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tof E ii} se HS F i i i a: ‘i 3 he ii EF i PERE Fetes Fit rs 4 3 Hd Bee k a F 4 i z y seems even its respe ug the difficulties; but no one imagines for ® moment that they went to that unhealthy eoast: an entirely peacefal errand. ith- most serious occupations havé eon- cruises to shake off the fevers eagendered by the malaria of the coast; bat we all go lemn by ‘est Indian mail, just arrived, that it is _lkely a portion of the will be sent from Nicaragua to Mexico, to biockade the port of Vera Croz. The cause of this fourth “little war” we profess @urselves wholly unable to discover—further it is connected in the usual with consular or am- squabblings, with a report—which seems almost too ludi our government bas taken upon iteelf the office of collect some of own countrymen’s debts, which the Mexican it refuses or hesitates to pay. Then, in eee fifth age nore § ——. ex- pedition, which we are to! y, in a perfect state of equipment; but whether it has sailed or not; whether it is to sail at all; if it sails what it is to points kept in profonnd mystery. J m . And then, and lastly, there are the troubles looming upon us from the Cape, where the Kaffirs are again restless, with the usual accom pani- ment, a@ call for more troops, more fighting. more bloodshed, more tat pickin; for the authorities and yyes at the Cape. [There is yet a seventh dif- h was not known in do; are on hand wi en the 6th; le of New Grana- @a and 2 war that government.—Ep. New Yorn Heracp. be owned this list is a respectable one,and er two of money? We com; that Rassian po ey eg , and circulate s thousand stories us among the half savage ‘twibes of Central Asia. Well, can’t we send ta to checkmate them by telling the simple trath open to us as it is to them? Is Ht B82 i E b i j 3 FEE 4 ; i i Fl fi 4 E i 3 so ii if ft ciel f g E 3 be H 4 a ae Ee 3 ida 4 | Ee i a2 =f8 8 E Ee t tH i iH tl | E F HH i # ir t i E i | i | A F { f i 3 i = i AE ee el ag* g i i : i Es A z. H ft i 4 ! H ily. Fi ay Hl : i i : | tel i E 4 fe cart | A i i As i i i : _ A ai. i | cs Pat d HG E Fe i ee the to ; Stroy rosea ‘Seal es c' be distorced by the success of any sa°h 4 of the kind may be NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1856. 7 i ‘These were all remarkable periods, and each ex- i: in Lote Ave bene ororieed with Weare watdror | hibits pheromena bringing curio to one ind, depreseed, condition of the grocery was from thetr Forge Sp tye made ie not improbable, for Southern policy is liable to growths quite as monstrous as the annexation of Nicaragua. But that it would not succeed, at least for the a Saar De Seiniy: ened foaee, the Taek that Ni ie divided from the boundaries of the United States by Mexico, which is not yet annexed. ‘The true design, it there be apy beyond the gretitcation of the Gilibeserng pas Ve and his comrades, would appear acquisition of a base of tions against Cuba. Bat we need more data to ‘mine the orbit of a body so erratic as the Fillibuster of Nicaragua. The New Turkish of foreign affairs aa the chief, and, indeed, the only insportant part of « ’s duty, such @ conflict as has taken place at Constantinople is certain attention fc 4 ther sustained the weight of sive war are divided in their views, so far as i i : rt case M. Thouvenel and the French gov- ernment su a which land and Austria had felt to be not sufficiently for the occasion. ‘These latter Powers have ht it ne- firmly; cessary to state their opinions clearly the Porte bas the Pt st who is not bound, like » by exp opinions in favor of an immediate evacuation of the rincipalities and the Biack Sea. There been a difference of opinion between the two Western Powers ; that there need follow the ali er aor or ill-feeling <s cannot pe ane object of both is, we presume, the peace by the due falflinent of the treaty of Paris. Ruse has manifestly evaded the performance of conditions which cannot be passed over. France is willing that they should be re-discussed at some future con- ference; England thinks that the case is clear and needs no further debate. France believes that the matter is slight and the difficulty accidental; Eng- land sees in the peccontiog merely the habitual course ot Russian diplomacy, which mast be met boldly and at once. The only question is, which is in the right? England, ‘Austria, and now Turkey, are of opinion that their interests