Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
to face Brruen down in a malicions ctory strtedl by the Infter 10 tha effect that por- tions of 3r. Fostim'a colebrated ** reconclia- tion apecch ” wero supplied by Southern Demourats. The Essox rowdy hadn't o brick o conld call his own at hand, md was fnin to erawl out of ‘tho encouster with an exceedingly ill, gtace. 1o appented to Thye Tribane, SUBSCRITTION. PRRPAID. .. 58 ERITLLT » 439 Frecimen copeseent trre. Give Post-Ofbee sudress fa full, ineloding Etatéand Countr. Kemfitances maybe méde efthet br dratt, exprém, eurder, or {n regiatered lefiara, a1 uur Hak. +’ TERMS TO CITY SUBMCTIBERS. deltvered, Eunday exceptéd, £3 centa per week. deilvered, Sundsy inclded, %0 ceute per week. THR TRIBUNE COMI‘A&\‘,{L- ¢ TERMS O p:offer by Mr. Fostss of Lis testimany con- ecrning the procecdings of tha Woamury Confersnce, at whick he wis present. Dor- 1em, However, had no tdate for* an. extended diege with & witness of thia calibre, and was summoning him befors the Committes. Ha would prefer something in the Implacable bearsay ling,«~W. E. CHANDLER, - for oxam. plo, who kaaws nothing abont the Womirer Confetenoe sivo what somebody .hiss told him,” ~ = L Ade Comner Madiron and Dearisiri-sis., Chicago, Ordersfor the dellyaryof Tux TRINUNR st Evanston. Fogiewond, and fiyde Park icft in the conatiag-rovin Wiureceiver The prosecution of the ‘* stink cases " has been rowarded with the most gratifying suc- oes 80 far. The Hoalth Commissionor, his bordinatea, and the Commiltes from tho Cilizons' Associntion have rosisted. all mau- Ber of inflnenco and preamro o give up the acent, and havo persiatently followed the dnses down 1o the point of conviction in avery ond that hns been tried. This s ns far aa the city officials, the citizens, and the Sloolry’s Thentre. Tsndoish atrect, between Clark and Lt Fngagement of the Union Squars Thestrs Company, “* A Gelebrated Cuse.” MeVicker's Theatre. Madleoh rtrcer, between Btats and Dearborn, L Tom's Cabln." ' . Tinverly’s Thentre, 2 Monrcoe rireel, corner of Dearhorn. Engagement of M. Joha Dillon. **The Colleen Hawn.” 2 New Chicaxo Theatre, o~ . Clark strect, between Bandolpd and Lake. Varfoty intertaloment, b Abatement of e nuisanco, is now.in the hands of . the. Court, . which has the discre- tion ecither to impose, a- fins -or to turn the dffending nuirdnces over into ' tho hands of ho Shexiff, for figal ‘extinction. If convie~ tion in these cases shall result motoly in a fine, then the time, expense, aud encrgy of the prosscutivn will heva been tlirown away,—for the offenders will poy their fine, langh ln their. slecvas, and go tu as belore doluging the town with nightly {ustaliments of tholr noxions gases. ''The rondering and fertilizing ostablishments evidently think that thig wilt bo the resnit, for thore is scarcely s night, oven daring the prosccotions, when soms pact of the city is not inflicted with Hershoy Mndo Malt, ' Madison strect, oppusite MaVicker's Thestre. The Midgeu. Whito Stooking Park. Ta¥e Ahore,~ foot of Washington belween the Providence and Chicaga I ent. Gate 343p.m. TRIBUNE BRANCH OFFICES, Tay CnicAo TRIBENX Das eatablished braoch oft for the recelptof subscriotins and sdvertteernents aa fol W YORR—Tinom 9 Tribune Butlding. F.T. Ma:, FAnDEE, Manager, v FARIE, France—No. 10 Ttus de 1a Grange-Bateliere. 1. Mapuwr, Agent, : LORNON, Fng.—Amcrican Kxchadge, 49 Btrand. Hxxny F, GrLuid, Agent. 3 BAN FIANCISCO, Car.—~Talace Hotel Court should sppreciate the focliugs of the. Chicago people in this matter, aud oxercies its nuthority to the utmost. It should not be inflnonced oither by the whine that-a #wift abatemont of theso nnisaucos will be fatal to™ the-"tenderitig and fertilizing busi- Hesn, nor by the threat that the offonding TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1878, . Greonbacks at the New York Btock Es- change yosterdny closed at 994, sk At The fnnaral of the Inte Btowzy’ Barest oc- currod yesterday at* Oarlyle, I, aud in re- spect of unosteutation in oulward pomp snd of the manifestationa ‘of siucero 'sarrow for the loss sustained by the Htate, the Dench, and the Bar, was such a fuueral as the plain old man could have wished, dr to Bt, Lonis. Neither of thesa thiugs will liappen, It hns. beon demonstrated that the nozious gases may be consumed with small and this will bo done in praferénco to aban- doning the business or removing outaide of wasy vonch of Chicago; but the men angaged in the business who aro still committing the nwisance will not adopt the necossary proc. oss until they ‘shall Le compelled to do'so Ly a peremptory ordor_of the Court. Con- fronted by the necessity of providiug the The Mayor's nomiuations for city offices ware for tho most part reported favorably to the Common CJouncil last evening by the committecs having them inoharge, but so- tion thereon was deferred until next Monday night. Present indications are that the more important appointuents will be confirmed. lusiness, all'these men will do tho former, and Chioago -will bo omanoipated for good nnd all from’ the groatest Llight on the com- fort and hoalth of the aity. ot AT MR. THURMAN'S FINANCIAL VIEWS, Sjnce Senator Taunxanisrogarded s one of tho most formidable candidates for the Demo- crntio nomination for President in 1880, his recant ntterances on the fluancial featurcs of 1he Ohio platform deserve some further con. sideration. Mr. Trunsax distinctly avows himeelf in favor of the ropeal of tha Re- atmption act, which means the indefinito postpouoment of resumption, and likewise of Mr. Bouwos. Baxzn followed: & very poor copy when he imitated Srawrex Matrazws’ refnsnl to tostify before the Porren Com- mittce.’ To the country at large Baxen has been known only a4 the author of a telegram containiug some gratuitous advice on the subject of Onbiner-roaking, and ho is mis- taken In supposing.that he can il a larger place in the publia oye by playing the mule in the Portren farce. - It ho knowd anything that is worth hosaring it is to bo Loped n way will be found to make him tell it, and if, a8 s probably the case, the information in hia possossion I8 of no more valne than his viows were in the matter of Cabinet ap- pointmonts, a fitilo of the sunrp dircipline which Gen. Burren threateus to find s way. {0 administer would not be misplaced. this reapcet, he agroes entirely with the Oblo Domocratio platform, and the Ohio Demo- crntio platform followa the expressions of moat of the National or Groenback Conven- tions, Mr. Tnurman's approval of these doctrines givea thom more importance than they had so long ss they wore regarded meroly as the dictates of Tox Ewixg and 8axt Oanx, to whom they wera crodited, and it is worth while to consider just what would rosult from the application of these two doctrines under a Dewmocratic Cangresy with Mr, Taumaax in the President's chair to approve them, * ‘Bilver was remonotized in this country nn. der peculinr conditions. We had then, as wo atill bave, & paper curroncy not redecema- blo in coin on domand. Dut we wero then, as wo aro 10w, approsching tho date aud the actual accomplishment of specte-payments, and the remonetization of silver was legiti- mataly urged for the purpose of restoring the donble standard of gold and asitver for re- samption purposea, In authorizing the coin. nge of wilvor dollars, which had been discon- tinued, the Governmeut was necessarily lim- ited to tho enpacity'bf the miuts, which was nsoertained to bs about 4,000,000 a month of silvor dollars, in addition to the colnage pf geld plecos, the trade-dollar, aud asubsidiary silver. Owing to the German demonstiza- tion of silvor and other circumstances, silver bullion was worth considorably less than par iu gold on the American ratio of coinage. It then became a question for Qongress 4 de- tqrmine whother the Government, under o liinited silver coinage which was unavoldable under the cirsunstances, should reccive the beuefit of the ocouversion of silver at the bullion price futo legal-tender dol. lars, or allow that profit : to go into the hauds of silver spoculators. ‘o hinve de- clared silver colnage unlimited would npot have rvosulted in amny larger colusge of silver dollars than at prosent, unless the ca- pooily of the mints had bLoan largely in- .creasad; bul to have given tho priviluge to all owners of bullion to take their ailver to the miuts aud dewand the coiungo thereof, would have given an unfalr advantage (o certain cliques that would manage to monopolize the wintsand enjoy a profit of sbout 10 per cent on the silver coined at the Qovernment ex- pease. This would bave eutailed a large -cost upou the Government for the benefit of thy American silver-mine owners and the London and New York ‘silver brokers, Lut 1€ the miuts nd beon multiplied so as toren- der the pyiusge of silvor unlimited in fac as well as ip name, then all -the silvar product of the Americon mines, allthe idle balliou in England, sll the dcmonetized ailver of Gor- 'muny, woyld have flowed intothis country to acquire the advantage of frea Awerican coia- ‘ago, aud the new logal-tander value given it by reason of coinage. ‘The country wpuld have been drained of gold, which would have gone abroad to be exchanged for silver at bullion rates. Thers would have been no further demand or use for gold in this country, os silver, bolug receivable for Qatles, would serve every purpose of gold, In case of resumption, then, wo would not have bad the doublo standard under theso sirounstances, but a single silver standard, 59 long a¢ thero ehould continue to bo a dif- furence between the bullion values of gold aud silver in favor of the former, and the speculators would bave all the beucfits and the Government al) the cost of coinuge. Wewill uot comment upon the probable cudurauce of that coudition of things, buee . B aa A most oxtrnordinary confession has heen nuade ‘by Harizt ‘G, Drown, the man who Dy placing obstructions on the track wrécked an cxpress train' near’ Claymont, Del, Baterday night, and coused the death of four persons. BmowN accompanied - the Coroner's jury to the’ scene of the wreck, and explained Lis plan of operations, His design was, nccording to his statement,— rud thero ix an eloment of tragia truth about. it that compels bolief,—not to throw the traln from the track, but to signal it to stop, and thus make it appear that he had averted a fearful catastrophe, hoplng in this way to mecurs from the Railroad Com. pany a grateful recognitlon of his services in tho shaps of o position on theroad. Ho planned a frand only, but excouted sn awful crime, and desorves $o saffer the oxtreme con. sequeuce of what ho did, not what he in. tended. The decislon weo Judge McCurroc, of Peoria, declaring the Vugrout act constitutional, should attract gen- eral attontfon. It willbe rocollocted that a few months ago Judge MoArLisTes (in the cnsa Poopla ox rel. Harrix Brown) took it upon himselt to pronounce the Vagrant act unconstitutional and void, ‘bocause, ss he slleged, the act Jenied the right of trinl by jury to the vagrant, which s a constitutional right. - But Judge McCurroon clearly shows that Judge MoArrtaren jmmped at his conelusion without proper judiolsl examina- tion ‘of the subject. The: mot of 1877 is simply au amnendment to the criminal code, and nmet bo read in connection therewith, The code providea for trinl by jury in all criminal cases. The act of 1877 does not Te. peal it If avagrant, ofter heis arrested, demands a jury trial, bo can haveit. If he dou't axk for a jury, thafault lu his own, Ha mny dowmand or waive a jury trial jf he pleases. Judge McCurzocu shows vary non. clusively thot the Vagraut not Is constitution. ol, and must stand. mT————— TLo Borlin Congress is making rapld prog. ress in settling the most important points Lrought boefors it by the Plenipotontiaries of the suveral Powers. The Roamanian dels. gates, although fn s mensure uusuccessfal in’ thelr efforts to save to that principality the Provinco of Beasarabis, hava wucceedsd in limiting the terrilorial cession to that pars of the Bessurabian territory which Russia lost iu 1856, Prince Cuanres, however, obtaing the Dobrudscha, thus secaring to Rownania Lotk bauks of the River Danube. Rou. wanisn judependence is to be acknowl. vdged only on the condition ihat freodom of religlous worship sball be guar. uuteed by the principality. Auother . portant point settlod is that the hardy Mon. touegring who have fought the Turks for Lundreds of years in thofe