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0002642-00000 | ./Z 9 \_ - fr . ) ;EIVSPAPI:h rt Tt r • rr , 1 1 1 . _ z Sia ILLY 3 '1 Na 5,123.] CAFIITTA, calling at the Cape of Good Hope ati Madrea—MONTHLY num - COMMUNICATION between LONDON and INDIA by the magnificent Beet of steamers belonging to the EAST INDIA and LONDON SHIP PING OOMPANY well-known clipper atudthuy HYDASPES, 2,249 tone, 100-bone power. G. H. rOll m irat, u ocounander, now loading in the Victoria iLoadon) Docks, wi leave on the leth February, embarking gen at and leaving Gravesend on the RIM February, for a Cal cutta, calling at the Cape of Good Hope and Madras. This magnificent ship, built expressly for the Indian trade, has been thoroughly retinal, Ins tint-rate accommodation for singees, and wIR smart experienced surgeon, also a stew The avenge of the last seven steamers has been 11 hours to • the Hp dames performed the voyage da C es days, and the last 'th. Calcutta in 59 days, being the shortest OD record.—For freight or passdge apply to ORI N OLAF sad On, it, Partfament-street. SW. the broken ; ALFRED BRITT and CO.. 150, Lee/Mahan stn , i t, EC. or at the OFFICES of the COMPANY, 9, /alums lAne, London, LC.; where also applies Dons for appointments au midshipmen should be made. RICHARD DREW, Secretary. East India and Loudon Shipping Company (Limited), 9, Mincing-lace, P.O. MIITTA Direct, under engagement to the imi! of India, with immediate despatch, the splendid ship LINCILLIIii, A 1 for I S years, 99S tom register loading ln the East India Docks. Hee magnificent able accommodation.— for 171421ifi or prow apply to 132LLATLY, UANKIY, sad SZWII,L, 27, Leedeall street, LC. BOMBAY Direct (to fail on the 15th January, ten or not tall% the well.known dipper ship LORD RAG LAN. A I. It ran. 713 tom. N. N. IL, lowan to the Rad India DocYa—Ag to GALLATLY, RANKEY, and 813 WILL, 27, BLACK BALL PASSENGER LINE of CLIPPIR MI MS for AUSTRALIA from London direct. Fest I limp. Name. Dooka i Fe nail. Sydney W . Meihniel . MN London Liam 10 Sydney Sane& Home . IMO Leedom I Jan. 1.5 Sydney Morrie Reglead %NS I. India , Feb. 10 Melbourne Perini! of UM Peak 1,4041 1 India Jan. t 5 Melbourne .. Golden Santis LON 1 India Feb. IS Queensland .. Light Brigade— 2.500 1 India Jars 30 Queensland , Beelapore i 1,1100 I. India Feb. im ' TAI. otisbralad Ilaa or mesas lave, by thsir puoatoalltr aad rapid pammass, earasst a world Mows rulattatloa, sod their pas ustpr asosemsdatics Is uassrpassad Wog Iseassla allprModare rosipscatag M.& or to Australia ap to Lit SAINTS sad Co., Lir ; Avata tor the Lack Dag Las; sad T. It. MAMA and Co., 1 , Leradaaballatprot, lositaa. KC. TO BRITISH OOLIIXIIIA 101_#P#.. WKICIEft StraIifdOKIItgIOATION so IriW YORK Direct—TM LIVERIV:101. I4ZW YORK, mod PILLADELFKIA ITTIAMAIIIP COMPANY Wood despotclo. log their tall.oewered Clyde-baUt Iron &row gtesunehlga iow ealrg . ot Qnsometwoo to embark pasoonows sod despatekos. as WEEKLY• PROM LIVERPOOL FOR NNW TOLL EDINBURG Wednesday, Jan. , lgel CTTY OF 14ANCH H. ENTKIL Wsdnis l4 day, Jan. EL lagg. ETNA, Wednesday, Jan. .11, 18411. And every oodoorg Wednesday. Oakes prom 111, and 11 gators, according to lie soar medstei. Forward poonmos, II oboes, Including all provision mewl Preengen ler Cords. Am Untied States, sad 21451.5 Wok* booked Wont on vory &dna know—For kirlborpordoolars only to WILLIAM IN , Waterotreet, Ihoonool; or to 11V45 and /LACEY. 01. Ling Wilikusetrost, BRITISH and NORTH AMERIC ANAdmira ROYAL MAIL lITLILIUSHIPK appoiated by the lty to hstwean LIVERPOOL and NEW YORK., and between Lt VR salt lt. POOL and BOSTON, with liberty to call at Halifax or other ports Is lead and receive mails, goods, and peomagers, the Bostoa Was WANE at Halifax to land aad rearm passengers and her Ifejestrs mill. The foliowtE or other vessels are ap. pointed to lel tram Liverpool, ea nit at Cork to ro 1 • 00 tl• • AVSTRALASIAN. for NEW YORE, Saturday, Jan. 11. ' • Taidng immensely and goods for Nassau and lismina, to he buntewed at Hew York on board Use LIM& Mash Queen. BUROPA, for BOSTON, Saturday, Jan. U. ASIA, for NEW YORK, Saturday. Jan. A. Passage money, including steward's Ise and provisions, but Zth4t wines or liquors :—To Halifax and Boston, chief cabin, . second cabin, 116. To New York, chief cabin. aseead cabin, RIK Freight to Halifax, Boston, and New York, ZS ger toa, and ri par cent. priasage.—Apply to J. B. loord, 14, Old Woad-street, London ; J. U. Currie, Havre, and 12, Plans de la Rome, Paris; O. and J. Burns, Beskaaanotreet, Glasgow; D. =Z. W hir. a Queenstown ; or D. and C. U'lver, 6, Water. LI Tamp PS, GRAVES, and PHILLLPPS aani ralP iath the andermentiond Iliet-class steamers: for ROTTILLDAM, the FYINOORD, Thursday morons *arty, Imes cdflheilmmes. Fare Ai ler BIGAIGN, the YALU:, CONDOR, or mow& alternately seep Thursday. how liorselydown, at 11 am calling at Black well Pier to reeds pee:sassier' at aeon. Pans : Ct. Al. and Ma. N.B. Bremerhaven Is always amenable, whilst the other Gathers Ports are closed by lee . lee GOTAINBURG, the GUSTAF WASH, In a few days, from Ronelydown. Fares, a .. in to.. and AI. IarCOPINHAORN, the GAMUT, In a few days, trees Alder- Meal Tter. Fee freight, painge. Chaplln's Unlvenal Oaten 11114=6.a. to P FR GRAVES, and PUILLLPPII, THE BRITISH and FOREIGN MARINE COMPANT (Latted). ander the Companies Let, *.IL which elleniel l ll l =th a ttability of each Shareholder to the amount of his Shama Capital L 1,000,000, In 50,000 shares of LIIO each, with power to Increase to £2,000,000. IPlret issue, 25,000 shared Deposit, cni appllaidon, Al per Mare, sod LI on allotment. Archibald Boyd, Director of theeCrala Beak of London, London. 'reacts C. Braun, of Bleeds, Braun, and Co., Liverpool Thomas Cilton, of Hoiderness and Chilton, President of the Chamber of Commerce, Liverpool hands Anderson Clint, of Clint and Co., Chairman of the Ship mates' Aasociation, Liverpoo/ Marks B. Colchester, of Colchester sod Woolner, London. Wiliam James Penile, of Arnie Brothers and Co., Liverpool. Arthur Bower Norwood, of Leech, Harrison, and Norwood, Liverpool Peter George Heyworth, of Heyworth, Pearce, and Bahasa, Liverpool. Thome Harrison, of Thomas Harrison and Co., Liverpool Thomas Kendall, of Kendall Brothers, Liverpool. &Mud Lawrence, of B. lawrence and Co., Liverpool George LyaU, of Lyall, Still and Co., London. Andrew Mammon, of J. end 1). Malawian end Co., Liverpool Hobert Maxwell of A. M. and It Maivell, 14v George M. Papsysnni, of Panamint! Brothers, =pool John Park, of Park, andoo... Liverpool Charles K. Priolsau, of Fraser, Tombola, and Co., Liverpool John Havenscroft, at W. and J. Havenacroft and Co., Chairman of the Borth and ?oath Wales Beak, Liverpool. Jules Searight, of Junes Semliki end Co., London. Samuel Mitt, of Stitt lirothen and Co., Uverpoil. MOONS Milldam Tetley, of Hollinaded, Tetley, and Co, IlverpooL Thomas ineshouse, Director of the Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, au, london. Relay Threaten Wilson, of H. T. Wilson and Chambers, Liverpool Mama Fletcher anAlita Liverpool. Moms. Flax and Arena, Mincing-lane, London. MOWS. Loodca—Meesea. Laurence, dos. and Pearce, Auction Mart, LC. livairpool—liamn. Thews Tinley and Scum Mews 0. and T. Irvine. 1110111115. The Union Bonk of London. London. The Union Bank of Liverpool. LtverpooL Temparen OElees of the Company-9, Cookoeueet, Uverpool: 39, Lotebury, Londoa, LC. Notwithstanding that several new Marine lassnmee Com panies have been estahhaned within the last few yews, It is generally recognised that the means of effecting marine insur ances are tint sufacient to meet the increasing estimation of trade. insurers being now driven to effect their ibsorances Is remote gowns in the provinces, la Ireland and Scotland, and on the Continents of Ynrope and America. The actual price of shares in the existing Norio. Insurance Companies deniongrates clearly that the businees la highly re munerative. Of re new romper., one only has been established In Liver pool, and it has already secured a very large and lucrative bur lier then half the exports and imports of the kingdom limn through the port of LiverpooL and there Is no doubt, therefore, Abet another co m p any h aving its chief errs In London and Liverpool will meet with maple support. Ca fir tke.e iiirum.xenees the British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company lois been cherished. The borer of the Company mill be confined to the issuing of Policies on Freight and Goods only, and It is expressly provided, as • fmadanientel element in the constitution of this Company, that no insurance shall be effected on the ships themeelvea The minclple of hunted liability, •• applicable to insurance companies, came into operation datum the month of November last. The Directors, obserring th at, in bank o; and other im portant commerclid enterprises, limited liability has met with universal favor, hare kloptrni it as an unallereble principle In the pesusat undertaking. The Directors, therefore, express the greatest confidence in the Soccer of thh Company. finch provision bas been made by the Directors for the pre elpEl3llll s Will secure the Company against paying any pamtotjw 1100137. A Copy of the Articles of Association lies at the Offices of the Company for inspection. The Proispectres and Forms of A ! lon for Shares may be obtained of the Brokers of the Company. Applications for shares to be addressed to the Directors bet no apolleatioa will be considered Salem a payment has her made to the Bankers of the Company of gl per share, on the number of shares applied for. Thie mem will be returned If no allotment is made to the applicant.. PORN 07 AP?IJCATIOP PON SWAM To be retained by the Bankers. TO gni DlTlNCentil OF THe IRMOII AND roRISION RAMIS ram:Litre oolleitY fLirolte.l Gentilleen,—lfaving paid to your bankers the am of L, Why • deposit of £1 par share on shares In the above CogaPenY, I hereby request that you will allot me 'bat number, and I agree to become a member of the Company In respect of satb shares, or in respect of say leas number you may allot me, ao aid to inecnne th e articles of a•riation when required I and W that my name may be placed oo the register of members tor the Yana mo allotted. Name in NH Residence Profeaskil or briar, Date THE CONTINENTAL BANK 00111.POSATiON f Lialted). To be established under the •• Compsnimi Act. 1882, - whereby the Liability of each Shareholder is limited to the amount et kis shares. Capital £1,000,000. In 10,000 shares of /100 each- First hone 5.000 Shares. Deposit a per share, with a further payment of ft per share on allotment. .... _ _ _ It is not contemplated to sill up more than £25 per share, and no call shall ere ed LS per Share. Pant Broil, Esq., 4', l'hrsaLeedle 7 s7Met, London. William PI. Cargill, Egg.. Director of the Oriental Bank Cor poration. James B Cumming. Esq., Messrs. Cumming, Beaver, and Co., London and Singapore. Thomas H. Gladstone, Esq.. Mums. John Gladstone and Co., White Llon-eourt, ConhlLL Salomon H. Outlefrol, Zen., Mews. De klattne and Oodefroi, Copthall.court. William J. Harwell, Keg., Director of the National Provincial Bank of England. The Hon. Roden Noel, Chandooptreet, Cavendish-square. labia* A. Ilientla Depety.Clutuinan of the koglith and Anatrallan Copper Company. Vincent B. Trittoo, Eaq., Mesas. Edson, Trilion, and Co., Old ilThard E wade, Eaq., Director of the Nation►l Provincial Bank of wand. 'ANITA/LI Wawa Barclay. Bevan, 'Pillion, and Co., 64, Lombard-street, The NaUotud Provincial Bank of England at Its various branches . SOLICITORS—Messrs. Wilkinson. Stevens, and Wilkinson, Nicho las-lane, E.C. Blioutits-11 tsars. Hichens, Harrison, and Co., 21, Thread. Brwe7Raii-4.4lirge --- L'uToniing, Fag. Temporary Offices-00, Cannon street, iLC. The application of the Joint stock principle to banking and eichanges, under the control and general management At boards of directors in London. has proved so eminently successful in the British Colonies and dependencies, more particularly in the Fest and Went Indies. that .1 is deemed expedient to introduce that spinal into the Continent of Europe, with which our coin. mercial intercourse is now so great an to demand additional facilities and safety In support of oar mutual monetary trans actions. Banking on the English system, and with Engibh capital. has already been applied, with success, to foreign countries In the in. stance,s of the Ottoman Bank am regards. Turkey, sod the Bank of Egypt In Egypt, both conducted under royal charters of blow. porstion. Other companies have more recently been established_ with similar objects, under the Limited Liability Act. The directors propose to tale powers to apply for a special charter for this Bank. . -. . . . . - Infiellmits of a prospectus it Is Impoatbi• to enter into full details, but dada! datisties are arall•ble to show the lamps In the totals of our imports and expo. is of merchandise with the principal countries of Central Europe. between the years 1854 and 1851, which may be briefly given thus —with France, from IV to 36 . with Germany, from It to 19 millions with Hol. laud, from 13 to 113 millions with taly, from sto 9 millions and with Spain, from 5 to 8 millions darling. It may be useful to recall the fact, as stated by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, " that the export trade between England mi France alone, which, before the recent internatinnal treaty, averaged. in the two years preceding the treaty, only £9.1.02.000 per annum. has, to the first year of the treaty, surpassed 421,0(.0000 "—an increase which alone has made up for the tem porary hem of the American market . In a Bank like the present, bullion operations form ► neces sary and most Important feature. more particularly with France. the yearly average of our dealinp with which. In gold and sil ver, is about 80 millions sterling the business originating In these vast transactions has, hitherto, been enjoyed by a Imams of known wealth. _ . . . . The Continental Bank Corporation has for Its object to faci litate the commercial and financial business between the United Kingdom and the EtllOpeill Continent, and to carryout oa an ex tensive scale operations In bullion and exchange and it Is con• Ildently anticipated that, by extending to importers and ex• porters accommodation on an enlightened and liberal scale. a large proportion of such business will In secured to the present undertaking. The Bead Mace of the Bank will be In London, and the first Branch will be established in Parts not only on account of the magnitude a our dealings with that city, but because it is a vat financial centre, second only to London. Paris taken from London the greater portion of the gold imported into England. and furnishes in return the bulk of our vast demands of silver for the East. . . . . Other branches or agencies .111 be established in other chief cities of the continent. .t such Bract and in such order so the progress of the Bank may Justify. Arrangement* are matured to secure the services of gentlemen of large experience to conduct the foreign department of the business . . . The Rank. In addition to ordinary banking operations, will conduct an the liminess of exchange agent. It will Import and export gold and silver. Purehnse approved bills of exchange. coupons, notes, &e. Undertake foreign financial agencies. Grant drafts op its various agencies, and Issue circular notes. Buy and Dell foreign stock* and share* on commission. Applications for shares must be mode In the annexed form, accompanied by • depo.lt of El per Marc. If no allotment be made to the applicant. the deposit will be returned without de duction . and, If • Icre number he allotted then I. applied for the surplus will be placed tower.:s the payment on allotment. ITo*Pcctimes and forms of applk-ition for shares may be obtained at the temporary oflices, and from the Woken of the Company. 7..{11 Or APPLICAI7OII Vol =LW. To the Directors of the Continental Bank Corporation Limited.. Gentlemen, .ring paid the sum of delimit of SI per 'harem shares In the Continental Rank Corporation Limited), I request you will allot me that number of shame. and I hereby mime to accept the same, or any less mustier which may be allotted to me ; and I agree to be. come a atentlaer of the Company. 'object to the memorandum sad articles of saiiociatton _ Name in toll Proferlon or business Dated the Attires' day .4 The above form, when filled up, to be left with the Bankers on payment of the &welt. URIOORD'S ESSENCE of LIFE a 5 essloros vosidised to ths matt shattsrod 000sIttnitasis to Om wombs. Mao is tospaeallis. Its Moots ors porssahost. Ae esoislistiow to sem, with tall lostractlows, ▪ lls., or toot co.aYtW for SU. mot saywhors, what cos to siplot tomitissosos stotaps...lisis 0p.% MUT sal Ok. Illitted. TINIPIO4I4 PLYMOUTH, Jam 9. The auxiliary steamer Golden Fleece, 2,768 toot, G. E. Bird commander, belong ing to the Bast fedi& sad London Shipping Company, passed and landed her pilot it 3 Lin. this morning. She had a full mend ergo aad about 90 passengers, among whom were the following: —C. J. Walonneyer, Eq., J. C. High toe. Faq., Mr. and Mrs. Crightoo and family, Mr. and Mrs. Marto. and family. H. L. Morton. Esq.. Mr. and Yn Darnel and family, Mr. Maseergis, Mime Coleridge, H. Jackson., Fee.. Mr. Clouts, Captain aid Mrs. Gordon and family, Am, for the Cape ; Captain and Mrs. Forster, Miss Montgomery, Mir Fitzgerald, Dr. A. F. Churchill, Stall Asaistant-Surgeons Nicholson. Elliott, M'Adam, and Mel hoarse, hers. Scott, Pram little, HortihY, St•Pato 8000 . Greenwood, owl Godfrey, Lieutenant Wood, P. Orr. ER.. Miss Ciarlos, i s., for Madras ; Captain Patina., Mr. Dud Mrs. Burrs sod family. Lieutaaare Hay and Vandeleur, Ensigns Mallet and MAlillaa. Dr. Purefoy, Mr. sad Mrs. Kettlsworth, A. Brett, Esq.. Mr. and Mrs. Nash, Liras east and Mrs. lleedale, Capri& mad Mrs. Baer. F. Ur, Esq., Mr. Baker, H. Gamer. Fazi., Lieutenant and Yea in., for Gres N'N etta reara, J. Collins, Esq., Mrs. Corbett sad family, . THE INNS of COURT HOTEL COMPANY ;United). Incorporated ander • 4 The C.impanies Aet, Int" Capital ElOO,OOO in 10,000 Shares of *:10 each. Deposit 10e. per share on application and 10.. per hare on allotment: Calls not to tamed £1 per share, at intervals of not leas than two month►. maßcross, E. W. COX, Esq., J.P , Recnnler of Falmouth and Helston. 38. Russellaquare, London: and Most Mount, Hlghwood, Middle sex, Chairman. John Jackson Blandy, Esq.. Town Clerk of Reading. and Under. Sheriff of the Ceunty of Berks. Director of the Bolicitors and General Life Assurance Society. G. F. Fox, tiy., Bristol, Director of the Law Property and Life Assurance Society. F. Gwyn, ifsq , Hammersmith, Chairman of the Daeentry George way COMpS.I3. Alfred Lamb, Esq.. merchant. 4S, Mark-lam, Director of the Loudon and South Western Bank. John Benjamin Herrn, Bag., 16, Weethourne.park, W. J. B. Worcester, Ley., merchant, Lawrence Pountney-lane. and Lewisham-park (late of Calcutta). L Wright, Bag.. Bradford. Director of the Bradford, Wakefield, and Leeds Railway Company. (With power to add to their number.) sintrlTOl9. Meam Druce and Co., 6], Victoria street, Wevirminter, M. C. Llott, Esq., 89, Lincoln's-inn fields, W.C. AUDITOR& 0. A. Cape, , public aciTiatinteut, Adelaide.plaos, London bridge, E.C. One other to be appointed by the shareholder.. Bank of London. Threadneediestreet, City. Mears. Hallett. Omroanney, and Co., Great Oaorge-street, West minster, London. Monk of Manchester, Manchester. Memo. Baeluet sad Co.. Lead& Mesas. Heideman', Fowler, and Co., Change-alley, CorehM, London. Mews. &Bergey and Son. Manchester. Messrs. Irvine Brothers, LlverrouL John Besseen, taq., Leeds. SECILITAILT pin tern.l—Mr. Themes Waite. Tansparari 011ese—TM Old Mansimbouse, Cheapalde, LC. It Is admitted that a artit-Cisas hotel Is required In the vie!. Wry of Lincoln's-inn-gelds. and the Directors of this Company bare, with a view to supply such an acknowledged requirement, secured toe advantag eous terms , the freehold of the George sad Hine boar Inn, in Holborn. and the booking (dike and stables, In the occupation of Mews. Chaplin and Horne, and some premises at the heck extending to Lincoln's-Inn-gelds, now occupied by Mews. Clarke, Gray, and Woodcock. It Is proposed to pull down the buildings purchased and to erect an hotel, which will be conducted on a scale and Is a manner consistent with the Improved popular Mate, and will =spacious coffee rooms, reading rooms and library, billiard, arbitration, and public dining rooms, about ens hundred and seventy bed rooms, and e.egaat suites of looking Into the Central Court of the Hotel, which, =lll,7 ta manner of continental hotels, will be laid out as • eon. sereatory. The Hotel will have two entrances, one In Holborn, the other In Lincoln einn-lielda. 