Durdenelles, where the Greck | The only thing to be observed is this: that the silk | tineple in fifteen are, ‘The Brigand and the Pi- | Eiinencet | ie is Relays pevciiatbed ithe Pera anes aera r. Ti vedford (nephew to Peal Bedlord), who ® and English heroes tried their sivength and their | Uimming ought to be assorted to the color of the | rate have accom! the distance in eighteen. | Fiehest point of dignity which a British subject can | has been unable to, resist its intoxication, “she | hae been a great favorite in Dublin for many yeai be. : wah) Fed the straw is only yellow, you cannot | We need not add that a sailing vessel wou se! attain—that of a cabinet mialsterend the eo maherd ave a concert on “Monday. night, “for her own | Will make Ms debut in London uext season, at the ie American men of war are cruising in the | have it trimmed otherwise than with white and | three or four times 4s long a period on the voyage. | ofthe Peers, His head seemed to become giddy Benet performed some scenes of ‘Anna Bolena,” | Haymarket Theetre. 4 Mediterranean sea, and have taken Marseilles as | Yellow ribbon. ‘This trrimming is generally made | A new vessel for this company also, is at present | by ihe elevation, until at last he became a positive | on Thursday ; and sang yesterday morning at’ a adame Vestris’e benefit was fixed for Friday, their place of rally. On the 15th inst., the frigate | twisted asa net. Itis the latest fashion. For a | building on the Clyde. 5 7 nuisance to his colleegues, who were obliged | congert at the loyal Italiza Opera for the benefit | on which occasion she would appear for the last Constitution, of the L. S. navy, Captain Conover, | grand toilette, the pink or white chapeauc are al- | The cargoes which the steamers bring from “the | rudely to dissever the connexion ; since which of the Italian exiles in this country, Those—and | time m her favorite character of Gertrude, in tmtered the port, and was saluted by the firin, | Ways in demand. land of the eypress and myrtle,” and the other i “ ” uns from The jorts; Hoge, Comal p te { ‘he luxury of linen is also recherché! I have | countries tia exnaion skies ‘ban this, washed by mg (og on mgr yee a ry marl — Taare sre it many—who remember Madame Pasta * peg aoe ole Lenses. Jebrated French Waited States, who iiciaediately wrrived on board, | JUst seen some chemeses made” by the most skilful | the central sea, are very miscellaneous, and include | (12 Jiuh MWe we nec horry that he ie croreine the | neal ecadey Met hae heat Thee oan those eane. | dienne inade her frst appearance, this season, nt wasalso received by the firing of 9 guns; and, on Coupewr of Paris, which are the ne plus ultra of ele- | every article which the most genial of climes can ‘Ath i) mei 2 are as ge . peo | ae | sical stage, must have heard her on those occa- ag Loo whonnd a Wer et ke 1 oRanris at the following morning, Captain Conover returned funee and grace. The body is made of Holland | produce:—Wine, oil, dyes every hue, “es- | Atlan hi him : “ fag hs ary pegs fs Rho pte ingular mixture of pleasure and sad- | St. tinea tre aohehe week, in Racine’s the selute to the cily. The American officer wes | linen, and the shoulders and sleeves are surround- | sences,” alabaster, boxwood, marble, and works of enoug! ¥4 ; im to ae Reta ae ol — ness. In their perceptions, the past must have been aaa 7 ae ,” and was received received with much honor by the authorities of €4 With a splendid embroidery, trimmed with valen- | art, Merino wool, Morocco ‘Jeather, straw, velvet, | 4 Le igey _ t pe af fe 8 etiaee or hin. blended with the present. In the form and face parce af ery ing welcome by a crowded and Matvcillee. The frigate Constitution is a man-of- | cleaner. Thet invoice goes to-morrow to the United | silks and perfumery. ‘These are but a few of the | encveh lo th ole scope tr tte we lest of i before them, however changed by time, they were | f audience. The of this grand war, belonging to the fleet now in the waters of the | States, and the lady for whom it has been bought | items struck down at random. There is one im- ploits—the highest soarings is oratory. He | still able to discern the noble head, the Grecian | drematic work is portrayed under circumstances Tagus, compored o hdance, St. | May show it to her friends as a specimen of bon | port of rather an interesting character, and of con- | Cannot fail to attract, perhaps to please, and, it may | features, so full of intellect und power, the lofty | Which, were they not modified by the dexterity of Lawrence, Cum berl: 4 the cor- | gett end refinement. siderable extent. The silks which come are manu- | &¢. 