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NEW YORK HARALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4%, 1872.—TRIPLE SHEET. noe THE EVE OF BATTLE. ON THE BAST Pa force, and every effort was be! ie ia one r and exhibited symptoms of 2 ‘reason that it ‘bowed he Dersnman. secretive than in any other quarter. They ith the “early = oftzn” Soe which little of good odor ever come: its garrets op Tuesday night, and an expectan CONTINUED FROM THIRD PAGE. most commie, tikea*ana ee et sna penal vext consent el me exeitement pont a At arters ee chs eee ae in ‘of the districts to be able to vote The Germaas of avenue A were ™ over Lgl many of them claiming that ex-Mayor Gunther's letter comecaee all chances of "g elec- tion, for that was no DOWN ABOUT GRAND STREET the workers seemed more im earnest and potared mass strongly for Havemeyer aad te intend enter- ing upon the work before them in a business way, -peems to be ke od 8 tly trom few back to be worked secre: 1 rooms of liquor stores and from ¢wo public aes ‘street was all alive with expectation of the mone; ond whiskey to flow into its cellars and mount m4 ue and indescribable seemed to hang inits feud poisonous atmosphere. CITY AND COUNTY TREASURY. pore eo Petey Comparative Statement of the City and County Debt—Monthly Statement of ‘Warrants Drawn end for What Pur- poses, DEPARTMENT OF COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE, Now 1 asra.} Monthly statement of amount of warrants drawn and for what purposes against the City and County Treasury, January 1 to October 31, 1872, inclusive, gmounting in the aggregate to $41,701,109; alsoa comparative statement of the city and county debt as of the Ist of sani and Sist of October, 1872, ‘with statement of for what pt 8 BLOCKS have been issued during that pe! STATEMENT OF WARRANTS DRAWK. account— One ee semen 7a Deseraat Commissioner ‘exper gerne tc med bef 3811 Hf 1 #8311 Ped SE 1870... Duplicate asse: pos ee LR oppeste Barks Department of Pept ‘Works. Department of Public Instruction. nt of Po! i : Be Henin! oe newer Printing apartments, civil poles courts. 4,850 44,499 i Sa conn: count— Adve: rising Comm issioner of Ju- 1,000 82,956 wstigers and and ees—County and witnerses. 46,371 ing foF Lecislative Departient ‘810 Frinting for for Executive Bebarunent ai 4548 890,000 925 theo 43 “a 496,750 25,666 Grand total.. Total account of" f city ‘and county CITY AND couNTY Der. 31, 1871. sink’g fund. 19,216 “Ferante rom nk’ fond. $22-819216 2 15,483,997 1 29,804,704 29,896,108 «890,000 "5,406,300 6,256,300 (03,551,708 130,609,129 130, sims 20;182)322 21 21,805,421 Beer $88,360,386 108,723,708 108,642,602 Cash in city and county Treasury. «$11,482,474 ‘Cash in sinking funds. 675,098 Daring the ten months endin 872, bonds and stocks have been ixsued on account of, viz. :— Amomment fund. payable from assessments to ed. + $1,715,500 691,700 of 1872, to be collected .... New York county Court House... Groton water purposes Public ‘school but “— Pablic wor! Public parks Riot di mn Total.....0...- + BM aart ‘The above stocks and bonds were issued in ac- eordance with special laws for works in progress, assessment bonds, account of improvements being —_ and to be repaid by assessments to be col- revenue bonds in anticipation of the tax rot 1872, and on account of arrearages of 1871 and adve: CoD rior to 1871, as authorized A. chapters 9, '6 of laws of 1872, ‘The temporary eae of the city is represented by advances to contractors on account of work for which assessments are to be and those already laid to be repaid by collection, alien for that amount on the proper! ye improvements made and in 88; an offset or asset for a similar amount. revenue bonds will be cared for by the taxes of 1872 and the arrearages of taxes of former years in process of collection, The actual debt of the city and county of eae York on the 1st of Novemper is therefore that able from the sinking fund and from taxat a, pon tgs A $93,362,459 97; less amount in the | on Gs 985,967 41, ‘sa $71,816,992 26, on the ist of January, 1872, an increase of '$4,260,707, accounted for by vs Lg New York County Court House stock Water stocks. . sewer and other stocks 444, section i a i on account of ‘assessment Supreme Court tor illegalities, aA labeserescsProesssivoorsessvevvive ‘$5,016,404 ‘The excess of stock over the increase on the debt for cash balances awaiting requisition by the being y THE EMPIRE STATE. Comic Side of the Canvass in, ‘ Saratoga County. Speaker Blaine’s Bloated Abstractedness. MYSTERY OF “THE FLOODWOOD.” Closing Up the Lists on Either Side. Joke on the German in Saratoga. A DEMOCRATIC FORECAST. Saratoga, N. Y., Nov. 2, 1872. It was a relief to come away from Albany and ‘wander a while through this glorious old county, filed