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NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY NOVEMBER 17, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. Peet ews Sect Ace Se tahe | SeteRae Fnac SM Peet wend | THE FASHIONS. | Tatum the fomoun dtamoed calcd tops "ies | Sas, Meuron, Lax: Biddle aod. Cooke, hee i . tary miracies before. Th estion te, Whethor nis ee LER a coscalationsian 1G: Denia, it te evi. PO een enn Eees she var a at the Palais de l'industrie, | left tively penniless by the fadure of sheir SLi a mame ls cemanser shee mols an weak om cdversury aa | der lo sop anything ‘like tilfoclings tntay eminent ‘SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD where she buted prizes on the 2th to the | bauks, the latter ise evury, prospect of surviving, children suplerea in large factories and to Paris | pecuniarily the wreck of his grand scheme. apprentices, wore a biue satin train robe | J; born Sandusky with @ ficha Marie Antoinette, and over it tie eeen rere His an eee Cooke, bald! has the force of aman | actual wer, between this count aod = Frauce. who uw thoroughly inear- | Ttaly ig an inumture child Bad owes al mself aud hiv cause; who | of good in her educatian to France, Her money, the King of who kuows what bo we ‘apie, G The Malian War for Rome---Its Inception, | nex; whe Heal, the Atwer'can Juba | her polos, her raltroads, her thterust tereromnente eos white ace Alencon shawl. Her bonnet, ® fan- | and his mother, whose maiden name was Marthe Conduct and ¢ Read ne 8 aad woet upon a some- | ail the resuite of French (uition. Her-caters have been | Turf and Royal Gunping—Constames at the | chon, was white, trimmed with blue feathers. Caswell, came’ from Washington county, Now ‘conduct aud Consequences. what similar exped:t.vn—to rouse slaves to freodom-— | Glled with French capiial. Her commorcs is mainly | Austrine Fete=How Kugenie Dreseed—Mull», | The most fanciful figures are aiade of crosscuts | York; the former from the plesaaut town of Gran- and yet Jobo Brown was captured and The | under Fronch contro’, Make France inimical to her, on short costuines, lining to velvet jackets is | ville aud the latter trom Re newt and decorous i a cant siaves were freed, it is (rae, but pot ia mor in { and you deprive iialy of more than half ber tiie, Gari- usually white and gray. village of Salem. Cooke, the elder, was 8 man of i at snchile the aflaire of Italy are im a most dtatress- pong pa Eos toe deena heen a 1, 1867 The mol arenes ig little ferret heads are | abitity, self-willed in his way and restiess of limit- ne hi : pad , 1867. lookin: < Aa African Hing Avenging Offended | Mra MS ncing the setloment of the Ramon | (avo estreme Heke nowy for the oan at ey | This ia a very buay time with ministers, diplo- | ““Veiencins Ape ThE ogee Pog inld edna die belanged n-ne Spe otimenenhe Royalty. — hah aiy = og said <hr Lape fe eied, ir tene —- wean whole matista, broughams and livery servants in gen- | ture for winter robes, of the West while building ap “tor (heme es pment; we are ait blind and deat that Home would hetong 0 ltaly after the death of t! eral. They are all now rushing from place to pe soe ti are # tulle scarf, and room for a flower ee oe Peippemieccs. le studied law in Be k eve nor whom to trust,”’ Dur- | present Pope; oven France would h ; . ve town w i " Que special European correspondence and sles furnish | ing the vate civit @ar tho American people often cri s bel, valle than wie 4 place to put off the honor of attending such and | ““Voiis are called mantitias, bany by Gkauoeller: ieean Hosbecesee bin tte Abe following very imleresting details of our cable fey io one LOGE Of WosiuRaba Harpe trae Bs siakad » wee with, Hoanoe, ad ba hs such an interview, for the least said at interviews Twill not close my letter without a few lines | out West over rough roads, down swollen rivers, daapatobes dated to the 2d of November. Eg is the soonest mended, and subaltcrns are at their | Sbout our next soason’s trimmings, The most through forest, praivie and ludian hunting grouuda, gant are made of gmp in the shape of leaves, all | till sfier many months of cheer! patterns. Satin pluits and gimp plaits are sewn | pitched his ply about ths your tots a hae cere 18 a pause. In the presence of France, armed and | 1 y to strike, Italy helt her breath and the boidest | wits’ end im search of reasons why their chiefs are revolutionist ebraak ur The government is Bot equal to the cris Italy bas ben so tony a country of chances and has li ch @ jong run of good tuck that the present cio zi > : & = however, is | «not visible.” Audiences, however, do take place ike th in th di dd i \j . 7 VCE. oversbadows end dismay boty. y nation | bolder than the boldest, and that he ‘i r not 5 5 . place, | on like the crosscuts in the shape of diamonds, | tance from this city. There he purchased a lat OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE, there comes ade when. the goveravoent rite (ent ita \ remains 19 be esa what iris Se | and official visits are exchanged between the | squares, po nts and acorent. an. new er one nid. pa 6 which he ahier wares ocd ot ‘ strength by opposing, from wise motives, the will of Turin is too pear to rane and hopes too much from | pr, rings are now worn lor looping up of | of Be 8 from his native tow ‘The place | the name’. tienes Teen arctita Guise tn tke,| ane coleeeae time ea ene Mount Cents, aud has too ree ay ei? Lagan t Meudon | Skirts in front; ribbon ends aud bows through | is now called Cooke's Coruera, Sle: signa inte. THE WAR FOR ROME. Trent affair, ad you remember how nobly | auch to foar in th> event of a war, not to share iarcely “mperor Francis Joseph was at Meu biack gimp and jet rings are very rich on velvet, | Sandusky in the year 1821, and with hie oharacter-_ the people eudured ft. Now it has come to Tialy, | ia the apprehensions which the nows of the embarks. | with Prince Napoleon yesterday, but where haa | Necklaces have a many a6 Coins te round the | istic energy set’ about building himself a stone b nd governtae ‘ people aro alraid to | tion of t Poul C Hy . és x ab angel i pe eg Tne pareeasoneg irre Grton vik ° 7 as lost half repent iot gine Sp pie his Imperial and Catholic Majesty not been aince | throat; gara t and garnet cabochons for hair | dwelling, though the hamitul of residents in the Arts lap Hy ov ae " A bands are