The Atlanta weekly intelligencer. (Atlanta, Ga.) 184?-1855, November 18, 1854, Image 2

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THURSDAY, NOV. 16. [Corro.qjomlence of the Daily Intelligencer.} Things in SewYofk. . New TouKXm'. K 1S51. [ (Vionel 0. A. Ari went of ' S. L., win ! ber of Cm tervie'.v v,4 The Soathcrii Iilatl Difficulty—Decision of the Postmaster General. Crisp’s Atlienn nin. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Crisp, with their ex- j Wo arc just emerging froi cel lent, corps of theatrical performers, arc j om< °f tho-most oxtr#Minaryc jpoliticflir eon nlAvins nightly to delighted audiences, at I tl,at c '« occum ' d irt P' ls s #- ThoPC '«* “ CriV« Athetia’um,” the elegant and com- ! ** modious now Theatre, fust built in this city i •.** **"* t T 0 ’’!- hy onr enterprising friend Col. Jas. h.W tl- |. > The officiar fit:iirc ; arc not vet aImo ^ H ,l. buW limns. arc uwfnl. ' The official figures arc not yet announced, bui may be set down ns certain, that-llorntio Seymour, 1 lie Athenatum is a tine establishment ; (fo. _SIioTI and liquor dealers’ candidate, is rc- T1 ... vu „ lv ^ ^ v -,i,. . aud Will cuiupy.ro favorably in point of size, j elected Governor, nnd that Femltwd«r-Wno«t. whet dwnnndp of the rriritl b'a.*sed"on "the gross in beauty <>f arrangement and the excellence j was on the same ticket, is Mayor oloet of this city. of Charleston, •’«••• <!ek‘§^f«tT by the Cham- % e r , f tSrit ditv to have an in-1 a*»e y. t j the 1\ itma^ter General rela- ■ ” * tive Jo th.£Jdife;uky,? between the Depart-j • £- uient and ijfeo §i>uth'£jr’qlria llailroad, has ■ sucajpded Sbiffijtiiig?* ttftugotary truce, as vrejidve AfrsrKAt-uej. We have been fav ored bv fM.A.witkanersual of the ulti- IiATEE FBCM EUROPE. ARKlYiVL OFSp. The. Tariff.—We hope that the next / Details or Congress will t*ke off the whole duty upon Hie Atlanta Examiner of Tuesday, refer- j paper. We nujfce thahthe New York Sun Jvgible fopor against SATUtyjAY, NQK.-18. N That HemeVSl. , iantarExajniner of Yue> t d ?! ring to the recent removal of Mr. McPher- i late imported pajser for S f IIP | son, one of the clerks in the State Road Of- and after paying thik had purchase in a splendid _ ly dna his bi 'ranee, (ity and J ATLANTIC. The steamer Atlantic has arrived at New fice, says that the removal in question “ was three per cent .addit , not made by Gov. Johnson, for' he lias not, , it cost no more than tlji over the'subordinates of the Road, of this country And sold in W class, the power of removal." Now, we enormous taxis an odious'imposition upon j bezzling §303,000 in notes of city and State scrip. a News. ho Supremo- Court ie testimony is not odmis- fclte man in criminal prose- yd^ctcd Co| tionsj ' Mre*sets:’ The diSncs eontin^b’prdsperous.’It is feared that' inch vfffeat is lost by heavy rains. The Chinese continue to bo persecuted by the ers and others in tlie-interior. Smyth' Clark, hecrctaiy of the into mayor of San Francisco, has been arrested on the clmrgo of em- matum «»f Postmaster -General Campbell, York, bringing fimr days later news which i* to the effect that lie considers the j Europe* - w.4r- rk A r* rl Vn ' a it, k rf".- . .. * _ from ^ ave no ^ nie asserted that Gov. Johnson the diffusion of knowledge, and onght to be removed Mr.McPherson in person. tffWnynRl. 11 ' '•i'i'*""** lommton justice to the Department and to the'other ton, was painted by Mr. Rogers, one of Mr Crisp’s Company, and a young artist of de cided ability, as is amply proven by the skill and good taste displayed in his work at the Athenaeum. We had the pleasure, on Tuesday eYeyiing, of seeing the well known play of “ The Stranger," enacted in a style to. do credit to any stage in the Union. We regard the character of the Stranger, as one of the most difficult to delineate correctly, of any in the entire licld of the English Drama, and we must confc-? we like Mr. Crisp best in this character. We do nut think he can lie excelled in it, ar, least, by any actor thht the American stage can boast. The depth of emotion—the strength of opposite and conflicting passions to bo found in this play are admirably adapted to Mr. Crisp’s tem perament and Gyle of playing. Wc have rarely or never seen tin actor who liad more Attack on Petropoloski av tiie English and Eu*ch •MHmttfnMPUgtMpf"'' < -'Wiy.i.ii in n allied forces have met with their first repulse in LIVERPOOL MARKET. | we 8aid ™ s in these : “ Gnv * ¥ n T Deaths from Yellow Fever in New Or- of rto scenei/, wi^>. the Theatres of Charles-i Seymour has probably seve.. or eight thousand ' roads of like clraiacter in all parts of the ! Liverfool, Nov. 1.—Cotton.—The de-i son .’" iiS * re y^erday and had an employ- • j jEANS ._a letter from New Orleans states o Savannah and Augusta. The scenery i majority over CWk,>h!* and ten or twelve | country now performing similar service.- . AiSL^^^SgS^ife **?«*«* ***** naval operations during the present war with Rus sia. Although the only information in tins matter has been derived from Eilglish and French sources, the Superintendent i of Petropolnski the Russians had a decided advaa- J voniovi! of : 8everest that haS ever ^Sltedthat City, With ; ^ Th* priucipal part of the French squadron shall then proceed h> make the best arrange- power ot removal of oxc{! ption of that of 1853. The num- Examiner, we presume, : ,^ r of deaths from ^ to-st of July sav that the Governor officer on the Road, from THE WAR NEWS tiie Superintendent down, removed whenev- An official despatch of Oct. 20th, fronuthe i e? ' he ma -Y <lesire his removal. Should Gov. e. As ] ments in my power to seenraexpedition and ’ Cdanea says tbe siege of Sebastopol is pro- j Johnson at any time feel disposed to purge , ee are r regularity by horse power, or other means i gressing favorably for the allies. Not much ; the Augean StalJe, his power is quite com- ‘ < V - ,U rill he Of conveyance, to commence on tiie 1st of damage done to the fortifications. ' llie „surate to the task of harimr the S.mer- , k ' ince 1 , _ , , -.tisfactory ^ mortal ncraggs—Bngadmr General Gusurus not c . onc iuded by the 5th of December I Scruggs—(“Phoebus, what a name!”) or l.ud low, the -oft candidate, has won the prize, far as the return- hate come in,'the three nearly neck and ucek. .The Legislature will Whig by r round majority, und more than two- , January.— EharlgMon Courier, third- of rite Congressional delegation ditto. • f The Columbia Carolinian received yes- j of the outer ports of the harbor have been ! 1 “ W “T S “''” “ Ulc u " uu ," guc ^ ed. Tlverc is scarcely n corporal guard of Nebraska . terday afternoon, says: | destroyed by the fleet, in which the Allies cei ’ Sj d ,nvn **'0 lowest menial, shoveled men elected in the Sjate. In bur coinineu conn-! “We understand that an agent of the ; lost 100. Russian loss 500, including Ad- j out-.’ It is simply a quibble to say that the c’d the Rcroriners and Whigs will have a decided i Post 0ffice Ilei’artment- 4sas arrived to make i miral Kofnaleff. ’ Governor has not the power of removal in ruv y.” i-* t vf.; n( i, v T u„i. i gr.rr’strt F, zz h wt* <w rs i ,hi » •=“*■ »»•>»-* *« m. <*** It,rL=. ”»»“oo3' JtSJSS ~wo z"s- !-r*-«?*«^ _ - . mensurute to the task of having the Super- a S™ e ? fY *, that , two ; intendent and the whole catalogue of offi- to the sixteenth of October is set down at 2,420, and Jthe number of eases a't 13,800j On the loth of October there were 159 eases still in the Charity Hospital, and 00 under treatment in the city.