27 SEPTEMBER 1834, Page 14

M. de Menthe], ex-Minister of Charles the Tenth, has fallen

into thorough madness. The only thing of which he can talk all day long is liberty, political economy, and the sovereignty of the people. Our governors regard his folly as incurable.—Le Corsairc. On some of the glass forming the lamps in Paris, the names of the streets are inscribed. It is desirable, says one of the Paris journals, that a similar inscription should be made upon every lamp at the corner of each street. This would prove useful at night, not only to strangers, but to the Parisians themselves.