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DYING IMPERIALISH. Views of Le Figaro on the Politi- cal Situation in France. MONARCHY OR REPUBLIC. Journalistic Quarrel Between Cassagnac and Girardin. PERSONAL VITUPERATION. Girardin Characterizes the Prince’s Death as an Expiation. CASSAGNAC’S REPLY. Has Bonapartism Received Its Death Blow? t MEETING OF THE LEADERS Prince Jerome Said To Be About to Pro- claim for the Republic. [BY CABLE TO THE HERALD.] Pants, June 30, 1879. The Figaro of Saturday contained a leader, signed by Francis Maynard, review- ing the present political situation in France. The article closes as follows :— VIEWS OF THE FIGARO. ‘Nous persistons & croire que le 1dle actif du Bonapartisme est interrompu, et qu’une partie de son personnel va se désa- gréer. On sait notre opinion, et nous Yayons dit le soir méme du jour ot ona appris la mort du Prince Louis Napoléon. Hi n‘y aque deux principes possible comme gouvernement—ou le droit monarchique héréditaire, produit du sol, de la race, du tempérament national qui existe en dehors des volontés du peuple et de leurs chan- geants caprices, sur le principe duquel on ne le consulte pas plus que sur le principe du paiement de l’impét, du service militaire, éte., etc., ou le suffrage universel appliqué | & toutes les manifestations dy yoou de la | nation. Dans cette derniére hypothése le fait légal appartient i la République. Cela n'est pas douteux. Et les élections de 1877 équivalent sans contestations & un plébis- cite. Ilya de grandes probabilités pour que la masse électorale raisonne ainsi. Mais jusqu’h présent la mort du prince impérial n’a amené aucune modification dans l’as- siette ni dans le classement officiel des par- tis. I] serait puéril de ne pas voir et de ne pas dire les choses comme elles sont.” [TRaNsLaTION. } [‘‘We persist in believing that the réle of Bonapartism in its active manifestation has been interrupted, and that one section of the party is on the point of disagreeing. Our opinion is well known. We stated it on the very evening of the day on which we learned the news of the death of Prince Louis Napo- leon, There are only two possible prin- ciples of government—(1), either the hereditary monarchical right—the prod- uct of the soil, of the race, of the national temperament which exists in- dependent of the will of the people and their changing caprices, concerning which they are no more consulted than about the levying of taxes, of the military service, &., &e., (2), or universal suffrage applica- ble to all the manifestations of the wishes of the nation, In the latter hypothesis the legal fact belongs to the Republic. Of this there is no doubt; and the elections of 1877 are certainly equivalent to « plebiscite. ‘here are great probabilities that. the electoral masses reason in this way. But up to the present the death of the Prince Imperial has caused no modification in the situation nor in the official classification of parties. It would be puerile not to see and not to state things just as they are.”’) CABSAGNAC AND GIBARDIN. Bitter personal controversy has been | aroused between Paul de Cassagnac and Emile de Girardin, In an article announc- | ing the Prince Imperial’s death, Girardin wrote over his own initials an article en- titled “Expiation of the 2d of December,” in which he made the following severe com- ments:— | “Cette triste fin du jeune héritier de l’au- teur de l’attentat du 2 décembre en est l’ex- piation comme la triste fin du jeune héri- tier de ’auteur de Vattentat du 18 brumaire en fut aussi le chatiment.” ; [tRansxarion, ] (‘This sad end of the young heir of the suthor of the attempt of the 2d of De- cember «is an expiation, just as the sad end of the young heir of the author of the attempt of the 18th Brumaire was a chas- | tisement.” (This latter remark refers to the | | unfortunate end of the Duke of Reichstadt, heir of the First Napoleon by Marie Louise).) CASSAGNAC’S REPLY, To this Cassagnac replied in the Pays of | the 22d of June in an articlo headed “Ques- | tions of the Day,” in which he alluded | personally to Girardin, reminding him | that he should not speak thus of the im- perial family, which had created him o Senator, and reminding him further that the Empress had once risked her life at the bedside of his daughter, who died at Biar- ritz in 1863, in the arms of the Empress Eugénie, hor godmother. The article con- cludes as tollows:— “Quand on est comme vous, si prés de la mort, Monsieur de Girardin; quand on n’en @st séparé que par quelques ingratitudes | child. Courtesan of powor, of fortune, you | NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1879.