117 adiltiZiothe ordinary hotel accommodation, it is pro. ned to let apart a suite of Minimum rooms, facing Linmin's lem-fields, for a club. similar to the West-end clubs, for the accommodation of barristers There will also be in this part of the proposed building several reference rooms, for the conve nience ndsoileitois and others. It is believed that ere long the different courts of kw will be concentrated. and that the neceswry buildings for that purpose will be erected In the aeithbeurhnod of Lincuin'winn-fields. The rats of the proposed Hotel is admitted to be mod eligible and unattested for Its position and central situation, and insa melt r the reesetly formed hotel companies pay dividends varying from le to 116 per cent.. there to every reason to antics. pate that equal meows will attend this Company. Plans of the proposed Hotel can he seen at the Mikes of the Company, and any latormation required will be given by the secretary. • copy of the article. of association may be seen at the °Mom of the Company. A large amount of the capital has been already esibeertbed. Interest upon the amount paid up at 5 per cent. per annum win be allowed from the date of payment mill the opening of the Hotel. Applicalious f. sr shares may be made la the form annexed, accompanied with • eposit of 10s, per share. It uo allotment he made the deposits . 111 be returned in fall. Prospectuses nay be obtained on application to the secretary. solicama and brokers. TOME OF APPLIOOIOII 70i SHULL!. TO THE DULECTOILI OP THE HIES OP COURT HOTEL COXPLET Limited). Gentlemen,—Baring paid the sum of I request that you will allot me Shares in the above-ammod Com pany. and I agree to accept such Share*, or any Pos number, sod to pay the culls thereon when am, gentleman, ta Name in full Residence Profession or Business Data This form, when filled up, to lae vent to the Secretary, holkdtors, or Brokers. IliiNimmilmmomommmE LONDON, SATURDAY EVEpTRIO, JANUARY 10, 1888. THE BRITISH sad ILECIIANGE BANKINO CORPORA/LOX (limited. (Itstablished under the Cetnpaniee Aet, 1I with • Lbwßed Liability.) Capital One HIWoa aterling. In 20,000 shares of ASO each. Flint issue 10,000 shame. It is not intended to call up more than £25 per share. With power to the shareholders to increase the capital.) Deposit Al per altars oe application, and CI per sham on allotment,. DTREOTORS. Archibald Boyd, Zig., Director of the Colon Bank of London, London. William James Fertile, Eq., of the firm of Verde Brothers and Co., O LI IIIV Esq l. John ~ et the fins of Gilchrist, Watt, and Co., of Sydney, Director of the felon Bank of Louden, London. Robert 0111erple, Jun., Esq., of the firm of GlUesples, Moffatt, and Co, London. Harry George Gordon, Esm, Chairman of the Oriental Beak Cor poration, London. Harold Littledale, Eq., of the firm of T. and H. Littledale and Cv., Liverpool. William M. Neill Esq., of the firm of Neill Brothers and Co., Manchester. Thoma spool. Rees, Esq., of the firm of R. and T. Woodward and Co., Liver William Rennie, Fan., of the firm of Cavan, Lubbock, and Co., London. Samuel bUtt, Esq., of the Arm of Stilt Brothers and Co., Liver pool SAMOS. London—na Caton Bank of London. LivrfPral—Tbe Bank of England. Matiebester—TM Bank of England. India and Cblns—Tbe Oriental Bank Corporation. SOLICITORS. London—Messrs. Ootterill and Sons. Liverpool—Masan. Pletcher and Hon. nacoulnB. London-Bheppseds, Pally, sad Aliened, 48, Threadneedle-street : J. and J. Whitehead, 8, Momenta street. Liverpool—Hors:fall and Addison. Temporary Offices-4 Newman's-court, Cornball. Lyndon Middleton-buildings, Rumford-greet, Liverpool. The Britieh and American Eschango Banking Corporation (li mited: is formed for the purpose chiefly of dealing in exchange•—• business which, tempting with British po mrfo has hitherto been mainly in the hands of private fi rms and it le well known that with many countries such banking facilities have not been afforded to merchants and others as the vastly extended com merce of the present day demands. This Is particularly the case In the trade between England and America, and BM proposed that this Corporation shall commence its operations by the estab lishment Oen agency in New York. The profitable nature of Exchange business is well known, especially that with the American States, and although the profit is at present, greater than can be calculated upon in ordinary years, there is generally a much larger margin than is usually found remunerative by bankers. The purchese sad sale on comas sins of securities In New York and London, the dealings in which amount annually to many millions sterling, and the re. mittances of interest and dividends, will afford other sources of Dr ofit The practice now become very general of attaching bills of lading to Who of exchange as collateral security, renders ex change op. rations more than usually safe, whilst the shipment of gold involves scarcely any risk whatever. The shipments of produce end specie from New York alone for the past year have amounted to nearly forty millions staling. and the average of several years bee not been much less. There is thus a very extended field for the operations of the corpo ration, and the faculties which it will afford, both in W s coestay and America, must tend to promote, and still further to extend, the oommerclal and monetary transactions between the two eountriea The same remarks are applicable to other places In which the establishment of 'gamin is ountemplated. A large bllßitleil Is also anticipated betwixt America and the ports in India and China, which will be carried oat in co ope ration with the Oriental Bank Corporation. Ihe success of Joint-Stock Banks dealing In Exchange is evi denced by the present quotations of the shares of the under mentioned Companies: and it is somewhat remarkable that the Joint-toot has not yet been adopted In the American trade, then pretenting a wider Mild for its progtable operation than any of er part of the world. Present Paid.np. Prices. eo se so n 20 49 „ 61 26 49 „ 51 20 1161 26 54 „ 66 50 94,,46 26 41 „ SS Colonial 41 34 „ S 5 pleb , 43 T oL he Corporation will have offices both in London and Oorporation Is formed under •• The Companies Act, 1669," whereby the liability of the shareholders is strictly limited to the amount of their respective shares. No promotion money will be given for originating the under taking, and the preliminary expenses will be strictly confined to such ma are indispensable. ApplicaJons for shares may be addremed to the annexed form to the Directors : or to the Broken of the Corporation ; and copies of the prospectus may be obtained upon application to them. or to the Solicitors, or at the London and Liverpool Offices of the Corporation. Bank of Australasia New Routh Webs Union of Australia London Chartered of Australia...... ... Oriental Agra and United Service Mercantile Bank of India, London, and China Ottoman ►ORN OF APPLKATION ►OR SHAMS, To be retained by the Bankers. No. To the Dtrectora of the British and American Exchange Banking Corporation (Limited. Gentlemen,—Haring paid to your hankers the sum of C , being a deposit of Xi per share on shares In the above Corporation. I hereby request that you will allot me that num ber. and I agree to become a member of the Corporation In re spect of such shares, or In respect of any less number you may allot me, and to execute the articles of anwetatlon when re qnned ; and I request that my name may be placed on the re gister of members for the shares so all itted. Name in full Residence Profeealon or business .. ofthe METROPOLITAN RAIL irtY.—PASIMENGER TRAMS will run on and alter DAY (Saturday), the 10th January, as follows: WEEK DAYS. roaltwill depart from the Terminal Stations at Bildiop's ddlngton, nod from Farringdon.street, in the City, call ing at all intermeatate stations. ate o'clock am., end every 10 minutes following, until 8 o'clock a.m. After that hoar at each quarter of an hour following until 8 o'clock p.m. After that hour at every 53 minutes following until 11 o'clock at Wight. SUBWAYS. Ate o'clock am. until 10.30 am., and at 1 o'clock p.m. until 8 o'clock p.m., at each quarter of an hoar following. After that hour at every 20 minutes following until 10.40 p.m. For the times of stoppage at intermediate stations, ma well as for fares of pasermgers and other particulate, see the train bills. Re Watt train' or osmium to or !mem the Great Western Railway trains will run near the Metropolitan Railway nail further notice. rffIREATRE ROYAL LYOZUM will OPEN, sok amaaagetneal of Mr. IfSCHTTM, THIS MN INO, J BOIL. To monsoonal with an mistrial sketch ea titled A M DDLt ATTACH—Mmes. Mere, Garden. H. WWl oomb, &Grade, and Mrs. Lee. After winds, at a quarter to 8, a New Hasa lo Drama, lo then acts and prologue, maltled The DUNES MOITO, by Paul Pent by Jam Brengham. The iltcharade. VIM be somerlorad by Mr. Yachter, ra O. Tang, J. Brougham H. Widdlcomb, S . lP. g rr .d yn, . Charles. Gordan. Pnymood, H huller, Dawson, lames Oarlette Leclerc% Tate Term Z. Laverne, and Marrorthy. Mr. Midge and Mr. Welter Hontgoenny are sapped and will shortly 72:= Doors epso balf.paste, performance to cogareenon at T. bone, Et at ed. and kg Mame registered : Malls, M. ; dram etrule, as. id. : upper drat% h ed. Prices at door.: Stan, ea. ; dress circle, k ; upper circle, 4 : pit, Ts. ; gallery, le. No balrprloe. Boxedice open duly !tom f till lftege manger, Mc. O. Vining; Adios manager, Mt. H. lleetmoA. IMMENSE SUCCESS of LITTLE CORELLI in her new and marvellous performance. The ?oar Ameri can Wonders have occasioned quite a seneaticm : they surpass all ever witnessed in thin country. The best company in London, including Madame Vatoksosere, Min Coastlines, Madame LAM bin, Madame she, Mu Lissy Watson, Mr. De Brenner, Mr. and Mn Brennan, falawalmeg, Daley, and Litille Bob; and Miss Georgians Bautbeon fn a new Pantomimic Entertainment. The lAilsDtiN PAVILION, Tiehbonseatrost. WIBL and IiONNEAILIIIIIR, Paosteistoss. WHITTINGTON CLUB, 37, Arundel-street, Strand. onataboing Reading. Dining. Bdllard, Drawing, sad Smoking Rooms. open daily, including Stlnd•Yu Tamely suseeripstos, E 2 b. : Ir 4 eau-year, £1 tie. Country Members, £lla. annually. Udine. 411.1. annually , halt-year, lot 6d. 01(1Sfembers are informed that the Club Timms are now com fortably furnished, and a billiard table is provided. The weekly Dancing Assemblies have Tremont:ed._ at & Mr. Arthur Young, Reading from the Iterchento! Venice : " . _ _ TV Tweittii Jnrmla Ball will be on 13th Jan. Tickets L. Tee prospectuses apply to the Secretary. The Great Hall (capable of accommodating 800 and other large and entail Rooms, to be Let for Pabllc Sleeting', Bans. Concerts, to. Terms may be had on application to WM. YET/L2B, Sec. %IRE ARUNDEL GREAT HALL, 37, Antoci/31- J. ttreet. Strand, to be LET. —This hall is available from its capacious accommodation (SOO personal, for piddle neetinp, Weans, comma, balls, &c. (having orchestral sedr quirementeincluding . For bans, supper and refreshment rooms, ladies' room with attendant, 'bat room. 4c.. ins Wow: for public six guineas ; for ooperts, five guise's. No extras for pa or . Also committee and other mall and large rooms to be let.—Apply to WOL Secretary, Whit 'torten Club, drundelutreet, Strand. T HE LONDON GRAND RESTAURANT. LUNCHEON'S and DISNIEE A LA QUITS tea he had with COMFORT and DESPATCH AT ANY HOCH DAILY. im a in tbe Ovissd itheas. Simedal Aim-room for ladies and gentlemen. Spada= ant ventilated mine, «Mee, and smoking Saloon. Opts ON SUNDAYS YEW! POUR TILL NINL KARTS; groprodom 191. 71,111ZWYR1IT, OMNI& ag CRAINIBRY-LANR. Tilll7llll YBENCE BRAND Y, wizaarrio, 20.. ru (Lamm aft. rs DOM : ma &L smile bank. Karted's Ise Add Wendy. In ease as Impefted, 110 e. pea dm a. WALLItZ sad CO., 61, IDOWAR4AOAD, nadir& Oxford-street, Regeat-elreaL BARLOW'S PATENT CABE STAND, a new invention, so admirably contrived that a MI bate, as well as smaller casks. may be robed or tilted on It without labour or trouble. Ito action to so impalpable that the sediment of the wet limpid Auld by no paribality can be disturbed. Prim K, 125., 14., to suit 41, V. and IS gallon costa BARWW'S SELF-ACTING SYPHON TAP. No vein-peg required. Ito same flat beer or sour vine. Price an ed. ; ditto, electroplated, k.—epply direst to JAMB BAILOW, patentee, la Kb* Nenseen-leases. Ise Mat Ids same end Wier are in every wilds; ell Minoan epinionsimitotkas. Ingrovium gratis. NMahliehed lIIM. LONDON CARPET WAREHOUSE. WAUGH sad BON, $ sad 4. GOODOWITRHYT. W. BROWN BROTHERS. -PATENT OHAIBS sad 00IIC Barrack Anal" Trunks, Pertsra- Mau. ie.-1116. . Catalogne• tree. VALUES of GOLD.—WATHERSTON and BROGDEN, ler the information of the Pales and their munerons Patrons, bee to make the following anneimareent re the VALUE of GOLD, feeling perimadsii BM& the inte rests the fair trader and theiblle w e ha ins protected by the wide circulation of knowl edge en Ws fabled. Gold being late 14 ports or carats, I follows taut geld el U cents flish is 18 aerate.. BS 81 wands —ll 11 14 worth —ad 114 17 carats.. $ 0 1 OYU! .. 1 n 4 PR POOL le carats.. ale 71 carats .. 1 4 9 !Scarab.. 4 1 8 15 masts.. 13 1 sari& .. 1 1 14 21 or (British 14 aerate.. 9 51 carats.. 017 8 dendert) 517 101 la mats.. I e 0 carats ola 111 El carats.. 314 4 11 egrets.. 1 it 64 carats .. 010 71 Meets~.. 10 91 11 asists.. 118 1 estate.. 0 7 1 • 1,9 sands— 5 7 II 10 mats— 115 44 cant... 0 1 01 14aselsetery, lasrietts-elreek Covent-garden. Lyndon. Ages made al Cholas and Jewellery for la. seek. 8.8. This is aimed ate in the ovsnina and re BMardaye Mons o'clock QPECTACLES, improved by HARRIS and 1...1 SON, will most oertalnV preeerve the Night. Beier meet be made. Steel, with crystals or pebbles, it steel. with fr:hto 10a. Gold and Silver Spectacles and Rye.Olarees rrst . variety. at equally low prices. Harrlis Prospect WA's, Ih Id. post tree. TIP M. HARRIS and SON, Opticians to the Royal Family, opposite the British Museum Osage, London. Reishlished 5780. Outtloa.—No travellers employed. Tzirru. - By Mr. BSEESLL'S invention, of whack be fe the sole gaieties (protected 17th July, 18110) haTIFICIAL TUTU, to iest lifetime, are made end fitted fa a few boars, without pain or extractions, se wire. nor feetenings requited, detection Impuseible. Comfort guaranteed. Mr. lekers end tresam, which tally explains hls Invention. post free saves utetnpe Consaltatleas free. Terms strictly moderste.-8, Ores nrior-sliese Boo44ttlet , sad ta. Bennctrehill. Birmingham. riro PARENTS and GUARDIANS.—The return .2. of Youth to their respective Boarding-echo°ls induces a solicitude for their personal comfort and attraction. and ROW. LANDS' MACASSAR OIL, for accelerating the growth and Improving sad beautifying the hair. Rowlands' Kalydor, foe Im proving the skin and complexion, and removing cutareous de feels. and Rowlands' (blunt*. or Pearl Deetifriee, for rends big the teeth beautifully white. end preserving the gums, are con sidered Indispensable accompaniments.--hold by A. ROWLAND sad DON% 96, Hattonitardak and by chemists and perfumers.— Ask Mr Rowlands article& ANEVER FAILING REMEDY. Dr. SCOTTS BILIOUS sad LITRE!, FILM prepared witti est say Mercurial Ingredient. from the recipe of Dr. Scott, will be found invaluable to all who =Nor from bilious and liver com plaints, Indigestion, wind, spasms. giddiness., dimineu of the eyes, tie. For habitual oostiveneet, unfunny aperient medicine, and as • purifier of the blood, they are truly excellent la their operation and grateful to the stomach they create appetite, pantile digestion, sad strengthen the whole nervous sydaa.— lead by W. lasubert o lling Charing-cross, and by most druggist s , la In lid. and is. *IL Be sue to ask for Dr. Bootee Billies liver Ma. The genuine are a square gam pacts" with "'Wham Lambert' engraved on the damp. ASTHMA, BEIORTNESBof BREATH, BRON CHITIS, NEURALGIA, infallibly relined and cored by the ESPICS CIGAILICTIRS (Pectoral nonmetals). The 10011.16, being Inspired. penetrates Into the chest, calms the whole nerv osa system, facilitates expectoration, and assists the functions of the important organ. of respiration.—T. lonic, Ras d'Amster dam, 8, i Parh. Price L. 6d. a box. Sold in London by ,110ZRA P. Chemist. Haymarket. COUGHS, ASTHMA, and INCIPIENT CON SUMPTION are ETIECTUALLY CUBED by KEATING'S Col'oll LOZENGES. Statlitics show that 60,000 persons annu ally foil vleilow to pulmonary disorders, Including consumption, diseases of the cheat, and the respiratory organs. Treveution is at all times better than cure . he, therefore, prepared during the wet and wintry season with a supply of Keating* Cough Ly ranges, which possess the virtue of averting as well as of curing &Cough or Cold : they are good alike for the 'nuns or for the aged: they oothe bronchial Irrltubon, and for improving the voice, the Prracher, Statesman, flinger, and Actor have long patrunlaed them.—Prepared and sold in bones, Is. lid., and tins, Ra Pd., as. ad., and Ins. Gd. each. by THOMAS KEATING, Chemist. die., TO, pt. Tours Churchymd, London, Retail by all Druggists sad Patent liedwitte Tendon In the world. DLLNEFORD'S PURE FLUID MAGNESIA bean. during twenty-five years, ampbMlcWl mane nonfat by the medical profeesloo, and ant socepted by the public, as the best remedy for acidity of .be stomach. beerthure, headache. sont, and leihmstloo. and as a rsild ape. dent for &hone coonisussowsonore especially for ladles sad children. It to prepand, In a state of perfect puny and of uniforms strength. by DIN tiIIYOILD sad Ce.. ITY. New Bend street. Leeks; ead slid by ell respectable ebeadate Ibreuele. eat Ihr week!. nAVIES'S SPERM CANDLES, is. 4d. and i t . ..e.... lb. ; >t ad.: wax,:. 11 1 4 ; to was, L : waspoidto, al., 9d., and the boot IS. tanic vas. W i too ■ lame, aed. ; mynas.,.,, 9d.; dips, , limb% N. ; Coles oil, ta 9d. par pallet ; yellow Ma, ada , aad ail. par 111110. ; mottled, 489. ; oV il trowd =la 94. par packer ; seamers brews Windsor. la: Irblat la ad.: bossy. Is. td.: ityearthe sad almond, is per boe-dor eaab, at IL P. DAVI= mai 8018 ekawitabliabod ware. Yeas. 411. at. Ilartleadana Obartaparaw. Loads., W.C. GENTLIMRNII DRlER—Gentlemen about to order their OVJERCJATS for the present sestet are in *ad to see Specimen tiaraents kept for inspection. N.B. select stock of Walking, Laniging, and Overcoats, always oa hand, for we, at HAMILTON and NIMPTON'S, 106, Strand, opposite itzeter.hall. "♦ TACT wpsTay Or NCfri". Mabilftiritiiitofiiii fromßoud-strest io IS, BROOK-STREIT, HANOTS BARK on the Id Ooksher. LK& Its lea Trousers ( b kW Intitir dm wet. talablimbsd 1111. laz MINISTERIAL ALMANAC. An t ALMANAC, Illustrated with well-eseented Portraits ot Pslmerston, Earl Russell, and the ill Et W. t Orastora, and containing some neralt !aeration, may be had gratis a IL 110Skli and SON, Reedsinade and Bespoke Tailors. Habit SLAMS Woollen Drapers, Hatters, Horan, Boot and Shoemakers, and General 01141104118. _ London Homes: City Bustollaltment, 114, 316, 168, 11$7, Ylnorlea 83.114. 