Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, October 30, 1844, Image 2

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    REPORTER
Wednesday, October 30, 1844.
DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS.
he resident in 1814,
JAMES K. .FOLK)
'CV TENNESSEE.
For Vice President, —
CZORGE M. DALLAS.
OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Metiers far President and Tire Presid
I v s f: D s o i srN! , , z c , Ay D I:tssl Senatorial,
1. George F. Lehman.
Christian Knees&
3. William H. Smith.
4. Sohn Hill, (Phila.)
5. Samuel E. Leech.
6. Samuel Camp.
7. Jcsse r Sharpe.
8, N. W. Sample.
9. Wm. Heidertrich.
10. Conrad Shimer.
11. Stephen Baldy.
12. Jonah Btncrater.
13. George Schnabel.
14. Nath'l B.Eldree
15. M. N. Irvine. ;', , r , ,
16. James Woodlairn.
117. Hugh Montgomery
IS. Isaar. - Ankney.
19. John Matthews.
4, 0. William Patterson:
21. Andrew Burke.
'2,2. John M'Gill.
^3. Christian Meyers
124, Robert Orr.
Startling DISCIOSUre:
British Gold sent over to defeat Polk
a nd Dallas —4tis now placed be,y o nd
a doubt that if James K. Polk can be
defeated with the aid of meney from
England, it will be done, v.ren though
it should require 10,000,P.00 of dollars.
The several states are indebted to
Capitalists in England to the amout of
fifty millions. I.t. is not now worth
twenty-five tuqions. The BOND Hot.-
DEM of Engla'ild are assured that if Clay
is elected, 'le revenue arising from the
sale of the PUBLIC LANDS *ill be Dis
iribtaed ninonethe States for . the pur-
pose. of paying this debt; and in ad
dition to this Mr. Johnson's:bill for the
"Assumption of the State Debts by the
General Government, will receive the
up,iicirt of the.,Whig party. The suc
cess of these measures, depending on
the election, of CLAr, - will make TwEs-
Tv-Fivt , .difrerence with tho
Whisk bob(' holders. , Cannot they
afford to spend ten millions? In the
large .cities their money is. poured out
like water.. -
• -4
- Will 'Abel Democracy tolerate this
interference from England?
Once More to the Rescue!
Democrats of Bradford, the aft,AT
and FINAL BATTLE iS to be fought.on
the FIRST DAY OF NOVEMBER. You
have achieved a great, a glorious vie-
TORY ; not only have you triumphed
over the federalists, but their new allies
the Natives. In , the flush of this vic
tory, we beseearyou by the love you
owe to your country, forget not that
the DECISIVE day is AT BAND. Increase
your exertions; be active; be vigilant.
Let there not be a Moment's delay
in effecting a perfect organization of
the
,party 'in each township. The vi
gilance cominittees should be active.—
We advise them • to visit each schobl
district in .their township ; appoint
meetings in those districts ; have with
them copies of the assessment, and
make out a perfect register of every
democratic voter ; and be sure that not
one of them fail to be at the polls on
election dar.
- -The ,crisis is becoming more and
more Important ; and the danger of
frauds on: die ballot box to secure the
election'Of Henry Clay. more and more
alarming. _Nothing will so effectually
prevent ch4ting the;lpeople out of their
rights, as vigilance on the part of the
honest yeomanry.
MlLLERtsn.—This singular fanati
cism has again been raging to a. great
extent. The inhabitants of our bor
ough were warned'hy a notice pasted
in the Post Office, that the end of time
was nigh at,hand, and Wednesday last
appointed for the consumation of all
,things. In , the cities, this delusion has
made many converts, who forsoolLev-
errkind of businessyslint up their shops,
and awaited the coming on the 23d in)
full faith. The world however, with
all Sits lolly, fun, wickedness and wit,
wags on asusual, as it has, and may for
years to come.
LOOK OUT groß :FOBOED TICIMTS !-=
We advise our friends in the townships
' to keep iti eye out for forged votes !
