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’I‘HE. CHICAGO DAILY' Tnmm FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 187 TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE, YERME OF BUDSCRIPTION (PAYADLE IN ADVANCE), 1200 | BUn0ariseservense BZs T ey 1 3568 Wookly., Parta of A yaar at the ‘samo rato. To peovant delay ani mistakos, bo surs and gire Port Offico adress in full, including State and County. ‘Romittanoes may be smads cither bydeatt, oxproes, Post ‘v order, artn registored lottors, at ourrisk. TERMS TO OITX AUDSCRINRNE, atls, doliverod, Kunday oxcoptod, 23 conte por waok. Duily, welivorod, Buuday tncludod, %0 couts por weoks Addross THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, omer Madieon and Deatbor: Uhioago, e me— TO.DAY'S AMUSEMENTS. ¥ RATRE~Madinon steoot, botmeon '+ Our Amorican Cousin.™ V'S TEHEATRE-Tandolph sireat, Yotwoon m‘.‘xok%flfin?. T ion O'Nell, * David Do st Me japtatn of tho Watoh." A MUSIC—Ialstod atroot, botwoen Mad~ Tun ina Fog." ADELPHL THRATRE~Comor ot ‘Wabnah Avenue e Varioty porformance. Lo-Loy B0 CRrote, 25 v, Yiawa, ot » QHIOAGO THRATRE-Nog, 51323 West Madison Mroot. Varloty portorniance, ‘Tho Jackloys, ute. UILDING—Lakoshors, foot of Adams O lahta Afioriooh aud ovoniag- JCINGSBURY MUSIO HALL~Clark stroot, botween Randoiph and Lako, Lucea Concorts PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAT, OIIUROH—Cor- 3 Tiwonty-Hith atrect. Illustrate T PR S e “SOCIETY MEETINGS. A E, No, 91, A F. & AN, sl fgn}gw,f,gg,figggnw:, Gdmmiuateation ihis (Trie ay) ovonizg, at8o'clock [ UAHGR kR, Socratary. —— BUSINESS NOTICES. EX- ik, N. Y. WALL STRERT. L sl capifal selthout WEEK'S DOINGS IN uth Palne o PR MBRIDAL & €O The Chitago Tiibune, Pridsy Morning, Juno 5, 1874 Judgo Drummond yesterday hoard arguments for tho granting of an injunction against the Yisconsin Railway Commissioners, Atty.-Gen. Bloan, and the Northwestern Commissionors. Furthor hoaring of tho caso haa boon postponed 1for o fortnight. Butler's Civil-Servico Roform Committeo has agrood to roport that it does not rocommend any mppropriations to carry on tho roform as it hag ‘boon carried on, More 1s sound Bonsg, albelt tho motives of tho Committeo are somowhatb mized, and not altogothor noble. —— Sawyor has mado known his intention of xo- signing in order tosuve the cmbarrasament of Bocrotary Bristow. In unqualified andscity and fmpudence, Sawyor is, beyond doubt, the king- pin of the old Trensury trio. Xvorybody knows thaf ho will rosign bocauso ho has no cholee. it ——— Cluss has brought suit for libel agalnat Shopherd and othor mombers of the Washing- ton Board of Public Works, by whom he was officially charged with baving committed por- Yury. Itwould be usoloas now for the District {Investigating Committes, oven it it waro BO disposed, to bring in 8 ropost exonerating the Board. Oluss bas beon aroused, and ho meane businoss, He will go to tho bottom of thinge beforo tho libel suit is dono with. —e A compromigo curroncy il hes boon agreed wpon by tho Congressionsl Conforonco Com- smittoo, Itis in substonco tho House bill, the _most important change being that the propot- *4ion in which United States notos aro to bo yo- ‘tired, as National Pank currency s lssuod, 18 fixod ag 873 por ecnt, Wo have alrendy ox~ ;prossed tho opinion that no serious objection osn bo wrged ogainst tho bill in {hig slhapa. What Presidont Grant will tuink of it is anothor «question. No assurance hos hoon rocoived from ‘i thas it will be appravad, o Trof. Bwing's admirers uro more than can bo accommodated in the Tourth Presbyterian Olurch, Gentlemen interested in the matter v sgreed that s tabernacle, capeble of hold~ ing 8,000 poreous, should bo built for him to preach in. Tho plau i to put up o plain odifico on tho comer of Desrborn and Ontario stroots, tho ontivo property mot to cost more than $100,000. Funds will bo gocured for this purpaso by subscription, and the tabernaclo will be owned by tho stockholders. The subject will be publicly conaldered o waelk from noxt Bunday, inthe Fourth Prosbyterinn Church, ot tho clogo of Prof. Bwing's sermon. | Ono of the wealthieat mon in Oslifornin, James Lok, has docided to hostow his surplus proporty upon several charitable and golentifio ontor- priscs, the transfer to take offoct immediately. Mo gives $700,000 for sn observatary at Lako fTahoe, §800,000 fora Behool of Mochanicwl Arts 4o 8an Frauclsco, and about $500,000 for publio monuments. Mr. Lick {s {n thofull enjoymentof Jia mentsl fooulties, Ha kuows porfeotly wall that posthumons fame and prafde aro but a poor substitute for honor and love beforo doath; and that o gift of proporty which cannot bo Liopt 12 not to be compared with the froe-will offering of ope who has abeolute possession, e et Mr. Ward, of Hlinols, s veported as having #aid that he would not voto to givo the negrocy equal rights in tho theatres as long an tho public achooly aro closed on thom. This is viewing the civil-rights question from & striotly moral etendpoint, Mr, Ward might profitably inquire whether suy ono proposea to closo the public schaols on the negro; alko, whether the dilomma which ho presents, oven if 1t woro ronl, 1s n conclusivo argument for {ho passago of tho Civil-Rights Dblll. Tho most trustworthy ad- vicos from Washington sve to the effoct that tho bill will not, in sl possibility, pass without amondmont. It it docg, s voto may be looked tor. Tho Ohfengo produce markots woro rather loss activo yestorday, with an easier foeliug in broad- stufts, Doss pork was quiot and 5@100 por 100 b higher, closing at 817.60@17.66 cosh, and §17.70@17.75 sollor July, Lard was quiot and atoady, oloslng at 11,00@11,05 per 100 1ba onsl, ond $11,20@11.25 sollor July, Moats wore in bot~ tor domand, and 3o por b higher, at 03@034c for shouldors, 9}{o for short ribs, Oifo for short oloar, snd 11@1lige for swoet plokted home, Highwines ware In falr demand and unchanged, olosing st 050 per gatlon, Lako frolghty woro aotive and onsier, st 434 for corn by sail to Buffalo. Flour was dull and un- clignged, Wheat waa Jogs sotivo and 3o Jower, claxing &t 1,18 cnsb, 8117 seller July, and ©1.213¢ forNa. 