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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. 7 the Freuch army ready for any omergency. On oueh | countries forming tho ®usstan Empire, In Ruasia the @ subject it is unsafe to indulge im conjectures. (As to the condition of the army to take the field there has always been a diversity of opinion even among military men; but I have just heard, on what I think to be good 1g better prepared for apy sudden call than most people supposed. THE EASTERN QUESTION. Refusal to Cede Crete—Pr: establishment of the Hungarian constitution im that ‘The Russian Minister of Finance’s report to the Em- peror Alexander, accompanying the budget for 1867, States that the expenditure of the Ministry of War has not been increased, but has, on the contrary, been diminished by six and a half million roubles “by the re- duction of the army and the adoption of economical measures, The expenditure for the Ministry of Marine has been reduced by five millions. ¥ It bas been discovered that extensive forgeries have been committed in the notes of the Bank of Portugal. The directors bave consequently determined to withdraw all the 20,000 refs notes from circulation, A photo- grapber named Selvira has been arrested in Lisbon, charged with complicity in the forgery. The negotiations for a treaty of commerce between Austria and Italy are nearly terminated, and the treaty may be looked upon as concluded. Senator Melagari is tobe appointed Secretary General of the Ministry for EUROPE. ‘The Peace Congress to Assemble Tuesday, May 7. ‘The Fenian Colonels Burke Doran to be Hanged. it to the ampui yreected by the Sultan, Ho de , he never felt better, if would leave him alone; that the scratc! ived im Crete are triding, and that and a litte gun- of Fi an Asters jorelgn rs Ince the year 1856 the rultan bas been con- on hostitities; but she has also the means, no ¢ inclination, of intimating to her the break the peace they do so at thei wap Corenea in ennenatien of te Cooma: rally tends to reinvest it with part at least moderator and arbiter with which it was origi- ‘instituted in the Middle Ages. Alarming Aspect of the Luxemburg Question Before the Mediation. Ottoman Minister The London Times states in a leader that it learns from America that a special Commissioner of United States Re- venue has received instructions to visit Europe and see what he can discover touching the labor and wages ques- tion, the relations of employer and employed, the ope- ration of protective duties, and so forth. This envoy, who has to report to Congress before the conclusion of the year, will arrive at a most opportune moment, for the revelations of our Trades Union Commission will be ready for his notice and consideration. The Emperor of Austria had accepted the resignation of the Minister of Commerce, Baron Von Wullersaorf, conferring upon him at the same time the cross of the order of Leopold, and appointing him Commander of the proposed Austrian expedition to Eastern Asta, and also Plen:potentiary for the conclusion of treaties of com- merce with China, Japan and Siam. A letter from the Archipelago, dated at Mitylene, April 3, published in the Levant Herald, says:— The shocks of earthquake have nearly ceased, and there is some improvement in thi Our population has recov rt to resume its rormer occupati 1 sends us abundant supp! every [tan consented to the union of the Trans- provinces under Prince Cousa sia. When the Prince of Hohenzollern was elected hereditary sovervign the Sultan couceded virtus! inde- pendence to those provinces of his empire. In Syria he made every concession demanded by the Freuch Em- ‘Zhe Sultan’s Determination to Re- tain Crete anid Progress of the Bastern Insurrection. to please France and Rus- ‘Two Views of the Russian American Cession Treaty. the Christian Powers contemplate employ: violent means to enforce such measures, events, the Sultan is prepared Sovereign of the Ottoman Empire, He leaves the iasue to Divine Providence, throws the responsibility of events that may occur on the governments pared to support his of another Navarino. reported to have been the substanc of the verbal communication of the Ottoman Minister to the foreign ambassadors. only "bo “proionges by. the, Sultan ly Prolongé