26, 86, 87,88, and 880, Aldrate. Oxford-street Branch, 606,607, 508, New fhford street I, 3,3, Hartwtreet. Tottenham-court-road Branch, 137, 138, Tottenham court-ruad ; 881, Euston.road, Country Establfsbments Sheffield and Bradford, Yorkahirc Tim QUARTERLY REVIEW, No. CCXXV., om bo published on Wednesday next. --- COXTINTS 1. Travels In Peru. 2. Institutes for Working Men. ConstituUonal Government in Basta. 4. Zlll t ions of the Greek Testament. 6. The Ticket of Leave System. 6. 'Me Art Loin Exhibition. 7. Ws at Clatintopher North. & The atashope Miseellantes. 9. Tbrnit Yews or • Reform Administrall Saha Ihrenr, Albemarle-street. Ready b a few days, crown (Ivo, cloth, price al. , 110_ .1118 • DESCRIPTIVE and LYRICAL libelestiese of the beauties of Tropical hoe sad Sketches of Objects of Interret with Notes, If and 22 Pbufliori. By the Author of "The Nuptials of Boredom" Loudon : Robert ilardericke, IW, Piccadilly. - RIMMEL'S ALMANACS for 1863, ri c hly to xv illustrated encurdd perfumed, for importing delightful scent pocket.books, mem, desks, du. Just out, price 6.1., by poet for 7 damps. Sold by all the trade. perfumer, N, atraad, and It, Oaraldll. (Stamped, ld..A.ddkioNaL] TFIEGRAPIIIO INMUGICNCM. (mirrars istsoxims.) ITALY. TURIN, JAIL 7, Rvrernio. The Stampa of to-day denies and qualifies as a calumny the assertion made by La Prance that General Lamarmora had tendered his resignation in order to avoid having anything to do with the ()m -inimum appointed to inquire into the causes of the brigandage in the Neapolitan provinces. The same journal also denies the statement that the Italian Emancipation Societies had been recon stituted, and says :—"Nothing has taken place but some preliminary meetings of the chiefs of the party of action. Should, however, serious efforts be made for the re-constitution of these societies, the government will act according to the provisions of the decree whereby they were dissolved." Telegrams received here from Naples state that her Majesty's ship St. George, with his Royal Highness Prince Alfred en board, had returned to that port. Au encounter has taken place near Bari between the mounted National Guard and a body of brigands. Twenty of the latter were killed. The transmission of this telegram from Turin has ooca• pied 42 hours. REACTIONARY CONSPIRACY= IN NAPLES. NAPLES, JAN. L The police have seized the oornispoodence of some Bourbon conspirators residing at Rome, rela tive to the organization of reactionary committees in the Southern provinces. It appears from this correspondence that the regulations of these committees were presented by the Dukes of Popoli and Dellaregina to the ex. King of Naples, and received his approval. THE DISTRESS IN LANCASHIRE. (FROM OUR EIPICIALL NANCHEETER, JAZ. 9. The weekly returns of the Manchester and Salford Sanitary Association contain a table of all new cases of disease coming under treatment in the poor-law districts, charitable and public institutions of the city and its neighbourhood. With the exception of a part of Salford, the medical officers of which decline, for some reason unknown to me, to give the requisite information, this table is An accurate statement of the sanitary condition of the people. And on contrasting the last two months of 1862 with the last two months of 1861, the comparative healthiness of the former again comes to view. For it must not be forgotten that the area of observation and record is this year indefinitely extended, as thousands who have hitherto paid for medical aid themselves are now dependent upon the parish offioers or upon the various hospitals and dispensaries. In November, 1862, there are reported 307 new cases of fever ; in November, 1861, 312. In December, 1862, this number is reduced to 193,; the corresponding number to which in December, 1861, is 190. In the first week of December the officers of the Sanitary Association— perhaps prescient of the coming report—requested their correspondents to separate from the general category of " continued fever" all cases which might be justly classified as " typhus." The num ber of cases of typhus, to which public attention has been thus directed, during a period of three weeks, amounts to six—an !epidemic (if epidemic it be) of Lilliputian dimensions. When we recol lect the vast population of Manchester, and the maaa of squalid wretchedness which at all times it almost necessarily hides in its close courts and fetid alleys, the wonder is that at a season like this infec tious diseases should have been restrained within such narrow bounds. From Preston I have received, after some in quiry, only incomplete returns, which do not take into account cases which have occurred in the workhouse. According to the statement of my correspondent the chief incidence of the disease was in November, when 109 cases, involving no fewer than 27 deaths, are reported. This alarming state of things was considerably modified in December, when the cases had fallen to 38, and the deaths to 9—probably in consequence of the larger,provision for the physical wants of the people to which I have alluded. An increase appears to have again taken 'place in the first week of the new year, the cases reported up to Jan. 7 being 15. Still I think there is fair reason for congratulation that in so large a town, with a population depressed in health and hope by an early and severe pres sure of distress, and where the disease made its appearance, in sporadic cases, as long ago as last September, the epidemic should not before now have assumed much more formidable proportions. I have thus stated, as accurately as I know how, what I believe to be the facts as to Manchester and Preston, concealing nothing, and exaggerating ' nothing. I have no theory to establish ;my sole wish is that the public—both in Lancashire and elsewhere—should be made acquainted with the exact state of the case. Granting the worst in re gard to the two towns above mentioned, it must be a subject of congratulation to all who have charged themselves with the administration of re lief, that nothing like famine fever has broken out in any other of the many towns which are weighed upon by an equal pressure of distress The facts, such as they are, appear to me to point to the advisability, not so much of an increased rate of relief, as of a careful medical super vision of every district, and a special provision for the wants of the sick. In every pier* let competent observers be upon the watch for the first symptoms of a danger, which, thank God, has not broken upon us yet. Let such sick-kitchens as have proved themselves of incalculable service at Preston and at Hyde be established in every town ; many an in cipient ailment will be checked in its progress to wares a graver phase, many a case of imperfect nu trition will be hindered from development into fever, by assistance which more than one lady who is now eagerly seeking for au opportunity of kind ness can effectually and happily render. But a general rise in the rate of relief, founded upon the idea that the vitality of the population is low, and ready to succumb to the first attack of epi demic disease, would be fraught with almost un mitigated evil. The difficulties in the way of a resumption of work are already sufficiently great sad numerous, without the interposition of an other. Perhaps, however, the accusations against Lancashire relief, which came from opposite aides, may fairly be taken to answer each other. If the people are kept in such a condition of luxurious comfort that they cannot be enticed from the relief board to the factory, all the ghastly picture of hag. gard eyes, and wan face*, and wasted forms, and the advancing spectre of pestilence, is surely no [TWOPENCE more stable than a dissolving view, which was called up at the showman's wand, and at the same bidding will fade away. Such would be a fair rhetorical argument : a more judicial procedure would be to take the mean between the eontradictory extremes. There is un doubtedly much privation, a large loss of accustomed comfort, especially among those whose standard of comfort was once the highest, and who are now too proud to be importunate and successful beggars. But I still hold to my belief that few have yet wanted necessary food ; that " famine" is a word which can be applied to the condition of things in Lancashire only by rhetorical license, and that by God's providence, and the help of good Christians all the world over, we are yet safe from the mere fearful danger of pestilence. The following is the variation in the amount of pauperism in the undermentioned twenty-one unions, on a comparison of the first week of the present month with the last week of December. The total number of paupers in the fourth weak of December in the section of unions marked (a) was 6,130 ; in the section (b), 24,2,0 ; and in the section 236 740--togethse 267,160. The ag ef these unions is 2,060,000. g 7altroWisenlivil Lao 3 Pauses. Maley Warringtas ao To6‘l 250 (k) Two trams are in respect of thematic* et pauperism the sauce as la the preview, week : Liverpool. Wigan. (c) Seveoloso Unions have leis : Peewee. Ashton-under-Lyne Blecklaus Bolton Burnley Boxy 270 Claorlto• 240 Glossop Hasliogden B4O Macclesfield kleaeheator Oldham Prides ' 740 210 . Rochdale 6O Suldowerlk SeMowl Stockport Tolman SO • Teed Net decreer le tke pup of tie whole district : 224 week December, 186 r 3ed weekDeemeber, 1862 4th week December. 1862 Lt week Jeavery, 1862 i 8,200 ELPINDITURZ n 0137.1111L1NT. The weekly average of out-door relief ; its actual mount is tie lest weak ; with the total of 14 weeks of the half yew ending at Lady-day next. The other items a& " relief to the poor" will for the whole district average about 6.000 f. a week. Aransas Bana weekly actually I Total ex es, = expended pentlturo Usk's% as. ,Io Bat weak , of th e last Quarter, of present 114 weeks. . . . 1912. quarter. Blac Aahtoo-tumler4eas . 41,1/16 33,069 327,7119 kburn • 1,116 1,116 16.149 Bolton* Barnley 627 4.31 9,889 Bury Morley 2ll 248 3,124 =o ll4 n 796 1,146 263 11,479 3,948 Hadtmedis 667 610 1 6 796 776 9,219838 =l i st emig* 217 2i4 91 3,206 BlinottriWrit Mama • 79 crewrirp WO 10,526 RUM Preeles• . 1,673 1,743 32,186 leabaski - + 9lO 942 12,906 Ballard 666619inee11t Cl'eusidp) 1171 793 136 168 1.367 9,601 1103aper6 1166 Me* Tod ascedis 213 $4l 4,362 W Warri lia• 136 LW L N W 1.166 4 43 0 Total 316 in 1 317,160 sistais • The returns of espiadttere for the Bolton aod Preethe Unions hare sot bees seeped for the 14th weeL The Owes Inserted In the third edema ere for the 13th week. FREDERICK PURDY, Statiatioil Dopartmi, Poor-law Boar* Jas. 9, 1563. THE CENTRAI ! BELIEF FUND. The total esDonut of donations on Thuraday was 8,0611., wad included the (040,nm-2001. from B= 1001. from Sydenhani and Forest-hill, 1001. from side, 2501. from Kingston, Surrey, 4001. Iron Daily Fels graph, 1004 from lianley. 1001. from Falkirk, 1001. from Mr. R. Walmaley, Ince-hall, 5001. from Bristol, 2001. keel Bntr St. Edmunds 128/. 10a. from Belper, eaui. hem Forfar, and 1061. from Sir D. Cooper. The following is an extract from the correepondeeoe " Mersey Dock Estate, Secretary's Cass, Liverpool, Jan. 7, 1863. " Sir,—l am iastructed by the Mersey Docks mid Bar bour Board to hand you, on the other side, a oapy el a resolution adopted by the board on the Ist Met., wad to add that it will be competisat for you to teaks any pada* me of the seam that you may think proper.-1 am, as., "J. W. liar-lure, Fay." " Joel, liaimuson. . . (Extract.) " Ileralved unaninionaly : —That any vessel whisk shall briag, freight fres, any cargo of food or other articles Ur the relief of the distressed operatives of lencsabire, shall haw the full use of the docks of this company dogleg her sty in the port, fres of all dock rates sad charges ; and that so rates shall be charged on any food or other article imparted directly for the rise object." THE MANSION-0000Z CO3lllll7TEL—This com mittee held their weekly meet* yesterday as the Hessian house. Mr. Alderman Cubist took the chair, sad the Lord Mayor wee preload during part of the time. Mtwara. Cotton, Howes, Barber, Armitage, Lyeett, Morley, DU lue, sad Gibbs, wore alio pelmet. Mr. Pickering. tie eaekiee submitted his fiaamial lid to the committee, from which it appeared that the whole amount received up to Thursday night was 385,502/. 19a ld.„ and the total amount remitted to the cotton diaries in which the distress prevails, ex clusive of the grant made at the meeting yesterday, was 265,2491. Its. 3d. The total amount received der* the week wee 10,9821. 12.. 2.1-, from horse seeress, and 36,667/. 3s. 44., iseiudusg the 20,0001. from the balance of the Indian Famine Fund, making together 47,6594 16s. The following is a list of the ensile made yesterday :—Healy. 1501. ; Feuw, .501. ; Sandesbury, 501. ; Bt. Paul a, Hansen, 501. ; Staleybridge managers and overleolims, 30th. • Clayton , 75/. ; I>avylaulme, 50! . ; New. too Heath, 251.; shtos-under-Lpwe, 1,0001. ; 81. Michael's, Angel Meadow, 3001. ; thaleybridge, 1,000/. ; Newchurcb, 300 i. ; Birch, 1,0001. ; Aalitoe.under-Lyne (general com mittee), 2,0004 ; Wigan, 1,5001. ' • Newton Moor, 2001. ; 13lookley, 1001. ; fit. Phillip', Bmilford.road. 5001. ; Cheri ley, 50th. ; Jade's, 2504 ; 81. Peter's, Oldham, IV/. ; Belmont, 501. • Muchboka 100/. • Tuctlioles, 15/. . • St. Hasebelw, 230/. • Testwisile, ; Bernoldswick, 2001., making in all 10,8 251. The number of parcels of clothing which were received at the Bridewell depOt during the week was 132, making Is all kcal. The number of bola and oases already mat Imo the diamond diatneta is 1,54 which 77 have been despatched during the past week. The Vale of Reath Railway emp/oyes have agreed to • deduction of 1 j per mut. from their wages up to the end of March next, for the lAtioubire opestairaa. About 1001. will thus be realised in three months.—Bristol Mercury. Braemar IN nouns—At the Worship- street policarcourt, yesterday, Lewis Bennett, otherwise known as Deerfoot, the pedestrim, was charged with a violent assault upon W. Byre, otherwise known as W. Preston. The alleged assault occurred at the White Lion public house, at Hackney Wick, sod arose out of a dispute in oponectioo with a foot race which took place there on the '29th of December. The complainant's counsel, in opening the case, stated that the defendant was said to be a North American Indian, but whether really so or ea Englishman, or " any other man," he must be taught that acts of violence could not be committed with impunity. He hoped that the case would he sent for trial. The magistrate infliMed, however, a DIM of its. and costa, or fourteen days' impriamment. A case arising out of the same dispute, and in which W. Syre was himself charged with an assault, wes previously disposed of at the Worship.strest court, the defendant being tined Jl. mid coati. Of • month's imprisonment. in the course of his tins, Yr. Sere gave it as his opinion that Deerfoot'e running was generally mere "Punch and Judy business," or, as he explained it, " an eshibitiorinot a race." Importing tea without colour OP the leaf pre . vein. ter Mime wing of bawler brown loevoe as Is w , until kinds, ilorainsn's Tea is uncoloured, therefore .Ivy/ good alike. Sold la pockets by IMO agents.—(Advertbentent.l J SUM' SHAWLS, MANTLES, FANCY DBMS'S, elm B. WILLEY and lON. helm desirous of reducing their Stock previous to their annual etockkaktag, have decided to allow a discount of TEN PILE CENT. apes all sales amounting to 10a. and ia Lwarde will Ind Ws an unusual opportunity for making pur chases, as the stock alsocumprleasa large assortment of NUIIEE Y, !FLANNEL& BLANKET*, ODUNTERIPA NW, and general DILA MY GOODS, purchased by the Ono for the present swami. lb and 16, LUDGATE.STREET, LONDON, LC., Four doom green St, /burs-churchyard. | 1863-01-10T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.697 | 0.245 |
0002642-00000 | STOLEN KISSES. —PIESSE and LUBIN'S 211 W PIIIYMUS for the festivities—ltioka rams sad their !Aegis!, Box-his-Dark goo air Roger de Cove*, bp flavour, throe hoMMe. hi a pretty ger, 75.-2, New Baal street. muu MEDAL AWARDED.) ALLEN'S PATENT PORTMANTEAUS and THAVELLI2fO MOB wtth LAMS WARDROBE TZUNIII32IIBVM O 4 'ten Ober Mugu DISPATCH EOM% WRITING and DEEMING CALL and IMO other articles for boos or ooatlneutal travelling. Muntrabsd eatalognee poet free. Abe Alien's Barrack Furniture Calalogos or Portage Dad steads, Drawers, &ay Chairs, Wasishandetands, CsMs ewt n tree. J. W. ALLEN, Manufacturer and Patentee, lli, Weis glum. London, W.C. MAPPIN BROTHERS' WEST-END HOUSE soleb and dtatinetly at uOENT-brKEET. For 50 years MAPPIN BitOTtlEtt.s . lisuintactures hare been gaining celebrity and s good name but ft la quit* a nalatsks to suppose that theism sold In Oxford-dreet at all. Yatabliabed In Sheffield A.D. 1810. Hones-t 7 and at KING WILLIAX-BTII IT, LC. wAsmosonr—Qciffixrs PLATS & (Imam Wain, lIKKMIIO. CaPIPAGNE, DRY and DELICATE. Inle 242., gaerbe - - par dam, ceiling carriage mid. Recommended with mae.—HRNRY BR Z.. 7 end Oa, merceseen Old Fundreln DietUlery, Holborn. LC.. end $O, Regeetetreet. Waterloolgooe, B.F. HARMONIUMS. - NSW MODZL. GRAYER. ELLS, sod WOOD, DM, legentairest THE EXPRESS, SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 10, 1863. Ebr Court. OSBORNE, JAIL 9. Her Majesty, accompanied by Princess Louis, walked and drove yesterday morning. The Queen drove out again in the afternoon, attended by the Coastline of Gainaborough, and Major-General the Hon. A. N. Hood. Countess Bhicher had the honour of accompanying her Majesty. The Queen held a Council this day, at which were present his Greoe the Archbishop of Canterbury, Earl Granville, Lord President ; the Duke of Somesset, and the Right Hon. Sir George Grey. At tbe Council, parliament was ordered to be further prorogued from Tuesday, the 13th January, unto the sth February, and ► proclamation was issued, summoning par liament to meet on Thursday, the sth of February, for the despatch of public badmen. Mr. Helps, the Clerk of the Conseil, attended. The Archbishop of Oanterbury, the Duke of Somerset, Earl Granville, and Hr. Helps, left town at nine o'clock yesterday morning, by &special train on the South Western Railway, crowed from Gosport to Osborne Pier in the Fire Queen, and arrived at Osborne about one o'clock. The Archbishop of Canterbury, FAA Granville, the Duke of Somerset, and Secretary Sir George Grey, altar attend. log her Majesty's Privy Council, re-embarked on the Fire Queen, and returned to London by a special railway train. Tai PRIRCZ Or WALES.—SANDB.INGLIf, FRIDAY ILTllRSOON.—Conaiderable sanoyance was canna his Royal Highness yesterday afternoon, by a circumstance which led to the abrupt termination of the sport. His Royal High... bad been shooting with good wooer for about three bane, and when about to shoot a wood where a large rise of pm• was expected, it wee found that one of his tenants, a Mr. Sharringham, was rabbit digging just on the edge ri the wood. His Royal Highness at once intimated his doiirmi. nation to have no more shooting that day, and the royal party at once returned to the hall. This morning hie Royal Highness has been in consultation with his agent and solicitor on the subject. The Mayor of Lynn (L. W. Jarvis, Rsq.) also bad the honour of an interview, and lunched with hie I Royal Highness. This afternoon his Royal Highness rode over the estate. Pheasant 'hooting will be resumed to morrow. Tux NEW BARoxirs.—WHrrzaALL, JANuARY 9. —The Queen has been pleased to direct letters patent to be passed under the great seal granting the dignity of a baronet of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, unto the tuadermentioasd Foilsmen and the respective heir male of their bodies lawfully begotten ; viz. :—Thoinaa Davis. Lloyd, of Brom wydd, in the wanly of Car. digan, and of Kilrhue, in the county of Pembroke, Fag. ; Henry Rich, of Sonniog, in the county of Berke, Peg. ; Frame' Crossley, of Bello Vue, in the county of York, and of Sonacisytoe, in the county of Suffolk, Esq. ; Wiliam Brown, of Richmond-hill, in the county palatine of Lan caster, Fag. ' • Sir Daniel Cooper, of Woollabra, in New Wales, SouthWaßnight, late Speaker of the Legislative Assem bly of that coloey ; David Baxter, of Kilmaron, in the county of Fife, Fag.