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5 f I E i H ? Ti i i i : L i ! 5 a » im mak' AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. | $5 tcd/wousded ore wes srmoc css: | Rms Serdar unriodtconde fe ep “SLA ea they cou'd be in France. of pear the west const of Bailie Bag of Prussian Interference. the London Globe, Nov. 16.) ‘The Arctic Discoveries. conelusive, and eaw no chance of Sir J eussische Corre: News, Nov. 14.) | in’e party having escaped. eo Moni eran | try hens! sn of Sr ourany suc te tation in peg Lea ~~ — of sone informa’ contained in whic! \y a} 5 mira! Lord Radstock, Admiral Commander Osvounn preteated against Bir J Lord Keep the guidnunce ‘om the qui, ont jr cnaDe agri Boss, Captaios inglefleld, | Franklin being accused of taraing back from ‘ now in the P tal. Quin, Shadwell, Fitzgibbov Maclore, Keliatt, Lien- | work, and abanconing the duty cn which he | Pee Conder. Hedakia, Colonel Sabine, General | been tent, It wa: nov said, search for him in Monteith, Lord Sheficid, Dr. Rae, Colonel Portlock, | vis’s Straite or Bafiin’s Bay;'those places had been | Colonel byerest ‘Outram, Renni open to search every year since the expedition | Geeneh.® a borne, sows a b5 i one kin, rod sailed. He believed Sic Jovn Franklin went either 2018 bases for the settlement \ % @ Dorthwest or to the southwest, (thres years OF | OTe Gan se nanted by Lord Colchester.” | to the porthwest or to the southwest, (thre! tern question, so it is inferred from the lan- A peper by Dr. Rar was read upon the recent dis- ago be thought it was nortuwest, but now he be- Corres z that Rassia inti- jes in Arctic regions, and the evidence Heved to be soath west) and there perished. He voce to the like concessions ins | thet tad beea obtained of the probable ‘ate of ‘Sir | wae confident that Franklin had obeyed his orders neutral friend regards as sincere. | John Franklin and his pa'ty. The paper, which | t the letter, and that he by way of following 1s the oh of the Preussische | occupied a considerable time in the rea: , was Walker, but that fincing the ice too heavy to Correspondenz, to which we refer :— | merely a tition of the despatches and corres. | head against, be went down Peel's Sound ‘We cannot believe that the Porte and its allies can, | pondence which have been already published, de- | —% fine open channel—and in that direction either by anypartial success,or any temporary misadven- | img the voyage and discoveries of Dr. Rae and | be believed the other bodes would be found. ture, feel themselves impelled to enter upon a wild plan his companions. The Doctor himeelf explained his | Dr. Ree said that he had + icked up two pieces of for the reconstruction of all European territorial rela- | Paver by tracing out upon small but apparently | timber in Victoria Straits—one a boat's mast, aad tious, and to renounce @ programme which, taking it all | P@DOr DY rac Out SROn My me thenber ef | the other # block, haviog a tole im tt for s chain. He in all, procures good securities for a lasting peace in the | gc eapoes Ay Bo | thought it would be well to send out ships as te East.’ On the other hand, we have some ground for be- | mspe the course it had pursued, aud particularly | *houslt'® itdle Trsanihilite of lieving that the Russian Cabinet would be found just the point where they bad met the Esquimanx who | $d; but there was lutte pose! ervenes vater: now more @isposed to negotiate upon propositions which | hed reported to them the fat of s number of white | ing in that locality for any len; me. fron a former gecasion, though chiefly oa grounds of | MeN. Sup} by the remains found) to have been | Place where Air John Frinkiia and. bis party formal nature, rejected. We should be 9 from Bir Jobn and some of his crew. A motel | Suppored to be, it wes very difficult to uting such a willingness on the of Russia to of a tra in the Arctic reg was ex- | especially by men weakened by scurvy long 14 welling party regions austion dr dlepiri ; but would rather regardit es | hibited by Lieut. Pim, showing the nature of the | bardebip. During the fthree years that Bir John ' proof that the conviction has obtained entrance in St. | k the bad to under + glao some Arctic pla: Rose wintered there he orly killed three deer and Petersburg that the basis of the proposed ran- | Mite and Liste Bt by the officers of thellate | Ome musk cattle. He sbould be the last man toad- tons hed Yoccind sygetlal {0 any say yt at mediation, | bills and of game shot by the officers of the late | vine tbe eae or ail ; oie noteonly the attitude of the Western Powers, hope, though but also that of entire Germany, is dependent on =| reply to a number of questions, Heved there was nove. derstanding being come to on point, hy | Dr Bas eat that he aide not himself speak the m3 anyene es ee ber he agony It will be readily understood that we draw atten- | — Lag & very few words ; the facts de- | S Mig a EES peeks: wie act Be 9 om tative Secisatee Mani st | Seta nueptreiy Snape we aye | “Cope sear. remem et still Mason those of the Western Powers, but aa | dition, | This man spoke tue Engiish language as Sere ee ear nies 000 maea rend Chere tee significant of ascertained dispositions, profes fiuently as he (Dr. Hae) did, and he had reason to Mint ttn oud... A veuok Gatti land sions of dispositions, to treat, on the part of ia, | believe that he was trustworthy. The person