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The Fever and Ague Districts of New York. THE SUBSTRATUM OF THE METROPOLIS. CURIGUS DEVELOPMENTS. ANCIENT STREAMS OF THE CFTY. Dubowill ave added! to it the namenne at which Inger moisture, draiaings through the animal and vegetable refuse accumulates in aa! large cities. The City in Detail—-The Migration of Fashion—The Public Markets and Other Public Kalsances. yRE FIRST WARD, ‘This ward, tke the Second-aad Third, was originally all surrounded by water, About half of the ward’ fs mace ground, undreined and unhealthy. Fevers are never absent from this ward along Washington and Creenwich streets. South, Promt and Water streets ore principally occupied by stores, and ds no one, excepya Watchman or two, remains-in them: over night, there 6 no way of arriving precisely at their sanitary con- dition. Ja former years the First ward was the abode of some of our most wealthy famikes, State street, Greenwich street, the jower partof Broadway, including the resi- cenves facing the Bowling Green and the Battery, were oc- cupied by such wealthy and fashionable families as those of Stephen Whitney, J. Phithtps Phenix, Saul Fashionable Quarters in Re | Airy, Comor Sande Mr, Prizno, of ti6 tem of* Prime, gions of Miasma. March of Fashion from Ward to Ward. THE SHAKING PALACES OF NEW YORK, Impending Dangers to the Health of the City. THE CAUSES AND THE REMEDY. &e. &e. &e. General Egbert L. Viele bas published a very interest- ing work, together with a valuable map, showing the to- pography and bydrology of the city of New York, and defining the bealthy and unhealthy sections of the me- tropolis, It will prove of great value to persons about purebaving residences or Duilding sites upoo which to erect the same. WHAT THE FEVER AND AGUE MAP SHOWS. ‘This map shows the water courses, streams, meadows, marshes, ponds, ditches, canals, &c., that existed and now exist upon the site on which New York is built, General Viele asserts the remarkable tact that when the cholera, yellow fever, intermittent, typhoid and other fevers, fever and ague and all similar complaints have prevailed in the eity they have been most general and virulent within or near the lines of these water course districts. THE CAUSE DEFICIENT DRAINAGE. ‘This is ascribed to the fact that these water courses have been filled up with all conceivable kinds of rubbish, and that in most cases there hax been either no drainage at all or that which ie worse than useless. He has no hesitation in expressing the opinion that one of the chief causes of mortality is to be found in the defective drain- age of certain districts of the city, and furthermore that this is.an evil which is increasing as the city extends itself towards the northern portion of the island, and that the main ciements by which the evil is increased are | are, more fatal bere than inf any oihor ward, wit! tho so-called city improvements on grading of the streets and avenues which. are, now being carried forward. ‘This grading consists of deep rock excavations | Swamp, and high embankments, some as high ns forty fect. ‘These embankments cross, of course, the old valleys Ward & King, and many others well and popularly known among the ¢aid people of New York. These families resided there-before the filing up of the Battery Jine aud the extensionof Washington and West, and South and Front streets, into the North and East rivera. This Olling up destroyed the healthy character of the | neighborhood, and the wealthy families moved up to St John’s park, on North Moore street (Lispenard mea- -dow). Finding this to be made ground and unhealthy, they moved up t© Washington park, Waverley place, Fourth street, &c. Subsequently, fashion again migrated toward the Fifth avenue, which decided the character of that locality, for there was nothing elso to define it, Where fashion will mextanigrate to, now that the lower part of Fifth avenue is proved to be incrasted with a bed of disease and impregnated with an atmosphere of miasma, it is a little difficult to tell, ‘THE BKCOND WAKD. This ward is the best drained of all the wards in the lower part of the city, havingya water shed from the high ground of Broadway through Maiden lane to the river, Tbe great blot upon this ward, or the exception to its otherwise good sanitary condition, 18 met with in Fulton market, and the filthy shanties on the docks and the sidewalks in the neighborhood. A great deal of the waste stuff of the market is thrown into the slips, and after the sun has bad an opportunity to work upon it, is carried back through the sewers by the mean and flood tides a mass of putridity. This will prove a fruitful source of mortality in case an idemic should appear. ‘The scarcity of dwelling houses in thix ward prevents apy complete account of ite sanitary condition. THE THIRD WARD. In this ward is located the Washington Market, which is worse, if possible, than the Fulton Market, An enormous bulkhead is built tn the river opposite to it, with the intervening space filled up with debris and re- fuse. dirt from that section of thecity. On the top of this are a number of shanties, and between these is a mass of filth that would disgrace the meanest piggery in any part of the country. It is dangerous, from a variety ‘of canses, to walk here witle marketing. Our Jersey peixhbors. are the principal venders here,, and many a Jersey City alderman bas made bis fortune as an exg and poultry merchant by th ines he obtains in this mar- ket to sell his track, Jerseymen have no interest in keeping the market cleanly, aud therefore it becomes the duty of the New York authorities to see that the market is kept in proper order. ‘The Third werd was (ormerly a favorite abode for some of our most respectable Vesey and Barclay strevts, Park place, Chamb« irray, Warren and some other streets atone timo presented mavy handsome private residence. Now their places are supplied by archouses and stores of all descriptions. Columbia College grounds were lecated in this ward, THE FOURTH WARD is as bad as any purt of the.city in point of.drainage. ‘It receives the entire wash of two clevated sections—one on the south, the otberon the north. Nearly the whole of this ward was originally a swamp, never bas been properly drained. The consequence is, epidemics tho exception. of the Sixth, The number of cholera deaths in 1849 in the Fourth ward was nearly seven hundred. In the Fourth ward is located what is known as ‘The extending from Gold to Sprice and through Ferry, Franktort and Ciiff streets. It is the contra! and chief mart of the hide and leather trade of New York. Clif street was.so named from the fact that its startin of drainage, through which flows the drainage stream of | point was ona height, and the street was extended throu; alarge area. in most instances a few stones are thrown together and cailed a culvert, for the purpose of letting these streams pass under the embankments, A few monthe suffice to destroy there