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ER RO REET EO RRR RT LIE ENS OTE - EY ——— _ SEE snare n= rn on — _- — = ee he Effet of California Gold in Europe. | never more singular that the present moment. | if they are compelled to retire before the march of | because, simply because, we possess the largest | heaven, though they knew he had lived a life of AFFAIRS IN BDUROPS. | 7. [From tbe Saieraah tearaa August 3.) * Every thing Tending in ® direction to produce | eivilwution, it etcinty what they ought to do, | and most costly navy in the world, The truth is, | sensual enjoy men', cod bud for years neglected his ~ Although « desire of gold is, despite cl in the ions of capital; but, 1) ope that no be he red or white, browa or sa- | we attempt too much—more then any one nation | religious duties Neither had they sent for any of | (ance resulting from our Inte exhané | ble, bos any, original or acquired, right to land he | gan do, without distress to iis own people, loss to | his relatives, ‘hough they al! lived in the neighbor» tipathier, universal, it would 7 . s ' e On, Ihr ¥ Are Kearcely notics With an tn in | "1 7 ig 4 i R ae oni . al Fv Yo notice of his illness . smeye dreaded than its the enantar's patent yt 8,000 oper the favor- | cannot culnvate ; that the dog ia the manger is an | its credit, and injury to the geuerel interests of hu- | bood. No nouce ilness was sent to them Our Paris Correspondence, Tux GossIP ov PARIS as Pactolus he S S ‘ the Offenmive and an unjustifiable animal, aud yet that | manity. It hus olien been suid thata man never » his wo wephews, General and Colonel Panis, August}, 1850 | merciald Geclared eats cf one ea rosts of tacmeae rs.000000 | Mr. Copway claims for the Indian the privilege of | knows what be can do till he tries. itis ¢ ually | Be nic‘ on the Tutsday to see him, they Parinan Mar L dating wath dduced as a modern i and £4000600 during the same period, a stock of , sitting in his pire. neither tilling it himsell, nor | true that he does not know what he cannot do ull |] were net admitted to see him; and his brother a : L I N with fear to the probabl bullion in the bank which has remained, with slight | permuting others to cultivate it; that his claim | he tries. Angland hes tried, cad she now knows | Jobn, ¢ nm ealhing on the Saturday, was retased ad- wr ee cots Ne | Cont auriferoas doings ; fvetwations, xt a larger amount tan was ever be- | to preserve his hunting grounds over sn ex- | that shecanmot govern the world. mission also, »1d wes obliged to foree his way into te 5 the Theatre—The Camp of Ver- When most of our co r treating | fore known; and the prospect, thus far. of ap al tent larger than Europe, becomes ridiculous —_____—_- the room, and found him dying. The Bainl . sau Comedy-—Nao Plays by Dumas-- | the » ddiscovery of gold in Californiaas a de> | dant harvest, there are alec a number of more ex to those who have long abominated the | very Extraordinary Will Casein England, | vt the tu, were on bed terms with each ot ler, N a MP ty The F , ay 1 warnings against the folly | tonal elveumstances, which furnish still greater ind | pine laws; that his alleged suflerings from the (From the Liverpool Journal, August 3. nd, «thovgh Colone! Bainbrigge, at the reading sep jolie dye v4 belief so false, We ventured to | ¢Stonethata state of aftcirs is orev acey und , encroachment of the white man ace ali imagiuary; | At the Stellord assizes, Mr. Bainbrigge, surgeon, | of the will, had his suspicioas excited, he did net si—A Kader—The Fuir of Hea ey were W Deca The Oy d Ce ee eee ane ane et sean impulve co the | that he has gained rather than Jost by the approach | of this town, was piaintill in a trial before Lord | communichte wiih his cousiua, who Were more s of the King of Holland—Mon- a nature to satisly us that the precious epread of Atilsation puch TEs been wituvssed at no | of the ised thai when ‘in the woods the noble | Carnphell, which oceupied nearly five days, and | immediately intere His uncle had a claim om . } .P mineral € hed the neglected sands of the * | former epsch, Kach account from Culifornia not ouly | savage ran,” ignorant of gin and gunpowder, he | terminated in bis favoron Tuesday last. Lt was an | the deceased tor £1,600, und, on accepting a house mento. ‘They have now altered their view confirms, but #dds vo all previousanticipations of the | had hix grievances, his perils, his hunger, aud his | action of ejeetment to try the validity of a wall | as payme contrmed the will, Marianne, at , We suspect, equally wreng when they eppre- | growth of thot nessiteay aud of the success of these | wars; that the extinction of a Wholy tribe was thea | made in I$1%, the plainufi, the heir at law, seeking teen, ran off to Gretna Green with 5 we at i pec evils as certain to result from an in- | who have thronged to & Common Occurrence; that those near the whute | to upset it on two grounds—~insanity and fraud. ), the apothecary, was married, had of our stacesir t lax of gold. The silly sentimentality | movements on other po In#n now Cormpare most favorably with these more | The cave, as opened by the Solicitor-General, was d and filed a bill agaiast Mr, Blair im p which seeks a distinction betw the labarem- | Bing to manifest themsel primitive and remote; thet at this moment, the | to this eflect:—The testator, Thomas Bainbrigge, | order to establish the wil, A suit was instituted , yed i setting gold and growing grain, obtains | force, Ip the Sandwich 1 indian, in contect with civilization, leads a life | was the representative of a’ very oneient family in | by Mr Blair to perpetuate testimony. Marianne probauen, sto | Derbyshire, Warwickshire, aud Statiordshire, wud | and children passed off the ne, and her line bee the plainest of all sciences, | (Ouyer's Islund, aud even ia Chin's, the atit is distingtly | Yather enviable tham otherwise; that, accordi urious | politica) ec is still caviare to the million. | fejt,and the awakening life cho» manifesting itself at | Captain Lyons, the Indians are as numerous as ever | inherited considerable estates ia those counties, to | came exunct. Blair became bankrupt, and new ea sPa care, | Were people a litle better informed, they would | the extremities of the commercial system must soon be | they Were; and that those who believe the one- | which in the course of his lite he made considera- | wustees were substituted, and, finally, the Court Be ete how fivolc / tk hat all veluntery labor is equally productive, | acknowledged most powerfully at its contre Kvenit | tenth of what is related of the Peruvians and the ditions. In eurly life he was a man of very | of Chancery directed