Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 15, 1876, Page 1

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- The Chicage Dailp Tribune, ’ VOLUME XXX. CHICAGO, THURSDAY, JUNE 1 FINANOIAL. FIDELITY SAVINGS BANK B DEPOSITORY, NOS. 143, 145 & 147 RANDOLPH-ST. TIE VAULTS of this inatitution nro tho .qn;opll!d Amodoll ot Bafe Deposaitorios throughout tho United B.ates, ll?( arg Uit S woitd magoncy, and ate linod wi llncle}lnlu auvfrr‘:llnu os thick. They con= n abaou S N EANATLE FORTRESS againat tho nsanults of any and all Burglara B e o niood {hg 1o proved 1] ng! A PHRBAT GON FLAGRATION OF 1871, 'l‘uuywmrord ?mnao nl‘cz?grsx::g;fuug‘t vg:r RO O no Ly . "‘lfit"fh:n%udu. Bonds, Wills, and Valuablos of al nds. ditions and improvements have mgggo&‘nng'mmni\m?l{ tln?mon comploto O ity Dionaitary 1n o world, Binals opon i oxon and Drawors for Ront from $640 576 & yoor, THE BAVINGS DEPARTMENT of this institution paysinterost at the rato or 8 por cont por annum on Bavings Doposita and Truat gundl, Thin interoat is addod to the vrlx‘%?ll on the firat day of each Janua- Y. d €. HAINES, Prealdont: JARED GAGE, vico-Fronident: CHARLES J. HAINES, Cashler; GEOIGE M. GAUE, Assistant Cashicr. MORTGAGE LOANS At lowcst rates. on Chicago property. J. E. REED, New York. JON . AVERY, 150 Lasnlle-st., Chicago, 7 PER CENT. will lond $100,000, n Inrge sums, on busl. nown praporys ot SHY Bl 310,000, 30,000 aud $2,000 a1 8:°$1,200, 51,500 and 32, 300 0t 0, BCUDDER & MABSON, 107-108 Dearborn-st, WATCHES., WE ARE SELLING sll grados of Elgin, Waltham, and E. Howerd & Co. Watches, now and in porfoot ordor, fully warrantod, at lowor pricos than the same make of goods, old snd shop worn, ofton bring at Auction. Our assortment of onses is tho largost in the Wost, containing many styles found nowhoro else. N.Matson & Co., State and Monroe-sts, 1776. CENTHENNIAL. 1876. ¥ingn and Decorntions for the million manufac- tared at tho Washington Print Workn, compriing Flaga of the United States, all Nations, hiterna- tlonal Arms of all Natlons, ‘&c., in all aizes, from one taslxtecn flaga por yard. Forwale by all jobbers, Au Established Business for Sale, Capltal modornte for amount of business and profits, Address D K8, Tribune ofiice. W KENOSHA WATER CURE, KENOSHA, Wis. Rtecently cnlarged and Improved. Fino lako How and good boatin. - Summers re- parkably sool, and climaio doflghtfal. Cironic Disoanca; Disoases of Nervous System, . For clrcu lare, LoF, €1C.y addroan No Ar DENNOYEI, M., Vhyafeian,or_E. PENNOYER, Proprietor, OOEAN STEAMSHIPS, 4 LINE TO FRANCE.~The Gencral TusilInbie Gampany's WAl BiEamees borgeen Ko York and Iavre, ealll it Plymouth (G. .) for the Ianding of passengers. The eplendid vesscls on thin fa. yorite Nflra for the Continent (cabins provided with tlectric bells) will safl fromn I'ler No. 43 jorth River, s follows, *PEREIRE, Daure, Saturday, June 17, 1 P. m.; BT. GERMALN, Reculous, Saturday, Junods, & LS LAUKADLOW, Banglier, Saturday, July 1, 1 p.m, T'rice of It including wiiic) : First accominodation s el anrerior aeomio: ceenie, Sk Wt MUDArIoT ACCONI . i Wi, Dedutig, And toRAIA. withovt e e AN A Brondwag . 5o . . WINTE, No. 67 Clark coruer IME‘?]V A‘,!!’II fur Chicsgo. STATE LINE. I TO LASGOW, LIVERPOOL, DUBLIN, R [ R SR These firat-clans fuli-powe: amers will ‘sall from er. North Itiver, foot of Canal-st., New York: BTATE OF VIRGINIA. JThursday, June 13 FTATE OF NEVADA.. 71 BTATE OF INDIANA! I 2 And every altornate Thuradsy thoreattcrs FITet cabliny 53 and g0, according Lo accommodatlon, fleturi lickets. i & datious, fn extra ehar, hrsday, cubli, $30; return tickets, §00. fi':&.. 'A'np'u tod. WARRACK, No. coko. National Line of Steamships. ° FOR LIVERPPOOL AND EIIBPNzT(:\Yl:;: ~ TOREE Spe i o in | ARV 0 m Cr. +etoJune 31, 3pm A0 currency. Return crage tickets, #20, curs arus on Great Britnln, T3, LALKO: 8 Tency, Draflafor £1 and upw, Apply to Clar) AMERICAN LINE, PHILADELPHIA AND LIVERPOOL. Cabln, intermediate, and steerago passage AT LOWEST RATES. , 138 La Balle-st., corner Madison, General ofes, ot R SES Westorn Abon White Star Mail Line. T'o aud from Europe and America. Rates s low 84 by any other tirst-class Line, Ofiice, HEost llAn:lvuI pli-st., Chlcago. ALFRED LAGERGREN, 'llwra]\\'fiutnm Agent, Drafts on Great Britain d Irelund, CUNARD MAIL LINE. Bailing three timesa weok toaud from British awest Price t OfMce, northwest corner ) Chll:lfn. General Weatern Agent. North German Lloyd. The steamera of this Coipany will saft ovoty Satur. day from Biemen Pler, foot of Third-st., hoken, Kkates of pamage—From Now York fo Soithampton, duis, Wayre. aott [ uich, Aret cabin, §1; e 2 Nowlig Gire: Groat Western Steamship Line, From New York to Uriatol (England) direct. A ymons. WALL, bianipe K . Labin ', $7U; edlal curaibn ks, S e Caton, e WARE o MicUlgan cutral Kaflroad. B SALS WILL RCEIVED DY M abbirn Wodlitord Core 1, of Waal acee $ally fu tha on 4 Mudis v uf . , srchiteot, 170 i -al,, Ch 1. ; each bid must Lo ac- Sipauted by n boud In the ustsl furm, ki the peosl Aumuf two hundeed dolls Address propossls to B, s L, R, O ko o i chwol Lulldin o : fnfl", ‘o rfi'fiu"; inm‘nfie (A alf mpuJa subwitted. By Nobl Board, VL BEOO Barss MoGULLOGH, Hecretary. THE DAILY NEWS. THE NOMINATION, Tho public engerness to learn the namo of the suceessful eandidate at Cincinnat! to-day will bo Intense. Tue DALY Nrwa WILL BE TIE PIRST to glvo this fmportant information, Extra editions will be fasucd after each ballot, and all the procecelings will be pubilished nlnost. BIMULTANEOUSLY WITH TIEIR OCCURRENCE in Cincinnat!, Tur DALY Nrws yesterday waa the only pa- per that gave the news from Clnelunat to the closo of thedny. The NEws brought. its report DOWN 7O THR ADIOUIINMENT, glving the permanent organtzatlon,—theelection of & permaucnt Chalrnian, 8eeretary, and Vice- Presidents,—which Important poluts were given by NO OTIIER EVENING PAPER, Ite earller ecditions antivipated by several hours the news of the other papers. By such unparallcled enterprise, expense, Tiz DAy News holda its reputation of hefusr always THE PINST TO GIVE THE NEWS. Everybody nceds the News. It §s the paper of the people; cireulates ansong nll closscs; has the largest evening circulation In Chicago, Its dash, enterprise, aud fndependende om all questlona have mado it JUMP INTO UNIVERSAL CIRCULATION, Its pages aro crowded with advertielng, It costs one cent, and {s at onco the cheapest and hest newspaper ever published