Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PSH ge aeeet yata= ots x : THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY. Che Sribune, TERMS OF BUNSCRIFTION, AY MAUCIN ADVANCE—POSTAGH PREPAID, Dally edition, ono yer Parte ot n year, per tn Daily and, fan Paesdar, Ph Monday, 3e ONG TeRt, ve and Sainrday, aday, nnd Kelday, par ye Sunday, 1G-paue vdilion, per year, soo WERKLY EDITION—POSTHAID. One copy, per year, ii aD Hess re ty-one capt eimon eaplar 9 Post-Onice and stata, Homlttanees may bo made either by draft, axpross, Post-OMice order, or in reglsturod lottor, wt one risks TO CITY SUBSCRIBE Dally, delivered, Sunday excaptent. 27 cents por weak. ally, delivered, Sunday Included, 80 conts per Wook, Address THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Cornor Madison Chlengo, 1. Entered at the Post-ostee ut Chtcagn, Hh, as Second= (lacs Matter, Yor the bonefit of aur patrans who sesira to sond hale copies of THE TRIMUXE throwzh tho mal, we give horowith tho transient rita Gf postnue: Foretcn anit Domeatice Per Cony, Eight and Twelve tao 33 cants, Sixteen Page Paper. cents. PICES, THh CMCAGO THINUNE line establishod branch oMices for the receipt of subscriptions und ndvortise- FADUEN, Mann GLASGOW, Ageney, dt Henflold-st. LONDON, Eng—Ameriean Excbango, 49 Strand, HENIY FL . WASHIN IF stroct, AMLSEMind 4's. “_Randaiph a feateats iseateas and, fn salir, Braagment ‘of, Tarrigan and! Atert “atultigan’s MeVicker’s Thentre. Madison atrnet. elween. Minta apd Dearborn. 1 Engageniont ofthe Vokes Family, "Welles of tho Kitchen” and “Cousin Joe.” Grand Gpern-Ttone, Clark street, orpost now CourteHoven. Engagar ment of the Acie Opera Company, “Ollvette.” Olympte ‘Khentec. Clark. street, bettoon Lake and Nandolph, “The ice." Sea ot I Academy of 3uele, Tintsted wreet, none Madison, West Side. Varlety entertainment. MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1881. —— ‘Tur arrival of two shiplonds of {ninl- grants in Baltimore within twenty-four howrs is reported in a dispatch from that city. ‘yho number arriving on the two steamers was about 3,000, and there are now elzht speciat Immigranttrains, embracing over fifty carluads, on the way to Chicago via the Bal- timore & Ohio Railroad, Mn, A. W. CaAmppect, of Wheeling, W. YVa., denies that he has ever had an intima: tlon trom Washington on the subject of his appolntment to the Berlin Miyslon, or that he haa disposed of his interest in the Wheel- Ing Intelligencer, of which he Is tho editor. This denial is put forth In view of certain statements to the contrary In the Washing- ton dispatches, Tne undoubted willingness of Conkling to form an alllance with the Democrats In or- der to secure his return to the United States Benate has given riso to n curlous state- inent, current in Washington, whlch may or may not be true in manner and form stated, but which, Ju the light of known facts and of’ the existing situation, Is not dificult of belief. It Is thattheConkling peoplotempted Tilden with the proffer of Pintt’s place as the price of Democratle support of Conkling, and that Tilden refused to cuter into the pro- posed bargatn, not only because ho did not want and would not neccopt a seat in tho United States Senate under any clroum- stances, but because he approves the position of President Garticld !n the present contro- yersy alike upon considerations of Inw and of choice. ‘Tire sermons and other local religious mat- ters chronfcled this morning include n-dls- course by Prof. Swing at theCentral Church, on “A Coming God”; the farewell sermon atthe Jefferson Park Presbyterian Church of the Rev. Dr, F. W. Patton, who leaves to accept a chulr in Princeton College; the core- mmony of laying on of hands at the Cathadral of SS. Peter and Paul, where two candidates for holy orders were ordaineit; the Interest ing Ohfldren’s-Day exercises at Grant Place Methodist Church; the efforts of the North Star Baptist congregation to sective # new building site; and an Interesting letter from the Rev. H. W. Thomas, giving gratifying agauranco of his speedy restoration to health, ONcE more on American horse has capt ured one of tho leading turf trophies In Eu- rope, Mr. James &. Keone’s Foxtial! laying yesterday won the Grand Prize of Paris, otherwise known as the French Derby. ‘Thus In the two grentest foreign contests,— the English Derby and the French Grand Prize,~in both of which were entered tho cream of the Europenn thoroughbreds, . American horses have carried off the honors and the mony, What Irequols won for his owner at Epsom, added te the snug sum se- cured by Foxhall ‘at Longehamps, would make o good round fortune for almost any- body, to say nothing of the honor and glory of beating all Europe in tho two groat ruces, It begins to look ag lf the balance of horse- fesh were about to bo located on our sila of the water. Gen, Grant, being In Chicago yesterday, politely granted an titerview toa THinuNe reporter, and the conversation Is given in wne other columu. ‘The General, after glying some interesting fuets concerning the Mexican railway projects with which he ts 80 prominently Identified, “dropped into politics,” and proceeded to deliver his opinion regarding tho resignation of thd New York Senators, Upon this subject he spoke very freely. Moe fs an ardent sympathizer with Mr, Conkling, aus: talning that gentleman's course in every partlonlar, aul with eqtal hearthness condemning tho action af President Garteld In having dared: to nominate Itobertson ugalnst the wishes of Conkling, Gon, Grant will doubticss bo astonished to learn how sinall & proportion of the Republican party, eyen of those who favored his own nomlnie tlon to tho Prestdoney by the Chicago Con- vention, are In accord with him upon this question of sustalning a mun who declared, war on a Itepubllean Admbulstration and abandoned the Republican party, leaving the Democrats in a majority in the United States Senate, for no higher or better reason than that of a failure to dictate to the President concerning an appointment vested by the Constitution solely In tho President, ' THERE Is 8 scheue before tho Corneil, sald 40 be Indursed by the Mayor, to aend a Com mittee of that body on a junkeliny tour to Europe at the expense of the taxpayers, on the pretext of exniniuing the yerlous kinds of street-paving In use In the elties of that Continent, All but such of the Aldermen ag ure grossly and ridiculously fenorant know already what kind of muterials are thére ous ployed for street-paying. Nearly half the Aldermen were born in lreland and Ger- many, and, Jt may be presumed, have per- sunal knowledge of the matter and ean entighten the ignorant natlyes who have not yet crossed the sea, ‘Phe Mayor has rambled over Enrope sever! thnes, and has seen all the Kluds of streot-paving In use over there, ond can post the knownothing Aldermen on tho “subject, thereby saving both thelr precious thine and pockets of the taspayers. The Mayor and tie forelgn-born Alder- nten, frota thelr ample stores of