Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
McCurdy, Lieut. Parrott, and Mr. James Law- | emerald armlets, a ed emerald and diamond tponed on account of the bad weather, which | filled i « EUROPEAN NEWS. comme ‘aaa SarTed om post > many valleys of the island, which now pro- | for Queen Mab, and the ethercal-seeming beings withirr,- , ‘an emerald and diamond set bri- sents the real a with fh nd Tank aa nRaR Cnn -| in the evening, the opera of Don Giovanni” was | de tad mortingale; ‘guid mounted suddlo, vot | cored on the Mth ingtant—was no better favored | $i Tie SSS Sener Sanrecvam and ebace. | | crocious bends ines (oars aalcein semeeata ee Gaate 4 wi performed at Her Majesty's Theatre, when Sontag | with diamonds, emeralds, and rubies ; a magnifi- | Y the atmosphere. As on the first Sunday, it wded i ig | (WH marsive braids of superb black hair,— INTERESTING CORRESPONDENCE | fang. “box Giovanni” never wearies or disap- | gant broesded robe, richly decorated with pears; | rained inecssantly until five o'clock in the after- | who patronise them © grand variety af now'sater: | {vi did they even wear the mantiia wad when they did ee., &e., ke. points you. There is im that opera such stores of | and an emerald girdle, the stones of which are of | noon. ‘The wind was chilly, and not many were en- | tainments. ite exquinitely-¢: d folds seemed little else than the treasure for eve: ; such wit ; such ; fi ’ light w cast by those abundant waves of silk: 3 vocal comedy, andintense ck | MMmenMe se, and auost of them of 2. werd goa | tieed out of doors. Accordingly, the caterers of |, Atte Grand Opera, Atbeni will appear to-mor- | jck:—all was enchantment ow gracefully waned thee such unequi in th * Our Lepdon . wy of porpose 5 such minutia in details, that it | some of the manner in which the eastern em- | public pleasures were obliged to demolish the iy La Corbeille 2° St odie thee y iy) i Sales abe siden atten a , Lonpon, May 16, 1851. receives the unquestioned ho: eof the audience. pire of Great Britain is Ly near S and will recal | statues, columns, arcades, waterfalls, and orna- | its merits by a rehearsal, contains ver: ine music, | wings of rylphides: and their dresses pa Ba ean Great Race between Flying Dutchman and Voltigeur | Sontag sheds » radiance upon Her Majesty's Thea: } at Teast some of those visions of fabulous wealth | ments, which had been prepared for the occasion, | Which will soon become, Popular, | Mme. Pauling | ber*eif must hve spun them, and Isle colored them ! "hc 5 rt of ith which the name of India use y t i ances will ti id t, im words, of these fair daugh- —The World's Fuir—Additional Contributions— | Zerlina was acknowledged by the plaudits of the Lad “lays ae be connected. Everything now | and now the places upon which they had been | q, rire aa ae: “Gs ae et a hetere fer far otra te ey recite Ih thee terete eee ‘Theft—Royal Pageant—Mr. McCurdy, the Ame- | house. Some of the airs of this opera are treasures | within the building is orderly and decorous, but | erected are as clean as before. This has been con- | ++ Prophet,” and met with the utmost’ applause | 20¢1* in a dressof the most #ky-Like azure; another in w Austria, at the Queen’s Drawing | of music, that one especially beginnin, when the one shilling days come, and the mob of from a crowded and delighted audienco. diephancus dreamy sort of robe, of the most gossamer: ran dara a sting sa yap td "WHat Balt, O be Matette, . [er ne Gh wetted erpetites outer the bullaing, eee RT SEAS pumas 64 a Ledeen | OUR fe Como Opera Honss, the whole company | fitted of ibe Fete finn ym Aly re i ; iven by Souteg, as Zerlina, wi he tompeatlens $0 dianmaa. 6 are ee theth and Cur i js busily engaged in tho rehearsal of @ new work, | in spctiges llywhite ; and these dresses float light An eigners in London—Portugal, §c. §c. §c. bert siya y ke atag, as Zerlina, with a fe | rage, be great beyond precedent. ‘The protraction of bad weather has been, with | hy Ambrose Thomas, entitled “ Raymond, or the | full'as very A uds about them. They are all 7 + ‘The great eveut of the week has been the long | Hct i, at rosaie ion, ne mony c# Dine? on * here 4s no political nome of ay importance. | many amateurs of dancing parties, a cause Eomstiol p Queen I hare hon told that this | and with very short sleeves, and all are snow.pale with ici) * - arliamen' . slow length OD wing no- imnis i fr opera wi equal, in musi ti statues v cl ‘nifieent hair, anticipated match between the best two horses in | jeaning on Masetto’s breast were heard in | thing and eae everything. The continental | fT continuing the winter balls into the spring | }pers Wi" be equal, eanbies, 60 those of | \t eeemmemamesnad Meng aleek’ lees: Saat Ld the world, which came off at the York spring meet- | every quarter of the vast building, and listencd to | news is a mere recapitulation of what you had by | season. Princess Kallimaki, the charming and ‘Mile. Rachel is on thi 7 equally fair and like damosels within, and clad L ing, last ‘Tuesday. On that day, the disputed point | With rapture. Her delineation Of character is very the last steamer. "The great offer deotainet beautiful lady of the Turkish ambassador, who | Germany. ‘hey ratios ete an ere! evry hine atthe talnbowilue caneraid- green, the was to be decided as to their respective speed and Riera ina eictinel oc nearer Colsit. * your paper, having reference to speed in ocean | gave but two bells during Inst winter, thought, it | the Theatre Fraugalss and every time she aypears prenee ES A ype pea pee dae An Ry yen 4 powers of endurance. Flying Dutchman, Lord | worthy mn PCH GS onaaer Higy magni Senet - rH 4 Ley Sage Sees 2 peperss, a oe LC Tal be SA icead cad connotssonces « third | she is greeted by @ crowded house. Several new | +hades of all colors. ‘The carriazes themselves look like A oe i 4 It | comedies are in rehearsal, and will be produced in | enormous buttertlies Eagiteton’ 9 beens bad bem the vister ta‘ erery ri08; = fren inte roneepenay age a Lerglorary ale y ri Reape sepeoren ano enay om was attended by an immense crowd of fashionable | # short time. V3 scendivg run, with feats in the ye or until he encountered Voltigeur last year, when he | in8 “Oia Tablncke ae Leportllo. wes inimitable, Our Paris Correspondence. ople. The pretext was, that from the balcony of | ‘The Theatre of the Ambigu Comique performed, | cvlcrs. ‘Then, how beautiful are the long double rows of | was beaten at Doncaster. His backers were net | ‘That tan of @ coke’ oe Fok cation him, isa per- POLITICAL MATTERS. Re splendid hotel, her guests could have a sight | ©” “ae last, the fourth part of Monte Cristo, | tes ott Peper) sagt ie wen lige tg convinced by the losses they then sustained, and it | fect mine of wit and humor, and despite bis bu Panis, May 15, 1851. | of the fete, and enjoy, at the same time, the Ce aa aeh hta cow deen, Alexandra Dumas | tncieculptured