The New York Herald Newspaper, December 16, 1851, Page 3

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Lenden, and the late Werld’s Fair, Do: scribed by a Lady of Ni York. The following lotter is from Miss AnaBeLta ee ap Lei need 2 CELEBRATION OF 178 INDEPENDENCE. Cranxe, one of the Principals of the Young Ladies’ baronial hall or palace room. OF 29K CP REIS Y. Seminary, No. 10 Rutgers street, addressed to the slab upon the top is of onl ad of marble, pupils of her sctiool. Miss C. has been in Eng. | [eeamassive, in front of which is eurved the rose por ican iy peprvay etre there, Tish, ran" Elbe on ‘one of and has improved her time to best advantage, im viewing and noticing those things in which she Lt I Ans. co. bet Knees, she takes most interest. It will be perceived that | gho ig Leicester's lawful wife. Tai. door, on one she is @ close observer, and her description of arti- | side, hasa of Sir Philip Sidney, on the other cles which sho inspected at the World's Fair is | that of Sir Walter Raleigh. The one on the left rs . Mi very minute, acd calculated to interest our ladies, PA RGRAY paler pee a. fh cao discovered his se- NAVAL INTELLIGENCE, dic., dic, die. Herald, ‘5th ef October, has aon ee at ee aya New Yorn of whom many hundreds im this city have ressived | arm over him—for she has just Ag rather neatl: their education under the instruction of the author | cre’ marriage with Amy Kobsact. On one side of ixaay. It is aamall ised poper, 7 | Ghore ebuadans, "Ih the log ole sadathe somsehiag like | ofthis letter this door is a figure ot Shakspeare, on tho other printed, and seems to be conducted with enterprise. t hundred thoussnd gallons have been shipped from Loxpoy, Oct. 10, 1851. | that of Sir Francis Drake. ‘Yhe railing behind Appexed are extracts therefrom, wi will give | Liberia ; of this quantity, about one hundred thousand By this time you will wonder why | have said | the slab Bas tho scene of her ee sonaave ‘the public some ides of the progress the African | gallons have been shipped to the United States; the rest | nothing of the great Exhibition—and curiosity may inte acts, mounted on Yad gg nd oe : he scale of nations. we gone to Nasepe, She pramadinny ts, # Scant | induce you to ask what there ishore? It would be | #94 ol er robes of state. robe is ‘Zepublic is making in the seal 01 ply for the next six months will be at least Gfty percent | Gift uy to anewer such & uestion, but it would be now tobe rd 2 the a oh Sa THREATENED WAR. “Cau demand. We from $70 | still more difficult to say what there is not, for it is | the queeny sitting on the very horse she Ttis A oy by good suthority, thet King Bromley Phe pete ab for it. fcc) rag hp ea “1 anepiteme of the mt When you consider that to | °2 that oocasion, or rathor the skin of the identical jus chief, ‘and Kis s are barricading thelr towns— ly of this article does mot mect the demend walk completely around the tables, you have com- | *timal, stuffed. I have not yot seen Kenilworth Be former lives on the B¢ Paul's river, wt hin & stone's STG ee eadaee eeltniae in alte tad vaoee Ls cot 0s pre- | pleted @ iN omit of yyy plgenee ee ‘these tables | Castlo, which is in Warwickshire, near tho ruins throw ‘irginia settiement, sent, aystem im our trade. We hope soon to | are piled with ‘fruits of all kinds, in coats, or | of the Castle of Warwick the pmaker. They ho miles of Ie baok from the river. They give as seceded ure meroantile principles; then | pratt oF husk, frene every Gling Tee te soon tas OF | are a little off the main route from toLiver- id before our foreign readers. a 7 1, but I shall endeavor to seo them before [ leave mers of an attack from Gatoembah. All who are ac- upon,”’ you can more easily conceive the extent o! Ee quainted with affairs in this country, k i thas no For the present, it is well to know that It is largely on T (J 7 ‘Dgland. the inerease. f the contributic ug hiy John Bull, the of eed be entertained. Ga- Co calo ee, thelively Frenchman, Bestdes the si in the main aisles, there is Zhombah ia too well convinced of the power of the g0- Raval, MATTERS. Spaniard, the sober italian the ewarthy one room devoted to the wonders of the chisel Cri- ‘The United States ship Germantown, Uap. J.D Knight, y t to attempt to molest immediate!: 4 tics seem to award the in this department to J the vicinity aK towns aad Saper ie fact, it 2, | bearing the broad penmant of Commodore M.A. ¥. !aval turbaned Turk, the jowoled Indian and the tea de: part: . &e., sailed from Monrovia on the 8th of July; al Chinese—all meet together, as the children of | Austria, whose ‘attpact crowds, even of the 0A Niven \aino shiefinin, who ives in gneeter Sees of the tie United steamship John Adams, Gop vBearvel Bisee! me common parent. “te ecoms to me that this | uneducated in matters. One statue meng Government than Gatoombah his town was once de | we understand it is the intention of the Commodore, on project, so great in ita design, and so suspicious in | these is of groat-yalue—it is that of a vestal veiled. Have ‘nim to be the mest quiet chic! nour jurisdiction,” | Bis way down the oat to cal,for a anort time, at the | Eg resuite, will redound more to. the oredit of the | You wish to remove the curtain from her face, thet him to be the quiet chief inourjurisdiction. | ceveral, ports of the republic; thence to the south coast, RepahPrinenele cated it, than allthe boasted | you may view moredistinotly her beautifal features; It seems that Kai Bucha, who is represented by all to | 10 Guest of alavers. 0} rince who 5 bry "4 ‘and insolent, lately built a very large thatched | “™aiNCr te Pints ist or the offlcers attached to the vements of the Edwards, or the Henrys, er all | but as you make the attempt, you Pareelve, to your the roof of which is in the form of « suger loaf; | Germantown: Commander JD Kaight; Lieutenants &, | the trophies taken by Nelson or Wellington, for it | admiration, but ent, that this, too, is ‘when such roofs are made, the custom is, to place at the | p'irnompson, Jas H. North, Geor Coloocoressis, and | Will teach the nations to learn war ne more, by | marble. This exq specimen of art is aba sro top of the roof pot of mative manufacture; Kia Buchs, Geo Whee ers; Fleet Surgeon, Wa. F. Patten; Acting | uniting them in one common bond of brotherhood. | perty of the Duke of Devonshire, the most wealthy the custom, substituted a brass ket- | Doser, ‘RW. A Surgeon. A.'N. Bell: | | am not sure but it may prove amore direot moans | nobleman of England. The Italian deparimont He of the value of five dollars. Gatoombs and Ban-quse | Acting Master, IM. MoAraen; hipmes, Joke Tay- | of christian ! i ffords comparatively few specimens of this art. inquire of ‘ing pagan nations, thar that of sending | @ etn nt st fans ig | Hn Spe od See ier nga sg | Punaa rD ee yggteartnesenll | oat a pedaeks PD oil pope pn ge get catawain, Joby Barrows; Conner, Wm. Hi. | doubt been copied into our own journals, seems to | he had nothing else raga of notive, for there is had heard of any one before him, presuming to depart beutanaeeidiet ini tie corroberate my views in this respect. An ambas- | one inlaid table of wood, which is nowhere equalled Soom vo ancient a usage; and desired to kaow if he wished ‘The following is a list of the officers of the yohn | ‘ador from Nepaul, who, whon here, was very | in the whole exhibition. The pieces are so small nderst: bad wealthy and ps : iced by ¢! 