the favorites, Antique bands are worn | three frame houses and two log cabins constitu’ Gatlentpet asta 1) Le ar Byron i preeice wile ete Undoutiegiy' ther ieee foe irl peed prs Bal ny ben on bonnets, on the forehead, round the waist, | ing the city were unable pot les stone pte ened war wtih France. Under this cloud al \orw at frst in favor of tho iamediate capture of Rome, | Private and quiet, it ia but all the more enjoyablo | round the arms; we are caught by rings from the | wherewith to build a sidewall, However, he care queer creatures creep from their holes, Too Pirtly, parhaps because they would like to see the capl- | to him, and of all the sovereigns who have visited | third finger of our left hand Lo tue very end of our | ried out his scheme, made his Mark, aud theace- SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD Ienly the Geve! © Inve Kecalled=Garibaldi’a | party beciox to make itself heard, aud Mazyni’s name | tal removed from Fi : ’ ee diminutive hoops. forth went forward to luck ued 7 ce, Tnvusion=No Government in Htaly= | 10{ee's the ait, Of all lands ou earth Italy sseias to an | excitement. In my walks abost town to-day Leaw bt | this capital nono have seen so much without the States Congress. He was the jal dB —_ 1 News=(ioverumental Interference | '@Pattial observer loast capable of repudt It is | asing'e copy of Monatti Garibatdi trammels of state and court etiquette. Hoe has railrodd at this side of the ANeghan: Mountains, pub ae & 0 lane of, pole nig kn Eg nell Bee pte gus ape lpa Dagin also met with more cordial sympathy than an EARLY LIFE OF JAY COOKE. aad ultimately saw it carried Wi With the Telegraph—French Loterventia idleness and ere: aud what it needs before | baldi nimsclf was by no moans prominent ia the pic- . ympathy ae ee chess I ae y Bhi out. ith all his Frorenon, Oct, 25, 1867. ig cap be anvth $a reoublic or a monarch ture stores, Few peaple, wore tatking of the revo- | other potentate, ae 5 Tugged energy and self-w: i}, he-had @ broad ba-= Eventa come crowding upon each other here like the | are sound finances, developed industry, national cty lutton and in answer Lo the ques'ion, “How would you But, readers, you will be sorry to hear that we SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. mauity 91 disposition, w: indly,, hand so & hundred such pure men as Garibaldi withe like to havea republic, wh Garibaldi as Presideni 4 — ciabie man, or, a if is More expressively rendered, aime, and as for rumors, the air is For example, you may have heard era in a pa with faults the invariable I close this totter, inte at night, the most st: od. It is too lato to ho King isa good Ki do not know how to behave ourselvoa when we go } Gentus of the Great Americana Financter= | here, a good, clever fellow.” Hs wile was ae- eS ~ wie Gata for Rome ts weil | to court or when foreign sovereigns come to tho | His Enterprine und Intrepid SwiritHis | tive,’strong minded and sacacious; and this much 3 to go and figh eS there was aurrect! Rome on | news and rumcrs have arrived OF pasty Pre-eminence Amo Masters of Fis | in reference ( 0 i Bee wan tus che city oak nn ceeds kee ae must take thei asthey stand, I can lea of awar with France‘ much more seri: | Tuileries, A book has just been brought ont for! nance, Nick Biddle, wi, deeimTny | tanne or maaleenaNith aor: “ the tee be 4 @ 22d; that th ie ea 7 poe ai ? me | ony add ther or base been ayes on tras at the | oie aud the most scatter-brained Malian hesiates @ | ihe upper circles by a Countess de Bassanville to Cooke’s Parcute=The Material They Were | Cooke, and which have :o strikingly marked hip ho sing vod, Advic: me | Ptnis' he Toteri ou Ou hem tay nal. a - = anwia hat, Devons the Gack of ai “ nat tai eee apie eek The news.ts - tell them how backward they are in point of eti-| Made of Luherited by Their Son=Young | character, : ; y a hina rae ar that last might, tho 24th, Garibaldi was at Monte Re AFRIO'M ROYALTY, qnotte. The title of this new fashion. {| Cooke at SchoolmThe Child Father tothe | Tuere were six children in the Cooke family, two, insurrection. all (hi Was mere Motion, The arm {%e | gy and had been joined by the remnants of tho | u . bt ‘ fal (as “6 Case Man—First Start in Life—Piuck and Self- | of whom dicd; the rest live and sre married and fnsurtectionisia were seized outside tho of Meoort Gari mone, Frigo-y and Mosio; - aw nee adie’: a ps) sd ty ‘ode of ere> RelianceHow Ho Succeeds. affluent. Pitt Cooke, tue eldest, bas partial clarge Romo before they bad been distributed; a: on reaching J te ape ok i : King Archibons OQended—Rurbarous Mase | mouies.!’ The name may be forbidding, but Sanvusky, Oho, Nov. 13, 1867. of we New York house of Jay Coole & (0, Hey at fron pat he ha t * em? s " ¥ Ci i” Cr airategoilc points i the eity having been occ ing news be truo| a4. snere of Wane Tipe ae 1 amin duty bound to aay that whatever Mme. | If this good, old, steady going town by the cool | + Wana cole Meee een tone Pope’s troops, the alfuir fell stillborn. dowayed, and t20 | ee Enetand. from Old. Ca nee of an attack | “'e Bassanville may think I nevor was so pleased | wayes of Lake Erie can boast of nothing else but | deipuis, Sarah is. Cooke, tue only daughter, is qumor is that ali’ communication with an atictp ite the Freneb. ag | Which King Archiboog, of 6 Town, the targo-t oil | with the detestable education I have received | its jumber piles, fishing yawls and beautiful grape | married to a wealthy speculator, Willinin G. Moor- J bold in my band a ig@ier writtea in Romo yosterday, wept peat ie an ng niace on tte Danke of the Caiahar river, has * ‘aga.ust diab», a town fiuate ferchor up the | #8 luce Ehave perused her work, She does not | vineyards, it can at least lay clain to being | Met, Who lives rgit royaily in the City of Broth- precisely suggest that we are not to let our ser- er of this ‘ 3 erly Love. Elcutuerus Cooke, the tw the birth place of one of the leading prominent | happy family, died avout three years ago at tue and beliove that you will receive your regular Roman (alien — governm 1 ita policy cbrrespondence by the mail as usual, So much for the 7 Two years ago two men be! sng to Old Town and | i i i / ‘ pa | psp Ade) Do Pony enivety qquarrelend ‘onght, and the man | V8t#, w hile waiting at table, scratch their heads | mon of this decado—the nation's broker, banker | green old age of