who a Rise miche ~ Hagin It will be remembered that, when that power desir. | Tecommended and whom he (Dr. Rae) had i mate ohenee pein * ed to bring to an end the war of 1928-29, a Prussian | known for years, told him that this interpreter was (eae pens Figen ry Beacry ld Crpen | pn Posl's envoy, the late Baron Von Mofifling, was yh. | Dever ® rogue unless when hay was hungry. = ot ry Ialan Peel’ ed, nominally by his own monarch, but on Joneh,) pee case the Rea! jad no interes fo de. | “Trhe shaiiks of the ‘mbeting voted to Dr the of the d by a | ceive, an an Esquimaux attempted to im; an were then ion, sucesed- | watruth upon you it was easy to detect him by | Rae, acd the meeting separated. oF, | BS Sentence ceeements | Sida Se tive ule ite Bes | aege 92 tngp tin i for peace vaders a 5 in Hi Lh Majestic, which we were soon | It was not then known how critical was their por Sohn Franklin and Captain Crozier; and this and ‘Among tho Laine tn Rhedeipahe tion, after Diebitech’s during descent on that place, | the statements made by the Esquimaux he thought (From the Philadelphia News, Nov, 28.) i conelusive as to the fate of the party. It was the pean tok Par vm heingin Siece,temnere, gineral opinion that if the ac divided, fri was d marriage demonetration came off on th> A sine the party. While Russia is affect: most ble, one ship's company would take one | evening of Tuankeziving Day, at one of the fashion- ‘The na Pb aah Dy oar ee cotati ee | direction and the ‘other suother. "Now, there were | able mansions in Went Locust mrect, which was the her troops from approach to the Austrian frontier, | SY two routes that could be taken—the one by occasion of much fun aad excitement. Prossia ie rofessing the ‘ike compliance as Togards Lancaster Sound, and the other by the Bick River, For seveial days previcurly, it was whispered pasts we bave 3 E iz Ht J mo ‘rae Shoore Mars or Sarr Masesric, h lacomp--Mxorrive Onsen vom 4 WaAse. t ( i id ‘Rows AwAY wits Tus Boars—A Foo, ap thoerzcr oF Fixvive raz Sarr—Srx Days on or Brasvarion—Lanp Ho! on THs Istaxp or St. Marrasw— vor Saint Paci—Tae Sar Discoven- wre. . Lanamra, (3. 1.), Ost. 10, 1854. 10 THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. ‘ars that several of my friends on the pas” emery a cpt, 8nd at. tho various ports out here, are Our eftorta in, to.know the particulars ef the catastrophe | fruitless; we s without seeing a vestige beach. | Majestic's boate lately experienced in the | '* without seeing « vestige, ob any benoh. We were Sea; m4, knewing no surer means, I | bear was seen on for your cirealatating paper, breakers. fox esto) thefllowing rn | eoeee wee rently bis intention to crm to te aj? 15th day of Angust, 1854, while the ship | Teving our’ distress ato E ¢, of New Bedford, Captain Thomas Percival, | effor vom ising in the Kamechatka ses, between lat. | ommee. Yet it was (60 N, for-whales, ot six o'clock in the morn- | shpointed; for the cunning elf no, sooner saw i pimaa at the masthead saw a shoal of right and shortly after was lost to our ehhead of the ship, ship heading N. N. W., at 9 going at about five knots; ship a Senet stood in company, ten miles off, bearing N. becoming 20. a few hours we ,reached tie werk fo wectrand; tho ship enced ty +t at the rok, ti ou wind §.; all hands were cal ance of & sea; un well lowered, (the larboard, waist | * continual line of ra as far a wf boats,) and made for the whales, My bost | ting thicker, no that it was | had got bat a shert distance from the ship | any’ before the morrow: keep! ‘harles Thompeon, my boatsteerer, fastened | boate 2 or ghinag tng oy safe, the warps | eighty barrel right whale. The whale | 2, ‘seroes our boat for the larboard boat; when | occupied. sgittiens, the fire} mate, also got fast, but was Thad out of his boat immedia'sly, yet through | ship}, when the ations of the boat’s orew he was hauled on | yord suffering had the boats drifted it - captain, seelng two boata fast, came down outer Ti; ; Bor was it without difficulty that we | continued the w! , Steering 8. ‘Wat before any one could lance the whale, he | so:tied down to our seata in the apiece oye ccstccncrthgree seater psec ae wens, Bee eee ie scarce were we z atiff breene, it became | seated when the lookout altered our course pect oman dtouiy fo held cn sthioeee pei mae nn rg epecmepengr us space | distance run would make St, Paul by nig pacar ~ tinued on this course but a short time. Mill- | could not be seen thirty yards off. boat’s crew, descried a abip close to, seeing on! ort, he started to leeward, making anorth-| The sails, time yaree; in helf an hour I anced him, but with sore ne renee the mecening endo Ma appenrnne, ironed be 3 the mate then lanced with equal success, | night before. Woeectod A pithag this season an | Samos oteensttotng 3 30 e s gid, when the mato’s line parted, leaving me | the laland. It was necessary ly boat fast. The starboard, boat had caught | the cther was not more |. they conld do nothing, for the whale was | windward. Sail was set; we . To make matters wo-ve it now set in foggy; np nang ea hhdpealti sermon hoard boat carried away her mast, and as it | Wi0 came to the conclasion tomer wibare — keep up, he put orto there than to get to the or Immed' fter Mr. Whit | we 8 no power was catgh be, pe ae He ght be- fore peaking the our, the Posi P| thicker than {t had hitherto been, #0 | About four