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8 NEW YORK ‘HERALD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1868. ~ i - Fhe —— St degrees east, 10 & ¢reck in a Zeep ravine; the very hard. If it did not there certain! Flos Rich, NYork. Also cleared! THE INDIAN WAR. sey ta consi, Tock, Fanning ina teen ravine: | LECTURES LAST NIGHT. | Woddbesr’mine tuber “the ancroid waromeur Winning, Valparamo and Caldera ‘General Sully’s Camp—The Troops Compris- hills. Seven- THE HIMALAYA, mi) ‘ship Borneo, from Padang; brig Merri Saree Ranetunen-cee f See ee leahing leep ravines and very to cross, ‘Atver Second Lecture ef Professor Von chia» | came “ led. a I coe SBALTIMORE, Dec 10—Arrived, brig Finke, Sr, Ebel!, It bey F these marched six miles over @ level, hard, aintweit—Interesting Disclosures. @ band of metal in which avacuum was made. These | §20 feared—Steamship Maryland, Johuson, Havana and Ne HEADQUARTERS OF TROOPS ee where the line of march struck into | professor Rudolph von Schlagintwelt delivered | struments were very sensitive aud would be excel- | yar Joseph E shi Orleans via Key West (nid sallot); ship Gray Bagie, Co Ht iv ‘Sand bills. Stiortly after thvee o'clock in the after- lent if the elasticity of the metal were not constantly | », and molasses to Rio Janeiro; bark Man! North, Porto Bico; A OprRarine SOUTH OF THE ARKANSAK RIVER, noon the colum ed ‘seaver creek at its forks, | M8 second lecture on the “Himalaya Mountains” last Every instrument must be tested by | siirinst inside the lightah) (Be) Richards te or "AMP SUPPLY, 1. T,, NOVy®2, 1868, me FOREN ee on gr oe 4 = Hebtebiy Baie cond jncbre Mary J A: CAMP > 'y where the command went into camp, having evening at Steinway Hall. The one alresdy reported | i! ions of the atmosphere were known Brig Camilla (Br), Newman, G: Bark Manitou; brig Mississippi; 7 ~H BATH, ‘Dees —Cieared, ship Prussia (new), Patten, Ney Brevet Brigadier General Alfred Sully, lieutenant | marched oneness ‘and a half iil By in the HgRaLp on Tuesday last, was a mere as reevlar and Serequiar—sr0ms atmospheric tides | Wilmington, NO, Dec, with general had heavy weather the entire colonel Third United States unfantry, commands south fork of the which occur every day, every month, and, in fact, oro) ng , Outline of the whole course, and it was followed on all ns of the north, | ton in distress, having los seat S © every year. 01 sout rear! the expeditionary foree, having teached this point | gand which is found in its bed, The north fork is | the Tuesday evening by a description of the ap- | to the sixtieth degree of latitude, the barometers | “Brig Nalad (Br) CHARLESTON, Dec 8—Arrived, schr N W Smith, Too! 5 = ~7 2 i z ei 4 apinnisd ichardson, NYork. Dut four days since, has within this brief space trans- | twenty yards - width, — roy A ery wae = proaches to the Himalaya Mountains and their ap- roe aes over bag - bad bec, awa by gngne, to a Li nr yes Bed bear site (Ses Beak Beats (afore, Somers, pinereons mie! - formed nis wild and “untuhupited vietuity into a | Pung WI TaD CT gona, The north fork of | Pe@rauce southward. Last evening this was con- | fell like the tide, standing, on fan average | Uottranchora and before the vesel brought up “oR with sailed, - 5 scene of active life aud martial preparation. Here | the Beaver 1 about forty mies in length and the | tinued by a very interesting ploture of the Vale of | higi ‘aboutnine o'ciock A.M, and least about four | chains parted, and was driven to-sen again; CALAIS, Dos be Cleared thee Piazie Watson, Wateo ? in the wilds of the Canadian, the paradise of the In. | south eight mules, ‘The wagons sent in advance Witt | Cashmere and of the passes which lead through pas P.M. The difference between the maximum | “ Brig Montrose, Johnston, and Joho Stockham, York. i dian, in the heart of the regian occupied by the nos. | Major Elliott diet not reach the camp of the main | the mountain range known as the Himalaya, Tuaninm wee Dot very grees, bat & increased | sagas and tary: jieecleran, sabre 8X King, Parsons, and Ring Dor column, having taken &@ course too to the east, towards the tropical ions, and there there was and balance of ‘Wooster, NYork ; M & Coombs, Coombs, ao; Sth, bark W! tile savages, the Sond of the bugle, the | Weather very oid. cali Lmpossible to give anything like a truthful re; | the greatest amount of ue tidal wave. lot Barocgat pamed a Cloud, Hreeman, Providence; brig Tageni, Verrli, Puig roll of the dram ami the woodman's axe break | | Novesssi17.—Leftcamp at the forks of the Beaver | al the varied information which the Professor's ex- | ce ete ee car anak ie | germ snring Bird, (Bt), og Genning, NB, 10 days, with FORTRESS MONROE, Dec 11~Batled, brig Sarab Cro 0 Dai t 1 o} " at seven o'clock inthe morning. Marcned east down of storms as manifested by the barometer, and its West Indies. Te wisi tinder and tan bast ae se | Shere he cera aed Mace | poeasas aero ma crime! Ormern | MEtmASanOMPRE See canal, | SAR crore NEG MER | wince Me Sah natin Bae ba , cl el o- 4 Cl ¥ fork. 0 q mile, ¢ nued the mi he Venice of High Asia; of the floating gardens, stasiead ‘armly ap- oH i eee ahi, aod 12 days north NULOUCRSTER, Dec 9 sep idee “4 DPR. Priahy Selelh, 8 dae, wiih inthe and eared Schr William 8 Baker, Phillips, Baltimore (trong. Prince Edward Island), p end the fox, the innumerable turkeys and different | 08 the south bank, The crossing was extremely | go weil known in history and remembered | P!suded. : . 3 hse bad, the ‘banks low; ‘the river bed, about seventy sé ” ——_ Varieties of the feathered kingdom which made tl8 | jeerin width, was composed of soft sand, the wheels ee Men by ccna THE TIMES AND WORKS OF MACHIAVELLI. tigber to Jed Frve. » Hi, Ellsworth, 9 days, with lumber, ‘Sheir favorite resort, new find their old haunts occu- | of the wagons sinking in bub deep, for J Cr HOLMES’ HOLE, Dec 9—Arrived, brigs Meh turesq stack 4 . 5 my Dec 9 a pied by a superior species. Hovering upon the out- | Keneral nature | of the north bank consists roe rargara ere clon bea oer Lecture by Signor Antonio Biaggl. Sehr Wm Boynton, Judaoo, Gardiner via Newport, where | Nuevitas for NYork! Chas Wesley, Nichol aeorastonn, nkirte of this anusual ricene with mute bewilderment, | Of, “andy blu and hills running within | mosphere—ail these were presented in alight and | The first of @ course of three lectures by Professor | *e Oedtarser ——, Boston for Philadelphia. NB; sent 9 4'E Corson, Brower, Wifiniagton, NO, for oslo 100 yards of the banks and very broken. - Beh. tS Brooks, the crack of the rifle 74nd the fatal bullet alarm them | ‘The south bank is at and rather sandy and from Pe ae i ne, A ee Antonio Biaggi on the literature and fine arts in Bohr Jamneg Neilson, Blanied, Taunton, from thelr astonishment and drive them to seek new | one te two tulle wide. | Crossed one sinall sandy | ‘he trish Orientalist nained above exhausts the Eng- | Waly wae delivered Ist might before an appre | sone J P Alien, Alléa, Dighton. stream and found a number of small sand hills, the ciative, if not a 1 it the chaj ‘Scbr & W Blak 5 lish language to depict, is shown by the professor in large audience, al pelofthe | sehr W fawticket for Philadelphis. resorts #( a distwace. The wandering parties Of | main hills a cl pproaching much closer to the river. At | her natural estate and historic verity. Theetymology | Theological Seminary, Ni Grit : > . alarme ci r I fo. 9 University place. The . savages are themselves surprised and