Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 12, 1878, Page 4

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e TR TSR UL T THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1875, The Tribwne. TERMS OF SURBSCRIPTION, BY MAIN—IN ADVANCE~TOSTAGR PREPATD. ally Editlon, one yi 12, . er mi ¥ dition: Literary and Reitgions boubis Rpecimen eoples sent fre Give Post-Office sddress fn fall, {nclnding Btate and County. . Hemfitances may be made either by draft, express, Poat-Office order, or In registered letter, at our risk. TERMS TO CITY BUBSCRIBERS. Dally, delivered, Sunday excepted, 23 cents per week. Dally, delivered, Sunday [ncluded, 30 cents per week. Adiress THE TKIBUNE COMPANY, Corner Madison aad Desrborn-sta.; Chicago, Iil. Orders far the deifvery of T TAIAUXE at Evsnton, Englewood, and fiyde Park iefs n the counting-room will receive prompt attention. TRIBUNE BRANCH OFFICES. TRE CuiCA60 TRIRUXR has catahilshed branch ofices for the receipt of subscriptions and advertiements as Tollows: NEW YORK~Room 20 7vidune Bulldiog. F.T.Mo- Fanoex, Mansger. PARIS, France—No. 1 Rue dela Granga-Batellers, B Mamran, Agent. LONDO, Eng.—American Exchange, 449 Btrand. Hixar F. Giitio, Agent. BAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—Falsce Hotel R — AMUSEMENTS. Slooley’s Theatre. Tasdolpb street, between Clark and LaSalle, Eogagement of the Majeronis. *‘Csmiile,” Haverly’s Theatre. . Dearborn street, corner of Movroe, Eogagement of the Colrflle Folly Compasy. **Hobinson Crusoe.” MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1878, — In New York on Baturday greenbacks wers worth 99} in gold and silver coin, —————— We are to-day threatened with the unm- welcome south wind, and the rise in tem- perature which accompanies that oppressive visitor, A San Francisco dispatch announces the death in that city yesterdsy, from hemor- rhage of the lungs, of 3r. H, J. MoNTsavE, the well-known actor, who was to have ap- peared in Chicogo ono week from to-night at 2cVicker's Theatro, —— The sttractions prosonted at numerous favorite summer-rosorts East aud West aro grouped in an interesting vollection of gos- sippy letters which we print this moruing, descriptive of the delights at Saratoga, Mauch Chunk, Waukeshs, Goneva Lake, Madison, and Boscobel. ! Among the local religious events of yester- day was tho colebration of the twentistls an- niversary of the pastorate of the Rev, Dr. Everrs, of the First Baptist Church; ser- mons by the Rev. Wirrazp H. Ronixsox, at tlie Second Baptist Church; by the Rev. Dr. Roraerronp, at the Thind Presbyterian Church; and by the Rev. E. N, Bannerr, st Westminster Charch, Austria hason hand a bigger undertaking than she bargained for when the occupation of Bosnia was stipnlated for nt the Berlin Congress. 'The fall force of resisting troops which the Austrian army will have to en- counter is estimated at 100,000 well-arned mon, consisting of Bosnians, Arnauts, Al banians, and regular Torkish troops, the latter ovidently operating by consent of the Porte, or at least without its prohibition, since it is reported that Turkey disputes the right of Austria to posscss the territory ex- cept through a soparate convention with the Ottoman Government, The labor troubles of the Typographical Union and the Order of Crisping formed the sabject of discussion yesterday at a mass- wmeeting of the Amalgmnated Trades-Unions, at which speeches were made snd resolu- tions passed pledging support to the men now on a strike. The case of the printers waa presented by Mr, LuNa in a speech com- mendablo for 1ts moderation and for the evi- dent purpose of the spenker to bring for. ward in a spirit of fairness what are con. ceived to be the facts and figures in support of the position taken by the Typographical Union in opposition to any roduction in xates of composition. A curious question of international law * Lias bean raised by the Canndian Uovernment {n forbiddiog United States Revenue-Marina ateamers from succoring Ameriean vessels in distress in Canadian waters, The guestion involves the polnt whother tho exclusive right of pilotage and towage e¢njoyed by Cauadian tugbonts slso includes tho right to lot an American vessel go to the bottom when tho tugboat making the tow is unable to prevent the wreck, as was the cawe ro. cently when & United Btates revenue steaner went (o the relief of the disabled ship. The Canadian tugmen maintain their Hght to the whole business, und the Treasury Depart- ment 8t Washington will look Into the law of the case, In the course of aspeech of welcome to the Columbia College crew on their return frow their triumphs in Eugland, Mr. Ansax 8. Hewirr, tho New York Oongressinan, took oceasion to introduce a few remafis not exuctly gormane to the subject of boat-race jug, but which were none the less timely and appropriste. Ag illustrating the great need /that college wmen should go into polities if they would help to preserve the Government sud the justitutions their fathers fouglt for, Br. Hewirr brought to their notice the mis. sion aund purposes of the agitator Krannky in a way that could not fail to doeply im. press the educated muscle beforg Lim of the vital importance of arrayiug intelligence sgainst ignorance, common-wnse and good order sgainst fanaticism and recklessness, in the contest which the Kearneyites are scek. ing to insugnrate. While the Goverymont carried its point in tbe effort to secure for the United States Circuit Court in South Carolina the juris. diction of the indicted internal vevenue ofticers who had been held without bail by a Btate court for the killing of a moonshiner, the law in the case remsina to be settled and # prucedent estublished as to the jurisdiction of State courts over the action of revenue ofticers while engaged in the enforcement of the Federal laws. Chief-Justica Waits, in viewof the importance of the questions at issue, bus arranged to sit with Judge Boxp, of the United Btates Circuit Court, uud the wausgewent of the case has been placed in hands no less able and distinguish- ed than those of Bexsaxay H. Bauwrow, who will be furnished with such assictance in the | wsy of extrs counsel a4 bo may desire, Of course an mposing array of counsel will bo prescuted by the other side, and & weworns ble battle in the courts may be expeoted be- tween advocates of Btates-Rights and the defenders of Federnl supremacy. 'The New York Board of Trade recently ls. sued A report showing the population ac- cording to the consus of 1870, tho amount of the tax-duplicate, rato of levy, bonded and floating debts and sinking fonds of the twenty-eight loading cities of the United States. Tho highest rate of tax-levy of 1877 is that of Troy, N. Y., and tho lowaest that of Detroit, Mich.,—the rate of Troy being 6.14 per cent nnd that of Detroft 1.2-5. This immonse disparity is caused by the De- troit Asscssors valuing property for taxation at its full cash-value, while in Troy it is put in at one-third of full value. Taking popu- 1ation na the basis, the municipal taxation of Troy is $17.13 per man, woman, and child, and that of Detroit 814.68. 