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CHICAGO DAILY RIBUNE: SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1874, - TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE #RANS OF SUDECRIPTION (PAYABLE IN ADVANOR). L) | Bund 2., S1E.00| asky 288 'aris 0f & yoal the samne rate. Te proront dolay and mistakas, bo suro and gira Post ©Mcoaddross n full, including Btate and Connty. ‘Romittances tuny be made lthor by draft, oxpross, Post Diica order, or in rogistorod lottors, at our rlsk. TENMA TO CITY RUBACIIDENS, Dily, delivorod, Bundny excoptad, 2 conte per wank. Daily, dolivered, Bunday Included, f0 conts por wooks Addross ‘TIE TRIVUNE COMPANY, = Cornor Madinon and Dantborn-sta., Ubleago, 1t s TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS. ACADEMY OF MUSIO—-Talstod atreat el waen Mad- Tho Vokes Family. Engaasioft iug, + Doilesof the MOVIOKIGTUS THIATRIE-Madlsan strost, bobweon entor Afapazonont. of . A, Bothorn . Prathorn, ol Do nud ovoming. RATRF—Cornor of Wabash avenuo A T orfarmanca. AUdallat a'nm v of Arabs from Jorusalom, ** Izlon." " Aftornoon nd Svoning. G- Lakoshore, footof Adama PO emiait - Aliarnooh Aad evoming: e ——— SOCIETY MEETIN R, REN LODGE, NO. 209, A. F. & A, 3. B LR g gt arontal Hall, 122 Lassllo-y 07 SUNTOR, Heorotary. —_— * "BUSINESS NOTICES. EER <03 IN WALL STREET, EX- e e FUMBRIDOR £ O § Wallat,, N. Y+ WARRANTED. Four to alx bottlos bf Dr. Plorec's Goldsn Modloal Dis- YOry Aro. warrante ‘onro Salt Rhoum or Totter and o et kin af implos on tho faco, To o fout ot~ o eeamfod 1o gloat tho syatom of Bolls, Oacban: s, o Horee Holg fo mix bottjco avo marraatod Lo oiro ivorst KIncof Erpmipoins and Lototios amon tho falr x to t:h Bottles aro warcantod to ouro Hunni nwl tho X0 i Borraptior Runaing Uloore. Elgiit to fon bot- [0 nro warrsated to aurs Borofulous Soros and Swollings. o to VT Botflo, v earrantad o caro Litor omplai i - Baroh o, 1678, Ncia oty & (ais trial, and itwilt do afl p0/ to do, nu'l‘ moro too. 'When I waa 16, 1 1220 LYin twenty-olgist yoars I iava beon b por; gkt of xl!“lw. nl\l(l‘l tha medicines and dootors’ 1mon 20 to At {hroo Hunirod dots Bt worsa: when | gavo s ail the summor “\m\lf\h 0 s, and told my Lusband, , that it was too Iata to IY furthor, but ho oty st o ok . {ound it was helping ma vory muoh. 0 o oSdbied it Ustareh aid Soto Tiront, sad wanal, e e Cis tibat 11 oo sar, Aud Ty volo0 was as dull es bo. Tusre was constaut pain in my he ) Y viloa s o vory. By tivor was vory b body, it wi my hiad on my il g 15 G for tiro montne. 1 e ke i o A3 Yours, with ro- RIS LAGKIE The Chicans Teibune, Saturday Morning, June 13, 1874. (=== The House made in order to the Bundry Civil “Appropristion Lill yestordsy an smendmont for #ho payment of the old Ohoctaw fund of $2,100,- 0. This action Indicates & romarkable ghange of sentiment. Thore Is reason to bo- kleve that a considerablo part of tho old Choctaw sfund will ba distributoed in Washington. — . Itis rumored in Whashington that Prosidont Hrant aod Senator Schurz have burled the t;:tcl.mt. 1t i 6aid that Sonator Jones acted s ediator, and that agroement of fecling on the jpurrency quostion was tho bond of sympathy Potwoon the persons coucornod. Tho reportis ‘grorth montioning, 08 an indication of tho thinga Ruat o beliovod poseblo of Prosidont Grant. . Counsel for tho Alton Railroad Company ob- &chd trom the Bupromo Court, in session -at t. Vernon, Til., yosterday s supersedeas of the Gudgmont rendered by the Sangamon County Cirenit Court undor the Tilinois “Railroad law, Xho supersedeas was applied for on the gronnd, | ‘Brat, that tho onso was takon out of tho ju- adlotion of tho Btnte Court by tho wrlt of cer- iorari issned from the United Btatos District Yourt; second, that tho Tailrond lnw violatos o Qonstitution of Illinois andof the United tatos 3 third, that defondants were cntitlod to ‘Q'-omo il of oxcoptions. ; ts buginess snd finally adjourned. The last ys of tho session havo not been fruit- )nl in good doeds or good words on the art ©of ¢ho dolegaten; and it is wnot gunmflns too much to esy that tho Ro- nlon, a8 awholo, would kave beon far from ocosefal but for the contributious of men rominent In Anti-Slavery days who wore unable r onwilling to attend in person, These contri- ‘Butions saved the Convention from obsourity. gw Lo collected and printéd thom from day to ay, and this morning complote our reports in a ‘gupplomental sbeot—tho tbird we havo issuod “Wince the oponivg of tho Convention on Tucsday. ‘gt any fault is found with tho roports that have oppeared in these columns, it will not be ou the gcora that thoy have beon too brief, i Eflmn Convention of Abolitionists kas fiuished ———s The Houso of Reprosontatives refusod yoster flny, by a voto to 108 to 48, to sppropriate BIG000 for the oxpenses of the CivikServico Roform Commission, Republicans snd Demo- £rats soom to bo protty well agroed that the Re- Zorm s at present conducted s o' slom, buta Fespectablo minority i8'in favor of continuing gho Commission 88 boing at least o first step fo the right dircction, The best ovi- Menco we have had thet the Noform §s not o sham is tho opposition it has et from Gon, Butler and the broad-and-butter frigado under bis command. Most of thesd warrlors aro membors of the Republican’ party, @nd subscribed 1o tho Phbiladelphia plattorm, which contained a plank distinctly rocognizing #ud approviug the principlo of Civil-Rersico Ro- gorm. DBut it wasone thing “to pledge the sonor of the party,” and anotber thing to koep #hat pledge when it could bo sately broken, Mr, WWard, of Cicago, dosorves tho crodit of having inade o mauly protest against the ropudiation of the Philadelphia platform, which has beon tho polioy of tho Nepublican parly over since the gocond oleotion of Prosident Grant, Y The Chicngo produce markets wora irregular mud uncertein yestorday, Bfous pork was quiet, nud 23¢e por brl lower, closlng ab $17.65 cash sud $17.60 soller July, Lard woe in mod- erato domand, and G@7ifo por 108 Ihs Righor, 8l §11,10@11.12{¢ eash, and 811,16@11.20 moller July, Menta were in light demand, and gtoady at 63(@0}¢c for ekouldors, 03e for short xibe, 93¢0 for short clear, and 11@1134o for gweot-plokled hams, Highwines were moro potive and, unchenged at B4igo por gallon, Lake Areighta wore dull and & shado casier, olosing at B2{@?33{c for corn by 8ail to Buffalo. Flour was Bull and unchongod. Whoat was less notive, and BE@3{c highor, closing quite weak at $1.19)¢ eash and 81,189 seller July. Corn was vory motivo, and 1@2e highor, olosing vory weak at B3)go cash and 63}¢o