alarmed at | a distance of nine miles the line of march crossed | of the word was traced to a beautiful fable deriving pend ~ ait oNaicH! Babedice Ellie Brostlenes for Elizabethport. hb this extraordinary and new aspect of affairs, and | Clear creek, a tine running stream, with no timber | {tw origin from Kasyapa (to chauge the sea into | SWviect was:—“The Political Life and Career of | Behr Helle H Benedict, kills, Fray ‘ » . ‘ | 7 cl ides fe ort. doubtiess look-apon this sudden dispiay of force as | OB2'8 Danks: banks low, bed of ereek sandy, Water | garden), the Vale of Cashmere being evidently but | Nicolai Machiavelli, from 1469 to 1527.” ‘Tho parallels Bohr A F'Rowiaad, Rowland, Providence forElicabetsport, Sarah Cullen, Davis, abd Admiral, Steelman, DC, for do; Pinta, Smith, Alexandria for do; 8 E A ‘Tadbert, and Faw, Wiley, Philadelptia for Boston ; Sab Sampson, do for Newburyport; Florence Rogers, Rogers, exandria ‘or Portamouth j J G Craig, Marsh I, Baltimore f ; Mary § Lunt, ‘Brown, do for Newburyport; ran, Jackadavle via New Haven for Bosto 3 Lucy M J an er for Boston; Alice E or, ‘Adams, do for Porty one foot in depth, perfectly clear, and good crossing. imme ; hr Shepherd ouing, Gross, T: “vad medicine’ for their fature career of murder and | After reaching the south hank marched two Tulles | the change of that Lame to. Kasyapore to Kestpore | (TaWD by the Professor between the barbarous prin- | cbr sarah Ana. Uallather Protidence for Jersey City. Jand;’Forest, Gilmore, and. Pavillion; Parker, York fa devastation twwards the North. ‘The force already | OVer a flat bottom and went into camp on the south | ang finally to Kashmere, and that another tradition ciples and times of four centuries backg with those ser co ‘Warren, Davis, Warren for Elizabethport. Boston; Loui DBE, do for St John, NB; Wm H Mitchel concentrates at this post consists of eleven companies | Side of Beaver creek, after having marched elghtcen | derives the name from’ Kasyash-Mare—all this was | of the present day were interesting. The lecturem | Sehr Soa Ce ee ey: cop Phidadel- | aa AM for miles. e ‘i . 4 7 . é iVen with the clearness of definition and precise- t very conversant with 1 i of the Seventh cavalry, three companies of the Third | NoveMneR 18,—Left camp at seven A.M. The | Hayy t cular to the I not very with our language, but eloquent, | pbia. United States infantry, ove company of the Fistn | Column advanced in an eastewy direction down | the pal aiaseraciead pes linee tye remen ind of | nevertheless, deserves the more credit. After afew | Schr yizze Raymond, Lord, New London for Philadelphia, the south side of the Beaver. Marched Schr J L Brali N Lor United States and one company of the 'Thir- | })g s ‘The Professor, in speaking of the peculiarities of | words of apology as to his deficiency in the English rains jorton, New London, Inited States infantry and mpany of the Thir- | hack “from the river on the summit of | tne "Valley of cashmere, referred. to what. he called Garrasl tist-aeile=ies iueetemeciioe Tae eee Baie Martower, fy yach, Harford for New Brunswick. for Philadelphia. as, 10th, AM-—Arrived, schra Jobn SI ton; Laconia, Hall, 'NYork for di ; gier for do; Ti Prescott, Freeman, do for Porlland, lith, 2PM—Passing by, steamship McClellgn, from Balti more for Boston. NEW ORLEANB, Dec 5—Arrived, steamships Cuba, Duk hart, Baltimore via Havana and Key West; Don (Hr), W. son. London via Cardiff; shi Leatingion (BF), Bell, Aden’ ides, Mallard, Mobile; Zimi (Br), Woodworth, (ove ter; schr Abbot Devereaux, Rich, Philadelphia, Below Anna Lyons, from Boston. ‘Cleared—Steamships Mariposa, Kemble, NYork ; De So! fovte 8 Hoxie, Philadelphia via Havana; (Sp), Paris, Barcelona. th—Satied, steamship Bavaria (NG), Hebich, Hamburg. SouTHWRsT Pass, Dec 5—Salled, ships Wallace, ) one barks Jeanne, and E A Fis! rig Farion, Towed a, ship ‘Anna Camp; brigs Junito, B H Steink NEW BEDFORD, Dec 9—Arrived, schrs Lott 0 Pe Philadelp! Stephen Waterman, Chase, NEWPORT, Dec9, PM— rived, brig Elise Thomas, , Philadelphia for Bo ‘Goo 8 Pose, Paine, Taig ty-eighth inited States infantry, arriving withthe | @ range of hills, Crossed a very bad “4 ‘par —which column commanded by General Sully, and escorting | 84 creek about one mile from camp ay rngeecurTy Makin Cases heen eomning. find @ tombstone dedicated to Nicolai Machiavelli, | chr w'uasd, Norton, New Ha & trainsof 450 wagons, conveying supplies and | MU stuck Wall creek, thirteen and one half miles | noon and evening. He then passed on to a descrip. | whifvh was erected two centuries after hig death and | Sehr Uncle Ned, Hall, Portland, Ci : from camp. ut Tour miles from Wolf creek the | tien of the rocky wilderness of the valtey of | py nis admirers of foreign birth. Machiavelli, as | Scbf Sharpehooler, Davis, Connecticut River. stores fer the proposed post. This force was in- | Column crossed the trails of a war party going north | Bhaghirathi, with its passes of steep declivity, = Behr ie Port ter. creased yesterday by the arrival.of Generai Sheridan | 420Ut seventy-five strong and two duys old. No In- | where, with the utmost care, it is almost impossible | the great statesman, held during fourteen years Schr David Neilson, Davis, Port Chester. diana positively seen, though cwo or three were re- | for horses to get through, A very atnusing incident | twenty-three missions, He alluded to Cesar Borgia | Shr Ta Avail Hower Millstone Point. with the scouts, Company C, Tenth United States | ported, but they were’ thou; . ght to be the fankers of 0 cavalry; two companies of the Nineteenth Kansas be ae ae taboha ana My pursuit of a tcp Tee citnsiead of GaUMeTEnee men Anode ba pt Rie pig ule anes i volunteers and ten Kaw Indians aud twenty wagons. | 10! he guard. Arrived in camp at half-past | Saladin, In Paris, the boi tre of European | Of the republic, and when the cl re-entered whe following is a iiet of: alacant line ne go! twelve noon on the southern bank of Wolf creek. ‘The pon iy the A et OnCaeaeS mine ePche | Florence, Machiavelli was deprived of his public ptr ee peat care weetery cue te 8 BOW | country was now reconnoitred as far as the mouth | president of a scientific society introduced him as | functions. in 1613 a conspiracy was discovered. | Banks to New York, with strong westerly gales, and was ferving with their commands or in their respective | of Wolf river, which was found three miles beiow Peete Dronneur de vous presenter Monsieur | Machiavelli, belng imprisoned, was put to torcure | driven across the Gulf twice. Lost and ‘spit gals dud low an spheres of duty onthe staif, exclusive of the com- | camp. The timber on the two rivers is very heavy, tera”. “eto | Duthe could not be made to speak, and after his | avchor and chain off Jones Inlet. fi gue, PR; schra Em fart, Darien, Gi manding generid und stag abd the companies wich | consisting principally of cottonwood, witha small | Sou “Gr gening and so forthe Suoekiag of the tre. | cerated body was put in irons he was thrown into BELOW. a Horessitapii; Florence. H Al aki constitate his escort :— quantity of elm (familiarly Known as slippery a dungeon. ‘hen released he was continually sur- Brevet Brigadier General Alfred Sully, lieutenant | ¢lm); grass remarkably good and abundant, Fesch Protomscr” von Hin the peak inate athe rounded by spies. Compelied by this action of the | _ Brig Edvs (Br).