with memories of ante-revolutionary days. I undertook to study the architecture of Albany, ‘and suffered from a nightmare in consequence. If all the cities of the Union contrivuted a few second hand houses, churches, &c., each, and pitchforked them into a place all hill and hollow, the result would be as handsome and precise as our State capital. I saw that beautifully stupid fascination, a torch- light procession, in honor of Horace Greeley and his Gratz, move like A GOLDEN PANORAMA up High street the other night, and the idea oc- curred that we might improve a little on the torch- lights. Suppose we put a thousand able-bodied fei- lows in line and fitted a blazing tar barrel on each one’s head instead of giving him a miserable little can of ofl to carry. It would be a thrilling sensa- tion and be sure of making a name for any party that should succeed in having it tried. SPEAKER BLAINE IN THE ROLE OF HELIOGABULUS. Speaker Blaine spoke in Albany last evening for Grant and the party, which reminds me that at eleven o’clock at night I met him at the supper table of the Delevan. He had been there an hour or so and had already used up the energies of three waiters. His consumption is prodigious, not that he loves the vulgar food for its own sake, but the machinery of his system, mental and physical, re™ quires an enormous quantity of fuel to keep it going. In truth, he is asa gigantic locomotive draw- ing five miles of ‘freight cars toa baby perambu- lator as compared to other men. Then he forgets half the time that he is eating his meals, fancies he is presiding over the aeliberations of the House. Under this hallucination he eats along rogardlessly, smashing a plate here and a coffee cup there, with his knife for a gavil. Occasionally he startles guests and waiters alike by a sudden rap which diminishes the crockery stock, accompanied by a loud, vigor- ous exclamation “The question is shall the bill pass; all in favor please say aye; contrary, no—ayeshave it—the bill is passed.” This weight off his mind, he goes for another plate of pork and beans. A MAN OP GASTRONOMIC ABILITY. At his favorite hotel at home the waiter is in- structed that after two hours have elapsed, and half a ton weight of pork and beans, tripe, codfish balls, hominy, succotash and pumpkin pie have been cleared off the table, to sing out,, “I move that the House adjourn; whereupon the Speaker breaks just one plate with his gavel, or rather his knife jumps up and proceeds to the herculean labors with which he is ever engaged. THE SERAKES,AS THE SLROT QOARING, BIRD OF I notice the cage ord still wears that over- coat, with the cape sleeves. In moving against the ina oy Jooks as if he had win; and was just about tosoar. If he trifurcate the toes pod his shoes, shaved his head and jumped from the top of a church steeple, he male Rt while mid-air for the great, id and bald North Ameriosm eagle. ‘Let call htm the eagle of the North. Whats potent title that would bein a canvass! It ought to be patented for the New ‘England States. The Speaker spoke little. After SWEEPING AWAY THING on the table, except the silverware, he swept ont of the room with the same di, lor rdly air Talma might have assumed in Louis Quatorze. He is now sweeping onward ta Ro he orth eof never alee] lo meee sore us away with a mag- iifient sweep of his hand. Of course he swept 4 CASE OF PROFOUND AFFLICTION—SPIRITS ALL Go! NB. ‘When I reached Saratoga in the morning I won- dereg if there.were anybodies lett m this great Mausoleum of departed joys. Tne wind was cold and the prospect cheerless. I saw one man sitting alone on his porch, as sorrowful looking a8 a brown owl. I invited him to take a drink at his own bar, but he said there was nothing left to drink. His customers were few, his spirits were low, brid having acquired a taste in his early youth foi vigorous erages (no slops), he went at it and drank out the whole concern him- self. I asked him whether Grant or Greeley, and apologized by saying 1 made it an mvariuble rule of late not tb cultivate any rson’s acquaintance until I found out on what side of the fence he planted his shoe leather. He Feplied it was all the same to him now, neither of the distinguished candidates could restore his lost spirits, I told him he could vote ey for Greeley now, as he was out of spirits. He turned a sad red nose on me and said, “Young bey you had been accustomed from your ear! outh to an allowance of from a pint to a half 4 lon of whiskey pe bar Oey, and to have the hard han of fate cut off that generous solace of your tine jes, ‘ou would sympathize with me.” ‘hy don’t you at rand ral water as a substitute ? It’s good for tl »” said]. This was too cong He iasorted me, as we just then stood fifty, iG rds Lig hy that if my road home