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THE NEW TOKK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 6641. MORNING EDITION-TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1854. PRICE TWO CENTS. INTERESTING POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. IMPORT ANT WHIG MOVEMENT. THE SILVER GRAY STATE CONVENTION. rmOCKAHHE OF FVTHE OPERATMW8. Appral of the Graad Couneil of tlx1 Know Nothings. ADDRESS OF THE FREE DEMOCRACY. Meeting* la the City and Sabnrbs, Ac.. Au. A:. STATE CONVENTION OF THE "31LVER GRavs." THE DILIBPBATION AMU Till COMCLC8IOE. [From the Albany Fxpress, Oct. 30.] Tlw gentleman win. hand* us the following, assures u: that it U an autheutlc report ?.f a private meeting of pro minent silver grays, held in this city early lust week. It la as imj.nrtcnt item of jx.litirai new*, which we publish ?a such:? IfR. Ebw.tRDt'?Tlie Xkw Yohk Hkkalii, and a number of other |-i>|M'rs iu this State, have been speculating <>l' late with reference to the actual position aud probable action of tbv national whig*, or silver grays, a* they are called iu the present canvass They are ah in the dark, | *nd very wide of tl.e mark. 1 can inform you briefly and authentically precisely where this elaas of whigs stand ?]. now, and \\h?re they will be found on the 7th of Xoreiu * her next. In view of the new issues of the present cauvass, and ' |the perplexities they present, a number of the prominent conservative politicians of thi- State assembled early last ?week to talk over matters, and decide upon the course that should he pursued. It was agreed upou all hands, that the national whigs should occupy precisely the position assumed by them at L'tica, wlieu tliey bolted tire Syracuse nominations, and with Frank Granger at their'head, laid down their memorable platform. This bciug agreed upon unani mously, the next question that presented itself was? "When shall we act?" An eminent Xcw York city "sil ver gray" counsellled the immediate publication of an address, in order that the position assumed might exert all the weight it was cnpAble of upon the issues of the present struggle. This proposition was voted dow n. and It was finally and uuanimously resolved that an address should be prepared forthwith, setting fortli in full the "views aud position of the national Wi.igs of Xew York, and that it should be circulated simultaneously with the resntt of the coming election, and not iu ?rder to inter fere in any manner with the voting. I do not doubt, from all thin, but that (hit clan of whiff* will repudiate the Syracuse now {nations, and throw their vote* ??faror of Danil Ullman. The meeting was held at Congress Ilall, an.l embraced the principle leading men among the national whigs. I forgot to sav in the proper place, that it ukm alio re? *olved upon to call a convention to atremble in Albany early in January, to reinitate the whiff party on it* old address that will be issued will plainly declare the principles of the whig party; express a decided opposition to the Nebraska bill as a violation of the Mir ouri com promise; stand by tlio whig principles established by the National Convention at Baltimore in 1852, and pledge thb party to opposition to all propositions for tlio "fu sion" of the whig party with auy other for seetioual party purposes, based upon the agitations of the day. It is thought by the friends of tills important political movement, that the time for decision has arrived, and that the approacldng winter will determine whether a national party shall cease to exist. Yours, truly, P. T. Albany. Oct. 28,1854. THE ATTEMPT TO REELECT WILLIAM H. SEWARD TO THE UNITED 3TATES SE NATE. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. There can no longer be any <l?ubt of the fact that the Eeward whig* are concentrating all their energies upon the alrle Issue of the return nl' their leader and chief to the United States Senate. His defeat this winter would he the most disastrous blow which could possibly befall him, and would do more to darken his prospects for the Prea'dcncy than any other event. No one knows the truth of tliis assertion or appreciates its force better than Mr. Seward himself, and hence the concentration of all hla force in the endeavor to secure a majority of the members of the ensuing Legislature favorable to his interests, and pledged to vote for his return to the United States Senate. To accomplish this end his coadju tors in this city have, by trading off the other offices, secured as the Assembly nominees men who are publicly known to be identified witli his views. In the selection Of their candidates they have, in a majority of cases, brought forward tlieir most popular men. In the Second district, comprising the Third and Sfcth wards, their candidate is Kobert B. Coleman, one of the proprie tors of the Alitor House, a personal and political ad mirer of Mr. Seward, and whose house has long been known to be the headquarters of the Seward organiza tion of this city. Now, few men (and certainly none within that district) possess a larger share of per gonal popularity than Captain Coleman; and but for bis known fraternization with Wm. H. Seward, and his acknowledged identification with hia viewa, beyond all doubt hla peraonal popularity would have gone far to ward hia election. But, air, the time haa now fully come to vindicate the honor of the State, and in the ensuing conflict all personal preferences must be eachewed. The State of New York ia at present represented in the 8enate of the United States by William H. Seward and Hamilton Fish, both of whom are free Boilers and aboli tionists, and as a necessary consequence, the Empire State is classed among the free-soil States. This result baa not been produced by the action of the people. The members of the legislature, who six years ago violated their sacred trust, and made William H. Seward Senator, have, by the sentence of the people, long since been con algned to the shades of political obscurity. Now, when it isknown that a large majority of the" people of this State are hostile to Mr. Seward, that they regard his views as treasonable, and if carried out, dangerous to the best interests and welfare of the country, yet in the very face ?t all this, the same trick is about bring played, and a ?tain inflicted upon the escutcheon of our State, which frill require six long years to wipe away. The union Whigs of this city and State owe a duty to themselves, and by every principle of patriotism should endeAvor to avoid the i"ipending calamity. For myself, though gray with years, I have never voted other than the whig tick et, but my duty to my country is now pa fa mount to mere party allegiance. I can have no fellowship with any party of which Mr. Seward is the champion. As yet ted in this there is-no national whig candidate nominate! district, nor do I know that there will be any. My choice, therefore, must be between Robert B. Coleman, who re presents the Seward interest, ami Nicholas Quackcnbos. the candidate of the national democracy. With the former, I am on terms of friendly intercourse; with the latter I liave never spoken. Now, as Mr Coli-man is the champion of a cause, to my way