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urse especially of Mr. Booth, your correspondent would not like to hazard an opinion. John Owens, at the Broadway, it seems, is growing tired of "Solon Shingle," though I doubt if the public are, or they never would have "sat it out" for one hundred and fifty nights in succession. A hit of this kind is entirely without precedent, I believe, in New York theatricals. Owens has only to thank his own genius for it, and the admirable tact of his business agent, Mr. Taylor. At the Olympic, Mrs. John Wood is doing a good business with Life in New York, while Wallack's, as usual, is prospering with genteel comedy and an occasional sensational drama.--The cheap theatres on the east side of the town are indulging in the customary blood and thunder, while Barnum, at the Museum, is making the "judicious grieve" by doing a drama of the intense spread eagle order, founded on the rebellion. "The small-pox excitement is less rampant to-day. The city inspector assures anxious inquirers that t