'Thus, whilo the nominal rate of taxation of Troy is four times as heavy as that of Datroit, tho tax per head is only one.sixth largor. On the basis of valuation, taking the figures of the ton largest cities, Boston lends with the smallest rate of tax-lovy. The per.cents of levy for tho sovernl cities are as follows: Boston, 1.81; Ban Francisco, 1.83; DBalti. more, 1,02} ; Philndelphin, 2.15; New York, 2.65; 8t. Lonis, 2.80; Cincinnati, 2.91; New Orleans, 2.95; Brooklyn, 1,16; and Chi. eago, 3.01. On the basis of population, taking tho census of 1870 ns the standard, the tax.levies per capita in the same ten citiea rank as follows, the lowest rate being placed first: St. Lounis, $16.18; New Orleans, £17.12; Baltimore, 318.42; Philadelphia, $18,72; Chicago, 219,83; Brooklyn, $19.61; Cincinnati, £23,71; New York, $30.96 ; Bos- ton, 235.91; San Francisco, $37.03, In this table St. Louls is made to rank as the lowest- taxed city per capila; but that is in consequence of the fraudulent census of 1870, by which the population of 8t. Louls was magnified 60,000 above the actual num. ber of inhabitants in the place at the time. It will bo obsorved that Boston, with the lowest rato per cont of tax.levy, makes next to the largest lavy per capita; nnd that San Franeisco, with the heaviest assessment per lead, stands second in the list for low-rate per cent. New York occupies tho third place per capita, nnd Cinciunati nearly $4 per hend more than Chicago, which is oc. counted for by the heavy tax levied to pay the intorest on the bonds of the raiiroad which the city is bnilding to Chattanooga in order to secure Southern trade. Deduoting the amount of tho sinking funds of those citics, nnd adding their ascortained floating to their bonded indebledness as reported, wo bave the net per capita debt s followa: San Francisco, #21.82; Chicago, $55.51; 8t. Touls, §74.41; Philadolphia, 880,68 ; Brook- Iyn, $98,20; Baltimore, $09,37; Oincinnati, $103.63; New Orleans, $113.32; Boston, $117.48; Now York, £125, ‘WHAT DOES KEARNEY MEAN 1 Mr, Keanxgy hns now had timo to give oxpression to his viowa. In Californin ho had tho substantisl grievance of the Chineso immigration nnd thelr displacomont of Cau- casian labor. ‘That griovance, howevor, docs pot exist at the Last, Tho country has been informed by him that his party proposes to carry elections, get control of legislative and executivo power, to corral capitalists and squeezo them, o close up tne banks, to break up the eatablishmonts of the employ- ing class, and to take the administration of offnirs all in lheir own bovuds. All this is very well ; but tha country looks for some- thing more than nbuse and denunciation, It wants to know somathing else than that capi- tal is robbery, that corporations are nothing but organizations of white-livered thieves, that bell is propared for every rich man, that overything that is is wrong, nud that whatover I8 must bo changed. All that has been ropeatod so often that it has become tiresome, Now will Mr.*Kzanney explain how aud by what means he proposos to incronse the employwent of labor, aud how aud by what means he proposes to incrense tho wagea of the incrensed number of persons to be em- ployed? 1If that be objeot of his apostle- ship,—and unless it is, then be isa frand and n deception,~—and ho will explain or set ‘orth any ratiounl or practicable plan to occotaplish that end, then he will not have to sppeal to unwilling ears, Decanse the wholo country will sustain him, If Lo has any measure for that purpose, and will ex. plain It, and it be supported by roason and practicability, then T'ug Cmroaco Trivunx will be willing to follow Keauxgy in having such mensure ndopted, Iustead cf being the were leader of a faction, the mere blat. ant yeller of invectives, the loud-volced dealer in epithets, the conntry will recognize bim as a benefactor of lus mce, nud a na. tional hero deserving of uational honors and rowanls, Mr, Keanner, however, mentious nothing of the kind. Hending some scores of Rall- rond Directora to * hell " will not increase production; corrallng some five hundred copitalists aud * grinding " them Lo powder will not make capital more liberal, abun. dant, or disposed to iuvest; electing Brx Burees Governor of Maadachusetta will not give emplogmont to an additional laborer, except Bex, and will not iucrease the wages of nman or woman in the country; closing tho cotton-mills will not increase the numw-. ber of omployed workmon und workwowmnen, nor will it increase the weekly or daily wages of any person; stopping the railways by rofusing to let men operale thom may throw some thousands of mon uow at work out of ewployment, but will not furnish labor for a man now idle, uor ndd anything to the weekly carniuge of those now at work, ‘Lhe clasavs of men who are idle, who hiave no employmant, sod have no wagos, are of those competent to work in wmines, in fur. naces, fu rolling.mwills and machine-shops, in all Lranches of iron and steel work; those who aro competent to work iu wills wa¥ing cotton, woolen, “silk, straw, leather, nnd other goods of that general character; of those competent to labor in the wsnufacture of gless, china, sud eartheuwars, furniture, and generally in all kinds of jusnofactures; and also those competent to work as mechan. ics in bouse-building. Desldo thess, there are others whose employment depends on the prosperity incldental to the employment of all the othera. Thero are thousands of wmen engaged iu haundling, hauling, and otherwise trausporting merchandise end ma- terial who can find continuous work ouly when all other classes are at work. When there is no demnnd for the product of the ron-foundery, iachine-shops, and steel. mills, there is a falling off in the demand for coal ; when there s a reduction of the fn. come of auy poriion of the comumunity be- cause of & want of employwcnt and stop- pago of wagos, thera is o falling off in the means by which men can purchasg, and ‘beuce a reduction in the production of cloth. ing sud sll other articies for which wages wro generally expended. When production declines or ceases becauso of the want of means to purchnss, then, extending from one branch of industry to anothor, tho do- cline becomes general, and thero is an in- evitable reduction in employmont equal to tha reduced consumption of the product of Iabor, 1t roaches all classes alike. Tt strikes the morchant as well as it does the railway, and the mechanio, and the laborer. ‘We have now reached that point where