The New York Herald Newspaper, December 9, 1859, Page 5

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i ‘The monarehical sentiment which now ani- 200 or 300 yoars after mates the Kalian po) bas ite rise in their reve. worn, even in Italy, peeenee ce areas eee Siete ava roe inspired profound conviction august dy- lébrated for the perfec paren ded bardy would become the of ter. recurrence to the rible recrimination, of which advant would be taken and many of the opie lcd wi uae memerehiee pa ee ad : of revue, the decaon ofthe Sagres wou ret walgomniaerncane Wane ae erper peed cubed 1 mpi gods by tho ad macnaes thst pestis agity depen provoked by the treaties of fodge that my soa! is too proud 4 stoop to falsehood. much rate they can be made by the old sé without their consent, ‘Congres of 1 would more culpable; for, while the treaties of 1815 disposed of non. the 1850 would of since Villatranca, forthe eold purpose not of di tion of the raw produce of cotton and of slik to dispose the internal government of the country, which they ad- | manufacturing machines of this we Le Lise nab peigatoe’ Aig emrec) aperean tekicn emnaladeiey emake tle reapectablity | enabled to supply them with colon and site macriernare in the eyes of Europe, but merely in the of beh ata cheaper rate they can make them. _, The cultiva- ‘ing an equal energy imparted to the external relations of } tion of cotton in . ig a subject, Sir John Bowring the roment; for ] am sure that the restoration willbe | observed, that deserves earnest consi(eration. There tried, and our task is to prevent it, ses ay foreign or at forced and help. Great nambers of volun! then onwards through the country, and finally saw them safe across the Canadian border. Emboldencd by the reaults of exposing to ap nye tS pepe great advania, = of had enabled the ex 08 4 national ion better than his! eve pasa the celeb 04 of this t, he conceived the desi ing but without fear, all that wo bare p endensanedsso 2 an 4 me, signor, | manofa:’arers wo sur cated teen = beater tg vo iy same in of ate A aoe rardy which Gil our éflurts ond anwexativa, | ¥OUr® obMged, GIUSEPPE MARINI, ' | 1» scapves and quality, and we have now possession of Overt acimure of, a, pont'at Harper's. Ferry was. the THE MACHINATIONS AGAINST GENERAL GARIBALDI. }/ty , (900 Zanrite ane Sf Johm hoped that "in the course | commencement of the plan. re Ferry ta sita- on the northern frontier Virginia, ‘and con- bequently on the very contines of the slave and free States of the Union. If the scheme had succeeded, we must imagine that the slave popnlation of the South—millions io number—were to be pushed through Pennsylvania and New York, and takn across the St. Lawrence into British territory. On project s0 inconceivably chimerical and ‘wild we need waste no words. It js not with this part of the detence that we are concerned. notable features ‘Turin (Nov. 20) correspandence of London Times.] ' | of a fe a) aheechet ett what siskes one is that Garibaldi was not asked t | ose wag that they were pier ready to purchase the ie | Dest article at the cheapest price, country whence the goods might come; and, it the British iriotigm to doubt for moment that he would have ° di bh aod to, icing himself in the interests o Eien gd sak produce his for Med ihaetane bis country. He has a kind of attachment to | Bese ; be ht without the King of Sardiniay which has mado him do and bear ca pee eter, ny weal Miho teault of ho to Pioctmont, ‘The first act of the new government was to present to his Seuante ee aeemaniennctinens poaniiene0e to to assume the direct jon of power. 1 ak iy a aged that iasued fro ia it ypro.lere Subservien- | we. re is nota shade of doubt that, for ig. at the present day utterly, votes Tope the degtinies of these provinces, And the word of eee =, on “roathery dulge in follow- i i : 83 eee ; i ef, § < m9 bef ite df rh i i it iF i av i 4 4 ze Se € < H Let Mr. O'Brien «4 ince the national orime’ now committing in China, let him announce that retribution will follow on that crime,” and ‘‘tremendous cheering,” that “even now the fate ‘and hangs upon the caprice of a ip individual.” po 3 4 43 concerns Austria ‘ , creatures ag or the pa- fe | the King—who has hevor broken his promises—ought to | many ‘whieh "he'woukt ‘wot ‘Rive ‘done otherwise} ‘ht him that the Chinese are@ people who | of the case are to be found lose lan of opel H 5 ack aad ending of bus her heed to her ~. reo taal the ur wee thaw The t py tems experience taug! Fs x the ay wien the ped bt poe | tence to ligten to him, eee cieen foam and the | a loyal vy Le tah these Sg 3 istified in open court. * * Markets. SeEcans onatied to relinquish Piacenza, Ferrara, Ce- | the temporal government of ‘he Pope and firmly desire We repeat that, in our opinion, there is an appearance ‘THE LONDON MONEY MARKET. ' Tasachio, inch of available to the south: | be annexed to Piedinont. Ty of sincerity, if Ct this singular 4 from the Liverpool Times (City Article), Nov. 26.] Austria. has found on that river and on the Min- The note addressed to the Powers defends and iltus- who govern to take place with Em ai Jn its character, indeed, it ly resembles the inarket for British securities hag been ‘“ termini ot ber future power in } tratesiall the votes ¢: by you. Contra} Italy think so, and evenie will show whetber } might be recouciled. We trusted, at least, that a botter | ‘addrenses which fanatics, whether religious or political, | the ane sensitive, but there has been no activity. » To the ‘Mineio and to south of the Po the they are right ar wrong. They thought to" bave found | inowledge of the Chinese, and of’ the importance of im- | have ever been wont to make. Anal ri; | Yesterday (24th) the official business report. was as fol- eUPRTe teeter eins on oe dread u exopreni de |) OUR or commer Foals wit bam, woud have | wn: Cevenatere, end Ph Monarby, Me, Rave | nwt pe cent come tor any. bhlA ndence, to er » » fect i a feelings, . 0. for account Dec.) 9824, 34; three per conte re- without.an answer our adversaries. jive revolution the upperhand; the second, to pro, ities —if ities there must | uffder King Louis Phili; ad a similar style of | duced 94%, 4 “by 6, he AE Jar er wae Cee ees besore ie oviiinne ofthe facta; they | duce, by means of a revolution, aa intervention. I} | te means of Bringing hostil vs ‘ other my) ‘ J ie Dor oes, 9436, 95, argument, and wherever, indeed, a single doctrine is as- be Aare Pag reomumne (0 mepdacity. To ali the accusations e iment has opposed the contradictory proofs and ry Impartial bites wil, Fosietne ie Ss ever more ca Fries than tho clerical party has in 18 % a tr John Bowring, again rose to return thats, and in @ ver: manner, cansed by a revolutien, would’ have been the fire step to. | Soing 60 ee hie refusing td ws a thane ‘The painfal impression which Garibaldi’s resignabor eerily fo po prion: | has produced all aver the country makes mo {oar that the {S812 wag imade by © man who had immdlatod ‘moro vio. | to follow, Brown had but one i E : : sumed to rative above, boron |, and