lay through his‘ ailiwick to bring a 68-pounder along and a small rifle armory. DINING ON DRUGS. Seeing it was still early and tew people around, I rejoined the train and went away to Ganesvoort, in Moreau township, a sweet little place, with a pop- ulation of about five hundred souls. A sign swing- ing over the street said “hotel,” but the “fixins up” did not exactly correspond ‘with the designa- tion. Drugs are well enough in their place, but the prospect of mistaking a bottle of assafcetida in the decanter for salad oil was not too inviting. THE MYSTERY OF FLOODWOOD EXPLAINED. Isat down at the railroad station on somebody's trunk awaiting shipment, and said to a man, who in the very‘ excess of infatuation was trying to clean a window pane with oil waste, “ Who do you go for, Grant or Greeley #7 “Well, sir,” said he, and a lazy, good-for-nothing rascal he appeared, “we go for nobody particular, leastways none of us fellers do. We are all tlood- wood up this way.” “What do you mean by floodwood ‘” I inquired. “Oh, you know well enough. Floodwood is well understood. If you have any money about you, you can get heaps of foodwood fellers that don’t care who they vote for provided they get paid.” “Do you mean to tell me the people of this hand- some and respectable little t0wn have no more principle than cattle /"" “Oh, I don’t mean the people of the town alto- ether. It’s the fellers outside that get hard up for a ew dollars ‘bout ‘lection times, They is the ones as’ll vote just as you tell ‘em, provi idin’ all the time you come down with the stamps.” TRE ACCOMPLISHED MR. BRIGGS. I crossed over into Greentield township after this and met with a Greeley farmer, who said he was sorry to inform me that several democrats of his acquaintance intended to vote tor Grant; but, said he, 1 believe that stripe is not numerous. “They do it out of spite.” Coming back to Sara- toga, I dropped inat the Marvin House, and had a talk with one of the big guns (600-pounders) of the town. His name was Briggs, an uncommon and aristocratic name, according to Hoyle. He said Saratoga county hd been in republican hands for anumber of years. The average majority was 1,000, but this time he expected, owing to the Uberal defection, it would be reduced to 800. Mr. Brigg conversation performed the mar- vellous fei pL opening and closing the stove with his toes, balancing his spectacles on the tip of his nose reading the New Tonk HERALD, talking to your correspondent at the same time, without even once ‘tog J at him. Thad no idea of meeting out of season in Saratoga anybody so accomplished. There is A GOUD, LIVELY POPULATION here still, aespite its being winter time, They don’t do very much business, bat they fuss around and make believe they are coining fortunes. It is an odd sight to see all the great hotels closed up and business going on as usual right beside them. The St. James is not yet completed. Workmen are busy pre} the foundations for the hotel which is to e Gh in the mae ond will stand on the of the o14 United State: A PRIGHTFULLY SEVERE YOUNG LADY. Ast was standing on the Saratoga platform men- tally comparing notes of the quantity of vaggage en an now, the Ya floated past ya a ntaminous soe ay. pes wan ont toe ehotne “4 with th 4 ond of per besid: was ithe. tans track, my ry? kn that so struc! meat oe my last. Before leaving I He hign to honor of @ five minutes’ cenvenente confided to me the bar ‘that thor i Berea = favor « of id adhesion to bs formula a thought ometrical is foo much popp mon, prac sense, or ig for for twenty years, wretch w! blandlanments THE BIGGEST JOKE OF THE SEASON. t the hotel where 1 took dinner to-day were four North-German officers, belonging to some veasel in New York. The four wore glasses, and two spol They had come up ke Englis! but finding the great hotels closed ae byond measure, Two New York wags, an Irishman, came to their rescue and have them now in charge. ny Be told the benighted foreigners that this was the Winter watering place of America, the Summer watering places are all down in Texas, and that the season has not yet gun—won’t be in full blast till Christmas. ey want to know how people can drink the mineral waters in Winter “so var cole.” Doolan, one of their chaperones, meets them by ‘ing the; mig “hate all that wather and fill thelr bellies full of it scaldin’ hot, ‘pon my sowl. There’s furnaces undher all thim wells, and they hate the wather oe just as itis wanted for whiskey punches or the es 0? that,’ a are in good hands ENT EVE OF BATTLE. There is infinitely les leas excitement than one might one over the issue of Tuesday. It ix too late now for regrets or amendments on either side. A Democratic Calculation. ALBANY, Nov. 3, 1872. Half a dozen of the most prominent democrats here