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WHOLE NO. 1782. MORNING EDITION—TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1857. “ ARRIVAL OF THE ADRIATIC. THE WAR IN INDIA. tecture, and will doubtleas prove to be by far the fastest vessel ever constructed in the United States. The total cost is estimated at little short of a quarter of a million INTERESTING FROM NICARAGUA, || commence nseit o the support of every Southern patict, REFORM IN THE NAVY. and we hope our citizens will turn out in strength gh, “04 1 Aes, ghee ts ened uh ction of their presence and countenance to it. laceantinidetsttecaanpeotal eacde i Letters from ‘encrals Henningsen and pllcocawreale whic the devoted Walker is making to | Result of the Action of the Naval Courts of Adespatch from Cagliari to the British government | sterling, ‘Walker—Pesition of Captain Chatard, of | ¢xtend the induence of our race and establish our institu- Inquiry. FOUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE, | *unces the arrival at Suez of the steamer Oriental the Sarwtoga—His Note to General Watner | {ten that important region of the continent claims oUF | We published in the Hunan yesterday tho result of Go ihe regular nel steamer), with Caloutta dates to THE MONEY CRISIS. , . French Opinions, d&c., dice ‘The following is the notice referred to:— the action of the three Naval Courts appointed to inquire jov. 1—one week later. Perot Sa ac a Ha Ponuc Murtiva.—The citizens of Mobile are requested | into the decisions made by the Naval Retiring Board in the | ONE WEEK LATER FROMINDIA. | two convoys of provisions had arrived safely at Luck | Latest London piigney, Market— Additional ; to.aitend » public mecting at the Amphitheatre, 00 Ws | casey Captains, Comman\ tenan RAR ogni? now, where Havelock was still surrounded by large mum Ro a Ri Wasuixcroy, Dec. 16, 1857. | (Tuesday) evening, Dec. 15, at half past 7 o'clock, on the of the ns, ters, Licutenants and other wee a > nl Tom the Landon Times (City Article, 1) To me Bion. A. T. Srevnes:— Subject of Nicaraguan allairs. Matters of importance will | officers of the United States Navy who were either re- HAVELOCK HEMME! AT LUCKNOW ders of the enemy, who were said to have 300 guns. mime quolation of gold at Paris iw about 4 por mille pre. Deak Sik—In conformity with your express desire, T ‘be laid before the meeting. tired on leave, on furlough, or who were “dropped” al- 0 IN T ’ There had been some severe fighting, and General sterling. On comparing these with the English mins veg leave 10 enclose some notes on Central American | WALKERS ENCAMPMENT AND TER SARATOGA: | together from the service. Tho act under which the Seaaaeeeaaaeeaaed Outram was reported to have been wounded. price of £3 1s, 103d, per ounce for standard gold, it ee 2 ee TS ecsten feta’ hale saranel ive Pea, rasan rms Grr, Bana} Board was constituted became a law on the 28th of Febri- | gy gossy eamppess Gomis TO MBS RELIER, | ou” umphel and stat tet Namroor for Cawnpore | appears that gold is about dus per vent dearer ia Lan- oy 4 ‘ Monpay, Nov, 30, 1857. ary, 1855, having om that date received the approval of GON! be + | om the 28th of October, to which place the troops were | WR than inFaris, | Dbulof the population of Central America is Indian—aa A » Hite Salient sen Guilty ta ole, and would pro- | foc et my ry pre eer hanen cs Leagan bong = 4 lish mail steamer came in from indian not resembling the Indian of the North American | aevrtail’” y'was over ue G amer came in from | the President, and on the 20th of Juno the new naval in- cortinent—tenter, nomade and gayage—but of the race | came off. There appeared to be a very t anxiety to | Wisition; consisting of the following officers, went into ‘Wiat Cortes, Pizarro and the Spanish conquerors found— | learn what intelligence she brought. ¢ house of the | session:— port ceed to the relief of Lucknow ‘when in cumolent strength. class paper. At the present rate of discount here there is ‘ival out of several additional troop ships is OPENING OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT, oe ee eee oe ee consequently Bo ‘on the trangusission of gold from this country to the United States, Fnglish Consul was surrounded by a large crowd of eve CAPTAINS. Lord Palmerston, in announcing this news to the House pon Deck aici eet arbariaus, itis true, but a stationary, agricultural peo | jive and color, as though each one expected tidings of the Wm. B. Shubrick, C.K, Stribling, of Commons, said he feared it Witt Dut the echo of the hast cieodinnaetins posite rer vn < te ple, docite, patient; industrious and superstitions, who had | most important moment. Upon listening to the various Matthew C. Perry) | Abraban Bigelow, " mestage relating to the convoy which had reached, uot | 91, to 917, the closing bargains of last evening having Inuit large cities and raiged stupendous temples, on whose | groups as they left the Consul’s Louse, T learned, that Arlen MoCaaley. The English View of the Money | tucknow, pp non cs beth ak G6 19.91% As the ond of the day no shorn altars smoked indeed the blood of human victims. The | 4s q prisoner a8 goon as the English steamer came, and be Q. J. Pendergast, Samuel Barron, Crisis, ‘The intelligence received last night at the Foreign office | to 913 for money, and 923 to 9244, or 90%, to 91 ex-divie + Fest of the population, which may amount to from one- | sent back to the States. I could eagily see disappointment Franklin Buchanan, Andrew H. Foote, eA AU AaakAkaninAnenns from the seat of hostilities in British India, may besummed | dend, for the 8th of Januar: Bank stock left off at 217 to + quarter to cue-third of the whole, consisisof theadmixture | depicted on the countenances of nearly all the tna. fide age men, | Thine taeds-toe belengnoed eto Lacan | 216; faduond, 4 to 60K Saw Riven per Gena, 93 of Spanish, Indian and negro blood, mingled and re-inter | their expectations were not 10 be realized. Before left John 8. Missroon, Wr, 1. Maury, THE INDEMNITY BILL IN PARLIAMENT. | was sult holding out. Two convoys of provisions Dat | 2076; india soak, 211 to 220; india bonds, de. to 264, dis, mingled in every imaginable degree, The pare Indian | jin the evening, it was that an English war vessel Ricard L, Page, Jas. 8. Biddle, . himself had left Calcutta in order to preside over the ope- | failures were announced to-day the dealers, in ad- Faces are the people who cliitivate the soil, who produce, | was to be sent for, which was 10 urrest Walkers Sylvanus W. Godon, rations in person, and all the available British troops were | dition to two yesterday , meking sl of five in the eet- ho bay had any share in government, and who | [This is confirmed in part by our Aspinwall corres- | ‘The Board remained in session from the 20th of June, a Rate of Interest by the | being moved up with all possible despatch, ‘Thinintelli. | Uement of the account. br osincethed ascendant) from | Pontence.) 