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THE CHICAGO 'TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1870. i B R R R R R R R R TERMS O SUBSCRIPTION. PAYABLE IX ADVANCE—POSTAOB PRRPAID AT TUIS OFF) pasty Faislon, poutraid. § year. $12.00 "arts of 8 year, per month,,... 1 Jiatied to any adiress tous eeks for 10 Hundey R 3 1 0 Bheet .. 3 Tri- Weel B0 Parts of 8 year, e One co 8 1.50 Club of .00 Clubof twenty, .00 Yortage pre; £pectmen copies sent free. To prevent delsy and mistakes, he rure and give Posts Ofice address (n fuil, including S(ate and County. Remittances may be nade cither by draft, express, Post-Oftice order, or In registered letters, as our risk, YERMS TO CITY SUBSCRIBRRS. Pally, delscred, Bunday excepted, 25 cents per week, Dally, detfvered, Sunday Included, 30 cents per woek Addrers THE TRIBUNE COMPANT, Corner bMadison and Dearborn-ats., Clileago, Il CAMI'AIGN TRIBUNE, The Repulilican party liss now placed its natlonsl ticket and platfunn bofore the people. The ensuing Presidenttal canvass wlll be onc of the most exciting and limporiant that has ever occurred In this country, Kvery manshould be furnished with full and correct po- iitfcal information. 1nordertosupply this necd, the pube * Iiabers of Tug Curcago Trinenx will print » camyaign edition, commencing immediately, and continulng watll after the Freshurntial election in November, 185 atthie followlng exceedlugly low rates, posta; 1zn TuineN E=single co ek humbers of the campulg: i« seut. The roaner persousorder Titk CAMPAIGN ‘Tril UNE, the greater number of lisues they will get for elr wowey, AMUSEMENTS, looley’s Theatre Randolph street, between Clark and LaSalle, En- pageuent of the Union Bquare Company, ' T8 TWo Urplisus.™ ~ Afternoon and oveulog. Wood’s Muscitm,. Monroe strect, between Desrlorn and Btate. +*Orphan Genivieve™ sud **Clicago by Gasllght.” Alierauon ead eyenlag. Adclphi Theatre, Monroe street, corner Dearlorn. Varlety perforin- auce, **Arvalt ua Poguc, SOCIETY MEETINGS. EX CITY LODOE 141, A. ¥, & A M.—A e acation, il . i o ¥ eameiny Tyenive, Junean, at Orlenea) Tinll, Wark on the N R T TR R L. L. WADSWOKTIL Secretary. LSPERIA LOUGE, No. 411, A, F. snd A, M. — PSR PG nsonc Temple, cor, itan- it ad, atsdan, Mis Oredcaiar) evcaing, ey T Demreer,, AR, S CilaS, ¥, FOERSTER, TTENTION, SIR ENIGH P llcl';ml;":.\] Corbmandery, R, 35, Ko T thls (Wetipes: oo At ® el IO, Recorder. pocial conclate of WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1876. Greonbacks at the New York Gold Ex- changa yesterday closed at 82], ¥ ‘Thoe Republicans ofg Vermont accopt tha Cincinnati platform ffid condidates us the best and wisest that could have been givon to the country, and promise an old-fashioned anjority sgainst any ticket the 8t. Louis Llonvention can produce. The Hon. Hon. ack Fawmuaxnxs is the candidate for Gov. ernor, My, Bamiz left Washington yeaterday for his home in Maine, ocenpying a special car containing & bed, in which he will make the Jjournoy without change of cars, His health is still extromely precarious, and a period of absolute rest and careful nursing is necessary 1o avert scrious if not fatal results. 'The Ju- diciary Cominittce have not yet decided to postpone their investigation during Mr, Braixe's absenco, but out of regard for fair- ness and humonity will probably do so, Beata at tho Democratio Convention nre quoted firm at $26 ench. Thora were o few offcrs on the sireet ato slight concession from this figure, but there was no lack of speculative buyers who calenlate upon a rise ns noon a3 the Conveution shall have begun bal- loting. Each dolegate is equipped with o stated number of tickets, and in this way it is expected that @ fair proportion of lotel and bar-bills will bo adjusted honorably nnd in o manner bocoming Demoerats, The Reformed Episcopnl Church in Ameri. cn hag suffered a heavy loss in the doath of Bishop Cusuixe, who oxpired yesterday at Lutbervills, Md. e waa grestly admired and beloved for his zonl us an evangolical churchman and Lis warm Christian character. Just prior to his election as Assistant-Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Ken- tucky, Dr, Custins wos a rosident of Chics- o sud Rector of Trinity Church in this city, “vliere the nows of his deuth will occasion profound regret. m————— At lnst the Plymouth Scandal Commission Is made up, the Committee of the Advisory Council having chosen Judge NaTuanten Burruay, of Connecticut ; tho Hon, Asaurr, Fixex, of Wisconsin ; Judgo 8. B, Gooring, of Indiana; tho Mon, Jowartnan E. Ban. GEANT, of Now Ilampshire ; aud Judge Jo. seen C, Kvave, of Iowa. Whather all of these gentlemen will consent to servo on the Commission, aud if eo, whether anybody will ombrace the opportunity and become re. rponsible for the formal prefermont of charges aguinst the Nev. Hinny Wawp Buzcuxn, aro matters highly uncertain, The latest Li of compromise suggested {n connection with the Congressional dead. lock ou the appropriation bills contemplates the adoption of o joint resolution providing that appropristions shall be mado for the en. aufog four or five months on the basis of the sppropriations for the flscal year just elos. mg, and that Congress shall take o recoss until kotacdiately after the Presidential cloc- tion. Bome of the lending Democrata in Washington aro getting frightened at the prospect of burdening the party with the re. sponsibility of blocking the wheels of Gov- crnment, and & comprowise of some sort is yrobable, A largely-attended meeting of prominent Germau-American citizens of Chicago was held Jast ovening for the purpose of eXpress. ing their sympathy for Mr. A, U, Hastne in the misfortuuas which have befallen him, In the speeches made and resolutions adopted there was no word of pallistion or excuse for the offense which dr. Mesixa admitted in Lia plea of guilty, but thero ‘was a ganeral nxpression of feeling thnt his punishment is vxcessively wevero, and that bis case is ono which warronts the intervention of the Pres- ideit’s power to aborten the term of fmpris- onment imposed by Judge Brobarrr, Reso- {utions tq this effect were adopted, and peti- tions willatonos bo cireulated for siguatures, ———e The Chicsgo produce misrkets were rather glow yesterday, and generally stoady, though tbe lending coreals wore essicr. Mesw pork closed 5o highor, ot $19,00@19.05 for July and $19.20@19.25 for August. Lard closod Ge per 100 s lower, ot $11.10@11.12} for July and $11.25 for Avgust. Meats were frmer, at Tjo for boxed shoulders, 10jo tor do short ribs, and 10jc for do short clears, Xaks freights were dull, at 2o for corn to Buffalo. Rail freights were un- changed. Higliwines were quictand stendy, 8t 831,10 per gallon. Flour was