and 7. quire a warlike’attitude. France thinks that such a pt a3 is um . lit ration will, we ive, lead to a just deci Can it be doubted that the ol the e, has been to recover reputation which she lost in war? Can it be imagined that a sovereign on his accession to a throne see without mortification the diminished consequence of his envoys at courts where { influ- ence been su , Russian principles in ev. mouth, and m every o Rassien interest was prostrate. Could an empire, still powerful and arrogant, fail to take pe gh 7m arg of re-erecting its power and salving its pride? The means to this would be patent to men less skilful than the Russian diplo- ee oe ae as to the Naas of the eat) to gain some petty vantage, wi should be noised abroad, exaggerated to Orienial ears, would be the first step ; the more long-sighted policy would be to create disse: between the two nations which had been allies in the war. have been ly could succeed may be somet to un 3 has whole length of the Continent it has been ose that France extolled to the skies, and England cried and challenged, must eventually be divided. How far the expectation may tend to fulfil itself we cannot tell; all we can predict is, that it will have no effect in this country, and we rejoice that of the treaty of Paris three are Q 5 Ee Ee PESEg = tau! & : iiss H : ze a a iif i ! i z i F : : E z all npie a3gi2ay >s pestle I int i : 5 it 5 fH i eee i dee asf i =f i : i f ee a i z li | i z, a QI i i ; i & zg § i ii at § i z 5 5 L 8 33 3 3 i z t { 8 i z F : i Fei aj i 34 Fi i £ = i i i i 8 5 : i 4 H i 5 E ; i | i : # cf f 2. j Fj ff ‘ : : F} ei i ah i t tf ; HA [ i 5 ; : ez as FE. | 3 i ? ‘il [ | fl | the soundness of the rapidly inmneding stpert and fi ag at least, of the futility and mischief of the Act of 1844, but we have arrived now ata state of things far more remarkable ag concerns monetary theories than of those of which we have made mention. In 1866, with the train of war at an end, with com- merece sound, altho idly increasing and wide- q yn quiescent, there is | 10K charge, like the pre- sent, with their interests; and concluded vy advising every grocer to support the associ ition, Mr. Apsiss, of Gracechurch street, in rising to | move the first resolution, said that grocers could | compete with houses that dealt only in tea by aban- | doping the iniquitious system of not makwg a fair | remunerstive profit on sugar. He had been in busi- ness for 21 years, and never bougbt sugar to sell at a loss; it was entirely the fault of the trade that the a did not give ‘them one sbilliog in the cwt. je was certain that if fifty members among them clubbed together and said, “ We will havea fair re- munerative price,” their example would be followed by the whole trade throughout the country in leas than a year. The resolution be moved was, “That the meeting cordially concurred in the ob- jects of the association, and was in favor of the for- mation of a district committee.” The names of the gentlemen forming the commit- tee having been read by the secre! the resvlution was seconded by Mr. supporied by Mr. George Taylor, of Bishopsgate street, Mr. Edwards Mr. Moore. The latter in occasionally widted. by the Empress, and’ I. pre- is b, Pp sume other ladies, for I observed several wrist shields, paaded with crimson satin, scattered abou, with bows and arrows, showing evident signs of baving been lately used. In another part of th grounds, and before the grand facade of the palace, were a party of gentlemen, sevoting, whilst others Were ctrollin about = and the cele- brated berceau, built by the Em; Napoleon L, to please Marie Louise. There have been several stag hunts in tne forest, On these occasious the sportemen are dressed in the costume we see repre- sented in the bunting pictures of Louis XIV’s period, and of which most continental royal pizture galle- ries afford an example. The Emperor and Empress have both assisted at these sylvan amusements, and I bave been told by those who witnessed them they presented many picturesque incidents. The sorely regiments have also amused the Court party wi deeds of prowess; so that there cannot nave been apy lack of out door amusements. The guests are lodged in various parts uf the palace, the name of each being placed on the door. His 'y and the Empress dine with their guests about seven o'clock, when about one hundred versity, while in Ireland only one mam