The New York Herald Newspaper, March 31, 1852, Page 2

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APPAIRS IN BUROPS. wanes Our Parts Correspondence. iP OF FARIA. ba Panis, Mareb 11, 3863. Tis Fine Weather—The Balls and Parties—Singu- far Conduct and Treatment of Mrs. Howard at a Bali—The Victims of the Conseription—The Bintellishment of Paris and the Palaces— Charity Suks—An Amorous New York Gentleman— Bank Note Forgery Prevented— The Great Nizam Diamond—Construction of an Immense Break- water—Adventures of an American Gentleman— The Operas, Theatres, §¢.--Niblo in Paris. We enjoy an anticipated spring, and if such weather continue, we shall soon see the trees cover- e@ with foliage, and the flowers springing out from their buds. The horse-chestnut tree in the garden of the Tuileries, the same which was in fall bloom on the 20th of March, 1814, when Napoleon the Great returned from the Island of Elba—is now so much advanced in vegetation that there is no doubt that #4 will be ready to make its full appearance, or yather its thirty-seventh growth, on the appointed day. It is an astonishing sight to behold the bou- Jevards and the Champs Elysées for the last fort- night, filled with crowds of people, who appear to have no vther cares than to talk and promenade. ‘The heat of the sun is so great by two o'clock, ‘that overcoats and cloaks, of all sorts, are untied and earricd on the arm. Notwithstanding this warm weather, the evenings and nights are cold. Im the meantime, notwithstanding the austerity of Lent, the balls are going on, and the Parisian peo- ple enjoy them with great pleasure. I have, on my table, seven invitations to grand balls to be given before the 28th of this month, and they are only parties at the minietries, the City Hall, and the Pailerice. 1 do not mention the petites soirées de famille, where the piano is the only music, Those we eal} horo, the ‘daily bread” of the prayer of “Our Father,” &¢. The Minister of Foreign Af- feiss, Mr. Turgot, gave, last evening, a grand ball, which was attended by a great number of guests of high rank, and all the dignitaries of the government, im full uniform. The assemblage was magnificent, the women beautifully dressed, and the orchestra exeellent. The buffet had been furnished by the best cooks of Paris, and it was attended to by all who went to the party. J was really delighted with the sight; and, as I retired early, I requested one of my friends to let me know how the atfair con- eluded. He has told me that the party broke up at half-past five o’clock—nearly at daybreak. M. de Maupas, the Minister of Police, gives a d party on Saturday evening next; then M. Persigny, Minister of the Interior, on the Tues- @ay of next week ; and as this gentleman is a bach- elor, his parlors will be honored by ten of the pret- tiest ladies of the Faubourg St. Honoré, who are the most devoted friends to the government. On Thureday evening next, the 1®th instant, M. Berger, the amiable Prefect of Polieo, will open his parlors #0 the most honorable citizens of Paris and to all dis- tinguished foreigners. This festival, the last of the winter season, will take place on the day of la mi Ca véme (the half of the Lent), and will be, no doubt, a@ grand affair. Then the last festival will be given atthe Tuileries on the 29th of this month. It is to be hoped that this party will be better composed than it war on the previous occasion. 1 will explain what I mean, when! tell my readers the following anecdote. It appears that the mistress of Louis Napo- Jeon, Mrs. Howard, (who has returned from England aad made her peace with the chief of the State,) had ebtained permission of him to have a peep at the ball fem the gallery of the Grand Hall of the Marshals, where the children of the d’Orleans family used to go to tee the coup d’ail of a ball or of a reception. She was dressed as if shehad been allowed to penetrate the parlors, and after having enjoyed for about twenty minutes the sight of this animated scene, she could not resist the fancy to enter the ball room, and epjoy the pleasure of a polka with one of her nu- merous courtiers. Accordingly, she went down by the private door and walked into the ball room. There she met with an English gentleman, one of her friends, whose arm she accepted, and with whom wbe continued her promenade. But alas! she was met not only by her highly placed ‘‘charmer,”” but also by Lady Douglas, Princess Mathilde, and oth- er ladies who knew her well ; and after having par- taken in several dances, she retired, unconscious of Baving done wrong. The result of this escapade has been to make Louis Napoleon very angry, and to excite the modesty of his cousins, who now refuse to e to the ball of the Tuileries, under the pretext t they wish not to meet had company. How will this little quarrel end? Ne doubt it will only be ne- @eseary to tell them in good French: ** Embrassez- wous a que cela finis Paris has been much enlivened and rendered gay by the promenades of the young men who have been drawn for the conscription, and have been designed by the chance to become soldicrs. These victims of the fates generally accept their misfortune with much philosophy, and they parade in the streets of the eapital, their hats adorved with silk ribbons of all eolors, and the fatal number by which they have been sent to the army stuck in front of their head | dress. The number of these children of Bellona has been great this year, and the cause of this is | attributed to the non-calling of soldiers under the Hag for the last two years. ‘ very brilliant steeple chase took place on Sun- @ay last, on the turf of the chateau of Lamarche, sear Varscilles, and was favored by a most brilliant sun. The attendance was immense, and the whole affair offered a very fine display. The carriages were beautiful, and the horses worthy of their Feputation. On Sunday next another race will eome off, and will be more magnificent. Louis eon, it is said, will attend. : ‘ e embellishments of Paris are continued with much energy ; and one who does not follow closely the operations of the workmen, is astonished not to reeognise, after afew days, a place where he had passed, and which was filied with buildings. The opening of the Rue de Rivoli is Progreating and within a short time the street will be cut through from the Place de la Concorde to the Hotel de Vil On the Place de la Concorde the ditches in which the trees were formerly planted are now entirely filled with earth, and the gardeners are planting the dens with ranks of box trees and evergreens. ‘be trees have been transplanted to the garden of the Palace Royal, where they will be replanted in the counter alleys of that large place, and will cover it with their shadowy foliage. The Palace of the Bourse has received the orna- Mental addition of another statue, made by Mr. | Duret, the excellent sculptor, and representing the “Justice of Commerce.” The pedestal of the statue is so situated that (he personation of Justice ** turns her back” to the