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NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNK ll, 1872—TRIPLE SHEET, 8 THE WORKINGMEN'S PARADE. i ‘4 Basieton was elected President and took the chair Mr. Hasleton stated that the adoption of the eights hour system would be the worst measure ee eat were concerned. Despatches recetved daily Boston, Philadelphia and Baitimare reported ‘sient & question of the test del- | and x national interests should, if possible, | the matter to prejudice. He contended that the foavy and | upon which fei latter ne- } be ap As for the Fapesasion of ihe negotiators | seminary followed the college in its ups and downs. 2 trations bet Re government have not | (which is a matter of com tively conse- | He ted, however, that the seminary pond . Tkave no right to speak for queues) ~ wall, .a9 £0 tha ‘a man will take care of O ite ascending scale again jas ae it hi ‘go ner for my late colleagues. It reputation to take care of it- | its descending scale, and the college would exertan rests with tee goveenneyt under which we acted, | self, that {s as much ag most of us have time fer; | imfluence upon it. In giluding, to the prejudice hich reported me to time, as and he may safely trust that what he really deserves | against the professors, Mr. Van Oleef said that Foe and to wi re from thi ithfully a8 we could, every step in the 88 Of |,of praise or blame will be d out to | man who complained of Dr. W: Wek tape Rotem Samael. Jom. € ered ahead | tabiaasiongman ey Menenred ” Re see ced : Peake ss aS | knee beaettamen tn, Pano the Treaty and the Alabama Claims. Fee ieee of ite aimee ty = sd:tole:protaerin aaee EO ian is oY the Eight-Hour System. under the ten-hour system, and the absence of demand for an increase in the rates of pay. So ts done in the Theological Se: who speatcnce vo te instructions “aevona win tie | THE REFORMED CHURCH. | beits‘h’tinor i the woritinas created fat government alone to conduct te the end traps- ter). The young man, said the 8 could be prognosticated from the feeling im thes .— | action which ié now pending. I shalt refrain, there- 8] » left the seminary because he could not get Tho Businem of the Joint High Oommiston— | Mr) guroluwely, from adding ® word £0, what, las: Cap oan gig through in two years, aid he was. afterwards seen THE ORDER OF THE ESSION. Cae Ro IRIE? fos. diene 00r nar amr aS How the Work Was Conducted—Claims Bi- been, ee 2 ae Grea e's regent ¢ despatches, Fifth Day's Proceedings of the General Synod— | ,,, Porciaaag miuuasog AxD enone onens & PROCES: + | Bhoula the proposed rule be Toot and Indireot—The Negotiators Not fr was alguesios tote Josterde eee iriend tnt | ‘The Declining Seminary at Wew Brauntwick— | leave the seminary for tuat purpose, why, let hitn a I og TR oe The this lecture might be rej ed in some sort as an “4, go, said Mr, Van leet, 4 enemetarceec! nang Shelr eatep! to Blame for an Overtight— Gee og ire mlghe De regarded {a some sort aan | “Is It “a Theological Yoo House ?’—Yester- Elder FERDON followed, and safd that he ald not Sail fire se clunattna tor seduction cea Relations at Present Between ration which on ou part cannot be mado now. day's Spioy Debate Among the Minis- med leone (he cobease Mato shasitinaibe,} OVS, tre, PTL ae ean anarear’ dhgolutely trown out of employment. ‘the Two Countries. The question whethe: aro just! ters—Difference Among the Divines extent, be destroyed. Mr. Ferdon sald that he was | 0 Mottoee—The Internationals-Strength Mr, ‘ax followed in an ting to biamcis one on which thoy might reasouably “‘Oaltve for rel one of the twelve ‘men appointed to look after the Each Organization—Megtings of the Pis- eS rena hians fait have something to say; but it and m and Two" Cen- seminary—the twelve apostles of thi gens he noforte Man’ Pen and Pencil other outsiders. He closed, by that ‘ Loxpon, May 29, 1872. | wait uutll more important questions are set- tennial Fund—Reception of Would say (laughter)—and he found that ail the ppecrers, employers remained rm te fsckbone of the My, Montague Bernard, Chichele Professor of In- | ted. I have spoken of the Tesponsibitt studenta in the seminary were not from their col- Case Makers, Brass Founders, Gas sould soon be brokert ' of the negotiators. The true | an rope! Corresponding Delegates. lege. One-fifth of them were from other colle; femational Law, delivered s lecture yesterday in | responatpiil Rovou, and certain students had sald that if they were aot fora rests, no doubt, Fixture Makers, Gas Men's ‘ sph re: an atte MAP ERTS Matted University Musetng Oxford, before a large | the actual negotiator of It, but on what they ought tobe it was not the fault of th tne oa coe ; SResenco, on "me Treaty of Washington.” ‘Mr. | ordera'he acts. Hols responsible he tallsctther % | ame aynod met at. nine o'clock rofessors. Mr. Ferden alluded to the ill treatment Protective Union and Meeecied cnoreasionn, sie bol win Rome hed Rersard spoke at some length on the questions of | CX¢cute those orders to the best of his ability, or 4 9 yesterday morn- professors received, I have beon grieved to the Wire Workers. mene 08 A ye? the Canadian fisheries, the northwest boundary and aaa Ptr cme a — ane pyres ene ng, Dr. Elmendorf presiding. There were several | my heart, "parece Mr. Es at ul eG a Aes 3 fomer portions of ‘the treaty. Ho stated that he | Kuvw. Bur iis spectators in the gallery, but beyond these few the | wasn seems 10. bo. he on bene men, Who On Sat bs e vu called them w! hey wanted. The workingmen’s parade came offyesterday, and | ‘h mg ny te Tt Be ‘Was a success so far as ita peaceable conduct to | believed’ they wonld stay at woz, the end could make {t. The power of the labor | tracts which he was compelle< ¢ organtzations, however, was not fully represented id a, an in the demonstration, and it would seem to anyone | of twenty per o TY Who Knows of the tremendous infinence which | 9 they ee are judgment may be overruled and his 1d upol tions disregarded, become. his | *88emblage was composed of delegates. cannot be here to defend themselves. Condemn 9 ‘was satiafiod thas the course which the commis- | {uf#%o coucinto dad pat his Ar pra ‘AN invitation was scoepted from the Reformed | man-and abuse him when he cannot, answer back! stoners had been directed to pursue as regards the | ments which he wholly or partly Yet, church st Astoria, to visit Hell Gate to witness the | It behooves you to stand by yonr institutions at ‘withdrawal of the claims on account of the Fenian | speaking for myselfouly,and in myown universtty, | roprovements there, on Wednesday. po cana lt Ls io. Wee t, CEST OUyE amt 100: Min ene of the Alabama | is be, for this part of the treaty, fOr every substan | Elder SCaTEFFLIN moved to reconsider the motion re Ventre ip fidrenming We epnod, retteraten @aima he spoke as follows :— tal part of it, and for the Srediy an whale T am | to sccept the invitation, saying that he thonght the | He, Sentiments of hia speech on Friday, and said ‘There wete to texe mysiiare. Imay be per. | 1b tethe te'wasee tn Sopsetpoce who aitared wish hime bad eir shot SEVERAL OBSTACLES to observe in. before taking leave of Bynod had ni Making excursions. | at him and he had had shot atthem, If there -gaore.er: leas serious in the of: that. final: ana pod Ses the subject, thats treaty is an instru- | TH ALLEGED DECLINE Mf THN NEW BRUNSWIOK | Were bre ess eney. cold gettle it outaide, way which you caniyt send to be settled in a SEMINABY. “And then,” the Doctor, regal this exhibit ‘The others, 3 of this question of whlch ME. | converanogry, Chambers, nor, commit toe Knot | ‘The Synod then took up the report of the Oom- | engntar.) ‘Te committee ot altogether to meaty hls into: more ‘evtce of the | oeintara Besinmay dibert Wish héd spoken in-one ef his- official. letters to Sir | Of | 0 rn <2 | mittee on Pastorate on the ‘Thooiogical Seminary, | Mame in this matter, but he had. felt oe . evident when i is | prancis Bacom and Napoleon. Haines ‘Maward Thornton, see principal object of negotis- |'tn the or “the aenaiiive | which has-been under consideration sinoo Friday | cborge them with trinsconding thelr powers, “Wo Tespenienoe:shad yearbolp: dagnc baton hate Sete | an tee to prepare a stagemans of ¥ tion. Inthe first place, the views of the two nations | and punctilions Prompooe of-governments and f jess are all to blame,” remarked the Doctor; “but can’t | Seen 80 good an opportunity for an overwhelming | sitjon for circulation among the’ "cast esto their respective rights were as far asunder | Dations bas neu! ‘Wo rise above all this bickering and The down? } display as offers at this time. For weeks past strike = trade societies wield when they like that there th Must have been something wrong in the premises |, defini ” ee yi toe after strike has been going on; nearly every trade The Pencil Cace and Pen Makers, “<) erate inte alter n, in Dr. eRgon took the floor and spoke at con- | Can’t- we hayoalittle more ? es cast from west, America believed that she hed | which it is ofven necessary, 10 q now is about ‘rallying round {he fag, 2 fasainod great. and monitipied injuries at | mentrosscopeaiear auicls estou eas ccc | eee ene a epeeare om thas | Gi this Funning down of and. insinuations has been busy’ in organizing ite members, | vne members of the sbove association, to $he hands of England. England, on the contrary, | expression instead of # more Anishedormore accur. | 1@ subject. | the professors. Sustain the college: sustain With the progress of time the “strike” now is not T of eighty, met in joint seston et the . x tare one, and which must be construed liberally and | Instead of devoting himself to the needs of the case | the r of the seminary. The ministers have got teenth Ward Hotel, at nine A, M, yeater an maintained her conviction that, although Americal | reasonably, according to what appears to be the YVermilyea had busied if with to help and the churches have got to help in pro- ‘Wiah 18::pAeAe< tm ity ONAis ONS LEWTIbOATS, ARO pursuan bani Thora @ommerce had suffered severely from the Confed- | true/intention of the contracting parties. In allthis » Seater men viee ‘ me motives | Viding the material.’ ‘He thought that there should | shed in the family circle over the weeks of idieness | Pur apc & resolution adopted en the 7th inst, erate cruisers, America had received no injury for | there I no excuse for equivocal expression, and no ihe cin Speaker held to be | be an agent appointed to stir up the churches. of the workman, The roughest part of the work- on strike. which si bs defence of sugh ambi can be founded en it, | Wrong, the committee being at perfect lberty to | The Synod shortly afterwards adjourned until this | ingmen’s battle for disenthralment from an almoat | _ TB0E? #Fe tn the United States eighteen firms England justly be regarded as respon- | But of apparent faults of expression, it has often | talk as they pleased while in exécutive session. As morning at nine o'clock. serfliké condition.ts di gaged id the pen and pencil case mathutoture, al: ~tible, Again, the complaint on sccount of these | been, and often will be, the unavoidable cause. | t the statement that the chairman of th In the evening Rev. Rufus Clark, D. D. of Albany, col lon is over, and in most cases now it teen’ of whicii int —— » Yesaes had, in the minds of the American people | There ere several things which I would willingly @ commit- | preached the annual sermon before the Syn Only needs good and efficient organization tosuc- | 02 Of Whicii are tn this city and suburbs, The! been peralstentiy blended and confused with other | £ ee wore Ane for a a one or two | tee had told the professors, in tho name of their | subject was “Benevolence.” ceed in, winning every reasonable demand. This | °°!" New York sever ‘pencil'case manufacture! N gomplaints of the conduct of England daring the | servations which naturally occur to a Denon who pn fet Be jeenntions mie sine THE METH was made plainly manifest fn the sertes of strikes pi City one, in Brooklyn ne, ang in Wi War, founded on her early declaration of neutratity | for the first time has been called upon to take an | Scoepranies 20, UGned ee waren Moon mitses, ODIST PREACHERS, which have occurred this season. In but avery urg one. The pen manufacturers, -@mtho tratic with blockaded porta in the Confed- | Sctlve, part in, negotiation, end tat negotiation | getion, ‘The whole ourrent.of Dr. Vermilyea’s | : fow cases have the a din the | lt im New York, and are etx in a -@veté States and the like. Prom these it was neces- | most extensive and troublesome ever attempted speech, he Pocens, was ‘ungentlemaniy, an gO Reorganization and Election of OMicers— | jarger organizatior tory Wa six, | bet. These branches of {ndustry fel sary that it should be extricated before It could be | With that country. ipelaetaaen, au 8 ma ee me nay | Heviewing the Actions of the General | plishment. Indeed, in those attempts which proved emph macniniets of more than ordinary abil 7 must rdin: gabmitted to arbitration, for as to them no such THE DIFVIOULTISS AND DELAYS OF NEGOTIATION, t the resolutions in question had been written Conference—Attempt to Get the Preach- failures there was more of the defeat due either to | The enell case * wito eae such a8 ti 8, OF186 fi reference could be accepted by this government; fara. that ee Principaiein- parties. realy by the hand of Joab? Joab was a traitor and mur. | ers? Opinion on the Labor Strikes and | the impérfectness of the trade organization than to fobs least wi averaging about en, do} but, farther, © convention which provided for a | interested—netther tre, nor can be, Drought face } Gererand the Impotation ofDe- Vermllyea was that } Might-Hour Law, any strong spirit of determination to restat on the | somBneneenl genes conden gi mand fd reference to arbitration had previously been re- Paxernatentr te meres Sete ae A MURDERER OF REPUTATIONS After a vacation of six weeks the Methodist | part of the bosses. The bosses, with two or three Jhovemnont, Fae ory rasan ts out ide of tl by the American Senate, and it was | through an intermediate responsibility to a repre- Se coe tes reps aan Se fe Frvachers, reassembled yesterday ia thelr untal | exiéeptions, Haveverinoet: towards’ thair employte | ty critiese: were sent fone. ere testa . - re) 1 mi ‘derstood, though not officially made known sata ne fesembiy pia anew oxen 60, the. east ton. milyea, re having some sense of gH, he (the place of meeting, and reorganized for another year, | inthe recent struggles a most lenient bearing, ments, and at noon two-thirds ef the men in tha to the government of England, that the chief | i, exercised a speaker) did not propose to look upon it in any with Dr. J. 8. Porter, of Newark Conference, Prest- | and in not a few cases in which the | business were enrolled, cacadiabinheiabidh linea aaisiteieuiis aan sanrendanl |lpadaner et inden a ‘sertos of restraints, and the | sense a joke. Apart, Lowever, from These conside. dent; Drs. 8. D. Brown and J.B, Morwin Vice Pyest- | eight hours a day was demanded havo | , Join Foley and Appleton Brothers Sopent - 18 1e . rations, he looked upon the speech in question as a new system last wee! from the terms of reference of the other So ee ape i behes elif ta senseless rigmarole, and thought the gentleman se Dra, Crawford, Weed and Brown were ap- | they as speedily offered the concession as the men | strike was given. “gupposed grievances to which I have referred. | Praicg’to mie oh, wd in ora 5 Mette bere | Who. made it would have been congentally pointed a committee on topics. Dr. Porter earnestly | made the demand. In truth, the strikes this sea- The following communication was received from i Where was reason, therefore, to expect that some | positie bargain, and the other motives which con- employed mo ‘defending | atte Ring re a ia asked to be excused, but the meeting would not | son have been a continued series of victories for | the Appletons yesterday :— @inculty might be found in coming to av agree- nee to peamiote he peocame. road yaalled hag- pass by. these FF aati eres eek 4 grant it, and elected: thé full ticket. Rev. A. Mc- | the workingman, especially when itis taken into tS ae the society that we a ton this subject, and no Uttle dificuity in | Fostraints Tabanan jo be Ang tue | mean inainuator to consider the merita of the cage, | Lean remains Secretary, aa ‘before. A committee | consideration what a “strike” meant In former | prepared to accede to thelr wishes, and will ‘advertise to wing up the terms of an agreement in aform | on the negotiator ‘are nowhere so sensible as | He read letters which had been read before the | of three, conalsting of Dr. I, H. King and Messrs, | years, Under all the circumstances it seemed as it | S8Y,‘0f Ax first class caso makers, You may come td t right off, Y ful : yacht hs pb ee bank eit clade tptiat in the United states. There are in the United eee ae een oeeOre alte dine sqcated! | Parker and Osborne, was appointed to draft a pro- | the announcement made were to be realized, that Work GE of ours respect XPELETON BROTHERS. WHEN THE COMMISSIONERS MET AT WASHINGTON Eh eee are apr a SET gruneer- | stupid-ueaded icicle.” In otners the professors | Tamme for a ministerial supply of the pulpit in the | the workingmen’s demonstration of yesterday | , The meeting continued in session tll a late hous {he American government had tn its contemplation | singular foree of party influence ‘and the unceasing | Were Pronounced incompetent. Dr. Anderson ax- | Old Ladies’ Home, in West Forty-second street, for | would number fully thi in the evening, iq a a S iy ly thirty thousand men, but so —_—__> fe omnis sre itruaive mode of dlapeug of | Rew Fterenge Yo parr aucuatona fhe pacca | ford fae guins of te piers ad boon wrt hy | the cvrent gear. AM, fare mas cowsh To Pénch | fr rom that number being paripents In the | "Re Gas and Brass Pistare Mon Preparé ~ gum of money wales settled by agreement, or the | tween the President and is Ministers and the Sen. writers. The professors were accused by one Of | REVIRWING GENERAL CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, | Parade the total number in the line exceeded but ing for a Strike inthe Autumn. ence to arbitration. Nor can it be doubted | ate, the composition of the Senate itself, aud for. | the writers with sinking the ship. New men are At this point there was a lull in the meetin; a little two thousand men. Considerable efforta A large meeting, of very respectable and@ intelll/ it to either of these it was prepared to agree, | ther, if I may be permitted to sa: ‘acortain vein | Wanted to take charge of the old orpft, who will | when the Secretary suggested that the pteache had been made, too, to get the men together for 4 H only, f the latter course were adopted, | of tnreasonabiencas, Im respect. of ‘the ‘subjects | 2quare it with the wind and bail out the water. | might perhaps discuss profitably the question, ‘‘Has | the occasion, and every feasible argument was used | Ot men, was hold last evening at the New Yor! $ certain conditions were attached to the refer- | which rans through the American character. Since Dr. Van Vranken’s time the Seminary 1s | the Methodist Episcopal Church good ground to | t0 induce the various unions to be at the point of | Asscmbly Rooms, corner of Second avenue an: ‘The first alternative (which would have in- : ¥OU TREAT IN AMERICA. WITH PEKSOND alleged to have become a theological icehouse. | congratulate itself on tho results of the General | rendezvous at the hour named for starting; | Firatatreet. It was composed of members_of th ay an admission of lability on tho of | who consider themselves leas the representatives } Another gentleman writes that among the profes- | Conference just closed?” Drs. Hare, Roche, Dick- | but 1¢ would seem as if there were some | ;, } ¢ Britain) having been ested at py of the President or his povernnient dian ives | sors there exigts a feeling of bitterness amount! ingon and others were called out to speak on this | damper thrown on the project or that it wag | Draee Ainishing ‘and gas Oxture trade, f eet by the ‘Americas loners and rejected | Senate, a body of more than seventy men, in whan | Smost to open hostility. Four of them cannot | topic, but declined, partly on. the ground that they | impossible for the men to be. present. In gupport cia AE ore wl com! @mthe part of the British, the whole discussion was | the federal clement ts upreme, and