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s NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1858. ADDITIONAL OM EUROPE bind detail the scientific fruits gathered on these oota-| plexed about the far greater project of the Nicara- pig Ney BB tt has been very SPECIAL NOTICE: pele i a ase into tbe a lasa apd preserv Bearing the ile “Hoeats of the Beleaue Murion of | © Ourtenders Will remember the point at which | Andon the’ placa” where thst echitctural marvel Gree8 mazoax, | see SI eo . Be i ar aTros. , bi A per we wast 5.] liberty. MM. Schlagintweit in India and Central Asia,” to be | our doubts had arrived when we tly called on ic eur bee eaennied toe an which the Giiiczansoith tn nares wi te on frase S Coleg, ‘The infellizence that Ning-po has fallen into the | must inform you that edited, we in German and English. That | any member of Parliament who would attend toa | inhabitants of Antwerp ed with the most | Reclhe socicn tan he friends and the oubilc, whee Oo ra hands of the Chinese insurgents is calculated to | bas given in ‘its adherenoe to that great the application of the magnetic needle, great eoonomical need to obtain information from pious care, now stands Rothing but a mass of ruins. Una street. in'this city awaken the expectation that we shall now learn | #4 asked permission to organize commi of ‘the barometer and of the atmospheric as well as the government, in the one house or the other, as to cupola, that masterpiece of baldness that the | _S#¥ Youx, august 2, 1ese, somethin, more vontalnly of this formidable move- | View to its accomplishment. the subterranean thermometer, over 60 lange 8 teak the French company, re) ted by M. b § caused to be raised at such great expense, ‘ASONIO—MYSTIO Tif LODGE, NO. 972 WIuL meant thes has been possible hitherto. Ning-po be- gE of land, and in altitudes so different, will not be | Belly, or either of the two At companies, which {was the admiration of every stranger, M‘S The lodge roam coracr of Groote end Oronby of the five free for foreign trade ( Journey of Exploration without important results upon the knowledge of the | were actually empowered by the Nicaraguan govern- | lies buried in ashes; some arches have ‘esis! roots thle (Fueeday) ovoutog, “a night orto. hr Ofte er eren of considerable liter as well . el hoagie And Schlagint- general physical laws of globe, may readily be | ment to male the ship canal; and how much was | effects of the fire, but the flames which are consum- | “ou,uizs A. Kewrian, BT. D, HOLMES, W. M. commercial repute) many Enrvpean mer | wor? ition of the Saree tan, for the weed conceived. We will content ourscives by remark true about the convention by which the route was ing them, and the large flsures which appear in ee Te I a chants, and a Toentde pumberof American and | Welt to In » Rhibet one ination nad teher | 28 that the observations of the Schlagintweita go | placed inder the protection ofthe European Powers , announce their fall. GUYERAL PARTIAS ARE OFFERING A COUNTER. English missionaries, these we shall probably | Cf, Observation on of the globe, m1 far to confirm the theory of a close connection be- | —England, and Sardinia, If we had learned | At the moment at which we write these lines the | }> , ett of Me Thava no pedlers or any one ¢ sackhe Qcamidiind eiaibea vditaeatiationht ce physicial characteristics of the globe, as well a8 on | tween the lines around’ the globe, indicating equal | this, we shonld know what weight to attach to the | arches which touch the offices of the Union Commer- | Wherever | dod ths artile povstetfel Token ict eat uses sectts the cimerent views ther may Ue disbaeed to | ie oclogy of Boat d Central Asia, hag so far | magnetic intensity—the isomagnetic lines—with | declaration of the American President, in June, that | ciale are falling with a dreadful erash. Ono of the | sures to prevent the usle of the Ane Terctes chem, daavtles there ei i, | bees brought to a happy iague hat taro of those that indicate equal temperatare, especially | he was determined to eee the work done, and that it fron columns which supported the cupola | Be HOBBS, 36 Maldon lane. waeeh: vabioaiad’ tadosaumattir Revwrareial te tide be | thers, Herrmann and Be tee safe and subterranean isothermic lines. The | should be done by the party who should convince | is still ‘ ‘possiblity of its Sa a tryin the ehupe of facts, from Which we may | Wo tte! Tear of incessant travel” The "hind | Schlagintwalt enpived for this purpose « o-| kim of its superior right. Parliament has risen; the | ens with houses in the Rue Pee ica. . amd ‘whic juestion ni 5 an are - He ee ee Tne tern, | brother, Aeciphos, wes Inown in.1056 t have made! deacasied a \wo metres, uoarly six feet and | leftdependent on such casual communications as | ‘Thebelfry of one of the turretshas fallen; the ve- | Brace aatcriny oresiog int s Newfoundivas, ee ee aden of a een en, | his way towards ¥arkand, in Turkestan, and, unfor” | a half English, into tle soll, Some lees me} . cond turret is in . Feiehing 185 pousie mos tt Toe ring ‘wa buck merly Hungatn-teven, the leader of the rel ion, tunately, every trace of him was lost for s | Set very’ interesting, eaperiments are those they ty — Hilti Sothing: in age a nger MSL erg int wad etteren Yoov'entoneyeing the province of Menges ced that, | Crater tee Dental tee both nc eae the trar sparency of the a nt and those which arrive from the United | ‘The flames have devoured it, with all its artistic |) osrceurrosep 70 HAVE BEEN CARRIED 0 THE me thbnce ‘a robber ohie? andi sting with hed zeached the $a} sha foang Sarel in different altitudes, and of the water of t , We can pretty well follow out one scene of | riches, with all the archives of the Tribunal of Com- row 9 tin bec, emerging thbnce as and meeting with ler had lost his life in a war, carried on has Tone oceans.’ It was discovered, by means of two black | the drama of competition. New Orleansisina fever of | merce, of the Chamber of Commerce, and of the filiameon aeons of Chins. afectin _ pers 7 nee | oe of Yarkand against the Chinese, former whe | cizcles of different sizes, on ‘a white , that, at | exultation at the success of the Louisiana authorities | Synodical Chamber of the Sui a maaiuse te iat 3 peetaxt-ferpiusdes on 0 tare etal Ties bee | eee aes teen ee a beight of 17,00 feet (in the Himalaya range), the | in obtaining s treaty from Mexico which insures, | _ The beautiful fresco paintings, at which Mesee. ened none Protestant missi i e transparency an | we are the speedy com; n Tehuan- uffens werta labored for three are roiaved that they neala t missionaries | able to announce that the Delhi Gazette of the 2d of | Shyect, distant 5,000 feet, e een x cearly'as if'uo | tepec railway, in. spite of the op brought by | it is needless to aay, entirely destro eg pe 9, BROOCH, CONTATHING BLACK have he hey cou trace a germ Oat Mr, | Une; contains the following notice, which gives hope | air whatever was between it and the eye. The | the great capitalists of New York, who point to the | The following are all the details which we conld 1 ph a a tianity — riage Tecieeres i a fs ytbowen that he may etill he alive:— transparency of the water they attempted to | existing political condition of Mexico. The droop- | collect of the manner in which this fearful conflagra- rewarded by leaving it with D. L. ‘almost pvdde: that b: een incttven ‘of | _.News has been received of Mr. rer ie crores why determine by means ot a white ioe dropped into | ing fortunes of New Orleans are to be revived by | tion took place :— h o Ke ertotians ry Awe fe ot ogi rs gli said te have the winter (evidently this last winter) | it, and fastened toaline. In the Mediterranean, enterprise, which will is | through tat city The fire was discovered at a quarter to eleven ONDAY, AUGUST 15, A Teall me deabe lenra withht © dio tine: tht we ark ormedeggralperiat 7» Mca yi) marches on thissid? | near Corfu, such a stone will not disappear until | the whole traffic to California and the North Pacific. | o’clock in one of the granaries at the side of the Courte | poodle slut, anewering to tbe name of Know fecta reliable courees enough of the commence, | ernment 4, wide awake, pep by ay enter atl it has reached a depth of fifty feet, while in the | The New Yorkers laugh at this, and say that, aup- | des Claires, and it extended with such ra idity that | Jenny. black eres and nose, having bees sipped. aod the nent of ie odes Ay ‘regard the present movement | deputed to that part of the world by competent authority, | tropics it disappears at thirty feet,and in the Ganges | posing the road made, some divisions of passengers | in less than balf an hour the entire locality was en- | armed reddieh by siaknons. PEI anromern br jo ine o eery differen’ vee as eonal outbreaks of Chinese | 8nd that he is ¢uly protected. If this be not the case, the hy Indus, in which rivers mty of matter is| made go that way, but that the commercial traffic | veloped in flames. About half: twelve the glass | If purchased the money will be re. rebellion id ‘h ght with very different results. | Dew# of his safety should be regarded with great csutlon, | always held in nsion, it disappears even at 80 | will always be engrossed by the water route. But | roof fell in with a frightfal ci and the strongest The genet an shen facts are as foliows:—About | 824 the persons who have brought the news should be | small a depth as six inches. the New Yorkers are themselves divided as to every — of iron were broken into a thousand bits, a8 AUGUST 10,16 A aIxtH vome yearsago Hungesiu-tsnen was a promising | Very Clovely queatiened. ‘The news has come rom eh, | | ‘Tho travellers have found time—besides devoting | point but that on which all Americans aro agreed— | if they had been glass Ay, ADGUOE 19, I & SIX eH a piles aeadent tenia ‘a school in lapasive (Ladak,) capital of Little Thibet, vie Zshiker; and the | themselves to the objects proper of their voyage—to | that Americans are to make the Central American | —_The civil authoritiesf and every person engaged in ba all amount of allver soda oe —_ the province of Ewen chane,” he excite | eS re ee. pe on grant fast Shoceme per bestow attention on ethnological subjects. They | route, and to possess it, The Central American peo- | :uperintending or in laboring to subdue the flames ‘Tee Qader will reseive ce ae sentide an cuatiinatina Wor = fon Prat have conveyed leters Soblaginnw brought home, :for instance, a very valuable collec- | ple have sufficient apprehension of this to see the | ¢xerted themselves to the utmost. yo Me! 6 ‘at Canvon, ned the bitter disappointm sot ats orien . tien of plaster caste of Indian ‘and Thibetan faces, of | necessity of a close atease between the States of Shi threw him inte'e ft of illess phi This latter supposition is most probably unfounded: | which galvanoplastic fac similes, beautifully execu- | the Isthmus, while to disbelieve that the ‘The Steamship Bremen. AVENUE OARS, A gd into mental derangement jast a8 kis fiends | Joe ee nae eee erlin 6 that fare | te2> bare heen taken xt Berlin, atid are tobe offered | Americans have gained thelr point with the Pres. | (Troms Bremer Lever (anguat) the Now York Staal | syytdcd by rtruing W'S) hulivowaseee aN J nt ol X never believe %, Se I witched lai arian’ Gis ai weeks C42 ee | cree eee ae to view. in the collection at the Hast nds House, | Martines bes accorded 1 any party in the United | | The news ofthe arrival of the Bremen at ont port | [O14 NOTE, NO. It FOR $88 18, DRAWH BE x. 4d himself employed in exterminating evil spirite | beria and Khokand. | The consuls, letier- the | Other ohjects of ethnological and historical interest | States such privileges as eeveral boast of; but it is | yesterday morning, at eight o'clock, after an as- oh 4 Bro, order, Serie, ated il 6, atsix month All persons: are to be made accessible to the study of the general | as well to arm and prepare, because Walker and | touishingly rapid run of but twelve days and five | Qdyousuing te me parment kariog public, by means of photography. te bith. | his pirate crew will be down on the Isthmus in case | hours, has no Boubt ‘ere this reached you by tele- Bu FRANK & BHUTHER. 