2 Minnesota. Corn was loss aotive sud 3¢o higher, ologing ot B8Jde soller June, aud Doj¢o weller July. Oats woro flrm and logs ao- tivo, closing ot 45350 onels, and 4330 goller July. Ligo was quict aud stoady at 000, TDarley was nomianl ab §1.00@1.40 fox Mo, 8, Hoge dull end 100 lowar, olosing wenk at #4.00@"5.00. Cattlo woro in good domand at stendy ratos, with Tivor- al snlos nt $2.60@0.20. Bhoop wero inactlve, the offorings amounting to only 100 hoad. ) Honator Davis rocently submittod n resolution ealllug upon tho Socrotary of tho Treasury for s statoment of tha balances duo from disbursing ofoors of the Unitod Statos, Tha Sonato yos- | torday discharged tho Committeo on Tinnnco from furthor considoration of tho subjoot, It naving boon ascortnined from hoadquartors thab tho information nsked for could not bo obtained in losa timo thon threo months, or at loss oxponso than 876,000, Thero is monifest fair- ness in this assortion, Tho resolution was un- fortunataly worded. What wo waut to know ia not tho balances duo from disbursing officors, ut tho amount of which tho Govornmont has boon actrauded by such officors withip tho past govon yoars, Buch astatement might onstly be propared. It would bo ‘bad for tho party. Miuora who woro Iatoly engagod in o striko v boon drivon from thefr housos by the-pro- priators of tho Dorhaw, Bug., collieriod. Although the messuro soemd havsh, it is moroly o roduction to business principles of tho rolations botwoon omployer and om- ployed, and tbis s what striking worke mon on both sides of the ocosn hnvo rigorously inslated wpon. Tho Duko of Rut- Iand, somo weoks 6go, fased & circular to tho Iaborors on his catate, taking tho ground that tho rolation botween tho farmers, and tho work- men should bo confidontial rather than morcan- tile. ‘Thia position was gooorally dorided by the public aud tha press, the Spectator boing of tho number; but the npplication of tho **morenn- tito" principla in practico, as wo have s#ald, seoma torribly harsh sud cruol. et —r— Gontlomen promiuont in tho managomont of fho Nortlswostern Railrond assort that no ox- topsion of tho Company’s Nues will bo uuders taken until tbo presont attitudo of Western Logislatures toward vosted capital intorests ung boon abaudoned, Porhaps it is just oa woll that no moro money should bo usod §n bullding Western raflvonds for gome tioo to como, Tho cxpansion of tho country in this direetion has boen dangorously quick. But tho Northwesters people may reat agsured that, when pow railroads aro noeded, thoy will bo built, oithor with or without tho nsstatanco of existing companios, Itis quito possible, bowever, that the pooplo of Wiscousin will be clamoring for. pdditfonal ratlrand facilitica bafore they can, or onght to be, supplied, and fn that event tho Northwostern officiels will havo the storn satis- {action of polntiug to {he Polter law s anob- ataclo in tho way of honest enterprise, - P —————1 Two significant utterancos on tha temporance question, comiug from very different quartors, are published this morning, | One is from John Bright, tho groat English Commonor. Ho bas been o practical tomporance man for thirty yoars, and Lio comes 8 noar baing an advocato of total abstinenco as ony one who hes recontly been prominent in Goverament affaira; but he doos not beliove that prohilntory legis- lation 18 citbor practicablo or expedi- ont. Mr. Bught seys that if Parlioment yworo to pass such Jaws 18 many friends of tem- ‘persnce sdviso, the whole Oity of Tondon would- Do in riot, rovolt, and insurrection. Ancther de~ liverance on this subject los been mado by the Govornor of New Hampohbiro in his - insugural address. Ho tokos tho samo position as A, Bright, sayieg: * Laws, to bo offeotivo, must be in harmony with publio sentiment, but this prine ciplo has in o gront dogroo boen overlooked or disregoxdad io our tomperance legislation." ] i TOW TO INFLATE THE CURRENCY, o the Editor of The Chlcaze Tribune ; ‘gtn: Jceop it boforo the people to urgo Congrees to yowo w ill maling o Jaw to double the prasent vatno of 21 goid and silver cobi that 16 colned or muy bo coinod 11 tho Uniled Statcs, and aleo of ull colus of o forelgn coinago used in tho Unlted States,—thuo caupiug tho United States to bo nblo fo pay off oll outatandiug lie~ Bilities, resmning speclo-paymont, snd placing tho ‘money-basta of the country vpou sound footing; also alng tho United States tho moncy-coutro of the worll, Congreeshus tho right, under thoConstitution of tho United Status, to do this,—~It giving them tho power to coin moncy, and regulata tho value Liereof, and of foreign colus, A ciaugo of thls naturo could 1ot fall to be approcited by all snd Lring prosperity to tho conntry, Joux HIpiaN, ‘Fho Logan and Morton echool of financlers, 88 Mr. Hindman ehows, fe making progress, Their thoory of monoy is boing cultivated by ardent and consistont disciplos, who even surpass thoir masters, Just as tho modern echool-boy Imows more of sstrouomy than Ptolomy did, Mr. Hind- man surpasses Logen and Morton os o financier, Morton and Logaun proposed to worle wonders Ly thoir finencial loglelation; but the mira- cle of nll miwmcles is to bo porformed Uy Mr. Hmdman's project. Mr. Hindmon hne digsovered the plulosapher's atone, Out- Loganing Logou, sud out-Mortoning Mor- ton, hé would have the country mado prosporous by an net of Congross. Lat Con- greas say that evory dollar in gold ghall bo worth two dollars, and ovory English soverclgn that touchos the Jaud of tho froo nnd the home of tho brave shell become two sovereigus, and forth- with it shall bo so. Then the United Btated, laving twico es much monoy g it Lad before, will bo twico as woll ablo to pay off it dobt. It will havo twice ng mony dollara in proportion to ita dobts, nud bo that much botter propared to roturn to spocie-peymonts, Then, teo, as Mr. Mindmoen says, tho Unitod States will be the monoy-centre of the world, for sll tho god fn the world will flow hero to got lfsclf Jombled.. Tt i3 n fact that Congroad moy regulato tho valuo of mouey. The Con- stitution does givo it that power, and the Bu- premo Coutt iu tho lopal-tondor cago ko docided. Our only objaction to tho plun proposed Dy Mr. Logau's disciplo 14 that it doos not fix tho valus ot monoy high cnough. We should profor to fix the value of gold coin at ono thousund timos ity prenont value, or one million. ‘Wa would uot go boyond this lnst figuio, becauto wo do nob think it well that thore should bo =0 many millionairos In & counhry. ‘This would give our gold valuo cnough to make us ot only the monoy-centre of tho world, but of tho solar systom. Wo might pay off our national dobt, buy up France, Gormany, ond England, and build o tunnel wndor the Atlantla, Should wo succoed in all this, M. Hindan would have s place in hlatory sccond only to the learned