-TRIPLE SHEET. a peine, on a le devoir de se préparer du respect pour sa propre tombe.” (TRANSLATION. ] [‘‘When one is, like yourself, so near to death, Monsieur de Girardin; when one is only separated from it by a few ingratitudes, he ought at least to prepare respect for his own tomb,”) M, DE GIRARDIN’s REPLY, In La France of the 23d, in an article en- titled “Le Respect de Ja Tombe,” M. de Girardin replies to the accusation of want of respect for the dead by quoting the atrocious things which Cassagnac wrote upon the death of Thiers, of which the fol- lowing is a specimen :— “La mort frappe sur vous. Tant mieux. Elle ne vous épargne que trop? Laissez- moi, une fois pour toutes, laissez-moi maintenir mon droit de montrer ma joie, de témoigner mon allégresse.” (rRaNsuaTion. } [ ‘Death strikes you. So much the better! He has spared you too long already. Allow me, once for all, allow me to maintain my right of showing my joy, of testifying my delight.”’] CASSAGNAC REFU1ES THE CHARGE, Cassagnac replies in the following terms, his article being. headed ‘A M. de Girar- din”:— “Vous discutes au lieu de demander par- don ; vous’ donnez des aliénas au lieu de donner des excuses que tout le monde at- tend. C'est bien, De vous et de vos paupiéres desséchées par l'égoisme il ne peut tomber quedel’encre. Vous me reprochez mon lan- gage lors de la mort de M. Thiers. C’est vrai, J’aurais pu parler mieux et autre- ment, et, vous le voyez, j’ai sur vous l’avan- tage de la franchise et du regret. Mais M. Thiers, aprés tout, n’avait pas été mon ami, n’avait pas été ‘mon cher,” mon souverain; il m’avait fair arréter quand je revenais de captivité; il m’avait interdit le sol de cette patrie que j‘avais défendue sar le champ de bataille, et pour laquelle je venais de souf- frir pendant huit mois en casemate sous terre; il avait fait arréter mon vieux pére, Yavait fait conduire en Espagne escorté par des gendarmes; il nous: avait accusés faus- sement, misérablement, ila tribune d’étre les auteurs ou les complices de la Com- mune, Voila ce qu’il nous avait fait! Mais cela n’excuse pis de ma part un entraine- ment de représailles. Vous, au contraire, vous aviez été l’ami du pére, de la mére de cet enfant outragé par vous. Ils vous avaient fait sénateur, et vous aviez accepté de ces “criminels” une place au Luxembourg, 4 e6té des Persigny, des Rouher et des Saint | Paul. Vous aviez été plébiscitaire en 1870. Qu’était devenu ce ‘crime de décem- bre?” Et ne Vaviez-vous pas effacé avec les basques de votre. habit brodé, avec votre bulletin de vote ou le mot quis’étalait sur toute date antérieure et lacouvrait? Et votre fille, n’est-ce pas la main dans la main de l'impératrice qu'elle est morte? N’étiez-vous pas i Biarritz pen- dant huit jours, ému, pleurant, reconnais- sant? Que fait cette date de décembre, in- voquée par vous pour frapper une veuve, une mére, une bienfaitrice? Elle arrive bien tard, etil fallait vous en couvrir avant le Sénat, avant le plébiscite, et surtout avant de luisser la souveraine de France s'installer en seur de charité au chevet de votre enfant. Courtisan du pouvoir, de la fortune, vous faites des barricades avec des pierres de cimetiére, et vous vous embus- quez derriére une tombe 4 peine termée. O vous ne sortez pas de Ji, monsieur! Vos raisonnements n’y feront rien—rien—et quand vous aurez prouvé que j'ai eu tortd Végard de M, Thiers, ce que je vous coneide, vous ne prouverez pas yue yous ayez eu raison d'atteindre V'im- pératrice i travers l’ombre aimée de votre fille morte, et puis j'étais jeune, bien jeune, par rapport & vous, quand M, Thiers est mort. Et quand on est jeuneon a moins de respect pour la mort, qui semble plus loin, Mais vous, & votre fige, vous, com- ment vous est-il possible de ne pas saluer le cercueil qui passe, en vous demandant avec inquiétude si par hasard ce n'est pas le yoire qui vient vous chercher,”” [TRaNsiation. ] [You argue, instead of begging pardon ; you give new paragraphs in place of the apologies that everybody expects. Very well! From you and your eyelids eaten up by egotism falls