the intereta cf | @Well together in peace. A delightful example tor | could not speak as censors or critics on the actions | of thia latter view of the dimoulty 1s ards confined to the second. (I may here ob- students for the Christian ministry, The lectures } of th a that perhaps, all things considered, the men could | & short ME: <ol oft re that what the Americana Lidiceted as tne | we,smallest State count for as much aa those of the | Are declared to be fitted for ae of the General Conference, and they ald not want | Tot attend, "As tius fe the busiest season of the | the ‘movement, ‘there hed iready boea held | of catculat for the suggested money pay- t BRL with the serena tonduse rs VERY SOFT-HEADED INFANTS, “broke the ice” and remarked that for ten minutes | year with most of the “bosses,” every day lost 1s so | two or th Roped 8 at which over two hundre tuent was the total estimate of private losses by | amuirs, is not a member, to which, therefore, he | DUt Not calculated to convey much information | during his visits to the Conference he felt proud Much money lost, and as thousands of the men who | and twenty men had joinéd the associa tted out or enabled to augment tneir | Cannot personally explain his policy, and which he | t,young students, Two other writers say that tho | that he was a Methodist, but for ten hours he was strack are now at work it might be unreasonable | the name of the Brass Finishers, unde! in Great Britain or her colonies, and for ex- regards, therefore, ae ‘at all & 1 Britian Minisver dusetlecsnalpants dealt outin teaspoonfulslest their | ashamed to be known as such, The wrangling and | to expect that they should turn out vesterday, Chasers and Gas Fixture Makers’ Protective ang incurred in the pursuit of such cruisers. | regards Parliament, but as @ separate and external | 8tomachs should be overburdened. One of the | fighting that prevailed there on certain questions | spec! ally after pete | several days idle while their | Benevolent Union, There are about one thousan estimates, as now presented at Geneva, are Sear 6 bE MERU NGOD LovOd att tbe laut tality | Students in this “manufactory” was so displeased utter! disgusted him. ‘There were some things | ‘strikes’ were pending. two hundred members of the trade in New Y¥ nd to amount to between five and six ns Pr ocnere conyin atid Sotan enadcenare’ thi 4 that he went to another seminary, where he was | done by the Conference that he was proud of—as, | _ The parade was called for half-past ton A. M., and | _ Mr. ALLOORN sald that the object of the socie r necessary, Ihave entaten te ay thut there is in Kindly received and treated like aman. While in | for instance, its appreciation of real hard work in | @t that hour the men began to gather in the Bow- | was mutual protection and to at t Dy comm THE DISCUSSION DURING ITS NEXT STAGE, the Amesoan character » certain vein ofanreasom | New Branswick he had been almost frozen to death. | the re-election of brs. Vincent, Nast and others as | ery. At Germania Assembly Rooms, whence the | intercouse to become united, so that a timey which was protracted over a long time, turned on | abieness on matters of fore: licy which Is eeey | DE. Anderson wanted the Bynod to act towards this | editors, and ite resolve to increase the power of the | Procession was to start, numbers of the men were | when the question of short hours or am snore: gertain rules or principles witiah tho’ Americans | to understand and pot reign, pe y ray ne “factory” as if it were their own individual prop- | laymen by reducing the ministerial representation | Collected, and here and up the street the crowds | of should arise, they could ie Wished to have setdled by consent for thé guidance | fouuderstand and poem lle Pom calglittr d IPS Zome of the members of the faculty, he sop. | Weincressing the ratio trou 30 to 45. continued to swell until by eleven o'clock A. M. all | instead of the last in rising in ® body to uphol eitny Perera ee Kr posed, were fricnds of the institution; but | Dr. DeVinxe believed the last General Conference | the paradera were present, It had been expected, | theirrights, He asked them to cpme forward an se the arbitrating authority. It was highly expe- t nt, they ur nh Ro thre W open the whele question af foe moe of scchrier ond: aoakane indepen- personal quarrels rendered real improve- | would compare Soke favorably with one held in | Of oourse, that there would have been a | unite and stand true to each kas believing that of neutral duties for the judgment of any selected | dence which a nation may naturally feel when it ment pmponnivie ane he (Dr. Anderson) declared | Baitimore forty-eight bet fears ago, to which he was larger attendance; but as the morning wall | by so doing it would bea mutual fit to theny arbitrator or arbitrators, whose decision might pos- | has not merely an island but almost a continent to the whole affair behind the age, if not elected. . = hope of larger numbers was dispelled, and it was | all. He said that the movement was also in pro; sibly be at variance with the views of both nations, A DISGRACE TO THR TIMBS ‘The Committee on Topica having previously re- | Tesolved to carry out the programme as well as | gress in Philadelphia, where @ similar associatio woud nevertheless, orm “an important | isclf Separated from the rest of the world by 5000 | inj which we lived, He held that @ new faculty | tired, returned and reported three questions for | Might be, Befero the start, when all the trades | was forming. recedent. Their government, they said, en- | past, America almost exclusively of her future, and | Should be appointed, as the men now tn power hi discussion, namely: — were gathering into line, the scene was lively in the A constitution and bye laws were last evenin; tained the strongest objections to ‘this | fie "ideas of increasin population, of immenge | 2Ot shown that they were deserving of confidence. | Is the Organic consolidation otall Methodist bodies | @Xtreme, banners, mottoes, musicians, &c., being | fully adopted, and almost three hundred addition: peurse, and would be unable to agree to | gnace, of a nitude in the future which At the conclusion of the speech the Synod took a | in the United States desirable or practicable ? mixed up together in the usual informal style, and | members signed the roll. 3 e government of England did not ad- | shale. withou example in the past, are | Tecess. Is it desirable to include ritualistic forms of ser- | the bestof good humor provailing everywhere. fit the force of these objections, and preferred an | constantly present to the American ‘mind, Afternoon Session. vice in the Sabbath public worship Bo far as could be seen Lon | the entire route the The Gasmen’s Protective Union. pen arbitration; but It tnally yielded on this point, | These causes, I