im every 20,000 has received @ similar proof of educa tion? Dr. Lyons proves by inconts that Ireland is the most ignor: nt of all the nations; and further, that we cannot poverty asour exsaee. We, have bees 1g ourselves upon saperiorit: vari phone —poiaing oarselves tor Tencled virtues; decrying others, | taking credit for being ourselves more worthy, but overlooked through jealousy or fear. But lo! the truth beginsto dawn upon us A few earnest, out- spoken men at length venture to tell us that we are not what we assume to be, and that, until -ve realize pong and truly what we are, we cannot atiain that which we fain would be. They out us in the same words which startled’ the learned per two thousand years ago—* Know selves ! The name of Dr. Lyons is familiar to the pro- fession at large, not less by his eminence aa a prac- titioner, than by his recent scientifiic visit to the Crimea at the instance of the government. Here is an extract from the address above referred to: ] bave been at some pains > bring from - ous sources such uvailavie evidence as cam be roacned with regard to the sta‘us of superior education, as tested ly extencing, again a great pressure— operations are checked, if Bot lysed; traders and merchants are sab- jected to great and serious josses; their profits, more large on each transaction, now- a-days are mulcted; and there ia not access to capital and credit sufficient for the carriage of the current and legitamate enterprise of the coun- try. And why? cause again the Bank of - land has created violent and sudden alterations in the rate of interest, not influenced by amy policy in respect of commerce, but simply for the purpose of eventing bullion dealers here oan gold to the . Bank of France, whose directors, rightly or wrongly, deem it better to bny bullion, when necessity drives them, just as they would Fon hevd commodity, than to expose trade to the disturbances in which they see it is 8o constantly involved by the practices resorted tohere. Surelythis is a hard case upon the com- mercial worid, and one which itis the proper func- ie gentleman made an earnest appeal, at some length, to the mecting, assuring them that grocers would 8 are gene | tions of a q best consult their intereste by maki tit good banking system to avert, not to const interesta by ing a OD | by university juation, in *everal of the countries of bay gy engl the bap | “* Craving rooms | create “ the sale of sugar; that if they would see duties | Kurope in which public attention has been gives to edu- on that article simplified and’ reduced, to take care there should be no further settling of the samples by the Secretary to the Treagury and the Commis- sioners to the (he thcing nor ww one daty to be | levied in London, another at Bristol, a third at theatrical representation; that of last night was perbaps the most numeronsly attended. En- peror and Empress occupied the chairs of state in the centre of the pretty little theatre; behind their cational movements. and in Amorics, Tnee results have been collated with such authorities as are accesai! though they are to be regarcad only as approxima: tocorrect data, they are yet, 1 think, worthy of some confidence. With your permission I will cite from tbe ‘The Banks of England and France. (From \oe London Chronicle, Nov. 8. The arrival of the James Baines, with £700,000 worth of Australian gold, has long been anxiously Majesties and on the right and left, the visiters at expected. By that large consignment of precious | Liverpool, a fo in Hull, a fifth in Glas, adda list which I bold in my baod some of the more remarka- the palace, and those honored with special invita- | metal it pe that f bullion to the yt . H oe hore | Die results. It may be observed that no very ot netant or toes, pt ey “oilettes of the ladies, Gentine tat “4 —~ sony he ae ft : phir sixth in Dublin; and that it they would have their | yanecessary connection ia to be found betweem the status trade profitable in all its branches, to join the asso- ciation, and increase the numbers of @ just and righteous combination. ‘The resolution having been put and carried, — The best thanks of the meeting, on the motion of the Chairman, were awarded to Mr. Moore for nis kind attendance that night and assistance on all oc- casions to the association. A vote of thanks followed to the Chairman, who, in responding to it, said that grocers owed it to their