yy the Sultan making a great effort to avert the dismemberment Hf His dominions are beld together by a central administration, BY THE CABLE FO MAY 2. . THE PEACE CONGRESS. ‘The Day of Assembinge Again Changed—An Earlier Date Appointed. Lonvon, May 2, 1867. ‘The day for the meeting of the Peace Congress has sagain been changed, and it is now announced that tho diplomatic preliminaries are already so far a@vanced that the Conference will held its first session on the 7th instead of the 12th inst. THE FENIAN TRIALS, Celonels Burke and Doran, I. R. A., to be Hanged—Captain McCafferty on Trial. Dosum, May 2, 1867. ‘The Fenian prisoners Colonels Burke and Doran have ‘been convicted of high treason and sentenced to be hhanged on the 29th of the present month. The trial of McCafferty is now in progress before the to do his duty as federate goveraments, as well as the re) the people, — given equal proofs of their readiness Ea Ted ‘adele spontancousness and unanimity of The fact is, however, that peopie—nave exhibited mmarck, if he would bial stubborngess and providential for Germahy that she has found a master; a man not only calculated to councils by a decided): aracter, bat so aided by circumstances, of France and Rt It be good saseia, rasa just authority even at the Te = national movement. e Princes not a little of what Count Bis speak out, would call their prover! headedness. It is with 800 bags tetas and the English government, The French thée and the Rpcoat barrels of flour, sent by corvette Giuscardo have also. from Smyrna, This morn- jon and solemn thankegiv- ;_mearly the whole who had kept a strict fast during the three previous days, attended the A London medical journal reports :— We are enabled to state upon authority that the pro- bas been very satisfactory. t of the thigh, after hav- by M. Nélaton, as we lately men- tioned, has boen treated by the introduction of a iubed and it is slowly closing. There has been somo very naturally, of a troublesome secondary nsion is now entertained on bonds except those of @ dominant religion, and the personal an individual of the house of Othman. Universal suffrage would destrvy the fabric, On the other band, the prin- itical vitality is every day ¢ Christian maces in European nians and Bulgarians demand ly superior genius and and ght ing there was 8 grand ing for the cessation jnssulmans and Chris- tians alike agree in seoking more anarchy than they enjoy, and the Greeks wil be satised with nothing but national independence. The power of the Sultan and the progress of his Christian subjects placo them in a ‘state of irreconcilabie hostility. Tne present political condition of things cannot endure, and no man ventures to sucgest any practicable step towards the t transformation, unless it be the dismemberm of the Prince Imperial complication, bat no ap} that score, The little to witness the review of the troops in the ly restoration to his former health ‘he war in Crete continues, The Ottoman troops march through all the cultivated parts of the island, except the district of Selinos, without encountering serious resistance, But the insurrection revives when Tuileries, and his igbnesses of Weimar, Coburg or Brunswick would think and activity is confidently anticipated. Prussia’ much better than her The opening of the Salle Evangélique in the English garden of the French Exhibition, took place under the presidency of the Earl of Shaftesbury. Haif an hour before the opening the building was crowded. Among others who were preseut on the occasion, were Bishop Stevens, of Pennsylvania; Baron de Chabaud la Tour, M. ‘FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. jo’ nest at Omaio, wishin a uarters of the Ottoman army. its Voyages in quick succossion, A fortnight ago it landed a cargo of provisions and mili stores at Rodakina, im the district ot Aghios Basi! last week it landed a similar car; and this week it visited one of of Milopotamo, on the northern side of the island. For the present, therefore, the insurgents have received am- ple suppiies. The failure of Mustapha Pasha as a Commander- Chief of the Ottoman army was com| by He Greeks The Arkadi makes ‘Alinota Central shares. Erie Railway shares. at Suia, in Solinos, je bays in the province settled However pardona- bie might be