o'clock we saw & vhose im the boats could hardly discern | breakers were not so heavy; we stood Still, as the whale had been making | ceeded im hauling tho boats bet y j i f H E rf i i 4 eG ff i 3 : ft Hit i see E il ve 4 F iI ? t > 3 5 : 5 i E i i E Fy ? & H é Ee i f § HI i 8 z if H “i #8 = H Z é : E zg i i HH i i! 33 i 5, il ttf 4 i t I i $ i F; i i 3 FE i ee A g i 3 i f i 7 & iH ? a ie Hh Fy ii Fei § iJ ar viet i i ; i i i 5 i HE i Ee ag Hy é e i g cr Hus Bee é "| fet ESEGEE reais uae paver pity pits? a « Fa Hh : ty g { rf) Fr iE g | g: $ BF Hi i a 8 32 é : E § ; E 2 5 H : i z a3 : E E iF gz & gees aL & 3 i2 tha | ae et f ft af | i is é E i i i é i ; £ i § i i it Hi i | i i E 4 i i b i z 43k * [ Es ue 3 Br 5g i E iG A FE aE é EE f E i 4 E ih LE 5. z.8 ll Hie Ey F E E E & H iy ig # i E i 2 i j : 4 i EES 8 t eRsE3 8 eas tl abe Rg ibe E age f. i Ex fist aay & z Ext i mir Erte: obs H eaaee 82828 eae ahi 5 A eS zé 3 ibe B a +H i eis 5gs F i A 1 :-¥ F F fe ee eee ere He Fv neS Lf Ht 2 ite $n insisted " and it was in the immediate of the Back | Smong the beaux ard belles that the ceremon the ‘Berths mintsteries ores ore Sad we have | River that the remains were found. | Would take place at the Eplocopal churel, in the Drulet, Richard Flinn, L.R. Pope, Jo le, | tute the pocitions assumed by the Kreutz-Zeitung, | _ D¥- Sconesny inquired whether Dr. Ite had | mmediate ho ye ‘tue residence of the fair ‘Thomas Macomber, William Simonds, A.B. Crosket’ | that «if expedition to the Crimea failed, nego. | been enabled to form any opinion, from what had | 00@ who was to be hound with “Hymen’s silken H. John, William Baldwin, Obarles Rogers, Richard | tiations might be renewed between the Western | been communicated by the Erquimaux, as to the | cord,” and that the footway and the saveny be- Holmes—making in all by Powers. England and France would then begin to period ot the year when the party of ‘white men was | tween tke mansion of the fair demoselle the ‘ORTUNE H. Tay.os, | reflect, and Russia would be in s position to accept | seem in a and when they obtained supplies | church, would be beautifully laid with that Secofid mate ship Majestic. | reasonable conditions. If,on the contrary, Sebas- | fom the Exquimanx. the vulgar eayth or more stubbern stone, not -——————_——_————__ topol should fall, the Western Powers would pro- Dr. Rak replied that it was abeut the season of | come in contact with the delicate little stractares Monument to John Quincy Adams, Erected | pose terms to which the Osar would never consont.’” | the year when the Esquimaux went down to hunt | which are so essential to the locomotion of fair la- [From the Quincy ‘Patrist, Nov, 5.) The Correspondens, on the other habd, contends | sale, Which wes ghout the end of April or the be | Sounced that icketa of afmicsion. woUld be ‘aces: waar oip ag vet od Prag? it, nin; jay. wes sbout a mon’ a that, whatever happens, there can be no loss of Bares Seated were found after the navigation had | ®@Fy to obtain an entrance into the church on the é +} Z 3 s =e ja Hi sil mer Siig aint iy ne ofl age st iE sf i Pr and beaching them, but not qaight course, it was not deemed in any med on some rocks, clear with: A monument has just been placed in the Unita- eithe ft @maafe to hold on, Thus matters con- peeling a brtgd landed at | rian church in this town, to the memory of John a resiooalll; CR yy eS | began to open, but before tho ice had broken up. | occasicn, and a goodly number of police officers } until about four o'clock, d uring which time I | was far from ing our hopes, even had we been | Quincy Adams, by his son, Hon. C.F. Adame. It | sehestopol. The Esquimaux, like all savage people, calculated rere desughs to ‘the bal Pd Be! ha 3 ut one iton into his flukes, which he haa | better cir ced. It was a small of beach, | 1# composed of highly polished Italian ble, and ‘There can be no doubt that if the reported Russian | time by moons. They had the bear moon, the fish ieee for thé purpose of kc eping off the “ vile out, : oe scarce broad enough for two boats to lay side by | in | i, Maggs very soatiy Tesembiea thé One | reply to M. d¢ Maiténffel's ate of isc 22g ult., (the | Moon, the fowl moon, and the seal moon, and it was | bleh lp em dg ron in the oy i {ohip had not been seen in half an hour, when | f7°y,lor, 4¢0P enough to heal the bonta np clear of | Ciesies Te ie exoepTon of the upper past where fare) were pel bread ie Leeinne Parbenece Losing tee heer ae Remabon ope | of the evening, between seven and eight o'clock, & from the whale, when she bore southeast heights, which was the bust rests, which is enclosed on both sides by | rious basis for Negotiation, it would be at epee |, Dt. Raz repiied that he had very clearly ascer- | Crowd very largely compoecd of young ladies and Ea th, coming towards the our in’a place more than fourteen | the upper members of the cornish, that sweeps up- | sconte. | tained, by crose-questioning the Exquimaux, that it | their beaux, began to gather, and in striot aecor zs mhort te there was no apparance of the Set ogemeisal tke. wit vor frases ward fn gracfal ines towards it It was Genigned | Sout that if Brensian Ninossee’ Chott ofr pent | wan tn the Jour 1860. At aihowgh the {nforma- | dance with the inquisitive propensity of the, greet as nothing ceauetinn, abundance—water, ‘which flowed in abundance | 80 athe & pe Ging Marble Works by