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NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1856. NEW YORK HERALD. | ™coycc "has eee JAMES GORDON GENNET?, EDITOR AND PROPEIBTOR. Pulome XXl........ccccrrserrssreserreeret@ 309 AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. ‘WYBLO’®? GARDEN, Broadway—) BisNerte xD JFANOT —Troer Kora Faam— Barcus. SoWERY THEATRE Sowery—Tue Dexon Lovan—Kup Mask —Hawuer Teavesrix. STRTIN’® AKW THEATRE, Broadway, oppostio Sond st, te Fr Daxcine—Barse PALLACK'S comune Bros¢way—-Tus Wire—Fus Barna— Wuo Sraaxs Finer. MaMBSKS STKSKY THRATRR, (ate Burtoe’o—Ton @uwnsnes oF Moscow~ Sairy Suant—Rory O' Moss. GaRNUM'S AMKRICAN MUSEUM, Broadway—Aafer nseo—Gas, Tom Tavas—Dx. Diwoaru.—Rvening—Daun, BROADWAY VARIKTIES, 2 Broetwav—Toe Miss or Mausei 1as—Nan, rue Goop ror Nursing. @50. CHRISTY & WOOD'S MINSTRELS. 444 Broadway— Memory Peuroananows— boxe Syuasn Diavous, WOOKLEY'S SKARNADERS, Se Recadwag— RETA Wereremsy— saa cy rs Deep Sw. Sew York, Thursday, November 6, 1956, — —— Malls for the Pacific. EW YORK HERALD—CALIFORNIA EDITION. ‘The Untied states mail steamanip Lllinois, Capt. Boggs, ‘wii leave this port this afternoon, at two o’clock, for Aspinwall, ‘Fac mails for California aad other parts of the Pacific, (WH clove at one o'clock. ‘Tee New Youx Weexvy Huzsup—Oalifornia edttion— Bemtaining the latest intelligence from all parts of the (world, will be published at ten o'clock in the morning. Single copies, 12 wrappers, ready for mailing, stxpence. Agents will please send in their orders as early as pos- ‘bis. ‘The News. Akthough it is pretty generally believed and con- eeded on all bands that Bachanan is elected, yet the figures received do not show such a result. As far aa ascertained the electoral votes are distributed as follows:— Buchanan —leaving Mlinois, Indiana and Oalifornia to make ‘wp the total of 296. The returns from Illinois and Indiana give republican gaina, and induce the belief ‘that those States have gone for Fremont, in which event the decision will of course depend upon Cali- fernia; and shonid she have decided for Fremont— aad it is the opinion of bis friends that such is the fac:—then the election will go to the House of Re- presentatives. The steamship Canada arrived at Halifax last evening, with Liverpool dates to the 25th alt., three days later than those previously received. The finan- cial news is of a favorable character. Consols are q@oted a: 924 a 92§. Cotton continued ouoyant, vat bread-tufls were dull. The Neapolitan question was po nearer settlement. The English fleet was somewhere in the Mediterranean, but the French fleet remained at Toulon. Reports entitled to confidence were in circulation, to the effect that Russia had advised King Ferdinand to yield some of the points in dispute, and to trust to France to mediate upon the remainder. From Spain there are rumors of an expected Ministerial crisis. ‘The rule of Narvaez had naturally led toa concentra ‘tion of the opposition elements, and an explosion will be the result. In France frequewt arrests of mom- bers of ce -ret societies caused some sensation. We have files from the Cape of Good Hope dated to the 10th of September. The Graham's Tow. pa- pers state that a very dangerous pamphlet was be- img circulated throughout the Kat river settlement Ths cirentation was confined to the Hottentots, and there was great difficulty in obtainingacopy. It was set forth to be a covert attempt to rouse the re- Deltious feelings of the colored people. Three han- @red and twenty-one and a half tons of copper ore were exported from Table Bay during the month of August. By way of New Orleans we have news from Ruatan to the Isth ult. The treaty between Hoa- @uras and England, retroceding the Idand to the firet named Power, reached Ruatan on the 17th, and eansed considerable excitement. Public opinion was almost unranimons against the recognition of the sovereignty of Honduras, and a large portion of the inhabitants were determined to resist the mea sure it it were forced upon them. Many were io favor of endeavoring to become an indepen lent republic. The island is inhabited by about three thourand five bondred people, a large proportios of them blacks, but all speaking toe English lancaage, the same as thore of St. Andrew's and Proviiea va, Bearer t» the New Granadian coast. On Toeeday nicht Montreal was visited by « ter rific burricave. Much damage was done to the Doildings in the city and neiguborhood, bt 0 loss of life is reported. The steamer Prince Albert was driven ashore at St. Helen's Island, bat the passengers were landed in safety, aud properly eared for by ‘he cartison stationed there. We publish elvewhere im our columas ® well written nerrative of the overlaed march of the Se- cond regiment of Unit.d States cavalry from Jof fereon barre ks to San Antonio, Texas. It graphi- cally deorrites new and fresh seenes of camp and froutier life, snd will doubtless be perased with re- Jish by our readers, who have heen surfeived wich polities for rome time past. We have news from Kansas ap to the Sthalt. Oa that day 9 numeronely attended c avention orga nieed at Big Springs, and nominated Gov. Reeder an the fice state candidate for delegat> to Conztress. ‘The Stat» prisoners were on trial at Lecompton. The Court of Gegeral Sessions meets this morn. ing, pareuant to adjournment, Recorder Smith pre- mding. Tae Roards of Supervisors, Aldermen and Conn @iknen were in ecesion last evening, but the basi- ness transaced was merely of a routine character, and dcvoid of importance. The southeasterly gale which prevailed on Toes day, caused considerable damage ou Lake Eric and Lake Ontorio. Two schooners, one laden with wheat aid the other with salt, weat ashore between the picrs at Oowego, and the schooner J. G. Deshler was dian arte? aud driven ashore about nine miles hove that city. A large number of vessels left Bafialo on Mow and much anxiety was felt for their rafety. bark American Repablic was Griven ogsinet the breakwater and eynk im.oediate- ly. She was from Chicago, laden with a large cargo of wheat. The propeller St. Joseph went ashore at Pairpert, and will probably prove a total loss. Her crew were rescued with much dificulty. There were remors in ciréniation at Baffalo of the wreck of a nomber of other vesvels. With a decresed stook of beef cattle on market yesterday, and an improved condition of the wea- ther, prices aporeciated, and in some instances an advance of fully 1c. was qptablished, the average being Te. a 10(0. per pound. The quality, also, of the cattle fur sule was rather better than that of- fered during the previons week. Cows and calves were dull of vale, at $25 0 $60. Veal calves were in demond, avd sold briskiy at Sc. a The. per pound. Sheep and jamie were in fair request at #2 88, according to quality. Swiue were in good supply, at Glo. a Tle. per pound. The market for cotton yesterday was rather irregular, while the sales footed ap abyat 1,500 bales. The flour market was heavy, without quota. ble change in prices, while sales were moderate Wheat was easier, with fairsales at #1 670 $1 69 for Canodian white, 1 66) for Weatera white, and $1 69 for common red do., and Chicago spring so'd at $1 42 0 $1 43, and Milwankle club at $1.46. Corn woe easier, with sales of 15,990 25,000 bushels at 72. a Tic. Pork was heavy, with moderate sales at #2) for mess and at $18 for prime. Bales of sugars were confined to azout 600 a 600 hogsh+ads, at prices given in another colame. Coffee wos firm, bat quiet. Freights were engaged to a moderate extent at etendy rates. With the election of Mr. Buchanan, and with a democratic majority in both houses of Congress, the first conclusion wou'd be that he has secured everything essential to a :mooth, respectable and successful administration. But such is net the case. His adminietration, from the outset, will be surrounded with difliculties and perplexities more numerous and formidable than those which any President has been called upon to grapple with since the organization of the government. In the first place, his majority in the House of Representatives is an uncertain and slippery ma- jority. The gains, in many instances, which his party have secured in Pennsylvania, Ohio, In- diana and New York, are gains achieved upon false issues, and particularly false upon the test question of Kansas. Let the Southern democra- cy try these Northern gentlemen upon a bil! for the admission of Kansas as a slave State, and they will most probably discover that they have made a lamentable blunder in their calculations, and that their democratic majority in the House is by no means a harmonious working majoriiy ‘or the extension of slavery according to the Kaneas policy of Atchison, Jeff. Davis aud Frank- lin Pierce. We are not kept in doubt concerning the pro- gramme of the ruling democratic secession faction of the South. The leading article, which we trans- fer to this paper from that outspoken confidential organ of Jefferson Davis—the New Orleans Dela— is singularly frank in the exposition of his policy as the great Southern Warwick of the democratic party. He has ruled the administration of poor Pierce with a rod of iron—he has left the im print of his power upon the Cincinnati platform of Mr. Buchanan; and with his transfer to the United States Senate, this conspirator, Davis—this arch-agitator of slavery extension, secession and a Southern confederacy—will be in a position to work out more effectively his mischievous designs upon Mr. Pierce’s successor. His preeent pro- gramme, as laid down in his confidential organ. is, after the admission of Kansas as a slave State— First—The reduction of the whole of Central America to a slaveholding confederacy under Gen. Walker. Secondly—A descent from Nicaragua, by Walker, upon Cuba and the West India islands generally, the re-establiehment of slavery in those islands where it has been abolished, and the annexation of the whole lot to the Union. Thirdly—The adoption of this policy of slavery extension as the Union preserving plank in the democratic platform of 1860. With regard to the prospects of this grand and sweeping programme, this organ of Jefferson Davis and bis powerful faction hasits misgivings It confesses its fears of the Northern deinocrats elected to the next Congress; and the fact that the cause of Mr. Buchanan himself has been pushed forward in the North upon the policy of hostility to the extension of sla- very it regards as a very bad omen. “ But, after all,” says the Delta, “ we have the Ostend manifesto, to which Mr. Buchanan is pledged.” This will do; for in this seces- sion slavery extension programme, and in these misgivings and fears of the confidential orgau of Mr. Davis, we have disclosed to the naked eye the budget of embarrassments which will sur. round Mr. Buchanan at the very outset of his