Elevator, Volume 3, Number 27, 4 October 1867 — Acknowledgments. [ARTICLE]

Acknowledgments.

Remittances received from F. Massey, ■ Gilroy, by Mrs. Massey. Arrivals. —Mrs. Massey, Qilroy ; W. Moore, Downieville ; D. N. Davidson, Sacramento ; by steamer "America," Samuel Porter, from New York. Departures. —By steamer " Golden Age," J. Johnson, from Placerville, W. l Ford, from Folsom ; Master M. Mellen, San Jose ; George Washington. LicrrEßS received at this office from G. Proctor, Sonora ; Chas. M. Wilson, Idabo City, I. T.; Ed. S. Simmons, Portland, Oregon ; Chas. 11. Mercier, San Jose ; A. J. Ferguson, Idaho, I. T. ; E. P. Hilton, Hamiltcrh, C. W. » — ■ Opposition to New York.—The North American Steamship Company's steamer "America " sails to-morrow with passengers and freight for New York, via Nicaragua. This route is perfectly healthy, aud passage at reduced rates. The San Jose Patriot has commenced its fifth volume. This paper was originally Republican, with strong Abolition proclivities, but became Johnsonian, and finally, as a natural sequence, simmered down to a regular Democratic sheet of the Copperhead stripe. The Santa Clara Argus has now a powerful auxiliary in the veteran editor of the Patriot. The following letters, directed to our care, have been received at this office : — For Israel Stevens, 2, from Baltimore ; Sam'l G. Hatton, from Detroit, Michigan ; Wm. Isaacs, from Baltimore; Joseph Sylvere, of New York, from China, (we have sent this letter to New York by mail;) F. G .jßarbadoes, from Rome, Italy; Chas. H. Mercier, from St. Louis, Mo.; James H. Riker, from Virginia City, Nev. Remittances.—Subscribers will oblige us by sending money to us by mail or express, at our risk and expense. If sent by mail, get a postoffice order when possible, or register the letter containing the remittance. We take " greenbacks " at seventy cents. We prefer receiving money by public conveyance than by third parties, as we are then under no obligations. Direct, P. A.Bell, Elevator, San Francisco. Returning Thanks.—To Messrs. J. W. Sullivau, 604 Sansome street, Hoin Bro's. corner Montgomery and Jackson streets, White k Bauer, 413 Washington street, and Major J. Stratman, 506 Washington street, individually, severally and collec tively, their partners, clerks and ataches, we return our thanks for Eastern papers, magazines, and periodicals of all kinds. So may it ever be. Senator liu Harris.— The Morning Call, San Jose Patriot, and other Copperbead papers, were jubilant over a letter published in the New York Herald, signed Ira E. Harris, supposed to have been written by the late Senator from New York. The letter referred to condemns the reconstruction policy of Congress, condemns negro suft'rage, and says the writer has purchased a plantation in Alabama, and contemplated removing there ; and also says, "if that State is to be a uegro State, farewell to my purchase." It now appears that said letter is a base forgery, or an arrant hoax. Senator Harris writes to the Albany Evening Journal that he did not write the letter published in the Herald; he was not in New York at the date of said letter ; he has not " purchased a plantation in Alabama," aud his name is not Ira E. Harris. He says : "I am earnestly in favor of the " Congressional policy of Reconstruction. " I believe it right to enfranchise the negro." The Copperheads must find new thunder.