The New York Herald Newspaper, October 21, 1851, Page 3

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Prince de Montfort for the concerts which he gave | or Englieh. Besides the common sense which di rity by logal and moans alone, loading bears, ‘They sheuld learn o lesson of well % Iwas ahead E U R fe) P E . in tho Palasso Orlandini. There wore fower | tates such # division of duties, we may add—al | strong to submit Pecomebeysat hot, wre] Bentowed gonsronty from the Sitah ministry, who for phase bef pe paren my Ans puss travellers then than now, and Florence had not | though Boone scarcely intimates the exist’ | of their advorsari The republican minority al- it to @ private company an Admiralt, George A. Green was sworn, and Our Lendon Corre mae. then, as it now has, been adopted as the capital of | ence of any other reasons for its adoption—that he is | ready avow their of appealing tage if assist in down the ine of elactie telegraph followa:—I am a police constable at S; re ageetne pa second rate English = Americas sosiely. a fee a yasiiond Chinese scholar, pad eheretons omunently Se fepablie should be placed in serious er, | across the its of Dover. They should e juested by Deputy Marshal Allen, To aaalet Loni . » J vast jace, re looked as Were not nu- a! for miesionary ‘Wor! ago ey expresel: eserv: usiness habi from ericans, case 4 Gridlligence when Koreuth will «Arrive in the Great Cuy— aaa but the long galleries sad succession of distin hed himself by a master! y discussion of r4 as one Of the ‘tatog p the tans of tnou 00 | business habite and quickness the Ami at fugitive Jerry, ° guards of public liberty even | who have, in # few weeks, nearly completed the | nesdey last; while Jerry was*esca) from the the will of a y of thelr trymen. | wi re ‘and Halifax, luding Commissioner’s office, I pursued A Remarkable Coincidence—Abdel Kader-—Meeting of the with a view to avoiding that undi translation of t Seripanres, or of any arties are anore restrained and-quiot png = tho Gulf of St. pia hy - atroet bridge, where | Bund ener ae Rheological , . ‘bat are Bishop Smith's ac- | ed by #) ion of their natural chief, i 3 at the foot b Americans af the Star end Garter $Rickmond. would have found it | quirements in the difficulties of the great monosylla- | the want of popular ai lon e thei “ ang ese efor a b een ancecenen poems] sg had a ee ne Save whore Joerg it poreessor, | named Pring At length the gallant Arerican steam frigate, the fi [t to fill these lofty halls. This space givesan | bie, and al! but symbolical language, we are not | tary submission to the law. The existi e casi Jackson, hold of Deputy Marshal’ Swit, held ‘Mississippi. with ite brave uuu illustrious cargo, the noble | idea that each guest hal an intrinsic meee and ia informed; but, judging from his attainments in the | went is probably of ali parties that whichis leant Bete tae et err te him, and said, séyon bave gone far ptt ‘Hovsuth, after coasting along the shores of the Mediter- | of importance in the eyes of thehost. There wasa | English tongue, we should not rate his Chinese | disposed to resort to force, because it has unboun- represenjod in that important council, and,we then | had better hold on; was to got away, tanean cea, has been heard of We all here began to | curious mélange of nations assembled at this par- | sebolarship at a high value. ded confidence in public optnion. and its efforts to would rtain the pleasing hove that, unlike the | and ordered Prince to let go of him: tone hold of think that ebe must have sailed right away toNew York, | ticular féte, and some names sounded strangely un- To this proposition of the American prelate, | preserve the internal peace of the country are justly | former ated congress at Vienna, it will tend | Jackson, and Swift got away; 1 assisted Lowell fr the boadage of | and Way to bring back Jerry; we were molested - der the roof of a brother of Napoleon—many of | Bishop Smith, of Victoria, returns no answer; but | 1ega:ded a3 one of its priucl claims to the suf- | to frea tke nations o on which account, when I wiote before, I thought he | ore i ei heen inscribed u, the lin of bie | he consults the Archbishop of Canterbury, anda | (rages and good ee But how ia it | ignorance; and contribute vi quick- | on ret and threatened b; roes, who ‘All doubts are now dissipated r4 'po) u s er bury, 4 & Fs H tribute te 3; d, wich the quick. our urn, yy negroes, had perbaps arrived don evemies when he lived and reigned; now all were | body with whose metropolitan jurisdiction we are | ultimately to dea! a law wich terminates its | ness of lightuing, truth and knowledge over the | Were stripped; Hiram Brown (colored) tried to pro- On the ath of September (ie Mississippl arrived at Mar- | friendly and courteous; all danced to tne sound of | rot acquainted—the Church missionary Society. | own existence—with a people who attack that law | whole euttace of the globe vent the recapture of Jerry; several white mez seilles, with the liberated csptive and his companions on | the same music, applauded the same strain as it | To Dr. Sumner “it appears that the proposal of | by every weapon of pubiic opinion—and with ad- - seized hold of me, but | can’t tell who they were; board. Count Bathyauy e landed at Maresvilles: | fell from the Yd of the first artists of | Bishop Boone involves a difficulty which makes it | versaries who make tnat law the o: and pretence Forelgn Theatricals, the Marshals requested me to assist in detain- poy eded to Paris, where he bas connections, and | the day. ce brings about strange things. Here | im bie for you (Bishop Smith) to acce je to his | of their own schemes of insurrection? Such a state ‘The re-opening of the italian Opera in Parisis | ing Jerry ; stones were thrown into the office he intends to take up bis residence. But as to might be seen walking arm, in arm, the Russian | wis! ” The Church Missionary Society enter- | of things can only give rise to the greatest appre- | looked forward to with great interest. [tis an- | after the Court adjourned; there was s where os a admiral Tchitcha Kuff, who was sent by Alexander | tain trong objection.” Bishop Smith states | “hensions, unless the manifestation of public opinion | Nounced that Mr. Lumley, the Ropular impres- | crowd in front of the office ; ® pistol was ‘ Kossuth, the timid and cautious Prefect of the Depart- | to cut off the Emperor's retreat on the Berosina, | that in his own view of the matter, ‘‘it is not desir- | be ro universal and intense ag to float the President | satio, is expected in Paris on the Ist of October, | the north side of the office, opposite side of the ca~ = Kossuth and Mr. Bennett Meeting at the Same Time— | stately drawing rooms had been constructed es- | very difficult question, lying at the very root of a seins pecially ¢ £0} ing, nifioent the hos- | work, isto Chinese. i ment was almost as much frivi:tened at his very name as | and the brave and heroic Polish general Wonso- | able to enter upon the proposed arrangement.” | and his government over svery obstacle. and that the opening of the house will take place | nal; Ira H. Cobb eat within the enclosure in thé the Austrian government! itsclf. Therefore, Kossuth | wich, who bore Napoleon company in his sledge