Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
y SPAIN. NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA. ‘Ministerial Report of the Vietory at Ripoll and | Haunts of Vieo and Poverty in the of the Internationalist Rising. Terrible Assassinations Under the Radical Flag— “Mounting in Hot Haste” and Hurried Marches to the Front—Constitutionalist Rights for Cubs and Porto Rico—Special Legis- lation with Respect to Slavery— Carlist Advance Into Old Castile. TELEGRAMS 0 THE NEW YORK HERALD. Maprip, July 12, 1873. During the session of the Spanish Cortes yester. day evening the Minister of War announced that the government had received despatches confirm- ing a report, which was current in Madrid during the day, of the defeat near Ripoii of therepubii- cans, under General Cabrinetty, aud the deatn of that officer. The Minister also said despatches had come to hand which confirmed the reports of an Interna- - “tonalist imsurrection and excesses in Alcoy, Province of Alicante. The government also received intelligence of the departure from Malaga of General Carvajal, with a force of volunteers and artillery. His destination is not known. General Velarde, with a body of troops, is hasten" ~ ‘dng to Alcoy, and it is expected he will arrive there. to-day. CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS FOR PORTO RICO AND CUBA. Upon the assembing of the Cortes to-day Sefior Suner, Minister of the Colonies, presented and read @ bill applying to the island of Porto Rico the constitutional c'ause of 1869 with reference to individual rights; aiso applying the same clause to the island of Ouba, with the exception o1 the terri- tory occupied by the insurgents. A despatch has been sent to the Captain General of Cuba authorizing him to adopt the same extra- Ordinary measures against the isurrectionists in that island as nave been resorted to by the gov- ernment fo: the suppression of the Carlist insur. rection in Spain. The abolition of slavery in Cuba will be realized “by a special law. MURDER AND ARSON AT ALCOY—RADICAL QITIZEN RUIN. The internationalist insurrectionists have assassi- nated the Mayor of Alcoy, notwithstanding the fact that he was a thorough republican and spent a fortune in the cause of the Republic. His body was dragged through the streets of the town by a Mob, which kept up a continuous yelling. The Collector of Taxes was also assassinated and his body treated with the same indignities as that of the Mayor. The cotton factory of Perez Puig and four other factories at Alcoy have been burned by the mob. THE CABINET A UNIT. Areport was in circulation this morning that a -erisia in the Ministry was imminent, but it was “goon pronounced to be without foundation. The Cabinet is thoroughly united and resolved to repress all disorders. BULL BAITING AND ASSASSINATION OF CITY FATHERS. There is serious trouble in Malaga. Yesterday, ‘while a bull fight was in progress, the people of the eity rose against the municipality and many ex- -eesses occurred, Among the atrocious acts com- mitted was the assassination of several council- lors. RIOT AND A PRUDENT PATRIOT. The Madrid government hes received a tele- :@taphic despatch from the Governor of Malaga ten- dering his resignation. BULLETINS FROM THE FIELDS OF BATTLE. ‘The defeat of the government troops under Gen- efal Cabrinetty by the Carlists commanded by Saballs is attributed to a lack of discipline in the republican force. The troops which were cap- tured by the insurgents surrendered almost with- out firing a shot. Lieutenant General Sanchez Bregua has re- ceived orders to hasten to Navarre and take com- mand of the Army of the North in person. Carlist Advance and Royalist Resolu- tion. Bayonne, July 12, 1873. Advices received here from Carlist sources state . that the insurgent chieitain Sierro, with a band of 500 men, incluaing fifty-five cavalry, has crossed the River Ebro and entered Old Castile, where he is organizing risings of the Carllists. There is much agitation in Burgos, and many of the inhabitants of that province are enlisting under the banner of Don Carlos. Several bands of Carlists have appeared in the province of Leon. ‘There are three Bourbonist chiefs in Galicia, each at the head of an organized force. WEST AFRICA. The Warring Ashantees in Immense Force Against the British—English Reinforce- - ments on the March, TELECRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. Loxnox, July 12, 1873. The steamship Senegal arrived in the Mersey ‘to-day from ports on the west coast of Africa. She brings dates from Cape Coast Castle to the 23d of June. Thirty thousand Ashantees were encamped ‘within fifteen miles of the town, and an attack was looked for daily. ‘The English defensive force was small. Reinforcements were on their way to the town, ‘but they were not expected to reach there before the 6th of this mouth. ‘RALY, printgidpmeeneente Parliament Prorogucd. TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. Rome, July 12, 1873. i ROME. —— Scarlet Hats Ex; for England and America. TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. Rome, July 12, 1833. His Holiness Pope Pius IX. will, it ts |, create the Most Rev. Archtishop Manning, of Westminis- ter, England, and two American Archbishops, Car- dinals of the Church and forward to each of the pre- lates a scarict hat. TURKEY. Imperial Ottoman Concern for the Government in Constantinople. TELEGRAM TO THE EW YORK HERALD. Vienna, Jaly 12, 1873. ‘The Sultan has declined the invitation of the Emperor Francis Josepa to visit the Vienna Expo- ition, assigning a8 the reason that affairs of State ‘prevent his leaving Constantinople. CUBA. Interesting Discoveries by a TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD, Havana, Joly 12, 1873, ‘The chief of the Trocha, while reconnoitring, “found the encampment of Vincente Garcia, which ‘had been deserted. He also uiscovered same tm- -Portant documents, Public Officer. Quaker City. Nudity and Squalor Sleep- ing in the Streets. New York’s “Five Points” Outdone in | Filth and Degradation. ain Ra RAS ST. MARY'S ALLEY. Poison Whiskey at Five Cents a Glass---Whites and Blacks Equal Before the Bar. A MISSIONARY WELCOMES THE HERALD, Christianity’s Work Among the Brotherly Love City’s Savages —Respectable Men Reeeiv- ing Rent from. Disorderly Houses and Thieves’ Dens. PHILADELPHIA, July 10—Midnight, 1 have frequently appealed to the local journals of this city, and | have asked Mr. Lippincott to fol- low the example of other publishers, and present in his illustrated magasine, or in @ special sneet, pictures of the rookeries you see abvut you, and then give them to hamanity exactly as they are. have appeared even as late as last year, hefore the city authorities and asked tueir aid lor exteud- ing the mission, but all in vain, jor in each evort I Was quietly repufied, and turned away without a cent. 1 have frequently said that some day tue New York dailies would send their correspondents here, and that they would become the means of setting our own journals an example, and of ac- quainting the country with its greatest haunt of sin and misery, 1am glad that you have come. In the name of their mission | tuank you, and bid you hearty welcome !"