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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, MAXCH 9, 1866—SUPPLEMENT, | ee Pate Sen vO ann : ——- eee i y, the Foreign Rofist. | is none. I Cutt ' ~ pnet ors} Tt wonk be impossid: Biv. a Siperintendent of the atreet to be Which =" age EEE) art Rul had said thal tho Yaw was a weendal | Attorney General rotured to aM" ovat the “autty of cals oan Seba without unputiag w Breaclent ins | iedemy. jou these: are Gsaneal Cunt leaned whine ‘sted et Rarer Sect carseat tual | Na snanmenemmeres in, sonal and reproach, white the United States had statea +uat | Tite Veh tm enmaced ” He retuy, *) Ob the ground, | and honor to this oomniry; because all muse ‘admit that | walking to the grave; Professoe 5, LL. D.; Pvfes- | enid lols. support of the government cclty of New Y they nd lst inittons throughs tis tnoiiclou-y. Oue"lt | Aist* that tho Pores alls ores tos wae Salictan, Greet tid Your. bast in engl cago ere can be uo claim, ser Burtielt, LL. D. ¢ Gotomet commanding Céet pa ap Site Baakth, ming dna jearedemption of tke we not, then, toalter the law? Was it con: it ” adh ~ by ‘as not the fear, .) Secondly, at cannot om, St yong. ‘bh, Professor erens: a Our truo policy to reply to those who suifered from its ) 2nd, setondly, it TR en Otho rory Would boa mest daitgerons Prevedent 1f ney atic Wier, Colonel “George de cain Ouirk, Brovor | turaaeanend Price charger ‘thane to he yas iat Meer ie et ntie Cammitio on inane, operation simply by making counter ac usations? The | & x Subsequent events shows snands shonid old itself responsible for evits wh wutenaut Colonel Hil foMillau, Cap- | sumera, supplied by the Gaslight Company; be | ried and Comelrstior be and country which in the Jong ran would sutor most from | ihadvic4t that decision was, Because the She “"iited | repress. (Hear, hear To say Deutral naijons shoot tain Dos Protwenor sneateny sr pronth, Prefs: | it theretore yf ‘ng | trey behalf of the sree tn pom the present atate of the. aw would be England herself, | Was fitted o-+!% 00" ports, The Shenandoah was “be | EMM oduiue tar ai ase sad that neu subjects of r Kendries, Professor KeNogs, CAp- | goinrerrnn rans especial $F audio reports is | raise, by tax thes =r because she had the laegest carrying trade, (Hear) Sup: | OBL In the po."* Of Loudon, and a weasel callen ‘Ye | pa téeuennbie fo all aote done by \ Mhahe Soiicus aerate Plain Pound” Contain Darter Gog eng eau | %itrest'gate the » ject conspiained To roport io this | raise, by tax. by pow we were to go to war with Paraguay, which bad uo | Tagret was sent o. from another, port to meet bers." | trove xt, would. be lo. tivow on nostey eaions cannot | tain Poland, Co Bush, Captain Arnoht, Coptats Lyford, { sonritons eat % day a8 practicable the result of such {n- te aboard at all, what would be the consequouce? Why, | the liigh seas, Thore *#s hot the slightest evidence thas,‘ ations tho ex- paral, Captain Doane Arnold, Captaft 3 Oa wi a Hons: as L} city, en ‘nba Ba teat Wes atncet ae ry Pp <S & eee preaaees — = what pare ihe ¥ ee ‘ae Capen whieh eel ay aise cuitives, Finn Liedaent ‘ir Wen, retl fa Tewore or ‘te caises “of” tho ‘tad com. | venues of tho Genoral peuttinte te Unied States in erder to prey upon our commerce, nm 7, Adams did n™ know ni) - the ‘Te be any case in which i | First Licuteoant Farley , it. from the a i Briish vessels wor é Seans, When thes two | and if she Te 00 any we are warranted in | First Lieutenant Brevet Majors ard, wo Gi erin idp gata git | vert ao Wa ey vaio sonata ei | Cikhog wre M4r0,000, grand for athetog te | Fiza craw Pint icwenants Gk amin | Suse th Comin on Lampe aa ne | "Phi uate! ty Sonar ; posing, however. that ws never went to wan, | od Desertas, and there in Foriuguoss waters, but sili he | contrary pr. WRU, ool maven we are dealing with « | Jono: and Callens Me ddald ead cher, Genel Orig et? B sireet bonwees Laight | phim. tha tases to te ska, See it might happen that two othor great countries—such ag | believed, utterly unknown to the Portitguese, they trany- | great ys oem moet Jealous fy ee fcetl faith, | Ragrtine wa fang, MDlY dotained at, Washington by sick- nd anisertcbe Maik fn Cova wick sires er ig PEMD. (ue same to take ‘the passage France and the United states, for example—might at | ferred the armamont from the Laurel to Sue Shenandoah, | which has alw %e, but which was not move suceeatat Which waa laid over. . some (ime or other be engaged in hoetilities agatust each | The men were mustered on deck, and the captain said to | Own national lay {dW which on many serra en ae APPEARA F THE LIEUTENANT GENERAL. ‘hich was teferred to the Courmittee on Sewers, ‘ed, the yt fing 3 a other. Ib such an event much angry feeling would | them, ‘Ido not intend to fight. Any one cam see this.| than ourselves, a. ‘ntly and ompbatically reteced oe General Grant a throughout the melancholy Al ent be and the sane ts it 4 arise, many angry despatches would be written, and ac- | vessel was not made for fighting. 