the zeal with which German up for their own emoli Loxpoy, May 2—7:20 P. M. Consols are { per cent higher. Five-twenties are quoted at 44, and Illinois Central hares < lower than at the opening. .Bries unchanged. “Cenacle closed at 913¢ for movey. AocERIOAN SECURITIES area shade weaker, and closed at the following quota- Loxpos, May 2—Evening. li ‘The Continental Bourses. Lonpos, May 21:20 P. M. A despatch from Frankfort, dated last night, reports ‘that United States consols closed there at 76. The Liverpool Cotton Market. Livearoot, Bationalities of Christian communities; bat they were willing to keep in abeyance minor differences in order ta. carry out the great object of preaching the truth “and,” he concluded, “I hold out the ght hand of fellowship ‘across the ocean, coming as I do from Phila- deiphia, the city of brotherly love, and we welcome you 8 Christian brothers.” i s = £ appear first in a French paper. of nonrishing insurrection in {i bolds dipiboniictutereourge, but it¥ery naturally con: tt hol intercourse, very naturally con- siders that the condition of the Greeks in Turkey ought versal suffrage, etlento Kingdom lie in Greece repudiates all i y * Theo otton market ts firm; sales to-day 12,000 bales, ‘Middling uplands 11 $d., middling Orleans 124. Liverroon, May 2—1: 80 P, M. ‘The cotton market is steady at opening quotations. Liverroot, May 3—Evening ‘The cotton market closed at a decline, though there ‘was a good day's business. The fotiowing are the authorized closing quotations :— Middling uplands 11}¢4.,, middiing Oricans 11X4. The @ales of the day exceeded the noon estimate, amounting I and that the natural bee a) THE FENIAN TRIALS, ot ¢ € A Rebel Informer Runs Away and Escapes from Crowa In@ucnces—How He Decelved i Ey OF iors oes ae oe fegarded as resting on any basis these telegrams, which was copied into a8 sspecimen of a bi aad intrenched themselves had defeated E rt I i i HF F Liverpool Breadstuffs Market. Liverroon, May 3 -Noop. ‘Western red wheat, 13s, 9d.; California wheat, 14s. ‘Oa. ; corn, 44s,; barley, 40. Od.; oats, 3a, Td; peas, Lrverroot, May 2—Evening. ‘The market for breadstuffs is unchanged. Corn, 44s, @orquarter. Wheat, 13s. 9d. for No, 1 Milwaukee red, and Ida, 64. for white California, Barley, 4s, 9d. por 60 Ibe, Oats, 38, 74. por 45 Ibs. Liverpool Provisions Market. Livgrroot, May 2—Noon, Provisions unchanged ; pork, 77a. 6d. ; beef, 127s. 6d. ; acon, 30a, ; lard, 51a. 3d. ; cheese, 60s, Liverroot, May 2—Evening. ‘The provicion market is steady and quotations remain qmnerally unchanged. Pork 77s. 64, and beef 1273. 6d. per bbl Bacon, 392. for Cumberiand cut middie, Lard thas advanced to Sls, 6d. Cheese, 60s, por owt, for to clear up—this time of one whom they fondly believed te be an informer of the ght sort, but who has “sold’”’ them unreservedly. A young man named Eugene Smith was made a prisoner by the British t.oops at Tallaght on the 6th of March, and while in Mountjoy prison he af- fected to yield to the temptations of the police and con- sented to become an informer. Daily lessons as to what he was to swear to and who he was to swear against were given him. His proficiency was much com- mended, and, in short, he promised to be « model crown witness—cunning, docile, and not at all particular as to the responsibilities of an oath. He rivalled Corydon in importance and even threatened to contest the palm with Massey. He was to swear against Dablin men particularly, and for every conviction on his evidence a round sum of money was to be paid him. was arranged that bis evidence was to be corroborated by s man named O'Toole, who at one time of his life had the misfortune of berg sent to prison—of course most if ij fl E FS 3 f Fi : i operations 1a Thessai, Banda of armed men, which have no as brigands, have, mado sbeir appearance: at ve jo their ay a near the Greck frontier. They invariably three hundred heroes, and they are as: inva- ed by three thousand Turks, bers of three hundred heroes and three thousand repro- bates represent indelible impressions on the Greek mind wise, and of the wicked men of Scripture, “for there fell of the people that day three thousand men,’ An invasion of the Ottoman territory of moro im- i it i j i 5 i of the Spartans of fhe THE WAR ASPECT. How the