The New York Herald Newspaper, September 24, 1874, Page 6

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KEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, NEW YORK HERALD BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, , POR. THE DAILY HERALD, published every day in the year. Four cents per copy. An- pual subscription price $12. All business or news letters and telegraphic despatches must be addressed New Yors Henan. Rejected communications will not be re- turned. Letters and packages should be properly sealed. pea LONDON OFFICE OF THE NEW YORK HERALD—NO. 46 FLE STREET. Advertisements will be Subscriptions snd received and forwarded on the same terms as in New York. Volume XXXIX.... a AMUSEMENTS TO-NIGHT. The Republican Nominations—The Platform and the Third Term. The renomination of Governor Dix by the Republican State Convention simply confirms the popular decision reached long before the Convention assembled. It is a fitting tribute | to a pare and high-minded statesman, who | has discharged an important trust with dig- nity, fidelity and independence at a time | when such qualities are rare in public officers. | It was demanded in vindication of the reform movement of 1872, which has suffered so se- verely from the scandals of Mayor Have- | meyer's adwinistration of the New York city of the President in this State to abandon the thought of pressing his nomination fora third term, and to make up their minds that there are other ways of preventing the return of the democracy-to power than through the continued re-election of one man? Their influence over the President is known to be great, and they now have an opportunity to exercise it for the good of the party and of the country. A word from the proper quarter would settle a question that is disturbing dent free to act with independence, magna- | government In Governor Dix the people | feel that they have a Chief Magistrate who, | | with well defined and settled political | principles, refuses to use his high office | | for partisan purposes, and whose honesty is | | unchallenged. Holding himself aloof from | | the petty quarrels of factions, Governor Dix | | has refused to allow his official acts to be in- fluenced by any considerations save those of a | | public character. His appointments to office have not always been satisfactory to the lead- | ers of his party on this account, but have won | general approval. In placing him again before | the people the republican organization has | selected the strongest candidate to be found | within its ranks and has insured harmony nimity and true statesmanship in his treat- ment of the Southern States. The certainty that the Presidential policy was uninfluenced by any ambitious object would create a better feeling all over the country than now exists, and whuld tend to consolidate the republican party and prevent a democratic reaction. | On the other hand continued silence on the subject will increase the uncertainty, suspicion and alarm that now prevail and | create distrust in the policy of the adminis- tration. The country desires peace in reality, and not in “name alone. The bitter tirade attract, for the people are tired of the revival the public mind and would leave the Presi- | | uttered by Senator Conkling against the | Vardie, in Norway. Long since given up for | South will repel more republicans than it will | Jost, they were everywhere received with joy SEPTEMBER 24, 1874.—ITRIPLE SHEET, New Developments in Arctic Ge- ography. The Austro-Hungarian expedition of Payot and Weyprecht, concerning which informa- tion was received some days ago by cable, seems, after fuller reports, to have accom- plished an important discovery. Being locked in the ice they drifted northward, and, when about two hundred miles from Nova Zembla, discovered land, which was mountainous and lofty, Coming within three miles of it they landed over the ice, but found very little life, either” animal or vegetable. They traversed this land to latitude eighty- two degrees five minutes, and sighted a cape in about latitude eighty-three de- grees, which they called Cape Vienna. To the land itself they gave the name Francis Joseph, their Emperor. They saw no limit to the land in an easterly or westerly direction. Their ship, being still icebound after two winters, was abandoned, and the party, escap- ing over the ice first, then in boats which they had dragged until open water was reached, | at length reached Nova Zembla, and, while | coasting southward, were picked up by a fish- | ing vessel, from which they were landed at not unlike that with which Dr. Kane's party, from the administration, it only receives a contemptuous and reluctant support. If, instead of accepting the duty which these facts impose upon him, and resigning an office which brings him neither honor, dignity nor usefulness, Governor Kellogg should enter upon a campaign of revenge he will open a newer and darker page in the his- tory of reconstruction. The Philosophy of the Third Term. That wasa remarkable article in our contem- porary, the Tribune, the other day, on the third term discussion. ‘It cannot be coughed down as an impertinence, derided as an absurdity, or set aside as having no vital connection with present politics,” said our contemporary. “It is the most important question in current politics.” It “rises above all other questions, and dwarfs them all,’’ because ‘‘they are but questions of policy under a settled govern- ment,’’ while this is the ‘unsettling the foundations of government itself.’ ‘Tho issue is vital, present, pronounced ; it cannot be evaded.’’ It has been ‘lifted entirely out of the realm of abstraction into the domain of Tribune present practical politics." The argues, therefore, that in the pending autumn elections every republican suécess will practi- cally mean acquiescence in the idea of a third term, and it sees but one course open to all audience uiiagennene eee TARSAL LOO RE SESE the second centenary of our national exit. ence with a change in our form of govern- ment as radical as that effected in the govern- ment of France when Napoleon accomplished his coup d'état. We say nothing will prevent this but General Grant's magnanimity. We have yet to find that distinguished soldier aud statesman magnanimous enough to decline anything in the way of public dignity that has been offered to him. Tue Far. River Inguestr.—The evidence before the Coroner's jury at Fall River yester- day developed the fact that the Fire Depart- ment of that city was deficient in ladders ade- quate to saving the lives of the victims to that | terrible fire. Thus it is always. There is no | exit from burning buildings by the stair- ways, because these are too few or too nar- row, and there are no ladders long enough to reach the windows, which are the only other means of escape. In a hundred factories, not only in. Massachusetts, but in New York, a like fire would have an equally long list of victims. Is it possible that these fre- quent disasters will not move some one to labor for greater security in the great facto~ | ries of the country? Here is o mission as noble as any to which philanthropist ever der voted a life. A Bap Boy.—The killing of the boy Robort ste |in the party. Governor Dix could of these sectional issues with every recurring | whose fortunes were very similar, were re- | honest citizens, “4 1 t HOUSE, 3 ‘ - 8, ‘to stamp out and vote ou oe West Twenty th a er = xi avedue.—NEGRO | neither be a Conkling nor a Fenton, | election. The war is over, although Toombs | ceived in 1855, after their long ice and boat | the very possibility of it in the future.” Bell by another lad named William Harrison ra Bi sha amc | for politics with him are “a principle, {a+ the Sonth and Conkling at the | travel of a thousand miles of oyer eighty days, is one of the worst evidences of the want of No. 585 Broa ee OROLITAN THEATRE. ats. u, | 80d nota personal venture. He is strong on | North do not appear to recognize the | after abandoning their vessel in Smith Sound. | aggerates the importance of this question. It moral training among the youth in this city cauaauk Cae aiaine | this account; strong with the people, who fact. The animosities engendered by the This discovery of land gives a new phase | is now something more than a year since the which has been developed in a long time. " Finy.ninth street pat’ Seventh avenue:—GILMORE’S | trust him; strong with the politicians, who, | ¥@! should cease, and our political | to Arctic exploration. The American Arctic Harrison quarrelled with Bell, and, pursuing CONCERT, at 8 P. M,; closes at 10°30 P.M. ) MINSTRELS, SAN I twenty-ninth streets —NEGRO Broadway, corner of MINSTRELSY, at 8 P. x AMERICAN INSTITUTE, Third avenue, between Sixty-third streets. INDUSTRIAL EXHIBiTIO and Sixty-fourth | | while they cannot use him for their own | selfish purposes, feel that he is equally inac- | cessible to the influences of rival factions. | His nomination will insure a hard-fought con- test in the State, and his success, should he | battles should now be fought without the resurrection of buried issues. It would be difficult to persuade the people that the evils depicted by Senator Conkling would not be lessened by the avowed abandonment of explorer, Dr. Hayes, predicted land here some years ago, and has never been in favor of the route between Spitzbergen and Nova Zembla. In this he has been supported by Chief Justice Daly, President of the Ameri- We do not think that our gontemporary ex- Henaxp, in a series of articles that attracted so much attention at the time as to justify our present reference to them, elaborately pointed out the latent dangers of a third