Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 4, 1873, Page 4

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THE CHICAGO DAILY TERMS' OF THE TRIBUNE. TENMA OF BUNACRIPTION (PAYADLE IN AD'AI':R?. Dy mall 2,001 Bunin -Wed iy: :‘:a.dfil Weolly arts of 5 yoat at tho same rate. To provont delay and mistakon, bo wiro and givo Post ©fMco address in full, inoluding Stato and County, i Temittancos may bo mada oithor by draft, 0xpross, Post .Oflica ordor, orfn rogistored loliors, At our rlsk. ZXRA TO CLTY BUDACRIDENS. : « - Datly, dotivorod, Bunday oxcantea; 35 conte per waok. Dally, dolivorod, Sundsy included, 30 conta par wook, i TIIIE TRIBUNK COMPANY, + Ohloago, 1il. =3 =5 TO-DAY'S AMUSEMENTS, g F-Randolph _streot, botwoon it A PE Gantts Havago K Ptaroon oad oleckand Latile, ovening. '8 THIAT[E—Madison airaot, hatwoon DA A Atata A "Kalts Patmats Fromve: *Hot;or Through ¥iro and Wata: Halsted atreot, botwoon, AADENY Rraras. ro Cowlquo Corblnation, Madlson _and Monroo. Aftornoon and ovonng. » OPENA HOUSE—Moroo siroet, botweon P A e I R FATRE-Ollnton, botwoon Washinktonand e e Gooran " Missteores ™ Riternesn aad ovouing. . A BUSINESS NOTICES, ANDS OF OUR VISITING FRIRNDS ARR il ot £h6 photogTbl foons 160 Stai N M FACTURING. 0. i ORLY {mpostomof puto Lyun Tnseet Powdod In Amorica. . Gob tha geunine, X , TAVANA LOTTIIRY-WE SOLD iAot il WP fiat ty ALRLNR, Mo, Ulrcalata funty furmat ol ir L 1, MARTINIZ &CO., unkoes, 10 Wail . 10z 4385, Now Yori REMENTIN, DURING (Fic JUDICLE, OTEnY iy’ Burlii ol aad Towbean Tt 8 e kom0 \Post Hadtsonae. A o caliastion of plbtures on oxbibition fron. EKIDNIE ND LIVER_JAPANESE KIDNEY m“x}""n’x‘fi. Q&I‘?nnonc 3 Japaucao Livor Pills, pnor I T SR, Qtmidior bout ot O o, MOL: A LS apaat-st.San Franciseos Oal.s_olo" Akont for North Amiorl T . AELNNOLD TO ‘TE FRONT again, Woara alnd t90c0 hat during tho Daotor's tem. ey exaiidonco, in Morcoe, 'thn aundly ‘ot Hin 5traot Buohu—tho only knbwn spociite’ 10t~ uri ordora and obscuro complafats in oithor apx~ias boop supiiod (rom bl forinul and apparatus by I ropreson. tativo horo, Thu ganuing artiolo baaes tho Do sl wiaturg, and fa peobably thobess known atuah gomody of 1o kiud 11 tho world: ~ JOMN T, HIENILYy Now York, solo agent. The Chicage Tibone, ‘Wednesday Morning, Juno 4, 1873. Prosidont MacMahon, by way of attaching tho Tronch army to tho presont Administration, has issuod an addresn rominding thom that its head ia takon from thoir ranks, and intorproting this choico a8 an oxpression of the confidence of tho Assombly in thoir loyalty, which thoy sro oz- poctod to continu i ‘What to do with Capt. Jack ond his assoclato dosporadoes was tho sibject of a Cabinet dis- cuision yestorday.. To extorminato prisonors of war, it was agroed, was out of tho question. No authoritative deolsion waa rénched, but it is bolioved thoy will bo turned over to the State nuthoritios of Orogon, to bo tried for murdor. Christianity io still uudor the ban in Japan, but Minister DoLong atatos that Ohristisna who havo boon banishod will bo allowad to xotimn to their homos, IId bolloves that.tho advoostos of univorsal roligious toloration, who aro still in & ‘minority in tho Japancso Governmont, will soon bo strong cnougli to secure tho adoption of tholr policy. Carlists and Republicans in Spam have agreed to rogard the Northern Railway, now held by the formor, as'a Dontral line, This atlows travel and trafflc not contraband of war to be frecly resnmed,. Humanitarian motives were not tho only inducomonts tho Carlists had for this detion, ae tholr military chest will rocsive $200 adsy from the Rallroad Company for the concegsion. - ... : g Chinoso crimjnals in the jail at San Francisco ure to bo punishod'aceording tothe decroe of the Bonrd of Bupervieors, not only by* incarcoration, but by tho unspenkable dishonor of having their Lends shaved. This involves tho loss ‘of tho pigtail, which Is as dear to s Ohinaman s thelr honoristo the women of our race. Thereis hope that this brutal enactment may-fail to re- ceivo tho approval of the Mayor. ’ * Tho roform inaugurated by the Union Pacific in the abolition of tho freo-pass systom bida fair | to becomo popular with the railroads. A meeting’ of Westorn rpilrond managors was held: in this sity yestordny, at which wore roprosontatives,. among other roads, of tho Chicago & Alton, the Burlington, tho Northwestern, tho Tilinols Con- tral, tho 8t. Paul, tho Rock Island, and Ohio & Mississippi Railroads. Thoyrosolved unanimously to cancel all outstanding passes at tho ond of this. month, and to rofuse to iseuo any moro after that dato, This order is absoluto, 'oxcopt with rogard to tho passage of. employes ovor roads with which they aro conneeted, and oxcopt jn cases whoro ronds are compellod by oxistjng con- tracts to grant passes, Clorgymon are no longer to bo allowed Lalf-faro tickots, snd railrond offi- cers are no longer to exchauge passes with each other, : There is hope for tho future now that the Gov- ornment hes taken an cconomical streak. By a recent act of Congress, all tho diplomato eatab- lishmonts in Costa Rion, Guatomala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and 8an Salvador aro to bo olosed up on tho 80th inst., and one Ministor will attend to 4l the interests of tho Government in ‘theso potty ropublics. Tho presont fiva Ministors ro- ceive an aggregate malary of 87,500, while tho mnlary of tho one Minfutor will bo but 10,000, thus saving 37,600 to tho Unitod Btates Treasury, besides somo small scontingont oxpensos. The saying is not a vory largo ono, and, fn comparigon with the offlcial grabbings and etealings, is hnrdly worth mon- tion; but forany sotof economy, howovor small, tho peoplo cannot be too thankful, Tho new Minister who takos the placo of tho five is Col. Gaorgo Willinmson, of Louislana, who was an officer in the Confoderate armny, and has boen reconstructed. ————— ‘The sudden passion of Nixon, the murderous vougonnoo of Biokes, tho drunkou frenzy of Tostor, oven tho atrocitica of tho Bonder assna- sinations grow commonplace heforo tho droadful murdor of Walworth by his son, yostorday, in Now York, Tho youthful parricido is a luw stu- dont, but scoms Lo havo pursuod bis logal studion fomuch loss sdvantage than hiy grandfather, who was ono of the most ominont of the Chancellors who graced the Now York Bar in tho palmy days of Kont. The young law ntu- dont bogan Lis courao by surroptitiously intor- copting lottors from kils fathor to his mother,— 1he two were divorcod,—and, inconsed by tholr languago, travels from Boratogs to Now York, Tovolver in pocket, to punish the disturbor of the family pesce. o invitps his fathor to his own room, under the protext of eoitling somo famlly matters, . Whick ho doos by shooting no less than four bt lota Into him, ono at such closo quartors that the faco of the.murdored paront was scorohod by {tho burning powdor. Buch a deed would bo aufl- ‘clontly awful woro tho parrioldo aud his viotim tho dograded (nkabitants of tho siums of Now York, but it gairis o ghaatly Ullumination from +| tho illustrious doscont, high breoding,’ snd ola! gant lifo of the Walworth family, 3 s Nono of the countloss rumors - affosting Gon. Vau Buron havo takon dofinito shapo oxaopt thio