The New York Herald Newspaper, June 19, 1852, Page 3

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SS 1 reg a sO Our Parts Correspondence. affair. Many arroste wore made in the city, and the | torim of the Ministor of tho Interior is to be filled | ‘L’Africaine,” is now on the tapis, and it is sal@ The Great Trial Stakes over the People’s | reaching the distance polo, The race was slew: peitininsivg wore taken to the jail. But, uAfortunate br Lefobro Durao, Minister of Public Works. | Ubat th compos a bualy engaged a Course, Baltimore, won by . ening the old that “nothing is more uncer P. qi 1352. report, they woro received with hurrahs and bra- us is oomploted, by a rich wedding, the oaroer of | for tho grand theatro of M. Roqueplan. ft will be (¥iom the Richmond ihe td v. ally the Phin pes i ‘ants, Juno 3, 1852. | vos on thoir way to the prison. man who has become, from being an exile and a | produced within six months. — Lee tae ese tn erection cities (even All were cieaaedien ihe , and it looked as if | Louts Napoleon's Mission to Vienna--The Empire In Gormany the diplomatic moetings are over; | prisoner, the most powertul citizen of France. I take pleasure in announcing to the dilettamte of > result, greater than in the racing circles some thirty years | the whole field had lost; for a while not a single —The Munistry—Continued Severity Towards | and they have boon quite numerous. Those who | Thore is no example in modern history, except in | New York, the arrival in their city of the young ; *, havo closoly followed these political mectings, will | Russia, of so rapid and so high a fortuno. [tis | Paul Julien, a violinist of talent, who is only elevam seen chuarlara tbs Utes | nnn tari eral salary ame | tte Prou—Tie,eibth—Gon, Le’ Lair | ree tat tarshare taken pace treet | well tare st. it Remy yeni | Tau dalese, volmihal len oh nl Saree 0 run \y o » dared not to offend the majority. But the latter be- Distribution of Standards at Lyons—War in Al- | house sow a a v ider,” 8s mbltes—one at Vienna, another at Darm- | new: reporter in 1534, was devoted to Prince | ceived applause in tho concerts of Paris. Ho ta Pg aaah ilar ees ore > | ee eae are sty beteta chance, | _giers—Tle Spanish Goverament—Discovery of stadt, and the third at Borla during which wo Kaouit Rap leon, then prionee in the Cha ena of ja charming boy, with aa intolligoat and Brews fon fos 4 grass. ‘ali: “ ave witnessed, at Vienna, the desire of seoing the lam, ontel, the Napoleoni t. FF . HB. ABpesonch annoying daley in. gebiing 2 ‘ suit all poet ee ee ane all itiod “thom. ceetelics Society — Garwscnnye— Fhe Fagor » 9; incorporation of the Empire into the Confederation; that Saament, after havin Neen talvotnead to the —that was heavy—in such condition ot the <*goil” ores bararmine pe beng ie rf side of | Russia——The Count de Chambord—General Rosas | at Darmstidt, the idea of seoing the secondary | son of Queen Hortense, M. de Porsigny tied his ihe Gemnpettt ne -to slekp Sixes at last, amid Ge Kady oe Darl bad spe the Granicus —The Rumored Cuban Invasion—Lamartine— | States tied with more union than before to tho groat | hopes for a better future, to those of Louis Nape- Pook re oe lippery. Jor, tae ous aot Rest Perit eS on tiie meats by his Cea ; Feargus 0’ Connor, &c. rival powers, as if to ostablish an oquilibrium which | leon, and was as much the dog of the nephew of the | longing the tobacco monopoly ‘until January of human beings congregated to seo such’a “field” | After a while, a general shout was raised by the | Tho mission of M. Heckeren to Vienna is still | CUSM not to be ever destroyed; and at Borin, | Emperor, as Gertrand was to hi a ras, 0 tuclo. M. Bol. Joa, is published im the Ddontteur, together wil as had never beon seen on a similar occasion; the | party, and all the grooms and the jockeys, stable the renewal of the Zoliverein, which is now demand- | monte! is still n poot, but his friend is now the | the roasona in favor of the measure (the capoes doa , unprecedented number of twelve appeared at the t MM. Boin- TH i the cause of much gossip in political circles; and | ed by Prussia, to the plenipotentiaries of tho States, | leading chief of the Napoleonian party in l'ranco motifs). These reasons are signed oys, fillibusters and all, went into the stable of A " A x u Ly A p i i Ks 5) Sitleaey ; A + + the | amidst all the oontradictory versions which are re- | rerembles the celebrated plan of restricted union On Friday last, the annual ceremony on the ant villiers, Vintry, and Greterin, the Councillors of Bamhertbat, © %5 he be Bieter wecolltuset hat ea rae eae eee tates rest rted, I am porfectl urna tho Kavoy of | Which was to bo, in 1850, the nucleus of the future | vereary of the death of tho Emperess Josephine, | State appointed by the President te support the bill See ne tet eouab- atrial, All bad-taken | dciane dascrve ta tomamed ihe tate day witha’ | Porn ns Peeenly 4 of Germany. But tho last meeting of the Austrian | who, it will be remombered, died on the 29th of May, | in the Corps Logisintif and the Sonate. It is very The Tobaceo Monopoly of France. i ‘ore the Corps, Legialatif for ii is i ‘1 i Louis Napoleon to the northern powors of Europe | Em h his bi -in-law, the Czar of Russia, | 1814, at the chateau of la Malmaison, wascelebrated | commoniy . ia ry ” 8 se is at Emperor with his brother-in-law, the Czar o: . |, at the uofla 5 h ] y said that no goed tobacco or snuff ia te their ipeallataney, ane tothe seoming satis Ren Saroaice by pe abun ales roenireie eee has not received the answor he desired to the ques- | has beon the most striking ovent of the year. What | in the church of Rucil, where she was buried. The | be got ink and ifthe reason why be faction of ag ir an ae after the hour named for | the Pere thd Al of whom had run well at Bunker tions placed before the eyes of Nicholas and have been tho plans settled between the two powor- | church was filled with old soldiers of the Emperor, | the jeneral answer i4, “on account of the State mo- It ord "the arrangements were completed. | Hill, ipa the British side! <i ; Ser ‘ ith It i8 | fl Sovereigns, no one can tell. But these friendly | officers of the French army, all tho oitizens of the | nopely.” This opinion receives confirmation from There Sea a morass at the starting post, over which | ‘Though Granicus has won, the spostators of his | P*#Gois, during his interviow with them. It i® | yolations of Russia with Prussia and Austria, aro of- | village, and the entire house und cfat . of the | the eagerness shown by Frenchmen to commission 0 -erect a * wD res A i afact that the Czar of Russia, though much in favor | fering to Germany guaranties which are not to be | President. The Chief of tho State, inpd by a | their friends to smuggle London segars and snuff inte At was found necestary to erect pe platform”—one achievement think he would have been moana 2 with the Prosident of bsp has not given his fall disdsingt in eae alton ciroumstances which could | momentary indisposition, was not proseut, but Gen. | Paris. It is, however, undoubted that the quality ene ao encten is evade OU | aye run) (ingle bauded,s ag eleay iicee ne pare : & pur in B Roguet, his firat officer, had been sent by him as his | of French tobacco has considerably improved’ witke gust. twas supposed they would be obliged to | the field. His success is to be ascribed to tho ad- | consent to tho