— lie recent change in the weather, however, the disease has considerably abat- their own writing. tW New Voik Election. A telegraphic despatch, which we presume sand-bar ver, returned engaged^ was lying in the San Francisco harbor on the 16th" ult., where it was tt> bo speedily joined by a portion of the English fleet, to winter in Monte rey harbor. It appears that, on the 29th of August, die alli ed fleet, consisting of the French vessels of war Forte, Eurydiee. and Obligado. and Elfglish ves sels of war President, Pique, and steamer Virago, hove in sight off Potropoloski, boing at the time in want of water, and before a gun was fired, the bat teries on the outward harbor opened'upon them. The fleet harbored under a. great many disadvau- , „ , — tages, and in consequence of the strength of the them only two leathers of the kind. current and the dense fog which prevailed was un- cost of procuring the feathers is neari- ablc to upproa 1 “ “ —=, “ ■“ 1 - 1 i_ 1 otieu ii, mg pith hi m h , ‘ if Johu- G. Iteigg, r „/ a& i- itiBIer, and a Iwgc oiaount of^J parts in the Pacil^ ”* rea '- thfttruo ariounl of the lossf sustiffiied bv v rr ' l,l! operations? Amount o^farltfre, - S8fl Comptroller'^ parrants forgoy, y®Co California Lumber Company forged, * Forgeries on sundry firms, ‘ ^ - i is 11 ~p i*i si»iTfl»i S"i T ° ta! ’ The warrants were generally made out’in r of-'Jesse L^Wcstmore, amf in sums of from ". ov ° r .$1,000. At first it was’ thought that the > 200 WeH h? the'sigTttttnrfcs were eounferfeit; bn- 1 ; now conceded that the former was genuine !tl ' so admirably wees the.latter executed that ¥ mayor and comptroller each pronounced ' i The King of the Sandwich I s i ani , has got a new cloak, and no European ( b pot has got a better or more costly o ne ? " It has cost about a million of dollar^ j There is a good deal of hfuss and feather^ : about it, for a considerable portion of ip made of rare feathers, procured from by,: difficult to catch, and which have each, majonty. The Knciw-Kothin: Although there was some opposition in their ranks i t. , . , .... to Mr. J. U. Barker, the Know-Nothing eandi- | that G,e department has signified a willmg- date for Mayor, he received about 17^00 votes, ! Ue ® b set ^ e theaccount ..fthe^Compmiy, . ... . . on - . ... . ... | anu io continue the contract until the first ..ml comes within about 200 votes of being elected. of January that something will be effected, His party claim that he has wtually a plurality, ; altll0U gli this will be objectionable to the und that be 1ms been defeated by the rascality ol j company, who desire to finish tlieir present ‘ . . ! blspcct<,rs of clection Sn ono or two of the ' contract, which expires on the 1st of July, complete control over t..c facial muscles, j -arong “foreign” wards. Some ten thousand ! 1355 . imt still there is every reason to hope whose countenance was more faithfully ox- | Know-Nothings assembled in the Park Inst even-I there will be and adjustment of the dim- pressive of tiie thoughts within, even to the ! ing and jiassctl resolutions to that effect. After ' culty. most delicate shading of an emotion. The j t,lp meeting had adjourned a portion of the crowd ! Our worthy Postmaster has politely hand- constantly of “ The Si duty, dictat wounded lionor, •CClUMBag 6U inor, aMrthc Struggle in the breast t-'rmed in a column and marched up Broadway j ed us the subjoined dispatch : between the sense of' " ' dl mus ‘ c > hffh 13 Rt *d banners. The procession j “Columbia, Nov. 11th, 1854. numbered about five thousand men. "Mr. A. Huger : The election here was unusually quiet, the; ‘‘I have just returned from Sumter Court, friends of the liquor dealers being too hard at ! and leceiied your letter ol the 8th. A post work, and having too tough a job before them to j ® ffice a ? cnt g 008 to ^narleston today. I go spend any time in fighting. Jhe friends of “li- I ^ to-morrow. Hope will arrange cense,” incredible as it may seem, drank very practicable to storm. if it is well posted up in the matter, that knows. The Herald, of last Saturday (2 urcs as exhibiting the strength of the differ- Clark Ullman Bronson •254 123,360 105,119 22,514 Seymour over Clarke 1,882 Clark over Cllinan 18.241 consciousno-* of P'tho promptings of the most tender and don ting affection, were all so accurately and feelingly mirrored in the varying expression of the face, that the en tire story of liis proud, brave, but sensitive i sparingly during the struggle. down to-morrow. Hope will arrange on Monday. JOHN CALDWELL. President” Our Columbia correspondent,■ also, for- heart, crushed beneath the blow of domestic • At Williamoburg there was riot and murder, j war( j e( j us yesterday the following aoreea- affliction, might have been rendered almost ! TU ° dt ‘ ,ut 7 ; horiff3 ¥ a, ' kcd ’ )y ,l ' e Irish ’ ! ble intelligence: * intoili-rihlp Lmrimar without the aid of i and one of lhem ’ nHmcA Wllham Ue,,r - V Hamson, j “Columbia, November 12. , , b =* ’ ‘ . a vei-pcctable citizen, was so fearfully injured about ! “The difficulty between the Department word or gesture. ; the head that he died on Wednesday. Mr. Silk- | and the South Carolina Railroad Company Wc hope Mr. Crisp will favor our J licatrc- • worth, another deputy, was seriously injured, and ; is not definitely settled, but affairs are in going citizens with another performance of ! Mr. John II. Smith, a fireman, in endeavoring to “The Stranger," before the close of his present visit. llSL-The -V. T. Herald of the 7th saye ) that Messrs. Buchanan, Mason and Soule have decided that our difficulites with Spain have recommend that the government of the Unit- rescue the officers from the mob, had his skull ! fractured and will probably die. Last evening the | Know-Nothings assembled at Williamsburg in j great force, with the evident intention of avenging l these outrages, but through the exertions of the j Mayor, and of Mr. Andrews, ono of the editors of i „ i , • • 7 i, i., ! the New York Courier <f- Enquirer, bloodshed was reached a crisis, ana nave agreed to , , , prevented. An attack was, however, made upon iho Roman Catholic Churches of St Peter and St. cd States should declare that' our Safety and ; Paul, and some damage done to the exteriors of interests demand that we should either pur- j the buildings. The presence of a strong body of chase or lake Cuba at OliCC. They have j citizen soldiers alone prevented the burning of also expressed the conviction that Franco j both edifices. I fear that the end is not yet. and England are favorable to the sale of Cuba to the United States. The whole question is now being deliberated upon by the Cabinet at Washington. definitely train for adjustment, and the mails will be carried beyond the ten days to give the De partment time to accede to the propositions pending.”—Charleston Courier, 13th inst. The LaGra-sge Bank.—At a meeting of the Stockholders of this Institution, on the 4th inst., the following gentlemen were elected Directors: Hon. O. A. Bull, President. Hon. E. Y. Hill, S. Curthright, B. B. Amoss, Wm. Wagner, W. C. Henderson, Wm. Reid. It affords us no small pleasure to be able to state, upon the authority of one of the directors, that the Bank will go into opera- V®, The great Georgia Fair will be open- j < d at Augusta on Monday, the 4th of De- j comber. Articles for exhibition will pass } free on the Georgia road, and delegates at half price. _____ Mobile an t d Girard, and the Columbus and Opelika Railroad.