The New York Herald Newspaper, November 1, 1860, Page 8

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St the great masses of your republican party, and ‘which imilames the eloquence of buvc reds of your leading ‘writers and speaki rs, aod that they ought to rely on the few words of your more prodent acd moderate organs of ‘opinion which we now see aiming to tranquillize the pab- Le alarm et both South and North, by vo that the ence wrth all the TY YEARS HENCE, Letter from Jobn L. @’Sullivan to | William H. Seward, ny fhe" extension of lav rant all this, and as mach more as you can ask, fiat which mone of you cap ask or will ask, via:—That Lhe republican policy means a Testrictio) | of slavery within its oxisting territorial limite; that 1s t> nay, the denial ‘o it of apy possibility of future outto | ver may be the natural growth of the negro popa: tey—The Ratio of merease—@ur National Bum bers Ope Bundred Year: Nenco— Three Sundred Millions, with Fifty Millom of tlaves—The Preblem for State eee Eee eee | | ation within those limits. Republicanism meave this or men—How Are the inferior | notbirg. Se Se pete pee Zea ane 88 fram ged | Inst, agrees ‘the most mogerate to the most Races to be Governed? | auntog pos. ‘had tn vedarenae to tubeanegie potest one thes ‘1 8 DOW as clear as the sun at noonday ‘that policy, if aa and maintained in power im the federal govern- ment, mast wevitably incense and enrage bes aot done Bo al ly, © the point at which it would be | absurd for us of the North to expect from it submission | and continuance in the Union. Bax Sm—in your specobd at Binghamton yeoterday yee aro reported as baying Bald:—'‘Look back for sixty Why, look only at the past growth, and thence forward | to the necessary tuture increase of the slave population at Years. Wo had then four milliens of people—now thirty | the south, zi ‘ab the cenus of 1810 («ince which | mé@iions.”” Since you thus open to us the record of the poimportation from Africa, 80 that @xasus, permit me to follow you into the same feld, and — = \morease bas been solely by natural growth), we find fe tern to ask you, too, to look not back, but forward, — increase to have been as follows: — flog tho gracd vista of our future censuses, | Wo have both receutly returned from abroad, where | we have ween great nations and great things, the pro- | deste of many centuries of a great past. Our country has, wo bo speak, no past. If we are now out of the stotbet of our matioual infancy, we are still in the period * of our national boyhood—strong, well grown, promising, vages of the cholera within that sep ny, but still a mere boyhood, whether as measured period. The average ratio of increase of toe other three periods is 296 per 1,000. Tho average ratio of ali the four ‘vy years or by comparison with the manifest destiny of | periods ts 281. We , therefore, safely assume tbe fu eur sublime future. Our greainess lies ali amead,and we ture ratio of increase at 275 per 1,000; let us kee to what tse every year taking « hugo stride towards it. The beet | Fetulle even that reduced ratio will carry us— use of our past ceasuses is to show us the formula of the Ine. iw of pupuiation, which, baving hitherto governed our ; 881,186 hmoipient developement, must equally determine the fa- 5 209 O1L 1,123'612 @are progress of ibis magnificent Union. Tv this law I 6 641,490 1,452,479 Deg ive to invite yeur attention. 8,407 899 1,326 409 fret census, in 1790, gave us a population of 10,706 671 2,328 612 8,980,827. Stnce then the following has been our pro- | 18,765 628 2,969,057 gressive growtn:— 3 1920 17.561,176 3,788 '547 Rate of Decemmia | 1980. aa. aT 148 4,820,510 dee shear ee eee | ae 36 377,822 1846197 meee... 1,375,098 361 46,381,723 10,003,901 1,063,800 804 | you republicans propose to 2,890,817 353 | do with thie foture increase of the siaves? Is it not evi- 8,397,880 334 | dent—ruast not you yourself admit—that long, long be ee 328 | fore the compiction of these fow decades of yours, the accumulated slave population in the Southern States, cooped by your republican policy within those limits, while the white race is free to drain off by emigration, mutt reach euch ® po'nt of \derance in numbers as to make the country mntenabdle, uminbabitable to the whites? The qnestion ts not whether it is or is not mo rally better by this means to compel the South wo abolish slavery—whetber by themselves quitting the connt-y and abandoning it to the negroes, ‘or by emancipating them, 80 a8 to open to their necessary outilow the fron- 48 ‘Al Ap estimated ratio of increase of 398 per 1,000 for the fen years from 1860 to 1860, our present population weld be 31,949,000. We may safely assume it as 000 000. T will bot enonmber this letter with reedicss figures. It I be suillcieus w state that afer deductiog the imm!- gravion—which bas beea correctly ascertained oaly sinoe the census of 1$40—it will be found that the ratio of na- WA! werease— Liat is lo say, by the exoess of births over @ asbs— nas averaged 287 per 1.000. It ia therefore cicar | tiers ‘hermetically closed by your republican policy~ but certain that when I assume for the futare an aver: the question is whether, when it is thos arithmetically matio of only 200 per 1.000, we abail be greatiy within the | cortain that such muat De the result of that policy, it oaa mark, especially as | include in that rave of increase not | be ‘or a moment expected that tue South will ever submis uly the natura \ucrease, but algo over and above that na- | to 14) Has any powerful community in bistory ever sub- ura! inoreasc—First, the future immigration: second, the | miited to apy attempted domination from oatslde, admin Population of aunexéd countries,and, third, ine iuttacace | istered on a policy thus clearly shaped to their own piaia @f Khe mudero improvements in sanitary Soieuce, Lendia, and swift destruction? Would any of ue, in reversed cir- bo increase the provortiea of children Hving to the age of | cumstances rso submit? Did the thirteen colonies of Warriage, 10 prolong lite, and iso