of thinking, dangerous to the reputation of my native State, and as 1 believe, subrershe to the honor and welfare of the country at large, my vote (unless a Union whig candidate is in the deld^ w ill lie given for Mr. Quackcnbos, the democratic . nomtnre, w ho, if report be true, is a gentleman of edu cation, high personal character, anil sound ami national in his views. To my brother national wliigs I say, with all sincerity, " Go thou, and do likewise." A SILVER GRAY WHIG. Third ward. October SO, 1854. THE KNOW NOTHING EXECUTIVE COM MI T < EE. We stated yesterday, that live of the nominees of this organisation were members of the committee that nomi nated them, thus virtually nominating themselves. W# were in error in regard to the candidate for Record er, John H. White. Mr. White, we hare since learned, is not now, nor never has been, a member of that com mittee, aad therefore cannot be considered as a self-nom mated candidate. He is the regular nominee of the whig party, and was adopted by the Know Nothing party without any agenoy ? of bis own. AMERICAN STATE TICKET. At a meeting of the Grand Council of New York, held . at Odd Fellows' Hall, in the city of New York, on the 5th day of Ootober, 1854, it was unanimously Resolved, That the president appoint a committee of ? Ave, charged with the duty of preparing an address to -the Subordinate Councils of this State, setting forth the reasons that caused this Grand Council to present an iu ?dependent nomination for State officers, ami urging upon the brethren throughout their jurisdiction, the necessity ? of giving to the ticket so nominated, their united and vi gorous support, and also of electing to the legislature such -men as will faithfully carry out the principles of ithi* Order. In accordant!* wRh the above resolutions, the follow ing committee was appointed:? & Ssmmo.vh, Fonda, Mont- C. Shawm, New York. gomery county. T. Scmtnurr, Brooklyn. A. 8. Parsons, Albany. C. Gardner, Buffalo. J. W. BARKER, O. P. H. FaRxnroTOH, 0. 8. J. E. Enu.vo O. V. P. To THE SCBORDI.NATK COCKCM OF THE STATK OF N*W VogX: It has become the pleasure as well as the duty, of the undersigned, a committee appointed by the Grand Coun cil, to inform you, and through you ail the member* of ?or most trusty aid well beloved Order, that en Ameri cbij ticket?the American ticket?hat bt-eji put io nomi nation for State officers, to l?e supported at the coming {rMial I'lwtion. 'Ihnt ticket for which is claimed, and which by no pos sible contingency can fail to receive, your most cheerful, energetic and successful support, ia A>w Gorernitr: Pamki. Vumak, of the city and county of New York. A'or Lieutenant Governor: GisTAMs Ccuouoct, of Huifnln, Erie county. Fur Canal Coinmutvmer: JoslAit It. Willi VMM, of Ithaca, Tompkins county. For State I'riron Jntpecfor: J oil: I'. Stt.M'Hn, of peek-kill, Westchester county. These ia minces in a each and all of them intelligent, trustworthy and patriotic citizens; faithful ami true to those great ami vital principles the iinmedia ?great and vital principles the immediate and per manent establishment of which are so eaaentially neces sary to tlie |s-r|>etuity of a republican form of govern ment. and the future safety and well being of society. A body of representatives, composed of over one thou sand native Ivorn citizens, selected by yourselves, and in win m your respective associations had and have the li'.ll"st confidence, after mature and earnest deliberation. adeeted equally from the two old political parties these tandidates as future fi candidates as future fraternal co-workers. With entire unity they concurred in the sentiment that honest, intelligent and patriotic officers in every department of tl.e government, selected from among tho e w ho, from hirtli, eduction, habits of life aud warm rational sympathies, though diliering perhaps in some minor detail- as to the in"de of carrying on the mere machinery of the government, were safer depositories of political power than the mere partisans, whose nomi nations are the result of accident on the one hand, or of corrupt political caucua combinations on tie- other. In immediate and inseparable connection with this was that other equally im}u>rtaiit faet, which -e-m-d to be perfectly undersb-od and fully appreciated that while the old political purtis'S of every sliaite ami complexion were struggling with each other bitterly and unscrupu lously for tlie mastery, a common enemy, by dividing, distracting, controlling, corrupting, first tlie ?me a thru the other, was rapidly and certainly preparing the way for a final victory over all?sweeping them, their principles, the old political landmarks, the old national sentiment-, the very institutions themselves into com mon irretrievable ruin. That power which is doing all this is a unit. It has one mighty head outside of our government. Its fol lowers, as unfortunately for themselves,, as for us, are comrautided (aud which command they implicitly obey,) to think, vote, and combat only as that solo and mighty head directs. Such is not the province of freemen, who though they may dill'er, yet in all things exercise tlie privilege of thinking and acting independently. Free speech, free conscience, free religious Protestant worship, were tlie great cardinal doctrines around which the founders of our republic stood, as an impenetrable wall of lire. This belief in them inspired those founders w ifli that gigantic faith which could not in their day and generation be overcome. That faith led them and theirs to a certain victory?a victory where no all absorb ing church should lie the head of a persecuting State. I-ook ye uou to that mighty foreign head, which Ts in the full tide of successful experiment, dividing the old par ties into multitudinous fragments, tlint it may the more easily conquer, while with iron grasp it coutruls tlie every ientiuient and action of its thoughtless de votees, who do not stop to think that unless this dread ful purpose be stayed we and they are cngulphed in a common de-tructio'n. Our mere "politicans are rapidly by their policy consummating this inglorious end. That foreign policy seeks to destroy our very form of government?we seek to save it for the commod good of tlie whole human family. It cries "peace, peace, but there is no peace,"?we should prefer to live in bonds of charity with ull man kind, aud die with hope of peace beyond the grave. If indeed these thiugs la- so, how can we have confi dence in whoever may be elected by any party which seeks to elect its candidates by such anti-republican as sistaneeY Arc they not more or less chargeable with this gruve offence? If .so, tlreir candidates, when elected, cunuot anfi will uot be entirely independent. We go, in all kindness and sincerity, but with uncom promising firmness, lor pktciug none but Americans on guard. Such guardsmen, too, whose past lives are a guarantee for future conduct. Come, brothers, arvusv?be firm, be ready, lie steady. St ami! the ground's your own, my braves. Will ye give it up to slaves f Who would he a traitor knave, Let liim turn and flee. Tlie great American heart outside of the Order will come to tlie rescue, for it beats in unison