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oy vid Bus of the line are te ra aut 8 oxems and custom house the port A ET or THE FINE ARTS. Prizes of the Paris Exhibftion—Preparing ROR he poqaecccie | TC TAMTHRN QUESTION. | SSB Sear BILL $i § also been TO authorize the estabi been of ooend al olen ene nak playing on @ Turkey a “ bea gainer this 8) i y Rik tents wena ends | Mhe Turklah Ditty with Beypt—tts Re- | teeuncnei, rary ge Proposed Establishment of Lines Between | Siged wy Wt Wein, otien vores the | Mpubl of mown es ge AR at the’ woud | Ported Arrangement by Foreign Medl- | Neary. alecount: 1.4 cis weak by wn ox-King, in for the Medals—The Successful Com, ar corners of BY See Onr Ports an@ Those of Eu- * proviatm the of whe United States of - i ment of mehip service between the petitors—Bent of Genlus—The © | #manca Snel isfneheccripton when the omc! | tlon—Royalty, (Marriage and Pree- _—_| the shape of the Re Bombing of Naples, and.an, ex, Tope “and “Asia, United States ang the: Hawaiian v6 ex PRE catal of thease three to four fui juare pron two ” ‘, tend the same to Austr it empo Schools, Modern and Anctent— feet of bedanbed canvas, enclosed in one of the most masonry—Awericans in the ilave St ueSeaal ob beer master General to contract with the steamship oom. EXiborate an gorgeous tunce ever turned ous of a rvice—Tarkish on account of what they are. not “ihey | Bills Before Congress Granting Subsidies to Com- | PAuy Bow carrying tbe smalls berween Wot of shi: Promeivante:" | Ceram: aaOueanens me) °° “oee orm | aimee pee aaa esl inert Berpaem Antal, Pane, | aries toustns, or uaouran hana ists—A Hungarian Pris- from ine trath £0 call {8 phivosophteal OF bistoFical Opinion of Mormonism— + BY aoe Seleoehiok Shoes : d egy ing at the Feajec and. at New Zealand, at treatise executed with ‘orheh ana colors, What ik Porte an@Pers! Pmacee of : to. announce Mexican and South American Ports—Proe annual cost not exceeding $12,000, and for @ om Conti kentetaam Dial Mora Sot GaP ata a ee ee toysusguin newark, ‘What inp echinay bopor | vstons of the Several Bile—Wames of | Shaina 2. asia avian y Productions and Scones Walch dre often let down botween the acts ee ee eae ot veailomentoces aummareainy: and faithful verforimance of the service. ‘ minor theatres for the amusement of the ‘and Const, May 24, 1070, | (REED Pal et ela, [a a. maak RHORE the LINE BETWEEN NRW YORK AND. MEXICAN PORTS, Criticism, the benedtottendare coke aia iy van ioe cone pM areEeNROm, ‘May 96, their bands in thelr pockets, In. a. wget Mr. Kellogg, of the.Senate, on Maron 18, 1870, ine and who, of course, like the owner of the canvas in | The Bayptian question seems now to have been secana cy of the Joan Bret troduced a biltestabtishing mat! steamship service eee question, have to pay handsomely for the sauie, arranged amicably with Ismall Pacha, the Knedive | gat Pirt of the Brom etine Mtavor of the loan if one tn the Gulf of Mexico, between the port Sioa lce Pavas, 10n02,2670 ‘| talent He has gine ea ee een ey RreaE | oF Vioeroy.’ This ts, mo doubt, dus to the private | of the large priaae were t9 fall, to the nanare of none : opie Yeans, Ls. aid eortald norte Of Ye Fenn ea Tete now-quite along time since tie Exnibition of | are of easy access; and therefore he has give us | advice of the British ‘and Frénch governments, | venly KOA RemnoatnS tance gor the nextieaue | The deplorable condition of American commerce | gontract with William R. Garson. James M. matey, Fine Arte was opened to the public; but Ihave de- pre hee ry J Mr. Yoon with it and | which are averse to any open rupture between the of prizes, ‘and the serip would certainly go up above | has received some attention from the present Con- eS Ag worn a es, La perd dayed until the distribution of medals awarded to | that Me ought Never 10 have wecatinetee Beat niid | Porte and ite vassals, It 1s now sald that the son | par from four to ve per cent discount, at which 1 1 ‘grog: pus etween the: fears on the part of some | mails from and to the United States Yo and from the most meritorious artists should-—by ratifying al- [by the roduction of such an. wu daub as his | #24 hetr of the Viceroy will soon visit this capital a very Pred prasect on the # cay. | members that beueath some of the proposed enter. | the re le. A Mesto. The service to be eas most to the letter the upinious 1 expressed—have | 7Ztate.t ray ie el ag lly tag owe eH aed amManced to his cousin, Naslee Khanum, the x44 ou fhe Taadehy Mast ne | prises lle big Jobs, and a hesitancy on the DATE Of eee eee ne rte Coalzacaloos: “4 given me confidence to continue and to éonfirm tte | The thirty Le? en, ce? | very beautiful daughter of Mustapha Fazil Pacha, van Coed MN he |: others to act promptly, the prospects of accomplish- lagu na, Campedchy, ‘ial hn 1 thence w evans 4 ing anything tangibie’are anything but lively. Below will be found a synopais of all the bills now pending in Congress for the establishment of Ame- rican ateamahip lines:— pivgia MB. CONELING’S BILL, On February 16, 1870, Mr. Conkiing introauced a bill to encourage the puilding of steamships tn the United States, and to provide for the transportation Of the Unitea States mails to Hurope by steamships Ddallt m the United States. This bill directs the Postmaster General to contract with the. North American Steam Navigation Company of New York for the tranaportation of the mails between New York and Beigium or Bremen, touching at Plymouth, in England, and Cherbourg, in Franee. for a weekly service for @ period of fifteen years. the postage money to be paid to the company, and the steam. hips tobe exempt from all taxes or dues, State ornational. The bili alsd provides for the safety of paasengers and the fulfilment of obligations. Another bil authorizes the Postmaster General to contract with Francis Skiddy, J. Hathaway, Charles Luling, Lester M, Clark,. 0. M. Saunderson, Carlos. Pierce, Isaac Taylor, George R. Sampson, J. Ken- nedy Smyth, David Gibson, Robert B. Earle, Charles A. Secor, Cornelius H. Bushnell, Thomas Soott, George W. Swepson, John B. Clark and Charies L. Frost, for a weekly service between New York and the ports of Queenstown, Liverpool, Plymouth and to 8101 , the -four States are any V: Preliminary remarks which I offered in my Ist con | smiling, smirking young ladies in Puttootored Yeaey | Dtother of Ismail Pacha. In this manner, if the son | Fevaide Qsmanich, inte Tarkio naigtion om ‘tnbation to the TisraLD. It may first. be. well to — Jp ayy by meee _ Regn of the Viceroy funerits the Viceroyalty of Egypt, | peries, Tan et ue woes oo since easily if the ad- apprise the reader that these medais—forty in num- | of the - extlaguh dest ove 40 will the daughter of the brother, who has lost his | ministration were put into European hands, but Great Taiver? gh doubt anyboay’s any ber—are 4 by an elective jury of painters, the | re at a lose to divine what w taking place on our | OWN birthright by the favor confersea by the Sul- iphody P qlonters sem footionane > enter only be — “ergo ae well m4 po 7 hay ee. tan on Ismail Pacha, the eldest of the