—From the Colum- < bus Times of the lltli, wc learn that the cars arc running on the Girard and Mobile ' Road to Silver Hun, eighteen miles from Co- i 'ambus. The same paper lms another equal ly gratifying announcement: The Opelika road, it is said, will he final ly completed !>v the 1st of January, or be fore. The grading is about finished, the su- j pers true lure nearly completed, and the gen- | tlernan who contracted to lay down the iron | G rapidly proceeding with that part of the work. Sam Houston and tiii: Know-Nothings. ' —The Galveston .Journal learns “from a re liable source that General Houston is en gaged in furthering the organization and 1 advocating the doctrines of the Know-Noth ings in the interior of Texas.” Who knows but old San Jacinto may turn up as the Know-Nothing candidate for the Presidency in l8o(j 1 It would be not a little-singular should it come to pass that the party which has beaten Benton should elect Houston. It is not necessary for us to comment upon the advantages which null accrue to the trading portion of our citizens. Indeed the rapid growth, and increased business of our town demand the establishment of a We have had two murders and three attempts at murder in this city since the date of my last I tion in about twenty days letter. On Saturday evening a policeman named David Gourlny was stabbed through the lungs by John B. Holmes, a candidate for Alderman in the first ward. Holmes was attempting to rescue one of his rowdy constituents from the custody of the officers, and was seized by Gourluy when he in flicted three stabs upon the unfortunate man, one of which proved almost immediately fatal. A coroner’s jury have found a verdict equivalent to willful murder, against Holmes, who is now iu the Tombs. j Worcester, Nov. 9.—T/tc Assault on Officer I Batman.—Solomon II. Dutton, a colored j man has been arrested here charged with j being one ef the party who made the assault and riotous attack on officer Batman, who regular house of discount and deposit. The Bank officers are men of standing in the community, and our citizens need not \ rocks, off Point Arguello, fifteen miles above fear anything like a “ wild cat ” arrange- Point Conception. ment.—La Grange Reporter. On the same evening, (Saturday,) a young Irish man, of the name of Patrick Quinn, was killed by ‘.he thrust of a knife, in the hands of a hoy of seventeen, named Edward Allen. It seems that a drunken fellow, who was with the iad, staggered against Quinn, and a scuffle ensued between them, during which Allen stabbed Quinn to the heart and made off. He has not yet been taken. An attempt was made to poison five persons with arsenic at IS.’l Church street, on Tuesday, and :i colored woman, named Sarah Jane Wil liams, has been arrested on suspicion of having placed poison in a pot of coffee, of which all the persons in tiie house, except herself, partook.— Four colored persons and one white man were ren dered dangerously ill by the poisoned coffee, aud one. a colored girl, it iu a dying condition. A feeling of revenge for some real or fancied injury had rendered himself obnoxious to the apolitionists by arresting the fugitive Sims and Burns some months sience. The accu sed was required to gi ve bail to the amount of 81000. The Russian Official reports of the 21st the removal was made in accordance with , say the garrison had made a successful sor- j the express direction of the Governor during 1 o n t candidates np to that hour ■ tie ami spiked sixteen Frenchmans—destroy- i h i 8 rec ent visit to Atlanta, and Mai. Coop- i Seymour.)..! ?.... ;...' 125.25 ed a battery and took Lord Dunklie (En- : , 1 1 1oq QC glish) prisoner. er Wl11 not den Y u - The Emperor’s two sons had arrived at! In regard to the charge of Know-Noth- the Crimea. , ingism, we may he mistaken, but we are Nothing new from the Baltic. The de- I under the iniDre^sion that the Examiner • , , , .... , 0 feat of the Russian arniv at Osin i« confirm- ; impression mat tne nxumwet At a quarter to one o’clock this day, Sey- ^ j has, on more than one occasion, charged mour’s plurality in this city was 15,560 as NEW YORK ELECTION. that Know-Nothings were retained in office appeared by the l-eturns received up to that The latest returns report Clark, Whig on the State Road—complained bitterly of j tj me > *0 the County Clerk, rhis places Freesoil, 700 ahead. P their retention and zealously and feelingly ! ^mom-one thousand higher than the un- TVf A PTMF TVTQ A «TPTt , ineir reienwi 11, nuu zeaioupiy anu ieeun 0 iy 0 fij c . la l returns previously given him makes irt t* 1 it r v calls on “the powers that be ” for their his plurality over Clarke, thus tar, two York went ashore on Brigantine Beach— ! expulsion. Mr. McPherson, we are credi- thousand eight hundred. probably iost. j bly informed, was closely questioned, at | - The Bovs of New York.—The city su- RAILROAD COLLISION. ; the'time of his removal, whether or not he perintendent says there are about one hun- A serious collision occured with a pas- | vras a Know-Nothing, and he admitted that died and fifty thousand boys in New York he was. He has since been reinstated, and of an age to attend school. ’Of thU number ., . ' only fitty thousaud on an average are eon- we presume that.the idea of iurtlicr remoy- j s ^ aat i v there als for political causes will lie discarded, ! * —r -1 *—r. r— 1 , n , ■ , 7 i Later from Kansas.—Dates from Kan- unless the Governor shall again be drauoon-; , ri - i 0 -.i m w- . . , , „ . & . sas are to October 2oth. ihe Missourians ed into the measure iv the Exammer, in . i iave i ua( j c frightenened attempts to fright- order to preserve the ’* harmony ’ and ! away the New Englanders, but haying “ organization ” of the Democratic party, j failed, have taken to destroying their cabins We are of the opinion, however, that the ! an d tents during their absence. They eu- existeuce of the Democratic party of Geor-! deavored to get the troops from Fort Leav- . , , , r * . enworth to aid m drivmg them away from gia does not depend upon the political the disputecl but without effect. complexion of two or three subordinate j ,, —~ Tz—— r—;— . ii -i . d i Hon. John 31. Clayton.—This gentle- clerks on the (state Road. : , i. t\,i A*. . man made a speech at Delaware City on NIassactiusetts Election.—The Know i 3Ionday, in favor of the Know-Nothings, v , . , 7 , , ,. Ar ! and predicted all sorts of ruin in con- Nothings have swept the entirestate ot 3Ias- 1 - ,, .. . , . , . J sequence ot the passage ot the reciproei- sachusetts, electing their Governor, (Gard- which he said would cause a reduc- ner,) congressmen state senators and Pepre- tion. in the price of wheat and breadstuffs sentatives. j generally. If that is to be its effect, it may i certainly be taken for granted that there Sew York Election—Latest. j are a large class of consumers who, under A telegraphic dispatch in the Nashville i present circumstances at least, will have papers of yesterday, dated New York No- eause to rejoice. vemher 14th, says that it will he impossible 1 to tell who is elected Governor until every : county is officially heard from. The Times of the 14th publishes a table giving Clark ; a majority of 229, while others figure a majority of 467 for Seymour. , - _ . . . BgLThe elections in New York have was the cause of the disaster. e Captain | >eerl attended with the usual rioting and supposed tne steamer to be twenty miles . , . ° , from the coast at the time of the disaster, j fi S htm S- Two or three men were shot, The scene among the passengers is repre- ! an( 1 as many more had their skulls cracked, sented to have been awful, fifteen of whom The military were called out to quell a perished before they were rescued. The I r i 0 t in ’Williamsburg, where an attack was following are all the names of the lost that j made on a Catholic Church by the Know- are given; i our cluldreu ot Mrs; Longs- v xl _. . ,. . , , town : Mrs. Smith and child, wife of Mis- i ^ othln S s ‘ in retalmtion for which there srs. Smith, Brothers & Co.; 3Ir. Moore and j to Iiave been an attack on a Protestant child, and Frank Mitchell. Church by the Catholics. The military, senger train on the Michigan Central Rail road, by which many persons were serious ly injured. Two Weeks Later from Californio. New York, Nov. 9.