soller July. Onts were in good domand, and 3(@3go higher, closing at £03g0 cash and 44)¢0 goller July. 1tye was dull wt 34@1c lower, nt 840. DBarley was dull and un- ghangod, at ¥1.26 for No, 2. Flogs wore nctiva @nd firm, the yards heing oleared &t 24.90@5.00 Jor noor to ohoico. Uattle wore more quiet aud oualor, with snlen at $2.50@0.60, Bhoep were In goant supply, and sold higher. Panl do Cassngono 18 the bully journalist of Franco, 1o has fought more duols and killed his man oftenor than any contemporancous ruf® finn. Hovoral daya ngo Lo publishod an abusive articlo, which was resonted by tho Itepublican Delogates in the Assombly, Io bs now mado known his willlngness to answer the ap- pointed ohamplon' of tho Iepublloans on the flold of - honor, and haa added & bit of gratuitous Dbraggadosio that will provoke & good deal of ridioulo wherovor it jaroad. Tho proposal {sto match nino editors of Lo Pays agolnst nn oqual number of Ropub- lican Doputtos, tho choles of wospons sud antag- oniats to bo mado by lot. Thers Lave boon fighting editors bofore Cassaguao, bubt & pews- paper oatablishmont armed cap-a-pie {8 somo- thing now wundor tho sun. BSome of tho Now York journals, i’ rumor mpoaks truo, mny find good (uso for thelr intollootus dopnrtments by omulating tho oxampla which bas boon sot in Parls, the sourco of now ideas in dross and mannors. Porhinys tho safo thing to do will bo to regard Cassagnac's ohallongo 8s & smart ropartee to tho foolish demand of the Ro- pulican Doputy, ox-Mayor Clomoncoau, e THE CURRENOY ‘‘ COMPROMISE."” Whon wo oxprossed tho opinion that it would bo impossiblo for Congross to pass any Curronoy il this gesslon, thore was ono contingoney that wa did not count upon, viz.: that Morton, Lo- gon, and the inflationist party in the Benato would ** flop,” and give thoir support to a moas- uro of contraction—n messure proposing to re- storo spoole paymonta within four yoars, Could anything more fully domanstrato the demagoguo oharacter of tho spesches thoy have baon mak- iug and moasures thoy have boon urging during the past throo months? Tho so-onlled **com- promise " reported by Mr. Morton, which passad thoSouate yostorday,and whichia printed in fullin our Washington dispatchos this morning,is s moroe thorough-going moasuro for spacio payments than tho bill roported by SBonator Shorman four weoks 8go, and which Morton, Logan, and Wright emas- oulated with their amendmonts bofors it went to tho Houso. It proposes to make thegroonbacks oonvertiblo into a 6 per cent gold bond on the 18t of Jonunry, 1878, Mr. Morton, by way of showing whero tho compromise comes in, said thiat it was hoped that 6 6 por cont bond would then bo at par, In point of fact, the § per cont bouds aro 2 per cont above par in gold now. Pass this bill and thoy will be b or 68 por cent above par in 1878, for tho only cloutl resting on tho crodit of tho Governmont I8 ita failuro to provide for tho redomption of tho greonbaoks. Romove thiscloud, and tho wholo list of Govorn- ‘mont uocurities will advauce. Thiy bill is some- thing liko tho compromise botweon Bt Michaol and the dragon “whon tho latter wns_utterly cast out. . There novor —was & moro ridiculous surronder, or more convinei ng proof of tho Iack of principle, for, if Mortou and Logan bolloved what thoy have boon tolling the pooplo about tho ourroncy the past winter, thoy aro now votlng for a moasure fraught, in thoir. estimatlon, with ruin to all fu- dustrisl intoreats. If thoy did not bo- liove what they wore telling, thoy are sclf-con- victod charlatans, upflt to bo trusted with any public omployment. The truth is, thoy had no opinions which they dared to put In opposition to the opinfons of tho Prosidont. Ever sinco the veto of thelr bill, thelr kneeshave boen knookiog togother, until how the Jonos memo- randum has sont them sprawling. A protly spootaclo they are, for gods and men | Tt ls 6nid that the Prosident will veto ovon this bill, because it doca not restore specie pay- ments soon onough, or beesuse it provides for froe banking bofore specic payments are ro- ntored. Wo think ho will not voto it. Very likely ho would prefor s mossuro which should restore speclo payments during his torm of office, but tho public will hardly sympathize with that soutimont whon thoy reflect that Lo as endured tho ageravations of irredeomable papor six yoors with the utmost oquanimity. And, so far 28 froo banking goes, who, we sek, s likely to rush into that business under tho present law, with the assurance that Lo muet ba prepared to _redeom in specie within four years ? If tho in- flatiomsta sot any store by the froe-banking clause, wo take leave to assure them that for thoir purposes it i8 nobt worth o rush, Morcover, tho cluss wha are brawl- ing for more currency aro - just the class who don’t want froe banking, On the contrary, thoy want to got rid of the bauks wo now have. Tho bill really provides for a resumption of speclo paymonts insido of four yosrs. Wo hopo it will pags tho House and that tho Presidont will sign -it. Thoro {sdunger in throwing this question Into tho flold of politics. Thero i no knowing what the noxt Cougross may consiat of, or what form of curroncy madness may bo doveloped by the oleotions of the prosont yoar. Ifa bill is now enactad into Inw, tho faith of tho nation will bavo been pledged in s way that ovorybody can understaud, and that wiil be tho ond of it, THE STRIKE IN 0H10. The are sovoral strikes in progtess in Ohio, but the striko I8 that of the minors of the Hock- ing Valloy. It began two months ugo. It has, therofore, already cost the men more thau they oan gain in many months, it it finally succeeds. But it will pot succeed. Soveral sttompta af compromigo have failod, by whoso fault we do not know. Probably each side, embittored by the protracted strugglo, 18 now too prejudiced to come to any falr agreement. Ab any rato, the mivo-ownora buvo at last declarod open war sgainst tho Union, Thoy will hire noue of ity members at any prico, howover low, ‘I'hoy havo onlisted colored workmen jat Richmond, Mom- phis, aud Louisville, Tho nogroes are desoribod a8 s rugged sot of mon. Mauy of thom sre ox- soldlors, Tho firat detachment, 840 satrong, reachod ' Nelsonville, whoro tho chiof troublo is, at 4 a 'm, Thursday., Twenty-ono policemon cucortod them from Columbus, On their srrival, thoy were armed aud put on picket duty. Mr, TLongutreth's mine has become * Fort Long- stroth,” I'ho American flag floats ovor it; ita bulidings sre garrisonod ; ita outslirts aro pickoted, 'Tho idea that the nogroos would