family of old - DY TOREA ORY, 4 given three times, and on three separate occasions, | looking amiably ata sprawling ain.ablo negre, who | Menemet All Pacha, the founder of tho present ‘with the minimum interval of one year, to the same bai = a riod ‘cut on of owes ee ‘soapy Soren bs cof ypu Tata ap. paele ae ~~ " y er Upon him here ere. After and Mustapha, now here in exile trom eandidate for honor, After receiving his tnree | every endeavor Lo discover some redeeming qualities | nag been extremely desirous of return Coe | Wolf) the Medical Malpractitioner—-Ho ts medals the artist ts reported hors concours, hay- | in huge chaos of ugly form a faring | 288 ly returning to Catro, ing notting further to compete for, say- | Color we are obliged to give up the effort in despair, where he possesses the splendid palace, &c., of Shu- the Offender. that’ he has become eligible for the | on ‘drawing of form this picture presents | bia; but circumstances still are unfavorable to hia | ‘Testimony Agal me iS or ° | us with the very incarnation of vulgarity, and the wishes, and he has decided to visit Pans and Lon- Coroner Rollins jay held an inquest at the decoration of the Legion of Honor, a su- | color and execution are those of a sign board. We Morgue over thé remains of Mies Henrietta Ulimann, the coming winter in Spain or preme reward only and rarely given to exceptional | Te, alas! not writing im jest, but in sober sadness, | don and spend who recently died at the house of ker sister, No. 517 and can only conclude these to us most distress! Algiers. He has refused the post of a mem- a y 4 merit by the Emperor, who, at the closing of each | remarks by expressing the ho} Siet Yoon’s No Sn of the Privy Council of the Council, | Hast twelfth street, from the effects of an abortion pe International Exhibition which nag béen held dnring | 2,974 will not Sey be. Placed side by side with | oiered him by the Sultan. He ts not wealthy, aud | produced upon her by the notorious Micnael A. A. his-reign, has distributed these high distinctions in | S¥ch noble works as e's “Enfant Prodigue” | the piace would have given him a salary of nearly | wolf, of No. 182 Seventh street, It will be seen by and many others of equal merit in the same ery, ema person. When given, at the close of each annual | for we have been cold baad such! Was ite cde eatin LN bill ite PP oa fertheee, a aynopste of the evidence given below that Wolf 1d ee nt ey rt | ak ddbialin Gk huts a CK mam eee ee Tee | Rec aiecee ae alana ae e ror. in aw se8—I THE WHARVES AND PIERS AND CITY TRANSIT ns of Europe. vel med here by | the time till her life was in imminent r; in “ all who know him, and especially by ail those of the pong tm dtstridbuting the medais in the name of Me 16 oF der, he being ‘the Provineial Grand Master arsine pagenytcars nine Frese a0 home a Af of Masons in Egypt strum pon her nefarious ‘Phe opening of the Exhibition has falty confrmed | ys pon op vdeo June 14, 1870. pane local papers here make Oooastonal allusion tt Doge. s my first ‘anticipation, as expressed in my letter of erg ee price igh any prec pal A ceroy of Americans In his | “ pogine Hermann, @ sister of deceased, late of No. + I, ine ni army, and various remarks are made by ali of " . the 20th of Apri; for the works of nearly ait those | ° 1 1p common W ih aul Property holders in the cltys | them. ‘the Levant Horaid was. always favorable 1o | 617 East Twelfth street, but now living st No. 270 ‘whose names 1 mentioned have either been re- rman ty has been ac- | the Viceroy or to them. This paper is generally un- | ayenue A, deposed that her sister had been employed warded by the medal, or their authors have be- | °F! e Money market to the first issue of | fortunate In the side which it takes. It was ex- | 4. domestic in @ family named Harris, Bast Bight- “do ” rf tremely hostile to the Porte during the Cretan insur- longed to the class hors concours, and deco- spoilage A agsturas pots belts i lar ge Fectiog, in the view of increasing the number of its | eenth sircet;on the 28th ult. deceased complained horizea to issue quadruple the sum the whole or {ha - rated, to which we have just alluded. Among the nk Greek subscribers, ‘Chat atfair having terminated t Jatter are Brune, deanery the elder, Bouge- | Mount would have been taken atthe same premium, | contrary to the expeoinlous of the latter, the Levant fo We mieen, OF Wetym. Siem, Uae Mio not nay iat ten years and aball not mvolve upon the part.of the rete ed the United Mig eee ace oxpenes ture exceed! 00 per, frat fad $100000 for, the. otber ithe. Post master General is also authorized to pay to the within contract & pro subsidy for the fires Ove years for one suitable vessel or vessels that may placed as pi the above route prior to econ acme of the contract service . herein Thig. bill is strongly urged by Senator Bello; in ie amendments to his bill of the previous Decemper, “to increase the mail sveamship service between the. United States and ‘China and Japan.’” ‘The bAE pro- vides for an increase to a semi-montbly serviee. is known as the Pacific Mall Steemship Company, and is at present engaged in ranning monthy line. In view of the proposed Increased se: pressed. its Willingness to, proportionately inorease wi roport Bi subsidy, andthe bil wii “doubtless become. s ae LINB BETWEEN NEW" ENGLAND PORTS AND GRBAT BRITAIN, Mr. Washburn, of the House of Representatives, introdgced a general bill in January last constitut- ing the Iron Sieamship Company, composed of John. B. brown, Harrison, J, Libby, Samuel BK. Rng. Woodman, Je K. J, Libby, Rufus E. Ward, Woodbury 8. Dan Hersey, Jonas H. Perley, George W. . Jewett, A, D. Lockwood, John M. Forbes, B, T.. > bday BR Sag ys le rors eee 801 . Upton, Alpheus M 8] mt , Onaries + Hovey, Nathaniel Thayer, and thelr associates, The steamships to ply between the. ta of Be , Massachusetts, and Portlana, Lonce! ¥ 2 di Herald changed its tuue, and no other paper has | Wa the matter; she wanted to remain till she re- - ont” "a Feau, Plassan, Wyld, Pastut, &c., and among the | 7 Sm concerned, Rowever, a4 to the disposition | poor more wevere than ft. on the subject of the late | covered her health;on the 24 nst, deceased requested | Su-nampton, and any one oF more of sald ports in | Easigh cin tine’ Mock sock”. pape tabpleats former we find Bouvier, Becker, De Beaumont, Giraud now at the depart- | sau affair of the Greek brigands. It was very iniml- the witness to go for Michael A, A. Wolf, of No. the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, | geeks; ‘the capital . stock of. the company to consist of 40,000 shares of $100 each; the e883. and between the port of New York and the ports of Hamburg or Bremen. The bil) also provides, as soon asthe navigation of Hell Gate is safe, that the said steamers shail toneh at Newport, in the State of Rhode Island, to receive and deliver the mails and passengers of .and.for the New England and other States and the British provinces, is THE COMPENSATION. ‘The compensation for the conveyance of the mail is fixea at $5;000 per voyage each way across the