UL SIHlf jlfdi t x "ft Mr ft " 7 Q! itt f t I .'-:V' JLiEil ' L Jilt 1' iLI rlfL iILL ! ilJlll I 1 ilP I t li h 1 i r B i ir! i n - Mi, THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DE7S OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALi UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE POOS. EBEiYSBURG, JANUARY 3o' xSf v y s 'V vy 'y w ' .Nyx. s.Ji' - f j m n UJ I'd in . tl YOL. 3. iYO. 15. TERM'S Til IK DEMOCRAT & SBNT1NEL, is publjsh-o-l every Wednesday morning, in Ebcnsburg, Cambria Co., Par, at $1 50 per annum , if a id is advance, if not .$2 will bo charged. ADVERTISEMENTS will bo conspicuously in serted at the following rates, viz : ' 1 square 3 insertions, $1 00 Every subsequent iusertioH, 25 1 square 3 months, 3 00 1 ' 6 " C 00 " " 1 year, 12 00 " col'n 1 year, GO 00 " 15 00 Business Card. - 5 00 J-Twelva lines cms! State a square. TIIK FAM.ES IHitE. Arc wc not all of the same great rV.terT.ity, Members alike f the Human Fraternity I Whether in youth oi All swept alike i: t Havo wo our wcvik: us! Unspotted aud pure of US ! .er materity,- futuritv ' -yea, every one of .ict a mother a dear s -n i.-r Il-re is a b (YOU Lis Ties tin.; hi; ("-:.;-:- roiher in meekness r.n.l checrfah would J' II' with iLu-ful- tue gutter s at . f hi lK-rfeCt ipi: rity. urify!) humility; :l of ability!) there needles: rs- jiu! i.iur ve no he Pa-. iih; ( l.iur.i oi your brother Lck1 heed IeW ; Ixnd Lr a ha Seak tj iiii'.i ! Trample 1 "mi n i, hi !p a fellow unfortunate mgly l.i.i I!y import tmate ; for Li i dreadful insanity, S iJly true type is he of fiad hun.:iity ! Dave yo to t.u!:t hi;;j, !kloeil Society, Of genteel behavior and Christian sobriety? You make the pit (but you don't like to thi of it!) Then, with your sauvity, lure to the bind; it : of 1 nuiulr c.ls c.it-npe A tl e Human l'ratornit; Tkousuii g o dowii the larK fit to i.ter:: Go to h:m, brother 1 man- to :.:m T- Ur J ' Tc'l him you care for him kva him exceed ingly; Then let the deed be the pi ;xf of tinccrify Trustily point him the way to prosperity ; btoop to the clay from your mushroom u vanity, A baud and a word to dej ted humanity. Ilis n;j ineia'. ' v:.:l, :i t'.o.i'-T.t ir :i e:i( him No eye to slit Oae gleam oi oil ms pathway 01 learlu hop--ii.l:a:s one ray of ness, checr- fulness ? Will not the hand of beneficent holiness Keach to uplift him from indigent lowliness? O that mankind were not blind to their parity That selfishness miht be less common th.i charity ; Oh, that the world Lad more Christ-like hi: mility, And good deeds increased with increase e ability ; That the Image of God could be shorn of i: vanity, Aud righteousness rule in the breast of h ti mamty A. THE EIGHTH CF JANUAF.T III HEW ! The Anniversary of General Jackson' c vic tory ui Now Orleans has been celebrated with great enthusiasm in many places ; but at 2ew York with unusual pomp and magnificence Civic and military parade, orations, the firing of canon, the shipping in port, theatres aud public houses decorated with the ieltar Span gled Banner and other emblematic devices, ' commemorated the glorious occasion. The evening cf the day was devoted to festivity. Amongst others we notice a splendid Demo cratic Banquet at the Metropolitan Hotel, at which several hundred gentlemen, assisted, and veterans of the Democracy were present from all quarters of tho Union. Our atten tion Las been arrested by tho speech made by our townsman, William J. Rose, Esq., re sponding to the tenth regular toast : ' The Press: t.'te Vfe J Freemen the Death of Turants." piUhic " The Devil and Doctor Faustus." William-J Kose, Esq., of the New York Daily News, responded to this toast. Mr. Rose, upon rising, apolo-ized for even answering tuc call which had been so flatter ingly tend,rcd him by the President and members of the National Democratic Club It was with unfeigned diffidence that ho felt himself standing there iu the presence of men whose eminent talent and political as well as forensic and literary ability had been tried in bo many fields of brilliant achievement, .and, while the hall still rang with the rever berations of eloquence worthy of the Forum and the Agora, when genius of that kiud gov erned empires, and won the homage of the world jt was with earnest misgivings that he stood there to offer his feeble words in re sponse to a sentiment so important and so full of meaning as the one which had just b.vu prrt,..uT:.