wishes of Louis Napoleon, I had ae . aurope. Russia loft Bec the 28d in- gue! a ve Ar by iped ete cose taniteet ot | Le niue ane Cater aimee ie mproved Fan sled to'tato incline to either ede; for tha bon: | TAD Red ead cress teey aba balning eaten, | Beem told that ho had consonted, without any re-| stant, on his way tn Warman tarough Being, | ieee ta Celiy od eh ee eampaniinent of | in the lest fow yoarg; and if the iupronetent te Stor each nag as ho should go over it. Thoso that | Harry of the West, Tippeosnce aud Tyler too.” | striction, to tho proclamation of the Empire in | where he arrived on tho 25th, and from which ho | large quantity of immortal wreaths were deposited | owing to the eee A ia sete Se ee ran upon it were knocked up, as appears in tho se- | Beforo the start it was amusing to see the caretaken | Franco. It was not so; and the best proof of his departed without taking a moment’s Re ane An | on the tomb of the first Ll ie Hel | ee TeQOORGLy, Se airs 5 Ge pri re’ te by quel. Of tho whole field, Granicus alone did not | of his jockey—a little Virginia darkey, pillowed and each as khad” ite, Gide’. ite. deans a Aiti-de-eamp of the Emperor brought to Vienna At Nanterre, on Sunday last, the Rosiere was the Emperor in , it has ser un upon it—it being known to his rider that he was | cushioned, all lying dark, so that his powers should | "°US®) 18 saies heb ys 98% | and Berlin the news that at Zenstochow, Nicholas | crowned, according to the ancient hubit, in the most | overy discussion, and has been daily more produe- apt to fall down when in a tight place or put up— | be presorved and kept socret until the vory moment | Published an article, in which it is said that “sove- | und his suite had met with an accident. The Czar | magnificent style. Tho church of the Md was | tive. The progrossivo increase of the profit to the and by most of the ficld he was so little regarded, | when necessary to call upon Granicens to show ‘all | ral newspapers are making efforts to give the im> | W#s accompanied by Prince Frederic Charles, brother | crowdod to excess, and the heroine of the féte, was | State is proved by figures. In 1837, when s parlia- that it had not been observed by his opponents that | he knows.” me supposed it was metely the in- fomMMMt thie Corsigce owners, fikeuasine. cantata to the King. The bay bares of the railway were | Milo. Louise Brali, a charming young lady, scarcely | mentary commitiee reported in favor of the contim- Granious avoided the platform altogether. Thus he | tention of his Virginia backers to break down the | Pr oat bil eda banat aes thrown from the rails, but no one was wounded. | eighteen yearsold, whose good manners, excellent | uance of the monopoly, tho net receipts of tho trea- was enabled to run “home” with his strength undi- favorites with him, as a ‘ confederate” to the Ca- | events, bave formed a coalition similar to that of | The Empress of Russia was to leave on the 26th | character and religion were universally ay preciaton | sury from it amounted to fifty-seven millions o€ minishod. Since tho race, some have thought tho | valier; and then to bring him forward to win the | 1815, and determined beforehand tho limita boyond Ee. Fotedany ae a pre passing ion hh Baad Bee Sosy eAD: ape bash a d rei | pers he babes to ne traasosy bad seal ay 7 f f Gra- | i A ‘agdebourg. Count Nesselrode was to go to the | delivered a very neat spoeeh, and then deposited on | creased up to when it. re 000. Se ae mierniene fuente OopOnAnEN oF Gry panes eer tae had Feeney non be at: Waich France would ot: be allowed to: changes aay wads place of Kissingen for bis healt the forehead of the French girl a wreath. of white | ‘The estimmted amount for 1351, when the returne The following made up the field, arranged in the | with Granicus. If such was tho intention, the government. These rumors are false. Tho events pert Count of Chambord was to arrive at Nassau on | roses, whilst he also gavo her a sum of 300 francs. shall have beon completed, is 92,509,000 france. Ft i08 :— vas i kopt ; “Napoleon | alluded to, which aro the pretext for these articles, © first day of June, where apartments had been Mine. Bruli was then taken to the Maria,{where a | ix admitted that these results aro attributable ia Re ee a sis wr. Peart! eUeROL Ea ele eA hie no entation | AREER probability whatever: Frevoe ts adiovlolt tikan for tieg nantes, ; ~ | fétehad been propared in her honor. | gupat measure to the fac that tho uso of tobaoae 2. Lancaster, by onnsy ly: y had formerly won with another * Yankee ;” after | the utmost quietness. All the foreign powers are General Luis Manzilla, brother-in-law to Gon. The complotion of the Louvre building is now a ecomes every day more general; but credit 3. Young Americus, by losing two heats, in which ho was actually dis- | entertaining with her tho most friendly torins, and | Rosas, the ex-dietator of the Argentino Republic, | decided fuct. ‘The workmen were taken, on Monday | claimed for improved tmanufacturing processes, and 4. Pantaloons, by Yorkshire Democrat tancea! But they went. for nothing, as thoy wer: | they never had any intention to minglo with the | arrived last night in Paris. | ain told that Rosas | last, on tho place of the Carrousel, and’ distributod | general good managomont by the Ssute, to whiok 5. Kentucky Warrior, by Old Hickory. dead heats, Bue Granicus, by belog keptout o°| interior government of the country. They kuow | and the beautiful Manuelita, his daughter, will ar- | in sivall parties, to dig the ground, to level itand | a part’ of the increasy ‘must be attributed. 6. San Hacinto, by Texas ; sight, stole ‘a march on tho whole Ald, and may | well that Pranee should have hor rights rospected, rive ina fow days. Rosas’ intontion is to reside in | to lay down the foundation of the building. This | Before 1835, the quality of segars and tobaceo waa 7. Buona Vista tho Third, by Indian Chief. have won by “a Yankee trick,” contrary to the in- | a8 she respects other’s rights. These rights are France. T will find out where. We: large place is now like a field upon whieh the agri- | inferior, owing to prohibition against oe tae of 8. Black Hawk, by Red Jacket. tentions of the gallant Vir, ng. Leaving th» | neither threatened ner contested,” &c. The above | Said Bashaw, uncle of Abbas Bashaw, wi is the } cultarist has distributed his men and many ploughs. | moro than a very limited proportion. * loreign to- 9. Blue Dick, by Binghampton. shell to them, on the Jonathans getting the oyester. | language may be, no doubt, called a check | Vice King of Egypt, arrived on Tuesday evening The stones of the pavement are taken out, the earth | baceo. Until that poriod, the admin| stration wae 10. Granious. by White Hil. In the second race the same day, to scloct a’cham | for the imperialist party, for it donies that there | from Marseilles. It is his intention to go to a wa- | carried away in carts to the plain of Grenelle, and | compelied to use at Least 7 por cent of Fronoh to- 11. Tho ‘Alabama Colonel, by Rip Van Winkle. pion, for the smaller national stake, to be stabled | is any intention on the part of Louis Napoloon if place to restore his health. BML all the ground is undergoing an en change, It and only 21 per cont of eee pace Me 12. Moderator, by Salt River. with Granicus, the Alabama Colonel, a fine high | to assume a now title—that of Emperor. Welive J , Many articles have been published in Paris rela- | is thought that the whole of the building will be | cent of European. By an al Fie jon us aoe The Cavalier, the Commodore, Buena Vista the | bred Southern horee, proved himself so superior toa | at_an epoch when politics are growing out of} tive to the intended expedition against Cuba, which | achieved within two years, if uo political event | the law, they were Paras ee B per pe Second, and some others of less note, paid forfeit. | large field, the Kentucky warrior and others, dis- | daily occurrences; and no doubt that M. Heckeren’s | is spoken of in the American newspapers as of boing | come to trouble these prospects. | American, and re eee cent al ries of BOE 79 pee Several were “weighed and then drawn.” tancing them the seoond heat, that many believe th visit to Vienna has somewhat changed, not, per- | on the eve of taking place at an carly opportunity. In the garden of tho Tuileries, at the oxtreme | cent ef French tobscco. he price of 85f 7! r ¢ ) h , e , add MRA a) Oe aad aE ha Fes a einai | kilogramme, formerly paid to French planters, has Berring.