The New York Herald Newspaper, December 8, 1869, Page 8

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8 NEW YORK HERALD, WENDESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1869.—QUADRUPLE SHEET, to mention here the embarrasament possible ‘The Oharter Election=The Result, Cashel General Councile—Our Special to arise from leaving on the statute books | At sundown last evening the polls closed on | Mistery ef the Hilerarchioal Papal As the so-called ‘Tenure of Office act,’ and to | the charter campaign of 1869, Following so | Semlnges from the Mirgt of Nise to the earnestly recommend ite total repeal ;" and he | closely on the State and county election, held | iret of the Vatloan. thinks that {t could not have been the inteu- | in the first week of last month, which gave | The Eoumen{éai Coynoll symmonait by Pope tion of the framers of the constitution, when | such an overwhelming victory to the Tammany | Plus IX. assembles in Rome to-day. . It is ‘providing that appointments made by the Pre- | Regency, there was very little spirit left with | called the First Council of the Vatican, end sident should receive the consent of the | the late dominant party to show fight over the | Will be registered on the record of the Catholic Senate, that the latter should have the power | spoils embraced within tho municipal offices | Church ag the twenty-first General Council of toretain in office persons placed there by the | open for election. These offices consisted | the hierarchy of that partioular creed and federal appointment against the will of the | of nine civil and nine police justices, | form of worship, The prelates, patriarchs President, and that “‘the law is inconsistent | elected for six years; a Common Coun- | 2nd other Church dignitaries have journeyed with a faithful and efiicient administration of | oil, composed of a Board of Alder- | from Europe, Asia, Africa, America and tho the government,” mon and Assistant Aldermen, elected for | far-off shores of Australasia to the Eternal So says General Grant, and a0 say we. The | two years, and twenty-one School Trustees. | City, and will aggregate in round numbers one law makes the President the mere creature of | Added to these was the unexpected Balloting thousand persons after the roll has been the Senate in the matter of bis removals from | for Mayor, in consequence of a technicality | Called. Itis an august, most reverend and office, for this is the point where the shoe | raised as to the term for which Mayor Hall | imposing convocation in its appearance, and pinches, Surely, then, if the two houses have | was elected last year, No quogtion had been | one which affords matter of very deep interest full confidence in the President, if they have | openly mooted on this point, but it being ascer- | to the Christian world. On this account we no misgivings that with a fred rein he may | tained that the republican and Democratic | devote a large space in our pages to-day to an become a second Andy Johnson in setting up | Union leaders would spring a candidate for | elucidation of the history of the Catholic for himself, they wil! promptly repeal this ob- | Mayor at the last moment, and if successful | Councils which have been held ainco the period noxious and originally vindictive Tenure of | bring the question Into the courts, the Tammany | of the moeting of the First Council of Nice to Report of tho Seoretary of tho Interion tary of the Interior, giving the salient "y pate es department for the Inat » Je have {pterosting statiss tios of tho sale of publ Ih lands, of whioh more than seven and a half Millions of acres were disposed of; 9 million acres more than last year. It is worthy of notice and well to know. that there has been a large inorease of land entered under the Homestead law, amounting to nearly half a million acres more than last year. With regard to the management of the Patent Office Secretary Cox urges the repeal of all laws which authorize an appeal from the deoision of the Commissioner of Patents on ape plications for letters patent and in interference cases. Referring to the subject of pensions: the report states the curious fact that there is not a single soldier of the Reyolutionary war living to claim a pension, while there are eight hundred and eighty-seven Revolutionary soldiers’ widows surviving and drawing pensions. Within the last year only ono’ of _ York Clipper, was terribly beaten by MoOoolo, the NEW YORK HERALD | posse, ana‘ teninor Key, m 8 Zou, on Mon- real day night, for some striosures he bad passed on f REET. MoCoole, BROADWAY AND ANN — whe ‘Chist NETT, Unt'ed States District Attorney Pierrepont visited AMES pega: yal — Washington yesterday in order to consult with the van e Secretary of the Treasury in regard to the New York Custom House frauds. Samuel T, Blatebford, late Deputy Collector in New York, it is undere stood, acknowledged to Mr. Pierrepont his complicity in the frauds and promised to make @ full exposure of the matter. He says his revelations will astonish the country and intimated that he would implicate men who stand high in business, official and politi- cal circles in New York and elsewhere, tah st ana 6th av.