The New York Herald Newspaper, October 10, 1850, Page 2

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ptt tv 5 fear of a new ston, &la Lopez, is, to New York ul . unpleasant consejuences, has resolved to grant | Cuba. The f n % . , : yosnem | in eee Se hme By 26,000 crowns, on the demaad of Haglund, for the TE ae oo bn that the Scene pee the passage rae Lind—No; it is always new to me. I ee geass Raving’ concluded, Her Majesty and | 8 metres (26 re A mole injuries and losses sustained by British subject® | cholera has begun at ‘Constantinople, where it | around Cape Horn. Even the overland ronte is be- | cannot accustom myself to it ‘There is too much | the royal party were conducted by General the | north to south will shelter the port om its widest i scupation of Leghorn by the Austrian | comes from Malta and Exypt. You may know | ginningto lese its terrors. The Mormone are for- | friedsbip shown me. | am full Ginceapections, Hon. Sir Alexander Gud, and the Duke of Leeds | side. A refuge wikpe be created from the most. ina that it causes many desths in Tunis and Tripoli, | ming settlements just at the point where they will | and if you continue to flatter me in this way, I | te the baronial hall of the castle to witness the | dangerous storms of those seus, not only for trading adepth ‘ew Orleans wis afew years thi hectares at le nd that it cannot injureyou. We thiok you | race, and other rewa ngt and tranalaiiag Gaelic, &e.. for troops. most it h hi d caravans; | shall tremble when | come to sing. dancing. The sword dunce aud strathspey were | veseels of the largest tonnage for the A very remarkable engineering blunder has ps i ennui vedere “ ay parte bey ro eb phen Impossible | © It was quite evident,” saysthe Weekly Herald, | the dances, and then there was a competition among | navy, an important 1 > eaused the entire destruction of a dry dock built — that arailway may connect New York and Saa Fran- | from whieh we quote this edify conversation, | the pipers. ; - ‘ an extent of brag lea Cap Corse to f N lay of some | A@strian Indignation at Haynau’s Treats | cisco, In the midst of these brilliaat prospects it | “that Miss Lind, who is made of a mould peculi- e games and amusements having terminated | Porto Vecchio, does not uflord a single harbor of near the ay ol anno polis wo wage ol MERIT gy ee as might | i§ Very natural that the citizens of tne Union arly sensitive and fusceptible of, applause, wee | sheze ovclock, the Queen and Prince Albert imme- refuge. Bea £30,000. The who! ric in, fe r ¢ Austrian pape ageons, A their usual modesty. | overwhelmed wi aises lavished upon her | diately departed, attended by the Eurl o is a have been anticipated, at the recent disgracefal at- Be eon Arnitte itch should letra them to | ‘by the two distinguished. individuals, whe. hed | and suite, for the royal retreet on the banks of the Mr, Layanite Latest Disoovertes. pressure of water, fortunately when 09 work- A few weeks ugo we anaounced, says the Lites n General Haynau. The Allgemeine Zetung moderate their hopes suzgests to us, also, aot to do | thus visited her in succession, Her cheek was | Dee. rery Gazette, Mr Layard’s return’ from his expe men were on the works. The blame is attributed | fe to say what destin: mantled with blushes,”” The following dey having been chosen for the é 40 Prince Ischitella, the Minister of Wor. Tea | We are not now called upon to record our a Ry ire “When the pares Mise Lind was then visited by about 400 ladies, | escent of the Bea-na-bourd, the Qeen and Prince eae 4 deoaths ond, Se recep at mane of pears the king had been warned hy some Neapo- | opinion of the executions in Hungary; they have | (°°) fur out of buman calculation, what is more | efter which she was earried off by the President of | Albert, accompanied by the eldest son of Prince thei bea a cp tor England. We "st f i hat the watls were too slight; and | been canvaseed in every direction; but we will say | Viiv thon that ihe future should be also? the American Art Union to a private view of the | Leiningen and the Marchioness of Douro, and at- | heir embarkation fr Muguad. | © ake since a engineers a oe wal ot pats fi sian poe Dalene pp ae exhibition. The pictares monaen with her marion jenees b aon aillien,. lett Balmoral at ce pid recent discoveries ut hoyuojik, which are extreme- time past, the works w . sngifuh people ate leas atio i vecribed. ty is then | hour in the forenoon, rove ¢ Sout, oes ur by yy than one English geatleman, | deeds of this kind, It is scarcely a year ago since bee Ld sean, - 5 og are ane poy me y ae ny fade of the Dee, till the; reached the bridge of Inver- ages iy 4 Sompelerey esr ap eemny binge . se at once discovered | Sir H. Ward, the Lord Chief Commissioner of ‘the From the London times, Sept, 24) __ | magnificent collation, a c:owd of fashionable Ja- | cauld,a substantial eight-arched structure, that, | Det, Which is completely flle« . Ppp pieion! know/oie & Tonian Islands, thought proper, by means of the | Theres a shrine for some divinity or other in| dies, anda host of fficinis with singular names. | to all’ appearance, will long ufford a specimen of | J¢t® the inscriptions on which, we now learn, are ‘the error. Hed the acedent taken place «short | knout and the Tope, to suppress the national aspira- every human heart, Ja this respect the Amerivans | Speeches ensue. Jenny Lind is enrolled a mem | worthy old General Wade’s engineering, and also i ahehinehpeana a fet pees ome time earlier than it did, handreds of hives would | tions of the republicans whom Great Britain ‘pro- | are spade pretty much like the rest of us. They | ber wmida shower of compliments, aud is with | give a hint of what, at one time, was considered ive probable that Heese te 7 = recor, ; Bave been lost tects’; and Lord Palmerston expressed his approval | PU e hor Munch reverence for a sovereign, of & difficulty driven back thro fh the erowd to her ho- | not at all an inconvenient or inadviseble variation theming intoets tevtuplionns port ay gl Sa he Laiperor of austrin is suid to have person: | Qf the view which bis friend took of the case. | lord, or even for a pope. In fact, their politteal | te]. ‘The near approach of the ticket auction, fixed | of gradients. Here the royal party crossed the ri- | 70m mays in fac pene Nee oe The Emperor ¢ . | Searcely a week has elapsed since fresh atrociiles | engegements have rather cut them out of the old- | for Satarday, creutes intense excitement. ver, and, after passing up the opposite side fora | Oo suleston for issii : oa ally invested the King of Greeee with the order of | from Ceylon would come out, in soe of the anxious | fushioned eirele. But