Mo- | as the interpreter with the Western Powers, of the | tin came to him second-hand, it was, in some re- brought toa stand on tie Son we ‘wad the crowd be Grat! and perfect spects, better than if it were firsthand. If it had to pallto wind-| Koga wore filled, and meanwhile one of the party | inal! ta parts, and cannot fall to ndd much to the | Plen‘an eftr hom foeko camer eocls be foots | come first band from the Bequimsnx who fell in with | o#1ie 20 dento as o interfere materially with the ar tle entertained captured a duck; these fowl appeared in abundance, | already wide-exterded reputation of the manufac- the party of Europeans, they might have had an in- | Tivalofthe invited guests. The cariaues, a ee be ing to oar inability to'reach their lt re turers for ability and faithfulness in executing thelr | 2° He cntereained. The reality of alvered dispositions | terart in misleading, beeange they Might suppose | CoRfained some of the. most presious trelgnt whlch gor a the ‘ake hi bat Gil nots ‘a abort | treats, no more were taken. All now repaired to | work. The bast, which rests upon the top, was | pent, either by Baron Branow’s coy complaisance to | tbat the Ds pestioning them ired to deprive | it bas ever been our tortune i wae, were kept half ah bode wisn the ene it | the boats, putting a large lump of snow in the bow | executed in Italy by the great Amsrican sculptor, Prussian cour@hip, or by the construction pus apon | them of Bre article the taken from the per at 80 respectable a distauce from the cntranes wcrew sere | of each boat. Hiram Powers, and is very perfect and hfelike inits | such very equivocal data by the Berlix official jour. | 80D8 who had perished; bat the party rho gave the | Deeseis of sucnen MRS Set Se See ne ten | _ The boats were got off without any more accident, | resemblance to the venerated statesmen to whose | naj, Upon this point, we may refer to the reniarks | information had no rush interest, and, besides, they Jebus begaz to despair uf «ver being able to/ with no provisions and saturated with water. | The coast was ran down for near two hours, without | memory it is erected. Immediately under the bust | of cur Paris correspondent, insertedelsewhere. We | Were friendly to the white men. the de}ightful eontents of thelr castles ; aud the ex- 4nd ourselves in a complete atate of exhaus- : | tent of tbe anxia owd of “outeide:a’” such as apy of alteration on the shore; the | is. Latin sentence composed of two words, “Alteri from, i Dr. Scorgssy—Ie it your impression that it was | Dt ‘Shxtons Crowd OF outa aelg wee, tbe aight in the poste; tat are eotaey te sheeta were slecked of, and. the propoaiiicn of | Seculo,” separated by an oak branch, with two | canecuansgcs pane pernarame from the, Chronicle | 5 £79 the Bank river tie calamity hoppened ? erocenne in caite sce tabek kpepeeuee ithe night in the bosta; but as it got dark it | standing for Behring’s Straits was recurred | leaves and one acorn. The following is the inserip- | “His aeserted this evening, end not without founda. | D': Rak—Yes, it was detinotly described by the | this emergency the police ‘ere oulted upon to act, 8 ee ee ship | to, and decided on; still it was judged expedient to | tion:— tion, that this government han despatched instructions | E#qUimanx. They described the namber of rivers I | Py the *:cupante of the carriages, but like the stub indve, thd w nigh, an alon, ALTERI SECULO. to Counts Bernstorf and Hatsfeldt to intimate to Lord | should have to cross to get to it, and they stated | born donkey of old, the ‘stars’ would not move, bat a ‘well ee Clarendon and M. de Huys the desire of the Berlin | that the place where the bodies were found was to | declared that the ca:risges must “ rtaud off,” elee i ort ery cotaiaiaor Cabinet, for nearer approachment towards those of | the west of the river, where there were'no hills, and | they mizht injure some of the many ladiea who leporen all that could die o France and London, and for a resumption of more cor- | the only part that answers that description is the | Were hemmed in the crowd ; ¢00d gallant fellows eonnt She tk teat oa dial relations—to assure them of its intention to main- | grcund near the Back river. i thet they were. As the eveniag passed on, and the $e, c enn son hoes he an a {ain ‘the soot scrunlons aeatzality,” without favor The Cuainman thought that onths present ooca- | ifficulty continued, a dapper tue ntleman inade Born 11 July, 1767. hopes that thels inteations will be appiecinted. cakvce® | sion, which was the first on whi bh the society bad | his appearance in the doct-way, and announced in Amidst the storms of civil Commotion tpected. It in for the windom of the Leitich and Feeneh | Met sirce they bad heard this important bat melan- | & Voure of great commund, that “tue c-owd must iy He nursed the Vigor Cabinets to catimate the value of these attempta at ap. | CUcly information which Dr. Rse hed brought to | Ssperse,” to which suggestion the mascutins por. . Which nerves a Statesman ant a Patriot, proachment, and to weigh seriously the indisputable | them, and itwou d not be rigbt unless the chairman | Hon ot the crowd cheered, whilst the feiiciue part Bd vlgay ah mischief of the past against the chances of lesa mischief | (aNd be regretted that the absence of Lord Biles. | Of it exjoyed the scene amszingly. After the cheer pel nine tamines 