mathle basing sed ho hee was resolved to test the merits of the two horses | “igure, he converts the shaking of his fut sides into | Po)tical A/fairs—Fusion of the Bourbon and Orleans renee vifag at ‘ema ne can cane — as the nan ‘interesting of get and is played pepe temperature, aud the ‘oft breese from the this epring. Voltigeur, like Flying Dutehma: Se Eee eae Py! ced Parties—The Republic—Lowis Napoleon’s Minis- | abundant, exquisite, and eae P by the talented actors of the company with the Dendrotnehetemmioaesnae ‘catalters say ae stood very high, having carried away every race; . ae ‘So r} try—Louis Napoleon—Italy— Fort ifications—Hun- On the previous Saturday night, Mrs. Bingham, | Utmost ensemble. M. Arnault, who plays the part | steeds champ, and prance, and caracolear, i ire and being only four years old, that is, one year | 804 her voice betrays great training, but Soutag’s nlite - ” "| the pretty and fashionably Aumerican lady from | of Mapte Cristo; M. Chilly, who reads that of | welghty silver’ ts flash lik cate Soaks ounger thea the Dutchman, had the benefit of | Warblings eclipsed any inferior star. M » garians in Turkey—Hungarians leaving Switzer Niledelphine auiabilite Les tow oe — Villefft; and Mme. ‘eee who is so pathetic in Tue the eutlanen. are seoncells eee oe of . F 7 jiuliank, i on " Philadelphia, whoze amiability has won man; d prome- zing lighter weighted. The weights were— site a ee ge yor tty land—Political Gossip, §c., §c. mines aad Seana alee gave a padid party, 4 the rile of Valentine, have won the favor of the | Daders, if they are not lounging, stretched out tie thels Flying Dutchman, 5 years, 8 stone 8§ lbs.; Volti- | poP "rs orentini and Calzolari, was admirably dz | ‘There is no important thing in polities now to be | which were found the most distingué people of Paris. | public, and will add to the attractions ut the Am- | !'xorions volantes themselves. | They walk leisurely and ur, 4 years, $ stone; match one thousand guineas, | ;* mt sine: Wik iw Mh hich te A very curious thing took place at this ball. Mrs. | bigu. gently along, smoking the fragrant fynig ey at. forfeit.’ It is no exaggeration to assert, | livered. At the Italian Opera, the Huguenots was ment! loned; but » few items, which may, perhaps, o esled nek tas ie nelish th t last the drama of Madame George Sand, en- the fair Habaneras w oare passing in their fairy cora- that modern history furnishes Beerstaace of so vase | Tepeated before a very full house. ‘The scenic de- | after awhile become interesting, shall be given. ieee By og dole the 9 ay Rogiish. gentleman or titled ““Molidre,” was performed on aeturd ay fast, | cie#on wheels ; and they tell ime it is the fashion here, & concourse of people assembled together to witness Biba Cost aattsngt clio aemepaasel hae ‘The fusion of the two branches of Bourbons, with | deprived of a host of pretty women and refined | and presented to the public with a strong and a race—every class furnished its quota, and when . - ~ | the aim to return to France after the Republic | beaux; yet this manifestation of nationality was | talented cast. Bocage, the excellent comedian, por- nd for her to reply, with a slight gracious inclination of ~ peor came Pps crtee eae hundred | ey ee ee wuliolens, pee fo ba age shall be “done brown,” is always the most taber well epineclates by hero ntrymen. In short, this formed the. ped se he famed French suthor and her litle Cg ead -Graclns, sabaliero, J X was nots nd puirs of lungs, t ens. i 4 A ‘ : arty was avery fine affair. Shal e of France, and was eloquen e b » at the answer the Both horses ran fairly. “There was no humbug or | tour to ee en eae graceful mo- | ant point of every one’s eonjecture—and this new | "Tie third day of the spring races took place on | 10 the utmost degree. He was well reeended by | {0 the universeliy-emplcyed ealutation— A los ples do Sietaping. ‘Veltignrm tock tholoads bus fl Desk | Oi phase of polities finds many partisans in the ranks | Sunday last, and, despite the rain that fell in tor- Tacreshaniegs, Messier, Matis, and M'mes Lecres- | ovat your fect, madam "I kiss your bands; ain} fowards the close, and, Hutchman von by a length: | “Mr Hackett has intimated that he will perform | of the statesmen who are at the head ot the Legis- | rents, was aitended by all the sportsmen who are | toniere, Bondeville, Jonne, and M. Colin. Never- | Tueihe dignided entleners with, whlch they say, eae, yee aes, War Denne. on the 2ist at the Haymarket, for the aid of abe- | tative Assembly. It has been decided by th the daily frequenters of the turf. Six premiums | theless, the drama of George Sand is not to be | gcemed to take off from the two great condecension minutes Sfty-Ave seconds. There were faster races | via: society. He has selected the character of | “ive Assombly. een decided by the ma- | were distributed. The President, Louis Napoleon, | compared to “Claudie” and to “Francois le | parently expreseed. It was as superbly gracious as the that oe age ae pln tegen haye | Sir Jobn Falstaif, in the comedy of the “ Merry | Jority to oppose the re-election of the President, | surrounded by several members of the ministry, | Champs.” It is but a long biography of the French | Lending of u crowned head in acknowledgement of # covered the ground in juicker time, therefore YOu | Wives of Windsor,” and is promised the support | aud the remodelling of the constitution; having thus | his aide-de-camp, many prefects and statesmen, ar- | Poet, lacking in interest and incidents. Tho only | subject's homage. * ‘The streets are excecd~ should not judge of their powers by the above te: | of Hudson, Buckstoue, Mrs. Fitzwilliam, aad the | a purpose to overthrow the present state of aifairs. | rived on the stand at t eppointed hour, -and:the:| Bag sduaizabla te cls new pisy is thestyle, which:| S08, hers tid erdneboetens tae te eames mewunie hetsbeed onveartoe ah ccaataatine ge , | Yoealist, Miss Poole. In pe ¢ to attain this aim, meetings of all sorts are | races began. On Monday last, there was, also, an- | }8 oo ace ultra of elegance.” y prattest dittoulie tet teakity too ry Ls hyper ie the Tallway lines reduced their fares for the oceasion, |, inthe local events of the week, the only osour, | held in Paris and in the departments, A grand | Otter rior hore: who ‘vere present the’ rain’ mes | Babul,” was performed last tight and mot wich | ‘re, im the ruburbs the srety are wer A angle rs ration i . | rence that ruffled society, was the committal of | dinner party was given last night, at the house of | nately for those who were present, the rt was | ia 7 + > Soe Ry olante stoppi ill ‘ sr ponecid — here Bs oy tone hug : -aptain Somerset, of tia Guard, tothe House of | Mme. Pozzo di eae, at whick were present Gene- | over and the sun shone a part of the day. Many patie approl n.. It is written by M’me Achille ithe eateeene ta - Bes ecetny ce po bi ly ds mass