at | Not a syllable more is vonchsafed by the mosher— | Amongst the impediments to his euccess we do | onthe lith. Already the choruses and orchestra | Police Justice's seat, near the gas lights in the was mot permitted to land until the ministry at Parishad | this fatal catastrophe. Then, memory taking us} or stepmother—Church of England. Yet the prin- | not rauk the now hardly dissembled intrigues of | are infull rehearsal, under the able direction of M. | front office ; when the first pistol was fired, I wont previously been consulted suth himself was desirous | *till further back, connects the names we heac | cip'e on which Bishop Boone founded hia proposal | the Orleans party and the pretensions of Prince of Hiller. The programme for the season is not yet | tothe outside door to close it; stones were then around us with the sanguinary anzals of the do- | was surely one that called for a most deliberate | Joinville. Enough has recently transpired to ex- ublished; the only names spoken of are those of | coming into the windows, and clubs striking ; I » via Paris; but the French | mestic feuds of Fleesnes, now Gtied in the con- | consideration and a most courteous reply. To uso ¢ the schemes entertained by those of whom we | Cruvelli, Barbieri int, Lablache, and Belletti. wont ts the door ; a negro named Harrison who e! of proceeding to Southam) s risis, was fearfulthat his | ventional court dress; without either the coat of | his own words, his objeot was ‘‘merely to suggest Baa wished to preserve a rent opinion. The | Madame Sontag is in Paris, on her way to Ger- | formerly lived with W. W. Teal, struck me with government, at this particu: talismanic name might |. 4 popular demonstration | mail under the satiu jerkin, or dagger under the vel- | that we adhere to the old canonieal regulation, not | Duchess of Orleans, acting on behalf ot her son and | many. Madame Grisi and M. Mario have arrived | club ; as I turned round [ saw Cobb still in House's ‘and an ebullition of Parini ling. Consequently, he | vet be Mee st pg, yok to AL} two hia ae one ag a “ as wie the eka 4 Eg perhaps more i} i Salone tig eth ieccapupe i hin 4 ot nol in Ay aflee at the time bat Coe, refused. egraphi: 0 permissio1 arm in arm— tt remains ef these mo: en- ow, we m' remark upon the gross i- instrument than she su; 5, con: ; . ‘arron and myself; asl walked, Cobb run ; the bey Jehan pe tens, the Soeired ” | mities is Via Ghibellina engraven on the corer of | lity of this whole proceeding. If Bish gs ir op Boone’s | stantly stood aloof from the recommended | follow shortly after. M. Ella, the director of the | two gas lights were out—first one, then the of passing through France. Another no less welghty | One of the streets of Florence. Then there were | proposition was 80 monstrous as to involve a “difi- | by King Louis Philippe to his fanily, and has of | Musical Union of London, has been in Paris for | other ; ‘as Soon a the Fae were out, I'turned te Feason operated to produc: (i:is result, viz.: the fear of | jadies of every clime, from the fair exiled Poleto | culty” which amounted to an ‘ impossibility,” it | late distinctly favored the extravagant schome of | the last few days, on his way to Germany. The | go to the back room, and met Cobb near the gate, giving offence to Russia and Austria. Kossuth could not | the dark-eyed Italian—many bearing names which | would not have disceurteous in the Primate of | making a Prince of the younger branch of the | barytone Coletti isat present singing at Romo; he | to place where House sits, coming out ; know the pesition of things at Paris; he thought, no | made your heart beat whilst ga: at thom. | all England, or his suffragans, to have pointed it | House of Bourbon, President by universal suf- | is ebgaged for the next carnival at Venice. went into House’s apartment and sat down on the doubt, that France of 1801 wos the same as France of | Here was the young Princess Mathilde, afterwards | out to their American brother. To give no ex- | frage of the French republic; and it is suggested | A letter from Genoa says:—‘The opera had | floor to avoid the stones; in a short time two pistol that the | the Countess Camerata, daughter of Glisi Bac- | planation, to offer no ccunter-project, is simple | that the termination of the next President's period | scarcely commenced, the other evening, in the | shots were fired, either fromthe windows or by 1848, and could hardly ralix the possibility that the | Oris hi another neic, whose face and look wore all | rudeness on the part of the English church. We | of office will nearly coincide with the majority of | theatre of Carlo Felice, when a murmur of dis- | Some one who had got inte the office ; there was President of the so-called rench republic was so much | her yneles. Here too was a Russian princess, | have practically shown Bishop Boone the door, | the Count of Paris. The most appropriate lesson | satisfaction arose, which was at first not understood | then a great rush into the office from the door wia- the ally and friend of Russis wo Galibyen, celebrated for her wit; a prtacess without any diplomatic circumlocution at all. As | which can be given to the authors of such devices | by all the audience, until it was perceived that it | dows; one ofthe windows was entirely demolished ing . Aldobrandini, and princess Poniatowski, (the | regards the ‘‘difficulty,” {since we are only left to | will be to bring them to the test of popular election, | was directed to a box in the second row, where sat | With # bar of iron; after this I heard a pistol fred , | widow of the hero who leaped with his steed into conjecture, it is not our fault if the Archbishop and | ia order that having first desoended by their low | the Countess Gherardi, an Italian lady of the Tus- There is one thing to be from the back room office; Isaw Kev. Mr. Loguea, and that is, that Kossuth » the Elster;) her daughter, Madame Monte Catini, | the secretaries of the Uhurch Missionary Society | ambition from the station in which they were bora, | can Court, notorious for having, at s public ball | colored man, in the officeafter the attack; I saw him then arrested in is one of the great whist amateurs of the day, | permit us to fall upon an incorrect solution of what | they may next be thrust down by the contempt of | at Florence, snatched a feather from the hat of the | 00nafter this, coming in with a plank ; { thenmade ited ‘been done had Austria only b:on aware, in time, of his | and is often heard at these princely concerts; an: otherwise looks inscrutably mysterious. {[n Lord | the people from the stationto which they aspire. | Austri R laced escape, and went up stairs to the window to try readiness to throw himseif into the jaws of the lion ; for Murat, who bears at pool @ name royal and | Palmerston’s letter the residents at Shanghae were | Of tl elt absolute defeat we can entertain > deubt, ge y mee ae nt he ‘fn pall rossauise the offenders; then came down, and there is an understanding between Austria and France | chivalrous; here was the Ring of Wonphatla, warned not only against Bishop Smith, but against | foreven among those who would be content to re- | verse of Berchet, invoking curses on the Italian | the crowd had the negro and resoued