The New York Herald Newspaper, October 16, 1859, Page 2

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- ) __-NEW YORK HERALD, !SUNDAY BER 16,1860. * = . - ’ Ua el Hibs oi — Se Sanne ———— — —_—_——1<1- —— Cee nn aaa a - 2 , EE a a an, ee panauchsand sina bagi snctigMouitorn wltbe Wick sopllloadferty |" EHE SUNDAY QUESTIONS | Ssh wor eredppeccay ding oyu sAgoullgin | creda cea Ma Reries kocie OSE GE mSQL “ lig bag sgt, Northern. The following lines, said to be from the di. Aanncninentceininanmetetsh: conveying & Living freight of Liutlo Jeas shan a thousaud | Would pot be softicleuk to moet the hiwbilities which the | A %) Big Sly rt A Se tha noel; ieee io editor of tho New Orleans Delia, are a faithful em: HISTORY OF SUNDAY LAWs. cople and belig drawn by a cot yinos, | committee had come under, but it was hoped that the ‘ ‘Address A. J. 8, Union Square Post he ru! trains wore a soUurCe ¢ by being to (hem a perfect!) bln aad e Ch) not at all suterfere with theigreyulay trad | peared that the custom: enrsion | friends of the League would’ raily. round tho committeo, and onable them to meet allt On the motion of Mr. J. Kexn RL, SP. thet Alocture on this subjeo afternoon at Rey, etrect, by Reve db, 1 juent speech at Circleville, in April, nue gentleman took the ground that— laws of population and emigration Kansas must bodiment of the flery spirit of this Southern demo. cracy : Sons of the brave ! the was delivered last Sunday Maxson's church, in Floven eh, . eo whieh as it ap: OR.—ON TURSDAY NEXT, AT THRER O'CLOOK, IF the weathor provoswstormy, the gest fair ¢ JOS, Naa NDAR time is come " A , y Sundity trains, rhnsiog printed md ted df Siaie. We gain mneh (said he) by rubbing To bow tho haughty crest, | The lecturer confined himself to that-portion of the his- | paral that (he ctieimary Sindy tenis, whaniuy Ie a AMonmen sino proposed. inaemiracahun Waliesles : a — of 80 degrees 30 minutes, bocauso, by 80 Or stant alowe, deapito tho thrents tory of Sunday laws which preceded the Protestant a Sunday excursion traina | boro clocted the President of the League for. the ous ot Pate SOD TOLD M4 LITER WOULD FIND FOU doing, free States may be established south of that lite. oe ‘Tho hour has come toe manly dopda Roformation, Ho showed that Paul had a groat oon. | were espe aly edlened for the bevel of the people of ORG ACR » they would ait agra Witt dra Toginud. Call ut 28. : The Detroit Free’ Press, the home organ And not for paiiag words— ict with the,Judaiaing teachers,” in tho first con- | the metropolis, a a Gemreeeere: | pil in the grant bend Tir, fore, run Gt OX) conferred npon the cause. It mightbe that he might in ene respect have lorta position amongst a certain party dn consequence of the supportwhich he bad given to the Perey reat opvicicry aud made no stoppages on the Tt is the time tor And by the famo of J )RURN DERSS, Uk LEPTRN MIE 3D A Paine ears eeical eae tet ee, bome nistake., Send address more aure,, Seabury, Brooklym General Cass, gave us the same vie w, in the follow- platform prato— ing language! ne tury, on this very matter of the enforced observance of particular days as holy, and that in this couilict he jtion of at two or three stations in the y of Londen, in the moraing forthe pur- : Bijscbcd o. | page of taking Uy dhe the evenig. for Midwin, | dhovemedt; butdt (bat wae so, he was sure tit We woat (| xe enc Mr. Douglas’ Kansas-Nebraska bill is ghe groa‘e moh ‘Ane Danes teoth bo tre was victorious, aud established the principle that with re- | {stray ahey 0 sotting down, Bravo the satisiaation Bf fooling in hia. own wind that he [SROR pane PARP ON ADR WSO RARE ys Vanice Movement the direction ot human freedom tha het by eld dacksou gard to holy days every man was to bo “fully porsunded | “"}1 is not to be supposed that his saecess'wad to Bear | Lad been doing his best to promote those objects whch | jafor le unty has been made since the ado,tion of the © mee rg r ang ae in bis own mind," and follow his own convictions ofduty, | lowed to rest here. ‘The Londou and Brightom Company | would confer a great moral benofit on his fellow country- | therine a puna’ ike ei 4 J aa ee aeaiece tnt terctunioe irontd bo 10-10 Mis rbolet h n course of timo extended their Sunday excursion.tramie | men. (Cheers:)Hohad, therefore, much pleasure in . popular govereigity in the Territories would be mak Be rosvlute p . ‘ not the doginas of others which might be attempted to be s0 ag to ineluco within its scope the Deautifyl sca | procosmg his re-el i PYroRMa ION. WA D OF HANAH CONNOLLY; SRO eeTinnrE Repeater. oresnlae’ ee rob nia ee imposed upon him—a dotormination which the groat | peaches of Hastings and St Leonards on ite eastern cbast | > Mr, Bonroracer baving-seconded the motionyit was put i sup Howbd Lo Be fate elty. 4 should lie north or south of the Missouri Comprom: shor a shroud cn byes aE, Council of Jerusalem, held about the middle of the tirst line, and on its western branch the pretty lite watering ry, fully sustatued, place of Worthwg, the vity of Chicheater, the public works. and government dock yards at Gosportand Portsmouth and fiom the chair and agreed to with much apphwuse. ‘The Vice Presidents were thenre-elected, with the ad- dition to their Momber of the chairman of tue evening aud be thankfuily receive hi ves the el tthe Bt ‘ndaeon bt Retonalvane/eorsun fan 8 street, The New Hampshire Patriot, which was the This agrees very well with the sentiments of a home organ of Mr. Pierce, after declaring that the Nebraska bill would “rake two or three new free Blates out of soil which had been devoted to slaves,” winds np by boasting that, “no act of any President or any Congress has secured so much, and so suddenly, and so easily for liberty.” Ina speech which Judge Parker, the democratic nominee for Governor, made at Tammany Hall just before the last Presidential election, he said:— Trepeat, gentlemen, we stand upon the doctrine that the citizen o{ a Torritory shall have the same right to speak, to act, to vole Lor his own domestic institations that we have in the States, * * * * [hold that itis now really. the democratic faith t> recognise everywhere that itis the truo policy of tho country to leave that (tho Blavery) question t the people of the Territories, * * * ‘When the question is settled, as I tell you it will bo, we shali have au end of this agitation of slavery. It will bo left to each Territory, and then, if the laws are properly ad- ministered, the people will vote just as they have a right ‘to do, and the majority will determine the question thore. So far from having avy fear upon the subject of the Terr. tories, it would be aimost impossible to make them other- wise than free States, because the emigration pours in from the North ten to one. Ifanything more is wanted to show that the de- mocracy of the North is Van Burenized, we will lock at the following democratic advertisements and posters of the last Presidential canvass, which are well enough to preserve as curiosities for fa- ture reference:— FRIENDS OF THE UNIO! RALLY The friends of the Union aud the coustitution will hold a grand mass meeting at South Bioomlleld,on Saturday, the 2Tth inst. Two hickory poles are to be raised. Lat’ the friendg of this glorious Union raily from their farms and from their workehops, from the hills and from the valleys, and spend one day for the: try! The invaders are upon us!! The black republican leaders are determined * to divide the Unite: Come up and blast the ef- —BUCK AND BRECK—RALLY ! distinguished democratic orator of the South in the last Presidential campaign, and which was quoted approvingly by the Southern democratic pross at the time:— I tell you what I firmly believe, that this