Evening Star And Dial (Newspaper) - November 9, 1861, London, Middlesex AND NOV a ADVERTISING AGENCY 110 Roe Advertisements received for the 1' STAR AND CHAFF CUTTERS delivered Free for 50s. each and A variety in E. PAGE Laurence BENNETTS - CITY OBSERVATORY 62, and 65 and 6i and Foreign J. BENNETT begs to announce that he has OPENED the 62, with a stock of every de- external interference from destroying itself internecine are the materials and manufactured lot suited for every foreign WATCH 65 and 6i and the CITY 62, MAWS FOUNTAIN BOTTLE for INFANTS effectually supplies the place of the Natural Bre Infant obtaining nourishment by the combined action of sucking and pressure on the t Price 2a, 6d., 5s., and 7s. 6cL Chemists and by S. nd 11; THE RESPIRATOR is a - guard Against the ill effects of cold or damp and is recommended by leading members of the medical A smaller size hov The though not affording the same degree of comfort to the has not so ati Ask for the above as they hare the peculiar advantage of not being liable to corrosion from continued The prices are and 8s. post and 6d in the form of scarfs for in which the is 12s. 6d be had of all Maw and S. BURTON'S GENERAL may free % itosi It upwards of 600 of ms Stock of sterling Silver and and Britannia Metal Dish Hot Water Kitchen Tea and Table Toilet Iron and Braes Bedroom aad with Lists of prices and plans of tike twenty large at 39, 1, 2, 3, and i 6* and 6, and 1. i - BROWN AND PATENT CORN In 2cU 4cL, and 8d.; and Is. RECIPE FROM THE By C. E. Late Chief Cook to Her Majesty the SAVORY of Brown and add rather better than half a pint of good mix and stir oyer the fire for five and then This is a light yet invigorating food to the debilitated which in its results will prove far more satisfactory than any preparation delicate may also be advantageously prepared with broths made from or for the correct preparation of see Cook's CHAMPION PLOUGH for 1 two 7s. 6d. H. H. Plough for general 5e.; Seed 3s.-Agents, J. B. BROWN and 18, IRON Bar Wire ' Fencing Garden Water Lawn Mowing J. B. BROWN and Ca 18, Offices of the Star and Dial and and are at No. 5, - - - letters business to the Orders to be seat to the above and payable at the Strand Money * to Daniel of that strong and stable government which can alone give abiding effect to the stipulations so readily accepted by every succeeding administration or adventurer If the allies intend neither to partition Mexico among nor to compel the establishment of a well-armed native what will be accomplished the occupation of the capital that might not as well bare been performed by a frigate stationed in each principal harbour The difficulty is not confined to tie scene and the There is a Power much nearer Mexico than either of the much more interested in lier The United States may be disinclined to accept the invitation of and Spain to join in the present but will not the less certainly claim a voice in any subsequent President Lincoln enough upon his hands at present in the shape of domestic dissension to compel his immediate acquiescence in whatever the allies may resolve But a time will assuredly come when the Northern will be more at leisure to assert the independence of her Southern The presence of a monarchy upon the soil of Mexico would as certainly lead to fresh troubles in that unhappy ii and to disputes between the Old and New as a train of gunpowder certainly conducts to an If anything could add to the inflammatory and explosive quality of r such a state of it would be the share which Spain is taking in the preparation of the Two-thirds of the land it are to be If any one does not discern in an expedition thus constituted the same ruthless hand which withholds payment of debts long and smites with barbaric violence States harmless and defenceless as Domingo and we do not envy his powers of Some among us may be honestly incredulous that Spain should foster the audacious ambition of recovering any portion of those splendid possessions which were her infamy and ruin but such unbelievers forget that this is an age of and that a Spanish foray upon Mexico is now only as romantically improbable as was the other day a Spanish raid upon Spain alone were embarked in this we might safely leave it to be encountered by the resistance of the and punished by the inevitable intervention of the United It is the alliance of France and England with this perfidious and profligate Power which strikes us with indignation and that we accept without reserve the - 9, 1861. presentations of the Paris press the An evening Ministerial and of organ i a of will leave our harbours on an expedition to the other side denies that the convention provides for a march upon the city of Mexico and we cannot reconcile the entertainment of that design with the explicit assurances of Earl But we of the Their precise destination is j know too well that his lordship's reputation for Vera and some other ports of j veracity is sometimes employed by an astute and They will be joined by a similar force under the unscrupulous colleague to cover projects that French and Spain will contribute from would be defeated by premature Cuba a military as well as naval This tripartite formidable in actual as well as representative is undertaken by virtue of a convention concluded at our on the 31st but for the terms of which we are dependent on foreign A Paris newspaper acquaints the three Powers are entitled to There is sufficient of humiliation in the little we know to prevent our reposing confidence in that which is An expedition leaves our shores of man out of the and perhaps not two