moyptain fort. renwos, and have never been conquered. have st Lust secured the recogoition by the Euro- peun Powers of the fact that they have well carned thelr independénce, which has been ucceded to thew by the formsl action of the Congreas, T ——— No sucking dove can yoar you more gently thau Brx Borigs can when ocoasion neces- situtes it. Buch an occasion aross yesterday, when Omauiry Pomrs, of Ohio,pat in & voluutury sppearsncs bofure the Comuittce THE CJIICAGO TRIBUNE: TUESDAY. rt of the progmmmo which Mr, Trunyax has npproved. thus provided a new bonanza for the silrer speculntors at the ozpenss of the taxpnyers, having nssured the. cxpulsion of gold from the country, ho would then furthar ex. inde sllver nlso by indefiuitely postponing tha ato of resumption. _Frce and unlimited doinage,of silver nndar the counditions of the ¢nse wonld make silvor practically the single specie standard of the tduntry, and, with res sumplion accomplished, silver and graeh- backs would have an intarchangsable vélne. But, with resumption indefinitely postponed. fhe greenbocks would keap bélow tha par alue of tho silver dollam in which they quld be redeemable if resnmption had beon dccomplished.~ A papor cutrenoy is never worth mote than the speclo enrfetioy inwhich it 18 redoomable on demand; but the papor glways beoomes worth less than that specie Ton redemption 'is not definitely provided for.. Gresnlnoks, then, would ba below par insilver, and the inevitable sosult would bo {hint alivor would hot oireulate.” Gold would Hnve buen: expsllod from the conotry alto- duuwr; silyer' Wwould be tised only for-the payment of duties and intorest on the public debt, and for the pnrposes nf foreign trade; ] remnin . o sctual giroulation ouly the irredeomable papor cur- fenay; which ‘cannot’ Inwfnlly excecd what any bo called, tho , constitutional Umit of $400,000,000, and its valne would constantly BeJowés than the valng of silver, whatever that .might be. Mr. Tuunaas's financisl Plan, therofore, necessarily leads to nn dnormous contraction of the ourroncy,—frat, By expolling gold altogether and excluding dilver from airettlation, atd, secondly, by ‘re- ducing tha value (tho purchasing power) of - tho Himitad jssne of jrredeemable paper cnr- rfeney. Me. Trmmstan, o3 a Democratio ean- didate for Presitlent, would scarcely dare to proclaim himeelf in favor of vontraction, And it would cortainly-ba.fatal to his, smbition it ho did 50'; novertholess, ho las given his approval to- a fiunnclal policy which '‘cannot ponaibly load tq anything else but contraction. T e e port with enthusinam and zeal. asponsed his ennse and mnde {t their own, and heis making a living- profit, notwith- stonding he has to pay freight on his beer. 8o long as hls pluck holds out and Cinciis- nntd rages with thirst, thero isa prospect that ho® ean hold Lis own againat the combined forces from ' over the Rhine.” The Germans of Oincinnati feel nud know that he is & benefactot. They care’ nothing . for the profits of Clncinnati brewers or the oxigen- cles of Cincinnati saloon.keepers. anly ktiow that the man froin Chicago gives them twjco as much beer forfive conts os the Cinclonati men will give them, and it is not in human natare, at least in that cityy to resist amch an opportani THE LATEST 'ACT OF VIOLENCE. | On Sanday .cvening, Peren L. Staviss druelly and cowandly attempted to niurder liis wife nenr the door of her residence, amd doemed to think he had’ performed s merito- tious act, for which men should praise him, In Beptomber, 1875, he married Manr Younoe, thon ouno month Jears of age, and their lifé slace then liag beeu one of bitterness and regret, the chlld. Wwifo belng mubject to abmse and violones, dud compelled to appenl to the' police for protection. Remoying , to Cinclupali, he lypullml to her to follow him there, which 4he did, but in due timo, Lecause of his ill- frealment, was compallod to return to her other. For six months thoy bave besn living separately, ho forgvor threntoning her te. nconsing - ber ms to have davoted much of hin time to.khadowing her add writing her dffonsive and threntening lettors. On Sun. day riight éhe” was ‘at Joiforson Park whoii be . nbused her. and followed . kher home,. ind whon near her mother's door he shot ber down. The unfortunate girl, nearly thres’ years a ‘wifo, and yet not 17 ‘yeara ald, whatover sho may, have becomo, was nothing. more than ho had made her,. A aoward and @ brute, ho had ireated her malignantly and wretchedly from hor-child- Hood. Bhe haid boon & victim more.than o wife, and hor youth nnd her benuty seomed to provoke, rather than subdue, the’ cow- |’ ardico which inspires a man fo strike'and’ malireat 'a woman, and that woman a child ‘walted for the decinion of the eomrta, ¢aitso they did not do so, the guilly parties to {his disgraceful proceeding deserve the con- demnntion of the peoplo of the whole State, and such ppnishment as tho law linposes for JUDGE BR The Remains of the Eminent Jurist Consigned to the It thé nows from Berlin is tene, ths Aus. {rinns will comnisnce’ marching troops into Bowmin and Herzogovina touday, The Tarks tigorously protested, bub tho other Poward Bave given their consent.” They demadded fiext ‘that the deenpation shotld be' of femporary distalion; but even this was net promised. . The Turka must bow their hieads to the fnoritable, pointed out to the Bnltan’'s Ambassador that Anstrin in Ifsrzegovma will be a check on hostile plotting in Bulgnatla by thé Rassiaus, Both provinces have Loen shockingly govs érnod by the Turks, and have boen in'a state of insurraction for two years past, ' Mors {tian 100,000 women and ohildron have been fefugees acrose the lfue' ou Austrisn ter fitory to oroipe of the bloody Mussulmans. - The peopls ars maioly Blavs by race, the Turks befngin n small minarity, ‘The numboer of Inhabitauts in the’provinceals about A ‘millioi ‘and & balf. A dispatch from Vienna yesterday Atates that a eivil comtission wifl accompany the troops to Hoania and Hersegoviua for tha purposs of organizing the administration of the country. - ‘A large train and seventeen ambulance hospitals. will follow, 'Germany 1ot only gave hor consent to the ocenpation, bnt has urged Austria to ‘tho pelzure. England belioves that it will tesult jn Aus. tria more firmly opposing the further en- aronchinents ‘of Russia on Turkish territory, dud that it will eause har 'to hold ervia in check asn Rusilan Al Times remarks: . ! T'he question of Austeia's ceny and Hetneguvina hat 4 miiTary, s cal, 1mportance, which amply A¢ | ctiement proauceéd by 1t in Berria and Montonegro. 