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8 NEW YoRK TIBRALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1861. ; life from shipwreck. Pofore | tune ¥ “son arene re SRE Ct rocket apparatus for saving was taken by | ny ent for the oxeetion of the protect. Tt wonld | of much importance, The Zverr ¢nent organs, on tho | as impossiblo any idea of a reconciliation with the North, | 15 days, with fruit, to 1, Nickerson, Sailed incompany INTERESTING FROM EUROPE, commencing the exereise the opportunity ent Cap. ‘Avitetons yhoo ee ae i nt to engago | whula, speak favorably of Lho ‘yoeument, It is notiecd | and in which ho threatens reprisals for the wanton eruel. hark ME Prout, and schr Ainy Chase, for New York, Cie seahou Harbor Naval Reserve men io present C ol ye if A Sehr Allred (Br), Wells, Nassan, 14 8, with a aeraies iia Acer he ema whore wg itn ai tt gt | Ki rn rte Sane | St in rcs ory mje ihe maa | wks SMMSAMT'S Bis ed eat wa {CONTINUED FROM the expired tran. | ip their services 1p top Lede 6 aid | bands on enemy who nda work for every man they can | ony ued of reconciliation wits the North’, and denounces its | dificultuo suppose that this omissicn is aceudental,andalmost | “Schr Western Star (of Boston), Crowell, Port Roval 8S Yast gleam/of Nope bad departed, and he exp they be required it twas over, which we may Tr Taso, and who aetuamy keors at ty an nriny which they | crueléy. Whether the omisgon was mudo by aeeident or | ditlicult to finda motive for i. the Acniteur does not in- | Declé, Mad tery: heavy toaster, aud” kos boos 7 dap qquilly at tea minutes to eleven o'clock. eee eer Captain, Heard was baer «tare was | themselves declare ip 060,000 strong. Ave the Siates wilt | design is not known, me surrounded the death- i val Res ident’ dan address | im the Uatien prepurect to double (his force, to take a second | 1), ynCk CANNOT AUD WRULAND TO CRUSH DOWN THE hive bel Apel aie poy pn pire he bad giveo 4 Seaham, thank. | war om ticir hands, and lo engagean cnemy on each from. UNITED SLATES--THK BONDS BETWEEN AMERICA AND baestiedpapttd = >t bo lamentable |} trmaimentof them white nar. a6 movement, and | ier ike « iz fighting both her Lari tthe same tims? | YRANo von wasiney INOKN, ‘The Loudon Observer, in announcing the hos trent men of breathed “~<a” Itwas preseuted by | Mre'they quite confident about the results of such an ws Fee eg i event, exciaimse:Pesce to his ashes. A good husband, | Josoph Burrell, naw breelt Bune loyal and patriotic | dortaking? Ave they disposed to S00 the emburrasmenls | mmay gthioitentiies the London Pause, Inepires the poate fo counsellor, Kug- | feeling which pe sein offer of service to the Ad- | ofa Ucckade transferred fram their atversarics to them- } ry ‘matisiies th cs h a goed father, @ wise Princo and a rafo co , mnivalty. tiloen, cna to find at ir copraitumary forces hopelenty cut | Dat with gratitudo appears ingufleient for some French ugk will not goon Jock upon his like again, Capte%h Hoard, asving revliol in short and complimen- | «fF Yor thone congwjnences, ut cust, Uiey mut be (pre- Py ood onde pe peas yon Set ets pry sna —— AMY verms, wb ‘op Jared if they force us into war with Wem. Kven if we | (7 Temendie by tie ni ee tater ets taal he France. Mr. pjuhO Was @ witness to this highly | should stand aloof from their private quarrel, we shoul | ‘euinorately departed from, and the imperial government ‘The monthly statement of the Bank of France shewsan | creditable proceeding, aud who addressed them as fol- | certainly command the sen, or, in other words, blockade | Wi) not satisfy that portion of the press unless i joins its Ywerease of cash in band of nearly forty millions of francs. | tows: — their ports, and compel them to raise the blockade which | (dts to Une of Bn iglandl tn,order to erush the Dlied The Bourse was heavy rather than lower on the 13th Tbave very great pleasure in addressing youon the | they are maintaining against the ports of the South, ; form its readers that it lays tho document before them in | Hatteras; split sails, &o, bedettemtissys 9 Sebr Ctingarora, Hasierson, O14 Point, 3 days. Tk is to be remarked that the comments of the | Sched ganelanf, Leeman Baltimore, § days, French press om tha Southern message ave ‘vather | Schr M © Tow: y ees ise hostile than otherwise, The Paris papers identily the | Schr AR Wetmore, Bocurt, Baltimore, 10 days. Southern cause with the “domestic istitution,” and | Schr Hannah Maula, Price, Salisbury, Ma, d days, with one or two exceptions maintain, in spite of the | Sehr F Bell, Robinson, Nanticoke for Fairhaven, ! clearest evidenco, that the North is’ tighting for the Bene Sera Lh aoe ieae eet or New Haven. abolition and the South for the maintenance of slavery, | Sehr afonteven, Patkenberg, Phlladeiphi’¢ days, and alveady a great outcry is raised at the bare idea of | Schr LY Phar, Cranmer, PD! hat i! England recognizing th: Southern States, as tending to yer- | Schr Beulah, Anderson, Philadel . peluate it, It is difficult to account for this sudden repuy Scr HP Siamdhs, Goitfrey, Philadelphia for New Lowe Dance of France to Peclavage, when we reflect that it | o.. Had heavy W gales; ~~ de facto stil exiets in the French’ colonies, where the so: | Schr H Townsend, Williams, Philadelphia for Mystic, . 2 States. hore unjustifiable suggestions are happily without | eailed enga, i 7 Schr Fashion, Sears, Elizabethport, f. 0c. Joyal and patriotic sentiments which I have listened to @ trust they will think better of such a policy. Hith- sg engagess—i. ¢., nogroes kidnapped on the coast of : : sae Tanto from you to your Queen and country, I sincerely trust | ero it enunor ve. somedh aa protended that they havo danger, Tho imperial goversment bas given too many | ozambigut—have replaced the negrces set free, and that | River, (ne MSC: Elzabelnport, and. sailed for Palle Austria, “hat your Ger tadefind your country against attack will ne | bad any reegon Yo complain of us veyond the sentimental Fequfeany one to defend itfroes the everclear at sowie | Only tu certain localities, in 1848.” But it looks philan- + Blossom, Douglas, Elizabethport, and sailed for Nore- stated that during the Emperor’s stay at Venice | verbe required. Iam a man of peace; but if we are atlack- | one that we have tooked witb “coldness” on their efforts 'y pI , and affords room for a little healthy ths walk, 4 aa ey ihe ara a Be aya Y sobgh Ermily, Thompson, Eitzabethport, and sailed for Sta ‘the general opiaion to-day tn, that ‘a compromine win | £24; rw take place, and that war will not arise out of the Trent | gieamernemania Tad’, Norwich, 2 ho lordored all political prisoners to be set at liberty, ed, the honor of Eugland must be asserted axxi vindicat- | to maintain domestic union at the point of the sword, In | {self seveasible to such projects. | Thearmed interference : f France would be without utility as well as without pre- ed. But lam sure, when I see around me so many fine, | that respect, however, the very events of the war have | o! Fr v able men ready to fo forward at a moment's warning to | justified our viows. ‘Tho attempt which we thought was | ‘Xt; Fiance reserocs her tlocd and treisure for her own Prussia. quarrels aid for the defence of her own interests; Hngland is | ditfculty. ‘It would puzzle those whi Oe maintain the honor of England, I have no fear that wo | hopeless has actually proved so; nor has there been ] 5 y. puzzle those who put forward that | Steamer Karitan, Slover, ‘Trenton, Movements continued for the establisument of the Prus- | should he able to bid defiance to the world. Ihave had iction-of this kind haxarded which has uot been ful. | 2werfud enough to ,atence single handed the outrage ccm. pRinion to give any reason for It, beyond thefact that the | Steamer Gyenee. Garson, Tronton, | || “ML was’ reported that oan of ten millions of dollars | ‘he Pleasure of seeing a grcat many addresses trom the J filled. In all material respects we have done as much fr | a¢ nought by'the officers of the federal navy wo admit; | of ewes en nee cel ved hereare totally devoid | y svernment ightahip for bed Revi So. koen sa ae ‘ various seaports of the kingdom, offering the: i them as they could desire. fe have not only ab- ‘ the Navy Yard, nial s He Oe ae ed ae ar ees teaseving twenty-six | !0'be government to defend us, if need be; but inno | stained trom interferepoe with # blockade which was | Dubin euch matters te seen perecnal, an Banos, Steamer A'Hi Rowman, Clark. New Bedford. ‘Tho Knglel: war vossel Bury lice, carrying y cearort have I ween, @ more unanimous;evoted ‘ealing | paralyzing ur manufacturing | induatry, but we | account, Let one writer, quietly eoated at his. reside, Commercial Intelligen 8 Ospray, Kenney, Providence. guns, had been purchased by Pruss! than in the port of Seaham and in the county of Durham ‘even carried our recognition of this block- z » quietly » N MONEY MARKET. LOMDO! BELOW. generally. Ihad the honor of being a member of the | ade to the utmost limits of indulgence. —Stricity organize on paper @ general conflagration in honor of the ‘The funds on the 13th were dull and Srooping. Dut | One ship and one brig, unknown, 5 h of neutrals; let anather, to the crusades of the Italy. vernment which adopted the recommendation of the . the Wackade has never been Iegally valid, and a | Mbt ee closed steady at the rates of the previous day. re The eruption of Mount Vesuvius continued. Houres | Manning Committee to establieh & Royal Naval Reserve, | rheorocy inecrpretarica of. tnternetioua’ law would have Tine a ete op cee ttcerance af the holy placcs only | was rather more demand for discount, and the best bills | _250%—hips Loutsa Hate’ sesbourne; FB Cutting, and J were falling in Torre del Greco, and the village was in | and I have great pleasure in witnessing the great success | justified us in treating it as ineffectual. We allowed it, principle and fe Sarirag. ol elcoaal of daa Nig | CFO done at 2% per cent. Rowen BP, Liverpool; Thomas Ann, Cole (Br), London immipent danger of destruction by lava. All communi- | in the formation of that body. er, to operate a8 if it had been actually enforced, | Prymihe Sue crler tf to Daroerennn thousands AMERICAN STOCKS. Salem (Br), Bristol; Windsor, Forest, and Weatrin Oren cation between places in the vicinity and the mountain | ‘Three cheers were then given for the Queen, and the | and we abstained from any attempt to get at the cotton will find no echo with us, ‘The tei op <7 Business has been small in American securities. Miinois | Havre; barts Falke, olen), Rosierenm, Were interrupted. | Martbquakea frequent.’ In the’ Bay of | ‘men dispersed. we pesded. | We cannot pre any sympathies | Picvancee may be ashaointe’ fees Tee romance steed a shares, 4044 04844 discount; Erie shares, 24340 | Rainbow, Oardensa: Tun (Hr), Neavitan some Jee aoe Jes the sea had reced y . —— with slavery, or accused of any clandestine ings wi jones (Br), Tri it nr 3 Eh Kalian Chamber of Deputies had passed a billex- | me American Democracy the Only Ene | thesia. We havo been really and truly neutral, with Me DLS Gees SORE. ae Sennce Sone Sue eva teae BREADSTUFFS MARKET. Neseau: schee tetr® (hr), Oporto Gaetan Siena Leones feuding the application of the Sardinian penal code to _ nies of England. very sincere wish that the rupture had never oceurred, | Siventores Ut te in husanding her power and, in reaerving Livanpoor, Dec, 14, 1861. | Elmo, St Thomas; J yn, Bt Kita, fLombardy. [From the im ‘Limes, Dec. 10.] and a desire that it migit be healed at the earliest possi- orowght into oo ane bride ‘efficacl ce its Messrs. Wakefield, Nash & Co. report flour quiet but Wind at sunset NE, very light. ‘The brigand Borges, before his execute said to | Our spec: Sl oeteppteies describes to-day with lively | ble moment. Is this a poliey which it would be worth | (rng Wenghi inde play, thes she more efi world.” What | Steady at 309. a 34s, Wheat steady: red Western and ave declared that he had been deceived hy the legitimist | irony the persistent labors of the Americans to make ont | while to convert into one of active hostility? We cannot | fren men, nuance over the rest of re yt | red Southern, 10s. a 13s.; white Western and Southern, committee at Paris, and that uo elements of revolution | 9 case, They are still at work, turning over the leaves | think so, and we rely on the good senso of the President | Frenel Ree cee eons. oa: Fe AAS MAY bebvibeong 128. a 18. Od. Corn easier: sales of yellow and mixed American Shipmasters’ Association, against the Ttallau government existed in the Neapolitan | of Wheaton and garbling the judgments of Lord Stowell. | and neople for doing us justice now that we are compelled con! fe know of none; but bat gas, 3d. ‘Nos 89 axp 90 Menomanrs’ Excuaxar, provinces. Perhaps Mr. Everett and Mr. George Sumner will, after | to ask it, ‘Tor, Dec. 15, 1861. Rete twa of searching thetrauthorities, ow to what we do know is that on ono side England is our ally, imicn is united 10 The report of the commission appointed to inquire into | be conscientious as to historical quotations; or, after ex- ‘The Financial Aspect. France by bonds which will not be easily broken. It is the ‘and that on the other the American Us PROVISION MARKET. ‘ |. ‘Phe following approved officers have received cerificates Beef firm and inactive. Pork steady. Bacon firm. | from this association Lard inacti: ; 4 di : , a a the opening of letters pasting trough the post, states | perience of detoction,will at least grow moro cautious | STAT OF FEELING ON THE STOCK EXCHAXGR, LoNDoN. | APElO-Sux0n blood which runs in the veins of the Ame- | faleg at SOs. a bla, Mo Produce tending downward: | | Cuplaing James Dutie, bark Thva; Gam! A Swinnerton, bare that certain postal agents had consigned letters to the | in falsifying facts. If 'wo are to be dragged into a war it {Frot tho London Times (City Article), Dee. 11.) "| Weer sStaence nts ieependenee cae eae im hit poli- Paine mani py Thatcher. sehr Manchester; Hi¢rage B Soul, ship Yorieks euthorities, but without ministry orders, isnow clear that it will Le the demreracy who will force us | There has been less agitation in the stock market to- | then “Can ghe do otherwing than somatic iy HOW. | Ashes firm at 375. éd. for pota, and 36s. 6d. for pearis, | Theodore Guilbrandson, bark Greyhound; Rufus G Dearborn, ooh a , he . eutral in such a a ee brig Ganges—Ca&W1; Gilbert A Kuudson, late of bark Maria into it. It will not be the rich or the educated, but the | day cone but prices, which were rather firm in the | connicty Rosin dull at 13s. a 198, 6d. for common. Spirits turpen- | Morton: Edward Cole, schr Wai © Mershon—CxW1, Wim Denmarx. ignorant and the penniless, who will mako a war in | morning, subsequently’ became weak, the final bargains | fon thai aa tine—no sales. Sugar quiet and slightly lower. Coflee— | Newhall Jr, ship Alfred Storer; John F Underhill, schr Sa~ Covennacen, Dec. 15,1861. | which they have nothing to loge, and of the | being at a quarter per cent below those of yesterday. EMPEROR'S PLAN OF CONTINENTAL ANNEXATION | salen small. Rice quiet. Linseed ‘dull ced deolnnt 1s, | rab Maria—F&A; Harmon C Orr, lary; Benj F Glo Prarsia bas rejected Denmark's proposition for the set- | events of which they have no power of per- | This heaviness was attributed chiefly to the apprehension AIDED BY THE WAR TUMULT. Linseed oj] easier: sales at 358. 6d..@36s, Cod oil firm | bark Glenwood; Jas ap Gontideuce: Saini H Dok tiement of the Holstein question. ception. It would be vain enough to reason with such | that tho additional news, which may now be expected at [Paris (Dec. 9) correspondence of London Herald.) ‘at £40. lard, ship Guy Mannering: Geo Hf Leinas, Inte of, brig Bale a multitude as to the justice of the caso at issue. ‘Th mouth; Atking R Nickerson, ship Rastern State; Wm Snow, Apprehensions seem to be entertai " || any omen, will chow that. the Washington Cabinet ppreh ‘a entertained in many quar. LONDON MARKETS. brig Jas B George; Alfred Hulse, schr John Rose—FikA; Wma we Loxvon, Dec. 14, 1861. J Todd, schr Lizzie Russell—F&A; Louis T Bradburn, ship Baring’s circular reports wheat dull and 1s.lower. Flour | Augustus. Mate Duncan McArthur, bark Union, steady. “Iron firm, Sugar easier. Tea very dull, at Miscellancous. 