apart from all other ection whatever, * consequences will be idea—that of abolishing slavery; and, having persuaded himself that the-eud was good, he gave himself little trouble about meansor oppertunities. We shall be thought to have cent loon bas afr 9%, 94%; new 04%, 06; bak stodk 283, 8 The Todian ger it 10424 to 1 ah Fs fe al 40° tani deoted ie, (O'b0e, Seomsiana pie re steady. To- (25th, ly. To-day (25h) calculations based on Garfbaldi’s removal may torn out } ‘ims'than any human being who ever existed; and if ho | strained this argument to the utmost if we suppose that | prices are unaltered. Console for money closed at 963, French bends he tol of to Ponta! Siie has Boe fetta te poplar slment inayat tp : ‘se Uanapa e cores pupa ft Souther Sas | (S30° took nea Sits tae iti camnemu gale “ ol rr 5 1 5 > 41K 5 24 - ide my ses Siti | ran ee aa ee a | en hte gece res | near erences | SS ees laa Case | eyo vitor be we the territorial integrity of the e union of the four States of Centralltaly, It has not | derstand all the political complications which induced the |) in game circumstances, would not havo done the’ same. | tonal on this sesumpdon as on any other. ‘It would have ——For money————, —— For accounts, # the continuance of his temporal power, but, | hesitated to deciare that partial self-government must at | government to remove him; but, knowing the differencer He eat down amid a tumult of applause, savored still more of madness to project a forcible gab- Nov. Lowest. Hi Closing. Lowest. Hi when, by driving Austria oat of the provinces, | ence cease if the governments wish our countries to await | which existed between she War Department at Turin ané f . version. of American institutions, apd to an! that | Set.” 19° 95% 6%. 96 i 6 she very ¢] }otimated that she would share ‘pro: calmly and resignedly the meeting of a Congress. the General, they may easily see in this policy the result NAPOLEON'S OBJECTS IN THE WAR WITH CHINA. the score of conspirators who broke out at per’s | Mon. 21 96 96% (96% 9816 4, 96: tetiraie wriidoue of the other extuolio Poser ‘And | _ This fact is now going to be accomplished, and. we con- mBy, } (From the Paris Constitutionnel, Nov. 22 } Ferry could really overpower the govermment of the | Tues. 22 96% 96% 964 961, ae 96: the ig vot only to re-assert his rule over bis sul gratulate ourselves that your vote has sanctioned the line neral Garibaldi had quitted Nice for Genoa. Bef ‘The mission in which the French fleet and army are United States. There is insanity in the thing either way, | Wed. 28 96% 96% 96 96: 96, by tlie exclusive aid of France, but he is even to of conduct pursued by us. his departure he addressed: the inhabitants of Nice, about to take bn ip heey Fin be eee & a Soe and the insanity of fanaticism offersa more credible hypo. | Thur. 24 96% «96%, (083, oot 96: 96. and “reform” that rule according to the French views of | At home our government had specially three duti+s to | said:— and civilizing character. versaries of the expedi- | ‘tosis than the insanity of ambition or crime. Fri. 25 96% 96% 6% 96% 96 6 Tsball resume my command when necessary. Let us | tion urgently remind us that our commerce with those be united ‘under Victor Emanvel; let us continne uniey | distant regions is imited to a small number pf ships and arms so long as an inch of Italian soi! remains eppressed, | 0 ineignificant anoual tommage. They seem to feel a degree of pleasure in constantly paradiog be- HE EST OF CMSSBAL ITALY. fice tone eyes, in all its bm reality, the > General Fauti, the commander-ia-chicf, has issued ® | jamentable fact that the French empire, with pew wider of the day. After sp2aking of the difficulties | 1, 400 kilometres of coast, does less business with which have been overcome in the space of three months, | cning than the little republic of Chile; and that absence of he eays:—To-day we bave numerous phalanxes of infun- | any vepy important interests in those countries was the try, 0. cavalry and of artillery. Arsenals are being | main reason which they alleged to dissuade us from send- erected, ammunitions, ambulances and transports are be- |. ing thithof our vessols, sailore and goldiers. The French ing organised; fortifications are being erected at Miran- rnment has thought differently, and we congratulate dole and Rimini, and Bologna, surrounded with gung, fs the line of policy which it has adopted. If our mer- ‘will Decome at no distant period a centre which will give cantile navy stands below that of Chile, as to the extent us safety and A prpwection in any eventuality, Of its relations with the Celeatial Empire, we think ita mis- observe—to maintain order, assimilate our laws to those of Piedment, and prepare the elementa of a vigorous defence. Order has not deen disturbed; the good sense and pru- dence of our population bave triumphed over the inces- Sant provocations of a party which, if 1 bas not dared to combat cpenly against its adversaries, bas endeavored wo strike them by covert means and insidiously. Neverthe- Jess, the line of conduct pursued by ushas been mode- rate, for the moderation of this movement forms its main atrength, its glory, and compels our enemies to descend ‘wo false! for their weapons. While respecting and bonoring the priest in the discharge of his sublime mis- sion, we have not permitted the pulpit to be transformed {nto the orator’s tribune or words of anger to proceed from Cousidering the extreme sensitiveness of the Americans on the topic of slavery, it must needs be acknowledged that these extraordinary proceedings have been distin- guished by remarkable moderation on the part of the peo- ple, Brown himself, while urraigning the justice of his nt, BO the interference of France in the man- pr letheg ap Nulige it m intrinsic aud extrinsic causes—both for matters of internal and external policy. Whether ‘the Emperor leon contemplates bringing back the barkrupt es and Grand Dukes of Parma, Modena, and Tuscany (and which of them), of ~ 'ghe upon these States better his or Prin never bis trial, but to the genera] character of the treatment he had received. = bd » bd ‘We can only look at the whole case as a fresh example of the ers involved im the establishment of alavery— dangers which in the instance of the United States are more serious and complicated than in any other instance on record. A slave population is a perilous element im any country, ‘but it is more perilous than ever when a large portion of ‘interest, time alone, will show; but, whether the ‘come back or not, the certain fact ts that they wilé % as Austrian Archdukes. shall reappear their subjects as mere creatures of Count Watewzki, ts. before the French throne, tools im the: autocrat’s hands. Were Austria at any time to xvail herself of ber tes of kindred and rights of reversion, ‘The general advises patience and constancy. With | ¢, which cannot too soon be remedied. It isnot by | the free a are sym} with the alaves. The mm vam aempte to her ascondency th these her | & Spot whence only words of peace should