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cen. seo N SR CI T B . W DNGSDA mdont has positive assnrances that a gon- old silver dollar was omitted. It does not :Pn?l movemant will take place this week, and | 18, follow that thers was 4oy corraption in all that a orossing will be attempted at four | army of 40,000 wns rodaced to & straggling | this, but the genoral bill lingored along in pointe—Ibrail, Giurgovo, Kalarash, and | mob of scarcoly half that number. If that | Congrosa durlsig sevoral sossions, the partio- Turn Bovrin. We print also an interesting | was not a vlctory, then thers woro no vioto- | alar point of domonotizing silver boing men- lotter from our correspondent with the | ries dnringthe War, tioned not more than twice, and then only Tarkish army at Nikopoli, giving an account At Vicksburg wo nro now asked to beliova | briefly, The subject was novor discussed in of the situntion there, and describing the [ that Gnanr won no vietory, though captur- { the publio prints, and that it passed withont Junis 6, 1847, none of thom having the means, rosonrces, or inlelligent population of Minncaota those Btatos,are subjeot to revolutions every sizty days, anfl havo taken the dishonest courso of not paying their debts, and of not making any effort to do so, They aro ex. cluded from the world's markets, and are not recognizod aa haviug any olaim even to com- principle. must be excused from being eaten by that kind of a llon, Reform {s the last thing & Democrat thinks of, and is an act im- mediately proceding dlasolution. Nor will the Democrats be allowed to eat the frult of a ro- farm Administration which they opposed in the bitterest manner, It Mp. IHAvas forces his partyup to hia standard, of what use are the Democratal 1t he faila (which he will not), the United Biates Army, snd the colored cadet, Mr, Flipper, who has acqalttod himaelt excellently, Tio will prabably bo the fest of his race to wear the shoulder-straps of the United Btates mlilitary servico, Tho cordiality of Adclina Patti's wolcome In Londan was not aftected, i fn e8ld, by tha fact that her once frroproachablo name has within & - Tlye Tribane, TERMS OF SBUBSCRIPTION. BY MATL—IN ADVANCE—TOSTAGE PREPAID AT TIUS OPFICE. ol k " £ yunrl heen dragged throngh the mad of Euatopean Dafly $12.00 d 87,000 prisoners of war, | atircting any nerious attention is shown by [ mercial agencies or reprosontatives, ‘otty | eupport ho will have froni the opposition will be | EosMp. « AL 1@ | pecullantios of tha colobrated Circassinn | ing “:"mc i:" o 1 : I;. tha iy -6 tho fact that silver had boon demonotized | yearsago the name of Missiaalppl wns black. | like that which Brufus Kaveto Casar whon ho | Hobart Pasha's valor, rash and impotuons Eunanr g0 | 3valry, whose appearance in n Christisn ;;‘:’;m';“ “‘H;fi du.:c;flw:z:do a —becnune’ he | was not known, outside of & narrow clrcle, | balled throughoat the world, and to-dny even | tabbod bl 81 18 acoma to the lasy Turkn, has been n the way FiNehin oot et b el D s ropulsedl. An n mattar of faot, ho [ until in 1876, whon tho relaivo ris n gold | In Egypt and Tarkey ho anme of Missis A-now Civil-Servica Reform Astoclation has | heme o+ P Paree o Fanmare andther Ari ot yeur, porimon o ——— hnd won several decided victories beforo the | and fall in silver led to a goneral investiga. | sippl is synonymous with dishonor in Amer- beea organized In New York on s non-partisan | Bold, or affect $o hold, him of litile of D0 accomnt $,1:% | Avenx Moone, the defaulting Bapervisor | assanlt on Vicksburg. In actions such as | tion, Then, for the firat timo, nineteox- [fcs. Do the people of Minnesots wish to | pasts. Among the mombers are Haxny WV, Ber~ | 1o connell, b of West Chicago, has nstonished n large | those at Port Gibson, Raymond, and Oham. | twentieths of tho American peoplo loarned | divide this shamoful notorioty with Afissis- Lows, Donsean B, EatoN, Joux A. Waeks, Drigham Young now has fifteen wives Tostage prepatd. Srecimen conles sent fres, Toprevent delay nud mistakes, he mreand give Poste ©Ofice addrosin fall, incloding State and County. Kemfitances may be mads either by draft, express, Tost-Oflco order, o in registered letters, atour risk, 7KRMS TO CITY AUDSCRIRERS. Tally, deltvered, Bunday excepted, 25 cents per week. Lefly, deitvered, Snnday fncluded, 30 cents per wesk Address THE TRIBUXE COMPANT, Corner Madison « Chlcago, il sippi and Costa Rioa? To-dny the Btate of Minnosota is known all over tho world for the magnitndo of its extont, for the fertility of ita soll, the industry of its peoplo, tho vast produots of ita labor, for its grand water and rall communications, and 08 offoring the most deairable homo on earth for the emigrant mooking peace, liberty, and hoalth, Better will it be for the Stato to bo stricken with pestilonce on the 12th of June than for its people to vote that henceforth Minnesota profers to bid croditors defiance, and that henosforth the payment of debta in abolishod In that Btato. It is not tho State alone, but her cities, her towns, her mer- chantaand manufactnrers, who will horeatter hava to pay the penalty of this popular mis- take. Businosa will bo done in Minnesota number of friends and acquaintancos in this | pion Hills, he had notably weakened the | thatsilver had beon demonetized, city by lllodmddan nxpoc:nru of his official | enemy, and taken a Inrgo number of prison. | Tho statemont that *the principal cause dishonosty, as woll as by Lis flight to eacapo | ers ot every enconnter. As a not resultof | of this refusal of the country to accopt silver tho consoquences of his crimo. Ho was | the campaign which resulted in the oaptareof | as current coht"wn that it was nndervn!?od highly esteomed as n man of aterling integ- | Vickaburg, the enomy lost in killed, wounded, | in our cofnage,” ete., isasimplo nbsurdity, rity, and wo beliove deserved that ropu. | and prisoners fnlly elght times as many men | The coinage waa never refnsed,—no man tation up to tho time whon he yielded to the | as GrANT. At tho samo timo ho was press. | wonld refuss to aceept dollarsworth 103 cents foo common wenkness of using public money | ing the sicge with one hand he kept at bay | ingold. The fact that they were underval- in his privato business, Ife is now rated no | Joz JonxsroN's army, upon which Vicksburg | ved in onr coinage,—that is, that they were better man than the common thict who robs | was dopending for relief. Ilis lines closed | worth more as motal than as coin,—oxplains o bank or tapa a till, and his offonse calls for | in steadily about the army which ho had { why thoy woro fished up and melted as fast awift pursuit and sevore punishment. It is | driven before him until he compolled a com. | ns thoy wers colned, but is not evidence that time tho Penitontiary hold n fow dofaulting | pleto surrender of all that was loft of it, in- § thoy wero refused, Until 1873 they were publia officinls ; suocess in escaping the pen. | cluding srms, tents, bnggage, and war mn- | worth threecents on tho dollar moro in green- alty has multiplied tho erlme to the extont | terial for 60,000 men. It was tho hand. | backs than was tho gold dollar. that on examplo shonld bo mnde of somo- | oat singlo blow that the Rebels rocoived at By this act of 1873 the peoplo were sud. body, if only to show that thore is somo | any tme during tho War, It opened tho | denly and without notics deprived of ons slight dangor of disagreeablo consequences | river, cnt off Texns and Arknnsas from the | form of curronoy which had beon n logal OswaLp OtTENnONPER, RoOnErr I, Minruny, Tuzoponz RoosavaLt, Annax 8, Hewrrr, and others. Tho prescnco of the last-mentioned name in the list may occaston some doubt as to the prospect of the Assoclation’s success, Dr, HexrY W, BELLOWS I8 the President. Jla #ays that the Intentlon of the organization s to arouse public opinion on the question of Civil. Bervico Reform by ascries of public lectures and addresses in which the superlority of the clyll servico of other countrica over tha spotls aystom ot llklmerm will be brought home to ths public mind, under his care and protection, He has had forty. five children. Tho number of his geandehlldron ho docanot know. Victor Hugo's **Art of Beinga Grandfathor" might be of some asslstance to tip Mornion Preaident. Minnie Commings has swooped down on the devoled press nf New York with a 1argo nenort. ment of *‘protesta’ and *‘ecards to the pablle.» ‘They haven't fonnd her ont yet, though some of the Now York editors were **ratsed " fn Chieago, and onght 1o know better, The Mount Carmel in Wabnsh Connty in thls Btatewhich was visitod on Monday by the do. structive tarnado 4 the **Mount Zlon™ of the colobrated story of the *'Jericho Ttoad™ Mr, Habberton, the suthor, passed his early yearsin that town, and among the aufferers was Me, Habe berton, an nncle of tho writer of the story, Mr. Willism Andrews, Fellow of the Royal Historlcal Soclety, and his wife have Intimated thelr intention of clalming tho Mtch of bacon at MeVieker's Thontre. Madison street. between Destborn and Btats. **Our Bosrding-House.” Judge OnmiN, C. Pnatr, of Callfornis, was married In Now York, & few days ago. It fa statod in the Cincinnat! Enguirer that Judgo PRATT'S wifo was divorced [n 1807 and obtalned $700,000 from him, In conscquence of hia rela- tons with the woman ho has now marrled. In Haveriy’sa Thentre. Randolrh street, between Clark and LaSalle. - Engagement of Den Thompeon. ** Josbus Whitcomb.” Afternoon and evening. Adelph! Thentres Monros street, corner Dearborn, Variety per< 1864 bt daughter ran away with a negro min- e ) 4 Confederntos, and woakened and demoralizod | tender for eighty yesrs, Against thot act | heroafter under o cloud, and, nnder the cost strel named Anxeco, takt vesscl | Danmow, Essox, this year. Atrangements are in Sy Atieramand erenios, whien lh(cvn___s hodk the eople's mfnay m:’:;n:;l‘.&?my, psc + | thero is a gtgnurnl popular Bpmlul. which | of extra Interost, want of crodit, exclnsion of b;:nd ::‘,e Au.mlcln.' .n:g‘,fifi;:? ::,_..m e,:c. 3"{5“‘;( M; e;lflbnllnz‘;b; l‘n;hnl festival in Cark atreety e o e Baadai, £5 GEN, GRART'S MILITARY CAREER, 8o, too, must the Virginia campnign bo re- | will resist any resumption of spocie pay- | immigration, stagnation of intercourso with cutter, overtouk them, thrashed tho minstrol |y and . ndrewa presided at last year's festl. atgti val, and ls sald to be engaged In writing a history Commandeur Cazeneure, the Prestidigltatenr. of tho quaint castom, Mr. Conway writos: “ Apencefnl surrondor by MacMahonlsont of the question, Hals knownto bo egotistical to tha verge of insanity, and fanatical to the verge of Imbecllity, whilo the only thing ho fears fa liberty, and tha object of hls hatred i an honest Democrat, *Our diMicnltles arg not nne derstood in England,® sald Louls Blanc to mo} *Qur President ia an {dfot.* " Anne Thackeray, daughter of the novelist, writes to the London Zimes asking holp for a party of young emigrants whio salled on the S1st of May for Canada. Thoy are gutter-chlldren, confded to .tho benevolent Miss Rya at Peckham by policemen and parish.officers, Forty of thom wers started, Mlsa Ryo has sent more than 1,200 doatitate chlle dren to Canada in this manner, A Louisville bolle ontraged the dignity of the Grand Duke Alexls ata banquet fu the Mam- moth Cave, She had been drinking champagne, affectionate mood, and she sald to ble Imperisl Highncas, In s jocular tones *‘Dukie dear, crackes mo some nutteen.” Ifo looked aa if ho might take great pleasure In ceacke ing her head, bat he morely called on the waiter In & freezing way to help the young woman, Frank Leslio has n party of young fonr. nalista and young ladles—tinder and powder— Sravellng undor *hia care In tha Yoscmita Valley. Two of the Jonrnalists foll In love with one of the young ladies; consequencos, & quarrel a blow, a challenge, a dnol, & shot In the arm, grace, merey, and peace, Now It In an aven bet whether the young man who gave the shot or the one wha re- celved It will capture the young woman,—sourco ©of theso woes and many more to como, no doubt, M. Thiers has, ever since the Rovolntion of 1848, kept his valuablo papers In England,—a clrcumatance which indicates fulely the degroe of ‘popular confidenca In the stability of the Govern- ment which ls ontertalued fo France. The libeary of M. Thiors which was destroyed by the Com. munec was not valuable, axcept as laving costa great deal of money, for every ono of the books in itconld be replaced. Ifohas na passion for old booka and costly bindings; books are with him only tools, ‘Tho Inst nnmber of the Dritisk Quarterly hae a flattering notico of Von Holst's Political and ) Constitutional Hlatory of the Unlted States, trana- other Blates, the poople of that State will suffor every year a greater