with your own. Then advance. Still as the breeze. Hat dreadful as the storm. I.ook to the glorious past while hoping tor the fearful future. Go to the graveyards of your venerated sires, and there think of what is to become of your children, and your children's children. Commune with the dead. Go see How sleep Die brave who aink to rest With all thoir glorious honors blest. Then strike one powerful, united, peaceful blow for liberty. You can yet strike that blow tlirough the ballot box. Brothers, we know wo cau conquer peaceably now. Let you this opportunity pass, and horeafter your chil dren may sit by the dishonored graves, if oven the graves themselves would be left of unworthy fathers. ' The glory of the children are their fathers." Shall it be. lives there a man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, This is my own my native laud ? Brothers, the issue is with you ! S. SAMMONS, C. 8CHAFFER. L. S. 1'ARSONS, T. SCHNEBLEY, C. GARDNER. FREE DEMOCRATIC ADDRESS. TO TBI PEOPLE OF TBI STATE OF NEW TOBK. In addressing you at this time on behalf of the free democracy of the Empire State, we cannot but allude to the marvellous change which a few brief months have witnessed in the political aspect of our repub lic. At the beginning of the current year, the two great national parties are yet moving in consolidated masses, still professed to recognise the pledges they bad given at Baltimore, in 18.'>2, to discountenance all further agi tation of the slavery question, "whenever, wheraver, or however made," as "unnecessary, useless and danger ous." It was distinctly declared on their behalf that the last concession bad been demanded at our hands by South ern slaveholders, and men hoped that slavery thence forth would encroach no further upon freedom. President Pierce in his inaugural congratulated the country on "the existing sense of repose and security to the pnblic mind throughout the confederacy," and vo lunteered his personal assurance to those who had placed him in his high office, that "it should suirer no shock dnring his official term if he had the power to avert it." Thus much for the past?now for the present. That confidence, security and repose, those conven tional pledges and inaugural oaths, have vanished into air before a breach of national faith, perpetrated by a Southern coalition of whigs and democrats, abetted by Northern traitors, and led by the President himself, armed with the executive patronage?a patronage, it may be incidentally remarked, immeasurably greater tban ever belonged to Washington, and the control of which in these daye, by a single man, is at variance with the principles of our constitution, and hazardous to the liberties of the people. Already Is verified the prediction of Jefferson of "the future tyranny of the executive power," to which he might have added, its demoralizing and degrading influence. The credit of the Nebraska perfidy belongs exclusively to neither whigs nor democrats. From its Inception po litical antagonists strove witli each other for a share of the fnfauiy that clings to those who trample on com pacts. Tlie violation of the Missouri Compromise origi nally suggested in covert form by .Stephen Arnold Doug las, holi.ing a commission from a free State, but in fact an accomplice anil tool of the slaveholders, with ikhom he is identified in interest, was presently proposed in bolder shape by a whig Senator from Kentucky. The Southern viliigs met in eaucus. and sundering forever the national party to which they belonged, reckless of ' si pron " their recorded promises?of the honor of the State, and of their ow n integrity, joined the President and his abet tors. and pledged their support to the bill that was to swindle the free laborers of the North. East and West out of a territory ten times larger than New York; a ter ritory which the slave power wore honestly estopped from" attempting to occupy either in whole or in part, since for a consideration h-ng since granted by us and accepted by them, they had given for every acre an Im mutable and eternal quit claim. F.mbohlened by the numerical strength thus acquired, the coalition resolved to consummate the fraud before the Northern people should learn their design; and the day was Insolently announced when tiiey would arrest discussion in the Senate nnd push it to vote. That in tention, you will remember, was defeated by the vigi lance of the free democratic Senators. Chase, Sumner and Wade?who were subsequently well sustained by our own Senators, Seward and Fish?instantly sounded an alarm, w ell fitted to arouse the country. The citizens of the free States, accustomed from childhood to the ob servance of good laith, w ere slow to believe It possible that any Congress was base or bold enough to repudiate a compromise which for thirty years had been regarded as a firm, inviolable, irreneslnble compact, consecrating forever and without recall the territory north of 30 de grees U0 minutes to perpetual, universal freedom?a com promise originally proposed by the South, and approved not only by Henry Oij, with'whose name It was so In timately associated, but by President Monroe and his Cabinet, including those great exponents of Southern principles, Calhoun, Crawford and Wirt. As each morning's telegraph, with confirmation strong, dispelled their doubts, and revealed the design of the Southern coelltinn, the people of the North awoke to their danger, and the closing winter and opening spring looked upon a popular convulsion unparalleled In our history. The agitation was not confined to the abolitionists, some of whom viewed lite Kansas-Nebraska bill with satis faction. ns exhibiting on the pert of the slave power, so long distinguished for a wise subtlety, that madness w hich precedes destruction. But the most conservative and cautions among our citizens, the honest "Union men" and "friends of the Houth;" the "compromisers of 1840," who had pledged themselves for the honor of the slaveholders, In regard ing that compromise ss a finality; the merchants snd mechanics of New York, who, in blunt phrase, held that "a bargain was s bargain," as one man revolted at such a breach of faith; and declared again and again from the Tnbernaele, that with the repeal of the Missouri compro mise all compromises and all confidence were at an end. The l-Mfrcnit clergy, beaded by their bishop* and digni taries ipgardle?s of vulgar obloquy, protested in the name of religion and humanity against the two-fold crime. 1 lie people everywhere iu maxa meeting*, with out toga id to party, and under the lead ot men venera ble anil trusted, gove vent to their feeling* in tone* whose leveibernting thunder might have shaken the capitol. hut the Nehiaaku couspiraIota resolutely braved the at dim 'J lie popular sovereignty was dehed. The peo ple'* proteit ?a? unheeded, their resolve* unread; tlietr .senator*. on presenting them, were insulted, and their Milt mil warning* weie laughed to acorn. Hie slavery e\teiisi.>ui*t* knew well the atake for laved? t which they flayed?they knew well that it waa the cul ii inating j*'iut of a aerie* of triumpha over the free ?State*, iircompli.