- A, nore especially, as there had betti neither time nor opportunity at Lis coni- maii.j to ii.ape a syllable of his s reply ; yet be j had thus selee- f Lasted to t hit L-ir.lrnv ulur-fi teJhiui among so many abler aud more expe- i rienced gentlemen now present, and connec ted with the profession lie had the honor, for a moment there, to lepresent, to bear with him an instant and to hear him "for his cause." He felt in this society that he was at least encircled by tho intelligent e and the consideration which must ever distinguish Americans professing the principles he saw emblazoned upon their political escutcheon, and assembled to commemorate a victory won over the assailants of their country, while from the breathing canvas placed against these walls, the eyes of their hero immortal to fame though dead to earth seemed to craze I down upon them a subbmo approval as they I offered up together their common vows upon t the altar of a common and national patriot j ism. And thus surrounded, though as pro i found y sensible of the responsibility devolved i upon him, Le would not like a raw and timed j recruit while scarred veterans looked on, j shrink from the demand of duty. If the j steam engine be a Democrat, the Press is the very leader the Jackson of Democrats and ! while it, in its high mission ever assumes the responsibility, it, in no circumstance, allows I its subalterns and co workers to falter. The mission of tfie Press he had said was lofty ! its history had been the history of accelerated i human progress the stroke of the first rude WOGdCU type impressed on ruder paper by the eager zeal or ttie poor Liorrnan carver naa seemed like the signet of Providence itself cfa.ii pod i:i a visible character to mark the close of a dark era passed, a nd the a n w uoox on whoso pages t:ie records ot liu- maniiv were, thenceforth, to be written inlet ters or Jiving ligut. the ciuaint Trutonh Fi-oni that period when fancy mingled the won der workings of that rough imprint with the mysterious pranks ascribed to an incident per sonage, who shall be nameless, and his repu ted private Secretary, Dr. Fau.-t, and enrich ed their romantic poe.-y with fresh material for these dreams which ban? around the foot- rcps of scientiiie discovery, as mists environ the approach of day, from that odd period- the ruvIQ end oi modern history down to our ! own taemiug time, the 1'ress has traveled on its silent way, its little emissaries leaping, with certain aim, type after type, from its ex baustless armory, beating down the barriers 01 error and letting in the light 1 f truth upon the stagnant places cf the human mind, or gathering here and ihero and everywhere a particle of knowledge, has built up from the very deeps of ignorance new and glorious worlds for the abode of f he emancipated gen triitlon.). As the Assyrian monarch blenched when on the arches of his palace, the strange writinsr rrleamed out which none could read ( but he who here with him the inspiration from on high to solve it, so has tyranny faltered and trembled on her throne where those mys terious characters have risen before them, mirroring her misdeeds and summoning her to a reckoning with the people she has crushed and scourged. 5-uch has been the story of the 1 ress, ana u tae nours si; claims iJi laoor a war nmcc voice, did not utter, and even now miirat call up m review an array of the splendors which have tkiMied along her on ward pathway that could scarcely fail to daz zle and confound but while we here utter cur mutual congratulations on this -proud an niversary, ve iCCu. but look around upon the realm ot treeuom we lnnerit, ana the privile ges we this night cnioy, to comprehend how far the press has aided in th ch" acouisnion, ana now 1 is worKiiig on, tor tneir perpetua- tion on nunureus or thousands of win its iho good worda this night, spoken here, the patriot!'. sentiments so eloquently uttered, the admonitions and encouragements addressed to our brethren in the faith, the stern reprobation of error and the high, man ly assertion and defense of truth will be Hying over our vast laud : aye, and even over the rant rossiii'' seas taat 'iru it and image 111 with the Protection of their Winter storms the freeman's home, bearing healing a far aud good tidings to millions who are looking forth to gicet their coming. Applause. Y'es, all this the quiet agency of these Uttle leavas scattered here ( pointing to some blank papers on the table,) ha adec-ted and will cfioet to wards the great consummation we are all toil ing for, let us hope, iu the various pursuits, to which fortune, bind of churlish, has as signed us. And do not forget, gentlemen, while you sit in the midst of the glow that high success has cast in such profusion around you, while you enjoy the rich remunerations of wealth and eminence that merit has won from the hands of men, do not forget that in chambers aud rooms nearest to the cellar or the roof, in narrow streets, remote from the avenues of luxurious