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vo NBW YORK , SUNDAY; «MAY 12,.1867.-TRIPLE SHEET. 5 She was escorted to the river, but was not bound. | tears rolled down the cheeks of the women. Itwas an} he bad been raised He followed me and inexhaustible, Without to : EQUATORIAL AFRICA. he sia ee he aie, pak hem There hs | mposing sgn. Tk seemed that they chose the hout of | cummin, and was ox fond of blog pete NOTES ON NEW BOOKS. ng or any other Puffoonery «Mark: Teele” oat oa rggae wards | the rising, sua; io, feviched pore. shades of evening were to shroud the land in darkness. He waiched very carotfiy tit had ieft 4] rue arat volume of a “Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theo- | Mi Testers moft unexpectedly into inextinguishable Keecture by B. P. Du Chaillu at the Brooklyn avis (hate sap 0 fasiet anaes in a few _s They sang— Peat wenid then enter, eemlia 0 off with thelr | i and by the laughter by maay @ touch that smacks of what secms to Academy of Music. they troaght to. tbe, Base 608: ot ae Stores Ne chi na M labella pe na beshe. Eeate ees very oneal ake tna e teabed ties.) Rev. 3 Pore otet See aera PE, 1. | be the diatingive characteristic of American wit and nm the invitation of the Long Island Historical crimes of which these women scoured, The first Which meq bocuneietetr Zarerel limes, ond aegis to the conviction that it D, has just been published, The work was commenced humor—a problivity to exaggeration. But even his ex- Beciety, Mons. B. P. Du Chailiu delivered s lecture on | taken. CHAMAGD, 200d site. “Bult wan farce, and ‘he Cicces claoec teem Tens, Hataie coeaiatin eh con ne sven, foead | 18 1852, and lip editors: have: ever since beta engaged | Ses*tations Ase Dot ezaggeraieg. beyond all bounds— “Reminiscences of Equatorial Africa” at the Academy | had refused her. She had sla woris to him | | After half af hoer of chanting they stopped, and then out that my hut was better shod with ripe bananas Upon it, assisted by-several regular collaborators and by | ‘#7 leave fou with the impression that he conld bave of Music, Brooklyn, The unpropitious state of the tiie, and hed bewitnee ; coy phend he | began to crowd around me. Worst of all, the tribes an piaitsinn thas others, the be Bumerous contributors of special articles, The alm of stretched yiem twice as farif he had chosen “to ve as ‘weather prevented as large an audience being present as said, was jealous ipeme b 4 children and | have no burial and leave their dead in different aoe © I was asieep i the morning. At U peninaiaw snapectinins the fanny as he can.’’ The title of his book is ‘The Cele- she had none. Quenquaga’s he said, had asked | parts of the forest, Now, that I have given you a brief | time he used to craw! and slyly tow my bed, nish a book of reference on all . of County ond Ot ‘would doubtless have been in attendance under more | Mpomo for» looking glass, and Bethad refused her; | account of the customs of the black men, let me descend | look at my closed eyes, and if ho saw no movement he | topics of the science of theology in its widest sense, | Teed Jymping Frog of Calaveras Connty - favorable circumstances, but yet the intelligence and | therefore she pees fy Sasegh accuention wes to his brother the ape. In Shane slomy. seinen, man, would re several aniaige 2nd When I | under one alphabet, It includes, therefore, not only Sketches’? His famous lecture on the Sandwich Ielands Fevpectability of Brooklyn were well represented, Tribe proieed stern onligod to jolm in vba Re po a ee ee yoo committed the toothy A canbe dd tole ave fe articles on the Bible and its literature, but also upon all doom yall hoase lees Moody aaa A Tn the rear of the platform were exhibited a number | emulated bis neighbor in cursing, each fearful lest | known under the name of nahiego, by the nat ives. | honest face, My hot had foe, but was pest the subjects belonging to historical, ‘aan 1 and prac- Dr.J. A. Allon, of Chicago, isthe author of a thin j ef diagrams, pictures, skeletons, &c., which the lecturer | lukewarmness should expose im Woe like fate, The | Then I discovered another variety which was re- | With @ mat, and it very ‘funny of ectaro volume, entitled +*Medical Examinations for Life Inirance.’’ ‘The resident consulting physician of a Igading life insurance company in New. York has sent copies of it to his modical examiners throughout the country, with @ circular endorsing it, thus:—‘I value the work for its hints and suggestions of knowledge al- ready acquired. Any one of us can find his way through beaten and familiar path, even in darkness. Still no one objects to the way being lighted. This book may lighten your way.” With the importance that }ife in- tical theology. It will be completed im about six vol markable for the baldness of hia head, called by the | #e@ Tommy gently raising of the mat to see st abirosewrReioh natives nshiego mboun!.. Then another vanety Called | tT was asleep. Comethnoee ncte ‘umes, royal octavo, of about 1,000 pages each, copiously the koolac-Kamba, a single specimen of which | then stirred up just as ne wasin the act illustrated, and wil! form in itself a convenient, compact I have been able to get. Then another variety, | his prize, when he would di and make of! in and comprehensive library of reli; it ‘The called the "Nehlego-kengo.” The troglodytes niger, f Wimost consteraation." He ran of meal 1 teligions ‘Theeatare, Bahlego is cy ‘animal long ‘discovered, had a ielnd of rude table made which my ‘most industrious and erudite monks of the middle ages roughly known by uaturalists. The others are | Served in the open part of use, is was too | might well be surprised could a varieties which I discovered myself, The chimpanzee | bigh for Tommy to swe the so when all was on and learn what a aati _ perp Gidees froma the. genilin fn these chia? 2st ia | ready he climbed upon a tree, surveyed" every dish for Lnepinnesicg hentai @ great tree climber, passing much of its time among | the table, and, having deternined what to have, he | Cdge in almost every department of theological stucy the branches of the great trees of equatorial Africa; it is, | WOuld descond and sit down atmy side. did not} ‘has been amassed by modern scholarship in Europe and referred to frequently m the course of his address, which was throughout Astened to with marked atten- | tion, and at its conclision rewarded’ with considerable applause, The Prestdent of the Long Island Historical Seciety introduced Mons. Du Chaillu with a few appro- priate remarks, when the latter gentleman spoke as fol- lows:— Laprs axp Gevtizuey—I have been invited by the Long Island Historical Society