Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 11, 1873, Page 4

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B THE CHICAGO DAl LY TRIBUNE: SWED TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. TENMS OF NUNSCRIPTION (PATANLE IN ADVANCP) by mal W0 | Bunds 2, Dyl 1308 Voo it Parts ol A yoar at tho samo rate. ‘To provant dolay and mistakos, bo suro and give Past Ofeo address dn full, Inoluding Btats and County, Jtemittancos may bo made oithor by dratt, oxpress, Post Otice order, or in rogistorod lolters, at our ri TERMA TO CITE RURSCRINERS, | Datly, deliscred, Bunday oxcopted, 23 conte por wook. Dally, delivorod, Bunday included, %0 cents por wook. ddress THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Corucs Madison and Doarbor Ohlgago, 1. TO.DAY'S AMUSEMENTS. VS TITEATRE-Randolph treot, betwaon O gnttar * Afhtnron Orlie, " A **Hoora Dillon.™ Afloruoon aud ovening, i | 'R TIEATRI-Madison stroot, botweon n.?lf&‘.i“{‘.}”‘ e e Keatis " atnath Troups. *101d Curlosity 8hop. 4 MUSIO — Halated stroet, botweon Y oncos. Fioaisa Gornlso Corabination: Altornoon nnd ovoning. MYLRS' OPENA LOUSE--Monroo straot, batweon Moran Siaty and Doarbosn, & Munning's Sfinstrols. BUSINESS NOTICES. N'S_ 1N 1S USED DY ALL O i M sinisuraaie, o Slasting thom of bugs, floas, worm: ’,_nm.l ants, A “ROYAL, IIAVANA _ JOTTERY_WE' BOLD IN hfim‘; gtaad Avcll laat Aiu; 0 prize, Circusrs : o, . B " Bakors, 16 Walbat. - £ 0. Box 1685, Now York. aoncluded by a vote of confldence in tho Gov-~ ernmont passod by the satisfactory majority of ‘080 t0 816, This is o much strongor voto than that. which overthrew Thiors, whoso Minlatry was dofoatod by 800 to 844, Tho Chicago produce markets wore' gonorally “strongor yostordny. Moss pork was quiet, and 10@20q por brl highor, closlng at ©16.80@16.85 onsli, ond 810.00@10.10 eollor July. Lard waa qulct, and Go por 100 Ihs highor, closing ot §8.45 (@8.50 oash, and 83.00@8.06 sollor July, Moats woro quiot ond stoady, ot 6)¢@03¢o for shoul- dors, 8Y@8){o for short ribe, 8J§@B%(c for short cloar, sud 10@120 for sweet ploklod lams, .Lako froights ‘wero aotive nnd unchanged, at Go for cormn to DBuffalo. Highwines woro quiot and steady at 000 por gallon. Flour was moro active and woak, Whent was quict and firm at 3¢o advanco, cloaing at §1.243¢ soller the montl, and $1.235¢ soller July, Cornwasmod- emntely activo and 3§@3{o higher, closing at 853¢ @36340 cash, and 87940 sollor July. Oats wero _moroe activo and X @950 higher, closing at 285¢0 cash, and 800 soller July. Rys was active snd stoady ot Olo. Barloy was inactive snd un- changed at 68@730 for No, 2. There was in storo io this clty on Baturdsy ovening last, 446, o< AND LIVER_JAPANRSE KIDNEY PI]‘[‘BNIEZ::. 83 oturonoy; Jopaneso Livor Pills, PO Jar, 4 Curzoncy. Ono. Jat 1a suliciont 1o, ouro ithor {rhwac, Sadiontly. Togistor. your lottors. Ge Av LEUT, 481 Dupon jan Francisco, Oal., Bolo Agont Jor Notth Ameriea, The Chicage Tobune, Wednosday Morning, Juno 11, 1873. ° The Spanish Ministry bave ru_slgned, and Figuoras, who was asked by tho Conatituont Cortes to form n now Govoramont, declares bimsolt unablo to do so. Thia loaven Spain, for tho momont, with no othor head than tho Cortos. Stokes haa been unanimously granted anew * trial by the Court of Appeals of Now York. The lower Court is held to have orred in charging the jury that the law presumed murdorfrom tho fact of killing, throwing the burden of defenso on tho accuged, and in tho exclusion and admis- sion of somo of tho testimony. Bowles Brothers find {hemselvos able to pay £ty conts on tho dollar. 'This voleasos ‘them undor the Bankruptey law from further liability, but thoy bavo issued o circalar to thoir creditors in which they promise not to shelter thomselves bohind tho Jaw, and pledge tho paymont of their dobts in full. The ordinanco passed by the Common Coun- £l of Ban Fravelsco to subject all Chineso pris- oners in tho County Jail to the dishonor of hay- ing thoir heads shaved, has boen vetoed by tho “Mayor of that ¢ity, on the ground thnt it mndo . unjust distinctions’ bétwesn prisonors, and waa in violation of tho treaties with Chins and of tho laws of tho United States, Another ordi- nance taxing Chineso leundrymen $15 a quartor was likowiso disapproved. Tho Town Press Assoclation, now meoting ab Codar Rapids, has passed a rosolution condomn- ing tho practico somo cditors have of aocopting freo pagses from railronds. Who some of theso sditors aro may be judged from tho announco- ment made on the 28th ult., in reforenco to this vory meoting, by Prosidont Treyuor, of the Asso- slation, who publioly gave notico that all Tows editors who desired to attend it would bo fur- " nished passes by tho Towa roods, and that thoso who wishod to go to Chicago would be taken thoro, freo of chargo, by the Chicago & North- . westorn Company. 3 Btokos, tho murderer of Fisk, a8 wns vory gen- orally oxpected 1n Now York, hns been grantod o now trial npon tochnical errors by the Court of Appenls. 1o has alroady, ad it will bo romem- bored, had two ‘trinls and beon convicted on each, If there is any truth in the old adago tlint the third timo never fails, he maoy got his dogorts this’ time. Tho case as it stunds is eithor o reflection npon the logal abilitios of the prosacution, which cannot try 80 cloar 8 caso a8 this without committing ‘technical orrorsover and over again, or olse it is tantzmount toa con- feusion that justice is of uo avail in Now York 955 bu wheat; 4,020,485 bu corn; 1,618,028 bu onte; 293,174 buryo; 67,262 bu barloy. Total, 6,080,610, bu. Hoga woro nctive nnd firm at £4.25@4.60. Onttlo wore insotivo and un- changad. -~ THE ANTI-MONOPOLY PARTY, The offico-holders’ organs in Iowa are whining mont pitcously over the detormination of the farmors of that State to take political mattors into thelr own hands at tho cloction this fall. The Davonport Gazetlo is horating the farmers and tho Grangors forundertaking to place a can~ didato of their own in tho fiold for Govornor, whon the Ropublican party is ready to nominato Gov. Carponter for re-oloction, and Jot the fami- o vote for him. Tho Gazells saya : Gov. Carponter 15 tho Ropublican Governor of tho Stato, nnd thoreforo ho must bo Ued down. It ‘mattors pot how much ho Lias usod tho infuence of his ‘position in favor of tho farmor—how ofton ho haa nd« vocated tholr intorests from tho rostrum—he i3 the Topublican Governor, aud tho probablo nomines for another term, and thoreforo ho must bo robbod of his 1good name, and mada to appar as tho enomy of thoss for whom he has always manifested {riondship, Can the farmors, can the Grangers, fford to treat, thelr frionds in high station in that way? - Will they stand by and eco thoso Fho can do thom most good alandered and sacrificed beeauso they happan to bo Ropublicans whom tho party has honored, ond who . havo honored tho party by thelr falthtulncss? And yob the,Graugors koep on their .way. Thesoe office-holders and party organs rofuse to oo what is ovidont to tho wholo country, that mero party alleglanco hangs very lightly on tho conscioncos of mon of any party. There nover was a time whon political partics sa such -were hold in moio contempt than thoy are now. It is notorlous that notthor the Democratic nor Rto- ‘pub].lmn party has o distinctive polley of any Lind; the two organizations aro hold togother for no othor purposo than to eloct tho managors to lucrativo ofiicos. Bo far as railrond extortions and tho nggrossions of monopolista aro con- corned, theso office-holdors havo not the elightest interest or concorn. Their pocuniary intorests aro on tho side of tho corporations, bocauso tho latter aro froo with the monoy of other paople, and nover hesitate to buy official favor whon it cnn bo bought. i The farmers of Livingston County in this Btato, in their declaration at‘nppuamon to steals of all kinds, oxprossod tho sontimonts of tho wholo peoplo at this time. They nro tired of bo- ing neod at election aftor olection for no othor purpose than to clovato, ‘thia or that gang of oftice-seckors to commit dopredations on the Stato Troasury. Tho farmors of Iows aro a largo majority of the population of that Stato; divided 28 Domoerpts aud Ropublicans thoy aro powerless against tho politicinna ; united ag farmers, for tho attainment of a com- mon end, and the destruction of common op- presaion, they can take posecasion of the Gov- ornment of tho Stats, and of nenrly ovory county in tho Stato; thoy can clect four-fifths of the members of both branches of the Login- lature, and can elect all the members of Con- gress from that Stato. Divided, they must ro- main 88 they are, slaves of monopalists and of~ fice-holdors ; united as'a party of farmers, thoy become mastors and dircctors and makers of the law. Thisis readily undoratood by every farm- City, Tho disposition of the Btokes case bogins to look very much like o farce. Somobody in Washington hus promulgatod & carefully-written dispatclf explaining the posi- tion of Presidont Grant and tho Windom Com- mitteo in roference to the transportation, ques- |- tion. Yresident Grant is shown not tohave com- mitted himself to any schemo or even oxpression of opinion. In unusually felicitous languago bo ig seid to have rosisted any attempt thus to involve him, *in tho silont, offectual manuer so familiar and-unwelcome to political operators of tho presont era.” -As to the Committeo, san- gulno agriculturists oro warned not to oxpoct an instantancous solution of thoir troubles from its labors, Its powers are only advisory, and its work will be put onc of tho meny steps that must bo taken in thelr bebalf, : [ — A zoalous friond of J. Young Scammon at- tompted, yestorday, to bring the Bwedenborgian Convention at Cincinnati to a vote of confidenco in lhis intogrity, - but did not succecd. Rosolutions woro introduced declaring that 1l tho chnrgas affcoting his Loneaty wara jucon= siotout with his charactor 08 o profosslng Chuls- tian and a gonerous cootributor to the funds of tho Church, and that they hnd moreqvor Teen proved to bo falio by the Investiga- tions of ‘hfs, own Boolety, and by ftho | inquirics . of . soveral . individual mombors’ of tho Convention, numbers of whom would scom to Lave been diligently cerrying on indo- pondont and private investigations of thelr 6wn, Thosc'resolutions wero tabled, Thoy woro thon reconsidorod and s substitute proposod, and fiually tho whole mattor was withdrawn ; all roc- ord of it was-oxpunged from the journal, and or of tho Wost, and those poople. 8o long ‘victimized aro not likely to be driven from their purpose by the threats or appeals of postmasters and office-trading politicinne, WOOL AND CORN. duaers of corn, and of all other oclauses of pop- ulation who live upon the wages of thoir daily labor, to tho tax extorted annually to bo paid as bountios to the manufacturers of iron and cotton goods. In thatartiolowe showed the following Btates 195,639 porsons omployed in tho manufac- ture of cotton, and 130,011 in the manufacturo of Iron ; that tho wholo number cmployed in these two manufactures was 265,380, and thet tho capi- tal omployed in tho twoindustries was but 8328,- ' 829,000, Against thoso wo presented tho figures of agrioultural capital and labor in Illinois, as follows : Hsnda omployod making colton gaods fn ploy. ng [ i Unlted Btales..vvere oo Seveates Hunds employed making iron in’ United Blatoa........ 130,011 ‘Hunds employed in United Slatos. oy 205,880 Tands employsd i 416,411 Uapital fuvesied fu tron and colton mmuic * facturo in United Btato8, .vevvven oo 8328,020,000 Capital iu cultivated farm lands iu TiluGts, 614,000,000 Wocall the attention of the. producors and laborers to the fact'that tho entiro number of orsons engagod in maling iron and totton goods was.but Jittle moro than half the popu- Iation of Chicago,- and that, if the !whole 206,000 were' pleked up from all patts’ of the, United States and ‘planted in Il nols, they would not conoumo tho surplus praducts of more than two countics, In cone uidoration that theso 205,000 porsons employed in making cotton and iron goods will eat corn the newspapor reporters woro begged to suppross al} reforonco to Government Bearcoly hns the BlacMahon taken itu seat whon it bogins to resort to tho samo ainlstor means that Lounis Napoleon' used to control tho provinces and swell the enormous majoritios of his plebiscites. Gambetta youtor- day produced n tho French Assombly & copy .of « Ministorinl ordor dated Juno 4, oloven' days after MacMahon's election, in which tho Pro- focts of dopartmouts are rocommendod to use subsidios and othor secrot moans for tho control of tho provinclal pross, in the good old Bona- partist way. Minfutor Boulo, of the Intorior, acknowlodgod that ko had issucd euch a circular and assumpd sll the rosponsibility of having done g0, No report {8 given of the scene that onsuod, but it must havo been one of tho “mtormicst that ovor yegodab Yomalllos. It wag aud other breadstuffs, tho wholo country has beou put undor a tax of from 40 to 00 por cent on all tho cotton and iron goods thoy uge. We now in- vito the attontion of the farmors and other pro- ducors to the wool businoss : Yaluo of woolen product in tho Uuited Btiled, v +$165,403,58 Capital enipioyed 08,524,881 Whoela nunibor of Unitod Statos, o 80,053 In the Btato of Illinois thero were, in 1870, live atock of tho valuo and kinds following dattlo 45,000,000 ules'atid 68808, 1 11ve 0,000,000 MHogs, 5,600,000 Wagona and carts on farma, 15,000,000 Total, . 