personal Knowledge, can lel the others dint grant block and colbtestane are used quite geners ally in European efties, and that they are as nolsy mut disagreeable for travel as the same materials when employed for paving pur- -puses in Amertenn cities, ‘They ean also tell the knownuthlng Aldermen that gravel and ineadam nve extensively employed, and that both answer onty fnitiiferently well; that Doth become muddy tn web aud dusty tn dry weather, and reqitire constaut repalring, Just a in Chicnge, in proportion to the use, They. can, furthermore, tell Ignoramus Aldermen that the baulevards of Parls ure paved with slippery asphulttan, as are the prinelyal streetsof Washington, aud wears there about tho same as trourCapital. ‘The other streets of Parts are paved with hard stone blocks and cobblestones, and are as nolsy and unpleas- antus the streets of Now York, Boston, and Cinelnnatl, The Mayor ean inform the Al- dermen who are thirsting for forelgn-pave- inent. Information at the cost of the taxpny- ers that considerable Norway pine’ black pavement can be found i London, where tt is used on account of being noi and smooth, and preventing racket and rumble of voliicles, and that property-owners prefer renewing It every few years rather that en- dure the annoyance and nulsince of nolsy granit or cobblestone pavements, "The Mayor can inform the Aldermen that In those parts of Europe where the whiters ure mild and tho frosts not severe they will find coustlerable smooth and stippery ns- phaltum pavement, as, for example, In some of the large French, Spanish; Italian, and South German elties; but that In climates relatively ns severe a3 Chicago or Boston It has proven a failure, as will be the case If Introduced here; and, finally, that the pave- ment problem fs no more solved in the cities of Europe than in the elties of America, After his Honor has imparted the fore- xolng information to the ignorant Aldermen, they will know ns ninch gbout European pavements ns they will after a three months’ junketing trip abroad at public expense, and perhaps more. ‘There ts no serviceable In- formation to be had in Europe in regard to street-paving material that ennnot be got by visiting American cities, An examination of tha street pavements In New York, Bos- ton, Phitadelbla, Waslington, Baltimore, Pittsburg, Detroit, Cincinnati, and St. Louis furnishes all the useful or adaptable hints and idens that can be applied in Chicago as fully as ean be obtained In alt Europe or the rest of the world, and, indeed, in better shap for adoption here. 1f the Mayor is honestly Inclined towards the elty's Interest, he will “sit down” on this junketing scheme of pil- ferlng Aldermen to enjoy a European plens- ure tour nt the expense of the taxpayers under tha thin aud impudent guise of seek- PROPOSED ALLIANCE OF BUCKS AND BOURB! NB. The friends of Mr. Conkling linve for a long tine coquetted with the [dea of n Bour- bon alliance. Thoy perceive clearly that success for them within the lines of the Re- publican party is an Impossibility, and they aro so bent upon suececding that they catch desperately at the only chance which remains to them of obtaining tho reinforcements they need, They have at various times spoken of Mr, Conkling ng the possible leader of a new party, Ho has been introtuced to the public in an entirely novel character,—as an “ antl- monopolist’; and It has been pretended that he possessed in an eminent degree those qualities of head and heart which would en- ble him to succeed In polities Independently of all partles. But It Is quite evident that these utterances are not sincere, nor intended tobetaken seriously, Nobody understands better than the supporters of Mr, Conkling that a party and n machine nre neces- sities of his political oxistenee, He could no more prolong his public earecr without putronage than he could his physical life without breath. ‘The talk of his re@lection as an Indevendent Js, there- fore, tha sliverest folly. If it has any purpose atall, its objectis to feel the pubffe pulse, and prepare the way If possible fora much Jonger aud more desperate eap, ‘The New York Heratd, which maintains the most intimate and coniidentinl relations with Mr. Conkling, has within s few days ad- vised him boldly to go over to the Democratic party, The sincerity of this advice and the wisdom of it ara unquestionable. ‘Lhe logic which dictated It 1s withonta flaw, Given the premises furnished by Mr. Conkling and As friends, nnd the conclusion arrived at by the Herald is Inoyltable, If It 18 Mr. Conk- ling’s purpose to “make war on the Repub- ean Administration,” or to prolong tho deadlock In tho Legislature and throw the election o f Senators over into noxt winter, or to contribute to the defeat of the party im Now York as a means of punishing the Presi- dent, he Is already o Democrat in intention and in heart. A politielan who has adopted auch n program has no hustness In tha Republican party. Cone mon honesty and candor require that he should join his fortunes openly with tho party to which he propyses to alve his sym pathy and ald, ‘Lo remaln in the Republican party and covertly asalst the Democrats would require a degree of treachery and baseness of which wo are unwilling to be- Nove that even Mr, Conkling could be ca- pable. The path for My. Conkling, if ho persists In his present course, is so open and plain that {it cannot be mistaken; and any further of- fort to polnt itont would be quite auperilu- ous, But tho fact that ho and his recognized organ have such 0 stop under serious constd- eration at once susgests an inquiry as to the probable effects of It upon the inunediate situation in the New York Logislature, It Mr, Conkling should obtaln nn election by menns of a coalition of his Bucks and the Bourbons, and should, ns tho price of such a burgaln, taka back with him to the Senate n Democratic colleague, he would, {pao facto, becomen Democrat, Such asulution of the problem low to deserttotho enemy most gracefully may well scom te hha and his followers. simple and alluring, But thoro is reason to bellove that. in practice tt would not bo so ensy of accomplishiuent. ‘Yhe condition of a coalition must bea suf. felunt inducement to both parties to it, ‘Pho Bourbons in the Legislature would doubtless: hott this condition to be fulilled If. one of tho vacant Senatorships were alloted to them, But what reward has Mr, Conkling or any one acting for hin to offer his Bucks fora betrayal of the purty which lus honored hha and them allko? Thore aru fifty-four Bourbons jn the Legis- Inture and thirty-three ucks, Elghty-one votes are required for an elaction. ‘To uke acontition efectlve, therefore, It would be necessary to ebtaln the assent ta lt of twenty- seven Bueks, or all but alx of the entire nuim- ber, It Is incredible that there stiould be thisnumberof epublicans in the Legislature who would deliberately betray thelr party and sucrifice their pulltical prospects to pro- note the fortunes of any man, however reck- Jexs or