nothing but ink. You} reproach me because vf my language on the occasion of the death of Thiers, | It is true I might have spoken better you | see, I have the advantage over you of frank- | and in another way; and thus, ness and of regret. But M. Thiers, after all, had not been my friend ; had not been mon cher, my sovereign ; he caused my ar- rest, when I returned from captivity. He forbade me the soil of the country that I had detended upon the field of battle, and for which I had suffered eight months in the underground casement; he caused the arrest of my aged father and had him sent to Spain, escorted by gendarmes; he had aceused us fulsely, miserably, before the tribunal oi being the authors or the accom- plices of the Commune, This is what he did to us! But this is no excuse for impul- sive reprisals on my part, You, on the con- trary, had been the friend of the father, of the mother of this chiid vilified by you. They made you a Senator, and you accepted trom these “criminals” a place at the Ltxembourg beside the Persignys, Rouhers and the Saint-Pauls. You were a “plebiscitaire” in 1870, What had be- come of this ‘crime of December?” And had you not covered it with the skirts of your laced garments, with your ballot on which the word most displayed covered everything else of anterior date? And your daughter—was it not in the arms ot the Empress that she died? Were you not at Biarritz for eight days trembling, weeping, grateful? Why | is this date of Deoember invoked by you in order to strike down a widow, a mother, a benefactress? This came very tardily; and it was nevessary for you to enshroud yourself with it before the Senate, betore the Piébiscite, and especiatly before letting the Sov- | ereign of Krance install herself as a | sister of charity in the bosom of your made barricades with cemetery stones, {and you yourself ambuscaded behind a tomb scarcely closed. 0, you shall not escape from that, Monsieur! Your arguments will be of no avail—none—and |) when you shall have proved that 1 was wrong with regard to M. Thiers, which I concede, you will not prove that you had any right to strike the Empress across the beloved shadow of your dead daughter. And then I was young, very young, com-) pared to you, when M. Thiers died; and) when one is young he has less respect for| death, which to him seems far off. But) you, at your age! how is it possible that | you do not salute the coffin which passes, asking anxiously whether by chance it i not your corpse that is sought atter?’’] To this M. de Girardin replied in France, of Friday evening, as follows: — “Voildl’homme dont les invectives ne 801 lévent plus @’autre sentiment que le dégo causé par l'ivrogne incorrigible que 1’ rencontre dans la rue, ou, aprds avoir épuii son vocabulaire d’injures, on le voit ch celer et tomber dans ses vomissements, ne s’arréte point a répondre aux invecti' —o de la rue et on presse le pas. Jo vonye mien.” (TRaNsLaTION. } j {‘‘Here is a man whose invectives of abuse, is seen to stagger and fall i: own vomit. But one does not stop to the other side of the street and he his step; I hasten mine.”] Thus ends the controversy so fa: ring up the dead corpse of imperialijm. THE MEETING OF BONAPARTISTS AT HER'S—SIGNIFICANCE OF PRESENT EVENTS. [By CABLE TO THE HERALD.] Paris, June 3041879. . ROU- read, but no decision was arrived ing the future course of the diseussion without coming to any the questions agitating them. Ajdeputation | afterward communicated the Pri Prince Jerome Bonaparte, who sit edged it. M. Rouher refused with the deputation, stating that was determined to retire from acti, THR LAST HOPE. L’Ordre, of Paris, the organ makes the following declaraton:—‘Prince Jerome Napoleon is recognized ag chief of the | Napoleonic dynasty and consequpntly chief of the Bonapartist party. He canjot fail to re- ceive the resolute and devoted sapport of all | faithful to the Empire.” This declaration is | made by the advice of M. R r, but it is | doubtful whether all the imperialjets will rally | around Prince Jerome, who will) probably con- tinue to maintain his silent attitude. | participate neetorth he polities. M. Rouher, PRINCE BONAPARTE TO PUBLISH A MANIFESTO AYTER THE FUNERAL OF PRINCE. [BY CABLE TO THE HERALD.) Lonvow, July 1, 1879, A Paris despatch to the Standard states | that Prince Jerome Napolgon will publish a manifesto