100,000,000 1t will bo seen, thereforo, that in all tho United Btatos thore aro only 80,000 poreons of all ages omployed in the manufacture of woolen goods ; that tho value of tho ontiro product of woolen §oodo [y ©205,000,000, and thag the entlre canital invostod in that businons is but $08,000,000, much of which {s nominal inthoalinpe of watored atook, bat not equal to ona-halt tho capital investod, in Tilinols alone, in Lornos, cattle, mules, hogs, and’ farm wagons,. ‘Tha farmora of this ano Biate’ havo investod in. cultivated. Jand $614,000,000 3 and tho working of this land gives omploymont, 40 876,000 hands; and yob thoso 970,000 Lands hnvo to pny out of thoir wagos sud enrnings n tax of from 50 to 80 por cont on overy articlo of woolon good thoy wso. Tho law intorrponos and |- doclaron that, in ordor to mako the ©00,000,000 inyestod In machinory, mills, and woolon manu- faoturo profitable, the consumors of wodlon goods all over the country shall pay, in addl- tlon to tho cost of tho goods, an averngo tax of GO por cont, to be divided among: tho holdsrs of tho capital stook. Tho oporation of this ls, thnt, whon five bushels of grain would purchase & glven quantity of woolon goods, the farmor must pay eight bushols, tho oxtra throo boing a speolal bounty roquired by law to make woolon- mill stock valuablo. Tho farmers aro nskod to submit.to this robbery becauso thoraby 80,000 porsons who eat bread are farnished as addition- ol consumers, Tho smatlest county in Illinols could tako the contract of fooding the whole population engaged in making woolon goods in all tho United Btates, and that without at all exhausting ita surplus. Theso persons cngeged in making . woolen' goods in tho United Btatos .rocoive an averago of $834 a yonr each for wagos, The ontire wages is about 27,000,000 a yosr, not more than oqual tothe purchnsoin Now York of ono-tonth of tho corn prodused in Tllinois nlone. £ Tho ‘“homo market,” that is to say tho pur- chagors of brosdstuffs .and provisions supposod to bo furnished by tho manufacturors of iron, cotton, and woolen goods in all parts of ‘the United States, numbers procisely 345,000 per- song, or lesa than the population of Cook Couns ty, in this Btate. Tho wholo capital employed in the wholo United Btates in' the throe ccoupe~' tions in £427,000,000, or one-third less than ia invosted in tho cultivated farms of Illinols. Tho Fifth Benntorial District of Illinols, con~' sisting of Madison and 8t. Olair Countios, Ling undor caltivation: , L In wheat, acres. ... 171,852 In corn, acros. 1n otlier prodi Total acres in grain.,.. Theso two counties in Illinois hayo an annunl surplus of breadstufts more than eufilciont to feed every man, ‘oman, and child engaged in the whole United States in -the manufaoture of iron, woolen, and cotton goods. And yot, tho' entire farming community of the whole, country aro told that tho additional markeb furnished for brondstuffs by tho employment of puréonu in thoso three products justifics the payment by tho farmors of oight busholsof grain, instoad of af five, tor atl the fron, woolen, sad cotton goods thoy have to purchaso. We submit that thig “homo market” is rather en expansive luxury, Tho aggregato capital invested in theso threo oceupations, does nat oqual more than two-thirds tho capital invosted in tho improved farms of Tllinols, and wo submit that to subject thefarm- ergof tho entirecountry to a epecial tax of 50 por cont on iron, cotton, and waolen goods, to make those ocoupations profitablo, is a robbery so ovi- dont and so enormous that tho law which au- thorizen it should bo repenled without dolay. THE MODOC MURDER. Tho atroclty porpetrated upon o bandful of Modoc Indians, who had surrondered themselves g prisonors of war and wora coming intocamp, is not oxceodod in cownrdice, treachery, or brutality, by nny of the numerous outrsges with which Capt. Jack stands indicted. The telograph hos alroady suppliod the full dotails of the manner in which the Oregon voluntcors interceptod tho Modoo prisoncrs and butchered them in cold blood, and it is unnceessary to ropest tho story. Theso Modocs had mnot beon. gullly of any spoecial ncts of violonce or murder, oxcopt 80 far ns thoir dofianco of the Government and their dofonso of thomsolves against the Government troops may ba tormod violence and murder. They were captured in ‘Wo last weok called tho attention of the pro-- focts: That in 1870 thoro woro in all tho United” open warefare and thoy surrondored s prisonors of war, under implied, if not actusl, assurances of safo troatment, until thoir cases could bo dis- posod of by tho proper authoritics, olthor in the rogular courts of tho land or in court-martial. Thoy were in tho hands of the Governmont, If thoy had been killed whilo committing an out- Tago upon geftlers, or if thoy hed'beon overe takon and killed while bearing arms against the Govorumont, the case would bave been o differont one, and-no blame could have attaohed to thoso who Lilled thom. Dut in this caso thoy wera in tho hands of tho ‘Government, and the Government alono was compotont to docido upon thoir punishmont. In addition, thoroforo, to tho brutalivy and cowardico of the act, which reduced tho perpotrators to the lovel of the sav- ages themaolvos, they stand guilty of a gorious offonso against tho Government and against law. They have taken upon themselves the func- tions of the Governmont, mado thomsolves judgo, jury, and oxccutioner, and onforced tho oxtromo peunlly in such nn' unauthorizod man-" ner that their action was shnply murder.. No matter what thoir wrongs may have been, or howovor much thoy may have suffored, tho Governmont . was the solo arbiter of the fato of thoso Indians, and was already commoncing ite arrangemionts for ‘the vindieation of it rights and tho rights of tho pooplo who had sufforad, by taking'tho nocessary atops to bring every Bodoo_to triak some of thom In tho courts of Orogon pd'somo by court-martial. The voluu- teors Lind no ranson to supposs that the Govern- mont would fail to do its whole dutyIn tho prom- Ises, and iwposo tho full penalty of tho law spplying in such cases, | Thoy had no reason to supposo “that {be .Modocs wore insocurely guarded or would malko ' their escapo, Thoy Liad 1o ropson to suppose that tho Governmont was disposod to bo lonient or to allow thom to escapo with o lght punishnent. Their actwas com- mitted in supremo contempt of tho Govorument. “Tho United Btatos has oarrled on war against tho Modocs under tho rulos of civilizod warefaro, It has treated them ag o war-making power, rathor than as a mo) of turbulents- or assassine, It b treated with thoir leading men under flags of trmco while tho war was pond- ing. It has ropostedly mado offers of compromiso and gottlement with thom,' In nil roapaecty, it hna recognized thom ns & power ca- pable of making war snd oxecuting troatics. - Xt would, theroforo, have boon just’ as conalatont fora rogimont of Unlon soldiors, during tho ‘War of the Rebollion, to have ehot down asquad of Confedorate prisonors, who bad suqunmd undor tho forms of war, and placed thom- solvos undor the protection of tho Cov- orumont until thoir fate was doolded. It does mot alter tho omso - that thoso Modoos woro savagos, and