Aulantic, the contract t6 be voidable at the explra- tron of fifteen years from the commencement of the mall services by @ joint resolution of the Senate and House of Representatives, of which one year’s no- tice shall be given to the contractors. SENATOR FENTON’S BILL. Mr. Fenton, of New York, on April 4, 1870, brought in bill authorizing the Postmaster Geperal to con- tract with William Ruger, Emi! Ruger and Theodore Ruger, owners of Ruger's American Line to Earope, and their assoctates, for the conveyance of European , a the younger, Tony Robert Fleury (son of the Acade- meat’s disposal, I learn that they have appointed | cal to the government of the United States during 182 Seventh street, which she did; the doctor the late civil war, and bas always belabored the mician), Zamacols, Saintin, Van Marcke, Voliemot, | °*tain membera of thelr body “district inspectors,” | Kr eaive, sroundum aruny edtiorialum, without, | came immediately, and found his patient lying Regnault and the rest. The two very important | “se duty is tobe the survey of our whole water | however, sucoceding In extracting a penny from his |) g dark bedroom; the witrfess wanted "0 . ' - works—almost the most important of this year+of psi Bp Po eags3 CN ge Nt a a dt Bory et egy tilomon to enter aypt, where lt | + get a ltaht, but Wold aald he did not want a Nght ‘Tony Robert Fleury and Giraud the younger, are the aeion, ‘withstanding all this it 13.an exceltent paper, infe- | and requested her to leave the room; Wolff left in pictures which attract tne greatest amount of pub- fi As a member of the body politic anda taxpayer I | rior to none other of this capital, Its news is not ‘ aby ten minutes, atter which deceased was seized with protest against the word “repairs.” What this | always infallible, and its remarks about the Vicero, i oe en and they i: the more interesting from | Prone sedi idles etal ee tyatem of dock. | and the Americans In hisservice should be subject ‘y, | severe pains, wnich continued for two or. three the fact that the aims of the two young artists are age;-and this ohnoxs ord @ few days at least of quarantine and a stroug fumi- | hours; early the next morning Wolff returned to 80 widely different from each other. Equal mantpu- | 92° lous word seems to imply that the i the house and spoke w deceased in her room ina : gation. lative ski!1—a aktll hardly to be surpassed—ts manifest old nuisances are to be continued, with merely the it 1s not believed that any of these Americans low tone of voices he left in five minutes, and, being in both; but we observe that Fleury has compo:ea | Patching up actually necessary. Ibis to be hoped | Av, as It sates renounced thelr citizenship or | Sereq by the witness what was the matter, a oa a , | sincerely that this implication is an error, and that ny it th said that dece: had ap accumulation us picture (“Phe Sacking of Corinth”) while follow- | tne «Department of Docks” 18 NOt to be 8 JOD" AL | A eee ne nate tier of hemes att Of | Ot blood, but would soon be over it; ‘Thurs. Ing somewhat too closely, according to owr judg- | lar to those with which our ¢ity has been Cursed for | no war, nor, indeed, any prospect of one, between | day Might deceased had severe pain, and ment, the rejected traditions of the classic school, | 80 long a time. the Viceroy and iis Peas legitimate sovereign, and it | the following day, sus; aaenetnih g wrong, ana has had, we think, recourse, far beyond the | ,,/,W0uble you with these remarks as a preliminary | js not supposed that an American citizen forfeita | the Witness asked deceased what was the mattor, to the statement of a crude idea 1 entertain as to the | his nationality because he enters the employment | 2nd she replied, ‘Nothing; I am only playing sick; bounds ot discretion, to that ever-recurring scholas- | plan thay should be adopted to make our dockage | of g fore government. Thus many Americans | the witness repeated the question several times dar- te, poetical license of introducing the nude’ where | Wortuy of our position as the greatcommercial cen- | gre surgedns, dogtors, engineers, professors, &c., of | ing the day, but without receiving satisfactory tre of the New World, New York city to-day is Y d the princi i answers; towards even the witness went to sce 4ne nude js not only not wanted but actually our ftoreiga governments, an Principle is the same, more wealthy than London, the acknowledged tinan- | At tie head of those in the employment of tie Vice- | Wolit and asked him why he cid not tell her in what Of piace, out of character and unmeaning. The | cial cenire of the world; and while it 1s able to pay, | roy is General J. Mott, of New York, and he enjoys | condition her sister was; Wolff replied that deceased painting is, nevertheless, a work of high merit, and | Without grumbling, twenty millions @ year for city | the favor and respect of the Sultan’ to an eminent | ‘came to him about a month previous and said the jury has designated it for the Grande Medatlie and county taxes.it surely will be willing to disburse degree. The Sultan has conferred upon him the she was at service at $14 Third st at the house 10’be transacted by a ooard of commissioners. The Dill then proceeds to the details of and Mauagement, ‘the government is to enter | an agreement for ten years and to guarantee the suns. of $500,000 a year, payable montily, pon compli- ance with the requirements of che bil. The steam- ships are to be commanded and oificered & ns of the United States. The bill allows a drawback equal to the amount of the duty paid on the materiais. used in the construction of the ships, or. should they |.be built exclusively of American material an-addi- jonal subsidy of $100,000 to be paid. * LINE BETWEEN NEW YORK AND LIVERPOOL. The same bill also Constitutes A. A. Low, Moses: Taylor, Marshall ©. Roberts, W. H. Aspinwall, Howard Potter, Charles Lubing, George W. a tard, W. N. McCready, Herman Livingston, E. V. Leow, Charies Morgan and others as nay be assoc ated with them, a body geEpersie, &e,, to be known as the American Iron mship Line, to run be- tween the ports of New York, in the United States, and Liverpool. in England, touchi each way at Queenstown, Ireiand. The details of organ! ion are the same as for the Atlantic Steamship q except the place of meeting of the board. is ate to be carried once a week, for witch an annual subsidy of $500,009, payable mon thiy, as guaran’ LINK) FROM PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE TO teed. double that sum in ten years to secure wharfage tor if of a Mr. and in the house a her of his @Honneur, over and above the ordinary medal | its im.nense shipping trade, that will no only be an. | goisiom gen to omiers aN Kings, priuoss oF slaves, | Fesided; that he qas the cause of her trouble, and | aad foreign malls of the United States between ‘SOUTHAMPTON AND BREMEN. already awarded. ences ve oa eran oy increase the value of com- | men of nigh rank, He 1s weil Kdown ‘and bighiy a Geant him tage Pag cathe sey rmntges g New York and Copenhagen and other Scandi- bi farther constitutes John Edgar Thomson, < pt os ve the ef jestred ; t The younger Giraud, In his “Bird Charmer,” has | ‘fhe pian that, in the rough, Lam about to propose Se eatnicanpiceaeain mince eataaa ne “he.