men in can tell the real The terms of the convention with our allies are kept The advice or consent of Parliament has not been The forces have an equal naval and troops in despatched are out of all proportion to the portion to the number of subjects which each objects The state of Mexico renders may have in As in this respect Spain stands she will despatch four or five thousand while Great Britain will probably be content with her sailors and The forces are to all the occupy towns on the coasts where are exceedingly improbable the easy accomplishment of anything beyond the collection of dues and the protection of foreign subjects at the The establishment of a responsible government involves nothing short of a choice of and the erection Of new institutions under a and thence to demand of President i European Facts are more the payment stipulated than The conditions under after a time the money be not j which our squadron sets sail compel us to the Allies are to march upon the j despite Earl Russell's Are we and that measure should lead to unforeseen j going to Mexico to collect a debt or to set up a J c an understanding will be come j to in common as to the course to be far we are indebted to La Patrie for this pleasing information of what our own Government has The Debats makes some interesting addition to knowledge thus The commanders of expeditionary forces are not to quit the soil of Mexico until respective Governments have ratified any arrangement they may provisionally conclude the Mexican But - K they are to begin their term of occupation by endeavouring to impose on the belligerent parties in Mexico a suspension of and they are to leave Mexico perfectly free to choose her own of The contracting Powers Mnd themselves not to occupy permanently any portion of the nor to acquire separate advantage for They also undertake not to employ their intervention to procure the of any particular person to the throne of should the Republic be converted into a monarchy but they withdraw the proposed stipulation excluding from the throne a prince of any reigning European are the disclosures with which we have been favoured by the press of France and agree wonderfully well with the speculations of an English contemporary never slow to j its knowledge by The Tim ascribes i&e object of the expedition as the coercion of of for the anarchy hj party The Tidies anticipates I I that the accom ent of this object will involve more extensive than a descent upon coast and a of the A march upon the capital is described rather inviting F m The situation of the city of midway between tie aid Pacific is to be peculiarly favourable to such an Its surrender to an army advancing by easy marches from harbours in sion of a resistless naval force is regarded F. A of the has been appointed a commissioner to administer oaths in The Grand Civic Banquet at the Duke of Cambridge accepted the invitation of the Lord Mayor and the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex to the customary grand banquet to be given this evening at the His Boyal Highness will he received on arriving at the entrance of the hall by a guard of composed of officers and men selected from the London of which he is The following distinguished personages will also be Palmers the Prime and Lady the Duke of Secretary of State for the the Duke of First Lord of the Admiralty Earl President of the Lord Stanley of and Lady Sir George Home the Bight Hon. Milner President of the Board of and Mrs. Milner Gibson and the Bight Hon. First Commissioner of The Lord Chancellor is not able to be nor the Bishop of who had been if not of her Majesty's judges will be in The diplomatic corps will be represented by the and Honduras The Marquis the Italian wrote yesterday to the Lord stating his inability to be present from Mr. and three other of the junior Lords of the Admiralty have accepted Late Sir William will of Sir civil formerly of Great residing at was proved in the London Court on the 28th by his Joseph and Francis T. the The personalty was sworn under 90,000/, The will was executed the 9th of 1852, and Sir died the 13th of last aged Sir has bequeathed his fortune to his relict and To his Lady he has left an annuity of 1,000?., with other specific To his son and two each of whom take certain specific he has bequeathed one-third each of entire residue of the The above with the exception of a few small legacies to his and are the contents of the London Welfare of the vocal to he given by the Surrey in aid of the funds of the has been unavoidably postponed until the 26th at the Assembly Booms at instead of at and as and no less so the maintenance of with the But through the purple haze of this bloodless triumph is discerned the form of an unmeasured What is to be done with the capital and the that thus readily submit to the foreigners whose while at a was so defied What is to be the r future of a race that can be bv J 1 j In- an open carriage and In attendance were the Marchioness of and Colonel The with the Grand Duke and the Duke of went out shooting attended by Lord Major-General Aide-de-Camp and Colonel the Hon. A. Earl Granville and Viscount Sydney had the honour of accompanying the Boyal of the Prince of morning guns were fired at the in St. and other in honour of the birthday of his Boyal Highness the Prince of His Boyal Highness was born on the 9th of 1841. The Countess Apponyi has arrived at Chandos House from His Excellency the Austrian Ambassador is not expected from Vienna until the middle of the The Duke of Newcastle has arrived at The Marquis and Marchioness of Bath left Carlton on