term, and warned the people of the sure rise of a ques- tion which would ‘dwarf all other questions.” him, deliberately plunged an umbrella wire into his head. Harrison has not yet been | arrested. His crime seems to be one of the most inexcusable murders ever committed by a youth, and he must be arrested and sternly | the third t&rm policy; hence the desire that President Grant should break the silence he | has so long preserved. The subject cannot opposition to Governor Dix in the Conven- | 2°¥ be ignored, for the action of republican | route has come to be known as the American Beers ohcias’ Soe an Gicees ekaTA | tion—at least none that appeared on the sur- | State conventions has made it a live issue | route. First explored by Dr. Kane in 1853-54, punished that similar offences among young, men may be repressed. be re-elected, will place him in a very promi- nent position in the national republican party | in the line of the succession. There was no can Geographical Society. These gentlemen have constantly advocated Smith Sound as the most available route, And, indeed, this BAILEY We showed the existence of all the conditions foot of Houston street, Eas leading to it. ‘There was a party in power more powerful than any party had been since the time of Jefferson. The war had given this party, by the dislocation and elimination of the Southern States, prodigious influence. Its power was retained in the South by the rise of a timid, suspicious, ignorant class, who sus- corrects, iver, atiP. M.andsP.M. | No, 201 Bowery VARIETY, aes? Me Tue Miysesora Democnaric ConvENTION adopted a hard money, revenue tariff platform. It will thus be scen that the Indiana demoo- racy are receiving little favor even in the West in their currency expansion heresies, WALLACK's TI the remainder of the ticket, but it was settled | New York would have settled the question, and | Hayes in 1860-61, and from that time to this cree Tey poR closest it | on that account an open avowal on the subject | the latter explorer bas continually asserted E, DEAREB THAN Xs. ; closes at 1 r LiFk, at P. | before the Convention formally organized, | | NIGHT, al7:49 PM. | face. A preliminary struggle took place over | Within the party. The outspoken opposition of | jt was still further developed by Dr. | | | WoOp's MUSEUM Broadway, corner Thirtieth JENKINS” at 2 P. M.: closes at 4.00 P. M well OTHELLO, atdy. M.; closes at 1050 P.M. L, Davenport OLYMPIC THEATRE, | Ro Broadway. VARIETY, ate P.M; closes at1045 Fourteenth street a: DE TREBIZONDE Aimee, Mile. Minelly. .A PRINCESSE 050 P.M. Mle, | THEATRE COMIQUE, fo Broadway —VARIETY, at SP. M.: closes at 10:20 PARK Broadway, between Twe Streets GILDED AGE, ats ATRE, | irst_ and Twenty-second M. Mr. John. Raymond. BOOTHS THEATRE, | or eight years. It is a mere subterfuge to and the present Lieutenant Governor, Canal | Commissioner and State Prison Inspector, whose terms of office close this year, were | | | placed again in nomination with the old chiet who carried them to victory two years ago. The great error of the Convention lies in its | failure to speak out boldly in its platform on | the subject of the third term. The majority | of the republican party in New York would | have approved a decisive expression of | opinion in favor ofa constitutional amendment | limiting the President to a single term of six in the republican platform was very desirable. The unmistakable spirit of the Convention was in opposition toa departure from the time- honored precedent established by Washington; but this is not enough. The people looked for a positive declaration of principle from the Convention, and the fault of the omission can only now be remedied by President Grant. It will be prudent policy on the part of Senator Conkling and his friends to heed the sentiments of the party and to aid in un- sealing the Presidential lips. | that a stout steamer could, in August of any | year, push through to the open sea, which he { | views werein some measure strengthened by believes in, and then to the Pole. These the success of Captain Hall, who, without any difficulty more than would be experienced in sailing through the East River, steamed to latitude eighty-two degrees sixteen minutes— nearer the Pole than any other vessel has ever gone. Dr. Hayes thinks Captain Hall was in the open sea, which he only reached with dog sledges in the early spring after travelling sixty days over the ice, after the fashion tained all the sins of party rule, from the in- stinct of gratitude, because it had given them freedom. The vast war patronage, internal revenue, tariff, impost collections, increase in the army and navy, building of railroads, a policy of voting subsidies to irresponsible cor- porations, the shoddy class, those who tres- passed upon the revenue for gain, all combined to make this ruling party