—“ The odds” on the Veteran, Lancastet jolonel to be a faster horse than Granicus; and, in | haps, the wishes and designs of the Prince Presi- | Several xmong our contemporaries considered it as | end of tho te rrace, on the shores ofthe Seine, attho | kilogramme, former! y, pa p i" and Amorious, against, the feld—some betting bee Sone oeue alters cusHesto Ve metic forthe; (dente DuGHEl way bodttende taking tovreaok tiei| iutpossibile, anid a honx invented by England, to be | placo where Lewis Philippe escape frow tho sab- | hoon reduced, to 73. BBe.y and yot nolthor this ro- tween the threo favorites, a shade in favor of each, | great national stake—reversing their positions. aim. Well, for the present, provided no event takes | used theme against America; whilst several | terranean passage to enter the small coupé in aaa ion in price nor c 0 ses os ie fides bi 4 as named—the Vetoran having “the call.’ Ameri- But for Lancaster’s entry the Colonel would have | place which will force Loi apoleon to enter into | othe re taking it for granted, aud blaming, with fled to St. Cloud, Versailles, Havre, and | tobacco eee ret ate sey ny 0 cus wae a special favorite of the Fillibusters. Pan- | been'run differently in the lirst race. Hehadnot been | & new action, notwithstanding the ill-wishes of | the utmost severity, the government of the United | thence to London and Claremont, the masons are | Krench proc 500.000 Lala. cad citien Sh Epa betes taloons was fancied by a freo and easy set ; others | let out a single instance; but, like Cavalier, was | Russia, Austria, and other powers, we shall keep | States for not taking every necessary step to ert nah digging the walls, to build an immense green house, | change, was 11,880,000 kilos., and si © ji 7 ; i ‘ 4 S ean ‘ » the pend f ‘ e orange tree: the Tuileries. | 10,328,000 kilos. One great recommendation of the ‘ied Blue Dick ; and ky Warri Sa eserve e the ¢l f ** Ii the republican form of government. the pirates who are endeavoring to trouble the ¢ | to he filled with the orange trees of the Tuileries. 323, 1 i \ ieee Ne ab E ee Se ae Fe TURMCseinlative Coraaberantyesterday. todisouss | of the Spanish colony. I aim inclined to believe | The present orangerie is going to be changed for | tobacco monopoly as eran of pane yi glo od the others, except as making up the field. Lancas- Another trial race is about to come off, on tho | the project of law relative to the total settlement of | that, this time, if the buccaneers were again to in- | another purpos that it ems so ay ; been scares Bg ih lt At ter’s backers snatched at the odds against tho | same course, to select, for the match, the champion | the Pits of 1848 and 1849. I was told that several | vade Cuba, they would meet with no commisera- Among the many proposed embellishments of | volutions or political commotions. 4 ; is the avenue of Champs Elysees which is | argument for prolonging he, exatualy ss BEA an ns i i express much blame on the finaucial disorders of | Europe would all approve of such a course by the | to be totally adorned with colossal statues, and in | the State to manufacture and se 1400, vale tea eats ante thitse too much to be lamented years; but the ma- government of Spain. the centre of which, place called the Rond | produces a sixteenth part of the public revenue, and Veteran, as did Blue Dick’s against Pants. of the whig, democratic, industrial protection, im- | members of that house had decided that they would | tion, and would be all hung. The governments of | Par The two favorites at the head of the list, generally | provement party to run ag acknowledged to he the fastest in the race, (espe- | loco foco, demovratic, int i A ss ., tivo oquie: ii cislly the Miohigander,) wore handicapped vie tis | inireemaont eae aes party. jority of the Legislative Corpa showed themsol Mr. Eugene Burnous, the celebrated Orieatalist, | Point, the mammoth statve of the Emperor, by | that by a tax easily collected, and acyuioaoed in by heaviest weight, expected to “tell” upon them. ‘The unknown whig is now the favorite, especially | wiser than their colleagues, and it was deemed pru- | Whose science in the language and dialects of the | € sey will be erected. When this will be | the public, w ho aye become oust, f The Veteran had aequired reputation by runs | as Granicus is so shy on the rivers, canals and roads | dent not to awaken souvenirs which were of an irri- | countries of Asia had no rival, died on Saturday | achieved, the Champs Elysees will become the fine | RAGS abroad, both as a colt at when seed he PDS that he is ox pedbedieo have another fall before get- | tating nature, and, ] am sure, from what I hear, | lust, and was buried on ‘Tuesday at the Pore La | and only grard promenade in the wor natwart ell Pedestrianism in England, good race on the Thames when following Tippeca- | ting into harbor that forgiveness of the past will be given to the | Chaise. The capital picture of Murillo, the Conception of | Gerar rooT RACE OF TEN MILES, FOR THE CHAM- follow 8 Sect awavice lanetin Rain Viet ced i e grand gall f) poxsmr ci) i. —LEVETT (THK OM AM- noe; and showed most speed c] oe RET ESs roa acts of the provisional government. M. de Lamartine is on the eve of leaving France | the Holy Virgin, was placed in the grand g¢ | pronsmmp AND £50 A SIDE.—LE' Against Old Zac, (Buenavista thefen) thoagh The Census of the United States. Many rumors are afloat that the government is | for Smyrna, whore he would remain—thus abandon | the Louvre, and since then it hus been vistled PION) AGAINSE JAORKEOM. (THR, AMERICAN DERE. second. He had promised well when in the stable ypkrom the Paris Journal des Debats, May 25.) | | on the eve of publishing decrees relative to sumpta- ing Europe for ever. ’ the amateurs of paintings. ; vn a | COPENHAGEN FreLDS, May 31.