career. But again: We must not overlook the delicat» duty of the appointment of a new Cabinet. How is Mr. Buchanan to satisfy the country, or to se- cure a reasonable cohesion of the conservative masees of the party, if he shall fail to secure 4 homogeneous Cabinet of Union and conservative men? The fatal mistake of poor Pierce was his mosaic Cabinet of factionists, disuaionists and secessionists, To avoid splitting to pieces upon the same breakers, Mr. Buchanan must repudiate from bis Cabinet, and all other offices of honor, confidence or emolument, all such preachers of treason and disunion as Jeff. Davis Governor Wise, Toombs, Slidell, Benja- min, Brooks, Keitt, Johnsoa * Georgia. Mason and Hunter of Virginia, Atchison, Stringfellow and Forney. They must be repadi- ated and sent about their business; for all that class of men who counsel revolution aad diz union against the will of the American people, should it go against them, are unworthy the countenance or confidence of the President of the United States, who-e fret official pledge is to support the constitution. The election. by the divisions of the opposition forces and a series of accidents, bus resulted io favor of Buchanan. w the work among the vericus managers, cliques and coteries of | democracy, North und South, for the firet seu the table, beging Mr. Buchonan will soon dis cover What Mr. Jefferson Davis and hiscontrollug seerssion faction expect and demand; he witl perecive, on the returns of the election, however, that come steps of concilintion in behalf of th North are indispensable to the continaed exie tenee of the democratic party. Inevitably he ust disappoint the North or the South; aad fo the present, with the Southern programme of Jeffervon Davis before him, we leave him to his reflections upon this interesting question. Tus Evection or Maron the question whether the public of this city I are likely to be influenced uafavorably to a cun.i- date, by unspa: ing though injadicious and exag- gerated abuse of bis private character. With the single exception of Col. Fremont, Mayor Wood bas been the best abused man of this canvass; and be is one of the first whose victory we learn. This matter also settles the disposition of the Presidential infmence and faterest in this State. Mr. Wood, independently of hie persona! triend- +hip with Mr. Buchanan, now becomes, in virtue of his election and in obedience to a traditional principle which the new President is certain to werve, the legitimate channel of commnnication between the President and the New York de- mocracy, the proper adviser of the former in matters affecting New York, and in some sort, the recognized head of the latter. Mr. Buchanan is too shrewd a politician, and too observant of party discipline, to entertain for one momunt the idea of treating with the party through its dis carded leaders, euch as John McKeon, Robert J. Dillon, Mr. Libby, or ex Judge Whiting. What he has to say or to do will be said or done throagh Wood, and him alone. This very brilliant position involves responsi- bilities at least of corresponding import, Fer. nando Wood will enter apon his second term as Mayor of New York more deeply pledged to ef- fect a sound administration of public affairs, and to introduce reform into the city government, than any Mayor we have had for years. The friends who heve stood by him in the cobiest, and those who, closing their ears to the abuse | which hae been lavished upon him, have gone for bim at the polls m the teeth of the most earnest warnings, are entitled to expect that he will vin- dicate the justice of their course. It is due to them as well as to himself that Mr. Wood should proceed forthwith, really and earnestly, to the practical realization of the promises of reform held out in his first inaugural. It is very true that the reforms that are needed cannot be effect- ed without a new charter ; and therefore, we expect that Fernando Wood will devote bis whole mind aad energy, at the proper times and in the proper places, to the procuring of such new charter, aud that he will not rest till it is passed, At the same time there is a wide field for the display of energy in the proper execution of the laws that we have, and in the adwinistration of the govera- ment of the city with all its faults, Defeat, De and Burial of Brooks. The defeat of Brooks, the American candidate for Goveruor, conveys a wholesome moral lesson. Erastus Brooks is one of two brothera, who owa and edit the Express newspaper. Years ago, the Express was a pet'y whig organ, and by dint of contrivences well understood by the initiated, oue of the brothers, James, secured a seat in Congress, Thus varnished into respectability, the brothers continued to carry on their jour- nal, obscurely enough, and to eke out a precari- ous livelihood by economies which are well re- membered by all who had dealiags with them at the time. Time rolling on, aud the corruptions of the democratic party on the one side, and the decrepitude of whigism on the other, stimalating the discontented to the formation of a uew politi- cal organization, Know Nothingism was ushered into being, and the brothers Brooks eought and obtained an humble place amoag its priesthood. They were not known as Protestants, or religion- ists of apy kind. Their fulsome adulation of the Irish in the days of Taylor and Scott was weil and sorrowfully remembered by all the high minded adherents of these