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weit NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. P Fn er — ee eee POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. Beoundarics of the Buate and Assembly Dis- the committoc, presided, a large delegation of its mem- | and rbeumativm, was yesterday so far improved iu | Senator, and adopted by the republican Congress in hen bee nO nomination. aS p @ sake bers being seaisd upon the ‘and. ina brief address Bealth as to aduit of his receiving visitora, is6!. They have treated the tea Southern Slates which same platform, and wiil run if po recon- trlets. - aalatias were in rebveilion as territories, and Bow ofr to restore | o; e' The constant the law by the State | introduced Senator Yates as the orator of the evening. thon (0 their status in the Union only upou the uncon | Vas iiinee te ee ynne, Probability is that Beajamin Mase Meeting of Independent Der See cree Vegislatars as to the of the various Benate republican candidate, will be lected, Ex.Governor Ysres, baving beew presented and the Ractabe iatetet stitutional condition of their accepting negro domination | The republicans held @ FAcation mevti: CITY. POLITICS, and Assembly district, Has puzfled even the aldest cll | grosiod with showers of plaudits, preceded to discuss | 4 mass meoting of mdepondent dersocrats was nea | 12,20" public adaire | Under any cireususianess these | of tue Catuolie institut Jemvey City, Iast evening. The aumbe; an fa binvton Hall, at the intersection of | \s token into consideration that they ate imposed for the | Ciiy 1s fa is cont hettlionaie Proce + a zens, Tho changes in population, not to speak of Cer | the issues of the present political compaign, The coun- | Jest night in W Aspirants for Ofiice at the Election Next | ‘ain political ends sid to be attained thereby, BaV® | try, argued the Senalor, skguld be careful iato Whose | Broadway and Four!h etrests, B.D. Long before the | * lsh purpose of the republican party iu 1ST OF CANDIDATES: Tuesday=Full List of the Candidates—How | created corresponding changes im the extent of the ter- | nanas ~ splat Grave issues were | hour appointed forthe meetiag an immente concourse eat! Ce po oy ‘Reprewautv in ae De yarties in Kstex county bave com. ‘Tab ety lettin’ Fetes tt band, promises to pep erin riessne ae at se igieragt ae 2 Md Stake—issues of almost paramount opera Of citizens took possession of the by ly ae * Joys | Sales im the next Kleotoral College for lent, 1s be- P follows. — gd and the lists pow stand as . ose Which agitated (he country in 1861, The du eptbusiasm was manivesied, At balfpast Boven oreock | COS revolutionary amd moustrqum Thé mie cout cere, excite more interest in the resuit than many thought it | to ihe particular Senatorial or Assembly district they are ; so Tosted. alf- pas tho world does not show any outrage like this. Lage Cot Fm would a few weeks ago ‘The adverse termingtion of the | feanedarai ine following dofiattion ef tue bovadartes | CMC Party having reeked for six years with treason, | iho masting Was callad to onter amd organised by the | laud’ “yi soe,noL auOw any outrage like thie, i Dossadery dente Abert. Condit, ton; Bagry 1. ° il—Pever F. Rogers, rep.; Willlam Busb, useful:— Union. They, who organized the Kulghts of the Golden | Davis and Dr. John Murphy as secretaries. of Hodgary, and even Bysmarck im his reconstruc- | dei. pati , 5 gone conciusion that the republicans would tose this BOUNDARIES OF SRNATORTAL piernicTs, Circle, claimed 10 be the true pe ant 3 of the ‘The first speaker introduced waa Lavi §. Coarriern, | Hon of Germany, Ware more liberal and generous For Coroners—Robert Lang, John ¥. Chase, Leander State also, But the radicals have latterly gone to work’ | The Fourth district comprises the First, cecoed, Constitution and of constitutional goverument; they | He was loudly cheered on rising. Mr. Chateld did not #0 as to render the canvass a more spirited one. Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Thirteenth ani who elaborated conspiracies to pr iyo loyal Gover- propose to wik of joeai affairs, Let others who were of Fourteenth wards, and is bounded by the North river, | nors, now presumed to prate about violence, lawlessness competent do that. There is common ground on In this county there 's @ scrub race for some of the | from the Battery to Canal street, Canal to Broadway, t0 | and unconstitutionality; they who prophesied that the |‘ which we can all stand, We have a disintegrated offices, A great many men are infected with a desire to | Houston, to Bowery, to Division, to Noriolk, to Riving- | North could never conquer the South, and who rejoiced | conntey auding our attention. (Cueera.) Although represent the people in the legislative halls of the State; | ‘2. @ be hy Battery. the Righth, Ninth, Fite when the hosts of the Union were defeated, now pre- | we may aever hope to restore it us it once was, yor ‘han the republican party has been in its treatment | Willams, reps. ; lsauc P. Baldwin, Da’ vt of the outh, and te people, tired of ts jyranaical and | 8, Yuli, dems. eek det gape ae cruel course, arejuow indicating @ purpose to take the YOR ASSEMMLY, power from its bands before it copsummates is pur- | District, Republican. Distr ict, Democrartre. pose. (Applause,) The fact is, our government ia now | 1—Josiah Spoer. 1—Robert M Henning. controlled by New England, and has been since 1861, | 2—James Peck. 2+Edward H. Ensign, for the benelit of her capitalists and her manufacturing | 3—John Kennedy. 3—James Smith, interests, Five Jittie States, with leas ulation aud | 4—Timotby W. Lord. 4—William Allen. Joss real worth than the State of dew York, have ab- | §—Sam: ater, 5. ; sorbed the government contract: penean ae! A Bald “Sonia 1. Bald The Firth district co tended to value that Union beyond all things. They, | we hope to restore it. ‘The question of slavery has but a great many more havea marvellous itching, not | teonih and Sixteenth and is bounded by the | in short, who met in convention, of shah Hora: been settled, Let us now seitie the negro cation. for the honors of position, bat for the little Jucrative | North Hives to Fepgiy-sini meet, to sixth avenue, to | tio Seymour was president, and which Clement | (Loud applause.) ‘The stupendous national debt under emoluments, which are considered the natural appen- pouettn Le wiiciheae het ie fo Bowe, to L Vallandigham engin into declarations that | which We are groauing is not, a8 bas been stated, the dage thereto, Thus, in several Assembly districts