with whom I have been conversing to-day de- elare that if New York city gives 25,000 democratic majority the State will go Greeley and Kernan. A SEXAGENARIAN MONSTER, ho falls a The Discovery of the Violator and Mur- derer of Young Miss Day. The Old Brute Caught in the Sheriff’s Trap. ConcorD, N. H., Nov. 3, 1872. On the morning of the 26th ultimo the young granddaughter of Sylvester Day, of Northwood, about twenty-five miles distant from here, sud- denly and mysteriously disappeared. ll efforts to ascertain a cause for her voluntary absence were unavailing, as were also all efforts to discover her whereabouts. In a day or two circumstances transpired to lead to the belief that she had been murdered, and AN OLD MAN NAMED FRANELIN B. EVANS was suspected as the murderer. Suspicions were so strong against him that the Depaty Sheri of the town was persuaded to take him into custody, although there was no evidence to justify such a proceeding. Evans, upon being arrested, stoutly demed all knowledge of the whereabouts of the young lady, and at length there was a reaction in the public feeling against him. The story that the girl had eloped obtained general belicf. Sherif! Drew, however, did not share in this opinion, but felt, CERTAIN THAT THE YOUNG WOMAN HAD BEEN MURDERED, and that old Evans was the murderer. He em ployed all sorts of means to get him to confess the suspected crime, finally telling him that if he would own up and disclose the whereabouts of the body he would assist him in his escape to Canada, and also give him one-half of the reward which had been offered for the discovery of the remains. The old fellow FELL INTO THE TRAP AND CONFESSED that he enticed the young woman into the woods and after outraging her committed the further crime of murder. Having thus admitted his guilt he went with the officer into tiit\ woods and Pointed out the exact spot where the murdered girl’s remains were buried. They were concealed beneath an old stump, some brush and just suMicient earth to hide them from the view of & passer-by.’ The body was most horrbly mutilated, and there was every evi- dence that the poor girl mude @ desperate strugi- gle for chastity and life. The remains were brought into the town and placed in a village store, where they were viewed by the excired citizens and the grief-stricken parents, and then handed over toa Coroner, who immediately commenced an investi- gation, THE MURDERER is about sixty years of age and a most repulsive looking man in every particular. He has been a sort of an itinerant beggar in this section of New Hampshire for years, but was never regarded as a dangerous person. A KNIFE MURDER IN BOSTON. Rum and Sudden Jealousy Run- ning to Homicide. A CHASE AFTER THE ASSASSIN. Boston, Nov. 3, 1872, A most terrible tragedy, growing out of rum and Jealousy, was committed at the West End at an early hour this morning. The murderer is a young man named Maurice Lomansly, and his victim was amarried man named Timothy Deasy. It seems that Deasy and his wife were going home at about one o’clock, when they encountered Lomansly, with whom they were acquainted. Both the men were drunk, and during their conversation, as they went along Cambridge street, Lomansly made some remark which Deasy thought was either AN INSULT TO HIS WIPE OR AN INSINUATION that she had at some time been familiar with Lo- mansly. A good deal of profanity and abuse fol- lowed, and when Grove street was reached the par- ties commenced to fight. A large crowd assembled and viewed the scene with evident interest and with no desire to interfere. Both men fought with the spirit of tigers and finally the two fell upon the sidewalk, Lomansly having the advantage by being uppermost, Holding Deasy’s throat with one hand, he employed the other in PLUNGING A KNIFE INTO 1118 BODY in the region of the stomach, and the blood flowed from the wound as if from a water-spout, The crowd, beholding the awiul scene, set up a cry of murder, and attempted to retain Lomansly. The murderer was too quick for them, however, and was quickly flying through the streets, followed by some 0 f the spectators, and finally hy a police ofi- cer, One man attempted to overhaul him, but was driven away by the flourish of the assassin’s knife. The chase was kept up, however, and the man followed on to his house, 19 Spring street, where he was afterwards arrested. When found HE HAD GONE TO BRD, He denied all knowledge of the deed, but the blood of his victim was still on his hands. The po- lice took Deasy from the sidewalk and carried him to the station house, the unfortunate man dying on the way. The wife, who was with her husband at the time, followed the body, and when the offl- cers had placed it in the room she lay down beside It, FONDLY EMBRACING THE