Luxemburg Question was Treated Bofere the Peace Congress Plau, te ‘When the Persia sailed from Liverpool the I vicinity of Athens was the immediate cause of the 463, crossed the frontier lately of followers, variously stated, but gen- reported © consist of the tnevitable 300, Aitor fons in some Christian vill finding that he wes not joined by rept westward along tha positi Koronaios civil war ta maintained, We publish the more important of the details, showing the relative asti- tude of the Powers, and which go to corroborate—but in eight days afterwards—the Huratn's special cable tele- grams relative to the uominency of tho danger of a Liverpool Produce Market. Liverroon, May 2—Noon. ‘Spirits of petroleum, 11d. ; refined petroleum, 1s. 3d. ; ‘pot ashes, 344. ; spirits turpentine, 364. ; rosin, common, ‘Js, 34. ; rosin, ine, 188, 9d. ; tallow, 44s,; clover soed, Liverroot, May 3—Evening. ‘The market for produce is unchanged. Rosin, common ‘Witmington, 7s 3d.; fine American, 13s, 94.; spirits ‘eurpentios, 360; tallow, 44s. por cwt,; petroleum, sapirite, 11d. ; refined, 1s. 84. per gation. The Lenden Markets. Loxpos, May 2—Noon. No, 12 Dutch standard sugar, 24s,; Scotch pig iron, 62s; Calousta linseed, 658, ; linseed ofl, £30; sperm of}, £131; whale oi1, £30; Imseed cakes, £0 15s, Loxpos, May 2—P. M. ‘fhe market for sugar is steady. Loxpon, May 2—Evening. Bagar closed steady at 24s. for No, 12 Dutch standard, drom hes advanced 64.; Scotch pigs, 52s. 64. per ton, smixed pembers. Oils unchanged, Amtwerp Petrolcam Market. Astwaxr, May 2—Noon. Loxpox, May 2—Evening. ‘The latest advices from Antwerp quote refined petro- ywoum at 43 francs per bbI. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. Conx, May 2, 1867. ‘The Ban Francisco ship Dragon, Captain Clements, which touchea at Deal on the 27th alt. arfived at this BY STEAMSHIP TO APRIL 21 —————— The Cunard steamship Persia, Captain Lott, which left Liverpool at eleven A. M. on the 2th and Queenstown ‘on the 21st of April, arrived at this port yesterday even- to be prepared for any contingency. When the Mexican transports return, it 1s stated fifty thousand moa can be landed by France om any open coast, Tho Paris Btendard of the 19th of April denies rumors which were current of the despatch of a French nove in reply to Prussia and the calling out of the reserves. ‘The London Times of the 19th of April, imits city ar- ticle, says:—Yesterday afternoon (16th) very heavy quotations were recoived from Berlin, and « renewed decline took place bere in console, accompanied by s Sresh panic in foreign securities, which show am average dectine of one per cent. Judging from the effect pro- duced by each adverse rumor im Berlin or Paris, an im- pression would seem to be entertained that any rupture between France and Germany would be a signal for every nation in the world to repudiate ts obligations. Compared with the last prices of Wednesday the qevta- tons efter regelar hours exhivit a tall of one and taree- fourths per cont in Italian, one and @ quarter in Rosten ‘and Chilean scrip, and one-half In 6panish, Mexican and Turkish. United States bonds bave fallen two per cent ‘at Berlin and one per cent here, the closing quotation being 70%. Telegrams from Borlin to-day describe a gractal rush to effect sales, without assigning any Teason, The King’s speech is assumed to have produced /Petrolom, 43)¢f. I i ny U i i it hii zis iyi fi ii nt HA ld i? ~ } £ £ f Fj i : 3 E j i af i E i i 2 Hi ‘The London Herald says \t was intimated that the feeling at Berlin was produced by the threat af Count Bis- ‘marek lo resign, the King of Prussia being disposed to force on @ wer af all haserds. ‘The London Times’ Paris correspondent writes that s Private letter from Merlin mentions that on a very re- Cent-occasion Biamarck declared to a foreign diplomatist that it was tempoerible for him to make any cocession with regard to Lusemburg ; that he could not conseat to its neutralization or withdraw the Prussian troops from the fortress, or even admit that the qucstion was one open io negotiation ; and that even were Prossia willing to do so Germany would not hear of it, This declaration must be known to the French government. The rumor again prevails, though it iso very vague one, of 4 visit of the King of