—Gazelte. _ . Their Royal highnesses the Duchess of Cam bridge sod the Prisons Mary, and hie Royal Highness the Duke of Cambridge, honoured the Dschem of Invernew with their company at dinner last evening, at Kensington Palace. A select party were invited to meet their royal highsew• _ . _ The Duke and Durham of Wellington and Lord William Hay. have left Apeley Howe for Strathfieldaye, Haat& The Earl and Countess of Hardwicke, who ar rived in town a few days since, will leave Portman-square on Monday for their seat, WimpoLs Hag, Cambridgeshire. Lady Agoeta Yorke is staying at Melton Mowbray, on a visit to Mr. sod lady Mary Craven. The Countess Craven and the Ladies Craven come to town to-day from The Grove, Herta, where they have been staying on • visit to the Earl and Csnateas of Clareodon. The Countess Dowager of Westmoreland and lady Rose Fano have returned to town from visiting the Berl end Comte= of Clarendon, at The Grove, near Wet• ford. The Countess of Kenniare arrived at the Royal Pavilion Hotel, Folkestone, on Thursday, from the Coa. tinent. Viscount Royston will leave town to-day, on a yiait to Mx. W. and Lady Nary Craven, at Craves Lodge, Melton Mowbray. The Right Hon. B. Disraeli and Mrs. Disraeli have returned to Grosvenor-pie from Winter Villas, Ply mouth, where they have been on a visit to the Marquis of Noi manby._ _ . Mr. and Mrs. Disraeli were the guests of Baron Rothethild in their sojourn at Torquay. The marriage was solemnised on Thursday, by the Hon. and Rev. Robert Liddell, of Lady Catherine Lakes, sister of the late Margais of Ely, to Captain Arthur Loftus, late of the 18th Harmers. The bride wee mom. paid to St. Paul's Church, Knightsbridge, by the Mar &Mesas of Ely and Viscount Hawardeo, who gave the bride away. The bridesmaids were Lady Marion Loftin, Lady Emily Toler, the Hoe. Clementina Maude, and the Hon. Olivia Calthofpe. Colonel Francis Seymour acted as beet man. At a grand amateur concert at Leamington, on Thursday, given as behalf of the Coventry weevers, Ladies Ida and Mary FeiWing, Miss Bertha Yorke, Mr. Coleridge, Captain Stzacy, Mr. Millais, and Mr. Standish were among the sinprs. A duet by Lady John Manners and Mine Stan dish was also given, mad was perhaps (says the Lea mi ngton Courier) the most charming mid delightful piece of the day. The moot refined taste sad ability were blended with a fiezi. Why of voice and superior style of azimut/no. Lady John Mansen also sang with peculiar softiies Haydn's solo, "My Mother bids me Bind my Hair." At the conclusion of the piece her ladyship was greeted with prolonged cheering. _ _ CZYML PALACR-01f2 SHILLIWO DAT.—FRI DAT, JAN. 9.—Admistime ce payment, 1,315; Moo by usesue tickets. 862; tetal, 2,197. Nairn 9l. Aberdeen Letth 97 Ardrossan Pont ash Gab, sy Nairn 14 80 Queenstown 72 Holyhead Liverpool Pembroke Penzance Jersey Brest L'Oriont Rochefort Plymouth Weymouth , .67 Portsmouth 0.70 Kew. 29 7s, London Yarmouth _lf' Scarborough.; Shields ; Heligoland nhagen 1 co. Zer B6Tonne... 0 Lisboa 1/1711. N. to W., moderato. BooTWZ. - - snow or rain. LE to B. and W.. liauA ong, some rain . ILL to S. and W., fresh W. Ceram. to strong. 8.8.5 to 8.3. W. and N.W,PaQO►. W., strong, to a gale, rainy. As nett above. MONDAY. N.W. to S.W., strong to • gale. 8.8. W. to W N.W., • gale, rainy. 5.9. W. to W.N.W., strong, squally. As next above. &WENN...in. S.W. to N.W., Oxon, unsettled. SB.E. to 8.8. W., B.S ENGLAND. As above. strong, some rain or snow. N.E. to &S. strong, S. Ontfr. 8.8. K. to W.8.W., some rain or snow. strong, rainy. Eighteen months before his death the late Car dinal Morlot added the following lines to his will : " In terminating this act, in which my last wishes are comprised, I humbly ask pardon of God and my fellow. men for the faults which I may have committed against them in the course of my life and my long career as a bishop. This weer I hope to quit as soon as possible, and I ask of God this mos from the desire to render the ter rible account which will soon be demanded of me, and of disposing myself to do so more seriously than I have hitherto done. If I can truly declare that I have never sought nor dee;red any of the divers functions which I have filled, and if I can say with all sincerity that I have held them! with out any illusion, I am not the less bound to admit that In no reaped had I anything that could justify the choice and the preference of which I have been the object." He says further on that he had saved no money ; that he never had the slightest inclination that way, and that, even were he so inclined, the liabilities attached to his functions would not have allowed him to do so. It is certain, even without this declaration, that the prelate, who was at once Cardinal Archbishop of Pans, senator, and grand almoner of the Emperor, died poor—so poor that the expenses of his funeral have to be defrayed by the state. A Paris letter in the Inds pendant says :—" The subscription in favour of the cotton workmen in Frame has not bad the success which was to be drink!. MM. Pereira, touched with the position of that branch of industry, have written a letter to the Emperor, proposing another mode of assistance, more efficacious and more moral. Those gentlemen propose that a loan of 15,000,000 franca should be made to the unemployed workmen, cm easy condition both as regards Intelsat and facilities of reimbursement, offering to subscribe themselves for the sum of 2,000,000 francs. The prefect of the Seine- Infirieure, being consulted by the government upon that project, replied that it appeared to him impracticable." A letter from Berlin states that the numerous manufactories of cotton in that city are suffering severely from the scarcity of the raw material. A number of them are completely at a stead, and others have discharged a peat port of their bands. At least 6,000 of those weavers are now oct of employment in the Prussian capital. The Theatre of the Op4ra Comique, Paria, has during the first five days of this month realised the enor mous reosiptm of 30,013 fr., or 6,000 fr. per night. Thin sum hem Dever yet been attained in eo short • time, no that the new administration cannot complain. • Di Augier'e new drama Le Fits de Gliboyer was samonneed for performanoe some evenings mace at the theatre of Anton (Saone-et-Loire), and as it was expected that opposing parties would make it an occasion of disorder, the gendarmery and police attended in considerable force. The actors were saluted with applause from the pit and hisses from other parts of the house. The commissary of police sad the mayor exerted themselves to restore order, but in vain, for after a momentary calm the hissing recom menced and continued to the end of the piece, so that it was impossible to bear a word. To prevent a recurrence of a similar scene, the piece has been withdrawn by order of the authorities. The question has been raised at Paris of adopting repressive measures against poachers. The other day a gendarme discovered, on a haprick, in the environs of Paris, an immense net, called by poachers a "shroud," and with it, as a convincing proof of the ravages of that formidable engine, 132 partridges. A net of this description is valued at I,ooofr. to 1,200 fr., but the profits arising from it must be enormous, for with It all the game mu be swept off • plain in one night. PRUSSIA. The %nut Zeitung (the feudal journal) of Berlin, M a programme for 1863, says : The situation is favourable, and the victory certain if the King's language is followed by energetic acts. It was only in 1813 that the struggle against Bonaparte commenced; with the year 1863, fifty years after, commences the struggle against democracy for the liberation of Prussia and of Germany. The recoastitution of the country and of royalty upon their former bases-such are the object and the prize of the present contest. Weakness above has produced disorder below. It is from above that the present situa tion has proceeded ; and it is from above that the conser vative dements must be reorganised, for they are too weak to reorganise themselves. If the government and its partisans were united by a reciprocal confidence the former would not grant ►n electoral law, but would govern in con. formity with the constitution ; it would consider the bud get as the principal affair, would effect of itself all the re trenchments possible, and would each year consider how far the chapters of the budget might be specialised with out risking the treader to the Chamber of Deputies of the power which is necessary to the crown. (111011105 ULM/BAWL ) FRANCE. PARTS, JAN. 10. The Moniteur of this morning announoea that the Courrier du Dimandie has received a third warning. SPAIN. MADRID, JAN. 9, EVENING. The discussion on Mexican affairs was continued to-day in the Congress. Senor Rivero censured the policy inaugurated by France and Spain in Mexico, and defended the po licy of non-intervention. Nothing has yet been decided upon in reference to the resignations tendered by several function aries. That of Senor Coello y Quesada has only been accepted unofficially. WEATHER REPORT.-{THIS DAY.) BAIVISAY. JAM:WM . IO, 0 AX. EXPRESS FROM PARIS. trite erpreM ,dvertlawatands load tar It;17;;•;i" London Inedwg Pram% at Ye anon, 10, Bouverlootroot, by Two be Ic ow Ur day ol pobakailow. UOVINT GAIDIN. Tins EVENING, Tlii 114117T1V11 DA176 . 1113E. Ildlle. Pam Mr Santley. and Mr. W. Harrison Ms —And Pantota LEQUIN BEAUTY AND TSB BlAST.—Coodoctor i 7kr. A. Mollon.—Commenco M too otinaloo to 7. HAYMARKET. Tam Emma. OUZ "ditiCRICIN 00USM. Mara. Bothern and Ilnelutona ; Era E FltswEllam. -LAMMAS PRINCE OR ABYWENLL Mr. Compton and MYs L Leaky. —And MR.S. WEITL Mr. Compton and M 1 Hardier. PRINCESWB. Trio EVLMING, THE TRIPLE ALLIANCE M 1 Oosetsaos Aylmer. —And the Pantomime, HIQUICT WITH THE TETT ; or, Harlequin end Mother Shlpton. Juan. Whew, H. Power, and Halford; Him A. Collinami. BRITANNIA. TBM Swum, the Pantomime, ABON HASSAN. Wm Lane Mesas. gnat, lonia, Newham, and 3fdlie. Celeste Stephan Tom Sayers and his two performing Halm—And SOME BELLS THAT RANO.—Commence at half-past O. NIGH WATIR AT LONDON BEIDGN. TIDII DAY Maratmg, bb. LEA....AAmemoos. 6i. tom. To-Gossow—Nornlng 66 41s.....Afteask, AL I. LONDON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10. Tea Underground Railway, to use a slang phrase of the day, may now be called a great fact, and may take its place as the subject for a hun dred gushing leaders. Like all new undertakings —from the Thames Tunnel to the Great Eastern —it will be looked upon, for a time, as the one reformer of the hour. It will be credited with a power of performing wonders which it is never likely to possess, and will doubtless encou rage the birth of many followers and imitators. The days of want of faith in railways have long since passed, and superstitious belief has now taken the place of coaching scepticism. The Under ground Railway is the newest enterprise of its kind ; it is the one which creeps most closely to our door-steps, and it will therefore doubtless be the one which will meet with the most favour and attention. For twenty or five and twenty years the travelling MAHOMIT has been content to go to the railway mountain, and now the railway moun tain is straggling to come to the travelling Mansur. The travelling Msnourr can hardly feel otherwise than flattered. It is his duty, at any rate, to thank the railway shareholders for their politeness and benevolence, and to ask no troublesome questions about vulgar dividends. The great work which the Underground Rail way is expected to perform is the relief of the City traffic. It is expected to cut that Gordian knot of vehicles and passengers which causes police men to be tyrannical and Common Councilmen to make themselves ridiculous. What capacities it has at present for performing this gigantic task are not easily perceived by the impartial observer. At Holborn-hill it threatens to become a feeder of the City traffic, instead of a re liever. It will deliver goods and passengers on the borders of the crowd, but it will hardly deliver the City from its pressing difficulty. It may ease certain broad thoroughfares in the out skirts, which were never troubled with an emcees of traffic, bat it will leave the fifty great feeding ar teries of the City almost as choked as they were before its coming. It may have & little influence at Holborn-bars, but what it draws from that point it will only pour out again at Victoria-street. When its extension is finished to Finsbury-circus —another railway of the future—Newgate-street may have just cause to bless its existence, but at present Newgate-street stands a chance of being more blocked than ever by contributions to and from its terminus. Al the fist creeping arm thrown out towards a general centralization of all railways, it may be welcomed or not, according to the way of looking at it, but some time must elapse before it can be fairly admired as a City traffic reformer. As a junction line to the great Northern and Western railways it has not even done its work thoroughly and welL It has started from the Great Western, and has picked up the Great Northern in its course, but it has passed by a rail way of equal importance at Easton-square—the London and North Western. It is not for us to enter into or give publicityto the reasons assigned on both ides for this palpable omission :—it is sufficient to refer to the fact when the Underground Rail way is praised as a collector of all the heavy traffic from the north and west of England. The construction of the Underground Railway is a matter which we may safely leave to profes sional critics, after expressing a belief, drawn from personal observation, that the engineer and the contractors have done their work well and honestly. They have had great difficulties to contend with, which they knew of before they turned a sod, and, fed with unlimited supplies of capital, they have overcome these difficulties. Backed by the Great Western's shareholders and influence, by the Great Northern's shareholders and influence, and the Corporation of the City of London, who are anxious to turn to profitable account the slimy desert of Victoria-street, their success was certain. Money, as we have before said, can do anything, and a million and a quarter sterling, if we are rightly informed, has built the Underground Railway. Much time, which is also money, has been consumed in the task, but the task, up to a certain point, is finished. The tunnelling of the Underground Railway is not longer, or more impressive, than other railway tunnelling, but it is imbedded in different soil. There is the three-mile tunnel on the Manchester and Sheffield line, there is the celebrated Box tunnel on the Great Western Railway, built by an engineer who generally sacrificed capital for scientific display, and there is the Kilsby tunnel on the North Western Railway. All these works differ materially from tunnels which have to be bored through a London street, between gas pipes, water pipes, sewers, and telegraphic wires, like the tunnels of the Underground Railway. In their difficulties of construction they more re semble the Thames Tunnel, though we sincerely hope that they will never become such a laughing stock for posterity. The Underground Railway deserves credit for one thing. Though it has been a nuisance for years while in process of formation, it has cleared up its litter, and has left no permanent eyesore I above ground. All its merits and its faults lie buried in the London clay and gravel ; and in this it forms a worthy contrast to the works of other companies. Telegraphic enterprise, in particular, is a glaring offender in this respect, having covered our not very picturesque town with a web of tight-ropes and wire clothes-lines. Underground ingenuity may surely do something for us here, and relieve us from such a terrible infliction in the name of utility. The Underground Railway is already promised several imitations in various parts of London. A railway is planned from Leicester-square to Kensington ; and those dripping wells of Wapping and Rotherhithe, and that damp fragment of a cavernous fair, which together go by the name of the Thames Tunnel, are threatened with utiliza tion as an under-water railway. These are only two out of the many similar projects which will doubtless be brought before Parliament for its sanction, and against which one or two indigna tion meetings have been held by frightened trades people. If present public convenience is made to give way for future public benefit, let us hope that the projectors will be merciful. They will neither be backed with the capital nor the influence which supports the present Underground Railway ; and for their own sakes, therefore, we trust they will make short work of their disagreeable task, and save their shareholders, and the inhabitants near their lines, from all unnecessary suffering. OPENING Or THE FRENCH CHILMBERS.