The New York Herald Newspaper, June 28, 1857, Page 4

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2 ; NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 1857. , eure & e are obliged to go by land, which, | us to hope that the is not distant when our pre: | franca, thus , in the short Of five years, | is # very different matter. Indeed, we cannot see that | purpose of taking into consideration tbe prosent deficieni | ty of silk. The war, if it may be called a war, iato till the railroad to the P ontier is finished, is ‘sent arbitrary abe value will ive place to an increase the number of ves: of 16 per cent, the Could ndw interfere to any parptec, | SPRY of coon. ho ques ier thers eerions asnect ta Se ey ee Barrens as so inganlously contriv- & tedious and fatiguing . Besides the usual | the simple and beautiful aystem of decimal coinage | in the tonnage of 43 per ceat, and inthe value of she | The poreedy, ouch an it is, aapanga so B6 in (he Somamercial ait feniving as it doce s diminution of | °4,t0,blunder, adds to the diffi of the silk re trips to Revel, Hapaal, Helsingfors, Abo, been so frequently advocated in our | cargo of 59 per cent. hands of the shareholders vee, labor in the manufucluring districts, considerable interest | Westion, since it appears to have facilitated the ope- Ladoga, &c.,@ steamer is advertised to take | columns. We shall here simply give again the de- | _ It will be satisfactory to.our pountrymen to learn was manifested in the proceodings, avd at an early rations of the insur; np paper oe Permengers fo Torneo, a small town in the north of | nominations we would eoin:— from the last returns, that of the 21,402 foreign | . sree African Colonization for America. & Vory large number of porsobs' were nreteat. It bad | ing the communications, and in some places land, where at this time of the year the sunnever | Gold,. 10 rupees expressed decimally 10. 0 | ships which visited the Freneh porta, 11,504, or con- From the Loudon Times, June 12 | beep eneouncod that several members of Parliament were | 1B trade with the interior impossible. But in spite pots, and they wiil enjoy the spectacle of an uninter- ... Srapeas do, do. 5. 0 | siderably more than one-half were i Noris| a of gentlemen connected with the West | invited and would take part in the business, but unfortu- all these drawbacks, the silk trade of Eagland, im- rupted noon. ‘Those who are prevented by official or | . 2rupees — do do. 2. 0 | this an accidental fact, for, for some years, the num: | India mtorest, beaded by Lord Shaftesbury, bad an iulor- | ately their duties in the House prevented them from | portant as it is,has leas to suffer from the euhanoed _ ther engagements from undertaking longer excur- | lrupee do. do. 1.0 | ber of Enggiah vessels has been ‘on the in- | view with Lord Palmerston om Seine, for Re wee Sean Sat civing nétarancn fo thele ba yon upon a | price of the raw material than France, we having jou ree to the dateh or vilegiature in the neigh: | jrmse do. do. 5 | crouse » in. 1850, among 20,425 ships of Tig to chow the increase of slavery, and to make sugges: | ever, to state that that warm of feeling whick was ox. | Only to.do with its manufacture and not with cf borhood 5 only come own for a) ¥ « 4ryy io. lo. —. foreign origin juent 9 French ports, cotton production, being moreover dependent on few hoars every day. Io August, however, we are Copper. the decide do. do. —10 | 10.482, or more than one-half, were under the British | (008, calculated to suppress, the fraiic., The gentiemen | eae i a Pe ee cacarone | She'particular quality of silk which has suffereajmost to have great doings again; the imperial couple and we ++ the doganee do. do, | —.0} flag. veasels were priacipally laden with iron, | Mr, Thomson Hankey, M.P., and Messrs, John Cater, L. R. | more than been declared carried, when about half the | from the spread of the disease. But the necessity | the Empress Mother are expected to return by that | Our only new coins would be the copper decime | cast iron, steel, coal, wool, woollen » &¢. | Vaipy, Stephen Cave, 'W. Mackeson and W. D. Child. audience left, and as the business ‘proceeded the numbor Sve lemposting larger quantiles of Eastern silk at a time; and the nuptials of the Grand Duke Michael, | and the doganee, and as we should retain the pre- | American vessels came next fo our own ia mimber | \ The’ poiuts “ion Lord Palmorston’s aitention | of the remaising listeners dwindled, “Tue apeochos were | greatly seriously aggravates the mo- peat ae ee ad pa AT wi tn a | Sivse Somer e ernst Eiermndr tty | “is Rois eon vr sept be a * celebra' wil E) , af- | sikle that © cor feit to onve- rom commerce we a * » — ter ibe bride has been first admitted into the pale of | nieut. * thee three gears; the further inpeing to be droaded | , Rows, Talus mesint 2 Gear reauble OeJente- | month, reaching at length the amount of £4,380,000 ly of ‘ the orthodox church. enemy ~oe Bank swi 8 much on the carpet of | from the high price of sugar; the deprass Influence oa | Sins ‘of manufacturing Industry: thar week ancply’ being | #1008 20th of , to which total about a Tree it mentioned in the French and German pa Drain on Laat pew Ramee. rs East. | jate—we mean the subject of extradition. From the the Prospeats 6 free labor; the Lg ergbreitran a Be slmoat er direly rama aenees i ‘uncertain and oreearine it million more will probably, be added on the 20th pers that the “once famous Prince Menschikoff” is fi ‘as was the im; of ‘bullion in the last authentic returns publis! we learf that the num- Re ‘on the ibd a ‘the as ‘auch labor | gud inconvenience the conauiiner™ pod causing rey bd instant. Much of silver is drawn from Ligon now travelling in Burope, and had arrived at Paris. chutes it has eee far exceeded in the | Def of extraditions asked of France in 185% was 60, | in elmost all the Weet India islands, and, as acouss- | bility and fu'ure Prooperity of bis coun ee replaced, ttn toa great extent, by g0.d5 ‘ ‘This is a mistake; Prince Menschikoff, the ex-Am- nine tae an ‘whiok have f the cur- | 22d 46 in 1864. OF these 46—16 were asked by | quence, the supply of slave labor to meet such demand, | , Resolved, That in the opinion of {hla meeting the colonial | in the purchases of Eastern silk made by coun- bassador aud ex-Commander-in-Chiet in the Crimea, t one, and we shall be within ths, ifs jum, 8 by Spain, § by Sardinia, 7 by Switzer- | unless free labor of the same quality is provided. Gemninions ond iver Someries oe Gaus a ae try there is no return of specie directyand the ne Ml in living very quictly at his palace, the same that | Mitte tie uantity of bullion retained this year | 122d, 3 by |, 3 by Holland, and 1 by. Austria, | Lord Suarrmmony, in introducing the deputation, referred J Cotton viaal, aud that