thore jsanoed and a demand for the man who will point out whore and by what means the thousands ont of employment can be put at work, and how the product of their labor can be furnished with a markot, and how production can be increased by an increase of consumption, Is Kearwey the man who can toll us how onpital may be ap- plied to labor and made to pro- duco moro tham it now produces, finding an Incrensed consumption amonga people with incrensed menns of purchasing ? ‘There can be no substantial relief until this in brought about. If Keasxer or any other man can point ont how he can farnish an incressed market for the produbis of labor, then lot him proc'aim the means to a suffor- ing country, and he will find an united peo- plo anxious and willing to carry his scheme into execution. Ons hour given by him to the statcment and elucidation of such a scheme would ao- complish more good and diract, substantial ‘bonefit to the workingmen and to the coun- try than months In wild denunciation snd abusive opithets direoted against imaginary enemies, Will Mr, KeanNgy give us bhin plan for increasing employment and increns- ing wages? THAT SILVER DOLLAR. The Boston Advertiser ia ambitious to join the WVation and the Now York Times in the process of gell-stultification over tho status of tho silver dollar. Theso and other organs of the New York and Now Eegland gold- cliquo contended dnring the fight for remon- otization that the silver dollar would never be worth more than its bullien value, and now point to ils non-circulation ns an evi- denco(?) of that fact, holding that the peo- ple don't want it. The Adcertiser fancics thore was somothing grotesquo about the hending of an article in Trx Tamune * Why Hilvor Circnlates at Par with Gold,” bocause it says silver does not circulato at all; but silver does circulate at par with gold where- ever the coin standard is maintained, and not merely in the Btates of the Latin Union where the double standard is in vogue, but olso in Qermany, where silvor hns been practically domonetized by Governmont nc- tion. Bo tho Boston Adrertiser was not so “ gmart " na Boston people aro unsually ex- pected to be. It then continues : We do notcare for tho alight inconslstency, bat wedo protest agaiost ibe sscriion, constantly made and reiterated, that silver does not_ circulats for tho same reason that gold does mot. The Treasury vffers to pay for greenbacks with silver dollars,” Jt does not offer gold dollars. The poo- ple do not want silver dollara; tiey do want gold dullara, ‘They refuse to make the exchange for siiver, but not even Tum Cmicao Tuisune will assert that thoro wonld be any hesitation on tlie art of tho peple in taking guld. Thore fx, thero- jure, thia racical dierence: (old atays in the Treasury becauso 1 Cannot be gut ot} sllver stayy there hecanse nubody wants It. The (lovernment ankn 100 much far its silver dollars; 1t will not dis- poso of 1tsgold. However, we do not iutend to waate this zood powder now, It ia better to walt until tha Sectetary trles to get silver futo circuin- ton, —for TiE TRIBUNE anys ho has not yot made an effort in that diroctlon, —aad then we shall bave copious quotations to make from the wild-cat ar- ticios which Tz Trinuxe is ncwrnhllshhlg in its desperate effort to convinco itscif thst 1t has not plade an egreglous econumical blunder. Conld anything be more Inconsequential than thia jumble of contradictions? Silver doos nnd does not circulate; it will and will not circulate,—le about the purport of this sogeoions diotum. The plain facts of the caso, aro these: Tho silver dollar will not circulate generally during s suspension of specie-poymonts, for so long as greonbacks cannot be proscnted for redomption in coin, the silver dollar, in which they aro redeem- able a3 woll as in the gold dollar, will have o higher value; a non.intereal-bearing note can never bo worth as muoh, whon past due and unpald, as the mouney in which it is pay- able. Nevertheloss the silver dollars circu. Iate in a limited quantity to the oxtout' that they take the place of %1 and %2 greon. backs, for the necessity for small notes will bo sufficient to overcome the § of 1 per cent premium on coin. As to the relations ‘between silver and gold, it {s only necessary to point out that greenbacks are now within } of 1 percent of par with gold, and yet thoy aro rodesmable, when they shall be re- deemed at all, in silver dollars; then the silver dollar certainly cannot be very widely romoved from par with the gold dollar, But, to disposs of tho question, we will wmake the samo practical suggestion to tho shrowd Adcertiver financior that we have already mndo to the New York Zimes sud Nution men, viz,: If you can buy silver dollars down Esst at 88 ceuts, or 10 cents, or wven 95 conts, you can do » smashing busiuess by taking all you can get, for you cau send tham out hore and exchange them at par for tho broadstufls and produco of the Nortuwest, which you cau sell at New England prices, or, if you profer it, you cau got groenbacks for them at a small broker’s commission, We kuow of no batter business to go into theso hard times, if the Enstern papers tell the truth about the valno of silver dollara. 1If they can't take this practical advantage of the situation as they describe it, then let us have o suspension of their complaints about the 90-cant dollar till they can furnish & reason. able and practical test that tho present fiction has become a faot. —— MORE SECESSION DOCTRINE. Ex-Gov. Jouy M. Parmen, of Ilinois, has boon ventilating bis opinions in a recent lot. ter. Mo thinks the * Repnblican party ac- complished its misafon in 1870, aud that it onght then Lave besn disbauded, a3 was the army in 1860." Why in 1870 any wmore thau in 1866 or 18087 Gov, Pavuen did not ‘conclude to join tho Democrats nutil 1870, and hence he puts the proper date for the disbandment of the Ropublican party late enough to cover bis own conduct, In 1863, ‘when PaLMER was the Ropublican candidate for Governor of Iltinols, he naver intimated that the Republican party ought to disband in 1870, or that ho intended to go back to the Democrats. His advice then was to secure the Natlonal and State Governments, with o view of perpetuating the Republican party end forciug tho Dewocratie party to disband. Bpesking of the two parties he writes: 1 aseume It to be trug that the Republican pasty only cxiss at vresent becanse it has practical cou- trol of tho Uoverumont. A1 It were now out of power, 1t 18 not easy to lnskiue any zood redson why it should agnin b Intrusted with the manaye- usent of public adaire, Like the Dvwocracy. 1t bas no Boauclal croed, though It [ not su badly de- woralized. 