Nolle are correct unless printed with
the regular head of this paper on' the
sheet, with the words, M Polb•, Dallas
and rietory,"
SLEIGHIING EARLY.—There . avas ex
cellent sleighing, on a snow nine limb.
es deep, at SlewntitoWn N. H. .oa
the hst day 'or Fl ember.
FREEMEN AROUSE!
onwptidn'isdalkfng abroad!
•
llead reflect—Men ad.!
.
We
have long believed that, when .
all 'other appliances failed; then' the
Federal party Would resort to 'the
MONEY POWER. They have no
more contidetice in the honesty andkO.:
tegrity of the people, than to: sup pose
they.can be r i perated upon by "i3ritish
Gold. • We now have the PRfJOE - that
the Annie. is commenced, and that It --
will be pushed to the atm oat extent we
can tint for a moment &pal :i t. We have
advices from a privar a source, that an
enormous sum of r.ioney has been con
!' tributeil by the v;hig, merchahts of Bos
ton, New Yor',;, Philadelphia and Bal
timore, foe distribution• 'through the
Stales of P ensylvania and Nev York,
for " 0 - ssintiary - purposes", in other
words " TO DEFEAT THE ELEC
TI('jN
OF JAMES K. Poix, and .GEo.
DALLAS. EinisariesfronaPhiladel
phia, have been travelling theie north-.
1 ern counties for the last-ten day s.—
'THEY ARE NOW IN OUR
MIDST,ag and we have good rea
son to believe that Dar MONEY„ d aa
has been sent to Bradford by the Fed
eral Merchants .of our large , cities, : to
decoy her 'holtek , i yeomanry - into the
4.•
snares of Federalism.. The Wong
whigs have already 'bpasted that they
would reduce the majority for Polk and
Dallas tMo hundred : below that given
for Shunk in Bradford. How can they
do it? i oOnly by seducing Democrats
from their duty, and they think seinean
ly of them as to believe this can be
done.
Frer;men of Bradford, we say to
you in the language of the Union, " will
you quietly rest under, an imputation
so insulting to ypur feelings, so
degrading to your character, so essen
tially at war with your virtuous rule of
action ? You spurned. the gold of the
Money King, when at the zenith of his
greatness, and you will be " proof and
bulwark," against his allurements now.
Rebuke your enemies at theballot-boxes!
Rebuke those who place this mean es
timate upon your character, by giving
increased majorities to POLK and DAL
_
LAS. You owe it to your country.--
You owe it to yourselves."
We copy from the Democratic Union
the following astounding ,disclosures,
exhibiting the Federal party in its true
character: The myrmidons of the
Bank are again in the field, and' al
though they have not the old monster
to back them, its friends and parasites,
Men who amassed fortunes- by follow
ing at the - footstool of its power, when
it was striding victoriously over the
country have come up to the work, and
are pouring out their ill gotten gains,
to corrupt the , honest voters of the
country, in a vain hope to avert the in
glorious defeat that awaits them. The
old monster failed, whey at the zenith
of its power, to defeat the election of
General Jackson, the old Hickory, and
shall its minion's now prevail in their
schemes of BRIBERY and CORRUP
TION against the Young Hickory of
Tennessee. No it can neverbe,, while
virtue and intelligence remains ,With
the people.
1113
[From the Democratic Union.]
BRIBERY & CORRUPTION
The Clay coons of Philadelphia city
have grown positively desperate. They
are aliving exemplification of the adage,
that "those whom ,the Gods have
doomed to destruction, they first make
mad." if ever politicians in the world
'have fitted themselves for 'Bedlam. the
unscrupulous city coons are in that
dilemma. They first despatched a be
vy of traveling spouters into . the interior,
to seduce the democracy by their irre
sistible eloquence! We knew that this
was anticipating mighty effects from
monstrous small causes, and so the re
sult hasproved. They next covered
the earth
_with lying hand-bills and
electioneering pamphlets, defaming the
characters of the democratic-candidates,
and coaxing the honest yeomanry to
turn whigs. Their public: lions exci
ted derision only. Fading themselves
shamefully foiled in all those effortsand their corrupt alliance in Philadel
phia annulled by bn indignant people,
they next abused the democrats In the
true tory slang of 1800, stigmatizing
them as an "ignorant rabble." Their
abuse, like their praise, was received
with merited indifference.