chiargo of corruption in granting rostaurant-per- mits, and that’ hag no offloial sanotion na yot. Not a word has yot boon hoard from the Stato Deoparimont in explanation of the grounds on which'tho Commissionor was removed, A Vion- n0 corrospondont of the New York Tvibuna glvos o vorsion of the rostaurant story with a color unfavorable to Gon. Van Buron, The reoltal is & complicatod one, and, so far ns it Involves Van . Buren, amounts to a statement by a Now York rostaurant firm to s mon namod Jowott, who ropoated it to tho correspondent, that they had pald $2,000° or ' 3,000 for 'tholr priviloges ot Vienna, ‘This pnymont was in tho shapo of loaua and school-hiouso do~ nations, pirt of which, it is statod, wont to Van Buren. In return for this consldoration thoy Bot_tho oxclusive concession of the right to .ostablish a rostaurant, but in spite of this an- othor restnuraut got a pormit from Van Buron, for which $1,000 was pald, $600 of it going iuto Van Buren's possossion. Tho Vieunocso suthori- tloa rofuscd to honor tho socond and conflioting pormit, and the doposit was thoroupon returnoed by Gon. Van' Buren. Some vary irogular pro- coodings aro obarged upon Mayor, but that Van Buron s responsiblo for thom is not shown, ‘The Chicago produce markots woro woalt yos- torday, and grain wae activo. - Mess pork wag dulland 10 per cont ¥brl lower, closing at 216.60@16,55.cash, and $16.90 soller July. Lard was dull and steady ot $8.50@8.65100 1bs cash, and $8.75@8.80 sollor July. Monts woro quiot and firm ot 63@03¢o for shouldors, BY@8igo for short ribs, 85$@83¢o for short cloar, and 10 @120 for swoot pickled hams.” Lako freights wore in fair domand and 3¢o highor, ot 5X@6%o, for corn to Buffalo, Highwines wors quict and stoady at 900 B gal. Flour was .dull and n-- changod. Whoat was netive ot Monday's insido pricos, closing ot 81.24 cash, 1233 eollor- tho month, «and $1.223f seollor July. Comn ‘was activo, and 1@l}o lower, closing ab. 90%@80jgo ‘consh, sud 0030 sollor July. Oats woro very notive, and 230 lower, cloalng at 28350 cash, and 30} sollor July. Ryo was dull and calor at 080, Darloy was dull aud woak at 70@750 for poor to good No.2. Tho stocks of grain in storo hioro on Saturday evon- ing Iagt woro 875,260 bu whost, 5,805,769 bu corn, 1,806,101 bu oats, 220,756 bu ryd, and 66,600 bu barley. Hogs woro' dull throughout, and closod wonk at 16c doclino, or at 84.35@4.70. Thore was & moderato amount of trading in boof cattloat o ehade lower prices, butchors' stuft doclining 250, Bhieop woro ateady. COTTON, IRON, ANRD CORN, One of tho wise mon who mot in * Congross" at Indianapolis, lnst week, exprossod the judg- ment that the sovoroign romedy for all political . and financial troubles was to establish manu- faoturos in the Wast, 5o that tho peoplo ongagod therein conld consumo the surplus broadstuffa raised, and save tho traneportation. This Drilliant suggestion underlios tho whole pro- toction nargument. Do the poople who talk this way evor rofloot that the labor - cmplosed in manufacturing pro- toctod goods snd tho capital ongaged thorein aro utterly lusignificant whon compared with the labor and capital ‘employed in agricul- tural production? In 1870 tho whole numbor of porsons of all ages employod in tho manufacture of cotton .in tho United Btates was oxacily 185,360, and tho capital $140,706,000; and of those engaged in the manufacturs of iron, 180,011, and tho capital employed, $187,628,000. This waa in the wholo of the Unitod Btatos and Torritorios. The aggregate numbor of porsona cemployed in the manufacture of iron and aotton goods - 18 ‘265,000, or but . fraction over one-half ‘the' population of this city. If oll thoso poople wore picked up and plantod in Illinois, Low much of tho surplus corn and wheat of this State would thoy con- “wumo in oxcoss of what they now consume? In tho Btates whero tho “cotton oporatives are em- ployed, grain is not produced in sny considorablo amount, It costs twico ns much to raise corn in Mossachusotts s it does to buy it in Iilinols and have it haulodto tho towna whoro the cotton millsare. Wo ralsoa surplus of corn and whoat. Ponnsylvanis ‘ raises ns much whest ag she consumos. We moy 6ond Lor somo corn, but sho eoxports s much whoat as eha buys, Now, ff tho monufactirors of iron and cotton, tho 25,000 hands, wore all takon from the Enat and put down in Iilinols, how wohld that affect tho prices of corn and whoat In this Stato? Theso persons would ot 10 moro breadstuffs than thoy do now. The New England oporators, instond of oating Illinols broad in Massachusotte, would cat it in Illinols. Tho wheat of Ponnsylvania, Instond of being consumed at home, would bo gout to tho markot where our whoat now goes, - Tho smount produced being the samo and tho congumors tho eame, how would . the galns by tho producora Lo Incronsed by the change of residonce of tho con- sumers, and how would tho consumption bo incroased without any increaso of tho con- sumors? Granted that the cost of transporta- tion for this small amount would bo exved and divided botwoon producers and consumers. The protectionists leave it to bo Inforrod that if tho 185,000 cotton operatora who pay 90 cents o bushol for corn in Massachusotta were romoved to Illinols thoy would continue to pay 00 conts o bushol, and pay from $1.80 to 2,00 por buskel for whoat, when In faot they would not pay one cont more for oither than any other porsony would, Wo do not undorrate the valuo of mau~ ufn.turcs in the Wost; hero is to be thoir future flold. Tho existence of iron and cosl in tho Mississippl Valloy, sud tho density of population, mark tho West 08 a uoat of mauufsoburiug Industry; but, rogarded as furnishing additional consum- org of broadstuffs, thoir cstablishmont has no possible significance, A vory trifiing proportion of the grain-producing. sootlon would supply all the brendstuffy and provisions wanted by all the “proteotod " oporatives In tho country. Their sottlement and colonization hore would nol mako o porcoptible difforenco in tho * prossuro™ of which tho farmers complain, Moreovor, the proportion of human labor employed in produo- ing manufacturod goods s ovory day growing emallor. Tn many lines of goods not over 15 por cent of the product conslats of manual labor. Tho rost 1o porformed by machinory, which docs not eat corn, and is wholy unconcornod in the rato of wagos or tho Lionrs of Inbor. T4 1870 thoro woro 870,441 porsons ongaged! in sgrioultural Iabor in tho Btato of Iilineis, ' This nnmbor i moro than ono-third Inrgor than that of all tho porsona ongaged in tho wholo Unitod Btatea in thé manufagturo of iron and cotton,: {Fhoro woro fn Tllinols, in 1870, aa mony 58 24,670, 495 noros of Improved - lands, with n rosorye, of 0,500,000 yot to bo put undor cultivation, If all tho handa engagod In producing cotton and iron 8oods In “tho United Blates woro placad dn the Btate of Illinols thoy would not consumo tho surplus products of ton countles, aud by tho timo ‘thelr removal Lithor was nocomplished tho murplus products of thoso countion would bo .80 incronsod ' that throo coun- Hos could readlly undortake tho job of food- ing thom .all. Iilinols has 102 countlos. Tho valuo of tho improved lands.of Iitinols, at an avorago of