who congregated to witness one of the great” | Correction, for having assaulted a policeman. He | ral Changaruier, Guizot, Duchatel, Vitel, Dumon, | Amazons were on the spot, and “illustrated,” by Comte and L. Monrose. Numa, the inimitable | hind to let hin pars by. but it is not always this is con- eee ete a the daw aa ie the owe; | had been'in trouble previously, hence the harsh- | Salvandi, de Noailles, Partoret, de Lavalette, and | their peculiar costume, the uniformity and dullness of | actor, has in it an excellent part. A company of | ceded ty the fair Crecles in the carriage; at least, #0 = te a posh gees Ci o- bak as int pine | ness of the sentence. ''The police are all dominant, | many other distinguished servitors of the Bourbon | the manly appearance of the turf. Among the | * ‘penish dancers have also made their appearance | rays La Condesa de Meriin, in her amusing ‘ Visje ala » = ie Chest gery ; en ba. as fete pecnone | as people are more thoroughly police ridden | andd’Orleans families. Though the greatest secrecy | most conspicuous there, I remarked Mrs. Howard, | the Gymnase, and they are really very clever. eer os the tells us, is a feminine voice heard vie inte anather in the Sutton tunel "| thanthe English. As to resisting the military, no | has been observed on the result of ‘Geir conference, | an intrepid rider, who has made there her last ap- | Senora Petra Camara, » genuine Andalusian beau- | hom the depthe of quitrin or volante, crying, (No te Tuite Sreather duriog the last week has been raw | Mob dreams of such an act, and ere they do so they | Iam informed that: political war has been desided Fearance for the season. Iti said that tae egerie | ty, has created mise een | Be He Bee”) Heh Mme Gem Selects, Ai Oaete eeemniedip mene ott i ri relat mustreceive a large infusion of military educated | against the republic, and that nothing wi of the | re ison the eve of leaving Paris on an . " ady, at the door, iu cam t Sake — cag tapi Pedic bene! men. In France, peers accepts a conflict without pe to effect a change, as soon as possible, in the | excursiontin Italy. Many reasons have been given eS banter beg Rai = v. es Heke York. ipa ite acne ince neater atin ae eee ee eee eee tion “The | the slightest hesitation. Here, a hundred men | manner of our government. 1am told that the | for this absence. It is said that her health being | WW "idand Gieveland, RCW dilcbees Lekeeoa.” | Wealthy establishments ench daughter—nay, each child, e influx of visiters to the Exhibition. The besediy > « 200 ie rtisans of the fusion have such a belief in tho suc- | infirm, on account of the fall she had six months |W * of iM. Adame US won | basher cwn tolunte, Among the poorer classes—and 4 ak the Aeden 4 nace thiliton | iy pai ¢ | A. McLaughlin, N. Orleans. Lt. M, Adams, U.S. Nay Ps The Portuguese revolution furnisbes an example | cess of their cause, that one of the leaders has | ago at the Bois de Boulogne, she has been ordered | } 0. Kiffin, Chill! + * | peor they must be, indeed, if they do not indulge them- amount received a @ doors frem the five shilling Th 2 se p hi tt the Bois de Boul: he has bi di d | . Cl illicothe, Lt. W. Gwathney, a. y L be, indeed, if they d when a gallant senor secs some particularly lovely young whens ga pa jovely youn for him to exclaim—*How beautiful—how level; yisiters has averaged £2,000 per day—a warm day nee n ‘ A i 4 felves with one carrii t least—it is af 5 52°30). for imitation, which must astound the despotic | already prepared everything for the ceremony of | by her doctors to go under the warm sun of Italian | Orca: t, New York. Lt. J. B. Smith, do, ve na ig Pageoaenet constantly the sending the receipts up to £2,200—a dark cold day | {2° muiiioms on The defection af the armgris a | Henti Ves return to his good city of Paris, Whe | skies, where sho may be restored to health. Seve- | Jc) smith; Piiladelpiia, TM. Fairland,’New York, | ¢Ut/M, from want of the necomary space and tal sume, the season tickets find greedy sale: and, ia | Contingency against which there is no resource. | programme of the most influential men is designed, | Tal _mauratses. Le voltae oar egg dl BME pags x. 8. Bee, os house. In fact. T was told they consider a handsome d tarde Russia, with her million of soldiers, is weaker than | and the speech to be delivered to the king, by the | Mrs. Howard is in disgrace, and that she goes to es Dejonge, New York. % 9, axatt, do. Oe kk do, the Ottoman empire, if her troops acquire the dan- | President of the Committee of Arrangements, is | Rome to accomplish a pious pilgrimage, by which, i ibitors, there are frequently fort ; olor fe (and retixer than not bave a bandaome one th ne Bas on ote Philadelphia. | Wculd helfatarve thernselves on a little chocolate and % fifty thousand people in the Crystal Palace at one " ‘ . hast a ae thet levatad ont Ruttler, Leulsville, (. R. Bul : 5 gerous knowledge that they are the true depository | written with the utmost oloquence and chddcur of | perhaps, she may recover the former elevated opin- | «°G" Ww. ¢ ‘im'ti. . . You cigarito) @ really great ornament to their not otherwise vr ch day unfolds some article from the conti. | of power. The journals publish 2 manifesto of | feeling. When will it be delivered! That is the | ton which she occupied in the heart of a beloved | }. A’shurticmt, boston, Pp Mowell Lebanon. | BUcb-furnieted rooms, “It looks very eonrpicuous and nent which the eye detects ‘as a new arrival. The | »lazzini’s, upon which discredit is thrown. It is a | question. ae . one. It matters not what may be the cause of her | k’ W. Ubini, St. Louis, W.M. Meclure, Phila, yory eg Me gigantic wheels, and it is oceasion- has born liberalle reeruited with | Curiously Worded document, and rather vague than | Whilst the fusionites are thus dividing France | departure from the magnificent hotel she occupied | W. W. Billings, New York. P. J. Anshutz, Cincinnati, | SY jd: T am intosmed. us a sort of elevated and French department has been liberally reeruited with | Curious! into shares, to be distributed among theneelves by | in the Rue duCirque; but there will be, in a fow Scclskle arm chair by two, or perhaps three of ‘the ladies some charming specimens of jewelry and brocade. | *tisfactory. * a “tif todas —_—_—_— of tue house when the rooms are partieularly full; and From India, the coutributions of the week are ofun- | _ The number of foreigners in London must be | way of prefectures and yvernorabipe, the republi- | weeks. a splendid residence in Pa: Travels in the United States, &e., during | thvs,raised ax it were, on asilver embonsed threne above ss agnificence. onds wo ” | small, to judge by the forces seen in public. About | cans are still at work. The ultras are in the hope | The Champs Elysées will soon add another at:rac- 184 1850. their guerta, they chat with them condescondingly, and eurparsed magnificence: | Diamonds