to address you this even- 2 &2 Fae qhine 3 a2) days after a person bas died, and ig .a jollificae | though untamable when still not tierce like the | Immediately pay the utmost attention to him his “How, ing and give you a brief account of my travels in Equa- | tion in which drinking takes a part’ | gorilla; it has been Known'to attack man, but its young’| Bow, iow” became fonder, ull for peace sake, his wants | America amidst all the pressing activities of a matsrial- surance is assuming to every one the details given by terial To speak frankly, I feel somewhat in | After the nchongou is ‘over the’ m ‘are tractable easily tamed. While the male gorilla | Were satisfied. He refused uothing—was fond of boiled | istic age. The editors of the Cyclopwdia belong «o the Dr. wd -. be doudt where to begin, for it is impossible for mein the and continues until the bola iv resists man, the chimpanzee files to thedesert woods | meats, deh, a, cofee, and was constantly picking the | Methodist denomination, and, of course, biave yropared | YF Allen of the elements of a ‘‘good risk’? are interest- PYitsiasod at this latter most carious custom, which means the breaking of the mourning time, It occurred near vd place, at Washington, on the banks of the Fe way river, When a man smaeatpace ches Soe clan and village cease to wear td y clothes, and ‘abort space of one lecture to bring before you the labor of ten years; the more so as the country I have explored ia entirely new tothe white man, The countries seen by me are situated under or near the equator, in the with even greater difficulty than the ia. | bones he collected in the vill Tmade ‘him @ litue Often the adults go in pairs, In pacaheeieh yom T | pillow to sieep upon, and fan er he went he took it | the whole work from their point of view as totheolozy, mentioned that the chi zee was not gregarious, | With him. If perchance it was lost, or if | but, they hope, ‘im no narrow or sectarim spirit.” When I published that I had not seen any great | amy one had hidden it, the ° whole camp | They design to make it so complete a manud for the use ing to lay as well as professional readers, Mr. W. Swinton has lately been engaged in labors more creditable to him than the pretentious criticisms im western part of Africa, It is remarkable for ite natural number together, but during my last jon I | knew it by his howls, At night he al ale} which he used to indi j- history, which is in many respects. not only extraordi-'| make it a point of going numually vty + no ornanieats | have seen Doth chimpanzeos and gorillas in herds, ‘The on it. As the dry season eaune of the weather became | °F Ministers, students, general readers and Sunday respondents in ss pesreynlyerpimyie gm “si wary but peculiar, In this comparatively carrow belt, | whatever are. worn, and as ii ing as ible. | negroes are very ingenious tn their contrivances of | colder, and Tommy began to wish for company when he | school libraries that no other book will bs necessary for g , extending on either side of the equator, is’ foupd that | There is no dancing allowed In tha is is to | traps for nearly all the greater beasts of the forest, | slept. ‘The negroes would not have bim near them. ‘Then | “ordinary purposes of reference. Henao in particular, A volume from his pen bas just { Monstrous and ferocious spe, the goriilA. | Here, too, is | mourn, and lasts generally {rom a year to two. vatching by various devices not orly the elep! hip- | he waitea until everybody was and then Mr. IS of “Me Banks of New | *PPeared, tolerably well printed, and illustrated) with | the home of. that Slag penne goody g the | man who had died left seven wives, several slaves, a | popotamus and antelope, but oven the leopard aud the | crawled in softly next to ago lends, and hep Gibbons, author je ateel engravings of workmanship superior to thet troglodytes, caivus, the usbiego mboune of the na- | house, plantation and other such as wearlng | Cunning monkeys; but I know of no case in which an | #0'slept there until earliest eral times he was | York and the Clearing House,” hse added a fresh con- Ip superis yo pe ae Ca fe fosorseetll srilp haronicharr ee spparel, eae on the rece we ES — pana any kind was caught in this way. The common | caught and peste. As y: ‘Became imoliged ot suowed | tribution to our financial literature ina volume entitled | ST@PbY- It contains compact and detailed histories of im devolve e duty vi gran umpanzee is remarkable for its unu: wide an extraordinary fondness for stron; 5 henever | ,, “Twelve Decisive s r?? Po Thus it will be seen that this region forms a peculiarly | of bola ivoge. For this feast the people grapiical range. “It is found from the Gemtia In sieect @ negro had palin wino ‘Tommy was sureto know it, He | ‘*The Public Debt of the United States ; its Organtza- Battles’ of theirs, wees UP teen? Mr. Swinton omits any mention of the superb achievement of Farragut in opening the mouth of the ‘Mississippi and capturing New Orleans, What is done, however, is welldone, The summary of the general situation just before the battle of Five Forks even re- minds one of the luminous pages of Gibbon. The de- cisive battles recorded in this book are Bull ran (the first), Donelson, Shiloh, Antietam, Murfreesboro, the Monitor and Merrimac, Vickaburg, Gottysburg, the Wil- derness, Atlanta, Nashville and Five Forks. The work is one of the most valuable recent additions to our ‘war literature,”” We have received the advanced sheets of a valuable and interesting volume, entitied, “Modern Inquiries: Classical, Professional and Miscellaneous,” By Jacob Bigelow, M. D., late President of the American Academy of Arta and Sciences, and lato Professor in Harvard University. The book attests both the ripe erudition and the progressive spirit for which the author bas long been distinguished. It is dedicated to his friend, George Ticknor, Egq,, whose “History of Spanish Litera- ture’”’ has never been surpassed. vieb field for a naturalist. Game?is not found in such ty as on the vast plains of South Africa; there is less itchering ; but if the larder is not so well supplied, the half starved explorer experiences many happy days Dird rewards him for his trials, dangers and sufferings. Not only does the fauna of this region contain a very unusual number of species peculiar to itself, but even some of these animals which it has in common with the other regions of Africa seemed to me varieties. The elephant is a variety distinct in sever Particulars frem his South African brother. Doubtiess the peculiar formation of the country causes this condition. Insteat of the vast, aod watered thi wooded sparsely Plains of Northen, Eastern and Southern Africa, the explorer finds avery densely wooded country, where rains are very abundant. From the coast I made several expedi- tions, and visited many tribes. 