may havo beon engaged at gome timo or other in outrages upon 4 tho frontior ottlomonts. In faok, thore 13 e SDAY, JUNE 11, IR7% ovldonca to show that iticio. partios had porpe- tratod any opocial nots . of {gutrago, liko thoso .committod by Onpt. Jacky Doaton Charloy, or ' O1d Bohonsohin, Thoy-wbro " éntitled to protoo- ton until the law dlopoood'of thom, and the sct of the:Oregon ‘voluntoers was' in supromo con- tompt of tho authority of thio Govérimont, * It isnow tho duty of' tho ‘sathoritica ‘to dls- cover tho guilty purties and puniel 'ihom for tholr offenso, just as bauoh as it fs their duty to punish the Modocs, The conduot of the volun- toors ahould not mltigate thio punishmont of tho Inttor, . Tholr- tronchory 'and brutality should moot with comploto and ‘swift jrotribution. At tho samo timo, tho condnct of tho ;Modoos dooa not furnish any palliation for tho brutality of tho volunfaors, and should not stand na an off- 8ot to’tholr punishmont. The Government ls Lound * to nssort its power In the' ono cago- and’ {ts dignity in the ‘othp;, and, whilo it toachios Modogs that thoy cannot murdor, and pillago with impunity, it should also tench white men that thoy caunot step in'and usurp its prorogatives without paying the penalty, i i THE ALEXANDRA PALACE, . Tho csblo dispatohos, yosterday, brought tho intolligonco of tho dostruction of tlio Aloxandra Palaco, noar London, involving & loss of abont threo millions of dollara, As this palaos waa but just finished, having becn openod to tho publio on tho 24th ult, thoro aro probably, but fow peoplo who have any well-definod idea of Its character or uses, Tho AloxandraPalace grow ont of tho Groat Exhibition of 1862, aud portlons, of ‘tho Orystal Palsco at South ‘Kenslngton - wore used, in- its construotion. It hod boon over .eloven .yoars “in - pro- ocea” of ' constructlon, * oiwing ..to ' hitmar- ous obataclos ' which stood In tho way. Opors~ tiona woro many times ‘suspended, but at last tho building was finished. It stood In the midst of a park of 20 acres, in tho boautifying of which Art had essisted Nature. Tho interlor of tho palace was magnificontly ddcarated, . Tho nave, which was 000 feot in length, wias filled with Atatiios, fountaing, shrabs, and fowar-beds. In {ho contral transopt—thero bofng throe—tho vash domo’ rose to' a helght of 220 foot, fte' olr- oumforenco - boing ; 170 feet. ¥ In- this' par of the building o ‘huge crgan had ‘been orocted undor ‘tho porsonal supervision' of Bir Michaol Costa, and In_this transcpb:grand con- | corts woro continually to bo given. A spooial concert hall, onpal_flo of holding 8,000 poople, was alsoconstructod in another transopt, in which thero was also o largo organ, At tho opéning concort, on tho 24th, Costa had tho control of the’ band and the chorus, upwards of 1,000 {n gm- ‘bor,—nmong tho singers being Milo. Titiens, Madame Trobelli-Bottin!, Mllo. - Oarols, - Sig- nor Campanini, and othor distinguished ar- tists, .. In tho northorn gallory, throo &pa- cious rooms wero sot apart for pictures, and in theso rooms were works by Millals, Ward, El- moro, Linnoll, Colo, Cox, Prout, Hunt, Gilbert,” Turner, Cuttormols, Morland, and other famous English masters. In additlon to theso, thero wora sovoral of tho finost plocos of tapestry in England on oxhibition. The London News says of tho entortnainmonts which woro announced to tako placo fn it : F 3 ‘Tho programmo of amusementa which tho directors hove fssucd 1 almost Lowildering from its varlety, Thorg aro to bo cat shows, dog shows, horsa Bhows, poultry and plgeon shows, cage-bird shows, rncos, crickot 4natohes, croquot matehes, srcbery matches,. volunteor fotoa and roviowa; thore is to bon gymno~ sfum, anaquarium; nothing will bo neglectod 'to at~ tract visitors ot all soasons of tho yoar. Tho refrosh- ment dogiartmont 44 {n the cxparienced hands of Messrs, Bortram & Roberts, who Liavo a large’rustio banquot- ing hall in tho grounds, and suitos of vory pleasant and clogantly-furnished dining-rooms in tho intorior of tho bullding. Thero are, morcover, tastefully-ducorated rofreshmont counters in various parts of tho palaco, . Judging from tho gonoral deseription of tho building; it was to bo dovoted to publio ontor- toinmant in a varioty of forms, in spocial com- potition with tho Oryatal Palaco nt Sydenham, On Baturdsys, when -there were spocial ontor-. toinmonts, the prico was fixod at one shilling, but on othor days it was to bo thrown open to oll comers st sixpenco each. - Tho principal lossos to be doplored aro those of the art |trens- ures which it contained, and of the great organs which had beon coustructed for concort ‘pur- poses. The Green Bay Advocale thinks that the ques- tion of cheap froights can bo solved by complot- ing tho “Northern Improvemont " achome, that is, a ehip-canal from- the’ Mississippl River’ to’ Groen Buy. Tho Advocats overlooks the.fact that tho tronblo is in gotting froighta onst of the lakes, The Erio Csnal has boon ever since 1854 inadoquate to carry the grain of the West, and during that cightcon years tho Btate of*'Now York has not expondod ono dollar to onlarge the capacity of the.canal. Millions of bushels of grain aro shipped henco by wator to Buffalo, and aro then placod on railways and sent to tho £ast, Thoe ivability of the canal to porform .tho sopvico; tho long delnys incldont to its crowd- od stato; tho high rates of froight, all combine to rendor it at times even chosaper to forward from Duffalo by rail than to send by tho canal, What is nooded is a through routo or routes to tho soaboard of suflicient capacity to move the wholo surplus products of the West ot rates which will not consume the value of the things forwarded. 80 long as tho lakes exist there will bo no difficulty in roaching Buffalo; bo- yond that thero must be new routes, and if that routo bo by thio. 8t. Lawronea River, instond of au onlarged caunl to Now York, tho relief will bo all tho samo to tho Weat, howover unfor- tunato it may bo for Now York. Tho Springfleld (THL) Journal is very much disgusted b tho way things -aro golog: It do- nounces tho nction of tho Livingston County farmors in proposing to hold a convention and nominate caudidatos of thoir own for county' ofiicers ; for this the farmers aro callod onomios of the ¢ Ropitbliean party.” Cannman boan enomy to tho -Republican or any othor !party unless that party sud bo are opposed tq onoh' otlior ; and if tho farmors of Tliinols havo united for yoar after yoar, for the Republicans and Domoorats to do somothing but logislate In tho intorosts of monopoly, is it" not timo that thoy should tako stops to do tholr own voting and thoir own legislating ? 