culverts as conductors, aod the ewbankmonte soon become permanent dams, causing the colléction of large bodies of water all over the island, which in midsummer become stagnant pools, breeding pestilence and disease. For the purpose of im- proving lots adjacent to these embankments dirt is dumped in to. absorb the water, which is none the less present because it is noteeen. The soil, becoming satu rated, forme a sort of sponge through whieh the water ascends by capillary attraction, giving out a constant miastua, vo leas fatal to health than the stagnant water whieb i replaced, Within the corporate limits of the city more than seven handred acres have been filled in where the tide once flowed, and the material of this fili- has generally boen the worst description of eurth for 1 a purpore. The filling ip some. cases has been too fou} for description, particularly in the area confined by cortain bulkheads op river lines. ‘The fearful ravages of epidemics in there portions of the city are sufficient evi dence of their insalabrity. A BIRDB’-EYE VIKW.OF THE ANCIENT AND MODERN WATER COURSES, BTC. the swamp. The lower part.of the ward i# w fever nest, occupied by tenant and emigrant famiiles, aud great danger exists of frightful mortality occurring im case ap epidemic breaks out. THE FIFTH WARD. A large portion of this ward lies in @ swamp, anda considerable portion f& made land. The main outlet of the Collect pond ran through this ward. Although the population is not $0 dense, the ratio of disease is al most the same a§ the Fourth ward. The drainage is very bad, especially slong the river line, where great quantities of water remain for a long time on the surface after the storma There are very few rowers in the ward, and the consequence is, a large amount of filth accumulates in the strects and gut- ters before the water reaches the sewers. Garbage thrown into the gutters is sometimes exposed for days to the sun, and at the same time dams the water so that it remaine for a like period the continual source of disease. THE SIXTH WARD lies between the Fourth and Fifth wards. It is simply a low basin, ip the centre of which was the Collect pond, seventy feet deep. The death rate from cholera in 1849 reacbed its maximum in this ward, as doey also every ether epidemic, ‘There seems to have been no suitable provision ever made for removing the large body of water Spee jying in this basin. The consequence is that the sub-soil of the entire arca must be at this time ablack mass of decomposed animal matter, exhaling constantly the most fetid odors, ‘The sewer which was A brief enumeration of the water courses, a8 described | constructed through this ward, it bas been discovered, previous to 1695, may be thue given:—Commencing at tbe Battery, we find an inlet, and subsequently a canal van through what Is now Broad street, as far as Exchange has sunk in several places, so’ that itis Dow a series of elevations and depressions, which accumulate in- stead of discharging the water. The Croton Board place, witha branch running through Beaver street, af. | have this important matier under censideration. The terw: ardn known as the Oid Diteb. The Lonw Island ferry- Rouse stood at the corner of New +treet and Exchange place, ‘the ferryboat passing through the canal. Wttle north, a stream ran through what is new Maiden lane. Next above, where is now Ferry street, was Boek- manis Park, ® large tract of wet land, from which a etream rav into the Eastriver Next was the Coilect pond large body of fresh -water, said to have been seventy feet in depth, located in the basin, the site of which is now occupied by the Tombs. On thie little lake Fitch launched his first steamboat. A stream called the Wreck Brook ran from the Collect t the East river, we. a low meadow ; it emptied into the river at the number of deaths by cholera in 1849, in this ward, was about nine hundred. The extension, widening and ‘A | raising the grade of Worth street have had a material influence i the health of this ward; but through the swore hese 088 4 hag influence of interested parties completion of this improvement through the Five Points has been rated. The ex- tension should be continued directly through to the Bowery, and such pigholes as Baxter, er and aid $ Mulberry and Mots streets, now occupicd bya heterogencus ulation, wiped out. Those who re- member W. street when it was named Anthony street, with its filthy déns of vice and debauchery, feet of what is now Roosevelt street. The main outlet | woul in the long line of marble ware- of the Collect was by a stream, running t the North | houses on the street the ads to be wwer, through the Lixpenard swamp, which covered a | derived in @ densely populated city from wi very large surface, extending from Duane street on the | the narrow streets, and especial! the south to Spring street, A large stone bridge crossed this | where natural exist It is a well known cirenmn ab Canalalaeek. In the year 1706 a project was vicious peopie in submitted by two engineers to the city authorities for | the low and unhealthy city, and of making e Geck.0o Meare Gy Cdinenge, 2 atte ever course every epidemic has ite ready food in all such fer shipping, and to drain and carry off the water from | places, gee pene oe ce So far back as ‘THR SEVENTH WARD Wes const ee appointed to examine mto thecendition | affords a striking example of the great injery ‘the Collect Teported that it wax filled with the | which can be effected by Giling low grou! with insa- bedier of animals, and was dangerous to the public | Jubrious material and without properly arranging the endth. ‘4 ee tee ward lies along the East river on The orxt stream above the m the North | ap extended A large portion of it was originally wiwer wide, was called the Minette water, origi | high ground, and, had it been left a0, it would have been mat im the néighborbood ef University place | com healthy ; but the extension of many blocks apa ‘oenth sireet,; it emptied imto the Hudeon, | into the river and a neglect to drain the Jow ground bas near the foot of Hamersley street, rough it ene of the most unbealthy wards in the what is sors ‘Washing! Raw and a city. = great swampy #0! at “inkoehe side of the city wore the Stuyvesant swanpe-a | THE U7 TOWN BROWN STONE SHAKING PALACES. Fery exieunive area of low alluvial land, receiving the | ceive the character of the lower wards Of the city, W cwaters of numerous smal! streams, Tompkins’ square ulation is dense, and who hago pot'the- dan lies m this region. The ensterly side of the city is advantages which are au to be enjoyed Mae ewampy atl the way up from hore to 's more. thy vs now turn low is the TRE DRAINAG® OF MURRAY HILL. ‘upper seetion of the island, where capital and ulative Murray Hill and vicinity were drained by a consider. | influences, or individuals through a “Tecire to able stream, creating « great dea] of swampy land, pass- | excel in architectural display, have erected there ing through what is now Madison