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a a 6 NEW YORK HERALD —__— BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR, es ae a ee Letters and. packages should be properly sealed. Volume XXXVI... cecgcecee reese 950 —— AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. \_ WOOD'S MUSEUM. Broadway. corner Thirticth st.— Kurt, Taz Agkansas TRAVELLER. Afternoon and Ev.oning OLYMPIC THEATRE, Broadway, between Houstonand Bleecker sts Rev PockxtaooK. THEATRE COMIQUE, 514 Broadway. ~Aroorp Town; or, SicuTs oF THE City. WALLACK’S THEATRE, Broadway and Thirtec! atreet.—Ixton; on, Toe MAN At Tux Wuert, us FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE, Twenty-fourth street.— Diamonps. GRAND OPERA HOUSE, Twenty- Ar nhor Onsoee HO! Twenty-third st. and Eighth \, BOOTH'S THEATRE, Twonty-third strect, corner Sixth ‘avenue.—Tne Bris; on, Tax Pouse Jaw. e2 |_ BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery.—Tavurs—Ovn Nea. mons, Spits axp Brows, &a rae THEATRE, Brooklyy.—Paut Pry—Livs In- \ WHITE'S ATHENEUM, 685 Broadway.—Nzaro Mur. aranusy, &c. 4, BRYANT’S OPERA HOUSE, Twenty-third: st., ‘€th av.—Nxcro MINsTRELSY, Moosmvaivawe tor" aes aia \_ST. JAMES THEAT! \Wway.—Bam Paastisoe 720 BROADWAY, EMERSON’S MINSTRELS,—Granp Ermiorian Eccenruicrrgs. { NEWARK INDUSTRIAL EXIIBITION, W: Btroct, corner of Court, Newark, N. J. pai i , corner of 23th st. and Broad- INOTRELY IN FaRoe, &c. CENTRAL PARK GARDEN.—Gr. = AND INSTRUMENTAL PAVILION, No, 688 B: a ‘Guine Coane roadway, near Fourth street. NEW YORK MUSI pXEW YORE MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 618 Broadway.— TRIPLE SHEET. New York, Friday, September 6, 1872, H CONTENTS OF TO-DAY’S HERALD. Pace. 1—Advertisements, 2—Advertisements. 3—MAssachusetts: The Colored Men in Council; Addresses and Resolutions at a Social Pow- wow—Paul schoeppe’s Trial—The State Con- ventions; Inside Workings of the Liberals and Democrats at Syracuse; Abundant Wire. palling and a Great Deal of Hard Fighting; mendeus Enthusiasm at the Finish, 4—Syracuse: A Busy Field Day in Both Conven- 1ons; Obstinate Skirmishing Over the Nomi- nation for Congressman at Large; Sunset Cox at Last Triumphant; Frank Kernan and Chauncey Depew the Gubernatorial Standard Bearers; Tilden Badly Snubbed ; Enthusiastic Endorsement of Greeley and Cincinnati; A Harmonious Soy to an Eventful Days Spepohmaking ue feral Both Conven- 8 journed an ie Delegates Alread, on Their nd Tlome. 3 y S=The Bursted Bourbons: A Mournful Morning's Work Among the Louisville Hardshells; J. Q. Adams Follows the “Backward Lead” of Charles O’Conor; Louisiana's Deep Demo- cratic Despair; Refusal to Nominate Living Men; O'Conor and Adams Still To Be Their Phantom Chiefs; Dispersal Amid Ghostly En- thusiasm Over the Stili-Born Ticket; Effect West and South of O’Conor's Will 0’ the Wisp—Missourt Republican State Conven- tlon—Kansas Republican State Convention— Minnesota State Convention—The Presi- dential Canvass—Coalition of Reform Demo- crats—Republican Meeting in Newburg— Prospect Park Falr Grounds—The Fashtous— Yachting—The New England Falr—Saratoga Agricultural Soclety. GeEditorials: Leading Article, “The Einpire State—The Democratic and Liberal Republi- can Conventions’—Amusemeut Announce- ments. Y%=—The Council of the Crowns—The Steamship America—The Alabama Claims—Cabvlo Tele- grains from England, France, Ireland, Austria, Hungary, Wales and South Africa— The Metis: Continuation of the Investigation; Testimony of the Chier Engineer and Bow Watchman—Miscellaneous Telegrams—Busi- ness Notices, t! 8=The Courts—Sister Mary of Stanislaus—The Burglar Policeman—The Polish Passenger Case—Jefferson Market Police Court—Tombs Police Court—Municlpal Affairs—Rewarding Internal Revenue Avairs—The Tichborne Claimant—Drink or Die: Full Particujars of the Glen Cove Shooting Affray. Financial and Commercial: Another Change tn the Money Market; @ Sudden Relaxation and Fall of the Rates to Three Per Cent; the Finale at Louisville and the Speculation in Gold; a Spiritiess Competition for the Government Gold; Further Decline in South Carolinas; Government Bonds Heavy and Lower; In- tense Dulness at the Stock Exchange and & Decline in Prices—The Hassler Expedition: A letter from Professor Agassiz—New York Fea iat A‘airs—Marriages and oaths. O—Gratz Brown: A Sharp Criticism of the Ad- ministration Policy at the South; Three Years of Grant in Dixie; Increase of Debt in Car. pet-Bag States $168,000,000; Responsibility of the Republican Party; Liberalism the Life- boat for Niggers—shipping Intelligence—Ad- vertisements, 1—Advertisements, 2emAdvertisemen: , Orner Srate Conventions.