—This exciting with Harry of the West. But he had latter! The American census of 1850 was executed with | ary laws, as, for instance, a tax on carriages, {. Edgar Quinet, a writer of much talent, who, | At the academy of the Institute of France, 9 | struggle for the championship took place to-day, trained off, was somewhat restive whe ngsod, | Kreat care, and at great expense, having cost7,250,- | horees, and dogs—an augmentation of the duties E place eaimanaiete oat eer rom Tig | 000 francs. “The reason of this exponso is, that in- | Heres and dogs—an augmentation of the duties | since the 2d of D ago, a Valuguelady, aud tho lappy | count of the reception of MC Afeed da Musset, | joining Mr. Garratt’s Copenhagen ‘Tavern. - The trial runs—and_oxhibited such a want of speed, in | Juries were instituted not only into the state of the | on salt, by which the prodace and revenue would be couple are on the ove of leaving Europe for tho | amoug the forty members of that body of learned | ‘yfiernuon, though inclined for showers, was alte- his trial with Hungarian Chief, that the Veteran | Population, but into all matters of interest connoct- augmented. United States. : ; men in all branches. M. Do Musset, whe was | gether fivorable for this display of skill and endur- had lest friend:—and some suid “nono but fools,” | 4 With the country, Tt appears from the returns | “Another rumor afloat, worthy being montionod, | _Feargua O'Connor has arrived in Bolgium from lacing Mr. Dupaty,an old poet of the t | ance betweon two of the fleetest runners of the day, since the 2d of December last, has left France, mar- | grand ceremony took place on Thursday last, on ac- | {he well-known pedestrian and cricket grounds among the Southrons, “ could not comprehend” already published, that the portion. of the country | js, that a ministerial change was > tapis, and | the United States. Many complai ude by | regime, isa “gentleman” of letters, whose writings | to witness which nearly 8,000 spectators assembled. Veteran, when others maniferted & went of conte | 2oW in cultivation is forty-five millions of hectares, | ‘{ MI. ‘de Lavaletts wis, to bovome Maier of | bis fellow passengers of his. tamil nd vul- | are particularly appreciated by all the amateurs | ‘The ground had been slightly altered since tho Laat dence in him. The knowing ones took the field | OF Within an cighth of the whole superticies of | Public Affairs, All the other ma ters would send | garity. t of the style of briles lettres. By being thus ad- | race hetween Levett and Frost, on the 22d of Marol against tho favorites. France, and much more than is cultivated or capa- | their resignations, with the exception of M. de Per- mitted at the Academy, he receives the deserved | Jast, it being so marked out, that it takes just three Lancaster, though not so aged as the Veteran, as | bl¢ of cultivation in thislatter country, but which | signy, who would’ become the Minister of State, GOSS” OF PARIS. recompense for his energ@tic efforts to keep in its | times found to run for one mile; consequently the a horse of some ce'ebrity, had too much“ weight” | 1 only the eighteenth part of the territory of the | ‘Thisis only a rumor, which has, perhaps, no foun- Panis, June 3, 1852. ranks the Brench language. According to ews | pedestrians, today, bad to traverse that cirouit ked upon him to give him much chance in such a | United States. The agricultural produce in that | gation, The Evivmdinary Wealler—The Crops—Louis | tom, M- de Mussct deligered a noat speech in honor | {hirty times to complete the required distance of eld, especially ashe and the Veteran would ran | cOUntry.is exceedingly great, but the supsriority of The law on public instruction, which was threa- . Ball" 1 Red P ‘Mar of M. Dupaty, his prodécossor, and was much ap- | ten miles. each other down, it being generally supposed the | the En States, relative to Europe, is proved | toned by tho opposition of M. de Montalembert and No 3all— tale and Red Paint—Mar- |} nianded by the whole audience. M. Nisard gave M. It will be in the remembrance of our readers that race lay betiveen them. When a colt, Lancaster | More by the number of cattle, of all kinds bred | his friends, and hu been violently criticised at the ria 8 not precisely been withdrawn, of th d from circulation, in order to bo revised. The political mazhiavels, who are discovering a m h appre: 1. Persigny—Annivirsary of the Death | Musset the repligne, and was a \ ited | Mr, Garratt gave a superb silver and velvet belt, o€ mpress Josephine—Embellishment of the | by his hearers. The tribunes of stitute were | the value of £25, to be contended for, en his groun The Tuileres and the Streets—The Clos- | Hlled with the most refined people residing in Paris, | on the 12th of last January, when twenty onte te LUUCUES AN Ue § te ©0081 and the eye could look at all the /itteraté of Feanee | for the contest, George Frost, the Suffolk Stag, be es Li old y m ; there, than by the quantity of wheat grown. The | Counc ‘Sta AA en ene ued stable; afterwards, | United States produce only {rom forty to forty-five | Council of State, well with Young Hickory, in his groutrace, - | millions of hectolitres of whoat, or abouta heetolitre poe re 8B : and a half per head. France and England give Louvre _ - ; ivate ep meaning in ev a une ing of tw Racing Season—Amevicans Preseni— | ¢ ecated in the same spot . slike ‘i ies i Sounielanen he x : ' ao x we sive | private and deep meaning in everything, are un: ing of tw Racing Season—Americans n congregated in the same spot. then declared’ the winner, going the ten miles ia his hears B Hetwen Kate oe a upen bY more ; but the United Stutes grow 200 millions of nouncing that this is but a mezzo-fermine from the —Pardon of Madame Lafarge--Sale of Victor ave ae day sete Facok ee Wee took pao | min. 9see. Levett, though on that day dofeated, ; i at Versailles on Sunday last, 90th ultimo, and was Hugo and Marrast’s Furniture—Strange Con- hullenged the champion for the belt, the honor ef Sat Lis epeed, like the Varroa ie Been inated héctolitres of Indian com, which enables them | government, and that M. Fortoul has thus rovised xi x < to breed an unusually large number of cattle. check, which will b dead bi pagel) not favored with fine weat The rai ii i 50 i by trying to keep along with the Hungarian The: : neha 5 ‘ acheck, which wil be a dead biow to his reign at 507 Oe BR Ao TAD «Dlicotery ot favore h fine weather. The rain pow jt haipionship, and .£50 in cash, which was ac- The most sagacious HES knew that neith RR ee Wie Oe ae tho Ministry of Public Instruction. wast—Extraordinary Agricultural Discovery down in torrents fom morning until twelve o'clock, | copied by Frost, aad the day fixed for that race te the three favorites could win—that thoy would ren searcely 300. They about 1,800 pigs for setae attic eeclihoe ia i Sronts oui Fa el fiedonierty aie eee rl each ether down. Be ust j = every thousand inhabitants, whilst we have Pantaloons, when a colt, had been in the Feleral | pot 12 3 and in consequences the Am stable, avd ran well on the St- Lawrence course; he wer to chus co or on its Whilst my last correspondence was leaving Paris | the clouds by which he was surrounded. fronticrs: ‘Chis week the Jndépendence Belge has y i hig efforts, the darkness of n Londonian da anil the ground "Y | come oft’ was Monday, the 22d March. This time tt was declared the conqueror, beating Frost im d only—deing the whole ten miles in | overthe Plain for the United States, the clouds were gatheriy somuddy | jhe « . chi been stopped for three times at the post office, on ss pr est time ever known to be performed by wras used to the birch, and had sae ennbly vod the able to yey, a large ‘quantity of pickled po account of the publication of PS i icles, the nd we reatened by one of the most violent that the horses found it an impossibility to run n 52 min. 35 