great question is not to be settled by diplomacy, or by statesmanstip, but by the sword. Again this same gentle son of the Southern de- mocracy added in the same speec! The constitution of the United States should be torn to fragmouts, and a Southern coustitution formed, ia which ever, te should be a slave State. The only hope of tho South is in herself. Let us cut the bands which holt tho two sections together, and take our position as a full grown nation in the fumily of nations. This, variously softened or intensified, is the ani- mus of the Southern democracy. The New Orleans Delta, the confidential organ of Jefferson Davis, in a well written, cool and determined article on the election of Mr. Buchanan, used the following threat- ening and impudent language: — ane Preside Peal a cd of 1854 is ended, and that of 1860 bas just commenced. The struggle for the Presi- dency is over, and James Buchanan is clectod, bgt the issues involved in the contest are not yet settled. Bhese are yet in the womb of the future, and what the next foar years may bring forth, we must wait to sec, hoping for the best while we should be forearmed against the worst. When the admission of Kanens into the Union comoes to be acted on the South will lear the manner in which tho late contest was conducted. She will Gud, we fear, that non- extension of slavery was the middle ground on which the majority of Mr. Buchanan’s supporters at the North agreed tostand. She will find that it will be: difficult, if not im- possible, to bring Kangas into this Union as a slave State, She will find that the day Mr. Boehanan signs a bill to that cffect, if ever passed, DiS party will be dead and buried a: tho North. There is but ove offset to this condition of | things, and that is to make the South so strong in her ma. terial progress, in hor domestic reforms, in her social eon- vietions, in her political attitade, as to keep the North in check by the only arguments which remain to be used | t ‘This decision was respected and complied with, the turer remarked, until the tine of Vietor, Bishop of Rome, who, in the later part of the seeond century, assumed authority by virtue of bis metropotitan position” and con- sequent commanding iniinonce, to order that Kaster, the anual festival of the Resurrection, should, in future, be observed by all the churehes on tho first day of the week, uniformly, some of them having been accustomed to observe it on the ldth day of the month, irrespective of the day of the week, and others on the Sunday next after tue 14th when the 14th did not come on Sunday, Thus, a8 the first assumption of arbitrary ec- clesiastical power by the Roman Seo was in connection with the oxforced observance of Sunday—not, indeed, as. the weekly, but as the anyual festival of the Resurrection. ‘Tho Western bishops sustained Victor, and threatened the Eastern with oxcommunicotion it they did not comply. ‘This, after seme time, they did; and thus Papal authority ‘was virtually established. Something more than a century later, Constantine being Emperor, a union of Church and State was effected, aud the Papal authority confirmed. ‘Then the canon of Victor respecting Faster was made an edict of tho civil Jaw, and a law was also passed requiring the observance of the weekly festival of the Resurreo- tion on the first day of the week, none but husbandmen being allowed to pursue their ordépary tabor on that day. By the same act tantine required the observance of Friday, the day of ourLord’s crucifixion, as a fast, upon which,'as upon Sunday, ne labor but agricultural could bo performed, and no logat business transacted in the courts. The observance of Sunday and Friday being thus en- forced by law, there were not a few who still adhered to the old Jewish custom of observing the seventh day, Saturday, as a day of rest and worship. Tu prevent this the Council of Lavdicea, in 860, decreed that it was un- lawful to obsorve Saturday as a holy day, and anathema- tized all who should dare s0 to observo it. As an evidence of the extent to which the asceticism and priestly tyranny for which the Romish church after. wards became so distinguished had already gained ground, the lecturer remarked that this same Council of Laodicea forbade all dancing at marriage feasts, and directed that the clergy should thanceforth: be elected by the Bishop of Rome and his provincials, and vot any longer by the poo pie t whom they were to minister. A step in advance was taken by the Council of Orleans in the sixth century, which prohibited agricultural as well that garden of England, the lovely Isle of Wight. Otber com anics whose iron lines formed an outlet to the sea foilowed in the track, and many other Dianna of note, such, us the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and the in- laud watering places of Tunbridge Wells, Leamington Bath und Cheltenham have at times on the Sunday Dbrovght within “a day’s march” of, and a return to, the metropolis, though some of these are situated at more than a hundred mites distance therefrom. We here give the advertisements of tho. Sunday trains of three railway companies, two of which advortisements we have clipped from the columns of the London Times of August 19th and the others from a London Sunday paper of August 21:— OUKAF EXCURSIONS TO BRIGHTON AND BACK RBVELY SUNDAT From London” bridge vat. 9 A, Mf. po iis and. from. Phtaleo, 9 : 3: 03 9:35 A.M. Returmivg frou Brighton si TP. M. ‘x Iusaage ale Faresthere and back—7s. 6d., be 6d and Se. Gd. journey tickets—7e., ds., 88. CUEAP EXCURSIONS BY TOR BRIGHTON RAILWAY EVERY Y. outh ou . From the London bridge and Viuili, fermint to Portsmouth vd stings, from Kpaom i rom Newcross iniphton, returaing thesame crenlage hess trains wil eatt at some of the intermediate atat for partisulars of which and for fares, Limes of starting, aud’ other’ time tables of the company, SOUTHWESTERN RAILWAY. ‘The Sunday exen trains ron every Wie, ( ry arrangements, sec Mrsion from Water- Joo bridge nud Vauxhall stations te ule of Wight, Fortamouth, Southampt'n, Winchester and to Farnboroug! rshole camp), ut748 A. M.i returning same day from Portsmouth at 7 for P. M., and Southampton at 7 M. hares to Poctamoath Southampton, or Winchester and back, $8. 6d., Ga.6d., or 9s.; to isieut Wight and back, 1s. Gd. extra; 0 Faruborouga, Js., 4s. or CHEAP SUNDAY EXCURSIONS AY THE SOUTHEASTERN ‘RaAtt- Way To Ramsgate, Margate, Dover Folkestone (station for Sand. gate and $horneiitie camp), Hastings, Ashford, Canterbury, at Ss A M ; faves. f..78. and 10s. Tanbridge and Tunbridge- A. M., fares 2s , 5s. and 78. 