only 826 por ncro, sliows o total cabital invostod of 014,203,760, not noluding o valuo of tho live stook, implomonts, oto, ‘having a valuo of $200,000,000 mora; whilo tho ontiro capital invostod in tho manutacturo, of cotton and iron gaods, moluding * buildings, ma- .chinory, stock on hand, andall, {s but 8028« 829,000, Tho capital invoatod in agrioulturo in Qtlinols, with the personal labor of the ownors ddod, hardly furnishes tho lattor with s lving and pay tholr taxos. i The strong arm of tho law soizos 40 por cont of tho monoy of tho farmor whon ho makos his purchasos, and transtors it, arbitrarily and with- out conaldoration, £p tho maker of cotton, wool- on, and othor “protocted” goods ; and tho wiso- aoro in the Indlanapolis Gonvention could eoo no romody for this but by repoating the procoss on a largor ecalo, and by localizing -tho privilogsd olass in all parts of tho country oqually. Forty millions of pooplo in tho United Statos aro taxed annually to tho oxtont of nenarly $100,000,000 to pay bountios and subsidios in the namo of pro- tootion to infant industrios ninoty yenrs old in this country, undor tho dolusivo protoxt that by 50 dolng 205,000 poraons engaged in making cot- ton and iron goods will bo ensbled to cansumo the surplus products of four hundrod millions of ' “acres of land. o 'WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE M0DOCS P Two’ important rosults Wwors nccomplishied Monday, which will givo vory gonoral satlafac- tion, Tlio ono was tho dofeat of Bam Ashton for Olrouit Judgo, and tho othor was tho cap- turo of Capt. Jaok, tho Modoo murdoror, Tho cago of Sam Ashton Is satistactorily disposod of. Tho peoplo got through with him yostordsy. Ho is bottlod up and sholvod. Tho caso of Capt.” Jack; however, is still ponding. *Having caught him, what shall bo dono with him? Tho ‘Modoo war commoncod Inst fall. For ovor six months, tho. United States Govornment hos boon dofled by a mob of fifty or sixty sav- ages. During that timo, its troops havo boon. soveral” times dofontod, with sovero loss. Tho wounnded who Lave fallon into the hands of tho Modocs have been eruolly tortured, and tho dead have boon shockingly mutilated. Duriig tho campaign, & vory estimablo clorgyman and ono of thio most gallant and skiliful Gouorals in tho army havo boan murdered by tho foul treachory of Capt. Jack, nud Boston Oharley, ono of Dis warriors, Inaddition to this, tho Govorn- mont has boon subjocted to an enormous ox- ponge. A long indictmont oleo stands osgainst Capt. Jack and his Modocs for murdors, robbor- los, and numerous othor acts of savagery perpe- trated botoro tho war commonced. This is tho cage aa it stands, and it is o vory cloar ono. “Thio proot is overnhelming, and tho prisonors’ oro in tho Lands of the Governmout. shnll be douo with thom ? At tho vory ontsot, it must bo taken for granted thattho Intorlor Dopattmont will intor~ foro in thoir bohalf, s it has In tho casos of tho two monsters of cruclty, Batnta and Dig Treo, bocause it Lod had nothing to do with their copture. It must bo takon for granted that the Quakers and Ponco Commissioucrs will ift up tholr volces in o plaintive howl ngainst any pun- ishimont, and'that tho sontimontalists will gush in tho most maudlin manuor over tho persoon- tions of the moblo red -men ‘of tho forost. Tho Intorior Dopartmont, tho Quakors, the Toaco Gommissionora, and tho sontimontalists to tlio contrary notwithstanding, strict justico must Do enforcod both as: componsation: for injurics committed, and 08 o healthy wamning to othoer Indians that surder and pillago. and opon de- flnuco of tho Govorumont cannot go unpun- ished. Cupt. Jack and hin sanguinary Liouton- anis must bo' tried by & rogularly-constituted jury, and they must oxpiate their crimes upon the gallows, or by confinemont for life at hard Iabor within the walls of & penitontiary. = Eithor of theso punishments will satisfy tho domands of justice. “hore is no punishmont which an Indlau droads 5o much as hanging, sud at the same Limo thoro.is_ no punichmont which an Tn- dian would doem moro sovero than to bo com- polled to labor for the rest of Lislifo, Hoisby aature Inzy and indolent, aud looks upon work 08 somothing dograding to bis lordly naturo, and only fitted for squaws, Now lot Capt. Jack What durlog tho rost of his lifo bo taught tho: dignity of labor, aud of very hard labor, too. He s & vory power- ful man in physique, and his musclo can, thoroforo, be utilized to good purposo in carn- ing lis own living, and doiug the Atato somosor- .vico nluo, 1t 1s'abont’ timo that Indinns woro mado to understand that what is good enough for u white man §8 good onough for thom aleo. If o whits man bas to dopend for subsistonco upon his own labor, lot tho Indian do €0 too. If communitios lot & lnzy white man starve who won't work, then ot " lozy Indians | starve also. It wo Lang & whito man who has committed murder, or Imprison him for lifo and doom him to hard Inbor, thon haug or imprison Indian murderors also, Adopt this just and oquitublo thoory,— ond thero {8 no reason why it should not bo adopted,~and tho cass of Capt. Jack presonts no difiiculty whatovor. If, however, the courso of justico s allowed to Lo iutorrupted by tho cir- omlooution of the Interior Dopartmont, or the maudlin' appeals of soutimentalisty, thon tho probmbilitics are that tho case will bocome 80 complicatod that Capt. Jack nnd his follow- murderors will go scot-free, It is not impossl- ble, indeod, that humaultarinne havo alvendy commoncod oporations in bohalf of this eavago bruto, aa tho dispatchios state that many think Onpt. Juck s insanc, This is usually tho first stop in tho apologies for murderors. It euch bo the caso, Lowovor, it is not very croditablo to tho skill- of our Gencrals and to the prowoss of our troops, that au insano mau ot tho hoad of fitty warrlors, and inoum- bored with an almost endless crowd of squaws and childron, could set tho entire Govornmont of the Unitod Btatos at doflance’ for six mouths, out-manauvie ita bost offloors in eiratogy, wid, on wovoral occaslous, signally dofont i an ovorwhalmingly largor forcs, and only ylold nt Ioat whon his own warriors ‘hiad dosortod bim, and ho was out off from pro- Vislons and supplios of war. Thoold insanity dodgo {n this caso ia too palpably absurd to'bo ontortained for au fnstant. Wore It nat fot tho sorions oharaotor of tho ocension, it would bo Inughablo. Tho pooplo, howovor, aro not in tho mood to boar with any moro trifling with this Indian quostion, nor with tho plaintivo nonsonsa of sontimentaliats, Lot the Indian falfill tho saino couditions as whito mon, Tiot lim labor or atarve lko o whito man. Lot him lavo the #amo Juatico na n whito man. Lot him bo pun- {shod like a white man. Any othor courso s & dnugorous one, and will keop the Indian quos- tion in a continual muddle. Place Capt. Jnok, tho murdaror of Gon. Cauby, and Boston Cliat- loy, tho murdorar ‘of Dr. Thomas, on trial at ouco, and, if thoy are found guilty, hang thom or gond thom to prison for lifo, and then placo the rost of the murdorous brutes whoro thoy Will bo Incapablo of any furtlior mischlof. - THROUGH FREIGHT RAILROAD, Wo print olsowhoro tho toxt of s potition whioh s to bo olrculated