unserupulous he might be. There might be some ¢elut for Mr, Conkling in olny over to the Democrats, especially if he should be pald his price in advance, but there would be none for the silly dupes and sycophants that should follow hin. No offices would yawn for them. ‘Tha door of party-preferment for them would not stand open, ‘They would fiat in the Democratic party more and hanarier oflee- atekers and tess means of appensing thetr Ingntiable appetites than in the Republican party. ‘Thelr one act ot perfidy would end thelr experience of public Ife abruptly and forover, Neither Mr. Conkling nor any of Is friends has anything to offer them which could compensate them for so complete and ruinous nacrifter. We co not, therefore, apprehend that the proposed coalition of Bueks and Bourbons will be effected, Mr, Conkling inay bow aut- ficloutly to the logiv of events to turn Demo- erat himself, but he will be able to take with him tnto the enetiy's camp very little politieal hngenge of any kind, and hardly a handful of camp-followers and budy-servants all told. ———— CRAZY SPECULATION IN ENGLAND. In another column will be found an article from the Pall Mall Guzette, entitled ‘The Conilng Crash on the Stock Exeliange,” which shows that the condition of the money market In London fs precisely the sane as in this country, Speculation has run wild. “Phe bonds of bankrupt States and ratlways, shares in negieeted or unworkable mics, stocks of fron or eoal companies, all and everything that seemed low in price has heen driven tp, and forthe most part has remalned up. Stocks that pay no dividends at all, and that.anay never pny any, often stend Migher in price to-day than others did n few yonrs ago which yielded some dividends? The Gazette repents almost in tention! tanguage the warnings which ‘Tie ‘Thmpuxe and other Amerlean newspapers hove beet giving for weeks past. A renetion aud erash must come, and. that vory soon, The situation !s so unwhole- some, so ovorstrained, that any accident may enuse it to snap, and, IE no aceldent should occur, the market must Inevitably brenk down of Its own welght {n np few months. ‘These views of the Guzette are already fo- millar to the publle as an expression of tho condition of the American money market; but they are valuable as showlng that Infla- tlon ts not confined to this country. It fs, fu fact, world-wide, embracing not only the United States and England, but France as well, where the people recently. went mad In thelr race for the very “faney” Vanna Canal shares; and Germany, where specu- Intion has of late become rife, though Inn less degree possibly than in the other coun- tries mentioned, When the crash does come, therefore, it will not be confined within nar- row limits. . Whethor it stafts in England or tha United States, It will inevitably extend to both countries, and eventually also to the Continent of Europe. Tho oxplanation given by the Gazette of the enuses of Inflation in England is ‘bad trade and cheap money.” ‘There not being use in fegitimate enterprises for nit the money in England, much of it has found its way Intothe banks, ‘The accumulatious of deposits have made the market easy, and any kind of security has been taken for loans. ‘The banks, It will be observed, are, or be- eve they are, under the necessity of declar- ing dividends; hence they contribute Nborally to the inflation by letting their loan- ble funds go out on easy terms to speculat- ors, ‘The only encouraging feature of the situntion in England, as in this country, ts that legitlnate mercantile credits do not seem to be unduly extended. Heneo the erash, when it does come, will cause no paralysis of trade; and the suffering will be chiefly confined to the stock-gamblers and those who have trusted thelr revresentatives, RETALIATORY PROTECTION, Under tho pressure of the agricultural pro- ducers in Germany and France the Govern- ments of those nations were {induced to Im- pose a duty, or an Incrensed duty, on bread- stuffs and meats, ns a sort of protection to the domestic furmers, But this protection could not be afforded to one class without provoking compensating demands fromother elasses. ‘The manufacturers insisted that a5 ‘an offset to the protective tax on food there should be an inerense of the duties on manu- factures, that the labor which was oppressed by the tax on food might also be protected, Once begun, tha demands of the protective policy are Insatlable. The German tariif has been revived several times with a view of alfording more equitable protection, but In Franco partinl protection has developed Into the adoption of an almost radical protective tarlit. In the meantime o commercial treaty bo tween France ant England ts drawing near tolts expiration, [t terminates in Novem- Der, and the new French tarlif will thon be- come applicable to the trade with England. ‘The people and Government of England have become much excited, and the. press and Ministry of Great Britain have been labor- ing with the French Government on the rub- ject, denouncing what they style the folly of the French, and at the same time. appealing for anew treaty. ‘She French Government, however, seems to be determined to retulinte by tho adoption of 1 taritf that will be largely prohibitory. The now Fronch tarlit aban- dons the ad valorem duties, and adopts ape- clfle duties, imposing rates by weight, ineasure, and count, and taking no notice of valuca, A comparison of the new rates with the old is dificult, but the Manchester Chamber of Commerce has made the ate tempt, and announces that In two cases tho Increase is 25 per cont; In three, 60 per cent; In nine it ranges froin wy in~ crouse of 55 por cont to 0 per cents 1 two cusce itis 10 per cont; and in five cases from 10 to wld por cent. In short, tho tarif ia, 6o fare thla Uranch of business fs converned, meraly prohibitory. Oust of this disruption of the partial reci- procity which lins hithorto existed in the trade between the two countries ‘there has sprung up in England an agitation in favor of the abandonment of frov-trade and the, adyption of the protective aystem. ‘This fuc- tlon proposes that Kugland revengo her wrongs on Franco by finposing Iigh rates of duties on all French goods. In fact the proposition is that, instead of encouraging ad promoting the most Hberal exchange of commodities, seach nation . shall: abandon foreign trade, and contine Sits productions fo. the capnolty of an exclusively home market, ‘ho coal-miner shall ox change his conl for high-priced pork, the nianufacturer shall double the price of his cotton, woulen, and leather goods, and ex-_ chongp them for double-priced wheat and corn, In short, that, doubling up the prices of all we produce, wo shall, produce only what fs needed for home consumption, and convert our domostis commerce into a mero barter, In tho meantime we must suspend tho fabor which produces the. $80,000,000 of surplus products witch we now annually ox: port, Other nations are te do the same, Evory country will go protect