-heii during fifty years, and that its au ] ren in y in the Territories, from which it had been ex it by roiupa eluded by compact, once restored, the way waa open for making America a great alave empire, and verifying the threat uttered by Wise of Virginia, that "slavery would pour itself out without reatraml, and find ao limit but the Pacific Ocean." Hie Nebraska bill paused the Senate at midnight, amid oath* and drunken in?oience,deaecratingthat once august chamber; and later it was paaaed in the House by n viola tion of it* rule*, ao auilacioua that in an ordiuary cats it would of itself have a tanned the country. But connect ed with the Nebraska swindie it attracted comparatively little atteution. A contempt for the laws of the body wss u nutural adjunct to a great outrage on the lawa of the land; aud it caused no surprise that men bent upon ti c | ci J etiation of a national Iraud. upon the bet ray a ot tlieir country's faith and their own honor, should k ip themselves of the outward characteristics of gentle no ii unil extend the ]>erjury of the act to the very man # i if Its consummation. tl itii the i assage of the bil thad removal the land lunik of freedom, and opened wide our Western territu ile* to the curse of slavery,'t was supposed by some tli .1 the popular storm would be lulled, and that the North would, a? on former occasions of lesser moment, gruniblingly but *utely acquiesce. They judged ol the Ireemen of the North by its servile representatives .it Washington, and naturally enough ?apposed that the individuals whom by fiMiis, on the IP or of the Capitol, they bullied and bribed, insulted and cajoled. were sent tVlther by a constituency equally des titute of conscience and of backbone. Iliey repeated with senrn the declaration once reproachfully made Ny the New England states mail, ??there is no North." "They threaten us," said the Charleston' Mercury, "with a great Northern party. ? ? If they were not meie hucksters in politics, with only this peculiarity, that every man oilers himself instead of some other com modity for Mile, we should surmise tliey might do what they threaten. * * Hut they will do uo such thlug. 1 hey wilt bluster and utter a world of self-glorification, and end l>y knocking themselves under to the highest bidder." It was a mistaken reading of the times. The North is not the craven that the South believed. The spirit of our fathers is not extinct?tlieir resistance to tyranny is not forgotten?their contempt for meanness and treachery still survives. A great indignity may develope to tlieir fullest extent senses that long have slumbered. It is recorded of (Fgles, a t-aiuisn wrestler, who was born dumb, that aee ing unlawful measures pursued in a- contest that would deprive liiin of hi* prize he had justly earned, his indig nation gave him on a sudden the power of utterance, which hail been denied him from his birth, and he ever afterwards speke with ease. The parallel will hold good lor the future as for the present, and the North hence forth, with quiet confidence, wilt declare its principles ami pronounce its will. Its resentment was slow to kin dle. anil it will be slower to abate. The fall elections are now recording its sober aecond thought. Kront Maine to Iowa, despite the struggling resistance of a desperate administration, the Nebraska perfidy is repudiated by an indignant people. This result vindicates not only the manly spirit, but the intelligence of our fellow citizens, who refuse to be deluded lor a moment by the empty sophistries in regard to the principle of the hill, with which their understand ings were insulted at the moment their liberties were be tiayed. They have Isarned from the fathers of the tepubHo their constitutional rights over territories purchased by their treasures and subject to tlieir control. They have been taught by the trainers of tire ordinance of 'il, the responsibility resting upon them in the protection and guardianship id their infant and dependent territories until they aio organized into independent, and sovereign Hates. They will not consent to such a violation of tnis sacred trust aud boundeu duty, as tlie veUnquislimeut of that guardiuusbip over the rights, destinies, and happi ness of uutoU millions, until it is resigned to the people of the territory constitutionally organized as a State. The citizens of the free states have in times past, acted in many thing* weakly and credulously?they have fool ishly giv en credence to ilia threat of disunion repeated by North Carolina "as often a* babies cry." They have trusted?and tor this none should blame them?to the good faith ol the South. But their weakness ami credu lity aie at an end, ami lenst of all at this time will they forget the lessons of Washington. Jefferson, and Madison, to gather instruction in regard to popular instruction in regard to popular sovereignty from Douglas or from Fierce. We need not dwell longer upon the character of the Nebiuska bill. Its unexampled bad faith?the falsehood it contains, that the Missouri compromise was defeated by the compromise act of 1850. while the Texan bill ex piessly reaffirmed and reapplied the principle of the pio iiibition of slavery north ot lib 30?the shallow pretence that it recognizeii the sovereignty ot the people of the Territories, while it vested the appointment of their (lov ernor, their Judges and other important office- in the President and Senate, and refused to recognise the validity of any law passed by tlieir I^egislature unless first approved by Congress, and various other quibbles equally contemptible, liave been so thoroughly exploited that weir repetition, as of late, by ex-respectable states men, excites a feeling chiefly of pitiful commiseration. The obnoxious clause of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, so far from being entitled to respect as law, was in violation of all law, human and divine. Its intent was a crimes?it is saturated with fraud, and bears the impress of untruth. The true issue is before you?economically the policy of the slave power ia to depreciate the value of labor, by multiplying laborers to wbom no wages are to be ?aid: while your policy is to heighten the value of ibor by allowing, in your Territories, no laborers ex cept those who may demand " a fair day's wages for a lair day's work." Politically, the slave power aims to rule the country by a slaveholding oligarchy?to extend their property representation through our western ex panse?to sway with despotic rule the general govern ment, and devote its energies and resources to the con version of the western continent into a slave empire. Already ure efforts being made by Virginia to reverse the decision of our superior court in the I-emnwn case, so that slaves may be brought into the free States?and New York he made a port of departure for the slave mar kets of the South?and more southern States are seekiug to re-open tlie African slave trade to supply wretched la of Texas, borers for the cultivation, not only of Texas, New Mexi co and South California, but also as they hope of Kansas, in place of the free hands and stout hearts, whom God helping us, will never permit that soil consecrated to freedom, to be deseerated by the lash of a