9 ‘Reading, Aldershot r BOR ALL, Geveral Manager. Bir J. G. Wikingon. | ‘The other office bearcrs:were thew re-elected, aud the Proceedings closed With wcordial vete ofthanks to the chairman, TY ayia Seeruucapeal Commercial Contest Between Russia and bs England in Chica, SrEECH OF SIX JOHN BOWRING ON THE RUSSIAN 5 * ‘TRADE. At the meeting of tho British Association for the Ad- svancement of Science in Aberdeen, on the 19th of Sept., tn the Sootlon 30 Sepia Bkunology; Mr. T. Mitch- ell read a paper on ian trade in Central Asia. Sir Jobn Bowring observed that as this paper bad partly reference to a country with which wo had becen assoc! ted for ten or eleven years, he would mako an obser tion or two on the Russian trade with China, That trade was now about to undergo a great change. It had floar- ished, as far as any trade could flourish under the baneful influence of monopoly. Whether from commercial, po- Jitical, or other motives, he did not know, but in view of the great prospective ct alluded to, it was perhaps not undesirable that the ish merchant should autici- pate the state of things which was ey 3 ‘on in conse- quence of the late treaties which Russia had made with China, It should be made known that Russia, formerly having a monopoly of the inland trade with China, was not permitted to carry on commerce with what were called the fivé treaty ports opened to British rade by Sir H. Pottinger. Their trade was confined to a single locality¥in the northwestern part of China, and the whole of thattrnde was in the hands of certain monopolists who enjoyed special privi leges from the Russian government—enormously to tho prejudice of the Chinese people. Tt was important to re- mark thathe (Sir John Bowring) found that’ Russian mauvfactures had made their way peculiarly iu China— there were many towns in which he did not tind any Eng- lish weolleng, in which he found there was a considerab! sale for the woollens of Muscovy. The cost of woollens in Ruesia was much greater than in Central Evrope— Russia impesing dutiea some of them very elevated. How, then, was the effect stated produced? By an extraordi: nary ukuse of the Russian Emperor, who absolutely prohibited the sale of Russian goods for Chinese money, or the purebase of Chinese goods in silver, the only instrument of exchange in China. Thus the whole te FORMATION WANTED—OF 5 of No, 8 Dean street br oes ress to Mr. P. Troy, RSONAL.—MR. T, junicate, imorking a 9 o'clock. Torti he Heap At the Post aflice tor # leuer, 8. B., HARTFORD,, COW the 7th just received. ve 101, care of B. Lockwood. HOSE PERSONS WHO BOARDED AT THE WYOMING lotel ine the mana tof noiihed that trunks left in ps ‘be redeei ifealled for, on or the gpesare upon them, They are stored at 175 sireet. I HAVE SOMETHIN Wil call at your hen W.aol are recut ea iN.—YOUR LETTER OF very sick. Send ed- u ent for their boa: ILL A LADY, FORMERLY MISS C—I—A D—RI, ‘of Auburn, fame a time and ‘a femate friend who travetied with her some years: Avbany (a auburn t Address. stiss H, G., Post aioe, way, 8. Y. lace where she can TLLIE” WILL F address at Benue: ND ALETTER TO His FULL e3 tob, Nisou recognized you last evening. THE FIREMEN. wee nnn aeacaaaneed RAND TRIENNIAL PARADF OF THE NEW YORK Fire Department on Mond 17, 1859, Engineers at (thote mst. On motion decided that no invitations be extended te out of town compariies for that day; but should any vi ra place will bé provided for thein tn Disnanven Cowranres Wrosk Cases Are Paxpina’ Ts.—The Board.of Enginewrs rev such companies disbanded by the Fire Comm! been placed in service by the Cominon oi nie on parade asioners AS have: uvell, unless pre- legally disbanded, vious to the parade the Courts declare them in which case they cannot parade. ‘THUKD. Mvsyo.—The Board will aceept’ of twenty ba from those companies who will surrender teins ta ber pinned Shere most nceded iy tho ibe, wider the aiection oc tke rand ; . lay. orts for civ! m 0 f e against free soil—fear aud interest. He owes his election | a8 other lebor on Sunday. : forts for civit st: ife in our great brotherhood of States!!! | to the voto of the South and to the deflaut atiitude of resis- cis Synod of Burgundy, held, inthe same century, oF- vho heee tak ay Dear $1,060,000 of the people's mouey | tance which she was beginning to assume. Hoshould | °° red be e Sceaaere. Bi is hea i e Sororities tredbury aid put # 1A Whir wa pockuls bear that fact well ia mit, He will be a traitor aut iu- | should forfelt the hay, and if a slave should labor on tha lamiup und Lebtaeseats hslaicabasotr cavers cost sensible to every manly fecling of gratitude if he forget it | day be should be “beaten hard with cudgels.”” It was pags trendline eae as oat a Tg: | in this century and by the same authority that the celibacy Vast Territories of Kausss and, Nebras : ‘What do these announcements inform us? Why, that for a sum less than a dol'ar the Londoner can visit Brigh- tou, * Queen of Watering Piaces,’’ that is if he is content to ride ia a plain covered carriage, open like our railway cars from end to end, but net with cushioned seats; if ho desires the extra seclusion of a second class carriage, trade was carried on by a system of barter. Therefore, all. | that the monopolist had to take care of was to get an enor- mous price for gools introduced by this yexa- tiovs overland communication. Russia further protected | herself by the prohibition of cheaper goods from China rourtn Ue pin | Aa a ae cet ncaa | of the clergy was ordered whieh is @ivided into compartments, he cam have it by the. | tween nated that Wie tea, drank Russia wam mach sips |, BATRANCR Frx.—ERvery company that doce not furnish, ma ps at BI nd, Sage ghd 8S a oe This is the kind of fire which everywhere lies | he Council of Constantinople, tn the next century (the | Cxpaisiture of Lall a dollar extra; bubit ho wishes taluxn. | rior to tial used in Englaud: the simple tuct, however, | ‘ike Ghies'G alice, tots ver eoaln wet nana ne caegh ritaries ‘with the curse cprenbietendionsy pent up in the windy bowels of the Southern de | seventh), ordered the priests to teach the people every | riate amid the springs and drapery of a first class carriage | was that the Russiaus paid about treble as much for ten int | theelty metinaneet vine bring your wits, youn sons.ana your danghters: | Y ignty i etation | Sunday, but “only as the light of the Chureh and doé | jx will have to be at a cost of very nearly two dollars. | China as the British pad. Some years ago in tho provines | Ist lass engine exmmpany, 70 mon. ” Serenata: ; | mocracy. The a ah eee ae, nee a aah Bese Le pedinat ng byes biel Pore a Jaymas | Brighton, we have already slated, is ty miles trom-| of Kokein, whieh produced the finest teas, he got uot only | 28 “Be ts roo | of the Nebraska bill, which the Northern dempo- | should be allowe ach inthe church, or to come ©n | London, samples but the prices at which the contracts were enter- | FO aivuder < i Let us have another taste of the same sort of | + 5, ‘ i. | any pretence ‘within the altar rails. fe To Portsmouth, ninety-five miles by railway from Lon- | cd into. For from 80 to 40 taels, (a tael isun conce of rf neared Gktet | cratic faction has settled down upon, it repudiates, | “Tn! the mext century (the eighth) the Councils of Frioli | don Bridge, it will be seen. that: twe companies compete rilver,) a tekel, or 183 1 8d Ib., oftea could be bougui;for | Uo"? jes bel perpcngrd ge abhors, and means to break up the Union if it is | and Frankfort ordered ‘that the observance of Sunday | with their excursion trains every Sunday, aud for afare but |. this quantity the Russians pait 100 taels, ‘The reasons | [Invirations.—Decided to invite ex-Chief Engineers, ex-Aw- ‘THE UNION!—DUCK AND BRECK—TO Tite RescrE! applied to the new Territories, On this subject Pr echh Dn gt Pyleetthe wey = meson 4 midleg anil | jittle in advance of that charged to Brighton. Portsmouth, | were obviows—the tea had to be transmitted overland | sistant Eugiseers, Exempt Firemen's Assocteiun, Hourd of There will be a meeting of the tricuds of the Cujon, | be kept by all “giving themselves to prayer and’ going with its adjoining towns of Portsea and Gosport, form one of the great naval arsenals of England, and are therefore naturally great places of interest to every “truo born Briton; whilst seme five times every Sunday smail steamers Icave these places aud cross over half a dozen Fire Commissioners, and ex-Fire Commissioners, gine Covipany, Board of Trustees of Fire Department, Hoard of Fire Wardens; Mresilent, Vice President aud. Secri of Fire Department, and all ‘Odlcors and ex-odicers wf the Fire Deparunent ral thousand miles, apd as obsery ¢, ig order to enable the Rogsians to keep up the high price for manu- factures in China, it was necessary to put enormously high prices on goods coming from thence; lence that tea which could be bonght in England for about. 