1856, till the 26th of July of the same year, and in that | Reduction in the o by gence covers the state of facts until the end of October, | In the Stock Exchange loans on government sscurities are dragged (as successive fuctions are ascendant) f Mr. Cottrel, the American Commercial Agent for Grey- . culating on the event we are treating | were in demand at 6 per cent fr short periods and 9 per Bank of France, and doubtless in s , of a foregone conclusion. Before this despatch had reached & ko. &e. us Lucknow had either fallen or it had been relieved. It wa he ‘3 Was not in the nature of things that the siege should be rotracted indefinitely, as was the case with that of Delhi. in this instance we are dealing with known forces. Could the The Collins steamship Adriatic, Capt. West, arrived off | defenders of Lucknow but ii out for a tew weeks after " the date of the despatch there would be on the ground a Sandy Hook about daylight yesterday morning. She left | vr etn force which, added tothe strength of the bo- Liverpool at fifty minutes past 3 o'clock on Wednesday | jeaguered garrisov, would be amply suilicient to deal with afternoon, the 9th inst. the rebels on fair fighting ground. | The poict is one upon 7 which any man may form his opinion, for there is no con- ‘The Adriatic has the follewing paren’ facts, pbs any mystery about their import. SPECIE LIST. Three thousand desperate and disciplined British troops HS. Lansing... .sssee e+ are, or were, fighting for their lives in the midst of a native Brewer & Caldwell... army by all accounts some 30,000 or 40,000 strong. The ad- Wm. Tyson... vantage of position was on the side of the British, for, al C,H, Marshall though the works and buildings they oceupied would have M. Mallison & Co. Ubeir willing labors to fight for the mixed race. This | town, who has been down to Aspinwall, came back onthe | time decided upon the cases of no less than two hundred meined vase'le tn sotate of rapid shoral aud physical de- rere a beard a say ie _ jae rn — und seventeen officers. A nice calculation of the work generacy. A large majority are born with the taint of | He brought the intelligence that the Fulton was or had | Performed during this session shows that the Board gave hereditary disease, and the incessant revolutions since the n at Chiriqui, watching to bay org Ahk from | an average of twelve minutes and forty seconds to the ‘Spaniards were driven out, the general decay of cities, of perpen | = ae ent De AEN pray tory _ ya case of cach officer, furnishing one of the most remark- agriculture, of industry and of population, the abandon-“| Would not be able to leave the United States. Having been | ble cases of judicial expedition perhaps on record. ment of plantations and of mines, attest how utterly vi- | thus assured, one can well imagine Mr. Cottrell’s surprise The summary action of this Naval Court—unencum- lentes io. the ian t any self-amelioration can be ex. | 09 Hnding Gen. Walker in position upon the Point, with his | bered as it was by the regular forms of trial, the sum- sionary v yanners floating in the breeze. moning of witnesses or the rebutting evidence of the par- To-day the captain of the Saratoga took part in what is | ties tried, none of whom were allowed to appear or had Thave no hesitation in putting on fecord my conviction considered by all whom I have heard speak of it a8 a | avy nolive that Wey. were on secret trial arouted a pais 3 a 7 ridiculously small matter. It a] ‘s the Eng! ul | strong feeling of indignation throughout the country. that five years after that couniy is Amerisaaizod, aa so1me | ‘very anxious to send forward the mail for Costa Rica by | ‘The officers who had been removed from the active day it will ve, its production in sugar and. coffee will ap- | way of the river. Last night a council was held,com- | list presented memorials and petitions to proach or equal that of Cuba at present; and that its mine ud of J. Squire Cottrell, American Commercial Agent; | protesting axuinst the action of the Board, and demanding ee ee Ca i .. . Green, English Consul, and Capt. Chatard, of the Sara- | the appointment of a court of inquiry to adjudicate upon cpt ncaa ella wae toga, to devise some means of getting said mall forwarded. | their several cases. At the head of the list of complain- say, sir, Americanized, referring to our own people; | After long and serious deliberation, it was finally deter- ts stood Commodore Stewart, or, as he is familiarly decauise, with an instinct prophetic of their destiny, this | Mined thut Capt. Chatard should address a note to Gen. | called," Old Ironsides,” who refused to permit his case 4 the term by which the Spanish and Indian races desig- | Walker, requesting him to permit the Costa Rican mail to | to go before a court of inquiry, but who determined on bate them; yet, if by any great convulsion of nature | pacs up the river, and that said note should be sent under | presenting it to Congress only. There were among the those races could be totaily cut off from communication | the gealof the English Consul. They no doubt thought names a large number of others, who, by their gallant with “apd aap. of the United States, it is my tirm belief | this would tickle General Walker—that he would not hesi- | services, had acquired a high reputation in our naval ‘that in fifty years—and probably within half that period— | tate a moment about granting the request. They were all | apnals, and who were certainly entitled to a fair and open the mixed races would be entirely wiped out by the | anxiety this morning to have this note reach General | trial. ‘After due cousideration of their petitions, and. in Christianized Indian, and the Chi@stianized Indian, in tarn, Iker at the earliest possible moment. Colonel Bruno | view of the justice of their demands, Congress passed an cent till the payment of the dividends. At the bank tse applications are still numerous, but moderate in compari- son with recent experience. In the open market there aro gradual signs of returning confidence. Foreign stocks have been in little demani, and tho treneactions marked show little alteration. Turkish left off rather flatter. In the foreign exchanges this afternoon the rates for Amsterdam and Hamburg were about the same ag last post, but those for Paris were slightly lower. ‘The final prices of the French three per cents on the Paris Bourse this evening were 66f. for money, and 66f, 16. for the end of the month, showing afractional recove- At Hamburg there is again a quotation in the di nt market, and some restoration of order may the e be inferred to have taken place. The ebarge is 10 per gent. About £260,000, chiefly in Californian, French and Rus- sian gold, was sold to the bank to day. |About 80,000 sov- ereigns tly brought from New York, were also de- ‘The suepension has been annonnced of Messrs. Hadiand & Co., a very old tirm in the Manchester trade, with lia bilities for abont £40,000. It is theught that the liquida- tion will yield about is. in the pound. Arnexed is tho circular issued:— presented no yery insurmountable «ificuities to a besieg Gordon, Talbot ing army of Euro , itis well nigh superfluous to say that when the are Asiatics—even disciplined TOMA .. 