think, coupled with, per. | | The Synod reconvened at haltpast two o'clock. Do ministerial summer vacations promote the | demonstration was conducted. in the most orderly | Tne members of the Gasmen’a Protective Uni material concession, doubtless, but not without | haps an excesstve appreciation of the merits of | Rev. Mr. Doolittle opened the proceedings with | Welfare of the churches and of the pastors ? manner, not a solitary disturbing occurrence lisy. t es Union advantages, This government had experienced | good bargain, have produced in a people which | prayer. : THE PARSONS ON SUMMER VACATIONS. ing arlacn. Noticeable especially in the linc was | metlaat evening im the rooms a¢ the comer of juring the war the great practical diMculty of draw- | in everything else are as sensible, reasonable and THR PROPOSED CENTENNIAL FUND. Revs. Kelsey, True, Dickinson and others dis- | the body from the internationals, who carried their | First avenne and Twenty-second street, Theis, @ clear line between acts prohibited, whether | piacabi in the w ‘The committee appointed last year to supervise; | cussed this last topic briefly. Mr. Kelsey thought | blood-red fag proudly, and, though not of | session was a secret one. They seem a decent an international or by mae law, and acts not Race Wirele pay dn the. word eame Sendepey it aid and counsel tl rj Mhatement: tise initlatea to | that where a minister's health did not compel a | ferce rh the men seemed to be of intelligent set of men, and are consequen’ | 4 prohibited. Instructed by tlis experience, it had | gatiea by the expressive and convenient name of | raise a centennial fund of $1,000,000 reported tho | Vacation he should not take one; that the summer | Fe determined natures. The men from Singer's | likely to win their spurs in the battle for reform. vised ita own municipal law, and it regarded as thia. it must be added to this that the rela- ount of contributions for five months at $684,251. | 18 the time when pastoral service 18 most needed | factory put in a ‘appearance, and attracted lestrable for the general interests of peacd, and not EB. 8. Porter is chal f th ftee, | among the masses. Dr. True thought that what | much attention, this being due, perhaps, to the | The Journeymen G: } Portis British tuterests, some inbresse of pre- | as probit Acs eta! nk te oh tpt Rev jabs: fea oa hy 4 pista benefitea ministers did churches also, Mr. Dickin- | fact that their bosses had promised & be relentless urneymen Granite Stone Cutters. The workmen who belong to this association as- on and stringency tn the recognized Jaw of na- i 4 church ft ind son thought that an exchange of puipits between | towards them. In fact all the organizations in line ry ns. Further it trast be oneerved that, while oe ee eat Teak £0 aa aa uy a fee ioe pei a is er ne en country and city pastors for a few weeks at a time, | Marched well, and in their appearance and demean- | sembled at Putnam Hall, Third avenue and Twelftt® constantly maintaining that have any old traditions of hostility, the only coun. | Synod.. The amount raised thus far ts so largo aa | either in summer or winter, would benefit the | OF excited most favorable comments from those | street, last evening. Mr. James THE MUNICIPAL LAW OF ENGLAND ty orithvwhich they have any feclings of rivairy, | to Justify the expectation that a whole Fear of | churches and the ministers too. Mr. McAlister, who Tho saw them. ‘The procession, however, did not | sens, assumed the hammer of be ie ae ape: ts ft existed during the war, did not furnish tho | she is also the only considerable Power besides | special attention to this work will pe crowned with | has been accustomed to take ‘good long vacations” | } OEY, horas smeshes to 168 the sight,” and 7 opene measure of her international duties, the govern- | themselves remaining on the American. continent, | complete success. ‘The great conflagration in the | 8'ued in favor of the same. eee Chk FOGPAE Ln TRG. Guerhi GAEDE AAT Ge De | Ce Een ee eer ment had nover hesitated to make the admisston | But, notwithstanding, and together with all this, | West occurred just at the time when the centennial DO LABOR STRIKES IMPERIS. SOOLETY? slong the route: As ine men marched np Eighth | rolled, after which Mr, Clancy, the Becrey , Y if tae law of England, even where it exceeded 5 y When the meeting came to adopt a topic for dis- Cooper Institute, the ryt A ery cat teeth Wed not pen fairly @x- Shere is in America, there is in England the sense by! pares were canng ais period ot iyo monrss Gteaio text ibe iy workingments procession | leading organizations countermarched, forkning tary, read the minutes of the previous ting. The reports of committees wy ated and administered during the war, this would 1 UNITY, sufferers. An interval had to be allowed before an | Was Just passing the building where the preachers | lines on elther aide, between which those in the | men Wo given to the United States reasonable cause | or something neariy appronching it, between the | agtempe conld be mado to enter nto the execution Were in session, and many of them ran to the side tear passed, all the inen now cheering vociferounly. rasan: | pore i ae: vied two nations—a unity of race, language, literatare, | of the centennial plan, Owing to there facts the | Windows tosee It, This fact probabl, nary to D e, ne | to arrive @t- some amicable conclvaip! with the eotio! f complaint, and might furnish an equitable ground fe reparation. From these considerations to | aootal habits and habita of political thought and ke: | work could not really be entered* into before Jan- | the Rev. J. M. Pullman the propriety of the topio | Won, order and excellent behavior, the parade | Hi terson, who holds the contract. {or acceptance in principle of express rules, | tion, as well as of general and substangtal inter- | uary last and had been confined to five months. Palatal od ovate I lpg OER Se 10 the TEE DRHEAOF ‘moceanitet of the Masonic temple in this clty. These men 4) agreed to by both nations (could such an agree: | esis) which ie indenendent of all that governments mite Teport was accepted and referred tothe Com- Purl gosietye' Die Crawiond, chaitnan of the Com | ‘The procession formed on the side streets adja- | peat to have boen strange misrepresented by th can do on either side, and which no quarrels, no re- on 0! ion. fe { ; | cent to Astor place, between ten and eleven o’clock, rovidence journals, Ail they demand see: be ell og for the future, was not a very long step. It | sentments, nor even War itseif, can destroy. It is RECEIVING DELEGATES, mittee on Topics, seconded It, and said they would places en cles | fair and hon fi f as A step at any rate which the government de- | common for Americans to say, “We want Ho medi: | Dr. VAN ZANDT, the corresponding delegate from | have to discuss it some time, not only there, but in | With ihe tntandon of golting an carly start The | tion last cvanina a the thay haved tay ti thank iberately resolved to take. It remained, ponent eyo", no arbitrators, pe ween ourselves and you, | the Reformed Church to the Presbyterian Gencral | thelr pulpits and in the religious press, and he was weighed down by a three-inch blue sash and a gold ing the very gentleman titey are contending sgainsd for the courtesy with which he had treat settle what the rules sould be; rules propos ra are too nearly relate ‘on, and our sympa. | Assembly of the United States, mado a report to | 1 favor of taking it up now. ‘The meeting, how. e cJooted by thies | ith you are Yoo cious Cb aul r the intérven- | the wiges: in which he said that if the Reformed | ¢Ver, being unprepared to take it now, voted it tok “ oes Aaseenig aot ceed by im te de} f the American com: ers re British conimisstoners. The intist Were ¢ e Hon f atréngers.” A mista en inference, for the | Synod deemed it proper to form an organic union | 40W2, and, on motion of Dr. L. H. King, adopted nat ré, after ail, ur earlier. Peed agree Gye aa Ly ah a "aig 3 a few days to. decide upon Cr to propose a counter project in their tarn ¢ | Foy would find the Presbyterians nearest them in | tliat suggested by the Secretary, relating to the | His commanding appearance was most marked, as ft thls was not found satis i by the "Anrerl, Mt neceugaatacton other; and erbiration Go. the” work. e mbiy expressed thelr warmest doings of the Genera) Conference, for discussion | He strode into the barroom and saluted one aber urhasveny, sd ane ne ie e no can, co) joners. eels, alternative strokes | where more usclul than in family quarrels. But | feelings for the Reforme Church, and sent their | 2¢¢ Monday morning. seated about awplting the order to fallin. ‘There | doubt that @ mutual and satisfactory settles r yy prolonged discussion, during feeling exists; a man must indeed be strangely | Christian greeting for the progreas and prosperit, a? . Ment between employers and’ men will 800) wnole & sare bc he # British couumianloners constituted who, either, there or “here, “has mot | of the ieforme Snare i ae ie jie " “ A SPIOY QUESTION, . aso Or Mot, teat Manta, aus | sztived.ah ples * ere With some sense 0} 3 ane influences in various ways V. JOSEP! ILSON, lelegate from ie sby- mere alee were framed as yaw ata fa The tixts | 207 Orcntke beating of America towards Bugioet | tering Assembly, was’ introduced, and addressed | Hasterm Report of the Condition of the | Dames, of, thelr socletics and the number The Steam and Gad Fitters. - Site 0 ie treaty. tl but sat! Were settiod 8 | but that of the English government and peoplé | the Synod. He referred to the separation in tho | Clove, Nutmeg and Other Spice Crope— | Picen ine Mars Lorerintiel prerian put satisfac’ | me above mentioned workmen assembled im, rence of opinion a8 to the manner of cop- wards the American. Yet this consciousness of | Presbyterian Church caused by the war, and said 7 0 arte tae coepeande ertientan., MP LICHR | EBlon cor OF ttat seAnaiocandn rit See eal is poms: | tant Ioan Whe Keformed Church that first foun Goew erot pects toe Caxrecily Sse pacee | Serer eer anranteoar Hiaaiyahe iestbege | tn tc tenon eet ER wished for selected jurists, the British preferred a patible—it fs Indeed more than compatible, eape an open! in Puddings and Negus. SP tecel vin further accessions to the linc was di the chair, A set of resolutions to be distributed govereign or head of a State as an arrangement | cially in a pedple or qiyactous anne a THE BARRIER OF SEPARATION ‘The readers of the HERALD are aware that re- ed, and the procession started, moving down | each one of the employers was drawn up, and pler in itself and affording in some respects @ | with the strong Fnglis Gahal street, through Canal atreet to | they were sensibly reasonable in their demandes Bonsé or justice, with yehe- | and extended the fraternal hand, which as they " tter guarantee of responsibilty. Under the plan | ment resentments, Whiere thete has bodw & real asped sent @ thrill of joy through thelr body, | Porta have been in circulation daring many months Hodawane ef Broadway to Fourteenth street, | and advocate peace and Persuasion, they wi finally agreed to (which ig in 8 geanse & fees te supposed Injur: res were well ayonivad with the past history of | past, both in Europe and America, which alleged | qown Fourteenth street to Eighth avenwe, up | probably carry Rnelr point. A Roberta wed Mise) the responsibility of actual decision 18 le: ME RES! rider FELT IN THE UNITED STATES the Reformed Church, and did not forget that | that the crops of spices, of nutmegs and cloves | Eighth avenue to Twenty-third street, through | elected to the presidential cliair, \ wate persons of eminence, the responsibility of | toward England at the close of the civil war was | within the past twenty years it had doubled in min- | particularly, in Netherlands India,had been sertously | Twenty-third street to Second avenue, down caoiniealeooney proper selection to the sovereigns or govern- | more general and much more deep and fervent | isters and churches and quadrupled in wealth, until | P - ap a Neatroyed positively before the har, | Second avenne to St. Mark’s piace, and through St. The Brass Fountain ments by whom those pene i respectively | than most of us wore aware of, and more so than | now it stood fitiy joined together. ‘The doctrinal | blighted, if not destroyed positively before the har- | Mark's place to Cooper Union, where the procession | 4 meeting of the Brass Founders’ as been & real or Bamea. Hithe ve ing on any of us, who knew how little we had really done | faith remained as strong as it was at the | vest saving of 1871. The subject is one of great | was dismissed. The following is the order in which co * “THE TOO vExED QUESTION to deserve It, were able to realize. There was | time the Church recelved it from the porta more go than appears at first sight, not | the procession moved :— 7 held last evening at the Tenth Ward Hotel, corne’ ‘Of (as théy Are now called) the indirect claims, or, | throughout the whole country a universal convic- | reformers. Dr. Wilson expressed the hope » J Captain Copeland nt Lefferts and a Squad of Police. | Broome and Forsyth streets, for the purpose oftiears ‘aa they would be called with greater accuracy, the | tion that England had been both ungenerous and | that ministers of the formed Church | only to the commerce of the world, but to our every ‘The Gr al in a carriage. "| ing reports from the delegates who had. been sp- Claims for indirect losses. Direct losses are those | ynjust toward America, and this conviction has not | would be attracted to the Presbyterian Church to | day economies, domestic and