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. oue 'y Vartaar a ear, WRER 1 Thye Tuibwne, TERMS OF SURSCRIPTION. DY MAIL—IN ADVANCR—~POSTAGE TREPAID. Tally Editlon, one year. %12.00 i o0 i3 .5 E B Farurtay b a1t Weekly One copy, ner ¥ Clal of four,, Spechiien coples sent free. Give Post-OMMeo sddress [a full, Inclnding Btato and Connty, Hem{‘tances may be made efther by draft, express, Port-Offcs order, or in raglatered ietter, at our risk. TERMS TO CITY RUBACHIBERS, Tally, delivered, Funday nxcepted, 38 cents per weoks Dally, delfvered, Sunray Inclnded, 30 cents per weeks Address TIIE TRIBUNR COMPANY, Carner Madison and Dearhorn.ate.. Clileago, Il Oriters for the dellvery of Tim TRINUXE st Eranston, Englowood, end Hyde Park 1eft fu the counting-room will recelve prompt attention. TRIBUNE BRANCII OFFICES. Tit Citeano Tainoxa has estahilahed branch ofices for the recelnt of subscriptions sud advertisoments as Tollown: NEW TORK—Ttoom 20 Tricune Duliding. F.T.Ma- FappEy, wer. PANIA, France—No, 10 Ruo do s Grange-Bateliero, 1, Manern, Agent. LONDON, Eng.—American Exchange, 440 8trand. Tisxny P, GiLLin, Ageot. BAN FRANCE Hotel. AMUSEMENTS, Hoaley's Theatre. fandalph street, between Clark and LaSalle, Fnragement of Mirs Clara Morrls and the Gnion Bquare ‘Theatra Compan} New Chleago Theatre. Ik atreet, betwoen Randolph and Leke, Varlety ents THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1878, Groenbacks at the New York Stock Ex- change yesterday closed at 00F. The 8t. Louls Republican of yestorday moruing gives a completo list of the fatal cnsos of sunstroke in that cily duning the provious week. The ghastly total is one hundred and_forty.fice, not including yester- dny's fatalltics, which add fourleen to tho number, Tho naveiling of the Dovenas monument took place yestordasy at the Inclosure i which repose tho bones of one of the two greatest men given to the world by Illinois, "I'he coremonios were very brief and simple —only o fow remarks by Judge CatoN pre- vious to the unveiling of tho statue, which is prononnced o most admirable likoness; and the nttendanco was not large, owing to the intensity of tho heat. An excollent remedy for tramps was de. virod and applied with success by the au. thorities nt Aloxandris, Va. Tho farmers of tho vicinity had been greatly annoyed by the dopredations of the peripatotio maraud- crs, soventeen of whom wors surronnded ond captured at their rendezvous by a party of special police from Alexandria, takon be. fore n Magistrate, sent to jall for seven days in closo confinoment, and are to be fod on brend and water. It wes short, quick work, nnd cannot faml to render that locality un. popular with tramp Lord Savisnusy's congratulatory circular from Berlin to his Ministerial collesgues in ZLondon, calling attontion to the grent dip- Jomatic nohicvoments of England in the Congress, is quoted more at longth in tho cable dispatehes this morning.: Tho burdon of SaLsnuny's bloviation is the immense powor oxerted by the Britlsh Plonipoten- tinrlos in two directions, both cal- culated to flatter Dritish pride nnd comfort the British pookef, viz.: the limi. tations placed upon Russia’s political aggros. sions, and tho protection of the Ottoman from the threatencd dissolution and annl. Lilation, and with it the preservation of the prospeet, which at one timo had nearly van- ishied, that British Lolders of T'urkish bonds will some day get thelr monoy back, e — Last evening the Jong-looked-for and much-prayed-for change in temperature oc- curred'in Chicago, the wind leaving the arid southwest,whence it Lad brought sufferingand Qesth to an extont hitherto unknown in this city, though far less in proportion than that experienced in surrounding localities, and, veering to the west, brought immediate re- lief. Tho "change was modorate, but it was n chaoge, and left room to hope for a cossation of the torrid intliction. Our dispatohes report great ex- {remes of heat ag continuing in noarly all the tocalities which havo sulfered for sevornl days past, with acoompanying prostration aud death by sunstroke. In 8t, Lonis the number of fatal cases registered had dwin. dled down to fourtean, but thd grand totul for tho eaven days has reached in that unfor- tunata city tha fearful figure of 169, leaus fails to runemooth, The Hnb-Com- mittee yeaterday ran nfoul of meveral wit- nesses who had not beon propetly coached, ~one Durs in pyrticular, a volored man, who had been offcred by B. L. Wenru a livoral slico of the TiLveN fraud-hunting fund, 500 in cash, if he would follow Winen's oxawple, rocant the afdavit bLefore the Ieturniog Board, and deny intimidation In the parishes, Durs bad recelved a portion of the bribe from Wenes, us was shown by anather wit- ness who saw tho money change bands, and was to got the balance after ho had dono tentifyivg, An Assistant-Deputy-Sergoant-nt. Arms of tho Sub.Committee furuished Weurn the money to bribe Duwa, it being understood that o fund had been raised by some * New York gentlemen " threo or four weeks ago. A report reaches us from Yankton that Lavisostoy, Indian Agent at Crow Craek, Dokota, bas cmployed local counsel and is ubout to fustituto a suit for libel agalust Tz Cutcaco Tuiwune. Thisis the first intima. tion Tur Taisuxe has received of such an intention on LaviNaston's part, and it would prefer to bo first served with the papers in the caso before belioving the extraordinary rumor. The idea of being eallod upon to defend a libel suit instituted by an Indian Agent simply because he is reported to bo dizhonest, and who, if tho accounts may be bolioved which have filled the columng of the principal newspapers of the country, is in imminent danger of vindicat. iug Lia character through an extended torm in the Pevitentiary,—the {des is too remark- eble to be entertaiued upon vagus report Landy, JTavinosron's case ig now in the Lauds of the United flates District-Altornsy uf Dukota, and, oy sppears fromn some ro.’ warks dropped by Bocretary Beuvsg in an iuterview yesterdsy, ke is likely to have & sulicicucy of law business on his hands for sowo tiwu to cowe, without indulging vol- untarily in the comparative luxury of libel suils, Mr, Sosusz stales $hat Lav. astos’s is oot the ouly case of traud wud plunder duveloped &y the reault of Qen. Haswowp's resenrches among the Dakota Agoncies, and confirma. tion of the statement {s not lacking in tho dispatch which wo print this morning from n correspondent