-LoNpon; It is the opinion in Washington oMoial circles that VOWS OF THR GREAY CITY, ~ the Spanish gunboats must be released, Judge Pierrepont has on several aceastons oMicially called the attention of the Peruvian Minister to the fioportance of his producing evidence to sustain’ the charges apon which the gunboats were libelled; but the Minister has faken no further steps in the m: , and appears indiiferent as to her the ves aro detained or not, Judge spont says be has not suMeient evidence in his ssion to warrant further detention of the gun- ta, Peter Burke, who is sald to be the leader of the ——— Volume X*® XIV ENENTS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVE! EATRE, Bowery.—Pavt Currom— Broadway and 18h street.— FRENCH {Ht on, Liens THE TA nth stroct.—Tar BURLESQUE or Bap D GRAND orek 98d atrect.—F BOOTE Finer Pax VEN as Tury Wi pats ¢ vane ot wav trent unt teautrecreatt street, | Olfice law. We apprehond, however, that the | leaders, In tho fice of Mayor Hall's objection | the present, the ciroumstances uader which | these widows diod, tho number on the rolla ‘ Ipsos GA » pene: | yestertay morning early, by Bartholomew Donahue, | Senatorial favorites and the cliques’ and fac- | to such a course, determined to checkmato | they mot, their work and consequences. Wo | then being eight hundred and eighty-elght, wivE-AN O10z a former independent candidate for Assistant Alder- The total number of pensions on the roll ig one hundred and eighty-seven thousand nine hundred and sixty-three, and the total amount disbursed was over twenty-eight mil« lions dollars, F@ the prevention of the in- numetable frauds which have infested the pension bureau the Secretary recommends that ponsion agents should be paid by a fixed salary, and the present system of per centage on the money disbursed should be abolishod— tions of intriguing spoilsmen concerned will | this move by opening a ballot for Mayor. Of | 918o present all the Pontifical doouments con- resist this proposition of repeal, and that the | course the natural result followed of a second | nected withthe present one, including copies Senate itself wiil hardly consent to give up to | triumphant election of Mayor Hall for the term | of the Papal invitations issued to the Eastern the President the power which it holds by the | of two years, dating from 1869. and Protestant Churches to send delegates to law in question over the distribution of tho With but one exception the Tammany nomi- | Rome for ‘“‘instruction,” preparatory, as it spoils. We have seen so much of tho con- | nees for civil and police justices have been | would seem to be hoped, to a return to the temptible trickery of party majorities that we | re-elected. Judge Dowling, by virtue of his | ‘‘one fold” or ‘‘centre of religious unity.” think it quite likely that the Senate will fail to | re-election, becomes ¢a-officio ‘a Judge of the The peculiar, compact and almost universal appreciate the simple, honest, outspoken | Court of Special Sessions for the full term of | system of organization of the Catholic Church, character of General Grant, and will still seek | six years. It is owing to this distinction that | ita manner of government by an elective C, Vth etyeet.—TraAntaN OPERA man. Burke was taken to his home, but tue officer . Who arrested Donahue afterwards reported that be could not find Burse, and, therefore, no complaint could be made, John J. Eckel, fier being told that he was about to die said (hat he had nothing to do. with - the Burdeil murder, bat he told, facts that point Lee egy ome Vooste | directly to Airs. Cunningham as the actual muc- derer. In the United Staves Court tn this city to-day a motion will be made to release the Spanish guo- ACADEM Winuram T woop's mer Whirtier {TONY PASTO Yooarism, N Tammany Butltiag, pial PRANCISOO 4 Late a ne a ot oe relations between Spain | rather to use him than to strengthen him in | he has been popularly dubbed Chief Justice of | Chief Bishop and the College of Cardi--| » point upon which we think the Seorotagy is WAVERE John & Risharda ‘and B, Caldwell, who are said|| Ma %poetlfon. the Magisterial Bench in the city. This is the | nals, with its means and power of | right. Pian Mins to be implicated in the Custom Honse frauds in tuis | If the radical leaders of the two houses, | second term upon which Judge Dowling enters | intercommunion and propagandism, re | Indian affairs, of course, absorb a good ASSOCIATION HALL, $d vlreet and {th ay.