in Ph ey yi at v4 th and county, there are from five to it candidates . venteenth wi ant in‘ y Bows fhlas ¥f nf a : rane | Fourth a ius Foerieath to East street, to Norfoik, to Division, to Bor re culties with conservative balm. Should the American | will be paid, never can be paid. (Approbation.) No 2, Seat ct wee, a | He erven toe combi EAS We | See al ecto oe miei | gamete sy lt np th te Ue . Brice, and Twenty- att ‘0 whé seo! trayed it—who joni e when Andrew Jackson was President. He was an conn api at Seats: and John Brice, | fecpih street to Sizth avenue, to Twenty.aisth sireeh, to | authenticity of the victories of sheridan ahd sherman | honest mam, “I'with to Gea, ue koe weeciden enna whose terms of office expire on the Ist of January | North river, to Fortieth street, to East river, to Four- | and. Grant, until they had been forced to be- | (Applause.)” It now costs tvs $70,000 a dee tosaliner ah next, 0 Uidille” “Wi ’Iaw,’ ‘ome from’ each’ of | eee nets Hlave® ‘Mon’ who. pel; se’ lene Seay saree. toe: | Mempertanee; Wat's couse be tore fen tae ee brant Tho Eighth district comprises the Twelfth, Nine- | su the leddimg political parties is entitled to the ry teenth and Twenty-second wards, and is bouuded by ery rebel defeat, were not likely to maintain the dig. | debt is by repudiation. (Faint applanse.) I ao not election, Another supérvicor is to be chosen t | Kast river—including Diackwell's, Ward's, and Randall's | nity Of agovorament of whose pormanency they had | advocate direct ropiidiations but T believe. in “dome Gil the unexpired vacancy occasioned by the resignation | islands—to Harlem river, to North river, to Fortieth | been enamies for the past six years. He was quite aware | what all other ations have done under of Genoral Alexander Shaler. This jon i held till | street, 1G East river. that an effort was being made by the democratic leaders | similar circumstances, I believe in funding 6—Samue! H. Baldwin. 6—Josiah L. Baldwin, by an unjust national bankin, to the great | 7—Francis Mackin. 7—Philetas W. Vail, preiedion of the on mporsial, maa uh iug and agri- 4 §_ Jacob 8. Van Ness, $—Ed win Heddon, yet ts, © Middle and Western Sta aud the merchant, manufacturer, maspbanis ant taamaee si eo eH NR os apaibags roaliziug this, have determined to overthrow this radical Yankee monopoly. (Applause,) The Pn Senater Freylinghuysenon the Stand. — ie ern apetey oye) in its administration of At the republican ratification meeting in the hall of the pablie a just to ali sections of the Union. | the Catholic Institate, Jersey City, last evening, Senator Areturn to the statesmanship of a Jackson, a Poik, Van Buren, a Wright, a Marvy and a Seymour in aks. | Frevlinghuysen spoxe for about one hour upon the issues Jutely necessary before the work of reconstruction can | Of the approaching contest, In speaking of the princi- be perfected and the Union restored to peace and pros- | pies of the republican party he remarked:—One generic perity. (Applause,) Mr. Colfax, 12 his recent harangue |? At the Cooper Institute, claimed for.the republican party | Ut we derive from what T have laid down ts, that the paternity of the doctrine of the Kosta case. | there is a great power in a true principle, and that is the e war been a failure, and that treason was | result of the late war. It is the resuit of larcenies— treason and ought to succeed, have now the audacity | grand and petit larcenios—perpetrated under one of press their claims to administer the government om | the most corrupt administrations the world the ground that it was their mission to beal all diffi. | ever saw. (Loud applause This debt never F nder of Lee, and who made wry mouths over | men, The only way to rid ours of this national the letof January next by Joseph B. Taylor, who was BOUNDARIES OF ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS. to get up side issues and thus obscure the real iasnes of | the national debt just as it was funded at | This claim bas sbout as much foundation as his | sireugth of the repablican party, With regard tothe vital enpolnssa shortly after Mr, Sbaler's resignation, Tho. Firat Assembly district comprises the First, | the campaign, Hence uad come the discussion of the | the close of the Revolition, I believe in calling in all | threa:s of impeachment against the President, The | Cenion of pulitieal eocuowy I bolleve that we are two Supreme, two Superior and one Common | Second, Third and Filth is bounded by North | financial question—the insinuation of repudiation. He | government bonds and issuing non-interest bearing | Protection of the American flag and laws was thrown , 7 Pleas to beclected regularly, and another Judge of | river to Hoboken street, to Canal, to Broadway, to | should not enter at length upon that question, He be- | greenbacks, That action would be the death of tho | Over Martin Kosta, an inchoate citizen who had only de- | not to enforce virtue «o mach by the lash or by Common vice Judge who is a candidate | Park row, to Spruce, to Vesey, to Pock slip, Kast river, | lieved that Uncle Sam was bound to pay his debta, | national banks, and therefore the life of the people. | clared his intentiuns, by Captain Ingraham in the vay of | #8 by taking a man up if bo be degraded, lifting sp Smyrna, during the administration of President Polk, | to our own teve) and then say, “ You-are my. ees for the Supreme Court, There is also a Justice of the | to Battery. When Uncie Sam wanted money he borrowed it and | Mr. Chatfield concluded his remarks by saying that he Marine Court to be elected, in place of Judge Hearne, Toesecond district comprises Fourth ward and part of | took his pen and signed a promise to pay it, With that | had no idea that the present independent movement There are three candidates for tus office, Judge Hearne | the Sixth ward, and is bounded by Broadway, to | money Uncle ‘Sam bought uniforms and shoes | would defeat the State ticket, (Cries of “No, no.’’) ‘beng among them. Walker, to Eim, to A ooo Bag Baxter, to Bayard, to | for the army of @ Union; with that | Then let us march forward and redeem the State from The fir-t step taken towards an clection isthe notifica- | Chatham square, to Catherine street, to East river, to | money Uncle Sam paid those soldiers for their services | its present misrale, (Cheers. ) tion by the Secretary of State of the offices to be fliled | Peck slip, to Ferry, to Sprace, to Park row, to Broadway. | in the fleld; with that money Uncle Sam fed them for Tosts V. P, TALMAGE, the independent candidate for to the