of primary and that ot secondary education. Thas it will ‘be reen thas, ine country in which primary education is compulsory and all bot untvereal. superior education ts by ro means eo high in proportion to the total as in several other countries in which voluntary educe- ton is the rule, placed; it far- and the sprinkling of itary, forming an ani- mated and gay andience. The young Tus- can Prince, who was on a visit to Compiegne. sat beside the Empress, whilst on the nt of his Majesty was placed the Princess Mathilde. Round about the imperial group were seated Marshal Peliesier, with short y hair and heavy eyebrows, looking the old soldier; Lord and Lady ‘owley, the Duchess of Montebello, and many of the and the Bank of Bog and might be then relieved from the pressore which nad week by week been reducing the stock of metallic currency, whereon, accor Jing to law, her paper issues and transactions generally must be based. Although the packet #9 richly laden left Melbourne on the th of August, and has now been ninety-two days out, we are still without advices of her appruach. But meantime the process of exhaustion, as applied by France and At the top of the list Scotiand must be Bishes @ proportion of one 1 5,000 of its entire ‘The several c upiries of which these data bave been ascertained are as follows — ; Scotland, one graduate in every 6,000 of population. foreign ministers and their ladies. The company of | other Continental nations to the Britiah stores of | families to raise their sugars a balf-penny in the | Norway,’ one - po sl? lia the mnase pe formed their short comedies— g2i8. would seem to have died away. Vor many | pound, it being fuily warranted by the state of the | Holland, one . 1,083 that of the ‘ Toilettes” appearing to give the great- | days past the announcement has been stereotyped | market. What was more, ‘hey wust be prepared, | United States of Americs, one in 7,795 est eatisraction to the ce. The entertainment } that “ no further removals of guid have taken place | for some time to come, to dnd sugar dearer then it | Saxony, one ~ bf lasted until 12 o’clork, when their majesties with- | from toe Bank of England.” ‘These announements | had heen for many yeurs, in consequence of the re- | Ault ie: ing tne. © drew, amid the cheers of the company, to the draw- | are moreover corroborated by the bank revarns pub- Belgium, one warkable consumption of it, not only in this coun- 8,670 try, but in foreign lands, more particalarly in Ger- La arr ha is ing rooms. There is nothing remarkable in the state apartments; they are simply furnished with ele- ‘Ditto, m the 16th century lished in last night's Gazette. Bavaria. one bd According to this expose, which reports the status % , and Am , wh the dem: « a ance and bung with tapestry, of which a romarka- | of the bank atlairs on the previcus ~aturday, tbe | ftwas cxtraorainary; and, froma, lecsr which we | Fremont” “ oer peane H iy eras ee eee Tne Ba eases of gold and pet Leino in both Le eis had received that morning, it would seem that the | England and Wales, Manes te - | ments was 49,516,327, showing only an insignificant | dem: i lreland in 1631 18, peror and Empress both look remarkably well, and | diminution of” £41,269, as compared with the previ- ported Remceforta ‘be ‘equally great” in the 1880 90/812 appear to treat their guests with a simplicity which | ous return. During the week that has since elapsed ‘A desultory conversation then ensued as to the “1863 “ must make every one feel “ at home.” On the Sth the visiters will leave, and their Majes- ties will retarn to Paris on the 9th. The following 11,607 paluptesing population at 7,000,000, and deducting any the bullion departures from the bank are believed t» b students, the proportion will be only one in every ‘isit f t] ce of in th have been few, and trifling ia amount; while some ee eee ye ae course of which the Chairman said he did not see 2, considerable parcels of precious metal have been re- | why the rise should not take place immediately— it we based our calculations strict! the degree is a hat of those who have been honored by an invi- | ceived from various quarters. ue one morrow,—after which the meeting se- | of A. B., which is the only eflective one, aba that sswomed tation to Compiegne:-— The flustuations in the course of trade and genearl } parated. fo Frakes, and unon a normal population of $000,000, His