7s. or 88. per Ib., those who are opposed to legalizing slavery in the Territo ries, and who are opposed to making all children born of slave mothers in those Territories for the next two years slaves for life, this evening (Saturday), September 20, let that venerable authority of the Southera demo- | to church.” cracy, the Richmond Enquirer, speak :—“It ig | J» the ninth century the Council of Paris decreed that ~ all marketing and trading, as well as manual labor, on often charged that the Kansas-Nebraska bill con- | Sunday was unlawful; and the same council ordered that | the priests, and not the people, should be considered the arxta. 18656, at Wittich’s Hall. tains the doctrice of squatter sovereignty. Now miles of salt water to Ryde, in the Isle of Wight; such | was absolutely selling in Russin for 16s. to 26s. | City Avrnontrres.—The Mayor, Common Council and Hoady " 9 a 5 i sig via Spithe . a i axct ay! of Departments nre fnvited to reviow the parade as it Here is another specimen of a democratic | this gun must be spiked.” So says the democracy "Tue Ovunell of Gratlen, x tho. ten ceaary; cokeant |) Heseane POG. Ge cla mayatiders Seen RST Teather ptt atten oot”) Ss croak ob the City Hall. : aa “wooden walls of old England.” ” From Ryde, itself most picturesquely placed upon the side of a slope, an hour's drive will take you to almost any part of the island—to Bonchurch, interesting as the scone of the labora of tho Rey. Leigh Richmond, the avthor of the “Dairyman’s Danghter”—nlong the beautiful Undereliff of the southern const to that home of the invalid, Ventaor—to the nobie ruins of Carisbrook Castle in the ceutre of the isiand— to Queen Vietoria’s marine residence at Osborne—and to Cowes, the headquai his imperial Majesty, and also the question whish had been often mooted in Russia, namely, that tea con- veyed overland lost none of the qualities that recom- mended it, while borne tea necessarily lost some of its Gualities, he ch John Bowring) made a suggestion some years ago of this character—that a purchase should be made in_ the locality which produced this excelient tea; that half of it should be sent overland through the mo- nopolists, giving them all the advantages they possessed poster from Pennsylvania:— that whoever sold any goode on Sunday should not only of the South. Now let us hear the Detroit Free | forfelt the goods, but pay thirty shillings. Press, equally venerable Northern democratic au- | tn the eleventh century the Council of Coyaco ordered violin ‘ i 5 | fasting on Fri¢ay and chirch going “on Saturday evenings thpetty:—2sT Re. MABODRL.. RDO ANA PATE has | ud Sundays,” with abstinence from all work ead travel; agreed to stand upon the doctrine of popular sove- | the penaity to differ with the rank of the offender; persons i | deprived of the communion for reignty regarding slavery. The compact isa most | of rank and influence to be dept solemn one, and the democrats of the North willad. | *.20t#0B;, persons of ho rank or wealth to be whipped SEVENTH. Umstrorm.—Filve cap, black pauts and firemen’s red shirt. E10! CuTH, Line oF Makcn.—The Department will form atten o'clock A.M. on Pitth ave riche resting on Thirty-fonrth street; — fom sao Kigiah ae wo peta b Fourteenth street: avenue, to Blevckerstreet, w chary = down Away «thn st, Park, to ‘Chala street, to East way, wery, to Washington statue (Uniod Park), marching arouud, Ue sane ig a dares the meeting. Democrats, whigs, repub- Licuns, turn out and learn the fact that it is the democratic party that is laboring for freedom in Kansas, the asser- tion of opposition rators to the contrary nothwithstand- with one hundred lashes. The Council of Compostella, in of the Royal Yacht Club. from monopoly, atd that the other haif should be carried | and dismiss. Companies who are usually late In reaching the Pidined and jtlge which Ws the pau hecedoee ** & | Here to it, and will insist upon adherence to it. Wo | the sume century,ordered the clergy should wear hair- | “the 'exccrsion train of the Southwestern, Railway, | fe Tae estes te etek ah fie Soul De curried | ince of farming Se az are noted that the line wil move nd this is the complexion to which the Northern . he Council « , , , Railway for the Portsmouth traffic.) includes within its | cost which was brought by sea and by land, and what the 1 it Van Burenized ae has.come at last. Dis- | the undivided popular democratic sentiment of | part of the thirteenth aie eee should com- | grasp Botthanipéan iets city of Winchester, with its cashe- tao G. Joaxrn Byun Abeisianl Hiaglanct yan meg cl id be Teenba at tueles o'dlbek’ Oa y and. continue until Pare in which the tea coul delivered after going ‘cm port to port, and what the time occupied by the ca- ravan carriage; and, thirdly, if it were true that tea lost anything of its excellent and sanitary qualities by con- veyance by se He believed that the result would have 4ral and ancient Abbey of St. Cross, and the military en- Monday morning. This council was heid by Cardinal Sa- | campment at Aldersbott. The name of the first mon- leruo, the Pope’s legate. Another of the Popo’s legates, | tioned place is very fumiliar to American cars as that of Cardinal Courcon, held a council at Paris ten year’s later, | {he English port at which the ocean steamers sailing in which it was decreed that, though all work was unlaw- guise it, lie about it, skulk, cheat and hide as they | the North.” ‘ may, these are the real principles of the whole boodle And this is the way the Calhounized democracy of of the Northern Van Burenized democrats, who | the Southshowsits sharp teeth tothe Van Barenized SOCIATION OF | RXEMPT | FIREMEN —weMRERA will please assemble ocruer of Fifth avenue and Thirty - fifth stree! at_ 10 o'clock. paneer, CAnphe 17, to Join the Fire le. $s ds between New York and Continental Europe | been that the tea would have lost nothing of its excellent | lepariment in their Triennial 64 will be pre- are.wellrepresented by the Cassidy-Cagger janta | democracy of the North; and of sueh discordant and | fut on Sunday, it Spas peter to dig or plough on Simday | cal, ‘The town, which is beautifully | situated qualities, Dut that the delay—an immense’ delay—of land Mocitng will be bela at Fisecnon?s Hall West cea tee of this State. Now that they have succeeded in | fiery elements is the democratic party composed, | ‘YD England the tame ascetic doctrine was preached by | "PO! Southampton Water, an inlet of the sea, | carriage would bo prevented, and thatthe Russian consu- | 4u3) the lsth Inst, at tide O'clock, porsesses magnificent decks, has the ruins of Netley Ab- + ‘i 4 i - - mer would have the privil of drinking tea for about . EN 7 swallowing Dickinson whole they have everything | and with this kind of preparation must it ge ino | Fustuchius, Abbot of Flay; aud when the people de- | fey close at band, and has frequent steamboat commu. | Sthird of the nresent coat “fe fact ane Cone Ragliah’ |G, W. Wuesien, Secrdtary, ee W-BNGS, President. their own way. the next Presidential campaign. What are its peng Melt od and e rere, their Sunday | nication with Cowes, in the Isle of Wight, already alluded | houses d to deliver the tca in Russia at 78. or 8s. — to. ‘The Sunday Excursion trains of the Southeastern Rail- way cover a wideextent of territory. This raiiway notonly. competes on the right with one of those we have already named for the suffrages of the excursionist who wishes to see the defenders of bis country’ encamped at Alder- shott, but it also competes on the “left with the other rail- per 1b., which in St. Petersburg and Moscow now cost 20s. per