FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. FRANCE
... meat and carouses of cattle are for. bidden entry into, or transit through, Franee, from across the French frontier, from Dunkirk to the Rhine near Lauterbourg. ...
... meat and carouses of cattle are for. bidden entry into, or transit through, Franee, from across the French frontier, from Dunkirk to the Rhine near Lauterbourg. ...
... husband, who had in 1866 obtained a sentence of six months' imprisonment against his wife, which imprisonment she suffered at Dunkirk, found out that she gave birth to a child while in prison, and a comparison of dates proved to his mind that he was not the ...
... SINGULAR CAPTURE OF A WFIALE. A correspondent of the Guernsey writing from Dunkirk, describe, an exciting scene by thousands of spectators on the bathing sands at that port. At about four o'clock in the afternoon a dark object wan seen nearing the shore ...
... October, 1880. and of 18131, whilet :the voieleJ was on a voyage from Liverpool to St. West Coast of Africa, and back to Dunkirk. E EvorardSahnon conducted the caw for the . prosecotioo. After carefully considering the ,eviden.v, the court were of opinio' ...
... TELEGRAPHW Sir Sills Join Gibbons. late Lord Mayor -- don, died at Hasticgs yesterday. '1• The steamer Roebuck, from Glasgow to Dunkirk; struck on the Kish Bank yesterday. Crew saved in boats. A clergyman's son, named Ran 'ins, committed suicide at Hereford ...
... entertained that the steamer Woodlands, belonging to Messrs. Fenwick, Groves, and I Co., of Swaneea, lots gone down. She Dunkirk! for Newcastle—a 30 hours' run—on Saturday, the 17th inst., and has not been heard of since. The owners, however, believe ...
... November, as it appears the steamer has not been seen or traced in any way whatever since she left Malta on the Bth November for Dunkirk, France. Much sympathy is felt for Mr and Mrs Watts in their great suspense, and fears cannot but be entertained that some ...
... works. There have been large deliveries of iron of late to foreign ports, the principal being to Stettin, Antwerp, Rotterdam, Dunkirk, Hamburg, Stockholm, dr.c. The shipping season will soon be over, when it is expected, unless there be a considerably enlarged ...
... miles off, look a small boat and in.de for her to regulate the chronometers. The vessel was the French btrque Le Genies, of Dunkirk. An English boy on board complained of illtreatment, and asked to be taken on hoard the Caswell without the captain's permission ...
... December last the London steamer Fulham. belonging to Messina. Watts, Batts, and Co. It appeaced that while& bound from Malin to Dunkirk, with a cargo of barley, the Fulham ran short of fuel to the Bay of Biwa . The weather was very both and the crew, by the ...
... went ashore on Monday morning at St. Catherine's, Isle of Wight. The General Caltleld, of Newcastle, bound from New York to Dunkirk, with wheat, has been totally wrecked on the Irish Coast, through mi.. taking Courtruaceterry for Cork. The orew were saved ...
... were much damaged. but she proceeded on her voyage. The other collision occurred between the America. of Scarborough, for Dunkirk, and the steamer Brenda, ot West liartlepool. Both ve , sels were damaged,: but the 1ire1.134 w“ able to tow lhe barque to ...