issue. perseverance, be says, we shall triumph over the enemy, | fortune whicl Y | disputes which convulse the Union periodically, from regia - re 5 withdrawing our flag that our commerce can acquire the 2 former ‘lependencies, Napoleon could, without aelrig nif Gri noe Se ati euniee exe nine’ to | Nelo does not feel stroug at home, who reads bis ruin in Genk which we would fain see fe atain. We hang | North to South, are not contests between slaveholders and hank foot, defeat purposes ing ibe ecg gh og Ls ray slaves, but between é6laveholders and abolitionista, and this affair at Harper’s Ferry was conceived and executed ‘not by an ambitious negro, but a white fanatic. What can be the termination ef such a state of things is hard w conceive, for both parties are resolute, and upon a balance of numbars and organization together are not ill- onr attitude, amd who will be compelied either 0 1g00- | mado treaties in its interest which wo cannot permit even mipiously ldy down bis arms before public reprobation, the Chinese to violate with impunity. — or come despairingly to batt e with the certainty of defeat. 7 ry o xf * DERBY PLEDGES HIMSELF AGAINST COERCION ‘We see courageous men, and even humble women, with ba a 3avCn OF THE ARCHDUKES—A UNION wiTs | & devotedness which is of itself an eloquent demonstre- ‘been iuduced to adopt against all those who endeavor Secretly to prepare in our countries the only intervention to be fearea by us—that of anarchy. Notwithstanding the deeds of violence, the arbitrary acts, the acts of vengeance perpetrated by the Pontifical of seainst her {Piedmont and Italian nationality, as he w uses the terror of Austria to para ~ of Sardinia and of the mational party: strongest man has in this instance, clearly been the most cunning. Piedmont and Austria were for many ears, iN pretence, madly eager, yet afraid, to come to the | government when the Austrian arms had, in 1849, re-es. ARDINIA THE ONLY HOPE Of FREEDOM. tion of our moral superiority, eager to intredvoe matched. Political considerations, too, are entwi Secciah, Tapieta bartled tharmie techie They both | tablighed its authority over these provinces, we have only | © {From the London Herald, Nov. 22] Oe amoetcee tiation tale the Dnlnese eee | themselves more and more closely with the mere soci erolgaddest on the 61d, and the fox walks away with the | bad recourse 10 moderation, oblivion, jnstice. If the people of Central Italy bave been iighiing for Sar- | Which erates at tee question until its solution appears more remote than ever. prey. While the government did not hesitate to acknowledge | ginia they have been equally fighting for. their own free. Ar an not fo Sn Wie GREET oho tah eaterianh Oaly eo OoittOn ear ES . As master of Central Italy, the Emperor Napoleon might the part of the Pontifical debt assigned to us for the past, to the advantage of the religious corporations aud pious establishments, we have pre! a law that secures to the officials dismissed in 1849 for political acts, a just ¢»m- peneation for the sufferings they have endured, At home the administrations have been regularly car- ried on, The municipalities and the Nationa) Guard have. been organized. ‘The laws affecting our shipping and po- lice have been refprmed, the supplies of the ports for the protection of c erce have been raised, and a commis- sariat appointed; four new telegraphic stations have been ‘opened; @ contract has been concluaed for.the demolition of the fortress of Ferrara, that reminds us of the outrages we have Buffered from during the Austrian sway. We have established on the same basis as those in Piedmont the University studies, both primary and ge- eondary; increased the numer of rhandtatenr fm the University of Bologna; and freed by new laws the Italian mind from the bonds that ri its devel our missionaries and Sisters of Charity; these feign fr ey” ia si | a) momangere am oly anne can ap ‘straightforwardly annu) their votes of aonexation and de. } Complish of Be of fail periel,» sope int Glare for their former rulers, if they will; but let them | ceiving ent educating we yee stg hoe 9 not, by the assumption of an overstrained dignity, imperil | # generous! a eS epee heme ap Fv ae the cause which they, as well as Victor Emanuel, have | ment and benefit oe er ¢} eis BLD T- really atheart. Up to ihis moment the future in dark to | Self have forgotien Pripenape ny pros otae them as well as to the rest of the world. ‘There are some } Seseors of those whom she now pores so e persons who still nurse the hope that when the Congress | Has she ba dag ne Pont epoch when a ae mects Louis Napoleon will be found on the side with f t0lerant it, in cent a word degipl revised her astronomical calendar, and wrote in Chinese Mhepalod joel do Bt the beginning of tbe veut, | not less than 160 volumes; that Father Verblost w4s ham from the engagements at tt this view be | deemed bps food oocupy’ fs eq yey i cremont of the correct, they have nothing to gain by an impatient move. | Council of mai eekies ree ebae seein er ment. ‘If not, they will still do better to await the a pesca ise eats y Looe siya 3 of Europe. Of this they may rest assured; no Bnglish bil, crew up & general.snep in or nok, will pi a subject itself, but all who desire the rity of the Union—and lishmen are foremost in the nomber— must earnestly pray for the day when this source of dis- cord, violence and wrong can be removed effectually from the American soil. the London Herald (Derby organ), Nov. 21. Brown, the leader of the insurrection at Har- per’s Ferry, has been tried by a jury and condemned to consider himeelf satisfied with the ascendancy bis position ret, gcoures for him. The scheme of a confederacy, which Piedmont, Austria and Naples are to be mom: ders, and of whigh the Foye isto be the nominal head, , Setms tap abeurd ingane tofbe seriously contemplated; ny very. g8 and bickerings the members mnstrously incongcuous body will be bi most Delplemly to the mercy of the arch-echemer aud ‘masa’ ger. France will rule at Rome in the Pope’s name, and an the same Ponti’s behalf will exercise the Presidency ‘ef the Dist, either to the effect of bringing all the confede- Ben vid Subjection or of weakening them by setting them yy the ears. the Emperor Nopoleon has walked sufficiently ee ee unimpeded to his goal. He has yet heavy to settle with the weak and irresolute, but yet stubborn and enduring, Italia character, and ’with the December is the day appoiated for his execution. ‘There can be no doubt of his guilt, and in the eye ofthe law he committed the donblo crime #f treason afl murder. ‘When we first alluded to this terrible catastrophe we avowed our incompetency to oe eg nag was @ maniac or an enthusiast, and his to the Court after the verdict was pronounced throws no certain light on his state of mind. The desperate character of his en- peror Kang: pire—an ‘whether ‘Dose immense undertaking, which occupied them eight years, ction. roe any settlement which the other Powers of | S@F more extensive than any wor! the kind that has pe ise could not have