—The steamer North Star arrived this afternoon at 5 o’clock from Aspinwall, bringing California mails to 16th of October. She connected with the Golden Gate, which was detained at San Francisco until 4 o’clock, P. M., on the 16th, to enable merchants to answer letters received by the Golden Age. She brings 527 passengers including 3Irs. Sin clair and Lieut Beale. The steamer Falcon from Havana and New Orleans with mails and passengers arrived at Aspinwall on the 1st inst., and was to sail the same day on her return. The North Star brings §1,100,000 in gold on freights, The principal consignees are Adams & Co., §399,000; Duncan, Sherman & Co., §617,000 ; Drexel & Co., §120,000 ; Wm. Hoge & Co.. §153,000, and Wells & Fargy, §233,000. Wreck of the Yankee Blade.—The steamer Yankee Blade left San Francisco on the 30th of September for Panama, and was wrecked on the following day. She had on board 800 passengers, besides her crew and firemen when she struck the Reef Conception. A heavy fog hung upon the coast, which Nov. — Ten Thousand i There were terrible scenes of pillage on | however, prevented either party from Join in Council.—Fully . ten I board after she struck, and before the pas- i muc h harm.’ Nothings asaembled* in the ; sengers were rescued by the steamer Goliah. | md : a.-sotl string resolu- I -AH the specie on board, amounting to §153,- | 000, was lost. The ship is a total wreck, : New York, Knoic-Koth mgs thousand Know-..’ j Park this evnh i tious charging the election of Mr. Wood, tiie | l Democratic canidate If:- .Mayor, with being i | the result of thi grossest fraud, <l v. The j I meeting dispersed quietly, forming an im- i intense procession, ar.d pa-sing through the! i principal streets, shouting, cheering, &c. { having soon washed away. j of yesterday the following highly important- California Affairs.—The steamship ; telegraphic intelligence: Tiie Know-Nothings in New York.—The New York Times remarking on the action of the Know-Nothings in the recent election in that State says: “ The general result is that the Know- Nothings have served the Whigs in this State just as they served the Democrats in Onio and Pennsylvania. They have very great strength and have cast it without ref erence to National or State issues, but with exclusive regard to their own position as an independent party. In other States their principal assailants have been Demo crats, and they have occupied a position of hostility to the Democratic party. In this State the leading Whig papers have been against them—a ml their direct attack has been against the Whigs. Their nomination of a Whig as an independent candidate was a sufficient indication of their intention to effect the defeat of that party. . , , A Coot Oi'Eration.—The Cleaveland . Higiay importarn. (Ohio)§kcw» says a Butcher in Athens, 3\ ehnd in the Daily alontgoinery Journal, Qh>o, i ias beeniu the habit of nabbing the Brother Jonathan arrived at San Francisco on the 15th, with the passengers from the wreck of the Yankee Blade. The steamer Sierra Nevada reached San i Francisco on the 15th ult. The ship Golden West, from Philadelphia, arrived on the is the supposed cause of this diabolical act- p rom California aud Mexico. Yesterday morning a desperate attempt was i New Orleans Nov 11 made by a young German, of the name of John j 'Tiie Empire Cit’t iias arrived with the. 12th, and on the same day the steamer Un- Genselcy, to murder a Miss Meadcley. residing in | California mails and 250 passengers. She rfe Sam from San Juan. Twenty-fourth street. It appears that she had | a ] so brings Havana dates to the Sth inst.— The sloops of war Portsmouth and St. promised to marry the young man, hut afterwards ” 1J * ’ ” — ' ' ~ Our Market. The last Columbus Time.-; <(■ Sentinel, has an editorial showing the comparative prices of various commodities iu Athens, Atlanta, I declined to have him, whereupon ho attacked her with a pistol and knife in a most determined man ner. Fortunately the pistol, which was charged m ihe muzzle, missed fire, and the girl’s mother seized the fellow’s arm as he was about to plunge theknife into the young woman’s side. He wa- ar rested and two pistols found on his person, with Americus, Columbus, 3Iacou, Savannah,and \ 01,e ,,f which lie said ho intended to murder Miss W est Point, from which it appears that At lanta is the best market in the State for the purchase of almost all the leading articles of consumption. As a grocery market, it lias advantages over every other place in The news from that quarter is unimportant. Mary were at Honolulu, Sept. 16th. The Orizaba has also arrived with from Messi-o to the 4t1i instant. New York Nov. 15. [1854. It is believed that the expulsion of Soule from France will lead to serious results. 3Ir. Mason, our Alinister to France, lias de manded an explanation, which has been treated with indignity. In Massachusetts, the coalition between village cows, making beef of them, and then selling them out to the owners at ten cents per pound. The hide and horns of one—minus the body—having been found at a neighboring tannery, an investigation was had, when the remains of several other village cows were detected. The butcher, smeUinig a rat in season, sloped to prats un known. . Shocking Suicide.—At Covington, Ken- the Know Nothings’and Freesoilcrs lias been j ° u t t hc 9th 1 u ] t ’> ?* ^motive on . ° i the Covington and Lexington Railroad was succesful—electing Governor, Congressmen, J b ac king up to hitch on the 7 o’clock A. M. and a majority of the Legislature. train standing near the Covington depot. Mr. The ship New Era went ashore on Jersey j Frederick _G. Gedge suddenly let himself beach and two hundred and fifty lives were i duv>n IJ Y h' s hands and laid his head delU>- eratelv across the rail, ihe head was corn- lost? pletely severed from the body, and divided Georgia. In ' sugar, tiie lien " can buy Ne w one-half cent < :he article ■< «!■ Se n Urn Orleans s cheaper pei of New Orleans ’I'say.s purchasers agar at Atlanta, pound, than at dates Henry Meigs has committed forgeries of Comptroller’s warrants, the stock of Cali- The American hrigAcatanche foundered fornia, papers, &c., to the extent of §1,600,- at sea seventy-five miles from Vera Cruz.— j 000, and decamped for parts unknown, with The captain and crew saved. his brother, John G. Meigs, in the bark Santa Anna’s heallt is restored. Almonte j American, which they purchased, stored goes minister to Vienmi. ^ ^ j j ^ Nashville Rom,r of yesterday j bythe next wheel, the face rolling on one side , , r, , , ,, . a f'»6e™ n « has the follwmg additional particulars: of the rail and the hack part of the head on Meadcley. and with the other to blow out his own Cotton is weaxer under the influence of of-bonoia, is progiessmg. vBwvnnif v. „ u.i r r , • vr Ono ,,f In? -n-ms was ikn ent nff brain. the steamer’s news. Sales to-day are 1600 : A Battle in the Pacific.