work with & pick in ono hand sud o muskot in thoe othor Las not boou carried out. Tho danger is too groat. Tho musket noods both hunds, Bo- yond thie plcket line of Fort Lougstreth is an- othor, 'The Uulon men Lave put soutries around the fort, Anyman trylug to enterlt must run the ganatlot of two luos, A person “who bLns had exerlence in working colored miners {u opposition to Union meu "—this I8 cor- tainly an odd profession to follow—is iu com= mand of the bosloged foroes. ‘I bosiegera aro led by thelr Presidont. Gov, Allon's Becratary I8, on the ground making pacifie speaches, aud two compaules of tfoops from Cinolnuati are 1 read- Incas to move at a moment's notice. Paoitlo pro- negro rooruits havo boon fired at, and thore was desultory skirmish- ing botwoen tho two sols of sontriea all Thursday night. Enrly yestorday morning a largo com- pany of miners moved up to the colorad pickets and mado friondly overtures, Thoy promised kind troatmont to ‘all who would joln in tho siriko, and agreed to pay tho fares of thoso who desired to roturn homo, Thirty or forty no- groos were provalled upon by theso ar- gumonts, and went over to tho strik ors' oamp. That thoy woie as kindly troatod ns thoy could ressonably expect isap- paront from tho fact that many of them wers afterwards encountered on tho road bolweon the. opposing hoadquarters in varlous stagoes of drunkonness. The miuers fairly won the day, but relaforcemonts aro oxpocted by tho opora~ " tors, and tho ond of it all no man can toll. This atato of things isa bittor commont on _our incapneity to reconcllo capital and labor. Horo {s a bit of olvil war in a Northorn Stato, and that Htate la not Ponnsylvania, whoro it Lag bo- como a Bottled thing that conl must be paid for at the pit's mouth with monoy and blood. Ttis not woll that this doctrine should galn wider ore- donge. 'Tho oporators of the Hocking Valloy may, thoy probably will, conguer the Union in this onao, but what then? Ero long tho colored mon will bave a Union, Then thero will bo an- other strike, another protracted quarrel, porhaps bloodsbed, sud finally another sdt of mon, who will, in thelr turn, form s Union. Then the old circle will bo trod again, and so on ad inflnilum, untilcommon sonso is hoard. Ita mossagels thia: .An industrial partnership botwoen mastors and mon bas beon found to wWork toa charm in English oonl-mines ; try it hero. Put tho mines into tho banda of joint-stock compunies.. Lot tho prosont ownors Liold (eny) two-thirds of tho stock. Boll tho othor third to tho. mluors, if they want to buy it. At flrst thoy will probably refuse, Afterwards they will compoto for it. Fix a rato of profit somowhat above the average rato of the last fow yodrs, and provide that whon the profits aro moro than enough to poy this now rate of {utorest on the capital etook, the surplus shall bo divided into two equal parts, ono of which shall be an extra dividond upon capital, and tho othor & dividend upon labor, to be divided fu proportlon to the wages earned by ench man during tho porlod for which the dividend is declared, Buch & plan, while it will in 'no way provent the prosont ownors from con- trolling absolutely their proporty, will yot ‘mnko it the interest of every employe that the mines should vield the largest posalble profits, If adopted, it would provent wasto. It would stop strikes, It would insuro the hiring, not only of -a man's musclo, but of his skill and his good~ will. Tho oxtra monoy paid the mon would be only part of the exirn money galnod by tho mnsters, Such a schemo bad proved a complote success in England, under circumstancos as bad #8 those which now prevail in Obio. Théso aro the dictates of common sonso. If the warriorsof Hooking Valloy aro wise, they will heod them, THE TROUBLE IN FRANCE, On June 8 tho feoling st Versaillea was any- thing but cheorful. A storm was beginuing to blow which las over since boen gaining in vol- umo and forco, What destruction it msy yot make, or how it may shatter the temporary framework of government in France, it is hard to predict. Fronoh politica doubtloss aro gov- erncd by law, as are all other things under the eun. Only the law,of French politica is very hard to got at.: It is somotning liko tha Inw of tho winds, or of epilt quicksilver. % On tho 8th, 125 Doputios. signed a potition for tho dissolution of the Assombly. The siguers hoped to be rewnforcod by 105 moro, 1. e., by the Loft Contra, .The Left Cortro, or Modorato Ropublicans, aro dotormitiod that, bofore the Asaembly adjourns in August, tho question of Tepublic or dissolution shell bo gottled. Of courso, thoy desire that tho Republic shall bo proclaimed definitely and made perpotusk Fhailing in this, they would insist on dissolution of the Chamber. M, Dufauro, it is announcod, will in n fow days ask the Committee on Institu- tlonal Laws to come to a voto on tho'first article of & bill introduced ono year ago, which provides that the Govornment shall consist of n Sonato, & Chambor of Ropresentatives, and a Presidont,— ‘which means tho Ropublic. Before moving for a dissolution, howaver, it {8 proposed that, 1 M. Dufaure's motion fails, the Loft Contro will move to rofer a like proposition to & new Com- mission. It is thought that, should tho last motlon fail, all tho memberd of all the divisions of tho Left would resign en masse. ‘The feeling of the Loft:againat the Bonapart- ista ond in favor of the declsion of the question, Republio or no Rapublic, was intensified whon, on tho 9th, M. Girord, Deputy from tho Depart- ment of the Nievre, resd bofore the Assombly o paper which ho said had been ciroulated during the recent campaign in his dopartmont, and which ealled on all Bonspartist ofllciala to confor all appointmenta of which thoey had the bestowal upon such retired oflicors as were in favor of M. Borgemo, tho Bonapartist candidate. M. Girerd addod that M, Magne,the Minister of Finance,had furnishod lsts of such officors to the Governmont. The Bouspartist, Rouher, pronounced the doo- ument a forgery, but eaid ho was in favor of in- quiry. Gambotts, the leader of the Extremo Loft, or of the Radical Ropublicany, accused both Magne and Cissoy of complicity in the movement to strongthon the Bonapartist in- fluonco. Whereupon Rouher retorted by ro- calling the fraudulent contracts and lmproper sppointments roported againat 3. Gambetia by the Committeo on the Acts of tho Sopionnat. This waa too much for Gambotta. - He roso aud eald that he had slwoys answered tho quostions of the Committeo, but would not allow tho # wrotchos "—monning tho Donapartists—io question Dlim. M. Duffet threatoned to movo a vote of consure on Gambotta, When lonving the Chambor Gambetta and o friend by whom he was accompanied wero insulted by s Bouapartist, The fcoling in Paris is of course jntonse. Parieis not Bonapartist, and hence tho necessity of placing a guard on the train tlint conveyed the Deputies from Versnilles to Paria to protect tho Dounpartsts, the fooling aguinet them by Gambottn's supporters boing very groat. On tho other hand, tho foeling of {he Donapartists against Qambotta is not the kindest. 