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e T SUUEE) YV W vy TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. F [Tlll;ll OF RUDAONIPTION (PAYADLE TN ADVANCR). i 3 ¥ Tk B3 081 ey :58 Parta of & yearat tho samo rate, ‘To provont dolay and iniatakos, be suro and givo Tost Office nddresa in ful], includlrg State and County, 5 Romittancos may bo made ofthor by dratt, oxpross, Poat Oflley ordur, or in rogistoroil lottars, at our risk. TRTAS O OVTY SUNAGHITIERG, Daily, delivored, Sunday exceptod, 2 ‘conte por wosk. Daily, delivered, Bunday includod, 20 cents por wook idross THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, - Corner Madlson and Doarborn-sts., Uhleago, 11l /. TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS, AIEEN'S TIEATRI-Wabush ayentto, corner of Oone arets wicout, Byaotacuinr ojiora, ***Zaloo.” "Allornoon vening, o HOOLEY'S | TREATRE_Randeloh st P A R R VRN MOVIOKER'S THRATRE~Madl b LA b U T e AGADIEMY OF MURIO — Halstod streot, botwoon Riadison and. Monroo. Tlioatre Comiquo Corabination. JAltornoon and ovoniug, AMPHITHIEATR] ton and Randolph, and ovoniog. LENT'S OTROUS AND MRNAGERIE~Madisonatroot, ocornor of Elizabotls, Afternoon and ovoning. . —Clinton raot, botwoen Washing- al Wagnor ftornoo ‘Miustrols. A n » A E—Monroo, between Dearborn | T oY e BRI Gover. + o ‘Hunchbaok," BUSINESS NOTICES: 18 QUTTING TERTH, USE THAT o % ooty Birs, Winalon's Booting ANA TOTIFRV—WE 80LD 1N ARORAT ST AT et tha. 500,000 v S nr fadormadon wigen, J. B SARTINUZ &60- Hrnkarse 10 WWalbat." P O, Box 465, Now York. TATONELOR'S TATt DYE, _TIl8 SPLENDID Balrdye i the bost in tho world, ‘Thoonly truo snd pdr- foct d5o. Harinloss, roliable, and instantancor {ntment: no ridioulous tints or unploasant fo8 40,1 olfoots of bad dyen and whslice. Frodiicos i Lol & suporl bluak of ey i Yo nd boautifal. The ) “Bold by all _drugwists, OHARLES The Ghicagi Tribune, Saturdsy Morning, Juno 38, 1873. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. "The prossure upon our columns on Sunday morning 1880 groat that wo sre compelled to roquest advortisers tosond in thelr advertiscments for that issuo at s oarly an hour sa posaible, 10 apder that thoy moy with caxtainty secure the proper classtfication, ; A joint resolution donounciug tho malary- mtoal has boen pnssed by tho Lower House of tho New Hampahire Loglalaturo. —_— Japaneso farmors are advised by the nowspa~ pors of Japan to uso tho labor-saving sgricul- tural machinery produced by the United Btatos. l Mra. Woodhull and Tennjo Claflin bave beon acquitted, in accordanco with tho charge of Judgo Blatchtord, that, under tho law, newspa- para cannot ho classed as ¢ obscone publics- tions.” | The Catholio clergy of Brazil aro forbidden by the Council of State to publish tho bulls of the Popo until the Governmont haos accorded ita per-. ‘mission, and tho samo authority deny soy civil offect to sontences of excommunication, Spain is still without s Cubingt, but the Cortes contributos to tho distractions of tho situation & now Conatitution, which gives to thio Constitaent Cortes tho election of the Presidont of the Ro- public, who appoints the Prosident of the Ex- coative Gounctl, who appoints tho Cabinet Min- sters, Tho pooplo olect the Cortos. A jockdaw strutting around with & pencock's feather could not be prouder than tlie Chicago Times with the Sykea roport on the hot-corn caso. If the Z¥mes had publighed tho hot-corn atticlo which appoarod in Tn: Tninoxe, nobody would have belioved a word of it, and no ropork would ever have been mado on it. l The Italian slave-trade demands the sttention of philanthropista aud the interferenco of the groat powers, Italian citizons of Now York bog Presidont Grant and Gov. Dix to uso thelr power for the suppression of the trafic which kidnaps from their parents in Italy the littlo minstrels who swarm our streets, and holds them ss slaves. Tho Hon. James Mulline, of Tennesses, who died yosterdnyof the cholors, was & member of the Fortieth Congross, During the war he was a staunch Union man, and in 1802 was compolled to fleo from his homo. . JTo took up his residence st Nashville within the Fedoral lines, andsubae- quontly joined the Union army and took part in the battle of Murfrecsboro snd tho sssault ou Hoover's Gap. By its subjugation of tho independent Khan- otes of Turkostan, of which Khiva was the lnat to yiold, Russin, dospito English opposition, has carziod ito torritorial nggrossions in Aels up to tho boundarics of Indin. Itnow proposes to extend its railroad conncctions throngh Baku, on tho Cospian, to Tohoran, in Persia, In this way Russia hopes to tap the East Indian trade which now gocs by water slong the dan« gerous ronte skirting tho shores of tho Arabian Gulf, and passos up tho Ted Sos, through tho Buez Canal, into the Meditorranoan, ' This plan bes rodoubled English approhensions of tho designs of Russis, ond is considored by the Daily News a8 o formidablo attempt to paralyze British commorco in the East, Onarlok A. Dana has boen sucd for libol by tha Vice-Prosident of the Board of Publio Works of the District of Columbia, whom ho oharged with boing corruptly interosted in a strest-paving company of Washington, Com- missioner Davenport yesterday issued an ordor for Mr. Dana’s arrost and his removal to tho Washington Jail, and rofusod to allow him to give bail, In this way tho Commissioner Hopos to pay off sovoral old scoros which ho ovwes tho editor of the Sun, who has boen one of the bittoroat assailants of Lis erbitrary coursein Now York., Whothor ho succeeds in his revengo deponds npon Dana’s sucecen in tho appleation bo has mado to tho United Statos Diatrict Court for ita intorforonco. — Parental relations in tho Walworth family do mot scom to have boen happy In either the pres- ent or the procoding generation. In a lotter writton to hief wifo Inst year aftor iho prabate of tho Chancollor’s will, which left him only an sonuity, tho murderod novelist rofors to his father 88 a “dond scoundrol dog,” and applios -to him othor terms unfit for repotition. Ho then turna to his own childron and sweara by tho domons who attend ligh-spirited men like himsol? to plunge hia dagger into their throats, Bhortly his rage carries him into vl gar idiom, and he promises to * gut" thom, and tholr mothor as woll. The language in which ‘ho addrosses hig wife fa foul beyond utteranco, 1t was statod In evidonoé that, after reading this Jotter, Frank foll into » fit, which lasted for an hour. A foundation for & plon of insanity was laid by thodoforso in the- introduction of toatl- timony to sliow that Frank's skull was fractured durlng chlldhood, and that during his youth ho regelvod