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A Yearning for Fuller Fraternity with the North. SENATE, WaAsHINGTON, April 27, 1874 New YORK + inordina‘e, what does it prove save that even the greatest intellects are not free from imperfection, | Tn the opinion of Charies Sumner, in that most touching and beautitul address delivered by bim on the occasion oi the deata of Senator Davis, of | Kentucky, while paying the bighest tribute to the | virtues of the deceased, and izing the mod- eration of judgment upon the character of our adversaries that is m vy time and experi- ence, he yet stood by his own well settled con. in the customs: Mr. Sumner always relieved him from inconsistency. While he was not aiways satistied to secure what he had Dreviously demanded, he was always advancing in the game direction, and not in an opposite one, No man's actions could be more couswtent with the objects he always kept in view. MA, SUMNER WAS AGGRESSIVE. He could brook uo opposition. He was always for a clean victory or aclean deleat. He would not yield even on minor points, und would often fight tor a phrase when he endangered principle. be would sometimes turn his his best’ friends when they did not keep and trusted to the Juture. His spirit was of the morinh and “his iace was radian: with the su rise he intently watched.” His personal integ: Was so absolute that a breath of suspicion e' never suilied it. He never had any tracks 10 cover Up or opinions ana motives toconceal. No doubt he died @ martyr tothe cause of liberty as truly as they who fell on the field of battle. Speecues were aiso made by Messrs. Lamar, of Mississippt (aden! of Indiana; Rainey, of South The Notion of Isolated Su- premacv at an End. The English Foreign Office has just presented to Parliament despatcnes from Mr. Wade, the English Minister at Pekin, giving an interesting account of the audience granted to the, Ministers of the West- £ (@) N G R E s taste mained sil tuat fein wan, we couremplate & | Yaniage he Sgn tig py fe tiget | prt in aotonten tanatie, tried Pi capacity ne enrered the ae oo us @ | character whose amiability, high -breeding aud po- Capacity for airing knew trom ree and ‘op any. tee “outside of healthy “ place rf. “ Fs liten rf 3 t and | ic usetul ine emerxency. = be was 8 ” t A8 soon as the address was delivered we laid Lee | 3 rey og coumand our la gegen shes fixed convies ‘and with 9 bo rte ef. ween He ee letters of creaence upon the table. The Emper f Mr. Sumber w: wie, sad this 1 suppose i | geceps. ‘The concen dasa ee oe | ee io cae conselnntion, to Da: tae bandon toe Bade a alight bow ol acknowledgement, and the [ the popular opmion, “ie imay be true that, tried by, laverys. This a in his eat Jungs'as | Committee on Foreign Relations, to see men of tie The F Of the throne; ile Majesty: appeared 10. peak Ewlgies on the Late Charles Sumner the Standard of modern manners, Ne wasegotisth, | strand a: whin aterwards It became mixed wih er, | proscribed color admitied toseaisin both branches @ First Audience of the Foreign | tim-i' tay appeared’ cesanse no sound reacned with ack nb teen Py pany Serco inuiliane | netpand by ouch aay fanddeninci. | SoG aneouion of the per a an steed amet Ministers at Pekin. ra we hud. been told, however, that the in Senate and House. compared, for exampie, with Demosthenes OF juyecuves axuiist the system as parwonal cPutsuits de, | pate, with the respect and the confidence of the vials Frinoe would interpret. Pimeotias aia tech a8 Cicerone was a modest man. {apprenend that | Manding resentinent, Mr. Sumner did fot so regard | ation belore whot he had pleaded that “nothing his Highness rose, he descended. the steps and 1m bad hed egoism, rather than ism, of — his =. ‘ai area Cy bares 2 Cas slave, not ham | ~ _ bes -_ Bie us that bis Majesty declared that the let Sra MeL Ee ACCS ey io a long etruguie | Re could secure the one he freely gave amnesty | how right,” ME A CHAPTER IN _ HISTORY. | {2%,2%ctedence tad deen received. ‘Then return THE SENTIMENT OF THE SOUTH. | tani e tor okuule t th Pann 3 the other. Washingion did not parsue his object to obialn | gnq tru 3 + | ing to tis place be again fell upon his knees, and vi je Opposition or adverse circum- | iiperty and independence tor his country with more | # ruly an the Emperor having again spoken to him in 4 low stances without some confidence tm his Own pow- | unwavering faith and effort than iner did tor | his country, her unity, her interests, her tone, he again descended the steps, and coming q| ers, and if this confidence, led by 81 became = liberty and eguai rights for the slave. quality in | grandeur aud her destiny. He was an idealist, to us Iniormed us that bis M: oe talon rey gio 4 Tespective ruiers were in good healih, and ex- pressed @ hope that joreigh Alfairs might all be satisfactorily urrauzed besween ioreign ministers | and the Tsungli Yamen. ‘This closed the audience, Wace may have lasted @ little more than Ave We then all withdrew ip the usual fashion, reculons, and bowing, with the exception of Pd de Geoiroy, Minister of France, who had a reply to deliver from ais government to the letter 01 ex- | Warfare upon be | vicuons. Following that example, I speak over is | exactly abreast with him. ‘This teature of his character | Carolina; Dawes, of Massachusetts; Potter, of it ni ter ‘This being the day fixed jor the eulogies upon | grave my belie! that wan preatin intellect, pro- | lay a the founda ion of many his con- | New York; Kelley, of Peunsyivania; Nesmith, of | ero Powers last year. It was aa event which Ghunghow. that with wale Mae Geutia yee ¥ the late Senator Sumner the galleries of the Sen- found in learning, Sincere 1m bis convictions, true | Movetsies | with | his, amociaics | and was ihe Oregon; G. F. Hour, of Massachusetts; Couger, Of | marks a new era in Chinese diplomacy. charged may be considered to close all discussion a crowded | in his triendships, Wroane and amiabie in bis inter- | Piers arminds’ Sharsalen. great multi | Michigan, and Phillips, of Kansas. up. reguruing the ‘Lientsin massacre. ate Chamber were densely crowded long before | Coume und wholly Unassallabie by corruption, An | Ducity of minds that must conirivute to a common pur, SUMNKR'S MORAL QUALITIES. WADA TO BARL GRANVILLE— (RECEIVED SEr- | "FTA Geen conceded, not Without debate, thas i lebate, there a “ BER 3 the hour of meeting upon the floor, The bustof | tuis ican truly say, and more than this he would _ huuor things to accomplish great things Mr. oumner | The most notable speech was that of Mr. Laman, THMDEE 1) ox, July 7, 1873, | M; de Geolroy was, lor tals second auutence, to be ‘the late Senator; recently finished by Preston not, 1 living, Wish me tosay. He would not ask me ‘Was industrious to a remarkable degree. His seat was (em) of Miss., who 8poce 48 foliows:— P As my telegram of the 29th of June will have in- allowed the use 0; his own interpreter, M. Deveria, " to surrender well matured opinivns or to a| rarely vacant, He was prompt and faithful in his at- | Mr. SPBAKER—! rise to second the resolutions 4 theretor that Powers, ;was placed ina conspicuous position and Pi,.14""his views or his course wien they were Op. | eueance i committes "of | which he | was a | presented by the meuber 1rom' Massachusetts, I | formed Your Loruship, the Kuiperor of China on ix Sduced. Whe second audienon was, aear ae appropriately draped in mourning. Vice Presi- Member. Genius can accomplish, nothing with; lieve that they express a sentiment which per- y wave audience to myself and my col- | quickiy us the first, und M. de Geofroy presently deat Wilson was present, but did not occupy the chair. ‘The Ubaplatn, im his opening prayer, said:—‘On this day oi solemm conference we come to bow be- | posed to the deliberate Judgiuent of my Own mind, | Mr. SreNCgR, (rep.) of Ala., spoke of the many good traits in t personal character of Mr. | Sumner, bis ability aa @ statesman ana bis efforts | against the evils Of human slavery. | REMARKS OF SENATOR MORRILL. Mr. MORRILL, (rep.) of Vt., also paid