The New York Herald Newspaper, December 16, 1852, Page 6

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cI be hoped | with o river of motres in | lawns of all | with om ample tf smmenition, note, ADDITIONAL EUROPEAN INTELLIGENCE. cana od | Sin, obo ond rane of ol Gnriedon, ha | sad xl fo Dearie witcnd hep rime | Recast merck | eee hae Sve ‘Amother Overland Arctic Ex- dows the per: | be com ‘sod, Armaineiliors have | (ue starting pelt af the ase hens Os pedition. ioe | ben bug fae rien fom | Se "be ell ‘ead fo tncive poked mest be exhibited an im- | ily, for the eum : engaged. company have, in the liberal ali A babi, Ju Pant soustas sfastiag ton in | evergiuing that T may’ tak cette the sons Our Foreign Correspondence. appearance Fmekieg soa | fort and bealth of the party, a eat i ignites, instead ot Senter All the party, es for making = ef our clubs have-adopted the new fashion. | correct astronomical and other observations. To ¥ told that the government intends taxing the for the first, quantity of preserved vo MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. cal profession renee Tamicalors, te provers the lees of the régie meate, soups, alse tome slehebol Lie, the leader in those glertous wars ef general secisty. But it has been doo, | collar ton deen in’ yage was arrested a fow days ago, | for fucl, have been to Hudsen’s Bay. pra Now to burial slowly borne, or, rather, attem many ao time and ofi, | words, at Roman ip the dirty place called St. Martinville, | To insure the latter object an execllant sextant, by THEATRICALS IN EVROPS, Follow'é by the brave of other lands, and is a subject new qanning the pa geen m4 who declared himself to bo Count de Mailly. and | Dolland, which has already seen muoh hard service He. on whom from beth her epen hands on various Pt boards. That consummate artist, had in his ‘ets the enormous sum of 240,600 | in the north witheut injery, is to be used. Two Men, Be, Se. Lavish Honor showered all her stare, Frederick Lemaitre, is now Taoconet, # | brother of the same have been, or are ptied heca. » enacting, landin; francs (his ewa monoy) in bank bills. It appoars | chromometers y fade, ordered, from — ee rarsneronae vata Feel, sete. of Sareorenere meow is ~ oamee the lending, 9 Deaegee: Fete Count, who i@ somewhat mad, has the mo- | two of the first London makers, for this spesial sor- a ae Barer ie Ayo lng sean a hry cot M7 > | aad ata Pee ea ad. abado, in & that bears his name. Thon we | mounced “ls tana . y! the kiad =~ in addition te his ALDNMARLE SFEEWT, ProcADIELY, 2 | Hot anes oe Uwien, in our romgh iaend-stery, Fey eA at the Theatre Francais, | it is said that the treo ‘The theatrionl news is not of muck iqipartance, | the mest kiad Sonor, petenions, Paes Nov 23, 1862. glory. thet Jann Sas tf very val saviee, the use compass “ 4 “ Hie that walks it, onty thirst and “Les Foyers dos Theatres Parisionno,” at the | menth, will be reduoed will Jot you knew thet J ec gana BA ion; tho advantages Relics of the Iron Duke and a Description of his For the right, and leans to dead«m Funambales, all woeking, up to the same point. The | vailed some time ago that the reduction would be | onthe at Vienna, whero she was to give some superior ening rag. OB 5 by every FPuwneral—The Decorations and Orders of the Love of self, before bis journey clores, Albionio samplo of the matic profession in this | 75.000 men Ne deubt this reduction bears an ua- | eoncerts. and thereafter to reside near Dresden, im bsg a oa — wil bo opprsatated _ etoed A Duke—Ode of the Poet Lawreate, Alfred Tenny - Hed em en te See thistie bureting nevelty is the repeat Pog Woflington, a lady as mies pl opr and mer be sake ae —_ aves iNew has bought frem Lucile Graha, ae nal ae ie my er i , Siete si is és feedion Ml kn: about town » hundred and re years | mon: is Napeleon’s mtions Bu cele) mseUse. e magne » most iin sna wine #0 She Preeieces Ont. ete He Hoh cane or tite te ont Pair Meet tory, tee asLaura Ball, or any other indy fequatiy uae | it will only Feduce the expenses of that part ofthe | The success of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” is still of | that a dip sirele, of an tigks and Seana saoerip- Jurions Results—British Operations in Burmah— ‘The path of duty was the way to glory. enviable notoriety. Mosers. Tom Taylor aud Rsade, | French budget twenty millions. the highest degree. Thore are hero, im Paris, sevon | tien as yen nn elon ed Fe octal The Cafre Wer—Benjamin Disraeli and the He, that ever following her commands the adaptaters, to be sure, have done their bestto | | The Journal des Debats, which has boon quite | translations, published by three newspapers and four | that sho lage enggann cls Nels Soieuaaea with English Prese—Roasting @ Cat Alive—Banguets On'with toil of heart, and knees and bands, make her sppear as inviacibly geod humered aud | hostile to the government of Louis Napoleon till | booksellers. bai eee teat ae compared A 8 : ‘Through the lon; to the far light, has wom instinotively generous as can be desired. Indeed, | new, has thought r to anzounee to its readers, AMERICANS IN PARIS. i) ae of eds james Eergln fone ered basa may te Foreign Officers im London—The Arrival of His path upward. end prevail a. her fair reputation is most goncreusly treated by | ina very long article, signed Armand Bertin, that | G.7. Dunning, Philed’s, Mise Bond. Cincinmatt. tend te throw some lig my: 08 the La Plata with Yellow Fever on Board—Uncle find tne Legend crags of duty sealed, these gentlemen, who, truth te admit, cannot be toe | the ‘empire was made,” and, after all, that it was | A. ourcho, Charleston. os Keen and family | in the direction otithe maagnetio atesnotlons Oe thie Tom's Cabin and the Stage—Very Full Accownt fo which our God witaeat ete oat oun; highly somupenees Ce their brilliant ure. ai 2 brag Gy baer ed petra ey ae wa Everett! Ware: .T 2. . pablees 1 Maps te: pce | rh ia) course, iesane- ‘, rd: us Fun plot: When im a very wily posi: ie ve shown a ion an 1. A. Lore + ‘eX v ™ of Hingis Phestricals. 