after the funeral of the Prince Imperial, urging all Bonapertists to submit to the Republic, and that he has already assured President Grévy that he will not become a pretender to the imperial throne. THE DEAD. PRINCE. THE BODY OF THE DEAD PRINCE ON THE WAY T0 ENGLAND—HOW HE WAS DESERTED BY HIS COMPANIONS. (By caBLE TO THE HERALD.) Lonvon, July 1, 1879. The British troop ship Orontes, with the body of the Prince Imperial, is expected to the 9th of July. The troopers who were with the Prince Impe- rial he was Killed declare, contradiction to Lieutenant Carey's statement, that the survivors galloped two or three miles without stopp stmmarizing the dedth of — the Imperial, “The Quartermaster General disobeyed Lord Chelmsford’s orders by sending the Prince on a davgerous expedition, the escort of which de- serted its duty. In the whole affair there is not one redeeming feature.” The Duke of Cam- bridge has approved the proposal for a general army subscription to raise a memorial to the | late Prince Imperial. The subscription has already been opened. reach England on when in ng. The Times’ correspondent, various accounts the Prince of says:— HOW THE NEWS O¥ THE PRINCE IMPERIAL's | DEATH WAS RECEIVED IN THE HOUSE or | COMMONS, Tho scene in the House of Commons when the death of the Prince Imperial was announced is said to have been ‘one of the saddest ever witnessed.” Colonel! Stanley, after reading the telegrams, said ;— “It is bardly necessary for me to express here in this House what I am sure is tho feeling of all of us, to whatever party we may belong—(cheers)—a deep regret that the young man whom we are proud to think derived some portion at least 4f his military education in our own military academy, and who, actuated by the teuderest bonds of comradeship, hat voluntegred to go out and assist his former comrades in the time of difficulty and of danger, should have met with # fate, though it well becomes a soldicr, which has unhappily cut him off promaturely, and I am quite sure we must all feel deop sympathy | with the gracious lady—(lond cheers)—who has been deprived of the hope and support to which she might so justly have looked forward in later life.’” (Loud cheers from all parts of the House), “This sorrowful narrative,” says an eye-witness, “which relates to the cruel assassination of a gallant youth who was beloved by all classes of the English na- tion, upon the House with deathlike siler Many members sliowed copious tears to fall, there was weeping among the occupants who, vanced thougs the hour was, remained in the por- tion of the chamber allotted to them, expecting that the government would give publicity to the sad facts, care having been previously taken, at the tele- | graphed instigation ot Sir B. Frere, to commun | them through Lord 8yduey to the Rmprens Eugenie, the widowed and now sadly bereaved mother, It ‘was the saddest scone J ever wituessed.”’ i nd | day a body of Zulus rai | of Luneberg. LATEST CABLE NEWS. Coolness Between Russia and Germany. ti LORD CHELMSFORD’S UPPORTUNITY | of the Khedive. ‘The British and Freneh am-, {bassadors at Constantinople have protested, Will He Be Able to End the War Before Wolseley Comes ? THE KHEDIVE AT SEA. A More Complete Railway Sys- | tem for Italy. | hpermeae eat [By CaBLE 10 THE HERALD.] Lonvon, July 1, 1879. The United States. steamer Wyoming, Com- mander J. C, Watson, has arrived at ‘Trieste. Isidore Christophle, a French republican Deputy from the department of Drome, is dead. | A despatch to the Standard from Janina | States that the Turkish authorities haye warned the people against purchasing arms from the | troops under pain of martial law. a A Paris despatch to the Zimes announces that M. Rouher has been summoned to London. A split in the Bonapartist party is inevitable, ‘0 the secession of the clericals. 