Prossta to Paris during the Exhivition, With a NtHle good will on beth sides it will mot be difficult, one would sappous, to eetile this affair between the two sovereigns, if indeed they do meet without an appeal § i il 4 i z i # 3 Ty i # i z i i ti i ; i i i i : i i i i j fi L PY i Eee HEH [ H HI eis? A : E j if 5 1. = FD ~ l ‘ranging the completion of the North American Confeder. ation came as passengers on the Persia. eke ‘April -being Good Friday, was holiday, if i i & itu i i i H : fo be bamished, without exception, from the country, tn cluding even those who are willing to change their con- dition as Danish subjects and submit to become liable to paying for s security we do not got, ind squandering ou? Sovereign, Pesources iM providing 4 semblance of and that the personal and pecuniary interests of the in- | facility of fault. ve were not Me habitants must be subora ‘Mate to the political advan- | th ftwas the duty of the English Admiral on » tages of the whole, as una ®stood by tho Crown, ob- recent occasion to interfere in order to pre tains to a larger extent tha. anywhere elso; but in | bombardment of Valparaiso, but, duty or no duty, the alt that relates to Russian America, the result would have been all the same—the Admi- doctrine absolutist theory that th.’ State belongs to the S has been ever adhere’! to, That ral bad not the means of giving effect to bis being accounted worthless for Im erial purposes, was | opinion, The Spanish ships were enturel; loft to the en and comirerciad activity musters of the situation, and, bad the city bombarded Venturesome citizens. It lay in a rémnote part of the | been English instead of © English Admiral H : 3 i : i LF Hr me Fell Pe # nl 25 i g®e55 F PETE turers began to scour these inhospitable seas, the right to utilize their discoveries and to mare what little fa. vantages could be derived from them, was readily parted with by the &. Petersburg Government. In 1799 one} 800 to Gare pavkod, a pad captain, who had been cruising | dismantled. She se o | & dozen years, was granted letters | each of 960 horme carrying twelve guas, patent authorizing the establishment of a Russo-Ameri- | a complement of men, 1e is bufli armor- can Company. The body corporate thus founded enjoyed | plated corvettes of 430°horse power, Setatas ‘hoor 300 and bat- i about the same rights as its neighbor and competitor, the Hudson's = Company. It bad both a commercial monopoly ip, the civil administration of, the coun- try included in ts charter. Besides an exclusive mght the fur trade—the principal suurce of gain in those Intitudes—it was alone entitled to buy and sell any other commodity whatever. From valuable cargoes of ore and wood down to gin—ihe delight of the native savare—all vendibie goods had to pass through the hands of theso merchant adventurers; and so unlimited was the prerogative they exercised in so rar as it depended upon the. Rasso- american harbors, ‘beard than thiv alociation'of” Beoping 80 far aa it deo) q ar’ f ‘was entirely. consigned to thelr bands, pytedmal if fs bem vl The charter, originally Te for twenty years, was Lota Mtn is oot ee a Year ago, when the company having indu: e gov~ ‘inese for their paper ramparts al ernment ‘o abandon the intention of appropriating the | gum but in respect better Pelvilages il Janaty 1, 1063. "Iie capil, hus varled, ment oa legen january 1, . capiti as Vi distances and at a great expense, in order; and, according to the latest account wh! IT have been | seem, to affor able to obtain, now consists of 1,122,600 silver roubles, aepitit ot a nutte servos. os into 7.484 hohe le No op se : Rang) is ® reserve capil at wi al we suc- | no shi the onor ceeded in ascertaining is that {t amounted to 374,350 leecgions: tone noatitel eign degrading than, the roubles yg cre 3 _ = ee bi posieniok x: gelian’ officer who finds bit perbaps com| g pas! a th heavil crew supeet.. Ly — posh onus | ly | with a large ship, heavily armed, and a choice of i f ; a ef 8 : i moat painful and, gratuitous Teton wo have be at least to oiders. | eight hundred mea under his command, com wo Though a9 late ‘an, 1863 a dividend of | 12 Bor | fy before a feeble. enemy who bas no otton sdvantage from ® nomiual valiso of 150, kind fatten to00, ‘Indeed. | iovish Cependhece bane eae ye