4 arictan. for the future. As for Prussian ofers of mediation, of | mere and Sir R. Murchison imposed that duty on | the sprouncement was repeated, with the addition Whenever his Country called for his Labora, Which the above instructions are,the manifest forerun- | him) expressing on bebalf of the society the deep | itt ee crowd ae dispersed, the werriage In either Hemisphere or in any Capacity, pers, it ie evklent that they ‘can only be admitted | and heartfelt sorrow with which they had all heard | Weuld tabe p ace inthe h'use. The crowd evjoyed pan SS ekornetens werent, | Siar eramuaes gun ot mum | ere caer ena | mvs eh ems eet mae erew, for w a wenty-fou: mber, 1814, 5 ave compenions, ani C ju the on. , D . have been sbeer folly. Ni | gratitodes 4 bin debt of | Be mgned the second Treaty with Grest Britain, } genoe of the same date ia that the Berlin stock ex. | way iney eonld thelr deep regret forthe los ot tha, | 8 this junsture ancther scene of interes’ attract- | ion with St. Matthews was more | ” Yet six ducks were obtained before starting for ich restored Peace within her Borders. chapge was surprised this day (13th) by aa order | distingrisied navigator, and their sympathy for the | €4 the attention of the crowd. A shrill sing, for, by the same calculation, the latter | the , Where we arrived in a short time. The On tho twenty-third of February, 1948, from the authorities forbidding the public negotia- | sofler'ngs of his cople minded widow. (Hear, hear.) | "ate voice was hesrd to cry, “let me pa ,|,was bat 170 miles distant, northwest by | ceptain’s boat was already healed up on the beach, Tee a ceundaahe weet? a tion or quotation of the Jast Rassian loan. It isnot | No doubt the goverpment or the people, or both, | ®'icket; [am the aunt of the lady that’s to be mer- therefore to leeward. ‘To resch this island | which example was followed by us, after having ty nest coy ace pretended to ssy whether this order results from | would pay a higher aud more fittiwg bonor to nig | red! Police, police, clear the way ! 1 must go in!” ur best, eur only chance, as the wind was | taken all a out of them; the boats we hauled In her great “national, Council. & spontaveous desire on the part of tre goveroment | memory. Tuere was no need for himtorecapitalate | This suited the street rerty to a charm, ard the cry ag a gale from the southeast. up opposite each other, tarned them up, leaving "AGon worthy of his Father, to give proots of its neutral position, er whether it | the exploits of sir John Franklin, but he could not | WA ‘aired, “let the anut zo in,” “stars, do your de- as determined to Iay still all night, the captain | gunwale of each bost on the and the A Citizen, shedding glory on his Country, has resulted from representations on the part of | butcailto mind the indomitable courage he had | ty.” &c.* The “sunt,” in « dress of mouzping, was pualy ing orders to cut ap lines and poles | otner elevated, a0 that there was a spsce large A Scholar, ambitious to advance Mankind, the British and French governments, | displayed on sofmany occasions he had bean engaged | £00 lost to our sight, and through the gallantry of men from the weather, as it now | enough to walk between them; a fire wee made and This Ciristlan gonght to walk humbly © | in expeditions to the Aretic regions, and the many | the gentlemen comporing the company, dow 4 with » fary that is seldom secu ins Novem- Shockeht ducks were ronated alight. ‘We proceeded In the Sight of his God. ‘The Position of Poland. | and Smportant ciscoveries hohsd made. Nor could | suoceeded in malting her way into the a shome, which, had it beem ia any warmer lati- | to divide them out, which was rather less than one __ Beside him lies The nce Belge publishes the following | He forget that atter having returned from thoseexgo. | ssrements for the evening would not permit ew might bare been bearable, bat the thermome- | for each man; it was pronounced by all to be a deli- His Partagates Bie eners) letter, ‘Hamburg, 12th tost.:— 6 ditions with honor, and after he had become the | $0 remain and wituess the “denoaement” of this vhen we left the ship, stood at 43 degrees, rarely me: with on a whaling voyage. pavgnter fee SA CATHERINE, ‘The military measures adopted of late by the Ras | Governor of a colony, he was willing again to en: | interesting offsir, but we wnderstand that the ecre- ince that time the iacrease of wird fog enand mata were taken under the boats and aa ere peu ne Soe Certeeroe (nue) Voxiian,: | aeeeeasiel ie Peiaed eyitentl Oreretak it | Counter the dangers of an Arctic exploration at his | ony was performed during the evening, but that have materially depressed it. Previous to | the sald were spread over them, and a few got Married, 26 July i797," wishes to be prepared should political complications | 8dvazced period of life, and that he perished in | the carpet was not laid. pee eres Peeeere for Se aight, 1 ai- | under thia shelter; yet none of us were to have any Deceased, 15 May, 1862. render that country the theatre of war. All the | ‘bat service. (Hear.) Without doubt, his name PROPOR AR RAF \ nine cakes y rnich was in my | alesp, for the fire had 20 inflamed the feet of moss ‘Aged 71.” fortresses have been placed in a formidable state of | Would go down to posterity with honor, but It was ‘Theatres and Exhibitions, rp keg, (a keg which all whsleboats