for- signatures, asking Congross to grant a chartar for o doublo-track froight' railrond from Obicago to “Now York. "Tho hopo of reliot to bo found In such s railrond is ontiroly rensonablo, and tho only question is, whothor tho prosont effort to soouro it has boon propotly shapod. Tho potition reads: “In caso Congross is not proparod to order the construc- tion of “such. n highwny as a hational pubdlio work, wo humbly pray your honorablo bodios to grant o chartor for the construction’ of. such rond, with judiclous snd propor rostrictions,” etc. Tho purposo fa nowhore avowod in the po- tltion' of having tho' Govornment undertako the work on its own nocount, and wo hopo thoro {8 no euch intontion lurking at tho bottom of the potition. . Tunm TrinoNE has froquently pointod ont tho roagons why the Govarnment should not go into tho rail- road businoss, and it is not nocossary £o roitorate theso reasons so long s tho Orodit Mobillor transactions aro frosh in tho minds 6. the poo- plo. In connoction with tho prosont poject, it Is only nocossary to ey the, if tho throtigh froight railrond éan nfford'tho roliof sxpocted from it, it will have alargo and profitablo traflio, and thoro willbo no difffeulty in onlisting private capital tobulldlt, It itls tobon: losing invostmont, thon ita roliof wonld bo of s forcod dud artificial chiaractor, subjoct to all tho abusos'of Govorn- mont protaction, snd thore: is ovary. ronson why tho Government should have nothing to do with it e . ‘Thero is anothor objoction to this mannor of Insugarating thio project.” Congross is poti- tionod to exorciso doubtful powers bofora any effort i3 made to socuro tho dosired privilogo to travorso varions Btatos from the Stato Govorn- monts. It is truo that Congross grantad a char- tor through tho- Btato of Minnesots to tho Northern Pacifio, and tho oxorolso of gucha powor ia not mecosearily dangorons; but it would bo obviously moro in harmony with our form of - Government first ‘to sk tho chartors from the Blatos through Which tho proposed railrond will pass. Thoro is littlo doubt that the ‘various chartors - which aro nocossary could bo obtalned. Thoy cortainly could bo khad in Obio, Indians, and Illinols. That por- tion of tho rond lying in New Jorsoy cotld bo built undor the now gonorsl Iaw of that Btato. Pennsylvanin is, porhaps, doubttul, but it {s probablo that tho poople'of that State will bivo adopted & now Conscitution providing for freo raflronds beforo tho prasont cnterpriso can assumo & doflnite shapo, In any case, it will bo timo onough to apply to Congross aftor it shail havo boon ascortatned that the Btates will not grant the nocossary ohartors, Tho charactor of tho proposed railroad s ma- torially tho sumo 88 that suggestod by Josinh Quinoy,—n doublo-track steel railrosd, to bo workod excluslvely for freight business, at tho clicapost practicable rates, and at a epood of about soven miloa to tho hour. Itis estimatod in tho potition which Las boon prepared that such o road would carry from Chicago to Now York o tonnage equal to 450,000,000 bushols of wheat, and roturn 88 many tons to Chicago. This wonld bo = tonmago of = 18,600,000 annually onch way. Mr. Quinoy’s ostimato was, that, at oight milos por hour and two milos spaco botween trains, with twenty-fivo cars ‘each way ovory fiftaon minutes, 7,000,000 tons could bo carried onch way, which would ba a totel tonnage capaeity of 14,000,000 tons both ways. «Thoso estimatos aro undoubtedly oxtravagant, booauso thoy do notallow for unayolidablo eecidonts and dolay, and would roquiro an onormous invost- ‘mont in cars, locomotives; and employes, which could only bo justificd by o pormanent and rog= ular businoss demanding tho number of traing aa catimatod abovo, It is not necossery, howev- or, to accopt thoso oxaggoratod ostimatos in or- dor to domonstralo tho usofulnosa of tho pro- posod railway. -In round numbers, tho total amount of grain moved from ‘the North- wost to tho -Enst in the courso'of ' the your ia 200,000,000 buehols. If, thon, the through froight railroad” would movoless than Balf of tho amount ostimated, with all tho othor railrond and wator facilitios left to us, it would provido juat doublo the presont facilitics. Thoro are other advantages which such a rail« road, properly constructed, would progent. It Dullt for cash, na it ought to bo, and opon ‘at a uniform toll to cars of tho propor.slzo and con~ struction,thoratos would nocossatily bo very much lower than on railroads which have beon builé on tho Crodit Mobilier plan, which doménd divi- donds on watored stock, Inaddition to this, tho froight businoss would nob Lo callod upon to pay for any loss of timo and oxtra oxpenso Incldont to rapid passongor transit, Proporly managod, thoro would ' ba no noed to havo the road blocked up with freight, which is unavoldablo with roads of singla track in which passongor.traing have thoright of way. It is common, at cortain sonsons of tho year, to find our railronds 60 much clogged by o rush of businoss, or by tho natural cbataclos of éuov, | ico, or floods, that it' la almast inipossiblo to handlo tho frofght which tho roads might ordi- norily carry witkout difiiculty. Tho first con» sidoration fs givon to tho passongoer travel, in which thero is largo compotition, and tho froight in such casos 18 nllowed to take caro of ituolf, as all tho roads at such timos have more of this busirioss than they can do. Tho delays that aro thus occasloned reprosont & Eorious 1oss in time, the interost on thocapital invested, tho wages of omployes, oto. A vory large pro- portion of theso delays would be avoided in a Qauble-track frelght rallroad, and tho publio would bo rolieved of tho oxcosslve charges made to componsato tho railroads for tho lossos inel- dont to thoso delays. B Tho proposition whioh {s made in the potition In zegard to dlyidonds {u to Limit tho not profits of tho ontorprise to 12 por cont por annum on tho notual cost'of thio road and equipmont. Tho amount Iu toolargo. If tho dlvidonds are to'bo limitod ot all (and thoro aro many ways to avold such a provision), 9 por cont would bo o largo rato of intorost on tho monoy luvestod. This is muoh highor than tho avorago rato of intarest in 'ihls couniry in good ond pormanent fnvoste monta. . Rallroad stooks which pay rogularly” 10 por cont aro, otlior thinga bolng oqual, always ab o promium, ' It such o raflroad is to bo bullt, It sliould bo built on o logitimato busiiions basls, with tho prospoot of n paying patronago. "Thio monoy to.construct It can be socurod whoi- over it prosdnts iteolf in this shapo, Its busi- noss, if properly managed, would rapldly in- aronso with tho dovolopmont of tho country, It would creato roturn frelghta from Now York to Olileago with tho spocial faollitios it would offor, and tho froight to tho Wost would bo monsurably incroasbd with tho abatomont of the, tariff on importe. Thoro s no doubt that such a rond will bo construotod soonor or Iter, and it 18 bottor thiat 1t should bo somowhat delayed than hurriod forward on any plan that threatons to impair ita usofulness, or to excito noodloss opposition, —e " Tlsowhoro in this lsaue s printod an opinion of tho Bupremo Court of this State in a caso of considerable ntorest, affooting tho titlo to real atlon, tleroforo, the Logislaturod of: 1872. and 1878 ‘nve loft an aggregato deflcignoy.of throo millions, .or theraabouts, for the:Legislature of 1874 to moot.