5 U — It sooms that tho oditor of tho 8¢, Paul Press waont with tho Congrossional oxoursion to the Gult, and comos back from New Orloans with tho clear conviotion that both partics aro mani- fostly in ¢ho right, and Loth partiod hopelossly in the wrong; and that evorything they say about onch other is truo, and overytbing thoy Bay about themsclves ia falwo. Yo thinks that thig {s vory likely to bo tho improssion loft upon overy men who goes to Now Orlenns with the purpose of tsking an impartial viow of tho situation. XMis conclusion js that the only just romody , is for the pooplo to fight it out ot tho polls. This was tho oonglusion of $ho Joadiug mon ju the Renato, and, aftor. ronohing it,” thoy deliboraioly ad- Jjourned and loft Prosidont Grant at liverty to follow ont his polioy of ‘sustaining tho Isllogg fection by forco of arms. B *'NOTES AND OPINION, ‘T'lto Ropublican farmern of Powoshick County, Jown, como up to tho county-soat, May 81, by invitatlon, to “purify tho parly,” and, finding thnt tho purifieation was only to bo o whitowash of tho old leadors, the Republican formors hold su Indignation-meoting on tho spot, and purifiecd thomaolves of all such party namo and londer- ahip. Powoshick Gounty votod, last year s Grant, 1,060 ; Greeloy, 559. 5 —The epectacle I8 prosontod to tho poople of Now York of n loglslative supply bill appropri- ating over $4,000,000 for tho odds and cnda of things not ombracod iu rogular approprintions ; snd, as it such a bill was not ‘itsolt bad enough, tho clorksand lobbylste havounwarrontably tame porod with' it, and it {s yot in o clmotic stato days aftor tho Loglalaturo has adjournod, The Rochoster Uiion eays 1 Tk Vicwed 11 sny aspoot, thobandytng about of tho Buy ply bil, involving oo of e fou, without. b tiiy or pignaturo by the &) or of the Assorbly and - I’mfi'ldnntuof mnbfi oty onnto, 18 n charmiug conmenta: ‘upon Republican * mlfl‘:l’n " legislation, ¥ i ~=Gov. Carpontor, of Jowa, know that Btato Tronsuror Rankin was stealing the funda; know that ho limeclf was on o worthless bond of tho Tronsurer; knew that tho product of tho thoft was a doad loss to tho Hortloultural Qollogo 3 know all this, and did not seck to pro- “vont it, and hna not sought to enforco the lawe for tho punishmont of crimo, And now, a candi- ‘@ato for " ro-oleotion, and known to bo on intt- mato friondly torms with Rankin, tho Govornor hass had .tho coolnces to.eny, in cn addross at Museating 3 Thero mitst oxiat a sontiment of chivalrio hopor in #ho poople, that will ruako it too hot for au ofiicial do- Linquont 5 lvo 1n the prosonce of & constilusucy: o has botrayed, . © D] ¥ Tho peoplo.of Iowa are very much disposed to tako Carpontor’s advico and apply it to himsel?, * —Tho Olty'of Cloveland, 0., 1s to hiavas Bu- porior Court of throo Judges, nnd, tho party manipulators and profossional bummors have so sob up things that, whichover of two tickots is olootod, the party machine is glorified and tho peoplo cheated. . Thorefore, the Leader and the Herald adviso individual olectors to soratch both tickots, and tho Herald snya : v “ Thoro fra 5o oxeuso {or making party momimtions, inasmuch aa.-tho loction ia to bo a peclal one, & most favorablo opportunity was afforded for mnking ;\Idl oloction nou-partisan, But othor seutiments ovatlod. 1 ~—Tho Btato Printer of Yowsn has tho bulky volumes of thomow Codo in typo, for o Btate edition to supply ail ontitled to copies; but thoro is dolay in gotting tho title-page, or profaco, or eomothing of that sort; so tho Bate Printer will work off o fow thousand ** imporfoot copies "-and soll thom ot 84 a volumo, Two or threo months honco,.n correctod ' titlo-pago, will bo got in type, and “porfoct coplos " distributed freo, And tho Btato Printor will bo ablo’ to build. o now house in DosMotnes, A T —It ‘Bonatora Ohandlor and Forry, of Michi~ gan, aro honost mon, as their ofiica-jobber at Grand Rapids esys thoy aro, to tho oxtontof having rofanded tholr salary-grab, why do thoy _not allow Tronsuror Spinner to say so? * Tho ‘moro word of tho Grand Rapidy ofiice-joblier is not onough ; - and - supercilious contompt under euspicion is not o trait of honesty. : —Buflinton, of Massachusotts, wont down to Washington and took ‘‘his'n" only last weck, and took it homa to Fall Rivor, whero ho'thinks it will do tho most good. Mr. Buflinton in & membor of the noxt Congross, and will voto in the roll-call just boforo Burchard on tho quostion (which Durchard proposes) of refunding tho wholo. Will hio vote ayo? s —Wo find this in tho Toledo Commercial, an ‘offico-holding Administration nowspoper. Is it trua? Gen, Garflold has thrown himself into tho Farmers' ‘movement enthusinstieally, Lo oxprossea his convio- tion that tho relations of ' raflwsy and other corpora~ tons to the Goverument will be of as mucli im- ortance iutho politics of the future, as slavory hos gmmln ho past, —Credit Mobllior Garfleld bes taken tho trouble to sond us o bulky pamphiet coutainin, hin oxplanation of his councetion with Ames nn tho Crodit Mobilier. Wo wieh ho hadn't done it, for it Ia inexpressibly painful to soe o corpse ox- hibitanyrostleasnesa ! tvrhnlnidnconflylmd out. Ordinary considoration for the feclings of tho mourners ought to bave prompted the dofunct ontloman to remain decorously doad.—Fond du ’E‘Wis.) Commionwealth, i —Tho Buo{ms Journal thinks the President could not woll avoid the appointmont of Bing- ham to tho Japaneso mission, having promisod 1t to him boforo the latter, supported the back- 0y grab. Tho Journal eays, however: * Wo Enpu ‘our United Statos Benators will boinstruct- od to oprose hig confirmation and to demand his rocoll.” "This is the gonoral sentiment o the Ropublican pross, and Judgo Bingham must Liave o hido like that of o rhinocoros to sccopt an oftico in-the faco of such univorsal condemna- tion.—Zoledo Blade, ~—The Oloyoland Herald is inconsistont. The appointment of Binghnm is distastoful to (t and £ho Ropublicans bocauso tho formor participatod in tho salary-stenl and pockotod tho 95,000 ; aud yob tho Zerald Liss no word of condamnation for tho Prosidont. . Bingham'’s voto did not mako tha baok-salary bill'a Inw ; Grant’s approval of it did. Bingham ‘makes £5,000 by tho speculation ; Grant, ©060,000. Thot's the differonce. Con- sistoncy, . thou nrt & jowel.—SJaginaw (Afich.) Couricr. —Alr. Burchard's position on tho salary-in- [- oreaso businocss amounts to 1\15& this and no more, when divested of sophistry aud apecial ploading: ““It Congross passes & lnw compelli mo to Eny baclk my salary-stenl, I will do it, a8 am not exactly satistiod in my own mint whother it i3 honest or not; othorwiso I will apply ‘it .on my $26,000 residence I havo just purchnsed in F'rogport—tho old Wile, Shaffor proporty.