abode, and buried in an obscurity which but the eye of the keen and thoughtful intelligence can penetrate, there are oilier men laboring aael laboring again with diligence that never tires, and an enthusiasm which nothing can exhaust, to help on these wheels cf progress and to add their mlie to the triumphs of their natbn and their time I The speaker continued to trace the severe duties cf editors and others engaged in the conduct of the press-, their toils, their conso lations and their rewards, claiming for them the credit of faithful soldiers in the cause of freedom. Leading from this to a political consideration of the pcrlexi and the land in which we live, he warmly asserted the mag- i uin.ee nt mission to which the National Domoc- ! racy is called, plead for the exile who comes ! to us of every creed and clime, and referring 1 to the elevated statesmanship manifested in that flauc of the Dcmocratio address uttered at Syracuse, August 23, gf5, which made me jeuiocratie form so broad that all the nations of the earth might rest secure upon it ; said that if the Democracy remembered j tue struggles of their brethren ia Europe, as j veil as. 011 the Yv'estcru Continent, and boldly j asserted tho true doctrine of American lle j publicanism as they had thus far done, their victory in November next would be not only the rescue of our own glorious confederation but another triumph won for all humanity.. j In every distant land, where freedom has a friend, the hearts of men would turn to us and bless us ; and we should have but begun the higher career of our republic that would inaugurate the reign of liberty . and cluster around its standard the coming glories of our race, giviug to it all that human genius has hitherto wasted at tho feet of tyrants : " Yes, in that generous cause, forever strong, The patriot's virtue and the pott's song Still as tho tide of ao roils away Shall charm the world unconscious of decav." Firct Trip cf the First Locomotive in Amer ica. William Wurts, Esq., of Carbondale, Perm' ' communicates the following paragraph, clip ped from an old newspaper, to the Carbondale Transcript. This paragraph confirms the statement of It. F. Lord, Esq., putlished in the Port Jervis Union, a few weeks since, and apparently settles the question as to whom belongs the credit of having run the first locomotive steam engine on the Ameri can continent. The Trul Titrr of the Fmsr Locomotive. Major Horatio Allan, the Engineer of the Xew York and Erie Railroad, in a speech ma.'e during the recent festival occasion, gave the following account of the first trip made by a locomotive on this continent. When was it ! Who was it ! And who awakened its energies and directed its move ments ! It was in the year IS1I8, cn the banks of the Lackawanna at the commence ment of the railroad connecting the canal of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company with their coal mines and he who addresses 30U was the only person on that locomotive. The circums tances which led to my being alone on the engine, were these. The road had been built in the summer, the structure was of hemlock timber, and rails of large di mensions notched on enps placed far apart. The timber had cracked oad w-irped from ex- posure to sun. Lflor dred feet of straight line tas road c-rossou the Lackawanna Creek, on trestle work about o( feet high with a curve of i"0 to 400 feet radi us. The impression was very general that this iron monster would either break down the road, or that it would leave the track at the curve and plunge into the creek. luy reply to such apprehensions was that it was too late to consider the probability of such oc currences, there was no other course than to have a trial made of the strange animal, which had been bronght here at great expense ; but that it was not necessary that more than one should be involved in its fate ; that I would take the first ride alone, and the time would corn when I should look buck to the incident with great interest. As I placed my baud on the throttle valve handle, I was undecided whether I would move slowly or with a fair d'-grec cf speed, but believing that the road would prove safe ; and preferring, if we did go down, to go handsomely, ana without any evidence of ti midity, I started with considerable velocity, passed the curve over the creek safely, and was soon out of hearing of the cheers of the vast assemblage. At the end of two or three miles, I reversed the valve, and returned without ac cident to the place of starting, having thus made the first railroad trip by locomotive ou the Western Hemisphere. A Buy Supposed to Lave been lulled by his Cvn. Father and Erothcr. Intense excitement was created in the