4 afford Northcote stated in the House of | Commons yesterday that the body of Lord John | Lawrence, formerly Viceroy and Governor Gen- | eral of India, would be buried in Westminster Abbey. | The International Agricultural Show opened | at London yesterday at Kilburn. The weather | was fine and there was a large attendance. The | Prince of Wales and the Lord Mayor of London | were present. | Mahmoud Nedim Pacha, who was formerly Grand Vizier and friendly to Russia, has unex- pectedly arrived at Constantinople. The pres- | ent Grand Vizier was not aware that the Sultan had sent for Nedim Pacha. A Paris despatch to the Daily News says that in consequence of the Prefect of Police having illegally seized the Lanterne for publication of false news; there will be an interpellation to-day, | when the Prefect will probably be censured for his action. The Zimes’ Constantinople despatch says the | Turkish Ministry is still in a critical state. The | | ultimatum of the Grand Vizier demanding the dismissal of the Ministers of War and Finance, is still unanswered. The former Minister is very unpopular, A despatch from Constantinople says it is as- | serted in government circles that the Ministry | will decline to name boundary commissioners on | the part of Turkey, but will leave the delimita- tion of the Greek frontier to the Powers in the hope that they will be unable to agree. The Lord Chancellor, Lord Cairns, intro- duced in the House of Lords yesterday the gov- ernment's Irish University scheme, which pro- poses the dissolution of the existing Queen's University and the application of its endowment grants to a new university on the model of the London University. The bill was read for the | tirst time. THE ZULUS SUING FOR PEACE. It seems certain that the last peace overtures | of King Cetywayo are bond fide. A special de- spatch to the Zimes from General Wood’s camp says:—‘The messengers of King Cetywayo | have been recognized as important persons | by native spies. While they were palav- | ering with Lord Chelmsford a report arrived that the Zula army was advancing on | General Wood's camp. The messengers readily | agreed to be shot if this report should prove true. When it was ascertained that the report was unfounded the messengers were released. Lord Chelmsford, after stating the terms of peace, declared that, before treating further, the two cannon captured at Isandula and some hostages must be given up. The messen- gers asked Lord Chelmsford to halt, pending an answer; but he refused.” A despatch to the Daily Times, trom Utrecht, under date of June 8, says:—*Yester- ed a farm within a mile A small detachment sallied out from Luneberg, but, tinding the Zulusin a strong hill position, retired. NOT SO VERY FRIENDLY. The Times’ correspondent at Berlin says:— “In connection with the reported coolness b tween Germany and Russia it may be noted that | Lieutenant General von Schweinitz, the German Ambassador at St. Petersburg, arrived in Berlin | on Saturday night last and had a long confer- ence with Prince Bismarck, and that Prince Or- lof, the Russian Ambassador at Pai visited Baden and interviewed Prince Gortschakoff. Trustworthy adv from Coustuntinople speak of the endeavor on the part of Russia to come toan understanding with France relative to the East, It is said, also, that Russia is en- deavoring to conciliate Turkey by dwelling on the possibility of a release of Bosnia and Herzegovina from Austrian domination.” The Post's Berlin despatch says many persons believe the coolness between Russia and Ger- many is owing to the influence of the Czare- pr GERMAN POLITICS. The German Ministers Falk, Hobrecht and Friedenthal have resigned. Prince Bismarck | has offered to Count Stolberg the position of Minister of Agriculture, and to John Bey- deurtz that of Minister to France. | Both gentlemen are ultra conservatives. The Standards Berlin despatch says the resignations of Ministers Falk, Friedeuthal and Hobreeht have been rendered possible by Prince Bismarck’s endeayors to form a forced alliance with the ultramontanes and conserva- tives. The North German Gazette, of Berlin, eon- firms the report that Herr Von Hobrecht, Minister ot Finance, has tendered his resignation. It is denied that the government has declared in favor of Herr Von Frankenstein's motion to | distribute the surplus of the revenue under the new taxation among the separate States in pro- portion to their population. A despatch from Rome to the Pall Mall Gazetie says:—"'A special convention between Germany and the Vatican is negotiating. The German government is to nowinate bishops subject to the approval of the Pope, and the bishops are to nominate priests subject to the approval of the government.” The Times’ Berlin despatch says it is under- stood that Minister Hobrecht’s resignation was influenced by his positive opposition to the purchase of all private railways. It is