47 Doy street. erto been done for the purpose at Berlin is, however, | of any disappointment to his countrymen. Such } graph. ‘This surpassing result of the first Me fo of of so very inferior workmanship, that it is desirable | was the state epee opinion in Greytown a month | the first steamer of the North German Lloyd caused Lo, ,G0OED WATCH, AND CHAIR OWAIN (68 the Mesers. Schlagintweit d entrust the taskto | ago; jnst at the time when the scene we have referred | the greatest excitement in our city, andthe manage- | J2.a9" "with Sngiee, merken taste tee eee ere and ran about his room fighting, singing and exhort: | tele, hed from Marseilles to Baron A. Hum- ing by tarns, till, exhausted with his efforts, he lay bold. Pat. Berlin, did not. find the two down to sleep only to rise and go through the same | prothers there, as they had just gone to London; exercise again. With the return of health he be- | and so Baron Humboldt, in paternal anxiet came gradually changed both in character und ap- | about the fate of every scientific traveller, too! pearance, acquiring # large stature. great bodily | upon himself to open the letter, and he has sent it rh, a firm pace and piercing gaze. He re-| to London, accompanied by the following charac- , and for several years continued, his labors | teristic aod pees we bave translated m the asa teacher, but to his more intimate friends be- | original before us, and in which the tremulous char- ye the visions of his illness, of which he | acters betray the highly advanced age which the spoken freely on his first recovery, had made | veteran of the science of nature has now reached. a deep ee ee Ws Baron Humboldt writes— some other an inge 4 is 1A 8 this letter, addressed to Dr. Robert, which has the year 1843 he and his cousin Li were | jug‘been brought tome. As I am in want of cousola- ° |, With angles, mai’ ony to becoming the wonder of the day in New York. | ment of the Lloyd has been lite overwhelmed by | mM: ” B iphem, ““PFenee Tendon or Paris PHO\| Tp the midaleot une, ""thefamous Wabeer, Vander. | congratslatins, Asitis,the remen has achieved | Hat sew Yorke wn © DUE bilt’s agent,” landed at New York, aci something extrao1 3, She places herscif, al Ebgiish Picture of Mexican Affairs—A Pro- | by a WWiceraguan gentleman of large landed ¢- | first outset, alongside of the proudest champions of | Traut SSorteatonsie’ scutising ender Bis ie Cine tecturate Recumme:ded. ty. Webster waited on Commodore Vanderbilt with the ocean—the most celebrated of which, the Borus- | anda litt echenge. The finder by leaving it at 193 South t., nine the Lonoon Times (City Article), August 5} certain documents— precisely those which weall want | sia and City of Washington, she even excels. The | wil ce suitably rewarded. ‘he accounts brought by the last royal mail steam- | to know about. There waa rst, we are told, a deed | first named steamer, which left New York two days C&T—IN FULTON ATRERT, BROOKLYN. LAST WEEK er show that the West at this moment rivals the | of Concession, dated 8, 1858, which conveys to | in advance of our ship, had not reached Cuxhaven $87 in S's and one $2; also, a note drawn ia tavor of K" East in the horrors of anarchy and rapine, and that | Vanderbilt and his assoc! ea ‘the exclusive right of | when the Bremen was already at anchor in our port. : Brant & Beets $17 68 ABY person siting any informs. there is scarcely an outrage recorded in Central lo-| conveying passengers across the Isthmus of Nicar- | The mail for Hamburg, bronght by the Bremen, | oon tia rained louse adcrdce mtb Penisae, Bi. led to examine some books in the Chinese lan | ton, and well may claim the honor of considered | dia which may not find its parallel on the borders of reached that city in anticipation of the arrival ot the were written by one of Dr. Miine’s couverts, and | quarrel wih me for bavicg ‘opened !:. To Munich, | ex. cril heightened by the fact that the struggle, in-| of that, nor of a ship canal, nor of anything bat this | i# true, but her actual running time, as the Borsen TiRd Mtoe Cusstes dog. Ase eceon setaratag bis to Ho, , Will De suitably rewarded and receive the eve ees eo be united by every bond | py that route. The other document is called the Act | difference of two days eight hours in favor of the thnake ot the owner, izes of your worthy mother. A. HUMBOLDT, stead of being oue of opposite races and religions, is | simple conveyance of passengers across the Isthmus | halle reports, was fourteen days thirteen hours—a were revised by Dr. Morrison himself before being | Pe among a people who printed at Malacca. They contain a good many be = July 20, 1888. of patriotism. A letter insertea on Tuesday states In tion. It constitutes the Bremen. The City of Washington, which sailed entire chapters of the Bible, esays from single texté a ae 7 sve, | that from one end to the other Mexico is in a condi- | Okeuel eempangr, Grantees 8 per- | im New York in-company of the Bremen, arrived | | 08T—YS6TERDAY, 7 INFANT. IN BLEROK. and sundry Scriptural miscellanea. In these vo Should Mr. Adolphus Schlagintweit be still alive, | tion that would. contrast ‘unfavorably even. with oe omens a) ewe RRs a Be Rnd rom, i which ~ ted pti two days woven Les Veimees! Thompecn, and Rrosdway: at shout at Lit x Oude, and some additional particulars received from | from taxation, while placing them on the footing of | nearer than Bremen—only twelve hours in advance | fiacer sil be Uberaly rewarded by returaing tha axme to another source fully confirm the picture thus drawn. pipclengs paige oes parileaes. and, ‘atthe | of the arrival of the Bremen; Perens, ns Silp.