'The theorles that look 1081 tacresus aud more genvral viuployment of the army Iu the admifaistration of the Goverument, aud It appareut wililnguess to claim forthe Federal Governmont 8)1 the powers that Coogreas, the President, of the courts way assert for it, rendurs It dsngerous. o wburt, It scems (0 108 that tho Republican party ac- complisbed 1t wisslon du 1530, 83d _that it puvht then bave been diwbanded aa the army was fu 1640, "The Kepublican yarty hav, I before said, run its race, sud 18 will for thy next guarter of a'custury situingl to aewer every critlciaii upo 1ty acts by appealing to ita record duning the Civil War, avd bl oy fear Lo yleld way power for th Fderal Governweut wiieh 1t clafued ve exercised duting the War, The Democratic party, on the other hand. {s lhtfllt“tl"{ right mow’ as [s was before the War on the most Inportant and essential prin- ciples of conatitntional repnhlican government. 1t fa st present infected with hereales aud nonsenae, ot it may, anti wilt prooably, rid {telf of them, And it can do an by steady sppeals to its oan fun- damental doctrines. What are the ** most important and essen- tial principles of conatitutional government " on which the Ropnblican party fundamental. 1y differs from the Domocratic party, and on which the latter, despite all its heresies, Is ** theoretically right now as it was beforo tho War"? Gov. Patuer himseif farnishes the answer,—State Sovereignty. that 8 man of eminent learning and ability in England, when accused of mental aberra- tion, endured for days the test of n rigid and exhaustiog examination by distinguished jurists, and, whtle ho gave no sign of mental wonknesy, gave sbandant evidenco of the most extonsive learning and clearness of judgment. At last he wns asked if ho was not Cunist, and he promptly answered that he was, So with Gov. Paumzm: onco touch tho subject of Btate Rights and the nationality of the United Stales as opposed to a new confederation of sovereign Btates, and the delnsion of an otherwise woll-balanced mind is rovealed, ‘Theo- rotically, the Democratic party, though frosh from along . and costly war, favors the doctrine that the United Btates aro n confederation of sovoreign States and not a nation, and that the use of an army by the more agent of the States to assert and en- force nntional anthority in the territory of and over the people of the sovereign Btates *‘ia dangerous” to liberty and sub- versive of constitutional right. For this reason hue thinka the party generally, though poisoned with heresies, is right now, as 1t was in 1800, when the Dem. ocratic States nppealed to arms to defond thomsolves nyniust the nation, It is true, the Governor offered Lis services to the nation, and led national troops into the ter. ritory of soversign Btntes, suspended civil suthority by the use of the bayonet, arrosted and imprisoned free citizens acling under the nuthority of their sovercign Btates, and shot them down in the flold as he woald any othor public enemies in time of war, Never- theless, leaviug to othera to explain or ac. count for this violenos to the sanctity of free and sovereign States, the Governor now be. bolds the existence of an army of 25,000 men in a population of 45,000,000 as signifi- cant of terrible danger, Ho nlone command. ed n groator forco than that, and some- how or nnother gained considernble credit for ro-ostablishing national authority within tho hostile Democratio and sovereign Statos, who only insistod in 1860 on the doctrine which the Democratio party now holds in opposition to the thoory of the Republican party. Without Btate Sovercigaty, according to Parugs, the Democratio party would bo barren of a sound political principle; while with it, the American people will be apt to hold it, s they did in 1861, s a constant menacoof disunion, robellion, civil war, and anarchy, LECHEROUS BONDHOLDERS, Io all his harangnes Drxyis Keanyey do- nominates those persons who hold any Gov- erument securitiea as *‘lecherous bond- holders.” Sometimes he varles it by calling them * thieving, lecherous bondholders,” or “bondholding, lecherons rascals,” but what- ever the phraseology may be the chief alloga- tion against them is lochery. Tho gravamen of ‘s accusation is the offanso against chastity ; the grisvance complained of is Incontinence on the part of boudholdors, or the tendency of owning bonds to produce cououpiscenco. As Dexnnia koepa o privato seoretary in his employment whom Le brought along with him from the land of Bner Hante, we take it for granted that the meaning of the word bas been oxplained to him, nud that he ap- plioa it understandingly. Wxnsres dofinesa lechior as 0 man given to Jewdness; one nd- dicted in an uxoessive degroe to ludulgonceof soxual desires and illiclt commerce with women, And lechorous—Krazner's favorite adjective—menus oddicted to lewdness, prone to indulgo lust, eto. It would scem that Kzamxzy must bavo obaerved some {mmoral influence wrought on a citizen by investing a portion of his money in United States bonds. It a man leuds any money to the National Gov- ernment at 5 or 8 por cont in time of war, or 4 por cont in time of puace, he instauily be. comes a bad, loose citizen, according to Dex- w18, The loaning ot monoy lo the Govern- went at balf the usual bank rates of inter- cst changes tho lender’s moral charaster, 004 ho sinks Into a ** lecher,” and thereaftor fsn ‘*locherous bondholder,” The way to avold this fall of man s not to lend any monoy to the Governmeut, ‘To hoard money doca not sppear to undermine mascaline viee tue, nor s ft dangerous to a mau's chstity to donate money to Keannex'acrowd of tramps, nud a porson may even lavest it in food or clothing and still be pure; but if in nwmowont of weakneas or & sent-minded- uesd he gives way before the enticements of 4 por cent iutorest on his money from Uncle Bauw, from that hour hie Locomesinflamed with lawless carnal desires, and, iu the laugunge of the Coltio drayman, he is thereaftor a “lgchorons bondholder.” Tho remedy for this deplorable offuct of bouds ou tho holders {s that advocated by Brick Poxesoy, viz,, ¢ to burn theus,” ‘The burden of Brick's war-soug is *‘burn the bonds.” He pro. poses to urganize rifle clubs for the purpose of compelling the ‘‘lechorous” wratchos who hava loaned money to thy Government to wurrender their Londs m order to buve them burnod, Keamver states the pyscho- logleal effoet the ownenship of bonds pro- duces on » man—that it makes him lechor- ous; and Poaesov prescribes the remedy that will restore him to the paths of virtuo— to solze lus bonds aud burn thew, For many years eXperiments have been mado 10 convert the juice of thu sorghum cane into grauulated sugar, sud to fres It of the pecullar wiid taste the sorghum-sirups posscas. It ls uow claimed this has been accomplished by parties of Miunesota. We understand that, after along seriea ot experimeuts aud observa- tlons, theybave found a