seventy-six, retaiuing bis wonted wonders to perle ooging tothe latter placs was killed, "This causeta | with the forks, but she gives us so many other . " An euergy to the last. Mrs. Cooke, wito isa five and financial engines Jay Cooke, It isa familiar, | over seventy, still lives Lere in the old family man- if not a remarkable name, one that has been | sion in the enjoyment of all her facuities, und am blazoned forth amid announcements of government ange partici,aut in the filal bounty of her soas, ingl ‘i a ‘ uen Jay Couke was sent to scivol lere, at tho loans, mingled up with five-tweaties and seven- age of mix years, instruction’ ip ite ‘pie tbalds tones The events bave certainly been th pidity. Tho protest of Franc troops at Toubou, the pacific response of eroment, tho withdrawal of the invaders pate beiween the to towns, which was referred to | yalos and regulations that confusion must arise in Archibong to be seitiod, His vordict was tbat the e H | ceath was accidental, and he rolused to deliver up he | the minds of her readers, who will certainly one 1 | tureivor. The sister of the decossed hired an assassin | day, in the wrong part of an imperial speech, use shot the Old Town man. Archib.ng de- i hbor’ Fave and his employer ahould | their neighbor's pocket handkerchief instead of ical in thoir ra. | the embarkation of to allow th 6 atian Kov- | grapn abrrad lest it shou a the Papal | interven ion Havi wr tton it ont for a dospat and prec ntellig he unhappy. corre speci States, the resignation of Ratazzi, the escape of Cari ‘ 5 {| manded that the mnrde thirties aid encircled by a halo of green- 1 mit it to the Minister of the Interior, 4 F . y greens ts ements was fur abin baldi, is arrival bere at Florence and bis | who rads it over and says. “You. may send thie any: | © oe oe claret eae mie tare thelr‘ows,) "We sip:Hareren sneese before xe yey, '| ‘hacia i pnd golden interest. During the war by a ‘Miss Stumps say anpnatines thteae depaiters by epecial =traih far the fomtler | wane i eer ce les the Gee ere fully armed were sent mp to Adiabo to | however imperious the cold in our heads. We are | i¢ wag. both conspicuous and commanding, | *chvol marm. ‘Tue seat of learning, of have ail been crowded into less than a week's | TyypStaies an oh.” 7 is the ofical, bate it tha mon, women and children they could, | never to bow more than three times on approach- " no | Wich there is now no trace, stood ocar an ‘Oh, itis true enough,” responds tho official, “but the Lthoms whoastempted, 10; Sha caeae Re " : and seemed to influence tie ebb and flow of the ed ude “ i time, Verily, this i the age of steam and | government does not wish it known just yet.” This | 2! en who atte : ing a sovereign—three is the consecrated number ; : orchard owned aad teided by @ civilized fudiam . sine 2 i was the cae with tue news of Garibaldi's escare, and | Vious tutimation was given to monetary tides aa lunar attraction affects those of | cuef, named Ugoritz, who was afterwaids ki.ed slectricity, The protest of Napoleon was not unexpected, : rue | he canoes went up during the migat they secured a | four would look as if one had never been to court Dut the vigor und celerity of bis preparations to enforce pre ing oot gd Jeepers ibaurprised everybody, Stilt it ie now almost aniver- | this suppres: sally conceded that he could do no leas under the c footlah ostrich t pieces of informa’ h intervention Isatieged aa the cause of a, fhe Italian government ia like the that sticks its head in the sand and ie ak ‘ .? the ocean. People, innocent of the mysterious | by one of his tribe for being over civilized, The pede ster] Meemocsins leat Riba tee oe betore, The first bow is to begin before the ne- | ways of finance "aeevailsa who he Pasty be to vulage then cuniained nearly a hundred inhabi- tog off the heads of men, women and children in the | ceasity of making one is felt—at the door, for whoa thavaalo op milli diy das light | SAU the school avtendance being wardly a baker's: most eavage inanner. The Rey. W, Anderson, the mi- | instance; the second at about the centre of a ons a day appeared as lig! dozen. Jay und hs two brotuers were tree imstances, This ehower bath of @ French fle: aj | ‘inks itself aafe. But safo for how long? slot of Duke Town, sed atl the influence he bad with jalon, and ius @hedauntatslasein ies ts @ transaction as the changing of a dollar bill; and | ducile buys, puucwuai at school, litle Sires to the Tou woled the hot- t e. RU ER. Arenibong and bis chiefs t» induce them to spare the | salon, and lovereiga. 7 ii sports Commun among boys vi Licir age, but more oulon bas ¢ an ithe hot headed Ttalans a ee _Teey | phe Turinese Lethargy—The Rowan Ine | women and chittroa, bat m vain. Now, T-ingiiire, warke'lu'to\be ‘doe if Wie sore: they to whom great fluancial undertakings were leouuea to tay ams 8-4 4 y' i jie i Wegin to realize (be facts that the Pope is a legitimate vaders Returning—Garibaldi at Foligno— Sunday, the Y2d cf September, the misstonary mado familiar looked with astonishment at the dash and ore Ppp oa sous. Jay however was the least imctiued to play sovereign and the September Convention an existing Prince Humbert Opposed to the Invasion | 4 Statement in the churci to the Europeans to the ofect | reign thas operated on should happen to be near enterprise of this bold speculator. It was so of any of the browbers; it is sa.d of him that he wap guarantee, No wonder, then, that the Malian puveu- | Fears of the Italian Mouarchy=Napoleon Leet Bebe dB cg chy rst Dee the door and there is no space for three bows, es | wholly ontside the ordinary transactions of the | uever traly s boy, never acted or talked after ‘tae ment came dowa at once, like Captain Scott’s cel ted Dreading a Double Revolation—Prussia and | ponait, After service it was agreed by the traders to | pecially such as Mme. de Bassanville’s. Is the orld, tl . | orainary iasliou of boys. He was of geutie aad coon, and even the leaders of the so-catied “party of | & Religious War-What Lnaly Owes to | form themselves into a deputation and go ina body with | royal personage to be knocked down first and peeeablbrey) nod his paving Mh og pis fravk dispusiien, tond of watcuing rausachons im action’? ordered the invadors to recrosa the Italian fron. | Feawce=Hesitation Succeding Exeltement. | ihe missionary to tho Kiog and Antercede for the poor