1 intend to ran away | ver again, the part of Portugal mud “a9 | ceremouials as though he had met with an edary of In_ the office of Sree eer anauas, the suid increase to take cusatious and countor-nocusations Would be bandied from | rather than fight, My orders are to destroy the federat | nize such claims on ‘O°. prt Raa ly yc loca. He sormed crushed in spirits and worn down with | the Common Ree tonreaset aa Orme near nan: . gue side to the other, and very possibly we ourselves | commerce by destroying, as tar as T can, the vessels that | declined to submit th 0 Claims to arbitration. (Cheors.) | aneuish at the suddenness and character of the | ‘ike 0Mfect after ve approval ; mlstes ‘paper to the Gom- should be draggod Inte. the war.” Now, he could hardiy | carry It” Tn pursuanoe of those instructions the Seer | I think with the exam t pracipie Bae Axe oll war- | death of his friend and fellow oder. vas, however, wen tes ‘Which wasloat by the venture to recommend to the government any partici- | nandoah burnt all the vessels it could find on its way to | ranted in uph tha “iter to take the same Tine it | as usual, calm and importurbable, but sad and dajected, ‘That Gharivo W, Romain bo and he is hereby ap lar course of policy; but he thought that if a provision | Melbourne. When it got there it was hospitably re- | We are entitied in i. Nad thon “gyn _ THR INTERMENT. pointed 9 fn for the city and freee intedsiced inte ur law similar to that which ex- | ceived by the authorities and remnined for something | United States took itself, .. ‘&4 though | Meee as | Xho dody wes biried tn the in that gaan of New York, in plies of John i. Masterson, Ww isted in the United States, permitting the government to | like threo weeks, Repairs were executed, and eventual- | afe entitied to hold that the ‘ding: teas ot ure | of the Academy grounds known as vaige Nevis pinay t A would do much to street en anos oF suspicion, thas | 17 IC sailed thence, having been enabled in tho mean. | Claim could bo no Just and at Ot ‘a1 do, that | Cxptain Boynton throwing tho carth on the coffin asthe | By Alderman Remce— would do much to en the law, and put us in | time to enlist some fifty or sixty men in addition | on the past of the United Sia, “ Pelleving, fare it from | minister read tho soevice. Tho iiring aver the grave | Resolved. hat «recelring banin and be placed Detter position in to foreign Powora Ho was, | t0 the crew it had siready, ‘Then it went to the | We have good grounds for that 1 Gc mg ord closed the scene, The Lieutenant General, and | the Corner of Third avenue and sires, Us- however, of opinion that privatcering would never be | Arctic and thero it burnt all the whaling | melo say that if the Seema mate + cieoce Bh Once ta by the Hudson River Ratiroad in 9 | “Gt of the Oroton Aqueduct Depertment. altogether crushed out until by an exchange of diplo- | vessels which it found, and put the crews on le repay not one. ‘Te hey eam ae ial car for this city, Dining at the Metropolitan, ‘hich was referred to the ‘on matic notes, or by some conf all the great mari- | shore among the savages. It then proceeded to | & it mot be worth wh: nr Pieaite | Conorat Grant and stafffore in tho half-past sovea walt aldecralkce ta Fisty:firsh street betwrese: Ume Powors were induced to make a declaration on the St where, Jong after the war was in point | sum rather thanthere should be any in. Cf | for Washington. ‘avenues, be flags width, were gubjeot like that of the Troaty of Paria. Tho wings of | of fact over, tt 64 fourtoen whaling vessels. ‘The | Selinge beeen this enmiryandine Un Lge ae) under iho direction of the Sirest Come future Floridas and Alabamas would thon bo effectually of thal was to moro than double the price of sperm me Ben Sa 6 aan re) Ber | oo iituateationgh tin tas at Colonel Bowers seResea ‘uations ould Ne teeter Be oe ce eeunalae | On thus, by the way, adording an illastration af a lay to Ee rere 6 ret > Noe ‘ints ona 1 te mnay be remarked that, aa ihe on of the war be se None te tho Committee on Roads, botiorn nations would no longer bo at the mercy of ship- | which the honorable member for Westminstor und called ho Peeking 5 Bans cote py iy ed ome tne Pp lreringe mell Ieg Reopen hil oyster) ‘Tint the County Clerk the Common epee ont ee eee Of pperen di was tarry ties Oiehiet ee toca ee | oer penn ee fos the | captain, whereupon the democrats of the district, with a lat of whose LY Es. ve ex) or ur Raped oan tty | SB wt om at cet conse tere | one ie re rpc, rie | emi ad oe aly gee ea oh _ egpgenpe ees veces was usually more correct im ita statement of law than it | oll, a het with re. | raised Ine company to get an office, Ho atonce aes. bnd been on the present occasion, Firat of all they had | Selves, having assured one did not realize the | endless ¢ au, iane. eee snm'| 20 norinate and so served, and when, finally, after serv- That a walk of hocks ‘soroas ‘deen told that the morality of Europe had changed, and_| loa ‘Those who had sperm oil got more than double tothe future, almost ev jonorable ra 1 od Be + a eae be Inid - ig With s#eneral Grant in a clerical capacity, it was on aides -sixth street, under that the Rag cag a fay rs of one State were not allowed pe oe i had peraree os Sone. ie Liokrvad pane oo ean ne Se im on ‘ (a oaks Gcuvainad 6 aommaiae on acpoont of ro ‘oxire- atign the Croton, ‘Aqueduct Hoard, ‘and the accom- shoo penlanion be eee Bae Wie clergyman came in to bu; pe Poin tes Oil fora magic | with other nations witch have interests in comikon with | ord abifities and fidelity, and detail him from the vane ee was not that armay eompoced to a large extont of tian | lantern for his children, "When he waa told the price | OUF ga ar et oleh thread emt ome pene ber pce pay otter eg ETS ormisaion’be and the aame ta hereby rican subjects? (Hear, hear.) A very large number of Irish- | W48 more than double, he said, “Well, then, I cannot | Say it wor my “it tT contain & his \stead, This was denied hi: he | tothe North River Si Rofining Com to lay a drain Red themselves th buy it, and my children must go without the m: lan- | for if you make laws or alter and amend our laws, wjth- in in uv ni im, and ng 7 va federal eblied and pkey Xn lta ane y trade 34 tern? Now