quist and ensy. Wheat closed stondy, at $1.03} for Juno and $1.03} for July, Corn closed 4o higher, at 4Gia for June' and 4Gic for July, Oasts wera unchanged, closing at 30c for June or July. Rye closed ensier, at 674c. Barley was 1@1}e higher, closing at 60@60}e for June. IHogs wero uctive and 10@16c higher, closing firm at $6.05@6.25 for com. mon to choice. Cattle were quiet and un. changed, Sheep weore scarco and firm; quoted ot §3.00@4.50. TLast Saturday even. ing thore was in atore in this city 1,461,900 bu wheat, 1,049,230 Lu corn, 301,323 bu onts, 66,473 bu rye, and 809,116 bu barley. One hundred dollars in gold would buy $111.874 fn greenbacks at the closoe. The first day of tha St. Louls Convention hns come and gone, and nothing has oceur- red which furnishes anything like an indica. tion of what the outcome is to bs, TrLpEN's supporters claim for him an amount of strength which will securo his nomination on the first or second ballots, but the anti-Trroex men ag confidently nasert that his nomination is an impossibility, There is littlo to Lo gleaned from the first day's proceedings of material for spoculation, but what little there s seerma to point to Tupy pa the nomineo 5f tho Convention. It is expected that the Committeo on Resolutions will be ready to report at the opening of the Con- vontion teo-day, and that the balloting will begin early. It hes beon quite generally conceded that Mr. Warrzrson, of the Courier-Journdl, knows how tfo run n nowspaper, and it must not now be donied that he knows how to run a Domocratic Couvention, 1lis charming disregard of parlismentary for- malitics in sottling such questions as arose during bis brief careor ns ‘Temporary Chair- man, his ruling all points of order to bo out of order, and his gentlo but firm method of aquelching every delegnte who attemptod to claim attention, resulted in driving business along at o sponking gait. Jrrrexson would have groaued in spirit and Cusuine tore his hair, but Mr. WarrEasox was serencly con- fident that ho knew what he was nbout, and o Convention was none the worso for it all. Tt isn't the firat timo an editor hns run a Convontion and run it well. Tho coble dispatches this morning smell strongly of powder. A war between Servia and Turkoy is not only imminent, but would acem to bo inevitable. Servin's ultimntum Lus beon rojected by the Porte, and the Princo MivaN has either gone alrendy or will go to take his place at the hend of the army ina dayortwo. A dispatch from Belgrade statos that he will issua a war manifesto on tho 30th inst, and on the 1st of July a state of eioge will be proctaimed throughout Servia, The Servian Committes in Parig is on. gaged in purchasing arms and enrolling vol- unteers, and in Montencgro nll tho msles Be- tween the ages of 17 and 60 have bean or- derod into the ranks, The Turkish troops on the Bervian frontier and the flotilla on the Dsuube are under orders to commenco hostilities at the first signal, and all hope of proventing o bitter and bloody war sooms to Liave been Abandoned. WAITING ¥OR THE VERDICT. There does not seem to bo a very gonoral nor o very deep interest in tho result of tho strugglo at St. Louis which will probably be' detormined to-day. Itseems to be conceded that the Presidential question was sottled at Cincinnati. The nomination of Hayes and Wugeren frustrated sl the calenlations the Democrats had mode, and sot them by the ears. It wes nu acknowledgmoent by tho Republicans that the real fight will be in Ohio and Indinun in Octobor and New York in Novowber, and it was a preparation for thio strugglo which the Democrata did not ex- pect, aud which has frightened them into confusion and dismny. If it had not boon for this noguination, Mr. TiLoex would hava reccived tho Democratic nomination with considerablo unanimity; but those Dowmo- crats who desivo the success of the party morae than the success of any particular indi. vidual are forced to admit that Tiipey iy not the man. It is out of tho question to uppose that ho con carry either Indiana or Obio in October, and doubtful whethsr he can carry his own State in any eveut; but if Indinna and Ohio go Republican in October, even New York would not eleet him by giving him its electoral voto fu November. Hut those who foresee all this in I'rLpeN's case are at a loss to sug- gest auy other man whose chanees are botter, ‘The Bouth iu uxtremely docilo in the matter, Ita chief, in fact its only, ambition ia that the Demacratio party uhall get control of tho Govuraihent, The South is poor. Tho Houthern whites will not work, and the black lsbor is mo louger uble nor willing to support them in idlencss, Thoy aro now looking for approprintions and reimburse- ments, for offices and plunder, The South. ern dolegates, therofare, say to the Northern delogates: ‘““Select your own man, take anybody who ean get 60 or 70 eloctoral votes at the North, and wo will nccept him willingly oud gladly, and furnish the reat. DLut the Northern Democrats aro not equal to tho situation, They are divided among thomeelves. The Nuw Yorkers will not vote for Henvuicxs and soft monoy, and the Olfo snd Iudisus Demoersis will not vota for Truoxx andhard moucy, Nonoof the othiers who have been mentiouedars in a po- sition to muke an inrond on Haves, cither East or West, Such ** dark hortcs” as Tuun- MaN, Havcook, or Jorr Panxerdo not proni~ ise a swift race anywhers, TiLoey and Hxnpaioxs, eack in his awn State, are (ho only Democratio candidates who can promise oven the lLope of currying auy Northern Blate of importance, and the nomination of eithor insurcs tho loss to the purty of the strength which the other commands, ‘This embarrassing situation at 8¢, Louis {s furthor complicated by the fact that tho nomination of layes and Wiperen hos brought back to the Ropublicau party niuo- tenths of all the mon who desertad it four Yoars ago and two yearsago by renson of the errors it had modo and tho abuses that had cropt into it. The nomivation of Maves was a vietory of the conservative and reform element of the Republican party over the *‘machine* olement. It was tho sigual for » now and genuino movement in tha party for the purification of national polities. It war meant in good faith, and It has been nc- cepted in good faith. The * Liberals " havo boen united on him, The disaffected Rophb- licans have been entiraly sutisfed. It is, therefore, impossible for tho Democrats to seloct & Rupublicsn, liko Daviy Davis, and run hiw with suy bope of drawing away any vates from the Republican party, They feel that it would bo o doubls failure ; it would {ui) not only to draw off any Republican vates, but it would fail all the more becauso such & man could not command al she Det- ocratio