| 8. ON men Cr EL ces hclediremenn In the city of Mexico there is a party who call them- | game time, giving them full powersover theirownor- | of that champion of screw propellers sailing under OST—A SMALL BLACK AND TAN TERRIES DOG, lumes Siu believed be found the key to the | and his return take place, the gain to our know- visions he had had six years before, and he | ledge of the interior of Asia will be very great, as came to the conclusion thit he was divinely ap- | the track of his latest journey crossed regions which pointed to destroy the idolatry of hisnative country, | never as yet the foot of a Kuropean—his two broth- | Jcives the government, simpl mee thay hold the ie tin “ 2 > TAN ke Earn, 1 he eri of te Ea Gol | oe a ticdlpcant, ewer | GB, Septored hy tke eccsasio, they | Rent‘ ther oem aces Commanders Wester | ture The pews tha ha iemen hd walled fom | 2, Sern ste, teh" Weddey, sad be ms ing. of the 71 ; i Seemed. Ses treacherously over. ; | New York, which was telegraphed to this city from ived fi . this warfare, which is said to be going on all alon . voy whee nauce till the terms were on his side. His | came to ati vi the vessel t Cyt nee 2 0 Tae eae secindy und tetarued, bat rang more felt | the frontier, where the Mahomedans and the Chinese | COUR for a longer period than usual; but they | gon inlaw was seized with a desire to. visit Southern | sailing of which it was to advise. Feat Shy hy ok have never obtained even for a day the slightest ge from New Y same The steamships New York and Hudson left yes- , and f Knickerbosker stages t: neral authority. At all the seaports, with one ex- eee Webster anon phe eo terday, the ener Greenock, the latter Newcastle: ea ind treet ‘They were highiy prized ee betng tha ception, their power is defied, and as the customs | for New Orleans. They or gerool heavy boxes | on-Tyne, and are shortly expected to arrive here. | memsn'e of eat pet ee bowrh tl hn! ea them, iy! yer with them, now known to contain one hundred thou- Fd trial trip of the Kew Lore whlch took place on : —— itrary ‘operty of such native President 8 , during wi made an average el and foreign merchants as may be within their reach. ae arte pee fonthe Presié a or encase or hie A note 1 pares (BY MISUAKK IT 18 PRESUMED)—FROM ON under bis infinence and received baptism at his | meet. hands. Several years he epent, sometimes teachiny | _ There is, certainly, a strange simultaneonsness school in Spore are wen itineratingasa ven. | in the attacks to which the Chinese empire is jast der of ink and pencits in the province of Kwang-si, | now exposed from all sides. With the English where several thousands received his doctrine and | and French in Canton and in the Galf of Pet- hour, resulted most satisfacto- board the Highland Light sieemer, trom Loa formed themselves into congregations uumberiny | cheli, now even preparing to attack the capital; | fot the misery is not limited toa contest between i FToubt. but the vessel will be able | iaetaiaat @arurcy, sip net, on eretrng at tne foot of from itp to 300 individual," However Tar this doc | with the Rursians,noraching from the, nord, | che nominal goverment and an ‘ondary prty ot | Mit aried peat pfamer the Granada, Ye mac | toa for New York onber appoated day, the Lith | Shi"graseaek sare ene ftw, teas trine might be from pure Christianity it embraced revolutionists. There are at least half a dozen chiefs | the son-in-law and Webster at Havana, aud convey | August. The Hudson will mi her trial trip im- | dress for a gentleman, And the ascae for a idle elit m pale of ints of renouncing idolatry and keeping | west; with the more than ever doubtfal in the field, each with his special p od I 4 be ana t te ol 7 . Special programme. them to San Juan. On landing there they were to | mediately after her arrival in the Weser, and take | opers glasses sn¢ some ps Dortane ginases fact, every professional brigand is now at the head | proceed inone of the amall steamers up theriver and | hier piace in the line on the 11th September, Ac: | e mek raiuee gen ih he oapers con bn of a9 wba s ‘of an anny of his own, ening, a legal position as | geroes the lake to Granada, and thence by mules to | cor to last advices from Jarrow, Weser, the | Wailack’s theatre and the articles remaining in the representative of the people, and levying for the ser | Managua, and there make ‘the exchange of last of the four gigantic vessels of the line, was ra- | dollars zeward will be paid, and no ques tous asked. a ie ve we yice of his “government” all sorts of contributions. | with the government, and take possession the main the Ten mandments, violation of which was | of the Mongo! princes and the Thibet 3 severely punished. These new disciples were pre | and with a powerful insurrection in the centre sently favored with those marvels which usaally at- | of the empire itself, China, like a sick cov- tend the commencement of great religious move | ered with arrows and harrassed by dogs, excites ad- 5 E A idly ay completion, so that the whole ments; they had visions, ecstatic raptures and mira | miratiom by the very fact that she still stands up- | 1) Sonora, the richest province as regards latent Reet will bein active service by the of cles of Bealing.