Exchange. This has caused a joke that ‘Justice was ashamed to be so near the place of robbery and humbu, The game laws are now in ‘full activity, and the police has declared war with all those who sell game of any sort, with the exception of rabbits, which, being considered as injurious animals, are allowed to be destroyed inall seasons. It must be known that when game is offered for sale, it i 1 1 to the hospitals. There this 1 food is delivered into the hands of the poor, who generally sell it to rich persons for bread andeommon weat. This was the case on Saturday last, in many places in Par and I had the chance to buy a maguificent pheasant for five pounds of beef and (en pounds of bread. Many charity sales have taken place within the last six days, and they were ail visited by a large number of fashionable customers, who bid and pay high. Itis the rule in these charitable auctions that there be no Le and the ladies who at- tend the counters cheat the buyers in the best man- ner they can. An American gentleman, who is well known in New York among the upper-ten salt-pork aristocracy, went to the Sadie Bonne Nouvelle, where the sale was for the be ward, and after having bought trom a charming young lady of hie acquaintance a certain number of nick-knacke, demanded how much she would ebarge him for—a kiss. ** You mayt plied the lady, and then pay after. ranted,” said the Amorican, and instantly he er on her cheeks How much? With a triumphant rmile. ‘ A thousand franc swered the charmer, and Mr. L—— was obliged to pay the charge. But the most amusing part of the anecdote is, that Mr. 1 who is a married man, | has met with the anger of his ** better ha cannot understand how that “long s the qualification she < to her become £0 enterprising The m of Paris b within the last vix days out wo sin five franc pieces with the apoleon. The ike excellent y hae not al} pleasing appearance th he large i ppe, from the thateaux of N ; he Palais Roya md pom of Kilverire, 1 Many of these books are and the bu Jarge sums of money for them. The Kaglish teurs are present in gicat numb and with energy A very astonishing discovery hes a French chemist, which will render the alteration of bank bills impossible. 1 consists ina peculiar yof making the paper, wh heing mpossible to alter oy imitate The ievent intends going to the United States to take out patent The Koh-i-noor, that magnificent diemond which war exhibited the great exhibition of Lon: and wae eyutidered ae the proet admivable eized and given | efit of the poor of the Tenth | le by | the epoch, must new be considered as the second, for ae British it has received in pay- ment from the of Nisam, a precious stone, weighing seven or 400 karate, whilst the belly A Lally rp 7) the Bra- 8 are com isam. “the Bay of Mount 6t. Michel, which is situated ‘on the shores of , in the Channel, and is considered as the met French coast, en account of soon be rendered fit for ioulture by the eon- struction of a great dam, which will be formed by an immense breakwater. This gigantic work wil be achieved within six months. Madame de , the heroine of the murder of the Chateau de Glandier, where her brother, M. de Fouquier, was poisoned Use husband, i: at Brussels, in the street Schaerbeck, No. 136, ani the daily takes her the boulevards of the city. She was violently in- sulted at the last mardi gras—having had the door of her hotel covered with tobacco leaves and labels, upon which were written the word “nicotine.” Her intention is to emigrate to the United States. Madame Sophie Gay, the mother-in-law of M. Emile de Girardin, late editor of the journal La Presse, died on Saturday last. An American gentleman, who has made a large fortune in the California trade, and has come to Paris to epend it in the most amusing style, had hired in the Chauseée d’Autin a very beautiful apartment, which he had elegantly furnished. His house was the rendezvous of all the courtezans of Paris, and his dinners were celebrated Sunes Bose. given to these i nine of the female sex. On Sunday last, one of his ordinary guests gave a sup per party at his lodgings, rue Rochechouart, and invited Mr. P., who attended, and made the best of his time, by drinking like a Pole. Upon leavin, his friend’s house, he turned to the right, instead o! to the left, and went out of Paris, and arrived in the valley of Morvans, where, on the highway, he met two robbers, who took his watch, pocketbook, and clothes, leaving him naked. Fortunately for Mr. P., he met with a Christian earman, who gave him a blouse and a blanket, and thus he was enabled to return home. he police are on the track of the robbers. At the Comic Opera House, Mme. Manignard Dar- cier, who since her marriage had renouneed the stage, has resumed her tormer profession, aud made her re-appearance in the opera of ‘* Le Carillonneur de Brug She was enthusiastically received. At the Grand Opera, Male. Priora and M. St. Leon have produced the reprise of the ballet of “La Sy- phide ‘The remembrance of Malle. Tagtioni bas cen fatal to the success of the dancers. Mme. George Sand has met with a check at the Gymnace Theatre, where she produced on Friday jast anew pay, entitled ‘*Les Vacances de Pan- dolphe,” (The Vacation of Pandolpho) which come- dy isduil and void of interest. At the Odeon Theatre, Mr. Leon Gozlan, one of cleverest writers of the epoch, has been very success- fu) in anew drama in five acis, called ‘Les Cing Minutes du Commandeur.” ‘The plot is excellent, the scenery and eostumes capital, and the actors good, par excellence. Leopold de Meyer, the German pianist, gave a concert on Monday last, in the salle of M. Henrt , assisted by M. W. Ernst and Mme. Duval, h was attended by a large audience. The pianist met with great success. William Niblo, the clever manager of the well known Garden of New York, arrived here on Tues- day last, in company with his niece and nephew. He intends remaining here for some time, and no doubt he will make arrangements which will eveate great sensation in New York. AMERICANS IN PARIS, Dr.C.C, Williams, Manchest Mi. Banks, Jersey City, J.C. Walbridge, V. 1. Suddards, Del. Dr. L. Parks, Boston, Wm. H. Huntington, N Dr. Clifford Dorr, Boston. H, Berry, Washington. Wood, Charleston. ero, Va, Miler, Baltimore, B. H.R. The Freedom of Speech tin Scenes the Americ {From the London Times, Mareh 2.