The New York Herald Newspaper, September 23, 1878, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1878.—WITH SUPPLEMENT. NEW YORK HERALD |™ ** ‘BROADWAY AND-ANN STREET, JAMES GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR i palished eure dey in the year. THE DAILY MBRALD, f ‘ ator abe pe meee fe any verted id wor apersiel “ - 8 , an six dea, fre CA Svs eiglom hnctaded fea 3 yee WEEKLY MERALD-One collar per year, froe of past- ase NOTICE TO spascurntns.—tenit in drafts on New York or Post Oftice moacy o nd where welt! of these can be procured send thy wey In w rey intes der. iu order we tpeure address changed must NO, 112 SOUTH SIXTH PHILADSLPHIA OFF! STKE’ LONDON JOEKICE | ee VHE NEW YORK HERALD— NO, 46 FLERT BET. vabls Para ENVENVE DE LOPERA. exhibitors at the International, Exposition can huve ‘American their letters (Uf postpaid) addressed (0 the care of our Paris OS Pes SePOR—NO. 7 STRADA PACE. Subscriptions and advertisements will be received and forwarded OB the » Orme asin New x AMUSEMENTS TO-NIGHT, BOWERY THEATRE—} — AMERIVAN INSTITUTE FA ai BIANDARD RORATES: NEW YORK AQuARIU PARK THEATRE-U BROADWAY THEATRE -A Wowan oF Tus Prorte. LYCEUM THEATRE—Joanva Wnircomn, BOOTHS THEATRE —Hanny VILL WALLACK’S THEATR HOOL FOR SCANDAL. CHICKERING HALL—A Pixs ron Tramps, GERMAMIA THEATRE. BAN FRANCISCO MINSTRELS BAYMARKET THEAT! GRAND OPERA HOUSE -Vaurery. BROOKLYN PARK THRATRs—Dirtomacr. BROAD ST. TEBATRS, Pl delphis—Ro: ~NEW. YORK. crn The Herald C One hundred and ten thousand seven hundred and eighty-one (110,781) Hezatps were sold yesterday. ulation, ilities are that the weather in New York and its vicinity to-day will be cool and clear, followed by a slight rise in temperature. Yo-morrow it promises to be slightly warmer and Jair. ‘THe Unton Savines Bank of Saratoga is the latest addition to the long roll. Of course the speedy payment in full of the depositors is promised. Tur Dirtomatic E T in Washington this week will be the official reception of the Chi- nese Embassy by the President. It is to be hoped Kearney, wherever he is, will not sur- vive it. DeLawark opens the chapter of murders this weck. An old quarrel between two col- ored citizens about a woman and a fence was effectually settled yesterday by au axe in the hands of one of t Tne Decree of the Spanish authorities ad- mitting horses and mules free into certain por- tions of Cuba ought to make a good opening for some of our citizens. Of course, we mean for those who own the animals, New Ortxans sends a comforting report this morning in regard to the yellow fever. The number of new cases yesterday was ove hundred and ten less than the day before, while the deaths were reduced by twenty-two. Ir Writ Nor Surrrise the majority of intelli- gent people to read in another column that our custom houses are doing their utmost by their absurd regulations to obstruct the growth of our Southern and Central American trade. Now Tat tk Execrioxs in Canada are over official fashionable society is devoting it- eelf mainly to preparations for the arrival of the Marquis of Lorne and the Princess Louise, which interesting event is set down for No vember. Reapers or tHe Herarp between this city and Washington will be interested in the de- sqiption elsewhere printed of the operation of the railway mail service along that route. This branch of the postal service is a marvel of effi- ciency and expedition, and to the gentlemen who conduct it the public are under far more obligations than they suspect. Tue Senmoxs.—A glance at our reports of the church services yesterday will show that many of our leading clergymen are again at their posts of duty. It will also be noticed that many of the sermons deal with some of the live, vital questions of the time, which is av improve- ment upon the slow, old fashioned humdrum style. Dr, Hall, for instance, enforced the les- son of the yellow fever plague and the duties it imposes upon us; Mr. Talmage had a good deal to say upon Communism and the working classes, while Dr. Newman did stout battle for the Church as against the scientists. The Rey. Dr. Abbott lashed our modern Scribes and Phar- isees over the shoulders of their ancient proto- types; the Rev. Mr. MacArthur pointed out the duties of the wealthy, and the Rey. Mr. Tyng, Jr., explained the meaning of the paradox, “he that findeth bis life shall lose it.”