—The Monittur of yesterday announces that the French Emperor will open in person the legislative session of 1863 in the grand hall of the Louvre on Monday next, the 12th inst., and that he will receive the oaths of those members who have not yet taken them. The ceremony is to begin at one o'clock precisely, and every one present is to be seated by a quarter past 12 at the latest. LATEST INTFILIGENOE. POLAND. The Czas of Warsaw eaya : Out of the 66 persons tried by the military tribunal three have been declared not guilty, and it has alio demanded of the Grand Duke the liberation of nine others. That request has been acceded to, and 12 innocent persons have just left the prison. One of the accused complained that the committee of inquiry had forced him to confirm the denunciations of Piwoniski, the agent of the least police, and that his own observations were not entered on the proch-verbel. Another of the prisoners complained that no ►ttention bad been paid to his demand when he called for the evidence of a vanes. It is proved that the oom mittee of inquiry attributed to the accused replies which they never made, and presented them as voluntary admis sions. A SINGULAR ROMANCE. (nom OUR °yrs onaseromarr.) PARIS, FRIDAY Emma. M. de Villemessant, the editor of the Figaro, some time since informed his readers that he was the illegitimate son of an unmarried lady of noble family whose name he bore ; that out of filial respect for his mother's memory he had long withheld the legal evidence of bis parentage, but that being harraseed and persecuted by some of his mother's relations, represented by them as an impostor, and actually prosecuted by them in a court of law for bearing a name to which they alleged he bad no right, he felt it his duty to his children to lay aside the scruples which bad so long restrained him, and, at a painful sacrifice of feeling, to lay the whole case before the world and the tribunals of the country. The facts thus alluded to came out very fully on January 6, before the civil tribunal of Blois, and they con stitute a very singular romance. The case exc►tes intense local interest, and in the crowded court were to be seen many members of the oldest and most wealthy families in the department, who had known M. de Villemessant from his infancy, and among whom the circum stances of his birth were matter of notoriety. The Count de Beaucorps de Crdquy, Madame de Bou vale, and M. de Clinchamp were among the wit nesses for K de Villemessant. The present action, which arises out of one pend ing before the courts of Paris, is in the form of a demand for a judicial declaration that the plaintiff is in reality the natural son of the late Mademoi selle Louise Ren6e-Francoise de Launay de Villemessant, who was the daughter of Philippe Delannay de Villemessant, one of the body-guards of Louis XVL, by his wife Louise Ran& Hurault de Saint Denis. This form of action is, in the lan guage of the code, styled recherche de la makrnit4 t which is permitted, while, on the contrary, recherche de fa paterniti—inquiry as to the paternity of an illegitimate child—is prohibited by an express article. M. Lachaud, counsel for M. de Villemessant, stated, in substance, that the mother of his client, a lady of excellent family in Tonraine, was unfor tunately seduced by a Colonel Cartier, whom she accompanied throughout Europe in the wars of the Empire, in which he greatly distinguished himself. By him she bad two children, the plaintiff, born at Rouen in 1810, and a girl named Isoline, now de emed. After her elopement she bore the name of Cartier, and that name was habi tually given to her children during their infancy. Nevertheless, when the present plaintiff at the age of 16 went through the catholic ceremony of the first communion, he was described by his name of De Villemessant, which was then re cognised both by his mother and grandmother. A certificate of his birth at Rouen, in which he was described as the son of Mdlle. de Villemessant, was also among the proofs. That he was the son of Mdlle de Villemeasant was notorious in Blois, where he was known and liked as a dare-devil boy, and where, to all those who knew his mother, the striking likeness spoke for itself. The only diffi culty in the me was that at the age of 21 M. de Villemesaant fell in love and married without his mother's consent. On that occasion, in order to evade the law, he procured an "act of notoriety." in which he was described by the name of Cartier, and as having been born in Poland of " parents unknown." Soon after the marriage his mother forgave him, and he lived on terms of affection with her until her death, which happened in a most tragical way in 1847. Colonel Cartier had then been long dead, and she, having lost a law suit in which the whole of her expected fortune was involved, was living in Paris in great poverty. M. de Villemessant, himself poor at that time, had helped his mother to the best of his ability, and one of the proofs of her acknowledgment of him as her son was a bill in her favour drawn by him, and endorsed by her. However, in 1847 Mdlle. deVille measant and her daughter Isoline committed suicide together, leaving letters in which they de sired that their little furniture in their lodging at Montmartre might be given to the plaintiff. Ever since that time the name of De Villemessant had been borne by the plaintiff without dispute. But very lately K Casein and Mme. Vezien, the legiti mate nephew and niece of his mother, brought an action against him in Paris, in which they alleged that hie only real name was Cartier, and that he had no right to bear the family name of M. deVille messant. In answer to this action, the plaintiff, not wishing to brand the memory of his mother, contented himself with pleading the notoriety of his name of M. de Villemessant. The tribunal of Paris, however, held that in the face of the "act of notoriety" obtained by himself on the occasion of his marriage, the evidence of contrary notoriety was not sufficient, and it accordingly granted an injunction against his using the name of De Villemessant. M. de Villemessant appealed, and the court of appeal being informed of the ac tion to establish his parentage, which he had at length decided to bring at Blois, adjourned the case for three months to await the result of that action. M. Lachaud now submitted that the proof as to the matter of fact was clear as noon-day. His adversaries, in fact, ad mitted this by declining to argue the case on the merits, and confining themselves to taking objection to the jurisdiction. He argued at great length a point of law which is in reality the only substantial question in dispute, i.e., whether the various letters and certificates produced con stitute such a "commencement of proof in wilting" as is required by the code to sustain an action of this kind. The case stands over for a week, when the public minister will be heard. The motive of N. de Villemessant's opponents, as stated by M. Lathaud, is simply to extort money. He had lent them considerable sums from time to time, they always writing to him as "My dear I oonsin," and it was only when his patience was tired out that they threatened to force him either to drop his name or to brand the memory of his mother. The Bank of France returns show, aa was anti cipated, a considerable decline in the stock of bul lion. The increase in the discount department, which, under ordinary circumstances, betokens activity in trade, cannot be thus construed in the present instance, because, as I am informed, the greater part of the augmentation is attributable to the discount of treasury bills necessitated by re mittances to Mexico. I further learn that imme diately after M. Fould's statement that the cost of the Mexican expedition was 83,000,000, further drafts wefts received to the extent of 22,000,000 more. According to some estimates the real ex penditure up to the present time is not less than 220,000,000. The Bourse was heavy to-day in consequent* of the comments made upon the Bank returns. I am enabled to state that the paragraph which has gone the round of the papers, representing that Mr. Dayton, the American minister, had discussed with the Emperor the project of an armistice in America, is essentially untrue. I have just heard that the Cowries du Disnanthe has received a warning for last Sunday's article, by M. Prevost Paradol, suggesting reforms in the working of universal suffrage. I donot know thepre ciae grounds of the warning, but I believe one of them is that M. Paradol objects to printed bulletins, which are thrust by government agents into the hands of ignor►nt people, who think they are bound to use them, and that every elector should be bound to prove his intelligence and real will by writing the name of the candidate of his choice. I can well conceive that this proposal to limit the suffrage to people who can read and write may be plausibly construed as a csae of flat blasphemy against that universal suffrage which, as at present organised, can never by any possibility fail to echo the commands of the executive power. Mozart's Requiem was performed this day, at 12 o'clock, in the Cathedral of Notre Dame for the repose of the souls of the archbishops of Paris, whose coffins are to be placed in the vault lately prepared for them under the choir. The bodies of those of M.gre. Pierre de Marca, deceased in 1662; Hardouiu de PiSrlffize de Beaumont, in 1671 ; Francois de Harley de Champvallou, in 1695 ; Charles de Vintimille, in 1746 ; Christophe de Beaumont, in 1781 ; Antoine Leclerc de Juign6, who resigned in 1801 ; Cardinal de Belloy, de ceased in 1808 ; Cardinal de Talleyrand-Perigord, in 1821 ; Hyacinthe de Quelen, in 1839 ; Denis Afire, in 1848 ; Auguste Sibour, in 1857 ; and Car dinal Morlot, in 1862. THE WAR IN CHINA. The Secretary of State for War has received a despatch and ita enclosures, addresaed to him by Brigadier-General Staveley, C. 8., commanding her Majesty's troops in China, of which the following copies are pubhahed in yesterday's Gazette : Headquarters, near Bah-ding, Oct. 21, 1862. Sir,—l have the honour to report for your information that the Chinese authorities having expressed their willing ness to plea a garrison in Kah-ding, if the allied forces would recapture it for them, the place was taken by storm after a bombardment of two hours, this morning, by the force under my immediate command, mentioned in the accompanying return marked (A), as well as the British naval forte under Captain Daiwa, CB., and the French troops, placed respectively at my disponi by Via-Ad• mind Sir James Hops and Captain Fanottn, command ing his Imperial Majesty's forces in China, also the lo cated Ward's force, under the command of an American (Colonel Burgoviene), and Lieutenant Kingsley's 67th Regiment, battalion of 500 Chinese, and six mortars worked by Chinese, under Lieutenant Cane, ILA., all detailed in return marked (A). The guns and mortars were got into position during the night, and opened fire so soon u the walls could be seen. At 8 o'clock, two practicable breaches having been made, the French and British each established their bridges, the British under the direction of Lieutenant Knevitt, &N., and Lieutenant Lyeter, R.E., the storming parties of the 31st and 67th Regiments, under the command of Captain Christian, 31st Regiment., then planted their ladders and entered the place without opposition, the enemy escaping by the opposite aide of the city. The place had been considerably strengthened since our last visit, by au outwork made to flank the walls, and protected by a sort of bomb-proof, which, however, waa not proof against 8-inch mortar shells. I gave over the place to Colonel Bur goviene and his men, and, except the storming parties, none of her Majesty's naval or military forces were allowed to enter it. The re-capture of Kah-ding completes the radius oflthirty miles round Shasghae, which it was decided should be cleared of the Tai-ping rebels. I trust that the excellent conduct, of the troops under very tempting circum stances, and the very arduous nature of the service, will be favourably considered. 1 wish to mention for favourable notice, Captain C. Gordon, commanding Royal Engineers ; Captain Mansergh, Deputy Assistant-Adjutant-General ; Captain Gammsll, Deputy Assittant-Quartermaster-Gen. ; Dr. Rennie, 31st Regiment, Senior Medical Officer ; Assis tant Commissary-General Thompson, in charge of Commis miseariat ; lieutenant Jebb, 31st Regiment; and the Prince Witgeostein, of the Ist Prussian Lancer Guard Regiment, who acted as my Aides-de-Camp. I take this opportunity of recording the greet assistance I hate invariably received on the 'occasions of the various expeditions from Mr. Consul Medhurst, and Mr. C. Ala baster, of the consular service. I also wish to manila, the services performed by Commander Strode, of her Majesty's ship Vulcan, who was employed during the whole of the operations against the Tai-pings, and whose name was in advertently omitted in my recommendatory despatch ; also of hie first lieutenant, Lieutenant Grant. Commander Strode bad the working of the naval 32. pounders on all co- Cili01)11 when they were used, and was assisted by Lieute nant Grant. _ . In transmitting a list of casualties marked (B), I have much matisfaction in calling your attention to the senio r medical officer's report (herewith forwarded) on the health of the field force.—l have, &c., _ . . _ C. S4avittEr, Brigadier-General, Commanding her Idsiesty's Troops in China. The Right Honourable the Secretary of State for War, War•offioe, Pall-mall. London. THE POPE'S SPEECH.—A correspondent of the Tempe, ins letter from Rome dated the 3rd instant, states that the reception of the French officers at the Vatican on New Year's Day was so unusually solemn that of itself it indicated a radial change in the diplomatic relations with France. The Pope, be adds, had a very animated and smiling aspect, and seemed in excellent health. His speech was is French, and appeared to have been learnt by heart, although " here and there some few extempore words" escaped him. It is perhaps owing to this circum stance that two different versions of the speech have been published in the Paris journals. The Bade of yesterday places several peruses from these two versions aide by side, and point. out bow very much more energetic the Pope is made to speak in the columns of the Union than in those of the Moniteur. In one paper oc curs the phrase, "Why cannot I also bless my enemies!' In the other this is given as, " Why cannot I also bias the impious r The discrepancy between other passages is even more marked. The Temp. of yesterday, in comment ing upon the .peoch,says :—" Pins IN. blessed the Emperor, the Empress, the Prince Imperial, and the French army. He regretted he could not also bless his enemies. We were not aware that the gospel forbade him to do so." " We are informed," says the C'entstitutionnel, " that the Superior Council of Commerce, Agriculture, and Ilsnrdacture has been called on by the French government to examine the sugar question in all its bearings, both u regards internal consumption and the regime of exportation and maritime interests." His Honour Sir William Foster St•well, Knight, slake justice of the Supreme Court at Melbourne, lies appointed Mr. William Barr, of Beighley, Yorkshire, soli citor, • commissioner to take and remise affidavits in Engbutil to be need in the Supreme Court at Judicature of the colony of Victoria. . . . Among the new companies (says the Atheneum) one of a most novel and curious nature is talked of. The object is to construct a gigantic reflecting telescope of far greater dimensions th,,n Lord Itore's celebrated six-feet reflector, with which it is expected wonderful planetary sights will be revealed. "We hope, if such an instrument be constructed, that it will be erected where the atmo- sphere is clear ; for, as we well know, Lord Itosee's splendid telescope is sully out of place in the very misty atmosphere of Ireland." The honorary secretary of the Central Relief Pond has received an intim►tion from the Mersey Dock Board, that any vessel with food for the Lancashire opera. tives "shall have the full Odle of the docks of the company, free of all dock rates and charges." This resolution was unanimously adopted, and it was also agreed "that so rates shall be charged on any food or other article imported directly for the same objects." The total receipts of the Central Fund yesterday amounted to shove 10,0001. About 140 boxes, saved from the wreck of the Colombo, will, it is expected, arrive by the seat homeward Australian packet, due next week. Mr. Cowdery, for many year; the toll collector at the lichen floating bridge that leads from South►mpton to Natio) , Abbey, was found dead in the toll-house yester day. In 1860, one in every 9,404 slaves in the United States was insane, one in every 4,900 was a deaf mate, and one in every 2,503 was an idiot. NAVAL AND MILITARY. ADNIAAIST, JAN. 9. Dr. A. Graham, to the Edinbeuxh. Ammtant.Elargeool B. Brown ( , to the Dumberland ; K. J. (YToole, to be &Athlone! to M• Forte; and T. S. Bur. nett, to the Royal Adelaide, for service at Plymouth Hoe- OW. Amietant Payment& in Mane H. H. MT. Grant, to the Invedilrator• .—Surgeon POBTAIKIIITH, JAIL 9. The Termagant, 25, screw frigate, Captain Ro bert Han.. paid out a l commission to-day. The Pylades, 21, screw corvette, °appal Arthur W. A. Hood, is expected to sail to-morrow for North America and the West lodise. -- iii; member of the Privy Council arrived at the Royal Clarence yard this morning shortly before eleven o'clock, and crossed over to Osborne in the Firequeen steam vessel, Master F. W. Pant commanding. They returned in the afternoon and proceeded to London. CHATHAM, J pg. 9. Admiralty instructions haveleinireo — ervedai the dockyard directing a shot-proof turret to be erected on the upper or lighting deck of the Royal Oak, 80, 800-horse power, iron-cued steamer, for the protection of the cap tain d uring an engagement. The turret will accommodate one person, and it will be encased in armour-plating of the same thickness as that on the exterior of the Royal Oak. It is probable that the Royal Oak will be shortly commis sioned, and a certain number of her °SOWS eppointed, in order that the work remaining to be accomplished on board in the way of preparing the frigate for sea may be pushed forward as rapidly as possible. The subjoined (says the Army and Navy Gazette) are the names of those Trawls which either an on their way to England, or have been ordered home, viz.: —Hecate, Fawn, Pioneer, ImpErisuais, Odin, Scoot, Pearl, Encounter, Centaur, Sphinx, Renard, Blandon, Snake, Vulcan, Clio, Wye, London, Man, and Melpomene. The Beagle is ordered to be put out of commission at Hoag Bonn, Pas to be available on the spot if her services should be required. PRACTICAL JOKING IN THE ARMY.—WO sincerely regret to have to refer to • case of " practical joking" which lately occurred in the 18th Human, and which formed the subject of • court of inquiry. Anything less jocose and more stupid and ungentlmmilike than the pro ceedings conventioasily clawed under this heed cannot well be conceived. Gutting the room of an unpopular member of a regiment is an act more befitting the undergraduate career of a " ticket of leave," than that of a gentleman's son ; and in the present instance the nn-resentful character of the victim took away from the outrage even the element of pluck which is sometimes held to palliate such freaks. Schoolboys, not to speak of those grown to man's estate, have long mince eschewed this kind of boisterous mis chief. We are glad to find that his royal highness the field-marshal commanding-in-chief promptly took up the cue in the 18th Hussars, and when it was proved, at once sent down the deputy-adjutant-general to Hounslow, who read a severe lecture to the offenders, and announced that their leave was stopped and their promotion affected by their transgressions. As some impression to the coatrary appears to prevail, we feel bound to state that the culprits at once bowed to their sentence, and accepted it in • spirit which leads WI to hope we shall bear no more of these vul gar eccentricitiel l —Aresy zed Navy Gazette. REDUCTION OF THE NAVY. An examination of the Nary List would seem to justify the conclusion that the Admiralty intend to make a considerable diminution in the estimate of expenses for sea. going ships. No leas than sixteen vessels have been paid out of commission during the past quarter, including five line-of-battle ships. This is au unusual number to be dismantled in one quarter; but in addition to those already enumerated, there are no less than 17 under orders to return to England, allot which will in all probability, be paid out of commission on their arrival, their term of service having expired. To supply the vacancies of the 33 ships paid off or under orders to return home, there have been only seven commis sioned during the past quarter. Of these, two are merely store and receiving ships, and cannot, therefore, be accounted effective men-of-war. It is very clear, also, that daring the ensuing quarter no material addition will be made to the numerical strength of the navy. At Portsmouth there are at present only three ships under orders to be brought forward for speedy commission, namely, the Frederick William, 82, the Curacco, 31, and the Eak, 21, although the harbour is crowded with ships to reserve, the majority of them being in the second, third, and fourth classes. It wall be observed that most of the homeward bound ships are from the East India and China Station.