rs:e.rynsn-r-ts.s.;t. I arANISU STUDENTS.We hope our people will go and hear the Spanish Students Thursday evening. It will be a tine entertainment, or | From the Brooklyn Eagle: The instruments are madolins and guitars.r--| The combinations of sound produced by these instuments could not be imagined until they were heard. The increment of the Spanish airs is most infectious; the music is weird and strange in its general character, and, at times, irre-sistably recalls “Carman.’’ But what is more astonishing thaa anything is the perfect promptitude and precision with which theso instruments are struck. Thomas’ orchestra, at its best, cannot excel the Spanish Students in accuracyof tempo, and the effect of the strings, to as handled by them, is something indes-}r* cribable. The first selection brought s** down the house, and it seemed as though the audience would not ccnseut, to letRill:foimiinSt(piWiFfit am crr\