EFFECTS OF THE CALIFORNIAN NEWS IN ENGLAND.—A glance at the advertisements in the daily papers (says the Examiner) will show that the public appetite for California is likely to be promptly met. The burden of the various vessels already announced as ready for immediate departure amounts to about 5,000 tons, distributed in ships ranging from 190 to 700 tons, to say nothing of the West India mail-steamer, which leaves on the 17th, carrying goods and passengers to Chagres, or of a “short and pleasant passage” advertised to Galveston, in Texas, as a cheap route to the Pacific. The rates range from L25 upwards to suit all classes. Thus far, however, we have only the arrangements for those who are able to move. The opportunities provided for those who wish to share the advantages of the new region without its dangers are still more ample. Indeed, so imposing are the plans for an extensive investment of capital for carrying on the trade in shares of L5 each, that it would seem as if the first effect of the affair would be to cause a scarcity of money rather than an abundance. About a million and a quarter sterling is already wanted, and the promoters stipulate for the power of doubling the proposed amounts as occasion may offer. There is a “California Gold-Coast Trading Association;” a “California Gold Mining, Streaming, and Washing Company;” a “California Steam Trading Company,” a “California Gold and Trading Company;” and a “California Gold Mining, etc., Trading Company.” The last of these alone will require L600,000 for its objects, but as half the shares are “to be reserved for the United States of America,” the drain upon our resources will be lessened to that extent. Some of the concerns propose to limit their operations to trading on the coast, sending out at the same time “collecting and exploring parties” whenever the prospect may be tempting. Others intend at once to get a grant from the legislature at Washington of such lands “as they may deem necessary,” while others intend to trust to chance, simply sending out a “practical” manager, accompanied by an adequate number of men “accustomed to the extraction of gold in all its forms.” Along with these advertisements are some of a modified nature, to suit parties who may neither wish to go out with a batch of emigrants, nor to stay at home and wait the results of a public company. One “well-educated gentleman” seeks two others “to share expenses with him.” Another wishes for a companion who would advance L200, “one half to leave his wife, and the other half for outfit;” a third tells where “any respectable individuals with small capital” may find persons willing to join them; a fourth states that respectable persons having not less than L100 are wanted to complete a party; and a fifth, that a “seafaring man is ready to go equal shares in purchasing a schooner to sail on speculation.” What number may be found to answer those appeals it is impossible to conjecture. Common sense would say not one,