itis the duty as well as the interést o | DFice of nt Of course necessitates A | was formerly occnpied by tho Board of Admiralty, | {the posta ge 10,000,000 to 12,000,000 sterli Of 121 accused persons whose extradition waa asked | 10 the document which had been previously subiaitied to | the British tation to aid tn the Promotion of those measaras i ment of an large amount of cein. It and was presented to Lim by Alexander Il. soon sf | Now if we take as the 00,0 oto La or granted, 36 were proceeded against, for robbery, ener Palmerston, ap pe bea b panache the bear hd Soled eel cnt tetas Baie damien py et that the French crop of silk furnished a com- ? ter his accession to the throne. ‘The traveller is his | Grmvng for eilver the year 1g04251 nd cous 29 for murder or B26 for fraudulent bank: | re eee ea peed to touch upon the indisputable. | couirien. paratively su only of that consumed at | fon, who is also Aide-te-Camp General to the Em | the average of the seven last years with that of the | Tupty, 21 for fraud or coining, and 9 for diferent | Cvideuce which waforiontaly now exisiod of tho Ragrant | y tepord, That this meaing hes oreerved with euuat@vion | Lyons, Dut. ita failure is, not the less important, ) yeror, ood who is ng mild end inoffensive a personas | Sixteen preceding, we find toet for the former we } otber crimes. " violation of the treaty ob! ‘onthe partof the Spanish | prrise'tor ie otyect wessore extended, suoWne of eptou, coupled aa it is with a similar deficiency in the other’ the fathe: is haughty and imperious. have an’ aunnal amount of the-preciows metals re, |, We Willnow turn to the French areay. a of koveroment in all ity departments, leading to the encour. | ia meeting, pladgen ell (0 render auc asacation very Foe PE ot the g look Holey og nefarious traffic juman ‘ar- 5 an Hs & OO on’ comnit junction fi, tained in the country of 5,500,000, against au annual | fective of the Fronch srmy sPrigutiers, | lor obcorved” that to trate was undonbicaig om tee | Mik toe Comm tuopiy Atel, comssing at Ave gealie: | the Southy a failure in which would probably leed te i 472,734 officers, sous-officers, orals, bi The Bullion Movement in urope and Asta | secomlation eh ony 4,000,000 previously. a and soldiers. Ta 1953 it amounted to ania dreaxe, end that there seemed tobe a preyonderaiing weight bt Hh nk og Tero sbeoripien aad Son: calamaties of which the history of Lyons unfor- INTERESTS OF "THE PEOPLE—TRADE IN BILVER— | 40 crores of Tupees than she was in 1850 On the Ist Jan eel the ‘active army of Coven for which ‘ver 0, hho was infor tbe ae A. Lansen an Asserionn ned urged that, by v . , DRAIN OF THE METAL TO THE EAST—THE GOLD | in the precious metals alone, making no —— despatch gunboats were specially. @iaptod. Whilo be } the passing of the resolutions, it sould not go forth that a The Atlantic Telegraph Eni QUESTION IN INDIA—THE BANK OF FRANCE. account whatever of her Wrould favorably } foregone conclusion had been affirmed, that there realy | prygicaL GROGRAPHY OF THK SRA—THEORIES OF git folowing interesting information rerpecting | in landed, and Property, and in : sing aysioanc be felt | ey newly From, inacicieat SUPP Om cela | MAURY AND OTHESS—THR ATLANTIC OCKAX— piace from the different countries of E: Ope Throughont the vast extent of her territorion. It is What there was much truth in the next proposition | there was the same relative hetwoan the slave | TSMPMRATURE, DEPTHS AND CURRENTS—KFFSOTS to indie and China is extracted from our latest Ha. | well to 0 facts such as these to the angry mis- t! be , tho removal of the mixed | labor applicable to cotton cultivation and the generalpo- | OF INSTANTANEOUS COMMUNIGATION ON TRADE AND end 0 ‘flea. The our cd h pose oF of the Mal Lewin clamp. last three or four years has been wonderful, Atthe | commission court from Havana toJamaics. All our ex- ulation, as existed {n 1830, when there was a great scar- OLVILIZATION. . fx standard ot metallic currency in France, aswell | The world basnever before seena.congnored empire | PeuOd of the rerolunon of, Bebroary, It Coe | Securing ho efitiens operation ec such soachtucry ta ‘a | ficice bad thos bows tnoreased mod tel emara caor suzonis dF MAURY 44D ERENT “OnLeesgNG OF OURS a6 results of some recent experiments in quartz wernt wisdom ani ons whic! slave country, and the more active our Dritish officials be- | from otber bealih had gradually DEPTHS. crushing in England are also noted:— . Gharacterize the English rule in india, and if we | For three years afterwards the bed 5 improved. Mie ccreation of work oe ho part of man sical Geography of ee Sar net Sathatint «re SUPPLY OF GOLD AND SILVER IN FRANCE —EPYECTS | sometimes speak sharply for the interests of the | tionary; but euch was the e subsequently ap: | oven iD jeopardy. ‘fhe Tacs oF the ual avs ot ees facturere would rolieve any difficulties that might exist; the Sea,’ we may add that we ON TRADE, WAGES ANB THE COBT OF FOOD. people, it is not that we Niclinvs cnrtatear honester pas when tranquillity was restored, that fy the 31st } unfortunate beings who, from thelr tle 10 freedom, were | and the energy of the Uuited. Staton was great euough t | Licut. Maury a worthy laterpretor of the great pheno Under this head the Revue ‘Contemporaine of | or wiser than whe have the reins of power, ecember, 1854, concessions were granted for 9,236 | rtyled ‘‘emancipados,”’ 'alzo called loudly on the British } meet any real cal for extended cuitivation, although iucluded under this title. Attached as Superintendent Paris, in is last number, publishes an interesting but that the press A the legitimate dimatané or ‘our | Kilometres. In the course of 1855 Lyons and arn eet Ae} ioe on the paged these ne nagrone saipen frome, did not mean tosay that it was always tobe depended eee settee tik LW from ior Ng used >. G . jave al ul , . ty Do oe ee ee eee De Whole social and economic system. The resources Cea eae Jah cox y line was opened to | Knows, and the Spanish goverament wero ia, expreas | "ii: Cuacruaw replied to some statitics given by Mr. | in forwarding objects of ‘singular {mportaaoe to his 6 from statistical data alzeady brought under the | of Scindeand the Panjab beginning to be rapidly de- 4 a terms bound by the treaty to agree upon othor moans bet- | Barber, us to the stocks at the cloee of 1839. Whathe | country and to ours, and of general interest to all z notice of the publi by various previous writers, ar- | velaped; the immense demand for prodace which the | Bayonne open many imyortant sec | ior to secure the complete attainment of the object | (Mr. Cheetham) waa alarmed at, was not so much the low | of the world. He published some years ago his * Win.) rives at the following’ preli teealer “i ths | Suman war crested ta tei country, and which is now tions have been Cycle gabe oy reenter proposed. Certain suzgestious would also be brought be- | Mato ettie stocks ls Curistinady a Use sendy: dogiaing | abd Curvent Charts) valuable precursor of the ral rise in the price ot provisions and merchan- | permanently established; the marvellous growth of | ¢¢ Nghe Grand Central, and Company fore bis lordehip for furtier consideration, having in view } tendexcy manifested ever since 1816. (Hear, hear.) volume. To his assiduity working trough and secondo phe proceeds from four causes, two of which, viz.