'The Bonopurtist journsls aro raving against tho Loft Coutro, The Bonspartists bave again insulted Gambotts, On tho 10tk an at- tompt was made by Cagsanovs, a member of the ‘Tmporial Guard, to Btrike him, Count Halnt Orolx wae moro succossful next day, and sctu. ally did etriko him on tho roturn F: tho Doputies to Versalllos. Tho Governniett haa promised to institute an inquiry into the procesd- ings. What largor osk may grow from tho emall acorn wo hall loarn soon, or whethor any shell, In the mesntimo, the Government has beon de- featod on & very important moasuro, On the 10th tho Assombly adopted an smendmont to the Muniolpal Eleotoral bill fixing the ago of eleators at 21 Instoad of 25 yosra. Thislan galn to tho Topublicans, ns most of tho young mon bobwaon 91 nnd 26 belong to and will voto with thom. Tho voto argues gront atrangth for the Ropubli- cans, and itis just possiblo thoy may have strength onough to effcct n dissolution of tho Assombly should they not succeed in having the Ropublio deolarod and tho Soptonnat onded. THIRD-TERM POLITICS. ‘The Washington National Nepublican ls an organ. It grinda out the tunes for which it gota pay, progent or prospective. Tho Investigation into tho Distrtot of Columbin affalrs has shown that its editor drow inspiration from tho purses of mon unplonsatitly mixed up in thoso alfairs. Tho ovonts of tho last fow years bave shown that he draws more innocent Inspiration, in puraly political mattors, from poraons high In offico. It is of somo import, theroforo, whon the Republican boldly declares that & third torm for Grant {a not only possiblo, but porhaps prob- able. The oditorial which makes this assor- tion is a loug one. It bogine with ihe fravk admission that the Republican party is no longor & unit, but a eomponnd of faotlona, with mony lesues and many leadors. 'Thoso among thoso leadors who aro fairly entorod for tho Prosidontlal raco aro then mentionod and disoussod. Sonator Carponter is tho first man trotted out for ispootion, Various undeserved adjootives aro showorod upon him, and his *¢ opportunitios of sorvice aud of schilevement” aro doclared to be “fully equal to those of any other mon fn tho country,” BMr. Carponter cau congolo bimself with this thought when tho morniog of March 5, 1875, ushers him into pri- vato lifo, Mr. Morton ia **a suporb politician,” whu hioids hig friouds with *bonds of stocl,” and will, “in. cortain contingonoles, prove s formidable opponent in the strugglo for nomina- tion." BMr, Conkling is an Intolleotual and moral porfoction. Why was not tho phraso rounded out with & hint at the physieal perfootion of the Republican' Adonis? In lis caso, too, that evor-rendy " contingonoy™ comes into play. ' Wo can imogino," says the Republican, ¢ contingenoy in which lla nomination and elec- tion would bo anabsolute cortainty.” The prido of Iilinols I tronted of In briof. Ho Toprosonts the elan of tho party,~whencas wo infor that the elanis in favor of natlonal bankruptoy at the earliest possiblo moment. Hoe is a good stump spanker, and could, with good backing, carry & convention with a * Hurrah, boys!® Thisis all sbout Logan, 1t is evident that tho Hon. John A. would have dono better to buyan intorest in the Republican instend of In the Inler-Ocean. Tho Iatter would have fawned upon him, ot any rate, ond tho formor now damus him with faint praiso. Bpoaker Blawna ' never blunders.” Ho hos a large assortmont of othor admirablo quolitics. Ho js now ' bonding an iron energy.” to attain tlio Presidoncy. Bald encrgy is not ** vaib or hopeloss,” Gon. Butlor is snother man whom tho party would be delighted to honor. Iio has moro onomlos and more frionds than auy other man. Ho is “atrong" with somo poople, an “idol " to others, aud a *'tower of strongth” for stll othors. If nominated, he would *ro- ceivo & populnr voto that would nstonish his enomies,” Hix cnemles, who do not think that knavos and fools form the majority in any Stato, would, of course, be astonisbed if B. F. B. car- ried one Stato. Mossrs. Dawen. aud Garfleld ara out of tho- fight. “But," says the Republicn,~It is slgnificant “Dut,"—* what of Gon,: Grant?” If his suo~ cossor wore to o elocted now, “no candidato upon any platform could defoat him.” He will probably bo strongor in 1876 than Do is mow. ‘Ho moy rofuss re-cleo tion, ho mny contont him- .| self with naming his succossor, he may tako tho third term that is within his grasp, o *con bp re-oleoted for a third. term almost without op- position‘and fu spite of all the tiaditions of our politics.” * Traditions are atronger than the ‘Waslington - Republican snd the Loulsville Courier-Journal thiuk. Yot wo can imhgine ono contingancy in which they may yield to the third-term idoa. If in tho campaign of 1870 Gon, Graut ropresents gold and his opponent or opponents rags, then he may win the race, The Independent Conventions of Illinois and Indiana have doua their best to make this contingancy o fact. . . BUSINESS PROSPECTS. +The opinions of leading businces men on the ‘prosent condition of trade avd its prospects aro not uniform. 