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[ "TIE CHICAGO DAILY. TRIBUNE: MONDAY, J UNE 30, 1873. <t TION (PAYATLE IN ADVANCE), & Wooliy Offico addrosa in full, fncluding Stato and Caunts. Tenslttances mny Lo mnde olther b draft, expro OBico ordor, or in rogisterad lottors, at ourrisk, THNMS TO CITY BUNSCRINENR, Daly, dolivorod, Bundny oxcoptod, 95 conte por wook, Daily, delivored, Bunday fnoludod, 50 conts por ook, Address THE TRIBUNI COMPANY, Corner Madtson aud Doatbaru-sts,, Olicago, Ill. TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS. ATKEN'S THEATRE-Wabash aganue, cornce of Cone #ress siroot, Speotaculnr opora, **Zoloo." HOOLEY'S THIEA i—Handolph streol, betweon Olark sud Lasiallo, **Casto," MOVICKER'S TIEATIE--Madison stroot, hotwoon Denrborn and - Btate, 4ho Katle Futnam Troupo. *Last Tynno." {USIO — Halstod strot, botmoon AR eeoe Honira Comiats Coinbiantion: MYERS OPLRA 1T 81t—~Monroo, bistwoon Desrborn sud Stato, *‘Bo BUSINESS NOTICES. AR TTING TRETH, USE THAT o SR s, B Wik beslina up. YOUR OAR- O o Rese toF ON'S INSEOT POWDE] aud in your oupboar T DT, KERDRIOKS OANMINATIVE AR Ietrmastad 10 oo cltolo; ehouls dlarbiuny A oxbiisy cholurs ) s atata. - Xor salo by drugkista. Monoy rofund- 2d 11 not as roprusontod. Xi, HAVANA TOTIRRY_WE SOLD 1IN u}fi%‘fi‘ftm}mum Ly 00 weze, Gikculsr 4 ron. o, I i Dovitoreio Waitat, B 0. Yoe 18, Now York. " = g ES_AND MOTI PATONES, ABK R or e Moth ond Frooklo Lotion, i, Now York,. Dot Dlmploson thataco, Homedytho Gront Skin Hedivino, - Porty, Dormatologisty The Thicage Titbune, Monday Morning, Juno 30, 1873. Tho Mexican Border Claims Commission have Bnished thoe oxamination of the claime for dam- agos submitted to them. Thoir flual xoport, sshiich hau boon sent in to Secrotary Fish, cov- ers 400 cazon, involving clains to tho amount of ©11,000,000, Socrotary Richardson snd ouator Boutwell, who have roturned to Washmgton from thoir visit to Massachusetts, aro reported to faver the olection of Gen, Butlor as Govornor of Massa- chusotts. Intimations come from many sources that the Administratioun will give him its power- ful patronage and support. Tho citizons of Sulem, Tnd., intolerant of the 1nw's dolay, avengod the murder of one of thoir number jn & vory summary way yostorday. About forty of them broke iuto the jail where tho murdoror was Imprisonod, snd, after pelt~ ing him with fire-balls and pistol-bullets, took him out and hanged him. The Mshommedane are carrying on a cruel pordecution among tho Sclaves of Doanis, in European Turkey, most of whom belong to tho Groek Church. In six wooks, 270 of them have been killed in one distriot. The local Turkish magnates give the poor natives no protoction, and tho reprosentatives of the Christian powors at Consetantinople have called upon the Sulten to stop the outrages and bring their perpotrators to justico. Venice and the neighboring towns of Norlhern Italy woro shaken by un wsarthyusko yeatordny. Its shocks, although sovere, did no great ham in the queon city of tho Adslatic, but in other places considerable property was destroyed and many lives lost. In Foleito, a little town of Piedmont, with a population of abont 2,000, n shurch was shaken down and thirty-cight per- sons killed ; and near Vittora, fourteen persons were killed. A now Spavieh Ministry was nomed on Friday by President Margall, but on Saturday, boforo the Cortes had timo to act on the nominations, the Minister of Marino resigned, and throw the whole Cabiuot question open again, Tho Trro- concilable faction are ready to fight if the new Ministry is takon altogether from tho Conserv- ativos, and tho Govornmont thinks their threata serious enough to call for doubling the guards around the Cortos. Finding themsolves worated in Lo appeals o arms which they made to support their aggres- sions on tho Achoenese, the Dutch have de- scondod to nogotistions, Thoy offerto ropay thoe Acheoneso Govornment the costs of its do- fense, and reimburse it for all the damage dono - by tho Dutch troops, and to respoct its religious and political rights, provided it will grant Dutch tradors privilegos mimilar to thoso which {hoy enjoy on tho neighboring islands The oxcitement in New York about the traflic in Italian childron does not wano. A mnsg-meet- ing is to be held thoro to-night to roinforce the domand for tho interforence of the authorities. A uow aspect of the mattor rovealed itself in the diunppenranco of eightcon paupor children who wore farmed out by the Commissionor of Chari- ties. Noither thé children nor the woman to whoso care they woro intrusted can bo found, and the Now York dotectives beliove that tho little croatures have been sold to the Italian slaye-donlers. Irish temporanco men hold a meeting in this city last night to disevow any sympathy with tho German domonstration against the tomporance Inws, Thore wore prosent 600 roprosentatives of tho various Irish temperauco sociotios, which havo o membership of about 5,000. The rogo- lutions adopted and ths speeches made are very strong in their denuncistion of the Hosing movement, and unequivecally opposo any re- peal or mitigation of tha Bundsy or tho oarly- closing lwws, Ald. MoGrath Is sharply rbulkod for his statemont that nine-tonths of the Trish woro opposed to the Bunday law, and it is pro- posred that the Irish and Amorieans unita to do- fent tha Gormany in the full clectlons, The investigntion into tho charges agalnut the Rev, ITenry Ward Boochor, which the Dea- 3616 T6£u800 to mako u short timo ago, has at Inst been forcod by tho presentstion beforo thom of charges of slander agalnst Henry O. Bowen, couplod with & domand for hig expulsion from the church, A committes Las boen appoiuted to consider tho charges, and it s understood that tho whalo matter will bo probed immediutely, porhaps by a publio inveatigation. 