pecuniary loss than wonld pay this entire debt. Witha State producing 850,000,000 of surplua prod- uets annually to rofuse to rocognize its own debt, will be o stain on the cradit of the Btate, sndonall personsdoing businoss thors, which will outlive the prosont timo, and will tako ita place in the rocord of historical instances of bad faith, It was frecly prodicted by Tuz Trinune garded as a whole, The losses in the Wil- | monta until that silvor dollar shall ba made n that Gon, Grant would bo received in En. | dernesa were preliminnry nad nocossary to | logal tender, and its free coinnge ostablished. gland as the most distinguished Amorican | the capinre of Richmond and Lerx's army, | Whon the conntry demands the remonetiza. who ever visited the ** Mother Country,” as | Tho higheat statoment that has beon fairly | tion of sllver, it demands the rostoration of tho English aro so fond of describing their [ made of thoso losses fs 70,000 men, | the silver dollar which had existed so long Iand in its relation to tha United States. It | and yet it was that campnign which | a4 the unit of Amorican money, The whols was also stated that ono renson for anticl. | reduced tho flower of tho Robel | publio debt of tho United States ls payablo pating such o recoptlon (which haain fact [ army from 130,000 men to the famish- | in gold and silver, by exprosa provision of exceeded all expectation) waatho snceesa and | ed and atricken wreck that finally mmnd‘or- ll\;-h "‘l‘"):; :::h :lf’ nll{:l"lfl;l‘ ‘llfln" |:f§?;m1;:;;il{¢‘::; brilliancy of Gen, Graxr's military eareer, | ed. Tho Rebolloss in the ond, including 6. which wonld overshadow abrond all tho er- | the temriblo slaughter inflicted by Snemibay :“’,l‘l';,:tll’::m":‘::a‘:fl;:;m:,q“':;:m‘;,::fl‘:&f rors of his subsequent civil service. This | and the prisoners token, was mnch the «st, known as United Btates notos, and of all the enlled out n protest from tho Chicago Zimes, henviost, notwithstanding Lee fought be- | Intereat-besring obligations of the United States, and now we flud that other Copperhend and | hind intronchments. The Rebel forces | exceptin cases whare tho law lfllhllmllnl 2‘0"1:;\1: firo-iu-the-rear newspopera aro joining In a | wore reducod to s condition of the most ab- f;:“.";,:‘g:;“',‘:“‘("::ln;:' f.’:,':;":o‘::;'o: oth:r now offort to impugn Gen. Grant's claim to | ject misory nnd helplossnoss, whilo Gmaxt curroncy tlan gold and sliver, tho highest Lionors among contemporancona | had hia army left in good diacipline and ex- Tho Funding act of July 14, 1870, pro- military chiefiains, All sorts of reckless ns- | cellent condition, During the eloven months' vides: sortions are made to the offoct that campaign, from tho timo Gnavr crossed the | That the Secrotary of the Treasury ls hereby au- be was whipped at Sbhiloh, beaton | Rapidan up to the surrender at Appomat. | thorized tolssuc In & sum ot suma not exceeding in back beforo Vicksburg, and sneri- | tox, it in safo to estimale that Lex's losses ::;:;:i‘l‘f:;"u:"&?"mm:;’u"::’;‘o‘r’:" :fi:‘::: ficed throughont tho wholo War threo | woro doublo thosa of Gnaxts, This cam. presceibe, and of. denominations of $50, or some of hiamon to every one of the onemy ho | paign waaso onergotie, so determined, 80 | multiplo of that anm. redeematle in coin of the killed or rondored lelpless. . To uttor such | persistont, that the ontire army opposing | present standard value . and bearing o barofaced falsohoods now, whon tho War of | Gnaxt may bo satd to have beon destroyed. “‘:“"r payable ';’m"“"“““m"’ + 40 auch coln at the tho Robellion is a mattor of history, roquires { Thoso who wore not killed desorted and | ™ "1"!‘:«: u‘:‘d?rml::d ::‘:l o s ack reclio on a degroo of partisan malignity that nlmost | came over iInto tho Union lines to escape thelr faco: defles the comprehension of the averngo | destruction, or crawled off to thoir homes This bond 18 lesned in accordance with the pro- mind; thoy ean only be prompted by a ro- | half dead, or romnined only to participats in vislons of an sct ,,: Congress, entitled ** An act to lontless indignation ot the crushing of the tho finnl surrender. Thus endod Gnant's llllhnrll‘z'c :n:‘n;unglnzor :Ihal ;uuon-lgdobl. -p'i Robellion, and uncompromising hintred of | victories when the War ended and thore woro | proved July 14, 1870, amended by an ac! Approve: the man who contributed most to that re- | no moro armies to conquer. dan, 20, 1871, " and Iu redeemable at the pleasure sult, Theso defonders of tho Rebellion and . of the United States after the first day of Septom- Ot conrso Guant's milltary carcer necds | her, A, D, 1871, In coln of the standard sats of mournors of tho * Lost Couse” ean nover forgive GraxT, not because of avy wonkness no vindication at this timo to justify tho | the United States on satd July 14, 1870, with In- high Lonors ho i8 recoiving at the hinnds of | terest in such coln trom thy day of the date heml:l in his strategy or minor mistakes that be | the English peoplo, who rarely mnke mis. :lfxn‘.‘:,l';"“:m“"h‘:‘l"‘:",:;":,""l;e::'::q":" ‘;{‘::h‘_’ made, but becauso he was successful, telies in thelr awards of morit; but it is a Juno, and Septomber in oach year. - The princlpal 1t will be difficult to find in tho bistory 3¢ | serious reflection that thoro is ovon o small | and Intoreat ars exempt from the psyment of all warfaro tha name of any Goneral who had | portion of tho Amarican peoplo so malicious, | taxes or dutles of th United Siates, as well an 80 fow roversos in a war of equal magnitude ond duration ns Gon, Geant bad, A story ia told of him, which ropreseuts Gon. Bugry ouvious, and monu-apirited as to cnoournga or [ fFom tnxation in any form by or undor Stato or o8 criticising his atrategy in tho con. with arawhide, and brought the daughter back, Another adventure of Judge PRATT'S was his Into arrest In New York as an Inmate of & gam- bling-house. PratT Is not s United States Judge, 2a widely statod In the newspapers, The Tabernnele. Monroe street, between Market and Franklin. Con- cert by the Apollo Club. Afternoon and evening. ————— It 18 n queer revolutlon fn politfes that roversca parties and not leaders, Tha 8t. Louls Jtepubitcan claims the Presldent 1s supported by the Democrats and opposed by the Republicans, In its own words, * Tha victors and the van- quished have changoed places, almost withont knowing it. The Domocratle party has not been