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3 - Orpd St et s et By b+ st e 4 ey 4 THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1876. The Tribyne, TERMS OI' SUBSCRIPTION. PAYADLE 18 ADVANCI—TOSTAGR PAETAID AT THIS OF : Altio tpatd, 1 ye: 12,00 P e e, et Malled to wny address four weeks for. T Lo Huynday Edi terary and Rielg! i oo Sheet..... . 3 .+ - Weekiy, popaid, 17 sw Tarta of 8 year, per tonth Bt 50 00 x Hpecimen copfes sent free. To prevent delay and mistakes, bo sure and give Post- . ©mee address Ln full, including Btate and County. Temittanoes may be mado cither by drafl, express, {Post-OBice order, or in reglstered lattcrs, st oar Hak. FERMS TO CITY SUDICRIBENS. Dally, delivered, Sunday excepted, 25 cents por week. Daily, dellyored, Bunday Included, 30 centa per week Address THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Corner Madison and Deasborn-#ts., Chicago, Il ——— TRIBUNE FOR THE 8UMMER. Partlesleaving tho city for the summer can have Lne DALY TRIDUNE forwardod to any sddress upon Yeaving orders st our counting-room, The naper will ‘e promptly mafled In a aingle wrapper, postego pald, 01 §1 per month. ADMUSEMENTS, Ilooloy’s ’!‘lh!kl!r:.l s I Clark and Lasalle. Jflfl::d'y"fi:. 3 “Awffinmn snd uyening. ‘Waod’s Mnsenm, Monroe strect, hetween Dearharn and Btate, ** The French 8py.** Afteruoon and ovenlug. *Two Crystal Gardens Sl tding, Michizan avenne, W rfim’:‘.‘}fi" cé::“:‘ernk Afternvon sud eyentog, Lincoln Pavilion. Corner of Narth Clatk and Grans straets. Concort by tie Germania Maenterchor, SOCIETY MEETINGS. Tt OF TSR CROIX. A, A, e Ayium g TatTatey craning, Hin.at 73 o cloc Work on tho 13t A T R K. GOODALE, Gir. Sec. . JOOODALE Grgee ' WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 15‘75. I O R i » In the middle and southorn portions of Alabama the cotton-worm has appearcd in an ndvancod stage of bLodily vigor andin great abundance as to numbors—so much g0 a8 to cause fenrs that the crop may be to- tally destroyed. . Mr. Bmistow has written a lotter to the Prosident in reply to the communicstion of the Iattor removing all obligation of sc- crecy as to testimony beforo tho Houro Com- mitteo concorning Cabinet consultations or personal conversations on official subjeots. Mr. Bmistow adheres to his position that fuch communioations aro matters ontiroly confidential and privileged, and states his intention not to testify, oven with the con- gont of tho President. " e ————— Somo littlo political wisdom must be ne- croditod to the Democrats- in the House in backing down from their detormination to coerce tho Senato into m ropeal of the law providing for honest nnd free clections. This decision was reachod in caucus lnst evoning, and action on the Sundry Civil bill will be no longer hampered by this quos- tion. It ought never tohave been tacked on to the Sundry Civil bill, nud the Confeder- stoshave shown unusuel discretion in aban. doning it. Tho season of sports nnd pastimes may bo eaid to be fairly at its height, and for tho noxt two montts thevo will bo a succession of intorosting and important events through. out the country. Tho giand trotting circuit of the year began at Dextor Park yesterday, with an afternoon of rare racing, and mezt tember. Rye wan dull al 68@00a. Barloy waoa doll at 65@G7c for Beptember. Hoga wero fairly active at 6@100 advance, with the bulk of the eales at $6.40@6.75. 'The cattlo trade was quiet, with prices weak and irrogular. Sheep wors dull at $2.50@4.00. Laat Saturday ovening there was in store in this city 1,688,477 ba wheat, 869,848 bu corn, 288,144 bu oats, 56,604 bu rys, and 844,159 bu barley, Yestorday wns a resurrcotionary day in both Houses of Congress, Yesterday was als0 a ead day for the virtuons Democracy— the Demoaracy that has grown so virtuous of late, as the time for a Presidontial election approaches, and the leading lights of which lavo dilated so oft and 8o long upon the su. perior excellencles of that party organiza- tion, that thoy had almost come o believe that thero was s sprinkling of truth in the mountsin of praise bostowed upon the old political hulk, It may have beon ernol on tho part of the Republican speakers in the Benate and House to rip uptha rotten planks of the Confedorato ship, and show to the country the dangorous characterof the wares with which it is froighted; but publio necessity domanded it, and the country will bo the better forit. Even littla Sasux Cox dropped his low wit, and for the nonce be- came oarnest in his defenss of tho party which has fostered the Tammany corruption nnd apologized for Southern murders, using the threadbare demagogical arguments which have served his party for years, but which have failed to convince anybody but the ox- Confoderntes, some of whom are shamed into an scknowledgment that tho Northern doughfaces have overdone the business of crooking tho pregnant hinges of the knee in tho interest of outlawry and Ku-Kluxism, Reforring to the Hamburg massacre, which was the text of the debate in the Houso, Mr, Lanan, of Mississippi (after Cox had at- tompted to excuse and palliate the outrago), freely, fairly, and candidly acknowledged that the affair was a disgrace to the counntry, and the persons engaged in it shonld bopun- ished to the extont of the law. Tho differ- enco between tho two spooches is only the difference botweon truth and - falsehood, and My, Cox ought to know who ropresents the latter commodity. THE DEMOCRATIC LAW OF MURDER. The thinking reader, by a comparison of Democratio history and Democratio doctrine, will have no difficulty in discovering that the recont sacrifice of human lifo at Ham. burg, 8. C., was but the premature exerciso of a power and a right which waits only to be genorally established thronghout tha South upon Tinpen's eloction. The Democratic party .has been for moro than half a century insisting that this is a con- federation of independent Btates, and in no senso A nation; that thers i8 no Natiunal Union, but a moro compnet; that the sov- eroignty abides'not in the nation, nor in the pooplo, but 1n the peveral States, and the so- called Government at Washington is a mero agency of tho Stales exercising cortain fuuc. tions under writton instractions, and limited in its authority by the letter of those in- structions. The opposing doctrine that the United States are & nation, having a National Governmont, exercizing all the powers inher- ent and cesential to a soversign and suprome authority, is now and has always been do- nounced by the Democratic party ns cen- trolization, The reader of thoe history of the Democrtic party will find that this anti-nationalism was invented as a special