Bheriff of each conaty, who duly advertises the ‘The Third’ District comprises the Fourteenth ward and | four years and equipped them; and he (the speaker) did | Mayor, was the noxi speaker. He spoke briefly but and our own lamented Marcy was Secretary of State at | Of the democratic party—I mean the leaders, I do that time. If Potk and Marcy wore republi- | speak of the rank and filo, for these bave fought too cans, then the great State paper of the lutter | bravely tor the country for me to speak anything against from which Mr, Colfax quoted was a republican docu- | them-—1I shali say lille, They want to persuade you ment. No, the republican party cannot cinim the credit | that the suffrage question in New Jersey is one of the m you are to vote, That is a mistake, of the Kosta affair, Its international! record is to be read same, The next proceeding in this county ts by tho rt of the Sixth, ald 1s. led by Broadway to Hous- | not believe in repudiating the money for which the boys | energetically. I appear before you as yourcandidate | in the cowardly surrender of Stideli and Muson io * question comes op in New Jersey I have Board of Poiles, when appoints four inspectors to act, | Lon, to Bowery, to Bayard, to Baxter, to Whito, to Elm, | in blue had spiiied their blaod, and with which they had | for Mayor, Mis elected no “Ring?” can ‘control me. Re. | England, in its failure to protect American nights in the you will be ripe for the work. | But firstly, as registry inspectors, and, secondly, as election | to Walker, to Hrosdway.. received the price of wounds and privations, The have beon circulated by the “Ring” that I have | Alabama claims, and in its failure to assert the Kosta to say Something about the suffrage inspectors, two canvassers and two poll clerks. These | ‘Tbe Fourth district comprises the Seventh ward, and | patriots of the country, therefore, shouid be careful into Backed out of this race, Gentlemen, no Talmage ever | “ovtrine in behalf of American citizeus now rotting in | io the reconstructed States. Are you prepared to hand wero sworn in before the chief clerk of the Metropoli- | tg bounded by Catherine atreet to East river, to East | whose hands they committed the financial in| of | backed out of an honorable race. (Loud applause.) If | British jails under the charge of Fouianism, (Cheers.) | over those Joyal men >outh to an aristocracy which Haviog said this much in relation to national affairs; tet the very rebels against which you and me now wilude to some of the prominent State issues, a contending? ‘That is just what our opponent The democratic party insists that the tegistation of our | want. Freedom and political equality to all men—t Btate, since Governor Seymour’s administration, has | 18 my principle and it cannot be defeated; it m tan Police received errtificates of office, When va- | street, to Grand, to Division, to Catherine. the nation. In tbe bands of the democracy there was | I deemed this movement prejudicial to the success of cancies the Potice Board filed them. The certifi. The Fifth ai comprises the Eighth ward and part | danger that the signature of Uncle Sam would bo dis- | the state ticket I would hove te to do with it, but cates so received entitle the holder during the | of the Ninth and Fifteenth, and is bounded by Broad- | honored, and when the old man’s signature | I believe it will add 7,000 to our hs ae (Cheers. ) Cotahan, year to exemption from mili! and jury dutv—a fe ry He to Amity, to Sixth ave- | was dishonored, what were we as a nation Messrs. Henry Hartea not generality mown tothe rome of election officers an EN ‘to Wieecter, matey to West, to Canal, §to | but a corporation which had taken advantage of the | Birdsall and others followed in brief addresses, deen distinguished for more rottenness and corruption | delayed. But T may be told by some caviilor, their frends, ‘Phe inspectors met in of the two | Broadway, ‘ Bankropt law? From this topic the speaker proceeded | large and enthusiastic assembiage disporeed at a late | than ever before. So ashamed of this corruption was | very well, provided the man ts white” Such w hundred and seventy election d'stricts on the 15th ult, | ‘The Sixth district comprises the Thirteenth ward and | to discourse u; © question of negro su There | hour, Mr, Greeley and other radios! leaders who controlled the | reasoning ia the olden time as the Scriptures tell when and proceeded with the registration, Tho final days of | ie bounded by Grand street to Division, to Norfolk, to | was, he said, ew imés, @ich a consideration in the Republican Convention that they threw overboard Gene- | te man heard a voice trom Heaven saying, “Whom registration were on the lat aud 2¢ of November. Rivington, to East street, to Grand. case as the question of simple justice and m Registry in Brooklyn Yesterday. ral Barlow and all their old State officers, and put now | God has pronounced clean let no mau pronounce un- thie there is no revision or correc:ion of the lista, The Seventh district comprises of the Ninth, | It was on this ground that the ballot was de! for | ‘The number of votes registered in Brooklyn yoster. | M0 \f nomination. Among these Mr. Hulburd, seeing | clean. Selb ATS Ane \ RRR. 06 .. the: On election day the Excise taw probibita the sale of | Firteenth and Sixteenth wards, and is bounded by Bow: | the black man.” Thore was nothing more appropriate i _ niga the hand on the wall, has wisely resigned-his | ancient, @recks, who. considered all men oatside liquor, ’ ery to. Fourth avenue, to Fourteenth street, to Sixth | than that black loyal men should rule white traitore | “87 Wereas follows:— nomination for the Comptrollership, and the Sta'e Com- | thelr own natlon baDariaus, | The man who denies 40, wa soRoM epee, thirty Ave minutes pant six A. | Avenue, to ixteonth street to Righth avenue, to Greca- | who bad warred againat ihe Union for five years. ‘They | Precinc. No Reg. ties hae ueined, te Die, wheat Conecak Mummaopey tee | is OU May ata abe ae scree a ‘bal closo -two minutes past four P, wich avenue, to Sixth avenue, to ts lougal, | must rule or be trodde: fe 822 nt incumbent office, 1 tip be pom The Uehte ane oF te fon tnhivas and seventy | to Hi ey) ue, % jm ender [05, aid ys Be} “a ocratie mominee, William F. Alien, We denounce } have the chance to develop those powers tha ‘od has . no middle § ground. The question of louston, to the Bowery. Clection districts will be numbered and designated as ‘The Eighth district comprises the Tenth ward nal frauds exposed by a legislative committee, of | given him, and that he shail not have an iron collar nd | could never be adjusted unless the negro | 43 ai toliows:— $ ofthe Eleventh and Seventeenth, and is bounde by | had some power in his hands to protectjhis own righ 4. 