held out any rational pros ect of and inert, but yet jealous and versatile, Furo- velopement. | purc make in deflance of the pube opinion of ever been executed in Europe. | | terprige co . Whether Congress 's to meet at al, or | Wp have obtained without ce OF party rago, the rmanent. Whether that Wil bech | BRIrise smALOUsY OF THE UNITED srares Wnssicn poreon ie Oe may ie eee fer of non-ecclesiastical causes to the secular tribu- nal. ‘The new laws decreed are all in unison with the Picd- montese laws. Tie acta are drawn upon in the King’s ‘per by\ the present government re’ wo be seen. PSKIN—A BINT TO AMERICANS TO JUIN IN THE Ourselves we are Blow to comprehend the utility of jd ay pea Congr tag imprisonment for life. our ance in reas, side by with and at the a -d Derb: *. inetigation of a Power which avows a @udied disregara of | [zom the London Herald (Lord Derby's organ), Nov. over the best part of jut) 'o Preach autonen, jg what ing wi ‘what bo- sentence, bore willing testimony not only to the fairness of death. He has been sentenced to be hung, and the 2d of ment, and the death ity be commated into & question arises on the charge of treason, whether he was tried before stock market, which bas been quiet but steady. Since our last there has been @ good, Das Bod pressing: demand for money both at ‘the bank and in ond street. In the early portion of the week a fraction the bank minimum was demanded in the open market. At present the rate for ees bills is 206 ber cent. e return from the of Enj for the weak end- ing the 28d November, gives the following results when, com with the previous week :— account:. Govern’t securities. .£10,925,167 Unchanged. ° Other secnrities....: 19,058,503 Iucrease,. £187,718 Imcrease.. | 897 The amount of notes in circulation is £20, Ly a. deoreaso of 1.028.135, aud the stock ot batten in boxe departments is £16,986,664, showing an increase of £124,- 934 when compared with the pr return. In the London share market during the week the busi- nega done bas been limited. Great Western of Canada ‘were quoted this afternoon 135;, and Grand Trunk of Canada at 8634. In miecellaneous shares, Adantic graph continues quoted at 190 to 220; Canada Land, 107 111; and Great Sbip, 4 w 5. Messrs. D. Bell, Son & Co. report there has been during: the past week a ‘steady demand for the various Ameri- can State stocks, and more inquiry for the better de- scriptions ofrailroad bonds, and prices are generaily very’ firm. xy Tel h from London to Liverpool.) agra Fray Evguya, Nov. 28) 1859. Jn the afternoon a decline of one-eighth per cent took place in the funds, notwithstanding the increased firm- ness of the Paris Bourse. There Was an active demand for money. The demand at the bank continues steady, Dut is not likely to increase ‘a8 long as good bills are taken in other quarters at 23¢ per cent. a bullion opens at the bank to-day. The demand for on Holland, Frankfort and Hamburg continues, and prices: were again lower, Other exchanges exhibit little aljera- tion. In the case of Paris firmness was shown. ‘The Board of Trade returns for the month of Getober were issued yesterday. The aggregate exports of the month are returned at £449,076 more than in October, 1858, but £267,916 less than in October, 1857. Those for the ten months of the orme bane ‘ a court of comperent jurisdiction. * * * «se | Present year, however, have reached the unprecedented Se canuer Bieiean en ee ‘Gems fare over tne public balgings; al eur’ biesorntey | tbe will of the Of,@ man's best friends not altogether We cannot bnt admire the noble and undauntal | ‘otal of £108 706,184, being anashern pes. gepieneea tee brake Tunans fo fall fe wich Wd views end in | bave been placed under the s Fe with kis clornal iaplensure if" Wwe confens thas go are | CTUGE of this determined abolitionist but there was litle | {9M JoeF and one and Ares. quarters per cent more tae fined oo ll «ey Eoawesce in}, ime charges have been made alike between Can- | . * POSTSCRIPT. / ns with his eternal displeasure if we confess that we ‘wisdom {n his defence before alegal tribunal. fhe fact it, imgbseaperte: aud Stee feat Sct fea eur mee meas at pais, | Sagar esas etiesed mamre" ™ | (rae cal" Seah emmpetion at Lente | Wye SaaS cette lingua | Reepececeruect cae aces | meat meena ten Stn Me s, 1 think 1 ought hy virtue of my office and position | thé te! fant ocean eens vee eetagtling: ime. ‘Uaat, although te Chinese bad got tho beuier of us in di- | contemptet his audience, and rouse no other feelings than | 8¥¢rage, bab the of and Aya jo be cxpegiedtp-9ay something, industry’ and trade of a kc oe ee delay which Law onus thé tewers | plomacy snd in war, we had adopted a straightforward | those of batzed and indignation. All “his be knew por: Tnoreased, “*there is alo Pally a ha ¢ BY tA. _ | advantage from the chlargement of the territory, and the | of invitation to the governments fin the ress hag not | &nd intelligible policy, and that even our disaster at fectty well, ‘and so fer ag his own life was he pope? . Re pepe: silks and raw wool still Ggure < thas addressed the following | principles of a wise commercial liberty have reopened the 1 am assured, from any ween Peiho rally looked upon aga had better have remained silent and awaied the blow | the unfavorable side. | ct the ones on ihe subject of the yo Italy to | source of the public wealth. English and Frenck Cabinets dus is : 0 gener shen pment Soraen See Pa clon | Without protest or remonstranoe. It is dificult to believe poclntmenanataeane es pares tar ‘210 res are, Nom 16,1869, | woaie Siu) tha prorindeg af con kad the aaias Giaphons Tis livers bare Dees Zande ott Tor days past, and | march upon us. We were outside the Yetbo; and Mr. | {ate was not prepared for self sacriee before he com- | Swen folsng November 10 abe the date specified tor the meeting of the Congress wasthe {4 Ward Was at Pekin. The United States government, whiqh 15th of ‘Dectiobe T. In oonseqnence of the deiay it is con- | bad taken no pains to create an impression of its invingi- sivered thaugt would not be possible for aff the Plenipo- besa Aes the minds of the Celestials, had apparently obtain- Tentiasies to be the 15th, ready to sit in Congress. | ¢4 all itasked. ce ope had brought her line-of-bat- The seme iettehe be sent, bucwith # longer date, | te shipsto the walls of Nankin, and bad dictated her own fu explanation given in offitial quarters. terms within easy distance of the Chinese capital, bad ginal pothing ty =p desiay of ge but bumila- tion and deflance—ali this was galling in extreme to be preteen. Sina traps Jobn Bul, He felt that his kinsman had played a part oa @n industrial and commercial sense. The union is ere. Passports in the interior having been abolished, the traveller now journeys freely and witnout hindrances through his regencrated native land. The army, which the resolutionto . . servecighteen months had raisediny:'” “* ae 15,000 men in its ranks, and 7831°333 ‘ . umns have been transfermed intoar)> a y12 2% order which characterized the vote of annexa- uon, their