The New York Herald Newspaper, November 11, 1854, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. fn ene WHOLE NO. 6652. ‘ MORNING EDITION-SATURDAY, NOVEMBER Il, 1854. * PRICE TWO CENTS. Washington .. Seward and Maine law. | the political actions of F THE ELECTIONS. . Eide Loan serene the poucial tetions of men, just ea etetually aa would | NEWS BY TELEGRAPH | THE WAR IN THE NORTH PACIFIC we pap aie Se Seward ah ont Maine Law. ee of his serfs HS instrumentalities by which that pots rear cassie, - ee R a ny was su) too were of the vilest kind. Governor General of a 2—John P. Bennett,’ Seward whig. ‘great motor prigoat these is Chosen Govornor of New York? | westenester...1-Geomge € Finck, ON ee Sadined $0. be mate ee ke eee ates Qumsze, Nov. 10, 194. | THE ATTACK ON PETROPAULOVSEI. ween i John . Payne Seward whig Pa tere ice cn, ee eee ania ete satan vty oe , . ym ex on re e | = B. Gates. and possitiy on the days of election, men who and Int: Parti LARK OR SEY | 2— Asa 8 Wygant, T. Ng et and ok he OATS of claatian, te Lord Elgin leaves in three or four days. Farther resting Particalart, : tereriwhusneciioe ca Politics in Massnahusetts. ard w! al nce a acon couet:, sng: bmatatad | Saomeeesiee esac Shegdncrst jn Would Sst Setanta? ee ne | ee eee Le az inistrat fs would not in y The preparations for the State election on Monday . | AM others.....-seeeeeeee and as &o., &o, ao. HE FULL MAYORALTY VOTE, BP Boece psd lan prom pa ie ose ana oii gine vies. Cet Yet to hear from. ly. ‘The published announcement that there would be a Saw Faanomoo, Oot. 7, 1856. — p WOOD'S MAJORITY OVER ONE THOUSAND. CITY OF BROOKLYN. Rows. | And yet such was the degree of moral courage | S*thering of whigs in Fanuell Hall to-day, bavonot been | m4 tate Operations in the Paciflo—Phe French and Mag= aa Vout Woe maken, required to break up such a stupendous system of cor- | carried out, as there has been no such meeting. lish Fleets— Was it ? BH emia paaine Hall, wh ruption that few would venture upon the experiment. | Politicians seem paralysed by the Know Nothings, and fas ta Victory PINGONS OF THE PRESS who did thus venture were set upon and hunted | in6 of le Aeinteds to lelive the Enclosed I sead you the French version of the defeat " down, The same vile instruments, the same despicable mass of the people are conten ve the matter | .¢ the allies by the Russians at Petropaulovaki, aa. on ‘ex Hall's majority ....ssssessescoss sssenssesoves 90001 Bpommmy gam who ent eer tree oe te oes seagidags ae That the French and English fleet have met with a se dhatrer; wig) ek meee caucus dictation, and like hungrs houna were put sou Railroad Accidents, ‘were Goted$ there can be no question, and I have (6 fame ‘The publi ate yot in a fog in regard to the result of Wives cepa iisty his trail, and they followed him with open mouths and | ONE MAN KILLED AND EIGHT OR TEN SERIOUSLY 1N- | reliable authority that the loss of the allies, in killed « » oe ravenous jaws until his influence was utterly deatroyed, SURED ON THE SOUTHSIDE RA! alone, exceeds 600 men. Btate election, We have mnie every effort to get at eeamMcin ——= | and he was worried into submission or political death’ RNPO AR . but afterall our labor we do not with Othees MORIN Toe semasedsehis ooo i 78} But such a state of things could not last always. It Baummwore, Nov. 10, 1854. From a sea captain, who was at Petropaulovski in the have sv ast wai’ sas pleats Cee ke ere a PTROLLER. ai2ar | Became ao evil too grievous to be borne, and the people | The passenger train of the Southside Railroad ran | summer of 1863, Learn that the whole population of the: pares an they werp received over the wires. Wo giv: Extabrook, democrat. se “ crozen] have, risen ume ae a, boa wiped it cut wiley | over cow on Thursday, and was thrown off the track | place, including women, children and. Indians, did not, wr tabGdiah aebbiadibls ‘aint toe sh the dandleke Pw —— | those who planned the system. ‘The “central power’ | i conbequence. The fireman was instantly killed, and | at that time, amount to 700 persous, as taken by his eeerected and anended frém the latest returns Lewin’ MAJOVIEY 66... seeccseceseeeeceseches 880 fore so potential, with all ils instrumentalittes | eight or ten of the passengers seriously injured. A good | from an official Russian map, and that the fortifications. sight, We oan do.no.mare, Norttup, whig.. AUDITOR. ed the way ‘4 bo throne of the Casars to the | number of them received severe cuts, bruises, &c. The | must be of the most primitive kind. ceneeiit eae Gerald, demooat . Bond fm the arena” exctih onty eat ay for Pao thed | accident oceurred near Farmville, Virginia. ‘You will observe that the allies had 196 guns, some of GOVERN VOTE IN THE STATE. ridteule by its threats. ANOTHER MAN KILLED. them 80 pounders, while, from their own accounts, the a a Fy y 36. : Liaw yg "amen PRR a aim 848 PR aoe’ ome ba Sues Nie contest pat has Horwxiaviie, Noy, 10, 1854. Russians had but 120 guns, including those of the ships kn ee Se 21-.