dovoral Injurlon on the hoad. : The Uhloago produce markots wors vory steady “yostdrdiy, ‘Mo’ pork wai. notivo and a shado firmér, ot §14.00914.06 cnal, anil ‘14,80 sollor August, Lard wea nelivo and - firm ot 86,05 por 100 pounds. Mdata woro activo nad firm ot 830 for shouldors, 7¢e for short ribs, 73@8o for. shiort oloar, and.D}@113¢o for swoot plokled hams, IHighwines - wero quiot and un- oclnnged . at BE@B8lGo per gallon. Take trolghts - wore active oud uncbanged af | 5o for corn to Buftalo. Flour was active oid stondy, Whont waa firm, and. g0 highor; *olosing ot $1.203¢ cash, and 81,17} sollor July, Corn wan active and 1¢e lowor; closing at 843fo tor now rocolpts, and 833(@82Jo for ecllor July. Oats wero notive and unchangoed, olosing at 281do onsh, ond 2830 sellor July, 'Rye was steady and moro aotive at 0600, Darloy was quiot and unehangod, at 513¢o for good No. 2. Tho hog markot was - largely ovoratookod, -and pricos rulod, 10@160 lower, olosing ¢ ©4.20@4.60. Tho cattlo and shoop markets wore without do- cldod chauge. Miram Powers died yostordsy st Florence. 1fis carly life gave littlo promiso of tho axtistio schfovoments which have placed him' in tho front rank of soulptors, Ho was waiter in' s hotel, traveling saleamian, and approntice toa clockmakor. It was whilo working at thia trade in OCinolunati that he took hin firat lossona in sonlpure from o Prusslan artist, who was making o dtatuo of Gon, Jackeon, His natural aptitudo for this work soon was manifest to his frionds, and his ‘tasto for art led bim to accopt s -position in the Westorn Museum at Cincinnat, the waxswork doparbment of which was in hischargo for soven years, Nicholas Longworth, improssed with his evi- dont genius, bocame Lis patron, and' through his goncrous ssaistanco Powors was onabled, in 1887, whon 83 yoars of ago, to go to Europo to study his art in tho gallorios of Floronco,” He was as- siduous in his application, and in "1888 ‘pro- ducod his {deal study of * Evo,"—n work which - Thorwaldson said any soulptor might bo proud to claim a8 his mostorpicce. In 1839 homado | his model of the Groek Blave, his most pop- ular worl, of which hio has made six duplicates in marblo. Among his othor works are tho ¢ Fishor Boy," Il Ponsoroso,” *‘ Prosarpine,” “ Califor- nis," and *Amorica.” * His portrait-busts are tho’ most’ numorous productions of his chisel, and emong thom are busts of Adams, Jackeon, Wobstor, Calhonn, Marshall, Everott, and Van Buren, of which that of Onl- houn is his mastorplece in that kind of work, Ho hos died in his 66th year. Bince 1838 ho has resided in Floronco, making only occasional vis- its to Romo and othor places. HOT CORN, ‘A Committeo was sppointad by tho President and Dircotors of tho Board of Trade, tho othor dny, to make a cortaln investigation lu pursu- arico of cortain rosolutions, tho firet nud princi- ‘pal ono of which is os follows: Resoleed, That s Committeo of threo boappolntod by tho Prosident of thls Bosrd, subject to tho approval of tho Directors, and that this Committco bo, and horoby 15, instructed {o mako a full, and careful, and impare tial investigation of tho sots of tho posting, and tho start o panto on tho first apponrance of hot corn. Wo prosumo tho fact is, that, if thoy find a littlo com getting out of condition, theyship it to Duffalo and put it through & dryer instoad of “ ory havoc, and let slip tho dogs of war." Boar Iu mind that to post corn s out of condition fs not moroly to avall onesolt of Lis logal rights, “but it I to Infliot hoavy losson on tho Loldors of oqm, both hore and olsowhoro, to bring dis- crodit upon tho trado, and upon tho olty gonoral= ly. Now, 1lot us. sco what oxouso BMr. Iiram Wheolor hnd for taking o stop of this Chiof Grain Inspeotor, who rolatos his intorview with Mr. Wheoler botoro the posting took placo: Q.—Whint dfaposition did Mr, Wheolor mnifost ns to {aking caro of 17 A—Ho oxprossod himelt somotling Mks this ; that 1t waa all tho corn o had or oxpeoted o hnvo in tho Nortliwestorn, and he wasn't golug 1o tako fn any mora coru this soanon. I think ho fgurod somothing Lke thla: (ot 1t wea a loss to him of $3,800 thet day; causo for tho posting of tho sald corn, of the offect of said posting on tho value of corn In this markot, snd of tho facts aud condition of the subsoquent with- drawal of the posted corn from store, with tho state- monts of tho parties who witldrew tho corn, and the Btate Inspoctor and his deputies who oxamined it when shipped. Tho Committeo g0 appointed have mado s short report on the subject of hot corn, and sup- plomented it with o long mess of impertinouce concorning Tue Cmcaco TBIBUNE, winding up with the following eago observations on journal- ism: ® We teet compollod to eay that slanders, untruth, and: soneation aro not nows ; it 4 something less than en- torpriso which publishes thom aa nows, and the papor wihich gives utterance (0 50 grosa ond neodlees o lbel excrelnea s disregard for tho falr fama of our clty and ita citizens, Tho faults wo mny have in onr system of handling gratn can bo mot and corrected by falr and nonorablo messures, Nouo other aro worthy of us, 3, W, Brurs, exnny O. RANNEY, Asa Dow, - Whothor elanders, untruth, ad sonsation aro characteristio of this paper, we do not chooso to discuss, excopt to romark that tho roputation of Tug Tnmuse for truth sud voracity will comparo favorably, both in tho city and out. of it, with that of tho warchousomon and’ the Board of Trado. The Committes, in tha briof paragraph which they devota to the aubjoct ‘of Lot corn, eay that Vihoro was sufliciont legal and proper oxcuso for posting the corn out of condition in the two olovators spoken of.” That thoro waa sufliciont legal oxcuso for posting this corn has probably been shown, Wo suppose that any good eriml- oal lawyor could sccure an acquittal on the facts wunder the statute. That there was a proper oxcuse for 60 grave an act, which act, and not any articlo in T OmroAo TuisuNe, causod tho oxtraordi- nary decline in tho prico of corn snd brought discredit upon this market, we firmly dony. That an'fuvostigation into nowspapors and the ules of sound journallsm should bring out all tho facts in rolation to hot corn, and the propri- oty of posting it aud knocking down tho market, is not to bo expected. But wo find somo tostl- mony not suppresged by the Committoo to which we wish to diroct mofo particitlur attontion. Tho firgt io that of Mr. Hiram Whoolor, propriotor of ono or both-of the olovators - whore the post- ing tools placo: ' : By Mr, Hiram Wheeler—Well, I don't belféve that the percentage of hot corn this year fa tore than the aver age. * Will Mesars. Bykes, Raunoy, and