—Onrneo | clly, have been arrested in Montreal and appiteation | however, have a remnant of party sagacity | with his nomination endorsed by every party | set forth in such a shape as will | portion of the report. The red man Is one of is ani a ee a or a eran sor Court yes | them they will surrender this Tenure of | organization in the city, supported by the | enable our readers of all religious persuasions | tho dificultios of the government. Mr, Cox, ARE LORE cHCUS, Fe iNiead i, pag ines pation! a Mayor, Comp. | Ofliée law as a usurpation which has served | united votes of the whole district. Judge Quinn | to understand why it is that its clergy have | however, thinks that the present Quaker ays arotier, Chamberian and others, to prevent tno | i's purpose, and as an offence, a check and a | (civil branch) has also been re-elected, encoun- || been, and now are, so successful in the work | tem of dealing with him is an excellent one, menace upon the President which ought to be | tering not a shadow of opposition. In two | of missionary enterprise. The relations of the .—Hooury's HOOLEY'S OPERA HO’ STRELI— py's DAU auditing or paying of exorbitant bills against the and is quite satisfied with the work the Friends MPTRE RINK, Sizty-third street and Thint avenue | “Us removed. districta, the present incumbents not receiving | temporal sovereigns of the Old World towards | have already done. The employment of unat- {T10N OF New Yorx St POULTRY SOOrRTY, It 18 reported that Wegaiten, the cere convict, a Tammany nomination, contested the election the Pontiff and bishops—a mattet of the utmost | tached army officers as Indian agents he alee DORE ART UNION, 687 Broadway.—Exurarm0x ox bean esa pectin tas let seoa bel retains oh psciornern as against the regular nominee, but were beaten, | Consequence at the present moment—are | approves of, on the score of economy. The i ag The Cunard steatuship Scotia, Captain Judxing, | The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher sees that his | ana they retire on the first of the new year. treated in order according to the power of the | old idea of gathering the tribes on reservations SOMERVILLE ART GALLERY, Firth syenve and Mtb | will sail about ten o'clock A.M, to-day for Queens- | association with the recent ante-mortem nup- In the Aldermanic contest Tammany has | respective countries. Indeed we may claim | and civilizing them, and even giving them Street —ExuainoN or Tue Nis Musi town and Liverpool, ‘The Burdpean te wiilcloso | tial ceremony was blunder, His explanatory | jogt at least two districts—the Tenth returning that nothing of material value has been | a representation in Congress, is advanced; NEW YORK 4U'SuUM OF ANATOMY, €1! Brontiray.— | atl he Post Ontive at elgne o'0 lock A. M. letter makes this fact plain; at the same timo | , candidate on a republican ticket, and the | omitted, and that the Hzrarp of this morning | but the trouble is that we have boon trying cia para MUERUM OF ANATONY, 6183s waite var pcs latin Bribe ats bas in that letter he fails to acknowledge his | pisnteenth electing Florence Scannel, noto- | Will remain in after.time a more faithful and | this plan for many years and have as yot had fondware—TuUALES ONLY IX ATEENDANOS. ington, but generally strong, closing dnaily at | {ult ina fair and handsome way. He justifies | rious from his participation in the late riot, in | accessible register of the Council of the Vatican | but little success, except with the Cherokees, _————— ; == | 12 ‘i, the latter beug the highest price of | his oourse on a statement of his viow of how | which he was serlovsly wounded by a pistol | forthe use of all Christian peoples—that of the | Pottawottamies, Osages and a few other tribes, Q UADRUPLE SHEET. i : a the case stood before he appeared in it. Now shot, and who ran on the Democratic Union | numerous Catholic community of the American | The Secretary reaches the real cause of the i iahtemsees side siete Moot! _ | @man cannot plead one of his own faulis in} ticket, The Assistant Aldermen elected are | Continent in particular—than any which has | difficulty in this respect when he says that.the . . " i iain EF. Sunpson, of the United States Y; Wew ‘York, Woedaceday, Deceniber S, rm 69. | ceneral L. Flagg, of Rhode Istand; ex-Mayor George Lp eo 4 eee Innis, of Poughkecpsie, and M, Vassur, Jr, of TRA NEWS. Poughkeepsle, are at the Astor House, st e ee 4 Charles M. Ferguson, of the United States Coast Europe. Survey, and Viscount Borghese, of Italy, are at the elegrams are dated December 7. Metropolitan H 5 aid to have cony roofs that | Count Walewok mitigation of another, It does not lighten an | 1 Tammany democrats, Our returns on the | been published of the previous Roman