The last resort of whiggery is alike
discreditable, add will prove alike urta
vailiug. Imputing corruption to the
masses, similar to that which actuates
themselves, they hive now hit Upon
the miserable expedient of carrying the
election by the liberal use of MONEY !
A few years
, since, one of the* accredit•
ed-organs in Philadelphia, uttered .the.
disgraceful sentiment. that "where all
other arguments fail, MONEY , CAN
BE USED." ' l pon thin, immoral axi
om, they are 'no O. acting. They have •
conceived the' grovelling idea that the
Imo* -of 'Pennsylvania . car Abe BRIB
ED into the support of Clay ' They
true accordingly raised. by stibscrip
-tion, from among the merchant princes
of •Philadelph r ia, Boston, Baltimore. and
New-York. a sum exceeding= FIFTY
THOUSAND DOLLARS, and have
sent out their emissaries into the re
spective, counties, to begin the work of
bribery. One is traversing, the North.
another The East. and a third the West,.
each " flush " with the funds of the city
Whigs. •
POSTSCRIPT.
PROOF OF TOE FACT !
Since writingthe foregoing we' have
been placed in possession of undeniable
.proof, that the Federalists are flood
ing the country with MONEY, in or
der to BRIBE voters into the support
&I Clay. The following is a literal'
: transcript of a letter written by WILL
IAM B. REED, the feed attorney of the
late - Bank, to a fillow-whig of the in
terior. Mr. R. will not DARE to - deny
is authenticity. What think you, Fel
low Deinocrats, of this infamous at
tempt of the Money Power to corrupt
you with GOLD ? Will you not rush
to the ballot-boxes, and prove your con
tempt of the menthat would thus BUY
you, as cattle are purchased at noon
day in the *Market ? Here is
Mr. Jeed's Letter.
PHILDELPHIA, Oct. 19, 1844.
"Dear Sir :—Mr. Buck basin hand
for ,you ONE HUNDRED DOL.
LAks, to applied' „as suggested in
our conversation, providing conveyan
ces for voters, canvessing the county,
4-c. He will send it to you, and WE
RELY ON YOU FOR ITS JUDI
CIOUS AND EFFECTIVE EX
PENDITURE, AND ITS • EF
FECT _Lehigh must do better. We
are all in high spirits.
" WILLIAM B. REED.
" To • , Esq. Allentown, Pa.
MENDERS OF CONGRESS ELECTED.-
The following members of Congress
were elected at the late election. It
will be seen that we have gained five'
and lost one; while ,the whigs have
lost six and gained none.
1. L. C. Levin, Native American—W. loss.
2. Jos. R. Ingersoll, Whig—Same last year.
3..!. H. Campbell, N. American—Dem. loss.
4. Charles J. Ingersoll, Dem.—No change.
5. J. S. Yost. Dem.—No change.
6. Acoto Erdman, Dem.—Dem. gain.
7. A. R:• - M'Ilvaine, Whig—No change.
8. John Strohm, "
9. John Ritter, Dem.
10:R. Broadhead, jr., Dem. "
11. Owen D Leib, Dem—No change.
12. David Wilmot, Dem. "
13. James Pollock, Whig—Nochange,
14. Alex Ramsey, Whig—No change.
15. Moses M'Lean, Dem—Den gain.
16.. James Black, Dem—No change.