--Jonathan Purdy, Reform and Soft. Emithy, whig... . ‘and shown the powerof ihe American sentiment, the | Aman named P. D. Landback was killed by the ex | of-war Aurora and Dwins. * : ; E 3 ¥ 28... William Taylor, Hard. Mackay, democra’ es who, to secure politieal {nfivence, banded press train from Buffalo, this morning, at the Main | Nothing can be more conclusive of the utter defeat @° Ld 3 P i im, ni a ) and them | ; 7 engagem than their inability D by : deters Carat ogg > a Smith's majority.....s..sseecseeesecsseeesees M19 | ane body guard, not ouly to push’ thelr own fortunes, sae ae hi eed art a al beady age hows Ree ee 4522 9033 ‘801 rps ee ley, form. ‘now Nothing | CHIEF OF POLICE. butto hunt down American men ten thousand times | ‘™Ploy of Thatcher & Sawyer. tack 1 ussian squadron, laying at the mouth of the $32 118619771007 | 43. 33°"* William Floyd. Folk, whig...... their own su; a in intelligence, in integrity, and in g river Amoor, in the Japan Sea, This squadron consists ‘B26 125 n et oe" Eaward ©. Meconnell, Hard. | Tucker, democrat poo, Caving at goes to make up the patriotic citi- | Damage to Drawbridge at Gray's Ferry. | of three or four vessels, the largost being the Dwina, ef 37 290 59 83..."Th 4 nae 4 3 ; ——— | zen, have been most signally ovbitiniown: The moral Ne | 60 2608 1356 10 eee ery Bere | Folk’s majority.......c.sseecessessesees seeees 9,086 | Prestige resulting from-such overthrow will be most banyan a yplble nt a 2425 3775 ne a ¥ CAPTAINS. OF POLICE. salutary. It will teach the de ues who would de- This afternoon two trains from here, for Baltimore, The French and English while at Petropauloveki ha@ 43 Ho at First distriet....Joel Smith, wh sig gg 2993 | the American character for the sake of political | were detained at Gray's ferry, by the drawbridge having | positive information of the Russian war vessels being in Sri ‘now Nothin; . fw ican id : fe Second dlsizict.. Thence Kile tere ig dem. pimen a ‘advance their own selfish ambition, that how: been damaged by 9 passing steamboat. A temporary | anchored at the entrance of the above named river, - O16 816 87 John Fulton, whig ever successful such a course may fora time be, the end | Platform was constructed to enable passengers to get ut did not feel in condition to disturb them. The dis- F eo Hae ¥ meuiaaatiacies Fins Si Sed ey be Lary pp wi poppe} ae from one side to the other. A large force of men are | tance from Petropaulovskito where the Russian vessds 7. 5 ict...James Cam mocrat. country asa huge or in purst of fortune, win ‘207 18 decod 8 Moore, x oud R | Wa E. Wanaervoes ‘4 whig. that they must Iny aside thelr foe of faith, their | 2°¥ employed in repairing the damage. The passengers | lay is only 600 miles, in nearly a due west course, and 1800 wi P, Soft, | Fourth distriet..John Hambler, democrat prejndices of country when they enter the field of | by the afternoon train for Baltimore passed over the | had the alli feet not been most aevarely handled, they 2144 = 1,430 390 | Richard W, Gail, whig American politica ; that they must cease to band them- | temporary bridge across the draw, and took the carson | Would hardly have failed to pay the a Tiag “dtop ag The result shows that Joe! Smith, Thomas King, Wm. | S0Ye# Pom, their religion or thelr origin, and become | the west aide. ‘The damage will be repaired in time for | Zeit orn sountrie and the world could expect nothiag: ieee? ler | E Vanderveer, and Richard W. Call, have been elected— | American people, become is fact purely and only Ameri. | tbe passage of the eleven o'clock train. way to this pl oes 5200 10a | three whigs and one democrat. an ftisent, As such they will be cherished and admit. : ead tae fo positions of influence an mor. As anythin; ul 138 «(1384 ion CITY OFFICERS ELECT. else, while they will be protected in thelr social, political The Case of Pamela Snyder In Philadelphia. | sian fect. As Fae — : and religions rights, they will not be preferred fo oficial Pursaperaia, Nov. 10, 1854. a Webber, Reform and Koow