New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1886-06-10 [p...

1
aAmu8cmcm«. fluor orxR* motisb.8.The Bridal Trap. fjj,r-iv>.A.Erminie BrtBN MrSBK.W ax worts, Oassr orvKt Horst. s.«street* of New-YorX. Maiuson bocakk iiiRATaK.Hi3(i.Trlnee Karl. iisiusos-Avr. ami .S!»tii-st..o s, ru. to lip. m..Marri- m*csnd Monitor Naval Hattie, Hrw Cfstrai Park AABBSTB-n-Cnncert. Plato's Wsbuvn.8. B und to Succeed. Poi/i Qboubbb PaseheiL BTAisnAKi' Tukatbx.».lin Poldler. Bali-ack's.h .Tneurewlne lien. du AvtM'S lHKAtKR.H.l.itile Tycoon. Inott to aAoncrUBcmcnto. Page. Col.' Psge. Col. Amnsements . 7 j Mnmsees * neath*.. 7 tv AumniiiCi nu nts. S f> Miscellaneous H Auction Mt le. ol Heal Nen I'llb'tcillnus ... ti 1 Kstale . 8 ( ti. eau strainers. 0 e4 Bos- iicbs Notices. 4 i U.-.ii I-..talc . 7 1 lurid, nd Nollie*. fl J Kminisanti Hats. .'1 8 I)ns«iiiakiiiir. ti 4 BnerJOJ Notices . ft « Aiciirsions. 7 fi situations Wanteat. .7 4 0 jVrnaticlal . ll ;l Meanti»o.it« sn I lt. H. 0" 4-* MelaWaatee . 8 4 unarsaer He*,uta. 7 'ji He!-cs and Currisces ti 4 Teacher*. (f ll Ilistructiou. 0 1 J Hie Turi. 7 li JDneincss Xcltccs. Dyspeptics. Liquid Bread will relieve vonr trooble It is th- gr-ai aM to digestion. Ka-ilfusslrai'sK'* willi the teed, ann tr.ve* sm-nnu to the digestive uigaus. Your ilrugKisl amt grocer have it. Till' debilitated weakened system needs a mildly amnuiaiing tonie. Liquid Breed ls recoanteaslad na anch nv p'oinineiit physicians, (.ive lt a trial Pruigists ai 1 gre cers keep lt. TBIlll'.NE TIRMs Tn M VII. sIT.-i'-llIiJKfl's, ici'Otvr .itt,}, Ik* I MM Mofes, 1 Year, ti Months. I" Months. {.tit with Sunday.«s.) -44 j5 gJIS sily.witliout Holiday. 71»0 350 175 ftvaeavTribune ...". iso . . rienill hy labial order or Express Cii>r or Reg'isteied Illtrr. Pr Postal Nr,|s the remitter win please write on the Now .Jeri ur NEW-YOBS Trim mc " kl sid omreof Tur Triiuhk, 1 "<4 Vnsssnst.. few-York. Ad- Siiiialicorrcboniience simply "lug Trihi xx. New.York. BRANCH OFTICE9 OPTUS TRIBUNE. Advertisements forpublicsilou la Tim TlillirsK. and orrien ?tl rem,ar delivery o' the daily paper, vi lil bc moSIVCd at Ult rnaswbte breach ofllcce in Sew-Yorki Branch office 1,'J.lH Rmailivar. 'Ja. m. to 9 P. m. JS " lc' Hi-... lu nv tietween JJd Mi 1 Jill St*., till S p. m. ge. BOM West I wentv.llilnl.st.. lo a. m. toK n. m. Bo. Ttil'Tcird-tvr.uear Km tv.seventh.st.. lo .,. m. to ( p.m. Bo. 1. no7 Third ave., near Blxtietb-st,, Ina. Ba. foS p. m. PO.90BKaat "Iie.huutlr.-d an teeiiM-.imn «t., 4 Ins p. tn. Velor Sijuiiie, No. 189 IJuiith.ave rot of Itiurtceutli-tU IN OTHER 1 III):-'. Wi'jipisi.io.x.1.321'F-st U-xpox-99 B fcrn-it. strand. t\XttoQj& WOnilr) fctilmit FOUNDED BY HORACE GREELEY. THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1886. tue yr. irs nus morning. Foreign..Thc Roane Role question; dissolution imminent; Mr. Laboiuiicie on tlie issue, s_- Hint Ulu in Belfast; tell pcisoiis killed mill KKI houses il.>trovetl. ==.-: The Hiv Ntclioils Fletit 1) ex- jM-tlitit'ii. -. TIw lisl'i'iie.s tiiiuiilfs. . FamifMi in Colen. Conches*..Both braaebea in session. n_ gea- ate : Debate over alleged bud treettaenl of olaimi against the (Joverninent; a number of lulls nstesetl *===Hcaiae: Ihe Civil Service pruYiaiou ol tbe Legislative, lull discussed. In CoBUBlttae: Continuation of ihe Coliiliiissioller Wadi invest iga- 1 HUI. Dome* nc..Coiiiineiicenieiit ol Vaaaai College, -l'olitiion lindie building ut Weal I'oiut. l_5 J. It. Bodweli, n..iiiiii:it(ai fog Governor of Maine hy the Repobliceaa, " The junker City Yudit Clob reiraita near riiilaihitiliia. Labor Commissioner Peck in- Bpr-ctitiK the ttrlkea ¦ j ReedgnatioB of 1'ro lessor Bm kiiani, of tba Mate Normal Babool, s_ burglary conspiracy discovered in East St. Louis. Cut asp BVjaoBBAJl..Columbia CoHcre coin- ¦aaceaacBl exereieee. rr.