worth neal; | four thousand of the French National Guard, with | that M. Ledru Rollin will be elected by the part, | tion to thelr numerous pleasures. A magnificent a surrey them oossplaoen ly from ani edventageous beliines rls, set in armlete bracelets, and even ia saddles | the band of the Ninth cavalry, are preparing to | and it has been said that the intention of this | flower exhibition, to which all the green houses of 6 ee ee ee eee These apartments, in general, have a great resemblance ved bei to 4 ps ee pant visit the Exhibition. The low-price tide has notyet | refugee was to return to Paris, a few days before | the department of the Seine will furnish contribu- n ib rom the aa? ‘theneum, Kay * to each other—large, cool, and with jittle furniture ex- SS ST SNE OF ERTS ARS SEES EM | oot in, the election, in order to deliver himself as prisoner, | tions, 18 under preparation in the Square Ledoyen, style more gayly-tinselled than Lady Emme- | cept a number of rocking chairs, which are called here ship, garnished with gems of sparkling brilliancy; " a ‘ ; i 5 | line Stuait Wortley’s could hardly be found in the | buta © . softly balancing th ‘ is i * | The Parliamentary news is at zero. They are do- | for he could not be elected, according to law, if he | ad will be opened on Sunday next, and last four | y's ¢ ry he Sane se he im these, softly balancing themselves back- bute ae Coarse article furnished by the | i. nothing, aod wish to do nothing, until after the was still a contumace. This, I fea wil not take days. (It ia for cx benefit ine poor. This Moral journals ce, the mat aa pink parasols | wards nd 'xwarde wil be soem uetally the ladies of te known as the Durria-inoor, or Sea of Light, | D¢W House bas been elected. The whigs will then | place, for M. Ledru Kollin would pi Tosin very | seat pt agro " Wonders nre. | Scramble among the strange ruins of Central Ame- | —th°e never to-be-forgotten-or-disponsed-with — fane, ‘ hehe * | bid for power by turning half Chartists, and each | cubious game, and would run the risk of losing the | culture, and, no doubt, the natural wonders pre- , s which they agitate cond. é re iar moniat eiiaes ee ch a year will bring England-sloser to a republic. Men | party. Lt would be too bad for him thus to expiate | sented to the curiosity of the public by the talented Frpahier pone oped ora hh grace. Tt nuny perchance be tertuta that you look up: le fee the caickectine of these mecicde som. | say that Victoria will be the last sovereign of iing- | the dream ofa “night at the Elysée.”” and cognoscenti gardeners of France, willbe visited | the march of female courage. I:pitheis, neo Ss | om: the great doors are thrown open de par en par, Nu- ai 74 “~ isk i — ‘ebt, pd graarr ett and. Certainly events tend that way. B. The true republicans are atl putting forward | by, all the strangers now in Paris. superlatives, exclamations, allasions, merous | hts are blazing in beautiful cardelabras of ma — ¢ ris! est slight, for —— plc General Cavaignac, who is, I may eay, the more ‘The grand capital of France is really besieged by | S¢ther in a profusion so tasteless, that the reader | glass or alxbaster; flowers are profusely scattered about Sh cnn ech dates ore team panaeicnices a Loxnox, May 16, 1861. | honest candidate of the party. “As for M. Nadand, | a crowd of foreigners of all nations, and our streets | Whe Should throw down the book at an early chapter, | In tevely vases of porcelain and of silver ; and enormous last act of the kiud having beea coannitted in the | Ozposition to Statuary by a Purist—The Amazon | who it the candidate of M. de Girardin, through | may be considered as a second «Tower ok Sake? | Wile eee ee eats i loan tiveblin by | ees Awmerican department. So much depends upon the | Group, by Kiss— Dinner tothe Sculptor—The Fancy pepe gry oben coe ph Rey Ameren | sseakeer nak ic bee pate pucdias: Piste’ Mawant sis'a pity: since, besides her affectations, and | 1/*clous apartments, and the broad corridors, and largo pp ed oben * iia ase mas comeing | Balto be given by the Queen—The Progress of the | a wan of humor, and never retrogrades in presence the hon ied ener ff int res es ccnttines isso See ee eee Me ia et or ad rig the beautiful array of’ inde peed some ¥ thers: * hibitic i —Visit- | of an argument. strangers is an excellent affair for the managers o! a fe im | tn the grand eula.”” s ¢ Poon . 8, Fe, Fe. exist at the se, between Louis Napoleon and | money. is only a pil at the wi er no! ne 4 : ° is gorgeous and ornate in | fin: \e ns em Ds “os ee fearriages — ner The very respectable clergymen who protested | hir ministers. “1 was told last night thal an toma more agreeable t an ft iL for it would allow the yectbay woe rang lively pictures, some touches of the | ¢\'y is, speakin, of the iver UReeme "We scum, prosnrnens vor) wih venfoct indillere he to cost an | #2 Your city, some years ago, against the immoral- | standing had taken place between M. Veron, pub- | evening parties en pleinairto take place, and would the dun tam > pees gory from | however, give her florid paragraphs without calling surety egress 2 801 or Hasporr ly Ee, tocaue ane oft | baer ofthe Cigontenndr aa at. do Lamaine, | give, move opporcnice for Aodlng new amu | Sr ladyxcurey to ara at what ther fe | anton fo he atented peat ened yo gould not fail to be appeased. I-xeeption nas been | plates represented Eve in a state of nudity, are | Mevers, Leon Faucher and Baroche, would bs | Mobile, the Chateau de Fleurs, the Ranelagh of authorship which has led her thus to” deck out | mirapyiied and samful eattose” whee ae eee taben tot ae, practical wes o t he American lig © | quite outdone by Mr. George Rochefort Clark, in | blamed by those papers, and then be obliged to | the Chateau Rouge, are, nevertheless, open and | her ose] (for im assures us that these “Travels” | ascribed to the writer :— wheeled vehicles, as not being adapted to the stone | 7 ion. Mr. Clark has written a public letter | send in theirresignations. ‘They would be replaced | frequented by a large socicty of Kinglishimen, Ame- | consist of merely her home correspondence, re- | “1 never imagined uns thing so lovely as the exceeding pavements of large cities, and the Times me ewer | tren by Messrs. Bixio and Lamartine, or, perhaps, M. | Ticans and lorettes of all sorts, and in a few days the jer pel and we reprebend the fancy, in order | superfinity of the biooms and foliage and verdure here, the absurdity. roadway is paved with as fir and | upon what be calls the indecent and euperstitious | Qaijon Barrot. Pare Mousseaux, at the Batignolles, which belonged | # jould she again indulge in prose, she may be | As to describing it soberty, it ix impossible. ‘The enor solid a granite as any in the world ; and if the buggy | imagery of the great Exhibition, upon “the naked | ~The eause of this plot of Louis Napoleon against | to the regent, then to his