1s. 1d. for common Congou. Coffee tending downwards, | | Br Bark (wor amir) Gueat Britain, reported ashore Rice firm. Spirits turreutine nominal at 668. 6d. Rosm | Anticosti, cleared from Montreal Nov 16 for London, She quiet a 13s. 34a 13, 64 for common, Tallow declining: ee dees ib uke reek ee Cee sales at 51s. Sperm oil firmer. Cod oil steady at £41. ca ” madi Linseed oil dull at 34s. 64. ” wien eeee our feo ot re THE VERY LATEST MARKETS. more obviously unjust the advantage gained the greater Suen. would be tbele admiration of the dexterity which had | country, right or wrong,” and in the face of the mob will | itself of the embarrasements caus Seay ie deel, | acquired it, and the creater their triumph over the ecun- | neither have the courage nor the dignily to do justice, ‘The | With America to carry out its annexation designs. From News of the resignation of the Marquis of Wileopoloskis’ | try which permitted it. Mr. Lincoln cannot hope to show | tone of the private mercantile letters received yesterday | 0 article communicated by the authorities to the Debats, resignation is received, He remaiusamember of the | tom that it is honorable to act justly; but it may bo | wag snch as tocontribnte to this unfavorable view; but, on | Which appears under the signavure of the secrelaire de la Council of Stite, hoped that he will use an argument capable of being ap- | tho other hand, there is apparently an increasing feeling of | Tedaction, it would seem thatas regards the Vallee dos preciated by such minds if he addresses himself directly | confidence among the most inluentialand respectable fede. | Dappes, at least, those facts are not quite without foun. Turkey. to their oterests. Even that ‘shonest, hard handed Wis- | ralists now in London that the affair will be promptly and | dation. The article states in substance that France is It is stated that a panic on the Bourse was caused by | consin lumberer, wbo is sitting with his loaded rifle at | honorably settled. Consols for money, which closed last | eatitled to th etary, in dispute, and comes to the con- fraudulent speculation in metalliques, Dut in consequence | fult cock on the stump of a tree, and reading his newspa- | evening (9th) at 90% a 3%, were first quoted 90% a ,, | clusion that sho should first take possession of it, and ne. of the energetic measures of the authorities, order was | per and smoking his tobacco, in the discharge of the high- ‘old national principle, Our | ters here that the French government intends availing fo the old naijonal principle, ‘| Our d in England by the war 8. Brig Forrest Cre, previously rted wrecked at Elbo Liverroot, Dec. 15, 1861. Koy, was bullt at Portland, Mg, in Ts68, 198 tons, rated "A, an but the last oficial trangactions were at 903 a % { gotiate afterwards—if Switzerland thinks fit to do so. aot disturbed in Constantinople. est duties of a citizen and a, sentinel,” may be made to | money, and’ 903 m3; for, the account; and afer réaular inlay euiaon Sales yesterday 4,000, balce. ‘The’ market downed by Pleket & Go, of Borland, valued at 6,00 INSTANTINOPLE, Dec. 14, 1861. understand to what unpleasant straits an insolent douial | jours there was afresh fallof an eighth. The business psy algal ho 7 rates. Breadstuffs quiet but Ph igang ot a Bus, Previously rere ted. eahere on fnez, The bap panic has partiallysubsided. The Bourse | of redrees to eo —, repeated atest — of the day was not extensive. On tho part of the pub- ‘on the American Qi 4 ly. visions firm. Sener ele \por a. eo 18 ful semaine oan Mr. Lincoln might contrive to make him understand that | jie the principal investments were in India five per cents, , Lonpon, Dec. 14, 1861. Satisfactory intelligence bad been received from Omar | ifany maratime Power withnavalforces greater than these | which have recovered to 1017; @ 1024, Baukatock loti (From the London Herald (Lerby organ), Dee. 11.] Consols closed at 90%¢c. 9 90%e. for money.’ Illinois | | Stmamen Kate, from Philadelphia for Baltimore, towing 4 of thie United States wereto hold the Chesapeake, to Uockade | on at 232 a 24, und Exchequer dill (March) 98. 122, | 4,12 the Present lamentable difference between our gov- Sees paaes M 486 Goan Ee share, | UA ae ade, Ub evecan careceeeree i ‘Its d that of North America we should be glad to nore Annazolis, and lend some assistance to the willis (June), 128. a 15e, premium. comaree ‘and two of hole Union and India and China. hands at Baltimore to break up the communication wit In Cabada five per cent bonds there was a further im. have the sympathy of our neighbors in France. Their Keystone .. at Bal : y | moral support will be of use to us in the contingencies that mm Dondcn in eeagon forthe aineriean portion of Tete go f ranengon, Hwoulz po hardwih that Wuconsin umicrer | provement cf 1 per cent, the cloalbg price being 954 GT. | Try arith doen st mply thelr coxperatlen’ ner, fen vomen nies pierine cike trom Antworp fr Axyas inlet caught dre tat nigh ac (orward per the Niagara. eats Moosellaey ties hk the: ‘The interest on the bonds of the Atlantic and Great | aware that the present circumetances of France’ do not sigs o'clock between Portland and the Start-and was run ashore per Cavovrra, Nov. 17, 101, | Genera! McClean reviewed, and who are most of them } Western Raiircad (New York) is advertised for payment | arrant. the imperial goverument in entering on an exe | COF0DeF Jackman held an inquest at the New York Hos- isiuance wan employed, aid she was 4o of a Shirtings active and unchanged. Twist dull and with- | sp not to appreciate tho fact thet it is better, Messrs, Ma, | 02 ‘e 18t of January at the Bank of London. tensive war in a case in which the interests or honor of | pital yesterday upon the body of Charles H. Russell, a 4 snow inside the Breakwater; the fire is atilk- out alteration. Linseed advancing. Exchange unaltered. } son and Slide! should go to England than that all the sup- France are not clearly and immediately at stake. We negro, who was kill Froights active and advancing. oct. 21,1800, | PMCSof the Army of the'Potomac should be cutog. It | Retarn of Rpg ia Reni grants Sem Auee~ ee CP mania Gerke Sngls DabAML, 1 ihe grocery dn wnat ashi ep haart ine Sa eee Rea ee jet . _ Bs CCEBS , wi sf ul m4 sre Neen cet rec es tocclge Mees ck toe ii keel flit ag Apel onto [From the London Times, Dec. 11.} may he necessary, for the vindication of our | which occurred onthe 28th ultimo. The evidence went | , Gusuzanr, Des 7-40 attempt has boon made to raise the satisfactory. Boston: but it must be of the first importance to them to A part; ot returned ieoarenie from America, passen- Poutraged rights. majority of the French | to show that at a late hour at night—half-past one o'clock | was stranded here Now ‘30, but without success. A large quan- ‘Canton was finally evacuated on the 21st of October. be secure that, while they are themselves hutted in tho | S°r8 by the Niagara, arrived yesterday at the Euston ter- 8, whother or no at the instigation of the government | A. M.