master, or the i abject submission of a slave. Morally, the aim of the slave power tends to the ener vation, the extinguishment of true liberty, to the degra dation of man and the dethronement of tiod; and if It were possible their end should succeed, our western star of freedom on which the hopes of the world are resting, would set in a midnight of despair. Touching the manner in which, at the approaching State election you can declare your sovereign will upon the present state of tilings, it is clear that both branches of the old democratic party have deserted their Ancient faith, and joined themselves to the sectional coalition, which aims at the triumph of slavery over the coifftitu tion and the country. Openly deriding the doctrines and the practice of their great leader, Jetferson, the one swears by Pierce, and the other by Douglas. Of the whig party, as such, nothing is to be expected. Although their present Statu candidates have to some extent acquired public confidence by their recognition of right principles, as a national partv it is dissolved, nor lutual conf" again to be reinstated; for mutual confidence between its sections is gone forever, in fact, for years their union has been growing weaker, and the separation wider, despite compromise platforms, and all the cheate ry of resolutions intended to mean anything or noth ,cv of tin ing. It Is clear that the free democracy of the Nortle the men who intend to repel the aggressions of the slave power, and restore the national government to its origi nal position on the side of freedom, have nothing to hope from the whig party, nor trom any party that seeks to conciliate and fraternise with the slavery ettenaionist* and repudistors of the Sonth. Henceforth, there will be, in fact, but two great national parties?the party of faith and freedom, and the partv of repudiation and sluvery. Hie latter is fully organized, and the Southern whigs. with one or two noble exceptions, have cordially joined it. The former is now rapidly organising at the North. Of the bars togs and Auburn conventions, which It was fondly hoped would unite the people of this State under the broad banner of faith and freedom, we can onlv speak with regret. We trusted that a generous enthusi asm in this common cause would supersede all desire for the personal or political advancement of any set of men. And while there was very much to commend in the spirit and resolves of those conventions, we are con strained to declare that our highest hopes were signally disappointed In the omission to nominate a State ticket which should represent not only the principles, but the preferences of the free democracy. It Is an ungenerous task to impeach the motives ot those who, at Auburn, doubtless ta* or fauefc ?' In ?* a favorable opportu nity of reinstating in ? u I at seetion of the whig party with which tliev ) nipathisc, without diminishing the triumph of republican principles. But they should have remembered the original object of the convention, and while rebuking bad faith in others, they should carefully have avoided committing a breach of faith similar in kind, in repealing the rule of voting hy districts, adopted at Saratoga, or in throwing off the character of an independent convention hy reject ing the claim of the free democracy to a representation, and nominating an entire whig ticket. The natural con sequence was trie nomination Dy the free democracy of a ticket rg their own. However much this state of things may he regretted, I it is now unavoidable. The one object to be attained la the signal rebuke by the Empire State of the perfidy of the slave power, and the return to Congress of true men; and if by the unfortunate errors at Auburn any And themselves embarrassed in voting for State officers, no such obstacle exixta in relation to members of Con gress and of our State Legislature. There you can manifest your appreciation of the difference between true men and traitors, and, dropping all personal pre ferences, support those onljr wno remained faithful among the faithless. 1 Touching the traitors, one of your statesmen of ths revolution when In a foreign mad, refuted tn recognise a countryman and former friend when he found bim to be intimate with the traitor Arnold, und frankly wrote to bim in terms that should be remem tiered in regard to the Arnold* of our day:?" The man who gives his hand to that man, in my opin on, pollatea it." *?7 God in hi* g>? d providence guide and direct our counsel*, that uniting on the broad principle* of freedom and justice to which our fathera pledged their lives, their fortunes, their sacred honor*, we may restore our country to the moral emiuenoe on which they placed her, but from which by treachery ahe has been hurled. That carefully avoiding all encroachment on the constitution al rights of ether States, we may successfully resist the increasing encnuchment* of the national government wielded by slavery upon our own: and utterly defeat the sectional coalition which has trampled ott the national faith, impaired the bonds of union, and brought infamy on the American name. Hlavery is the ear element that ever disturb* our peace sn<l threatens oar stability. Originally sectional and lo cal. it openly alias to become natioual and universal; and now is the turning point of our destiny. The power of deciding it is in your hands. Act, as the 8ai?th de clare you will, as "huckster* in politics"?'"knock un der," as they predict and hope, to the sectional coalition, which having betrayed and defrauded you, now sneers at your want of spirit, and all is lost, and most' of all. your honor. But act in the spirit of your fathers, ^-ive back twits southern bounds the mean tyranny that, overstepping our ancient landmark, seeks to lord'it over the free citi zens of free States; that is corrupting and degrading our politics and extinguishing all that is noble and manly in flhr land, and then freedom, honor, laith, will become, as of old, the moving principles of our republic. Let etch citizen who has felt the iusult and the wrong of the Nebraska perfidy, remember his personal responsi bility, and swell by his vote that record of condemnation which, gathering from State to State, is about tn Oil Congress with honest representatives, who will convince the slave power that " there is a North." JOHN Y. HALE. HIRAM BARNEY," Nnr York, October. 