——Albany (X Y.) Arqus, . - | —Tho Iato deolsion of tho Bupremo Court of Minnosots in thé casos of tho Winonn & BE. Potor Rond dofinitoly assure to tho &mnp}u tliolr constitutional right to regulato tariffs of railway transporiation. "It now remnins for the paoplo to dooldo whothor or not they will' take advan- tngo of tho disapponranco of an obatnola wioh in somo Btatos hias proved tho most difiioult to overcome, . . . The railway intorests, con- solous of tholr daugor from tlie Loglalaturo, aro { preparing the means of - shiold- ing thomsolvos, “They proposo to nomi- nato. and oloct a8 Govornor ono of tholr own number who will have it in_his powor to voto whatovor moasures tho people's ropro- sontatives ma; N!li;)l for lh'nlthl% rollrond ox- tortion, Willlam D, Wasbburn s tholr man, snd his fidolity to thoir intorosts. was ampl Wvud by his nmnl[iumnut of tho plot to gral 000 noros of publio lands to bo dlvldngfm epolls among tho ronds,—st. Paul Dispalch, —All around us tho farmors aro orgonizing for tho campaign alrondy inaugurated by our brothron in’ othor Statos, for tho long'pull againat tho monopolists 'that bave boon for yours dovouring our substance.— Gloncoe (Alinn,) Ttogister, s —Tho Patrons of Husbandry hiave hisd & rapld growth, Thoy organizod for s Inudable ond ond rocoivod thosmilo of approbation from all lovors of fair doaling, and now thoy connt tholr friends by hundrods’ of thousands. 811, this perlod of” thoir growing strength may be the criticnl time with thom. ~Already, in somo quar- tors, mon whose politiosl ambition has not boon Pl‘ntlflod oro putting thomsolvos at tho hoad of ocnl faotions, and calling convontions wndor various namos, insidiouply Inaisting that tlio farmors must mako the nominations. Thoso sly catato. Barbara oil and Josoph Koll, hor hus- baond, brought suit to racovor & pleco of property which Borbara had conveyed whilo yet a minor. Tho dood was oxcoutod in /1853, whon Bacbara wag botweon 10 and 17 yoors old. Sho wag mar- riod In January, 1855, whon sho was a fow ‘months over 18 years of sgo. Aftora lapso of ‘yonrs shio brought o bill to recovor the proporty, which, in tho moantimo, had passod through the bands of sovoral imnocont purchasors. . Tho Oiroult Court dismissod tho bill on tho ground that sho hud forfoited hor rights undor a ruling that hold that & minor must apply for o rostoration. of rights - within throo yosrs ofter attalning mojority. Tho docision of tho Ciroult Court hos now boon roversod. Tho Supromo Court holds that Barbara has boon undor cumulativo disabilities in tho married stato, aud, as tho limitationa aro not statutory, thoso diénbilities must apply. Boing undor tho covorturd of marrings all theso yoars, sho was Dot suf furls, and cannot bo Leld responsiblo for o ‘nogloct to suo for hor rights within the throo yoars sot as a limit. Al this, howover, was prior to tho statuto of 1800 concornlnga married woman'a soparato estate. It would bo intoresting to lmow whother this lator statuto would affeat tho quostion,—whothor & marriod ‘woman, undor tho present statute, could bo con- ‘sldorod as non juris, aud, theroforo, not subjoot to tho limitation prosoribod for such cascs. A Gorman View of the Judicial Elcce ~..° tion in Chicago. Translated from the Chicago * Freio I'resse,” Juna 3, Soldom hny an oloction occarred undor such poculiar clroumstancos ‘as that of yostorduy, Tho’ mombors of {ho Bar liad declared for tho ro-olection of tho five Judgos, and Booth was tho only ono who mot with any opposition among tliom_worthy of montion; for, with tho pro- verbially short momory of tho pooplo, tho fact was iguored how “graclous” Mr. Williams may bo to o domagoguo nudor corlain circumstances, Thoro woro no opposition candidates nominatod. Mr. H, Borbor, Jr., had fotirod from bis candi- daturo, Mr. Juliue Rosontlal dotormined too Inte to tako it up, and appoared to bo not in tho fiold af all, so that, finally, Sam Ashton alons opposod M. Booth. To tho crodit of thoso Gorman wards which foxos hnvo dorangod tho work of tho granges i difforont_countios in two or threo Siatos, and causod s division of purposs smong the mem- Lors, that, If not spoedily cheeked, must broad finol disastor,—Mitwaukeo ( Wia.) Sentinel, —Capitalinta havo always boon united, and it has always boon tho disguised polloy of oapital ista to koop tho Inboring poople and the farmors divided up undor plfl*l names, that capitalists mxgm ot control of the mafority party nnd run 1t for thoir ntorost and bonofl, - Bartioe. ot the dominaat party for tho past fifioen yoard, haro not boon managed or run for tho Interost of tho gountry, But capital and monoy havo ruu’ it, And thie farmara havo sufforod in thelr ignorant boliof that their party was terving tho country, ¥hon in faot tho country haa beon mado to Borve tho wenlthy monopolisis, who Improva ova ossiblo opportunity to oppress tho farmors an: 0op thom poor. It will bo concoded, oven by it was found ihat thoro wora 1id back pockots 1 his s Michaet Manly, sicarn: ‘T know Sulllvan for_two Joare, b frst kiiow im in Dioominglon, Iil. I maw m plve for tho last timo betwoan 11 an 13 o'clock Inst night. Taaw him about 10 o'clock at Mrs, Tonuy'a boarding-houso, Ifo was,'drunk.dt tho timo, Jim Hauoy and hin brothor and_somo’ othors wantod Lim togo tan dance, T went with him, Bullivan pafd for tho drinks at Last's. Homo partics wha wero fighting broko 8 window In fho Liouso, One of our party and & Gorman ware ‘fghting. I fold Sulllvan to come. on lomo. Oute pariy turicd away, Wo tlion hoxrd homo shots firad, and tho crashing of bricka. Bullivan ra. back to soo wliat' was the mattor, I thion hoard some one asy that ono of our party was belng Iillod, I rnn Dback and_found - Bulllvan Iying in tho rond, Suliivan throw no bricks, and did not molest anybody, WALL STREET. Roview of tho Monoy, Gold, Bond, Stock, and Produce Markots, Spectal Dispatoh to The Chicago Tridune. Nzw Yorx, Juuo 3.—A vory quict feoling porvaded tho Wall stroot marketa to-duy, and thoro was an ontire baonca of any fntorosting foaturo {n buainoss or apec- ulation. Bomo of tho loading mon of tho atroet are at tho West attonding tho spring rallway cloctions, and tholr absonco has sometlilng to do with the prosont quiot condition of affaira Lioro, Thoro was pothing in t‘!l. forolgn advices to causo any imporisnt fluctuae fons, e MoNEX W8 vory casy, and an increasod supply of capital waa offering on call, . Early in tho d4y tho brokors wors sccommodatod at 8 o7 por cpat, but theso rates wora ot long maintained, and (1 lator Lusiness was dono 8¢ 4 to & por cont, Primo discounta nro oasy at 63¢ to 8 por cont, Thoro is a Lsrge amonnt of monoy offering on timo, snd overytiuug Indicates o summor plothors, L BToOKS, 'Tho stock maikob Was firm o tho opening deslings, but woaknoas 900 8ot In, and a doclino i prices of 3¢ 10 1%¢ por pont wna notod, * Thero wns no materisl o covery.uatll aftor 2 o'clock, when, under little more sotivo duslsioss, prices ndvanced to tlio highest point of thio @ay in nomo fnstances, Tho most active denlinge and widest fluctuations woro fo ¥acio Mall, with Uolon Pacifio noxtin pointof intorest, Tho Clark ‘party wro liboral buyors, Tho amendod financial roport of tho Paciflo Mall Stosmaliip Qompany is anxfously Jeoked for, Tho Di- roatora promino that it ainl b #oFthconiug on Tiies: day, 1t 1s roportod that tho vxhibit will bo vory bad, ‘Tho last roport showed a=ong tho assats over $11,000,« 000 £or stoamorn, bt 118 bollovod that i thor s Sgured down Lo ot orl, not moto tlan 30 por oo Ry ket 3 Goay Fi gorLn sas quigtand stendy yestordny and to-day, of gal#c0uld bo traccd ta tho Gould perty.” ThC 1o ail lionost Ropublicans, that monoy 'runa the Govornmont, and tho Govornment s run for It’l:’m who Lave monoy.