3 es Baie tee cea ven baits arena toe shame, | tion, Peg has reooived great kindnoss from a poor, | astonishment, and expressed it in other very leng | § Oomect, as, peerthecteeapetenmeper ate i gar The various editions of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ ‘Through many and a age proclaim half starved, and miserable individual, named Crip: | articles referring te the subject. m J. L Rogers, do. “ited "0 ‘of Halkett’s sir boats has been for- published, from a penny (in illegible type) and A civic revel, and pemp and game, | let—so named doubtless, because he combines in b M. Thiers, who was residing in Paris, living with | B, Hitchcock, do. eed: te'Amacion, while anetaat’ aiteaae enefal wpwards, are fast giving place to equally varied And when the long-illumined city’s flame, | own porsen the three vocations of post, painter and | the utmost tranquillity im his mansion, in the Place | 0.J Starr, do. bad’ ger ety at bake hare Fite Jaiasay Ges wmibtcs' of the Wirth; poceniaghs ‘alllacy | © SRM Eocene eae ts tam | Sotie-and abe aserdingly aéte allie he peas te | SE: Gesstes ih, Fantom, Mensiay inet om bis wa | Dy Rialaes. gnear: sab: Reeetate: tele eetsiod: bentelmniorer, ae and oxpleite, death ‘na red funeral, Eternal honor to his mame ” ; | bees Me A mae iis children? eed ‘ oe politionl friends wisanecin aso | Mes Boge Mazyell and Exq., othe Admiralty. "As th wvigation on the i The above is sbout an eighth of the laurel leaves ardian angel of his poverty stricken mausarde. Vely Bashaw, the new ambassador of Turkey, ar- wig wie Paid reat American lakes does not open until 5 of the Iron Duke The supplements of the Times, | issued. gi gel of ~ W. B, Babbitt, do. ‘all net leave Canada for th th until the latter Perticnlarly, and other daily journals, have, for | The inundations in the provinces form » subject fiMe.tven qucoeedé ia inner ae at ne a ee ee ate ere The aT eeetl: | Walter Mantes, Prey. RAL pert ch tied boos, Afar onlling @A Ladeiga to te- of hia tr . . | G, ¥. Fernandes, . ly some time past, teemed with advertisoments, offering | of national interest; The town of Nottingham waa, | Dower AE peed be this canteciusnte Mantltt aad all | Count Bacelsoht accompanied him. M. Edward | Jno. Wilkins, do ceive the final instrutions of Sir George Simpson, nate, of the illustrious warrior for sale, and | J a cab Fone one | without ostentatious sentimentality, but wita jotlity | Blecque kas also returned from Constantinople, in | E. Van Arsdale, Newark. governor-in- chief of the company’s territorios, eraphs id it floods ever remembered—more extensiv Be It Ste. Mi a, greatest floods ever reme td te | and goed humor, #0 that Pog not only dries tears, | company with his embassy. J, Bartison, New York. shall prooged by steamboat as far as Sault Ste. Ma- the possensor (vill lately) of ‘ais Grace's ealigraphy | oven than the great floods of 1831 and 1524; the re | buy Svcitos the riaible muscles of those whe sre re- | Frem Madrid we received the intelligence that | 7: A. Teiator and family, rie, and thence northward in a large bark canoe, looked upon it ass bank note or exchequer bill. cet ia lng al rtniagipeptsregtapid oa prom fries | Moved by her goodness. Her visits to Triplet are | the members of the Cortes are daily arriving. It ia | , ¥* se NE and family manned by aioe Sonatinas by Lakes Supo- It is gemerelly ramored here, and indeed, I may im many instances been diverted, in others it is | ¢YC® turned to goed account, being rendered | said that the eppositien will have abent eighty | “'Now York, f oa Rainy, ou bik nea ft ‘aotory, where pay that Ihave it frem 0 authentic source, | dificult and dangerous Great alarm was excited | .Jebicles to the furtherance of a trick uper theoritios | prtizans. | hepe to arr: ut the 13¢! rycen Here, or at Pachbiens: Uh: f Mars kept by | threugheut the unty of Gloucestershire on Geter, | B84 Wits of the day. Triplet, whe h aint hor has published a de- | AE Dt Norway House, I e: ee to find my men waiting my that the departed business like son of Mars kept by So errgrmape ay tas ts He a atar | portrait, despairs of rendering it as beautiful as the f treason against the Our Swiss Correspondence. arrival, and should the sea-ice be brokem up, the him variows lithographed forms of letters, morely | 487 shel be ine Siaraing Inextane of the waters in | griginal, and, whon just completed, stabs the face | government, offences towards religion, murder sud Bien: Bieack: Gln an Vino. ty will immediately ombark in the boats provided Tequiring the date to be inserted, pted | hor saad te a light, ome hide. The, aa ne with a knife; aad the sprightly Pog, seizing on the | stealing, will be punished by death, oven if tho jury (Switzerland,) Nov. 8, 1852. y bee the iter 7 ep peyote pees wee as replies. Thue—‘ Field Marshall the Duke | Shrewsbury, and county of Galop, as also the adjoin- | pean ete oct satire ia ae popping her {seer ne O he pena Med om tho Lith at Civitts | The Vintage-Contemplated Railways in the Dif» | Inte a eauall naverie ty tun wertens aeeomity, of Wollington is net the Chancellor of the | ing comnty of Montgomery, wore on Suaday nearly | 9 choice party, including Colley Cibbers Quia, Kitty | Vecahis, incognito, and Procesded te Rome, where | ferent Cantons—Advantages Thereby Presenied— | and there leave the large boat under charge of three Exchequer,” &o ; ““F M. tho D. of W. is teatire the Ci Mile viaduot over the river Soar, | Clive, and the critics Saat] and Soaper, fiad every | ke had an interview with the Pope. What took | Commercial and Political Relations between Swit- | MD; While tho remainder of the party, dragging Dot the author of such and such s work,” &o. In | between Wigston and Countershorpe stations, on sno | masivable fault, and swear that itis not a bit like | plaoe at thisinterview is aot known, and Ferdinand | eriand and the United Stales—Great IWant of | (ue smaller boat, are to take, w ditvot eourse over- fet, i ity of the writ. | Midland raitway, wore om Saturday, the 13th ace, | th® charming and courtoous Peggy Woffington. | has returned to his kingdom by ses, incognito. rf WY of | land for the nearest point of the Buck or Great Fish » AnAWers as Varied as the necessity of the writ- | arta a ars were a a ne ‘t 2 tes | Hor kindness te tl r artist forms one plosof the | _ Letters from Vitmaa announce that the eldest Consuls— Departure of Travellers—Duchess D’ Or- | River, the distance to which is estimated at about ten interrogatories and applications required. This | pewmerer Toye et) is oN solo ine 1 drama; and the o' Se is not ef an over moral daughter of Queen Victoria has bee: leans and her Two Sons—Reflections om Fallen | ninety miles. Having reached the river, throe of piece of information, in monetery parlance, bas | Gembridgoghire the iecstant tein setae Now tendency, being reploto with those intriguos | the eldest son of the Prince ot Prussia—F' Caataaas the men will be seat back to the inlet to aid those caused a reaction and buyere.are searce, As T