17. James Blanchard, Whig—No change.
18. Samuel Cleaven ger, Dem—Dem gain.
19. H. D. Foster, Dem—No change.
20. John H Ewing, whig—No change. •
21. Cornelius Darrah, Wbig—No change.
22. William S. Garrin, Dem—No change. •
23. James Thompson, Dem—Dem gain
24. James M'Kennan,,Dem--Dem gain.
AN HONEST OPINION.—Major Noah,
a leading whig editor in 1840, and now
editor of the N. Y. Sunday Times, a
neutral paper, says
:
We read 100 papers daily, and can
not be mistaken in publie opinion, when
we say that Polk and Dallas are run
ning ahead with the rapidity of light
ning. and yet we can get bets on Clay;
but then the Whigs are a sanguine par
,ty, always looking at the bright side,
and carried forward more.by their anx
ious hopes and wishes than any posi
tive indication of success."
NEW JERSEY OFFICIAL VOTE.—The
Newark Daily Advertiser contains a
complete list of the votes for Governor
in every township in the State,,compil-,
ed from the official returns. The ma
jority for Stratton, the Whig candidate,
is 1378. The increase of votes upon
the Presidential election in 1840 is 10,-
145. The Abolition vote, for Johns
than Parkhurst, stands thus :—Hudson
4, Burlington 5, Gloucester 9, Morris
33, Essex 15, Camden I—total,o7.
RUNAWAY.—The Springfield Repubr
lican says that Lewis C. Munn, - for
merly editor of the Democrat, in Green
field Mass., has taken leg bail, and is
not to be found. He was elected Town
Treasurer last spring, and it is reported
the Treasury is minus over $6OO. We
hope it is not true.
RESIGNED.—An officer of the customs
of New York, who has becOme a be
liever in Millerism, have sent his res
ignation to the - collector. He expects
a better situation shortly under Failitr
Miller.
AJORlTY.—Francis R. Skunk's ma
jority for Governor is 4,307 ; Joshua
Hartshorne, for Canal Commissioner,
has 6,330 majority. The majority for
the sale of the Main Line, is 21;433.
BEWARE OF FRAUE!SI
The federalists; emboldened by the
success of theirs unhOly ; coalitiOn
Philadelphia; are making 'desperate et;,
forti to carry iPennsylvania for' lay
We warn our . friends -to be on their
guard against forged extfacts front Mr.
Polk's speeches. -misrepresenting his
views upon-the Tariff ritiestionj Wg
w art them to beware of lying letters
written at the South, for the same purL
pose. and intended:for Pennsylliania.,
The views of Gov: Polk, are tob well
known we . trust, , to permit suCh.diS.
araceful means to have any effe(A.
The Democratic Executive,Comm4-
tee of Philadelphia have issued a cir
cular, stating that they have just received
authentic information from Tennessee,
of a gross and . outrageota fraud and
imposture contrived there forlthe . pur
pose.. of controlling the vote of Penn
sylvania. The following letter ekposes
this base attempt
LETTER.
" NASIIVILLE, Tenn. Oct. 3,1544.
A most extraordinary partizan
movement on the part of our political
opponents in Pennsylvania and Ten
nessee has just come to light 'harp. ,'A
plot has been laid by them .to get au
imposing array of names to false state
ments concerning Gov. Polk and his
sentiments on the tariff, and WOcircu
late their slanders thus boldly put forth
by numbers of their partizans at so late
an hour of the campaign, as to prevent
the possibility of an authoritative and
satisfactory contradictidn.
.. It seems that some of the Pennsyl
vania whigs have given notice to - our
Governor Jones, and his unscrupulous
whig associates, that if they will ob
tain a long list of signatures as spbscrib
ing to a declaration that they (living
near. Governor Polk, and having heard
him speak in public,) knOw that: he
(Polk) is a free trade man, for a hori
zontal tariff, anti-protectionist. and all
thatiort of stuff, it will be of essential
service to Whiggery in Pennsylvania—
that this declaration must be signed by
hundreds and thousands, if possible, in
Tennessee. taking care to obtain the
names of all persons residing here •who
are acquainted in Pennsylvania, and
particularly all our whig merchants
who trade with Philadelphia, Pitts
burg, &c. •
It is a very easy matter for our
-Governor Jones to furnish his whig
friends of Pennsylvania with any decla
ration that will suit them best concern
ing Gov. Pold or his sentiments, and
hundreds of his unscrupulous crinies
woulddoin hint in proclaiming it "true
as holOvrit."