city yesterday morning by the intelligence that a boy had been fouud dead in hLs bed, under circumstances which led to the suspicion that ho had been killed by the violence of Lis rel atives, during a state of intoxication. The boy's name was Carey, aged thirteen years, and his parents, Thomas and Mary Carey, have frequently been before our police court for drunkenness and disorder. They resided in Spring street. From the evidence given below, the Coroner's Jure- returned a vertlet in accordance with the sucpie-ion mc-naoted above. It appears that on Wednesday night his father, mother, and brother had indulgtd in a drunken orgy ; yesterday morning the boy was found dead on a pallet, laid on tin floor, (where his father and brother had als blept,) in the corner of a room, the only apart ment occupied by the family, where thoy liv ed in squalor and wretchedness. His head and body were covered with bruises. Near his bed, and about his height above the floor, was an indentation in the wall, apparently made by his head, as if it had been violently jammed there. It seems quite probable also that he had fallen down stairs, but whether accidentally or by bciag pushed, is doubtful; the phj'sicians. however, who examined the body, testilied that his deatluwas not caused by the injuries so received. Coroner Downi was called in the morning, and Dr. J. IS. Coleman having been summoned to make aa examination, a jury was empanelled, and tie adjourucc to permit tins to be uCljO. -i.i;er Hearing tne testimony, tue jury venuor- ft i- 1 - Y . . . 1 1,. ft,. cd the following verdict : That Johu Cary, the deceased, came to his death from injuries received at the bauds of Thomas and YvTilikm Carey, iu a manner unkuown to the iury. Trenton. Gazette of the 'loth An Incident tuat Bium its own Com ment. Isaac, a boy servant of Gc-n. Quitman, arrived home a few da-s since. Shortly after tiie General reached Washington city, Isaac expressed a great desire to return home to Mississippi. Upon being pressed for his rea sons for so sudden a wish, ho told his master that ho had been repeatedly beset by two white men from Boston, who urged him to accept their aid to run from bis master. He stated that he was afraid that he would be kid napped into freedom, as ho believed the two men were capable of auy atrocity. The General gave Isaac a pass, with which he safely reached home, to his infinite satisfac- tion. Xatchez (Miss) Free Trader, J,ui V ashington. Li tter of Lord John HitsstU or. Central Am-cr-'ican- Affairs The Central American (Ques tion, Important Ofieial Corre$irnJ ncv. Washington, Jan. 21, 1S5G. I send you the annexed correspondence up pon Central American affairs. You perceive, by the proceedings of the Senate, that the subject therein discussed will be taken up in that body on Monday next, when an import ant debate will in probability ensue : L0I1D JOHN UCSSELL TO MR. CHAMPION . -. - - London, Jan. 10, 1S53. - Sir In treating of the affairs of 3Iosquito, I must in tho first place refer you to the despatch of Lord 31almesbury of the Gth of July, 1S52, upon this subject. It is evident that since Great Britain first assumed the protectorate and defence of the Mosquito In dians, the position of all parties has changed. First Spain, instead of exercising absolute sovereignty over Central America, and pro hibiting all commerce on tho coasts under her sway, has entirely lost her dominion from Cape Horn to Florida. Second The Mosquito Indians, instead of governing their own tribe according to their own customs, furnish a name aud title to Europeans and Americans, who carry on trade at Creytowu and along the coast of Uosquito, according to the usages of civilized Rations. Third Crcat Britain, instead of having an interest in the defence of tho Mosquito In dians, for the sake of rescuing part of the territory of Central America from Spanish control, and obtaining an authority for her commerce, baa no other interest in Mosquito than that which is derired from an honorable regard for her old connexion with the Indian nation of Mosquito. Her Mjesty'.5 government has for several yci.rs c-itdeavoreu to suit her emnu'emonts to the altered circumstances of the case; but every proposal that has made with this view has encountered some insuperable obstacle. The contentions in Central America between Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Honduras ; tho absence of any authority with which any permanent agreement could be made; un founded jealousies of Great Britain, aud various other circumstances, have prevented the settlement of this vexatious question. Iu conformity with the opinions stated Li Lord Malmesbury's despatch of July 10, to which I have already referred, I