— | ourcommercial relations with continental Kurope un- | LYons. 1856 Marseilles and Paris were united by } not only the suppression of the slave trade, but of slavery —_—— by his goverament, we owe that conference held at Brua war acd bad harvests—aze transitory, while the | der the enlightened laws which invite al! men to | T!/,and om the Ist January of the it Fea iwelf, through emigration treatics for substituting the free | Sugur Speculation tu iw African Labor | sels in August, 1853, in which were found representative! other two—the develo; ‘ut of manufactures and | deal in our markets on an equal footing; and the | 11,20 kilometres of rail had been con of which } African for the slave. Having stated thus far the general in the Colontes. from Engiand, Fravce, the United States, Russia an increased supply of gold—are permanent in their | growth and pi rity of the cotton trade in the last | 6,500, or more than one-half, were in o _ ane hllar ned thong pay hag perro marry Mei The [isos Os Linton Coon Tene 30) It penal Pye rine Sagi ny gee } years, sufficiently account for the state of mat- These are certainly important facts for France and hee porary dy nt espe a few gentlemen large excitement in the sugar market increases. pists z Mad repairer aa! effects; 2 The rise chiefly affects =o and Buch aeticles as are produced in limi been singularly active to-day, and the largest quantities; | ters“on which we have to congratulate ourselves. | fr the world; and we can only express our fervens } “OSM in DCTS Mt submitted a map of the Island of hes for wany years hes gone off with considerable | ©2-0perative labors om the ocean, those methodical re 2. Isis much less perceptible in manufactured arti. | We make no mention of the introduction of railways, | hope that the prolonged continuance of may | cuba, and pointed out the usual course of slavers and winds, currents, tides and whie cies; 4. It is greater in England tnan in France; 5. | for, although in the process of their construction | enable the Emperor and government of erent | ints Sms Deve ths cones eel Whichisintes. wore inpdied. brig. i Is. oo ee pee ce ba the day. | provide, for the peaceful’ interestsand progress of com Tt cannot go beyond a certain Limit, at which it is | they are een! masses of the laboring poor, thelr eanienn People to improve and extend such } ito men snggested the stations on whica the despatch gun | iC Ai0ch Nee Are a dP a eee hecum, | meres! navigation over the globe, Bi BE eS stopp y competition, il prices devoend to the of triumph is yet to come, and a glorious one it should cruise, in connection with two or more larger . Spain juently Shel) gall ivilized rn i vessels. His experience enabled him to express, adecided | usually large this by reason of the promised | co-operation {n the same great scheme, With observa, Pap prem: Ary a oe ‘s ‘on ‘ror wile os eke the aah: ea wae oe Distribution of Property. In England. opinion that the clase of yeasela he lind specified would be | abundance of frait which be available for pre- | tions thus multiplied on every side—the log even of wb ficiaily exaggerated’ by the retail desler; 7. The | looming grandly in the horiaom: but these misera- [irom in Eineen Cheenicle, fuse) nerey ee emer haiti inte oben Te es Ste Opeteaes, upon. the | Comenn eet ca ee ee eae cnmeeen toa a Pr 4 friwiand, hes > as bi Mich milli heedl " On Saturday was published an interesting return, | 4s to alord every prospect of health to the crows. strength of this anticipation, and prices are running | Work—tacts will 9) become numerous ag see a eles taaslend eat en Beary favorable fe Seer ees tee poy igen td a lessly squander- | moved for by Mr. Moffatt, showing the number of | Mr. Leoxaxn Rows Var expressed hia own regret that | up, ‘The holders and importers of this article “if yield results of the bighest certainty ant value. poth to the merchant and the agricultarist; 8. Sala- | ed. must cease, ¢ question of tpublic works be persons in the United Kingdom rated tothe income | %¢ found himself the subsutute oi Captain Hancock, R.N., | realize immense profits this season, provided the: pokes of Cpe or bb dy ood an ong phere as that officer was unable to attend, though cordially con” t ‘hand. Mtr. Valpy submit. | be D0 sudden collapse in the market. We would | conclusions which no detached observations could ‘readt ries do not increase in proportion to the price of | taken up in earmest. The capital of a public works tax, under schedules D and E, accordi i vo positions of the islands | BOW Cirect attention to a subject of some interest. ‘Though Heutenant Maury’ claims all seas for his pr y provisions, cousequently the rise has been detrimen- | loan, whenever laid out in !ndia judiciously, would ding to their } corring in the work thoy bi EX to thous whe live’ upon fixed salaries; and 9, | be sowing silver to reap gold, and he is the culight- respective incomes, We subjoin the table as regards | io a skotch, sowing the 1 n n . i — on The popule‘ien of this and all other countries is ince, the larger jon of his yolume is occupied wit those, therefore, who live upon fixed incomes daily | ened statesman who, grasping the idea, will force it | “Feat Britain of St Domingo, Cubs and Jamaica, and the course of | © D8 P . ‘ Ligh . lccome ‘poorer. "AX a set of to these evils, the | into adequate exprission. Wwe hd intended to SCHROTT onc onwhich Nun'erof | Sensor toudfontat Cake, ievactho opaonee cap, | quently. the consteapdion of colvalai produce ta: | Wola very saural efeet of the nupreme impertanc suthor remaiks upon the benefits arising from an | make some remarks in further advocacy of a gold the duty is persons in Hancosk, after several yoars experience inatemmaad of a posacon in proportion. Pie find Wahee eoneuon com: | of the Atlantic in the commerce of rations, and of tb increased influx of gold, and shows that, aithongh | currency for India, but must defer them for the Otasses. cruiser, tbat most of te slavers ran aloug the porth coast | peting with ourselves in the mariet of Supply, at the | greater knowledge thus attained of all its physical pb in theory an article of commerce might be expected | present. Under £100 a ages: of St. Domir go, and thet tt woyld be advisable in the Srat | game time that the production does not sensibly in- | BOmena. It will be seen that we have given on ot te rise tu price exactly in proportion to the increase | |. 