4. You may depend upon, the fact that
a batch of ingenious slanders, calculated
to affect Gov. Polk in Pennsylvania, is
already made up here, agreeably to the
order received" from the Pennsyl
vania partizans—that it has been hawk
ed about in a private manner amongst
the faithful, for several days past, ob
taining all sorts of whig signatures—
and that it is to be sent on to Pennsyl
vania, to be used there on the eve of
the election, at an hour altogether too
late to be overtaken by an authoritative
contradiction from this quarter.
"This is one of a series of tricks in
coqtemplation by our .oppOnents from
this point, after the fashion of the
‘. Roorback hoak." Be on your guard
—warn the committees—throw out a
timely word of caution to our friends
in every quarter of the State. It has
been planned in secret—it is gotten up
in secret, and it is to he carried out in
secret. They are calculating_ upon
powerful effects which they expect it
to produce, and we must rely upon the
press of Pennsylvania to forestall it—
to expose the system of slandera priori,
and prepare public
. opinion to,receive
and reject it with scorn and indignation
when it shall make its appearance."
&Immo CAL AMITY .=—The thielling
house of i Mr. Thomas G. Meredith,
situate - on the outskirts of the village of
Morley, in Canton, N: Y., was de
stroyed by fire on Tuesday last, and
two of , his children, one a boy about
two years and a halfold,j , and an infant
daughter about eleven mOnths old, per
ished in the flames. A 1 part of a bed
was the only property laved from the
ruins, and Air. Meredith, besides the
terrible bereavement in hie loss of his
children, is 'left almost utterly destitute
and homeless.
,_.
TILE How. E. JOY h ORRIS, in a let
ter to the WaShington Intelligencer,
;r
denies the story of hist ithdrawal from
the canvass as a candid te for Congress
from the first district—ai.story gotten up
i*
by some of his Whig riends as a sort
of apology for their tr acliery towards
him 'on the day of elec ion.
I
THE MILLER FANATICTS3L—Lewis
C. Gunn, a well educated, young man,
has given up the situation of principal
of the Boy's .Public Grammar School,
a berth worth 900 dollars pee. annum—
and become a follower of Miller. Be
had only held the situation one wcel:.
Pennsyhranla is - SiOe -
Thies .words, the-DeMoerittie:Unior
deatensitate as a trilei'sradiY the. fol.:
lowing remarks, to which we refer any
person, ,who for a moment entertains a
poutit ' that
.Pennsylizattia , will go for :
POLE and DALLAS : .
We once more assure our 'distant co
laborers, that there is not a Spate in the
Union, whose Electoriai votes are cer
tain- for Pout and DALLAS than are those
of Pennsylvania. ; Theyeceitt election
has placed this' event beyond the pale
of even a remote contingency. • Feder
alism left 'not a - stone unturned to elect
Markle, and it was openly pfoelaimecl,
thatias the State went for Governor, so
would it go fur President. What mon
ey,. time, and labor could achieve, to
• • -
eiteet the defeat of Mr.,Shunk,iiicts ex
erted, and we declare it as. ddr convic
tion, that theie were not one "hOndred
of dur opponents in the wficile State,
who bolted from their Sta le nontina-
Lions
On the other hand, Mr. Shun': lost
probably from 10,000 to 1 2 ,000 votes
by various local causes, which canna
possibly affect Polk and Dallas. The
absurd flag and bible stories arrayed in
a shape so plausible as almost to defy
refutation, enlisted, die Native Ameri
can" vote against Mr. S. 0,2 ma
sse.—
But it accomplished even dore. Hun
dreds of well-meaning Chr?tans, mis
interpreted Mr. Skunk's tter in rela
tion to the 'use of the scriptures as a
• I
school book, and were rendered either
lukewarm or hostile. Can it be pre
sumed, that these men will now falsify
all' their-professed reverence-for the-doc
trines of revelation, by .supporting a
man fot President of the United States,
who lives in the habitual," violation of
them all ? Can it be ,presumed. that
they will now vote for Henry Clay—
the Gambler, the profane swearer, the
Sabbath-breaker and Duellist ? Nev
er. Hundreds of honest and conscien
tious men, who have heretofore acted
with our opponents. will either subject
themselves to voluntary 'Aisfranchise
ment, or if they exercise the right of
suffrage at all, will vote for JANES K.
