The New York Herald Newspaper, September 14, 1868, Page 6

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6 EUROPE. British Review of the Barlingame- Chi.oa Treaty and Mission, Ro‘{fand's Friendship for China and One Tun- dred Millions Sterling a Year, Jce Goss in the Future After the Prize Ring. ‘The Inman steamanip City of Baltimore, Capta'n Leitch, from Liverpool the 24 and Queenstown the 24 of September, arrived at this port yesterday noon, bringing our special European correspon’ ence in detail of our cable telegrams, dated to ber @ay of sailing from Ireland, The Pall Mall Gazette of the 1st of September, epeaking of the future of Mexico, says:— We can scarcely say that the future of Mexico is one of the “questions” of the hour. The destiny of the empire which has known thirty-three changes of vernment tn forty-six vearg has not been dimeuit ee ever sincg the fail of Maxunilian, For eleven ears past caaneas fonght with all the energy of 18 nature for the reteution of a power which never had anv actual existence. For five years the French succeeded in redacing him to a@ level with a guerilla chieftain, but they were the five years during which ce United States were unable to Stretch for‘h a huni to heln a neighbor, Stray hints have been droped sigrifying that General Rose- erans is gone to invite Mexico to join the great re- mbiic. ~The on!yqnestion in our op'nien is, how lon will he have to walt hefore his errand is accom- plished? Is Juarez already brought low enough to aevept terms? * * * Perhaps even an Indian may hope to sit In the chair of Washington, At rate they could govern their own States. There would only be two or three more s*ained glass windows in the roof of the House of Penresentatives at Washington, and space has been thowrhtfully reserved for them. The re- nblic has aiways been ready to take tn new comers. tetter the Unite! Stetes than anarchy, and to that conclusion the Mexicans will come sooner or later. ussell has written a letter to the agent of his Trish estates, in which, after pointing out the duties respectively of landlord and tenant in their Social relat‘ons, he reminds his agent that the land- Jord has no claim whatever to coerce the votes of his tenantry. Galignant’s Messenger, of Paris, of September 2, reports;— Aninhabitant of Reanne (Céte-d'Or) recently wrote to Mr. Seward to ask for information relative to the mode of purchasing public tand. in the United States, and as to the facilities granted by the government of that country to foreign colonists, By order ofthe Sec- retary of State a detailed and comniete reply has been prepared by Mr. Williamson, Territorial Commis sioner, and has been forwarded to the applicant, Who proposes to go out with a number of his fellow- townsmen to cuitivate the vine in America, The imperial government of Anstria has just as- same! a decisive attitude in Bohemia, A formal sunmons ha3 been served on the Tch‘que deputies that they are to attend at the Diet. Should they fail to comply their seats will be deciared vacant and Rew elections proceeded to, A communication from Rome in the Italie of Flor- ence says:— The ' ope is rif'_ing his cannon—that is, as many as Possible. ‘The operation is accomplyshed in the ar- senal within the enclosure of the Vatican, so that the spiritual and temporal weapons of the Holy See are forged side by side. Joe (oss, the pugilist in training for the champion- ebip of Engiand battle, was arrested and brought up at the Bow street police office, London, on the 2d of September. Sir T. Heury, the magistrate, in holding him to bail said:— I will take bail, each for five hundred pounds, and Goss must enter into his own recognizance for the Barne amonnt to keep the peace for twelve months, and now I warn Goss at the expiration of that time, motto think of entering into any engagement, or making an undertaking to fight, for if such a thins occurs it will not be a question of ball, but you wil be committed for trial. Goss replied, thank you, sir. I shall not engage in any prize fight, but I hope that when prize fighting is put down nothing worse than Qiehting with the fsts will happen in this country. Sir T. Henry—I cannot go into that. An important letter froia the Protestant Dean of E}phin, Ireland, Dr. Warburton, ts published in the London Tins, addressed to the Secretaries of the Protestant Defence Association, who had solicited his co-operation in the movement in which they are engaged. To this request Dr. Warburton gives a distinct refusal. The Comte de Corday d’Orbigny, first cousin of Charlotte Corday, died at his chateau in Normandy, Which he was never known to quit except to attend ‘the marriage or funeral of a relative in Paris. The azed Count was the type of a French country gen- Geman. Matame de Stael’s grandson, the Prince de Brogiie, who quitted the French naval service some Ume since, has entered the monastery of Saint Sul- Pice, where he will meet his young friend the Mar- quis Jules de Pellune (brother of the Duke), whose retirement from the world caused so great a sensa- Gon two years ago. ‘The vacant Legisiative seat of the Niévre Depart- ment, France, is to be sharply c_ntested. M, de Bour- going, one of the Emperor's eqneries, will stand on the government side, and MMW. Gérard and Gambon, who weut to Paris to receive their pro- gramme ‘rom the “Comité d'action,” will oppose him. The opposttion press selected MM, Mac and Seinguerlet as representing its opinions to contest the Moselle against M. Lejoiudre, Inspectear G néra! des Ponts et Chauss‘es, Neither of the forincy gentlemen has ever been in the department, whereas M. Lejotndre is well known in the country and Is an extremely popular man, Ley. John Bramston, an Essex, England, rector, speaking at an election meeting on the Church ques- tion, said:— Holding, as I do, that this is the great question looming in the future, 1 wish to be ab'e to argue the question on sound principles, and not to have it thrown In my teeth that there ts in Ireland such an 4 eatablisiment as ou; never to hi existed and which ts a mockery of @ union bei en Church and State, Although I do admit most fuliv the great ability and the consu aimate tact of Mr. Dierae at the same thme I very mue’ prefer ths sound love of justice, the transparent earnest. bees, the unimpeachable sincerity, the unrivalled ‘qnence, tie finance al abilit nd, above all, the Teligious couveuience of Mr. Gladstone. ENGLAND. Bittish Review of the Burlingame-Chinn Treaty—O\e Trace of the East in Process of Kevolntion=Mr. Burlingame’s Position and the Claims of Grent Britain, om the London rimes, Sept. 2] The announcement of Ission to the Courts of Europe from a government whose past treatment 0; its relations with Western nations had well nigh caused despair in those who had looked forward witu hope, when the treaty of Tientsin was signed, tothe undisturbed developinenc of {riendiy inter: course with the Chinese people was hailed here with fatisfaction. The prospect hed out by the viter. ances