Bonators who inaplred him. P ] Tho INlincls Central Railrosd Innd-grant wos convoged to the Company by tho Btato of THi- nole undor suthority of tho Coneral Governe mont. It la stipulsted in tho nob of Congress that all lands vomaining unsold nt tho expirn- tion of ton years sftor ihe - completion of the vond shall Lo offeved ot publio gnlo sonually ootll the wholo sball bo disposod of, The rosd was completod in Oatober, 1007, bus tho lanus hiaye nob besu roxe winrly offored nt public salo. ,On tho 10th of Jonuary, Attorney-Goneral 1dnall potitionod tho Bupromo Coust for n mandamus to compoel com- plinnco with tho provision of tho nct of .Con= groas, Wo publish this morning tho answor of tho rospondonta to tho Attorney-Genoral's potl- tlon, Tho substanco of it {s that tho Com- pany has attompted, in good faith, to disposo of thio land at rensonablo vates; that offorts to sell at suction, with a rosorved minimum, have proved futile; that the unsold lands are soourity for Londs of tho Company; that a forced salo would fmpaic the obligations of o contrat; and rosult in n sncrifide of the proporty without of- feoting any ndoquate good. The contost, ns It stands, involvos groat Intorosts, as woll of tho publio 85 of tho Railway Company ; ita progroes to o conclusion will bo followed with goueral Intorest. EELLEY AND HI§ KANGAROO, “Kelloy han rolaxed something of tho stornness of his Protogiivo principles. o bas offored an amondmont to tho Tarift bill sdmittng duty-froa olophants, loopards, tigers, horned horses, kan- garoos, and all othor anlmnle latondod fof the Zoological Gardens in Fairmouns Park, Phila- dolpbin.” 8o comes the wondrous nows. Has Holloy changed his Protective principlos? Thon may thoe leopard—porchanca tho very loopard which will entor Amoriea undor tho mgls of this ‘Ditl—change his'spote. Then may the Ethioplan chavgo his skin, and 80 sparo us tho nocossity of passing the Civil-Wrongs bill in order to keep 800,000 votors inside tho Republican party. Wo fear itne Hon. Plg-Iron has nob roflocted on the possible consoquoncos of his smondmont. Mark that provision about *hornod Lorses,”” Suppose eomo sinful sout manufac- tures horned horses acroms tho Canadisn bor- dor and imports thom, nominally for the Zoolog- teol Gardone. Bupposo (dreadful thoughtl) that Iiia falso horna should be mado of iron. As oaclt Lorse etopped across tho border, bringing in (any) six pun'nds of iron duty-froe, would not Mr, Xolloy hoar tho crash of an sbandoned for- nnco in his Ponnsylvania aud the wailof the familics of tho hundred men thrown out of em- ploymont by tho competition of the paupor labor of tho Dominion ? Tho iden of Protection s that anything with enough duty laid upon it can bs producod hero. Mr. Groeloy was of the opiufon that all our toa ehonld be grown ¢ Lomo, How ofton lave wo hoard thoso glowing bursts of eloquenco from Kolloy that havo sout tho American esglo wing- iog his wsy *from tho troplo glades of tho South, o'or boundless prairics, to the ics-crowned mountain-ponks of tho North,"—ocloquence that was domigned to show that this country could produco everything, if the forolgn product woro but taxed out of our markets. If clophant, hornod horse, tiger, leopard, and kangaroo hove not already boon hred undor glasa roofs in this country, it Is. beesuso Africa and Asia have been allowed to compoto with us, No woll-rogulated circus is without its kangsroo. Andyet wo stand idly by and sce tbo gentlo oreaturo hopping o'er Australion plaina on his way to Amorican sawdust, canvas, and oages. If o wero but proporly taxed, ssy $10 por pound and $250 por capits, 40 per cent-ad valorem, with forfeit of tho whole jnvoico if any Infant kangaroos wero concoaled within tho maternal pouch, Amerlcan labor might bo employed in producing bim. Think how many men eould goin & livolihood by tho hording of kangaroos. Tho first necesslty would bo & gigantio hot houso. Hundreds of glass-blowors, and iron- molders, and brick-makers, to say noth- ing of iron and coal-minors and tool mokers, o aly would bo required in ordor to get tho . matorials togothor. Tho operation of bulldiag would require ‘bricks layars, hod-carriera, carpontors, plumbers, oto. All theso men would have to bo supplied with tools, Whon the plumbing began, the land- minea of Ilinols would pe drawn upon. Then, 28 our firat-born kangaroos wouid doubtless die, nearly all these offorts would have to bo repested for long timo, What a vieta of employmont for Amerlcan Iabor opens bofore us here. When tho first porfect specimen wag produced, it would ba {n demand, not only for the cireus, but for other uses. Tho kaugaroo would mako rapld transit posgiblo. Businese mon, mounted onit, wonld skip dowa Michigan avonua and buat tho Hyde Parl troins all hollow, Tho post- man would sigh for.s kengaroo. Tho croa- ture runs botter up hill then on o lovel What moro could & lottor-cavrior in tho business district want? His langaroo would talio him up stairs more quickly thon sny lag- ging clovator could. On the plaing, whore now tho stago-conch conveys tho mails, & fomalo, with hor pouch stuffed full of lotters, would Itap slong et lightning speed. Tho horso would probably bocome obsoleto, suve where heavy teaming was roquired. South African natives coaidor kangaroo. mill & dolicacy, and oat tho flosh with gusto, Hero are two poseiblo trados ghadowed forth, And yet )l those pricoloss ad- vantagos aro to be lost to tho country for the seko of bonofiting Fsirmount Park. Lot Mr. Kelley bethink limself. Lot him stand by his principles. If Lo is constant now, gratoful conatituenoy will surcly orect a etntuo to him, In seulptured stono Kolloy will bestride his knn- garoo, Bonoath him will be the proud Jackaon- {an motto: “Tho union of munufacturors aud Congressmon must and shall bo prosorved.” No more will “Pig-Iron™ usurp the piecoof his Christian namo. He will go down in history as Xaogaroo Keiloy. THE BREWERS' CONVENTION, The address of Honry O, Kiauson, Prosident of tho Brewers' Convontlon, and tho address of thio Convention itself to the publie, are intorost- ing, au showing tho presout condition of the liquor businoss, the capital Iuvested in it, the gonsumption of ita products, the revonue ob. tolued from ir, the prospoct of suocess {u sup- pressing it or curtailing it, ote. Mr. Kisuson's address is o senstblo sud straightforward oxpo- sitlon of the viows ontertained by himeolf and thio Asgosintion of tho tomperancs quostion, Ho explafug the fact that thoro