= Mr. Stark linnie pres. iik-iit el tba Dick li'.ard. ¦ ¦¦: Aqueduct Coiiuni- eioners stirred ap, : =Chieagoa bceteo by New- Yorks, ltiooklyns hy the Mets. .. Sale of Ten¬ nessee horses at Madison Square Gardes,.Dr. ll. P. Farnham dead r.. lleetiag ol tlie Repub¬ lican Cluli. aa.i (idhi value of the legal-tender silver dolar lill'i-j grains', 76.22 cent*.-; .stocks duli early and active n the laM lumr. wiih Blimp advances, closing excited and et ron g. lilK WBATBBB. Indications for to-day t>liifhtlv ¦efinner, with ram. Teenperatarc yesterday lli«h ett.Tsis; lowest 00 : average, G7r,i-. I mer J'f inonu Icanit'j tow* tm- the season, and sum. .er titntllas. con loire Tun DAILY Iiiimsi wioi/m/ to tin m. poetpaid,for 7r> centeper month, tht Bsftires* I;ina elmnoed «« often ns desired Inn Daily TbibUMI in ll hp sent to eiinj addrm in Bmropt <tt ^1 LJ") per month, whick rac/udei the ocean imshnje. -4>- Mnjdi Batterwortb'9 witty ;md forcible i|weel In the HOsaBt yc-tenlav was not cal cu hi le il tu uiuke the Dcudci.its happy ifl view of then Bliiitm-r nilli evasive Civil Service policy, Nc wonder they writhed when he read the pub- lndicd utterance,- ol QoTtJTDOl Hill and otnei proiniiient Denaoerata in favor of the ii-iurin. .- s*> Tho nomiuatioii ol J. R. Bodweli lor Gov- crnor bf the Maine Repablicaoa had been dis¬ tinctly f.jrcsliiul'.ived in the preliminary CBDVatl and was made in the Lewiston convention yes¬ terday byan OYerwheliuiog Biajortt; on thc btst ballot. Tho candi late is in every naped cajmblo and Worthy, and his lelactioB will uu- douhledly give full tatiafactioB to the bulk ol the Kejiitblicmig tiiroii^hout the State, -ty . I The most inteiestiiiK thing about the Colum¬ bia coiiiiiieiicemeiit was the contailing of u de. grce on a woman.the hist incident oi the kind in tho history of tho venerable iii-stitution. The WBaBBlal thus distinu'iiislied is Miss Winifixd Edderton, a i-radiiiite of Wclleslev. She was already a Bachelor ol Arts ; noni she is a Doctor of 1'hilosophy. It La safe to predict that she leads what is destined to bc a hui*; line ot women on whom de-jn-es will hereafter he be¬ stowed by Columbia. Now that tlie New-York baseball nine has gone East its friends aud trelUwiahera expect to 9M it make a better record than it did le- SjBBtly in the West. The defeats in Detroit ind CMcsjjni were decideillv n mu t i tv in*-', aud of the len gataaa played on the West* rn tom our Jlub lost live. The Beaton club, however, is well .lawn in the list, and it the New-Yolk men do not win fhe tln.c Kanns tc be plaved in Boston this week it wiil probably be theil own (ault. -*>- The coldness, alas! between the Ticsident of the Baited states aad the Governor of Nea . York haa paaaed Uta preliminary atagaa aad ie How in an adv ann d state of developnient. Nut ©nly do they no loogei trjeak bj th. v rjajog l,v, but Mr. Cleveland reiiises to sit on the saine platt..nu with Mr. HUI. Al lc;.st so a letter fiom VVaaUrijrtea printed o.. our Pre! pace acta aTorth. The fiienle of a uniled Ix iiiochk v can- Jiotcontemplute this soectafle without sht'iddei- liiK. It will be ¦rciieially felt that the I'resideut aught to have been in a more amiable mood two days before his marriage. Mr. Villis has brought so much discredit upon thu country and caused sa much inconvenience to merchants bavin*: dealing- with countries peached by American steamship hues, by hi* refusal toohey the law in ie-rard to the carry¬ ing of maihs, that any move on his pan ra con¬ nection with this matter no longer excites ¦^riee. Bia latest scheme ls to get the mail* lat Mexico carried from this pott by the Alti- andre Line at the expense of the Mexican tlnv- ernnient. This univ seem shrewd tn the Post- nnistei-General, but self-respect mg American". who pty as tiny go and wish their (iovetninent to do the same, cannot look oa I* wit h un¬ bound ed admiration. Yesterday's meeting of the Aqueduct Com¬ mission showed that the new members and the old ones are not pulling together in entire har¬ mony, lt would be a sorry outcome of the en¬ largement of tba board if its meetings should partake of tho character of