demoralized and disintegrated by the in- stallation of BAvns; but the Republican party has. Democrats are very well satisfled with the prescnt and the futuro; Ropublicans aro dissat- {afled with botk." This is not true 8o far aa the Republicans aro concerned; and {tautterance in different papers §n different parts of the Unlon showsa a deaign on the part of the Domocrats to steal tho Presldont. ————— The Philadelohia Bulletin says that ' Mr, Gronon 1. Boken, late Mintsterto Russia, * is fitted for avy diplomatic position in Europe ‘to which he could be appoluted.” Bo are ten thou- #and other men in thecountry,—~LoaAx or Gatn Haxiuron, for Instance, We arc in favor of Riving It to GarL. 8ho would break her neckin less than & week in trying to scold {n Russlan. ‘What is Boxgn to tho nowspapers whon they are after voogeauce? ——— Vax Bunex, Fintsons, and Pi#ncs mado cxtended tours nbroad alter serving their terma In the Presldential oflice, but no one of them 'was honored as Gen, GRANT has been, In Lon- don tho American Mintstor, Mr, Bucnaxax, took Trecedenco of FiLryons Invariably. The distinguished attentlons bestowed upon Gen. GHANT secm to bo rather a recognition of his military famo than of his civit services, car APTER, No. 127, Tt A, M.—Tegular COATHOAOD &8 hEleFBome: ¢ Todbts e thin (“’,fldntwl]]uu'finllel(?;li;nfl u(;z:"fl '-};cl:t'sér P on M. T andd. B Musters Dekreet o S teny. — ‘WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1877, Tha delay on the part of the Egyptian Gay- ernment [n sending its contingent of troops to Turkoy {s explained by rccent lettors from Alexandrio. At a meoting of tho Egyptian notables, the Khedive informed thom that, as part of tho Turkish Emplre, It was thelr duty to send tha troops, but at tha same time they had engagements with the rest of Europe as regards finance which were cqually pressing, In view of this, cither the Bultan must pay for the malntenance and transpor- tatfon of the troops or s speclal war-tax must be ralsed. Innsmuch, however, as the rovonues of the country were boyond the control of the Government, being pledged to thelr creditorsas sccurlty for tholr dabts, the situation was a very embarrassing one. It added to these embarraas- monts that this is the scason of the ycar whon the wholo population of Egypt makes its an- nual fight with the Nilo and the dosert, 80 as Lo mako the most of tho autumn fnundation by improving the vast network of canals, which if Teft to themselves for a alngle acason would so choko upas toruin the productivencss of the country, The triplo ailiance of the Nile, the descrt, and flnancial bankruptey, will not allow Egypttolond Turkey very eflective hclp, cs- peclally lu view of chodanger that Encland may forcclose her mortgage and take tho whole con- cern boforu long, as she haa already taken tho revenues. OHICAGO MARKET BUMMARY, ‘The Chicazo produce markets were less active yestoriday, and steadlor. Mess pork closed a shado firmer, at $13.15@13.17% for July and $13.274@13.90 for Angust. Lard closed un- changed, at 80.15@0.174 for July and 20.25@0.27% for Angust. Meata were dull, al 4%¢ per B for loose shonlders, O%c for do short tibs, and 64c for do shortclears. High. wines were unchanged, at $1.07 per gallon, Lako freights wero quiet, at 2¢ for corn to Buffalo. Floor waadull and anchanged. Wheat closed 1¥c lowor, nt $1.44 for cash or June and $1.43 seller +dnly. Corn clored 3¢ lower, at 44%c cash and 40c fot July. Oats cloacd casy, at 37%c for June or July. Ryo was quict, at 70c. Barley was noml- nally dull, at 60@G%, Ilogs were quict and ateadler, with sales of common to cholce at $4.05 @400, Cattle wera quiet andunchanged, at .00 @0.00. Sheep wers nominal. Last Saturday ovening there was In storo in this city 1,109,037 bu wheat, 3,051,663 bu corn, 400,105 bu osts, 180,281 bu rye, and 177,510 bn harley. Total, 5,805,480 bu, being an ineronso of 172,330 bu, One hundred dollars §n gold would buy $103, 6215 in greenbacks at the close. — Greonbacks at the Now York Stock Ex- chango yesterday closed at 943, A sack of new Toxas flour was yesterday reeoivod at Now Orleans, which is Pprobably tho first of the mew crop in the United Btates, ————— The Erening Post has shown commendablo enterpriso In getting speclal “cablegrams? all to {tself, commencing yesterday, uotwithstand- ing tho fact that tho wickea Journal Rets the samo ‘cablegram " also. But tho Lost'should ——— Nothing noticeable emanated from the obitu- ary poct-laurcats Cunwps, of the Philadelphia Ledger, to commemorato Decoration-Day, J. W, F. gavo the pross n fow veraes, howerer; and, to mako identity plaln, they .wero sot in lcipal or local authority, tolernto the falselioods and misropresouta. | ™24 tions which a fow of tho pro-Robel journals | , - c%¢ bonds, uven those issued lnat weck, : doclaro that they aro payablo in the coln of of tho Narth nro atll williug to priné agalnat | it W05 Ihey aeo Payablo in o oo — Thoro is something amlies in tho State of Iated by Mossra, Lalor and Mason, of this city, and Donmark. Great crowds thronged the streots f duct of tho L i Neharyi) sthsen o i, Woe do tio Uion on July 14, 1870, The silvor dollarwas then | £EL (8, WAEAAY ko better workiog order. | oo brovir, while tho ather’ pooms " sorn publied by Cillghan & Co. Il'tl:z- fhat ihe ‘was our ino ol attaci nskes e ———— W s ranslators ive performes el with ** the :;f‘;l:;;ifl::g‘::y Y:;‘:!fl':flzr::":? ::C(;fl.:oélo:f Bmzu..’ st N e i THE SILVER DOLLAR. 8 legal tendor, and no change of tha law can patch, which forms part of the cavlogram ;| T8056d under them fn solid nonparcll. The oot et maesar armad (hele tadk i s+ he effoct was striklog as well as the discrimina. Tho New York Zimes, roprasonting that | olter that contract, and therofora the silver i clasa of persons who ate insisting on apocin | d01Ar of the standard weight and finencss pnymout? and an cxclusively go!l;d currx;ncy of July 14, 1870, ia yot a logal tendor in pay- in the United Btatos, is excoodingly unhappy | ment of all thoso bonds, The popular de- becausa of tho agitation at the Wost in favor | Tnnd ia that that snmo mivor-dollar shall bo of tho restoration of silver as n Togal tonder, | #8%in made a legal tonder for all purposcs, It denounces tho bi-metallic currency, and | A0d that its froo colnnge shall bo again au. .donounces all thoso who favorit. In n ro. | thorized. — cont artlclo it makouseveral poluts: 1. "That MINNESOTA AND HER CREDIT, tho doublo standard of gold and sllver, In 1857 Congress granted six millions of though in forco until 1873, hnd nover worked | acros of public land to the Torritory of Min. well, and woa abandonod for that roason. | nesota to ald in the construction of rail- 2, That the country refused to nccopt slivor, | ronds, 'The Leglalature ceded theso lands and during more than thirty years no silver to varfous railroad corporations. Tho panio dollars were coluod, 3. Thnt the repeal of tho | of that yonr rondered it impoasible to build ot making tho silver dollar a logal touder | milronds with lands. In tho meantime, waa notorious, aud was gonerally approved. | Minnesota became a Btate, aud tho Leglsla. 