0 astonish, ¢ have said, the Slopes graceful movement of the Pasta of former | the dramatist and the genius of the actress, would vette Erie’ That fleet, a8 you know, is command- |, The dress of the gentlemen is not much altered, | factured, but they are accompanied with large of the great republic. fi bBE acta, eo in her voice, even in its decay, in her | be deemed revolting on the stage. Phédre, cher~ ed by Commodore Morgen. The dorvetie Erie, | tince my lust batch of fashions. With the excep- | quantities of “silk waste,” similar in character to s style, in her exquisite manner of roundin; hing a guilty Jove for the son of her husband Lieuienent Potter, from Genoa, Whence she sailed | ton of the silk jacket, which is very mach worn | cotton waste, and this, through the manufacturing ‘The Expedition to Central Africa. and finishing every vocal phrase, in the classic | #fortner wife, would be an object of horror; bat on the Loch inet, arrived also at Marseilles on the | during the warn part of the day, the frock coats | skill of Manchester, is reduced to order, and glis- | _ The following information, derived from letters | purity of her ornaments, and ubove all in the gran- Pbksren imasliod by an irresistible destiny, which oth | are always made with short s! the dress coats | tens in “spun-silk? material. And what ure the | 8ddressed to the Chevalier Bunsen and Prof. Karl | deur and beauty of her declamation, they recog. | forms the grand element of all classic to ‘We have had several new plays performed in the | With pointed basgues and high collar. ‘The panta- | exports? “We can answer almost in one word. | Ritter, by Dr. Overweg, the geographer attached | nised the greatest ectrese-singet of her age, and one rt against which she eee with feel- auierat theatres “Paley and wert beng mene leone ef green, argon, gray and ‘hive drapdué, | Manufuetused goods, They ate chiefly, too, manu. | M96 Suvdinet Matateregting” o° yaar reuters: | had ever heand ber belereand towhom her aume | tom and sys Powerfuly nd benwfaly did i J ariéte: | wit! ver . » tioned. At the Varieter, La Vie de Café met large aries or band, ate much in favor. ‘The | factured goods of the very finest qualia, Facet oieec toeak ee Bie ats ae: | a eek Tene cence een, | aheambetediae dilletickaneiaen, ak tephatas veh 88; |, though i r linen drill is not h worn before. which the steamers are laden, of that e i e i Vie de ohem:, it reverthelees contuicg mary foe | Weather is not warm enough here for it Consignore, for the superior ‘speed and safety of | companied by an excellent map, describe the route | whocould judge, from what was, of what had been; | the victim vainly combatting with the unholy ty~ polis, which aflont the actors an opportunty to | Hats with high form and broad brim, of gray or | steam conveyance—the lower rate of insurance, | (rom Tripoli to that place, through a tract of conn- | who could discera, in the decline of her powers, | 0 Wi tet te tadiy ok her sex, overmatered bY a bop! onic 7 i i) q itant—| t tage + ° ic traveller. inal 3 Who, fe a we. tke Mises ieee ee tiocas tnd pritees too wich returns,” willingly paya ‘omall edditional ¢ direction of route is almost due south | the Cuviers or Lyells, ould mentally reconstruct tremendous power, while ehe makes the reluctant At the Theatre du Palais Royal, fai Boots end gaiters are made in a pointed shape, play, entitled Le & pha, wee performed tet hinbe Lent round at the toes. Small shoes, with silk | freight. from Eb aon turn: R +d south-east on approaching | the perfect creation from