ewe lavish expenditure, have failed to aupply? STANTOM AND THE PRESIDENCY, to such a condition has the company been lately reduced by losses in the tea trade and a variety of adverse cir- cumstances, that the government, when renewing its charter a year since, had to aliow it an annual subsidy pb aaron roubles. Ty bpeind wa oe ae only a fortnight ago, through ¢ jation of the Minister of ‘i wer: @ large number of leading men of the Northwestern’ Final ranted a further loan of 1,000,000 rowbles by the Amperi Gant. sil i States are corresponding wits view'st, sssaring. Mie 0 latter incident has given rise to no little spe- | Bomination of Secretary ton for next culation, The news of the cession having previously arrived at St Petersburg, people are at a loss to divine the motives of the government in rendoring the company an assistance which it would seem: they wo longer needed, for the dissolution of the com- | pany 18 expected to follow as a matter of course the cession of their territory, Under the Russian common law all contracts for the ronting of land expire on a change of proprietor by death or sale, a rule which, 1t is assumed, will hold good in the present insiance also, Moreover, the land wouid be all but worthless in a a: it the opoly. St. 2, 186. A Jofferson City despatch says Governor Fletcher and SPEAKER COLFAX AT CINCINNATI. Speaker Colfax, who lect chong emer on tig nf or wi a ere to-night, was es- corted to Mozart “Hall by a company of bmn f armed and uniformed, by s brass a H. Pendleton introduced the lecturer to the audience, niary point of view to the American government, company be te{tin the enjoyment of their mon r. In such a case, even were the sum of 150,000 roubles a year, which the Russian government are in the habit of counting upon from the company, either in cash, goods or other equivalents, to be henceforth paid to the new propnietor, this could be scarcely considered a fair return ‘Uupon the purchase money of $7,000,000. As to the idea of continuing such a losing business, afver the withdrawal of their privileges, it was never entertained by the company. If usable to make money, while enjoying monopoiies and subsidies, therr prospects would become even. worse upon the extinction of these advantages, aggravated by of Yankee competition in the fold. The DEATH WARRANT SIGNED, Harnussuna, May 2, 1867. Governor Geary has signed the death warrant of Gett- tied Wills fizing his executiop for Jane 4, Williams killed an old lady named Millor last falt. SCARCITY OF WHEAT IN GINNESOTA. St. Loum, May 2, 1867. The Dubuque Herald states, on the authority of a gea- ieabout Co nue proclamation urging. the.citiseas te ‘about to a jon urgi of ship 20 more whest down the river raul after the ‘vest, owing to its scarcity. Fs iin g a waned on Sass ree fede kd ear nt pct ig en i ‘and other belongings company, Ward ner’a Touts arcs apil ae hooped sm = the price of the land sill scarcely cover the com: 2 THE NEW YORK LEDGER. FOR GALE AT ALL THE BOOKSTORES AND ‘Kast thas ‘old Adds had boon ducovored. tm ‘7 the far re : pon _ NEws_ DErots. iiodied See ager a — ‘ a The ‘We have the pleasure of sonouncing thet the publicattes be taken Sonclustve contradiction of the |. of the New Story by HENRY WARD BECHER, which has - ae Tike negotiations forthe cession date from the time of | "besa written expressly for THE NEW YORK -LEDGER, ‘ox'a visit to St, Petersburg. This gentioman ap- | win be commenced in No. 19 of the present volume of tbe peared in the Russian tal to congratulate the ar, — ap PNP mrrpeetn nh dian pe pod mane Ledger. The number will be published om — MONDAY, MAY 6, 1807, his happy escape from the hand of an ‘The Point of Union betwoen Republicanism | 11s said thaton one oecasion, during Mr. Bencher's rest- and Imperialism—The March East and | 4... a: the West, Commilics from the eharch where he preachedcalled upon him to remonstrate against his saying 40 many witty things in his sermons, He replied to them: “Brethren, if you only knew how much I keep back, you would never think of'finding fault with mefor what say." In this story Mr. Beecher keeps beck nothing. In it hegives . full soope to all his faculties, and for the first time finde « 1St. Petersburg (April 17) dence ot Le Nord.) Ip examining the transaction