of the A nerico-Chinese Bavey ou his arrival in New York—that “Chino finds that she must come into relations with this civilization that 1s pressinz Up around her; fecting that, she does not watt, but comes out to you and extends her hand’—tmplytng that the Chinese rulers ¢ ntempiated a atep forward ty tne direction of fuitilment of their obtigations, contracted aud uncontracted, was more than wel- come, We are interested far beyond any other country in 8 trade which already amaeun's to one hundred mullions sterting tn the uear, We are alive io the immense benefit which cannot fail to accrue to us from the develonment of that commerce to the pro- Portions possible to its those proportions mean.ug, sides Olver things, the not insignificant advantage to ua as a manufacturing people of clothing the teeming millions of that ewpire, causing China aimost to surpass lndia in worth tous. We barbor Bo sinister desigus on the rights of ether govern. ment or peo; Of this we lave given practical roof by the terms to which, in common with the rench governinent, we restricted ourselves when ‘we dictated at Pekin the convention of 1860, Our sole desire is that the Chiuere government may not be tempted to revert again to tts po icy of isolation nd hostility, which it once fairly avandoned and that 80 lately as the year just nated, that we be spared further confict, and our ‘legitimate commerce being suffered to expand in security, free from underhand interfereuce, we may gain the opportunity of cementing by tue ties of a com mon Interest 6 friendly ailiance with the Chinese le, P Por reasons of the ahove nature, the cordial re- ception of a missiun With a character such as that announced by ite Envoy was guaranteed, although ‘we might, if 66 minded, have ‘aken wnbrage at ie selection that has been mate, (o ine exctuston af our own countrymen in favor af an American centieman who does not even count among his qualifications any know'edge of the language uf the rt Jr which he comes accredite?. Under no ob!'getioneto the United States, the Chinese gorernmen’ is under Ob iations nositive and welghty t onrselves; for, oddly enough, ever siuce the teriniuation of ovr inet NE a trate, Of £2,700,000 sterling, and which the Chinese government, left to ita own resources, would be utterly incompetent to collect, we nave contributed In no mean degree to the main- tenance of a government = bankrnpt in ite exchequer. Hence, it would have exhibited a fui appreciation of such services had the Chinese government made choices of an Englishman with a knowledge of the language in place of an American withont it, Bunt, donbtless, the choice the objects which the treaty clauses. conel the envoy with the United States disclose, Its aim would seem to be nothing less than the reinforce. ment of the Chinese ryers in their old attitude of ve resistance and nnfriendliness. It is a nity hat the foreign counsellors. whom they have at their elbow should have supplied them with adrice so mis- taken and mischievous, A retrozrade policy on a i Ey ct teni 1s condemned by all the experience of the past an can bear but one fruit—chronic hostility, There is an Irresistible law of progress which Ohi moust, lke ail other countries, obey or suffer, The compact which thissinpplementary treaty aims in effect at exacting from all foreign Powers Is to let China remain stationary for all time, 7 acyuiesve ma contition so ahsurd and as unavailing as ab- surd, would be infeed simnty to court fresh wars, and to fling away the chief gatn, as will be found whenever that treaty is carried inio e'fect, of the ‘Treaty of Tientsin, which was to transfer by dogrees from the hands of the government to those of che people the power to imperil onr relations whenever this m'ght chance to suit the purpose or convenience of the former, We will now, without further preface, proceed to examine seriatin the articles of the treaty under comsideration. It seems to have un 'ergone material morifieation at the hands of the Senate. As {t orisi- nally stood it aMirmed that the Emneror of China had never waived the right of jurisdiction over stranzers sett!ing In Chinese territory. As this sur- render is the particular featire of the treaties the Emperer has signed with every foreign Power, the aeclaration was in manifest contradiction of the t-rms of those t eaties, fo which, notwithstanding, no allusion whatever was made, nor was any pro- viso alded to supply the place of the jurisdiction thus abolished at one stroke of the pen, by one of the sienataries to a special agreement, without con sultation or concert with the other: an oversig’ t under the cirenmstances so patpable and extraordi- hary a8 to suygeet the idea that the abolition of the tng inrisdiction conld not have been seriously e ated. This point need not now, however, be discussed, since the addition of a line at the end of the clans ‘xXeept so far as that right may have been expressly relinquished by treaty”—has ren. d the article at once innocnons and nugatory. it stands it reads strangely enough. The Em- peror of China avers his opinion to be that he has. not surrendered hts jurisdiction over those tracts of his empire to which strangers are permitted to re- sort; but by the words which follow this opinion is shown to contravene existing treaties, which are thereupon pronomnced binding, the opinion ex- Dressed to the contrary notwithstanding. Thus the Fmperor, after arming that by cértain acts of his which formally surren:lered certain rights, he had not so surrendered them, advances the length of declaring that the treaties which did in express wns surrender those very rights sball bind him. It is diMcult to ‘see any intelligible object in a8 stipniation so worded, The right of the Emperor to jurisdiction over territory not ceded to a foreign Power has never been qnestioned. The anomalous state of things which grew out of the defenceless atate of the foreign concessions at Shanghae during a time of civil war, when all vestige of imperial authority had disappeared, owing to the expulsion of the authori- tes by the rebels, ceased with the bnesenyye and the Eruperor recovered, without dispute on the part of either the British or French governments, his rights unimpatred. As little reason was there for the intru- sion Into the body ofthis pu: jess clause of the sub- ject of war between foreign Powers on Chinese soil, as if the contingency were imminent or probable. Surely no good purpose can be served by it, and (not to speak of the bad impression conveyed to the Chinese inind) itis asinr upon Western nations. Through- out the Russtan war Chinese territory was never once violated by any one of the three combatants, and as far a3 compacts can avail neutral territory ia hela sscred by international law. Was the phan- tom of war raised in default of any other cry, In the hope of scaring us into acquiescence in @ treaty to which our assent was deemed otherwise hopeless ? Arr, 2. This articie provides that all privileges shal! rest