561 | which Senator Stanford (a republican) was the cuair- | about his neck, that when be makes an effort to breathe BtatooN0. 2, uy and County—No. Piveion street, to Nerfolie, to Rivington, to Tompmins, | and thet power coule cnly bo Sota te tee enee | 35: “77552 0, * 926 | man, amounting to over half a million dollars, whieh | freely ho may wot be choked ta death. The principle Senator—No. 4. Judiciary—No 8, to Houston, to Clinton, to Stanton, to Bowery, to Divi- | Not that the speaker contended for equality. It was not | _ Total istered, 8,795; Tegis- | went into the pockets of a republican canal | for which our fathers contended in 1776 will work good ‘Assembly —No, 6. Supervisor—(No wumber). | sion, a tenet of the republican party to contend for equality, | tered during the four days of registry, 64,307, making | “ring.” | The ring defeated | the _ renomluation ‘whether yoo spply it te'@ man of ong colds oF OF ae “tthe ‘ing of the polls the inspector is required to The Ninth district comprises. of the Ninth and | save that equality which sprang from equal rights be- | an increase of over 6,000 over the vote of last year. of Stanford, and is now aasisting to re-elect | other, As for my interest in the republican: recite the proclamation :-— Sisteonth wards, and se bounded by Eleventh avenue, to | fore the lam. The intelligent, energetic, sober man was Riegarags ceknepycomitnee Cine Lovee nneh er Creme arcs oe Soe Evers ipo cpt mans Se ae Hear, ye! hear, ye! hear, ye! of this election is | Hammond, to to to Bleecker, to Carmine, | more than the equal of the slothful and thriftiess, For at it may more securely appropriate the money of the ng * ns opens aes Mi melareci ze; Ten, pefict thie teation te: | SE uarueemae: to Grveeetin kvimtec es Moreton” 6 instance, what equality could there be between the noble, WESTCHESTER POLITICS. State in the future, ‘The commissions whica have been | wer having inscribed on’ tt @ perversion of denial of nd wmanded by the anthority and in the w: Eighth avenue, to Sixteenth street, to Eleventh avenue. | cultured’ and eloquent Frederick Dot and PIES created by the republicans affecting New York city, Brook- | truth. But there ts one class of men who are not afraid of the people of the Btate to i "Pao Tenth Glatrict ‘comprises part of Seventeenth ward, | the low, groveling, traitorous Andrew Johnson? A lyn and other democratic municipalities have subjected | to trust the colored race, and that ciaas is the soldiers, eke Stengunee es te and is Bounded by Stanton street, to Clinton, to avenue | (Clapping. of bands and loud applause.) With | Democratic Mass Meeting at Fordham— the people of those places to mitlions of doliars of uddi- | When those brave men were hunted do'vn by the blood- 1 yall be B, to Seventh street, to Third avenue, to Bowery, to | such representative men as the high-minded Douglass of John B. Haskin and Others. . tional taxation, This system of legislation was iu vio-.| hounds of the rebels, they were comforted, aided and ‘open without in ow, the voters are at liberty 10 ton. i was. strange tbat the democracy dared to an enthusiastic meeting was held in the | Iation of the constitution of our Stato, and was mvented | even rescued by thoso black men, now against whom at F ‘The Eleventh aistrict comprises parts of the Eigh- that ne; was not eligible to the | hall of Mulgrow’s Hotel, Fordham, to ratify the State, | %° Jgislate into office republicans whom the people | Huck an outory is raised. There is no birth without ite The voter must take his own risk of what is inside his | tecuth, Twentieth and Twenty-first wards, and is bounded | ballot. Give ‘the tiack "man ‘bis “rights med the i . gad * | would never alect to direct thor affairs, ‘The Puritanical | throes, no victory without ite conquest, and T bail tho Dal but the board must sce they are folded to | by Ninth avenue, to Thirty-second street, to Sixth ave- | economical questions of reconstruction were dis- Judicial, Senatorial and county nomunations of the dem- | Excise law affecting New York city and Brooklyn has | opposition of susb men as I have before alluded toas a contents—a provi liey 5 Rue, to Fortieth street, to Madison avenue, to Twenty- of; give the negro the ballot and he would} ocratic A bonfiro blazed wy the vill green, | driven thousands of our people in search of innoceat | harbinger of success, endorsements corresponding asbmantisity wits those on | Md. sireet, to’ Fourth avenue, t Union square, to | take caro af imeclfs give the negro the ballot and. he | set a phe of ordnance awakeued the echoes wf tne | fecrauion 10 New. Jerwey, thas’ euriching. that | ‘Darin the dehvary of i ig min ye me the boxes—a provision of convenience. aay elector re- | Fourteenth street, to Sixth avenue, to Twenty-sixth | would reconstruct the South upon republican and loyal i State at the expense of New York. This sumptuary j Was repeatediy cheered, a rate apo th Ph dy wae siding in the county may chulienze, no matter in what | Steet, to Ninth avenue, principles, And here the great question of reconstruc- ‘woods at intervals through the evening, Jaw and these unjust commissions must be promptiy res the hayoaph anit in good faibo, and repo istrict he lives, Ifon achalienge the voter takes the The Twelfth diitrict comprises ee of the Eleventh | tion was settled—if the negro was permitted the ballot | Ateight o'clock the meeting was organized by the | Pesled by the next democratic Legiziature. (Cheers) A | tempi to pay iia y . Pepe oath, his vote mest be received even though | W4rd, and is bounded by avenue B, to Houston street, to | the country was already reconstracted. election of Mr. Jesse Lyon to the obair. He introduced report made to the late Constitutional Convention by -= fe immediately one of ite committees, and which ts concurred in by SPEECH. OF arrested by order of the board Peukeratn anreck, Mote ih street, to East river, to The speaker concluded with an appeal for negro suf- Opdyke, a well known republican, inakes the frage, and, after some farther desultory speaking, the | the audience Mr. Tomumsox, who said that ‘assem! ? j for porary; bt ithe auth not taken of course the ore 3180, 98 1,896 80, Consid- ny 101g ere Hot received. The Thirteenth district comprises part of the Sixteenth blage dispersed. tho North fought for the Union