Nothing. pee or power. merican citizens, if they choose to The remains of one, of Pamela Snyder's children were 263 850 203 such in truth as in name, they will be accepted ure ontet 4383 | 4g Chasles H: Haswell, Reform and Bort, without inquiry as to their origin or their faith; but | “covered to-day, buried in the yard of a house where | bas no longer 1972 «Bald 635 . Fh Mather, Refers dnd Hard. they will have jearned by the result of the present can- | she formerly lived. The coroner held an investigation, | former days, their — 989 © 8379603 Bryan Mecachill Soft “ane vash that the American people, looking to the preserva- | and ascertained that the child was born in February, eee sap by being ansored, Hie tip , 3087 8036 270 ‘tC Wendell, Band K. N. ampere tion of American institutions when they station-their | 1959 and that soon after its birth it was thrown inte | ‘he,=nglsh papers, and, the London 7¥mes in 4 ius ise Jenkins. ti THE RESULT IN NEW YORK. secre srentiee, wil “gut none but Americans OW} (ce acd aterwards taken out-and busied whete it | for tueaBion hn eee ee : FARE CC Pee guard. ’ yu w . 1826-4640 434 TENTH WARD SCHOOL TICKET. OPINIONS OF THE PRI These are some of the results of the present canvass | was found. As an item of local news that has not found ite way: 600 «=—:1969 278 te eee at Jr., KN. (From the Washington Bla that are certain, let it finally termtnate as it may, and oo into our newspapers, I would inform you that some 173L «= 2300S s«(1120 EE eg yh | there are generally two sides to every question, and | they are worth’a month of excitement, and a day of Destructive Fire at Montrose. thirty officials were removed from the custom house em 647-573 cog ate es Lvacancy, K. N. the result of Tuesday's clection in Now Vouk chugs’ tay | labor such aa Tuesday in fact was. They will exercise a A Nov. 10, 1sé, | {te Set inst, and. ebpeh ihe atthe number Suempatae 1002 1298 44L | ean ee tec Le Brower’ dem and R. K. N oren fanatielam can be arrested in its progress by aiualt. | falutary moral influence, such aa every honest eitizon | 1. a. os usrea here tits taminings destroy | ofcar hau eos nboliaked.” The reasons, aivee tee teoee > L a o1 a e last hour. ‘e are not 3] to imi- 2 iy " * r 205 ps By ‘aunane OF Cowes as tate the expedient, now #0 common in the whig press, of MAKING A CLEAN BREAST OF IT. ing & large number of stores, shops and dwellings. Loss | Tm0vals is the decrease of shipping to this port. ee 4 BESS. | glaiming every democratic victory as an endorsement of {From the Tribune, Nov. 9.) about $60,000. Insurance $16,000. — 0 District 1—Wruam W. Vax. . | administration of General Pierce, and every demo- Our State convention nominated Myron H. Clark, of NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. . sana a 02 2—James S. T, Stranahan. cratic defeat as a rebuke of his policy; because most of | Ontario county, for Governor. Mr. Clark is a good, but | 8—Guy 0. Pelton. the causes that have led to the overthrow of the demo- | not a great man, and was very acceptable to the tom-. A Sea Captain Arrested for Murder. ‘The following detailed account of the late operations lee cea ot eo Kelly, 5. 8., 74 maj. me “a [thes bose phge cone car perance men, and to most of the free democrats. When”! 4 Boston, Nov. 10, 1854. | in the Pacific was translated for the San Francises 1050 «1680317 6—John Wheeler. | ‘The period, moreover, had ume for the success of those | That we had no ehjecton ts hee txcept that’ he wee in | goctPtsin McDonald, of Gloucester, was arrested here | Times from the Beho de Pi OF Oh ee ze 1% = 7—Thomas Childs, Jr. influences which, about once every ten years, contrive | the State Senate, and that his voice and vote would be | t-day, charged with killing » man recently at Cape | ‘Ihe squadron sailed from Honolulu on the oe 48 ao Abram Wakenan. * | 00 poison the public mind and to bewilier the public | needed there on the United States Senator and tem- | Breton. It is expected the prisoner will be claimed un- | the 25th of July, at 6 o'clock, the Eurydice and Amphg- 1198” fd ome | ao - cased oF aycnom the democratic party. | perance questions at the coming session. We were as- | der the Ashburton treaty. trite leading off, and the Forte bring rh oe 12 980 ry sas S. Murray. | e pe 5 ory ort le elements, however, can no | sured that this ground had been earefully looked over, NSS ek order of the admiral, and by 4 0’ P.M, the 4 ke i ; nor were there no’ that, eahingtons;Stownd.,. 