within the discretion of the Chinese gov- ernmant. After this matter-of-course proposition there comes, a4 in the case of Article 1, a omg sentence, which provides that such discretion shal not be exercised “in a manner or mn incompati- ble with the treaty stipulations of the parties.” If the clause had declared that fature convessiona being absolutely within the discretion of the Emperor of China, foreign Powers were never more to ask for further privileges, a definite and inteliigible result would have been attaine As it is, by providing that the admitted ditecreti shall be regulated by the aprit of existing treaties, nothit is deter. mined or defined, with tne farther disadvantage of opening the door by an expressly worded clause for disputes and differences. Who among the contract ing parties, for example, is to ounce when the discretion exercised 13 compatible or incompatible ole the spirit of the treaties, not to say with their letter? It ts worth noting with respect to both Articles 1 and 2that particular pains appear to have been taken by Mr, Seward and the Americo-Chinese Envoy so to gnard the United States that it parts with neither privilege nor concession In event. In a speech delivered at New York, public attention was invoked to a policy, branded as extor- tionate and tyrannical, which it was allegea had been pursued towards China to the depriva- tion of her just rights, Td the Fnvoy hold this lan- guace to Mr. Seward, and if he did and Mr. Seward concurred in the representation how came it to pass that the government of the United States neglected the oppor'un'ty afforded by this treaty of renoune ng some of those rights of which the Emperor of China is stated to have been shorn, which the United Sta'es have not been slow to graso, and of whieh they, in common with other nations, are at this moment in full possession? Can the Envoy have raised (ie cry for a purpose, knowing it to be baseless? We need not happily go far ia quest ef proof to make the groundlessness of the insinuations tn ques- tion apparent. This Is aptly furnished by the terins of aconvention signed by the Chinese when unde- niably masters of ther own action. Tt was con- cluded tn November, 1°60, in the month subsequent to the Mnal conclusion of peace between China and the allied Powers—Great Britain and France. What was the nature of the privileges voluntarily accorded ve Ruasia? Article 7 of that convention provides that:— In the ‘ocalities thrown open to commerce the R: China and the Chinese in Russia may enter into a’ tans In im tral ‘may frequent the markets and shops in. pe: as a'so the merchant? houses: they may bay and Jeorretal, ag best suite their conrenter ere@tit or othe-wire, according to the coniidence they p! each other. The 'ength of stay of merchants in these Wes ts entirely dependent on themae.ves, What tyrannical agency was there in this instance in operation to extort so vainable a clause’ The trath is that the Chinese govern ized the Impossihtity in 1800 of loner ¢} under thts finpression opened it wide, We might cal! the same convention to our aid upon the qrestion of jurisdiction, paraded in the Americo- Chines: ‘oy's treaty as if of predominant impor- in the eyes of the Chinese, It is a singular . although the convention referred to nu 8 only fifteen articles, Chinese juristiction ing the door, aud con wt de long will be judged as settled by nth article of the treaty of Tren:tein, aceoring lo the the empire of which the delinquent Is au, 2, Disputes whieh do not come under the head o ommer voto mplaints, &e., wil be settled tual consent ‘and ehlef focal authori: and the dedinquente punished according to the law of their ntry. 7. In crfurinal cages, no matter how serious, neither the | nor the Chinere authorities have any ri ht to inoarcer. ate of pass nentence upon an in lividual not @ subject of their own niet. 4. As provided for by the seventh article of the t Tien-tein, offenders aball be triet and pantshed tn acy with the laws of that one of the two countries to wi may belong. liad the question of jurisdiction been @ matter of real grievance, why should the Emperor of have alirmed and reatirmed its surrender as aly n attempt to assign either duration or ression > Articles three to seven incinaive appear object! since thelr provisions already form a part of the United Staces treaty of Tien-tain, or of one or other of existing treaties with other foreign Powers, to the privileges of which the United States, under the favored nation clause, are entitled. 'Thia wil be ap- parent if we place the new articles side vy side with tue old articles:— NEW ANTIOLES. OVD ARTIONRA, ANv, 2.-The Emperor of Ant. 10—The United States Chine ew the right (9 of Amerion eball have the t pork of right to appoint consuls and who shall other commercial te for y ited e607 the same privileges the protection of to re aod immunities which are thietat auc laces in the do- shoved by public law and minions of China aa shall be sony te pied Stares by agreed to be opened. (The ie cont = Pd ig Bk ¢ Of reciproctt; and Russia, or either of the of China would them. be e,unily entitied to the ART. @—The twety-ninth Terese principles of article of the treaty of the the Christian religion, as pro- Teih of June, 1868, baying stip. fessed by the Protes!ant and ulated ior the exewption of Roman Catholic Christian — eltin of =the Untied States ‘would have Chins on account of their others do to Hy falh, it in further that those who qui eas and olisens of the United Rtates in teact China of religious per- not ue tenate, it re- teaches and practices tl gious faith or worship io ciples of Christianity shall in either country, Cemeteries for the sepultire of ti Ant. 12—Any desecration of the cumeterien by natives at of Chin shall be ever profanaion. pupiebes avcordang to law. YORK HERALD, MONDAY, Re z —Anaorn as the ral. PP. 5 gery packer fr] have imperial Me 'esty the Erm, peror of Ching wi!! eee take service in B caionten, or other a F shalt and also of the pon re i ot 3 | 7 ‘ 3 i i i Ey 2 2 2 Ff I chit 3 £333 ACCIDENT TO & POLICEMAN.—At & late hour on Satorday night officer Daniel Samuels, accompanied by oMcers Decker, Keenan an‘ Conklin, of the Four- teenth precinct, While searching the premtaes No, 10 Bleecker street, at the request of the inmates, for burglars, fell over @ rail and Injured his side. RESCUBD FROM DROWwNING.—Thomas Smith, eighteen years of age, a resident of Me!rose, West- chester county, fell overboard from the steamer Sylvan Grove in the Hariem river, near 130th street, on Saturday and was rescu oificer Palmer and others. Foounp at Tax Foor or Norra Moore StReet.— The body of an unknown man, apparently about thirty years of age, stout, with sandy hair and mus- taehe, and dressed in black coat and pantaloons, white shirt and calf skin boots, was found in the river at the foot of North Moore strect yesterday morning. The body is now at the Morgue, PERSONAY.