has baoy & ateady youly increaso of 1,000,000 barrela consump- tion of malt liquora in the United Btates, a8 & tostimony on the part of the publle, as Lo olaime, to thelr ‘rofroshing, in- vigorsling, and nutrtious qualitios,” Ho pronouncos drunkenuoss & orying ovil, and arguos that great boueflt is dorlved from & mod- orate use of stimulsnts; end quotey Prof. Moy sud Prol. William A, fiammond in support of tho posltlon that alcobollo stimulunts ara abso- Jute necossition in cortaln onses. The Laor- brawora ho looks upon as engaged in alogitiwate branok of buslness, and argues that not thoy, Dut tho drunkurds, shonl¥ be prosecuted ns alons respontibla for tha nbuso of liquor, whothor in- toxicating or not, 3y, Klnuaen would havo the drunkard punishod by debarring him from so- clety, by dla(mnuhlllnu him at the polls, by confemulg him 45 awiep the aivedts,: with chain aud ball stisched to his foot, sto, The “address to tho public roproionts that temporanco logislation would Impale * tho honor and oradit of tho United Blatcs,” by depriving 1t of ono very romunora- tivo moana of incomo (a rather fallaclous nrgu- mont), aud oven jmperil Ita flnancial well- TDolng !—furthor, that it would bo an iufsingo- mout of tho ¥ soverolgnty of the individual." Tho statiaties brought forward by tho Prosi~ dont n bis nddross avo oven starillug, The number of barrels of formentad liquora brawed and gold In the Unitod Btates for tho year ond- Ing Juno 30, 1873, was 8,010,828, —an Increate of 010,854 ovor 1872, Tho copital invested in’ broworlos s £89,010,828¢ in malt-honsos, $16,707,703; in barloy-lands, ©44,654,130; in hopands, 1,003,000, muking & total of $162,776,600, Tho numbor of por sons omployed direotly or Indlrectly in tho monufacture was 60,477, The totat fn- tomal revonuo for the yoar ending June, 1873, from sl sourcos, was $112,747,772, and tho totsl recolpts from tho tsxes on stimulating boverages, 61,424,810, or B5 per cent of tho whole, Thoso fignres show that the advocates of total abistinonce axe opposed by an smdunt of capitnl oqual to $159,776,036, aud by an amy of 50,477 poreons, depundont for s livelihood on the lquor trade! The movers in prohibitory mens- uroa will do woll to think over theso figuros. 8o tong aa tho appotite of tho peoplo ia &0 groat for stimulante of some kiud, no loglelation can sboilih the trado. Tho appetite 18 tho rxoot of tho ovil. Tho appetite must Do oradicatod if tho ovil would bo curod ; and who ovor heard that an op- potita was changed by an aok of a Leglslataro ? Wo sttach very littlo impartance to the argu- mont in tho * nddress to tho people of the Unitod Statos” that a probibltory fow would have tho offect of diminishing tho incomo of tho Govoromont, It would havo that effect fora timo 5 but in tho ond its incomo would bo all tho greator, could such s Jaw bo enforced. The con- sumption of lquor is unprodnctivo consump- tion ; and as such not to bo encouraged, whother tha Govarnmont obtains arovenue from it ornot. THE FRAUD OF THE FISHERS. Tho Fishors aro of Florids, Thoy resemble tho Apostles, in that they sro fishors of men— Congrossmen. The rosemblance stops at this polnt. Tho story of tho Fishor froud s, In briof, this: In1813, whon tho Crook war was at its holght in Florids, tho Orooks destroyod tho housen, hords, and crops of ono Georgo Fisher. Then tho troops camo up and probably saved the lives of the family. It wasa great pity. Auon, tho original Fishor died. His widow congolod ‘Theraolf with & now husband, Thoy lived together nenzly a acore of yoars in Lonost poverty. ‘Thon thoy triod to gain dishonost woslth. Tho hus- band of Mra. Gisher potitioned Congross for dumagos, alloging that thoe pursuing soldiers bad Jastroyed part of the crops, hards, cte. This was about 1892, Congressrojected thounproven claim. By 1848 tho TFishors wero roslly in noed of monoy. In camo thelr potition. It was decided that tho troops did half tho damago. Accord- ingly tho indofatigablo family got an award of $6,873, ‘which wag just holf tho original loss. 'his sum was probablyabsorbed in lawyors® foos, for the boggars boggod again tho eamo yoar. Tlia timo thoy got intorest for sixtoon yosrs on thosward. This amountod to 8,997.94 This kept thom only a yosr. In 1810 thoy begged in- torest from 1818 to 1832,—to-wit, $10,004.89. As thoy had now boon paid more than thoy orig- inally claimed, with intorest dating back to twonty yoaro boforo they made tho claim, they might hiavo beon eatisfled. But they wero not, In 1854 thoy handed in thorogular potition, This 4imo thoy wore robufed. I 1858 John B. Floyd was Soorotaryof War. Hore was agoldeu chauce, The Fishora got their cluim traneforred to the War Dopartmont. TFloyd figured on 1t and dis- covered that throe-fourths of tho damago bad boen dooo by the troops! So tho Fishors got o Yttfo logs thau $40,000 cash, In 1860, aftor thelr documonts had beon improved by forgeries, and the pricos of the produco and cattlo had Loon put at figures thet o Parisian would have thought exorbitant during the sisgo, thoy attacked Floyd sgoin. That watch-dog of the ‘Trossury now made up his mind that afl the demagohad beon dono byour troops. Ho acecord- jogly ordored tho payment of $0,610.85 to tho Tishor helrs, Boforo thiscouldbo dono Congross interposod, much as it dId in the Chorpenning job., During tho War stoaling was not dono in this way. The ohanco caomo, Lowever, sftor- wards, Tho Fishors bad survived, of course. TTho hoirs to claims nover die ont. Will Auneko Jans evor ho boreft of doacendants? In July, 1870, Scuator Garrot Davis prosonted tho TFishor claim for 806,610.85. In tho Galaxy for August of that yoar Mark Twain publishod tho story of the swindlo, #It apparontly kilted it. The Fish- ers sont an ox-Congrossman from California to Buffalo to “*soo® Twain, Lhelatter doolined, howover, to bo sitenced. Truo to his word, ho hoa again oxposed tho fraud. Thoro 18 neod of oxposure, for, incredible s it scoms, tho Houso Committoo on Military Affaira has just roported in favor of paylng this Flahor olaiml Tho helra of aman whoso ferm was ravaged by Ine dions in 1818 have alrosdy boon puld §00,- 570,80, or nbout elght times their ariginal olaim, on tho falso plen thot United Statos troops did tho domage, and now sk for $00,848 moro, with inlorest,—ond & commitios of presumably suno, non-idiotic mon roport in favor of giving it to thom. If thls sort of thing istogo on, tho best thing a man who wishes to loave his ohildron waoalthy can do do is to