set them once free, try them FIFTH DAY. couple of miles, alighted from their carriages on fring oon we mt fea (om hg — the golden fleece during their recent meeting at saaver or Oe Ratetaens ie has beh ona hitue pew ground, and their inaate loyalty Jenny Lind’s personal appearance, her intellec- | the Slogen burn. They then mounted ponies, and twenty-five cases are on their way to England. In _ ile their owa rivers and ‘i ibihti ascended the Slogan by an excellent pony track, . Jsehl. them, Not atip trembles, not a sigh breathes in | Fig Meany Lind, after fiitiog about Enrope aa | {al qualities, her religious sensibilities, ate now | ech Cried them wpa. shouider of the bill 10 | {Re P¥femid at Nimrou, ve, a unique statue has A funeral service was celebrated at Aix-la-Cha- | the Sunday prayer of the city, on account of [re- | fee usa lark, jilting queens, suitors, und opera sett fob withio about a mile of the top; but as the moun- | bee discovered. It is from four to five feet im the King Luis Philippe. ‘The service had been | of egilian! gencrss comes down open amy agricul. | herown. The Curibs were not more awestruck | grewt deal better. The ‘Benerous pablic had taken Rae eae nies ot Daring the, teiisonne | very beautifully executed, ‘standing in an arch ordered by 4 Polich fainily out of gratitude to the | WTCTEG lieing onda are tot loose, and | ee eee ine irony Lind, Oar own couatrymen | #arm at the prespect of her being fleeced in the | oe INN SMe proved herself to be a tiret rate | eight feet high, and covered with minute inscrip- fe “ 3 i vi the advent of Jenny Lind. r way of charity performances, but is now coasoled | 8scent, | ‘ tione. Mr. Layurd’s laet communication is dated deceased monarch, Amongst the persons present | the people of England applaud the infamous vio- | wer. mad enough in wil conscience, consideriag h destrien, and had the advantage over Prince Al- uke of Albufera lence and the revolting ineults of which he i¢ made'| {h5hcf the multitudes who raved about Jenay, not | tthe thonght that they help to make up that | Provsitians te to oe “contest for superiority ia | AKT@ 17th July, where, we are sorry.to say, he fs ee to be the victim! Are not the English afraid of | bre in ten had heard a note of her voice; and | siritaal ideal, in whieh consists her great charm. surmounting the more rugged points, where the | Dad been confined by # severe attack of fever. The Our Paris Correspondence. being served im the some way-—the Eaglisty who | [rough she sang for charities, she certainly did not pleas rae nerae et Jonny Lind i ena, | bands perform fully as important « part of the loco- | inedficient assistance he has received bas caused Panis, September 28, 1860. | every year cpoil eur beautiful leadscapes. By the sing to“ the million.” The Americans, however, | irbuies to the same happy result. It is reported | Motion as the feet, and eventually the Queen | soneq for a while ou his way to Van to secure AIM Society of the Diz Decembre—Splendia Mili- | Oddity of their Appearance and the ‘refiaemy beatuscenand quvin the pluch of tbels danetae, StoT tar ie existing engagement between Barnum and fea ype gece enh for the | inscriptions. He hopes to pass a great part of the tary Review— The Nepantere Ambassador—Intrt- | Afraid or not, it appears by the following ex- | belief, as expressed by one of the soberest of their his fuir protége one pata and ase Feo very inagnihoent prospect it aommandse tbe ver | winter in Babylonia, and to return home in the gees of the French Politicians—Naval News, | tract from a letter from Vienna, of the 11th iastanty | jourpaty thet "she bas been raised up by the para Bl Rap a4 caly Mage United rious chains of mountains throughout the High- pth ahe very feted Be rage ners yy ag a ae &e. | 5 the Sine Fearne jr secy se Perkin'a Great Spirit to make the a of the ee hum- | States, but all over the world—to the end of that | lands, Co ames ie bi wal 5 ped exertions should not be stayed for want of fands. The political world has been very dail since my | A mre ble, while they adore His power. ere 18 | Jady’s career. To obviate any momentary alarm | ‘Ty is 00t very extensive, yet by elp ast letter, with the execption of the debates which | always a certain rejation between the worshipper | this announcement may occasion, we may ag well | telescope as the deerstalkers use, @ person can The Expedition to Pekin. riety of Dux Decemdre, | beenleying in for many years, is now taken out | jonage will occasionully betray the contemplation prize of $200 for the hest poem on Jeaay Lind’s | Bé** and even count the windows of some of the The Reynurd revur he store of Anglophobia, which they have | and the worshipped, and the most entranced | feu tion that Mr Baraum is a married maa. The | distinctly see the ships upon the at Inver- [From the Ubina Mail, July 23.) have been caused by the & ‘ 4 4 n d to the harbor oa the 7th : | end aed in an offensive, and, indeed, in an absurd ! ent instance the prostrate mal- | Pt farm houses in Ross-shire. The summit wf the > Nines en the subject of the nots which took place at the | manoer lathe Café Daum, which is hauated by ying Lg pS being praud of ‘ r city, of 70. posal dap 4 ty og mountain is almost void of vegetation, having the from bay craiee cau et Re A, Sa is ast arrival of the President, from Cherbourg. our officers, there was, amidst the portraits, of of themse Ives, aud of thetrown sing | ‘he far smile of the card to the balcony, with die | Peculiar weather-beaten a pearance ‘common to | jitte to transpire. Ou her artivel at the mouth of Poblic epioton iy much excited oa this subject, | other seyal rersonages, @ porirait of (Queen View | lar good taste. “The Swedish Nightingale, the | sections to the bearer; an mdignant deta by Mc. | Ur Scotch mouataias of like elevation. The cor- | ihe Pei-ho, it was found that, without lightening The m Fro 100k Up0n Oe ee any eee ner cee Who drawing hia | SOUL Of song, has at length arrived wm the Empite | foward that he tud bribed Jenny Lind with | Ties near the top are also famous for their veins of | she ship, it would be imipoasible to proceed up the ; i | ee te oe Ctecen OTE, Wm, Ar “ic | City of the great bite of the New World, and |g) 000 19 put up at Lrving’s Hotel; more monster | those beautiful rock crystals, with which we ate | river, which, even at high water, is too shallow ter; council, at which | gubre with @ volley of imprecations, smashed it | her welcome hasbeen cordial and enthastastic in | Foy yd ; more familiar a8 “* Catragorum stones.” We may | for a vessel of her draught. She accordingly while his comrades cheered aad crie bouquets, mulutudinous visits by ladies