—General Egbert 1. Viele will lecture the inhabitants of Ponghkeepsie Wednesday next, on the anhject of water annply and sewerage. Midshipman James Kelly is unler orders to report He proceeds by the next Ca- London, whence he will join the . SPEEED,ApATTe? ‘TREATY INTINOED. ART. 89. The contractin: nitles of exemptions tn re- spect to travel or reattence as en. be citizens or anbiecta nf the most favered nation, and, rectpre cally, Chiness Anbjacts chien a ation, any ed from drowning by Btates aball enjoy the same privilaves, immvinities and ax- emptions in respect to travel eas may there be by the citizens or ote of the most fararet ni Imt nothing herein contained shall he held i confer naturs!fzation anon gnch right, priviie:e freely Inure to the bene’ of the United States, tt» merchania AWt. 17. 18 shall_ be inwint for them ("miter Staves zens) o hire 4) pleasure aer- ania, co. pradores lingniats, wriers, Innorera, seamen and person’ for whasaver neces Unite! States shall enjoy all the privieves of the pnbiie eIneational inutitat the control of the ge Ms o to Admiral Far nard steamer European squadron, MErTING OF JOURNEYMEN BArERS.—The parent branch of the Journeymen Bakers’ Protective Benev- olent Union held a meeting on Saturday evening. ‘The committee appointed to make arrangements for the intended plenic reported favorwty. pected that the profits of the fete will reimburse the sortety for the expenses of the strike. movement is talked ot. Fata RuN Over Casvarry.—Catharine Ander- son, a widow woman, fifty-five years of age, died in Bellevue Hospital from the effects of injuries received on the 5th inst. by being run over in Duane street, a horse an‘ cart driven by Daniel Raf- sed, who was an English woman, dron- ped some fish In the street and while In the act of picking them np she was run over and fatally in- Coroner Flynn will hold an inquest on the a!) the privileves of the p f the Unite? States, niecta of the moat Hons, The citizens ‘nited States may freely est biish and mainta:a achools within the at those places where foreignera are by treaty per- miJied to reside, and, A co-operative All may be prononnced harmicss, 89 harmless and 60 nee‘tless a3 to awaken suspicion, with an imposing question, that of Jurisdiction over the persons and property of foretgners. This is mooted, and at once dropped and left in specific terms precisely where It stood before. Article 2, Providing that the Emperor of China shall exercise his discretion in respect of privileves in conformity with the apirit_of the treaties, attains no tangible result. If the Emperor of China would but thns act, all fair claims upon him would @t once be unani- mously declared satisfied, The subsequent articles, as has been shown, are of ‘The first drafht of the treaty, as published, contained aclause, which was originally No. 7, “recognizing the necessity for representative coms haymg @ common value, and also a common standard of weights and measures for all countries.” is appears to have been eliminated, the Senate oRsibly revarding a proposel of this sort from hina, whose coinage happens to be the unwieldy copper cash, and whose government, though re- peatedly appealed to, has turned a deaf ear to all Proposals for a silver coinage, a8 too good a joke, and the object of its proposal, the occupation > a8 not quite a suMicient reason for its inser- ‘That function the articles which preceded it were, no donbt, thonght to have adequately discharged, to conceal the real and sole object of the Americo- Chinese Envoy’s mission to Enrope, which 1s em- botied in the eighth nnd last artic e. rticie is intended to pledge—and’, in the minds of the Chinese rulers, it wiil pledge— Western Powers not to introduce the subject of ratirovds or telegraphs. until. of their own moiton, the Chinese avow their willingness and invite counsel which they, of course, inwardly resolve shall be never. ABs no foreign Power has the slightest intention of forcing the railway or the telegraph at the point of the bayonet upon the Chinese the government Article t started Car CaSUALTIBS.—A man named Thomas King was found on the corner of Third avenue and Thirty- ninth street, suffering from @ broken leg, which he stated he had received in an accident on the Western Railroad on Augnst 19, and having no home was taken to Bellevue Hospital. Abont eleven o’clock on Saturday night Gottiteb Schaler, residing near the corner of Ninety-second treet and Broadway, in stepping from car 93 of the Eighth avenue line, fell and was taken to Bellevue Hospital. Nationa MCCLELLAN LeEGION.—This politica) organization, composed of those who served in the army and navy and are of democratic proclivities, wiil hold a grand mass convention at Masonic Hall, East Thirteenth street, on next Wednesday evening, ateight o'clock. There will be present and address the meeting Generals Theo. Runyon, of New Jersey; James E. Chalmers, of Mississippi; Thomas Ewing, Henry W. Slocum, James McQuad ie, Nelson Taylor, W. 8. Hillyer, Captain J. M. Cohen and others, METEROROLOGICAL.—The report of the Park meteorological department for the week ending Sep- tember 12 contains the following statistics:--The maximum range of the barometer, 30.162, was reached at seven A. M. of the 12th inst., the mini- Mum, 29,352, at two P, M. of the 7th, the difference of range being 0.310. The weekly mean was 30,0399, The maximum range of the thermometer, 84.50, was P. M. of the 12th, the minimum, four A. M. of the 8th, the difference and the weekly mean 72.64. ‘th, Oth, 10th and 12th, eight showers ‘The total duration was four hours and forty- three minutes, the depth being 0.382 tuch. FounD DrowNep.—Yesterday morning a man named Frederick School was found drowned in a pond in Ninth avenue, between Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eizhth streets, Deceased, who was a German, thirty-seven years of age, lived in Forty-seventh street, between Ninth and Tenth avenues. Coroner Schirmer was notified to hold an inquest on the bory. The remains of an unknown man were found float- ing in the dock foot of North Moore street, North Deceased was over thirty years built, with sandy hair and mustache in black sack coat, dark pant and calf skin boots. An inquest will be held on the body by Coroner Schirmer, who was notified. no perceptible value, ctured his hip, vernient, and as is quite competent to prevent the people under its rule, willing and weil disposed parting with their land for such purposes, it is diMcuit to perceive the utility of a treaty engagement to such an effect. It would cer- tainly be an act of imprudence and to'ly on our part, considering the temper and aims of the government we have to deal with, to bind ourselves by an en- agement in the solemn form of a treaty never to moot the subject of railroads, telegraphs or other works of public utility, however desirable. nav, imperative—in a time which may not be far distant, their introduction might de for the conservation of our interests in that part of the world, Silly as such an engagement on our part wonld be, it wonld be