pro- | and other rivers to completely Overflow their banks; |S Pécliar to the period in which the scene | Guillaume, Nicolas Charles—born in 1831. : left there in laying up a supply of fish, venison, and Tho Hungarian refugees in the dominion of the | The regular receipt of the igRaLD singularly re- | musk ox moat, to guard against contingencies. Tho | Torkish empire have lost their secowrs, which thes. | minds me ef the promise contained in my last, to et et a Sof ai ie ascent ats meter, & certain cxereseeuce on my favorite and | beon'known for several v 7 | courtezan meet at the apartments of the latter. | used te receive from that governmont. Kossuthdid | write sgaim before I left Switaerland. I have pro- ; , au daar aa F ; | years. The extraordinary ‘ visit the U! ! i ‘i 5 Pp lowing closely the windings of the west eoast of sensitive toe,) rain, rain, incessant rain, in very | flosds whiok have visited the neighdoraood of Raghy, | ion 8¢ Ube auntionee Loy har oe ee a ones | Fant Of mccoy or a aaceaiet and realixo ® eertain | srastinated to this moment in order that I might bo | Hovilfa aa hig as lat 72 dee Ny which is new wee Lh “ “5 attains hose bi 8 ere he pavements | ug Phere mene wife from the wily intrigues of a foppish villain,and | In Greece the order of succession to the throne has | enabled to give you a correct report as to the re- | porcd to be the extreme north point of the Ameri- us. We live in hopos-—that is, that is will | cay as thet tie at maky of the prinsipal by her restoring the wife to the husband, and vice | “ f *; is laid. In fact, Peggy is the mistress of a dicted, em prophése, (thanks to my natural baro- | in fact to give the adjacent lands the appearance of | individual who is'a Benedict, and the wife an been reguiatad by & moetiug of the plenipoteatia- | sult of the vintege which is new terminated; andI | 8 continent. From this point wo shall eommencs Gesist, como fine d: ther. 0; Y + - ~ versa. The plot and situations are very hackneyed, | ries of England, Franco, Russia, aod Bavaria. | i. | ourreturn by the same route as that by whick wo: bagel srkggar tues Cities Be ettiee as | roads boon impeded, by being covered witt water Sri'coom a put pourri of “Paurre Jaques,” “Tirk, | Tho heirs of King Otho will sueaed to his orews, | *™ RaPpy te state, that notwithstanding the geue- | came, unless the state of the ioe may permit us to tis sg Wins Le bcd ths Sear ae pad ea kite pial fs gs Midland tine heaite Gate,” “The Mummy,” and ‘La Boune Actrice ” | om condition that they will embrace the Greek re- | ral apprehension upon the subject, in oomsequence | cross Victoria Coannel; in that case, I shall visit % x: It is not at all the pieoo calculated to elevate the | ligion ef the great rains during the season, the yiold | the east shore of Victoria Land, and trace its eoast | Seamio, Sapedtd $0 m comalterebls cxrent Gy’ b i i i F | southward from the spot where Kensedy touched | patriated forciguors, imbabitants of Leicester | i profersion, and theso talented authors have heen The Bey of Tunis died on the 14th inst., amdim- | win be of a superior quality, and much more | ord fr pot Jluo; and, while they thank us for our hospiialit aciseh ta Doupdunioa were ereeay Albert Smith, in a vory clearly written advortise- | terrancan sem, went to the Kegency in order to pro: | ® erat, OF 7 (iat. 70 deg 30m ) in the summer of . Havii s sality— db, rN pick 3 j at i erie | ment, im this day’s papers, announces that his ascent | tect their countrymen. roast beef and metrepclitan beer—iawardly ourae | the tt ay Kis we Uren Ha ne | of Ment Blano will pepe for the winter season, | ‘ our detestable, damp climate. Oue—a political of | pecs) ee ad the traffic, which had previ 1S al with eeveral additions and improvements, on Mon- | your mighty country, hasbeen reooived here with tho iithien-etksaeas dvacoan ti ik tne | Geel > Si ubeeesee | day evening, the 29th inst.,in the large room of | utmost pleasure, by all his countrymen and also ly mot, taiked of returaing heen partially stopped, was now entirely suspended. | the Egyptian Hail. | by gthe French ‘press. It is said hero that tho rt 3 u to la belle France in order te give himself up to | Ultimately, arrangements bead ee ey which the | Mr. James Amerson, as “‘Horculo,” in “Civili- | policy ot the new President will have great infa- | S¥1 of Lausanne, thats vine at Yverdon that | The following are the dates on which I hepo tereach sentence of deata, I should prefer being shot or | railway, ‘via the Birmingham and Derby line. | Ay oe oars ameter. Ccowda, Baal nightly | Panis, Noy. 25,1953, | #8: Se your “Anti Maine Liquor Law” consti- | Winnipeg, May 30; York Photos, ‘Hudson's Bay, | guillotined in pare sir, te dying the doath of a suf- | The railways in Buckinghamshire and other osun- | jult Concinded wan aleninnanaet athe peng 2 ? | tuents may have no approheasions as to any serious | June 13; Churchill, June 24; Chesterfield Inlet, focated frog. Umbrellas, water- proof coats, and leg- ties have all euffered more or less The water rose consti ‘4 ty” | Wet Weather — New Umbrellas—Overflow of the | dimination in the ordinary supply or quality of | July 12; Back River, July 24; the sea (Aretic), Ju- | ms | lebene theatre, and takes a benefit next Frida: ‘ ‘ 7 S 4 . fing, overshoes, and such of cetera, find a rendy | [eta lean ar ehrice pberighed dead evening, provious te his departure for Liverpoel, | Seine and Loire— Stormy Weather throughout | Swiss wines for this year. ly 3@. Farthest point north, lat 72 deg. August the meighborhoed of Vevey, Yvorre and Yver- fe ene ere = os hi agit Mehdi ta } i leave the boat, and cross over rfia! The election of General Pierce fer President of | don, and tho vines, upon examination, do not |Gndse on fob; Cacahark the,’ grote saints the 4 Speer to have suffered so much from sickness asin | jarge boat, and start far York Factory, whore I the Sui past year. In fact, I read in the Cowrier | hope to arrive on or about the 30th of September. ji { as “cia is—In- | ,. The railroad mania has spread its contagion evem | 2; return to Chesterfield Inlet, Sey ber 12; Yerk sale; and yet, en attempt to berrow the first enume | Wiadsor Castle, presented the appearance of an im- Mr eraeett; apd neatheen peorinee our’s, ° Pigs ere ese aeras eee ie | ia Switzerland, where they defy the appreec of the Factory, or Churchil September 30. Tt may bs } rated article would be as unavailiag as to utilize | monse lake—an clevated spot here and there, with eras TGoeCasan, | Wiidation at St. Petersburg—Pleaswre Parties in | cholera, and the provisional counsel of the govera- pear to many that I allow too little time fer # jour. the Dutchman’s cable, whioh was at nome. | ite clumps of trees, leeking more like s little islet | : * | the French Capital—Ball,Given by Lowis Napoleon | ment at Berne, announced its entire sanction | ney of suck extent; but the experience of six visite Bince Thursday, carpenters have beon hard at | iets ae ae ee ynenden pesare: | Our French Corresp)ndcnee. —Description of the Dresses— Princess Mathilde’s | se) Serenata Feilgueend a a to the Aretio san, om ino and by boats, da re work in tho demolition of their handioraft of the | of Whicl ordinary time’ forms amen! P. . 