square and Gramercy | long rows Tesidencos, which strike Wark. We vee here five public squares located entirely, | the eye and astonish the mind, especially of foreigne: or i part, in ewampe, vig—st John’s, Washington, | whose meceived ideas of this country are commected Tompkins’, Madieon and Gramercy—several of them + aed that remarkably salubrions locality, Murray it On the wenterly side streame ouptied into the Hudson at Thirty second street and Fourth avenue, coming | un ail the way from Sixth avenue, and creating an abund- | gale, but a fow weeks There wax another stream at | an elegant aracter aml | the entire family who previously occupled it died of dip- ance of swampy soil Forty second street of neuriy the same ‘extent. In the nighborhood of Broadway, Kighth avenue nod Sixty-eecond wireet wax, unui recently, a stagnant poed emitting the most noxious odom. Tis now pare tially obscured by @ covering of earth, which is, howe ever, eaturated with water cromes the Park tw the corner of Fifty ninth street and Fifthavenve. Here a miserably constrarted culvert partly obstructs and dams back the water, Crossing Fifty-ninth wivect, it pacsen under Fifth avenue, veat Fifty-eighth treet; then again cromang Fifty-ninth street, between Fourth and Fifth avenues, it passes ander the Fourth avenue, between Fifty-cighth and Fifty ninth streets, then efosing Fifty-cighth, Fifty-seventh, Pifty.9ixth nd Fifty-lifth streets, between Third and Fourth ave wen, it rane inte @ sewer at the joncuon of Third ay ‘and Fifty-tourth street, A branch of this str jasses vader the Arsenal throogh a well constructed e6) duit, and ander the Fifth avenue and Sixty fourth «treet, third, Sixty-mecond, Mixty-fret and 8: joins tie main etreatm at the junction of Fourth avenue aud # ‘ty month street Avotber large stream rise® between Enchth and Ninth and running easterly croses the Vark at Sev. h strent; then eroseing Fourth avenne and “Lujtd avenue, between Se fe ceete; croming dw gen Recond and and y-fourth and Seventy-third i summing and recrosing Seventy: fo stween avenue A and First avenue; crossing avenue A between Pevewty fourth and Seventy-fth wtrects, and avenne By Hetwegn the same sirets, empticr inte Zhi sirear ix more than turee iniiex body of water passes through it, which at one ‘Giine firmed a mill, and the ground throughout 18 whole €c.i75@ ip Ewampy. ‘here ate other streams traced in General Vielo'e map, Dut those described, it ie sing to relate, contamed almost as much water ar has been collected from variour, agources on Voog Island forthe Brookiyn water works, anceatly constructed FRKONEOUS IDES ANOUT THE ABBORPTION WATER. general supporition that when the city ie entirely Hust apon all this water wil! dikappear is not the ¢ The very material which i® thrown in t pul Lyra p nugious [or Nip jnerdane, byl only reining H or uA A stream originating here | attem| we AY “4 to Keep out the noxious ex with a plain and unassuming style of architecture, con. sistent with a democratic pe Little would it be #up) that many of these gorgeous residences had within them the seeds of divease and death. But such junately ix the case We happen to know of the for forty thousand dollars, of t brown ttone house @gy Fifth avenue, in which theria, This house i# located over one of the original drainage streame, and we are informed by the oecupant of the adjotping house that be found water in his ovllar in digging one foot, the presence of which he has since to obviate by excavating the entire area and filling it with concrete, In Twenty-fourth street, on a short block between Madison and Fourth avenues, within a few doors of each other, fourteen porsons of mali fevers and diphtheria within a brief period. General Viele’s map hows the existence of an old drain. + stream in that locality. In some of the splendid looking ences on Madison and Fourth avenues, Thirty-first street, and other similar localities, ‘he (iret thing the servants do in the moratng is to pump out the house, and then make the fires. in one house on Thirty-firet etredt there bas been an average of one foneral per week during the year. An old gray haired physician, who had been practising for fifty years in that weetion of the eity, states that he can trace the source of the original Manetta stream by the fever cases which came under his own p ation. One of our Most prominent merchants, residing in @ large corner houee on Fifth avenue, recently lost a lovely daughter from fever# contracted in the houre, which proved to be built over an old stream, The it, watiafied of the uhbealthfulness of the place, ont, and built a residence on higher ground. As another striking inetance of the malari influences in the hbor- hood of these old watercourses, we may the fact that a large aud well known medical eal! up town had berome #0 permeated with mal being located in the vicinity of one of these streams as to tant, | reqhire the excavation of the soil uadernoath the buiid- and a pavement of Sageing lad e.conext put down Nalations, might go on mul- Uplying Instance upon instance where personal obverva- tion and ad experience have confirmed the fatal conve- quences of a neglect of the ordinary measures requisite to remove the water of drainage from its places of But those that bave been recived indicate what will be the condition in the couree of a few years of our moxt highly improved and fashionable localities, which will, undoubtedly, rival the Jower wards in their death rate when any general contagion ehall virit our city, BRORMOUS PRICKA FOR LOT® IN A FEVER AND AGUB VALLEY. Still further up town, in the vicinity of the Park, where ote are ij eb UORBADG, OL CDUTINUMR WDE Ab Where 588g i BF i g 2 i this fetid mass, and offer the lots for saleag the most eligible buildingsites on Manbattan Island, But a few years will elapse before the illusion is destroyed, and this locality prove to be the most unhealthy in the city unless the proper remedies are now applied. There are such as Murray Hill andthe moro elevated portions of Broadway, where residences are not affeeted by the evil we have referred 40, and where property will always command. a premium, " Yet the presence of contagion, wherever .it origivates, carries its fatal conseg all classes: of society, amd it becomes the duty of every citizen, no matter where he may reside, to demand that remedial measures #hall be adopied before the desolating elfects#of a wide-spread epidemic shall have told us that it is “too. late,” GENERAL \‘VIBLE'S REMEDY. The remedy to be applied in the lower part of the city is to widen the narrow streets aud to raise the grade where the streets pass through the original depression of the surface. Narrow streets, under ap: Sircemetances, are @ curse toa city. Bey are: gobi the abodes vice and crime. In: thea. an ordinary \es8 epreads into a pestilence, and @ ire into-a conflazration, By con- structing lateral drains along the slope of the depressions in the lower part of the city, and connecting