Itself agalust the lmportations from. othor countries that protection as a principle will accomplish its natural result, the suspension of all Inter- national trade, and the Chinose system will become pniversal, Tho London Pall Mall Gazette warns the Freuch people against the detusion that they fro always sure of a free market In England; and agalnet supposing that, while they can keep British goods out of France, French goods may always be adinitted to the British murket, Itsnggests that a tax of 25 per cent on French silks would deal the French a blow trom which the imunufacturers would JUNE 13, 188%. never recover, French wines and French xloves ant fancy goods, the samo paper in- sists, might be so taxed that It would soon be seen that no country could bo ao ensily erly. pled by retallntory tariff legislation as France, In alt this the United States have nn.tin- mense Interest. We, It is true, have but a slight Interest In the forcian protection to quanufaetures, ‘This country, with all tho factlittes of being tho great manufacturing Nation of the world, practlenlly abandoned that business; Indeed, voluntarily prohibited any export of manufactures from the United States, ‘ But we have other interests. We produce food upon whieh other nations are largely dependent. Choy may tax the cotton, the brendstuits, and the provisions, and thd pee troleum, and atbenke, and the cotton-secd- ollve-oll, which they receive of us, but can thoy do without them? Nations mny do without thany things, but enn they give up bread? ‘Chey now buy wheat and florr for bread, and thoy are buylng our Indian corn with which to maintain thofr cattle; they are buying our beef, pork, and mutton, allye and preserved, and our lard, and butter, and cheese; they are dependent on this country for their cotton, and largely for oll for {tw ininating purposes, Can protection of texite and other manufactures supply the defi- eleneics now become permanent In the sup- nly of these articles of food? ‘They may, by dutte3 on Amortean breadstuifs and provis- jonis, Increase the price of home-produced bread and ment, but that wlll not Increase the supply, nor place them within reach of the hungry consiinet. Protection will not make one lonf supply the necessity for three: nor will it incrense the food suficlent for one person to asuftciency for three, Retalintory tegisiatlon of a protective ehnractor, while having the general tendency to destroy international trade, will rffect this country loss, perhaps, than any other, -It cannot, however, be permanent, It will have Its run, and will, In Its own time, expose the supreme fallacy of the whole system, and lend to its generat abandonment and the uni- versal restoration of commercial Intercourse upon the freest and most reciprocal basis. In the meantime the “ Retalintors” and Tro- tectionists will have their day of expertment and thelr day of failure, and on the ruin of the whole system of protection will bo estab- lished'n world-wide trafle and exchange of the protuctions of all the peoples of all quar- ters of the globe. A NECESSARY STATE REFORM. Tho idea of conferring upon the Chief Ex- ecullye of a locnl Goyerninent the privilege of vetoing Individual items ina general ap- proprintion bill, without thereby invalldat- ing tho bill asa whole, orlginated in Chica- wo. It was first Incorporated In what Is known here as tho ‘ Mayor’s bill,” whieh was passed by the Tilinols Legislature sliort- ly after tho fire of 1871, aud gave the Mayor of Chicago tho right to single out appropria- tious for disapproval, The plan operated so well In lopping off extravagantand useless ex- penditures which would othorwlye linve been unavoidable that it attracted attention else- where, and was subsequently xpplied to the State Government of New York {nu the latest revision of the Constitution, ‘The people of New York have since had abundant rerson to congratulate thomselyes upon this pro- vision, and Goy, Cornell has this year been able to cut out appropriations from the Gen- eral Supply bill nnd save In the aggregate avout $104,000 which had been put into the bill by the usual process of log-rolling, and which, under the old Constitution, he would have been constrained to approve or allow the whole bill to fail, ‘The advantage to the people of such x pro- vision Is obylous, It places upon the Execu- tive the final responsibility for the expendi-- ture of public money, instead of dividing it among 10 men who can shift the blame from one to the other, So long as it ls necessary to veto general appropriation bi asa whole, in order to avold improvident ard un- necessary items which It contains, there is a standing excuse for the Governor for ap- proving In his offical cnpacity what he knows he ought to condemn. But if he has tho right to prune the bill of Its objectionable parts, he Is aware that he 1s personally re- aponsible to the people when he permits them to remain, Hence this excoutive privilege not only makes his Ine of duty clear but also identifies his own political Interests with an economical policy, Itisa great pity that this useful princtple, originuting as it didin IMnols, has not yet been applied to our State Government. Had Gov. Cullom possessed thesame discretion ns to appropriations which Gov. Cornell was able to exercise in New York, he could have sayed the people of this State even more money than Gov, Cornell has saved his peo- ple. ‘The inclination at the late session of the Ilinols Legisinture was to extravagance, and there was no effective check upon it, It would have been futile, perliaps, to, urea upon tho Legislature to submit to the peopio a constitutional amendment conferring upon the Governor the power of discriminating yeto, because there were several profects for amendments urged at the Inte session, wherens the Constitution provides that “the General Assembly shall have no power to propose amendments to more than one artl ele of the Constitution at tho same session.” ‘The frlunds of each proposition, desiring to seoure to it tho right of submission, folned tha friends of the other propositions In vot-, itig against any ono scheme that caino up, The result was that no amendment was sub- anitted, and If one In regard to the yeto power had been urged it would probably have shared tho general failure, There should be'n general effort, however, to sveuro the submission of. stich an amend nent as ts deafred at the called session of tha Legislature, which will probably bo necessary next winter to puss the new Ap- portlonment bill, ‘he Governor could prob- ably assure consideration of tho subject by incorporating It in hls message convening the extra session. But, even if he shall neg: léct to do tla, the Loglsisture may still agree In extra session upon an amendment to bosubinitted to the peoples, because such nu act ts not legislation, Tho orgaulzation of public sentluent in favor of tho project will be necessary, howevor, as it will pretty surely oncounter selfish opposition fram the Jubbors and traders