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Am Rooth's Theatre Mo Bowery Theatre Wales fa Verdot & Wes Joni, Lard Dros dvonry ‘han Franct ‘The Tammany 1) Wallach’ 1s | y Theatre! Onngrany Anvenrie Fretientt ‘The Returuss As fast as the votes are canvassed they will be forwarded to Tite SUN officeand displayed on trans. Parencies from our Windows thie evening. We hope hy is means to be able to announce before 10 P.M. that Mr. Greeley bas run largely ahead of his ticket in the elty, sad that the Tammany Ring hae deen smashed by the independent party of Tue Stn, On Wednesday morning Tk Sen witl give the fol election returns of the clty and State, aad of all the States which elect to-day, Remember this: Vote for Horace Gresley to-day, and bay Tee Sen tomorrow, which shine ail, price two conta Denoeratic ballots, with the name of Tonacr Greener for Comptroller, can le procured at Tun Bux air to-tay — Cut the Horace Greeley Democratic ticket from our a ing colimns this morning, and wote tt — ocratic Mov the Di moc The Great D: The movement o: ments parts of the State in support of We Gneerny is astonishing. ‘The rank and file of the Democracy—Tammany, Mozart, Dem ocratic Union, and al!—are going for him at 9 surprising rate. If there were a little more time, we really believe that this movement would Lecome so universal that the old Dem ocratic eandidute for Comptroller would be withdrawn, and Honacn Gremeny, the benevolent, honest, truly democratic states: man, wonld be substituted in his place, It is notorious that Judge Ane, who was nomi- nated by the Democratic Convention, doesn't want the cilice, and we presume that he will fully agree with our reasons why all honest Democratr—and Judye ALLEN is one of them—should voto for Horace Greeny Push on the column th Up with the noble old banner of Jerrenson, Jackson, and Van Buren; and while the band plays Hail Columbia, let us march to the polls and there proclaim by our ballots that, wha ever else may hapy ev The Office and the Man. Some of the friends and admirers of Mr, Grer.ty do not show as much zeal intrying to bestow upon him the Comptrollership, as they would if they did not regard the office as below his deserts as a party leader, and ug inferior to his talents a3 a philosophi ptatesman, ured hy the gront servier he has rendered to the Whig and Republi ean parties, and by his a philanthropist and n reforms, there woulde on a superficial view soem disparity between the v tobe bestowed aud the merits of t ficiary. But it should be remembered that for fifiy years past the Comptrollership has been re. garded as oneof the most important offices inthe State. It has been held by many emincut citizens, aud has ofttimes proved to deastepping stone to etill bigher stations, Accorling to the provisions of the Consti- tution, and of general and permanent statutes, the Comptroller has always been clothed with weighty and varied ry sibilities, In ad. ro achievements as to be a w of the re » ben ernor, At ® later period Cituncn wag elected Comptroller, and the manner in which he fulfilled his trust revived recollec- tions of the purer and better days when Marcy and Wnrrorr sat in the State Hall, His administration as Comptroller gave him #0 strong « hold apon the Democracy of New York that they presented him as their eandi- date for the Presidency ia the last National Convention, Lat the people, then, remember that by eheting Honace Gi bY Comptroller, they are not only conferring upon him an important office, but are preparing the way for his advance to the highest stations in the Republic, Vote for Honack Guen.uy | ele A Terrible Revenge—The Press as a Publie Protector. All the prominent London journals of the h of this month published a letter with the heading, “ A Lost Child.” The story of this loiter was very sad, Lieut..Col. J. F. Mrekin wrote that on October 8 his child and nurse disappeared from his house at Kidwell’s Park, near London, and had not been seen since, ‘The child was his youngest, a little girl only seventeen months old, ‘The nurae had reeently been notified to leave her employer's house. Sho had snid that she would be revenged for her dismissal. Whou the mother found that she did not come home, she thought of this threat; she searched the wardrobes, and discovered that the nurse had taken with her clothing for the child as well as for herself, thas leaving no doubt of her disappearance being inten. tional, Col, Hrorns was absent in Ireland at the time of the kidnapping. For one weck the distrossed father adver- tised in the Loudon papers for his loet child. ‘There cama no respo Then he wrote this letter, containing a most pathetic appeal toall who by ony possibility might be able to aid him in the search. Te appealed to the m Ilions of sel! made detectives who might be found in the fathers and Innd, sayings: mothers of “They alone can conceive the awfal agony we sur. fer ax one sad OAy after anotlier patees mway, wid ur hopes of scone oy are stil deieired. Tiry can also rnderstand our still deoper dread for the (tur: lost and forever hidden from us, Hhe rhould grow tip i poverty, ignorance, and pet any rine, No form ot bereavement could be so erribte, and we appeal to militoms of Kindly hearts to save us from thisawtal lot.” Perhaps no 1088 could find wider or ceeper sympathy from the poblic than ench a ter. rible home sorrow os this. But how, it may be asked, could this sympathy do any good ? and what benefit could be derived from the publication of the letter, in addition to the previous Advertisement ? ‘The answers are plain. The publicity Which the newspapers of @ country ive to crime in all the details of its commission, the description of the supposed culprits, their conjectaréd toute of their flight, and nll other matters connected with it, is one of their most precious duties. Few persons in the community know how many villains Lave been brought to yrnish- ment through the agency of the press. The papers convey, far and wide, the news that an awful murder hes been com- mitted ; they describe the man who is thonght tobo guilty; they tell their readers tho di- rection in which he is supposed to have fled; and many persons nre thus pat on the watch, who otherwise would know nothing of the crime, ‘This is just what happened in. the great Pantin tragedy in Paris. AN ¢hnt the gendarme who arrested Traursasy, the ‘in, know of the murder or of ti derer’s appearance, was what he had road in the Paris pay Several of the London journals dvvoted leading articles fo the loss of