—two men, named John H, Turner and Joshua John- | tity of barrels of flour have been picked up on the const, ‘ap Shaughae is m a state of alarm, in consequence of the | snows, they will havo fuel and provisions to keop up | "uso! the London and Northwestern Railway from | hag adopted in this crisis a most friendly tone towards | gon, commenced skylarking ik ‘the store, mock agarcs | bareudy much damaged, proximity of the rebels. their patriotism till next spring or next autumn, as the | New York via Liverpool. They consisted chiefly of per- | thiscountry. French journalists have come tothe con- | the’ will of the Proprietor. In the scutile some panes of | Hvatornwr, Dec 2—The coast is strewn with wreck, among: The English and French troops assisted the Chinese to | case may be. It may, no doubt, be yery pleasant to the | 008 of small means, who had left this country four or | clusion which every impartial man. we should think, a lass a ated . | which have been found some bales of cotton marked at ona hold Chee Foo against the rebels, who ultimately,ro- | members of that expedition tow i> permanence ‘at | A¥e Years ago, and established themscives as shopkeep: | must arrive at, that England bas no choice but to resist | £aaswere Broken, which irritated Wienke to such an ex and VB treated. tent that he expressed bis determination to shut up the A eeygtioet forint Sopmrnap g Port Royal to read tho vaporings of Captain Wilkes | ¢T8 in New York and Boston. One cause of their retura ratification of the illegal and piratical attack madeby | piace. Accordingly, the ‘was turned off, and all the ” with * triangle . qintton goods ot Canton, were active and advancing. | ‘at Bostcn, and 10 leara Low attentively be quaiied him. J $8124 to have been is annoy anon the British residents We iimerian Ge tod nen erat Castamern were ordered lear out. ‘Tho occupants | and‘acem fo be undamaged, with the exception of abouas without change. change a per cent higher. if by examining Kent, Wheaton and the rest,’’ to a ‘atrie, were slow in obeyin; jummons , hor id of | inch on thi itside. ip’s boat marked “Mary Ann” - sasume ibe dutiee of} ‘Prive judge upon the bigh seas; but | *i#ce the affair of the Trent. They state shat numerous | country might expect an offer of the them tried to pus door open afier it had ‘been closed | iso washed on there here! she | ion of English families are about to leave the Northern States | France in the measures to which it might be driven in the perneal of this Pere tiretas ny one, in apprehension of a war breaking out with England, and | order to right itself. as chis a for the night. This enraged Wienke beyond Lavearoot, Dec l4—The ship Vs Hallett, for Ne ig "aged Wienke beyond measure,and te Senet it, for New Pp ne My : . But in going so far as this it spoke | seizing a revel i pon . | York, has put back with sense. tiebuasaee nmmacrons that several had already embarked on board the City of | without authority, and the subject had mot. been Uvoathot ‘walk sitting Russel pare der Policeman Macleay beg Putzasaerars, Deo S6-—The prise seanits Baivor-wid sold European representatives were awaiting instruc- If Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Seward are really inclined todo | Washington, which is daily expected at Liverpool. again. From the tone of the government organs we are cer- | of the Fifth precinct, hearin e 4 report of the weapon, | to MrT Clyde for $12,000. Itiy intended to make her one - tions from their governments. st tain, atall events, that we may reckon on the neutrality of e | of aline between Philadelphia aud New York. One-half Justice and to save their country, there is no lack of facts came up, and, after sending the wounded man to the hos- | tiescur Batre brought. $125, Ar’ Ridgway. be ‘and arguments at hand fit to work upon the minds of those IMPORTANT FROM FRANCE France in the event of war. pital, arrested the assailant and locked him up inthe | ‘he sh ¥ pedlwsiviic. ssa Australia. of the multitude who have the naval and military work . ‘The indiscretion committed by the organ of M. de In } station house. Tho injured man was not supposed to be ‘ Wéictis ‘Pare : . Mennounre, Oct. 25,1861. | todo. And why should they care for any others ? Ameri IES: Gueronniere is much to be regretted, as it has served to | seriously wounded at first, but he commenced to sink welgm Poets. ‘Trade ie generally dull. can giliciiataa hts GM Goomae, aeDicke GAty es elicit a counter demonstration from writers in the two in- ly and died on the night of tho 23d inst. ‘The | 4,827, We have received but one London shipping paper bye ‘The ship Kent sailed to-day for England, with 105,600 | force of arms. ‘There 4 no haleas corpus to prevent the re apolecnte Idea of Neutrality and Prince | dependent papers for whose opinion we have the Geoary rendered @ verdict of “Death by apistol shot | ‘Ro >eamabip Arago. “ ‘ounces of gold. asian cf disagrceatle cngeettion ventigrents, nd atid, 90 leon’s Opinion of the Blockade. | regard. Need it be said that the journals to which we al- | ‘wound at the hands of Frederick Wienke on the 28th of | ,ASTW#Rr, Dec9—Sld Vesta, Torgesen, New York; Berlin, pol long as i be unarmed, is as harmless in America as it is in [Paris (Dec. 9) Correspondence of London Times. } inde are the Temps and the Journal des Debats? Our atten- Jackson, de Mowow or Warsaw. What Mr. Lincoln has to do | The tone of the Moniteur in the summary it gives of | tionhas been drawn toan article in the latter, from the pon is to convince, not the citizens of America, | foreign political news is unobjectionable. ‘True, it does | of one of the ablest and most eloquent of French writers. but the army of the Potomac. Surely, whh such per: | not express any positire opinion on the Anglo-American | M. Prevost Paradol is known by his consistent adherence Sonar suasive facts at his hand, he can contrive todo thie, But | quarrel—it is neutral; but under a veli of noutraiity we | to the principles of constitutional government which have THE NEWS BY THE ARAGO. if he should fail, he cannot be so much below the level of | May trace the signs of admiration, not far removed from | made England what she is, by his honest and persevering ah the occasion, and so imequal to the crisis he himsolf has | approval, at the energy and unanimity of the English | opposition to the system of bureaucratic control, which New Zealand. November, 1861.” Coroner Jackman commitied the | °“ixurasr, Dec 9—Arr_ Col Ledyard, Sutton, Richibucto; Co The accounts from New Zeaiand are very unsatisfac- y. Col accused to the Tombs, to await the action of the Grand ] looney, N¥ufks 10th, Pacific, Philadephia.’ Jury. Deceased was twenty-six years of age, and was a joDEAUX, Deo 7—Arr |, Casiner, NYork, ROUWERSHAVRN, Dec 7—Arr Burinah, Beckwith, NYorx. beet hihi cro Capiz, Dec 3—Sid Elias Pike, Hawes, Boston. SHOCKING DEATH OF A CHILD. Paes nee Reh oe lee mae Br), for next day; Altavela, A Ro Josoph Mans, a child about three years old, was burned | fin. for Portiand; schr Abby Bradford, for ‘Boston next dese to death yesteraay at No. 36 Mulberry street, during the | «so, bark Virginia Ann, wtg. D ¢ a $ D a temporary absence of its mother. Mra. Mane—who isa | gos Clare ‘kan, Geomig, Minmaice (aad Ti eo —was * London). very destitute woman—was ‘obliged to leave her child | anton. 1 sey Dee 13—In port schr Ann Glover, SINT OEE irae brought about, as not to be content to sacrifice personal | people. has withered like a blight the energies of the prets in The United States mail steamship Arago, Captain Lines, | popularity in order to save his country from the ruin of a | | In Erereties aa lth: t4) beste she: aninkannpa o¢.| France, His ‘babit ot, Safting: Binal tn: oppeslticn, 21 foreign war. We cannot yet believe that the new year | Peace, it said yesterday:—The attitude of the English |-his dislike of any posi r doctrine assumed by the ec set Se Om HDA HAE) el Mem pon) C0 TAA Arie In Lear oan Ube vedi: he ie tiemee petal Aue tae Lhe Lait peeapiancuaee) mecca bent ane HL eitod jourpalists—whose “ independence” is sobered by inst., arrived at this port at five o'clock yesterday after- | Cr ine nighest and the lowest sentiments that can move | resolute than ever. They accept without hesitation a | their’ “devotion”—seem naturally to rank him, on alone for the purpose of gathering some pieces of wood to | Cura for NYork next day. noon, with files of European journals to date. mankind must be against such an cvil consummation. | State of things which they have not been able to prevent, | most political questions, on the adverse sice to the Con- | make a fire ot alg a poman uke wax ahecees to find | \ Guascow. Dec 9—Arr Sally J Altken, Godfrey, Philadele The purser of the Arago in his report says:— Honest men and honorable men will abhor a war inan | and they are resolved to gain by force of arms the | situtionnel, the Patrie aud the Pays. But surely the | that her infant son had been burned to death during her | Phia. Sid Sth, Moro Castle, Ross, NYork. unjust cause; avaricious men will hate a war which must | Satisfaction which they no longer hope to obtain by | liberals of France must perceive that England is their be ruinous, and timid men will dread