the contemplatien of its | Confession of her love to herattendant. Even when ‘yon: was received e . colored stockings, are well portés. ‘o all seed of taste, undoubtedly the most | Mursuk ; and b d the Garian Pass—which is | remains. But these were the few, capable of ax | carried beyond the barriers of shame, pru . “" oumeece r Frederic te Malco at Lee ciaits, Shortoticks, t's whip, ave also the great fashion. delightful excursion in the world would be a yacht- | bout thirt ‘five miles from Tripoli, and near | sisting the = pomercene by ic imagination,— | self-respect, und the onunen tienes she «de- is the most brilliant of the season. In spite of the | The hunting dress is always the same high bouts | ing voye, long the shores of the Mediterranean. | Which is Mount Tekut, having an elevation of | The multitude must (and, far as our observation | clares her passion to the object of itin the veho~ Cee ee eee eee thee who. like | of patent leather inust be worn by agentieman of | But yachts are expensive luxuries, in which the | 2,00 feet—the country consists of a continuous | has gone, did) listen to this illustrious woman with | Ment eloquence of love. she produces the impres- theatrical performances, the pleasure of seeing | 40” ton. most wealthy only can properly indulge; and the | tble-land. As far as the Well of Tabonia (in | disappointment; and those even who retained the | sion that she is under the resistless inflaence of 28 min. N. lat.) many deep wadis most vivid image of her past splendour would ra- | cruel destiny, which wreesherto the commission Frederic le Me e Le CI Nochange in the dressof children. B. H.R. purpose of most tourists may be sufficiently served | about 30 d eats as Gy wee vane ges cen na Orr can by the class of steamers to’ which we mf at- | tereect this table- , and the ruins of several | ther that it had not been dist: and dimmed by | of @ crime sgainst which her heart revolts The *, induces many per- | Smouldering Fires in Europe. tention. Take those; for instance, of which Messrs | Roman monuments and columns were discovered | this reproduction. She was cordially welcomed | character was, indeed, delineated with a in- — pons to dely the chalewrs de (été | ; s “— + ant te sn | (From the London Leader, July 15) McKean, McLart Co. are the proprietors, call- | by the travellers. Beyond (to the south of) Tabo- | and warmly applauded; the applause proceedin: sightinto human nature, e fine eption of the mar eeeien oF = pte gt thing! meogge nod ‘The present disastrous state of things in Europe, | ing at Gibraltar 4 which , however, few but he A is the table-land of the Hamada; an immense | in many ieaenen frees edaelsation, of the high ~~ ties of French tragic poetry. and unequatled Mademe Miolan, Lefevre and Meyer . ” which is called “peace,” is to be ascribed to the | military men go), with fare and every com- | detert of considerably greater elevation, and ex- i ited. But the signs of decay | qualifications for rendering her lott conceptions <akeies Wane The Meo government of England, to its influence and its | fort, they pod nc Bm for fifteen guineas | tending about 119 geographical miles to the south. nd, in particular, her intonation | powerfully on the stage. the delicious medula- Gaulle, is to be performed on Saturday eveniag | We'SMt, to the imposing attitude itassumed in the | at Genoa. There kp vesely: wanalt stay for | As far as the eye can reach, neither trees norwells | Was so constantly and so distressingly fulse—that | tions of & voice as powerful as it is flexible, she Thave beard a part of ies Gabon a is ‘ease 2st misunderstandings between ‘Tadey ont the | about three days, affording him canple time to | are visible, and the seeag voeentee which oc- | her kind reception must, in a great measure, be re- | £ives to the measvred lines of the classic drama- me very much. The poem is by Eugene Gorbe, Kussian and Austrian cabinets. In sofar as the | visit Turin, and come round by Milan. in, | Cure is to be met with only here and there in the | garded asa tribute to her past glories rather than | tists nerve and