In and about the Leglali- ture; and from that numerous class which subsista upon public moneys. ‘The hydra headed inonster known as “Btate Charity” will make war upon the project, for one of the earliest and most benolicent results of enabling the Governor to veto Koparate items would ba the excision of supuriluous gratis ities to the numerous State Inutitutlons, ‘This and all other opposition night be overcome, however, by the assertion of public oplulon, and the extra seasion will ba favorable to the attempt, bocanso tho present Legislature has passed all the appropriations it can make, and may be willing tag ite successors shull be kept within the Iults of the public need, ‘Tho newspapers of the State ought to (ako Up tila subject and ,convince Senators and Representatives I tho varlous districts that they may establish a good clalm on the grat! tudo of thelr constitiients by uraing the sub-, nisaion of n consiftutional amendment whieh ahuil provide the desired reform. ——_—— Fitank WINKLER, coal-uiiner, of Canal Ful- tou, Btark County, O., layow revolving Iu bis mind the announcement that he has fallen heir to one rixth of nn estate ot $45,000,000 which a stray Drother neeuminted at the Capo of Goo Hops M1 tho ditmond business. The Winkler family originated [n Prassin, where four of the brothers mnt ulstera now tye, and whither tho tongenbe kent Cresiua owas returning when death anatener hinttintinely in bondon. It ts aald that tho facts hnye heen advertised in the Huglist: and Gorman newspapers, and that the cout miner's (marvettous windfall is not lkely to turn ta nnthing but onshes in his inp. [t fs tolerably safe to preeiet, however, that the $15,000,000 will dwindlo by a tmillion or two whon ft fs romembored thut elnco the first South Afrtean diamond was recogulzed In 1807, the totnl yitluv of all tho diamonds collected in that region ts considerably loss thin twleo tho fortune which Is now reported to -be nwaitlng: distribution among the brothers and sisters of the Inte Inmented Winkler. It is 9 strain evedullty to bellove that this Winkler ynnked outhalfof all tho dinmends when 10,000 men wero ongimed in tho business for thirteen years. If throe noughts were dropped from the figures tho rematnder would be nbout tho amount of the fortuno. Tne London Standard, conservative though it be, docs not approve of Lon galls- bury’s renetionary speech to the merchant tal- lors on the Irish land question. The newspaper snyat itis nota httle Anibeks, that tho lendor of the Opposition tn tha Uppor House should have se- feuted for his frreconeltnbte pag tho very ovening, and almost the very hour, when the Tlouse of Commons was deciding by two to ono in the opposit sense, In tho face of facts lke theso, it is rather the part of “irresponsible fel> vollty” than of strtestminship to tuk of the Trish Jand question nsif It wero a fantastic chimera or w predatory craze. Tho attonpt to reduce Trlah eatth-hunger ty an absurdity by compurligyg it with golil and silver hunger i tho clty, or places hunger in politicians, is more disingenuous playing with words, ‘There wus no reason why Lord Salisbury showtd have tentionad tho Land Di utall There wero muny reasons. why ho should not. lint that on. tha very night of wo division in the House of Commons ho should have dismissed tho whole sublect na a mero ebullition of Communisin—too conteniptible and tow fldiculous ta be seriously discugsed—is much to be regrett em ne Tue genlus of the Inte Lord Beaconsfield would havo been hard pressed to find encour- agement in the present state of the finances of Turkey and Cypris, Warllke preparations in the Sultan's Emptre havo caused su grent ote Jny's that the now buudgot shows o deficit of £14,000,00, In anticipation of this, taxes, which oven for Turkey were extraurdinarily heavy, have beentmposed, but the rovenuo for war was not suticiont to mect the exponditures. Cortain finanolul schemes subinitted to the Porto have, It Is said, been approved, and English det- egates have been invited ty Constantinople, In the afaira of Cyprus thore fs also a deficit, and England, for the so-called prize she acautred In the convention with Turkeys, is called tinon to pay for its mainteunnce the sum. of £40,000 per year. English Liverats point to these facts with party satisfaction, One of thom, nau tax= payer, regrets to henr of the Cyprus business, we “As o lovor of justice," he says, “1 ro- joice. a Ayona the other duties of naval oficers enumerated by Secretary uot at Anuupolls Friday was this one: It will be your office to protect In foreign countries our own commerce und all who muy uratefully thank God thoy are American citi+ Z0u8, ‘Tho duty of protecting American commercoin foreign countries ts not so ensy as Sceretary Hunt sceins to imagine, It reminds ono of the famous reolpe tur cooking n hare: “ First catch your bare,” ote. Firat find your commerce, O noble olticors, As for tho American cltizons “who gratefully thank God for beiay so,” they seein to be woll provided for. But what ts to be done for tho irreverent citizens who don’t “ gratefully thank God” elther for being Amor- tcan citizens or anything else? On the wholo, wo wish that Secretory ITuat had been tess ene ibuslastic. —— Tne American mind-render, Mr. Irving Bishop, hus talrly cnptured the British public, Some of bis failures are sald to be quite as re- markablo ay bis successes. One of tho yentle- ™men on the platform ata recent entertalnment thought of a word which Mr, Mlshop endeavored to pick out from an alfabet of tetters ranyed in front of him. Ho chose the firat letter, * A.” ‘That was correet, and bidding the chooser of tho work to think steadily of the second totter he pieked out nuother A." “ Think of the second letter, not of the first; T baye that,” Str, Bishop auld. Again he tried, and ngala’ ho setected “A.” The Inference that the other party to the experiment was continulng to think of the firat letter was strong, and eventually, being Sinable to tind anythlug but * A,” Sir. Bishop abandoned the test. The word, however, was" Anron," a Mn. Guapstone hinted strongly Ina re- cont speech ata reform of tho methods of pro- vedure In the House of Commons, Ho declined to plodgo himacté to any deflnit program a year Nhend, and tho subject cannot possibly be con- siterea until next winter, but ft Is generally ud- mitted that some rovision of the rules has be- enme imperative, The flow of eloquence in the Honso of Commons 18 altogethor In excvss of the demands of the public service, The most trivinl question cannot bo disposed of wituoutan exneperating nimount of talk. Tho obviona remedy {3 the .cl0ture, or provious question, which all admit Is the Inevitable outcome of the disettsyion on the amendments of tho rules whonover It doca take place, ———— Sratistics of pauporism in England for the year which closed in January last furnish w stelking exampic of the poverty which exists at tho alde of cotussn} fortunes and matorial sucial and political progrosa, The numberof paupors on