—Tho Missouri publican State Convention met yésterday nd constructed a platform which, in addition fs the usual party planks, kas one deprecating ny conflict between capital and labor, but sserting that should one come labor has/para- ount claims, In other words the party judges that more votes aro cast by poor than y rich men. Another plank is a sharp stick lox Governor B, Gratz Brown, the coalition ndidate for Vice President. Admitting that ey helped to place him in his present po- ition, they allege that he has forfeited all nim to official integrity and déprécate his Jevation to a higher trust. Kansds répub- icans have nothinated Hon. T. O. Osborne, f Leavenworth, for Governor, and B 8 torer for Licutenant Governor. Besides on- orsing the nominations of Grant and Wilson cy pledged the party to a free and pure elec- ive franchise, and asked Congress to arrange ¢ difficulties between the railroad companies d squatters claiming lands on late Indian rritory, and to open public lands to actual tilers under the pre-emption and homestead Ws. M Convicrion or Tut Buronan Poricnssay,— jAiken, late a policeman of the Eighteenth pre- inct, was brought up for trial yesterday in the eneral Sessions, before Judge Bedford. wing to a stipulation of the Sergeantto whom made the confession of his having, while a the police—some eight months—committed enteen burglaries, that admission could not tised as evidence against him. He was, Jhowever, promptly convicted of grand lysteny m one indictment; and, there beng four gainst him, he was remanded till Aue District ttorhey is ready with proof jp.‘the other cases. fudge Bedford told the cy Grit that his offence all the thore heipSus for disgracing the hich he was ® wemler, and for prostituting posit{on of $fust and authority to purposes hope for no mercy. heft should thug meet prompt and se ret iticntnnnsetnarineclagtes New Exeraxo y drow & very large al between the two parties, the ascertained e desertions from Grant to Greeley in this State the Union Defenders—St. Joseph's Home— would settle the question now in favor of Greeley, were there no drawbacks to be con- sidered in the estimate. Greeley even in New York, which, in a fair treatment of the subject, cannot be overlooked. ‘There are, democrats. 80 respondents who have been canvassing the diplomats of our State Department it has State report that these democratic Bourbons, as sullen neutrals at least in the regular party v camp, can be found in any place throughout | will and even the peace of two powerful nations | through the whole length of this interesting | ag a third party candidate, defeated’ Fremont, the interior without difficulty. They sent a brave, fajt%iful and honest men of 6. Evtry facility would be afforded Cort to the public prosecutor to try tho charges, And the recreant policeman . It is well that police mR gt Lowell yester- endanee, Its show of orses {s a special feature ond will terminate NEW YORK HERALD, FRWAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1872—TRIPLE SHERT. The Lmptre State—The Democratis and | special labors of the two great Liberal Republican Conventions. efforts of the republicans being a State Conventions at tial electors and thotr G and have proclaimed the 4 Liberal Republican | maintenance of their best majorities, w have nominated | opposition alliance are working zealously to partiod%th 0 | The Atsemblage of the Sovereigns in ond the sggns a > ore ipitel ha of the milliners exert a mag- netic Influence 22 the fair ones in quest of the last invention in bon 24g OF the newost attrac- tion in costumes, 7 their joint stock State ticket, their Prosiden- | cut down these majorities, and to cut out at Alexan a — n at Large, | least one member of Congress as a trophy of | their midst rte Ges Hemera teats Third Parties in Our Previentiel and national | victory and as evidence that Grocley may still | in Berlin yesterday. He was accompanied ContestewThe Loutsville Bourbon: =** issues and objects upon which they intend to | lead his supporters to a crowning national fight through the campaign in this Common- | triumph in November. Nor is it cortain that wealth till the November election. The two | they will be disappointed in great parties, therefore, in this contest—the | tions in Maine, notwithstanding and the oppo- | aging bombshell from Vermont. before | complete failure of their hopes in Maine do we ir suf- | imagine they will lose their hopes of Pennsyl- administration republican sition coalition party—are now fair the people of the Empire State for calcula- the discour- Nor with the frages. The republicans have i strong State | vania. The conditions of the two parties for ticket throughout; but it is the October battle in Pennsylvania are rather with General Dix at the head of it for Gover- | favorable than otherwise to the opposition al- nor. The opposition alliance against General | liance, for the republicans who will not sup- Dix have nominated Francis Kernan, of Utica, | port the administration State ticket because for Governor—a distinguished democrat, an | of Hartranft, the head of it, outnumber the able party leader and in every respect a popu- | anti-Grant republicans. But if, lar man—after Judge