25, A | ., ° cay | this tifal least jos of new eoast were added to jing week, and the Saat favchurceyssds, re | eal Hxtensive damage has been done on the ‘au13, Nev. 25, 1852, Soirée—Arrival of a Whale—Bamboo Cane— , , 4 p ri : ; and picturesque country with as much ease | charts, leads me to believe that the time is amply | tof olub houses, and in shop windows, have | Great Western railway. Tho loss of property The Elections—Abd- el- Kader Voting forthe Empe-| . Mint Statistics—Lyons and Avignon Railway— | aad rapidity as any ether portion of Europe, Rey arts always supposing that the proven pat } dearly all disappeared. Really. the sion, | throughout the country has boom immease, aad | ror—M. Troplong Nominated Vice President of | Embellishments of the Bois de Buelogne— Tea | Which will be s great inducement to our country- | yorable one. Should the contrary be the conse, and though generally lauded to the skies, uF Of auch 4. wee ist emis ee nage aa ee the Senate, in place of Ex-King Jerome—Terror of | Cigarittoes—Freaks of the Cownt de Mailly— pratt rerdede ee wad bona the ice hang long on the co taba ees Pian et eee oe mesa oe ape for | éuaata iekeveaee 4 but tlewly, and G Petre ior | the English m Paris at the Election of Lowie Na- | Theatrical Chit-Chat — Uncle Tom’s Cabin-- ' te death in the dark and foggy precinsts of Lon- oa case poder aher scoompluhing our purpese, inworthy saves pate Se caine aia | wim, the commander-in-obief, is in cemeraldisrepute. | poleon—Present to the Emperor of a Magnificent | Americans in Paris. don or Paris. It ap that our government at | the winter is too far advanced to allow of our gettiag wonder, and that the wide werld: revowned warrior Tis aceounts fromm tee See Seem et ot rer | Bagle—Reduction of the Army—Arrwal of the | The rain has been pouring in torrente upen our procs ony wobec eer yieg rary rg ip) the im- | home by en he rat hg abana pa } day bo remembered unconnected with his unstately | bros out evita 4 oct. daily deavale ee the aa, | Twrkish Ambassador in Paris—Assembling of the | grand city for the lest » and, asa matior of | neclects its duties most ‘stubbornly. T will give a, eae te a eo E ee pom Same of —— pea Oo ee hia nee abate rer Our | THe Cafire war remains in staiu quo, although. by» | Cortes in Madrid—Decree of the Grand Duke of | eourse, we are living in an atmosphere of dampness | a trict note as to the intercourse between she two | with spors and a sullolency of fool ae we eravel mulled. The Grea: Exhibition was only sucopssful, | Tecent despatch from General Cathcart, the Gover. | Tuscany—The King of Naples’ Visit to the Pope | and cold, whilst our feet are trampling upon Jakes of Rinenyers also te the canes aad heat along. I may add, in conclusion, that as the | being unconnected by what we oall the supreme | POr-General, we are assured that a splendid viotery | _ Afarriage Contract Entered Into Between the | mud on the liquid macadam of our streets and boule- | S¢erded by our government. the United dition has been planned by myself, I shall a | has been achieved, and that the war is drawing to feetriys eantens of Switzerland ex; te i Mao cigh? thoutod oeldions ascecsblods wed li | close. This is the inore extasordinary, as nono ef the | Eldest Daughter of Queen Victoria and the Eldest | varda. Unbreliag, as uraal, have been in great de- | Staten morchaadives to the aizocat of go,a0S7e6. | mere, thas common interest in bringing ic to a rae- was on the qui vive in this reepect I saw tho pro- | Osflre chiofs have been taken or killed—indeed no | Son of the Prince of Prussia—General Puerce’s | mand, ands new invention in that line made ite | The Zollverein expected the sasse yo0n, My nig P.S.—I do not mention the lost navigators, as | cession, (in company with » French avocat, whe | prisoners at all have been captured, if we excepts | Election, §c., §c. { appearance on Sunday last, at the garden of the | Austria, $1,300; Now, whes we the | there is net the slightest hope of finding aay traees Witited’ England. for the first time, in order’te be | few starved and emaciated women and children! What | Noete pluit tota, redount spesta cula mané | Settiaeton. This air uietirstle axed do he shoulder by | 722? sissdrantaros under which little repab- | of them in the quarter to which Tam going. t wt this grande svlemnite,) trom the top of * glorious, and what an expensive war! | Divisum imperium cum Jeve Cusar habet. | add folowing 45 Foaiv oo ti rm labers in comparison with the fhlracunsdbat ecatatiots x! : ‘Wasneais blacking warehouse, in she Strand, where ‘oor Ben Disraeli’s original speech, on the death | Despite the rata, which oxdae’down in torrata, the | © spring, following the movements of the body. | other twe States, wo are astonished at the re- Deuth of Lerd Byron’s Daughter. Tebtained » clear view of Uharring Cross, Cock spur of the Duke of Wellington, has been teverely criti- electé hi “4 seh tasea aa o | This covers the body as the ancient ene, and leaves | ult. The Zollverein and Austria are bathed by On Saturday, the 27th ult., the Lady Ada Augus- street. and, in the opposite direction, elear up the “ited by the liberal orgavs of the prem. By compa- | elections were held on the appoin ye—Sunday | 4, the person who uses it an entire liberty to manage the seas, and pereess large and navigable rivers, | ta, ‘sole daughter of Byron's house and heart,” ox- | Strand to the ‘Adelphe theatre My French friend, | Tison, it appears to be a literal translation of M. | and Monday last—and, as a faithful reporter, I must his hazds as he is pleased, | and enjoy great facilities frem their net-work of pired, after a lingering illness of more than one namber two, shrugged up his shoulders, and politely | nee eee esta the lithe Galt ate ae sey that no disorder took place during