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Show of the Second empire, and they are consistent con-sistent now in their refusal torecognue the president of the republic. , But in addition to the Legitimists, who have now transferred their allegiance to the Orleans branch, there are hundreds of individuals whose patent of nobility would not bear inspection, who joyfully accepted invitations not only to the Tuil-enes, Tuil-enes, but to the hotels of the adventurers adventur-ers who surrounded the imperial court, and some of these, as well as persons of even more recent origin, are the most offensive of-fensive in their attitude to M. and Mme. Carhot. The president, who is acknowledged on all hands to perform well the ceremonial cere-monial I had almost written mechanicalpart mechani-calpart of his office, habitually drives out by day and by night attended by a squadron of cavalry. The other evening, when Baron Mohrenheim entertained him at the Russian embassy, the fashionable fashion-able people invited to the party which followed the dinner resolved not to appear ap-pear in the Rue de Grenelle until after 11, when they made certain that the president would have disappeared. However, as the carriages drove up that tortuous thoroughfare they found the court yard of the embassy full of the republican guard, and so they sat in their carriages in the street until the Carnots had goue home to the Elysee.--Cor. London World. aoyau,ts and the President. ambassadors kave a somewhat -t task in arranging their parties, yalists and their imitators either Mi the officials of the re- - uc or are very uncivil to them when iiy hV tb 664 them- 111618 are mdoubt-!t mdoubt-!t of ,l)e8t Parisian society anum-H anum-H of10? of "impeachable pedigree or unbroken tradition of loyalty to - noose of France. Many of these in- ifiFl-Fanbour? 8t Rermain t- Tui dedmed M invitations to -Jfiierie during &elitteringdays |