tho Ist of January wns 600,518, of whom 15,- x80 were Indvors panpera, and 014,20) outdoor, with oxnetly and only 177 of the total numbor clusgod ag *reliuved." Reckoning tho total pop ‘ulation at 22,700,000, which are the ngures wiven in the census of 1871, the proportion stands ono puiper to evory twenty-olght persons, Some improvement, however, was mide over tho provious year—a reduction of paupars number ing 4,618, wha wero cuniined wholly to the out+ door class, ——[——___—. Tur Pittsburg Dispateh is authority for the statemont that ut least twenty furnneos in the Lohigh and Schuylktll Valleys alono, which wore in uctlva operation a fortnight ngo, will have gone out, of blast within a few days, and that tho condition of tho fron trade {a such ua to Warrant grave apprehensions, The oxtraonil- Hury revival of this industry tn tho fall of 1870, says tho Dispatch, stimulated production to the polut of excess, and at tho sume tine speoulat- ors ordorod large shipnionts frou England. Tho combined product thus plicod upon the homo tnrket groatly exceeded the domand, and tho result bas been a serious lose upon tho English Smpourtations, amounting In a single transaction to 8280,000, , Mn, Jonn Bunnovaus announces, through Foreat and Stream, that bts experiment iu intros duoing tho Enylleh skylack in this country bas proved # fallure, Sr, Burroughs imported seven. of these birds in April; two of thom dled, and the othor five, which wore iiberated, huve dis- Appeared, and it ls probablo that thoy havo also died or buen killed. Mr, Burroughs thinks that tho sizo of the country and tho cllmato are un- favorable to the Introduction of tho skylark, bub guggests that Ifa number of tho birds wero Iib- erpted on wn faland of tho coast thoy might maultiply and oventually spread to tho mdintand. —— ‘Turnenre at present Inthe Old Work! ant in tho Now World mora than 100,000 rallway-to- comoatiyes. Tholy totul force ts equal to W0,000,+ 00U-boree power, and all the other steaiu-engines on the globo ure cstimuted at 40,000,000-horso power, Tke technical * horse power,” however, fe really equal to three ayeraye horses, and cach. horse to about scvon mien; the aygroyate powor, thoretore, of all the cngines being vastly moro than the effective force of all tho human work- era living. Four-ti{ths of the stcam-cngincs now utwork bave buou made within a quacter of a century or 80, ——— Exasination of witness before the Mayor of Now York in sequrd wo charges of neglect Ayuinet the Polloo Commisslonera in cleaning the atreotar Mr, Iliaa-What {9 your vocation? “Witness (pompously)—[ aim a collector, Mr, Hilza—A collector of whut? tt aoe (urandly}—1 am a collector for the Mr. Bitee--Dut what do you collect? Witness (fullen from bia high statc)—Well, then, ashes. (Laughter.) A sere Interesting to newspaper “publish: era has just beon decided by the geueral term of the New York Court of Common Pleas. Some mouths ago a mun bumed McCabe rocovercd £200 damuyes aguluat George Joues, Seoretary and Treasurcr of tho Association which pub- Mshen tho New York Times, and also owner of a majority of thy stock, Thonlieged offense was bel, This decision was reversed at the general turm, 4 majority of tho Justlecs holding that Mr. Jones’ position did not necesearily give bint muthority to supervige Ue printed mutter tn tho: piper. ‘The Company should hive been sod. Audyo Van IHoesen dlasented, holding that the defendant should have proved that hla supervis~ fon was of a kind that dhl not render him Hable. ‘The mnjority of tho Reneh,as has beon sown, thought that tho burden of proof on this polat rested on the proscoution, —————————— Ges, Simusan sald to tha West Point cadets: “Thore are no aristocrats here." Noy ‘but there ire mnuny whowould Uke to be thought eo. As a real genuine Atertean “aristocrat” nobody can equal n boy who his been picked ont. of tha streets, sent to West Polnt by his Cone gression, citucnted, fed, and clothed at the ox- pense of the Government, and made a gentlo- mun of by the yrace of clreumstances, The army Is full of thom. a D.P. ‘fonn, of the Nautieal Almanac of- fico nt Washington, lins Just complated the com- purison of individual mensurcs of tho Amer- Jean photographs taken of tho Inat transit of ‘Venus, Tho reauit {9 {2,028,000 miles for the menn distance of the earth from the sun, tnk- ing as the buse Clark’a value of tho curth's equatorini radius. The valno of. tho puralinx eurresponiding thorete 18 8.883 seconds, plus or minus 0.034 seconda, ———— A arttovus difference has arisen between Count Corti, tho Italian Ambagsndur at Constati- tinople, and the Porte, aristug out uf the disap. pearance of n young Tullan lady, who Is satd to have entered a Turkish barem, and gone over to Islam. Count Corti has fmporntively demanded her surrender, and ting, tt (a stated, declared that If the Porto persists In ts refusal to order that sho ehnll be restored ho will break off all pergonn! Intercourse with Asalm Pasha. ——— ‘Ts Neapolitan bootblacks that now reign Inthe streets of Philadelphia are looked upon na nuisances by the Quaker cltizeus., They col- fect in eginds about daybreak under the wine dows of tha slimbering Quakers, and gamble for hours in ponny-pltching. whlle indulging in. other reminisceuces of sunny Italy. ‘This pra eludes allidea of sleep or peace for tha house- holders, ———— Tim follwing from Uppor Silesia three months ago throws light upon the enorinons are rivals at Castle Garden: “No grain, ho potatoes, no food for erttic, no seed for sowing. Snow and cold without, hunger and sickness withly,” Soup-houses and public kitchens have beon started fn seventeen villages, a Des Motnes has a- praying band of women who hold services every Sunday in tho Jail, A member beenme tnfatunted with » handsome young horse-thicf, and planned to help him es- capo by disguising him in woman's clothes as une of the band. Butabe failed. , a St. Lovts papers say that Mr. Peter Cooper sent tho Greenback Nutional Committes, at the Ume of thelr mecting in that city, a plan of organizntion and a check for $3,000. They ac- cepted the plnn—and the check, ———————$_ Mr, Jon M, Sitaw, of Minneapolis, has dcellned the position of Judge of the Supremo Court of Minnesota, which was tendured bin by Gov. Pillsbury, being Influencod, it 1s thought, by tho inadequacy of tue salary. a A MAN In Racine, Wis. 89 yenrs of age, was introduced by friends ton bloom{nug country girl whom he hod never scon before on the oth inst, and in three hours had married ber, PERSONALS. “T see that Mr. Blalne has the rheumatism, Twish my trouble was as light as that.""