varlety of the cans which produces a pure ssceharine juice, free of the disagreeablo and objectiunable taste at- tached to the sorgbum-molasses heretofore ln use. ‘The 8t. Paul Lrassof the Oth lust. has tho fallowing remarks conceraing this {mportant watter. The sorghum-cana wlll grow wherever cora can be ralsed, and 1t Is ns eaally cultivated s corn. The sugar und molesses huported futo this country from the West Judies, taking one year with anuther, costs a8 wuch s the wheap exported will pay for. It this country pro- duced ali of ts © sweotening,” it would then be pertectly ludependent la its comwmercial re- lations with the wurld, aud need uvver feartho recurrence of an wdverse balance of trade to draln away its colp-money. Bays the Press: The cultivallon of amver sugar in Mingesota promiscs (o be one of thy greatest agricultural pur- wuits of the day, for it bas been demoustrated that Minuesots can siceesatuily compets with Loulsisna L1 the productiou_of this tudlspousable necussity of buwsn lite. Minoesots clalms the credit of haviug produced a wugur-cae from whoso julces sugad can b4 durectly arauulaled ut irfingcxponse, aud specunens of e sugar bave beew forwarded It is related 10 all parts of the country, where it has created fmmenes reneation. Gien,' LEDte, Commissioner of Aprieulius of Washington, is natisfied that the Zundrait mlilions of doliars now annuatly apent for forelgn razats mestic mannfactures stho can rajse their will be anil own rved ‘to do. the farmers, angar as remd- ily as they can any other agricnltural cammodity, The genilemen who liave been most prominent in ‘bringing Minncaota amhber snear-cane to the atten- tinn of the world are Measrs. Rerir il Kixxey, of Morristown, and ¢, F. Miuen. of Dandas, both of whom ara_largely encaged in the growing of cane, 'These gentleman have, a« they think, wisely con. cluded tomake s grand practical exhibition of their cane, and the process of converting 1t Into snear, at great Blate Fair in 81, Panl, Thrae gentle. men are now in 8t. U'aul, and were enaged yester- day at the fair-grounds in makingarrangements for thetr wonderful show, Toeir location ix estah. lsned, and hutldings and machinery will at onco ‘be put up to carry on one of the most Astonifhing feats that waa ever I|N!rn')nm‘fl fn publie. They will, in fact, eyery day during the State Falr, In the presonce’ of tenn of thonsands of spectators, nanufacture eugar direct from (As cane, every pracess being explained dnfing the operation, for the benedt of the farmers of Minnesota, for whose especial bonefit thin exhibition will he wiven, Messes, [K1sxry and MiLLkn have peactieally proved 1hiat a thougand paunds of Augar ean be ralsed to the acre of cane, and that the cana can almost 28 casily be cultivated as corn. The machinery for converting the cane Into sugur and_sirup i sfmple and incxpensive, while the articly produced is equal iy nof auperior in appearance and taste to any sugar produced in Loulsiana or Cuba, The fafmers of Minncaota’are therefore espocially i+ wited to witness the practical proof of the merits of the amber angar-cane, wulch will be fornished ot the Stato Falr at 8¢. Paal. T — FIAT MONEY, To the Editor nf The Tribune, Cincaso, Aug. 10, ~Much hns been foolishly safd and wrliten about fiat money; and. if you will allow a liitie epace in your paper, 1 will elocidate the snbject in a new light, or vossibly obscute It effectnally, as others havo done. Flat money I that which 1s made money by the flat, the iaw or the auprome power, of tho Stute or country in which It fa used: in other words, it ls Jastul money, and none other. if we should nse lorec-ratiroad tickets as a matter of convenlence In roakiog change, we did before the War, in Chicago, auch tickets would take the place’ of moncy practically, &nd anawer ita uses for the time “belng; but they could not property ho deemed lawful money, because there le no fiat pover or 1aw compelling any one_to receive them, n like manner wo might nee gold, silver, copper, and nickel, or greenbacks, 89 money, by common conscnt, and effect the ‘exchanges necessary in civilized soclety. We might welgh our gotd and other metals each time one prodact or article wos exchanged of purchased, or Invent now methods of doing businers; bnt the world acems to have dincarded such cride methods of trutfic, and to have adopted tho fiat peinciple of making lawful money, regulatiug 114 vaiug by the flat of tovern- ment. ' ‘'his fat uskea a certaln weight of metal, of aspeciled nama and fAnensss, o doliar or an "f , 0 cent or a nlckel, The power o infuse tho flat principle fnto nort matter, and give it vitality, In elcarly cxpresscd in these worids of the Constitution: **to coln maney, sud toguinte tho value thereof, and"of foselyn colne.* ‘Ihere fs no limit to this power to coln money and 8z §ts value, excopt the discration and good senss of Congress, \Wo may laugh at and ridicnle men who advance ‘vakuo and impracticable theorios of ** fiat money, " but the great truth atill moat be scknowledied: *‘Flat money,"* or money made by the supremo poter of aState, ia tho only safo mooey. Caurix s Worr. REMARKS. Mr. Dr WoLF, we regret to perceive, falls to cast any pew light on what s * tiat money s but has reallzed his fears, and *obscured it.”” Ho looks to the Constitution to find the **flat " power conferred on the Government, and, After quoting the language of the supreme law, wholly misunderstands and misinterprets its meaning. The Constitution confers on Con- gress the nuthonty “to coin money. and regu- 1ate the value thereof, and of foreign colns.” **’To coin” is a verb, and WepsTiR Jetines it: “To stamp sud convert Into money, as @ pice of vletal ; to mint.” The noun “coin' ts dellned by the same suthority, as applied to money, * A pleco of mefal on which certain characters sre stamped, making it (the metal) legally current as money.” All this refers exclusively to metal money; and, when the Coustitution twas tnade, the only metal money In the civilized world consisted of gold and silver. Copper was only used as token-currency, to make change In the fractions and transactions too emnll for gola or sflver money. ‘There wos no such monoy as fiat paper at the time our Constitution was framed, There was not a paper dollar In existence. Sucha thing was not koown, The Continental cusr< rency was the nearest approach to flat or legal- tender paper, and that had fgnominiously played out and become utterly worthless. 