—Reported by colonel Third infantry, commanding District of the | Water excellent. Having now reached @ point | and his brothers peers dry of them, of which | existing government he devoted himself, uucon- | No is Baltimore for Stonington, with loss of forestay, main boo! gad gait; Mary W Hupper, Satis River, Ga, for outh & {oin, 8 AM—Arrived, New York pilot boat Ezra Nye, ov boat Mary A Williams, Upper Arkansas and troops operating in the field | Whtch seemed to indicate that a aesirable 2 quered, to his works, which are transmitted to us AILED. north of the Arkansas, locality. had been found at which to Bee fee whe” Mont’ Blane the pote and which are studied by every man of science to bs — ee ee ee ee ee | Captain J. W. Clews, Thirty-eighth Infantry, assist. |-establish the contemplated post of supply for the.) mountain in Europe, only rises to un altitude | this very day. | The prosensor then spoke of the | Steamsbip Costa Rica, Panama. NORWICH, Dec 8—Arrived, achr Harriet Thomas, Alexas ant adjutant general. ic columns designed to operate against the hostile | of 15,784 feet. In ‘geographies heretofore the | Very many Italians who have been forgotten and ‘Wind at sunset NNE. la. i Brevet Lieutenant Colonel M. W. Keogh, Captain | savages, General Sully immediately ordered a recon- | })nawal aghiri of the Himalaya range was mentioned | Dever. appreciated, but whose ideas have been bor- oe NEW LONDON, Dec 8. ~ Arrived, schrs James Neilson, St Seventh cavalry, acting assistant inspector general. | nolssance of the adjacent country. In his instruc- | ay the highest peak, but after measurement it was rowed ‘and worked ‘up by Germans like H Schle- Marine Disasters. pesand vod ealaser, Taunton for NYork; Sami Mek Brevet Major H. Inman, captain and assistant | tions from General Sheridan General Sully was or- F * gel and Gans, and he,instancedjGiovanni Mistavico, ” quartermaster, chief quartermaster of the district | dered to proceed to the Canadian river in the south | tne gave. theta as followse Sins st,700; Kan: | WWOSe Work, ‘La Sciéncia Nuova,” has been treated | afoul or schr Eastern Belle, breaking meschooner's bowspiity and troops in the field. and find a suitable point which would possess all the chinjing: 166, and Gaurisankar, 29,002 feet above | that way. He then passed to Machiavelli’ great | jibboom and head gear. Brevet Major G, M. Sternberg, assistant surgeon, | requisites of a supply post, with wood, water and | the sea the latter being in northern latitude twenty- | Work, ‘ll Principe.” This work 18 always cried | srmauzrJ W KveRMan, from Philadelphia for Rich- chief medical officer. winter bie for ‘a large command, the distance | seven d fifty-nine minutes, and twenty-six de- | down as @ work to perpetate tyranny, while, | mond, was ashore at Point of Shoals, mouth of James river, Second Lieutenant J. F. Weston, Seventh cavalry, | south of Fort Dodge not to exceed, to any great ex- ‘tiy-ave minutes eastern longitude from if really studied, it truly — philanthropic on the 9th, with a tug alongside. acting aid de camp, tent, one hundred miles, which’ was to be the | Greenwich: There are twenty-one passes leading | 88 the writer wished only the welfare of | Banx HenseRt—The report by cable published yesterda; Brevet Captain W. Mitchell, Third infantry, acting | entrepot of ee for the pro| 1d post. On No- | across the Himalaya, the highest, the ib-1-Gamin. mankind. Tyranny has existed from _ time | stating that the bark Herbert; Capt Bmith from “New York” assistant quartermaster of the troops in the field, vember 19 @ thorough reconnoissance was made of | 90,459 feet; the lowest, Bara-Lacha, 16,186 feet above | !mmemorial, ‘and to speak of tyranny before | for Hamburg, had put into Milford, water! is certainly First Lieutenant H. J. Nolan, Seventh cavairy, | the adjacent country and the result was entirely | the level of the ocean. A® a remarkuble fact it is | aM American audience would be to couple slavery | ADeror, The bark Herpert, Smith, sailed from Galveston acting commissary general of the troops in the field. | Satisfactory in view of the objects in view. The | wortn mentiot that onr own tame barnyard | With liberty. Machiavelli divides tyranny into two Po pdt ty diay he latina , Seventh Cavatry.—Brevet Major General George A. | site selected for the proposed post is immediately | fowis were boning in that elevated region as wild | @rades—one the hereditary power, which is easily BARK M. Br), McK , from for. Port M: Custer, lieutenant colonel Seventh cavalry, com-| ou the confluence of the Beaver river and | birds, Indigenous to the country. The Professor | Scduired, and the other that of the new principality. | goe- Wales, has Neer lost om the Newfoundland coast ud manding. Major—Joel H. Elliott, Captains—Wil- | Wolf creek, which, united here, form the | gaye many more exceedingly interesting disclosures | Kvery uew principality 18 compelled to meet with | four ‘crew drowned. Six of the survivors were landed liam Thompson, Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Frederick | Main fork of the Canadian. The approach over the | ofthat hitherto unknown country, and concinded | the tisfaction of those accustomed to the old | at Halifax, NS, 10tn inst, W. Benteen, Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Edward | route followed by our column is along the Beaver | gmid loud applause, announcing hi ig next lecture, on | State of things. As an illustration the lecturer re- Bank Dency, Barriagin®, from Elizabethport, with c: ‘A 4# ashore’ on In port achrs bity) Snow, New Bedford for NYork; J ‘or do; Sarah W Blake, Blake, Dighta for do; Thos P Cooper, Bearse, Providence for do; G Hotchkiss, Rackett, do for do; RH Daly, Saunders, und Phij Sheridan, Murphy, Fall River for do; ‘Mansfield, Acboi Providence for do; Jonas Stith, Nichols, do for Charles! A&D Scudder, NYork for Boston; sloop Harvest, Corwi Bristol for NYork. : rrived, schrs Daniel Webster, J Warren, and W. Wind, Elizabethport for Providence; Dexter, Cold Spring £4 do; Nettie Cushman, NYork for Bosto1 herting, om cific, Norwich for NYork; F B Baird, Allyn's Point for do. PHILADELPHIA, Dec 10— Arrived, schrs 8 E Jones, Ha} 4y;, Taylor & Mathis, Choesman, and’ JG Baboock, & 1, ‘Cleared—Schrs E W Pratt, Kendrick, and M S Hathawagy Boston; $ L Simmons, Gandy, New Bedford; M A ler, tyler, Washington; Decora, Clark, Boston. LewEs, De Dec 8, 6 PM—Bark tind from Philade}} jg Anna M d Myers, Brevet Colonel Robert M. West, Louis M. | and through an expansive valley a mile wide and | yesd; be ? ferred to Louis XII., who quickly gained Italy, but | of coal for Boston, 01 West Chop, Holmes’ Hole. : Hamilton, Brevet Major Aibert Barnitz, Lee “P- Gik | tree or-four miles in length, termiating at tis | Suesday of next week, to be on the pecullarities of | Tort Ana reacquired and held It by the wiser blan | itis doubitul if ane wil be got off without, dlacharging cargo, | f0F SAEDR; D Knight from Cardenas for orderg Jette, George W. Yates, Brevet Major Thomas B, West. | point. This valley is covered with a fine growth: of | Me #econd range of mountains, the Karakorum. hehad adopted. Machiavelli's doctrine is that care | asshe sin a bad position, wind blowing fresh from Ni.” | schre Emme L Porter, from Phiadatphie for triniond Wellington, fro NYorkfor Virginia, 3G Cralg, from Baltimore for Portlan Lola Montes, TJ Hill, and Mary E Smith, are all at Breakwater this evening. Thomas Kelly, a seaman on boat the schr J V Wellington, had his foot’ so badly Injured being caught fn the main sheet, that be was, brought asho and had it