in Chicarco. (REAT BARGAINS SPECIAL SALE AT Public Auction, ‘Wedresday and Thursday of this Weck, Of o Largo Stock of Ladies’ Fine Sts of Jewelry, in Cameo, Coral, Coral and Gold, and Solid Gold Bota. Also u large assortment of' tho finest quality ROMAN GOLD NECK CHAINS, which will be offered apocially ot A B Millers Closing-Ont Sale, 61 East Washington-st., INEAR STATH. J, H. FRENCH, Auctloncer. RAILIZOADS, “LOOK AT THIS Then atthis **Daily Bulletin,” The great favorlte route to the East vin the direct rliable route, BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. Cleveland ... ghl’t{"mdpm? % 11.40 allimore Washington ; > 11.00 TParsenpern oro privileged to stop over at any ofnt donirod. . Tickels for salo at Dalmer. Hore, Tirand bncific, 63 Clnrk-st., nnd Depot (Exposttion Bullding), foot of Monroo-at. L. M. COLE, General Ticket Agent. THOMAS . BARRY, W. P, A Joliet & Northern Indiana Rail- road Company. JovLigr, Juno 12, 1870, The annual meeting of this Company, for the cloction of Directors, and the transaction of aach : other business as may bo bronght beforo it, will be hehil at tho oftlce of the Compuny, in the city of Jolict, Wlinols, on the 20th day of July, 1870, at 12 o'clock. JOHN BRISIN, President. R. G. RALSTON, Secrotarv. TO RENT. Desirable Ofice TO RENT IN TEER TRIBUNE BUILDING. INQUIRE OF WILLIAM C. DOW, Room 8 TRIBUNE BUILDING COAX. A, D, MEERED, E. L. BEDSTRON, A, J. UOOLE, E. L. HEDSTROM & CO., GENERAL AGENTS LEHIGH VALLEY COAL CO, ARE SELLING THE Bost Briar Hill Coal at $5 cash. Anthracite Coal at luwest narket ratea. Y@l. Nortiwest cor, Adams & Marge@s, The City of Dubuque, Jowa, will recelvo bids for furniehin the beat quallty of ‘Coal Gas for e use of the ¢ Acceptible security required, th right to reject auy or all bids, No ids received after Aug, 1, 1870, The fur- ylehing to cominency on thio 141t day'of Septein- cr, 1877, “For furihor particalars Inguice o . (. MARGUR, Clty Record The city reserves QNS PISIING TACHLE, FIG. At E. E, EATON'S, b3 State-st. ESTABLISHED 1853, Fuen COPARTNIERSIIIP, w Yous, Juno 1, 1470, ‘The underslgned have entered ito coparinerahip for tho iranwaction of business In Forelgn und American Ball, under frm namo of Francls D, Moulton & Co! Oilice, 105 Wate Vo FRANCIS D. WILLIAM A, 11 DYEING AND CLEANING, DYRBING And Cleaning Ladics’ aud Genta’ Garments of al kinds, Lace Shuwls, Sacques, Cus ctc., aod repalring inew's clothy Call on or 1 t mptly attended t ehirena’ U0 TTAVAIY: 100 South. Ciare 1o8 1llIno! id 265 West Al sla, COLLECT DICG. Claima Jocated at a “distance, or roquiting legal Inveatigation, war or wercuntile, wo will prosecuto without attorneys' fees fn sulin or charge unless tollgctd. ” Bakiue this vur eale busiticrn siico 1672, vur seliablilty and ubllity are cotablished. Beud for chcular. " FRASIER'S COLLECTION AGENCY, Btate and Mourve-ata., Chicago, THE CONVENTION. Opening Day's Proceedings in the National Repub- " lican Council. Speeches of Gov, Morgan, Gov. Baldwin, Gen. Hawley, and Others. After Vigorous But Unsuccessful Resistance by the Machine Men, Mr, George William Curtis Reads the Platform of the New York Reform Club, A Change Scems to Have Come Over the Spirit of the Gathering. The Blaine Men Less Boastful, and Bristow’s Friends Take Heart. The Action of the Committee on Rules Hurtful to the Ex= Speaker. Bristow Repeatedly Offered the Becond Place by Telegraph. ; No Vote Will Bo Reached Until Lato in the Day.§ RUNNING COMMENT. FIRST BLOOD. FRYZ, WIIO 8IOULD NMAVE OTHRR FISH, CLAIMS IT FOI DLAINE. Spectal Dispatch 1o The Tyidune, CiNcINXATY, O., June 4. —There hung over the Conventlon npon ite asscmbling this morning the usnalatr of nuspente that precedes n final atruggle between contestants, neither of whom knows what nnexpected strength the others may develop. On all sides everything engerly selzed upun that could nfford the atightest clew from which to gauge tho Blalne and anti-Blaine etrength, for it was set- tled a full day previous, by tucit consent ol aronnd, that only in the event of that tho fleld combined agninst Blaine counld there be any contest, for nelthor of the other Presidential sapiranta could measnre strength with him. The Blaine men wery onhand carly, sanguine and spparently eager to press the vantage of thelr situation s disclosed In thesc dispatehies lnst night, but wetchful forthe firat manifestation uf the consolidation of the antl- Dlaine delcgates, The hope of the friends of cach of the othier candidates was, that, with the lapse of another day, there might be such conwideration of the Impollcy of forcing upon the party a candldute o bo DREFENDED AND EXCUSED as would materlally reduce tho Blaine following, and practically remove him from the contest aa un- avallable. Tho gesreral applanue that followed tho speech of the Hon. Theodore Pomeroy, of New York, on taking the temparary Cliairmnnship, i which ho referred to tho solf-evident fact that tho party could defeat fteclf, that no platfurm could bo made bioyuut enangh to float an unworthy candidute, and that vien as well as_meusnres must be welghied In tho balance by the Convention, was generally eccepted o indlcating that the antl- Blaino forces were gining Instrength and purposc. But fmmediately aftorwsrd, when Sllas B8, Dutch- er, of New York, moved to reconsider tho resolu- lution providing for the organfzation of the Per- manent Committee ro that it might be amended to EXCLUDE THE TENRRITORIES FROM UEPRESENTA- TION on such Committoe, and Dufcher's motion was promptly tabled by & declaive vote, Gen. Frye cx- clulmed, ** Flrat Diood for Blatne!™ o It was, for the Territorjce, which cannot cant n ainglo voto for Blaine if he b nominated, are relied upon by the Ilaluo menagers to render material ald in carrylng the Convontlon for him, and fn tabling Dutcher's motfon the Blainu men checkmated tho first move Jookiug townrd ruling the Teritorial delegntes, who ropresent nothing and nobody, out of active show In the Couventlon, GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS, A T, A PALPABLE IUT, Special Dispatch o The Tridune. Cixcinxats, June 14.