them with the sewers, they will intercept the water in its descent and prevent accumulation in the basins; and then raising the , at the same time widening the wtreets, and perhaps disconténuing some of the short and insignificant streets in the Sixth ward, the health ot the clty will: be improved one hundred per ceat. So far as regards the upper part-of the city, it is absoiitely neces- sary that gome system should be. adopted for the freo flow of water along the chamnéls of the original drainage streams. This can be done dy building more substantial culverts beneath . the ani by the con- struction .of permanent ing, 86 built as to admit .of the mn .of -water through the dnterstices .of the .covering. These drains should be excavated to a firm substratum, and every property owner should be compelled to consti of a uniform character, that portion of each drain which may pass through his property. Where buildings already occupy the entire site of somo. of these streams, as is the case in many instances, especially in that of tho “Minetta water,” a stream which ran from the vicinity of Union square, through the lower portion of Fifth avenue and Washington square, emptying into the North river in the neighborhood of Vandam. st it wil be hecessury to excavate & way under the house which can be Meadilp. dues by the aid skilful engineering, and then constructing open stone drains, After this, the houses ican bo restored to their original condition, and no more evil effects felt from the presence of water or dampness. After the great fire in London which succeeded the great plague of 1666, and in which over thirteen thousand houses were destroyed, an opportunity was afforded the authorities to do the very thing which it is now neces- sary for us todo in the city of New York—namely, to restore the old drainage streams in the manner we have suggested. As regards London, the enormous population now included within its limits could never have existed there -bad not that system been adopted. THE COMING ELECTION. The Polling Places Selected by the Police Commissioners. Notice Is foreby given that the places named in the following schedule have been duly designated by tho Board of Metropolitan Police, in pursuance of chapter 740 of the Laws of 1865, ‘as places of registry and for holding the polls of election for. the general election be beld on the 7th.day of November ‘instamt, and charter election to be held on the Sth day of December next, in and for the county and city of New York. By order. of the Board of police. 8. ©. HAWLEY, Chief Clerk. FIRST WARD. First district, barber shop, No, 34 Greenwich street; Second district,” barber shop, No. 3 Rector street; Third district, barber shop, No. 120 Greenwich street; Fourth district, barber ehop, No. 0 William street: Fifth <is- trict, barber shop, No, 105 Broad street, SECOND WARD. < First district, plumber shop, No. 158 William stroet; Second district, barber shop, No. 130 Beekman street, THIRD WARD. First district, barber shop, No. 168 Washington street; Second district, paint store, No. 70 Barclay street; Third district, plumber shop, No. 256 Greenwich street; Fourth district, printing office, No, 3 Hudson street. FOURTH WARD, First district, shoe store, 318 Pearl street; Second dis- trict, bakery, 267 William street; Third district, under- taker’s store, No. 6 Madison street ; Fourth district, board- ing house, 87 Cherry street; Fifth district, shoe store, 62 Roosevelt street; Sixth district, boarding house, 69 Cher- ry street; Seventh district, boarding house, 46 Oliver street. FIFTH WARD. First district, fruit store, 46 Leonard street; Second district, boot stere, 220 Church street; Third district, private dwelling, 131 Franklin street; Fourth district, findings store, No. 4 Beach street; Fifth district, shoe atte, 49 Hudson strect; Sixth ‘district, boot ‘store, 99 Hudson street; Seventh district, cigar store, 418 Greenwich street; Eighth district, tailor store, 449 Wash- ington street. SIXTH WARD. First district, hose carriage house, Centre street, near i¢t, howe carriage house, 12 change office, 67 Baxter pig Elm street; Ninth’ district, bose store, 9455 3 Nini house, 19 Elizabeth street, SEVENTH WARD. Firet district, Botanic Hall, 68 East Broadway ; Second streot; Third’ district, ai barber shop, 144, Chi agaessor’s office, 36 + Fourth district, tailor’s snop, 62 Market street; Fifth barber shop, 38 ty 19 New Canal street; Seventh district, undertaker’s store, No. 1 Mont- strect; Eighth ‘district, barber shop, 57 Mont. tonne reed; Math district ‘barber shop, 47 Scammel street; Tenth district, cigar 214 Monroe street; roe street. BIGHTH ae Second ‘office of shor, street; Third No. Fourth district, shoe ‘Dominick district, shoe street; Sixth Moffet’s brass street; Seven trict, fruit store, 180 Pi i i 5 3 i Unrooter'satepy 50 Horatio harness maker's shop, 21 Ninth avenue TENTH WARD. First district, hardware No, 2 Delancey street; Second district, paint store (| ment), 129 © cigar 81 Ludlow street; district, tobacconist’s, 71 Essex street; Fitth dis- trict, jewelry store, 54 Allen street; Sixth «strict, cigar store, 84 Heater street; Seventh tailor shop, 13 Eldridge street; Kighth district, office 47 Ludiow street, RLEVENTH WARD. First district, tin shop, 311 East Houston street; Sec- ond district, barber shop, 99 Pitt street; Third district, cigar store, 86 Columbia street; Fourth ct, tin shop, 90 Lowis street; Fifth district, cigar store, 147, Lewis street; Sixth district, butcher re Rul] Second street ; Seventh district, cigar store, 216 fecond street; Eighth district, cigar store, 227 Third strect; Ninth district, clgar store, 40 avenue C; Tenth district, shoo store, 80 avenue D; Eleventh district, feed store, 89 avenue D; Twolfth district, fruit store, 431 Fiful street; Thirteenth district, soda water 337 th street; Fourteenth district, milk store, 372 Bighth street; Fiiteenth district, butcher shop, 417 Tenth street; Sixteenth district, cigar store, 346 Ninth atreot; Seventeenth district, barber whop, 224 East Eleventh street; Eighteenth dietrict, ber shop, 604 Thirteenth street. yuo dweht ig wroos a of Broadway, First distriet, private ing, west ride of near 100th wtroet; Seeond district, dry goods store, Fourth avenue, near Fighty-#ixth street; Third district, dry goods store, Third avenue, between 113th and 114th streeta; Fourth district, tin shop, 125ta street, south hree doors west of Third avenue; Fifth district, more, north side of EEE coer ene th avenue and Broadway ; six tailor shop, west side of Tenth avenue, between 165th and 166th streets, THIRTEENTH WARD. shoe store, 161 Delancey street, Firat district, Second district, furniture store, 0 A street; Third dis- trict, barber chop, 4744 Pitt street, Fourth district, cigar slord, 262 Delancey sirect, Fifth district, cigar store 6 Lewis street; Sixth disteict, 608 Grand shoo », street; Seventh’ distriet, feed store, 14 Suffolk street; Eighth district, railk pate, 67 Cannon sireet. i FOURTEENTH