to increase the propor | 1776 ever allege against England any grievance compara. Monate wumDder of childrea oorn. Butooatentiug ourselves | ple in the hundredth degree to this as it bears agutuat the With the assumed future ratio of 250 per 1,000, as cover | ontire white race of our South? Should we uot ourselver fq wi the causes of grow th, the followiag Ogures exbivit | despise the puasillacimity that would so submit? And ia eo Tuture progress of he population of this Union for tbe | there anything in the characier or babite of our Southern Bext buncrea years—a period of time which, io the his- brethren to # t the idea that they, of ail others, are tory of a pation, may bo callod alinost now, ince there | {ne people to cet? id ase thourands of children already bora who must live be ‘Aud it ie called by you and yours “non-interference end that period — with slavery ip the States,’ thos to force withio their : limits this accumulation of a vast negro preponderance 88,760 008 | which must eventually drive out the entire white race, ¢ = oq and which must drive it out after a eertain period of God 5 only Knows what agitations, what borrors of insurrectivn 75,685.93 | gttempted, crushed, renewed and renewed, incivent to the + 94,604 491 | gradual accomulation up tw the time of reaching the de 118 255.613 | gree of excees impossible to be longer endured. 147,819,516 | “ Noo interference! Why, what mode of interference 184,785 385 | could be devised more 81 more hostile or more - 930,931,991 | deadly ? 3 ; Saiaiaes 296,726 488 Revolutions sre generally made, rather from the Whoo we consider (he population of at least 400,000,000 | apprehension of threatened and approaching evil ef the Coinere empire, ubsieting within oe much lees than even our preacnt limits of territory, and when We oourider, further, the expaurive and anvexing teaden- sy of our prople, who will uccopy the whole ¢ ntigeat, ay, the who hemisphere, before they wiil allow them seiven to begin to fee! crowded or incommuded for elbow Foom, it ie evident that in Mitty yeare our population cag not jail short of a hundred mililou; to @ butdred years, tree handred millious. It will probably be mach more. ‘This, this, Mr, seward, is toe Ucioa about whose per- petuation it if now & question a than from its actual preseure, and pressure be- | youd the point of enduravoe. Men aod natioas, except whea beld down in chains by direct and local overpowering military force, do not wait for the | actual arrival of what they sce platn'y coming. Aud when to the manifest and intolerable evil is added a senee of outraged rights, of violated eqaity and of insulted pride—the whole combined with a consciousness of pow 1 courage abundaatly sufficient to enable them to | to soorn all threats of coercios—revolution and indepen deuce are as certain to be the eventual reau!t as any pos- thete three huadred millions, which are to be wit- | ginle conviction of cause and effect iu Dutean affairs messed by thousands of eyes which already bebold the | 4 Northerver myselfadevotet, in a decree iuferior to light, are not to be Oriental, but are to ‘of tae most poe, to the Uniov—more accustomed than most to dwell ‘Vigorous aud energetic race of which history bears reoord. | with kindling emotion on the thought of the maguificent Une thing you Will adm t, that such @ Usion can only | future open before it, I do not hesitate to say, puttin bg held together loug on the purely foderative principle myself in the position of our Southern brethren, that § fd by a epirit cf common and reelprecal good will, con. | Know of no revolution in history sauctioued by balf the etBation and forbearance among ail ite parts, among all | justidcation which cannot be dedied to that which I firm he great sections and great juterests contained within tt. | ly believe to be impending, of tho South for independence Bach eve of ita leacing divisions or sections must £008 | from ine North, if the republican polisy is adopted ‘and be no rumerour sud strong as to be abundantly eofficiont | maintained by the federal government. Nor do | kaow of to ilgel( ne & great pation among the Powers of the earth, ot baif £0 certain ae its consummation, un and the moment Ih becomes infled with ite p a North stop short in this maduces of sowing B the Union it willsimply walk out of it, avd no human te to produce the whirlwind. of them cau be long dominated thern disunioa perty is, and has long been, far be the majority or the motives | stronger iban it understood at the North Ik bas a apy manver that bai! either offeative | been growing every day for mavy years past. The beart & ‘te pride, irritating bo Ite temper, or injurious to 8 | cf the South has been undergoing & prow of ailenation Wetereeis ne it uoderstande them from the North ever sinoe the commence meus of the aut Aud hevever su ate of fooling shall arise ja say | slavery agitation. Th t three censuses, ove alter the one of ite leading sections. it is further evident that it ober, as they have developed the steadiiy increasing au never be kept in the Uolon, nor com d back 49 | relative majority and preponderance of the North, have VM by force. Our people are all far too bigh spirited, too | spread wider and wider the idea, that it Is ouly by inde- brave, Woo weil armed, tov familiar with the use of Wea pendence that the elaveholding South can piace itself in pore, ever to be sab nei own ground by AUy bU- | @ position of Be and of aocuss to the outlet fur man power Al the et Weare all too peareful, thor necessary future southward growth They too averse to the vain avd suicidal folly of civil war,to | know that their cotton is iodispeusavle, uot oniy t possible that the majority section or sections, in England and to Rurope, but even to 08 h w contingency, would ever attempt se | and tbat ite poesersion guarantees to them ail the surdity. No; sf ever one of o ur great sections treaties of peace aud commerce that they may want jor fad tick for itecif that it # be happier, safer of more | their domest.c tranquillity, whether with ths Poworsjof federasy than in 1t—if proeperour out of the existiog o ever that ides shall once become generalized throughout ts people, #0 ws to lead thom to secession and the forma tion of an iudependent confederacy, the rest will have Rothing to do, can do nothing, and will do nothiag, but then accept the fast accompls and endeavor to make the bent of it by Keeping up as much as possible such pexce- fa! intercourse of commerce with the new confederacy as | MAY ferve, at lomst, lo mitigate ‘the shock of the se; Sion and Lo epare to both parties the aggravated evils of Barter hoeti!