some ol' those held by other commissions in recent yeuis in I'uion Squaie and at Castle Garden. There is no cry¬ ing demand for bear gardens when meet ines of public olliiers take place. A communication from Commissioner Squire was the feature of tlie meeting that, viii attract special attention. He proposes to iediice the engineer corps ol' the uipieiluct so as to save $100,000 n year. If this amount, or even half of it, can be saved with¬ out impairing the elliciency of the work, it ought tobe done of course. Tile aqueduct is bound to cost so much that economy should he the order of the day in every dep..rtmenl of the work. P088IBLR RRNOMINA TICS. President Cleveland's renomination hus been predicted bj several people of late, on c irioiisly different giounds. Gue urges that, sirce he has tal.en a wife, the hearty sympathy of the people foi the President and his jrOBOg bride will lead toa more kindly judgment cf his acts, lt is thought that this sympathy will bring him stronger upprovnl of his course, if lt proves un¬ popular with the politicians. Another, an ob¬ server so sagacious as Mr. Elkins, is reported as savins; that the President's nomination is likely to be insured by his control of the patronage at the South, and in New-York and a few other Northern States. Still another, of the "Kc- form" variety, observes that a prominent Democrat at Washington, according to accounts in 'The Louisville Courier-.louriml, proposes that Cleveland shall be boycotted by the Democratic party, and left in a helpless cinidition, as An¬ drew Johnson was by the Pepiiblicans, and con- cluiles that this would insure him the delighted support of all '.he people who belong to no party. Now if Mr. Cleveland ls ginni, to have the support of all the "reformers'' becaoae he resists and enrages the politicians, and of al' the politicians because he uses his patronage to win and control them, and of all tho people ot heany hiiniau sympathy because he has a lovely and loving wife, any opponents will have a haul time in the convention. It may occur to some that the President's sup¬ port on these various theories would be a little inharmonious not to say inconsistent. It would be hard foi hun, one would say, lo offend tho politicians so ellcclnally as to win all the re¬ formers and all tho people who have human 'sympathies!, and at the same time to win the politicians by his uso of patronage. Put that would hardly be stranger than his election in 188*1 by the zealous co-operation of Hubert 0, Thompson ami George William Curtis, OB a basis of Civil Service Reform; <>f Soveu-Mule Barnum and Mr. Beefher, ob a basis of resist- ance tn cotraptioB] of Mr. bundall aud Mr. Cai lisle, on the basis of a protective free-trade "refom "of the tari tl. Many people of many classes chose to juill the wool over their own ives in 1884 ; -nrhy not again ,' lt is line, that was a matter of promises in 1884 ; in 1888 it will be a matter of peitoriu- ance. 'To prom isa 9*9oral contradictory things has been found easy bv many slippery poll* ticiaiis. Put it will require all the ability that Mr. Cleveland possesses, to say the U-a-t, to do several contradictory things, He cannot usc the pattouatre to secure his own nomination and at tlie same time refuse to use it, though possibly some reformers are bat-eyed enough to be made to believe that he has performed this miracle. He cannot win the support ol 'poli¬ ticians of his party, and at the same time cap¬ tivate the people by enraging those politicians. He cannot keep Garland and Lamar in the Cabinet, and cling to the odor of telephone and ncus-selling scandals, and at the same time put these scandals far from him. He cannot please the workers in iron mines and mills, and the millions who are employed in industries which depend upor the maintenance of the turill, and at the same time insist upon the "reform" which he indorses in his letter i > Mr. Manning .the collection ol the entire revenue from untie* un "a