100 ani £150. instance to have a close corddn stretched from Crooked ease; indeed it is i icles, frot list to another work, by Captain Philippe de Kerhallet, « of the circul‘iog medium, such is not practically | Charter and Privileges of the Bank of France. oO 200: Island Passage on the north bearing south to the porthaast | ©fC#Se; im in many articles, from one G2u8¢ | the French navy, having more especial relation to th the case, because this proportional rise meets with | , The Paris Monitewr of 11th of June contains an 20 = = 300 of Jamaica, so as to cut ofthat passage. In other respects | Of another, diminishing—and hence, with other in- | ocoan—less scientific tn its character than that of Lio its check in the stimutus given to prodaction by | imperial decree promulgating the new law for the 30000400) tue views of Captain Hanoock, in a povuliarly striking | fluences of recent rate, a high range of prices is | tenant Mavry, and less animated and vigorous in its d dhe increasing demand consequent upon a greater | Continuance of the privilege of the Bank of France, soo. ameer, cue tare mtsanled D7 Ur, hin one ME | Page’ he prowte Of ctkion ln Geers aod qoumeias | Svan mage him Se rioters ncn abundance of means. The difference between the | 88 follows:— —_ * ae ee pera il , i r rl 2 iy 1d to bo dl. We come with more satisfaction to the logitimate obj inlux of the precious metal and the amount o: riso | 4, 41. The privilege conferred on the bank by a) "Sie shots Cave thon urged the noceesty tor tas re- | Heequaliy- wort comeideration. wither it ix not | of Lewtcant Mary's work—ine great wacery empire” which it has produced, therefore constitutes « real | the laws of the 24th Germinal, year 11, the 22d of « 7 equally worth co! wi Bes “ increase in public wealth. Thos, in Evgland, | April, 1806, and of the 30th of Jane, 1540, the term 00° “t - 1,000. Glace eiersenk of fats tse, general vice eupromed bp, | Sararas wprommone fie peodecdion of other aisicles: tbelf various paeicalrelaloca, as well ‘othe Contes deducting the effects of the searcity which | of which would expire on the 31st December, 1367 ooo =~ 2000. the aoble earl who beaded the deputati which, if not directly connected wii Manufac- | god islands they encirele as to the atmosphere tncumbo are transitory, the” largest tise “does | 8 prolonged for thirty years, and will not ead be- 25000 =~ 8000 lar, Whtux Wrisres Maossece subpitied (ink slavery cats of this country, are so indirectly, | overall; and that further relation Sey Dear to ue eer where tae eflec\; of bi vel sa ie capil of the bank, represented at 000. je knew yjections wi would be started, but on bd dered the most dis qen : reve ty felt aa ther per “3 ot Meson) — present b, 50 shares, will be Tepresented in fa- 6,000 10,000 reflection they would be found to be groundless. The plan- c ave not equal; the latter exceeds The all nations of the earth. The Atlantic is the ial obje vise attributable to the infux of gold is also limited | tare by 182,500 shares, of the nominal value of 10,000 — 80,00, tations must and would be cultivated, and «lthoug! {t had | former, and will imerease year by year in a | of our author’s Isbors; and accordingly we find the ar Spar wer cock. “Slawtie dates at air - “gee 1,000, each, not including the reserve innd. $0,000 and upwards been sald by a high authority ([ar¢ Patmerston) that the | gresior degree, unless endeavors, besides what | Parts of bis volume occupied almost exclusively with tt b 2 F pr an ~ on on o Leet a8 — “art.3. The 91,250 newly created shares will he ‘ planters were slaveowners at heart, be submitted that va prices engender, are made to meet | ean. Though we may explain the preference, wecann Sper ot or coat, teeter, abaition as | grcnciviy amagnod to, boise of tae 31.6 | A refi Scars | Se mats hein, fn arin | SP catego afta Seel oe re Of st leset one half of the new amouat o gold in. | Shores now existing, and they will Lave to pay ‘the normoua, and if free African Libor ras out any practical system of this kind, two even! by those more goueral views of the distribution and rei froduced. Wher. and at what period, age riee of the same, at the rate of 1,100, pet share, wile dho preneatsiaveownr rch besome @ missionary ect for TR Cee ge fe Uve configuratisa of maerand ind oer the gobo, wi world wil! Le saturated wich th oh e a fe bank, im quarterly instal 2, atbeart. Sacha plau must be universal, fur L restricted 5 form the very foundation of physical y, and & MM. Levassenr does a pe se ry cider on he | Ments, within the term of one = at the latest, ay year. to the British colovies we should be eb: ced with pelt in. | Worse than useless to supply the one without the | fertile in Curlous and important conelt 1. a whic thinke that that period is still far distant, end that | dating from So promalgstion of present law. 100 and under £160 terested motives. If France were not jxined she would | other. Jf our West India Islands were furnished | if stated at all, are and ey, scatter the activity of our manufactures, the immense in: ‘The period of the first paymertt and the conditions 1a “ import the free black hersolf, and to Spain and Portugal | with a sufficient supply of Chinese Coolie iabor, or | over the volume, ought to have been put before the ross, crease of oor commercial interc sure, and the civili. | 2 Whiek the shareholders can be permitted to anti- We must show the advantages to be thus obtained. Butho | free African, our ies nf cotton, sugar, , | in some connected form, as in the nature asd mr vation wilich, through the iogtrumeatelity of gold, | *ipate the further paymenss will be fixed by @ dect- admitted that emigration must be accompanied by eman- | yum, and other articles be multiplied four; nitude of the objects conceracd. Maury pinng bag s0-rapidly sprang up in California aud Austra. | Sion of thé bank. anet, py ea dod tn a slave coun: | We ‘trust that these remarks will not be wi pm Te egg ye er a lia, iol Goble ts for mney ra to come to absoro | _ “7.4. The produce of these new shares will be an culgraiion should be reg by = 4 com | their use, pee tettoe tat oti Rese TAT ore sriitings of Humboldt, inkteresvon, Buch rin =o . regal Wold bo founded’ oa | “At Booher or later the fi if ‘upon ‘Gorthan, who have don: the produce of the gold ells without being m. ied, until the completion of the whole amount of of any materia \ depreciation of on 91,260,000f., to the formation of the cxpiti:! deter. cy. We will not follow M. Levasseur through the mined by the eecond article, and as regards the sur- numerous statistical details into which he sabsequent- pie fo ‘the augmentation of the reserve fund now ly enters