him ; om Hand peal —_ bringing back painful memo the field of | “‘any other bishop.” Could this ‘tany other | storb the dynasty of the house of Orleans, there are | woman capable of allying herself unto the foreign | shal Swift had his coat torn—he is a small sized guth. 4 Waterloo. bishop” be Bishop Boone? It seems so. And | few besides M. Thiers and his immediate adherenta | t ts of b try :— man; I can’t tell how far Jerry was ahead whoa fusal of the French creeV in ie ios} eae Sampresi was at the piano ; Mlle. Perhani stood | could Bishop Smith have come toan understanding | who can desire to restore it upon disereditable and ven pel oases @'Tilo amplesto Pringe Jackson hold of Swift ; office is of bis friends, the secre- | beside Mlie. Degh Antoni, an artist of great | with the foreign office ? Does ey 4 Smith submit | precarious terms; but, at any rate, such a compe- Tl Tedesco soldato beo.’ 2 ten deors from 's office; a great a to the Mayor of South- | repute, sat amon; ‘oup of jadies ; Tacchinardi, | to be snubbed himself, provided jhe can get the | titor will carry little weight in deciding this im- noise, and ran from the polise commissioner’& oswuth will pass through (o4e voice could only be heard here, prepared to | Foreign Secretary to insult Bishop Boone at the | portant gontest, in which some principle must ulti | 2Be storm of indignation at her presence became office ; this was at the first rescue from thence to England, | vin| wo ; ; Swift was ‘and thus surrounded by the living history of | same time? Or is it that, after all, Lord Palmer- | mately prevail, and not the exclusiot of every prin- universal; and the histes and the shouts for her ing to get away from Jackson; ‘Way took : 5 : ; ; ithdrawal continued with increasing fury, until landing tor © be will stay a short time | the great man who overshadowed the last fiftyyears, | ston—sick of the whole affair, and disgusted at | ciple which makes monarchy respected or republi- | "it . J ’ jackson ; after Swift got away, he ran 7 ? end ree be keae, there aad ene ny nae We gan look on the pictures of Gres, David, Girodet, yee | Smith for lording it over Bishop Boone— | can government secure. Coll mara e peg. Mike ieee eas tae 1 passed him ce} ‘near the Syracuse A pelosi het Ar or Ris eae letter Ostober | #24 Vernet, which recorded his actions, while the | thought it would shorten matters to set up his own _—— from the iasults of the crowd which hed Trendy was lame; I found Jerry just over the Look street Pig - ot onthe “land of | busts of Bosio, Canova, and Bertolini, retraced | claims as paramount to those of the rdant | Telegraphic Communication in Germany. . bs bridge, when 1 met him; I then took hold, and gathered outside.” 3, Retese he Dente Seam y sbi those who were linked to him by family ties We | bishops? Has Bishop Smith’s insolence o precipitated TO THE EDITOR OF THE LONDON MEWS. The Lond. - helped to take him back to the polise office ; it listened to the strains of the ‘ Pirate,’ ‘Norma,’ and | Bishop Palmerston’s tyranny? Is it military ‘The numerous discoveries made by the rapid pro- nd The ce Sunday Times of the 14th ult. | five minutes after I loft Prince, till got to the Count “Org.” And thus untill morning dawned, | dictator settling aconflict of factions? Anyhow, | gress of modern science, which so remarkably dis- | SYS ‘Ted h — unparalelled success which has | street bridge, when I met Jerry. her yachts, and. above ail. ber noble Collins steamers, | some never to be forgotten hours posed on, when | Bishop Palmerston swallowsthe oyster, and he is | tinguish our present century, derive their great im- ae bE the performances of the American and | John W. Jones, sworn, and testified as follows :—~ to abtonish the natives in all parts of the known a. the perfume of night blooming flowers, the pre- | not even polite enough to hand the shells to Victo- | portance not from the astonishment in the minds of hente cos at present occupying Lane I was at the Commissioner’s office about 2-0’clook, ‘The will probabiy reach Southampton on | senoy of arace of heros, the smiles of lovely wo- | ria and Shanghae respectively, but flings them at | the wondering multitude, and admiration they | theatre, is not to be wondered at whon we takn into | soon after Jerry was taken there; I left the of man, the arts, poetry, and music, united to thrill | the bishops, not without an ugly grimace. Or, | create, but from their utility and from the material | Consideration the peau dooe of the company and | before Jerry was taken away; saw Jerry bro with every enjoyment, both the heart and the | again, was it in deference to the Palmerston claims | benefit they confer on the community, and on man- | the difficulty of getting together a body of eques- | back to the Police office; | stood at the door, near- : senses. __ | themselves that the archbishop proclaimed the in- | kind at large. Of all the agencies applied to the bie rene ules Pog without doubt, un- | ly all the time after; recollect hearing of the ad- forms me by letter, frem Paris, (ust he proposes to leave How to go home with this fever of the brain, | vincible “impossibility?” Wasa Dowsing street | grand object of accelerating locomotion and the ba " * 3 y all atre has nightly been crowded | journment, by the Commissioner; know several for New York on the 10th. ‘1m Southampton; he will | when the lights were extinguished-and the guests rescript necessary before our prelates could recog- | transmission of intelligence, none is better calcu- | t0 the topmost gallery, and the spectators have tes- | ‘persons who were in the office after the therefore be there about the (ue of Kossuth's arrival. | departed, the sounds hushed—through the streets | nise the existence of an American bishop? Or did | Isted to astound our imagination, at the same time tified the liveliness and appreciation of the grace | sioner adjourned; Edward Hi, Ira H. Cobb, B Mre. J. G. Bennett willremain hind in Paris fors short | of Florence, as 1 went, teeming with the works | tho missionary claims stand in the way? Is Lord | prove useful to our material interests, than the ap- | ®0d agility of ae. M‘Collum, the dosing, and skill | L. » Justice House and C. Woodruff; Cobb oe Loin pr the ae of JG. Bennett, Jr, | sndremembrances of the great artists, whom, ever | almerston, under the consular act, ordinary | plication of electricity to these most important pur- syeoed by Mr. Eaton Stone, the manifold qualities | came in and went out several times; saw him bas ak puemees preying vvcparations made to reoeive | fice modern art has striven, but striven in vain, to | inpartibus infidciwm as well as superintendent of | poses. It is natural, therefore, that the introduc- a rs ie Caroline, andthe unusual ability shown | before the final adjournment; he came to Kossuth, the eddresses, dinucrs, the persons flocking | imitate, Giotto, Michael Angelo, Benventan», Cel- | British congregations ? tion of electric telegraphs in England should have | by those devoting themselves to the gymnastic por. | door; think it was in the early Rerk fe ote there to. meet him, kc &c.,1 tefer you to the papers, | lini, (the Medicis artists in the art of approciation,) | Emerging, however, from this wide sea of con- | been followed