few score articles.'1 That is Mr. Cleveland's radical difficolty. Ile luis behind him a heterogeneous concatenation of wrangling and ai tagotiistic elements, which by no possibility can bc united in hearty action. <Mi the basis of desire for spoils, the old Demo¬ cratic element can be united, whether free tinders or not, but not Um independent voters who really want reform of thc service. Ile has put himself nearer the ultra free-tn de senti¬ ment ot the Democracy ni the West and South than any other public man living, if his declara¬ tion to Mr. Manning means anything. Pat he cannot do that and al the tame time satisfy voteis of New-Yolk, New-Jeiaej and Connecti cut. THE CHANCES OT Al'I'EM. Tba electoral cant ass bas begun in England and Scotland w ith mai ked animation. Oar Lon* j don cortespoiidei. t in bistable litter describes Mr. Gladstones eloquent apeecfa as made to the country rather than to the House and as foi ni in*; the basis of Liberal canvassing, Mr. Par¬ nell"-pnv\ cit ul speech in his judgment might have changed the tate of the Home Pule bill if it had been delivered eailier. It now goes to the country with the Prime Minister's impas¬ sioned appeal for reconciliation with Inland and imparts definiteness and positiveness to Liberal electioneering. Mr. Gladstone will not oniy go to the country with a distinct policy for settling tue Irish question, but with a plan thal is accepted in detail by the Nationalist leader, whose will is supreme in tho political councils of the island. The Liberal canvass may bo deficient in candidates and money, bj Mr. Labouchere states in his trenchant cable letter to The Tribune, bul it is nat lacking Bi ideas or unity of purpose). With these two speeches flesh in the minds of the ConstitU' encie.s, tin- toilowers of the Government viii have no difficulty in framing their election ad¬ dresses anil in appealing foi sui port on a well- deli i.ed Issue of overshadowing importance. lt tbs country eui be depended upon to ta¬ tura a Home Pule majority, the defeat of the seconil reading will be a most foi lunate out¬ come of the debate. If the measure had been postponed until autumn, reconstructed in tin- Cabinet and icvised in committee, it would in¬ evitably have been defeated by the House ot Lards alter being seriously damaged in the LoWBI House. Pet the constituencies now de¬ cide in Mr. Gladstone's favor, and the hill will be paaaed very arneb aa it was dtafted by him ami accepted by Mr. Parnell; and the House of bolds with the verdict ot the nation ringing in their ears will imperil their rapidly ci ambling political authoiity by vetoing the settlement of the Irish question. The prospects of Home Rule Will be bright indeed if Mr, (Hailstone's confidence in his appeal to the country be well grounded, since harHssiiiK obstruction in both Houses will bare been overcome. Pilton the jthcr hand, time would unquestionably havo multiplied the chaiicea of electoral success j aud the rejection of the bill hy the bonis would have lie parted a new impulse to the democratic movement in the Prime Minister's fa\or. The elections will be held before ihe Government is ade<|iialely prepared tot them and under ad- veise conditions which seriously cloud its rjreaV jtet'ts. riii|neslionalily both Mi. (.hillstone and Mi. Parnell would have preferred aa appeal in Norembei to a premature dissolution In duly i and this fact will tend to discourage their sup¬ porter at Hie outset. The cable letters published this morning con¬ tain partial forecasts from two trained ob¬ servers of the result of the approaching elec¬ tions. Mr. Labouchere is not over contident, but predicts that while the Conservatives will be strengthened, the Home Kuli' coalition will obtain a clear majority by icplacing Liberal- I'liionists with (Madstonian Pilietals. Scotland will naturally bi- the chief battle giound and if Mi. loadstone in his advanced veins can speak at Midlothian with the same marvellous power ami impassioned