protoction to Slavery, and has always been invoked to maintain Slavery, and, since the War, to maintain the anthority of the whita weok Oloveland will set in motfon the sop-’| race to dictato conditions to tha emancipated tilatoral ronnd of trotting which ends at Hartford, Conn., eight weoks hence. What with base-ball games, boating, ote., the Con- tennial yoar will bo remarkably prolific of firat-class sporting ovants, Mr Hexonicks has permitted himself to be §nterviowed so far as to deny the truth of the published account of the serious disagree- ' menta betweon himself and Mr. TrLozx upon soveral important political questions, chiolly, of course, the currency question. According to Mr. Henonicks, the recent conference at Baratoga was in the highest degres felicitous and sutiafactory in its results, and thero are no difforences whatever in the viows of the New York resumptionist and the Indiana in- Tationist. And yet, somehow, the rapesl of thoResumption act hangs fire in Congress, and it Das taken Messrs, Trupey and Han- pRIoks a long timo to dotermine what to put lnto their lotters of acceptanco, That was a terrible rebuke which the little floughfaco from Now York receivod yoater- day from the dignified und candid gentloman from Mississippl, Cox had sought with bhis buffoonery and cheap wit to laugh away tho horrors of the Hamburg massacre, and had attemptod to belittle and excuse it, but La- Man, with the grave scriousness befitting such » subject, admitted the terrible and disgraceful character of the Bouth Caroling outrage, and expressed tho carnest hopo that swift and sevore punishmont would be visited upon the perpetrators of that cold-blooded murder. The Northern demagogus waa mode to look smaller than everin the light of this manly and honost declafation by the Bouthiorn Domocrat. " The stald and sober Senate canght the do- bate infection which raged in the House yes. lerday, and gave up a good portion of tho iny tova spirited discussion of political ques- . lons. Mesars, MouzoN and MeszmoN wero the principal spokesmen, the latter indulging In a sweoping tirado against the Republican ~ party, while Mr. Mon7oN, without denying that thore were many things which nooded roforming, ransacked the racord of the Demoeraoy for tho past thirty. live years, ond brought forth an overwhelming array of facts to show that there was littlo hope of reform at the hands of o party that, during that period, had failed to inaugurate a single measure of bonefit to the nation, but whoso annals, on the other hand, were black with dishonesty, sacossion, and misrule. The timoe of the Banate might porhaps be more profitably em. ployed than in political spesch-making but ihe Domocrata began it, and it Is pleasant to Xnow that our side came out ahead. The Chicago produce markets were gen. erally steadior yesterday, with rather loss doing. Mcas pork was unchanged, closing at 19,42} for Angust and $10,00 for Boptem. ber. Lard closed 100 per 100 Ibs higher, at $11.05 for August, and $11.15 for Beptember, Meats were quiet, at 8o for boxed ahouldors, 100 for do short ribe, and 1030 for do short slave peopla. ‘The racent wholesale murder—tho cowardly and mean slaughter in cold blood—of helplesa prisoners is on nparaliel with what aro styled tho flendish ntrocities of the savages of the plains, Tho Spanish Americans in thoir civil wars, the uncivilized Indians, and tha white Demoorats of the Southern States, enjoy eud divide botween them the glory of mur. dering prisonors. The rude savage knows no higher sttudard than that which is com. mon smong his race; the degenerate Span- iards obey the natural impulso of cownrds, but the Bouthern Democrats discriminate betwoen thoss whoso murder might be avenged, and thosa who are wenk, power- less, unarmed, and friendless, ,Tho latter, being defonscless, are, of courso, Lrutally murdered by the cowards into whoso hands’ they fall, During the last elaven years tho National Goverument has interposed its suthority aod its force to provent theso mur. ders; it has stationed troops at points where they might Lo available not only to protect the unfortunate nogroes, but to arrost and punish the murderers, In the presence of troaps theso men were silont, o single com- pauy of calvalry being sufficient to **subduo” a district twenty milos square, Tho Demo. cratio party'has persistoutly denonnced this interferencoe by tho Government gs the exor- iR of tho powers of *‘centralization ¥ by a centralized” Government, and have de- manded the restoration of the old Democratio dactrine, clothing the States with ¢ constitu. tional rulo.” In the Trioen platform at Bt, Louls this donand {4 ropoated in the name of reform, Hers ia the demand ; Reform {s necessary to rebnild and establish in the earts of the whole peopla the Union eleven years ago happily rescued from the danger of & so- cenrlon of Htates, Lut now to be saved from core ruvt centrallsm! # Contrallsm " s the term used to describo the Govornmental interference to preveut and punish the atrocities—the cowardly mur- ders—such as were committed ot Ilamburg, B. 0. Srrrvo Buwy haa not yot canght tho phroso, but he too will say that he slaugh- tored Quatzs and his 800 men, who were the sgonts of a corrupt centralism, The mean- ing of this domand jn the 8t. Louls platform is, howevor, lucidly explained by a Demo- cratio suthority writing on the spot. The Chatleston News and Courier thus explains : The Northern newspapers, cven thoso moat {friendly to the Bouth, are loud {n thelr denunciae tion of the Hamburg slaughter, They regard it as doing good work for Hayes and WueeLEn, and predict that a fow more outbreaks of the same sort will insure the defeat of TiLoEN. J& It not horri- blo that o band of regulators should bave tho pow- erto destroy, by thelr lnexcusable violence, the proapects of the parly which, if succesaful, will restore conatitullonal rule to the whole people Notica tho lament that this gang of white wrotches should lave, by their prematuro saction, destroyed the prospecta of the Domo- cratio party, which, if suceesaful, will restora * conatitutional rule," not only at Haiburg, but to the whole white people of the South | The imprudence and hasty action of these cowards at Hamburg is pronounced * horri- blo,"” becausa it islikely to defoat Tirnxy and ’ clears, Lake froighta were moderatoly active, | the Demooracy ; wherens, if Truoew and the ot 1jo for comn to Duffalo. Kall freights wero unchanged. Highwines wero unchang- od, at$1.10} per gallon. Flour was dull " 'Wheat closed fo lower, at 800 cash, and 920 " for August, Corn closod jolower, at 44fc ',tnz August, and 45}c for Boptemher. Oats