of ous party that they could not remain easy one Living through many Vicissitudes, and defence, and supplied with provisions for eighteen | Stting that the Geographical Society should no: Bi pes ui some bread, s lantern, matches, | moment, and thus we our first night on ‘under high Responsibilities months, and three divisions of the army are now in- | cit the expression of their deo regret at the me- varpetoes 8 aTRE—Miss J. M. Davenport, giving thestarboard and bow boats three cakes | Saint Matthew's Island. main danger was now Asa Daughter, Wife and Mother, stolied in the three campa the milita-y engineers | !ncholy fate of one who had contributed so largely | whose character as an sc‘ress stands at the highest 0 eee for my own boat. | pesced; food, of its kind, was to be had, though not She proved equal to all. ‘ bave been ergaged in constructing since the first | UF raphical knowledge. (Hear, hear ) He point, is announced to appear to-morrow evening as tabing & eden Lea tebe steatd without ut some aificalty ia getting rit, waich ws noon, Pr Sei actnmomteeete fortright of September. I sm moreover informed pe w sinmian tald hac ughatseaiuer ai, ng | Adrienne Leoouvreur in the tragic drama of d some stanzehioue round the boat, then wind- | {guna Out, for on the mo roger rey Ss Of a ‘Woman that feareth the Lerd.”” that within a few days the engiceering department, | Cheirated arctic navigator, Captain McClure. “ Adrienne the Actress.” The concluding feature of he line around ‘these, it made a proteo: | one. boat! all’ the rest being down, with the ““HERMIN 18 THAT SAYING TRUE, OSH SOW- Writ a view to completing the measures of defence | (oneers)—who bad had the gocd fortune and the | the evening will be the now farce of “A Blighted against the wind; then. dealing out our ration awelling in their legs and Mek, the Baek wan pple ser onan gd | aes ad pw they seeudicantiioms of hoe: Grok Neppineea cl returning to his coentry anil hie frisade, Being.” On Tuesday Miss Davenport spuene as toad, which as one-quarter of & cake, amount | prepared by putting in a few poles, and a spade BESTOWRD NO LABOR. OTiLER | Bridge of: boats over the Vistula, by which the aiter baving solved the imyortast problem of the | Parthenia in the pisy, of “Ingomar.” Broad- gsr an ee: then also on a long pole. We started after MEN LABORED, AND ulovs suburb of Praga communicates with Wareay. | Rorthwest paseage. (Loud cheers.) In conclusion, | Wey 20 doubt will be crowded. oe ata’-warps to each other, two boats the s. Ina short time the rocks were reached, ‘YE ARR RNTRRED Being desirour, however, to keep up the comuni. | thé noble chairman called avon sny gentlemen pre- Bowery Tuzarre—The grand spectacle of the Bree covering the boats with tem—ny | and operations were commenced with our poles, by i 4 cation of that ciiy with the right bank, whence it de- | %2¢ who were soqusiated with the subject, to give | «Cataract of the Ganges” will be presented on wi Nigam seeeping oer sail on. 1 them on the bead withail our strength,when Fa atta | riven its principal supplies, the government has or- | ‘eit opitions on the couclasions to which Dr. Rae Mond: Th ® grees epee bad moderaet’, ee they would fall into the water, which they no sooner The Missing Woman at Rochester. dered the construction of a temporary bridge overt e | bad arrived. ctf fohcras ni nding the ace bah pefevesr ith "Our hittle and shi reached, than, diving, you would not see them again THE SEARCH AND THE RESULT. Vistula,under the rrotection of the gues of the citadel | __D¥. Sconxeny expressed a doubt whether they had | Aymar, Myers and Madigan ap. ear in a variety of ry ivesty Garver ley pend pessented but a | unless s hnndred yards off, and to all appeatiace [From the Rochester Advertiser, Dec. 1.] of Alexander. This bridue, thos commanded by four | Yet the means before them to come to a conciusion | equestrian exercises, This establishment, under the % d - Ble fore, and cold, | as uninjured as they were previous to striking them | Since our last iasue there have been two meetings | formidable batteries may, in case the events Of the | a to the fate of Franklin and bis companions. It | direction of Mr. Waldron, is doing well.’ ‘The pre- ng traces, This early suffering on our | down. It was & operation, and but few were | at the Court House for the purpose of the | war require it, be removed in a few instante, Down | bed been anepmed by the newspapers tat the ships | sent stage manager, Mr, R. Jones, is untiring in his cpp) prempiet net there been | taken. However, with our spade we were more | reports of the parties who went in search of the | tothe sth no otner rogiments of the Rasaian Gaards | % the expeoition had been lost, but they had no | exertions to please the olf Bowery patrons, p=) ‘he 4 boats; bat wi boats were | successful, for by it against their necks, | missing women, Mies Emma Moore. On the firs: | had entered Warsaw—s fact confirming the an. | CVidence cf the fact. Dr. Rae tad give no informa- | — nipro’s Ganpen—The representation of “ from a aaee Saaehiad Siena you could strap; Often cut off the head, | dey, some four hundred persons turned out and | nouncement that by the order of the Emperor nu- | #00 ss to any timber or remaivs of ships being | . pry te gh on of «* Lucy of ir 7 ax08 ve ears. conseenentie all, dnd by this mode of operations we obtained eighteen | searched