episco- offence to say that it is the legitimate conse- | anoting for School Trustees, so far as they | pal congregations, The pens of our special quence of a previous offence. Yet that i8 | 95 show the election of all the Tammany can- | Correspondents in Europe, aided by steam and Beecher’s plea. This man stole the livery of | didates, electricity, have enabled us to accomplish this heaven to serve the devil with most offensive The vote yesterday was far below that] Work, so that our readers can after its pomposity; he abused his sacred office to | potted in tho city at the November election, | perusal draw thelr own independent inferences want of appropriations to fulfil our treaties with the Indians is the chief obstacle in the way of peace, The fact is that our agents and commissioners promise too much and perform too little, The savage is distrustful, If he makes a bargain with the white man he of Russia; Captain Dick Austin, Prussia fomented the Dalmatian in rue | of Sliwaukee: Major J. ©. Butts, of Richmond, and | £1088 an adulterous connection, to glorify a | (pis naturally arose from the apathy among | as to whether Rome in her penetration sees | expects him to keep his word, and if disap. Peabody funeral ship. will sai from goxt | Colonel 8, Burtiss, of Geneva, are at the St. Oharies | libertine and to reflect all possible obloquy | the democracy in tha absence of any united | the handwriting, the mene tekel et eupharson, | pointed he becomes unmanageable, Tho subs Bunday, The British radical rego js | Hotel. upon a man in prison by giving the sanction of | grort on the part of the republicans and out- | on thowall, and is preparing to meet its conse- | jects of education and of the consus also ed in Scotland, Pre s commented on by the Lo a Legisiavure a referenc being com Barney, of Irvington, and Robert Colt, of at, are at the Everett House, nap, of Washington; General F, his name to tho statement that the shooting of | side democratic organizations to enter the lists | quences, or whether she will be enabled to 2 occupy a brief space in the report. The Union Richardson was without possible justification. | 9, against the Tammany nominees, To a | sustain her priestly claim that sho is “‘over Pacific Railroad completed one hundred and @état of 1°57 gave rise toa very excited debate. | Bla t. Louls; General Sudiey, of Chicago, and | Having done all this he excuses himself by | groat extent, therefore, the election went by | new and ever baptizing and being baptized,” | sixty-five miles of road and telegraph during The Cabinet of France t Q HH Shania. of Saratoga Springs, are at the Fifth | declaring that he was ignorant of the facts— default, Little can bo said of the composition | and thus, after an adjustment, take a new | the last fiscal year, and in the regularity of resignation sebiragvannsiniys ap ebepi aay that he had formed his opinions on a grossly | o¢ th lease for the commencement of a religious | running trains and general management makes an permission to march troops t S. M. Mora, of Cuba, and John Tucker, of Philadel- | 0+ of the new Boards of Common Council. It is . ° . * kd ba } Dhascaites to Daicatin: ihe pe Siberieaie amet: one-sided view of the case. For what are | to he hoped, however, that in the opening era of | career in accordance with the spirit and-| altogether a fair show, according to tho report telegraph e 1 to India and Chiua is eng Captain Poole, of San Franctsco; Governor Under. | Man's senses given him, then, if he cannot use | yestored municipal rights to the city, which they | Tequirements of tho age. of the commissioners, much aire in England a wood, of Vermont, and Colonel Dudley Olcott, of Albany, are at the Hoffman House, Africa. , Prominent Departures, A telegram through the Atlantic cabie, from Lon- General Stead for Ohio; Judge Spencer for Gon, reports the yacht# Fauvette and Cambria as tue | Syracuse; Profes: Thorpe for St, Louis, and Cap- first vesse!s through the Suez Canal ater its com- | tain A. Wilson for Quebec, fmercia! opeuing. ce oelicate . rae fhe President aud Congress—The Tenure of The Viceroy of Egypt assure sh.cotion mer- Oftce Law. fi ehants that ne has made extensive preparations to 4 increase the cotten crop in Exypt. The general policy of President Grant, as india, developed in his late Message to the two France wishes to obtain a legal jon of the | houses, is so fully in accord with the general. ferritorios which she ocenples In Anam, Farther | programme of the republican party that by India. pe awe Py common consent, it may now be said, he is master of the situation and of the succession, He holds the advantages which General Jack- son possessed after his first annual message. He is, without t, recognized as the offi- Congress. cial head and leader of tho dominant party, In