| Mr. Froth- ingham examined from the materialistic point of view the demands of the present generation ‘on religion Tne Weatn he low pressure that was over the Middle Atlantic States and the eastern lake regions has been entirely dissipated, the area of high barometer having moved very rapidly northward. In the Northwest, however, the barometer has fallen considerably during the past twenty-four hours and a storm ceutre is developing in that region. The very position of the high pressure makes it almost certain that, during the advance of the depression over the lakes, the gradients will be steep, and couse- quently high winds may be expected. This de pression, like the one that bas just passed, will travel on the northern margin of the high zone, so that it is very improbable that its passage will affect our district very much, The barom- ter is falling in the Gulf districts, but as yet the pressure is only relatively low. Very little rain hae fallen, mainly on the Atlantic coast and in the Gulf districts. Clear weather bas generally prevailed, except in the South Atlantic States and some sections of the lake regions. The winds are brisk in the northern lake regions aud the Northwest. They have been from fresh to brisk on the Middle Atlantic and New Eng- land coasts, and elsewhere generally light. The temperature bas risen in the central valley districts and the Northwest. It has fallen in the other districts. The weather in New York aud ite vicinity to-day will be cool and clear, followed by # slight rise in temperature, To- morrow it promises to be slightly warmer and fair, \ © aud Saratoga Conven- thous. This is to be a lively-week in the politics of the State of New York. The regular State conventions of both political parties are to be held in the middle of the week— the Democratic Convention on Wednesday at Syracuse and the Republican Convention at Saratoga on Thursday. The greater part ofthe delegates to both conventions have been chosen, and although it is not yet quite certain that the Kelly faction of the demo- crats will have the upper hand at Syracuse it is past doubt that the Conkling fac- tion of the republicans will be in a large majority at Saratoga. It is only because both parties are split into bitter factions that these conventions are thought to be of political consequence. Not the slightest interest is felt in the question of candidates. The only State officer to be elected is a Judge of the Court of Appeals, and it must be said to the credit of both political parties in this State that neither has ever attempted to bedraggle our great court of last resort in the mire of party politics, Whatever may be thought of the wisdom or expediency of an elective judiciary it must be conceded that the experiment has worked well in the State of New York so far as relates to the Court of Appeals, and, indeed, in respect to the Supreme Court judges, if we except those elected in this city dur- ing the ‘Tammany régime. During the whole period since the adoption of the elective system in the State constitu- tion of 1846 our Court of Appeals has uni- formly maintained its character as the most learned, able, impartial and indepen- dent appellate ‘tribunal which has existed in any State of the Union. The true reason why the State conven- tions of the present week excite so much political feeling has no relation to the single judicial nomination which is the chief ostensible business of each. ‘These conven- tions are important only because they will bring on a trial of strength between the hostile factions of both parties. In the re- publican party it is to be determined whether the Conkling faction or the Hayes faction has control of the organization; and in the democratic party the question is whether the supporters of Mr. Tilden or the supporters of Mr. Kelly are ip the ascendant. The Syracuse Convention and the Saratoga Convention will be alike a battle of factions—a civ war in each case rather than an external war be- tween the two political parties, A keener interest is felt in the democratic party in the case of Kelly versus Tilden, and in the republican party in the case of Conkling versué! Hayes, than in the broader question on which the two great parties are divided. The Hayes ¥epublicans would rather see the Staite go):democratic than witness a Conkling triumph, and, on the other hand, the Kelly democrats would prefer a repub- lican triumph in the State to a Tilden tri- umph in the Syracuse Convention, In such a stnte of feeling it is too ob- vious that the two regular organ- izations have lest all their vitality, and that the time is ripe for the dissolution of the old parties. When both care more for the defeat of their internal enemies than for the success of their Organization it de- pends on the mere accidents of politics whether ties which have become so weak are not to be totally ruptured. There is a close resemblance between the dominant question in the two conventions. In the Syracuse