j 4 fterwards? A book of this kind must | 22” Million dollars’ worth of bonds by one indi- | buying aud setliug in his fathcr’s store, who, 5 sega tape age tee Tory, Oct. 24, 1867 | vretengs, | nly waz gongs yt owed af aftermente? piraoo login cee ptoe vidual, that a feeling of admiration, not unmingled | with being a lawyer, kept ail kiuds of marketable tier, This order being obeyed, the King able to Geperally the acqiisition of news in Turia ts accom. pivch displeased, aud said EA wou! lead to equivocal interpreiations, and I advise with envy and apprehension, was excited at the products—was everyting by turns, as the ueces- toiegraph to Napoleon that the necessity for interFeation . : man aod child be couid catch, Att ii i sities of umes naed—and also had ceased, plished onder dificuliies aud au umbrotla, The woather | of the traders went 10 a body totho Kinz, andafter come | Houe (o study it who havo not already acquired 4 | event, Nor was the enterprise unaccompanied by eerie bone amepea ee aoe ie Now, if there were nny doubts of » con ts almost alwave bed hero, and the absence of anything | dilliculty they aroused him trom his slumbers avd ob- | certain habit of sneezing and bowing decorously | oy, midable risks and heavy responsibilities, for a | an, 3 i I ( ori . “b i ly mental characteristic that revealed itself ia like retiable information is really remarkable, SU, he | eee ana e ati tiness pad Uaed there oink ice | before they leave their owa uncivilized shores. | time occurred in the nation’s travail when @ com. | Jay at thia age, it was lis love for figures iu tele the invaders, there is plenty of proof of such | traders acted with firmness end used threats, which bad i up on i " 1m 1 t . 5 te—of putting two aud two to; anlin what followed Uow did | Tarinese Wake up once tn a while, as witness their oner- | the efect of making him moderate his tone and com A chapter about knee breeches would have been promise with the enemy was suggested by some P t deighthur te man ies 4 sigs ach 0 Wogetuer rs koow of Napoloou's protest? How were | gotic protest against Garibaldi's arrest; but then th terms, He then promisod to send to the ahips all the ccoptable; but therein the fair wri is remiss, ‘ ry all of them, even to the impetuous Menotti Garivaldi, | soon go to sleep again, as witness their present ee: women and children ®uich he then held, and also ti aati therein the fair writer is and surrender advocated by others; ata time, too, | At this periud in tue history of Sundusky, thore persnaded to ‘aw 80 suddenly and so epportunel: which should be brougut in, that they might be sent | Yet few people appear in court uniform and calves | + was an iniiux of settlers irom the East. Meu came for the King? And, fluaily, how was the king ie | $9 regard to tho mvasion o” the Roman States. When | out of the country. Thrve days elapeod, however, with: | w: fe when this sanguine agent: of the government | ‘New. Xork aad of Pennsylv ex formed thatthey bad all wi:hdrawn? ‘The anseor to the cupiial of Italy was removed to Florence all the news. | it this promise being fuifited. Withicennehoriarnce: loan had issued seveaty-throe millions of credit in Serres sweety do “pore to eaperteriecee in ‘tose ques'ions 1s tuo one word—Ratazzi. This Minis | mongers seemed to have romoved with I ‘The paopla | ptt # impossible to ascerta'n the autuder alain during The famous duels between the Marquis de Rouget | ondg for which he was Tesponsible to the Trea- | following the siar of empire in tue Occuieus. ter, who bas resigned in consequence of Napol " the tbree nights the butchering was carried on; but i i a * protest, has beeu intriguing wit all parties, Ie is, ber | Wander up and down their arcades, umbrellas in hand, | there could net uave bees eas than thirty, . and Prince Achille Murat first, and between | sury and for which he looked with confidence to the rest was William G Moor- Among d doubt that i the re 7 A meeting of all the F: 8 was held om board tho | Prince Achille Murat and the Marquis of Galiffet head, of Philadelphis. He s-uled here, Segion bere: th aed ianinor euch. Was re real sarepsbesphas | 207 barre ee ene royal. wail sesemebip Lagen when it was resolved that | next, have eubsided into private commentation. the pedple SF Veyerree.. wt Wakenen satebes ne nude sume money, married Juy’s sister, wigned this Legion was recalied aud i9 now disbanded, | °%@ bears too many rumors; in Turin, too few. the King should be waited’ upow with the view of re. ‘ in the patriotism of the masses, unitedtoa remark- | weut some years aiverwards to Va.parsiso us i dat he allowed volunteers to pass | The news which | have to send you, therefore, may | leasing the other captives, ‘ihis wae eventually accom- | The papers inform us that M. de Rouget is not | 4116 shility for lucid exposition of monetary intri- | Unived states Consul, then to Cal.foruis, where he je has been for and against tho in- lished, and ix of the captives were conveyed to \er- | very serionsly wounded and that the Marquis de ar enon tac aie aaonaee Ae te be merely confirmatory of that which you will receive ae * pt Ty ly larq cacies and for a certain tact in appealing to the made a fortune, returned were and iost nearly ull ; from other quarters; but it has a cortaim value of its licensee Galiffet's wound under the left leg is not worse. I in sume speculative eaterprises, retrieved himself for and against tue (rendstup of Franco; for and naftonal pride and impulse, that has made Jay ul i q jooke in the t everybody and everything, watil he has now so | own even from that point of viow, That France has am afraid M. de Galiffet was quite in the wrong | ,, again and ultimately ay veoks tangled hismaolf that be bes te fealgu, and eo eatangted | not intervoued; that Italy has not sent her sheet THE ABYSSINIAN WAR. pat the very beginning; he — 0 often been in | COOK® the most successful financial negotiator of | banking business just betore the opening of tue h try that no h a wal & of a i é modern times. Apart, however, irom his charac- | War. or foreiga aed docnestic aifculties, Omay ONE OF | Rome; that, spite of all gossips, there ts no Immed:ate ‘The Enulish Mule Force and Ite Management. | the wrong. Some years ago he was the fervent | 1. a, leading broker, we find his name so identi- ynorai (ialdini has accepted tho jt vacated by | danger of a war between these two countries, you must 2 Ratasal; but beyond this the wew mininey is not sei- 4 In @ lotter from Alerandsia, Egypt, we read:—the | admirer of a famous beauty oalled Constance, 188s f Mr. L. S. Hubvard ar rs 3, was @ Mr, |, BOW pi dy know by telegraph. Undoubtedly, however, | transport Venetia arrived here iately trom Alicapt, with fied with the national banking system, directly, as Of the national banks. 