attended with the most mischievons consequences; it would be safe to be violated, as, despite any treaties or conventions, railways and telegraphs will sooner or later find thelr way ernment would think they had cause for complatnt 1 woul: reproach us with bad faith, This impres- n they would take care to convey to the people: the violated compact would be diaseminated throughout the length and breadth of the land; we should be held op as tncorriible violators of our word—the laying down the rallways aa only a first step to ocou- pation and possession of the land, the ravishment of the women and the slavery of the men, altogether strangers to this metiod, and we have seen In India how popniar resentment may be in- Hamed by artful managment and contrivance. less, therefore, we are prepared to pledge ourselves to the Chinese goverpment and people to have nothing to do with railways or telegraphs for all time aud are willing to let other nations enjoy that Monopoly we had better pause before we aM@x our signature to such & condition. ‘o coneinde our remarks upon the treaty under notice. It 1s important to dwell upon the fact that Chinese government whatever from the United the only provision of any value ts in fa it which was possibly the inducement tendered to Mr. Seward as the price No railways aud te'cgraphs are to he introduced ; but, if they are, matters are put in train for bisuriag the monopoly of accruing ade whoare “to recone American diplo- nt years at Pekin, it 57.50, at half-past f ranj jt thongh they are, from ot ze being Rain fell on the 7 ito China, The gov- its, white muslin shirt POLICe INTELLIGENCE, VioLATING THE Excise Law.—Danlel Connell of 12¢ Thatham street, was arrested by officer donohan,, of the Sixth precinct, on the charge of violating the Excise law, and required by Alderman Moore to give it before the Court of Sea bail to answer the com; PICKPOCKET ARRESTED.—Two men were discov- ered yesterday picking the pockets of Lawrence Sul- ivan, in East Thirty-second street. A policeman sneceeded in capturing one, who gave his name as He waa taken before Justice Kelly, of the Four'n District Police Court, and committed for examination. RELEASED ON BAtt.—Patrick Flannery, a few dave since committed to prison by Judge Kelly, of the Fourth District Police Court, for an alleged aggra- vated assault on Rosanna O'Neil, breaking an arm S published in the HrRALp, was yester- on giving $3,000 bail. The woman is still fn the hospital. ASSAULTS With Wrarovs.—Louis Teller was ar- rested on the charge of assaulting his wife, Loulsa Teller, of 126 Greenwich street, where it is alleged he struck her on the head with @ chair, inficting a severe wound: and Charles Ktng, of No, 58 Centre street, caused the arrest of Nicholas Rathman, on the charge o striking him on the head with a matter, Alderman Moore hold the aceused parties to answer the complaints preferred against them. NG AN OFFICER.--Late on Saturday night omMicer James O, Beay, of the Fourth precinct, at- tempted to arrest William Brown and John Haggerty ronduct, when they turne | upon and, after knocking him down, kicked him in che side and wrenched the einh from hia hand. gerty were subseqnentivy secured, ant yesterday worning arraigned before Alderman ‘Tombs, who held them for trial before the Court of no concession on the con- of his signature, to the United State her nations to c ! macy tay have beaten ours in re but that does not constiinte # reeson why we ehould chronicle the tgnaowluious cancy of the gain to the ¢ treaty constitutes a. su tion, that gain. too, bein At bottom value ba, as has been above remarked, tu ev development of our intercourse i ‘The very tnsignifi- ) government of this not real, but only apna sstothe Chinese, it would Meinl to the pa: idorations aside, it 1 if It be wise to not already en sowing the seeds Brown and fag. surface. Ht bears anditts our * originate with whe + the tdea of enlisting recruit for further- from being spontaneou 1 foreign brain, and teas suggeste an Envoy, hen on he plan was, no doubt, joys Ministers, who, hav @ but one instruction, to the rest, carte bianche; aay The treaty concocted by the mission of ite passage from China is the result be- me AS a tempor AtLecep Drsorperty Hovsrs.—On Saturday night the Fourth precinct police made raids on two alleged disorderly honses, Chatham street, kept by Charles Rothmen, and the other at 105 Chatham street, of which Harman Vot- ket 14 the reputed proprietor, alleged to be the resort of abandoned women. dranken men and other vile and disrepntable people Alderman Mvore, acting magistrate (in place of Judge Hogan, wio is ill), req the accused parues to give bail in the sum of $500 each to answer before the Court of General Ses- emanated Tr rture or the Amer one located at No, 61 “A hy the Chine tng but one object at heart, “Stop all progres and do whut you tit These houses at of both sexes, TURKEY. Kreuch Opinion of Forragut’s Vistt—The Rasso-American Alliance, [From che London Te ascribe it to the barrenness of 1 Para journalieta make so mach stantinople with reumstances con- ble the anxious seers of bow 9 any who 3 month, hke Sister Anne In “Rineheard,” to ace tf anything was coming. One is the reported mission of the imiral to open the Dardanelles and the Bos- of _ men-of-war. PERSONATING OFFICERS.—Joseph Hooker, of No. 269 avenue C, appeared before Justice Ledwith, of the Jefferson Market Police Court, yesterday, and entered @ complaint against two very ungainly speci- mens, named John Flanagan and John Connor, for attempting (o extort money while they played the part of police oMcera. The facta simply are that complainant and the Fast river, Admiral Marragut's visit to C the Opinion Nationaie atching for the las near Nineteenth tue accused and given once appease them with the gift of @ certain sum of money they should be arrested and held to answer for breaking a cit: ‘ound of alarm statute forbidding sport ig one's self in pubilc waters while in the iu Hooker and friend felt disinclined odeat request and had the would-be Justice Ledwith heid each in $500 As to “insist”’ on the coucession—which we altogeth- er disbelieve—he has taken more than customar, ‘The neutrality of the Blac! a8 vessels of war are concerned, is Be- eee. Pity between the European ” their nt tw wome safeguard be wihdiewee St. ‘Be trying to bull: Slice with the gi little disposed they were ten yer lavering between gnatiey will alter th Another incident minds of the Parisia monstration by the crew of th when she was Visited some of tthe diplo: these notables were rec borrahs for Americ: aine to invite a retin? leers arrested, ball to answer, A BRAMAN Ronnen.