974 1068 360749 Tuaae Teller, for short term. | have gone into this combination discover how powerless | man and prohibitionist could be chonga tm is stent; Prrrsnuro, Noy. 10, 1854. | with the musket. On the S0th the Amphytrite and Ar festchester:..... 1858 Sg Anti-Nebraska. | it ie for any good purpose, they will be as prompt to de- | hat he would resign so soon an nominated, sothat © | The panic in our Money Market has subsided. The | temise were ordered off to San Franelaco. On the 1éth fates... cenccs 838 - sert it as they will be eager to atone for their injustice to | sueccssor could be chosen at the regular election, and | suspension of Mr. King, tho broker, was but tem | of Angust tise Ranydiee: was lost sieht of teeeeeanane ee Total. 119,788 00,435 120,661 22,509 — - the democratic party. An individual always hesitates | the possible peceasity of a special election obviated. TP s'4 : porary, | » thick fog, an@ did not answer to the guns of the Forte, assis eat cigs cA IOY , , E ‘Simmons. fore changing his opinions or admitting his errors; but | We were silenced, if not convinced, and Mr. Clark was | 40d he will resume in a few days, | which sounded the recall, On the 224 the President dis- inner, Soft Shell. it a8 Characteristic of a free people that they are ever | nominated. We met several leading delegates soon after, guised her batteries by a thick coat of paint, wi ox. forton. ready to undo a hasty verdict against a great principleor | and asked about the resignation. They said it was | Suspension of the City Bank, Columbus, Ohm. | — was followed by the Forte. On the 26th the Ba- 19—Lewis R. Palmer, Soft Shell. agreatman. The New York election is an evidence of re- | ull right; that ample assurances had been given . rydico was signalized, and took her position in the rear 20—Orsamus B. Matteson. turning reason, No matter what causes have chiefly con- | at Syracuse, and that we would soon’ sce hia lotter Bervaro, Nov. 10, 1854. | ct the Forte, signalizing laud ten miles to the wertward. 21—Henry Bennett. trolled the result in that State, the most gratifying feature | of resignation, with the official notice for e special | _ The City Bank of Columbus, Ohio, closed its doors this | On the 28th’ land was in sight of the whole 29) Andrew L, McCarty. to the mind of the patriot is, that in one of the strong- | cicction. Yet’ days passed, and no resignation came, | morning. The liabilities are understood to be large. | being the peaks of the Mounts Avatscha, ‘Koselitt aod Henry ©. Goodwin, for short term, hols of abolitionism the democratic yarty has rollel up } and when at last we wrote to a friend in Canan- ‘ re oe ie sare Sree eee eee 23— William A. Gilbert, : great vote, n comp! jumphant. | daigua toascertain what it could twit clad sides, enabled them to clear! juish their H—Amoe P. Granger, Seward Whig Be, too, is i'n wholesome spectacle to see how effectually dismay that It lad boen deemed perilote by tenling ost, oe pecan Mea ale Lg 3 rg outlines. ‘The vessels hove to, and Yue Kaglish Adenia is 25—Bhuin B Morgan, ‘Seward Whig. ne movements of certain litte demagogues have been | in the district to open it fo a contest now, and that Mr. ‘ons, Nov. 9, 1854. | boarded the Forte, The Obligado, covered with canvas “TELEGRAPHIC. nin irew Oliver, Soft Shell. = se a crashed. The vote for Judge Bronson | Clark had acquiesced in the decision, belioving that, af- ‘The salaratus factory of Darling & 8 this village, put into the bay of Avatscha, ta geconnoltre, followed. : Annas Noy. 10, 186. 36 William £0. Kelsey Ere guile Sotmrntongsepce see teens tony | SEEN ISARLAC GRRTAGF MAA at a apecal lee: | farenoon.” Loe about 67,000." Nolnnuravee. "| 4, the Brepapatons fig i i Diemer gee, 20—John Williams, 8. 5. and. M. vituperations ‘who east 7 tion. - caret eth the ‘The Regitier foots up the vote for Governor in the Ltd py caupaige, To ineae Sas aay CClae seaaeiice 4 Coins tila: wid tt Sac: Vaal Glaak's, past aks nach Sadho { the: Forte’s battery. The re’ - 31—Thonas & fer, National ° tion had become subordinate to porsonal hostility to | und on that of his friends. We know how well paved e ty in South Carolina. | Virago from her expedition, the Intter reporting that ~s G. Havens, National . | President Picree. ‘The vocabulary of Billingsgate was | with good intentions the nether region is; 'tis pity our Cuarteston, Nov. 10, 1854, lind gone within two miles and 9 half of the 83—-Francts 8, Bdwards, K. N. &National Whig | exhausted for epithets against him; and men claiming | «treets were not in equally good