—Notwithstanding Fryo's “oiest blood,” the Blafno men wero saun coun- tered upon by George William Curtts, who, to fol- low out Gen. T'ryo’a phrave, **got in on them be- tween the eyes,* Tnthe 1ull In tho proceedings, while thy Convention was awaiting the report of the Committes on Permanent Organlzation, ho ob- tained the flor to present the address of the Hee publican Reform Club of New York, which he usked leavo to rend. Ubjectlon was made from il over tho Dlaine quarter, but was drowned by crics of “*Head! and, finally, on the motlon helng put, the Conventlon declded by an overwhelning majority to nllow Mr, Cartis to read tho address, ‘Pheannouncement wos recelved with greatapplause on the floor avd in the gallerles. In response tu cnthusiastic calls, Mr. Curtls took hls pluce ugon the atsge, and, a¥800n a8 tho tumultuous cheering with which he was grectod hud subuided, proceeded in & clear, distinct tone, audible throughout the vast bullding, to read that FORCIBLE ARIRATGNMENT OF TIHE MACHINE in the Republican party, aud of the Federal oficu- holders' usurpatfon af the party mauagement in New York. The reminder, in thatnddress to the Iepublican party, of fts broken pledgo of civil service reform was healthy read- Ing for the machinu crowd, who have come Lo to ran the Convention, The declara- tion that the Nepublican purty bad other work to do than to apeculate upon professlone of loyalty, that tho context was close, the peoply exacting, and the necersity nrgent for paridcation and ro- form, und the nomination of condidates who them- aclvew are o guaranty of puritication und reform, told with unmistaknble offect agalnat that element in thu Convention determined to folst Blaine upon the purty 1n th face of his record as written Dy himeelf in the Flsher correapondence. THE THEMENDOUS APPLAUSE with which tho nddrees was grected evidenced that, desplto all thie “eflarts of the Blaing wenagers to force him upon the Conventlon, there Is & powerful body of delegates who are resolutely determined not'to have Dlalne forced upon them withont a mast atubborn fght, and that tho effort to silence dlscussion of biw record und of hls availubility, In view of lfs record, must fall to counteract the nd- dress, which Mr. Curtls read without adding any comuents, LOGAN. SYNTAX APPALLED, Special Dispateh s0 The Tridund. CixCiNXaTL, June 14, —The Blaine men called out Joln A, Logan [n tesponso to Curtls, Logan sct out I ble usual rambling, Incoheront style, ot razing the Queen's English as vilely sy ever, but finally came round to declare with senscless em- Dhasls that thiv was & Hepublican Conventlon to nowmlnate Republican candidates to be voted for by Republicany, and that this Couvention should bo controlled by Republicaus only. ‘To clinch It, and. that thers might b no wletake about ke meaning, Lo declured thut the party coubl elect nnybady they numinated, and that thoa who would not vute fur whaeser wight b nuiminated woro nt trus Repub- licuny. His epeech, In short, was A MACUINE POLITIVIAN'S NOTIFICATION toall inembersof the party that wschine politiclana Intended, at a1} hazards, to run the Conventlon; that tiicy would entertain no protesta agatnat thelr presumptuous folly, nor tolerate the judicious ctiticism that distingnishes between the ftness and clatma upon public confidence of candidates for the Presidency; In akort, that distingulshes botween machine candidaten and a candidate whoso whole life ix an assurance of purification of the Admini tratlon. Logon's speech, In truth, was but an echio of the machine gang's ' WIIAT AILE YOU GOING TO DO ABOCT 171" Tho spplause that came fn responno, disclosed Ahat his machine intolerance, proscriptivences,and rocklesn audacity, was shareil by 8 numerous party In the Convention, which, under machine lcader- £Nip, was preparing to override tha intelligence and conaclence of the great Republican party, iHls os- sault upon the encmies of tho Kepublican party whoaanasninated the private character of leading lte- publicana was cepecially aimed nt the anti-ma- chine delegaten anud the Republican preas, which holdw thiat It Ia better to discusatho character, fitness, und avallability of candidates before, In- #tead of after, the nominations oro made, What Jeading Republican's privato character theed falks have attempted (o nssassinnte, Logan omitted to ntate: also what right any pubilc official again seek- ing office, and the highest inthe Jand, hns to object to the most searching exploration of hls character B a public officlal. HOORAT! Logan's burst of native frenzy, however, was spproprinted by the Blalne men as a defense and vindication of Mr. Blaine, nnd by them sccarding- Jy warmly opplauded. It was tacltly recognized na i eficct presenting Dlsine on he will be presented beforo the Conventlon. Should the Fisher lotters ond Blalne's relations with the Northorn Pacific, the Little Rock & Fort Smith, Tom Seutt, ete., be bronght in guestion, it fs now foreshadowed the attempt will be mado to dieposa of them simply as attempts of encmlen of the Re- publican party to assawsinate a leading Itepub- lican, . HAWLEY. TIE SPEAXS SERTINMENTS WIICH MEAN DRISTOW. Special Dispatch to The Tridune. Cixcrssats, 0., June 14.—The Committee not being ready to report, Gen. J. R. Hawley, of Con- necticut, was called upon for a specch, which, it wan plain, must be au fnformal placing of lirls- tow in poxition before the Convention, He quletly met Logun's frenzicd omatory by maying he would be glad to bellere the Republican party had but to nominate a candidate sud go home sure of electing bim. Gen. Hawley re- wminded the Convention that §t was the part of wisdom to recognize the fuct. The fact was that there was a widespread diseatistaction with the trifling with the sacred trust of high office, and the deterjorstion of offical morality. That dissativ- fuction must not be disregarded, forevery man present knew the Convention conld #o act that thelr work would prove inoperative. Hawley's speech produced A MARKED CFPECT. It wan received, not with tnmultnous applause, but With o rober earncstness which discloscd that every man there did reslize that the Convention might defcat the party by forcing Bialne npon the party agalnat the proteets of the doubtfu States,—Ohio, Twitiana, and > York—which, of afl the candi- dates numed, Jthere wonld be the least prospect of Dlalne's earrylng were he nominated. It was also manlfest that Hawley's presentation to the Con- ventlon of the fact that there remained but o day in which to conslder the Important question of can- didates won not Jost, A BTOPF TO DISGUSTING BULLY1SM. His specch was a quiet, firm response to Logan's bawl that, to canvass the character, cluiina to pub- lic confidence, and avallability of & candidate way tobean encmy of the party, The respouse wos