1 found that polygamy, slavery and witchcraft the main features of the social system. Polygamy is very prevalent, Men marry at every opportunity, and atallages, The chief busi- ness of an African is to get wives, No matter how old ‘man may be, he will continue to marry, and got as @reat a number of young wives as he can. It was very amusing to see old men, such as my old friend Quen- queza, walking to and fro in the street of the village and ordering their wives to love them. Obedience is the first duty of a wife, and is enforced without mercy, ‘and a whip is considered a very important piece of house- ‘ hold furniture. It is inade of the hide of the hippopota- mus, and is a barbarous weapon. This is laid on with no no tight handig jworthy husband crying out, at the game time, “!) 1, do you think I paid my slaves for you fornothing?”’ The women cultivate the seil, and it ds the duty & every woman to feed her husband. Tnere is no ceremony whatever at the The youn; pre- pare long before the time; fish are caught and dried, and sholombs and joumbonai are prepared, The chief mourners bad) beea fishing for two weeks, and had returned with several canoes laden with fish, and the slaves and people on the plantation had been busy making intoxicating drinks. The day ap- pointed at length arrived, end drinks had been pouring into the village, and trom the plantations quantities of palm wine, Every one in the village don- ned his best attire and ‘ornaments; drums and kettles were collected, powder was obtained for the salutes, and all was ready to commence bola ivoga, The wives of the dead man seemed quite jolly, for to-morrow they were to lay amde their mourning robes and join in the mpae as brides. The chief mourner could have married them all, but he had generously given up two to a younger brother and one to a first cousin. At seven A. M. three guns were fired off to announce that the widows had done eating a certain mess, com- posed of various Loh read supposed to have magical virtues, and by which they are released from their widowhood. They now put on braoel anklets and earrings and the finest clothes they From early morning the guests had been arriving from the adjacent villages, bringing with them intoxicating drinks, Mats were spread about the house of the deceased and along the main street of the town. The people were divided into ttle groups, and before each door was set an immense jar of mumbo, or palm wine. They ail talked pleasantly, when suddenly the Biayano people began to fire a volley of a hundred guns. Tbis was the jal for the drink- ing to begin. Men, women and ch’ eet to work, and from this time tilPthe next morning the orgies were continued without interruption. They ik, they sung, pd oe of fehate — to the paraliel of St. owas s decked, taste Pe bandy ope his ae tion, its Liquidation, Administration of the Treasury; ip, of Benguela; we might in almost every | ploit was with a brandy bottle which, on going out, Financ! ratem.”” Mr. densely model’ wooled country within the tropes, | carelessly left out of my chest, Wiren Preturned, after | 7° la By" Se eee Forests being necessary for the animal’s existence, its | some hours of absence, I found my precious botile—it | St@at freedom the policy and measures of the Treasury food consisting of berries, nuts and leaves, so far as I | Was the last—broken in pieces and my close by ina | Department. He exposes mercilessly the preposterous have been able to ascertain. Strange to say, the chim- } state of drunkenness. Whew he saw me he tried to got theory which considers a national debt as a ‘national panzee is only found in the western of Africa— | up, but tn igo His eyes had the glare of human in- i none having been found in the east. is would prove | txieation, legs ‘tottered, and he fell down several | blessing.” He would provide for a thorough reorgani- that the forest must not cover the whole of tropical | mes. Dt him athraghing. One day poor Tommy | zation of our national debt and for its gradual liquida- Africa, but that there must be agapsomewhere, Isaw but | Fefused his food and seemed downcast. He | tion, Perhaps the goneral aim of this volume may be two of these treglodytes niger; I killed one and saw | refused all kinds of berries of the forest, another in my Cape Lapez expedition, I was travelling | 804 next day, without a struggle, he died. Tommy as best described in the words of the author, who says that a b soe ke earl ccnie | each surrounded by fave al ‘older bear i kp id at — “+ it is designed to show how little the government ought orest and seem! e natural gardens planted in | yellow rather than mens afterwards ti 7 the woody wilderness; it does not require much time | older than Tommy that wero still darker and almost | ‘ "ix Mself up with the affairs of the people; and that to get into the backwoods there—(laughter)—suddenly I | black. As the Cen 12 mbouni grows older he turns | 't never ought todo so bat asa servant—not as a mas- saw a buffalo standing near the edge of the forest watch- | from a white or yellow to a jet black. The young | ter. Itspresent office isto a great extent military, and ing our movements; evidently not liking our appear- | M8hiego mbouni were not bald, but the ha'r was very | trom necessity that of predominance. But this is ance he made for the forest; we went to daecops thes thin on the top of the bead, while the young of the other s p peae- I watched at one pass and the other men went round to | Varieties of chimpanzee had the hair thicker, Strange | ing away under the direction of a Congress that has in ei “wr ile on sgh of Afsiea: Rave pases saa it the popular wisdom, grandly expressed in the late proaching me out of the deep gloom of the forest a: jac} e of the people, while in Born: Took it tobe one of my mon, especially as it neared me, | she ourang outang has redish hair, Prery near the color | elections. As the initial step to the rostoration of the it continued to oh, when suddenly it got sight of | Of the red men who inhabit the country. The cranial | natural rights of labor, first of which is the right to live = Or Ades oe ah marae it oo back inte the woods. Cg AS br Ciimpensese rom % fh, = without distress—wrthout being famished on high prices, das quae untgved: eh yas ee oO Bg arty eae fitted po pitas 25 cubic inches, | deficient and adulterated food—as the initial step in this laughed at my mistake; the black face of the beast re- | 1 have now given you as accurate an account of the life direction, we show that full one-half of the excise tax minded me of that of the negro. Tho most curious | Of a Africanas ibe short ‘time allowed to me would | now levied on the country ought to be stricken off At of the varieties of the chim which I discovered | Permit. You have seen by that account that the priimi- | ja.) we show that eve ‘i " an bil is the troglodytes calrue, called by thonatives nshiego | tive unsophisticated man of nature, though he has ry requirement of the public mbouni. 