Col. Hickin’'s child; and the 7/egraph related the follow ing incident as an illnstration of the value of newspaper intelligence in cases where it could hardly be expected to be useful, and at places fur distant from the place of publica- tion: ¢nur. made certain remarks upon a stat whieh had beon hunited, und had fallen with a broken leg Into the ses near Mi Several days nfter, the ear. cass of the helpless er ay uetually identified by our description, d ng ee northern shore 1 dition to these, the Legisldture has been wont to confer upon him from time to time special trusts and duties of the gravest character, The result of the bestowal of theso ordinary and extraordinary powers upon the Comp. troller has been to make him, and especially unter the existing Constitution, quite as in. fluential an officer as the Governor, The position, therefurs, hos been deemed worthy of the ambition of our moat distin. guished public men. ‘To verify this stat ment we need only name Samurn Jonks, Jomx V. Henny, and Jotrx Savacr, who held the office under our first Constitution; and Winiiam L. Marcy, Sins Wricir and Azaniau C. Fraca, who held it under the Constitution of 1821; and Mtuiann Pua MORE, WasiiNcTon Hu and SANFonD E, Cronct, who have held it under our present Constitution, ‘All of these men won such distinction while discharging the duties of the ¢ trollership, that it became their stepping. stone to loftier honors. Jonus was subse quently made Clincellor of the State, Sav AGE was transferred from the Comptrolle chair to the bench of the Supreme Court, whero he presided as Chief Justice for fifteen years. Mancy became widely known by the almirable skill with which he performed his duties as Comptroller, While holding this office he was appointed a Jadge of the Su preme Court, whenee he was sent to the United States Senate, which latter position he resigned on being elected Governor. He laid the foundation of his great administra tive fame as Governor, and as Secretary of War and of State, by his six years’ service in the Comptroller's offies at Albany. Wricur sucoeedud Mancy as Comptroller. Near the end of his second term, and after achieving distinction scarcely inferior to Mancy's as an executive officer, he was chosea as Marcy's successor in the Senate, During the twelve years he sat in that body, confrouted by such compoers a8 CLAY, CaLuoun, Wens?Ex, and Benton, he so bore himself as a statesman and a debater that he became the leader of the Democratic party of the nation, Frit. mone, while yet Comptroller, was elected to the Vice-Presidency, and soon afterwards, & the death of Tayion, became President ; thus, almost at a single step, advancing from the State Hall at Albany to the White House at Washington. Hunr followed Fi.taone Comptroller, and wre he had served out half his term he was elected Governor over Bermoun, after an excited canvass, Cuvnen, though on the same ticket OF the Bristol Channel: and while It was eventual Mhown that the 4 fll the poo: hey. roved ho obeys the citation to Sigue © Of public opiuion, aud so helps te enforce ustiee, The sorrowful letter of Col, Hick, and the newspaper comments upon it, ecattered the account of his dreadful afftiction all over England, Every parent in the land could partly realize the apprehension, the grief, the agony of those who had thus lost their child ; it was a visitation of misery which might come into any household ; and it was thought that if all these parents would observe earcfully those whom ‘they met, reflect carefully on all that they heard of any person who might possibly prove to be the nurse, and speak of the kidnapping to all their acquaintances, the guilty woman would not long remain hidden, This im- pression proved to be correct, The nurse was finally found, with the child, in a low neighborhood in Liverpool, It is thought the was about to sail for America, Many of the London papers contain articles on the arrest ; and they attribute it to the publicity given to the occurrence through the prees, All the journals recommend a severe pun: ishment for her, There js something which arouses admira tion in this office of the press, It contributes to the punishment of crime by a far more effective method than the cunning conceal it of the detective; and all citizens of New York who appreciate the morits of the press should prove it by casting their ballois for Honack GieeLwy tod — Slandering Horace Greeley, The base slander of HOKACEQREELEY which Mr. 8, B. CirrrenDen has just had publisaed through his obscure paper in Brooklyn, finds a ready echo in a Copperhead journal in the western part of the State, The Lockport Union repeats CarrrenpEn’s calumny against Mr, Gneecey with all {ts original malignity, ‘To say that Mr, Gneeupy is an honest man is, according to Mr, Cuyrran DEN’s echo, “imply an unimitigated false hood.” And why? Because “every one who has read the newspapers knows that Mr. Gneeey has never accounted forthe Irish Re- lief Fund that went into his hands some years ago.” ‘Thus the atrocious falsehood respect ing Mr. Greerey is repeated and reaflirmed. But it will be in vain. Irishmen, who know that Mr. Gnexiny never held in his hands a cent of the Irish Relief Fund, but that it was all intrusted to CHAnies O'Conon, will you not rebuke this outrage upon the fair fame of your country’s faithful friend? with BeyMoun, was chosen Licutenant-Gov- | Will Z9p not prove by your suilrages today 1969. THE FRIEND OF IRELAND, ba tay 708 ona ip br for 1] eof Tih sent sheen 4 Har ron counrny mencnaxis. |THE REALMS OF FASHION. freedom % is rupning for the Coort, The 8 Twentyewtxth Street Gambling Mr. Omrrex pes claims to be a Republi. fa rapping for and the Tap rersn warcnwonp, ronace| "0 « THE MARVELLOUS HISTORY OF ANEW can, and yet by disseminating such a slander vote for them both, We fight GRBELLY AND Vrorone! Spider Dev File YORK MERCHANT'S WIDOW. mit 5.9 als The Twenty-sixth street gambling honse has ———— he does his best to defeat the lending Repub- ee isthe, Listes to 6 organized @ campaign for the winter on an original | A Queen of the Drawing Room Ri lican candidate. He has also taken up the} = Mr. BAntrerr, in his history of “Modern From a: and comprehensive syatom, after the Baden-Baden her Reverses-The Future Autocrat cause of old Jndge Lort, and has thas labor- od to accomplish the defeat of Judge Woop- KUFP, another prominent Republican candi- date, But that is his own affair, just as is his prodilection for having his journal filled with disgusting billingsgate and blackguard