1 152 
Gullle (o !.e Second Captain ; Second Lieutenant Noel Hamlyn Harris 
to bo First Lieutenant ; First Lieutenant Charles F.dword Oldersliavv to 
be Second Captain ; Second Lieutenant Oswald Carr to be First Lieu- 
tenant ; Lieut. -Colonel William Bates Inplby to bo Colonel ; Brestt 
Major Edward Walter Croiton to bo Lieut -Colonel ; Second Captain 
Joseph Clarke Childs to be Captain ; First Lieutenant Nathan, el Octa- 
vius Simpson Turner to be Second Captain ; Second Lieutenant Henry 
Whitby Briscoe to be First Lieutenant; Second Captain (.corgeY un- 
der he/den Johnson to be Captain ; First Lieutenant Augustus \oung 
Earle to be Second Captain ; Second Lieutenant W Ilham (.eorgo Mar- 
tin to bo First Lieutenant ; Second Captain Adolphus Frederick Con- 
nell to be Captain ; First Lieutenant the lion. Leonard Allen Adding- 
ton to be Second Captain ; Second Lieutenant Philip Henry Sandilands 
to l>c First Lieutenant. 
BANKRUPTS. 
William Watts, East Cowes, Isle of Wight, chemist, druggist, grocer, 
and mealmon— James Bach, Ludlow, Shropshire, auctioneer and seeds- 
man— Betty Baron, Henry William Knowles, nnd James Hey worth, 
lineup, Lancashire— Robert Jackson, Lomhard-street, City, ship 
owner and merchant— William Haile, late of Foster-lane, City, nnd 
now of Pownall-road, Dnlston, lace dealer— Joseph Whitehead, Brad- 
ford, Yorkshire, coach-builder— ^ William Bartholomew, late of Chiches- 
ter, cabinet maker— Charles Parker and Edwin Parker, Northampton, 
boot and shoe manufacturer— Robert Adams, Liverpool, merchant— 
James Thomas Snow, Pollen-street, Maddox-street. Hanover-square, 
butcher— James Balding, King’s Arm’s-placc, Old Kent-roa.l, hat ma- 
nufacturer— James Gankrogcr, Titus Cankroger, and William Slater, 
Halifax, cotton spinners — John Upson, Bexley Heath, Kent, boot and 
shoe makers— William Finch, formerly of Crutched-friurs, City, after- 
wards of Woburn -place, RusseU-squore, Middlesex, and of Bartho- 
lomew-lnnc, City, wine merchnnt— Edward Jones, Chester, timber 
merchant— John Taylor and James Burton, Stockport, power-loom 
cloth manufacturers— William Littlejohn Dowie, Manchester, tailor 
and draper— Robert Robinson, Manchester, provision dealer— Titus 
Oankroger and James Ganliroger, New Bridge and Lord noline Mills, 
Yorkshire, cotton spinners. 
MONEY MARKET. 
Monday. — The announcement that Parliament is to meet on the 12th 
Instant had an unfavourable influence on the English funds, since it is 
assumed that questions of increased expenditure will occupy attention 
at an early date. Consols for money, which left off alter regular 
hours on Saturday evening at 98$, opened this morning at 92 to 
and, although several further speculative purchases were made 
throughout the day by those who still retain a belief that Austria is 
about to declare agoinst Russia, the market continued to show weak- 
ness ; at one time there was a decline to 91$, and the final price was 
91$ to 92. Bank Stock left off at 209$ to 2 1 1 ; Reduced, 90$ to £ ; 
New Three per Cents., 90$ to $ ; Long Annuities, 4$; India Stock, 
230 to 233 ; India Bonds, Ss. to 10s. premium ; Exchequer Bills, 3s. to 
Os. premium ; and Exchequer Bonds, 99$ to $. The next account-day 
is appointed for the 10th of January ; and Consols for that period were 
lost quoted 92$ to $. The January account has usually been fixed for 
the opening of the transfer-books, ofter the dividends ; but that prac- 
tice has now been departed from. The opening day is the 17 th of 
January. 