votes, It mny bo stated as n rulo that every mian who has over voted with the Republican party, or who has.aver folt him- solf politically nssocinted with that pasty, will enst his vote next Novembor for Iiaves and WnEesten, Eight months of a Demo- eratio Congress have helped to nssure this, It hos been demonsirated that, to the extont the Domocratic party shall acquire power, to that extent it will pass into the control of the Confederates. ‘I'ho country has an op- portunity to see what the Confederates would like to do, and what they have only been re- strained from doing by n Repyblican Sonate and President, and by an approhension of the effect on tho Presidentinl clection, 'They want a lengue of States instend of o nation, ond they desire to be reimbursed for losses incurred in tho fight they made to support thot fallacy. Honce tho eagoerness of tho South to accept any candidnte who can com- mnnd three or four Northern States; but hence, also, the impossibility of finding such » caudidate, which is the desperato situation of tho St. Louis Convention CANADA AND EXTRADITION. The folly of tho position taken by Lord Russzst which led to the annulment of the oxtradition trealy betwoen Great Britain and the United States will be visited more severe- 1y upon the people of Caunda than sny other territory involved. 'Tho Canada nowspapers forcace this, and o recent number of the Toronto Globe kaya ¢ ‘This matter bas a more serions aspect to Canada than to Eugland. 1t fs more or Jess difiicult for an offender to vscape across the een, and none will attempt {6 whle they ave tho convenient border Mue of Csnada to shield them, We shall receive every ranaway robber for whom tho United States have become too warm, and we ehall have to re- member that to the sudden interposition of the Euglish faw of 1870 18 our discomtiture owing, It Ix uunecessary to offer an opinlon as to the refative merits of the controversy, The Luglish Govern- ment bove tled thelr own hands by un act of Parlia- ment. Untid this {5 repealed or othurwise lter- preted thers 18 no opinion left theW; but this nonn the icas leaves tha United States argument unos- eailable, Wa cannot lmsglne that two civilized Governments will allow such a dead-lock to con- tinne, ‘Tlhere must, souner or later, be a ncw treaty, concerning the provisions of which we in Connda, a8 belng primarlly {aterested, should have something to eay; but in the meantime the somo- what discreditablo condition of affaira wmust be endured, The short-sightod policy of the English Governmeut is oven less excusablo thon the Toronto (flobe, with that strang fecling of loyalty characteristic of provincial papers, las stated it to be, for the very municipal 1aw of England upon which the guarantee was nskod expressly provides that it shall not op- erato to invalidato any existing treaty. Had England desired, therefors, to rotain extra- dition with the United States on tho termsof the Asmountox treaty, it would not have been prevented from doing so by the law of Parliament which Las beeu reforred to, ‘[hore must have been some ulterior purpose in view, Porhaps it wns the thought that the United States, with its well-known devotion to the most advanced rules of civilization and interuational law, would permit o summary and forced chauge of the treaty without go- ing through tho usual formalities and cour- tesien, If this was tho ides, the British Govornment must be convineed of its error by this time, Of course the movement for o now extra- dition treaty cannot originnte with the United States under the circumstances, no mattor how annoying it may bo to have our criminsls eluding punishment by flecing over tho Cauada bLorder. Porhgps it will be as well, indeed, to reccivo any overturcs from Groat Britain with sutlicient deliberation to insuro a concession of the ronsonnble de- mand that each Government shall hinve tho right to try surrenderod criminals for any violation of its laws outsido of palitical of- fonscs. ‘Thus, Baivars, oy, and Roor are in Cannda and could not ba Lrought back under the extradition treaty for defrauding the Govorament ; but if there wasn prima Jucie caso of forgery ngainst cither of them ho would be survondered. Iu that ease the United Btates would cluim the right of trying the surrenderod porson for defvauding the Government nlso, but England would deny it. This explaing thu controversy, But now that the trenty hns been sbrogated Ly the refusal of Great Britain to obuerve its termy without exacting pledges which it doos not require, Canada necessarily becomes the Botany Loy for:American crimiuals, We can stand it as long as Canadacan. Our population being ton times Inrger than that of Cannda, we ‘will naturally contribute ten times ns many criminals, The borders ex- tend from tha Atlantio to the Pucific, and have a frontage of nearly 4,000 miles, alford. ing an ensy escaps into Canada of our mur- derers, thieves, forgers, snd all kinds of rogues. The Cauudiang can scarcely view the prospact complacently, aud will not feel particulurly grateful to the Mother Country for making thoir cities the asylums for the convicts from tho United States citics. Dut they are welcomo to them. LAND-MONOPOLY IN GREAT BRITAIN. "The Fortnightly Review for Juna contains an exhaustivo review of the English Domes- day Book, written by the Houn. E, L. S7an- rex. Tha results of his cxamination contain many facts additional to whut hns alrondy sppeared in ‘Tue Trinuxy, which go to con. firm the statoments of My, Buwour aud Mr, Mitu relutive to individual land-ownership, although this census was mada exprossly to rofuto thoso statumonts, Mr. StaxLeyshows many ways in which the number of owners has beon grossly exaggerted. First, o gront maony. lowsoholders are sct down as free- holders, tha roturns enumcrating lense. oldors for more than ninejy-nino yoors ay owners, ‘T'his error includes n large nunuborx sinas noarly all lensos in tho largs towns Jiko Lancashire and Yorkshire are made for 999 years. Bccond, in numerous casos, whero owners hold lands in soveral conntics, their nnmes aro ropeated in each enso. Mr, STan- XY states thot already over 300,000 applice- tious have boen minde to clear np this matter of double entries, Third, anothor mistake baa been made in nat setting down the own. orship of glebe property by the clergy as owned by corporations instead of by indi. viduals. 