falsehoods. Let us leaye Cirrrespen in the contempt he cerns, and let all men with true hearts goto the polls today and vote for Honack GReeiry! $a. Wateh the © Agitators,”” published in 1851, says of Horace Gnasugy, the workingman's candidate for Comp. troller: The Tribune hind now become a Incra- tive concern. Tt was the first enterprive in which Horace Gi y had so succeeded as to make it pay, Instead of heaping up a princely fortuné upon the receipts, ax he might honorably have done after so much herd labor to establish it, he determined to make an experiment of the doctrine of associated labor, and to il he devo! the Zrbune. The concern was divided into om hundred shares of $1,000 each, and, excepting To the Fyttor of The Bun : Sin: “Concurring in the sentiments of Messrs. Michael T. Gibbons and J, W. O'Brien, as expressed in thoif letters to the Trish voters of this city, in your idence of 90th ult. and Ist inst, reapcetively, I feet compelled to kay, with a eenne of free regard for the Interests, intelligenes, ond independence of all trne Trishinen, that it behooves them, in a apirit of the exercise of thelr rights and diseretion, as adopted Amerteans and voters, to east thelr ullota for the friend of their race and the friend of humanity, in the person of Horace Grectoy. I belteve tat the Iristinen of New York and elsewhere who know me kchool. The house is but a few doors west of Broad way, and not far from the aristocratic St. James Hotel, It is a five-story brown-stone front, and te jod by a score of the card fraternity. Women, elegantly dressed, flutter in amd out its doors, During tho early evening the Mutter of alike and laces and the shimmer of jewels crow most britiinnt. The women are whatare torued by gamblers clegnut cappers. They inyelgle many wealthy victiws img bling dew. e-hal’ ihe number of men at this honse aro young and handsome men, drowsod in the richest of clothes, ‘hey provemt to represent so aveaue and other aristocratic neighboriow young men have eneaged day board for t Dress Bewitching Display of the News Some mouths ago Mes. Grundy had a deal ( say regording the failure of a prominent merchant off this city, ond of the cousequent destitution of hit family—a wife and daughter, Later the ruined mer- chant died, and died a pauper, The supposed friends of the ence wealthy qnecn of fashion deserted her in her aflliction, and reused to vender the heart- broken widow and daughter any assistance what ever, One by ons all the euperfuous articies of wearing apparel and jewelry wero disposed of, and i nh ‘ J. | 8 MDtown inshionabie boardirg housee—oue in | finally starvation stared shem in the taco, As a last reserved portion for ihe original partucrs, they | Well, do me the eredit to neknowledge that any nd- | hon Pane uidest of the ceew ave. men who Late pride Mypelyotoberib dene geteal a The vote for Mr. Grextxy to-day will | wore sold out to such of the mou in the estab- | Vice T should take the liberty to give them, pro- | traveltod extengively. Five of them have been run- , Mra. ners for New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Cin- clonatt wholesale houses. They have a more extead ed circle of acquaintonces than uny other class of menon the contivent, They know thousands of country merchants who visit New York to purchase goods, and the pites of each. Thesethaye day board at the hotels, like their cou jubs, are agents Of this gambling house, A sqnare gaine of thro, keno, roulette, monté, oF ceeds from honest convictions and disinterested motives, The truth is, our people have been maide the pio- neers, rand army, and reserve of Democratic #uc- cesses heretofore. Clothe} with the panoply of their fMithfal adherence and constituency, corrupt, unpa- triotie, and ungrateful men have become elevated to known and Hiberal dry goods merchant of tis citys relating ber sad history, and asking aid. ‘The kinds hearted mun provided her with a large sum of moneys and advised her to establish somo business to give her @ livelihood, Alter variows plans had beem discussed, it was decided that the widow and her daughter should go to Europe, snd, having informed estonnd the Ring Democrats, and they know it, but they hope to count him out. Our fricuds must watch the canvassers. ‘There will be many thousands of Democratic bal- lots east with the name of Honacr Gren lishment as could pay for them. Each share en- titled the owner to a vote in proceedings of the Company, and it #0 continues to this day.” Vote for om, Even the Copperheads are voting for 7 of . wf 1 ‘ n . and, rt ywer, have held its reins so | rouge et uoir is not played at this hoare, Gan vi re wry, Unless his friends are vigilant, | Gaamuar! The general rush iv his favor is re- hed ley gy ically. that the honest bl not interested ve he psy rohiacd ieageit bepecshi tl gle hahe ge era Se these will be counted as straight | markable, Men of the most opposite political | simplicity, and unswerving devotion to oor lowed there, ‘Tho association is a combination | w York, a al 6 millizery a race have hed to be held largely accountable for all ‘Their ranners obtain ‘ ; Din cas to ail | drewemaking wtore, ‘The mothor and daughter re- Democratic tickets. Thoy are, however, | opinions go for this houest man, Everybody ier misdoings, Sreles How jthey effect this it is not | turned from Puris in the last French stoumer, quite dintinct from the ordinary Democratic | fights mit Gneeue welatt of their havent eohenghe, snd onbureGares: | tion They ‘arent ‘all"the eeumdcrseentions reat { Throush tho Iiberality of & relative, « fine straight ballot. In the first place, they are two inches longer than the regular Demo- theit Indy companions of the millions bie exertions to the triampl Horace Greeley Have been « Democrat, bat I re from among the families phowse in one of the faabionadie thoroughfares up if the young ledy bas a brower Tn tho Fifth Senate District there is a sharp town was secured as a residences, and last week contest between Mrcnasi Noutox, Tammany | Bore, wile somesande ica tavorite with | cards couched as follows wero sent out for the cratic ballot; in tho next place, they are] Demogrot, and Jacon Fnanp, Tommany Repub- | PRe,,thi the wbsence of ‘thoy become $e | “ opening” printed in much Inrger type; end thirdly, | ticun, Iexanivs Fiysy, Democrat, is also run- | (ng of our salvation Boma of than " to be believed that Mies tounge in the i Me —— -—— the print is spaced out, fo that the matter o¢- | ning, but it is understood that itis for tho enciit | {0b any other