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the ae as IRATE NET 8 EON OS TE r . area of essessment has expanded to 2) eken oa the shores | way onwards, end that the crew, and the piss n- | eonsider Cracow 8 the Mecca of their nstionality. A have b ' AFFAIRS IN EUROPE, oer. the company 'yave begs anew. It | pers in particuler, shou!d have had the benefitof It is, bewever, much to be doubted whether ade- | 16,019,488 neree ; thst is to eay, in two years tt has are ie saiet that w the expe’ wnent will have proved | his shill in conducting the vessel, in addition tothe — quate assistance for the relief of the sufierers will | increased five percent T he whole amount of panlic Our Parts Correspondenee, satisfactory to iis uude pakers, they will make | ekill ef the mate, onwards ull he reached the be obtained, theugh numerous associativas are be- texe hag? ted within the State was under Panis, September 12, 1950. | enother vbet “een Engiond and Ltreiand; | Clyde, ond from that to his destivation. For, me formed throughout Germany for that philaa- | $300,000 or 76,000/; aaddthe burden of these od St challe— | ond, very tikely efte wards, between ireland aad | ean we doubt for a moment, f the testimoay thiopie purpose ; tor Cracow is poor, and will not, | was limited to au inficitesizaal assessment on most The Summer Seesou ricans at Mulille— North America. boree to bis character asa s ifthe cap | therefore, meet with the sympathy of the Roths- | of the principal kinds of real and personal property. Amusemants~-Neww York Hippo Drome—Opera~ \ You ure very tikely aware, that sinee the dis | tain bad not heen neg bat had res childs and other European Croesus, as did rich | We mat for example, entries of the amount of du- saddle, and nos, ty levied on pleasure carriages, rac harness horses, gold and silver plate, Hamburg eight ye ny We cannot refrain from aeqainting our readers, mained on deck, resdy to exercise his skill, that ccvery of Cx' fornia, our ¢ of Paria is “poisoard” there would have been no wreck, and that the ves- | ug companies, or rather “gold hambags” Theatres--A Debutante—Sub-Morine Telegraph — Califor nia— Signor eorti— Mr. Rives — Steamer pes ola, : otellseats” The police has lately made a severe | sel must have arrived ia. a few hours at the port of t speaking of unbappy Cracow, of another | bowie ka ves, “slaves under 60 years,” and **free Frantin— American Painter— Te Gossip fo VecGpation upoa those * green catchers,” aad | Greenock, iustead of fifty of the passengers and , fire which breke out in unfortunate Poland on the | mate negroes” This is certainly not a list of fiscal Paris, Se. + many of chem have been forced to shut their ehopa. | crew being drowned, and the lives of the reat ti July), destroying agother of her | cbjects which eould be furnished by a starving and The ammer season is breathin Siguor Forti, the talented tenor of Max Moret: | ing plecedin danger. Under these eireumstances, monumen) Not far distant from Cracow, bat in | exheurted community. By the evidence, thea, of the so-called kingdom of Poland, blessed with Mus- their own public documents, the people of Mi covile sway, the castle of Pieskowa Slalla (the 8 the This, us plan as it is important ; and, having fairly aseer- end making every allowance for the distinct which the verdict imposes, by every consideration ishere, in Paris. I received his pedlic gardens of Paris are trying their vieit t We bad a lone conversation sippi possess the means of payment. a fuct i ee ms ny > P < ames. tions to entice the amateurs of greea f together relative to bis suecess in the United | 1 can bringto my miud, and with every desire to | Degs’ Rock) alse become a prey to the flanes : | y E a Y ‘ gne, diners on the turf, 1 merry State ote kind ry on he has meé with your make the sass me Pry light as 1 think it can be | It wae founded in 1832 by one of the first Polish | tained that, in calling upon them to fulfil their en- mer ey toned: See Bans Cha- | publ yet, ‘This youna man seems ta be | made eonsistentiy with the ends of justice, Thave | dukes. Upon looking at this eastle the idea would | gegementa, we are not making a demand with dancers, to visit (heir enchanted grove ne AY” | very grateful to the dilettanti of America, and in- | the greatest pain in co».ing to the conclusion that | cress your mind that it must have really been | which it is impossible or even diflieutt for them to eau d’Asniere Suaday | of the tends returning to New York by the steamer Hor- | the sentence upon the eaptsin must be one of im- | erected by a supernatural power, so mysteriously | comply, we shallexamine, on an early day, the na- most brilliant /#% nd it was @ | wan. M’me fi iNet, the wile of the master of the | priconment, and such as to show those having the | did it—stacding upon an elevated rock—peep out } ture and validity of the pleas by which they have tended bya h pany goes with him to New Yorks, ace charge of such vessels, that even for bm slightest | ps m amor eet caer aah Cones Sova Aap noe “sere * Sereive their own consciencies, and a by ¥ ; et | i - 3 i a c 1 Ge. others. d by her daughter. neglect of duty, followed by such calamitous re. forests ; and before its brazen gates sio bille, on Tuesda The cholera is raging in Denmark. The last sale as in the present case, they must answer to! having the form of Hereules’ club (much thicker Speculation in Cotten, and the accounts received ce Biol it as very severe ia | the law. Upon the whole, I propose that the sen- | at the top than at its base), looking like a formida- een te London News, Sept. 13.) Amencans were | some parts of the country. tence of the court upon Thomas Henderson should | ble petnfied giant-sentioel, which could be seen Whether commerenal revolsions be or be not a3 rowminent were My.and | | Mr. Rives, the American Minister in Paris, re- | be. imprisonment for eighteen calendar months. | from efar, es thongh watching with a protecting | peceseary and inevitable as are the flux and efflux _ hee N.Y..a ethepe by ina H iw | turned, last week, from @ journey he hed tml in ‘ Lord Ivory said that it was with the greatest pain | eye the power and riches of his masters. ofthe tide, form a curios and doubifal question. re. Y., aceon ied by y! YS | Seotlwud and England, for his health His amiable | he felt himself called upon to concur in the sen+ secant Certein it is, that in addition to those which are su- who enjoy visit to the jardim des Lorestes | judy end agreeable family are still travelling in | tence roman’; and, in the circumstances of the | The Bicaraguan speed Repudiating perinduced by purely political causes, and which Ss the mee ntious style. It wasa pleasure | Germany an land, but will soon | re- | case, he felt that he need not say more than ex- [From the Londou Chresiele, Sept. 18.) can never be clearly foreseen or thoroughly guard- hi ta hab he atistocracy of New York mip | torn aled, to open their parlor of the Pp de la Eee he concurrence in the remarks of Lord It may be regarded as almost certaia that very | ed against, sham id their apoeennecl the Cs a es wale " merican friends. ‘ood, 4 i vy good sand ji ti ill be | dinary course of affairs, if not at periods exactly ling with the desnocraey of Paris, and condessend- | de in Havre forthe | ‘The Lord Justice Clerk then addressed Cap. Sai ane 0 the euptelat Hien eons ay Tal ol roguiat, us least io oycles: of whigh{t ts uct diioels ing even to spcak to Mademoiselle Frizetie and her | rece; of the American line, | tein Mendeten, ie pt pray nde gee | gua ecunal, between the Atlantic und Pacific | to determine the average extent. In whatever pretty rival Anais, We were alot of New Yorkers | the , eae ee ccalten neniset cf duty, whereby the | oceans, under the auspices of the, New York | thepe they may present themscives, they are pretty - io that eity. iv nity, of culpable neglect of duty, whereby . for that under- | generally found to spring either from egregious hen, and I yo e § » “elephan Y a * é company to whom the contract for that under ‘} ‘ ? then, and Ig you we saw the “elephant,” and | joys, of the first pioneer of the | ship of which you hed the command was wrecked, teking has been conceaed; and this circumstance | miscaleulations on the part of producers ar deaters, bad much fun. At the Chateau des Fleurs, on | Ame cen New York and Havre, will | end many lives lost; and there can be ho duube is Well culculsted to revive. iequities, and to | OF from an extensive derangement of the money Fridey last, the festival given ia honor of the | meet a Os a a offered to | of the truth of what bas been 89 a rheraa suggest reflections, which are of no insignificant market, causing ¢ sudden and violent fluctuation in ** Dancing Celeb lid affair, and | the u: nd his steamer at, be ge Ean peen e ‘Les moment. Why is it that the first commercial | the quantity and value of money. Difficult though the. lively an > the | Union ea have cualhed nets taike | Country im the world is virtually debarred from | it be acurately to determine the priaciples which regulate them, they are usually found preceded by symptoms and followed by resulis bearimg en anal- egy, if not a resemblance to euch ether. A close beat pupils of T flowers, aud pr other bp crowned with its fair share in the profits and eredit of an enter- prise, towards the promotion of which it has so materially contributed? Why are the merehants er than that of the mate’s, y heave drawn a dictinetion e 7 f ¢ Ame! vi ad it been proved that sant i * sal y ek the studio of the American | between the two 3. Had it been pi ‘and capital fG Britain to be t off fi attention to these, on the part of our business men, Fa Pea 3 oft th - ’ pitslisis of Great Britain to be eut off from » ° r bus 5 j Painter, a Hi. Powell, who. is 9 ad gear * fo oF pay ei a ell participation in the design and construction of | Wonld go far towards the [dissemination of that sily engexed seen Of the infticr olicer; we must have made | &cigantic Work, Which British commerce will, in | sound information respecting the laws of trade ington akan aig, gag all probability, do the most to encourage and sus- | Which would greatly mitigate the severity of com- Iutr yours the higher end far more severe punishment. mercial revulsions. Noone can attentively read the tain? What is the nature of the impediment West. Ferdinand de Se But culpably to leave the deck in sneh circum. | 1 nol signs of the times witheut observing that the phe- hay ak ianeeraot, aid ro » by aed which forbids a prudene Englishman from en.- en! t ng ep coe eee eteD emens faoake acd suldicrs; ene | was wrecked fas olleace which we must take | Dubing his property ia.a noble and legitimate un- | nomena which generally usher iu those periods aeeee thn eaptnad cha Wiamicelem pena al ba ie ‘in the wane of ie dersking of this character, in conjunction with | of impetuous prosperity, sure to be followed by tered the mouth of the & Th . “ the citizens of the American Union? The answer | Secsons of ruinous reaction, are now rife in the eom- deterred from com: 4 The sentence of the court is, in witha tribe of red skin yous repre- to this question is unfortunately very simple and atmosphere; and that superebundant capital, moth b ents the mement whea Fer de Soto, | the like offence. wk Be et vi ~ - n eds Meguro mounted upon a. splendid gray horee, arrived | that you are to be imprisoned for the period of ccetecles and le Senne oy oven te ees Mee rer Intec er ear aE TESTA oo i | infront of he temts of the Indians. The chiefs | exghteen months His lordship then addressed the of England are seared awey from such enterprises | dition. It is true thatonrexports and imports are mate, and said:—Jobn Williams, yeu have been convicted of ulpable end reckless geglect as an officer or mariner’ »yed on board the steamship Orion, whereby s was wrecked, and many riety of costames, the richness of coloring, the | of the lieges were bereaved of life.” Little as you | ability of the painter, everything leads me to be- | mey have thought of the reckless neglect of your lieve that the capitol will be graced with a very |“duty in navigating such a vessel, how awful have | remarkable page of the history of the couatry. | been its consequences! Alas! how little did the The costumes ore of the most accurate siyle, and | numbers on board thet vessel imagine that they Mr. Powell has found here the beet models of the | were to be exposed, so many, to instant death, all kind, either ia our public libraries or among our | to ench danger, by the reckless neglect of duty by artists. is mam picture cannot be fiaished | an cfficer ef that ship. The sentence to be pro- | before one year. The American painter takes much | nounced in your case is, no doubt, one that must | giving his country a petit chef d’@uvre upon roduce & great impression; but, on the other ergercale. Besides painting, Mr. Powell is | hand, the offence is one—the culpable and reckless of the tribe offer him the calumet of peace, and in the meantime the monks place upon ! a mourd the sign of fraternity and redemp- | tion, the holy cross of Jesus Christ. The va- unusually large, showing a healthy state of trade, but o also are our accumulations, notwithstac ding the recent wholesule destruction of cupital by the reilway mania. This is shown by the present cheapness of money, the best evidence of its abua- dance. Low rates of interest cannot long continue without quickening the ingenutiy of, capitalists, with a view to devise some mode or other for the profitable investment of capital ell but protitiess, whilst circulating in the ordinary channels of wade. Such a state of things has been the prelude to recklees speculation before, and wiil be vo again, until the science of trade is reduced to its guiding principles, and universally understood. Even al- ready there are unmistakeable signs that men are Ly the bad faith of the parties conceraed. They cen feel no contidence that repadiatioa or dis- honesty, in some of its forms, will not suddenly obuude itself into transactions of this nature; and that they will not be deprived, by the most reck- less end reprehensible means, of the returas to which they cre justly entitled. The history of our financial dealings with the States of South and Central America may well suggest and justify such apprehensions. But if the risks of European eubecribers, backed by American coadjutors, were strictly confined to those arising from the dubious integrity of the native governments, the di r would be by no means so formidable. A perfect European and or animal, who por er, and by the car . ji 4 i i identity of interests between th pan a aast, | busily engaged roducing, upon a small scale, | negleet of duty by which such a steamer is wreck- | iertity of a is Herat honey Ee ned | King Ch ries IX. firing wpon the Huguenots, | ed—the offence is oue which, really, one wants me eae or contributors, supported by Gl eee deta outente trees entire wenty-one miles below Pa- | Which will be a capital hitle gem: words almost to describe; and, a8 Lord Wood has | {Ctity of thelr resiective goveruments, mig speciilation seems to be fulfilled, except that of de- where they fell on the pre- |, Mesers. Ganpel & Co. have published a lithograph | said, im this case, there is nothing that can account | fiitly presumed to uflord no mean security against | THT Ton been ee a eh it should ceding Sunday. The experiment will be repeated froma painting by the same t, representing | for the wreck, every circumstence being one on patray fy eat ony thin, The flee histo | take. ‘Already are men considering what the next this evening, and Lam persuaded the Hippodrome | “* The Burial in the Mississippi River ot L'erd which all_mankind would have reckoned safety | Y" i) _ Sy Leable will: be, Gad Gunious te dlagevartheactaal of several of States of the American Union will be as ded | de Soto,” whichis a very remarkable composition. | certain. That which, alas! they deemed to be | ¢ . i ‘Apropos of the Hippodrome. Here we have in |. Jutues Watson Webb left Paris with his family, | meat propitious cireumstences, the reckless neglect itself, during the Iaat ten years, has surrounded form of that the shadow of which seems already waite Wel Mon of te Pde | ga wy othe Uae sce fo sean A | tan tron nn rennet mage, | My Seach gun cnace manta | 1.8, en eat a ei Amph atre, who comes here with the intention | lantic. Le was accompanied by Mr. Daniel Leroy, | turned to disaster and calamity. His lordship be uncertainty, Which is exceedingly Loses | those who may follow. It is not surprising that then sentenced Williams to trapsportation for seven years. The Contagre, to arrange every Ung for making, in New York, & place on the came pizn as the Hippodrome. This able director has already engaged a host of taleat among Fiench riders, ladies and gentlemen, and, the present state of the cotton market shoold ar- rest the attention and excite the eupidity of many who are in this temper. The limited extent of the stocks on hand, the firmness and etill upward ten- Aggie Sarna race on both € gladly admit that, out ion which had dis- to the interests of the sides of the Atlantic. of the seven States of the who was formerly Consul of the United States at | Genoa. B. H.R. | Wreek lon at Cracow, andthe Aus- of the Orion—Sentence upen the Ceptain and Second Mate. i more ao doubt, you will appreciate his choice when you | Lrrom the English Papers | [From tl Perey per ee to 14) p Bree agape Day yt jor tg pegs dency of prices, and the unfavorable pi ty real have the pleasure of witnessing the pertorminces | Lord Wood said—We have now, my lerds, ar- In the Leader of July 27th, we stated that adread- | entered into bona fide and specific arrangemen:s | OF supposed, of the growing crop in United he will offer to the American public. The com- rived at that stage in the proceedings of this most pany wiilcontain the best écuyers of the French | ’ States, have, for some time past, drawn attention to interesting and anxious trial when it becomes our fal Bp ds Beales, Ont Sei aee Sie ae cena cotton, as furaishing good material for epecalation. for the redemption, eocner or later, of their credit Since then we have been furnished with some de- | and their good name. Pennsylvania, Maryland, givens and the prettiest amazons of the same place. duty, and a most painful duty it is, to consider and ‘also ichii is Many are convincing themselves that preseat The feet proof of what I tell you is that Mr. De- | determine the nature of the fentence We are 10 pas ihe ot ipa create wn a cg en es Bey roe Saat ng wry mars ot are but the Dewtane to a much higher rise in yn, | 3. of the Elysian Fields Amphithea- tre is most desperately mad with Mr. Weich, who has alrendy engaged the best actors of his com- ny. Professor Risley is essociuted with Mr. ‘eleb, and you will, therefore, appreciate that I | am right in my anticipations, The grand opera hes been already doing an ex- eellent business, with Albopi in “ La Faysrite.” j poe the verdict that has been returned by the jury. he two first charges are, in truth, one and the seme; and the terms of the verdict apply more strictly to the secoinl charge than to the first, namely, culpable and reckless neglect of duty | an officer or mariner employed on board the Orion steamship, whereby the ship was wrecked, and many of the lieges were bereaved of life.” That is one o'clock, P. Min Krupnieza-street, situated in | Mississippi is the only community which still per- « north-western suburb of Cracow, ‘and, the wind | sists