1r, Bowon is said to havo brought this action upon hitarelf by his curious conduct in - holding & consultation Ilately with Mra, Woodhull, in tho presouco of her counsol and o number of friends, and promising that, if sho would tell all she knew and “lelp paka the seaudal clear to all," the persocution to whioh she ling boon subjected should bo stoppod, —— ‘Iho Ohlcago produce markota wore losy active on Baturdny. Mess pork was in.good domand ond 25@800 highor, olosing at $14.00@14.85 cash, ond ¥14,60@14.65 sollor August, Lard was qui- ot, and Go por 100 1be highor, at 8.10@8.15. Monts woro activo and firmer, at 6J{@6}go for shouldors, 8@8¢o for short ribs, 83¢@BXfc for short oloar, and 10@113¢e for swoot pickled bams, Highwinos wore inactive and nominal at B8@88do por gallon. Lake froights woro quiot snd unchangod, at bo for corn to Buffalo. Flour was qulot and stoady, Wheat was faurly active aud 3@3o highor, closing at 81.204@1.203¢ cash, and $1.175¢ sollor July. Corn was quict and 3¢o lowor, closing at 3430 for now recolpts, and 02)4@320¢0 ollor July. Onts woro activo nnd Xfo highor, closing ot 2830 cash, and 200 sollor July, Rye was quiot and steady at G0c. Barloy was Innotive and unchangod, at G1ido for good No, 2. Tho hog markebwas dull at 10@18c decline, olosing woak at $4.00@4.60. Thoro was a modorato amount of trading in cattle andshocp ot about formor prices. HOT CORN. ‘Wo wish to remind the Ifot-Corn Committeo of tho Board of T'rade that thoir roport on jour- nalism hos not yot been adopted by the Board. If thoy hove full and outiro confidenco in its correctnoss, 80 for as they have gone, they had ‘botter completo it by roporting on * tho oftect of said posting on the valuo of corn in this mar- kot,” and thon call it up for final disposition, 1t Is a burning shamo and disgraco that & city which handlos fifty mitlion bushels of corn por aunum should bo unprovided with the means of taking caro of it. It isnot Tne Trioune's busi- noss to caro of, but, sinco tho Board of Trade have dono us tho lLonoer to assumo that our opinfons nro of some consoquence, Wo notify all hot-corn dealors nud their apologists and thoir nowspapor organs that wo intend to mako Lot corn the most expensive article that can bo spouted out of an olovator; until such {imo 08 thoir combined wisdom shall have pro- vided at loast oqual appliauces for preventing it, or roducing ite losros to & minimum, that are ‘provided in other markets. What is the specta~ clo prosonted tous ? A cry of Lot corn is started. A warchousoman is playing the gamo of * por- haps.” Porhapa tho price of corn will go dopn ~porhaps it won't, A panic getsin. Tho prica falls olght or ten conts. Thoso who are “short" of the artiole make monoy. Thoso who are “long” loso it. All bona fide holders lose, and tho farmers, who are tho largost bona fide holdors, loso most. Straightway a lot of speculators rush {n and commenco buying hot corn and shipping it to Buffnlo to be cured at o supposed cost of two conts por bushel or less, and sending it forward fo Liverpool at o aup- posed profit of four cents per bushel or moro. Could any system bo inventod more likely to tost tho virtue of tho average warchouseman? We will suppose, for tho sako of argumont, that warchousemen are = muperior or- dor of boings, and that all other por- gons oro dosconded in the Darwinian foshion from apos. Givon, & cortain amount of discration in the suporior bolng as to tho timo and circumstancos under which hot-corn shall be precipitatod on tho markot, with a large pile of grooubacks adorning the vista hard Ly, How many of tho inforlor boings, we bog to inquire, would have supreme confidenco in the outcome off uck & ollustiun dwing o poriod uf fuur yours? Could any eystom bo invented more likely to bring tho Chicsgo market into dis- repute? So long as it provails, tho suspicion of foul play will attach whenover hiot corn i posted. It will bo the old story of tho boy aud the wolf* When the wolf actualiy comwes, nobody will believa. Wo beliove that Tne Twnuxe has been of some ervice to the Bonrd of Trado, and to the commuity, in past timos, in dealing with such warehouse abuses as falso bottoms, unregistered and uncancoled receipts, unprincipled contracts botween railways and olevators, ofo. Most of these abuses havo beon corrected in spita of the warehousomen. The hot-corn abuse remains to be doalt with. That hot corn cannot be wholly and always pravented we admit. That it can be greatly miligated, sud tho lossos reaulting from it reduced to an inconsidersblo sum, and con- fined to tho corn actuelly heated inatead of boing spread over the whole crap, overy dealor in the articlo knows, That tho speoulating tribe, whether warchousemon or doad-beats, bave & dircet intorest in avoiding and ataving off the remodios which would miti- gato this ovil,%o far as it is a nocessary ovil, and reduco it to mathematical instead of imaginary proportions, is apparent to the naked oyo. Their intercst iy in the widest fluctuations apd the groatost stalo of uncertainty—to tho outside public. The rogular laying of golden eggs by the groat goose of tho corn market, and tho equitable division theroof, constitutes tho publio intorest, Cutting her opon occasionally and taking out hor “innards,” constitutes the gam- bling interest. Against tho possibility of such surgory wo protest, and shall continue to protost. Whon Mosars, fykos, Ranney, and Dow finish their report, we hope to bave a few words on this branch of the quos- tion ; sud, failing in that quartor, we shall look for somothing in the noxt report of the Railrond and Warehouse Commissioners. In conclusion, wo ropeat what wo have previ- ously eaid, that tho warchouses of Flint & ‘Mhiompsou, Armour, Dole & Co., and the Measra. Buckingbam, holding mors than threc-fourths of all the coru in Ollongo, arc not yot in convul- slons, and bave not contributed anything to tho convulsions of tha market. Wo also ropro- duco the testimony of My, Hiram Wheeler, n good suthority : N I don't bellove that tho percontage of hot corn thiy year s moro than the average, THE PRESIDENT'S BALARY, “Tho popular indignation that hus boon oxcited Dy the salary-grab of tho lnst Congress is not “hlowing over,” as ita prinolpal promoters liave 0 confidontly prodictod. The storm gathors fury na it goos. Thoro i8 now no proapect that it will wubside beforo the next scssion of Con- gross, There hag boen no subject for yoars upon which tho people have united g0 unsui- mously asupon this, Unlike tho Orodit Mobillor, 1t 1% & grab that the wholo peoplo oan undorstand, trom ol sides, thorofore, comos the demand that the grab bill ahall be ropoaled by the noxt Congress, The party newspapors have nob darod to justify it. M. Carpentor's spoook has uttorly misonrrled. Tho Republican Con- vontions, the Domoeratio Convontions, tho TLiboral Conventious, the Farmers Conventions, tho Btate Legislaturos, and all sorts of public moetings and popular gathorings are of no accord when thoy approach tho galary-grab, Back of thom s ko entiro pross of the country, oxcopt ono nowspaper n Bt. Paul, with spocial forvor on tho part of tho country nowspapera direstly roflocting the sonti- monts of the peoplo in the rursl -distriots, Tho indignation is 8o intonso ngalust tho grab, and tho domand for it ropeal so gonoral and fm- porative, that (he