Dow please toll s whon tho Jast posting of Liot corn took placo? Was i laat yoar, or tho yoar bofore, or the year boforo that, or the year bofors that? Our roo- ollection is that it was four yoars sgo, but wo may be mistaken, Itiwas cortainly s long timo ago. Now, wo havo tho teatimony o Mr. Hiram | Wheeler, which wo have corroborated by inquiry in othor quartors, that thora is no mora liot corn horo this yoay than the average. Ilow doos It happen that kot corn 18 postod this yoar, andtho markot knocked Into flinders, when it isnot posted In the averago of yoars—whon it hos not boon postod for, uay, four years back ? When Moessrs, Sykes, Rannoy, and Dow write elr noxt ossny on Journalism, wo beg that thoy will mako & short digression in ordor to answor this quostion. . : Againj the warchousos of Flint & Thompson, Armour, Dole & Co,, and tho Mossrs, Bucking- ham, hold fore than 76 por cont of all the corn in store here, The ory of Liot corn Liss not boon raised in any of thoso warohonsos, Why? ‘he presumption I8, oithor that thero is no hot corn thoro, or that these firms Lave foo muoh rvogard for the reputation of their houses, and that an o was going to dosiguato it In tho poat~ ing, and 2 1t waa all tho corn in the hotne, and thoy dlda't proposc to tako fn any more, it couldn't bo any particular damago {0 tho corn in tho other clovators in ho city, ns tho trade wonld know thoso facts whon (il was_postod, I think thero wns somo such atate- mont, & ¥ The sum and substance of this is, that there was vory littlo corn in tho elovator, and that, lest ho should loge $2,800, ho would take the risk of bringing on o panio by siarting o ory of hot -corn. Porhaps it would knook tho markoet down 11 conté » buahel, and porhaps it wonldn't. Who tho dovil carca? It i upon tho forogoing stato of facts that Mosera, Sykos, Ranncy, aud Dow plodge tholr vorecity that thare was a proper, a8 woll as o logal, occasfon for posting tho corn. It is upon this stato of facts that thoy doom thomselves qualified to deliver & locturo on untruthful and sonaational journalism! ’ Now, the motive, and tho sole motive, of Trr TripuNg for publishing any articles whatsoovor on hot oorn, wns to onforco tho nocossity of adopting tho nocossary warchouso appliances for taking onro of grnin aud keoping it in condition affor it hns passed into storo. Wo urgod this ne “eminently required for the protection of tho pub- 1o and for tho roputation'of tho clty, In tho articlo which has called forth tho ejaculations of Mesars. Sykes, Rannoy, and Dow, we eald : ‘That the condition of hot corn can bo provented by the employment in warchouscs of machinery for the ventilation, drying, and cleaning of tho corn, from Hmoto Ume, i conceded. Why should it not be adopted? Why should it not bo made compulsory? Why should not tho warchousemen thomsolves pro- vido it, giving to thelr customors full security sgainet hot corn, for which the public will ss roadily pay as thoy do for snyother insurance? Wo inaiat that tho Boord of Trado cannot, in Justice Lo thetr own ohare scter, not {n Juatice to tha character of tha city, per- ‘mit this disgracaful businoss to go unnoticed, nor with- out a atrong offort to provido a proventive agatnst its futuro repetition, It appoars, from tho testimony of Mf. J. T Lyon, that Lo has been availing himsolf of tho hystorical condition of the markot, brought sbout by Mr. Hirom Wheolor's anxiety to save $2,300, to buy o Jargo amount of hot comn and shipit to Buffaio, to bo cured in tho dryors which exist in that clty. In giving ‘this highly- tutarosting narration, Mr. Lyon soys further : Q.~Do you thinkit would bo suy better when it gots 1o Buffalo ? A.—This Fulton corn, X boliovo, was 50 hot that, lofé in tho bin ten days, it would havo cured itackf—driod up. 1t was ko very hot that you couldnt Lold your hond in {t—somo of it, Occasionally it would run o 1ittlo coo), and thien aa hot 5 fury, Mr. Lyon's opinion, that this corn would have cured itsolf if loft in tho bin ton days, must pass for what it is worth. Thero is one branch of tho invostigation which Mosars, Sykos, Ranney, and Dow havo not yot reported on viz,: ¢ theeffect of said posting on the value of corn in this market,’ Whon thoy got around to this ques- tion, wo suggest that they draw & comparison botwoon, tho offeot of ssid posting nnd tho offect of loaving the Fulton corn in the bin ton doys, A false improssion has gone abrond that the Committeo's roport has boon adopted’ by the .Bonrd of Trade. This is not truo, It hns beon adopted by the Dircctors who appointed the Committeo, but has ‘not boen voted on by the ‘Bonrd. Wo oare not whethor the Board adopt it or not, but it is shnplo justico to say that they havo not a8 yot o far stultified thomsolvos. THE REPUBLJCANS AND GRANGERS IN I0WA, Thoe Ropublican Btato Convention of Iows, at its meooting last Wodnesday, got down on its Imocs ond piteously asked the farmers and Grangors of that Stato to lot the Republican party havo another yoar's life, promising to do anything in roturn fo oblige tho farmors that might bo saked, provided to do so did not offend tho railroad ctrporations. In 1872, when tho Logislaturo of Towa woa in sossion, that body was potitioned by the farmors to adopt somo logislation on the subjoct of railroad oxtortion. Some of tlio Granges -sont dolegatos to Doa- Moinos, . to urge such sotion. Tho” two branches of tho Xown Logisiature were Ro- publican by o two-thirds or *.three-fourths majority of all the membors. Tho Prosident pro tem. of tho Benato, Sonator Lowry, offored & preamble and resolutions, April 22, 1872, which wore adopted by the Senate. They form & cu- rious contrast with the oringiug platform of Thuraday last. Thoso preamblo and resolutions woro ag follows : Witeneas, Thero Lns been constantly fn attendanco on tho Senato aud Houss of this Genoral Acsembly, from the commencemont of tho Hosalon to tho presout time, four gontlemon professlug to roprosont the groat sgricultural {ntoresta of tho Stato of Iowa, kuown as tho Grango; and, Wnzneas, Theso gentlomen apposr o bo antiroly destitute of any visible' moaus of support; thoreforo, boit ' Rtesclved, By tho Benate, the House concurring, that 1o Junitor pormit aforesald gontlemen to gather upall thio waste papers, old newspapors, otc,, from undor tho “denks of the membors, and hoy bo allowed ono postage’ stamp eacly, tho American Agriculturiat, What Grocloy Knows About Farming, and that they bo parmltted to tako with thom to thiolr homaw, if thoy haye uny, ll the Tojucted railroad tarif bills, Sncluding Richards' and O'Donnell’s tarlf ‘commisslon bills, Duncombe' oech on railroad tariffn, Beardsloy'a spooch on fomalo suflrage, Olaussou’s roply, Kasson's speoch on Darna- oles, Blakoly's dog bill, Tealo' Uquor bill, ond bo given # pass over tho DesMofuca Valley Raflrosd, with tho carncat hopo that thoy will nevor raturn to DesMolnes, The Ropublicane who passed thoso resolutions wero just then sending dologaten to Philadelphia fo voto for Grant's renomination. Thoy had Just rosolved that slavery ought to havo bioen nbollshod ; that nogrooa wore entitled topolitical oquality; that the Ku-Klux ought to b put down; and that Republicans alono phould hold oftico. 