that now waa the thne to aharply consldor precisely the queation, and it was significant that the Blaine men tid nat attempt again to wisld the party whip, nor dared threaten to pruscente Republicans who refured to fgnare the protests of the lcading Re publicans of Ohlo that Blalne wonld not carry that State, and of the Republicans of Indlana and New York to the like effect. e OYES. HE CAUSES NOISY DISAFPOINTMENT, Spectal Dispatch 1o Tha Tribune. Cixersyaty, June 14, ~Ex-Gov, Noyes, of Ohlo, who followed, levied even more polnted notice upon the Blaine men, thut the nominntion was not to Le driven through under the lush of the manag- ers, e called nttention to the fact that the peo- ple demnanded more than ever before as to the char- ucter of candidates. e deprecated all unjust at. tacks upon the public character of high oficlaly here. The Blalne men, quick to take the cue, applouded vehemently, but, when order was ro- stored, Gov. Noyes atruck thom all abieap by adding: “* But that wpirit of criticlsm: which sceks out of- fenxcs sud punishea offenders v cqmmendalilo, * and at that juncture thu thundets of applause that greeted theorator did not come from the Dlaino meu. Noyea is known to be for Hayes, and this “speech had the eftect to place Ilayes before the Couvention nan uncquivacal attitude un opposed to the machine pollticians, of whom Logun constl- tuted himself, or was constituted, the head. Noyen' rpecch atrengthened Hayes more thun anything that has been done in Hayes' behalf. It makes his candidacy nearer, more than a were compromise, A smoothing down of the rugged fssucs, TRED DOUGLASS, UE LETS THE COLORED VORTCULLIS FALL WITH- OUT MUCH BUBSEQUENT COMMOTION, Hpectal Dispatch to The Tribune, CINCINKATE, O, June 14.—The apeech of Fred Donglurs, who was put forwarl se spokesman for Morton, fell flat on the Couvention. ‘Though o fino ellort, it did not avail to convince unybody that the question of supplemental reconstruction is the parumount Issue which dwarfs ull other fssucy, THE DAY OVER. BLAINE NOT 50 NAMPANT A8 TUESDAY NIGHT, &Spectal Dispateh to Tl Trioune, CIXCINNATI, O., June 14.—The upshot of the doy's proceedings waa to develop that, though not conciliated, there 8 o common opposition to Blatue, It results frowm the effort of his managers to forco hiin upon tho Convention, and to proxcribo overy Hepublican who questions his avalla- By, or bl connection with Flsher, Caldwell, Tom Scott, and the Northern Paciic, the Little Kock & Fort 8mith, and the Union Pacitle Hallrond. Tho fact in now sufiicient- 1y obvlons that the Hepublicans of the National Conventlon who ere not Blalne's partisans canuot bu dealt with as Blajoe himeclf dealt with the Iucapables of the Democratic side In the louse, Wero Blaine hiere himself, ho could accomplish no coap de grace agafust such men us Samuol Hawlsy or Gov. Noyes, Roscos Conkling's managers and Morton's lieu- tenania are rorely irritated ot the bullheadedness with which Blalne hus been pushed. The folnts, trlcks, and surprlecs that have unscrupulously been attempted upon cach of the other candidutcs by Blaluc's adkiorents has ROUBED TUEM ALL 1o a greater or lesa degreo of autagoniam. Besides, the bost men In tho party now hers challenge the right of Blalue to hinperil the party by (nslsting upon the nominstion when thut would bu so noarly cquivalent to defeat as now appaars, BUMMED UP, then, tho result of the dret day's proceedings s that Blaine's stock s quoted very much lower than It was lust night, Thls attempt, or that of his ad- lLierents, to subordinate the party %o his personal ambitiun, for thy sake of which be_snd thoy would iraporil ita cxlstence, bas duveloped an opposition Lefore which (he Blalne managers have qualled and have biad to abandon thelr Intolerance ond pro- ecription of all Republicanism that was ot Blajue Hepublicanlem, There 1s, to-night, every Indica. tlon of such elements in the Republican party not Blalve Republicanlsm as will consolldate aguinst him to save the varty from the defeat which his partlvans lovite, LOGAN'S ' FOUR PAWS," The cohesive element was supplicd by. the obsti- note determination of Blajne’s partlsans to nomi- nate himanyhow,andby John A. Logun's speech in the machine interest proscribing and defying the Rcpublicaniam represented ln the Convention, TABLEAU { THD FLACE. Special Dispatch to The Tridune. Crvcinvarr, June 14.—Expositlon Wwhich the Convention assembled, lo the features of Cluclnoatl, It Hall, i ouo of Toget an fdea of It sppeurvd to-dsy ou tho assem- 1876. bling of the Conventlon, imagine a wide platform, one-third of the way from the west end, roaching from the norih to the wouth alde, and & rapidly ria- ing serlen of seats roaching upward and backward ucarly to theapring of the arches. Just below tha main platform waa one for the prees, where nearly 250 men st down to tell the country about the gathering. The press-platform had for ita flanks and withdrawn s« {f the great reacrves for ita work, two well-equipped telegraph-roamns, one for cach leading company. 1In frant of the presa-plat- forin was the section sllotted to delegates, and outelde of the rafling that hunnded the floor of the Convention wan & great area for the publlic. The Immenec gatleriea held such an sudicnce as might Lave gathered at the playn of the ancients, and the music matched the other proportions of the rcene. The Commltiee had ly done its work well, and 8athe varlous portians of the audlence came in, all moved quletly and promptly. TUE TIMD, At10o'clock mpectators began to dot the floor, the variona gallerles, and the main platform. 