the Senate yesterd and is wilhout a rival for the next Presidential Introduced a bill to 4 again: f@ct of april, 1506, ma } - ( the law and quatifying His’ recommendations touching the legisla- Court, and conferrin tion of th eriminal yuri them to better purpose? Is it not | wilt pe the first officially to receive the benefit | In this connection we print a faithful trans- a little {inconsistent that this would-be of, they may demonstrate tho wrong done in | lation of the Syllabus of Errors, as it is termed, innocent should so much set himself | iyo past by republicari legislation and prove | or the Pontifical and hierarchical platform: It up asa guide for men when he cannot guide | that it is only in the hands of the citizons that | is said that this document will be adopted by himself in a matter s0 notorious that none municipal government can be safely and | the Council, viva voce and without discussion. need be ignorant in rogard to it? Wo are glad | proptably lodged. should this prove to be true we can see but to see that Mr. Beecher fools the propriety of | no day passed off very quietly and with a | little use ina meeting undertaken at 60 much yielding the position he-had taken on this sub- gratifying minimum of the disturbances which | personal inconvenience and cost, Indeed, we ject ia deference to*public sentiment. It is generally attend the excitement consequent | cannot shake offthe lay infirmity of thinking noteworthy that all the three parsons con- | upon charter and other elections in the city, | that the Catholic Church would sustain a very cerned make substantially the same defence as +] severe shock before the eyes of an enlightened to one point—they were all fooled into their Shin Meseiiians. cn Natinalinadion. world in consequence. Science and material connection with this business by Greeley. Tho Prosident in his Message has drawn | Progres# will havo their apostles and adyo- Greeley, who never did care a button for any seiaiitoith waporlea'oh tewal ne system of | cates in the Council, The Archbishop of Cal- social line—whose first and greatest claim to ‘Aatarelieetion obi has probabl: yale ed | cutta, India, travelled through the Suez Canal— notice was always his defiance of the proprie- ublio notice, Out minds have os aiesiak one of its first passengers—on his way to ties of life—never stopped to inquire into the x tntiok to tho: se frauds developed at the Rome, while the Bishop of Honolulu, in the right of this maiter, as he never does into the tétatey ofee: aid the ball ig box that Sandwich Islands, was carried from San Fran- right of any matter, but went ahead with an ite ai @ of abuse which the Prosident cisco to New York over the Pacific Railroad intemperate ‘fon to Richmond” determination refers to has been in. @ measure | When journeying in the same direction. The to make everybody beliove that Richardson overlooked. President Grant says, for ex- first, having steamed over the grave of Pharaoh was right. He fooled the parsons on, and imple; “The unsettled political condition of | 904 his mighty host, must certainly reflect on now will let them get out as they may, not other countries less fortunate than our own | the evanescence of all temporal power, while The present Secretary has had but'a brief experience in office, but his report is, nevere theless, full and satisfactory. President Grants Views on Emigration, The President evidently appreciates the wants and requirements of our emigration system, The grossest abuses have grown up for some years past in the transport of emi« grants to this country and their proper dia- posal upon landing here. In his message the President informs us that upon his accession to office he found that a proposition from the Minister for North Germany had been made, but not acted on, for the negotiation of a con vention for the protection of emigrant passons gers. Feellng tho necessity of such a measuro the President, it appears, invited all the mari« time Powers of Europe to join in it, and with this view notes have been sent to the Cabinets of London, Paris, Florence, Berlin, Brussels, the Hague, Copenhagen and Stockholm to em- power their representatives In Washington to Advices from fich gold x Englishmen in C of gold having aire ent session of Congress, mean- Ny calculated to hoki the dntroduced : : (opeiias and 40 keull rote caring to i cout himself, as he is quite In his sometimes induces their citizens to come to | the latter will speak to his compeers of what | enter into negotiations with a convention in her norma hee mm curs “ : ie thse we shia elections oflnaxt fall tao element in this-particular sort of muddle, the United States for the sole purpose of being | ™#t has accomplished and can do by the this country for the purpose of making uniform Ww Was introduced