and great Generel ( J, was held by the ea- ; proportion to her fame, and that intuitive instinct | fupcionaries, some adventures of Jenny Lind in | mention that while the royul party were ia search | gnchored, aad shortly aficrwards was visited by | binet of Louis Napoleon, ead that there was me: 5 oF tna rte ay Rte hy which the people et New York never fail to re- | cnet « fa sensible old horee ;? and speculations | Of specimens of these stones, Prince Albert hid | some of the local authorities, and afterwards by — : ofr 0018 ner, and they curse the istanters | cognize and appreciate heroism, goodaess, Or | on the mode on which ehe will pass next Sunday. | the good fortune to piek up what tarned out to be | oihers of higher rank, who were, or pretended to tioned, in all its details, the whole aftair of the they cannot get at’ and whom they long | genius.” In this Pantheon of greatuesses, which } ? not merely a specimen, but an excellent piece of | be, apprehensive that her intentions were hostile > 12h inst pudacity of these sociétatres has shiver.” as the ofheer did the picture of theif | is most admired, and which stands on the principal | rorning is eco red with anticipations | Ceifmgerum, fully more than suffic ent to make a | rough, as the nature of her business had been pre- really become intolerable, and if they continue | Queen. But not only ubsnrd—indeed, the iasults | pedestal—the Nightingale, tne Empire City Saturdey morning is occupied ¥ a he nolie pretty large brooch, end worth iwo or three days’ | viously communicated to. the court of Pekin, they F Jia + it will | &¢ low and mean which were yesterday offered to | Grext republic, the New World, the people of of the auction to come eff on thatday. The policy | toil toa *Cairngorum digger.” probably did not really feel any great fear on the their egg the people, be sure it will" two harmless English tourists (whose dress be- | York, of the ‘abstract excellencies. that wi ve or that price, the produce of the sale, | “The Queen conversed very freely with the guides point Be the cause of a ce le row. [tis said, ia cer- | spoke them sw by several cavalry offi » | the sentence? Need we hesitate for an anew e liar character of the voor gene wortd in | and gillies about her, ind appeared to take great Arrangements were mide for receiving the so~ tain quarters, th Uesof the Elysée intend | einong whow was ‘@ near relative of Prince | They are all in proportion to one another, and the | New York, as compared with Th or compas interest in the scene, inquiring the names of many | called Queen’s letter, the contents of which wa i . +. veitval.¢ N Schwarzenberg. 4 beauty of Jenny Lind consiste in her being of a | discussed with finaneial vigor. The Weekly Herald, | of ihe hills and places round about; und, as exem- | have already sufficiently indicated, and short giving a grand party, or a festival, to wren The Ties states that preparations are making | cece with New Yok which hes always been beating down the mouey | jifying the interest Her Majesty also takes in the | yfierwarde the ceremony took place within e hend- leon, end that it will take place on the 29h iusty | to greet Genero] Haynau, on his return to Vieuna, |" Our readers are already acquainted with the | Value of Jenny Liod, while it cried up her talents Jogends ond treditions of the county, it, may be‘l‘nce tent, erecred for the pnrpose onshore. The euih ave with a splendid demonstration of loyal devotion, splendor of Jenny Lind’s reception; the desertion and virtues, says that one dollar would be about | worth while mentioning that while ascending the | Mandarims were exceedingly civil, but gave thei daring the meetiag | accompanied by an extraordinary act of grace on of churchese—for it was Sunday; the assemblage | the figure that would pay best, and reduces it to] Siogen she requested one of the guides to point out | guests to understand that any farther negotiation estation a the part of the Monarch The garrison is tosere- | oF the population on the shore; the triumphal arithmetic. It now oppeare that the 750 disappoint, the fises where one of the earliest of the @arquhar- = aks give arlethe ieeeniel Guam rd at the grand nade him by torchlight; and the Emperor is to arches; the myriads of eyes fixed on the Atlantic | €4 Competitors tor the Jenny Lind eines ate all | sone of Invercauld (“* Fiondiadh Mhor”) was bora, | at Canton, who had ihe direction of foreiga aftairs; iy ene i | place into his hands the object of his ambition | ge she steamed up the nver; the meeting of Jeaay | deeply disgusted, and, aye is vant ge << stating that she was awure it was somewhere in | and to him instructions had already been sent how nd which | the marshal’s “baton Lind and Barnum, with the brief bat importaat ia- | eavally diegusted with the a ep ie ich | the glen. The guide accordingly pointed out a| to uct. He will probably tell us that, ashe is the \ ws Ravelets terchanves of sentiment that ensued; the rush of | She is expected to heh and w Po od “4 a pd small ruin among the heather, as the spot, and her | mipister specially appointed to manage foreign busi- ie ere the eager multitude through the dockyard gates; | eulogy of herself. The choice is declared to be a | majesty halted and examined it, evidently with | nese, we can commume ste with the courtin writiag 30 of to-eay, i to that aboveme review of Le Hesse Cassel. seeasion, and it is said | Although unstained by exees-es or violence of d fob. Tt Wan KaGWi before Wht was to have the t aang Mion ned tae - “4 i % ™ the ; regress to the Irving House; the gorgeous | } ¢ A much interest. Fi mndladh Mhor” is al the | only through hum. This, #8 we have formerly re- ghee om ue diet dl oe anes ony See fay ache by mgpotaen a The : a apartments prepared for the “Nightingale;” her prizg, and the SON et eae yee hero ofa beautiful Gielic song. After the party had poet ia ah anaes the daiamiiad ieee English doubi it will plendid to! tor and his people eontir avimiration of the scenery, of the stripes and stars, | Hon to music. | More bouquets. | fenny Lind’s | tunched at the *sapvert and miners” cairn at the | testy, dud express!y ‘tated. in the subsequent once hoped, that no folly of the m he former ia ‘aeenrasingd to persiet in | OF the respectabilivy of the mob, of the comfort. | ©! erty Psa yrsr os ce Mebane § top, Her Majesty took a drink from a clear spring | with France und the United States. 