grow two blados of grasu whore ono grow bofore, get an Indlan pony to ost thom, swenr that & oavalry torso did it, und thon dio. A grateful country will poy bis hoirs whatever they chooso to ask, ma e e When the Inwyor Myors, of Newport, Ky, was shot dond by Torrellitho latter claimed somo publio sympathy on the ground that ho had besn Padly tronted In o divorco Bult which bad boon brought by bis wifo, Torroll was & woll-known charactor thronghout Indiana, Oblo, and Xen- tnoky. He published & nowspapor for sevoral yoars in Lutayotto, Ind. He had boen Paymoe- torin the army. Ho was onco Postwnstor nt Nowport. Bhortly boforo ho lilled Myora he Biad himsolf yooelved & dangorous wound, Alto- gother, ho appoared to many poréons In the light of a peracoutaa and oxasporated man, who had gome pravacation for tho crime ho had commit- tod, snd who was entltled to aympathy for bla miofortunes, Bince thon the muit for divores Las boon on’ trfal, and the summing up of tho onge for tho complalnant by hor attorney, Mr. Otivor W. Root, of Newport, makes n diffor~ ‘out showing frowm that which Mr, Torroll and his frionds pus forth. Mr Raot, o an oloquont manner, dofeuds ‘Mra, Torrell from tho hnputa- {lous that had been Inforontially put upon hes by Terroll's claim for sympnthy, M, Torrell 18 » Lndy'of good famlly, woll seared, of & deliohto and sonsltive naturo, nnd of bismeloss lifo. Tho yoara sho haa pasged with Torroll ainco thoir warringo, aa dogoribed by Mr. Root, have ‘beon £ull of snoritices, hardships, and auffering, Itis charged thnt Worrell first porauaded Lis wifo to dood hior property to n third persen, with the undoratanding that b wes to be deaded baok to thom jointly. Bho consented to thin In ordor to glve her husband tho stand- ing of & man of roand, and possibly » fooling of indopondence. Dut whon tho prop- orty was dooded bnek, the dood was mado o Torroll alone, A similar tronsnotion 18 alloged at tho timo Torroll was appointed Paymastor in the army, Mra, Torrell then dooded property to Jior Iusband's fathor, fn_ordor that o might bo in & condition to furnish ¢ho roquisite bonds for Jua gon; and it i chorgod that, in convesing ‘bacl tho proporty, it was doeded to Torrall him- solf, and not Lis wile, to whom it bolonged. It in sold that, ot no- timo duriog their married 1ifo, did Torroll stpport uls wifo, but that be spont all his salary and oamings in dlssipation and dobmichery, It lsalso oclinrged that ho con- sortod with prostitutos, bonstod of. it to his wifo, told ner they wero @8 good o8 she, and omphusizod bia insults with tironts and the monaco of firo-arma and bowle- Yolvos. On two occaeions ho is charged with having attompted to ‘'chloroform™ his wito in the pight. All this time Lio ia said to hiave boen squandoring his wife's money. Yo n word, hois charactorized as & gamblor, & sponge, o libor- tiuo, & blackguard, nnd a bufly. It 8 incl~ dentally noticed, by way of ostablishing his charaotor a8 & Lypocrito, that, whilo publishing & Topublican nowapapor, ho sold & nogro lnto Houthoin slavory and put the procoeds into thoe nowspaper. It is strongo that & man could maintaln the appearanco of respeotabiliky, hold a prominent placo in public and “social 1ifo, keop frionda abont him, and gain ofileo, whilo i privato lifo was go corrapt snd rovolting. To bo a fiond to hig wifo and a torror to his family, while tho world thonght him & man of sonsitive honor end gocial rofinoment; is & curlous bub not sltogothor oxeoptionsl condition of things. Wo only soo tho skolotons in other people's closots whon thoy aro brought Into the courts, or neclidontally oxposed by somocalamity. Even the Court, In this case, might not have ‘brought out tho full oxtont of infamy if Torroil's passion bod -not Tod him to ill ono of Mra. Torroll'y Inwyors. Tuen {tbocame necossary to probo old sores that might bavo beon left untonchod. 1t waa both nocessary and propor that the ssper- slons which Torrell had put upon his wifein ordor to vindicato himeelf should bo clearod away. Hor justiftontion conld only bo socured by the oxposuro of bis infqmy. IE Torrell Lns beon guilty 10 the dogree charged upon him, tho ponalty will bo & hard ono, Ho will suffer not only the odium of public coptempt,, but his shooting of Myers will honceforth bo regarded 28 s flagrant snd unprov oked murder. P ———1 THE ADMISSION OF NEW IEXICO. ‘The prosont offort of cortain politicians to got New Moxico sdmitted as s State rest upon very flimsy considerations, They have succeeded in carrying the mossuro through the Hause, ondit 1a now ponding in tho Senato, and, unloss some’ more weighty reasons are offerod than havo Fob beon presonted, thoro the bill should rest. The inconsidorate bosto with which it wae forced through tho Houso {s of" {tsolf a ronson why tho moro considerate Sonato should cavefully weigh ‘both sides of thoe question. It has bosn sprung upon Congresa by ambitious politicians, both in and out of Now Moxico, who nre anxious for powor and plunder. Tho admisaton of New Moxico wowld give thot Stale two Sonatora in Congross. It would croate tho various ofiices connocted with & State Govornment, and give schoming, ambitious mon tho influonco growing out of the appownting power, At the eamo time, it would make New Moxico the very hat-bed of corruption, and {t would Do tho sigual for n general flocking thithorwarde of tho carpat-bag knaves who are always lying in wait for ji ust such opportunitios, and who would enjoy oven graster opportunitics for plunder in that distant country, among ita ignorant population, than thoy have bad in the Southern States. The sdvancoment of poli~ ticians and tbe intorosts of carpot-baggoers do not offer auy valid resson for tho admission of this Territory ; on the othor hond, thoy oonstl- tuto a valid roason why tho admission should ba donied. We hove bummors and ncalawags onough withont adding to thelr ‘oumber by con- tributions from New Mexico. Tho sctual condition of the Torrltory itsolt, howover, furnishes the strongest rozson of sll againat this absurd poliey. The population of Now Moxico by tho last consus was 91,871 That it hios not fucrensed materially smco that time may bé inferred from the fact thot tho consus shows fulling off since 1860 of nearly 8,000, ‘Thia population 18 composed of 8paniardy, Mox- icans, hiali-broeds, and an insignificant sprink- ling of Amoricans. To, bas incronsed just 130 in population n the Inst ton yonrs, Tho Englich langaagols acarcely spoken in tho Territary. Thobuelnu& of