01 ival at 4 that a magnifying glass hangs on the frame, the Soden tee fo Ta Re Adems:—Commander, Samuel Barron; Lieutenants, | much noticed by the Queen, was, on his arrival a! fog ease pe Ta Henry French, George T. Sinclair, James A. Doyle. | home, found worthy of death, for ha eaten and | better to ‘maanded, that Ss Lge one rig ene Johnson It. Carter. Issac G@. Btiaw; Acting Master, James | sorted with some beneath his caste. sentence | an octagonal shape, and contains three millions of wali vee Higgins; Acting Surgeon, William B. Sinclair; Purser, | was paseed uy ‘and but for the intercession | pieces, the arms of England oooupying & space of aes a ee Ao ce taeae oiniat | Aled A, Belkoapy, Audstant Surgeon, Jamee'T, Hour’ | Sat ogtishaan, Would have been eurrcl tavo | Hix iguare Inches, having 55,00) poe sone. ‘The Bromley is dependent upon Kia for advice ani | io: 4! Maren O Ontebeii Ghitios A. Baboock. execution. dried and preserved fruits of Spain are very tempt- ponder ay Rr i Deh aA Baber, James R. Koche; Boatswain, William Blaek; Gun. You enter the Crystal Palace from the street at | 8 to look upon. . John Owins; Carpenter, William Hyde; Sailmaker. | the south transept, and such # scone as meots your | Sut Egland—England, whether we view her as a Ipet of thet rat, and the reply he made to it; at once | Wiliam Mahoney; Captain's Clerk, Camel Batron, Jr.” | view, oan scarce be gonceived. It seams more iike | whole orn soparate parts, yot stands out im bold THE INTERIOR AFFAIRS. # fiction of the imagination than an actual reality. | relief from the dark bi nd, where must waeant last, we noticed the assembling, in our town of [rom the Herald, October 1.) The broad aisle, whose roof of glass seems to touch | place all the other nations in this Sania of arts. “the chiofs of the Little Cape Mount territory ; and that A few days since, we had s conversation with a chief | the aky, is adorned with tall fruntaice, constantly | Among her articles of taste, Shs display of they came at the sumwons of the President. to give au | of the Vesse tribe respecting the, trade ot the interior. | playing (one through glass so contrivedas to give | jewelry attracts great oro of who, like oceunt for the attack that had been made on the town | He professed to have considerable knowledge of it, and ¢ water a fairy shape, statuary, plants, and large | myself, have never before seen @ estates con- Stipulatioas wiih the government. We alzo informed | beyond Bo-Poro thecountry is thloky settled, andthe | {£208, "Bich, standing upon the grounds, could not | tained in one casket of jewels, || The colleotien me nt e in! 01 oro, wi our > au] r Scene tae a coats tok Geeailited ¢0, | inlabitents ase’ & treding people, trade of that | be eutdown. The tones of the great organs, which P i is the te property of Storr & Morti- xeturn home, to meet here again in November next, | country does mot find its.way bere, owing to the ra- | T° ore ee Soe soll Seee 4 She, tty arenes, b paged: vin ‘Llaten, yy, sine yopulan eer “hen it te propored to have present the chiefs of Grand | pacteus ane of the people of Bo-Poro. some sofour | greeting the eA F toorcmncata alia endut tetol, | that thoy aru the Queen's jewels, becdace the mess Po Mount and Bugaree. The objes voces a ees es minent ornament is a crown, and cortainl; resume, final end to the petty am- | brought into our market, and that it was through the | added to the hum of voices from the busy multi- | pro ly a ay theese hie are, abeeted Bo-tore people that the trade with the rich interior | tude, Produoe what may not be inaptly termed “the eo pre poet ee Trg ta their 5 a e 0 }. qotemureno anevurage ahd inctense oommacee. No doubt Coming from beyond Bo-Pero. travellers necessarily | ™ pei ent the first day in taking a general viow of bies, Rape semge by a necklace, ear rings eed be entertained that any of the chiefs will fail to | have to pass through or near it, and the chances are | |, | Spent the Last Say in tak Ls eel he heat | and” bracelet 1 went vory carly one morn- ‘obey the summons, as they are convinced of the power | ten to one that they fall in with strolling parties of Bo. | the whole exhibition, brite cme oe ost | ing on purpose te examine theso jewols, as [ Sod resources of this government, and they will not | Porians. who either reb or carry them before some of | way to obtain a distinct of the ive merita had found the ‘ase 0 crowded the previous day as ‘Feadily incur its displeasure. Indeed, (f the summons | their head men, and then, under some pretext, they are | of the different nations, was to take each country nlf toprevent me from inspecting them closely, and extended to the Galenas chiefs, it would not have been | compelled to retrace rath with empty intr by iealt, J ooraeled Soe woke of th seem: was _fortanate snongh nse ae one of te owners, "Our ed, that in the | with ey, ivory, F yj i self, will doubtless ‘ ete met en enema | ree Geez nae eee | Fen Many a ela ey il re ation tha | deed with new ideas of the resources of Switaer- | that ho gave me all the information that | desired. ae edged have but # short distance to come, if they had | 6° #4 Tasked him “how it was that there waaa crown Jo preseve peace mong them.cad, if It betas eden s ENamteted route to Liberie—to_ the jouraey they {hoa ret tho srtens of Soaps mememonneas 1 as I among them if they were not the property of the pary, it must send an armed force to assist t! chief- | now ee e 7 and . siadteae: a f and. silverwaxe—Dbut the elegant ween 7” le re was by no mesa Zains who act only on the defensive. The government ‘The oe ive by plunder—shey at 9! uncommon for la to woar hoad-drogses 7n that ~ ir | fenceless tor away everything can find, and | silks, the em! « of which pass for Po py lavryey cp ve ote oy ood tower’ iulowences ond | make the inhabitants slaves, wn French in foreign markets), cloths, ribbons, porce- Pain th, wodehes — ea surprised me, ‘acrifices, before commencing hostilities. It will be well 7e would advise ment to give some attention | lains, and merinos, excited my sasonishment. Ghe for bad a that the loyalty . g- ‘for every Liberian to consider all the relations which can | to the interior—let it