concorning tarther inignities among the pions sconndrels whose only uso for an Indinn is to rob him, and whose de- votion to the Government s regnlated by the amount of atealing they sre able to aoc. complish without detection or interruption. —— THE MEXIOAN FOLLY, Tha Chicngo T'imes is moking a desperate effort to keep alive the folly of annexing Mexico lo the United Blates. * Mexico must bo American or British,” it says. This is ridiculous. There is no imperative reason why it should be American, and nothing i more improbable than its becoming British. Probably no British statesman has ever en- tertained for ono moment the notion of ex- tending the dominion of Great Britain over Mexico, Buch a proposition would be obnox- ious to the whola English people. Theyarothe ancient and traditional foes of tha Spanish, ond entertain ‘the most profound contempt for the Spanish chnracter, No loyal English. man will admit that it wonld bo possible to Anglicize eight or nine millions of people of Bpanish origin, who stili retain all the Span- ish gread, treachory, ignorance, and super- stition. 'The success of auy English domin. ion in Mexico would depend upon the ulti. mate extinction of Bpanierds, Indians, and Grensers, and this is a crusade which, how- over commandable it might be in the ab- siraot, will scarcely bo undertaken by the England of to-day. Bosides, the unwritten law of the United Btates forbids the occupa- tion of Mexico by any Earopesn Power with- out the consent of our Governmont, Such consent would not be given, and England would not seek a quarrel with the United Btates to acquire something bhe does not want, The fact is that the British Govern- mont would not inour the cost of transport. ing a single regiment nor risk the lossof s ningla life to obtain the privilege of ruling over o mongrol people who would nover as- similate with the Anglo-Saxon idea of gov- ernmont, and would only prove a source of constant expense and turmoil. The notion that Great Britain will ever attempt to ex- tend her colonial government over Mexico is too ridiculous to warrant serious treatmont. We endenvored the othor day to make it plaln to the stupid comprehension of the shaollow pate of tha Times man who has such & lively sympathy with the Moxican Cireasers why the United States caunot anuox Moexico withont planting the Moxican saeds of discord in our own system of govornment; and we said then that, if tlio United States had the British forms of government,—meaning tho Iome Govern. ment and flexible colonlal systems,—thers might be some temptation or somo excuse for attompting the rescue of that country from the coudition of semi-barbarism that provails thero. Dut tho 7ZYymes can sce no differonco botwoen: the DBrilish Government and the Umted Biates Government in this regard. “Wo cannot nndertake to furnish the fool of the Zimes with both brains and his- tory. **‘Chereis nothing in the English Con- stitution,” says the Z'imes historinu, *which oxcludes colonial ropresontation in the British Parliament.” This romark simply shows that tho Z%mes writer is entiroly ignorant of what the Evglish Constitution is, It is the unwritten Iaw—tho traditions and ussge— of tho DBritish Government. Tho exolu- wion of colonial representation in the Britlsh Parlisment is ns porpetual and obsolute ns if thero ware a thousand stat- utos oxpressly forbidding it. 'The colo- nial system of Great Britain is a part of its Constitation, beeause it {s the outgrowth of British custom—n dovelopment of the un- written law, 'The British Government might, other conditions belng favorable, aunox Mexico as a colony without the slight- est risk of ‘over permitting Mexican in. fluences to invade the British Home Govern. ment or Mexioan Grousers 10 obtain scats in the British Parliament, or In tho romotest degres to influence the Government of any other British possossions. Dut any schema of annexing Mezico to the Unitod States not only iucludes all the objections which will prevent England from undertaking it, but in addition thoreto tho fatal objectlon of allow- ing the Mexican Btates to become, sooner or lator, integral parts of tho American Usnton, with numerous seats in Congress. There {s o stupid attompt to make light of this fundamental objection to Mexican an- nexation, **The same thing exactly,” re- iterateu the fool of the Zimes, **was said by the prophotic wisencres that doprecated tho nacquisition of Loulslana, Florida, and Texas,"” But it was pot the same thing, for two rea- sons, viz.; (1) In the acquisition of Loulsi- aus, Florida, Oalifornis, and Toxas the num. Ler of Bpanish inhabitants wos vory insig. uvificant, and, in sunexing Moxican torritory, caro was taken to draw tho line where the populous Grouser communitios would be lefy on the otherside; and (4) in annexing tho territory instanced the American and Texan CGovernments acquirad the title to vast do- maios of public lands wherawlith to induce Anglo-Baxon Y immigration by glving away homestoads nnd pormitting pre-emptions at the lowost 7ates, DBut in snnexing Mexico the American Governweut would lLave to accopt along with it between eight and nive mllions of mongrel, ignorant, super. stitions, priest.riddon, and vicious people, who own and occupy the lands under Span- ish and Moxican grants aud purchase, so that Auglo-Saxon immigration would be disconr. sged—indeed, prevonted—by theso two conditions, We have had soms expericnce with Greaser citizenship in tho case of New Muxico. Thers were about 40,000 Greasers iu that Territory when it was annexed, some thirty years agg, aud the population has now {ncreased to something like 125,000. DBut the character of the people has not changad; the 125,000 people are as much Greasers now 08 the 40,000 were thon. There aro not 1,000 of what we would call white people in tho whole Territory, and not 1 per cent of the Greaser population can-read or write oven the Bpanish language, and know noth- ing of ours. Mexico would yield us milllons of this kind of creatures,—uice maoterial for American citizenship! 