WARD, First district, store, 279 Mott street; Second district, tailor shop, 21 Prince’ street ; Third district, private dwell: ing, 16 Spring street; Fourth ba:cher shop, 64 Prince streot: Fifth district, store, 16 Marion street ; sixth district, dwelling, 188 Mu street; Feventh dietrict, dwelling, 101 Elizabeth street; Eighth district, dwelling, 84 Elizabeth street; Ninth district, dwelling, 20 Hester Hirect; Tenth district, dwelling, 196 Bim street, FIFTEENTH WARD. First district, piano factory, 120 Ami district, carriage factory, 14 Amity place; Third district, Dyery Hable, 19) Mercer etroet, Fourth district, tailor avenue; Sev: ai Eighth district, fecd Ninth trict, furniture store, trict, shoo 302 store, 260 West barber shop, 111 Ninth avenue; Tenth dis- 163 Ninth avenue; ua venteeath xireet ; house, 523 Went Twenty-second street. SEVENTEENTH WARD. First distriet, furniture Second district, cigar store, 1 Third district, office, 173 Ersex street; 22 Rivington street; East Houston street; Fourth sdistrict, furniture store, 21’ Clinton street; Fifth district, shoo store, 33 Second, Thi street; Seventh district, } avenue; Sixth district, cigar store, 78 shoe store, 18 Fifth street ; Eighth district; shoe store, 103 First avenue; Ninth dis- trict, shoe store, 34 Third avenue; Tenth district, oyster house, 76 Third avenue; Eleventh 850 East Thirteenth street; Twelfth, q district, 141 First avenue; First avenue; Fourteenth district, stable, 263 street; Fifteenth district, shoe six Sixteenth district, barber Eighteenth oyster teenth district, jewelry store, tieth districts Barbor shop, 186 Third :discrict, barber ‘aap district, shoe store, third district, barber 108 Sixth teenth district, tailor shop. ap East Fo: house, 78 First street; Nine- Cire i ‘ber shop, Teed store, 208 it Tenth ith street; ; Beven- urth street ; 11736 Re, 175 Second street; 'Twen- street, Twenty-first Sixth street; Twenty-second 67 East Eleventh street; Twenty- shop, 194 avenue A, BIGHTRENTH WARD, First dist) district, stab! district, stable, 68 trict, shoe store, livery stable, 63 Union place; Second lo office, 54 West Nineteenth street; Third West twenty-third street; 149 Third avenue; Fifth district, under- feed stor Fourth dis- taker’s shop, 183 Third avenue; Sixth district, 136 Bast Twensy-eecond street; Seventh distri as) store, 243 East’ Twenty-fourth ‘stroct; street; Ninth disti 284 ‘East Kighteenth street; Tenth distrie 204 ‘Twenty-first street; district, stable, 187 East Seven: stable, $43 East Sixteenth “399 First avenue; Twelfth ith dlstrict, ict, stable, ty shoe renth district, shoe store, teenth street; Thirteenth district, feed store, 214 East Nineteenth street; Fourteenth district, unoccupied store, East Twenty-third strect, one. door east of avenue A; Fifteenth district, store, 264 avenue B. NINETEENTH WARD. First district, produce dealer, 641 Fourth avenue; Sec- ond district, confectionery, 625 Third avenue; Third dis- ‘Fast Forty-fifth street; Fourth trict, dwelling house, 85 district, paint shop, 55 East Forty-seventh street; Fifth district, undertaker’s shop, 736 Third avenue; Sixth dis- trict, feed store, southeast corner of Fifty-second street and Second avenue; teventh district, private dwelling, northwest corner of Fifty-third. street and Fifty-sixth street and Third avenue; Eighth district, lumber perhoniee, northeast corner of avenue; Ninth district, cabinet maker's shop, Third avenue, west side, betwen Seventy-sixth and trict, coal office, enty-seventh streets; Tenth dis- trict, barber shop, 118 Fifty-ninth street; 4,838 Third avenue; Twelfth district, Bleventh dis- shoe store, Third avenue, two doors north of Eighty- fourth street. TWENTIETH WARD. First district, shoe store, 288 Weet Twenty-eighth strect; Second district, tailor shop, 287 Ninth ‘Third district, livery stable office, milk depot, street; Fourth di ‘avenue; West’ ‘Thirty-second 827 West Thirty-first istrict, street; Fifth district, ‘milk depot, 428 West Thirty-tifth street; Sixth district, milk depot, 273 West Thi Seventh district, paint shop, 467 Ninth nue; Eighth distriet, r' banging store, 266 Ni avenue; Ninth ‘dinicie plomier “shop, 1208" Misth enth street; avenue; ‘Thirty-iitth street; 331 "West. Thirty-ninth Tenth district, barber Eleventh district, street ; -BeV- e- th shop, 307 West milk depot, Twellth | district, crockery store, 280 Seventh avenue; Thirteenth district, feed store, 287 Seventh avenue; Fourteenth district, cut- lery store, 304 teventh avenue; Fifteenth district, barber shop, 343 Seventh avenuo; Sixteenth district, shoe store, 370 Seventh avenue; Seventeenth district, plumber shop, 389 Seventh avenue; Eight clothing store, 430 Sevontli avenue; mth district, second hand Nineteenth district, paper hanging store, 564 Eighth avenue; T'wentieth dis- trict, livéry stable, Broadway, two ddors from West Thirty-sixth street. TWENTY-FIRST WARD. barber street; Third dist Fourth district, feed’ store district, milk depot, 628 trict, shop, t, shoe store, trict, mill jk 496 Second avenue; 145 East Twenty-pinth lepot, 566 Second avenue; 599 Necond avenue, Fifth Second avenue; Sixth die bukery, 679 Second avenue; Seventh district, bakery, 743 second avenue; Eighth district, fruit store, 124 Kast Thirty-ninth street; Ninth district, stable, 189 Lexington avenue; Tenth district, feed store, 435 Fourth avenue; Eloventh district, 84 Kast Twenty-cighth street ; Twelfth district, carpet street; Thirtcenth district, store, 14 furnivare store, 65 East ‘Twenty-soventh ‘West Thirty-second street; Fourteenth district, cigar store, 622 Sixth avenue. TWENTY-SECOND WARD. First district, nue; Second district, maker's shop, $11 Seventh ave- milk depot, 209 West Forty-first street; Third district tailor shop, 143, West Forty third street; Fourth dist t, cigar store, 529 Ninth avenue; Fifth ‘district, beok store, next to northwest corner o/ Forty-tifth street and Broadway ; Sixth district, stable, 312 West Forty-fifth street; Seventh district, livery stable, Seventh avenue, one r west of Forty-seventh street ; Eighth district, ‘paper store, 691 Nint dist Stewart's ice office, avenue; Ninth , 155 West Forty-ninth street; Tenth district, tallor shop, 382 Weet Forty-ninuh surect; Eleventh district, plumber sh 1 Broad H Twelfth district, Pate store, 651. Ninth avenue; Te teenth district, Barber shop, 1, district, soda water store, Fifteenth ‘ 1,405 Broadway ; Fourteenth West Fitty-tourth street; district, cigar store, 865 Fight avenue; Six: teenth district, coal office, southwest corner Tenth ave- nue and Seventicth street; Seventeenth district, private dwelling, southeast corner of Tenth avenue andteventy- ninth street. City Politics, THE MARINE COURT JUSTICE. Mr. R. D. Livingston, the Mozart Hall nomiuce, and Mr. Charles Price, the McKeon nominee for the Marine Court, short term, bave both withdrawn in favor of ex- Judge Bartholomew ©’Connor. Mr. Wm. M. Evarte has written the following note vo Judge Dittenhoefer:— To A, J. Dirraxuosrsn, Esq