have to state that the committee of government of Grey town are in f?ct the real power that exercises autiority in that part of Central America. To her Majesty's Government it would be a ma.ter of indifference whether that authority was exercised in the name of the King of Mcpquito or in the name of Grey town itself Bu it is desirable that what Ls apparent should be uadc to con form as far as possible with what is real. What is apparent is that the KiDg of Mosquito exercises sovereignty over Grytov.n. What is real, is that he has no authority there whatever, but that the com mittee of Europeans and Americans carry on the government of that port. Vi'hat her Majesty's government, therefore, should consider a good and fiual arrangement wu!d be First, that Greytown should be a frte and independent port, connected with Misquito by such relations of friendship aud aliiince as may be agreed upxm. Second, that indemnification, or advantages equivalent to those laid down in the project of convention of the 13th of April, 1S52, shall be assured to Mosquito iu return for its withdrawal from its present position with regard to Greytown. Third, that Great Britain and the United Staies, without guaranteeing Greytown, should be ready to act iu concert to defend the inde pendence of the free city or port of Greytown. froai whatever quarter it might be attacked What is essential and of immediate import ance is that the authorities of Greytown should ba really to assume either unqualified independence, with an engagement to defend Mosquito, or qualified independence, owing allegiance and support to Mosquito. For this purpose, some person qualified to treat should proceed at once to Greytown Whether a naval oieer ot uer -'lajesty s service or a t uer -'lajesty s service or a lbea fitter person to be en- is mission, I must leave you to dd be desirable, if the govern- civil one, would be a trusted with this decide. It would mcnt ol tue Lmitod estates snouid concur in vhesc views, that a new convention, iu place ox the unaccepted project of agreement of April, 1852, should be proposed and conclu ded, and that a person similarly qualified should be sent by this government at the same time and for the same object. I have only further to say that indemnity to Mosquito might possibly be not made iu money, lut in greater security, for certain fixed territory within which the free port of Greytown, assisted by her JIajesty'a ships of war, might manage to defend tho Mosquito nation. The Governor General of Cauada, and authorities in other of her Majesty's . TT , tit.. 1 1 North American possessions, have made, from time to time, agreements somewhat similar. President of the United States has fre quently made conveutious with the Indians to the like tifect. The peculiarity of this case is that certain neighboring ot;tes djuy alto gether the ia-Jepeiiueuca of Mosquito, aud the Mosquito nation are liable, every day, to new incursions upon their tenitory. We can make no complete provision against this danger. Our policy ia to do all that honor and humanity require in behalf of the Mosquito nation. But we intend to adhere strictly to the treaty of Washington of the 19th April, 1850, and not to assume any sovereignty, either direct or indirect, in Cen tral America. J. RrssELL. MEMORANDUM IN MR. EVERSTT's HANDWRITING. Mr. Crampton authorized ine to communi cate this to Congress in :tny way I thought proper. Interesting' f roi Patriotic Sentiments. tFov. Medill, of Ohio, closed his message wordsLegislature in the following patriotic " Cenu republics, amiien is the greatest danger of er the motive Vest euch a tendency-, wheth intercst or the grau.idvanccment of special mosity, the American pVyj of sectional ani- V '. - 1 j. , oarrier more secure man moan estaiuisu no ion of political power defined bjrable le divis- Sunders c-OTw of our institutions. " Nor is it necessary, in order to c-otu sippi will tolerate any doubt ot the perpetuity of our league of States. Yv'ith our relations to the lake, river, and gulf coasts of this mighty basin, any scheme of dismemberment 1 which sectional infatuation may engender can- ! not bo received otherwise than with mingled L- scorn and indignation by the patriotic commu nities of the West. "Let it bo understood that the centre of our republican empire will soon reach the shores of the Mississippi, constituting the vast region diained by its tumultuous tlood and innumerable tributaries, the natural arbiter never a belligerent in sectional controver sies. And as long as the a&hes of Andrew Jackson are inured among the Western peo ple, so leng will we cherish, iu sentiment aud in action, his stern and patriotic utterance ' The Union it