for their The Earl of Derby comes to town on Monday from Knowsley for a few Frances Countess Waldegrave and Mr. court arrived in Paris a few days since from a tour in Her ladyship and Mr. Harcourt are expected in town about the 16th inst. Viscount and Viscountess Palmerston arrived at Cambridge House from where they have been receiving a succession of Viscountess Jocelyn arrived in town yesterday from Lord Brougham left London yesterday by the special tidal train of the South-Eastern and crossed to Boulogne in the afternoon by the company's boat Prince His who is proceeding to his seat at in the south of appeared to he in improved Count Karolyi and Count J. Karolyi have arrived at Fenton's from The Eight Hon. Sir George Grey arrived in town last evening from his Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Pennant have arrived at from LINCOLN The nomination took place Joseph proposed and Councillor Battle seconded the nomination ol Mr. Charles As there was no other candidate Mr. Seely was declared duly The new member then addressed his in a speech in which ho advocated an extension of the vote by abolition of no intervention in foreign The proceedings closed with loud cheers for Mr. and the city NAVAL AND MILITARY Nov. 8. The 51, screw 400-horse Captain E. having completed got up steam yesterday and in the evening left the 2s ore for saluting the Hag of Vice-Admiral Hope She will receive her final sailing orders at The 18, iron screw fitting at this is to be supplied with the following - Two 100-pounder Armstrong pivot guns on the upper deck and twelve 68-pounders and two Armstrongs on the main The the have been taken into at to be overhauled and both steamers being in a unsound Admiralty orders have been received for the following promotions and appointment to be made at this - Mr. third-class at Sheerness to be second-class clerk at vice promoted to be clerk in the audit office at Sheerness Mr. third-class clerk in the succeeds Mr. Croaker as chief the superintend secretary's Sheerness troops belonging to the Boyal Canadian under the command of Lieutenant together with detachments of the 37th and 73rd arrived at Fort Pitt Hospital this The troops not medical treatment were removed to St. Mary's to await an order for their discharge from the The new recently built at Fort Pitt is about to be converted into a reading room for the use of the troops confined hi the boon which will be highly appreciated by the who are at present debarred from everything of the kind in consequence of their being no reading room for their use within the The Duke of Rutland and his Royal Highness the Duke of General Hall and Colonel Tyrwhitt shot the Stamford through the Cheveley Park near on Monday and bagged 400 130 93 and 7 making a total of 630 They shot in the celebrated Links preserves on Lord George Manners and establishment left the park for London on Saturday A Clerical Chelmsford in its account of a recent Sunday march of the 16th Essex to service at Tendring says The church was crowded in every part. The usual afternoon service was read by the the J. M. additional interest excited by the lessons for the day being read by a gentleman in the uniform of the and we is studying in this neighbourhood preparatory to takin holy A New of West writes to the Edinburgh papers that while riding at eleven o'clock on the night of the 5th he discovered in the eastern horizon a large and very conspicuous At that hour it occupied a point of the horizon due and was but a few degrees above the seeming It was situated immediately beneath those three stars which used to lie most popularly known as the Lady's and a short way distant from the eastern rest of the Transit of the heavens be unclouded on- the morning of Tuesday next a grand will present There will be a transit of mercury over the sun's disc on the morning of that The actual period of contact will happen about two hours before when both axe below the The feast distance between the centres of the sun and planet occurs at 7h. 17m., two minutes after the sun has and from that time until the emersion takes at IS minutes past and the sky be clear the planet's body wiB show a travelling dark spot over the face of the which proves that the planet is an opaque and receives its light from the the dark side being turned to the The first transit of Mercury ob- 12,1801; November im May 7, and Novem her 10. 1SU4. ' TELE THIS Li 1 Windsor Nov. S. j The Duke and the Grand Duchess of with the Grand arrived at the Castle yesterday afternoon on a visit to her Their imperial are attended by the Bussiau Ambassador and Baroness Comtesse he Marechal de la Cour and Aide-de-Camp Cambridge also arrived on a attended by Colonel following visitors likewise arrived at the Castle Earl the Duchess of Earl and Countess and Viscount and Viscountess Ber dinner party in the evening included the Grand Duke and Grand Duchess the Princess the Duke of Lady Augusta the Hon. C. and Mrs. the Hon. Sir C. and the visitors who arrived in the The accompanied by the Grand Constantine and Princess drove out this morning in in its bulletin of savs Several in announcing that General i has been named of the 4. of occupation at endeavoured in this a which by there is nothing to The Emperor simply wished to the title of the of the French forces on a level with his real This does alter the character of our mission at which is essentially pacific and j The the also contains the i following 44 A report made by the commander of the 7th Military Division states that no detachment of the troops under his command has penetrated into the valley of and