closed {0 higher, at27jo for eash or Bep- . Dewocrncy ba succsstul, then the Hamburg affair would bocomo the ruls, so loug as any negro claimod the right to be a freoman, The *constitutional rule” which this Democratic paper saya will bo the result of ‘Tieoxx's election, is the ruls of shsolute non-interforence by the Qovernment (o pro- tect the colored peoplo of the Bouth from | in the samo way would probably bave beon murder by their whita neighbora. Such pro- tection during the Iast eloven yoars s do- nounced as * contralism,” and inita place the Democratic party promiss the * constita. tional rale " of non-intervention to protect the negrocs, leaving the latter to the dresd alternative of murder or bécoming once more the uncomplaining, submissive chattels of the superior race, According to this Democratia authority, the Hamburg murder ia doubly eriminal ina party view. It wes criminal—horriblo— because ruch a murder bofora the election is calculated to aid the Republicans, It was criminally unnecessary, becauss it tendod to dofeat Trupex, whoso cloction will of itsclf bo n guaranty to tho Houth that there will be no more centralization, no more interfer- enco by tho centralized Government, and that negroes, doprived of the moral and physical protection of tho National Govern- mont, will be '* impudent” no more ; will not obstruct tho highway, will never have arms, will never be organizod as militia, and will, as fitting undor the ¢ constitutional rulo” of a sovereign State, be reduced to thoir normnl condition as elaves. The people of the North will, howover, have somothing to say on this subjoct. They do not proposo to abandon the four millions of colored poople either to murder or to slavery. Thoy do not proposo to elect Tz~ DEN, And thus declaro thnt any portion of the people are to be excluded from the pro- tecting power of the Government, especially whon that protection is ncodad to prevent thoir murder in cold blood, by familics, by dozens, and by communities. Tho people of tho North will toach theso Demoerats that thia is a nation Liaving national jurisdiction, and that it possesses and will axercise Ltho power and cmploy the force to protect all its peaple in their lives and property, and the power and the forco to provent murdor and to bring its cowerdly perpotrators to punishment, Aty SOUTHERN TILDENISM. The Troxx Confaderate-Democrats in the South ars showing their hands rather pro- maturely. In South Caroling, as we havo al- rendy stated, they have murdersd soveral no- groes who wore lLiold illegally by them as prisoners, the latter having committed no offenss, Iaving murdored their prisonors, the TiLoex Confederate-Democrats then pil- Inged the town of Hamburg and triedto burn it, In Kentucky, the Confederate- Democrats of Carlisle, aftor ratifying the nomination of Trroen and Hexpnicxs with wild demonstrations, went about the town hauling down flaga hoisted by Union people and rniging the Rebel lags in their places. A gallant young follow by the name of Brarn, who protested, was murdered by theso un- reconstructed Robels. InTLouisiana recently, tho Tnoey Confederate-Democrats have boen murdering colored men at Mount Pleas- ant, principally becauso they had eatablished n colony and wero working bard to moko a living for thomselves and urging othor negrocs to do the samo. As these negross hnd influence and voted the Republican ticket, they were Lnnged. At Plattsburg, Mo., on the Fourth of July, the Troen Confederate-Democrats carried the Rebel tlag at the head of their procession, and placed another one over the entrance to the Court-House, Those rro a few incidents among many showing the proclivities of the Troex Con- fedorate-Democrats in the South. 8o far ns they ombarrass the Northern Democrats by murdoring Republicans and hoisting the TRebel fing and tearing down the Stars and Btripes, it is perhaps none of our /concern. ‘Wa may at least suggest, howaver, to these Twpen Confederate-Democrats, that their candidates aro not yet elected, and that it would be more prudent for them to wait un- til thoy aro before thoy commenco re.estab- lishing the Confoderncy and hoisting the Rebel flag in place of the Biars and Stripes. To the thinking, patriotic men of the North, wo hava a suggestion to make, 1f these mon will murder Republicans npon the evo of tho elestion, what will they do if Troex and Henonions are eleoted 7 If they cannot wait to realiza their expectations until after election, what will tho full real- ization be ? If they are hoisting the Rebel flag in 1876, what will they do in 1877 it Tirpes aud HeNonriors are elocted 2 If thoy take liconso now to murder, pillage, hang, and burn, because thoy think Tiupen and Henomioxs will be elected, how much H. censo will they take if they actually nre clected ? Will not exceptional cases of re. bellion and murder now bo the rulo then ? Tlhese aro serious questions, to be thought of by Union men, and no amount of croco- dile tears shed by Northern Demoorats as they curee tho hot-headed haste of their Southern allies should ba allowed to inter- fere with o thoughtful consideration of them, e THE HAMBURG MASSAORE. There is fortunutely no issue ns to the merits of the massacre of negross at Ham- burg, 8. 0. There is no Democratic news- paper or politician who hns yet darcd to juitify or extenuate it. Dex fmi, of Georgia, may yet bo heard from in the Houso of Roprosontatives, for tho man who could defond Jxfe Davia in connection with the Andersonville horrora ought not to liesi- tate to epprove oponly o elaughter of colored men with which ho no doubt sympathizes hoortily in socret. If Ben Hiwy cannot be controlled by the Democratio managers of the Prosidential campaign, and sbail burst forth somno dny in o characteristio glorifica- tion of the chivalrous gentlogien of Bouth Carolina and Georgia who shot down un. armed negroes whom they unlawfully held as prisonors, there is no doubt that tho other Confoderates in Congress will rush to his support; snd wo may yet ses tho singular spootacle of an open defense in the American Congress of the most brutal and unprovoked massacre that has yet been porpotratod by the bad blood of the South, As yet, howaever, there is no dis- pute 8a to tho charactor of the ontrage. The first nccounts of it came from Demo- cratio Bouthern nowspspers, and they could find no foature on which to basoa vindica. tion or pallintion. And now the report of the Attorney-Genoral of tho State, printed in Tun TripuNs of yesterday, which was made after’a personal examination on the spot, shows that the whites wero the ag- gressors at every step. In tho previous confliots between the