- Taking shove things in connection | TAG iueste lide has boon known of the extensive | mining wealth, « General Peaaveira hs setupan iu- | Phot called the reat Gomeecas® | ber next. ‘The bert wisbes of al Germany, which i a with the con a agiry So pF tah bi ane oe pare ne berthed os w) dep nad poe a4 In Chibi no “temp cere * on obtaining which they id pay over the specie, | most af has grime by these vessels, accompany Dreyer", SrmDay MORNING, THE ET, INsr., i mo i ' > 0 one ig collec d at once set men to work on the line, before em- | them wherever they go. eon! haa Isend, acer Oo Sacre ~4 tally and morally, it is not surprising that the con | by the brothers Schlagintweit, under Baron Hum- | harass the neighboring State of Durango, which | }2 nio Valdis, a young man eighteen of Bapel tee Unde pers increased marvel- | boldt’s patronage, in 1854, and as some time will | pa. prononnced for the eentral anthoriiies’ “Eecste- barking in their special steamer at Greytown on Cuba, seme five feet eight " i i 2 ere! is their story; and our corres- PERSONAL. sender frome $25 reward ly; that when a tial disease broke | necessarily elapse before the whole of the collections | cas and Jalisco are overrun in turn by the govern: Coat ee, Soe. reporta of their having newer | the body by PRBANT BKO! = . pd i RE ow ti ere ated toe will give oacieh Ag ment forces and those of Vidaurri, who enjoys the Boe ls not thie Soper rete they intend dis- Toren onthe elds Addrtee RP Harel othe, tas sus | @R RBWARD.—LOST, AUGUST, 90, A SHALL Waitx mii esc et ent | secret: | ay eMac fig, | fee neice a Stine | Maa ein =" | G5 MATAR LAR thowe ‘who were defeated sought refuge with | of the more striking points to which they have di | Fespectively choot theit prisoners’ as rebela, The | $acewegie em of Possemion into next Fear, and | y ware eHOULD MER TIE tray wil receive tbe above reward, 8 NOT Brwsd on to giveap or Fomaast oxe ‘way will receive the above same is the case in Tamaulipas, where the govern: | where is the canal? and what “is the line?” | ren, is Germanh os th Sekamunicaon tomate ct | Qi REWARD —LO#T, ON SATURD, cd = ie a only port, and general pad by Brn Poe what itis that the Nicara- Tio greatest importance to him. $5 inst. Tromn Pitty third etree to Fi are ee Sa ERO Se. cuerclacs commana) geen Sarena oot ee ah Rory OS TION WANTED—OF WI tang frombts to 821 iy revwriag tke same to every other part. te of Sinaloa w gene- | Sy hecie:” but it is hardly probable that Commodore | [SE QR¥ATION W4 ATETNEON: | Second sirens belween Wace ral Yanez, by siding with neither party, seems thus | Vanderbilt serious! expects the world to uiesce | on evening 4 be far to have preserved comparative quiet. In Micho- | in hia « line,”” and leave him alone in his 8. | "itive of Begland, about forey youre of REWARD AN? GAUTION.—LOSt OB STOLEN, acan an organized rabble of 4,000 men carry on | M Belly, mean time, bas been worried almost out | att Wastes yas has $5 BAEAPD, SEO wet ace ne Kena tt” nha | mne n e r& | Ss ater eee hg above ™ fo came at No. 109 Twelfth Detwetn #ftu and ‘avo- not seem satisfied that Commodore stands sn- | Pete! coat and black, been exposed to devastation, but is for the | preme between the two Ba ieocn go kn ehepetowig we jeseau, Now York.” | nuea, and wo questions ‘AU peteous are cautioned oceans. it nobody at New York or at W: gton seems able to tell as agvipst receiving said check, as the baaks have had notice of the God-worshippers. But presently not only dis | rected their attention. treaced winged bands of pace dames by During the first cool season (1864 to 1855 ) they the imperial soldiers, sought this alliance, gladly | ex! , on different roads, the country situated be- submitting to their discipline for the sake of na! | tween Bombay and Madras, and then went by sea to safety. In this fact Sin saw an indication of the de- | Calcutta. . 2 sign of Heaven to raise a valiant band for the delive In the summer of 1865, Hermann Schlagintweit rance of China from idolatry aud the Manchoo dy | visited the oriental part of the Himalayas, Sikkim, nasty. He did not hesitate to receive them; and | Bhoutan, and afterwards the Kossia mountains. this, ashe had foreseen, led to a collision with the | He availed himself cepectally of every opportunity mandarin soldiers. Siu was blockaded in a spot sur | to measure the height of the most elevated peaks rounded by high mountains, and baving only a nar. | of the range, which, as is well known, constitate row pass kept by soldiers. A number of his follow- | the highest elevations on the globe. Thus he pement in the bands of the government— overcame the soldiers, and delivered | bad occasion to measare, under an angle of more ies gk se penne... “ ae 3 M. Belly’s views on any subject. When such topics Ptose i WANTED—BY JOUN SULLIVAN OF | its loss. = julia Sulliven Masandrew, born in tbe pariah | | —— their chief. Thus was the Rabicon passed. Such | than four degrees and a half, the exact height of the ‘1 A as an isthmus, a canal,a treaty, &c., were introduced 1 were the autecnacsta of the, now Febel chi as | peak which Col Wangh had fore pointed out with robbers, Who: lie in wait for cargoes of pons, | St New York, M- Belly’s English ‘became s0 rey fre tee $5 ports 852 tives, 5 obab! hest, and Zolonel, un- The , y ‘ broke most experienced reporters peat been capiateds reacapbd oisin, ‘and. find: vequainted with the native name, which was not | RI ag Mohini 7} a tary ot not ventured to supply us with > ee. The wales ing it imposaible to rejoin his companions fied to | known by the people in the plains from which he | dofeq' the reactionary t fi Cog hw more he was questioned, the worse be- Hong Kong. There is no reason to doubt the | saw it, gave the name of Mount Everest. The | ig latterly even the rural lation of the district | °A™@es mw ified ne ae Sg mp a veracity of bis statement as received by | Nepaulese name is Gaourichanke—the Thibetan reputed as the least dishovest in the country, have exhausted extremely 1d . Hamburg, especially as he bad no means | name, Tchingopamari. The peak reaches the as- | 4 Jo msel bands view ao a r ponte of x}. wy reso "even of first colli — ot tgiich inet lo to mage ave mnie | ne og: penene bashed a png re: Peeks et a we are sion with the imperial forces. subsequent 9 = " ; ‘The little territory of Tlaxcala sends forth gangs ‘there ‘a’ English becat career of Sin is more generally known than the de —~ ee sitavent ibhesd | of robbers, 100 fa vamber, to stop the merchant = > ont oe and = ~ — follow tat tails of Mr. ease a bey vipa nn narrative; how Fw dolp! A H .