spontaneity; the continually recur- aud you may be satisfied it is an excelieat play, | Easter question ie, eomoemed, or the unfounded | Jeaving the ship at he may visit Flo- | ‘rifling irregularities of the surface. The is | to her present efforts. Pasta is one of the many | ting rythmical cadences lose in her mouth their mo- « . ~ & claims ot the two “christian” powers connected | rence, and diverge to e, and, after a brief | Covered with emall stones; pyramids of which, | who have diminished in some the lustre of | notonous effect, and we perceive only their strength Mademe Laborde has been re-engaged for three | with A ie is opinion is certainly right; but it must | contemplation of the glories of ears at the grea: Opera. 1 had the pleasure of | Tube formotien that atnee the Turkish ques- wae ‘Stel g this talented cantatrice, on Saturday last, | tion, comiaered in itself, and by its own omy areesenshateans coon - The shuren for Eternal Cay, erected with great labor, serve as road marks ts the | their name by mangng in the “longing, lingering | ¢nd dignity when she utiersthem. Madile. Rachel A y iith inst., at Versailles, where she came to sing ®t | \nerlts, with regard to the nl ar 7e- | n entta praseas te Fedieaee's Creamy aoepertted a intrest camel drivers by day—whiie the Polar Star | look behind,” which is not peculiar to performers | néver looked better than ia the ay ea and Antares are their guides by night. After six | on the stage, thoug! more fatal to their fare | tume of the unfortunate Phédre. seemed tho ys journey, the expedition reached the | then to most other celebrities. The records of the Pirie eemeation of the classical heroine— sub~ ie. long aconcert given for the benefit of the poor. ler jitieal question of Europe, has dwindled down te | ; A . 5 ™ » he entire round, such as we have sketched, thirty- | Southern edge of this table-land ; which descends | stage are full of such instances. Siddons thre ime, graceful and poetic, breathing the meloaious success Wax immense, and she met with the most | one of wecondary importance, the solution of which | five, Of course it would be much taove ogieentte, in pepengiteio’ walls to the Wadi el Hessi (in | cloud over the end of her bright career, by romeiar: numbers that in olden Greece saweked to ecstacy. aatic reception. On the following day she | Tiretbe necessarily postponed. Nicholas. hy e ~ : e noes to fall " time and purse permitting, to go by one vessel, and | about 28deg. 30min. N. lat.) From hence to the | ing on the stage long after ht to have left | the living lyre.” ce eeaea thea makes, Gris tha tet (ae prepared, ond is still busily guthering, nu- | ihink only of Teturming Ay the neat, By the other | Wadi Shalt neu sniy weographieal miles, over | itvand when. the dif’ retire, by arsiling hervelf of | Mrs.Glovertook leave of the stageon Friday night qetere of G Her husband ie engaged at | merous materials for future interference. Moldavia | Jine, the voyage to the Turkish capital can be made | #nother plateau ef less elevation and extent than | new occasions for comin, opel before the public. | at Drury-lane Theatre when the receipts pn he Lyons for two years and Valachia submit to his rule; Serbia and Monte- | for £26. Bat the vessels which have sailed hither- | that of the Homada, but of equally dismal aspeet— | Mara, after a career much longer than Pasta’s, and | to upwards of £1,000,’ Mrs. Glover waa so feeble Among the best hotels Iwill rank the | B*f0,0re to him more than faithful Pog bed to out of Liverpool have not been laid out to se- | the general direction of the route — 8.5. E. | as bubliant, eame again to London, to be an object | on that occasion that she could scarcely get through Hotel des I’ vat, a gentle. avd Bulguria ¢! every day more in the habit of | cure passenger triffic, and about fifteen persons is | It is composed of a black sandstone, the disintegra- | of pity and sorrow to her old admirers. Grassini | her celebrated part of Mrs. Mal: and was * beholding in him @ guardian and protector; and | the utmost which each can accommodate. As | ton of which formsa coarse