4, That it would be dishonest to make tho turo, in obedience to a gencral popular de- silver dollar a logal tendor, it boing bad faith mond, submitted an smendment to the Con- to tho public creditors. No ono of these | stittion to the people of the Btate, This pointa i sustained by tho facts, As rogards | amendment, which was ratified by a voto of tho first, the statomont is mads in theso | 5 to 1, anthorized the Legislaturo to issue words ” $5,000,000 of State bonds to aid in the con- Up 1o 1R, —twelvo years after tho passage of | struction of theronds. The roads wore to g‘“ n::.‘-_c";:? :"“"::‘“:n:"': dz:[-‘:z-d “-’7 “‘“‘;‘:: oxeoute mortgages on tho land-grants. The 1 the col 5 Kl il 1607 not adoliat was wned trum tha i, | Gotornor, before fssuing thio bonds, requirad Durlng the next thirty-soven yeara the colnage of | Varions conditions, but the Supreme Court sliver dollars amounted to only $6,007,321, or an | of tho Stato by mandamus ordered him to mmnu, 8\’! ‘:::n's‘lm%g ;“::lfi:y m’l‘.!;: nr:-lf;nll issue tho bonds, Of tho- bonds authorized, SAuse afn'e raiver | only £2,375,000, or less than one-half, woro 71 hal 84 undery: ¥ 4 * " i 1 Shames i s 13 S | niod. Tho. somprsin zeninng e ¥rench colnage, and the tondency was to sbip sil- | bonds paid thom outto the contractors as ver abroad. tho work progressed. The companies had Thisis inaccurato ond illogioal. In the | graded obout 230 miles of railway, first placo, the Amorican dollar contalned a | Lut under tho effccta of the panlo wore greater welght of fine silver than could bo | not ablo to soll thelr own bonds, or avon purchased for & dollar in gold ; honco but | couvort the Btalo bonds into cash, The fow porsons having silvor had it coined into | contractors stopped work, and in January, dollars, proforring to sell it as bullion. The 1860, the Logislature prohibited any further dollara that wero colnod were for the same | {ssue of bonds, The mortgages on the renson molted down and exportod. We pub. | lands were foreclosed, and the Btate pur- lishod soma timo ago a statement of the an. | chased the lands, franchisos, snd graded nual colnage of silver dollars, and, despite | rondway,—the Btate thercby recovering all tholr greater valuo a4 bullion, thoro were but | the property, which had been mortgaged to few years in which thoy wore not colned at | securo the State bonda, Bubsequently the the Mint. Prior t0 1853 tho mmaller silvor | Btate gave these lands away to other and colus wore proportionatoly of the same value | now companles, and the rosds wore all 85 tho dollar, and they, too, were exported, | eventually bullt. In a sult by the holders of In 1853 Congress reducod tho wolght of pure | tho bonda to recover from the now compa- silver in the coins of loss than a dollar, but | nies the cost of the graded road-beds, the loft tho silver dollar ns §t had been | Bupremo Court of the United Btatos decided since 1703, n legal tender and the | that the Btato was the primary debtor, and unit of Americon monoy, 41t 80 re. | liable on ita bonds. malned until 1873, at which {ime the Bince then it has been a question in Min. The military position of Rustchuk lies diroctly oprosite Giurgoro, and has been the {mlm from which tho Husslans commandod the ftoumanian tartitory, Not long slaco they sliolled Glurgovo, #nd compelled ita ovacuation. An attompt was made some wecks sgo b{ the Turks to croas the rver, but they were driven back by tho Russian batterios at Rastchuk, and it ia prabable that, as soun as the damaze occasioned by the Turkish ire on the pontaona_Ia repalred, tha offensive will be reaumed by the Russlane, - and the pamnze of the Danube b offacted at thla point, anil the Rouma. nian occupation bo complete. With the excoption that ftustchuk is not tha point from which the Kussians commanded the Roumanian territory; that thoy have not com- pelled tho ovacuation of Glurgevo; that tho ‘Turks did not attempt to cross tho river several weoks sgo: that there aro no Russlan batterics at Rustchuk, it belng marely a Turkish fortreas; and that the Russians have no fden of crossing tho Danube to make the Roumanian occupation complete, as thioy already completoly occupy it, and are about to croas for tho purposoc of oceu- pying Bulgarla, this dispatch ia correct. Tho *‘olbows of the Minclo* may consider them- selves outdone, ——— It 13 somothing to be an helr, It only to a clalim; aud when the claim happeus to be for such a good round sum as $100,000,000 and sgainst so responsiblo a party aa the Stato of New York, the helrship Is ‘almost splendid, Buch & case has arlscn through a dispute in the Brooklyn courts. Jonx G, LxAxe, a bachelor, died in 1808, leaving property then valucd at $200,000 to $300,000, but since advanced to $100,000,000, In round figurcs. He left no so- knowledged helrs, and tho estate escheated to thoBtate of New York, which used it for en- dowing asylums of varfous kinds, 1n 1823 a claimant for tho property appeared fn the per- son of Jamzs A, a Bcotch peddler, who regularly prosecuted his case until his death in 1570, and twas Lonce unsucccssfully heard by the Legisiature, o, dying, 1aft as the heir to hia clalm one Joun Hav, his nephew. Now appears a Joun R. HAv, and contests the clalm of tho claimant, sciting himself up as the legitimata son of tho old man. The nephow admita that Joux R. {s the son of tho old man, but asserts that he is illegitimate, It {sa pretty casc as it stands; inasmuch as tho helrship ts only to & claim which does not now enjoy tho least prospect of belng allowed, it fs & inattor hardly worth dis- puting about, except, as alrcady statod, for the glory of the thing. ————— a “Baxxr Havens, oh{’"—the once famous purveyor of