this ejretment to be brought, If you follow ‘ ve poor Nureaburgher,whofabricates | California were announce: ow tobe a delasion, | Mexicans, believe nine times more than they ought and polished manners. He became attach- | in order to try the validity of this will. Chatear A " which fascinate infancy, is operating | it would be years before the eff po gpodlred Rerape to do; that the tales of their heroism and their | ed toa young ludy. Some difference arose us to a It appenred from the cross-*xamination of seves those pu b wh h Bthe rilling of Jand es the man who, a fegeeamar i. Frodbpicpaeed o pa Bry. e new con. | Cloquence are all fancy sketches; that they were | manage seitiement. His fether would not con- | yal of the witnesses that Ba nbrigge’s brothers, eee snl direct | im the broad fields of Norfolk, holds the plov bernie Beg sae yh Ay ry Dave never been over. | Béiber so brutal nor ¢0 brave as represented; that | sent to his mariage, and she died. This event | Jobn and Joseph, frequently visited him and dine yout ; 1 . man must be fed and clothed, and food and ap; Uitimutted. end hence the inference is unuveidable that | When tribes eubsidieed the first settlers to make | soured his temper. He had a gervant, Mrs. Betsey, | with him any of them admutted that he had are obtainable on | deen ed of equal v Californian, in pickin: your y the beginning of | Wer on their rival tribes, they exulted in the white | ® person of sume atiractions. She became pregnant. ys been odd, eccentric, and slovenly ; some ges FO Come. Accordingjto the recent accounts | man’s courage, but could not help remarking that | He believed himself the father of her child-—a | seid ihey never beard bim’ teach the child any- York, it is confidently believed that the gold ha piled too many. daughter, who was born in September, 1790, and | thing unproper; and that she used not to say or do va and the | received in the United States during the next six he further tall was, that the Rey. Mr. Cop- | was numed Betsey Bainbrigge. Mrs. Bet P- y unge for something | what has yet taken place is ox Goid buys both; and the | the changes so come. A up grains of gold, is stimu | from ians mixed up with greate : ur p p lating’ the’ srowth of corm in Amel ‘ \ tsey did | anything wrong in his presence, aad was under orvcitcs end greseties Of ali sorts, and enjoyi spinning of cotton in Lancashire. His desire of gain | months will esceed the total of ali that manent eee Way’ scheme of concentrating all the Indians of | not contine her fevors to her master, and beeame | dread of being detected in her shocking practices with them, the pleasure of an ergie, the em 2 moy be teo intense; bis morals may not be i The silver mines of South 4 arf gh jieiding ® | North America in one district, ou the Missouri, is | pregnant a second time, by another man. Mr. | by him ; some never saw him sober—others never proved by his necessary location in an unsettled | lergely inerensed supply; 2: but these matters most concer himseli; sseosen te | bets fury ner ty, on the whole, benefits by those ere y utterly visionary; that the United States govera- | Bainbrigge thereupen turned her off, but kept | never saw him druuk ; some considered him atem- ment is not Likely to collect so unmanageable a | the daughter Betsey; and when her education | perate man, and saw no liquor in his bedroom § proved methods of ‘axa Tes body on one spet; and that, if it were, the Indians | was completed, introduced her es his ackaow- | for mouths together—others saw it always ; circumstances W) nehtily augment tr plication of capital from the p would never agree to live to, ; jedged deughter into society. In 1 some never heard him curse or swear; some as ‘Two evils prehended from an incre with Seu Francirce, itistheir destiny to roam the desert; and that, | was 13 years old, he made his will, le: thougi:t him a tidy, proper gentleman ; many, who flux of gold—first, a monetary derangemen Other gold regions in Bolivia, Venezuela, and | ultimately, absorption will look like extinetion; | estates for li h remainder to her i said Ul the plaintiti could desire against him, ad- secondly e speenlafion, resulting in an } South Australia, are then noticed, end also the | that, at this moment, the total extinction of certain | Before, howe she was 17, she wé4s got with | mitted bat he kept excelleat wines, and gave very medium. steady increase in the supply rid from Russia, | races of men is in palpable progress; that, in the | child by his coschman. This deeply annoyed hirn; good dinners and suppers are purely imaginary. | and ‘the importation inio wlaad of between ch Islands, New Zeal nnd Australia, | and he made ther will, by which he left his es- The case for the defendant was, that the testator J + Will not cause any ex- | £2,000,000 and £3,000,000 from Holland, arising aborigines do not renew the: es, und that, | tates to three trus 0 sell, and out of the pro- | was a man who restrained himself iw company, but create in ports of gold At most, | from the substitution i t country of paper aud | atno distant day, these people will diswppear, not | ceeds to pay her an annuity of £200 a year, and to | at home, and in private, indulged in those passions the supply is not estea'ated to exceed £5,000,000 a | silverfor gold coinege. All these cireumstances | because of the proximity oi civilization, but in | divide the surplus into three equal portions between | and habits which he formed at un early age, and id five iniiioase year will hardly do more, | have tended to make money plentiful end cheap; ; obedience to an inevitable law. thee rep of his brother Joseph, of his brotuer | ata period when society was in a ver: 7 different ithe excitement of a: rthelees, it ofan Ridic our French manners. Ag Yous to one of opment; qui F ren- | Ifyou rroves well as in Ne dezvous the take a of these of the Nati of the e rk you y v foure, o: in th , you wil ers saa htie eith i be ul years me, thar afford a quantity | end the tendency to further accumulation will, the a Colonel Philip Bainbrigge, and of his sister Mrs. | state to what it is at present. From the earliest que : i adequate to the gement of the commercial | writer thinks, continue fora considerable time ; he Aspect of Great Britain Jomes. On the Sd of Febroary, 1809, the child of | period he had been slovenly in dress, and eceen- souper, tting in the mos: e language. eyivencies proceeding from the discoveries on the | thus proceeds :-— arcs is lenica Zines the corchiman was bora, and was named Mari- | tric, and violent, nnd especially addicted to wreak ( must contess it, we Frenchme very litte | Sacramento. As we predicted, long since, and