case. But, in the face | Mr, Aiken, member of Congress from this district, has | mulowakl. The foBowlng morning the ontee: | to be gentlemen did not hesitate to use the vilest terms | of a mysterious and active treason in our own raike, 4d Washington te 4 8 dette thovanath Riahevtay | sail was given, and the squadron entered. the ASSEMBLY. of reproach against the chief magistrate of the repub- | boldly ‘vaunting itself invineible, and predicting our over- gone to Washington to try and settle the mail dificulty | Avatscha in the following order:—The Cownties. Dists. lic. Professing « superior kind of democracy to all | throw, this hesitancy, this postponement, was a fearful | in this State. | Pique and Eurydice, the Virago taking her New York....1—David O'Keefe. others, and even assailing the most eminent champions | mistake. It could not be publicly explained so as not to ee the left of the President and the Obligado, on the left ef 2—Rodert B. Coleman. of democratic principles because they would not Join | jmply fatal weakness, timidity, of selfishness on the part Bacrtlege. | the Forte. At twenty-five minutes past one the allie. 3—Patrick H. Maguire, I. D. | im the crusade against the President, these men did | of our standard bearer. It was plain that Mr. Clark was Urtva, Nov. 10,1854, | upe, Molsted their Bags, sid 9b; haley two, the 4—John D, Dixon, ea W. | Ot henitate themselves to vote for and to combine |vitlier done over in his district, or afraid of being beaten | os ui. church at Oxford Cuan “Ais erat preety d capitis so fin barge in i | wi most violent enemies of democratic princi- | in the State; that he eith t now to hat fgued, ¢ Catholic church a , Chenango county, was rorya cry and magasines ANOTHER RESPATCH. 6—William B. Aitkin. | ples in the State. Confident in the success of this | or ought not to have been & cantiinte for another pubs | broken into om Thursday night and the silver pix, a ves. | _, Whilst anchoring, the batteries, four in number, opm ‘Atsany, Nov. 10, 1854 ‘i—Charics C. Leigh, Maine law. system of defamation and hypocrisy, (because they had } (rust until he should have nequitted himself of that al- | secased with gold, for containing the blessed ancrament, | distance th them, which proved harmless, as owing tothe dis bs ae _ &-Theodore Stuyvesant. | polled a respectable vote ® year ago,) and believing } ‘cady canfided to him. How could his supporters be in- | *!° gold, for containing the blessed sacrament, | distance the bails failed to reach them. ‘The batteries es s0nemo votes herd from, mating Cart bind * soo WichehngSeagrist Sage o Bosaiagtale | siaply ‘Vecrase”Soncral Feros te apposed snctner | ined postion apteciel ste Set Senate tis | nt neon | “SW the Schatot battery, stunted on the potato that i it | r al a] very hou! r S Joins eae rebtad Ohin, repress u—J , Pally ¥ Feraon to office in his place, they looked, forward to a tremillins dedempaiting? "We hove forborne to «peck Markets. | name, which controlled tie entrance of the port, enter ay ne 12—W. G. MeLaughlin. | different result from that which now greets their eyes. | on {his point until after the election. The next time we Nuw Onteaxs, Nov, 9, 1854. _ | ing to the left. stands, imeluding majorities, as followa:— 13—R. M. Bate yora, Seward Whig, 18maj. | But there is another view of this part of the subject. | iuave a candidate in such a eategory we shall beless pa- | Cotton firm. Sales to-day 5,000 bales. ‘Middling quoted | 24. A battery located on the point to the right. « 111,933 14—Thomas J. Mundy, 8. 8. The Washington Union has for months contended, in } tient, and speak before. at 8%e. Flour dull and selling at $8. Mess pork, $16. Eh payee panes wits Fog ted cannon elevat~ . 5 a iv 4 e in ving we read cor ir m market is quiet. jes to-day, les, Sodus Deciates a heat hiforward tive like Frankli iat they are we every true whig will justify Burrato, Nov. 10—11.30 A. M. | of four vessels, one a merchantman, and the other Aunany, Nov. 10, 1854. 4—~J. B. Van Eton, K. Nemuw Freres Goeth pet, ond sovia nos, "excite any other sensa- | “* 12 withholding the su of the from | The stringency in the mopey market still continues to | men-of-war, could be diseovered. i. | Broome. 1_—Charles McKi tions in the minds of intelligent democrats but infinite Mr, Clark and his co-nominees after their Saratoga let- | restrict the transactions in our market for all descrip- At half-past four o’clock the frigate President It fs generally conceded here to-night, that Myron H. Cayugs. “1—Moore Conger, 8. 