me aed wero a8 spontaneons ag oahee ww imeous. a’8 government were completely rst tothe resolution. It is solely and simply the ‘result of pationa! tendencies, which the.fear of a res- ‘oration ls but made stronger and more pigoronss x ema arti ore eae age do Savole-Carignan. Marked by the calm: will be mourned as a martyr, while his enemies will de- nounce him as @ trailor. The misfortune is that he has done immense mischief to the cause he desired to assist, and embittered the hostile feelings which have so long existed between the North and the South, and so frequent- ly threatened a rupture of the federation. TION, TRADE AND PROSPECTS OF THE EMPIRE— _ . it is. a mew homage rendered to the rehi- ’ idedfoes¢s-7 aillcurg Lp tUhAtIon, . unworthy of his position, and played it to advantage; and | “For ourselyes we not hesitate to express our unmiti- So Sow’ pool of he firth. determina: <The tpenary, has amply providedty. nilsury sy SR 20 be dlr td tae) one. that he himself had been polling the chestnuts out of the | gated abhorrence of the domestic Gutnanont dar we are tion of those countries to maintain order and | “In the accoutts that will bo laid ore Foy you, will ad (Botte fire, whilst the Yankees had leisurely picked them up | sure that it will not be abolished, by physical force, unless Ata crowded meeting of the Society of Arts, yesterday | and appropriated them. The United States, in fact, traded evening, Sir Jebn Bowring delivered a long and highly } on our own prestige and prowess. The Anglo French interesting discourse on China and its relations to Britis squadron bombarded the forts of the Peiho; tie Yankee commerce. Numerous persons ‘could not obtain admis- | ambassador looked on at the proceedings with th3 caim sion, and the confusion round the entrance, owing tothe | retermination to profit by the success of either side. crash of visiters struggling for entrance, rendered the | When victory favored the allies; when the Chinese forts conipnenpseeaas of Sir John Bowring’s observations indis- | had been captured, the booms removed, and all chances tinctly at le. - of a hostile reception were » Mr. Reed steamed up He began by describing the vastness and importance of | the river Peiho carefully in the wake of the French and China, its immense population of 400,000,000, the general | English forces; when, at length, the Celestial Emperor character of the country, and the extent of its imports and | pave way before the close proximity of the invading exports. The average exports of China to this country | armament, then Mr. Reed stepped boldly for. Gerba Gi nth Se Yoors wae ad Lo exceed £9,000,000.} ward and claimed the first fruits of the triumph, rl and its mani amount- Lord Elgin whom he owed his peaceful progress tj od to os £2,000,000; and, but for the opium imported beget enden one ‘ tie in Ri the chief obstacles 4 from India, the balance would be required to be paid in bul- 'To Tnglehuien there would have boon lion. Sir John Bowring dwelt with much force,andatsome | “an: but @ matter for congratulation in this back length, on the misconception that prevailed in this country | stairs sort of diplomacy, but it went down in the States. Tespect to the trade in oplam, for the purpose of dié- | All Yankeedom laughed at the dodge that had been per- abusing the public mind reeperting, the pileged immoral trated at ths expense of the old country, and Mr. of the trade in opium and the injurious effects the drug Reea'e petty rivalry of the English representative was represented to produce on the people. To prove that the applauded as a of use of opium is not forbidden by the Chinese law, it was he elation of our transatlantic cousins subdued by the sufficient, be said, to state that opjnm is cultivated in |. failureof our recent eutomape to reso, Pekin, and the sub- China toa great extent, and that the quantity of it im- | sequent reception of Mr. Ward, their present ambassador. ported from Tadia does not amount to so much as the pro- | Onee more ey had gone ahead of the Britishers. Th duce of China itself. His experience of the effect of the | own treaty was ratified, whilst the French and English <~ guthority, to augment and shester from all attack the preati Pane supetemp power, resolution attests, in ‘ane. e ardent desire”of thé populations of Centrai Htaly go see their whion with the monarchy of Sardinia ummated—a Settlement which can alone, in their jon, give solid guarantees of national iiberty and p*ymaependence. In the presence of a vote so imposing, ‘and miotives 80 Roa, the King, our august sovereign, ‘ought that his first duty was to obviate the perils of disorder aud anarchy, reasonably to be yates if ‘the offer of the Assemblies was not received. But, assured of the early meeting of a Congress called to solve the questions raised by the situation of Italy, His Majesty hast- ened to make an act = deference i the councils < ing from any decision which \t ene tery: natute to interfere with oats ae of and deliberation. Agroeably Majesty’s intentions, Monsigneur the Prince of , despite his sincere sympathies for the depu. — ine Ginee, LAr cee ae with mal governing om, did not judge uty to accept regency which they offered. At the same time it was im- possible for his Majesty, as well ag the Prince, not to con- Bider seriously the motives which had dictated the offers of the Centra) Italy, and not to concur in the measures suggested to them by high motives of ex- Retieney to guarantee from all agitation those countries Bee that the expenses of the army for the last three months are estimated at 818,000 crowns. We have bougnt munitions, horses, muskets and cannon. Notwithstauding this ontiay and the expenditure re- FS hon by the commonwealth in several branches of the bifiget of payments made, the result of the first four months leaves us a surplus in hand of 804,000 crowns. During the last quarter the receipts have surpassed the outgoings by 218,000 crowns, and this without the laying on of fresh taxes, without regorting to any exceptional measures, and even with a diminution of certain charges. Nevertheless, a few experimental essays had been made with a view to procure some keen re- sources for the government. The government would not have hesitated to ask the country to make sacrifices, be- caure it Ey page aera ie $0.00 9) we 8 good grace for the sake of secu: lependence. wo are to announce anr firm hope that the King’s Ministry Jend us its powerful aid to contract abroad aloan for the special purpose of increasing our brave army. . ‘Your vote, gentlemen, will render this operation more will consolidate our credit, and by means Ro unity of the government our provinees will present ves with greater moral authority, with groater ‘material force, before the Congress of Barope. by producing @ greater amount of misery and evil than now prevails. her can we forget that the sin of in- troducing African slavery into the North American conti- nent rests with England, and she cannot assume the char- acter of an innocent accuser. England has indeed so far