'Chird, in numerous instancoes, col. logo and university property has boen sot down to funnts ns ownors. Mr. Branex recitea many other iustancos where mistakes Lave buen mado through carelessuess and ig- uorance, and, making all deductions and ul- lowances for orrors and double entries, he oyrives ot somothing like a true statement of the caso. Oumitting 1,624,264 acres of waste lands belonging to lords of manors and large ownery, who derive profita from the mines snd shooting privileges, and 1,450,000 acres of plantatious owned by large owners and tho Crown, ho finds that there are 17,600,000 acres of cultivated and rateablo lands in En- glaud, or 63 percent of thetotal of 41,000,000 acras, belonging to 4,600 gentry, yielding an annual reotal of 175,000,000, and that 333 Teers or Pecrcsses own 5,422,000 ncres, or ouo-sixth of tho total acreage. In Beotland, tho results aro still more remarkuble. The wholeacreage iy 18,446,694 acrcs, nine-teuths “ported them largely. of which belongs to leas than 1,800 owners ond ono-half to 70. Out of 131,530 ownors, 111,658 own less than An scro. None of the English Pecra can como up to the Beottish. Tho Duko and Duchess of Surnearaxp own 1,326,000 acres, or nearly equal to one-halt tho aren of Counnecticut. The Dnke of Buccreuon own 431,000 neres, and 20 porsons own aver 124,000 ncros each, As one rosult of thoso immense propertics in Scotland, Mr. 8raNtey showa that over 2,000,000 actes, formorly devoted to shoep-raising, have been entirely clearod of sheep and'tho valloys have boen gepopulated, to make room for deor- porke, thus killing tho food-supply of the country, dospoiling a productive aud profit- ablo industry, taking away from active in~ dustry an army of gamekeepers, watchers, nnd gillios, simply to minister to tho luxury of a faw wenlthy sportsmen. Mr. STANLEY not only presonts statistical results but nccompanies them with pertinent commonts, e showa in the first place what an immonso power, growing out of rontals, profits, politfeal importance, and church pat- ronngo (theso Inrge laud-owners having 1,361 and the Bishopa 2,020 livings in their gift) 1a concontrated in the hands of theas 4,500 Iand-ownors. Asthe land systdm now works, the moderato owner is a mero lifo-tonnnt struggling with mortgages, dowagers’ joint. ures, nud land charges, Instoad of Iand be- ing freoly bonght and sold, one-half of the land is so tied up in sottlemont ns nover to bo in tho market, Ho points ont ita effect upon the younger sons who are forced to go into the clorgy, or nrmy, or official places, nud, with reforenco to the daughters, saya : Bot how docs the aystem work on the daughters? We are astoniahed al tho willingness of widows in India to burn in obedlence to custom, but England Is fuil of starving spinsters who have lost the chance of happy homes, becauso tho glory of the family demanded that the money which might have enabled them o marey shon)d bo retalned to en- able the son and heir to keen up his position in the countty. And these faded women, many of then, do not gepine, They treasure the memory of some old romance, the novel of thelr life, of which the third vofume has been suppressed, but consvle themselves for the luss by feedlng thelr family pride ond keeping up a chill gentility, which would be ludicrouw, If 1t were not pathetic. Tho comment would be incomplete with- ont the guggestion of some remedios in tho way of reform, and these he offera ns fol- lows: 1. Tha separation of connty adminis- trotion from tho ownersbip of Iand, the bns- ing it on electivo ground, and the rendjust. ment and extension of areas for local Gov- ernment. 2. The nssimilation in all respects of renl and personal property. 8. The pro- hibition of settlement of land on unborn per- sons and the incorporation of a powerof sale in nll sottlomenta without requiring auy con- sents, 4. The extension of the powers of compalsory purchnses of land for many pub- lio objects, . The abolition of the game Inws, or at least their very gront restriction, ———— 1038 OF BRITISH COTTON TRADE, The trade in cotton manufactures is one of thoe most important branches of British com- merce. Out of n total export in 18756 of £232,800,000, no loss than £74,624,000, or ono-third, wero of cotton goods. In turn, out of thiy £74,624,000 there wera £14,769,- 695 of cotton goods sent to India. It will be secn, therefore, that one-fifth of the BYit- ish exports of coiton manufactares go to the great Indian dependency. Tho cotton trade of Great Britain has nat maintained the ssceudency it had at oue time. Thot is to ssy, British consumption of cotton has not kept pace with the general incrofise in cotton. Thus, in 1875, thoro were consumed in balos averaging 400 pounds cach ¢ Countries, . Bales, Per cent. Qreat Rritain.... 000 ¥ Continental Enrope; 2,000 340 United Staton, 441,000 201 Bombay. 4,000 ) 7,154,000 A fow yeors ago tho British consumption was oqual to 49 per cont. The latest danger to this cotton trade of England {a the growingloss of the oxports to India. Indis produces her own cotton, and inbygoue times produced not omly all tho cotton goods hor people needed, but ex- But the primitive weaving of Tudia cbatd not survive a compe- tition with English machinery propellod by steam gonorated with choap coal. Though tho cost of labor {n India was nominal and that of the cotton trifling, the mills of En. glaod could delivor the machine-made cloth to the people of India. chenpoer then thoy could produce it by hand. In the progross of timo there has been groat improvements in Indin. There has been a largs acoumula. tion of capital; thore has beon an ad- vance in tho commercial cultivation of the peoplo. Expanded and intolligont views of industrinl nnd oconomio questions have taken doep raot, and as a rosult it has como to poss that India hns gone back to the manufacture of catton goods,—not in the old stylo of hand-looms, but with tha mpst modernized and {mproved stesm-machinory imported from England, In 1863 the first Indian cotton mill was built, and at the close of 1875 thero wore forty mills in operation, cighteon of which wero established in 1875, ‘Tha eapital invested in theso mills in July, 1874, was 22,085,000 rupees, equnl to nbout 211,000,400 of our monsy, while in Novein. Ler, 1875, it had reached 19,000,000, ‘I'he uumber of spindles al work in Indis is 1,000,000,—an incrense of 400,000 in 1875, It is estimated that G,000,000 of spindles will mako all the cotton goods that can be con. sumed in Indis, and that pumber, at the presont rato of increnso, will bo rapidly reachod, s ‘I'hese facts have attracted considernble at- tention in England, especially in Lancashire, It js atated by o writer in the Hortnightly Review that thero is half a million of proplo and £120,000,000 (#600,000,000) of capital directly omployed in England in the cotton trade, which, with varions other industries, including the shipping trade, dopend for their prosperity upon the foreign dersanad for thess goods. 