the blow which | negotiation. All discussion is now laid aside, To | very hope and mainstay, and that a sympathetic alliance such a war must draw down. We yet have hopes, but if | the arguments of General Scott they reply with these | with this country gives them a moral support for which those hopes are disappointed, the event will but show | simple words:—‘Surrender the guests of Great Britain | they might search in vain elsewhere. In this matter M. how hapless is a nation whieh, eveb in its relations with | whom you have made prisoners, apd then we will discuss | Paradol has allowed his French jealousy of England to foreign Powers, is governed by its own populace. as much as you please.” The government acts up ener- | Override his better feeling. and to deprive us of the good- pasesitaisi eer getically to public opinion. Nothing is spoken of but | willofaman whom we would fain consider our friend. armaments and shipe, embarkation of troops and of war- | Why cannot he regard the outrage on the Trent simply as like stores for Canada, where the strength of the English | @ matter to be discussed on Xs own grounds? Does he absence. Ag there was no fire in the room itis ditficult,| GREEXocx, Decd—Arr Statira, Eastport. to imagine how the accident occurred. Mrs. Maus says'| Siurvnvan’ Dos Sare pice Nora Mes Eloy, NYO she does not think there were any matches even within | Havre. A” i . reach of the child. and is at a loss how to account for the | _Havne, Dee 8—In the ronds, Wm Nelson, Cheever, and sad calamity. The Coroner notified of the affair, and ihe roliowine HR ene port Deo tut» will hold an inquest upon the body of deceased to-day. tenberg, and Nuremberg, of NOricans; India, of do: Virginia, PATAL FALLS. mre, Ch Hickors, Osborn House, Lincoln, BD Me enif Ata rank Plerve, Horizon, Abby Brown . Jacob Miller, a native of Germany, aged fifty-eight Gouin Mongolia, uxan ‘thik, he chm, amar i ‘ Criterion, Dorcas’ Prince, Consignment, Robert, Marel years, died at the New York Hospital yesterday Crout the | Dov "sons aihork Grote Ouarves Ook, teanqaetbey Merkle effects of injuries accidentally received by falling down | da. ‘Rebecca Shepard, Ann E looper, Gen Nowell, M stairs at No. 68 Mangia street, on Tuesday evening. | dela, Express, Mary, Ladora, Uncle Toby, Ciara Mt Coroner Jackman held an inquest. Lord, Jr, Chas Ward, Chas Davenport, Corilla, Es The Postmaster at Washington having erroneously noti- fled the Postmaster of London that there would be no American steamer leaving Southampton on the 11th of December, had ordered the English mails to be forwarded by the Edinburg. As scon as this was known the Post Department of London was advised of the mistake, and notified that the Arago would stop as_usual at South: ampton for the mails of the 11th inst. Notwithstanding | What Great Bhi) Hopes from Its Posi- ion. this notice they refused to send them by her, conse: mn. army, very insignificant in time of peace, is to be in. | suppose that anything short of a deliberate insult to our quently the Arago has no English maiis. {From the London Times, Dec. 11. pris Hed eo vay wee" ™* ) fag would have induced us to interfere with the Norttern Amongst the Arago’s passengers we notice the return Tt is satisfactory to find from the American journals With respect to the official opinion of the Minister for | States at a moment of great danger and perplexity for of General Scott and Mr. J. Glancey Jones, late Unitea | Tat there is aireacy @ considerable party in the Northern | Foreign aluirs on the quarrel between the Washington | them? Nothing but a regard for our honor, whieh neither " States di government and England nothing can be more precise | we nor the world can afford to see slighted with im- inctly anaiousto avoid a war with England. It is, States Minister at Vienna, plain, at any rate, that our demand for reparation in the | ‘ind positive. ‘Tho Minister thinks. that the violence | Punity,could plunge us into a war with tho North at such | _ John Gardni,.a native of Ireland. aged fitty-five years, | o! New York, Southern Chief, Wisconsin, Empire, The Arago left in port at Havre an unusually large | *air of the Trent will not have the effect of uniting all command by the captain of the San Jacinto is inde. | & moment as this. Have we not stood and looked on | fell in Park street, near Mulberry, about two weeks ago, Rathbone, Planter sue, Northern Light Weaderer? — Ps Panes achat eng eo Americans against us in a spiril of irrational arrogance o” | fensible; that by regarding the Confederate commis. | while our manufactures and the millions who depend on | 804 injured himself 0 severely that he died yesterday | Cobb, Rattler, Ame 5 ing eighty-three. blind desperation. Already, before that demand has ar- } “sjoners’as ‘contraband of war’? President Lincoln and | them have beon threntened with irremodiabic ruin? | 8t Bellevue Hospital. Coroner Jackman held an inquest | Wm ‘Nelson,’ Germania, Ci upon the body. Liverpool Packet, Arno, Swallow, alt, Samoset, Star, le, BODY IDENTIFIED. Pleqvot, Eastern Queen, and Hastern Star. The body of the unknown man found drowned in the | | Kixctrowx, Dect--Arr Palmyra, NYork; Eleetra, do; Li cellar of the now building corner of Jay and West streets, | ""'Wyxroon, Dec 8=Arr M Tilton, Tilton, Philadelphia; Un= has been identified as that of Wm. 8. Hay. Deceased had | derwriter, Roberts. and Dara, Rose, NYork; 9th, Montezu- The papers by the Arago are four days later than | rived, there are organs of public opinion advising conces- | hig ministers give a flat contradiction to themselves, | Our determination to be at peace is so strong that we those received by the America, and contain the follow. | *0%,and it is clear that the refusal of the federal gov. | or they always refused to admit that they wore at war. | haveallowed our ships to be confiscated one after ano- ing very interesting details of the news already reported | “Test to do justice in the matter would eroate a very | ‘ro gcize them on board a neutral vessel as contraband of | ther while we condoned that imposture of a blockade angry fecling in the States themselves. Into the party | war implies that, after all, the Southern States are en. | Whichhas been eluded, we are told, by more than five by the Arago, by telegraph from St. Johns, N. F. politics traceable through these masifestations we shall | titled to belligerent righis, while, even supposing the { hundred vessels. The biockade of the Southern ports ie hot at present enter. It is sufficient to observe that | \, ; i notoriously inetotive that, thas been ar ‘ the differences exist, and that if President Lincon | Northern States not to be at war, but merely repressing | 80 J Nal rs i r i " 9 , Rutignac, and Compromise, Cauikins, do. a rebellion, they had no right to seize men who were at | great reason, that our recognition of it is an infraction of | 4 letter in his pocket addressed to the superintendent of | ™& r 5 4 THE WAR FEELING IN ENGLAND. should have the wisdom to ‘meet, our requistions in | that moment in the character of refugees under the shel- | one of the articles of the treaty of Paris, a violation of the | the Brooklyn City Railroad Company, asking for a situa- | ,,t# shonver, inward bound ik, Agnes, Somes: EG Soran 2 ~ & proper and reasonable ‘ irit he will certainly | ter of the English flag. France, be argues, cannot con. | proclamation of neutrality, monstrous injustice to the | tion as conductor. Smith; Tronsides, Chase; North American, Weeks; Sardi Meeting of the English War Committee. find himself supported by a large body of bis country- | sistently view tie matter in any other light than this, | South and to hundreds of our own subjects who have A CHILD SCALDED TO DEATH. nian, Pendleton; Tiger, Lowell. and Webster, Lowber, alk men, sadgines Baeknt the tone of bard Pages be- i fore us, we should think it by no means impossible that BCS STS Sh ro ty or oe Eraer ara oere cere ow ee nea the tremendous, eventuality depending, upeo the reply of park loreal d sk Cotbed nee lla eal hi President Lincoln to Lord Lyons’ demand. What the re- sult is Kkely to prove may be inferred from the opinions, Blind indeed must be the fury of tho Americans if they Catharine Fawcet, a child, about three years old, was | ‘git Sih Neptune, Peabody, and Goddess, Lothrop, NYorks scalded to death at No. 1234 Washington street, on Mon- | %h, Morning Star, Foster, do: —th, Vanguard, Hallett, do d put bacl vith loss of sails, &c). day last, by the upsetting of a pot of boiling water on her | “Inthe river outward bound 9th Minwebaha, Beauchamp, person. ’ Coroner Schirmer held an inquest upon the body, | for N’ York. when the jury rendered a verdict of ‘* Accidental death.”