logisla- tion,and tho Courts is mainly conduated in Span- igh. Tho mojority of the peoplo eannot rond ox swrito. Thore aro only flvo newspapors pub- Jished In tho Torritory, and tholr combined oir- culation amounts only to 1,010, Until within two yours ago thoro was not & publio achoal in tho Torritory, It has no tolograph lines, no railronds, no commorce, no ‘wonlth. Under such clrenmstancos aa theso, of what profit will tho admission of Now Moxico be to tho Union? Whorain will auy strongth scorua {rom tho sdmission of this soanty and unintelli~ gont population of Moxicon nnd Spanish Lol broods? Will Now Moxico in its prosont oondi- tion evor provo anyihing but a corrupt and rot- ton mombor of tho National family,—contribut- g nothing in bualuces, intelligonce, gommorce, wealtl, or strongth to the gonersl pavinership, and only furnishing facilitios for plundor to wn peinciplod politicians ? The avenuos to fraud and corruption aro sufflolontly accosalble now, without oponing & now and brosd ono through Now Moxlco, aud one which will bo conataatly improved, owing to its distance from the centro of authority and tho low condition of tho intol~ ligonce of its peoplo, o ‘Massachusetls Lug now two Judges on the Donck of tho Oours of Clsimy—roring and Rlchardson,—XEz- alange, 2 Loring was appolnted by President Plorce, to vindleato him from the unanimous coneure of & Maganchusotts Logislaturo for conduot, ns # Mas- sachusctts Judge, in n fugltivo-slave caso Ticbhariteon i appointed, by Presidont Grant, alao to viudicato him, bub undor widely diftorent, olroumstancos, Tho Massachuwotts Judgo Loring, twonty yeams 850, wont ont of -his way tobe supotsorviogublo to the slave-driver, and —got on tho Donok of the Court of Claims, The Asushohusetts Horvatary Blohardson, of b ister Tho principal city, Santa. day, kopt strlotly in tholino of rontine, snd—gob on tho Bonoh of the Gourt of Claims. — PROTECTION AGAINST FIRE. London, Hamburg, Romo, and othor great duty, In consequonco of and big inability to oxeouto tho nocossary dutics of lisoflco. Ho has doslguatod Afr, Abraham ZLansing, of Albany, to Il the placo ad inferim. ————— Bkillings has swoopod dawn upon Portland and oltios of tho O1d World, had to bo burnod doWn | giiaq that olty with dismay. - Bkillings had a saveral timos boforo thoy conld bo taught how to | penchant tor hunting nmong musty rocords, and bulld houses, Tho poople of Chlcago and othor Amorloan citles alao apponr to bo utterly insen- ‘ouo day, whilo oxamining tho papots in the offico of the Roglstor of Deeds in that olty, eho found out that, woy baok in 1792, Enach Illatey lengod siblo to tho oxporionce of tho past. If all tho { \iey ot Minings and his holrs o tract of flros of tho Inst twenty-flve yoara could bo prop- ground for ninoty-nino years, which is now tho orly mappod out, snd placed eido by sldo, &t 18 | vory buainosa-heart of Portland snd worlh soy- searcoly too much to assort that Ohiosgo has Leon entiroly destroged st loast twlee within o quartor of a century, And yot, with tho horrors fore our oyes, that proteotion from fires must bogin either by oral millions of dollars, Tho Interosting facts connected with this dlscovery aro: 1. That Misa Pillings has the documents to prove ‘har doacent from Thomss Bkillings, 2. That this lasse lins of our groot alamity atill vistully be- govontoon yoors yoi o run, 8. That tho Oity of Obleago’ ontirely diero- | portfand doos nob seo its way oloar out of the gards tho first principlos of safoty, viz: | predicamont. And all this results from fomale ourlosity, with which quatity Bkillings was highly uslng littlo wood fu the structuro of buildings | blossed. or by bulldipg 8o that tho firomen can caslly got at tho fira to put it ont. Though ueing wood ag frooly as boforo tho great firo, ownors and architacts noglect to provido thoso mosns for oxtinguishing fires which our oft- ropentod and costly exporfonce has shown to bo valuablo and offootive. Onoof theso, ospecinlly in bigh buildings, s placing In the outaldo walls iron pipon, to bo conngeted at the bottom with the steamorw, and hinving fire-plugs with hoso in enchatory. It hng boon praved over and again, ovon it tho engines havo the power, that it is almost imposeiblo to make floxible hose strong enough to throwwater ta the tops of moat of our buildings.” Honco, whon s fire gots started near tho roof in any of them, tho cutire store with ita contents is most commonly destroyed, Of tho truth of all this ownors and insurande compautes liad n lessop, to the sum of 300,000, 1pst Mondsy morning, in the loss of the largo sholcanlo boot and shoo atoro of M. D. Wells & Co, Tho fire was discovered at its very com= moncoment in the roof or uppor story, and tho Dopartmont was promptly o the spot with an engine, Comprohending the dangor, tho Chief Ofifcor ab once summoned the entiro Dapart- mont 3 but, with. ail their bost machinos, the building and its contents woro burned to tho ground. Tho stonmora could not throw a suffie clont smount of water on the fire to put it out. Had thovo been fron pipes in the walle, as above guggested, to which one or moro stoamors could hove beon atinched, probably £300,000 could have heen saved at thia vory firo. Itis stated also that tho stalrways wero 8O narrow and fnadequate that tho firomen could not gob up thom with tholr hoso, These and othor faults in construction shonld ba preventod by atrlngontlaws. Undorwritorsshould mako largo and just discrimunations in favor of bulldings that aro proporly constructod. This would very soon bring ownora and arohiteots to torms, and wo should not bo likely to Beo an ontire building again burnod down with the whole Department on tho ground very scon aftor tho flre com- menced. . Tha fire of Tuesday morning does not suggest vory cheorful reflections, Therowas searcely any wind ; snd ono naturally inquiros, it the wholo Dépnrimont could not put out ono building, what would'bave been the oxtent of tho disastor it this wind bad boon blowing a gale, or it two or threo fires hiad started at tho samo timo? The State Ponitontiary at Joliot bas received an unoxpocted recommondation from gentlo- mon who ought o bo good muthonty on the sub- ject of pritons, aa ha epont bis life in thom, &lnco e was quite o small boy, in oxpintion of sundry oftensos. Tho name of this gentloman ig Jobn Makoney, bottor known as ke Amori- onn Jack Bheppard,” sud hie {8 now sorving out & torm of four yenrs at Jollot. A fow days sinoo r, Charles