must be preserved.'" Casualties for a Year. It is not surprising that in these days- of travel, aud of peril by land and by sea, the chapter of accident and casualities for the past year should be long and sad. We have gath ered from reliable sources the facts and S rures which are appended, although it is highly probable that the number of deaths by fatality of travel is somewhat greater than Is here rep resented. During the year 1855, the number of rail road accidents in various parts of the country, resulting in losses of life or of limb was 12, by which 11G persons were killed, and eUi badly wounded. More than GO employees of the railroad companies are iucluded in this number of the killed, of which 20 were cngi neers, and 0 conductors. The steamboat accidents have not been so numerous, amounting to 27, but resulting in 17u deaths, an increase of GO over those caus ed by rail. The loss of property occasioned by destruc tive fires has been enormous, amounting to more than $13,000,000. This is the esti mated loss of abot 200 extcn.-ive conEagra tions ; the figures do not embrace the vast amount of property destroyed by almost innu merable smaller fires. Disastrous as these results seem to be, they are happily far less in magnitude tLau those of the former year, 131. During that year the railroad accidents numbered 51 more, while of the year. the number of tho killed was 70, aud wounded 50 greater than iu the last 1S51 were 43, ie hi Led were dimiuh bed in 1S55 to 27 ; o87, diminished to liG; the we-undeu 22e, diminished to 107. The number of fires in 1854 was 223, which decreased by 30 iu 1855 ; and the loss of pro perty amounted to $20,000,000. which was reduced to 13,000,000 during the last year. TheRcssians in Northern Sevastctol. We read in tho jrcsse d' Orient, under date Sevastopol, 18th ult: " The Russians, en camped on the north of tho bay, must feel rather uncomfortable, for they have not one half of the tittle conveniences we enjoy. As far as we can judge, with the aid of teles copes, their installation is most deficient and incomplete, and their supply of wood very in sufm icnt, for we frequently see numbers of their men seeking fuel amid the brushwood of Inkerman and on the hites of some ruined houses close to the bay. They have become of late more sparing of their gunpowder and projectiles. Seeing that we never respoud to their provocations, they fire less frequently ; nevertheless, when they perceive a horseman or a pedestrian, they cannot resist the tempt ation, and salute him with a cannon ball or a -.1 11 1'.' !...-. ,..,...,...,1 . , , , considerable mc fr J,cb Jasou must hi considerable movement in the Russian camp, is inferred that Prince Gort- have received reinforcements. The works intended to blow up the docks are nearly terminated. An officer of the Engi neers told me the day before yesterday, that tight chambers were realy for the purpose, but not 3-et loaded. The destruction of the.se gigantic works will not be the least curious cpiso'le of the great drama we La-e been ac ting hers for upwards of a year." Effects oy Goon Engineering. We per ceive that the Delaware division of the Penn sylvania Canal, has, for the last year, pro duced the large sum of 392,073, an amount which, after deducting all expenses, will pay ubout 20 per cent, ou the original coct of the Canal. Up to 152, the utmost capacity of this work scarcely exceeded ,200,0o'0 ; but about that time the Canal Commissioners tnen in ofiice, Messrs. Gamble, Morrison, and Clo ver, appoiutod Mr. James Worrell, the pres ent able Engineer of the Uuiou Canal, to su Tierintend some improvements which they thought were needed. Under Mr. Worrell's skillful management, ami at the small cost of about 100, ('00, the work propo.-edwas com pleted thereby nearly doubling the value of the Delaware Division to the State. We have no doubt that this is the most produc tive of the State improvements, and might still be enhanced iu value by a judicious though comparatively nnall expenditure. JtST'The Managers of the Maryland lotter ies havo issued a card, cautioning the public "against the numerous swindlers who circu late by mail acd otherwise, fraudulent Lottery Schemes. " The safest way is to bay neither the spurious ncr the cccuiac. the public approval of these fundamental pri. ! , . V-y 00 ue:ayed omc davs ciples, to add any appeal in behalf of the ITnv" , "patoa mat it will contain ion. No citizen of tlm valley of the Missis- .J,UULL nt nor refusal, but will Arrival cf the Africa. " T, ' , . , .Xeu' I'obk, Jan. 2d. . f -;3"P Africa has arrived with Liv erpool dates to the th inn Her news cousins merely of the extension OI tUO Peace nimnra r.i. I 1... .1. . 1 . e . 