} ‘There was a committee appointed some time ago to consider the forms of proceeding in Parliament. The prolixity of speeches, and the multitude of speakers who came ferward to reiterate the same oints, were felt to be great evils. Could any remedy we devised? Many leading members of our own House of Commons were examined before the com- mittee. There were also some very distinguished gentlemen from the French Chamber of Deputies and the House of Congress in the United States, who favored the committee with the results of their experience in their respective countries. When the report was taken into consideration, the eneral immpression was, that in certain points the English form of proceeding might be amended, but that, on the whole, our own system reconcile the utmost possible latitude of expression with the utmost poesible brevity of speech. There is, worked tolerably well. It is no easy task to however, one particular on which we may fairly challenge comparison with any deliberative assem- bly which has ever figured in the pages of history. It is seldom indeed that any member of the En; House of Commons is found wauting in considera- tion of demeanor or courtesy of expression to his fellow senators. Now, when it is considered that some six hundred and fifty men, representing the most opposite shades of character, education, social posi- tion, political opinion, and religious belief, are se- lected from the great mass of the community, and draughted off under one root for the exprees purpose | of discussion and contradiction, it is almost miracu- lous that so little mutual discourteey should be the consequence. Enormous pecuniary interests, the cherished prejudices of aristocratic caste, and the premature aspirations of democracy, long cherished party feelings, and eager desires for office, are at work on the ministerial and opposition benches; and yet, how scldom it is that a breach of good | breeding occure! If any such there be, it may safely be referred to one of half-a-dozen members, who are marked men for infirmity of temper and indiseretion of conduct. The sonorous eall to order from the Speaker's chair, and the universal | outery of the House, quickly reeall the peccant | orator to greater moderation. Quiet is restored and business resumed with infinite quickness, and | the unseemly but momentary outrage on decorum is forgotten. We surely may be permitted, without | rendering ourselves obnoxious to the charge of overweening natienal pride, to contrast the ice of our own House of Commons in this respect with that of other legislative assemblies. We shall not lose by the comparison, as will abundantly appear froin a report of some recent proceedings in Con- ress, Parliament— Co ‘ac | It would appear that twe members, Messrs. | Stanly and Giddings, hed fallen out upon the old none of contention. The slave holding and free | soil States met in opposition in the persons of the | two combatants. Mr. Stanly, the Carolina man, certainly had much the advantage, in volubility of | speech and determination of purpose, over the eof Ohio. The hon. member for Ohio, ddings, called the hon. member for Carolina, + “liav:”’ whereupon the hon. mem- Carolina pronounced the hon. member to be a ‘sneak. Mr. Giddings for entered a parliamentary protest against **dough- Ohio | faces prompting Carolina.” the gentleman from South Ir. Stanly retorted by saying that it | Was the provinee of a scavenger to meddle vith Mr. Giddings. He intimated, moreover, that he should be compelled to wash his hands very carefully after pulling Mr. Giddings’s nose. Giddings loguitur, “* The gentleman shan’t crack the overseer’s lash to put me down.” Stanly, in reply, ** | hope that gentleman won't guush his teeth so hard—he might hurt himeelf. bg . ra as 4 If that member was in the southern country, nobody , Would own him ae a black man with » white skin— | but he would be suffered to run wild asa free negro, and in the course of three weeks he would be brought up to the whipping: post and lashed, for stealing, or slandering bisueigblor.”’ At this point the Speaker, the Manners Sutton or Shaw Lefevre of the procee- ding, thought proper to interpoge, with a requost that the gentlemen would ** suspend” for 2 moment The opportunity for a pun was too strong for M | Stanly'’s parlimentary allegiance. The honorable member, pointing to Mr, Giddings, roared out, amid the general laughter of the House, ‘‘We ought to sus- pend that fellow by the neck.’ From this point Mr. siddings’s ease might be pronounced hopel He inade, indeed, a feeble effort to regain the moral ascen- | dancy hy deelaring that the honorable member for Carolina reminded him ‘ofthe boy who turned round So fast that the hind part of his breeches wason both | sides at one butit wouldn’tdo. The effeter joke | died in the utterance, and only served to increase | the flow of Mr. Stanly’s rhetorieal vein. “The | honorable member,” said that gentleman, “talks about my sssociates, but has anyhody ever seen him in private decent company ? Free negroes may gall tosee him. * * * He sayswe were here drink- ing grog during Christmas time. Where was be! | In Philadelphia, drinking beer and eating oysters with free negroes. Which was the best off? Judge, ye!’ It would, of course, be quite superfluous for us here to reprint at length the facile vituperation oi the honorable member for Carolina, but the pero- | ration is too vigorous to justify ite omission hus | did Mr. Stanly concludes—*f quit this subject in disgust. 1 find T have been in a secting-room. cutting up a dead dog. | will treat him as an insane man, who wae never tanght the decencies of life, or | propricties of conduct, whose associations show that | he never mingled with gentlemen. Let him raveon | till Deom: * So the dispute was brought to a close; hut in“our eyes perhaps the most remarkable feature in the re | parenthetioal ne invective was by the House ny plauce batioonery an Speaker in. sile hter and shoure of with piey Singular Literary Forgeries tn Englond, [Prem the London Atheneum, Mareb 6} ‘The shelly Letters, published by Mr. Moxon. and reviewed in oor paper 4 fortnight since, are, it uns interspersed with | treat in the streets, or on | | & called in the copies The discgvery was maa os ite an aeciden' manner. Mr. Moxon sent & copy to Mr. Tennyson. se @ visit te ipa rave was paying to Mr. Tennyson, into fie Shelly volume, and lighted on a letter written from Florence to Godwin, the better halfof which | he at once recognized as part of an article on Flo- | rence written for the Quarterly Review, so far back as 1840, by his father, Sir Francis Palgrave. It is | good to find a son so well versed in the ene? of | fis father as young Mr. Palgrave proved himeel! to | be on this occasion. He lost no time, as we may | suppose, in communicating his curious diseovery to | his father; and Sir Francis, after comparing the printed letter with the printed article, wrote at once to Mr. Moxon, informing him that the lotter, by whomsoever written, was a ‘‘crib” from an article which he had written for the Quarterly Review. Startled at such intelligence, Mr. Moxon replied, that he had bought the letter at a public sale, among other letters also by Shelley, and that the sage of which Sir Francis claimed the authorship was contained in a letter written by Shelley, earrying upon it the post-mark of the period’ and other writen ice which pppereatly marked it to be genuine. The Deputy Keeper of the Public Records was, it may be readily imagined, eqnal startled with Mr. Moxon at the anouncement of such a fact. He wanted tosee the letter. The letter was produced. **Tt looks genuine—is it not genuine?’ ‘I am the author of that passage, but not the writer of that letter,” wasthe reply of Sir Francie. ‘But may not Sir Francis,” it was urged to Mr. Moxon, “ have seen this letter in the noble collection of autographs belonging to his father-in-law, Mr. Dawson Turcer? a question which enly added a fresh difficulty to the solution sought. In this emergency, Mr. Moxon had reeourse to the assistance of a gentleman known to be conversant with autographs, The letters were placed in his hands, with @ request that he would spare no pains to ascertain the truth about them, and with this in- formation to guide him—that they had been shown to some post office clerks at the General Post Oiice, who ** to the best of their belief” pronounced them to be genuiue. The tiret step takenafter this, was to com} the portmarks with Byren’s letters to Mr. Murray, posted from the same cities in the same month and year, and to the same city--London. Here they failed—and in this way. Where ‘* Ravenna” on a genuine letter wasin a small sharp type, in the Shelley letter it was ina large uncertain types and in the letters from Venice the postmark of the City of Palaces was stamped in an Italic, and not, as in the Shelley specimens, in a Roman letter! These were strong facts; but then the dates agreed with Shelley’s sojourn at the several places--the seals were correct. The haudwriting was marvelously Shelly-like—no hesitation about it—a free aceus- tomed hand- ‘* Are they not genuine?” From whom did Mr. Moxon buy these letters? They were bought at Sotheby & Wilkinson's at large prices. From whom did Mesars. Sotheby and Wilkinson reheiee them for sale? We had them from Mr. White, the bookseller in Pall Mall, over against the Reform Club.” Off runs the gentleman detective. ‘From whom did you, Mr. White, ob- tain letters ?’—** I bought them of two women--I supposed them to be genuine, and I paid large prices for them in that belief.” Such are the words supposedto have been spoken by Mr. White. The two women would appear to have been like the man in a clergyman’s band, but with a lawyer's gown, who brought Pope’s letters to Curll. It would be impolitic at this stage of an impor- tant inquiry to publish the whole of the particulars placed at our service in elucidation of the forgery of these letters. It is proper, however, to say thus early, that there has been of late years, as we are assured, a most systematic and wholesale forgery of letters purporting to be written by Byron, Shelley, and Keats--that these forgeries carry upon them such marks of genuineness as have deceived the entire body of London collectors--that they are executed with a skill to which the forgeries of Chat- terton and Ireland can lay no claim—that they have sold at public auctions and by the hands of booksellers, to collectors of experience and rank— and that the imposition has extended to a large cellection of books bearing not only the signature of Lord Byron, but notes by him in many of their pager—the matter of the letters being selected with a thorough knowledge of Byron’s life and feelings, and the whole of the books chosen with the minutest knowledge of his tastes and peculiavitie But the ‘marvel’ of the forgery is yet told. At the same sale at which Mr. Moxon bought the Shelley letters, were catalogued for sale a series of published) letters from Shelley to his wife, secrets of his heart, and con- tainitg tacts, not wholly dishonorable tacts to a futher s memory, but such as a son would wish to corecal. These letiers were bought in by the son & of Shelley, the Shelley; and are now proved, we are told, to be . fo im- n the credulity of a minor of- compared with the erim vidence st the dead, and still minor as in one instance against the fidelity of a woman. Our readers will remember that it is our practice to report the principal autograph sales, and to offer, when opportunity occurs, extracts from letters and documents of historical or biographical impertance. Now, some of the documents and letters to which we have called attention, have since, through our publicity, undergone the’ severe trial of Sir Fre- derick “Madden’s critical judgment, and have found a fitting place on the shelves of the British Museum. We have, however, we fear, given addi- tional publicity to some of these undoubied Shelley and Byron forgeries; and if our readers will turn to our account of the sale, at Puttick & Simpson's, of Mr. Hodges’s collection of autographs, they will find extracts of letters from Shelley to Byron, and from Byren to Shelley (the former especially), the preeumed originals of which we have now no doubt were forgeries. Shelley's letter coniaining an as- sertion against the fidelity of “Harriet,” which sold for £6 and whieh excited even then our in- st, although we had no reason to doubt its genuineness—was of this sort. The for- y of Chatterton injured no one but an imaginary priest—the forgery of Ireland made a great poet rite worse than Settle eould have written forgery blackens the character of a great man, and, worse still, traduces female virtue. Mr. Moxon is not the oply publisher taken in. Mr. Murray has been a heavy sufferer, though not tothe same extent. Mr. Moxon has printed his Shelley purchases; My. Murray, wise through Mr. Moxon’s example, will not publish his Byron ac- quisitions. Terrible Blow to the Women fn Berlin. (Yrom the London News, March 8.) Six years ago, a ‘Mutual Dowry Society” was formed at Berlin, and sanctioned "hy the gevern- ment. Any female under twenty-one years of age could be inseribed for a sum of from fifteen to seven- ty-five pounds, which she was to receive on produ- contributed for at least five years to the fund—the coutributions levied in weekly or monthly sums, ac- cording to the calls on the fund. In the first year, of course, there were no claims. The directors le- vied, in the first year, only three-quarters per cent.; in the second year one and a half; and in the fifth | year not inore than three per cent; on the whole eleven per cent in five years. This, of course, was very enticing. A host of poor girls believed that by | paying only eleven pounds in small rates, they would get a hundred; and so, in fact, some did, whom the directors regarded as decoy ducks. At present, upwards of fourteen thousand girls, with elaims to the amount of £840,000, are inseribed, averaging £60 each. The bubble, however, has burst. When the sixth year came, and the first subscribers beeame entitled to dowries, they all has- tened to marry; some of them took the first fellow that came in their way, and married him on condi- tion of not living with him, merely to get the mo- ney: the claims at once exhausted the reserve fund, and it was neeessary to levy contributions, which the subscribers were nowise in a situation to pay; they found out, to their cietey that payments of nearly fifteen per cent would be required to sup- port the fund: and how were girls of the poorer class to raise eight or nine pounds a year! The: discovered that nothing could be drawn figm thefund, but