whites and the blacks, of which thore have baen 8o many sinoce the War, it has boen gon. orally possible to trace somoe provoeation, or at least frame some exouso, for the hot blood and old.time projudice of the whites, But thore was no coufliot in this instance, ‘Tho negroos gave way at every point and ac- ceded toall the unlawfnl and ountrageous domiands that tho whites made upon them, their buggy into the militia company, the nogro soldiers broke ranks and wade way for them, Two negroes attedpting to ridodpwan When ' the two white men drove killed. But the white men wore not satiafied with having insulted snd cowed the negroee. They thon set about Inciting their neighbors to a massacre, and temptod thom with tho entioing plersuro of shadding negro blood. A demand was madoe for the surrondor of the arms which the militis company Leld from the Stato Government ; the negro Jnatico of the Pence was willing to fssuo such an order, though ke bad no right to do so, and tha no- gro soldiors waore willing to abide by it, it thoy conld got assurances that the arms would Lo sent to the Governor, and that they would not bo massacred after delivering them ; but thoy conld get no such assur- ances. One Maj.-Gen, Burren, one of the ex.Confedernte goldiers who claim so much virlue for their magnanimity and good focling, said ‘It could bo scttled in some other way." Anditwas. Itwas sottled by gathering in white desporndocs from tho surrounding conntry in Georgia and BSouth Carolina, numbering about cight or ton white men to one negro, who coolly and delibarntely, after meveral days' time for ro- flection and without the snspioion of a prov- ocaton, proceeded to alaughter the unresist- ing blacks, and thon to pillage and plundor their village. If olght months of a Demo- cratio majority in one braunch of Congross can oncourage the Confedorates to scta of this kind, what may be expected if tho wholo machingry of the National Government be turned over to them? Now the porpatrators of this outrage must not be pormitted to escape. The National Governmont and tho people of this country must urge and sustain tho Govornor of South Caroling in tho fall and prompt porformance of his duty, Gov. Cmaxmentay finds him- solf oanfronted with o moro serious responsi- bility than ever beforo. It is bolioved thnt be hes done some gorvica for tho whites of South Carolina. Ho has lenned to a con- sarvative and concilintory administration of tho 8tate Government. Dut there must be no conciliation in this matter, Ho must ar. rest all the etizens of hisown State who ‘wero engaged in it, and he must make a de- mand npon tho Governor of Georgia for the arrest and surrendor of those citizens of Goorgin who took part in it. The United States Government will see that this demand is enforced if the Confederates of Goorgin daro to rofuse it. This *Maf.-Gen.” Bur- Ler must bo arraigned and tried for murdor, and, if the evidenco establish what all roports 80 far agreo upon, e must be convicted and hanged. Ho was the counscl, instigator, ringleader, and director of all the operations up to tho timo of the massacra of the prison- ers, and left the ground then, probably, with the understanding that theso disarmed and helpless mon should bo slaughtered. It was ho who marshaled tho whites nnd distributed them in such a manner as to provent the es- cape of tho negroes when they tried to run away. Having captured them, the subse- quent proceedings aro described as follows by an eye-witness : E The gunrda hod & llat of the *'ringleaders,” oand ag tho name of & nogro was called out he was taken to o corn-fleld hard by, where the grain had Just, begun to ehoot, and told ta run, and, befors ho could makes dozen ateps, well-almed shots brought him down dead. One poor wretch man- nged to make 60 yards, but the fatal bullct at last overtook him In his Aight, and stretchod him prona upon the earth, Two wero shot In this way In the ficld, and iwoin the Ligh-road. The other prls- oners wero then turned loose and told to fiy, and, as thoy ran, o volley was fired after them. Tho guard then mounted thelr horses and rode rapldiy away, and by 3o'clock not a sonnd could be heard in the village, whera for six hours the work of death bad been going on, Every man who fired a shot, and overy man who countonanced the ulaughter by his presenco, was guilty of murder in the eyos of the law, and this * Maj..Gen.” Buries guiltior than all the others ns tha instigator and director. Justico and humanity cry aloud for the summary and condign punish. ment of theso davils. TILDEN OYALTY." Mr. Maxron Manzre mado a desperate of- fort to Lolster up Tiuoen's loyalty at the time Pruny H, Swmirn was ondeavoring to capturo tho Ilinols delegation to tho St. Lonis Convention in Tiipex's interest, It is just possible that Mr. Manpre had in his mind loyalty to tho **loat’ esuse,” and not to the Union, and, if 8o, it is likely that his testimonial cannot ba succassfully nscailed, But it ho meant loyalty as a citizon of the United States, asa Northern man, and as a Loliover in tho doctrins that this nation isna union of States, one and indivisible, and not a league to bo dissolved at tho pleasuro or whim of any one of its parts, Lis certificate of Truoex's loyalty is scarcely borna out by the facts. Mr. Truozn's loyalty, it scems, waa tested ot the very start, nud found want- ing. Whon Sumtor nd boen fired on and the nation was aroused by tho first call for troops, tho loysl citizens of New York, as In other citios, without distinotion of party, held muss-meotings to tender their support to the Governmont, The call for the New York mooting simply eet forth that the aignors wore “in favor of maintaining the laws and Constitution of the United States,” It rocoived the signatures of all the distin- guished mon of the clty, and it reflected tho sontimonts of all the Demacrats of that day who waore loyal to the Union,—men of whom Jonx A, Dix and Sreeney A, Dovuras were conspicuous roprosentatives, Mr, Trupen's name was not among tho signers to this call, sud the ronson for it is thus set forth by a New York gentleman writing to tho 7%mes of that city ¢ Mr, Baxurr J. Tinxr was called on by a per- sonal and political friend, a8 gentleman then and now at the head of one of the great corporations of the country, and asked to sign tho call, ThAls Ae refused (o do, Amazed sud confounded that a man of hia recognized position should refuso ta support measures to waintain ** the 1aws and Con- atitution of the United States,” his friend urged Mr. TiLoEN with loyal zesl, presenting to him the consequences In public esteem 17 ho withheld Lis name, but all his efforts