medicinal. We aro A guard of hono! renty men on foot Inted ta wait upon the bosses. The followin i directly and proximately occasioned by a given act | been entirely removed, though the poignancy of the reach there, and cautioned the Reformed Church glad, therefore, to be enabled to publish, by the re- Three mi 's aids, Bins are re] as hey or default; direct losses those whieh can only be | fecliag has been allayed by time. On the part of E the Presbyterian ministers came among. them to 4 f “4 " ba sual: be ingoribea | the demands of the men—G, ie Co, traced to {t indirectly or remotely through a chain | the government this had been evinced by more than | beware lest they shoul out-tire them. “Some of ceipt of our mati despatches from the East Indies, Canpngrpetors Toateet a Ane t ae dlan tt ive men Centre street; inter & bale. Arey or sequence of intermediate causes. By general | dne act of what tous seemed very like peevishness; | us,” said Dr. ilson, “can outsmoke pe tf | the following article taken from the New Batavia tf ‘each—total,.300 men. Holland & Cody, id street, and Barker & tb, principles common to all systems of jurisprudence | and the government followed what it knew or be- | we can't utpreach you, and thai 18, | sranaelsblad of the 30th March. The writer says:— Ap onkoowe organization—about eighty men. Greene street. These firms have given in dr | and founded on reason, the former are customarily | lieved to be the sentiment of the people. Ifthere | from all can _jearn, @ verturesome 4 Upholsterers, Torty-five files of five mon each—tolal, 228 the necessity of a strike, on the solicitation ni taken into account in determi the measure of | be one lesson which history teaches us with espe- | boast.’ (The Synod smiled.) Dr. Wilson referred Some persons seem to have set themselves the Bet, mien. it #7 a intimated ‘that if the demands for th ability for any proved default; the latter are not | cial clearness, it Is that national resentments are | to organic ecclesiastical unton, and said thata task of spreading in Europe. unfavorable iba cb: Varnishers and Ponmeny, a ne files of ix men Ergot wet bagi — pals. taken into account. For at each fresh step, when | jong lived, and that {t is very imprudent to think | union between the Presbyterians of the South and | touching spices. First were telegrams signalled Uy Rice p La =) uu attempt to pursue the consequences of any | lightly of them. The special mission of last year | the Reformed Church was a dream of not afew of | thither that the Banda nutmeg bene eae ‘1 had | pianoforte makers, thirty-three files of glx men each— winan action, other | causes enter i 10 | was.a generous advance on our part for the sake of | the Church he Fepresented. Thelr most consplewous been deasrere tion Retin roth Wa Me rage a ee, tt ee ta gat Gnade ‘Wire Workers. or control 6 operation — of @ | a thorough reconciliation. Generosity ia & word was their poverty, and in that the Reforme: i international Workingmen, iJ 5 Sra; the circle soon ‘widens indefinitely and-| with whien it is easy to point staresh. It Is out Gare could Pola in redeeming them. They oc- | in the Huropean papers that according to reports upon which, in white letters, was inscribed :— A meeting of wire-weavers was held last event , between nations. There | cupied thirteen States, with fifteen Synods, 1,600 | from Netherlands India “the clove crop of Java a eg | recap, forcibly Hyyeanusts” | at the Germants Assembly Rooms, George Barn Paluters’ Union, thirty-eight flles of five men each— President of the Union, in the chair. . The Unt <i has not been organized four weeks and numbe: and. -four files of seven men each— | about forty, Lat it is being daily inc! . PA ecting last aight was for the purpose of further: escapes the possibility of any jnst computation. | of place, we are often to! There is at the same time no definite and ascer- | isa kind of generosity, no doubt, whichgis always | churches and 90,000 members. had been destroyed.” bah yc fn Veda ad — moar ha ge my at “ may ince out-of piace. If, Dr. ELMENDORP, President of the batecrti veued bei a an, "fad TRDrENT ig ractice there is rarely much dificulty in de- FOR THE SAKR OP A RECONCILIATION, to Dr. Wilson, and in the course of his remarks . , basin § dto one | we had acknowledged a liability which we did not | sald:—Be toatired we will follow the indications of | The telegraph news agents are, however, bound to | Bricklayers’ Union, fore olding What lospen Pay properly be assigne itshall thet a Phy believe to exist, or had consented to pay money | Providence most carefully, prompted by the sin- | correct such tidings as soon as If si Appear that en. my baa wnat ya CnuatYy OF WASHINGTON which we did Bot believe to be due, arf vould cerest affection for our bretheen yom you repre- | they have helped. to ere wholly ot eer te taal HM pats, j Mochi company, ing the int+rests of the La reisstace’ au Is carefully framed to embrace only specie claims, have been a generosity haraty consistent, ip my gent, and by the prehension also of the Faun pote arr: eee ba ns "she "exports Conchmakers, thirty. three files of five ten each— pony ae pT ‘lty and the sora vome known gov- | view, with self-respect, and I for one should have | of that work which your ideas of co-opera men, ernments under the bame of the “ATnbams claiuie? "subscribed with reat reluctance to any arrange. | belure us. it has scomed to many that. Ht Rie ate te furnished by oat cot | ‘The Coach Painters, about elgven flies of six men each— | 18 One of the largest of them. jamay used by the acts of certain jen' that 5 jut the erosity which OUR FACILITIES FOR WORK '" So genet eine een Oe rae the Alabama Was the typical in- na t. hot WS giv ing away. stantial rights, | were much larger than we could use, Why make | that island had not 4 eee bs, reo been visited Scattered in the column were probably fifty Ber THE STREBT-PAVING OONTRAOTS. atance. Further, the losses muet be such as can be | butin waiving punctiiio, in being ready to make ad- | so large minary? Why make provision for so | 1 calamities, and the prospect sons, including miscellaneons workingmen. 