what had first been drawn from thelrpockets, a fact which nobody seoms previously to have thought of. Theafiair affects so large a number of families, involves so many bitter losses, and destroys so many hopes, that the excitement caused in the town is very intense. But the lesson is salutary. The de- Iusion by which the people were led away im thi case, is exactly similar to the projects of Socialism. Jtis to be hoped that the Berlin ‘popwlation, when of which Poure it in future hears the prom rober the social disciples are so lavish, will ren “dowry fund.” Agriculture in France. The following details on the present cultuve in France ave taker (says th the most recent statistical tuhse millions of hectares of land, and the gr of the soil mimounts to about. sia scarcely 118f. per hectare (2} known that a good posse produce gross tillage gives, in produce, about 10 per cent on the value of the land, of which 6,7, or 8 per cont ix for the cost of tillage and mane, and for the farmer's profit; and 2,3, or 4 per cent for the lendowner’s revenue. Ja France, good land is worth, on a », ahout 3, | hectare, and giver ¢ pe . on aire many pi ive SO0E. ov 600P., f without speaking of jand cultivated as gardens © nurseries, Which must not be included in the eon devation of the average returne. Every pleco ofland Whigh doce not give 10 percent of grors produce their extent, are Berry, Fores, Vélay, Gevaudan, Vendée, Brittany, Limousin, e. After those come, in de; ’ Anjou, Artois, Alsace, La Bresse, Lorraine, Maine, Poitou, and Provence. ‘The districts which aro the best cultiv: ated and most ive must be consi- dered the Nord, Notee tte Fore! Miscellany. The Dutehers de Berry, at tho latest accounts, was at Vienna; and the Count and Countess de Chambord, and the Duke and Dutchess of Modena, were expected in that city. A letter from Electoral Hesse, of the 3d, states that in consequence of the great distress occasioned by the high price of provisions in that country, the emigratiopot the inhabitants every day increases. A Belgian journal states that the accumulation of bullion in the Bank of Amsterdam is so great that the floor of the cellars has given. way, and it has been found necessery to remove the money to the royal palace. Emigration from Germany still continues on a vast scale. An Can linn company of Mentz is pre- pax to convey 10,000 persons to America. In 3axe-Weimar, a few days ago, all the inhabitants of a village, headed by the clergyman and school- master, took their departure; anda similar depar- ture took place from a village near Gotha. From cing her certificate of marriage, but not till she had | the two Hesses, and in a part of Thuringia, the emi- gration is also extensive. The Duke of Gotha has declared his intention of uniting that Duchy with Coburg by a common ad- ministration; only the finances of the two Statos will be separately ministered. The plan hag been more than once proposed, and rejected by the Cham- ber. The Duke expresses his determination to carry the consolidation into effect, and hopes that the de- tails of that proposal will not uow be misunderstood or misrepresented. The following is 2 sceno at Clerkenwel), London:— ‘oung man applied to Mr. Corrie, and coolly said—Please your worship, I wish to know whether it is lawful for a manto marry his aunt? (A laugh.) Mr. Corrie (smiling)—It is a most extraordinary question. Have you married your aunt? Appli- ‘Yes; my mother’s sister. (Laughter.) Mr. Corrie—How old are you? Applicant—Nineteen. Mr. Corrie---And_what age is your w Appli- cant---Twenty. Mr. Corrie said that such a mar- riage was cartainly illegal according to the Scrip- tures; and he referred to Leviticus and the Common Prayer Book. The wife, a good-looking young wo- man, here said---He is a fool; I am willing to do everything to make him comfortable. Applicant— I can’t live with her, she has got such a bad temper. Wite---If the marriage is illegal, and he leaves me, is he not bound to support me? Mir. Corrie---Oh, ‘Then can he marry again? Mr. Corrie-—— | Wife—And can I do sot Mr. Corrie-—Yes. Wife—Oh! then that’s allright. (Langhter.) Ap- plicant--Ill take Rood eare I'll not get married again. I have had enough of it for the lest six months. (Loud laughter.) The applicant then left the court, followed by his aunt-wite, who continued abusing her nephew until they got out of sight. The Russian government had resolved to carry into execution the project of establishing a railway from Chartoff to Theodosia, and had accepted the Beeped Hes ofa private company for that purpose, with a capital of fifty millions of silver roubles (118,750,000 francs), to which the government had consented to guarantee an interest of three per cent. Chartoff is a city of the Ukraine, situated 1,030 kilo- metres 8. E. of St. Petersburg, and Theodosia or Kaffa is a port on the Black sea, near the straits of | Kertch. It is in contemplation also to establish a railway from Moscow to Chartoff, so that a direct communication will be ultimately established be- tween Petersburg and the Crimea, and the capital of Russia he thus able to communicate ina few days with the Black Sea and Odessa. China has an area of 60,000 Rocgranhical square miles, and about 838,533,000 acres under rice cult vation; on which, not including the lands for vege- table production, three hundred millions of human beings have to live. The entire population of Madrid was assembled on the 25th, along the banks ef the canal, to assist at the interment of the Sprat, the concluding eee! of the carnival. The burg Witness very beautiful young wide perverted last year to popery, hi ys that “Lady Harris, a , only 26 years old, wh iven over to th sesuits her beautiful estate of Seaeliffe, in Bast Lothian, her ots of 10,000/. a year from an old unele, (Mr. Sligo, of Carmyle.) aid all the trea- sures collected in India by her late hus! Cornwallis Harris. She has been induced to forsake avy aged grandmother, and her mother, whose ouly ld she is, and to retire into a strict convent a enoble, in France, committing herseli to the pro ion of the Jesuit priests. ‘The mixed criminal commission at Mons has sen tenced cight individuals to transportation, andamong them M. Trouvé Chauvel, fermerly Minister of Finance under Louis Philippe. Foreign Literary Gossip. Mise Mitford, the author of so many fresh and na- tural sketches of English rural life, has lately pub- lished her ‘Literary Recollection: The narra- tive is “illustrated” with criticisms on favorite poets. Loid Holland has left behind a history of the Wig party during his time, which is just printed. We learn that it contains many curious particulars of the career of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, which will be welcome in Ireland. “The Slingsby Papers,” which have been the popular series in the Dublin University Magazine for the last year, are collected in a shilling volume. The prose is graceful and agreeable, and has a fine flavor in it, but the verse is meagre and frigid, and will not