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Tt Shines for AN THURSDAY, FEBRE ver T Firth Aven Ne Sent ft. da Tony Theatre Comte Thirty-fourth street T! Square Theatre Mae owt Grand XY LYMAN OF iLtiNots, For Vice Presi SAMUEL J, TILDEN, Who Oncht te G Th ne ft have there of his must renomi rth take a seve itelans w allowe their o enve sume th who have this such interferen: that th grati Ou de and t! leans samo. have fora lon and on var sition to pe to manage the Repub’ exert any inth or evlecting its have turned a deaf eart founders and or simply becawe they qu Grant, his beialf as trea \tself. ers only a Convention, whose have away erty to ne then let th The country. inatkir Hiened ¢ vast The Brery « sooms to chal st result f obj cur what itm the la mves ri Bolic ought case of war portan proceedings hu ¢ porations, lately introd lature of 1 obj to atord the fact, regard of thi be explaii zeal to of tlon of s th tl or in ing i fy int proval ption of and i int » regu nile w the fact that this corporations whatever, let us s¢ Amusements To-Day, demy of Music at eoraay Ue! nil could brin tion, in the name of the people, for the dis- lution of @ railrond corporation nd Opera. Niblo’e Garden. York Bly mpte Thea! re Jsco Minatrels county as the place of trial. dofendanta, be rder from a judge of the suspending from office the president, directors, and manager; and by obtaining an order to show cause returnable on short notice— | hace meppoved. which would be equivalent to an er-parte = proceeding, by reason of the distance be- tween St. Lawrence and New York—he could have the corporation and its officers enjoined 4o far as he saw fit, and a receiver | Governmont on account of any exigency in Its appointed to take possession of its prop- | own politios, but on the complaint of officers of Without no- procure an Opera Donsent4. For the accommodation of ap-town realden’ vents for THe SUN will be recetved at our regular ot the up-town advertisement ofces 64 2-3 Wost Eairty-se It is possible that the despotie power with which this bill invests the Attorney- General may not be exercised in the man- ner which we have suggested; but there are still other remarkable features of the measure, Among them are the sections providing that the plaintiff'—that is, the Attorney-General — may mpulsorily examine persons not parties rto frame their com- witnesses 1 to produce paper amination. We belt res as these have ev 1 to plaintiffs in this State gates those portions of which were universally the public shows that thi REFORM T.cKer. For President: IMBULE, to the action in orc plaint, and that th ote., on such ex no stich privil to Philadelphi been extend at body of t t that it ab jomination. special, personal lers and beneficia them to ob Having under- which cannc be attained under that s be good, if to attain od laws must be repealed ? whieh itis their duty rights against corporntions which it is tt It is also quite po: political factions ¢ this specialized legislation is dl- avail themselves of a si power return. And med ought to be y to maintain, n way, aud without the Indeed, we pre special friends of the Pi matter in charge de »; and it is entirely pre inst which rected may expedient, s! » expense of the people, unless Jawshi's Money. time past, in many States sasions, shown no dispo- except themselves an organization in shaping its pol 4,500 in gold There is arur ror that Jan: ms tosome Eur newspaper, and that he (ters; but this is not certain, and pean stock excha' ot his $4,500 hy of the party ventured to ion the expediency of renominating nounced lack of z , however, ascert in gold to Jar payment of $4, ski by Mr. Comptroller the first of Dex mber, but about the LLY was in full posse s bound to respond t him if they can, ttorney-Gene Corporations. $ sort of Inw- m as Clerk of hould not be allowed ith them to rob the Is against the State elf shaving with the Evening Journal in the fruit when these villan’ be allowed to re aud he has ¢ ed, ishe to y asserted th is monstrous, t be tolerated for a mome TerwriztceEr should be expell as dray be dealt with by the courts, 3 a Reformer, and has t in prosecutin, vobbers in this city, Ichily ina earpot-bag, but Library labels, ai of Innocence shows a diwegard for truth ont equalled by his contempt for the intelligence of public in asking It to belleve his preposterous nesettions. And yet this convicted thief Is per= th Itted to continue his mintstrations as a clervy man, alt h an ecclesiast lded that he shall be reprimanded be congregation. This case has Its lesson. 