'Tha average Hritish product of cloths and yarns is 965,100,000 pounds, of which ouly 16 per cent, or 154,000,000 pounds, are retained for homo consumption. The Governmont of India is, of course, supparted by ravenue derived from taxation, and, curionsly enough, one part of this tax isaduty of 5 per cent on the imports of cotton manufactures. Al British cotton goods entering Indis pay this duty of & por cont. ‘The tux is a light one, but in the alarmod state of tho cotton interest in En- gland it is regardod s & sorious in- jury to Dritish trade. It is claim- ed that this tax, though lovied for revonuo, {8 in fact @& protection to Indien industry, and that undor its “ pro- tection * the Indian cotton mills are rapidly building up to the exclusion of the manufac. tyres of England. the interest of tho capital and ldbor of En. glond, earnostly appeals for tho repesl of this 5 por cont duty beforo its repoal be too lato, and before India will be producing all tho cotton sho noods, and will Lecomo an ex- porter to all the sdjacent countries of the East. It is asserted that already tho Indian import of DBritish cottous of tho coarser qualitios has so seriously declined, in conso. quence of tho native production, that that branch of the trado may be salil to bo lost to England forovor. In tho menntime, tho In- dian factoriea ara producing the fincst yarns necessary to monufacturo shirtings. The English mill-ownora aro demanding the ro- penl of the duty bofors tho Indians hnve bronghit tho mpanufacture of finor goods to perfection, This rovelation of tho growth of cotton manufacturos in India marks the wondorful changes which take place in commerce. Ilero is India recovering, with tho aid of Writish mnchinery, her trade in cotton fabrics, In- slead of being tho largest purchaser from Grent Britain, she is becoming not only her own manufacturcr, but in a short time will compete with Great Drituin in all the coun- {rics of the East. The tradeof England in cottan goods iz also threatened by the naw policy of the American mannfactnrors, who, instead of running their mills on one-halt or one-third time to supply our overstocked howe market, have bogun to manufacture for export. If they wero reloassd from the thralldom of the tariff, which taxes thom in- ordinately, and the abominntion of depreci- ated papor monoy, thoy might success- fully compolo with Grost Dritain in tho sale of cotton goods nt least in countries on this Confineat and in Japan. Even tho cotton trade of “Now Englaud in threatenod with a rovolution. A Now En. gland paper before us points out the large extent to which the cotton mills in the Houthern States havo cut off the demand for New England-made goods for that section, The Southern mills aro producing all the conrser lines of cotton goods needed for homo consumption, and consequently New England loses that much trade. Tho loss of the Indian cotton trade will Le a sericus one to Eungland. Thoe decline in the iron, and gonorally in all tho other branches of her ozport trado, has been sorions and continu. ous, but 1o branch of Ler industry bay beon 80 prosperous and o widely extended as the cotton trnde, which is now throatened with the permanent loss of hor Lest and largest customer, Tho London Zimes, in the course of an article on British trade with New York, says: ¢ Thero hias been an enormous decline in the volumo of British iwports into Now York since tho Amorican panie, Tho volumo of British goods sold in New York City in 1872 vxcoeded 200 mitlions of dollars, and in 1875 it had follon to tho extent of 85 million .of dollars, or batweon 40 and 50 por cent. But tho exports from Now York to tho United Kingdom and British Possossions, which wero not quito of tho valus of 210 million dollars in 1872, still exceeded 200 million doltars in 1875.” In searching for the causa of this Heavy falliugoff, the 7%¥mes attributes it in conaiderable degroo to the grent decline in tho wages of Amorican operatives and other exponscs of mauufaoturing produced by the panio : "This heavy reduction of wages of labor, says the Tinies, Lna enobled American munufacturora to produce In successfui competition with the Rn- glieh certaln ataple articles Lorotafore almont ex- cluglvely Imported from reat Britain, snd nota- bly in manufactures of iron and cotten. Dritish mannlacturers wust henceforth expect an Increns- ing competition (n the United States (n thess two branched of Industry, s well as ki fabtics of allk. In regard to cotion goods, It s not sluno that they ary belug produced neatly ns cheaply an ln Ia- gland, Lut for certaln qualitios of guody manufac- tured In gome of the New York and New England mille o decided profercnce exlsta over the highly- tinfsbed caficocs and shirtings of Manchestor, Lut wlth stiuulated production wages ju the United States will doubtless advance, Indirectly owlng in no small degres to tho increased oxpenue of liviny cansed by the heavy protective dutlea to which Amerfcan manufucturers so tenaclously cling, and this elemcnt In tho cost of prodaction will tead to diminish tho force of tho competition with which Dritish manufacturers will hovo'to contend, and &lvo thom a better chanco In tha struggly to rotain thelr pro-eminence, The Houso of Represontatives having concurred in tho Sonaty ameundment to the Bilver bill rolative to the trade dollar, that bill will probably bacome alaw at ouce by tho signaturo of tho President, It is what is known as the Paxaebill, und was propared to facilitate the iusuo of silver coin in ex- chauge for fractionals and ralieve the faming of small chango that is now felt in many of the largo cities. It provides for the immo- dinte exchunge of "$10,000,000 sllvor coin for the vame nmount of greenbncks, the green- backs to bo held for the redomption of the froctional currency far which the silvor is to be substituted, It is probablo that the banks throughout the country will avail themselves of the opportunity of exchango which ttiis law will offer, aud through them the silver will be rapidly distributed in busi. nesd circles. For a while the cxchango will renlly swoll tho volumo of small monoy to woro thnn it has ovor been, so that imme- diato relief may bo expected in the way of small chavgo. Pooplo gencrally are also overcoming tho disposition to hoard silver, ond we 1ay now eafely look forward to tho cotplets substitution of coin for the ragged oud filthy fractionals wo bLave endured so wany yenrs, A Washington dispatch says that Gep. Suenaay, in speaking of ths situation in the Indian country, etutos that tho ntiack of tho Bioux upon Gen. Unoox's command indi- cates that those Indians are very dotermined in their warlike operations, Gen. Bueraan in absolutely safe in venturing this opinion. * Dotormined,” however, iy a very mild word farit. His opinion would have boen more valuable had o said that those Indians aro very successful in thoir warlike oporations, Tho General furthor says that * forbearance has consod to bo o virtue towsrd these Iu. dinns, nnd ouly a severo and persiatont ches. tisement will bring thom to a dus scnse of submission,” Just so; but tho chastising should not be of the Rossbud Crock styla, ‘When the chastising occasions us the loss of more men than the Indians, and compels ng to fall back for help, it is altogother too Bovere~—{or our sides, cratic Cunventfon fs the mountcbank Hznny Cray Daaw, who may well be regarded ag the original Nasoy. He is, of course, ut 8t, Louis, and he {3, of course, preaching political doctrine «hut would be dangerous It It was not 8o trause parently atupid. Considering that he preuchcs the Gospel {n the intervals between Democratle || Conventions, he scems ta Jearn less thaw ony wan who wakes himsel! 