| gave her medicine; he told the witness she had SE eee ee cae ae eee ee raion. tenes ton, or Queenstown, or Havre, the number of trips to be twenty-five per annum, and the con- tract to be for 100 trips in four years, and to receive for every round trip $15,000; but after the expiration of four years they are to receive only the actual postage. In order to secure the construction or pur- chase of the necessary seagoing steainships the Post- master General, in anticipation of the moneys to be- come due, is authorized to pay the parties ONE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS, the United states to take a mortgage on the vessels as asecurity, the parties to receive no further com- pensation, but the reduction of mortgages shall be made at the rate of $15,000 per trip. The steamers are to be officered and commanded by citizens of the United States. The rights and privileges gganted by the bill.are not to be transferrable. LINE TO INDIA AND CHINA FROM SOUTHERN PORTS. Mr. McDonald, from the Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads, to whom was recommitted the bill to encourage the establishment of a line of ateam- snips under the flag of the Unign for the conveyance of the matis of the United States to bed ports and ports of India and China by way of the Suez Canal, and for promoting of em: ition from Europe to the Southern States of the Union, and reducing the rates of ocean postage, reported au amendment. authorizing the Postmaster General to enter into contracts with the Mediterranean and Oriental Steam Navigation Company of New York, a corpora- tion existing under the laws of New York, with the following named persons as a Board of Vomis- sioners:—Joseph Medill, George B, Loring, Horace Greeley, Erastus Brooks, at large; Addison P, Jones, of New York; Benjamin Milis, of New Jersey; A. G. Mouiton, of Mississippi; J. 0. Noyes, of Louisiana; William ©. Wickham, of Vir- James H, Orme, MoMichael, Henry Winsor, J. ‘a Fell, John O, James, John G. Breemer and Daniel M. Fox, of Philadelphia, ‘and James Conner, Fitegerala Booth, D.-M. Hoages, dr., J. Hooper, jumacher, Thomas. F. W. Brune, John Garrett, James Chester, Hamilton. East ‘hera may be followed a totally different ronte, and has devoted | for the consideration of the Department of Docks, are also American tter keep deceased at home, as she would soon be all his energy and powerful intellect to the portray. | through your Influential columns, 18, 1n Orief, as fol- employ of ine Suitan, aul it 13. not supposed task ora oe the eons ee aoenrad ene ay ing of what may be termed a poetic reality as com- Nearly all the sltps between o1 these have forfeited their nationality. Mr. Barlin- | 4nd, rel 8 ‘ards, ur present wooden to see Dr. Wolff, who told her she was all right pared to the poetic fiction of his rival. We prefer | piers, as high up as Tenth street, ou both rivers, are indice conmtone or bie ne ae ‘| now and would soon be able to be about; he the reality,.and the rich gorgeousness of the color- | More or less raps up with sewage and the deposits | Sects or citizens asthe diplomatic representative of | told her to put cold water on her abdomen; de- tng, the noble daring of those startling contracts of | Of twecurrent. My tea is that the bulkhead line | another is @ diferent matier, depeudent upon the | Ceased, however, instead of getting betier, draw hue and ine (which less skiifally treated would. ve | SHowld ve placed 100 feet further out than If now 18. | charaeter of the individual and the relations exist- | Worse, and Dr. Rupprecht, of 72 Seveuth *iract. was unbearable), become here the strongest proofs of the roe this new line @ solid, stone seawall should be ‘ng between the two governments, sent for and preseribed for her; but deceased gradus ~ powerful originality of the young painter, and would | Huilt, entirely surrounding the city as high up as question of Utah and the Mormons attracts the | ally grew worse and died the hext morning; on the Pompel our admiraiion even were We disposed to | Jut-lourth street on both rivers. Inside of this | attention of members of he Torkish government, | $4 istant, when Wolff called to see deceased, she sanpe We have heard with pleasure tat her Impe. — ae a discharge sewer, which would re- | and, perhaps, naturally enough for Musguimans, | told her to give him three dollars; Wolf gave de- Fial Highness, the Princess Mathilde, has Purchased | CClve, te, entire sewage of the city and empty it | thay think that Congress should not interfere ta | ceased some medicine the diet time he oalied, nut this fine work, and that it will ornament one of ihe oF ens 5 Sag one game manner that the | refuse thelr admission solely on account of their | took it away with him the pext day. * gaione of her charming Parisian residence. In this | rea! discharge sewer ol the oly of London aets. | gyetem of polygamy. As the principle of the | | Louls Rupprecht, M.D. of 2 Seventn tnet, de. eonnection it 1s a subject of regret to thelovers of art | qty veut Dero the Soowath ne Ailing up the slips | United States government 1s freedom of consclence, | posed that $.on Saturday a§ noon he Was chiled to see here that the Pwincess has ceased to exhibit her ‘A uullorm system of piers should then be con- and as pol; eee Oe ae ee connected with weenepen, he eymptoms of wlero-pel aia TAT sicagribed works, for ber water color drawings of lifesize flx- | sencted outalde Of the sea wall, extending into ‘tue | {aclr region, they think that jy should be telt to } for her accordingly; learning the llstory of the case ures were generally. most deservedly acdinired, and | rivers ag far as practicable. Tnese should be built fr ile cf if ‘om his patient, the doctor was told by her that sie ee a in pabile carrled off @ | of iron or stoue on arcies, 80.a8 not to obstruct the = Cane aOWAd EpaainnIA We TeVeLOaE ee had nad pi ‘abortion produced upon her by M. A. A. ‘We have said that technical skill and irreproach- current more than absolutely necessary. At conve- | enjoymentis an expensive one and tends to create | Wolf, of East Seventh street; that ne had given able mumpalation are characteristic features of tho | ZeRt places basins, insiead of piers, imight be | domestic discomfort. All Jews are alvo atlowela | her médicines and also used instruments upon her; French poten ani truly 90; for every artist here Eoengiers to receive the canalvoat and sunilar | piaralsy of wives, and at they do nos. in da neit ee erly tory as: ae sony ned ¥ ct sy poten —_ Lrgeiller ed bas leiguto hil A ‘The new ground gained by the advancement of the They safe gland spore By cs es ford mer o'clock she died; the first time the wiinéss saw the Than’ a quanty tobe acquired by’ stady, Stil rae | Oukhead Nie might and should be uttlized tn tue | srom thelr full rights of citizenship because in prac- [Patient he told the family that she could not live. French areca ‘gat'the Whole: niky