'T re his of religion can never be brought into dist . solves on churches for good men church membors combine to shfeld eriminals in thotr organization from the opprob: thelr crimes, with the idea that by so doing thelr church will eseape scandal, they not only mit 9 grave mistake, but infllet deadly injury on the cause they think to serve. sean hea We have the best reason to believe that the npose ther but when Third Avenue Savings Bank te ina more demper- ate sttuation than even the best tnformed outaidera ene ‘The Tribune baa information that Baron Gero12, tho veteran Prusstan Minister at Wash- ington, who was so firm a friend of the Union during the rebellion, was not recalled by his our Government that he manifested undue zoal in sorving the interests of Germany daring the war with France, If such complaint was made, {t was probably because the Baron exhibited too much curtosity in regard to the supplies of Gov- ernment arma and ammunition furnished to France, a matter that ts about to be invostigated by Congress, for there {8 no lint to the tnso- lence of the military Ring toward those who dare to interfere with any of the plundering schemes which have been hatobed in and about the White House, This Ring derives all its power from the President; but whether Gen, GHANT fa It tool oF « plice ts a question which seems to puzzle some of the most ardent supporters of the Administration — The Hon. J. B. Crema rexplair f Assembly at Alt but that nly stol 1 dollars y several t 1 for Cusuman. Let him ha’ t tamp depart ment t a’ Conven fo Philae delphia, The pul nm of the Dundee Weekly n lily has been d ainued, This is the ixth t that the 1 under s . pr ‘ to an untimely end ; and in its final issue the rales urned and ther yurces of the office inthe way of ghastly cuts of coffins and tombstones are exhausted in the effort to render suitable mortuary honors to the expiring journal, And as the editor had m gaping columns at his di sal which should nave been filled with paying advertisements, but which owl the penuriousness of the non- advertising population of Dundee wer 1, he took wion to fill the hardly calculated to ett particular or part of Kane count Chicago burned into a crust misery ; a San Fran ape starvation, and recite had been deluded by falr promises lato s experiment of publishing a news rin this foul graveyard,” as a warning to who may hereafter nticed to bury ir talent in so unpromising a ft And t which he tells th Is reader representa the identi: n oof cars in which he Jend th ' 1D 1 ‘ tt 3 se , 1 it Lowen | New York ¢ { Don t nst tho President for this little but ho was finally persunded Presieut's patrona, bla; but Hexiy D. Ce ed accordingly, leaving p w he is tok to Bowes is t ldly for decline the offer Mouk $s are becoming exceed ngly plentiful in this country, The latest stor in which a woman polsonee figures comes from Loulsville, and relates toa girl who, young and from Germany. She subsequ went to Rocke port, Ind., where she took service in the fan of an old and wealthy farmer named Sitane, In it two years Mrs, SHARP died suddenly in ime the git], whose name Was CATHA- 1 1 i handy ¢ ¢ of by bane 1 i 1 Me. Iles ay DD. I t ‘ ono waa written by the clerk of tt ed | w friend of mine in New York; tho ¢ 1s my own handwriting; and the fourth the prisoner's,” substantiating his statement by hese clreumatances, bis plea ! velonen A POLITICAL REVOLUTION, se REFORM REPUBLICAN: FORM DEMOCRATS UNITING. AND iY al council has des many Ring to be Brotken— The National Tan Y Takers Seeing sand Press the Handwriting on the Wa nation Chat will Sweep the whole Coun r ming more outspoken every day, and there t¢ no longer any doubt course of the anu-Administration party In the Neither Schurz, Trumbull, Logan, nor Tipton will support Grant in any contingency ‘The course of the Connecticut Democracy aa in= Convention bas had an en- couraging effect upon them, and ® correspond- on the White House Ring. ‘The leaders of the Reformers here feel that there is some prospect of success, ff the