Weat Polnt—{s dead. Ho kept a tavern in the vicinity of the Acadomy from the beginning of the present century until some eightoen years ago, when ho became involved in trouble with tho Governmect, and gave up the reply. To this Buesy porsisted that not more than 10,000 men could havo been ferried scross. _* Very well," Gnaxr is roported ns anying, * thora would not havo been moro than that.” Thero may be no truth in the anocdoto, but it furnishes a key to Graxt's conduct of all Lis campnigns, It was always bis Intention to make the oneiny fecl that he could not bowhipped, and that any dosperato effort to do it would bo accompanied by the miost direfnl results, Ho was a destroyer of Rebol armics from thoe boginning, As o rule, Lie captured thouo who did not foll on the flold of battlo, and periaitted. of no organ- ized retronts. From Fort Donclson to Ap. pomattox Conrt-House his course was ono of prograss, inflicting the most terribla pun. ishment on those who opposod him. It was his stratsgy which gave tho final blow to Lee's army that had for yenrs resisted all other armios, oll other Genorals, and all other tactics that hod beon tried. Of courso ho hnd durirg the War tho aid of ablo and brilliant Marsbals, liko Bueriaw, Suenay, U'uostas, MoPuznsoN, and others, but It wos his judgment that seleeted and placed them, and his suggostion of or con. currenco in their plans which mado them successful. It §s too late for malice or onvy to rob Gnant of his military Inurels, The nsaertion that Gnant wos accnstomed 10 lose threo of hiis men to ono of the enemy is n most propostorous dlstortion of fact, In counting compnrativo losses, no proper estimate can be made which does mnot in- clude prisoners, who, when eaptured, aré ns effoctually disabled as if killed or wounded. Counting prisonére, it is more likely that Gnant oxacted Ave for ono in all losses in Lis entire campaign ngainat the Rebols, Ho rarely lost any prisonors; ho was conatantly capturing them, sometimes bngging o whole army with all 'its materlal, arms, and ammunition, Belmont was iy first battle, and, if ho did not win.a dacided victory, he wade it 8o closo a fight that it is still o wmnt- terof dispute ns to which of the combatants galned an ndvantage. o certaiuly lost no credit in the action,—having made a bold and gallant dash and returned in good condi. tion, Iis long and uninterrupted serios of successes began at Fort Donolson, Ie wag the assoulting party, and the enemy fought behind formidable works, so that it is not stitution, and political oxcitement ran so high that extra_precautions were necessary in ordor to provent riotous and disorderly demonstrations befora the residence of the King, ort," and that the work In Ita American dross reads llko an Enclish original. It also compli~ monta the mechanical get-up of thoworkas a credit to tho Amerlcan press. Two handsome and “witty Indios of Ton- don—Lady Seabright and Mrs. Mouckton—have become prominent a¢'sctresncs in amntenr theatels -eale, . which, - from. baing private,..hava, becous seml-pablic; that Is, they have been acting fs drawing-rooms where any one msy obtain admis. slon by psying ono guines, the proceeda belng voted to charitable institatlons. Tho two ladles acted together on ono occaslon only, and thero was little to choosa betwoon thom, Mr, Conway bo- Moves botter acting can be scen for one-fourth the monoy at soveral tneatros In Lundon. « Mr. Andrew MoParland, of Oak Lawn Ro- treat, a privata rotreat for the in«ane, for many yoars Superintondent of the Iliinols Hospital for the Ane at the same place, was marricd under circamstances at i, Louls the other day, It wasdnnng the Conventlon of Suporintendents of Hospitalaof the Insane, Just befors the Con- ventlon was called to order ona ovening, the room rowded by & party of Iadics and gentlemen, rgyman began the marriage service, and bo- mambars knsw what. was being done Dr. McFarland was married td Miss Abblo ¥, Knor, of 5t. Loufs, Misa Bulivant, of Boston, has just been married, Bho Is celobrated for the compliment she recelved from the Grand Duke Alexis at the timo of his @rst visit (o this country. Bosincera and earncst was the young Duko in his admiration that, boforo he left tho country, hawrote to Miss Sullvant's father—a sumewhat dlstinguished botan- fst—and rospectfally asked for his daughter's plets ure, In order to prosorve tho flnest tyna of Amerle can beanty that ho had scen. The Grand Duko muet bave donea good deal of this sortof thing when ho was In America tho fiest timo, 1¢ haif that lasald of him inthe newspapers la truo. Erastus Brooks, in his farewell lo the pnb- le, after forty-one yoars of editoria) eorvice, says ihat, with the conalantly Incroasing exponsce of dally journaltam In New York City, the chances are that there will not bo as many ncwspapers pub- lshed In New York City twonty-Are years heoco 82 there aro at presontj and, if experlanca toaches snything, there will not be occaslon for tbem, *+Tho Increase 0f nowapapors, ilke tho maltiplica- tlon of colleges in the Btatos, is nosign of sn in. ¢ressed diffusion of knowledge, for within proba« Lle ilmits the fewer thero are in tha city tho belter and cheaper thoy will be,** MMy, Tennyson's ode to Victor Hugo {n tho 18t pumber of the Nineteenth Canlury was sent to the Ierald by cable, Iere Itis: 1 N e S e “claTover: Band e ie fantartc aatats glbhce etz the winatha of £l that would sdvasc a —————— Tho President dnes woli fo roly upon the Indes pendent and unbonght uppon of such papors as the Journal,—springfleld (Hite) Journat, It was tho support of rosistanco until the hint of a Government appolutnjent made it a suspl- clous ally of the Admnistrstion, Rettance upon such a thing would bo n cheap sarcasm on vir- tue. * Unbought support,” indeod! It is the colicalvencss of a leoch, if anything, » — ‘Whenever an ex-member of Congress, or an unsoductive oditor, or a galled policeman, falls toget an ofiico, the editor of the Cloveland ZLeader pata his paunch, elevates his nose, and remarks in & Pockenifllan way that thero are soma peapla not intho polltical market. Yet, it wo remember aright, he wanted an office and did not got It, ———— TiLDRN {8 going to England early fn July, Thera Is danger that the enthusiasm of the En- glish on American subjocts will bo exhausted by tho time he reaches the other side, and he will not bo treated with anything lke the respect sccorded to