—Monlello (Wis.) & 3. ~—Wo bellovo tho timois rapldly approshing whon the peoplo will find it uognauiryp& mtorro- ate thoir candidates for Judges, oren of - the upremo Court, a8 to whiat aro ther views on | many important points of constitutional law. Inthis Btato, for Inatanco, thero have boot stondy encronchmonts npon ' the rights of tio Bsoplo, In overruling plain provisions of o tate Conatitttion.—San Fvunoisco Call. ——NnthlnE las]boen ovolved,by tho *Farnoera' Movement " moro likaly to result in pormmnont good, both to the railrond compauios and the Dooplo, than 10 rebuke of tho pass eystom. - No Jman can bo o porfectly indopondent legislator 'Who ridus upon nfroo pass, As for a Judgo riding upon & froo pass, it scoms to usio bo atrocious and morconary to tho last dogree. Tho fact that it is common doos not reducoits heln- ‘ousnoss,—Danville 6171.) Times. . —Out upon this Obio tomfoolory. Tho peo- plo will have none of it. Thoy are in csrnest and moan businesa whon thoy condomn tho sal~ ary atonl.—Portland (Me.) Arqus. —Qon. Canby dlod poor. Eithor tho pay of tho army officors should . bo raised, or thoy #hould bo allowod two torms in Congross after thoy hava sorvod noy twenty yoars. Thoy ought not to dio poor.—Toledo ‘a.) Blado. —Wo prosumo thore hias_beon a misunder- ahmdlnlilnhout tlio back-pay business, Tho fact {a tho whilo thing was o tonching opiadde of mutual disintorostodnoss. Congress pnssed tho bill, not bocause its mombors wanted that manoy, but bocanso thoy wanted to tostify thoir rogar for tho Prosident's sorvices by rafsing his slary. And the Prosidont signed the bill, not becauso Lo wanted tho incranso of ealary, but booauso ho thought tho mombors ought to havo back-pay.— Buffalo (X, Y.) Courder. ; —Wo aro unablo to joln tho New York Herald in jts domand for the execution of the 3fodoo prisonors ‘bocause -they have murdered our * troops.” If “troops " aro’ more sacred than citizons, wo- ero unablo to parceivo wherefore, nor doos tho crimo of _the redsking of tho Lava~ yosterday placed their intelligonco and solf- roapoot in a vory' bad light by glving largo ma- Jorities for Ashton, wo wish to state that nino- tonths'of the citizens who voted for Lim know not what thoy did,—that they did not know who Bam Aslhton is. In any caso, the votos for this man would have been incomparably smallor it the dementod be- ings of tho Tomporance Burenu had not insulted the Gorman-Americans in the grossest mannar in their last call in the interest of Mr. Booth, and, 80 ‘to speak, driven thom to the polls by forco to vote ogainst Booth. *Anybody to Lont Baoth " was the resolution of many, Bum Ashton racoived tho support of not a sine glonowspaper. Tho Frele Presse wamed ita rondors against this man, and even tho Staals- Zeituing, which would very gladly have séon him olooted, soconded its Bam only by attacking Booth fiorcely. That, in epito of all this, an Ashtori could get mora than 6,000 votos, should sot those people to thinking who, in thelr blind fanaticism, place thoir constrainod views over the Constitution and tho right. If the agitation ovor tho scolding of Mr. Booth’s friends could securo 80 largo a minority for such & sorrowful, unsupportod candidato as Ashton, it may bo nse sumed that tho unitod action of all those who will resist tho joyless, Puritanical Sunday and othior kindrod restraints will bo strong onough to inguro tho eloction of froo-thinking ! mou; inimlcal to all unnocossary progoription, —— NOTES AND OPINION. Tho Administration organs in Towa aro rathor ashemod of tho recent expostyos alloged agninat Dudloy W. Adams, and tho Davenport Gazelte (orgail) says : . + Tho ongincors of this romanco of slsuder have clearly boen “holst by thelr own poturd,” . . , . ‘Wo do not 8eo how tliose whio have taken part in this “erugado,. in the lght of such facts, can hesituto to vindicato bim cntiroly ; aud wo are suro that all who havo.taken grouud in favor of Lis momination for ‘Lioutenaut-Governor will bo stimulated by this cxpo- sure to work with redoubled zeal in his behialf, —Nelson Dingloy, Jr., editor of tho Lowiaton Journal, has tho fneido track for tho Rdpubli- can nomination for Governor of. Maine, and Josoph Titcomb, of Konnobunk, is likely' to be tho opposition candidate. Llection in Beptem- bor ) : .. —O¢ tha Now York Logislativo sonsion, junt ended, tho Brooklyn Union (Honry O, Bowen's nowepapor) Bays: . Thero was littlo or no buylng of mombors, a8 Twood was wont to_buy thom—iike shoep in_tho shambl But tho corruption of gold ia uot tho only, nor alws, tho worat, corruption of the period. boon dout from vory noar tho firat of the acusion that the Legisloturo Lia baen composed of waak, if honcst, mon; and it lins Loeu equally ovidont that the lobby usa beon stroug nnd unscrupulous, howover dstu- olined to make uso of poonulary inducoments, DIA any sob:of mou jn thia city want any bill pasaod for thelr own fudividual advantago, thoy botok thome pelvas to Atbany, and ‘fastenod” thomsolvos with tiro loas porsistoncy upon tho rural ear, Novor in the Lis. tory of tho Loglsluture havo wo kuown o lobby more succossful in_obtaluing its euds with o loss oxpondi~ turo of money, Thu reault hay boen volumo of logls- lation almostsinpeocailouted, uud equally romarkablo o account of the littlo theroin of real valuo to tho ‘pooplo ut Jargo, - It has for yenrs past beon tho custon’upon tho gdjonrnmant of overy Logishaturo to pro- nouneo it o wonkor or worge body thau any of its rruducusanm, but wo doubt if this condomuation s Jugt, Tho fact I, our Loglslatures havo como tobo pratttv‘ much of n plsco—to be substantially aliko in charactor aud nct, beeauso run in tho main by poweroutside of or bohind the legisla~ tive body, aud for uelmciul and poruonal rathor than ?nunnfl aud public intorosts. 'Iho domor- alization is not #o much in tho mowmborship of Honato and Assombly, as in tho outasido londorship of that momborship. . ... In tho coming Novomber tho peoplo will chooso an ontiroly new Loglslature—n Sounto for.two yoars, audau Assombly for ono yoar, Lo elect a Republican Logislaturo will bo to re- peat 1872 aud 1878—to say to Murphy, Cornell & Qo,, continue to run tho Blate au your machine, —Hlochester (N. X.) Union, —The ug?ro%n(u amount of taxes levied by the Tato Logislaturo of Now York excoeds that of last g&ml‘ (exclusivo of the doficionoy tax) over 82,000,000, o mako tho mattor worwo, tho ap- propriations largoly oxcood the taxes leviod, and no provislon wos mado for tho deflolonoy of $1,600,000 boquonthied by the Loglslaturg of 1872.”"Asldo from tho onofmous bicroaso ln tax- = Bods appoar moro holnous than that of . tho Apnchos, who_nro wolcomad to the resoryotions of ‘Ariccna. Capt. Juck oughe to dio, but his offonses aro not worso {han tho orucltios prac- tsod on_ tho whito sottlars in tho valloys of tho Gils ; crucltios that not only unpunlsliod, but which the Government would, for a long timo, not condescond to notico.