Church, perhaps, the | torious advantage, most generally acceptable nomination that |‘to carry Pennsylvania in October all doubts could have been made, and particularly in | concerning the Presidential election will be view of democratic harmony on their State ticket in this city. - Bats Briefly, for the present, it niay be said that if the republican State ticket, Presidential electoral ticket and candidate for Congress- man at Large are perfectly satisfactory to the rank and file of the supporters of the national administration, the opposing nominations from Syracuse aro calculated to give shtisfac- tion as broad and general to deqdcrata and liberal republicans. As between the ‘“glitter- ing generalities’’ of the platforths of the two partied the intelligent voter will judge for himself; and to the Voter who ig without in- telligence the platform which goes with his party ticket represents his principles against the world. But in New York, in every politi- cal crisisembracing the momentous issue of a national political revolution, thore is a float- ing balance of power which, in reference to a coming State election, drifts with the pressure of intervening political events; and it is in relation to this floating clemont, this twen- tieth vote from the people, that we have to consider the probabilities of our November election, What, then, is the prosjéct in the Empire State? In the overwhelming huo and cry against the astounding and abounding corrup- tions of the Tammany Ring the State was car- ried by the republicans last November bya majority of nearly twenty thousand. But the democrats were disheartened and demoralized by the Tammany exposures, and many of them, with tho anti-Grant republicans gener- ally, supported the regular republican ticket as a rebuke to the “Ring” and in view of re- form. Many democrats, oh the other hand, from sheer demoralization or disgust, remained at home on election day, so that the figures of our last November election will not apply to the present political situation in New York city and State. With Mr. Greeley as the coalition candidate for President the condi- tions of the battle may be greatly changed. Mr. Greeley, for many years a prime favorite among the republicans of the rural districts as & political reformer and evangelist of the party, has in this State carried over with him into the coalition against General Grant a considerable body of devoted republican followers. In the Presidential election of 1868 Seymour against Grant carried New York by ten thousand majority, on by far the largest vote over cast in the State. Taking this vote, then, as a fair test at that time But there are certain drawbacks against Mr. for example, tho anti-Greeley They have shown no strength for in any quarter; but the Henarp cor- delegation from this city to Louisville, respecta- ble in part, and, however small a faction or frac- tion they may be in the State at large, they are yet, more or less, » dead weight upon Mr. Greeley. Next, there. is to Mr. Greeicy the discouragement of the Vermont election, and the apparently inextricable confusion into which the parties, factions and cliques of this city have drifted upon municipal affairs. We may have three or four candidates for Mayor this year, and the divisions among the democrats upon these candidates may affect more or less the State and Presidential tickets, Grant and Greeley, one way or the other. In the absonce of these disturbing elements New York might be safely set down as good for the opposition coalition by an overwhelming majority; but while these disturbing forces exist the vote of New York in November can- not be assumed as absolutely certain for Mr. Greeley and the State ticket associated with him in this contest. The republicans evidently have strong hopes of holding New York. They may count too much upon their victory of last Novembor against Tammany and too largely upon the anti-Greeley democrats and upon demoeritic divisions in this city, and they ‘may under- estimate the strength of the anti-Grant repub- licans; but the Grant managers are never- theless working ‘ith ‘great expectations of carrying the State. ey say that as in 1868, General Gyant in 1872 can be elected without the votg/ of New York, but that, having been cheated oth of this vote in 1868, they de- sire and expect to right this wrong in 1872. Téy say, furthermore, that, as the anti-Grant Fepublican bolt is or will be neutralized by the anti-Greeley deniocratic bolters, they lose noth- ing by Greeley’s defection. Theso are the opinions which, among the administration re- publicaiis, have revived hope and are in- spiring them with something of confidence of adding the vote of the Empire State to the electoral vote for General Grant. The odds, in our judgment, are still heavily against them ; but, considering all the party complications and cross-firings which exist and which are foreshadowed in reference