wiped out the stain that she purchased the marumission of her own slaves, but the United States have no sach power. When America was a colony she desired to emanci- pate the black. on her soil, but the mother ‘was sent from Jamaica by Patrick W: to a friend resi- dent in Georgia, and there cultivated with success, the immenge value, and the cry for emancipation was stilled. Let us further a mind that ere — trade meat we now encour: e slave produce, ani pt tte aiid country t cultivate cheap sugar. But there even our in- consistency under whig liberalism has not stopped. If, then, we censure the United States for retaining the domestic institution for the sake of profit, we cannot ex- onerate our own Legislature from the crime of encourag- epee ay aionelg pom na gen In de 0 we are both foolish and criminal, fe profess a wo serve India, and neutralise that wish by conferring s spe- cial favor on Cuba, We tax ourselves to maintain a pre- ventive squadren on the coast of Africa, to intercept phe I i laced their confide: ‘House a use of opium on the people led Sir John Bowring to con- tin, rat a in oge Highacs hos soyriiaey bbeved oso alo | wich'e enc i™egiily Qa7ing dams tho, power, t | Souctal unfurl’ Praicows than eiria’und ao | EuMPrmuarce wer’ awating furleroraee foe | savas, ale we old out tho rong indus. w the ChéValier Buonoompagni to take the re- | dent that the new order of Will accelerate the tri. | Mentioned that in Hong Kong, during te period be disarmed Chinese prejudice, and the old friends, Russia | the traffic. Let no one construe these remarks Umph of the: Haan idea, in the moana roosive, car | COVerROF Of the ialand, there were two-thirds more d and Awerica, were to meet in Pekin. Mr. ‘Ward's | into an apoiogy for the United States. Whatever is moral assurance that we shall always be the first to make every | used by delirium tremens than by taking opjam. He | pr through China is now a matter of history. If | wrong can never be politically and that is the suff. imagmable sacrifice fr our common country. elduced, in which the introduction of opium’ | The Yankees choose to pocket the aronts put upon then, | cient condemnation of slavery; we mean to urge LETTER OF M. MAPZINI TO BARON TE en a eS ce er epeniteae rhe UY | and the manifest infraotion of the trosty of Ten-tsin, itis | js, that England enfecbles her moral power of remon- Putting @ stop to the excessive use of spirituous Liquors; | no concern of ours. Mr. Ward, no doubt, entertained a and the effects of the two kinds of excess were, he said. ‘very proper sense of what was due to his dignified ap- greatly in favor of optum. Tho effect of opium is altogeth arance, and. of-the respect that was to be ¢ rent from that of spirits. It may deaden the fac @ barbarous, potentate towards the representative of ties and produce stupor, but it does not incite to the com- | State whose strength he had never felt, and whose pride mission of crime; and among &@ people who take opi might be fairly estimated by the indignities submitted to there is amnuch tae pat a se Ppriary pa ambassador. Ihe reception accorded was, in fact, a ice than among those who indulge in iB. | favor granted deseeching Cees eats i It had been stated, he eaid, as one of the evil conse- | sal, not the crtay thw an enh whole aifalr strance when she does indirectly what she repudiates di- rectly. She puts herself out of court by her inconsistency. A8 a mere matter of commerce she commits the b| blunder of enriching a foreign State by impovert Eastern empire; and becomes positively ridiculous by opposing her practice to her professions. She invites her own subjects to multiply articles of trade, and shuts them out of her markets. Tho following is ota leer wich 3 Maaaiol has & copy of a wi addressed to Baron Ricasoli:— Sm~—I have been informed that you have in your pos- eession & letter of mine containing a plan of military rations in Perugia, which has given vite to persecatians and annoyance. Were [to address myself solely to in your charac- ter of Tascan Minister, Te might be outholent to manne i that the letter in question concerns in no way the irs | quences of the encouragement ef opium. thatist ved carried that spirit it ‘ i of Tuscany; that it does not appeal in the least to the Tus- | prevented the diffusion of Christianity? but this wie so fer | Mancoucelved aud carried out, in that spirit of ienoratt + eaten, O'Brien's Lectures on Amorica— can functionaries; that it does not threaten elther govern- | from being the cage, that in one district into which opium | joa Power un dasttoy, ast even had Gis, Wacde cit | | Amaerfeas ee ronkon tiene Ne sia ment or people.’ But I prefer addressing myself to the | had been introduced as a substitute for intoxicating drinks, | Pekin been attended with temporary success, the mode of 1¢ London Times, Nov. 26.) patriot—to the man who ves to confer with his friends as I do with mine—of the unity of Italy.as the only aim. for talk is one of the most enduring in the ChrBten misslonericg and “had hoes ko recelve | is attainment would not have been the less degrading to | »,,qre,Pperon 1 reeen ove nade tiee nae ‘Christian missionaries, and had become. r converts. a and high spirited uation. and end to be attained by the present movement. In pro- | In his intercourse with the mandaring and other Cutnese | “Sivante wane, ain Ward is ouly another victim of Cat. | Tice. From the cradje to the grave a talkative disposition this movement I mean to indicate the only opera- | officials, he said he had never heard any of thom speak | nese heeds Ne wine te be er victim of Clit. Frill show iteplf- Tague rank: of lif 1, makes the pot- of ion and of coriflicts for Europe. I invite you, M. | Yon which not only can accomplish the object in view, but | against the importation of opfum; and he felt persuaded tory than this treaty is annulled. follows in the path } Bouse orator, in an ie ee a nthe wae Re Pl: Je Ministre, to tring the contents of this deg; to the | 8l80 of saving Tuscany from an inevitable restoration. | that the ice that had been excited in this country | which if men have trodden before, from the days of cee trae scientific Oona ae ny knowledge of the government of ——, whil argiog the | You profess to know ‘as certain fact (which is far from | against the opium trade was without foundation, and that | Jord ey to those of Lord . Frenchmen, | 22ti-Eng! bey anid old tae he feels, (4 speetly meeting wf the Congress, DABORMIDA. | Proved as yot) that King Victor accepts the fusion of Can- | the recognition of the trade, and the import of opium injo | Englishmen, even Yankees, are done by the Chinaman; | ™iliation wi hy Aremene betty ae gannie s TUSOAN CIRCUAAR ON THB CoxDrTion oF ux | “Pylaly; and that the ecceptation since the treaty | China ata low duty, was one of tho most benoticial mes. | and Mr, Ward has the pleseure. by this ime of learning | &FTied away by Tip ant cose Datae. ee pani eae A Me pf Villafrance, is equivalent to a declaration of war, you | sures that could be adopted for the promotion of