1854. JOHN JAY. CITY POLITICS, norma of the democratic republican qene&al coMmrrn. A large and enthusiastic meeting of this committee was held last night, at Tammaay Hall?I-orenzo B Skepard in the chair, and Charles H. Haswell acting a* Secretary. The only action of the meeting was to pre pare for the mass meeting of the Seymour party at Tam maay Hall on Thursday evening next. It was half-past 11 o'clock before the committee adjourned. tup Judge?c. it luiver. Comptroller?Win. B. Lewis. WILLIAMSBURG POL'TICS. temperance nominations. An adjourned meeting of citizens in favor of a pro hibitory law was held last evening in Williamsburg, At which the following nominations were made:? Mayor?George Hall. Citp Judge?C. H. Culver. Treasurer (endorsed)?J. 8. McKay and Crawford C. Smith. Auditors?Paniel L. Northrup. Collectoi?Horace Thayer. Chief of l'olice?John 8. Folk. Ward Officers Thirteenth Ward.?Alderman?John B. Wells. Excise Commissioner?Joseph H. Yandewater. Assessor?John W. F. Smith. Fourteenth Ward.?Aldermen?Win. H. Hiccocks, ? link. Assessor?James Salter. Captain 1 'olive?dames Gallaudett. Commissioner of Excist?Wm. A. Campbell. Constable?George Young. The liquor dealers held a meeting last evening at the Odeon, at which addresses were delivered by J. H. Bowie, Chairman; Mr. French, of New York, and Col. Gardner. Resolutions were also adopted in favor of sup porting Gov. Seymour for the gubernatorial chair. ?BIO NOMINaTIONH? FOURTEENTH WARD. Supervisor? Clias. H. Henry. Aldermen?Win. A. Gulsclvard, P. H. Brown. Assessor?Zaeariuh Colman. l'olice Captain?Refer Bennett. Const aide?Geo. Young. Fxilse?John E. Watson. lNDRPAMlKNT NOMINA-IONB?F1VTEMNTH WARD. Supervisor?Wm. Woodruff. Aldermen?Jos. W. Burden, J. Neabitt Astessor?Mills 1'. ltaker. Captain of l'olice?Henry Boyce. (unstabh?Wm. Sheldrake. Lxrias?Gunion H. Barter. TO THE EDITOR OP THE HERALD. Sir?It la with great reluctance that I feel myself compelled to trespass upon your politeness for an op portunity to refute the calumny of Mr. Fillmore's organ, the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. In that pa per of the 23d instant, in an extract republished in your paper of the 26th, occurs the following paragraph:? In Brooklyn. C. ,1. Jack, a slippery sort of whig, offers himself as an independent candidate for Congress, and is Iully endorsed by the New York Times. This Jack was the tool nt the central clique In their operations at the Auburn Convention. He offered the res tuition to break up the district representation, and carried it by the voices of the bullies und State prison underlings, with which the Convention Hall were packed. Had the Advertiser consulted Mr. Havens, whom it especially endorses, they would never have hazarded the putting forth the falsehood contained in this paragraph. I deny that I was "the tool of the central clique in their operations at the Auburn Convention," and brand it as anlhfamous falsehood, having no other foundation than the malice which invented it. I deny that I car ried the resolution referred to by the voices of bullies mid State Prison underlings, and pronounce this asser tion as false as the other: and I deny that there were any "bullies" in that convention, and assert, without the fear of contradiction, that the gentlemen composing that convention will compare, in regard to talents, in tegrity and political and social influence, with any body of men who have ever assembled in convention in this State in the last thirty years: And, in conclusion. I as sert that in all I did, proposed and carried, I was no man's, party's, or clique's tool or agent; any assertion to the contrary is utterly false. If it tie any satisfaction to the frieuds of Mr. Fillmore to have l>een instrumental in deleating my nomination, and consequent election in this district, 1 wish them joy of it. C. J. JACK. Brooklyn, Oct. 28,1864. Marine Affairs. Sandy Hook Pilots.?An advertisement will be found in another column, dbntaining a summary of the annual report of the Pilot Commissioners to August, 1864. Some sections therein mentioned will be found particularly in teresting to shipowners and masters. Naval Intelligence. Invalids from thi Mkditkrranka.v Squadron.?The ship Commonwealth, arrived at this port yesterday from I eghorn and Spezsia, brought home nineteen Invalids in charge of an officer from the United States squadron in the Mediterranean. The following are their names:? George Harrison Hare, officer in charge; John Sadler, Matliew llasset, Win. J. Morris, H. Brummel, Jas. Wat son, John Munioe, Horace Robmaon, Jno. Wryland. Wra. H.White?the above from the Cumberland: l'eter Pol man, Jas. Blake, Win. Groves. Samuel Howard, from the tt. l.oiris: John Smith, Francis K. Swain, Jas. Knight, Jno. Stewart, Isaac l'sge. John Hatell, from the Saranac* Slandering Hew Orlenna. TO IBB EDITOR OF THE MEW VOItK HERALD. Nkw Turk. Oct. 30, 1864. Some days since, the Tribune charged the New Orlenn 1 tlta ?lth having made statements which never ap I t ared in that paper. 1 corrected Greeley in this matter by sending bim tnc following note:? N? w York, Oct. M. 1864. lionAcr Gri?l?v. Esq., Editor Nrw York Tmsi-sr:? In ) ?ur paper of iliis ilats, yon make the following state en r.t in reference to .New Orleans:?"Recording to the DeUit. tin re is no place where murders are umre frequent." 1 deny, positively, that tbe Delhi ever put dished such a foul slander: therefore I beg you will not make further use of the name of ig you will not make further use of the name of journal to propagate such a falsehood. God knows. If v ou will refer to ths calendar of crime which appears dally In your own journal, modesty, if you have sueh a virtue, wilt dictate the propriety of tayins as little ahout New Orleans as possible. JNO. P. 1IF.1SS of the V (I Delta. In the Tribune of this morning, Greeley acknowlclgn having received the above communication, but will not puhlisn the same, on eccount of "Its impertinence." He also shifts the responsibility of the charge alluded to, on another paper published In New Orleans, and accuses It 'with having declared some time since, that on the aver age, one murder Is committed In New Orleans every cigl t fct c.rs." I am satisfied that In this instance Greeley has Lien aa unfortunate In shifting the responsibility of pro) ngating such a lie u|>on ano'lier journal, a. he was In the first Instur ince opon the Delta A minder every right hours, foraooth! I defy Greeley to produce any I nper, except his own. which ever contained such a foul cud malignant slander on New Orleans. I will not charge his own brain with lieing the Inventor of the culumnv; but the principle?"a lie well stuck to is a gfiod as the truth"?in this ease, will not answer. Respectfully, JOHN P. HIM NlWff FROM TUB CAFE OF OnOD floes*?The fast sailing bark Ppringbok, Cnpt. Htird, from Cape Town fept 11, arrived here yesterday. We are Indeb'ed to ( upt. Hurd for a file of Cape Tow n papera. but they arc exceedingly deficient In local affairs. The legislature waa in aesalon, and there was some discussion with re gard to the " voluntary principle" In religious matters, there being much opposition towards any government establishment. The vexatious subject of the "masters and servants bill" Lad also been before the body, and a reference made to the home government as to the power of the colonial government to repeal one of Its proposi tions. The decision of the home government not to keep up steam communication with the colony w as alluded to in the journals with regret. Two jackalls and a laughing hyena constitute a portion of the Springbok's cargo.? Bottom Courier, Oil. 39 NEWS BY TELEGRAPH, ABOLITION RIOT AT WORCESTER, MASS. TTiprovoked Assault on an Offloer. Big EALTEKATHCfi Ml IWAL ERIK. THE CASE OF BEALE, THE DENTIST. Ik Nun Frigate ?MtvMts ivsrM, j ho., ho., he, -- Ontrag* ?t Wore rater, Mara, Orrat KxcUe. ' BMntr Vokcbstkr, Oct. 30, 1864. j An O. Butman, the person who arrwted Thomas j Sims and Anthony Burns, was discovered booked at the