a high | out industry. Kuucation cannot be acquired without it, Success in public ife more ftrequently* depends upon industry than upon natural ability. We can have no eight hour law or ten hour law here. Mr, Sumner even in social lite either sought The eloquent speeches ne the less valnabie the midnizht | was always busy, and for or conveyed information. that will preserve hisname are nol because they have been distilled b; vadea the nearts of all the people whose repre- sentatives are here assembled. Strange, as io looking back upon the past the assertion may seem, impossibie as it would have been ten years ago to make it, 1 is not the less true that to-day Missis#ipp! regrets the aeath of leagues, the representatives of Russi States, France und Holiand, oo eae It will have been seen from my telegram that the final settlement of tue question was not arrived at without discussions, ‘The negotiations vi the lust four mouths have been condugted by the represen- tatives of fuur or five Powers acting tovetler. overtook us at tie Shyhsing-Kung, wheuce, aiter a short session, we were couducieu to our chairs by the Ministers o! the Yamen, the Grand Secretary joiming the rest at the gate. ‘There was a strong disposition to establish a rule by which uo audience should be granted except to | fore thee, oh, God! im deep humility; for the mem- | trinute to the ch lo rf a b aracver of the deceased Massa- | Mr. sumner honest in the broadest | Charles Sumuer, and sincerely unites in paying |“), uorum vf five Ministers, ‘The Japanese AMbas- ory of the distinguisned dead of this Senate comes | chusetts statesman, briefy tracing bis pubiic bis- | ing of ‘that "good “old” Roman” word He" was | honors to lis memory. Not because of the splen- | g4/ 4 outbiod appeared in the manure cae | sador Was, nevertheless, granted’ his sudiouee freshly before us’? He then besought Divine Prov- | to.y. In conciuding he said:— PR gatets. ie aenty ar Kerk Tayciitee coe | atic Onc ye eer iret ioe ea wae oxtiO: | of the Pekin Gazeue of the 14th of June, and was | #0UE, aud the second audience accorded to M de Public men during life very often receive the poorest | see! improper means to influence his gui Geolroy wil always be referred to u8 @ precedent idence that the vacant piace and solemn pause in the Senate chamber to-day might impress their leasoas on every heart. THE RFSOLUTIONS. Immediately after the reading of the journal Mr. BovrwELt, (rep.) of Mass., suid, m accordance with | Kind ot thanks tor their nobles: efforix. The world at | large 1s nov always swift to comprehend associates look | | on with indifference; and enemies are made glad | by overy new field exposed to waauil, But when the loses the scene, praise o! the dead harms no rival, | and the final verdict of history prociaiis only truth, Kencrously, perhaps, but tree from detraction ‘and ail | Wncharitableness: and then pubhe men who have de- served woll of their country obtain that full measure of by conduct, might be misled by prejudices, or party bias, or local miterests, but never by personal interest or hope of ik He Was not a politician in the sense of the word as it is now used—a man of artifice or contrivance He was remarkably Iree irom all artifice. He did not even use fice ot silence, But he was a politician true and nauiral sense. tie was pro- ot government. it common error that he confined his attention to the iilustrated the councils of the government for neariy & quarter of a century. Not because of the high culture, the elegant scholarship and the varied learning, which revealed themselves so clearly in all bis pudlic efforts as to justify the application to him of Johnson’s felicitious expression, “He touched nothing which he did not adorn.” Not tus, though these are qualities by no means, communicated to the Lezstions on the 16th, in a despacca irom the Prince of Kung, of whicu | en- close trunslution, Foreign Minisiers, the repre- sentative vt Holland included, were at tho ‘same time invited by tue ministers of the Yamén to meet them there upon the .6tn, ‘the chiel ubjections to the decree were two— First, that foreign aiunistera were deciared in it to have “numpiy begged” or “implored” an audi- for the admission of any single Minister who is charged with @ written message irom his goverm- ment, Considertng tne antecedents of the discussion, I regard M. de Geolroy’s separate audience as the most important result of tae whole, aiways With & single exception. That exception is the coucessiom 0: the audience af all to a number 0: foreigners ue- the notice previously given, he now submitted to | recognition and reverence which at last conters meri! ery question. Far fom it. No one in tis senaie | 1t 18 to be feared, so common in pubilc clining not only to pertorm the koto! a s a : — OV ww, but even to the Senate the following resolutions and asked | TBM the roll of the wortiiesto! mankind. | | was so familiar ag he with ail the laws and usages laces as to make their disappearance | Ce; Secoud, that the Words “Kuo shu” —Zov- | bend the knee, We aust remember the long-staad- et |. Seemeeeny Sas, HOWSYEr, SIWATS SSese Ste govern our mtercourse with foreign nations. in even a_ single instance a matter of | erum Sg itera ha ie ing pretension of the Kmperor of China to this act their consideration : by contrast with’ the pas. vecaise mone but the xrest Was deeply interested n_ questions affecting | jnaiference, but because of those peculiar and | &2Ce the Cuuuese describe letters of credence, or | o/homage and the tradition of isolat Resolved by the Senate, That as an additional mark of | A)yCRE ihe unnumbered hosts trncd 0 derave been We ,imernal | development of, the country, and strongly murked moral traits of his cauracter, | letter irom the chic! of a otate—were placed in the | acy on whion that pretension Nas been based the Fespect to the memory of Charles Sun m- | Droserved, while allor tue present ave are vidbieand so Cia “YiogAone® and’ contbibuusn te tnakt sonntt | which gave tue coloring to the whole tenor of ts | txt Without auy ot the honor due to tue dignity | euipire nas, for tue Hirst t eaione wroken, tor of Massachusedts, business be now eee ee eer eee care oon iat: | Sinks, aaeations and contibured | to. their solution | Cah oe i ol a foreign goverament. It migut be added tuat | CHipIFe has, lor the ite. time in its hisiory broken the friends and ae the deceased may * | that has not ion: ceased to sine whose a Be eects Recta entin ose | singularly Aree ee Even hea vel making hice, fe the words KnVoys or Ministers were reierred to | Pod He Sane ‘rokba wiamde rie See ting tribute to his pablic and private virtues, tbo remaim unreveaied. Our deceased associate, | States should no louger be measured by a depreciation | moa “the object of as deep ahd passionate & host. | With as litle lormality as they would have been | finie': would anxiously aeareshia Rene tera ‘Kesolved, That we Seeretary of the senate be in- structed to present these resolutions to the House of unshe'tered by wealth, by tinuy or by part of ‘en to ourteen per cent, ity as to another, he was one 01 euthusiastic admi- had the persons reierred to represented States de- estimate of its results, immediate or remote, [ am lw ‘Xposed first and last to much adverse critic: Such is the esti re con- if : ective: i. Bepreseniattves. | From whieh. urspite of “tauch eal admiration. mar: | ceived Gt ME Sumner, He acess apomNount Lancer, | Tation, and waich are not the less the case that | Peudent on China; but irespeoiively of the argu | gs yetie disposed to wudervalue the #iguiicahes of ‘The resolutions were agreed to. | tality will not now whoily release him. | His Persistency | and uo word of oursecan give him care or grict. He | NOW unites all these parties, so wideiy differ- | © fT 4 tlie’ ine ernploved.. tii the change that has been etfected. We are not iam: ROUT WALI Deanne: in pushing his own measures w the trout, though to | qwaits the mysterics of the future, and not long hence | ing, in a common sorrow to-day over his | Certain