amputated; he is doing well, Wind NW. Mr 8 Fuller, pilot, reporta:—Barks Atalanta, and Jenny, Dol ‘ork, fn the bay, coming up on Wednesday; » large oh brig beating in the Ca First Lieutenants—Samfel M. Robbins, Br et Cap- | grass very much resembling the muskeet of Texas. must be taken neither to change laws nor to increase BRIG FINKE, SR (NG), Ebell, from Rio Janeiro for Bulti- tain Matthow Berer, Owen Hale, Myles Moylan. “ad. } The grass, though apparently: dead aad dovoid of THE BAROMETER AND ITS USES. taxation. As an ilustration the lecturer poinved to prep aeta aicknan r oere TU as nts — Capt omas W. Custer, Brevet \ ions ry oe a whiel as been Victor Emanuel, who increased the taxes in Naples, % ‘ Captain Charles Brewster, Brevet Major James M. | found to be ighly beneficial and fattening for ani- | Lecture Before the American Institate by | and the consequences which followed. One ‘ther | Bria Joux G1vax, from Turks Island for New York, with Bell. Regimental Quartermasters—W. W. Cook, | mals. To such au extent is this the case that the Professor Guyot. principle laid down by Machiavelli was first to de- | salt, was at the Delaware Breakwater 10th, having beea Jobn M. Johnson and Edward G. Godirey. ‘Second | auingls have very much improved and are in better | Tye third of the winter course of scientific lectures | Stroy and then make new laws tn imitation of the | “iin 0 Muuel ® haul Sut nt oll Windus Mlaltane F —Brevet Captain Algernon E, Smith, | condition to-day than before they started. ‘There 18 old ones. Machiavelli has written eight books, and RIG STEPUBN DUNCAN—The crew of the brig Si Edward Law, Walworth H. Smith, Edwatd G; | another variety of grass also found, which, though | before the American Institute was delivered last | to each he gives @ philosophical introduction, | Braver'wereailoaved © cr Marseilles, stranded ne Mate, Frank M. Gibson aud J. 1. March. Assisi. | but two incties in height, seems to "be also | evening at Steinway Hall before a large and select | showing the doctrines he discusses and is yepinae ps go - N SAa gat surgeon—Henry Lippencott. Acting Assistant | excellent for | grazing, and | notwithstanding | audience, a goodly proportion of ladles being pre- | Motives, and every one of these | DOOKS | seccived from achr William T Merchant, previously. reporved Third United States Infantry.—Captains—Brevet | Wich now prevail, is quite green, as if | Sent. The lecturer, Professor Guyot, of the College | happiness of mankind. He says:—‘‘As I don’t sea st Mantay ntaie tt ta ice ie ake rosy “going to Major John FP. Page, commanding infantry battalion; | the pioneer vegetation of spring. This valley, judg- | of New Jersey, Princeton, chose as the subject of his | write this for an intelligent and (feoige cen aed Pieces. ‘ ost hen 1e yynton, for Rotterdam, barks Salmi, fo for Sagua, and schr Pedro’A Grau, for Cienfuegos, sea on. neaday morning. PORTLAND, Dec §—Arrived, steamship Franconia, Shegy wood, NYork; schre Emily & Jennie, Hewitt, Georgetor De; —— Wardell, Baltimore: Georgie Deering, W! Hattle E Sampson, Biake, Brey Major Henry Asbury. First Lieutenants— | ing from the tracks and other indications, seems to i lic, ces It Jard, an ial ladelphia. vevet C: alti shel aba ea favorite. rer 2 tO | discourse “The Barometer,” and illustrated his re- | llc, Tsay princes must not always be good. Scur Geo BRooxs, Henly, from New York for Portland, coos Brevet Capiain William Mitchell, Joseph Hale ai be a favorite resort for the buffalo, On ‘the river mén are bad: why should princes -be otherwise | before reported ashore at Gicacester, Maus, was got off night Brel Sete ire eon oO Te Jotun P. Thompson. Second Lieuténants—Williain N, | iront of the proposed fort there is a dense growth of | Marks by frequent references to charts, diagrams | princes should be shrewd enough to sift and thus | of 10th, after discharging part of cargo. She will be taken to Williams, Chanccilor Martin, timber, heavier and in larger abundance than has | and philosophical apparatus. avoid their ruin. They should be generous, but not | Warf at Gloucester. Pn United States Infantry.—Second Lieuten- | been seen ail the distance from Fort Hays. On the The lecturer was mtroduced by Judge Daly with a | 80 Much as to interfere with their power. They Sone Lizzy MAUL—The achooner before reported ashore ant—George P. Berden, opposite bauk of the river is a series of low hills or y y should be given to luxury, but not go to extremes; | 9m Hempstead beach was the Lizzie Maul (of Greenwich, Thirby-cighth Untied States Infantry.—Brevet Ma- | wounds, Which will prove excellent lookouts from | few highly complimentary remarks, and proceeded | for then they would have to resort o taxation and | NJ),Beckler, from Philadelphia for Salem. with coal. She rr) Sailed—Bark Jane Adeline; brig Hattie E Wheeler: scl Richard Vaux. PROVIDENCE, Dec 10--Arrived, brig Matilda, Dix, Balt more; achrs Webster Barnard, Smith, Jacksonville; Brotht ers, Handren, Norfolk; Joseph’ Baxter, Baxter, Alexandria jor--W. be, captain: Brevet Captain—J. A. Gou- | Wich to give timely notice of the approach of any | to say that our earth was composed of various ele- | that would create dissatisfaction. They should be ios OR By eee eee Onc E ares. Bulle A Orawlord, Buckley, and) John Strom Cramton irst lieutenant, Acting Assistant Surgeou—J. | Bostile foree. A good quality of sandstone, excel- | ments, soll, Nquid and gascous, three different | Merciful, but not shrink from cruelty When neces. | GLOvgraTER, Dec 10—The Br achr Violet, Capt Camp, of | Eiliadelphie; Evergroe eae ae toa “Hanngn Wilk raton, United States Army. ent red clay and. gypsum are found and an'abund- , hag sale erent | sary, which is often the case, to give an example. | Sndfor St John, NB, from Boston, at anchor tn this harbor, | jae" Bolt, Rondout: Mulon Raymond, John © Baxt “With this Coumand General Silly moved ont of | ance of ganie, large and snail. Possessing ail these | Stites of the same matter, which, meverthe- | fue When such an iran rod. is applied It should be Tetsetrippite het foveeait irom ibe apare end iujuring the buli | Jobes; Kate Scranton, Palmer; Clarisea Allen, Hale, and ; ye Mien and animals were in excellent facilities, on the same day the troops began work on | leas, perform very diiferent functions in the | short and decided and clemency should at once be | so asto cause a bad leak; while in a sinking condition she | H* aldweing NYork; Connectieut, Stephenson, Ho! condition for te hardships and exposure, as well as | the proposed fort. Details of choppers were sent } whole system of the globe, considered as one | reinstated. A prince should not resort to plots.” | was taken intow by atugboatand brought to the wharf, fie, Dolow, sents Giewood, Lawrence, froma Philadelpb ficuog, which were to constitute the ‘burden of | into the woods under command of proper otticera, m : ‘The lecturer referred to Mazzini and: Cavour, | Where her Injuries could be examined. Heel ator tecoean, dlandven, stot Va: Gerad tie eaperiticnt of a vigorous Winter campaign, | Mule and ox teams and teamsters were also detalied | Great individual, On the land were found by far the | Mazzini's mode of action was always by plots, and | ¢,7eschr Ploughboy. Capt Huckin, of and for York, Me, | pater Satre fumonam Hendnn, Martane, Yai Sara The ofivers were anxious for the opportunity of | from the trains and were employed in draguing | Mighest forms of life, whether of animals or