Tuesday. — In consequence of the anticipations expressed, thnt pro- 
posals for a loan may probably be submitted to Parliament at an early 
date, the English funds opened at u decline of $ per cent Consols 
for money, which left off on Monday at 91$ to 92, were first quoted 9 1 to 
$, whence, after some fluctuations, they advanced to 91$ to $, at which 
they remained up to the termination of business. For the January 
account the last price was 91$ to $. Bank Stock closed at 209 to 211 ; 
Reduced, S9$ to $ - } New Three per Cents., 89$ to 90. Long Annui- 
ties, 4’ ; India Stock, 230 to 233 ; India Bonds, Ss. to 11s. premium ; 
Exchequer Bills, 3s. to Cs. premium. 
Wednesday. — The authorised statement to the effect that there is no 
immediate intention of applying to Parliament for a loan, caused the 
English funds to open at an advance ; but the subsequent intelligence 
of the disasters in the Black Sea, during the gale of the l lth ult,, led 
to a reaction, and the market closed with dulness. Consols for money, 
which left off last evening at 91$ to $, were first quoted 91$to$; 
after which they ranged for some time between 91$ and 91 $ They 
then declined to 91$, and remained without recovery up to the termi- 
nation of business. For the January account the last price was 91$. 
Bank Stock left off at 209 to 210 ; Reduced, 89$ to $ ; New Three per 
Cents., 89$ to $ ; Long Annuities, 4$; India Stock, 230 to 233 ; India 
Bonds, Ss. to 11s. premium; Exchequer Bills, 3s. to Gs. premium. It is 
stated, In explanation of the next account-day having been fixed for the 
10th of January, instead of for the 17th, the day for the opening of 
the transfer-books, that the committee of the Stock Exchange are de- 
sirous that the Consol settlement should on all occasions take place as 
nearly as possible at intervals of a month, and that also it should fall 
between the 5th and the 10th, so as not to clash with the share settle- 
ment at the middle and end of each month. Although the books will 
not be generally open on the 10th, they will be so for what are called 
private transfers, which merely involve an extra payment of 2s. Gd. ; 
and the inconvenience was therefore considered less than would have 
arisen from suffering the account to extend, as it would otherwise have 
done, over a period of six weeks. 
TnunsDAY. — The tone of the English Stock market was firmer, but 
business ruled rather dull than otherwise. The period approaches 
when the transfer-books of Consols will be shut, and, as usual on such 
occasions, Consols for a few days previously became rather buoyant, 
because the public are anxious to secure an early dividend on tlicir 
investment. The market is now under the influence of this circum- 
stance. Consols have been operated in to-day at from 91$to 91$, 
and left off firmly at 91$to$. The Reduced Three per Cents, have 
varied from 89$ to 90$ ; and the New Three per Cents, between 89$ 
to 90$ ; Exchequer-bills, 3s. to Gs. prem. ; Bank Stock has further 
declined 1 per cent., and is now 208 to 210 ; India Stock, 230 to 232 ; 
India Bonds, Ss. to 11s. prem. 
Friday. — The Funds are supported with tolerable firmness up to 
the close of official business, and Consols were last quoted at 91$ to 91$ 
for both money and time. Reduced Three-per«Cents. and the New 
Three-per-Cents. remain at 89$ ; Bank Stock dull at 209 ; India 
Stock, 233. Exchequer Bills unchanged; ditto Bonds receded to 
99$ There has been little doing in Foreign Stocks, and prices are but 
little altered, Dutch Four per Cents., Certificates, have been dealt in 
up to 90$. Turkish Scrip is slighty better at 8 to 7$ dis. 
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS. 
BIRTHS. 
On the 27tli ult, Mrs. Charles Cotton, Philharmonic Rooms, New- 
man-street, of a sou — On the 27th ult, the wife of the Rev. William 
Somerset, of a daughter — On the 27th ult, the wife of the Rev. G. W. 