'That was when overything was lovely, snd tho Credit Mobilior stovk was doing the most good; when Harlan wasg onjoying n soat in tho Bonate and Durant’s $10,000 Iu poace and quict. At that thne, Gon. Dodgo was not run- ning raocs on tho plaine of Toxas and Now Moxico, with tho Bergeant-at-Arms having asubpons roquiring him to appear and ex- plain how the Ohiof Engincor of o railroad company could bottor earn his salary and do the company more good in Congress than out on the road. At that timo, the Ropublicaus of the Town Loglelaturo, consclous of the atrongth of 70,000 for tho crodit of tho Ohlego market, o gravity. Wo .quoto from tho testimony of the | majority in the Stato, hold Grangors' and som- plalning sgrioulturiats in contompt, *~Rallroad oorporations hiave nover falled to..psy promptly and Iiborally forall tho loglulation thoy havo agkod, What loglslator hed over. recclvod a dollar from & farmor for Apocial legislation? The four Grangota who woro sont to’ Ues Molnes hiad no monoy td pay out for the: purposo of pirohase ing loglalntion ; o "ol ‘the Loglulaturo to do tliem justico, withe out boing pald for. 1, and. the +Bopublican Loglelaturo thought it o groat foko. Thoy, thorotoro, In tho ‘Honato, put it on rocord that ke roprosontatives of tho Grangos, hnying nd motiby t6 oxpond for tho purolintio of ‘Togdlatior, ‘Wworo paupors, Laving no businoss at tho Oapital, a1id that thoy bosont to thelr. homos at the aost of tho railronds, on condition of thelr. never ro- turning, It fu possiblo that tho Grangorswill havo moro ‘than four roprosentativos at Dos- Moinos during the noxt Legialature, and that tholr roprosontativos will not bo thera ds potition. ors, but aa Iaw-maltorn ; and they.will likely give Bonator'Lowry and his Ropublican sasbolatos indofluite Ioavo of absonco from official duty in tho Stato Loroaftor. -As tho Republicaas.in 1872 Inughed at the Grangors who had clocted thom’ 80 will tho Ropublioans of 1878 ridioule tho pro- tonsions of men who permit thomsolvos to bo, will dupod by Bepublican protossions, THE PLATFORM OF THE GERMAN MOVE- MENT. i It s signifionnt thatall tho varions political doparturos of the day, howovor diverse they may b in intorests, load -away from the Ropublican party. This is true of tho Roform Republicans in Philadolphin, who havo joinod tho Liberals and Domocrats for the purposo of putting down the corruptionists who havo controllod the city and Btato for somo years. It is oqually truo of tho Domocrata in Allon Connty, Ohio, who, in sovering tholr allegiinco o the ald Demooratio party, havo gono still furthar from tho Repub- liean party. It is.s0 with the farm- or, who, in Jowa and elsowhoro, do- claro that thero in no hopo for a rodress of their griovances from tho party in powar, or any othor party. Bo it'is, too, with tho Gorman clomont in Ohicago, - whoso recent doclaration of the political prinoiples that will mako up'tho issuo of tho local campaign noxt fall arralgn the Ropublican party with that dls- honesty of purposo and bad faith which soems likoly tq command univerenl recognition, 1f the doparturo from the Ropublican party were choson by any single ono of the new movementa of the A7, it might t> acoounted for.on the pround that ita nims and thoso of the Ropub- lican party wore difforent, and thord the mattor would ond. Dut, aa sll tho movoments agroo'in denouncing thoconduot of tho Ropublican party, and doolaring tho purposo of having. nothing | in common ‘with i, tho inforonco s plain that thoro is & vory goneral sontiment among 41l classos that, if anything is to bo accomplished, it cannot bo dono under tho.auspicos of that organization. In other words, tho instances aro congtantly multiplying which expresaly racognizo tho fact that the power and usofulucss of tho Republican party aro passed. The local move- ment, started somo weoks since by the Gorman citizens, Lo indieated, fn tho platform adopted last Wodnesday evoning, that tho Ropublican party can no longer depend upon tho voto of tho German-Amorican oitizons, which the party.'has haretoforo regarded ns bolonging' to 'it. The addrona issuod by the German-Amorican Liboral Asgociation will command tho sympathy of tho majority of tho pooplo, €0 far as it condomns in unmistakoblo terms tho desire of private gain that charactorizos tho office-holders of tho dny, the scandalous transnctions of mon in high placos, and tho froquent attompts at defrauding tho Public Treasury. Tho introduction of this foaturo intp tho platform, which wasnot noces- sary to o dofinition of tho locall iésucs, shows that the defection among tho citizons of German. birth from the Republican party hins not been suggostod simply by local differonces, but by a rocognition of the vicos that have permonted tho political organization with which they have horo~ tofore been identified. i As for the local issucs with which the Germans expoot to o to the polla at the fall election, thoy commond thomselves %o the public gonorally as thoy aro dofinod in tho ros-. olutions unanimously adopted ns much fairer and moro worthy of pupport . than those which have beon put forward by irresponsiblo porsons and gathorings from timo to timo, Tho public hasboon aptto identify tho movoment with tho action of tho suloon-keopors in opouing tholr doors on Bunday in violation of tho law; with tho nttackon Ficld & Leiter, bogun in the Staals- Zeitung and indorsod by tho saloon intorost; with tho violont oxprossions used by Mr. Hesing and other oxtromists. It has boon variously confused with a whisky interest and o * Gorman Enow-Nothing" intorest. Thera is cortainly nothing in tho address and rogolutions of tho Assoocintion which has takon the leadership of the movemont that will justify any of theso as- sumptions. Tho rosolutions exprossly disclaim all inteution of a nativistio movemont, but olaim that thosupportors of thomovement, nating 88 Amorlean citizons, invito tho co-operation of all citizons without regard to the accldent of birth, They moraover oxpross & high rospect for the causo of temporatico, and.deolare that intemporanco in all things should be combated with ovory suitable moans. Thelr idea of tomporanco, howaver, is not that with which tho torm 18 froquontly confusad—total abstinonco— Dbut in favor of cultivating grape-vines avd on- couragiug tho brewing of good baor and alo as & moany of diminishing the use of strong aleoliolic drinks. 