—San Francisco Alta. e TUESDAY MORNING'S MURDER. Investigation of tho Casc by the Coroner Yestordny, ! A parageaph in Tire TRmUNE of yostordsy morning. informed tho publfo that s fatal tragedy Lind boon cn- -nctod at Linlf-past 11 o'clock on Mondsy night at the cornor of Wood znd Twonticth stroots, Tho lato hour .8t which tho fact was {ransmitted to tho Contral Polico Station provonted tho publication of furthor particu~ lara ot that time, p 7 Tho following facts woro brought ot st tho Coros nor's inquest yestordsy afternoon ¢ f Dr, E, A, Emmona aworn : Tam County Physiclan, Imadoa post mortom examination on the body of Thomaa Bulllvan, ot No, 201 South Ashland avenuo, T found a gun-shof wound in tho right sido, just at tho lowor margin of the scapul, paading inwardly ‘bo- twoon tho fourth and Afth ribs, throngh tlio lung -of tho right sido, injuring tho venn and pulmonary arto- rles, and passing through the left aldo about .threo inclies from tho spino, Tho gin-shob wound: pro- duced doath almost ustantly, Thoro were Do otlior njgrioa found on tho body. 3 Uenry Peters steorn: 1 1ivo st No, 497 Weat Stxteénth stroot, -1 was present at the placo whero tho pliooting occurrad, on Twontioth atreet, near Wood, on Aonday night. It wasabout 11 o'clock, Thora was an open- ing danoo of a grocery and saloon, Tho placo 1 kopt. by Oharles Last, Iwes bar-tendar thbro, About fit- tcon minutos of 11 'elock a crowd camo info thio saloon and enlled for somo boer, and poid for it, Thoy thon want outsido, Thioy came buck into tlg saloon nud callod for moro ber, which {hoy did not pay for, ‘If T askod dne to pay for it, they said it was somo ud olac, Thoy thou wautod fo danco, but I wouldn’t ot them, and stoppod tho music, becauso it was 11, and timo toclose, Thon they sald thore would bo a fow tlicro, M. Last told thom to got out ; that ho wanted o clozo {bosaloon, They did go out, snd_started to breakin up windows with brickbats, Inmbor-wagon sticks, an clods of earth, Thon Mr, Last fired ono shot, I did not know hie had a pistol bofore, He stood fu the front Dinll and shot out, I don't kuow which dircction, Then tho crowd all seattorod and began shonting, . Ta ivo or ton minules they camo back aud fufslicd the rest of tho glass, Then' Mr, Last wenk out: and fired threo 'moro gliots. When tho crowd - ro- furned they' hallosed out “We will fix » _Baw mono of tho shola fako ef- ! ), Joct, DId'no} Yniow any ono was aliat until tho potico como affor Mr, Last, ‘Tho sccond timo Isold tho crowd boer, T gavo thom fwonty-ivo glasscs, and whils 1 waa sorvinig 1t some of thom went, througlh tho draw- or, which containcd about $12, I think thera wero from_cighteon to twenty-fivo porons in tho party, T was in thio hiouso putting out the light when tho abiots Wotu fired, Cguld not aby whotbot lio gt tho Tovolvor p ataira or not. X am & brotlier-iiiaw of M. Lasts, ZLouds Nicklo sworn: T was ot tli dance at Oharlos Laaa on Monday uight, About 11 allogk s party of young mon emno lnto iho saloon. Ono ‘of “the mon ot tho dauco enfd his watch was slolon from Dim, Ho was not ono. of tho partly which canio in, Ouo of 'the parly trestod tho wholo_crowd, Last ssked them to gooutsido; ho wantod to closo up, Thoy would not go, He mado thom o, They thon commenced to bombard tho win- dovwa bud doors with stones and bricks, and so meny camo insidotho pooplo did not know howto savo thom- selves, I ran out tho back -door, andus X went out wome ona ot tho outsldo bit mo on -tho hoad with somothiug, (Tho witness hero oxhibited a sealp wound on tho right wido of hisLosd,) I then ran and cropt undor & neighboring houso, and that is all I know, Thio witnoss horo [dontifiod & humbor of young mon as' Dojug part of tho crowd which mado tho attack, George Sull{van, swors: 1 am a brothor of {lio do-- coasod, 1 luat fuw him alivo ten minutes biforo ho got aliot, on Monday night nt 11 a'clock, or soon nfter, ¥t waa oh thio coruor of Twentioth and 'Wood atrects, Wo wero at a danco thoro, fu £hio saloan of thio man who sliot my bratlor, Whilo 1 wau thoro two Gar- mans wero fightiug about s watch, Thero was s largo wrty of u in (ho paloon, My Urothier drank at tho ar with them, Then (lioy all went outelde. Thera \yoro soven rounds of buo drsuc by hy party, Ligard {lio proprivtor order tho patty out, Thoy satd thoy wankod to danco, Thoy then went outalde. Somg ono throw Lricks, Last fired threo shots, 1o fired boforo wo commenced to throw bricks, Wo thon went- awsy ond eamo back, There woro thiroo shots fired whon wo camo back, My brathor was it by the first shot, When ho was Lit ig ran {nto tho roadaud foll, Aftor wo wont out ono of tho Gor ‘manu whipped one of our erowd, We allowod bims to o whippod, My brotlior was waiking past (ho _daor when ho wasshat, 1 saw have tho _rovolvor in his Baud bobind ho counter, Wison Lo firad o was in tho doorway, Whon I rau up to my brother ho could not epoali, Last fired toward him, Ono wine dow was broken before the shooting was done, Philp Murry, eworn: T know Thomas Sullivan ; Twout with acrowd to Last's place; L was 8 Llock awsy whon tho firiug commoncod § X was i (ho sa~ loow'; thore was & row thoro; I aw -Last go behind tho countar, sud tako a revolver and put in hls pooket ; a woman triod {o stop hum ; X heard windows belng Droken ; this Was fter T hoard tho shota, _‘Thoro were slx ghot fired, Tho prisoner sworo that Last had put g3 on thio holdiuga of 1 #Birol ot far from #1500, °_ 110 210 that thuy HONDE, Governmonts wera dull but atrong, For flour tho inquiry was e ( £ tho inquiry wes moro gonoral, whoat Lrands are il Jerogular nnd Loy Contrind ‘winter, cholce freah ground mnbor, and white wient/ oxtras sro steadicr i Joss Treoly Gffercd, " Ssjen, 7500 berrels; rocofpts, 19,080 barrols. Wheat mot vith & morv activo inqulry for exporl; aud a steadlor Teoliug ‘was noticeably nmmd grades of spring, Tho major ‘part of tho good whoat arrivingfn aireads aold. Winter ‘was stoadior and in falr domand, but tlio hupply Is only modorato, Balos, 161,000 busiiols, part Jast night ;. ros celpl 205,140 biishols. _Pork wis ‘modoraloly setive sudsteady. Throo hundred aud fifty barrels now mess 801 for export at $10,035¢ cash. Ollicr saloe, cawh and rogular, wero about 135 brlo, ot $10.50@10.75 for now Tucas, and $18.02)¢ for clear, For futuro dolivory 250 Lrls for July sold ot $16,76, and Inst evening, 500 brla 0, nt §0.05, " Racelpts, 031 pkge, Out meata gxhibitod nll!lxbl businons, "634 orices wero ploady, buyors Al scllors g o _apart, saltod shoul- dorn " are” B E° npl" ploed hams, 16 ‘@12c. Dry safted hams nro Orm, and in smafl’ stock, Receiptd, 301 packagor, Tho bacon markat waa modorataly doivo aud steady. Long clear, 83¢c, and plfort clear, @00, Tard was modorately activo nud about steady ; Western on apot, 9c, About 200 tea city nold at 