noxt Congross will seatcoly daro to realst it. Itisan intoresting quoution, then, what courso Is lilely to bo taken in rogard to tho late incroaso of tho Presidont's snlury. Thoro e an improssion that Congross cannot constitutionally reponl tho Increnso of tho Prosi- douts salnry, or othorwise alter i, during tho torm for which ho was clegted. Tho toxt of the Congtitution docs not sustain‘this view. Indo- fining the atatua of the Prosident, the Constitu- tion gaya that * Ho suall hold his office during tho term of four years ; but,furthoer on, in that portlon of Soc. 1, Art. IL, which concorng the Prosident’s snlary, it ronds: “'Fho Prosidont shall, at atated times, recolvo for his services n componeation which shall nelther bo inoreasod nor diminished during the period for which Lo shall have beon olected, and ho shnll not roceivo within that period any otber omolunont from tho Unitad Btates, or aoy of thom.” Whother or not tho incronso of the Trosident's salary by tho Inst Congress was low- tul, deponds upon whether or not tho words ferm and period are synonymous 48 used in tho Con- stitution. It is not reagonablo to nesume that thoy aro. If tho framers of tho Constitution had moant that tho President's sslary should neither bo inoreased nor diminished duringn term of four yoars in ofiice, thoy would undoubt- odly havo sald term in the salary seotion as woll s in that which doflned tho tonurc of the ofice, The Copstitution bLas never beon oritleized on account of & confusion of words, But whon they subsiituted tho word period in the salary scction, thoy ovidently intended it to covor tho wholo time in which a Prosidont might servo, which could ofisily in- cludo soveral ferms. The change of words was undoubtedly made in contomplation of theprob- ablo cloction of the Presidents for more than ono torm. The carlior Prosidents wore all olected to socond terms, and Washington would have boen olocted for s third torm if ho had not positivoly declined to heeopt tho offico for a longer period. Tho word period, therofore, covers tho entire oo~ cupanoy of tho offico, no mattor how many ferms it may include. If this is truo, then the increnso of the President's salary was unlawful, snd, whother Congress repoals tho salary-grab or not, tho Prosident Is not on- titlod to tho 100,000 additionsl pay thoreln voted to him, for it s porfectly cortain that tho period for which Gen. Grant had boon olocted waa olght years, The purposo of prohibiting tho increaso or diminution of tho Prosident’s pay *during tho poriod for which ho shall have beon olectod,” was twofold. It was intended to prevent tho Prosident from using the power and patronago of his offico to socure an increase of pay for himself; and itwas also infonded to provent n Congressthat might ba inimicalto the incumbent of the Exccutive chair from starving him ont. Noither of those manifest purposes can bo at- tained it tho word period is construed to mean o singlo ferm for which the Prosidont shall have been olocted. Undor this construction, tho late Congross might liave reduced the pay of tlio Prosldont to $600 o yoor, if an obnoxions candidato had been elected, and thus have at- tomptod to starve bim out, which they could not Lave dona if tho Oonntitution monna perivd whon it says #o. If period means only the first torm for which a Presidont scrves, then it in no wise provonts the President from cmploying his influence and patronago to secure an ircroase of 1is own puy, «¥¥ tbis s just what tho probibi- tion was intonded to provent. The differonco between ““torm " and * period,” thoreforo, isnot merely technical, but is baged upon thé ovi- dout and only purpose of the Consti- tution in prohibiting the incresse and diminu- tionof tho Prosidont’a salary. For Gen. Gront to recoivo the additional pay Is, connoquently, o violation of the epiril ns well 2s the lettor of the Constitution. If, then, thio domand of the people for tho re- peal of tho Salary bill shall prove to be irreslst- iblo, 28 it seems likely to prove, it is not proba- Dble that Congross will consont that Gen. Grant shall dras bis proportion of the grab whon they are deprived of their portion. The whole trans- action presonts iteelf to tho public as a wicked compact betweon Cougress and the Prosidont to got their hands into tho Public Treasury and divido tho spoils. It is vory gonorally be- lioved that Congress would nob havo in- crensed the pay of the Prosidont oxcopt as & moans of consummating their purposo of enlarging thoir own pay, The belief is just as goneral that the President would never havo glvon the bill his signature, without which it oould not have bocomo Inw, if it bad not provided an opormous incroaso of his pay. In this light, it will not satisfy the people to ‘repeal the in- croaso of Congressionnl salarics, and leave Gon. Grant to enjoy the roward of his important pait inthe grab. Nor can this ocour if cither the spirit or tho letter of the Coustitution bo en- forcod. Gon. Grant's large porsonnl proportion of tho grab will lave to be disgorged if Congress can be forced to disgorgoe its proportion. UNLIMITED GREENBACKS, Thero ia to bo & Oovernor olected in Ohio in Octobor next, and Gon, Thomes Ewlng, at prosent o member of the State Conatitutional Convention, is idding for tho Domocratio nom- ination with every prospect of success, o has Itely, in n proparod speech, presonted the polioy of an unlimited fusuo of greoubackas an the sov- eroign remody for bard timos, andfor all manner of impecuniosity,—to make wonoy so plenty that ovorybody's Lands will be full of i, and, by making it & diug, to reduce the rate of intorest ton nominsl sum, Thiy Is not a now proposl- tion by any means. It wassuggealod anumbor of yoars agoby3r. Pondleton, of Oblo, who b lived to rogrot 1t ; it haa beon talkon up from time lo timo by Butlor and othor portons, violontly ad- voeatod for o whilo, and thon abandoned. It is not now with Mr, Ewing himeolt. Homado its special hobby before the poople of Ohio four years ago, but It did not tako very wall. Wo do not think that timo has commeonded it to the intolligont judgment of any portion of thoe poo- plo. Ayearngoit was formally repudinted fn tho platforms of all political parties, and, until AMr. Ewing rocoutly rcvived it, was consldered ono of the visionury schomos which had lived its briof day and was thou lald asido foreyer, Mr, Ewing, howover, hag for a long timo beon ambitious to bo Governor of Ohio, aud ho Kooms to have faith In {his greouback proposltion ag o gort of patont contrivanco that will in some un- expovted momont lift him