0... seve even ee . Asiatics—the case is widely site the despatch vi nO) 10 the public for two day ‘we have received jt is mentioned that according to gene. Pei sas vor See vss ee jean shad ral report the Tndians had with them some three hundred during her stay in the Mersey, and admiring crowds ay ae tae auaner io no Geue Good soem ed themselves of the opportunity of inspecting the noble | Considerable allowance, too, must be made for “telegraph vessel. The Persia was moored in the immediate vicini ns” and other implements of the lke kind, which, however formidable in appearance, would not, in al ty of the Adristio, thus affording a favorable opportunity | Sonabiiy, add mater ially'to the diffeulties of the. be- Lonnon, 11 Cheapside, Dec. 8, 1897. ply regret to inform you that we have been com- 0 conquered and assimilated by the wild heathen Indian: | y ol Greytown at an early hoar, voias- : . : f ; y, : hg Herrero : pelled aymenl Tn Guatemala, which alone contains half the population of | ree tee oe ee Owe ceueval, supposing, | actcr,the appointment of a court of inquiry, which went | for contrasting the two vessels. sleged foree.” Sui, when all due deductions are made it | Py cLonr principal creditors our books have Central Americ, thie is already obvious. The Indmns,many | from the anxiety of the English Consul, that it contained | were subsequently appointed, and ithe Given the tren Among the matters of political importance may be men- | is yews. et ate ee bey they Et pg hi tr. C.F. Kemp, years ago, were only prevented from exterminating the | matter of vast importance. Upon its reception the General | nearly the whole of the present year to investigate and | oned the case of an American citizen—Mr. Maillard— ri ¢, for it is not withir will he su ener to look it bo! mixed population because Carrera, himself an Indian, was | had a hearty laugh over the contents, and stated that he | adjudicate upon all the cases which were disposed of b: mans erat Wy WS clergy, ant Fy 4 few families WhO | ag noreply te make, And here the matter ended. the Naval Retiring Board during the brief apace of one ‘ve bowed to his despotism, because he can hold the | “‘pnig afternoon three middies came off from the Sara- | month. The following tables give the result of their ac Christianized Indians in check, But in the rear of these | toga, to the wharf nearly in front of the General's | tion in regard to the officers retired on leave, the office are the pagan Maya Indians, who have swept through | quarters, where a sentinel is posted, with instructions | furloughed, and those who have been dropped trom the ‘Yucatan, devastating nearly every town, occupying | t allow no boats to land without first hailing and bringing navy list altogether. The asterisks show those who nearly every potion of its territory, and by whom the | them wo a halt, until the officer of the day gives them per- | have been restored to the active list, the daggers those ae ee een auly he thers | wission to land. The middies, when hailed, replied that | who have been removed from the furlough list and re sorbed as the mixed race rooted out eventually by them | they were American officers, and referred the sentinel to | tired on leave, the double dagger those who have been re J need not reraind you that in the Mexsean territories the | {he officer of the tay for inatructons nsw his duty in such | tneated trom ihe ist of dropped. at pul_on urough, savage is everywhere steadily encroaching on the eee | caggs, They landed without farther parley. The officer | while the section indicates those in whose cases the find ee _ of the day came, but instead of instructing the sentry that | ings have not yet been notitied to the department:— * 4 small portion of this mixed race in Central America, | {Vcmeriean officers’ bad exclusive privileges, he very po . mm both of the main parties into which they are divided, | jitely requested the middies to Sion from the line of RETIRED ON LEAVE. are incurable factionists, whose trade is revolution’ | Gneampment. ‘They wanted to know ifit was an order. If CAPTAINS. whose property, purchased by public auction at a place called Moyne, in Queens county, Ireland, was taken pos. | and unassisted by Europe: 7 carry such @ business as the storming of Dethi to a s 8 session of, and is still withheld from him, bya lawless | frit.ue Now, there can be no reagun to doubt that the mob. Mr. Maillard, itmay be remembered, applied to | resistance offered by our countrymen in Lucknow will the Irish government for the assistance of the civil power | have been as desperate as any recorded in the military le bi . a be sats annals of any nation, Not only in their case can we de to enable him to obtain the cattle he had bought. Having | rend upon the inherent courage of Englishmen, and upon failed in this by the adroit use on the other side of supe- | the warlike ability of their chief, but we know that there rior personal influence and official circumlocution, he ap- | i not a man among them who is not fully aware that the . i , option is between det to the last and death in the most ped to the American Consul at Dublin, Mr. James Arrot, | option is betwinn, the rabets if they ar who, on inquiring into Mr. Maillard’s complaint, was sufi On the wh 2 scems little reason to doubt that if ciently satisfied that he had been treated with great injus provisions hold out the garrison of Lucknow will be tice and oppression, as to justify the application (in his of: to maintain their position until the arrival of relief. which due notice will be sent you, HADLAND & CO. suspension bas also been announced of Mesers. Lichtenstein & Co., a German house. Their liabilities have not been stated, but are supposed to amount to about £80,000. The Western Bank of Scotland has notified that it has been tinally resolved to abandon all idea of resuming the business of the establishment. They have consequently placed themselves in communication with the other Scotch banks to obtain their assistance and advice in wind- ing op ‘The result of the investigation into the affairs of tho City of ow Bank by the independent committee ap- pointed by the shareholders was announced at Glasgow ly period, and o nquered. ‘There is, however, a majority fully aware of the facts to | {t'was'they would: remain until forced to leave. ‘They hav. 1 adverti e fl a v v » was no complaint of any want of arms, | this morning. It appears that, after deducting for bad = eas — hen tpen gel aby enough plo a were informed that i Was not an order, buta simple re- Po OO Fg ae ficial capacity as Consul) to the Irish executive to obtain = ai si =a the matériel of war. The | and doubtful debts and making sufficient allowance for Geukbs Main atier wivuarion aad sean. Gab of inane bars eae one Sete ae Or came Sheen Be Te eee | Genge C. Raa: Wm. V. Taylor. or reseue Mr. Maillard’s property from the hands of the | question ‘wis simply one of foot. "We cannot, uaforti- | depreciation in the securities beld, the capital i found to ties is designated the democratic, the ‘other has accepted | Paimstrusted to fire, ‘They left. muttcring about General | 7: AP. C. Jones, Chas. mob. ‘This application of the Consul was refused on the Jd one word of explandtion to the brief an- | be intact all but £75,000, and that the greater part of this deficiency may be made good by a slight improvement in the value of the securities and th veries from doubt- ful debts. Considering all the circumstances of the case, this will doubtless be regarded with satisfagion, and the bank may be expected to resume itis stated that Messrs. Dutilh & Co., of Liverpool, who ment of the telegraph, that two convoys of pro most shallow and insufficient pretexts. Mr. Maillard is, | yisioux had reached the town in safety. It would only therefore, about to submit the history of this ‘affair, to. | seem probable that had these convoys been inconsiders. deno unimportant, the intelligence of their arrival would ether with the official correspondence of the Consul with Jorma haritcy sing see Menpat epi bngohonay the Irish government, to Congress, and to petition both | hur it the the appellation, originally given to it by its adversaries, ° , 4 Jobn D. Sloat, of servile. When. the Spaniards were driven out the for. ea ee | i er prevailed in Nicaragua; but in the reaction, conse: | "Th "the arternoon, at alater hour, two Jamaica negroeg | seven S1uith ~oomses the serviles—that is to say, the old | came up in a bungo, and stated that they bad been sent by | ‘¥'*¥! Baap miles, the employes of the Spanish govern | the captain of the Saratoga to come and demand pay for m. D. Salter, vi ve of sufficient magnitude, a» seems probable, ae en ee eouney uy the tories ta the war or | W004 burnt by his men stationed on the lower end of the | ain 3. Young. houses for an official inquiry into the whole of the cir- | to have afforded substantial relief to tha besieged, it fol. | suspended after the failure of Messrs: Deunistoun & Co., depundence-obtalned tie secundaaay, were Polat, Fhe Gencval dectined paying wail the demand wee | soos, 2 Jarvis, cumstances of this most singular affair, and such relict | lowe that they cannot be so straitened by the hostile | will be likely to pay in full and have a goal surplus, their overturned and again established, through a countless | MAde cut in a legal form, and sworn to by some respousl- | WS? Armatrony, : : : : leaguer as to render their resistance at all a ‘one. | New York house having stood through the crisis. pedometer atte ogg meg papain hy Recent De eee t FW. Carpenters. T. G. Benham and protection as Congress may think him entitled to. Ta | Tye tast days of a besieged garrison can scarcely have ar Mestre. Hermann, Sillem & Co., who suspengied on the Lill, through recent’ events andy foreigMinterference, | 4 A, TIE came nto the harbor © short tine “en ars John'L. Saunders, Cecar Bales. the meantime Mr. Maillard’s case may well be broaght | rived when two heavy convoys are safely passed through | 24th ot November, have called a meeting for Tuesday, the ‘22d instant; and Messrs. Gorriesen, Huffel & Co., who sus- pended on the 18th of November, have called ‘a meeting Jor Thureday, the 17th instant. With respect to the affairs of the London and b rocate, | the besieging force. We may add to these ascertained pofore the House of Representatives by an able advocate, | the besieging force. | We may aid to these ascertained Aud cannot fail to create considerable interest, as both | was working beavily in favor of the beseiged and to the houses of the Legislature may possibly think this a proper | prejudice of the besiegers. The desperate character of the thal servile party, represented by tho government of | fon dne of her masts. Supposing that she hadon beard | JobnS. Paine, Martinez, and dwinilled down to a mere faction, is tempo- | Shether lot of Gen, Walkers meu, the captain of the | ‘James Gl rarily eetablished—that is to say, draws men and re- | 2 R.D. Thorburn... sources from about one third of te country. Seeehage sinmnnd Wises ot hie boats, Ste sen oe OAS Be | cian Lockers y [gagnladen target larg andl: Bnd og ggg ey : sport : ‘ : tiny ‘and the conviction of its ultimate and speedy | Fastern Bank, now under a conditional — winding- It would no Foy: Png Rms desirable, ma nam so she was what he had supp her to be. But when his B wall, op wonity of removing the ay in whieh the vitor’ must have ocourred very forcibly to the cane A ap order in the Court of Chancery, @ strong ro 4 Bed these politicians and parties in Ceutral America, and | Sots sot up to the brig, she turned out to be a Sardinian | 5 w_ gqin Geo. L. Seldom righte-and eafety of British subjects who become Ameri. | the great bulk of the mutineers. Delhi had fallen,and | is felt that the official manager should ve somo pone onnag Feeionn, Mould be induced to subside ato a | Yesel. Here was a great wa of valorous intention. | Son ‘p, ‘Ferris bg hy can citizens are at present enveloped. Therearefew sub- | they knew it; indeed, many of them just have been refu- | Person who, up to this time, bas taken no part in winding United happy family Uill the settlement of the country by | 1neKlected to mention in s previous letter that the captain | Site ‘yisury,.. Wm. Reyuol Jecta of greater international importance, or which ro- | Kees {rom the captured city. They Knew, too, that the | up of the proceedings privately or out of court. Any one colonists from the United States should 30 far have pro- | the first aay prep after ng P *Jas. 8. Paliner. das. B, Lewls.. quire more immediate attention. masses of the mutineers in their flight wherever’ hey ad known to bave hone fries of aay icecter wh me con ° ol 1 of practical ser reas ? 2 i Etierpise und vigor ino tons countries bt the Heat | clu ariy nt navn ged hy tat Somme Hig toad bigprymasnenrsderrctrelpad dotenfle reasons {had only found thelt safety ma race or hfe, | \ Tho’ amount of alver shipped for Hambiteg by tho » cl ped oa D4 y fa ut more than delusive. If the native governments could | fi tho river, and pledged them to Seott for. their paseage M. . Woolsey. . inst, at Constantinople, the final act of rectifeation of the | hed escaped bad only 7 “ pat British troops by hundreds and by Russian frontier in Asia. thousands had arrived and were arriving at Calcutta, and The London Times of the Sth instant says:—The last ac- | were on their way to the ground before Lucknow. They counts from the manufacturing districts in the north of | knew, salty, Cant i a aay should over une when, they J 8 decidedly lave ies were to meet the relieving force in the open field they Ireland are decidedly unsatisfactory, and the general dul- | MT" vue hitie mercy torexpect. {rom the troops wh nese of trade is beginning to tell with considerable seve- | had come