CORPSE and caressing it, while she called to him in endear- ing terms in the hope that he might exhibit signs of life. The murderer (Maurice Lomansly) twenty-three years of age and claims to be Irish. The victim (Timothy Deasy) was about thirty years of age and lived at 18 Grove street. The woman (Deasy’s wife, as she claims to be) was very reti- cent about the whole affair and nothing could be elicited regarding the cause of the tragedy, Caroline King, colored, living near Harrisonburg, Va., gave birth to two children April 3, 1871; on December 8, 1871, gave birth to two more, and on September 8, 1872, gave birth to three children, making seven children in a litue over seventeen months. They were all boys, WASHINGTON. The Quakers Objecting to Tribal Punishments on Indians, Surveys of Isthmus Routes Preparing. *! Two A RAILROAD BELIC OF REBELDOM. Tardy Complaints of the Management of the Freedmen’s Bureau. THE HEALTH OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE. Wasnrnaton, Nov. 3, 1872. Purchase of Bonds and Sale of Gold for November. The Acting Secretary of the Treasury has di- rectea the Assistant Treasurer at New York to purchase $1,000,000 of bonds on each Wednesday and to sell $1,000,000 of gold each Thursday during the month of November. The Indian Commissionership—Assistant Secretary Cowan—The Quaker Policy. The resignation of Commissioner Walker, of the Indian Bureau, takes effect on the 1s of January, and the President, Secretary Delano, besides the Board of Peace Commissioners, Young Men’s Christian Association and Methodist Conferences urge the successorship upon Assistant Secretary Cowan, of the Interior Department, with such ‘warmth that he will feel bound to withdraw his re- fusal and take the office. The straight talk of Com- missioner Walker to the Indians lately here is not acceptable to the Quaker and benevolent elemntse in Indian management, who contend that corporeal Punishment has no rightful place at all in the In- dian policy of the government as they understand it, and the late letter of Mr. Stuart, of Philadelphia, to President Grant, though apparently referring to the reported change in policy, was really a protest against the revival of a dormant feature in the policy as first understood, that Indians proving in- corrigible should be punished by the military be- fore being @ second time turned over to the Quakers. The latter object to tribal punishments, when only individuals or detachments go on the ‘warpath. General Cowan, the prospective new Commiss- toner, is understood to favor the Grant policy in its entirety, which is, punishment where per- suagion fails. General Sherman's Vicarious Reports, General Sherman will submit no extended report on the army this year, but, referring to his absence from the country for nine months, will lay before the Secretary of War the reports of Generals Sher- idan, Schofield, Meade, Terry and Emory as em- bracing a view of military status for the past year. During the year to come the General-in-Chief may have an opportunity to apply some of the ideas Picked up in observation of foreign establiahments which will give interest to his next annual report’ The Adjutant General’s Report—Loose- mess im the Defunct Freedmen’s Bu- reau, The report of the Adjutant General of the Army to the Secretary of War mentions the transfer to him of the business and records of the Freedmen’s Bureau, finally discontinued under a late act of Congress, and, incidentally, reflects unfavorably upon the management of the Bureau affairs. The report states that certain important records, essen- tial to proper understanding of past business, have not been transferred by the Bureau officials, also that 8,000 discharges of colored soldiers, forwarded for the purpose of obtaining bounty or back pay, and many months accumulating, were turned over as unfinished business. An instance is given where the accounts of a disbursing officer were not ex- amined till after nis discharge, when it was found he was 4 defaultey for $1 but being out ot the Service the government was left without remedy. A Rallroad Relic of the Rebel Govern- ment. The government has begun to recover the rail- road from Danville, Va., to Greensborough, N. C., built wholly at the cost of the confederacy during the late war a8 a military necessity, and exclu- sively operated as @ military road, but unaccount- ably taken as private property by the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company in the general break-up following the surrender of Lee’s army. Repeated decisions here and abroad in favor of the right of the United States in succession to the Con- federate government are believed to insure the recovery of the road and compensation for its use and detention by the railroad