live an hour. It has none of the electricity to which the conquered bosom throbs; it has not even the mysterious melody which floods the ear with pleasure in the verses of a poct. The humor of the comie poems is incredibly melancholy, and the Irish verses might better be Kamschatkan. The manufacture of ‘* ancient masters” for the home market is an established branch of trade in London. The ‘* splendid collections” of Rem- brandts, Corregios, Murillos, and Vandykes, sold periodieally, come entirely from this school. | Another kindred branch of art has just been dis- covered——a wholesale factory of autographs and autograph letters! The forgery was so perfect that Sir Percy Shelley is found to have purchased a number of letters believing them to be his father’s; and Mr. Murray, the publisher, several suppositious Byrons, which came from this same workshop. But their most remarkable success was re atane collec- | tion of Shelley’s letters, recently published by | Moxon, and edited by the poet Browning, which | turn out to be all forgeries. ‘The cestacies of some of the critics, a few weeks ago, over the Shelleyesque tone and spirit of the letters which prove to be “cribs” from the Quarterly Review and similar sources, is memorable. “The Political and Historical Works of Louis Na- Pinon have just appeared in an English dress. hey are a pale shadow of the ponderings and spe- culations of St. Helena. In the accompanying me- moir, M. de feey is painted as the secret will and intellect which has guided the entire career of Louis from Strasbourg to the Tuileries. _A German, named Ebeling, has recently farnished his countrymen with a cataloges of ‘British Writers of History,” from the earliest period down to the prosent time. Mr. Daniel Owen Madden has published a novel— “avila, or Clubs and Coteries.”” iliam Jerdan announces his antobiogra’ correspondence for forty years of literary li Jerdan has come into contact with every rary man of note in England since before the rise of Seott, Byron, and Moore, and when Wordsworth, Cole- ridge, and Southey were pilloried and pelted in the critical journals as French levellers. phy and Ry Mr. Brooklyn City Intelligence, Tre Wartanovt Canat.—On Monday last. about three hundred laborers were set at work. east of Bedford avenue, upon the line of the projected canal, commencing at the foot of Ross street, Wallabout Bay, and terminating at Newtown Creek. Sicnais ar Fines—The Brooklyn police have been provided with signal lanterns to he ured at fires, in imi- tation of thore of New-York. Ench of the four Districts is provided with one, upon which is representation of the Maltese crose—the police emblem. Brookiys City Disrexsany—During the past year, this Institution, (which is sustained hy individual contri: butions) rendered medical assistance to about 53.000 indi- gent sick people, end expended about $600 in the purchiuse of medicines From Venezvr.a.—The Venezuelan Congress Was opened on the 26th wt. A great improve- ment is announced in the condition of the finances. ‘The continuance of peace has given increased ac+ tivity to commerce, stimulated the operation of in- dus’ and thus enlarged the resources of the trea- sury, All the obligations on account ef the public service have been met; the eapenses of the wars of 1848 and 1849 have been partially liquidated; the interest on the domestic debt, which has not heen atiched “zco HAS, has been paid; and the install- ments on (he foreign debt, which have been negleet- ed for some yenrs, have heen promptly remitted to Fondon— this improving the national eredit abroad. The President congratulates t wlatnre on the recent discoveries of mineral wealth m various parts of th ry. Mines of gold, silver, eopper and quicksilver Have been opened, furnishing an inex Wav viebes and promperity ' urte mt COMMERCIAL AFFAIRS, MONEY MARKET. Torsvay, Mareh 30—6 P. M ‘We have no material alteration in the stock market to report, either as regards prices or extent of transactions. At the first board. to-day, Reading Railroad delined 1g per cent; Norwich and Worcester, 14; Harlem, 3. Krie Railroad went up \ per cent; Nicaragua, 34; Hudson River Railroad, }g. At the second board there wore large sales of Reading Railroad at a further decline of 1}¢ per ecnt, making two per cent for the day. ‘There wasa sale of a small lot of Phenix Coal Company at a nominal price. Reading Railroad bas taken the back track. and there will be considerable anxiety to restive. The first out will of course do the best. All were eager to sell to-day, and the heavy transactions at the afternoon board, at the dectine, show that there are more sellers in the market than buyers, The Jarge holdersare getting rid of their stock, through commission brokers. In this way the ownership of the stock is dixguised, ‘The excitement im Nicaragua Transit rtock continues unabated. At the opening of the board this morning, higher prices were obtained on time than have at any previous time ruled, and very little stock waa offered. J. 0. Clark, Eeq., of the firm of Uiark, Dodge & Co., well known bankers of Wall street. has been elected Viee President of the Nicaragua Transit Company and the Nicaragua Ship Canal Company. We bear that these companies are distinet in their organization and opera- tions, and have rights and privileges entirely independent of cach other. ‘The holders of canal shares were the original holders of the transit stock, and the amount on the market was forced out by the bankruptey of parties having the canal rights in their possession, The receipts at the office of the Assistant Treasurer of this port, to-day, amounted to $106,984 40; payments, $21,650 85—balance, $2,776,840 81. ‘The bide for the $250,000 bonds of the Bellefontaine and Indiana Railroad Company, offered for eale by Messrs, Winslow, Lanier & Company, were duly opened at their office, yesterday. according to previous notice. ‘The total number of bonds bid for was 880, at prices ranging from 84 per cent to $2 65-100 per cent. of which only 109 were be- low 90 percent The number of bonds bid for, in proportion to the number offered for competition, ia larger than on any previous occasion, Considerably more than one-half of the successful bids were for foreign accounts. The succesful bide ranged from 91 26 per cent to 9265, as will be Feen by the annexed statement:— Wm. M. Dunn, 10. 9265: do. 10, 92 55; John Ferguson, 10, $2 25; H. Seymour, 10, 9210; Chubb & Brothers, 10. 92 16; D. D. Howard, 10, 92; A. Wrights, 3. 92; Chubb & Bro- ther, 10, 91 86; Moran & Iselin, 25, 91 80; Chubb & Bro- ther, 10, 9176; W. H. Calhoun, 5, 91 76; do., 5, 9170; 91 65; W. H. Calhoun, 5, 91.57; John A. Stevens. 10, 91 56; Joh 5; Chubb & Brother, 10, 91 46; ©. 8. | Fréncis. 3. 01 45; Moran & Iselin, 2 , 11 35; M Lusk, 1, 91 26; Wm. H. Calhonn, 5, 91 26; De Launay, J. & U., 28. 