send commissioners te Bo-Poro,to | Americans havo been so much prejudiced th favor suaies would allow such an entrenchment upon in | two cities which have given them names, are beat + ich | ‘ifal craft, a are also the Levant steamers ef the belong, that the of fashion, | “me company. But an Amorican coast steamer, th be a te op Medes gad Seem, |S pay Sno bamgedl pot these, is, in pelgt of reth not,” so pupils ma; soon e 5 nsior accommodations, @ galace poly cage ig by Bed by ti ian of the aa ai ot _ b Years since. La a group of girls a the Exh: There are not less than five distinct e@@ dit- tion lately, clad in blue stuff frocks, white round | ferent lines of steam packets that regularly ply capes, and tall linea caps tied round the head with | between Marsolles and tho ether Mediterranean, to thie part of the dreu"as tn aunecsary expones, | POC, a8 far a Malia; aod yet there is no: ice Which might be better bestowed elsewhere. Soar, | fle Vessel of either of the five lines, or st oll pes too, as I have been able to observe, the system of | together, that can compare with the most educating females among the higher classes, is far steam Long Island Sound. infertor our own. Youn ladlenane mostly taught othe sseoad 4 ‘ at home, under the eye of their parents, bya gover- | ‘The Languedoc, » boat of about four bundyed poss, and such masters as they may require. "This | tons, is the crack bost of the ersck line—the Fresh aA is well, as far as it gos, but it does not do enough; vernm. ine—and ii be the strongest, very few families at of the whole number ieving poh phe at smh fe steamer in the the meani to acquire or pursue a complete course study. An English Sa with whom I was lately | Mediterranean. But she cannot, comfortably, ec- gonversing, and who has spent several years in the | commodate more than fifty passengers, and ber United States, but who retains her English pre- y whole days, judices, says, in favor'of the Tesln af aims departure from Naples was delayed six education with them, that our girls become | because ofa gale, which would not have detained « bela “a pnieinine by, being ane ae Yankee steamer, either on the lakes or on the At- ic. Perl re ma} some tru 0 ‘i pom Ay often found such results myself, eae enat, alt mya wes ed some of when I have seen young ladies drilled for public | ‘Be#e steamers are nebo on exhibition of their nog rements. Itold her, how- | At length, however, it was definitively announced ever, that if she could prove that the wo: of | that the Languedoc would leave her moorings, ia America wore corrupted at sohool—if the result | tno of Naples, at 4 P An eo vod that they were leas perfect in character in oy irs oes " oy an aed J Ks omen ae ER she did: And then the cere! aud Sermality jet than L ich nded begged her to point out the trait, and I would yield Thought’ the pet Foe ge general jail de- the argument: She paused, Seslly <figned 20 livery! Such scrupulous and punctilious in- reply. This syutom of instruction gives to Ragtieh vestigations of passports and their visés—suok ladies a peouliarity which a stranger will easily | gauing over of names, sach mustering of pas- detect. Their dress is so different from our own, sengers, such making out of rolls; all that should you mect a who has nots military | this, not to prevent certain dangerous people from it, long curls, and deep flounces, or who has not coming into the kingdem of the Two it but r shawl or collar so worn as to expose the throat, to prevent, peradventure, certain other ns, e8- and pinned with a brooch as large as the of | teemed dangerous, from going out. Not a month one’s hand, you may safely conclude that she | since occurred an illustration of this policy. Youre is not English. At the Exhibition, and in ago, a citizen of Naples fell under suspicion of the other crow places, | have thus endeavored to overnment, and continued an object of surveil- detect my own countrywomen; but, when the until his deceaze. His two sons have re- other day, after having admired for some time the ly, since, endeavored te obtain passports dress and manner of @ lady whe stood near me, | for England or France, but in vain. A few whom I supposed to be an American, Lheard her | wooxs ago, an English merchant, resident at Foogy soapy fron Wie oan: | Nap Sled fee cum Peng, de feel tae y , sumed 08; but, just as they were t stopping must not forget to tell that eng Selle made it 3p) bbe on board the English steamer, they wero all Bloom Lon- . don ; but it will not do—nothing ban be dene here - both inister ch Noaleaena pot a + eed ir 80 long as the Queen, who, it is said, is not proud Pslmersten, was, of course, released ; bat the two of her ancle, wears such long dresses, for the Neapolitans were put to torture, to extort fashions must originate at court. Ido not know | thom the object of their attempted evasion, and who is the Beau Brummel of the gentlemen’s | 1), probably, bo prisoners for life in one of those toilet since the Count D’Orsay left 3 dungeons referred to in Mr. Gladstone’s celebrated have been told that he was as perfeot a model in | jettors. This may scom incredible, but good eu- dress as F po may soe in the windows of any tailor’s | thority assorta its truth Mr. Gladstone shop in London. A of the Count D'Orsay: | inst winter at Naples, for the benefit of - the house in whic Countess of Bl ton | ter’s health. It was supposed he would publish lived is directly opposite to the Crystal Palace, but his impressions, and ashe was known to bea conser- is now fitted up as a place of entertainment, much tive, was believed those impressions would Yike Niblo’s, in New York ; sho has the credit of | 46 favorable to the government, as had been those ® victim to apoplexy, but it is whisper of an English gentleman who had preceded him that ehe died by her ewn ed poison. She | the previous winter. Every facility was given him, hae & ball, or some other gay fete, the | therefore, to examine thoroughly the secret me- night before her death; bat, ore the morning | chanism of the government; and, being an accom- broke, she was in eternity. hat anend for ® | plished Italian scholar, ho freely conversed with woman who had run such a career ! several accomplished Italian scholars now in the Thavebeen now nearly two weeks ia Londen, dungeons of Ischia for political offences. The re- and scarcely @ drop of rain has fallon during the | gq) might have been apprehended; but not less whole of that time ; when the windows of hoaven | ws the astonishment and wrath when his Expose are opened I fear a sad reverse, which will proves appeared ; nor has the indi; been lesa, thas serious detriment to my sight seeing excursions. | Tord Palmerston, his political opponent, should ba vidi the Thames Fante s fow sage ee, have tramemitted the Woche ofscially to every could pags