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Latest European, news Army and Navy Pre-Ara of England. what the "Times" Thinks of Secretary Chase's financial report. By the arrival of the Bohemian at Halifax whose mails reached New York on the 3d inst., we have the following details of news from England: Army preparations. The Army and Navy Gazette says: Another battalion of infantry sailed for Canada of Saturday last, and three more will sail in the course of the present week. Until hostilities are actually declared no further body of troops are likely to be placed under orders in that event the authorities might naturally look to the fine regiments now in the Mediterranean garrisons, the Ninth, Twenty-second, Twenty-fifth and One hundredth, which could be sent across the Atlantic without delay from Gibraltar. The infantry regiments at home are to be strengthened. Recruiting for the army is going on in earnest. The Fourth company of Royal Engineers are under orders to embark for Canada. The fo
December 23rd (search for this): article 21
90 segment 100-pounder shells, 50 boxes of common and 50 boxes of the segment 20-pounder shells, 125 boxes of the 14-pounder segment shells, 360 of the naval 88-pounder shells, and 109 boxes of the 24 pounder howitzer shells. Her solid shot will consist of 600 68-pounders, 160 100-pounder conical Armstrongs, 50 20-pounder Armstrongs, and 50 12-pounder Armstrongs. Two additional, 100-pounder Armstrongs will be added. Secretary Chase's Gigantic financial scheme.[from the London times, Dec. 23] Everything in America is on a magnificent scale. She has mammoth rivers, her water falls are tumbling floods, her mountains tower head and shoulders above the pigmy altitudes of Europe. She is a continent of very marked features. But there is nothing in her physical phenomena which no taxes our astonishment as the moral immensities she has lately developed. We are not used to the thunders of Niagara, and the tremendous distances of the Mississippi, and the high shooting peaks of th
December 20th (search for this): article 21
got ready in a very short time. Altogether, the fleet of gun-boats at Chatham and on the Medway number twenty-four.--In addition to the above there is a squadron of mortar boats, all of which can be ready immediately. The Rattlesnake, twenty-one guns, screw frigate, 400 horse power, is to be brought for ward with the utmost dispatch. The line of battle screw steamer Mocance, eighty-one guns, is to be brought forward to be placed in commission. The Flying Fish sailed on Friday, December 20, for Lisbon, with sealed orders. The guard ships around the coasts of the three kingdoms were telegraphed for all men belonging to them to prepare for immediate service. The screw steam corvette Satellite, twenty-one guns, accompanied by the gun-boats Sheidrake and Spicer, left Plymouth on Sunday last for the Southwest coast of America. The screw steam frigate Orlando, fifty-one guns, will take out winter clothing for the squadron at Halifax. Several gun-boats at Davenp
July, 1861 AD (search for this): article 21
he Treasury, does not go out of his way to mention disagreeable facts. He does not tell us how much of the expenditure of 1861 was raised by loans and how much by taxes; nor does he mention the present amount of the newly-born national debt of his nation. Without this intelligence, however, he states quite enough to enable any man of business to judge how long this war of subjugation can last, and what the probabilities are of sustaining another war in addition to it. He says that from July, 1861, to July 1862, the war expenses will be in round numbers, £109,000,000 sterling, of which he has succeeded in borrowing about £40,000,000, and hopes to get the rest by paper money, more loans, and taxation to the amount of about £2,500,000. If he can get the loans, and if people will take his paper money, and if they will also pay taxes, he will then be able to make both ends meet up to July, 1862; but, if the South should not be subjugated by that early date, he tells his countrymen plai
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