—kev. John D. Long, Missionary. Immediately alter my arrival in this city I pre. sented my card to Captain Heins, Chief of the De- tective Police, and in a few words described the object of the visit. The gentleman extended me an earnest greeting, and, after commenting to some length upon the magnitude and danger of the undertaking, gave me in charge of Mr, William P. Mears, one of his most steady and reliable associates, with the following directions:—“You are absolutely excused from all duties to-night, for the purpose of conducting this gentleman around the city. Take him through all the haunts you know of and pass by no house about which there is the slightest interest. See that no harm befalls him.” PHILADELPHIA'S “FIVE POINTS,’ In company with Mr. Mears we set out from the headquarters of the city police at about seven o'clock, and after a long, circuitous walk we found ourselves in lower Sixth street, among the scum of the city and inthe destitute habitations of the poor. The contrast between this locality and simi- lar ones in New York is very great, and I doubt whether there could be found among any of our dingiest thoroughfares one so REEKING IN FILTH AND POVERTY as this. The street was filled with gracelesa vaga- bonds, and black and white were indiscriminately blended. The clothes of the women were rags, and the beards of the men were all unsborn, while drunkenness and riot were seen on every side. Handreds of men and women of all ages, of all nationalities, of all colors, who by day are scat- tered throughout the length and breadth of the city, cluster here at nightfall to spend their earnings for drink, which inflame their minds to the highest state of frenzy, until their sole intent is to riot and their highest ambi- tion is to fight. There were white men lying apon the pavement senseless, and there were black women lying there in the same condition beside them. Women with swollen faces and bloodshot eyes hung in an almost nude state from the windows above, and other females, lower yet in their degra- dation, glared flerceiy at us from the cellars below— @ street In a ward which has no bright side, and in which VIRTUE OR MORALITY HAS NO ABODE. “Don’t get nervous yet,” said the detective, as an indecent incident caused me to pull him along; “this is but the beginning; Keep all your nerve for the end.” A LOWER DEPTH. From Sixth street we passed into the narrow alley of St, Mary’s. This is celebrated for being the yilest and wickedest in town, and we believe it is the vilest and wickedest in the world. Upon the corner stands the dramshop of the two Spaniards, 8. Lertora and G, Arata. We entered and were presented to the proprietor. Its interior arrange- ment is both novel and striking, and New York contains nothing like it. The apartment is of me- dium size, and directly opposite the entrance there stands a bar; behind tne counter tiers of kegs rest against the wall, from which their contents are drawn through spiggots. The room was literally CRAMMED WITH NEGROES, the majority of whom were women. We make no exaggeration when we say U at least fitty wenches were crowded in a writhing, twisting mass between the counter and the door, and, as the proprietor’s attention was soon called else- where, the detective and myself were the only two white persons in the room. The inmates of this place comprehended all conditions of their sex, from girls, who appeared to be mere children, up to crones and hags in the last Stages of destitution and disease. The woman behind the bar was never idle, and her customers drank the liquid fire she served by the glass fall. No sooner would one bevy of tipplers master their dram than another bevy would take their places; those in front swore for beimg burried, while those behind grumbled for being delayed. The garments which clung about | the forms of these creatures were soiled and ragged, and upon their skirts was the filth of the gutter outside. A TRANSFORMATION SCENE. “Come this way,” said my friend, after pausing | here tor a few moments more, and by dint of great labor we wedged our way through this crowd until we gained the upper end of the bar and stood against a slight partition which separated us from some other apartment beyond. At a whistle from | the detective we were admitted, and the sudden twansformation was almost dazzling. The two rooms presented avout the same contrast as a Water street grog ship and Delmonico’s, The bar in this room was merely an extension of the counter in the other, but was adorned with tastetul ornamentation and very rich panellings; behind it, in rows one avove the other, stood handsome decanters, and in them glistened the liquor, while the background was wrought gn ae of ex- quisite and dainty glassware. ere were many tables in this room, and upon them fell a flood of soft and meliow light. Who were the customers grouped about these tables? Negroes, every single breathing soul of them! Not negroes, however, poor and ragged and des- titute; not negroes drunken and bloated and riotous; not negroes crawling up from the gutters and reeling in, balf irenzied, from the cellars; but negroes well dressed and high-toned, clothed in nicely ‘i garments, appropriate’ supple- mented with eye-giasses and canes—the typical representatives of the African aristocracy—the elaborate and ornamented colored beaux of the town. Their amusements were those of the best Metropolitan clubs—poker, whist, cribbage and joo, Piebeian rye or ragatmumMn gin was no drink | for them; they