— , Fran the Hampshire Telegraph of to-day. THE AMERICAN MINISTER AND THE MAN CHESTER ADDRESS TO PRESIDENT LIN• COLN. _ _ The working men's address to President Lincoln was beautifully isegromed on vellum, and placed in • neat morocco case, gilt lettered. On New Year's night • special messenger, Mr. T. H. Barker, proceeded to Laden, and on Friday morning placed the documents in the hands of the United States minister, the Hon. Charles Frame's Adams, to be forwarded by Saturday's steamer to President Lincoln. Mr. Adams received the messenger very coltrteously, and kindly said that nothing could give him greater pleasure than to have such an address to forward to the President under present circumstance', coming as it did from the heart of the manufacturing districts, and when the people were now suffering so much through the sad state of matters in America. He was sure that Mr. Lincoln would very highly estimate such an expression; and that its influence would tend very much to soften any bard feelings that might have been engendered during the conflict, through misconception on either side of the Atlantic. Mr. Adams, in reply to • direct question from Mr. Barker, said that he did not think that the President, whatever the pressure brought to bear upon him by adverse parties and interests, would shrink from upholding his proclamation ot emancipation of the slaves of the rebellious states. Hs could not see how the President could recede from the pcsi. tion he had taken up, and he sincerely hoped and believed that he would remain lira. With the address a note from the chairman of the Free-trade Hall meeting was handed to Mr. Adams, and we append the reply of the United Stales minister " London, Jan. 2. "Dear Sir,—l have the honour to acknowledge the re. caption of your note, dated yesterday. together with the address to the President of the United States, of a publio meeting held in Manchester, over which you presided. Both of these papers were put into my hands this morning by Mr. Barker, the gentleman who had them in charge. I shall take the greatest pleasure in forwarding at once the address to the President. Permit me to add the expres sion of my own conviction that nothing will be more cheer. cog to him in the severe trials through which he is now passing, than the sympathy and encouragement of inch,. pendent and disinterested witnesses all over the world. and most especially such • manifestation as this, coming as it does from the very heart of the population of this king dom, and that the most deeply affected in its interests by the unfortunate strife in America, must not only move him strongly to persevere in the policy to which be has pledged himself, but cannot fail to rouse the generous enthusiasm of all true friends of freedom in the United States. I bail the occasion as one likely to do much to cement the friendly relations between the two countries, which • common in. Greet in the great principles of civil and political liberty should always keep united.—l have the honour to be your obedient servant, "Cuaacre FRANCIS ADAMS. " Abel Heywood, Fag., Chairman, Manchester." The Era remarks :—" The visit, on Monday evening, of the Prince of Wales to the Haymarket Theatre will be, we hope, but the precnreor of many such extensions of royal patronage through the approaching sesmon. The Lord Chamberlain has officially granted permission for the curtains, that have hitherto been closed over the royal bons to be oboe more drawn aside, and it in now rarely vacant." Mr. Balfe's new opera is said to be in active pre paration at Covent Garden Theatre. Pause is also in re hearsal there, with Miss Pampa, and Mears. Perron and Weise in the principal parts. The rumour that Mr. Sims Reeves will sing in English opera for Mr. Maploom gains ground.. . . Signor Costa is understood to be closely occupied in the completioe of his new oratorio. Mr. H. Leslie's choir will give its first concert of the ammo on Widmer:lay Dent. . . . The Philharmonic Concerts, this y ear eight in number, are to begat oa the 9th at March. The next Sacred Hanuouiu Iwrfornianoe will con- Wet of Maudelaaolues dtAalie music aud Mozart's Requiem. Among the numerous changes contemplated in e►r-changing Paris is the transformation of the large enclo sure of the Palais-Royal into a winter-garden, in which con certs will be given. We (A thenauni) hear that Mr. R. 11. Knowles is prepack's a memoir of his father, the late Sheridan Knowles, for publication. The work could not well be in better hands. Mr. Knowles acted for a long time as his father's amanuensis, and was perfectly well acquainted with his ideas on all subjects, es pecially the drama and literature. The Austrians, it is stated, have now 112,500 men in their Italian provinces—in Verona, 38,000; Peeshierk 5,000; Mantua, 7,000; Vicenza, 5,000; Yemen, 21,000; Treviso, 5,000 ; Trieste, 10.000 ; F null, 12,000 ; and Tyrol. 7,500. | 1863-01-10T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.86 | 0.182 |
0002642-00000 | LAW INTELLIGENCE. (THIS DAY.) COURT OF BANKRUPTCY. (Bon Mr. Cmataissionar Holivid.) ix it NIMAX—" . IIFKLAIeS . B9xDa." This natorbas cus was a g al;ir;i g it63fOi;ihe court for n adjourned'esamioatioa sitting. Ile is described as of 40, Bryanitone-square, and of Waltham-villas, Brampton. He owes to unsecured creditors 9,03 d. ;liabilities, 16,0061. Against these the creditors hold bills or bonds given by the bankrupt on some property which he expected to become possessed of. It is rid that some of the creditors have taken proceedings in the courts of Scotland, where the property es situate, with a view to enforce payment of their bills or bonds ; bat the trustees under the will of the bankrupt's father defended the actions, on the ground that the bankrupt's rights were forfeited by his iosolveocy ; and the Scotch courts' held that the creditors were not entitled to recover. Mr. Nicholson opposed for Mr. Tozer, Mr. Taylor, and other creditors. . . . . . . . ia - nkrupt,;xamioed, said he was insolvent in 1853; hie debts were then 14,5001. His expenditure had been 2,5001. a year for the last two years, u near as he could tell. He had no income but expectation. He believed he should come into a large estate under his father's will at the age of thirty. He was not certain of it. He was now prat 30. He expected to come into possession still. He had purchased nos horses of Mr. Wane, but had not them now. Mr. Dawson had one of them himself. Its name was Mountain Dew. Dawson held it as security for keep and training expenses,. Never had any shares in the Commercial Discount Company. It was proposed to give hint some shares, but be did not - know what became of them. Did not pay anything for the shares. He had a picture from Mr. Treadwell, as a present. As it was of no value, he had not given it up. He had banked at the London and West minster Bank. St James'irsquare. Had not given up his nrabook. It was some time ago—in 1860—and he had lost the book. He might have drawn cheques in 1861. He closed the amount when he had no more money left there. (A laugh.) He thought it was in the autumn of 1861. Would not swear he had not drawn cheques in 1862 ; he thought the last was at the latter end of 1861. He ga ve his yearbook to • Mr. Williams, who was the agent of Mr. Treadwell, and negotiated some bills behind his back. He had a cheque-book, but seldom used it. He almost always wrote his cheques on blank paper. Had given a bill of sale to one Hargraves, for three race horses, Inheritress, Mountain Dew, and Sister to Horace. Had no consideration for that bill of sale ; Hargraves gave him nothing for the horses. Had given up the bill of sale to the assignees. Had given an acceptance to one Adams for 5001. without consideration. The name to Jack son. He had no interest in land beyond that under his father's will. Had not inserted Taylor and Tozer in his balance-sheet as creditors. Had never seen them. He supposed they were "innocent holders." (Laughter.) From Charles Maraud, who held his bonds and bills for2,oool..kehad no consideration. They were given to lawns in 1860. Blorhain, of Waterloo-place, held brads for 1,0004, without consideration. Some of the trannetioes had taken place 6ve yeah ago. Many of the items appeared in his accounts without dates. His Honour said these dates must be supplied. Mr. Sargood, for the bankrupt, said he had fallen into the hands of persons who were ready to trade on his inexpe rience, and to help him in putting in circulation vast quan tities ci bills sod bonds. He was utterly unable to furnish the dates required. Mr. Chidley, who represented the assignees, mid they were ready to amid the bankrupt by furnishing him with all the date' in their posesesion. He would also be required to furnish a copy of his father's will. The Oommiesioner said it was also ancestral that he should produce a copy of his banking account, which might be obtained from the bank. An adjournment was then ordered to the 18th February. THE POLICE COURTS. (THIS DAY.) =ID KR OP OMAN 13 TER OL2ee•IJI lOLD. Mary Sea Connor, a di;iiiaied looking woman, residing at 2, Fox-court, Gray's-ion-lase, wan placed at the her for re-examination charged with attempting to murder Catherine Walters by striking her on the head with a poker. Mr. Beard attended for the prisoner. Police-constable William Feint, 454 A, mid that the injured woman,. who was over sixty years of age, wee now recovering, and would shortly be able to attend and give evidence. According to the evidence of a witness, the prisoner was drunk when she struck the complainant. He had received the following medical certi ficate yesterday from the surgeon attending her :—" Bar tholomew's Hospital, Jan. 9.—1 do hereby certify that Catherine Walters, admitted on December 20 on account of • lacerated wound on the scalp, is now oonvalesceet, and will be discharged from this hospital in a few dep.—Bower= Joint VERNON." A witness stated th►t she did not think that the com• plainset would ever be wall any more. Whilst she bad been in the hospital she had bean twice given over by the stir. roma and for some days she was lying there in an insensible state. Mr. D'Eyncourt remanded the prisoner again for the attesdanee of the injured woman. The prisoner, who treated the matter with the realest indifference, and who has before been charged at this court with amanita, was then removed. I'H.A.IILES. ♦ BURGLARY IN A BTORII. Jan rani, a dirty-looking f 4ai4 - 0, ind desalting himself as a traveller, of Charles-street, •law, was charged with feloniously and burglariously breaking and entering the shop of Mr. Frederick Starling, boot and shoe maker, of No. 5, Waterloo-terrace, Commercial-road East, and stealing therefrom seven pairs of boots, valued at 4/. 10s. It aPpeered that on the stormy night of the Ist instant one of the shutters in front of the prosecutor's shop was removed by the application of groat force, and prized up, and shoved over another shutter. A pane of glees was broken ' and all the boots on the window board within reach token away. Stimpeoe, an experiemed po sergeant, 21 bad no doubt the burglart and robbery were e ff ected by skilled " crseksmen. On the afternoon of the 2nd instant a woman pawned two new boots, a portion of those stoleo at the shop of Mr. Wood, • pawnbroker, in Highetreet, Shadwell. Mr. Wood advanced 6s. on the boo ts, and took them in as a pair. They proved to be two boots. The prisoner come to Mr. Wood's shop yesterday to redeem the boote, and on presenting the duplicate relat ing to them he was detained mid given into Stimpoon's custody. He was asked by Stimpson where he WU on the night of the Ist instant, and he replied at home, in Charlee-strest, Drury-lap.. Martin, 441 K, saw the prisoner at 4 o'clock in the morning of the 2nd instant in a door way two doors from Mr. Starling's house, and be appeared to be sheltering himself. Directly afterwards the prisoner left his sheltering place, and walked fifty yards towards soother doorway, near to White Horsogate, and then sheltered himself again. Martin was informed by an inhabitant • few minutes afterwards that the breaking of glue had been heard, and in the course of the same morn mg it was discovered that Mr. Starling's shop had been plundered and • pane of glare broken. Inspector Alison said there was • fearful storm on the night of the led and morning of the 2nd instant, and the min came down in torrents. It was • favourable night for the operations of burglars. There bad been four or five other similar mad burglary in the district, where abutters had been removed. The primmer was remanded until Wednesday. Cools or Quinces Bzucm.—The Court of Bench will sit at Nisi Prim is and after Hilary Term sa follows :—ln Term, in Middlesex—First sitting day, Tuesday, January 13 ; mooed sitting day, Wednesday, January 21; third sitting day (for undefended causes only), Wednaday, January 28. The first sitting day in London will be on Monday, January 19 ; the second sitting day on Monday, January 26. The court will sit after term in Mid dlesex OD Monday, February 2 ; and in London, on Friday, February 13. The court will sit every day at 10 o'clock. The mules in the list for each of the above sitting days in term, if not disposed of on those days, will be tried by adjournment on the days following. COUVTY COURT JUDGESHIP. —The judgeship of the Marylebone, Breatford, sad Brampton County Court (Circuit No. 43), rendered vacant by the death of Mr. J. L. Adolphus, has been conferred on Sir John E. Fardley- Wilmot, judge of the Bristol, Chipping, Sodbnry, and Thorubury County Courts ( Circuit No. 54). The promo bon of Sir J. E. Eardley-Wan t ot neatly leaves the judgeship of the circ u it f rom w hi ch he been removed vacant. --- REPRESENTATION OF MANCHE:WEIL—There is a rumour in circulation that Mr. J. A.Turner, one Of the repre sentatives of this borough, will retire at the mitt election, and that it is in eontemolatioe to invite Mr. B. Laiag..lllA• Amoco minister to India, to offer himself as•oandidate. It is also intended to make • similar invitation to Mr. J. B. Potter, brother of th e l a t e Bi r J o h n Potter, M.P. for the borough. TEE DUKE OF BEDFORD.—The present duke, as n well known, is t oo mac h o f an i nvalid to take min active part in affairs, or to appear in public; but, notwithstand ing this, his gibe always taken a lively interest in the pro ceedings of th e d ay, an d i s especially anxious that the position of the bourns of Russell shall be SR worthily maintained u is possible during the seclusion of the head of the family. To this end, and in order that the tradi tional character of Woburn for princely hospitality should he fully supported, Mr. Hastings Hassell, M.P., has, at his grace's especial desire, presided at the abbey daring the Christens season, and while a lame and distinguished circle of family connexions and visitors has been entertained within the mansion, the retainers of the house and the poor on his grace's estates bare been regaled and &misted by the usual Christmas cheer, supplied by his grace's bounty, in thorough keeping with the well-known practice of hie aeowitwai.—Cambridge Independent. THE EXPRESS, SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 10, 1863. THE BANK FORGERIES-(THIE DAY.) *. -•-- SENTENCE UPON THE BANK NOTE FORGERS. Robert Cummings, 00, who was acquitted on Friday, was this morning again placed at the bar of the Central Criminal Court, before Mr. Justice Blackburn. Sir F. Kelly declined to offer any evidence in rapport of the other charges against him, and verdicts of not guilty were consequently taken. The other prisoners, Bucher, Griffith; Williams, and Burnett were then placed at the bar to receive judgment. Mr. Justice Blackburn, addressing them, said that as regarded the prisoner Griffith., there was a differuce between his case and the others. He bad pleaded guilty to part of the indictment and had been found guilty upon another part, and from the evidence there was no doubt that he had been making a regular trade in forging notes, and he seemed to have been about the only person who bad sufficient skill in making bank notes perfect enough to deceive any ordinary observer, and there was no doubt he bad been so engaged for a considerable time before the robbery of the paper. He was possessed of considerable talent and skill, which, if he had devoted to some honest calling, might have produced greater benefits. The cue was considerably aggravated by the fact that he must have known that be was assisting those who were stealing the oil"from the mill. The fact of his wading those forged notes caused others to be con-' victed, as an innocent person might receive a forged note, and might be tempted, rather than be at a loss, to try and pass it, or persons might innocently tender a note not knowing it to be forged. The crime for which he had been convicted was by the old law punishable by death. The maximum of punishment by the new law, however, which he was about to inflict, was little short of a sentence of death, which was that he should be kept in penal servitude for the term of hill natural life. With regard to Bucher, he said he had been convicted on evidence which was very clear. He appeared to be the one who supplied the money to those who forged the notes, and was the means of potting them into circulation. In this case there was no doubt that he received the stolen bank paper from the prisoner Burnett. His cese, however, was a shade lighter than the last, and he should not pus the maximum punishment, although it would belittle lees than his natural life. He then sentenced him to 25 years' penal servitude. Burnett, he said, had been convicted also on evidence which left no doubt that he had received the paper from Brown, and the others who had stolen it from the mills. His crime was that of receiving stolen property, knowing it to have bean stolen, which, from his having been convicted before, made him liable to penal servitude. His case was a shade less, however, than that of the last-mentione d prisoner, and he should sentence him, therefore, only to twenty years' penal servitude. Al to the other prisoner, Williams, his cue was of a different descrip tion. It was very probable that he was not in any way concerned in putting the forged notes into circulation, and he had received a good character. The sentence upon him therefore would be penal servitude for four years. These prisoners were then removed, and theprisoner Cum mings was placed at the bar. His lordship addressed him, and said there could be no doubt that he bad been con cerned in this great crime, and that he had been engaged • great many years in similar proceedings. Although by the rules of law he had now escaped justice, he thought it right to caution him as to his future conduct, and to state publicly as a warning to him and to others also, that where a number of persons engage themselves in such transactions, although they might be suxessful for a time, some of them were 'unto become treacherous, and detection would * cer tainly follow. He was then ordered to be discharged, and the court ad journed. THE METROPOLITAN RAILWAY. OPENING TO THE PUBLIC.-(THIS DAY.) SHARE LIBTII-(THIS Ain Two dOLom The railway market is rather dull to-day, and where any alteration has occurred in the priors of the leading stocks it has been in the adverse direc tion. London and North Western, Midland, Lan cashire and Yorkshire, and Caledonian have declined 1 per cent., and South Eastern, }. London and North Western stook is now quoted 971 to 98} ; Great Western, 67} to ; Midland, 1291 to ; Lancashire and Yorkshire, 109} to 1104 ; Caledonian, 115} to 1; South Eastern, 89} to ; Great Eastern, 46 to } ; Great Northern, 1281 to 129; and London and South Western, 103 to 1. Lombardo-Venetian Railway shares are steady, at 34 to 4 prem. With the exception of Great Luxembourg and Turin and Savona, which are dull, other foreign lines are firm. Indian and Canadian railway securities are steady. IDoo■. — .Dez7l7o:VCiouTal. 1_ Do.. Now ? Z Bboros..l 07 0 ! 104 100 e Ka 3 3 ii 76 Ti . 76 I lei lila in i r e k F l 4 __l —. 10% in 104} im MONEY MARKET.