that solemn | bi P Z railways; while Switrerihnd, on the contrary, is | year’s duration, at No. 6 Great Cumberland ‘ . Cyr, i a gst pe ea kage aes ate. “fa: one | Ben Dizay and plagisrism are terms now synony- , cession. But, in the meantime, no excitement or | troops were present A balf-witted cookmey at our | mus. There still seems to be something “looming | extesordinary focling was remarked in the masses Pas seal s eels Ss wie ae side, whe had evidently aequired a kaowledgo of | in the distance” in Wrance; but what that something | of the people whe went to the polls. On Sunday uf the 'Freoch lapguage at Folkestone, facetionsly | ee be, de Leeder FL acd of discovery, not be- | Inst the different wards of Paris did mot rooord | end ed eae onveren tee waaeres of Pacis over fete That ldn’ | ing ap adept at a “rebus. Siany toldiers as tho Fronoh, secang shat it wange, |, AmODg the rooentaets of humanity perpetrated | MAD; : norally considered that threo Frenchmen walked | in this land of civilization was one of most atrecious | attributable to the indolenoe of the Parisian citizen, one pair of English lege” Ahem! Shake- | cruclty—the roasting of a ont scale red by a cani- | who, on Sundays, only cares for pleasures; but on speare! Icjaculated With acivic maosion-house | bal, but bye Mr. Wm. King, amsnofedeoation,and | 474 hes tha eehe wink, the cockney indulged in e peroration, in that | Well to do im the world t. Brough‘on, the wor- bn gp Hacseignss ine Abbphcagbemmag the fem he yn Vernacular peculiar to those born within the sound thy magistrate, in concluding his observations, gave | from twilight till late in the evening the byreauxr of Bow Bella: ** [think I ad im there at hail evonts 's demon to understand that, to a manin his situ- | were filled. In the departmente the same observa- my tulip!” Do you think so, I replied, Mr H } | ation of life s fine would be no punishment at all, | tions may apply; but I must esy that in many places veLiteh baint my nams;” aad he was, doub:less, and he should, theretore, send him at once to the | much opposition has been showa to Louis Napeleon. Notwithstanding this new invention, or perhaps on | °°! of the most rugged and mountsinous Bhe was born in 1816, at the noble poet's town illas- territory in the world, has no seaport; her products | residenee, 122 and was, like are conveyed by land ever long and dificals roads, | trious father, 2 . when and on ove! de she is surrounded by custem- | died. Lorber ly Medan. = = houses, and if we calculate the commerce by the My daughter, with thy name this sesg 4 four feet and three inches. Phe Loire is also so much | sumber of inhabitants according to the returns ef My daughter, with thy name thus much end. many votes, and the cause of this delay was wholly swollen that all oo eee ls stopped on thas 1845, we find that for the head of each person I see thee not; | hear thee ut mone river. Im the south of l'ranos, in the Var depart- | there has been produecd by commerce with the | Cam be 0 wrapt in thee, Thon art the friend ment, the stormy weather has caused much damage. | United States alone in Switzerland, $37; in Payee praleercg th ek. ‘isk peo At Aups, in that eountry, on the 1Sth inst , tho rain | Belgium, €21 40; in Vranos, $14 10; in Prussia, | }Y,velee shall with thy futuro visiens biomd, fell im euch s quantity thet the inhabitants were | $5, and in Austria, $3 20. Now, in almost 4 token and a toms even (rom thy fothor's mow. ae de Lee eee gee Cee pore | eredeue ae oe et States | eo ald thy mind’s developement; te wateh ire on the hill opposite to the city. Many dwelling | are represen yy either a iF Plentpoten- joys; 2 places wero thrown down by the violence at the 1 ‘ ison thy tery gromt to rieg inate tentiary or Charge d’ Affaires, and a host of Cen- conte and considerablo damage eaused by the sterm, which | suls, whilst in Switzerland, until within tho last eowuata peg! oe Canker eit theo; | F ‘ | House of Correction for one month. He was thea | The yeas, nodoubdt, will be rendered public, but the | lasted three hours. Tho Var river destroyed the | two months, we have only beem represented by a | Te hold thee lightly ona gentle knee, ocak te Looney aber i. pee rye tego | locked up. The decision gave great satisfaction to number of nays will be kept paitens but, withont | bridge of St. Laurent, oi road to Nice, the only | Consul at Bale; at presont we have another a} | And print om tby soft cheek a parent's Kise; sat ban ta had rs sm Tek ws Parisiag. friend | ® crowded court. doubt, the future ots of France will have, in , theroughfare to Italy, and since thet momeat the | Zurich. It should be remembered, at tho sams = Paws lgeany not reserved for me, Wiikbank, snd descsaded Wacecat a teas dice to | The foreign officers who cams to represent their | the newspaper amd before Europe, his eight millions Passage in interrupted betwoon the twe countries. | time, that Switzerland imports annually about | Jo child of lover yuo giv born tm bi le house, When siriving on the Grae. door wo | feepective countries at the faueral ef, she Duke of | anda baif of yotes. de uo: approve the violent | Jn the Moxa department, at Metz, a tomado, | £200,000 of cur cotton, Wiuhin my own know. | The cil lve, thous oyu Sind ton bed avefied carstives of the wrong trap- | Wellington were entertained on Friday, (so, you | language ef Victor Huge, Mazzini, ando:hers; but | mixed with hail, took pen on the 17th inst., aud | ledge there has beon sereny several seizures These wore the element op thy fire deer, and had entered ‘a strange pontine | fon | see, a feed was necessary, even on this occasion,) at | I musi say that they were right whou they publis! cansed also the utmost damage. | eonfiscations of cargoes of Swiss moerchan J i yut red, ami thy hope far higher. a slumbers, Carpe Hanore, IB. 1 ‘ : 5 of | Shall be moro tom arplendid banqust. by the members of the Senior ed their mamifestoos that Louis Napelcon wanted a | _ Ia the meantime, anaurora borealis was witnessed at San Francisco and clsewhere, by | Sweet be thy cradle United Servics Clab, im Pall Mall. Oa Saturday | higher number of vetes than that of the 20:h of | at Cahors, Agen, Mentauban, and several other | Custom Hovee authorities, in consoquence of ti they were presented s full drecs banquet, givom in | December, 1851, and that he weuld have them by | southern cities, and causod much astonishment ; ignorance of Swiss cxportors as to the manner | Writing te Mr Murray from Vouico, Febrascy 2, among its bebolders. We, in