son Philippe égulité, and | encoura ed to use the ng knife rather than | mous and inconecivable profusion of quent or the light wheeled wagon can travel over the Kuss | 7 “gate lately to Louis Philippe and his hei 1 be 0} the embroidering needle—to rely on the thought, | palm rutiful beyond expression, And then sue! " cle menand women, the crucifixes, and the supersti- | two of his ministers is, that he has seen, by the re- 'y o ippe ly W i fata bal pavement without detriment to the vebicle, the in- | » , It of the seesi f Tuesday and Wednesday | to the public as a succursale of the dancin; ng | the image, the trait, rather than on adjectives an ike flying bouquets of jewels, or rainbows om ductive reasoning is, that the London pavement | tious rubbish,” which, he fears, will make a woful | fut Gf ibe sccsiond of Thasioy, and Wednestey | of Paris. It will be called Chateau de I" itgalite. expletives, and the other exploded artifices of the | Thoutaha culcks and in the soe tee tee mee tn tam mts no obstacles. It will be some time be- | breach in the chastity, the moderation, and the blamed by the Chamber for the telegraphic de- | This may be calledan Orleanist restoration, and it is a“ florid school of literary composition. wand colors in the evening the fire-flies made i soe then 4 " i . : f ; eG a mort magnit’ t and tremulously-stirring illumina- fore the, Lenton ‘coachmakers altor thelr mode Of | spizicuality of this christian people. Perhaps | spatches, and the state of siege of tho Department | & fort of “fusion” of the arictocracy with the de- | ,,We,cannet fancy s book. more popular in, the | tin, tit alf ie seemed. tht amd al lght fe, "ha to d r . de L’isere, how unpopular their statesman is | mocracy. is likely to prove. With- | ihe stars overhead. they shone out like littl The catriage+—ihe ‘ordinary cha g® being four bundred | there are no better tests of feeling, taste, and | te ee ae a ajority of the Clasatee. iL | With thefresh breezes of spring, the acronauts of out the fulsomeness of Mrs: Maury, Lady Emme- | iver Chopns iveit ie beauttiul ; 1¢ winds and twlte guineas for such a one as a man of three thousa character, than the mode of looking at any given may say, with confidence, that Louis Napoleon | France have filled their balloons, and from every yr ae ortley is nearly as unreserved in her | bout likes brilliant serpent, most gracefully and change- aes oot ge A — wor on It may re — object, and the class of associations which the ob- | cannot avoid his fate. He seems to me like | department of our country we receive news of as- th ie i ~ Spprovel of Celie 3 borg lang find seni eens they tu ne! insie gilt el that two thourand dollars is the ordinary price for | ®e#¥€r uswally connects with it. ‘Thefirstexclama- | @ man who is drowning, and who, in his de- | censions by these daring imitators of Icarus.) M: | Sito “a2a'inado fast friendships her yustrieal | éelered chaine on its bright waters to arfent is progress, afanily carriage, and that a new one ts requisite | tion of the Parisian, on entering one of the finest spair, ping ng ee, one Ln eritiocten last ph & White horse rendered | record of one of which was some touths ago pub- tamedeots aieesneamanemannaies thick reves after every bait dozen years of London wear and | of the Egyptian tombs, was, ‘* (Quelle place pour um | OPCth 0°, BUT ane Conot ear ts Sunday last, in the city of Caén, ard though his | lished in an American newspaper. Ualike Mr. | sil sver with sumptocc < wi, Wacldened 6 a tear. Such are the actual facts. ‘The nobility pay | Uulliurd?”” “The lady who commended Dr. Johnson | Of roth a pereieio Le oe | agente Salivee toa aah un coins at the moment of its | Dickens, she found beauty in the Mississippi. Un- | and in other parts the most cantuleeny setene tad much higher, and the exhibition contains several | for having omitted all naughty words from his | oY) trying to obtain demands in favor of the proro | departure, he afterwards made his descent in good like Miss Martineau, she was cheered by a certain | foiry-like garlands, fertoons. and streamers quivered just mpeg 4 of _ aie Rg Ngee gee by poi on wae neon ome ee, gation, 4, is said that M. De Broglie will present | orders but he was assaulted by a gang of despera- Laeger poate erm we _—o a —— reer ge therein in all ir beauty. the other Sle atthe atlantic draw counter vison | Swift easd that “your nery Stee people munt have | toe Propoition te that fice on the Sth of next | doet, who were near killing Bis horse and deetroy- | Tres the Sto le toernaulon bet ist master end | ve ee ee gee Sad fuscee eae tear —many of whom have evidently been in America, | very nasty ideas!” And surely none but a mind gs session of Tuesday last, the elections for | At Angers, M. Margat ascended in bis huge bal- | Trollope into fits, amused her as studies of charac- | CeUeht» passi pee of the inner depths of this passing as may be gathered from the tenorof their remarks, | haunted Ly the obscene could deseerato by foal | ., the session, of, Tuaslay let, the, elections for | 1 cn on the Sih instant; and having landed after | teF-, In the following description the cordiality is | NoFld wittin-wctid of Leauty and glory, you caw wilder. and one is always certain of encountering a fellow | ribaldry, under the odious disguise of cant, those Dupin was re-elected speaker, by 350 votes against | #7 hour's journey, in a meadow covered by the wa- | # strong as is the sense of thé whimsical :— illuminating tbe recesses of the " tai . ¢ : 1 f t ‘a ard convolutions. Some of the latter flowers, on thi Seater SAik Ris, ee aatloae! Geeta: | <ee eeee e Ceiee Sian: |e General Fadeau obtained also $23 votes, and | ters of the Loire, he. was obliged to remain there | scqmmadationn but commanded ty nmat obliging | Uumcm embroidered banks, hada mot marvelous eect i ps sti Vacant, 5 i it. uring ole , freezing and shivering— | S59 “rwrtee ges x —apparently “doing business on thelr own hook;’ for but hopes are held out that the contribations | beauty as you will, let the cold stone be the em- | "9% Prociaimed * ice-* resident a : 3 bs mas capi Were several familivs | they seemed to be u ut that a. | eae ; : 4 General D’Hautpoul has been replaced in his | knowing not, on account of the caikness, where | on beard, who were removing to remote OF | or cam ince to be standing slone, perfectly Independent is schosties all sasktion tere ok ae wer | to all sonore yi sttien te every. ccleen command of Governor General of Algiers. His suc- ba ck rege te a oa on the Jth of this | Mfgction slaves childrene chaticis, and cattle Soumbeh othe ds oad plied ent eee thee mene of arts, “rawn from the distant regions of | stituted heart and mind, these purists, pur exedllence, | c&2#0r it General Pelissier, a man Tastee talents | uonth, to exbibit his iinmense balloon at St, Quen | Atiarrs, carrying “thelr own’ little world’ Gethety | Atel eteund some irregular stumps of old trees, or ehance to whose capacity the war ag: Russian Asia. The variety and abundance of war- | will see in it nothing but a studied excitement to trusted, General I" Hautpeal, it appearsris angry, | tits. ‘The entertainment was favored by the wea- | *houldere—further west, of course—which is quite the | tick of stcne—but in such unlinayinable and luxuriant like weapons scattered throughout the Crystal | unchaste wishes. . bi d the Ville de Bord having behaved | ¥#y of the world hereabouts, This was one of the very | PTCfuslon. that they often formed, as it were, enormous pony . 