8 chimpanzee is baid headed, and I do not | fewer wants than ourselves, is far more wretched, for | Credit and honor may be mot by a great reduction from pow if i is erent et hin aides, bathe lacertainly | 00! re Ce Ae ite at 2 show bie fF the prevent srale of taxation.” The goneral burden of e most int nt. Thi ‘chim, hi ways woos, ‘ much narrower geographical range than the troglodytes | this world {js bia.all. wish that time would allow me | ‘@*ation makes everybody interested to know or common chimpanzee. I found it onl: to show you in what particulars the skeleton of tl what is je character and meaning of our TBIe hd or the interior; and tp the deepen freee | gorilla epprosches the bony framo of man, and @bat Be be ee 7 bead eae i lensest man, pudtic debt, and whether ft can be paid id south of the Equator, It differs from the in. claims to being the nearest approach to @ human eff, that we may get back to the condition of those being smaller, milder, less strong, b 3 77° ng, but far more docile. ng. hen it was lesa of 4 Lardship to live. Mr, MUSICAL “AND THEATRICAL INTELLIGENCE, On Easter Monday night the two theatres at Cardiff (the Theatre Royal and Prince of Wales) were opened for the first time this season, ‘The farewell engagement of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Kean is attracting crowded houses at the Theatre Royal, Man- chester. At the Prince's theatre Mr. Watts Phillips’ «Lost in London” has been produced with success. A dramatization of “Griffith Gaunt’? by the author of motions are of the loosest kind, and no two persons are found to agree in any two particulars about which the traveller seeks information. Iam unable to present to The size of an adult specimen 1s about four feet in ‘The lecturer concluded by saying that in all his wan ay pa ings he had no hope of | “ibbon dors nat exuygerite the claims of labor to recog- two specimens do not quarrel, “It bas thea Lagmeamapian, elena ated nition as the vy interest of the State. He belioves cluding ceremony. His brother’s house was to be torn ular cus- you anarray of items from which the reader may make | down and burnt. When | came the people surrounded | tom of building e nest or shelter f iat ward, bat that as an Amorican citizen he always GPa Wheologioal eyatom, Superatuion seems im these | the house, siagiag furiouly, and Tere | eee eoneree crmpergehnpl on gral pe tthadighlialinyt Drake ion tinpthonboartangl Ra A ae ies of dunnco, ail the embarrass. | the novel has been brought out at, Newcastle. Theatre countries to have run wild. ey believe in good and | the old house to pieces with axes and cutlasses, and they rest at higut, and climb up to bis house and seat him- © all the distrust of | Royal, with Miss Avonia Jones in the cbief role. It was evil gee phoepoont ‘the evil >a =e eg burnt the whole. Wer ies were burnt the feast | self in the projecting branch. Iremember contributions to science would be appreciated by hix on ‘aud ‘suffarivg dacsed by | very sucoosstel. spicits recently. will put was over, and this is ‘out count 4 oe ate ‘ : ined im the forest and at their P te Ear Bel the rejolcing core arfrom a lnke called achat Th sarees res eit ndiled all the diffeulties in | Melle. Friccl appeared at Covent Garden on April 230 the Commi tribe. Hardly med, Ce. fohanea the man mre bet, Seepoaly, Ouse ‘abeence on some hunt sce “anata oecees weak ried bio m a gravo in the sand, eo shallow that when retorn from time to in + Un Ballo in Maschern,” and with Mario, Graziani and Mile, Morenst, made a great success, Her Majesty's Theatre opened on the 27th with “Le Nozze di Figaro.’ J Halliday’s “comedy drama,’ the Great City, « ‘play relying on strong seenic ejféc's—on veal railway stations anda real tollzate—on a real gus lamp aod. real hand- some cab, with a real borze, was breught out at Drury whose chief was called Shimbouvenguni, king. with a THE SUNDAY LAW. big name. His Majesty was a negro between sixty and boo ne seventy years old, and had dressed himself in a swallow ‘The revocation order of the Chief of Police, which was arent tail coat, that belonged to his grandfather, but nounced RALD Yesterday, had the cfiect eau’ he. hed’ pot on another single article of costaines: | 2 Taralg ebay , eee ee” | air: dis fil in labor.” (aughter)—with the exception of « beaver bat on the to} siderably allaying, if not totally putting an end to the ex. Ys “The Financial Economy of the Umytod States Mustrae of his of the fashion of a generation citement which prevailed throhghout the city on Friday in ‘ ; quite proud of his costume, and be, 10} consequence of the telegraphic orders of tush Wednesday | 2, and Some of the Cuises which relird the Progress several of ‘ id seemed oe given ay to menage dollars” Aree aod Thursday, ‘There eau Mp bat little doubt thet hag | o California Demonstrated, with «, Relevant Appendis,”” Be (mat sance of industrial , in his opinion, outent to 80- ore ihe tng alee Ww 14 : H : i g E i i i E i la E ty 3 c a3 rw ‘wil now 1 an account ‘& people | articles of dress. felt his Qe the police: attempted to put the old blue-law relative to |b? Jobu Alexaniler Fervis, A. SL, is, another very recent hay) es podition Nas Des wmang ‘rheen have spent many months in hunting | was “the thing.” The people gathered round | the general ees ‘Stores on the Sabbath day into | Contribution to onr tleuncial literature. Mr. Ferris nates | Lane last inonth, apd met with ‘ it to give them (ao 3 and ‘They are one of the most numerous | to see my bair (I had a little more then than I have now.) r witis perfect hatred what ho styles the “ialse money | A musical farce entitled’ Garibaldi'im Sicily, the music , ‘ and Woeld frighten and ‘extended tribes Thave motin Africa. ‘They | Tsaid I had come to hunt. His ‘majesty sent me some | OPEPatios, there would bave been good dew! of trouble “ bats pA by-di:Li Haenena Gy: Cuibon, emrpbodetiahad the order comes the o gene, inhabit the country of Muni on the north, and from the | plantains and some sugar cane by a black woman, with ; in certain portions of the city; still, owing to the with- | 9 Nell as the excessive duties to which “the Eustera | by J. la — ' ceane ‘they seem co have explicit faith, and Gea shore to thé Apingi country, and as far south as the | word that she was tobe my wife. This was true royal | grawal of the obnoxious pronunciamentos, no disturd- | PePle,” he complains, are anveteraiely attached. What | Adelphi. The piove turns on the mythical, adventures wegvons 1 e Feroad Bay. To the north they approach the sea | hospitality. I took the plantain and sugar cane, but de- th. ne | they need, be thinks, is not higher duties, but a sound | of Garibaldi insiclly, The TWuilay patriot has consider- more of these articles. These ghore and live on the banks of the rivers and other | clined the matrimonial alliance. We now coms back to | ®8ce of any kind is now anticipated either by the whe ; stata waicleas pont eter pe ‘are called, are generally worn around the places, Dut. they also extend far inland in the moun. | the nsbiego mbouni; I was walking along, accom; police themselves or the community at large. That the | Cafrency—-‘‘a currency worth one hundred cents on the | ably deteriorated 0 years m ‘yea ( ‘ cp iner Eedert the skins of rare ani tains, Their settioments are widely scattercd, and they | by # native, rather tired of the sport, for I rr ‘action of the Police Commissioners in causing the revo- | dollar in goldcoin.” And he offers what he regards as | mirers; he has statked as a political ‘Boanoryes’ about ss Co Neg SCALE are cbiedy found living fm independent towns in regious | nothing, when Tbappened to look up at a high tree and | cation order to be issued, thns guaranteeing a peaceful | an eacy way of returning to specie payments, at the rate | the'coumry, and made tilly epeechies: at christénings ‘sabes of ‘cectaln Ripts of traits ‘of the. ri {herr rov! e They saked the native if hunters nad ‘is habit of clespinn, a tho phlibeation rite wate wan Thalled ou the fart ‘of | Of sixty-eight millions a year; this, too, without oppress- | and written # foolish letter, itis auserted)to'Mr.’ E a ‘Of serpents, &c., &c. nevor stay long in ry ‘village 4 the woods, and to my utter surprise he said it was built.| the public 7 ing the government, the banks or the people in the | mund Beales; but the'final degradation to which the ised! “pov er—one -provecta from: scarcely built, the ba hot barne | by the nsbiego mbouni (chimpanzee) that hed. nohairon | _ In order to guard against any im- | jeast. He indicates “resources, which, if faithfully ap- | falion hero has been exposed tx his’beng’presémted in : ACRES SSPE Fra or PB. wit aces Tonal nn et once eae ahanie eat Banh maaan ten came en ay ot {ne | plied, will enable the hanks to resume specie payments | the preseut.guise on the stage of tho‘Adelpht thentre. gee , fron an tn fo fied 2 aaah cr ‘Rot to rest revocation order, they | at the above mentioned rates; or, in four years anda | Burnaud® extravaganza, tho Olympic Gattis; an iden yoo Ta fap thing. ap teen encanto diag ape, Sach soe ai heen entaneet, rnp “" balf every dollar of their issues of bills of credit may be | borrowed from Planché, 1s thé Intest novelty at! the ? phy Ae deal of roadie, rae hae Seorenes ey Seaman mmanine of | sale were taaraciba to coals thelr clasiar aatarion withdrawn, and in place of them may be'| Olympic. Méulia, a sensational drams at the st, James’, ~ 7, 7 tlement; teria iia or ‘as in thia, the trees have to ipcbe mesic: of closing 1 te epee. issued bills, of sabstance—tiold _Bills—secured | and a burlesque by Brough, entitled Pygmalion, at the wee eeinins emematieny one be gaia oad (neh at ot = mane conpene ve oemgh beehed so Mypei Lis kiya. | by a deposit of gold in the National Treasury, | Strand. ¢ a doctor is (np sehen ft 58 Macy. i oak press the fect faye brn se that a man could dollar for dollar.” The achome cuts off all profits from It Is stated for certain that Richard Wagner has been 4 ee aire ea Ib ewe Re sensgess bot eet Ayy Ay os rd te | pcan, ty ated od ahve or obinis & dom of med the circulation of bask notes, further than such circula- | nominated latendent of Music at the Court of ‘Madrid, ‘a doctor somet death, gee a dead tT cine on y without « rd Senet thee tue ‘devi isin his body, and the Tuole sick unless they have food cetvater deeds v0 ae tte eaiee in eiiaceies on aa 311 CP thoes whom be ay Pe congo. pone tion is based on gold. ‘It rids the government of the | while Von Biilow is made orchestral conductor. Bethat gees about in a wild way, seeing take care of them, are often driven out of the village to | his nest, his feet resting on the lower branch, his head cchentieaiaperneniesihiaedacinniey obnoxious position into which it has placed itself, by | as it may, Wagner is now in Munich, and amases bim- pretending to see fuure events, gaining die in the forest. I reaching quite into the little of a rool, and his DEPARTURE OF STEAMERS YESTERDAY. creating monopolies to circulate paper. money (which | self by promenading up'and down the streets ail day, Saeiahto, temporary.» Peewee men th arm clesped Srmly Found the txee tyank. After gating — has ever bean the bane of the country) and actually pay- | with the view of showing the sinking ’hearts of that wciaahes honen ate waste Geet eee ey Te neo ene reenaeid | The following European aud coastwise bound steamers: ing sigze monopolies an inimonse bonus for the mischief | capital that they have not got rid of lint yet: ’ left this port yesterday :— which they moet thoroughly achieve, by oxpelling the We are told that Mr. F. B, Chatterton, leave of Drury The City of Paris, of the Inman line, left pier No. 49 | 1.4) money from the country, and making all the busi- i Lane theatre, bas taken initiatory proceedings to bring f a i 5 = 5 ; = f a struggle oreven a groan, Then we baili a ie our camp for the night, ‘Rot imagine tbat a man who was well two weeks ago We hung up the | North river, for Liverpool and Queenstown, carrying | ors ind a ” inst Mr. Sims Reeves for f hould ‘death’s door with disease, unless the reach of the Kk 4 industries depend upon a basis of gambling. ap action against Mr. Sims wes damages for ‘wome ican ee eo teed 't Tell asleep on my hed of lource ag | 008 hundred and seventy-one cabin and one hundred | Wnetever may be thought of the views of Mr. Ferris, | breach of contract, the latter gentioman having dectined Broken the thread of life and inflicted sick- as the Sy ing Fd behold. This specie | aud two steerage passengers, a full cargo of cotton, rice, | nis hook is full of interosting statistics, aud indicates the | to appear in the drama of Rob Roy, for which he was peceetntealinames ak chantinies’ aR etemsukers | nts “Canes pel --enpnip tment ihren | ep gh ap Tay the full United