Paris, had alsow | of preparing their goods. There was no attempt at | 1818, Byrei I haves great love for little eight ef the same pkenemonon, en the 13th inss., | fraud, as the merchants stand above suspision. | Ada, and I leok forward to her as the pillar of my | im the evening. These occurrences have had the offect of impeding | old age, should I over reach that doselate puied, _ AtSt Petersburg from the last accounts we at the commerce between the twe countries, whioa | which ie informed that the Neva bas overflowed its banks, | eould easily bo corrcoted, if our gevernment would From Belegns, 7th June, 1819, he again writea— which we were hurriedly ejected, (without the See Se) bya ery, ge individu who teld us that he wou! * > | in h i ‘y theirbonor by the Earl of Malmesbury, atthe Foreign | any means. We facto, the new emperor of France podicrnenedlay eatin thee a Fe kegn dg iptareed | Office, in Downing street. Yesterday, they proceeded | bas tried the belt iacans to be elooted by a large anythin Contrary to the fabulous old ada that | to Windsor Castie, by command of her jesty, | majority; and in order te obtain this result, he had an Englishman's house is his castle.” However, | When s ced state banquet was given hy the Queen | ranged under his banner, all the priests and bish- this was net the wort, 4 | to the illu sors of oe of the country. Many prela' nd dignitaries | otk strious foreigners and the great of om pote Sth Octebor, 1820 :—“lf of State. The royal mail steamer La Plata arrived at | The Polytechnic School has shown in its ra over the pages of the ae Southampton om Thursday morning, bat was not | sort of bitter opposition t admitted into the docks, owing to the provalcnos ef | Among eighty-five vote: t ited who tipped me the | the yellow feveron board. Tho captain aad many | ayos against fifty-ai about 250 intimate and deveted friends te a ball k, and to whom I tipped a coin a wore com. | of the crow died snd were buried on the passage | to make the eighty-five, refused te vote. and supper. The diplomatic oerps, Mr. Rives— | : fertably assorted across ay road te tho hospital, | She bas been ordered to the quarantino ground, of | Not only the I'rech nation has voted, but also | our ambassador, included—wero at that party, | poured into this little country befere. Tio hotels | ledge the receipt of pur civ friend bawling out. “Leet theeo here gatie, | the Isleof Wight, and her mails havo boen fumi- | the former enemy of Framze, Abd ol-Kader, the | and also » large number ef Senators. Ee'te been deluged Ry @ heteregoneous mase of poli- | soft and poh ines decease? 8 gated, previous to tranmission to the General Post | Emir, who, having hoard what was taking piace en | the membors of the Legislative body, they wore | ‘efugoes, scions of royalty, t of nobility, Tae Cocnees listle comparison between Na. | Office. On Saturday the was visited by tho Super- | Sunday last at Amboiss, requested the Mayor of | represented there by only Mosars. Billault, De | leon and Wellington intendent General of Qasrantine andeundry medical the city, M. Trouvé, to receive his vote ia tho | Languerronniere, De Keaceg,and De Morny Lonis | x ‘memory, and I dete officers, who, after the most careful examination of | shape of a Jong letier, in which he says that he much | Napoleon danced several times with Madame I, | “Mon cher,” enid [, “it is mot neeessary for us to | the veesel and orem, granted her pratique, uoder | wished to see France governed by his benxactor, | Rogeir, wifo of the Belgian ambassador, ad the country for the last six months. ve gene to revel in the gay saloons of Paris; | will Jearm bow common was t! ir flight to the the Pisatsgemets. I found it taly. Never ass there boen | the reigns of Joha and multitudes ef sight-sceking oonstituents | Pisa, 17th Novembi Impossible to make our way back again, for wo Were carried on by the hi beweled) to Hungerford apeclor of my acquaintauer of the govera- | i ment. Lo’ Napoleon himself gave tho ex: om Sunday last, at St. Cloud, where he aniseed an State On Tuesday and Wedoesday the hespitali- ‘rance have delivered orations to their vwailies, | snd ceversthe whelo plain. The low part of the | send somo functionary te reside bere who would be | ‘I have not keard of my little Ada, the Elostea of chette, pre} @ for ue, and hi itcrs gomerally, by | ties will be kept up by Lord Hardiege, Commander- | with the sim to entice them te vote in faver of the | city is und " willing and eapablo to give the proper information. | my Mycenw, but there will oome a day ef reokon- Mr Harsch, the present proprister of that celebrated | in-Chief, and by the Earl of Dorby, Firsi Minister | new emperor; and this new mode of driving i Deepite the notwithstanding | “Za belle saison” has taken its flight, and with | in should I ne’ live te see is.” | wanafec‘ory or Werren's lacking It was quite | | voters has beem crowned with the utmost su: the absene pleasure parties | it the motley concatenstien of bipsas who have rage a | ame et Ads teas | my own pedigree in | sare havo te acknow- | look of Ada’s hair, whish ie d noarly ai dark as mine was at stream (almost em- et, where, thanks to On the 8th July, 1835, the poot’s daughter was united to Lord King, subsequently (in 1538) created yk pe Earl ef Lovelace, a connestion by whioh the lineage 7 daite Be Montijos, a charming Spanish adj. blonde | ert aad iasy beggar; tats as tke ight of ofthetntereet whtok etteaheete the daagheref it | i condition that she should take w trip of about eight | and that he voted for the generous prince who gave | dame De Montijos, a charming Spanish lady, ablonde | era and lazy beggars; but, at the si of ta On cme Interess WAIN St 2 ightors of Mil- wavin India seine ‘years ago, tecing ‘tas Bitten | wiles down the river, to bury the dead on boards in | hrm buck his sword te Sgt, inthe ranks offene | of the noblest blood. ‘The guests of the President | wpom the fuoustaias imey havo Ail taken that | tex aad Shakespeare was Colt in the deceased "ee Reatred’ Waeaaee’ Avia, ch rate Preference to landing their remains at Southampton. | French army. Apropos of Abd-ol Kader—The | were, for the most of thom, dressed im oiti- | fight, and wo are tote once again to enjey the | wherevor the English language is spok: and to the city ef Poopoo. That was a sight, indesd! | Tis condition was complied with, and the steamer | nows of bis liberation from custody, which arrived | zens’ black clothes, whilst the officers of the staff, | charms of a quict life. Among