Demo- | among the livin crate will only pursue a sensible and not a fool- They are led to believe from the action of the Democracy of Connecticut that the national Democracy will pursue & Like sensible course, There Is no doubt about the success of a combined effort against Grant, It would sweep the country like a whirlwind, SHOULDER TO SHOULDER, ht, since the Connecticut Con- as of the Cincinnati Reform Convention, The leaders of that move- ment have within the last few days received thousands of letters from leading Republicans | py... in almost every State in the U.son, assuring them that full delegations will be sent pledged nd to favor the policy laid m due to p= dicated by thelr la ingly depressing effe hardy courne. . about the suce to hostility to Grant, down {a the Missour! Libe nly remains for the authorized leaders and recognized organs of the mate that the party will act as sensibly as the ut section has acted, and there will be Democracy to intle to carry three States in the Union. n party has f reform, and sweep the country. non the public 1 the revelations made by seores of wit glove with the Leet-Murphy Then the almost daily exposures of frauds h somehow will, In spite of t neeal them, find th e desperate 1 worse than f OF THE ConRUPTIC ing which prevents a general cay- ing In of tie White Hou s faith that f test, In the unman fossilized leaders of the ted, and that h the bad generalship of the allowed to walk over the st notion that the hey had the remc uld pursue as y danger of @ union with the they would lose no t! form Republi nt to piteh ACE TO ANY PARTY 0 old, worn-out prejudices k my pile on WITH A CORRUPT PRESIDENT, Blows a Bugle ke the Cincinnath MANSFIELD, O.y Feb. 6, 1 y and yourself, p fin the Comp uri Convention, fora National Mass Con- vention of Liberal Republicans, he Ist of May next. haractor of { w York Cust adminsatratic mn House, f {is late ohief, polley of those who ae | whole: producing Ube lettert received Ln seme of Uke ene sume to be the spectal friends of the President More acceptable to me. Ldo not like a tariff of duties or imports which, while it takes money from one man's pocket and put in into the pocket of another, brings little or no revenue into the public treasury; and which, while it oster sibly adds to the w t some manufact If there ever was a pai honest view to the real in jegislation and purity of exeentive admin- stration, it was the Republivan, party; and it ts grinding to the sensibilities of those who par- t ot sted in fta formation to find so many men who had no sympathy with the principles on which it ta based, but Ye jum ped ale Biot it when the Y saw that tte voynire waa kely to be a. successful one, now easuming both the office of captain and the responsible labors of the holma~ man, The disruption of long accustomed po- litical aasociations are always painful, and it Was not for auch resulta as we now see that such men as Todd and Brough, among the dead, and Matthews and Hoadly, and thousanda of others, 2. stepped out from the ranks of old afMiliations and fell Lato line with the cohorts of republicantam, ‘The great battle against slaveholding dominn t and rebellion having been fought and won, and the fruits of victory engrafted into the na tonal Constitution, we have leisure to consider other questiona—less vital, doubtless, but atill of Iminense {mportance to the public interests, and the people of the United States can never aiford to abdicate their own sovereignty in favor of any set of self-constituted leaders, Believe me, dear sir, very truly yours, JAcon Buivkannore, formed with an of a f Chiet Juatice Chase Out of the Fiold—Trum. bull the * Coming Mon? Cocperstoron (N.Y) Breama (Democratic), Chief Justice Chase has dismissed all thought of being a candidate for President this yea d is in favor of the nomination of Sena- tor Trumbull as the opposition candidate, Mr, Trumbull is understood to be a revenue tariff man, and opposed to a high protective tarlif, The health of Judge Chase is not suMfetently stored to admit of the excitement of ay campaign such as we are likely to have this yea a fact which he fully realizes, Most of the lead- 's Journal ing Democrats of this State are at present in- clined to accept Sena: Trumbull as the “ com- \ Je any pitate action, v1 f dud the bench