? Cid 9th, Highland Chief, Barstow, NYork, m the London Chronicle, Dec. 11.) because it is precisely the point she had contended for | suffered by the arbitrary proceedings in the Northern during more than sixty years. France never would ad- | courte. mit the right of searching neutral vessels, and sho cannot | _After all this long suffering, after all the insults and now belie her own policy by approving the outrage com. | taunts to which we have caliniy submitted, after all this mitted on the Trent. holding aloof from anything that might embarrass the I believe the Emparor does not materially dissent from | North, or weaken its hands against its encmics, it is ra- c da war with this country to their . ; 1d by M. Paradol tha Ent out 9th, Underwriter, Roberts, for NYork. sed yhatically than by words, of th can voluntarily superad his Minister. Not only does he not dissent, but not very | ther hard to be told by M. Paradol that we are now about ‘eho are closest to the sceue of disputation, "The Warner | Peeent overwhelming embarrassinents., It is clear, not | jong ago he had ail bi made up his ‘mind to. take the iz. | tact on a foregone conchision to interfere in the Ame. Late Despatches for Europe. Sanger, NYork: ohn hee "Slacthewn ‘dor Highlander, is in preparation for a lengthened cruise; the Black | W/hstanding Hee ere eget in, which small successes | itiative in recognizing the independence of the Southern | rican quarrel. “M. Paradol does not seem to dispute our Bostox, Dec. 26, 1861. Sherman, Calcuta; Fleetwing, Tooker, Boston and Portland Prince will be put in commission with all ‘poseible ce- re regarded, ie federal government is making LO | States, for it must not be forgotten that France also is | Tight im the question now pending with the Northern aes tibet 2 1th, Philo, Golightly, NYork; James, Williams, and Gem, ‘The Europa, which sailed yesterday, took £21,000 in | Powell, do. specie. She will call off Cape Race aboutSaturday even- | premier MrGivery nid Aree Oona RT one Montevkdeos ing. Despatches for Europe can be transmitted through | MAtaga, Nov 28—Sid Joseph Clark, Lesa Gibraltar. lerity; millions of cartridges have been shipped for Canada; the embarkation of troops is uninterrupted. Not to multiply evidence, indeed, it is manifest either material progress in the war. On the Potomac the grand | Siteswogdt mune not be forgotten, that, Fran 2 ernment. But he morethan hints that we are anzicus eviow of soine 60,000 men was not the prelude to any | Su nateny pe prine Navan st nige a tea | fo take advantage of Bey aria t. step im Decors North anid Active operations against the enemy, and precautions, | pars, exercises now and then no small influence over his cou. | South, and, . This writer avows indeed, were taken lest the spectacle ifelf should be di sin. Prince Napoleon returned from America laboring un- | that all his sympathies were with the cause defended by . i Portianp Roaps, Dec 9—Put in, Pe turges, from tea bys evecwhelolng aienlay’ of Verted into a battle instead of a parade. Intheremoter pro- | ‘avery, with strong undencies in favor of the North and | question. He considers that the slavery ques- way, NewYork. Fateino, Nov Wheatland, Peacock, Alicante, coll i Bios Boe 0 be answers Rrnterial | vinces the dead lock was equally decided. Neither in | {,2verd, wih strong tendencies in fa ing for the tion was the great cause of the war. The in- Pc i eke ig eee ae cartel a ie power. There is only one question to be answered before the | Virginia. nor Kentucky, nor Missouri could the federal Speer ‘ich he is now lely preparing for the Sen- Death of Dr. Van Wyck. NYork 2d; Times, for Boston 8 days. terrible judgment between peace and war is pronounced, gina, iat f : Naat | ate will doutiless be in this sense. The Emperor has yielded | stitution could not, he thinks, be perpetuated after seph- Mippixeron, N. Y., Dec. 26, 1861 Quexxstown, Dec 8—Arr Sunbuirg, Atkinson, NYork; 9th, Will the Commissioners who were, seized om toard the Prent | aval expedition kad go yet Proved Dagsee OF seats iy | to the influence, and postponed, but Ido noe think given up, a ee eee rrontiehck such immense | pr, 'van Wyck. father of Hon. C.H. Van'Wyek, died | Bermuda. dec Aparkling Wave, do; Sternberg, do; Berne ae PACE seme tiom of he English flag? Every | 19 the latest advices Beaufort was still unoccupied, and | 22%” 0 his own original judgment. Struction of the Union the Permanence of slavery, pro. | ‘8 morning, at bis residence in Bloomingburg. Pekan, Dee h Are wicork Baden AKyab.’ ation of ideas vipon this point, $0 a fuctu- ae sapaire of Port Royal seemed to promise little more | DIFFICULTIES OF THE FRENCH MERCHANTS AND | vided for by the constitution as solemnly amended last on ¢ e capture of Hatteras. The federal troops, it was MANUFACTURERS, ould be placed estion—how is it that” Ling bye ings! gs cr og soamittst by | said, were retiring from Western Virginia, and the ap- This Anglo-American quarrel has added considerably Li oop fee Stiucioropate: rested earn war ai <4 ion jess ‘one eae an aha tows Com- | proach of winter would probably keep things in their | to the difficulties under which French merchants and | for the triumph of the North, do not urge forward the wemmigth: tide parcobe Holitioal ‘ed will die untried | Present position for some months to come. manufacturers were already laboring. They feel that | separation, which at their own showing must in the end a9 Ted Triecne: ah 7 es ne 1 he ie oats: ‘That position, it cannot now be denied, offers no pros- } they are placed in this dilemma—should war ensue be- | he productive of such good results? We think we have in the fe erierod at | Te wil b bd hart ptite a pect of any speedy termination of the war. The last s' tween Engiand and the federal States the blockade of the | impaled our critic on the horns of a dilemma with regard rt A hig medal fugit Salou ne itll that | months have shown that, though the resources of Southern ports will be raised, and the French manufac- | to his own sentiments. Let us quote his own words as to Bie na fp 1, though it bret oped lion of | North are indeed great, they are not sufficient for the sub- | turers will procure the cotton they require; while, on ours:—'*It cannot be questioned that England has a double in Oli aves, sentiments of a the’ a nd expressed } jugation of the South, or the establishment of the federal | the other hand, the Northern ports will be blockaded | interest in the definitive break up cf the American Union. pdt yo Site: waters vente real conactence | ‘suthority even in the border States. It appears that the | by the English flect, and the French must lose the Not only will that rupture check for many years Q Bi beed = i a jt & 7 Lg pe only too Sppropriate Southern States are really unanimous in their resolution to | litle trade which remains to them in that irter, | the developement of the naval and political power of ey shouldjtrickle forth iufkngland from the obscure | achieve their independence, The Unionists have offected | and they will, ‘moreover, te unable. to execute t large the United States, but it would also constitute in the and corrupted reservoirs of To a rh e thay aaa oibee Prats Teste aruinuant ips sopenisy- lodgments on the territories of the seceders, and displayed | orders now on hand for military stores for the Ni South (at least it is hoped so) @ great republic, purely ing the public opinion of England, But we are bound to the federal flag on Southern soil, but with no material re- | They apprehend that ‘if the blockade of” the