yellow sand, covering | committed a similar error. John Kemble and | utterly unable io recite an address that’ had been man'y ouse, at present, » but the Czar’ ries have be , r > the ls mericans residing in Paris, | 200¢ bat Szar’s emissal ve been the au- | the Peninsula and Oriental Steam "g | the inequalities of the stony surface ; and from it | Charles Young showed uncommon good sense in e] % One who dines at his we iveerved table, may thin {hors ot the late disturbances in the two last pro- | vessels call at Malta, and some of tae ohaet parte stands owt prominently the black rock, in high | retiring abrolately, before their powers were at all Grad wubwteled-—ihe ourtnin wee drevaty, od ae he dines at one of the best New York hetele. The | Vinces. Turkey, indeed, has for the present suc- | we have named, they have been, hitherto, the cho- | cones of the most fantastic forms, so much resem- } perceptibly impaired. was discovered sitting in an arm-chair, with all the Engiieh language ie heard spoken all around, and ceeded in easily putting them down; for it is to be | sen medium for passenger conveyance. But why | bling basaltic rocks that Dr. Overweg’s companions The same paper has the following For some | performers of note of the t day de noticed that these movements were only local, dis- | should partie, from the north of E connected, Without a common direction, ot have to go to Southampton to «| public and avowed support from Knssia; ina |, | sels building for this station that they were got up for the purpose rather of pre- | sure, supply all previons defects, and we paring the way to # decisive struggle, by reviving | wrong Liverpoo! enterprise were we to hesitate a | Was relieved by the yel the mutual hatred of Turkish and Selavonian na- | doubt of their entire success. the whole of Fezzan wo one who has travelled a little in the United States is very able to find acquaintynce among the guests of Mr. Privat. Py the by, this gentleman told me that he had beencheated, last year. by a young man of New York, Mr he lodged, ted, and amused for three months, wi out receiving @ farthi Finally, when he ented the bill te hin pong ran vanish and woe never he This case is enly one | may relate to y me, on his books, a note of 2,000F. d of Al which wa i nd eaders of tb a Mr ; , doi and at least, | Were often led to exclaim—* This must be a ba- | weeks past the appearance in one of the boxes of | to w - y ‘ Mcncw tes’ | saltic Fock.” He himeelf was frequently. obliged | her Malesty’» theatre of lady of Color, bas caus- | Gy foe Theretity wecsnee tne ata tt mea- | to exemine the rocks closely in order not to be de-| ed much conversation in lobbies, and the rumor | bear, and she pod under it watil she died oa Mon- ould | ceived. The Sane of the dreary black rock | that this was the same la Bey under the name | dey evening. This long celebrated actress was S eee «oe te Meee be - ey greatsea- | bora in Newry, ireland, Janna 178i. Ler J a lifeless wilderness | sation in Paris, cont ted much to increase cu- | family, the Bette lieved" descends ‘ies, than of hastening the ultimate downfall STEAM FROM ENGLAND TO THE DRAZIES. | —as it is in the sand that the palm trees grow, and | riosity. Biographies, too, have been circulated, by from ihe great ‘Deeertou, oh floxrished tor: of the Ottoman empire. 7 The service is tocommence on the 9h of Janua- | {2 the Wadis filled with it that the wells are found. | which we learn that Donna Anna Maria Loreto | temporary with Garrick andeQuin. Our heroine ‘The real turning point of the European question, ry, 1851, on which day the first steamer will depart | Tn the great Wadi of Fezzan the expedition passed | Martinez de Morena—such is her brief name—is a | Juiia, commenced ber theatrical career at the age we think, is to be sought elsewhere than in the for Southampton ae t pioneer of the The | throvgh a complete forest of palms, as well as | representative of the oational music of Cuba and | of six, and in 1789 joined the York circuit, ~ 4 bk we shall find itin Central Europe. Some- | pivite are to be made upand despatched monthly