3 It ia further contended that Mexico coul bo governed as a Térritory, or 8 numbeor of ‘Territories, o8 New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah are now goverasd, and with very much the same gort of dominjon that Eugland exer. clsea over its colonies. No intalligent man be- lieves & word of this nonsense. * Mozico now pretends to be a Coufoderacy of Btates, aud the inhabitants would not willingly yield np the nghta of citizenship in onp Republip for she Ifore we should have tho twenty-five Moxi- cau organized BStates, entoring our Benato with fifty members, and botween seventy and eighty Representatives, Does any one doubt that the Domocratic party would insist upon the sdwmission of these Btates in tho firm belief that the Greaser Benalorsand Representatives Eoidition of mere subjects.-in snother, THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: TIIURSDAY, JULY 18, 1878, would, by naturo, sympathy, habit, and lack of education, not with that party? It is known that the Domocrats intond to insist upon the ndmission of the Nuw-Mexican Groascrs, which lias sonrcely a quota for represontation, beoause thoy can count npon Groaser afliliation in politics, and will thero- by gain ¢wo Grenser Democratio Benators snd one Grenser Democratic Represontative. Wonld they not for the same purpose nsiat wpon the admission of the Moxican States into the Union, and wonld they not prate sbout God-given rights and the injustios of remsting Moxican claima to full and eqnal citizenship? Indeed, isn't it preciscly with this result in viow, and for this very pur- pose, tlat tho Chicago Zimes is urging Mexican annoxstion? If so, it certaluly furnishen suother good roason for resisting the movement, for we alreauy have cunough Demoarnts of the Greaser calibre in the National Legislature. - ‘WHAT RUSSIA HAS GAINED. Lord BracoxsrisLd has mnde a triumphal march from Dover to London. Crowds of thonsands grested him with cheers at every stopping-place. Mayors of towns rond ad- dresses to him. London was spangled with flags. The Charing Cross station waa im. bedded in flowors and covered with docora. tions, and he rode through bouguets and was polted with roses to his destination at the Foroign Office. Doth Bsaconsrizup and BSarrsovry made short addrosses, in whioch neither of them failed to put in somo **big licks " for their party, and they wore ban. queted s the closing fonture of this remark. able recaption,—romarkable because it s dificult to ace the occasion of it. England camo ont of the Congress very eomfortably, but did not securo any such advantages upon hor sida of tho Enstern Quastion ns to call for such an mposing demonstration, Upon this side of the ocenn such a dem. onstration might bo undorstood if Evgland had overmatchud Russta and wrested somo very striking concesslous #rom ber; but, as Russia comes outof the contest withont losing anything, and with the objects for which sha went to war ac- complishod to tho fullest possible extent, why should the English poopls have re- ceived Bracoxerierp with an ovation thoy might have extended to a conquoror? In viow of this popular demonstration, it will be interesting to inguire what Russiu Lias loat, or wherein ahe hasfailed to comaup to her expectations. When Great Britain ju. terpolated Rusaia ns to the cause of the war, the Czar replied in his declaration that Rns- sin appoaled to tho sword to rescuo tho suf- fering Christians from Turkish tyranny. 'That has been completely accomplished, and the Turk {s forovermors barred from tho ca- pacity, aven if he havo the dosire, to perse. cato or oven interfere with Obristions, Rus- sin has torn the Trenty of Paris to shrods. ‘Wuat thero is laft of it not covared by tho Berlin Troaty amounts to nothing, Ble has rocovered the Bessarabian territory that ‘whs taken from hor in 1850, and thereby ex- tended her frontier back again to tho Danube, 8ho hiag mada that river frae, with the stipu- lation that no vessels of war shall navigate it between the Iron Gatos snd the Galatz. Bhe has destroyod overy fortresa on its banks, and razod every fortress in Bulgarin, and earrled her point that no more fortrosses shall bo constructed there. Her approach to the Balkaus in future, thereforo, will be unimpeded. Bho will cross Bulgarin with thie snmo ense that sho crossed’ Roumania a yenr ago, The English interposed and so- cured for the Turks tho priviloge of fortify- ing tho Balkan pnasses, but Dussia has de- stroyed Varna, at the eastorn aud strongest cud of the rango, and shie has taken Bophia frow the Turks, so that she cau turn the DBalkana and have a froo rond into Roumelia from the west. Bhe advised Austria in the earlier stages of the war to occupy Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Ausiris has done so. She domnnded thnt Bervin and Montenegro should have an extension of thelr frontiers and their indepondenco for aiding her, dnd the domand was recognixod in each caso, 1f alio as consented to o very ma- torial rostriction of (he limits of Bulgaria, ns defined in tho T'roaty of Ban Stefano, it is because it was certain from the firat that ehe would consent, for tho reason, as now ap- pears, that the Twlks Lave a northern boundary they cannot protect. In Asiatic Turkoy she domandod Batoum, with its splendid harbor aud strong fortress which slie conld not tuke, also Kara and Ardahan, uud she bas secured them. When the other Powers, particularly England, domnnded that the Batown fortress shionld be razed, Russla opposed it, and the fortress will by loft untouchod. 8he demaudud un fndem. nity of §800,000,000, and that indemnity was not considered by tho Congress. Bho told the Plonipotentinries that she would not claim territory in lion of the Indemnity, nor prejudice the claims of the other credits ors, but beyond this mada no conceasious, so that the indemnity remains, with the Turks committed to pay it. The tima of payment {s postponed until such time as Russin shall see fit to collect it, Bhoeholds a mortgage of §800,000,000 upon Turkey, and it will have to be paid to tho uttermost farthing. Bho modo the concession that the 'Turky should fortify the DBalkan pnssos, but, s a- counterpolse to ihis, she haos loft all Rou. melia open to the possibilitios of her juter. forence hercaflor by stipulating that it shall be policed by native militla, tho majority of whom are Blavs, of the Greek faith, and cou. sequently Russinn allies. If Roumelia hith. erto has boen unfit forself-govornment, when policed by regular troops, how iauch better fitled is she for it now, when policed by a native militia? As one Engllsh™ paper re- wmarks: “Unless wo are to suppose that unde. veloped racos can be tralned to thu capacity for civil govornment by being passed through o twelve months' course of elvil war, what prowise of tranquillity for Europe Is therein the