7 ; Decimbre will spoil ihe grandeur of that review. y. The seat of goverament is to be mov. | Sble nigger, of the aire “Hail Columbia” und | are told aboile hind ; na alec tine |, she epends to- | well, at the top of the ‘‘snowie corre,” and, | We neverexpected any good from this ill-advised Before leaving the ambassador of Nepaul, I will | ed trom Caesel toa small town in the vicinity of | “Yankee Doodle,” and of everything that she | motrow with the Kev. Nr. baird, shorily after, the royal strangers left the sumunit, | expedition to the Pei-ho; and if it be attended with. tell you that thie di verson dined, on | Frankfort; aud Hassenptlug, who remains minister | he@rd or saw. As we have to epitomize the pro- . SEVENTH DAY. ‘ and by Fix o'clock had safely descended from by | any result at all, it will be to excite mistrust in the Saturday last, at the he Normanby. the | has summoned the diflerent servants of the go- | ceedings of ten days, each of which would fill se- Sunday is devoted toa review of the auction | tar the wildest and sternest region of the IHigh- | Chinese, instead of encoursging them to extend our ambarsador of 4 invited, for | vernment to Wilhemsbaa. The people, oa tne veral columns of this paper, we are torced most re- | the previous day. It was attended by 3,000 or 4,000, | lands Her Majesty-had yet trod. commerci | facilities, which was the real object of the occa: istere, and, | other hand, preserve an attitude of constitutional | Metantly to omit heaps of the most interesting and | notwithstanding @ heavy rain, and the unexpected Ben-na-bourd is in itself a large rugged moun- | the mission. We have, therefore, no immediate also, all inatic corps. This | resistance; the martial law proclaimed by the Elec- | Piciuresque details. It is, however, satisfactory | imposition of one shilling a-head for admission to | tain on the verge of the Cairngorum range, rising | prospect of exchangwg Fuhchau and Ningpo for a to know that everything is recorded; and if future | the Garden. Mr. Barnam and the auctioneer had | to the height of 3,900 feet above the level of the mer “location” on the Grand Canal, ever ages should wish tu realize these events they will | much trouble to dispel some mystifications which | sea, and, though sloping away on two sides in the thovgh we are willing to postpone, sine die, out nothave to draw on their imagination, or to be | rumor had raised he latter took his stand oa the | direction of Speyside and Cairngorum, present on | imaginary right to admission within Canton city. content with these few scanty sentences, in which | very spot where Jenny Lind was to stand, and | the opposite direction an unbroken chain of almost pn leaving the river Pei-ho, Captain Cracroft the fate of dynasties and empires have sometimes | * proce eded to sell the first ticket, having the right aging ry ne with the exception of @ | bent his course up the Guif of Leaou-tuag, a8 far been recorded. Not a word, not a smile, not | to the first choice seat to the first concert of Jenuy | neck or belt, that connects it with its brother moun- | 6 the Great Wail, which he had the gratification a downcast look, not a choking of the utter- | Lind im America.” After a tremendous comperi- | tain, Ben A’an (literally—the hill or mountain of | of minutely inspecting, and of proceeding a con- ance, not @ flowish of the handkerchief, or | tion, it wes knocked down toa hatter for $225, | the beg og Magner 80 called from the fact of the | siderable distence along ite summit. ‘e trust wave of the hand, not a pink riband has been | amid vociferous cheering. The next choice seats | Gairn, the Don, and the priacipal tributaries of the | shortly to be enabled to give some particulars of: ay op the history a Ges os amped went a6 meee less iow, bm names of “ tee Sey, seins in its ange There ey one of | this interesting trip. ? j . ~ al " . . day, from the iovstant when Jenny Liod was re- | purchasers, the numbers of their tickets, and jose rocky eminences, which ferms the great pe- -_— pede ye 5 yp ver he = tang ‘ Lepage § Saenger Hoa Weep orn Noon vealed to the ‘eute of the American werld by | sums given, are published at length, and would oc- | culiarit of Ben A’an, on the top of Bea-na-bourd, Art, Music, and the Drama, + ool mao,” but Berryer is a ** man of nerve % | have irdeed been industriously circulated. although her proximity to Barnum on the deck of the | cupy two columns of this popes. We must be | rising abruptly to the height cf some forty or fifty Tt ws seid the ‘The first is very excitable, and the last is a surt of | they do uot appearto be fdunded upon facts, but ra- | Steamer, up to the witching hour of midaight, | coutent with the results. On Saturday there were | feet above the ridge of the hill. reported for the aut’ chairmanship of the Talleyrand in his line. Therefore, the Couat of | ther upon (he assumed aggressiveness of Austrian pap ge Se serenade by two hundred musicians | sold 1,429 tickets, at the average price of $6 33, ® a oyal Academy, has realized not less than £500,- Chambord, who knew well that * mildaess is bet- | diplomacy. Lt is the ashion to aceuse that govern- | #84 the whole population of New York, and a | amounting to $9,194. The Submart: 000 by bis brush ie has been nowhere enforced; and the couatry portaptevent of the four lost days, and itis bel a@ state of perfect Uanquility. [tis ma- ere wes again sealed the entente cordiale of | nifestly impossible for the goverament to restrain Freuce with Engload, w little en frowd, the movement, since the pudlic fanetionaries, the tince the quarrel, @ pr e “Grecian dif- | army, and the people, are u ficuhiee.” | termination to resist whet t! The legitimict part ewhet separated in | trary invasion of the co two camps, since the retura of its members | that M, Has from Wiesbaden. Mr. de La Rochejaquelin and | support ot his own colleagues im the cabinet; an Berryer are the chiets of the two battalions, but [ | there is no reason for believing that the coup de’état ieletae * Antenatal a ol ent o ia j ‘aod. | tremendous long address by the commitiee of the EIGHTH DAY. Dover, Exe , Sept. 15, 1350. Mr. Samuel Lover bas been giving his Irieh en- Mir. gpey i cobs ann o poten © ee | ism, 0 arr noe Secreend henna am apy id Murical Fuod Socicty, “the deputation havin ‘The hatter’s reasons for giving $225 for the first | _ Since the sinking of the firet wire, otrcumstances tertainments, with great secnees, ae Douglas aud style of condact of Mr Berryer. Judeire! The | esis to aceouat for the. trovemedt ta fen, | conversed a few moments with epg, Lind and | ticket, and bis expressed determination to give | have ocenrred calculated for a short time to retard | Ramecy, Isle of Man sie de France, being the oxgan ot saeaseia’| re of wisdom inthe Elector, and the want | M*- Darnum, then windrew, and the Nightingale | @500 ir necessary, occupy the attention of New | the carrying out the