Step by step with this tendency tbe rate of interest A semi-official pamphlet, on practical financial | Sone. ‘Though exaeperated by his daughter's con- | his anger on his domestics ; but no man was more ity at home, and the more nd _haugkyy hove frequently repeated, a new and vast trade | to be obinined by capitalists muct decline, There is | retcym, published last year, began, “economy is | duct, he allowed her and her child to remain in the | shrewd in matters of business. He was a most ac- in q teble | hos been ereated within a brief period, and centres | BO over speculation in trade to prevent It and no | the order of the day,” and ended with the words, | bovse, and even took a funey to the child. But the | tive and intelligent magistrate None of his brother and grav 0, With | in California, Comm is geographical, and at- | quarter of the world where the exchanges are likely | 4.1.16 oraetical retrenchment is to be cought not in | dughter oflended him ogaia. There wasa farmer | magistrates perceived any alteration in his mental much ret A Perch t us, . The only questions, thewatene, fl r } b ‘ An ; a It ries and manufacturing inven (eo mas a el gry ee yo the lopping off of round sums, but in the thorough | i the neighborhood, nemed Arnold, who had given | powers, and they transacted sessional business rus forthe Adriatic; | the value of money will descend withoat erercoming | €X diterravean for the Adant i ation and re-adjustment of salary and ser- him offence by some dispute respectinggame. This | with him till within a fortnight of his death. ; and now San | the present horzcr of ell investments which involve | vice.” ‘There ean be no doubt that this is the true | Tan's son made up to the daughter. whe he | Up to June 10, 1818, a few raf edie a ye n teeming With | yisk; apd secondly, in what quarter the yent will be | do: Economy is an adaptation of means to | heard of it he sent her out of the way; butshe | he kept a regular diary of his proceedings, and and adventure. | found when the overflow of capital shall at last be- | on end, and, when the end is ascertained on | ‘!¥écd his vigilance, proved pregnant, eloped with, | there all his peyments were entered, even the visit ining that kind of | come irrepressible. $b We grounds of its own, we have then to take care that | #4 mamed Arnold. This made him furious. | of his friends, and every fact of which it was ructible and instantly That the present state of affairs, in which inyest- | Cur means are the proper ones, end neither defi- Under these feelings he made another will on the important he should have a memorandum. In The whole world is eager to pos- | Ments that yield scarcely any return, but thet require | Cio por excessive. This can only be found out | 4th ef Avgust, 1822, whereby he conveyed his es- | these diaries, entries were found to correspond with end in that eagemess abides an enduring | tbe €xercize neither of thought nor faith, are preferred bei frequent, if not continual, “exploration.” The | tes 1 two Lustees, of whom Mr. Blair, an attor- | the facts stated by some of the witnesses. From ¢ | security for en increasing trade, A magnitied a} Pen eens Pree gh cansiderable | changes which nations, and, indecd, society alto- | BEY, Of Uttoxeter, was one, in trust, to secure to | the earliest period, the testator was bent on se~ Napoleon at the to see the drama visit to that 1 in spite have been n this subjec! England lies opposite—t be peopled and culti- no rymptoms of revi i | gether, ere always undergoing, and which have | b's grand-daughter, instead of his daughter, to | curing to himself the power of disposing of his pro- said that | vated. Chine, peopled and cuneenas is already | {ya proapeetey, + piledBga Seat Pretec yutnaen | Gichened ‘Upon A of Bt _ make new | Whom he left nothing, an estate for life, with re- | perty away from his family. His father was not sinstic re her customer} and numerots islands, known and | ¢istrust until the shareholders shall baye resolved to | methods neceesary, and render old ones super- | Minder to her issue in tail, and, in default of such | deed a fortnight, when he barred the entail. He You will t Luknown, present profitable stopping places on the | admit what every body recognises, namely, that, there | finous. It is the oflice of the Legislature to *ex- | i#sue, for sale and division aimongst his nephews | never seemed to have been quite determined for present t tered there | Woy to India, ‘This, however, is only a distance | is no help tor them but ina complete r: zation of | jore” these changes, to see where the current | @4 nieces. Of the daughter he never took the | wny length of time, how he should dispose of the were the No doubt | in the picture. Nearer home, untilled regions of | their modes of management. From this and other | }... found anew channel and lett its former bed | ‘lightest notice, ce f ad name wes not or’ ultimate remeiader of his Reyne A lf a these cries were y ind * | snteld fertility, complete the foreground. On one no Sparoreeljerl yea arie Poe i revival of | cry, und to rescue What it can, in return for that | ¢@ to be es =e: the Fork ee | eon for saying Mr. Blair gained any’ anit the opinions were not thove of the majority of specta- | hand, South America expands into a home for hun- | Conmecnce will not be cae ee aoe deelded ‘e-ap- | Which it is compelled to surrender. If there is not | he came te live in) Green-lane, y. He | this will, which could induce him to commit the tors; but it was a manifestation c- | dreds of millions of inhabitants; and the United | Svaranee of the epizit of ndrenture. the period may | continual ‘re-adjustment,” it is impossible te | b*d & fell from his horse, and, when he re- | complication of crimes imputed to him by the By that will, | plainuff. - A inf iti i v4 her will. tionary proceedings of Louis Nap He went | States enlarges itself from ocean to ocean, across be su Micient to enable the Chancellor of the Ex. | conceive the infinite superaddition of establish- | COVered, be made anotl ; r to and retired from the theatre accompanied by | a world prepared for, if possible, astill larger popu- chen ie Geen a reteeton in the government | mente, of buildings, of offices, of materials, under | *fter rection: the ses of en rer: r med a eaden Arnold Sg pre ee =< inaitg his ais de camp, and a company of cuirassiers, | lation. ** The ebild is father to the man ;” and in | tunga. ‘ which we should labor. re are stories of a year to wher hie + pen pa = fo as any bagrve t een "he Soartee oo ae which caused more trouble to bim than if he had | 1he infancy of the new trade on the Pacific we see | When the spirit of