great whigs. Yet they now burst forth into a strain of bigotry and nar- row minded national prejudice that would have disgraced a Hindoo. Morning after morning they put forth violent and brutal tiradea, equally devoid of decency, discretion and common sense, against all foreigners and all religions save the narrowest Calvinism. They called for persecu- tion; they howled over the tolerance of the age. Every Catholic, they said, was a villain; every priest a hypocrite, a traitor and a Jesuit who was dying to destroy the republic. Of course the brothers Brooks, who had been engaged for fifteen or twenty years in the news- paper business, were a8 well aware as apy one else of the palpable absurdity and. ridiculousaces of this gabble of theirs; they laughed in their sleeve at their own affectation of bigotry, aud ver} likely felt a good deal of contempt for the parrow minded ignorance of the fools who were deluded by it. Still, whatever they thought they kept to themselves; and Erastus Brooks rode on the bigotry wave into the Senate. There he wonld have died, politically; there would have been the last of him—-but for the extraordinary indiscretion of a gentleman whose many good qualities are singularly alloyed by want of pra dence and caution, This was Archbishop Hughes. The Archbishop allowed Brooks to beguile bim into a political discussion; Brooks of course en- listed the religious sympathies of the rural dis- tricte; made so xsuch capital, in short, that the nomination for Governor was secured. The next step in this unhappy man’s career was the canvass just closed. It was competent to Brooks to move gracefully from the peculiar position he occupied (which, practically, was mere opposition to the democracy), to the side of Colonel Fremont, who alone, as he knew, could defeat the democratic candidate; or he might, if he really considered the election of Fremont dangerous to the Union, have fol- lowed the example of the fossil whigs of Masaa- chusetts and elsewhere, and rallied to the sup- port of Buchanan; or, finally, like our venerable female cotemporary of the Commercial, he might have assumed an attitude of newteality and con- tented bimeelf with underhand digs at the can- didates. He did not pursue any of these coucses, for the simple reason that not one of them held out to bim any prospect of personal gain; but in concert with a number of other uuprincipled po- liticians, he played upon the personal antipathies and the conceit of Mr. Fillmore, until he per- suaded that very foolish gentleman to run a sepa- rate ticket, and divide the opposition, Brooks’ share of the plunder was to be the Governor. chip; and this crafty rogue calculated that, though Fillmore as he knew well would be de- feated, and killed politically, he (Brooks) might etill carry the Sate. On this bask he began the campaign. We shrink from follbwing him through the coarse « the contest. Al} our city readers, at all events, remember the ubblushing, unexampled abase of Colonel Fremont which was the sole feature of the campaign Es pres s; they recollect how the Brook+es chose for their attacks those points 1: Col. Fremont which would bave been safe fro. the touch of every gentleman or man of hoaor : bow they calumniated bis mother, reviled his father, encered at his wife, invented falsehoods about his birth. his parentage, his religion, bis moral character, and repeated thom time and. again, long after over-zealous friends of Fremdnt bad been to the trouble of dieproving them; how, indeed, the sole, the only proposition they asserted, with a view of training the people to a right exercise of the suffrage, was that Col. Fremont had, by his energy and charac- ter, risen snperior to mishaps or disadvantages thet would bave crushed a weaker mau. This was Trastus Brooks’ contribution to the literature aud the labor of the campaign. Secure as he thought bimself of the vote of all the bigoted Protestants in the State, he las. od at the cries of shame which his course elicited irom every onc who had a voice to raise; to the very last day of the canvase, be persisted in setting all one’s teeth on edge by his indecent personulitics. He was to brazen, co bold, this Brooks, that honest people began to doubt their own senses, and to inquire whetber after all, black might not be white, and unmitigated rascality a mark of virtue. And now he bas been finished. The verdict of the people shows that he had done them wroog when he supposed that they were foole and bigote: they have not only rejected him, bat have entirely thrown his party overboard. In 1852, the party with which be was affiliated lost the State hy about 27,000; In 1854, the party of which he wasa leader, being the Know Nothings, then newly organized, polled 122,000 votes; ia 1655, the same party carried the State and polled 148.000 votes; this year, under the effeet of Brooks’ policy, theydo not seem at all likety to poll one-half that number, and the State is lost to them forever. So ends the career of Erastus Brooks. Hie ie a neefel, and a wholesome story; young men entering life, shoald study and reflect upon it. In these days of successtul roguery and brazen guilt, it is quite refreshing to eee one case in which the devil hae got bis due. Swau. we Have tax Travian Orera?