aiverence ip “4 mpioyed, there | iree to furget the conuitions under whick but ® | their present hurt or to the hurt of otuers,’ oiten pro- we must in our turn join hin. How change | jifeleas remains. It is of these.high moral qualities | Would have been naturally au indisposivion on the | century ago the representatives ol iriendly States We Deere | Yoked rebuke, Mis enanuics he easily jorgave, ‘but this scene since a lew years past entered it! More than | that | wish to speak; for these Wave been the traits | Pat of lorelgn Ministers to insist vo much OD | were admitted into the presence of the Sultan w& ye sme that has passed singe the death of Mr. Sumner | affronts 'Fecelved in any" wordy ‘encounters fron | who were then members of thé Sonata: ly ghree remain | whicn have, in alter years, as | have considered edo rere sre ears a grieeareaen \helr./ Gonstautinople, aud the extract wuich 1 enciose has assuayed the bittersess our of griel. Dut ihe Drst eel | his veers tls self-coutidence, ‘admirable enough | Rerwas the iast or the funeral train. Who next? May | the sticcessive acts and utterances of this remark. | Pe y ie | wiil remina as'ol Waat but three years since was ings of sadness rests with undiminished weight upon every | wiien he Was right, Was No le-¥ uninistakable and xiiter- | We be so guided here that when our time comes vuras.o. | uble wan, fastened most strongly my attention | Plates. ; | ie posiuon of w foreign Minister beiore tie Alle heart. Here and by us, wore than elsewhere and by | ing when he happened to be wrong. To his conclus.ons, | and impréssed themselves most ‘orcibly upon my | _ Kemarks on the other two points could not be | xudo oi Japan. In a cuuntrv ike tlds, theretore, others, his presence will’ be missed. For nearly twenty- three years he was a member of the -enate, and fora considerable period its senior. To allot us he was an acquaintance and to many oi us an intimate friend. To the sincerely reached, he gave rexal pretensions, and ior them accepted nothing less than ancondiuion’! submis- sion. | neonselous of per-onal offence, he iinperiously anu with the stride of a Cowssus, trampled down what- clates may be abie truly to say of us something ot the good that is this day said of Charies Sumner. Mr. WADLEIGH, (rep.) of N. H., said:—Representing in part upon this floor a State contiguous to Mas- imagination, my sensibilities, and my heart. Let me speak of the characteristics which | brought the illustrious Senator who has just avo.ded; and, although at the conierence of the 16tn, the eluquette to be observed did at lust come to be constuered, the discussion which occupied | where iorms of longer standing lar tuau im tae | sister stronghoids of immutability, so largely, usurp the piace of substance, it 18 not to be ai cultivated classes of Europe and Am: he was Known ever argumenis stood im ois way, not knowing suacnusetts, and a@ people closely allied to hers by | passed away into direct and bitter antagonism for the eariier pars o! the interview had rendered pro- ‘, lar, ph F0} , . Q * pro- | puted that im its present departure irom prece- : as a ripe scholar, a sincere philunchropist. an arent | who Was “brulwd,’ and yet was " sometimes many tles, I cannot reirain from orledy expressing | years with mysown State and her sisier states o | gres# so lar diflonlt that it was not until tae 25th | Font’ en important beginniug has heen Prada col ty crender ofthe right; so sensilive that if hix own arguments were | ypon this occasion the profound sorrow that bowed | the South. Inst, that the memorandum oi etiquette to be | ynere may be—ihere 1s—very Much in our late re- an experienced statesman, trained especially in english and American consututioual history, and the traditions, genius and practice of European and American dipio- mucy ; @ lover of art; an orator fully equipped, accoraing to the requirements ‘mentioned by Cicero, tor the torum in which bis maturer years were spen' touched by the gentlest zephyrs of personal retort he ieit they were visited too roughly. Yet, hese occasional sel’ assertions by no means held general sway, and never at bis own house and table, where the cordial gree.ing and genial sunile, with conversation embroid- their hearts when they heard that Charles Sum- ner Was no more. In common with the people of the whole country they recognized his eminent public services, ana even when disagreeing witn HIS MAGNANIMITY. But here let me do this great man the justice which, amid the excitements of tue struggle ve- tween the sections, now past, I may have been observed at the audience was agreed to by foreign Ministers. Tandum earlier communicated non-officially, which had been considered in a very lengthy con- ference neid at the Russian Legation on tne 23d. The ‘This was @ revised edition of @ memo- | | ception that falls snort of ‘the stanuard ol our requirements, as authorized vy the usages Of the Western World; but we appeared face to :ace wit | the Emperor, siauding, Lecuuse we represented ; and, more than — ered with boul lom and mith, exbibited the tullund {jm never lost their faith im his honest; ¢ ‘ v of purpose | disposed to deny him. In his flery zeal and his its the equal Of his own, and in the re- ail aman or pure purpose im private hd public ataire | varied attractions, or the hei’ and ‘heart. tibal- | gnq unualtering devotion to the cause Yo which his | earnest. warlare against the wrong, as he ‘viewed | PAPC Ih its prosent supe was lormally enclosed | Eogniion of this equality Chua has commenced ‘and for more than alt that period hisintimate triendship, | pern’’deauetion” ‘the deceased never ‘omitea— | We Was given. But New Hampshire has other | it, there entered no enduring personal animosity - rg ee apr ies be ie ar ng | her revreat from the maintenance of that claim to at Views iF be greater and better tuan her neigubors, which Forgetttag tor the moment my relations to him, it is to be said that his iriendships were first moral and intelleciual, to which he added with @ liberal band the civilities, amenities and viessings of cultivated social life. He came ‘to the Senate, not only as the representative of the Com- monwealth of Massachusetts, but as t! of an idea to which the State was even then already pledged. The men who supported him in 1851 were, ‘with lew exceptions, his supporters in 1497, 1863 and 1359. Mr. Sumner was at times in advance of the people, the State; but in his hostility vo the institution of slavery, in his efforts for its abolition and the reconstruction of the government upon the basis of ireedom. he never mis- | Fepresented Massachusetts. In the cause of liberty he the brightness o: his tame will not sorve wo perpetuate | the memory of any staiu upon the purity of his private | or public character, and there will still rema.n the im- perisnable records of a memorabie cureer—something | that the highest ainvition aims to grasp and that heroe die to obtain, or much of the real elements oi greatnes: | and ail the glory of @ historic name. “I live in hove o' & better worid, a world with a Little less fiction” are | words I have seen attributed to the departed Senator. Has be not, with no duty negleciea, reached that “bet- ter world 1? who ot us does not sometimes pray for | “a world with a little less fiction ?” | Mr. Pratt, (rep.) of Ind., said as a legislator and reasons peculiar to herself tor cherishing his memory. Seven years beiore he came here to vc- cupy the seat of Daniel Webster Jonn P. Hale appealed irom the decision of his party to the | voters of New Hampshire upon the question of slavery extension. Almost singie handed and alone against a party unequalled in discipline and ignorant of deieat, among a people Dearly as steadiast and uucnanying as their granite hilis, ne won one of the greatest victories ever recorded in our political ann: kindlio his eloquence the love o: liberty an towards the men whose lot it was to be born to the system which he denounced. It has been the kindness of the sympathy which in these later years he bas displayed toward the im- poverished and suffering people of the Soutnern States that bave unveiled to me the generous and tender heart which beat beneath the bosom of the zealot and nas torced me to yield him the tribute ol my respect—I might even say of my admura- tion. Nor in the manifestation of this | there been anything which a proud and sensitive the protocol of the 15th oi May, but we had de- clined. 