—A French j r A L\V \ UlHv.A ov. 14 th. Lhe hlnp New theothei. One otlnsarms was also cut off ‘. - , . ... . . . , ; bales. ‘ fleet, consisting of three frigates and a sloop ! ?ra was wrecked at Deal Beach on Tuesday j Mr. Gedge was one of the firm of Gedge The above « a black ^udoptc for a single , resuhed in a ma | of war, arrived at San Fmncisco on the 3d ; « » thought Unit , 0 persons were washed and Brothers and was '^empkry’ as a week, and I blush for New York as I send it. The , -j f 5Q()0 ^ ^ ^ of ^ U ' inst. They had in conjunction with the ! overboard. Wreck boats boarded her yes comments it suggests I juuet leave for another j oenpes f 0 sell liquor. English fleet made an attack upon the Rus- limc at the pressure of news this week limits me ' _ sian town and fort of Petrooanlowski in man and an estimable and influential citi- terday morning—all the passengers remain- 1 zen. lie was director in the Northern Bank u l> The English and French were repulsed Later—130 passengers were landed* this any of the oilier citlosaud towns mentioned.” |From the .\itni.-m Oim-iilutioualisl, 14th in.-!.] Oaring Robtiuy—.$20(1 Reward. The store of 3Jv. E. If. Rogers, Gunsmidi, was forcibly entered . n Still- day night or Sunday morning, and articles to the value of over §1.000 taken therefrom. 31r. Ro ver? ha- offered a reward of §209 for the apprehension (' (he thief ami goods, or si proportionable amount for the recovery of the good- alone. The articles stolen can be so easily identified that v e pub!; h a list of them, as far as could he ascertained after a hasty examination, hoping the publication will lead to the detection of the Burglar. The following is a li=t of the articles ab stracted : 1 double Gun, Moore & Harris, .Makers, about 30 inch barrel. 1 double gun, Ilcnry Tomes A: Co., dic kers, 32 inch barrel. J double gun, F'.. II. Roger.?, Maker, ,‘j.j inch barrel. 1 double gun. Powell *V Son, dickers. .'14 inch barrel. i Silver mounted Itiile, patented muzzle, K. II. Roger- Maker, .’ll inch band. i Silver mounted Rifle, C. 11. Rogers, dic ker. Tbe barrel of this gun, 31 inches long, screws oil the stock by ( Mgjjfenjfcp end being left behind. Revolver. 1 pair Silver mounted duelling pistols, Maker’s name not recollected. 1 six barrelled pi.-.tol dial’s ton’s make. 5 Colt’s Pistol-’. 4 and 5 inch barrels. 6 Bowie Knives. . . Lot of Pocket Knives, Wnstonholm’s, Crooks aud others make. 1 large spy-glass, covered with leather, Percussion Caps, Powder Flasks, <tc. to a brief resume of farts. ,, c , , ; Kamschatka. The excellence of Barns is, indeed, among j The steamship North Star arrived last eveniu'r r l, p r-nre-t whether in noetrv or nrose • but : ° ^ , - A . - , , .. , , ; , , i’nnn Aspinwall with San Francisco .late: to the I ut the same time, it i- plain and easily r^ I « from one ; “Jirmngo0 dead been picked Ifith ult.. anti si,500.000 in gold dust. She ( e0!rnz ed • his sincerifu his indisputable air ! hundred to about doubto liat number l ie up on the sho e. The Aothern Light bring- iuteliigeneo of the total loss of the Yankee ^truth.' Here are no fabulous X or joS; i A^xrri Pnce^^ commaMed the ; arrived twency days and a half from ban ! Blade, on her voyage from San Francisco to l’an- no holl ama. She ran upon the rocks near Point- Concep- . wiredrawn lion, in n foir, on the 1st inst. The Captain and j feeling: the pa? most of the officers ashore. Three boal and from thirty to were lr.die-’i were lo wreck, some of the s robbery and murder on board. The details are horrible. About SI 50,000 sunk with the boat, and was irrecoverably lost. The North Star brings new? of au unsuccesful attack of the English and French fleet* upon the Russian station at Petru- polou.-ki on the coast of Kamtschatka, in which tbe British Admiral Price was killed. The allies lost 60 aud the Russians 100, killed and wounded. Astounding frauds and forgeries have been dis covered at &‘an Francisco. Henry Mciggs, late un willbesaved. The ship is much broken 1 of -Kentucky, and Y ice President and I)i- her masts are still standing ( rector of the Covington and Lexington Rail- scenes, rude and humble ns they are, have ° btained b)r man Y leading f a P ley - ? 1:d kindled beautiful emotions in his soul, noble if S e P u f h f f had bee ? made . f arrive, thoughts, and definite resolves; and he I>u« n g *e last week business had been less speaks forth what is in him, not from any j Jf d . lve ;^ ut nn ear1 ^ revlval of trade 18 an ‘ outward call of variety or iuterest, but lie- tlc Jp a 6(1 • , - cause his heart is too full to be silent. r e h f been no imports, and He speaks it. too, with such melody and n f hin 8 of f “terert to note. Ihe only sale - - *• • • - - J - of moment was » i™ of t in i ipt-r, nt. siy road Company. lie had endosed bills to a considerable amount drawn by the company on the faith of a conditional sale of some of its bonds on New York, but the sale hav ing fallen through the bills came back pro tested, and in a fit of mental derangement, it is supposed, brought on by the embarrass ment, dir. G. committed the act of self-dc- tion.—Nhshcille Bamte has put on the Its success has have been. The of good and a great deal of harm. It doubled the profits | f f 0 n c ,i„,i t.,. ...e that others, iprouch nearer titan three miles from Lite j half a dollar eacli, and it takes a Tastim-,.’ which divided tbe harbor. They, hotve- j tity to make such a cloak. If the S-up ucd the fire, when the three butteries in I ; ch I 3 ] amls are annexed to the Uiii^ the eastward harbor, viz : the oattery on the pen- ; StateS; to wholl! will that eIoak b e lon4 insula, and the two on the main laud on the oppo site side, aud the A'uroru and Vwiua, sheltered be hind the sand-bar in front, anti' nt first concealed from tiie view of the allied fleet, opened a galling fire. Laboring under the above mentioned disadvan tages, and being only provided wkh ono steamer, the ailed fleet were unable to approach nearer. A brisk cannonado was kept up for sometime, and shot and shell wore vomited forth by the allied fleet. After the first half hour, the outside buttery on the main land aud below the battery oa the peninsula on the opposite side, was silenced, and the troops with which it was garrisoned retired toward the town. The battery on the peninsula hauled down the Russian flag shortly after. Me should have stated that the bombardment commenced on the first of September, and on the second day a de- tachmeut of marines, numbering about 600, and composed equally of French and English, were or dered to land, for the purpose of spiking the guns and completing the destruction of the abandoned forts. Under cover of the guns of the fleet they landed, but they had no sooner commenced the. work than a murderous fire was opened, upon them by the Russians, who had retired from the forts, and had concealed themselves iu the brushwood. Between fifty aud sixty of the marines fell, aud the remain der, after the work of pemolition was completed, retired to their boats. It was impoesiblc to form any estimutc of the loss on the Russian side, hut it was supposed to he much greater than that of the allies. During the four days of the bombard ment, the batteries which overlooked the town on tho inner hay did great execution, and also the ‘Aurora’ and 'Dwina,’ which, sheltered by the sand-bar, poured forth their volleys, while French officers describe the havoc committed among the Russians as awful in the extreme. Many of them wore cut in two by the balls from the allied fleet. The bombardment lasted for four days, ut the A New Style of Railroad.