912 rin our remarks. a few days since. relative to the opera tions of the Phenix Coal Company, of Cumberland. we intended no unjust reflections upon the management. We used the term “slow and sluggish’ for the purpose of showing that such policy would no longer answer; that competition was springing up, and that energy and acti- vily must take the place of the inactivity which has so long reigned in that neighborhood. Although we called this company slow and sluggish, we admitted that it could not have done otherwise—could not, under the cir- cumstances, have pursued any other course, ‘The exten- sion of the Baltimore and Obio Railroad, and the comple- tion of the Chesapeake and Ohio canal, were necessary be- fore the Phenix Company could get a pound of coal to tide water. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad now pastes through the property of the Phenix Company, and by the construction of a side track, cars loaded with Cumber- land coal ean be attached to the through train on its way down to tide water. Independent of this, the coal of this company has an outlet to market by slack water naviga- tion and through the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. The policy of the company has been to delay every expendi- ture of money until the works they depended upon to bring their coal to market became available. Those works have cost full twenty millions of dollars, and had they been constructed entirely by the Phenix Company, they would uot have been more convenient or important for the coal mining interest of the Cumberland region. All these matters being explained and arranged. it is only necestary for the company to make use of the facilities it enjoys for getting its coal to market. With au inexhaus- tible supply of the best bituminous coal in the world. and with markete on the scaboard for any quantity, we fee no rearon why this and all other eoal companies similarly rituated, should not annually reap rich har- vests, ‘The rapid increase of our steam marine requires requires large supplies (f Cumberland coal. and it is for- tunste that the two grat works of internal improvement named above were exiended to the proper points iu time to furnish sufficient quantities of the raw material for the advancement of our sicam navy. The Cumberland mines have been in existence tor ages, the immense mineral wealth ofthat region has been known for many years, but it has been almost hermetically sealed inconsequence of the utter impossibility of getting the coal to market, Without the Baltimore and Obio Railroad and the Chesa- peake and Ohio Canal the coal mines ef Cumberland would be valueless; with them they are invaluable, and ‘will prove mines of wealth to those who take hold of them inftheir infancy. Coal from the Phoenix Company's mines will soon be in market, but not for general consumption. It will be some time before there will bea full supply be- yond Baltimore and Alexandria. There is an extensive demand in that section to satisfy first. The developements growing out of the investigation into the affairs of the Suffolk Bank, Boston, are exceed- ingly rich. The source of supplies which keep the ma- chinery of Wall street in operation, is clearly shown in this expose. There is more of this work going on at this moment, under our very nose. than we dream of, and we shall not be surprised any day to see sights that have not fora long time been presented to our citizens. Boston, at present, oceupies the most prominent position in the embezzlement line, and we have no desire to take away its laurels. It is our impression that before the investiga- tion ends, it will be found that Wall street has extracted a large amount of capital from State street, and tbat the processis still going on. We learn that there is a great quantity of ice in the Welland Canal, and that, from present appearances, it will be full three weeks before navigation will be free and communication between the two lakes clear, ‘The board of Public Works, in Ohio, have adopted the foliowing rates of tolls on the Ohio, Hocking. and Wal- honding canals, from the 1st of April, 1852, and on the Muskingum improvement, in lieu of the rates fixed by the toll sheet of January 20, 1862:— Onto Canat To. Le—CHaxors is Rares, For cach Not te exceed mile. fer any dist. Mills, Cents. 4 0 4 00 4 60 4 0 Lo 4 " 3 50 2 Ww 2 ue ‘These rates aie on ench some proportion for a gr ¢ thousand pounds, and inthe ler or lest weight, Reductions have been made in the t of tolis on most of the public canals. Heretofore the effect has been an increase in the gross revenue; and there is no donbt bac that a similar result will be realized this year. ‘There isa bill before the Legislature of this State autho- rizing the Common Council cf Albany to loan its evedit tothe Albany and Su quehanna Railroad Company, for 500,000. The cos m are anxious to subseribe $100,000, subject te the decision of the citizens at the next reguiar election. It is to be borne in mind, that in the event of the approval of the loan hy the tax-payers. it will be made only after the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad Company have raised and expended upon the construction Of the road an amount equal to $10.000 per mileon its entive cost—or $1,400.000—in compliance with the pro’ ne of the general railroad act of 1850, Stock ery $2200 U § 106% 7 oh h & $400 13) 100 di 550 Long 10d ol 7 Ohio Life & Trust 1 Cantoa Co ! Haven RRM 50 Hind River RR,” ed” 67 100 Harlem Ri... 7% 90 do, 1% i Cd HOARD. 40 she Farmers’ Trust. S0¢ 00 Exie RR 130 88 wy ‘BO! CONE erns 00 Nor & Wor Itht., — NER POAT TINO CR RS CITY TRADE REPOR®r. fi pe romioar, Mareh 5. ee. ™. Asurs—There were ww taken at $5 i2ty and $0 05 for pearls -the previous value’) PMH 6 Breswax continued quiet in the absence of supply, at 26 a 2634. per Ib. Basaperurys— lout variod little, the day's sales Teaching 7.000 bbls —uperiine Canadian «! private bar- sein; eommon to good Southern. at $1 7's « $4564; 4 Ordinary to chuice atate, at $4 508 $4 ond mixed to ~ faney Western, ai $475.0 $5 per bbl, Kye Hour and corn meal were rearce and quiet. Wheit se med dall ; 3.500 bushels mixed Ghio brought au uoknowa priee. Rye raled buoyant. 12.000 bushels. hore and to arrive, having found buyers at 80c.—an advance, Liomosiie oats were 7 retailing at 394 dde.—a reduction. Cormsvemed scarce and the business comprising 1.00) sacks mixed Orleans, at tte. Cattie.—At Washington Drove Yard—1.750 beever (700 Southern. the reanainder trom this State.) Buin hasbeen protty active since our last; but it ix iuterrup! alittle, to-day, by the rain’ Prices continue tir at a9. per Ib. for good retail’my qualities; ab 00 ieft over. At Browning’s-- 80 cows and calves; sales at from $20 to $52 60 @ $45; left over, 25. Sheep and sautbe—4.500 on rale, Prices ranged ut from $8 to $5 40 figure an improvement; left over, 70. Hudson fiver Bull's Head—Oflored, 27: 9e.; 100 cows and calvesat $22. $30 a $45; 1 $8, $4, $4 50 a $6—all sold Corson. —The sules were 1.600 bales, to-day. with aw easy market, We heard of no operations effieted after the Canada’s advices were known \ Caxpiys.—Plain and patent sperm were slowly in- quired for at 42c. a 50e, per Ib. Coat.