Gon, GuANT, Yot he haa devoured more railroads than Gon. GRANT fought battles e —— A London ZT'imes correspondent with tho Turkish nrmy in Bualgarin snys tho infantry are well equipped and ready for the fleld at any moment, but the artillery fa wotully deficient in horses, nnd the money with which to overconio this grent disadvantage is not to be kiad. The corrvspondent estimates tho strength of, tho Turks, of all arms, bo- twoen’tho Danube and the Balkans at about 200,000 men, 8 — Tho doctors of mediclne have followed tho doctors of divinity umong us, and oro In the thick of their interosting and valuable dis- . cussions and treatisos, which, thongh under- 1 stoud by enly a comparatiyoly small propor. tion of the gencral public, nro undoubtedly of groat benefit indirectly to mankind nt lavge. The American Modical Assoclation ia a body of grent dignity and importance, and it is to Lo hoped that the large number of " physicians and surgeons in attondanca from all parts of tho United Btates will enjoy their visit ta Chicngo thoroughly, and carry away plensant recollections of the peoplo and the city. — ‘Tho practical value of the Government Grass- hopper Commission Is shown by the fact that farmers havo themsnlves discovered ways of getting rid of the pests by tar and keroseno. By tho tima the Commissfon has fts speeimen locusts duly classified and labeled, the fnsocts will kave gone to more charitablo climcs, —— The Denver Tribunels bidding for an office by sneering at tho acts of tho Administration, and ridiculing the utterances of tho Prealdent on Civil-Service Reform. It {s on the trawmp with the DesMolnes Regiater. T —— Under tho protext of gnarding againat any disturbance of tho *public tranquillity, tho French Minlster of the Interior is making tho most daring encronchments upon the liberty of speech and nction, Having mado aclean sweep of the Republican Profoots and filled their plnoes with Bounpartists who cnn b rolied upon to assist In the attermpt to coerco popular sontiment Lo the support of an unpopular Government, Fountou ig making effectivo uso of the mnachinery thus supplied for the work, Tho Prefects have beon in. structed to keop o sharp lookout for the sale of nowspapers and pamphlots hostile to the Macdauon dynasty, and suppress their circulation whorever found. If this policy wingin France it will bo time to drop the numno of Republic, and call it an absoluto monarchy, e———— ‘The Cleveland Leadsr explatng why boy-ba- bies aro pretticr than girl-bables as * bezause boys aro sald o tako after tholr mothers when very young,” Notso. It'snip and tuck until they are weaned, ———— A 8an Francisco professor has Identifled the tizo and fall of what ho calls earthquakc-warcs, They are woll cnough at sea; buton land—woli| swimming is of 1o use to one taking that sort of a dry bath, I ——— California has & woman who s assertod to bo 140 years of age. This will be encouraging to Busan B. and Gaw, H. The publio—welll the public may focl hopeless under this promise of possibllities, - 1t Bxx Bureen fa not carefal about his repu- Two indictments have been returned by the Grand Jury engaged in the effort to | it Vrane dnasgusieofent oy Radt v 1 Engisad, ice, tation, he'll spoli It some day by telliog the T know not. ance; ail men 1 b, bring tho thi f ing to | SUrPrising if ho did loae tho largost number | American silver dollar was o legal tendor for | nesota politics whethor the Btate should Pay | busincas. There wero many convivial times at truth, IMis Colorado-f he [ ne peaple, cre wman's raca bé ruay Tuslses: Mhny ave bacinat o S n el Bt s e Louibes | Amerioan frile and priviloia tho United | thote bonds. Tu the wmeaatimo 0o intorst | BRxXT's, whero the cadete usod Lo teal afer | rousy 118 just oo In the negative vetannt | - A5tTucr nflfll:‘-:&'f:a.r'lfl"’ull courteey clerk Meviox, who aro charged with a con. | $0r® to enable him to demand **uncondl- | States, and receivable for duties on customs | has baon paid, and tho Btate has practically | parade, 1t wasin his honor that the famous untruth, ¥oyolcesr Ensiacd (3 the boy, oy o tional and immediate surrender” when the enemy begged for terms, and the result was the capturo of 12,000 or 14,000 prisoners, or fully five timea tho number he lost in killed, wounded, and prisoners, 1la captured all the guns, arms, and munitions of war, and struck the Robels a blow from which they did not recover for months, He followed up Donelson by Bhiloh, To say that he was boaten ot Bhiloh is simply to fulsify history, It was a two days' battle, On the first day his advance BTy Was sur- prised, and he himself did not arrive on the battlo-grouud till 9 o'clock, when he found Lis troops falling back, He checked the panio, rostored the line of battle, and fought tensclously till night came on and lefi the field in dispute. He would probably have won the first day's battle .had not an unfor- tunate countermarch of Lxw Warzace's di- vislon kept eleven or twelve of his reglnents out of ‘the fight, During the night he was reinforced, and had no longer to contond sgainst superior numbers. He renewed the attack, and the victory which bad been ro- ported ko vaingloriously by Bravsraano the duy beforo was turued to defeat, nod the scottered Rebel army was on its votreat to Ooxinth, As o losses, the highet s0ng was composed and sung; Como All your glasses, fellows, and stand up in & To singing sentimentally we'ro golng for to go; In lhl‘ army there's .ewmy.’;r:gauuon'fim Bo m"l’:° ll'llll our reminlscences of Baxxy Havmns, ol * splracy to obstruet ths course of justice by destroying or making away with doou. ments believed to be material to the prosccution and conviction of the cor. rupt wombers of the County Board, "he thicves aro determined upon making a desperate fight, They have engaged em. inont counsel to defond them, and one of the first moves will bo au attempt to get asido the proceedings of the Graud Jury on the ground of its illugality, et us Lope that in thiy caso the law will not bo twisted und tor. tured s us to provido a loophole for the cs. “eapo of the precious batch of scoundrels vho are now in a fair way to get their deserty, and payable for intorest on the publio debt, | repudiated the debt ; but we have no doubt, Every dollar of the public debt, principal | whon the loss of credit is cousidered, hor and intercst, was payadle in silver dollars, | people have in various ways lost ‘more