'The Germans havo cortainly o right to, advaneo theso prineiplos by reason of theix own tomporato habits a3 a class assoointod with tho uso of boer and wino, The rosolutions further declsre tho iutention to oboy tho objactionablo lnwa as long a9 thoy nro in ox- istonco, but tho parpose to defoat thom, if pos- siblo, at the polls, 'No one can flud In this doclaration anything but the clomonts of gaod citlzonship, and the oxoroluo of a right gusran- tood by our form ot government. Whatover opposition, then, the Jocal move- ment under tho suspleos of the Gormen-Amorl- oan Liberal Agsoclation may oncounter at tho polls, no fair man cau maintain that the manner of maling up tho issuc has not boen calm, or- dorly, and docent. " Tho Association and thoso who act with thom forosaoin the onforcemont of tho Sunday law ag it nowstands an infringomont on thoroligious frosdom guarantood by the Con- stitution, na woll ag an unnccosaary conatraint of tho habita and soclal oustoms of a largo class of tho people. 'Thoy asscnt to tho démand that #during Sunday all business and smusemonts shall bo undor such rostriotiona as will in no mannor intorfore with or disturb tho devotion or worahip of any olass of Rooloty.” This is an ad- misslon of what has boforo boon suggestod as a they went 'thoro asking’ rocrontlon ag o proper celobration of Sunday will ot Permit tholr cuntoms to {ntorforo with thore- ligious obsorvanco of tho day, it tho othors will consontnot to curtall thelrssculnr socisl customs. Thero Is in this and other rontimonts of tho plat- form'adoptoed & apirit of concossion which 'many poopla will be willing to meot halt woy who would have boon onrnostly opposed to any Cor- mnn nativistio movemont, or any saloon-keopors® patty, Tho platform, o9 n wholo, will strongthon tho oauAo fn which it has -beou propared, and thoso who do not agreo with all *the sontimenta oxprossod in it will rocognize o donservative and Iaw-nbiding disposition to scouro what the Gor- man-Amoricans rogard as a right under tho Gov- ornmont of thelr ndoption, Tho duty of tho Gorman-Amorioan Liboral Assoolation will now ‘bo, to hold the varlous olemonta favorablo to the movomoent strlotly down to the spirit of thelr renalutions, S | ' A LOUISIANA RAILROAD BTEAL { Tho Virtuous ‘Gov. Kollogg, of tho Govern- morit in Loulnians, rooms to_ havo boon s large operator in’ rallroad stook whilo Unitod Btatos Honator, it corlain rovelations of tho Now Or- lohns Horald may bo crodited, To go baok to the ‘boglnning, Col, Thomas O. Bates, a railrosd pro- jootor and contractor who had beon interostod in Southord r6ids bofore thio war, and had logt bis intorosts through tho war, woat to Now Orloans aftor tho cessation of - hostilition, and rovived a project fora railrond connccting New Orleans aud Baton Rougo, running-through's particular- | Iy’ fortllo distriot on “tlio ‘Missivelppi cosst. In 1800, tho Loulstna ' Logislaturs. was in- ducod " to; pass o bill, which Gov. War- moth signed * vory. promptly, i by .which tho Btato gaaranteod §6,250,000 of socond-mort~ gago bonds, to bo paid a8 soctions of tho rond wero complotod. Havlng. sceirod this concos- slon, Ool. Batos then got possosaion of an old chartor for a road from Baton Rougo to Shrove- port, which had o handsome land-grant from the Btato mado boforo tho war, With this matorial to work with, Col. Bates proceeded to Now York, whoro ho mado o combination with Mr. Willis Gaylord, a brothar-in-law of SBenator Pomeroy, to got somo aid from Congress. Tho.good offices of Bénator Pomeroy, who was' then Chalrman of tho Committes.on Public Lands, and of -Bomator, now Governor, Kollogg soom to have boon eonlsted, for, in tho bill granting lands to the Toxas & Paoiflo Railroad, & provision was addod that tho Baton Rouge & Now Orloans Road should havo 4,400, 000 acrgs. This secured, Col. Dates appoars to havo stopped back, and Mr. Gaylord sssumed tho managomont of the project. With tho land- granta and tho Loulslana guarantoo, Mr. Gay- Tord announced that he had mado arrangoments in Frankfort for the disposalof the bonds, tho monoy to b advancod ns stated goctlons woro complotod. Thoro was. somo hitch, howover, which provontod Mr. Gaylord from carrying out bis plan. Mo thon endoavored fo goll tho rond, and nogotisted, among other partles, with Sonator Bpiaguo, of RhodoTeland, Ho offor- od to scll the sond for £1,200,000 it Benator Bpraguo would assume tho paymont of cortain ‘bonds hold in trust by tho Union Trust Company, of New York City. Upon further inquiry it was discovered that thoso spocinl bonds amounted to noarly o million dollara. Fivo hundred 81,000 bonds (2500,000) woro ownod by Mr. William Pitt Kollogg ; one hundred $1,000 bonds (£100,000) by Mr. P.B. O, Pinchback ; a batch by Senator Pomery, sud soon. My, Gaylord declined to toll In wuat way those yentlomon became pos- sossod of these bonds, but Mr, Kellogg and Mr. Pomeroy wore both membors of tho United Btatos Sousto at tho timo the land-grant was so- cured. Benator Spraguo did not buy. This i tho story substantially as told by tho Now Orloans Jierald. Of courso, no work las evor been dono on the projected road, In the meantimo, & company has been organized to tuild & railroad botweon Vermilionvillo and Shrovoport, which travorses s part of tho terri- tory that tho Now Orloans & Baton Rougo Road would occupy if it should ever bo built, and tho intorosts of the two roads would conflict directly. The now Company soems to have boon organized on & gound bagis, and so far has asked for no grants or subsidies. Last wintor tho Company gecurod o bill from the Legislature granting a cbirter, and Mr. Willinm Pitt Kollogg, now Gov- ornor, rofuses to sign the bill. Ho assigns sovoral ‘uneatisfactory reasons for withholding his sig- naturo, and demaonds, among othor things, that. soourity sball bo given that the rond will be built. This purposo would bo highly patriotic and com- mendable under cortain eircumatances, but, as long a8 Gov. Kellogg holda £500,000 bonds in o fond 6¢ conflicting intorasts yot to bo built, his patriotism s of & vory quostionablo choractor; It will also bo portinont for the Louisiana peoplo to domand how Mr, Willinm Pitt Kollogg, Unitod Btates Bonator, Locamo possossed of $500,000 ‘bonds in a railrond, which Mr, Willism Pitt Kol logg, Governor of Louisians, now seoks to pro- teot by rofusing fo sign s bill suthorizing tho conslruction of & compoting rond, A BANERUPT CARPET.DAGGER, Tho United Btatos Marshal of the Distriot of Mossachusotts has igaued a notico to tho credit- orgof tho firm of Hannibal I, Kimball & Edwin N. Kimball, and of Hannibul I, Kimball indi- vidually, informing them that & warrant in’ bankruptey has boon Issucd againat tho ostates of thosa Kimbnlls, ** formorly transacting busi- ness at Atlanta, Ga., and both noy of Newton, 1iddlosex County, Mass.,™ and thatamaeting of tho ofoditora * wilt bo hiold at the Unitod States Court-House in' Boaton, on fho 14th 'in- gtant, to provo tholr dobts and chooso an Assignoo.”