commercial adventure and | jadies who have left in their wardrobes, or would | At#old for ber life, and making provision for toeay whether his wife, the daughter ‘ we ri i ‘i i ‘i i i i i his | ceased, died in 1827 or 1828. He was married bad only his corriege and two servants. the incipient germ of that commerce, which, at no | mercantile speculation shall aguin be roused, the | have done so had the moth and the rust permitted | ¢ducstion of his grand-daughter, he left to her » Apropos of our President. I have been told that distant day, will make that of Europe, at present, | able writer of the Zimes’ article thinks that it will | jt, all the dresses they ever wore in theif lifetime, | estates - “a be remainder _— to tooue, again, and ru now de ndant for subelatesioe on hist of forming comp of 1208) inen at Yer- Ierk poor, and insignificant. For the faeiity ot | find the seen of its oneration on the western con- | tough the accumulation could, anewer 20 othet sign tha leaner of the THIGDA. tor eras. ahs | casdteh tat Tha wate mnaee ehioniunee tetee sailles is to be given up by him. ln order to estab- such a trade, and for the people created by that | tinent. The conjecture is a more than usible | purpose then to expose the extravagance of the de- res ” . n if lieh it, it was ‘beceseary to. obtain a credit of ecve. trade, will the gold of California be superabundant § one, and all that we can hear and learn of that pow s- and the absurdities of fashion. There saat the Mre. Arnold was not to come into effect | defendant, and had previously stated dif- ral millions of fra and, according to all Will it be sufficient, according to the mistaken | portion of the globe, leads to the inference that it | have been men, and statesmen, too, who left | Until the existing lease to the Amolds should ex- | ferently. Mr. Blair was also exa l. provabilities, he would have been refused; “| ifen ofeufliciency 1 In estimating the future popu: | will afford ubundant room for all that adventure | hears of eeate r Walking sticks, oF snufi boxes. | P¥€,end neiiher Arnold nor bia wife, nor his father, | seemed to account satisfuctorily for his part in the At the Theatre des Vaudeville, the reprize of the lation of California, we must admit data moreex- | con accomplish, or speculation find materials to | ‘The trick degenerates into mere arbiets | BOC Sn Suelo et hingtine’ Treat wee ese - ER i auld tha the ‘,Chevaller de 8 George,” a. charming comedy tensive than present themselves at first view. The | engage with. bei in is one of the lowest eccentricities to w! puinan oy eaters Ee dain a“ pays yi . ana when ‘aiah vegeta ws Srabaacese by Roger de Beanvoir, met with imme success. Stimulant will pot be contined to the auriferous re- 1 us begin with California. An as to ature is liable; but sometimes it ys short of tr hs 4 ‘I ry Mme. Paul Ernest, the sweet actrevsy and Me. gions ; it will extend throughout ail civilized na- | the character, and enterprise, and indornitable | houding, exe shows teelt im the form of om ar, | TaDkle in his breast. The provision for the child’s | remarkable, but it was possible that, at the last Felix, the talented comedian, who took the prinei- tens, who will, undoubtedly, contribute to the | energy of the people who are already there. The | fectionaie but rather silly fondness for wsed-up or | Cducétion was ample. Marianne was now dead, | moment, his heart relented, and his natural fee! pal rcfes in the comedy, were received with the | peopling of all Aj 4, North and South, and, in | following facts are decisive upon this point:—Oa | antiquated articles, as ae coos keeps ‘all’ his | end the yo of her cialtenn dod te aniie ct the | in By ecgne ch kaitielit dnd o'caeales tabtbas utmoet approbation. joing so, encourage the growth of populations at | the morn 4th of May, a fire took place at | old iages, or all his old horses. Sometimes | i#*¥¢ of that line be ‘ sre e question, n . ee pos eae phe ey om og This evening the Theatre Ilistorique re-opens its _ home, the old countries serving, in point of fact, a | San Francieco, which swept through several | the eccomulation is the result of mere fickleness, poe who sy Fai aS oF eetia oh Mn pow i m the = an emg cond doors, ond oflers the public two new performanees | nurseries for the new. The picture is not over- | streets, and destroyed houses and property to the | andis owing to the unfortunate fact that a man map, ibe that, in oy jae aX oe Senn utes returned ind —the first ooing the “Corsicen Brothers,” (/es | charged. ‘The experi@nce of the past guarantees | amount of at least $4,000,000, Tea days after | connot change his material and his e ements rianne, as cea be im. he Comead or ce for plaintiff. is estimated at £60,000 fréres Cores) a drama in three acts, andthe second _ its truthfulness. : this calamitous event, forty-four houses were in quickly as he can his FR LL Petey pstmt a FP ah mtn ney Property at issue " : a melodramatic penoreme, entitled, The Chastre ‘The fear of evil from an influx of gold_is there- | progress of re-erection, many of large dimensions, son why a fickle man is generally ruined. | ti02- At the close o! “ Hed car OE a eS Shooting,” (La chasse au chastre) which are boths fore groundless. If gold comes from California, | and several nearly completed. The wreck of the le bis ‘aflections rove from horse-racing to tae, Deziz. te. sneies nets oe pol {0 Reform poo emcee written by Alexandre Dumas, the fi nl vel gold will go to it; and probably as much has gone, | conflagration was nearly cleared away, and hardl: hing, from yacthing to house building, from 3} writer. I way re tent, last night, a Fp ad » % this on bi ; saved. ro siesant uw vestige, of a st ae: "Serer these tones building i clectioneering, and in rapid suc- ceet tds cra aoa vie Lik ann Send h The non eran or epee eg oe fired and | am satisfied that the Theatre Hist i] wbundance o ney, aud the low rate of interest, | first setilers in Francisco are a good founda- ion 1 ing, to picturer, to wines, to . 