that he has confined himself to up a position at the extremity of the French in order to observe the movements of the Swiss Nov. 8. Letters received here from deny the rumours of a defeat of the Turkish by the insurgents at the of the set a price of 1,000 sequins on the head of Omar Great exultation prevails among the The funds for carrying on military operations are being sent to the insurgents from different Constantinople 3. The Sultan has made a two visit to and has laid down the keels of some new A meeting of the foreign representatives has been held at the of Sir Henry Bulwer for the purpose of considering the question of No decision was come The Grand Tidier was present at the There has been a severe storm in the Black attended with loss of life and The news from Syria that Daoud Pasha had become a French tool causes great A our own short time since the journals announced the intention of the municipality to cease from the destruction of old ill-ventilated and unhealthy in order to make it rise from its ruins in freshness and But the information was no better founded than many other announcements coming from the many same as the work of demolition with unabated streets and ot goes on by cut with trees shading pillared and the various boulevards that diverge from and converge into those splendid which answer so well the threefold purpose of beautifying as well as ventilating the and incase of an military positions where a handful of men and a few pieces of cannon could by only moving some dozen yards at a nine wide avenues penetrating into every quarter of The Boulevard de connecting the handsome entrance into the Bois de at La with the Place de is on the point of and sweeps in a bold curve between these two points across the heights of and of which have been cut down to make way for it. In the centre of this avenue runs a wide shaded on both sides by chesnut for To the left of is a handsome bordered by a shady for vehicles returning to and to the another for those going to the or to Villas of every style of architecture that devise are springing up with the same rapidity as the the promenade dt chevaliers and or stately surrounded by pleasure in the landscape gardener has been able to hide a limited by the deceptive arrangement of clumps and winding or that disappear behind thickets of shrubs and thus apparently magnifying a few roods into what appears to be several times their The rage for reconstruction is being carried into the charming suburb of celebrated for its iron for the literary associations connected with as being the retreat where St. and retired from the bustle of and the noise of the neighbouring capital but - alas for these walled in which young ladies are confined to receive an by shutting the unfortunates out from and making them moving encyclopedias of facts which they may probably never be called to But the additions which M. a great German banker at is making to the Maison du so called from the effigy of that biped being placed during some centuries on the facade of the are in every body's This which all those acquainted with that Auteuil it may remember known as No. when told Grand was Known as 33, was as much frequented by kings and great people as the Muette but adorned with greater care by Originally it on account of its sunny selected by Cardinal Richelieu for a where he ordered some Italians to cultivate the then neglected and comparatively unknown science of A few were erected for that and when the stem cardinal bent the the French while tolerating the Protestants of made them entirely dependent on the he used to come neck of a great and refresh his fatigued but active mind by watching the progress of plants from the and a tulip tree which Henrietta Maria sent him to gain his good offices with Louis for the exiled Marie de Louis Quatorze bought this nursery from the Cardinal's heirs and built upon the site of the greenhouses a hunting lodge for the accommodation of the of Burgundy and the Princess of England when they used to hunt wild beasts in the then wild woods of Louis who had taste for the exact here during hio childhood cultivated and learned a smattering of botany and when his character altered for the the chateau built by Louis was greatly and the ceilings painted by for the purpose of converting it into what a feuilletonist called u du pare aux cerfs At his death it was assigned to the virtuous and unfortunate Madame Elizabeth by her Louis and in its gardens several fetes { were given by that Princess to her Marie When the Crown perty confiscated in 1793, Mr i became the purchaser of chateau in La Grande Rue It passed successively into the hands of Prince Paul of the Count de the Due de President of the Chamber of Peers M. the Princess and the Abbe who converted it into where the education of boys of rank was In the garden are several cedars of Lebanon that sprang from the cone as the one planted in the Jardin But are about being transplanted - another part of the grounds in consequence of a new boulevard advancing in all the length of three and the breadth of twenty-three across the spot which they still overshadow with their property has at fifteen to M. at the enormous sum of 350,000f. Since the drinking ordinance has been I learn from a person in a position to be well informed as to its that the weekly returns of crime furnished by the commissaries of police to the prefecture have sensibly and that wife which was becoming more frequent than it was some years has ceased in several the plan of those who sell to men drinking at their counters a quantity of spirituous liquor sufficient