. Tho lst of oroditors and tho amount of dobts aro also furnished, setting forth tho indobtodness of the firm to be 90,084,160, and of ' IL T, Kimball individuatly, 9784,677.45, making tho joint indobteduoss of tho two hankrupts 84,508,727.45, ' Thig IT, I Kimball will bo romembored as hav- Ing boon in Ohicngo somo yoars ago, and with no opocinl gratitudo by sovoral of our citizens, whom ho perauaded iuto gold and silver mining investmonts to their dotrimont and ultimato loss, From hore he wont to Atlanta, Ga., whoro ho orooled an opora-house, which ho eventunlly sold to tho Biate Government for & SBinte-Ilouso. In councelon with this transaction thoro aro facts whioh havoa boaring local to Chicago, It is enid that in this liat of dobts thore ought to bo ona of #60,000 which ho owos to the Rapublic Life Insurance Company of Obloago, to seoura which ho gavo o mortgago upon tho Btate-House at Atlants, bo- foro it was purchased by tho Legislaturo, Tho oxlatenco of this debt and mortgago was known botoro Gov. Bullock paid Kimball, but ho pald hiny; novortheless, in full, withont making any arrangements for the satisfaction of the mort- gago, whicks tho Btate of Goorgta will thus haye to pay. compromlse,—that tho classos whorogasdzostand | Kimball wao s mombor of tho Georgla Ring, of which Bullook was olifof, and, whon the Ad- ministration parly bocamo alarmed &t ita frauds and. sbusos of power, and rofused to catry this lond of carpot- bag . corruption any ‘longor, ho and Bullook and Blodgott trlod to prolong the term of the venal Logmlaturo which thoy controllad, and to provont tho oloction of & new one, and aleo socured thoe lllognl elootion of Foator Blod-~ gott to tho Unitod Btatos Bonate, At Iast, how- over, whon tho atorm throatonod ¢0 broak upoh thom, thoy commenced sooking for sholter, Dlodgott loft st tho oxpenso of hig bondsmon, ond la now in Bouth Carolinn, whose Governor Totuses to glvo him up. Bullock wont to New York, and, whon a requisition was iiado upon tho Governor of that Btato for him, ho managed to oscapo with ‘bhis plundor fnto Canada. No omo in the Bouth know where Kimball. wont, until thls official mo- tioo from the United Biotos Morshal dls- closed tho fact that ho waa living near - Bonton, o was a sharp trickstor, and hio 8o ‘suocossfully covorod up hin tracks that no eriminal indiot- mont can lodge againat him, ! h An Atlanta corrospondent of tho Loulsville Courier-Journal has analyzod tho lsk of debts, and finds gomo ourfous facts, Tho ftom of $118,~ 000 duo to John Rico, President of tho Goorgin National Bank, was socured by a mortgago on tho Kimball Houdo at Atlauts, which Mz, Rico has since found plastorod all over with mort- gages and buildors’ lems. Anothor itom is $1,000,000, duo to Homry Glows & Co., of Now York, Olows was Bulloock's finan- oial agent of the Btate of Goorgin, and lhandled many of the fraudalent bonds which Bullock fssucd, and was troamuror of many of Kimball's entorpriaos. Tho Georgia Rallway Constructing Company, in which Kimball claims he ‘owns §75,000, was sim- ply b Grodi Mobilior, tho Cowpany being I, I. Kimball and E. N. Kimball. Goorgo Cobk, of Now Havon, who s o croditor for £80,000, fa the fathor-{n-law of Kimball, and" was 8 member of tho Ring. E. N. Kimball himself is put, down 88 o croditor to tho amount of £47,000, and Bullook for 320,000, Thore are numerous other sharp transactions connected with tho opora- tion# of the Kimballs whilo thoy were in leaguo with Bullock and Blodgott to fleoce the Btato Treasury of Goeorgla, which it would be needloss to mention. Tho moro fact of bankruptcy, ‘which hns overtaken tho Kimballs, is of little ac- count as far 08 it concorns them. Bon of that stamp, wha fail for millions, always contrive to sayo a largo amount from tho wreck, Thoy havo failod sovoral timos boforo for colossal sums. It it shonld eventuato that at somo timo or other, aftor soveral moro failures and smart oporations, tho, renl chardotor of thoso men may bocomo Inown, public opinion may sdministor s panalty quito a8 sovero na-if thoyhad renderod tliom- solvon lizble to tho laws. Tt is ono of tho poculiaritics of hyglonfo phil- osophors thst thoy are contluually discovering somo new aud dangorous proporty in the most common articloof food.. Now that the cholerais coming, In which event, oa the doctora toll us, tomato Is the only safo vogotablo to eat, up starts Dio Lowia and tells us that tomaco-oating makes tho eator’s tooth fall out, whilo an Indiana to- matophobist makes the startling announcomont that ho hag known of two or throo tomato-ontors who havo bocomo insano, We presumo that tho two or throo lunat{os alsocat broad and potatocs, but this doos not soom to count for much with tho Indiana wavant. . e - NOTES AND OPINION, " . Tits Citt0AG0 TRIBUXE hna had o groat desl to say sbout salary-grabbors,” montioulng varlous Bena- tors and Mombora of Congress, but, for some un. known cause, it novor yet, $0 our knowledge, hin snld # word In regard fo_tho part Alr, John A, Logan tuok fu this Tobbery. Tz TRmUNE hus nover mentfoned Logan by namo onco, “Tho publjc la_anxious to know # why is thin thus?” Many ovil-disposed porsons ine timato thot the groat thunderer is not in & condition to dncur Mr, Bonator Logan's displeasuro. Of courso, 8uch intimations aro base.—Sprin gfield Reglater, . Wo think that the Register has not been an attentive rondor of tho columns of Tk TRIDUNE, That Gen. Logan. was onc of thoso who voted for tho Salary-Grab bill ia tolorably well known to our readors, Tho prosumption is that he took the back pay. In this respoct ho is nelthor botter nor worso than the, rest of tho salary- grabbors, Wo have soon no occasion to single him, or nny ono olso (oxcept Butlor, who was tho father and special champion of the bill), out {for special ‘animadversion, What the Register Boya ahgut tho displonsure of Gen.: Logan is probably o joke, ‘the point of which is too dim for our discornment. Tho Baltimore Domocratic primarics, on Tues- day, woro overwhelmingly in favor of Gov. Will- iam Pincknoy Whyto for next United Statos Bonator. “Back pay” <killed' poor Thomas Bwann., L —Tho Republicana of Philadelphia have pul up a fall “ ring tickot " for tho Octobor elaction, with Willlam Elliot¢ at the hoad, for Sheriff. Mr, EMiott has been two wintors Speakor in tho TLogialnture ot Harrlsburg. For the Logislaturo, i Mr, Elliott's distriot, William J. Ovons wgs named; and for the Qommon Council, Sevonth | Ward, Jobn Bardsloy, We aro thus pactioular. bocatiso on tho morning of the Ropublican pri- harics thero appeared this notlco: Sevouth Ward,—~To my frionds.