6. and ineffable disgust and indignation. ter. We were not itted behind the scenes in these | tions of produce. Flour—For flour there is a very limi- | the Virago to advance to the peninsula and open hee! Dlark is elected Governor. “a—David L », K. N. and Hard Shell, ‘We told them, too, in these columns, that the demo- arrangements, and had to rely upon such discernment | ted inquiry this morning, and prices are without el nee. on the Russian forts, which fire was sapenen to 3—William B. Wooden, Seward Whig. cracy of the other States in the Union regarded the men | *4 ¥¢ Possess, to infer from various public movements | Sales of (200 bbls. Michigan, good brands, at $8 60 a | Sring of bombs from the city, which did not ‘THE VOTE IN THE CITY Chemung.....1—Orrin Robinson, Z | guilty of this systematic detraction of the American exe- | \2%t was more secretly going on; and we little expected | $8 ¢0. Wheat—Wheat is fa goed supply, with no sales, | vessels, but burst in the air. ie Chautanque ..1—Samuel 8. Whallon, K. N. & 8. & Cutive with feelings not far different from those which Coe within forty-eight hours after electionday, we stould | It is held Lo agg he $1 58 for Milwaukie and $2 for | To deceive and annoy the Russian sentinels lanterns 2—F. W. Palmer, Seward Whig. are always entertained for nolsy and reckless calumnia- | ' Able to present such irretragible evidence ofthe justice white Michigan. Corn—Corn {s quiet, with no large ad- | were carried about the vessels, and guns were Gred te HE MAYORALTY TICKET. . Knapp, Seward Whig. | fora aad we raid, furthenssres that the democratic | of our apprehension and aulstrust, S401 we had toread | dition to the stock as yet to-day. The prices aro the | ccunterfeltsigoals. On (heir se, the Russians kept . “1 David Rhoda, Seward Whig. | party of the State of New York would be certain to aym- | ‘h® arlicié & second timo before we could satisfy our- | same as yesterday. Sales of 4,000 bushels on the spot at | fires in their forts. The following morning they made pas MERON OF FERMARDY WOOD Br 4 FLCRALIFY 2—Blisha W. Bushnell, Seward Whig. ° | pathice with the Prevail sentiment of the stemocrac selves that we read correctly, iat it was mune | ¢9¢., and 3,000 bushels to arrive shortly at 70c. In onta, | ready for hostilities. An officer was detached from the 86. — of the country. The sequel proves that we are right. that thus spoke, for the, stared us in the face that the rap and rye, there is nothing @oing, oer the | Forte with orders to make a naisance and to deter- recont ‘The full returns for Wood and Barker from all the ly of the first continues |. Whiskey—Whiskey | mine a position for the bry od ve would enable ako! Tribune had almost every quality of greatness | Thus has the wildest and most unscrupulous warfare | 14 jyrom H. Stak, shore privy Felt bear Pa isin fair demand; sales of 100 bbls. ‘at 34c. Canal | to cannonade the fort of and the flanked 5 |—Albert Emans, H. 8. upon an honest public man been rebuked and defeated fi distatots in the city give the following result :— ‘2—Joseph E. Allen, HS. bys popular decreé such as tho country has not wit- a Of | Freights—For corn, 17c., and for lour, 73e. to New York. | tery, without being exposed to the fire of the Rusilam Tocnenie: Weed, demoerat........ S—Ambrose Wager, Soft & A. M. L. nessed in twenty years. Peay proclaimed the P litical strength ra | Receipts this morning :—10,400 bbls. flour; 4,000 bushels | frigate. James W. Barker, Know Nothing. ..1— William W. Weed, Seward Whig. But-this subject suggests other views, which will be | gee of roughout, pe ger Ba lenstertbiang Rea ert, | Teens £000 de. corn; 20,571 do. onts. | 4 cutter commanded by an officer of the Eurydice, eo- 2—Daniel Dovening, Jr., 8. 8. treated of on another occasion. timphant election, while i as awe auare there Borraro, Nov. 10—6 P.M. | operated in this’ reconnaisance, in which. the com> &—Lorenzo D. . {From the us, Nov. 10, coe fiuslt Obit ems. wel. enon ba eeplatnel publich Flour.—There is no new feature in the flour market to | mandants of the Eurydice and Pique took part. It W. Goddard, Seward Whig. We arel yot without sufheien’ iy full and reliable re- | aitkcet in eteto eas NOt even be explained publicly | note. ‘The supply is rather greater than the demand, | thus ascertained that Fort Schako was manned _egziey: | turnt to delermine the result of the gubernatorial con- | ness” om his part, and felt that hit supporters could not , Which ia. eee nn vas macenre, by. the laewsasing.