to our November national and State election, it is too early yet to predict in New York an opposition victory. t in 1868 it was determined, so in 1872 the issue of the Presidential contest will probably be settled by the October State elections of assessors. Apart even from this wholesome dispelled, and the friends of Mr. Greeley will have to labor without ceasing to save New York. In 1868 the primary object of Tam- many and the democratic party of New York was the State and the city, with our enormous Corporation spoils; and the Presidency was a secondary object, because the popular tide of the Union was irresistibly against them. In the nomination of Seymour, then, the object of the Now York democrats was at all hazards to save the State; but now the State to the stpporters of Mr. Greeley here, as elsewhere, is mainly valuable for its Presidential weight; and sould the coming September and October elections strongly foreshadow General Grant's re-election the Presidential issue in November will be apt to override, even in New York, al our State and municipal issues. Thus, while we think the Empire State, in a vote this day between Grant and Greeley, would go, and go heavily, for Greeley, the Presidential and State vote of New York in November may be determined by the intervening State elec- tions. A Fifteqn-Million Award Reported from Geneva—The Arbitration Near- ing Its End. Information from Washington places the gross award to this country of the Tribunal of Arbitration at Geneva under the Treaty of Washington at fifteen million dollars. In connection with this statement we are also informed that the arbitrative labors of the Board are virtually at an end. Ac- eepting these two items as correct, we might conclude that the sum mentioned is the outcome of all the pother about the Ala- bama claims, leaving the national balance against it to be decided by the Mixed Commis- sion to meet at Newport in a few days, when the British claims against us have been” re- duced, once for all, to dollars and cents. The general feeling in the United States which this will arouse will not be one of enthusiasm. All that element has long since been squeezed out of it. The history of the negotiations presents too many features of fretfulness, overreaching smartness and bom- bast, followed by ignominious collapse, for the result to transfigure universal chagrin into widespread jubilation. The best fea- ture about the matter will be in the fact that the arbitrators have had tact and courage enough to make a direct award, and not leave the matter to fritter away what little power for future good feeling and peace might be left in it by deferring the money judgment toa board view of the case, the people of the United States will rejoice that the whole affair has been buried and dropped out of sight. Looking back from this statement of final award over the events that have led up to it, since the signing of the treaty, we are sorry that we cannot congratulate either government to any extent on its course of action. For the been a sad record of bungling and trifling with: o subject wherein the good were involved. The introduction of the indi- rect claims with a flourish of rhetoric may ‘have been, as Seeretary Fish protests, a politi- cal or partisan necessity of the hour; but the indignities which their subsequent with- drawal heaped upon the nation and upon the administration are enough to show the flimsiness of his reasoning taken as he puts it. It shows how the honor of a nation can be flippantly compromised by. those whose opinion of their. fellow citizens is so low asto imagine that the mere tricks of party can be successfully imposed upon them as the dignified course for the nation to ac- quiesce in. Tho absolute failure of this attempt is one of the few consolations of the people. On the other hand, it cannot be said that England acted in the controversy. with either forbearance or courtesy. The howl which went up from one end of that country to the other on the publication of our ‘‘case’”’ indicated how very thin the layer was of treaty cordiality. War and treaty breaking were spoken of with o suddenness of expres- sion which was the more marked that on this side of the Atlantic the whole question had been quictly relegated to the tribunal un- der the treaty. What mada this violence of public feeling in England the more curious was the undoubted fact that her whig’ govern- mont was laboring tooth and nail to save the treaty, exhibiting a love of place almost equal to our own Secretary of State, But all that is past. The revival of an old | feud is always profitless where peace and con- cord can prevail instead. A statement of the facts, however, has this use, that it prevents a false estimate being placed upon the profes- sions that may mean nothing. We.are pleased with one fact—the great one of the controversy—that the apology which England made in the treaty is