in retaining the badge of its degradation. being inthe west, the lower mills, and upwards of | But the circumstances connected with the refusal ten houses, situated in the direction of the wind, | of that State to pay its debts are distinguished by were burnt down. At half-past one, the house of | £0 meny flagrant features, and they strike 90 di- Mr. Wysocki, situated at the corner cf Glemboka- | rectly at the root of all commercial intercourse street and of the Plantations, at a distance of | and confidence, that, so long as the icuous and peculiar dishonesty of Mississippi receives the, gees and thet a sure road to rapid fortune would to purchase cotton and postpone realizing. any attempt is made to reason with such, they t, in refutation of all doubts, to the stocks in iverpool and in the American seaports, to the ux: itious seazon With which the growing plant has om tocontend, and to the probabilities which ex- ist of not only a steady, but even an increased de- The admirable cancatrice has been nightly receiv | the statement in the indictment of the S000 paeee feces the sous of tho Gret onibiosk! (ond i ri < ; | nt particular | in q southern direction from it,) at once burst into | tacit countenance of the other States of the Union, | mand for the mills. [t is on these grounds that —_— Fda sf spelanee, and remunerated by | deseription of the culpable homicide charged egainst flomes. Ata quarter to two,’ james were seen is- | by be ing permitted to enjoy a perfect equality with | they rest their hopes of being able some day, not Roquelan is going to cein | the panels, and then what follows is a statement of far distant, io realize at prices the attainment of , ( 7 ; e Pol; titution, situated in | them, ti le of this country will con: Teataugh money as ever aay manager did. “Mde. | the special case, aud of the circumstances in which | Celmbeatreet, aa well aa trom the palace cf the | self defence, fe regard. with great dinike end ture | which, would. bes heavy’ blow to theit expects e a Lane penn Sopera | this veseel, the Orion, was wrecked. Lhe Orion | Archbishop in Krancis-street, and Wielopolski’s pa- | picion every financial project which attempte to | tions, from the check which they would necessarily This telented arist ay Was Very suc. left the port of Liverpool on the 17th of the month | jace, to the imminent danger of the University, the | aseociate them as partners in any enter. | give to consumption. If any evidence were want- Pe in Belg Cag at emt returned of June—a fine vessel, one of the finest in that Jagelionian Library, and the newly established | prise. We have not the smatiest doubt that, if the | ing of the madness Tistic of excessive pot onl: “ uch re omg but al: a trade—a vessel fully equipped for the were museum; but, owing to the great courege and zeal Miveiesipga cebt had been scttled justiy and | speculation, it would be furnished us in the partial a a .s pete wt pete = y= of having on board at the time @ valuable cargo, of the siudents of ne University and of the high ly na those of Michigan, In ‘or Mary- forgetfulness already occesioned by this incipient a ure. Her bushand, Me. D Hur aborde, was no fewerthan two hundred passengers. It wasa | fehool, headed by their profeesore, those later 4," the formation of the Nita: Company at | Menia, of the ordinary connection between cause Terie tu, her euae stews wi stair wey | Sherbet etre ter | Edythe mason of he Saran Spay at | Mung, oh ray conection tater cae At the Theatre Frangais, the return of Mme. | fifteen knots an hour. When such a vessel, with ved Bap ‘eee m ALtze cotect, Ais the | Suained exertions of the New Term capljalind; | 8 ‘he gruands on a. Wearaetons agi tions of many are based. jaestion the limited extent of the stocks on hand, both here and in America, as indicated wy the serious falling off which has teken place in the export from the American ports to Great Britain. As compared with the corresponding period of last year the de- crease isnot far from half a million of bales, or i With | Dominican | nor would that clause in their charter which church, and Grodzka-street, were in flames; so | invites eubecriptions from the citizens of eve: were several houses in an eastern direction, be- | country in the world have been rendered, as it tween the plantations and the bridge communica- | has been, a perfectly inoperative appeal.’ We ting with the eabuarb of Kazimierz. The fire at | have good grounds, thetefore, for regarding the the Polytechnic Institution, communicated iteelf to | cenduct of he nope js the buildings conteining the printing office and the | @ mere violation of o: Brohen has created much sensation. Her daugh- ter, a young lady, fourteen years old, and already seing the finest talent for comedy, will make r firet appeerance, in a fortnight, in a new come- dy, in five acts, by M. Eugene Seribe, entitled “ eee ontes de Ja Reine de Naverre. such a tan ole gy with such a number of pus- eengers on rd, left the port of Liverpool, it ap- pears tome that every man who hed any charge in it, should heve had it most indelibly impressed upoa his mind, that there was no vigilance, no care, and no enaiety he could Lestow in the navigation of as something more than La Porte St. Martin will open its doors on the | that vessel, which was not his duty to employ. | jithogra : u rdinary mercantile justice y a ae o x phical esteblishment ot the University, as | between ma man—as somethii about four months’ consumption. But there is, fortu- = eG Fad rama, by Leoa Goslan, en- | But what is the case! The vesset went wrong in wee the church of the United Greeks. ey mere revival of the freebooti ww be nately, now some ground for questioning the ua- = Bee ¥? le ot Cre and) and & prologue | her course; one wales is set at twelve o'clock at quarter-paet two, the Franciscan church, with ell | or the Rhine. We are entitled to consider favorable reports received anid irculated of the Wy geen b oa le s Boulevards de | night on the 7th of J une, and at two o'clock in the | its extensive buildings, took fire. The ican | offence inet international as well as municipal | @™OWing cfops. Some weeks ago the prospect in a ~— as = renovated, aad will | morning the shi is driven on the Ward Rocks. It | librery and the convent were at the same moment laws, a8 one of the gravest impediments to | this respect wae gloomy enough, but our more Te- oy — d nr he ees . iy tn the indictment that the vessel was wreck- | prey to the devouring element. At a quarter to | that reciprocal