fh aeaton wb remained wa what ove tiie sympathy by of Rg oo coeetion “bother recta took thie vacant captaincy at General Grant's | {rom thetr Their eccmere ‘agra Heotion of the Report of Committee om Streste te favor of adopting reso officers and made their appearance in Dublin as Fenians, | ¥eTe wo ness we acted in concert with foreign ol ae Heat Commiasi lution as follows:— Jeman 7 7 success. (Hear, hear.) But her Majesty’s government 4 MONUMENT ich was adopted. Ey cece sane ned a ae peg gy eo Steer retina FOU, DOC |. NED ean thous Ghaieou so eoaliagh tne eamaeale friendly | will be erected to b\S memory during the coming sam- | By Alderman G a script ba Gavel wth URES, eee te eee poorrantiiearr<pulh « ng sufficient Pio to pounce | Father from our conduct when wo were neutral, (Hear.) | communication with the gavernment of the United States. | mer by his surviving comrades of the Lieutenant Gene- bee ‘That the Sireet Commissioner be and heishere- | of the C Aqueduct "Bon and that the accompamying: upon ships which wore ballding, and arms and equip. | And, therefore, although -ho stiould uke to seo the act | 1 scarcely need remind the Houso that as ato as the dd | ral's staf. Charles streets Norticrieee to Sheed an Or eer ond | ondinance therefor be lows meats which were being made’ for certain parpoee. altered, there would be no use in doing 80 unless we did | November last, Lord Russell wrote to Mr. Adams thus:— ase calenten Us ie cite heat elke of pli Im Which ‘Was 8 domed by he foto win rote os Now, that he-denied sltogather. Slaton Bo Would Taner, DOr eitee Ieee eae eotent at | Uahed eistet nce on ates tat ot neither the law of the THE PRESKOENT’S VETO angnue’™s Teferred to tho” Comiaiiee on Wharves, Piers | Gidinews Ely, Yully. ion, tw, Masterson; Vara seytonn bad hea ofthe ce oft anip Maan" | oe sions with ive ast Sta, evans ielavred | Eve at ca nely ei Wn worth nla : Leer aC eet we sgtnt rsanrnenazes, | wees aaron Mere ef wong rene ? 4 4 ~ 5 = orahio gentleman as mntier of Safe He aterm tans | hot tovdenl with. “At the samo time, he hoped tat tho | wer 9f volbnatons: sothabtorthefuturweach government | President Johnson’ Polley in Vetoing | Ess Tiver. be repaired under the direction of the Street wi iteaolved, oat Toonard fire. from Broad Lo Hoda th nal . He was aw . 3 ave in its own territory as much seeu ratanioner. ement, under the Attorney General Bad provented certain tame whiten | government, notwithstanding tho way in which they had | institutions will permit agaigst those who netin deface of | the Freedmen’s Bateau BU® Cordially ‘Wilet waa referred to the Commitiee on Wharves, Piers orth Grofgm aguedt Moara aad Gast ‘eo ncnoeepior had been ballt by the Messrs, Lain from going to the | Fefnsed to.act, would entertain. tha question in view of | the intontion of the Sovereign, andovade theletieraf islaws | a agyaed by the Howrd of Comnelmen.. anu Sh Ordinanbs thatetoe be donee, assistence of the Confederate States; but there was no | the enormous importance to this country of having this | Her Majesty's government, I am authorized to say, (dbs ey orn Which was adopted by the Canis «By ate aisforence tecen the Lane of Brgtond and Ameren wth | WW altored and {otesoational law on. the subject clearly | eontinue of the Same ming, (Glee wary to say, Resolutions in Favor of a Bill to Pro~ | Resolved, ¢ 81M Of $5,000 be and the same ia he Affirmative—-Aldormén Norton, MeBrien, Fiynn, Shannon, Jaiddown, The honorable member (Mr, Laing) had ad- verted to the question of private property on the high seas not being subject to capture; but one of the most important features of the Congroas of Paris was the agreement that in all differences between two countries there should be arbitration. regard (0 the treatment cf neutral States. Now, he wanted to know how it was possible to prevent transactions like those which had been roferred to. Tho honorable gentle- man had said that vessels were sent piecemeal out of our ports. Now, how was it poss’ble, except upon clear, de- frate and indisputable evidence, for the Executive in a country Hke this to prevent a transaction of the kind? Allusion had been made to the possibility of England being invoived in awar at some time. or other. Well, we had incurred that danger before, and we most incar it again. He would, however, warn the Executive against taking upon themselvs 80 dangerous a power ag had beon suggesied by the honorable gentleman. Eng- Jand depended upon her mercantile enterprise. She sup- Piied all the countries in the world with everything they could desire, selling them ships, and making guns and manufackiring powder for them. So did tho United States, The whole civilized world did the same thing. Bit ould say to the government, “Do not attempt to aequire more power than you have now. You have suilicient to enable you to prevent great mischief aris- ing. Do not endanger the security of your merchants and artificers by any such proceeding.” “But he did not Jike a discussion of this sort on such an occasion. (Hear, ear.) A great and gallant people, making a stand for what they thought their rights, had suffered cruelly. Things had been done im America that wuld have disgraced Tilly and Wallens‘ein; and now tho British government ‘was called upon to take steps which would bring dis- gare on that gallant people. His sympathies were in favor of the routhern States, The federal army was made up of a body very much like Dugald Dalgetty’s; they had conquered, and he wished thom joy of their ‘conquest ; nt Americans were net a united people, and he Aoped they would not be. (Laughter.) REMARKS OF MR. LAING. (Hear.) But