iuto tho Executive chalr. Tho gonoral idon of au unlimited and ir- redecmablo curronoy I8 much older than Mr. Peudloton or Mr, Ewlug, It dates back to a yory romoto time, Thoro i hardly n nation of Europo that has not undortakon to make money plonty by fssulng & dobasod coluage and making it n legal tondor nt Its statutory valuo, Qrent Britain triod it more than onco ; and tho Minlotry that made two shillings out of ono woro gomowhiat surprisod to find that the two new shillluga would purchaso thoprociso nmount of commnoditios that tho ono old shilling would buy, and nomora. Frauco, Spain, Ifaly, Russls, and Turkoy havo run tho entiro gamub of dobascd coluago, Issuing paper promises-to-pay and calling thom money, i8 but anothior and worso form of debasing tho coinngo. No etatuto can compel o man to oxchango his Inbor or his prop- orty for paper monoy oxcopt at his own prico. A groonback can have no value except what it will ‘purchaso, though it may bo ealled o dollar or ten dollars, Wo Lave bad a stiiking inetance of this in the fuct that tho greonbacks is- sied and moade o legal tendor during tho war havo not, aftor olght yonrs of poaco and of comparative nalional prospority, obtained a highor value than 86 conts on tho dollar, and that, too, under a logal stipulation that the amount isauod shall not bo incrensed. It is casy to undorstand that if an issuo of 856,000,000 of national notes, mado & legal tondor by law, Liave not approciated to par during oight years of pence, during which timo tho population, weallh, and production of the country have largely in- cronsod, o further 18sue, snd in an unlimited amountof tho samo kind of paper, could have no other effeot than to still further lowor the crodit of tho Guvernment, and reduce tho yuluo of tho curroucy in tho hands of the holdor. It can bardly be necossary to discuss the propo- sitfon upon its morits ; but, aa Mr. Ewing and what romains of the Democratio party of Ohio assumo that the peoplo of that Blato are so pro- foundly ignorant upon this subjoct that thoy will voto for moking money plenty by issuing paper promises that bave but littlo roal value and aro thorofore largoly fraudulent, it is wellto undorstand who is to voto with them. The Dem- ocratio party per s, in Olio, is now but & com- paratively small faction, It is powerless for any other purposs than to keop tho Te- publican party alive by sliowing the people that there is somothing in the wind ovon less dosirnblo than that, Abthe coming oloction, the party by itself will bavdly mako & show at tho polle. In tho absonce of such & party, howover, probably a majority of tho poo- plo of Ohio are opposed to the Republican or- ganization, and would gladly givo tho lattor n quictus, Tis oppokition cannot be united upon Mr. Thomas Ewing or upon any other man who talks such nonsonse as having an unlimited iosuo of greenbacks, and of reducing intorest by making tho money loaned of so littlo valuo as to bo worthno interest. The Liborals in Ohio can noithor touch uor hnndlo any such dootrine a8 that, nor con thoy voto for-any man who places such & low estimato upon popular intolli- gonco ns to assumo that they approve such & policy. pors of the Btato nre vory anxious that Ewing shall bo tho Opposition candidate for CGoveruor. Hisnomination is just the thing thoy need,—per- hisps tho only thing that can savo them, and it is not at all improbable that tho Domocratio fac- tion that Is g0 intorested in keoping tho Ropub- lean party alive will moke Ewing thelr condi- anto. In that caso, of courdo, Gon. Noyes® cleo- tion will bo & forogono conclusion. But tho Liboral Ropublicans and the disgustod Demo- crats, while they will probably mot voto for Noyes, ought certainly not vote for Ew- ing. They cennot afford to adopt any such abomination a8 the greenback policy, while advoeating financial roform sud s spoody ros- toration of national credit to nspecie standard. Thoy should ofther sbstain from voting at all, or should present o candidate of their own. It is not likely that thoy would elect him ; but that is not hialt 60 imporiant us proserving thoir own rospoct, which cannot be dono by toloration or counection with the policy of flooding the coun- try with 1rredeomablo and dopreciated shinplas- ters. A DIABOLIOAL CRTHE. The dispatches in our Jast issuo contain ihe Qotails of sovoral dinbolical attempts to throw railrond traing from the track in this Btato, allof which attempts occurred on tho samo day. In one inatance, codor rails wore placed across tho frack of the Ilinofs Central Road noar Freeport. In another, stonea from a culvort wero piled up on tha track of tho Chicago, Burlington & Quincy TRoad near Moridan, whils a third attempt wos mado in a similar mannor, on the same road, near Earlville. TFortuvately, neither of the threo traing was thrown from tho track, and the entira dumoge is’ summed upin the wrecking of ono locomotive and thoe attendaut dolays to tho soveral trains, In the samo papor, intolligonce is brought that tho farmors of Northorn Minncsote aro constantly exposed on their roturn from market, affor selling thoir whoat, to attacks from armed footpads for pur- poses of highwey robbery. From these reports it would scom that an organized systom of law- lossness and violonee has boon inaugurated. Tho farmery of Minnesots, however, will find some mesus of protocting thomuolves,as thoy havemauy times bofore, for tho attacks of footpads have for a loug time beon common in that Stato, The disbolical attempts to destroy life and proporty upon the railroads, however, is a more sorious matter. ‘Lhis is an outrage which can bo perpe- tratod in secrosy, aud ono againet which it is impossible far u railway company offectuslly to guerd, Tlierois no crimo iu tho catogory more abhorront or flondish than thedeliboratoattempt to murder by wholosale for purposes of robbory, or to.oxposo the livos of hundreds of innocent pooplo for the purpose of taking revenge upon o rallroud corporation, In this . parlioular instanee, tho outrage i moro sori- ous than ony similar attompts over bofore rocovded, because it shows & con- corted offort made at difforent places on the sumo dny and in tho snmo section of the Btato. e dispatch from Mendotn, which bringu this nows, eays: *¢ Thoro #coms to be an organized movement on tho part of somo desperate villaing to worl murdor and destretion upon the rail- roads in ihis ecotion., Vurlous surmises are aflout na to tho cnuso of those diabolical acts. Home even go 5o far as to attribute this scoun~ drolism to tho farmors' movement, Wo fool suro, however, that