—— ret oo ' ni | tains, and on the other side the old and remorseless | {here is any harm in M. Belly; for it must be remem- = - be was afterwards joined Ly many members of those pa sem ane “insoel “aus Gan General Alvarez, who overthrew Santa Anna, and | jered that the reporters, who tell us all we know of BTURNED —WEDEREDAY, FIVTH AVENUE, BE political. societies which had been. organizing for | part of malayas,, Komaon and Gurwabl: | who, as Governor of the State of Guerrero, is | him wore on the wateh apuinat each orher, heat RES ahd asdilasecripaemmnaMndt, 28 ty; how + ly of fare — fell inte the Proper visited the great commercial station of Gar ead aa ae dete’ a x tte ‘ inform OUR TL Hands of the insurgents, they unanimously declared | tok, where Enclish merchandise is already, #6 near | twoely" Gianiah resdeate ike Merwe heats | tions. and it may be easily belloved that some expe- Mireur We ber at once Ad ul aa be orton Tt him emperor of a new dynasty under the name of | the frontier of India, rivalled by Russian and Ger. | ot any moment to advance upon’ the capi- ag TEy Tai ping Wang, or “King of Great Peace:” how he | mun articles, coming by way of Rusia; they ex- | ta) and again dictate his own form of rule. It pessoal hia Victorious course tll Naukin was taken | amined, geologically the environs of Lake Mansu- | was ing great degree from the proceedings of this in 1853; and how he has since pushed his conquests | taour, and that remarkable mountain saddle which, | chief 4 year or two back that the reclamations of tO, WHILS OTF in various directions till almost every city has more | nearly in the centre of the enormous longitudinal | gosin for satisfaction had their origin. And while {A: GENTLEMEN ote Ot Renetnent ated nie oestly | Witch Thibet convate teparaten the. srareen of the | We ite poplation are thus tearing each other 10 | fore the Vanderilt “ine” i realy begun.‘ Doce Mi seen, Tool | Beet with the Old Testament records than the New, he | whic , sepa pieces, and ceaselessly resorting to every act of | Belly act, and splutter in his xpeech, on behalf a tanpalteh ot euecge seems to have regarded himself as another | Indus from those of the Vikong, wrongly called the | murder, violation and rapine, the Indians roam of a company of his own—Freach, British and Joshua, divinely commissioned to exterminate idola- | Brahamputor. - try by slaying its adherents as well as by destroy ing A little to the east of this place they sncceeded on — snd cattle, “Eiliy fhe fen nS eae American? Or has he @ higher commission from ita appurtenances. But there is no reason to doubt his | reaching, in the ascent of the Tbi-Gamine, a height ing away women and children at thelr ph carry | Paris, and support to expect “from Cherbourg,” as original or even his present sincerity. He may now, | Of 22.260 feet, the highest point that ever was | indeed, the land may now almost be considered to Snow ut the “yarlece tape ams yng? on 4 y ea’ Contlemas, re, Teepedt maker, 14/ Grand street, TAK RAAN, Preaitent. “ if he chooses, obtain more perfect instruction in the | reached by man, at least, in the ascent of mountain | },,v¢ relapsed to the sway of these de. who, lees 7 whether he will be as docile now as he would have | . Liuripg the cool sewn of | 1805-56. fecmaun | population, show a power of cobesion which entities | foraive or ten years to boner While tenn ee Bernta, ors equivairn’ in portage FRU | nnn anno pen nive or ten years ago. Doubtless it would be « ng Givaf the Techanapiee, and Gab ‘sevtt them to be their masters. Even this fact, however, ing these questions, and urging th t Lord Malinox- ey vere otree awe ot P NOTHER REGATTA AT STATEN ISLANO—AY diificuit to induce him, at this stage of his career, to | Ganga and of | Pe ee, ee eoraces | does not complete the chaos. ‘The forces of nature | Bory Should ti aoked dhnct fe Baa ~y yay ee eS of ale Bead: ‘he two chamcion bosia, Dan Rrvant and Prank (. lay down his carnal weaponeand embrace the pacific | situated to a nen ' oe ute eat work on the same side, and the country has a benned be aske Heng t 4 pean oS Foure plotage, Amilie Vullove, New York Post oes. cod have entered ard will be on band on Monday, ‘ira inet . doctrines of Christinnity. We cannot, with some. | to Simla. Adolphus Schiagintweit had returned to been visited by one of the’ severest earthquakes yy A eb oT wh tnigmimuuess petmeral movement. it may be | the Presidency of Madras, descending the Godavery canal is to be kept open to all the world, this is the eee OMAR C BURR, Proprietor, Neutiios Mell { regard this av an e cedfor many years. that the Imperial toeps have regained much ground | from its source to ita mouth. He then went on by latest information we can obtain from Washi : At Guadalajara, while one part of the town was in i ’ that Taiping had overrun; but probably they have | way of Pondichery and Trichinopoly to the extreme ~ y It ig from the Washington department of the New AMELLED FURNITORK—A FINE Ad doctrine in the minds of the people. We do not | into the Neilgherries, and by way of Calcutta came | the same time visited with a shock which for mo. | THe exeeutive government ts engaged in this hosted Broadway. ranging in prices from $25 > HERO OF THE BATTLE OF LEXINGTOR—A edict that this fanatic will overthrow the Manctoo | back to Simla. Robert Schiagintweit had spent | nent car form in preparsticos for settling in our own way all mat- Goode carefully packed to go 01! of tne cv" besutiful steel engraving. just pul ished —will de semt to “ By part of the country cn we 04 tae price, & ages . ‘Ratlonal y Of Arte, oon aes i all parties to suspend their work of pil- | gore penoing Petween os and Nicaragua. As no treaties chery. The extinction of Mexican na- om to meat with that state or, if