0 : and cally the President a vory ungrateful man. | ther, and the Ville rdeaux having behave TY | towers ond gateways, thus standing by themselves, of Palace would arma regiment. Each nation has | | A great dinner was given on Monday, to M. A. | {0 with much elegance, he returned to the land after fiely wnh the Sepaieety bese, Ly 4 Le lived enix | itomenae thfekners and height, In ort, they ‘splayed farnished its quota, and those racer who have nade | Kies, and other foreign artists in attendance on iu 2 joubt, th the least progress in the use of the steam engine | the Exhibition, by English sculptors and connois- The most curious and inexplicable orders were | an hour's stay in the clouds. had pald first-class price.” Some were from the heart cf | Si, kinds of shapes, mot fantastically diversified and ‘iven a few da: 0 to the fourteen regiments be- M. Arnault, the able manager of the Hippo- | ,, re ‘ varied? are ibe vary. people who turn out the most ex. | seurs. Upwards of one hundred of ‘the latter were ant ew ate EON vislon [e's sell that enn | drome, has also in his possession an immense sero- | Cit aesieny and aly mire umigranls; they | "We do not profess to enumerate the. loading foa- quisitely fashioned ewords and other weapons of | prevent, and, besides Kiss, come eighty of the for- | iit it dere were sent to the colonels of each | #tat, seventy-nine fect high and fifty feet wide. | one family of children, belonging to some bard. w tures of these provoking volumes. Life in Mexico ‘ offence. There hangs upon the wall a coiled silver | mer. Kiss, as your readers will remember, is the | Tdemttl orders Nore stim oy to, Patig, as | This mammoth balloon, which is the largest ever | backw (eyo gp Le, wert tus belie? dietied seneeneab totic serpent, under the flag of Spain. Approach, and | author of the celebrated piece of sculpture known | regiment, to De suady to mitrell tt Lael, 68 | made in the world, contains three hundred dollars’ #rfuly “spelt, and ted Uhekr parents miserable tives; | Calderon de la Barea;—Linia and Callaoare halted cnmalne Ss a pevmany Savaen Suara sae ts seen, | 99” The Se Oe) A ee ee news having been published by the newspapers, | Worth of gas, and is strong enough to carry forty feratching and beating their mother, and boxing the | at;—but theze points we merely indicate, without. and then you ascertain that one of the flexible and | more excitement in London than the whole "| ci t exhibition of this balloon is to take | ©®8 and kicking the shins of their (little) respected | extracting any passage relating to cither . Let beautifully engraved sword blades of Toledo is | wonders of the Exhibition. Sir C, Eastlake ms en denied by the Elysee. What does piace Pt antec at the. Hippodrome, and the pre, snd Keocking eruely about the only persoa te the | it sufice us further to mention that howe gay pages poe dew the ye ser} . Le a4 = —, Sm AR, no A pa Ngee Riots of a very serious kind have taken place in sident of the republic will be present. shape i salhnenimaneinn, conmaitinare suateen ms a on a few copies of verses. last, terial illustrafions of nat astoms and pursuits | Mone e » 2 . 3 es, on the | The journals received from Berlin datedMay 6th, | prenadier, in’ a turban, with a short pipe—the last evi. | NOPOS = ey contain are a lyric entitled “ Cro a ou nd pursuits | a, r rere | the department of the Gard at Aim jon" . 4 are ingeniously worked out. Thus Spain exhibits | the principal speakers. In alluding to M. Kiss, H announce that Mersrs. Coxwell and Risley (the | dently the consolat former inge- | tion's Prafle,” in which many fights “beyond the @ miniature model of an amphitheatre, with its | Seott Russell pronounced the genius of the man who poops poh pe eg! ied tina WTO OP | Seether of Peeteaner Risley, of Philadelphia, Soe Sieuee praieated of some tae vd the forme age reach of art” are dared. aia bey aseembled thousands, and the bull fight in pro- | could execute thot Amazon group, possessed not In Italy, the league of Tuscany, Parma, and | near losing their lives in an aeronautic excursion. | or handkerchiefs, and apparently built upon her head by = gress. Each character ia faithfully reprovented, | only of the highest attributes of human nature, but | x1 )i.0 ogether with. the King of Naples, is | They announced that their intention was to leave | Der own bande io a fantasti fashion, having aittie ap. | | Torxano ar Sr. Lacie, Mo—On Saturiay afternoon us, ata glance, you gather a correct im- | also of the divine. Ie said that when he was in | °:i03” They will occupy the Papal States with | Berlin from the gardens of Schutron I pearance of a fortifention for defensive purposes, which | terrific storm pasred over our city, more intense ia. ite of a scene you may never behold. Yousee | Ferlin, a year ago, he had felt himself in tho an army of 30,000 mea, who will. bo under the | proceed to R asfar as their provisions would jute to — Vas er eaettes cee =, and destructive in its consequences, than wo ove rank’ ranged in accordance with | presence of some superior being, while gazing upon Neapolitan flag. sllow them to go. ‘The balloon went up at the ap- | Sith considerable engineering #hiil, this poor rustie Cy- | The mecoh sa hed bommeeecgs nd it ons Jeiced Spanish etiquette—the combat between the mata- | that piece of statuary—the Amazon and the lion— | “T'Rt tT ceived from Garda, in Lombardy, an- | pointed day and hour, and everything promised | Tule, with her tower like turban, would have been lett | thut the barometer was duusvally low, inaiecting cet dor and bull—the slaughtered animal dragged of— | and had, after some difficulty, discovered the seulp- | avnce that the Austrian army is busily engaged | thetravellers a fine prospect, when their balloon | defeweriees nnd bareheaded. hy these litte furies She | emiy rain, vut storm” “About mots the’ sky became fare —— < one enty ~ ntry, i oie ' phasing Seer an bop ne gd bee 4 in Leen J a vie ot, Poscsire. ‘ by, pale. tare -_ pith gh cpreny cout che vgrly _ cut ‘wont to confide to me her t hes om ate bend tally ep serumed @ peculiar sppenrance ‘the i mei ated’ lnealitie . - ~ | years the city wi #0 strong’ as to re 5 " e . besides + be in eddies, rather than moving on- in miniature model scenes of celebrated Iocalities | a work of art, would be appreciated, and