expressly to exact a dire retribution for the steamer Neptune, to sail tomorrow morning, i about £55,000 only; a further sam may therefore be expeetod to be sent by the packet on Saturday. Mr. Thomas Curtis, of the firm of Curtis & Harvey, hag bean elected a director of the Anglo-Mexican Mint Gom- pany, in place of Mr. J.D. Powles, who has resigned The railway market has been dull and generaily left off stand, the men in power, as all experience, as their own | "the river, and pledged Men i oot d the amount the BP nots and. proclamations’ show, are bent’ on excluding | Wren they were pledged, she, was to take the arms, and | MAST ‘Americans. Where in the bistory of the last twenty years | "hich they. were pledged, sho, wa i en ee arviigge ot | *Wm. W. Low... has any colony of United les citizens been established redemption. Ever since they have remained in the build- by pacific developement in any of the Spanish-Amorican | Trev of the Transit company until. to-day, when the arti. countries? What foothold, what security for life or pro- lery was taken on the Saratoga, whether to .1812 HL. A. F. Young. ‘1812 Chas. V, Morris . y now on 7 "ane vr ~ sl2 Wm. M. Cay ar ee ae an, Guano seinen ained — ae Se eee oe Se a ere oe 6 Ree rity upon the operative clastes. Wholesale houses, it is | jst, The country Dehiud them eas open for | with litle variation. Canadian shares wore slightly flat What bas becomgof all the United States citizens who, | “Ti Pithored that a despatch og 7s ian room, said, have had quite a sinecure of it for several days past, | (l@ht, aud Iked the thunder, cloud was gathering in | avy, notwithstanding Fp Ty pects ae lured by delusive contracts, offers of protection and tren’ | wabash, now at Aspinwall, to come to this port imme- 4 —— and in retail affairs no favorable turn can be reported. Tho , p . thority whieh they have themselves, but it can scarcely yet have had time to consolidate iteelf sufficiently w keep together huge os pared with other similarly guaranteed lines. French 7 shares closed generally about the same, except Sonthern of France, which declined 5a. from the unfavorable nature of the traific returns. American securities were in little demand and show no altera ion. Canada government bonds were in request, in anticipation of the dividend payar bie next month. A report was generally circulated thie afternoon that the Credit Mobilier (Paris) will flnd it necessary to pass the next dividend period without making any distribution, bat it was not traced to any authority, It is betieved that the first fortnight in December is the time for their annoal valuation of assets, and the statement may have arisen from unfavorable anticipati ws to the results that will be exhibited on the prosent occasion AMERICAN *TOCKS, {From the London Times (vity Article), Dec. ties, started with their ploughshares, their engines and . oo their tools? On the other hand, tbe rifles of the Texans | “ately. Thope she may come. Com. Paniding ts aoe converted the wilderness into « flourishing State of the | fivtepure, whose principal object is to gain @ litle Union, aud indirectly brought California and New Mexico po ’ noto- cee relations wih tiie, coauury which have render- | sarp Wak BETWHER COSTA RICA AND NICARAGUA. joorhees ee Lange bent. apedbitonk We have to-day Intelligence conftmatary of thé reporte | Thomas Paine... Jogitimatize their enterprise, according to the strictest let: oe Pages hieneors dete ———_ oF. — on ter of the law; and without thisappreheasion or perversion | (YS. eon ‘gr Fort Castillo and ail the river boats aud Yap tans COMMANDERS. Of gpcte, hie opponents may be challenged to show any | 1.1./"Ccamers.. He is on the lake, in command of the i T. Piatt. 6... 1812, 4. H. Jackson, umber of hands connected with the sewed muslin trade, when that business is brisk at Belfast, is estimated in | issses of men who must, before all things be concerned round numbers to be 2,500; of that aggregate not one-fifth ij man for bis personal safety. It is one thing to is at present in full work. tmwaintain authority ina besieged town, ae at Delhi, and ‘ 4 s, | quite another to enforce obedience in the open field where The following advertisement appeared in one of the St. | {ule Minter Ue eve open On all siles save one We Petersburg papers:—To be sold, portraits of Nena Sahib, | have the further gratification of knowing that the com the Indian chief, the slayer of the English fifteen co- munications were eatirely ipeeteage | Calcutta to Cawn ac! ~ s cullerers pore, and from Cawnpore to within three miles of Luck- enor the proceeds for the relief of the sufferers in | To’ "Along these open roads the British were advancing 0 Crimea, the despatch was transmitted, It is difficult to an- It ie stated now that besides some financial matters, one a a " ‘ a3 of troops: * ly land. 7 if : complote an | ed at Caleutta since the first reinforcements, but, assum object of M. Fould’s visit to Kngland was to complove an | tt tte tee a emenioned in the’ dea ya arrangement on the Chinese question. France will de oken with’ had arrived, we may reekon upon dQdi mand large compensations for injuries done for years past | lions of 3,000 or 4,000 more to the Britieh troops actually " ‘ cate . _ | in hand. ' 11 remains only to add that the telegraph brings to the Catholic missionary establishments, and the restora- | 2 os u nich we most earnestly trust te uniounded—10 tion of all the property once held by the Jesuits and after- | (he effect that General Outram bas been: wounded in ac ence between the circumstances under which Lafay- | Take steamers. | He is on th n : 4 both sides of Fort San Carlos | Henry Bruce.........1813 George Adame te I Kee OO a eth nemo ini: | blockaded, he demanded the surrender of the fort, with | J. Nicholas......0.,. 1815 *lanac 8 Storreti, Vor of the legitimacy of his acts. He was called in by agoy- | tte honors, of war, promising a free passage to the com: | > 4. Long 18 ernment which bad proved, by occupying all the country, | Mander and his aaa any pol ig HCL: Eee reese Ere had the cympathies of the mart, |, Nothing is said about Cauty’s condition, or that his | Wu. Green... Tro Nie repaired the disasters his party had tet win, | steamer had been fired into at Granada. The fact is, Cauty He conquered the whole territory ofthe republic, and was | more besieged than San Carlos | Hil supplies have been | Frank Ellery eu , and so bw ‘ation with Costa Rica, |. M. Watson. elected President by a vote of the majority—that is to ay, | Hiockading the river this side of San Carlos has cut off the oP. A. Neville... J. M. Gillis. Railways. levingPrices. | 23 Alexr. Gibson. aber pin Raimond de Hie detended ‘peony qa supply of beef cattle and everything else from above, so B. W. Hunter. wards seized by the Chinese government. tion with the enemy. Iilinoiw Central 6 per cent, 1875...,760 78 Sic aumane ct four teregn Sates of winly | that Castillo is likely to be starved out. “They were send- George R. Gray pipconcnghedy salad a tase Chaneiato tees De 7 uereest, 1038... Hie riven from it by the unauthorized interference of a | iné from that post down to San Carlos is b Bs ee. pee ) | Passage of the Adriatic to Liverpool—Her Ap- | 0. | do. Free Lan’ driven eae eee oesit | The, nearest point in Costa Rica from which supplies can “Henry Walke London, which in effect will invalidate ail marriages by eosin teens bP ananne 036, 30, house “the Secretary of State, that but for such in- | YE bad is more than sixty miles, over an intolerably bad . British subjects with a deceased wife's sister, not only in (From the London Times, lec. 7.) Mich. Cen. 8 per ceut cou., if Fence President Walker would tet hive iad to aban. | Toad. efore this letler reaches you their supply of plan Britain but in all foreign States The United States mail steamship Adriatic, Capt. West | Do. do., 1869............ Src raracea, is abundantly coufitiaed by the moesage | wine will be out off from below. ee ae ae arrived off Point Lynas at? P. M., on ‘Thursday, after a | DO. do., 1869 (sterling)... Sf the Prosidest of Gneta Rios, from, which I sutjoia at Unless Castilio is well supplied for a siege its force One of the parties implicated in the recent robbery in | PLN Yrten days four hours, from New. Yorks nation eft |. Do. $100 oe ps the President of Costa » from which Tsubjoil a0 1 wil) be compelled to surrender or evacuate. It is my London of a trunk containing jewelry, &c., belonging to | that port at neon on the Zid ult. Had she proceeded to | Mich.S. &N.Ja.(sink.fund)7 p.c. tis irue that he attributes to his own eagacity a resuit | Pvinion the Costa Ricans, will oy eT Lady Fileemere, tad mado a confession. ‘The trunk was | Liveryool direct the passage between the two ports would pO 800 shares... it's. 30 ae eee ae ae ae een. Run ackike | river. It will be almost impossible for them to unite Robert B. Riell....../.1836 | boldly taken from the top of a stage as it was Sapna ceahiy oetbegmene Cf biden an | mg iend), 100. ine and to the seizure of the schooner Gi . ‘This act the | with the force on the river, and then compromise with the Mathew ©. Perry... ..1835 the strocts, cad ite contente, valued at abo! , a in Tebemscn., ak et ‘adminitration has visited with its censure, through tho | 1 anak along the , from the westward, deemed It prudent to lay to ‘turing pe Secretary of the Navy, who blames Capt. Davis for giving | Nicaraguan force at San, Carlos: fer pry a Nh bed v+++++1836 | G99, dieposed of for afew pounds amongst receiv the night, and did uot ket under way tll weaty high wa: | $100 sharee.--......°.-.. Tg 18 up the schooner Granada to the Nicaraguans. | beg refuse to re the flag of truce in their hands. Taking John 8. Taylor stolen “ ter of the next flood tide. ‘e have not received any o! ‘Do. Tenn . et, eapert : F , goods. ; ‘ i sinking fund), do. 1876.../40.a 50 Secane meets oubtie Serves in bows wr, soe ape everything into consideration, General Walker could not Foxh. A. Parker. ‘The London Sunday Times says it is stated to be the in Rarktn’s porter liom slags varvas wee oniak, Do. $00 shares =) 6a 18 18 raoen of s pebie wrong, aad! think sir, jou will agree poseibly are ares apy A ps i < *Fabius Stanle: wr . econ tention of the government to raise sevoral regiments of | ered by all on board to be bighly satisfactory. It is re. | Penneyivania Centi Ist ; With mein considering Gat the people of tha United States | Ce#8 ik concerned. It is mocrats oe Py ge . erga . ‘Africans for service in India, the staff to be composed of | Ported that the supply of coal fell short. We wore told | mortgage, con. 6 percent......|81a 8% would better get rid of that responsibility and more dis. | T9608 are taking but little part in the war against Costa by @ passenger that the highest rate of speed in 24 hours | Do. 2d mort.,6 per cent (stg.).|82a 84 = | creetly further the future interests of the country by re Rica. Jerez is remainining quietly in Leon. ee ro don +e R. M. MeArann,, non commissioned officers of the West India segments Was 590 miles, and that vecasionally she logged 15 knots | THR MONEY QUESTION IN PARLIAMENT—THE DANK pealing certain causes of the neutrality tawe, than by the | PILIBUSTERISM AND THE CLAYTON-BULWER TREATY . oy The marriage of the Princes Royal of England and | per hour. to taking the pasage at ten days eight hours | OF ENGLAND INDEMNITY BILL—THE CHANCKLLOR Mont succersful treaties with Spanish-American govern- AS VIEWED IN FRANCE. Samuel Pearce *Edward C. Grafton, ...1841 | Prince Frederick William of Prussia is set down for the | jones allomanus tule’ be male tor pede a ry ~A OF THE ENGLISH EXCHEQUER ON AMERICAN TRADE. "Your Obedient servant, tected in complicity with General Walker in allgwing hi ey omy =e. The work of launching tho Leviathan was progressing | may not be out of piace to state that the first passage of | Solved itself into ® Committee to consider tbe Bank char. ©. F. HENNINGSEN. to depart. If Walker, the writer, bad the - : slowly but surely, She was moved a few fect forward | the Persia from New York to Liverpool bar occupied 10 | tor act (7th and Sth Victoria, 32 at on eben oF ‘alee DROPPED WITHOUT ray. days seven hours; but this was made in February, 1856. i h ap. 38) ‘The foitobring letter fromeden, Walker's carap, received | krates would have. convicted. him wih contempt He carraien E every day. Operations were suspended on the Sth inst. | the worst season of the year, and on that vecasion abo | The fallowing ls a copy of the billto indemnity the yet be 4 city, discloses a ‘dlagracetul ‘and | leaves, however, under their eyes to steal from Nicara. 1809 Wm. Ramsay. by a dense fog. le détour southward to avoid the jee. verner ant Golgaay le team of wey hy 4 ‘outrageous procedure on the partof the officer commanding | gua ber independence and her nationality, and they shut . The completion of the lines of the Movditerranean Tele. % | certain issues of their notes, and to confirm such issues, the United States sloop of.war Saratoga, which cannot fail | their eyes ¢o that they may not see him. COMMANDERS graph Company had been effected by the successful laying wot that the | 4ndto authorize further isues for atime to be limited:— to excite a feeling of chagrin and indignation in every true La Prewe is of opinion that the government of Whereas, by the actof the session holdem im the 7th ‘bosom: |. &. Chaunce: % Ls Johneon, Jr. Of the cable between Malta and Corfu. Adriatic was outside and @ steam tender was despatched American i" wrongful accused s, |. Lecompte. « Majesty hapter 82,‘ ns freely as we ould Log py ‘conayetes oom by complicty nn the Abusers hovrding to hon Petigra! : ‘Wm. 8. Ogden. Advices from St. Petersburg affirm that the reduction in | for the mails, which _— = atll Ace In the ae aie aa r= ova te tveoaam dloct, ae unworthy the dignity of an American officer as | that Journal the adminietration wo the federal agence Bae teh heey sense the Russian army will include 3,000 officers and 200,000 | fate yrars'in the size of oosan steamers, crowds of people Company of the Bank of England certain privdeges for x OS mrsoramts caved br whaln wo copay ae Support a | is more careful to guarantee the erty of the citizen than | HH. Rod 420 Thos. Brown ; men, This reduction will merely pot the army on the | assembled on the piers and landing stages to witness the | U"gwyitnd are prohiblved trem: kaci hon of eae mary. , Commander Chatard bas exposed himsel ss being | {20 Dore, oan ee a aor wane sovera oR” peace standard of 1852, < ee eee ee ied of onteann toung | Hotes either into the banking department of the Bank of Caer every impediment he can tothe enterprise of en, | which openly cotspires with the future conquerors. I is S Chase Barney... aie nak (he Dicate acta thee teen” W | ripping, that the Adtiatic was soen off the Rock Light: | fe Cxchange for uber Bank OF Begland molec, or for mae *T. H. Stevens the effect that the Divans, modifyng their decision in | house, and, as the weather was fine, @ good opportunity ‘Walker—a dignified and worthy position, truly, for an | 4 imposeible to stop the filibusters in tho South as to ar- coin, oF for gold or silver bullion received oF purchased American naval commander — rest the fugitive slaves nt the North, where every one lerael C. Wait.. favor of the union of the Principalities, had resolved that | was ty reed Se Viveing, Re eeaeeey vent 8 e8? | te the tenn Sopartiners of the eaid bank cnaee the progi- Penta Anny as, Niearaova, Nov. 20, 1857. ee Ferg 4 Ferme Fer ae ie Sones aa on io bner Read they would give up that idea if the Congress of Paris re. | “tetmed against a he ae aan aerate had sions of that Bet, in exchange for securities acquired Dai Sin—You may recollect the circumstances which n article i lorning Jost, says the Parin Rpectat , 7 ex, | aud taken in the said issue department under the provi. m of December 4, showed us yesterday that the treaty entered fused to grant a foreign Prince. ‘note per hour, and yet, 0 keen and fine are her I pone hy siceitnal Wo tan goon of Lovareiges pd Bo ay | fato between the United fiater ant Meneagen bas onesed = MASTS IN LINK OF PROMOTION. The Turkish government is said to have interdictod the tna na order 'w oousell Loved enter the yoeviones on ‘bere. By we bagi Taf es belonging to Nicaragua, J ages deal of dimatifaction tn Ragland, and particularly, Joie cicannrer.-.-.. 1890 Peter Wagers Jr.......1840 | pabtication of the proceedings of the Divans of the Princ! ‘nea. Druisers,” the pet | of te amount of securities to be acquired and taken in the pad ok LI Win tome omyingas, on voard Goat ¥ ingen that J is. The proviso by which the United | Jobn Madigon jr 1840 David Ocheltreo : palives models of the old school of naval architecture, in their la- | Som ur £14468 Ou and eet ae, NOt to exceed the ‘and they are how trailed on us, States promise to Weg repabt ic of Nicaragua the active ser. | *G. A. Stephens... 1840 “A. Mclaughlin. ,. The Paris Moniteur announces that the Cammission of | borsome progress at sea. On approaching the sloynetthe | iuh day of November last the First Lord of the Treasury The conduct of Commander Chatard is so much the more | Vice of American fordes in cage of attack, has been viewed Fiseen seSHIPMRY the four Powers signed, on the 6th inst., at Constantinople, | Adriatic displayed the Eagiish ensign, and saluted the | ang the Chancellor of the Exchequer infurmed the Govern- Cunard steamers Canada and Persia, a compliment which the final act of the rectification of the Russian frontier in | was promptly returned by these fine vessels, each of A which had the United States ensign at the fore - rs ‘ Viewed from the piers the Adriatic appeared to us leas In the Liverpool cotton market the sales of the last three graceful on the water than the Persia, and «il ‘but little 6 were 9.000 bales, of which speculations took 2,000. rom the other steamers belonging to Collins line, hav Prices were easier but not quotably lower, The market | ing the same upright stem and neatly rounded stern. She closed with little inquiry. bas two light masta, with topsail yards on the fore m ind two lofty funnels, placed fore and aft, slightl; The Bank of France bad reduced the rate of discount | raked. . ’ — m he has no instructions in London as a violation of the famous Clayton-Bulwer | *J. A. March 1841 Wm. P. Mercer... eae a ures tin inthe hostility he manifesta | treaty. We have often said that that Lreaty” has *J. 8 Thornton 1841 Chas. Gira towards us. He knows he dare not fire on us, and his at. | #ince cet to exist for the Cabinet at Washington, and | Fd. A. Selden 1841 Geo. & K tempt to intimidate us is not only lndicrous but cowardly, | We have scen the result of every attempt to bring it 1841 Joe. A. Seawell ¥ ther than this, he has attompted to involve the Fashion | life again. Now negotiations are to be opened, and it i 1841 James Bruce...... in diffculties=-threatening to have her fined for not carry. | for that object that Sir William Gore Ouseley is sent to | Falmund Shepherd... .1841 ing her name on her stern, well knowing at the same time | Washington, although that city is not the direct aim of | Those names which have no sign prefixed to them have that the vessel is here without money, and therefore in | hit mission; but we can assure our readers in advance | been ieft as they were pl by the action of the Retiri the condition of a ship in distress. He bag placed himself | thatthe North Americans will never abandon anything | Roard. Of the whole two hundred and seventeen acted in the attitude of a United States naval officer seeking to | that = help them to be at some future day raasters upon by that seeret tribunal one bundred and nine officers or and Deputy Governor of the Bank of England that her Majesty's government had observed ome pon comers the serious consequences which had ensued from the re- ce ilure of certain joint st banks in Ragland and Scotland, as well as of certain large mercantile irms chiefly connected with the American trade; that the discredit and distrust which bad resulted from these events, and the withdrawal of a iarge amount of the paper cir. culation authorized by the existing Bank acts, appeared to Her Majesty’* government to render Alfred T. Byrom jure American ship owners. the road between the two oceans, which for them is the | have been before the Courts, and three more are yet to | OM per cent The Adriatic was constructed in New York by the tate | jt necessary for them to intorm the Bank of mire following note hag just been handed to Genera | Toad to California. | Kngland is now less than ever ready | come. Those who lmve been placed on the active list will ‘The steamship Arabia, from New York, arrived out at | Mr. George Steers, who also built the United States screw | England that if they should be wuable in the present emer. Walker, under the seal of the English Consulate, written, | ' make them recede. take the same position which they had in the line of se- | 7.15 p. M. on the 6th, and the City of Washington at sso | {rigute Niagara. and was Isanched on the ith of April set the demands for discounts and advances as you’ perceive, by Commander Chatard, of the Sa niority before they were retired, while thoes who were ton ee , 7 1856. Her extraordinary delay in that port was cau ed securities without exceeding the limite of Fatigee! Court Calendar—Bnts day, moved further up on the list by ‘the removal of their eo | A. M. on the Sth MFrequent alterations in her machinery. According to ton prescribed by the act of 1844, the govern- pe American meastirement she is of 5,900 tone capacity ; . . sae Svprewe Cocet—Circuit.