Convention of Wednesday the battle will be fought on the ques- tion of“imdorsing Governor Robinson; in the Saratoga Convention of Thurs- day the” battle will be fought on the question of indoraing President Hayes. In the Democratic Convention a resolution in- dorsing Robinson would be a humiliating defeat of Mr. Kelly; in the Republican Convention a resolution indorsing Hayes would be a prostrating blow to the hopes of Mr. Conkling. It seems already certain from what is known of the republican dele- gates chosen that Senator Conkling will not be humiliated at Saratoga; but whether Mr. Kelly will be humiliated at Syracuse is still an open question. The Kelly faction in the democratic party is olxeady shouting victory; but, so far as yet appears, this is mere bravado. Mr. Kelly does not really know how he will stand in the Democratic State Convention. The chances, indeed, look favorable to him, but these chances rest on the assumption that the Tammany delegates: will be ad- | mitted at Syracuse without question. But there is a possibility that they may be ex- cluded, There will be contesting delegations from this city, and if the Robinson men have a clear majority outside the city the Tammany delegates may be left out in the cold. Governor Robinson's supporters claim that the delegates whose seats are not contested should organize the Convention, and that a committee on credentials ap- pointed by them must decide between the admission or exclusion of Mr. Kelly's Yammany delegates. If the Tammany delegates are excluded from the prelimi- nary organization Governor Robinson's friends may exclude thein altogether and admit the anti-lammany delegates from this city. In that event the Robinson- ‘Tilden faction would control the Conven- tion, and Mr. Kelly would find himself out- side the regular organization, But it is unlikely that the Syracuse Convention will adopt 60 extrome a course. The democracy of the interior know too well that it is in the power of Mr. Kelly to defeat the State ticket, and they will not push hit to ex- tremities, If the ‘l'ammany delegates are admitted without a quarrel, if they are allowed to take part in the preliminary or- ganization of the Convention, it seems prob- ablo that Mr, Kelly will be master of the Syracuse Convention, But tho triumph of Mr. Kelly in that body would rule out Mr. Tilden as the democratic candidate for the Presidency in 1850. It is the main purpose of Mr. Kelly to destroy by this means the Presidential hopes of Governor Tilden. The action of the Republican State Con- vention at Saratoga will not turn on the Presidential question, but on the Senatorial question. The dominant question in the republican party of New York is whether Senator Conkling shall be re-elected. The election of delegates to the Sara- toga Convention has gone far enough to show that the supporters of Mr. Conkling will have a large and controlling majority. This being assured it is the part of wisdom to treat his republican opponents with respectful consideration. It is inex- pedient ¢o jurnish them with any excuse for a bolt, since a republican bolt is the only thing that can really endanger Mr. Conkling’s chances of a second re-election. The cue of the Conkling republicans is har- mony, and: it is certain that they will fur- nish no plausible pretext for an intestine quarrel. If Mr. Conkling’s republican ene- mies insist on an indorsement of Presi- dent Hayes his friends will of course re- sist, because an indorsement of the President would be a condemnation of the Senator, But short of this Mr. Conkling’s friends will be willing to make any reason- able concessions for the sake of kceping the party together. If a resolution should be offered indorsing the President they will vote it down, not from professed hostility to President Hayes, but because it is inex- pedient to introduce in the Convention any subject on which the party diffrs and which might disturb.the harmony of the Convention. Dean Stanley in America. Yesterday morning Boston enjoyed an unusual pleasure and honor -in listening to a sermon by the Very Rev. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Dean of Westminister. This gentleman is one of the most eminent divines of the Church of England, and, beyond all of his clerical brethren, the most versatile. Remarkably successful as a student at Oxford, he earned several of the more prominent prizes awarded for scholar- ship, and since taking orders he has made a permanent mark in literature and the Church ‘by the publication of important biographical, theological and historical works. Except Charles Kingsley no Eng- lish clergyman who has visited America approaches Dean Stanley in ability, and even Kingsley did not surpass Westminster's Dean in intensity of Christian sympathy, while intellectually he was by many de- grees Stanley's inferior. Great as are his abilities and many and faithful as have been his services to the Established Church of his country, Dean Stanley’s fame and popularity have been largely earned by his sincere and intelligent liberality. Among men of religious profession liberality usu- ally indicates doubt or carelessness, but with Stanley it seems the reg of the heartiest sense of spiritual fellowship with every man who loves right, hates wrong and trusts in the uplifting and -strengthening influence of a Higher Power, whatever may be the name by which he designates the Unknown. In his sermon of yesterday, of which we give quite a fall outline, and which will be read with sincere satis- faction by good men of every faith, the preacher tersely expressed the leading feature of his own belief when he said that ‘in the better part of every human being there is a spark of the Divine Spirit.” Honest differences of theological opinion will probably continue to divide believers as long as men live and think; but for this very reason it is necessary to the sym- metrical progress of humanity that men shall approach each other's hearts when heads disagree, and it is particularly grati- fying when: an influential’ sympathetic spirit is manifested by a man whose ten- derness is born of intellectual strength in- stead of sentimental vacillation, The Council with the Cheyennes. * There is a marked family resemblance be- tween reports of councils with Indians, and the talk of the Cheyennes yesterday with General Crook did not vary from the usual model. First camo many expressions of courtesy, loyalty and obedience, of which it would be wise to accept no larger proportion than might seem sincere if the speakers were white men. Then there was general complaint of the coantry they were going to as areservation; aclaim, @ la Mrs. Gaines and other highly civilized litigants, that certain lands were theirs, although other tribes had inhabited them for years; and then came the stereotyped complaint about poor blankets and insufficient supplies and a re- quest for ammunition. They wanted am- munition only toshoot buffalo with; but they were in great haste to be upon the march, and as a body of ranaway Cheyennes is ap- parently about to cross the proposed line of march there is a possibility that some fighting may take place. ‘The disposi- tion of troops in the neighborhood of both runaway and reinoving Indians, however, seems to bo excellent, and the presence of General Crook with the main body of the Indians is likely to do as much as can be effected by moral suasion, for hé baa pun- ished the redskins many times and soverely, Whatever the issue may be it cannot long be deferred, sf Our Subterranean Abominations, It would be a circumstance remarkable beyond precedent if this city had good sewers ; for if Providence takes care of people who do not take care of themselves in any particular whatever it is probably not in respect to their subterranean drains, Our sewage system has no unity of plan or purpose; but its greatest defect is not merely that it is patchy and undigested as to its original structure, buat that nearly every part of the original structure was ir- redeemably bad. There is, perhaps, not a sewer in the city made ten years ago that is not defective, while it is known to the au- thorities that there are places where they are so gone to pieces that what they should carry away has spread ont and made extensive subterranean morasses of the most poisonous nature, Street after street was sewered by itself in the old times with little regard to any other street; or if any thought was ever given to the relation of any one sewer to the system that thought was directed by so little intelligence that it might as well have been left out altogether. The varieties of level are infinite; and as much of the labor was done in the most cor- rupt periods of the city administration it has partaken largely of the general charac- ter of chicanery in such transactions. Con- tracts were in the hands of ono rogue and in- spection in the bands of another, and walls that would hold till the rogues got their nfoney was all that they ever sought to con- ptract. Open communications made by the rats exist between the sewers and about one qnarter of the cellars in the city, and the ooze by these or the saturation of the earth accounts for far more disease than even the defective pipes of the plumbers. The Canadian Premiership. There has been no doubt since the over- whelming defeat of