the aston, | 2°09 Sitio 4s? walle an army of 110,000 men. teronauts were ptocipitated to the ground, where, | her sullects that worsted her pretty considerable with steady curreut of air. ‘Between three. and Alps and Switzerland, with the isolated mountain | bas amply confirmed tA pos A d All the plenipotentiaries who were at Dresden, ye by,p mire Tye be pap seal oo Oct | aignent and patronising fa ber masner towords we. | striking the'city euddealy, ooa’'p Rid Sou oneabeeees cottages, and esin the valleys are eo faith | ‘Thi piece of sculpture is, without doubt, the | left that city om the Sd inst., and returned to their | dent: y pape. Sometimes. (sinehing her short pipe the while,) marching | to northeast. Chimneys were blown Gown, trees levelled, i States. The aim of their return is to obtain from | despite so many accidents, | am sure that the “bal ; One way aed many ow mening 4 most roarkable of ellmodern, i notof all ancient, | ir government the sanction and approbation of | loouirg” mania will be very fashionable, and Imean | (fy sie would caciim, Wal them chittren of ourn are | horcinen mere Hcy frm’ Thee horses ate Sopher Gt ing in-England or Europe | the proposals which were discussed and adopted | to,try at it myself. bad children—mighty bad, mighty bad; Prince Albert attempted to | during the last session. The old soldier Kolomberki, of whom I spoke in | worits a body, I guess, properly; and, his return, a faithful model of the | purchase bat was ee toe So. b It is decided that the Kings of Prussia and Aus- | my last letter, and who died, as supposed, aged 127 | skeary-like too, for I've never ber fully portrayed th leagues, and r iim can follow any route for It is as | time. There i ito |. of the Exhih pg over Switzerland, had re- | that com: 7 , did the i . , bad, it is enid, im’ d upon the or lulity of | steaming boats, nor never seen one afore.’ This surprised | iron shutter was lifted from its binges and bik across: untry Marquis of Westminster ; and both, failing of that, pe oe TO lal 9 pie pa 5 comrades, 00d veo oaly ‘Mycareold.. The birth | me ‘considerable,’ for I should have thought wo one | the strect, falling between two pedestrians, and slightly upicd aod amused examin- have ordered copies to be made, allowing ten years ow! nee i coreie®. Pp? certificate whieh own during his life, was | Could live in the States without seeing them. This I | injuring one of them. The lofty steeple of the Baptist ing and admiring the ind il- | time for the two pieces. The group, os it now is, bs om bo dy ope J to Greece. He embarked | that of bis father; and when, aftor ins death, the | ¢xPreefed. No, I haint; where Tlive to home, these | Chureh, corner of Sixth and Locust stroets, was hurled don't come, none on, ‘em; and they're mighty’ queer | fom ite pedestal nd fellon Sixth rtreet.a perfect wree! they | hoats, I guess, and I don't like them, and ts ~" d 0 b or > ized world, the hours pa: proper ‘The cort of this steeple was about 3.000. It was the most cr one ‘oesto the United States at the close of the Exhi- "7 offi if the Invalides looked over his h M. Ki vineed, = on the 7th inst. at Venice, on board of the steam- cers of the Int looked | pape! u the labe ar, ere youean Fiton.3t, of oer sommayoune pee tpg om | ship Voleano. soon diseovered thetrick. This has been the cause | skeary, too, aboard on ‘em.’ Then she pensively heautiful in the city. Had it fallen westward, the whole nem youbie Se mols camel a Ben ig bang d raptor ‘Poe news of the arrival of an American frigate | of the refusal to pay to his memory the proposed | away at the short Pipe till the roaring of some building would have been demolished. As it was, the — oe » 9 pe b ‘afiuian 12 - po Mg oy Ad 4 as at Constantinople, to receive the Hungarian refu- funeral honors. mY rebels dema: her presence as "head pacifics- | roof received but little injury. On Market street, the dieutck journata, hte, at the isveption | leash Whether itis by sale or consi Sent that it | 8€¢% Was communicated by Mr. Holmes, Chargé ad | _ An immense anchor ee eet Se pvt ge gl be Ay 9 a Pi pom Sse? Uf: he =e Hyreiected exhibition, extended towarde it | is put into American hands, Buttl oongratulete | iterim of the United States government in thet | nel three miles from Havre, has been castiod to | fetes) ct" eatn for while in’ the, distabce,’ Yor | Walte,artut . Mratromage, that they bave ont aside pre: | mp friends om the other side of the watersthas the | city, to the arth Mew cota This anos weiks Laue ants sodas remained the benefit of those who like to study various fashions of | and, it ir fenred, mortally injuring a lady passing, The nd fravkly confessed that the exhibition is opportunity is to be presented them of udying a hong Me sla whe aig A. ‘Colon biers, in | three hundred and Tt ia | ‘ree, 1 may as well remark that the attire of this worthy | lady was rercued from the ruins insensible, and was takem years in the sea. woithy of alltheeulogy work of art, which, for boldness and originality of | ., Many ungarons Toe woe oe ised have'al- | thought that this anshor was lost by one of the | (hewardreu uf’ Abd-del Rader, enurafted au the recite | cariepe huere’ sttac ent Tee eoh ete ethan ati nit. ‘Im some cases all conception, correctness of design, and perfectness | © 08 WMuee Os toe the United States, under the | vessels of warof Ilenry VIII. of England, when he | garments of a Dutch skipper’s wife; but no deseription | Sixth, near Cheanut street. was blown in, crushing four Ron ait tae a J coe og henge p Crystal pig pba T. Pay mph is unsur- ee ‘of Captain Bekay. They have crossed | sent his fleet to besiege Havre. Sates ot —o8 ay ne oe ailking to the worthy | vehicier—a burouche, a oe and two buggies. mirers nnd supporters, and that the number of | ‘The great talk smong the court circles is the ap- | Franee in military order, and arrived two days ago | |, A splendid neomebip, has Jans bees Sokiien Ot | fos Aigarer from ‘dhenrymenn’ and from the, Fepalring thea wil be about $000,- Bi, 32, lowe fa a * t er of gr iB the P | at Havre, from whence they. will goto New Yor the foundry of Crensot for the Bashaw of Egypt. | ly akeary ness. the kicks and | repairing them will be about $300. Mr, N's, loss is about Viekers will be greater in August than any | prosebin eS ee by the (Queen on | *' 7 "Kon de Kent, Great Vicar of the Bishop of | This new man-of war is to called the Ariel, and i thove ineubordinate grandehitdren of hers. But | $100. Cn Rieventh etrest, the guble of Dr. Gibson's reel. them. ike « as blown out. A similar accident happened to a Impartial statements from credible | the 13th proximo. original announcement was, conside: ultra of magnificence. | 0 y. : sources will soon reach all quarters of the world, | that the costume adopted should be that of the Troy, was, a few days ago at Arras, on his way to . Pip reap Tmt oe will rus upon ‘he charge of Napoleon's