than the Democratic tekst: nnd s of thelr respective Donraing hover after dine Tang, Pa pleased to, ave you, tnergct the Laat ie ore q 8, Now wedo not | ¥a8 expressed in my hearing year by a ecrtain ingle with the ors, They are asked ow m4 reses, » bonuels, &e., cuples much more room than In the Ring of Sua who pays his expenscs, Now we do not Basile M owes saked, “What will #ith rich men, aud "9 gentlemen out with them, ore Wet ek ticket, wish to be understood as particularly admiring | jen'ge ( ; Then, as Wt by aecltents as tuey converse’ on New | | NO—We— Men are Voters of all parties, go in and smash tho | Mr. Nortox, but as between him and Mr. Sane hy," with a confident smite and cold-tooded | York'life, gambling helia are spokum of. Justa look | Pr Sine atin indifierence, he replied, * Olt ing; they are all into some of the moat elegant ones some night Is | iy right, The Trish will Vote the Democratic ticket ; suaxeated and agreed upon, They xo to the Twents More Were Seat co. the tela ves eat we do not hesit Norton ought to be je to say that vil Ring tieket, and then be snre that your bal 7 fo onest Demo. | they can't vote any other; you needn't trouble your- | sath street house, of course, ‘The stranger is not | former friends of the decoased merchant and family, lots are fairly and honestly canvaraed, A perry PS he My ad) by ines bate | nelver bout them. ee asked 0 play. Hd teen a bait-dezen, tine-sppearing | aud tho ontouishment of the snobs ean reailly be " P ti an id Republicans to vote for Nortox, but not | "Tr the thousands of clever, pare-minded, honest | mon at the table toying with ivc ps. Others oo: oeter rr little watchfulness, and you can make tell re phe v orien Honac rr Irish voters of thia city had heard this, as Tdid from | cupy maguiticent settecs aud chairs, Lasury sur. | im™eined On receiving the dainty little missivee, svery vote fu the lips of one of Taminany’s greatest sachems, how | rounds the apartments, and insteadsof a hell," ax | Notwithstan yeir and position, all w eva coe — insngideyon INAK te thle tuealy pride und inde: | (ie vow ototior bes tertatagd: be Rate ae Geode ue | sts he arvtecsel esata nae ry are any da you ty ie nly pride and ‘inde- ¢ have tt . he an ay ceived cards attended, 6 "opening * GHEE ES = Tho Ring Democrnta nro seared. Within | pendence, of charneter wold vote. the ‘Tammany elegance. He is oftred a sent near the table. He | Cong tive of elesent private cuties gee Hornee Greeley is a Truc Democrats | lket?. In tho name of thot: fatelligence aad com: | looks on and segs men accumulating stack afice | © 006 live of elegant private eurriagce wes drawe i‘ - forty-eight hours tho Tammany rulers have ad- | jon sense, let me ask the Irish for teir own sake | stack of white, blue, red, and black « pa, and | up ta front of the honse, leading many to infor tbat The Jate Lament A. WILMER, who re. mitted that the popular uprising for Honace | to act Indeben ently and fe ie “ cre for once glanging eae i tr by pg ad SE some grand ree n WOS progressing, One of peatedly ny te her people do, for whomsoever drawn to the table. he playa, he C ‘ bichon bila a : ELEY Leentiso ie Gneatey, irrespective of party, has floored their ig 9 part of Fe lene as ho tas ts monty") own. Those 2 cu Yon’ Feportrs Label bec the wee oppored tho Know-Nothing party, thus de- | calculations, Tue Svx has been be od by en- wot like religion ; whom he ses playing winning are members of | at the hour named, and was courteously ‘adritted seribes him in his work entitled “Tho Pross | thusiastic voters of all parties foi ell parte of atin Re wa ee MIRE GATOE Gi Lat Mine eta ee Gang,” published in 1851: “ Grienraey woeks | the State for ballots for Mr. Creever, aud they | d!-pensations of the food RE ne i AT eth Winco e no society, and has none except that of per- | have been most liberelly supplic ere has that whieh Vor, aud are t with thes heir brilliant gant- ri 1 re biing hells, Not honest i is torued, A fi i" harp sopremesah Mabrrirertd edhe sons who desire to make soutething out of | been no such furor for any one candidate in Sa hk ye ARO | tn Paris the court dres {the associates of th ker was employed to wo May be see on him, Tie is the most good-natured person in | MARY yeare before, If the honest vot Kei orners of Twonty-aizth ntivet and Broadway | design many coxttimes which were dlaplayed in the the world. All grades of society are alike to edand recorded, the 7ridnne philosopher wi Ibe ta wan Duka: Teaee wear ictnonae bane weer front drawing rooms of house on the afternoon " y P ed, T hie eleg r He will stor 1 vith tt Victorious. Bast night, at the various public or Iriel evel, ts near the wi mentioned we seene in the elegant salou, filled a AO WHE BOD and converse Will the | sesadtaabout town, Gasuer stock ranged high, | ence, eve ut To wi ws at the I ies, and crowd | witha of our most prominent I Congressman and carman alike. Hiseympn: | and not « ia Ganid: la tuke Ww bet det he m the ime the pt ple gif th Ry The of fualbo the most, be witch ot toile? : ald be foun re wet | of men fond now int e-like into higher soc: edir rilllant an sin) ladant thies are with everybody.” In other words, | him, Lot the independent votors go in for Guxe for the (eu ein | econ ther did wot appear’ the vurlons dresses, Hona ELEY Ie Vhs tadphe, | bar: Lin ae a er L fail to wdvise or | Contral Purk, & own by two. pr ONACE ELEY 4 man of the people, | rey with a will, and the polit ligarchios will ple from the highest of | may always be din blacks ale die and they will elect him to the office Vote for GnmeLey! of now the comfort of my and the good contcientionsness of having done rth the best they don't Ogit a aprous, and the Jauntiest of Ince expe, dresses we were shown several specimens, oue of ——— Comptroller to-day. without regard to party elected, in spite | ryttly to my fellow Tray this beearse st is | apy - Which was a costume of violet colored pitsh ” be . , " “ ho . Heer he Recovery of n Stolen Child—A Line i pe aa x F é lan 2 chinery, in tho Empire | thonght heresy now.. # faith to say : with a long train, but short enough infront ta Of cabals and party machinery, in tho Empiro | Wongit, herey | Nor ne arty, and the rei Girl is the Detective, Gixplay the feet, and lined throaghoat with « hite, The Onondaga stone man is as great a puz- | State. Is not such a consummation most desout- | pong ot the man bre aspersed who anres to confront From the London Telegraph, Oct. 0. #ilk. A short cape is also worn with the dress, and. the