farmors would lond ne sane- tion to such & erimo.” In the presont ox- olted state of fooling botween tho farmers of this State evd tho rallrond corporations, there will not be wanting thoso who will oharge those outrages upon the farmors, Tho oppo- nonts of the Granges will not be slow to take advantage of thelo outrages, whether thoy bo- Hovo farmers porpotrated them or not, nud use thom to defoat or forestall tho moasurcs which the Grauges aro secking to accomplish, The goneral public, howover, will not ontertain suck, ‘We notice that all tho Ropublican pa- |. o auspicion for a moment. The farmors, as o olags, aro pencoablo, law-ablding, snd law- enforolng mon, Evon if thoy bhod not thoso moral merits, thoy lave common sonse and disorimination onough to know that tho destruction of rallroads is the comploto wrock of thelr own prospority. Thoy know woll onough that, although tho prosont froight ohinrges mny bo o griovous Lurdon upon thom, tho dlays of travel or tho destruction of roads ‘would outail npon them o thousand-fold groator dlendvautngo, and so array publio opinfon ngainat thom that thoy would imporil forover the vory roforms for whiok thoy are now struggling. Wo do not boliovo that they would resort to such o stop as this or countonanco .uch infamy in otliors, Dut thero are those who aro projudiced against thom, and they will oogor- ‘ly ombrace such a tompting opportunity to make capltal sgainst thom, Tho best protost whioh tho farmora thoroforo can make against thoso outragos is to uso tholr bost offorts to forret out tho villains who have porpetrated thom, and hond thom over to justice, Thoso offonses wora committod in thoir midat, and thoy have thus an advantago over othors In gotting upon tho track of the pooundrels. The whole community should bo wupon the alort to discover thom, No man's lifo s safo whilo thoy are ¢t large, for tho mon or mon who wounld deliberately place an obe struction upon a railroad track, thus jeopardiz- ingtho lives of hundreds of innocent men, wom- en, and childron, would not hesitato to commit any other crime, Ho could not commit any orimo more diabolical. Lot the farmors n the neighborhood of these outrages, therofore, use tholr beat endoavors to discover the villains, It will be tho strongest answor thoy can make to opy suspiclons which tholr adversaries may sob afdont. Asale is rocorded of four-fittha of tho vast property bolonging to tho Contral Pacifie Oali~ fornia Bailroed Company, This is probably the largest transaction ever made in xeflroad prop- orty. Tho corporation owns and controls about 1,500 milos of railroad, besldes stosmbonts and forries, valuablo real estate in Ban Franoisco and othor places, and important priviloges and franchises, It owns tho rosd from Ogden to Bsn Francisoo, 900 miles ; snothor from Baora~ mento to San Franclsco, 100 miles; lines running through tho oontro of the Btate to Ore- gon in tho North, &nd comnceting with tho Bouthern Pacifio in the Houth, about 400 miles; and the Napa Valley Road, 50 miles. It is roported that Tom Scott and othera have bought tho Southern lines in tho intorost of tho Southern Paciflo, Four- fifthe of all the rest of tho property have boen transferrod to & compauy of Sau Franoisco capis talists, roprosentod by D. O. Mills, late Presi- dont of the Bank of Culifornin, William Sharon and A. R, Colien, two Ban Franciaco capitalists, and Michael Reeso, who has boen connected with tho corporation in s confidential capacity, Tho amount of money which changed hands in tho transaction is not stated, but 1t muss have boon very large, 88 it ropresents the stock and control of the Company's entire proporty. Tho other onc-fifth is rotainod by Leland Stanford, one of tho original owners and now the Presi- dent. The Bpringfield Republican draws atten- tion to the fact that this transfor bresksup a combination of flyo men, consisting of Judgo Crocker, his brother Oharles Crocker, Leland Stantord, . P. Huntingdon, and Mark Hopkins, whio wora the first to give lifo to the projoct of epaoning the continent with an iron rail, aud whe aro entitled to tho orodit of that practical patriotism which has boen cleimod by cortain Esstern capi- talists who did not go into the projoct until after theso gentlomen had demonatrated ite practica- bility and profit. Another siguificant circum-~ stanco of tho chango is sald to be found in the fact that tho tranefor is divectly in the interests of Ban Francisco, which have boen sacrificed to the Intorests of Bacramento horotofore. The now party in control ia composed entirely of San Francisco capitalists. Itis also predioted that tho affairs of the Company will heroafter be ‘managed more in the interests of the public than horetofore. Tho Board of Trustcos of the University of Chicago, ab their meoting 1ast weck, passed & rogolution to admit young women to tho regular collego classes, though to excludo them for tho present from tho Academic Dopartment. There is ronson to believe thab the action was hinsty and inconsiderate, Tho suggostion of tho pollcy camo from a committco of Iadics, and the grounds for its adoption woro stated to bo tho original purpose of the University to extond its educational facilities to all classcs. The main Tonson why this policy is promature is that it is experimental, and the Univorsity of Chi- cngo does mnot scom to be in o condi- tion favorable to trylng oxperiments, It would be much more judicious to leave it to Oberlin, Cornell, and other colloges which have started out with tho purposo of opening their doors to both soxes alike, to solvo tho problem of tho Joint education of the soxes. The attention of the Trustces was callod by Prosidont Burroughs to the fact that thoro are a6 yot no accommodutions in tho University ‘building for young ladies, and that thoro should ‘bo some proparations for their admission before this radical change. The fact is, that the Uni- vorsity in not mow in the position to undertake theso proparations, It s carrying a lnrge debt, even in its presont unfinishod condition, and it bos probloms and difficulties enongh forced upon it without voluntarily assuming that of tho co-cducation of tho sexes. Amnother error sooms to lo in tho oponing of tho collogiate course to young womon, which Is modeled aftor tho strict and infloxiblo currioulum of the Eastern colloges, while the acadomio classos aro shut out from the mombord of the fomalo ko, This policy is directly op- posed to the oxporionce of po-education as far aa it has progressed. Tho studics at Cornell are eolootic, and the tondency at Oberlin is to give