Roumelian settleinent now sauctianed by the Congresa?” Aud it might have added, Has not Russia lcft open another avenuo for her juterferenca in behalf of oppressed races Ly dolug nothing for Groeco, who is always disoontented, now more than everso? e Pall Mali Gavetto, which has been a very henrty backer of Braconsvisiv, cvidontly does not share the enthusias of bhis advo- cates. It secs further ghond than tha crazy populace, and utters this noto of warning s That §t loaves Russis with all, ond jnare than all, the opportunitics for disturbibg intrizuy whicl afore pussessed ; 1hat 1t subsiitatos indepond- cut. Bulgaria for Servis. theroby advuncini the **Husalan outpust ' (o ths inmoast Hus uf Turke; natyral defepsce—~Itaall **turned'’ by tho dcquis twa of Soplia; that it walutaiod (e ald '-r scrye” of the Panslayist sgeucice in thu Fhihin. E:rrulu atsteict squally opeu to thelr operatlune us fdre, whilo the control of military force bas beca retoved. Al this v aurely plain: but the sctilc. mens does more aud worse than thie. It literally leaves Moumelia at (he marcy not only of furcign intaigue, but ol domestic discorde; and not ouly asprives it of ali sucurity agulust disturbence fovionted from without, but wlwost lavites Wiy orfodical vutbeeak of 1 atieds which will bo tlie war of 1677, Gourscuskory goes homa very quiotly. ‘I'he ussians do not sppear to have goue crazy or to have pelted hiw wilh flowers. gse futerual religlous ovitable Jegacy of the Perhaps, liko tha blind woman in the Dance of Death, they seo something in the distance the crnzy crowds at Charing Cross do not yot discovor. The Democrats of tho First Congressionnl District yestarday nominated Jauzs R. Doo- LirTLE, Eaq., aa the candidate of that party for Congress., Mr. Doovrrres is entitled to the credit of having openly sought the nomi. nntlon, and he basea his hopes of being clected on the ground that he is **sure” of gotting the volos of all the Demoorats, and nlso **saro” of getting the votes of the Na- tionalists, Hocialists, and Communists. Mr. Doovrirres facla so confident that the Demo- erats will voto for him thathe has iguored that party in all things oxcopt in accopting its nomination, and dovoted himself studionsly to the advocacy of Communism, as preached under the varions names assnmed by tho factions of that party. As little DoorrrrLs will be beforo the publio until tho day after election, and the wenther is distressing cnough withiont asking people to think or read of Dootirrre ns a possible Congress. man, we will mnke our noto of his platform o brief one. Ilo hns two poiuts: (1) To puuish employera by relmposing the war- tax on jucomes; (2) to abolish bank- currency and issue gruenbacks in its place. The tax on incomes is proposed in order to gratify the largo number of voters who live in the Fifth and Sixth Wardy and in the Town of Lake, and who bolong to what is known as the Workingmen's parly, and nlso. to the Communists aud rabble, It iy not expocted, of courio, that oll other taxes shall be abolished and thoe whole revenues of tho Government be col- leoted from incomes. It 13 proposed to abolish mome one tax, and substitute tho income tax, Oantzs Jannwos sud hisSouth. orn nesocistes proposed to roduce the tax on whisky and tobacco, and oollect tho tax on Northorn incomes, Who are the people who are to boreached by o tax on incomes? ‘Tho uumbor of porsons in this country who live exclusively upon incomea derived from in- terest on bonds or dividends from stocks is very small; oxcept 1n cases of widows or orphans, whoso incqgues from such invest. ments aro personally very slight, and lardly more than sufficiant to support them. This class, morcover, ia not composed of the capitalists ngainst whom the domagogues sovk to srray overy man who works for wages or stated componsation. Tho men with incomes agninat whom the law s demnndod are those who, with Iarge means invested fn boildings, ships, ma- chinory, workshops, and tools, employ labor, and who aro roprosented as grindifig the working classos to thadust; it {s to moke thesa employers disgorge some of the large sums they sunually * zob from labor,” that JInt Doovtrrix and hia followors insist that » tax shall be lovied on.incomes, Without going at this tine into any elaborate disous. sion of tho subject, it'is suflolont to say’ thatn tax on incomes 4¢'in fact n{sx on the labor fand, and thaty vfhon an employer is required to pay a tax, say, of 5or 10 per cent on the nmount of wagea Lo pays out annually, the wages fund will be reduced to the oxtont of the tax. The firwa will naturally fuclude the tax as part 6f¢their current ex- ponsas, to be offset by }lm}n'cdnn of wages, eithor in tho wholo sum -paid out for labor, or by tho dischnarge of & suticient number of men, Every %100 or $1,04) takon from the incomo of an cmployer 4s:s0 much taken from his means to employ Iabor, and the income-tax, therofors, prgebically is taken from the wages fund. J1eDooLiTTLE knows, this to bo tho affect, but HY thinks tho com. mon laborers are too luum’;fi! toacait. The sum which might'possibly be raised undor nn income tax, .HY' this thwe, wo will cstimato at $13,000,000. How much Inbor will 15,000,000 oylfloy in a yoar? That would bo equal to the, wages of 10,000,- 000 of mon one day at $1.,60 cach; or equal toan annnal tax of $7.80" ench taken from tho wagos of 2,000,000 of men. Tho tax wonld be taken in the form of so much ro. ductlon n the weckly g monthly pay of oach, or in the number of persons divcharged to reduco tha cxpouditize, We do not know tho cxact nggregate sum pald for wages in thls vountry every year, but, what. aver that sum may be, it ig furnished by cap- ital to pay for Isbor, oud ia known as the 4 wages fund.,” To levy a tax on that fund, —nnd that i the inovitablo and direot result of o tax on incomey, the woges fund being wholly derived from incomes,—then Jixr Dootartre’s schume is to tax . the fund sot apart to pay the woges of labor, 1o reduco that fund to the extost of the tux, aud to subject those who live by wages to sufler the loss of tho 15,000,000 a yoar under an idea thut it 'is punishing capi- tall 'This is ono of the achemes which little domagogue Dooxirrry proposes in order to comuend -himsolt to the workumen in Lis district, ‘I'lio other schome, to prolibit bank.notes and {ssue more grooubacks, is so threndbare, oven among demagogues, that wo are sur- prised that DooustiLe montlons it. Xveu Tox Ewmxg, the greatest as well as the ablest demagoguo, not excopting Bex Dur- 8, &lwits that logal-tender notes in excoss of four hundred willions of dullars cannot ba legally lssued, sud that any additional iuauo of greenbacks cannot logally ba made legal-tonders. It Jix Doorirrie will look up somo of the family publications ou this subjact, he will learn that “war noney " cannot bo inflated sud forcod upon the coun. try in a timo of peaco, aud wo think It s pousible he may flud o rocord of his own, dewmaudiug, several yoars ago, the immediate rostoration of specie-poywments by the Gov- ernment, To the Editor of The Tribuns. Ciicago, July 13.