19 JUNE 1847, Page 10

, The Grand Deice Conataidine left folen yesterday, for Wilton

EOM*, near Salabliry, Oh a vita to the Cotinteas Pembroke. Mt. Daniell, the African &atelier, has reached this tountry, after escaping all: the vicissitudes of a comparatively unknoWn Munn". in South-western Africa. He has had several attacks of fever, and escaped death under various guises. He has, however, reaped a rich ethnological collection which he intends immediately to lay before the Ethnological Society.--Mortiing 'Post.; A cbrresporident of the Times states that "the Guild of Bakers at St. Peters- burg have, with the sanction of his Imperial Majesty the Emperor, at their own expense, sent over to this country ten master bakers, with instructions to offer their services, gratis, to bakers in this country, for showing their process of baking brown bread from coarse-ground rye-meal, Without, as well as with, the admixture of other bread-staffs, even of potatoes. Rye-bread prepated in the Russiah Way a Very savoury, nutritious, and wholesome."

The Morning Chronicle puts prominently forward an alarming statement on the Freed of fever. About two thirds of those adulated at the London Fever Hos tale are Irish—the importers of the disease. The fever is typhoid, and often Mtn ed by the distinctive character of " plague"—bubo and other severe glen- dulir affections. Warm close weather would fearfully stimulate the pestilence in cloWded districts. The Worcester Journal Mentions "a providential discovery." Suspicions were elicited as to the safety of a bridge of the Trent Velley Railway, over the Tame -6-like that on the Chester Railway, with iron girders: a man was set to watch; he saw a girder giving way; and measures were taken to strengthen the bridge. An atch overGreat Russell Street, in the Borough, part of the works in course of alteration for the North Kent and Gravesend Railways, suddenly fell in, last night: two dead bodies have been extricated, and a workman was slightly hurt.