Durby, rector of Feraflold, of a son — On the 28th ult., at the Lawn, 
Bristol), Norfolk, the wife of the Rev, James Waller Bird, of a daughter 
— On the 28th ult, at 12, Avenue-road, Regent's-park, the wife of Mr. 
Geo. Gilbert Scott, of a son — On the 2 8th ult, at the Rectory, Barnes, 
Surrey, the wife of the Rev. R. E. Copleston, of a sou — On the 28th 
ult, at Shepton Mallet, Somersetshire, the wife of John Seppings Har- 
rison, Esq., of a daughter — On the 29th ult, at Grosvenor House, 
Blackheath, the lady of W. Gray, Esq., of a son. 
MARRIAGES. 
On the 28th ult, at St John's Church, Cardiff, by the Rev. Cyril 
Stacey, the Rev. Charles Ruinsey Knight of Tythegston Court, Vicar 
of St. Bride's Major, in the county of Glamorgan, to Mary Anne 
Elizabeth, only daughter of the Rev. Thomas Stacey, Precentor of 
Llandaff and Rector of Gelligaer, in the same county — On the 23rd 
ult., at the parish church of Byton, Herefordshire, by the Rev. AllYcd 
James Lowth, incumbent of Hranksea, Dorset, the Rev. Arthur Lowth, 
son of the late Rev. Robert Lowtli, and grandson of the Right Rev. 
Robert Lowth, D.D., formerly Bishop of London, to Jane Spencer Per- 
ceval, third daughter of Thomas Bourke Ricketts, Esq., Coowbe House, 
Herefordshire — On the 28th ult, at St. Peter's Church, Bedford, by the 
THE FIELD. 
Rev Richard Garde, M.A., rector of Uarrold, Beds, cousin of the bride. 
Henry Piert, F.sq., surgeon R.N., late of H.M.8. Investigator, and 
second son of the late Rev. Octavius Piers, vicar of Preston, near Wey- 
mouth, to Ellen Sarah, youngest daughter of the late John Colburn, 
of Cork— On the 28th ulL, at the Abbey Church, Malvern, by the Rev. 
F. F. Close, of Cheltenham, uncle of the bride, George Davison, Esq., 
Bombay Army, eldest son of the late Daniel Wilson Davison, Esq., oi 
the Brand Hall, near Market Drayton, Shropshire, to Constance Louisa, 
second daughter of the late Major Close, H. M’s 9th Lancers— On the 
28th ult, at St George's Church, Hanover-square, George Marwood, 
Esq., of Bushy Hall, in the North Riding of Yorkshire, to Frances 
Anne, youngest daughter of the Rev. Frederick Peel, prebend of 
Lincoln. 
DEATHS. 
On the 5th ult., killed at the battle of Inkorman, Lieutenant-Colonel 
Charles Francis Seymour, Scots Fusilier Guards, Assistant-Adjutant- 
General 4th Division, aged 35, eldest son of the late Colonel Sir 
Horace Seymour, M.P.— On the 5th ult, at the battle of Inkerman, 
Henengc G. Wynne, Major, G8th Light Infantry, second son of Charles 
W. G. Wynne, Esq., of Voclas, Denbighshire — On the 5tl» ult., killed in 
action at the battle of Inkerman, Captain Sir Robert Lydston Newman. 