1 partuership w: at this dace, althougo Franco did threaten to fatervene; her troops were ready qnutes for ihe Abpustoisa expedition. Owing ‘othe ut, | Whose extravagance was proverbial. She was organizer and champion, that his course in the Saneune he cutee eumretee: ‘the oo arent been tolographed yo), and I ° i i goverament. ‘To aggravate the crisis, the ircepre at Touton, and nothing bat the prompt and pairiouie ac- | tins 08 poard fees Lag oy on age tee better known as Madame Violette, from the fact! pare he has taken reminds one involuntarily of | merehandse, a term which then comprised every baldi | i! tue frontier. In spite of th i rs of her having a bouquet of violets sent her every conceivable article of clothing, food «nd house snrruis Sha, reownded a deed home and | Or Mane rae nee ee Memes trtataas | Saeed ot Lika oe casein Sees | soralng Uy sueniown, whe coed net ccmpens | Sst masters of Saance whe saaped ve make me- | S50; "hcetase: rem’ a ‘tea pecduorsint 6 me es many think, wish the coduivance ef ths authorities) | WS Orders were issued from Florence te the invading { Sere PMc SS Bite eee ee enol on : Pagel tions affluent and happy through the medium of @ | herring. Mr. Hubbard was prospering, there was he cacaped stow | aprera in a sinall vossol used as a | forces to fall back at once; on Friday and Suturday las | {irate wore much hurt in thie way, theooatinual | With the Marquis de Geliffet's princely offer- | dimusive, uniform and concerted banking system. | little competition, aud when market day broughs smuagicr aud bired by bis {rleods, aud, taking advan- | the retrograde movement began, and now there are uo | motion of the body. The carpenters’ of her Majesty's | ings. The present real Madame de Galiffet | qi4¢ tho admirers of the present national bank | 12 # crowd of distant setuers, his store received Tae Seed bes way ep atone ite Coekt aad thea namo | invaders om Roman soil and ao excuse for French water. | ship Terrible are eogncod making the necemary ui'era | is young and unwise in the selection of her | orgnization consider it as simple and beauti- | ¢ lion's share of custom. euadesivik--s aersiondhrone: wardrobes, which are always the ultra montanism | +41 iq design as it is vast and original in ected bo tee Ligalsinter sad bong oiserenee t Ujract to Fioreuce, arriving last Friday and remainiag | vention. untit Tuesday 22!, whea be left by special train | Tne best possible proot that the invaders have rest bs of this article of womau’s faith. But the subject elected to the Legislature, aud being one OF thse for Barat a set ee ee er eecmiece or | oarene be oat bcaae ot shana pbbagee arpa YACHTING IN ENGLAND. of her husband’s duel with Prinoe Aclille Murat | conception may possibly be true; but | men, so ig hoe ted Wade gest rong ~— ! rontier, Narni is the quarters n apes binne ‘i concerns @ letter which the Marquis wrote to the | it is very doubt ul if all its theoretical excellences p | aor ' aoe the invaders, and Menott! Garibaldi ix there, | in the streets four or five Tarin youths, who went out to Marquis de Ronget. The ex contained ja He? toe ive more tune and attention to. the public than to Foasee eat reick, Coe on the Unsat toiiroud ant to, | SHbt with Garibaldi and who have come beck, footeore, this ‘letter conceraing the highest nobleman of | YW bave commanded for it as much attention | his own private welfare, he seen found rr aed 5 v lage | #0nburnt and diseatwiied. They do not talk much; this land were such t the ‘Siarquis de Rouget | OF established it on its present extensive basis but | at home were becoming embarrassed, and ol - m the London Star, Nov. 2.} ness prospects looking less bright tuan furmeriy. m whence his | they profess to have seen very little fgbting; the; sev'g should have torn the epistle as soon as he bad | for the practical energy of its champion, Jay Cooke, brosp Coli" Alto into the rig uneasily at the police, as if pparlb eile ps the Royal "Tamer Yacht clot’ Saat the stoneoey read it, but he did not. 3 was even carried about, | Being prefatory remarks t» the notice of his early | Wheu he seturned to ety be found matters Papal States, cuumbing the mountains that ‘orm the | EOD A 1 bo arrened for thelr exploit Ne fear | allended meeting specially convened to cousider the | and Prince Achille Murat challenged the Marquis | career, it will fot be superfiaons to allude briefly | were uot at poor ty Peele Dem ee oncp tn watershed between the Tiber and Severvae, aud (hus | © 7 . financial posiiion of the club, and hoid at the club bouze, | de Rouget for spreading the communications it | to what other great wer accomplished ia pts and money was scarce, & coudi a Uunge Jehouching at the very gates of Romo. Of that however, The poople of Turia are all quietly | Ainemarie street, Piccadilly,'on Thureday, the 17tu ult., | contained. He then gave his demission as officer | their day, and show by contrast the claim for pre- | eminently disagreeable. Sanding in his dour une If the Ttalian —e > —s py omig 1m favor of Geribaldi's programme, The journals are } Lord Altred Paget, the Commodors, in the chair, a state- | in the army, in order to be able to do likewise | eminence between them. day he eaw h.s three boys returning from —. Ph te conspiracy ra thele banderon Tuesday At Nara; | nantmous for i, Garibaldi himself has escaped from | ™eat prepared by professional accouatants was read to | to the Marquis de Galiffet, who was his colonel, | John Law, son of an Edinburg goldsmith, started | Aud when they came up to him, putting his arm b nd have captured Garibaldi, bia son, tberem- | Cay ‘and bas beon stopping in Florence for several | 2° tectimg. showiuz that, with @ subscription of Ave | and both met at Meudon. ‘The seconds of Prince | out in the middle of he last century, while yet | balf jokingly sround them, he said:—“My nace of the ixvadele aha Alana? ouamiinesto.” Oat — ig Neh eeeana | $ulneas per aantim from eibt hundred and one mem- | ‘4’ ile Murat were:—-Prince Jerome Napoleon and unknown, like QCuoke, to win the sweets | boys, I have nothing left for you; yue Couto of the euergy dapayed by the Cutie! States | “7% To-day he is cai to be at F@higno, which means | bars, the cla could be raintained upon ite present foo! Bonaparte and Baron Antonio de Eypeleta. Those ar fortune and.’ the. laursis of renown, | @Ust_ go aud look out for yourselves.” ernment ia’ drating Piet the. Fenians on ihe | tal he iw again approsching the fronter. It bas been Hig iamsasnstaiion aiortel te er " pepe ot Marquis de Galiffet were :—The Marquis de Laa | He had a caloulating brain, a tenacity of p , | the others remained. ollest, and. sanreinl - nada. order would have squelched the inva- | openly siated that he lar bad a long interview with the | coeding its income and without applying the entrance | and Horace de Choiseuil. The duel lasted but a | @ readies of resources avd an accomplished yours Jay, who was i eran oud eave a o4 eae erect ee elt ee ciorte Narn! “Pha | X96 and that they have agreed upon a policy. This | fees to eurrent expensea. The circular Jintorms the | few seconds, and honor was satisfied when the | address. ad bot be pal dash and an entuusiasm oJ he Befined ciak. wenell on Prope ma ne a area, | mente my my al | Reeve“ eter | Tn, Un wore Tater recived Me] aca Sanne ces | Kote Tea gander rte Scene ‘i jeans dere b read, fed to, had brought tbe last | di's uncompr a, Gartba dine out of tue Papel Staten, Ass tastier of | prevent movemente, which indlosse @ revival ef the fanectipese committee to increase the anmual | prince Murat was present at the last Vincenaes flaanee, in calculating and combiaing prob! took no further notice of this litile ncident, yet is fact, they have been returning to Florence in equads of | juvas from three to ve guineas 08 in that most delicate of sciences and planning | Might be said to have had a greater influcace oa autumn meeting; also the Emperor of Austrii 2 ty and thirty, since inst week, and may be seen s stands on the street corners here at Turin are aod aa euk inthe ER ra vane his suite; Prince dela Moskowa, Baron Hause | schemes of 8 magnitude commensurate with his sou’s destiny than other event of his life. ‘ai tho depot by every train. “I fell in with five | placarded with all sorts of caricatures represtating Na- | mann and the Duke of Hamilton attended likewise. ambition. History, however, relates that | He, no doubt, commended tue spirit of the boy, of them this moraing, and ragged, giad to poleon and Ratazzi in all possible aititudes, while [ cindes by auneanemng a4 wiena se ine coors I may aay the riding was eccentric; for the jockey | after starting a royal bank with avightroyel number | but he had no fixed intention to send him just them eary ly id rtain what to be done with them. | sterniy frowns 2 them both, Notably, the K " to earn torhimself. However, the next BOGS COE “GRONTTS SSNS Wee = 7 (0g 3 | strong domonstration of opinion that a large majorisy of | of yn de Toumelle’s Pigeon took a voluntary arg! lampeteet eae ae ncn ed not ving ) a Ni, atela away ion. i it, foro, ths Payal States are again invaded it will | omitted in these caricatures, Still more potable, no ar- ‘bers Ja be avother aud ‘totally Giferent invasion, tacited and ied | tist has ventured to grapple with the situation since | pouty one) Deve writen to the wesretory, ‘tring anrardiy pot in ists the Dake ot Haat iiton'st iy tad “enriching halt ite ple, his whole scheme howe and» went. down to’ ‘ir. Hubbard's Garibaldi in person; and how ig the Italiau govern- | Ratazzt and Ciaidini accepied the office of ig Rel $ to alluded above. He im trout to coafute the char-e of complicity 1a this ura. | Mioister-tu-Chief. In fact, Italy is ah thisdate wirnous | ‘De assent to the proposed incresse, Fox was second. ‘This was for the Prix. de Poly- in what is Ay ee ppg og free = or id him oom, een jaribatdl te dety them. in Bi roment, aud notody appears 10 bend the > ‘one, three thousand francs. The Grand Prix, . Yet John Law meant honestly, but quired the proprietor and told him he fence and do bet arrest the ‘avadere ass mbled at Narai? | situation, ie atic OBITUARY, fon thousand franes, wou by Mr. Hereheim's Said; | genius wae at fault and his culculations imperfect, | owme to look for work in bis store. Dr. {s tt possible that 40,000 Italian troope camnot capture Prince Hum! who is now at Milan, has very clear one thousand franas to the second, Duke of Ham- Of later years in our own country we have had | Hubbard just then to stand in need of a ty boy, as he discharged his only oue a few daye 400 Garivaldians ov Ival an soul? and srong views, but Larrepenttier f are right oF wrong ilton’s Avenays, The third handicap of twe | Robert Ent whose of 7» Hi ie My owa conviction, however, if you will allow moe to | is another matter, He is to the whole Rotian Voth of a Wife of the Sultan Seltm. thousand franos, Prince A, Murat’s Nemesis first; | was considered so excellent by Congress that previous for 'y, He adinired the artioas state it, 19 that Garibaldi will pot attempt another inva- | business; be has refused the command of the Italian {From the Levant Herstd, Oct. 23) M. Maurice's Ocean Witch second, Count Oscar's | was wed shortly after being submitted, and | and intelligent looks of young Cooke, and forthe Sion without Roman aid, but tuat he lias bora army on the frontier, and be Diuntly deciares that be | ‘The fourth wilo of Seliim Ill. died on Monday lees ai, | M. A Ahan Benepe Parente Narted under the ‘title of the’ Bank of North | with empioyed him. In the evening wuen Jay agoa by the reports of the imsurroction in Rome on the | fears that the success of the revolutionists in Rome may | palace tradition the exirome old age of onc | Rogue third. The hero of the day is not great with Thomas Willing ss president. It penacant nao he was reproved by his mother for 224 and has crossed the irontier, aimost unaccompanied | lead directly to the downfall of the Italian monarchy, | huadred and thirty. Hut this is most likery anexag- | winner; nevertheless he is no less a loser than | Amorice, a. ane aie ing laying truant, for she hed learned from bis or wi imnante of form-r bands, with the idea of | Holding these opinions, he declines to be mixed up with | ceration of at least thirty years, as Selim reached | Francis Joseph of Anstriz. He