—Car- roll County (Ill.) Gazelle. * —QGon. Butlor bought o tract of land, and im- mediately o Committes, appointed by buugruuu to soleot n sito for anow Executiva mansion, roc- ommendod tho {mmhuflu of Butlor's tract. Wo aro now told that tho Committeo was influonced solely by Gon, Butlor's willingnoas to part with tho promiscaat a lower rato than any othor prop- orty ag cligiblo could bo bought for on tho mar- kot.”" The man who is mean enough to suspect any collusion here, or that the Committoo conld find any othor property ns oligible and choap, or to suppose that Gon, Butler is golng to make anything on it, ought tobo branded with a 8- contstamp, If Gon. Butlor liad suspectod that the Gdvernment would bo trying to doprive him of that lnnd in leas than o wook, he never would havo bought t—nover,—St. Louis Repubiiéam o * —'The Cincinuntl Gazede tays that ‘410" Muae sachusoetts Itopublicans doniro to crowd Bon Biit- ler off the-track, the'adoption of ono or two lanls of tho Obfo Ropublican platform wdald lo tho business, wo think, Butlor can stand & good denl, but wo do not bolieve Lo could onduro n vigorous condomnation of tho snlary-stenl” Is not the Gazelte o litzlo rash in this statomont ? Why should not Butlor endure it'hs woll as tho PTrogident? Tho Ohia Republican platform with {tg" “vigorous condomnntion of- the salary-stenl,” vory carefully avoids giving ‘any offonse -to .tho “galarymstenors,” and even ‘*hedges™ on tho 4 gtgal™ itaolf by-hoartily indorsing tho Admin- {utration and ite monsurcs, Tho **enlary-steal” ‘was notoriously an Admiunistration measure, It could not have becomo & law without tho Prosi- dent's- siguature, and tho * Presidout himsolf helpad it through the Iloueo by giving notico thnf hio would not approve & ‘“ralse’’ unlass thore was to bo “‘a ralso all vound,"—St Louis Republican, o 1 ~ZL¥hoso who aupposod- tho anti-manopoly ‘movemont had no roat existoncs - excopt in tho nawspapors and amoug o fow crazy farmots aro much surprised at tho result of the Judiciary eloction, Thoro nro still'some who think it will not bo much of ghowor,” afterall; but tho olactlon of MJudge s only ani “incident in tho movoment, It i not the ond nimed at, nor tho boginning of tho oud.—Aurora (I1L.) Herald. —The olootion in Illinols olearly proves tho ability of tho farmers to bulld up » now arty and olect thoir nomineos upon their own istinot privoiples.—Keokuk (lowa) Conslitu- tion. —1Wo bolieve, a8 a rulo, the farmors mean to Do froo, and that thoy jutond to ruu their own affairs, 1t thoy do not, thoy degorve high tuxas, they dosorvo al{ the ovils to which they aro sub- Jectod.—Des Aloines (Towa) Leader. —'Cho farmora should Tomomber that who would bo froo thomselves must strike tho blow. Thoy hnvo tho power, and, if they will cust asido oll partios, put bohind thom all Immlcnl dlagon= wlons, and work unitedly, thoy will ho astonjuhod to 800 Low great the powor iy which thoy wield, —5t, I'aul (Minn.) Dispatch, —Tho royolution has commenced, Tho powor of monopoly has beon qurtalled; it muet bo broken: forover. The farmors—tho lnborors— tho nrtifioors—hnvo ansorted thelr rights, Thoy must remombor that the prico of Hborty in otor- nal vigilanco, Tho monopolists must bo rondy to accopt tho fact concorning tho poopla: That tho qmnt doy of tholr wratn is como, and nono eliall bo ablo to withetand tt,—Pcoria (ZIL.) Dem- oorat, —T'ho time was whon mons-govored Jndges could porpotuate politioal wrongs, bu the ballot 1n tho handa of tlio pooplo, to bo thrown nt tho Judgo as woll ag_tho fmmlc(nn, glves nssuranco 3‘.&'1( Sox;l}u‘::r chlg nm{:u “mmhku thae bul- of ong obnoxioua to U — Gatro (11L) Damiocrals Tubile —Thoro 18 a torriblo outery becauso tho farm- ora of Ilifnols, who ato fighting tho raflronds, mndo o stand and olacted tholr candidate, in & udleial oloction. Woll, tho railronds havo boon looking aftor judiolal oloction for o long timo. A groat numbor of Judges orthe Bonch aro owned by railroads, Hundrods of othors aro Tunning up and down the country on froo prsson glvon thom with the purely busiiess purpose of Affocting their deolaiona fayorably to raflrond in- toresta,~ Why should not tho farmers own o fow Judges ? Thero {s not o rallrond_man of lsrgo intol lgonuu In tho conntry who doos not know that tho gront corporations hayo thoir roprosont- atives In tho lowost and tho highost cutousos, aud o8 koou an oyo on the eloction of Judgos nn on that of mombors of Congress ; and it i pop- ular knowlodgo that tho Bupramo Qourt of tho Unitod Btatos was, In the opinion of the Chiof Justico himolf, paoked in o rallrond fntorcst.— Olncln’mufl Cnyulnwclm.wl Call qul t"' b —Loulslann is roported ns *all quiel both Bonator Wost ‘and Cony roaurnn?: 8y] hnl{ Those gontlomon aro on o vislt to Washington “ to hayo somo changes mado in tho Fodoral offices in Now Orlosne.” Tho ono groat sm- bition of & Louisinna Congressman sooms to bo to malo chanfiuu in tho Now Orleans Post-Offico and Oustom-Housos Whon will the mon who nssumo to roprosont the Ropublican party in {thot Biato bo loss anxionn nbout the spoils and moro willlug to labor for tho peaco and pros-° pority of thelr distracted Btate? The strifo for gnrt{ Flundur has beon ono grent cnuse of all of ouisinun's political troublos.—Buffalo Com- mercial Advertiser. —If Mr, Dawes ronlly did meon tho Adminis® tration aa tho sinning party in the Loulsinna question in his Greonflold addross, nobody has ovor uttored harshor sud shnrpor condemuntion of {is trontmont of tho pooplo of that Btata.. Toko this sontonco from his pioture of affalrs thero: * Anarchy alono bas power, and its mintons sit in tho gent of judgmont on 'tho denrost rights of & atrioken pooplo,” No Cabinet pluce, no firat- claga forolgn misslon for o man who can spenk of Grant, ulloqg. Durell, and Cnsoy in this atylo. ‘Tho “‘minions™ of *anarcby” for- nuot}n 1-—Springfleld Republican, . —Tho pensioned prosses of tho Adminiatration sponk of Gov. McEnery's rocont addross to the pooplo of nis Stato as o submisalon to Grant's Fowur, and an “nccfirhnco of tho situation ay ho warloft it.” This is significant lnangungo. Tho war left Lonisiana not o Stato, but b sub- Jectod Provinco,—Pillsburgh (Pa.) Post. WALL STREET. Reviow of tho Monoy, Stock, Bond, Gold, dnd Produce NMarikets. Special Dispateh to The Chicago Tribune, New Yorm, June 10.