in order to explain the great phenomenon pom Ont of the duce of the aald - Et? Africa, and the thors, ipall; , Who haye done so much { yolumary conwrasts, free passage and outiit, with ret public attention—that if high prices are to be kept | the study of gcography woul rarniah Pastages or grants of land to the settler. ‘means of the dowa, and the wants of the people supplied, some | both model and materials for a paduainesy rete su colonization of the Wost Indies with free blacks the civill- practi al assistance must be readere? to promote | as we desire for a work bearing this title and dealing wi" zation of Africa might be advanced—emigration and mia- he extended cultivation of those prodacts which ba yg various in kind. e siouary boards wevld work togatier. ’ r neatly, slate here, tm lituntrats of our day, viz.: the disa, ofsilver in propor: | .2"tr one hundred tiltions will be psid into the Fed ee ind Foner nn Yoomcriat hed been Unity of action will ada foree te ludividant’ A | ose general fats, Wo which ovr cuthor magn tty ha tion ae gold flows in; a circumstance more severely | Dublie treasury in the course of 135%, at euch periods treaty welch casse Ino opristion Ik theSear Ioe) aed | The suk Crop of Southern Europenits Re. | £ snd, Cerulusd ts nonrty Uniets eer ns te te that in bis opinion it is to the arbitrary pro- Tye be agreed upon by the finance minister and formlag the basis of the sugycstions mado for the abolition Ported Fullure. ~ words, that three fourths of tas surface of the globe we ortion of value legally sdopted in thelatier county, | This sum will be set apart for the diminution of Mentway Syceniation tdllingend Finis of May last, which said, If we are 19 bokeve the | ‘The advlees ‘hom Soutuene Barsne talortanately | fenton ite parity tte toreee Sameerias ee silver |.) & pro) n permanent ‘ ad 7 - rt 5} iy Pron tit London Poot sent 6. Feuoral evidence of the world; the slave trado gow on a8 | concur in representing that the alle crop has acain Sie two hemlepiercs) of the great” etcent of lana tat held between two metala the relative valae of | deficits in the treasury. ‘ Tiaueady on weer,” tae Wels Terk ioe hich is eabject to constant change, that “France ‘ ae poy ee oot oo coe, bd en’ ermidable array of railwa sharehoid re waited tn 1800 ond, “Withie twelve meéatea net’ ines Maan are failed, the yield being variously stated at two-fitths, | theratis of 11 tis tome wbick oed eee, PaO owes the melancholy privilege of always being a bs of oe vd peated pod for the em. | {2¢ other day apon a anaes Of | slavors nsd'been fitied out and deepatche (0 the wort of | And even one hi as. of the ordivary average. | rious results that only 1-27th part of existing land hac la | rich mine of speculation, eituer for her gold or her | * or the acid peters, oor ry rail ions. | 2tade, with tho view of calling luis sttention to cer- | Arrice from New York alone, and a commanier ofas.aver | This would represent about the same amount of pro- | diametrically copesite to . silver.” The author now inquires which of the two pone fund . i + on eee ot the | tain grievances, of which they loadly complain. | who was imprisoned in that city declared that, in his | doce om lest year, when the juences were metals ought to be chosen for @ standard? The ~ " tt I of the bald m oan 3 ll be added to They truly informed him that they represented pro- | Opiviou, there were in one year as tuny as thirty dve.” | felt so severely in the silk districts of France, which | tho French law, indeed, establishes five grammes of | nominal capital of the said rentes will be a | perty to an enormous amount, namely, up’ ‘of | Acco! to the evidence of an interpreter on boarta | had in addition to endure the privations arising | cet! sea on silver at {-I0tha as the unit of value, but it alsa | Uhydetation of the sinking fund. | oy o¢ | three hundred millions s.eriing, snd that therefore | *lsy°r taken into, Jamaica, to voesels departed weekly | trom the inuudations, the deficient harvest, and tho slobe longitudina sanctions gold as a legal tender; end which ever of rerage quotation of the month pre- | they were well entitled to 3 heard—a pro position in tho Sines aon then teh to in the ‘memorial, to the failure of the vintage. Although there is happily ‘ when a me the two metals be preferred, this preference is sure neni, but this price must not be which cannot be disputed. We shall not go throng’ } crect that ac ta from Havana to the 9th of Maj oer rospect that two latter elements of suifer- = a a. re. to give an unfair advantage to the holder either of lower than seventy-five france. the catalouse of — emp . — pba we trade was fouriehing. A Teltla De f A this year, the failure of the silk benceahere por lf, phe gold or vilver, as the case may be. One of the great | !US oa it reed at the Treamry in | tet the points whic Ah Sy pressed npon the Africans at the Sagus Ia Grande, and | Crop is in itedlt an evil of no ordinary maguitnie, in- lobe being taus proved, and nst gold is its present depreciation; | the of the ng fond stock, and proceeding consideration of the Miniater were—Grst, that their tho water's edge. ‘There were a dozen | asmuch, as it forms almost the sole resource of a hereafter, approximately ¢ ell whether silver may not, et no very i poy my consolidation of the reserve of the einkien | property had been greati depreciated in value of vente in the port of Havana for sale as clavers. considerable number of persons engaged in reach other conclusions, of nigh interest distant period, undergo a similar depreciation? The | °° _— 4 ~ recent and, secondly, that it was unfairly courre of action suggeried for the abolition of sia- | rearing the silkworms, the cultivation of ihe mul- ‘Any Sd physical science. We will poti taxed. y com) lained. too, of the operation of Lord | ery Comprires tho following pointe:—s fren ssarpar gee th res compensiition Reeintiees eae k trong and enorge- | berry, aod the preparation of the silk, and is se in which geological theory both past a rernment. Great | moreover of vito hy prospective is more especially concerned. “The mean. ying despatch -- ital importance to the bn ay ay a Fation above the sea level of all the land on the globe there shall be erased from the great book of roduction of gold appears inexbanstible at present, | {U2d, . 