\t; 1 eertanly = not yet written a word which even you, Mr Seward, who are a fatally able men as well ase Courteous and amiable gentleman, will deny or question, however we may difler in regard'to the application ‘these manifest truths to the present crisis of our common country. Well, theo ® the South now, a# a great section, yot trong eo: ngh to make 1 able thus to go out of the con. feveracy , anc to reconstitute itself as @ nation among the powers of he earth, in the event of ite becoming ani- mated with such a general spirit of Gissatiefaction with | ite position in the Union? Sir, itis. It is already four | times as strong numerically as were the whole thirteen colonies in 1776. Moreover, the North {s no powerful Raval and military mother country, either willing or able to send great fects and great armies to fight out the iesoe, Or even to atiempt to resubjugate & seceded South. Still further, no man soquainted with the policy | of Great Britain ane France, who care for nothing from ‘bat our cotton, and whose hearts would leap for joy at Whe apectacle of our division, can dowbt bat that they would be prompt to recognise the indepesdeace of the new Southern conlederacy, eager to mike new froe trade | treaties with it, and only too giad to bumbdie what should Femain of the old Union by supporting the coston Staten | With the fuil power of their Geow, their loans, and, were | Mt necessary, of their allied armies. And stil! farther | again 1 will add, that before you “‘republicass” could | marths! or march’ your Wide Awakes for the recoaquest of tbe South, whether by (mir dght with our white breth- | ren there, or by still more inhuman appeals to negro in. | sorrection, there are still others with whom you would | have to deal before setting ovt—I mena us, the indignant | Boios democracy of th» Nortn ital? In case you should doubt the soundness of my reference | to Great Britain and France, let me mention tae sab ance of what I recently beard {rom & stincashed | Hiab diplomatist at a foreign court. It was on the so ee eee sary eevee wend te Brin | rerement about ihe attemptet reareh of our vessels in “Whe Gaif—"It w not because you Yankees cuif us every how and then, first on the right cheek and then oo the left, ‘that | com pia) it ie bot because you |!ke occasionally to give ve an unpleneant Kick bebind. But I do thiol it | rat rd that after doing so you should thea insist on oar | down on our knees and begging your pardon for | wr iw for your damned ootson''’ Englaad cannot | adord to see our production of cotton and iis free flow to Liverpoo! arrested or impeted « tingle day, and the mest and the wouk! (aod France the mame, thougn in (eas forth the whole power of b otte to pro- tect ‘he trapqe y mar coston region, if (which \s far from being the case) the South etood iu the slightest uset f #oeCe-r of RS uct is regard to the ability of the South, even at the present day, to make food an easy and nafe Beowssion , tm the event of the covtingency fuppoert—camely, the georral zation at the south of @ epirit of dissatietect io is only to consider the corelative question, | lt remaioe the ascendency of your republican policy io the fede- | Fulgorernmeetgpredecs thas state of things’ I aay it will, | 4 \t monet inevitably } will discard from the discussion many reasone on | which I might dwell with great force, derived from tt Wh intringic strength and weight. | will grant that the | Fouth oognt to mubmit—that it ought to be expected to cbmit—to the public inult of seeing am exclusively Northers party, on exclusively Northern ideas, pri ple and sentiments, go into the ion of the Territories, and the right vo migrate (into them, or into a fair ebare of them, with their accustomed property, in- dustry, Babite aod eretel inetitetions: and thet nd Furope or with our Northern confederacy a'ter a separa- top. They know, too, that in the Union the tarii! polioy and the navigation policy of the Norta subject tuem to An enormous taxation for the benedt of interests in a large degree alien from their own, from which they would be re- lieved by independence and free trade with ail the world And do you thint—can you think, Mr seward, if there Are now superacded the irritation, the ippalt apd the manifold aud tmevitable peril to their very exisien.e which are involved im the idea of the permanent adoption of republican policy by the federa) government, that the disunion idea, already powerful, will not become entirely prepor derant mat the South? Way, sir, establish and persit in policy, and the South will soon De absoluicly unanimous for separation aud iade- dence. Probably you may think that much jon would be betier than coutioued association With slavery as it exisus ae a great fact and & great power, and as It is gueraniced under the constitution. Many of your party with whom 1 bave recently conversed frankly accept this con- clusion when pressed in ot, I will, then, merely ask you, whatever satisfaction to your mora! theories on ‘Whe subject of slavery you and yours may thas hare at- tained, whatever position Of saoendancy in the epinion of the anii-elavery Northern coufederasy, how much geod will you bave done to the negro race, left in unchanged ery in the imdependent Southern covfederacy, not ai ite existing Slates, but with aii that future Soutn- xtenaion in the eal direction which must twfall ait from ite already inat accumulating rowth | HTto not mean that thore will be finmediate disruption on the election of