'Though differing widely, the ron- ‘song of that difforonce can bo found in tho nature of the business pursued, and tho activity, or the want of 17, that forces itsolf upon tha attontion of tho obsorver. Some dopartments of trade snd manufactures wero paralyzed by the panis lst Baptomber, and thoy aro likely to romain so for an indefinite poriod in the future, Formany yonrs previous to the rovulsion, railway building sud bonds had sbsorbed most of the surplus capital of tho natlon as fastagit accumulatod. Tho manufacturo of iron, stimulated by an enor- - mous tanff, wns, therofore, active, and those -ongagod in it werd exceedingly prosperous. Of course, this’ trado is now'dull,”and must, continue .80 certamly til the country has time -to-j:rdcover.. from - tho' too. rapid oxtousfon of our rajlways for most of tho timo since the War closed. Tho manufacturo and salo of what aro proporly ealled luxuries aro also by no menns active, Prudent poople always cut down thelr expenditures in this dircction duriog s panio, and for & considerablo timoe after business in other dopartments boglns to rovive, Hence & large claes of poople East and West bava reason for the opinion that trade 18 oxces- sivoly dull, 3 TLet us now inquire what elements of hopo thore aro for s gradunl sud suro rotuin to s reasonablo dogree of prosperity. Most of tho lquidations caused by the panic have been effacted, Tho losses Lave boou charged off, and, while the capital and stock eohed- ules Lbave sunk down sadly enough for many men ounco in tho list of milllonarios, yo it cannot be donicd that the ac- tunl wealth of tho nation has stoadily Inoreased, True, many of tho new railways defaulted on their intorest and most of thom passed thoir dividonds, but by far the largor numbor of roads paid the interest on thelr bonds promptly, and a fow have declared dividends on their astook., Tn addition tothnt, iuterest duo to individual capl- taliats, lifo-Insurance companies, trust funds of all kinds, in tho aggrogate amounting to tens of milliona of monoy, hias been pald. To this must Lo added tho intorost disbursod by the Govern- ment evory six months, and the proilta on the grooory and othor dopartmonts of trado, many of which bave boon doing & successful busf- ness, Binee tho advauco .in comm, sov- eral montbs sinco, our farmers have boon rocoiving fair pricos for farm products, and an immense amount of money s now in thelr hands, whioh, in due time, will flnd ita way back to tho chaunels of businees, And withal, the prospacta for o good corop of oll kinda of co- ronla woro nevor bottor, For wools, if not months past, money ks been ncoumulating in all tho busineas tontros of tho nation, A londing bankor from Yortland, Oregon, rodontly informed us that money on tho Paciflo Const hins not boen o plentifal and choap for many yoara. California has slready sooured her whent-crop, worth probably 26,000,000 Orogon has algo a Iarge surplua for oxport, In addition to tho facts sbove onumorated, vast sums in tho shapo of intorost wiil bo disbursod by tho Goneral and Biato Goy-~ ornments, and by individuals, and fa dividends by books and othor institutions, on tho 1st of July, loss than threo weoks honao, The sggro- gnte would bo told in tens of miliions of dollara. ‘Whoro all this monoy is to find safo sud profita- ble inveatment will bo n quostion not cssy for onpitalists to docido. In Now York and other Enatorn cltios, intorest on oall haa for somo timo boon down to 8@0 per cont, andin Chlcago, 8t. Louls, and other Wastorn citios, aud on tho Pacifio Coast, it has goldom boen so abundant and ratos of Intorest solow. Iienco wo expoct & lLoslthy rovival of business within the next fivo months. — CHICAGO AS A PLACE OF SUMMER-RESORT, ‘Thoe truth which we have for soveral yeara been prosonting to the publio, thatin all tho land thero ia no placo that can equal Obicngonsacom- fartable summor-resort, {8 now almost gonoraily accopted. A brief oxperionce in any other city will eatablish tho fact that, when a Ohicago fam- 11y loaves homs in goarch of comfort, and hoalth, and onjoyment, it rarcly finda these combined until it returns agein to this clty. As arulo, tho oltios of tho United btates aro ihtensoly hot dur« ing the summeor senson; and this rale applics oqually to thoso placos known as speoial resorts, —such as Baratogs, Nowport, and Long Branch. Even in tha losa fashionablo places of this kind in tho mountuin distriots, thoro ia thosamo blaz- iug eun during tho day timo, and fogs and mins~ matio vapors atnight. Tho *‘country” board business, or fraud, is now too genorally under- stood ta decaivo any but the slmpleat boginner. Thehot sun by day, thedusty roads, the inovitable korogono lampa by night, tho low and, small- plzod bod-rooms, tho seanty supply of water; ond the monts, butter, oggs, and othor food all brought from the nearest eity, naver {ail to opon. tho oyes of tho victims to the dolusion of coun- try board aud country alr aa an éacapa from tho gomforts of home in o city tike Chioago. % A recont visit found the City of Cincinnatl ovorwholmed with hoat ; business susponded av mddsy ; horses dropping in tho stroot; tho seanty water in tho channel of the river avape- oting at the yafe of two inches & day,: and throatoning to leavo tho olty high aud dry. A visit to the various regorts {o the mountaln plocos of Virglnia and Ponnsylvania all die- closod Iutouse heat by dsy aud by night. Balti- mora Iny swoltering undor the rays of asun which hiad not boen shiadod by'a otolud for waol. Washington City was oven worso, 'The hoat was a4 inténso that oven at the Capltol, on the bigh- eat point in the place, tho hieat was'sd groat that physical oxertion was out of tho question. Mombers of Congress faund it diffieult to romnin in . their bhalls for any longih of timo; an escapo fo the rotunda and to tho porticos of tho Capitol to ' got fresh air, | was o nocossity. No person-could it {n'the gal- lory Linlf ‘an hour without being overcomo with tho hent, - The presiding officers and clerks were objects of gonoral commiseration. At the hotels and in private fomilios thoro was tho some gen- eral discomfort,—blazing sun all dny, and sloep- dofying wultrinoss at mght., In Philadolphia, Now York, Albsuy, and oven in tho Counecticut cities and towns, it was tho samo thing. . How difforent in all theso respects is Chicago, ‘Hore thero {8 no such extreme weather. Wo ap- proach néarer to an Elyslan summer than any: othier part of the continont. Wo have at timies, it is true, an intousoly hot sunshine for a fow hours about midday, but, long bofore the after- noon ia spent, thore sots in tho gra teful, cooling broeze, rendored all the moro enjoyablo by the heat of tho fow hours boforo. Tn most, it nob all, of the citics of tho country during the warm senson tho brooze dies away in a dead, sultry calm, with tho setting of tho sun, In-Chicago tho revorse is the cago. We donot suppose that, taking tho average of the seagons, thore is more than ono night in each year whon comfortable slooping is in the loast- interrupted 'by tho heat, not oven when tho days have boen unusually hot for a fow homs, : < o Chicngo has now, within the circle of s faw ‘miles, numerona suburban towns and villagos all oy of nccoss by excollont roada, Bho Hasalsohor systom of parks and broad--boulevards, and tho two furnish s serios of drives not oxcelled, it equaled, In any city of.. the country, Bo much is tho summor heat modifled in Chicago by the .nover-failing broezes of lake and