—A few days ago William Scott, aScotchman, entered this port after a four years’ cruise in the navy, and having been paid off concluded to have a good time ashore, He secured lodging at the sailors’ boarding house No, 90 Roose- velt street, and on Friday fell in with Samuel 8. Smith, @ satior, whose native soon became jay indulged in counted over his money tender fotes), which was Smith. At night Smith took his imebriafed com- panion to the house of The No. 112 Koosevelt street, ond carried him up st During the night times, and the If Mr. Seward ts y Turkey he wilt find himself face to reat Powers; and three of these are as ‘0 oblige hia good friend Russia as No amount of diplomatic Adiniral Farragut and General which has greatly exercised the posed e Admiral’s Mages the Sultan's ministers ic corps. We are told w A ~ by Nap pe and Kuasa, We shail be ab'e to entimate the significance of the story when We leara the particulars, but meanwhile we take the of entirely withholding belief, Not that we piace mnch reliance on the 1 Bbip’s Crew, but we have every oc Admiral avi 18 oiteers, tal'ty and the necesaitios of i Understood by American naval not fora moment baleve Li eit ed by the “pore old erous, who carries hi vers drinks, $650 in United tS Oveerved. by Smith visited following morning Scott missed his cid Suuith of taking tt, tie later nthe house ail night but wil Smith was ai ¢ ‘inet, and on the eviden omnm tied him fort iat The secused, Who 18 forty-six Ul AA, desed his gaiit. in, of the Fourth diced Alderman Sag iv the yood aby SEPTEMBER 14, 1868. QTY INTELLICEvOE. Taw Waarure Yesreepay.—The following record ‘will show the changes in the temperature during the past twenty-four hours, the Indicated by the ther- mometer in shaded open air at Hudnat’s pharmacy, 218 Broadway, Hsgatp Bullding:— THE RIVER FRONT. A Sabbath Ramble by the Shores of Man- hattran. Anybody whose olfactories are not over-sensitive and who dis4ains 4 faaltiess polish on his shoe leather migkt take a ramble on a Sun‘tay afternoon along our river front and find a good deal to amuse and not @ little to instract—perhaps more to con- demn than to admire and leas to attract than to repel.’ Trae, he can feast his eyes upon the Hudson or the East river and feel a tingling g'ow of native Pride in the reflection that no snch tidal waters lave the feet of any other city in the world. But these tdal rivers look better at a little distance. Naturally, of course, they have no peers in this wide creation; it on!y remains for man to pollute their limpid flow and disfigare their noble proportions. For instance, look at that returning tide here on this East river an say if you think {ta pleasant, sanitary recrea- tion to bathe in its turgid ebb. How do those little boys, not to speak of those of larger growth, exist after once imbibing a draught of this fonlly adulter- atedgelement.’sBut the win:l is tempered to the shorn lamb. and these creatures of poverty or Inexorahle toll saffer no such harm from the polsonons stream in which they love to gamhol as those of more ex- pensive and fastidious tastes would be t antictpat to bi Natore is not and surely she is not to be censured for the horrible disfigurement in the grand outlines of the two rivers around the shores of Manhattan island. Oh, for a tonzne to anathe natize theorl rn. ator of wooden wharves and piers—of the broken tooth comb abortion that bristles fron the Battery on either side of us! Let ns console onrselves that as 00d oftentimes proceeds from evil, taste and beanty may yet spring from cross ani sordid unsightliness, THR NORTH RIVER FRONT. In the cool of yesterilay afternoon the sedentary Roctety of the west side of town straggied down to the river side, where every other pler formed a freely improvised natatorinm, Above the exit of the city sewe! where the Hudson begins to mingle in the jean Cure rents, the number of men and bovs enjoying gatuit. ous ablutions was very large. The water appeared to agree well with the most of then, A fow alarm- ing incidents ocenrred at the foot of Fifty-third street that disturbed the general enjoyment for a mo- ment, Some boys reported a man under waver longer than it was thonaht necessary for his heath, and forthwith over a dozen daring youths jumped tn and dived down in the neighborhood of where he was concealed, He was brought to shore insenst- ble, after being struck below water by half a do-en heads. The old plan was put tn force of drawing him along the shore, head downward, and by the Merest accident enough of animation was enven- dered by this process, esnecially by the vigorous bumping the head of the unfortunate victim recelyed against the big boulders, to bring conscionsness back and restore tho poor fellow to the bosom of his family. Away down to Fourteenth street men and boys might be seen paddling about tn the verv dirty water and clambering up in all sorts of ont-of-the- way places on piers, boats, rafts of timber, in open view of the pedestrian public at one aide and the aquatic public at the other, Fishermen were unnsnally numerous along those fers where the waters were unvexed by ride thing boys. The day being dull and cloudy was exceedingly favorable for piscatory sports, Down about the lower piers where the steamers lay a revular Sabbath stillness prevailed, the sailors apneared fast asleep, and save acitizen or two wandering listlessly here and there little else gave token of life. Of course the ferry stips were all alive as usual, with the rush of thirsty immigrants to Jersey, and more than alive when night spurosched with the uprori- ous hillarity of the returning tide Of topers, ‘THE EAST RIVER. From Jones’ Woods down to Grand street ferry along the city shore of the East river one almost continuous line of bathers might be observed yester- day afternoon. They infested every I!ttle iniet and took possession of almost every buikhoad, There ‘was far more genuine sport at this side of the island than at the other. The excitement, however, of the rapid eddying current is much greater here, and the timorous swimmer must summon up A good deal of luck before he ventures far from shore. On the luffs above Fortieth street a great number of the east side residents seated themselves to catch the welcome puffs of wind that came at fntervals from the harbor down below. What a pity of pities no grand bou'evard rons along here that all the ronsted resi- dents of tenement rookeries might be af- forded a chance of breathing the God-given breezes of Heaven. All below Grand street to the Battery was, a3 usual, dull to oppressiveness—no life aronnd the shipping, little or none on shore, The seafaring population was wrapped in slumber, and even the ships themselves looked weary and depressed. The Battery wore a similar appearance. In the grass plots some few forlorn emigrants stretched their exhausted forms and gazed wist- fully out upon the dull, grav waters. Altogether the river front was by no means a particular place of attraction yesterday. POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. The Lee and Ronsecrans Correspondenco En- dorsed. An endorsation meeting in Norfolk on the night of the 10th instant, which was presided over by General R. L. Page, with some fifty or more Vice Presidents, adopted the following resolntions:— Whereas the letter of General Lee (in reply to Major General Rosecrans) has developed the views and opinions of that great and good man; an Whereas we epprove the liberal and magnanimons sentiments of General Rosecrans, which do him honor as @ patriot and soldier; and Whereas Genera! Lee, who is first in onr hearts in peace aa he was first in war, has, in addition to his own sentiments and opinions, expressed what he justly conceived to be ours; therefore, be it Resolved, 1. That we who once resented the iv, tue navy, the civil service and the citizensiip of the late Confederate States, do. in public meeting assembted, ratify and reaffirm the sentiments and opinions contained in the above named letter of General Lee. 2, That we affirm for onrselves an‘ in our own be- half that we have accepted the rean!t of the late contest, and do not desire to renew what has been 89 conclusively determined; nor do we mean to per- mait aay one subject to our control to at emp. its re- new'l, or to violate any of our obligations to the government of the United States. 