by & new Congress. For example:—Hoe recom- = naturalized. Having secured this they return | Subornation of the agencies of modern civiliza~ | regulations as to the construction of the parts The Opening of the Ecumenical Council. To-day the Ecumenical Council opens. The impossibility of three hundred years becomes a of vessels to bo devoted to the use of emle “grant passengers, as to the quality and quan- tity of food, as to the modical treatment of the is the re tion on bank notes of their ov wai tender ne atroyed by bills were ends that all of the tariff ¢ poned till the n chemes for a general revision ternal revenue laws be post- xt session of Congress. Hero to their native country and reside there with- | tion. out disclosing this change of allegiance, They | The Council of the Vatican meets on the day accept official positions of trust or honor which of the Feast of Immaculate Conception. It is Secretary ofthe Treasury. Severa Mere plage aol Gergen fact. The chimera of Joseph de Maistre isa also the anniversary ofthe birthday of Horace, | sick, and as to the rules to be observed durin; Satrodnced an i, and at haif-past one o'clock | ® great stumbling block is avoided; for upon | \ i . can only be held by citizens of their native v y » 4 the Senat , the tariff question—the East being for home | Hvité vistble, tangible reality. The Catholic | j 4. They journey under passports describ- | the Roman poet having first seen the light on | the voyage, in order to secure ventilation, to Immedi he reading of the minutes the |- protection, and the West for free trade—there bishope Serene: 2 ares cumbere-areiin ing them as citizons still; and it is only when | the 8th of December, in the year 65 before the | promote health, to prevent intrusion and to Flouse went into Committee of the Whole for ine | ©, a ji : Rome. The Pope finds himself at the head of : { Christ. It is one of is col rotect females, and providing for the at probably be some serious sectional civil discord, after years, perhaps, of quiet, | birth of Christ. I those curios coin- | P y Pi 4 estabs purpose of reti the different po 8 of the : A his flock ag no Pope has found himself in many fs z lishment of tribunals in the several countries threatens their persons or their proporty, or cidences which occur in the course of a world, when their native State drafts into its military | The spark of the Syllabus may havo been service, that the fact of their change of allegi- | Hghtedin the brain of the satirist, when he ance-is made known, They reside perma. asserted that in ancient Rome nemo contentua nently away from the United States, they con- | teat ia sorte seu ratio dederit sew fors tribute nothing to its revenues, they avold the | °ecerit—‘‘no person lives contented with duties of this citizenship and they only make | the lot which reason has accorded or chance themselves known by a claim of protection.” | Presented to him.” And then he went on to The President is right on this point, Not only | show tho prevalence of the sticcus negra lol- is this practice a great abuge but it is a griey- "| “#gints—the ‘‘jutce of the black cuttlefish”—In ous injustice to those who honestly become | the slanders, defamations, detractions and citizens and carry out logitimately all the obli- | Delittlings of personal worth and private gations of citlzenship—who pay taxes, do jury | Character which abounded on every side dnty and military duty when called upon, andin | ®tound him, Indeed, he characterizes his every way contribute to the good weal of the | friend and patron Mecenas ‘the tutelary guar- country by their industry and good conduct. dian of peace, civilization and progress”— This latter class can be numbered by hundreds | Words of wonderful, prophetic accuracy, and of thousands, Tho class to whom the Presi- | Which wero almoat immediately sanctified in dent refers are, fortunately, but few, yet the | the text of the earliest Christian who Presidenv’s 1 to the proper rmittecs. ions in the camp with any marked After the reg business was resumed, Mr. But- | change of the existing tariff laws in favor of Jer, of Massachusetts, Introduced a bill to abolish | free trade or protection, tho tenure of office law, A bill was presented ie ‘ gi upon the Cub: 2 - by Mr, Williams, of Indiana, to amend the tarir | A€*in, if upon the Cuban question the pro Dy abolisuing duties on tea, ee and paper, | Bressive men of Congress are dissatisfied with Ea were introduced by Nr, Wood, of New | the conservative precautions of the message, ‘orky to prevent Membera of © "<8 (rom | they will surely be appeased in considering walt te me oi ina ot ult es chen the emphatic American views which General . y ‘. ¢ » illnois, pre . + osned t Varled.t the further sale of gold hy the secretary of | Grant has expresse et