by the erection of electric wires | tion of the entertainment, the most extraordinary of | noon; he walked in as I stood by the door; he aaid which are, and will be, full of them Gs fy} Sleep was impossible, and sitting down on the | jecturo as to the political bearings of this matter, | throughout Germany, which being commenced in | Wom are the Italian brothers. Monday night is | nothing the first time; 1 saw him sitting in the come. Cotemporaneous with tie liberation of Kossuth, | Sasso di Dante, th me on which he ia said to | one thing is very plain in its ecclesiastical relations | the year 1817, were completed with marvellous ra- | ®” goes" evening Bog programme of next | Justice's seat; don’t know whether the examina- and the noble conduct of the ‘Turks in this respect, the | have sat, and taken # yearning look over his beloved | —namely, that Archbishop Sumner and Bishop | pidity. ‘Tho eloctric telegraph has served the Ger- | Jieei% the performance being for the benefit of Mr. | tion had commenced when I first stood at the world bas the le presenied to itot the incaroere- | city, ere he went into exile, I watched the dawn | Smith have passed a griovous slight on the whole | man government excellently; it enabled thom, when E - thy rst? Gr at. e amusement of the | door; did not see the Commissioner ticn pees ta lym aan —_ pAisd — 8 y tinge the mauresque towers ofthe Palaz- | American Chureb, its episcopate, and its rights, in | they had once serewed up courage to combat the | English pul le have been frequently ceeetebs ac- | the examination; think I went into the office az = wna es nap aang A ptoheecpee cel 10 Vecchio, dreaming confusedly of the voice of | the person of Bishop Boone. Of this, as placing | revolution, to do so effectually; it overtook many | knowledged b Leyton return for which response | once; the negro was there when I went in; I Srouteheonon the same day om wnich the lbsration of | Hernani, the Prince de Montfort, the fascinating | the English Church in » false position, we must | of their flying adversaries; it prevented the out- | be has now a ere them an additional opportunity not seo Mr. Cobb that time ; saw the Commissioner word to Lord Londonderry to ray that he cannot liberate | Princess Mathilde, the old and the Modera Florence, | strongly complain. Until contrary reasons are pro- | break of a frightful war between Austria and Prus- | of testifying their consideration by the introduction | leave the office, and saw Mr. Cobb sitting in | the other. “Je ne peux pas,” are his words, It is a sad | the past age and the present, the bright eyes of | duced, we maintain that the American bishop’s } sia; it then acquiesced to summon prime ministers | °f the present com ‘They will doubtless re- | the chair after the Commissioner came out; contrast wherein we see the Turk keeping faith, and the | the endants of the Imperial Court, and the | offer wasa fair and reasonable one—certainly one | to amicable interviews, and even condescended to $ogsiee Be peal a he has shown on all oc- | don’t recollect whether! saw Mr. Cobb or not the Christian breaking i and disregarding a solemn treaty | battle of Waterloo. The bride of the Count Demi- | rot to be dismissed with contumely. On the other | invite monarchs to friendly suppers. But the peo- | ¢@#ions by the crowde sapect which we are convinced | first time I went in; when | saw Mr. Cobb sett! and contract; for be it rememb»red Abdet Kader surren- | doff was the heroine of these assemblies, It was | hand, the position of the English bishops has a | ple derived no advantage from {to falry-like powers; ae ill present. Theartistes have all offered | ia tho chair, also saw those ne whose names dered himself up to General Lamoriciere in Algeris,on | for her that these jes were given ; and as she | vory Erastian look, as though wo were'tee dignified | it was closed to the public until M. Vonder Heydt, | their Sy ae and the entertainment will be very | first mentioned; B. L.. Higgins stood near the mid- the ex; Soe mage oa ae 4 waa to be | paced the rooms, (clad in a long robe of eky blue | to treat with any dis-established, or other than Act | the Prussian Minister of Commerce, was graciously | ¢Xttaor not only with regard to the number | dle of the floor; Justice House stood near the hall he pleased; peepee he hen lh onl sag lepine doors velvet, fastened at the corsage with a large bou- | of Parliament, Church. The incident has even a | pleased, at the end of 1819, to give it free—no, to | 2d qualities of the performers, but also on account | deor; Charles Woodruff came out of the back finement. ’ 0, tempora! O. mares Christiani ! quet of diamonds, a wroath of diamonds shi in | more melancholy, because a more serious impor- | give it fettered—to the German nation. To go- bela po sr aeaceh feats which have been Lf On Monday ast, ‘at the famous Star and Garter on Rich- | her chestnut hair,) a corteous word to eac we that our high language about ‘‘full | vernment despatches the first preference was se- | Prepared expressly for occasion. i 3 4 Ly mend Hil, wl George the Fourth was wont at timesto | smile for every guest, one felt that she ought to ” is a matter of mere words, and looks | cured, another priority was claimed for railway —- , entertain his friends during the period of his regency, | have been called to shine in the most m cent, | very lik ham. Bishop Boone is ful empow- | directors, and then, last and least, the public were ‘The Fugitr jave Riot at Syracuse. mt 44 Mhete, also, more recently Louis Philippe took up his | but evanescent, court of her uncle. Her dark gray | exed by the whole Anglo-American Church—he | to be generously allowod to sond their messages by | EXAMINATION OF THE ALLEGED RESCUERS AT AU- doorway; the door where James stood was seu ' quarters after his inious flight im and | eye, so like his, had the same fixety of expression, | speaks our own language, and holds the doctrines of | this ‘fbrating spirit, on its winged courier of iron. BURN. saw Mr. Cobb as I came into the fom rag pr yet this celebrated rendezvous of gourmands of % and recherche, dinners, Mr. George Peabody, the weeithy | §!ance ; the mouth, when in re which it was | ple to him and his clergy; and, sooner than per- | pending this boon whenever it should please him to | fore Judge Coucklin, at Auburn, in the case of the | 8e¢ Mr. Cobb go out or in after the Commissioner ‘American banker, gave an entertainment of a peculiar | T@T@ to catch, for youth and h: ‘under an alias, rom the people be just before ruled over | making the timid and ity quail beneath its | ourown Church. But we will not entrust our peo- | The minister reserved to himself the right of sus- | ‘The following isa portion of the testimony, be- | lect how long before that | first saw PI ave, Jerry :— left; | had some conversation with Mr. rnd ws ness unclosed | mit the Chinese to be converted by him, we prefer | do so; meanwhile, interminable regulations and | rescuers of the fugit! specia! eral distin. | over With a smile,) had the same exorable firmness. | setting up mission against mission, altar against | by-laws, of a very complicated eharacter, were B. L. Higgins call 4 sworn—I reside in Sy- | stood bebind the inner door; Mr. Cobb sai and special character