1 append translation of this memorandum, Upon the aiteruoou of the same day, the 20th, we met the Prince of Kung by invitation at the Yawén to communicate translations 0! our let. ters 01 credence, and ail conditions vo be observed having been careiully reconsidered, upon the 27th His Highness wrote oficially to inform us tout tne Emperor had verbally given orders for our recep- tion on the 29th. 1 shail mention here that the Japanese Ambassa- has proved more tian any otier # cause of hin- drance to her improvement at home, and, as @ consequence, @ standing danger to the security of her relations abroad. HORSE NOT:S. , The following are the latest quotations im the betting books ai the American Jockey Club rooms, people, smarting under asense oO! recent discom- ture and present suffering, might not irankiy | 20r, Soyésima Pandomi, was aiso invited to the by | Statesman Air. Sumner deserved to be held up as | hatred of oppression that Me at the core of hu- The Chinese Ministers leit it | several changes having taken place since our last ‘was apostie or martyr and finally conqueror. In thi cause and by nature as weil he was selt-reliant, self- | an example to others. No one ever ventured to. manity. He was borne into the senate upon a | ve them just cause Yambu on the 26th. eres, ee, A re fae ere ee ee } Saget Bie pores oi his public or private life. ‘tnat popular torrent, which burst through the feeat ot | aitoes: ‘ts A though ff taieee 4 to us to AX our-own precedence, and, by common | report a ‘and he made little allowance for the diversities | 2¢, did not love money nor seek to accumulate party ike lava from the burning heart of a moun- | voice as soon as he Delleved the momentous issues | Consent, the hignest place was assigued to th WITHERS STAKES. perious, Among men, and olten he dealt hacshty with those who | Tc hes was known irom the modest estate he ieit. | tain’ Here for four years he stood, the isolated | of this great military conflict were decided in be- Ambassador oi Japan, 1 might add that Soyésima Tai ‘opposed or iuiled to accept his views. It 1s, howeve In conclusion he sent to the Clerk's desk and had | and” ostracised representative of a principle | half of amnesty to the vanquished, and thongh | had had difficulties of his own to surmount, His | Astral... Battle Axe........ 7402 happy memory for Be lence, 306 countrymen th: Tead tue preaimbie and resolutions adopted by the stronger than all parties, and destined to triumph | he stood iorward ready to welcome back | CoMierences with the Chinese Ministers had been 4 Grinstead. * 4tol Thunderboit coit.. 8 tod ci, eran tbtces wits whom he kad umaeaiieconce |e eee aaa ne | over them ali. In 1851 Massachusetts, asif to pay | as brothers and to re-establish in their rights | Separate, but Irom his irequent intercourse with Maccaroon.. 4to1 Dubin... tol upon personal and puoiic questions First of all Mr. | yn SE On Dal | the deot she owed for the men who marched from | as citizens those whose valor had so neariy | Us We had peeu Kept fully imlormed Of What Was | Beatrice. 4to1 Weathercock 9tot Sumner was devoted to liberty; not to English tiberty of | MT, SARGENT, (rep.) 01 Cal., sald it was bia the Granite State to die at Bunker Hill, placed | riven asunder the Union he loved, ho always in- | Passing. 1 feel bound to say that | think the gov- 4tol Keiorm:..... 10 tol fo American liberty, bat to jiperty. | He accepte In area at gan Ge tenet be Supene ner Charies Sumner at the side of Jona P. Hale. X was | sisted that the most ample protection and renient Raed per gathvat Blerney 1 TAPDURnOnE ... 8to1l Harry Feite: wi their fa! eal he words of Kossuth, “Liberty is |. DB rhyme the reiuiorcement of a foriorn hope and revived the | largest safeguards should be aro ue part played od E liberty, as God is God.” In his efforts to brother Senators, at the giave of tue late Charles drooping spirits of the 0} farsi cae slavery. ot 4 | edit pid pention of the newiveniteae this negouation. ‘Ihe knowledge which, a8 4 Jap- BELMONT SIAKES. ie jis leone nceenaneiies an One eet euler | Sumner widie nis earthly remains were being de- | followed is known to all and wilt never be forgot- | chised African race. Though he knew very | #nege, he necessarily possesses of Chinese litera- taken, Wine parpeec eg STE HEIN ant nice eal aos | posited in the soul OF his uauve State, to rest walle | teu, Linked to the emancipation of 4,000,000 of | well that of is ‘conquered fellow citizeug | ture dnd of the usuges of China, deverred him rom | hora me Eee Mere within its jurisdiction, aud the powers of a consti Mareen gun nent wrth eager aged of bes slaves, the memory o: such men as | of the South by far the larger portion, | Undue exigence ou any point of iorm, but he | fotherorr sme , tagon may weil be consiriied liberally m the cause of | heroes. ands atesmen habap es sane preceded imperishable as the stars, and alter this | even tnose who most heartily acquiesced in and | showed, at the same time, much firmness and dig- Sit. ie igtee . right gan, jussice, but they ea eee be too much | him. se i¢ among the tom! ere many Who marvie pile shall have crumbled into dust and | desired the abolition of slavery, seriously ques- | ity im tne assertion of his rignts. | sien ow ‘ bees fn eg gl Wao ere frag aba ARS «op a that" lead | every existing poiltical organization shall have | tioned the expediency of investing 10 a single day, | , Lt was agreed that Soyésima wus to have his au- | Stee! Byls foes Fea ied : form’ of, human areatness. Mr. summer ‘was a iol- | Ore {0, “He, grave BOrKeay e eagne co outers been destroyed by all-devouring Time, Sumner’s | and without any preliminary tutelage, 80 Vast & lens nts. jedi uli osseariae his rank eornal ee enuington ywer of ideas. A general declaration is the fullest | °, incorruptibie honesty and steadfast devotion to body of inexperienced and uninstructed men with Y 9 Baev eee’ expression of ideas, aud Mr. Sumner was inclined to | tM masters of philosophy and poetry. who the cause oi human freedom will be gratefully re- | the iuil rights of citizenship and suffrage, ne would | the Mikado with which he was charged was not a TRAVERS STAKES. ; frustyeneral declarations and ‘oembody them inthe | express cuir nignest t.ougut anu give intellectual Tempered, ior these make One Ol Pi | folerate Ho. halt-way Measures upow s port to | letter of credence, but of congratulation only. The Taken Taken. Raat ee eee eee eatin gould stich. al assembly have been | Faime’s eternal bead roll wortay to be dliled. him so vital. Indeed, immediately aiter the war, | five representatives holding le'ters of creaence— tol Ser Phi pestsrachor ot want kay been “than ot ca | cxthured: Bomething bealiss station pvoked.coee | SENATOR ANTHONY'S REMARKS. while other minds ‘were occupying themselves | Viz. the Mimuisters of Russia, America aud France, tol Ropes of the Tumare. Uur own coustitution isnow anear | gatuered, Something besides station evoked that | vr, axriony, (rep.) of RL, briefly addressed | witu different theories of reconstruction, he did | Wilt myrel{ and Mr, Kerguson, diplomatic agent of 2102 ai nto the Declaration of Independence, and we | Homage Ol select souls. Mr. Sargent hamed awong | tne senate on the deain of Mr. Sumner. He gave | not hesitate to impress most emphatically on the | the Netherlands—were to be received together. tol La cetrner | those who stood around the grave, Ruiph Wal ga y : May anticipate the time when local governments and | those whi grave, Raiph Waldo an account of their relationship previous to his | @dmumistration, not only i public, but im the | The order of proceeding was 08:1CHO mT, WESTCHESTER CUP. pendent nations, in the discharge of their duties | Emerson, Henry W. Longiellow, Oliver Wenuell | (air, A 8) adi rr b % ce of tere his ‘The place appointea by the KmpeFor ‘Was tne = et — con: | Holmes ‘and John’ G. Warttiér, and quoted | {ruc.eq his beliet that Mr, Sumuer recoguized no | ising resolution to oppose to the last suy and | Tz’U-Kuane-Ko, o1 purple pavilion, u large storied ree RS form (practically “to the best iccas of justice and | appropriate lines from these ‘autnors. He Particuar coustitueucy, but he regarded the | everyrscheme which should ial to provide the | building in the grounds West 9. the paiace. ‘Tne | ftanford + @001 lassie Tuons 7 it .. Mr. Summer was impatient of ‘delay, and | sgid it. had been assumed that Mr. | 2 r ye ea x ent Sn rand eet li—tuat 1g, the place designated by for. , Tubman. 