New Yoru, Nov. 3, 1865. ‘Desx Sin—I should greaily regret that any one should nition of Ju O'Connor's just y th of his fel in the election of a Justice of the Marine Con: or should bave the effect to disparage your own claims. for the support at sane election of the suffrages of our own Party ly of independent citizens. I take pleasure in saying this, as your election would, in and to the be. I baad to the pul am, yours, 5 bia Bis 4 BVARTS. : ey to three compet democ: rs is back ua NINTH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT, Mr. Henry F. Ranney bas been nominated by the United Service Society as their candidate for Assombly in the Ninth district, vice Colonel George D. Kellogg, resigned. PIPTEENTH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT. The Citizens’ Association, at a meeting held last Tues- day evening, endorsed Mr. £. H. Anderson, the regula, democratic candidate for Assembly. Mr. Anderson is gainin, fresh saps every day, and his election is now almost The New Jeracy Campaign. LETTER PROM MAJOR GENERAL NMOOKER ON THE APPROACHING ELECTION IN NEW JERSEY. Ata large and enthusiastic meeting of the frionds of the Union held last evening at South Bergon, N. J., the following letter was read and received with marked ap- probation :— Gro. W. THonx, Esq., Dear Sin—My- Naw Youn, Nov. 2, 1866. Bergen, N. J. :— ments will render it impoesible for me to meet ‘ise citizens of Bergen this evening. You will readily appreciate the satisfaction it would ive me to meet. #o many there who were my compan- jone in the late war, For that reason, too, I rogret being unable to be with you. With pour city y, thie time is not to the approaching election, my. going to a8 I am confident. nsured that. the Union. ticket wil prevail over the Tobel one, Ido not see how it can be’ otherwise, The fight you are making is a bloodless one, but the iesues in- volved are the same your brave soldiers have been hero- ieali; es Me during the last four years. Indeed, our victories the ficld are. fru oo far as New Jer. sey is concerned, without hes ort am ageure you that the battle is in good your own veteran soldiers of the war. the 7th of November next, at the polls on when I those of ‘ith great re- Bard, Orme HOOKER, Major General Volunteers. Died. Dety.—On Thursday morning, November 2, at hailf- past one o'clock, Hewry a aged 66 years. The relatives and friends attend the funeral, from bis late residence, 406 |' P aie street. the family are invited to Wert HY Vor Olu Deaths See Becond Pave.) NG NEWS. SHIPPI Port of New York, November 2, 1665. CLEARED, Sngetlp Monexa, Marshman, Charieston—Livingston, Fox. Co. caienmehip WF Clyde, Rollins, Wilmington—Plerson & ne, ‘oll ‘Steamship Kingfisher. Rector. Baltimore—J B Small. Bhi] py (Be Wiliams, Liverpgol—H J &0 A De- olf. mi vase Back (Br), Gunderson, Antwerp—W F Genoa—0 Luling & Co. Bc eats, oan, decom Gamer Ost Brig Eureka (Br), Williams, Cork for orders—Brett Son & Co, ‘“fivig Odin (By), Plum, Rio Janelro—Funch, Meineke & Brig Teabella (Br), Morgan, Para and 8 market—H K Cor- a ne Searge Downs (Br), Paine, Demarara—H Trow- *s Son, Jobu G (Br), nson, Nas#ai—J Eves, Rehr Supero Signe, ‘Lubave, NS—B F Small & Co, Schr Horton (Br), Wallace, 8t John, NB—D R Dewolf & ©, rksen. Galveston—Murray & Nephew. Bor We Haas, Marhetn. Onl ermonde a Bada Schr Miranda, Hardy, Deal's Isand, | Ya-R J Godwin, Bont Chae rhompaon, Breweter, Portamouth, NH.” ‘Bobr Hero, Salem, ARRIVED, Ny ip Grand Gulf, KR R Wallace, Lieut Comdg, xsi ith idee and! mee Behe tat a 15: lon erseverance, : iio ee. ot oe a on kd, poke’ aki Lawrence Brown, bound W. Wumnehin Chas C Leary, Gifford, Gatveaton Oct 4, via Hat. te ur witha to Ankur Leary. Experienced strong NE “crossing the Gulf. Toone ut, had a bea of ene Aa etic ante Ib hore; 34th, fretod 80 hours ship. a ar ieet fred 30 hot ‘sails; finding the oval ‘experienced a gale from NW, mes entirely unmanageabie; lost 5 fin ving out, bore away for Hatteras, Seat are fre Gf New Oct 14, SW race Geni ot Bar7 "Stee Om a en cresunberar Sew nents Oct ty a9 AN, reaching r teft the wharf at New a s SW Pass 4 PM, and through the carelesmess of the Tun out of the channel, and remained the eve of the 19th she got off and p the weather fine and sea . DI the weather fouled, rain and heavy squ creased to a gale from NE, heavy sea; Mon Ing, nea running heavy, ship steady and. ma and very little discomfort felt by the pussengers; on hight, at 12 o'clock, the gale tnereaned to burr cane, the ship became unmanageable. and tell off from the wind into the trough of the sea, rolling very heavy. Every Attempt to bring her head to the wind fatled—the main spen- cer having been blown from the bolt ropes inte ribbons soon anit was set, ‘The situation of the ship became imminently pe laboring heavily in the trough of the ses. We then made fast a heavy gun and fearrlage to 80 fathoms 10 inch wer, and put it over, which had the effect of mat bg and bringing her somewhat to windward, xo that the rode out the storm safely throughout the balance of Mon- Gay nlght, all day Tuesday and Tuesday night, during which the gale continued with unmitigated violence. Wednes le began to subside, and we put into Port coal, arriving on the 26th, and leaving on the 30th, On Sunday, hr Wilke Dil! arrived at Pori Royal, having on board 23 passengers of the steamship Repubife, nicked up at sea in an open boat, The Guiding Star received 18 on board that wished to return to New York, the balance remaining in Port Royal. Steamship Quaker City, West, Charleston, Oct 29, via Hampton Roads, with mse and passengers, to Arthur Steamship Yazoo, Couch, Norfolk, 24 hours, with mdre and passengers. to G Heineken & Palmore. ‘Steamship Hatteras, Parrish, Nortolic, 24 hours, with mdse ‘and passengers. to Livingston, Fox & Go. ‘Ship Rhine, Moore, London, Sept 12, with .mdse and 160 passengers, to Grinnell, Minturn & Co.’ Had three deaths on reaching pilot was nd § days, On on her voyage, uring Saturday, the 21st, walls. Sunday, in- gale increas. head- the passage, Ship Coperniens (Ham), Terry, Hamburg, 43 days., with dae and 95 passengers, to R M'Sloman & Edye. Had very m heavy weather; carried away maintopsail yard and spilt fa ‘Ship Arnold Bovinger (Prus), Steenken, Rotterdam, 40 days, with mdse and 143 passengers, to Chas Luling, Oct 29, lat'38 84. lon 6924, spoke Am bark Ukraine, from Bath for Apalachicola. One infant died on the passage. Experienced very heavy westerly gales. ‘Bark Wimburn (Br. McKenzie, 80 days, with mdse, to MeColl & Frith, Had heavy W winds the etniry pas. ; and received other slight damage. exchanged signals with steamanip City of ce for Liv e ant (Brem), Steengrafe, Bremen, 57 anys, with iadae and 360 passengers. to Herman ‘Koop & Co. Had one death and four birthe. Had very heavy westerly weather entire passage: from the 12th :to 15th Oct was ina ve Je from WSW in the immediate vicinity of Icelan fat 44 82, lon 48 02, spoke Prus bark Lact, from C: diff for New York; 12th, lat 43 