money aud tha silvor dollar was at that timo, as it | by the operation than would have pald the bad been for a long timn proviously, worth | bonds twice over, 103 conts in gold. After yoars of vexation, the creditors made Provious to this timo thora hod beew a | & proposition to the luat Legislature to take scheme on the part of varlous persons in | new Btate 8-per-cent bonds at a rate of about Europe to advanco thoe price of gold. A re. | 50 cents on the dollar of the State indebtod. duction in ita production had been visible ness, and surronder the old bonds. The for some timo, and, if to this could bo cronted | Leglislaturo submitted an amendment to the Bn extraordinary demand for gold, then | State Constitution embodyiog this offer, and thero would be an advance in its value. The suthorizing the mcceptance of tho offer, German Government was therofora seduced | This amendment is to bo voted on by the into the enactment of alaw demonetizing | people on the 12th of June, and the matter silver and making gold the legal ten. | is warmly discussed in the Btate, dor in the Empire. At tho same The olection is an important one for Min. tims, European influonces were at | nesota. It isof far more consequence to the work in this country, and under the | Btate than any election that hos taken place form of revising the coinago laws the | there for ten yoars. It is to declds whether colnage of the silver dollar wes abolished, | that young Btate will commit moral sulclde, sod the gold dollar was mado the unit of | —whether it will assume the attitude of dis- Amorican monoy, Tho changs was not oven regarding her solema obligations, and take made in direct torms. Tho historical dollar | her rank smong the municipalities whose was not abolishod by direot enactment; the | names are posted in-all the markels frumer of the law accomplished' thispro- | of tho civilizd world as dishonored, cecding by providing that the ‘‘followiug | and excluded from recognition. Thers coins " shall heronftor be coined ‘and none | are half & dozen petty States fn olber, and then giving s Ust in which the | Central America aud = South Americs, f Mr. Fdward Freeman's late book on ‘Tarkey s thus spoken of by the London TVmss ¢ *‘inthls volume Mr, Freeman demollshes tho Turks, and if mere words snd arguments could banieh that stobborn race from Kurope (hero would not by thia time be Ottomn Turk lets on shls not tho Brst sy powerful Gov- ! his pen. About seventeen 8gohe wrote and published ** A Mistory of Federal Government from the Achean League lo the Late United States of Amerlica.” ko now sccrus dlsposed to write prematurely **The Lato Tarkizsh Emplre," A blunt correspondent of the Manchester (K. H.) Mirror says that if Now England farms - ‘baverun down the people who occopy themare & long way ahesd 10 tho race. **We have gotun our farms to-dsy s class of peoplo who can cipher through +tha algebrs, plsy the plano, and bosst gl an scqualintance with the fine arts, but they can’t work. Thoy bave got fino minds, but thelr bodles are alckly, puny, and wesk. To talk the matter plaloly, we have bred thu bone and mascio out of our families until we have gota kind of human Jereeys, fne-boned, mild-cyed, and nico to look t, and pot, sad put on exbibition, but so tendcs snd weak that thoy aro At nefther for our climato, osr wark, of our clrcumstances. . . . A8 8 farming people we arc ployol out.™ The corre- spoodeat thluka 1t wonld pay yoang farmers t0 1ook out for wires among tho hoaltby German sad Irioh gicls of the large cltics, who will know how to introdace tndustry and frugality luto the farm- Bagag, ‘The Dotrolt Lost continues to utter ahomin- able political scotiments in order to have re- spoctable papers controvert them. That ls {ts only way of getiing into decont company, ———— The tona of a falr proportion of Bouthern Journals seems 10 ba favorableto the Prosidont's 1sbors for pacification, and the press spesks for the people to & great extent. PERSONAL, Mrs. Julla Werd Howa was honored by s recoplion at the resldonce of Lord Hoaghton fa Loudoa recently, Edward Moran, the marine palnter, and the oldest of the distingulshed Morsn brothets, 1s about to take up s resldence In Znrope. Mme, Esslpoff returned to Europe $20,000 richer than when she camo here. The fnanclal Josa {nvolved In ber concerts fell upon Ber man- ager. Col. Valentino Baker is sald to be slowly recovering, and bo has at last recelved his commls- dlon 88 Baker Pashas, Brigadier-Genersl of the Gen- garmsrio, which Is 10 be organtzed under hla direc- tlom, Among the cadots in the graduating class 4% Weat Polat la s son of Gen, Denjsmin ¥, But- lor, & sonof tha New York Becretary of State Bige- low, two sons of prominent Confedorste Gomse- 8ls, & mophew of Brig.-Gen, O, O, Angur, of thy There wero about & dozen verscs In all whon the song was wriiten, some fifty years ago. Tho author of 1t was Liout. O'BRisx, of the Eighth Intantry, who dled afterwards in Florida, —— Benator Monto has started for Oregon to in- Yestigato Grovar, better kuown as * Gobble! or “Gabble.” ‘The principal Jncldents of his manhood are that he was developed by a dic- tlonary and dostroyed by s cipher in the effort tohelp Cuonix organiso himsclt and to have bim stey organized. 1t is rescrved for Oregon ta experienco tho ploasure, excluslvely, of hears log and scelng Mr, MozrTox squecze GROVER through a colander of truth, and to listen to the dripping that will follow after pressure. —— Fora specimen of unalloyed brass thers s nothiog {a history to equal this complacent ut- terance of the Loutsyills Courier-Journal on the policy of the President : His scheme Is to force bis party upto hls elevated standpoint. The lonin bis path will bs tho Democratlc party; for tho Democzatic party s with him i his re- formatory policy. His own party is not, and there's the difigrence,”” That means that the Ditmorpayjc party: will support the plan on Woareable to place before our readers this morning very futeresting and important intelligence from Tax Tamuvse's corps of correspondents. From London 3Mr, Watant telegraphy that he has received special ad- vices from Bucharest to the effoct that it is the policy of the Ruwian commanders to vouyey the impression that the crossing -of the Dauubo i to be delayed untit the middle ©of ke month on account of high water, the + object beiug to mislead the Turks s to tho intentious of tho ememy, Qur corre.