1f the Constitution recognizes ““tlat paper® as coin, then tho term “forcln colns ™ must mean fat paper of foreirn nations, and thero- foro Congress would have the right to regulate the volue of the (rredeemable paper colus of other countrivs; which, as a proposition, Is ri- diculous au its face, as Me, D WoLe must sce. The *foreign cuins” mentloned by the Conati- tution mean gold and allver, of course; and “to coln money™ Is a very different process from printiog paper. We print ou paper. We stamp metal, To coln money by the Government Is to take quantities of bullion, and melt It, aud run into molds a certaln welght of this gold or silver, and stamp certaln characters thercon, ‘That was tho Idea the framers of the Constitu- tion had when they used the expression, ““to <oin money.” Printing of reams of paper In parallelogram shape, with plctures and words nsserting *‘This Is onc dotlar,” or **ten," or **oneg hundred dol- lars," Is **tat* paper scrip. The Government may decreo that it shall pass as legal-tender nwoney; but it {s utterly impossibte for the Gov- ernment to attach any purchastug power to such o0 Irredecmable ploce of paper, It will only be worth what pcople will give for it; and, Iif much of it be issued, its purchasing power will be nothing. This, too, on thebypothesls that such arbitrary shinplasters could be forved on cltizens went of debts bosed ou valuable constderations; but there Is no hint of any such power conferred on Congress by the Constitution,, Mr. Da Worr fllugtrates his idea of “fat paper monoy by a horsu-car ticket; other flat- ts do the snme by means of a puitage-stamp, ut, singularly enough, the one overlooks the fact that the value of the car-ticket conalsts in 1ts redemption on dewand by a ride on the horsecar, 'This octual service coustitutes its redemotlan, - and makes it current, aud not wuy *“fiat” of the companles. The postage-stamp persous ulso fall to percelve, for sowme reason, that the stamp s redeemed by couvoylng the letter to its destivation, This service equals in value the mouev paid for the stamp, and the stamp s equivalent to the money, on the vnu side, and to the servico of carrying the letter, un the other. The postage- stup 13, therefore, a wholly different thing from a Y at’ ‘(Ikw of paper, promising no re- demption fn mdpey or servive on demahd, and possessing 1o utring whatever, ¢ or exchangeable value ——— Of the crowd that sssembled in Faneufl Hall, Boston, to welcome the Irish blatherskite, Knaunzy, the intelligent correspondent of the New York Tribune writes: No doubs {he weettng was 4 meeting of working- wen; but It was ot parcicularly uarked—why should it have becut—from sny crowa ala poli- ical meetine in mideummer. 1 was mixed up with 1t, 1hiad time to take a qood luok at 1t and It wae Just a crowd of workingmen, well fed, cowfurta- nlr clothed or comfuriably unclothed, In high aplrtte, without u' tanciola grierance, with the whule night belors them, and vound (o have & good time, 1 am no chicken, and in my day have weeu crowds of apgry men, Autl-slavery mobs, meelings broken up or triud to be broken up by Tsanant Ilyxpxus and his gang, Joix Brows west {nge, and the Irish nots in New York; and [ heve seen hungry, silent, desperate Pars inobs, snd awsrma_of Londou'snd Liverpool poar; und if ston hasn's any wore miscry and dowbtrodden poor and laburing people 10 show toan she o8 Into Faneuil Hall and tht square aboul 1t lsst night, Mr, DxNzie Exaunxy and Mr. Cuase sEuLIN whl navo their labor for thelr paing, Iu- side, what struck we in the crowd wss the entlre wall uf earnvainess. When 1 remembered otber crowds | had ween In that same hall, —cspecially wlien § romembored the worn, eazn 4 faces of the Freuch workinguwen and women, who would have worked themselves, and vcurned their spirits that cuuld bave beei wbeod (o suille at anythivg 1y those dark days of 1870, ~1 could uot feel wy heart wtiered by tuls sésciubly, that shuuted snd yelled hs applaug every Dieation of the word **hell," or ** or **villaw,” or **boud- ready With & horsas avored of fowdylsu. I ouked b v for soy fuce thul seeied 1o b touched with fevllag ue lympalnl{. 1 Jooked for elgus of poverty or sulering. L didn'tuea s man in the hall who would uot have feli lnauited if @ dollar bud beecn o L 1o charley, Lsaw no roukb, nor the Sn uof guy deslrd to make & disturoance. e ——— Tt s stated fn a Fond du Lac (Wis.) paper that the Hon. Cuanres A. Erbmivus, who repre- seoted that district dn Congress fur ten years, fs wililug to accept the Greeoback or Nattoval nomination this fall, snd try titles with Gon. Enwinp 8. Braca, the present member and prospective nonrinee of the Democratle party, The rumor 14 entitled to credenco for several eood and suflicient reasuns, among which may bementloned that a bitter personsl feud of long standing and violent character oxists between Braoa and ELDRIDGE, that was very much ag- gravated by Brioa’s efforts to defest Ei~ Driper's Congressional aspiratfons; and the Iatter now scos an excellent opportunity to gelze npon tho paper-money lunacy tolayBrAco out, it he cannot get back foto Uon- gress again himsell. ELDRiDGr has still & Inrgo following among the implacable Hourbons of Niia district, hoving been an ofd Copperhead a1l through tbe War, while Braga wasa Unlon soldicr; snd, if ELonipo® runs, tha result is quite likely to be disastrous to BRace's pros- pects. BRAGo voted for the Confederate FizLn for Doorkeeper, and that has et tho tecth of many Democeratfc Irishmen in his district on edge; and, altogether, it looks considerably #qually for little Braua. Braca's principal competitor in the regnlar Conyentiun o State- Benator Jor RANKIN, of Manitowoe County, the present Chatrman of the Domocratic State Cen- tral Committ: —— Our Milwaukes correspondent suggests the provability of Matr CarerxTER running for Congress In that district on the Oreenback ticket,—which would not be & bad {dea when it s considered that MATT s crazy to get back into Congress again; sud the other fact that the district {s hopelessly Democratic. MATT was always popular with the boys, and the present disorganized condition of the Democracy in that district offers an excellent opportunity for him to utilize that * personal magnotism" and fer- +id oratory that have long been Mr. CARPEN- 7ER'S principal stock in trade. If we are to Tose the brilllant services and influlte resources of Besaastin F, BurLzr from the halls of Congress, there 18 no man that we can pow think of who has the varled snd diversified ability to 11 his place as well #s Marr CanpextEr. [Ilis own uncertain political status fully corresponds with the unstable affairs In the Mliwaukes district, and 1t seoms as it there was a tide o MaTr's affairs which taken at {ta flood might lead ou to Wash- {ugton. - p Last Friday, Aug. 10, Mr. Jonx Brianr, the great Liberal member of the Engilsh Parliament, completed the twenty-Orst vear of his connec- tlon with Birmfogham as oue of (ts Representa. tives In Parllament. The event is to bacom- memorated {n » wnanper worthy of the town. Says the Birmingham Post : 1t may take placo toward 1he clos or the beginning of Octover, and