FUT N. The Chough and Crow. No one. MR. GErre, of EVAmNs's, ]lis "Dear li);s." Shaking hands with himself. o on ait all. Wandering Mifitrels. Interval of half a mile is supposed to elapse between the Acts. Dream of the Future. THE LORD MAYOR, Drawn by Dlaxin' iacLIsE, R.A. VOTE ro; C UB 1' 1 TT. The 1Happy Past. b London Statues, (in ecstasies.) Sinrluvr GaurohX, after taking a T'rkish ]ath. t \\" ntg ll Out-skirts of the crowd. The Leaders from the Times. Crowds unable to obtain adlllinSioln. A SETTLER FOR THE SNOBS. IT is with delight of the most frantic description that we hear of a new adaptation of photography for cartes de visit. This invention, which is at present confined to the French aristocracy, will doubtless be adopted in England by the time these lines are before our readers. Instead of the portrait of the individual who leaves his compliments, it is now the fashion to have simply a view of the principal mansion of' the swell,-the place, in fact, from which he takes his title; so that the Marquis of Margate would favour his friend with a charming picture of the jetty, or his Grace of Whitechapel with a view of the London Hospital. Now, to say nothing of the great degree of intimacy which must necessarily exist between the giver and receiver of the card before it will be possible to make out the identity of the caller,-an intimacy which must have extended to an amount of visiting sufficient to make the place familiar,-how this will extinguish the snobs ! They can't imitate it, you perceive. Nobody could by any possibility leave a picture of an ordinary two-storey house, as an indication of their polite attention; so that MRS. KOOTOO, of 54, Maple Eye Villas, is undone; while even the Elms, the Laurels, or such distinctions as "lodges," "cottages," or "houses," are too much alike to make an imitation of the aristocratic ciistom other t. :a absurdity. Th6i curious part of it is, however, that theo liHliion is obviously borrowed from the advertising tradesmen, and we shall never see a carte dto visited of this sort without thinking of those bills which are thrust into our hands at the doors of enterprising grocery establishments, where a too flattering portrait of "No. 1, '' NAart," is used for calling attention to our fine Souchong at Is. Gd., muclh admired." As to KltE'ENS and SONS, whose property extends to Nos. 100, 101, 102, 103, 10t, 105, 106, 107, 10S, 109, 110, Jewry, andl at the same time for twenty-seven houses round the corner, as well as branch establishmnnts (country seats) in Arabia l'etrca, and Egypt, they beat the dukes and marquises to nothing. 1IAY TREASURE FORl FARiMERS.-" licks pecuniamnn." HONESTY OF TIIE MODEIiN 1'RESS.-A newspaper now-a-days is never one-sided. The Monument, with a Song.