in compliment to several distin. | ‘5 Prineces Mathilde had the most perfect man: | sitar, Church against Church—and all for the sake | framed, calculated to confuse the clerks, to’ cause | racuse; am*ene of tho aldermen of that clty; was | me I had better put, the club 5 he was Yoremost stood the fon Robert J. Walker, the dis: | ner ever acoomplished by education, tact, and caro, | of showing that we are too proud, or too State- tion to the public, and to occasion delay in the | requested by Deputy Marshal Allen to assist in | Jeaning against the front wall of the at the ti hed American financier, late Secretary of the | combining at once the ity of the queen, the | ridden, to recognise the existence of a Church | transmission of despatches. Jt is unnec tostate | preventing a rescue or disturbarce in the case of | time, two or three feet from the hall ape it was at Uni oo iy 4 The fame Pa grace of the woman of Rshion, and the jeyous | which is our own daughter. So long as intercom that for forwarding intelligence a certain fee has to Jerry, the fa itive alave, on the 1st of Oct. inst., at ben baisg ie o pn ae Raenenaiees preceded v soporte were jimplicity of thi irl. munion was a matter of paper and talk, Canter- | be paid, but it might not be eu uous to remar! Syracuse, betore Commissioner ine; I was at the ; statesmen, andin Mr. Peabody he found a.congenial spirit, |" ™PUCitY oF the young g bury made a civil, ifa distant, bow to Washing- thetn0 iyearantes whatever is wien for its due de- | feot of the stairs when Jerry was drawn down by re ; the lights were then burning ; did not nable financier. great merchant,:, noble Amercan, who | The Knglish Church in the United States. | ton; but when talk is to bo interproted into a living | livery, nor axy money returned, or compensation | white and blask men from the Commissioner's office Seoputete Sometimes bn Saree rp ar Mweg a t rom the London Chronicle, Sept. 19.) % setlon, we shrink inte our iusalar—tasslenee ol made for p= sad megliquaes- Every clerk is | the first time be was rescued; I know one of the of admiration, to do all in bis power to render the sqjoura One of the fow events in the recent ecclesiastical | we all it, or imbeoility We cannot think that empowered to refuse any message, the tenor of | black men; was informed his name was Hornebeck; light; don’t know whether he ‘Americ ‘agrees saceti < | history of our country on which we can look back | the American Church, which has a corporate and h might appear revolutionary or dangerous to | after they got him to the bottom of the stairs, a | 0m the floor or on a chair; | was out of the the Gator scinesty oh eek nae os Reecleees eve | wh entire satisfaction, is the solid fact that some- | syrodieal existence, will permit this matter to pass | his judgment, ra in fely Srotected white man and two negroes lifted him on his feet fa lights until I got within « eg We get cp—end the company was oll Asnerieon, beers how we did transmit the Episoopate to the Ameri- | Or without a scrious and dignified remonstrance to against all spiteful ene’ and told him to run, and they all went off together; lights were burning; and soul. Several good speeches were delivered. In Eu- | can Church. Grudgingly, perhaps, the gift was, in | |ambeth. tric wire, covered with gutta persha, was laid seve- | I followed till they got to the iron bridge at Mul- hirty persons in the room at rope, Americans are Americans; there is no thought of | one sense, bestowed; but it was well-timed as to the ee ral feet under ground. But alas! the Prussian go- | berry street; | saw Jerry when he was brought ; the lights are three feet apart ; | could not party or geographical divisions. Mr. Walker's speech | future, if not asto the past. Years of misgovern- | The Consells-Generaux of France and the | yernment is not omnipotent, and if in its pow dg back to the police office, @ brick building, where | see the face of the who put out the lights; In tho convisisl dee; All the. Ameriseas im Magiena' | mete ond campaigns of Rereer than civil , Constitution, above ground the very dogs bark at it, in its sub- | the examination was resumed; as he came tothe | vhey were turned off slow; think the man’s face was five ovr Minister the credit he deserves for bie edeaires | were at errr! t Gipem the Londen Smee, Bap). 18.) terraneous regions certainly the very rats gnaw at | office before the Commissioner, a great many | towards the east; he had no hat on; saw s maa Feet Mn pcttiotic iealecy for the American | Of political union. The victors asked a boon; and | Of the eighty-five Conseils. Genéraux which have | it''The gutta percha coveriug turned out to a:- | rushed up and halloced rescue him; one white man | reach up with his hand near or on the cock ; saw mame. He. as also the President, pen foo distinguished | the defeated were placed in the ful position of | just completed their annual deliberations in the | tract the ‘gastronomic propensities of the field rats, | took oft bia coat, and said, take him away, rescue | but one bard up ; think the man was on the outside men at home, were not b. The New York He- being the spiritual benefactors of those whom they | departments of France, seventy-nine have, under | }y whose voracious appetite and sharp teeth the | him, calling upon the crowdto rescue him; there | of the justice’s desk ; @ man might face say direo- Rat, also, came in fog oy of deserved eulogium | had failed to subdue in the field. Thus the ori one form or another, reeorded their desire that the telegraph bas suffered incessant destruction. A | was agreat crowd of people in front of the office, | tion he bad a mind to; have known Mr. Cobb by Mr. Peabody expressed himself highly yleased with the | of the connection between the Anglican and Anglo- | present constitution of the republic should be | siecial mechanism has been invented to detest the | considerable noise oan mah threatening and de- | sight five years or more ; I sawa hat in the office whem extent superiority of its reports, and at the far- | American Churches, apart even from the direct and | revised and altered; two rejected a preposition made | injured places, but, scarcely repaired, the indefati- | nunciation of the officers; at about seven in the | the office was which [ shouldthink be to influence which it #0 wisely and judiciously exer- | immediate relations of the two communities, was | to them to the same effect: three refused toenter- | cabie enemy has made » fresh breach at another | evening, saw them breaking in the windows; saw | Mr. Cobb; he told me next day he had sent for it ; ‘bieh none a a peel eg Be others, also, | exactly of that character which gave the most | tain political questions not strictly within their | Point, and proved himself more troublesome and | stonesin the office, thrown in every few minutes | James M. was the first man I saw come younn hind axeena New rane eee wi bridge, cu. | Promising omens of intercommunion and perfect | legal functions; one only, that of Vaucluse, demand- | cyasperating than the most crafty demagogue un- | through the windows; I got into the office about @ | into the room ; a tuasel with him not see Tremed the ‘company, and it was pleasing to hear the | €quality. Other considerations helped to cement | ed that the constitution should be y revised | Ger direct orders of the Central Revolutionary | quarter before seven: | spoketo police Justice House | Cobb at the time ; I was pretty 5 Clapp came sound of a voice, and the copious flow of eloquence, | ® mutual ge understanding. Contreversially the | with a view to the consolidation of republican insti- | Committee could be. Instead of devising means | and officer Ormsby to go with me out to catch those | in before the lights were put out; I him ; whieh we have heard so often at Tammany Hall, echoing | two Chi helped to support each other. Either, | tutions. On the other hand, in the department of | fr counteracting these lamentable delays and con- | who were throwing the stones; we went out upon | don’t recollect that any one assisted me ; there was here in the rich saloon of the Star and Garter. ‘The fol-.