States mails, and | growing interest throughout the country in the science | engaged tor twelve special representations, eems to change, and he becomes suspicious of his | away for that.” ‘ What will you do?” “Die.” A few | in killing several others. [he average height of those sg? io ‘ of potitical' economy. The book has been printed and Mre, Haydn Corri, the well known vocalist, and * © “@earem, friends and relations. The tather dreads his | women came up to him and gave him water anda little | apes is about four feet. The spread of arm isseven | ‘The Fulton, of the New York and Havre Steamship | pariished in elegant style at San Francisco. mother of Mr. Henry Corri, Mr. P. ¢orrt, &e , died on ebildren, the son his father and mother, the men their | food. But the men saw death in his eyes and they | fect. Now | will give yous description of its sppeat- | Company's line, left per No. 46 North river, for Havre, | 4 new and thoroughly revised edition of « Welle’ | the 10th inst. at Leds, in her 68th year. She made wives, and the wives their husbands. By night he | drove him away. He departed sadiy. A few days | ance. Theskin is black; the tbroat, heart and abdo- calling at Falmouth, carrying one hundred twenty. y wd ~ fancies himecif surrounded by evil spirits, he covers | afterwards bis poor lean body was found in the woods, | men are covered with shor: and rather thin, blackish ing ing 'Y- | Every Man His Own Lawyer and Business Form Bovk,’? | her first appearance in Dublin im 1820, hjmeclf with fetiches and charms, maxes presents of | His troubles were ended, When a man dies ina Bakalai | hair. On tne jess, in the adult imené, the hair is of | five cabin passengors, a full cargo of cotton and general | hag nee brought out, with such additions asthe extra- Benedict's St, Cecilia i* pronounced by the London food to the spirits, and is fal! of wonderfal and frightful | visage the stability of that settlement hes received @ | a dirty gray, mixed with black. The shoulders and back | merchandise, and $41,700 in specie. i akan i te Wee lntrodacton @ be acharming work. ‘The Sééi0d Itarilonic dveama, These ail point to the fact tbat the is (ull | violent suock ; if @ second dies, then the people at once | have biack hair, between two and three inches long, The William Penn, of the London and New York ordinary ges demand, iu ing the | papers to a charming 5 of sorcerers, and gradually it becomes intected by bis | move They think the place bewitched; they | mixed with a little gray. The arms, down to the waist, | Stoamsbip Compauv’s line, lett pier No. 3 North river, | Internal revenue system, national banks, modifications | Society produced it in excellent style at Exeter Hall fears, the people grow suspicious of each oties. Chance fpooy dent, arena a their vey ow eee besegertion ee with one handred and eighty-two passen- | o¢ the tariff, amendments to the Constitution of the | isst month. see cnpamsangpenea oemraton vewliches Winton, bag wretchés sre cundemed to drink the ara the ofa ie ust 60 tough. Even making allow. wethe stealer Denmark, of the National Steam Naviga- | United States, the emancipation’ of the slaves,and the} The direction of the Imperial theatre of Moscow for Fis the excitement becomes (oo high to be restrained, oceans Often several creatures are accused | ances for size, its chest is of far lew capacity, its mus- | tion Company, left pier No 47 North river, for Liver: | general bankrupt law, together with the increased im- | Italian Opera bas ten conceded to Signor Graziagi, the < eee ema tae athe 21 $a6 une vamy to teckeen ope ther sos eoh ‘upos Sotas oes tile somone, toe ang Beal nap dior td g See N Son a ahty merase PAS: | portance of the subject of, pensions, bounties and war | popular baritone, who intends giving a seriow of per- public vi up, they proton has fastened. ‘On the death of 's freeman at least thet wandering “y ae new slender, tbe fingers especially. The hair the nabiey _ The steatiship Columbia, of the Apchor line, Jeft pier claims, and, in short, all the present requirements which | formances there pext season, ‘ one or two persons are killed, and often many more, but | plantations Cee, es ate amen that of the gorilla. | No. 20, North river, for Liverpeol and Glasgow, with | the laws, statutes and provisions necessitate. In it; im- Mile, Adelina Patti bas left Paris for London. On PT RK Cs ole BG aboot = ys oot superstitious. faeries caer poh me oye ood gg vam Sul oma cabin and sixty-‘our steerage passengers and © | proved form this work is worthier than ever of the | sunday she took Ler farewell for the season as Rosina in vena prince, slave or freemen, male oF ial country and perfestiy bald. The nese of the nab tw mot #0 prom! ‘The sveamsbip General Meade left pier No. 9 North | popularity which tt long since acquired as a convenient | the Barbiere, and mtroduced inte the lesson scene her female. locicaeniedaemadeatsme are or he em 8 ewes Sahat Soaeriie,. Gewese tat Be a ae inn terme al cael and reliable manual. own very charming and exceedingly well written song, en ety eT ET pd on eee Se at, a re oe Oa ae neeeee, Stephen D, Law, Connsellor-at-Law, author of “Law's | “Le Baiser d’ Adieu” which, was received with an uproar every such scene; imterest, | which fetich would keep trade away covered with hair, commencing at about the middle of | The steamer of the Star line, left pier No. 46 Loan: . ow Mey farther rather Risa to retrain ths coors, town, This pelaver was very the ear, Wat sérvek me parucslarly was that 1 found | North river for New Orleans, with thi srt oo fa and | United States Courts,” “Law's American Digest,” &c., | of applause. Wiens ile deciolons follow often the prejen sucher, Of toate, seat a teomman: Wien tee omustigin ts ioe tay | * us tan aver wert" pier No. 19 North river for worth: power “scotia elena oy Begrnrstname cre peg sa lag ‘ vex in a § 3 the molt suspected. beforehund’ those having stolen Tove on to some other part of the forest and make a | vannah, with twenty-five passengers and a three-quarter a ae tua man aes cee o Copyrieht Laws | rin purposes bringing out next winter at the Grand who are the aviemba, From | to have trade. new shelter. Keren gn Boned yy nen di a of the United States, 1790 to 1866, with Notes of the | Opera The subject is, incredible to relate, nothing less the doctor's - maititede there te no tellow ie groper at, frame te nay, freee t Bt yA Ree gun satis eerte! Jadicial Decisions Thereunder, and Forms and Indexes.” | than Hamlet. Imagine the melancholy Dane at the foot- eppeal but that doctor is a per- | the prince ult specimen ’is intensely black, oun, . South ports, a eenage whose chief