—In a recent cditorial on {Jzrr Davin' wpeech) tho resuration of slav- cry, Tus TRISUNE® 8sscris that there hae ngver boen & auostion of Btatvs' iiighte or of Btato Bovorclinty which could not be determin. «d by uuy Chreuts Courl, cxcept in the mattsr of whavery.” Iid ‘tany Circuit Courl,™ or auy Bu. rewe Court, quell tho howl that canio from Loulst. b 8 fow years azo when Corernuicat troops were scit thiere to settlo a question whica that Btate iad tus entire righit and capability of sctthngr {Two state Governwents clalmed the right to govern Loutslaua; the Geucral Government was wbllged W uct Lo restore peace. ‘lle fricuds of tbu Lost Cause bad not sccepted the reconstruce tlon situativn and were not reconciled to the doetriue of National Soverelguty whicn had con- ferved clyil aud politieal rights on the freedwen, —Eb.) ¥ Can *‘any Clrenit Coart! determine the right or 10 0f the Freslduut to seud 1700ps 1NLO & BLate durs fug® riot, when the Governor of that State bas nut callod for, and does not geed, the aasistanco? “pue, u Cirvalt Lourt would decads, tust tns Progte deuthadno such right, but would that **auttle™ the question? I titok aot 5 [When » caso of thuy kiud vecurs it will bo tiow cuough 10 answer. HBefurg the conquersd Rebel States wero readmitted to thetr former relutions {o the Unlou, what was dous by the Geueral Goverument to preserve order fo them Las no upplication 1o questlons of Jurlsdivtion thut sy ariso o regularly constituted Bistes— Ep.} . i _Agaln, If thoro {8 a Repobifcan jouroal o the Uuiled Stutes that has not done ite level best 1o #Jull thie ueyry with the tuleo bellef that the Ware waa brought on for Lbs sols purpvio of bucrasiug Law, Lbave yettosru i, Slivery wus tho ludhivce caune of tho War; bt [f the hlack man'a freedom md been the snle eim of the North, 1 fancy that 0 rth eould havo accomplished with hor pen in ono early hoar wnat It touk her sword nanrly Bve years (o do. [Thisla silghtly maddy. It Is difficult to com- prehend how the North could have emanci- vated the blacks with her pen in sn hour,” no matter how willing she might Lave been. The statement Is simply nonsense. It will puzzle the writer to imme even one Republican journal that “hias done its level best to stufl the negro with tho false belief that the War ever was hrought on for 'the sole purpose of liberating lim."” e nover knew of a Republican paper that claimed that the Republican party brought on the Warl The slaveholders, under the lead- ersbip of Jarr Davis, brought on the War, not with the desfgn of emancipating the nogro, but for the purpose of dismembering the Unlon, cutting loose from the North, and riveting tho chialns of bondago on the blacks forever, They elaimed theright to dissolve the Unlon under the doctring of State Bavereignty, and thoy sought disuninn to prosact, perpotuate, and spread slavery. The negroes don't neod to Do taught that the Republican party emanci- pated thom, and conferrsd on thom all the elvit nod politieal rights they possess, because thoy kanow it, and no vontemptible slurs or sncers can remove the fact irom thoir minde.—ED.] Further, if the hair-brained fanatic to whom nearly a column and a hialf §s dovoted was in the Presidentiai chaic, and it there was & Democratic wajority in buth Housos of Congr does Tits ‘I'RtauNE supposs that sven thon it would be pos- #ibla tu ** odtraciso (he negroes, and reduce thom oucs more by furce to substantial bondage™? Fer- hups it does, —I don't. ‘Tho calored mau s Igno- rant, mnd hde but little contdunce in his uwn Abillty to keep the right polilleal path; then why doea ‘Tue “Tninoxe, cislming to be his friond, try 1u wenken tiat confidence by hinting at the posai- Lility of a thing which It knows can nevee occur? W D, NuwsAN, No, 188 Exat Madleon street, This *hairbrained fanatic” 18 no less n persouage than the man calied In the Bouth “President Jeerarsox Davis,” and whose pleturs §s hung up in the parlors, and couating- rooms, anud offices of tho mourners of the “ Lost Causo.” Tho future frecdom of the Llack race in the Sonth depends upon tho strength of the Republican purty In the North. Lot that organization fall to pleces, and its members scatter and give the Democeatia party full control of the Government under the lead- ership of a **Solid Boutb,” and our correapond- ent will witness the negfoes’ political and clvh rights and privileizes melting away like anow bo- fore a spring raln, Withonly one branch of Con- gressnow u tha handa of the Democrats, the ex- slavcliolders fecl snfe io making cycroachments on the political rights ot tho blacks. In Ala- bama, Mississippl, snd somae other Bouthern Btates, by various coantrivances, restrictions, and hindrancee, tho blacks find themselves already ono-third disfranchised. Whero thia work of encroachment will stop, depends upon clrcum- stances, The colored men who allow themselves 1o be fooled Into rejecting tho prutection of the Republican party and accepting that of the Btate-Boverelgnty Domocracy, sre playing the part of the silly sheep in the fable, who turned off tho falthful watch-dogs audchose the wolves for thelr protectors, Immedlately after the nomination of little DoorirrLe he began playing the part of decepd tive demagoguc. Heinsisted thatall bauk-notes be lmmuodistely retired aud thelr place bo lled up with new emlssions of greenbacks. io in- tends to play on that banjo-string to galn votes. 