-(THIS DAY.) Two o'CLocw. The funds to-day are rather dull, owing chiefly to the decline in the stock of bullion in the Bank of England and Bank of France. Console are quoted for the aoconnt about 1-16th per cent. lower than they closed yesterday. The dulness extends to the market for English railway stocks, some of which are a fraction lower. Foreign stocks are likewise in less demand. At Paris, this morning (according to Mr. Renter's telegram), the Three per Cent. Rentes were quoted 70fr. 46c., being 6c. lower than yesterday. Consols are now quoted 93 tot for money, and 931 for the account (Feb. 5). The official business report is as follows :-Three per Cent. Consols, ! for money, 931,1, 93, 1 ; ditto for account, 931, 1 ;1 Three per Cents. Reduced, 931 ; New Three per Cents., 931, 93 ; Thirty Years Annuities, 1886, 124 ; Red Sea Telegraph, 22 ; Bank Stock, 237, 235 ; India Stock, 228; ditto Five per Cent. Stock, 1081, 4 ; ditto Four per Cent. Debentures, 1001 ; Four, per Cent " enfaced " rupee paper, 961; ditto Five per Cent., 106 ; ditto Five-and-a-Half per Cent., 113, 1121 ; and Exchequer Bills, 18s., 14s. prem. The transactions in foreign stocks have been fully equal to the average for a Saturday, but in some cases, including Spanish Passive Bonds and Certifi cates, the Peruvian Loan, and Maremmana Railway Bonds, flatness is observable. Ths Turkish Loan of 1854 is quoted 841 to 851; that ofblBsB, 71 to 4 ; that of 1862, 674 to 68, ez div. ; the Consolidee, 40/ to 1, showing a fall of 4 ; and Venezuelan scrip, 14 to 11 dis. Transactions are recorded as follows :-Brazilian, 1862, 1868, 1860, 93/ ; Chian, 831 ; Equador, 164 ; Egyptian, 961 ; Greek Coupons, 61; 'tallest, for account, 691, 701, ex div. ; ditto Maremmana Railway, 734, 4, ex div. ; Mexican, for account, 311; Moorish, 97 ; New Granada, 28 ; ditto Land Warrants, 41 ; ditto De ferred, 61, 1 ; Peruvian, 1862, for account, 891, 89, ex div. ; Portuguese, 1853, for accounts 471, ex div. ; ditto 1862, 471, ex div. ; Russian, 1860, 934 ; ditto 1859, 614 ; ditto, 1862, 951, 96 ; Spanish Passive, 241, 3 ; ditto Certificates, 91, 1 ; Turkish, 1854, for ac count, 854 ; ditto, 1858, for amount, 714, 1 ; ditto 100 i. Bonds, 75 ; ditto 1862, for account, 681, 671, 68, ex div. ; Venezuela, for account, 231, 24, ex div. ; ditto scrip, 14, dis. _ HALr-rAar Two o'CLoci. Consols are now flatter, at 921 to 93 for money, and 93 to k for the sth Feb., it being rumoured that a considerable amount of gold has been taken from the Bank. An instalment of 10 per cent. falls due on the Russian Loan on Monday next. Messrs. Baring Brothers and Co. announce that they have received the sum of 2,0601. 9s. 10d. from the custom-house of Ban Josd de Cucuta on account of New Granada dividends. The absence of ad vices from other custom-houses is occasioned by the correspondence not arriving in time for the steamer. The customs revenues generally appear to be in creasing. About 50,000 sovereigns were taken from the Bank yesterday for Alexandria. The Bavaria, from New York, has brought 10 OC3I. for Eugland. The Mexican dollars by the last packet were sold yesterday for China, at 5/1. 30. per ounce, showing an advance of id. The rise is caused by the activity of the demand for China, combined with the small ness of the amount in the market. The exchange on Austria yesterday afternoon was less in favour of that empire. With this excep tion there was scarcely any alteration. The rates were as follows : _...... . -- .... - . WILUNAZY MAUI AND 111'00Z3. ek IP 4 1 RUMAT& iitesylLaLiArr Joao. Whoa Tres leda4MaiKilitid MEW art Smite Clabdaddia Orwell . De. sad..e.o paid So B. B~i Tos. Dad..Porth..tAbd.M. Idlabarglised Glasgow Maim/ agile hum. =rir * B. Western . . Da A Stook Do. hut Anglian Stk Omni Nankin! doothuro Or Northern De.A Ane. no dlr. nu- Oak( taldpot. yoldß 011. Mouth et Grad Waders gra , DalbergVaLGuallilt Lassiblne Toddy Imam eml Maskvall Dose Lobe Lo b got lko =Wortir, lo.dia."=Liad Do x.w-- Ds. Wm.& .. Dory NIL el. Wu. Or.) ... Nowesib mai Carilik IhnorplAzossib.dat... NowszWorteap. Witco. /Mailt ........ .3 IM 13 1., I:2 l3l6ll ZILDsvos 9.17.1.1'un. Do. Dab . D. !aft icelblillWaotosJoo . c: Scottish Osatrol nootlliL Z. Abor.elk linsolgro Doke Soolik I INedion W e ei nZa DON OW Tot Tao I Maw Do. ...... Do. . TimaiGa; Violodo Ma. # Maio Wad (karmall W.Eira==tl Wad Dab - DOW =I BRITISH KAILWLIM 7 01 olrt ar &ices I lass Stria to 1 p.m. ft • 1 es 88 1161 111 II Ti 41 43 111 14 lob m 4 4 66 4 42 64 114 26 118 119 1/4 34 43 1911 102 WO 071 071 1111 1 1111 72 72 118 119 $3 $8 118 114 .... 101 e 1011 t 42 UR 199 f 11 9 19 IN 99 837 114 f - dl.i Uf 531 26+ 100 100 k 07 AS awl NI LOS 11C TIIO 6 Si dls II tle 118 110 a 48 0 104 l 106 47 ID A A eft as lop 104 7 8 30 40 10 3 NI Os I __ 4. ii _ 17 00 PP: 140 146 Se ft U 46 U $7 96 SO I OL Vii i I NM :29 112 Me i 6 en} 110 n us* 184 101 f ill i I ni 7i . ila dim NI r D. Prodorosoo ti— fte,BeaskAaocrtiti Op.& Aug.I,IDDI oodoloodbyletal..lll Do. Jul/kW% dido Do. Jim 1/1/4. &No COMM* toolorn Co udDOT.Da Doopl Dookllp..ua D Lama gua.6 Do. G. Idondoo D. N. do arood wok ot Oadoda - Do. l - ipor 01 -- Prol. .. Do.Soo.ProLl Do. Swot. iatas. Ds. I per 011. AN—. Do. do. 15A.... Do. AA D u o Pod irolo ISA.— Do. New Do. January, 1811 ate, ot= . 4=l Do al . Kew Do.ilitablupara,w. D 0.10.16.14264,47. Indian Branch Waited Madras Boar. 44 par ok. Do. tlo. =4 Do. d. par aL ells.oaup.ao. 41. Ito®. and Hobson By. M„Bowwlok • Cacaos - al= • cap.*. Do. do. 8 esp. ao. I N.& d Canada. p. o. 0 &dodo. itto 6 per °out I Do. Delhi do Do. do. do Do. Panisub. do Do. do. do I DwlsdAt..Fk4.d.6lo.o IOILIIGN iiiTATS. WlAalmee a Bass.— U '3Ggalt...Tra.Lg.TD.6 all 161340 16 :sonars If &Ayres G. doutlierafL. • OWING= leas aLa el▪ l a &Amu of hues sU GIL Itasslaa gos. 6. p.a. all Osairsl at Prossa a All Dasarnsaal. an Basal a ;Lb Osaviaace a Dab. 5 1 1114 am sus Tarshoet all 'roe sad Gowns —. I ▪ saltlAsiel: all Do.sp. o.Prt an Northam of 08 16 Da New Shams . an N.Ball B.3yres g. 79: e. Do. do. do. an Irarwaslasarank fret. 19 Ottoosn'emprnaMdin) aD en iszia.Lyoss.andttodl Vats sad Miaow t all MGM sod 6. Prandaes (D•6116=7p. a IR 19 a alga owl an Gaya Danish an Royal *widish aD Do. T pre cent. - all 'Sambre sod ll•use en l emi l= obi tper eat. Pest, !L C join I liipommi. 1 I oro in an i Do. do. 2 13 zn 231 all 11.11u4.k Loos-V 13 /6.130 t P sal Ileutbse= P : " ”3 - 6 Tartu ens Savona all Weirlsaders an Da lipar coat. Peed le 14 fig !rota it. W.*/ from 31 Ii r i au! 1 II pe xcl IDe fli i Ili 111 9- 1 9 M I 99 ?Of Li 4O .11 zd - 0.1 II 1 Pa , x 4 le si 2 6 di 47 46 42 44 JOIN! MCC BANIU. =ad D. Oar. link Laillvatpoal indealsala Bank ot Bank at b i ngo Bank at Quaandand IL LW& It Lorrica Obaalik.Brlt. tudia *dna Mend. cattl* &a arid BnalsolnAoal.Oharld. tiladana.Chinailap. (L) Dapertat Bank, Limited Landon and Brasill an loall.Ayrentß. Plata (L Las. A. Bank M A n.t.t. Landon and Colonial (L. I tl m aren J " o d tn e° t 14 “ t. ' 3 ' ,% " • La and Middlesex . tendon & lawn Almon ton. and Wanagnalar r Matra. & Pro.. (knit (L. Do. Reserved 1.P% of rwdad *coal Bank New South Maim Mental Bank Dorms. Mama Bank ilese D d. e. Now Pnwhwohd of troklea.A at Brit..B.Afria Chivy 44 U. of heisted (140.). Oaks et Z00id..,,,,. 63 96 52 De 71 76 25 16 100 108 1e 1 .11s 60 61 61 001 21 6 46 44 92 66 41 44 31} 211 2; 2.1 u PM N 7 Pla n pm 27 674 28 I 11 pm 30 $ 5 2 See tsPai ea Si 34 4 * 3 13 3 4 9111 10 62 66 66 gi 6 i Pak tr i2 1 Oa Jl. si iiii Ose ml It n pia in It tr ml ii ii es ii ii ii •8 68 16 16 . 36 B6 ld7 m liPm 1 If pm zu -1- 4 I I du - 1 98 100 I 91 . 93 I Elk Eli 104 !041 in! U U , 00 $ 6 nk; 1 leo in. I pm ini 106 106 :I WAn, Punctually at 6 o'clock this morning the Metropolitan Railway was opened to the public at both ends of the line. The train. consist of three carriage', and daring the day they have been crowded. It was calculated that up to 12 o'clock the number of passengers conveyed had been about 10,000. When the gates of the Farringdon street station were opened, a considerable number of artisans were in waiting to be carried to their work in the neighbourhood of the various stations on the line. It is believed that a good deal of traffic will be got from this source, as the operatives will find it more profitable to pay the low fares charged on the railway than to walk. The traffic is not con fined from end to end of the line. On the contrary, it is well kept up between the intermediate stations. No doubt something mast be allowed for curiosity; but with all abatements the opening is highly satisfactory. The passengers express themselves much pleased with the general comforts and conveniences of the travel log. When the direct communication with the Great Northern is completed, as it in expected to be on the lit of March next, a new and important accession of traffic is confidently anticipated. It is known that several builders are now directing their attention to the expediency of erecting dwellings for the working classes in the suburbs of the metropolis, and in this way one of the philanthropic ideas of the late Mr. Charles Pearson touching the constrection of the great undertaking is likely to be to some extent, realised. It is not unlikely that the pressure of the traffic may compel the directors to run ten minutes trains. The traffic arrangements are under the superinten dence of Mr. Fenton. The banquet was held yesterday in a large room specially erected for the occasion, and adjoining the Farringdon street station. This room was 250 feet long and 50 wide, and constructed to accommodate 700 guests, for which number tickets were issued. It was lined throughout its entire length with red and white cloth, and banners of all nation/ were suspended from the ceiling and side walls. The tends of the City police were in attendance, and as the trains came into the station they struck up some enlivening sire. Amongst those present at the banquet were the chairman of the company, Mr. Wilkinson, who also presided at the dinner ; Lord Harris, the Lord Mayor, ILP., Mr. Lowe, M.P., Mr. W. Wood, M.P., Mr. Anton, M.P., Sir S. X. Pete, M.P., Mr. H. Lewis, M.P., Mr. S. Beale, M.P., Pro faner Owen, Sir Rowland Hill and lady, Colonel Sir J. Hamilton, Bart, Mr. Malin, LP., Mr. Sheriff Jones, Aldermen Sidney, LP., Humphery, Challis, Abbies, Dakin, Wilms, Moon, Carter, Hale, Gibbons, Mr. Soott Ruessll, IL Du Chadic', to. THE BISHOP OF ST. DAVID'S ON SUNDAY EXCIJR SIONE.—The following appears in the Spectator of to-day : "Seeing your remarks on the Memorial of the Bishops on Sunday excursion trains, I think it right, as one of the sub scribers, to state that what you suppose to have been the one object of the memorial, whether desirable or not, did not enter into my view of the matter at all. I never expected that the London churches would be better filled if the Sunday excursion trains were to cease run ning ; nor, I imagine, was that the object of the various dissecting bodies which have presented memorials to the same effect. But my own motive for adding my sig nature was simply a conviction of the generally pernicious effects of the Sundaymilway excursions— a conviction which was forced upon me by the evidence laid before me. I say fraud upon me, because, at first, I felt a strong doubt about the propriety of the proceeding, and was inclined to believe that it might be directed against the least of two evils. As I have had no communication with any other bishop oa the subject, I can only speak for myself. Bat it is not impos sible that the cue may have bee, the same with allure, and that there are more who are not chargeable with the ' im bedßty' of ' hoping to force the working classes into the churches by earthing up the paths of escape.' Few, .I think, can have been as sanguine about the mouse of the attempt, as they must have been sure that it would being down a great deal of obloquy as themselves.—l am, sir, your obst servant, C. ST. Dam's." LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC MirliTlNOs FOR THE Exam° Wm.—Monday. Architects, at 8, " Building an d Sanitary Arrangements." Mr. Taybr ; Geographical, at fli:nOceas Currents, N.E. Coast of South America,: Mr. ; " Oman Telegraphl ," Captain Rowett ; ' The Atlantic said Telegraphy , Dr. Wallieb. Tuesday, Actuaries, at 41. Council ; Syro-Egyptian, at 74, "Sama ritan Pentateuch," Rev. J. Mills ; Ethnological, at 8, " Comnsixters of Races of Man, and Civilisation," Mr. Crawford ; "Human Skull, Rellet, Lancashire ;'• " Ancient !Alan Antiquities from Ecuador," Mr. Bollaert • EiWseers, at 8, " Electricity and Working of rains," 'Mr. Preece Zoologieal, at 9. , Ornithology of Bonnie, Mr. Wallace ; " Snakes in West Africa," Dr. °thither. cm :today, Graphic at 8 ; Society of Arts, at 8, "Ph y sad Magio Lantern Educationally Considered," Mr. S. bley Microscopical, at 8 ; Archscoloxinal Association, at 84, proceedings of Charles 1.," Sir H. Halford ; " Roman Msrlstooe, Ideas,' Dr. Palmer; "Ancient Brand in:ma" Mr. Syer Coming. Thursday. Numismatic, at 7 ; Royal Academy, at 8, " Architecture." Professor Smirk.; Lineman, at 8, " Lorsathaceis," Professor Oliver ; " New Species of Aber*" Dr. Anderson ; " Germination of Seeds in Cyclamen." Dr. Masters; "Chlocon (Ephemera) Ding dials," Mr. Lubbock; "Japanese Species of fciostraca," Mr. Adams • Chemical, at 8, "Atomic Weights of Nickel sad Cobalt," Dr. Rumen ; Royal, at ; Antiquaries, at 81. -Friday, Pkilelogieed. at 8. li. 11 - 10 • N to a W au OOWNIAL 001111U1KMIT 511001121.111. IL I 1110080. I rd. I Ci. prleft. I Wee. ::: :: ali ke..rat e ieb. lin eo. 4 :6: II 176 re al "I 1m .. . Do.llo, elllsiularp. WI 106 108 - %Eves par mt. 680.8011 - Do.llpereenlln.lox6 HO 96 97 xd - 0 100,000 .. pro 610 8.000.0.1873 109 108 do. 1891 100 111 113 1111 1 1 ..: :: Do. do 1890 100 111 114 - do 1801 10 111 118 sd 1 . 00,900 .. Ce7loo,Nov.lBBl, 6 p.ct. 100 - - - - .. Wanittlos 6 per cent lO 110 112 .. 1 . 61106 .. atel Gov. 6 per cent - 1110.10 .. New Bninow.aor.6p.ol 101 10 0 3 10641d.106 65 xd - I. .. .. B.Wohe 0 v.E.p. e. 10.15 100 99 100101 - .... .. 10.6 p. o. 1871 to 1878 100 100 t :di -Id .... .. Do. 11p. 6008 94 VW 90 99Ixd 995 xd .... .. New illeialed Spec coat 100 108 110 id -id 09, .. Nen 'oohs 6p. a,1876 100 106 106 xd - MOW .. Qeeerland Clov.alit 100 100 111 xd -sd .... /194.130v.0p.e. Sande 100 100 111 id - .... . .. . Goctip.c.len.r.leht 100 107 100 xd 100 xd .... Do. do.6p.e. .11101 & 0 100 110 1144 11105 flO BRUM 11111111. 1170. IQ. I MUM. 11d. I Ct. pease I Balm moos I comb's= con. ihad. L 1 par 1 8 9111 - 1. .. Clifford AntaL nil 16 - 1. .. Dev. CI. Coe. fravlstk ) 1 600 610 .... m il • i • sid 10101110110 0.0a ( 90 , 4 110 19 11 00 ) i U m. pi. 611 65 i ism ... 0. .. Lot Owed= I, .. Let Cern Brea "4 .11 14 1 46 1 6 4 11 7 44: - - I.llll.llred(raitelk ) 71.190. 45 4 41 I 1 468 - °rambler & 96. Alarm 67; 17 19 91 0.00 .. Grad loath moues - 6.908 .. 0. Wk. her (liels601 ) 4O 6 - 1,0024 000 ... OnevUle - .. &rod loot lll.lllO. 68 50 - 0.000 - Illoptea Downs 6,000 ... Lady Bertha 2.0.0. 1 5 tow el. ..... Mararet itsas va (l7 .7 ny Ldia6) ei 41 0 •-• 4,7 ... 4 . E xth ew ""7 Bstos p.. l"4":" 6. .. 1. In'. Daisokall_opa) 21 1 1 1 4. 1"2 21 1662 4 i f t I -6,640 .. North Wheel Many 6,400 - Per Cone. Olt Blamer) - 1.110 0 Providaset (11. Lelani) 10.8.7. 41 41 - 11,000 .. lerieldepOos. Min. 0o 1 - - - 612 .. 5. Oirellos (IL Gee- 11 190 400 - 6,606 .. S. Own Bros (Mean) . :61160.1 25 25 -. it. ..... S. T.I. W. rranor um (lllopia m..o. )l9.l:o 90 1 05 1 - MO 11. 111 . Or P e a l: tal" 0 1 . .. Vele el Teeree d ie ) 1/0. 11111 0.1 9 118 - 4 1440 - IS -= 4. - Won 6 Bernell ( 1 l5 IS 14 - 1,014 .. W. Oenelom ) 5 28 30 - 611 0. E ... 8711. WILWa lk i r allian Inagea (00009 1 ) 7.76 2815477 - 4 t"r4 - 24 ---- 1,680 .., WO. NW Lela* 2.0.0. M ee - 4. .., Wheal LoAcett 2.10.8 95 10 - 1,064 .. W.llarlknotlleousn JI 8 lb .6 - I.ao .. WY. Treisorney (Wk , 7 105 175 No. l Oh. I Omrsmung. Ird I Cl. orlon I Salm. 10,000 0 Andlloddadan an 171 161 50,000 10 agissOs IL sta in) all 2 4 115000 U ArlemiLa AplaaL 10 26 1111 0000 10 Berta Walsrwoetn.. Ol 61 7 10,70 6 Bombay Ons. Unified I 1 dis 3 pas 1 1 6107110 85 IlelleidskUnpTes 100 62 0 5911 816 Moods Una all 97 100 98 some IL Os ct rlltec.alkselt all 18 22 1,002021 86. Ttlite• 160,80 85 Pislisumo 10 100 111 an MON St 1011 p. ed. Tap. 0.1 160 106 112 xn —xn 10,000 10 ILlnagOoMandlemi7. St 1 dim 9 0 60,000 10 Cloak' Los. all 2 II 60,00 SO SasaladlalisigA= I ilia Ipst rd —ad 700,00 C 0 Medd. 10,000 1 toss. and Art. 00,000 IS Weft 80mon Navlnatlog 14 27 DI mor %Notably (thalCed) I 1 I 10,0 0 0 1 1 Do. Taper rest. Prot all Igooo I India ft- ming (L.) 1 SOO U ttallan Irrigation Canal 2 64115 par ad lj 3 ad 18.000 6 Lam. Dialrid Tel. (5.1. all 4 S dig 951,00 4 Loa ism. Onnallms Co. to la 11 11 60.600 0 Wear Inta. Oana. 1 211 opm 0 —xd S i l MOO 00 Wedlior.llx. TaL Mug , an ef 10,000 10 liet.ltall, Car., &Wag 5 4 II 05 — OOOO IS Waslosal inseam* 0o • pm 111 3 1 511011 10 Kasbud‘LoCoaltlrou(ll ) 3 1 pm MAO 6 WailmelandsLlp. a. • all 1 LIU NO IL Dross. et N.BOO. 81 10 10 117,070 1 W. Mt. Australasian. all 1 11 101001 I Oriental Gme 60,000 1 Da New lll 60,000 IS 000. In. Rm. (Um.) all i 1 1l P ad ad 10,000 5 04goolan Or l 1 par 0)0;060 Pa Peel liver load WNW. 100 53 56 10,000 U Psalm andOdan.llleam all 71 73 72 111 10.003 21 Do. New ln 11 12 pm 17.000 10 Quebradald.ll , l4lL(L) 11 3 3 dla WAS 60 Memo Iron 10,00 IS Do. Now ill 6 7 4410 IS filo deism qtr lea.(L ) all la 194 ad 0 ad 0710 I 5 Do. do I 1 11 pm ad 31 ad 115010 UPI Royal Mal Steam 100,000 U. flooUlah Aust. /wmalin. 100 Me 140 1510 U loath Australian Und all 22 U oo 1 40miallne TeL Sortp 11 9 0,000 1 De. 60. liesdaterod aU 1 . 1 11,100 10 Do. do. 0000 I Calera& to India (L ) 1 3 1 dlo 17,M0 10 T. di ft.cd Attot(L) XL 1 Ida Ipm MOO SO TrsAiLo.Co.U.Canade 5 3 Ipm 00040 1 Cla. [Mem Tel. (L.). 2 1 dla 3pm %OAS° 100 it Dimmed's loud.. 01' 111 15 4 111 THE RIGHT HON. T. K GIBBON, M.P.—Mr. M. Gibson is expected to visit Ashton-under-Lyne &rim next week, when he will address his constituents in that on public affairs. The meeting is fixed for Wider day, the 21st inst. . • ifswicnomr DEATH or A VALsr.—An inquest was held at Renton Monastery, on Thursday, before Mr. Collis, on the body of George Norton, a young man 28 years of age, who for some bad bees in the service of Major the Hon. A. H. Anson, as valet. The story of the unfortunate accident which resulted in hie death was narrated by Major Asses himself, who =peered deeply affected while giving his evidence. He saU—On Tuesday, the 9th of December. I was shooting in the Renton covers, with Lord Lichfield, Earl Vane, Mr. Woodroffe, and others. Deceased was my valet. He was loading for me, and had a mooed gnu. Those shooting were all in aline. We had gone down the cover about sixty yards, when a rabbit got up before me, and doubled back through the line of beaters. I fired at it when it had got about fifteen yards from me. As soon se I fired, I saw the deceased fall. He was behind some hazel bushes. He was fifteen yards behind the beaters. He ought to have been close to my ride. He has shot with me before in covers, and he knew it was dangerous to stay behind. Major Anson went on to my that deceased was found to have been shot in the right leg. Medical assistance was obtained from Eccles- hall, Stafford, and Birmumbern, but it was found necessary to amputate the leg. Twenty-four hours after the operation delirium attacked t h e poor fellow, and did not leers him till his death, which took place on Monday last. Mr. W. Bras ford, gamekeper to Lord Lichfield, gave similar evidence. Ho mad that when Major Anson fired be (Mr. Brailsford) believed everybody was in line. He thought it almost impossible for Major Amon, even had he bad his attention fixed upon the spa, to have seen the deceased behind the bush from the place where be was standing. The jury re turned a verdict in accordance with the fact, entirely acquitting Major Anson from blaros.—Staffot drldre Adm.- tiaer. Tag LANs hiss Rows IN Cassrssma.D.—At the Derbyshire Sessions on Thursday, Jame* Riley, • power ful Irishmen wee indicted for a violent smolt on Polies. °mutable El se, at Chesterfield, on the 30th November last. On the day in question (Sunday) • large mob of Irish, 300 in number, began parading the streets in Chesterfield, and after amusing themselves thus for two or three hours, they began • kind of faction fi ght, and the prosecutor interfere d, upon which he was knocked down by the prisoner with a bar of iron, and after being severely beaten, rendered almost insensible from loss of blood. Ultimately the police were defeated, and the prosecutor and another policeman so injured, that for some time they could sot perform their duty. Else still had his head protected by stripe of plaster. The prisoner was found guilty, and sentenced to twelve calendar months' imprisonment. DESPATCH OF THE BRAZIL AND RIVER PLATE YAWL—The Royal Mail Company's steamship Oneida, Captain Bevis, sailed from Southampton at 2.30 pm., =y, with the monthly mails for Lisbon, Cape Verdes, buco, Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, Monte Video, Buenos Ayres. die.. She took out 42 passengers and on freight 219,3471. in gold for the Brazilian ports ; 7,5001. in liar silver for the Minister of Finance at Rio. English iswellery, 1.9071. ; French jewellery, 3,7501. • and for Litho°, 10.0001. in gold. The Oneida also t ook out on freight a full cargo of French and English merchandise. PLYMOUTH, JAN. 9.