alone, and not | anmusl taxation of this Stato, 180,061,906 80._ Consid- ; ? , ‘ ‘ase Tae polls are closed by s prociamation of the bs Gog era Elevesth pte bbe Neteerrd to build up am ignoramt and barbarous race ie J that New York now pays @ yearly tax of tomy: Seuntor Deolitsle ou the Relitiont pense chairman in the Tallowing words ;-9 eer eee wi to rule the destinies of the fairest portion of this con- | five dollars per head on every man, woman and child in}| _ Sebator Dooli:tie, of Wiscousin, delivered a apeoch iu nt ii FL than the taxes levied om | the Cily Hall, Miwaukee, on the evening of the 28th — om To that | uis. the following 13 a report of his remarks:— largest Mr. Presivent axp Feu .ow Crrizexs—For some months, es i vg Apel 4 + [have bean absent from my native laud. J have Pood removed from thé exciting scenes of polttica) strife. I have hardly read the political newspapers of my own country, but during these months | have had leisure to “ 1" HT hemos Hear ye hear ye! Leer x41 she hour of sunset havign ‘The Fourteenth district comprises part of the Seven- tinent, He thought it the duty of the North to treat arrived, the poli of this election is closed. eae ue eee ee ot Oe | oer andasca: «| ae There is much misapprehension as to the “4birty days’ | Fourteenth’ street, 10: avenue to Soveuth ‘sires, bo Shp Heath in a opis sf.clemenry.and fraternity, Sonthes residence” to qualify voters. The words of the consti- | gourtn avenue, List of Candidates. ‘unhappy section had suffered much indeed; and in the en ae ee ee Fifteenth district comprises part of the Twentieth | The main feature in the political affairs of Kings | place of vindictiveness he would substitute the spirit of peer re lperg i hina aoe ee ree Woe Sek Pennine WE BOER Hives, te Lometh | copnty, which have been fully noted in these columns, | Christian forgiveneas, even so taf as to plant flowers on which od officer ohig og ced b epee be be apte Bnt 3 ant street, to North river. ts the unlooked for interest manifested and the unpre- | the graves of their unpitiod dead. He believed After the closing polis the canvassers take legal registered their ow party, which he would term the custody of the ballot boxes and contents and commence asic 4 the public canvass pe votes, The canvass is public ‘and continuous, and not to be adjourned nor iniermitted until concluded, Canvassers are required to complete one box before going to the rest, and to preserve the following Krg ae Frac yd the ey Senate: Ansombly ; thie lncindes ‘Sheri, Coty: Clerk, ‘Dhartes and Coroners; 5th, Judiciary—including Judge of of Appeals, Justices of Supreme, Superior, Com Pleas and Marine Courts; 61), Supervisors, There statates requiring that the ballots in boxes shall be vassed in a certain order, for the sak: ‘asa security against fraud or coll feasance for canvassors to refuse ¥, follow the ‘Triplicate returns are to be made copy Jeft with the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors, Supervwer of the return district; one filed Burean of Elections, and the original return filed the County Clerk, THE CANDIDATES. jetize aie sile g¥aug apiee aye Peters sea83 FESes. Fy ide £ Teflect much upon the situation of our beloved country. go From all ube reflection and thought which I could = the oxtravagance and misrule of the republican which was forced yvon me more than two ycars ago, pplau mamely, that the policy which was then Lay ge es AR tor sch gM mest a by. Mr, Lincoln immediately upon the surren of the armies of the rebelhon to recogniz? at once the secteaten tn sonsecs’ ai jetinor att cinyerting tee States of the South, to have them restored to all thetr ple of the State to thousands of dollars of experse, constitutional rights and to their representation in the failed to make any report to the poople for their action | Uaion, was the only just, the only wise, son. con- atthe coming election, Does any one doubt the reason | Mtitutioual policy, (Applause,) From that time forward why? Dowenotall know that this convention was | | have struggled to carry that poticy toto effect. «I be- calles for the purpose of establiebing negro equality as | lieved thon, and I am now more than ever firm in the @ part of our organic law? Do we not all know that the orinion,. tat if, two years ago, immediately upon the }- , of the rebellion, the States of Fepubiicaa majority in the convention agreed to report [-aazrentar of fue urmis OF the repation. ae” coast. it auao amendment to the constitution? And do we | tonal rights, and admitted to tholr roprosentation 1B tue Union, under tne policy of Mr. Lin all li istrict part of the teenth | cedented number of voters who js boundea by Fourth avenue, to Twenty. | names at the eleventh hour, and will cast tholr ballots | United slates party, was about to come forth, Ly sae cere artganth strost, 1 | on Tuesday next. The registry of October 16 and 16 in | and govern the doctrines of this nation—a party that hd pot La ght ae com| fang ha pi’ bef the city of Brooklyn was 25,632. This was not considered | ignoring Lorde South, —_ — Ste io Simard to -gecond wi an y North river, conserve and secure st int 3 great street, to Sixth avenue, to Fortieth street, to - dcaee ee pesca oda and ‘inaivisible republic, He would ‘rather | name re many such a eo | ora lope,” for Eighteenth district comprises: yan ed the Twenty- | politicians ag an indication of a considerable falling off | must ie the expression of intelligence and Pounded by Madison avenge, 1 | in the vote as compared with that of last year, when the | Virtue, mot of | ignorance and = venallty, | the Hae Ti to TURES Siren, UOT. amber of veten pitied fone 42008) Sines thuloun. pes em ons a phal agy—l AD ET ge ! e mm! inery 3 expens! ‘- part of the Twelfth, | of October, however, the leaders of both partics and the | erty and merit are forbidden the arena where viel me: eae sae © Bented, x workers of each faction bave, in common parlance, | tional issues are contested and where wealth and patron. One and Ten! od bave exclusive monopoly and control, He felt ‘treet, to North | put their shoulders, to the wheel, and as in | CGnecious that the Forlorn’ Hope, embracing the. good the political machinery there sre many, wey men of New York city, coul one earnest fos wheels all wears run wi work, mana economy in its Unger Boy jidance engineers, meni every useless office, rt bave been excoed- ae; te the iblic good that which H now he public treasury. parts ution of the wheel has bad its effect either directly asx was then introduced and spokeas bounded by Eighth | or