with Chief Justice Ct — Who isthe Man¢ Nam ! From the Springhteta Rey letter in the New York Srv he preparations forthe Repub nthe xt June the ation, headed by ex-G Claflin, hew the Continental, though they tail pledged for Grant are first and last for Henry Wilson as Vice id As nota single member of this del- egation has yet been elected, these declaration tata a ns are certainly. pre are, Tt may be Massachusetts will have vdidate for Yresident to present to the Philadelphia Convens Hon, rather than one for Vice President. ——— REFORM IN PHILADELPHIA Defaulttng City ¢ rs Dethroned nnd ju Ue corcera Any ¢ Grants Sympathy for the Tne lous-Col. Forney's ¥ but Grant nce of Tir PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 13, 1872.—The popus lar feeling against the present corrapt munietpal ring In this city has finally been most keenly felt. The late City Treasurer, Joseph B. Marcer, together with the wealthy, handsome, and dash- ing Third street banker, Yerkes, are safely dom! clled within the walls of the Eastern Peniten- tlary, Yesterday the Hon, Harry Huhn, P: deat of the Common Council, who so lately Ward, but throu his righ 1 t only in his own Fifteenth out the entire city, together it bower. Wim. 8. A the bolsters 13 and earnest exponent of Ulysses 8. Grant, 9 of the de- throned from their places of trust and power by the jon of our Supreme Court. TI nt Reform party, which was feeble in the beginning, has so wonderfully and rapidly in- creased | noth that not the corruptior ists of the munielpal gov , tering, but t both of whom wero surit faulting City Treasurer, were suddenly ¢ Administration f cit en ie SEVP Low N } Yared the nd | st int che iy \ | zi nthe be that Col. Forney felt obliged to throw up abie language, ° H pei COL. FORNEY'S POSITION ‘The resignation of Col. Forney as Col this port, ts ly regretted hy the busine C f Philadetphia, and at the same time it hailed asa good omen politically. [is no dt Ruised fact that he is personally and politieally oppored to the present status of the municipal, legislative, and national Kings. Although by Will lend his best energies for the Hepublican andidate for President, even if it is the unscrupulous man now in power, his ever ready pen and mind will hereafter advecate that be A will unite every wing of i h party, and more especially will his en ergles be devoted to the unvertaln pollitea aspect of Pennsylyant DELEGATES TO THE NATIONAL CONVENTION, The New York delegation has secured ample ations at the Continental Hotel dt ing of the Republican Convention us Indies’ parlor of this hotel will t their headquarters. When the Hon. Alonzo B Cornell, who will head a portion of the delega- tion, Was asked," How many wi here e he smilingly replied, * Oh, Tdon thuow ; t will veral del “Trow will the mafority vote?” 4 naar fr Rather ser ' mieea The Hon 7. BG i | t ‘ | | (0CSEMENI | - | | t Of cour Mr, Mack , i f strong ¢ tnd expre nhisy \ Mack \ t r ' 1 | | ) | \ t that, 1 ‘| ey vd hoverluz ' a ry, if they pe y ty the situat ro sure to fix tho attention of a audience, Whether the interest aroused ta of fssued at the commencoment of the season, Mr. MacKaye truly stated that the bene- ficial results of the drama wer pure plays, adding further that It may be doubted whether the eeryputonte will find in the long d impropriety of faithfulne and the spectacle of a handsome non the propr to the marriage vow, woman grad- ually yiciding to tho faseinations of a lover and proparing to fly with home, the subse t of contemplation that they may deem most fitting for sensilive or young minds, even though the husband in queetion was @noglectful profigate, and though the wife, by ident rather than from moral purpose, roalsted the temptation, and finally died a victim to the confilet of her passtons, Be this aa it may, the play certainly has that measure of Interest which grows out Nor ts it {ll presented Kayo personated the lover with tntolligence— somewhat coldly, formally, and oopstrainedly, 4s we have suggested, and like an actor whose art came from the head rather than the heart, yot with certain refinemont and good taste. ‘The other characters were those of the un- appy wife, whose sorrows and struggles Miss Griswold presented with true feeling ; the worth- loss husband personated by Mr. A. H. Daven- r characters—all in capable John probably Joct matter, port, and three ott Butler as the serv had as little care for Delsarte as might be, yet there was a touch of nature about him that the audience was not slow to recognize. While we cannot percoive that at tho St. James art is receiving any higher jon, or indeed as high a one as ‘Theatre the » is striving to do good ts of his prot rich it la presented credit- +. D. Bs Sickles to Albauy. . 