the liberal party in the elections of last weck that Sir Johu Mac- donald is to be the Prime Minister of the Dominion; but his defeat in the city of Kingston, which seemed to exclude him frum Parliament, created a hitch in the nat- ural progress of events, ‘The Canadian as well as the British system requires that members of the Ministry hold seats in Parliament, and the personal rejection of Sir John Mac- donald by a constituency which had con- stantly re-elected him for the long period of thirty-four years seemed to put him in an awkward predicament when the general drift of the elections throughout the Dominion was so splendid an indorsement of his policy. There were conservative members enough who would have resigned to make way for his election; but this would have necessitated delay and have postponed the formation of a new Ministry with Sir John Macdonald at its head, But, luckily for him, the constituency of Marquette, in Manitoba, has. come to his rescue and elected Sir John as its member. He has, therefore, a seat in the Dominion Parlia- ment without delay, and the question of an immediate chango of Ministry is relieved of its chief - embarrass- | ment, But it still depends on Mr. Mackenzie, the present Premier, whether the new Ministry shall succeed at once or await the assembling of Parliament. If Mr. Mackenzie chooses to hold on there is no power to depose him until the new Parlia- ment. meets. There are.two strong prece- dents in the recent history of the British government in favor of the immediate resig- nation of a Ministry wlien the elections have gone against it. Mr. Disraeli pur- sued this course in 1867 and Mr. Gladstone in 1874. But on both those vecasions the London ‘Jimes maintained that the proper course was to await the assembling of. PRar- liament. Ina recent series of striking ar- ticles in the Fortnightly Review on ‘The Political Adventures of Lord Beaconsfield” the writer maintains that a Ministry de- feated in the elections should hold on until the meeting of Parliament. ‘Imitating,” says the writer, “the example of very doubtful constitutional expediency set by Lord Beaconsfield in 1867, Mr. Glad- stone in the beginning of 1874 re- signed without wailing for a for- mal vote of want of cenfidence on the part of the House of Commons. It is to be hoped that there will be no fyrther and future imitation of this double prece- dent.” And the brilliant writer goes on to assign at some length his reasons why these innovating precedents should not be followed. We will not enter into this discussion, which for the people of the United States has only the interest of spectators. We have alluded to it at all only to show that Canadian opinion is di- vided on -the subject, the victorious party insisting that it is the duty of the Macken- gie government to resign ut once, and the defeated party maintaining that the proper time is on the assembling of the new Parlia- ment. But the general drift of Canadian opinion seems to favor an immediate change of Ministry. Free Spech in Goimany. Ill-natured people in South Germany used to say that in North Germany, under its Prussian constitution, all the law and several of the gospels were summed up in these precepts:--‘‘Hold your tongue; pay taxes; be a soldier.” Timo has not lightened the burden put upon the people in any one of the particulars thus designated; but rather the habit of all these exactions has grown with its exercise and has be- come more specific and intolerab‘e as ex- perience has taught it how—a fact common in the history of bureaucratic.government. All the agitation in Germany, so far as it has in any degree the sympathy of the well disposed masses of the people, is related to protest against the pressure exercised under some one of the points of this old epigram. Taxes that have made food dear and wages small, and have thus sapped the foundations of popular prosperity, com- fort and content; the military spirit that sacrifices the welfare of the people to tpe pride of a casto and a court—these were hard enough to endure; but now the poople are asked to endure under the third head— liberty of speech—on even severer re- pression than was ever pnt upon them in the past, and their represent- atives in the Reichstag are called upon to legalize this repression. As originally drawn that clause in the bill against socialistic agitation which gave the government the right to put the press of the country, and its speech ns well, abso- lutely in the hands of the police, would in practical operation have made it crime for any man to open his mouth except to fill it with beer, and a crime, also, to print a singlo paragraph. Those who printed