aid and cadens, upon the diffu. | Cent intelligence is calculated to dispel much of - sak ittle vaudeville, by ed by the reckless and culpable neglect of duty on | three, the butchers’ stall situated’ behind | sion of which we can alone rely for the effect the apprehension which then existed. Unfavora- reogeet pearave ez and, Rover, wee performed — the part of the panels. I do not think it necessary, | the ‘Dominican church an convent, caught | prevention of wars, and for the sure progress of | ble ti still reach us from the Atlantic States; i ck with suce ‘is called “Le Jouret | and I do not consider that it would be expedient | fire; go likewise did five streets, viz: Bra civilization. Not the least extraordinary and dis- | but the reports are now, on the whole, much more la Nuit,” (ni he ai ) and affords Mmes. Cas- for me, at the present time, to enter into all the de- street, Grodzka etreet, Vistula street, St a | grecefol circvrastances connected with debt of | Cheering from the great cotton growing re; to el end n (ovo charming women,) tails of this case, and far less would it be proper to street, end Golembia street. At three o'clock, every iesistippi, are the ively t | the westwerd, from which the are — Lec Perey, (two excelient actors,) | dwell upon the deplorable sacrifice of human life | house in the last mentioned street was the prey of | amount of the Gieies ‘agate Bee and ae ‘own | now obtoined. There is still time for adverse At the Thestge Mloataaser & laughable farce, | feud t urbe carduy to look-pariculerly at ine | Me,eames. The library of the University in St | great and increasing FH, NO SNS | cca thects mee diectemoeeteie atte J . = - » best ever heard there, has met with the utmost | circumetances in the evidence, as they were theeues eneerwee ve vv pg ho Lo | qacleesen, eaenaaaes lori tg ond Setoret the plant Van tre big i id been irretiievably injured. There isalso some ground for doubting the aceu- racy of the calculation, in as far as it is based upon an anticipated increase of demand oa the the spinners. It is supposed cae, ition of the public, dee,’ (the well taki and it is the nec wdtra of folly and amusement. An actor name esot, And a young girl, seven would be difficult to imagine a cave in which one years old, are the heroes of the play, and perform could feel that it was more impossible to suppose their parte in the most admirable manner. | that a ehipwreck could have arisen under the cir- Ivis called * La Fille to ashes. At that eprermeete arise from positive inability. The care of young lady,) | oie moment the confusion and the lamentations of the question does not exceed five millions of ‘ople at the sight of the churches being consumed | dollars— pop one millon sterling—advanced in the Y. the raging element, were a soul stir specta- | year 1838, for the capital of the Union Bank, and cle. At the same hour, St. Joseph's street, and in | carrying an interest of five per cent., or exactly itthe church of the same name, es well as the 000 per annum. For the sum, therefore, of cloister of the nuns of St. Francis, were in flames. year, the people of Missivsippi have appa- detailed, in order that we might come toa just con- clusion as to the punishment that is to be awarded. Looking to these, | must contess that I thiak it o if a third less of the raw material been consumed this year than leat, there must The The Vaudeville obtained, the other | cumstances in Which this vessel Jett Liverpool, At5 o'clock, all the most cost! ; vay te r i i “ . : . ” rently become convinced that it have been a jing deerease in the num- —- rs s tical, satirical and | than in the present er The culmnees of the | street were blazing. At To'ele ck, tg fea e the ‘chaaasses af their ¢ Scar tmee hd ber of yards of cloth manufactured Sach would un- iw impossible to give yo he. pnt po t | pg sae tor the bee was po orig ny Fog pond the University were most ae endeavoring to | themeciver, ina great measure, from iuter2ourse ye wy ar been the cuse, had the goods manu- I will only tell you that at the end of the | nesses na throwing ner impediment in the way of | Qiigguish the five of the palace of the Archi . | with the respectable part of their speciea—and to | fectured continued of the same weight and texture At ¥ o'clock in the evening, all the houses as before. Dut this has lie edifices were burning and pud- | maintein a tual and not beea #0 with a ve: all the ac ee ee core For many months the rs @ppear armed with brooms, and — the ssfe navigation of the vessel—and the distinct ati u insittione. swing c| without the ceuse of liberty and t proportion of $ ne Lao ing chorua, upon the famed tune of pape fe A Ls em —— po ihn na chance of being saved, presenting & sanaiee a the country mane Toa § its soil were sterile, its | high price of cotton rendered the weaving of coarse Malay ae Kn Sather tide Uh, they had Vote wrecks. flame. An unceasing and fearful cracking noise of | X!¢nt intiguificant, its people diminishing, and its aaveeteen oods so unprofitable as to close some the falling in ef vaults of churches and other ed- ‘ally suspend the operationsof others. je port le beau, le plus digne d'onvie’ Tescurces pared down to the quick—there might be | ed, is to me, even now, moat eppalling. I eanaot | ; i % ete: nett 4 4 q ifices, was heard during the whole . | eeme palliation for co variance | But this interruption to business was, in man: And next, upos another ro Sean patrie ' = how it could have happened—I am quite The conflegration, which began on the 1s A with every maxim of Soeere ron Ad But | Cates, accompanied @ change in machinery, Du balat, du balal, po ay eccouat a = thing is certain, | mid-day, raged during three entire d it was | the precise contrery is the truth. The territory | Much of which was adapted for the weaving of a Mettens nous y sans delat Tee ii Patastrophe could only have coourred from | oply on the morning of the 2let that the fire was | included in the ‘State of Mississippi enjoys a pre- | finer class of goods, the price of which would be Dau balal. du Balai! e reckless and culpable neglect of duty in some | almost entirely subdued. Ileven streets, four | eminence even ai the most favored of the | lees aflected ih the fluctuations in the Fairons un netjoyage complet. ove or other of the persons in charge of the vessel churches, and 227 houses, were reduced to ashes | communities which recognise of the raw material. A ceux qui matin et roir, | before the wreck took place. Hazards were incurt- | by the merciless element.’ Th ment of Wasbingt it is that, vnless a very low for cotton le aon ed for which there was no conceivable reason of | fees femibies amounts to about 1.008 ae great river ‘which drsina ito the AMcrinen welt the s Gecasion @ return to the mannfacture of nverver pou heen cuguested. Ail thet meee to render ita treet | auNows if we bear in miad the striking fact, that | superiiuous waters of the whole middie remon of | heavy bodied goods, it will he some time ere an peta en euggested. All that goes to render it a most | the fire Lroke out almost ntaneously withthe | the North American continent ; and for two hua- irhed increase takes in the demand for cot- Pugravated case, for it seems to have been one that | first, ata distance of 2,001 dred ton, secing that much Jess is now actual! ‘There are about twenty verses, which are night- ere, and not in the and sixty-five miles along the lower and if the same proceeded upon a total neglect of what your Lord- | direction of the wind {fer fe the ot than wes consumed this time Last year, ther mend yot aero mil arth | Sue he ean freeea af er | ie ese ah enced hp ng | ain wen tank, Ae duly careke, | Rabegof May mo ea ene double entendre of the above mentiourd verses, | one who has to navigete such vessels, namely, th bee Men cats cenE neal oaihese end | Cement any caertion of ie own; fe i . hea we coaster - , n 3 . ecientitic establishments sicoi, we must circumstance and every accident ‘whic! increaring, is likety to decrease, when we consider Peer uate cance of the plaudite received | sntety of the vessel and of the passengerson board. | infer that the. coutlagtation, was the weorh cr Le | sribates to awrell the ron nso | what maybe anticipated as the natural reeult of : ll the ition who dweil on the aad bewitching Mune. Bester, ‘and ber ahey ti | yaare, we have a course of navigation carried on | cendiatiom, and that the insiguificamt mills and | higher brenehes of tle Misstaipph, the M Somntlidestne nie ania on ret te Sanian of coasting—apparently trying what perils the ves- | wooden houses, which were fit and the Ohio fi reases mob nee 2 | Notwithstanding this, we are not so much eurprise<l psi Ban 88 si | pelea be placed in, and yet to carry her safe to | werk of tome’ crimical hand, ‘merely’ tordrav | lowet watersef that tighty confluence of tense, | Wt Preeent prices, consideting the lowness ot the opened last night, with a new ploy. with trans. | thould be enrned oaft—end carn ate the miata p dE ofthe fohabi ta, whilst at @ on — i Wy ita oe shassies onal wars Gade spent aoliecoe ea cannany tions, change of costui neries of all have been on her accustomed course—a clear | Gevouring ele! wee bony ta domencee came | SS Deets ae ae ~ £2 | to make them too retentive of their stocks, aud the ae entitled “Le Lac hla course, anda known course. Now, in these cir | Geyqurigg element was bury in destroying the house | the deita of the chief lines of water commanica- | '@ meke them to retentive i aaioler aioe a M wos received with mach Applause. | cumstances, the jury have found by « majorit Ce OE eran and, Mt lesser distances, and in- | tion, through which pe vod Proepeets rah he ag its whet fony coon -~ |e / Y | tervals of time, 1 regions te into what i bot present, but Twill go to-night, and will | Thomas Hendegson, the master, guilty of culpable question sew cuen Whe wes he eect be caccraas ocpuaetee ot > promising speculation. For, be it Temembered, het | neglect of duty es libelled, under the second ch. ages know all in my passage, and by which the greater portion of the evflerers themselves ang the history of entton speculations is os rife in warn- ore closing my theatrical reports, I will re- | but not of reckless neglect of duty; and they have | ait er this question. They | imported ities must be conveyed. | / concur in accusing the ing as it is in encouragement. If hi = bm So ssiven oles wa — place the other unanimously fonnd Toba Williams, mate, guilty of having been the. me ren, and around ther as. stand hp lg ee ~¥ “14 been suddenly made, ry have seojunes opm irre: toon ofthe Theme Frasca Wiens eS | erases eclang ie greet a9 ens ha | Saeeyten the three flowion act iat ‘Thai | sand bly pds mere epeck om the map of oe | LaGrwOY wrecked by ik Thowe who fecolet te we | » Bees r. Wysoteki’s property was doomed, he being 4 i ubbles can ea the exrent t ouvere mes Bice eee aes leay, ber ;o 1? ohare din t lndicteneat, Lam sorry to netorions Polish pation, tn wae eyecot the whole of Eng! Wales, In ‘or of | Rhich cortag speculation ficured them. the usher, and requested him tohear herinrricace, | Mate at eet it to be impossible, with euch ver- | the Austrian government ; and, moreover, because | fact, the is one of the largest States of the Union; | They can aiso trace the resemblance between the The friend of Mr. Houssage retired alta | peo and tC ) gael ~ ‘any other sen- | the wind being in the west, the flames of hishouse | #nd the natural resources of her eoil have ex. | Citeumstances which led to it, und whichare at netonishment of the he saw before | that cf trapsporinnone No other mentence aetinan | assisted to communicate the fire to the whole quar. | cited the admiration und amazement of every | BOW seducing many to cou! ite repetition. im the most adorable face fer weet lips ut- | adequate for the offence committed, and no other | {¢! in which the monumental and scientific build- | person whe has eaamined them. These are the peften speculation of ia the tered the following words “1 . ings were situated. oily. That several churches, | general outlines of the picture; and, when we | belief thet the stock im hand was that the efi Revel of Tania; Tats Weat at | “Sad STL fry Sa unsere ted | eave ond ue pac’ ieee Camest"Wack | Ssmear Seon ede we tie Ctl wo Tit ad, he the de crop the most sriking spel coms afaak Semee7 ie | gene Jutyme are in grestina to make adatine: | Saved) were deviaed to be deeropeds hecrule Wo | faten of Mrstsigg very mach tne tan ol Teta aron, an tony eet bd je my debut a the bounds ecuttesaee | pony eng“ Me dine a ae the mass | Austrian government is, and always was, anxious | ittelf; end when the cersus of the present year d was high, that the ing crops were aban. x: poy decity disarmed the maiaze?, who re. | the latter guilty a ‘ jury, a id | to eflvee every vestige of the encient ur and | thallbe completed, we entertain ne doubt that, in 1, apd that neither t nor the conti- nested his sisiter to perform and fead something | belled, but not er reckt ee