—Liverpool orrel was dull of sale at $70 $725 > per chaldron, and American anthracite at $5 75 a $6 per ton. Corrrr.—Some 200 bags Maracaibo fetched 934¢.; 1,200 Rio. part 2c. a 9},¢ . and 1,200 St. Domingo, about former rates—demand brisk, Corryn.—New and old sheathing were fought after at 22. a 22!.c. and 18t¢c. a 19¢. Ree a Ib. s Fisis.—Cod appeared dearer. 900 quint bringing $3624. Nothing new occurred in mackerel or herring. Frricnrs.—Lates to Liverpsol continued steady. About: 3,0€0 bales of cotton were engaged, » good deal of it com- prested, at 14d. Vlour was at 1s, 9d., and grain at 534d. he ship Pelican was chartered to load with cotton for Liverpool at 44d. ‘To London, about 1,000 bbls, flour / were engaged at 2s,, and 600 do. by @ transient vessel were reported ut 1s. Sd. To Havre, packet of the Ist i was full at }sc. for cotton, $8 for bark. for pot- ashes, Rates to California were quite dull at 45e. a 60c. Fxvrr.—There were 400 boxes Malaga raisins bought at $1 65; 300 bushels peanuts at 80c, a 85¢.; 10 casce sardines at O0c.; and 25 cusks Zante currants, At 4)<0. Hay.—River was abundant and languid, at @0e a Gic.. ¥ per 100 ibs. ' Es wess was done in Eastern and ~ cash per Ib. made of 270 tons Seote! x mouths, Market unehanged Galena was tirmly held at $4 62.4. and Spanish mul rales, pig, at H —About 100 hhds, Muscovado were pur- Inquiry light. of whnie limited operations. Tt was Some 2.000 gallons lin- 62c.—a decline. ’ Provisions exhibited no special variation, 300 bbie. new prime and mess pork have been taken at $16 a $16 1244, and $17 a $17 25; 450 packages © eured hams at 2%e.; 400 bbls. prime lard at 914 a Oise. per Ib.; with 250 bbls. prime and mess beef at $5 75 a $6 75, and $975) # $12 75 per bbl. Rrat Esrare.—Sales by auction—Twelve tets on One Hundred and Fifteenth street, between Ninth and Tenth avenues, $146 euch, $1,740; one lot on Fourth avenue, near One Hundred und Ninth street, $180; one lot on One Hundred and Ninth street, between Fourth and Fifth avenues. $165; three lots on Eleventh avenue, near One Hundred and Twenty-third street, $165 eaeh, $4957" one lot on Eleventh avenue, near One Hundred and Twenty fourth street. $155; two do on do adjoining, $330; one do, corner of One Hundred and Twenty-litth etreot and Seventh avenue, $475; one do adjoining, $250, one do, cerner of Fourth avenue and One Hundred and | Eleventh street, $250: one do adjoining, $200; two do ad. > 5 joining. $195 each, one do on One Hundred and Eleventh street, near Fourth avenue, $190; two doadjoin- ing. $1% each. $390; four do adjoining, '$192 50. $700; inth avenue, coruer of One Hundred and Bighth - $285; one do adjoining on the avenue, $185; two doy aajotning, $170 cach, $340; one lot corner of One Hund- red and Ninth strect and Sixth avenue, $270; one do ad- joining on the avenue, $180; two do adjoining on the ayo- nue, $170 each, $240; seven do on One Hundred and Fighth street. near Sixth avenue. $110 each, $770; one do gore adjoining. $300; three do on One Hundred and Nintly st, in the rear, $127 50 each, $382; one do gore adjoining. ; three lots on Sixty-ninth st., between Seventh and ih avenues, each $330, $990 ; one lot on same block, 30; house and lot corner of Forty-second street and Ninth avenue, $5,800; house and lot on Ninth avenue, adjoining, $3,100 ; do do. $3.300 ; do do, $3.400 ; do $8,700; houge and lot on Forty-second street, next to tl corner of Ninth avenue, $2.300 ; house and lot on ore fecond strect, adjoining, $2,050 ; do do, $2,050; do do, $1,650; do do, $2.550; do do, $2,550. Property in Brook- ‘wo lots on Van Dyke street. between Van Brunt, and Conover streets, cach $355, $710; two lots adjoining? each $250. $700 ; one do do, $360 ; two do do, each $370, $7 ne do do, $375 ; one do do, $385; two do do. eack 760; one do, corner Van Dyke and Conover streets. $700; four do on Conover st, adjoining, each $470, $1,880; one do on Conover and Van Dyke ats.. $700; one do on Co- nover st., adjoining. $450; one do do, $450; two dodo. each $445. $890; one do on Van Dyke st., between Conover aut Ferris, $315; one do. adjoming. $310; one do do. $314; twe lots adjoining, each $30, $600; one lot on Elizabeth st., between Ferris and Conover, $380; one do, adjoining. $880; one do do. $820; two do do, each $315, $630; six lots on Elizabeth, between Conover and Van Brant sts,, euch $320. 91.920; one do, adjoining, $315; three do do. cach one do corner Flixabeth and Conover. $730; one do on Conover, adjoining. $510; two ae os do do, 5 ing. each $49: D, one do do, $485; 01 three do do. 440. $1820; one do rorner Reid and Conover. adjoining. $749; two lois on Reid between Von- over and Van Brunt stroeta, each $300, $600; two do coining. ench $305. $610; one do adjoining, $310; one do corner Conover and h, $750; two do on Conover” adjoining. each $500. $1000; two do adjoining. each $490. one do on Elizabeth. between Conover and Ferris, ne do adjoining. $460; four do do, each $460. 840; thirty-five lots on same block. on Elisabeth, Fer- ris, and Reid streets. soid in one parcel. for $9.500; four do at foot of Conover strect, with bulkhead and water front. sold in one parce! for $5,000. Rice.—Within the past three days, 700 tierces have hands at $5 25 = $3 50 per 100 lbs. n8.—100,000 Havana were disposed of et $20 « 50, usual credit . ‘The sales were confined to 100 bbis. priso1 it 203¢¢., cash, per gallom. —There have been 50 hhds. Cuba bought at 1d 330 boxes brown Havana at 4%e, a 5%e., per Wb. Market firm. Tattrow.—About 5,000 tbs. prime were picked up at 8 Stock small. Toxacco.—Included in the past three days’ movements have been 100 bhds. Kentucky at 53éc. a 8)¢e.; 10 eawk Florida at private contract, and 6 Connecticut at 7 '4e. RECEIPTS OF PRODUCE THIS DAY, ‘ By Enir Raitnoap.—Nothing received to-day. By New Haven Rartnoap.—33 hogs, 6 casks ashes. 249 boxes cheese. 57 pac! butter. By Hupson River Ratroap.—12 bbls, flour, 32 pack- ages butter, 10 do. cheese, 49 sheep, 21 bales wool, and 64 packages merchandise. THE LATEST ADVICES RECEIVED AT THE NEW YORK HERALD OFFICH, Maron 80, 1862, Acapulco, Mexio: Adelaide, 8. Aust Alexandri: Peru, Pernambuco, Bra; Ponce, P. R. Portau Platt, Punta Arenas, C. Rangoon, Birmah Rio Grande, Brasil ee ee Ses Son ot ot |, West. Ft.Good Hope, Fort Independou Fort K Pacis ao— He: cy Ey St. Domingo City. Se. oleae. 0 SSEGLe cat Hong Kon Honoluin, 8 2 Portngal. |. Di i St. Vincent, W. Sumatra. ‘ociet eahvann, Crt Valparaiso ers Crus, Mexieo y NXSoRBE oe SSENSEE x Be ASTROLOGY, &e FROM PHILADELP HAA, TEN: to Indios nnd tratlenen etait, 0, by how: and’ will tell ra, interpretin, tly relied ‘on by Non a he Indy’ or gentlom aoa a tenn the gn of the visifer street, between Clinton and Atto Afty conte: gontiomen, one dollar. ney ***e*te- i; OW TO WIN A formerly of Lon+ one delinr, poser ym tl MA teen Prete of # ia simp marriod, irrespeetive of 4 La ugh not leant, i that d Lawton, Fi “0. Offce unless the portage fe pala

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