com- | dhat the earliest result bf his inieresting undignit Bi ais concees, Ho caput come borore ublic, and, a age have too much perception not to bebold. The revoluiton | merce. ‘The average annual imports of the drug ‘np journey to Pekin is the refngal of the Chinese authorities | 98 during sy oh tora ett been ing ms Bt ressed @ Memorandum |} must be extended, or it ‘is useless; izad it China had amounted to about seven millions sterling: to open the ports of Swatow and Taiwan, especially desig. subject of human interest, ho Degin again loealized it becomes. Mi less. Sentral Italy is lost if it does ‘not at once fix ita basis upon @ foundation as sure and strong as that of the govern- ment. The clements which compose the strength of Cen- tral Italy are condemned to disnnion, the two columns commanded by General Roset@ threaten mutiny if nothing be done to prevent itma very natural thing to happen: with voluuteers from Ombria, March of Ancona, and Venice, who figint with enthusiasm, if, instead of being solders 0: Parma and Bol , they were fighting for thoir own rights. Revolution which does not press forward the cause, can only serve to retard it by many years; and the elements which compose the strength of Tuscany are un- dermined by discontent, which originates in a great mea- sure from the duke’s party. By throwing the volunteers into active service they would remain steadfast with the bane ‘of promotion—by keeping them unemployed they will ferment—they do ferment—and one of these days they will give ihe signal of civil war. Our late masters are waiting for this result, in order to beable to cry out ta Europe—Benolil! The eiection of Garibaldi as active chief would be ac- copied with enthusiasm, and if that activity so univer- sally desired bo withheld much longer, it will give, as you well know, frosh causo of discontent to the regular militia, Before the rotaking of Perugia, Rome hernelf, compelled a¢ present to remain quiet, will rise— soldiers forming the outposts of the Pontifical army will Jom our columns—and between Perugia and the i ‘te old style of 1848, a little modified and to the nt time. The leader of the Irish rebellion has been to Al the the wes to the principal of Europe. It states:— Such is the fatality of their position”(the Duchies), such the deplorable cinsequences of their, antecedents, inas- mugh as the reoomition of their sovercignty would imply foreign rule, srickepraance would be the signal of per- petual reyolution, 't cannot be denied without offence to common jnstice tha with great claims great merits are required. To abancdw » people without a government after vain endeavors ‘oimpose upon it, to expose it by this abandonment to al the dangers of anarchy, even to ya in the ranks of the enemy—wore this the falflment Slogitimate principe? If during the Criméan war a = Drinee had serv in the armies of the Allies, what Preuss e been thougt of him at St. Petersburg? Ifa aig Joine| the Russians, what would haye been ‘the Aneta And this is no e: janet he Lorraine di ty. refore, then, invoke the Drinelvo ‘of legitimacy. when all hak those im whoee favor} le is wanting; when even awd? When & o tis woked bave yoldntarily abdi- nounce upon the pretended alos: called upon to pro- = Zurich, it frag well proc ol 10 deal ‘Austrian Int timacy; it will only have feel tring pa oe nae ol inc by misfortune it were no tent thee te great Poss u semble in Congrose were to imclaro thoracines eres to the desires and the legitimate votes of the Taliag’ eee pies two inevitable consequeices would Feault—oithor Piedmont, as we aud all Italy ve, faithful to the na. oval idea, wonld rofuso its alheronoe, eruet apprehen. sions, new ‘conflicts, rd buddshed. @ Future el but for that return for the teas and silke exported. | nated by the of Tien-tsin. What the next move there would have been a most exhausting drain of | ‘the Americans ‘de yt would be unsafe to predict. It is the precious metals from this country. After enteri only when the old country is in question that American into several statistical details of the exports and impor stateam >n are particularly sensitive of their national honor; from China and Hong Kong, which have already been | and we very much fear that if they can contrive to look published, Sir John Bowring proceeded to notice the Ror upon this new affront as an obli they*will. It ts to be which had been opened to trade by the treaty with hoped, however, that they will at ‘common cause Elgin, some of which, particularly Ning-po, he considered with the Powers whose Forces are now on their way to avenge had been ill chosen, for it was not the place of rasiden the insult offered w civilisation. The nullification of the of any Low Officers of the Chinese government. American ireaty is but the legitimate sequel of the “Thou, however, which was the residende | barring ot the Peiho, of the treacherous destruction of mandarins of the first rank, bad not proved favorable | of our smal) Squadron, and the refusal to admit Mr. Ward F commercial transactions with the Chinese, though pos- | injo Pekin except under circumstances which rendered sessing those advantages. Shanghae has become the pria- | bis entry an ingult to tho State he represented. If any- cipal si ping port for Chince produce; and as it is in | thing were needed to open the eyes of the world to the the neighborhood of the tea districts it is favorable for the | systematic idy of the Chinese character, this last export of that commodity, more than half the tea exported roof of deliberate evasion of treaties supplies the want. from China being shi from that port. Sir John Bow- K is evident that the Chinese, like other Asiatics, recog- ring observed that all the seaboard of China is remarkable { nise no moral obligation, and that the only agency that for the absence of any large towns ; the principal ports | can be employed successfully inst them is superior omy sry g on the estuaries of rivers, as remote as wall of partition will now be broken down possible from the sea, for the sake of protection eon with or without American assistance. France and Eng- the numerous pirates who infest those waters. Having | land have 00 object in the prosecution of the impending noticed at length the statistics of imports and exports, | war but that of punishing treachery and effectually open- Sir John Bowring procecded to consider the habits and ing up China to civilizing enterprise of tho western qualifications of the Chinese, andthe prospects of an in- | world. Tbe contest is one between enlightenment and creasing érade with that vast country, which extends | barbarism, and the result cannot be for an instant doubt- 5,000 miles in length, and upwards of 8,500 miles th | fol. The United States government will do wisely if it breadth. That vast territory is scarcely sufficient to ae- | abandons the tortuous polity i has hitherto pursued to so commodate its 400,000,000 of inhabitants, and the rivers | litle honor and adeantage, and associates itsolf with a swarm with boats in which hundreds of thousands of the | cause which is roally her own, however shortsighted people hive and spond their lives, Some of caer instita- | promptings of seif intorest may misrepresent it, tions are of a more republican character than could have been supposed possible in so despotic an empire. Compe- tittve examinations for pudlic offices had been ostablished | Old John Brown’s Defence aa Read in appears, with great enthusiasm by the Irish, and, th icon eb Mite tna with a Archbishop. 