11 e does, 1t will be the duty of the sound-mouty Democrats to employ little DooLiTrLx's father, cex-Senstor DoOLITTLE, to follow the son round on his stumplng-tour smong tho saloons and rvefato that nouscuse. The father, who is o good constitutional lawyer, bas dellvered sev- eral strong addreases showing that tho “war woney M'--grecubacks—cannot bo fssued fn time of peace beyond the original - Umit of 400 mili- fons; that to lssuc in time of peaco more than the 400 nitllons of forced notes, making them a legal-tender betweon cltizons, cannot ba done, undor the decislon of the Buprome Court,na the oxcess would be unconstitutional. Little DoourrTie has been told ULy his fatler that such (s tho law and the Consti- tution of the case; -and ho don’t know ciough law to be able to contradlet tho law as Iaid down by bis progenitor. But L o, thinks it will be popular with the illiterato rabllo to talk {n favor of vast emissions of forced notes. 1lence hewill puy,no regard to tho 400-milllon Umit, but will blow Jlite a brass instrumont for enough *flat " scrip to *taupply thio wants of trade,”” Cuonsequently, tho honest-money Dom- ouruts must cugage his father to go round atter his cub and refutc and exposo his misreprescuta- tlons of the la and the Constitution, il ¢ A goblin damncd” Is Just now haunting tho Houthern politician's mind and driving him almost distracted. It .comes to him In tho shuve of %the mao vn horschack,” and 1s moroe ot a terror to tho averago Mourbon than the » Flylng Dutchmau " was to the iguorant and superstitious sallors who believed in the cxist- cnce of that phuntom ship, The Baltimore Guaardts argues the caso with aue solemuity in the following paragraph; Sapposo, by n rurbllnd folly, _**the man on horseback** whould bo elected In' 1880, and take wmeasures to huld over, witn or without the forms of » re-glection, and incauwhile the majority tud (urned agalnst hiw, how big an army would be ro- qgulted to hwtd down the forty wilfions of Aweri- cun peonle? Every suidior custs ubout 81,000 per year; cach roglneit avout 81,000,000 per year, An army of one milhon of men wonld bo needed to keep ** the inan on hurseback ™ on tits horse, —that {4 to say, $1.000, 000,000 perannum te what Capital must pay to koup up the army and the strung Guyernment. Free ress nud froa spoech would be overthirown of course, fur ihewe cannot cosexiat with uw strong Governont, — Monopoly, curruption, desputism, ring-tysunny, harlutocrae oy, miktury dundyto, and anstocratlc snovbery wauld ot last disgust this people until the stroug Governnient would be stattered like thin gl 'hen Cuprisl would be crushied in tho rotns, we and history teach botier sv: aud wale Uoveromunt le Hepublic. 1€ Cupital wants ** (he man on bores back,* it 1s uut only unpatriotle, but eilly, e —— The Vicksburg era'd, that Is wover on the fenve coucerning any publie question, gocs over Jeevruson Davis rouzh-ohod for his fooling speech uu Becussion, recently delivered, Speak- ing of the exgloded doctrine of Secession, it sayss ‘Wo deaples snd spit upon it, asone of the most devillul doymus ever devived by smbitiuus political jnaders. Wo du not beliove men saould niks (ovuruments as they do limited purtnerships, 1o by (involvod at tne eaprice of & very smail portlon of taoir unmber, 3 that portion habpens Lo ve called »biate, When dovernulents see tursied, thoee ie 1o atich thiug us poaceubly eplitting thum up into the parts of wluch they were wade, ‘Thore nover was, aud uever wiil ue, suy such thing aa peace- But hierd coues Ar. Davis, in ron, 0 aulu sccession, 1878, prociaiming ls falth In thia Weatched oviis the Suuth ahould disown sho uoctrine, snd sak of lifia tu be **lot ulonw,™ In snotber part of this morning's lssue, there 1s ou claborate ariicle from the sawo paper, Lo which the stieution of the readeris fuvned, v e —— Tho tramp nulsance prevails In Wisconsin to such au extent that Qov, Surti has beenin consuliation with the raflroad muthoriies to ste how tho scourge can be avolded or miti- gated, Rallroad truins are often takun possus- sion of and the enxincers made to run them as tho tramps dircct, without auy referencs to way stations, time-tables, or any other sort of regulation exvept the swoet will of Mr. Tramp. This pest ol soclety has appeared fn some lo- calitics by the dozen, and aro often scen ju such forco a4 to defy tho Jewal wutboritics. Filteon of thein were recently scooped up in the sub- urbs of Muwsukcs at ond haul, sbd safely lodged fuo jeil. Thelr uversion to a!i kinds of work (s proverblal, and the tramp question ls gettiv to bo a very serious and perplexing vte, eud its bractical and saitsfaztory sulution 1s as Jar off as ever, ¥ : —— ‘The Utlca' Republican (CoyxriNo) declarcs tbat tho Republicans of New York ingend tb coutivug Mr. CoxxriNg in office. By which it probably meaus to say that Mr. Conxrixo de-' slirua to be continned fu offics by the Republie- sus, or by sy other party that cay bedt HATRS. e —— R ———— For the informativn of wany persons lu Northern Iilnols who are tatereated Lo edaca- voual matters, Tus Tubuss has obtained & tull sketcb of tho services aud claracter of Viol. Jaxss P. SLap®, the Revubllaan candle date for Superiatcudent of Publie lustruviion, Mr. 8LADN was born in Albany Countv, N. Y., In 1597, and came to Belleville, Tk, when 20 years ot ege, remaining there eversince. As early s 1837 ho became connected with tho Belleville schuols, passing through all tho grades up to Principal, from which lo was pro- moted to County Superintendent. Lattarly, out of a charitable dosiro to serve the peonle who have so honored him, he baa been filling hoth the positiona of Principal of the achools anid County Buperintendent, ‘Threo thines ho haa been elceted County Bupor- intendent, and although & pronounced Repub- lican at the last election (1877), he carried the strong Democratic County of Bt. Clalr by 3,300 majority. Prof, 8LADN is a thorough educator, who s personally popular with the masaes, and 1sheld in Nlgn esteemn by his colaborers fa the catso of education, ——— At the concluslon of the Crimean War (n1835, 1u which England and France whipped Russin, thelatter Powers guaranteed payment of Interast ona Turkish loan of $20,000,000, and of the vrincipal payment in 1000, For roveral vears et the Turks have allowed thelr former allles to py the interest, amounting to $1,000,000 an- nually. Tho Turks have now mssigned Cypras to England, for an annual royalty or rental, gald to bo $700,000. The English, ot course, apply this rental on the futerest of the guarane teed bonds of 1855, and in this way are com- volled to muko zoud seven-tentnsof the intercat on the losn. Trust John Bull to look after his pecunlary Intercst In & horso-trade! The"Baltimoro Amer/ean Isof the opinfon that the attitude of England ou the Berlin Conter- ence, the duplicity and double dealing of Baa- CONSPIELD sud SALISBURY, “‘which are applaud- ed in England, ought to mako every falr-mind- ed Englishman burn with shame. \While they were demanding tno Berlln Congress upon the Rround of publiclaw in Europe, while denving to Russla theright to concludo a separate Lreaty, . BuaconspizLb and 8ALisnunt concluded a se- cret treaty with Russlia Lhat atripped Turkey of bier European provinces, and, whilo concealing this from Turkey, mnade a treaty with Turkey kept secrot from Russia. taking posscsaion of Cyprus and Asla Minor.” 