Mr. Lincoln. if, indeed, tbe great dis- aster and the great peril of that event have to be in curred. There will be a vigorous «fort at the South to effect this revolution, anc a partial, but I trast not irre- parable disruption, may take place, Many causes and influences vow conspire towards ite succenr, which bave never existed before. Butal willnotyetbelost We have yet a powerfel perty for the Uoion at the douth which Wwillco operate with us of the N to sabdue the im pruaiog agitation reaction sucoced, when it is seen that t30 wolf bas tated at ast come. Thea must ycur party crumbie into very dust, D more rapidly aud more utterly than dia that of Koow Nothingism. Ite one idea—that one which, as a icy Of deedly hoetility to the South, I bave shown to Be evcotwally o fatal as atl ibe ctnor forme of the aati | slavery eeatiment together—wiil be, and must be, sdsa- doned. Probabiy it wili be buried forever under the monoment of a constitutional ameudmont, required as » condition and guaranty. And thus may we suoseed, pe bape, within next four years, in eaving the Uni from the brief madness which, wader your great go ‘ance, is hurrying tt to the verge of the abyss Bat |{ this reaction does not take place, if your party \* able within the next four years to cousolWate ite power of allen majority dow ination over the conquered South, and sball maintain the fundamental priaciple of 1t# poticy and of tte existence—then there la ap ead of the Union, and of ail the fond dreams of our patriot fathers. The couser. vative Caton party of the South will only ben ie to stand op and live even now on the expectation of this promised reaction, and they will and must ail pledge themselvee to go Wiib the immed late secession sta if that reaction should | bot lake place. If the democratic Usioa party of the North, beneeforth to be consolidated in cordial coafrater. nity for the talvation of our common country, should not sucesed (u justifying that expectation, and if { deceive myrec! in the couddent bope of this reaction, then shall we find the South unaa!mour to a man for independence, | unanimous and bitterly resolved The thing will then be done with unresisted caso. It will do (teelf Withdrawal and reorganization Souta- ern Convention. nothing would be eingular, nothin Perbape {t ie wevitable NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, N' “SHIPPING NEWS. Movements of Ucean Steamers. FROM EUROPE, Lewwee, ALMANAO FOR AW TORK—r19 Dar. 6 79) noon Sreamship Thomas Swann, Ramsey, Portland—H 8 Orom- W Frethingham, Stetson, Havre—Royd & Eincken. abring. Francis, Cork—Thos James. ate —Ha beck & Co. af, Booker, Uaireston— Nore: one & Prince. vie, Pairchilt, "New Orleans—Rodaou & Fosdick 1d, Rerry. Steele, Vardenss—Traji Doane, Gins Rehr Ls Peaoonk, Hobart, D © Murray. Sebr i, P Smith, Hillman. Wilmington—J Sauith & Oo. Sehr Herndon, Geskili, Wilm'ngton. Rear Hurter, Racket Phuacelphia, Sloop New World, Bly, Providence—Waster, Steamer Octarara, Lanpher, Baltimore. Meamer Jersey Biue, Uhadsey, Newport, ARRIVED Steamahtp Fulton, Wotton, Havre, Oct 17, via Cowes 10 PM fame d>y, with mdse and 29 passengers, w 5 M Fox & George Mackenzie, Have had « succession of severe W gales {roa Bavre Cape Kace. p Karnak (Br), Brownless, Havana ana Nassau, NP. Cet 27, with mdse and passengers to F Conard Siesmablp Mount Vernon, Layfield, Savannah, wish mdse and sores end rigging wil) also ship Parkersburg, voll, Wilmington, NO, 3 da: — rg, Powe! ©, with naval stores. to "R Crowe Ro - ey, S nae tenn de, 0 Wimerting & Wont Jone 26, lat 18 8, lon 130 BE, experienced » typbeon, and hove fo opti] ‘the 2uth:'sinee then have bad ® condnuation of light Whampoa, and Hong Kon) ‘Touched at Anjer Aug 7 410, the week previons to whieh 6, iat 1 27.8, lon 19, signalized Br Landon ip Henry Harbeck, troe, Calcutta June 90 Sand Heads Joly 4 with linseed ac, to Harbeck & Go, Waa 26 days from the Heads to the kanator, and in the heart of the locality where the 8F trades should have been we had W winds for ld saya, passed Cape Good Hove Rept 7 and the Equator 34 inet, 27th inst, Int 3390. lon 70 saw & bark steering B\W showing whi'e flag with letter F in the centre. weft Sand Heads in company with shies Napoleon, for New York, and Talbert (#r) for London. Calentta, 110 days, hip Marian (or, it the Rept 5 int 3645 5, leon 3é days from Bata ringtom, & iat 308 pawed Cape Good Hope Se; ad revere W gales Sept ship Chryso ite from #bangbae tor Ship Canova (Rr, of Liverpool), Hayes, with linseed ae, to Brown Bros & Go. ie Slane Cameron, Bombay, Ju'y 29, with Nuseed Ac. te Napier, Welsfurd & Kanken Had conaide rable light winds throughout Jon 94 40 ©, wignalized Dateb brie via for Retherdnm; 70m lat $470.8 lon 22 90, ‘ir bark Laty Ane a 2910. Br bark Blizabeth Har reve, from the Downs for Caldera, 82 days out, Oh ist 135.8 m 90'48, Dutch bark Malay, from’ Cardiff for’ Sic gapore, 29 cas out hip Santiago (of Boston). Bames, Padang, Jniy 28 psseed Cape Good Hope Sept 9, crossed the Eqantor in the Atlantic in lon 87, with pepper 4¢, to D G & ¥ 3 Bacup at, Int 35. 20, lon 7425 aw a vessel, supposed aherm brig. with loa of foremast steering S~ apparentiy wanted o0 Aesistence. Ship Sea Nymph (of Rew Fedford), Whittog Jr, Mazatian, June 19 ¥ kb oyewoods. w Hargona Bros. aly 6, oi Acapul co bed a barricaue from 5% to SW. whied view away alla carried away fore yard, twisted rudder head badly, do waa iS dave from Mazatlan to the Line, with very light sire and no trades; was 14 days from Mazatiaa to the Hora, averaging only ra Isinnd, hed a horrieane e Horn had bead Hh winds 28 days; ‘& great many verse ina Wi voyage bas Int 20 40 Ni, jon 106 20 W, enw Br bark Koderiox du, MoPher Mazatian Juve 28 for Cowes: Sept). cape Horn NW 4 saw ship Siam, of New London, from Hoewn for Ho 1u; W9Ub. Int 40 82 N, lon 43 35 enw a ir bark «h | # Now £234, 24 inte pendavt sweering SW 27in inet lat St | 20, Jon 68 saw eebr Virginia Price, kidridge, 19 days from (i braltar for New York. Sbip Quebec (Br, of Quebec), Bern with salt de, to order Ship Universe. Dewar, Liverpool, 34 days, with mdse and 448 pennengers. 