6to1l Merodac + 8toL he accepted reluctantly those umendmentsto the Sumner was an austere mun, absorbed in | whole Republic ag his constituents. In conelusiva | surest guarantees for the personal freedom and | palace lise ry h pias | y for- constitution which to others seemed sufficient tor the a4 1 in | he said:— . | political rig®ts of the race which he had | eigners tue “iorvidden city’—lies, a8 any plan KENTUCKY STAKES. Protection of personal and public rights. It 1s therctore to be admitted that in the business of government and for the time in wich he lived Mr. oumuer was not al- ways ® practical staiesman. The world is usually too Busy to concern iteeif with the meu of the past, uuiess ¢ immor- they haye special claims to consideration. f aah farts ‘whose Tanne t th tal iew in politics and government are those who have Sargent spoke of the courage, manliness een familiar me, on s many of them | magnanimity, therefore, which breathes in his | i# divided intvu streets, and, with the exception o: | aystratind 10101 Sangara.. Hedin proceedings in which men o/ ail times are inter. | and high seblevements, of ME. Summer. aud Te Gesks and are wow carved onthe marble that coversthers | utterances and manifests itself in all his acts | the grounds of which I am about to speak, 18 gen- | New York. “lotol Geneva Colt. icen Kevoiution gave a few such names to the country and the world. fhe contest for ee not merely heresies, but blapbemtes; the ark he © sublunary :hings, I come to perceive that their instability id rT JUVENILE STAKES. added othe: ture lace “# ‘Was dispiayed, ‘with it towurd che southern end of a large piece of Terie Geerner, wheme labors, Aaeity’ aud pl red | shook with unsparing haud-was to them most con- | 1s not in their essence, but in the forms which they as Dey CRATITUDE OF THE SOUTH. Water, on the west bank of which is situated the | |. ESSE Sau never be oinltted trom the history of the contest. | #ecrate. when I recall those whom 1 have secn fall around | , It was certainly a gracious act toward the Sonth, | purple pavilion. ustralind,....... 701 Examiner. As tts influence widens and deepens in the current ot | universai hunan life the services of the men engaged in it will be nore appreciated throughout the world. The blow struck at slavery in America will fectual egains, slavery in any o.ner country. 'v @: his seli-consciousness, and in bis daily labors in- | | different to emotions; but the lite-long friendship | } toat knit him to men like these shvwed the real Warmth of nis nature, his attractive and receptive Jecred to tum standing alone in the Senate twent years ago, uttering what bis ussociates deeme Alter speaking of his effonta to put down human slavery he said it would be assu sing tov much to Say tuat Mr. Sumner was tue sole cause of the revolution that Was wrought. Mighty as was bis influence, there were other abie javorers in the consolation. Mr. Prustpznt—When I Jook back over this long period, crowded with great events, and which has witnessed thé convulsion of struction of our political -ysiem; wi eye. U people this chamber with those whose torms have ¢ nation, the reorganization and recon- m, in my mint dust, I am filled with a sadness inexpressible yet tull of For, musing on the transitory nature of all me, and whom I thought necessary wo the succ alutost to the preservation ot great principles. recall also those whom I have seen step into the Vacant places, put on the armor which they wore, litt the weapons which they wielded and marcti on to the undertaken to protect, Whether these measures show him to be a practical statesman or a taeo- ret.cal enthusiast is @ question on which any de- cigion We may pronounce to-day must await the inevitable revision of posterity. The spirit of affecting the South was as evidently honest as 1¢ Was grateiul to the feelings of those to whom it though unhappily it jarred upon the sensibilities of the people at the other extreme of tie Union to propose to erase irom the banners of the national army the mementoes of the bloody internal strug. Will snow, about midway between the eust and West outer walls ol Pekin proper. Round tus pre- ciNct, at a distance oi irom a quarter to nail a mie, runs an enceinte known as the Huang Ch’eng, usually rendeied the Imperial city. This erally open to the puviic. The grounds im ques tion lie westward o1 the palace, communicating A little west of the grounds, put well within the Imperial City, stands the Pei-Vang, a Romish catuedral anu missiou house, buiit within the last few years upon grvuna deslowed upon the earuer Mussiouaries in the reign 0! Kang-ni, aud recovered Taken, +10 tol James A. -10to1 Meko... SARATOGA STAKBS, Taken. Matador.. King Bolt... Bernous 10 to1 Tom Ochiltree. Books on the Westchester Cup and the Juvenile Stakes were opened on Saturday night; but, owing to the inclemenucy of the weather, there was a slim attendance at the club rooms, and littie busi- Wits “Bs, 00d, eciirane | was * y, ine 4g consuinination of the Work which they had inaugurated, | @!@, Which might be regarded as assaillog the , Huth of the Declaration of iniependence wire not re | Senate aud the couutry, increasiig in naNvers ae ‘na ius am Giied with Feverent winder atthe bene: PTide OF wounding tue sensibilities or the | by lis presen! occupancs under the Convention Of pegs done. One of the youngsters in the Juvenile fon danek te ike etcnines Saitees of Bo one ae "f Ay ient ordering of nature, and inspired with a lottier | Southern people. That proposal will never | 1860. lt was setiled that at six im the morning stakes, however, Was backed as soon as the price Seas Gauate aaii Waed ween hae inte | bis ips counsel for submission or unworthy jaith in that Almighty Power without whose guidance | be torgotten by that people so iong as the name of | the five representatives uf Western Powers should jig: way made public—$5,000 to $700 against Al pupie. That deteney is now vaken away and one alter | compusnce, Rather Was le sera and agureusive and direction ali humay effort ‘is vain, and with whose | Charles Sumner lives in the memory of man. But, | Mees there. M. Delaplace, the sisnop resident | traund, BRT ee oI will Mr.’ Sumucr Justiy claim consideration in other | $8 Deli ted the TIMES. | nae cn ne ey emsul ts the mighiiest rork that tie designs, “°° S¥¢ | whule it touched tue heart and elicited her pro- | had Leen so good as to give us rooms to dress In. lands and from fature times. There 18 however. an im- mortality uot personal which is even inore enduring. | timidly followed or resisted, ne buidly ied. in the | prime vi Manhood and Oi vis intelectual powers, On motion of Mr. ANTHONY the Senate then, at found gratitude, her people would not have asked | of the North such an act of seif-denunciation. We rendezvoused accordingly at tue Pei-t’ang and were thence escorted by @ minister of the | Australind was backed $1,000 against $10,000 | that sie will win the saratoga Stakes. About $5,000 aside has been wagered on Stra- The power of a great life, otf a superior , hardened in grain aud nerve by the long exercise | g quarter to three P. M., adjourned. Conscious that they themselves ‘mated b} Yamen to the north gate of the palace grounds in \ human intellect, reads far beyond the knowl | of his strength im Senatorial copficts, lis decisive id y themse were animated by x | chino beating Shylock in the Westchester Uap. and is transuitted to gene: voice gave Couiness and energy to ok ‘counsels of PRT devotion to constitutional liberty, and that the | our Chairs; the tavruugofare across the marble | ” kytheriord had $1,800 to $300 laid against his edge of names, tions that have no means of tracing the influeuces to their source. These iniuences become woven into ihe civilizauon, Lterature anu politics of nations, control | ‘their fortunes, shape their destinies, and work ‘out good or evil resulis of the most importan. character. ot be denied that in the evorts made by Mr. Sumner in Debaif of human iberty aud universal peace he has given new force to the most benign iniluence, or that his Power, mingled with numerous other contribu tons of the past, present and the tuwure, wil contribute to the Itcan- | | the American Senate, where only boldness anu en- ergy could cope with the appalumg difficulties | tuat assailed the country. To Mr. Sumner iargely, as to men of bis bold and sagacious spirit whoily, the nation Owes it thacit 1s how not only untied, but iree, irom the Canadas to tie Guwif, With Charles sumner no dreau of unpopularity ever operated to deflect him from his c.usen patn of HOUSE OF BEPRESENTATIVES, WASHINGTON, April 2, 1874. BILL8 INTRODUCED. Under the call of States many bil's were intro- duced and referred, including the following:— By Mr. LANSING, (rep.) of N. Y.—To permit par- brightest pages of history are replete with evidenct Of the depta and sincerity oi that devotion, ‘hey ca but cherish the recoliections 01 the battles fougat and the victories won in detence of their hopeless Cuuse, nd respecting, a8 ali true and brave men must respect, tne martial spirit with which the men of the North vindicated the integrity of tne Union and their devotion tu the principles of hu- man freedom, they do not ask, they do bridge, which spans the piece ol water avove men- tioned, being closed to tie public eastward by de- | sireotthe Emperor. We had come to the Pei- tang through tue west of the outer city, large numbers lg 4 being already on the alert tu see the joreigners who were to be presented to the Emperor without prostrating themselves, A dense crowd was asseubled in the Vicinity of the Pei-t’ang jor the same purpose, | winning the Travers Stakes. | The san Francisco Chronicle of the 20th inst. no- tices the arrivaiin that city of three thorough- bred stullions, “which arrived from the East om Saturday. They were purchased by William Big- ham, of Bridge Creek, Wasco county, Oregon, to which place they will be shipped on Saturday next. One of them is @ chestnut stallion calied George Wukes, by Asteroid, out of Emma Wright, by imp. meral weliare oi the human race. But whether hisname | duty. He might err—he did sometimes err—in | ¢, testil their own detence in U te: t wish, the North to strike the m At the Fu-Hua-Men, the gate by which the palate « remembered or forgo:wn. his power will continue, | choosing that path, put he pursued it sturaily, | tes to testily in theirowndetence in United States | not wish, the No 0 strike the memen- y Ue Margrave. Another is a bay stailion called Lu- When s person has disappeared from the stage of humaa | chtwont‘seuish feur of conneden on. it is ment | Courts, | toes of ' herolsm and victory from eituer | grounds are here entered irom the nortu, we leit ther, by Lexington, dam Belle Lewis, by Amp. records or monuments or battlefields. ‘ihey our Chairs and Were received by the urand Secre- A very fine sorrel stallion, seven years action, his hame, even 4. known to future generauiol ; - r | enene Hor ttitie consequence to them. The iniiaence otis tie | that to Se IE AOry OL SRCS Beans Scholar, states- | By Mr. POLAND, (rep.) of Vt.—To provide @ free | wouid rather that both sections should gather | tary and ali o:ner mimisters of the the Yamen, the Gin, completes the list; he 18 also by Lexington, 4s all of value that remains. Thus has Sumner | Man and patriot, high uonors ve paid. He Was system of national banking and tor the resump- | up tho glories won by each section, not envious, | Prince and the ministers Pao aud Shen excepted. Gaim Veroua, by imp. Yorkshire, Mr, Bighamowns ioaee, Sissel te tas conbiymen of two. Faces, and to | himself generous of eulony 6) departed wortn. I | but proud of each other, aud regard them as a | We had been told that they would be in atten iy ee vator ane tine we civilized orld, by (cords that may be traced | haye sougut to add but a leaf vo tae garland that | ton of specie payments. Common heritage of American ‘valor. Let’ us | all the morning on his Majesty I pln pu bap AE rough the ages ustice can find defenders or | det } . . 4 : the divine spirit of liberty shall animate mankind. decorates bis Se neasiisile abiiaaas By Mr. LaWRENCE, (rep.) of Ohio—To factlitate | hope that (uture generations, when they We proceeded, according to the programme, to this coast rrenerally.!! » Buf these thoughts relate to the uncertain tuiure. We the resumption of specie payments ana to prevent | remember the deeds of neroism und devo- | the Shinying-Kung, or palace 01 seasunabieness, a In consequence of the bad weather and the are called in the present to accept the solemn truth that the death of Charles ~umoer is a signal loss to the sen- Mr. SHERMAN (rep.), Of Unuo, said Mr. President, when the senate ‘met on the 11th day of | March last we were into: fluctuations tn the value of United States notes, tion done on both sides, wii! speak, not of Northern prowess or Southern courage, temple in which, 48 circumstances require, the Emperor prays tor rain or jor cessation of rain, brevks in the ae the spring meeting of the Chickasaw Course at Memphis, Yenn., has beem ate and the people of the Unied states, alleviated in d that Uharies Sumuer Was | By Mr, CROSSLAND, (dem.) of Ky.—Repealing all y y - I dying. intelligence came with such sudd id i bat of the heroism, fortitude and courage Confectionery, tea and Chinese wine irom the jvm. ry i some degrer by the velier that Ils jive, charactr and Gxcited sucu surrow aud sympathy tha: ny oue ol us | 1aWs imposing @ tax on State banks. Of Americans in a war of ideds—a war in which | peror’s bultery were offered us, and, ater waiting PartbQure Nott aneay, AY fe pacing stn versal peace, Will ever be held in grutetul remem- | Was a erg rg. + fh vual Ca duties. Ee | By Mr. Port, (rep.) of Il.—To impose a tax of five each section signalizea its consecration to tue above an hour, we moved on with tne Ministers to | nas been purchased for Germany by the } pad eheeed the Boe Me de a good bealth, principles, as each understood them, of American | 4 large tent pitched westward of the purple pav- | von Ujest. ‘Tue price paid was 60,000 thaiers, wit brance by his country, an@ the Knowledge thereof trans. mitted to posterity as an example ior future generations. by the General per cent on all incomes of individuais ana corpor- liberty and of the constitation received from tucir | thon. | the understanding that Amauie von Edelreich and Assembly of Massachusetts of the omy criticism 4 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE MAN. ever made by that Commonwealth or any act | Tations exceeding $5,000, iathers, ‘The Emperor did not arrive at the pavilion a8 tnign suall be delivered the end of the ee: " Mr. THURMAN, (dem.) of Ohio, said:—Mr. Presi- his. during his long, couunuous “service | By Mr, BRIGHT, (dem.) of Tenn.