through cultiveted fields of wheat and barley. | Spain, having been born in the dependency and vi- | ing ws the page in the tregedy of the * Orphan.” thing more vital, more palpable, of greater and | ww, join the particulars of the route to be pur- | Awother small table land was traversed by the tra- | sited the kingdom, and having studied music in She soon after played the Duke of York to the more precticel urgency, is now at stake than, the together pppages and durati e j | Yellers before they reached Mursuk, at which place | both. She was announced twice last week, but | famous Cooke's Richard Lil In 1796, the play- This something is the propping up of Absoluticm— oyuges to each place outward :— P | they were awaiting the arrival from Ghat of the | hoarseness was proclaimed, and she did not appear. | goers of Bath passed high encomiums on her z at conquest or assimilation of any paltry province Menated Length or | Tuarick escort, headed by Hatila, who calls him- | This week she presented herself, however, and | and Lydia Languish, and the echoes of her pn je-establishment of such a state of things as peed Stoppace. eayage from | self “ the friend of the Englieh,” from having es | proved a conspicuous failure. A divertisement | reaching London, she was engaged by Mr. Ha Ls bind him $3,000 ¢ : Jafter the congress at Vienna, after taat of farce per hour. wton. | corted Oud: d C ly g i wares th nehents % . thes © ‘ Re corted Ondney and Clapperton to Ghat. The party | Wes specially got up forher. A Tarkish sultan is ia | ata salary of £12 per week, w wi Re. eke tains he & ch, or of Verona ; 1848 having furnished a gt Dave drs. Daye Hee | were all well, and in High opirite. his harem, eurrounded by his favorites, who ate ea- £15, £16, £17, 90 fo py com ‘ hvincing proof t ‘7 such a ha if Way station as 8 eu fF 7 Of the varied oral information collected by the | tert ainiog him with sports and dance: A veiled elwina, in Hannah More's “ Perey,” she made 1 vietted, yesterday, a splendid daguerre ~ * cor ones ne ment” which Pd | Zodeig to See : § i 8 3 | travellers respecting the interior of Afnea, the | stranger is introduced by the attendai who, her | her debwt at Covent Garden, October 12, 1797, with eatabliah kept in Paris by Me. Thoms of. the revolution of 1890, i ot aflo: jay most interesting, probably, is the statement made | veil being removed, appears to be a black female, | immense success. A Miss Campion, Dublin, New \x rhe has acquired the fame of ‘rones, f } , cantal ae fi | te pe ee Chk Dr. Overweg, by a Baghirmi negro, h | richly attired. She is eeated on sn ottoman in | soon beesme Mise Betierton’s rival in tragedy, and an aces i . saeetat in there ion be an je arery to cal | | by SB 5) + the _— a ae ens Fer ee es nt of eo! stoge, and, a gut * ne am ‘© | drove her to sec k unplucked iaurels in a walk better cives. 1 have never xeen before I aqparatas, ; ‘ “9 ~. | means that they do not profess the Mohammedan | her, proceeds to sing national ballads, which are | suiting ber genius; thus, henceforth, we find her and larger plates, then in hie stad kcaehanes are me 10 Bey 18 the ia of The one are rs = ae } teligion), who are clothed, possess large herds of | intermixed with dances. At length the sultan Hleingtin the higher walks of comedy, with onl of his pictures ia the mort remarkable of th 4 at op oN zn po ies a, and the estinv- Sevgrepasing Foplive Dihemavendralande aa | cattle, and have iron weapons (war-axes) of their | tives, pays her the homage of adoration, delivers | occasional impersonations of tragic parts, In 1797, Hon in was mi ie held, pigentgroms. maanet onda oan Ut the same ports, and, inctoding | CMP Pe® facture. Their country is mountainous, | her the handkerehief, while the ex-favorite ex- | » Mr. Biggs and Mr. De Carty teth Deeaine siitore h t come Se. eneen ib i. es Sroppegee; Will occupy twesky-nine dave terentye mth d with snow every win’ « 5 presggs jealous rege—and the curtain fails. “ All | for the hand of the accomplished lady. She wae Bh ge Fyre yar en " me a) a thee L re, thaking ihe conre of post to Rio ae { ith regard to