Demoeratic giant, He Is shorn of his locks, sud d say let him come on to mortal combat; #0 say thousands of others, who are willing to break a Taner upon the cr. T hove all Irishmen ere Jong will be found doing the same, Let those of one old army nol forget the teachings of the past. We mutt do much to gulde and protect our people, Let ns do it manfally, nnd eleet Horace Greeley, who de- serves our gratitide und devotion, “ JAS. R, O'BEIRNE, —— Ono Irishman Remembers ly to be wished? All who desire this re must vote for Horace Grenier, piesschacha ete The Father Mathew men will all vote for Horace Gueetey of course, He hves by their great principte of total abstinence. ——— There aro three candidates for District At torney: 8. B. Ganviy, Tammany; E. Detarieny Swrrm, Republican ; and J. MH. Axrnox, Demo- cratic Union, All are good men, and Ganvis will be elected. But Suir: and Awruoy will poll the full strength of their respective parties, Ina contest so tixed up as this, it is interesting to know that there are candidates whose names no party man will seratch from his ticket, And zle as ever, and, despite the eftorts to prove ft of recent origin, gives evidence, if learned geolo- gists are to be believed, of an antiquity remote enongh to pique the curiosity of the united body of American archwologists, Dighton rock and the Old Mill at Newport are nowhere in compari- son with this mysterious relic of the past. Professor James Hatt, has made a critical examination of the statae, and is decidedly of the opinion that it never existed in the flesh. There is no authentic instance, Ko says, of a petrified man, and there eannot be in the nature of things, It was therefore wroaght by human ayency, and, ax Professor Hau. thinks, in an era long antertor to historical tines. ‘This opinion is not founded on his knowledyo of art, which may om owing facts, which have been obtained most anthentic source, will compicte t Hory, Intaerto tmpertecity ‘related, of the restor lion of Col, Bickte’s child, and the capture ef the woman Barry, At the same time they will, without prejadicing any gene that may be set up m defence of the ae throw some light on tue motives of conduct. She had been in the service of Cob. Hickie for ahout two months, and was under notice to leave, on account, ms she imagined, hiuts with the other servants of the house, Miles O'Rei the last six or seven years whe had been in as diderent sttaations; but usually referred to ont To the Fattor of The Sun. My ar ike — for acharacter. It'ins Leen ascertained. sin Sin: An editorial in this morning sSvx, under | stole the little girl that be had, in two or three the bead of “Horace Grecley and Miles O'Tte.!ly." | cases of dismissal from employment, threatened to Lad the effect of making one Democratic Ir tiin | be revenged. The wine cause of ber veins dis. Change his views. Previous to reading the article | charged from Col. Hickie's vervice ws thnt she Was waded to he was astanneh Democrat, and may be | found unauitable for the duties of hor position in now, bat alter reading it he ¢ tically annoane a | jis household, It may be mentioned as a curious Wis Intention to Fite mit ley." Buch is the influence of ‘Tue Sux which shines for all. © Lone 4 wide sash of violet plus pound with ‘attr Iringe is worn on one side. With this drews are of white satin, wad ‘The siippers to be worm some material, lined with nd having purple #ilk heels, and orna~ mented with large steel buckles nother dress was of black cashmere, trimmed biack guipure lace and looped up at the side the front breadth deing short and the back loope: (” panty with long train, ‘The lower skirt is of Dinck sik, with ® siraight flounce ald on in fine . Phe waist i# male loose and full with wide lappels of nee to match, ‘Nght coat sleeves. A suc- cession of smail silk bows edged with luce are Justened at the back of the waist with pleasing of- fect. A loose mantle of eashimere trimmed with Ince and belted and fitted in at the back, transforms this dress mto a beautiful walling suit, ‘Au exceedingly rich dress was of dark ercen sill the lower skirt trimmed with two bias tloances the wame material, euch leaded by « bias baud of reen velvet the same shade as the dress, ‘The t was trimmed with two very wide bands each side of the front hile bows o1 vel= of compluints which were the subject of | pl raring Friend ot incident that, Within the past twelvemonth, sho has heen In the serviee of & well-known dutective and * : : ; ilar band at the ubove all, vowe for Ho: TRewLey, may it shine, principal of an“ ingutry of oot it with a si etn or'tnay hot be considerable, but on its wequite- | °° ov for Honace Gasuuny ——-— When Eligubeth Burry tet Col, Hickle's house, at The waist ice and trimucd a ho yen aated VOTE VOR GREELEY, Bo'clock In the afternoon of Oct, 8, with the eluld with deep: ments as a man of science, and therefore pos- | Where are the Fenians? Will they not pias intruated to iter caro, she went Co the Taplow Park . Moh hy Or arene: Season high valtte as furas it goes, The cheml- | alt ho found in the ranks to-day working for | A Wesson for Moneylews Young Mon—How station, where shied 40 walt neaely halt | eS nah edad power“ gemigt i ; ‘egabe? on hour fo r London. None f cal and geological evidence satisfies him that the | Jlonsce Gueexey, the friend of lveland? Horace Grecicy Got bie First “Jeb tm | te “Omen noticed her; bun ie happened | Skire with ® narrow platted flounce, be. statue had lain for ages ia the spot where it was | = ———— ake ee Who wns her futiow. | Wide bias bend of bluck | ve divcovered, It seems that the namo of THomas W. | fp Greeley, fa his sity Oars lass ark errbieex elves, whe Coens Tt was foun ity i rem mbered, inarceum- | Crenke isto he put on the Repub in hallo ©] twist of fortune as anybody, To-day ne stands hi; wus He ree A a the ale froot ai ee Vent position, imbedded in a gravel stratum, and | candidate for Judy he Supreme Court, Meny | m Now York. Tn 1681 he entered the eity * with i. OF afternoon toilettos we were suowm, covered with luvial deposit three or four feet | Republic ce s aswindle, saving | ten dollars in my peeket, sumer etothing worth | Nurthwestorn 7 Ural gerne po hen ged if tte erie 1 ln thickness, ‘The gypsum of which it is composed | that ax Judge Canxe was a Copperhead during | perhaps as much more, neatly all on my beck,” and | dee Ag O44 rlinmed up the sides of the skirt by has been eroded to the depth ofen inch on the back | the war, they will not vote for him now, For our | @ slight knowledge of