ee aaty 4% ti- | national glory of Poland ; and Sdly. That all the t of Humbers, the citizens of that State will be | Dental demand was unusually great. conse- in his presence, and ehe did it wit co mech talent | tainty that bee material didtons 44 firemen and engines were 00 carefull concealed by tee ay Se ee The ground on which energy, and pathos, that he tushea to her, took | the two cases; end if the verdict had included in it | (te authorities, that they conld not he found until | fome degree thueproportionate to theit general | ‘housands hed rushed madly into the speculation, her band, and piomived to make her débuter at | reeblecances on the port of th a we, the conflagration had reached ite climax, eo that | standing in the feceral commonwealth. Between | jes thus completely Shoes From tule babe —~ the earlieet opportunity. The first appearance of | course there would have been no ‘elternative | {ne frst engine employed was one which’ arrived | the years 1540 and 1816, the revenue derived from | feet, and the loeses tot Cae pl had the epeculators been able to meet their were estimated at neorly three mi . In 1825 there remained for home evn- ly at night from a email to rituated in the so called kin; distance of thirty English the sale of her pubtic lande inevensed ever fold; and it must be borne in mind that, a the new western States, the rapidity with which the the aun-actress will \WOelimene, in the « ., Phe privi wn called Miechow, lem of Poland, at a les from the Craco+ soon the place, in the part of Misanthrope” of Moliore of @ new theatre, to be called Le bot to pronounce vw; him a similar ter | of trassportation. "hue I feel that, in de ling | with the case of ote 4 person euch as the master | vien frontier. sit * i C out of the total import of raw cottn othe Invern hebalt of ir aordee “Fas | aches eave t eatag pen heraurae'ae ike | fa that bce, who nish armed Gennes | the sroncest prt of keane” apres. | faethe yt mH, Kington, for that year, Yoh bu iding, which will be, at the same time, a gae- | oflence. We must take into consideration, tl © in Calica nak laughter nearly 2,000 otwitetanding, hewever, this great increase in de 1 crops were to di ici 4 work den, © theatre, and & concert room, a fa Niblo, will | we must not allow it to earty ue too for,'the nee, | emilee in oy ged last year only ed | the demons for Youd, the State had still on ha the total. import. w 228,000, C00 hee et bev be trceted on he nd formerly occupied by the | menious interests of the pullic involved im this 5 eg ng Women floggers as Haynan ia | OO the 50th of June, 1845, no leas than 10, the por , he. of which ; 'd, in 1850, ve remeined fer me consumption 21,- ey A | tet cane hut tite aad sche | che mar tran eit | Nc tp ht ata | li es def ee ‘ Y , by menementa end relics of Pol \ ~ ay, that the abundance of the pot fed ‘Naseem t — a 4 ogeformance will pooe ia ray of such vessels, by this impressive | cow, es her ancient capital, io the polar rine oa Gerete selon of ton ind a half dollars per acre, tthe of 1825, from which sprung the increased tayorts 1, Whi B jomilies Domneless 4 pt hes us Tay LRT by least, it is worth being | dig. A those ie on a tbe other hand, we have to quote @ fact of « propried public desmptehign toad equal to tive eeele’ gin -— eae - imerraced stoek Patron’ y . » ver propitions the weathe: le . ‘sterlin: If have occasioned. eo ext mene yr ies ett ce de op he | lac inc beeen egeaeagis | ew hate cd hp deta eh | anh tee gd ae aR | esi mye gett whe gan ‘Third, of England, va Squiehed the Sixth, | that the master of such & vessel, upon syoa h | ASC! to value it. Ile did Raving | Grea Hanes the ee Srinaes coarse of «few momins fa 4 .¥ toed the by t ve course of a few months to 7d. Sain at hate eed | ene tear ata | Ac ess ee Raa bt fem ta sea 1 a vieti ry te is ardreg similar a _ ein Fo tt fa 2 ea | Wo eae hea ha aig ane | 7s one eh ha ten Caewo | sic |S ssarener sf asfosetersaat oy at the battle of Crot ys pet he cul. | Cites the pre with spe. | ocouente ot, veasure of the tacts, bat so did their roisy. ‘ ial are Dreceerssors of 1525, although the hypothe magnetic telegraph, cua, Uahed in the cham (ily othe” death ne, to | Sed Wik there Who cua feel haw decohy mtur afte | Jesr. "Ta’ 18s the murmher Which the whole coiten epeeuletion of that year between France ungland, y OW O | have been upen the deck from the of tional wound netet probe the ‘Dat he tin the State was 18,272,380; rested was entirely visionary. We would, ihere- T mimitting 1 i ul presentioetanee, although py Brg might not await them as feil upon those who, ne rter of a century ago, committed a similar jiecretion, When the madness of Speculation universe), avd when the calamities occasioned it were eggravated by such a state of. the curren as necessitated the paying of commissions for g ting bank notes into cireulstion, and the ‘iving champagne breakfasts to those who favorel ab by accepting its discounts. The Erazillan Emytre aud the Slay, <The Mugish Poles. Ye 7 (Prem the London Globe. (government organ,) Be] It RP ed ce FE Seal we may rely on a report in 10 Commerce 3 the 1th of Jaly last, the Brazili Minister of Forega Afl.irs is convinced th eoener or Inter, ‘cod’ lotest within the next ten litteen years, the Brazilians will be compelled q Great Britain perseveres) to abandon the slai trade, He even thinks the sooner the trade given up the better; end that ‘as 10,000 arrobas coffee, well prepared for the market, are more pi fitable of sale than 20,000 in an imperfect cond tion,” they should, for their owa sakez, tura the! attention (6 improving the quality, rather thaa qj inereosing the quantity of the Iabor—to makig tkiltul the hands they have, t merely multiplyin their pumbers. It is suid that these sentimen were loudly applauded, ana that the deputi pledged themselves to support the government any measures it might take tor the better enfi ment of the treaty ot No sber, 1826. Similar premises have beeu made go often, an to eo litte purpose, that we cannot place in thi nearly so much fuith as we should like. Nobod in his senses, who has exaunned, ever so curso) ly, the position and powers ef the Brazilian gd Vernment, hes hitherto believed it to be serious these promises Its treaty stipulations are worde precisely a8 though it wielded such authority ovel the inhabitents of its doonuiéns as is seen to b exercised by the most powerful governments d Europe; while its actual coadition obviously pra cludes the exercise of any puch authority. My forms of command