—Money continues in abundant supply at low rates of interest. Prime discounta aro quoted at 614 to 8 por cont. < BTOCKS, Btocle speculation was generally firm until af- tor 1 o'clock, whon tho market bocamo woak, and on subsequentdoalings o declino of 34 to 8% por cent from tho bighest polnt took place, There was considerablo pressure to soll, but non- dividend paying and fanoy stooks, such s Bt. Paul, Wabash, O, C. & I 0., and Union Pacifio sullored most. In the abovo mentioned shares thodeolinoranged from1¢ to 83§ porcont. In tho fall gmall fractions aro omittted. Whilo dealings wora nttonded with » greator dogroo of anima- tion than usnal, tho génoral markot left off wenk, ata vory slight rocovory from tho loweut pricos, ond thisouly in n few casos, Larly in the dny Erio was tho loading fenture, owing to an ndvanco of 13¢ por cont, in sympathy with highor quotations, nt London, In tho lato deal~ ings, howaver, the prico gave way % por cent, closing 3¢ higher. The grngaaml loan by the Pacific Binil Company of 85,000,000 was diflicutt to bo obtained at less than 10 _per cont on stoawmship collatoral, Insuranco and othor ont~ lays would consume 10 per cent moro, and thio concorn i8 not yef, ablo to pay 20 por cont for the privilego of carrying on business. It is eaid that short iutorest 1 stook is boing coverad, and that thia {8 tho rosson why tho prico stands where it doos to-day, Tho statemont that the ‘Westorn Union 'Lelograph Comxnny have given 16,000 shares of, stock for the Atlantic & Pacifio Compnuy's linos i doniod, but tho atory iaa had its alfoct upon tho prico of Western Union, and that is probably oll that was intonded by the porties starting tho ramor. It is statod that the COentral & Hudson River Company is propar~ ing to Jay an oxtra doublo track botwoon Albany insanity of tho neeuncd, thay woro' romoved by tho toatimony brought forward in his defenre, Taking lnto considaration all the clrcumstancos, ha was willlng to sharo tho rosponsibility of such a disposition of the easa, \With this une dorstanding_ ho ave ihio casn t6 tho Jury. Tho Inttor rotived, and aftor o briof consnltation ro- turnad, and rendored a vordict of * Guilty of murdor in the socond degree,” Tho Jndgoe thoro- upon nontonced him to fmprivonmont in the . Poniteutiary tor life, ————— " SPRINGFIELD, Additionn? Judicial Elcction Roturng ==Serious Runawnyss=Festivale Spectal Dispateh ta Tha Chicago Tribune, 8rriNeFIELD, IIl, Juno '10.—OMcil roturna wora racolved at tho Becrotary of State's ofico {rom tho Tonth Cireuit, Adams and Hancook Qountles, Judgo Josoph Sibloy, 8,083, J, II. Willioms,'3,418; majority for Sibloy, 64, Bove entoonth” Ciroult, Dowitt, Togan, Mmmrdfl and Bason Oountlos, ITon, 'Lywan' Lacy, 8,190; Hugh Fullerion, 8,040; i ; 3 mferlty, la(;.o“' ,040 ; soattoring, 18; Lacy's atrawborry fostiyal is given at tho Stato House to-night for tho bonofit-of tho Home, of fl% n?’rieu:]luus. Tho recolpts will bo quite PRINGTIELD, Juno 10,—A. horso, drk buggy by’ Bie Thomas Tdos, of shia oy, Lok {right Inst night nnd ren away, ovorturning tho and Duffalo, and that that portion of tho $10,000,000 loan nogotiated in London is in- vestod in rails, which are being brought ovor for tho now track. Tho Harlom Itoad will be utiliz- od botweon Now York and Albany, thus obvist- ing tho nocossity for double-trecking tho Hudson River Road. aoLp woaker. For tho past two db{‘! ‘bull spaculatora havo entertained hopos that tho Bank of Eng- 1and rato might bo advanced ak loast 3¢ por cout this weok, and to-day thoy wero groatly cha- rined to forn that Bank hed gained £225,000 ullion. Tho_question now is, whiat will tho lending bull do? Ho mny ho content to! carry Lis loud of $40,000,000 for a fow wocka longer, but ho Is just a3 likoly o pitch soma of it over and pick it up at lower figures, taking the profit by declin, sud milkiug tho street ot tlio samad timo, 1t {s catimatod that o fall of 2 por cont could bo made by tha enlo of only nbout £5,000;~ 000 gold by tho fanding bull, for all othor opora- tors would baston to follow wult. k 5 GOVERNMENTH by German bankors, but in-good demand vory fow offering. 3 ¥ FONEIGN EXCHANGE f oponedwenkatroducedrates, About£50,000long bills, drawn by one of the prime baukers, wora ressed on tho markot early in tho dn{, and wero Eunlly abgorbed nt 108%{." After this a firmor feoling sot in, and at tho close 108%¢ not was bid for primo Daukors sisty-days’ storling, and bills | could not bo bought lass than the rogular nsking rato—109, loss 1-16. Bufi'ht Dills closed up firm 8t 110 not, to 1103 loss brokerago, . ' - ° BNEADSTUEFE. . Tlour bettor for low grados, which are sgarce. Bedium grades vory plenty, aud vory unsalablo, with light arriyals of good . ghipping oxtrds an ood superfino, Theso aro botter. Salos of ,200 byl ; receipts, 13,980 brls. Whoat in bot- ter domand, chiofly for ‘good %ulll"qfi for- tho London matket. “Winter firm, but quies,’ Salos, 78,000 bu.: - ! s e . PROVISIONS. 48 < Pork quiet, by} firmy 200 brls now moss, Juno 10, soldint $16.60. Salos, 120.brlsj art at $16.75 for npw mess. * For futuro Salivory o elos; July . -quotod sbout £16.75.° Out monta *modorately sctivo, niid ‘pricos gonorally stoady. Saloas 1,000 pick- led shouldors ‘at 80; 200:'smoked do at 8l4c; 1,000 dohams nt 140 ; 8,000 by pickled slioult dora’ nt 8o, Dry salted -shouldors, TH(@7560 ; ploklod'boilies, 10 ih, unourup.;glfiomim, pkgs. Bacon- rather dull, and pricos to some oxtont nominal. Short cloar quoted at 8(@0c ;| * 100 boxes long cloar 'sold at: 8o. .. Lard mod- oratoly aotivo and casior ; sales-of 600 tcs nt 8o ; for future dolivar'y 280 ten; Angust, 9io ; 500 tcs, Soptombor, 9%¢c; 9o ‘bld for Juno: () fi'l-wu bid for July. ‘fl_ucolpus,‘ 200 kogs, ;,'lfll plige. ] =7 ] P ————— ! Railrond Thicves Captureds Bostox, Juno 10.—Plunderiug to a largo ox- tont hins boon golng on for some thmo from the traing from Boston, on tho Fitohburg Railrond, whioh inducod tho Company to omploy datoc~ tivan, ‘Tho rosult is tho arrest of conductor Edward Prinder, ongincor Goorge Smith, fire- man Napoloon_Blood, and ox-conductors” Fred Iildroth and Frank Hanscomb,.. Othior partios are suspocted, nud their arrosto-threnton to fol- low. Prinder and Hildroth plonded guilty, and the former has boon sentencod to ona yaar in the Houuo of Qorraction. Tha sontonca of Hildrath is roserved. A largo amouunt of stolon property Lies boen recovoroed. . phistie I A Murdorer Convicted and Sentenced, CLEVELAND, Juno 10.—%ho trinl-of Albort W, Chnmborlain, for the murder of Goorgo McCOon- noughry, on Jan, 8 last, in Solon, O,, came to n an(lgnn and unoxpocted termination yostorday aftornoon, At the aponing of Court in tho aftor- noon, the Proscouting-Attornoy roso and sald that, on cn\msnllnuh with othora interested in tho trial, he had, aithough aguinst his own pri- vato judgmont, consentod to nsk for n vordict of murdor in tho socond dogroe, it boing undorstood that the prisoner and his frionds and counsol would cousont to such # verdiot, sud #hat it would be ununlnumx;y toallthe pnrdus intorosted, Tho ohiof counsol for thoe dofoneo thon said that it was aftor maturo conaidoration of all tho eir- oumnatancod connootod with tho caso that' this roposition had been advanced. Judge Faino {Ilmn addrossod tho counsol, conourring in the proposition, whioh, ho said, mot Lis own viowa oxnotly, A 1o hud ad doubiy bofoo an t0 tho, “and | buggy aud throwing Mr. Ides and 1i Misg Priost, who was riding with his, violontly upon tho {round. Mr. Ides was eoriously cut ufian tho forchend and othorwiao Injured, while ;n:tyfi;x!;ig‘ éufhyu euflnxu% o llt{wtur;siof tho’ skull, osr, and ful it Ip fonrod wil prove ot . todurles whida 010 was o rumor horo this morning that Mr. J. W. Wham, who waa racontly &y lnfwd :l’kn[y:- ltontiary Commiesioner, had® ros ad, but the ;}n}mmgr BOYB umtfho ows nothing. of the osignation, nor of nny intontion on {| Mr. Wham 'tamalgu. ¥ S aater ANTI-MONOPOLY. A Convontion to bo fcld fn Pontlac, Xley SOpt. 20 Spectal Dispatch to The Chicago Tribune, Pont1Ag, TlL., June 10.