and arguments wero uso. “Ycss, He never signed the call, But few, nat morae than three or four, in this greas city bad the wicked audacity or abject cowardice to withhold thelr naines and support, and not tho least con. splcuoas In this small Lad lob was Haxuzs J. Tite DEN. (| §The inference is warrantod, both directly and from his subsequont record, that Sam. ves J, ‘Titoex was nol *in favor of main. tnining the laws and Constitution’ of tle United States."” This refusal to sign o call for that purpose was mnde bofore n single blow had beon struck to save the Union. T1okN wos' opposed oven to making an effort, Bome threa or four years later, he was a momber of the Committes on Resolu. ons in the Democratio Convention of 1804, which denounced the War as a failure. Sohe did not change in all these years from his original sontiments, and g}l the patriotism that fired the North, and all the blood that had been spilled to save the Government, bad not excited s single responsive pulsation in his broast. If this wasloyalty, it was loy. aity to secession, to tho Confederacy, and to the Rebellion,—but not to his country or his own pooplo, Itisnot likely that Truoes bas experi. onced much change of heart in this rogard. o wilitia sompany of white wea i the Noxth' | Fa bas loug beon too old a deg to loar paw tricks, 1o probably regands the Constitu. tion and the Union now as he did in 1801 when he rofused to sanction their mninte. nance, and as ho did in 1864 when he assiat- od at n solemn declaration that tha War to preserve thom wns & fallure. If Sawvzn J. Tioe, fooling a3 ho doos, shonld succeed to the Prosidodoy as the ropresontative of the Confederate sentiment of the country, and if the Union and the Constitution shonld again be assniled as they were in 1861 (of ‘whicl recont eventa have oreated an alarming suspicion), the United Btates would be ina worso plight than it was under Bucmaxax, becauso it will have a stronger-hoaded man ond alongor term of & sympathizer with troason to contond ,again: ' ORIENTAL LYING. « The London Times, innleading article writ- ten July 8, the day upon which the Princes of Borvia and Montenogro declared war with Tarkey, very aptly romarked that the only diffienlty in obtaining intelligenco from the war would lio in the neccssity of discrimi- nating the modicum of truth in the heap of oxaggorations, Bubsequent eventshinve vori- fled the litoral acourncy of this statement. To demonstrate this we have only te glanco ot the reports that have come from tho three principal localities of the war—8aitschaar, on tho northeast; Bjelina, on the northwoat; and TonzaNAYRFP's army, on the southoast. On the 8d of July the'Turks had dofeated tho Secrviana nt Saitschaar, and killed 2,000 of thom. On tho 7th the Turks had dofeated the Borvians and the Servinus had defented tho Turks. On the 10th the Turks had with- drawn from Baitschaar, On tho 11th Baits- chaar was ecaptared by the Turks. On the 12th the Sorvians in Sauschaar wero roinforcol. On tho 13th the Scrvieus repulsed the Turks five times beforo Saits- chaar, and, on tho 15th, the Sorvians were defented at Baitschaar, At Bjelina, across tho Drina, the situstion is equally unsatisfac- tory, Tho Servians captured it on tha 4th, On the 6th they ont to piecos 2,000 Turks, and after this victory wero driven across the Drina by the fragments of the Turks, On tho 7th, the Turks occupied Ifjelina. Tho next day thoy dofeated the Sorvians, and on tho same dny wero defeated by tho Barvians, On the 0th, it is naively aunounced that o battle is oxpocted At Bjelina, On tho 11th tho Turks withdrew from Bjelina and went south towards Navi Bazar. On the 16th, however, they wore atill in Djelina, surround. od by the Servians, and on the 17th the Sor- vians were defeatod by them. The earcor of Touenyayerr, commanding the southesst- orn Servian army, has beon no less re- markable than that of the Sorviau armies at | Baitschoar and Bjclina. On the 8d, he de- featod tho Turks at Nissa; on tho 4th, he turnod the Turkish flank ; and, on the 5th, ho ind mado a junction With the Bulgarians sad wns well on his way towards SBophia. On the 7th, however, we find him back at Nissa, soverely ropulsed by the Turks, oud at Pirot and Palanka dofoating them, On the 10th, he is rotreating with his army demoralizod, but on the same day somohow | orother ho fights a great battlo at Pirot. On the 11th, he is hommed in between two:| Turkish armies, end, being crushingly de- foated, flees to Bervia. Boing in this sad plight, tho next day he attacks the Turkish position on the Timok, and nt the same time is marching on towards the Balkans. On tha 18th, ho attacks the Turks on the Timok and defonts them. The next day comes the cheerfal intelligonco that thero has been no battle at all on the Timok, but that Tcnen. Nayere, by some hocus-pocus and presto change, is way up in the vicinity of Saits. chaar, Of courso * you pays your money and you takes your choice,” and thers is some componsation in this, but it does not alter the fact that the lying upon ono side or the other las been gigantio, if the fighting haa not. As more than two-thirds of the dis- patches have come from Constantinoplo, and as the Turks have long borne the repu- tation of being tho champion linrs of tho world, they should bo credited with a band- some share of themendacity, In looking the whole ground ovar, it would appear that, for apeoplo who havo beon boaten, routed, crushed, and cut to pioces so many times in a fortnight, the Borvians posscas rallying powers of the most oxtrsordinary descrip- tion. Waving the lics and exaggerations to one side, oud taking a critical view of the probabilities, it would scem thnt thore hma yot been no decisive battle fonght betwoen the main armics, but that tho operations have beon confined to skir- mishes, small contests to gain positions, and guorrilla warfare, auch as has boen going on in Hereogovina for o year or two past. The end no ono can forésoe, ‘Tho following opinion of * the Thunderer,” howevor, is o safe one : It may end In tho subjection of Scrvia to tiphter bonds than those sho now desires to shake off; It may end in a genersl dlysolntion of Turkey in En. rope, or the conclusion may le in any mean be. tween theso extremes; but It may fairly be sald to paca the Jimits of possibility that, when the wur ay e over, wo shall fiud the relations between the Porto and its feudatorles such s they wore be- tore. 