moistened their lips with wines and cordials. They indulged in no wrangling or disputes; the burden O14 their conversation was not obscene; they talked of politics, religion, yachting and the turf, Thus, under the same Troof—nay, even upon the same floor, and sepa- rated from each other by a single partition—were two grades of biacks, Which, though of the same | conceal their proprietorship by the person whom race, were as diferent im their aims, habits and morals as though id had been born in different countries and paid their reverence to two distinct Bat on, how jnful Was the contrast! ™ cre could be no sach as aMiliation between a the two. Indeed, 1 was ed thas thy intru- sion of either ‘upon the other was like tl sertion of a drebrand within 5 ieee teenth coremmeneet lace, all the advant attend- Fyn the Lg — Shion cletaonte existing nilestion are closed ns nai «id OREAP RUM SHOPS. When we came from chis resort night had far ad- vanced, and the alley of St. pa ‘was very foul and dark. ‘This lane is one continuous line of ram shops and assignation houses. The liquor stores seem no larger than store boxes, and the poison is sold tor five cents per glassful,' While we were tm one of these, near the opening of the alley, & drunken rufian rushed in and asked tor seven cents’ worth. He received in return an ordinary soda water bottle more than hall iull, I saw & Woman served with three cents’ woxth, and she received as much as he who paid five. ST. MARY'S LODGERS, left this place our detective whispered : pe ,»® Care. The pavement is filled with pe And it was. People who reside in New York and complain because our authorities are not more vigilant coucerning the haunts oi the lower classes have no idea how infinitely superior they are to those of the lower classes of shis boastiui city. It may be impossible for many to credit what we say, but ever) lable inch o1 St, Mary’s was crow ted with human beings. Upon the pavement, and in the very dust and dirt of the street, men and wo- men were lying piled upon eacn other, ‘The mtense heat of the Summer drives them from their low and squalid cabins, and iu a seumi-stupor and semi- nudeness they iie down in the street filth to sleep. It was almost impossible for us to step without disturbing some one, and at every disturbance there was a curse. Men with sunken eyes glared upon us threateningty, and women stretched out tueir long, gaunt fingers after us and in one instance caught our garments. Never shall I tor- get one thing which wo saw—a woman lying closely agatnst the side of her cabin and over her eee two dogs were wrangling lor a resting ace, As we rity “BIG GABE,’ THE GIANT NEGRESS. When half way through this aliey the detective paused tor a moment and calied my attention to a Monstrosity, sitting in @ huge chair before an open window. She is black; her name is Big Gabe; she has no other; she is simply Big Gabe; she keeps an assignation house of the lowest an filth.est order; her height is six feet, five inches, and her weight is 218 pounds, Sitting as she did im @ costume low at the neck and open at the sleeves she was the most loathsome and disgust- ing creature that I have ever beheld. AN EFFORT FOR REFORM, We had no desire to tarry longer in St. Mary's, and we bade the detective take us elsewhere. “He led us to the street which was formerly known as Old Bedord, but which is now cailced Alaska, Here an effort, and a noble one, has been made to wrest irom destruction hundreds of souls, whom poverly bas taught to so degrade themseives—an effort which for twenty years the public authori- ties have never given a cent to support, We reier to the “Bediord street Mission,” in charge of Rev. John D. Long, a gentleman whose society we left aoout an hour ago. This man is a Christian, hero, hovieman. He gave up his charge, be let his family, aud he has given bis lue for flap iets ruined souls, His noble-hearted wife ts with him in his work, and they live amid all the wickedness and sin of this fitdy and abominable neighvor- hood. All the traces of civilization which now and then crop out in unexpected places, the quaint little school house, and the slender walls of brick which occasioually peep up from between the tottering sides and crumbling roois of the old trame rookeries, and all their blessed hopes and aspirations, which, unknown to the many, sull come swelling la irom a few repentant hearts, are solely due to him, to his love lor his cause, to his remarkable personal etism and his ability to touch the spirits fo rs with that enthusiasm ‘HERALD, SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1873—TRIPLE SHEET. | THE ANNUAL POLICE PARADE. ———++ How the Orangemen Escorted Our Blue Coats Yesterday on Their Annual Show-Off. Eight Hundred Policemen and an Escort of Nearly 300 Crangemen. —~»_—_—_ A Display of Blue Coats and Brass Buttons. fo R ey cabana THE ORANGEMEN IN THEIR GLORY. The Orangemen had their parade yesterday ; that is to say, they managed to get out into the street from their various lodges, double quick, iong be- fore noon and succeeded by ten o'clock to get into position. They numbered in all just 261. The pro- cession started in the usual way, It was headed off by a man in citizen dress on horseback, who made everybody believe by his endeavors to de- ceive that the procession was to be a very grand affair. He swept along quite grandly with his black horse and short stirrups aud made for himseif, although he was unknown, a really enviable eques” trian reputation, Still he was not THE FRONTAGE OF THE PARADE, ‘The lines were formed regularly and the Orange- men appeared to pretty good advantage. There were 281 all told, small boys and all, the resplen- dent fags that recounted the great battle of the Boyne and ali the other standards counting tor nothing, with their four carriers. There were also two bands of music, It was near ten o'clock before the procession started, and a nice procession it was. Head and front of all was a platoon of policemen, and then came a carriage, with Chief Matsell, President Smith, Mr. Gardner and General Duryee, the man who wanted to make rifle mincemeat makers of the force. They all looked well. President Smitn said to a bystander that he was out for an airing only. So said Duryee, so said Gardner, so said Matsell. One and all of them feared no trouble, They had tured @ carriage at