through, and the . is so | Dritish legation and consulate in Europe. “ There is mot a govermment on th. conti- ry , that aged and infiem persons can derive | nent more sleepless wits vigilance than that of et be pe ee orey bests. cannot, the | ferdinand Il. And yet there seems little real cause P cai, iene Moamera going up Baa down ae Ste pongo eri Payee 5 river, that} shoot ico arrows under try reslstangs, commaset the bridges. and soom to say to every | “Way dows tot : thine “a their course-—“ give way”’—woald be apt | seem = a8 to run them down, continuaily. But there are | as in 1821; can deplore very deeply so many brit spanning the stream that the | the Probability that his ma) ety, in imitation of tunnel may be rded more as an object of curio- | the mad boy of Austria, is about depriving them of sity than of ol utility. IT have said that the | the last vestige of right, in taking away a quasi pes Bes streets of London are very broad, and, | constitution. perhaps, there is not to bo seen ia the world a Leaving Naples at 4 P.M., you are at Civita more magnificent business thoroughfare than lte- | Vecchia at 5 A.M. on the next day; and eed gent street, the buildings on both sides of which | again at 4 P.M, onthe next mi at 40’ Yet untarned by the sooty simosphers, tad are | Sather cough and fae anduypdee bobbed about on t untarnishe the sooty atmos; > are | ri ie} A uniform height. Part Hf it sweops rcuni, in | the billows like = cork ons Trond, Amone the form of a crescent, with a clean, Broad pive- | the gers was Bishop Odon, of Texas, WhO ment, along which ladies of rank may constantly | has been ' visiting the Pope, and Antony Bonaparte, Seana shar seta ets Geel | fea tg of ating oa are here galled, wi ir com al le oman in eis a }, fat fol- pee Metldatiy wait their pleasure. Tae | low, like his tousla, Lucien Murat, his face covered with th ela’ they are!" joable to the Neapolitans in 1851 Possibility exist between them and the ative | demand the reason why traders are interfored with om | Of French manufactures as to ke unwillins what they esteem the Queen's prerogative. ‘There ‘Bescon! A be mot too ready to try to influence the | Sovtent beyond Bo-Pere toemcoctage the treganetaetes | cbse any goods not bearing * stamp fe pur | is in this collection, « brooch and ear-ring;, T think i fe weasures. ” 5 poe ra a) I. Seip ecemnte ts en e tevm | hee ca aut aetna, wl bk | iu npc ty dame, leh aa fic measures fall to produce the desired effect then let | | Hereafter we will again refer to this aubjeot } our ob. | down acer. . Os: all | Thore is atill set,with diamond and opal fo trong means be resorted to, The authoriry of the go | Jes they may give it consideration fe ten, oe tetsu | Cowie manute= specim ar eaceeene dae f te ike gure <erament must be feared end fell or there Will bo com | wit be prepared to urge the matter before the tapi, | "2% a tho Frenoh departments yet they have | ¢Bttdl, © precious stone belonging to the qua Sinpaireee fapeng Se Saconient peetios, fare in Deoembey Beak, Refers ihe M*ECHE ( enough else of ‘which they may well be proud ; the sa yisoea ter ei tins eetmatio solees, COFFEE PLANTING. te to com. | ree == only wonder is, that with the instability of their go- pe wpe necklace, bracelet’ ad ear-rings valued at "A gentleman living on the 3t. Pi oy lain -+ REVIVAL OF RELIGION—GREAT OUTPOURING AND | yernment, theycan be so greata people. The LE ¢ 9720, d Quother set, in dia- Dlete, this month, bis goflee planting A He INGATHERING. lish, while admitting the superiority of the Freno a MK Kite ipar)) = ‘estin:ated to be worth Basplentog “his wursery eight thousand plants, | The army of the living God has had battle with the | in articles of luxury, have always r thom as | T1000. ‘These, with « bod , intended to be ‘gan Dre remains to be transp! d about twothou- | powers of cnans, supeestitivn, and Meetotey, ond vie- | pos: no ap ofthe comforts oflife—but aq ese, a bouquet ‘Dr that par Wand more. This is certainly doing well. Indeed, the rests among the ranks of Zion. All pi andglory | they will oMiged to reconsider the matter—for | WFD upon the bosom (but too large for P Danks ofthe noble Bt. Paul’s clearly indicaté that there | toGod. For weeks past the churches in and about Mon- thelr is nothing either for comfort or luxury to pose) consisting of an anemone, a rose and a cartid- ie » good spirit of industry abroad in our land. rovia, and the settlements the banks of the 8t. which they have not attained. Her tural tion, with leaves and buds, contain 60,000 RICE Paul, have been blessed with a wouderfu) outp: of | roductionsshow that France is not iafertor to E: diamonds, those which compose the stamons not the holy spirit. An swful solemnity, for some days, 0 ‘Og: ceeding in ht the 1000th My Our supply of rice is abundant. Two months ago it yh BB mee for some days, | Pind inthatrespect. It ia mot, dificult to see thir | exceeding in weight the 000th part of carat. My twas piling ot $225 a $250 per bushel, and of ready sale 9 ~ poh en a Py ty Seteneed — oye those nations which are mere cyphers in the political | ‘formant says that the Queen’s diamond oalled the at that, How, it can readily be procured at $1 60 per | 5a oe'them a number of the aboriginies. cone the | world, are those which are defient. in agricaltural | ‘Mountain of Light” is wort! diamonds are es- Doshel. | The crops in our neighborhood turned out well | Cfcrts of the wieked one, Ethiopia shall stretch out her | cod manuf implements, and that [ngland, | tated, about £295,000, (or $1,116,000, ) but that Dotil April next, we may calculate on having @ | soar unto dol,” : fr rr) nite States’ oneal” “Mane arti. | itsold, it would not bringhalf that sum. | This jow- Tair supply, at the latter price—unlees, indeed, the de- ‘Our Quaker friends, Mr. and Mrs. Jones, have been | /T##Ce, and th te excel. Many arti- | «Jig shaped like an almond, but is larger than any pana A [ne leeward settlements increases, which is 0% | nolding meetings in ali the towns and villages of the re- cles are exhibited that can only, from their high | butternut we have ever seen—the shelf included. Rae nie metal, Layton ee ae atgest | public they have been able to visit, and we learn, ex. | Prices, find their way a yeneenet Se ‘There is in the French department a set of eme- breve chemgelves highly grated at the attention with | ty, and no doubt many a titled lord has his ey talds and diamonds whieh cnco belon ‘Dushels, to be paid for in cash at $1 per bushel. It wa the their message of love was receit le. | ready on many of the works of art, and when the si , Bh segues LUMBER. Mey thelr labors Me abundantly Blessed.” bol cg eahibition is over, will be the envied pemnere of Rey ese tieths did not yt x ‘tte with pleasure we teoord the safe arrival of a saw —— Fe pc MY Ie Mosaic | er. Conceive pot ge ap po Thon Biggs goat ve ‘Quill in the County of Binoe. I: isa great desideratum ExhiMition of Nebraska Indians. boone phe rag wah left b - a thas tow flowers which you see in our milliners’ shops—I Before the commencement of the raimy season several le he was led to believe, when ome, ti! 1080 v 7 an such as go quite round the head, are want The Rochester American gives af account of an | articles which cost him so much time and labor, | }'° eee eee pana it aspeats nga tho mapig af th | exhibition which took place fa thas eliyen Weanes | would be sold immediately (oot taken amay, forchat broader and fuller at the ears to be made of aver coming dry season, if they will Byey = the | day evening by a delegation of seventeen chiefs | is not permitted), but that he had been here upon wit eaves enamelled 4 emerald--and you have of another rainy season. This is not | warriors, and women of the 0-ma-ha Indians—a expense six months, and as yet sold nothing. I | iho best idoal can give you ef some ef these tha owing to the absence of large timber in our forest, for | tribe residing’in the territory of Nebraska, nearly | comforted him by te! him that he might find » tah y ‘hey abound with the bast of timber for buildings but | 1,000 miles west of the Mississippi. The American | market for them at the close of the fair. He has s ponte canel tage 94 ‘au aslo the eye of one not “1 . In the East Indian he number of timber getters diminishes every year. | covg:— They are on their way to Washington fo: icture in Mosaic of St. Peter, and a copy of it in lays. ‘They find they ate lee Hable to exposure at, work on the P olan interview with the P Fiont of | bil by its side. Ata short distanee the eye could fe agg bh hate Be HY Seren eer tan canonl ae con impeoving the United States, in reference to business con- | not detect the difference. These specimens are s0 ted heir own property. We wait with much axiety to hear | ce of their m. Messrs. F. J. Wheeling, | exquisitely fine, that the stones ‘of which the aky is knownand celebrated; but we should still prefer performing re ‘fovia will prove to be @ profitable customer to the ower of Johnson and H. W. Miller, gentlemen composed are not larger than a pin’s head. se theme deg el oe bay ey . or near Council Bluff, accompany them. have all seen jewelry and small boxes of this fine ithe Bat cow wid delegation comprises the following chiefs | Mosaic, but it is not common to see centre tables | fis fr 'tntia amen ene nee Tere ee eee CELEMRATION OF THE FOURTH ANNIVERSARY or THE | and warriors, besides less distinguished persons | and pictures, three feet long, of this costly work- carved in ivory, which excites great admi ygrerommcn on tus naremit cr tapenia | sod cnsers ses, es cunt Memahwcwe: | menu, Ragans te 2. Fal Fiabe | in.oge ef the cas inn oak oi wh geil om: of the al was an- or b ry ‘poumeed ty. the bring ot canna fiom extent Lil, | White Buffalo; the war Chief, (ihe-ga, or Great | things, even‘of an ornamental charactor, ‘Tae | Dfoidery, and b toy he pe Se Fly od “The hour cf eight o'etock was in ‘pear! @ manner proclaimed, | easter; the medicine man, Wash-com-a-ney or | French have two new establishments for the manu- » 2 “ der, the pearls themselves as large as peas. Some at which time the glorious “star” of liberty was seen | Great Traveller; the fire ohie! Wha-net-wha h facture of the Gobelin tapestry, 80 celebrated Grcendizg in every’ direstlon, and soon the insiguia of | O'Grogt Mester of all Aniteale? Shand cate eat | thee ethane the work and ete has go selebeated | entire strings of pearls, too, as. large aso i be of immense value. Havin, Sai Liberia's nationality was observed graeefally fosting in | tho ‘Tireloss Man; An-gar-ho mo-ney, or the Life | unrivalled. The ion to which thisart is car. | MUS, pe pv from Mher ag "7 iets oe Guard; ‘A-da-min-g + 0 Fearless Warrior. | ried, must astonish any one not accustomed to these that there was every asoful artiale tobe be hore, I shall, haps, citizens at theit private residences, The shipping inthe | The Head Chiof has with him two of his wives, ox- | things. Here are carpets, fino enough and beauti- Shall, perhaps, be exoused for oenin with such 6 minuteness upon articles of luxury. | could not, coedingly protty squaws, seventeen and fifween years | ful enough to be put ina gilded frame upon the pees sielceh, @ motional eatate: was teed froma om | of ogee He has loft’ three other wives at bome. | walla, the rich coldring of tho wools ‘giving them a | tye? "y ro bere og J selon’ noth pon songen ‘Norrie Battery, and at half-past 12, an escort, composed | We learn that the special object of the delegation | charm superior te paint. The price of these pamper to the tastes of the rich and great in that “of tbe uniferm companies of Monrovia, under the com- | in making so long a journey, is to apply to their | fabrics must be so great that few if any of country, nor the hope that our own favored land omand of Col. B. P. Yates, formed in front of the Goyern- | progt father, the President, for aid in learni e | our republicans can @ to the possession of | ining long remain as now—free from the ovils ent House. and received, with appropriate honors, his | iit. of the white man, particularly agriculture. | them. The different States of Germany, too, Which @ we ithy ari impose. The laces of # apa ececeion, preceeded, aczording, ve | Ibey desire that afarmer should be sentto instruct | have great quantities of rich articles, such as | Frustels have long hoes eritee odin eee ee eee ees Mince Hey ereuna | them, and that a blacksmith shop and mill should | porcelain, silverware, &c.; but what I remember as | PF" reaghed " = Capes te Baptist Church, where | be put in operation in their country by the govern- culiar to them, is the variety of woolen stuffs, Sit were bi del! with an instructive and well | mont. Buffalos, hitherto their main reliance for | broad cloths, co. Austria, too, is not a whit be ‘written stan, by D. B Warner, eq We | subsistence, are becoming scarce, being killed or | hind France in the quality and variety of her dis. ‘were particularly pleased with that part of his oration | frightened off by California emigrants; and the play. How is it, too, that Russia, younger than which was addressed more immediately to the O ma-has are convinced that they must in future me rica in civilization, should se far o ay in members of the community, the injunctions of which, if | joarn te cultivate the soil or starve. They hav: the arts! furnishing not only every fabric acetals @ eadwash of eb ‘properly ol and or, ra whom, | tertile and beautiful country which they desire adorn a court or furnish a palace, but je of | cccupied one person PY Se iomadyanen 6 to yo) ee os eaceres So ecuewe the hie yt ye Rrra and oy valu f, ‘at | cushion, with the pattern laid down upon the d Aberia ; that rendet the pale faces so powe ric! it re es man guard the case. Eng- ~ , pemay bw agg the sdvice of The Graton’ Labecio has sad promerons, They be never learned the bale | land, of courte, makes the greatest figure in t pas Fa poh BD a Re ae Le fof to fear, in her onward march toeminence, from | ful use of intoxicating drinks, and are represented exhibition—her departments probably, oooupying | tho pattern. In one piece 1 counted 700 bobbins the dangers to which she may be exposed. ag practising in a high degree all the savage virtues, | one-third of the whole spsco; but not denying her | banging to the lace. How the fingers learn to fie on the occasion acquitted ites sdmisablg. | come of which might advantageously be adopted by | groat resources, sho had the advantage of all the | matnge 20 many, without confusion, is a mystery. ‘We have beard it remarked that the singing in church | the whites. In common with the other trloer on | otber countries Fepresented. She was athome, | ‘The thread from which it is woven costs from $300 Gn this occasion was better executed tan om tic kerct, | the California route, these Indians have felt injurei | and the expense and Fenienoe of transporte | i, £700 per pound ; and yet thore are many entire eas on aster oe wet tack te. the Goverament | bY the destruction of their game, committed too of- | tion were thus savod her. ‘Tho project, too, arising robes made of it. Some of the most elegant of these pga peg myers | by the side of the Presi- | ton wantonly by emigrants. The Indiansnaturally | with her, inspired every Eng man with a desire | a:5 probably intended as presents to the Queen ; <ah. wt Loliced Her Britannic Majesty's Consul, and | regard the duflalo as their property, on which they | to sustain her eredit in the exhibition. She not for on the corners of several | see V. R., with the “anal there quite « eprina.ing of foreigners, Rnglish rely for the support of their families, and they have 6 all that the British islands cao | gems of Exgland, worked in the most elaborate ° been prompted to acts of hostility by the reckless has brought fro: manner; the honer of her accepting them being we? po toned one Moe OF thle dnfogation regions, and the fruits of her tre probably all the compensation which the artist de- i polar . India, Guiana, South Africa, Cana- SI take all that is ked with have, however, forborne to a: the emigrants, —all assist to sweil the already onormous ap _ wi nenen © wien of eurlositice, being though eggravated by their conduct, and solicit- | of Britieh productions, embracing every <: rf si Senieoor, cd by other’ indian nations, having been strongly | and luxury That the bey wr of civilized so re- y, , | advised by the gentlemen who accompany their re- | quire; so that England needs not to import any ‘who, with all event apprarnd 2 ony able company” presentatives, to seek peaceful redress at Washing- | toreign commodity to her shores. as woll as jendid wardrobo. rand was hig! the wine be- | ton. A large council was held last summer, and When again I inquire for rich silks, ribbons, em- in ¢ ts of that cit The Freaeet lott 'af an Lene py? hooey an. the ples- | this embassy is the result. broideries, merinor, de laines, or even gloves, | shall | revolution, by the tnfuriated peweians' the other-- er ee, on ae (as is apt on such ove.#0M8) | ‘The delegation has been nearly three months al- | rot be sure that they are not all British, nor shall | | {ho Primate of Belgium. 1 was aware that the Indulge by some, but the whole was remarkable for “* | ready on the way, crossing the Mississippi at Rock | care, sure as | am that 4 are equal in quality | p en ho receives the homage of his subjocis, quietness and univon Island, and passing through Chisago and [Doetrolt. | ard finish to anyother. Thore is one glove maker d in costly robes, but was unprepared to ‘On the evening of the 20th, by hy ph aay bg sickness has delayed them and consumed their | in London, named Dent, whose gloves bring ® | soo such magnificence in a cardinal’s attire. Each ceremonies of anniver! of meee = extent, #0 that they now resort to Bigber price in the market than those known to be | of these reonage! dressed in a robe of the Som ven acsombled at the Benate tT — public ox, bitions for the page of paying their | of French manufacture, yot I do not remember over | picet ‘costly. material, stiff with gold —y sarea tr Sk —> yeas I} 14 way ‘We tru."* our citizens will countenance them | to have seen them offered for sale in ded with gems of the New York | gna d ot nt was more numerous than any we have reen at | liberally, and can wnhesitatingly assure all who | market. 1 noticed one pair in Dent's case at the - beedered by ‘prese | e ilar festivals, for a considerable time; but d the “rmances, that they will be | /xhibition—said made of rat skins. Ifthis | 5, indeed, with . [ountifed tabte tgeund peteen us, end thie povortes etre AP oemenes A ‘fully "erarded. ‘Those indi- | be the case, who shall say hereafter that rats aro of | “}8 Ne aly or tanie, of og gn ready ls ber of Indie: must ray that we have oer. by con- | no use tous? Hore, aswell as in the lrench de- dalbly, witnessed more tharity by far than it was our | 828 are unsophisticated savages, y ‘skine—the machinewith which ——, forme part of his oquipment, and this we unstained ¢ in their im- inaed and luck to enjoy on this occasion. However, it is | tact with the whites, and manifesting ™, | hw | to be a successor of the lowly m Secrorly 10 be expected otherwise, whers eo incongcusus | pressive eloquence, free bearing, and wi a love is cut out—and every implement ased in | Fenitent St. Peter. -@ gtoup of rage and youth is assembled. the liar grandeur of their race in its best s.“%- janufacture. part {t is believed that American machi will oarry ARRIVAL OF MISSIONARIES An in| accompanies them, and makes the ' put by an instrument ‘i A bey +, el off a prize in that department. | should feel prouder ‘We are happy to welcome to our shores the Rey DA. | speeches of the chiefs and orator, intelligible to the | very much in the came way 38 ¥ is in one | °f my country for this, than to soo her excel in those Wilson, a. ana TE 1 ee pe dhl So a ol {gored wre put into | &Ft#, that to reach their greatest perfeotion, must ‘Leone, on the 17th ult., in tig Leonora, from New - ————— ~ York. Key Mr. Wiledm comes to Liberia under the | Annesr oF Extensive Darnenators.