'The address issued by the Sorvian Prince upon tho ove of war with Turkey counted nmong othor sources of assistanco tho proba. bility that Greece would lend its aid to tho Sclaves. Far from sympathizing with Bor- vin, however, the Greeks thus far have been indifferent if not nctually hostile towards the Berviane. In looking for the cause of thiy, tho Belgian correspondont of the London Times gayn: “To tho Greeks, who lhave thoirown ¢ grand idea ' like the Bervians, and who conslder themselves, in spite of tho lit. 4le success and encourngement cobtained, the natural hoirsof the Byzantine Empire, the sproading of the Blavonio power aud influ. ence, which blds fair to become a formidable competitor for o portion of the inheritance, cannot be very desirable,” He also adds that the inconveniont proximity of o large Tarkish fleet undor Hovanr Pasma (who is an Englishman) to Greek commerce s act- ing as o sérious obatacle, There is ono con- tingency, however, in which Greek help may be counted upon, and that is Servian succeas, If tho Bervian cause comes out triumphant, the lazy Greek will come in at the last mo- ment to improve the opportunity of annexing the long-coveted Provinces of Epirus and Thessaly. The Turko-Servinn war has produced & vory vivid sensation in Italian politioal cir- cles, ond the Diritto, which is the official orgen of the Oabinet, gives utterance to the following sentiments, which, it ia not fn. probable, reflact the atitudo of tha Govern- meunt towards the Sclaves: Eervia has & great part to play. Whatever may bappen, whatover misfortune moy befall ber, she cannot perlsh, It ls not for her, as a recent proc- lutmation stated, o questlon of belng or of not bo- log; it is s question of belng great, of becoming tho centre of tha natiooul tendencles of the Slave of tho South, of reslislug o grand promise, or of remalning for some timo further *'the little Prin. cipality ** un the banks of the Danube sud the Save —copquered fndeed, but with sn aurcole wmore ppleadid, parbaps, than that of vigiory—iha sureojy of sacrifice. The Natlonal party {n Sorvin know this. 1le who hns willed the action, he who hna promoted the Lold sttempt, knows that Servia can- not do other than galn by war—gsin if she cone quers, galn if she in vanquiabied, Never will Eu. rope permit of her belng canceled from the num- ber of the Htates, S — TAE OANADA THISTLE. Those of our readers who know what a pestif- erous weed the Canada thistle is, need not be urged to use every effort to destroy it. 1f sim- ply let alone, It soon covers the entire ground,to the exclusion of the grasses of all kinds, and thereby renders whole districts practically worth- less for pasturage purposes. Its rank growth and vigorous vitality makes ftalmost impossibla for farmera to get rid of the pest when oncs it geta thoroughly rooted, In this State, and, wa belleve, ln Wisconsin also, there Is & law requir- g the town Otlcers to makeeevery eifort to cxterminate it wherever found, Along the line of most of our railways patches of {t can Lo found growing most luxuriantly, and, as it 18 now just coming In flower, unless it 18 mown at once and otherwise destroyed the adjoining farms will fn o year or two becomo thoroughly sceded. Such a calamity would les- sen thelr valuo at least 25 per cent. Let the railways and all others on whose lands the Canada thistles are found growing at onco be warned to extermiuate them thoroughly, and, falling to do it, let the severeat penaltivs of tho law be visited upon them, ¢ ———— When the CustaR disaster became known to thé country, Congress was dlscussing the Army bl The Democratic-Confederates wanted to cut down the handful of soldicrs about one- third. 8axm Cox, the most malignant dema- gogue in the House, sald : *And now you talk nbout the army, when SHERIDAN 18 in Philadel- phia rollicking on the Centennial, and when Cos- TuR falls in the wilderness, aud you say you have not got troops enough, Where are your 25,000 meni Three thousand of them are in Missls- sippi, Louisfana, and some other Southern Btates, What are they deing there? There {8 no revolt, no rebelllon, no election yet, and only 5,000 men are sent out to fight the wild 8foux Indiang,® It {t were true that there was o large proportion of the army in tho South, It would be sufliclent to reply that they werathere to prevent, If possible, tho tnurder of peaceable Amerlean citizens by men as merciless as tho 8loux, and whohaveembark- ed In the project of making the South nearly a unit for the Presidency of the candidate whom Cox opposed at St. Louls at the command of Kzrny, and now sustains.” Another snswer, however, is furnished in a report by the Becre- tury of War receutly sens to the House, show- ing how many troops were stationed In each Stato and in the Terrltorics, previous to the CusTeR fight, s follows: Northern Btates—Mnlne, 42: Massachuscotts, 1383 Rhode Inland, 2513 Connccticut, 100; Now York, 877; Maryland, 241 Michigan, 347; Kunsus, 815, Total fn éight Northern States, 2,818, Southern States—Virglnia, 4005 North Carolinn, 235; Bouth Caroli: 3 Georgia, 3033 Florida, 2601 Alabama, 21 insisalppl, 410; Loulsiuna, K85 Tennerseq, i Kentucky, 1193 Arkaneas, 78, Total in cleven Sonthern Btates, U, 3H, * In Texas, alung the Rio Grande, looking aftor greascrs, Indiaus, and’ robbers, 8,334, In tho ‘Terrltorics, scattored among tho posts, 7,030; In the ficld, operating agninst the Indlans, under, ‘Tenny, 1,823 (before the CusTER massacre), and under Gen, CRooOK, 1,700. Tlere were at West Toint, ot tho recrultfug-stations, aod on the TPacific const, 4,216. Commenting on these fg- ures, an exchange remarks: It will be seen by those figares that thoe elcht Naorthorn Statea named averago. 352 soldlers to tho State, while in_the eloven Southorn States named there are only 303 to a State. The degreo of mill- urry oppression in the North ia, thereforo, 1o the miftary oppresalon in the South as 45: is to 30, Thero {8 more *‘military oppression™ In New York than thero is {n Alsbama—four tinies as much, for there arp four times sa muany soldlers there. There is_mora ‘*military oppreasion™ In Michigan than in North Carolina, (oorgia, Florli: Alabama, Tennessce, Kentucky, or Atkansas; an Knngas suffers moro from *‘the Qovernment's hirellngs' than any other State save New York and ‘oxan, "T'hio fact Is, thero aro feswer aoldiors in the South now thai thero have beon at any thne from 1850 {o 1800, and not oue-tontl as many as ought to he there, to prevent the Confederato-Democracy from murdering peaccable American cltizens, to whip the Ko-Klux and White Leagues futo decent be- havior, and to put an end to the lawlessnoss, turbulence, and general disorder prevailing thero, e ———— Lhe New York T'ribunehas been pondering the queation, ““What shall we do gbout it ¥'—tho swelterlng weather, and to the stewlng inhablt- anta of Manhattan