1» Williams & Ginn | ‘Ship Bieolina (Aus), Paskewtich, Sunderiand coal. to order ‘waar (Belg), Condera, Ric ewond And 2 Drewengers. to Virginian (of Kicbmond), Lowrey, ! with coffee and rosewood to master. Sept 2t int 198 lon 34 61, vignalized a bark tteering SW, showing a white fing with blue crow. | Bask Zingarea, Bunker, Rio Jeueiro, Set 19, wih coffee, | to Aymnr ACO. 24th inst, las 24 YS, In €7 M0. eae brig Lae W | Artortrong, Thompacn, from New Haven for Party Rien | Bark Rien Morrison’ Plait Cursenn, [4 daye, witb salt, ty HL M Koberts lat 8020. lon 78 ‘pamsed Abo at $ miles to jeeward Of a abip eeering B, with main and fore Wogaliaptmast goue, Bad ® jury maiutnaat up ak¢ RAM topenll bet, bot nothing set on the mizes ed to be making fo Hermnnéa deen remarkably pleasant and #mooth No date, Liverpool, Seot 23. | 88 days, with | aye, > Appear Virig Rictmond (of Far Clark, Cadiz, 26 days, with wine cork ac. to RP Buck & 60. Brig Sprite, Price, Rio Janeiro, 42 days with colfee Ae, to | Bil hen & ironsicen | vf Boothbay). Reed. Bio Granda, Sept 12, | JK Ward & Co. 6tb inat, Int 9 5, jou « Wave, MoCart, from Valparais) for Brig Kemnel G with coffee, iat inet, Int ew York, tender Baltimore, ang was hindly supplied wit 9 26. lon Sombrero | 4 hiabt ~ d calm which Lime one he¢ strong winds from NK ane Drm with e008, cot. with salt, to on 71 10, saw a berm se with red croms; 24th, iat Jon 73 08, spoke brig Neuvitas, from Tarts Islands for oe oor th mn Brig Arabells, Lindsley, Aspinwa'l, 23 days, ton de, 10 J F boson, 2 Coffey. 18th inat RW, rhowine & white ew York. Brig Ruily Fisher (of Eastport), Staples, Kast Harbor, Oct H1,.w th sal, to Bret, hon & Co Brig B © Brooks, Mherrill, Sait Cay, 11 days, with aalt, to Me Cell a Frith Brig H Bauleh (of Savannah), Deering, Savannah. 9 daya, wih Sellowrine ‘In bound to Rennevuek; put into this port on neconnt of part of the erew being sick Brig Martha, Crosby, of Aspinwall Bie fesmant, Can uate fron te nmparl ¥ Prig Financier, Haskell, Calais, 9 daye, with luvaber, to Jed a. Contest (Br, of Dartmouth), Shaw, Malaga, 38 days, ‘with fruit, to Geo F Bulley. Bebr Cation ATherto (Port), Morlers, Opor 0, 38 days, with wie aud cork. tol. B Amainek. Keb . O'Doorell, Bt Martina, Oet 11, with salt, to wartio 19th inst. int 29 20, lon 70 10, spoke achr Alex- anter M- from Norfolk beund & ‘Rebr Veolon, Ciauason, Eiizabethport for Bangor Kebr © L Halse, MeGar, Ei for Fall River : y. Klizabetbport for New London Klitabethport for Allya's Point. Kehr . Clark Bast Mact ina, 8 Rebr Empire, Lovell, Boston for Bebr Corinns M, Gloucester, _ Behr N Tyler, Finith, Bristol for Klizabethport Bebr Charles Cooper Cooper, Hartford for Elizabethport. Schr Krendy wine, Keith, New Haven. 3 daze Kehr Rema Tuttle, Mayo. New Haven for Virginia, Behr Crye ireenport fer Philadelphia. Rebr Vous, Brocka, Greenport ‘or Philadelphia Kebr Cabot. Tilley, Northport for Port Rwen Kloop Fashicn. Young, Kiaabethport tor Providence. Sieop Wasbington, Richardson, Biizabethport for East Green wich Sloop BM Wack. Mack, Biimbethport for Bases _— WN Reynoléa, Runge, Elizabethoort for Poaghkeep- e Lg Thomas Carney, Faucet, Elizavethport for Cold it Micon Mary Brush. Rrnab, Providence, 2 days. Steamer Sophia, Hei) Philadelphia Bark Christians, from St ¥, Schr Virginia Price, from Roth by pilot boat Cortatian Bergh Brig News Hoy. 16 days from Tnrke Talnn’s —By pilot boat David Bitebell Nod Ship Octavius, Fue from ¢ in Jue 10. ‘One bark avd one brig, us . SAIL Steamehips tar of the South, Indiarola, with troops; Nash tiie. harleston . tay S2R Miscelian ure mpas, Rot a . 9 for Pauaswa, was lort ai sens ‘ ‘ ‘ Jobo Kobbina, late master severe weather round Oape Horn ehip leaking baily. s bands more ar jess dieabied (rom joe and « ther. Finding it impoustbie to keep the abtp trying to make Monteridna, Mary waa obliged to sbandon ber. The ship's company were in three boats bat Bale SD breaking sea tbe second mate's All banda were plated up, bowever. by tb ext day, till ing A gale, the mate in trying be tn the surf. Only three me ware free Rept her oF About 40 miles from Cape st aa abe was foundering slowing a 7 all in 8 Very exhausted stale several bar aod feet frostbitwen. &¢ Lverything was done t by the U # Coveal, Mr Upton, who tmmeriate’ ‘WAS Bacertained of thelr f the 13th brig, Palestine aa led. Latled from Reekiand, where ebh@ was boi! in fe warses hance thet 1888, was an Al‘, phi of 1219 tone burthes, and is probably insured in east- | Kalnbe oom) Sid 13h, Capt Thotwpeon, of brig Palestine, th Hampton Roads from | leare: 18h, Rio Grande, bas our warmest thanks for his Kin4 sttentions tror Dowtix, Lace, from Cronmiadt of and for Boson, ¢ Wisiowor Sth Git, apd on St be lat 87 45 8, en S took A very Beary gale from WNW. Afer being bove for ey ht hours, © sea Wrardea the ship and swept the doce of everyibiag moveable, inelnding be 4 ering, fod cared tbe ship to leak tnereves om hour | wiih it in thick wenther, | al weit, | dams (of Camdéen), DrieRo Santos Som 6 j « 30, OVEMBER 1, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. chor. She had commenced diachargtoy cargo for exawunsvon | and repaira, ‘Suur Moses Davexrorr, Condry, from London for Buss, Put inte Plymouth, Bng, (ct }5, in's leaky cowdiion. " Bane Ancapian, from Philadelphia for Pensacola, wae off Reedy Island Slat, , In & Heaky conaition, Bank Maks, Lewin, tp Hampton Roads from Momtevides, Joaing the NE trade winds have bad light winds and calms for avout three ” _o Bank Oxrcon, Wilsoa, Ph; dead, from Rengoon Set 4, Int 45 North, long 20 23 West, i Up & vessel's yard, wiih part of » top aad Lopgalinut caps, we ¢ Dackatayn and tataye aitacdad; at Noche wert all amped’ Witerasan 4. Weveslls patent Wren work, wart yen Tanury St 1i4d.” ‘Leogth of topmast, 39 feet; topanlivard. 