POLK.
The consequence will be, a large in
crease of the Democratic vlote in all the
counties, and a corresponfiincr decrease
of the federal vote. Listen, for exam
ple to the Columbia Star 'if Friday. It
says :
Many Democrats di not vote for
Mir Skunk, under the imtression that
he was a Catholic. Therefore. we,now
pledge the Star Af the North" good
for 1,700 majority for P lk and Dallas
in November."
American Sentinel say :
of Philadel
friends quite
"rom the vote
In the city and coun
phia we will show our .
another state of affairs
of Tuesday ,lasi."
The Mercer Luminais
organ of that county, say
~ The,vote of yesterdat.fqr Governor
may be regarded as deciding the con
test in this State for Prerident. If the
returns show, a majority] for the Whig
candidate, the vote in this State in No
vember will most probably be given for
Mr. clay, but
- if Mr. Sl4ink should be
elected Governor, ihere i is little doubt
but Mr. Polk-Will receiVe her- electortal
vote. There, are man. abolitionists abolitionists
who voted for Mr. Mar w a ‘ , 7
le, o .1.1.
NOT VOTE FOR MR. CLAT.." ,
. ,
' DEATH OF MRS. ClLr.—Mrs. Gil
ley, the widow of Johnathan Cili,ey,
•who was killed in the &lel with GraVes,
died at her residence iii East Thomas
ton, Me., on the 15th instant. Ever
since the savage death (if her husband,
her health has, been much impaired,
t
and.portions of time her mind has.
been wandering end in the most I
mel
ancholy state. - 1
i'
" HONORABLE SATISFACTION."—On
the 10th inst., two gentlemen met on
the Metairie Race Tratilt, near N. Or
leans, to fight a duel; 'weapons broad
swords.; to stand at eight feet and ad
vance. The affair was amicably ad
justed without coming to blows.
- 01110 ELECTION 11051PLETE.—The
Globe publishes full returns of the Ohie
election, most of them Official by whicl
it appears that ' Batil l ey's majority is
1185
PAY YOUR TAXES !.'We would ad.
visethose in arrears for taxes, who wish
to vote, to makelialt - Orit befOre the day
of election, for,fear the Collectors may
net be on the. ground.
CAN'T TRUST Ilm.--The Abolition
ists have nominated an opposition can
didate to John Quincy Adams, for Con
gross.
Tremendous_Gale on Lake Er
AWFUL DESTRUCTION OP Lo . t
PROPERTY.—We a.e indebted to the
tension of the editor of the Il e;
Courier and Economist, for a s l ip c
taining an account of an awful
which occurred on Lake Erie on
dayeveni n i g the same night of th e
vere blow
n ,
this
quarter. We r e .
to learn that the storm has occasio,
a great Joss of property and of ha ,
fife. How 'many persons hare h.
lost it is impossible to tell, buti n . e ' ll
five bodies have been already recover
About half past eleven o'clock Fri,
evening, a gale commenced blow
from the northwest. which fur rici e ,
and devastating effect we scarcely.
collect a parallel. Kndwin g the an ,
ty 1 0 get the particulars of the dins
we have issued this extra, with
particulars as we have at first been a
to gain. •
The Iron U. S. Steamer was dri
upon the beach high and dry, d ear
old stone house.