11, lon. 44 85, spoke ship Co- burgb, bound E. Bark Atlantic (Pru Feldhusen, Bremen, 57 days, with mare and 28 passengers, to Ruger Bros. “Hud one death and Oct Bark Tejuca (of Sersport), Herriman, Malaga, 48 da} with frultw Walsh & Carver. Been 28 days’ west of the Grand Banks with heavy westerly gales, Cy ee (Rwe), Lumbergh, Cadiz, 60 days, with Bre Mitler (Br), Grumtey, Nengac, 18 days, in ballant, Mt , Crumley, ¥ to'Mchtellé Bartow, Had sifong Baad NE gales all te passage; Oct #2, encountered « hurricat and was ome to lay too 48 hoursunder bare pik salle, fe. aah Marah Prey. Crosby, Gow ye, with coal, ret Do. Brig J B King (Br), Cofill, Halifex, 8 days, with fisb, de, to A Smithers & ‘Schr Lady Bannerman (Br), Carry, Abacoa, 12 days, with fruit, to James Dor ‘Sehr Farragnt, Ramsdell, St Andrews, NB, 10 days, with sumber, to Jed Frye & Co. ‘Schr Coast Galveston, 24 days, with cottons to A Abbott. Oct ex] need & her in lat 22 Ne boat, &c, and did ‘damage. ‘Lituejohn, Norfolk, 4 days. Washi in. Baltimore for Boston. *hiladelphin for Pawtucket, mith, Maum, Philadelphia for Boston. Smith, Philadelphia for Boston. Sehr James H —, Phila ia for Boston, Behr anes ask Carrol, Peliadelphia tor Boston, r Ma Sarro 0 n., Rehr 3 Foreman, Dudley, Bllanbetport ‘Smith, port for New London. Beh: ine, Halh, Blizabethport for Westerly. Schr Mary, Drisko, chport for Boston, thus Moore, rovidenee, for Philadelphia, Schr C A Greiner, Grouth, Providence for Albany. ri Providence. Jon 78 W, lost foresail, Schr Hannie Westbrook, Schr J H Youmans, Sehr Eltza Frances, Bi Snr K Richey, Fisher. Sebr Caroline & Smit Bohr W P Philli Behe Mary Banya, Henderson, ——~ . jeuiarsons Behr Barbara, Haddin, ——- arrived last it from Sar » connigued vo Murray's Repent ee * ager |, & very heavy sea on at the time Suir Easrrax Oran (of Bath at Boston from Shields, E, experienced heavy weather, spilt sails, Ac. orks warabentdoned t wet Och ta lat BY, ioe: Gy wis Fete geri ay anak ua rage detphie for in, Saving Part ‘were ire pul 0 . Bate York, wae ashore Oct $8 ¢n the rrmegensaties ‘Of Galveston, and awaiting orders Basan Davin of b- ‘and sprang forenmast. Herat of Bearsport, unin volt pe fore and main nope o sor aise SB, cea canvas, much of deck . glen ping at "before reported. on ees bn Pe bi, vere at EPs, Mt Bi boat fund suceceded a gitine ng her of with the tows st Bermuda. Baro Assorr Lawasnce, of Den 169 tone, has elu te Janoe'd Perce, of Millon, and loses, D tiodtreys of Boston, for $5700. Scum Beserr (Br), from Matanzas for Montreal, with mo- lassen and cigars, was towed into Provincetown 4d inst with with lom- ice of the eanal in about eight Senn De Karr, from Hole, returned to the latter for Newark, via Holmes’ Oct 31. leaking 2000 strokex per hour. Will discharge deck load of lumber, and go on the marine railway. Senn Hawnrerta, of and from Gouldsboro for Boston, with a cargo of wood, was run Into in the bay on Monday morning ER agg Np ys Og gle i ani * find. She wan'towed Into Gloucester by schr BD Haskins. Scnr Evanoruinx, Williams, of Gloucester, arrived from Geo ‘on Baturday, having lost her mast onthe bank in theo of the ah ait Scun Westover, of Dennis, 168 tons, bas been sold to An. gustu B Perry, and others, of Boston, for $8000. n_Avoosta, of Yarmouth, 90 tons, has been sold to the Non Caroline Furpentine Go, of Boston, for 83000. Tur Gare 1x Cona—The late gale wan felt severely through. Thi out the Inland of Cuba, At Havana it was at its maximum atreny thaitspast 7 in the evening, 224, scarcely an Mireis'in'the harbor excaped injury. "Hhany ot the Inuriches, amali ia were sunk or roken to pleces, meme writh cxrgoes 10.8 ncharge athe wharven.. Among ye: nels owned in the United tes, or engaged in the United Saver irade, Wo brig. Martha. which was at the Sart at Casa Blanca, a. Will be condemned; Br sehr Gamaged in the hull and dismasted, will = ‘caulking: brig Condova, ‘hull sh Merged ar atira otic tat anf ane i lo ren de from Poriln i BL astorg and wes a tn he jat W Stevenson, from. Fer- Nanalnn, Flay wert aahore A the mow of tbe Yumurl river, ‘but was not mi . AA schie of 180 tons was laymehed from the yard ofte Wilined Burnham, In Kecex, on Saturday Inst. She is Owned in Southport, Me. Netice to Martners. Lt wemdiagh webbabenny! op 1 Orncr oF RG! ae bird gn ay roa re ined and reno nade fn was exhibited therefrom on the Nigh uh Ihat, from sunset to sunrise, and will be contin mii apparatus is dioptric, or by lent the fourth order; We focal ane, in at an pitty e" % fert above the sea level, 8. Sele n clear weather from a distance of miles. Lonrnoven of --¥ RRYP, LOUIMIANA, lighthouse oF eys, Louisiana, near the entrance” sore ligninones oo as beck restored to ite original con: dniton ‘A Gred white labs wae exhibited therefrom oy the wish) a a suprise, gud will be con- a al dioptric, or by lenses, of the. * third order. The fs ‘at spon tn enters Bt at fouse Board, RANG S Engineer, ‘Whalemen. x Hatha North Bucite Geen; Seine, St eid hark Wl F cet nores = Ht Sto Fayal havi ended 126 tp oll Amel,” Wee peu Wo Prise Bark President 24, Gifford, was at Payal Sept 22, having landed able Sfutwen™bonna Beto. voueh at tit well bon! Barbados in March. | Reporia spoke Darks Elizabeth, - eatporty iad Sine watilia' Sears, Cliford, Dur. mouth, sop al, Greyliound, Barker, of Westport, sid from Fayal Tortugas 8 by W'80 iniles distant Fore! ont ign B DA. Oct: Putin, sehr Hani delphia for Port Spain Sth brig ht Nev, NYork for Demarara, (see Miscel). "Sid Seth brig Excelsior, Cooper, In port 28th, brig Meteor, Dungcomb, for NYork same day. ay carte ‘u port ships Nevada, Bartlett, wig orders; Gonex, Oct 7—In port bark Warren Hallett, from Boston. Off do Oct 7, brig Chicopee, from Boston Spoken, &e. Clara Ann, Stinson, Boston for Apalachicola, nuh, Litile, from Phila- rid Zone, A Sr Tuomas, tr acht Lima, NYork: Gth, brig Jas B Kirby, Outerbridge, Phuadelphita (and sla 2ixt for Nombero, and returned steamer Havana, Greene, NYork (and 1d 7th for Itio Janeiro): 8h, brigs Joseph Baker, Nickerson. PI hia; lth, Pleiades, Collins, 3 12th, Chas Ht Jordan, Pluiamer, Philadelphia; Dt Drichwen, Jansen. N York (und sid 224 for Naquabo, PR); 2ist, sehr Auna Eliza- dean Hutchinson, Franktort. ’ Sid 8th, Alfred N , Doa Porto Plata; 10th, brs Hufnagel, Arecibo, PR; 18th, brigs: Plelades, Collins, Bo- American Ports. ‘Orleans; , Philadelphia: Bawin ennedy, jiurgis, Bickford, Georgetown, DC: Harwood, Balti> @o; Edna McLanghlin; 8 & B ono, Rartlett; J M M Flannigan, Cain; George Edwards, Weeks: D8 Siner, May, Clara Blien, Dexter: Henry Nutt, Cobb; A. Heuton, inney; E © Knight, Tagior: Bitinloa, Kelton; Dirigo, Dal= how, and Harriet Newell, Gould, Philadelphia: Albert, Bur- ker; Crosby, Armstrong; Francis Coilin, Wass, and Maiktogharn, Blizabethports Edward. & Prank, Cud- fersey Cliy; Maria Whitney, Wheeler: Loitic, Wil- . Gor tnd Convoy. Merrill. NYork. "Cid barkx Fleetwins, Davi, Mobile: brig Willlam Mason, Small, NVork: sche Ann Flower, Love, do. Also cld bark