4 ‘ » the public debt a sam eqnal to that of the reates | ¢, y fot. ‘on the other band, has not bi. de Humboldt pre- created by the ing article. bag gga dicted, from perrona! observation and positive sclen- ms ' 1 -“ atives of persons killed thragh the ne: anboate on the coass of Cuba, which plan ft Lyons and its donse popuiatioa, er - titic data, that n day wo id come when the sliver wat a pel we ON yore ly bpd Rence of r tiway companies, pe } remedi ® | Evtrongty adveonsed by Admiral Fir’ G. Peomall ena ap man facture. * Nor do, the aceon jsbove ange is codmetes by lombetines semetrent les Went note mines of America would be worked along a line of | 2 > + ys hey were wholly silew “a aniy 0 lerley | Captain Hancock, | It ts thom meptioned that the opl- luilly represent extent ol @ calamity. ‘he ‘ 5 42 000 kilometres? Again, the prodaction of + | fentes shall be traneferred to the beaic. was anxious to w the views of the deputation | picns of thore re, ~ y ‘The mean depth of the groat oceans of our planet is calc n werd forcibly expressed | Humber of eges pat to Latch this searon war largely | lated by Laplace from the tides and oth: nea, who, writing #0 Inte ag | beyond the ov: — and yet the yiold of ek does | t it Leaat oh 1000 feet, Thus, allowing rn feege ore osired to stop | not exceed that of last year; showing that the dis , the entire submergence of the land might take plac Art.7. The faculty accorded to the hank of making tt . advances ou French public stock, oa Frencia railway thom pode ary hares and debentures, and on debentures of the city | wae to ict thet ‘ani point, but he failed to elieit from aplan. Their object apparently ces be known, wad wo isave it depends on thet of mercury: What if new 5 of that metal, bitherto ansuspected, were sho:ily dwcovered? Since the disovery of mines of mer- ¢. 93¢., equivalent to a fail | Credit Concier Company of France. That, we fear, wi a, let sufficient force | ease, ao far from being checked, would appear to be | leaving the central solid mass of the e: everywhe gury ui Californis the price of that substance hes of Paria, ks extended to the debentures lamed by (B0 | to the Lagistatare to dc a ee rigat lok oxi abel. tae’ socks aed ereeee tf Gasek Yad hood sonny Sees teas or, snoring, oofl ender the guvsramase &7 the’ mame osnte jaflen from 7 fr. dic. to 2 ‘ a 7 " ve no easy ue how: - be likely te ra 5 onntian a 2 tiree francs per ounce, ha = Of nix per cent in the value of silver. Hence there | _ The nk nee touching we ee cult it may be to satisfy the argo tne hoerors vey sastie foumso rear risen to tiiteen francs in 1456, and even a higher | laws which had before guided ite path through surrous i no reason to conclude that siiver will always re- | Ting Gut the preceding paragraph « P* | holders, it is not difficult to indicat aidve, price has been paid daring the’ present season for | "6 Meee. se ay seuPRRATORE OF THR GUY wmnaw. tain the stability requisite for @ standard of valne. | Proved ! Tithe Dank PF dhechd clecunsteness m1 th rurpeet to the mecestful operation of these screw | those procrred from localities where the diecase had | ‘This {s enough toshow what we shoal bare danced Pot even now is l'ruuoe vtill in a condition to dic = ny pry, ya deeper vance as iL appears | despatch guuboate, it if steted on ompeteat not shown iteelf. | But notwithstanding the exponwe | foreground to the topics of Lieutenant Maviry's wor ¢ . | require, may arise to above 6 per cent the scale of div — rae try & counts and the interest on its advances. Y The accruing to the bank from the exer- ch they have to eomplim. That has | that they are likely to be very effict arisen from a cause so olyvions that iumust be per } ar¢ row two in the Fast Indior, ceptible to everybody. It is notoriow that British | mae Fuitedle for a warm ciiraa's. A ral thus incnered in the hope of seewring more vig»rous | There ia undoubtedly much to justify his partial broods, the result has heen the same; many of the | fr the Atlantic Aer eubject for ihestratic eges failed altogether; others produced worms | we shall follow his example by limiting ¢ ‘Concerns this gr: toxe the law? Hy, ready declared in mints of France have coined 2,243 millions oi francs ding tothe ac- ow & oe ine power *'ll be dedacted from the sums =e couns given of the: ats by a Payal oiticor, thelr draught n “ arke atilt of gold, and the quantity is daily increasing. Hence | cise of this - waye pay worse than those of any #¢her eouatry. % wht | which, after andergoing one o: two chances, were | Tm more exclusively to w! “ r vearly divided among the shareholders, and ave to hat il "7 of water is (rom eleven to twelve (set. Under fall steam is a " ocean —a volume fm the * the question is uo longer & matter of choice, and | ; ndlicd to the joint stock fund. ie It is nowrious the:, while the grest lites of France they can steam a ened ohour. Wer fal a ed with the fi galtine, and & email portion 2 con ,4 physicat geography t commerce alone will co nplete the revoiation of it . and Germany pay ten per cent, and frequentiy more, 4 they req nel’, unloas the state at iets resslve to legalize q | Art. 9. The Bank . cance will Jp Fp | to the original sharehc'dere, few, ii aty, of or own ) tbe’, net noua state of things whieh is already beyond ita cont-ol. | Teduce to Sufr. the minimam amount of ite notes of | pg, pais (ist amount. Sfany pay nothag at all. The | Whee the inden | ui TEE GOLD QUESTION IN INDIA—ADVANTAGES OF A ~~ 10. Ten years after the promulgation of the | — 1 Of this striking di@ecnee w at nce explained bet os ines veotnie to reach the chrysalis state, Moreover, Je ousrent rent, Torvmemtytaere, | the moths from these latter, Tustead of being valuar | Sfuasle surent of te Atlante, bt tle carreat, under are required to le for the eges they produce, are oniy.a source of | remarkebie, that we cannot blame the priority thus giv s are banked, only from | {tue anxiety, for an intelligent silk grower of the | to its history. To use his own words :— Pan ference to the diferent cireumitaaces under - Reference ig made | Covennes bas remarked that although the first gene- There ina river in the coean. In the severest drought eons Coates ’ resent law the government may require the Bank | Hy boro ond og | in this meme ‘a statement in the New Yorn HrnaiD i ee never le nad oe Oe ee ee Uf France to establish a brauch bank i6 the Gogeet> | anes seeiwaye were conmsrosted ss Givens Se ester April last, ¥ tions several facts tending. to ane ao Sat eee I. La 4 te ang ISA Current is daily increasing moment. The following table enterprise, while on the Continent noting was done Station on the coast of Cuba. | pertially. The malady would therefore ing the Arcile Seas ; Rn -Aprmantinfpen 1 Art. 11. The interest due from the Treasury on ite without the sanction of the men, Tue result 7 following are the cuggestions made for abolishing local, were it not that distrieta bith t @ ofber such shows the excess of our importations over exports Of | running acconnt will be regulated after the scale in this country was excessive competitin and specu- pode Le ay ge) by the disease have shown tokens aS te eiee emi: he . 