repeated more pro- nouncedly in the verdict of the Court against her. What its value may be in the future we cannot now enter upon. It gives the nation another solemn assurance of the rightfulness of its battle with the rebellion, and is a verdict of civilization ogainst those who, in defiance of law, aided the foes of the Union—the foes of liberty to all men, It that triumph, we can join with beoomitg | there will be some indication of the actual of its east and west boundaries, the Andes and the coast range, so that while they stand those wonderful changes which have marked and shaped the earth’s surface. is nother triumph for the right, | outré styles of former years, American ladies and, while looking at the money | now have the good sense to exorcise a little of award as the smallest fraction of their own judgment in matters of dress, and his son, the heir apparent to tho Russian periment, throne, and His Highness the Grand Duiké'| The democratic Bourbons have met in Con- Viadimixr of Russia. Emperor William ac- corded a personal reception to his guests by yention at Louisville, and have nominated what they call stright or old line demo- meeting them as they alighted at the rail- | cratic’Prosidential ticket, Charles O'Conor and” road station and therd enfolding his brother | John Quincy sovereign in a fraternal embrace. The most Adams, and have adhered to O'Conor in the face of his peremptory or the victims of tha’ @ Gat, or the “men in the Gap’’ or those who have just fallen at the French in execution post at Satory, remains to be seen, The peoples who remain in chains were greeted—a fact whicit no doubt con- them very much. Genenz! a was denounced as “‘a traitor to his couniiy;"” and M. Jules Favre classified as @ ‘wretch’ -~@, mode ot S¢tion which will not, so far aa we can understant. have any very sensible effect for the advancement of the cause of universal emancipation. Perhaps fhe adoption of the motion was unavoidable, however, for we are’ prominent members of the family of the North | declination, and have adopted o plat Fores sitting of the Cougresd was at- German Kaiser assisted him in the discharge form, in oppositioit fo thé regular of his hospitable effort, the Empress Augusta | democratic candidates and principles and and Princess Victoria, her daughter-in-law, | t0 the administration republiead ticket of adding domestic consolation and a home | Grantand Wilson. But as the straight demo- charm to the scene, Prince Chancellor Bis- | °t#ls have not the remotest idea of o is with this no- marck did his devoir at the head of the Minis- | bility of the election of their ticket, it is evi- the opposition alliance fail | tors of State, and the most famous generals of dent that their immediate object ig a demo- the German army were present—living evi- cratic diversion for the defeat of Greeley and dences of what may be accomplished in the | Brown, It is, however, as they contend, way of national consolidation by the exercise | 20ugh for these immaculate Bourbons that of a well-balanced diplomacy, when it is sup- | they cannot. recognize Greeley and Brown as ported in its direction by a united, disciplined | *¢presentatives of the democratic party, nor and patriotic war force. The German | the Cincinnati and Baltimore resolutions as an poople—the sturdy column which sus- tains the brilliant superstructure of the aggregated, Crown of Prussia—were out in | It gives the old-liners, exposition of demooratic principles. Hence this Louisville straight democtatio movement. to Colonel their capacity as citizens of Berlin, They | Duncan, the men and the principles of the old welcomed the visiting imperialists enthusias- tically, just as did the British masses the late Czar Nicholas of Russia on the occasion of his advent to their shores years prior to the war struggles at Inkermann and in the Redan, and as did the inhabitants of Paris the many Ger- man potentates previous to the misunder- standing which induced toSedan, The royal procession in Berlin was conducted amid the plaudits of immense multitudes, The Czar halted at the Russian Embassy. He paid a visit to the Emperor William at Court subse- quently, and was there entertained by His Majesty. Enough for one day, in the way of Fétes at least ; but then we are told that there is nothing, and will bé nothing but fétes. Franz Joseph of Austria will reach Berlin, from Dresden, to-day. The Orown congregatiou will then be complete, and it may be that intent of the convocation, On the other hand, the affair may terminate after a friendly talk in reminiscence—Francis Joseph being deeply interested—of the siege of Kars, the. work before Sebastopol, the treaty of Villa- franca, and of the radicals in Paris and at The Hague, the latter baving just posted a Council challenge for Bismarck. A Letter from Professor Agassiz. The latest despatch from this distinguished disciple of science to Professor Pierce, of