4 giance at tho map will raflica 1o shotr that the - Auntrian territory of Daimatis, ‘Iytig dlone the Adrintie peabontd, and the thres Provinces of Her. ovins, Boshia, and Nervia, winth aucceed each 4 1t from west {0 £48t, nFs 1n the post- ‘tlon of four finvers outatrotched aids by ahle, the Inlan finger being ropresanted Thus, the conteinplated occnpa- h of the territory in question wonld “enabls Auttelo complstely to command Servia on one siio and Montencgro on the other, And to iredic thelr communlcstions whenever aha might thiuk At.' nohetter ndvantaga in connection With: the {115 Obsequics at tho Little Town of Cariyle, Southern The Simpls Excrolies, and the Dis- dbliged to own that he hod no intention of’ oniag him botors o tinguished Persons At- Braconsrisun Plenty of Untried. Mon. Rendy to Tako the l)cn.dv Man's High Offices Apecial Diwpated te The Tribune. . e, Iil, Jufy 1.~At 1 o'clock to-da; the last tribate ofrespect—and this means far tnore than the hackneyed phrase generally im- Mea—was pald to the mortsl reralns of Sidney ircese, he wlio died while the ok was not yet dry on an opiglon ha:was writihg for tho Scp- ember tertn of the Supreme Court. Your otresgoudent has bad $he privilege ok lopking - At that menuscript. It bore the agenda-num- Lor written by the deccasts private- mark, - that - meant {* Roget’s Thesaurus® dets opposito thers * would with his special proseculors can go.: The continuance or: ven moro than THE CITIZENS OF CARLYLE) 4mong whom ho had lived 80 matiy’ yedrs, ‘and by whom be was loved, and by whont his ory will be revered oa long as the Jittle. hamiep shall stand, had fssucd 8 programmna’ for tho fuperal obscquies gorgeous with ‘bross bunds dnd. tinseled - paraphervalis. I am glad to ba ableto write that ‘tho final ceromonies were ateictly in keepinz with the simplicity of char- dcter evory one knew Judge Breese .t possess.. \Vhen the cholera ravaged the new (and West 1o 1833, amdng its vict GOV, NINIAN EDW. ) Then the funeral was Annoiiuced to served. at Belleyille, the ‘beople of Southern Difnots, theo almost sll of the Btote.. mud. mparsely settlod, gatherod by buudreds avd camped out, that .thoy might be -roady.to pay the respect due. - The nceaslon :was & grand, as 1t was a 8ad, one. Dr. John 8, Peck, author of © Peck?s Gazetteer,” dolivered the ‘funcral ora- tion to-day. The venerablo “John' Thomas, ex-' membor of ' the , Legisiature from Bt Clalr County, tellams that nuver in’ the history of Soutbern Iilinols live the people becn called on 1o mourn a Joss 5o great. since Ninlao Edwards ns thet of Bidney Breese. ! The srravizomenta . for tho burial, conslders ing thot Juduo Drocss died last Friday, were Imdly manated. Carlyle % n town out of the way,nod with only, ono raltroad conncetion. ‘The' loeal’ cdmmittca put off the: funcral from Saturday till Monday to {nsurv a large attend- ance from abroad, whon any rallrond man could havo tokl the committeemen that Satur- day was a much better day thon Monduy, fnfidelity. He ly. Tla New York tho' usnal nauseating doss ‘of stink, The. naft of the Ylerze, e A S8CHOONER WAR. | Assuming, what vory fow beer-drinkors will deny, that the next hest thing in tbis vale of toavs Lo & glass of heer is a achoouer of beer, the paople of Clncitnali onght to ba very Happy. They owe thoir happiness to Chicago. It is due to tho onterprise of a Chicngo man that they can buy a scliooner of beor for the smme price as A glass; though It contains twvice as much liquld, and secordingly tiwice He has boldly opened shop o Vine stract, nud, while all “atuund him they sell beer at five conts a gluss, be ia dispensiog it st fiva cents a schooner. Tho result bns been A Gormanio uprising. Tho besr-drinkers nre commoncing anothor of their dosperate struggles ngainst the boer- seller fu.league with the brewer. ** Over the Rhine,” which - recontly listoned to ' the penceful strains of the Mosieal Featival, is up ih arms, and the brewers aro threntening all sorts of vengeance agalost the Chicago man, He went to Cinclonati very quietly aund opened his saloon without any flourish of trumpota. It does not take Clncinnati vory long “to decide betweon a glass and n schooner of beer, can bo bad Aftor the sale of-the very first achooner the news sprend like wildfire, nnd from every point of the compass, from Third sud Fourth streots, from the Hills, from Clifton, from over the Rhing, the thirsty multitude flocked to the Chicago wan's saloon. Even the squabble over the Great Organ and the deco- | ration of pottory stopped. Tho Pronasco fountnin forgot to spont, and the landlords on the Hills Iooked down from their empty halls and wondered what was .tho matter down in the smoke, that no one came up tho | Planes. Tho finit opposition to,tha Cllengo man come from the other maloon-keepers, whoso name is legion. !{hom live upon the profits from tha salo of two kegs o day, but it was evident that, it tho Ohicngo man kept on selling twice s much beer as thoy for the samo price, tho custom wonld go to him, for it in one of the principles that lics at the very basls of hu. 1aan nature the world over that a Teuton will always profer to go to a place whors ho can get a schooner of beor for five conls, rather than agres to pay five ocents for o glass; and this is a principle which cannot be changed by compnlsory education or auy amount of esthotio cultare, It is an inhorent quality like the knowlodge of good aud evil, The firat step of the saloon-keepers was to increase tho quantity nnd Improve tho qual.’ ity of tholr lunches. They provided more apd better radizhes, krant, warst, herrings, protzels, and cheese, Viewing the question, bowever, as to ils food sspoct, tha Toutons beld thot beer is food, and dotermined to go where they could got twica s much food for the same money, avd wers not influenced a whit by the exira sausages and radizhes, Then tha saloon-kespers went to the browers, nand the latter capoused their causo by pab. lislung a card that they 'would not sell any ‘beer to a saloon-keeper who rotailed ¥ for three oents a glass or five cents o achooner, nssigning na rensons that the exponses of the saloons were very heavy, and that the revival of the three.cent beer-saloons would soon furnish ney material to the Prolibitionists tholr attacks upon ihe mnnufscturo and nale of beer, Of course he first axcuse was very thin, as it makes difference to the brewer what the saloon-keeper charges, 8o Joug as he gota the prioo he damands. 