—Voto for Mr, John Bardsloy, ss tho difforenice of opivlon {hat horotafore oxistod botween ua Laa beon sottled, & Wittrae J, Ovexs, The Philadolphia Age says : Whop this William J, Ovous was Assossor of tho Sovonths Ward, ol, Riddlo, a distingnishod soldior, & Tiopublican, and s nost swmiublo and inoffensivo gon- tleman, called at tho office to settlo * n difference” in cortain'tax bills, Torthwith ho was sct upou and bru- tally murdered] Mr, Oven, a d of tho “ Ring," wus tricd foF the murder, snd jmme~ Qlatoly acquitiod and restored to tho commanding po- eltion'in hls party from which ho now tolla fhow whom 1o vota for, . —Danlel W. Wilder, elected State Auditor of Ransas last year, [s out iu a published lottor, say-~ ngie . v Tho old_Republicans of 57 wora not cast down in spirit when Juilge Tanoy attempled tg placo slavery in msas, an all ovar, tho country) by & fudiclal decruc, ‘Aud no roformer Will now bo disboartoned or fuduced 1o turn hack by boing told that ho caunot fight the cor- porations, monopolics, and almost univorsal corrap- tion, bocauso the Bupromo Court of tho Unitod States stanids In tho way, Whothor it daca or uot, the cause will go ou, It s 1ot only safe to trust tho pooplo, but thoy ur tho ouly power (hat can bo trustod, They will mareh through counties, States, and _tho'istfon, aud drivo tho monoy-chaugurs froth puwar, T think that thoy can and will clect tho nost President, though yenra mny olapso boforo the presout domoralization ta fully uprootad, —0ol. Edward Daniols, formorly of Wisconsin, and now editor of tha Virginia Slate Journal, tho Administration paper st Richmond, writes odi- torially of n lato visit in the Wout, snying . Nottlug Imprested ua liko tho majontlo uprising of tho farmors of the West to save {hemsulves allko from tho oxtortions of middlomon, the rupacity of corpora- tious, and tho plunderiug of politloal Treobootora of Dotls parties, . , o o ‘Uhis frightons tho old party incks, and thoy aro oalling out lustily to tho farmers 1o keop e+t af jolftice, Thoro iy no body of men moro intelll - organtzed, and who moro certainly Know Wua. - 4 aro about 'than the farmers of {ba Weat, Virginis furiers, If thoy know tholr truo {u- terout, will ‘speodily organizo and put thomselyos in live with their brothron, ¢ ~Tho Albany Evening Journal concludes an oditorial on the rovolt of the Ohia Demoorats with this romark ; f In attempltug to viay with i tho Demooratio man agurs hava kiudiod a Game whicll thoy may fud it hurd 1o control, . —\Wo ropeat our advice to tho farmers of Ohio. Lot them organizo throughout tho Biats wwith tlmrmlglmuuu and dispateh, Lot themn hold o Btato Uonvontion toward the last of July and nominato a Btato ticket pledged to their intor- ests, ., , , QOoursge {s sure to win, They hmve the Demooraoy behind them. All they have to do is to indicate tho wsy, and.tho Do- ‘moorary will follow.—Cincinnati Enquirer, —Inits gencralcharacter,ttis unexpeotedaction guishod membor in Olla {8 but an nutumppln[i of what maybs - or soon, although at prosont_in lona active’ mood, * in ovory Wostorn Slate. Indeed, wo fcol confls dent that tha Allon County.movoment, unloss, it moots with far Tosn opponition from Ollo Dotmio- ornta than wo oxpoot, will loso niuch of its dis- tingulshing prominonce when oompnred with the advancod position which tho. Demooratio vrgans - izations of ‘omo of tho Northwontorn Statod— - ° Iows and.Minnesoin for lnstanco— han to propos Uimo ulal GO S Pt e —Tor yoars pant farmors Liave submilited fn silanco, whilo professional politicians robbod the . country, aud enpital ourichod ltsolf Ly awallowe, g up tho {ris of industry, Aud now tHint thay: . aro aronsed, and bave dotormined to look aftor thiolr owri intoroats, lot not politiolnua or Eastorn monopolles g tho dojanlon that the movoment will provo but a filakoring light, which, :at the command of cavcus or party, will dic oul, Party inpoperiass ofthor to Kll of thio fartaors’ move. mont, or whip it Into tho traces, Farmors have hed enough of helping * pariy”~and *party rulora” In tho past, . an spond s little ¢imo fn helplug themaclyos.— . shkosh (Wis) Times. —In Cnliforiifn, too, thoy till disarrangoe con~ sidorably tho enloulatfons of.both partios. Ovar all tho agrloultural Stales ‘of ‘the Unlon tho Granges will soon control the politionl situntion, wnd bottor governmont will faflow.—-&m Fran- co Ohroniclo, s R —The poople hava olosed thelr oyon and awal- lowod whotovor tho: ofice-holdors s At to fix up for thom, for 8o long & timo that {ho thing 1isa lost ita intorost to thom, and thoy have con- cluded o “tumn over anow loaf ;" thay have votod for *party "—which meana tho oflico- holdors—long enough; aro tired of it, and pro- . . poso_horotftor to voto for tho people.—Lear worth (Kan.) Arqus. Lo mm- —Wlion tlicdo 6,000,000 of hard-working, In« tolligont, aud coneorvativo mon aro fairly or- ganizod, this movomon will bo such as to sscare tho admiration of tho world, whils it will sond constermation aud fright inlo tho ranks of tho Grodit Mobilior swindlors nnd back-pay thioved, —Grand Ttapids (Afich.) Demooral, 'he truo roformor must procoed with this understouding; Ho must roalizo that a systom of corruption s organized in tho Unitod Blatans that its lond is at Washington ; that 1t ramifles through evary Btato, Tarritorin), and municipal Govornmont In tho country ; that the post-oflices and custom-houses ro o part of {ta machinory ; that Colloctors, Marsbals, Survoyors, Indian Agonts, Inupoectors, Postmasters, and so on, to tho ond of tho list, o its nobivo agonts and firo- moters, Tho ox tush bo laid ab tho root of this . _Thora 8 1o narrow-gauge roform thal do.