7The reprencutatives of the preas from every part of the land were carly on the geound. In the midet of thelr tables rat one man with a small battery, al- morta toy in Its proportione, bnt Fint-tongued and voiced, which wna to tick out the day's cvents with the apecd of lghtaing to all poris of the world, having, without exaggeration, the world for {s audience, He and thoes with simlinr magle equinment o3t quictly with Gngers on the hattery-keys, and answered every moment 1o the calls from wll quarters of the land, TIHE INVITED GUESTS were 8 truly democratic collection, Jdudd, with well-known rosy face, white hair, and black beaver, entered among the first, He is supposed to have had much to do with engineering the irat nomination of Lincoln, and was his first appolntee in consequence among our forelin Minin- ters. e don't seem to take as much interest In the Kentuckisn whose name is 8o prominent nowas he did inthe Kentnckion Lincoln. It is even sald that, like Gen. Logan who lived ko long Inthe Democratic darkness of Soutbern 1llinols, be don't think it exactly safe to nominate a Ken- tuckian, although this particular one nuw ro prominent in the eyc and nind of the people an- tedutes wath hiv radical record the Repudlicanlsin of scores and scores of the prominent men of the purty. Norman B, JOIN COCHRANE, OF NEW YORK, the noted Libernl, came early. There is a sig- nificance fn the presence of this man and those who huve #o long worked with him. They stand again at the doors of the party, ready to caterIf they can e the promise of the reform they eeck. The machine nien snecr at them, but the rank and file welcome them, The body of the party know thut thelr belp {e needed, and fn Ohlo everybody knows well that the State cannot be car- rled by u candidute apalust whom they wlif rebel, It s folly to fgnore thix. Itls worse than folly, it iy madneas, Jobn Cochrune at there i a promi- nent pesition half way back on the floor. With hia long hair and floatlug beard, he looked the proplet he was, —a prophet of cvil ta this Cone ventlon. To-morrow will tell. Scattered around him ot varfous distances were men who fitly repre- scnt the clussea of pollticlins who abject to being dictated to by thewe political renegades who *prate about reform, ** und **preach econumy and purity, " and *‘al) that political nonsense. ™ MOURNEIS, Iow the classea now to be described became dis- tingulshed gucets 18 will puzzle most to tell, Let it be hoped that they were there present without the wedding gurment, and that thelr fate s assured. Near Cochrane wus & msn who represcnts the antl-Uristow Treasury Iing in Washington. e joiuw hands with Shep- herd, Multett, and nll the Distrlct Rings, and wor- ebips ot the Conkliug shtar. Dack ofeCochrane were two noble representatives of the St. Louls Whisky Riug. Back still further was a man who could tell ulmont as much about the Washington lobby frum persounl knowledge and participation ax Willlam K. Chandler, the Sccretary of the Nu- tional Committce, Another stands high in rail- road secrcts sbout Credit-Moblifer and subsily legielation. The New York Custom-louse was o uoforlvus **lovited pguest,™ and the Freedmen's Bank Iting and the District Ringof Washingtun woroe. both there in promt- nent places. Dioubtlers sl these men wondered who had invited the Liberals preaent to sit down with them, Buot, if the Liberals consent tobo #een fn tho eamu gollery with these political welghts on party success, they wili probably be eaclly brought back into the party by a decent and proper nomination, OTHER INVITED GUESTS, It must not be supposed that the great gallery of nvited guesta was crowded with such drones as huve been alluded to. Fortunotely it was huge box of goodly olutment (nto which these flics had dropped. There were wmen of promiuence, honesty, carnestness, and great ubllity umong these gueste. There were Governors, Congreeswen, celebrated lawyers, many noted writers, clergymen, merchunts, and men, in short, of high standing in alt the walks of life, TUE GENLUAL AUDIENCE. All the long gullerios about were crowded with men whaee appesranice spoke volutnes for the in- telligonco and standing of the mnasses who wuke the runk und fle of the Republican party, The earuest element, the element which s for prinei- ple more thun men, and inslsts under threats which aro not fdlo of mhandoning the party upon honest oud able cane didates—evidently made up the majority of the vast compauy of lookers-on. Thelr prompt responnes of applanse to exery boid and honest utterance slong the Une of reforw showed this, And this responso was the more slgnificant from the fact that there was 1o packiig of cliques pos- aible under the methods by which the tic dintributed. No fairer test of average sentiment could be had than the galleries of the Convention attorded, and the men who are Inclined to rush the delegutes on to u cortain end, upon the theory that auyboly who 18 nomluated can be lected, will do well to remember to what sentiments these gal lerlis responded most promptly to-day, THE COLORED MEX were present In considerable force as delegates and visitors, They have been prampt 10 copy the ways of white voliticlans, snd g0 sprinkled among the men who are rapldly giving their mice position wero Jobbylets and those who touk part in swindling It and robbing uthors, Both the Freed. wen's Bunk ting, wuich Dr. Garnett su severely denounced, and the Dietrict of Columbia Ring, wero prominently represented by colored men, WHERE THE DELEGATES SAT. . The Committee of Arrungements bud on eye to the fituess of thingw lu placing the diferent delvga- tions. Thore Stutes which furnish the 1ot prom- ment candidates yet named wore rrunged directly fu front of thu platform, Thue, the President of the Convention hud under his eyo and an the right Kentucky, On his left was Malne, To the Jeftof Kenticky was Indlana and Now York. Under the gallery to the right of Kentucky was Pennsylvanla, and under the gallery to the Ieft of Mulue waa Olo. These wero in tho posl- tion of flanking reserves, and will either be called tothe frout or centre, The Committee had not pald much attentlon to other favorite sons, and where they had concealed the **Great Unkunown® tho outeldo armagements gave no slgn. TUB BENTUCKY DRLEGATION waa the first on the ground in furce—may thero provu to be o good omen in this. But whethor thelr candidute 1s choeen or not. such mnen ax Har- 1nn and speed must have felt awply repald for thelr Tong years of devotion to Republlcan princlples—n a community whore wuch devotlon costs some- thlng—by the uatlonal hLonor o cordially awarded to thelr life-long friend and fellow- worker, 1L must have glven them hearty satisface tlon to rewl on the banners which Clnclunati had hung over tha steeets leading to the hall such in- seripitlons ua theso: ristow §4 honest, brave, and just, and just nomiuate him und we will elect b, ™ wind **Bristow Is o platform,” and again, ** lirlstow can bo clected, ™ CONVENTION AT A GLANCE. The arraugenients of the hall were remarkable for their Eumm tuevs and convenlence. The auphitheatre above the stage, appropriated by i tngulshed x, 1o fumnlllar to every one wiio b seen tho hall. Phe addition dn the present caso in that the balcany has been takon out and the seuts ustend in unbroken manke to the Fluu strect wulk, This s covered with the natlonal culuul u staud of ilage accupying the centee. "Thie rewsln- der of the balcony fa festooned with red, white, sud blue thruughout ita whole extent. The divis- lon for the delvgutes, sepyrated with a hand-rait fram tho ulternates, was marked ol (0 States with Jlucards which o bilud uan conld hardly mies. Pho ofifcers of the Comention vceupy the eliptlcal stage ut the Tuot of the amphitheatre, RO Blow thenis, L Tront uf the delogates, aite tivs newspa tlong deal tables, placed parallel with “the lungest dimeusions of ke roum, It took but @ glancs o show that every available atom of space conslstent with com haa been utllized In €ho placing of seatn, vy buily {a peniaing the nrrangements. No Notis Convention has ever asnembled with so Jitle -* ! furion. The Commitico of Arrangementa *: ; with directaesn and effect, and all sabordl-" o scem to be fully posted In thefr dutles, Cine'. 