Bort., Grenadier Guards, of Mamhead, Devon, in the 3 4tli year of his age 
—On the Glh ult., from a wound received at the battle of Inkerman. in 
the Crimea, Archibald Clcvland, Esq., of Tapley Park, in the county of 
Devon, aged 21, Comet in the 17th Lancers, lie was present nt the 
battle of Balaklava, andjoined with his regiment in the over-memorable 
and glorious charge of the British light cavalry. He was pursued on 
his retreat by three Cossacks : he wounded one ; the other ran his 
lance right through his pouch-box— it was made of silver, and thus 
his lifo was saved; and the third, whose lance was blunted, only bruised 
bis side. He arrived safe to camp, on his wounded and disabled 
charger, but was soon afterwords killed by a piece ot a shell, which 
struck his side. He survived till the morning after the battle, and then 
expired, leaving a widowed mother to bewail the loss of her only son, 
and many sorrowing friends the fate of this gallant young soldier — 
On the 24th ulL, at Alphington, near Exeter, in his G8th year, Charles 
Lewis, Esq., for forty-five years the respected Secretary of the West of 
England Insurance Company — On the 2Gth ult., nt 35, Richmond- 
terracc, Clifton, in the 8Gth year of her age, Mary Bright, daughter of 
the late Lieutenant-General Bright, of the same place — On the 27th 
ult., at Hertford, very suddenly, of disease of the heart, Captain 
Frederick Carter, the Royal Regiment, second son of J. M. Carter, Esq., 
of Northcourt, Abingdon, in the 33rd year of his age, deeply regretted 
by all who knew him. 
SMALL TALSC. 
♦ 
It may be useful in reading details of the siege of Sebasto- 
pol, to know that 300 metres are a shade more than 328 
English yards, and 400 metres 437$ yards, very nearly; 
also that 1,000 metres are 1,093 yards and very near two feet. 
Considerable quantities of gold continue to be sent to 
Spain and Portugal. The Iberia has just taken out £52,000, 
all in gold, to he landed in Lisbon and Cadiz. 
Royal College of Surgeons. — The following gentlemen 
having undergone the necessary examinations for the 
diploma, were admitted members of the college at a special 
meeting of the court of examiners on the 28th ult. — Messrs. 
Charles Beaufoy, of Oxford, and Edward Willis Campbell, 
of Woolwich. 
The Saxon Chambers have just reintroduced flogging in 
gaols, and extended it to the female sex — perhaps a conside- 
rate arrangement, to prepare the bodies of the Saxon lieges 
for the coming events, which, as is known, cast their 
shadows before. 
The English residents in Dresden have subscribed about 
£50 to the Patriotic Fund. 
The Sydney journals of September 20 are mostly taken 
up with the proceedings in the Legislature. One of the 
most prominent topics of discussion was the new constitu- 
tion bill, and the establishment of a mint. The revenue of 
the year was computed at £26,000, and the expenditure 
£34,000. The colonists were contributing liberally to the 
war defence fund. Several very large nuggets have recently 
been discovered. One was found at Maryborough, weighing 
500 ounces, and a quartz specimen found at Ballarat, con- 
taining a large proportion of gold, weighed 98 pounds. 
Two pieces of wreck have been washed on shore at 
Moelfre, on the Welsh coast — one with the name of “ Notting- 
ham” in gilt letters, and the other with " Mary Ann, of 
Liverpool,” on it. Several other pieces of wreck have come 
on shore between Bull Bay and Red Wharf, and a dead 
body has been washed ashore in the latter place. — Liverpool, 
Nov. 28. 
Tenders are to be sent in to the Admiralty on the 6th 
Dec. for the supply of 30,000 gallons of rum ; also, on the 
1st for the supply of 200,000 lbs. of suet, and 20,000 gallons 
vinegar. 
General Brown’s grey charger received eleven bullets at 
the battle of the Alma ; he was sent to Constantinople, where 
the bullets were extracted, and he is now fit for duty. 
Mr. Roberts, a surgeon of Holywell, whose chiffoni&re 
was frequently robbed by his servants at night, arranged 
galvanic wires in such a way, that when the servant opened 
the chiffoui&re, a pistol, filled with powder only, exploded in 
Mr. Robert's bedroom, and awoke him without alarming the 
thief. He burned out of bed, and caught his maid in 
flagrante delicto. 