10 a singular case Jour > meet with success. ee dae WE" | ean certainly have Jo reference to Californian im: | tion upon which to build first-rate merountile, what not, he isnot able te despatch with the re- | #leeted that he became a marked ee o in Piedmont. me Al Mr Bocoge, the red republican manager of the ports. Both proceed from very different causes, | industrious, and adventurous community. uisite celerity the engagements and undertakings clothes were filthy and unclean, ola and previous - Theatre de L’Odeon, has been discharged by the and people ought more seriously to entimate them. | accounts represent the overland emigrants for Ca- ia which cues has 1 Nolved him. By the time | With lice, and Tie hese beauas wesld net nek of nator the law in that country, may have been joverninent. It is said that his political opinions A circulating medium ix required by the exigencies | lifornia as moving along prosperously towards that | that his soul is absorbed in collecting, perhaps, ar- | ® eel trees hed “J kt J ible, f, vised te | inclined to consider this act as a piece of elas le- ave been the cause of this sudden and unforeseen Of trade; when commodities are dear, more | land both of promise -# performance. The low- | ticles of wirtw, he has several horses to run, a tench fim th: Be tape om of boys 4 }» aimed at the pretended privileges of dismissal. money is obviously required than when they are | est estimate made of the rumbere ing over | yacht and crew to get rid of, a house te finish, a | VOW rough the streets , Crying out iwelf already oppressed by the pub= i r f honor to ‘some ‘Mad Bainbrigge.” His house was in with A new end very elegant theatre has been erected | cheap. When tea and engar were double the rice | the plains, at the present time, is 40,000, the revgh to contest, a debt o! lic, in the Champ Elysees, just opposite the Circus | at which they are now sold, grocers, wholtaale | est 70,000. A fair estimate’ maken the mumber | supers gallery of rleturee ts chanee tain gonceee eS ee caneoeetaiacaed oe bees pon bg pelts for iy end Amplitheatre. It will be coneeerated to the exhi- | and retail, needed twice the sum now required to | 50,000, In twenty-two days, 2,807 men, 23 wo- | ond mem bogsheads of wine to k or throw wretched ve fined. cnpestenente of slight Rend end temas. | Senaue their business. It is the same in allother | men, and 22 children, 4 wagons, 3,978 uwey. PA devoted is he to the present idol of his vies donsrtion, ap ee rode out in his car- they hed an IL legislation of their own. main, and will be opened ina shorttime, underthe — tredes ; and it so happens that almost all commo- | horses and mules, and’ 94 oxen, passed Fort | aticctione, that he cares very little for all his tor- was unwashed and uncleuned, and covered | aid were amenable to no other. Priests were Management of some of the most skilful necro- dities are now vanen P ° re eheap. Cotton is almost | Lemutie, on their way to California, At | mer hobbies, or rather hates them more than it | With the dirt of the fowls which roosted in it. His | 14 priests, bishops were wi irresponsi mancers and escamoteurs of Paris, the only exception of importance ; butunfortunates } the seme’ thiae, quite as jarge a stream of emi- | would be decent to express. But he is tied to | ROFes were not groomed, und he took any of his Wecottatnd ekaee tt Pretdncnenn econ vor Such is the theatrical news of the week. and ly. incotton, a diminished quantity corresponds to | grants was working its wey across the Isthmus, | them, whether he will or not, All thie is absurd | {™ jaberers, Without any of fo eed Se law after their own fashiea, anc! before clow I will mention the departure for the | &9 inereete in pnee. No mere money is required | and others were reaching tue Pacific shore from | enovgh, but it isthe case of this nation. drive it, He used to mutter frequently bed nape] aon leed, was the civil magistrate who ver- United of the troupefot comic dancers of than when the article was lower in’ value: and | Chili, Ver, the Pacific Islende, and even China, ! History, i , seems to show that itis the | {must goto the devil, but Tam not ready yet.” | tured to intermeddle in their concerns, were it even which I spoke to you ia one of my letters—that of | hence it is that money is enperabundant and dis- | Hindestam, and Avetrali—eo much for the rapid: | habit of the nation to add new things to old, so | All religious feeling departed, and he cursed and Mr. Kobert Keni. who has sailed for New York counts low—there being no financial alarins, no | ity with which thie western Eldorado is peopling. | that we are the most conservative, end, at the | P*phemed in a most frightful manner. He was poe ey seabeie avons os enone in company with Espinosa, and several other Undue rpeculations. Gold is found not quite eo | It willbe rathera curious state of society, however, | scace time, the most innovating people in the | ® & state of complete mental aberration. There | o4 Cwsr's wile. artiets of much talent portable as bank notes, and sovereigns therefore | where there is so great an inequality of the sexes werld. We have added government by barens to | CoWd be no better proof of this than the change | “"j¢ layman had a quarrel with an ecclesiastic. Decidediy, you will have, next winter, an array | are permitted by wen al consent, to enrich the | is evidenced by the fact that the great overland | covernment by a king, and government by the peo- | 2 his conduct respecting his granddaughter Ma- robe yielded to the eurplice, and the cause eftalent in your city. I received the visit, the other S#fe vaults in Threadneedle-street. | ‘This is one | stream of migrants consisted of 126 males to each | ple to them both, hardly dropping or sxlagts a | Hanne. In 1815, he hed taken great precautions | wag judged by an ecclesiastical tribunal, morning, of four charming creatures, accompanied Teason Why money is plentiful; there is another: | female This, however, isa dieproportion which will | tingle incenvenience incidens to oll three. We | ft het proper education ; but subsequently, #0 lost |” Siceardi'e Inw hus made the priest amenable to by their father, Mr. Rowreet, a maiire dr ballet of Yoilways tender Jerge stocks in the handeofmanu- | be rapidly reduced. ‘The population of California | have udded the peculiar exigencies of a Protestant | ¥#5 he to all proper feeling, that he taught her to | ue‘ane which covers tic felons niuch renown, who are about sailing for your focturers and retail traders unnecessary. What | will went feeding, for their object is gold, and other | chorch to the. pretensions and cost of the Roman | Culee und swear, and encouraged her in the most be F a _ tthe " r A priest, till now unknown to fame, named Don hty chores. Maa’lles Caroline, Theresine, Ade- , they now want they can obtain in afew hours; | people must send them beef aud bread in exeh: Catholic ; J incredible obscenity, and in the use of 1 eto 1G , i d fide acl ae an &, have been, for a and the electric telegraph, if necessary, anticipates Tor it, Before the end of I there will be hil : fryer at cea ee onan coal which nene but the ost depraved could listen Nite the cteer a Schout betes oe ‘nian dl to the theatres of St. Peters: the rapidity of the penny post. «vine | Talilten of people along the Pacitic shores