reference to the Ala- fhe Treaeury and requiring him to redeom legal | bama claims and Canadian reciprocity. So, Sender nores with gold, at par. The bill extending | too, ifthe extreme radicals were disposed to the patont of R. M. Hoe on printing presses was lald | be fntractable in reference to the recognition onthe table, At haif past two o'clock the House ad- + ” v4 journed, of the conservative Walker party of Virginia Miscelancons, on the question of the restoration ef that State, Additiona returns of the Texas election leave the | they are, we suppose, satisfied with the equiy- result undecided, but indicate a further probability | alent presented in the President’s recommenda- of the election of Davis, the radical candidate, . The Postmaster General estimates tle ox tion for a new and radical reconstraction of the State of Georgia, on the basis of the Leg- his departmeat for the ensuim@ year at Of thia sum $1,507,000 16 for Inland 1 islature of 1868, with the restoration. of the centuries, What « wanderful spectacle Rome will present to-day! Since the days of Pompey and Cwzar it has not, perhaps, seen any such spectacle. What will the Council do? Who can tell? On Thursday evening, when Father Hyacinthe speaks outin this city, and tells us what he knows, we may have a clearer and more perfect idea of the Council than we yet have, It isa great pity that the debates in the Council, if there be any debates, must be conducted in bad Latin, and that the speaking will revive the experience and pos- sibly the confusion of Babel of old, Pity also it is that the Pope and his friends are so gensi- tive. The pross seems to be a bugbear, Cor- respondents are to be kept beyond the Roman lines, The most alarming thing fn connection with the Council is the rumor of a Garibaldi raid upon Rome, What o flutter such a raid for tnforcing such regulations by summary process, This is precisely tho reform most needed in our emigration eystem, and tho prompt action of General Grant proves that he comprehonds the matter thoroughly, A Busy Day ror Brrou.—The friend of the -horse had an active day for his sympathies and assistance on Broadway yesterday, when the slippery snow and heavy loads brought many a fine animal down. Oh that the sympa- thy for the horse would bring about the clean- ing of Broadway after every snow storm! Syrapathy for man will never do it, Fraaru Sorrraas has been adopted away out in Wyoming, where women are scarce and accordingly are appreciated. It is, on account of the scarcity of women, not a first rate place en we f np bce chiaerger grad Shien negro members ruled out of each house by the | ¥ou1a make! All fa n and frolic aside, we await principle to which the Message objects is not a within a very few years after his pty in a ash Goa he inte glad the experi- line and $7 » Sandwich Islands steamers. hee ‘eg iii question: the Eedten's oe the intelligence relating to the opening of this ey a hoe nee ed oa. be eo my If the Conneil of the Vatican can elaborate ra aaa In the uehanna Ratiroad case at ao money question ie Xreaients plan | Council with very great interest. When facts | Merefore, Is a! be! i! ee | oh d idoas of th into w ‘eh EXTENSIVE WHISKEY SEIZURE. Rochester y Mr. Ramsey's side wes closed | of funding the debt at an interest redaced from it frain | Matte and consular officers ‘to scrutinize care- | he grand ideas of tho poet into shape fit for | vera gays past the attention of United States with a lot mony to show that Mr. Fisk had | gix to four end a half per cent, and of a grad- pede ip renertpsacilh da i ee ihe fully all such claims for protection”—in other | @Very-day disolplinary practice in the world | gorective Nettlesutp, of tne scoret service, has bea brought a number of New York rougl to Albany #t | ual return to epecte payments, to avold the | “°™ etraction or praise, words, to protoct tho real citizen of the United | People may be disposed to accept even the | concentrated on the atore No, 20 Bank street, Now- the time of the election for directors. Mr. Dudley 3h ic Syllabus, and the Papacy remain, despite tho | ark, N.J., and tne workings of its ranners, Front . : dangers and shocks which a too abrupt return States against the frauds perpetrated by the | *7/abus, h Coap 2 Field opened for the Fisk pariy. bare ; Warr Sreer: Mass. a tori the detece A daponese Prince, W von he suite, ie about leaving | t0 coin would bring upon tho country, is a plan - Teeny AGB AND | reaudulent cltizen,: who only obtains his natu- | {ter utterance of tho Queen Boadicen, “Rome | fire nally Tenotved Innit itn that astead of care Ruvorrs.