projret to completion, seeing | —‘Atexunder Domus has prepared a new play for ees Ain. haw been much enraged by the | of honeety in his Minister, render it superfluous to | Tetired to her downy rest.” We assure our readers | York, to the exclusion of all other topics, and'even | that in order to the complete establishment of a0 | the Theatre Historique, called “Le oye Recheje pnd peek oon of seek fot sntpanesus leitannene ae tharabenen of tae Wat we have cut the first day very short indeed. | Jenny Lind is forgotten. As be lived next door to | integral line of telegraphic service between London, | jonquier.” Grent expectations are entertained that cols, signed by a Mr. de Barthel , has set fire | revolution which is now in progress. But whether . it out incidents h to fill_an otho- | Barnum’s Museum, many people thought it a ju Paris, and the contioent, the promoters have to | jt will prove emumently successful to the powder... Mr. de Lourdonetx, the publisher) the crisis isto be attributed to the agency of others, bt hree volumes, duodecimo. There are | gle ; but that does not acceunt for five others bid | 0! & grant from the French government of the Melingue, before us, go, adopting the coasoicuous | ding againat him.” ‘The place selected by the hat- | eighteen miles of line extending from the coust to ilocnt’ Sateowrrecedgned we ane eal ‘ nine day: of the Gazette, departed, two days ago, for F OF to the unprompted measures of the Price, the arrangement of the New York i i i Pari i J Tk sd Sountes tobe epptthended tan oneal we. gement of the New York papers, we will pro- | ter was by mo means 4 good one, being directly | Calais, from which point to Paris the wires are a mbassa- honfl, where gare — _ he members | ee Wir ane Se ceed ut once to the under Jenay Lind, and coe next to tt only’ wens for erected. To secure that concession of this section, pata Tr gn a yon pte ye quite certels uarrel have a deadly efiect Movement of the European Republicans. SECOND, DaY. . $10. “There is a better solution for the mystery,” | in the way of which some difficulties pres*at | and magnificence, which of the legitintst Pn “4 S" Maire, the head of The Constitutional Correspondence, a weil-iae | On Monday morning the whole population of says the Weekly Herald, “than to charge it to | themselves, Mesers. Brett, Wollaston, and [d- 2 in the preeent condiyon” Merit wa | formed ministerial publication, in Berlin, contaias | New York had come to the conclusion **that there { Peter Funk.” What do our readers auj that | wards, directors of the undertaking, are now at the legirimiet pare a sort of “holy war” is under- | the following notices relative to the projected Con- | Was no humbug about Jenny Lind, and that she | tobe? They remember, probably, the hatter im- | Paris, awaiting the return of the President of the “Vv ” “ In the Mope against the solunion of ull sorts, gtese ot Republicans i the island of Jersey, which, | W#8 4 diamond of the first water.” “They flocked | mortalized ty Carlyle, for eending about the town | republic, who granted the origioal decree, and to Sa st he prince mii ~ aeametinchngnth y taken in Keays plosting agaiost the couatries from | Tidiculous as it may appear, mey not be unworthy | '0 the hotel, hoping to get & sight of her, and, ae it | a monster hat, with his name and address upon it. | negotiate with the government authorities on the | suffered himerlf to be led behind the aoenea, where WhOS hey have been banished. Oar government Of the attention of those whom it may concern ;— | Tained very hard, they filied its halls and passages, | Jt now appears that Mr. Genin’s object was the | Bal F he could give free vent to his rapture, and taki has sent © series of claims to the British govera- | ‘* The ground-work,” says the journal, “of this | the resideut company of the hotel being elreody not | same. His ticket will be worth $1,000 to him, he | 1a the meantime, experience of the experiments | closer survey of the object which dazzled Ss ment, requesting the foreiga office to examine | Congress ie an assembly of republicans of all far from a thousand. At 12 o'clock, the proprietor | says. There were others alive to its value. Three | already made, goes to prove that a stronger ies | senses. Cerito was panting uj a sofa in the lit. closely wud watch the whereabonts of Messrs Le- | shaces, and the re-organization of the propaganda. | Conducted Jenny Lind to the ladies’ dining room, | of the five unsuccessful competitors were patent | Of telegraphic tackle will be required. By the | tle room to which she Tettes ia, the intervele af dru Rollin, Louie Blane, Caussidiére, and others, | The presiding commitice shall, as before, reside in | @nd introduced her to the gf Commodore | medicine venders. The name ef Genin now stands | terms of coniract with the French goverament, it | her performance, when the swarthy visiter present Who are conspiring at the gaies of France, and | London; but a country more favorable than that | Stockton, end 500 ladies, each of whom she shook | before us at the head of the most portentons list of | Was enacted ‘that the ment dove not re- | ed himeelf, indicn miles cad salcame his Who, sheltered by the shield-of Eaglish freedom, | of England gor the orgunization of the standing ar | by the hand. At 2ahe was driven, with no little | names ever published in America. serve to itself the right of making any similar con- | internal estieiaction” % more solid token of th are consten'ly dreaming of the means of destraying ™y of the universal republic shall be selected. J¢ | difficulty, through the crowd, to inwpect the Jenny | is said, to follow up the idea on the cession,” but “that in case the experiment shall | Ambassedor’s delight remained behind, for he the peace and tranquillity of oar coantry. There % proposed to transport the whole waprovided for re- | Lind Hall, the Tabernacle, Niblo’s Garden, and | concert, by sitting a front of the het result in a favorable execution by the Ist Sep- | clanped from his wrists a pait of magaificent di is alsoa schism among the members of the “red Livan emigration of all cowncries, as far as vt be Barnum’s Museum. Castle Garden received a | an immense hat suspended over his head. tember, 1850, the nght conceded will revert to the mond bracelets, and tgnsferred them with all the faction,” ax they are called in England. You | posstble, to North America, ostensibly for the purpose | More particular examination. By the eveuing, NINTM DAY. Seiten Consequent on the condi- gallantry and grace in the world to the arms of th know that the journal Le Prosrit is a sort of op. | of establishing agricultural colonves; but for the | Mre and Miss