lb. The Russians, however, with admirable sagacity, were using the elements which had boon presonted to them in China with a foresight and anticipation of future benefits of which by and by there would be secn the de- volopment. Representing only the interests of peace, they had obtained possession of vast tracts in Chinese chances there? How long can this party, which was born of Buffalo and Nashville, last? In esti- mating its chances to obtain a respectable age, we must not forget that it is not really one party, united upon a common creed and held together by Now let us turn to the South and sce to what ex- tent the party has been Calhounized in that direc- tion. There was a time when the awful ‘No, by the eternal,” thundering from the Hermitage, sent con- sternation into the face of the Southern nullifiers, an ‘Epistle from Jesus,” dropped down from Heaven and found on a tomb in Golgotha, near Jerusalem, from whence it had been forwarded to bim. This epistie commenced thus:—T, the Lord, who commanded you that you should cbserve the dominical day, and ye have not kept it,” and went on to require a strict and rigid observance of that OG LOST—A WHITE, LONG HAIRED WOLF DOG, ‘of small size, ‘The finder will receive @ suitable reward at 231 Lroadway. — i Upenret BRACELET, GOING FROM TWENTY-THIRD é dag, ‘from the ninth hour (thrge o'clock P. M.) on Satur- | way, for he who would take bis salt water bith upon the | Tartary,and the time was at hand when we would have to | ci ye aot icante avenue to Fourteenth street A reward and found responses in the hearts of the democratic | the band of mutual principles, but it is, in fact, two | day to sunrise on Monday morning,” the direst judg- | beach at Hastings, or who would visi the eld whereon the | anticipate tht hew position of Rusia, "Russie nt pee, | NALwestven stele at 76 West Twenty second street, ments being threatened fn case they refused. Armed | pattle of that name was fought and the victory gained parties, having two centres, which are precisely a3 sent was excluded from the Atlantic and the Pacific ; ( . ; O8T.—ON FRIDAY, IN| BROADWAY, BETWERN people. But that time is no more. There is an old : estes and’ Neghvills. here wasn vee this phi focene beat agen ae which, on the 26th of September, 1066, trahsferred the | by the Dardanelles or Bosphorus and the Belt. It was ‘Twenty-first st eee Lai ge id roy, con . Hi wg 1, alk apart as Buffalo ® 0 Wa great progre le absolved from cir eins | destinies of England fh ‘Sax way into ith : ke he 1 aining a portemonnate.s80in bank notes, twoletters. ‘Lhe finder maxim which says, “Virtue survives the grave; far ap’ Tidne' Whew keep the Lord's day holy by strict Pecans Ce ae prey sth otha hands of, impossible that Russia could make her way there un’ will be suitably rewarded by leaving it at 20 East Twenty -thind but we cannot say it is so of the patriotism of Jackson in the Southern democracy; it died with him. Ove of the Southern democratic organs in immense popular majority against it at the last | Apetnence trom all sports and recreations. ag well as let Presidential election, and it was only saved from a | bor, travel and traffic, and narrated to wondering crowds af, A a igh | how judgments from heaven had overtaken those who ruinous defeat by accidental circumstances, whieh | dared to transgress,e.g.. A carpenter who made a onamicable terms with Turkey and with the maritime Powers. And descending from the Baltic, the winter came on and compelled the return of hor Ships, 80 that they could not go long voyages, and could only remain at advertisement of the Southeastern Company are particu- larly inviting to the holiday maker, We have among them Boxhill, from the summit of which there is a most glorious sireet. —B. WHITE POODLE DOG, WITH Any o1 BLACK returning ito Mra. Emberson, 235 Wighus 2 view of forte lands and v Sw ete ei “ e close: a , Will be re led. the last Presidential campaign called Jackson “an | ate not likely to occur rae Its only hope of | wig oe ca Rade Se ar erie: another mulicy camap at fhoruelitey the Bruck by ee bce a yam oe men rine ce = 2 at AVENUE OMNIBUS, ON FRIDAY i vp aabiddicaianl Ake "4 5 ‘i is 2 | men § , ot 7 p e- | red coats being here within view of the 3 | on egardes rer “res IST! EON 3 A insanely vindictive oid tyrant.” Tuusdo the Southern | another triumph is in the bad management of | fy tho leeturer alluded to various other pre- | tvurmes of Ta" Belle France; the city of Canter: ance ae mn nal doubt veh es saaregt evening Octoder 14 a binck and gold eriamedied Chai fire-caters now dance and chatter like devils over the | the opposition. If the republican party is | tonded miracles of a similar cliaratter, got up about this y, with ite Archie with & gold Locket, containing ' copal Cathedral; Tanbrilge Wells with ‘its mineral springs; and the popular and pleasant cca side resorts of Ramsgate, Margate, Dover and Sand- gate, The fare to aud from these places varies from fifty cents to two and a balf dollars, according to class of car- riage and the dist: » travelled, the lesser sum being the «, thirty miles from ing a firat class re ket to Margate, 101 miles from London by r the passenger, ‘of course, in his double jon ing over double that number of mil Daguerzeotype ad a ama Lunch ot Charing. “A suitable reward will he paid for the de- livery of the above to Siceomb, Stowell & Co, $9 and 37 Parke place. OST—ON WEDNESDAY, OUT 12, 4 A. TERRIER with a brown spot ‘on his back; ene ear cracked. r Wil be liberally rewarded by returaing kim to 133 tits street, so overruled that the progress of Russia would be found advantageous to British intercsts. But it was no less trae that we must not lose sight of what was going on. It was no less true that Russia had found an outiet for her fleets into the Great Southern ocean, and that she possessed in the Western Indian region some of the most remarkable and most secure barburs in the world; it was quite true | that Rugeia was passing down that remarkable river, the | Amoor, towards the south, where large cities wero being rey | established and considerable commerce springing up; aud here, he would yenture to say, was afar. more promising mad enongh to nominate Seward or any man | time,to enforce the observance of Sunday, and suid that 2 r ¥ | they were precisely of the same piece of imposition with like bim, this Calhoun-Van Buren democracy | the stories told in our day, by the “American Tract So- may obtain ano! four years’ lease | ciety,” the “Presbyterian Board of Publication,” and the of power. Though ashes of the “Old Man of the Hermitage,” the lift. ing of whose smallest finger was once a signal for them to be dumb. It proves the old saying that “even hares may insult a dead lion.” Disunionism, bath Committee,” of pe fore Rex: Gian ie Gitoie Soute pth Committee,” of persons who had suffered the 4 : vengeauce of Heuyeu for breaking Sunday, by work or : if some third man, wi sery- } play. which had been gaining ground ever since the death | not be certain; forif so mad aah cn | Vet: oe cline eat ie en cALNd cas Uedlaeh tusk of Jackson, assumed a bold front in the Southera | ative democratic antecedents, who his plenty of | democracy on the passage of the Compro- | material for popular excitement in his history, like third class fare to and from Dorkis London, and the larger amount co turn t OsT—ON TUESDAY, OCT. 4, RETWEEN TITER COR? ner of Graham avente and Gra street, Williamsburg, auid the Her ald office, a small black Collar, with German silver the Sunday Sabbatarian doctrme did not originate with | the Puritans, but with the Roman Catholics, beginning | with the erectic mise measures of 1850. Mr. Davis, the | Gen-Houston, were to be put upon