—Since the recent extinguishment of the German Opera at Niblo’s Garden, and the settlement of the Pre- sidential contest, the imbroglio at the Academy has assumed a new phase. We have already stated that the renowned Russian, Monsieur le Baron de Stankovitch, has been endeavoring to obtain the Academy for one month upon trial, and that in the event of the Baron’s obtaining the house the redoubtable Maretzek was to be the musical director, Monsieur le Baron is charged a very high rent for the house—two thousand dollars per week—and in addition, he is to obtain from Max a formal apology tor the assaults upon the Executive Committee in bis memorable oration, when, like Aristides the Just, he ostracised himeelf from the Academy, and in & pronunciamento which he published in the He- Rap. This quarrel may affect the safety of the nation, and we therefore glve a concise statement of its origin and progress. On the thirtieth of September last Mr. Maret- zek took his benefit.at the Academy, and being called before the curtain at the end of the second act, addressed the audience at some length, The following is the objectionable portion of his epeech :— ° Ip every opera house which has been bul't in New York, the privileges of @ Himited wnd exclus.ve body 0 men have bovw guaranteed, In the Acaiemy of Mus ‘bis principle bes beep carried to ite chmax. Attha Av tor piace Opera House the privileged pyrion of the au dience at Jeast gecured the rent of the bouse But hero im the Acacemy of Maric, this is pot ibe caso. in adili Won to the enormous rent demanded the privileges of » wonld be exclusive party are larger—thy claims they make Upon the wapager sre more t—th ir terme ‘re barcer—thelr requirements are heavwr apou bi: brain, and bis body, his sweat, and his toil, thaa they bave ever betore been; vot but that Iam certain tuat the stockbolders, as a body, would be glad to grant al! jus and reasonable demavds required by me. were it ov thet the Executive Uommithe have determined upon eu forcing these upreagonable claims. The war then commenced briskly ; and, a: usual in such cases, the antagonists soon left the main question, and assailed each other’s private character. In the Herarp of the twentieth of October an anonymous letter was published, in which Max was called “an insolvent yet philan- thropic angel,” was accused of representing to the public that he had lost money by the Opera when he had gained plantatioas in Kentucky and eleewhere, and was otherwise rather roughly handled. Max, disregarding the wise injuactioa of Doctor Watts, allowed his angry passions to rise, and replied under his own hand in the Heratp of the twenty-third of October. He faye :— As to my affairs they are my own, an‘ the pub le care just ae litie whetber I Deve Boases and iaads a- they do whetner any gentleman connected witn the Aos Oemy of Music, part or preseat, has made m by lo \ery Operations, invesimen # ip the slave trace, or by & monopoly in the grain market. Now, whether any gentleman connected with the Academy bas made money by the means above mentioned we cannot say, but the insinu- ation highly enraged some of the stockholders, and they affirmed vigorously that Max should never more be officer of theirs. So stands the quarrel. The Executive Com- mittee now demand that Max shall withdraw the remarks quoted above and apologise for them. They have adouble reason for this. Some of the stockholders are very much enraged with Max, and say that if he ever does take his seat in the Academy orchestra again, they will not allow the performance to proceed until he does apologise, The Executive Committee desire that he shall do so first, in order to do away with he porsibility of a row, which is not a pleasant thing anywhere, and sometimes very dangerous to the furniture. The great question now is, will Max apologise at the price? It is certainly pretty hard to double the reat and demand an apology also; but if Max is very aaxious to get back to New York, he may doit Perhaps twould be better to wait a little. We have survived a month without the Opera, and it is barely possible we may get through another. People will go to Thalberg’s concerts en grand tenue, and eo ‘Broadway will not suffer mate- rially. The quarrel between Max and the Con- suls of the Academy must not be forgotten. It is now a great deal like the Brooks and Bur- lingame row: and perbaps it would be a good § ¢a to settle it at the Clifton House. ‘wALBERG.—We have published in another wace, a pleasant sketch of the life of the gre § pianist, who is shortly to give the New York public a taste of that ability which bas won for him +o enviable a position in the art world. It is perhaps too much to hope, in the still crade condition of the art of music in this country, that such a pianist as M. Thalberg will be fully appre- ciated. We know, however, that our people have always been ready to receive all that is true, beautiful and good in art and its exponents, and that in their over anxiety to reward the artists fully, they have sometimes been humbugged. We can point to M. Thalverg’s record abroad— to his fume, second to no artixt in the world—to his quiet course since his arrival among us, to show that there is no humbug or showman’s trick- ery about him. Therefore we simply suggest that every one should secure a place for Thal berg's first concert. The sale of tickets is to commence this morning. ‘The Honorable Saacer Hoan died at hw residence Concord, Massachusetts, on Monday, at the age of seve. ty tight years. He was born at Lincoin, and gra taste at Harvard, in the clase of 1902, and was