45 keoger part of tor sailyard nod Were mech Furst. We jnaices 1 mat of or : Bric Humour, Greenlow, from Aves Laiaada, be ashore on Thoma’ Polat’ below Rulumare Flcamiuy a Herbert bas been seut to ber assimance. Oct was ready to sail Senn Anctio, Redewald, ‘or New York with fruit, in coming ont of Nassau Get 18 struck on the bar, sprung aleak. and be- A Bx Senn is reportes ashore on Ram Head Bar, and an un- known sehr om Cape Ud Bhoal. ‘and is a total wreck; crew be saved, but it is feared that only Pir" of the cargo can be got out, as the lower deck fa much be- the water, Bone, Kore, Aug 25—Ry the arrival of the Brith bark ty. rian, from Nageeat, we have the following intetligence three masted American achooner sophia Ray. tonas, of New York, from Apia (South Pes Inianda) for dae. baving falen in with a very Reavy gala ar atoriogged, which on g the mate’s boat, The former boats remained at Makoog for twentv days, when the Syriaa touched there for water ae wok them ll on board, bringing them safely to this port. HoO>OLULU, no date—Put tn, The Lale of France, from Sydney (NSW) (or Ben Francisco, leaky Mavernivs Rept 5—#hip George Hallett (previously 4). on being dbeharged and rurveyed, it was (ound 20 be repaired for lees than $17 condemned, and was sold ancbors—for $2180. Ler nanouaR, Aug Onrd'fi (con's) grounded on the Risng Aug 7 sot bas siuce beoo ‘The wreck a8 tt lies bas been on Ang 20. (The T B was },072 tons, Al, built io 'W Hi Webb im 1851, and owned bere.) fypxay. KEW, Ang 21—The Flamingo bark Misegadea. Bremen, hence for an Frencireo (covls and return freight), wae wrecked cn (be south end reef of Ne July 4; crew eaved Barks Nubia, of Salem, 510 ton, built nt Bast Boston in 1358, pew'y caulked, felted and metalled, haa been sold to ® Boson yase for Ue Bark Orlando, of Boston, 270 tons, built at Newburyport in 1856, bas been purchased by parves n Salem on private lerms. Fhip busi¢ing at Calais and vicin'ty l# beginning to revive; there are five vesse's ou the stccks im ibat city at the present time Mr Charles H Kelley is bullding two, a brig of 220 tora, hoor 190 tone; Wi'lism Hinds is building & " Belmore & Young are bull'in, Mr Tarbox i# building ove teven veasela are to bailt ai Pembroke before next summ and or, conalatioa barks four sebooners. tbhip timber of all kinds is ri rapidly in price. na inevery kind of material used In abto b if erated that Mesers Chapman & Folton have reeet Sulla twe or three large cings veasels for parues in. Rogiand, Lg dee'ined them on account of . chartered Caledoaia 1 apwonen—At Buekeport 17th inat, from the yard of Messrs Wm & Ginn & a double deck bark of 480 tons, called the W B Anderson, & superior vessel in every reat ect. Notice to Mariners. The US Const Survey eteamer Vixen, Licnt Phelps, has ar- rived from nn examination of « Kip reporied of pi Lew, of the stesiner Seis Lieat ihelps reports that he ban not Only foand the Asia Rip, Tout anocher shoal of ten fathoms wx miles and a half long,’ in a NNK and BSW direc- tion nnd two miles brow. A full report has been sent to the Superintendent of the Const Survey, which will soon be made pub te. This is an important discovery, a ship masters in fallieg in an'make it a new point of de- partore, ‘The Light Ship, which has been adrift, wae back 'm her place on the 26th inst, al weil ow 8. Whrate Sid from New Bedford 30h bark Endeavor, Fisher, Paeifie Ocean, A letter from on board bark Osceola, Hamblin, NB, reports ber eff Gallipagoe Islands July 16, with 720 bbia#o oll, A letter from Capt Rowley, of ship Junior, her off French Rock March 26 baving taken 1 ap wh that made 9 bois of! since Weeving Mengaaal. peg ‘ lark Covington Je now fitting at Warren, for a whaling Dapt — Jenkes, of Kdgar- be devoted to sperm heling. Int jon #7 W, bark Civilian, town, 4 mos out, 24) bbis ap on board; Spoken, &c. Sbjy Ba A Clark, burton. from Plymouth, Eng, for Austra Win, ang 97. Int 10-218, lon 23.57 W Ship Niche strovg, frum Calcutta for Boston, Aug 10, lat 35 as E Nt st Ojty, from NOrleans for Gibraltar, Oct 21, lat 29 utherner, Boule, from London for NOrteans, Oct 12, 10 miles SSW from the Lizard ‘eroury, Freveh from Havre for NYork, Oct 7, iat 43 Paling nad toe Spoken—tept Rrrch from ‘rovi 7 ark Farad L Bryant, Rept 20, Int 43, Jon 6 lark’ Mary’ Aun, Horton, nenoe for Bristol, Oet 10, no lat or ¢ Rainbow, from Mansanills for Reston, Oct 28, lat 36, Mary Greenish. Greenish. from River Plate for Rostoe, Sevt 16, iat 16 30 8, low 83 10, wll well Soreign Ports. Anvimm, Aug 10—Paseed by, Keystone, Varina. rom Sine pore for N dork; 12th, Judge Shaw, . from Whampoa for do: 16th, Bt Loals, Jacobs. from 'tingapore for do; Magut Jones, from Boston for Cronsiadt, | Manna for NYork. Mr nournr, A rey fre Boston, i Brock, San odie night Bro Bastiet N York. Suh, Toseyh Hale, Btevens, Sid Ang ®, Bila W Badger, Bilimgs, allan; zelle, Orowell Quam. MONTEVIDEO about Aug 26 date) In port b rks Wes Ang 2 Poa Quixote, “olt, from Fooshow StHielara, Springer, Swansea: ne, ib Goran, Kagle, West, London’ arp, vangelime, 24h, Wild Ga- Robbing. rearl ios. une; brig Baglet, Terry, 0 der pane a ‘Arr brie Suman Daneas, Drinkwater, Porrauctrn Oct 16-6 Welfeet, melirery, mooie Pat in lib, Wich of ihe Wave, Fodd, from London for Povt Philp ails eplit. Pateed by do ibib, Alexandrine Titeomd, from Genoa, Street, from N York for Ant for nm; 5 Prrmourn, et 13—Arr 01 1, W tison. tan ip Oe. Mente Daven: ‘Condy, from Landon for y ¥. t 27—Hid Sarah Smith, Smith, N'York. QUEENSTOWN, Cec IScATT Willan’ Bell Sead MYork; 16th, Oceanne, §) . Philadelpbia. ne iW, "Ser' leat ia Caruh, from Sonderiard for America. | | Bio Guampe, Hept 13—In ime Young Poole, a | Graivage Pi Rance Wace mange wr | arr Aug 28. ure. FURDER ‘Oct 13—£14 R , NYork; 1 ni sin Golden ie ‘ork; 14th, ‘MYRNA, Rept 27—Bid barks Mary Eéson, Nickerson, Boston; ‘tb (not 26th, as reported), Kmbiem, Davia, do: Andrew ‘Cushing, Dison, Niort.” Preights barks Henry Hill, Polleys; KE H Yarringtor ards for Boston. Carney, Mayo, do: Emma’ continued scarce. In port Oct Puancuas, Aug 3—Arr Pursnit, ford, Kanagawa; Sth, Sultan, Kerry, Cardiff; Fhaptom. NYork: 6th, Tnaac Rei), Jobraoo. Cardifl (see mincel); Faloon, Drummond, Trulen Sth, Horizon Reed, Liveroool; Revere.’ Rocko, Car: Fam i coapaen, Taylor, Nagasaki; 1&b, Pleiades, Wins- iverpool. Sypnry, NRW. Aug 5—Arr Achi! San Fi i he} ae chilies, Hart, ‘sancise> 23 Stmcda. Pmith, Callao; Minnehaha, Beauchamp, Hong Kong; Bii Watuey, Urawbart Mauritias, ¥ Basros, Sept 16—No Am vease] in port St Tuomas, Sept 30—Arr harks Tiva, Durie, NYork (and ald Oct 4 for Maracaibo). Sid Oct 7, steamer A Clark, Gove, Na- bo; Lith, bark Margaret, Quig, Pernambuco. Jet 18, abipa Zone, |. from Newport, Eng, just arr; Wild Cat, Morve, disg: barka Clara Rosa Ratil, Bean: della, from NYork arr 1)th, ; Iddo Kimball. Harding, from bf ‘Eng, just arr; brig ‘Swann, Bockelmann, from NY¥ork arr lath. Bt Jaco, Oct b—Arr brig Eilzabeth Watts, Bryant, Philadel- pl Br M, n= schr Napoleon (3 masta), Bogsbreno to ead for Haat ieee oat Hampt Sr Joun, NB, Oct 96—Arr schr A Hastings, Lowerison, Ne York; 27th ship Princess Royal, Currie, 3 Mary Leonard, Churchill, Providence: schr Ocean Wave Flewelling, TOE 54 20 othe Bee Gall, Stackhouse, Philadelphia; 27:3, ‘ork. Tusminsd, Oot arr brig Se Lion Walls, Work; sehr Only Daughter, Fenlkinbarg sche vague, Warebam,; Black Bird, Mimpton, Fol bard A Wood, Cranmer > Maria ker, NYork; Emeline Chesar, Brower, Rhode lea P' Siiekner, ast ‘Cambridge; CP re, Jersey City. 3e Balti. i bare for bark. ¢ Arr steamers Ben DeF ord, Hallet, ; atgnal phils: via Queenstor + bark Africa ; Marshall, = Castle (Africa): scbre Rate Sargent, Bro: I m: arket: Joseph Nickerson, Asa Baker, On ‘Vaux, Frink, Philadelphia, via Chester. 8 ‘Wilttam Jentina, a State; bries Mareball and or bark Ha¢ley and bri John Shaw remain st anchor below. 3 barks Smyrna: Young Turk, brig Judge way, lands Off Highland Light, Jos Whitney, from Savannah; BALTIMORE, Oct 30—Aarr ship & RK fpaniing, Hower, Boston; bart Union, Tripp, do, brig Ocean Bell Benson, Nevases; echre Fetrel (fr), Skinner, he Johna, Somerset, Stirling, NYork. Bel Off Swan Point, ship ow, Cherubim, Bhinner. 83 days from Usilw "- tomac, Wate, NYork; ships Currituek, Knowles, and Js Chestoa Bryan, Liverpool. tid brig A ‘Smithers (Br), John son. Halifax; bark George & Henry, Gunby, West Const of 8 meri BRUNSWICK, Ga, Oct 28—Arr ship Anna Decatur, Par- fons, Cardift, BANGOR. Cet 28—Arr sobr Eagle. Gregory. NYork. CALAIS, Oct 23—Arr sehr Rossini. Hunt, NYork. (id 18th, sebrs Thames Albee, NYork; 19th. Dragon, Sadler, Philadel: bin 224, brig Velora, ard, do. DIN A. Pia, Oot 17— arr coke Blea Wi ht. Rogers, Cid wteamahin Py PERNA Beaufort, NC (and eld for New York): brige MN Bridge, Lang, and Sarah Flagg, Allen, do. Cid 284, brig Hope, Thorp, Matanran FALL RIVER, 50-14 achra J I Potts, Holley, Woolton. Garrison. York vealed HAMPTON ROADS. Cot 28—Arr brig Palestine, Thom) Rio Gaande, Breil, Watson, Reter's Barreda Brow. Pe: HARTFORD. Oct 30—Kid Latimer, and L Daniele, Smith schra Cynthia Jane, Bennett; A @ NYork; sloop Mary 0 BORTIELE. Oct 18—Arr schrs 8 A Edwards, Samii : F Rell, Robinaor , 3 se Howton; brigs Mary Hamilton, Régerton, Larne, NEW ORTEANS, Oct S1—A: ships Kearsege, Lea MEANS, Oct S1—Arr (by tal) | vitt, Bristol: Inepector, Belfast. hed nipie Ww, Get %—Arr Br brig Sea Bird, Hillsboro; sehr KR "7 Signal, Dameel and Catharine Ann, ree Marya, Nelly Rlonmeld, and Mller, New York: Amelia Kinston’ ¢! Hothronk, Saugerties; Coptrivanee, Stony Potut. P G Bi J © btont, and Extra, Ha: verstraw SEWPORT, Oct 28—Arr ect re Tangent, Rumyill, Union Inland, Gn. for Newburyport, lost a portion of the deck load of timber; Julia Ann, Blodget. Franksort for Rallimore; 2%h, scbre Julia ané Mary. Parker, Bangor for NYork: Marmo:a, Smith, do for do, via © y » Conn; yy ay ee ‘aptain’s Islan’, Conn; Expedite, Beebe, NEW HAVEN, Oct 00—Arr brig Robt Mowe, Wabd, Turks slands. PENSAOOLA, Oct 20—Cld echr Amy Chase, Benjamin, Mi- oni -PHIA. Oct 3l—Arr steamer Delaware, Cannon, Victoria Reed, Preble. Cslentta; berk Daniel, : sobre BOF Lewis, York, Portland, Tomah, Ao- . Undise Risley B York. Seturned, bark 'wrn hence for Pensacola, leak ld brigs Do- ‘ardul for orders, Com Stewart Portlan4; oare Tda, Howes ww aD Aretic. eS Jobo, NB, qwta. York, er, ‘Cheney, Newbary port, MTayirr, Nioke eign PORTLASD, oo, Alberton, Philadelphia; schre Mary Ann, Bryant, y: Ophir, Moon, Hancock for N¥erk; Zicavo, Mureh, ie brig Rutoras Haskell, Havann ‘27—Arr sehr 1) Tai Lake, Marsball, PROVIDENCE, Cot S0—Arr stenms P York: Pelion, sacumeon, Whelcen, for a Rpaen Roads about 2b, Mary Siuabelh’ Duster, trom, Philadephia, for N York, diag! alex | raon Boston | Oct 29—Arr steamship Patapsoo Vail. NYork; iwanp Prevideni. Trcifth sirocts ‘WM. F. SMITH, Bagineer Secretary. créer of the ba Cap! (CE OF THE PACIFIC MAIL STE. OOM. pany. New ‘ors. October SI, 1f60— Sees el eiertor ike tasniog toca Tear, wil be Senet meeting of the Pattern Makers’ Friendly A: } be beld at the Fourteenth Ward Howl, corner of | Elizabeth streets, this , Nov. 1, at or MA LJ iT, Pi 'elock. Joun Logan, Secretary. HB BOTTLERS’ PROTECTIVE ASRORACION WiLG bold their regular month); ‘on T! | Nov. tat 8 ollack, at Tronere Ball Nos 46 and 48 | Houston street. Pupetuel required. FOR ALBANY AND! ‘North and West, Train) iN RIVER BAILBOAD. , Connecting with trains jeave:— q uns ermaay: Pope NTE | EOLST LTE, mesh (can so |S," omar me ing var), 9:20 “Gedy Po train, 730 A.M. ee ct aan x |b antl Fx ‘emg 945 A.M. and | 10:10 4 M., 6:28 and 79885 «; 4. F. SMITH, Superintendent. ORK, HARLEM AND ALBANY RAILROAD,—~i From he = Be a7 York to ibang, Joaving 7 Sixth street station and 10 A M.and'6 P.M, makin: direct | counnections with the New York Sontees ween aad) 8. ee ape Fines 800 4. ‘180 and 6:10. M., moppinat For White Fiaing, 6:16 P. M. (trom White street Depot) stay | Williams Bridge, id a. M. and &30 P.M. (from Twenty | sixth street Devot), gal silwasona,’ a pany, 9:15 A. M.—Mafl Train. ‘et all stations sorts of Tre} “William's Bridge. 