18 oo hanks to liberal reforms, Yan Vorst, Suljivan and Jacq ‘and well-appointed a seminary? You have | the nutmeg planters are, ; | total number, then, in tho procession was not more | Commissioners of England in respect of those vessels; and in mak- | patience, temper, ‘considerateness—qualities 90 ated what God's purpose 1s in this very ma- | very favorable, From, Armboyis to feport, was | than 2.144, aithongh representatives of some of the | resumed last evening, at the Sixth Judicial Couy ing an award cach vessel is to be taken separately. | Valuable in the lives of individual men andwomen— | chinery we are trying to perfect. I know tho | pal to any Net! ‘hae tb meine Paper, giving riso to | workingmen’s organs, who were accommodated the hearing in the case growing out o} But beyond this the treaty does not define by ex- | are not out of place among nations which, after all, | hearts of our people, a8 of one man, will leap to | the sy osition pro ae 2 ree retauent with seats in carriage of the Marshal, where it | Tom, ere donbract for “pavite Third ave! press words of limitation the nature of the losses | are but men and women in multitudes. ey pro- ive you rellet | in this mosteimportant work you | stroyed. The Ne red hat cis com the Mot » | was impossible for them to count the files, estimate | Char’es Guidet’s con' pavihg avenuey ‘on account of which compensation may be awarded | duce lasting effects; they assist to build up lasting | have suggested. The Reformed Jhureh, accepting ie Focsives boy : ly et RB the artinet etre the attendance as large as 10,000. Counts made by from Fourteenth to Forty-fourth street, with Bél~ should the arbitrators Reclde that any compensa- | friendsnips; they enable governments to be drm | your suggestion of that sign by which we. con- ot tanh = re ie wore rete 74 different HERALD ay hr at various points o1 gian trap-block pavement, in 1868, which. tion is due. On this aingle point a disagreement | without giving offence, to make concessions with- | quered, an only expect to conquer at the South | lastly, tr thence of tidings of west huxrioanes the line do not vi the extent of fifty from the claimed, was | im| "7 has arisen between the two governments. The | out incurring the reproach of weakness, Tho ma- | with the sign and in e sign of the Cross. We feel an Pe iheeak a oe “othe information beatin above estimate, which may be safely set down aa i poo Tu ue ce { United States have introduced among the claims | terial interests which bind together great commer- | thaf all union must be bode in the truth, and that | an Rea tue would have Deen feed: in. the J Lm | correct. bas arreiet evening ‘thet be dq as which they have presented to tie arbitrators some | cial nations, and make war terrible and calamitous | that pI us fs ‘exponent of thé truth. yj “Tg foal The Protective Journeymen Bakers’ Benevolent fernet enough in the matter, father fo which England has excepted, as clearly beyond | to them, are precious securitied for peace. But | Dr. HaTFIELD, Delegate from the Presbyterian . Society turned out with a superb banner, buts * & nheasure sor fairly ascribed to some failure of duty onthe part | vances handsomely, generosity in this sense, large jn tim his holder om the avenue, ry uf the reference, It ts asked, very | there are other securities of a ind; and it | Church in America (North), was introduced, and small attendance, The banner, which in cost and irty » the fal #COP this country, whether there was | 1s a political error to disregard ‘hgter i Indo grror | referred to the. praposgd loa, with the Tefopm ABT MATTERS. denign overtopped anything mn te procession, was | the stone, and had found many of thom not on the British side a want of foresight and at- | to act as if nations were always ruled eithér by | Church, which, he , Would beconsummated. | a seriam Invitation te American Artists, | © red not in keeping with the sparse ay Sr Sooroonerect. The ee aaa 7 aS tention in not taking care that they barred by | merely material interests or by the sheer of In replying Dr. ELMENDORF said that this subject ‘nce of those: who marched under it; @ on Pym aah tone sage 4 express words; or rather, it has bee! umed that | the more orant and less intelligent majority, | of union was too large for him to touch. He would The committee charged with the erection of a | proceeding a few ard. work Py] tar a than ‘ae: there must have been such a bee ts x eeaeee — [he sb Ss ence and know! ea as say, Without bps an de public monument to the memory of the late Vice Sua nepwey reve ul by graet, nee aoe, rected ‘the Crot Board Horesighs,” le msy, Peeve Os ais 4 eet lceeralseente ini 4 2: = mney Admiral De Togetthoff in the city of Vienna have and other yen laid to one side and afterwards Father roesiaren 10 ase eee rea at raanhignon, ere ie ak Sidon s or Ti Ran en ae es cece to in at s A Rete if She Bower ed over ihe saloons and | A number of other witnesses confirmed ti union of Presbyterians, that it did occur to him that | set an example which republican America would do ak might be too langety, re) ‘well to follow. Tho committee evidently arc bent | eating Sage testimony, and the case was ‘Th Ainge the negotiators have been accused with some | regarded merely as a generous overture, worked @ | per ouses, while the head varters, sh Germont Oe mn Beyekteie ean ea rimony of having relied on understandings not | sensible change in American opinion. Some disa} sented under one General Assembly, and he thought Hall was profusely decked ats ye lay! she (Rorporaica in. tho. treaty of tho protocols, of | pointment, perhaps, may have been et first felt | so when Ne saw this troubvesome question come up | On Paying hones i Vetoanoneds Sees tane ease Keeucus the Prussian, _zgocu aud Amertoan fags | tracts cr te, mek hot paveme having neglected simple precautions and trusted to | when it was found that the British Pah he eed had | in their assembly — ‘How shall we reduce thé | to grin 1 ie matter; ss erefol ea 'y inv! 8 | floating from the Hags' nue, Was then called, and a number ie wil ambiguities of expression; and since I was negoti- | not Instructed its representatives to make conces- number of delegates coming to the gencral assem- jot oe to hana! ore “y MY in can nationalities. were examined, This case algo ineludes thé cou’ ator at Washington I should proceed at once to | sions which it had never contemplated; but this biles 19 iy “3 ney og a at mn e bos ime, ‘Wh. Pian lana factarers. for similar paving in Eleventh, Fifteenth, Twentiet! offer to you soon wore away, The beneficial effect has continued, THAT THROLOGICAL SEMINARY AGAIN. i, wi eS Py, ¢] . ene just what wo eo fee rs of the | Twenty-sixth, enty-seventh, Twenty-eig! SOMB EXPLANATIONS ON THIS SUBJECT. and it be ag itself remarkably in the present ‘The debate on the report concerning the Theolo- | urged shoul lone those cl iat Nearly all the pianoforte manu! ture! ‘Thirtieth, Varick and other streets, aad But I think. you sm saree we ~ Semper ot the Amerig a pecs. t 1s for. th Poon goLpcer ‘was then resumed, Dr. Dixon lead- q hed tie fate 4 ca Americ, oo. act city were gathered in council yesterday morning at | tested by some of the wealthiest property these circumetancet vantage, ink, that the comprehensive set ng off, ; yusine: vrei 3! rec Satnty, Of penun why | sould be ment then madg of many love oe arcd auostions | fiov. Mr. VaN OLEgr attributed all the dimonity in | pursued, the Monament House, Union square, Mr. Fregerick | tp the clize Neen ese