—Declaring it op- CONFIDENCE BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH. soon a8 we had been led to expect. ihe reason tonto the Olshowsel stad Company, The Countess { dent—My personal acquaintance witn Caarles | of twenty-three years as a member oi this body. We saw i “A J harles Sumner in tite believed that ail occasion | assigned was the receipt of important despaicnes | penard also retains an interest iu Waisenknabe, Sumner began a jew days alter 1 took my seat in | Bo indication of disease, and yet within twentyiour pressive to Impose addttional taxation, and inex- | for strife and distrust between the North and | from the seat of warin the nortnwest, The Prince two.year-old that was a special favorite with the the Senste five years ago. Itsoon ri Into Te- | BOUT he Wi ete een ite wea a ele of the un- | pedient to retrench on necessary appropriations | South had passed away, and there no longer re- | of Kung and the two ministers with bim Were jate Count, lations approaching intimacy, and @ personal | made more impresive by the exalied sor. Ry held i aiready made in the interest of commerce, and | mained any cause for coutinued estrangement be- | already waiting outside the tent to explain the es ‘ friendship resulted that was never marred fora@ | Mr. Sumner. At no previous period ot his hie wer tween these two sections of our common coun: | delay and returned again and again, as it was, CONSOLIDATING OITY AND OOUNTY. moment by Ye oe however great | would ie Fg have caused ‘such general , Providing, as @ measure of temporary relief, for iP. Are there ae Many of us who be- pape ieee nl to eed us bed ea fala eles: aud decided. ‘Therefore it is that I speak to-day, | sorrow. long strite he conducted against slavery the issue of an additional fifty miliions of legal | Weve the same ing ? not that the | Tue grounds were thronged with olliciais; but, ex- On subject of the bill passed by the Legisia- - and speal not sO much of toe palitioins aroused a atest oo age peter: Med bs pees ot tender notes Jf e common sentiment—or if not ougnt it not be—of | cept a few men wearing Cninese subres of antique t forte arise \ re ‘y a pee iA county of ’ or man as tie man. I leave to those | Our country: but thin wae Oo eviedsed ‘the susie at ‘ the great mass of our people, North and south ? | Jorm, I saw nothing like a soidier in our immediate | ture last week, by wich the city who coi cided with him in public affairs to delin- he aed tie purity of | Mr, Hag, (Rep.) of Me., introduced a bill | Bound to eacn other by 8 common constitution, | vicinity. At length, alter we nad waited in tue New York become consotidated, various Alder- eate his public services in sucu terms as to them hus motives and the loity purpose of ‘h had unmistakable evidence uf the continued conudence amending the shipping commissionship so as not destined to live together under » common govern- tent at least an hour and a half, the Japanese Am- | men express themselves anything but pleased. in seem just. loffer an bumble tribute to his per- | and support of his constituents und of the iove and a ~ ment, forming unitedly but a single mem. , bassador was summoned to the presence, and, his Gam peacdieer. 1 ‘appears to me tat one ol the | veneration of 0,60)" ot ireedmen.”” the ‘heat ot to apply to sall or steam vesscis engaged in the | ner “or the great iamily of nations, “shell | sudience euded, came our surn. Aa the first place the office of Supervisor, at the snug most striking peculiarities of Mr. sumner’s mind Ser on pa rece [1 thecgthanem fone coastwise trade, or in the lake trade, touchingat | we not now, at last, endeavor to grow In front of thé pavilion, in which we were re- | salary of $2,000 per annum, besides an immense was breadth rather than accuracy; a predomi- | G¢dressed necessarily produce some opinions ly | foreign ports or otherwise, or in the trade between | toward each other once more in heart, as we are | ceived, is a great piatiorm of stone, accessible on | amount of patronage, 1s abolished. In the second mance of the idea! rather than of the practical; @ | sonal feeling. This was pasting away and Charies | the United States aud the British North American already indissolubly linkea to each otuer in ior. | three sides by fights of steps. We ascended, as it | piace the Aldermen argue that the law 18 in viola- devotion to a great idea without duc regard to its | Sumuer was by the judgment o1 his associates here, by " 1! tunes ? Shap we not, while honoring the memory | had beeu agreed aiter some débate we should, by tion of the state constitution, which provides tor i unavoidable eer who of us has for- far love — raisin terpenes bd Possessions, Or in any case where the seamen are, | of this great champion of human liberty, this ieel- | the steps on hard western side; and, Seine welt city and county officers. The bill is denounced aa Soe ae a dieindance Babe ee COMIN Ace | Fervieeot the United Sialen, Thistminence iy unsigned | DY Custom OF agreement, entitied to participate in | DE, WePaMAtl OF Ce or Numan tender: | divided by wooden pillars, in the usual norcnorn | {batty Mensure, emAnsHOE fam te ste eng | cons y 5 ntenal | and deduced irom it powers oi government tna | 2m fy eopeemniciies feral iedy, am inieliectual ca ios oe or results of @ cruise or voyage. | hous and heavenly charity, lay aside style, into five sections. We came into this by coetted py the compirolier and ‘or. a but himself ever thosght were conierred | and ‘tor public services rendcreu he: assed. the concealments which serve only to per- the second section from the west, ~ into tre ‘Another question arises, Which the bill does not yy the tundamental iaw. Woo can lorget his i fidelity industry, with i HONORS TO THE MEMORY OF SUMNER. tuate misunderstandings, and distrust and centre section until we Were opposite the throne, cover—namely, how are the Mayor and Recorder, measurable demands upon Great Pritain, by re contabat A message being received from the Sen: in ref- iKiy Coniess that on both sides we mostear- | on which the Emperor was seated at the north ‘" mbers of the Hoard of Super- ag" is ate | both of whom are mei son of her conduct during ourpivil war ? Who de not remember his oit-repeated idea that the islands of the Caribbean Sea and the Gull should be wholly abandoned to the African race. But in all these and in other instances that might be power, position false eulogy: but th Mr. sumner in the pub- cember, sometines mperiec- and prosperity of the w! ¢ ought not to exalt aiter long association vice—continued since lie w disagreeing with him aud conscious of erence to the death of Senator Sumner, Mr. E. R, HoaR, (rep.) Of Mass., offered a resolution that a8 @n auditiooal mark of respect to the memory of Charies Sumner, long a senator from Maseachu- hestly desire to ve one—one not merely in politi- cal organization, one not merely in identity of institutions, one not merely in community of languaye and literature and traditions aud coun- try, but more and betier than @il that—oue also in end of the hall, We then bowed to the Emperor, advanced & Jew paces and bowed again, unu then advanced # lew paces iurther, bowing ugain, and halted beiore along yellow tadle about hall way up the hall, | shouid say some ten or twelve paces visors, to be disposed off ‘The republican mem- bers of the Common Council are non-coumitta: on this subject, but the democratic members are out- | spoken and decided in their opinions. This atter- | noon an adjourned session of the Supervisors oc- his views, however wopracticable they | tions—that I would notdo justice to his memory did I setts, and 10 sympathy with the action of the | jeeling and im heart? Am I mistaken in | distant irom the tiuroue. someth will be Seemed to others: Were In sccartiaace witea lorry | lust place hi name aad, ime above that of ail who sur. | Senate, business be now suspended in the House this” Do the concesiments of which I speak | The throne Was, Lthink, raised above the floor | Cart SY wate BRODRY reg TER ideal that was satisiactory to himsell, and from | ho , - it Le 7 aw fae Maiecee jeapor. , to allow fitting tribates to be paid to nis public | still cover animosities wich neither time nor re- | Of the dais On which it stood by & coupic of steps. ‘Mayor Havemeyer favors the bill, and says that which be would not willingly depart. | int initary ‘service, for. such a comparison is | 82! private virtues. flection nor the marcn of events have yet suiticed | ‘The dais itself was separated from tie hall