—A dir. Nn expiration of which time the allied fleet got under uf Dayton, has left at the office of the Cine; way and proceeded in a southerly direction, and i nat i Gazette of that eitv, a model of a fin shortly afterwards MlAn with and captured tho ( road inven ted bv himself the following af fcitka. The uilieu fleets, it is .§11111, would have c 1 • . *. .!•«. continued the bombardment but for a want of pro- \ t l ?. c ll< ? points in which it differs from th. visions. ! railroads now m use: The tollowiug i- n, list of the killed: Frenchmen, j 1st.—It avoids the expense of grading as. 12; left on laud. I'J: wounded, 07. Total of gravelling—the track being elevated fron Frenchmen, 96; total of Englishmen, 111; total four to eight feet above the ground, restin' French and English, 209. 1 - - The Los? or thf, Yankee Blade—Outrage and Robbery.—The San Fraueisco papers are fill ed with accounts of the loss of the steamer Yan kee Blade, which occurred on the first of October, by riming on a rock near Point Conception, when 26-i hours out from San Francisco. The Chroni cle of that city, says: As soon as she struck the wheels were bucked, but it was of no use: she was completly fast. The j and meat particularly is cheaper and bet- next thought after tho attempt to save the valua- j ter than it has been, and our country read- bles, was that the steamer would break to pieces ers will be surprised at this a soon, and that the only safety was to get on shore. WA l thnm ; r ; s boat w i Li j six men Will Seward de Re-Elected to j r . Senate?—Altogether the worst result i>' volved in the late contest in New York : * the election of a Senator by the lately chi* en legislature. Seward’s term is near]- out—will lie be re-elected? The wliid Iiave the legislature—but can Seward e^. trol them. Such is manifestly the opinG of the Tribune—but not of the Exjrress,^ The latter says: The Know-Nothing element now lm-, strong force in the Assembly, that dir. St? ard, according to present indications, not receive the Assembly vote for re-ek . tion,—but Mr. Seward, has prepared lii t . self for such a crisis, by securing some ver- efficient friends, such as R. M. B!atclif lt ii Esq., of this city, and some few others ek where. It remains to be seen whether the? ability and skill can convert a minority it. to a majority,—and if they can, he may b j re-elected, dispite the popular verdict. | shown in the Assembly election. ! The Herald thinks the legislature is auf- Seward. The town of Petersburg, the fun? county seat of Lavaca county, Texas, v? sold for debt a short time since by the slier- if! of that county. If payment were sn. forced of the liabilities of other tmvc, which have sprung up suddeuly in the Yu, as well as cities on the Atlantic border, tb same result would be reached. on a wooden structure. 2d.—The cars have no wheels and the L - comotive has but one wheel—a single dri ver. _, The Market.—Our market presents rath er a promising appearance, dleats aw! vegetables are in considerable abundance, Captain Randall, was iu in about ten minutes after the steamer struck, and went ashore to find a landing place. .Soon after that, the first mate left with another boat, with some ladies, and then the second mate took anoth er boat of ladies. One of these boats was swamp ed, and out of 21 persons it was said that 12, most of whom, if not all, Were ladies, were drowned. The laud, distant about three quarters of a mile front where the steamer lay, rose in a bold bluff 200 feet high, and the place where a landing was practicable was between two large boulders. About seven or eight boat loads were landed on Sunday. Hero most of the passengers were land ed; but the second mate took his boat down the coast abont ten miles, to a beech. All the ladies were landed before night. Most of the passengers had saved nothing but the clothes they had on. The sea was'rather rough, though there was but little wind. The surf was so heavy along tbe shore that the boats were swamped four or live times, and tbe men who had once reached shore had little disposition to go out again. When night approached it was of course impos sible to proceed with carrying the passenger? to the shore. The general impression was that the steamer would go to pieces during the night. The boat rolled very much. The upper cabin did not fill with water for about an hour after Ihe vessel struck, and it is said that fiends immediately began to pillage the property of which there was no own er immediately present. The filling of the cabin before dark prevented the continuance of pillage. As night approached the stern settled down and the bow rose, so that the deck stood at an angle of abont twenty degrees. The forward steerage was thus elevated above tbe water, aud as night came on it became the scene of horrible pillage. There was a large number of steerage passengers on the Blade, many- of whom had money or valuables in carpet-bags, stowed away in their berths. There were twenty or thirty-five wretches on board who were determined to take advantage of the confusion and commit a general robery. No sooner was the favoring mantle of darkness spread over the sky than they hurried down into the steer age and began to examine the clothes in the'berths and to cut open tho carpet bags. 'What was done down there no honest man knows; or at least we have not been able to find none. About seven 7 o’clock the cry of murder was heard in the steer age and about the same time two pistol shots were heard. Who was the murderer and who the mur dered no one knew. A number of persons started to go down into the steerage, but tho steps were taken away by those below, and threats were made that no man should come down there nlive. The condition of affairs on the boat was such that there was not much dis position to undertake to defend the rights of stran ger announcement when we tell them that it is now sold f.r from ten to thirteen cents per lb. Tliis i- the range of prices for lair articles of citk beef, lamb, veal or pork. Eggs are wont from 25 to 31 cents. Chickens §3.50 pet dozen, or from 25 to 50 cents per pair, ac cording to quality. Onions are worth ri per bushel. Irish potatoes G2f cents per peck, white beans 12’. per quart, cabbage from 10 to 18 cents per head, turnip? ami radishes at 0] cents a bunch of half a dozen weighing about 1] pound, snap beans and garden peas are in tolerable abundance.— Charleston Standard. All Well.—Brigham Yeung, Governor of Utah, in August last went down into hi- well to recover a lost bucket, when the cur bing tumbled in tho earth followed, a;. Brigham Young became, for the nonce, subterranean saint. Spades and shovels wer brought into requisition; the harem of the buried governor assembled in force to aid the saving efforts of the male members the flock, and in about two hours, they had the gratification of pulling him out from h>- sub-soil-bed. He preached that night frum the text—“It is well with me.” Submarine Communication with Europe. —The submarine cable, one hundred andthir- ty miles long it is said, is nearly completed, and will be laid across the Gulf of St Lawrence, connecting St. John’s, Newfound land, with New York as soon as the ice will permit. No doubt is expressed of the com pletion of the undertaking early in -June next. About three hundred miles of the land telegraph between St. John’s and Cap; Ray, which is three-quarters of the entire length contemplated, is already finished, and a month’s labor is all that is required f. r the remainder. On the completion of the line news will be received from Europe, in all the principal cities of the United Stats- four or five days sooner than at present. “ Cousins in Sebastopol.”