soon aitore § toitied to the bar, tf which he was « distinguish: d orma ment for nearly baifacentery. He was wih Mr Web fier in Une colebrated cane of the Common wealth agalost Crow pin shield and the brothers Knapp, convicted of the mworder of White, in Salem, Massachuseits, and was ro tained in nearly allthe great Ro civil and eriminal, in the State, for thirty or He by oy federaint of the Hartford Scavention and efter wa @2 @ whig Of the Grate street stripe, He sorved a doth branches of Be Blate Logisiavare, wat twiee elector’ to Congress from the Middlesex cistriot, bela many oth cflices of public truss. and was, at the time of his dow, owe of the Board of Overscors of Harvard Gitex» moet pouceable eventio hie life wae hie change 19 po'l- lier, tiene from tne whig 60 the free eohi party, di-cotly afer Pal Thee to Boath Caroling a the agent of the too, bad bee i alleged violations of the po- hoe rogniatons of the =, which are very atrict in rem. Hon to ne, » . Tho afials created a eroen, great Gral of te io Masencbusetts, and Mr Eloar wee soos to Onarteston to br ring & sult, in we Hage Of ths Com Pvt Weald, woo had inoked ap the negroes, He wae ant obliged to leave the cliy without eccomplishing the obi-ct of nie Hived in quire retire wovt Bear, on 30 of the Court ot ex Juv tae Coart of nd and ecihor of ‘the Freemont platform, as acapted by the Philadelpdia Cow vention. His father was an able Log gh Tg u wan of the old PF! 6 wae & poriont type Of the stor. ioe Phd fay ‘New Eogiand charactor, wh dut fow of ihe prejudices. Police Intelligence. Fxrexerve Breotary—Racoveny oF tim Gove —On ‘Tuesday night the dry goods store / Wm. Dranver & Co , No, 201 Broadway, war burgierionsiy entered, and abous 916,40 worth of slike taken from the promises. Officer rae avme the property in zr te bg a vi © ie int bulleme ‘The property wes restored to the owners yor" verday morning. Casror oF Varro a Sica Brot—Hoary Rice was ar. Commmenion.—In Tuesday's edition we eteted that a boy vered Augastas Ray hed vom: vommitted a felonious sens. npr & com ‘of bie names Yellow Pil This Ten mistate, ay we the arty injured, while Yellow mii ven tte THE LATEST NEWS. BY MAGNETIC AND PRINTING TELEGRAPHS, THREE DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE. ARBIVAL OF THE CANADA AT HALIFAX, Unsettled Position of the Neapolitan Question. Reported Advice of Russia to King Ferdinand. Another Ministerial Crisis Expzcted in Spain. WNPROVEMENT IN FINANCIAL AFFAIRS. CONSOLS, 92 12 a 92 5-8. COTTON BUOYANT—BREADSTUFFS DULL, ko., &., ao. Haurax, N. 8, Noy. 5, 1856. The steamship Canada, Cupt. Lang, from Liverpool at 8} o’olock on Saturday, Oct. 26, arrived at this port this evening, and will be due at Boston at an early hour on Friday morning. She bringe London evening papers of October 24. ‘The Colina steamship Baltic, from New York October 11, arrived ‘at Liverpoo) at 7 P. M.on Wednesaay, the 22d uls. The screw steamer Kangaroo, with 200 for Philadelphys, sailed from Liverpool at 3 o'clock P. M. on the 22¢ ult, The steamship Fulton, from Havre for New York, sail- ed from Southampton early on the morning of the 234 ultimo, with 200 passengers and a full and general cargo. ‘The Canadian screw steamship Indian arrived at Liver- pool on the morning of the 22d ult, THE NEAPOLITAN QUESTION. ‘The steamer Fulton carried out to New York a briof manifesto from the Paris Moni‘eur, on the subject of ihe Nespoliten afairs, The Moniteur says that when the Congress of Paris brcke up the great Powers saw elements fraught with danger to peace in Belgium, Greece and Naples; that of thege states Naples alone refused 10 accept friendly ad- vice, and that in consequence the Western Powers will cease to hold ¢iplomatic imtercourse with her, The article of the Moniteur is the only authentic glimpse the public have yet had, of what is going on. The British fleet is somewhere in the Meditorrauean, and the French ships continue at Toulon ready for sea. Meantime the despatches are contradiclory—while one statement rays the ministers will not leave Naples for some mopibs, another arserts that Baron Brenier, the French Envoy, has announced t) the Neapolitan govern- ment that if be did not receive @ satis‘act a cation whhbin two hours he would pet horned instruction being dou! nenieed bis nie statment that the Emperor of Russia hes urged the King of Napies to avoid a rupture by maxing some cencessions, seems to be confirmed Py: numerous com- murieat one in the contivental The Cologne @azclte and the Belge (two gcperaily reliable journals) express tmemseives very positively on the subject. ‘The advice of the Emperor, it seems, was that King Ferdipand should change some of bis ministers ani piace Pricco Satriavo at the head of the roment. While warning bim against the ii! will of Emperor is further repr: as having recommended to the King to t ut to the mogeration of the Emperor of the French and to accept him ss a meaiator. The Austrian Gazel- hes received a communication from Napl-#, to the effect that King Ferdinand, toshow bis conciliatory ispositton, will = recall his repre- sentatives In Paris and London, in consequence of the recail of the French ant "agian ambassadors ‘n Naples. They will only leave these capitals ia case tneir paesperts are teat to them. The only authority for this statement ie “etriau organ, whicn aiso professes: 0 be able to say what the domands of tae py be ment really are, which are considered to be as follows:— First, a cha: ge of ministry—second abolition of present police $y sem— a0 thire # geveral amnesty. On the same autuority it mey be stated that the French Cabinet sould be satisfied if a genoral amnosty were were granted. The hopes of a speedy reassembliag of the Paris Con- ference begin to be shaken The resistance is eaid come from the English government, whose views seems 10 prevail. GREAT BRITAIN. ™ Dee has been further prorogued till Docem- er ‘The citizens of Dob'in gavo a banquet on Wednesday, the 22d ult, to nearly 4,000 troops, who served in the Crimes. 