made, swoald be weptess ynasty and oft on the throne of China; bat doubt- | the 9 — os a aa I jens he has shaken that throne, which other circum. | mined, amongst . the heigh ¢ platean of | ay oe ‘ - oe stances may fill with a better man. We would be | Amarcantak, which he foand very different from he oy denn ee the tare ao oy | (eed tl eos Suan, end Ueeph pusll motonres os ear Sour far from exalting him as the apostle of China, but | what it hitherto was to be. Instead of | montis or days during which the Satarnalia must | Cesssry to reitatate our citizens Ia the enjoyment of tie and FURNITURE —FIRST PAE “Le im all colors apd wivies, at from #25 to 8960 per suil, Every article he xs K 0. WOODRRID he may prove to have been the pioneer whose rough | §,000 feet, English, as believed, it hardly anywhere | 16 allowed to prc before ‘olor | commusication betecen the tao oceans, across the [ele fo. 6 Sullivan Se F, PALMIPY. rou doings opened the way for the entrance of Christi. | Teaches a height of 3,00 feet. ‘The three brothers | Pvt. ‘enn be ripened that shall allow or. there hua, | mus of Niearagun. In the. propriety of Unis ‘proceediog, |) ——emmmmmenen oe anemeneeten novia a i waar ro = anity. then we separately during a space of four | put under restraint by the strong and willing hand | % Wel! es te the reasons for its adoption, the government ngs enennen, guirs oF pyanryne, re | vise Shoe hee i ie wrore haaardone campater they had cketehed wet fe | of their (neighbors. Spain, who has done her best | ° “res! Briain concurs eerene Mabhia wana Triana ere ee eee ee oie ope Sm ng ae cary iy bac by fomenting clerical intrigues against Comonfort, Has Lord, eer declared this concurrence at four om New York. Awd NIBHING eee MOR The St. Peterst ite contains two ukases, | Adolphns now set out ina northwesterly direction. | *@haeten the conenmmation, is, doubtless, looking | Washington, Will Lord Malmesbury declare ithere? GRAINRD AND SOLID CaESTNUT | aan born witha gilt wo tl be pak present und farses stones one relating to the peasants beloning to the apan: | He traverred the Himala of Thiet, the Bai. | With impotent rage at ita appronch. But even the | This it Bobo Mate Wile a ey toate te Deen aes Jan's warervoma, Soe Cana pes, | soe bet Lute, ay ge ep | asigued to the princes of the reigning feuily, | tistan, and made a close examination of that inte. | “thport of France wil be of noavail in retarding it, | comer. There should be no mystery about it. The Woomer, hanut'ctory, Non. ai aad as" Woswier | Jowell ten wih & mr atatow the masegement of which 1s confided is Resin tors | testing spot. where the Hindookoo joins the great | 22 Regnard ee corcesnly go reason to book on with SiS Bp ae ue nee Fon the ikenees of pour invendre hustred.” tbe has fast Fe ‘ inde nie a any feeling of commisseration. No one can defend odees turned from ohn fo, : hase and sell landed pro- | valley, Robert and Herrmann, 20 succossfaily dis. | citised commeree, and if the nations af the world wvene 7 | doer Win persis very tl applied trsose” ‘appis's | setuammuna "ven oome Sad Greed. Gestiemen per on Their own eccount, while hitherto they | puised that bot even s seeplcnn was excited: went oi oe Rae > Proper remedies, the | The lance Belge of the evening of 4th inst. 2G, OUARK, 600 Bromdny, |) SO ’ 4 STROLOGY.-NADAME 7 we only been able to buy and sell in the name | fy different roads to Ladak, and. thus made bold to | (2#4,f a + Of course, be performed | contains. the following fetter from Antwerp, dated FALR-ONE SUIT OF ROSEWOOD PARLO ‘bout ove. guarrisge and absent frientn, se tells Al tng and through the agency of the administration of enter Turkestan Proper, crosting the mountain | °Y tow whoare nearest. It would be grievous that | Monday morning, 2:30 A. M. Marsieate, te brocalel, Wik, all of ine cnocean oe | evestsof life, b1i80 Mulberry surest peor area, ‘Ladipe 36 apanages. These peasants can, moreover, hence @ community ally free should be converted into | ~ At the moment I write an immense disaster is oc- | cles forhoustkeeping. Inquire st 77 Thompann street Crnta, Rentlomen M) centa Khe oan procure aperdy marriages ranges of Karakorum and Kuen-luen, and descend- | | save State, which would be the first result of Ame in our tity. “The Bourse of Ant ‘oan fe ‘ivil pr uutions without th ¥ i ‘ forth carry on civil prosec without the ing at last into the great valley of Yarkand. This rien anneration, and & may therefore be hoped that Which oo many § jh tance of the procureur of the apanages, wi | s an immense furrow, so to + 8,000 to 4,000 interference will for the future be. at the will of the | fect deep, inthe tableland of Central Asia. It | 1% place af that menus the establishment of @ pro. | tached, and w its late improvement —ita fairy KET (BASEMENT), ’ plaintiff. Lastly, the peasants have A ower of | separates the Kuen Laen range from the Sajan Chan, | gnnexation to take place, it ponder Les pom like cata: become the eee of al Choice breeda of dogs. both for sale and stock. | Dinesace cused #iihout medicine, by eleairickty Seber texan Mevethe late of ardent and | ancy Seana gang the south ot ihe | Hr the compeorating "amarance that, owing to | Soe Smuldertag sehen Toe gla rok (cll Wits Muir abe won Geog Sasa | feag Brome re tow Coe purgeeses in consequence of the sappreasion of the | Baro Rape te Sy Mar Polo, whose 7 | its ultimate hearing on the fate’ of Cuba, frightfal crash, and the enormons pieces of the ——— dues hitherto paid to t tthe aropeans, not even by 0 oto, Minors course | here would be an end to ail anxiety on the ques frame work broke like glass on. falli th LA GOOD WAT ADAME METER HAS REMOVED F. 5 Paes > paid to the administration of the apan- | was farther north. They had here to stndy the form. | ion of the speedy extinction of the slave trade Se ellie ens to the | MOG ukuike BUMMuR, S00" Cherry cireen a tae bee A282 at beaona leoet between Pureinnd Sonond are: ages, which amounted to from 600 to 1,500 roubles, | ation, age and direction of mountain chains, of one 4 Every part of the building, in fact, is des | 7. 