be y down as | 22uuion of the great question of passenger transport | tice they differ from the theory of their religious | ,, Some other testimony was introduced, after which eeuruta, In a word, they have heen well tucie | between the extremities of the elty. An‘ elevated | rights, s tne Gage was submitied to the jury, who found “that and their works evince ren ‘study in the direction Tailroad, builton arches (which arches should cor- it is sald that the Sultan will vistt his military | deceased came to her death from peritonitis conse- y respond, especially, to the entrances of the piers, camp of Shumla, between Lama and Rustchuk,-aud be upon ap abortion produced by Michael A. A. to which we allude. But when we compare them to and be So constructed as not to interf ” the Germans of the Munich or Dusseldorf schoo's, | Gestion and delivery ol interfere with the re- | meet there the Emperor of Russia, after which he | Wolll. a i 'y of merchandise to the ship- rv The accused, who is in the Tombs on another even to some of the Flemings, we are Incliued to | ping), should be established uround the entire city. | Wel Rrocced to Rusala and be, provols af a Nediew of | charge of murder, Was also heid to auswer tor caus- think that they fail to maintain in the higher and | ‘ne cars on this railroad should be run. b yas & ctua i ry Blea, — ing the death of Miss Uimann. She is twenty-nine more, intellectual aeplrations of pictorial, art | and at every dve viocks in the upper part of the cy | to° enon athoreactuuly, occurs oF not, tne rumor | Years of age aNd a native ol Germany. By aavico of manipulators of color on caawass. Their works lak | CYO8-town lines, run by horse power, should cou- | shows a friendly state of feeling between them at | Counsel the accused declined making any statement that profound haere tion of le ‘and Bake dry ryor | ect with It, the tickeis purchased on the horse cars | the present moment. at present. hihie Germans ar and they un. | outing the buyer to through passage by thestesm | “tye Suttan’s oldest aon is to be clrenmelsed in a : ‘ransatiant ply the ports of Philadel bie , and Baltimore, Md., im the United States, and these of Southampton, y, from each port. England, and Bremen, port ate week there belng a ure alterni throughout the Sean the details and subsidy are the: same as the company above mentioned, EINE FROM NEW-ORLEANS TO RUROPEAN AND SOUTD AMERICAN PORTS. The bili further constitates Jonn J. Roe, W, M. McPherson, James ‘Harrison, Gerard B. Allen, John & Pheips, George snappy Stillson Hutchins, W. icKee, Onaries Deuger, Johu s. McCune, Ohdunoey J. Fuley, E. W. Gould, John A. Boifenger, of St. ey ‘Mo., and Charles A. Whitney, J. A. Caeaty L. J. Higby, S. B. Packard, Lafayeue Folger, Ai Mil- len! er, G@. W. West, Samuel Smith, ©, 4. Martin, 0. George Fosiick, F. Dolaoude aud W. ‘M. Burwell, of New Urieans, a body corporate, &c, under the ttie of the Norti'and South American and European iroa steams/ip Company, to ply between the ports of New Ovieans, La., in bie United States, and Hamburg, in Germany, touching on the out- ward and return voyage ut Southampton, Bagland; also from the said port of New Orleans t0.the port of Rio Janeiro, Brazil, touching at Havana, Cubat Mayaguez, Porto Rico, 8t. Thomas and Trividad in. the West Indies; Para, Perfambuco, and Babta, in Brazil. ‘The vesse.s are to sail from each of said orts of arrival and departure twice in eacit month: hroughout the year. In other respects the bill does . not majerialiy aiiter from the foregoing except im places. of ineeiings of oilicers, The subsidy Js alao- : Which the Germans are so remarkable, and they un- " ry . Uoubsedly {ail short In, or neglect t» pourtray, that | “SM. serous of tnis plan form @ very simple pro- | 1° Aaya, toyetlier with some 10,000 or 15,000 other BLOODY WORK ON THE BORDER, pinta; BE Buross, of North Carolina: Benjamin ¥. | Axed ut tne same rate. analysis of human feeling, as expressed ky couu- | pen in engineering, and it seems to mé to alord an young Mosiems, : biel ina; M. L. Rice, or ‘Arkansas; ‘Allen A. Burton, of ANOTHES LINE PROM NEW YORK. Gamansintuse so large a potion in ther works, | easy solution to the vexed questions of the day— | mye Persian Question—Religiows PHgrimage | Wholesale Homicides in Kansas City, Mo. There never has been a French religious painter who | ag ‘ comeedionns to our city, and speedy seaaaport of the Shah—Sect Divisions of Mohamme- | [Kansas City, — (June 13) correspondence of the approached the tender plety of Overbeck (the Bava | t and trou the upper aud. lower portions o the | danisin—Special Tarkish Mission to Bagdad Resp Reganiioen.} Kentucky; J. J. Hinds, of Alabama; Frank 8, Davis, of Tennessee; William H. Gleason, of Florida; 0. A. Locnrane, of ; Jonn 8. Carille, of West Vir- Mr. Hill, of the iiouse of delaratoy oft alo tn- ginta, and Nathan Ba ten, Of Texas, and their suc- troduced a joint resolution javatory of the act en- utied “An actto provide for 6n American line of mall and eunigrant (passenger Steamsuips between Tian), and there is not in the whole extibion of this Within the last twenty-four hours a catalogue of 7 New York and one or more Buropean , island, ! :, Sea ae ee ris we to once, | July 21, 1468. To facilitate and increase ‘the mail - 0 ear 2 French picture comparable with the “Dernier by Suez—Christianity and Specie Colange— | murders has been enacted in this city, which has Jour d'un Conaamné,” by Munkaesy, a Hangarian:— tamara pnts et Ex-Royalty from Rurope—Material Proe | resulted in the deatn of three men and the wound- an ep ath 4 rea tome Bee i an a engineers, would not exceed fifty millions of doliars; gress. ing of (others, Saturday night three men gO} into a erminal ‘about to explate his crime; the money | S04 1am well saulsfied that the merchants wno now hesteegesneipndsinrea go> on bce aich Wektaeee Her vance naman Was iteusk over given by the visitors 1s destined to purchase | fre amweusinenis teat Would be laid-apou teu, buy | _Pesshinists have been sounding thelr alarm notes the head with a Took throws by @ man named Wil- meee - eri otning: Cone amre ee hail the change asa great blessing, Taxpayers | Pretty loudly during the last weck, owing to a ques- | liams, and another ee named fodden was shot by See Oe TR ae enti ees tt the persorecen | generally would make no objection; ot the contrary, | tion which has again arisen between Turkey and | tie same, Williams, Mason tied ite Morning, aud this composition, The dogged, semi-prond, yer Pepto who Bhirties pd ieeatncunen sane Persia, and which the croaking of the alarmists gives by fin "yall. ipsenl tae se ‘cig ce th osity aes = sai OL the apectatecs, ihe miilons for a Court House that should have cost | out to the world as another dark clond gathering on Yesterday afternoon Jim Hall, = noes anes Unarected pity of others, the haif-‘rigtitened gesture only two millions will never complain of the amount | our southeastern frontier. It would appear that a butcher. at @ beer agin erg ee Hanlin of tie child about 10 throw a coin into iia setop- operat cegicekags Lamiabaton