3y har tearon to bo ratisfied with tho preparatio. st citlzens have made, —— ANOTITER SKETCH, THE WAT THEY ALL PELT. CiscixyaT, ne 14, —The proceedings of the Convention were marked by that harmony and good nature which generally distingnish the prellminary resaions of any political orgnnlzation, Everyhody wae plearant, and Uiere were no apparent sympe tomn of the Intonse cagerness with which every- body was looking forward to the busincss of to- marrow, Owlng ty a graciona dispeasation of Providence, there wann band of music to play in the paurex, and o arators near, which, during the early part of the day, prevented the flood of specehes cnstomary on rach oceaslons, But the denlro of the apectators ruther than of tho dele- Fates fiually carricd the day, and the closing lionrs af the Convention were veoupled by epeeclien by Kenator Logan and others, Their tone was ABOUT THE PAME, the only exception being in the remarke of Gov. o¥es,” who referred 1o the asplrations of tha ounser men of the day after purer ideals, an arpirationto which conwideration must he pald. PLATPORM-DUILDING, Another Indication of the overwhelming Interest which iaw hieen taken in the Prestdential question Lo the excluzion of ull else wos that to-day, for the Set time, Tus angthing been wald upon the xuhjeet, and even then, 5ot o4 mich_as waa heard In the Convention of 1868, The first reference to the pistlorin wan In the upening remarks by Gov, Mor- an, whore axacrtion that notbing must be done to nterfere with A SPEEDY RETURN TO SPLCIE-PATMENT met with applanee from perhaps a #th of the Con- vention and with no expressun of dissent. Tho suggestion concerning A SIX-YEAR PRESIDENTIAL TERM was warmly welcomed by bt a few. Then Pome- roy followed with a reference to the conrae uf the Denoeracy, which had prevented ihls conntry frum taking ite place amony the solvent nations of the world, After thils came the teading of the resolutions of the German meeting held here yesterday, nud of the address of the New Yark Reform Club, read by GEORGE WILLIAM CUITIA, There wan preat desire to hear thin well-known gentleman, and he had to go upon_ the platforin to read the document, which he diil most effectively. There was, howeser, more interest taken in \l’;’c man than {n the matfo After the speaking was over, the Committee on Permanent Orgunization made’ its repurt, recom- mending MR, EDWARD M'THERSOX, long Clerk of the loure of Representas tives, “for Presiding Oflicer. The Com- mitee's fieat “welection was Norton Mcs Michael, of l‘hllnduirlllu. hut he was too unwell and unable to preside. Both of them are Blaine men. After the presiding officer had made a few remarke, the Conventlon adjourned untl! 10 o'cluck ta-morrow mnorning. THE COMMITIEE ON CREDENTIALS will then submit Ita report, and the Alabama cane will have to be disposed of. Then will come the revort af the Committee on Resolutlons, and then the business of the Convention will begin Io carnest. —r CLAQUERS. AN ISPERNAL WASTE OF WIND AXD LXPENDI- TURE OF NOISE. Special Dispaich to The Tribune. Cixcrsxaty, 0., June 14.—This evening the oat- #lde followera of Mortan, und the ontside followers of lHartranft, and the out<ide followersof oll the other candidutes, are perambulating the streets, making the night hldeous with the bray of thelr brass-bands and the flare of their tarches, and the uninteiligible cjuculations of thelr respective ora- tors from hotel-balconies, and all of which reckons no more than 0 much wasted wind. I have been wondering why the rame throngs of outside work- ers appear regularly ot the Presidentlal Cone ventions to get up euch sn {nferual din and uproar, olt to no purpose. There fs not o delegate who cares a straw whom the torch- bearer and processionists shout for, nor who they dramTor. They all can't make a vote In the Cane veation for any candldate, and nobody in town {s 0 verlant a3 to mistake thelr cloquence for pulitic sentiment; and yet doubticen s long as Conven- tions continue to be held In this country in order to givo the machine-men o chance to defent the will of the people und to force the country o chease between two candidates, neither of whom would be elected M tho people could have thelr own way about the whole watter, &0 long doubtless the claquera will be paid to go through thelr demon. strations of public ecntiment In bebalf of favorite sons—the which [s as palpable o fraud ns the tears of hired mourncrs ot a funcral. Meanwhile a few of the leading managers, {n private roomsnt the hotels, are uctually rettling who shall be the can- didate. Could it only be foretold which et of theso private managers would plan #o ok to out- maucuvre al) the othiere, §t would be easy to predict who would be the notinee. To put it with more nccuracy, could it be nn awsured fact that the cliques that are operating for favorite xons wonld drop that nonsense, and work for just once for the goud of the party awd of the country, there wonld e no doubt of the electlon of Brivtow, or Iayes, or Warhburne, or any other candidate whose char- acter and antecedents were & guarantee that he meant reform and purification of the admliniatra- tlon; but when a favorite son geta the Preskdential waggot wrlgghiug inhis braln Lo is slow to recover, und 8o seem his followers, TIE PAVORITE-SON NONSENSY ought have been dropped to-night, but It was {n valn that efforts were made to bring about that de- vontedly-to-bo-wished consummation. Entreaty and argument were allke worthless 1o move the favorite-son lunatics, and