the,track by the | i etronser, us fs court Beam ee ee Dinette Gnas earenye Branch a om enon a ETE Te TeOT Ceara Carn ee eek perece ringing i to Thea. oe Pisbard 1S Peas eet, Ae r a | 8. ss c “td Rope! , wah iper Sg cor. al times he summer run Sunday excursion | enter into the political bearings of the subject, but in Con- | eye viie i 4 ¥ Secretary of War under Pierce, and Mr. | conservative national men of all parties, he might | Oa taT ee ut oee lene Lp Ra tae tocistant places; but the three railway companies | startinople, he mnight say, the views of itussia might ve | Ccliberally rewarded. Dobbin, his Secretary of the Navy, were the lead- | outetrip both the Calhonnized and Van Barenized de- | jj0,0 ood Se Te data ae ea ai t Pari- ed have op he Eanane mean tems a per- | checked. She was surrounded there by the representa. I OsT—ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON, IN BROADWAY, era of a powerful Southern faction who not only | mocratic party, and the Sewardized repablican fac- | rians, being in power in Fngland, revived and onto ution during the middle months of the year, | tives of great and jenlous natious, and Whatever her plans | La bewween Frankify and Canal streets, a steel wire pore! m amnonget them for each traffic natirall and purposes might be they would b. noaie, with fifty or sixty dollars in bills and some sliver. - 7 thwarted by | 4 rpaigRe ; ae >, ‘ 4 | _ Inhbis next lectare (in the same place, at three keeps the dow! ait must be eviden : ‘ty. 5 te ibe fuder will be suitably rewarded by leaving it at Tay) opp those great pe: asa but | tion, and successfully win the Presidential race. In | ,, Faye pet ci “lh és ceps the prices down, and it must be evident to all thst, greater powcr and greater sagacity than her own. But | °! — yy Waving it at Taylor violently opposed great peace measures, but the present, demorilised’coudttioW'ot ‘all pattién an | Bo ets Tie ued Be: Vico Rive the history of the excursionist could go a long distance for a as regarded the actin of Russia upon China he did | )/ others’, 76 Wall street. they boldly counselled immediate dissolation of the | tant Reformation. . f a im, ene of the priveipal inducements that in. uot see what was to stop her course. Already | = = SSS Union if they were passed. Mr, Davis bitterly | independent stump candidate, who turows conven- oes “ rollawe hits ee en rere ces him to take his Goal + wonld be lost. large cities existed on the Amoor with thousands pel REWaRkos, 2 fought the Compromise in the United States “enate, | tions to the dogs, and comes out before the people | hrugress of the Sua Neariae seoatediiee ae en rent companies run several other trains upon their and thousands ef armed men there, and hundreds and | RESSMEN.810 ROWARD various lives of railway on the Sunday in addition to those Ua ide aaron wrt ' hundreds of setiiers, eucouraged by the government, w drawn ‘towards the sun,” from the less hospitable cli mate of Siberia down to the attractive region of the Mowery £age, which lntter, it will be noticed, are not allowed upon Land We should have to mert Russia there. Whon he was the excursion trains. | i China the prohibition and jealousy of Russia wero very epOuinie ES pirgahiyaainin ety __ | strorg, Several traders arrived under tho Rassian flag, aaupaangt ite preiiaies, RetonEes VASP | and hoped they would be able to land their cargoes; but Ee ERS OF TBR Tar ORES though the Chinese were very willing to admit the cargoes, Th ie sNétonal Sant | a rmius, the Danes, the Swedes, the Belgians, and ne qunual meeting “of the National “Sunday Longue’ |: t-agers of other countrive not having troaties, said to tho wae hela last evening at St. Martin's Hall, Lang-acro, | Waders of ciher countries not having treaties, said to ti Bhs, chal, was occupied by James fey wood, Us. lta | Of" menopolane the caravan trade,” "Now, However hits Coste te nan | Russia was in the field; but he was'of opinion that, with with a pure, patriotic record, and with that sublime | correctly given. power of intellect which the occasion demands, would be quite sure to awaken the wildest enthu- sinsia in the breast of the people, and they would carry him triumphantly into the Presidential chair. will be pald to the person who loaded ‘and rode a lot of se the 1 and when they had finally passed he resigned his | seat in disgust and weat home to Mississippi, where he took the stump as an anti-Compromise, disnnion candidate for Governor against the democratic Union candidate, Gen. Foot, and by whom he wagloriously beaten. Speaking of the Compromise, Mr. Davis de- clared that he was “for resistance, and did not want the stain of such a degradation upon Missis- s pa on are atthe fall rates of fare, and are a 5 ‘sin boxes or in cageson Monday, the 10th or Tuosday, on Only of reguiar travellers with lng- th inst., from No- 77 Frankiin street, provided he gives. ion where tho said segaré where brought. Apply Water street, 1p stat SUNDAY EXCURSIONS FROM LONDON. NEW YORK AND LONDON CONTRASTED - EXCURSIONS TO THE SEASIDE AND DISTANT PLACES—ORIGIN OF SUNDAY EXCURSION TRAINS—LONG JOURNEYS AND LOW FARES. Sunday in London, the motropolis of the Old World— | Sunday in New York, the metropolis of the New World— what a difference. And still the people im both cities we veward will sli streets Ue paid upon her return to 15 Wi mh REWARD.—LOST OR STOL! FRIDAY ing, from 21 Watts street, a white Spanish Poodle: ers to the name of Romeo; n wart over the right eye The ve reward will be paid, and no questions asked, on de- Submarine Tclegraphs—Improved Sys- teins. TO THE EDITOR OF THE NERALD. sippi,” and he “would not submit to it’ The anti- Compromise and fire-eating candidates in Georgia and Tennessee met with the same fate that Davis | id in Mississippi, and throughout the South the | disunionists were awfully whipped. At this time the anti-Compromise wing of the Southern democ- New Yon, Oct. 4, 1359. World System of Tele- ing Much valuable and int ting infurmation. The people both of this country | and Europe are beginning to appreciate the importance of | telegraphic communication to such an extent as to increase | the demand for more wires. Your excellent ar graphs,” in Sunday's | speak the same language—have nearly all sprung from the same parent stock—worship the same God—ad In New York Sunday is a day of gloom—a period of time in which man cxists but does not live—in which he enters a kind of chryealis state—from which he returns at Monday’s dawn into the full blown butterfly. Tho streets ‘The CHarrvan, in opening the proceedings, remarked that bo was giad to seo the progres which the League | 14 chaneo of competing with England fo the Chinese mar, wus making, and the hold it had taken on the public mind. He was in the House of Commons when the sub- ject of opening the British Museum, aud other public institutions, on Sunday, was brought under the considera- tion of that body by Sir Joshua Waimsley,and he had much pleusurc in having bad an opportunivy of giving his support to the movement on that occasion. (Hear, hear.) the knowledge we should soon acquire, Russia wonld have ket. In the woollen market, for instance, he did not be. Heve the woollens of Russia could stand for an hour against the competition of British goods. When the Rassian mer. chants should say, “You are to pay for these in the car- rency of the country; one consequence wouid be that the seaborne tea would get into Russia, and the result’ would be that the Russian consumer would get tea on much low- Fighth avenue, corner of Twenty-second strech will receive the above reward. tacy made about the same headway that the anti: | © 94 9 certainty, cre long we will have a nctwork of sub- Compromise Van Buren wing of the North did— | aqueous lines in our own countr. our kind per- defeat and disgrace everywhere met them at the | mission, I would like to con. It has ballot box. monstration in this country, but more | been proved to a ¢ 3 While the Compromise measures were pending in | particularly in Europe, that the clectrieal conductor of He regarded the matter as another step towards the allain ment «f that religious liberty which they all desired, for this Suncay question was the only rag of spiritual tyranny which nw remained. (Cheers.) From the advances which public opinion had now taken on tho mutter, it was not téo much to expect that the principles promulgated by the League would soon be recognised and established. are deserted except at sume half dozen times of the day, when a small portion of the population are on their way to or from their various places of worship: the Filth avenoodles to or from their comfortably cushioned pews, where they receive consolation from the honied words of er terms, and the Chinese consumer would get Russian commodities at a much lower rate, fh REWARD.