'The second reason s nb- surd. That brewers should be afraid of Pro- hibitiovists in e oity that lves, moves, and s its being in beer, ls proposterous, They were simply Jetermined to crysh oyt the war fram Chicago who was ongaged in a great work' of - veform,—10 ‘break down a Chicago misilonary who Ig thase tight times ‘wis supplyiug the people of Ciucinnati with aore of thuir staff of life for the same money than thoy could get from their home dealers. ‘The Chicago man was not at all discouraged "Ly the sotion of the brewers, 1o kuaw he waa eugaged in a great and good work, thiat man is & bepefactor who makes two bLiades of grass grow where only one ‘geow Dbefore, by how much more. is he n benofactor who makes two glasmes of beer pour where ouly one poured beforo | ‘The Chicago - man wens over to Covington and got bis beer, and still the thirsty multi. tude flocked to bLis place, and the mwulti- tudinous din of three-cent mugs and five. cent schooners showed that buslaess was not Thon the Cincinnati brewers threatened the Coviogton brewers thay they wonld lower the price of Cincinnati beer to Covington saloon-keepers, so that tley could sell gt three cents a glass. Thiv bad the efect to cut of the Chicsgo man from both Cincinnati and Oovington beer. He was & man of resources, however, and a reformer who knows o such word as fail. He now gets his beer from Milwaukee by the car-load, aud still sellé his sclooners st five cents and his glasses at three, ond the Gerwun puople are rallyiug to Lis sup- ‘Woril was sant from Washington to the Dem- ocratic ‘bell-wethers' that Umanvey Fosren's District must bo so gerrymandered that he conld pot bo re-elected. crotle’ distrlef, ‘but so great 18 his popularity that he has atwaya carrled it, no matter who was nominated against him. - The Toledo Iilade gives the reason of the anxicty of tho ‘Demo- crais to get rid of him, A thorongh man of bun] whatever he had to do, n that the girl-wife had of Ista been' frequently in the company of young men,—and. he names a number of thom ;. that she walked and rode with them and mat them by appointment: that kho hin written correspondence with . them,. snd though he does not charge the woman whom he had worse tlisn abandoned—forcod to lenve him becausoof Lis cruelty~with actaal sdnltery, ho is moved to fronzy by ' her ac- qualntance’, with mon who noither boat nor otherwise maltreatod her. knowing the mon, he carefally avoided any violonoe townrd thom, but nsed his pistol npon the child-girl, defonseless and wouk, and so shot hor as’ to leave no doubt of his purpose to kill . her. nothing fo all he bas ploaded to ox- cuse or pallinte the act, . Tho act was in- tentional murder, and the sctor, if she shall die, a cowardly murderer. hnd thought of it long, and deliberated well, Lis letters farnish “sufficlent ‘proof. waited until he found her alone and unpro- teoted, and then’ he did what he thought was enongh to murder the child end the wifo, whose brief. life had been cursed. by hior unfortunate relation with bim, - " That tho man'is gullty of murder thers can hardly bo s douht, ovon if all he'states be teuo. OF courda it remains to be seen how far he may have tho means to purchase the services of counsel to delny tho trial, pack juries, changs the vonus, obtaln supersedeas, drive away witnesses, manufacturo testi- mony, invent rensons for now trials, and, in tho end, defent justice and escapa tho ponalty All this s to Ve dlsclosed in the fatnre, It {s not any longer in these cases a quostion of guilt, but whethor the guilty can comand the pecuniary means to sucure the legal aid fn obtaining the delnys and the othor devices which sogoften and so gon- erally defont the ends offjustice. 8T BT, LOUIS ‘TRUUBLES. . The fatal affray at Esst St. Louls on Sun- doy is a publio calamity which should cover all the parties concerned with disgrace. Thé municipal entanglement was sufioient, without adding to it a resort to arms and the killing of one sot of officlals by another sot of officlala, East Bt. Louls seoma.to be cursed by men moro than ordinarily ambi- tious to figure as officeliolders, and the reault hing been that for a long time it has had two Mayors, two Oity Councils, two sets of city ‘ofiicers, and, notably, two bodies of police, each olalming to be legally in offlce to the exclusion of the atker, Lind soparata Lesdquarters, and both organi zations have been armed. On Bunday, the police recognizing AMayor Dowmax at. tempted to ocapture tho which the other - police force had fits headquarters; they were realsted, and two of the attacking forcs were instantly killed nnd another wounded. ‘It was & bresch of the peace,—a most disreputsble and ecandalous act of viplonce by persona clalming to be the Government of the city. - ‘The QOity of East Bi. Louis had beun gov. erned by a city charter up to January last, at which time, the City Gouncil having refused {0 do so, Mayor Bowmaw submitted the ques- tion to the peopls of incorporation under the general law of the Blate. The regulari. ty or logality of this submission of the ques- tion Is ono of the points incorporation . was carriod, City Council, | This man chargea establishments will mova ‘over into Indinua’ Heolived In a Demo- v t, doik 16 tha nalbse WEIGh produces ticen;.| . 2uch_conitor s whonovor nepiected n of nnfmpeachable in- o aver solled by ques- tepublican, and a man of cburage wha could nelther ha buliicd nor intimi- Mr. Fortan ia precisly the k e Democracy do in want In Congross, cordingly; in the worrymander, his county waa pnt fate & district which gives & Demncratio “majority arly 4,000, and the Democrac think how assily they had dirposod of him.: "The proposition now Is, Torthe Toledo tistrict to take bimn up sod send him back to Congress 10 splte of the Bourbons. The Blade says: * '90 far an b 16 concornod, tho swindlers may bo dofeated.’ Mr. buriness intcroats In this diatrict, ond 18 as closel connucted with Toledo an with any point in hix o kbown In_Toledo thon he I8 In Sandusky, and _he lives so noar the Ting that b belongs ns much to Wood as to Soncea. ‘oater belonzs to the nation, Ho {sa man who Mouse, and who de- In lis cowardice, i TON ATTENDANCE - was such .aa cownorted with the modest life of tha deceased, and, therefore, more than gratify- Ing to_is perdonal friends. From Springlleld came Qov. Cullom, Auditor Nesdles, John. Palmery Col. W. L. (ross, Norman L. Freemdn. Johu Buim, Col. D. L, ‘Phillips, Maj. Alt Orendorll, Thomas. W. Kiad, D. WV, Lusk; L. machinery ‘for - deodorization or quitting' @. Pollerd, and’ Q. A, Beecher, of the St .Louls' Uar; from Bellevitle, ex-Congressman John Thomas, C. W, Thoms, and ex:Reprosentative 0. 8, Wild- erman: from ila¥aua,. State Senator Luther Dearborn s from Mouroe County, Scostor An- brose Hornler; from Olney, ex-Judga Bhaw; feom Clark County, cx~Judge Jacoh Wilking feom Coles County, Col. Jim Connolly, H. W. -f Hubbard, Postmaster ot Cenroll, High Priest of tha Masonfc Chapter of which deccosad was » members Joseph Robbtns, Quiney, Grand Master of the. State; J. A ‘Delancy, Deputy Grand Master, and other Masoule Juminarles,, wera presont. And just hore, for the benolit of the auti-Masonic men of tho State, I wish to recond that tho funeral of ‘Bidusy Brocss was' singularly plaky and sympathetic. Thero was i | L33 OF OSTRNTATION 5 andmore of real surrow than usuaily attends tbe burlal of & Chleazo firaman. t loss which tho Ilinofs Central Raltrond tained fu the death of Judgo Brecse, who was nfways proud to be cousldered its foster-tather, she Prosident of that Couni-. pany, Wilkam K. Ackerman, through B. F. Ajyur, its Ueneral Solleitor, tondered the uss of 7 A APECIAL TRAIN to the Chicago Bar Assochation, Ti gentlemen avrived by that Jped.‘ll toulay at J0 a'clock: Judue T\ Lylo Dikey, 1rs O. Wukin- non, B. A, Bherburue, Ephratm Bannfow, Gen. R. W. Ninith, Ma), Woodbury W. Taylor,Thomas Hoyne, Edward 0. Brown, James L. Mush, Sam- “wel Kerr, F. A.Herring,Sidnoy Thomanand Hers President Ackerman and Bo- |, 33118 Mgdtor Ayer, of tho Ceutral, and George G, Red- fleld and Edward Roby aud wify, also accom- panted the Bar delogatea. Bheldon, ond Beott wers atso preseut. Judgea Craiz and Walker wero not ablo to make rutl- rgatl connectlons. : THE ARRANGEMENTS ON PAPER were comprolienslys enough, but -the promises wera not Otled to the letter. Carlyle {s an old- tashlaned Bouthern tawn, with un old-fashioned two-story Court-flouse, with north nnd south ‘The remains of tha de- veused werc blaced on a stone platform, which was guarded by the dwarf-stone columus of 'the The casket' wosn handsomo metallle one, allver orvameuted, the plate en- graved with the name, birth, and death of du- Lying on the casket were haudsaine weeatlios and yasus of natural flowers, and at tho head stood a stund offarings, At the foat of tho coflin stood the local cholr which led the vocal ercises, Tmuncdiately in the rear of the coflin A, Ingraham, an Eplscopal mtu- who had heen cnmle‘;a to 2 his mark in tho. o8 tho wideapread_popularity he' evjoys. & man who honors the man who'. would b trict than 8ny man we eould send, We bhehove in Ioug and contlnuous mersice where the Representalive proves worthy, 16 retlro & man at the en inw 10 know something of the dutiés requice hor best me'n in Conzress dlatrict solecting of him. “The South ke for years, and the Sant Governnient,.controliod 1t in Congremn threo terms, and ougiit to be kent ‘The Domoceacy gerrymandered him ont of nis eoat, and the Sevanth contil da no hetser thing 1t bim to ropresent it Th renson why he shonid botha nomine wlataver why ho shionld not. F of Beneca, 1s our caudidate for Representatis the frea and unlimited coinngo of silver, In ——a—— . 'The Emperor of Morocco s dead, reat his soul. His name was MurLsY-lIAssan. in 1631, cldest sou of BIDI-MULEY-MONAMED,, ond ascended the throno at tho deathof his father i 1875, vHo was known to the outside world as Bultan, but to his subjccts as Emir-al Mumenly, or Ahsolute Ruler of True Bellevers. ' Ho was the fourtconth of the dynosty of the Auipes, founded by Mursy Acunnr, ond the toirey-Alth Hineal doscendant of ALt the uuele and son-{n-law of tho Prophet. His thres pro- decessors werv MuLry Soriwax (1701-1823), MuLax. AGDERBAUNAN (1822-1850), snd Bipi- Murev-Monaxep (1850-1878), fug about the late deceascd, but he ought to liave been a vary happy mau, o4 his was 8o abso. lute despot, buving everything his owa way un- .rostrictod by any laws, civil ‘or raligious, was mastér of the lives and properiy of all his sub- Jocta, and rafsed his revenue-of $2,500.000 per atnum with an armed force ot 8000 mep, who went out and took it for bim where they could get- it the ocasicst.: Nu. assassments: wera. ro~ qured, end tax-sales wars uuknown, any one objecting to the sclsure of revennue belng imme- diately slaughterva. fe had about 8,000,000 subjects,- two-thirda of whomn were Moors, and theremalnder Arabs, Jews, and negroes, but he never made any ' distinctlons botween them when he wanted mouoy, and would kill n Jew ‘Just ss quickly as's Moor or a negro. He wasa ind, a8 he had charge of - the nutional text-book of falth, the Commentary upon the Koran by 81t BECOANT, was probally a very plous man, aud la naw with- the Prophet. 1t he did not choose hls own successor,—which hohad the Heht to do,—the surviving eldest member of bis family will be the nexs Sultan. r——— The mnjority of Recognizing the ‘Wo know voth- bert 'B. Johnson. Judges Bcholfleld, ‘Thesa police have columned* entrances. north_entrance. covered with floral The Democrata of - Ohlo are having very harl lack with their Connty Treasusera The Stark County Treasurcr Lias defaulted and run away with $65,000 The Democratie Troasure Hutler Couuty hap embezzled $125,000- The Democratic Treasurer of Auglaise ran off with 12,000, The Demogratic Treasurer of Holines stole 829,000, Tue Democratlc Treasurer of 11t out” with $3,000. The Demo- cratic Treasurer of Coshiocton “mizaled with 220,000 ‘Che Domogratic Treasurees of Ottawa, Delance, Van Wert, Asblavd, Crawford, Henry, Lickiog, Wyandot, Wayno, Allen, and Belmont Counties have all provsd defsulters, and now comes & dispatch from Clncinnati which savs: In examining the affals of ‘tbs rm of Jacan & Bons, who receatly made an saslgnoient .. 