8Y5@Bso, For futuro dolivery, 250 tea for Auguat od private torms 3 250 tes July at Oige, and August alvut Digo. Recolpts, 483 plga. VAN BUREN. Specimen of the Erregularities Cone nocted with the American Doparte mont at the Viennn Expositione=0ut= rageous Prostitution of Officinl Poa sition. . New Yont, Juno, =W, J. Siillman, writing to the Tribune from§Viennn, Austria, about the irregularitios inthe Americn Departmont of tho Expasition, tells 1o slory of thio now old ucandal of reataurunt eerupe ona : 4 Jowatt, of Jowott & Tracy, Now York, callod on Gon, Van Burenin Ootober lnst, and told him that ho intendod to eatabliah an_Amorican restsurant at the Exposition, Van Buren replled that ho had many ay plicants, Tom Cable and Sutherland, of Now Yor) om ; that Lo bad alread: amony y 'mado s partia] promlo to ous iitzel, of 303 Broadway and suggostod tuny Joweit wud Hitzel - unile tholz rosources, s heonly wanted ono ustaurauat, snd 5 good ono, _ Th euggostion wa adopiad, and Moyor drow up ariicles of ngrooment, which wero signed, Meyer also slgning it as o witnoss, _Thoso nrllclos rex quirod an fmmadiato doposit of $1,000 from_each, nnd anothor of $5,000 from cach bofore J itzol Uning tha chock Which lio prencnted, ' Tha partaors wont to Moyor to erraugo tho final dotafls ns 155 concasnion, ofc, e HMeger swid. it hg on: pensea of cominiaslon wero heavy, and that 10 appro- printion Lnd boon made by Congroas, and suggested that thoy givo him, a5 & loan, tho check which hed Teen rojoctod ot ‘tho bonk, ’ Jowott rofused, and was obllged to sall for Europo without papors ond loaving tho Hitzel doposié unpatd. Moyer, how- over, gavo Jowelt a letior to Baron Schwartz Bonborn, who'informod bim that Van Duron bud no right to make concesalons or grant space outaldo of tho bulld ing for any purposo, - Jowetta concosnion woa mudo, aud contracts woro antorod nto fuvolving $3,000, thd undorstanding being betweon Behwartz and Jowott that 10 othor concesslon for & restaurant would ba mado. On returning to New York Jowett found that Hitzol patd Moyor $1,000, to bo retiirned whon tho up- propriation was mady, but lio got io_memorandurm o Toceipt for it. Ho had also ssceriained that Van Buron ado to Boohmo & Wiclo cons cosslons for moro bar-rooms, snd was informed by one of tho fim ' they paid from $3,000 o $3,000 for thelr concesslous, in tho shapo of loans und échaol-house donations, and that.part of this went {o Van Duren. As. Ifitzel 1ind not yot mado tho doposit roquired by iho contract, Jewatt mado o proposition to buy out or soll out, which ‘BMoyor, a8 Hitzcl's adviser, rofusad, but Lo iusiated on now articles, Jowott thoroupon ava his lato partuor . notico of withdrawal, gavo Van Lurana_ statomont of affalty, and roquestod that Lo bo nfforded tho neces- sary facilittes for transacting his busineas at Vionna 3 Dut ho was obligod (o leavo Amarica without furthor rogognitlon., Shortly nftor hia arrival at Vieous, Hits 2ol arrived with tho concession for n rostaurant jvon bim by Ven Buren for Limsclf and £ 1o 10% il oy ad alvon tho 1,000 originally. . paid in 71, -Donhie Bhntaving atd Mosog $500, Whlch lttes o kaned over to Iitzolas bis (Moyer’s) sharo of the original $1,000, VauBuron boing in tho posscealon of thi otbor $600.. Jowett protested to Baron Schwartz agaiust the concosslon mado 10 tho now applicants, and It ws re- fused, 80 that thoy not only Lind no ‘concassion for tholr doposit, but uo_compcustion for their troublo and oxpense, and it s only since {lo wholo mattor Das boen disclosed, on ostl, ‘oforo the Inveatigating Gommisatop, that atiempta have boon mado {o hush up tho affalr’ by returniug Hitzels monoy and induc- ing Hoehmo & Wicle to_ talts him_into. tholr eatablishe moit, It fa known that Van Buron has admitted o knowledgo of . thoso transsctions, ond tho Focolpt of partof tho money, aud that appropriatioua woro mado by Congress, A phase of tho corruption, which can bayo no rolation 1o tho pretoxts'af lending) 18 tho agreoment to puy Meyer a_porcentags ou salug by Boalima & Wiohle, and lilw direct. demiaud of 10 por contof all profits from Jowett, which was not ade mittod. 1t appears, also, that Moyor permitted por- sons to aend goods Intendled for privato wso axd protit 20 gocds Intended for tho oxhibiifon it United Statos yosnels, and that ho offered Jewott and Tricoy tho samo privileges, which thoy doclined, ' Ouo person is 8aid {0 liave oifotod o saving of sovoral thouspud dol- lars fu frolght fu this w . S—————— | : . Railrond Nows OmaTiax, Ont;, Juno 2.—Tho oontracts for builaing 1ho doublo track ‘On tho Great Westorn from Glencoo 10 Windsor huvo beon lot, in four soctionn, and tha contractors for oach scclion uro prepariig to coma ‘menco work at oncor “Tho contractora for the scetions betweon Ohatham and Gloucoo aro Mesars, Carpenter, Boymour & Bowles, of Chicago, Olatlnum will be thio headquarters of tiio firn whilo they are prossouting tho work, 1t §8 said the Company find somo difliculty {u artanging yith ownors of laud through which Uia lino passes” for tho extra twonty-fiva fect right of way roquired for tho doublo track, $200 por nere Doing © domanded fu wmany cases, Tho Come pany Yofuso to pay any such figure, aud, whoro par~ tios Tofuso to 0oma to torms, proposo to 'tako” possca- sion, and allow:tho owners of tho land to sook thetr Tomédy in orbitration or othorwise, - It n tho intene on of the Company to hav tho doublo tratk ready for traflo this fall, s Dxa MorNEs, Ta,, Juno 8.—Tho decreo of foroclos= uro n tho casg of “tio Des Moiues Valloy Kalrond wau rocarded yoslordsy, . Thio docreo orders a aalo of tho ontiro road, from 'Kevkuk to Fort Dadgt, aud tho Jahas of tho grant, o Amt morlgeyy 4 firat lion on tho road from Kookuk to D Moines, Tho mechanio's lions of Marcy, Vlyun & O'Briou mnd_Gaggorty aro catablishied as & fAirst lon on tho uppor vad of tho road, ond tho ggce ond mortgagon firt lien on tho road botweon Des Moluos snd Fort Dodgo, subjoct, howover, {0 the mo- chanica® Livi, Thio road fa (0 b6 sold under u spacial excoution of thio Borf of Polk County, and tho bonda ‘undor the first and sccond mortyngo rocelved on tha bid, on conditiou that tho purchssor pays in caah tia amount nocessary ta pay tho costs sud the mechanio lous, Tho cluding of Maroy, Flynn & OMirlon and Goggorty nmount {0 alout 55,000, Tho first morte go bouds amount to $3,000,(00 and. utorest, and the upatd bonda of tho iecand inortgago te abott $23,00 orcat, Tho paymont of tho Tiliuole & Midsis. aippl Tolograpl Company is deforred to the sesond origage, aud will probably bo foft out in the oold, —_— matnin BED Drowned, i Br, Louts, Mo, Juno 3.—Prof. O'Donovan, of tha Cbristian Drothora’ Acadomy of this city, wak drowne od yestorday aftornoon, in Crovo Caur Lako, reveral milos from tovn, whilo bathing withia numbor of upils of thio scademy Who wore attendiug a plculo a a platol {u tho back pocket of his pouts, aud that bo Dad bia cont off at the timo, , who ‘was present, ‘Was Toguosted 10 tako off Lis coat, and, upon dolugso, | Lo lake, Mr, 0'Donovan waa quito a young mau, and sonof the dlnunfiulnhnd Prof, 0'Donovay, of Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland,

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