indirectly in@s bearing upon the result in this county. ‘to East river, to Seventieth | This is shown by the registration of Jast Friday, Fetiow-Cimzess of Westcnester County :—The de- jundred and when no less than 19,765 voters were added tothe | lightful autumn weather of the past month seems to in- fll zig! # ii i ; i re i i i 1 : j i i 3 i not all know ge Fatt ek. sae +p Bh His nae adjourned we convention ‘aud Jett | she diffcaitios which now surround us, all its business anfinished? The democratic party, | Muancial and political, would have passed away. (ADs while sympathizing wiln the condition of the poor | plause.) I believe that, if two yeard ago, that policy had negro, whose worst enemy is the republican party, will | Deey ‘airy adopted, the bonds of the goverumen: never consent to make him the equal of a white ‘man | United States this da ix per cent, would command in tho Jurv bor, at the ballot box, in the legisiative hall, | ® Premium in gold in every money centre - the wortd. upon the bench, or in the Presidential chair, And now | (Applause ) 1 will state this fact—wuich I hope no one a few words about our local candidates and their merits, | present will forget—I have met no inteiligent maa ip It ig of the highest importance that we should elect Zurope who has not expressed the same opinion, that if our State Senator. During his term a United | Our States of the South bad been admitted to repre States Senator wili be elected to succeed Gov- | Seniation im the Union, that the whole world ernor Morgan, and this, if there was no oth Could seo that we were ono People, OS consideration, is sufficient to induce every democrat to | tion, with Gs the States be re vote for my old and esteemed friend William Cauldwell, | Part in pe logis! "tinal od cemt of Morrisania, for this position, He has represepied | Would uot only be at par bat would commandje this town in the Board of Supervisors of this county for | ' old, Why mot? Why not ny old, mot the eleven years consecutively, been President of that | Amorican securities at six per cont command a high Board, and has evinced extraordinary talent for legixta- | Premiu:n in gold, wuen the English three per cente tion, ‘He has done more for the growth and progperity | Command moniy-ibroe per cont in ots No earthly of the lower part of this county than any man in it, | Teason can be giveu, except that these States are ap- You are indebted to his enterprise and imine | Parontly divided and dissevered; that the States of the g Ege : ze i 5 a3 Hi i i a i i i a E £-% Fy 3 i 2 H : : i z i A F 2 il sk H # ‘The following is a list of the candidates to be voted for in this county on Tuesday next :— The State Ticket. previous figure; this, with the number registered yes- | dicate that Providence smiles upon the democratic party. terday, will exhibit @ grand total far in excess of the | The glorious news from Calitornia, Ohio aod Pennsyl- mond sarght bop bene A heme id Leatoe vania has been amen of bape ive us, and bod will four thousand ve thousand persove of foreign birth | enter the contest on ruesday with the assurance the 128,006—Comparison with the Registration | 117, hoon naturalized, which in a great meadare will | san will set upon a demecratic victory and the over. and Vote fer Governor iu 1886. account for the unexpected registrat This all goos | throw of radical corruption and misrale in the Empire From the tables given below it will be seem that the | to show _aee Genseotalio Sate toaet will i rich | state. (Appiause.] Fogger non pr ceimenn e *| work Tegistration yesterday carried harvest as it swoeps throug! Ml istrict ween | as your delegate to oO ™ vention Pom dls on of = sedis sunrise and sunset on Tuesday, one which will have a | for 4 the purpose of vindicati the plastorm great Vigor, although in many | most depressing tendency upon tho republican majori- | of principles there jaimed and thelr poli igsues, Getricts the numbers registered were very small. The | ties of country districts toronghost the Stete, The regu- | national, State and local, as involved im the present ‘work was prosecuted in a mest remarkably quiet man- | lars on the local tickets, with exceptions, if elected | campaign, The late republican Secretary of State, ner ? ii i October eleétions in other States almost ‘made it afore. | of those political divisions of the city will prove | 20W came forward and claimed to be the party of the | election of Wak J. Powell as chairman and Heary B. | Ireland, Rossin In its treatment.ef Poland, Austria For Sui by the democracy—and it is more than probable that | Chauncey M. Depew, in speaking of the democratic the entire city and dufing the four days | ‘Day will be-—will ran far behind the State ticket. Their | platform, took ooeasion to” say tbat it was. the. most South are kept ont of tne Union aad denied all thelr s mostings, Of ine registrars were held. It | morits and demerits fave frequently been discussed, and | cowardly that had ever been presented in the Conven- | for the horse railroad which unies Fordbam with | re i nl inion, by this. radical 1 charge seen that the total ie almost six thousand tn the voters have already shaped thelt course on thiewub- | tion, and went out of his way to charge | Harlem. He Apert ae ary this home to tue leaders of tuat poicy. The whole re- advance of bn FS 1866, and more than fourteen ject. The republicans are hopeful, yet somewhat chop- | mo with having belonged to all partios When | ¥! afford me and my friends great pleasure Bponsthiltty reats upon that radical poliey, which, tram| Mmousand in edvance of the vote polled for Governor. | ‘ation at the large Which angurs ily for | I remomber my canvass for Congress in 1853 a an | t” £ive him an earnest, hearty support. | (Appia Ting tho toort!auion wader hs feet, violating thelr Votefor | them, Still euey ts saw ape ‘and trusting to the | independent democrat, brought into’ political existence | Another of your local candidatep is my life-long frien ligtited.. faith rr iieg. Of , Mf law Registered §— Total No. Governor | su-cens of is tehopeugens emocraiic nominations in | Mr, ww and some ‘other of bis repubican irienda, 1 | Your fellow townsman, Abraham B. Tappen, who witl, | Piigiied, faine and the pollay OM a Yaierday, in 1866. | Creating a breech fa the ranks of that party, while tney | fect that bis porsooal attack was Uacracious, if no: | "hed clocted, as he will by, ndora the position om the | Solm | iis. otvan, | avowed PULSE, mien deta 816 858 2,308 | Srge their own claime, they await the ise, and they | ungratefal. Bat this ie not the time to vindicate per. | “UPreme Court bench mado vacant by the death of | him, refused. to, allow (Applanse.) Fellow citizens, it 73 a9 402 | mney be right in some instances The regulars have said | sonal records, Louly allude to his attack to say that | J9e° Scrazham. And yot another of your local candi. | ricut to rep: to detalel pouter any length of ited 16t sol 790 | Tithe im refatation of the injuries orthe coulaof firesought | T am mot a disappointed candidate for the ofice of | ‘tes, equally deserving of your united and geuerous | i nik Oy Purp “in @ Tew eontowen two oF tures oT 3,720 2,501 | to be ‘apon their hesde, Dut they have worked | Collector of the” port’ of "New York “under Mr, | SUPport, is John Bussiog, Zour candidate for Snerit. | fom Mag om noraph Fo he nanger nc chow a sa Ferd most fy—only as ‘voterans can do—to ‘secure | Johnson pamainietration, | which be was ambi- He ins grown up tow, childhood ander my eye, and, i Tadi¢aliem m precisely the tame idea which underlald ee- 1,088 6.038 6,108 | wit amply ropay thett got forvenrance aad the went: | { anmert that ont pletrerar i bold and. expiict, and gooa | YOualk Know Uhat he ie my proteg®, and I will vouch for | Cesslon. (Appice) What ia bat idea? Lt an not dey 1286 202 8.207 | Ty Der Which they haveeabiatted winds their tw | not atun at coc intaend ‘ridie Lato the re: | Bit AKing a good Sherif, task for him your enthusiast | celvecursaltes, tdows tile, We wore, tee rou 7,856 7,490 | (eS section Tor the eallrege of the peopte. . ao ee eee tet ecmanlie Ga ths quecicn | support. Y sm mformed: that a secret movement ison | idee which led the Soath inf this rebellion? Je was 710 4707 4.430 | "Tye independent democratic faction, 100, are hopeful, | dr’ at aa Y omardly on ihe question | foot in’ this neighborhood to trade off Stephen 8, Mar- | this, The Cea thee eile tear tees & raat Satem—Den't O'Ball 1,008 8,367 1,737 | i¢ opinion cam br based on thelr demonstration at the Sine. (Chee eratie party ot New | Shall for Hezekiah weou, the repuoitenn nominee | tra frou the auihoriiy of. the constitadon eae a 907 b,008 4,800 | mass mosting of Friday last. But, though well based, | York has itself on bigh ground in favor 01 pre- ig gh eed vochran for Silas D- | at pleasire, and theretore, after the passage of a BAC. ge aoe 4.074 | the above are at best merely conjectures or rather esti: | serving tbe faith of the nation in relation v0 the | Tiler’, the, republican candidate for County ude. | thei? “ordinance of secession, the constitution was for.—Jobn Galvin,‘ D'U.—P. B. Hayes. = be 3973 | mates, from a fair and impartial standpoint, on the | national debi, which the repubiican party has | This design should be thoronghly, exposed, and. tur | practically dewi in the States of the South. The veo} Pa Sopa, ok er 970 4,348 3,955 | chances and mischances in prospective in the political | saddled on our overtaxed people. It has demanded | friends must ek tae ota of Marshall | of the South went to war to enfores that idea, What on. Monaghan, —D.U.—Thoa. J. Bogan. 1,126 ¢,709 6.234 | world of Kings county. ‘The subjotned exhibits the | economy of administration. honosty in the collection | DOxt {0 soe emooratic» ballot, | W4d0% Wo maintained precisely the opposite idea, to one ‘Campbell: Rea, 0. Biery. 1,920 11,846 10; Bames of those who would solicit the suffrage of the | and application of the public revenues, simplification of | 124. Cochran tine has boon Cork of the Common | Wit:—That the constitution has supreie authority over -Rercbeeenlies) Eakeaa onan. Ro sass 7,245 | people to be voted for on the 5th inetant:— sod equality in taxation, and a curroncy issued for the | David T.. Calontine bas Deen vvemiy-oue years, and | te States of (he Souta as well as of the Norih, and that Moz —Jonn Foley. Con.—Eras, CG, ri 1,598 9684 SUT Tis sie * SENATE, aan of ogg 4 than ag gr Erect has beou kept in afflce by all parties because he is capa ae States of ee phd eee 0 a por ienee $—Tam James Reed. = Rad. —Nicb. T. D 1,428 1.878 6,501 lapses Ehoree. Witliam Wodoodrich, the power {t has usurped by establishing negro su- | Die. Mr. Marshall has proved himself a (githful, honest | 1, Pesca vey muillion of men tothe field. We Moz,—Michael ( assidy, 1 8,208 71378 | SoHenry C. Murphy. George ¥. Willey. premacy in tho South by military foree, coupled ‘and, having fairly recelved the regular democratic | ere oat our treagure and our blood like water. To. bag oh Ls er Rd Asse. with the diefranchisement of the mass’ of the Hon, is entitled to your uulted support. | Robert | Teintaln that ides we ereated this debt of three ‘housand Fon dan'y deaee <Hermen F. Bauer.” ¢ PSyucick Borns,” white popwation—(Cheers—and it tence Meteor ont cocky: | millions of dollaré To malotain that idea five 10—~Tam.—Ant'y Hartman, Red.—Horman P, Bauer, one of the most brilliant and able lawyers of our cone, hos stigma. tized the refusal of that party to submit the nfluen' hundred thousand of our sons woot down to —t =~! 2 Andrews. and 23.8 popilar oraior and democrat, he has no ral. ed D. Uifford, 18 & bigotted radical republican, who | Were victorious io ‘maintaininy iden Se ed ee eemat in his, lien Ho was for. | Supremacy of the constitution Hier the Baten of r tits, eomporitor, | date and to death, By the blessing of the ly a member of the Excise Board of the county, | South when we, at length, after a long and terrible a whe the , ©, moa —Charles P. Shaw. conn ih ate om : id zealous in running that “‘machine” for the iF years, compet cout ° Moa —Lewie W. Maires, > peresention of ‘demoorais, vee he could not manufac. | dea; when ‘We com people of those ye) li ‘votes for his friends, is made their appoal to the of ues 19 peerage rasa Piqalate | ce Sate eRe ae ae bim than a other 7 office. thi . of the United Pape to be sed at oe Cl owed 17—Tam.—James 4 ‘W. Mason. ¥ isan as Mr, Gi y Q james Troy. veo be isu Moa. —P.B. Con.—Samuel M. Cox. Peel Belling on the Election. 4 ae ey, ee hae} ne mann fr tnt sens amen ert | © 2 Ton hatha telat eee ne xd ve end, It seems to disseminate every circle, affecting 0 | Michael Slats De. 7. Be jour in 1862. (Cries of «We’ it, a at . Claasen, Jr, ner redaicn & degree every class of our fellow citizena, §=With Bome | jonn J, goott loot . Pierre C. Tallman followed in a brief and stirrit S1—Tam—Wm. Hitchman. Rad. —Robert C. Brown. 