old guard, and retire, crowned with | house en Scrond, near Locust, awd to another on Pine, utterirg in words of truth, eome of the marvels | reign of Charles Il, extending over @ period of | the United “tates. tai Nile. The speed of the Ariel was tried upon the | tory, to smoke the short pi —— aaee Gus parti. | near Bates’ theatre, eee pe the a which the eye bas ecen, and students will wend | some five and twenty years. For some reaeone, pone Joel ecany has visited Paris, and | Scene, andshe went from Chalons to Tournas in ferkdes Bumercus alight skirmishes, ‘The Tncresiaiy. of Suter works, the cutive trte ‘of tres, valsatis, beiok their way from all regions to gather practical in- | to be found probably {n the laxity of morals which | left yesterda Poileau 7 secret of the French | one hour and five minutes, thus accomplishing a randmamma, the Invincible, and hee despornte shacges, tearmente wae Dhewe out, From what we can gather, formation in this great school of nations. The | has a close affinity to dress, this announcement has » Ga me hes been named Kuight | run of 96 miles, : Uilimately won, however, the ficld, and decided the wat | we thould judge tbat not less thaw one Hundred “bulla: pec an my affairs of the nee ary Soaring be- | been changed, roy Court pole, = morn rrp vi een name ri ‘The railway from Tonnere to Chalons was finish- | in favor ct the pay ot Goany beh tet retinn tines | Bente a rl gyre lpeed canes jond the most sanguine hopes. The receipts are | ing, announces ¢ costume is to be that worn -! ‘ tal journey | ing, biting, and scratching, were alarmi: vehement.’’ | lease by th To count the number of chim to €15,000 portdiem, agd as the expenses are | atthe time of the Restoration. It will bea won- | _M. Du Breuille, formerly attaché to the French | ed « few days ago, and the experimental journey a sod third'volames are the ‘sacet into. | tope Glewn c&; wowid require more felrare tian we ra have read of | spare. Fortunately, as the gale man, and Mr, Prosteott, and Mr. Web- | feet of boate Cob 4 Galen oe Uttle or — nd Mr. N. P. Willis, again and again,— $2% Eiigpeacds ont, the guie 0s tosy meant the not many English ladies have described ‘ across the te, funds will soon be received, sufficient | derful and brilliant affair, over three thousand in- parge all obligations and leave the Palace a | vitutions having been already given. legacy to the nation. Its future destiny may be | Yesterday, the receipte at the Crystal Palace | & that of a winter garden, combined with edacationa | »mounted to the highest pores, after the manner of the Polytechnic. 1 ived: So great was tl Yesterday wasa a day in London, for tho Queen held ber drawing room, and her procession | rale of season tickets in stato from Buckingham Palace was a pageant | funde of the commission had, during the day, an at Washington, has married Mme. De | proved very excellent. In a short time it will be fecond rt 4 d to blic, and thus the journey from | reeting portions of this book :—for of a celebrated general of Bel. i te Lyond wi Il be accomplished ite in Feenty. | Lau 4, Professor of Astronomy of the Na- ree hours. hat has yet boon re | iia; College of Cambridge, tn. Huston, Masea- | Brandy made from w plant called Asphadile (s the dora ati the | shana, han been named orperanding miter ot | SKemict ie appears that this ‘pew quid has 80 roe #0 high that the | the Academy of Selences of Paris. B. HI. R. | Cette asthe end will be of much’ use for the Pee ee No doubt that in , daughter i i i H & 3 i E ii hag a state day ; at enct 9 frequent have becn the | 5 rded from Turkey are not yet arranged. | Anniversary of February, 1818—Balls— Mrs. Bing- yom pened gp ely ey into good Benes. ci prerge o> ine noe = — Lng 3 ve ae a sake ~, io | _ engage ~ how's ing The Egbrie of | Mathew. going In different d nee — Naval I 'e ever she is com at in public, that peo- | the distribution o rge and valuable addition: Party—The Spring Race ‘girie . rections, whose fair oecupanta. tebligence. " ple identify her with five’ weather. ‘The drating | cot-ignment within the last few days received froin | the Blysbe—Flower Show—Amusements and Wie PE Bae oat hy Od nn ~ ezine, shopping: and so forth urvaliy ending with the | United Stace ship Independence, the fag ship of Com worth lookin 0 at lenst thought the assembled of ther some £4,000. The French THE GOSSIP OF PARIS. 52 , a . Of ‘and yet the caacs referred to above are all that, thousands. ‘The sun always shines when Victoria ‘sill contitue their preparations, and the Panis, May 15, 1851. Oe Ore ree eeeted tea ceed beeen | dag ‘20 ome thinks ut whe | heard of fo which yervonal injury was sustained Bt help it. But whem it begins to the city | Lewis (Afo.) Times, May 19. to the Kev. Father | seems almost to shake with an jore Morgan, 4 room was numerously attended by the é/ite of the | India. Several of the most valaable of the articles Strangers—Ballooning—An Impostor—An Old spot. are called rolent —— = Long, at Sperzia daring the letter port of oristoeracy, and an jirer of ig og | would | have been placed in stalle we bey nave, and so Ftd for Egypt—Nee Railroad— py ‘in ey ott “hey bs sadn latres bya pertaite Peas Sienaid livery, and the latter was ‘dney hed on ® cruise of thirty be pussled to make a solection from the bevy of | great ie ‘leir value conceived, that they have boon y" rab 8 om brought them to | We went cut the other dey, and I went alittle way into | to the westward—to Nee, Cadia, Tangier, ke. lovely women. The toilets wore set off by » profa- | ced with a railing, ae ifthey were State pri- Mutiny on Board an American Bhip—The | oil MWe have not teselved the particulars. Ue country—a very pretty drive indeed. Tt wae along | her would to © sion of diamonds, worn, in many instances, wrought | In aduition to the Lahore jewels, the Last | ‘Theatres and their Novelties— Americans in Parity |?"'Nows toccived from the island of Rhodes an- | ® brond rmosth roud (rags 8 nereer $9 Bey after the road | with the I into bouquets, The anes was Garning, he | weshibit the “iurriwinoor,” of | ge, ge, nounees that, after the violent earthquake which | {” Mexico’) se ae Sse ot |e oy ee. = sllicred and spar searah, Sed cotieyigg | ernie ; semen ty KAA" | The second féte in commemoration of the aani- | took place on the 18th of April last two mountaing eet lo Ne pesto, Where cartlageey—mranivedinous frcain sont ey 1 renderir 5 oiler stoner about it; a@ " ‘ ton them from all stifners, The American Ministor’s | Jo aod & smaller one of J04 | Yerkary of the revolution of Febraary, 1648, whieh ae a _ igh obove the | al makes like rity py pee p Ay _— between the captain his 9 site introdueed thy Hom Mr. MoCurdy ang Miss | pcasie; « nccklace of four large rubies, a pair of | wagto take plage om Sunday Iesi—heving beem | Yiguniy level, and jt) 1... ib avonen have. | scrihlockleg, guply-pebated open voloates like outs Sited | Bevien Journal