Imperial aghnaen Prince Jerome Napoleon, | amount of business in the country are best shown the proportion in Ireland would not reach even } is 30,- Prince Nay in, Princess Mathilde, the Papal Nun. | by extending the comparison over a longer perioa Trade with the Far West of America, 000. cio and the Foreign Ambassadors, the Minister of | than a single week. By comparing the last three [Corresponoence of London Shipping t-«7* tts.) From these facts it is obvious that, with regard tosu- Franse-Magnan, Baraguay a'Hfiliens Duo te ile: . iers, Duc de koff, Canrobert, and Bosquet: Generals Camou, Fo- rey, Morris, de M’Mahoa, Uhrich, Korte, de Bour- on, Mellinet, de Ladmirault, le Prince de Beanvan, Perior education, as tested by university gredtuation— And this, be tt observed, is the only possible criterton— ‘be youth of Ireland iain a moet backward condition. L bave before states that there \s a grave reason for doubt- ‘wg that the intellect of thie country is, or has been, at ali adequately represented ia ibe progressive advance- Several writers baving called in question the suc- cess of this trade, though practically carried ont by the pioneer schooner Deane Richmond, this state- ment may change them. The cost of a quarter ot wheat from Lake Michigan to Great Britain at pre- bank returns, for instance, we find we following results:—The sums borrowed from the bank upon commercial sesurities amounted to £19,054,088 on the 18th of October, but declined during the subse- quent week by a sum of £508,773. This diminution le Duc de Bauffremont, Prince Poniatowski,le Comte | arose entirely from a strenuous application of the | Sent rates:— MC Nt of science 10 any of its branches. I have aso stated de Caumont La Force, le Marquis dv Caulain- | “screw” by the bank directors. Yet, although this | Wheat to Buffalo, 4£0 Ibe— ® 4, Days. | a8 my own conviction, tbat tbe cultivation of kaowledge court, le Comte Frederic de Lagrange, le mtive check is maintained in fall stringency, | Freight....... 48 10 | by methods of original research is, and has at all times Comte de Wendel, le Baron Hallez-Claparede, The decline bas been more than recovered (f Blevaung, &. o4 0 | been, in a backward condition among us. We have just Messieurs. de Rothschild, MM. alfred de the course of the week ending on Satarday | Canal freign' o 21 | seen that in regara to snporior education, as tested by Vigny, Auber, Meyerbeer, Verdi, Horace Vernet, | last, and the item ot “ Other Securities” aguin | Plevating an La 2 Se eee, ee ee bey, kc.; the Marquis of Hertford, le Duc | exceeds nineteen millions. This renewed de. | *T¢/bt'o London. a pot iio ret gy tag by A png Sond @Ostuna, le Comte Sclafani,le Prince de Croy, kc.; | mand for accommodation by the public, despite o ‘Three commissions ns a7 | retem to = the, however cer Ghee” quatives Lady Cowley, la Marechale Serrano, la Comtesse | ai] attempts to choke off the majority of apphicanta, Te Montresi— be regerded, @ high order of mental endowment ¢e Hatzfeldt, la Marquise de Villamarina, Madile. | was, no bt, the subject of those prolonged deli- 70 2 bg Irishmen is almoet proverbial, even with those by de Hubner, Comtesse Sclafani, Madame Fould, | berations in the bank parlor on Thursday, which we 06 © | wbom we are most misrepresented. I can see but one la Comtesse Walewsks, Madames Magne, Rouher, | are assured had well nigh resulted in the application 0° _© | possible explanation for this state of things. It epocars Hamelin, Rovland, Troplong, Baroche, la Marechale | of still more vigorously repressive measures. The oo 30. | So mo thes If the teteliontant Lene gg «Bae Se bas cent on —— cone a tool (ties sues P cure for money ions diesen fe ree tes Fi Teri Pr Wy a) cones ie haere wee ped, ras ; Ja Duchesse d’Istrie, la_rrincess uvau, constant wi wal of vate de- ‘ mis de Coulein. P its, whick ‘oan ced by £496 457 2 ‘the 13 6 45 wo 50 Steamion rang gant it is owing to the fact that bat a la Duchesee de la Mi pokes ago Ling ome an ‘One commission. Irish tateliect bas been put in motion, mne Hallez- jays between the 18th and the 26th of October, while the great mess continued to lie all ‘Dut stil Glaparede, Madame la Comtesse de Wendei, les | and by a furthe i £131,987 durin Screw steamers would take about half the time — | joved beneath. Hence it is that large manifestations of Dames de’S. M. "Imperatrice, les Officiors des ‘Mai- | the