14 =I notice in In which the gallant Gener entin the capital on an errand of con The facts in th: liation and har fly ns follows: tly alarmed about In the Stato of New York f the Legislature to s. and in the open ndition of thing: inthe fatty any useful measure ing public affairs, while Don Hana own Secretary of St man of the Repubt President's view only at and an imbecile go far as political man Albany, an anxious and nbers of the coi rdingly a letter red roof of the Pre of soothing down bis antagon- tment, and lay= ence to Roy rd was prepared dential palace sstering up his dt wsleep bis ad! }) 't was determined to t it was determined t UVAYVILLE Hanged on the 1 one Benk k him on the ing she and t ed the tloor and Huh this story seemed improbae y failed to convict the prisoner, bung OF, aad @ euulek sort, is another question, Lb bia DASHES HERE AND THERE HY THY SUN'S REPORTERS Scene tn the Bleocker st t Care A Wo man Jealous ‘olive Conductor, terday, as one of the cam of the [tt r . t8 up trip, 8 well d a b Crosby ste ’ car she #ald, “Conductor, T wish to ¢ t rowdwe aud Bleecker street id Certainly, madam," waa the potite roeyonw The car had t 4 Cros)y and 7 hea ft was hatled show!ly dressed lady t Carrying In her arme a large paper hit The woman on th ning the ¢ cc nast | Broad * Broads ay/ Indy who got on at Ca bp from the seat and loft the i lady remained seated. When the eur had nearly reach Mercer street she cut up, and walling to the door, sath to the condnetor,Didu't I tell yo to lave me of ab Brosdws “ Latopped the car for ai Broadway. Why did you was the Oras, bul pulite reply of the conductor. ‘The showily dressed inly'a cyen flashed fre claimed, in & votes trembling with rage," Yo {sin Ve didn't ahtop fur me Ye. sntopp foine lady. Its the lolkes of me fat'en to, ee tir bur Pithave me revtuge, ye villainy hint ye are She got off the.car, euaiing lor clcuclcu fet at the Leg wiidered conduetor. - A Rich O1d Man Sent to an Asylum Sons Going for bis Property. Last September Deputy Bheriif Ford of Wests chester county took William Hart of Kingstri tol the Utica Asylum, on the certificate of Drs. George Fy Jackson and Lewis A. Rodonatetn of Now York that Hart {# {neane, Ho was sent a8 a pauper, the count havidg borne all expenses connected with his case, te how turns ont that Mr. Hart ts worth hetween 420 0m He has two. sone, Ove of then, fytom lied to. the County Court, peaviny thet bap inetalled.’ee. ou father's prop this Ti ceil neaty Hand Crosby atrocta gr The eiowlly dree cated ong?! thie i that fr ting the old man int suapoet that ® a vio a West $2,722 Stolen from the saf Th taurant and liquor store of Jc apron {politician at Tenth et West, was entered by Lurglars oa Tuesday morn tween Zand 6o'clock. The burglaregot In by fa bonds and § The robbery was D, and Cape, Waal Yesterday ntit ea a Cents out of a Mon for w Drinks Kuocking Mr. Geor nt says thaw Thestay le took car No. % of the Grand, 4 Forty stroct and Tenth aven ferry. Het ‘ond sirect Hae at the corner of Tuirt: s Twenty-third wtree d handed the econ ductor a five-cent piece. There were three passengers in the car, Seon afterward a nul entered, an’ ta tor collected U maid @\Mr. rh yn dispute, Mr. Ford ‘onductor bad been ited the five cents for at says Mr. Ford. would kavex , they Would nol hee The Fate of a Missing Young Man- Fou the More 41 Tho Gaynor left we, 4 Wolcott atreet, Brooklyn, Ha joined three companions, and passed a part of the night with them, 7) ted after a folly time, and M A Firm of p Ind "7 nes t The Willlamsborgh Politicians Fun. Mr. Ed ¥ i wellknown Der ratic Mftthe most, they the feat one of Nevitie, W stractod th vction ia the Supreme Court en m against the Third Avenue Kain The Puncral of John Gloag Jack y 1 yesterday from St. A J Mr i Whos be Who? Coroner Herrinan held A Bludgeon Well Uret y | , | | - A Astoten I \