public expense to do their duty, wnd that duty was to head the procession w ith dignity, without any idea of GIVING DIGNITY TO THE PROCESSION. And thus they went on smilingly. Each and every one of them looked his best and did his best to impress the lookers on with a profound con- viction that they and they alone were able to give the parade a complexion of haut ton; and they succeeded, The fact is that the police were so numerous and the Orangemen so small in num- bers by comparison that the carriage containing which at all times kiudles and pervades his own, Aside from individual contributions their mission desires no sapport. We entered the residence of the clergyman and explained our business. A look of surprise crossed his Jace as he extended his hand, and immediate! alter we were seated he wade the statement wit which this letter opens, saying, furthermore, “When I first came here did not see how I could remain;. men knocked each other down at midday, and at night there was @ fight at every thresnold. 1 was uated and in- sulted, and came rear losing my life on more than one occasion. Ihave been in other cities, among the lowest form of society; I have explored your- own notorious Five Points, but they cannot be com- pared with this neighborhood for a moment. 4 REGIMENT OF ROUGHS LOCKED UP. About six or eight weeks ago disorder became so rampant that the absolute safety of the city de- manded an interference upon the part of the ofi- cers, and over eight hundred persons were sent away to jail, You hardly miss them. It was only to-day that I stumbled upon a horrible resort, in which I found, in the upper story, a room tull of people entirely destitute of clothing. People sim- ply live together here, the black with the white, the white with the black, and wedding ceremonies are very rare. A MONSTROUS CRIME, Some time ago a young girl, of fine face and figure, wandering from the popular streets, was decoyed by a rascal intoadram shop nearby and Was prevaiied upon to drink a glass of soda water. Oi course, the water was drugged, and in @ half. stupetied state she Was dragged into an assigna- tion house, Her beautiful hair was cut off close to her scalp and sold im the market for $8. She was stripped of every article of her wearing apparel, which went the same way as her hair, and when yet under the influence of the drug sue was bru- tally abused by a number of wretches in the shape ol men.” w York is foul enough, I will admit; but New York in her record has no crime so joul as this, And take these ceilars, Men have crawled down into them to sleep at night and bave been carried out dead the next moraing. The detective will tell you that, in the Winter season, people will lie in the gutter, as you have seen them lying there to-night, and in the snowstorms have been frozen,” “To whom do these places belong?” Lasked; “to those who live in them?” “By no means,” returned Mr. Long. “That is by Jar the saddest part of the story. They are the property of men in easy circumstances, who try to they send here to collect the rents, I regret to tell you what | now shall, but it is the truth, One of the filthiest dens in this whole neighborhood is owned by a clergyman! You would be surprised, sir, could you see the good people who by some means or other find their way to this place. ‘I'wo days ago a man of means, and one who moves in good and cultivated society, came to me and said that he was se bis wife; she was in the habit of drinking once in every two gd and he feared she may have been decoyed hither, but he failed to find her. But come, sir, let me show you what we are doing in A THE MISSION SCHOOL." We left the quiet study of the minister and with him entered the mission chapel. There is in ita school for infant cnb: m, another for bootbiacks and newsboys and still another for teaching the lighter industrial arts, The cutest thing by all odds about the place is the swimming school, in the ‘asement. There arc two great tanks filled with water, and each tank can accommodate twenty-five youthful bathers, Mr, Long says that when the little bootblacks and newsboys get in the tubs they sing and shout, and clap their hands and roll about and dive, as tf no demonstration Were sufficient to jully manifest their thankmui- ness, While at every kick the water Mies up to the ceiling and rolis over the sides in great splashes, When asked to ouiid these simple tanks the public authorities relused to do so. A QUEER REASON, “What do you suppose Was the reason they gave? They feared they might be used by vagrant Irishmen,” What has the Common Couneil against tne Hi- bernian that it does not want him to keep clean ¢ After leaving the mission school, Mr. Loug went with us among the eres. Twenty feet away from this school you would not suspect ita existence, for the same mis- erable sights met our eyes; but now and then there would come up, as if from the filth of the streets, a dainty form, and a sweet face, toucned with a glow of gentleness and gratitude, | would break ipto smiles aa the little one would | bid the minister good evening, and by this simple | act we knew him to be loved, and feit that our sex had indeed been crowned with nobility, THE DENS AND RESORTS OF THIEVES. In a little while we caine to what is known as “The Den,” and it was here that hundreds of | roguhs were held in until the authorities could | provide proper quarters for them in tie Peulten- | tiary. It was simply a lot fenced in and had no roof, and while confined there the thieves wran- gied and fought among themselves, and ove of them was found dead upon the removal of the others, Still further on we came across “Doury Dougherty’s place,”’ the resort of the vilest thieves | and rumMans in town. But enough of this for the | present. 