Present from Prince Albert to the Officers of the 
Grenadier Guards. — H.R.H. Prince Albert a day or two 
since commanded Mr. Hebbert, of the firm of Hebbert and 
Co., army contractors, Pall-mall East, to attend at the Castle, 
when the Prince gave him instructions to have made a 
number of seal-skin coats, lined throughout with fur, one of 
which his Royal Highness, as Colonel of the Grenadier 
Guards, intends to present to every officer of this regiment 
previous to his leaving for the seat of war. The Prince at 
the same time gave Mr. Hebbert his own coat as a pattern, 
after which these coats, about seventy in number, are to be 
made, directing that they should be completed in the course 
of a week. 
It is stated that the Government have purchased 18,000 
buffalo robes from the Hudson's Bay Company for the use of 
the army in the Crimea. 
A dependable datum for the rigout of a Crimean winter 
is to be found in the fact that the strait between the Euro- 
pean and Asiatic coast is not unfrequently frozen acrosB ; so 
that loaded wagons cross from shore to shore. In the year 
1,065 the distance from Kertsch to Tmutarakan was mea- 
sured on the ice by Prince Gleb, son of St. Vladimir, and 
found to be 30,054 fathoms. If the present winter should 
be a severe one, no doubt a large portion of the army of the 
Caucasus will be moved by the same route. 
The German Coinage. — A congress of several Govern- 
ments of Germany, and particularly Austria, Prussia, and 
Bavaria, is now assembled at Vienna, to consult on the 
means of creating a uniform gold coinage for all the states of 
the Germanic Confederation. M. Brentano, an Aulic coun- 
cillor, connected with the Austrian Mint, presides over this 
meeting. 
Professor Wilson, F.R.S.E., succeeds to the Chair 0 f 
Agriculture in the University of Edinburgh, vacant by the 
retirement of Professor Low. 
A Letter from St. Petersburg received at Berlin states 
that, on Nov. 6, 15,000 Russians were missing at roll-call at 
Sebastopol. 
The first cargo of salt, the produce of Irish mines, left 
Belfast on Monday for Rotterdam. The circumstance gave 
rise to a great deal of local satisfaction. 
Chinese Pirates. — Mr. Henry Gibbs, captain of the brig 
Grecian Queen, of London, writes his owners, from Hong 
Kong, dated September 27 last, giving an account of having 
had some sharp fighting with piratical vessels when on his 
passage up to Whampoa Roads to load. His ship being 
tolerably well armed with handy carronades and small ann 3i 
he succeeded in beating them off, killing fifteen of the 
pirates, and wounding several others. An English schooner 
was in company at the time, which he took in tow for the 
night. The owner, Mr. Wadman, who was on board at the 
time, was seriously wouuded in the side. 
A Daughter of the Regiment. — A letter from the French 
camp before Sebastopol says : — ■“ Recently, in a house to 
which some Cossacks had set fire, we found in a room, and 
on the point of being suffocated with the smoke, a child of 
about eighteen months old, elegantly dressed, and having a 
gold cros3 suspended from its neck. The poor infant 
smiled upon our Grenadiers, who removed it aud have 
adopted it until the family to whom it belongs shall bo dis- 
covered. It is curious to see the Grenadiers fondling the 
baby, and treating it with as much tenderness as it could 
receive from its mother." 
A telegraphic despatch from Trieste, of the 28th ult. 
states that, from the 10th to the 20th, 15,000 soldiers of the 
three allied powers started from or passed through the Bos- 
phorus for the Crimea. 
Suicide from Love. — On Tuesday Mr. Payne held an 
inquest, at the Albert Tavern, London-road, Southwark, on 
the body of Mary Ann Bauham, a fine youug womau, twenty 
years of age, who committed suicide on Monday morning 
last. It appeared from the evidence that the deceased had 
a cousin, who was a soldier, to whom she was greatly at- 
tached, and who had been sent out to the Crimea, and she 
was greatly grieved about him. The jury returned a verdict 
of temporary insanity. 