—Roscoc Contin, 1} seo that It Is proposed to erect a imonu- ment to Iroquols, Give bitin mine"—Georye Washington, A roller skaling-rink has been started In Cleveland, Cast-{ron pants will be very faeh- ionable there before long. ‘The old reliable New Jersey’ sea-serpent hos turned up nyaln, and tha New York papors are telling what 1t looks like. Mr. Hayes Is not quite ont of the ring, after. He hag been nominated for retlection as a Truateo of Kenyon Colleyo, A five-inile race has been arranged betweeh Nanlan and Ross, but which of them bas re- tained Courtney to saw his boat hos not been wade public, Mr, Storey Is making an earnest effort to fulfill hls promise of improving the Times. Tho trl-weekly edition of that paper will bo discon- tuusd Juty 1. “Are you golug to the ball match this after- noon?” No, not thia afternoun: but my brother is goiux to the puul-room to bot #1 to @0on tho WhitoStockings.” “Good evening.” From the fact that twelva men were killed by tho steamboat oxptosion on‘ tho Sfississinpl iver last Wednesday, It Is bolicved that at lenat four‘ Coloncls and throe Mnjora are lost to the world forever. A Brooklyn clergyman has presented his children's pet dog with a dinuerservice of green majoliea, Itts curious that ina targe city ko Itrooklyn thero Is no Institution for fueblo- winded people. ‘Nilsson Is coming to this country again. Nileson Is a fair singer, but hor great fame rests on tho artltic manner in which sho can kick over a pluno-stool whon hor Scandinavian tompor Is ruflied, A Washington paper states that “ the cur- tain of rezret bas Loen drawn over society olr- clos" by the departure of a young lady for her home ju Ohio, Not wishing to injure the paper, ita namo Is suppressed, It was very kind of Gen, Sherman to ad- vise the members of the West Pulut graduating claus * not to look down on eftizons.” In return, citizens will plensa not look down on tha brave veterans fresh from a terrife struggle with geometry and algebra, ‘The sunsct’s smilv had left the sky, ‘Tho moon rose culm and falr, As low an little mation knolt ‘To broathe her nightly prayer, And thug hor brief petition roso, Kj Tn almple words and fows “Doar Lord, plenso aend us blessed Creams, And let thom all game truco," “Me Too"—T, Platt, ‘Our highly entcemed but undoubtedly emacintgd contomporary, Mr. Curl Schurz, Is're- forred ta by 0 St. Louis paper as follows: Gon, Grant ts wrong in tho assertion that Car] Sebura haw nevor succeedai In anything, Ho has euce ceeded In two weeks In what wo thanght to bo an Impossibility, Ho tas mado the Now York Evening Post-a duller nowspapor, thao it wus under Mr. Bryant's manugement.” Aa Bir, Wahitclaw Held would say, this is roully quite too awfully quite, ‘The baby which was born aboard the steamer Gormanio on the way over from En- #land and wis christened Mary Gormanica Vanderbilt Phillips, bas arclvod in Youngstown, O., with ita wothor, Tho folluwing account of tho event on shipboard was glyon to tho Youngstown Reylater by tho girl's fathor- in-laws “Ina aplrit of banter one of the passengora laid nwagor of $25 with Mr. Vanderbiit that be daront't bring the baby up and exhibit It tothe vabin passengers, Tho wayor wis taken, pod Mr. Vanderbilt vanishod luto tho hospitil, Lor- rowed the diminutive arrival for a few monients, carried tt out and showed {t, He won the wayor, and when hu returnod the onby to ite mothor ho guvo with {t $30, tho amount of the bot, A purge was inado up amounting to $100 forthe mother, and upon tho arrival uf the steamer at Now York dr. Vanderbilt made ar ranuementa for hor to resolve tho beat of caro iu the Now York Moupltal at his expense,” ppt atta otal 4 '. PUBLIO OPINION, Loutsvilio Commerctat (Rep.); Conkling does things on a big scale always, ‘Thut is tho youson ho je making such # tromendous ass of bimseit now, Milwaukee Republican (Rop.): The re- fusal of gv many loglslators Jn Now York to no~ cept bribes woald oncourage confidunce in the purity uf politics, but fue the fact that the per- gans who otfur tho bribos ure also in politica and perhaps on the sane side, In this contest. BS the Virtuous rosectors of bribes, Pittsburg Chrontele Rep: When It ty quite elvur tous iut the Bourbon Funders of Old Vir+ viola aremore rellable,more worthy of confidence Of trust In aoy way, than tho Readjusters,we will admit that they ure to be preferred; Lut not uo: 1 tit that Js quite clear to ws. Wi aboutas clear as mud at t oe cull tay It Ig Th Readjuaters, on all matters ages N7lng nt i i i gy Mla and other Northera Cinclunatl Commerctat (ep, : unvleratand, eee by. Contig pews that In cow ration of Gen, Grauvedane gulshed services ot whtoh aumo things fe beon said tn public, at various tines and a ho need not wo to Albany a Tid Places, election of n Senator who deserted free Fes duty and dare not attempt to eet his reasons for dotny Rv. purt of Conk, & Co. Uf CommandereinCh would be taker, Washington Star (Ind,); Conkling unt dis Hiatt ts ter mo follow vot ever Tes don't st¢" sale sophienl German as he ant a ater Allud wlasses on tho iittle table stopped playing. “In ter ven ta the band Nigns of ter Sennio unit govs home ce CSF te 8 pt of nt forth Trinh Thin t4 gruclone nent rant Were an ont lef or ex-Presiden inary “Dot vellay onreasnpla Leehtsinture to entorse him, 1 to get top isluture inturse him, unt any evoa qa iets right yat you rosien,’ de: Inka, tes Oy ull Bit apout tt ox yor eng tf eeltse0 kaveor country, tis America! Py tinkey ya "1 unterstant bint ny tore as a vont Mr. Charles BE, Smith, editor of the pity delphia Preax, who left the Albany Journa} whey It censed to be a Conkling oryan, sald recently when asked why he now supports the President; “Thave always koa Mr. Conkling, and tre heon distressed nt some of tho. Bevere critic! 4 upon him, but Louutd nat dereud ‘hens realyninu Team the Sonate, and in thiseones ity thore ts Intediy aman ta tie found eee tilus hin, Thad nteendy made a Racrifico ft bin, und ieft tha Stnte ar New Yorke ke & GuUnE, TMU tial, for nysclt. and net ‘he governed tn iny Judginent oy Mr. Ci Havant ucts? 3 Me. Conkling's exe New York Sun: The mission to Ur e mis gua and Parnguuy bas avain gone bexying, on firat imam to refuse it was Gen. Lew Wallace, who turned up his nose nt It, and was mole, by petting ‘Turkey to congote him; and now i tisk bins niko declined the Kame position of Charge d'Afulres to Uruguay and 2, belleving that he nso can do better, It ta ‘cas to avo tliat {f Gen. Lusk shout be aiven dice, placo a precedent would, be ereated for n third uppointo todveling 1 Hke fashion: and Me Garfield would goon be compelled either to hug hobo in Uruuay’ ad Parayuay, of ote i nuke i 8 xamplo by tellin; eet tako that or nuthin. i Me nonioae te Springfield (Mass.) Republican: “If tar arrested,” said Jamos Redpath in telling a New York audionco be was avout to leave for Tree land, * T dare James G. Binine, and fdare James A. Gurfleld, to fenve me In prison; and I daretko Republican party to do it." Jnmos ltedpath has tho rights of every other American citizens, no tore, ho less, and Ho with be protected inno other righta, If he goes tow forcign country and breuks tho laws of that country, te will by punished for it. The Ualted states may nek as ww favor that he be lebthy puniaheds but the United States cin no more iuterfere with Mrity tow on Britta evils thin Great Britain with Atnorican law on American soll. New York Thaca: Whitever