igseanewteen party of lawless Turcomans, who, in the matter of ip ue er Pip mis makes the eg adh aerions facle for offerings, Placed on the oor of the prison, | to spend three milliona a year. Let them apply it | nationallty, are nelther, flesh, isn nor fowl, rosssed | stabbing adray in wikieh Hall has Agured, aud for te inuitect auiterer by the crime. about’ Cope ce, | 8..uave suggested and, instead ‘ot two or tires | me ronser in the neighborhood of Bagdad, and, as | Mile #,was tasren tat he would be Wched on the [peor = = —I ge ned aes re de | the great Tore as completed. The railroad th piers usual with them, after plundering several Last night a man named George D, Campbell, from = painting is, Perhaps. | sould always reinain city property—a source of | Turkish villages, they recrossed into Persian | the South, was murdered by some unknown party somewhat Diack, aud the work, as a whol ne Seucient in that exquisite executon often found im | !come the extent of which can Karly be calculated. | territory. The Governor, of Bagdad, Mithdath und in y erry of ae at vine Vy minor merit; but A TAXPAYER, Pacha, in order fo try and punish the plunderers, | the body and completed the work of disfiguring and Wihere are pier Works of & similar ciass in this | [SB EXeM.NISTER TO SPAIN AT HOME; and to prevent as far’as possible the repetition of | TMNOGIING: sence, yesterday, Gol Fisher and year’s exhibition, and I shall allude to then in a these Turcoman raids, sent Suleyman Pacha with | george Miler got into a personal di Mculty, which Europe, inciuding Cadiz, Marseilles, Genoa and Trieste, and Port Said, in Kgypt, and wien the company shalknavigate through the Suez Canal the Postinaster General 13 directed to contract lor the a Mie Ag d of the mails of the United Stutes tosuch parts of the East as may be ed upon, the termination of such mail service to be in China, ‘The steamships required for the service shall not be less than 3,000 tons measurement. The service re- juired shall at first be weekly, one departure every ird week from Norfolg, and the other weekly de- partures from Port Royal or Branswick and from New York, with provisions for the subsequent con- venience of the matis semi-weekiy from Norfoik, semt-weekly from Port Royal or Brunswick and tri- weekly from New York, in whole orin part from one or all of said ports. The company are to receive the postal money on aii mall matter conveyed vy their pots and are to be exempt from all dues an port charges. Congress is empowered to reduce the rate of postage, ‘without any right on.the part of the company to demand farther compensation. The Postmaster General 1s authorized in the name and on behalf of the com and emigrant passenger services contemplated. under the act the contract for the conveyance of the mails touching at Southampton may be.to.Bremen and to Hamburg, Uermany, separately or both inclu- sively, the semi-annual payment to company to $260,000. OE: Owing to the backwardness of Congressional business it will be some time ‘before action Cgn be snticipated on these bills. Nor ts it ‘impro! bas that, owing to the delay in public. business, t} - whole subject of subsidies will be postponed for the: present. The parties who proposed these ente! is ‘will urge action, it is understood, in hopes of bring- ing Congress to a sense of its obligations outside of partisan squapbles and to remind them ot the néceg- sity of Ing some steps to revive our commer- chal interests, and his body thrown upon the track of the Missouri Railroad. Passenger train No. 6 rap over MATRIMONY EXTRAORDINARY, A Youth of Twenty Unites with a Widow of Seventy and Settles a Board Bill, oul went notice. Meanwhile let me point outa grtraget 5,000 men to occupy certain passes of a disputed | resuitedin Miller receiving stabs which, it is feared, receive from the States of West Virginia’ ‘Prom the Pittsburg Oommercial, June 13.) marvellous piece of brillant color in Hegmunit | Remarks of Hoa. John P. Hale on his Rormrn belt of land separating Turkey from Persia, Now, as | will end fatally. Fisher fed and is suill't large.” | Yarginie, south, Caroline, North Garona, Fiori, > eating ocurred the oxher 4 4a she town of a? Se Hoge bas Dover, N. H. ma, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Mississippt, rryopolis, Fayet nn urprised the: ready for the decapitation of St. John the Baptist.” Lae N. 0 by the last arrangement concluded between Turkey Marder and Lynching in Ashley, Mo. flahams, Gorinte arkaiias and Texas theca’ | natives and set gossipdom’all agog.. 4 youth. of ‘These two pictures have obtained medals, John P, Hale, late Minister to Spain, delivered the | ang Persta, through Russian and British interven- ‘e have @ fine jandscape redolent with the glow- | following remarks on the occasion of his reception | tio; arding the dispuved frontier question, it ing hes of evening by Renié, who must have tonnd | 4 14s retiow citizens in Dover, N. H., on the 16th | wor aetea-tne *e wane twonty summers, Wiio until @ recent period rest in Birmingham, made his appearance in the village: above mentioned. and took up quarters at # board- In the town. of Ashley, Mo., om the 13th inst., Miss thorized bonds ana secarities of any of said-States, Abbie Summers, a daughter of ‘Nathaniel Summers, an bearing interest. payable semi-annually and the principal thereof payabie in no less than ten years; some of his inspiration in the ‘-unknown’'s" beautl- was agreed that matters should remain in statu of Quincy, Ill, was stabbed three times and killed ‘sect fublinee— mast {it me nal settement of tno delimitation of the | {nsantiy by & man named Ambrose Coo. Goo, on | Wert Manet eermne and io ford a fund for tus | her seventicth year.” "fhe "Birminghems YOuru. s00n This 18 the time, as witty poets toll ype yanmar Dorder. The government of ‘Teheran deciared this | being atrested, begged the people to hang him at | Fe ose ana Veneit of tho company. The oill fur- | Tound himself indebted for boarding to the smound Wea Phorbus into Taekir bonoen ell: - PRIENDS AND FELLOW OrrizkNs—There are times | act of rigor of Mithdati Pacts to bea violation of | ONce to airee. Mise Smnmers has beon living in | S06 Doe Ne. ror ne waiety and comfort of passen | of about forty dollars and unable to liquidate. His She blush'd at Aret—then put out the lizht, and occasions when a full heart does not tind easy | Persian territory, and instructed the Shah's ainbas- | Ashley for some time, and was highly esteemed as a | thes Dro y pi new home was quite a tba hs he. seemed ae drew ws a of the night. utverance Tor its deepest emosions, el ite pd sadot here, Mirza Hussein Khan, to protest against ray Cuesta Om enledeton pany ere oe A BIG LAND SUBSIDY. not at all disposed to it uy But empty ockets: A apie: it 18 ex! as usual, b . | itself seems (s most appropri ex] on. ct ‘01 urg. Ove, whi jail, we y q seeoomare : Has tien alacant ae Me aia, ehh Bush, my tevends,, 19. anus oe er errand ‘ A a tes S08 x —— a with oe lynched, Coe was engaged to marry Miss Sumniners, In additton to the above provisions an amendment | admonished him that