1 have thus tried to give you a glimpse of what is above ground, and In my next will treat of the underground dens—the five cent lodging cel- lars—which, the police inform me, are more horri- ble still. In our next tour Mr. Long will accom- pany us, and the letter will give afew recollections of the “Eagle’s Nest.” OBITUARY. Rebecca W. Easterbrook. Miss Rebecca W. Easterbrook, an authoress of varied ability, died on Friday afternoon of con- sumption. She had never enjoyed robust health, but the disease which speedily closed her life was of sudden and unexpected appearance, Miss Easterbrook was well known among journalists, she having been in their ranks for several years. She was connected with the editorial staff of the Standard during the life of that journal, and con- tributed to its columns @ number of pathetic poems and others of a quaint character, which were widely circulated through the States, AL the same time and since, almost up to her death, she wrote for Harper's Magazine, Vrauk Leslie's Chimney Corner and the Ledger, Miss Easterbrook was earnestly ambitious to show in all branches of literature. She made @ ven- ture a dramatist; but her play, called “Honor,” has never been produced. A hovel, written by her recently, is soon to be published by James KR. Ongood & Co. Miss Easterbrook's career was too short to allow of het doing anything which —_ the Commissioners was the cynosure of all eyes. Many of the unsophisticated took Mr. Smith as the head centre of the orange Peelers instead of the biue Peelers, and General Duryee was set down more than once atong the route as a good old fashioned standard bearer of the glorious old Dutchman who whipped somebody at Londonderry 80 many years ago that no accurate history can be obtained thereof. The fact must be stated that all preventions against riot were bravely and con- bee df taken by the police autnorities long be- fore daylight. And the arrangements were aa- mirable. But what were they all? ‘hia simply .— The putting on in procession form of eight hun- dred men and over to guard A LITTLE OVER TWO HUNDRED INSIGNIFICANTS ; 800 men, ip point of fact, who had been on duty for from ten to twenty-lour hours before, and who, by reason of the procession and its ridiculous necessities, would have to be on duty for twenty- four hours again before another rest was taken. Yet the procession was in every way a success, Not, indeed, that anybody thought that the pranie men were out to air themselves—not at all. The police so outnumbered the few who paraded, acarfed and bedraggied with orange colors, that no person who was not blind could fall to see that the parade was really a police parade, The men, with their orange outiittings, started in good time, it is true, from their various lodges, all gorgeous and bespangied with the insignia of their clubs; but tor al! that the parade was a police parade, The Orangemen were in spaces here and there in the procession line two deep; but all along, from head to tail oi it, the police were two deep on each side of the street, ‘The route of the procession was from Lafayette place through Astor place to Broadway to Four- teenth street, around the Washington Monument to Sixteenth street, through Irving Place around Gramercy Park to Madison avenue to Thirty-fourth street to Fifth avenue, thence down to Union square, Where the dismissal was had. There was NO EXCITEMENT DURING THE PARADE among the people, and the si¢ewalk committees that followed it were no more numerous than those which are always found ready to follow any mili- tary company that goes through the streets with a drum and fife. Altogether the Orangemen, as an inside escort to a splendid body o1 disciplined po- licemen, did all they could to look well. They did pot look well at all; but as the police did, and as the parade was really a police parade, they have nothing to regret. Yet after all, why should 800 men be put on extra duty and put to the loss of several hours of sieep for the sake of a lot of fanatics who want to air their fine clothes once a year? The Orangemen have demonstratea their right to parade for a third time—rather the people of the city have given their consent that a boay of men, carrying banners with loyalty to British sovereignty emblazoned upon them, can go from street to street unmolested, and it is certainly about time that the farce came toan end. The lice Want rest, and the people cannot afford to jaugh forever. The “Glorious Memory” in Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA, July 12, 1873, The parade of the Loyal Orange lodges took place here this morning. The procession was a long one, and the members, dressed in new and neat regalias, looked well. A heavy force of police was stationed along the route, but thus far there has not been the slightest disturbance, Honors to King Billy in Toronto. TORONTO, July 12, 1873, The Orange demonstration to-day was probably the best that ever took place here. Seventy-four Orange and twelve Young Britain Lodges paraded the streets, with twenty-one bands of music and thirty-five banners. Inthe alternoon the proces- sionists assembled at Queen’s Park, where speeches were delivered by prominent oficials. Everything passed off in an orderly manner. THE UTE INDIANS ON THEIR GOOD BEHAVIOR. Lamanix City, Wy. T., July 12, 1873. Colonel J, 8S. xittlefield, United States Indian Agent for the White River Utes, reached the rail- road last evening and sent a special despatch, saying that the White River Utes are all on their reservation and perfectly peaceful and iriendly. None of them have been killed or wounded, so far as known. It appears now that the Rawiins Indian fight was with a band of predatory, thieving Arapa- hoes, Who Were trying to pass themselves off as CLOSING EXBROISES OF THE YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, Povcukrersis&, N. Y., July 12, 1873. The proceedings of the International Convention of the Young Men's Christian Association to-day were again largely attended. Wuring the morning W. H. Hodden, of Great Britain, was formally in- troduced, and told the delegates of the Association work in England and Ireland, Dr. Thompson, of the New York Medical University, read an ablo paper upon the Bible and Bible class instruction, which was Ordered to be printed. Mr. Cobb, of Cleveland, gave particulars of the railroad work in that city, Where railroad companies provided the Association With elegant rooms, and 5,000 railroad employés attend the meetin, At half-past five P, M. the usual resolutions of thanks were ooread when the entire Convention sung the ‘Railroi Song,” following it with the Doxology ax® bene- diction, The Convention then adjourned sine die. To-night another large meeting was held at the Opera House, the leading men of the Convention addressing It. To-morrow ail the pulpits in the city will be filled with delegates. Over one-half of the delegates have left for their homes, and the balance will depart