plants. | now did he succeed? In not one Instance. Cavour, | fate a Boston, walle tying at anchor in our harbor, was run | tnd Ann 7. Bergen, Thompson, Philadelphia; Cyrus Oba taking port tn solving the problem of Ladian adminis- | in the huge logs which are to compose the work. As | It was on the solid ground that man aiso thrived, | on the contrary, through his candor and open action, | carrying away her mainmast close to the ‘deck, and injuring berlain, Potter; Triumph, hester, and EJ Munsell, Bario tration, which it is admilited has, ever since the pre- {| @ protection against attack from hostile Indians a } developed and civilized, and there alone he could | always succeeded. Princes should be punctual to | ber otherwise. fs ork. os sent policy of buying peace has been adopted, been a | strong guurd 1s posted in the woods and keep a sharp | find all the elements for his work. In the water, | thelr engagements, There are two kinds of govern- | GrunaLraz, Nov 26—The: brig Stephen Duncan, Hughes, | yyA\ANNAH; Dec 6 Arrived, bark Lamplighter, Conkli Contant succe-sion of jalutes. In-regard’ to the | lookout. The sirokes of the choppers’ axes, the | which covered nearly three-fourths of our globe, | ments—laws and force—the former made for men, | of and. from’ New. York for Marseilles (petroteiun), was | Hig syienes kncwantross, Coverty NYork; eee details of the march of General Sully’s column I | shouts of the teamsters, the log fires and occasion- | were found nearly all the organisms, or at least most | the latter for beasts. Machiavelli illustrated this "| stranded near Cape Spartel Nov 10(before reported by cable.) | Safled—Bark Leopoldiva Fraude (NG), Waak, Falmouth, wall here give a copy Of the itinerary of First Licuten- | ally the bringing in of a goodiy supply of wild tur- | of them, wnich were characterized by a low grade | by saying princes should be foxes for dexterity and Miscellaneous, for ordess. 4 " , ant Henry Jackson, Seventh United States cavalry, | Keys, deer, elk or buffalo suggest rather the first | of organization. These two, in themselves, were | lions for strength to combat ther adversaries. The ‘The steamship Ouba, from Li f the © 7th—Aryved, schr John H French, Burgess, Boston \ aid acting Chief’ Engin Departinent of the | stages of a pioneer settlement and the work of the | the lower elements; but, nevertheless, all knew now | lecturer here alluded to Napoleon. How does Na- x ibs. ely Bae i cape feed papa Weymouth. 4} Masyour, wuo was detailed from General sheri. | Jess peaceful pursult of war. From the woods the | perfectly. indispensable ‘they were for the life of the } poleon's greatness stand in comparison with Ins ee eran are ene necne Ot te a Cee ee ee ee eras Pres \ fins lieadquarters to accompany the movement of | logs are dragged & distance of nearly three-fourths | higher. ‘The gaseous atmosphere which surrounds | Contemporary, George Washington, the genius of | ships of this line that has bronght emigrants. In future | pith Cleared, brig Artisan, Blo Jangiro; sc qu ‘ai Snuy in advar The itinerary gives a | ofa mile to the site of the fort, which stands upon a | both animals and plants, high and low, gives power | greatness and goodness? Machiavelli recommends | every second ship will bring this class, in addition to the first ‘ é ably record of moveny With interesting data | Very slight eminence in the valley. The surrounding | to man and all the lower animals for movement, and | that princes should mot be too scrupulous to their | cabin passengers. aa n sWecting the country aud of particular value, as | ground is perfectly clear of high grass and brush, | it was from this that we derived all the motive | word, for men are generally bad, yet they should | sreawen Prowerievs,’at Philadelphia 10th inst f MISCELLANEOUS. ¥ tt ou through which the column passed is for | Which might be used by an attacking party asa place wers which were in us. It was apparent, therefore, | show kindness, justice and good piety. The lecturer | Charleston, reports taw threo steamships at anchor unger | “2mm TVOROES LEGALLY OBTAIN! ab ractical purposes unknown (0 our government, | Of concealment for sbarpshooters or as a cover of | that this third element was by no means unimportant, | alluded to Napoleon IIL, who listens to all his minis- { Hatteras, the wind blowing from the WNW al the tine. BSOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED Tt « distances were computed by an odometer. | 8pproach, The work, when finished, will be @ | though tt did not furnish the same materials that | tere, but keeps his own counsel and gives his orders | Quick PassaGr—Schr David Wasson, Jones, sailed from Giterens States, Ko, pablictty. No charge tll dive Lh > benant Juckson says:— stockade fort with a place for stores, also for pro- | were necessary tor our bodies, but {t furnished the | when the decided moment has arrived. These prm- | New York Nov 19, and urrived at Sagun ist inst, etoecicniee rarer: } OVEMEER 11, 1868.—Left Fort Dodge at seven | tection for the animals, and in case of being hard | power of motion, and it was with this power that he | ciples are the same Machiavelli advocated, and they Notice to Mari F.1. KING, Counsellor at Law, 261 Broadway. Lock P.M. Marched eight and a quarter miles | Pressed, of refuge forthe troops. The latter will | would have to do this evening. We summed up | have been always met with up to our day. Machia- vipa ise ARO USR eSee a ta is J U down the north bank of the Arkansas river and | heap around the stockade on the outside. ‘The | under the name of climate most of those influences, | velli has been accused of having chosen Cwesar Borgia |, CAPt Baker, of echr Hattie Hamblin, at New Bedford 4th BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT tinto camp for the might on the same side of the | stockade will be about difteen feet in height, ahd the | and those infuences spoken of under the generai | as his model prince. In answer to that it ts sald | was trom the Gong oe Ola Cook to the Linke eeeeel a eae A ‘OF PARIS FANCY GOODS FOR an. fort, when completed, will be about 126 fect square. | utle of climate comprised expecially the neat or | that as Borgia was the one who created the first | srock, but without injury to his veweh HOLIDAY PRESENTS. )VEMDER 12.—Left camp at sunrise. Crossed the Connected with the selection of this admirable | temperature of the atmosphere, an amount of water | Italian army, and it was preferable to serve a tyran- GLOVE, JEWEL AND HANDKERCHIEF BOXES, ausas three-fourths of & mile east of camp. The | Site [must not omit to give credit to the person to | indispensable to life of animals and planta, and last- | nical prince than a weak potentate. It is not aston- (Whalemen. BISQUE STATUARY, pe ly aoe try passed over for the first three-fonrths of a | Whom all is due. That person is John Simpson | ly weight or density. Our subject was confirmed | ishing that Machiavelli, aman of 60 deep @ knowl. | ,,A?tived at Honoluta previous to Nov 18, barks Sea Breeze, | go udu PANSESEERT SETS TOILET WARE, AC wie Was the bottom of the Arkansas river. ‘The | Smith, an old piains man, over sixty vears of age. | pro-eminently, though not entirely so, to the in- | edge of the human mind and its faults, although at | [emilton. of NB, from Ochotak Sea, with 1100 wh and 18,000 1h ROSE, WHITE AND GREEK.’ “* cross ing of the river was Indifferent, the channel | Captain Smith, or Uncle ‘John, ag hel sometimes | vestigation of the welght of the’ atmosphere | heart a philanthropist, should express himself thus, | si ser sioninetons rubles Bein ieee, en a bUle wk Real bronze cutout to an unusual depth and tilled with | called, left the place of his tirth, Frankfort, inthe | by means of an instrument which we knew as the | He took and spoke of men As. they were and are | Ocean, with 1190 bbls wh oll and 10,000 bs hone: Nile, Allen, Clocks, Mantel Seta, Groups and shifting sands, Tue country for a | State of Kentucky, when but a young man of twenty- | barometer. The atmosphere was simply a garment | found, not as they ought to be. The lecturer con- | NL, from do, with 78 bbls wh oil and 6000 lbs bone. if and Statuettes, distar ice Of one mile on the south bank was | two. of a roving and adventurous disposition, | for the whole globe, and apparenti @ very | cluded with the remark, particularly aday to our Arrived at do Oct 13, ship Janus, Smith, of New Bedford, ia comp ed of sand hills, At the snmmt | he set out for the great and unexplored West. As &| thin one, since its height was not more | country, “If princes, to be princes, must be tyrants, | ‘om Lahaina. ‘Atul! assortment of f ih went ridge the country swept om | trapper he traversed the vast region west of the Mis- | than about forty-five miles, and the first three or | it is better to do without them.” Nott chases Bee — Hawes, of NB, to cruise; GORHAM PLATED WARE, into hard, soiling plain, covered with | sissippi, and finally found himself on the Pacific | four miles above the level of the sea contained more a Eg henge = ll ‘At manofacturers’ prices. fale no trees, and broken into ravines {| slope of the Rocky Mountains, Here he passed seven } than half of the total weight of the whole atmos- = _— = — _ Oct 28, with 500 bbis sp oil.” Reporte July lat 1 88 'N, lon » leadiny : crossed the creek bya | Years, When he returned east of the Kocky Moun- | phere. It was in this very thin layer that the whoie 97 48 W, lost overboard a boy named Thomas Day, 18 years FINE PLATED WARE, EXTRA QUALITY, buffalo. trai! and went into camp on the south side at | tains, and for over thirty years has spent his life | of animated nature was performing its functions. $s H I Pp P I N a N E WwW Ss, 94 paonaing in Edgartown. Spoke off Gall lands Of our own manufacture. # quart, er before cigat o'clock in the evening, having | #mong the Indians of the Plains. Most of this ex- | The atmosphere of a globe fifteen feet in diameter 1g, barks Catalpa, Pierce, of NB, 330 sp; Falcon, Allen, | nesorated French China, fine cut and ed Glanew: travel, “ve wiles. The banksof Mulberry creek | tended span of life he has spent among the Chey- | would, if proportioned to the atmosphere surround- oe Se pee Parton statuary, er Ree rpm aera were fr om twenty to fifty fect m height and alivost | ennes, the Indians who were the firat to open hostill- | ing our earth as our planet, would be to that artificial nac fer Now York-—-This Day. Mreportee We aniied from Houohuie Dee 3s 1887, Yor tas | Ol Paintings and Alabasters from Ttaly, perpen¢ icular. The water is poor and in pool ties ugainst the whites, Capwim Smiih is a | globe pot more than two inches, and @ propor- Bonn Telands bumpbacking and sperm whaling. In’ Febru- Chandeliers and Gas Fixtures of the handsomest pate: Rnd tim) ver in snficient abundance for campang } man of remarkable intelliger He aaststed | tioned part to that in which life is developed and 7 15 | Moon rise ary we cruised off Ormsby Peak and St Peter's Island for | i" glass, bronze and ormolu, of foreign and domestic mi f the creek was firm. in revising some of the aments —ufter- | sustained would make but a «mail fraction of an She | aeeaeee ia | scrm whales, but sew nothing. Humpbscks were very | facture, Left camp at seven A. M.. after a | wards Incorporated into Schoolcraft’s volumin- | inch, “Barometer” meant an instrument to mea- 4 32 | High water....eve 7 18 | scarce around the Bonin Islands; got 2 making 100 bbls, Let N. B.—Holiday Presents selected in advance will b Caused Ly sstampedeof the buils | ous ‘on the Amer Indians. Your | aure the weight of the atmosphere, and was derived Nite Cunt alten) inthe Saven Searand took oun Ora mbes | fully reiained for delivery a aay spec td B.V. WA the night. The route layin a | correspondent asking the venerable Captain where | from two Greek words. Until the seventeenth cen- UOHWOUT & co, Broome wt of tne tr odad| southeast criy direction, ‘The plain’ for the fret six | De called his home, lus reply was, “Wherever my | tury it was scarcely believed. except by @ few Weather Along tho Const. Nerott cecmnoni ite tee easlors on tonteaea tate 488, 490 and 492 Broadway, corner of miles Was | much cut wp by ravines; beyoud this dia- | tent is pitched,” pointing to a little “A” tent loom- | select minds, that the atmosphere had any weight Drormurn 11-9 A. M. g0 back for medical assistance. ‘were eight cases in - a ———d tance the\ country Was rolling, with slight ravin ing out of the anow and a iittie fire burn- | atall. Aristotle tried an experiment to determine We Thermameter: |, four of which proved fatal. Aug 6, William H Allen, . " nutil the «| ‘olumn’struck a ridge betwee ing in front; “my sons are married and my | whether there was any weight in air or not, but bodistearer, of Krovidenoe, RI, died, the only American: | <u, "oer tor reese ane penutifal assortment of turics of Bl uffereek. The bauks of the danghters are gotng to scliool in the States. Lhave | fated in consequence of making the attempt im- ee ha ae eek nl en te ee ¥ {OF HOLIDAY PRESENTS. rough and al the surrounding country, from appear. | tree sections of tie finest land in Colorado Terri- | properiy, and, indeed, until the time of the great is. Seeded in saving 60 bbls oll from him. It wae. the Tatgest SILVER PLATED WARE, TABLE CUTLERY, ances, is al\ ost impassable for wa breaks | Wry, presented to me by these same Cheyennes from | Galileo the belief prevailed that the air 10 | Wilmington, whale that I ever saw alongside a ship. Took 1100 bble wh oil FANCY ARTICLES IN WOODEN WARK, from the at jes being almost perpen The | their reservation, and ratified to me by the Senate of | weight at all, and the controvertion of that opinion | Washington. ‘and 6000 Ibs bone this season. WORK BASKETS, BIRD CAGES, VASHS, creek is fair, tuber rather the United States.” At the tme hostilities com- | was dne to Gullleo, as the result of his dfcovery, | Fortress Mou Spoken, PARIAN WARE AND BRONZE ORNAMENTS, water in Bt grass middh\ 0g The country passed over was c menced € Richm: for iess than cost of Importation, COOPER INSTITUTE, CORNER STORES. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY—TEETH EXTRA 4 A without pain; twelve years; administered dail denutiful Teeth 10.9. JAY Viki ERs, WBS Grand strey. Ship Gen MoClelian, Williams, from New York for San Francisco, Nov &, lat 2 N. lon 38, ‘hip Derby, Goff, from New York for San Francisco, Oct 20, Iat 11 8, lon 34, Ship America, Morse, from Antwerp for Callao, Nov 2, lat 6N, lon 35. tain Smith was living at Fort | It was while engaged in the further investigation of ered with fi, ir budfalo grass. The crossing at the | Laramie ihe implacable enmity of the’! tuis discovery that he died, leaving to his disciple, confiuence o |" the two streams was tolerably good, | Cheynenpes against the whites bad cut bim offfrom | Torricelli, to complete his discovery by the inven- ‘The main str “am is thirty feet wide, sandy bed, with | 4!! coromunication with this nation. His familiarity | tion of the barometer. The experimens was by water mostly) below the sand, but shows a clear ru. with this region at once pointed him out as-@ suita- | taking a tube and filling tt with mercury or sub- ning current, wbout six feet wide and three inches | ble person to direct the live of march to some suite ,| stance thirty and @ half times heavier than water i . Tees in places». Went into eamp at twoin the after: | be locality. For this purpose General Sully se-*] Itself, and returning this tube in a cup of mercury. 