it was on that very basis of arbitration that our government absolutely refused to treat. He therefore hoped the government would consider th‘s question in view of its extreme im- portance, The view of the question taken by intelligent Americans was well expressed in the recent message of the President to Congresa. VIEWS OF THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT. The Arroxney Gexerst—The question now before the House is beyond all doubt one of tho greatest importance, and at the same time of no slight difficulty. Itis of tho greatest importance that the House shouid bear in mind what were the exact facts of the various cases bearingon the questton which occurred daring the recent unhappy war in America, Tho honorable member for Windsor (Mr. Labouchere) is slightly in error when he says that the English government was several times requested to amend the Foreign Enlistment act; 1 fact, the very re- verse of that statement is nearer to the truth. It should be remembered that at an earty period of the American war the govornment of this country, foresecing that vory important questions of intervational Jaw might ariso during the progress of the war, suggested to the Ameri- can government the Foreign Enlistment acts of both countries should be revised, and any additions that might be thought necessary made to them. What was the an- ewer made by the American government to this offer of ours? What was the answer of the American govern- ment to this offer? Why, to use a homely expression, they threw cold water on it altogether. They said that they had no objection to enter into the consideration of suc! a question; but, for their own part, they were of opinion that their Foreign Enlistment act required no could not let the discussion terminate without referring paabeh, aab-wes ‘adapted for its {o tho ouly way in whiah the question could bo properly T ask the House weal Sethenes dao goverment wostd settled. Tho only satisfactory solution of the difficulty | have been placed in if, after the receipt of such an an- ‘would be an agreement between civilized nations to place | gwer as that, they had od Parliament to ada more private property at sea on the same footing Property on land. (Hear.) The rule with regard to pri- ‘vate property on land was clear and distinct. It was not eubject to destruction or capture —— in bona fide del- could After giving such an answer, to have their bill ee oat by the @ money for the capture of a pri- rumout ox colonel of a regiment would be | House? (Hear.) The honorable member for it corresponding exploiton land? It was | pears to tak that the American Foreign Bnllstment that the principle of uniformity was | act ig far more stringeut than the one {a force mm this ‘sdvovated by the United States at the Congress of Puris. | country. The honorable member for Sheffield has already ‘The country at that ume ui lost an tunity hi ot = salioge le eek ee Tae Poortwnny, { Said thiat the views of the honorable member wero E ‘still most desircus to consider these ma'ters in friendly com- munication with the United States, and it could only be an unfriendly counsellor who would suggest to the gov- erpment of that country that the time is gope when such questions could be considered, to say that a policy founded on such advice would be a wrong and shortsighted policy. If by well considered amendments the laws of both countries could be made more , the laws of neutrality would be delivered from innumerable difficulties whenever a war took place, At present the United States ia placed ina difficulty by the war in Mexico and the war in Chile, and clearly it would only be fair to consider recent difficulties, because | as the Freedmen' it is only experience which shows what the weuk points are in matters of this description. It is expe- rience which tells us in what our laws are defective, and in what they juire alteration ond amendment. J venture tosay that if the United Slates gov- ernment would accede to the suggestion of Earl Russell and enter into a friendly consideration of this quesiium, we ave in o better position to deal with it now than if we had dealt with it without the experience of the late war. (Fear.) If we bad attempted to legislate on the subject before that war, I am perfectly certain that in practice our amendments would have been very imperfect, or would have altogether failed. It would have turned out that in altering we had made things very little better, and that wo had endeavored to amend with perhaps no good re- sult, But the experience of these iast years has been such as to enable us to become pretty cognizant of the sound and the weak points of our international Jaws, and if we could only ot ‘the co-operation of nations equally interested as oursclves, I would not despair of our arriving at a sound and satisfactory result. omy hear.) Ithink the Houso will be of opinion with her Majesty's government that the is one of deli- St Sener See , and that it is ene on we should not enter seriows consideration, if we do not enter on i in concurrence and in com mat Shrouded in the National Flag— ‘The Lying in State—The Burial, dc. All that was mortal of the lato Colonel Theodore 3 Bowers, Adjutant General on the staff of Lieutenant General Grant, was committed to the gronnd in the Caitet Cometery, at the United States Military Academy, West derman Saaxn Point, at one o'clock yesterday afternoon, The funeral | Rli‘uf Mouuhan's Bend for $146 for musto on the 4th of appropriated as ereby tect the Freedmen Offered ama Post~ | {he Now York Volante Fie MnO the charitable fund of ets tice Yo be taken from ei cept eee