the latte t of this information, | thi,” saye a contemporary, “was in bad taste, | relieved from thie dilemma by the death of Me. o at of ividuels belonging to the it may be remarked, that it seems to connect itvelf | and there was nothing to redeem it in the lady's | Biggs and the marriage of De Camp. At length, nation, but of national masses; not of a system | Janeiro sixty-two days sixteen honrs, The home » oF more statesmen, but of the | Ward packets will be due gt Southampton oo the onal idea. Te undermine and | 12th of every month. M fluence, and to sectue the | Will be transferred at I | with the results recently arrived at by other tra- | performance. The ballads hed nothing of the ro- | unfortunately for the doweatic comfort of ee eeenge oa the | vellers, end to afford revsonable grounds for the | mantic grace end beauty of the Spanish national | actress, the suit of Mr. Glover was cuccessful, and la Plata | opinion that the interior of Africa consists of anim. | mosie. ‘They were of n low elass, ckin to thenegro | on March 20, 1900, she was United to him. Hy am de Janeiro emal) 4 te Janeiro toa small | gence tuble-land, extending without any material | songs of the thiopion : - ssovid - - , renaders, and by no means | «1 it Drory-lane, she aided the gent: ability of tes monarehs, one needs to reach ——— * — provi which will convey | interreption from the Mountains of Mendefi, south | superior to them in qua d title ore ie a ey d cn oanaie a etate=s te we enliven oe nape g Bhi an Toret foom | OC Lake Tehad, na far as the Cape of Good Hope— | sustained melody, but w uick, inter- | of characters." At length, afer a youth of honor in a bof oy } Aol ht pr "PAI. Sh covnpter and which is mbalated by nations of civilization | mingled with spoken phrases and abrupt exelama- | the chief parts of tragedy and cemedy, she rradual- end? ineec 'P prec 1 Reedenare, 0 Miles Dey tire, Daye ft and that, infact, | tions, rometimes pereh and uncouth. ‘heir effect | ly deecended into the Deme Heidetbergs and Mali would se Lie lee Vilsouae minedity, Gena: ie Video, 17° HO... 8 1 6 5 | this great plateau, . Tesembles in | Was quaint and e@rious, and they were probably fel pe—no descent of talent or position, but, Hike the on is to be eflected speedily, wacom Video to 19 na 2-6 imate and physical ers much more an | of character; but, regarded as masic, they must more glorious in its neater approach to Tings, that Louie Napoleon | PrOt eo fore by main physical force, Beenos Avres wiih ‘ . pean than a tropical country, and offers an ex- | very low. The lady sings neatly and fluently, and | na So true were her impersonations of the ‘ toss of the tection of he la Ist " | ~ , nani , At Buenos Ayres thirteen and a baif days will be | einple enelogons to that of the & Andean table- | eccompanies cleverly on the guitar in the Spanish culiarities and beantics of darnehood, that it will Thove 5 onnltyman is not allowed fo wear - oa genang Ma gt x pene ed by continua’ — allowed for prepoting vid forty- jays | lends of South America. M+. Rebmann, in speak- | fashion, producing much more sound by beating the | be long before their memory will fide. For several hie mark of honor, it atters + ri he will & phe ; ad thes of ak 7» Who, drag- | witli he ocewpied on the voyage | word, mak. | ing of the petives im the interior weet of Mombas, | instrument then by playing upon it, She was loudly | years Mra. Glover had no equal in her theatrical keep it as & ny of French esteem for his H ny oe = rom on ant capital 10 | ing the course of post hinety-.wo days and sixteen | from Whom he received a very friendly rece applan but the applause was far from general, | welk; her Shakapearean readings also ranked very taleat and ressectobility BAR , ene own vain glory, | hours An average speed of eight anda half miles | ftetes that the character of the people is free from | and evidently of a questionable character. If we | high. In private life she wee long the support of Len a cele eer a nt of rest eo pet hour will be necessary te er the vessels to | thet savegeness which would render it unadvisable | are not muc inistaken, the prevalent feeling was | her famiy.