the’ Coast Survey, in another column, will be found of great scientific interest. It was written on the voyage from Panama to Acapulco, and records the impressions of the author gathered on the Pacific Coast, and during a land jour- ney of nearly throe hundred miles in the Yalley of Chillan, between the coast range and the Andian chain from Concepcion, at the mouth of the river Bio Bio, northward to the capital of Chile. This valley which, com- mencing at the Gulf of Ancud, extends over fifteen hundred miles to the north, he.finds to be the bed of a vast glacier, whose ice-slide to the north has ground and polished the rocks At one point, alittle south of Santiago, he finds the track of a more recent glacier which, moving laterally from the Andes toward the west, across the drift of the great glacier, has left in its course voleanic boulders in the direction of the coast range, which stayed its progress. A gradual recossion of the ice boundary towards the South Polé, which was accompanied with an ascending temperature, was followed by the formation of successive lakes, whose deposits now form a series of terraces of various levels valley. An examination of the group of islands called the Galapagos has, afforded an oppor- tunity for a study of new land. This archi- pelago, situated near the Equator, seven hun- dred miles west of the coast of Ecuador, are evidently of recent volcanic origin. Their animals and plants are some of them of types found nowhere else on the: known globe, and naturally seem special creations for that locality or strange instances of the almost cre- ative power of transformation in nature. Evi- dently the Professor inclines to think there has been a direct creation of organized beings for those distant new islands in the wide Pa- cific, and he confesses that as yet science is unable to answer questions of the origin of organized beings. Small difference is noted in the vegetable products of the Atlantic and Pacific coasts in the neighborhood of Panama, but in marine animals a decided variation was discovered, while all classes of animal life on both sides bear decided American characteris- tics. During the long and busy voyage the party of which Agassiz is the chief have made careful observations of a large class of sub- jects, and accumufated such a store of speci- mens as will in his able hands make most valuable additions to our knowledge in the sciences of geology and zoology. The Fall Fashions. The welcome change in the weather and the return of the fashionables from the watering places have stirred up the modistes to put their houses in ordor, and to deck the shrines of Fashion in a becoming manner for the great annual exposition of Falland Winter styles. Summer fabrics are being cast aside, and the belles of the metropolis, fresh from the retire- ment of the country, are anxiously looking forward to opening day. One or two houses have already taken time by the forelock, and have hold their gala reception in the display of the numerous and costly, “articles that go towards beautifying the wiodern belle. Many surprises await the feminine eyo this Fall, as novelty seems to bg the rage; butitis en- couraging to find the prevalence of good taste and the abandofiment of the extravagant and a third or a fourth party in the Presidential Representatives, that body was reduced to a as the three highest candidates from the elec- toral colleges; and yet the friends of Clay in the House, by uniting upon Adams, at once secured opposition forces. was frittered away by their divisions upon various political crotchets,, ab- they will tell to students the history of one of | stractions and candidates; but in 1840, in their union upon Harrison and upon the general idea of a change in the administration, the opposition elements strept the country like o whirlwind. In 1844 the little third party of democratic gospel of Jefferson and Jackson; tended very powerful delegation fromm, France—meri who haye already worked strenu- ously in the cauge of human equalization by the exercise of a most generous appropriation of the property of other and moré industrious people. Then there wad: the question of free love according to the American system. portion of the despatelnis somewhat confused. It is not easy to see how \the Internationalists can sincerely wish for any’ great en to tho number of their present families when we consider how difficult they find jt to get along squarely with the capitalists, They may, per- haps, be useful in promoting ma:ttiage, after. the fashion of Malthus and Pére EXyacinthe. Should the Emperors in ‘lin open {he door of their hall of ae the we shall be enabled to place the and, though they expect defeat in this battle | principles of royalism gnd theyod democracy’ on their ticket, they expect to come out of it | side by side in our Let illumine-- . with their old democratic colors still flying, | tion be general. ‘ \ and