said Prince Bismarck is negotiating with Count Stolberg Wernigerode and Herr Seydewity, | President of the Reichstag, to sueceed Ministers Hobreeht and Freidenthal, The Post's Berlin despatch says that in conse- quence of the Cabinet erisis the government has | suspended negotiations with the ultramoutanes | | spateh from St. Petersburg denies that Rus: The Berlin correspondent of the Daily News says the report of the resignation of Minister Hobrecht is semi-otticially coutirmed, but that his resignation Las not yet been accepted. . THE KUEDIVE’S DEPARTURE. The ex-Khedive, his sons Hussein and Hassan and Pachas Talaat and Ragheb sailed from Alexandria yesterday for Naples, on bourd the Khedive’s yacht. The English and French men- of-war saluted the Khedive’s vessel. A has protested to the Porte against the deposition against the abrogation of the irade of 1841, which gave the Khedive power to conclude treaties with foreign govern They de- mand that the status which existed previous to the deposition of Isinail Pacha shall be main- | tained. The Daily News’ Alexandria correspoudent de- nies that Hussein and Hassan pachas have left | Egypt. RAILWAYS FOR ITALY. F Atter two months’ debate the Italian Chamber of Deputies has approved the Ministerial Rail- | way bill, which provides for the construction of 6,020 kilometres of railways within twenty-one Years, at an annual expenditure of £2.400,000 ($11,616,000). THE GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY. A meeting of the stockholders of the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada yesterday approved the sale of the Riviere du Loup section of the | road to the Dominion, Captain Tyler, president of the road, stated that the purchase money would be applied to the acquirement of connections with St. Paul and extension to Chicago. The company has already taken the first step to the Northwest and intends to possess itself of a valuable line commanding the traffic of North Michigan. paibsmnanrabvia tasen, THE PANAMA CANAL PROJECT, EFFECT OF THE BURNSIDE RESOLUTION ABROAD—HOW IT IS RECEIVED BY M, DE LESSEPS. (BY CABLE TO THE HERALD.] Panis, June 30, 1879. M. de Lesseps wishes to convey to the people of the United States the assurance that he is highly satisfied with the resolution introduced into the Senate by 25th inst., in relation to the Panama canal, because it expressed exactly his own sentiment on the subject. He has always been of the opinion that the canal should be entirely independent of the control of any and every government. While neutrality should be assured, the canal can only be con- structed with the aid of a factor which has no This, M. nationality—namely, money. de | Lesseps hopes, will flow in from ali parts of the world. NO EGYPTIAN REPRISALS. Referring to this resolution offered by Senator Burnside the République Frangaise combats the idea that the United States should view the construction of the Darien canal under Euro- pean auspices with disquietude, and points out that the undertaking is independent of official support or control; that no European govern- | ment will contribute a farthing or a man to the construction of the canal, and that the com- pany will merely ask all the Powers to consider | | the canal absolutely neutral territory. RACING IN ENGLAND. MR. LORILLARD'S PAPPOOSE AND NERIAD STRUCK OUT OF THE JULY STAKES—THEIR STABLE COMPANION GERALDINE REMAINS IN AND MAY RUN. -- [BY CABLE TO THE HERALD, | MANCHESTER, June 30, 1879. MR. WATTERSON'S DIN A STRONG DENI\L OF A CURRENT REPORT. LovuisviLLe, Ky., June 30, 1879. Mr. Watterson put nal a telegraphic co. Washington correspondents of the Cincinnati and Philadelphia Enquirers respectively, touching their statement that he had pursued Mr, Conkling with 4 dinner invitation, which Mr. Conkling was forced to 1 with scorn and insult, Mr, Painter, of the Phiwdelphia paper, haying off to give up the a" yrship of the statement if Mr. Watterson would deposition that it was not true, Mr, Wateer. «says:— | 1 have made a courteous demand for the author. ship of u report intended to injure me aud exte sively circulated by you. The report was infamot aud untountied. If it was fabricated by you out of whole cloth, you are the scoundrel; if you got it of Mr. Conkling, he is the scoundrel. I have notuing left me but to denounce it and its author, leaving you to get out of the responsibility, POISONED BY COKNED BEEF, (BY TELEGRAPH TO THE HERALD.]