—Tho Contral Commits teo of tho Farmera and Peaple’s Anti-onopoly party of Livingston County, held a meoting to- day " at thia placo, Tho most oncournging ro- ports wora rocoived from nli parts of the county c::g:fi\ngjlfi‘ ll:ul:v plc:llnc?l movement of tho A 08 tion to bo held at Poutias, Soph. &, 1875, Jon e purposo of nominating county ARKANSAS. Scronade of Gov. Baxters-Xlo IXiscs to Explain Some Personal Mattors, Lrrrie Rooxk, Ark., Juno 10,—Gov. Daxter was soronndod by tho Capital Guards and a Iargo number of citizens to-night. Ho responded in & half-hour speach, stating that ho did not con- struo this into o porsonal ovation, but ona in- apired by tho friondas of law and of ordor, ITo said ho would not dwell upon the unaucconsful offorts to oust him and ovorturn tho lato Gov- ornmont, Derot with spies and foos In-his own political onm)fl‘bc deomed it wise to call on ;h(iga,‘got ?}{o i8 own 10] 0 Governmont, When he took upo: himsolf tho onth of offico, it-was no mlmunxfiug yow, but ono mndo with tho intention of faith- fully dischnrging the duties of tho position, ‘Thero woro somo who halieved ho had consonted to ho inaugurated when not he, but another, had boon elected, In rogard to thnt, ho would eny that the validity of his election’ had boen submitted to overy tribunal in the land sus- acted of having the power to dotermine it, and, urthor, if thero was any fraud in_his clection, hio was nolthor cognizant of, or privy to, such a \vmug-doing. Had his compotitor boon duly de- clarod oloctod, no man in the Stata would have been moro wiling to rospect bis nuthority. When _‘tho matter was rosented o tlo Legislaturo, that body, including botl politienl 'partios, docided Hy - hig favor, and whon in tho faco of this nuthobitativa declaration,—whon an offort was mado to go bae yond tho ‘Conatitution by epplying fora quo warranto against him, when that right had beon spocially givon to tho Loglolaturo, it wos ronson- nblo to Buppose o canspiracy had boen formad to oject him from offieo without rogard to morita of tho caso, Undor these circumstatcos, nnd with n furthor knowladge of the intontion of theso bad mon, ha Lad put himself in a position to moeb forco with forco. -Iy was o sourco of lmpElnnBB, howevor, that mno conflict aroso. ‘Whilo runiors of grent civil commotion wera bos ing eprond brondenst, not & ripple disturbod the peaco and ordor nt hiome. Ho thanked God that whilo wo had suffered some from tho acts of thoso bad mon, wo bavo prosorved the dignity of tho law, and that honcofort!i tho ponglo-m-o do: tormined to put down every transouablo domion< atration that may bo mado. Inthe futuro he would bo guided by tho samo principlos as in tha past. Ho oxpectod to romsin faithful to bis gnn‘.y. Ho was o_Ropublioan not only in namo ut in principlo, but ot the sama time he returne ed thanks to tho Democracy for the manner in which thoy had sustained him. In his future admimstration he should faithfully adhere to thet great fundamental principle, the oquality of all mon bofore thie law. At the couclusion of the Govarnor's poech the crowd dispersed. e THE CHINESE. Infamous Ordinances Votocd by th Mayor of San Francisco, Bax Fnavorsco, Cal., June 9.—~Mayor Alvors tonight vetood fho colobrated_* pig-tail ordi- _nanco,” rocontly passed by the Board of Super- ‘visors, m&‘ulring tho_hends of the Chinoso pris- oners in tho County Jail to bo shaved. Tho or- divanco was ‘yotood on the ground that tho unishmont way infamous, as it mado. unjust stinotions; alo on tho ground that it was Cou- trary to the troaty with Chinn, and to_tho laws of.the United States. Hoe also vetoed tho ordi- nanco _obliglni tho Chinoso laundrymen to pay 916 a quarter for'oach man employed. Tho nes tion of tho Mayor meote with the approval of a groat majority 0f tho pooplo, and even of thosa ugpnzedw Chinoso immigration, for tho nttompt- ed munigipal logislation had takon the form of persecution, 4 ¥ ' SADACCIDENT. .Ehrec RBrothers Suffocated in A Gnse ometer, ‘Cwo of Thom Fatally, Easrront, Mo., Juno 10.—A sad: accidont oc- ocurred this mornivg at tho Gas-Works. Ropaira wor6 to bo mudo, and n young' man namod Hi- ram Lnwronco went_down into tho gasomator to lot off tho water. ' Tho gns overcamo him, and ho foll from tho iaddor into’ tha water., Hig brothor Edward wout down to gob him oul, d 2, 1873, for tho officora, and ho, ‘too, was ' suftocated aud fell. Another _brother, . Jame: tied n ropo around-' -his « ‘body, aud* -iras’ lowored down, but had to Lo drewn up imimodintely. o was nearly dond whon ¢aken out, and now lies in & procarious condition, Tho- othiors wore dead when taken out. Edward leaves a wife and four childron, Hiram waa recontly marriad. ! ThoXown Prous Assoclation, ©CepAR Rarips, In., June 10,—Tho sixth annm 81 sospion of tho Towa Proks Association cone yonod in this city to-dny, and’ waa largoly ate tonded by oditors from all portions of the State. At tho request of ‘tlie Mayor, and in bLuhalf of* i Comnion Counll aid Lo gaod pooplo of tha placo, the Hon. N, BI. Hubbard delivered an olo- quont addroes’of woloomo, which was appropri- atoly roafiaudml to by Prosident Troynor, of tho Council Bluffs Nonpareil. Tho rogulus sunual addroso was then delivered by thie Hon. Waldo M, Potter, of tho Davenport & Gazelle, and s gonorally concod to havo, boon the bost over dolivered bofora tho Association. The poem road later in the duy by J, McCroory, of tho Dabuquo Times, was ulso well rocoived, Numorous resolutions wera passed, amoug othors, condomning tho secopt~ anco of frao pasacs from railronds. Tho. follow= ing ara tho ulicars alocted far tha mmn\u% Prosidont, Judgo E. IL Thayer, of tho Olinton Agas Vico Prosident, Jobn Mahin, of tho Mus- eatine Jownal ; Secrotary, A. C. Swalm, of the Jefforaon Bees Troasuror, Walt Parrott; Ex soutivo Committeo, J. P. Allon of tha Clintolt Dee; Andy Tolt, of tho Nashua Post, and L. B. Roymond, of ihe Chorokeo Leader, It iy gunom.lg undarstood that tho proposed excnrs sion to Chicago to-morrow will not bo made, ale though a numbor of tho mombers will roturn homo by way of {hat city. QAT ¢ —— i Oincinnntl Xton p CINOINRATI, Juna 10.—Tho Intoruational Busie nosy Collogo Asgoolntion mot horo to-day, Deloe atos wore presont from Ban Fraucisco, Now rloans, Now York, Wiscousin, nnd Ilinols, To-morrow R. 0. Bpencor, of hil\vuulmo, do~ lvors the annual address, f "I'he proposed amendraonts to the Constitution of the Chambor of Qomwmetcs, contempluting & radical chango in the basis of membership and an inoroaso of annual dues, oame up to- ax on 'Ohange, Emlluulug a marked intorost, After conuidorablo discussion, an adjournmont till tos _FROTOW ALLexuoon e Qiroolo political housshold, to up. .

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