—Nos, 2431, 2105, 2876, 2982, . n r ottion 1. & Sicor-cy-wan Banasona, Or Guavtows } sito Sr, ion, sf, 23, 2 ue, ert lore must retrograde one step for every such officer who F 3, 288, BHT, 820, , 880, 1877, 122, 2080, 2714, 2388, 206,’ 287, 1621, B81", 369, 1644) 924° al Intelligence 08, 2431, 2868, 2105, 1410, 366, CO The United States steam igus loorriinec Strneme Covkt—Special Term.—Nos, 143,56, 43,70, 199, | tirehecek, whic 108, 148, 149, 200, 2A, M10, B11, 144, 236, af 106, 7, 17,18, 42, 47, 67, 68, 74 to $7, 81), 82, Bo, 8d, 86 r ment would b Foss to propose to Parliament upon ite ing Bill of Indemnity for any excess so weued sand that, in order to prevent that temporary relaxation of the law being extended beyond the actual necessities of the cecarion, her Majesty's govertinent were of opinion that the bank terms of discount shon!d not be reduced below their then present rate; and whereas the Governor and Company of the Bank of Kogland have eince the said 12th y*of November, 1867, issued Rank of Ragland notes im exchange for securities acquired and taken in the said issue department beyond the amount limited vy law, and ey France. but if measured in accordance with the English standard on Of one per cent in the rate of discount | we presume this calculation would be censiderably fe. nce had taken place. The rates now | duced. The length of the Adriatic over all is 864 2-3 feet, stand at ix, seven and eight per cent for bills having re- | while that of the Persia is 590 feet. The breadth of beam spectively oot more than 30, 60 an! 90 days to ran. It is | of the former ix 50 feet, being five feet more than that of asserted that France intends strictly to avoid any | the latter. The depth of bold of the Adrintic is 33 16 erence in the Holstein dispute, which she ie willing | feet, and that of the Persia feet. The tonnage of the to consider as merely federal and confined to Germany, if | latter is given at 3,600 tons, with side lever engines of two the Germans themselves treat it in that way cylinders of 100 inches diameter each, and 10 feet stroke The «wearing in of the new members of the Legisiative | of piston. The machinery of the Adriatic con: Nov. 80, 1857 SiR—I have been informed through Mr. Groen, H. B M.'s Consul, that you meditate seizing the Englisi mat! from Costa Rica, with letters of the American, English and otver nations. ' Bosides, there may be money. Now, J warn you not to touch it, and toallow it to come rafely to hand here, If you do not, 1 will proceed Againat You without hesitation in the manner | sent you ‘word the other day—that Ye, with shot and shell. ina Another red of the Bank of Fr tomminder sailed from Boston October 17, for Rio Janeiro and the Pacific station, has been heard from Octo ber 30, by a letter from the second engineer. The oppor: 26, 185, 146, 162. 156, 180, 182, 989, 197, 210, 227 tunity wae by means of a Britich bark short of ert DA4, 247, B06, 88, 45, 46, 127, 160, 61, 198, 246, sions, which Was spoken by the frigate, and received from Surenion Count, (opens at 11 o'clock A. M.)—Railroad | her asnypply. The latitude and longitude where she was fow days the Ame 3 the English command ere will bo korer tea aft your hy ated command’ | Calcndar. 6, BBB, 04. 1008, 1OZi 1098, 1140, 1190, 747, | spoken is not particularly specified, tut it js understood | Body having been completed, the Chambers were pro.’ of the largest oscillating engines that have it ie expedient that the acts of t Governor and more particularly noticed, "Tours respocttully, 1214, 1277, 1278, 1281, 1286, 1287, 1202, iver, 1299 to have been not fur from the Western Islands. The rogrued until the 18th of January structed, whieh were manufactured at the New Company in relacion to the matters aforesaid FRED, CHATARD, Commander. 1003, 1604, 1906, 1907, 1810, 1911, 1812, 1941, 184 second gunner of the frigate had been killed on the 25th he imperial exequatur had been granted to Mr. Spenoer | velty Works. They have two cylinders, exch 100 inches and that the restriction on the ame The sloop-of war Saratoga protects Seott in his posses. eed ie’ im iy ihe sae anim’ tare? in consequence of the hook of the block of the main tack | as United States Consol at Parie in diameter, with 12 Geet stroke of piston, and are of the | securities ‘to be acquired and taken m the enid a a a Oy a a7 . a Ie having parted There was some talk of bringing forward Mr. Papret, | technical horse power of 1,500 each, but they are sion af the property on the Hoint, although he holds it der orders from Gen htune 1420, 1424, 1428, 1490, 1496, 1441, 1442, 1446, 1456, 1404, Lr litor of the suspended paper, /*resse, as one of the | sidered in reality equal to 2,800 horse power. The re enacted by the Q " " = ten. Walker himself. M478 : Brooklyn City News candidates to represent latte fa the Corpe Legisatif. | meter of the paddle wheels of the adriatic aad the P by and wih the advice & ohetal NICARAGUA MOVEMENT IN MOBILE. ‘oMMON Putas—Part 1.—Nos. 1800, 1810, 1911, W112, 860, Stores Goons is CoLeMMiA Steeer.—It was private A despateh from Paris of the Sth inst, states that the | is the same—namely, 40 feet. The Adriatic is ems and temporal, and commot rsent Parhament ‘ [From the same paper. | 1220, 1489, 1658, 1 45014, 1085, | watchman Wallace, not officers Oats and Byrne, who ar. | position of the Rank of France continued to improve. | ably luryer than the other American steamers, beia Assemble! anc by the authority o lowe smn A notice sor columns this morning informs the public 37, 1519, 1520, 17 ios. | rested the alleged thieves in Columbia street, on Saturday | luring the Inst three daye the reserve had reached th tons more than the screw frigate Niagara, 00 tous 1. All such isswes of Ran as may owes iil be a meeting this cvening of the friends of | 1184, 172h, 170534, 1796, 1827, 1896, 1898, 1849, 1701, 3860, | evening Inst. The poPce often get the eredit properly due | amount of 280 millions of france, The funds closed at OGL, | than the Vanderbilt, and 2.000 tons more than the Atlan | have been made by the said Governor and ¢ mpany, or Walker's Nicaragua movement, The cause is one which ' 1854, 1867, 1862, 1864, 1894. other people for money and 66.15 for account. tig, She is altogether a «plendid spedimen of nayal archi: by their crder or diregtion, sineg the 12th day of Neveu Oe