sec, Levett Las not lor great York stake—and_in running fer the Mextonn ng ee ives niditins Ke a mi contents of which were considoréd as injurious to the | storms ever witnessed in Paris The wind was | quick as requested. No peculiar in t took pi! wear his laurels, as Jackson, the Amen- Dut the fall ofa whose shoulder v orate short, the tempest was } distiibuted as won. Many eps. It broke up at about | tracted there by the entiec od | am und of th y, Mr. Hardy, 1 the stalk jeans had b ment of the races, and yg thom was Mr. Ronalds, whose magni jean importation, were plendid animals are ay spotted Betting before starting was six to four and twe aud they are the most m Hicent trot: | to one on Levett; at the finish of the fifth mile, two er beheld in Europe. Among the most en- | ty one on Jackson: seventh mile, ten to one raged betters of the raves, were Mesirs. Robort James | Sneyeont , SE government. In the provinces of France the 000 ee | Ztanas are daily overhauled by the Prefects and | ies eu Ee Aeabigoioaiiesk Batis i y , vant isnot very Lecribte | Deus Prefects, even for the most innocent para | Were seen and heard— ¢ had sustained an injary in That amount js not very terrible | graphs; andinany of the Swiss, Piedmoutese and | coming with giant's « the quarters, and could only run on free soil. So } for our wines, nor for shor i f f 4 My a alt 5 0 and Madeiras, of | @ . 4 ps: 7 Oe ¢ 2 the platform eperated against him, with the co-ope- | which the Américans driuk a large quantity. It 1s | ermen, papers, have boon altogether stopped at J sit past o'clock, with an unexpected ro1 ration of the Veteran’s confederate, Blue Dick. But | in Ohio and Pennsylvania that it is principally con- | dom of the press is entirely inuzaled, and that every | %@ccompaniment of unpoetical shouts Pants had his backers, who were full of hope. His | centrated, and uality is admitted to be belc Haga , e el 0; ¢ o1 present racing form, as well as the course, was iocrity. It aprile PUURE hitherto, entities means are taken to repress the publication of facts | by all those who were caught by this sudden . . mediocrity er re ve z , nea. ing fro he height 2 against him. The war ery among the sans culottes standing all the effuris made, North America cannot noe Va Ae hog paar which petaray, Ot ater, feiliog fr gohan een Ma boys was, * To the victors belong the spoils"—Put | produce wine fit to drink. ‘The vine is indigenous will'geaseturclouing of sions wadsoticonct sky-tipon the earth This Uilurium was composed of | sa Gottenet, who: hadi come to: Veraailles invcom: | shes kph 9 mi 6 o'olook. it in the war, but spare the breeches.” to the country, and grows thore to an immense size | Will ord Si EMAls, On Suadarer TET melee |, ball of We largoabMlite, andi. bave deen several) |. cany of two cf tase es. galantes of Mabillo. and | Pig: cee tae nee Be og nates, fon o'oleokc. Warrior, like Pants, had been injured by injudi- | indeed, to suc “0 | city, spy ln and hamlet, on Sundays. It is said e 8 » E pany of these femmes g: antes of Mabille and | Pirst mile in four min. 52 sec., Jackson first by 30 indeed, to suc a pigeon’s egg. The streets | Chateau du Fleur, and took delight in the amnse- | yards; secord mile in 5 mine 2 soe, Twokson atilt anextent, that the Scandinavians, | that the Assemblée Nationale, L’ Union, Le Public, | hail stones as large e- | and public places were covered with water, and gaye | Mentof the place, A lunch had been brought in | ‘with the the lead full 40 vards; third mile in 4 mim. cup, was supposed to have shown speed when he n miles in 40 seconds under jostled the pent Chief off the course, giving the ur, in a sw ng twenty miles race, felt am tion to run for the championship and a purse 0 sovereigns each. A challenge was given, on being duly accepted, was fixed to come h ad: | of this day. ctions of the country blowing with great force, the lightning and thunder cious training on *‘ free soil” His grooms had | when they touched on the new continent, some cen- Sas France, have deci rown old abn inde theircunning. He is an honest | turies before Columbus, were, above all, struck with Seda ae SeeU RE ice, nyo dociied SRE RL ebe ¥ ; ‘ A the carriage, and the champagne was distributed | 5g ca kon uhe 3 i Hore’regtont Semest, tock, and from a ‘+race- | the appearance of the vines, and, in consequence, | Leer ine Ratharier “Pete Om that day, and thas | 10 paris a resemblance of Venies, Ia several strvets | (oat the aie whi eens Was distributed icin d deo Dameoeull eetsioe teens iecaud aoe ne ee ite the nee favor- | called the country Vinland, or the land ofthe vine. | 4 proposof journava—The news of the lowering of | the caves, cellars, and stores wore filled with the | flocking like butterflies around a candle. firet: fifth n Simin. f sec., making the halt . riends were sanguine. The bunches of grapes are cf immense size, but the | the price of subscription of the Moniteur Universe, | liquid clement, and much damage was occasioned The celebrated Mudame Lafarge, who poisoned | distance done in nds under 25 minutes, being in 1813, and was sentenced to ten years | at a speed of more than 12 miles an hour, Jacksom nt, has decidedly heen graciated by | being at least 250 yards ahead; sixth mile in 5 min hy this unexpected shower, which lusted about two | } Louis Napoleon. She was detained at St. Remy, | 7 Jackson having a clear lead of 300 yards; San Hacinto is another gamo old horse, from the | wine is detestable. The plants from Europe soon | anddof its direction by sho government, has caused From all parts of the country “race horse region,” whose blood had told in man: degenerate, but the Americans are continuing their 5 . ion ii i itution- a hard-fought field’ He acquired great fame by the experiments, and it is not impossible that they will Bren ey Sisal eased tral rata ed aay Both are complaining of ingra- | bours and a half. drubbing he gave the renowned Santa Ania, in } succecd in the ond. ‘the developement of the manu- | ¢; fr Fouis Napoleon and his ministers. It is | We receive the news that this same tempest was | in the department of the E a Rho d 9 sec ards their match on the Texas course. But his position factures of the United Sta is remarkable. Cotton Yeetae, Gibiloas will Oe immense. sinha felt in the provinces during the afternoon of the ie id that hic Tegpaintale daneret a y oe irs i mil 7 ‘de Jacket an6 ieee in the betting was like that of the two proceding | is manufactured to the extent of 331 millions of | ” Prance and England are on the eve of settling, in | same day, and occasioned many disusters. The o¢ she will go th Ammorioa oY Jackson ne: first. On going the last reed francs, employing 640,000 bales of cotton, or a company with Prussia, Holland, and Piedmont, a | ¢!ops of wine in several parts of Burgundy naga. oO, Dios e Blnck Hawk titdissen servicelte beating Indian | fourth part of the whole production. To take atorm | treaty of extradition, which is much demanded ‘by | instance, at Chateau Chambertin, Chah or Hugo, who, | one-third of a mile Ss, for | "The splendid furniture of M. Vie , Tavel, | 4h, i i democratic orator, was living here, asa | round, Levett gave up dead beat, Jacksonj ru Ponies, and was known to be game—but he was too | of comparison better calculated to show the extent | euch cf these countries. and other places, have been totally destroyed, and | pashaw, in the most. nbd ‘furnished