640 A. M. andi PF. M., al) om | (tained arpertetondens. er Kewotamt 5 MEDICAL. Doni Ritvd—28 YEARS OFFICE PRACTIOR-I ‘Consulted nb36 Centre street, from8 A. M. 09 P, M. D* BRODIE, 483 BROADWAY, CHARGES MODBRAT#~ d His remedies exored) RB. H. A. BARROW, 1% BLEECKER STREET (POUR: Coors from, Macdongnl), N.Y. author of tbat papnist: ‘Human Fraiity,”” may be consulted daily from 11 uli 2, m 41i) 8, Sundaye til 2. Deze OFFICES. CORNER OF HO! 9 } & Crosby streets (139 Crosby.) Bours 10} to Xand | D*. JOBNSON, 4 DUANE STREET, MAY BB Lo | ‘sulted on all ¢ of a certain class Thirty yi ex. open andl Sad R ALBERT LEWIS ETROPEAN PHYSICIAN ANID borg: on, 25 Jay street, New dork, can be consulted dal- senses and guarantees & safe and certain, act R. R. CORBETT HAS REMOVED street to bin presevt very convenient suit of oMees No. & Centre sireet. between Cham! Rease —— — per. Reimer frem kok for do; Bist, Horatio, Paimer, | P?iiaceinuin; Fe Trem m York top thao’ e. Melbourve Bust mere Axoy. Aug G—BIi, Noniur, Cartwright, NYork; 15h, Arad, | Honoorne Mun Ml white J a RICHMOND, Oct 29—arr Baceron (PUD, Oct lt— Arr Times, 8 York; 15th. Sarah Park, 4 Pengiewn, do: Pleiades, Knowles, Pt Jobo, N+ Hlectrie, | NYOr: bark Meroain ; =~ meg , Oct 18M Game, Wieting, Cearleston: Al: | Tyteab Martin Slats, Alseon, Putameee, Jones, Wee: - bert inmp, ¥Crleacn; Cortolan, Bieena ral, + Hoheo: | D'W French Bliles Ga Ole. ship Hermine, Stricker, Bremen: York Hoaeesex, Oct Sd Tablia, Merrill, NYork; —th, Mary Luosretia Gibb, NYork nm, Oot 13—Od the Weser, Bremen (aa), Wessels, from it Rancetona, Cet 10—Cld WH Townsend, Or wby, Constanti- ie Lg "Cowes, Oct Arr Tentonis (@), SYork (and sid for Ham- cerita » Newanale for NYork. the moet a0 practice reatore 4 al 24h, for Canin, Cot = Arr Wi fad ats fe Canpenas Oct 19~ Arr hark Sea Breeze, dervgy,, Srmeanah: brigs Mi Philadel bin Foccnow, ang 3—#ld Christopher Hall NYork; ¢ Maryland, Urosby, Sapent Gh Fivtor Coos’ ‘Winsor, one i Tie Been onceners etn immediate ‘ment sit Broadway, New Work, fda Bale, Tooper, from NYork, PERS W. ‘ANTED—TO mate FEW FLOUR BAB« LU _rela. Apply to 4. T. Briggn. 66 Rutgers sitp. mond, Ardrommm. ge. TI, port brig Bhiza Ann, Dyer, for | and Camnen Price 28 ceuln } wabaah. hgiey, Reto ASFITTER WANTED —APPLY AY NO. 19 MAIDEN? tone wid Bipot. cod Gririens Pearl Oot eArr brig Hotton, Wihass elise. don” TO RETIRING JRWRLLERA—WANTED, A SIFUATION Patrick Henry, M York for Lon. peer, os, man who er Wek of the Ware, odd, London (and SEW PUBLICATIONS. Jy : | x reremoe: < Chief, Higgina, for Mobile, | J) MORES RAILROAD GUIDE, Pom Sepeterterl crektee roreneiee NOVEMBER, @ PUBLISHED OW wONDAY— The great National, Politienl, Social and Moral Sstirical W ‘rocunome Pece. Lae py J PRINTER. 2 im. W. Rose, stationer, — TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION. me 09 20-08 A.D Bocchenen, € beney, NTork. Sit entitled —_— — 1 wenens. RULER RUE 1 | AT A MEETING OF THR & TH WARD 427, the Ciyde Itt, J C"Ruka, Moe, and Rialto, Prisct, | 55 one Nenstifel volume Pree Oeewie, NES | A cvtied Democratic hewcclation, Beid Sil First avewse, Gurewoce, Ort 12—Arr Ocean Favorite, Norris, NTork rae found in | the tes >, ‘ne Gace ay, Get Arr © Plorions Upnm. Wallace, N York. Qiu Pept 7—Of, Fraiter, Mone, from Rombey for Hong & | WD. > orpr lett, WV. Pid 12ta, Fens less, Ps Mantia. 14th, Nankin Petereon, Ranaenwa: Alfred’ Mil Francisen; t ' * ™, (Br), a PC Alexander, Celeord, Poruand fy ihe | i i Je Toy whose mysterions dis- id and ther «ity papers, and ysow pushed 60 kosarge ra me ia bow published Cortein debts be bas lett benind : = Ringe han, cant petage ped, 1 part of the United a So receipt of conte, bj Lawion P. Staten op Barnes, Pobii her, 36 Aan lew York. FREDBRIC a. BRADY, . 4 Ann street. New Yor P.O. Farrell, Thos. 6. P rates AM BOU D.L. Bout ax, Secretary. Onl. taken Into L JF. emae Of our Mr, A ‘The wate suppiled by Kose, Avg 10—Arr Beatrice, Rogrra, Melbourne; = TODAY, L — Tae NEW POR eR WANDA, | the style of ohr firm will be D. & A. & Ney Lacexp or OL D&A. KINGSLAND & ® York: ‘iparaiey | “hire Fors, Nov. 1, 1500 . RB PROPLE'® CAR DIDATR. | T For Congre UN = | (Ata meeting of the Bowery.cn Write MJ. Bock, Seeretary. 7 OLD EMBLEWATICAL THIRT! realy, faith’ol and true to the ie geri Ish Rigearn. loolah, Newton, Mobile; Rd, RM Demill Hendrick. | abana, MeConpeil " b ater Lay Naan ame on JA, bark A sench in virtue’s nostrile it thon be po more forever, Chariegtom: Remniuie. Bil, But ae a Darnt out voleano, — waye fal Conatitu Y ' Amert. | On whore seorive, on whose ava, tion and the ‘The Hell Kverett National nea Mick SET ee | | Betis Brea Pe (ind acehip W ¥ Monee, Snail, New Orleans; barks Young | Hence shall grow the core tbr surepetBeneth CMienbia erent, Those who eytmpstnize with as in this glo- arcerion bahay, NYork, 284. Pentucket, Letgbton, do. | ‘Twixt Orion and the Piriads, | Hous moremest and wish to jotm will opportunity. Iurax, M—Cld ship Pouando, Curry, NOrieans, brig | Tile written ip wertiten: | Come one, come all who came Warand whaling Baltimore, sehr Herlin, May, NYork | Copies mailed. free Come all who woulg now mabe uemare, ‘Sonsey, Get f9-Put ia, brig Corviere, Jean, from Shiels RODD & CARLETON, Publisners, New ¥ ANDES 18, President. for ® Yor, leaky im bow ; —: = === = | A: te Rovtanp, Beeretary, é ta heserait ine, Cornish, Wis Ratbbova, rat and ICR ADVERINSREENTS. TR WARD NATIONAL UNION OLUB.—BY #(8TAKE Power, Pork: Biaset, Bray, 40 om ta Laie, | M Abax® Tik@, BLANCHISEUSH, DE FIN — Be pee ena —_K oa via Heilfar: Tone Molsovald 5 Ruy rence lie Gen ealery ou! dag amiliew pre ™ ty us ‘ Flayd, Vearnorn, Aimy, a | Saaremmer ws 1 West 30h wt this sory, froatyonm (ie Hanscom. St icon, XB; 16, Anelo Sagoo (aa), Qaedec; 17Ua, ‘AIK, DARA UNE for p sod Rewuistor, Masom, NOt. | gu'elle soit Ne et babitnee & lew enfants. fa. Dorovas + + wom, 60; '. ia Zime roe Onest, entre 9 et 1) beures, ar York rite, ow ; Chancellor, jb, iN DENA! UNE FRANC Ul Sait BIEN WARD DEMOCRATIC UNION OLUB ior heehee toe ete | O" eee Vlora cues | OTA.TAG Denes he wt aor fear ity Fat out TA Aven, Point; Ooab- Toxsoxs J ‘Pratt, (and ont for do h Arr yeEe Meenas, Corsten, HOvienes; 10m, ct 6—In port brig Orella, Reger, from Boston, just 12—Arr Taovey, Brows, and Bila, Hones,

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