and those who spoke would have been, in fact, thereby put upon their defence, and been compelled to prove that what was written or spoken had no secret relation to some socialistic purpose. That clguse was voted down on Friday, but an amendment has been agreed upon in committee which is far less extravagant. By this amendment con- cord between classes or the public peace must be endangered before even a socialistic writing can be suppressed. It is doubtful if the difference is tangible, because all turns on the interpretation of the effect of any writing, and they who make the inter- pretation are subject mainly to government inspiration. After Many Days. The people of the Hudson River edge of the west side of Manhattan Island are to be congratulated. The New York Elevated Railroad Company is at last going to look ata report suggesting routes to and through the upper western portions of thecily. Working according toany but the penny wise system, the directors would long ago have extended their rond and secured a large body of patrons before the opposition line could have laid a rail anywhere, But to some men papiegse means the best use one can make of a penny is to hug it, and so this important work of extending the older of the elevated roads along the already populated bank of the river has been delayed, and the money which might have been carned, but has not, woald pre- sent an interest account more terrible than that of the extra half million which Mr. Field supposes the Metropolitan road to have expended. A roference to our news columns will disclose the nature of the difficulty under which the company has labored. It is one which a sergeant of en- gineers with » detail of men would over- come in a fortnight, But such a man would be enterprising, thorough and have some professional pride—qualities which appar- ently are extremely unpopular among the managers of the New York Blevated Rail- roud Company. General Butler's Cumpaizn. The friends of General Butler in cal- culating his chances of victory in the cam- paign for Governor estimate that he will poll seventy thousand regular democratie votes, thirty-five thousand republican and thirty-five thousand greenback, or in all one hundred and forty thousand, which they assert will be more than they need. If General Butler can develop this strength he will in all probability be elected ; but can he do it? To show the liberal charac- ter of his calculation for the figures of his friends as they appeared in our columns yesterday and as they are reproduced above, it is only necessary to recall the vote of the last Presidential year. In round numbers the entire number of ballots then cast was two hundred and _ fifty-nine thousand, of which Hayes received one hun- dred and fifty thousand and Tilden one hundred and eight thousand. ‘The vote for Cooper was less than one thousand, but Baker, the prohibition and greenback candidate for Goveraor, received a little over twelve thousand. According to Gen- eral Butler's present rose-colored outlook he will cut down the republican vote for Hayes from one hundred and fifty thousand to one hundred and fifteen thousand, and the democratie vote for Tilden from one hundred and eight thousand to thirty-eight thousand. This would give him only one hundred and five thousand, which would be ten thousand less than the republican yote with the Butler guard drawn off. Of course this result of his complicated arith- metical problem does not suit him, so ho again goes to his multiplication tables, and, more than doubling the greenback vote of 1876, he packs it into his capacious carpet bag and proclaims his victory. General Butler’s process of subtraction and addi- tion may come out all right and make him Governor, but it will strike a great many people that his campaign partakes a good deal of Bon Jonson's celebrated Captain Bobadil’s plan for destroying an army. Save Me from My Friends. If Louis Riege’s Ellen Murphy is in the land of the living, or if the missives that re- port the death of Annie Hummel are only coutrivances to prevent a too diligent in- quiry as to her whereabouts, these damsels have small reason to be thankful to their friends who have bruited their names tothe world as possible pendents to a terrible story. Troubles as to which these poor girls had no other predccupation than the one ‘absorbing anxiety that they might be hidden from the world; that relatives, acquaintances, ill-disposed associates, or all who would point the finger of scorn might not know them —these their dreadful secrets are spread before the world with all the particularity that examination and cross-examination and the interviewer can