company. Preparations for the Press Banquet to Stanley. At & meeting yesterday of the correspondents’ committee for the dinner to Stanley, the Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Chicago and San Francisco press were individually repre- sented, as well as the Associated, American and Southern Press Associations. A committee of invita- tion was appointed to wait upon Mr. Stanley on his arrival in New York, which is expected to be about the 18th of November. A committee of arrange- ments for the dinner was alse appointed. The in- dications are that the Staniey dinner will be one of the most interesting affairs of the kind ever given. Chief Justice Chase Untble to Attend to Business. Since Chief Justice Chase has been here he has found that ne cannot attend to his duties without seriously jeopardizing his health. It is understood that unless his condition improves before Winter he will take a trip to the Pacific coast. There is much complaint among the practitioners in the Supreme Court as to the physical condition of the Chief Justice, and the action of Justice Nelson, who is not able to come to Washington, and is expected to resign. Two New Surveys for an Isthmus Canal About to Start. The two naval expeditions organized to continue the surveys for a ship canal between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, through the Darien and Nica- Tauga routes are preparing to start, Commander Selfridge in charge of the Darien, and Commander Lull in charge of the Nicaragua project. The first will begin his survey on the Pacific side of the Isthmus, at the point from which the navigable Waters of the Atrato River can be easiest reached. The second will start from Greytown, on the Atlan- tic side, The Navy Department expects to decide whether there are practicable routes for a canal within six months, though Commander Selfridge considers the question already decided aMrmatively by his Jast survey, and goes out this time chiefly to find @ cheaper route, the estimated cost of a canal over the route already found being $84,000,000, The Post Bag and the Equine Plague. On account of the horse disease the Post Office Department fears some derangement in the malis where horse power is used for conveyance on in- terior lines. Defect in the Soldiers’ Headstone Law. The question of supplying headstones for national cemeteries goes back to Congress under the opinion of the Attorney General. The present law is #0 de- fective that if the Secretary of War enters intoa contract it must be with the lowest bidder, re- gardiess of the suitability of material, size, shape or finish of sample, and cannot, in face of a general prohibitory law, make 4 contract in excess of the Pt SHIPPING NE WHITESTONE TELEGRAPH, ‘The New Youre Hxaatp has constructed a telegraph line from New York city to Whitestone, LI, and the sameis now open for the transaction of business. ‘This line will be found of great service to those having business with vessels passing to and from the Sound, and every facility will be given to merchants and others to communicate promptly. As there is no other telegraphic with ‘Whitestone, the Herald Line will ve open for all business and private messages, and the same attended to with all All messages must be prepaid. e The following rates have been established :-— Private messages, twenty-five cents for ten words or Jess ; two cents for every additional word. Business messages—For a message of twenty words or Jess, to be delivered on board vessels off Whitestone, one dollar; five cents for every additional word. Advertisements for New Yorx Huratp free. ovrices. Herald Office, corner Broadway and Ann street. Herald Ship News Office, pier No 1 Bast River. Herald Branch Office, No 1266 Broadway Whitestone Dock, Whitestone, LI. pide wesur melee a Almanac for New York—This Day. Hell er calaee 12 38 OCEAN STEAMERS. DATES OF DEPARTURE FROM NEW YORK FOR THB MONTH OF NOVEMBER, | Sails, | Damage. | ‘Steamers. PORT OF NEW YORK, NOV. 8, 1872. REPORTED BY THE HERALD STEAM ge a AND HERALD WHITESTONE TELEGRAPH LIN! Sroamakip ip Earthia Br), Wi Watson, eres on 22, via eeacete: and 601 to CG 3 Oct lat 4710 N, k Di 50 We at it 1 Pat, cated aah wea cee res eee : mehip. Dound éast; at ‘AM, Int 40 45, lon nl at 9:30 AM, lat 40 eamship, bound Fah irae eee aD, Seed Caron on a on, 22 ane Coemusiiee 23d, wit if ‘and Dassongere toJG Steamship 8t Thomas (Br, Draketrk, eveniia Oct 22, via Ki mM, \, with nd 26 a, Ribena ee a areas ‘PSteamahip Pei Pe : and raner ~ Ait rit, yd at oe aes via Bi Ms Exper caeriheriy eat Keutgen. Passage , jon 7410; passed Srig Geo Lat, po rere ater Savan Ont ith mdse Go. Oct ie PEELS: orieryaa, a "an Sh ee for een mot pou get ont came sa iS epee eae Wet enone , Newbern, vist Robe ‘Richmond, mdse and pastenge rs tothe