—At Wor r of the cutting instrument, so as to use the rraleen tammouete rors a class of ia- $5 Prnscipal of thee At Mila wohool te this town, | carter onze rag lest, theve sen named Clark Crees, | wi cognomy tm the process. I searines’ | redation. Some of the females employed tn the as Principal of the Alexander High Behool in this town. | Lambert Albee and Henry Albee, were arrested, ol that few of the most expensive artic inde hore | factories here are, ine social point of view, lower eet thn past, bes hed the sapertaten dave of the two Sppess toe ‘toon regeisr wait Of, i nahon te find their way into our markets, elegant #8 8 | ‘445 common house servants, while our American enths past, * min on. He 5 departments connected with the institution, and who, | was formerly a soldier inthe Mesion gar” ke weorease. | ® vale pet body devoted to articles | Women resort to Lowell and other, manufacturin, Slessnoit uo tach ugar nk: | Se aa Por ete tase fe | and shuts ota the testo eas pom | canbe, brut, hey wil a, emt vanceme: J “4 ol ® ‘it's Ho im 7 4 ry , . ing forward to the arrival of Mr. Wilson to relieve him | his trunk was set of burgiar’s tools, a lange bunch of | admiration, containing spec! : thet J I | write, while le operatives not only read them: == part of his duties and responsibilities, with much neg boy oe — s Agony 4 fey woe mp ah be Lanier re selves, but wr te what others are isd to read. e enxtety. ap 1D, some bed ave seen Ger Y tis strange that Americ ya ti ye DISTINGUISHED PERSONAGES. Krentinea by their owners There are more which have ded to the most curious specimens of this art. | ~ Feta ee ands cova chescing es | Bo Bit tees met rary cresting Mermnatvotie. | You may have syme ides of the quality of the in. | Thee "that ote ortuaremtens sienieetear bal Wave rw is m were fow 5 My * ‘ nde ve d attack On the town of Dwarrabay—noticed in out last | railroedchecks, probably token trem articles stslen from pay on ye Pa divi tered tong. by four | ¢0 Whom # monument has been erected in Westmin- arrived in town om the 15th inet., with « long train of | the stations, In his room was found beds, broed 4 46 500 nieces. Wooden Mosaic eter ype he vancaster, who died in Canada, attendants. The Golsh chiefs, Tom Gum, Dearrabay, | bedding, &o., identified as having been stolen from the roe end a eset srory department of | “id #0 much to improve the old 0 systems and Tar—the latter to represent old King George, who Nashua station at Lindoin square, afew nights since. | for floors, too, is to be seon in every am ment of | that thoy have rendered their nam ‘mortal by foo feeble to attend in person, had preceded Bumbo five | On the night preceding the 13th ult., four tubs of batter, | Earopean manufacture; and to my taste it is their exertions. Yet, as there is no appropriation or fix devs, and were making hore quite an impression | consigned to L. Wood, Uxbridge, om the might of the | more beautiful than either oil cloth ot carpeting, | foo the ‘overnment for the education of the com- Jn their favor, No doubt svemed to exist in a 17th. even more consigned to F Holbrook, Bellingham, especially for halls. But the great attraction in mon people—there has, as yet, been but little bone- " 5 from their labors. There aro mado of an old onk tree, ten feot in diameter, | “* derived to England from their jitof Bumbo. The fovestigation, howeve and last Monday night, eight more were stolen from the i d of antic dimensions, Sot “proceeded far before the whole question of Providence rallvoed cats, om the treck wear the Junction | (iit, Teom is a sideboard of gig mony Guariey, ethects, Capgarteh by pubewengticns until recently shaded the old walls of pA - Vey oles and individual benoficence; tack on Diwarrabay's town was iavoived ia myetery a Station It has been ascertained where Green di posed it is clear that ttack bas been made, so far, ne . “ fists . ian possible ‘tons the guilt we La ay He, | he bad diepoxed of but one tub of Green bowdad ae hon Galen Masbeh Fg ae \ but these are rut voy to fe mat rennons, Bumbo. cberges it upon one Carley, & Mamboo chief— | with the Albeer, and Ilenry is implicated ja the stealing me > a ace , | that com; W can i, @hich Dracrabay te rether tuclined Yo edmlt; still he | of tbe butter, | te bor Careritg Leigeator, whieh the pen of paratively bane hited gee. dress, his staff, his sh eee eet ieee ee hanis is quite fing; | with hair. thet cervillg’ cok’ Cemeveramoy being Smet {an Tuscany, [iberal principles are aald to be unknown in snops or stores of same idly gaining ground, with no organized system class in Amen They seem to make it a touch them sinelt, the pied of the tune duty not to let » lady leave the store without | relative and namosake ofthe Arch Duke, F' Jo- taking what she asks for, whether it suits her or | seph of Austria, is sufficient to have men shot in Leg- not, convincing her, by frequently lesning to whis- | horn by sentence of an Austrian eourt martial; ani, per in her ear, (lest some one else should hear,) how | albeit Engiand and France have tlought leas cheap ho has offered it, concluding by assuring her and proper o: wae inform the said Arch Duke, that this is the only » and, should he fail in | that the undue influence of Austria in his govers- prevailing op her to purchase, will offer her # host | ment will tend, further than ever, to complica: » of other things, so ter ey the like could not be | affairs in Southern Europe. But what can the poor had in all London. In fact, have found shopping | man do? It will hardly answer to bite ths a most vexatious business. band that protects. French soldiers alone retaia Rents are not so high in London as with us, but | the Pope 5 the Vatican, and Austrain soldiers gulte equal in amount to the diGernce fa tents. | */9%e,"yuin the Grand Duke inthe Pits Palace: 4) amount to the rence . twelve hours at orn give pas- Outed street, in is devoted to business, and | sengers in the steamed suxple time to reve the part of it, sweeping past Hyde Park, is adorned | plains, on the railway, ten miles to Pisa, and see with the stately ons of the t. It is cas | the Leaning Tower, the seventh wonder of the tomary, when there has been a, in family | world, to ay nothing of the cathedral, the baptiaty who can ‘boast of he ,” to hang thei and the celebrated cemetery of Campo Santo, all coat of arms, by one of its corners, out of | of them equally wonders, in their way. a chamber window in front of the mansion, | There agp quite a number of ‘Amerionn vessels at for one year. It is painted ona beard or canvass, | Leghorn.” Among these are the Juliet,§ for New of about @ yard square; the figuresin gilt and red, | York on the I5th:—the Mediator for tho same with a border of black, per! two inches wide. port about the 20th:—and the we ship Victoria aun Aap ages to bony atlidea casmts ore some 3 month later. The wy ° he hae oa reets, 80 narrow 8 cannot even pass e+, isto clear very soon. The Gertrude, ef l- Hooves thom. These have houses on both sides, | mouth. is also in Ay ae re built in the olden time, with the upper stories pro- Leaving Leghorn at 4 P. M. ebout five hours la- jecting over the lower ones, so that opposite neigh- | ter the Languedoc was driven by a tempest borg could almost shake hands out oftheir chamber | the deep Bay of Spetin, where she passed the wistows. 