something must be settle that bill before the old lady should take it into her head to “dun” him, Otherwise he must suffer the ex; ire of “empty pockets, the worst oferimes ’?” with the disgrace which generally. aiepgnen . thas condition, The young. man, 2 a ‘weighi! the matter oarafally, hit upon ol marrying the widow, jas, by one bold: stroke, wiping out the score which the old had “hung up” against him. Having deter- mined upon his course of action, our youth at once proceeded to court the old girl, The Sepegre | was short and decisive, From the begin ing to the end- ing thereof only six hours had i, Aud the re- sult was an engagement to enter into the bonds of matrimony. Mutually agreeing upon a summation of the affair the gay couple Nearest ’Squire’s office. This magistrate, after glancing the pair, refased to perform the cere- Mony on the ground of conscientious scruples. They did not become discouraged, reiurn to the widow's domici! unmarried. Not a bit of 14 as the sequel will show. About a mile anda tial! mn ‘the town is the office of Justice Hepkiug, and thither the lovers wended their way on » It was after midnight when they reached the office of the Magis- trate, but the Squire was called up, and after spend- ing an hour or two looking through Rurdon’s Di- gest, and not fading any iaw to prevent a midnight. Tharriage, the Kpot was tied, and the “twain mado one” returned home rejoicing. On Saturday morn- ing, about nine o’cleck, the groon was scen in the vicinity of Layton’s statiop, on .ine Connellsville Railroad, with a carpel bag in one hand and another man's beots-in {he other, He reached) Birmingham safely, and is now relating (o irieuds how ured he - had become of warried Hie, INTERNATIONAL CourTESY.—A distinguished gen- Uleman from Liberia addressed the Board of Trade Jast pighi, and m the course of his remarks he in- has been prepared by Mr, McDonald which 1s con- Bidered @ ‘part of the-bill, and without which the original bill will be abandonea. In consideration of the construction of sald sieamships upon pians‘ap- proved by the Navy Department from materials ex- clusively the production of the United States, tiere shall be granted and allowed to said company, for each and every ton, nter’s Measurement, thereof, eighty acres of Jand from the public lands of the United States on proof mae poor of the completion and titting-out by said company cf any steamships construc! as aforesaid within the eriod of five years; and as a further consideration for the maintenance and education of the appren- ticea hereinafter réquired on sald steamships the company shall be entitled to receive warrants for 640 acres of land from the public lands of the United States, to be located in the before named States and not elsewhere, for each and every apprentice edu- cated and maintained annually. For each $190,000 of bonds issued by any State, deposited in pursu- ance of the act, the com * of the Interior, upon notice of such deposit, shail Issue to such State lane ‘warrants or certificates of transfer for 100,0u0 acres a m perhaps the best porirait in the exhibition; and near | attempt to exp! the feelings which your reception | the contested belt, To this protest Olaly | Ut owing to his aotions of late she dit to this an exceptionally fine work fi the hand of | Of myself, 80 generous and 80 unanimous, nas | Pacha very wisely replied that he would ‘at once rif and me forbidden _— Seego to be — all, He Hebert, the di of the ‘Acad- | awakened within me, exraph ‘to Bagdad for information, on receipt of |-Da8 threatened to kill ner before, an noW Oar- emy at Rome—“Tne Morning and Evening of | | After an absence of five years in foreign lands, | which ne would’ answer the Persian note. Before | Ted his threats tuto execution, Jeasing on the'worgia of well in-au fue loon of | ening: { bave at eugtn returned my native coun: | Sex toops wil, trail probabil, heve reverted ni margt dn o ) P rKisl will, in robal ve return vigevane youth. and looking you proudly, perhaps | try, and after aes eae my thanks to that Divine | to jad, and there the hater witi Fest ull ‘anotier | PROGRESS OF OOOLIEISM IN MASSACHU- disdainfully, in the 1ace, while close by is seated a | Providence through whose biessing and protection | party of Turcomans think proper to go out foraging SEITS. poor old crone, with eyes already dimmed by age | We return where so many fauiliar faces that would | again at the expense of either Tarkistior Persian and a sunken cheek, too plainly denoting: that she | have met us, J am sure, with a kind and friendly | jands, as the case may be, ee a Sa oe ae ‘and 18 fast me WR btn ad Siley formyl ’ sae oe ig it pink ibe two govaromente do pane The Orientals Prove Remarkable Adepts in inking “into the erral ress, mselves apprehend any very serous complication — ‘There power aud mind in this noble picture, it ) and family, my shcere and nearvielt thamks to each, | from this affair that the Silah has omclally an. | Teumming tho Alpbabet~ ‘rhe oe) nee might perliaps be more Raffaclesque in drawing, | aid every one of you for the cordial and hearty'| nounced to the Porte his intention of visiing the petones “Pexging Out.’ Dut its color 18 @ masterpiece of rich harmony none \ greeting with which you have met us on our return. | holy shrine of Kerbella, situated some miles | [North Adams, Mass. (June 15) correspondence of the the less pleasing, and certainly more impressive, J am gratetul to you beyond expression for this re- | to the south of Bagdad. As you are no Boston Advertiser, rom the general subdued tone which pervades the | ception, and ex; lly so as ft is nota party affair. | doubt aware, Mahommedans are divided into} The Chinese-shoemakers have bad another holiday Whole. Alvogether it is one of the fuest works in | Leaving politics to their appropriate sphere, you | two great sects-—the Sunnies. who venerate | to-day, time being foumd necessary to complete the ‘the salon, have come to give a cordial and hearty greeting to | the Imam Omar asthe only legitimate suc- ossoe of their quarters and for reat from the At is but a thankless oMce to write censorious crit- | one who long has lived among you, a feloiw citizen | cessor of Mohamed and the Shyites, who render tiguing journey. They have been busy in many , B00 | shoud always prefer remaining silent in | and townsman, and in all sincerity and earnestiress | the same adoration to the Imam Hussem, as the | ways, some washing oul clothes, some learning the senses Where | could only disapprove, to the painful | let me assure you that it is a feature which gives to | only real successor of their prophet. The Persians English language, some studying arithmetic in the task Of pointing out glaring defects. Perfect nul- | this meeting 16 vi _ are Shyites, and as such are expected to perform at | calculating machines they have brought with them. Iity, a8 unworthy of notice, will always escape Since 1 last stood in your miast I have visited | jeast one pilgnmage in their lifetime to the shrine | One rapid learner who did Dot know a single letter | of the public lands of the Umited States, to be lo- any from us; but where considerable talent | Many lands and witnessed strange and startling | of kerbella, where the Imam Hussein lies buried. Fone jay, has mastered the alphabet perfectiy. The | cated in any of sald States and not elsewhere. 