} ALLENTOWN, Pa., June 30, 1879, B. F. George, a butcher of this city, last Friday prepared a quantity of corned beef, It was put up in the usnal manner and sold during Saturday and Sunday, Those who partook of the beet became very sick, Sixteen persous wero affected with every symptom of poisouing—vomiting aud purging. The | affected persons were Dr. K. J. Fatzinger, bis wite | | | | | | | | Mr. P. Lorillard’s chestnut filly Pappoose, by | Leamington, out of Maiden, and her stable companion Neriad, bay filly, by Saxton, out of Highland Lassie, have been struck out of the | July Stakes, to be run at Newmarket to-morrow (July 1), The same owner's bay filly Geraldine, by Saxon, out of Girl of the Period, remains in | and is expected to go to the post. Stakes is a race for two-year-old colts and The July fillies, and is run over the new two-year-old course—5 farlongs and 136 yards, EDUCATION FOR THE “REDMEN, EXTENSIVE PREPARATION BY THE CANADIAN GOVERNMENT TO TEACH THE NORTHWESTERN INDIANS HOW TO LIVE BY AGRICULTURE, [BY TELEGRAPH TO THE HERALD, } Orrawa, Ont., June 30, 1879. ‘The government are as yet without any informa- tion either confirming or contradicting the report of an outbreak among the Indians at Battleford. ‘The fact that the buffalo is becoming rapidly exter- | | | | | | | | | minated, thus cutting off the principal means of the | Indians’ livelihood, has called the attention of the government to the hecessity of making further rovisions by educating the various tribes O's knowledge of agricultural pursuits. It has been decided to establish agricultural schools at Fort Ellis, Touchwood Hills, Quappelle, Fort Pelly, Round Lake, Edmonton, Victoria, Pitt, Battleford, Duck Lake, Car eton, Prince _ Fort tr MacLeod and Morley viile—in ali fourteen. addi- tion to teachers inspectors are to be appointed to see that the wishes of the tederal government are carried out. Headquarters are to be at Prince Albert settlement, George F, who has had extensive experience in Indian tat has been appon: government agent to proceed to the Northwest and | make all preliminary arrangements for the inaugura- tion of these school: MIDNIGHT WEATHER REPORT. Orvick or TRE CHIkY Ste: Wasutnoton, July 1—1 A. M. Indications, For the Middle States and New England, rising barometer, northwest to northeast winds, cooler, | clear, followed by warmer, partly cloudy weather. For the South Atlantic States, northeast to south. | @ east winds, rising barometer and warmer, clear or | partly cloudy weather. For Tennessee and the Ohto Valley, northeast to southeast winds, cooler, followed by warmer, clear weather and rising or stationary barometor. For the Upper Missivsippi and Lower Missouri valleys and lakes Michigan and Superior, warmer, southeast winds, clear weather, falling barometer. For the lowet lake region, rising followgd by fall- ing barometer, cooler followed by warsacr clear | weather, variable followed by southerly winds. For the Pacific coast region, generally clear weather, except fog on the California coast. ‘The rivers will generally remain stationary, except a slight rise followed by a fall in the Upper Ohio, | and stationary or slowly rising from Leavenworth to Cairo, THER WEATHER YESTERDAY. ‘The following record will show the changes in the temperature for the past twenty-four hours, in com- parison with the corresponding date of last year, asx indicated by the thermometer at Hudaut's pharinacy, Henatn Building, No, 218 Broadway ;— 1878, 1879. 1874, 7 65 3:90 P.M i a 68 Tah 1879, #1! | lution, anda me General Burnside on the and sister-in-law; Harry Meyers, Mrs. Meyers and two children; Henry Beck, Mrs. Beck an@ child; Solomon Fatzinger. Wilson Kram, Jeremiah Bar- tholomew and his son and Mr. George himself. Medical aid was summoned and the symptoms pro- nounced those of poisoning. Neurty all the vietims have recove: The Board of Health will investi- gate the matte! A BRAKEMAN KILLED. PH TO THE HERALD. ] ALLENTOWN, Pa., June 30, 1879. At five o'clock this morning, While the fast freight train was coming down the Lehigh Valley road, William Stonebach, a brakeman, was struck by a bridge at Hokendanqua, thrown under the train and instantly kille gs being cut off and his body terribly mang! LOUISVILLE [ey rev AND NASHVILLE R. R, [BY TELEGRAPH TO