anid. aD her Finance FREED ME poned, &e. Which was referred to the Coumitiee on Finance. Intion es follown ies oe Tho Board met yesterday afternoon, President Green By Alderman Vanxou— That the Comptroller be and he Is. hye whe (Hear, hear.) I venture presiding. After the minutes of the previous meeting ved, That the triangular place of ground situated at | rized and directed to draw his warrant in favor of the junciion of Sixth avenue an south by Thirty-second street, on the east Dy Broadway and ‘on the wos by the Sixth avenue, be fenced in; and also that the triangular piece of ground bounded on the north by Thir- ty-fiith street, on the east by Sixth avenue and on the west by Broadway, be fenced fn, under the direction of the Street Commissione’. : Broadway, bounded on the | dolasohn Benevoi nation, in order ment for buildin, Third and Fourth count of donations, were read and approved the report of the special com- mittee appointed to draft resolutions endorsing Presi- dent Johnson's policy was presented and read. It is as follows:— mt mire Hi for the suur of $120 96, as a de able the said society to pay an wer in Eighty-seventh oo ‘nuea, and charge the to the ac- ‘ich was adopted by the follow! Afirmative—A Mermen Norton, M Flynn, solved, That the action of the President of the United | | Resolved. That, inaeuineh asthe application of steam to | Garin ” Belosy Loew, Mameteam, Vi into io teturnt cannes ba, yeto of the til known, | the purports of navigation, for while Ee conutey te SStrien and Stedtunte—ad : ureaut mm the opinion “of | debsod to the genius and polseverat fon, has. been 4 Streets, adopting resd% the representatives of the peo of the is city of | oneot th f Y an oak aane ‘tne Hee papa snpaamded New York in Com Conn jot only jnstif eatth and. its ro ol of pee the. din Re West ie 5 Dommon. ni stil | wealth and pi es - ba m ly prosperity 3, ty. Ly ‘evolved, That Duane street, from Hudson street lodged with the Chief Ma: \ creas, street, be paved with Belgian pavement, under the trate of the - | the iniatanta: com! i t U1 “l accompanying stitution, t9 be exercised in sneh contingencies; amd Ut tho | ofthe world: ahd Srosent ett alert ee Re ean | Of tue Crolom Aqueduct Board, snd the “ommon Counell of the elty of New York most sineerel and promises to be for the future of the highest ‘con- | ” Wiicn was adopted by the following vote:— thank the President for this salutary assertion of his hij celvable utility to the city in re to ils progress in wealth Afirmative—Aldermen Norton, Melisien, Flynn, | oom », believing, as they do, that this act will meet w! and (pete prosperity, and ja represented that certein Gedney, Ely, Reilly, rice, Loew, Masterson, Varoum, ¢ hearty approbation and solld, support of ihe. American | publ fe srarited cfttzene reriding or owning property, in the | Otrien and Mouings—as. z aK. o ‘plecew a above port Streets, adopting ress GEORGE H, MACKAY. ignated propose the erection of, Btattes of anid wanetuc. | tukishee Meee Om rena CORNELIUS FLYNN. tors of the country and of the therefore, it is or. | “Resolved, That Tenth street be ‘Zapumbered. the portion Tho provious question was called for, and tho rom | daucty tne Mayet, Aldermen and Commanaly of ine cy | dyin ant of Pith avento to be caed and: pumbered tong were adopted, ouly two members voting in tho | Same are hereby actapart for. the erection tharecm of bronze | be Pulled curd mnashaeed ee ee Tee aera th ate te a statues of natural stze—one of Fulton, the other of Morse— { be done under the direction of the Street p. . PuLiaaw offered a series of resolutions, setting | the vie of each statte to boar emblematic devices repre- ich was adopted by the fol! VOU s— forth that the faith of the nation was pledged to the | senting the discovery and nse of steam cope to navigation Aflirmative—Aldermen Ni ) MoBrien, Flynn, Shannon, froedmen, regretting the radical difference between the: | 8"4 the successive modifications in the perfectionment of tel. | Gedney, Ely, Reilly, Brice, , Masterson, Vgrnum, dont and Congress, and expressing the opinion that’ | SePerhy, And whenever the Mayor shalt be satiied that end | O'itrink Sad "MoGiuinis— hii battle ees She protection of these colored persons required the pas- | nities of cliten, the Street UonmrolaaiOner shall bo ausion. | Bas Tt Couey eon earren, Fite and Stipa sage of a bill embracing the main features of that h | ized and required to grant a it for the ereetion thereon: Resolved, That the Btroet ‘be and ~ 4 he reeently votoed. Of the same; und after the same are completed he shall cause | by wutuorised sack n oeasene'tr sameeaie On motion, the consideration of the resolutions was | #*!4 pieces of ¢: enclosed by an iron On @ | butid piers No. Band 59 river. indefinitely postponed, jan to be approved by the ayer and Sape. pone, ich was conenrred in-by the nA, tevolution ia favor of appainting.» committe of Gonignated as Wullon place’ and the othor-ab Gedney. hig. Rell. Brie, Booms reo to order to look after the in- Ice, O'Brien and’ McGingis— Toreste of this clty, was préscnted and iy wil | "Wiidh' wan referred to: the Comniiites én Arte and Bots tated (tee on ‘Piers and Slips, in faves drawn. oneen~ — Tesolution aa od y " After disposing of a number of general orders mt me ye oe ‘nk re a a Fe Resolut reset curb ther river, be repaired, under ing to routine matters the Board adjourned till Monday, fourth street, from ‘bird ‘avenue’ to the Bast river, ae ‘Com imissione: be by the - vet | = Whereas the ordimanes a stone-biock pavement to | Xairmative “Aldctmea Hortons Molinos Fivam, @harmem, MUNICIPAL AFFAIRS de laid in “Thinty-fourth