by & | ne gees no reason WAy two separate accounts of Another trait of Mr. Summer was his love of dis | impossibi We contrast the services of | ‘The resolution was adopted, and Mr. E, R.WOaR | vo subdue? I cannot believe it. Since | have been | light rail broken right and leit of the throne by | expenditures are to be kept, especiaily as the cussion. He was the determined oppenent of all | tue bat addressed the House in eulogy of Mr. Sumner, here I have scratinized your sentiments, as ex- | low fliguts of three stairs each. ‘the Emperor was squag supplied from but one source, saying attempts to limit debate in tue Senate by a pre- | then pl A | THE POLITICAL MARTYR, pressed not merely in eo debate, but in the | seated Manchu lashion, that 1s, PONE pT Upon | nothing about @ saving of $34,000 per annum im vious question or other restriction of the rule. py me eg A ye | Mr. E, R. Hoan then said tuat when more than | abandon of personal confidence. I know | his leit were the Prince of Kuug, his brother, Supervisora’ sala: It so happens that the iast words he ever spoke to | Wis Witen vontent h seit with rvi This | 8X Weeks ago the death of Mr. Sumner was ao- | well the sentiments of taese, my South- | known as the Seventh Prince, and nother Prince, oe rm al me On an adverse vote on # bill he hud upposed | jx ‘not the time or the occasion to. analyze evenis, | DOURCed it came So sudden that Lusiness was 8 ern iriends, whose hearts are so enfolded | the son of the famous Sangolinsin, who repulsed ARSON IN OHICAGO, were these :— | or to parcel out the good that has mn done ended until that lifeless iorm could repose Jor ® | that the Jeeling of each is the feeling of all; and i | our attack on tue forts oj Taku, in 1860, To tne — “Mr, Thurman, this is another instance of the | or tle evil that hasbeen avoided; but 1 can sely say | few hours under the great dome o1 the Capitol and | see on both sides only the seeming Of a constraint | right of His Majesty stoud two other magnates, CHICAGO, 111, April 27, 1874, effects ot debate. Hau the vote been taken bai E ee al Se ee issues that have arisen since on until his funeral services could be periormed in | which each apparently hesitutes to dismiss, The | the nearest beimg the senior oi the hereditary ‘William H, Harrison, late T.easurer of the Globe on this bill without discussion it would have pasyea | Cunmer eniered (he senui® he has been a promsers the presence ol the distinguished men of the na- | South, prostrate, exhausted, drained of ner ite | princes not of the imperial house; the other, I be hich DUFHEd earl aimost ananimously. It is an old saying that the | Soy aructaie ee rcren at eT ee oe ea vary, tom. Mr. Hoar then alluded to Mr, sumner’s | blood ‘jas well as of her material resources, yet still | lleve, 8 Kob-In-law of ‘he old Emperor, whore name ‘Theatre, which was early this morning, foundation of teness is benevolence, which which have either been engrattes, in the con- | lie, aud gave’ brie! pistory of his career | honorable and true, accepts the bitter award of | was Pa mh Below on either side Was & | was arrested to-day on a charge of having set fire leads us to contribute to the happiuess of others | stituuon of the United states or con- | te the | hour of his death, which he | the bioody arbitrament without reservation, reso- | double rank of high officials, which spread out | +, the putiding. He asserts his ability to prove his and avoid everything that couid give them pain. Wolied, the pollev of the government since lel. | attributed to the assault of Preston 8. | lutely determined to abide the result wich Chival- | warg's from the vnrone towards us, unui their (ocence, and has borne a good character here- ‘All who knew Mr, Summer 10 social iie will bear His ditar pees with political friends have been on col- | Brook. Mr. Summer had never heid any oitice but | rous fidelity; yet, as if struck aumo by th flanks reached the columns marking the onter | toro.” Tne owners of the theatre claim it was witness, that he exempilfied the truth of this | deen ti only a tepresentanve berm tea ways | that of Senator from Massachusetts, and his suc- | tude of her reverses she suffers on in silen he | line of the centre section in which we were stand: | WOON sialioo. insured for $1,000 cach th the ta saying. I never knew ina mixed company on the leading measures of the caver. His part | cegutve re-elections were carried by's great wave | North, exultant in her triumph and elated by suc- ; ing. In rear of these were others, fling theflank | Ching Miuwaukee City, and German, of Pitindahe to mMiroduce any topic that might prove dis- grew ou of the war ia so conspicusus that their hisory | OF public sentiment without bargains, without con- cess, Still Cherishes, as we are assured, @ heart full | sections east and west up to the walls, phia, and $6,000 in Western companies, agreeabl. When auca @ topic was Introduced | could tot be writien without his name appearing inthe | cealments Without pledges, except those of his | of magnanimous emotions towacd her disarmed On the whole, the spectacle was fair to see, by others he was always one of the first to divert fore trout. ‘he true eritictam of 0 course is thathe | jie and known opmions, and without competi- | and dscomilted antago + gnd yet, a8 if under | although should not go #0 faras to style it im- rooms Ramen Rp mad the conversation to ‘some othier subjeci; and [can has oiten been soeuger in ihe advance that he did not | tion, During his service in the Senate he | some miyeverious spell ber wordease acts aré words posinge i ATTEMPTED FORGERY. Dear witness that he could sit down With a polite | rc ready mare uo! measures to secure the pro- | gooKe on all the great questions that | and acts of suspicion and distrust. Would that | Our party having halted, as I have described, 8 m orl cal opponent and discuss political questions upon Mit, SUMNWR'A ADVANTAGES. | came up, and saw the accomplishment of | the spirit Of the illustrious dead whom we lament | the Minister of Kussia, General Viangaly, Lge OSTON, Mass., April 27, 1874, whieh they duiered most widely without tor a If I am correct in the position Lussign to Mr. Sumner | all ti jd results at wich he aimed. When he | to-day could speak from the grave to both parties | 01 the corps, read aloud an address in French, oe Henry L. Emery, twenty-eight years of age, a Single motmens losing his temper or manifesting | we inay well pause a p the personal aa- | entered the Selate there were but two otiers there | in this deplorable discord, in tones which should | which | euclose a copy. A Chinese transiation of | oon oro, J. Emery, Paymaster of the Navy Y: & Want of respect for the views of his adver- | vant to attain this dis | 9; hig political opinions, belore his death he was | reach each and every heart throughout this broad | it had been aiready shown to the Prince of Kung, o 'y Yard, sary. This, im my opimo Mr, President, deserves to be ranked toong the virtues, F qualities t fi And, first and chiet of woilld place the nage he derived from a good education. — He w ¥ an educated man, not only in a) emine| the leader of more than two-thirds of his party in tue Senate. He came there the advocate of tmpar- | territory! My countrymen, know one another, and you will love one another, ‘ | and this was then read by M. Bismarck, S¢orécaire Interprete of the German Le jon, Who, a8 Lhave | attempted to passa forged paper at the Revere | House yesterday by representing himselfas Colonel when we add that in the conversation of the de- | tery of college lessons, but in the bi he perfect mes | 1 Tberty throughout the land, tie antagonist of |” On the conclusion of tie enlogies the House, at | reported, had been selected irom the first to act ue | Fred. Grant, a go oi the President, He was at- Geused there wover was aaything low: oF Vulgar, | Gai’ sad Madlaa ot Uusrag Guay age? init ohoont | iat gry waemeverit could be reached under tte can | nalrpast faur o'clock ’. Me walourmed, "| interoreter meneral as aur In this |, rested,