1e avery feeling Americans generally. in the least too kindly; for his estimate of their great borer ay slavery he does them justice, and expresses: opinion of sensib! men all over the world. Mr. O’Brien thinks ‘that negro the sophisms about the receiv 2 & bane! wery. The astonishing paradox is propounded that negroes in the West Indies were worse treated than they are now in America. That the hands on Touisiona and Texas plantations, where every Legree does as he likes with his own, are better treated than were the colonial negroes, protected by the whol bower of the mother country and a vast apparatus of evangelical aiesions, is an assertion that could only have proceeded from an frish agitatar. a ‘i af mparison between the working of alayen ts Goat ee caiaes and the “wholeeale evice vhere is nothing to resist us. Eight or ten thousand nie the name of Garibaldi, and the movement in Siciiy,’ which has been prepared for a long time, and ready for explosion at a moment's notice, would become the instr- Fection of the whole State. ‘The insurrection of the State would swell the movement in Italy to such proportions that its chiefs would bo ontitied to treat on terms of end,” Uereatening, ” full injnite peril; or Piod- mont, by an excond of delicacy’ or illjudget pradence, would join in the de i fanality, ae from power to power, for the move mast | in China, and: some of the principal officers of State had England, tions” in Ireland. The Irish, also, are invited to emigrate macy against the opaies and “ihe Preasos oP bring the King of Sardinia once more upon the field of | risen to those positions from Tow conditions of life. Among [eos the 3 cate ‘Times, Nov. 21.) if they raanot live in their own country but as ‘staves the Tian peoples: to euch event hesgncnigene gc gat | Been. theee was the colebrated Commissioner Lin, who, in carly | In the defence made by the ringleader of the Inte in. | aod Eeggars’” But it i# on the subject of flibustorisin her popularity wn the Peninsula irreocably foryelien, With i ree Cannot take yp arms without bringing upon her- | life, kept a small stationer’s shop. In many of the manad- | surrection in the United States we receive a notavle ex. | that Mr. (Brien is most happy. Toe obvious comparison tho prestige of Modmont the manaritieal principle wonld Lb aree, Wi tue whole of Europe—Germany, Rusdia, } fa. ring arte the Chineso, it is well known, were far in | position of the motives by whick the offenders on that oo. | between the exploits of General Walker and the conqnost advance of Europeaus. It appears, from their records, casion may be conceit to have been actuated. ‘The fade by Fagland in different parts is, of coaree, fort phat silk dresses were worn 4,000 years ago, though woven ' statement, It is true, J# nob Only an ew parte siatement, perish, Atsuch a moment it wouldbe pourile yo indulge goming. “Amoricans,” we are told, “ridiculed the de. ‘Theo things I should haye told you, aud ail men who ee menced his hopeless enterprise; if he was not ho must have labored under temporary monomania. However, whether he was prompted by enthusiasnmor by insanity, ‘his conduct will not soon be forgotten; by his partasans he the act. When the cotton ot plato a sd, doom of the African was sealed. He at once became of Tho Times, in its weekly review, says the produce’ mar- kets have been firmer this week, and uiative inquiry has slightly increased. In Qiverpool cases a farther improvement ‘in price is consequently observable, transactions have taken place toa fair extent for export. PARIS BOURSE. Paris, Friday, Nov. 25—12:10 P. M. ‘The tendency of funds is well maintained. Rentes have again risen, and are now quoted 70f. 20c. 3:20 P.M. Rentes olosed firm at 70f. 20c., being a frac- tional rise since yesterday. RICHARDSON, SPEXCE AND CO.’S CIRCULAR. Nov. 25, 1859. Cortoy.—The market has been very dull all the week, yet the supply of new cotton has been so limited, that the demand has been sufficient to keep the market cléar, and have been fairly sup] . Such, however, is the want of confidence in maintenance of these prices, or the eagernesa of importers to realisa that quantities of cotton afloat are offering on qualities guaranteed, at 14d. a 34d. per Ib. below resent value if here; indeed. i¢d. a S¢c. per Ib. has conceded in some instances. The refuse of theold crop here is difficult of sale, and of nominal value. In Manchester there - no sigh we bp been com Mobile, 734d.; uplands, 6%4. per i. ee Breapstcrra.—The arrivals this week consist of 36,520 bushels pp 6,865 bbis. flour from the States and g i marie Secret mess ioe al rates; aS OO ia at “ALLOW. —" ice st but the demand from the trade ise 4 The nominal value of ‘‘Butchers’ Association” is 566. to 598. per cwt. Rosty.—Common steady at 48. 1d. a 4s. 2d. per cwt. Ous.—Of sperm five tuns winter bagged have sold at ne a ‘bagged there areno buyers. Noth- wi 5 —l Philadel have been sold at esate: bent .—AdOUt 100 tons have arrived, but aa Yet nothing has been done in it. The India Rubber Controversy. UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT. Before Hon. Judge Ingersoll. Dec. 6.—Charles Goodyear vs. Horace H. Day.—In thie cane Goodyear filed a bill to cancel an agreement made etween him and Horace H. Day May 26, 3868, under hich claims the right to manufacture aud. @elf vores caio abos gores and otber articles of India rubber, om the ground that the same had cured by false and fraudulent representations made to bam by ay and Jenckes; and @ motion for preliminary injunction was now made to restrain Day from suits upon that agreement pending the final decree. following order explains the D yee Mr. & N. Dickerson for the complainant, haying, on he bill, &c., moved for an injunetion acco! to the. ayer of such Dill, and Messrs. ©. A. Sey and E W. ‘Stonghton, of coungel for defence, having moved to’ post tho hearitg of euch motion to give 88. Od., Sunos. me ntime apd until the decision on the motion, for such in- junction (it a) ‘that the bill _ tng al nos enaned by or int evfficient to authorize the injunction prayed 1 no answer bas been to the be ee contal in it, either by affidavit of wise), if said Day do any of the acts er things sought to be the complaigant may renew the motion for injanction as aforesaid, to re- strain the defendant, as prayed in the bill, until te hear- ing and decision op such motion; the aflidavits in answer in opposition to sald motion to bo served ox or before 12 A. M. of the Wednesday preceding the day appointed for auch hearing. KENNETH G. WHITE, Clerk. E

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