the “upper ton” | large circle of private friends her dea bes were 500 elephants, 1,500 camela and droms. | Teturmed into dock. | im the provinces of Algiers and Sahara, bad made | aud altachés of ‘bis house wore the official | whe have ‘Nitited this hotel, have been tho source of sinoere serrow. Highly gifted, aad en | There and 3.000 builo:ks” The legal Frenchmen | , There are very few variations im the play bills | no sentation among the Arabian tribes. Thus, it | costume. As for the ladies present, thoy | Duckosee D'Orleans, and her two little boys, | dowed with » large share of hor fathor’s vivid tem- | ised saneet was far too polite. to Goubs my acser- Jullien the First, witm his superb erckestra, still | eppears, that the Sidel Hadz—Abd ol-Kader—hae | wore dressed im magnificent attire; but not much | the Comtc de Paris and the Duc de Chartros. Tao rawent, she delighted im intellectual as well as tion, but said, on bis return to Paris that ho would | Sttracts crowds to the walls of (1d Drury—io fast it | lost bisinfluenoe over the Kabyles. So much tho bot- | taste was manifested by several of thom, who, in | Comte de Paris is quite am ordinary looking boy, | benevolent and kindiy ta, one of hor, most in| (up our Indian campaigns. My conscience being | 18 quite impossible to gain adm: unless im at- | ter, in case he should ever forfeit his word of honor. | order to please the tuture Emperor, had adopted the | although ho is the hoir apparent of the Ocloans | timate and prized confidanies having been for many of delicate texture, warmly evnsoled me with _‘ndance at least twe hours before the doorsare opsm- | The first meoting of the logislative corps teok pluce farhien formerly en vogue daring the epooh of the | family te the throne of I'rance. The Duo do | years that intelligent jade of fomale excellence, the conviotion, “ that whes you do tell » you know ed. I told you in my last that the rage for that claes | this morning, at the Palace of Quai Dorsey the | first empire, and worm by Marie Louiso and Mme. | Caartres makes « better impression. Hor Highaess | Mrs. Jameson. To that lady's pon we should refer | of perseci gger literature, of whisk ‘Uncle | former Chamber of Deputies, and the numb. f | Ricamieti, the leader of the fachien at that time. | Madwme La Duchesse d’Orleads gave » dinner, | tho public for a truo appreciation ef her character. yy Co in the proces- | Tom’s Cabi the wide-world aeknowledged rep- | these functionaries was not #0 considerable aa | _ For the future, these who are not partizans of | whilst here, to somo of her faithful adherents, emer ——— sion was ‘ the Spesker’s carriage.” which looked for Tesentative, is viewed from @ comic point at the had been expectod. This first meeting was for the | Louis Napoleon will be oasily rocognized & lewr | among whom I noticed Mons. and Madame Thiers. ‘The Irish Sewed Muslin Embroidery, yooum theatre, in s rattling two act farce, | purpose of organizing the bureaur; but, noverthe- | tavle, which is to say, in good English, by the | There was no pomp ner pageantry about the onter- [From the London Chronicle, Oot. 14 is cp eubocmsissions or vin i baythe ver! adopted from the French, called “Those Dear | Feew the sxtatioe was grout among the pa length of their waist e 5 if taimment. There were forty guests, at sixty cents | Comparatively few branches of iadusiry Have made wheels creaking forth a discordant aveompaniment | Blacks.” ‘The satirical hite are remarkably good, | bers of the House, and the immediate prosiamation On Monday Inst, Princers Mathilde gave, also, a | » head, for the dinner. The Prinoo de Joinville was | ® more rapid progress of late than the sewed mastin te the “Dead March im Saul,” playad by the band of | *vd nightly appreciated by the crowded audienses, | of Louis Napoleom as Emperor was proposed by | party, at her fine hotel of Rao de Couralle, and | here aleo this season, and had his two little nephews | ¢mbroidery, and more particularly in the north of the 734 Highlanders, whe, if aot Isboring from the Who day after day begin the more to believe that | one cf them. Accerding to the roport, this grand | made her appearanco thero with a now set of mag- | to breakfast. Iggs. bread, butter, and coffee were | Ireland. Upon its first catablishmont, about the Offests of the dew. at leasthad thoir fingers benumb- Mrs. Beecher Stewe is givon to slight, if not wilful, | déncrement bas been postponed to the 2d of Desom- | nificent diamonds, mounted on the mplendid capare | ll of fare. How very pista and republican | latter end of the last or pogincing of ihe present, od, for it was difficait to discover which made tho ¢2*seeration Mr. Charles Mathews as Featheredgs | ber mext, as had reported itim soveral previous | soned donkey which was lately seut to hor by tho | there grandees become whon they come to be of the | century, the Lada ? Samad te low and un most disagreeable noise of the two—the Sporker's 18 quite im his element He enacts the pari of's | letters; nud on the 3d of next month tho additions | Vierroy of Pgypt. Ou that evening tho ‘Cantata | people, and ceaso to live on them. Hi | ee stan amieu china ara carriage or the band of ‘‘sans-culotte” Ssotohmen. °0veman who has lort overything but cool effren- | and changes made to the constitution will be pro- | of Quecm Hortense and Mecati” was sung by the on, a6 well on account of ¢ obras of skill in the Avast there! Dan, my boy; youare wn Englishman; | “tY and light heartedoess Mr Sater iss tele- | =~ by # Senaius-consultum Io the meantime, | Orpheonist Company. Another Arctic Expedition. | designers aad workers of 6 great fT | Poe i ings = ‘abl acl arles Mat; i a fl hale, which had m captured Mon Dr. John Rao, the Arctio traveller, hag addrossod | which existed in the principal markets to ogee ecanion phe 7. is tT Ahem Tong Se 3 however, abbots, chs though Mr "Baur ieeseal Licalaeden alter) aise Jaat, a the shore of Micoandy: va eBay oe the fellewing lotter to the editor of the London | ductions of this class. nes te cherthe poset & gr Le lumit mer “ the best part. We are promised many novelties at tiv, the selection of the | by the railway, and roade its entry into Paris one | ZJ'imes:—'As tho subject ef Arotio discovery ail | Ono of the circumstanoes which first gavo a desid- The Liens acct apele | this theatre. | people large cart, eroorted by a drom ef municipal | eecupies much of the public attention, it may inte- | ed impulse te the manufacture was the intreduetion | hete orders and decerations of