printing. “I knew no hu- | local p crip bvhe ia i we pity ribs we Pract f chiur was struck b: wurplice Waist, trimmed also with Llack ki throngh the action of running water, and this re- | part we advise everybody to vote for Jon R, | man being within two buwdred miles,” says he, and | batteniar was struck by the sivoves ticht to the ‘elbow, and flaisned by a wide sult, whether the statue was buried or was grad- | Baavy for that office, because we think be will | MS rustic manners and address helped to thwart | told her fitter, who ev ; | Pudle of ha ually covered by the alluvial deposit, must have tor Judge than Mr, Crrmce, | Dim In seeking “a job." “However, the world was | und a detective, assuming the character of n lody: fia cray silk onderskirt trimmed withw make a great deal be 40, too, we advise every fuse thanettes. "went Ge nom eked the | Wide plated floance, Overdresspof gray coshive required a long period of years. Again, all’ before me; my persons] estate, tied up in a | howe tnepector, went te the Mouse and sakred the | Trimmed with rachiage of gray alt frivet ante te one to vote for Joun new lodger ber name. Khe wate 1 was Taylor; aud the offer, who hal been Informed of her maiden name, asked Whether it way not Fox. She answer- Pocket handkerehief, did not encumber me.” Ho ends to imitate fringe, pliited very tull, ‘The skine got board at en Irishman's house (McGolrick was Professor H. is looped up very much ut the ides With bows of says that the alluvial deposit | Foury for Supervisor, and for Honace Gnnwuey mast have accumulated slowly and through | for Comptroller of the State, Democrats and | the name) at $2.80 per week. Let him tell the reat, | i that ic was; and on ‘being further interroated | Cosmere and silk. iow of eilk fastened to che bald toany succeeding yours in m quict water, | workingmen especially ought to support Howace | Having Breuktusted, T began to randack tie eity | wos the privan whe hen tale Wee he at Ae soi itoel wile bakes cat hee et et ‘i Ka per R J , nw Wee, aml heading of bias ¥ td that the sides and ends of the pit | Greeury, i for work, and Ym my total tgnoranee traversed | mm locking for you," watd the detective, *and you | Amv. witha wide Mouver, and heading of as ‘dhe whence the statue was exhumed give 10 indica- tion that the soil has ever been disturbed since its deposition from water, As if this did not make out a pretty gpod case for the antiquity of the Onondaga man, the Professor chows that the theory of recent or artificial inhumation will not are tn my enstody, Barry, so fur from having taken affectionate eare of the ititic girl, had cropped its hatr close, pawned its clothes, and, for some days ut least, neuleeted and halt etarved it, ced, for a week previous to her discovery, the woman hail given way to drunicen. hess, She ts supposed to have ‘had £2 10s, in. her poeket when she leit; and the Httle that was left of streets where none could possibly be found. Iu the course of thot day aud the next, however, I must Have visited fully two-thiras of the printing oMers on Manhattan Island, without a gleam of success, It was midsummer, when business in New York ts habitually dull; and my youth und anquestionable wide velvet edged with biack, and gracefully tL ohe sides. Watst cat izh with reversof bl sleeves Light, with velvet cuts, and wide ivet sish. Dros of light blue silk, with long train trimmed with three wide folds or blae velvet edged with narrow white luce. ‘Tuule o Dine silk Uummed wilh one wide (old of velvet, alsa, Every workingiaan in Kinga county who respects himself, and te not the slave of party, will to-day vote against Wexny ©. Meneuy, candidate Sor Senator. Mr. Mvarny is the enemy of the Jaboring class, and is responsible for maintaining 4 frat hag herpalive tare tad tet AE] edawd with ince to correspond. — Waist cut square ber ile (arta Samigee eecn These | 0% the statute book the odious Conspiracy Inw, | KTeennese must have told against me, When I called | rink. Tie chal wae in eaelt Fobuet imei when | Over webct cinc'ent tast'es to oust, hea pear the test of sei ly h atthe Journal of Commerce, ts editor, Mr. David | takew from its home, that «few days’ deprivation of | With rudles of silk an antes ¥ - under which workingmen are punished for at- PL quisite costume was very much admired, and was’ statements are made by one of the most tenariting ‘to regulate ‘hel x i Male, blunuy told me 1 was ranaway apprentice | Proper und suMecient nonrishment had had no seri | ecu . . accomplished of living physicists, who has pHing gone their own affairs, Voto | trom some country office, which was avery natural, | USI! effects on its plivsical condition, Hurry hud | “Ardeaton or ball dreaes were nomero against Henny C, Meneny; but don’t fall to cast ‘NO Means, as Wo have slowN, OF paying her Passage | ay execediagly beautiful and stylish, One made a close study of the geology of ‘ U 2d though mistaken, presumption. T returned to my | to “America; end her assertion that ‘she dit not | Whiten erie, vopnd over white satin the andecks this State, und thoy will go far to convince intel. | TOU" ballot Ashe of Horace Guwecer, the | jodgings on Saturday evening, thoroughly weary, intend 19 sale she ravage Sy _seerotere Je Trirmmed with» pialted Aowuee of watte ectiae wnat igent persons that the statue was not the work | Workingman’s friend disheartened, disgusted with New York, acd re-| ing herself and the child py necdiework.” iter | ables bind Of Aatin above tt, on Which was embrat solved to shake its dust from my feet next Monday morning, while I could still leave with money tn my pocket, ‘and before it almslonse eoukt foreclose upon me, But that was not to be. “On Sunday afterneon and evening several young: Irishmen called at MeGolriek's tn their holiduy: saunterings abont town ; and being told that I was « young printer in quest of work, Interested them- selves in my effort with the spontaneous kindness of their race, Ove tong them happeucd to know & place where printers were wanted, and gave me of w crazy Canadian stone cutter, but emanated rather from some long extinct race, ‘The ques- tion now goes to the archwologists, who will probably discuss it through several generations, As to the stone man himself, could he be en- dowed with life and speech, he would doubtless assute us, in the verneoulur appropriate to his day taking to drink may be ascribed to x fit of remorse, when she had found tinte to reflect on the nature of ber act. The very natural inferences from the state- ment thas