od roca S ectouen roca sane man hia ae any Ip geno 9 cay, with Be pe ang had, stro! Saws ice for ‘the first 16 Perigacteae Wm McKean fs with hi re Stes mdse tod ee ‘bow Seaman, Seaman, Alexandria for Provi- aneht IB Austin, Davis, Georgetown, DO, for Provi- aitht Ledy Bllen, Somers, Georgetown, DO, for Dy- Sache ME Rockhill, Rockhill, Georgetown, DO, for So- existing appropriation of $200,000, which is not sufficient for one-fifth of the work. There are be- tween two and three hundred bids, covering most of the quarries in the country. Johnson Sentenced to Death. A restaurant keeper was fined in the Police Court yesterday $100 and his livense revoked for re- fusing to entertain colored persons in his establish- ment. Charles Johnson, recently convicted on the charge of murdering his wife, was yesterday sen- (Venced to be hanged on the 10th of December meree Schr N C Paine, Jones, Baitimore for Boston. Sehr L © Hic! i, obineat, Philadelphia for B Schr Mollie Porter,’ Magatblin, Philadelphia for Boston: Passed Through Hell Gate. BOUND SOUTH. Dirigo, J Sepenette utes. lohnson, Portland for New York, with wiht ip ‘hhc “Bailey, New London for New York, UB for Ne arms Pe Revenue yectt eyachid H Baville, Lieut Stoddard, Mystic Rioharda (Br), Morgan, 8t Jonn for New York, wit Tore: rae oT Bel a B Js renga Providence for New York. Bohr Aun, ben's ‘w Bedtord for New York. Rehr Frederick ali, Chadwick, Portland tor New York, w Haven for New York. New aven for New York, 7, Glen or for New York. mn for New Yi ron, New London for New isaac Baker, ae New London for New York. Behr Mary & Carrie, Mosier, New London for New vo York. og Jane Emerson, Vanderbilt, Providence ior George- Sehr AJ Bentley, Robinson, New Haven or) Led York. Schr Mary E Tower, Lahoon, for New York. Schr Geo, Willias ae for New york. Pepe ee ta oa r Sylvester Sehr Frade Wind, ihe Somerset ro ade ia, r Mar; ves, s cht Mary Langan, Bi Burnett, Failte ae Ser York. Steamer Cnited a States, Davie River for New York, with mdse at assengers. Steamer Thoth “a Named Providence for New York, with mdse and passe: Stes letra, Mott, Providence tor New Y¥. th amer Electra, ott, ork, wi BOUND BAST. Schr James Smith, Smith, New York for Boston. Schr Fawn, Kelly, New York for Boston. echt HJ Raymon Cranmer, Alexandria for New Ha- “eepr Phil soeriden. EEN. Baltimore sak a ge Bohr Alon Bacon Crosby New ¥ york for N wport. ir on Bas for Ne Schr Memento, aviibar, jAtayey fot Schr Charlie Mille New Haven. Sen gee inard’'e A Nr ‘k for hoe Sehr 8 7 Wines Hal Hise, Ge rmetown gw for Braga Thos Hi for Ww ven. Schr Henr vali w York for Fall Ri fa a5 it or ge, Georgetown for New Bene ain, Cerson, Port Johnson for Boston. Schr Clotilda, Clark,’ New York for Sou Schr Harriet Ryan, bins, New York for Fall River. Schr Mail, Me: Now York tor ‘Greenwich. Wind at sunset N, light. Shipping Notes. Pacific Mail steamship Riisng Star, 2727 tons, is on the mammoth sectional dock at Hoboken, patching metal and doing other slight repairs. The screw docks foot of Market street have had up during the past week :—On the large dock—Three-masted schooners Moses Williamson, 338 tons, of Philadelphia, to repair keel, and R P Reynard, 587 tons, of Fall River, to calk and metal; brig Agnes Barton, 399 tons, of Balti- more, tocalk and paint; schr Mary Chilton, 70 tons, for examination, and propeller Capion to metal. The latter vessel is the second of the steamers recently built by Messrs C & R Pollion tor the Japanese government. On the middle dock—Brigs A B Petterson (Br), 186 tons, to patch metal; Clara P Gibbs, 197 tons, of Bangor, to re- pair keel and patch, and schr 8 © Noyes, 126 tons, to clean and paint. On the small dock—Pilot boat Christian Bergh, to clean and paint, and schr Idaac Oliver, 86 tons, to strip, calk and remetal. Messrs P J O'Connell & Co have had on their Erie Basin sectional dock schra Eclipse, Burchard & Torrey, Sarah 4& Jane, and Adele, all for calking and painting; brigs George, to patch metal, and Village Belle, to calk; Kalbfleisch for examination ; barge Sturtevant, to calk, and steamer Fanita, to paint. Marine Disasters. Suir Joun O'GauNe , At Ban Francisco 34 inst from shanghac, a 7 John Cookaley, seaman, « nulive of Bristol, Ee died on boa Sup TaRonacn, a Ssymaat Fer boyd Pass bad at from Liverpool, pase bark, name unknown, dis- ‘no ma in lata 66, lon 4440: she ‘wanted no B. le Ye in en’ the tof oi GR A St sea, belng also very dare, Grove om thi Packetay and a oedsand receiving other damage. The jr Borchester roceivod a few less iaportant injuries B. ried t San ult from Hon ear, Ses eae certn iene ise We during waren D Scour on Bearse, Sgn, Ind! ‘ot bora Sana, Peams, oe tnenal fr Das, Tots pat pte Eligabethport forFall Sour Norm LE scstac, Eaton, from port River, with