wok comprised ‘in the return v ablishos iy eee sate eal excellence and p poser have been rare, ‘tft, Leurs Majestes, "i " 7 co without e aa reg time, —e — es ae. Within tee. Sane the ac | From Wales to New Yor! or the simltanecus cchivstion. of allied “brauches tive circulation of bank notes bas been re- ‘The Monetary Crisis in Europe. ‘Traprbipping, New York {Frvm the Loodon Post, Nov. 1 } trenched by more than eleven bundred | New York, per canal to Suttalc rope: SOS Ee bee erect SV oan = 4 There a) now to be every reason for enter- | thousand pounds, having declined from | Buflalo to ports on Michigen been thoroughly aroused : wuu once aroused and enkindled taining aF confident hope that’ the country will | £21:156445 on October 15, to £20,472,855 on the dy the vivitying breath of science, though they may re through the m re of the 25th of last month, and to a little over £20,000,000 | Total * © | mit, they never extinguish the Gro, wt ile the interiectual pent year without bene eealved, fo extenkive | im the present return. The Bank has thus succeeded From | to Montreal, 4 9 ra oliieal ie of the rome exetennes. roti ~) NAG consi D eserve renshippipg........ . ou antic the failures, or in distress and commercial difficulty. 2 ey eee He 5 pln go pero Michigan 26 0 | aim. We bave found upon proofs which ean themselves nearly three qillions, although their object bas, doubtless. been attained at the cost of severe —— to commerce generally—and, we may add, no small sacrifice of safe and legitimate profit to the Bank iteelf. Contemporaneouely with the Goonies aspec Should such be the happier issue of the preaeut state de readily tested, that scie education tn of things, while it affords a satisfactory evidence of ly test ecience and superior this country are far from being in # position whieh is at all creditable to the natioual tutwilect. TOtMl ees cece eens Direct in one bottom, 45s. to 55s. ‘The advantage o: is, that for fc it import business of the the coun! carry to those who still hesitate to 1844, conviction of its insufficiency asa contreller of circulation, and of its mischevious influences upon commerce in ita establish- Copyright of the Low-back’d Car. SITTINGS IN BANCO—LONDON COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, NOV. 6. Love vs. Davison. ment; and we will even hope that the circumstances ~ comand go This was an action for an of - of 1856 may convey @ lesson to the theorists who re- pao rg pagent manl noth ‘the ean cour ech ae igen sbey woe - of 180 feat Kea 26 tes ss called the “Lowtacked Ca’ eyed = high seem to show that the worst is Dow beam, 13 hold, 25 horse power, would find good Mr. Justice Willes, when a verdict was found end that our allies will weather the Pat employment, with grain back, at 10s. to 13s. per | for the Plaintiff, damages 40s. Mr. Boville, Q. C., ficulties which not. long ‘threaten and iron and other goods out at 50s. to | Ow moved to set aside the verdict, and to enter it table commercial prec, Altoug he | 70s. per ton. The time f Great Britain on affldavits inevit ship" ke bh the bey bngphin | -y gamed cold the.copy: Oat the tank to percheee thas meta are cacy | tn 18Ei'we called ehention. to this on the duced bank to that metal at a heavy in we attent ng premiom, was in this country with great | grain exports of the lake in quarters ils S06; yey alarm, our a) were not excited so much | 0 will not be much under six Com gee = Se arene ees ne hak Dr. Kane, the Artic Explorer, in Europe. An it seemed to be tic. Under the im (From Mitcheli’s Manume Reuter. | The song aleo was Rg AT syilom ane presence in Eagland of Dr. Kane, tne intelli- to the hase of ‘above all saul- tt and enterprising American officer. whose name 's place parchage of goki above par appesred almost equi- | f°) intimately connected with Teoeat "Arctic. die. were of 7 J. was giving coveries, offers a fitting opportunity for mark | opinion on all the pointa that there should be no Halved the idee of os incsavertitie nice nd epie. | of respect from the nautical world and the British | rale. ‘i hile he afflic lic in general. We have lately been feting Pro- ciated paper be gmt as fatey nem 3 fessor Morse, whose magnetic discoveries have | The Steamship City of Washington and her tho-wer with Napoleon. But those who thes argued | £55) Hence vie tate tonsa temiteen ieoae k [From the Liveryoo Times, Nov 8.) f ~ pad ie net, ie oo aan