so until to-murrow night was postponed the arranglug for the quiet nter- ment of the favorite sous and defunct cundidates, 1f the Dlaine men act with their usual tact thero will unly be an adjournment klne die to-morrow afternoon, for Iln‘f will furce Blaine’s nomination while the oppositlon s wtill divided between and distracted by the favorite sons and defunct candj- daten. Poseibly o winning fght ugainst tiue moy T e T e W PRICE FIVE CENTS. and the ticket war declared by hundreds of persons 10 be an Invincible ane. The T oqiinrisily snyn: ;-Such a ticket would harmontze tho discardant faction, and unile the Eastern and Western fitates nipen enndidaten who wanld secure both th anpport of the party and the favor of the reformora. ™ INeIS AT, June 14, --It In now apparent that rome nie will elapro hefore vatinz will bogm, to-mocrow. After the discunslon of the report of the Cominittes on Credentialn will come thaf on tie feport of the Committee on Rnles, ana It will be in $urn followed by womio debate conceening the plat- Subecquent tothe adjonrnment of the Committes n Rules, Mr. Ceeana, of Pennaylvanis, at the re- {lost uf several menihers, thongh, a8 he stated, Without any anthority, called another meeting for half-pant 10 to-ninerow morning. THEODORE M. POMEROT. m’;'ll?’(nmpornvy Chatrmnn, 'y i a man viell known in Washington, Hu won ouic of the Lest spunkcrs on the ot of Congreen. With o fine voice and_an exeellent knawledue of the rules, “he wonld have been & formidabie candidate for' Speaker had ho been ro- elected, ne the New Yark mef had fized on him, NOW TIHINGS LOOKED AT MIDNIGONT. The **favorite son* diocy having defeated alf efforte at a concentration of the anti-Blaine men tosmorrow. the sole remalning prospect of 1ts cope rolidatlu that. after two ar {hree hullots with - g the Convention wmay adjonsn Friday, leaving the *fuvrlte ‘aon fo be dnv:"nfl{ interred In the interim, From prescut indications not one of the **favorita pone can he (nterred until two or shres hallota hase convinced him that he hasn't the ghost of & ehiance of heing pominated. Tt fs doubita) wheiler three balota would sy one of them of that already el ident fact, It s fufo to nastire that the ilialne manogees thoraughly understand this programme, aud the. prohabiliticy are that, while the ** favorite sons" are waitlog for the ballotx that will demonatrate thelr reapves tive strenzth of rather weakness, the Hlatne men ity capture the nomination with a rush, Should this happen. and prove destructive to the party, its :pllnm: shiould be: **Died of Wo much * favorite vany,’ " Theodore M. Pome. TIHE PLATFORM, DILCUSSION IN COMMITIER, Spectal Dispatch to The Tridune. CrxcisyAati, June 14.—The Committce on Plat. form in still 1n wesslon (1t In now 12:10) wreatling with the currency conundrum, About midaight, after n protracted sexsjon, the Snb-Commitice re- vorted @ mild aort of resolution looking towart gradual resnmption of pecic payment some time in the course of bLuman events, . Gen. 4, R Hawley at once opposzd the resolation for s vagnences, and Insisted upon a declaratlion squarely fn favor of paying our honest promiscs to pny o it wan epreed they shonld bo patd when they wero nsued. and for_uch Tesislation sa will make operative the Sherman Specls. Resumption. oct, Tot discussion followed. ¥inally the whole rublect of ihe currency renoln. tlon with o maltitude of amendments was referred hick to the Sub-Committee, which threntens 1o ro- main the ecaslon until' daylight without coming ta o1 agrecnes T the Western Azsoctated Prear, Cixcinsaty, June 14.~The Committee on Reso- Intions met at 7 o'clock this evening and remained All thix time wans spent In sesslon antil after 12, In the discuseion of the financlal question, polig. o ond Southern and Chinese questions. No conclusion o arrlved st concerning any of them, amt most of them were rer ferred 1o Sub-Committees of fve ar soven, who<c conclusions will probably be accopted by (s full Committes whicl will mect ut o'clock to- maorre It in believed that the concluslon which WHI be reached on the foanclel question will he #alinfactory to the hard-money men. As regards the Chlnese It ix doubttull if any satisfactory met- tlement can he had. ~About the Southern questlon comparatively littie wis said. The discusaion on these poluts waf anlmated hut not quarreinome, Among the subjects discaxsed by the Commiitea veas that of woman suffrage, resolutions on which Hubject introduced, Two fumale suf- fr pleaded thelr cuse heeore the Committes, ub-Uommitice of Seven, to which all snb- ;Im\e beee referred, i holding sn all-night on. A CIIANGE. KOT SO SETTLED A8 IT WAS, CiseInsaTt, Juue 14.—So far a8 the nominec for Prosldent f« concerned, there In an apparont ond admitted change elnce yesterdoy, 1t has been to wenken Blatne, but_secmingly not for the benefit ofany known caudldate. As for the cankes to which this fullins off 14 ateributable, they vary with the Presidentlal preferences of the peron who #ates them, The Bristow men eay it Is due to the republication to-dny of BLA 'S LETTERS TO risuen, which they elalm had never boen read by some of the delezates, and hurriedly read ond nover thoroughly understood by others, Some Conkling men way that It §sdne to an fmpression that the nominatton of Dlaine will resnlt fu the defeat of the Republican party, The Dlatue men are wald to have 963 votes sure for the firat bullot. T1is opponents clalm that that [y hix entire strensth, unid that he cannot gather any more into his fold. Iix friends assert he has 284 pledged votes, thungh last nlzht they put it at near #00. e haw, they say, o prospeet of getting about 400 on the flest ballot, The wajority of THE PENNSYLVANIA DELEGATION, they eay, |5 sutely for him, though Don Cameron and his aseoclates, who have made o tremendous ellort 10 kwing the delegatlon for Conklluyg, deny Ity asserting that Fennsylvanls I« solid for’ Hart- ranft, and Wil remnain wo firel, last, and all the This Ix certainly in sceonl with the action e cancus Tueaduy’ afternoon, but It becomes at [lartranft liuu no chance. From forty ght of the delegates wil, 1t 18 claml, s Iitaino, rinres looking to o -combination with the Lz intecest have heen made, but were unses ful. Jartranft's feiends want'hin st the head the ticket, Their determination In this ct brought about a promise {hat In tho nz being dropped his strength wonld Le given to ft. “'Flifs, however, (s not relled upon by ¢ ueylvanin men, who say the offer was mado to secnre Yeckprocity, It §s whiapered about st a late hour to-night that LOUISIANA MAY VOTE FOI HARTIANPT, which woutd remove any excnre the Blalne menie bers of the Peunsylvaniu delezntion worh! have for deserting the candidate of the huyotone State. 