| 1 Piet Ghated it wal Poruaed ih tele | test. regard him with'confidence because his own voluntarily, 4 : ot ful, and Ham.1—We Seward | $8 a $8 123 for U; $8 60 for Mi pounders, and that the battery on the right is es ee ee en tit ocentias not included, in whole or in part, will | maintained portion preclaimed him 40 be tremulous and | tnd ge oer ees ORV Fe Son, woos teva, | Grrau4, War ahellered but oar ecole: fortitea 2—David Mallory, Seward & M. L whee ay comes tn from the rumors of pat: eleok ale ain Loxton explain, 95 | brands. Wheat.—The operations in wheat are brought | Englixh Admiral gave orders to the master Greene .,.....1—M. L. Rickerson. ‘ascertained Tesults in those counties. J ‘ange contradictions. toa stand for the reasdns stated above. A sale was re- | the Pique to fire upon that battery and wor to 2—Joln C. Palmer, H. 8. & M. L. New York and Otsego, and part of Herkimer, are lo.| (From the Buffalo Advertiser, (National whig,) Nov. 8.] Ported of 6,000 bushels of white Michigan at $1 08. | dismount a piece of ordnance; the ball, well, aimed, 1—William: pl, H. 8. | ealities from which ‘Seymour's colusin will Feotve large We are without sufficient returns to warrant the ex- | Corn.—Corn is in fair demand, and the market firmer. | struck the ra which stood upright on its v1—Calein Ls Seward Whig. | Stcessions-but from:no other county ean he expect | 1ession of a very decided opinion as to the election for | Sales of 1,500 bushels, fo arrive Hoon, at 603; 9 70c., and | Which being shivered, placed it : 2—Moses Eames, Soward Whig. seer ee Lor ne ter COUT Poe ate eect | Governor, £0 far ns heard from; Ullman is considerably | 1,000 bushels on the spot at 0c.” Some libllers are | flanked battery was evidently the one most te 3—Joshua Main, Seward Whig. tradictory and unreliable, aud we omit them. From Ot- 1 of Seymour, but the strongest democratic sections aoking 73e. Oats.—Oats are dull and nominal at 42c, | subdue, being constructed with facines of « little over Kings ........1—Augustus H. Ivans. nego we have ‘but reports and ‘estimates—from State are yet to come in, and the election of fey. | Whiskey.—Whisk ay steady—sales, 100 bbis., at S4c. | twelve feet in thickness. On the receipt of the report ef 2—George A. Scaring. Werner the veel ents atte — mour is quite posstble, and: perhaps probable. If Canal fhts,—The freight on flour to New York is | theofiicers charged with the reconnaisance, the bombard 3—John C. Rhodes, K. N. ‘The counties to come in, partially ‘or whotly, which with | 20mination Clark by the anti-renters aided him as | 72¢.; on wheat, 21c.; on corn, 16%. Receipts for the | ment commene The Pique was made fast to the star- Livingston.,..1—Lyman Odell, H. 8. add materially to Clark's ‘column, are probably Clinton, | “uch in the anli-rent district as was anticipated, Sey- | last twenty-four hours—Flour, 10,461 bbls.; wheat, 26,- | board cf the Virago, and the President was placed in the 2—McNell Seymour, H. 8. « Cortland, Delaware, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Mont ry, nour may fall behind Ullman, after all. There seems 318 bushels; corn, 69,182 bushels; oats, 21,365 bushels, | rear of the stermer; the Forte took ‘on the lae- 1—Aaron Parsons, 8. 8. Saratoga, Schenectady, Tompkins, "Washington, in part, | ' Rodoubt of the defeat of Clark and afl his co! Tenn adeneuns, SON nuaetin. board of the Virago, the side on they found the Madison 1—Gilbert Tompkins | Wayue tu past, ond Yolen.” 7 1 | on the fusion ticket, by a very large plurality. The A STOCK MARERT. 1 as4, | Yensela: they easily distinguished the Ruselan 2—Aarn B Brash, keward Whi The ‘counties’ which reports warrant the belief witt | Sxure* in another column tell the story, #0 far asthe | aye stock market is dull and droopiig. Small trans- | Wrusdside {0, in the rear of the frigate Aurore; Monroe.......1— Smith, come in largely for Ullman, are Allegany, Cattaraugus, pre ll ee rea ices tosapes” in Reading Railroad at 36; Pesusylyania Tail: tie conte bemag Wamoe tore Ramee aes — Nobels Fe bate ie Chemung, Chenango, Livingston, in part, Chatanque, in | SY Cero se daigua, seems to have hada cleater ; Pennsylvania State Fives, 82. vanecd within resch of thee of. the beacon, A 3—Nehemiah P. Stanton, Jr. H. &8.8. | part, perliaps Rockland, Seneca, Sallivan’and Tioga. | Of + Charis, The rates for money are unaltered. beg air Montgomery..1—Aaron W. Hull, Seward Whig. nee, Ail te reported at 3000 for him, Chawtauque, | #d moro accurate conception of the political