sterd: on Napatree ee Poin pacar eaten ii fe Hiatt and feand rig ging may frou me for Hi ‘dem ‘om, tered & hurrica - Seon b Pro vite fanded joa here i Pe Bristol, ronan, it made on Thursda: Signe hea CHa fe are ballast was thrown over- Poy at Bro: Bator ctamept jeete C8 A HERALD BRANCH . New Orleans for Bors ja for New York, Oct 10, Schr Francisco, Ooty tat 8%; on iat WO uaNaMw for Sant Ports. sca Paechee Sept 6—Passed, Fre bi a ts rant = Loree A dcp bccdibinaie, Barve, York. JettNallod Sarabrook Castle, Smithy) Sister Pot, Matta, tenon sei, cane a als Sh J a ate eee van, B ‘Oat ‘Hillman, from Bremen ‘for! Ba! papers. raaipia tor Sterne eg atmourH, E, Oc Withetm Kisker, mebiee 5 Ses fake tee put ia wits leas of aatlay | , Hercules, Lincol carson Ot 1 Assam Valley, Robertaon,) | Giga, Oat 1o-Arriveds Bnewpay Pur back ith, ba bark By, Co Corr bay yt on on scgount 0 meri for lew York or oats for. Ph Antwerp, York. ie Ee bo York, rey nd areas " antices, itless, Coombs, ‘ale! yng ge = gatas ict vo Foye, from Rotter-! dam for New Yi Off the eMart Btn, Kit Carson, Spencer, from Antwerp| for Valpai fiynay Oct 18—Passed through Rentions ur Frith ball » trom Gothenburg for, bark bared Seranton (Br), Hil He Be, A ONOLULY, ined tn part DA Ste gusta, oder Sand rem motenmsy Ne mp Nevada: i Biothen, Auckland; 9 Seorges Starbuck mirror 3a Ot m, Ca). copes dase from mship General Sher- Parte pale dasa | railed fair L Porter, ork a walk River; ilth, brig Eagle, Greenwood, ¢ 4 Hi Ann’ Ne ‘York; rn. Mi Wed 22d, for New Y ed Stinaia, ar rived 33 cae ‘Cook, ‘ou. ee Philadelphia, Ranges! Poiana lied epee, Fay, peat G2 an Prane! zone epanicn, on Ook attived: Pon Pons “iit, Oct 12—Arrived, Mary M a Piekett, Arrivetl bac bre Break are Dew ea Spree, i a ter, aay 1 rt Oct 26, bark Eveni a) eerie Brine Ramire: 1. jue Se -scerot, hace Uaioe; American Porta," Noy pare, er Ws, na or CC Rig od aan niladetpa Pai ee || brig A das Ross, Pave oe a eas Addl Addie M, St Michaels; M WA Newcomb, New Or- Some ane: Bm D Finney, Elwell, Charleston, Riverside; barks Constance, Starlight, and a foot ot about 10 schire rae ed, barks Kate —_ Greyhouna, and Seot- peaaaves, Boston: tes Saar bk fees, Maeeeyehort Victoria (i, a (Bo Groner Archangel en eee a eg P| an GR Sared, exhr Gaboe, Dyer, oe Nov Cleat: | brig Almon Rowell, Ather- "Sev ho Davia, Pasteldge, forse nape BH ARLESTON, Ost sl—Arrived, ships Uncle Joe, Ren- aeeie masa Ui a New ¥. aa Arriyed Seamsnip, Sout ea Ware Bb, Hocken Rio Janclto. rae Bhai ee snyder mitt - act hata ; plaled-sehre AH Jebyih wh] Griffin, W: Sp ata ty Ap a Soran ett moe mo wibaaeed on oii Baltimore for Rio Ja-| r Gore: brig. it, Cnapinan, foe Bio Je sehr ‘Adelia, Jor Ha ALVESTON, naa Oct 28—Cleared, brig Margaret, Smithy) | ianporn Lt Oct 29—Arrived. sehr A 0 sailed Nov 1 for Danver eu ae vOotos Arcved: ae mship Kingeton, ‘Ja, i rarhc ba rpece ane ins 8.1 i from Havant via Florida ports; schr Mischief, Hunter, ships Woter! trom Liverpool; Advance, rison, and Antarctic, ig, Metooker, fom do barks Aiton ot Marie, Privat, from Bordeaux; Angels (Sp), Liuhi, Cleared—Steamfhip Tap) ane hannock, Key we wa ne Keyes ake al ae oe hei 7p fe ¥ arate ar Fass Oc ‘Oct’ Oct SOA Bays Wet ey London; pntonr Roate (ORFOL! park Doctor OR tan sr, Chambers, tnt = fire nee Maggie Marsd disraaoa, Decker, and farang ¥ Vaughan, iW roy S—-Arrived, schre Jotm H Pat Kel soe 3G Fell, Nlexerson, ny Routh A migors i on” anal Bacon, Newt ARe Hen nm; Ann a 1c Li ins, 6 ibs, Ohiase, New York; Thos B ete yin, Po oe aR ark Cher Rake be st pe ait Coss, Maced oo ilaabethp for i en loskey, 40 for rao: John ieee cay do for Norwie i No 41, 8, do; Isaac oh all Hamlet, Bron ohn Hickey, Hulse, doz, Gertrude mea Belew, my New ing RR, No Letts, Clinton Raps Vena G Bushnell, Hoboken: Wi Bis 8 Coin ta fo: iain fo ii No oathort Beckwith, Ho. ken: Active, yg 5 ton Bila, rey gf W,Gritting, Stocking iilbert dicen, Bra sloops Proof Glass Dohart, d Soper auabra cdg MeePe Fret Glass Dohar, GAMBLE, Pete pelle. Noes Cambridge, Cle- bas pean ee ate ‘Same P80 P Bal. Ryder, ith). aeth ite ‘sea, pana, wis, Lewi for New Y. 7 PHILAD! Pan Ner Ae het pad Elwood, Har! lew a ;. Hannal , Fenni- Bae, CTT tee ayers Ha frst dates a earea’ donpaniy bone Boston ; sch Alburger, do; ie rhomas ‘Sricket been ats 'e , Crowell, Seca’ Ava A int Fal iver. Arrived, schrs Viney yard, Bai po’ 10, load. for New gr; Perey. ‘cotwall for New York; EH |, bark fioen Emm: Weoke, Liverpool woken, mite mm MISCELLANEOUS. courts of diferent States. No pui Commissioner: bis a RING, “Counmpliotet Law 86 bacalas, FFICE, Bi Corner of Fulton avenue and’ Bowrurnsirook. Open trom 8 A. M. to 8 P.M. on sun jay trom 3 to 8 P. he Ap tie oar DIvoRGES LEGALLY punt Novem! QosrpaerrrEs AN CONSULT DR, J. p ER SCHEN ot ween at No, 32 Bond