Sutton, the Keaper of tho Oity-Hall, Now York, roceived a latter from him, in which ho says: + e Joliet Ponttentinry ia the bost conduotod prison 11 tiye United Btetea, Of course it lins it faults, that T admit 3 but tako it all fn all it Is far aloud of auy pris- on i the Unitod States, It stands as far ahead of {hia no~callad ** Model Prison » of tho world (I refer to Musanchusetts) os the Eust 8 from the West, Thiera u ona good thing 1n this prson, and that is hore ia no favoritlew allowed, Salut sud slnuer aro trented alile, If & couvict gots au ensy Job it is becauso Tie deserves it, and not on account of dollyrs and cents, oF i soelul standing In suclety bafore he becamo & oriminal, 1f Tweed, Ingorsoll, Stokes, or any other at thoss highi-toned ruscal, weroin this Penitoutiny thoy would have to turn the grindstone snd spoculato i 1agh sud muah the exme as tho reat of tho inmates ana (his {s no mora thun vight, for T hold tho higher the social standing of tho oulprit, the more cortaln and sovers should bo the senteuce, As Mr. Mahonoy s sorved in Stste prisons all over the country for twenty or thirty yeara and males this his business (a8 ho himsolf eays: 1 ptill live, and of coursc, 8s natural o8 tho Inwa of gravitation, I am pooping through the gratings onco more "), ho ought to know of what he s talking. e An Amerlcan ssilor dlod recently in Paris who gwallowod snd digosted knives for his amuse- mont. Tho Paris Siccle says: * When tho body wna oponed thore was found in it fourtean “nives, all corroded and partly dissolved. On one of them, howover, the namo of tho maker might bo still distinguished; & coppor button and part of o silver setting which had adorned anothor woro scarcely touched, but tho nails, springs, and horn handlos wero in & atnte of do- composition, The final malady and deaths had Dboon eaused by tho haft of a large knife bocom- ing fixod moross tho intestinos, Tho stomach itsolf was not at all injured, end Cummings, af- tor hialsat exporiment, had caten with oxcellent sppotite,”* It thorofore apposts that the swal- lowing ond digesting of knives did not kill tho gnilor, but he died bocasue ono of them got snurled up in his Intestines. While his death in to be rogrotted, thero is still coneolation in ro- momboring that ke was an Amerlean, if ho was full of knives; and that bis examplo was calou- lated to inspire Parigians with ouvy ab the capa- Dilitles of tho Amorioan stomach, It is statod in tho Enstorn papors that tho ex- eontors of the will of tho lato Edwin Forrost | noods, snd will some duy havo havo made & gottlomont with his formor wife, by which sho 18 to rocoive 805,000 in satiafaction of hior olafra. Tho oxoontors are now roleased from | and stability of the uation.” this ombarrnssmont, and ave st lberty to pro- cood with tho establighment of tho Tdwin For- rest Homo, for whioh ho provided in his will. ‘Pho pottloment of this olaim showa the pooulinri- ty of tho divorca laws of tho Btate of New York. Whon Mre. Forrost was divorced abia had full aullority to morry sgaio § ‘but Mr, not, Itwasalso orderod thab ho should pay alimony for her support, whick would equitably conao on the death of Mr, Forrest. But, undor {hio Jaws of the State of Now Yorl, claim for furthor support, and, xathor tan tost tho mattor in the courts, with the prospoot of doleat, the oxooutors havo sottled with her we statod sbovo. A fow days sluce wo recorded the faot of & woman living with lor third husband and drawing alimony from tho othor two. —————— Forvost had | nat to bo o ¢ promiso sho putin hor | colns—moncy. Tho ——————— NOTES AND OPINION. The nowapapors all ovor tho country, and of sl slindos of politics, sppoar no well nntinod to Tavo Rlehardson oab of tho Tronsury that Drls- tow goon fn with a wavo of npplanse. And yet, a good many catch broath to sek, Who s Briatow 2" ~TWa hava yot to oo tho Ropublicnn paper thab {ustiflos Pronident Gront's appointment of Tich- ardson as Judgo of the Court of Claims, Not ta burden our columns with quotations from all, nor unduly to emphasizo the romarka of one, wa quote from tho Burlington (Ia.) Zawk-Eye, now odited by Frank Iatton ¢ ‘Presfdont Grant should not mnke such an_aproints raont expeating to ho fudorsad by tho people, and, it lo does o oxpect, ho should bo disappoluted. Tl B oo and Jialk of 'tho Banborn, isisioss will gt bad color snd_odor. to tho judictal ermins ; and, Richnrdson was 710t 8 profesaional Now England places Juoldor, ono night hopo hat, knowlng, sx ho must Know, tho astimation iu which he {n Leld by the pub- ilc, 1o would not stop Juto the place tendered hha by ho President that ho might have an casy full. Tha Prosident should not heaftata to et publio offcinls of the Richardsan stamp drop, no matter low hnrd the foll muy bo, Il ns provod unworthy ot pubiic cone fidence, and tho best placo for him 3 in tho basemonbe story of obllvion, —Hera 19 gomo ploasant roading for our for« olgn-born citizons. In the debate on tho (80« cailed) Civil-Rights bill, in tho Bonato, Mr. Pratt, of Indiang, anid : A It hoa geemed to me & most surprising thing thad poonte ‘who doclajm agalnst what thoy call negro-oiuats ty uro never hoard tolart suy objection to admission 1o fullest rights af oitizenship of tho foreignor, though ho beignorant to tho Inst degroe, a paiper, or & crimi nal, unocquajnted with onr laws, and not capablo ovon af spoakiug our languuge, Moro thon o filrd of amillion of emigrants from ovory country of Europs annualty lnd upon our shoros, and are heattily wele . comad fo tho privilegos of citizenship, with whom it 18 ot unfair foay the negro population of this coun« try will hear favorablo comparjaon in oll tho elements thint go to make ugeful oftizens. ~T'hore are to ba elections of county ofticort Aug. 8 in Kontucky and Tounessce, and Navame bor oloctions of Congressmen in both Statesy also, in Tonnessee, st the Novembar clection, & Governor and Logislaturo aro to bo chogen, The Tonnosseo papors aposk of these August olege tions us Lappily paving the way to a complete upification of the auti-Radical voto in November. In Kontucky, the day of the August eloctiona will be, in somo districts, thio doy for Domocratia primary oloctions to nominsto candidates for Congroes. —In Virginia ond Georgla the Conscrvative Stato Executive Committecs will presently meed 10 Buggost a plan whoreby the Conservative Yot in onch State, st tho Novembor olection of Con- gresemen, may be massod upon rogular oandis datos. At the lust electionssovoral