corrupt, to bring corrupt men to its leadership, to fuse all of its political purposes into the one purpose of ambition, and to lead by a mathematical pre- cision to the situation which now exists, and The republican nominatious for Congress are severely condemned. The candidate in the First district is characterized as ‘‘a noted salary grabber,” the candidate in the Second district is ‘an apologist and de- fender of that outrage,’ and the candidate in the Third district ‘‘one of the most unscru- pulous Congressional lobbyists."” Calling names in party platforms is something new; but, as personalities in politics are becoming common, we shall expect to see more of this kind of thing. PERSONAL INTELLIGENCE. SorBeE of, Trenty-third, street, and Sixth avenue — | pretend that the Convention had no business TRE CARE TERS Ore of the Esquimaux. Hayes called his | which the Tribune presents with so much CONTE SO0uATL ats P. Mos closes at 10) P.M Mr. | to meddle with the matter, for it is as much | It is possible that the cablo despatches do | highest point of land, in _ latitude | vigor and clearness. The Vicar of Bray is dead. NIBLO" {an issue of interest as the condi- | not exactly represent the relations between } eighty-two degrees forty-five minutes, We showed that at the head of this party France sent to England last year 500,000,000 Baca retrgen Fs ouston The ini j tion and treatment of the Southern Germany and Denmark. We do not expect Cape Union. Captain Hall sighted land | was the strongest one man who has appeared Seees fash ©. C. Marsh, of Yale College, is staying Faully. States. Other republican State conventions | entire accuracy from those Continental friends | some distance beyond this, and beyond | in our history since the time of Washington. | at the Hoffman House. FIFTH AVENU RE. THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL, at SP. M.; closes at IL P.M. Miss Fanny | avenport, Miss Sara Jewett, Louis James, Charles Fisher. closes at 10:0 YM. | \ ® Sixteenth street, be iw: VARIETY, at 8 P.M. ‘TRIPLE SHEET. York, Thursday, Sept. 24, 1874. | From our reports this morning the probabilities itis | advocates, it was eminently fitting that the | “ERZEN, at 8P.M. | party should place itself on record as opposed | to convey news as to influence or sound public have recognized it, and in New York, where | the third term is known to have its warmest | to a departure from the precedents established \ by Washington and Jefferson. The necessity | Bismarck, who shows | genius and would make an admirable Henatp | for such an expression was the greater since | } Senator Conkling, in his burning wrath against | | the white citizens of the South, uttered au | expression which may be construed by parti- | sans as foreshadowing a lengthened term of office for President Grant. Anxious to im- | | press upon his audience the importance of | who serve us with ‘the opinions’’ of Bis- marck and the Czar. Very often we have the breathing of paragraphs intended not so much opinion. We can understand how Prince a fine newspaper correspondent, would be anxious to ‘test the feeling of Germany toward Denmark. Whether the cabled reports are exactly true or not, it is very evident that there is a cloud rising in the north of Europe, and that the Schleswig-Holstein question, or, as it may be eighty-three degrees, so that Americans have still reached nearer and American eyes have stillseen land nearer the North Pole than this last of the Arctic expeditions of the Austrians. The question is practically now narrowed down toa choice between Smith Sound and Behring Strait, above which a large body of land has also been discovered. The English, con- vinced of the advantages of the former by the American successes, are now making strenu- ous efforts to induce their government to fit out an expedition by way of Smith Sound. He had been a successful general aud had led the armies of the Union through many defeats to a culminating victory. Without entering into discussion as to the exact share of General Grant leader of the party, but in himself greater than the party. As President he has shown, not alone a genius for government, but a reso- lute will, as effective, if not as boisterous, as in the results of victory it is sufficient to say that the people gave to him, more than to any other man, the credit of saving the Union. He was not only Alas! alas! [t is reported that Jolin Mitchel will return to America, senator J. R. West, of Louisiana, has arrived at the Metropolitan Hotel. Genera! Butler had an interview with President Grant yesterday alteruoon, Governor C. R, Ingersoll, of sojourning at the Albemarle Hotel. Congressman George W. Hendec, of Vermont, is stopping at the Fiith Avenue Hotel. Major G. W. Scuoticid, United States Army, has quarters at the Metropolitan Hotel. Mr. David Chauwick, M. P., of