4 or Kei presided, sapported by Lerd Lient he Mager Goagh, Talbot and many other Gentiem. The city ‘of {Bitngvons will gives similar ban quet on the Sis Mr. Jobo Arrowemith, cotton brover, of Liverpool avows bimeelf tne wuthor of the story ta the Loatoa ‘Tinvs, of “Duels and Murders in « Georgia Ss Oar,” end reiterates the truth of his statement. aMair is incomprehensible ang excites mach = The schooner Dea: Ror mond was offered at auction at Live and the reserved price was £3,000. Only £4,800 bid, ene was wihtrawa. Aureha Sef}, a Roman Triumvir, has been engaged by the Italian Emancipation Committee to lecture throughout Great Britain, to dir up enthasiaem for Italy. Mra Mary F. Stone, sloter of Cyrus W rel, Fay +, of New York, died at Paris, on Wednesday, the FRANCE. French correspondence gives roontnens to ——_ ‘of the Imperial gaytics at ue, whore the Em md ‘Valls by bight, in Ab huatteg by day and costume of Louts X! sever have rose ak jen place bol Le 4 partment of the Deux aaa where @ seoret society of ‘A Capgerovs Cescription has been discovered. The soci ety was organized 7% Bei bay aul trained 4 to bey orders jor the the rich. Sixty per. 20D8 wert ipeteuded bet tt the Ah... armed with forks, attacked the oscort and reseuou the prisoners. jew arreets shore also been made in the Faubourg St. Antoine within a few days. ‘The report of the Bank of France le rather more favor- able, anhovgh the bank has adopled yot more stringent measures, aud will uot make amy advance at prevent on taliway shares or rentes. Commercial bills having six:y Gaye to run are always objected to, 80 that virtually tne verm is reduced to forty five days. SPAIN. Accounts from Madria = object ous to threw ‘The Marquis of Viluma, the head Fn yan acheck upon Narvaez. ‘ussian Knvoy, bas had @ cordial Queen. ‘A dangbier bas been born to the ‘peprier. ~ TPaLY. source, that in consequence of the Austria end Rome the Austrians aro ‘and will retain only (wo pornta, Ancona and A 2 ply te poy nae Russia and Na pincing latter in Russian porte The focaing of the tot Dighly favored uations, SWITZERLAND. ‘ein pense have been anemes. The wmthe ‘Ceogress of — = ew Minisiry. Redechid dectined. ‘The real ciuse was a ¢ifference of opinion with the French Mivieter, pcan Gea by aS, A SS. wit ie, bat te rlaned ee mays that Gea, Guyon od 4 died of cnoters. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. i = E g z i | Bs 2 Mite =o s aK 283833. 321 Pere eseeeese 2 3 he Benes See, reports that the advices from Ams by the Canada caused an advance of 3-16d. ie ernich bigger created 1-164. on the of the Batons mpews. ce the fuil advance one toe total sales amounting to the large quantity of 730,000 bales, ineluding 89, '19,000'd0. Amerions. ‘Tee talon to fpeoulators 59.000 bales, ‘and to 12,000 eo Tee wpe closed steady, at the d. rovement Was "nore were 12,000 bales, inciudp; folowing are the authored quotations:— Orleans, LIVERPOOL BREA DSTORRS— MABKPTS. Breadevuils generally were duil, The Broker’s Ciroular Says, flour was the turn in flavor of buyers, Wheat pigs anaes for the lower dmscriotions--aay about 24, om the week." Corn steady at previous atea.” Vario circulars call old wheat 4d. per bushel lower. Fleur 6d, a 1s. lower than at the departure of tho Aria. Some authorities likewise quote corn quiet, at a decline of 6d. per buzhel. ‘The foliowtng are the quotations of Messrs. Spence & Co.:—Wesiern canal flour, 30s, @ 338. ; ye ard Phiiadetpbia, 328, td. a 23a.’ 64,; Odio, ‘data. 6d. an,,358. w 288.; red wheat, 8a. Od. w 9s 4; white, 98, 96 m'108, 2 ow, 336, 6d, @ S4e.; while dbs, was dull at the close. LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKET. mBiglond. & On report beet ai ahh sea. a4 no m ®., report ali ‘eheaper, al holders witling sellers. The a Lend Fork drooping. Dane thaw ot tear hed eeeea: lard Rid @uil, and quotations nominal, at 76s. Tallow steady, at LIVBPOOL PRODUCE MARKET. ‘The Brokers’ circular reports rosin (common) in ave- roe nee withovt quotabla change, fine at 10s, Spirits of turpentine at 4s. ed business moderate; quoted at 49a, a 50s. ; Is Quercitron bark snady. Ny 138, for Piutadetpoie, and 128.94. 