of the | lond, in the ehape of their nvimerous dissenting ev- | !0>g &8 he had women servants they remonstrated | .cif to be the Messie, de~ sail Gated wise al wae ce dts | Nt aed ada Mees | So eer fawn, | EASY Rd ere ag | rc let i aa p Pareto vit | to ee, Y « i ery aiticle an ing. AE ONCE, vity » United States, Theve been ay. | from hereditary fallacies,(they could not fail to | ie ss catemsive new market fervthe agricalturiets pte ig Can FD of t yk y ure | 8 chip of the oi Mek "she mand aire ant ; fil : ‘ are ° and among them two parish priests, (more ured, by our best mates de ballet, of Paris, that discover, in the last four years, leseons of commer- | and manvfucturers of older communities, and the | emyly sufiici v free- low of a iD from ‘their "dances are oe chaste and gracefal as’ their | Cal instruction pregnant with more informasion | employment of the redundant capital of England, ome ae cians aed mp, cating Myst ne and epuited it up between the ed the new hadi raph ahi ip ay a charme are remarkable, ‘Then look out for them. than was ever before pres nted so briefly, The late | ‘To thin morket edd the Tapidly growing ones wich | interpolation; while there are others who think | fll tnd severely scalded her, and the old man | ever, was with the-fuir sex. ‘The women became They intend performing weveral new ballets, pantie and its sequence falsify nearly all the theories | the varioux groups of civilizing islands inthe Pa | the House of Commons sufficient for all practical | shed heartily, and said “ Well done, you young | fis hident followers and hecomplioes the nite. aneng which Twill mention. “La Vivandiore,* | Whieh had previously prevailed in reference to wold | eifie, Chine Australia, New Zealand, &e., and we | purposes. On the combined judgment of the two |,” ——", Such were the tricks she played, and the | yjo; ws agaee men od iu fo these seductive apostles, and “Les Fevs,” which are not only novelties, but | abdeurrency. Itwaschought, and ie atill believed by | ehull feel no dread of Wanting eufhelent and xt joubly governe languege she uted was euch that women were not | YeMded habitan: 7 Pees: Po beauties d many, thattrede ean be regulated by the contraction | employment for English capital and enterprise. Sovctmneietties cen We neve tmeoretes allowed in court while her expressions were de- ous ding ye Eoceais eet sie lar Lot ety likely remember the live engle which |r «xvansion of the currency: and in 1817-4, the | Nor need we fear that the Californians will have Pecliom of the eterese law tpos the One of the cain shag ee ee sobpaliosees and in their fanaticism, 1 r~ Boe with bien wt e landed at | bank ¢ cand her Mo * ininieters operat f v . . a8 . the telanof Louies Pelion, | inbote divections, ta Ga tame Gat they-were | bread, apd. beef, and cottons: sad Tecwaa” Tar | Common law, each enough to crush any genera- S.wpele year, to cultivate hele fielde, sow thes . 5 » and Tin T and such a¢ the most prececious depravity cow " , Which was enptured with bie | doleg immense good, and ¢hd—temnease mischiel Pacthc Nise, of May 16th, mentions (ant a meas | two wenhiteat Of ealrenaticn ead largest a he Saee a ere’ dat Giles iealted ( Y apenien ote: their ate, Seay. al Hutton, ie now biti t hey did not kne en ith ey ought t ww ro quartz, wi i fit t °| " ie nt to servant hone is i house vin Me. Durapt, whoan- , HOW—that a low rate of interest dees not of itell | found meet Mariporo, ‘and cold for M630 dolhare | EOEA he (eee gecncols in the world, we have | ould stop with him. Ife used to compel one trea ta be, Rewt law came most opportunely to the aid of st by Gener Arras, in the cofh , dollars. | added the greatest amount of echoois and colleges 3 and the authors of these disorder nounces that t of Louis Napoleon will be | encoorge speculation; and that a high rate of in- | There ie.» proepect of more gold being found this | matter ; to do his work by presenting a blunderbus at him y ivi a won by a poule at billiards. Good joke, indeed! terest depends, not on the will of government or ron Feather river, ion he found al Gere the nine lea ang a and ie sulladdicge t | Whenever apything was done that did not please pe Po ap A ‘The megnetic telegraph between France and banks, but on an apprehension of individual in- | fornia last year. The north fork ie peculiarly | very great cost, new systems of education, toa | MM. One day be came inthe kitchen, saw a ser- | Crime of blic order and subverting th a be in | solvency sufi.ciently extensive to be regarded as a | rich; mew working there have averaged 100 dol- | great extent occupying the very o and.” ‘To | Yart toasting, ond bending down with her back to | Teiigious faith of the community, . ; as soon general cauee. It con be hardly necessary to re- | lars a day for many days together. Qther rich | that trade which we with all world we | bit, and be stele up to her, and stuck a fork with all uch speculation hos arisen as to their oe jeat the proofs of this, which we have, of late, so | and extensive placets are working near Colum- | adced our colonial empire, with Ils monovoties, te | Mis into her posteriors, and then ran out, | fate under the old trgime. Possibly, G hi frequently adduced. The facts, however, accu- | bia City, Soper, Calaveras, San Antonia, We. differential duties, its navigation laws; and | *24*! not recover fora month. He had for- | would have been burnt alive—more pro! he trulate daily. The bark is filled with bullion, | The Aue G ifornia (newspaper) speaks of the apport we imsneneely increased our arma- | ‘Y Setvents ina few months, as none would stop | would have been cxcommuniested. Meng discounts are yngreeedentedly low, and money is | new settlements on the Triaity river as having | mente as well as our civil establishments. We | With him formore thena few days. rind RO | a divinis, and, in consideration of very aggravated cheap; yet there is no undue epeculation' This is | been remarkably successful, and says that very | have latterly discovered that the t for which | Women servant would remain at all, and then he | Circumstances, exorcised with eat But the reverse of ail preceding theories. The present | rich mines have been discovered in the vicinity of | this increase was made Was a pan one, and, | 1r2* obliged to employ hie farm servants to do all most certainly the ecclesiastical would neve: sate of thingy rotors all th foad eanclaiong of | the Cuter Bay. Ta fact all wccounts recently te rdingly, we have given up the colonial system | the domestic duties, clean the house, mill the | have consented to condemn him and his followers serous merchants who lirmingham, and renders the query of “ what is a | ceived convince us that there is no want of the n exclusive source of profit, but we have, | COW re his oreckfast and dinner, make his | 19 ihe punishment awarded to criminals of thi heb eanere pound!” as dificult of solation as the squaring of | precious metal in California, nor of adventurous vertheless, retained our increased armaments | D¢¢ and that of the child, and even to undress and clare by the laws of civilized Europe. " “Abdel ke chief, | the eirele. spirits to engage in the search for it. But Califor. | and our other colonial expenses. Nay, we have | Pt her to bed at aiem and dress her again in the | “The secular tbunals have condemned these morning. He took F i z & remov- Th proper answer to the ques- | Bia is not the only part of the newly acquired | added to them. In throwing ourselves once more je ROW opeculate Time sited States to whit our utten- | on the open commerce of the world, we have un- ni ot pseudo prophets—afier a lengthened trial and very nce of profiting by ad- | tion should be directed. The country north and | derisken \-P oy of the most distant seas, he Us eee ences curious exaimination—to imprisonment and hard afew Oar eplains ply because the and concentration of intel- | ishor—the penalty attached to imposition, fr. c Vree trade b it were, + | south of the Gila river on the southern border of | oflered to be the letter carriers ofthe world. ‘The | ieee on some points; andeo no man was more | 4.09 szitation. ith satiofac - leer be and n universa vices. “ia the pre- | New Mexico, and the whole of the unexplored re- | tecult. is, that we are now charged wih costs of | *hfe%d in his dealings with tradesmen, and noth- | 004 i The beh eh wt vind w bs ence of fine weather, t is no prospect of grain | gion between the Rio del Norte and the Paeific, | both defanct monopoly and ted free trade. he being de arer Tee, sugar, and “cofiee prteed yong end of the Gila, are highly important: dis “The shape inw this habit of superedditon Algiers. Bre famed Minieter of the Pi cation of justice and respect for constituted au- of the Provisional Government, M. Caussi- | feature which promises undue gains. Cotton is | ttiets, Much of this country is of a rich diluvial | most oppeals to the eenses, becomes most | ‘Be |, and é —_—_— ‘ for the United — almoet the only article upon whoh rests a doubt | description. Cr tad lool are known to abound fedleronsy is material Son armaments. | \{} Laat Ld NE to Boe Be Se Setentific Aerial Ascent. Y York & wine of scarcity or abundance, and, therefore, the com- | OR the Gila; mines of quick silver, of greater | We have a of guns, shot, shells, powder, | {Outs and semetimes nie 20 [rom Galignant's Messenger } je and retail.) mercial instinct prompts to’ epeculation in that tly known th ball cartridges, rockets, anel ropes, masts | im odes that the devil might be at liberty to go | | The account of MM. Rixio und of the bt it will sight to witness | article ; bot the limit is prescribed by quantity, estera Ca ard spare, ode arms, fe., enough to meet the ors laid Coty might by hie tedeae ae in S| aerial ascent, on Thareday week Jest, has deen operatyons, one of our and cannot operate to any general effect. Let us | Gold was found there by the Spaniards moet lavish for at least | & il the before his. Gio Tend to the Academy of The following politician have bed European harvest, « deficient sugar | M83; and the numerousevidences of silver mines | three years. Yet, besides deterioration by Up tama day Eres Dra death, June | is a summary :—* 4h. 3m. The balioow Vorusia, suyply, end another failure in the cotton crop, and | still to be treed there, show the extent to which | time, ho man would venture to how Te hawt sand drank and took an easterly direction. Some nies him, va shall have teed things-—a high rate of diss | this metal exiets in the country. This region, | much of this. Yast magazine of agreat deal—et least a quart that | ballast was then thrown out. At 4h. 6m., the The hea is very int counts a decrease in the stock of bullion, and | gnee occupied by the Spaniards, has long since | les been superseded by improvemente; so that Lye ey yg boy RR act been a day, for a for alarming epecuiation, at] to be followed by loss, pT the Indians; the ruins of | if we had to war in good ry St a. Sen, 130 metres; at 4h: Tle., either et morning or at pi bankraptey, and e—panic. In the law of villages, with deep sunken pits whence | we ehould protably have to add new mreteral a Dr. | 1,484 metres. At this" moment a fresh — iY biluy all thee infeferiumes are not now likely te | the ore Was extracted, matk the extent to which | to our eld. ‘At present, if man an im of the | eprung up, and they saw the cloude directing concer; but the sequence will always correspond Spaniards had planted their settlements, and prevement ia the musket, he is thathe mus CT ed selves towards Paris. At 4h. Him., the in the eha:le der the | to the degree, as at present, in the cottom jarket. what source they derived their support. | adeptit tothe « 8 inillions of bal! ; St ee Fit Se inemnenene. » tropics in Havana or Jemaice It je obviohs, therefore, that gold has positively the slight examinations made by Colonei | and if he thinks he out a better a degrees, t 4h. 1m. , the height was 2,570 metres. great event is going to take piace in Hi. nothing to do with trade beyond ite operation as a | Emory, eee S the Gila, and of or ball, he is told they be large enough house | at 4h. 20m., 3,752; temperature, 0.5; at 4h. 25m. which ie the sale of the private cabinet ofp ccmimercinl eoramed.ty. So fur it Is attended with | Colonel Fremont, in his Journeys across the | to fit the existing muskets. Had gun cotton been height metres; temperature, 9 deg. centigrade of the late King. It eppears that this collection is this peeuliarity, that, not being seasonable or con- | Country, they were both impressed with a strong | found a eafe and effective agent, it would have below 0. At this moment the ascensional move- considered ae the complete of the kind, nnd sumable, population has inereteed. te to | belief of the existence of mineral trearur-e ct | © 170,000 barrels a gee powder. The o | ment of ‘was stopped; there was a smal? eqate the fines moot he, Flemioh ie cupmeatation. We have no means of estima | great value. —— fire in the Tower saved vs from the necessity of tap the Tria of Suen ber va . alter- Sees Sheet pontvee in the tate of a thick mace of hechild, J . ting ite formerandtnorer . wanted hee a thousand obsolete : ’ u hed miass of Luyner, and ell the moet med amateurs of | sof ts ia cur own dey, Ws vale eae sehen net ‘The Indian Delegate to the European Pence | ! iad & save bet