of the cession of Russian America from the point of view of national interests an prone er gp clk MLSS ony alm dined field in which to display hie transcendent genius. The beria, a work which will require a long to accom- ate —_ plish. or Amercan-Russia to be of any utility | title of the story is to the mother country, all Siboria and the NORWOOD; province of the Amoor must be first suf. toele a lation fie Auecsans coum, “ashe oo jus wo the —. Called States ihe shustion is entirely diferent, They VILLAGE LIFE IN NEW ENGLAND, have already a compact population om the shores of the In tothe — of tls ~ seoured for publication in THE LEDGER acories of artt- cles written expressly for us, entitled ADVIOE TO YOUN@ MEN; being a series of twelve articles by the Presidents of. twelve of the principal Colleges of the United States. The of the Pacific; @ great and oye gt a first article of the series will appear in next Monday's or Ockbotats cad the” Penineuia oi Kemichat the | LEDOBR—whieh number will also contatm the first part of commercial resources of whic 0 developed a simultaneously with American colonization in the Mr. Beecher’s story. It ia on “The Study of the Mathe sent poss-ssions of Russia on the continent of the New | matics,” by Professor Hill, of Harvard College, The second World, We are there in exactly the same situation as — the English in Indi, ont coneidae it ieesnely mote of the series will succeed it in the following number. Itt desirable to have to wi Zens o < poet states in the north of the Pacific than with Kolochos and on “The Study of the Clausica.” by Prosidemt Woolsey of Roquimenn, jon as the Fagiich must preter te tenes, Yale College. Tho third of the series will baby the Rev, ‘ish the barbarous and fanatical then governess Central jacloan, D. D., President of Princetom College. Tt te governments of Central Asia. The yoye- is — ol fore an advantage to both countries, |, algo, there” « reason to hope, for the Progress of industry, commerce, | *utltled, * Hints toa Young Man about to Kater College.” And elvlizatiog which it will realise. THE LEDGER is for sale at all the Bookstores and News Depots throughout the country, and is mailed to subscribers THE NAVIES OF THE OLD WORLD. | sigue year, or two copies for 86. ron-Cind Fleets of the | Address all communications (0 ROBEULT BONNER, Publisher, 90 Bookman-strost, New York Peopie coast as faras Benring’s Straits, Whero Russia would have been perhaps centuries in colonizing a country situated at the extreme east of her possessions, the Americanos, who have it in their hands, will arrive at the same resulin a few years. The consequences will be the immediate peopling of the two opposite coasts remn.—<i hanm Goods Mane uftatureloy tal PE saa eat Berd ear" Pouras stwet;-also repairing done. Boiling 6). mer Me darkones the day yee 4 force country can any longer be estimated by the ‘After « ‘or ool 12 am 4 number of are able to bring into without Vrovided 18 COUGH BALSAM ia used, reference the power of resistance of the that ” ‘Depot 28 Barclay street. stegyfisrene nate eens i 4 i i H i if i i Ter ‘Aftogant, Leander, a ts herien nore repulsive to the mind then waste, and at the | .Cttstadqpers Hatr Dre. Tuc Best Tver Maer thoaght that all these fine vessels—the very best that | Astor House the art of their time could construct—are to be sold for ——— one of them, we can emcape 8 oe men oft of snsoynace— slimes «.! ‘ uy io *, [ey -oure, Copies free. chariot which bas cost £300, or £40 for an almost new ee ae . cased to be | , Dr, barnache and yet sen thee ings bare rated 10 be | perbeCatrres Pars, eae Leen Pe sage eacumbering the coachhouse and coatributing annually | sireet,, toe perenne OS Se eee Lat them go, then, ae he ‘and let us waste no unavailing regrets over them. tid of the last wadaraiaaie Sat sea oo | ES Ro ‘bow far we proceedings, Seth is sew’ the eoly peste jonstention ot ihie | ufjties” && Brtiar, Soa Veak "romunm Sowine, wholesale sacrifice and destruction of our wooden fleet te the arm conriction that wooden, vecmla are wore aden & Nauce—Deliclons with Soups. foie Uf pearing Se omnes So png nen pele SOND, Agents fer the United Staten, den outtroak vatittien, cet lean on broken reed whic te ” ! j Hl i eee j gree, Re / CR RETA ee B=, i ua E i | uf\t :