American House in this city yesterday, and was imme diately posted throughout the city. In the evening a vigilance committiw of eitiiens surrounded tlte hotel and watched Butman's movements. He presented a pistol at them, and threatened to use it; whereupon a warrunt was issued and he wns immediately arrested, and this forenoon brought before the police court, charged with carrying concealed weapons. The care was postponed two weeks, and he was required to give bends for his appearance. A large and excited crowd gathered around the court room, and it becoming evident that Butman's life was In danger. Mr. George F. Hoar, free soiler, and son of the venerable Samuel Hoar, api>caled to the crowd to let Mr. Butman go in safety out of ihe city. The crowd gave way, and Butman, accompanied by a strong guard, went to the depot, followed by the populace, where the colored men fell upon him, and would undoubtedly have tAken his life but for the interference of Martin Stowell, James A. UowlaDd, Mr. Hoar, Rev. T. T. V. Higginson, and Stephen S. Foster, all abolitionists. Butman was placed in a carriage, accompanied by Mr. Higginson, and thus escaped with his life. Mr. Higginson was considerably cut by the missiles thrown at the carriage, and Butman was pelted with rotten eggs and stones, and was kicked and beaten almost to death. liuslncas Matter*. COMMERCIAL EMBARRASSMENT. Bai.timokk. Oct. 30, 1854. Messrs. Hambleton k Son. an extensive dry goods house in this city, announce this morning that owing to the failure of other houses, and the stringency of the money market, they lmve to ask an extension from holders of their paper, but hope eventually to meet all their obligations. Duriug the day arrangements were made to meet all their liabilities, and they will continue business as heretofore. TBB BACKSTT'B HARBOR BANK. Buffalo, October 30. 1854. The suspension of E. G. Merrick A Co., does not allect the Sackett'a Harbor Bank of this city, Merrick having resigned the presidency before his suspension. tub creditor? of f. b. Manchester. Cincinnati, Oct. 29, 1864. The creditors of P. B. Manchester met to-day, and a pro rata dividend of five cents on the dollar was declared by them. From the South. THE 1 EI.LOW FBVKK?NEWS FROM FLORIDA, ETC. Baltimore, Oct. 30,1864. The total number of deaths in that city during the eek was 247, including 108 from yellow fever. There wore no deaths in Charleston, from any cause, on Friday last. Intelligence from Tampa Bay to the 20th inst. men tione that the Iwdians were j.orfeoVly quiet. Bill]- Dow legs had visited Fori Washington. The frigate Columbia wo* at ljpnsacola on the 22d instant. From Phlfsdrlphla. THE CASE OF 8. T. BBALK?TUB BODV OF A MAN FOUND IN A BOX. Philadelphia. Oct. 30. 1854. David Paul Brown, F.sq.. counsel for Benle. tiie don tist. filed to-day fifteen reasons for u new trial; amongst others, that the verdict was Against the law and the evi- j dence; that the jury was prejudiced by irrelevant state- ! ments, and did not find their verdict on the evidence a>'.- j duced before the Court; that they indulged in liquor i during the trial, and that some of the jury declared tlint 1 their minds were made up before hearing the evidence. The argument of the counsel will commence on Friday j next, before the Court, in banc. This afternoon, the dead body of a colored man was detected in a box that had been ahipped by Adams' ex press. The box was directed to a druggist in New Haven, and it is supposed it is intended for the Medical Univer sity, as a subject for dissection. The Weather at the Kail. Boston. Oct. 30.1854. The weather to-day bns been exceeding unpleasant. The city is now (7 P. M.) enveloped In a dense fog. Con siderable rain has fallen at intervals during the day. Ihe Machinery of the Steam Frigates. Washington, Oct. 30. 1854. The contract for the construction of the machinery of the remaining steam frigates has been awarded to Ader son, Pelany k Co., of Richmond, Va. Markets. Cincinnati, Oct. 29, 1854. Some hogs are arriving here, but the weather is too warm for pneking. The views of the packers range be low $4. There is no relief in the money market. East ern exchange is quoted at IK per cent premium, and scarce. BALTIMORE CATTLE MARKET. Baltimore, Oct. 30,1864. At the cattle market to day 2,100 head of beef cattle were offered?1.100 were driven eastward, and 750 sold at prices ranging from $2 50 to 84. The supply of hogs was large, and sales were made of fat ones at 85 76 a 80. and of stock at 84 76 a 85 25. Supreme Court?General Term. Decision by Judge Campbell. OCT. 30.?'The deed from Nicholas W. Stuyvesant and wifetoRcade and Hall conveyed the legal title. The rusts were good before the Revised Statutes, If a valid onveyance was not afterwards made by Reade to Hook er, and by Hooker to Hall, and then by Hall to the cor poiation, then the legal title would remain in the heirs of Reade and Hall, and the heirs of N. W. Stuyresa t would not be adjuged to have taken such title, as the thirty years have not expired. They, therefore, may be injoined. If the deeds from Reade and Hall vested lie lecal title in the corporation, then there is an end of he matter, and tlie injunction should issue restraining he delendants. The question of dedication is one of interest. If the | deed of Nicholas W. Stuyvesant and wife did not con vey the legal title to Reade and Hall, or if such legal ti tle was conveyed, aud afterwards on the passage of the Revised Statutes, reverted to Stuyvesant, still the orlgl nsl deed of Stuyvesant is a verv strong If not conolu siva evidence of the intent of the grantors to dedicate or devote the property to public use. Mr. Stuyvesant lived eight years after the execution, delivery and record of that deed, end several years after the passage of the icvised statutes. It was executed simultaneously with other conveyances of large amounts of property by the same grantors to the same grantees. In the partition et the property of N W. Stuy ?sant, after his death, among his heirs, the piece of land in suit was laid down as an open space where two principnl streets unite, and sueli street., and their union at such open spare, are laid down on the partition map. This map *a? signed bv all the heirs in various places, and sealed, and was niaidlestll an act ol gn at deliberation. The subsequent ales by the lietrs appear to have been oiade by this map, which ta referred to generally in their conveyances, iiiit firmed a part, of tnem. Tliia partition map was made ninetcin years ago, and it seems to ine should be (i nsidi red stn ng if not conclusive evidence of ratiflca tii n of the dei d of the ancestor, if not of dedication on tlie part i f tin heirs themselves. In each aspect of the case, therefore, we see that there slit t:ld be a |>crpctual injunction. If the deeds of Reade and Hall did not ci nvcv the legal title, then such title i wi uld remain in their lieir*. If the corporation became vested by reason of tbr conveyances from Keadc and ! Hall, then such public use of llie property has been or dered bv them as was designed by the original grantors, and as specified in such original deed. If neither of the pn positions be correct, and the