Southern agriculturai, which would be worked by the capital, the SUN ek Fico ea: Fl Per Sreausurp Niacana, at Hauivax—TeiegRarnqo) Arrivals and Departures. ite NYork Dec 8, Mischief, at Guernsey; loth, Teony ARRIVALS. Lind, at Waterford; J Ahlers, Dorette, and Jane Duncan, im Hayre via Sovrnamrton—Steamship Arago—Lieut Gene- | the Scheldt; 11th, Indus, Conciliator, and Regina, at Queena- ral WinfeldjScott and servant; J Glancey Jones, late United | town; 12ih, President Fillmore, and Monsoon, at Deal: Lucy States Minister to Vienna; Noah L Wilson, 8 W Kilvert, Mr | Ellen, at Plymouth ; 13th, Sundberry, and Ellen, at Dublins. and Mre-AL Catlin, of Vermont; Mr and Mr | Werner Itech- | Fanny Fera, and Caroling, at Belfast, ner, Mr and Mrs Lockwood and servant, Mra Seeligman, four = children and servant; W G Fuller, E Warburg, Elliott Little. | The Marshall, from New York for Havre, ashore near foun, TF Wilcox, A G Goodall G Lantern, Mr-Avbye, Henry | Guernsey, is breaking up. hard, A Mitchell, F § Bond, Mr Engle, Mra Lefovre, (Latest via Queenstown.) Letombe, Mrs_ Goldberger ahd child, Miss A Kahn, Mr and | arr from NYork, Aimira, at Singapore; Old Man, and G P Mrs Domis, T Tschuely, Mr Stagg, August Heuse, N- Meck Patten, at Deal; Hadding, at Jersey; City of Boston, and Re- F Reginald, J Gerling, 6 Rosas, B Rosas, L Wilderoter, Mrs | venue, at Liverpool. Woodley and four children, A Le Marinel, L Stefanot ‘iskiniet Po: Le Marinel, Mra Chevalier, Mr and Mrs A L Acker, two semen pig Las) danghters_and son; Wm Graham, Mr and Mrs Chartier and | _ BALTIMORE, Dec24—Arr schrs A Tirrell, Higgins, Boston; * i, Mr Yewell JM Soulagnet, B Abbiati Mrs Holmes, | SA Falconer, Tirrell; GB Smith, Soper and Jane B Durfee | = i 4 sults. They have not discovered any ‘‘loyal”’ class of ci- | ports be raised, the cotton growing States will send | industry, and tho marine of England, as it hil ee? 5 Reee ceed toms cho mrorky Ceeucence Teaches uf WD | tisens anxious to escape from the tyranny of the Confede- | to France a quantity of cotton of much greater value worked ap to this day, we musteadmit, by the capital, | Mite Lamblin—Toial, 68 passengers, River’ achta a Olen Gonery Bisel G Mt Nevlan: Boone except fron the Otafederate President himesit, ment bé rate government, nor have they been Joined by any symm, | than the French produce which they may take in return. | industry and navy of’ the Nortuern States, ‘That vast igert, and Mary! ‘atheart, NYork: Sifted clear of Northern distortions. ‘Bat we euwot be | PAtUizets or parisans. ‘Eten the tans i aid anne | Ccngequently, the balance much be paid orn gold, and farm as soun as had acheived fancied independence, Be > 1 » Dee 23—1 Mary Merahon, Swift, SHIPPING NEWS. | rye i nen ret feta my beeen mS son, for Cuba few days. Sid ist, brig Elizabeth, Trumbull, lardenas, letters: packages intended Ye LEWES, Del, Dec 9 AM—The brigs M: Means, fom neat bescated. y SO MBES Tome Banas | aoe, aaaalus mean toe rn wih the lowing oad A money, they fear, will again become scarce and dear in ‘merce surpriced that the belligerents should have lost all sense | vided on the critical question of emancipation, and what | Paris. ’ Considerable anit. must therefore, still prevail wel oie “Dnited Statea into hose of Bonar sisi Pe! ee * ber epee 5b oo ene Prvtg eit rt the wcte is decreed by one Minister is cancelled by another; but, | among mercantile men. ‘Here is a tempting and brilliant prospect opened out to jonesty ferments at home. ' Day y as far as can be yet seen, it appears by no means certain | In the mean time the accounts from the provincesfare ‘The great slave republic, 80 long our bugbear, to be { peace-at-any-price assure themselves that the ~ ‘ a Conds are dispetsing. that the feeling of tbe country has | that % slave poyulation would rexpond to the call of the abo- | not favorable. The demand for silk which was noticod | added to the British empire, ’ Colton felde eect enough litionists, even if the policy of that party were to prevail. | at Lyons for a rew days has ceased, and nothin, ~ “ wns | loaded schis, went to sea last evening:—J G Wright, peer gh) porn — bm Peete mage Reports allege that emancipated slaves are found more pon than the position of St. Etienn Even a Pars nee ghar Min matelialise ieee Tear ALMANAC FOR KEW YORK—THIS Day. Berrett, Express ‘ if eth Di 8 ‘sims, New H n, James can that? Lan Ruwoell hes reconaidered. iis’ iews; ready to act as spies for their former masters than to co- | there is very little business doing, except among manu- | ports never to be blockaded any more. Ths’ thing i8 too 723 lowes, Mary ly sy , Ro- rs, L Dupont, Elizabeth, Barnstable, 8 Ponder, N 8 Rue, 5 Wed, Mintle, H Stubbs, F Bell, L A May, Spencer and ‘The schr Calista, from Havana for NYork, came in last eve ning, ene left at daylight this morning for her destination. operate with their liberators, and the expectations of the | facturers of articles de Paris and of toys, who are pre- be true. Unfortunatel - sod a —— a =: get a bape my Unionists on this, as on other points, have signaily | paring for New Year's day. Accounts ‘from Besancon = pera “aed 0 rey Seervianen te ‘ine ae 1 » and, a, ecause the price offered for cast iron was less than it t that it could enter into t oy fom ok a ee Bn itself are reproduced in these distracted provinces. It | cost the manufacturer, but because the quantity sold was | even a Frenchman, that there are egtishanas itis Sour tte One cee San ‘irish Sepoy oe > | appears as if the North was resolved upon Union and the | inferior in amount to that disposed of at the correspond- | goil their hands with slave ownership, or that a country eee ira Uh Nas Poke cy viet aang, | South upon secession, while the border states ing period @f last year. tilled by slaves could ever be looked upon as a likely oppor- Sy sasha Males ANA Weide Gen Setar te berg Ee ie epeeaied Goreiaicities oe I ron | [Pucis (Dec. 9) correspondence of the London Chronicte.] | tunity of investment by English eapialiste. Ite a glat- io B. 3 Bs ~ ie ec ear that the government has given an order that a8 | ing misrepresentation that jictures tous the Nessionialine es scaaties eae preg dnd dag Mecle lee 3 bad uy — Ova ed an ae ae ma@ny as ten weasels + leer of different sizes shall be got States is herieg been cultivated. by.the agit Gad tae Narolcon, whom he, shathy pretender as he is, fancics im | Mtcciellah and its Beauregard. officer nen to | ready, for sea by the 25th of this month at latest, and | dustry of the North. It is the negroes that supply the Port of New York, December 26, 1861, CLEARED. : NEWPORT, Dec 2?—Arr schrs Edward, Strong. Ellsworth ei Trene, oe Queenstown, &e—Funch, Meincke & pe NYork: Stray Holden, ‘Rockland Yor do; J Healing, Coles 1, tes, M in, Fal iver for do. PEATE Greghound, Yates, Monrovia and a market—Yates, | mon, Fair ihis AM, Hr brig Wm. Akin, Wadman, Windsor, er, W vg | NS for NYork. Brig8 P Brown, Hammond, for Havana, ié Bark Reindeer, Wellington, Barbados—Hy Trowbridge’s for NYork, rie P Brown, at wind. Se rig Storm Nymph (Br), McLeod, Liverpool—Rogers’ & | In port at8 AM, bark Martha Anna; briga Redwood, Mel- , Yor Havana ready; Joho ment declared that it would take 200,000 men to | that the Minigter of Marine has gone to Brest and L t ‘itch. - ville, ana John Pierce, Hammond, Prove oe BI iy iy vi a U1 1 " dustry, and the sale of cotton, rice and tobacco, the Roe! 81 nee Balch; se Mary H Mittin, Buck, from Provdence for Elt- they ‘hava ‘tibtr: Wen Garten wae teats "in Great Rather ed Feria, nexey us Chivas {o take the necessary measures for haviug it executed. capital: If, Oy separation, tae tommnares gf the | ‘South | Brig Ex einior BY) Tatton Berioaaee Wepeine Feith, zabetipo Gazelle, Simmons fr"doy Glenroy, Wakelela: B “ai © vesi Of dor destined r ct is “fy ri ies ti . Perry, Gorce— 7 Co. |, from Tas + a le cig with Mom are, allied the lympathio minority | {¢for theseceders. The rebellion, in fact, appears as | "The rrench government haa Feceived iacelitnnee shat | eecefrrettram Uetuntensome duties imposed uprw their | Bete Ranunic, Perey Gorce BF BUCK RCO og | Mnk alt gport for Boson, A