England, has apartments at the Brevoort House, Commander L, A. Beardslee, United States Navy, Connecticut, te This is very likely to be done next spring; | that of Andrew Jackson. What Jackson @re that the weather to-day will be clear. | keeping a democratic administration ont | more properly called, the Danish question, | but, meanwhile, will not America stir in the | did with noisy speech and loud oath Grant pba al be bea ‘heen of a Luelter Wiss. Gubaan cNaerunnie’ tone) ken | of Washington, the Seriator pictured | may assume once more a grave importance. | interest of geography and national renown? | has done in silence. Jackson had Strong | Match,” ts tne latest London burlesque. active and buoyant during the day and closed | the terrible and unconstitutional acts So far as we can unravel these rumors, it | Let us have an American expedition to Smith | likes and dislikes, was swayed by his Cabinet, State Engineer Sylvanus H. Sweet arrived from strong. Gold was steady at 109$ a 1093, clos- that might be perpetrated under demo- | seems that Germany has been putting an un- | Sound, and let either Dr. Hayes or some com-'| by his loves and his hatreds, by his eee ae ote aia peuiaeare Eanes kia ing at 1098. cratic rule—the _ Massacre of Southern | due pressure upon her Danish subjects in | petent naval officer have charge of it. | special followers, Benton, Felix Grundy, | taxon up his residence at the Astor House, +4 : negroes, the repudiation of the national debt | Schleswig and Holstein, and where this press- | The former has been there twice, | General Eaton, Amos Kendall, Blair, Taney | senator Reuben & Feuton arrived in this city Tue Reronts or THe Keuty-Havemeren | and the assumption of the Confederate debt. | ure is resisted expelling them from her do-| and is the discoverer of Grinnell | and those whom he trusted. Grant, on the | yesterday, and ts at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. . ‘War which we print this morning will be | : “Say,” exclaimed the Senator when he had found excellent light reading. reached his climax, ‘‘whether you would like to exchange Grant for a democrat?” It is unfortunate that this expression may be dis- torted into an insinuation that there can be no choice for the people between a third, minions. Denmark protests against this course, and Bismarck answers that the readi- est way for Denmark to become reconciled with Germany is to enter the German Empire. This would leave her King a subordinate monarch, like the kings of Bavaria and Land, and it is well known that a lack of | funds only has prevented him for years past from making a third trial. Some nation will | ere long plant its flag at the North Pole, and why not the Stars and Stripes? To be sure, it would not be an achievement of much Brigadier General Jonn Pope, United States Arms, is quartered at the St. Nicholas Hotel, Seflor Don F, Gonzales Krraguriz, Chiltan Mints- , ter at Washington, is at the Clarendon Hotel. And so! they say Kelly for Mayor, Would nos this be Tammany Hall with the brains left ous? Congressman J. H. Burleigh, of Maine, is among other hand, is swayed by no one. Those who seem to know him best know him least. His Cabinet, selected upon a principle hitherto unknown to our constitution, is sim- ply a group of staff officers. His members obey without advising. They are the irre- Is Lovismsna the good omens are more prominent than the evil ones. Compro- mises between the blacks and whites have be- gun in favor of a good local government, and | good government is all that the State needs. Tue Empress or Germany has called a meeting of delegates of all women’s associa- tions of the Empire. Here is a chance for Susan B., who would undoubtedly be admitted is an advisory member from America, Turre Was Som EXCELLENT Trorrina yesterday both at the Prospect Park Fair probably a fourth and fifth, term for Presi- dent Grant and the election of a democratic President, and the absence of a third term plank from the platform will give color to such an interpretation of the remark. But the Convention thought proper to ignore the subject, and hence the platform laid down seems a tame and commonplace affair. One bold declaration such as the public sentiment Saxony, and reduce Denmark into the posi- tion of Baden or Saxe-Coburg. The advan- tage to Denmark, according to Bismarck, would be the protection that this small, lonely, defenceless Kingdom would receive from a powerful Empire. The advantage to Ger- many would be the possession of new ports on the Baltic, of the Danish fleet and of a useful and brave population, not without uses utility, except in a purely scientific point of view ; but the nation would be justly proud of the achievement, an emotion which is sometimes better than too much glorifying of national wealth and prosperity. It is well to have gallant deeds