—LOST, ON. THURSDAY EVENING J Get. 13. 2 Gold Cross, Ininid with jet tones, and small Chal attached, suppaved to have boan dropped. ia ker or Fourth sitet, “the above reward will be pald on delivery to F. K Saute, 727 Browdway. Eth alan Ae thst SUE Se OF REWARD —COST Of STOLEN FROM J, DEVLIN (DH) heise shoeing eatablishinent, 47 West Thirtieth street, OPINION IN HAMBURG ON THE CHINA WAR. {Hamburg (Sept. 19) correspondence of London P st of G Whiie he ested in the proceeding: » as in the all are it ciharee, 7 ‘ Sani Sandie el é oy, sently; e venue: Mr. Heavy, the Sceretar: om Pet ‘ned that inthis, as a place of considerable com- | cn Friday, 1th iust, a yellow Boll Dog, answering to. the Congress the fire-eaters called their first Gonven- | long cables (ouch az the Atlantic) is inadequate to tho | the Rev. Dr. Gently; the dwellers in other avenues toor | | Mr. Hav, mutagitatt eanenevaqany aie ean I iinportanee, the late intellige China has fYioston. Had on & leatheronine eben ine, Who tion at Nashville, and boldly declared their purpose mand upon jt—that ia, it is eutirely too small to pasa the | fom the conventicle of the Rey. Dismal Growl, whore, | thenced Ly giving au account of what steps had been spvshin niles lds phceperimelir | ripe dhol ll rare BL aut SOG Sana eens eer ey ae fivid in its course withor " is felt as to the course which will be fv t. seated on bare boards, they are at the same time able to feel the hardness of their position in this world and learn how surely they are all journeying along the broad way to everlasting perdition in the world to come. Bat the rest of the population—the muititude—where are they They cannot have rusbed \to the country to enjoy the'fresh air and receive renewed strength, for thore have no questions & BLO tnd ati ta on the Har anxiety the British government to obtain redress nese, nud to inilict chastisement on them for the o1 which has been committed on the Petho, Mer men here do not forget the most liveral stipulations whieh on a former occasion were made Britain for opening the trade of Chinn to all nations, while she mi have had it in her power 10 insist apoa taken by the Le the Crystal 9 to go out of the Union if those measures passed Like the Van Buren wing of the North, they de- clared those measures to be “unconstitutional,” and that “unless they were defeated the Union is at an end.” The same band of democratic fire-eaters re-a5- fusing it.” This, no doubt, was A cable. Your read- r the cable was and death, the words ed over the wire. rof. Thompson (the * company), to put onal his battery Jon this he put on flve bua- gue as regurded the Sunday opening of ¢, which the committee were happy to £4y haa been confirmed by a large majority of the share- ‘Dolders at the December, and almost unanimously at th» June meeting of that body. The Palace was ly open to thé shareholders on 8 the cause of th i a Re ita € Dire City Regatta Never ‘on We wesday. A ur cared Race Boat Alida, Whoever will return the ail toatto B. Collings, at the Battery, will receive the avove reward, $21 REWARD.—IF THE FINDER OF THE PORTS. paivilege, Crystal Palace Share ( 6. t ba he res “i Deen no railway trains, no stages, and hardly team- 1 eg 1] fi " monnate, lost October 1, at the Hudson River Raf - nt, bat the result being : ge iy steam y contribution to which was paid, and the priority | Pectlia and thoy i a | pnvey i : a i) b i : priority “t $ vad depot, Thirty Sratetreet, will retura the same, or give sembled at Nashville,on the 11th of Noyemt “ Arm end of the | ero recs iota en erst oe Lio tree of shares batloted for, while nuinerous shares had already | YS he “poder La be allowed to interfore, Intormaiion where teas be fonnd, thay will recetve tho above after the adjournment of the Congress which | sinful for them to attempt t te their Inngs abroad, | Porch Purchased by them. Man preven ire deeds ike hho: eee Address ¥. P., box 1u Fost office, Yonkers, N. ¥. report next refer y 80. disinterc procured for others however, it m In London, bow diltere passed the Compromise, and it was then that Mr. day observed; it is not for caged mortals; 26 NORTH RIVER, i Mr. J. Baxter Lan; be On this subje S100 eR aRE —=LO8T, ON PIE! a roti of bank notes, containing about $410, ro'letin w : ainet this a conductor, with a ge These ne eniifind’” a pon the | i& room fer appre n when it 18 seen that tt ; iy piss Che vent eee emnace, peech ini-whick he de- ise preesauoeuieyiese | ; people can either rewatin in the Faulty ad tones a pon the | time ts olecied for the departure of Count Monenciene | ites of mewmapar,, AlGut Sire wore \n 86 notes, and the ba- fouled the Samstttation ax 'é flcted mans of cor- tity of te TO Be ee renentet || Goncon on wundeer fortis “one ths: coentey co meri, minds of the large numbers heard | SMoureki on another mission from the government of | nt 266 and ! Washington Market, Will receive the above quantity 0 | Goo, ser forth into the country k 7 second, there is less ro- isticg Russia to that of Chiva, more 1, and no questions ask items, This fact has been ruption that stinks in the nostrils of honest men.” {.14,.. borders of the sea and there admire Hiv mighty greatness Masiety cineca aes Te TRAIT a A : ciples. Mr. in Scotland had also | taken in connection with the powerful Russian squadron Petecees This convention, which was composed entirely of trong’ im all practi L electricians, both in this Sot eepnumidene ibe oman ee sae: ee Ve ptr Deen thot wodocedful.. A deputation from be Tapes ‘ve | BOW in he aber ean; andl witht, the event depar- SPORTING. country and Europe, and has been acted upon by the At- and this fn er mo in number, had walted by ap A 4 ture of another for the game destination, which is - 2 . Te masthead, and sailed out to call upon the people — to be laid 5 conductor six times aslarge | ine.” siehenins Ys ; ae pained to the right reverend prelate the principles and | tht every Russian ship of war which has latterly | "Aloe sil tee for choles of ground for $80 he seca to unite in forming 8 Southern Cot + and they | theold one, with a Pr amount of gutta percha fo | lt, 1 Our deslgntin this article to exhibit Sunday | ciieets of the Tengue. The Bishop received the depute. | Proceedec to that quarter has had on board onginos, | {iec,And.tcea for hol 3 ngress; 'Y | insulating, disheusing utogcther with the extorgal coating | R*, it 35 pent Teor seat ae a elds metropolis, | sich with the utmost courtesy. An address was read to | Machinery and armament for another of the sams JOHN HANCON, Howburg, N. ¥. even went so far as to fix upon Atlanta, Georgia, as the