Basom, Barker, from New e ‘The French government hi ai, becatine hal 5 i " Teceived intelligence that | import trade-for the bencjit of the North, that will be an ad- ; rheeler, from do for Full River; in IA12, she cught to be hustled of the neas in 196Iee | BOmeIERE, AB extensive and as complicated as a rebellion } poth President Lincoln and Mr. Seward have assured the | vastape lor’ Siagtand “ond ‘to the reat sf ihe oat Oe chr M Bedell, Ryder, Baltimore Bedell Zork for dos, BrandywiBfiaworth for NYork: Sarah, Holden who the consequences of a transatlantic war—who | "pit even if the very depth of thers embarrassmenta | [reneh Minister at Washington (M. Mercier) that the | For the rest, from the beginning We have deprecated this | Sehr JT’ Brady Halt Pee tee from Rockland for dos Auguste, Mischie(, Sarah Janes Ce 4 talk of national feeling as “corporate self-love’—who should be thought suggestive of reckless co Je, it stopping vy the San Jacinto of the French vessel the | secession, and the civil war that has arisen from it, We Schr Mary Emma, Henderson, Tangier Sound—Master, ‘Thomas Hull, Hull, trom Providence for NYo: Wind NW, employ the term ‘un-English” as synonymous with a Id stit, be impossible to discover any pros hor Muther | Marie et Jules was caused by a mistake, that the damage | have not desired the dissolution of the Union. Schr $ T Garrison, Grace, Cape May—Baker & Dayton, ae TLADELPHIA, Dec %—Arr Steamships Kennebee, purer virtve than that of patriotism—who doat and | Mould sul be impure ag A her ae Gone was the result of an accident, and that pecuniary re- | We anrept it now as an accomplished fact, we do not knee | Schr J Lockwood, Truitt, Camden—Master. ere irkr Kensington, Baker, Boston! schr A ira eit ouonartatiao warn | Sl hls Meh tly, ga | atone te ado teUvies tthe Frch | wt fr gtr for sit" bur el cnt ge | Ari Re Ln SG BoA, Sai geeemee ue facta hoa Groat Britain as the big bully of the world, and who | have been imagined that domestic quarrels would be ‘ outof our way for the exclusive fris ip Schr Undine, Baker, New London—Baker & Dayton. Liverpool. Cla ste pRennebec, Garton, NYork; rhapsodize as though the Euglish Cain had lifted f nity A Paris correspondent of the Independance confirms | ing confederacy. Schr T C Lyman, Stannard, New Haven—s ‘ Frank (Br), Stanwood, Belfast, Ireland; schré J 8 Spenoe, egal aiaricn, Sas bos sebig abit Mh dorkaOer My Ta mercpaaa. ware Gs ae what Ihave more than once stated respecting the aun | "pune peaks of the loss that France would expe. | *® 7 . SD Biannerd Fea eT Went; SL Crocker, Presbroy, taunton; Bacelsor Steamship Arago, L th Deora, | Rileyyand Jon Trin, Wallace Poriivede, ockton Bab teamship Arago, Havre and Southampton, 7B , Wallace, Portland. wih masofaud passengers to Bamuel Mos & Gectge Mer. | Om Ccwy Dec Sarr sokt Oregon, Graves, Rorkland kenzie. Off Cowes, pasted going ia a propeller supposed to | for NYork. Cid schr Nile, Boothby, NYork. Std brigs Thou be the Saxonia, henes, Connor, Youpa Republic J D Lincotn; and others, Lg kcaneport)y Comstock, Fort Pickens, PROVIDEN ‘24—Arr steamer Ospray, Kenney, Now Steamship Baltic Dec.19, vin Key Weat 220, York; schr Morilla, Pettigrew, Nanticoke. Steamship Ericsson (US transport), Cole, Fortress Monroe, 30 hours, to Dunham & Co, Had heavy N gales during the | == tess and " tude of the French government with regard to the South- . war with England were she deprived Sea ee cerenised ne wu,teeritieal political atheists | reconcile North andSouth. The conflict has gene tovfar | wn Statens is said in neveral ore Te ee of Ciok ainistanion finer Contineren Wick: Wranbested oa clit recognized a: ¥ , u oath That they exeree an iniveg Buen OUF consolation 38, | for that, and, indeed, dt will have Leen seen from our opening | government, a Tegaris the Anglo American costing: former occasions by the nentrality of America. But tho that they stand apart from the ‘matliness of the nation; | Temarke that even the nolitical paries in the North itelf are | sovit ‘maintain strict neutrality. Though not able to con: | Northern states are Not likely 40 fall #0 low. as to be unas and that they have never vet persiaded a British govern oo mony oe ee aon ae hate yee woe tradiet this assertion, 1 have reason, 10 beliey iat the | hie at any time to undertake a protitable carrying trade er urrender the national ho 7 é iM Emperor's government will acknowledge the Southern | In the event of a war between England and America thi ment to ‘surren ronal hi AF ncne | rife. There was a time, no doubt, when the prospect of | states, if England does so. ‘This resolution was, 1 om | treat weiter aecae to" covet, for France this lucrative question was at first, so it is u Will the Lincol , t 1 Calrinet restore us the passengers who w «pirationly traeged operiaee arncon tee have becn expected to | aesured, adopted in principle before the affair of the | ani benevolent office of commersial zo-botween, He 7 MISCEL) NEOUS. " ¢ American mind, but that | § f he ; ser Incr ertaaae from the protection of our flag? If not, they will be Sati “ de Trent. brings this forward a8 a cogent argument for the neutrali- No cree Be 7 thet dulp, ond to oven giana asthe hanes may cies | {ime hae passed. A rupture with England wold now | ""the same journal also confirma another piece of news | ty af France in the, quamels “We do. HOU object te the 4 N CONS MPT Es. Wie aiigraeics by arecihaees for ages wo come. We entor into the spirit of tomorrow's | tier. crvate a atrong opporttifn to the federal. government | Which Thave been ablo to tyanemit to you:—It is said | conclusions wo regard the argument as cv tat 24 10, on 8110, spoke brig JA oad eS a Sears ta eee Prayer for pence. We cannot, however, be blind to tacts, | “her, cnvate a strong apposition to the fe fonrnment | ic ig not impossible, in case & British squadron rhall be | Pa sumed #6 ti-haes . BEL Ldcine eet Kismwort, Havana, $0 days, with en-|| ioe i that dread disesse, consumption, st Thoughtful men on the other of tho Atinnticara | wilhin the federal Sates, an Pig Pmamerrul rarty | sent to convey an ambassador to the Seuthern States, that the | Jos K sting when we tind that the | gar, to Simon de Visser. y » anxious ty nown te his fellow sutterers the means of nervous, and hesitate to the Union; but there | WHA irresistible arguments agatnst veident and his | gquadron of Rear Admiral Reynaud will be sent (o the same | sano writer, in discussing the duties of bis own counry, | “Wark Maweany, Pennington, Havana, 20 days, in batiast, to | eure. To Mah diectiece oe aeeeaad is @ majority of incendiaries poradces, sind of uch |? ny gener point of view the case would suggest ex. | £1&%¢, ovtensibly to exercise ime qlervation, fut which | puts ite interest before its RonOT cai, off Sandy Hook, during aheary blow from | scription w ay il aireciicon. SSeceeeeacaee ee ee fetty similar conclusions, It wae intimated at the out. | would mal the ie give moral suport to the armed intereen- | pe ye ppARNCE WITH ENGLAND STILE INCREAS iseirinann, Tainss, Port au, Prince, Dee 1, via 8G, Tue, ouly object of the t Ne American quarrel that the North might tina | "of hier; (ime. 16) cor Andon Her sind Ith, with logwood &c, to R Murray, dt. tion she atticted. cesham (nec Receh of Mr. Disracl ion in Canada for the Joss of the South; but if | JEFF. DAVIS’ MESSAGE AS REPUBLISHED IN TE uble surprise Xi neanged by the . en gar, Pere, Carenan 0 days, with : 7 Fant we Seaham (Dec. 6) cc lon Times conquest of the British colony could MONITECR. cial print, like the res? of the papers, publishes tue i ta ill plense address, t The Naval Reserve s n and other mariners were | evor have been re ally ene tained, even by Mr. Seward | _ Most of the daily jonrnals cominent on the Message of ofleraim Lavis, Wut Laveseattons of ts me tiny Ema h seripen WEY. EDWARD A. WILSON, bs Sasembled at the dock this day to be taught the use of th | himself, it can hardly be thought that this isan oppor. | Preetient Jefferson Davis, bul none of their remarks are | portan’ pa.cagee—that in which the Presideiit gots dewo logsten, Mass), Morton, Matanzas, | Williamsburg, Kings county, N.