850-61:— =. the ballin siace the year 1950-61 fixed by the bank for the discount of paper in the | lation, as everybody recollects,and wry many to eretion treaties, oy ‘ving the free biaek African for course of the infection being as unsc2ountubte ‘one are The question of a gold currency for India is of menta were none exist. } couitries. Here everything waa left individual | ° ow the netee | Evcess ; “ market, but most not exceed 4 per cent. ™ ; the ole rts. | "Art. 12 A regulation of the’ goveramnent will'de- os an ie omy wens B vie lena ‘Emigretion mast be vnivereal; if restricted to British eolo- ry pet bod ——— a common uJ 5 529 | termine, with reapect to such shareboiders as are in- | M&O ye! ges Britain migh: be i with intervsted motives. If 'y should ex ty | of the vessel may be p ‘918,351 and the breadth of land to the sre proft, in | Fravce be not joined, ison import the free binck by | Of the government, and that inquiries i the | while the other hn'l te in common water of 206; ara a erates of ts | most Sostances, of hel, prajectrs tu do ine’ o | Kei, sgpem an! Foroest iin bosbown be Gee | symptoms and probaie canses shoud have been ac: | 1,087,469 3,818,403 wt . oe | lees certain loss of the deloded sharehiders. Rail- f. est ben ively pursued to be expected; bot hitherto no the 969,905, 996,654 present law. way ee oy ar’ wang tele ge Pope for- yoo. ree Hacks smoot ones moral Ino seve cua, success: me KO the nope yg to provide a pL RS . 1,559,510 9,720,870 ‘The Comm: a as of Kran tnnes with @ ray y anes wal since ays of ah mye oy he 4s pig y-' remedy. In lepartments Rhone and This 1506-57; |.| ton to twelve milous "From te London Ports ane It}, | the South Sea bubble. The successof tie few stimu- | ,ficierpion, may bn regulated by 8 mixed commlasion in | Garg alone itis estimated that. neatly two hundred Daring the last seven years India has thus drain- Under any cirewmetances the condition of our | lated toe love of gain among the many and all pro- | » ‘and onitit, suitable vonsels, revurn passages or grants | thousand persons are directly or indirectly engaged fulstream, Rat there are yet others to ld of ly four hundred millions of sil- | nearest neighbors, the French, must be a matter of | fessions and all ranks were for a time imitten with | ° Jasd. a ‘ in the preparation and manufacture of silk qa cieos “or forty millions “Of pounds sterling. | moment to England. Intimately allied as we are, the intoxicating desire of suddenly booming ich. | compare ent of slays, fra Zig, wih int offre nck emt | chef means of thelr ubstence; and inthe Ceveanes, | Sri rium inenc haves tree aad aromas whee Fly paederet fom, curren ase, iy the | advantage O both omni “indood, we maya | unike "oder delusions of" wimlar sind, it ek | Sry ayo or oma "te | tiny" incapable upporting Wg Porat | Sin enuresis See Ste la ws absorptive process of conversion into personal orna- | to the advantage of the clvitiged, world 8 the something anneal behind it. ,,enes our ——. oo , by. nertealtare, Tesches sometimes the rice of | we live. ve : if gests f, doty of the statesman, 0! ian and the jour- | mone syetem been serious! ranged, al- How emanei be effected in Cuba.—An immediate | £%t per acre. e e ‘worm The eral devertption of the gulf stream, apart trv Fe eae et oe, ee ee etre: | nalst, to meke Almmcl! cduaiuted with. the com: | though ‘svusands bad been ruined both tm. for. | Spaniah nw for ‘otra filet Yeriod vor parenaae | involves at the samo time the dimigution ot | any preset question as to lus vourees, ta ota vam o silve neral condition of oor allies. ‘The task | tune and in character, and the natioial morality | (Ur cr°s ("oo . wt by Britain if | the revenue from this land, so that the sacrifice of roped cosas Servent, tapein from tho basin of the Mexic duce of the silver mines of the world warrant the | merce and gon i ' neconsary; ihe bh Ua is nov! soneal tas 1 represented by ao extensive ‘@ mortality as | Gulf and Caribbean on ares tho southern cape dent by no means difficult. Almost | had been sensibly tarnished, we had, ieverthelors, | on emigrants, and belief thet india may continue to appropriate to P) Florida: ferwards bereclf wes of the metal without creati ic in Paris publish | in the interval accomplished a groat parpose. We | (r cmancipation i that which has occnrred during the lest two years ; Pressing ‘ pertoes {nconveniones to the fest of the world, ree bine in which may be found, admire. | had covered the country from nortb ta iouth with Fee at Mat heaiioe Teh te center iioe Tage | is something enormous, As re the silk rnamo- | Porcers of tue Grund Banks of Kowion eventually forcing it to a highly fictitious valae? bly arranged, statistical tables, which by the aid of | vast network of railways. We had ‘ore this with a | way berween tbe African tribes and civilized factore, it was hoped thet the icy Of raw ma- | seasons partially over them; thenee, w: paseing ‘We may take i: for granted that India is refatory remarks and annotations, are made clear | rapidity which would have been imposible in any gration and misaioua will aid exch other. Nomerone | terial might'in a great degree be supplied by China | ing wicth ard diffusion, trayersi ; her wealth: She is r ih sala gee b the pudorsianding and perception of that large | other country, because no other ovaaky locatecal RR er ed cornmigsion and open ‘ree: | gilk; but this hope has been only partially realivod. the Aidaatic, wiih a contfal Cinpetta toonees the Beit duce to a moch greater cxtout tian he requifes for | class of the public who have a distaste bordering on | such ® combination of capital and ente as this. igracion will tend to put d It may be rocollected that in treating of this subject Ialen, and Analy losing itself, by stili wider difasion, herself, and after paying by the curplus for her im- | disgust for everything like figures. From some of | But we discovered—at least we now «l —that ] The normal state of Africa is war. followed by captivity. Com- | last year we quoted the opinion of a Lyons manu- | the Bay of Biscay, on our own ation of foreizn gouds, there is still a ba- | these tables we mean to jot down a few facts |} we had made a great mistake in enou ig too | Merce Red civilization must root ou! war. Kash new emigre. | facturer, tothe effect that the looms of that city | line ofthe Norwegian cosets. tte identity that she. ‘lls tor bullion, which ene | as to the foreign commerce asd genoral condition of | af the popular principle of compound” Dinies Lohcteh cma ieomen ot capttee: lke cmigran’s will be 1 could not advantageously he empl in working | charactors is preserved throughout the many thou ty as capital. She has an unhappy propensity | France, which are this moment of considerable in- } bat Lord Dalhousie, with thet sagaciy which has Lord Palmerston listened most earnestly to the remarks op Eastern = po Hay ld be impossible | vn sn dearee ‘eq wal - ¥ ble F deal of it by in