legal tttlr vested In the delendants on the death of the ancestor, then we think It very manifest that the defendants d'-voted or dedicat ed the pr perty themselves to the public use \JTe think also that the defendants are prcclnd d by the proceed lug* In the Ruprrro" Court, taken for opening this place aa a public square. The judgment of the Special Term Is aftnned with costs ARRIVAL OF THE PACIFIC. FOUR DATS LATER FROM EUROPE. KEBASTOPOlr STILL RUSSIAN. CMTOfUTHMf OF TOE UMIr THE PIOfOBED BE-ESTARUSHMKNT W P6LAHR Operations in the Baltic Ceaaei tor the Seaeon. THE /APAN EXPEDITION? Tie First American Merchant Vessel at Jridt an# Simodi. THE CHINESE REVOlrUTION. EXPEDITION TO SITKA. NEWS FROM AUSTRALIA THE UCfilT CMDUCIAL FA1L11S9* The Collins mail steamship Pacific, Captain Nye, from Liverpool, where aho sailed at 9 o'cloek on tho morning of Wednesday, the 18th, arrived at this port at 10 o'oloek yesterday morning. The steamship City of Manchester, from Philadelphia, arrived at Liverpool on the morning of the 14th, after a run of 12 days and 13)? hours, mean time. The clipper ship Red Jacket arrived in the Moraey on the morning of Sunday, the 15tli, with advices from Mel bourne of Augurt 1, having accomplished the return trip in 73)4 days, notwithstanding having loBt some time in the ice. The Red Jacket made the run out, from th. Mersey to the anchorage at Melbourne, in 69)? days, thua completing the voyago from Liverpool to Australia and back In Ave months and eleven days, being the most rapid voyage ever made. On th. voyage out her average day's work was 205 )? miles, tha emailed progress 50 miles, and her greatest 400 miles ia 24 hours. On her return, the average speed was 263 miles, smallest day's run 31 miles, greatest 376 miles. The Red Jacket brought 45,000 ounces of gold and 28,00. sovereigns. She reports the Lightning and Cairngorm clippers arrived out. The Guidiug Star had also arrived at lJverpool with 50,000 ounces of gold, aud Melbourne dates of July 25. The Cunard steamer Arabia arrived off Holyhead at noon, and at liverpool at soven o'clock evening of Satur day, the 14t)?- bringing no newB whatever of the unfor tunate Arctic. The Canadian mall steamer Ottawa arrived at Liver pool at 6:15 P. M. of the 16th, also without intelllgene. of the Arctic. The follow iug notice was po.ted iu the Underwriters* rooms at Liverpool-,? The royal mail steamer Canada, spoken on the morn ing of the 5th inst.. hy the steamer Arabia, made great exertions to communicate with the latter, but the only word heurd was "saved." She then telegrsph?i <Ua Arctic's number nr?*> ??tier signals, out the ves sels were hy that time too far apart for them to be made out. The arrival of the Hermann was looked for with anx iety, in the hope that she might be tiie bearer ef gratify hg news. The Crar has declared martini law in the government. if Charkow, I'ultawa, and Kiew. The Council Of Tauzimat has been appointed in accor dance with the decree of the Sultan, mentioned some time since. Alt 1'aslia Is president, hut Fuad EITendi ia the ruling spirit. The Council consists of All Pasha, Mi-hornet Ruchdi. Rifaat and Hlfzi Pachas, Ruchti Molln Kffendl. Fuad Kflendi. Gort achat off, it is said, is appointed Generatiniao the forces on the Austrian border. At the recent great fire in Memel tlve whol%pl*C. would have been burned dow n had it not been for th> x exertions of the American and Knglish sailors then in port. Mr. I'pton. an Englishman, settled In the Crimea, tea of an engineer of fortifications in SebnstopoL has been taken prisoner by the British, and is sent to lord Rag lan's headquarters to have information extracted from him respecting the works. Advices from Portugal are very unfavorable, both a. Wgnrd the wine district! and the general position oC affairs commercially. At Lisbon numerous failure* had occurred, including aome of the French houses establish ed there, as well as several native firms. fir Edw ard Belcher was under trial by court martial at Sheerness. (Eng.,) for his mismanagement of the Pola5 expedition. The inquiry is pro forma merely. Prayers have been offered in some of the Irish Roman Catholic chapels for the souls of the brave who fell at Alms. Cholera continued to spread in Dublin. Itespatcbes from Madrid, of October 11th. state that the foreign refugees have received orders to leave tha city within eight days. Those only who can give good reasons for their residence, or can offer security for their good conduct, will be allowed to remain. The Bulletin de Lot's contains an imperial decree re instating M. Jerome Bonaparte in his quality of French man. His son. Lieutenant Bonaparte, has joined th* army of the East. Henry Manning, an apprentice on board the bark Old Hickory, at London, fell from the main yard and was killed. The captain and crew of the Walter R. Jones, of Philadelphia, had arrived in london. and reported th. loss of their ship: they were provided for by the consul. The ship Goodw in. in charge of a pilot, ran ashore on th. Long Sands. (England,) and will become a wreck. The following telegraphic Intelligence, of the 5th nit., from Constantinople, la from the l'retff:?"For the 8ret time for four bundled years, across was publicly erected n the Turkish capital. It wan while a funeral mats was read for Marshal ft. Arnaud." The 1 ondon Time* says:??Tlie accounts of the state of trade in the manufacturing towns during the past week show some dulness, although, with the exception ??' Manchester, confidence i* everywhere maintained. A that place the transactions have been limited, and tb depression caused by the recent failures has not pastel off. 1 lie Birmingham reports describe no alteration In the iron trade. The demand is generally steady, and In the manufacture of plates for shipbuilding there is in creased activity, caused by the government orders for gunboats, to be completed by the spring. Notwithstand ing the present maintenance of prices, aome persons en tertain doubts regarding its permanence, owing to th. continued augmentation of furnaces. In the coppor trade there ia renewed firmness, and the business of th. district altogether Is .till characterized by freedom from failure, cluims br ing in aitnort nil instances well met. At Nottingham, although the American order*, in con sequtnee of the embarrassments on that aide, are unpre cedentedly small, quotations sre steady. Snd the hom. demand is active. In the woollen districts prosperity still prevails. The Irish Hnen market* continue heavy. The Liverpool cotton market was firm, with stilfer prices. Breadstuff* had advanced. A large failure had oc curred in Ireland in the corn and provision trade. Consols were quoted at ?4?? a 94>f. Our London Correspondence. toxnox, Oot. 17, 1864. The War fa Me Crimea?The Latt Report*?General Fan Often Sacken?Reinforcement* to the Allies?The Ger man Covert?England and America?the Latt .Vetre ?Denmark?Turkey?Spain?Mutical Gottip?Cruvei li A btoondt from Pari*?The Theatrical Seat on ia Lon don?The Campaign in the Baltic. i There has been a complete lnll in the exe'ting news of I the preceding week, and qu te a dearth of inteUig.no. We hare net received nny further new* Cro? Um sent