Barnum had been telegraphed up| Monday began with the adjourned auction, when | ions Inid down in the contract, the promoters euc- | E°iebrated daneeuce 4 position to the priaciples of Louis Blano, pablished | ral object of exercusag them to arms, and orga- | ftom Connecticut. Presents now poured in from | 3.055 tickets were sold for $15,319. ‘The event of | ctssfully sub the wire; but, as is well r. Basil Baker is engaged for the im the Nowveaw Monde. It has been decided that | stmg them multartly. Europe,” continues the | ell ose dg Rpeedleeaiged sed ee we the day, however, was the first rehearsal, on which | known, it was quently cut asunder by some | son at the Lyceum Theatre, in the pace of ae the former of th yuraals ehall be edited, forthe | Constituttonal Correspondence, * will probably not | Mr. took J roc! the French coast. future, in Delginm, in order to facilitate ite entry , feel much alarm at thisproject, although ‘artillery’ | 1g hat. Certain intended visits were postponed, Jour Lint ee Neen icant poy Since this happened, divers have been down, and Grephy. into Frenee. mater where the Proserit will | is spoken of. pre the ep ee a oun take | enthusiaem as in her first debue in the British me- patna pede Ad been, a 4 Mag the aed tragic fomie leone of pe poco, exhibited, * it won't do much harm.’ ‘allforn omer onday prior mo iw. occurres rei on 8 Ve! eatre, Mesers. Charles Kean an bert Keele: We ere ont} without much deta , } ho Aspect of py te Wi 1” | The papers are full of discussions on the price and epee, ‘TENTH DaY. sharp ridge of rocks, about a mile out from Cae will be first inthe dramatie field for the winter incidenis which bave taken place at Cagliari. The From the London Limes, Sept. 28 tule of the tickets, and the chances of Mr. Barnum’s On Tuesday was the second rel Grinez, so that the leaden weights, hangi campaign. On Saturday, the 2istult., a mee Piedmovtese government having the monopoly of | Califor seems ut to be in eaakeet: On yo en almost everybody in New York having a | the great northern luminary of song,” we are told, | Mit-like on either side, in coujasction “wit Pie of the company took place, to a the coon the ships by which the mails are carried between | the 2lst ult, the steamer Punama arrived at et opinion as to the proper scale of prices. | “was sul more successful than on the previous be bbe be A water, caused it to part at that point, | parts before the ing night, fixed for the 29th Sardinia avd the continent, itis to be believed | Panama, from San F ith $2.900,000 in | |; The choice seats,” it was known,"would be auc- | dey,” being, as the reporter explains, entirely satie. | While at another in-shore, the shingle fromthe | instast., Mr. d Mre' Kean ‘were The that orders have been delivered to the effect of fe dust, the whole oh, by the 7th iaetanta | HOned.” Another pecuniary ag ee great inte- | tied’ with the building, the audience, and herself, | D€8 of detaching the cuil from the | other ladies aod gentlemen, were—-Mesera, Robert wd been brought to New York by the steamers, | Tests wae the furniture of Jenny Lind’s suite of | + A curious incident occurred, when she was com. | !¢eden conductor that carried it upthe Cape. The | Kerley, Alfied Wigan, Ryder, Addison, Wynn, C. Empire City, Georgia, and Cherokee. Our intel | 100m, nude expressly for the occasion, which | mencing the ‘Casta diva.’ She hed pot got Surin the ieenernaee Couting was consequently | Fisher, Lloyd, Bolton: George Cook Meadows, nee fro: Tancisco ia up to the Ist ult, a 7 atleast $6,000. It mow transpired | through half a dozen notes when a gun was heard, | CUt 1 two places, representing a remnant of wire of | Harley, Fiexmore, Cormick, 3 he rm te mis wa con | a Meee "Abercnsake,Saih S| Sasammetny sapped and eugled She went | hrs aya ek wav itomed te rica | ie Cong pier Me mere favorable than ’ 5 b came into in nol ra inetn het, took care of her atfiirs “So much for oie and then the roar of another le en ao ae ‘Wigan, Miss Somme ere, Mine Gushone. s contain the intelligenee that 00 } smoothly arranged. see what will be brought to us by the next arri tidence of the annual inundati : J Boulogne, who made « demand of 60f. tor : The events of Hesse Cassel are ell the Saba: eememennnd te dae atean Jenny Lind’s second day in New York.” from senate s oeenda Gan. tar heal to give it fey alleges it did to his neve. ~ are | lips, and Mra. Charles Kean, &e excitements of the public of Germaay. The Elec- others, oa \ THIRD Pay. up. It turned out to be the firing of the 100 guns made by the fichermen, both on the English and | the theatre has been redecorated with considera id his ministers arrived on the 17:b inst, at | with gener “The Castle Garden has been taken by Bar- | from the Battery, im celebration French coasis, that the exis'ence of this wire | ble cere and taste Her Majesty's box ie Imsbad, in the castle of Philippsratre, which | As for the Californian republic, and the ecat- | num! The whole city was in b= A the | of California inte the sisterhood of Gene Dern wiil interfere with their deep sea fishing, and | in astyle of preuliar elegance ; the pre entrances been selected for the new seat of the govera- | tered community of the Paciie, of which it is eud- | BEWwS. The Castle Garden will hold 4,000 persons, | the firing, two or three wreaths of the smoke from | tat ite track over the Varne and elsewhere | for the royal visitors i» in Castle ment. There they will await the decision of other | deuly the yueen, one ean almost see them grow. | and as it will, of course, pay better at $8 ticket | the guns were borne right over Castle Garden, and | i®,in the way of ieee most frequented by | the stage door. The performers for the powers in their behalt know thet the Pras. val from the States. At San | then a room less than half the size at double the | had a very pretty effect. When she was infotned ee, Re intended, sr, at the suggestion of | pars through @ honse in the siiotaing oxen, next Liy, —_ government declared that she would have a0- | Francisco, the re ages of the contligratoa perce, & ee we nes more to | of the cause of the interruption, she ead it was to al ph Ay A a to Late payee pum Logs of have ® at New York, prion, vas fo mi scenes 4 7 | 5 6 Geman the room filled. Everybody's ehenee Df nome hn eg Gy we —" need ue thrope fand, to induce them to unite ia ry = will be the diret Shataperian pin Fe Pg y the part of the belligerent party, while Prussia | supplied, even quicker than the thirst of the gold- | Was ®0 much the bett Lind hed | "Phe result of the first public concert, which was | ‘cton of a gre tional enterprise. The assis | farce wae rehearsed for the opening