Mist coln, Le bei 'A Blossom, Hodgdon, Philadeirhia; schr Koret, lo, ‘Arr steamer Glaucuss, ffom NYork; brig Robert Goree; schr Fawn, from Gonaives, JTIMORE, Nov 1—Arr schra John Grifith, Cobb, Be ton; J Nickerson, Sleight, and J F Farland. Avery, M¥ork"“Beiow brig ota, from Mayaguez; Lark, from Rid Grande. Cid brig sippi (Br), eras «HB Russell, Nickerson, Liberia: J Clark, Seull, NYork. Sld sip Crest of the Wave, Rotterdam; brig Georgia. BANGO! ‘SI—Arr schrs Cormthian, Tapley, NYork; ‘Oct ol Means, Din : BRISTOL, Nov I-Art schr Robin, Hopkins, Blizaheth- port, Sldxschrs Pointer, Nichols; Ninetta, Wilson, and Cubi~ net, Burdick, NYork. F. R, Oct 31—Arr schrs Minnesota, Phinney, "ALL Philadelphia; David Smith, Anderson, do; Empire, Sinall, South Amboy, N. New Haven, Glover, Elizabethport, Is- land Home, Allen, NYork; jelen Smith. Smith, do. Sid Nov 1, schrs Daniel Brown, xter. Georgetown, DC. M &E Henderson, Price Philadelphia: Orion, Hudwin, NYork. GLOUCESTER, Oct 28—Arr brig Tangent, Chandler, Bal- more, HOLMES’ HOLE, Oct 31, PM—Arr brigs Barnard Baltimore ‘for Boston; Troubador Philadelphia for St John NB; rchrs Mary D Ci mer; Adaline Townsend, Sooy, avd Elizabeth Swith, Philadelphia for Boston; Rhodella Blew, Peters Fortress Monroe for do. Returned, sehr Dr Kane, leakin, ‘or 2060 strokes por hour. Will discharge deck load iumber anid Ghattonge, Nov l—Arr sehrs Franconia, Holt; Edwin T Allen, Co nh schrs William G1 and Kate. In port Steamship Hernan Living ston, 8 received ¥ Nae, Oct 80—Arr steamship Geo Cromwell, NORFOLK, Oct 20—Arr steamer Wm Kennedy, Parker, on the marine railway. SId schrs James Henry and. and Eliza & Re! Gorson, Philadelphia for Boston. KEY WEST, 0c) 27—In in late heavy gaie. Boston; 30th, schr N FE Clark. Clark. do. NEW BEDFORD, Oct 31—Arrschrs John Grant, MeGin- nis, Elizabethport; Jobn A Dix. Doane, Harwich tor NYork. 4 Sid’ Sist, schra Wm D Cargill, Perry (from Boston, having red), Norfolk: Elisha Brooks: Baker (from Nantucket s NYork. $Id Nov 1, achis Armadillo, Chase, and J A Dix, ne, NYork. EWPORT, Oct S1—Arr brig Fannie Butler, Berilett, Fant Harbor, TI, (or Portland. 8AM—SId schrs Oregon, Jordan, Boston for Gal+ ‘veston; Oliver Cromwell, Sippican for Savannah; L. Sturte ~ Sruiae, Philadelphia; forida, Kelley, Bedford for Fowler, NYork for Newburyport; Le ‘onter, Dennis for NYork. 6 PM—Arr achrs Jonas Smith, 7, Baltimore for Pro vidence; Clara Jenkins, Wright, Annapolis, Md, for do. HILADELPHIA, Nov 1—Arr stheamship’ Prometheus, Childs, NYork for Apalachicola, wil! probably have to dis gharag her eatgo; schra Thos Begley eConnell, fax; R H Daley, jondon ; Myrick, Providence; John Ferris, John, NYork: J WW Morrison, Albany; 9 Truman, Gibbs, New Bedfor: Crowell, Sievens, Provincetown; Muria Fleming. Norwich; North Pacific, Webb, NYork. Cid burk , Oct 31—Returned bark Ellen Steven 8." Cld brig Hiram Abiff, Tibbetts, Havani, rrachra, Union, Kelley, Elizabothport; B lard, Parsons, Phi + William Arthur, Loring, New York; George Brooks, Henley, Boston. Cld steamer Chenu PORTRMOUTH, Oct 90—Arr sehr Maracaibo, Henley, Pie PROVIDENCE, Nov 1—Arr Caroline Kienzie, Woodrnt, Philadelphia. Below brig Philip Larrabee, Head, from Phi> ladelphia, Cid echr Constitution, Strout, Sid sehreg Alice Ida, Mears, Philadelohia; Northern Li Trelas los feckerson, Eilzabeihport: © P Hialtock, Prambens Wat sioed’ Caan; Treasures Fuligia ina Oertala, Merion’ NYork: sldop Harvest, Coriin, do. PAWTUCKET, Nov 1—Sld schra Henry B Gibson, Crock~ er, and Clara Davidson, Jeffries, NYork. 3 a nyLLMINGTON, NG, Oct Zi—Arr Steamer Euterpe, Ete ork. n en pewy: Lek with meaforenetious 8 nn MISCELLANEOUS. At: PORTER AND EXTRA STOUT. Ay tether ge lenin adnate! aa MACPHERSON AND DONALD SMiTIL (Late style Stnith & Brother), New Yor! Brewers of Fine PALE ALFS, PORTER and EXTRA STOUT, for elty and Southern use. ‘These Ales, Porter and Stout are of superior qual'ty, brewed with great care, p'easant, nutritive and #trengthen- ‘and can be relied on for purity. jrewery, West Eighteenth street, between 7th and Ath ave. ARPET BUYERS WILL FIND AN ELEGANT Ax- sortment of new fall at: of Royal Velvet and tings at HIRAM ANDERSON’S, 99 Bowery; Mi Mi indow Shadse, Oilci ma pee indow a, wi four wo tide, o0 vensonabte prices. Lock for ® Bowery. (eo BUNIONS, CLUB AND INVERTED NAILS cured, without pain, by Dra, RICE & HART. 0& Bowery, "# Annihilator curescoros, bunioum, o Bank. Rice’ chifblal clan oe. By mail We. and $1. x ‘DERICK J. KING, SPANISH AND AMERI Pgs. and Commisstoner for every State in the Uni Geen mh Died (RENCH CHINA DINNER a F WHITE AND DECORATED RICH T AND PLA GLASNW ARE, Tea Sets, Toilet #e y Havonw OUT & CO... (688, 490 and 492 Broadway, corner of Broome street. of pew patterns of FIXTURES AND LAMPS. An Rig ae and choo ie oF novi Syd ily, fice git and glans. Special Reuenrentit antl 50 cites, a oct oom, BV. HAUGH co, (09, 100 and esa Broadway. caruerof Brostne iswet_| 0 TO THOMAS 2 aN, 900 AND 202 GREEN- Mu fb, Flows and vtiything eve ceaper aaa any store in New York. One price pamonrse GENERALLY IN FAVOR OF ALLOOCK’S POROUS PLABTE RS. ‘De, Henderson thinks the almost mitaculnus benefits das the Allcock’s Porous depend th rived from the sg the one pend upon the he blood. z w in the *kin, oF i oral extra su} “ir, Calfasst, Dr. Valentiog Mott, De. Vattatnies and Dry jnot report 5 OFM AFH Kpecition 01 esieinct rept the skin gurface end deop-ecated patte, In lumbago, where the patient has been weiched down with pain, and nearly double, an hour'a use bas ui! butonred. We refer to Thomas T. Green, 662 Broadway, abd Dr. Xing, se Ancibel syency, Brandreth House, New York fold by all Grugils ME NATIONAL PARK BANK OF NEW YORK. ov envoy 000,000) sl ann Cailianias ot Bopoalt,boaitng nters oD iait, beating iniere sole term, ns 3. L. WORTH, Cashier. FPURKISH BATHS, 13 LAIGHT STREET, NEW YORK Houre—Gentlemen from 6 to 8A. M. und Zw. Si Indies from 9A. M. to LP. M, A luxury; a means of thorough cleanliness, a health pres servative, a valuable curative agent, Try one. oie “ARTIFICIAL EYES. RTIFICIAL BYES.—ARTIFICIAL HUMAN | A to order and inserted by Dre, F. BAUCE Gove X formerly employed by Ioinn ar uy BYES of “WINES, LIQUORS, &C. ; 72 TEM. ayTauM. 4 is tiew. and approved beverne, Saniette and the beat ey for sale in Ra eS BOWN, 006 Went Sisteenth ntreet, | CIGARS AND TOBACCO. A substitute for bottles, by « CIGARS, AT LESS THAN PRESEN? 8,000,000, eee rattan. pany. EEKS, Agent, 4 Warren #ireet, NION NOMINATION, VENTH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT, U q ot Ninth aah mtb wary. ) or THOMAS Te ART. PRET R TE OR ) d nn 2. LL - it 7H WARD GERMAN DEMOCRATIC: CLUB.—A MEE" q this clay will be held on Friday evening, Nov. %, dlowk, wt 115 nat Bi AB. J. FIGORER, President, B. $75 REWARD—LOST, ON WEDNESDAY EVEN« ov ©) ing, Nov. I. Pocket Book, containing about $18, o Lo ea at oud g His and ® email imount of sliver and some recetpte. finder will receive the above reward on Ie gaprese ollige, [v0t vf Cortandy plage.