~Porttand (Ore) Neows, e —Offlcial mibmntingoment, corruption, and mnlfossnnico should bo punishiod by tho political dontl of the offondors, which can’ onsily bo. ace. complishied by rotiring thom to privato life, pooplo hore givo tho ordors to politiclans to sui- oido, and all corruption in offico should bo treat. od after tho Jopancso fashion, It is political hari-karf that io nooded, and cuthennsia In_poli- tics would bo advantagoaus,—Eeansvile (Ind.y Journal, % oW » ~—Our rulors, looking ont at tho world through the intoratices 'of tho publio oril, tco thiugs i s vory autificlal and falso light, Thoyaro ko mon in tho dolirium of fover, or under tho influence of opium’or hashish ; thoy ovidently. think the country onormously rich ; thoy. sro consumed il 12 inntioblo pasalon for graonbicks ; thioy Toso all sonéio. of dignity and: daconcy n. thy frantio scramblo to securo thoir shara of this suporabounding wealth, Thoy think when it ns grooubacks thoy may ns woll hold their Dats. Aro we, thon, 0 rich and prosperous, ag thosn dolirious gontlomon soom to think 7Fond du Lao (Wis.) Commontecalth, —Boonor of later this crisis Wwas sure to como, Now that it has_como, it should bo met in tho oulightoned epirit of tho ago, and with all tho halps to its solution which oxporienco and fu- vastigation ona bring. As for oursolf, wo havo 10 doubt of tho issuo.—Lawrencs (Kan.) Re- publican-Journal, —We Liavo long anticipatod somothing of this kind. Mon will hot quiclly stand by snd sco themselvos and their childron robbed of tho common horitnga of the nation. Tor every act of criminal corruptlon thoro musk bo an atono- ment. Wenlth bavod on robbory {8 o vory inse- curo possossion, Tho thioving #coundrols who thoy now proposo to . Tho' have had control of the Governmout snd used it - to plindop may yet moet summary justico. A nu"nlo ‘maddoned by ropoated \vronfia aro not E.kn ly to look c'lmaulf to legal forms in devising romedios,—St. Paul (Minn.) Pioncer, : " o war agalust corruption and monopolles hos bogun in carncst. This means rovolution, and thoso who proposo fo criticis this moves ment, becauso it dooa not advanco in strict o~ cordance with legal procodonts or statuto lawa, will find, whon it 18 too lato, that thoy have fook ishly attompted to prescribo a rulo of action, & 18W, Lur o rovolubionary movemant that alwayn hos'nud atwaya will doty all son (Wis.) Democrat. —All groat revolutions, from which have been educod salutary results, have boen accompanied by great, and what st 'to timo_sppearad to o violent and headlong, actions. When n {ooplo, .oppressed, iusulted, and spurncd, break away from opposition and faco the common cuomy, it is cortainly very natural to supposo that they will nako @ stir.—Kenosha ( Wis.) Telegraph. —Should the pooplo_dotormino at Jast to tako mattors in their own haude, and uiterly uproot tho {A)ranunt dynasty Ollinufiu(mm, tho country con bogin to mako itsel astonishing rovelstions, Tho foarful word repu- diation has beon lieard more than onco ju_tho ??nlmgs of tho farmors.—Kansas Cily (Mo.) imes, —Tlioso sporadic symptoma of rovolt against * the tyranuy of party may or may not prosage political revolution. "If a mastor mind were to appoar, copable of unifyiug tho causcs of local or sectional disnfTootion, and making. general that whioh is now partial in its dovolopment, wo should soo & great and powerful party spring into existenco that would supersedo the Repub- lican parly, a8 that, upon tho issucs of tho war, drove the Demooratie out of power aud into por- manent retiroment.—Cincinnati Cammorcx'af —We think tho course of political events during tho next twolve mouths Will Lo vary apt to. establish all that wo, have horo adyauced, Gon. Butler aud Butlorizod domsgogues would do well to take warning in time. Thoro will ba Do more salary-grabs or kindred operations.— San Francisco Bulletin, rondy for Home most , —Whatever olso is commended or donounced,” ~ tho Lack-pay stenl is condemuad unequivooally. on all sidos, and by all partios. In the Wost, tho taclivg aguinst tho baok-pay grabbors is espacial-, Iy strong, aud it is cortain that bO mau wha voted for tho bill will be ablo to recover the con- fidenco of his constituents.~—Zugalo (X, X.) Ex- rss. ¢ If ~—As tho caee stauds now, it is questionsble whotlier_any man cau bo zo-olootod who has not - washod his hands of_ this dirty business,~San ., - Francisco Post. 8.z ~If tho pooplo ro-dlect singlo man who voted for or took tho plunder, thoy deserve to bo robbod to tho Iast farthing they possess. Alr, Carpontor has moro thun su ordiiary amount of cheek to stand bofora his constitucuts and arguo his right to do ns ho has done. W8 liopo thoy will, romomber him in the near future whon ha socks indorsement st their honds.—St, Louis Demacral, . —1'ho time for modesty and_small-boor virtus in this dirty business is passod. ‘Tho people will know just whoro overy member stands. Monn- time Mr, Morton has given up evidouce of tho knowledgo that somothing muat bo dono,.—Indi- anapalis Sentingl, , @ - . ~Tho uimple truth is, all this is & dodge. Tho Dbaok pay, once spproprinted, will not be ro- turned _to tho ‘Progpury, unloss drawn, and thon roturned; by thosp in_whaso bolmll vouchers liave beon mado out. Ilonco such pleas as that of Sonptor Bhorman are prima facio evidonca'of an intontioh to draw the pay as soon as it can be anfely dono,—Litsburgh Gazctle, —The man who marks out for himsolf Senator Sherman's % passive poliy,” also confosson that o i8 the recotver of ‘what Lo rogards as stolon goods, but that Lo is williug, inatond of muking Bmulpf. rostitution, to leave tho proparty.whero o can reach it, i€ at avy timein the future it should soem safo, and ho should think best, All thoo porformaucos kayor of wonk kugos and a limber spino, and are bused upon the false iden that tho poaplo oun Lo humbuggied with chaff.— Detroit. Tribune, —This Mr. John Shorman,'by tho way, is tho samo goutleman who oneo helped engincor'e similar grab-bill,—in '66, if wo receollect rightly, —and who, & fow yars Iater, ugroed with Gon. Butler that it would be a good plan to choat tha unational creditors b Sn ing off the dobt in pa~ por monoy—Springfleld Lepublican, —On tho wholo, wo thipk that Mr. Ramsey and Mr. Sherman, togotlior with four other Bons ators who hava followed -their example, aro. tho mogt despioablo of tho ontiro ‘sok of back-pay fiubhnm, I'hey aro enenks, and of all dotesta~ 1o parasitos on tho footstool the suoak iy tho most odious.—St. Paul, Dispatch, —If Monrao's sccond torm wag properly called tho ora of good feoliug, tho prosont year might bo denominsted tho orasof nxplnmt{oun. 'fllxo inoreaso of salary nct has drawn forth more ox- ouges than suy monsuro within the momory of nuy porson now living.—Cincinnati Guzelto, —1 akos just 100 buuhiols of coru, at its pres- ent prico, to pay ench day's salary of th & . 8. Turohard, whilo he i at home writioig lat: tors to oxplain under what circumstances ho will ;cenptd cthn bll‘l"rilyl lumnl.l You w:x:‘r‘nluclha oru, do you think 'his seryicos worl t—Cars roli County (I.) Gazette, A i bumsn law,—Madi e