1 saw many such houses yesterday, in» | alongside the United’ States frigate “Ind narrow, dismal-looking lane, which bere tho classic dence.” This ship, by the by, 81 the d cognomon ef * Milton street,” but no one could tell | ture of the “M. leg ”” gonastitutes the United us whi or not the immortal poot ever inhabited | States Squi nin the Mediterranean That this one of these comfortless . When these nar- | naval force is ontirely to small for this important row streets were laid tp es barbarity of the age | station, especially at this it period, admits required that le should huddle a3 near to- | not of » peradventuro. "year of our Lord, gether as possible, for common defence, and this | 1452, is pregnant with events wbich may convulss form was adopted to give the inmates an advantage | all Scuthern Europe. The May election in Franca over their assailants, by affording them an oppor- | will be the signal for the eruption. Kossuth is re- tunity to send missiles down npon them, into the | ported to have said to as party of in street below. Some oftheso houses bearas carly a what he supposed was a secret conclave, at Mar- date as A. D. 1003, which, you know, wee plat to | seilies, that revolution was organized 352, at the Norman conquest. The mode of num! the | Home, Naples, Milan, Florence—all over [i taly houses puzzles me much; begin at one endand | Probability confirms and coincides with prediction ; number the houses on one si pak roundat the § and, amid the war of factions and nations to ensue, end, and doing the same on the other—thus the | neutral powers should surely have s sufficient powec houze where | lodge is numbered 37, while the | on the to maintain their dignity and rights, house opposite is No. 9; but the plan,awkwardasit | and protect their citizens and commerce. is, appesrs to be universal. London is supplied with | United States might take a lesson from Lagland water from several different sources, no one ofthem | deed she might in many, many being large enough to furnish so vast a tion. | otber matters of foreign policy lam told that, in the eastern of , they This port of Genoa we this morning at 10 are obliged to use the water of the Thames, raised | o'clock, and, as usual, shall resume our wee to by machi , for the purpose. Of course, it is | Marseilles at 4 P.M. There are no American very impure, and requires to be filtered; but what stranger, even then, could bear to drink it, kaowing it to have once received all the filth of so populous a city. The water above London may be compari- tively clean, but even this cannot equal our Croton pring. in purity. They call the Thames, the “Toms,” | need never expect to retain consuls at their posta, and Pall Mall, one of the great thoroughfares of | until, like I’ngland, France, Russia, all civilized Lendon, is unced as if it contains but one “1,” properly compensates them. F oT ees cheaiy totes of tao Lenhee Polk TT TE ave already spoken of t! one. Aun Bry in ConstantinorLe —Tho Cowrver de Yesterday, as wo wore driving in a carriage through Constantinople Begs of September last, under Cheapside, about the middle of the day, the crowd | 1). hoad of * Miscell: us News,” shes @ of vehicles beirg such that the horses couldsoarcely paragraph, of which a friend has obligingly furnish- g0 off a walk, and wero often obliged to stop alto- | 04 us the original ‘and follo translation: — gether, 1 saw a lady make several inoffectual at- “On Fi his Majesty, the tem pts to cross the street, till ae coming | his prayers, in the m Bockiktach. to her assistance and taking her by the arm, beck day, the Sth of September, his Majesty tho Sultan oned with on air of authority to the drivers on each | 4. ‘ing gone through his devotions, returned to the side of him to halt. They appeared to take the | Arsengi Library, where he oxamined » collection of ing from & legitimate source, | various articles brought back from America by t! ly was safel the | Fmin Effendi, on the occasion of his late voyage to other side of the street Around the Palace jof St. | tho United Stater, and consisting of about two hun- James, and Buckingham guard is con- | geod volumes of historical and scientific works; one stantly patrolling to and fro, “from morn till noon, | jundred and fifty maratime and other charts; some from noon till dewy eve. is custom is a mere on, carriages, muskets, and pis- ceremony, a¢ they have no service to perform. There is no clase of people for whom I have felt athematical instruments; ar Te than for these soldiers. They walk ther with models of ships, machines, &o. His round the ‘and. back, distance of a fow | {r@socsi ‘Majesty examined with much attention tods, the only varioty in their exorcise being to | the beauty and the finish of this o ‘and ap- shift their gun from one shoulder to the other, and | heared to be excecdingly well satisied with them. to march back to the spot whence they came. | “All these objects are made to perfection, —— and fecal, 90), be oe for it will tm ne member tl je ore gave an o: ee een ore oitenco, 1351, | Uast, when Emin liffendi visited ‘he‘neveuals and bane tn iy tty megs svat wet other establishments of the United States, every America beats all Christendom in steaming, in | thin should be placed at the di of this young almost every sense of that term. Tho officer which he should point out as being oo aed steamers are good ships; but the Collins vorsols ey bat which ho ia ae beat them. England has, also, some excellent | speaks of Amin Bey’s visit to the United States in stoamers on the Irish sea. But her channel steam- | terms very complimentary to our government and era, everybody knows, are utterly unworthy of the people. ros ecansseniesininaneatil sorvice; while thoee in the Mediterranean line are Devrn or an onp Boston Mercuant.—The Bos- it is with a oven more unworthy. The Trincaria, Genova, Li- eee, Seen Sn phy n' “ norno, Levantine—all aro small, with limited ac- | grdson, an old and h ay — ty La = ‘1 on yesterday, and changes in @ ratio exactly the a A ay qt in pe = am “ . with his family, and retired about » cone pn ten The steamors on the inland waters of Europe— | Soon after he — J ronsation of the Rhine, Rhone, Thames, Danube— are notorious san congo’ 0 have been evesed by om ly small and comfortiess. !n fact, the only de- | heart. Mr. Richardson was ex , nected for many years with t cent steam packets in Europe are those of the meee, i ey Zoe" tae leuvese ange Camp © weer Austrian Lioyds. The Venezia and the Tri- | bie sudden departure. Verily “in the midst of life ws goto,” which ply upon the Adriatic, between gue | i" deem

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