to intoxicate them is excellent in and works much better than that of fining the man who may owing to various been strongly tempted into taking a too great quantity of intoxicating The police of the Quartier de la Barriere de have also discovered in one of the most magnificent mansions in the Champs close to that of the Belgian ambassador a gambling not tolerated although the name of by which it is has a place in the French It was furnished with a that well accorded with the rich equipages and toilettes of its habit who daily shone in the Bois de Boulogne during the last three The domiciliary visit made by the authorities took place at and was so sudden that the proprietaire had not time to hide a hazard around which were several young gentlemen of a prey to all the emotions to which the gambler is subject wben playing for heavy stakes of such as were on this occasion heaped up in piles before The spoils discovered on the premises were all as. well as the sumptuous which by law is and the owner arrested and brought off to the prison of the The authorities suspected the place to be a gambling establishment from the date of its apparition but such a speedy clearance as was effected might not have been were it not that the son of a Russian banker in the who was frequently seen going into the house referred had been for two days along with a considerable sum of money taken from his fathers A search was therefore at once decided and lest any by escaping with the take the necessary proofs out of the hands of the commissary and juge de who made to the apartment were guarded by several sergeants de The young Russian was found in a where he after having lost all the money in his in order to console himself by swallowing several bottles of the choicest which were lying in and was thence carried to the paternal domicile in a state of beastly thing disgraceful in the eyes of Frenchmen of anything like respectable who are but little addicted to the vice of THE WAR IX A ME UK i } v Boston 1 Ti New i i of tiie Confederate a to the tiie produce in which the subscriptions the loan are \o the ihe sale of declining o control over produce The r as a dangerous experiment any chace of or on cotton by for tiie relief of whom he apply to the banks for tie funn the planters to make - preparation by planting for a winter crop The Washington correspondent of the N York states that the Federal go into winter quarters at The Albany thinks it that the Federal Confederate army shortly make a forward movement on Washin It is rumoured that General Scott's health wal compel hun to retire almost General Sherman has a general order t the naval expeditionary which says will Southern States under circumstances requiring reat and captains of the transports received sealed on ihe The fleet will sail The correspondent of the York Hampton Roads announces that the secretary of the commander of the Federal naval to the South had absconded with the and ihe commander's sealed orders from the Federal Navy The discredits this General Kitley haa routed the Confedera Western and captured es e -j i together with the camp equipa the General Fremont reports to the War Department that his body guard charged 2,000 in their camp at Springfield and drow them from the where they hoisted the Federal and then retired on their commander V ports that he had only 150 men General advance guard was approaching The New York journals assert that Garibaldi has written a letter to the American Consul in which he regrets his inability proceed to America at but doubts that the Union cause will shortly Should the war Garibaldi will co come all obstacles to his ami hasten to America for the defence of a p who are dear to The City of Baltimore has arrived A STORM BURSTING ON THE A Jetter from Rome of the 2nd in the Monde says During the terrible storm which over this two evenings a waterspout in the form of a wide and luminous at the upper and coining from the traversed the gardens and the vineyards near the San Spirito and fell on the The eighty lightning conductors which protect that residence tirst received the discharge Ot the terrible after which the point of the cone was seen to round in the great court of San on which the fresco paintings of Raphael Immediately the large glazed doors and the immense windows of gallery were blown hi and smashed to The numerous in males of that residence were greatly and almost looked for total From the detonations and frightful which made the palace tremble to its some persons felt persuaded that mine have exploded beneath the Pope's In a room called the Hall of which contains the fresco all the windows were of the glass globes which surrounded the gas in the court yard were found stuck in the wall of an another The large Genoese than a third of an inch in which cover the about like so many Fortunately none of Raphael's pictures were The arsenal suffered but 0, The North German Lloyd's steamer Captain from New York on the has arrived off She brings 238 passengers for and 9 for Southampton and The Bremen was detained at sea for two in consequence of a slight accident which occurred to her machinery on the 20th Her news lias been i t The Bombay Nov. 0. .md Oriental Company's steamer with the portion of the Bombay and Mauritius a raved the Needles at ten a.m. The Expedition to has the following The naval division which 1 Lord the English Minister to the Prussian arrived in a few davs back from -' V Baden and immediately paid a visit to Lord The of Turin states that Napoleon has pent a sum of 5,?C0f.. and the Princess 2,(AOf., towards the subscription for the monument