the late Duke are We learn from Edinbarg that Miss P. Horten’s | uch gorrip is ontertained here about the future | guards, and bearing on its head the man whe had | rest some of your readers to learn that the iuds n’s pee amen my oa oe yarn which had for.) ical at Meesrs Gurcards Panton strost, benefit at the Theatre Royal on Thursday evening, | doinge of Louie Napoleon, as soon ashe is seated on | Faspooned it, standing fierce, and holding his | Bay Company aro aboat to dospatoh » boat expodi- E ly ee ee ee Les a This change left tert daring the Ist Coportunity war afforded the visi- was a bumprr, and that her engagement, whivi | the krone of hie mocle ‘Will he keop house in tho | tridant, a mock Neptune in pants und jaoket. The | tiom (with the command of which I am to be hon- | large number of the females of Ireland without - 4, Wyiag-in State to examine this most | has only te be found fault with on unt of its | same style as the mporsr Napoleon? Will ho | buge animal wag taken to the Jardin des Pi ored,) to the Arotic Sea, for the purpose ef comple- | means o: oD thers ‘The womon and girls of the will be 5 ite pang collection. The deoorasions shortness, was then brought to close We may | have pages, an Arch Chancellor. « Grand Master, bamboo cane, of the most magnificent six tin; survey ef the northern shoros of Aan ce eany ul eh song \t be tome, othor moaus of om- s Cs mre cinaTHe Binee case. upon black | safely state generally tha; a more elegant, pig a number of officers of al! sorts? No ome oan tell | now exhibited in the Green-house of Paris, and bas tively a small portion of whiok wae ably | pl ot dre = aishesy avai ed thecarelves of the aes marshal's pinced inthe front. There and versatile actress, has not for many yeurs d | an yet, for the leevod Kuaporor koops the | grown. for tho !ast ten days, seven and vig inches to 400 miles,) now remains unexplored. | moans of obtaining # livelihood by working at om- | to celebrate, by antici; nt, Of Spxio, Austria, Rus- tage How comes it, then. that it sorecy about his je day. It is now ninctoom feet bi, The Few preparations have hitherte been made for this | broidory, and although a partial ice ox- Sa, Prassie, Portugal, the Nevnoviands, Havovor yoy Ores he | that M. Troplong ts to be Aecinnted Vise Be ea | cae ated: ta the sola leson A taptee pentete | expeditions an lt wan supposed by mony thet Mr | sted againes ib at ‘ret, it soon, Be England, and orders e04 decorations of all na- — the well remombere | of the Senate, in place of ex King J covered with ripe fruit, and « plumeria which will , Kennedy and his party weuld have traced tho coast | evident that it would ultimately fons, r Ln re value, Let eta 2 that the de- Ariol”’ of Macready’s management? | in the mosntime lao will have tho coon blossom, to the utmost astovishmont of agro: | referred to; but Mr Kennedy pts and | compensate for the loss of their former oooupa' “% nr} oo arta or benet | | Mise Helen Feucit, too, another star, ts announced | dent of tho Court of Justice the bi Ghost position in | Domists, who have never seem anything like is. romewhat to my surprise, the Coen still unoxam- is connection with this must also be noticed tha eo ieeen a up a store of good actions, and | for the capital of the land o° cakes Miss Giyn and | the magistrecy. © | The mint of France hes published sf ined. Tho requisite scrangeme cen nine efigotaal | plication of lithographio printing, instead oft gt Pw leinas aie Penplevn; has oes | Miss Cashman are both in town, and neither engaged; Before proceoding any further, I will mention | and Lextract from them the following carrying out of the ebjeot o! expedition sre now | former tedious and oxponsive system of blook print- ie Bt f ; n . 1 endeavor to give a briof | ing. Under the old system exch blook cost from 3s. and Miss Adela Rochelle, the fair Soukerperian dé | here thay the news of Louis Napoleon’s olostion to | tive to the amount of gold picoos which have bse | im progress, and 1 shal 4 sy butante, who made such & hit bus two mon hsxince, | the high position of Emperor of "Pranos, has caused | made this year. It in, 254,563,022 franos, whilst | skotoh of ite Lymn pepe e ‘epee Piney route pect the Komen dd dna Es ye vip ae | is now acting the heroine in melodramas at» Bou- | tho utmont fright among the British population of | last year it was only 8,192 039 franos. | The porty is Oieate Ms tae raerber i bys S boom Bn ¢! Lag od “tad the + haved . levarde theatre, Paris The celobraced oritie of tho | Paris They all epenk of it as if thoy regarded it Tho railway botween Lyons and Avignon is now | pepe Jyh hs ae he all rprotere, in two boats, | three weeks co ee ing rym) wats PA Li are Jowrnal des Debats, Jules Vanin, in » reoent fewille- | as a great calamity, for they imagioe that thoy will | constructing with the utmost activity, andit inex- | the one “sf oat vee, arias te es Savio, We tee ont ge letpond tin, after here | of a new pioco im whica this lady | soom be obliged to leave Vrauce, und many of them | peoted that it will be compl-ted within two years over lané, an river navigation, the ethor | in endless variety of style, 6 Coss of as many Mourne, for us bi Gur sorrow draws but on 0, friends! oar chit Btate Moura forthe man of lumg-eudur " layed, conclud a in her praise b have already departed for oth f th id ‘Tho same activity will be chown by the city of Ko, atrong, And woll fitted for encountering rough | shillings as they formorly oost pounds Tho groat: ‘The stateemao—warrio-, moderate, revolute, play’ o paragraph in hor praise by # | have ly dep er parts of the world. a i fea, bi ithoat dook disadvan iso, under which manufacturers ia Whole el a common good | qotation, slightly varied, from ‘‘ Ariost Ni Beveral English Indies and ge A) Ih Paris im the projected embellishment of the Bois de | weather in an opon sea, but without any dock or tego, p re Seine ty ‘of incgest infieenes, tural la fore, Spel ape 1a staenpa ved Tae menage either Visited ot inet, tn the Scene lori 4 Roulo no eee Varo, the gardener avd engineer of | other covering, except tarpwulins Oar stook of | Belfast formerly laborod, with rospoot to the dik. Yet freost from ambition’s crime, , Hall ory ie, we caunot find a youthful leading tre- | paccasphantome, and talking the most ridiculous lan- | that fine promenade, intends having it oranmented | provisions will bo euflictems for thres months, whioh, | oulty of selling their goods, in « Anished stat, at a! |

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