526 Cherry sireot, ih the base | ines phe continues 19 tell future evenia but which are now replaced py a payment of from whieh hitherto nothing but the names were known. - and it was with = difficulty that the by fifteen to forty roubles to the fond for discharged | They then returned to Ladak, and reached the Pun. | ‘The Atianste and Parifie Transit Routes. houses could be preserved. The civil Terre ateress in Rnglisn, French ant German, aud gives warraniee ber art. soldiers belonging to the claas of peasants. Imperial rescripts have been sent to the nobles of | rketched out their journeys for 1867. The letter from Ro agg which we printed on the governments of Orenbarg and Kalouga, grant Hermann Schlaginiweit had now received per- | Tuesday, and the remarks of our own o it jaub by different roads, where they again met and (From the London News, August 6.) stack, did their ty but A.A sy | done as to the Bourse, which will be burnt to the Bar RD r iD Tweiren hb THR CELEBRATED ROSIN! ' ing them permission to form emancipation commit- | mission to visit Nepaul, after negotiations which had | at Toronto, in the same paper, corroborate all that Rogues of . The fire appears to have bes ph provinces — .) | lasted aot lens than two pools os he succeeded | we have et about te linmlate necessity of in see room on tee side of the Courte LANGARD & MAOCHL Am F wer ukase the Emperor suppresses t! in measuring, among other ks, the Gaourichan | learning w! rutl about the Central Ameri- » le was e, at least, tha gomimnlttee of military conw in ‘and transfers ite | Kn, as well asthe Matchipoutehs and Yas, for | can routes to the Pacific. Americans inthis coun. flames were first seen; and in half, aa a a ee Hooem 13 | MNS MUN, ay "rs SRCNWRA TAD RIO. 0 the civil on ere ; onsen bs ; fe. ‘There is henceforth to be | merly vaguely designated by the general nameo | try, orsomeof them, speak and write of all the enveloped Freakin: pentane cna wits’ Sees eke ee hae id rane from Le ao mater revit ; was & person appointed by the Minister of War, to whom | Dbav: (snow ), and considered the high | four routes as practicable, needed, and therefore con! the Chamber of Commerce, = oo the civil censors will communicate the manuscripts | est mountain in the but now miserabl, sure to prosper. They certainly lie wide apart, and ibunal and the Record Office, the syndical of military works. A report will be ‘made on the | throped.. Robert's ‘way followed les beaten tracks, | ran be ‘conceived auitable reapectivel, to different of the stockbrokers, tl 4 merits of ‘each, and the final decision on them will | He from the Panjanb into Scinde, and | objects, and to travellers passing in diferent direc- | chamber of the Antwerp brokers, and the i — come from the Minister of Public Instruction. | then went by way of Kutch and Guzerat to Bombay. | tions. This view seems to be confirmed hy the | bureaux. Nothing, absolntely nothing, is saved, razed, siny that of her viewer. Tf you wiew opposite Bleecker air ae: Weenie, gentiomen st. “3 Nor —MRS. FRLRURY 265 BROOME b$PRREr tree information on ali events of life by the [Translated for tbe New Yors Brnar from thest Peters. | Among the objects of his study was the well known | eagerness of Americans on both sides of the Atlantic | All the archives of these various bodies are lost.* * * Darg correspondence of the Nori, July 80.) "| Balt Tan 7) the ‘ange which baye taken fohave & wuderdesd tah Amerieen en ital and | I have just returned from the scene of the disaster A vikase communicated to the marshals of the no- plaice in the flow of the rivers of the Panjaul since | enterprise are largely invested in each. is eager. | and in spite of the united efforts of a crowd of bility of the St, Petersburg government decrees the | the time of Alexander the Great. He then went to | nessnaturally becomes more manifest as the + | workmen and the engines, the fire coptiones. The manumission of the peasants of the appanages. This | Ceylon, to the examination of which he bestowed | opens of a route to the Columbia Gree the Hud: which surmounted the the interior ukase, which aves a very great importance, will | three weeks. Adolphus intweit returned to | son's ay territories, and of another through Min- have caught fire, and part of the turret to all probability be speedily published. In thie con- | the north, went first to Caboul, once more went — and we ae ‘all hope to profit by the excite- | on the side of the Place de Meir has fallen. nection an extraordinary phepomenon is to be re-| imto the Himalayas, and was to return at the end of nt, in the way of learning what really is A marked. At the very moment when the peasants | last year to Burope. But it seems that the charm of | the three northerly routes, while that of Panama is ioe Oe of this calamitous fire:— are about to be manumitted, those of them who pos. | Central Asia’s still anrevealed mysteries, of which ying a net dividend of fourteen per cent, after] A 2 ‘ 3 3 z z i sone a lil money are most in purchasing | his brothers had jost lifted the veil, wed too | laying by nearly as much for ‘irs, But while we our ition with Ariel . A fire, their ‘rec. This is explained by*the fear of the | strong for At went on instead of returning, pb to be rally in the way'cf learning the true | which broke ont mbes reeialcy of lightning, haa, regulations to which the villages will be subject after | perhaps never to come back. condition and prospects @f the Honduras and Tehu- | in a few minutes, completely destroyed one of the emancipation, or rather of the solidarity which will | A daily newspaper is hardly the place in which to ! antepec railways, we become more and mone per- | most beautiful monuments of Belgium, and one of ew Toad, Avg. 10.