1t Bas Leen ascartained that the ¥ of tho tirai, who is aleo Treasurer of the county, 8 10 arreass to ihe Trassury §18, 000, paid t the connly by his bonds« The obviously proper thiok for the Oblo Democrate to dols toelect Republicans as Coun- 1y Treasurers, a8 very few men of that politfcal persuasion have ever been cwbeszlers of county tazes fa that State. 5 P Y i Thero must have been considerable dirty lien among the Tidenites during the last'campalyn, $f what Warreason snd Bewire have hung gut urm\hohmh o be takcn 38 8 sawple., ————— 'As an item of reform, it may be meotioned that the River and Harbor bill of the lats Cou- gress was pearly two millions fu cxcess of that ‘mads by the last Regublican Copgress. e —— Tussuiuch s there is o laeus o the Oblo campaign next fall but Thurmanisn, it is oroper agd outural thyt the father of that litle ism suonld’take the stamp. . The vulger Demacraic. dress now speak of | Mra Jexxs a5 * Phe Jmnika’'. Well, there was sa iuuch of her that it 1 Do wonder they use a slzuiBicavt term. e e 2 % © As 400 &8 ho Porrzy-ButLEs Comamulttee | ; figd the SuLaryaN letwn divy il Juuuoduscly take Up thy cuaw of Craksix Koss, {3 popinlon fster from Bt. Louls crvo as Chaplain an, side the wide hall of the Cu tho venerable relict of the loseph Breuse, of the nuyy, an Bidney Hreesc, wife, aml sons, M wife, aud childreu, sans of deceased, Mrd. Me- Clurken and son, dsughrer of deceased, Mrs. Von Schrader. pud Col, Don Morrlson, cousits of deccased, aud personul muuruers, o'¢clock the ceromony begun. The Rev, Inera- thans, iltecuth cbapter. The ‘@iartette thew 5RO AL SDLFUDI selectlon, . alter which wrayer, aud thon ah orath of more than average ab! it, and in April there wero two eloctions, one under each charter, and at each cloction a City Council was elscted. If the new char. tar was Jegally adoptod, §t abolistied the old police, and Bowmau appointed a new force, An Acting Mayor was elected by the old Oity Council, which recognized the old charter sud the old Metropolitan police, thess organizations that came fnto eollision on Bundsy, with the fatal result stated. The Sheriff of the county, with a military force, is now in posseasionof the city, and the pyb- lio peace will be preserved, In the mean. tima the questions at controversy will have ta be decided by the courts,—the cases here. tatore taken up being on callateral sud not direct issucs. - The criminality of thess per- sons on both aldes 13, that, purely civil matter involving no other issues than who should hold certain offices, these mep did. pot waive porsonal feeliugs and personsl! ambition until there waa s logal declslon, but, resorted to force, ending in the loss of human life, in an at- tempt to decide a question of Jaw 'by the rifle. Mr. LmsooLy. told the Rebels bofore the War that the difficulties would have to bs sottled by law ia tho end, hod it would be a groat suying of lifs to have the seftloment bLafore rather than atter the war. ¢ Louis govergmenty pight lavg sayed the. lives of thréw uufortunste mun bad‘they WOT A COMMUNICANT OF ANY CRURCH, acesed {hat brosd cathollc splrit obim a {riend sud aduirer of all The omation wus evangelival organlsatiovs. well recslved, and for the occasion fuulticss, for it was nefiber verbose nor fulsuine, THE PROCESSION was formed in the followiuir orders Carlyle Master-Masons snd Visitiog Brethren, Hearse, ‘with Master-3uson Pall-Bearers Logsu, J, W. Maddos, Frode _ meyer, Willlam Gowsn, CHirtyn, d. 01, Adama, M. R ichards i The moaey will bo lon, Dickey, and Scott. “Doarherty, and Wall, of W. M. Teylos, Clerks Court. Ambrose Hoener, Jetting dowa at all. Represcntatives T‘“E, l{cl‘r“ll and 8. Whidesman ¥, O . aeuerally o, ths nuiuber o Tuyal Arch Nosous, Citizcus Mnnn‘l;b,e i b le procusslon numbercd, varbabe avy rain bad fullen fu the forenoun, aud the mugch to the cemetery, boll a wile, was not dlsiresaing. ; . THE MASON IO PHAYERNITY. - took- chasus of - the. runsing..on. reagh cewsetery, und Gruud-Master Josepl Rubting Incy, Aided b Depaty Grand-Master | , of Centralta, perforimed the sltual 4 seribed by tha Blue Lodve. ‘The day was low. erlng and_threatening, auch & dav 03 hoturslly Ammpened one's spirits and made one tink of denth and ia surroundings. On surh a day tio kind and noble senfor member of the 1lliniy Supreme Bench pald natiure's petinlty of eartl to_earth and dust to dust. ‘Men who twere his pete and proteges, and swho shiuld huve been Arst to his densh-bed and Tnst at his bler, were conspicuousiy sbsent witliout Q‘Nllc. ¥ =S , CANDIDATRS. . There are several men pushed by tnelr friends for the vacancy oceastoned by the doashi of Jud e Bruse, This vacancy: extends tUl Jane, 157, and will émbrace ond termn at Ottawn, ong term 4t Springficld, and ;one at- Mouat Vernon, Among thoss ndhied 'tay Le menttonéd E. I, (ircen of Mount Carmel, John Dourherty of Juuushoro, David of. Baker of Caira, O. (. Hoswer of Nashyilie, snd C. W. Thomas of Belleville” These men are all Repubilenns, They and thelr friends fo ?{hln the fdea that Gor.'Catlom will appuing & Reoublicn to the Yacancy, - . 5 TILA DEMOCRATS . . have a majority of 12,000 in this Buprame Court dlstrict, ind, should Gov. Chllum neminate a Republican for the vacaney; he - wouldt eertainly have to give way o June uext for the Denoe (rptlnnum(nu-.-“emmmr upon: the premire that the Uoverpor would not so violate the frishea of the dominant inajority, the Démo- crats“are also'bringing forwand” thelr Teading men.. Joslta Allen,!of Cardondale, had bee hamed, beeanse Albright wants. to get him out. of, the way fur Congross. . Willlww 1, Qrepn, x-3tatg Senator Samuel 8 Marshall, Francia farfon, ‘Younabloog, nnd’Georzd V.. Hall srd Also metitioned, “These men have thelr riends, snd the Leland Hotel will be crowded roim Lo-marrow - uniil -Culiom niames s inan. Your corresponideut . has_been, fndustriovs in gathering public opinton to<day, 'for. the solem- nities have not prevehted men from oyerclsing thefr ambition. £ 4 | o3 L TUB BANOAMON: COURYTY JIAR.. { Auectl ispateA to The Tribune . Serixariryp, 1il., July_ J.