otal, | two-thirds of aut Bore and walkin; til romain- slow for such a field. of this produce, we can say that it is much more | ~ ‘The letter of General Loflo, which has at last beon | 20 wine Will be made this year. In Paris, the | Rne dela Tour 1 Auvergne, is to be sold at public | der; yet he then completed the ten mites in 61 mim. Buena Vista the Third also ran upon his courage, | than France, for these 640,000 bales are equivalent ished e Constitutionnel, - | damage occasioned by the storm is redueed to a at about tho rate of Black Hawk. He acquired his | 10 116,000,000 of ‘kilog , and the consumption of | Pubsie haecereated as evel senate ene: | lange bumber of slates aud tiles tombled down, end name in running third to Old Zack, at Buena Vista. | France is about 60,000,000 of kilog. It is trac that | Generals Lamoriciere and Changarnier, and the il- | 4n immense quantity of branches of the troos, plant- | yooms of the houze, which are filled with the most Blue Dick, at one moment before the start, attract- | We #e superior in quality, as our colored cottons, | justrious general refuses, as well as his cotemporaries, | ¢d in our gardens, broken int» pieces. This is not | yomarkable euriositics, , BELGIC, AMERICAN, ATLANTIC, AND MISsI9stPPt ed some attention as likely to win. He only made | $v of middling value, aro superior to all others. | to take the oath of allegiance to the government of | to be compared with the disasters in our vignicales | "The furniture of M. Armaud Murrast, the ex- | RAULWAY Ap EsiGRATION ComPANY.—Thore ia @ one show in the race, having been entered’ to run The Americans, on the contrary, are below the Eng- | Louis Napoleon, by which he says he has been departments. auction on Tuesday next, and will, no doubt, produce | 34 sec , the quickest run ten miles on record. a large amount. I have visited the parlors and - r w the. r 3 i t uker of the Legislative Assombly, after six | “etailed project HR ere line from Savan- down Pants—became restive almost as soon as made | lith._ The cotton cloths made in the United States | treated with great roughness, and ‘contempt of his evertheless, the daily rains falling over Paris wonths of the revolution of February, 1848, is also nah,in the State of Georgia, U.S., to the city of to run, and stopped. Some had thought him worthy | 82¢ 700,000 kilomotres in length, independently of high position. and the neighboring departments are considered by | to be sold on Monduy next. But what a differenee | Natchez, a distance of some hundred miles, by the Union course. 12,600,000 kilog. of cotton twist. England exports At Lyons, the distribution of the students to th the farmers, whose ground is planted with grainand | hery oon that furniture ane rg ' o | Which the Atlantic will be connected with the Mis- of ceeatacis ured ‘among ‘the hills of New Hamp. | Realy, double that amount of cotton clothe and troops hae been made by General de Castellanne, the | Potatoes, as the best which cbuld be desired for tho abelHincrasvwhervadaostesd 0 ier cng sissippi, “the father of rivers.”” The company, shire,” was known to have sprung from its best | tWist in a still greater proportion. In the inferior | Commander-in-Chief of the astern Departinenis of | growth of theiz crops ‘The harvest of gi 18 | the treasury of the govermuent, and died pennyless, | Wich proposes to construct the line in sections, ta blood—a ‘noble Percie”—the Hotspur of the North, | ®tticles, the Americans are beginning to competo | France, ‘Thie ceremony, whic took place on the | {0 be excellent, and the hay and herbs, for the feed | had nothing in his Louse, whilst. the haughty Vis. | 0 Belgian origin, and is formed upon a co of the game “« Stark and Morgan breed.” But for | With the English in the markets of Asia, and the | 31st inst., (Monday lust,) was favored with very fine | ing of horses and other animals, are more abundant | Gout Hugo, wbo, though an advocate of liberty, | gt@uted. by the legislature of that State to cortaim his habit of stumbling, sometimes having awful | Produce of woollen articles is also every day be- | weather, and was the occasion of much pleasitre in | than for the last twenty yeurs; hops and vegeta- | Sas sift) Keeping his titles, is now rich and well off, | iuential parties in Bruseels and Antwerp. Am falls, at times when most important to stand up, he | Coming extensive in the United States. © In 1850, | the city. Several speeches were delivered, and a | bles are so abundant in our markets, t the though he doce not pay his creditors! * | impor tant feature in the company is that the share- might be expected tocome in creditably. In histwo | that country used 32,000,000 of kilog. of wool, and | military display of horsemanship and shamaght | dealers are in a state of the utmost satisfaction. | 'Y cabbage, trce feet round, two and one-half feet | holders will be protected from any possible loss be- Wacunes ‘at Contreras and Chorubusco. following | are goods to the value of 233,000,000 of | was given to the public in the large place called the This state of abundance is attributable, it is said, ich 7 the market, | Yond the amount of their babe ipa should the the Great Chief), he had fallen, onboth occasions, | nes. The iron trade is also on the increase. The | Hyppodrome. A’ letter reccived yestorday from | to electricity 0 , table, of the | Undertaking even turn out wholly abortive. The in one sense, hors de combat. Exce fas making one quantity of Pe iron obtained in 1850 was 570,000 Lyons, which was shown to me, assures that tho en- As a matter of course these sudden storms have species of cauliflower, was cooked in the bes capital is to be supplied by Belgium, Goorgia, and in the field, he was not considered {ate enough to be | 40Ms; being about the fourth part of the production | thusiasm was not great, and ‘that the only thing | somewhat changed the atmosphere, and whilst the proved style,” and furnished a sufficient food to | tis country, and the subseribers are protected by & in the betting. ~ of England, and a trifle more than ours was before | jt was considered advisable to take waspleasure. — | middle ofthe day is as warm as the inside of an | twenty-five people. sorteté anonyme, which limits their lability to the At last tho signal to mount appears—the jockeys | 1849, or 622,000 tons. The wrought iron of the | The news received from Algiers announces that | oven, the evening, night, and morning, are : There is in a garder amountof their shares. Should the requisite capital jump to the saddle, and the impatient steeds loap to | Americans in 1850 amounted to 252,000 tons, being | General Macmahon, commander-in-chiof of the | as during the latest part’ of autu Phi which produces two nt binds of upples, and the | be provided, the company will achieve a work of the goal. At the word “ go,” they are off, most of | Jee than ours before 1848, for we then went as far | army of invasion of the Kabyle country, in the | Weather is occasioning mich di grafts of which ure offering to the agrieu'tnrists the | Stat importance, not to America only, but te them at their best pace. ‘The Veteran leads from | %* 60.000 tons. But the Americans import from | mountainous land of the Atlas, encountered a large | Tam told, by two or three doctors Same phenomevoa. ‘This apple tree is the only one | Hurope. | Stewn navigation can accomplish the sew the first bound, not seeming to regard the platform