4 ———t— In his Fourth of July Commuanlstic speech, Ban BurLes spoke contemptuously of a cer- tafn class of young men bernuse they have in- lierited great wealth, and said they ought to be “sguelched.,” Aas Brxsayiy is a public man, and o lawgiver amoug his people, will he be kiud enough to tell ns by what principle. of Justice he woutd squelch a man, young or old, simply for the reason that ho possessed o large nmount of this world’s goods? If that rule should be rigidly applied, it might possibly reach the case of Mr. BuTLER limself, who fs roported to Lo vory wealthy, o re—————— Benator CoNKLING I3 reported to be down with a severo attack of Hay (us) fover, Diag- nosls of the caso looks had,—patlent exceed- Ingly frritablé, restlve, and nervous, with a rush of bleod to the head, disturblng the curls upon bis forohend, and some very marked febrile symptoms. Magnetie conditlon of the New York atmosolicro also considored unfavorable for the paticnt. Builetius will bo fssued every hour by tho Now York Sun. A good many anxious fricnds standing about the bulletin- boards weeping. —— Let no Chlcago Bourbon mistake littlo Doorrrre.s for Big DoOLITTLE, for In truth the little one can't hold a candlo to the big one,~— Mr, Ifeunent 8pExcer's law of heredity and Mr. Danwix's **descent of man? to the con- trary notwithstandipg, Big Doorirriz was twelve years o Nenator In Congress from Wis- consin, and {t will bo twelvo years more defore little DoorirTin will be o Representative In Cougress from Illinoly, ————— Wo want {t distinctly understood that tnere {8 no such newspaper oa the Oshkosh Caristian Advocate, and that when jokes aro perpotrated In {ts uamo they are all & pack of what-do-you- call'oms. Look at the following, which ls cred- ited tothat paper: **Can [ask a few ques- tlons concerning tho cclebrated Damascus steell? fa the way s corruspondent bezina hils fetter. Certainly; we don't care a Damascus auything you want to.? - —————— ‘The Boston Advertier i3 Intorosting ftsolt this liot weathor fa trylng to flud out tho dif- feronce botween Gxonan Enior and SYLVANGS Cous, If tho “kultchured ® Advert'ser will glve up the conuudrum, like an honeat newspaper, ond coufess that there Is ono thing that it don't kuow, Tug Triouxnz will undertako to solve the heretofore Inexplieable problem for it in flvo minutes by * the Bhrowsbury clock.” e ——— Inlittle DootirrLe's little speech accepting the nomination for Congress hie sald that **Thero never was & time In the history of the country when men of honesty sud ability were more needed to administer the offaira of tho vation," True, O King! And now we know that {t was because of lttle Jim's ** honesty and abillsy that he was nowinated. Ho admits It bimsolf. - rt—. Really now, without any equlvocation or men- tal rescrvation whatever, & Mr. Jt DooLITTLE the best selection that could hava been made by tlo Demovrata of that district fur & representa. tive to zo to Washington and stand as the ex- ponent of the intellizonce, abllity, wealth, so- clal pusltion, cte., ete, of that portion of the wreat city of Chilcago! We pause for a revly. e — e Because Mr. WATT2ISON got the best of It In Dis little war of words withthe late Mr. Hgwirr, 1t is no slgn that Mr. DANa, of the New York Sunyis to bu trifled with by auybody., The flery Kentueklan will not get olt by procldiming fn advance that ho doos not want to fght the New-Yarker, but wmust face the music when Dana calls time. e ——e Mr. JIALSTRAD is su much engrossed witn the third-tesns fdea that he wants (L for bresklast, dinuer, wnd supper, Hu even gruwls because Gen, GARWIELD wisely omitted all entiou of #the mau ou horseback'—which, belng inter- preted, means GRANT—iu his recout mddress bofore the Olio editors. No wonder tho Butten-Porrzr Committea weat tu the seaside for & little rusplte frum its orduous labors. If sca-bathing could vurge thut Committee of the coutempt already folb forit by she decout portion of the American pauple, the practice would commend tsell s0 all the dirty rascals in tho univers e ————— To read the Inferje—we mcan the L-O.-U. —ous would almost think that the Presideat’s lightoing lad astruck some of the- Riug o Chicago, tnstead of New York, by tho way it takes on, But then the weather ls vory bot, sud everybody is irritable, ————— # \Why does the preasman on the Tima work the paper so disty and vlack ' asked s fagtidi- .ousmau ju & strect-cur yestordoy. °* Because bowants $0 make the Dresswork corrcspond with the wvencral character of the paper,” promptly suswered 8 lady. e —— Now that DooLsiTTLE bhas told the people of Luis district what kind of men aro uceded o pub- Me life, * of whorm I am which," It Is barely pos- slble that the votcrs may give Mr, DooLITTLY ® blut st the ballut-box as tu the kiud of u rep- resentative (Aey want, —— . Do not eat much, do not. drink much, uo vot work wuch, If you cau avoid it. Keep vleau by the frequuent Use of cold water, that is abuudsnp wod chesp. Avold stimulatiog food aud driuks. AN - S A the Juler0. claims to have “almost made littly DoyLarrLe,” whi it uow seu to it that the work of its hauds s duly bocored! et s Sategielans slollie McCarthy has beén taught a quota- tiou (rom Warrsise—** What wight bave been,' e ——— DoorLiTTLs will have to du much before be Is elicts s | INDIAN AFFAIRS. { Livingston and His Gang Doing the Heavy In- digation. Additlonal Points in the Sworn Testimony Agninst Him., Ease with which Ha Communicated Hig Art of Btealing to Under- strappers. Secretary Schurz Making It Sul« try for the Indian Ring. Legal Proceedings Commonced Against Several of the Thieves. A Fight Between Friendly ond Hostilo Indians in Oregon, CROW CREEI. LIVINGSTON'S CROWD STILL LLUFPFING. Sptela) Dispateh” to The Tridine, 8Stoux City, o, July 17.