canoe ornate ing altogether the of the will of 1815. Sloude, and several large hailstones fll in the ear Europe, have departed in order to be present at the guleted by & kind of grheral nesent, rather thea by From the Liverpool Journsi. Aug. 9 will be equally out of clate by the time it iswanted. | i document a Fol jhe | arias Bb castes they ee iemmnaied by thems 8h sale < iis positive quantity. Viewed, however, in refee | ‘The ETrerpoot fix has no pretension, like | As for our navy, it is becoming almost too tragical Bi bnege. P my ~J metres; they at the same time aw the Montis, the well-known torredor (bull-tight rence to population and ite attendant trade, there ie | that Of Trieste and Ve to grow picturesque | 4M Sflair to be talked about. We have sdded three- sinbrigge familly, soe lait tena aah Amey A without rays, and at the mam) of Spain woe mort dangerovely wounded on po reason to support that it will ever beso abun- | with peculiar costumes, for here a sober unitormiy | decker to three-decker and stesimfrigate to steam. | ATOM. On the next to emeoute ft. it | fone aS ceaiins appenranes s3- ae ei studi in frome of the Gasen Lhe | awl && fe create # serious disparity between the | in vests and unmentionables beepeaks an abecnce | ‘Figate, Ul all thai con be said ia that we poseces | Willy end got t wane he encoveed he | eee slaguler a continued for piace at Madrid in iene p! Pe Gases. T «| price of balllen and coined gold. Should euch, | of representatives trom nations whose people are | the “ accumulation of rotten wood and rusty et Aye oe nad incapable of Seen ‘news sous the coemeinel's reese pull attacked him with fury, and d his calf | however, be the case, the public w inere low: vand-ninepennies; | iron in the world. tained J ny he = — Es nore w 1... tall deat t Same. they gain” by the a of a i his mack rings the err of rm it has been we ambition not merely to lo every- bg yews Raed Ine formet will, wih fe. SEvakue rte sees oi swordsman) was thro' » hi a, otber vendable commodity i i ° . ? hie life is etill in great dany mdity itt Price will still be Kev. MroKa-ge-ga-gnh-Bowh, a chief of | thing as if we did that alone, bat to do tpect to the Arnolds having nothing to do with relauve ; ond it signifies nothing whether the soves bbeway nation,” who has erosse. ena grand scale because we do ot y _A branch of Mesers. Tiffany, Young, Reed © | reign contains an ounce of an ounce and a half, great lwke for t of the inden “ny ~-- scale. A nation might —~ ro eet v0 Co., the fancy goed merchants in roadway, has | In either case it will exchange for the enme quanti . Ka-ge- eBowh, when | Secure its just weight the scaleol nations, either heen established here. These gentlemen have | of bread; and the debtor and ereditor will obtain ie reyecertied in the sorrame | by Warlike demonstrations or by a and ge- opened a house in the Rue de la Bourse, No. 3. | no advantoge over each other whether the sove- h the Rev. Mr. Copway | nerous di cy. We have Lines at tote We aad their intention is to make it an eutrep¢ of all | reign be large or small. Of course, the growth of | may have @ tiege of the Sazon in his. veins t 4 have ewollen the pomp of our embassies, that they the rich goods destined for the belles and beaux — the emall sovereign into the large one would be | bears in hie features undeniable moofs of his Ujib | may fitly represent a nation of vaet naval power, of New York. No doubt, with the taste exhibiced gradual, the state providing against any dishonest | bewey parentage. Ae becomes civilized divine, | While itis equally trne that the pride of our em- om all oecasions, (since the creation of the firm) | cperation in the transition, if perceptible. Bat the | he hee discarded the blanket, the hatehet, and the | beeties has reacted on the size of our fleets. Were they will succeed here as well as in New York. present generation may rest aestred that they will | pipe, and has a somewhat sirange gard, | it left to our diplomatists our navy to settle it Adieu, BLK experience po alteration. more military al. * | between themselves, (.Y os twenty oe ane ial Frem the Mereury. A The folk on the ve him an andi first-clegs embassies & cordon alternate A curious point of law has arisen at Berlin. One , The'artele waa copied Tiane'te lercury the Cotton teams, ond the talk ween te ; thipe of the line and fs to holding eny of his lands. inereesed Mra. Ar- nold’s annuity to £100 a year during her husband's Wife, and afterwards, and, shenid Marianne end her issue fail, left his estates to his daughter’: (Mre. Arnold's) six sons in wit £1,000 each to the younger children; and in ease all should die wichout issue, then to his own right heire for ever. It alse cont a that, provision that, during the minority of his daughter, Mr. Piatranculd have hie chotee of eny of hic thees neions, he ht z F y Was eeen. f the polar scope of M. Arago, the polarieed ‘light be i 3 " Ps i seen, Whilst on the clouds it was not eo. ? movement now incrensed the 7,004 metres; but there it was necessary to the baligon lesked. Some of the ait was collected in the = globes which were carried ap, but the ees one sun broken. at th. 50m an ther- me marked more than 37 degrees ero. The descent then commenced, but it was Soeur aks About Sh. 2m. they had a h 1 “ Europe, Metres, with a temperatare of ot more persons belonging to the nobility have | of Tuesday, from the T¥mrs of Friday lost, exance | peeks the with a fluency « from Constantisople to Cromtatt "That muteal re below zero. The thermometer stood at zero poo age 2 consequence of certain misde- | fyi] 16 re the attention of the coummenelel oven corvectanen wi @ long proxim 64 valry proves a extravagance. Ambasea- 4 Coulern ang f- anny L " mreanors, to degradation and ions of rank. Against | supity to the Western World. Caldornia is no | the white many thatin his discourse he is more | dots are not to rely on Svmne pigounn were hoeseds Bevan kamen Y jock nek recoabiee any iitetineton nt has, | longer regarced ae a fabled re nor its 4 isescaltnan logis and is plan for civil | ‘vexatious oy |, but they not beem — Lage y recagnice any distinction of here: | tions aa the eoinage of a neiful imagination, | ving the red betrays more henevole og i" oo Se tier. De teen of | The following extteet upon this and correlative | then judgments the he ‘cocks to be f~ teold, Te 4 whieh they do not possess. The court hrs © suivieote, in pustirwlatly desteving hatiee (xcite for his. brethren is t thet the pity Crees We pears . consequently revered the trdgments, en! ontered new tlele, ‘Lhe portion and preepeetsof the monty market vere | he craves fer their fortunes ts not yostly due; that |