Barry bad been found tn Liverpool wis thatthe lermined on embarking for Americn ; Dut, og that inference 18 negatived b tie discovery Usat she was totally unprovided with mopoy to un- dertake te voyage, a retson for her choosing the port In question wrist be sought cleewhere, tne liad, It appears, some associations witl the place, ‘fud'had been married there. But hor friends would dlered w stmall vine of pink roso budsand green lea "The overdress, also of erdpe, was very much and festooned, and vines of buds and leaves humg from phe waist tothe bottom of the overskirt. cagsare, trimued, with Duds and leaves, and seeven, Price Of this dress, $400. - Avother was of flue white tarlétan, with founeem half way an theskirt. The overskirt wax looped. AL the sides, and the whole dress literally covero@ with small White atin bows. ‘I'he corsace wus eet ow, and around the eek was a row of sinail white fatih bows. The Germans—Democratic and Republi- can alike—are getting their ballots ready to vote for Homace Guruuey this moruing, They honor ‘the man who has had the courage to break with the bigoted sdvoestes of intolerance, and to say that every citizen should be free to drink lager orany other beverage on Sunday or any other fy vh J generat wt he fights mit Qaeetey, b, A ie ween to be few; and she Was not tn tho habit of Sf and generation, that he fights mit Greene aay witha Snbrtranee of tholaw, ‘The lovers | Feqnislte, Slrection wo thas on Tistube the dene. mentioning whem by mame, Too colons for any | en! Minis yr " a Peery) of freedom it G : ; el orate comment is the #i je truth ¢ a litle. M The World makes an insidious attack on lom fight mit Cuseuey, Peat Sac hae whee, barely \broe gaye a resident || Sieh re te a ewepanes wine prageicalia the ace, | 180 Another was of black tulic, flounced almost to the waist, and t skirt trimmed with bonus. ‘The corsage wus trimmed. al benas and pumings A pink embroidered en the oF». and small spra Ronenr €, Hurewxas, the De for Surrogate, It says that he “ comes trom one of the best families in the city.” ‘This may per- haps seem like praise to an aristocratic paper of joeratic candidate tective” who arrested Elizabeth Barry, snd that the police bad Duta secon: part to play tu the Lusluess, Vote for Horace Greeiey, —— Kaights of Pythtos, Tt seems that Greotey’s kindly remembrance of those courteous countrymen of ours hax mellowed his great heart toward our race and country evor since. Te bas always bad Irishmen around tim in YY | the Tdune fice, one of the most thriving of tiem Judge is following the ad- tho veteran Ventan. It ‘There were no printed calendars at the Court of General Sessions yesterday, We are iglad to note this evidence that the gentlem and well educated Cit) white tows , thy overskirt also embroidered, = being Patrick 0? Monday evening, the Ist inst. the Grand | with a somewtint snfaller pattern corsage WHS very limited cirentation like the World ; butte the iain tht Nheadded. that every Irishman in bis employ, | 08 Monday evening, gh A “ high, and the sleeves unt walste . ’ vice of Tue Bux, and ridding his ( of me~ 4 elior, ir, Abram G. Levy, mesisted by Past gh, An: s aud eutire front of the int Democratic masses it wears the air of a disguised Pe nek: Ais aan) OF 0S Wat Indeed, every one comiug 18 ‘vereneal eeatest | Chanel c om ) lees expenditures, Honace Gaexuny is in favor | with hime attests’ ine Chancellors aud Brother Knights ivom Ark, Eureka, | Were solld embroitery, i rge liberality of views as r i «7 ay We bave not space to deseribe other beautifal insult, What do the people care about a man's aut gards our'people, and his fervent belie! in the Washington, He Damon. Cyssacer: sand dresses Which were displayed on the oceasion, Dub faily? What is it to then whether hisancestors | theo gees aerenchmeut in public alfuirs. | {rine of Irish maiionatiem, \In the far distanes aber kes in th fuchaietion asta "oar iay do 40 at some future Hine, . de Lion Lodge, No. 3," by tuatutiing aud Instr uct. tng thetr Grats sincere, on follows: dative. Adier, V. ichiry Levy, W. ©. (preaiting ofticer); Bernard Goodman, V-C; Bmanuel Bulger, i precited, but Lere at ho Uce, we ail love "Old Horaee, The City Judge should vote for b te Workingmen, vote ‘Tho bonnets were ullextremely atylish, and the Inrge ‘and beautifnl msortinent we hotteed : of back velvet, elaborately trimmed with blagic! ty were rich and proud before he was born? What they desire to know iv whether§he is an honest, r Newson W. Youna good, capable, faithful man hiinselt; not whether | for Coroner. He is a member of the Printers’ eee eee eae malt Aeanlers ABOU Be TO noe array, Pei Tyriawwe bold: | Set ace hsecs Aeoteer wee ‘ct bine trent his family is old and haughty, In reply to this }\Union, and the President of the Workingmen's T seo that you say under the head of | O18. oa oe the goth alt. the D.D.a, Heieerna erica tae caret te te ante? ata treacherous stab of the World, wo aro happy to | Assembly. He is the trade union uominoe, | Stubeams, that ido not Gebt with Grosiey Ido | nGeorNewen sviated by a number of tant Chay: | om say that we know Mr, Hurcmas, and never | Work for him and for Honsck Gaxeney. REE SAN Te It Se erect eg] eenee aAT) O cahory aa Brother alglite of Kings Cousty Die: | ttonwe® We sae civlion onaes hoard of his family; and that he is a true Demo- er : Lcd dash, Sabre Bain Treth rookie (W, Di er coh orrlig the | White push, aud another of white caslimere, eae crat, treating every citizen as a gontleman should ; Prancis R. Punceis is wanted in the We unders‘and that the Hon, George Joncs aivo | degrees of the Order upon some twenty new candi. Brpinered, Ad uae and that we are ecoulident he will administer the | lower branch of the Leyislature, He is amem- fights mit Greeley. dates, and installing the officers, Among the ubove posal to deseribe In detail ail the Deautifui articles of Wearing apparel we #aw, und we must let the .oove serve ns indication of the styles wa saw exiibited and let everybody who saw those garments tent mip Greeley. ro Firat Night of Italian Opera. Maretack’s opera season begins at the Academy of Music to-morrow evening, The ever-welcome “Trovatore "Is to be produced, ‘Two great operatic stars appear for the first time in Ameries, Madame de Briol, the prima donna, ts said to possess in a supreme degree al! the qualities which make a great — candidates wero some of the mont prominent oficers of the Grund Lodge of Odd Fellows of this Btato, as the KR. Grand Master, Grand Becre* ber of the