condition ball from that quarter having struck the water e 2—Hexekiah Baker, Seward & A. M. L. at 3,400, pan ston nt 1,800, &e y wd4, | of the State and his own chances of election, than any LARGE AUCTION SALE OF WOOL. distance from her, the Virago responded with « Ageoriiing to present appearances, which sre very de. | Niagara..,....1—Linus J. Peck, National Whig. In view of these things, and with the rosults as far as | °C his noisy and intemperate advoeaten here or chewhere. Troy, N. Y., Nov. 9, 1864. | which struck the lower frame-work of the beacon. AS the following ir the tate Ticket elected :— ‘Ira , National Whig. anceriained before theny our readers will perceive that | At no period of the canvass dul be fecl much confidence | _ A large auction rale of wool took place to-day nt the | this moment, (146; efelock,) & cutter from the th sult for Governor is as much in doubt as before the | his success, and being cytes Serbs +d the State | depot of Messrs. Herrington & Warren, of this city. | boarded the 1, and the commander of the anne on of his valuable services, he clung to seat in the | Four hundred and seventy-five thousand pounds of wool | companied by his aid-de-camp, with the French 4 Senate with unyielding tenacity. were sold at fair prices, ranging from thirty to thirty- | and the Sui bearded the as OXSLAUGHT OF THE NATIONAL WHIG CENTRAL ORGAN [From the Albany Evening Journal, Nov. 11. eight cents per pound. There was a large attendance of | miral Price had fallen moztally wounded by ex! ON THE SEWARD WIRE PULLERS. ‘The canvass grows exciting. “Our table of results, as | Eastern manafacturers and of brokers and dealors of | a pistol in his own handg, the ball of which f the Albany Register (National whig centralorgan) | reported by let! legraph, been carefull: New York, Philadeiphia, &. his heart, of which the dra: A y Nov. 9.) toed and & sed The jeveante between Sey. the retreat and ware suspenied. = ad vised and corrected. 1s between Sey- ~ tae rosie ot tae diseiiod, vo far te ened tome We |e ceenernnnnn apm ai Pe ed'n Russian laungls, ontter-rianed, ‘maneed Sy ales dr., Seward Whig. 8u that the contest would be between Mr. Clark he At the St. Nicholas Hot Hon. Tope Inpereell, hw sailors. pi) mn ore SP PipGeeat cece as, | Munberang pac ragtate fo, nto a | pa geeanicaates Pm | Eek gh pA Bang as | pnt ar ik tn wee Oranges... Aadao H eeemag banned aad MLL” | chance of am election. “Bet wo havo, evertal a groat Col Teslrosck, Altany: ion i Vert Indlesr a: | Viaue, , The wine wear ‘ 2 Samuel Me Le fact, that these are times which baffle all calculations 4 ‘H. Water waren; BeBe Lav. | Fort SchakoBend a Ty ML founded the observation and of the ‘GOVERNOR Fees hia; Col. Kpps, Vis ; John A. Linton, Preside: upon it across fire; the Virago 8 ‘at all events, they have completely) baified ours. Washington; 1.8. Ormsby, U.S. A.; Bernard Sa: | embarked a hody of ® short distance frog the people are up and around. They discarded all TREK) Sage Reitos, Sem Frencisee: Morton, bea The ry ties and weare glad of it. They have acted Goa, and | 1 phis; John §. Wright, Boston. Fe * Te adcpealentty as five went theull, ead we ace of it. duty of @ At the Motropelitan Hotel—Hon, D. ¥ Maine; C. | force rgshed upon right side We nee in the "ot evente, ‘that the good stuns hat has LS Lorene U.S. A W. Warts and | Auroriny © teomenenenneep ebiioter Dome when indieidual. mes will act and hans m9 entueky; Wm. mes , | A money, potiry bens a hurrah wel- for themselves. They have that corrupt — {lewnee Mandal U8 * | comed.’t, and when the emoke had dispersed the foree code that bound them to party instead of principles, that praise and + Capt, Kenne: wae mister of the battery, demolishing the made them automatons in the hands of political tricks- , the 30th Mase. 3 Irving, dion Covey it. Fieges with axea, Dresking the cainsone and spitting ess CS eee ee rintnete | st ea aes Tomen, , Bowdoin, New York: ©. el ies ee Nee, ee citizen, baie “ sae sb Se were to retake the bet- hoover elected, productive acknow- | Rowen San Franciso; R. iwood, Mobile; S. H. Cary, un wa et ad ey talker hie malti. | New York: Ca, inte Panta Aas, Heston: Ri: The Pique amt Forte the ‘the people still hold the reins of and that besten Werk Indies; J. HR. Butleny “thelr voice ts the voice of God.” Whoever may be next Governor, one ee oearee certain, that old are broken up. power that has heretofore controlled the State, and portioned out the government- | i }

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