tho girls a greator freedom of choice than thoy can find in tho regular colloge course. Pho of- foct of the policy adopted at the Univorsity of Obicago Is precisely tho reverse. '‘There are col- legos and univorsitios enough now open to youug women aa woll as young mon to supply the present demand for the highor education of womnn ; and the Univoreity of Obicago, in its prosent posltion, would have douo woll, porhnps, to await furihor rosults in this flold, Wo have rocolved, under tho frank of the Hon, J. G. Blalr, of Missourl, a copy of the Cnnton (Mo.) Press, containing a full roport of his speoch In defonso of his conduot in voting for tho bill incroasing tho salaries of mombors of Congross, including thoback-pay. In thisspeoch o justifion the whole procoeding, and declares that, baviog sctod from conkclentious gonvio- tions of right, ho cannot roturn the monoy to ho Natlonal Treasury, His genoral argumont is protty noarly tho eame as that of Hemator Oarpentor, but hia summing up contaiua somo polnts which Mr. Carponter probably forgot, or loft to bo Inferred by his honrers. Tho conolu- alon is e followat And now, fellow-cltizens, fn conclunlon, I submit thrao unsnawerablo propositions eatablishing Loyond doubt that thero was no atealings In the bill ¢ First—~Tho vaporinga of & numbor of would-bo leading political organs (all of doubtful roputation) show conolustvoly that thoy rocelved nothing under tho bill, Had 1t beon & ¢ ateal,” {hey would bavo gote ton thole sharo aud thelr mouths would Aave been Aushed, Becond—1t tn asnorlod by a large class of religlontate fn tho world that tho Biblo toachca that whatover comon to pass §s foro-ordained and doorood of God, Tho Balsry bill id % did como to pass,” Thorofore it “was ordainod snd deoreod of God. God don’t ordain “atealing,” o that reairts 1in decrocs, resints God, Third—Tho Senato and Touso had each & Chaplain st good psying malaries (at loast no complaint on that core), Thoy woro employed of courso bocauso thoy woro plous and righteous mon, Tho Diblo says thoprayer of the rightoous svalleth much, Thoy Dpiayod daily for us, Woro thoir prayors heard ? They prayed that God would give tho mombers pure hearts, and through Mis, apirit load thom into tho ways of truth and rightoousnucss, Under tho prayors of Mr. Dutlor (a small mmister), Houso Claplain, wo wero Iod to see $0,600 o boa sufficlent salary in lieu of franking privilogo, mileage, &s., and passed the bl for that amount, It wont to tho Honato thus, But thoro they hod & *'big ministor” (spoclal friend of President Grant), Their Ohaplain way tho celobrated and notorfous Right Rev. Brig, Gen, I, P. Newman, a mombor in good alanding in tho Mothodist Church, North, of Obrist; spiritual advisor of tho Prestdent (thia acconnts for Graut's quick percoption); npoctal frlend of md‘u Harlan, and lato pastor of tho Motropolitan Church, with chimes attschod, o prayed for tho Bonstors dnlly, Undor his prayors (being a big preacher) tho spirit lod Benatora to donounce and burlesquoe thosal- ary of $4,500 aa ixod by the House, and lod them to adopt $7,500 n liou thoreof, Thus {t came back to tha Houso, What woro we, gentlemen, that *we should withistond God 27 Of courso wo voted for {t. If tha prayors of tho Chaplaine wero answored, you have no ;lal‘lz tocomplaln, If thoy wero not, that waa not our aul — It is thought that tho provalling policy of Prohibition in Massaohusotts will cut some figuro in the noxt Slate oloction. The most notable foaturo of it ia tho result of tho applica- tion of tho prohibitory prineiplo to formented a8 woll as distilled liquors. Formorly, tho dis- tillors and whisky-sollers made common canso with tho .brewers in tho gonoral opposition to tho prohibitionista. Now it is said that tho whisky men have cub off from theboor and ale intorcats, and thot thoy aro preity woll contont with tho presont situation. ‘The explanation of this apparontly anomalous division is to bo found in the circumstance that the brewing busincss cannot bo carried on secrotly and in defianca of the law, while thiais practicable with the distllling business. Tho re- sult Is, that liquor ia surreptitiously distillod and sold, tho diffcrence in price and tho falling off in compotition fully compensnting for the loss occnsioned by the rostrictions put upon the business. A natural consequenco of this is, that strong drinks are much more gonor- ally uged pow than they wore bofore the malé liquors were prosoribod, and misory and orime aro incronsing in proportion. Thus the issue is brought within the ready compreheosion of tho poople, and tho Boaton Jotrnal prodiots that, if the same strong-hoadod pulicy shall bo main- tained, prohibition will bo short-lived in tho State. NOTES AND OPINION. County Conventions are now being held in Minnesota for tho choico of delegates to tho Re- publican Stato Convention st 8t. Paul, July 16. Willism D. Washburn, of Minneapolls, is tho ring sud railroad preforouce for Governor, aud Lo tho support of hia own county delegation ; but tho Dakota County Republicnns refused, last wook, to givo him their votos, —The 8t, Paul Press (organ) uays : —Tho Ropublican Convention of Poli County, Towa (Des Motnes), on Bsturdoy, iudorsod tho farmors' movamont agafust traneportation monopolies, nnd showed thoir good faltl by nominatiug practical farmers for Sonutor and Ropresontatives.. One of the * practical farmors” nominated for Toprosentative is Isnao Brandt, tho late default~ ing Stato Tronsuror Rankin's Deputy. —~The Iows Republicans have ‘¢ Resolved, That wo believe that, whenever » porson holding any position of trust given him by tho pooplo, is guilty of fraud or embezzlemont, ke should bo convictod and punished under tho cyiminal laws of our land in addition to tho recovery from him or_his bondsmon of the amount so embozzled.” llow are you Mr. Rankin, and was not Qov. Carpentor your bondsman ¢ #nd will the Govern- or, now ho' is renominated, sce that thoe Stato Is 1o loser by fhio Rankin dofalcation 7 A roceipt in full would bo au oxcollent eampnign documont to add to the skeloton in tho corn-crib.