—There is a: this moment a curious exemplification of the consequences to individuals of a breach with a Power with which we were so Ion.- on friendly terms. One of the bravest an ablest of the Russian was the late Admiral There were about 800 people on the steep j Grieg, uncle of our respected fellow-citizen. modulation as he can: “in homely rustic ^ was a lot of Gallego at §12 jingles;” but it is his own and genuine. This 8 -*- nce which that description has advanced is the grand secret for finding readers, and 2o cents Alderman, and one of the tuo.t extennivo lumber retaining them : let him who would move , is selling at §18, ; tOK ] a y -> «*•»■ *• ■—> •»* ! - Candles ! ty. The captain being tho first person ever tried for a violation of the laws relative to our dry-goods men, but it has ruined the ! the slave trade, his case excited universal stockholders, soured our speculators, and I interest. given low spirits to Wall-street. The palace j t-tv—-—,. ; has sunk nearly a million of dollars. What i • i v aU i a aces ,‘. . , T remains of the enterprise will be brought to i M e aie indebted to our friend Capt. J. t ; Je j lamme r, and rushed off at auction. Tne ! | R- Swift for the following synopsis, of the building is one of the finest in America. It j I 2d and 3d days’ races and the entries for cost some §300,000, and will probably sell deck of the boat, sitting down, standing up, and | Charles Grieg, Esq., surgeon. During th? a few laying down, shivering in the cold, and wait- ; j t war as lipon previous occasion?,!.? almost m uespair ot seeing the morning. No 7 . L . S n ,, one slept or thought of sleeping. Many, who-lmd | sei 7 etl tl }* ]™P erm } house of Russia with never been known before to pray, spent the night j eminent fadelity and courage, but, being un in prayer, but in such wild and incoherent terms j Englishman, lie was never naturalized.— even church members, were moved to RESULT OF SECOND DAY’S RACES. Melson’s Slakes. have experienced a marked advance—sales i Col. Goldsby’s Brown Dick, Capt. C. A. ilamiltion’sb.c. Whirl- merchaute iu the State, has failed fur $800,00O, nial committed forgeries to about the same - vinced himself. Horace’s rule, Si ns me „ . amount—$1,600,000 in all. Mciggs had sailed | fitre, is applicable in a wider sense than the ha ye exueriene'Jd’a marked advance—?*ms with hi? plunder iu a private armed vessel for parts ■ Rtera one. To P°.f:-J® of Adamantine at 25@26i. Hardware—no “irT Keyed 8 LS, m„„ butiplt Klrith^ i “>“<* Cheese ie io good re- Tne Anmnea ts a Haltfax with Liverpool dates , ^ eftrnegtn the th ^ ught the emotion, ! <l uest at an Malice. to the 2Mh ult. Sebastopol ts not taken nor like- Ae acmal cond}tion of hi ” own heart . and j , ly to bo at present The bom lardment wa» in , meil) s0 strongly are we all knit to-: U. S. Troops Among the Mormons.— quaic-iieacleu , progress, but up to the 21st ult little impression , g e ti lor by the tie of sympathy, must and We have already stated that Col. Steptoe’s m . t ie ?uii’r i liuil been made. The Russians imrrussed the al- >v ju gj ve i, eed to him. Iii culture, in extent ! command, bound to California, had arrived j lied armies w ith frequent sorties but were uniform- - 0 f view, we may stand above the speaker, or ! at Great Salt Lake City, and would winter ly repulsed. Austria threatens war, and it is below him; but in either ease, his words, in that vicinity, * ' “ ^ '* ' ’’ thought a collision between the Austrian army on if they are earnest and sincere, will find | says : night some further scenes of violence occurred. A number of person? were assaulted. One person was knocked down and compelled, with a pistol to his breast, to give up his money. Another was robbed, and an attempt was made to throw him overboard. A number more of similar cases occur red. When daylight came, persons went down into . . tiie steerage, nud saw some marks of blood; but if tor what old stoves do—a cent a pound : that ] a murder had been committed, tiie body had been is, the iron portion will sell for this ; as for | cast into the hold, or otherwise disposed of. The wind, 2, 1. dist'd. Col. Harrison’s g. f. Ardclle, 4, 3. “ Col. Easley’s eh. e. by Chieftain’s dam Little dlistress, 1, 4. “ Time, 3.47, 3.50. Track in excellent order and a fine at- A letter from that city j tendance. RESULT OF THIRD DAY’S RACES. Little dreaming, however, of a rupture with Great Britain, his sons have become natur alized subjects of the Czar, and hold high naval and military trusts. Thus one > ! thorn is at this moment in Sebastopol, serving as engineer there, while we believe English cousins of his are amongst the beleagurin; forces, holding commissions in her dlajesty: arniv.—Bristol Times Two hundred and seven locomotive- are employed on the Baltimore and Oh:- Railroad. the frontier and tho Bu?sians must soon occur.— some response within us; for in spite of all “The command, as a general thing, has i „ , „ ’1 l • f Af - - Rl Soule, our Minister to Spain, has been forbidden, casual varieties in outward rank, or inward, been well received by the Mormons. A j ^ ’ amllton b ,r - *• Mar d 11 uc : it is said, to travel through France. The Turks ! as face answers face, so does the heart of 1 great jealousy, however, seemed to exist to- ' skin, ! have gained a battle near Uuuiri, Turkey in Asia. man to man - CARLYLE. ! wards ihe officers respecting the wives, J Capt. C. A. Hamilton’s b. f. by One of the Arctic’s boats has been picked up Deleterious Brandy.—At the last meet- daughtere, and concubines of the Saints.—I Sovereign dam by Imp Le- A lew days after the arrival of the troops, i viathan 4, 3, 1, 1. Another Secret Society.—YVe have re ceived un anonymous letter from Missouri, stating that a secret organization exists iu all the upper counties of that State, the oh- 11 .. . „ . . ject of which is to carry slavery into Kan- sensat,ou 1U * 1,11 fctrLCt - sas at all hazards, dlcn are pledged to re- Deleterious Brandy.—At the last meet- empty by the schooner Lilly Dale, and another ing of the Farmers’ Club, which is cornpos- was seen in the distance also empty. ed of some of the ablest members of the The case of Charles A. Pcverely, indicted for ; American Institute, French brandies were having attempted to burn his warehouse in Front the subject of discussion. It was shown street, some months ago, is now going on in the by quotations from French journals that al- fbjurt of Session. eohol, manufactured from beets and molas- the people were advised and commanded n i r« u a > uu? r at bv the Deseret News, the organ of Gov. CoL Goldsb y s ch ’ f ’ Im P Mar Young, not to allow their families to asso- j eiate with the strangers. Except the epaul- j etted Gentiles became baptised, they could ' 1 .