—~The Liviogston crowd in Yauktou are boiling over with rage at the developmenta published (n your issue of Monday, The 8t. Paul Ploneer-I'ress veached Yankton last night, and the report spread liko wild fire. It was on overybody’s tongue, and Liviugston braced up with tho declaration of a loel sultagainse the Llonser-Press. To-lay the town-talk of Yankton fs aill on the dis- closurea and the brutal corrcapondent who made them public. Inguiry was mado herc as to what other papers had A reporier, and tho nuswer went back, ** Every papor {n the Unjted States.” A telogram from Yankton notified tho correspondent that ho would be knocked higher thau Beeelier's ** Lifo of Chriat” If e uver re- turned to Yaukton. While Livingaton is reap- ing tho whirlwind, it may be as well to give anuther chaptor of the Hammond ratd: . R, ORRGONT, the Agent at Lower Brule, was a brothor-in-law of Livingston, and his tool, Livingstow's trader, E. E. Hudson, wss Notary Publie, Uregory writes to Hudson: 1 acnd you a report of employes 1n dnplicata duly n‘mml by me, and wish that yon would put your sfenatare and seal to thom,” You can con- sider that | swear to all that ia required, and ag much as {s required. Please return thede papes Dy the first mail. 1n haste, yours truly, 1L K. Gasaonr, ile 1s an Episcopalian appolntmont, the hus- Land of u minfater'sdaughter in Yankton, and oue of Bishop lare's clect, On these Govern- ment pay-10lls b carried his privato scrvant as o Government lavorer, GREGOKY WAS NOT A BIQ THIRP. Tlc only puld a private account with a Govern- went voucher, drew o voticher of 834 for a vl of $29 for garden seeds, and pocketed the dif- ference, 85. Ho stole twenty-stx beef-hides belougiog to the Indians. o committed per- Jury lo signmug a fraudulent pay-roll, and drew 8230 a yeay for threo years s “oss farmer be- fore he was Agent, and was neverinthe Agency farm, according to sworntestimony, Gregory’s handwrltng appears on a great number of Liviugston's sraudulent vouchurs, GREGORY'S BUCORSS AB A LOYS PARMER and his church relattons may lave made bim Agent at Brulo Agen:y. The cmployes were fed on Government beef, milk, and potatoes. Grogory was nppolnted In 1870 Agent for tho T'oncas, ond was removed for causo. * Hon- eat! John Gueaman, who resigned the Yankton Agency, per request, just after Hammond was appolnted Inspector, took away ninety head of catle. ‘Tho Cominissloner says le never ree worted, T. B, Ciarkson, brother of Bishop: Clarkson, was Gassman’s trader. Ho was re. moved just before Gassman for fraudulent tnspection of supplies, which tho same Guss- mun accepled. Gassman revred with two stock farms. He now lives In Schuyler, Neb,, with n reverend prefix, i » OTUKR BPISCOPAL AGENTS during the past six years have gone out for cause, namely: Thomas A: Rellly, of Carllste, Pu.; A C Carrler, of Washinzton; Charles P, Berkett, o Omahn; and Jomes Lawreues, of Dukuta, Rellly got drunk and wos not conge- nlal to the Ring, Carrier wos (nefflelent and uscless, and Berkett was ditro. Hummond's fn- veatization {ato Cheyenne Agencey alfalrs'fs in- toresting, Jt runs back through the adwminls. tratton of . V. Blogham, of Minnosota, who rotired n 1870, after five years of pluoder, 1le came I as a poor vxpressinav, and NBTIRED RICH. After he was retired, & atrong effort was made by the Iling and 3 Bishop Mare to make him Dakota Superintend- eut of Indian Affuirs. Tho afldavits at Chcy- enno prove that Bingham supplied 8 mess housa with Agoncy Ucef, milk, und potatoes, and charged omployes 820 a moutli; that fodian stofes wero hauled to a camnp of waod-choppers working for the trader C. C. Rubbj that pro- vislous were hauled from the Aency warchouso to the hay campof Contractor Lue; that urivate horses were fed op Government forago; that Biugham's brother hauled graln to Slediciuo Creek rauche; slio lurge quantities of sugar, Leans, culfoe, tobacco, bacon, and carn jto the samcranche, owned by Blnghamaud Livingston, Unoe witness constdercd that everything at this rauche belonged to the Inuians. Bumoe Agency cattle gut as far away as tue Black Hills. Wil- fam Fleldeder, the post Interproter, swears that DINGIAM'S CLERK, ROUERT COX, ot rich out of the removal of the Tudns from Whltctone Azeucy, and that ha has seen thou- sands uf pounds of four scattered about the Aguncy and over the prairio; that ratious were drawn from the Uovernment for 7,000 Indlans when there were only 8,000 oh the Agoncy; that Dr. Cravens, removed by Hammond in March, and Trader Rubb flled n post-wood contract with Agency labor, horses, uud wagous; that Missiouary Henry Swift boiped to swell & census from 4,000 to 7,005 that SEVEDAL THAINS YOU TIHE ULACK MILLS wera supplied from the Aveucy warchouse; that the blackswnith got Agency rmatious to run a ranche ovposite Ford Pierre, Thero are numer- ous supportinyg afiduvita of all this robbory. Liviogston's trader, Hudson, has cut ninery-six pages out of his ledger, ‘Uhese pages undoubt- cdly show n full Listory of their busiuess reja- tious. Brockman, Livingetou's foreman, has held Gen, Hammond for $5,000 for falso tm- prisonmnent. Brocknion’s Luuse waa a secepta- cle for stolen goods, aud was full of them whea tho Agency was scized. E. O, Uamble, o late mumber of the Board of Iudiau Cumuiasioners, auvd nowly-appoloted Agent at Urow Creok, will recelve an asslgument somewhere elsc, Ilo was an Tuspector visiting Crow Creek Iu 1873, wheu Liviugston was cowmitting some ot bis worst fraud o To 1he Walern dnioclated Press, YANKTON, D\ T,y duly 1T.—an mwu-hwuml fo Tua Ci110400 TUILUNE and other Eastcru apers ou the 15tk redecting severely ou Dr, 11, E": Livingstou, late Indisn Agcnt at Crow Crevk, sud stativg that Comntssloner Sluyt has dls- covered thut tho glgautic frauds charged againat Dy, Liviogston arg proven by tha recurds of toe wufe, which wus voened by Uoverninent ollicluls, desplte the protest of the Ductor, Blnee theso charges ave been frequently reiterated, Dr. Liviugeton is understood to have takew pre- Jhinjusry steps toward justituting action for libel auinst Tus Cutcaso Tuivuse. e clglng That by bis becn misreprusented i the matter, uud that be will be able to viodicate Lioiscll by legal prucecdingd, L —— THE INDIAN BUREAU, BYATEMATIO INVESTIGATION. Hueesul Iissalch (o The Triduse, WasuiNaron, 1. C.,July 17.—Lute ¢xposurcs fu Indfan frouds ut the West are tho tesuit of 8 certain plan of operation ogreed upon betweeu Beeretary Schurz, the Commissiover of Indlan Aflairs, and duspectors who are vow ut work fa | vavious poluts of the Wet. The uffalre of fnnocent -