—Daven~ port Demacral. —Ronlin is guilty of embozzlomont, was ds- covered last January, but remains a froo and in- depondent man, Edwards is guilty of a fraud upon the Btato, but is chosen & membor of tho Ropublican State Contral Committee, Why, in tho name of the fifth resolution, have not theso men been punished? But in addition to crimi- nol prosecution, such mon _or thoir bondsmon ara, saya the refolution, Liold liablo in_civil pro- coes, \?lby liave not the boudsmen of Raukin, of whom Gov. Oarpontor is ono, boon sued P—Des Moines Leader. —Every ono romembers the embozzlomont of Rankin, snd how Gov. Curpenter mado haste to Covor it up; sud yot, in faco of thoso facts, and aftor renominating Carpentor, who had just compounded tho felony, the Ropublicans virtu- ously * demand puro oflicial conduct and tho punishmant of unfaithful publioznon. —Znibugue Herald. —What use aro resolutions as against tho ac- tion of the party? Ono resolution of tho Iowa Topublicans favors the conviction and punish- ment of embozzlors of public moneys, but the Tiopublican pacty did nos conyict, or piinluly of iry to conviot or punish, tho luto dofauiting State Tronsuror, On_tho cnntrmz, it lot him go Raukin free, and the Ropublican Convention Lug xunohmhmtmi Gov. Carpenter.—Dubuque Tele- raph, 980 Ropublican has always beon & party of rogress and patriotism, and theso Iowa rosolu- rluu! show & dotormination to make it ono of purity and roeform.—Galena (Iil.) Gazclle— Grant's Qun. —The Ropublicans of Iowa havo Fruualugly invited the Grangers to xm{umrt the Hopublican tickot. Tt is & piscatorial effort worthy of old Tzoak Walton himsolf. Tho intorosting quos- tionis, Will tho fish bite ?—St Louis Republi- can., —Tho Iowa Biato Auditor's books show that the losses to tho school fund, from failure to collect lonns mudo by yarious County Trensurers, amouunt to $100,000, Thess wore occasioned b[\; portios mortgnflng lands for socurity to whic thoy had no title. Bince 1862, counties hove been mado rosponsiblo for all loans of this fund that thoir officors mako, and soveral largo umounts aro now duo undor this statuto.—DesMoines Register, : ~~T'ho bost omen for the continusuce of the Republican party in power is that in two Stateo, ab Ionah [Mn}uo nnd _lowa), the Conventions of thiat party avo radleal In donanding honost gov- orument and in denouncing corruption n their own puzl vy woll as in that opposed to thom,— it (Al Detre ich.) Tribune, —Tho Ropublican party containg flve-sixihs of tho roal intelligont reform soutimont in (ko country, If thu%uul men of the lmrt will tako hold of and control it, Republicanism is good for thirty more years of usofuluess aud powor.— Cleveland (Ohio) Leader. —It in gomo sntisfaction to know that Repub- lican Conventions have been convincod of tho truo nature of tho tranaactions in which Colfax, Garfleld, Houry Wilson, and othor loading lights ware engaged. Tho trouble with thom is that thoy can ropol with scorn the imputation that sny individual Ropubliosn had his bands defiled wl{h the Oredit Mobilier piteb, while they can ponr brondsidos into tho nfno waiuts whon ranged togother,—Defroit Fyea Press. —'1'o this practico of voting for bad men bo« gauso thoy aro of our party is tracoablo all tho Oredit Mobilier, salary-grabs, and other infa- niics, tha tariff robborics, {he Louikinus usurpa- tlon, the carpet-bag Eovomnmnz in the Houth, tho turning ‘of the departments at Washington into Liousos of prostitution—all aro chargoeablo to the party dogma, of blind subserviency to KI:Q; anous.—Kewanee (11,) Independent, oo muay of our poople think aud aot with somo half-dofinod boliof that our pollticians ar¢ not moroly molfiali, but corrupt, and that the only way to purity the body politlo s to thrua anlde ovory man Who has ovor bad nnything & do iu politieal lifo aud: call to tho foro an onfire ly now ok, Thiy indiscrimiuato progeription may have tho denirod effuct; hut wo doubt it Wo Uollovo tho 60,000 politicians, so-called, now in offico, aro a8 honorablo and trustworthy a any other 60,000 that may bo relectod.—Alusca ting Slflwfl) Journal—Lostmaster, —hio majorily of hionest mon in both partios, all over tho country, aro willing to admit {he nocossity of n radleal chaugo In polltice, financos, monsuros, and mon. . . . . Yol tho cohanive, oflico-holding, offica-secking ol mont of tho Ropublican party 1umugh an n numbers), woll drillod and organized, aro likely to succoad in ruling oaucusen and conventions, 88 of old.—Maquolcla (Iowa) Sentinel, —In counties of Ohlo whoro tho Domocrats ar0 In tho minority and oo no Liopo of obtaining offico under tho prosont organization of partios, a now shuflle is domanded; but, in Domocratia countios, thoso who aro_contont with what the ::;xl;ty ?fi? X"fi \‘vmb opp‘ifilo ulm movu{'.\non! ‘,1’5“ 3 0 fight is_bocomlng intorcnting,.—To« ledo Blalia—lfllminhh'nfion. 5 G ~—With tho Groat Robollion came an ond of all $hose sprosd-eaglo spoochics previously so unic voral on tho Fourth of July, when tho Revolus Honary War was fought over again. Now, throughont tha Wost, Taurth o Jily cololn: tious aro gonorally to bo {n tho country, and the farmor, who “ pays for all,” ia the difector and managor, And thie celi brations aro roally meste ll:g‘z{‘ “onr r::‘zfi:\lulmtl;m ;x. da u;;rop&rnllon for actlon o against railronds and monopolict ~Rockford () Gazetle, retow —The war {s ovor, and now questions are prod gonting lthfimuolvos.‘ Tflrxu IDASACH ATO NOW cOn= cornod In finances, tariffs, railroads, ote., and whilo they may rogard it plossant and agracable to hoar an oocasional side remark about tho saoe rificos of tho army, and tho bombardmont of Fort Bumtor, thoy will expect tho body of the Fourth of July specches to Lo medo up of somo« thing moro portinent and usoful.—ZLeavenworth (Aam.? Times, : ~Out of this offort for disenthralment will of of nocessity Lo brought into roview the tarf uostion in alll ts benrings upon productive ine ustry, tho question of transportation, and the question of oponing new avenues for the ex- ‘mmuon of Wostorn produco to tho markets of tho world, A now ora dswns,upon tho country, and wo wolcomo it coming ; & now battlo, graid and suporb, on now iasuos, appronchos, and wo wolcomo #s coming,—8t, Lotis Times. —~Tlo snlary-grabbors camo in for thelr share of sttention at the farmers' mooting horo,—for no public mosting in oxpoctod to b sllont on that mattor,—and formal notice was sorved on thom all that the farmors of Columbia County would havo no furthor ugo for their sorvices aftor thoir proscut torms of offico shall havo ox« ‘pired.—Portage (Wis.) Register, —Tho Into Congrossionnl mniary-gtonl in bee coming daily more an object of ngitation, dise st, and abomination in tho oyos of tho poople. ndeod, now that tho pooplo havo had sufiiciont timo to recover from the first shock and ponder over tho outragoous deed, its vonality is roalized, —Freeport (1Ul.) Bulletin. —Wo don't believe the fues about the grab . will blow over soon, It has beon growing, as wo have said, for four months. It is not nocos= sary for the politicians to lmu&:& ‘befora the peo= ple; the poople will keop it before the politi= cions, It I8 not nocessary to bring outside influs ouca to worl up public feoling; for, like youst in dough, it works ilsclf. . . . . The poos plo had just begun to realizo_tho extent of Con- rossional corruption, when Congress, deflant of oconcy, opouly made tho salury-grab. Thoy doublad tho prico of their own shame.