give. They went away to hide ao fact, and suddenly it seems to fill the universe. They were willing to tako oblivion at the price of life. One of them said, ‘You will see me all right in a little while or you will never sce me again.” But their departure and even the sacrifice of life they ven- tured has not procured for them that safety from reproach which was all they sought, and, worse than all, perhaps they are “given away” by those who should have done most to defend. This is but one of the minor incidents in that horrible barrel inquest, but it is tragic enough in its way. A Dead King’s Usetulness. Imperial Cwsar, dead ond turned to clay, might stop a hole to keep the wind away, and be far more useful in such capacity than he sometimes was when alive, and it is not unlikely that his Asian prototype, the elder Cyrus, is at present held in higher esteem in Central Europe than he was twenty-five centuries ago, when he roamed about in the neighborhood of what is now Austrian Poland with a host of soldiers, ruining the crops and making things un- comfortable for every one but undertakers, Apensant woman in Galicia has exhumeda large quantity of gold, in value about fifty thousand dollars, and as some of the utensils and insignia found are such as only kings affect, and as history informs us that Cyrus met in that particular neighborhood the con- queror of all kings not now living, it is reasonably safe to assume that those archw- ologists are correct who declare that these articles are relics of the founder of the Persian Empire. Cyrus living would have been indictable as » nuisance by any grand jury among the original inhabitants of Gal- icia, but Cyrus dead will be tenderly re- membered by at least one person as the man who was wise enough to travel with considerable valuable luggage and thought- ful enough to put it where in time it would do the most good. It is possible that not every one will agree with the lucky finder of the treasure in considering the Persian | monarch a man of singular financial wis- dom. For instance, there is an American namesake of Cyrus—a gentleman who thinks the energy of the west side clevated railroad cost it an extra half million, though he neglects to estimate the cost to the public and the road of lack of energy on the east side. ‘This gentleman will prob- ably shudder at the thought of what twenty- five centuries of interest on Oyrus’ fifty thousand dollars’ worth of gold would have amounted to. But Persian Cyrus is dead, and his golden ornaments and uten- sils will probably be of more and better use to their peasant finder than they ever were to their royal owner, PERSONAL IN TELLIGENCE.”: ru The following Americana wore rogistered at oe Hixuato Bureau in Paris on Saturday :— Andrews, Mrs. Lorin, Lilinois, No. 10 Rue Keppler. Andrews, Frauk, Ilinois, No. 10 Rue Keppler. Amerman, Miss M., New York, No, 12 Rue Mosgjer. Barnard, Heury and wile, New York, No. § Avonut @Antin, Bloch, Mr. and Mrs, A., Brooklyn, Hetel du Pa villou, Byrue, E, F., New York, Grand Hotel. Cartan, ¥. M., San Francisco, Spiendide Hetel, Chapman,,.Mr. and Mrs. J. G., St Louis, Hotel @Albe. Corri, William E., New Jorsey, Hotel de St, Petera- bourg. Coyne, H, 8., Rock Island, IiL, Splendido Hotel, . Crop, Dr. $. W., Minnesota, Contiuental Hotel Daniel, Frank, Kentucky, No. 23 Rue de Bruxelles Deere, Rev. G. W., Minnesota, Coutinental Hotel. De Gollerz, Osear, Now York, No. 6 Rue Mosnier, D.x, Rovort 3., Nuw York, Hotel de Rivol. Duliv, Dr., Mra, A. F, and family, Baltimore, No, 54 Rue Galilée. , Ely, James J., Obio, Hotel St. Germain. Fair, George W., Philadelphia, No. 7 Rue de ta Biom faisauce. * Fish, Dr. G. W., Michigan, No, 10 Rue Keppler. _ Fowier, Frank, Brooklyn, No. 59 Rue Boissonade, _ Fried, J, 8., Artzooa, Hotel Pavillon. Gilsoy, Charlos, New York, Hotel Lord Byron, ae Gilsey, Joun, New York, Hotel Lord Byron. Giadke, Morrig J., Eimira, N. ¥., Splendide Hotel, : Goodwyn, Mr. aud Sirs, W, 4, Tennessee, No. 1@ Rue Keppler, 4 Grant, Hugh, New York, Hotel Bergéra. Pa Haines, George S., Pittsburg, Pu., No. 39 Rue Pas quis Haraie, Robert G, Jr., New York, Hotel du Mont Bluno, Harper, Mr, J. W. and wile, New York, Avenue de ja Gaude Ards, Hart, Mr, and sre, George, New York, No, 8 Boule- varu Haussmano. Hastings, C. $., Buffato, N, ¥., No. 29 Boulevard Haussmano. Heiler, A, New York, Hotei do Rivolt. Holler, Samuel W., New York, Continental Hotel Heime, William, Philadelphia, Hotel do St, Pe.ers bourg. Hoye, Gustave, New York, Hotel do Rivoll. Hull, Eumuna C., New Jersey, No 11 Rue de la Biens falsance. Honeyman, Mr. and Mrs. A. D., New Jersey, Hote Liverpool, Hunt, Samuel, Jr., Baltimore, No, 64 