the country from Hudson street to the | merous corps, d of his best troops, have | {000d in the possession of the Esquimanx. Tae | Lammermoor,” as given Jast week, has heen. very oe pan were ir shirt sleeves—a | thistime. lake—leaving unexplored a swamp of considerab‘e | halted on the way. t) await the uitorior develope- hai dad therefore was, that the ships were still | succereful—M’lle Nau is admired by all those whe eager Bena aes wan wer tee ter Babs “Sar During our absence one of the boys had gone out | extent for another oscasion. The search was very | went of events. The hereditary Grand Duke had | 2 €Xistence; and that bypotheais was by no moans | admire vocal talent. Her rendering of Lucy dle po le Boia , | and comwied up on top of the hill, where he disco- | thorongh— the parties proceeding in s line, the men | not arrived to the Polish capital, having remained | inconsistent with the finding part of the crew | plass great musical ablilty ; her voice is awest and StF ell ecring cients | seemed Srey enemies a aaa fers | Keto amare regen reth he | in Gandy wh tnd in pany | etait Pao | ew, nah ezenoa of tad rd ?. e 01 vert 1D afford = 4 ’ Ss ", twas very ight, and Kept banling to. the | sentup by volunteers for this service, and they, on | a clue to the fate of the Siming party. That meet- | oF hie bees weenie Lave resataey Gitablishmeat | frozen in, avd having no means of extri ating them, aier jaety bleed Kaw hs df on ei set Al dagiver oorygatgy pe gees ete igor fe coukdn’s joey wait until it was | ing adjourned to the same place om Thureday even: | of fhe general siaff. The desrth of all norte of stat Vins ba fhould be done the probability | own snging is worth the price of admicsion. pulle , 8 great their secing 4 | proviei resen ft a 1 3 vessels an bead within Shree points of that conraes haere | plant growing. wild ing thie Dallowilng' Gay wage Were pivridea, ana | ie # citevtatine de sat aeeeting inlané—some would probably take one route, ame | BURTON’s Tnaree.—The new piece called the 2 a Conga Ce ters) A There was small can in the bost thet was of | s large party started to complete the survey of the | the enfferings of the working clases, the military | snother—some , have remained in the ships. | “Upper Ten and the Lower Twenty,” is #0 very ve o'clock, we drew slongside the bow boat and | spous,® quart, in capac Tiny Parr $0 mmaks ete | Sn cee es es tie maceemnes, | Governce General of the hingdow, Cogat Hadiger, x thought it posable thas some cof shese brave men | encoessful—the theatre being crowded every night -ed our lantern keg and gave two cakes, | ofthe entrails of his du job each individual : Ml detee at Laser Ota EET er aoe 1 ha =the management annosnces the sume piece for ome: wootahdg gh a: | ofthe ent zsrnoh each now | such other sections of the country about the bay; | ail sorta of bread and articles of food mds with | J Franklin make across for the American | tomorrow evening. The cast embraces the names ‘though ratber mess » | ae time would permit. The ‘of this se: flour. He has like» bolie! oq | ccast. 1 te migeded It, none of my crew would ssk, fearfa, | was, at that time, our greatest support. Tis day, 96 | effort was as antruifal aa the fist ono-raothing | geives on erinding ott Witte (ha vasenonmns Bir Jon Ross observed, that in return for the | Shisted Being” will vermnate we amesement ; oye Se ceunctins petel were the feet of i ty; (that, wes tae having been brought to light affording the least obliged to pay for the bread ard ficur they brough: poten Laon Coes the hands The cast is ry dhe farnished ‘eption excursion none ‘trace object sought. into 5 ‘ol 1g , promised ould task m * ie ae reper boat, but the free use of it hed | men from ¢ beach that wehed | It is true thet portions of a woman's apparel were tals saan has produced gezeral satisfaction | ® #earch for him if he aid. 0; return in cereal HASORAY TEHARRS, The Feeney and Manin sore than taroo gallos i ll the best, hich, | tery rend tor'eben Nes bigh tes han bot | ama cu rene Pace, but Dove of tea had any | ot Waray. Ea Free Bre aRstat maakt tot. commits ask Wak mertics | ra, Terres S® senomnend Se sopesn evay U . 9, a worn ment ¢ bas J poner ote wero ea therefore, | room enough to move round to carry on our opera- | woman, and were goerets as articles raineeh ioe bed i seaceteneecanea rors y | him performin stat promise. He might! however, ee ree on zation totwo WS per | tions. worn out and cast off. ele, which was very coal by railway» ssy He ad ured every effort to promote the searsh, trian feata, A variety of acts in the ring he bear-/ Bundsy morning, 20th, broke over us with rather | ‘There was also prodaced a sheet, having traxes of | corsiderab'y. some doys peat our merchant | When he Inst conversed with Sir John Frankiin, | ‘De company. | The in drama of the “' sizei- more g signs. One or two more of oar | blood upon it, but this might be easily accounted | have received very large offirs of freight for the | that offi er stated that he would leave a notice of | ¢# Witness,” with Mr. Grattan Dawson as Will: when j were to get We now made au | for without inferring that it bad covered a body | trarport to England from the jot g ports | bis intended route in the channel where he winter- Waterly, con the amasements of the evening. we re- to our operations in du.king, We tok | which had me’ with s violent death. It was found | of a quantiiy of Russie goods, as tha Rnssian mer- | 4 Ip 1846 thev found the cave in the chanrel in- Watiacn’s TaRateE.