to Count The French Tuesday there was a grand hunt at at which their Majesties and the Imperial were present in the Imperial hunting The two Portuguese the Princess Anna and thirty other were also similarly which circumstance imparted a picturesque effect to the meet at the Puits du The chase lasted two and the stag was killed near the pend of A dinner of seventy-five covers took place in the A French is now living in Paris a venerable named 31", Ignace who was bom at Villars St. Marcellin in 1758. M. Gallot served twenty-two 1 i will sail in a few days for Mexico consists of the man-of-war commander four a hve an and a number of The squadron is under the of Rear-Admiral Jurien de la lie of whose staff is Captain A portion of squadron will sail from the remainder They will meet at Vera The troops embarked will be about 3,000 Zouaves and a detachment of will be procured in The Cobra de Capello in friend of the author's saw a man bitten in 1 I cobra dc which he had seized by the head The blood and intense pain to tollow almost immediately but with all the friend of the sufferer undid his and took from it two each of a small intensely black and though of an extremely these he one to each wound indicted teeth of die to which they attached the blood that oozed from the bites being imbibed by the porous texture of the article stones adhered tenaciously for three or the wounded man's companion in the meanwhile his arm downwards from the shoulder towards At length the dropped on of their own accord the suffering of the man to subside he twisted his fingers till the ami went on his way without diw hud been going on another Indian of the party con jo up took from his bag a email piece of 1� which resembled a and passed it gently head of the which the latter inclined close to the ground he theu Hi ceil the without and coiled it into a circle it bottom of his A id- on Sunday afternoon is a treat to which his wife look forward through the whole the keenest It is one of the linst duties of 1 T i- present at the disastrous retreat from invested money in an unfortunate enterprise for the navigation of the he made a journey to the last month to acquire the sad certainty that he had lost 40.C00L M. Gallot is still strong and The Emperor has graciously granted him a pension of has addressed a letter to the workmen of in as he advises them to be patient power shall have passed from the hands ot a coterie which has never had faith in the or community of feeling with it regarding its its and into those of men not by their riches or but only by their and devotedness to the welfare of Pome and as a matter of occupy a prominent place in this Juvenile Parisian the park of for some time robberies have been and wanton damage has been done to The police ascertained that the perpetrators of these acts were four the eldest of whom is not After minute inquiries they further learned that these lads had established their residence in an abandoned building situate at the extremity of an uncultivated field in the Eue des at Going there yesterday they found spits for and other kitchen drinking cups in silver and a bedstead constructed of planks placed on bits of trunks of tree cut in such a way as to form and lastly a pack of cards and various As there were of a it was clear that the place had only recently been and some articles were found which turned out to have been stolen the night before from a in the The owner of the building was sent and he was astounded to find that it had served as the residence of a band of In the course of the day two of the little thieves were and the other two will no doubt soon be in - Complete anb When the nervous system is the circulation amd the digestion disordered by impure no better purifier or surer antidote to disease can be found than these wonderful No medicine equals them an agent for restoring the tone of the nervous and so enabling nature to overcome any present obstacle to her healthy pills act mainly by or according to circumstances oi the deranged organ may 1 i i husbands and fathers in the middle and lower to take their to it enthusiastic love of it by which all French are animated appears strange to u great many in the English going promenade is neither more nor less than the thing which we call a which our mind is apt to dwell mainly no it is producing on the or or internal A Frenchman does not one straw whether it ' is good for his diction or recommendations to him that it enables a great many people to see that it enables him to see a great people that it enjoyment out any great of either mind or 1 move slowly along in the midst of a crowd which not squeeze to see a great many faces about if to have and green grass within U to all Parisian to a great aa intense Thievish crows are thieves of the and no however ' its can with safety be left in any apartment accessible to spoil ladies certain their content ask open paper parcels will undo the knot of i if it enclose anything and remove a pee which fastened the lid - in order to plunder the provender following r use seems almost bey -One of these ingenious attitudinising in front ot a chained r * - i - ' lazily gnawing a ami after fruitlessly ing to divert attention by 1'" i - Ihe crow's grimaces were but with no better till its poising itself on its descended with striking the dog upon the spine * the force of its strong The rust was the started with surprise and quickly enough to seize his whilst he had been gnawing was snatched by crow the instant his head was authenticated instances of the recurrence of * and of. communication ' by these astute and courageous