Rue Gaiilées Jacov, Goerge C., Olio, No. 49 Rue Vivieona Jarrett, Henry C., New York, Hotei de "Athénée., Johoson, Henry, New York, Hotel Bellevue. Jouvort, Rosalie, New York, No. 12 Rue ler. Katz, A., New Orleans, No. 25 Rue d’Angouléme, Kennedy, Donald, Massachusetts, Hotel du Louvre, Kieuer, Dr, W. H., Baltimore, No. 54 Rue Galllée. King, Dr. and Mrs, Francis J., Bone Carolina, Motropolitan Hotel. Krebs, Adolphe, Ohio, Hotel du ARE Lee, Alfred E., Onio, Hotel de Rivo! Mancell, Miss L., Broowlyn, Hotel de Londres et Brighton. Martin, Hopkins T., Albany, N. Y., Hotel d’Orient. Matthows, Miss, Virginia, No. 54 Rue Galiiée. Matth:ws, Miss Lizzie, Virginia, No, 64 Rue Galllée, MoUonnoll, Mr. and Mre., New York, Grand Hovel. McKay, Mr. and Mrs, and family, New York, No. 1¢ Rue Isasse du Rempart, MeLaughlin, W. J., Poterebourg. Millington, Ellen G, New York, No. 8 Avenue @Antin, Mough, Rev. B., Brooklyo, Hotel de St. Peters bourg. Mougn, E. and wife, Brookiya, Hotel de St, Veterse bourg. Norris, W. J., Philadelphia, Hotel de St. Peters- Dbourg. Parsons, Mr, and Mra, George, New York, Hotel de Loudres, Pasker, E.ward W., Arkansas, Hotel de St. Peters Péixotto, Captain, New York, Hotel Lord Byron. Peixoto, Georga D., Onto, No. 54 Rue Galilée, Peixoto, ., Ohio, No. 54 Kue Galiiée, Pratt, A. M., Onto, Splendide Hotel. Quinlan, Wasnington, New York, VAthénée. Rafferty, James C., Alleghany City, Pa, Hotel de St. Petersbourg. Road, Mary C., Brooklyn, No. 7 Rue dela Bien faisance. Reensijerna, Dr., and wile, South Carolina, Reynolds, Dr. K., Brookiya, No, 7 Rae dels Biene fatsauce, : Ross, Jobo J., New Jorsey, No. 1 Rue d’Astorg. Sauval, Henry, New York, No. 12 Rue Mosnier. Scott, J. Mitchell, and family, St Louis, No, 64 Rae Gatiée, Sctton, Joho, New York, Hotel Bergere. Seiley, Mrs. M. J., New York, Splendiae Hotel. Stadimair, Mr, Mra and family, Brooklyn, No. 2 Rue do la Bientaisunce. Stern, Jacov, Now York, Continental Hotel. Stovall, E. G., Virginia, No. 54 Rue Galiiée, Straugs, Mrs. Nathan, New York, Splendide Hotel. Tilley, H. H., Washington, No, 54 Rue Gailée. Tarner, U. ¥., New York, Hotel du Mont Biane. Van Horn, Abraham, New Jersey, ene dos Deag Mondes, Walker, N. A., Coanecticut, Spiencien Hotel, Waterman, L. D., Indianspolis, No 11 Rue de la Bientaisance. White, Miss, New York, No, 16 Rue Bassedu Rem. part. White, L., Portland, Oregon, Continental Hotel. Wickcasham, J. P., Lancaster, Pa., No. 30 Kuo Pate quier, Wilson, Hugh R, New York, No. 29 Boulevard Haussmann, Woodruff, Mr, and Mrs., Brooklyn, Hotel de Londres et Brighton. Woodruff, Mr, and Mrs. F,, Connecticat, No. 10 Rae Koppler. Young, Miss M., New Jersey, Hotel Liverpool. Sir Gilbert E, Campbell, of London, ts at the Wind. sor Hotel. Rev W. Allan Fair, of the Episcopal mission at Cape Paimas, west coast of Africa, arrived yosterday on the Egypt Seoretary Schurz save be would have accepted tho invitation to speak at Cincionati on the 27tp inst 11 tt had not been extended by gentiomen irrespective of party. San Francisco made the white-haired and white. bearded General Fremont foel very proud with ite premoniti of welcome, The Call says:—“The ape pointmont was a gracelul act on the part of the Prea- ident, Fremont belongs to this coast, and it ts fiiting that he should have home and placo ta the territory he helped to conquer. We do not know that he enters tains political aspirations, but if he does the road 1s open. Arizona will seon becomes State, and as sued will be eatitled totwo United States Senators. Gen- eral F nt is aceompanied by his wile, who has shared all the vicissitudes of his remarkable career, and never with moro devotion than whea fortune seemed ty turned hor back on a former faverite, The good of this community will accompany the veteran explorer to bis new home in Arizona.” EXTENSIVE BOND KOBBERY. BOLD OPERATION OF THIEVES IN KANSAS CITY, Sr. Lovrs, Mo, Sept, 22, 1678. ‘An extensive robbers was commilted by unkaows persons in Kansas City on Friday afternoon, which, best Enown to the police, was kept quiet night, It appears a well dressed mas Philadeiphia, Hotel de St Hotel de y afteroven and ot the company, out 14 ra five minutes’ oua- ‘versal! ou one of the ontnp or vo the office be dincovered that hie sate had bed 1,000 in money and $21, bata ory Qonds aud matured coupo policy, belonging to Thum: and other vaiuable papers, subsequ which contaived the bonds, &a, was toun 8 coupany’s stavles, stil og io rm policy and papers, but the bonds and coupons wero goue, county, maturi January, 1874, $5,160 12 coupons of Chilt counties. ‘These emen 8 prepories. there foes one 10 toe:

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