WITH CLEAN BILLS OF HEALTH.

Art. 1. French post-office packets.—12 days after debarking effects at the lazaret.

Passengers by these boats and their baggage.—9 days after landing, and their baggage exposed to the air.

Art. 2. French or foreign men-of-war.—9 days, with or without passengers.

Passengers on board these vessels.—9 days after landing, and their baggage exposed to the air.

Art. 3. Every other description of vessel or steam-boat.—12 days after landing suspected goods.

Passengers by these vessels.—9 days.

Suspected merchandise.—12 days after landing at the lazaret.

Of the Syra (Athens) quarantine, it is enough to say that it is more commodious and agreeable than the same establishment at Marseilles, and not so convenient as the one at Malta.

The Syra lazaretto is, according to the report of the latest visitors, exceedingly commodious and clean, and facing, as it does, the sea, where there are continual breezes, it is infinitely cooler than the city of Athens. The charges of the Trattoria are not greater than those at Malta (about eleven shillings per diem), and the detention in quarantine never exceeds seventeen days, and when a clean bill of health is brought by the French steamer from Alexandria, the duration of the imprisonment is very much less.