on Monday. A JERSEY PLEASURE PARTY TURNED INTO ONE OP DEEP SORROW. A few days ago @ party of Sunday school scholars and grown people started from Belvidere, Warren county, on @ plenic excursion up the river. There they stopped at a charming and very romantic spot called the Cascade, and spread out dinner ona large table rock, Suddenly, in the midst of their merriment and festivity, tney were startled by a rumbling Ominous noise roiling overhead, All serve as @ memorial of the literary ability which she known by her friends and journalistic associates to have possessed. fer funeral will take place to-di y from the residence of her sister “Eleanor Kirk’ (Mrs, Ames), 233 Macon strech, Brooklyn, started away except a lovely girl of fiiteen, named THE GORDON KNOT. The Manitoba Complication in a New Light. eke Cai Dean A Change i Patlic Opinion Favorable to the Attempted Abdwctors of the Absconding Lord—United States Consul Taylor on CommonLaw and Leg Bail. Fort Garry, Manitoba, July (1, 1373. The most tmportant event on the fourth day of the investigation of the'case of Lord George Gor- don was the introduction of papers found in the possession of Minneapolis detectives, which was a question of the legality of the arrest of this gen- tieman. Consul Taylor will publish the following card in the newspapers to-morrow, developing: the theory of the defence :— THE UNIIKD STAPRY CONSUL ON COMMON LAW AND BAIL. To THR Pupnic—Having, in common with the entire community, misapprehended the clause of the legal right to arrest Gordon, and the letters addressed to me on the subject being su custody, I have availed mysell of imiormation derived from Hon. KE. M. Wilson,. from Minnesota, to present a statemcnt of the grounds which, tf permitted to appeal, 1 am prepared to urge upon this Court, and 1 jeel, thereiore, justified in muking the present publication. Gordon was arrested in New York for embezzle- ment. Roberts released him from priaou by be- coming his bail for $87,600. Gordon ram away to Manitoba, As the bond was about to-become tor- Jeited Roberts procures proper exemplifications of the pail piece and executes _— of attorney to Hay authorizing him to act. Hay, with the author- ity, goes, with an assistant, to Manitoba, and makes the arrest by common law. A bail has the the right to take nis principal wherever and when- ever he can tind him. When a prisoner ia re- leased trom prison he 18 considered im the continual custody of his bat. ‘This right is not controlled by States or national iines, but runs wherever the common law exists, if the right has not been taken away by statute treaties, and extractions of laws have nothing to do with the question. Tuey relate to delivery for crimes. Gordon is not sought on account of embezzlement, but to reieve Roberts ot his liability. There ts no rocess, no international arrangement, by which Roberts can obtain him, No goverpmental demand can be legally made or responded to for the pur- pose of restoring Gordon to his ball. Roberts must take him by his common law right. What Roberts can do his duly authorized agent can do, ‘Lhe taking of Gordon, by Hay, was no violation ofluw. ‘The common law right exists in Maintoba, uncontrolled by any statute. It has been fre- quently ruled in the United States that the bail had the right to come from one State into another to take his principal. ‘The jurisdiction o1 the different States are as distinct as those of New York and Manitoba, and it is rested wholly on the common law principle, equally in force here as there. With this exposition I submit that the gravity, of the question involved, as well as the interests of both countries, requires that ail the testimony which the defence is prepared to show should be admitted, and, as an act of international courtesy, that Mr. Wilson may be heard during’ the present examination. I think it not mappropriate ior me to add, that irom an examination und knowledge of all the facts, It will appear that there was no in- tention on the part of any one to violate the inter- national law or to insult this posi nt but that every one connected with it sincerely believed that they were acting in accordance with their legal right. J. W. TAYLOR, United States Consul. A Change in Public Opinion Produced by Recent Developments. MILWAUKEE, Wis., July 12, 1873. A special despatch from Minneapolis says:— During the proceedings in the Gordon case at Fort Garry yesterday the legal papers in the pos- session of Captain Hay were submitted to the Court, whereupon the legal point on which the authority to arrest Gordon depended being ex- posed there was @ decided reaction in public opinion among the Manitobans immediately after the introduction of the papers. Following his card to the public Consul Taylor declares that the gravity of the question invoived as well as the interests oi both countries require that all the testimony which the delence 1s pre- pared to show should admitted; and, that as an ‘act of international courtesy, Mr. Wilson should be heard during the examination, Other advices state that the investigation has brought out the fact that the American prisoners were arrested south of the new boundary line, on American soil. ‘this will work new complications, although it cannot be et surmised just what effect the discovery will ave on the future proceedings, THE MURDERED MARSHAL, panini arth The Dark Fate of John E. Stephenson— Examination of His Death Wounds and Commencement of the Inquest— The Brothers, Wife and Family of the Deceased Viewing the Sad Remains. The body of Deputy Marshal Stephenson, who was murdered in Jersey City on Friday afternoon, lay desolate in the dark room of the Rink through- out the same night. No friendly faces appeared in the dismal hall, except that of one brother, be- cause his other relatives had no tidings of his premature death, and they slept on Friday night in ignorance of his unhappy fate—his four other brothers, his wile and his six helpless children, Not in complete ignorance, however, did his loving wife repose, for in the wild wanderings of her im- agination, while ina profound slumber, by one of those singular coincidences which sceptics ex- plain by the doctrine of chances—which the more poetical attribute to the work of the human soul atter it has been released from its casement of clay, —— forsook Its mansion in this tleshy nook, she dreamed that she saw her husband felled by the hand of an assassin, and she awoke in the tre- mor that follows in the wake of frightening dreams, When morning dawned her brothers went to break the doletul tidings to her, but she cried ou “Stop! tell me nothing; Jounny its murdered; 1 dreamed it last night."’ She was fearful of visiting the scene of his death yesterday. His three brothers repaired to the Rink and took a first look at the lifeless remains of the victim. Prepared as they were for the gloomy sight, they became paralyzed with grief and emotion, and it was some time be- fore they sufficiently recovered themseives to re- tarn with the sad burden to New York. They took the body to the house of Mrs, Stephenson, in this city, and the scene that ensned upon the arrival | might, perhaps, better be passed in silence. The littie children have scarcely sense enough to real- ize the loss they have now sustained. Poign- ant as is the sorrow that overwhelms the amMicted wife, she may find no little consolation m the jact that her husband perished he- roically while in the performance of duties that he owed alike to the country and to his own family. Hence it is that a subscription list has already been started at 41 Chambers street in atd ofthe bereft family. For the information ef those anxious to learn the nature of Steplenson’s death wounds the following is the statement of Drs, Bueh and Petrie, who made a post-mortem examination:—An external wound was found on the back. four inches below the left shoul- der blade. A crescent-shaped, gaping wound, three inches to the right of the left nipple, was two inches in length and penetra: downward in the direction of the leit side. Th chest was opened, and the fifth rib was severed at its cartilaginous portion about one and a half inches to the leit of the sternum. A large clot of blood was lying directly over the heart and under the external wound. This was carefully removed, and the breast wound was found to penetrate the pericardium and the left ventricle of the heart near the apex, passing completely through the wall and ito the cavity. mine prisoner passed the night and day following in the county jail. He frequently kneit on the floor of the cell, and. ers vehemently tn his native Russian tongue, hile the surgeon was tying a handkerchief around Ms wounded neck he asked, “Does that hurt hd vy) Whereto the prisoner replied, “Oh, 10; it hurt more byme by,” alluding to the death he expected to die in at one- ment for his crime, He paced the cell nervousiy during the greater part of the day. his parents and one sister still live im Finland. He has a few Irionds in a4 sailors’ boarding house on the east side of this city, and it is not improbabie, from ramors now afloa’ that some of those friends were fy btn of his in- tention to murder the marshal. it would be un- wise to say anything more jn this.connection until the inquest reveais the facts, A jury was empan- elled yesterday by Coroner Reinhardt, and the inquisition was adjourned until Wednesday, in order that ample time may be had to ascertain how Taany persons were conspirators oi Me‘land in the shucking deed. Tne reasons for suspect- ing this are well founded It appears that the missing sailor, Pritt, was well acquainted in the sailors’ boarding house above alluded to, and that Metiland eudeavored to shield him and his confréres, When the deceased undertook to search the boarding house for the deserters the jandiord and Metdand made @ powerful resistance, and Stephenson only escaped by drawing his pis- tol, Warrants were tven issued for the arrest of the landlord and Metland on of resisting an officer, The acct arrested and taken before United States Commissioner Davenport, and the landiord ‘was leld to bail in the sum of $2,500, Metland was Tevased on his own recognizance on condition that Caroline Bodermer, who delayed. Presently down flew a large boulder from the overhanging hill and struck her across the temple. She died shortly afterwards, in spite of the best medical skill of the piace ‘tephenson and tdentif, ee to the blood: i to himself. He is now in hourly @xpectation of a violent death, a8 he understands Eoghs® but im- perfectly and fancies that the dispex#ation of jus tice in this country is as swilt as i.\ 18 tn Russia. He will soon find out his mistake. ‘1 Uere is some’ he however, that one oi the invorruptine judgea of the Jersey Bench may try the : '@8¢. THE CHOLERA. —-———— Cinomnat, July (2, 1873. - Three deaths from cholera were reportéd up tet five o'clock to-day, im Nashville. Nasivitug, July 12, 187% There was one ease of cholera here to-day, an® one ip Chattanooga, In Memphis. Memrais, July (2, ists. There’ were only ave intermouts reported at the Board of Mealth today, two of which were (ran cholera, Died. EWEN.—At Spuyten Duyvil, om Saturday, Juty 1%! GeowGE Ricakd, oldest son of Aasten D. and Auior L. Ewen, in the"t2th'year of his age: Notice’ of tne fanerai hereafter. VALENTINK.—Ow Saturday, July 12, Wasninastne Vanunvink, in the 45th year of his age. Notice of the funeral heresiter. (For Other Deaths See Bighth Puge.| Before Your Lungs Bogin to Fester Stow the congh that may otherwise destroy you with HAL) HONEY UF HORRMOUND- AND TAR: PIKE'S TOOTHACHE DROPS care in one minate. Avoid Cholerait—The Only Perfect Dis~ intectant 1s CARBOLIC AGLD (vide Health Officer's ree port Soaps and Acid of all grades, pure and crude, im any, qualtity, Carbolie” headquarters, KADDisite Wirilin ‘#'G0."S, 83 Jobn street, near Williaa, New or A.—Herald Branch. Office, Brookiya, corner of Fulton avenue and Boerum street. Open trom 8 A.M tod BLM. On sunday from % to 9 P. All Traveliers on Qcenn cr Rivers should bear in. mind that KAMNWEILER'S NEVE SINK COKK JACKET is the hest life preserver in use. Examine highest testimonials. Manaisctory 46 Centre street. : Atter an Experience of Twenty-five years, during which tine not a singto case. of failure to. re has been reported, GRAESENGERG MARSHALL'S THOLICON is the only known remedy tor all com- jaints to which women are subject. Sold by druggista> 1 50 per bott GRAFENBERG COMPANY, 56 Reade street. Affections of the ‘Bladdcr and Kidneys Permanently curet! by wing KEARNEY'S EXTRAOT BUCH, only remedy for Diabetes, Gravel and Bright's Disease. Depot 10% Duane street. 4 A.