acats wera 108t for lack of this precaution. ~Last yoor, in Naino, npon thie suggestion of an snonymous nowspaper-nrticle, Josoph II. Willisms roceived 2,130 votes for Gavernor. Thia yoar, we obsorvo, It is proposed tohave & People's Btato Convention, and it is belioved Dossible to unito ll the Opposition voto on Mr, Williams; in which case tho Boptembor result might be marked * clogo and doubtful.” —The Rhode Island Togislature renssembles noxt Tncadny (aftor & briof recoss) to cloct a Unitod' Btates Sonator vico Bpraguo, and with nothing olao to do at this scssion. ‘There ard olght candidates, and the Providonco Pressanys: ‘Some doamod strong Just after tho Stato clectlon avo developed wenks otuers deemad weak have gath- oved strength, Dlxon atock hus not sdvinced ; Burue Wido's has; Howard still declinea to be a condidste; Baretow's {rlends ure fnorenstugs Sueleld fs neorly st zeros ond our * unknown fulogor” i8 atill the bal- anco of powor, Wo caunot ot spoll his nane, The prospect now i that a long aud todious cotest, after $ie oxamplo recontly set by Massachusoits, will pro- cede tho final vote, —Tho Illinois Slate Register has = lottor from Haucock County, suying: The Democracy of Hancack fs 3 unit in opposition {o inflation or repudiation of any sort, Litn Siuta tcket, composed Of upright Democratio and Libersi mem, bs nominated on the sound old plstform of bard money, Freo Trade, economy, State_rights, and equal Tights to all—Iaborers, farniars, mochanice, morchanty Al lagros of eftizona—ahd the Domocrats will make o ¢ reaurrection” similur to_tho BIll Allen wako in Oblo 1ost full. This would bo o broad platform sud a sejuare tickot, and would not bo. composod of & clazs of men who, niter deliate, deelda by a close vato that all atler occlipstions besides themstlyes may vote their Yicket with perfoct immunity from oll dsigor of belng burdened “with suy rospousibility in the cholce of tdatea or tho conduct of tho Convention! Itls Proper to bring this subjoct before Domocrata In timo. —In answer to Republican iniirtioniat papers of Towa, the Keokuk Galo Oily says: It thero bo among Repullican constitucnclee the aliforonces shown fo oxist by the party papers, with the Demacrutic press avarywhora almost Hulid agalust intlation, 1 it not supremely foollsh to wuut to forca Upon flio Rupubllcan parly the precis fssus us to “which aur pacty 1y ost dividod, and tho opposition Jarty, a8 indicated by fta pross, the most uuited? §Wo 4k tht questlon to Ropublicnn inflationtsts et~ ply from tho standpolnt of practical polioy, and 83 thiough no principlo wero involved, Lut tuiera 18 & princiyle {nyolved,—ouo vital to the Ropublican partys Yo publio_credit, publio welfurc, good govermineut, Ahd, whothor tho Ropublican pasty staud or fall, that privelplo must ot bo relinquishod, Tho Ropublican Jarty, and the Govornment, promised tho soldicr, ihe Foalor's widow, the Goverument'a croditor, the busl. iaas of flio cotiutry,” the holder of ita enforcod cur- rency, ot { would pey & dollus oty demand,—o dollsr vile s dollar, Its dollar is not worth & dollar, and it doosn't pay it promise on domand, Yot tlhe Gove ‘ernment sacrodly promised it would § the Republicsn iy again ad agaia sacrodly promised it should and Droula: S °And now some Jlopublicans aro irying to get ho purty to say it lea been neting in bod faith oll along; that s mot mocewnary that the Govornment houid keop its promise fn fact, that it ia quite nocessary tlat 1t ul ouldnt! Do you think you will ot Nepublicans to do that—ta bo i party to liat ar= &0 aat of fuancial folly and political kuavery? It i3 & ffvoat deal casler to bronk up the party thun to gob most of them to bo gullty of it —Thore i8 ecarcely & subjoct in tho wholo rauge_of disoussion which -dovelops 88 many mental odditios as tho one question of money. Somo gontloman, writing to the Western Parm Journal _upon the finan- olul situntion, soys: ‘‘What tho nation ia a natiounl eurrency {ssuod diractly from tho Duitod Statoy Troasury to tho people,—not promises to pay, but MoNEY, based and uccumf upon the welth It would seom a8 it & man who could_sco through @ barrol witth oth honds out might save himeolf tho mortifica- tion of such a biundor as tho above., o uays tho futuro curroncy willnokbo “promises {o ay," but * money ;" yob ho snys this money i {’n’én « baged and spoured _upon tho woalth and atabillty of the nation.” If . shis Millonnium is to pay,” what neod of se- eurity ? If it is to bo vorltable money, how Tidiculous to sk tho Govornmont to booomo ro- gpousible for t] Who ever hioard of & Govern- mont becomiog securily for its gold wnd sitver ides f4 tho vary scma of ridioutous abeurdity t— Vinton (o) Lagle. ———— ¥ A Oarlist Genoral Orders The Carlist Gon. Llio has issued a cheorful gonera) ordor."" o tolls the Royal srmy why 1t votroated from Bilbzo, Tho main thing was thn{ would have beon killed if they hed ro- maloed. The Gonoral i evidently afraid of The vacanoy in tho oftico of State Trossurer of { gyiou aud troaton, and that sors of thing, Ho Now York e led to & gomowhat ourions techni onl, butinvoluntary, violation of law. Mr, Raines, tho Trenauror-oloot, boasmo Ingane gome time sinoo and 18 now in the Btato Liunatio Asylum, g office hins moanwhilo remained vacsut, with tho hope that dir. TRaines' reason would be re- ptored. On tho let of June, lowevar, it bocame nocossary to provide for withdrowing from the Q'rongury abaut §800,000 to pay Govornmont ém= ployea and discbargo othor_ obligations, The gtatuton provido that mo monoy can be drawn | of the arny, aayAt “WTho enemy wants to employ other arms which are by no moant too noblo; thoy wish to omploy o uotion, and csues rumars of ‘oon- veulok,’ arrangomonts, and similor things to bo propagated, I fool suro that those rumors only oxcito your oontempt, . Novertheloss, I must warn {nu. and af tho same timo command you, to watoh with tho grentest care whoover {8 fn- troduced rmong yon to,sow division aud dis- truet, Any one you hoar speaking in terms which may projudico the Kiug's_cauio and that arvest him, aud I suthorizo tho wnloss by the Treasuror on cheoks subsoribed | Ohiely of b uf“m at onco to try him by & verbal by tho Trepeuror snd gountaralgned by tho coourt-mart} To rolouso tho Btate from this Camptrollor. tho Governor waa obliged anhumlug situation, and whatover b his condition to ghoot him, On my pare 1 wil bo inexorabls, snd any ono who, from wealness or malloo, coms e e it of b Ol | E o b o oot oo wil