2 at a ee re naneme, Me, for, Australis, Nov |, pear Broadway; HENRY VILLERS, 206 Grand street, neq noon, near Hid tT creek, north side, the odometer tn- | cured the services which the old map, thongh | It was found that the mercury would sink, leaving a Saamincheorpneeipconaacete Ship Kate Davenport, Otis, from Callao for Antwerp, Oct — — —— dieating a dis, lance of twenty and one-haif miles | Tar advanced in years, feit it hia duty to’ extend. | space above free from matter, which was @ vacuuin, Herald Packages. by ito LL THE LADIES DECLARE travelled durtag the day, Killed six buffaloes | General Sheridan expresses himself perfectly satis | so far as a Vacuum conld exist. The theory was that and P i Vials antr: a os Be erent Martom, from Cart for Point de Galle, A a ‘on the march. |, NO Indians seen this day, though the | Med with the site. the atmosphere pressing upon the mercury in the | Captor bse o arriving at thie pert will | Oot 15, let H, lon Si W. ‘The most fascinating Store In New York is Weather Was ve\'y favorable tw their mode of war- | — Although this post will be temporarily the centre of | cistern would cause the mercury to rise in the tube, | Please deliver all packages intended for the Hunaipto our Foreign Ports. BASSFORD'S, fare, owing to a\ tuck fog which obscured the sur- | Operations in this section, itie now the intention ofthe | and the weight of the air would be expressed by that | regularly authorized agents who are attached to our Steam ANTWRuP, Rov arrived, Toni, Riezke, NY rounding country age camp. Broke soe fo keep NS force here = Lod column ot eeny This ate es which | Yaehtfieet The New York Associated Press do not now oReree ¢Pilh, Nov 27—Arrived, Rosario, Hamilion, New cone Wagon in cra,s4ing the Jast creek and shot two is have cf , asa means of securing ye | demonstrat to eyes at the ir weight marine rte attend to the deli: f ork. Lorecs having the glanders, ‘The weather moderated, | peace’ which it 1s his ihtention to enforce by the in- | and gave algo the measurement of that column of SUM isi) Gb dmithg deen fot toe peceeaee, | jjlBOUWRREHAVEN, Nov 9—Zatled, Rogina, Harvey, Bos- NOVEMRER 14. Left camp at a quarter past six | srumeéntof arms, if he is allowedf without the inter- | air, giving us about fifteen pounds to the square a — Noy %—Sailed, Lizzie Moses, Cox, Mobile. Coram, ‘Nov %-—Sailed, Rjuken, NYork. Cooper Institute, corner Astor pinee, And pronounce his immiense stock of Silver Plated Wareg Table Cutlery, Cooking Utensils, China and Glass in axcete thia morning. Marched one and a half milesto Blum | ference of the authorities at the seat of government, | inch as the weight of the noaphere. in order to | fthe regular monthly meeting held March 3, 1868 crees. The crossigy Of the © was found to he | % prosecate the war already #0 vigorously com- | express the conditions which must exist to make a Resolved, That on and after April 1, 1868, thi ivr, Nov Bertha, Rio Janeiro. (100s enit. Thavereek bed was about 200 yards | menced apd promising eo vigorous @ prosecutien. good barometer and an accurate one it might be | Pres wri decgntinun the, sletion ‘stialp CAvry, Nov 3-—Arrived, A Pendesgnat, Lamson, NYork. — | tence of quality, as well as in moderation of price, wide, with a sedge \island-in the mia He, with a sand - - well to give an idea Ly ‘ struction before pro- coe ti portly ae.Gn a iden sale basen ue yoAlourta, Nov 19--Sallea, sip Calcutta, Shillaber, New ' Apt wee wn HT t : on ie mn e a ‘. V. a pat age: Clg sah ir the lg we fenan n EUROPEAN MARKETS. eee eae kiwaye the best. It’ hat, wowever, been | JESKRETEE at Whitehallalip. “Ail commanieation Canmmnae, Dec 4 In port bark Lorena, Hiehborn, for a | ———_—___ LL) 3 Pienty of cottonwoods limber on this side. After cross ; improved by the application of a deale which mem | Sti,eyi be forwatted tree of charge ws DO Pet rmanran, Nov Hie tn port trie ® P Gwett, diag. BSOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED I ‘ ing counted the Dims winding up inthe bed ofa | poxpon Monky Mani Aured the distance between the two surfaces of mer- "Arrived, Sharpahoter, Dyke. London tor erent States—Legal ev 4 BO publicity ; ne . led); 28th, Hudson, Pratt, NYork for charge until divorce obtained; tres. . rival’ ravine, reaching divide which was followed for cary. When the variations inthe barometer takes ‘M. HOWES, AMorneye78 Mnsoan sireees rj | fan M.—Consols close at 924; for den wae tf five miles. From this pomt descended soto & basin | a 4 74 place a portion of the mercury, if the baro- CLEARED. London (and proceeded for the river). i fu wine was very fine grass and the dry san bed of | BECO eed eee oi Tor Tito ab tag | meter falls, Would. enter the cup below a Kile'S Thayer, Thompons do, wey Toth New Orleans; | 4 _RUNTONS, CORNS, TENDER FEET, INGROWIN a cmek tending towarde the Cimarron, This oasi0 | pric and Atiantic and Great Western 42. de and raise =the | surface; and, therefore, Steamship Caledonia (Br), McDonald, HAMBURG, Nov 27 Art Shakapeare, Boysen, NYork. « Nails, 4, cured without pain, by, Dr. KIMMELL, | wa-one and a half miles tn width. Across this “PRANKPORD BOURSR.—FRANKFORT, Dec. 11.— uw gow had a* fixed § acaie, that scale nS hin Nereus. Bearse, Bostan—W P Civi HONOLULU, Nov 16—In port bark Bebring, Lane, from Fowreen commer street. The poor liberally consid ' Hasin We line of mareh day towards the summit of | enited States five-twenty bonds, 78% for the oid | Would not measnre the difference. The scale must Hhecaabip Dirigo, Sohneon, Poriiand—J F Aime Nicolnitant, for New Bedford, hav. Pak nn nee hh er another ridge. From tue epest of this ridge the | 7 » 754 for the old | be brought to touch the surface below and measure | Ship Crest of the Wave, Jones, Baltiwore-Hicks & Rell. EtvERPOoL, Nov %6-Arrived, Jumna, Fox, Bombay; #7th, SK ANY POLICEMAN, HE WILL TELL you To | county made a gradual descent so Rear " ares the suriace above. What was called the ayphon | — Bark Iiva (Br), Scheel, Algoa Bay via Cape Town, CGH_-c | Albambra (e 8. ‘4 try WOLOOTT'S PAIN PAINT, for thousande ‘ ‘ npooL COTTON MARKST.—-LIVERPOOL, Dec. “ a . Sailed 27th, ‘Haltimore; Oornwallis, Allen, aud try 4 wan | ercek, “Dis bottom a ois jour or five | YW The market closed ¢uiet barometer could, be substituted for this cistern. It bes | on; Magi: ‘Ann Kite, Davison, New Or. | she blue-coated guardians of our city have been cured by nies wile, with the ¢ running trough | sowing quetations:—Middling uplands, had two.branches, and according to the same law jt Wovager (Br), Yarwell, Gibdraitar—G F Bulley. jeans; Wacousta, Asco sacola; Lillie M, Clark, Ma. | TY 't free, at 10 Chatham square, Ne\ hiddie. Crossed the ereek abuve the forks | owes om : was only necessary to measure from a point any. | Brig Veteran (Br), tiould, Barcelona J Heney- tanzas, x “TTR ener toe —- , “ 10 middling Orleans, 1id. ® 114d. ‘The sales of mere th - ? - 7 Brig Eagle Wing (Br), Manly, Babia via St Joins, NF—G ch gmt, ; OFFICIAL DRAWINGS exinge ane both bad On Account of the sv | et Have fonted up 16,000 bales. where the heyght of the mercury im the principal | p putt eared 27th, Newcastle, Armstrong, New Orleans; Aus- Mineouri and Kentucky State Lotteri } a the bagke. ‘The first fork te iifty feet in wid | AVR COTTON iannet. HAVRE, Dee. 11.