Island it says: Now what can bo done about 1t? Chango the cli- mate wo cannot, . . . . . . First, the better part of Aghting thle battle Is in the_runnin uway, " No offart at kenylng cool in New York asf wcc‘ conld have puritled the afr, or mada it less liske tho fumes of a Aa? furnace. A large minority of puople leava town in summer,; but s large ma- ]or"tr couldda it 1f thoy choso to eacrifico’ somo other expenditure - to “thls. Transportation {s cheap, vast distances are Lraught within easy reach. Many's fomily makes & usoless show in dross, table service, ote,, through the winter with a sum which would take the children ot leaat for tho whole summer to tho cool airy Allegleny table- lands or the sea-beach. % 0Of course, now that the Tyribunshas told them what to do about {t, the hundreds of thousands of New York luborers, and sewing-women, and shop-glirls, and all the dwellers in tenement- houses,—the whom comprise tho *‘large major- ity" of tho pcople of the city,—will be abso- lutely gullty of little less than sulctde if they do not nake up thelr minds to dispense with uscless show next winter und forthwith betake themsclves to the seasliore or mountain-resorts soas toavold sunstroke. And yot, doubtless, the bricklayers aud draymen, the hod-carrriers and common Inburers, und the apprentice-loys, and shop-girls, and seamatresses, and wll the rest of thy underpaid toilers who comprise the “Jarge majority " of the population of the md tropolis, with futal folly will bu deaf to the Tribune's warning, and, instead of awnmering at the seaslde or in the mountaina, will stick to thelr close, nasty, heated, overcrowded garrets. It is really dreadful to think of, when trauspor- tatlon is so cheap, nud they might save enough which {s wusted iu **uselesa shiow In dress” to stay at the watering-places with tho ehlldren ull summer. ———— Tho DBrookiyn Aryus (Ind. Detn) paper ta telling conslderable truth about Tox Hzn- pricks, It refers to “almost every Demo- cratic statesman und nowspaper fu the Eastern States™ to prove that *‘the opiuions of Mr, llzxonicks und Gov, ALLEN wers last year looked upon us leading to repudistion,” aud then suys: If Mr. Hespricits was a ropndiator. Jast yoar in Olfo, we sce nothing t maku bim lees of & repu- diutor this year turoughout the uatfon. ‘Tho ua. Hou cuiplatically says that it witl nut recede from its courwe toward reduced tariffa, . nor add 850, - 000,000 a year to Its burdens, shinply to carry In- diana fur Mr, flxxumicks, ‘The very womst thing the Dewocrats did at 8t, Louls was to yomiuate Mr, Hrxomicks., Ile {a s sincore maiy his views, upon this mportant decislon were wull knowa, and be cannot receda from them. lle Ideus nre anti-American, ‘Chey stawp hlm as being either uppatriotic or impractical. "There can hurdly be » cuntested canvass lu the Hasteru States with Hzn. vricks on the tiekel, unless lls thoorics can be modited, The New York World publishes with great gusto thut “ B, Heunpow, Aunanam Lin- COLN'8 law-partuer and friend, bas declared for Twpex." Four years @go it nearly fumped out of its skin with joy over the nuwa that the samne Heanvon supported GHEBLEY and the Dewocratic ticket, 1n 1674 it proclaimed from the house-tops that HznxDON was heaving his mighty Influence into the * Liberal-Democratic” scate. The World might have added, says the Newark Advertiser, that Honatio Svmoun’s brother-in-law and Scorr Loab's partuer have Qoclared for Hayss, snd that Gov. PAREER'S v-partuer fs also an enthuslastic Republice an, ' Bevator CONRLING'S brother Is out for TiLpzn. In politics, neither blood, business, nor friendship determines a man's opinions, . There was acelebration of the Centenntal TFourth at« town called Virgil in New York, which was remarkable for the fact that the sume orator, tho same reader of tha Doclaration, the sune Deacon who offered prayer, aud the same Marshal oftidated who had conducted the cere. mypies of the celebration of the samo day fifty years before, Io this respect, the celebration at Virgll had probably no counterpart fn the Unfon, and it 13 not likely that it will over bo re- pested, dleanwhile, that location can scarcely fall to.commend itself as n destrable resig, for thoso who hope for long lifo. S ———— Haw wonld i do to bring Hosa Twneo back gy ma ke s Democratlc reforirier out of Rt The ot help Tilden a8 he 7] d‘"&“ (I«:;I«tu. did In days that are pagt. — (T He used to be Tiupew's right bower, Rapublicaus trlod to kecp bim 1 juil for e ing ten milllons of moncy from the peoplo of New York Clty; but TILDEN'S Democratie Sl X took him out buggy-riding, and let him ryg away, and TiLDBN still retalns that Bherim |y office. ‘The susplefon is strong that tho Sheryy let TwRED escape by Tirpex's directions, as g did not want to punish his old politiesl partner, ———— The Cinelnnati Enquirer, before the 8¢, Convention, remarked : Y Lent TILDEN'S surcoundings are had, wonld Lako to tiio Wit House. o woret o 1t rolluml Jobbers and thioves evor seen in Washiye, ony i that's saylug o good deal. . . i could not but be thnt a man’ educated in conning, in hynnulsy. in inlquity, nominatad In corruptiog sud ahameleas cffroutery, oven thongh his mlfllnm could eloct him, would “give us the most corrup( Adl‘ulumnuan the country Las ever known. # This was about the last truthful and indo pundv:-nt utterance of that paper. Since then the Enguirer is supporting TiLpznN, and liying on biled crow,~pretending that ha llkes {t1 ———— PERBONAL, Rurors of tho intentlon of the Emperor of Aus tela to abdieato are ugaln current. i e The presenco of Don Carloa in this connt still unkuown in Madrid on tho 1st of July, iy Dr. I, Petermann, the, distingaished Germag Beograplher, satled for Europe last Saturday, The Government of China is having Prof, dall’s work **On Sound™ translated gllo lh; nese vornacalar, ¢ The recelpts for the first three days of Me, Joih " Raymonl's engagoment as “!