133. for Bal Linseed oj) unchanged and in fair request. Tape "oil steady, Cod apd ry a without change. ae active, ad mand. jes of al ©: pam firm apd active, at an ‘ree cf 6d. a Js, Ton sete demand. at 834d. a 94d. for commoo ve and firm. Rice—businsss small, but ihixet corn, 334, 6d.; ‘& 33, 2d. Tho market firm, LONDON MARKETS. Messrs, Asner J Brothers & Co, report » fair bi closing in iron at unchanged rates, Bars and rails qi at £7 10s, a £7 lbe. Sootob 698 atl2e. Lead dali at 236 6s. Fine Rosin steady at 33s. sales at 760. Linseed Oil 40s. 6d. Breadstuils gen quiet, and without essential change. Flour quoted 38.8 Stes white wheat 70s. « 76s. ; red wheat 686. a 728. HAVRE MARKET Srotive selling at 1354. for Ban~ Lard without i ‘was estimated 600 baies, including 43,500 Ame- rican. The quantity at tea was computed at gg) omg Breadstofis dull and “ibe jower. sions dull ae bes—A. Teter foal. pe - the ey Sugar active and firm. Coffeeeas or, wpchangod. Oils very rn Rive quiet. Tyewnde (% unchanged. wWhalebone quict, and tirm; salea MANCHESTER MARKETS. Trade in Manchester was somewhat depressed, owing te ap sarees prices, while buyers were catling for ® PASSENGERS BY zae oan, ADA. two vi if and ant and ‘Miss Hill, Mr Sleeper, Mr Shute, rant, Mra Miss Melledge. two children and lake and lady, Gays Carter, Professor Oynhon, Mr, Burleigh and Hutehings Mr Moore and ‘and lady, Mr Hilt Mr Former and Indy, Mr lady and two chil- dren, Cape Swift tar Poscock and Indy, Misa Knollinger, Mre Gorham, dir Healey and lady, Nise Doherty, Misg Dy isses Clarke, Messrs Spence, Power, ¥ in’ Thomson, MeWiliam. tHurwu ; 5 G . Je, Galler, * 3 Det Rati, posal. boon, Wat i Maggmaige’ Wella New? je er, r, Wall, Kent, re, 7 Cortes, Cornish, Sumi eat Be Perry. or, Si » Foster, Wilson, ‘AY heya, Bwarts Re Intelligence from Kansas. Sr. Louis, Nov. 3, 1856, Advices from Kaneas to the 28th ult. state that a con- ‘Veption to nominate a candidate for delogate to Congress: met at Big Springs on thatday. Nearly all tho districta in the Territory were represented, and the convention ‘was presided over by Judge Schuyler. On the first bal- lot Gov. Reeder received 108, and Mr Carroll 71 votes, ‘Reeder was then unanimously nominated. Toe Conven- tion appointed a committee, who reported that the elec. tion be held, by ciroulating a proicst against Whitfeld’s election, and recommending Reeder to be the choice of the people of Kansas. A canvassing committee of five was appointed, and resolutions were passed endorsing the political course of ‘Mr. Reeder, and expressing a determination to continue tealously and actively to sustain freedom io K seas. Another resolution, congaring Gov. Reeder, was indel- nitely postponed. ‘The prisoners are on trial at Lecompton. Geary ws still in tho southern part of the Territory, making arrests. Destructive Storm on Lake Ontario. Oswneo, Nov. 5, 1866. ‘The gale of wind on the Lake last night was the severes3 of the season. The schooners G. M. Chapman, with » cargo of wheat from Chicago, and West Wind, of Buffalo, bound up frem this port, with salt, went ashore last night between the piers. The Chapman is a total wreck. No Ives were lost. The schooner J. G. Deshler, with a cargo of wheat from ‘Chicago for this port, lost her masts in the ga'e, and wont ashore nine miles sbove this city, Her smal! boat way dost, and men were on the vessel when our informan} deh Severe Gale on Lake Eric. Burrato, Nov. 5, 1866, ‘There wan a sovoro gale on Lake Erie lant night, and ap large number or vessels lefon the previous day, and as but few of them have been heard from, it is feared that many have met with disastors. The bark American Repubii@, from Chicago, on enter- ing the harbor last night went against the Breakwater, ‘and filled with water immediately. She was loaded with 18,300 bushels of wheat. The crew were rescusd. ‘The propelier St. Joseph, with a full cargo of merchan- dise, i ashore at Fairport, and in « dange rous situation, ‘The crew bave not yet been taken off, The sea \s break. ing over her. Several other echooners are reported ashore, and maay badly damaged. Lambert, wee driven on St. Helen’s Island lence of the wind. The passengers received every hospi- tahty from the garrison stationed there, Much damago bas been done in expused parte of the country, Fire and Loss of Lafe in St. Louis. Sr. Louis, Nov. 4, 1856. Farly on Saturday morning @ small cabinet manufactory im the northern part of this oy was burned. Ton of tho employ és of the eatablighment slept in tho boiiding, three of whom jumped from am attic window; but before the Particulars of the Fire in Martetta. Maxurrra, O., Nov. 4, 1860, ‘The Marietta flouring mill, owned by John ©. Cram, ‘was totally destroyed by fire on Saturday morning, No- vember 1. The tire ignited in the smu; machine, caused by the rapid motion of the machinery, at 1134 o'clock, and although every effort was instantly made to extinguish it, the flames rapidly ascended the elevators to the roof, ‘and in fifteen minutes the entire building was in one ‘mass of fire, About 200 barrels of flour and 12,000 bushels of wheat were destroyed. Losa from $40,000 to. $50,000. Insured for $5,000 only; $3,000 tn the Aina, Hartford, and $2,000 in Washington county, Obj, Musua).. ‘Tt was one of the most extensive mills in the Ohio valley, nd its loan will cause great inconveniense to a!) classes. The Steamship Nashville at Charleston. Cuantaetos, Nov. 4, 1966. The U. 8. mail steamship Nashville, Captain Thome Ewen, from New York, arrived here thie (Friday) morn~ Ing at nine o'clock. The Arabia Outward Bound, Boston, Nov. 6, 1866, ‘Tho steamship Arabia sailed at noon today, with finy. four pasrengers for Liverpool, and twenty-six for Hali- fax, and $779,000 in specie. Fatal Shooting Case, Pintapenema, Nov. 6, 1966 ‘This evenirg Ienas ©. Sheerivok, a clerk im ths employ: of Wamlee and Clodgers’ dry goods store, Market street, thot William Clodgers, one of his employers, at the june- tion of Seventh and Chestaut streets, Three balls took effect, and the wounds were mortal. The cause is re- ported to be an tmproper connection between the em