from foreign countries a portion of the iron which body of Arabs on the 23d ult., and defeated them. | leagues and tiemselves aro exeoedingly busy. of the kind, and the two kinds of apples which | Journey from pee eae Liverpenl or Antwerp, closel: pressed by Lancaster. Tho old horse is well | they use, particularly for railways. In France, on | These sons of the desert, whose commander was the otwithstanding the violent tempest whic grow upon it, ore the Reinetfrof the red cheaks, and | Savannah in fifteen days; but the prsege rode by’ bis land jockey, as the other by a | the contrary, the railway companies, as well as all | famed Sheriff Bou-Séba, were ent to pieces, and | Taging over Paris on Thur the ball given | AY. Canadian Reinerte of vellow color, thence to the Mississippi is through the Gulf o€ Southern “ ary Cbaateut spurring and As the public, are obliged to employ the national forges, | there were among them 780 men killed or wounded, | by Louis Napoleon to about three thousand guests, An agr 4 gellation, tying n the haunchos of the Veteran, because the dut; iron amongst us. amounts to | whilst inthe ranks of the F’ rmy there were | took place at the Elysée, and was a brill re 8 noor Paris, an apple tree, Florida, which frequently consumes one month, grain tee wy and is ee dificult and dangerous. By othe fe iti ince ‘ ‘ Ned r; afleir 8 calle o soirée of the legis- | the railway, the journey from Savani who is unab} ake off his Sinbad tor.nsntor prohibition, since it is no less than 1c t five men killed and fifty wounded afleir, It was called the soty of the legis: | Gah. | cape § iD oing at the top of theirepeed forabout 20poloswhen, | to8 for the most ordinary kind®, or 152 p ages or hamlets, built with stones and | lative corps, fur all the members of the House | valuable; it will soot be kuown to the public ta, Natehss, on tha bank of the Hissasipiy wilt ve going , peed for about 20 pr nen. | the value of the article. In the United States, the & and Wives, ‘dewshters: of ind bes effected in twenty-four hours. The line has boew to get a breathing apell, the Veteran allows Lancas bebo Gd valorcin, on five takes leer, | Mere burned, and the trees cut down to the rusts. | and 5 ohiew trules fo were, no | _ The theatrical performances are daily making | Surveyed, andthe ground is stated to be very favors ter to take the track, when Americus pats at him in duty is 50 per vent ad valorem, or five times les:, | No doubt that thess Arabs will soon sce t inviter ie other bodie the: ery worderful progress in Par ind the managers are | lucky in. thetr enserpr and for a Jong time iron intended for val novelties have eior the rail. Tt will commence at Savi the State of Georgia, ond proceed to Natches, a event, but his own style, against the Veteran—now lying third, ailways was | only way of being happy is to submit to Peanee. doubt, until after a very hard and protracted straggle,at th admitted free of duty. The United States is the Brom Spain, we recive the intelligence that tho side tue diplomatic corps and ‘ ar to the public within the last wi 0 7 iles. * C0 est ‘ 1 ‘ ; rp . » usta ° ly une hundrod ana fifty. be | distonce of some bundred miles. ‘* Large pot be 20th pole, the other * old fo, ves way, | Country where the greatest number of journal intention of the government is to break up the | the usual gu ere oly ) being mentioned, toes ; 4 ac rairien, andthe : advally falling back, and the Illinois yee takes | 9 be found. The returns already alluded to Chamber of Deputies at the end of June or begin- | The tain sae ai a “urand Operé, the success of the “Jui Bre | oot pe Mat al cibabe terre A beets he who came arrived at rag t the number at 2,650, and that of reviews at f July. Then a now House would be con- . wel i t c shout: i Bor i + ning of July 1 col eee ernest pga rath the saleben Oe That makes one periodical publication for every | goked, to which full powers would he given to mo- the want of the bone and niuscle of maturity, or for | 7,161 free persons. The proportion is nowrly the | @ity the political laws. The coups d°étal on the the want of blood and breeding, he could not stan same in the South and the North; but on the shores tapis had been entirely abandoned, and the address the press—but the 38d pole gives way tothe Vete | of the Atlantic it is nearly double what it is in the | which had for its object to protest against the inten- 8 te ran that, most unexpectedly, puts on the steam, | West. There are many other comparisons to make, | tion of tho government, was no longer receivin | pact ten « i eh Be ike Boston in his match race with Fashion,) wi- | bUt We content ourselves at presont with declaring | signatures. It had been decided that it would not | toom was nese as it ¢ dening the gap, and forging ahead fariher than a | that the power of the United States is rapidly in- | ho presented to Queen Isabelia. ment, the storm being over, ; any period fn the race, at the 24th and 35¢h poles; | creasing, and that thus anew manufacturing and | At Lisbon, on the 19th inst., General Das Antas, | were a ag hg about which place Lancaster makes his dying effort, | Political equilibrium is being prepared forthe whole | peer of the Kingdom, and who had beon the chiet | Bengal lights, offered to the | “ta '™ | engineer will not be startled by Boxhill or Kilsby rant still immense, and the part of Roger, who is | tunnela cher can be bad on each side of the taking his cong, bas been filled by Gneynard,a — jixe, which cun be used, particularly for the wooden singer of much talent, whose fame will inerowse. il, 30 common in America, sleepers, and every au excclient chanten i of wood work; and, above all, the the land, which has so heavily encumbered v lines, will be next to nothing.” The great valley of the Mississippi drains a surface not inferior. certainly, to that of any other river im the world, from its central aource, including its yn o'clock the ball ibe. At this mo- windows of the lay of firey holder the most Tanse “Vort-Vert,” danced by the skilful ed last night, and received with em. Louie Napoleon was present, and d that he bestowed th rks of the | Priora, was rev rouch enthe. it wae ret 7 vorld. H : ies striking coup dowd. The wn, which is | Wimost appr non the fair dancer | main stream (the Missouri) upwards of three runs upto the second place and then dics away, | “tl _ one vere Sorpa Of the ‘country; died; and) ected in trout of the r 7 wvered with | 4 At the Comic opera house, the comic opera of | {},ousand miles from the oeean, taking into account dead tind. Meanwhile, asthe Veteran is giving Foreign Miscellany, was buried with great honors. AY. . ; . | Marollicr and Mehal, ontitled the “Trat A sang | the windings ofthe river. This valley, rich in na. way, Pontaloons is gradually coming up; and at | ‘The Royal Chinese Junk Keying was sold by | In Piedmont, the ministerial crisis may be con- Coe or Heer rt ieee te eae | ty Dlle. Mamoated, Menere 8t ; and | tyro} reeoufces, and calculated to beseue hd. teats the Lith pole, under whip and spur, hoads the Vet- | auction, on Thursday, for £2,900. sidered as being ended. M. D'Azeglio was d posilb was excellent, the refreshments exgitisite, ¢ Lemaire, elicited the plaudits of all its hearers. | of populous communities, is comparatively isolated By Wat raha eie theta In London, on Thursday, the 3d inst., the bukers | cidedly Secretary of State and chief of the a Fe