—Eau Angelique, for the Teeth and Gums. BISCOTINE FOOD for infants. DELLUC & CO., 65 Broadway, are the sole proprictors aud manatac- turers, Paris agents ROBERTS & CO., Place Vendome, .—Lyon’s Magnetic Insect Powder Lei ver had a rival a6 an annihilator of insects and gs. A Pure Stimulant for Medicinal Usce CENTURY WHISKEY. For sale by druggists and grocers. A.—Civilization Received a New Im-- pee by the invention of THK ELASTIC. TRUSS—O8S roadway—which retains rupture comfortably till cured, Avoid the dangerous wire spring and filthy sponge pads. Bonnet’s Best Black Siik—A Full Dress: Pattern for sale at half price. PHLLAN, Shirt Maker, 693 Broadway: Chiropodist.—Dr. Westervelt, 852 Broad= Way, near Fourteenth, street, cures corns, 50c. to $l. Remedy by mail, 5c. The teet thoroughly treated. Corns, Bunions, Enlarged Joints, All Diseases of the Feet cured by Dr. ZACHARIE, 27 Uniom square. Corns, Bunions, Nails, éc., Cured With= outpain. Corns cure, by mail, We. Dr. RICK, 204 Broadway, corner Fulton street. Dyspepsia, Billous He ache, Sallow Complexion, Heartburn, Waterbrash, Norvous Irritae thility, cured by DR. SHARP'S SPECIFIC, or. money re- uuded, at HARTNETMS Pharmacy, Fourth avenue and Astor place, and O'BRIEN'S, Fiiticth street and Third avenue; HUDNU1’S Pharmacy, Herald Building. Elastic Belts, Stockings, Knec-Caps, ANKLETS, &c.,at MARSH & ©O.'5 Radical Cure Truss office, No. 2 Vesey str Lady attendant. Excelsior.—Fragrant Disinfectant, Rec ommended by boards of health. Pound cans 15 cents. Attwntion, druggists and grocers! Depot, 53 Cedar street. For the Piles Use A. W. Keating’s Cele= brated OINTMENT; price 25c. Office 235 Front street. corner ot Peck slip. Golden Hair.—Barker’s Aur Rarm- less as water, changes 250, 127k Broadway, near Thirty m Health and Economy. The COLWELL LEAD Cv., having had seven years’ exe perience in. the manutacture of TIN LINED LEAD 1PE, have reached that perfection in its construction which lenyes nothing to desire. Our patent TIN LINKD LEAD PIPE ibis and easily soldered as ordinary lead pipe, and is cheaper when strength and durability are consiiered Water tlows through it as clear as at the fountain head, and free from the slightest taint of lead and zine poison or iron rust, Tn addition to the plumbing ot houses, itis largely used for conveying. water trom wells and springs, also for beer pumps, mineral waters and water cool herever purity and safe to health ar riptive pamphlets sent by pound for all sizes. Be not nated imitations. Address. tre street, New York. sheet Lead, Bar Lond, Pig Lead, Solder, &e: 16s con washed BAD. CO. Also manufacturors of Lead Pi Block Tin Pipe, Bar Tin, Orders filled at sight. Holyoke’s Celebrated Fever and Ague CURE may be obtained at 978 Fizhth avenue, tetweem Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth streets. MacNevin’s Diarrhea, Dysentery and CHOLERA FANTUM POWDERS.—Cholera Infantum, or Summer Comy aint, is, of all other diseases, the most easily cured, I icel pertect confidence in siating that one child ae Ci fei fon bah ee not die from this dis- ease it ny Powders were given it, ‘4 CHOLERA MORBUS, From Rey. Matthew Hannan, Catholic Pastor, Toledo, Ohio, May 1866 :-—"'To Dr. MacNevix, Sweeny's Hotel, New York—I certify that T have been instantaneously relieved from a violent attack of diarrh@a and cholera morbus by your excellent medicine, lam very sorry it is not better known to the public. I feel very thankful for the relief your medicine aforded.” Sold by all Obstacles t for young men. Sent free in sealed lotter envelopes. Ad~ dross HOWARD ASSOCIATION, Philadelphia, Pa.—am institution having a high reputation for henuFable con- duct and proiessional skili. Marriage.—Happy Rellet Pegram’s Patent Sunstroke Preventor== A sure protective; For sale only at KNOX’S thre ack. Royal Havana Lottery.—Prices Re= duced, ctreulars sent and intormation given. We sold the $500,000 prize in the drawing of Aprit 22. J.B, MAY n% & CO., Bankers, 10 Wall street, Post office box 4,685, New York. 8. 0. P. Brandy, $7 Per Gallon, $1 5 per bottle; old, mellow, reliable; entire invoice sa cured at half its value, Good sound Clarets, $3 50 to $3 er case. Depot of Pieasant Valley Wine’ Company's Riih and Sparkling Wine; pure and wholesome H, B. KIRK & CO., 69 Fulton street. The Infamous Sewing Machine Ring.— Stupendovs frauds bmiliantly exposed; an exciting BOOK, Canvassers wanted. 33 Union square, north. 1849—Established 184).—G, Kauchfass, Practice! WIG, MAKER and Imposter of HUMAN HAIR, 44 East Tweltth street, near Broadway, NEW PUB LAWRENCE G. GOULDING, O¥ 182, 18 AND. 136 4 Nassau streot, in addition to, his Popular Business { New York, Brooklyn, Jersey City, Newark, th and Hoboken, has just issued a com> le Business Directory of New York, Boston, containing the names and ad= n, classified. and arranged under proper business “headings, thereby making the Work a ready as well as a user aud reliable reterance. mach needed. by basiness men, rice $5. D jaan BOOKS. GRBAT ATIONS. The fourth volume of “Carteton’s New Dinstrated Edi. tion” of Oharies Dickens’ Warks (the best, cheapest and handsomast edition in the world). Printed irom news readable type: exquisitely illustrated by the original ar~ tiste chgaen bound, and Sold at $1 50 per volume. perfield”” by Dickens hiinself; hiadsomely bou: “Pickwick,” “Oliver Twist,’ “David © .S “Grest Expectations” wre now vendy, to be wllowed by one volume h month unul all are ent, Those who. want a first e edition of Diekens’ works should af. Once commence takiug this new and best edition. } ‘True to the Last. By A. 8. Ros. New edition....... $1, My Betsey aval Are'Out, By Wood's Ulustrated Guide to New York Purple and Five Linen, Faweett’s new nove Cachet. A new novel by Mrs, M. J. R. Hamilton.... L738 Romance of the Rail, By Stephe Smith.. Book of Rpitaphs, Mark Gilderstoeve. Sauzrade's new novel. Clifford Troupe. Mrs, Westmoreland's new vovel... 178 Kenneth, My King, Miss Brock’s new now. Kana Browning, Mary J. Holmes’ new" novel Truo as Steel. Marion Harland’s ney, nove Earlscourt’s Wife, May Fleming's’ sew novel. | | Amusing and curious. | would accompany All beautifully printed and bor ritt, the leader of the of deserters. Metian and. Sold every wheres, at. first appeared to age th ood faith and wene | Sd ent by wal Wreknee?, 90 Tecan of pete, Ue with deceased identify Pritt. Wugo he ¢ Faadison square, Row Ye . £ is at Mm