89 notorfously consple- uwus. His present misslon to St. Louls is to demand of the Conventlon that it proclaim the policy of rag money, and, as au {uducement to that end, ko threatens that, if such a platform be not udopted, be and his associates * will join with the laboriug class and the Grangers, and upon a platform pledged to national justice and 'The writer, speaking in |rthe rights of lubor, nominate candldates, and contiuue this warfare upon capital a8 the old Abuolitionists made wur upun Slavery, uantil the laborfug classes of the country arc freed from the slavery of capital.” Aund yet thls harlequin Drax hus ecores of active aympathizers st 8t. Louls. Mo proposes the orguntza- tion of & party w ubolish capital, aud that {dea of sholishing capltal has, strange as it way seew, a large fullowing, sud Las eyen ite newspaper organs in the Weat and 8outhwest, 1t Is hardly possible to discuss such n question As the abolitlon of capital, espeetally when it ts proposed oa n measury for the rellet of those who lfve by thefr dally wages, Capital s the means by which labor s put luta operatlon, It 1a the fund by which labor 13 pald. To abolish capital, asswing that sueh o thing fs possible, 18 to destroy the life und value of labor, ‘There must be labor, and, to utllize that labor, thers must be capital to employ It Hexny Cray Dran recently had his house burned down, losing uls Hrary and faralture, and hud no fn- surauce, T this aflifetion he hal the sympathy of every one. It was tho luss of (all his accumulations. He was reduced to poverty, Ils capital was anolbilated, It s impos- sible to Imagine how such a loss covld beneft any person. Yet this fudividual loss this man wants to make general. 1o wants to an- nfhilate all property, to destroy the acemmulas tlons of all men, to reduce every person to state of destitution, and thut he thinks will benefit the laboring clnsses, ife wants a new party to elect a Government pledged to annihl- lte property and capital In every form. He bus followers at 8t. Louls and in Illivols, Some ol his Town assoclntes have an anti-capital, rage maney newspaper fn Chicago, Novertheless, however uncertain o Democratle Conventlon nay be, it will hardly resolve the Democratic party into an antl-capital party, nor propose to encourage fabor by abolishing all wages-funds, 8till, Drax is a Democrat, qud hing o contempt for hard-money and honest money; he thinksn clean shirt {s avidence of arfstocracy, and that o man who has saved a little money Is o public enemy. Hels nclergvman, and protests ngalnst honest muney; Is 1 Democrat, and ingists upon paying wages with bogus 2ad vtherwise dishon- est paper serip. When the new party 8 organ- fzed, DeAN should e Its leuder, its candidate, aud (ta apostie, OBITUARY, JAMES BAIND, ‘The cable announced a few days ago the death of JaMes Batrp, the milllonalre frou-master of Cumbusdoou, who recently male o secund do- nation of $2,600,600 to the Church of Scotland. The New York Zinies gives the following pur- ticulors concerning the enrly operations of this remarkable fumily: Early In the century there lived near Glangow, then o very ditferent place to what it 18 tu-duy, 0 woul furtier by the name of Bamp, who fud w famlly of stalwart nons destined 10 prove thems nelved the right men In the right pluce nt the right time, Lauarkubire is, us miott people are wwaro, the centre of the Scotcl fron trade, which, Incon~ siderable at the copmencement of the century, rone wilh giant strides, eapecinlly In the whilom rurul parlsh of Monkland, it muy give some idea of thie extent to which the busineas was earried on (o state thny dn 1806 the yroduce of pig-(ron throughuut the whole County of Lanurk wus ouly from $,000 to 10,000 tons ‘per unnuny, and_the conl ¢ haumed about 130,000 tons, while h 1830 170,000 tons were produced and 510, 000 toud of coai consumed. ‘Uhe Bainps recoguized the capa- Olltles ol thelr nuttve pluce, aund ot to work to make the most of them, and 1o these gentlemen are due some of the most valunble finprovements wulch have been mede ia the munuluctica of iron, By degrees their operations wssumed o colonsal chrscter, und their weaith kept pace therewiti, Pl v buen, e preatoet nbnurtiees o real catate in Scotlund durlng the present century, MATTIEW NODLE. MarTnew Nonux, un emineat English sculp- tor, dicd a few days sfuce (n London, in the 56th yeur of his age. His titst worlc that brought him luto public notlee was the Manchester WerLs LINGTON tonument,~—a colossal statue in brouze of the Irun Duke, surmounting o granite pedes~ tal, on the angles of which are herole Sigures, representing Wisdom, Valor, Victory, and Peace., Jie also exccuted o statue of WELLINGTON for the Enst India Company; a statue of Barnow for Trinlty College; and suother statuo of “ Parity,"” which was engraved for the Art Unfon, and will frobably do tnore than any of his other works tu Land his uume down to pos- terity, OTHER DEATHS. Among other deaths recently reported aro thoss of Reoar-Admiral Renie, of the French navy, who died ot 8t. Thowns, W, L., while In command of the {rigate Minerve, ou ils way to Philadelphifa; of fonatio StookToNn Brows, the President of the Board of Part-Wardens of the Hurbor of New York; of Ronunr Navien, the noted ship-builder, who constructed the English war-vesscls Duke of Wellinglon, Black 'rince, and lector, and in later yeara bullt several steamn rams and vessels far Larchgn natlons; of the Rev. A. M, HENpER- 80N, Prealdent of the Congregntional College at Melbourne, Australis; of the Rev, Isaac B, one of the earlicst misstonaries of the Amerlean Bourd to 8yrfa; of Gen, Witias Rose Mang- VIELD, of the Loglish army, who served with great distinetlon in Indin; and of ‘Commander Epwarp C. Gnraeton, of the United States navy, who