eadered severe privetions in making new’ discov ‘The screw steamahi a led cnet baying pn ge g ries, to map out the ocean for tature and, | 9, from 'valesbiy ie noord £3 178. per oance. Hoth the pre | Tet, l0 BP ee nave forth on * | freighted @ most cargo of tine mer- cious metals are 1m r Objects of bargain equa of paty, to Led if possible 4 chandise, a ee ee, and sale. aus een 6 more or less for gold, the missing scien “expedition of auother coun. | ¢T® to the Western C Being @ vessei of Just as the managers of the Hank of England charge pore By denaving @ cer cbmization great , under a very able commander, and as more or less for ‘‘accommodation,”’ a >ting in all cases ao Fw Brees or aif: is to arrive inthe Delaware before this With the view of pacing themselves in a position of | Of ootnion may exist between pasion and nation, oa | sheet i8 in the hands of our Philadelphia readers, thin eta rity and realising the larger’ Prolite Jn | this point at eastall are vnited—in whe commonob- | !t ls hardly necessary vo give any lengthened de: this sense the premium paid for gold by the Banque, ject of extending the realms of scicnce and — build, capacity or equipments; it in instead of being a loss, 4s too many fancied on this cuting new d des. In the 3 of Arctic bis | 80! ee eee oe land, aa it is still of the Bank of France,to discount | *4¢ of the Channel, incurred in order to stave off na- tory the names of Kane, Grinnell, aod Peabody, oar | French transport service, in which was en- at a' rate nearly uniform, 60 much #0, that from | “oval bankruptcy, was in reality one of the most en, willbe handed down topomterity | #864 for the past twelve months, she hae up- 1784 to 1844, with the exception of the 1839, | Profitable investments that could have been made. | with honor and renown for the aid they have givea 8 complete overteal, end Res Bad gvery when fora few months the rate was towix | Out Jee ogg ates ee the Banche | and the part they have taken in ca out pore poy agen hey ry os = a 4 ‘ Ber cont discount was never, leas than foar,and | Spent more than £120,000 on these preminme, and | discoveries in the far North. ‘The resolation — dhced. "While engaged in. the transport of French Dever more , after Q ; A passing of the existing Bank Act, this wan | Vithiie the lect four or Sve months some £50,000 of- perseverance disslayed by Dr. Kane and hi gallant troope she was pronounced one of the most usefal abandoned, and a minimum rate, actusting from ditional. But the stock of bullion which, by the aid | Mionei a a. wom tipsin the vessels in the service, which, indeed, is contirmed time to time, was substitated for the uaiform and | ° their wes, they succeeded in maitaining, | cause of hamanity and science, entitled thern to the | DY the fact that he was nearly the lest Enghian nearly fixed’ one which had been in use up | enabledthe directors to keep afloat many miliions of | Po" sake not only of their own nation, but of | Yeseel in the French employ. “Her commander, to that time. The object of the new | Paper currency, from which they have reaped @ | Hp jin , who are always most ready to | Captain William Wylie. is well known and highty policy ‘wat t0,give the bask ua induenoe over | PFOSE rullicient to pay 15 percent dividend tovneir | the Talia jue meed of praise t> those Who justly | Tespected by a large circle of sequaintances in the the fi , and h them over the | PT ¢ deserve it. Dr. Kane bas world-wide and . influx and efflux of gold into and outol the king | » The FeAl lseve evidently does not lie with the | viet Tenatation for his noble efforts to disower the | "Brivalled ss a seaman, but for his dom; the secondary one was to enable the bank to oe in ati can provi fate of lamented Sir John Franklin. For two | Sonetal kindness and urbanity of demeanor to those exercise = check upon unsound monetary transsc- | /t#elt with s sufficient stock of gold permanently | 120." ne persevered in his efforts, at the head of | ° board. Captain Wylie’s experience has been tions and extravagant speculations. It has failed to | 72! in ite coffers to constitate a substantial | {tr in in the 6o this, and bas only succeeded in producing a state | Datis for ite iseues, or must continue to bay bion, of of chronic apprehension and regularly recurrent pA gel iB. gh aed iy UT thet a ay Sy ay the wy gd jeri: 3 i ! 4 3 F i i i i t F me wre the rep rd 7205 @.umas vi vag