Painters’ $¢ and au ardent Father Mathew man. He has boon nominated by the representatives of the trade unions for Assem- blyraan from the Sixteouth District, Work for hiw, and vote for How Let every workingman in the Seventh Sen: office of Surrogate, to whieh ho is sure to be jety clected, with integrity and ability. too, though he has not told us so, that he will not be sorry whon the retums to-night proclaim the election of the Democratic State ticket and of Hoxace Gueenny for Comptroller, a We presume 8 commence their labors under ‘the most favorable auspices, ‘The hall abont to be ocenpied by Damon Lodge, No. 1% at 1M aad 116 Bast Thirteenth street, wil bo inst, Tickets for atmission, whieh — SUNBEAM, —Vote for Horace. Fight mit Ho: co Greeleye Americans, vote for Horace Greeley, Tonace Greeny is of trish descent. His | ate District (Eighteouth, Twentioth, and Tw enty- | artist, and fo be papi lowe jie yh ee = be. ma of te cline radsgy oO aa celler. Bi Irishmen, fight mit Greeley, uncestors had settled in Londonderry, in the | Gest Wards) vote for Ricnano O' Burm, Ho ina | Tequiste, voleo, Signor Manrico, ‘Those who have Pa ee A work for Horace Seeley. North of Ireland; but like our modern Celts, | member of the Bricklayers’ Union, and is the | heard bim predict that he wil! become a favorite, On | Iail" has taken piace sinee the introduction of the —#¥renchmen, do your best for Horr -e, they fled yraony oi jov- | eandidate of the trade unions, Vote for him, | rida Misa Kellogg will appear for the Brat time | Order in this Bate, and will nodoubt prove very —Work for Mr. Greeley. Keep © fraue 'y fled from the tyranny of the British Gow | this season in one of her favorite yperus, Vote lor | teresting, ‘Tho tiel re free to members of ernment to America, aud found a home in New | and work for Horace Gneeuey, Horace, Order ona thets wiv Tho Knights of Pythias aii | dulent al at elect aes karo aptroliers, Hampshire. The candidate for Comptroller frst 2 p< esr RRNA eis Menno Sight walt Grogs, ee ie ee pe peat on Ft saw the lightin Amherst, in that State, in 1611, | Voters, remember that you have only ton ne article in y Another Disastrous Blast tn Bergen, N. J. | and as no crown, © poured ing herder” ‘8 Bun about the tual Club House, our reporter nnintentionally did Mr, John Wildey avd his place an injustice, Besides having & room for the meetings of the baso ball club afer which his house is named, Mr, Wildey hours and nineteen minutes to-day in which to do your duty, The polls open with suuris: G234, much later thon your Sey comes out and in 1881 he came to this city poor and frieud- Jess, aud boarded with an Irishman at $2 per week, Ho sought work as a printer, and was At 10 o'clock yosterday forenoon, by an explo: | sion in Myrtle avenne, Bergen City, three men were | tube, severely injured, On Baturday afveruoou, one of the | —An order was sent to a Chicago bookseller powder charges Ina rock missed Gre, and after the | whieh, among other things, enumermed. "Six Prime by means of ® - ‘ x ol . . if | haw elec poms for the accommodation of forty | lope of twenty minntes the men, thinking that ali i { art employed in an old establishnent, West's, in | ¢l0 ou Fe 4 “a My time thay ort, hut {f | Ree wisening rosmae Per tite, Trem ereren tree danger had passed, descend the sewer and ee IN ona eaten tah Ronianas eal 7 act, whe maraed shout Bf you work wi will, and vote for Gaexey, nly one furnished wit four. With | continued their work, Yesterday morning James | ;RO2% tat Chathem strect, where he earned about $24 a oat las the Ring, and win eo taining only is furnished wita four. h hol - , Joun Richards, and W hh m ery Pp jest, * No Primitive Curisuanity to be (ound in Olle mouth, Three years afterward he established a ly. weekly paper, the New Yorker, and in 1641 he hogan the publication of the Zridune. From the hour he first wielded a pon to the present, he hus defended the rights of foreign-born citizens and workingmen, for he hus sprang from the ranks of both, When the dark-lautern party was ‘cago. —The white of an egg has proved the mosé oMcacions remedy for burns. Seven or eight sue cessive applications of this substance sootie palimy and effectually exclude the burned part from (he alr, simple remedy seems preferable to colloy dion or even cotton, = left thescore of “ L’ Africaine" lms Sanasre cent ache asta remedies i the excention of the groand floor, Mr. Wildey 9c: of the double house, and fity or n could Hud uecommodation there ‘Mr, Wildey fights mit Creetry, coeded ‘to draw the charge with an ordinary ateel drill, When the point of the drill reached the pow- der, the men Were not aware tuat the Implement was Kear the charge, and they continued to strike tn a careless way, and were blown up. ‘Thetr tnjuries not being mortal, they may yet emigrate to New Yori, aud volo In the next “canvass for Horace reeloy. cupies the wh even a hundred if they desired 11, Workingmen of the Fourteenth Assembly District, Jouw R, Hexxeosay, an honest plasterer, will to-day be elected. Tammany, alarmed at your displey of political powor, has ratified your nomination YThe Republicans and Tammany’s for a similar reason, bi Hint to Taxpayers, Mr. Philip Goodman, of 98 Division street, ways that be proflered Tommy Shicls, a Seventh Ward politician, $20 for the ase of bis political in- fluence with the ‘Tax Commissioners to keep the Auother Fight mit Greeley. i he | Daniel Reardon is @ bill poster, and wanted to | work kave a great deal of trouble oy iowsce Gavsuet an ners foe Iihmen, | taken up Naw W: Worse, your eanddat for | rataon hi roar att yar Aenre-87.00. | ts‘ or irae ites fr Cowan's | Geeesaontas meters Pits sad ths werkt p ag G | | Coroner. your best to-day, and Jouy Mo- | The politican demanded $100, which Mr, Goodman | 0. prrriek Smith's apple stand, near the City Ha | M8" mis meatheniag lanarerns ese for Howen nmr | SUNNY Te eet at ibeiOike Hall, tad Peas to, Bay, whereap ear "A bin Pro | railings, Patriek cbjected, but Daniel stuck the bill wacom heve-beos postal sh Clapham 3 Ly e . Gor tothe seized Daniel's Ned Wright, wh qh Paignton am fr nna. Yodge | Sey eae aac Teen a | OTA Teen aA, Rep ceed | tte, Cartes mate ner aw | Ge ered te seein re McCown, that jolly, dashing Irishman, came to | in bis ply tp or Hoxzeesnr, Youre, end avery will please ake the hiot and vote for have to answer at the Byeelal Besslous, Daniel yl lve 4 Gospel address, Come 4 this city years ao, as Gaxwiey did, poor friend- } Gungusr reeley. ‘Vous for Hora, come, nallauien,' | < 4