3. That Involuntary servitude, except for crime, ts abolished and ought not to be re-estabitaled, and that the negro race among us should be treated with justice. humanity and good faith, and that every means that the wisdom of the Legislature can devise should be uaed to make them use'ai and intelligent members of the community, 4. That we appreciate the motives that impelled General Rosecrans to write his letter of the oth ul- timo and General Lee and bis distinguished advisers to repiy thereto, and we azain ratify and ceat.m al that has been eaid by him and them in our name without reserve, Political Notes. Where 'a Ren Wade? Maine election to-day, Republican tosjority last year, 11,614. We would not advise democrats to set night waiting for the returns this yerr, Senator Wilson has made seventeen speeches in Maine daring the present canvass. Governor Harrima”, of New Hampshire, begins to stump Pennsylvania this week. Senator Morton's health ts improving. A Baltimore paper reports that Jefferson Davis will be offered the presidency of Randolph Macon Col- lege, at Ashiand, Va., 60 soon as he is freed from the legal embarrassment by which he ts now fetiered. 8. 8. Cox and Stephen J, Meany have been stump- ing Maine together, Postmaster General Randall recently visited Wan- kesha, Wis, The Freeman (republican) said he was “understood to quietly favor the claims of Grant for President.” Tne Plaindeater (democrat), on the other and, says “we heard him denounce Grant in severe terms and proclaim himself for Seymour and Blair.” The Hartford Post saya the only lack the demo- crate ever had in Vermont was when they carried St, Aloans during the war. That time they caine in from Canada. At Augusta (Me.), where General Tom Ewing made a speech, he was announced in the big posters as 7, BE, Wing. A Northwestern democrat reads Grant and Col- fax—Cant and Grabtax, A radical paper says that in order to secure Grant's election they “must get out every voter.” You can’t do it, gentiemen. Some of them are tn for a number of years. There's Cailicott, for instance. A Southern paper has the following complimentary reference to @ radical Congressional candidate:— “Just a8 sure as the democracy enter the field for the Congressional contest in this district so sure will the standard bearer of the democratic party distance in the race the slab-sided, snub-nosed, nasal-twanged, flat-footed carpet-bagger from Maine, who was nom- inated yesterday by @ few renegade whites and @ crowd of ignorant freedmen.” —_—_——EeEOoEUeE EEE MARRIAGES AND DEATHS. Married. CaLLOW—HaLsry.—At Jamaica, L. 1, on Wed- heslay, September 9 by Rev. Geo. Taylor, GRO, W. CaLtow to Canning, daughter of BE, W. Halsey, Esq., ai of Jamaica, Died. Berrv.—At Bergen, N.J., om Priday. September TD, tive SANE, daughter of ‘the late Pullip Berry, of KOnsAcK, Ne de ‘Tue relauives due friends are invited to attend the faneral, from the residence of her incie, Rev. Bo Fen D.D., Bergen, this Monday) morning, at 1! BRpsoy.—On r, September 18, at honse or Rts Batali ayer tg” Notice of fu to-morrow. - Bieakiz.—On Sunday, September 1 Jane Buraxte, wife of Robert i, Bleakie, in the ¢ith year hereafter, Brocx.—On Saturday, rember 12, MARGARwe Banos, daugaier of Mary Brock, aged 49 years and mon’ The friends of the family are respectfully 0 to attend the funeral, from her tate residenve, on 408 East Fifteenth street, this (Monday) afternoon, | one o'clock. CraM.—On Wednesday morning, Séptember 9, Lypta, wife of Jacob Cram, ‘The friends of the fimily are invited to attend the funeral services, at her late residence, No, 101 East Beventonnt street, this (Monday) morning, at ten o’clock, CRAWFORD.—Op Saturday, September 12, ELL, wife of Mr. Wiliam Crawford. ‘The relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from her late residence, No. 128 Ninth avenue, this (Monday) afternoon, at past one o'clock. CrricuesteR.—On Sunday, September 13, at 38 Seventh avenne, Lawie:, infan son of Henry Le and Julia hichester, aged 2 months an¢ 20 days. ‘The funeral will take place in Poughkeepsie, oa Tuesday. CRONK.—On Satarday, Sentemher 12, Susan, widow of John Cronk, in the 78th year of her age, ‘The relatives and frien‘ of the family are reapect~ fully invited to attend the funeral, from her late residence, 522 Hudson street, on Tuesday afternoon, at one o'clock. Drwonp.—On Saturday, Sentember 12, Nroworas Dimon». for many years a resid nt of the First ward in this city, in the 79th year of his age. His remains will be taken from his late residence, No. 9 Reaver street, to St. Peter's church, Barclay st., this (Monday) morning, at halt-past nina o'clock, where a solemn requiem mass will he offered for the repose of his soul, and from thence to Calvary Ceme- tery for Interment, The triend: of the deceased are Invited to attend without fur her notice, Frrzsrmons.—On Friday, September 11, after & long illness, Brinart, the belovel wife of Garret Fitzsimons. a native of the parish of Abbey, county Lo igford, Ireland, in the 7!st year of her age. Her remains will be taken from her late residen 244 West Twentieth street. between Seventh ani Fiehth avenues, to the Church of St, Vincent de Panl. Twenty-third street, this (Monday) morning, at half-nast nine o*clock. where a solemn mags of re- Ps em will be offered for the repose of her sonl, and ‘om thence to Calvary Ceretery for interment. The friends o! the family, and those of her sons, Thomas and Michael, are respec’ fnilv Invited to attend, Frercmer.—On Sanday morning, Sentember 13 sone A., son of Michael Fletcher, aged 20 years 11 mouths. The relatives and frienda of the family are respect- filly invited to attend the funeral, from the resl~ dence of hia father, 290 Elm street, at two o’clock this (Monday) afternoon. GoLDR'ox.