1t is @ profession, almost » disease, Sach men, it will JUSTICRS OF PEACE. en —W. H. MoCarthy Con—Michasl Halloran, 1 4 oiserved, are peculiar. They have distinctive traits | 2! Dennis Onrgan, First’ Assembly district, made a fow remarks, after kj Maengrnn in gp of character, More apparent than all else ia, that | 3-1 W.ilelr, Je which the meeting dispersed. ‘ Thos, Hames. T, a Freeman {, Fithins me Ty strains, NEW JERSEY POLITICS. ee sie a oe aieers Cardozo. itis new rebellion agmnst the Kovernient Ot Tem. {unk Barbour, KdwinP, Cowles, “0 Bad bey Dowooratic ratification meetings were held last even- | put down the fepellon Ot te seeped to A, Ledwith. ba! [ape with @ huodred = ing at Hoboken and Greenville. The former was ad- put down this new rebetlion at the North by foreo of supers Chime MAN, Googe who sppen born under Hi nichards, J. 8. Carman dressed by General Wright and A. 0, Evans, Poe a Applause.) We expect to put i doma by mora Tam, {2enn Brey oe, hooper C. Van Voor, raise th rander, = of taxation; At Hudson City one of thg latgeat meetings that haa | power alone, by atgument, by raaso by persuasion, 8 as Sy ad beat een Puls, sic at Eh ease | oem Sem semana arnn | Foe te aa court. 4 17—C. B. Elliott, = i u . the Court House, to rati! .) Mr. Presider will not detain you any J, Solis Ritterband, Such a throng of speculators met Inet evening at the | jy — iia, ot, Comoe barred Nise as SO. | Snes et @ Stra f tors ogy t “A rise in the majesty T. B. Johnson, at Reilly's restaurant, sUpeRYIORS. ~ igo | g-Rovt Nelson, John Tierney. 4-£, M. Johnson. - it the democratic State and county nominations, There | longer. trast We ay ee a enty wore present between six and seven thonsand persons, | of theif Fi nr et a gg A Bs the building being beautifully Mamimared with Chinese | yores proclaim again the Wupremaey of tution fT yi states of lanterns, The mooting was called to order at a litile be- ee the seecamesloed Los boar bes it im their little game in buying pools upon the candi for the position of Sheriff and County Clerk at hing election, It was an animated throng of sports, and although there were pools sold upon theve a, at a cost of thirty-five millions of support negroes in idleness and . Vi being "p- and evolutionists of North nly the bidding was of @ ii masters instead of their former slave fore eigat o'clock, Mayor GD, Van Riper be radical anarchists COURTY CLARK, Peaders will note by the amonats * on how thes i, Gehye. eaters sought to degrade the white race, and the in- | pointed cbairman, assinted by Judge O'Neil and | (Great appiause.) Lean very well see by tho <= ‘Tam. —Charles E. Loew. James M. Haggerty. gentlemen, who are su 4 to be in the * inner rine,” =r efitable result, is 8 war of races, By this course they | tomes W. Mairos as sccretaries, Soon after the | returns that a change has come over the ‘where Mor, —William ©, Conner, appreciate the chances of victory of tho respective cun- ann vaaen have introduced « Coating Sere, and te all yg meeting wne-'¢alled > order. clubs from South — eee ee ee eet ‘ate D.U.—Willian Walsh, aidates— The Germans have endorsed the entire democratic | NTP YEE hay at “aay time ealminate in | Tiergen, the Third sod Fourth wards, arrived wn- | riatoa mob who would provent me from speaking to ihe Joha Brice, Isaac J. Oliver. 7 ST 80 60 | State ticket, and bave nominated the following for the | posneial distress and ruin. have introduced the | der command of J. W. Whitney. Major Tease BR. | people of my own town. (Great woe ) Tam. {Wwiltem Soyce. William V. Alexander, 38 37) 40-40 | county officers: military onaulat system of Rome, under Cesar, | Wiion was the first speaker, and was followed by the | change is being wrought, (Cheers rowrld smith Ely, Je. 10 9 65 6 6 10] Register—Coaries Schurig, Varas and Pompey, but in a much mere expensive form. | on. tH. Winheld, Member of Voncress irom Hudson | If [attend a meeting in the nelshboring SAT enioh fase Beatabers, COUNTY CLERK. County Clerk—Andrew B. Hodges, The appropriations for the War Department alone thir ‘ty, who stated that he had boen travelling the | sha, to proclaim these doctrines ore, 7, —Pacrick McAleer, $55 5 5 86 BO OO County Judge—James Troy, year amount to the enormous sum of one bundred and ‘Sraaty eves dade iat proud to say that tho people | L beliove the very existence Cy Sree p.0.— DISTRICT ATTORNEY. a a | Saperintendent of the Poor—Joseph Altenbrandt, ninety-five million dotlara, This is in opposition to the throughout the ‘auneien La e anited i restoring once | liberty to us and to our chi ewe A. Oakey Hall, Rash © Hawkins, CB BCE TO) Qprasen Rims Lane fourt resolution of the platform of the republican perty | thorn wuite man's seiirage and 1> put. down the aiterapt | thero will be no one to IaUerrt Oe in aay ener, Seine 7, Waterbury Pet eer, se a of wo ra ot tn | eaenaanteae wera sherk | tuna Wey tas cme OP, Se at PH. Keenan, Alexander Wilde, Senator Yates on the Situation=Repubtioan | Senator, Third tistcet Henry O, Murphy, sisson sid apesaly tht eat ot Auch Maus to ore and Se? Witte We Ranecto, of Philaderpuin, ad others time, Mon ate beginning tents and atone and Tam. j A.B. Rollie See Mass Meeting at Cooper Institute. end the entire republican jadielary tleket, = J. Kei m lami of power® etn a yy 10 Rxscative, Comenttaes ediees ro hal war bas engendered are away, Swng Aged Senator Yates, of Iilinois, addressed @ iarge gathering | “Tho souicrs and sailors bays endorsed the somination Seth the perfection, and endurance of our, poliueal cook EMRE SF the Demeerne, Dub ® quotetn Was Thd cool, dispasstoned Judgment is once more anserting won {iionset swith Creme republicans eh evening i the tage neh et | a Baer 7% Oe Andean, 5, Veswnien and | ties Seo ef ibe as i ney ate or Fert Se mae nt, At the last meeting of this committee Mts Legitiinate #Ay a 1 already soe, and 1. think we Joba Wiidey. Cooper Insitute, under the auepions and by invitation | CALM T tait Me Biles, the republican candidate for | Under what pretext, n+ among the gravest df crither. roubles that agitate the Third district om the question | 1 ith oecasion to be yet more thanktal for what 16 Taeph W, Lamb. of the Ui btican General Committee (radical) of Me, whe nan been eoutned to his house fer ‘This ie in opporition also to the resolution offered im | of tho rival candidates, Alderman Davis and Mr. Van Wre forent and yrolonged applause.) DV, < John Wilder. 0 Union Repetit . ) Mayor, who bas ennfined to the past then @ | Vorst, were brought ub, ang it was decided thay there } yet to come, | E {Jonrph Given, the city of New York, Charles & Sponger, president of.| wo weeks, euleriog from a pevery euack of plegrisy | the United Statey Souate hy President Johnson, thea 9