happy town which should be the capital of the new Southern republic that was to be. But, afterfmaking more noise than twenty thou- fand devils, this band of fire-eating, disunion demo- crate were laid out as cold in the South as the Van Buren faction in the North were by the triumphant election of Mr. Pierce upon the Compromise platform. They held their peace and consid- ered themselves dead and buried until that deluded Yankee experiment of a President, poor Pierce, madly opened their Political and warmed them into life ag. rte tire patronage of the government. Ife up the Nashville Coventionists of the and the Buffalo Conventlonists of the N took ain by the en- | South, | of iron wire reby insuring perfect insulation, less in- | duction, less liability to atmospheric storms or earth cur. rents, and ‘ater rapidity of transmission. ‘This plan hag also beon adopted in the Red Sea cable, which has re- cently been laid. Prof. Hughes and myself worked through two thousand milesof that cabie, prior to its leaving England, atthe rate of five words per minute, whereas on the same length of | the Atlantic its utmost capacity was but two and @ half per minute, thus showing the advantage the large con- ductor has over the small. One word more regarding instruments on submarine wires. Wis afact well known that electricity is limited to the capacity of the cable; therefore the waves being so limited, the instrument that can make the most use oi | them ig of course the best. Such an instrument is now in possession of the American Telegraph Company, being on _ the one wave principle; and, moreover, for every wave of clectricity transmitted over the cable you see recorded {the other end a plain Roman character, thus avoiding the ‘dot? and “dash” system which 80 often “butchers”? mother tongtie, ‘The instrument is an improvement on the Hughes printer and is ¢alied the ‘Combination Printing Telegraph ‘*facts are stubborn things’—aud a bundle them is worth a wi lead of argument—we inclined to think, that in placing “before the ns of New York this array of advantages which their transatlantic cousins pace upon the Sabbath day, they will not, after a nowledge of such facts, readily forego their agitation of the question until they are treated by their rulers more like the Christian people of a Protestant land than they are at the present time. EXCURSIONS TO THE SEASIDE AND DISTANT PLACES. Several years ago the London and Brighton Railway Company, at a time, if we recollect rightly, when it was under the presidency of Rowland Till, the world ro- nowned originator of the penny postage system, com- menced the practice of rnaning Sunday excursion trains at a rapid speed, but still at a rate so cheap that the me- chanics and work people of London could avail them- selves of the boon, and after being pent up for the week within the walls of the workshop or the faatory, they, along with their families, could on the Sunday take a not very carly breakfast at home, travel fifty miles by rail, spend “eight hours by the’ seaside,” (such boing the of are him. showing that the Sunday opening of the British Museum, the National Gallery, the South © Kensington Museum, the Geological Museum and Marlborough House, would tend greatly to reduce Sunday Jabor in the metro: fen The members of the deputation addressed his lordship in support of the statements thus put forth, when his lordship stated that, while he acknowledged that a great deal had been said which was of much importance, and which had considerable weight in favor of the course proposed, still he had strong opinions in the opposite di- rection, and which Niels ‘were hot new, but such as ho had jong held, and which he had as yet seen no reason to alter, ‘The report then went on to state the result of se. veral depntaticrs which had waited on membors of the present and Jute government on the — subject of the opening of the South Kensington Musoum and ‘the Sunday bands in the parks. While no hope was at preeent held ovt that the former request would be grant- ed, the Sunde 'y bands might now be regarded asa permanent metropalitan institution, despate the unmerited opposition their wealthy crpments. (i mu’, hear.) es v In regard to finance, the report stated that the dona: tions and subseriptigns during th ar amounted to £270 168., in addition to £47 14s. 7d., special donations towards description, by which the Russian force there will actually be double ite apparent strength as soon asthe vessels whoch are building in the Amoor shall be ready to roceive on board those supplies that have been thus sent from Europe, as these alone were wanted to render theso ships fit for any warlike gervice in which it might suit the Rus- sian government to have them employed. There is too little known in Europe of what is going on in the Asiatic territories of Russia; and as the residence of a British Ambaszador at Pekin might tend to the attainment ot auch ugeful information on this subject, all who are ia- terested in the Chinese trade must be most anxious to see that point gained; but until that can bo arranged, the es- tablishment of an intelligent British Consul at the settle- ments on the Amoor is in truth a matter of urgent neces- tity, to whieh it behooves the British government to attend without a moment’s delay. SEGARS AND TOBACCO. ‘[AstoNtsnINGLy CHRAP BEGARS—HAVANA, Do. -and German—$i per thousand, npwarda, for cash ity iargatpn graranteed, "0: CHBERS, 17 Trowway, ae eeTL MRIS ae iD. E. PRICE WILL GIVE A SPARING EXHIRITION at Hovm's ‘Theatre, 190 and 192 Rowery, which oceasion the whole fraternit; ‘ices. Tioke! evéning, October 17, for pugilistic, have kindly voluntecred their servi Only at the door, eld at 4 imal tO OR SALE—TWO LAP DOGS (KING CHARLES) OF great beauty and finely bred; tan. “Can be seen at No, 1 Kast Twebt Fiftbavenue, up atairs, {OR SALE—THE Stork; also, a very fi Dog. Apply at 6L Washington street, Hoboke: ‘admired ‘black and first street, coraer of iQ | CHARLES TANDSOME KIN ‘a Terrier and a Hunung SUMMER ARRANG! On fod after Wednesda: ‘Twenty sixth street station, For Wiliamsbridg, For White Plait re atree! For Dover Plaius=4 @. M, For Albany—8:30 A. M., mail train. 121, 1889, trains will Barve 2 sant “York, ns follow and 6:15 P.M tempting words with which we remember the walls of the metropolis were placarded at the time,) travel the fifty miles over again upon. their return route, and be in their own houses in time for a not very late supper. The plan was so successful that before long the rail- roud company were compelled to run two jmmeng XPRESS FOR EUROPE—DAGUERRROTYPERS, PIO tographs, presents aud parcels generally forwarded by eve ‘eames, ‘at moderate rates, to any one place in Europe, and brought ont from Kurop@ totals country, by the Ulobe Express, 28 Broad wireet. L. W, MORRIS, of political jugglery which has reaut , Taig: é ¢ nae, 3 7. nstroment,’” now being used constantly on lines of fing the party in one section and f the whove ‘company. It is-ahortly to. be introduced on the other. i i Oregon, Texas and California. A description : ‘ cake ‘ould oreupy too much space. HENRY BISHOP, At this day the democracy of the South $s a9 4 taut Etectrielan to Prof Hughes, 21 Wall street, Leave Niquidating the debt incurred by printing, &c. ‘The amout received by the suspense fund originated by Mr. J. Baxter Langte: | be found in the balance sheet to amounnt to a considerable sum, The total income from all sources amounted to lbs, O3gd., while the expendi MRPURNING WILL Dover Plat rH—5:390 A. White Pining—5 and 7 A. and 5 P.M. bli ee gh hie A. M., Lad 8:40 P. Me Ay UcUA, Siena rane Fe WALLIAMS J, CAME BELL, Superintendent,

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