was flag ullicer of the Minnesota ut the thng the Rebel ram Merrimac attempted to run theblockade, In the engagement which fol- lowed in Hampton Ronds, Licut. Gnarron played an active und responsible part, In July, 1862, he wascommissloned Licutenant Comman- deryand was placed In command of theasteam gun- bont Genessee, Subscquently howus engaged atthe vowmbardinent of Fort Morgau duriug the pas- suge of tho feet into Mobile Bay. In 1868 ho commanded,tho steam gunboat, Geltysburg, of the Nurth Atlantle Squedron, and was soon after comilssioned as Communder, [ ——— The Hon, 8a3 J, Raypart Is admitted to be 8 fuflure us a leader [nthe House of Repre- seututives. e mo longer congruls the House. Ils political power and influence in Pennsyl- vania are sald to bo broken, A dispateh to the New York Times, from Washiugtou, thus speaks of hlm: Another reason for Mr, Ra¥patl remaining in Washinigeon, oesides that given clavwhiere, {6 sald to b the poution luto which the House drifted by Alr, SayLen Bpeaker pro fem. 'Fhere way uaflm y which Mr. HouLuax wis Lo by made Speaker tifl the rotura of Sy, Coxi hut it camne to Mr, Hov- *AN's knowledge, 80 the slory poes, thut some of the Southern men were Inténdlug to fun Me, Hangock, of ‘Texus, ugalust lam, Ia that cuse thero was m purpse on the Kepablic- an slde to nomluate Gen, Danks for Speake er, and ho would have been elected. Mr, 1oL- (AN struck s own numne out of 1he resolution that had heen prepared, snd inverkedS avLen, and mudo madilication which will prevens Cox guttlng Jnto the clinlr weaih without o uew election, in Ahis state of atluln Raniact found the fouse oo rupldly slipping away frow him, nnd gave up his trip to St Loufs, whers he s delegste, Scnatar WaLLAGE will his 0w way with I'ennsylvania folkn st 5t Louls, and Jreshape bo would bave hiud inany event, Oneof the revorts, indted, 18 thut HaNBALL was very glad to fnd un oxcuse'to stay in Washington, aince he expected WaLLAGK 4o cot- ol the Fennuylvania defegution, and Kaspaty would, by re nnlnlnm in Wasbington, be ablu lo render u resson for bis defest, © Altogethur the Bpeakershiy und the Appropristion bills are in a pretty muddle. ————— A correspondent of the New York Tvibune ln- terviewed ex-Beoator Jo R. DOOLITTLE @ few days ago, and pumpied the followlng out of him: With regard to Demncratic candidates Judge DooLstTLx bud uothing 1o way, but he expresecd great satiafuction with the numination of Havks und Wiskrxn, becaueo it averted the um)mgn of mud and aflidavits which the nominution of either Mr, Brawxg or Mr. Makrox would Lave brought o 0 high persunal character of tha candiutntes most promincntly numed by the etmocruts-~Uuy, TiLpEN, Judge Daviv, sud Gov, HENDCKs— o it aimost certain thot we should Lsve » compalgn deadng with priuciplos and not with “the ~records of candidates. o cousldered wuch campalyns as thoss the nom- fbution of Branis or MoutoN would huve pre- cipitated very deinorallzing. The country was to be congratuiated on the nowfnation of such men gy Uov, Maves and Mr. Wuserenw, . . o wibs thy decluration already wentloned, ex-Benator Duotirtie favors th immediate restoration of standurd ailvor dollars os lugsl tender du payment of all sume—thut {u, 10 thei vulue sa it exfated Lu- fore the wct of Few, 12, 1873; aud the passage of an uct of Congress pruvm\ug for the monthly re- tirement of o million or a balf-wlilion of green- backs, or, us Judge Dovwitrik calls it **war woucy. " "This, he belioves, would steadily but surely Uring greenbacks to par with allvag, and tlien ‘to par with gold. ~ If it should take five or ton yeurs o o this, Judge DooLiTTLE Whinks bo hara wuuld be done;’ **by going slow we sball ke no sleps backwar ———————— The Indianapolis Journal—an ardent Monron paper—speaks thus handsomely of Col, Buts- TOW's apeech at the knweuse ratification meets ing held in Cinclunat! last Baturday eventug: Tho sdaress he delivered thore traces the sentl. menta of the great majority of thuse earnest sud aincore wen who desired bls nomination for Preste dent at the Cinclunatt Couvention, uud will have great welght in wolldifyiug snd Inteusifying what Thuy by calfed the BinTow element In udvocacy of the Hepublican candidates wnd piatform. Fhy l\ulnlnn‘luno' Alavre and Wiikkexu was u direct autgrowth of the relori eletient of the Republic- au varty, in obedivuce Lo the demand of thy uickened publie consclonce, anid an cvidence of the purpose anid ability of theparty to desarve the continued confidence of tha people, noid success at thelr haada in tho coming Presidentint electin No Republlean who desired the nomination of M Buntarow on principlo ean withhold his cordisl in- dorsemont from Gov, HaTra. e —— The Albany Evening Journal says of the Cim cinnnt{ Convention: Toture the Convention mat on Wednesday it was plain that Me. Mouton could not be nominated, Aud bls friends nckuowledged It 1t was equally Pinin thot Afr. Coxkiine nnd Mr. HBnistow conld not b nomlnated,—3r. Congrine becanso, with the falluro of Peuunylvanta, one of tie primary conditions of auccess had been lust; Mr. Bniarow because his comparative freshness In pnblic 1ifa and his Kentucky home conld 1o, win aome of the Mot carneat _lepubilicans, o concentration apon Guv, 1aYR4 waa no sudden Impulse, 14 hnd been fn the minds of womo of the atrongest men, a8 we know, for many weeks, and [t was really termined bofore the balluting bean. ‘The come Dination wan not fully mnd furmaily made in ads vance, hecanse ane of o facturs were samewhiag uneertain; but it was substantially acttied, and the only renl guention was at what atigo of thy bilote Tugie should develop. e Colorado Territory was treated in the Repub. Meoan Convention ns n State, and, instead of casting two votes, ns (i the other Territorics, it was permitted to throw siz votes, This was doncon the assumption that ft would be ad- mitted s a Btate in time to vote at the Presi- dentlal election. The people of Colordo vote July 1 ou the question whether they desire to become u State or witl remaln a Territory. Ad- vices represent an alnost evenly-divided sentle ment on the fssie, and {t ts not atall huprobable that her citizens will elect to refect the habilfs ments of n State Qovernment prepared for them by Congress, Tho ¢ Centennfal State 18 becuming problematical, oo na— Mr. Citantes E. Corve, ex-President of the Board of Trade, peremptorily declines to hoa condidate for Mayor. Mr, (iEora® Ansoun, anotber prominent momber of the Board of Trade, also refuses o be u candllate, Mean- while publie upinion seems to be settling down pretty gencrally on ex-Ald. e, of the West Bie, who saya to his Iriends he is willing to serve If clected. He * doa’t haunker® for the office, but won't