— Cincin~ nati Commercial, —Ronator Howe was woakly facetious at the ' Green Bay railroad banquet upon the bhack-pay J grabbing businoss, & uu\){uut that bears face~ tiousncss porbaps s poorly ns any that over in~1 torested the public, Hia advice to trucklo totho| railroads instond of resisting thom in case they | aro our masters may also be good facetiousnoss, but was not accaptad by tho company og cradita: | Dle, sonsible, or sossonable,—Milwaukee Jour- nal 4}{‘ Commerce. —Littlo by littlo tho mowspaper organs and Eln.uorm speakers of the Adminiatration have con ropnrlul; to abandon their half-condomns« tory hal-apologatic maunor of troating tho ail- ary ‘stenl,” and to come out squarely in defonso - of that corrupt transaction. To make the chaago of front without demoralization, it was necesste ry that a signal should bo fired from ono of the ‘Adminiatration’s * big guns.” Matt Carpentor ‘was chosou, on nccount of his suporior brassi n;:ls to givo tho sigual.—St. Paul (Afinn.) Dis« palch. —In the morbid popular mood, caused by tha Credit Mobilier fronzy, the action of Congrosa on this salary question ovoked & storm of blind and unrensoning popular exceration which, as & pure psychological phenomonon, is one of the more romarkable things in the annals of civile ized fociety. . . . . Wo rogard tho argu- mont of Sonator Carponter in vindication of Congress s unanswerable,—S.. Paul Press— Postmasler. —Wa hopo tha whole venal hords of salarye grabbors will sccopt tho Sonator's haranguo as a suitablo dofenso, x:r nothing that could possibly bo urged againut their ignominious coursa would oporato with such crushing offect as this most weak, illogical, and undignifiod attempt to mako it appear that black {s white.—Fond du Lao (Wis.) Commonweaith, ——Nolw\!\lntnm“nq ol Carpenter and others who votod for tho * grab moy say, the paople have formod a protty irm opinton wipon tho sube joct, and that opinion is decidedly ngainst tho honesty of the law and tho men who worked for it and aro shaving its ndvantages.—Pcoria (1U.) Transeript. —The dofenso of the Senator is ablo and cun- ning. It will bo read with interest but without approval, 1 he has enid all that is to bo enid in support of hia action, and wo think ho haw, tho soverelgn, to which this last appoal is mado, wilt judge him defenseless,— Utica (N. X-.) Herald. —Ono ot the Benator's positions is that thosa Congrossmon violate the Constitution who return thoir back pay to tho Treusury, bacause the Cone stitution says, *Tho Henators and Ropresontas tives shall receive s compensation far their sors vicos, to Lo ascortainod by luw, and Paid out of the Treasury of tho United Btatos.” A cuves which domands such an argunient as this must o & vory wosk one.—Fort Wayne (Ind.) Gazelte. —Tho people have duly considered both tha Crodit Mobilior swindlo aud tho nnlnfi'—gmhhing of Congrossmon, aud have provounes judgmont. against thom both, It will bo of no avail for their counsel now to atlempt to re-opon tho caao. Mr, Carpontor had botier keop his mouth closod, and onjoy his portion of tho plunder in silonco, His spacch i8 ** too thin,” It will have no weight With tho poople,—Burlington (Towa) Lawk-Eye. —0f courso mobody disputos tho power of Qongross to do what it did, ~ Therofore, Senator Carpontor wastad much (imo in arguing that point. Congrosa might vote its membars 250,000 & yonr, and thero is o powor that conld stop it | but wo aro not talking about logal rights o1 power, but sbout the moral right, Congross: mon do not sten], but they did that which wan about as monn and almost as demoralizing. Thorotoro it 1s_callod tho sulary-steal ; and Ly that name it will be known long “aftor the politis cul graven rocoivo and hido out of sight the ro. mains of thoss who 80 gronaly offonded publi¢ sensibilitios, and plunged tha” Congross of the nation nto disgraco.—Cincinnali Gazelle, —It is cleat that a groat ovil has been grows ing up, and that it can only bo curad by tho ine dignaut protest of the peoplo. It I8 unfortus nate that somo gaod and able mon will have to 0 down with lilm stream, but it will bo bono= Eclnl tonoto the destruction of tho mob of huck=~ iaystora whouo chief intorest in thelr position ll.l ‘Congroes s the amount it will pay them. It ia nato to prophacy that the procadont which the pooplo aro now setting of removing from publio Dosttion all who voted for and took tho bnel-pay, will hold good heranfter, and no man who is nof rattling thio last grain of tho sauds of his ofls cial Jifo will horenttor bo found willing to risk a vote for back-pay,—Tndianapolis Jowrnal, ~—In tho oaso of The People v. Mait Carpenter ot al,, for burglavy sud grand larcony, the jury baving found tha defondanta guilly d’ tho Court having asked the defendants it thay had anything to sy why sontonco should not bo pros nounced, and the said dofondanty, through ong of their number, having mndo "o statoment which, in tho opinton of the Cowst, is altogothor too “I‘KD, it is ordered that tho said dofendanta Do taken to tho City of Washington, in tho Diss trlot of Columbia, fhiero to finfuh out the unex< ired terms of their ]])\lmlu sorvice; and that, ab o oxpiration of said torms, thoy bo transported thence to thoir respective homes, thoro to remain in quioz obseurity during the remaindor of thoir natural livos, And mnir thoy receive in tho next world that moroy which a decont rogard for the ople’s monoy will not allow thom in this.—St uis Democral. —Bonator Carpontor says ho doos not know or caro whethor tho Oredif Mobilior cheated the Unjon Pacific Railrond Complug' or not. Inview of the fact that tho Railrond Company and the Crodit Mobllior woro composed of tho Bame per< sony,and that it wasthe Governmont that wasbes ing choatod and not the Itailroad Company, u-a Ynoplo do enroy, That is procisely thio polnt o wsuo, Congrons’ did nob caro; but tho poopld do, Douglis didn't caro whothor slavery wad voted up or voted down; but tho pooplo did. ‘Thore may bo nologal redross ; but thio righteou indignation and condemnation of an outrage pooplo await all who eithor directly or indircally woro responeiblo for tho Crodit Mobilior frauds, —Janesuilla (Wis.) Gazette,