-> o o of the . «— r i i i • i.i rt?. , i to friends at home. Iu the morning the boats be- bonin e of them and burn them up Tnat Bgato to take off pcrso ns from The wreck. The I the 1 alace should lia\ e ended m a failure is ! third mate anti the purser were the only officers , to be regretted. In tllO way of art, it ad- • who staid on board. The passengers speak in high vanced the country a whole century. It has ; terms of the third mate. increased the national taste, and given us a j By a fortunate accident the Goliah came along desire for the refinements of life, that must ' within sight of the wreck about 9 o clock iu the j exert a salting and beneficial effect on the i monun S’ c, *? t ’ H ‘ l e >‘ took a large load ofpassen- | , , t-i j / "ers on board, and landed them at San Dio«ro. ; republic. AeiclotA Du(l/uH(IR. \ j n the meantime a number of the men on shore | ja®» We find the following dispatch in ! ^ ftarted for_ Santa Barhnria. whicl. was about j i 4 7 a* 1 1 hfty miles to the northward. Tho Goliah on her i tiie \ork Commercial A-dyei tiser : return stopped there and found forty-live there, ! Boston, November 8. J an d then proceeded to the wreck, where she found ! The Newfoundlander, published at St. . on tho shore the remainder, all of whom she 1 Johns, N. F., contains the following abstract • brought to this city. It may be that a few were of the cruise by the clipper ship John missed who were on the way from the landing Clemens, J. R. Luckey, master, in search place to 8anta Barbara, and had nut arrived when ses, has, to a great extent, superceded the expect to move in fenmle society The . 1 - . . tDllnwimr Nimfnv I ircnn liu<Ip IIhth pair to that Territory on the night preceding [ u . r ^kegivmg. He is dou the election, present themselves at the polls j UlB rc - olectl on. the next day, und cast their suffrages for! Tho markets are dull. There luu been a decline Slavery and its candidates. The Society is : '>[ 12 J ccm * l )er b J jl - »> floor and mess pork since said to number several thousand members i ednesday. Indian corn ia also a trifle lower.— already. Senator Atchison has the credit Cotton about tiie same. of originating it, anil the llev. Thomas | Dr. D. Jayne, of Philadelphia, the great adven- Johnson, late delegate in Congress from Nc- ■ turn’ and patent medicine man is a candidate for hruska, is employing it to foist himself into ! the U. S. Senate from Pennsylvania., a *. a the same jiosition from Kansas.—A T . ; The hank failures in the West are creating great | following Sunday, Orson Hyde caUedupon j So..»r h,„ <l» M, teat. I KlSl™ S™ck j * to Shep “f e ki“ j grove dam by Monmouth Eclipse, 2, 1, 2. rider thrown. Col. Easley’s ch. c. by Chieftain dam by .John Bascombe, 3, 4. dist’d. Time, 3.jH, 3.47, 3.46. 3.49. , . ... the Goliah touched there. All the rest are in this missing boats ot the Arctic Mte . city or in Lo , Angelos . when tho Goliah return- v. as absent lime Ufiys, and experienced very l C( j ? th e wreck was scarcely visible above water, heavy weather. Has been some eighty' and it is very likely that by this time nothing is miles South of St. Peter’s, and cruised over ; loft, and that the specie is a total loss, the ground carefully. , 1 In regard to the number of lives loot, there is Spoke many vessels and desired them to i difference ol opinion among the passengers, keep good look out. Saw a large chest but Some think thirty were lost, and some connate I it 1 b , , , ... , t as high as six tv. In ono boat load swamped twelve was unable to get it on board; also, a mat- werc W in another five, in another three. A. doubtless thankful for I ^.f^enrfias opened ite p^foToVtheTn- 8?^ to which the congregation rep troduetion of foreign wines and liquors, and large orders have been sent to this country aud Holland for a large supply of whisky, or pure spirits, as it is called, for the purpose of making it into French bran dy, to supply this and other brandy drink ing countries. C3 _ 11 CIA lUffl, 111 BUHlUtT 1I>1, *»» HUUIHUl inivv, v . +r»ii»ir in o-ond nrHpv mil full ^ rass ? supposed to be luade of India rubber, j o ne man who had two carpet hags fastened to his lhe tiiu k g od o de and a lull aft nd- and dded w ith air, but could not secure it . nook, one on each side, was so anxious to get to ance - Bets ran very high, &c. Think the boats have been picked up bv j ahofej that he jumped from the steamer, intending ‘Amen.’ In consequence of this move, ftll Tbe following were made for to-day, Fri- vessels bound outward. * to swim to « small boat which was near, receiving the horses that can be spared will be sent foy, 4th dav : ! passengers, but his carpet bags were too much for out to eraze instead of beihe- stable frd ' TJ',' , , A Righteous Decision.—Wo" copy the ' him. He sunk like a stone. “Tho avafom of onnonbton.ro bo 0 boonmo ^oldsliy s sorrel mare, Betty King, following from tbe New York Besidos, it is said three persons jumped over- Cincinnati Pork Trade.—On Monday, Tribune. Within twenty years, about one hundred churches, numbering about twelve thousand converts, Iiave been planted along the coast of Africa. Many school:; have also been j established, which are now in successful operation, and huudreds of natives have re ceived and arc now receiving a Christian education. HSf- Two hundred Jand seventy-five I houses at Cincinnati commenced cutting thousaud pounds of wool were sold ot auc- , 10 £ e ’ before nig.it thev uere obbged tion in Trojv N. Y., on the 9th inst, at, >n % conseqRCTce of , prevent further mischief they were locked! Tur. ForgeriesSan Fuaxcisco.—On tho 7tli track | - u a mu;ill rooip uhtU th0 ears arrived in ultimo, San Francisco was thrown into the greatest prices ranging ‘from ‘ thirtv to thirty-eight feather becoming suddenly warm. The “ 1 The above Horses are fine stock and some cents per pound. “ Ga^csays that in way of sale.: it heard of no : Arnson, the man suspected of sending the , fast ru ni ng m uy be expected. The transactions. Packers were not disposed to infernal machine to the house of Mr. Alii- : to ; n a u « order and muchsnort nnv bo look i !i^ w * u A a * l, ’ u ‘“ *'* i excitement in consequence of tlw rumor that Horn- r The Iowa Conference of the Methe- j V nt there we purchasers for De- b which he and his wife wero torn to ed for . J ‘ y ' Incn'fov a^aulT^c' butthe Surt fully i ry Moig f ’ ° f i l ° ?° u \ a f Alder ' , , comber delivery ai -1. on account of parties , r , men lor assault, oct., uui uie couni iuuy j men, and one of the most extensive lumber mer- ^piBCopal t/hurcU already embraces the wh - Q haye g()1(1 \ {)Y that thue at and , pieces m Cincinnati, last summer, has at Fi 0U r is selling at Tuscumbia, Ala., justified what he had done, and ordered the chants in the State, had failed-tor $800,000 ; that length been arrested in Iowa. ‘ at $11 perWreL I suit to be dismissed.” 1 several forgeries had been discovered; timtAIeiggs dist Episcopal Kansas and Nebraska Mission District. upwards. Summer's G’onc. BY MRS. MORTON. Hark ! Through the dim wood flying, With a moan. Faintly the winds are sighing— Summer's gone ! There when my bruisjefl heart feeletb, And the pale moon her face revenleth, Darkly my- footsteps stealeth, To weep aloue. Hour after hour I wander, By men unseen, And sadly my wrung thoughts wonder. On what hath been. Summer's gone. There in our green bowers, Long ago, Our path thro’ the tangled flower?, Trending slow— Oft hand in hand entwining— Oft side by side reeliug— Wo watch'd in its crimsoned shinning The sunset glow, Dimly that sun now burneth For me alone— Spring after spring returneth, Thou art- gone. Summer's gone. Still on my worn chock playeth The restless breeze ; Still in its freshness strnycth Between the tvess. Still the blue streamlet gusheth— Still the broad river rushoth— Still the calm silence huslieth Thu heart’s disease : But who shall bring our meetings Back again ? * What shall recall thy greeting?— Loved in vain? Summer's gone! MARRIED. In this city, on the lAth inst., by the l* 1 ' J. P. Duncan, Mr. N. C. Robertson, of Colum bia, S. C., to Miss L. B. WixsJiir, daughter " Isaac Wiaslup, Esq., late of Vinoviile, Ua.