power lies ia his ability (which is oo Soomny ot face white skin, "It seems as though wonders would | ing twenty-five passsogers and a full cargo of tmiscelia- ve towd realty seignsife as bee mae seer. Seite, eneceting the wale eS ne veal) to drink a great quantity of the mbouadoa | for the sake never cease in these equatorial foreste, and 1 will re- | neous freights. fally popularized science than Jean Macé, whose | missic of the author of Mignon! M. Thomas at first en- f Neng ye Ot ate seeetel caer in: nien DIOR eogR, Whee Gat woe comaliip Compasy, lets Pier No, Sy North. river, with | minor? & © spies tt Gaia ee - porcenes. su} it be , ine v '. > a charms, which, without bis masipalation, are worthless. | by some witchcraft Re ae eee sree tind maa nk Lea | scrcanediie oan avs saesvage venennen apd 700 ott rons ema doemaperstntortampny bet nt team wr amen ge gig ope nn natn ka ata Fae eiroton, beleney, toe spines exes: ot. plans lane that a people #0 of death would be peaceful; | been very ili im bis village, fevers hai goof merchandise. ' translation of ‘ntertaining and instructive work wat | ingly. Ax, however, there was really no French tenor effect. Lael have toe it hed Arg pe = =I Poa tA wis aot: seem | ages a on and } Pl psa for Norfolk amt Hickesoed, agape fo Ba eae cp ligd revi. | who could act the charscter siz, on ences, "1 have als0 seen a person fall down deed knew. | was sadly alarmed at my stiness. One he The Norfolk, of the Expree Steamsbip ine, loft Pier Oe aie te seventecnth by an American | that’. Faure would look and play the young Danish Ther arinking with blood ing from bis moutl shall | ened to kill the sorcerers if he could find them. | sbal | No, 15, East river, for Washington and rgetown, car- | editor, M. Macé ingeniously mide the great leading Prince to the pérfect satisfaction of all his Parisian ad- Tat ees 3s :cae. the = bi - sxirvageay Dever — ago oem Village. | rying @ cargo of assorted merchandise. anatomical and physical facts of Ife comprehensible by | mirers, and so ho has embaritoned the masic and made — ee oe oe y | They 7. achild, and children of slarzer growth may profitanly | it over to the popular French artist. M. Perrin, on his ed to go and see an old friend of mine, Mpomo, who this, ‘brought me more mats to uNGK Amon prin STuey bed it the night Detere drumming every moving tree or ive a cbter bed ‘and when m: ne OF THE STEAMER © 108E. study thie volume, which has been adopted by the Uni- | part, keen as to # suitable representative for Ophelia, The bonfomp Te dent hy Ay Ding Suagn scien ad by ry he ear to come | Even Paes crapte tie govt bers = . sd ~ vs cf pay “ .*} thas contrived to engage Mile. tine nef — wn received ita | Under the title of “Literary Life of James K. Pauld. character; se that every thing 1# business-like making such a noise to of their huts. of the quarrels and palaver lise to women can be tr Wenge horqeen Beston and Benge, Meine, + — SOT op eae “hat be ‘would depart, ona thas Sa chen cones, When war bas really trekaa oot in Thy inces, and as I had come to hun due baptism ot dipping yesterday afternoon at the yard | ing,” compiled by his son, William J, Paulding, we have | and luoks as if work were meant. Mpomo would get weil. I saw that newer drumming | the country there is no rest or safety; no man, woman | could I comtnenced. Before starting, according to of John Englis & Son, foot of Tenth stébet, East river. im one handsome volume the precursor of a new and St, George's Hall was opened on April 25, by the Phil- we leat aueday mts opt ond Uhaow westepsaeeres Tate dake eae Ot Gola They “Sy eeibert'| eemocedand che liert ase The vessel is somewhat more heavily built than the | select edition of the works of one of our pioneer authors, | harmonic Society. * seed one who | told me that bis majority of steamers turned out from the New York | and au interesting record and picture, not only of bm, | The Alleghaniase, who since their return from Europe 4 bark | day the heart of the otanga (#! yards, being considerably more solid than the Sound | but of his early associates, Washington Irving, Henry | have beon very successfal in the Western cities, will a Howe aa: ae. yw steamers, and of fat more substantial frame than the | Brevoort, Jr., Gouverneur Kemble, and other “good fel- | shortly commence a series of concerts at Irving Hall in they | and I began to think thal agerege of Hodson river craft; and, as it lay with ribs | lows’ of the Saimagundi clan, in their gay young days | this city. The troupe was organized in this city in 1846, do 60. They use very unfait means of warfare, and the | been too sanguine. Finally, and planks comparatively exposed upon the stock: ‘and Professor J. M. Boulard, the celebrated basso, is still director. ‘The Richings English Opera troupe open at the Na- it | of New York life, sixty yearn ago, By the help of ex- od for solidity and strength of materia! favorabl, comperable with toe Heatieat aiinatte ‘oamers. The | tects from his autobiography, bis eseays, and his corres- following are her cae aenet, honk of keel, two | pondence, ywe review the career of Mr. Paulding ase hondred and ifty La depth of hold, equal to twelve | writer and as @ public man, and we are convinced that, meaner the attack and the greater the treacuery the more glory they have won. In times of war fires are pot out, they give light to the enemy ; 3 after dark, people keop a dead silence lost their voices should y _ their hhereabouts : next morning I was awoke by the mournful wail ashes as silently as possible, t ‘Washington, on the 13th inst. They suecéea J. tbat Mi bad to bis ters fear to | cries. At last we saw som feet nine foches, with Ith of beam, thirty-six feet ional, UO TreeNcissen hearh tak of ichorait, ‘Tee | Rant’ for “fear ef come ove iyiog, tm. wals |. ground. When iceume neerer. wi 0 Acoommonations will be provided for | spite of bls fenlts and préjadions, the present generation | & Clarke, comedian. fs lasted two days, oe the anaes eon bebind ine wee, Pe shoot & = ae on — —, runt To four puis py premetes, ee number of state | of rin bimegi reid me ara to Pat hon- The Liederkranz Society ptodaced Schubert's only he cemetery {i ate proceed: women afraid oging hears rooms 4 orable memo stant love oueet am to deoover the fereone who had bewitenhed the | and in uence everybody is in a condition of semi- | ries. One of my party, named Querlover Tho hip yard of Messrs. Eaglis k Som presented yes, ied, ‘te (fy “ foobar hope operetta, peng herr dora pred ~ heer - poor fellow. At last, when ali were frantic with the de- | starvation, Is lasts sometimes for months, until whole | chance to fire, and brought