1s found blending with gross faults, or, still worse, | eVents that have now become historical. Govern- | Shah Nasser Eddin, therefore a,s a Shyite chief, feeis | Chinese foreman has visited ihe stores with Mr. This scheme is particularly ui by Mr. Jewett, ‘where taient is perverted or misapplied. it becomes | ments have been overthrown and revolutions broken | bound to perform the required pilgrimage, and, a8 | Sampson’s foreman, made many purchases ot dishes, | of New York. Senator McDonald has alsu made an our duty to speak out. Mr. Yoon, whose splenaid | out in the midst of the very sireeis where my lot has | stated above, has Officially announced to the Porte | shirts, &c., has not. ‘peen molested by the Crispins, elaborate report in favor of it, works iif days not far gone by were the admiration | been cast, and the Spanish money our early | his Intention of doing so. [ike all Bastern poten- | and has been very heartily welcomed to town by LINE BECWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND AUSTRALIA of ail, and Dow take lirst rank in the galleries of | friend ia the revelution, has ceased to till a place | tates the Shah will travel with a large suite, and, in | many citizens, T insiructor engaged by Mr. On March 81, 1870, Mr. Cole introduced to the Sen- Ss pee side Ag! foes the Face atid feeee, the nations and exists only in the annals of gape will have at least 3,000 persons in his bent otto es ee tag ig a oe pues ba) of the Guys vc @ bill a? the cave epiiens high worth—Mr. » Whose antecedents rye retinue. manu 8 arrived, of ocean mail si service between the Unite spoke for hii been selected, as well he might Surrounded by all this turmoil and excitement my ‘The Sultan, in order to welcome his. cousin propunes ta, begim his task to-morrow. He had been | Statesand Australia. The bill authorizes fhe Post- be, by @ dis! merchant of the United States | eyes have turned longingly towards the green pas- | and neighbor with due honor into Tunkish | in town but @ few hours, when he was accosted by aster General to receive proposals for mail steam- to paint for immense allegorical picture | tutes and tranquil scenes of this, my oid home. | territpry, 18 sending direct to Bagdad, via | strangers, one after another, and warned with ip service between the port of San Francisco and ilustraiing the contemporary glofies of America. | Dearer to me ts the view from old Garrison Hill than | the Suez Canal, a ecial steamer—t! Rabi— | various significant hints that it would be well for | some port or ports in Australia and New Zealand, The picture te called the ‘United States,” and the | tne Rhine with its castles or the snowy mountains | with all necessary furniture, carriages, &c., and his | him to desist, and was told that money might be | touching at Honolulu, in the Sandwich Islands, an catalogue tells us that “ihirty-four States are | of Switzerland, and the wildest, grandest scenery | splendid silver and 1 Nae service for the Shah’s use, | made by going home. He is® man of some obsti- | ports in the islands of Feejee and New Caledonia, the grouped round the symboilcal Oigure of the Repupiic | of earth does not present a spectacle to the eye of | while Kemal Effendi, formerly ambassadof at Ber- | nacy, however, and not likely te be either frightemed | service to be performed monthly by first’class Ame- giving ber hand to Wisdom. On the left the emi- | the beholder that so astonistics 1¢ as the quiet and | lin, has also recetved orders to proceed to Bagdad to | or bribed away. Otherwise the Crispins Nave not | rican built sea-going steamers, and the contract to | formed bis andieiwe that, on beariey ne news of the grants arrive from Curope with their families and | peaceable absorption of more than a million of | represent his Majesty. AN these civilities will of made any demands and are not hkelytomakeany | be for the term of twelve years. No pro- | passage of the fifteenth eudment in this country, np ome tag of labor and disembark on the land | armed men into the walks of private lifesat the ter- | themselves go some way towars quieting the recent | at present, The are some Oltizens of the town, not is are to be considered for more than | thegLiberian legisiators had at ouce resolve to ex- ot jiverty. One of the great rivers of America | mination of our late war. Dilaunderstending. regarding the frontier question. | Crispins, who think they see cause jor alarm in the 000 for the twelve round voyages per ean article in the cohstitution of ‘their repub- sau ic, which alowed the right of suffrage only to cis- zens of African descent. “And now,” adiéd the speaker, in a grand peroration, ‘in Liberia a white man 18 just as good as @ hegro!”’ This aunounce- represented by a brown old man, witha long grizzly Here have I returned, hoping to regain in my na- | The Sultan also id to be meditating, not a pil- | introduction of “‘slaves,” as they call them, fearing | angum, and unless the party or parties be a citizen poking a-torch into the mouth of @ crocodile | tive air ine health which has been somewhat tm- rimage, but an excursion to tie militarycamp at | a decrease of trade by the Chinese habits of cheap | ur citizens of the United States it requires before by the side of a smail puddie of water) “extinguishes | paired by my Jon residence aproad, and here, Stuima; ‘to review some 80,000 men. It is supposed | living; but the better class of restdents unanimously | acceptance of the proposals that contracts must 30 Its Waves the” said torch of war, andthe iilustri- | amoug my oid frieads and neighbors, I desire to pass | that tho admission of Christian soldiers into the | approve Mr. Sampson’s movement as made bop have also been made containing similar provisions ir ous predecessors raise their own tombstones, salute | the remainder of my.da; for no office in the | Turkish army will be pubiicly announced subsequent | sary by the outragedug cogduct of the Orisp! ‘with the other governments for additional subsidies. | ment will be, we presuine, very gratifying; and we ‘the tritmph of the cause to which they consecrated | giit or the President. or Lb would exchange the } to this visite: " e Ey express confidence int oe will give no trouble if | The contract.ts to take effect January 1, 1871. In | are pleased to note the Brome Tasoviealgebes cour- their lives. Traces of bloud on the right represent | heartielt satisfaction witch this, your receptiow, has ‘Another very Important measure decided angn ts | weil treated, but harnionfag with New Anglaud com- | case of failure of any voyages pro rata deduction fod ian mine A o a Sreeb, seppalie of Li- . erin. —Phitadehia Record. June 1 the past. into which archangels are in the act of pre | Qidordied ue. the geadal witndrawal som civculaiion @ the old | Maunitics. : is to be Made from the compensation of such voy-