—Halcroft’s favo:ite com downs of our howltne; one of tke party | ats house on or sicar the Sand Bar, and probadly | chante have teen informed that a number of light but no notice in it. This indicated, he | edy of “The Road to Ruin” wilt commence the ih srpch bing up the most promising snote, | was not regarded by any a8 a very reiarkuble cit | Ruesisn ships of war would make thelr appearence | tBcvght, that Bir John Franklin saw uo hopes of vd mt and mo tinn two ends of as many lives | cumstance. inth'st rea after the evacuation of the gulfsof Bothnia | ™8k’ng the paseage, and that be determioed on re- formances of this well managed theatre. The cast x in the rocke, we wera and Finland by the allied in | turning tome. It was by no means surprising that | embraces the names of Blake, ner meee thas Com | climb up the rocks and Spade tie desttared gusiey turn the | be did bot return lsum 1y, bezause it was not | Mise Rosa Bennett, Mra. Blake H wo- | indheir alee, by having aw ascent of about into thoee gulf. A an oocarrence for ships to be detained * yh P compisints 100 feety ie apace Tut generally to be obtain the Hberation of i oer lian ores fee Fur, Hebered cone en mew ia io boat the | were fast booming etrure ofat modo of warfare. a ha a op pode peor] phe Tong er onnwere | meee) were twoimmy | Today, after Jetaracd fom the rocks, Sheer wasees or tue Bay, unable to meke | Mursoroziran TaraTae,—Mr. James Andersen spuncctnante See someone on the hill above us sang ont, ‘Sail, ho.” ‘The whole crew og hls expended, Franklin foes bape teres ee the tragedian, commences an engagement to-mor- ey pom enn ET lise comp like Brith steam frigate “Amphion the boat. He loved that was done, and thet one | Tew evening, when he will sppesr as Hamlet ia the jamued tice ibs beach om ct cola 5 Memel, party an cartier than the of that name. Mrs, sustaine wy | Bat Saat cena este Sens ci ecu aaa Say etic ht | ta eer Satie, eae ee weld | ner. bath Ae meat of a8 we, pleny snowred The French Hewitt heecommended was, thet te goverment should wi im around of his Shaksperian charee- arvivecn, sod | They were nee tbie'ts mage Very fest, om account we have now at —— ~~ gem sa Rat Which had not yet been isis onal, be lemon wediponases , such | of the universal weakness, many were in a all fi ‘and the only pert which was useful could | meesure recovering 8 little of lost Tenthal alten enya bane yr eae be 5 ranklin yg dy meron be sagprrmeap ig had we be- Ze, bot pulled out of the bay ve salles, Bet aly s eteplais and aeverst Site both ones ae Tndig of acs of Frank son.’ al tena a of 4 1 - “ 8 as it was daylight.we made sail, cast Smothering thelr chagrin, "they pack, ia | od a 4 tig, eel, with sivamiag. mn 0. Oa ws Cade sao, 0d ibe me, 08 northwest by weet. e eilence. ver A tee We ryt one te mix oid not, think Franklin had gone tayer as Pauline. tinued course when Capt. | Two of our made a discovery while ellington Channel, but rather, in the 's Minerarie,— ag A ah a yy Tid Sanita, wet hy Oars Waller 44 | mora announad inter ro 4 a » another hay const of Ame; “ 7 se é run St. Matthew's Inland, by the distance | » house on the beach. ‘They Ayn footed ions (ee arnenel that there he got involved in the ice. me son” vienna’ coum pored to have been ran, and that it waa useless | formation to us, and on thei? return foot (the keys of which M Kaistr, RB. N., conaidered it entirely conjeo- ? ontinue on in this course further—to remain in | prints of some animals, which pi to ua there ister, would only giv taral where Frenklin met with the disaster which Bucxiay’s Srerxapsns —The much admired vicinity any er, in search of @ berren island | were animals of some description on the iland. Still of the Porte,) ie Freak Sac le sande oie Ba monred bed Yhetalion for row evening. "Also 0 variety Of platative he fog. | May be that island, to westward, would | nothing more was done today. Our ration was a onthe thie eubiinny tortura, 4 bim. He sareed with Dr. that there was a | {oF to-morrow evening. Also a variety of platative ~ table wron to those depending on our duck per man, with » surplus of eleven ducks, t nig probability tan did p think it ght Rarity sf remo of the ertioe being still im ex. ak y. Sheenennte ment. course Monpay, 2ist—We proceeded to obtain some | the Ge remains, “ “ euCe, @ agreed wit! ohn Ross that O0D'S VARIETIES. am given here Ania or Behring’s Straits, which was not more | ducks fer our support, bat it became evident that | duce them, as 18 haa obherse aecnchoa tor with real | the reese eh cere, Yeatcrn const of Baftn'ntay sonia be explored on | Every evening are of very Interesting haracar PJ undred miles distant. Bergorer all of | the style of su would become more difficult | pertinacity, but in vain, may (ha? boc Pritt bs towerda the territories of tie Hudson's Com- les negro delineations, Dr. Valentine gives his retie flost were somewhere ‘s wotnl now i 4 F Hr Es ; today we also went to anvther bay | The meeting without the | that he hee alreng: Deny. It was clear they had got the fanny lectures. ata vests patel | matey usr anaes eye | Se dy es Teaegmnsmetsytemasepownet ria | | Cumerpooraee—The Send Cat ¢ « j Cumlalied vs imvemgmeivlie | sogtio, and tgs tt bas ‘tue, Be ee eb - Hoches comes othis evsning. Gevy