prairo, that comfortablo driving on these roads and in the porks can be enjoyed from early afternoon and 88 farinto thio ovening as desired. Thesojourner in Ohicago, if hls objoot ba to broathe fresl air, to have an abundant supply of -pure water, com- fortable, spacious lodgings, and a tablo supplied with all the variotios of food thatmake up & soa~ sonable entertainmont, can find no place wheroho can improve his condition, * We are In the hoart of tho country and in dircet communica- tion with all its morketd, The eoft orabs of the soa-oonst, the fruits and -vogotsblos of the tropics, tho trout and othor fish of tho Northern lnkes, the beet of the plains, the mutton of the mouutatbs, tho wines of Californis, Obio, and Afls- gouri and of Edropo,—everything that can tempt the appotito, or gratify the most exacting taste, finds 1ta way to Cbieago,” Within twelvo hours’ ‘rido of somo of tho finost fruit-gardens of tho country, ‘thero i nover a Ecarcity of anyvariety of feult ot any season. The' world g tributary to the market of Chioago. With ‘puro alr and an abnm'lnuca of pure wator, with lake snd for- o8ty plaius and river, all at our door, wo unite all tho enjoymonts of country life swith motro- politan abundance, luxury, and comforts, . Tho summor visitor to this city has a)l the punty of air that he vainly seoke in the rural solitude, and hag with it thio comforts and elegancios of a motropolitan city, Ho is, morever, within direct and oasy accoss to any other part of the country, o can tako a few days to tho scenery of Lake Buperior, or visit Nisgara, or take a trip to tho Rocky Mountains, and come baok to Ohi- cago. Visitors bero—-sud the numbor s an- nuslly gotting largor—from Bt. Louls and the othor river towns, from all the Bouthorn and from tho Eastorn Btates, find In our hotels, and with private families, all the comforta and olo- gancles of home, without the oxorbitant charges which sro’ oxacted at tho wo-called watering- places, whore thie peoplo live ten months In the yoar on what they plunder from visitors in the othor two months, Without excoption, whothor considoripg the comforts of spacloua lodgings, the unsurpassed market, the longth and ole~ and olnlly tho gratoful broozon of after- noons and nights, thero {8 no othor plscs in all the broad 1and that offors such porfoot Satisfac- tion, or {a so juslly ontltled to bo dealgnated na the first and beat placo of eummor-resort on the continont. i —— D10 LEWIS ON PROHIBITION. Dio Lewls, tho champion of tho recent Tem- poranco Orusado throughout sevoral of tho Wost- trn Btatos, hns boen making o tour of tho Btato of Malna to obsorve the oporations of tho pro- hibltory law, and communioates tho rosult of his obsorvationa in a lottor to the Cincinunti Gazetle. Thesa aro, to say the lenst, vory remarkable, not alona for tho Information contalned in them, but aleo hocause thoy indients & very radiea chiange in Mr. Lowis' idons concerning the agon- clos which can bo most profitably employed for the pupprosslon of intomporanco. The first oonolusion ‘to which ho hos arrived s that ‘loglalation is powerloss to obock in- tomporanco. Bpys Lewls : * A littlo moro than twonty yeara ago Wo bogan to leglslato against the malo of intoxicating drinks. Sinco thattimotomporanco sentiment has rotrograded.” Furthormoroe, ho rogrets that the womon of Obio have dropped the *‘divino agoncies,” and that they havo boon seizod with tho maduess of- rogulating temporance by Iaw, sndesya : *In tho plane of politics the yum party will beat the tom- porance party ovory tmo; and if, perchance, horo aud there, tho tomporanos voters aro in the majority, the rum party will boat thom all the ssme—not in voting, but in dodging.” Unfor- tunately, howavor, the asmo difieulty lies in the way of the “divine agoncios,” ag Mr. Lowia oalls thom, that hindors tho oporation of logisla~ tion, aud that is tha intemporate zeal of the ryoformora thomeolves. So long as thoy studionsly ignore the fact, whother in logislation or moral sussion, that ail human natures aro not constitutod alilo, sook to mako:a mon tomporate by compulsion, invade privato sud porsonal rights, and run counter to national habits of lifo, just so long will they not only fail to accomplish any immediate offect for good, but aleo do harm to the causo of tempor- snco. The results of the porversity and reck- losa zoal of tho crusadors aro now shown in tho plontiful orop of suits for damnges which are apringing np all over tho Stato, inatituted by druggists snd othors whoso busincss has boon tnjurod. . H Thero s 'another polnt made by Dio Lowis, which also goes to show the folly. of compulsory moaaures, - In Bangor, a place of 16,000 poople, ho statos that thore aro 300 places where drinks aro gold, or one forovery fity people, men, women, and _children, and . this in o city whoro tho prohibitory law is supposod to be enforced, and whore it haa beon on tho statute-books for at loast twenty-five yoars, It should be furthor- more romombered that thls poraistont drinking in spite of law is dono, not by translout visitors “nor by new comers, but by tho staid peopls thomaolves, whose legislators lave made ‘tho lawe. Tho population of Maino does not incroaso ; on tho othor hand it is deoressing, ‘and, a8 it doorenses, tho consumption of liquor inorensos. In Chicago, whero there s no pro- hibitory law, there are 8,100 esloous, or one to sbout 180 people, mon, women and children, and this in & groat cosmopolitan city, throngod oon- stantly with strangers from overy part of the country. Dr, Lewis’ Maino trip has apparently convinced him of tho uttor futility of prohib- itory legislation, which leada hirm to say, “Iam sure the frionds in Ohio aro sufliciontly interost- od {n the temporauca cauad ta send & committea to Maine to spend a week or two investigating the workings of the probibitory laws; snd I am sure thoy would. ba amazed at tho facts, And yot I did not seo an opou drink- ing-placo while I was in tho State. Thoro 18 no doubt that the traflo has boon driven uuder cover, and there is not s shadow of "doubt that the consumption of drinks in Aaine i3 enor- mous.” In view of such faots as theso, which domonstrate the folly of attompting to make men tomporate upon compulsion, would it not bo at ouoe both' more seusible and practical for tomporanco peopls to recognize them and diroct their ‘offorts against drunkeunces by sdvoonting thé neo of thoso drinks which aro Larmloss, and which are in constant use In countries whoro drunkonnesa is comparatively unknown? An old resident of Cincinnati, James