killed one thou- | failed, however, eye oe oo Erethete ho hed boon absent from school. “Why, tb uprising of the Romaa people themselves. | presea at all, ‘and ie staying ot Milan to be out | the throme im 1789, and married the deceased when | sand two hundred pieces with his own hand at the Inuch time and thought to by I weat bo a trouble te longer; i This conviction is Owed poo the repeated deciarations | of harm's way. foune. s ust, however, have been close upon» imperial hunt, and it is said that his right shoulder in an elaborate report a more enlarged | mother, he troul 4 5 iiateen ct of Garivaldi—at Geneva, at the time Le was captured, and It te by so teeane dificult to see from whom Prince | huedred, and thus witnessed the cheokered events of | :. ‘cil blue with the bruises caused yy the butt | system of banking, aiming st national extension | 8m now earning Pa 5 acoepted as correct it | Humbert has acquired there conceptions, Rie bas been | mo fewor than five reigne—{rom Suwarrew's butchery end of kis gun, which was loaded three bi represent pe ary ument patronage, | conscious responsi . vamraa ona noe: ca) undred | and tation, uch are ead to have | staying in France, and they are precizely the ideas | at Ismail tothe safe return of Abdul Axia from a. iene fold ordinary eneral ramifica- | tation, decided to let Jay work diet cna Genuelas wunia Gartealds nd Chale | suien Rapeieen a. quacrehy astemeed to. coseripin. | ian. ie zat vanes Wik grea peaip i me Rely | WEE a onet giventahiohensret the Hetel és thee of branch establishments. 4 bil containing | tiny, and_from @ last few days, While | Napoleon koows that a ropublican revolution in ly | precincte of Eyoub, r * career an Garibaldi was here Ratazah did not. dare to rearrest higa | would be followed by a revolution in France, aad he f | "0a the sate evening Prince Mehmet, the infant on | Ville, by the Prefect of the Seine, to the two Em- most of Hamilton's, provielone paved, Loogrees’ | boy step by step up te the planacle of wealth and (hue ad in alroady overwholining unpopularity, | most anrious, at (hrs time, not to have any such dis- | of the Sultan, was also summoned to paradise, His | perory, wae the most splendid in this year of grace but effort harter Ti ble " and greatness. * Yes, 1 will earn for myself,” he ‘and Cialdiat migut well bave besiated as to tho policy | turbance anywhere, The French ire, With all ite | little remains wore carried yesterday morning to the | }x67, The guests comprised the visiters and and the concern was wound up. ‘The terrible state no doubt often exclaimed to himself that evening. of inaugurating bis Miuisiry by imprisoning the popular | strongth, is like a sensitive plant—it sbivers ata breath | tomb of hie grandiather, Mahmoud, with still grester | ¢hoir auites, the of Holland and her suite, | ofthe finances in 1814 prompted Alexander J. Dallas Next day he was at his post in the store pane- hero, But Cindini is m= @uservative, aad is is | from any quarter, Tne success of the attack upon | ceremonial. the Duke of Lenchtenberg and his suite, the Am- | to frame a report for Congress iu,refercnce to the 'y b se Me Ls of work tee hard to a0 how be could bave let Garibaldi oseape ifthe | Rome, without the complicity of the Itelian govern- Sea Ministers, Austrian and Hungarian founding of another nattonal batk. This re; tually, read perform gs ‘eer tt old revolutiogiat had ceciared bimaeif pledged to auother | ment sad in oppotition to the apparent attitude of that | THE ENGLISH PRIZE RING. Bmoyetny Exposition and merabers of | was the most lucid and master!, at | Which he felt strong -enough, a iy by day nvasion, Oa the otuer band, both the King and government, would, in effect, set the King aside and . o! hia i dint might easily be iuduced to consent to euch no ex- | makeGanbaldi again dictator. It was different in Na- | | the municipal body, The ladies ali wore their | had ever been submitted to the Legislature b; ge er el Blk hig Rigg onc bed \ Preamiane . “4 f the Treasury. Its ciples were in | became more and more attached to him, taugus meat which, 1 think, Garidaidi is now jew and Sicily, when Garibaldi constantly declared him- [Prom Bell'e Life in Londom, Now, 2) ensigns; the gentlemen were all ia uniform, wear- | Secretary o ao tmauing--vie, an efor’ tolncite ibe’ Romans. to lusce- | Rolf “ine beuvouant Of ioe Ling.” Me maxes no euch | Sax Beksr to Ratowin.—We nave, we are glad to | fog ticit colors. ‘The mailres «note alone ap- | Beret measure embodied in a til wake Rod fprcngecemyeen po ed engemen yng ening mea This woud not jnrolve any quarrel with | declarations now, Heir acting for himself; he is co- | state, received with £10 to maxe ibe | peared in black. 1 a few years after bonne gh = the famous any thinwe he hed falled to fetrn ét school. whe her succoveful or wosuccessful, sod it is in | body's lieutenant, and big successes will no longer be ures (ine Stalybridge Infant), accord. The menu cost fifteen hundred francs. Nomember nited States Bank, During the administration of | wany thing: tune Mr. Hab arener left hime daribakli's previous declara- for the King of Italy, bus popular victe- badeoger of the public press, beyond the court reporter, re- | Old Hickory, Nicholas Biddle came prominent, Atter some ? he. wer Uirueh “Bo h “Seeing that Ned Baldwin (the Irish Giant) pute forth ceived invitations to the banquet, but many ‘had upon the siage ae president of this bank, an’ to go home and Hubbard himee ick, les v4 . ing to Baldwi tbat ali be neked was to be ir the mot ye ng ao States, (hat he might lead ‘Delng ugdersicod, Napoleon is by no moans cer- | # chalienge to fight any man breathing for the y "1 neeforth until he resigned the country was! the store entirely in charge of young Cooke. tain that Ganbalat would be ae omsgasarsoous aa te has | plon'e belt, I herety pot forth my wiltagmes@ to test tue | tickets to see the Emperors banqueting, which, it agitated by one sole quastivn ite rechartering of | The business, of course, was not large, but such Dliwh \ it, f yrowees of the would-be champion of the world for the | must be confessed, is not precisely the sarue thing. eateee toe tes | ial up Nevene tus seiciones Weide setguacionny- of | © ‘ ‘s novel entertainment in Paris, and £ am | the bank. The charter expired in 1836, and tho | a6 it was Jay ound himself equal to yw leader, Here, you