| when reproached with its isolated position, could | the Loire Inferi esolution was carried directly | stant interruj pains appear to be taken to | the steps infront of the office; saw stones thrown, | seme loud talking; I have no doubt but that it was lowing are some of the names of the Americans and | point with satisfaction to the millions ruled in dis- | favorable to the restoration of hereditary and tradi- t ‘and to make it permanent. | but could not tell by whom except by one nogre Mr. Cobb who put out the lights; don’t know others. as invited who were present:—-The Hon. | tinct sees by bishops holding the same doctrines, | tional monarchy, and the gentlemen of Brittany in is made the central depot of all telegraphic | whom we caught afd took in the office; several tried | Whether any other man stood near wr th to put ‘RB, J.-Waiker, late of the ; Hon, Ash- | py f if. . The © h of Eng- | thus took jens once more’! oat open decla- > taking him in, but we succeeded; [ | the lights out; did not soe Chas, como ‘mith, late Minister from Texas; the Mr. 0 ut not of the same empire. hurch of En, communication from Posen, Bromberg, and Stettin, | to prevent our g him in, 0 succeeded; " »b Ipvormetiy British Minister to the Brasils; Gon, NoNett, | 82d could not be reproached as being @ mere insu- | ration of fidelity to the crown and hostility tothere- | on the one hand; from Cderberg and Breslau on | remained in tho office till the doors and windows Po ' ° ee Rep ut once. I had raised the Once ibridee we Se. Becks, of Mom Korky Me: | lar political machine, for its bishops were “in full | public. If these discussionsare to be regardedas® | th» other hand; from Hamburg as well as from | wero broken down, and thecrowd rushed in; the club to strike the man who was coming in at the Geo. P Me Hiddie, U, 8 Commissioner; Mr,Law. | communion” with more than thirty prelates of the | fair trial ofstrength, and s correct expression of the | Vrankfort and Leipzig; and lastly from Vorriers | Orst 1 saw come wore two negrocs; they came hal : Cobb a requested to assist the Mar- } rence, Jr , of the U. 8. Legation; Mr. Colt, of pistoi cele- | great western republic. convictions and opinions now pe: the French | and Aix-la- Chapelle. A despatch from Frankfort | in at the north door window, with clubs or bars, | Peel; Ce merely said, “Young man, you had , ; Mr. Corbyn; Mr. Curtis, of Baltimore; Mr. Brown, | Upon every sort of ground, and under every as- | nation, they exhibit the most ext state of | to Calais, instead of going the direct road, has to | « great deal of hallooing and yelling at the time; | better put down that club. Clapp had aclub; L of Providence, ke ke. %.&W. | pent, |. gene: {, and polemical, one | affairs we ever remember to hare witnessed. Here | travel'a ow hundred miles out of tho way, via | they immediately attempted to break down the | told him that he must Keep out, oF would put hue fa the duty, of | is powerful, free, and enlightened country, living | j, ibe f door and tion ating the police office from | Ut; he re he thought I was in small business ; he ‘and her would think it was the interest, if not the duty, po Berlin, where an immense pile of reta: mes- parti separating tl ice office from Princess Mathilde and her Surroundings | she two great Churches of the Anglo-Saxon race, | under institutions entirely the result of its own votes | sgyeg js constantly accumulating. At the present | a back room where Jerry was with the offizers. | he also he have the or die, or iy ° “4 on each ore of the Atlantic, to keep om the best | and the work of its own representatives, and profess- | a Cment, that most frequented portion of the line | ‘Then James M. Clapp, who was epj in afar- | Something to that ofiect Mr. Cobb me to put Panis, + 1951. | possible terms with each other. And if on either | ing to exercise, by universal + an absolute | between Berlin and Magdeburg is broken; and in | nace formerly, broke into the soul window | down the club before app tpoke; Clapp spoke Some days since I was pacing up and down the | side it would be more becoming to relax a point of | control over its own destinies, in which, nevertheless, | consequence, delay, irregularity, and uncertainty | with an axe; he then came in with a club; John | When he was coming in ; not said a fe: order, or to give the wall in way of canonical | upon consulting the whole nation in its provincial as- with regard to ‘all el i commento tion throw; Jones, one of the assistants of the officers, clinched | 8™ything to Clap; were sasphall » a . . lect a t smooth pavement of the Champs clysses, | Sts 0 it if the business of the Church of Eng- | semblies, not one dopartmentcan be found distinctly | Gory bas arisen, ‘Another bad arrangement ts, | him; Clapp said let. go of me, wo aust have the ; [told Cobb that down the window: time ; which, thought isnet the, pone land to be as him that serveth. In our position we | to express its confidence or satisfaction in the exist- | thas through despatches are st to givewayto | slave, or negro, he has got to come out; they hada | Would put the club over hishead ; he said he guessed peculiarity which Paris has above every other | uan afford it. Weare richer and older than our | ing form of government, and an immense majority | intermediate memages, whilst t pe § mm | tussel; about this time lights were turned off; 1 | I wouldn’t, and told me not to sity. One never gots at a wrong time to Paris, for | daughter ; we know that — has its peculiarities, | bas not besitated to affirm an absolutely — has justly and tainly, and with the best result, | can’t tell who it was, but I had just before seen [ra | thing like that; did not see Cobb assist to kecp the though they may not bethe identical carriages or | 424 if American Churchmen were not laudably | principle. It may bo inferred that the se- | Siwaye been adopted in the management of the | 11. Cobb sitting where the maui stood and no other | men out of the offies ; don’t recollect that cn td dontzous of Daring ihele own, lngitimete elaine tn. -nine departments which votes for what | diligence and the railway. But through despatches | man near him ; he sat within the enclosure picket- | Sid anything more; | went to the same pretty women required by a certain set, | derstood and acknowledged, they would form, in ‘med the revision of the constitution, with m0 | a1 generally sent from station to station, causing | ed off for the police justice, and where he sits when | times to request Mr. James to let persons in; the there aroalways, to a stranger, # plentiful supply | this particular, a remarkable exception to what | qualification in favor of republican government, | sy jinmense loss of time, there being twenty-six | engaged in his official business, and which is nearly | door swings into the office to the east < could see i , id in fact vote for som different from the " - ; | & portion of the police office when James of both, and amusement enough of every kind.