Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 18, Number 2707, 30 November 1859 — BY THE STATE TELEGRAPH LINE. [ARTICLE]

BY THE STATE TELEGRAPH LINE.

Later from the North— Affray at the Upper Cascade* — Delegates tor Jo Lane in Oregon— Arraignment of D. S. Terry. VV'VVV San Francisco, Nov. 29 th. The steamer Panama arrived here to-day, shortly after 12 o'clock, from the Columbia, bringing papers from Portland, Oregon, to 25th November. The Portland -Vats, of 24th Nov., Bays : By a letter from a gentleman at the Dalles, we learn that at the dimil-ia-meen mines the miners were forced to leave the former diggings on account of the high water in the river, and had gone above, where the water was not as high, and they found the diggings as rich as the others. Captain Travaillot, a French gentleman, who was formerly a citizen of Portland and who afterwards went to Fraser river, was reported in the Portland papers to have been drowned in the Fraser. The latest news, however, from Victoria, V. 1., contradict the original report. Henry Beason and Henry Hard got into a shooting affray at the Upper Cascades, on the evening of Nov. Sth, when Henry Hurd was killed. It is stated that Beason acted altogether in self-defense. The Democratic Convention met at Eugene City on the 16th. The delegates from eight counties withdrew, leaving eleven counties represented in the Convention. The delegates remaining selected three delegates to the Charleston Convention, and instructed them to vote for Jo Lane for President. The steamer telegraphed last night was the Columbia, from Crescent City. The news is unimportant. David S. Terry, indicted for the killing of Senator Broderick, was arraigned to plead in the Court of Sessions, this afternoon at two o'clock. Crittenden and Hoge appeared as his counsel. District Attorney Brown appeared for the People.