THE HERALD.] Loursvitte, Ky., June 30, 18) Considerable feeling has shown itself in the last few weeks in this city over a resolution adopted by the General Council, authorizing the sale of 18,000 shares of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad stock, owned by the city of Louisville, to New York parties. So strong has the prejudice against the sale grown that the Board of Trade and imerchants generally recommend the Couneil to repeal the reso- ing of that body wall be held Thurs- day to repeai the obuoxious measure, the people gen- erally being positively convinced that their money will in future realize # handsome interest. HANGED FOR MURDER. Saw Francisco, June 30, 1879, At Mariposa last Friday Henry Ivy was hanged for the murder of John 8. Royal. The killing arose out of a dispute concerning the ownership of land, and on the scaffold Ivy protested that the deed was committed without premeditation, in apprehension of an attuck by Royal. HOTEL ARRIVALS, John R. McLean, of the Cincinnati Enquirer, is at the Fitth Avenue, Ex-Governor Richard D. Hubbard, of Connecticut, is at the Grand, Hallet Kilbourn, of Washington, and ex-Congressman Stephen Sanford, of Amsterdam, N. Y., are at the Gilsey, John V. Farwell, of Chicago, and Colonel James H. Howe, of Wisconsin, are at the Windsor. United States Dise trict Attorney H. H. Wells, of Washington, is at the Hoffman. Paymuster Robert W. Allen, United States Navy, is at the Astor. Rey. Dr. J. 0. A. Clark, of Galveston, is at the New York. Major Charles W. Howell, United States Army, is at the Metropolitan, Jobn Tucker, of Philadelphia, is at the Albemarle, MAILS FOR EUROPE. The steamship Gallia, for Queenstown and Liver pool, and Amérique, for Havre, will sail from this port on Wednesday. ‘The mails for Europe will close at the Post Office at one, and for France direct at two o'clock P. M, The New York HeraLp—Edition for Europe—will be ready at half-past eight o’clock in the morning. Single copies, in wrappers for mailing, six cents, Sie Oleg Drvon.—At Jamesport, Long Isiand, Monday, June 30, JonN Dimon, of this city, Notice of funeral hereafter, Travis.—At his | residence, No. 123 Franklin ay., Brooklyn, June 30, 1879, WinuiaM Travis, aged 59 years. Further notice, [For Other Deaths See E th Page.) TO THE VISIT. and that it ix a "OC. N. ORITTED Sold by druggists. A.—KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE T AY BE promptly administered in all sudden cholera morbus, erat of the bowels, for w! AM is an effectual remedy. At this season of the year every family in it «useful and reliable euratlv THE PRE: E PUBLIC A THE TRADE nod the return ot KNOX, the Hatten. the scene of his old activity, and aided by the business this sonyis destined to repeat and add to bis's* norky triumphs. Buy your summer hat of KNOX, atNo Broadway, or in the Fifth Avenue Hotel, CLOSING INAWS, S140 to 1% (halt Broadway pric DOZXL" A tragrant, hy Of dragyists ana I FRIEDRICHSHALL BIT? é ‘A sure remedy for constipation and headache, SAVE 40 PER CeNT AND BUY YOUR WINES AND Liquors by bottle or gallon, at wholesale prices, from BORDEAUX WINE COMPANY, 50 Bes CIGARETTES ARE THE BEST IN use they wre manufactured trom the oldest WATER, nid dearest tobaccoes, without opium of sickening sweut- enings gees eee THE MOST POPULAR REM@®@DY EVER SOLD 18 wann's TRETOTAL Yoxte Many are having the best lives by its use, Cull and try ts well EUROPE. NIWERP, ROTTERDAM, THE RAINE, SWITZER: 4Xlnnd und ‘ail parts of the ¢ nt, via Hurwich, hortest and bust r t Eastera Railway, od in the ¢ every possible comfort . oxeoliont euising and wines. late of Meurices’ »yal Family, corner Sack. ville st. and Pieadilly; Prize Medal, Philadelphia Medal, Pari» Victoria station, is woll known first ¢ i hw ZEDER, Oks ° ‘ance on to tho rai ining. JOSEPH HOTEL, LIVER ds priv tom House ad, Wasitixatos This reopened MP. of his country, The Wash- facing the St, Georges Hall, n and Northwestern Railway, ity to the other stations and piers, s sending letter or postal card from America of stown will be welcomed by the manager at Liver dintels » London KLISHED THE L WORKS their Canses aud int of view. Price, h a chapter on Dyw- 1 on, With chuMes And troatment, work ever published on thi he had direet ork also, a T read Frank Lee Benedic Lawrence.” vou have missed 0 M new novel, bovks of the season, of the bust