else there may be Jn tho quarrel between the Southern Paelfle and Texus Pacifie Rullroad Compautes, tt presents at lenst a very Ming opportunity fur restoring to the people tho enormous land-grant which tho tatter Company bag forfeited. As set forth In a petition addressed to the Beeretary of tho Interior, no rond whatever bus been cone structed by the Texrsa Picltls west of tho flo Grande. ‘Tho ten yours’ Imitation of thelr charter hus expired, und ng none uf the requires ments of clthorof the nets embodying that chare tor has been complied with, there can be nu pos sible reason for retarding the devclopment of the country througt leh the reud was to run Ly Keeping the tands ted up whieh were granted Inautd of a work which can never be vnupleted, ‘The Southern Paeliic corporation bis evastruct- ed nrotd through tho sume territory without elther land-grant or other subsidy the Government, and It 1a equally contrary to pubtio poliey und the plalnest rules of gules that tho fexus Pacific corporation showld be allowed, un thebasis of a forfeited ehurter, to play tho nite of dog In the inanger by crippling an enterprity whieh It talled to carry out ct nder the post erful stimulus of a bouuty of 25,00 acret for every mile ut roud, Detroit Post (Rep.): if the colored peopla do support Maone's cnndidute, there sre peuple who will charge the Virginia Repablicans sith being repudlators, This {3 cidteulous. It 4 on Iguorlug of pust conditions, The colored pools wero slaves, Thoy had no knowledye of debtsor thelr obligations. © Honor wus tho one thing they were nut taught, ‘Though they haye made {me mense advances in knowledge, they have sct much tolvam, They are not registered among the commercial chistes execpt ti n few cities of the fae South, And they have hada few or no menns of learning the duty they owe ascithend to tnulutaia the honor and good faith of thelr States. Since the War thelr existence has been a prolongad struggle fur riguts whlch they have | seen eruelly trainpled wader the heels of force, Amt througboct this strugulo thoy hive bad itl opportunity to thint uf anything or stds uns- ting except themselves. ‘Tunse of thew wie folluw Mahone will do so because of this. For ‘one who follows biin because of uny conviction on the State-debt question, o thonsand will do go because of the promise to deatroy (bo pull- tax,and to secure them a fair voto ond ac boneatcount, which tha Republican party it Virginty bas been ‘unable to secure to them Thus, if thoy follow Manone it will not de beonuse they” have sympathy with remdiaden but beeuuse thay desire to be free nnd to ex. erolso the rights of freuen: and neither Yost, nor Wickhum will be likely to deter uny' gtcat numberof thom from aking thelr fortunet witha party that promises thoin 60 much. [tlt to be reyretted that thia ts so, hut {t is o mle fortuny brought upon the party by ineompetcat leadership in Virgin Now York Nation: Mr, Conkling’s ability to play the partof an Anti-Monopolist champlot Jn politics and 9 Monoy o.ist lawyer fn the courte nw 9 counterpart in the Weet Just now, but with tho rOles roversed, in the cnse of Mr. Janes Be Wilson, This gentlemas bas been for many years tho confidential counsel and champion of the ratlroads, Th 18i0 be rppeared before a folut committee of ‘the Lowa Leg aluture us tho rep: resontative of the Chivago, Burlington S Quincy Rallroad, to oppogy the tullrond Gurl baw a demand Its repent, aud sittd the reason be bad ‘boon selected for this duty was tit ho wus yt Known to by opposed to sted Legislation, and Do then and there dellyarcd a discourse a legistutive luterfuronce with railroad rates ehle m eireulated fur and tho Monupollits printed und cir te eeery SF 2 wide ns” 0 legal and puwertul ape KH one ought to read. He returned to to subject so. late na) January, ‘towse delivered another address to th vee Committeo — of Congress agalust the an Tuter-Btate Commerce UL, whic io dungunced ng “impracticable, te osophival, and opposed to the beat interest t the country,” and he held up tho experience his awn State, Jowa, as nv warning: wale it nelaiplegt the fourth avotion of tho, forbade “low rates for tong hauls.” He eke “dt had produced evil, aud only evils nie Ta fact, fo had udvocuted the frecdom of tee campanies in the mannzement oF thulr bu mo ag tha beat thing ror all concerned. Hie sree + be now tired of boing so. long out of pulltics ho has Juat bean thundering at the Hew i Cunnl Convention agaist tho « Monupalllt, and lid down tho tunucing daetrine, white nore far boyond anything heard in Lows or W i ce in 1870, that when any Invrease In tp wale i rallrond: takes pice through Incred i ol ye ‘and corresponiing improvemout of ier te proporly bulonia wot to tho stvowbunlers ® a Yenturod thelr monoy in tho ontecnrise. auth ‘ the people who travel on i and have invert fuw fares or Inconaiderniie Frelghtrcuarens it Wa fre eroutly, ee ie mut movement {8 golng to produe eatet demagoxy than oven tho Grunger movewent New York Herald: The announcement thut the Vatican Intenda to reprimand ATT ‘bishop Croko and the clergy who are taking in tho ngrarlan agitation in Treland 1s has moro than a roluforcement of 50,00) uugats aa Irish Excoutive, , While Dr, Croke sue ae usthe champion of tho League the Lance felt Justified in disregarding tho coment y Archbishop McCubo to respect the taal hendéerorth thus must cease to be “pate vig coaso ty bo goud Cutholicd. Ag Our HIE Ting Ulspatches bave shown, the interforenc’ *tatlous Vatican {6 tro doubt duc to the represent ing of tho English Catholic noblea NO Oy got absence oF ® Papal Nunclo In Eni sa ag go-betwoens fn cases of tbls Ned jung ng the nyltntion was cone nnd A eonetitudonnl demand for land ls Muy Leo X1Lf hud nothing to way dn the a ‘iota ‘of lite the movemont bas degencrater ) hoy crusade ngalnst the righty wt propert ‘olquet & anwar upon allen intorlopers. | Lord Cnty or native Cult, suifers ig suvercly WY ANY TE inst English landlord; nor is tea waret cre ie ag erved, for Lord Kenmare, as plous Arn chan any pligeiin of Knock, fe treated wo iT g ple Lord Erne, the Oraugeman, Leo Bilis mm Slustrious: pradécessor have rows uolym with a warmth possi ve tholr own grievances agalaat Talli mid when tho attention (oF ie i was drawe to Dr. Coke's wits could not do otherwise Mul sell Parnell Sulvosatiny the forcible landed ostutes is nu better than Sir ing the contisenen uf church prorat ‘wiih 6ct rien Catholica thin ete op anauld sul Hone, that au Archolstup of Castel anoul y. Ie was or for bis efforts in the populur CWE vain it canned ‘that’ the Nuvounl synod wel under the auspices of the Favs, Romanized thy ancient Celtic ¢ Ht Round Tower days, thus suppieme Hy bull yrantiag uby leland to Merny th oy, wil rank with Dr, SeHale ainand f prelates who buyo bev, * murtyred ti country by thelr Chure ° not loug. survive ini guppresslon. Ny, ay wake tight of tho Pope's UOT no wrule they are elther Protesuints igyed wit whose devotion to the Church 3 al Fentanism, but the peasantry will!