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ARRIVAL OF THE SAN FRANCISCO MAIL.

Auckland, April 26. The s.s. Macgregor has arrived with the San Francisco mail. She Ifeft on the 30th of March and arnved at Honolulu on the Bth, sailing at mdmght on the same day. She passed the j sth, between San. Francisco and Honolulu. On the 2nd iust. Mr Niette, a saloon passenger, a native of New York, died of cancer. She had favorable weather throughout. Passengers : For Wellington—Mr Nanoarrow; Lyttelton, Mr Coates; Nelson, Miss Grinin. Mr M'Beath, Postmaster of Greymouth, Mail Agent. J GENERAL Umm ARY. Messrs Moody ai ; ankey, the Revivalists, held conference widiilhiuisters of alldenomi nations in London, to consider the question of the success of the revival movements. The conference opened with great success, and it was .arranged that Mr Moody shall, by tele graph, communicate from England with some of the most popular preachers in America and Australia. A Calcutta despatch states that the Indian Government expedition, sent to survey Western China—a member of which was recently murdered—has arrived at Rangoon, An attack was made by the Chinese officials, and.- in a nght, forty Chinese were killed and many wounded. Communication with the China frontier is stopped by bauds of armed men. A meeting, attended by 100,000 persons, has been held in Hyde Park, under the auspices of the liohborne Release Committee, with a band of music, flags, and banners, bearing mottoes claiming justice, displayed. Kenealy, Onslow, and Whatley addressed the meeting, and the enthusiasm was tremendous, A resolution was passed denouncing the partiality of tho judges, declaring that they would know no rest until the enormous judicial crime was rectified. In the German Reichstag, a resolution was earned by a large majority, withdrawing .State grants from the Roman Catholic bishops, Bismarck insisting that it is tho imperative d.utv State not to pay fomenters of sedition. ■* The Roumanian Government has issued orders for a levy of troops. This warlike order excites comment.

Over ten thousand persons attended the funeral of John Mitchell

• P etere hnrg despatches state that affairs m Turkestan caused General Kauffmann to loss favor with the Crar, who has rejected the General s plans for the re-organisation in Central Asia.

a mass meeting of 30.000 Irishmen was held 1? wde Park, and demanded the release of the Fenian prisoners. France has determined to join in the United States central exhibition.

At a destructive fire at Foo-Choo-Foo, 400 houses were destroyed. Small-pox is still raging in Japan. The Czar of Russia has sanctioned a new ministerial plan for the construction of 5.000 miles of railway in that country. Don Carlos has requested more contributions, xionr Provinces met to consider the request, and the country was exhausted and that he ought to procure funds abroad. Further fraternising has occurred between the Carlists and the Government troops. General Cabrera has issued a manifesto declaring his adhesion to Jving Alphonso on the ground that grave responsibility was incurred in opposition to the Prince bearing the title “ Most Catholic.” Don Carlos has ordered all persons found reading this manifesto to be shot. All hopes of settling the affair by convention are considered ended Don Carlos is marching with sixteen battalions and artillery on Ramales, about twenty-five hITi Mtander - has paid Germany iutmge th leM “ “ mdemnit y for Gustave

AMERICAN SUMMARY.

r ?« w , ere S reat “8 floods at Fort Deposit Tel?® 19 K nS arch * ? ha Atlantic and Pacific Thi wPfl °?? £ ftS m fi .™ feet ae P th of water. The ice floated three miles an hour, and the crashing was tremendous. The people were fearfully .-excited, and the water was four feet higher than ever known before. The railroad tor five miles was covered with ice. The bridges were all crushed, and the damage is esti-. mated at about half a million of dollars. The • floods subsided next day. Floods are reported from Pittsopen, at Wiloeshoon. The water cut

a chwmel 40ft deep through the country, and flooded the streets. At Kupton the people jro about in boats. There has been loss by inundation at Harrisburgh, Columbia, end Marietta, by Great Augusta. A severe storm and fall of . u pwsed over, and several towns in the invenor suffered severely. There was loss of Pr °A P f, rt^ at , the canal the Georgia down &y ’ the bouses have been blovpn

Prostration is very great iu the ship-buildiW 00 d :^ Ugla f • and u America - Out of about tt laying between Europe and the State “ a ago sixty have been Wither awn, and there is stagnation coastwise. Two Ne T. Yo . r . k aud New Orleans (the win kfi-'amship Ime and the Merchants’) line isYeft. dlSContinued - °“ly the Cromwell

fr ™’w t York . Mercury ’ has a despatch from Washington stating that the excursion of Senator Cameron and others to Mexico is with tne object of arranging preliminaries for the annexation, by purchase, to the United States tl States of the Republic, and that the Mexican authorities have already acqu esced in the transfer. +«^h'- 8 i?l y is , considered probable that Secretot **■*’»*» r < ev : oke . d his «w*t trust deed clpo institutions in San Franthe rev^tion 11 b r ? £ onßiderab l« comment. In and daSof to burning health deed ofTmS km f red ’ and Ba y« that the aeea or tru-t was made under mental danreßsion and the apprehension of speedy dissolution. It is expected that the alteration will make great work for the lawyers a!«!j mg to the ‘Call,’ he proposed simulator! sume control of his estate and give directlv in .tad of through tru.tas. ‘luoSj'ta been expressed that the revocation is nS vaUdm law ; but this idea is not generaSy endollais ed ' lte 6State 18 valued at five million

~o ? faHk v . the 4. En , glish billiard champion, is cx--2 OOOdolB 61610 Play &U mtemiltional match for viUe eff rnd n T re f Um T d f°* Dg in A P ril at Nash- & T<>ole 18 mcetu “< » ia > «"»* Brigham Young was arrested at his residence fna ! ?n ke^ be * ore Jud P M<K:ea u for disol*y! f searsr.u'n£ a {From our own Correspondents.) «or . . Auckland, April 26. Pnihf 8 correß Poudeut Writes that the Rothschilds name to the New Zealand deben. tures caused them to be quoted at a premium immediately after their issue. The New Zealand debentures are m favor as an investment Voil P r° na , of ' limited income. m£ Yoge! has played his cards remarkably well He secured the general snn port of the English Press. The‘D«X News’of March lis the first paper which referredjbo the financial condition of New Zealand , but most highflown language of prophetic assurance. It reviews Mr Vogel's article in Fraser, 5 and sava .*< rnu ft i condition of New Zealand can hardly be wfid to be m so satisfactory a state for themselves aa we should wish the affaire of !mr Colonies to be. A great fuss has been made m the Press about the “ reconciliation” of TawMU b r d Z^ t9t^ e . w be tween Sir Donald hLk -h T d the Ma ? n The official handbook has been sown broadcast over the country aud * a « received most favorable notice. r * f• j T * • rd of J ?' rade statistics show* that the tide of imputation from the United Kingdom n S rJ et f Ulg d> ;? ldedl y fr °m the United State! tke olonies > specially to New The divisions in Parliament show the Conservahve Ministry to have grown in strength. ing actilely. aUB builrage Ration is prooeedn Native troubles are threatened at the Cape of ™5° d aDd - 80 “ e men-of-war. have been ordered there. _ Sir Garnet Wolseley has also the Kaffirs* 5 lultiate a new Native policy towards

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18750426.2.9

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 3797, 26 April 1875, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,282

ARRIVAL OF THE SAN FRANCISCO MAIL. Evening Star, Issue 3797, 26 April 1875, Page 2

ARRIVAL OF THE SAN FRANCISCO MAIL. Evening Star, Issue 3797, 26 April 1875, Page 2

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