they expect the recall of the deserters from the radical heresies accepted at Balti- more, and the restoration of the old party to its old landmarks with the defeat of Greeley and Brown. This is a desperate undertaking, and tho most unpromising as a third party movement that could possibly be devised. There has never been a less inviting occasion for a third party for tho Presidency than the present. The prevailing idea among all the political ele- ments opposed to the re-election of General Grant has been and is a coalition for his de- feat. Hence the failure so far ofall these third party movements, such as that of the temper- ance reformers and the labor reformers and free trade reformers. Hence this alliance be- tween the anti-Grant republicans and the rank and file of the democratic party—a few strag- glers excepted—in support of the Cincinnati liberal fusion ticket and programme. Theso democratic bolters, few in numbers, widely scatterred, -and without news- papers or organization anywhere, are as powerless as the temperance, the labor, the free trade or woman's rights reformers to do anything as a third party at this stage of the campaign; and most likely, as a third party, this Louisville organization will disappear be- fore the 1st of November. Heretofore, on several momentous occasions, contest has turned the scale, In 1824, when the struggle between Jackson, Adams, Oraw- ford and Clay was carried into the House of choice between Jackson, Adams and Crawford, his election. In 1832 against Jackson, and in 1836 against Van Buren, the strength of the the abolitionists, in taking off. from Henry Clay fifteen thousand abolition whig votes in the western part of New York, gave the State to Polk by.a small majority, and elected him President. In 1848, asa third party candidate, Martin Van Buren, in dividing the democratic vote of New York, defeated the regular party nominee, General Cass, and elected General Taylor, the whig candidate, In 1856 Fillemore, and secured the election of Buchanan. In 1860, in their divisions upon several candi- dates resulting from their break-up at Charleston, the democrats permitted the election to go by default in favor of Lincoln; and since that day the democratic party, in adhering to its dead issues, has been kept “out in the cold.” Now, joined heart and hand with a prom- ising body of bolters from, the administration camp, the democratic party, through their regular National Convention, having aban- “fixed facts” of the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, are on the road to. ulti- mate success, when they are met by this Louisville bolt of the Bourbons—this third par- ty movement—at the eleventh hour of the day. We cannot imagine what possible object these bolters have thus in view which might not by them be more cheaply gained by simply voting for Grant and Wilson, or by remaining, like the angry Achilles, in their tents, indifferent as to the issue of the battle. Surely this Bourbon experiment to push the demtocratic party from its advanced position under Gree- ley back to the constitution of Buthanan ts preposterous, and will utterly fail, if it rhay not be considered as a bubble which has collapsed with the Louisville Convention... It has no appearance of anything but a bubble and a collapse. The Internationalist Council at The Hague. Tho Congress of the International Society, which has been/6itting in close session at Tho Hague during > few days past, places its plat- form and proteedings before the world through the columns of the press this morning. The rule of, ‘kecrecy was removed yesterday and the ptiblic admitted fo ne council hall. fn this the operative fadigal reformers havo al- ready advanced beyofd the Alabama claims arbitrators in Gesseva, inasmuch as they acknowledge tha‘/public opinion may aid them in reconciling ‘he differences which distract so- lawyers eppear to dread that official commu, nion with the outer world will tend to impotte theiy ‘efforts to adjust a bill of account, be- twreen two nations, We fear, however, that there “all likeness ends between tho’ pair.” not to leave gverything to the dictates, 0 grace in the roseate auguries that, the joyful | in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, Tho State election of Monday next in Maine, mean, pale of valuable stock time, is attracting the special attention and Arbitration Court at Geneva, Conjure up at their fostivitiesyfindor the shad Alvs, of the, | foroign mofiistes. It was a reform sadly neoded, ind one productive of the most béjes | battle i en haunts | lution; but whether they bave commenced | tion, the forewarning of nil endangered wht ficial sésulta, Broadway and the otb~ of Fashion now present an @D)'oning sight. ‘The Congress of The Hague has embe‘:med the doned their dead issues and accepted the |-tions, ag two vast rivers—one on the ay ciety at large, while the Geneva tribunalists and | ices we now ‘record. The Spanish Loan. One of our Intest cable despaaches in- forms us that the Spanish government {8 ne- gotiating with bankers in Paris fora h 2 of five hundred millions of francs. Wear? nob sorry that, in spite of all her misfort, ne Paris still remains, as indeed she must rem 12 for years to come, the great money centra the European Continent. So far’ as Spain 18 concerned, this loan, put upon the Paris mma ~ ket, is a vote of confidence in France, This, however, is about the only good thing in the} Spanish loan. All the world knows that: Spain is bankrupt, that her indebtedness is enormous, and that she cannot meet her’ obli-; gations. Things being as they are, it scems almost an impertinence on the part of Spain to ask Europe to grant her another loan. It is only a few weeks since the King narrowly ex- caped nssassination; and the general feeling of the public was that tho assassination of the” King would have been national ruin. bi failure of the miserable attempt to take awa; the life of the King and Queen has given the, present government a temporary popularity. * It is scarcely fair, on such groynds, to ask @ loan. It will not surprise us, ps og if th money is granted, and if Spain finds, through the loan, another chance to begin anew, We cannot see the end, but we shall not be sorry if it ends well. see eS Barometric Waves=The Late Premoni+ tory Weather. For more than a week we have had wgusyal indications of some very marked perturbatior in the arial ocean. On the morning ofthe 24 inst. the meteorological reports mention the appearance on the Upper Lakes of oneof those immense waves of cold air and high barometer which desgend from the higher latitudes south- eastwardly and roll onward to the great tropi- cal sea. This phenomenon is most remarkable and suggestive. The season has so far ad- vanced that the sun has lost its power in the high north, and every day the refrigeration of tho air over the circumpolar regions rapidly increases. The movement of large masses this refrigerated atmosphere southward ang their injection or irruption into the warm ang humid gir of the superheated equatorial seas ia doubtless the signal. for most serious cyclonic disturbances in the latter, and also for the open ing of the grand battle of the Equinox. In thé opinion of an eminent meteorologist of this country the sudden commixture of the hot and cold.currents in the West Indies is the cause of the formation of the low barometer which warns the seaman and premonishes the hurricane in: the neighborhood of the Windward Islands. ? It is highly probable that these large aérial! waves, which often pursue each other in rapid succession, are due to the reversal of the set of the atmosphere in the normal struggle of the cold and heavy current to find its way home to the southward, and of the light and warm current to push itself northward, Such a movement is clearly traced in the aqueous ocean, where the Gulf Stream and the ice stream of the Atlantic move in contrary direc, surfacé, . the other over the marine floor and in the deep” sea bed. The interesting reports of the English mete orologists at Natal, on the southeastern const of Africa, reveal the not unmeaning fact that the violent hot wind from; the northw » which occasionally prevails in this colony, is clearly and causally connected with. the ° furious Winter gales of the South eotat that so frequently ravage the Cape Good Hope. Analogy would suggest that, mutatis mutandis, the phenoménon of our cold waves of atmosphere, 6n the northern’ side of the Equator, is indirectly concerned in the generation of eqyinoctial cyclones an may be regarded as premnonitions of extensive and violent tempest e opening of thé hurricane season sefms to have been deferred this year in the West Indies, but it will not be surprising if thé telegraph brings us early intelligence offdisastrous gales on the South ern and Gulf ‘toasts. When they fairly set in for the Fall we may flso look for similar storm on our eutire Atlantic sea front; and ‘dur shipping guardians ond life-saving autho ¢ities should now be sleepless if their vigilan 4e and thoroughly oquipped for every emergen,ey that may arise. It isa Hoteworthy fact that the tv cyclones of last Summer, whieh ocourred, August 18 and 26, were, preceded by just, “such atmos- pheric waves of high range in the barometer low iongg in the thermometer as It is greatly to Lesa! hoped that, at the earliest moment deep sea/ telography ‘rendots it possible, we may bave fa co-operative sytem of storm, signals canneet- ing with the island of Barbados—the outpast of West Indian meteorology and the most, favored point for watching the approach of rabmory of the champions who havg fallen in the for tho people's rights in a reso- with Watt ‘Tyler, or tho heroes of tho storms, When this is realized, in the tm« perative interests of commerce and. civiliza. will ba a matter of p%golute certaintys