— | setmsto be a charecteriatio of thelr race, |. | Sepublie's and although it wright be dificult or | *t#tions between Berlin and Verviers alone; most | under the gaslight; Cobb had been theresometime; | 0 Poriioe, Of Sou, Pola 8 James opgned Very diffe is London ; let him try it in Septem- ell, et, > = of the officers are unable correctly to work | there s' ¢ backroom where . oo portion desk, ery rent mn ; try with the American Church. is to say, an Eng- | impossible im most cases to by an equally | More's apparatus, which is alone capable of trans- | officers and Jerry were; after the lights were put g : ro west side | dent know whether bor. He-will find the grass growing in Belgrave | lirh clergyman may, for two whole Sundays, per- | large melechy what that something ls yet we have | mitting messages from one extreme to the other. | out in the front office, two pistel shots were fired b: ‘ob before Jerry ; the men were uare, and the well watered road of the ring in | mit an American to officiate in his | this undeniable fact—that the fe of France are | The figures are not sufficiently known by the clerks, | « large colored man, near the window; he then just coming in at the time the lights were pat outs nm Pa wuiltless of the mark of one horse's | Church. An American bishop has once or twice, | living under institutions which 16-17ths of them | who consequently ever inquire whether they have | vanced a step or two and fired again; then two or | don’t recollect Leguen come in win oy pnt reve "a we hear, jostled lawn sleeves with those of the mn and repudiate as adverse to their _— ri tly understovd or not, heavy fines being inflict- | three shots were fired from the back office; the | dows; there were no n bare to wean: the or carriage 1. As we paced along, of | «Bench; and we ask our sister Church in,ber re- | interests and repugnant to their personal . of for incorreet intelligence, which are Seducted | crowd rushedin when the lights wore put out, and | ###h was broken; saw good of the man’s eourse we looked into all the carriages stationed sentatives—to dinner. We permit them, with a | It is not easy to perceive whatfnir or practical reply | from their scanty salaries. How little the | commenced breaking in ‘and partition | face who put out the lights; thought it was Mr. bear the side walk, many of which contained one diseourtesy, to stand at our allars—perhaps can be made by the orgaus and leaders of the re- officers care whether the public make use of | which s¢ a them from the negre’ Jerry ; (sky tro bnstatare an goeral Appearance; Mr. Jue caleche, | 0% the same generous principle which the bishop of | publican to this overwhelming demonstration | the telegraph or not, is best illustrated by | the long bars of iron, clubs, and & long | Cobb stood on the south side of the window where or two indies. One carriage, © dark blue *+ | London indicated when he suggested that the for- | of Cert for either the republic is the govern- | the conversation of a gentleman, held last week | plank; at this time I ran to the front door window came lined with white watered silk, and drawn by two | cignecclesiastics, who lately visited England, might | ment of public opinion or othing, and its very | gt the Hamburg ‘Telogee office, where he had | and told them to stand back or they would get shot; of u I grey horses, who chewod their silver bits and pawed beailowed to have their say somewher9, just fo existence must come to a: when the fears it bas | to wait his turn, with rector of that bureau: | a short thick-set negro threw a stone at my head, | time with Clapp; should think the a my were Sunday because “ s00t lea inspired or the delusions as ereated are allayed | ” h ; he ex! ‘until the crowd bad. the ground with impatience, was surrounded by | () country.” yy ~ ee s0 soon to leave P Most despatches, Presume sald the stranger, wale mies me; he threw another, which hit me tinguished got boll wa orfourd out. It is imporsible to conceive that a funds ‘sure, by this tim assailants across the office ; Clapp is nota several gentlemen who stood on one side, whilst | not quite refuse our on Nady by yh ~ great nation will permanently submit to be go- te ea "a Tobe « Then you | the the pare ae hal called ey mistake for Cobb; don't recollect sesing any ‘ others on horseback formed a sort of garde d'honneur English living if they can get the cheap sacceda- | verned by institutions which are thus assailed on principal regulator on | raised a club and attempted to strike me as | came | peréon but Mr. Cobb with his hat off in the 7 t in this neum of a private Act of Parliament to authorise | « oceasion that admits of an expression of the re Lord, yes,” | out; Oliver Shuart caught him and ted the | Clapp seized club and I him by the on the other. ‘There was but one lady in this car- | Sut", Sroceeding. Ina word, the two Churches | public will; and, indeed, institutions thus assailed reply, * all day.” A private | blow; at this time the assailants out with | throat; I told him I would keep him, and that he riage, wrapped ins largo red cashmere,loaning back | ar», wo repeat, : a full comi ion;”” but in what b company would find it to their own interest to satie- | the Jorry; while in the office I received a | might soratch and bite if he Lp | { went out of the im the corner of the carriage; hor feet, over which | this fulness consists, it woul hard to discover, demand of the public, but Mr. Von der H blow from a club struck by a white man; | ran after | door with bim on the platform, and then went round the fell the ample folds of grey silk and black lace eapeeiatly after a recent illustration of the phrase. the Minister of Commerce, and Mr. Nottebohm, | the crowd which had Jerry; came up with them on i le i itely called attention to certain proceed- the chief director, are e indifferent about | the sidewalk, about two rods from the office; as [ flounces, were on the cushion of the front seat. I got ings of Palmerston with respect to the British the accommodation ixepPenerecd, No wonder then | came up, Mores Summers, of the Onondaga -_ sala 2 iow of thors bad et 3 Ro near enough to distinguish the features, and beneath chaplainey at Shanghae. The New York Church- that the public make as little use of the telegraph | ard, struck me on the breast with his hand man speanmnty hen fame loo the white.crape bonnet, surrounded bya cloud of | man, of 30, which we gave an oxtract as posible, and that re of last shoved me off the sidewalk into the gutter; the erow sy hey went fecogals: hich on Wednesday, throws a vory une: light on should not have been by the receipts. tse time saying, “ don’t interfere,” again started | into the room | saw ‘gins; J brown curls, 1 oa & thee whieh Red yours be. | oe ater. t appears—eo Bishop Boone formally | © nts to contest a sentence would other- | complaints, however, becoming extremely numerous | to get ahead; Summers then caught me by the lapel | the to see Justice House others; fore made (en tout bién tout honnewr) & deep im- | announces to tho whole Amerioan Church—that | wise be irresistible. Thus, only six of the Conseils | ang mt, the authorities bave-et lac delded on of my coat and jerked me off the sidewalk into the ph ciees Pat out as I went out the pression on me. I understood instantly the cause | Shanghae, the place in which Lord Palmers- | Gcnerauz carried their vote for revision in the form laying ‘& second wire aboveground, a consider- | gutter; the crowd then parsed by with Jerry; | fol- | °° ° of the erowd around, and paused myself to gaze tom teers pas, gum metropolitan rights, pn Ne =f implied the re-election of Louis | gbie portion of which, especially the line between | lowed after and got by them at the car house de- iene 004 Oe Bete, this face which time had rather ombel- | isthe seo of an Am bishop—a bishop, Pp oye ig) A) the Berlin and Magdeburg, is ¢: }d to be completed Bets and kept very near those who were carrying 10 THE EDOM OF THE KEW TORR upoa With thes for aught we know—a missionary bishop, we are | of the article 45, which renders him St | at the end of next month. amount required | Jerry, till get to, the foot of the stairs irenower ths La lished than deteriorated. With susceptibi- gind to —a bishop of some seven years’ stand- | the next election. Tho far greater number con- | for its construction will be advanced by government, | led up to Dr Hoyt’s ie aan said | Sin -—While Dubiio attention, te dieooted ' lity to eer tetera a ary. prelate in Chine, and of four eg ape dey Cry dhe Sp yf since the rum granted by the legislature has long let us carry him into Hoyt's coffee: «colored | speedy arrival i this 2a; to tions u ~ | years’ mission more credit constitution should “ ince been expended. in wen’ door, fiuenee of mg glenee, ond seraed bee OS ELT? ‘e the, American, tthe tare lagrace tothe be po ly ‘The Times and the Dai ‘Navs, ansious to pro locked there Wana light nthe ofc! the ‘fies Rei 'and enc and vs vr or aint on me. dream I Church) —» arning, cour- instrament . This demonstration , | cure jest possible mer carried on ‘west 5 of some years the oey whem fom a tet, udemant, and inte zeal. Sach are Dr. | thorefore, preved even —n ee os cantile comment Phere endertal ‘at a consider. | ren street, to in ton or fifteen feet Frrpaocd to be ralaed nla bob ake the Uberty of Dr. made indellivle impres- | Boone's qualifications for his office. Very recently | was anticipated, but possibly I . The | able to furnish in their publications | Lyman Clary’s office, then halted ; some of them of ropgesting ® grand of @ 2, id remember an old man, re- accredited a Dr. Smith, of Magdalen Legitimists took part in it, t they in- | the ‘changes of Vienna, Berlin, Hamburg, and ulred where is the wagon ; where are the horses ; a , be immediately given ; the which, nothing; who had seen and spoken leveria ; t to General Changarnier as | }; tie: men de- | tn heen thon © salute 5 y | St the seme time that it will increase the F aothings po of Vi in Hong Kong. We | oline at prosen ir Frankfort the preceding day but this de- | in am o.¢ horse and b ey, I rd 7 Paka Ty ~4 tion markable with her but once. she bad ® royal memory, not about tuire whether, in the above their for the Presidency; the Or | sirable been accom, amount, will afford an py Fete a aan meen | ea ay ay i Petey ua | ei a hare | fb te agency a ae 5 + | or 80} ir, OF , 4 what com ine. ff from t t “ and beokoned me to approach. ‘Vo you remember ve keow absolutely nothing, except that fe before he | Prince de Joinville and “ke Dutshews of Orleans. places bee eeaan three o'clock PM aupive that evening at my t's palace,’ said she, “! | was consecrated, he wrote a little book of unmiti- | Prebably the members of the Conseils Genéreaut, | at Verviers invariably in the course of the next day, was alittle girl, | I eg older, though | gated nonsense—in every sense, the very smallest | belonging, as they do, tothe upper classes of society | & speed with which railway might hav'nt; come seo us at the Elysee; per- | contribution to a questionable class of religious | in most of the departments, are personally less fe- compete. Surely, the English journals ought to be literature that we ever fell in with. Still he is bishop | vourable to Louis Napoleon than the mass of the | sssisted by the German governments in thetr expen: ght ‘ er Davacs of Victoria, and Dr. Boone is bishop of Shanghas. | peasantry who will record their votes at the general | sive endeavor to publish the continental exchanges | the partrer of Doctor Hoyt; it appeared to be abay d f Here then is a case “of fall communion”—two | election. and prices of fi at the earliest possible period, | boree, switch tail, not vi large; the negro was ‘pec precirely the relative | yer ments justly complain. A step in this direction teapect ‘ a the missionary work should devolve on him, whilst | situaticn of parties most favorable to the outbreak | weyld poe ay bem P Some years ago, the great object of all viiters | he desires to leave to Bishop Smith's jurisdiction to Florense, was to objain an invitation from the | the European corgregations, whether Americana bishops using the samo language, and substen- as it may, the most alarming sym in | since the German houses established in Eng’ put into the wagon ; the driver raiséd up in ‘ tl orable evening, when I had first soon the “{ > . -A.4 ‘a mit thas Yecsing, powerto ssaepes 0 tomb patty on the = farce ard Morchente trading with at, bas LL. 4 = Saerae at ful } i Over necanuns Late 9 By? socaly tarown out proudo Queen of Paris, if not of France. Here opens ao tnen just the relations of them aud | sile of the majority, and the consequent temptation Sblee why Eocene tamteae Sesenstionn | the foes | paw of Blames te ce whee PUBEY + | of employ in be, ot the Ret frost t adviee these they =e i = rpg vGriainiy arate 4 Gor verges Coes om ret souige 7 Ge insette oregano Oe a etes in the money market, and to deprive it of teat the — day leaw ever at the Arcade ; he said pepe cons ‘ieee {ommend tra connection with @ ishop, comes forwa: ith a ion. a reir obe clic Li | gambling character of which the continental go- | to me there was considera’ cit K ‘ Rel q jon, Bout! great attention and well founded admiration and bithep of a missionary church he proposes that all | #ubtful » character. Perse 8 b we Of wares te cn eee ‘ojeredt Saletan eel bes to gece Boltinere wig ins saya trien governn ent tbe trouble of | Lut I theug bt be wos rather faat in throwing me off | im thes weeks they wil be repaid ail their ‘continuance of civil war; for parties resort to | sending police agents on Ubange, and the unplea- | the sidevalk.ond erked him if he thought | was go- | **1ehees Othe eaters pay. ms when they axe too Wowk iwenivrye Masi autho: | pay EARCHMSGS Ph Gsvesivnally ipmprisgping’ tye | ing tg \whg ihe begre wmep fegq iygus, Ng babe vo A RURAD BY dilly BAN HT PRL MAS en a a Se A

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