—Laverpool Mail, July 2). demesit, tame UTA cette tine aod ta begs ue tie nei ay eee | perform this cervice within the suipul ted time; for | fer ene ortwo individuals to reside in t that the entertainment, clever enough in its way, = ©. Latehne, Not Grienas, Baminen Mi. Ooi, 40 land are ne Heated rth Reople of Eng: \ the distance from Southunipion to Madeitan speed | Fy amd that it rether displays compost was out of its place in her Majesty's theatre Ax Anpest Pritosornen.—Probably one of the Henry Clarke, Bostoa J. W. Goddard, | do coalition, 1 he question, and the | of eight milee ix prese while from Madeira nietnres—as ie generally the cas Madame Gavandan is dead. i most curious examples of the apparently trifling rs Geo. W. Prost, J.T Ratiey, PP tial forces 1 t amen ire, Hine t be the maximum in Mot « countries. Ag necessary to explain that Madam suits of scientific men has t xhibited by one of mea B Collins, 3 A. W. wtherford, N. ¥ ar mented, and the people ¢ cote Fim 1 inthe ex. | § 0 al ude sranga, or people of | in her time one of the most ta wing ac- | the most esteemed members of the Achdemy of it D. Huntint yi Reill 8. iro r ave more laclined to acslet Peuns ‘tant | but we ad in large num- | tresses and acting songstresses belonging to the | Seience of Paris, M. Durean dela Maile. He was . ¥. Young Nas BRaward ti ageinet her. ‘To conquer Fre i her w } . “4 " ‘ 8 that t Opéra Comique of Paris; and thot, efter many | 0nxious to ascertain at what hour different birds vpon a new revolution, upon civil wer wit » heir merch 1 to put it otherwise, before the career of it ay to the ol y¥, made observations, — af » | Menten. Tomene tee cece latent ot den on asees ef a fine breed. Of the successor, Malle. Jenny’ Colon, began—she, too, Lhe regularly published’ Tt appears that for wasend, On +: Phite. or rather afier the begiaaing of th he * thty Mr. Livingston neor Lake Ngami, we have | has now been desd some yearst—and almost be- | thirty years this vigilant naturalist went to bed at &.Charies'a. | revolution in France seemed unave: ewiee favorable accounts; go that we may ins | fore Maile. Dercier, the present Gavaudan of her | seven o’eloc! the evening, and rose at midnight, Isaac ¥ do. minent. Austria os w Pr (olae ‘he hope that as soon as Dr. Overweg and Dr. | theatre, was born. “A daughter of Madame Ga- | during spring and summer, and that this eccentric ¥. Boren 8 40, Wartfora arm; Russia to draw her armies t I " Sihebsllreach the Mandara mountains, they | vaudan, Mademe Raimbanx, some eighteen years habit was fer ecie niposes. Tteeems thatthe y PY Chatie. 4 ne ¥. 0 | when, in last June, a meeting of of F i « beyend the reach of the deadly climate and | ago appeared in E ngiand with success as a concert | concert is opened about one o’clock by the, chaf- & Fypeers Bo j Lexington. Ky. | Cited together et Wereaw, it was to , oi Git eaveue inhabitantaof the African lowlands | eget. fined, and that the enarrow is the Inaieat bird, not b C. Moore, YH bnddberser’ 5 " int they will afterwards have fewer obstacles . . Jeaving his rest until five o'clock. - Hd - me ge te on Ls oe) fh nae Fh ted ont Her | they shall have arrived ond Lake Tehad mence their natural melody. He shown, on veninet Tuckey, they woul ca “PP « tof those of | thet these realove and energe tie travellers consi- | _ Madame Sontag appeared at her Majesty's The- | more ian or oes 7 at ihe diferent hinds wean Be : n v veit real field. of exploration will begin. | atte ine character in which it was supposed che | have r istal ial hehe for the dawmieg of * W Deney, Cor sta! ‘wanen My al! iatinentel be ve eapect e be epto | The only fear ig, that their pecuniary means may torte bE ha Hohe the relia i Reg | de d thet » salar lamp has w@akened the Rifle ne he CORMEIERTA | coeds op het VOY Age Across th nt Y uflicient to Cgable them to carry ow! their | 1 —hetetofore considered the sole property of Jer ‘ —Paris Correspon the Bondon , sae iia heed | gigantic undermbhag by Lind, The sugeese wasectonishiog. The mora- | Correpenaeneney ee