street fro Third avenue to East Gasiny. Ely, Roslly, Brice, Loew, Masterson, Varnuat, : curt ‘aot having been see am oe aee aren, Report of Consalttes om Sewers, in favor of adopting ream ae yp Pe Bae and of of the teurb and gutter ution 44 followa:— re OFFICIAL. ireotved, at the ourb and gutter be set and reset w! the iiwent corer of Py street and atee STATED, SESSION—Moxpar. March 5—2P. M. | | nocnanary th Thirty fourth street, from Third avenue to Kast | nue ynder the direction of the Croton Aqueduat me ee, Bag chair, and forthwith, the same tat the accom: the following sosmmterss-= =” sabi ° the Streot Oominiasioner, and the accompanying Bon ‘orton, McBrien, F! Shannon, Gedney. Ely, Ryers, Rolly, ‘Leow. Mamarcon, farauras O'Brien, nad 54 Glonia. ‘The minutes of Fe! 26 were read and approved. {ana eee i i in of Sc omenpres on Fineneo: favor of paying Miles Tuly, ni te accurate, and I mut that statement. In- | coremonial, ‘though otrictly military, was a deeply im- | JUy., . scored to the Committee on Finance, ‘over, ‘utmost value. were at the mercy of any small State pe) the honorable member for Reading (Mr. Shaw- | pressive one, its chief features being Ite touching sim- Ry Al MoGonis— pispon of Commilio on Pinance fn favor of paying Jaman therefor be a4 yihem we might go to war; our commercial marine | Lefevre), who has spoken to-nicht with his usual candor | pyicity and solemnity, From the fact that the time that |, P of the German Lutheran church, Fittieth street, | Banscum for loss of horse, Which was by > Saenger at. ‘would te expowed to something detruction. The Ala- | ana abil ty, does not himself concur in the views of the between and Fourth event for viion (o pay tax. ‘of Committee on. Finance in favor of paying John rmatire =i) iorten, ML mm ‘bama having caused the transference of a third of the | member for Windsor on this subject. The two sections | the burial was to take place was not generally known, Py Nota = Ey ittee on Finance. Wright for tposived. Briey and i q Loew, Masterson, Gennage of Ham Tap to Sersign Gags, én whet Eee ate meppeaed 60 bees, oub-the, opinion thet the because the hour originally determined upon by General Riesonstvdnce OF Semen Mf: Ji James H. Giles, pro- Yt ks ‘Report of the te we be if a-hundred were 0 fo | Amorican law compels a strictor neutrality than is the | Grant—four clock—was changed to one a'clock | perty owners, te ‘ke., againsh farther ‘Proceedings for of Committes on Finance in favor of dovating the Pecan iramtencee Prey upon our commerce? Tho whole of our maritiine | casy in this country, are the tenth and eleventh sections enlarging Fullon and CS of the Good ‘® sum suficient to pay an as- | B late Publle Admin! in favor commerce would be transferred to the of insignifi- | of the act of opted in 1837. ‘The first of | P. M., the attendance from abroad was tnot Sree referred to the on Btreeta, Wrhi-h was laid over. Mm po ‘Cant noutral Giates guch ae Belgium, Holland. Norway | these sections enables secarity to be taken from ‘the | go large as was expected. This, with the fact that tho Wibkeat sect ernaa to. Sittin gor]... Raport cf Commins on Sinasle tn fant ot ageing tha toe Git Ape insert nance, for sand Sweden, under which alone It cond be safely carried | owners of every armed ship or vessel sailing out of 18 | means of. access to this military post are just now very | Baisian'parewene volwert Fira aud vor econ sidewalks of Thirty-seventh street, between First mount of wad = tape 7 immense interest e 1 wenues. com} ny " Majesty "@ goverament would give thosunject their atten- apes peng een ae ae pen ae aa Y that seetice | inadequate, all visitors having to be put across the ferry Pewiteh re referred to the Commitee) TW hich was tad over. Sauiinistretor and for in gismina- ton. any hing which is not contained in the English Yoreign through the Ice in onc small rowboat, may further help Patton of Pr. ohn Carry to be pald for loss of an over. agers of Demanidicn oy Serco be reer at Boeing ite: me pay expenses fncident inves ea Oe ee NOTRE EYRE IN SUP- | Enlistment act. | Our law ix quite as strict in its require- | to account for the slim attendance other than miliery. | £°% 2» qaasthegndpdomene sch aes ¢ ~*~ eeeray ,Ordinanes to amend the Revieed Ordinances of 1068, ante PORT OF THE MOTION. tmenis, aml I may ase when, in of fact, has any ‘Which was. to the Committee on Finance, ‘Which was laid over, other acts of the Common Council relating to Mr. Saxprorp asked if honorable members who talked | armed ship or vessel been permitted to sail owt of an THE MELANCHOLY PRELIMINARIES. yo woaietnmeioe th Report of Conmilter on Streets tn favor of foucing vacant | Public Aduvinnirsce of the exemption of private yon land from eap- | English —* attack the commerce of the United States? | After the remains of the dead Adjutant Genem! had | Biliot ingsiand, agent for Dodworth’s Band, for | Yous on the corner of Thirty-first stre Aigeman EAEAe Rotel, te ouand Silise 10 testy ure in time of war, remembered Sherman's march and | (Hear, hear.» No such occwrrewe has ever taken deen gathered up from the fetal spot at Garrison's they music furnie! the Fi of July, whereupon he pre- x Re hed pas ta e dea Se ee er eee ree Bheridan’s ‘The devastation carried on by the .