night. will aid in @ diplomade way. Several newapapers | hunter, apd even bricks and timber keep pace | NO interest in the receipts, the choice of this room | to take place on the Wednesday, we’ have yet to | Bee of the admiralty has also been secured for | Mrs. Clifford, whose peculiar wer in person at bad also pobliehed the news thatthe Elector of | with the demand, The sand hilis that frowaed | Was another proof of her gooduess. The requisiie | leern. the issue of prohibitory orders against fishing on | ing the mock reepectabilities of the stage nade het el, being afraid of the position in which | on the firet bateh of immigrants are already | alteration Toom are now minutely discuss et Dudinal the route of the electric sea line, and against ships | ao valuable a member of the Haymarket compan the intestion to a ndicate in favor of bie covered with fine gardens, and San Francisco is | dy whether to assint the voice, of to prevent a | The Queen of England in the Highlands drogen or drygging anchors over ite sie. The | died, after neurly a yeur's illness, on Thureday eon — Due jeewe-Darmatadt. bow «s well supphed with vegeta and fruit ae | crosh. Barnum is beset with splendid offers from The enaual “ Breemar Gathering” navi authorities of Caleis and Boulogne have intimated | week. the 12th ok ‘She heen connected r= A newe has no a vamaree. ba} Elector | this metropolis. ese flourishes, and we | Toront Louis, Cincinnati, sad ether cities sqpetased to tohe. pins a ring’ ayer a that they will drummers «round the town to | Mr. Webster's theatre for he long term of twenty- Se in hie ne ay uet, = he have several namesal in that remote region. | touth west. The crowd before Irving House uae all teneaaen pn» linn tr y on ol advise ot to fish on these spots, aad | ht yeas. 7 a ‘ we oy ple of 2 ing of Pras- | There is the Pacific News, the Sun Francisco | continues night and day. A perpetual siream of where the Earl of Mar displayed pete drt oe} the compony will apply for powers to punish as a Rebecca Is,ace, an astress and vocalist of hat 0 the Emperor of Austria, who Herald, the Placer Times, the Alta California, | bouquets and other “elegant tokens wf exeem” rebellion ta 1718, the ‘old feahioned i misdemeanor any attempts at injuring the wire. great ability, has eppenred daring the week in we already been dving, on several occasions, all with the Sacramento Tramecript, nnd the Sacra: pour io, and Jenny Lind begins to be aghast at the ed an uauienal’ apoeorance af Notas etidie | The line of wire where it was dislocated is now | several operett wie ie did only for the first P mento T We are delighted to see a list hiful debt of gratitude she ie incurring. She Majesty t od + ohm a . Since | securely fastened oa to the end of a large buoy. “ ¢ news from the Duchies ts vot of much im- of Californian marriages, one of them described at least to see her numerous benefactors, or | home’ hic eral teen emer te het © Highlaad | Her Majesty's ship Widgeon, with Captain Bul- fully demos ortance two armies, after the nee atte in terns which might pass for a paragrash in | © be excused receiving their presents. The chari- ‘cane maone ettpantive than evel, ter po 2 = lock, has traversed the rest of the track, tishing ap has attained chieswig- Holeteia ‘eenee a ‘ot jp yg ow, of poe dam a py fr wd bed te field preferring | Queen and court have been resident at her Deeside oy TE 9 foe ot of one | been most deserved. Sorz, and the Danieh regimente at Readebourg Bat “han never witnessed a A brilliant prtereess out with Mr Benedict ; usd it. fay bn ons retreat, her Majesty and her coo and the per | and laying it down again, thus peoviog ‘thet 10 has wn courts of exchequer and common pieas a everyone expects that an important battle will toon blage of Seauty and fashion.” Dering the three | their object must be to look out for a quieter place nached to the royal household, have al- | not drifted, and that there were no currents to re. ba mmninetes (Eng ) ore abost to Be ventilated by take plece nnd the Holeteia soldiers will try to ree | months immediately precediag the departure of | than Irving Hotel—much as she was pleased with gracedthe meeting by their presence. To the | move it. oe ee fe settled, ant Conquer the city af Schleswig and the tiver Slee. | the Penama, there had arrived at San Fran- | Mr. Howard and his splendid establishment. Gelight and graufication of many ofherMa- | The promoters of the project appear to be ful A lester received (rom Viewua, dated September | ciaco #f wceegle, Of which Ol ‘erre Bunun, | slicvents, they called ctihe New ton than, At y's loyal subjects, she was graciously pleased | apprehensive of the inadequacy of the prosoat ae Tith, announces that « Russian army is erectiag in the tonmage of the whole beieg 132,467. Not- | her rewen from her drive, she dined at the publie | ‘© honor the gathering” by her august presence | rangements, and all ‘heir ‘agennity is at work to the nrigMborhood of Fochskau, ia Moldavia, agreat | withstanding an immense imporiation, prices were | table at half three, where she and the com. | %M,this Occasion. be prepared to meet the emergency. Of currenta umber of fortificetions and that their army is en- ‘erally maintained. The Sandwich lelands had ny were de! ed with one other, What J _The weather was very tious, and at 12 | it may be stated that there is no fear, since it by Jet trom each court. In wi enmped in Valachia, neat Kolentina. No explane- | fargely profited by the ising trede, of ween they | Lind did after inner dors not immediately trang- | O'clock onthe 13h ult, the different clans began | been ascertained that at certain fited fathoms, | (°F hey are to be w med nod in summer cooled tion is given to these warlike rumore; whtch, | liein the highway. Vast nugehers of Ghiaese are | pite, but the gap ie filled up with Mr Baraumes aded by the pipers, aad attired in | even in the rapids of the Mississippi, or at the Me- | 2, Preuliar application of this prineiple. neverthelew, bave a very serwus aspect | settling inthem. The pert of Honolulu ia fall of | present of a service of plate to Mr. Wilton, the costume. There was a very nu- | pai, there are none below three or four The gignatic statue of the King of Bavaria ix pow weed on the hill of Sai Munich. The brouze of th 92,600 florins, or £11,800 In the Gazette, of Tuesdsy, is the follow! 