— Meesra. Money Wigram and Son's ship Kent, 998 tons, Captain H. J. Clayton, left here this morning for Melbourne, taking out about 100 pas sengers and a full general cargo. The ship Mary Shepherd, 905 tons. Captain Bridge, belonging to Messrs. Joseph Shep herd and Co., will leave to-morrow (Saturday) with about HO government emigrants, a large proportion of whom are from the west of England, and selected by MOWS. Wit. 00Ck1 and Dartoo, government emigration agents of this port. The ship Augleses, Captain M. H. Smith, is on her psassge from London, to emWk her passengers here on Monday next for Melbourne. The steamship Peterhof, from London for Matamoras, Mexico, with General cargo, is expected bare to-night to take on board about 120 toss of patent fuel. The very remarkable escape of a workman is reported from Blackburn. He slipped from the roof of a house, when he had been at work, sod fell a height of'22 feet. Fortnately, his foot caught a projection from the window end saved his fall, the wont consequences of it Wien a broken arm. A piecer in a cotton mill, named Wood, was committed for trial from Stalybridge, yesterday. for • violent assault on a catholic priest. He attacked the priest with a hammer, and gave him • severe blow on the head. Wood has before lase guilty of similar offences. It seems he is a convert to protestantism, and as much in-feeling ham been displayed toy im as he hes displayed to others. It is said that he slightly crazy, but he told the magistrates that he knew quite well what he was about. In the Masonic Lodge, at Alexandria, U.S., is preserved the knife that the mother of Washington pre sented to him to induce him to abandon his design of entering the British navy.—dfiasouri Democrat. Amsterdam, 3 months, 11.161 to 17 ; ditto, 3 days, ILI4 to 15; B.ottesdain, 3 months, 11.161 to 17 ; Ant werp, 3 months, 25.40 to 21 ; Hamburg, ma basin, tiros months, 13.81 to I ; Parts, 3 days, 25.15 to 20 ; ditto, S months, 25.40 to 5 ; Frankfort-on-the-Maine, 3 months, 118} to 119 ; Petersburg (per rouble), 3 months, 351 to I ; Vienna, eff. So., 3 months, 11.70 to 80 ; Trieste, .ff. tlo 3 months, 11.70 to 80; Madrid, 3 months, 491 to} ; •Cagle, 3 months, 49 to 1 ; Leghorn, 3 mouths, 25.35 to 60 ; Genoa, 3 months, 23.55 to 60 ; Milan, 3 mouths, 25.55 to 60 ; Naplee, 3 months, 25.55 to 60 ; Palermo, 3 Tomes, 25.60 to 5; Messes , 3 months, 25.60 to 5 ; Lisbon, 90 deys, 525 to I ; Oporto, 90 days, 623 to b 3. At Paris and Hamburg the rate of discount is p uri ti , er cent. ; Vienna, 51; St. Petersburg, 5 ; ; Frankfort, 21 ; Amsterdam, 4 ; Berlin, 4; and Brussels, 3 per cent. The monthly return of the Bank of France, as made up to Thursday, the Bth day of January, shows the following results (the exchange taken at 25L to the pound) : Coin and bullion Bills discounted lncrease 3,380,000 Notes m circulation Private deposits Treasury deposite Advances on public securities Increase 830,000 These changes—more especially the large increase in the discount+ and the decline in the coin and bullion--afford evidence of the pressure which is usually experienced by the French Bank at the turn of the year. Several new undertakings of considerable impor tance and interest are announced. One is the British and American Exchange Banking Corporation, with a capital of one million, of which one-half is to be issued in the first in stance. It is not intended, however, to call up Imore than 251. on each 501. share. The object 311 to embark in the generally lucrative business of exchanges between England and America, as well as between America and the ports in India and China. In this latter class of transactions the new company will have the co-operation of the Oriental Bank. The direction is of a character to inspire confidence. Next we may notice the Continental Bank Cor poration (Limited). In this case likewise the auspices under which the appeal is made to the public are highly respectable. It is intended to carry out operations in bullion and exchange be tween the United Kingdom and the Continent. The head office will be in London, and the first branch in Paris. There is no question that in the field proposed a vast amount of profitable business is constantly going on. The capital is 1,000,0001., in 10,000 shares of 1001. each, and the first issue is to consist of 5,000 shares. The City of London and General Fire and Life, Insurance Company (Limited) comes third on our list. This undertaking is not got up by profes eional promoters, but has been formed by a num ber of persons of respectability, practically engaged iu business, and who, it would appear, have it in their power,from the nature of their connexions, to give a good basis to the new concern. Offices are to be established in Liverpool, Glasgow, Edin burgh, Belfast, and other important towns. The directors pledge themselves to adhere to a popular programme, as distinguished from the system of high and arbitrary charges. The capital is to be one million, in 40,000 shares of 25/. each, and in this instance likewise one half is to be issued now. The title of another new undertaking is the Inns of Court Hotel Company. The capital in this case is fixed at 100,0001., in 10,000 shares of 101. each. A suitable site having been secured, it is proposed to meet one of the requirement's of the day by erecting a first class hotel for the accommodation of barristers and others in the vicinity of Lincoln's inn-fields. The central situation is considered of great importance, the more especially as it is be lieved that the various courts of law will b e f ore along be concentrated in the neighbourhood of Lin coln's-inn-fields. A large amount of she capital is announced to have been already subscribed for. Interest at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum will be allowed on all payments until the opening of the 1 hotel. _ _ _ _ The directors of the London, Birmingham, and South Staffordshire Bank are inviting applications for the appointment of secretary, also of manager, Inn rf e) In 108 73 xn In d— xn :04 in al sn Zn 121 1 am 104 i 4 in la 71 r 21 1 le both for the London and Birmingham establish ments. . . . . — fie official statement of the quantity of sherry wines exported from Xeres in 1862 gives a total of 32,616 butts, the principal shippers being as follows, viz. Messrs . Gonzalez Dubose Co. (in liquidation), 5,427; Peter Domooq and Co., London), 3,392 ; M. lima, 3,083 ; Patrick Garvey, 2,874 ; Pemartin and Co., 2,702; F. W. Cosens, 2,250 ; and J. Henri* Nephew, 1,598. The other shippers are below 1,000 butts each. A circular issued by Messrs Ruskin and Co., of Billiter-street, announces that the sherry vintage of 1862 "yields about a fourth less than any one of even the immediately preceding unpro ductive years" It is remarked, however, that, "the quality of the wine will be most superior. Mr. Douiecq having already advanced prices up to the point necessary for the maintenance of quality, leaves them at present where they are, but he can only receive orders for immediate shipment." The Canadian has arrived from China with 917,600 lbs. of tea and 115 bales of silk. FRIDAY snap. Consols, which closed yesterday at the sth February, opened this morning at the same quotation, and closed at 93# to #. For money the last price was 93# to f. The official business report is as follows :—Three per Cent Consols, for money, 931, L 93 ; ditto, for account, M I , ; Three per Cents. Reduced, 93, 3, }, 93 ; New Three per Cents., 93, I, 93, #, ; Ind Stock, 228; ditto Fiv e p er Cent. Stock, 1081, #, ; ditto, for account, 1 083, I ; ditto Four per Cent. Deben tures, ;Five per Cent. " enfaced " rupee Pace; 106. he India Five per Cent. stock was firm, at 1081 to 109. Exchequer Bills were in active demand, probably as furnishing an eligible means of investment for the deposit money on railway bills. The price has risen about 6s. to-day, closing at 14a. to 18e. prem. The transactions in foreign securities were to a good extent. MINIIB.-(THIS DAY.) Two o'CLoos. There is very little business doing in the mining market to-day, and prices generally are without change. East Caradon shares are steady, at 454 to 48, and Wheal Harriett firmer at 31 to 4f. In the Stock Exchange East Caradon shares are officially marked 461 ; East Wheal Russell, 4, 41, and 41 ; Grambler and St. Aubyn, 20 ; Hing ston Downs, 21 and 21 ; North Downs, 21 ; North Wheal Bassett, 31_and 3f ; and Tincroft, 113. Monte. Au eon. Mining shares continue in demand, and have again improved, having been dealt in at 21 and 21. Port Phillip are firm, and Yucianamn tana are steady. A prospectus was issued yesterday for increasing the capital to work the Tywarnhaile Copper Mine, in CornwalL The committee of manairrient is a very influential one, and there will be little difficulty in accomplishing the object, particularly as it seems that the greater portion of the shares is already subscribed for. The capital expended to this time is 30,0001., or 5/. per share on the 6,000 shares into which the company is divided. The machinery and plant have cost 13,0001., and the ore sold has rea lised about 20,0001. The returns are stated to be nearly 300 tons of oopper ore per month, and these can be considerably increased as the ground is opened. The royalty paid is at the low rate of 1-24th, and there is no profit or premium charged to parties now coming in. The subjoined weekly summary of the metal market isl extracted from the circular of Messrs. Von Dedelezen and North : The metal market tamales in a gnat state ; the actual Wainer done has been trills( and prices have undergone no char `a of importance. Welsh bars are quiet, and in mode rate demand ; 51. 12s. 6d. to 51. 150, tab, Wales, and from 61. se. to 6/. 7s. 6d. here. At the meeting of the Staffordshire ironmaaters in Birmingham, yeeterday, last quarter's prices were maintained. Scotch pig iron has ad vanced, 5U cash, sad 565. three months open. Copper remains quiet but steady ; there ia a moderate demand fee coke and ingot, but for manufactured orders are scarce, sad bat little business passing. A few sale; of Burrs have been reported at99l. ; Beano& is held for 1001. ; Bpaplek, 901 . 88/. Tin —English sells slowly at official prior ; bat little business done in foreign ; Straits realises 1171. far fine quality ; Haack 118/. 10s. nominal ; the Dutch market is quiet at 68i florins. Tin plates—Bat few fresh orders are Men t out, price unaltered. Lead is firm, bat not muck good soft English from 211. Is. to 21/. 15s. Boehm — The ;east is a shade linear, 181. to 181. 2a. 6d., the price on the spot here and in Hull ; 181. 10a. demanded for for ward delivery. COMMERCIAL AND MARKETS. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. (ram DAY.) Orr stscriuo AXD DITIZNATIONAL razowit.) (rum ova own oosastroimimr.) There is anther better feeling is the market today, asi more inquiry. Balm will probably foot up 5,000. TALLOW MARKET.—(THIS DAY.) The market is steady at the snoozed prior : —Town tallow, 44a, set cash ; Petersburg Y. 0., oa the spot, 44e. January to March, 43e. 9d . ; March, 445. 3d. ; April to June, 44a. 3d. ; October to Dosember. 465. !damn , Aviasors.—Town tallow, 465. 6d. ; fat by ditto, 2s. 34d. ; yellow Bunion, 455. 6d. ; melted stuff, 3 6d. ; rough ditto, 181.; tallow grams, 12a. ; good dreg, 7s. SMITHFIELD HAY MARKET.—(THIS DAY.) Mews. Haney sad Enka report trade firm at last day's mina Prime meadow hay, 70s. to 755. ; superior ditto, 80s. to 85e. ; inferior ditto, 50s. to 60a ; clover, old, 90s. to 110 s. ; ditto, second cut, 84a. to 1001. ; straw, 3'3. to 36e. COVENT GARDEN. -(T HIS DA Y.). Trades dull sad sales heavy. Importations of foreign good., including Preach Wading and asparagus, are well kept up, and English grown produce is more than sufficient for the demand. Among apples are Newtown Pippins, Pomme d'Api, and Iteinettes. Cles and pine mailed are plentiful. Peen consist of Beurri Diet. Glon Worcestt. Jean de Witte, sad Chaumontel. St. Michael oranges bitch from 26e. to per box. Cucumbers are amroe. Potato sales have altered little since list report. Cut Bowen still chiefly consist of orchids, pelargoniums, violets, mignonette, and roes. Pine Apples, per lb., Ss to Be Grapes, per lb., Is to 105 Melon.. each, le to 4a ' - Granges, per bon, ?A to 3ft per 100. 4s to es Na,ut small, p. bush , les to 18s Chestnuts. do., 8s el to 22s Almonds, do., 184 Brazils, do., 11l Walnuts, do., 185 Kent Cobs, p.loolbe, 1405 to 120 e realm. I Asparagus, per 100, 75 to Bs Seakale, per punnet. es to 8. ad Shallots, per lb. thl to 8d Garlic, per lb, 8.1 to 2.1 Lettuces, each, Id Endive, per score. Is to 11 Horseradish, per bun.. Is ed to li Salsify, per bundle. Is eld to es Scorzoncra p. bundle, is 3d loft Mushrooms, p.pott.,la 9.1t0 La Parsley, per 12 bunches, 3.• tots Herbs, per bunch, 241 to 4.1 Lean, per doL, 1s t 0 b per sieve, es to Ills Apples, per dos., Od to 1s ed per sieve, es to Os Lemons, per 100, 33!d told VEGETI Cabbages, p Act., 811 to le Potatoes.. Vol* ' , Mott. P ion, 110 s to „ Tubes, do , 1110 s to 140 e „ Rocks, do., les to GOs Cum do.. 804 to 00s ninny*, per bunch, &I to Carrot*, 110 , td to ad Spinach, per dere, I. 0d to Ti Cucumbers, each, le to la Ild Bed, per dos.. ls Od Celery, per bundle, hid to Is French Scuus, per 100, is to Se TRAFFIc RETURNS. —The traffic receipts of rail ways in the United Kingdom amounted for the week ending the 3rd of January, on 10,584 miles, to 483.336/., and for the corresponding week of last year, on 10,193 miles, to 460,790 W., @bowing an increase of 391 miles. and of 22,6001. in the receipts. The gross receipts on the fol lowing 14 railways amounted in the aggregate, on 7,268 miles, to 380,9421. ; and for the corr.- spooding week of 1862, on 7,008 mike, to 364,7131.; showing en increase of 280 mike, and of 16,2291. in the re ceipts. The itICTOINI on the Caledonian amounted to 202'. ; oo the Great Fosters to 1,5331. • on the Great Northern to 1,0974 ; op the Great Watern to 3,21.21.; on the Lanceshir . • sod Yorkshire to 139/. • on the Loalon and North-Western to 3,31 W. ; on the L ondon, Brighton. and South Coast to 6631. ; on the London and South-Western to 1,3341. • on the Manchester , She ffi eld, and Lincoln shire to 664/. • on the Midland to 3,223/. ; on the North British to 1,13. ; on the North Eastern to 796/. ; and ea the South-Eastern to 3371. ; total, 17,624/. Bat from this must he deducted 1,3951., the decrease on the Great Southern and Western, leaving the increase, as above, 16,2291. The goods and mineral traffic on those line amounted to 195,20 W., and for the corresponding week of 1862 to 187,237/., showing an increase of 7,963/. The receipts for paasehgers. parcels, Lc., amounted to 185,7401. against 17.,476/., showing an increase of 8,2641. The traffic receipts on 64 other lines amounted, on 3.316 miles, to 102,4541., and for the oorreponding week of last year, on 3,185 miles, to 96,0831., showing an increase of 131 miles, and of 6,3711. in the receipts. The total receipts of the past week 'bow a decrease of 47,3141. as corn wed with those of the preceding week, /radial; Decem ber 27. I Barran Tiler amt.—This applies to the les. Winter is originated by Alfred Webb Wiles, whose only address is 73, Brook-street, Hanover-sonare, Vi.—lAdrertiss mein.) I. lON. 141011 %NO 5 1 NO I no 511,111111 ISM° SAO MAN 5 01It - tool 14049 .-• XD - XII •! 8 - 10k 21 10 . I !!! I i 12 rii 4 - 311 I MI SSC _ld 101 | 1863-01-10T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.746 | 0.262 |
0002642-00000 | "SPORTING INTELLIGENCE. THE GREAT SPRING HANDICAPS. ZPSOII SPRING If ESTDIG. 5111711.1 roa WEB OM AN(...TRUNCATED) | 1863-01-10T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.738 | 0.23 |
0002642-00000 | "I T‘ , Tvbt fprt4 /;-4 1 , , r EW S PAPE it , ft- , 41: of ket, r'4 o - r i tifo gAg x S'S all Xd(...TRUNCATED) | 1863-10-17T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.692 | 0.257 |
0002642-00000 | "Mr' P ATENT MEDAL AWARDER) ALLEN'S PATENT PORTMANTEAUS and TRAVELLING BAGS trltb apiary , nether. L(...TRUNCATED) | 1863-10-17T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.855 | 0.18 |
0002642-00000 | "Thomas Saunders, driver of the pamenger train, said that the white lamp signal was meant for him, a(...TRUNCATED) | 1863-10-17T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.699 | 0.265 |
0002642-00000 | "SPORTING INTELLIGENCE. NEWMARKET SECOND OCTOBER mEgriNG.—Fuoar. The concluding day's apart of the(...TRUNCATED) | 1863-10-17T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.703 | 0.22 |
0002642-00000 | "i 1 1111.... N S PAPER (r e AV?* Kt7Q-.41:1A '; (4 r t al \\ Ai . 4 V '363a VidX2 X P * rt% a t •(...TRUNCATED) | 1863-07-04T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.702 | 0.241 |
0002642-00000 | "PI 8E and LUBIN'S HUNGARY WATER, Ph Ord YLACTICK, REFRESH NO, I N IGOR AT NG I am tmt surprised to (...TRUNCATED) | 1863-07-04T00:00:00 | The Express. | London, England | 0.838 | 0.202 |
Dataset Card for ERWT Hertiage Made Digital Newspapers training data
Dataset Summary
This dataset contains text extracted at the page level from historic digitised newspapers from the Heritage Made Digital newspaper digitisation program. The newspapers in the dataset were published between 1800 and 1870.
The data was primarily created as a dataset for training 'time-aware' language models.
The dataset contains text generated from Optical Character Recognition software on digitised newspaper pages. This dataset includes the plain text from the OCR alongside some minimal metadata associated with the newspaper from which the text is derived and OCR confidence score information generated from the OCR software.
Breakdown of word counts over time
Whilst the dataset covers a time period between 1800 and 1870, the number of words in the dataset is not distributed evenly across time in this dataset. The figures below give a sense of the breakdown over time in terms of the number of words which appear in the dataset.
year | total word_count | unique words |
---|---|---|
1800 | 282,554,255 | 15,506,515 |
1810 | 328,817,174 | 18,295,974 |
1820 | 328,817,174 | 18,295,974 |
1830 | 194,958,624 | 10,816,938 |
1840 | 305,545,086 | 17,018,560 |
1850 | 376,194,785 | 20,942,876 |
1860 | 305,545,086 | 17,018,560 |
1870 | 51,241,037 | 2,284,803 |
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
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Languages
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Dataset Structure
Data Instances
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Data Fields
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Data Splits
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Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
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Source Data
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
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Who are the source language producers?
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Annotations
Annotation process
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Personal and Sensitive Information
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Considerations for Using the Data
Social Impact of Dataset
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Discussion of Biases
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Other Known Limitations
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Contributions
Thanks to @github-username for adding this dataset.
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