are easily maiutained. Bi their substantial effect is limited by the power enforcing them. ‘Che so-called “bad faith” of thi government of Brozil is, alter all, for the most p: an indirect confession that the Executive power i not, at home, what, to foreign natioss, and in i ciplomatic intercourre, it professes to de. Nor i the farce limited to external demonstration, Thi lightly sabdued by & nesre eee to be used woached ia thi 2 hollowness, a whenever the same topies are cen'ral legislature. To obtain some idea of the trath, one needs bud to look at the country and the people as they are, and are best known te be. We see the nomin ewpire of Brazil extended over about half of th enure surface of South America—a space near, equal to that of the United Scatea, inclading Ore} gon and Califoraia—with @ coast line of about 2,50 miles. Crossed by vast mountais-ranges, inte! seeted by the finest rivers in the world, enjoyi in a tropical climate end on elevation of surfic infinitely varied, from the rich alluvial flats of th river banks and coast margins to the vast plateau of the intericr, all the conditioas of exuberant ve. getetion—the occupation of this great natural gar} den is divided between dense and almost impe: trable foresta, through which the mountain stream fing their wey, bat whose borders man can yet bu nibble at with fire aod the axe—gr. prait feeding millions of wild cattle—a few ladian trib still hving the scattered, wild, and wasteful life o the mere hunter, but not possessing bone and mu: cle enovgh to make them worth bee les phan some six or seven milfions of mingted white an black inhabitants of the maritime districts aroua, Rio, Buhie, Pernambuco, San Paulo, Maranh and three or four other populous centres of th foreign trade—almost the only trade—of the co try. he arule, all the labor of the country is done b eleves, down to what horses or mules would els where be put to. The onty prominent exeeption, we believe, is experimentel. The Emperor lately got over sone 1,500 ‘mans from the ban of the Rhine, to form an agricultural colony on estate of his own, about forty miles from Rio. number of slaves in the country—all African, o nearly so—is, of course, not very exactly known: A probable estimate makes Seas 9,000,000 But it Qaowtt Se Observed that the black ana whi! Taces are not kept so distinct here as in the Unite States. The Spaniards and Portuguese have never, in this rept, edopred the course common wil the English nnd American planters. There is fre: quent miature of biood; and the issue is not for bend ts off—us in the ee 5 ~~ pe of ultimate emalgamation wit! white race. The slaves also ~ to be rather more t ly treated in Brazil than is common under the sy: tom they are taken there to serve: ‘he cultivation o a virgin soil by excessive and protracted labor. Th cruelty seems to be all in the labor ; notin its in cidents, or in the manner of executing it—ui we put down, @s an item encbe ) wee in, the al: entire exclusion of females, of late years, from cargoes of imported slives: reeultiag im a co ponding deprivation of female society, and such do ee enjor mene. as ge aed 8u to be com jt with the bard Jong hours of rezilien slave. i be * But what is especially remarkable is the conati- tution of the slave-holding body; and in th’s desiz- nation itis necessary to include all the capitalists of the country—for capital in Brazil may be said t meet labor in only one form. A very important, be- cause a very active and influential, section of this body are rather Portuguese then Brazilians. As Lord Howden remarked, in the course of hie ex- amination before the Lords’ Committee of last year—“The Portuguese are the only persons of white skin who do unything at Rio.” They are the overteers, the clerke,the commission agents, the merchants, the bankers, the a the Etre: They tre the only prope who have ready el 5 are the only wi money; aud a8 almost every Braxilian is in want of that, bw How thi a3 British Minister, and ia th all he could to dicsare?, how it byte cy isof no avail at R ‘The Ministers and the tosare al bovee! | dificulties; thi Hatstern, vn 4 at went of moary, almost immediatel: Co > oh governed Tho Portugues, apnened toe ele ore emia sist al the Vevarre tio, when- er there is an insurrection. alws the is ‘these lone he it is poor, and these people temporerily i otetwiee, ‘they lives only’ tee and are constantly and exclu- only bw To fulfil t te page oe — retarns to enal noting epeenlator to pa} maritime aid. A veseel fitted out 4 if she ercapes the home with ‘olists ore dis ihed. But they are ow merous—say 40,000 in all—they rest _ the law of debtor and — which cannot be abolished Fay ad dis- clving society; they are possession of the industty jore and which he native Brazilions have not, ly never will have. They are the de, tories of the best mercanule virtues of the Bra. ilien hey are entrenched in all trengt ° Brazilion law aod order—the and enforcers of the lawe are almost creditore—they form a ma, teliste of the beg ae rags d thrive they feel British preventive measures i | h the pocket—and, a® they will stand tele fo inten he Brazilian goverument, however good ions and fair iw promises, is, spparently, It is hard for one government to enforce the in- terns! regulations ot another—and about eo hard *s it to pot an end to the Brazilian share of the slave trede. We ennnet cive the government of Brazil power to enforce its own laws; and it is yet doubt- ful whether we cao obtain the end by jess direct means. But uoril the toeane sugge sted by the lorde” committer, and to which we have befure adverted, have been tried, « newative conclusion as latter. is seareely justitisble; and in the the de! Tation above referred to, in the legislature, though it may signify litt, at beast hae ite signification on the right side. Prexen Stateevey at Clarewont = During thie end fest week, mbers of eminent Freach- coudolement to the family at Claremoat. Among Damoas, them, were ard Moprebcile, MG atthe polece ; ond a eon ony held ee to the title or nome by which the Coant de Paris wiil be recognized im future by te Orleaniats, and who isto be reengniged as the head of the foraily. A writer in the Times, speaking evideatly from evthority, anys that alvandy hore lectera frem the Ovi cham to the ex Qaven and to the Dache affectionately referri iy to the lore King; wid, it is hinted, that the rawait hee bern the cetablish ment of a most cordial feet ire between the two branches of the bowee of Bow bon = Live pool Jwrnad, Sept. VA.