—The financial cémmunity are satis- fied with the calm, dispassionate and unpoliti- cal recommendations of General Grant and Chicago, to perfect his education at New Brunswick, | go clearly calculated to work advan- Pann tageously to the Treasury and the peo- A large dry goods jobbing house and a shipping ralization papers for the purpose of shirking | Shall perish; write the word fu the blood of rying on sim: 5 4 retail liquor business, as the license obligations duo to tho country of his nativity, | those she spilt.’? : granted to en a RA ane gg i carry on @ brane meas place provided, a large wholesale business ticker, tn’ Pilladatpnia, ‘ate ‘teported' os having | ple that vil eae doubt its adoption Secretary Boutwell, The speculators, fuclud- That thero fas been a good deal of that kind Parw’s Gamn.—Our latest” telegraphic news as Unewiew, Reais 8 pe BERETS welled. By Congres, Dox is ‘advantages to the segan: ing some of the national banks, are dissatisfied | °* thing ‘done ts -undonbeet--ta oie: German informs us that the leaning of Prim towards | yesterday afternoon arrested Mr. Charles Phillips om éohn Ficids was excented at Willtamsport, Pa., | licans in the important elections of next au- * States, especially, before the recent treaty Broad treet while that sportive gentleman was ine Yesterday, for ihe murder of his brotherinlaw, | tumn, So, too, with the proposition to reduce vith certain, proposition Of tHe: Iateeen WEIR with regard to milltary service was agreed to. inna: taeda loch rd wi Ee sat Hows {cr ttairesedauguters. ina ice News. Zachar sha lip Aone 4 , if carried out would il * | marked, Ifthe report be correct with one of Newark’ Dunged ei eles, for te hose ay Aunty | the income tax to threo per cent, and to limit | yeene of the community yotpnaer ng A | We are glad that the President has drawn the | wna Jt the report be ents fre clea” | Gaatibe wat SEREDed MOS Ey Witena wo caster : 1 f ra y : " u . ’ ; - _ defrauding the government, in that Candiens. this tax to a term of three years. 80, too, his merchants aud the private bankers are grati- attention of Congress to this enbject, It is the tion, Ifon the shoulders of the republican He eaten. ont wholesale Tisiness without @ Chineso weetimony hag finally been admitted in the | earnest adhesion tothe doctrines of a strict Police Cours of San Francisco, on the ground that | integrity in fulfilling all our obligations, and Sho State law exctiding Wt ta in eondict with tho | of equal protection to all citizens of the United first time that this view of the naturalization i laws has been taken by our Chief Magistrates, Castz.—An altogether new version of | and it is to be hoped that it may pave the way sense, They were voth committea to the county Hi tenaing xamination, in default of $1,000 bath each, Kitterman is being looked after as the princi- pal “backer! in the bu fied. party Prim rode to the mastership of Spain and became dictator for life, who should won- ess. The liquor, consistin, fourteenth amendment. Th Age who es : der? The news interesting, but it do 600 gations, Was seized and remove to Ook. gulta tt Las heretolore nthees a S who hus @d- | States In every part of the Union, regardless | Robertson's popular play entitled Caste was | for somo new legislation upon that quostion ; not surprise, pihie Mey hie bis Joctor Hamorn’s quarters, performed last evening at Washington, Miss | for, says the President, ‘‘the citizen of the United re Wormley, with ‘‘a poach blossom complexion,” | States, whether native or adopted, 1s entitled | Nor Wanren.—The Brooklyn Aldermen Monsieur Paul Gerard, ‘‘a dark little French- | to its complete protection, While I have a | refused by vote to offer one thousand dollars man, darker than his bride,” and Rev. Dr, | voice in the direction of affairs I shall not cons | reward for the detection of fraudulent practices White (who officiated at the marriage of this | sent to imperil the sacred right by conferripg | at elections, They do not want those prac- | happy couple) belog the principal actors, i opon Gotiious qe Graudulens claimants,” | gas to bo exvenad, Tho liquar trafic in Alaska is Baia to be monopo- | of nationality, religion, color or politics, lized by army sullers, and Catitorniu dealers pro. | But the Tenure of Office law is an ex- Pose to meuiorialige Congresh for @ rigutto stare | orescence upon the statute book which Goneral in tt. The harbors north of St. John, N. B., are closed by | Grant cannot admire and will not let alono, too, Speaking of the distribution of the offices with George B. Dovgiass, correspondent of we New | which he ig charged, he says, “it may bo well FATAL AAILWAY ACCIDENT, Mayor Thomas PB. Peddeo, of Newark, N.J., re. ceived Jast night a despatch from Robert Piteairn, of Pittsburg, ’a., stating that a man named Henry Monan, of add ‘Was fataliy injnred on the Penn- iyania Ocntral Maile about twenty mileq cask ‘of Pitigyurg, ab wo preceding eveniug.

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