Pirates in the Mediterranean. — The Minister of Marine 
at Turin, has informed the Chamber of Commerce, at Genoa, 
that the waters of Samos are infested by three bands of 
pirates, under the command of three chiefs named Moro, 
Nieveiara, and Carajini. 
Death of the “ Oldest Inhabitant.” — Eliz. Curry died 
at her residence in Duckinfield-street, last week, after attain- 
ing the age of 109 years, eight months, and seven days. She 
remained in possession of all her faculties, slightly impaired, 
up to the hour of her death. — Liverpool Standard. 
General Cathcart at Inkerman. — When at the battle 
of Inkerman, General Bosquet sent to Sir George Cathcart 
to inquire whether he wanted reinforcements, the latter, 
being at the moment hemmed in by an immense Russian 
force, is said to have replied, “ Yes ; but don’t hurry your- 
self.” — French Paper. 
Despatches for Lord Raglan, in the Crimea, were sent by 
a messenger from the Foreign-Office on Wednesday evening. 
LATEST 
INTEL SIG EMCE. 
FIELD OFFICE, Saturday, 4 a.m. 
FRENCH REINFORCEMENTS FOR THE CRIMEA. 
There are at this moment at Toulon three ships of the line 
aud eight frigates, filled with troops for the Crimea. 
At the iron-works of Conches, in the department of the 
Eure, au order for 10,000 shells and 50,000 small cannon- 
balls is being executed with the greatest activity. 
The private telegraphic despatches received at Paris, giving 
accounts of terrible losses in the Black Sea, have caused a 
mournfulsensation there. One of the despatches, stating that 
the allied army before Sebastopol is in great want of powder, 
has created much alarm, for their is a rumour current that 
the Emperor of Russia has sent orders to Prince Menschikofl 
to make another attack coute qui cotitc. There is probably 
no foundation for this rumour ; but, in the present depressed 
state of the public mind, the more gloomy a report is the 
more readily it finds credit. 
A letter from Vienna, written by a person connected with 
the war department to a friend in Paris, says — “You would 
scarcely credit me if I were to tell you what it has cost us 
to send an army to the Principalities at this season of the 
year. The carriage of every heavy piece of artillery from 
the frontier to Bucharest has cost us 1,000 florins (nearly a 
hundred pounds sterling).” 
THE KING OF PRUSSIA'S SPEECH. 
Berlin. — The fresh additional article, agreed upon by 
Austria aud Prussia on the 26th ult., contains the adoption 
of the foui - points, and undertakes to procure their accept- 
ance. , 
Prussia also promises her assistance to Austria if attacked 
iu the Principalities. 
The King’s speech upon the opening of the Prussian 
Chambers, on Thursday, contains the following passages : 
“ A bloody conflict has broken out between three power- 
ful members of the family of European states. 
“ Our fatherland is not yet affected. I have fresh occasion 
to hope that the basis of a further understanding will soon, 
perhaps, be obtained. 
“ Closely united with Austria and the rest of Germany, 
I shall continue to look upon it as my task to plead for 
peace, the recognition of the independence of foreign States, 
and moderation. 
“ Should I subsequently be compelled to add force to this 
attitude, Prussia’s and my faithful people will bear their 
inevitable burdens with resignation, and know how to niee 
such eventualities. 
“ The army shall he made ready for war.” 
“ Marseilles. 
“ The Nil steamer, which has been due for three days, 
with the mail from Constantinople of the 20th, was forcei 
to put into Antibes. 
“ A Queen’s messenger, bearing despatches, who came by 
her, has left by the 1 p.m, train.” _ _ 
Printed by Dbrnabd Luxton, of No. 38, Robert -street, lluiton, Parish of 81torodltob, 'V 
County of Middlesex, at Iho Prlniirig-ofllco of T*vi<m ami GnHBMao, Nos. * ' 
Graystokc-nlaeo, FoUor-lonc, and published by him nt No. 403, Strand, opposite A 
street, Adelphl, In County.— PitcuuDia 3, 1804. 