afer’ i & question | find. To prove! mean business I herewith deposit with | told that many enjoy looking on at a great feed. | bank iteelf three yearsafter. A comparison might the task ef attending it, When he closed a imity of | Dett and £200 amide, and for as much more as hecen | This re i M the store in the evenings he repaired with tue | whi France most vit le yor entire: ou £10, and if the {\bernian realy means Gghiing be | 7; . f a survey from the | here be instita between Biddle aad Cooke, as Tadepeadeat, Of the question ber ‘Napoleon can | now basa ebence, and Iam willing to attend of aay time callety at the Hote TE Ee ot a aa eye noticed | each rose in the same city to. measure of renown; md_the day's receipts to his sick employer, oy deen | aiford to let the Pope go unalded, Im thie view Vietor AetLIe Lhe Usa! preliminaries. that, although Mme, de Bassanville hae favored the | the former, however, had more advantages of ited as @ nurse nme. EO ‘ ¢ educat place S asteot abs teavens cod. | oe nese the Prone Weatier, ‘eine Conary 00 poe te distingoied aha con Wane tow ace sorweneea a court with 4 code of ceremonies, some of the Ex- ion, more opportunities for advancement, mployment of Mr. Hubbard tor ° : p ‘ when a Mr, Seymour, who was t i@ impossible to dissn~ | Jolter, wBIC, sitbough breathiag a somewhat sim + earn rene a heragtie mi danhed ~ garned eenead scusgueeng thm ‘boners anxious to try his fortune by mercaatile invest- med policemen, thatevery invader bad retired | tangle the French from th: jaa sen on you way | spirit to ak Jast work, shows that he stil! hea a wish However interesting it may a 0 ‘not think the | at Princeton College, young Biddle trav- | ments in St. Louis, prevailed upon ie to accom from Papal soil by lass Monday, These are, perbape, | rely upon it that thie cons of the stably of | to put bimeel Aan ht with the British pubic, although | eat torbot yith Dutch sauce, I cnn ‘sown | elled extensively tervugh Marope Jearaed | pany him as clerk and bookkeeper. Le loit hie Salowni een aan ane: arumies noceptnat sand nanies apeneve iy ry orate. tie coupe spapanarie ine oon walteew ib toes om “oeaibioes bee cor wi . bo Se RAED AEROS Oe te ee yarions foreign tan, 4 and returned to his | original employer with a reputation for talent and ay hs, meveriheless, ere de. jas d van pus: Du I neon tin tee bon tears nod mates upon the best | scheme of a new intervention unless the Italian block- | of apace, af Wella ‘be repetition, precludes the inser- Pp The Emperor of Austria wore a white Cashmere | native country a gitte and secomplished man, pans op hee yt one 2 saps ig brad go authority, Why, it i@ au old story, which all of ut | ade of the Papal frontier were made more rigorous | tion. v a tunic, richly braided with gold and bordered with His career in Pennsylvania was a brilliant > on Pp = he te oh q 4 ought to have learned long ago. Tuere were a lot of | l’rince Humbert bas been converted to this oplaion, and Joe Wormal : ino stepped inte the teld and far, Over & acarlet endervest, ornamented with | culminating in hia election to the Frecdones. 3 He was now fourteenth year, & smu raw, unuoilormed, uodisciplimed, halfarmed, pourly- | is ite chief representative in italy. The King, tbe Shrowa out a) 0 Sgbt Baldwin, for £60» side, Boneenen braiding and sliver’ gimp ; tight trou- | the United States Bay, &® position at that time sprightly, ingenious led, desirous of studying fur vod Gontettinns — - wo Cap § led wante Rome, and bee been #0 accustomed to | jn the Lon rand wa Wao to bis departure Me wane ia Sawaree, and ie bn'was orne- | second only in infuerbe to that of Chief Magie- | no profession, but very ambitious to excel in mer. en ee eae oedcea OF M4 1 4) te. All | trate of the nation, But Biddle’s financial genius | cautile business. Tour invested his mor French The result it not t e mented on one side with a diamond asigrette. wih t iesete, ane ‘wan not doubtful: bub suil tnuch id e the ladies agreed that this uniform showed off he — aamrert more nro _ Ms ae = i > ae was re, about it ne by a rf “any day and into these of the conserte Austrian Emperor's Sgure to a aren oa mr, “yA incerta ot political af press, which were alu er wi qrac 4 o lastic Garibaldinge in Tir wad" hogiand “and pariy"wo in | \ Most ef the recon Ragiot socrnsle which Bectient Mehich, whatever Tie expression may | faite of the country, The bank failed, as similarly ¥rance. Aay rumor that camo from Florence was ac- | reached us bere urge ilaly to defy France aud | ocho te be in vogue, for 20 ‘vat plas- | erganized institutions did before, from the destruc: cepted #8 gospel ; aoy uews rome Rome was scouted ap Neo worse advice could be gives, and fos kaasker sonia tive influence of centralization, John Law's Betas ie hunitsan’ insccaniens. to have been & ‘The magnificent service of the Ville de Paris, | scheme had the same centralizing element, and baie davebcbohaaga flower vases, crystal and china glittered peed ney met the m been partly Italan biveter aad bravado end | 80 near the Preach frontier, aly trample over peaceful villagers, aud pooriy- | adecied by Freuch interee mateh with Mace im Am olng, for £200 of £500 tune, not duubting in his sanguine temper bat wd failure, ” hie chaece was bound to come in due course. romaine to bo seen whether dimeelf wilt light of Sift delabra, Ww’ blended ware fae) Ca bei ey wien that ofthe” chandeliers 48 G tbe une he fl in with « gentleman o siete ight ‘ ¢ aparkling broide: 4 nmet trimated into 4 Mache isa host i@ bis own It he tail betiers uniform and ther over eyes of caree Ge wae Dane mesfectually pre. valry thus : : oe eelled Th J but y i has & ot bo with La, pommeleipriig. y Und s eect in he Inereaeed @ oop ay Bong willbe given the fry paren leaner’ tor” {mportant ris he tho oid Aion of aes 4 Mebich ‘he deveetg, and amereue beer fountaine snd taps | was introduced trampete flourished outside es of — sharwarde doouined fo EZ, tagslny bw lo net te be wih bim te own salle oF wold for old metal, | od. be for the nee oO di wbare his perieand bie “but in al oe ‘he probibitery lew, as enforced by | M. Pas de Loup’s orchestra was ors ci by informasion be iacorrest, It be see | - K 4 the ‘banquet. ‘most cult nat finan: : dopenpathy wite is tan on = en oend ‘i by tan ‘one or twe te! tetlaed ben thas ou vient Romane mar carver at be Trawler (greproh The Rmprese wore Jestice