W. Qazlay, diod in that cliy & fow days ago, Ho was born in Now York in 1784, and in 1828 was oléoted to tho Eiglteouth Congrees, dofeating Gon. Harrleon. Ho onterod Congress in 1821, and was, placed upon tho District of Columbia Committeo. Ar. Gazlay's fate, however, was decided by bis first lmportant voto. Ho opposed the resolution awarding Gen. Lafayotte $200,000 and a townabip of lnnd, and vated for the amend- ' mont to reduce tho smount ta $100,000. This lost him his popularity in his district and cost gance of the drives, the oyer-onjoyable weather, ‘him his soat, Gen, Findley sucoeeding him. After his dofeat, ho commonced the publication, in Oinciuuati, of the Western Tjller, a wookly papor, which he conductoed with marked ability for & short time, “Sinco that time ho has boon' ongaged In the practico of the law. He had beon & reaident of Cincinnatl for sixty years. The students of the Indiana Btate University bid fair to develop into first-olass bruisors and plug-uglies, On tho3d inst., tho Sonior class, aftor the anaual fashion, decided to serenade the profossors, and as they had learned that the Junior c‘nifl would be likoly to interfore with thom, they went armed. During the scronado, . tho Juniors camo up in wagons, also armed, and an affray at once commencod, in whicl rooks ware ‘thrown and plstols fifed for some ten or fifteon minutes. TFortunatoly or unfortunately, as tha osse may " bo, no ono was hurt vory sorionaly,’ This, however, doca not - affoet the disgraceful charactor of thaproceoding, or tho fact that there is o pack of young -men intho Indiana State Uuivorsity who bid fair to graduato s rowdies rather than as gontlomen. s T NOTES AND OPINION. Lagun’mlls anlnterviewer thac ho used torather enjoy roading the newepaper, but latterly he hus paid but littlo atteution to what the newspapors my. Lo i —Congressman Dunnell (alary-grabber), of pross ntl‘ tho dlatrict bespoak for him a unanimous ootion, - g —0Ono of tho Wisconain Congresamon Las boon struggling for chionp notoricty. Tho Oshikos Northweslern says ¢ An item is going tho rounds of the papors that tho Tlon, . Allen Barhor has dincovorad that somo 40,001 0 560,000 ucres of achool fands ara dito the Stalo from tho donoral Government, ou fructional townships, 1( tho recordn of the Land OMlco aro oxamined, it will bo fout that thin ia o jiow discovory, Olilie wera mndo sovoral years ago for all tho Iands dia tho State, those ucludod, Our tmpression 19 that thero aro no lands now duo under {lie Inw Aaid to be discovered by Ar, Darber, an tho law was woll understood, —Tho llnyublleun Congrosamen of Iowa aro rotiring fast, and with revengoe npon their_lips. Thogo haviig declined to be ronominated aro MaCrary, of the First District; Donnan, of tho Third ; Knsson, of tho Bovonth : Orr, of the Ninth., Cotton, of tho Becond, s sinking beforo ho wrath of his constituents, and Loughridge, of tho Bixth, will yleld only when his convontion : saya hio in not wantod,—DesMofnes Leader, "—Tho Intrigues in Congress to carry objection- ablo monsures by s combination -of membora {from diforent ‘imrtlns to oscnpe Lhie adium such moasurcs would provoke ns tho work of & single- party, 48 o trick often practiced, but should not . succeod in Fnrmmln crcano from full individual responsibility, or allowing nany oue to sheltor- himaolf undor tho ples thab mombora of wl par- tles votod for tho obuoxious Iaw. T.ct gonornl condemnntion bo visited n{:on ovory Congrosa- man, without rogard to party conaidoration, who forgota his duty In scoking bis privato advantago, and the reform the snlvation of tho mation re- ?ulrcg would bo affootod by exchanging knavish for ionest roproaentatives.—JBoston Lost. —\Whon Congross mot last Decomber the Re- Enblle:ms promised to carry out the pledges thoy * ad so ropoatodly broken. Atter a sossion of six monthe, what bas boen sccomplishod for tho masses ? A radicnl salary-grab was roponled,- and the roat of the timo bas been spent in new attempts to whitawash tha rascalities of Repub- lican ofiico-holdors.—Afadison ( Wis.) LDemoorat. —The ploturo drawn by Mr, Bpror yosterdny in tho House of Roprosentatives of thothe official corruption in tho Wostern Judicial Diatrict of Arkansns was porfootly tromendous.—Alinneap- olia Tribune. : —8peer, by the way, I8 the ‘Congrezsman who took his back-pay, and waa the causo of such a muss_in tho Pennsylvania Domocratio Conven- tion last year.—Albany (N. Y.) Zening Jour~ nal. —'Ihia (Clvil Borvice Roform) is one of - thoso monsures which, like the ealary-grab and tho franking privilego quontious, do not appoar tha samo to tho “cmf" Cougreesionel feeling and to tho judgment of tho country; and, sooner or lator, ‘tho lattor will provail over the formor.— Boston Journal, —The Radical papers, which & short time slnce wera vociforously contendiny thut the Treasury Departmont necded no roformation, ‘now_insist that Dyistow is “roforming tho Trengury Dopart~ ment ["—Albany (N, Y.) Arqus, - —Tho suggestion made by our Wasbington corrcépondont that the now Bocretary of the T'rensury is a Tom Soott man seoms to have some Lasls, baving beon Salioitor of.the Southern Pagiflc Railway of which Col. Scott was President and a Jarge owner, and which earried him under wator fiunnn!nll{;( It is nlittlo singular, to eay the lonst, that this railrond man has suoceeded 1n getting two of hisfriends, Judges Bradloy and Btrong, both rallway attornoys, u"}on the Bu- frome Bonch, and a. third at tho head of the . nitod Btates Tronsury.—Poriland (Me.) A . . —Tha list of honest mon promiuent in the Re- ublican party ia_being day by day reduced by ho orasures randored booosary. b{ daily oxpo-~ Bures. . . o Tho ‘‘partyof grontmoral ideas" {arapidiy disisitograting, and the Demaoraticparty which has beon 8o often proclaimed ** dead" may yot nttend the funeral of ita opponont and ad- ministor the ostato.—Wheeling Wesl (Va.) Register. —The Republioan party in tho noxt electon witl not bo Judged by its Dhiladaiphia platform, or byany other platform, 80 much ay by ita works, If itlives much longer, it will not be bacause it obiofly coucorns iteolf about keoping its control of tho offices. Tho party of the fu- ture will bo the porty that most promptly and earnostly sets out to be right on the questions of the future.