shrinle from it, should the people select him to Al it uuth next April ———— Bishop TTavEx, it is stated, is golng to Liberla ta lovk after the spiritual Intercsts of the cols ored peaple. It 1s lust the country for millc punches, and will offer @ strong temptation to the good Bishop to revive his early reminiscen- ces, and fntroduee them to the notiee of lis uew fock uf black akeep. Forty-thonsand ¢oples of George Elfot's ** Dan- fel Deronnta * Linve been sold In Englaod. The brass Land does not secem to be g0 Importany ap element of the Prestdential straggle ot St. Louls 08 it was ot Cincinnath, Dr, Withrow, the ancceasor of Adirondack Muz. ™y, Lasfine culture, solld Mterary altalnments, and o rich, musical volcs, Ilo aught to succeed. The Langrishe Troupe, strolling dramatic or- kavlzatlon, has started for the Dlack 1illls. We lTear it will opan with ** Black-Eyed Sioux-san,” Lowrence Barrett, the nctor, hos bought the yacht Wralth from tlie Boston Yacht Club, aud pro- 1osea to tompt the wrath of Neptuue this snnmer. *$Fanshawe,* one of Iawthorne's carly pleces, ls published by Oszood without the cxplaaation that it appeared originally ae an anonymous work, und was afterwards suppressed. Prof. Bldnoy Colvin thinks that the auperiority of . English writing tn nowspapera and mognzines existsut the cost of fuferiority in scrious lterature, and capecluily In the Jilerature of learning, The police of Bengul are aametimes ordered to take tigers Into custady, and falfll thetr duty with commendabla alncrity, fere the tiger seems to ba too formidable a beast for a policetnun to tackle, Victor Jugo sent an addreny to b pronounced a the gruve of George Sand, being Wimsclf too feobla toattend, Iic wrote: **She Lad a great heart like Barbes, s great mind like Balzac, aud great soul like Lumartine, ' Why didn't somcbody get excited about tho Dewmocratic Convention yesterdnyr There was not more than & langald interest s to whether John Kelly tnd punchicd Jolin Morrlssey's head, or John Morrlsscy Johu Kelly's, Geargo Sand's 1ast words were: **Do not destroy tho verdure,* Tt wasat firat thought that ahe was delirfoun, and thoun {t was remembered that shehad liorsclf planted certaln trees fn the cometery, bo- neath which she had expreased n wish to Lo Lurled. 4 Willlam J, Patterson has presented to the Doard of ‘Trade of Montreal a paper entitled ** Impors tant Statements Relating to the Sipping Interests of Montreal.™ Eithor the composlitor has com- mitted some horrld blunder, or this Is a directory o the saloous, brawcrles, sod distiilerics, of that Rourishing city, A Now York correspondent says that Mr. C. A, Stevenson, who played with the Unlon Square Com- pany In this clty lust week, is **n younger son of un Lpglleh Lord, or something of the kind,” Ha became stage-struck, and from an inferfor position hie roso tili hie finally blossomed out s a top-lofty “tivalking gertleman, Emlly 8chomberg, the Philadelphiabelle, {s soon to bo married, She hins gono o far as toselect the man. [iis name fa publivhed in the Graphie. 1t uscd to be sald that Miss Schomberg bad vowed never to marry untif ufie had recefved 100 offcrs, This muat be the 100th. We hope Mr. Sonkey will bu sccured to sing **The Ninoty-and-Niue" at the wedding. Moncuro Conway has scen Mark Twaln's new novel, **Phe Adventures of Tom Sawyer, " which, by somg strange srrangement, has been published i1 England before {ts appeazance in this country, 1n the opinlon of Mr. Conway, thia {s the moat notable work which Mark Lwnin has yet written, and it will signally add to b's reputation for variety of powers. " Plous people of London belng shivckod at tho ap- pearance of tho numcs Moody and Sankey an bur- nlshed plates attached to the cages in which tho Prince of Wales® tigers are confined, a compromlso has been mude; the plates are now covered with canvas, and the curious visitor Is obliged to poke around with Lls cane In order to got & slght of tho sacred namen, Mlss Anoa Dickinson has just finlshed o new play, 1t fs written In five acts, and each llustrates the fortuncs and persecutlons of & Jewess n a dif- ferent country, —~England, France, Germany, Rus- sia, und the United States. Thosa who have read ths work way that It is remiarkable for tbe strength with which the principal chaructcrs are drawn and for tho interest of the jocidents, Miss Dickinuon will play the Jeweaa, Carter Harrlson, the great advocato of mixinge tho-nation, bus returned to the bosoms of his con- stituents—on the West Bide, Wa deslre to correct the finpreasiun created by Carter's Indlan apecch; that moet of the inhabitants of tho Weat Bide aro balt-breeds, ‘There funo distinction in reapect of color, race, politica, or religiun between the threo Divislous ol the city, A iwnajority of the citizens Inesch aro white, Caucasinn, Ropublican, pod Christian, ‘The Duko of Vortland was recently fred £5 by the Derbyshire magistratos for allowing a tractions engine owned by hitn to travel ulong the highwsy without a man carrylng u red fiag in front ta slgns! fta approsch, Mr. Cripple, steward to bis Gruce, d the Duke would be very much diseatisfied with the declaton, —h clrcumstance which, the Bench ins formed bim, they could ot help, The Inclgent of Chief-Justice Gasculgno aud Prince Harry fv sé sorviceable to English Judges ax the corruption of Walpole's time s to Awerican politiclans. HOTEL ARRIVALS, Pabmer Houte—G1bert W. Ledite, East Saginawy ¥, Dudley, Burlington, ‘Theodure Sprinygen, Cinclimati; Q. W. Peck, Hoston; Norace Heuton, Cleveland: De, B. M. ll{wn. BL. Loulu; Petet Graliam, Londan; “Jd. W, ' Quimby, “Toron- to; W, L Hul), Ottaws: © W. 0l Sime mons, Toledo.... Grand Pacie—W. Schivschln, Germany;, Lovejoy, Boaton, the Hon. Joseph Vilaw sud the Hon. Pofletus Sawyer, Wise cousins €. J. Horne, Dallas, Tex. J. 1. Brens nan, Philadeiphin; A, 0. Lrudley, ks Ge T. Taflesty,” Pittaburgs D, 8, aud N 5, Wat: i, Boston... Zeemont Housé~C. D. Robhnwon and T, b, Doughtey, Londua; W. T Burt, East Yaginaw, ‘Mich,; A, 'Walvon, New Yurk; Ludwig Racke, Cincinnati: the Lo, John oman, Met+ dotag Gen, W. M. Rogere, beaver; C. fowes, Dea Moines: W, 1L Dodd, Dubuyue....shermis Ilouss~Tho Tlon, 11. E, Wutklns, St. Loule; G. W. oftey, Hong Kong: J, E. K. errick, Boston} 8. B llonry, New Yorky the Hon, 11,'S. Varke und it Ualiard, LeRoy, N, Y. 1 W, J. Gordou, & D.. Davenport; Pillol, Australia; C. D, Uorhame Fort Wayno; 0. F. Balley, Now York; Prof, 4. W Cuslibug, Boatoti, .o Gurdner = Housemli.~ & Milicr, Owahu; 1L 'S Shwpyon, St Louls; 4. ¥ McUafro sud party, Sheboygans' 3.7, Kell, Smadst Maud VY. Muescr 'sud Mise Mosecr, Muscatiod John Farbaiw, Tuscola . Bodwell, Malos C. . Edwards, Balifworc; G, W, Foute, Lackes sack, N, Y,