{nl. sulle'ru.""l:: mc‘Cullfomln Theatre,wera §0,000. Waork has hoen stopped on Adirondack Murray! church, which has been In procoss of oru:!lv:;yu: Boston, The funds are exhansted, Somabody says that if B. H. Dristow shonld nominated for Congress In opposition to ll!nl:; Watterson, Mr. Watterson would nat k: candldate ('u support, N SRR Another plcturo-gallary §n England hna beg cleaned aut, tls time In'a private housa, All l;: Leat pletures wero cut ot of thelr frames, th prl-‘unmandl u‘lle'y will I‘x; brought to this country, whera the thicves whll be safo f 3 il ol @ for want of un ex. One of **Jrs, Porter's girl from Farmington® Is thus described: *'She wora what mluh’:!h:n Leen her brother's black felt hat, plalnly straight from Kuox's, modified with & black pin feather, l:o{ mllr w:u cut nwuyulrnm the cars, sha l[mrtcd: stunning® man's collarand ‘awell® v Pt iniit well' gentloman'e ‘Tho bill relating to vivisection lately Intr in tho British Parliament bas been nlzcndc‘:ld::fl to permit experiments of this nature upen don and eats, which were formerly exempted, *Medl. cal students would be quite at 1 loss if deprived of the humble, if mortal, services of thelr cantno and feline compantons, The Boston Saturday Frenlng Gazelle, good critical authorlty, romarks of Walt Whitman's barbaric yawp on the death of Custer: **When ex- amined by an ordinary mortal, i whose cyes Common sensc, correct grammar, and inteldigihil. ity are not contemptible, it nppears no more nor lesa than arrant Idiotle Jargon. " - Earl Nolson, grand-nephew of the famona Ad) miral, has been greatly distressed by the conver. slon of his second son to tho Romlish Church. 1fo writea s letter to the Z¥mes about it, in which Lo endeavors to ** expose tho Pharleaical zeal in muk- Ing prosclytes for which ono section of the Rowman Cathollea in England are becoming pro-eminently distinguished. ' . Lord Tlenry Vane Tompest, cldest son of the Marquis and Marchioness of Londonderry, was thrown from his saddlo and fell npon his head, the pony rolling over him, whilo eugaged fna polo. match at MTurlingham the 1st Inst. Ho was taken up 1neonaible and remalned in that condition sev- eral hours. At last accounts the prospects of his recovery were consldered favorable. . The Rov. E. Moore prealded at the Quartor Ses- slons at 8palding on a recent occaston, when it waz annonnced that thers were no prisoners to be tried, Ho submitted to the presentation of the usual pale of white kid-glover, and announced that he wonid retiro from the Bench, as his father bofare him did on a similar occasion. Mr, Mooro has been a it ting Maglatrate fteen years, and nover before pro- slded at 8 maidon sesslon, Molesonicr's fote-day was celobrated the laat weck In June at bis baautifal place near Polasy, by an assomblage of his puplls. Lucy Hoopor writes to the Now York World; **It is not csey to ho- como the pupll of Melssonlor, Ho. positively re- fusea to impart fnetruction in. general, and it la only when he [8 strack Ly the talent of a rising artist, or takes o particular fancy to him personally, that ho will conwent to recelve him as W& pupil. And ko is the scvorcst of task-masters." Mer. Plerrepont's speoch at tho Fourth of Jaly banquet in London, though in somo respects indls. creot, seems to have beon in the main creditar ble to his head and heurt. He com. mitted the faux-pas of poking fun good. noturedly at Mr, Gladstone and Mr, Disraell. English Prinie Minlsters do not like to be lzughed at, however amiablo msy be the {ntentions of tho mon who laugbe, Mr. Plerropont wiil find it the part of wisdom to do little" speech-making fn England, ; Anothermiraculous corefs reported from Lourdes by spocial telegramn to tho Parls Univers. The crownlng of the Lady of Lourdes had attructed an array of Bishops to tho town, uud unusual excite- ment was prevailing nmong tho {nhabitants 10 anticipation of the hinportant ceremony. ** During the musa by the Nunclo at thagrotto, " according ta tho dlspatchies, ** Madeline Lancoreau, of Potlors, nged 61, known by o large number of pligrims as being unablo to walk without ceutchies for nineteen years, was radically cured." Pools, the London tallor, loft ancatata of £120, - 000 bebind bim, People wero wurprised at tho sizeof tha ** plum," for the tallor's habita wero extravagant, 8nd ho must have contracted sn enore mous mass of bad debts. Mr, Lowls«Jennings souds thiv delicious ancedote of him to the New York World ; **Ouse day ho was out hunting when rather a large party Lappencd to be In the fleld, e went ap to Lord Murdwicke snd eald, with o gesturcof contompt, * A tine day, my Losd, but very mixed company.'’ *Well, Poole,' replied Lon! Hardwicke, ‘you Lnow you canuot expuct them all to by tailors,** o Durlng the recent wxtraordinary trial of Robert Duchanon's lbel sult against the publislors of the Loudon Eraminer, Mrs, Buchanan sat'In tho centre of thoroom, Bhe Is the orlginal of the *‘Littie Bfilliner, " one of bor husband's poems, and 1t waa necesunry to know this, in order to understand tho ful! snd shinost fcudish mulice of Mr. Hawkins in certaln rofercnces he made to this poom, bire, Duchanan's {8 a small, thin, oval fuce, with a dell- cate chin and mouth. 8he was very pale; her lips opeped, and her breath almost falled Lor at timee, when 8 inore than ordinarlly cruel thrust was witned at the **Littio Milllucr, " *' that Idyl of tle gutter and tho garret, " Talph Waldo Emerson and his danghter Ellcn have returned to thelr New England howe from o tour In Virgiula, Mary Clemuier writea to the Clnciunat! Comemerclal from Washington: *‘Wo shall hear mure from this daughter Kllen, For whe, fnall likolihood, will be the executor of her futher's papers and the delineator of that decp, atll, lowand life. 1t ls memorabla that the men who have achieved the most (u letters and o sci- ence bave always hiad a2 woman standing closa be- ufide them within the vell, as Carl S8churs waye in homoly phrase: *Handing them the bricks whils they bulld* and holding up their hauds when they - wera weary, Mary Clummer, wa jutge, docs nut vote with ‘I'tilden, orany other bachelor, MOTRL AUILIVALS, Grand Paclfo—A. . Baldwin, Wisconsing 3, 8. Kellogg, Davenport; 8. D. Carpentor, Ottume wa, In, ; E. 8. Washburn, Rochester; C, 8. uus- tot, Bpeingdeid; B. C, Cald, U. 8. Army; W, J. McKinole, Cleveland:'1, J." Kinney, Springdell; ¥, P, Ryder, Hyracuse; Uov. W, P, Kellogg s party, New Orleans; the Hon, J. 8, I eleuns. ... Sherman Jouse~The lev, Witt Tulmage, Lrookiyn; the Hon, 11ildrup, Belvidere; Col. A, Heltman, New the Mov. LI, U, Deun, Springtield; L. J. Bterling; Baruey Wentworth, Dublin, Ireland; Judge “Martin Fleld, Wisconsin; It @, Butle Naahville, Toun. ; M. A. Kennedy, New York. ... yanont' Houss—A, P. U, Boute,” Cincinnati; E. W. Perry, Indionola; the llon, I, M, Raymond, Nebraska; the Ilou. Poter layden, New York; Gen. Allen €, Puller, Belvidere: the Louls- ville Base-Ball Ciub; the ion. Q. B, Chapman, Eau Clafre; C. 1I. Allen, 5t. Louis; H, Merelll, Voston; 0. McFarland, '8t. Pacl.... Falnier llouse—John 6. Bradstreet, Minneapolis; 1L, C. Kiogeley, Now Iaven; Col. F, Wolf, Co- 1ogue, Germany; O. P, lium) broy, Alron, G 5 3. B Oilvery Pitteburgs. W W, Kiauah and ' - Bqulers, Boston; B. Martoll, Coguacs K. . an: kelwenn, Helws, ¥rance; John B. Colton, Gules. burki Tigmes Pickerson ang W, B Hsnges, Boas Tyn. e York; Cooky