The dearth of interesting news is manifest from the shifts
some of our contemporaries are driven to in order to fill up their enormous space. This morning, for instance, the Chronicle notices that columns of the Times have been occupied with Mexican estimates for the Snancial year of 1894-1835; the accounts of the actual revenue and expenditure for the same period having been given by the Chronicle on the 23d of last December. And then the Chronide finds it con- venient to reprint the whole of the December article—thus betraying its own lack of new matter. It ie but fair, hOMPOStily to mkt, thee the Chronicle has proved itself to be far richer in resources, in these dell times, than any other paper. Its foreign intelligence has been copious and well got up.