\ ‘The second section authoriaes the doten- sented the fellewing resolwtion— ( Commitita on Stresta tn relation to. grant ng in Hew whereof the words sederal generals wes, be delioved, saparalinied im the | tion “of any vernal manifestly balls for warlike pur. } were placed tn care of Dr. Mans, one of thesurgewme of | . Ressred. Tass, te ComptreBer be ond pots hereby an. ee cae Bite Sante epee he cidemeike. nny eg en yd history of the world. Our nouteality laws wore at present | poses of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms | the post, with directions to see if the mangled parts —, ‘agent for Dodwortu's Band, for. bros CONMUMICATIONS. gollara’’ aod insert the “four eighs @ scandal, for the ges were divided in their interpre. | and munitions of war.’’ Our Foreign Enlistment act just could be so put together as to preserve the semblance | for music furnished on the ening oF My 6 Tas, and A communication was received from his Honor the Mayor, Sep ares an any, = tation of thom, ‘the decision of the Court of Exche- | as strongly forbids such a proceeding, aud wo vessel of charge the same to account of ety cot - 8 ms mew Son ee, Whieh was lost by Tohlewtag votes quer was against the opinion of the goverument, and, | which if was proved that she was manifestly built fur war- | of a corpse. This was found to be utterly impossible, wi h was referred to the Committee on Finance. teres ny.) heey me pony a ears jorton. sonsequentiy, of the Attorney Gonoral_ Therefore, the | like purp ses and that Rer cargo mataly consised of mnt: | go thoroughly hed the body been disintegrated by tho | BU.AMSTARTSNINTOS, 1 ese werk. done on steam | TEST ee ne ais beroenth a cers] eACEaTe ae ees "Fira, Orion Me goverumont ‘ought to have annauneed in the royal | tions cf war, would be allared to keav: an Engl A port, of the car over it. It was then determined that | are engines, * tified copy of a resolution by the Board of Commis. & measure to make the law clear, certain and | After the refusal by the American governmont of the | Passge © ‘Which was referred to the Committee on Finance. stoners of Health, at a held on the 37th atts as | The question then being on the motion of Alderman Reflly, definite, Ifthey deemed the enlistment act eutficient to | offer which I have already detailed to you, the late Lord | the A:morican flag should be the only shroud of the By Alderman Moaneers— well as a gory. the report of the Resident Physitian ‘The same was loa by t glovhy wecure the fuliliment of our international obligations, | Chancellor expressed \t as his opinion that our Foreign | jamented Colonel, and the fragments of the once perfect Petition of M. Nicot, pastor of the Church of St. Boniface, | *lluded to Very wraiy, RO! 2 Idermen Ely, 7, Brice, Loew and Mag. there ought to bo brought forward a declaratory meas- | Rolistment act was fully as efficactoun as the correspond- | pod. were so enwrapped and encoffined previous to the Sip Senatinn 0 veg Seen een vf es besnkne Ld 5 ia .. re * ure; if they thought it insufficient, they ought to have | ing enactments in the United States. Under such clr- ‘ites. Bote ree reeaeras to the Comsaities on Finance, authority toexpand money, even for the ‘of tts | Gedney, Varnum, O’Brien and McGinnis, x p its amendment. There was @ general opinion | cumstances it was our duty to make the experiment to APPEARANCE OP THE DECEASED. Petition of George Kellock to be appointed e Commissioner | own transactions: Whereas there are, frequent, slmost ‘on the adoption of the ordinance as. ‘that the law had been sirained jn the seizure of vessels; | wait and see whether the Porcign Enlistment act would So much of the body of Bowore as wia pre. | of Deeds. dally, letters received from cities asking forma- ‘Dut we ought to mainta:n our international obligations | answer the purposes for which it is enacted, before ask- | porvod made only a partial corpse—a portion of one of Which was referred to the Committee on Selaries and poy J RON A 3 = whereas Tt wan lost by the bang > Bang ‘without straming the law. He hee tgacts YP be mn bed ped a reagan len ge pvt nad the extromities, a part of one arm, qxceedingly mastlaved or, vy is ual report » Dr. eontal) Shannon, Gedney ional con, to settie a principle wi 0 great | which would only increase tffieu chest and head,’ formii + was Kerman Varwow: maritime could istroduce 1nt0 their Tumelpal | fiom Uf the new lay was ues adopted; even if. we edealt ee ote ake tak tee tek oe 4 puition of the Managers of the Patriot Orphan Home for 4 laws. Had such measure been proposed during the late | that the Foroign Eolistment act is not as stringent as it | that part of the face remaining compamtivcly wee poieered to the Comumistee 60 Piaance American war ho would have opposed {t, as it wonld have it to be, it must uot be forgotten that it proved ia- | intact a smile indicating that he died without suf- ‘Alderman Fixex— deen to England to have been cease on more efficacious than did tho laws of United | fori ‘And here, it may be waa the only treog- of the Justice of the Seeond Distriet Potice Court fo alter her laws under the menaces of a foreign “eo oe. — aa ae a ants lzuble feahure, #6 fearful had the terrible crushisg be. and Justices of the Third District Civil Court fora new Court dw! a: England did not fear Ci Peru or con Spain, the uring the war oath the ite ‘The coffin was not im might be Y eolaieee now, when the Spain ie ngena of the ores appeared, notwith- | Siver the ensbroudment and depositing of the bay in bich was referred to the Committee oo Finance, Vnited States showed don to act fairly, honorably ling the exertions of the American govern to | the casket. the Vestry of Calvary chureh for remittance of Gnd justly with all foreign Powers, lnid on | have been able to set the law at deflance with impunity. um LYIWG In eran. an it. Abe table House, and on the tablo of the French | A number of armed vesseis ioft American ports to Early in the forenoon of Wednesday the