3 MORTON, It 8 the general ppinion that Senator Morton may be said to be where e was yesterduy, Indie ans will stand by dm to the lst syllable of ro- corded votew, Tlin friends eay théy have heen be mude to-murrow sud the nomfnation be deferred untll ¥riduy, ITERE AND THERY, BRISTOW AND THE VIC 'HESIDENCY, Special Dispateh to The Tridune Wastixatox, D. C., June 14.~18 Is stated that Mr. Bristow recelved 6 telegraim from Clucinnati 1his morning, Ingulring #f ho would accupt the second place on the ticket If tendered to bin by the Conventlon in the event of Mr. Blaine's wom- tnation, and that bo replied atating that he w willing to lease the matter In tha hands of his felends. A HISTORIC PARALLEL. 1t {s mentloned o u singular clreumstance in confirmatlon of hlstoric parailel that Buclunan, feom Peansylvania, and Breckeurldge, from Ken- tucky, were nominated by the Dewocratle party at Cincinnatd just twenty years ago, There was o peculinr alliteration 1n the names of the two ', and tho rude puna of that perlod, ** Bully Uoye," ¢ Bravest and Beat," ** Bound to Deat, " etc., will be remembercd by thove who were fa- witllar with the events of that _excitlng campaign. 1t fe thought that Mr. Iiristow's name woull mate- rially rtrengthen the ticket, becauxe & reasonable pretest would thereby be furnishied to the Liberal #alnite in the Sonth, and there appents to be somo colar for tho lnpression, CONKLING, The felends of Mr. Conkling du not by any means say that he fuout of the race, Vhey haye always Deen quivt, and have not Uradged as loud as suins of the nthera. 1t {» alated, however, on pretty good authority that they have not mich hope of thelrcandidate, und wro bending thelr sole nit ] to-nlght in con- undivided enerzies o the defeat of Blalne, understood that they are worklng Junction with the frignds r canitldates for ihe purpose of uniting thefr forces, The Imme- diate resuls of this Is that the fricnds of liayca sre more wncour: than ever, snd beliuve that he will be flually seevpled A8 THE COMPROMISE CANDIDATE after couple of balluls have shown the Impractica. bility of umting upon any other man. Sccrelary Brintow's supportees ure much more cheerful ihan Ihr‘y were yesterday, They have soime hope for thelr own nian, but nore for a des feat of Hlalne, They belleve that the reception of Grorge Willlam Curtis inthe Conventlon this aftee- noon 8 un dndex that he lsstronger than they hoped They ate conlient of 103 votes ou {he Sres baliat, kaving reclved weveral nccosslons since yen- terduy. Among these gaing are o majority of the Texn Ratlon, two from Pennsylvania, and four from Mississippl. The wost prominent man who has COME OUT SQUANELY FOIt NRISTOW, Is (ov. Alcaru, of Missfssippl, heretofure 1 eday doubtiul. e unb of the Vic Republicans to return to the party, and beskdes this, the rellzlons clement of the country which hau favored Mr. Bristow's nomination would be attracted to the party. Several prominent itepub- licana In this city declared to-day that Blslne and Hristow would be the strongest ticket that could be placed ko the feld, ANOTIIER VIEW OF THE OASE, Byectal Dispatch to The Tribune, ‘WasmNiros, D, Jane 14.--A ramor guined currency carty in the evening thut the Dlains managers in Cinciunati and here nd proposed to Bristow n comblnation which should give Bristow the seconi place on the ticket, Nuch proposttions have been 1o Hriglow, with the sesnrance that If uce the nomination of Bristow Il be rialn - upon the fret ballor. Threo mesrengers have been (o Hrlstow's houe [ rg:v.ml that Bristow veulng, waklug liln, w The ias [ elvgr or that Lie Is in the hands of his friends ls not ¢y There aro pervons u Cinclanati who are authorized to speak to-morrow for Bristow in this respect, and there ls very good reason (o bellove that if called upon to represent Lrlatow's views, they wiil eay Brlstow bas never sought the piace and would not accept the socond, i AN UNLIKELY COMBINATION. New Youk, dune 14. —Tho Evening I'ost saya: 18 18 rumured in well-informed clreles In this city thls mumlmi: that u strung combinatiun of the fricnds of the other candidates than Baiseare con- #hderlng a propoeition 1o bring forward the nanis ot Williany 3. Presidency, with It tbe report ubout the atrenyth of the combinatlon, us circulated bere, is correct, it will prove a forudduble vue. ' The wuvouncement of this wovement was buls letined by the Svening Lost catly thls moring, dents of the Brlfow meeting ut Pike's Ope Huuwo this evening. The present sitnation e co) sldered very enconraglng. Tliere nre detallod e tuates In Circalation of the strength which Mor- ton, and Cunkling, and Bristow hase, but they ara the ones wadu for publication, sud aro not trusts worthy. 1t is belleved that even tho privaty calcu. lutlons of the leadere, the ones which they have fuith In, ure somewhat at fault, sud the same men Oguro on juny States after (he complimentary Yot have been disposed of on tho Arat ballot. it 18 spparent that thero will be s lurge body of dela- ates concerning whose real weuthioents nothiug fs known, and whoss disposition of their votes tan ouly be guessed at. “Plicse men conatitute u lurge B vintve cloment {u the Conventiun, crved absolute neutrality, and, fali- bgg 1o contradict whut was sald to them'ta pralve ot diferent candldates, ave created thy impression that they were lu favor of them all. BRISTOW. E B0 MEETING LAST NIOTT. CixciNNaTl, O, Jute 14, —Another enthuslastia Bristow meeting was held to-night st Pike's Opera- Itouse, at which & larga and intolligent sudience was prescot, and this in aplts of meetings elso- whero and e distracting tendency of various pro- ccealons headed by bands of music pasaing through tho streets, The Tret speaker waw Mr. B, A, Chedbourny, of Massachusctls, who dwelt at length on the necessity of veform withins the He- publican party, He looked upon platforms as out of the question at the prescut thuo, 16 was men who were wauted, sud nut geueralities that spark ted aud glittered but were 100 ofien but vain and cmpty talk. Hu thought the prejudice sgainss electiog u Prostdest frum south of Mason .

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