—Cor be hand tne height in the Inferior branch. he BrigS W (Br), Davia, Kingston, Ja, vin Fatmouth—A i | ‘ain turrat Monte att and Braatoe, MIMOURIRNTEA ULAGH NO. Tl, DECEIT. IT. 1435 } a vd with sandy Gers, , ci ‘i diderence would ¢ barometric height. ¢ | Solomon & " “4 " ] 4, 78, 7%, 12, 4 . un “pools, mn caxwped | bg har Na pervyes MARKer.—Livenroor, | “milion barometer was the syphon barometer, in Littlefield, Clenfuegos—J E Ward & Co. Slgrker Whitmore, Gardeaact hen Gen Epcoetaco. hago unt habe x0. 749, pxoRWoRR IL, |v, | rok King fourteen and # quarter yule I ae ata oh iy Plour, quiet and | Wiel the branch had been expanded im order to Trinldad—J ¥ Whitney & Co. LONDON, Nov 24 Entered out, Southern Kagio, Pearce, for 2, 21, 2%, 27, 44, 14, 5, bo, i La ey ‘very litle t | Dec, 11.-—Wheat, quies and sready. Feat, quiet an revent the rising or falling of the column inside the Ge yy Brant & siaght. Boston. 9. 689, DROIT 1], Me { a Svnwiupn iS left camp on Bear creek steady. Corn, 38a, Od. a 386 Od. per quarter for fonge rbranck. ‘The syphou might be wade to regia | Sehr Spy ie oe Ade Ay MALAGA, Nov 20~ Arrived, Lola, Anderson, NYork, oe} Ae ‘ in hve morning. Moved south two u MINOE WORSE: ateiak tases LIVERPls DE torn a more convenient way Dy mirans of a handle, | | Sehr WE fupyen (ie), Nicholesa, Corowal pee nora Setes. Comen Bane; alen, Patedet i 348 iy " opeek, Ui ned‘ ee ~ haem on ~4 . ut the ditieut: ih this u the in- yh Co. ‘ 4 ee t ; TOWOE. Fol ' tr lee ae tates ce a at 208s. per terce of Birument’s preciton 4 impaired’ by ossanHion. dene atiantle qr, Coalfeet, Windsor, N3-Crandall, Um. | gMATANZAS, Nov 28—Cleared, brig Merriwa, Waterhouse, TW Broadway wa tes Pay mm, for extra prime ine The beat , been 4 oI phray & Co. Oven: | “Liveeioot, PRODUCE MARKET—LAVERPOOL, Dec. | for usin nimcrrotioms and TOF measure the mergne | rene deamam Mr, Sav Henson for Nort Mia ig. Caretioer MeFarisnd, for Balt : oan - northwest by 11.—Kosin, Os, per owt. for common North Caroline | of modhtains, where great accuracy of nieadurerment | Schr Wille kml Rosin, Basti Ths trol tants, | more, do: ache Howard, (irifin, for NY ork, do; and others, ETRCTIVE BUSINESS OF EVERY . x was found. te be very | 280 108 for fine, Petroleuta, 8d. per gation forspirit® | wag indispensable and where the instroument Must | Schr Oakes Ames, Edmonds, Richmond-—N ly McCready & | pi,o't DE Para, Noy dt-in port scbr Alina (Br), Hoyt, tor | By” attended to Partners and employes \ Fram the sot solumnn turned south | 82418 60, for refined. Tallow, 608. par cwt, | Tut | ho correct, even to the thousandth part of wn ineh, in | Co, ieee ee ee rol the south bank the eolurn 4 | pentine, sts. perewn Linseed rei per tou for . 01 part of | s Seeks QUEPNSTOWN, Nov %4—Arrived, Howard, Snulnier, St I twenty degrees west and crossed a sandy, alkaline tine, 27a. percwt Linséed cakes, £12 pe order to secure accurate measurement, ‘Mhey were | Schr Mason Rogers, Jackson, Norfolk M B Redell, Mary's, Ga; 20th, Aolus, Knudsen, NYork; 27th, Lancashire, miata \ flat for one mile and crossed the Cimarron river. | i oblong for feeding introduced in this country in 1851, and hud since | Sloop Report. Blepp, Now taven GK Hackett & Bro Gridtha, do; sli Jennte Prine’, Price, Bakers Island! O MORE MEDICINE. 70,000 CURES OF DYsP EPs ; Tue crossiye here wae good, The ruNMing stream i | QiONPOM PRovucE MARKET—LONDON, Dé 1 | yeen greatly moditied, 40 as to fuilll ail the vequire- | Sieniner'y stevens, Chance, altimore Bin, Joho L. bye, Hye, NYork| Horatio Sprague, Small, Ma: | 11 tora, oy Du Barry's del Dinrriorm, Liver ant Nery About uvensy-tive yards wise and one tooraeep. Tile cutta linseed, 6TH. & 514. 6d. Tallow, 508, 9d. per | ponte of a barometer, By means of this justument J tansae; Dec 11, Bnglaad («), Thompson, New York for Liver | Disorders, by Du Barrys delicious,” aa an owl. Spirits patrolearn, 64d. per gallon. @ practised observer could vouch for the correctness ARRIVALS. 1. bed is sandy and the banks low, with sand hilis ex- POSTbAL, Now 17_Saijled, brig Nellie Antrim, Watlace, Lay PRTROLETM MARKET. NTWERP, Dec, 11.—Petro- pins which saves 01 14 times ite cost in medicines. tending 9 yards from the south bank, Grass 2 e U 4 of the reading to the two thontandth part of an to Jor % Tins, 1 ib., 81 25; 94 Ibe, B18, pg adh R here for the night; Baving Jeum buoyant at Ob igh a for standard white. inch. But for the purpose of dovertnining the matade porate ECan deen ail ane - ar Kenta Nor 4 brig H Ht Seavey, Lee, trom Alo Revalenta’ Chocolate, ta Hib Bai 9 gente marched ten aby alt miles. About noon & vio~ . of mountains there wax found to be another impor. | | Steamship Cubs (Br), Moodie, Liverpool Now 28. an ‘ork, for Jamaica Deo C0 7 , lat whic 2 stown 2th, with mdre and ingers to B Cunard. SAQUA, Doo 1 Arrived, schr David Wasson, Jones, NYork. 163 William atreet, New Yorks, ent porte Wet, aetna ay and che ensuing | = EUROPEAN MARINE NEWS. j ‘tit Ft NOL Urea Tee na cee HaNNS | The in at aoon, HO mites Hof Bandy Hook, passed 6 | 67 Jolin) NB, Deo'-atrived,achr Humma (lity Webver, | snd all rogers and chemise ont bolt Heventh Unitect States cavalry, with three companies " in Several United States governmeat expedl. { “jon seam erp ates Gniventon Nov 90, and Key Went | Cleared bth, brige Bonita (Br), Ei and © T Tom WATERPROOF 6OLES KEEP THE FEET DRY. . of infantry and 4 squadron of cavairy, left camp with Ur WOOL, Dec. 11.—The steamship England, ef | torte that when the barometer was wanted ped with mdee and passengers, to © H Mallory & Co. Mad Bry ter ‘Cardenaa usa ¢ Se yer, Matang: GO and see them at 4 ihe heaviest wages, With instructions to march part | the National line, iruu: New York November 28, ar | for ee it was broken, The barometric tube | heavy weather ail the passage. Bee rt, Adams, Havana; schr Addie Ryernon, ki 458 Hronewagy of the distance td Seaver creek and make a dry | rived here to-day. should be kept free from air, otherwire it would pase Steamehip Volunteer, Gallagher, Philadelphia, with mdse to ba iad iphia, = —v LEAD, WHIT! ————— > camp. QUERNSTOWN, Dec, 11.—The Royal mail steamship | up through the tube and imake a vast difference. 5 kee. ‘of Boston), Thompeon, Manita, July 94, ‘RineTR, Noy 4--Bailed, Viyt, Engeleman, NYork. HITR LEAD, EB LEAD, NoveMneR 16—Left vamp at baltpast wx A.M. | Runwia, Captain Cook, wien sailed from New York | This was done by bolitvg, and a detect could be | gin Pee ye eT chore atthenW pit. > | American Porte. White Lend at half price, of great body and os Morched south a winding’ Courte for the first two | December 2, arrived at this port at eight o'clock this | easily detested from the fact that the mercury in Rhiy Levenits (NOs Wenke, Bremen, @0 daye, with mdse BOSTON, Dee 10. red, bri ria Wheeler, Wheeler, perpoundy ‘ton lote let ual price Tan te Tie!’ Bngiialy h mys sng, Ciuabing she baroMeler WOULD be hoary jo wbrlke and M6 yagsougers, 1o Hermann Bachics, Came the souib: | NYork; rebre Abbie Pima Lomvard, Charleston vin | Pruggian Hive in 93! ouly doc. per pound, MMB Pomp bteey\e widow, gv PANG Malin, WERNY BHO MaitH Youth, Wom