remaire, en- Prick, was referred to the Committee on Finance, ‘Chambers, showed that President Johnson and his gov- ish commerce, and im some instances actually | 01.64 in a neat casket covered with the national flag, iy ~y ke aN ov North germent were anxious to fulfil international obligations. | returned into these ports with their prizes. In the differs | Sore iainin stato in the handsome chapel atuched “ fesny street, As he had never beon sapposed to be & partisan of Mr. | ent breaches, or alleged breac the Foreign Rati | ty the Academy, the guard of honor being | Wiich'was referred tothe Commiltes on Wharves, Piers Johnson, be was only too ey to take t ge aE ee ate, bon thes che et luring ey dey it me nelected from the cadets. The commanding #fiicer | and on bis bumble meed ise to man wl thought, be seen vernment had done every- was Sergeant ai Ee Joe the hopes of | thing that lay in the secure the stringent car. | Of the guard, of honor was | Sergi ‘disappointed the prophecies of enemies and rien ‘hear, hear)—and who was s—( conrse | rying out of that act. alculated, If anything could, pursuin, Alabama manaced he povers- Decanse the iaformation on which her detention could ment of the United states, (Hear, ‘merefore | based did not reach the government ip sufficient time. Wentured to a ; her Majesty's govern. | The Oreto, subsequently the Florida, wae seized and tment would give the House some assurance that they | tried; the not succeed, and, in potnt of intended to take the question In hand. if bee fact, she was not fitted up as @ sbip-of-war in o British to force | port, The Alexandra was twice seized and tried. rama wero also seized and procecdi: commenced their builder, It is true that government u proper to compromise those prodecdings, ) dy that sud to parchaso the rams; and without, st all these | maki an: ly been taken aon ae Kee tat “that the course then go" nid vesse! should not be the second claase empowered the officers of customs of ‘the United States to seize ¥ chewed purposes, and whone cat arms and munitions of war. {eho latter clause, we could not have ih. (Hear, hear.) Bat, if the honorabie to the h story of the United Btates to nee cause of that statute being passed, he it wan in order to prevent the evasion of Enlistment act. The schemes for eluding were very diforent from those which if the Held, the nomination of Grant himoett.‘Dubing this period, of the obeequbs al to bo printed in the winctsa =" "uanenend die Gunes te chal tahoe tial gue ef ch wat se Of he triers of te eres Replay, bared in mained to mortal view of the departed. During the | West Forty arm street, — Te ee od tin Bapmtanes Oe Se ae eommanion tae eT pemeakl toe chias was soem tenant General an¢ his | “Which was referred to the Committee on Finance. fore oad be teebiiti'te : for and we god Boatived. Phat the ¢ of the, Ee eey ‘The funeral was in charge of Captain F.C. yey Kye k pa oes Tide comteoces of tipeare fiion The, Bp Sef na he fate aa fo na tery pee how inw alfects the satis By sent service, in presence of the Lieatenant General and “Resclved ’ ot a therta dew See 4 Nes, the Frant street of the width of th ascertain other + be ‘ facas ts et sian | Sani areh ey cae Ge seceniess a ‘the ide of 4S | ploy such amsiotanee, the expense to be paid ous of as eont or iinet “wr red In Our case. In Amorica vessels went out at Jy] bat oe se ro as an cargoes, and ad ‘ they outside ty jn hetiom of the United they took the from below, Lae Thold that our ings in this ‘Wasnixcrton, March 7, | oun te tae ote near ie aod | may ma mag pramred 7 onset wh | Me, armam:— Pea ttf ee ef atrers le quite adi here we - v wan rer compact ikon iacen wh | martian chen the Ould Ray vane wre. | Beaaiych der Watt le" $9, Bal on 6 ond rial bad. taken piace | veat breaches of nemralily with « succes which cannot “THR PALL BRARERS he pelle rit ane ae = eae tel tr test .-% ‘the oocasion were Brevet lier General nd as be newt to naow, toon pater Tor Read ® in & manner which, I Petes C Vincent, Adjutant Gener: oe, es bs of oan whatever | sat ih’ “ataaigernd, for. the tewe Tateres of the | States AMmgy during the war o€ the general sta ‘whatever with @ armed and manned might not be a he James) Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Sst Ea er io oe a Breve iesteatat Clone Gorentarr sed ayia another port carrying ite men, ‘of this Hoose may No one can cal, of ry sens out of a, Pieciste tore than Ge the disaretion of my . THE CHEF WOUAWERS might be managed in OE Rd were Licutenant General Grant, « e ind of case Ought to be met, | thors motives be UK actnate tind of | hel Adam Badeau, i Eiy Parker, Lieutenant etme ty ihe Foie Eitan alt occasions The mnst feel that in all cases | io) pr, . Vg '@ detusion and a pnare. where nations are phe! be a geon Willism MeRie Dur and honorable member for Hunting- br 3 which never must so. erick Dent Grant, the eldest son of the General. 1 wnseen yd aa fr 'Gonden on tener Oy sllovtag than tee ert eneen ot DISTINGUISHED PERSONS PREEEYT. Tho governupent, through the | honor to be submitted to an arbitration when really there A Among the distinguished persons present wore ith, | By an Vann Petition of the New York for the on imei feral he ea ieogetgrte eet pene ah as ‘of streets fronting om the mee roe on Wharves, Piers aie a S| Reta to menue ir whore necessary, under the n¢on Wharves, Piers and Sitpa, with greta Sgt RO Poet hs pits mae sap toes at . eaten ie ordinance ¢ better protection of life and property iaierautracrmamtin fan | MS! MA ge cree Se ed ey eee Sec raearmmnatt Poe RES Bae Fee eee ocean ease | ime erp an PEF ES kecemnenues ESSE CAR | ie aa Dear OPT nna