it 1s proposcd that the proccedings shall occupy two On the firat there wilk be a public reception ", Butont, and a procession wliil then go through the main atreets of the town to lllnr ey Hall. Hero it 13 proposcd that addressca shall be prosented from Iinningham, and that representatives of Liberal organizations throughout the conntry ahail also Lava the opvortunity of presenting addresses. The programme for the secoud day includoa # meeting with the Committeo of the Six [fundred,and a 1ic dinner in the Town-1iall in the evening, It is Intended, further, that a statue of Mr. Brinur shall bo crected In some conspicuous place, and also that a vresontation shall be made to Mr. Briair himaolf--one that may remain in lus fam- 1ly as an beirloom for gencrations to come. e ——— ‘Tho New Orlcans Picayune gives as conclse & definition of the ‘*Natfonal’ party as we remember to have seen. They are espectally distinguished from all others, .esys the Plea- yune, by their ‘‘absolute-money” dogma. “'They advocate the witudrawal from circula- tlon of the notes of the National Banks. They want the entirc bonds of the Unltcd Btates called In and scttled tn greenbacks, They want f September . all Government dues paid in greenbacks, They want $1,000,000,000 in paper money printed and pald out to laborers on new and extenslve pub- lic natlonnl works, that shall give employment to armles of men now Idlo. It will be remem- bered that one of the witnesses beforo the Con- gresslonal Committes investigating the Jabor wuestion expressed his plan of having the Gov- ernment Issue $1,400,000,000 of greenbacks for publlc limprovoments in New York City alone.”* ——— The Idoas that MaTT CAnrENTER used to pro- mulgato upon finance seem to bo spreading. Onco upon & time Matr was asked what his views wera upon the currency question; sud he said that all he knew abput money was “to get a8 much of It us you cav, as quickly asyou can, aud spend [t a8 soon us you can,” A Mr, MEn- wiN was befors the Labor Committee the other day, and gave & similar specific for hard times, His }les was that every man should ba com- pelled by law to speud ail the money that mizht come Into his possesaion as soon as he recelved it. Mr. MERWIN was of the opinlon that this would prevent bosrdlng and make things lively, and it would certalnly provent the stagnation of trade tosome extent. e —— According to the opiulon of ex-Gov. Joux M. PALMER, the Democratic party **1s st prosent infected with heresics and nonsense,' which, he hopes, It will rid itself of In due process of time. Vain hope. Look haw it {s torn up uvon the flnancial question, for example, It s for hard money fn New York sod solt tmoney iniLouisl- ana; forane thing in Delaware and just the reverse {n Wiscanaln; for coln moncy {o Cone necticut and for flat money in Virgloia: lor some sort of InNation in 11linols, and fur nubody knouwe what o Ohlo and Icdlaon. —e—e————— Mr, 8xaLLEY writes {rom Ohlo to the New York Zribune that, as the National party Is or- gaulzed fn secret councils, It is Impossinle Yo estlmato correctly its cxact strength, He says that he sbould not be surprised if it cast 75,000 or 100,000 Yotes 1 Uhlo, “1t looks now as it we should have a qulct canvass, followed by a pretty (ult vote. Tha reeutt will unquestion- ably be determined by the cffect of the National movement in drawlng streogth frowm the old parties.” . ————————— Ex-Uov, PALuRH says ho oxpects the Repub- licau party will attewmpt o answer all criticisms upon its acts by “eppesliog to its record aur- ng the Civil War, Well, If it showlu adopt that Jine of defense, as weak as it would be, it would theu have au immeuse advautage over the purty that Mr, PALazir bs now consosting with, becatse the Democracy has no record to apoeal to except one of shame, disloyalty, aud open symputhy with Rebels {n arma. Unless anotber postponcmient takes place, Senator TUUBRMAN will open Lis part of the catpaign to-norrow afternoon, at Humilton, O, Exeept that it Is THURBMAN'S kcynote und bid for the Preaidentisl nomination of his party, the chiel intervst that the public attacles to bis verformanve will be his definition of the Ohlo widees ‘Fou Ewino bas siready told us what the “Idee” is, and now we walt to get Tuur- aAx"s defluition of it e — S ‘While Gov. HaxNDRicks s hard at work try- ing to explain the position of Dan Yoonuzxs on the currency question, some ot the colored. voters of Indizna would like to have him ex. platu bis own record un the repeal of the Fu- gitive-Slave law, agsinet the repeal of which b argued and voted. HENDRICKS bad & bad wud chronic attack of negrophobls fn tue early part of his publie career, and now he wuuld like to rub the record out. The New York Zime, in an article on the Congressional contest ln the Bouth, claims that the Sixth Distelet tu Musviand, the Sixth ta Misslasippl, the Tenth fu ‘Tencessee, the Bccond Arksusas, Nioth Kentucky, Second Florids, Fifth Texas, sud Fint West Virginia, can be carried Ly the Republicans. It thinks also that the Republicans can gaiu & member, each, in South Carvtica aod Alsbawa. e —— Dexxis Kearyer calls the meo who furnish ewvlosment to labor * vumplres,” who, he ssys, “‘must be syet luto hell, where they be- loug." The laborers will have a good tlme Budlug work when all the men who hire work- wen ars wiped out sua thelr property de- stroyed. ————— *Weworkingmen,” said Dexsis KEARNEY in his Lyuu (Mase.) speech, ¢ ara the only diwafticd aud respectable body of meu fu Callforuls, suy, With those of Masaachusctls, are the only g1 oifled budy of men In the Unlon. Let alt yop meetings be dignifled, let your mctlons e gy, tlemanly on all aceasions, make 10 deviation yy party, elther Republican thieves or Domcray,, fobbers, put them I o tight place, and, wiioy You get them there, squeeze them tight." 1),y report of tho speech continues: “1 sl o tinne my specch a little longer: 1t 18 too oy to break off. {At this point Keanwey toldy story which was too @ross, indecent, and pr,. fane for publication.]”” Thestory was undoyy, edly intended to fllustrato DrxN1A' {des of What constitutes “dignity."” “Buopose,” aays the Indlanapolis Jouryy “that the Communists aod Nationals succes] in so thoroughly alarming capital that capity), fsts will not engage In auy new enterprise, nop invest thelr funds, nor employ labor ot any price, would tha workingmen of the coantry 1, any botter off in that condition of things thy thoy are mow! Labor Is even more dependery on capital than capital {s on labor.”’ e —— Ex-Gov. PaLser thinks tho Repnblican pany sccomplished its mission 1n 1870, and ought ¢, have been disbanded ot that time. About thy timo Mr. PAtue did disband his part ot t, and went over Into the camp of the cnemy, where ho stiil abldes; bot somchow very fop of his ofd assoctates thoucht it worth while ty follow him; conseauently the Republican pargy has not yet disbanded. —— Gov. Paracn is persuaded that, though by party Is now ‘“‘apparcatly groping i the dayg withiout definite alm, It will at no distact 4y reach solfd ground.” Not, if it keeps on n thy way that It Is now going, Governof. The ouly way for It toresch *“sohd ground' {s to taky tho back track. Tt must retrace its steos, purze {tself of disloyalty, and bring forth fruits mee for repentance. P ———— it took HexpRICKS some time to exolain to the peaple of Indfana just *what Mr. Voop. JEES belleves? on the subject of the inance, HinNpricks also very kindly nominated Gen, HaARRIsON a8 the Republican candidate tor g United States Benate. But uobody hus yet feit called upon to define the position of Gen. Ilag. nwsos. He did that quite effectually himselt, ———— - Keynotes have been sounded so often and b come s0 numerous that thereis just now con. siderable music {n the air. e e——— ‘Thoe Ohfo sky {s already lurid with the refles tion of THURMAN'S old * bandanner.” When wiil DAN Voonnzes explaln the er. plapation of HeNDRICKS! WASHINGTON. Tirlstow Takes Iold of the Soutls Caroliny ‘Whisky Caso—Johnson, of Wroming-in Inhumane Prohibitlon by the Canadisa QGovernment. Bpecial Dispatch 10 The Tribune. ‘Wasminaton, D. C., Aug. 11.—The manage meat of the South Carolina case on tho part of the Unlted States, beforo Chlet Justice Walts and Judge Bond has been offered aud accented by Gen. Bristow. The Govarnment will alio &lve him such assistance as ho desfres, Itis the Intention of the Government to make this case & precedent in all questions arising on azcount of actions of the United States offieers In enfore ing the United Btates laws within the States, ‘The suthoritics of tho State of South Carolira are understood to be preparing for the best pre- sentation possible of the State-Rights view of these cases. It ls aléo expected on the psrt of the Uovernment that the various questions at issue covered by this case will come up from the Clrcuit Court to the Supreme Court for final hearing aud decision. E. P. Johunson, United Btates Attorney for ‘Wyoming, has made full answer to tho charges lately preferred againat him by Alfred Lee, the County Clerk In Wyoming, and Judge Kiog- mnan, of the Territortat Bench, He was charged with returning a fraudulent bill of expenses, s0d of making a genoral attack upon the Bench ol the Territory. ‘I'he charges Lsve been fully investigated by directiou of tho Attoruey-Giea. eral, aud Itis belleved that they have been found to be unsustained by the agent waking report for that office. In addition to the unswer of Mr. Johnson, ho 1s most thoroughly judorsed here by lawvers and citizens of the Inghest standing In the Territory, who write atter the close of thio Investigution made Into the charges sgainst Mr. Johnson ‘The Canndian authoritics have just forbidden United Htates Revenue-Marino steamera trom succoring Awmerican vessols i distress in Canse disn waters, ‘Tho action of the British Govern- ment In thls reapect has been called to the ate tention of the Sollcitor of the Treasury Depart- ment for the purposu of an examination of the laws, with o view to ascertalning whether the United States steamer violated any law or it commander cxceeded his authority in the premiises when he went to tho rescue of an American vessel in Canadlan waters, altnough fu tow by an Engilsh tug-bost which scemed ucapable of saving it from becoming & wreek, It B a ruly even In American waters, for revenue-maring steancrs not Lo nterfere with tuje-buats whea plloting American vessels. The cquestion now 18 a8 to how far this prohibition appiies to thow smcers when I Is apparent that, without their ®id, the yesse) must b lost. The Canadtan tug- boat owners or pifota are jealous of our marms eutters, knowing that their fces for pliotaize and for resculng o ship aro very much diminisned it the steaniers ot our Goverument interfere with what they clain to be their exclusive rizht snd 1lne of duty. An {nvestigation will be mado iuto the wuolu subject by the Treasury Departmnent A DEED OF DARING. Display of Commendabio Nerve at Colums bus, O. Bpeciat Dispaich to The Tridune, Corvmsus, 0., Aug. 11.—QOne of the most dariug feats of herolsm ever witnessed tn this wection was made by un attendant at the Insane Asylum lost evenlog. A young ludy patlent of slignt figure had fu some unaccountable munuer worked Lierself between the ivon bars, and,when dlscovered, was hungiug on thoe outsids of ths wiadow-sill, some fifty feet above the ground. ‘Fo rescue the unfortunate woman from the vute side by she use of ludders was the only hopt but there were nony at hand which woult rea ubove the second-story window, Charloy Mardiu the attendant referred to, stripped off his coat and vest aud ascended to the sccond story. By displaying the utmost nerve sud endurance be finally suceeeded fu sseuring o hold of tue wine dow frame above. With vue hand he izt the iron bars and with the uther grasped the 100 unfortunate fust as skio loat her hold of tho casing abuve, aud suceecded in seating her on the winduwsa{ll, At this crists the Tudy's reason reurned, aud she begired ber rescuer 10 save blwsell and Jet ber drop to the wround sumne 1ty feet below, Ropes wera passed 1 Mardin, who securcd thuim around tho lady's watst, when shie was lowered Lo thy groutds Mardin belng relleved rrou: bis perilous pusitivs in the suwe mannee, Those who witnessed ths beiole und successful effort ps requiring the utimost oerve RYMENEAL, Couxcit Hrurrs, Is., Aug. 11.—This morn- {vg, fu the parlors of the Ogden Housc, fo this clty, Mr, J. B. Youd, » partuer lu the Redpsth Lyceuin. Burcau, was married 1o 3iss sabel Mo Htone, of Bostan, Ly the Hev. H, W, Becchiehh asslsted by Judge Burke. It had been thouzbb by tle fricuds uf the partics that the marriaZd would take place thecoming full. Mr.Pondaccows panies Alr, Beecher in bis California lecturio: tour, and the trip througn that State prowsy su much beuctt to te impaired Lealth of Misd btonu that she consented at length to venturd from Boston to this city, whero Mr. and 3ré Beecher awaited her. The cutire party will leave for she Pacific coust to-day, it EAST, ST, LOUIS. S1. Lowis, Mo, Aug. 1L.—Tne injunction grauted by Judge Watts sgafust Mayor Bowe wau and the General Law Couccli of East St Louls was not scrved oo them until Jast even: iug, end vo activn bas beco taken by them yeis Everything s quivt there, and notblug wiil probably be done by the Bowmanbes uutil tiey receive sn opiuion by thelr lawyers Louchiogtho furce wnd effces of the kujuuction, which way by given to-worrow. Both "Counctla will meet to= mortow, when sowctbiuy tangivle wiil, ¥ doubt, develoy. notiuced fo vue 1L, und bravere

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