—The. Sangamon County Bar nict thia afternoon in the County Court room L0 take action exvressfve of regret in . the desth of “Judge Breese. . Rloguent - sncechon In eulogy of the Hinetrious deceased wero mada by the Hon.Jobn ‘T, 8iuart and Gen. John A. McGlornand, the wtter of whom pre- dided. A commitice, conslsitog of tho Hons. R.L. McGuire, John T, Stuart, Jamcs C, Robin- sohy 'ahd C. Al Keye, was appolnted, to draft resoltitions, and reported the fo}lowiar, which were unapimously ndopted: - e | Resolved, That ks Dar of Nenzamon Cannty has reccived with deevest seialbilitg, Intolligence of the reath of the itan, Sldney Brocse. p toledd, ‘That [n the death of tie on, Riduey Breere thio peaple of thin Stato and thewhele - countey kiavo lost one uf thelr” grentest statesmen, o ta, and purest patriots, th the d nlmost (rom the vory oacended to (ha gravo, His yreat. deods'and acts ns ataleaman and juriat will live In bistory, and stand as exsmples worlhy 10 Yo (nllowed by those wiib comie alfer,” anblrfll. ‘That, as a fubtfier mati of reapeet for * the NomorY of the deceased, ® tony'ol’ the fora- of hislabor, he b i resolntions be presentsd tohis tlonor Jam . McMnthenys” dungo-of the” Conniy*Conrt Sangnmon County, with the request that ho by his dracr cause tho.'samg (o bo spread.upon the records of the Coutl. g thsa\xrmly tho reanintions were presontoil in - the Qounty Court In -open session, and, on the motion of Gen. McClernand, sfter a speech © by-him reviewlog the Jlifu and publle career of . the distingulsticd deceased; Judge MeMatheny ordered the trlbute spread upun the records ot the Court, - o hel ‘ © POLITIOAL. ILLINOL g ! Apecial Dispatch to Irivune., . Cantanviius, il July 1.—A call was {ssued to-day by ‘the Democratic Conpressiundl Com- inittee for tho Seventecnth Distriet fur'a Con- eréssfonul Couvention ta . be bield'ab Alton on Thursday, Aug. 3% Tho district Is composed of the counties of Macoupln, Mullson, 8t Clair, atd Monroe. . Tho:distriot tant prosent’repra. sented by Cal, William. K. Morrison. -» -+ i Speciad Disoateh 1o Tae Tiduna .+ -, Jover, 1L, July 1L—Thy Wil Countr Na tlonal Couvontion iwax held at tho Court flonse inthis city to-day. ‘Twelve of the twonty-four 10wns in the couuty wero represented by uboul thirty dolegates. David G: Murphy, of Jaliol was nomiuated for Sbert(l; De, C. W. Caak, of Wiimtugion, for State Sanator by acelamatlon; - W. I, Thompson, of Troy, for Reprosontative; and Buraue Daly, of Joliet, for: Caroner by ac- clunation, Previous to ndjonrnment.a Lreak ocewrted: In the- Convention, a: majority of the Brmdwood deleeation withdrawlue hecauso Dan McLauzhlio,” Mayor tof Braldwood and - Presis dent of the Miuers' Unlon, was not nominuted for. Representative. - Some of the delegution atated bejore Jeaving that the National move- ment would: et no, moro :aasistance fro'n tho Hraldwoad poonle, - The break 4 n. serlous ane, an nbout one-hall the strenuth of the party fain siraldwood, and without those votos It makes a thlu shuwlng, oo @i oo Tabs e e ok THE WEATHER. | s E Ovrice-or THE OmILe “BioNaL - OrricER, WasusnoToN, D. €. July 1—1.0, m.—~lndia- tlona—For the Guif Htates, Yonucssee,, nud Ohlo Valloy, falling toltowed by tiviog barome ejer, partly cloudy weatlicr; local Tais, station- ary foltowed by lower temperature, and southe w(u:: v]v‘lndn. !uxeép: shifting to mortherly north of tulf const, % Yor the Uoper Miestasinpl and Lowek Mia- sourl Vullevs and Loke Rewton, northeast to "northwest winds, cooler, mrt‘liy cloudy weatlier, flowed | ond riging baromitter, fol N the northwest h,\; l;l\lllng hecometer and warmner southicoat winds. o ¥ 10CAL OBIXRYATIONS, 1cana, July 1, Bn Wearher ale W Tiine. -|flw.Jnr Tre. Wind, 1 wvatiowe, o c . Cut0auo, July t—Mudalght, ™, Wind, [ N{ IFeainer, an o1 $y33E358222535335 SETTERR 13 edaagas Toleds Vievciaud T ———— CANADIAN NEWS, . Spectal Piepatch (o The Tritunz, MonraEnt, July' L—Acting Chlef-of-Police Maglp (8,08 opiufon that a force of about 4 regulare should be on baud to protect thacity in tho event of a disturbance on the 1ith of July. At a mectlug of the IFolice Committee which has been called to adops necessary precautions, ft I probuble tho CGiovs erminent with bo asked to forward to Moutreal the *“BY Dattery, of Quebee, and tho K Bartory and Ninety-seventh Reghment of Hai- fax, A meetlng of Muzistrates wilt be lield at an early date 1o inake oarrangements for the protection of the ety during the sccunid week fu July, These srmngemouts will 500U Ly wade publle, and will bo of sa doterrent a char- acter that it fn thouglit Jittle, 1€ auy, disturvanco may be apprehiended during the daytlme or durlog the night. . Apeciad THavade 19 The Tribune. Tonronto, July 1.—Tue elcveuth unnlversary of tie Domintou of Canada was celebrated herg und elscwbure throuubout she counlry with more thun usual enthusiasm. Larga bumbors of sfrabgera visited the ity to wite nces the Mardl (iras ~ Csrulval, whichy wus only molderately successiul, About 2,000 jolned the processlon. Two dranken licemen got futo an’ altervatipu with a party Y-"nu Quecn's Park this afteruoon and made a -1 mercdicss and upproveked aitack ou w tutnber of uien, several of whom' were serfuttsly if uot fatally fnjured. ‘The crowd finally turued un the policenen, snd they fn turn wers budly beaten. Other policenien camie upun the sceua fizd arrestod sho twu drupken guardluns of t8o HYMENEAL. Bpactal Dispaich to The Tridune. Brrory, Wis., July L—Hooth M. Maloge, & mewber of last year's gradustiug class, was this cyening married o Miss “Altta M,‘ l!c:nct!, dnugbter of A. Bepnett, und a wultitude “of Fe et cre o i Teshlonee uf Lo brids’s fatlier. ~ Muuy clegaut preseuts were msde. Ths cereiony was perfured by Prol. Blaledell, as- sbited by tho Rev. W. ¥, Brown. | v e e—re— o — OCEAN STEAMSHIP. NEWS. New Youx, July L—Arrived—streamship 8trasburg, from Bremen. Loxuox, July }.—Stecamshlp City of Rich- njoud, Lepeutw . Do, Kusdter, andiSchisdam, -frou - Now . York . Istrlut, frow . Bostou; ‘wod > Missisaipphy frow SMoatreal, bave artived gut,