her down. She dropped | terday afternoon, previous to the shower, # curiously patriotions, jaractertntic q oo Fourth street, inst. brilliant ‘sire to find the sorceress, the doctor aseembied them all | districts are depopulated. Those that are not killed leave | without « onges The poor iittie one cried “hew! | mottied and incongruous There were always hold @ niche of bis own ip American literature and | fasijonable audience attended, The affair was an en- ‘eroond him in the centre of the town, and drank his | them; and all this because a man in one village stole | hew! hew!” clung to the dead body. Icannotex- | muffins of all bistory. ure oe the principal singers were recalled at al incantations. Every | from another bis wife and refused to give satisfaction. presto you my surprise when I discovered that the | gathering of kindling wood—somo making off with Reprints of Baitish povoliate cn ti ot | Whe fail of the curtain, man that stood round bi armed either with a gun, » When in their villages 1 never considered my life safe, y's face Was pure white—very white imieed—pal!:d, | market baskets filled with shavings and el: com order Miss Maggie Mitebell Glenn, the ter of ‘pear, knife, axe or sword, and all evinced adetermma- | fearing war would come. Once T heard on a sudden | but as white as a white child. Omoxamining the mother | what as a member of the. the day. Diamond editions and Globe editions of Dickens, Glenn, of the House’ at Nort va, aot a4 ton to seck a bloody revenge on those who should be | great jing among the women; 1 found that two of | we found her as black es soot, We secured anes sive item; otters with loaded kets | Diamond editions of Thackeray, and a still cheaper and fe aod ts gd 00 bat ~4 ved out as the criminals, They seemed to have a | them had Killed by some persons unseen while | and I immediately ordered a to camp, and when | and aprons; and yet others fegible edition of hin ‘a? fottow each | veoded beyond public | omen taste for blood, For the first time im that village | they were washing in some stream near their village. | we fed the litle aabiego which ‘been ne) from | like athletes in @ Grecian game, pec: mere ‘Pendenn pret peed uname found my voice without @uthority. A silence suc- | The murderers were not kuown for some ; all was | her dead mother, yo een bar mone Aitule fel~ mapeep orcs fortunate contestant slipping it under }| other im quick succession. Competition ie the life of J Howard Paul gave three ‘ne ereded the noise, and the harsh voice of the doctor was | consternation in the village. Then it their ears | low ran fi to her, touching her on is Coat and walking a' trade. last week at the Academy of fanie, Brooki7e, Sper > beard. He was dressed in a most faniastic way. Then it these women had been killed by men coming from | and heart, saw that evidentiy some great [ctepemrtca Pomtnd 3 had nothi tateat oud she. neato menegpnest ot Mr. L. T. were he described jully a house apd tts location, and said jong distance, and hom they had no qu enge bed een pine. Vor a few moments car- | Bis cont, les That table iariet, Pepys, te by nearly six thousand persons. eee oT teicted Myoue., Seorcely hed BS murdered, tneir silts, oe tiene ns we returned to bed tad, cua he broke ous tee tong, pint: what greater Chau T paid wap, Gard bog ha THe YANO ROBSERTY ved m0. a" / wi 5 Ba aac eraraea crowd seted upon a | oar desertedvvillage, 1 found & division of traveling Cire wall, West once ones! "The entire coup wes tm tugging it from pared Sisks te the dell ar alas StF an pos WAVY YARD i poor girl named Okandaga, the sister Bakalal m possession ; were moving; I asked why } touched mn ae No Gita Gime F Sheed wonder é A “5 5 Simon aun nile to bt + Used Relense of the Parties Accused. guide Adouma, and flourishing weapons over her ar tA their sae hey told me | ing atthe white oo creature, it was really | dozen carriages of frien down page after page jing him to high rank among Tt will be remembered that four persone named and her ter side, she | one their =men ing out in the sp Hh oe hy pe mg a more launch. Preparations were historians, is to be reprinted in Now York ; or, rather, « | w, 7 “a were arrested by wae passed into the hands of | river had been shot, Thereupon were seized | strange animal I never Whi wtood there eee ceeiaee Sanaa Ieee sarap eas a right, Stanley, Walton feces oA her ; & cold chill ran | with a panic, the town by witches, | two of my hunters GM ‘Chailia, | the bie! Sipe eaneh ee condensed abridgeme: Diary’ shorty Marahal Marray and Colonel! Wood weeks since throug’ rush on the crowd and | and at once resolved to it and settle somewhere | look at your friend Kill goriliaa | the stocker. TDF, published here, edited by® New York man of letters. me ‘who, ta the year 1964 opened the safe of ould oniy have encrigoed | Chest, cloth, rae Rete westbania, Soe, conting pot, | Wook 'st'your whi Wrind’™ Tite’ they thousbss | of poung Ainericane who We Rave semaves Cea i cates ; | pesy tp she Brook Nen/on vo Washingtony - harsh pe A the te, an as @ great quantity > har] tremendous = tens he ari rain under Mr. Clements (* Mark Twain”), the Wild Hamorist of | it Fidircoe.” the men sere ot, mo euineriene Parl ere 1s 4) 014 woman | sunset every one of them within doors; the | straight ine you the egret na ee inet block gave way tho Pacite Slope, Lecturer on the Sandwich Islanda, | 824 incarcerated there MTA sua, succeeded Pt Dewriched Mpemie.” | COIN ae eT aie ner cane Terria tne | Locvauh dor ace nocihes Wak ethene cates suet | Mf senealy awabened, Citizen of Nevada and Pigrim to the Holy Land has in- | otsculy ip ouuaining an order from the United Bates r of king, Quen- been so much mbount months, « obiaisleg coarge . . fuser a noth iN ‘nae not there, As | and le, for it appears had just arrived before | One day after his pe eee game wane sod ines into the water. troduced himee most favorably to all ‘‘Kastern peo- fereraenent th pom indy ame appear. they flaming eyes and threate | our appearance. Tice bdioaly eevee te ter ose one of | would eat anything. weeks hie capture he | and the few guests ple,” sa the rest of mankind aro called in California, by ae Bat that there werg ether lag Sontag thers Wo Keep their bana of, tad, ef ei arog ue bushce of thie mage, Te'wes n chant Tor Welt ita ond de ai sa le sre deat | mtdel ot the Drow 8 little book fall of hard good sense, wit pure, sparkling | ny tbe accused could not De tried, a ot , 1 wi toe bouton: bal tee we my cconiern t igopn de” Mriend who bed haus bias ans tngy sana J tbe vilngs of Obssigh and love Jon'tg thouab | 2, B Reteerer ad sharp ue p Slasiced of Brot water, and hemor renial | os Doers”