0 tifteation, under date Joly 3:—" The @ “7 lay pleased ‘0 confer the honor of knighthood meter of those | upor General Haynna arrived at Vieuna on the 15th | vessels, and new public’ buildi jected at | agent Who effected the engagement. merous array of well-equipped wen. The Dake of | and that at five fathome there is calm instant, and it is said that bh mention is to visit | the cost of near ‘¢n0,000 Hele many yoore ‘in seen at Tenney’s, in Beeedeny. m Sywnty a ye at Mas Loses, breaght ce the field | order to meet all existing or conjectured Ld in gy ay an time. What reception he | great Pacific will be as thronged with merekeot- ; rounrn DAY pA A ty Gen Bie ‘aieneniee ‘boll. who — the character of the uadertaking, #0 far will have here, I do not knew. adil eT the nly eflective missionaries, saya the |‘ The firet question you are aked in the streets | accompanced by his sone, Mr. James Dull M. Po Rrogniiede end solidity ere eoncereed, w: Care nen je aria the | actrions Genera de | Weekly Hero id—as the Atlantic ot the Mediter- * Have you seen the Nightingale 7 was | aod Mt.G. 8. of. MP - demands —, The electric 5 Spm, 2-1 pm =e i yeas ot am eee 4 pn ad < Aue pot on ae teat oe bid fn before: pa In eddition to the Hi hianders ab ve alluded to, ave ata sane of. ae dwin Landseer, E Royal Acade; . E - 4 : hy D uch as we do on i of the in war,” ay | there wa siderat umbe 4 seer, Keq., Roy cademecian."” sented, on Wednesday next, at the Elysee, to | Germans and Swedes . . . * | Lind is “another Joan of Are;” she h re was a considerable number of people from | that placed the Britannia t and A vie Napoleon. | Th a aa taken the | the surrounding districts, Who appeared in the na- | these will he submerged by of enorme: A movement is in progress for the ereetion of an/ TS aaberioen equadren, wader the command of | cheatios t po Bey fA Fh ee to ye a weet fom morn till dewy eve the | tional garb. The Queen, accompanied by the | weights. The poral a A Laas ee institute of the fine arta in Glasgow, where the Commmnndare: Borgen, $0 dolly. aap oted ot tonsa, | Accuminensd a oar treme ~ eye ps4. — wihout, and 4 be . wy bay non | ae ai coil or cable, composed of what is called bs age cod tons sere, on the p-- ssougemeet of q - 5 abou ree o'clock, @ y it, wi | ‘ 4 culture, jcouragement © Fore Gonsitwien leh Marseilles aft the mirdcr | enphe Ree seat caciamenrytéing, they hile | way, tine were, leaded with pasorngers ca ing | Majesty and the illustrious members of her family | prepered, eo ne to protectit trea Tots and Ryanwut the fine arte generally, has long heen fle committed hy four of hermen on the boatman Row- cceupy the western const, be the lords of the clergy and tishope are ronning to see her Dr. pant: dn He > ajewy come Aga ye the nibote to be chained Ry qraduanes’ of te of he odmuyey bt ie ie Cee a in} ate Theresa, neax je Statue has cost! ver. The Cumberiand comes there from Alexan- Pacific, and possess a city there whose sudden | Dummis'@® @ plesdid oriter on the slave “. - ria, and the yy hy Sineson from bv Surpasses even the imperial creations of | tion, haw already been at her with, come ‘tohoot: geoo Yriaes Alon sod then he et Higtoneette hoge weights in the bottom of the sea. ey “ii ihe F Labs Buin 2 Por sane > - pe weed beet teen ag They pe % ite | girle, and @ od gh ae ~ A. coarse, he ex- | Prince of Wales and Prince Al = Princess New Port tn the Mediterranean Be ren, De ‘tint cod a hempaeenaeiones tars b - wonderment and joy. cts a con’ ti is echool. “ At 12 o'clock. a . Ee | . aan 4, have! it went two monthe ago to enforce the c! So confident are they that everything is work: Riebop Hag.hes paid his devotrs. Jenny Lind felt Dolce tee Unde in eet 4 te he Bastia io the weakthiets and wists’ popaies Y trpeet ie New York italien unpresarto, Meretti, to town | appear Mr. Clay, the American Minister at Lisbon. w York next epeiag. weil tha ‘te Pan ing in their favor—so firm are they in the | highly honor d With a visit from #0 distinguished ' i ¥ in Corsica. Situated oy } 0 ree unde ted in afew | Wranmtion ot, their destiny to fill the New othcrehomn.** ! epg Majesty | within « ier hous! Sesecy Wrote the en te | Rossint ie at present in Florence. Midi Keadesr comes so weet the | are br to be iadifinn Old, that they | «Next came Mayor Woodbull, to tender the en | ag she alighted with the royal party. Her Majes- nd Framer, on the road 10 the Adriatic, | _M'me Marray has heen engaged at the Imperint 6 ee ee wien “Ti po antocoas ~ nv a ther carclesely | chantress the we.'come ot the city of New York, | ty was most cordially received,and, it was evident, ,and the Levant, it hae become the most | Therire, St. Perersbury, from the first of next yen ia, “Let's have a couicen westions. Thecry | and then proceed*d to meget compliments on | highly gratified atthe shouts of joy which hailed | importent centre of traffic im the country, and of | MCBth 1othe month of March nextyenr ; for the where the | push eltogether for the erent remay | Mademoiselle. He ¢ have heard Mail- | her. A couch covered with tattan was provided | iteelf possesses one-fourth of the navy. ‘Struck | *Pti0e teeson she 1® enwawed at the lialian Opera, tree, | questions of slavery,of the Tecan and %, ‘The | bran and other singer.*, bat we ali know you are | for the Queen and the royal family, from which aa | With thie importance, and with the insufficiency of | V Thi ledy has been scarcely one year on who have ‘settled t to them Soeoderies, of the C Cussnanen | Mexican | the Qneen of No | . “ nebetrveted view of the games wus obtained. the old port, the government applied for a credit of | the stage. SS "| of the tari heve ail been hurried or slurred over, | me ep hane iseancts ome Sniioo Noenightes | In mediately after the Queen and roy l party nad | 300,004, with ion of @ sibvention of | M’lle. Cruvelli hes made her first anpearaace a1, ‘Orders from the ministry of Madrid have been | One thing they any they must have, and that with. Treat T shall pA ‘oume 0p 00 the on praise. | reached the ground the sporte commenced. The | £0,000f. farnishe town of [astia for the | the Gario Fehee, im Genoa, with great success. At y f vec tations began with putting the stone, and then fol. | Construction of a new port. The works are now | the i of went to Cadiz, to have there embarked, on the | outdelay—a railway or acanal through the Isthmus. | formed of me. Lhave been «poiled with flatte a pu 7 ie alee t " a cone lus her oad, in the first eet, the: Sst see, te humdrd ans wo wi ite | Hy he aby an cere larg rouge ee. | tec tea ana ear chal pot enn” | ESroactiereey aes oi ate | gad Ry Tat ib tn | eben ae teh jh in mua red ar passege op board the Solon am! then proosed to | ivo they expect soo to bring San Francisco as “ Mayer—We koow that you are accusthmed to firet receiving £1 between them,) the park or dat | than 12 hectares, (96 acies) one-half of whieh will Puretes hi es ait wy requisites to satisfy the mos}

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