—Koslon Adverliser. —It wa & pitinblo sight to sco a National Re- publican caucus meoting in such s crigis as the prosont, aud rofusing to grapple with issuca now digcusged in every houechold in the land. It had the look of the ropressive Pro-Slavery Dom- ocrats beforo the War, who thought more of party than of country, and loat the tirst booanse thoy had not courage to staud ‘{f the last, The isstie bofora tho peoplo of the United Statea to- day is not the franking privflnfif, a painted by Mr. Platt, of Virginin; nar cheap transports- tion, a8 {xremmnm by Mr, Knseon, of lowa; nor thio Civil Rights bil), a8 sdvocated by Mr, Lynch, of Miseiesippi; but whothor the non-producers, the men of capital, the mon who male monoy out of monoy, shall run this Government, while the peoplo, by millions, aro suffering for want of work aud a market for their praduce.—Philadel- phid Press. —Maj.-Gon. Alarm has taken poesossion of the Republican loadersbip at Washington and in the country, and things are " going to the dovil gen- crally ™ 'with tho natioual plundorors in tho most cortain aud gatisfactory mannor. But no great, political party avor died without a_struggle, and we canuot expect that the Republican organiza~ tion will dio without making & stand against ita coming fate, 1f it does not destroy itsoif before the battlo in an attompt to slay Grant with bis 100,000 Grand Army of Occupalion, wo may ex- peck & florco fight . in '76, but tlunga look very much as though ¥ the grent principlos of the Ropublican party” aro on thewr last loga as it were.—Omaha Herald. . —The conscience, intelligence, and powor of . the country profer to act through tho Republican organization. But thoso greab .elements are. awake and alert. I'hoyhave work to do not only- in oleausing the rottennces of politics but in providiug for tho neods of » grent poople. Thoy- will not be put off Ly any fear of injuring the. party n the prosecution of this work. If the, sty cantiob lold now truthe aud live up tothem, b is worthless und will be dashed to pleces.— Virginia Slate Journai. ~—The question is, sball the party [Republican: e trusted any further, kuowing the condition of affairs, or shall thero be a now deal, with now mep, and o xeorgenized party ? The poople are answeriug it by soeking' new allinuces,—Benton Gmmffl (4a.) Record—Republican. —Tha timo for whippiog mon into tho political ranks hos gone by.~.arshalltoron (Ia.) Z%mes. —Republican. —I'he ** potent magio of a mighty namo " can-. not arouse the peonlo {0 activity in bohalf of any: party. Politicians may bocomo. oxoited, bat tuis sfmpl.n_wm not, Duriug this campaign, party iscipline will coustram..but s comparatively small number of voters to support_injudicious nominationy, or awallow su, ar-coatod platforms. - —% 0. H, W." in Indianapolis Journal. —The presgut is an ers in the country of un- racedentod developmeonta of corruption In pub o and privato lifo. Defalcations, embezzle~ ments, Orodit Mobrliors, swindling contracts, and M graba® of various kiuds have bocome common.. .+ .- There is uow an appareut purpose to “ onact lying into.a fixed policy.” Tho ‘*salary~ grab " found its imitators in s30me Btate Legisla~ tures and Couuty Boards, 'Why should not the - Goyornment which starts out on'the road {o ro- ‘pudintion oxpoct private citizens and pubtio offi- Gors £o ndopt tho samo cods of othics which Rov~ erng the nation ?—Lieile Plaine (Iowa) Union, —Tho great political potters’ fleld of the Unitod Statos in located at Washington ; and it is big enouglh, deep enough, aud ugly cnough ta’ bury out of sight the great. mass of politicak corruption that fills .tho air with the deadly stench of unational gaugrene. . , . .They have, in thelr wickedness, beon diligent, tiraless, and successful : 50 much so, that they have dug an _immenso pit, and are fast ‘pro paring them= nolyos 1o “ fall thoroin,” and will doubtloss do #0 whergver thoy come beforo tho pearlm bog- f,'mg :for tho ronewnl of positions which they avo flgcuylod as chiof robbers and thieves,— Morris (1 )l.) Reformer. Y S Ohlcf-Justico obertson’s Willa Tho will of tho lnte Ohiof-Tustice Robertson, of Kentuoky, sturts off as follows: * Uniting our dostinies whon shio was not 16 and I was only 10 yeara old, my devatad wifo and mysolf, without auy patrimonial oatate, acquired, during a happy Minnésota, is ospoolally dosirous of' re-cleotion i o district whiok luat time gavo him 10,000 majority ; but tho 8t. Paul Press, at tho foot of & column editorlal on Dunnell, saya: The Ropublicau parly is not now fu condition tobe embarrauscd with candidatcs whoso rocords necd 50 much oxplauation, Popular projudices, even thouglh groundloss, aro facts which miist bo rocoguizod fn tho cholce of caudidatos whose elestion depends on (he ular yote, The Ropublican party cannat afford to urdon ftaclf with tho unfortunnte projudices’ agatnst Mr, Dungoll which Xrnvufl smoug his conatituonts, Bl lcas con ft aford tho cortain defeat whivh many of his warimeat fricnds conceda will bo tho rouult of his nomiuation, —0ongrageman Borry, of Ohlo, has hoon repu- diated with acorn by his Demacratic constituonta in primary eleotions, Congressman Lamison (Domoorst), of Oblo, {8 not s0 much as namod for ro-cloction. Lamison Is tho olnp who lask your told his constituonts, objocting fo tho sal- ary-grab,'to # Qo to holl.® —CQongrassman Oharles Togter, of Ohio, took no atook in the salary-grab, snd has shown good pluck in bearding Ben Dutler, Now, nob only I8 Mr, Fostor sssured tho unanimous support of his own (Ropublioan) pasty, bt tho Opposition union of mora than fifry-five years, a comforte nblo independsuce, rationully eujoged as the {fruit of onr co-opersting enorgios, tor dovot ing to the pdyaucomont of our childron at least / 80,000 1n various ways, sthl retaining property sufliclent for the comfort of my dosolate old age, 1 dosire that what I shnll leave bohind mo un- disposed of in my lifetimo ahsll be distributed ‘among my descondants in such portions as will os neutly as possible approach legal equality, nud for offectuating that oud I now” publish the tostamontary disposition’of the rosldual estate which Providouco onabled my admivable wifo and mysol?, by lnbitual judustry, to enrn, and by fulr-dmwlug ecouomy and systematio prudonce, 0 83V0, et Newspaper Entorprise Appreciated, #rom the Kt, Wayne(iud,) Sentinel. For some timo pnat the Chicago papors have beon in thoe habit of printing s column epooially dovoted to itoms of nows from thoe Northwestorn Btatos. Ty Onloao Tarmune ia now gathering this nows by telograph, whilo the other Chicago papors contintto to roprint Btate itoms from the weokly c”llmm' ‘I'his ‘inutanco Is ohnraoteristle of the difforouce botwoon T'ux Trinuse and ita gompatitare. For six mouths past, Tir Quicaae Tninune has had no rival as & newspaper in the “Weatorn qopntry,.