1 vaj "i, vjf iuc is?: arri. The Ftoamsbln 7? e x . t- , "T, at. VrrI on the morning of the Sth. . ; v,1 TWr t? Propositions could UUt P'J! I'o expected before the lot J, T . i -...., 1 1. ..in .H'w 101-ic. ur- before the loth, but longer. neither name by renewed 1 iii warlike, an. in England continues to ho again becoming so. ine iiJssians ai araticns for the Fr.rin, a . n, . . 1 -7111 in mcir prcp- imiu is iiuiuiiig 01 imjw,n The docks at Sevastopol crcrbS1 tLe the French on the 22d of December. v . AlTairs in Asia ia present no new featu'L The news from G reat Britain is not of much importance. The Grand Council cf the allied Generals has been opened in Paris. The Conference in relation to the Sound Dues has been postponed indefinitely. Sweden is making active warlike prepara tions. r 1 THE LATEST. The Berlin papers speak not unfavorably of the disposition of Russia to consider the Allied proposals SECOND PE? I'ATCIf . J THE LATEST FROM LONDON, By Telegraph. Loxpoy, Jan. 0. The English funds yes terday experienced a rally of at the open ing cf the market, but a relapse subsequently took place, and at the close the prices stood at the rate of the previous day. The money market was easy, and the de mand good at 5 percent. At Paris the 3 per cents, cloned at J.a' de cline, but foreign exchanges were generally better. J Asia The Russian army took up its position iu Kars on thz 3 1 of December. The troops aro being quartered in the town, leaving a small detachment of Cossacks to occupy the fortifi cations at Sohanly Dagh. At Yeni Keni, a village on the road to Er- zeroum, the Russians had collected largo stores of provisions The Rusf A Russian General is apprehensive of an ipon Kars by Sclim Pacha, and has attaclc upon consequently concentiated all his available force at that point. Selim Pacha was encamped ia the moun tains of Derch Boynou. An attack on Erzercuai by the Russians is not considered probable at the present time. in consequence cf the exhaustion of the troons and the state of tho roads The Peach Proposals. Nothing cf a defJriitc character has as yet transpired at St. Petersburg, aud the specu lations are ss contradictory as ever. An in terview has occurred bctweeu Nesselrode and Esterhazy, but the main question has not been discussed. The most that is expected from Russia is a modified couuter proposition, such as may in sure further negotiation and consequent de lay. In the meantime, the tone of the French Government is more warlike, while the Rus sian preparations to continue tho convict aro. larger and more formidable that; ever. Bavaria sends a special envoy to St. Pe tersburg to support the Saxon envoy. Omar Pacha has arrived at Batoum. Hi army suffered much for want of pro Lions before reaching Kutais, and being unable to proceed, deemed it most prudent to return. The fall of Kars lias rendered Omar Pacha very unpopular at Constantinople. (ten. Williams had arrived at Juniiri. The Council of War at Constantinople id directing all its efforts to the defence of Erzo rcum and Trebizoude. Acstria. It i again confidently asserted that Aus tria will submit the peace propositions to the German Diet' and call upon the Diet to sap port thelu. The Cr.iME.i. - The dates from the Crimea are to Christ mas day. The French Ld blown up one of the docks at Sebaslepol. The Rus.-.Lins Lave increased their fortifica tions over Inkerman and unmasked new bat teries on the left of the Tchernava j General Pollcsier remains in the Crimea, j and General Martempre o ts as Lis proxy at I -1... M ,f ?. r. ine ouuuca c ar progressing in 1 al ls. The recent storms had occasioned no injury to the cssAa of war. Russia. Advices from Okholck state that the Allied fleet had quitted the Gulf without finding tho cannon buried tht-re by the Russians. The Grand Council cf War assembled at Petersburg!!, is principally engaged in (luestion: iciaung to the fortifying the strat egic points throughout the empire. The fortifications at Kiew will be finished before- the close of tl nc wmter The railroad from cow to St. Peters burg!! is t) bo protected by redoubts placed at intervals ahmg the line, and each to be oc cupied by a buttwlioii of iufuntry militia. Persia. A letter from Paris, alluding to the recent report that the United States had made a treaty with tLe Shah of Persia, guaranteeing the ter.i.ory on the Persian Gulf, says that, although no sue h treaty has been made, yet It is certain that the most friendly advances have been made, and it is unfortunate that at the moment when both Ilussia and America nr.? j intriguing with the Shah, a suspension of th j diplomatic rcbuivng of P.'p-ja with England i sL'jUiJ Lave taken i-laee. . ii.ii"li .uj ue seined i e I n ir