cccrstne tna egore pies Lig tok ty on | veduoed the thar pound leat to Sid. ie price has | General Da Borivida had been elected pou and the wi c stho gentlem®n were ‘The Vondeville threatre has terminated the per- | by the want of intercommunication with the States while closing up, consisting of Western Warrior, | also fallen in Berlin and Brussels. the House. ‘This news has been received here with | to the Indies. poleon, accompanied by | formance of “La Dame aux Camelias.” Mme. | of Alabama and Georgia, and by its sea distance Na Louis i j inees i hisaids-de-e 0 ded | Doche took her henetit last, but she was | from the Atlantic; and it is scarcely possible to oati- ire i ¥ A young man, a patient in the Peckham House | much satisfaction. Princess Mathilda and hisatds-de-canyp, promenaded | b nenent by PP bee 7 “ cole nee on, thew ei othe eae; giving Lunatic Feytuia, Tepently died, and a post mortem | We hear, from the best source, that the great | among his guests, and wore received with much | i MY a lucky Ms ight Dp auae tt Bate ss Ve teen oal by ol hid Ly ve othe strtiegres, of Blue Dick, that gave up afver | exawination of the body being made by Dr. Arm- | powers of Europe have signed, in London, a proto- | reepect by those who were under his roof. Before | by it. _,new play, in Re States by linking them together, ing: the * by Messrs. | great water lines of the Atlantic and Mississippi. ‘ leaving this ball, | must spowk of a peculiarity whioh | tresae d’ Lite et la Mait pee was seamas ked by il the etalasient present—it is | Clairville and ope dass br series with SE teens, ae comer pth may expect Cay ben + . a | f ra ’ a i ats were « 2 e Yangbter by the public offman, the excellent | completion of this national work, we are not auffi- . G ivi is spoons, and other articles of the weight of two | France had signed with the other powers. that their coats were as while as if they had just | langbter ‘i wb - pea i 4 be the iith pote (Geant Hoe eri t the mounds ond & half, consisting of three entire spoon- | RA riot of the most exoiting kind took place last, | le!t the inside of a flourinill After many resem va wet dt ba ot ‘rhea: le their debut wt that en a pepe be A the a aaaaaeed track on the start); of Black Hawk, that had died fundies of about five inches long, four half:handles, | week at Poisseaux, near Fribourg. It consisted of | Lsivally discovored that the cause of this queer ia | # Al the, WariGtas Oleakeo a furoo: {0 Gad Sees enuste* | rhein GhesFatlwiepentans iaiciaa sem inducement to off earlier ; of the Colonel and Moderator, that had | nine nails, some of which wore as large as a spike | an assembly of more than fonricen thousand inen, | cident ‘was to be accounted for by the ridiculous Hed ‘“Madathe Magne,” was perteriied off Biatay: |) ahe eherchaldanathep ane. withers nantaey rials never emerged from the last lot in the ruck : and | nail;*the balf of the iron heol of a shoe, a screw two | who had congregated together to make a solemn | habit of our ladies to paint their faces, wrms, St? by CLEC OE MGR iDeabor Domne aay Tie to nactloipate [nthe develondshont Ge ohare, of Grados that had hitherto beon so far be- | and a half inches long, four pebbles tho size of a | appeal to the Confederation, and to claim for the | Shoulders with whito and pink powder, and eucbih dalaabosint vee sauce Me pee we Eg rpm hind as to be almost out of sight. At the 85th polo, | hazel-nut, a metal button, and a qasity ote | Teepe of Mribourg ite reintegration into ite federal see en tenses iv otihe taco bi tera wonld. ert pny th Ge te ae clinrbe: khe ene: Weld adapted te the European con- ick’: declini. Jani 3 | bles, which the patient had been in the habit of | rights. se mon, who had met at ten o'clock in | © J » the bls mite tho brust npon the vs ‘ ae and aoe eon ribs beable Sto ent fete x Sohal east tee AAO, Abel: arene avallowing for Awe or three years previously, and | the morning, soon becamo so oxvited, that a rumor | ¢yebrows, and under the pupil of the oye. failure AES MU ie eds et | rtm ag Tee ae os eatin f ane an ‘continues fourth, in hand, until reaching the | which, it was apparent, had been the cause of his | was spread that thoy were marching against the | itention is to appear as Spanish Like a jv - F “ty anol a single efor pole + Hacinto, | strong, the medical superintendent, there was found | col, which has for its object to guarante Sah Take 08 gui to rw, bee lasted a Tittle in the stomach a mags of handles of tinned iron | of Prussia his rights in the canton of Lith pole; he takes the third place, abiding his time, | death. city. lmmediately the soldiers were ordered out, and ey ; vot one ion ot those who may bo The Theatre abil " Pee | Ses ws Ay facerable distiogaiieed tis Hespematoal enti Pan! dl et he 4 le. ‘The Protestant religion is not only gaining ground | all’ the shops were shut, and the cannons placed in | cilled ainateurs of paintings, My coat, mnong ma | 1 eat i dtxteent®|tuuyeials ts obligatic. i Secu hots ieooiade ont te wppeoeston care in Moravia and Bohemia, but also in Carniola, all directions, particularly at the gate of Ramont, others, was partly as white as ay lod upon re sixteenth | payments of all its obligations, and itis the only State 4 h was received with much approbation. | in the Union that allows aliens to hold, sell, and The costumes are magnificent, the scenery remark- | mortgage property—a pris lego of inestimable valno and the play o . Apropos— | ty an emigrating population. Tt will be seem from i i jacket. eadi i ags, that had now ran | where, after the persecution of the Protestants by | the Arsenal, tho place of the City Hall, that of | jae * Ser ehan cacauaty odie Grantous gains av | Ferdinand IL, (in 1598 this Monarch demolished Notre Damo, &e. Tho poople rouurning from the ' M. de Persigny, thezpet minister of every jump the paco very slow—all his competitors | their places of worship, and banished their preach- | meeting were assaulled, aud many arrests wore made | leon, was tnarried on Frida, i } ho were | ¢ ove particnfars tha offers mony that bad eon pushed forward, dead, beat hy their | ers and schoolmasters,) there never was any ques- | among them, — . ices of the Elysee wana: ders the sbove'partioniar® § and in tha peo own efforts—and on reaching the 49th pole, witha | tion of a congregation until very recently, when | A letter which has been received from Hamburg, biswit M sed of the T taonpnromig ror, wo | moues Q will bo sure te sudden bound, on being touched by the spur, he | «bout 200 Protestants established a place of worship di dated May 27th, annouvces that» seorel socioty, oe Ney dela Mos ye wrikeniee tee The subscription’ 1a is filling takes the track, leaving | hehind bim, di at 1a . as: i the * Society of Death,” had bee ‘overod Persie ee a age, author of mus b havealways | to an enortnous erof appiicanta, and the shares, ing the 41d, Ct aut tre | of ions, says a Belgian journal, are boing | at Bremen. This socialist association wa ovorod \ gareut sb non sucoenafal ee ee ig | mad & peomiuta of three= Wek | carried on hetwoen Belgitmand Wngland fora troaty | by Wao arrest of a maa nainsd Hocholman, an ex. | tin rs been Wi i + ee titan : Amyaiyy 7 + We by Gaviaas Abdi ad Gime ogee, temweed, MAY rm Ylaw VE GUO epembinng Cmioty OL WOa PY Way cuomuvur vv meud die wviazudorn, bay ua S Rey wrewearnn vp oon

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