the most unprofita- | terest. ever distinguished his public condad, proposed, | made by those emen who addi him, and thank- ba sete i tion of the of ornaments and hoards, but there ip the} The commerce of France, as our readers | when he was at te head of the RailwayDepartment © [7.3 [a po he fey KT CY porous ~~ of oe 2 w 3 iy silk wes Dive tint declines, their high toupermare ai fact, and «util » much higher standard of living | are probably aware, was somewhat affected in the | of the Board of Trade in 1844, that thegovernment Wines tee wide ounien of ent 4 aval » The Meet y, Pe ' — o- | epeod with which they prese forward alates. ‘amongst the millions of her sons leads to larger | years 1863 and 1554 by the war and the indifferent | hould restrict this principle, so far as egarded the avaahip enpoenees ie pn RR ture of thowe rich, ag cooly es for wi et the the sircam inte total conreey it wall warrants tev expenditrre Pm foreign commodities, the world | harvests. But no sooner was there a prospect of | ormation of railways, in order to proveat the conse- owente ‘fuich treaties, ‘alladed to rarious objeions 80) ne < yt ay] a pT bm on of out eatthor, Oa Be mame os pee gh pay ber the yearly debt which it incurs in the | peace than the returns of 1855 exhibited an increase | quences, which he then foresaw, of excessive com- | which might be raised, the present, therefore, he | sential; ai is now general fac. a the . ep’ 5 wd ious metals. “Now the mischief of asilver cur- | of hae » In 1263 the commerce extérieur But Sir Robert Peel, unfortunately for the } could not to bia approval of the plan! His lordship | tion ie aa factured CJ must i et , hile eg i, so at Seon rency in India fe this, that it makes her prefer silver 3,749,000 000fr.; im 1854, to 9,785,000, | railway interest and for his own repwotion for fore- | then stated that her Majosty’s govornmont wore mest ang. | from and ir employ: fo vid in the payment of this yearly balance; 000fr., and in’ 1865, to 4,327,000,000ir. ‘The mart | sight, took the opposite view of the question; and | \ous to do all in their powor to and, as far as pos. | ments must be almost discontinued if the Lyons Lhe consequence is that the nations are time commerce of France in 1865,as compared Sree his great anthority, there cam be little | *ib4, crush the slave trade. Ho admitted the ae manufacturers are to retain their most important fcramble to procure it tor her. But for the intro: | with 1854, increased 16 per cent, and the oommerce | doubt, led to an aggravation of those evils of which pave hap Lenny PAR mee eg customers. action of a gold currency into France and the | not sea borne & per cent. we now hear #0 much. syaadron an the const pon bpp Ff ot he demand for raw silk, conseqnent on the fail- ‘United States, during the | Saree or. four By far the largest portion of the for ot, a it | In France and in other continental tountries, the vin, and proposed that sus er =. euntecen tnent SS & of that of Ft “ has nevertheless rendered the which an enormous amount of si 40, merce ‘rance is car- | government interfered and interfered eurcessfully, to with hit porta — hose Bastera Hf alone) was rendered available for the pur- From the last fetarns, this prevent the occurrence of each evine. By preventing the satjoct. The Toraship alee © suitted too advantage © nen neceraary, and the price hxs beon greatly , we should have seen the price of silver en- inted to 712,000,000fr.—an increase 2 great aaving wor effected im | accrue from. tranefor of the mixed commission court, | enbanced, not only by the increased temand, but by to @ degree which woul bably have per cent on the returns of 1954, The United ion Of foreign railways. This isone | and explained the position in which the goveenment the neceesity for ing tor them in silver. The forced the government of India to in' ‘8 gold | States traffic with France comes next to that of | reason why they have paid better the Raglish | were placed in connection with the treatin, He would, | last advices from Chita, moreover, speak of a fail- long ere now and to have issued it ata very | Great Britain, amounting, as it does, to 517,000,- t incipal reason is undenl the | however, farther examine into the subject, and assured | re in the “rst c of Cantou #itk, and a consequent heavy loss ‘nga e silver now in the | 000fr. and & ‘fare in the next | absence of rival lines, which, in this country, “a ne on hand for shipment. The impor The it, we believe, will be compelled te rank— the former reaching a figure of 412,000,000fr., | on every side, amd which always diminiss and some- r —_ tance of the demand which created may be x s oa currency eventually, and it may have | the latter a figure of 132,00 000. ; times annihilate the profite of the shareholders. This Supply of Cotton in Kngland. ae 2 ie ok ony ~~ Oe | cate den crt der ober mas ae cron via Bo do oo by and by, at « heavy cost, if it is unwise bed pee he Mg neighbors in navigation has | is the master grievance of our railway interest, and | yeerrg IN THR LIVERPOOL RXCHANOR—LAROR | Aer onty’ of 1856 amounted in value to more than | which Wt flows, Nor is this heat wholly tort ‘whos s. z yes to what is going on in the | been as o their progress in trade. In | we naturally ask, in reference to the recent deputa- reaches, and is spread . at the present moment. 1850, comprising navigation inwards and outwards, | tion, whether it i one with which the Legialatare js | ATTENDANOR OF DRALERS—-TIK RESOLUTIONS 5,640,000, and the importa of specie to £3.860,000. | Fop9. "tie waters, ts coaslamlly Bewing Weve few ( We have repestediy advocated the introduction of | there is a return of 31,226 vessels, measuring 3,735, might {From the Liverpoot Times, June 18.) but the haa Sece atill Core fi sue tropical regions, warmth, as woll as abundant m4. & decimal system of coinage into India. The ease | 000 tons, with cargoes valned at 1,955,000 francs, | prevented it by a timely intervention during the | Yesterday afternoon a public meeting of morcbante and ‘th ‘aaa Tati ar: unfavorable | ture, to our own Islands; and Ireland eapecially, ug wis frith which its adoption might be effected, and per. | whereas in 1955 there were 66,757 vessels, mi of onr railway system is obyions enough. | others interested in the question of the cotton trade was | to this country, necessitating the shipment of & | they more direct’y impinge, doubtless derives mich of feck Geodon from ol incoaveaiouce whatever, fag! 5,229,000 tous, with cargoey valued at 3,103,5 t how to eoTreCt the Buachicf, Mow tat it ig dome, | belt ix the cotton sale-toom, Exchange Buillings, for the } larger amount of specie to pay for the same qnanti- ° peculiarity of climate, ts moisture, yerdare, qud aduady i s é 4 Es 2 =

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