sometimes done to remind us that manly beroism and personal sacrifice for a principle or cause has not died out since there was a knight without fear and sponsible agents of a supreme will, and the President has protected them in this position against the anger of public opinion, the crit- icism of the public press, and, as in the case of Mr. Williams, the direct condemnation of the Senate. With a party which flowered into Crédit Mobilierism as a policy ahd Schuyler Colfax as a leader; with a President like General the New Englanders at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Count de Jarnac, the French Ambassador to London, lives 1m Ireland and ts of “Irish descent.” Jay Gould, Sidney Diifon and party arrived in Omaba {rom the Bast yesterday, aud go West to- day. General John Meredith Read, Jr., United States Minister to Greece, is residing at the Filth Avenue Hotel. Captain Maddick, of the London Court Journat, and Captain Gore, of the British army, are at the } | 2 ie j }i i i i Si + ’ eld himse! i i Everett House. Grounds and at White Plains. These matches demanded and the public judgment would | in these days of _ emigration, However | without reproach, and Sidney passed the cup | Grant, who has held himself as irresponsible | ASN Govemice: Allée vO) inanetnor are extremely useful in developing the Ameri- | have approved would have been worth all | gratifying the alliance might be to | of water to the other wounded soldier. to mere public opinion as the Czar of Russia ; | N. Y., yesterday atrivea at the St. can turf, and that they arenot without interest | *2¢ cnt-and-dried platitudes about finances | Germany or Denmark, it does not tag rts ATI aR with the Southern States, once the sure strength | xicholas Ho! 4 bs fi y | the record of yesterday's races will prove. Tae TemprnaNce Poxrticrans in this State held a convention at Utica yesterday to form a plan for united political action. All sorts of committees are to mect at Albany on Wednesday next for the san urpose. Some such thing was necessary, for most people had already forgotten that ex-Governor Clark | and equal rights with which the resolutions | | abound. There is, however, a lesson in the proceed- | | ings at Utica which those who favor or pre- | | tend to favor the third term will do well to study. The renomination of Governor Dix | is, in fact, a quiet but significant rebuke of their policy. It has been currently reported | that Mr. Conkling and his friends endeavored seem to please the mighty ruler of the North. Russia claims to be the mistress of the Baltic, and her ambition is supposed to look to the absorption of Sweden and Norway, evenas she absorbed Swedish Finland and Courland not many years ago. Copenhagen in the possession of Germany would be a serious menace to St. Petersburg. Accord- ingly the Ozar is said to be very angry with Louisiana, We observe that Judge Atocha has resigned | his function in New Orleans. One of the reasons alleged for this step is his disinclina- ation to take part in the trial of certain mem- bers ot the Penn movement who are to be | brought under indictment for their participa- tion in the recent revolution, Another reason, and this we confess would be the most gratify- of the democratic party, now at the feet of the War Office, what is to prevent the realiza- | tion of this third term question but the will of the Northern people? What was regarded a year ago asa Heraup sensation is now seen to have been a Heraup prophecy. The repub- lican party, through subservient newspapers, edited by anxious postmasters, whose mission was simply that of kettle drums for election Aleck McClure threatens to be an independent canaidate for the State Senate in the Fourth Sena- torial district of Peunsslvania. Mr. William Dorsheimer, the democratic candi- date for Liewtenant Governor arrived at the Gilsey House last eventng from his home at Buffalo, ‘yne Theatre Frangais will not produce the plays whieh Dumas wrote for the Gymnase, but will proe duce any new one he writes, if he will let them, Somevody in Texas calls for contributions of $1 to build a monument to George D. Prentice, still lived and was again a candidate upon | to compass the defeat of Governor Dix before | these “German intrignes.’’ He has shown | ing to us, is that Judge Atocha recognizes the | campaigns, ridiculed an issue which they | gcargely a satisfactory character to put up as an ¢ the temperance issue. the Convention, Asa general rule such ru- | his wrath by declining to take part in the re- | wisdom and patriotism of the demand that partly feared and partly failed to compre- | ideal. Tam Nartoxat Baxs are not content with | mors of intrigues may be discredited, but this | cognition of Spain. So serious is the com- | the Kellogg government, and all concerned | hend. Their caricaturist, Mr. Nast, ex- see rary PHA tie dios ee Ha the monopoly they enjoy, but some of them | one appears to have had good foundation. | plication that England is said to be alarmed. with it, should retire from office and permit a hausted the grotesque resources of his trade senat the decision, because the ‘Princess. Wii Wie waoteng, to fraudulent practions: 4: tt | The organ of the administration branch of The Queen, who has a natural interest in | new expression of the popular will of Louisi- | in endeavoring to show that this issue had no | je; ow, crease their gains. Nothing could be more | the republican party in this city labored | German questions, has summoned Mr. | ana. If Judge Atocha’s reasons are correctly | existence. But Mr. Nast’s subservience to | The Prince of Wales will probably be made Grand contemptible than the petty trick of making | to that end before it became evident | Disraeli, the Prime ‘Minister, and Lord understood then he deserves the praise of the | the President, his willingness to condone | Master of the British ride krcrotdc as ear ae checks payable one day after date instead of | that Governor Dix could not be beaten, | Derby, the Foreign Minister, to attend her in country for this act of meritorious self- | every mistake and applaud every crime of MR the conversion to Rome o' larquis ‘on demand, in order to save the two cent | and the influence of the federal offices was | the Highlands vant be ge ea See eas (ig rch hes lie that no | government, were in themselves the best argu- | “41 tne criticism of “Old Prob” 1s local. fhe says check stamps. There is only one proper | felt to be adverse to the Governor in the pre- | counsel in the event of one o! those sudden part of the Kellogg government, exePMtive, | monts that the issue was o true issue; that it | 4, win rain, and tt does rain over half the coun- ‘ course with’ these institutions, and that is to | liminary canvass. The decisive expression of | strokes which are apt to fall liky a thunder- | legislative or judicial, can be said to have | had life, and must, sooner or later, come for | try, butdoes not rain in some particular person's compel the‘forfeiture of their charters when- the sentiment of the party in advance of the | bolt upon the peace of Europe. gained the confidence of the people of Louisi- | decision before the American people. half-peck satis, that person suy8 01d Prob’s } ever they are detected violating the law. meeting of the Convention was due to this | TBS ola Bey Re bahia for certainly |/anm As Hoverdy Jolinson expressed it, in'| ‘The time for that decision tas come! | The PAL inate Hanae doesn’s understand wire. peice | attempt to control the nominations; and t Germany can have no craving for war, and | his letter the other day to the Heraxp, for | Tribune says truly that this question ‘dwarfs persia ‘As he was at full speed he probably could Tue Inish Rirtemen are having a splendid | ytter failure of the movement against Goy- | Russia will scarcely attack Germany until she | Kellogg to persist in clinging to power, under | all other questions.'' Vice President Wilson | not see the wire, and when he came against it ‘welcome in this country. Wherever they ap- | ernor Dix is significant of the disposition of | is sure of the sid of France. France, unfor- | the protection of federal bayonets, would be to | does not hesitate to express the concern he | was probably as much astonished as Mrs, Finch pear the entire party is well received. Last | the republican party to assert its indepen- | tunately, is only too willing to fight, and her | remain in a position alike humiliating and | feels at the presénce of an issue unsought, un- | Was, though he Pes dnW aFtite Glled teths evening, at Booth’s Theatre, they received an | dence, Equally notable was the opposition | people would too gladly welcome the slightest | dishonorable. desired, which cannot be sustained or ex- ee noay arene thief stole a firkin of 1%, enthusiastic mark of popular esteem. A re-| to the attempt to place Mr. Cornefl’s name | pretext for a war with the conquerors of Alsace | The example which Judge Atocha thus gives | plained or put aside, and which threatens to thinking it was butter. Before tho magistrate a ception is to be given to the Lord Mayor of | second on the ticket, The Convention | and Lorraine; but France is not ready, and | should be promptly followed by the members | rend his party. If we could enter into the | description of the article was required, when the Dublin to-day by the Common Conncil, and | was evidently indisposed to give any | in the meantime, unless Bismarck should feel | of the Kellogg party as well as the McEnery | secret thoughts of the group of staif officers | thief was discharged from custody as more honest an excursion around New York and up the | encouragement to the recognized or sus- | that he had better