The • steamboats St. - Louis, p u h,
and .Julia Palmer left last evening.
St. Louis was driven back, and
down to Black .Rock harbor with safe
The Jitlia Palmer, after making si r ,
efforts to make our harbor, sheered
about 7 o'clock this morning and at,
up the lake ; her upper deck appea.
to have been carried away and and
andrailing gangways destroyed.
Corn. Perry came M about
o'clock last night, in a 111081 shatte
condition; her wheelhousebeingsm,
ed in.and the boat almost a cripple,
In coining in she ran into the C,
Western, knocking a man overboard
the collision, who was supposed%
lost—then she ran her bowsprit throe
the side of the Wayne, where-she
mained fastened. •
The amount of damage done to
steamboats and vessels in the harbor
very lar g e. and the injuries to the b.
bar and do cit a is alsb great. Intl .
we do not recollect that Buffalo has et
been visited with a gale, the consequ
ces of which•haveben.sO disastrous
life and property.
Two girls, domestics, in the se*,
of Huff's Hotel,• were drowned in the
beds, probably, as they 'slept in
basement of the house, which wan.
pletely filled with water.
A woman, residing near the foot
Wash ington -street, was drowned in h
bed. •
. The dead bodies of five children
one woman are now_ lyint at
Watch-house, ten bodies at the CL ,
house, and. five bodies ata lkouseat
flats. .„
The water rose in the lower par.
the city higher than it has ever, .
known before. The atnout of m
chandise, books and papers destroy.
on the dock is immense—theamo •
the loss of one house s alone; is num
ted at over $lO.OOO.
Four additional bodies have just b
brought up from Sardy Town, tr,.
had been washed upon the beach.
Five bodies, twoboys and three•me
were just taken from the harbor, a
Commercial street, and another o.
'ust discovered.
The bodies of a man and boy ha
just been picked up on the others' ,
of the creek. The number of lives
certained to be lost, so far, is upwa
of fifty, and fears are entertained
this amount will be more than doubt=
, the abolition
Nearly fifty canal boats now lie
the beach, • ,between Erie street a
Black Rock. Several boats lie direc
across the tom path.
The extensive pier and sea wall
this harbor, has been darnagedgrest l
The heavy piers of stone this side
the light house have extensive btrit‘
in many parts, so that the waves a'
clear headway from the lake into
harbor.
The most . deplorable effect of
gale is the destruction of
many lives have been destroyed it
impossible, as vet, to ascertain. Ta
ty-five bodies of men, women and eh
dren have been recovered and taken
-the Court- House, for identification
- relations and friends. The bodies
five children in one wagon haver
passed our office.
Sixteen persons, men, women:.
children, are missing from Wilkes° ,
Foundry. Two servant girls, empio
ed at Huff's Hotel, slept in the b
ment. The sidewalk fell in and 611
the room with water before they co"
esoaPe. Both were drowned. Th .
names were Helen Bynam, a
Catharine' 'Redding. The patent'
the lattn live in Collins.' Thas
the number of dead , ascertained is
follows :
Nine men,. tea women and thin:
children, thirty-two in all. But 3 .
have as yet been recognized. AO
the nu ntber is a man named Smil6.l
lived on Elk street, bis wif - and
children, a child of Win. Nelsoo. l
inrr on Ohio street. alai James Soli
whose body was washed up in Sec
street, and was identified by his IT
Also, two
~families named Smith, i 0
teen in all, the heads of whom W ere
ployed at Wilkeson's furnace , oil
them a stove mounter, from - 41b1Y k
other a moulder, from Rochester•
a young man named Ploof,
from Jefferson county. STe
and three children, recently from',
ca Falls..a man named Metot, j u
other named White, who !es°
Williamsville.
I=l
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