—At the residence of her parents, 409 Fast Nineteenth strect, on Sun‘ay, Sentember 13, Mary A. Gonnrick, in the 4th year of her age. ‘The relatives and friends and the young ladies of the Soda itv of the Ble-sed Virgin Mary are respect- fuilv invited to be present at a mass of requiem at the Church of the Immacntate Conception, on Tues- day morning, at ten'o’clock, from whence her re- weaiha will be paren to Calvary Cemetery. any papers please cony. HAMIEPOR As Fort Plain, N. Y., on Saturday, September 12, James W. HAMILTON, Sr., late of 17) Denau place, New York, in the 50th year of his age. Relat'ves and friends are invited to attend rhe fan. eral, at his late residence in Fort Plain, this (Monday) afternoon, at one o'clock. Harrtsox.—On Sunday morning, Sentember 1 ofter a short illness, Sarau E., daughter of John ans Mary Harrison. ‘The relatives an‘ friends of the family are respect~ fully invited to attend the funeral, from her late residence, No. 23 Montgomery street, on Tuesday afternoon. nt half-past one o’c!ock. Richmond (Va.) papers p'ease cons. Hawiiton.—On Saturday. September 12, after @ jo ded. illness, JaMBS HAMILTON, aged 68 years and 15 lave, The relatives and friends of the family are respect- fally invited to attend the funeral, from his late real- dence, Bronx Westchester county, this (Mon- day) afternoon, at half-pasttwo o'clock. Hogan.—On Sunday, Sentember 13, WintsaM Ey youngest child of Daniel M. and M. A. Hogan, aged 1 year and 8 months, IVINGSTON.--At Oak Hill, Columbia county, on Thureiay, Foret 10, SaRaH J., wife of Herman vingston, ag vears. Frien is and relatives are invited to attend the fu- neral services, this (Monday) noon. at 12 o'clock, at her late residence, Oak Hill, Tudson River cars leaving at eight o'clock A. M., from Thirtieth street, will reach Catskill station in time, LLovp.—%% Saturday, Sentember 12, ANNIB Be daughter of James and Catharine Lioyd, pi years, 11 months and 21 dav. The relatives and friends of the family, the schook officers and teachers of the Tenth and Eleventh 0 the members of the Allen street Preahy- n church are respectfully invited to attend the fanaral, from the idence of her parenta, 35 Pike st., this (Monday) afternoon, at haif-nastone o'clock. Mannion.—On Saturday, September 12. SARan, eldest daughter of Michacl and Bridget Mannion, age’ 1 year, 11 months and 4 davs. ‘The relatives and frients of the family are reenect- fully invited toattend the funeral. from the residencé of her parents, 544 West Forty-first street, this (Mon- day) afternoon, at two o'clock, MFR“ER.—On Satarday evening, September 12, Evita May. daughter of Georve W. and Cynthia A. Mercer. aced 4 months and 7 days, “Fold the arma so gently o'er the sleepers breast; Caim'y she's renosing, surely ‘his ia rest.’ Relatives and friends of the fanily are iy invited to attend the funeral. trom the residence of her parenta, corner Prospect and Grinnell strests, Yonkers, this (Monday) efternoon. at four o'clock, Cars leave Thirtieth atrect at two P. M, Muwrorn.—On Saturday, Sentember 12, Wrn1.7AM Crozsr, infant son of W. C. and E, R. Mumford, ed 4 months and 8 days. e funeral services will take place at the Church of the Holy Trinity, Montague street. this (Monday) afternoon, at three o'clock. Pelatives and friends are invited to attend withont farther notice. Mvcrray.—On Sunday, September 13, Josrrnte, youngest danghter of Charles and Marle Murray, aged 2 years, 1 month and 14 davs, ‘The relatives and friends of the ‘amily are respect- fully invited to attend the funeral, from the resi- dence of her parents. No. 142 Fast Thirteenth street, at two o'clock this (Monday) afternoon, O’'HARA.—On Saturday September 12, HARRtet O'HARA. danghter of Anthony O'Hara, aged 8 years and 8 months. The relatives and friends are Invited to atten’ the funeral. this (Monday) afternoon, at two o’-lock, rom the residence of her father, No. 4 Tompkins street. Patrvrs.—On Saturday, September 12, Davip ParrvLt, of hemorrhage, a native of Scotland, in the 6°d vear of his age. His remains were interred 'n Greenwood Cemetery. Glasgow and Dundee rapers please copy. Ponrts.—At Tompkinaville, S. 1. on Satarday, September 12, Mra, A. S. Poetry, the beloved wi o1 W. D, Pontin, in the 6ist year of her age. The funeral will take piace from the Episcopal church, Richmond road. Tompkinevilie, 8. 1., this io Snel afternoon, at two o'clock. Relatives and lends of the fainiiy are respectfully invited to at- ten On Saturlay, Sentember 12, Miss MARY ne seth year of her ae, nd friends, and those of her nephew, m Gartner, are respectfully invited to atten inert, from her late residence, 27? East Broad- this (Monday) afternoon, at two o'clock. Sonivever.—At Astoria, Pong ‘sland, on Friday, September 11, Mrs. ELLEN COLLIER SCKIVENER, Wife of Richard J. Serivoer, The friends of the family are Invited to attend the funeral, from the residence of Mr. Serivner, on Ret fon street Aatoria this Ctontayi aternoon, at one o'clock, The boat leaves Peck slip at twelve o'clock, noon. S ENCER.—On Sunday, Sevtember 18, WrittlaM BURDEY SP RNCFR, son of € ea R. Snencer, of funera’ in to-morrow's Herald. At Paria, on Friday, August 7, EpwIn rvs, Of Hoboken, N. J. The friends of the family are Invited to attend the funeral, from St, Paul's church, Hoboken, on Werlneaday afternoon, at half past one o'clock, TEN Eycx.—On Sunday, Sevtember 13, MARY THeREsa, wife of John A. Ten Evck, aged 30 vears, The re'atives and friends are invited to attend the funeral, on Tuesday afternoon, at two o'clock from fer bhai No. 12 Division avenue, Brook- yo, B.D. Terry.—On Sunday, September 13, Rosarre, the beloved wife of George Terry. The relatives and friends of the family are resnect- fully tnvited to attend the funera!, from her late rest- dence, No. 604 West Forty-second sireet, on Tues day afternoon, at two o'clock. Van Boren.—Suddenty, on Saturday, September a. ag 9 Cg of Renjamin B. and la 4 jate Catharine Ann Van Buren, aged years, peg erp ala elatives and jen also members of Hoy Chapter R. A. M., and Atias Lodge F. and A. M. are, invited to attend the: fineral, from the residence her grandparents, corner of Clinton avenue and Chambers street, West Hoboken, N. J., on Tueaday afternoon, at two o'clock, Horse cars leave Hoboken ferry every Afteen minuter. Wareier.—sndden ty, on Frid: ber 11 2 fs aah ee ets a mann is friends and ac aa of Ivanhoe Lodge Non ato, F. ant Ae Mey are ieey 2 attend pL from his late a ' - .t, near Nostrand avenu: afternoon, at two o'clock.” Ws IVaNnoR Lover 610, F, ann A, M.—Brother Jone Wheeler, Jr,, is dead, and you hereby are summoned te pat the residence ot Bro daprarternoon at one o'clock, A VALENTIN Master, WM. Crave, Secretary. WiHiTAKeR.— At Interiaken, Switreriand, on Thare- day, August 27, Louie, wife of Thomas A. White- Ker and duughier of the late Saal Alley. Weare eat @an—It ym, snddenty, on Sun. $f sepember 13, Davin WRATHERHEAD, Aged 48 ears, h via of the family are invited to eure Gay tee a ale te eugene of his a, 4 , Mrs, Dicks hy «+ 4 Portland avenue, cn fiernoon, at three o'dlock. Nerwickshire Adveriser | cotlamd) and Scottien Avierican Journal piease copy.

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