fight now than later, when | claimants. But if, on the contrary, as we in- | called the Cabinet we no doubt could find the | an rage of this city, swam the Hell 4) Hudson will add interest to the occasion. In pected third term advocates, and a France is armed, there will scarcely be war. | fer from the tone of certain despatches, Kel- same thoughts, although spoken with bated | a petite 22, “EWo gontiemen lollowed aan all this there is a friendly feeling that will not | sentence in the speech of © ex-Governor | Crane rasan logg and his friends mean to invoke the laws | breath. Congressman Roberts, of Utica, who gir Ina direct line tae width of the river tel be abated by the result of the contest at | Morgan, the permanent President of the Con-| Anocr Frac.—There is an amusing des. | for the indictment and trial of the Penn revo- took pains to tell the Heranp a few weeks ago | about a mile, but the rapidity of the current, Greedmoor on Saturday. vention, was pregnant with meaning. “When | patch in recerence to United States official , lutionists, it will be a serious blunder, Mr. | that there was a good deal of moonshine in | EPR te eeeerecee, ate nce, eoee, toee Cee sarily be swam to get over. Cnignon ts dead, The great deity of the feminine toilet 18 no more. Paris bas given it up tor the sake of economy. It was very costly. Evety year suere Was Taken into Paris 110,000 pounds of human hair im a@ “raw or anworked state—worth $680,000, and to be made invo chignons. Now all that money can be spent in some othernonsense. Youf dines at the restaurant Matguery. One | aowen oysters, an eperlan and a partridge, with two bottles of fine Berdeaux and @ bottle of St Estephe, He sat very late and they went up t@ see Why. They even requested him to leave and he policd outa revolver and opened fire, They are SO Unused to such a line Of conduat tn Parte vhat thoy had bim locked uy, Kellogg should remember that only yesterday he was flying like a hare before the revolution | which Penn represented, and which spoke the voice of the people of Louisiana. He should reflect that, but for the aid of the federal gov- | ernment, he would still be cowering behind the walls of the Custom House, or, armed with his trusty and useful carpet-bag, be on Tae Presweyr asp Crvii Senvice.—Presi- General Grant's term of office expir in the South who, feeling it his duty to inter- | ‘dent Grant has issued a circular requiring a | Mr. Morgan, ‘‘there will be no necessity of , tere with the public display of a Confederate | more thorough observance of the rules of | hurling him from power, for he has never lost | flag, has been rebuked by the Attorney General | civil service. If the President is sincere in | an opportunity of showing his respect for the | for his officiousness. The government holds this intention it will be well, The country | nation’s laws.’’ When it is known that Gov- | that in time of peace a citizen may adorn his does not think that he las behaved hand- | ernor Morgan regards the precedents set by | dwelling with any colored bunting that pleases | somely in this matter of civil service ; that he | Washington and Jefferson as of equal binding | him. If this bunting takes the form ot the old } bas been earnest in its enforcement. It | force with the nation’s written laws, his words | Confederate flag it is his private concern and \ will be apt to look with suspicion upon a re- | can bear no other interpretation than that of | not that of the government. This shows good | b é nowed interest in the matter upon the eve of | opposition to the violation of those precedents. | sense, and it would be well if all the dealings | feel that his government is condemned by the | than the republican party? That question an election. But we are willing to take the | With these unmistakable indications of tho | of the adminstration with the South were | public opinion of the country, 8y men as | will be decided in the fall elections. If he is of their own party before | marked with the same forbearance and wis- | widely diverging in political belief as Reverdy | stronger than the party nothing but his may- | them. would it mot be wise of the friends | dora, Jobnson end General Butler. and that. even | nanimity will vroyent, us from entering upon this third term philosophy, now takes equal pains to induce the Convention which nomi- nates him for Congress to pass a strong reso- lution repudiating the third term, all of which shows Congressman Roberts to be a growing man in his opinions, and we trust a rising | man in his State, The issue will not die! | General Grant, by his silence, forces upon the his way to another habitation. He should | country this question; —Is he still stronger \ | | good things the President gives us, no matter | sentiment when they coma

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