ferrel which he has displayed this week, the Libeial canvass will be at once ltivigoiated. The {ormatioti of a Home Ibile association In that quarter under Poid K'isebei.v's presidency betokens immediato preparations for canvassing. The National Liberal Federation has taken decisive action in the same direction, and with the conferences of various bodies of the anti-Home Pule coalition is an earnest of the most exciting clcctiou Leld.in England during this ceutury. Conjectures respecting the outcome of this in pending struggle are of very slender value, lin the one hand English prejudices arc very persistent and tenacious, and on the other hand the English mimi, when il is once fairly opened to new ideas, moves willi extraordinary rapidity. Whether the old prejudices ate still stiong enough to repel ihe new ideas it is im¬ possible for any one to forecast intelligently. Put events must be marching fast when the English people are confronted with the amazing fact that even the Tory Viceroy in Ireland, Lord Carnarvon, remained in Dublin "Castle long enough to become a convert to Home Pule; that he actually negotiated with Mr. Parnell on the basis of a sepaiato Legislature and protection of the island's industries ; and that his proposals were considered in Cabinet council. This very important intelligence ap¬ pears in one of our cable letters as the explana¬ tion of Mr. Parnell's sensational disclosures in his recent speech. Coupled with Lord Sper cer's hearty concurrence iii Mr. Gladatooe's policy.it goes far toward prov ing the imprac¬ ticability of reverting to old-time methods of governing Ireland. New ideas and radical changes are required. Mr. Gladstone advocates them. His opponents cannot agree minn any¬ thing BBVC unicleiitiiig hostility to Irish as¬ pirations. CRIME AM) CRIMINALS IN NEW-YORK. The doctrine that a man must reap what bs sows has received subsiantial con til mat ion in the criminal tliala that have taken place in this town iu the past tivelve months. Not long ago the cry was that " trial by july is played out.'' This has been emphatically disproved by the recent course ol' justice. In part this is due to the higher Standard ol' qualifications now re¬ quired of Jurors. To serve ona jury it is no longer necessary lo bc in absolute ignorance ol' what is going on in the rorld. Law)els have come to recognize -w hat has long been appar¬ ent to the common peoph..hat a man can pass faiily ami without prejudice upon tho testi¬ mony laid before Inn. even if he has n-ad the newspapers. There has also been an unusual display of energy on the patt ot the District- Attorney and his assistants. The conspicuous trials which have occurred here in the last fifteen months have been those ot Wind, Pish, JaebBBi Crowley, Most, Pud- denaiek, Holland, Schwab, Short, Shaler and Vbo11lt Dudley. All except Pish were tried by the District-Attorney ot the county either in the General Sessions or thc dyer and Ter- inincr. Six of these defendants are now serving terms of imprisonment. Mis. Dudley was tequitted on the giound of insanity and was at unce tranaferred to an asylum. Two juries have heard the Shaler case, bul neither was able to agree. The verdict of acquittal ia the case of Holland was not unfavorably regarded, largely on account nt the disreputable char* acter of the man whom he pul out ol the way. Schwab was indicted tor inciting a riot ; the jury disagreed, but the effect on the Socialist agitator has been salutary, fut since his trial ho has been a pretty well-behaved citizen. In the casi of Short alone was there a marked failure of justice. «if his guilt in tile slabbing of Phelan in O" Donovan Elissa's office the public fell well assured, but when the verdict was rendered it was tell thal theie had been a lack of v igor in the prosecution. Thc case hail not been made out. I »n tlie whole, the record is decidedly goid. Besides lhe.se cases Ute numerous gangs which have been partly Or U holly broken np should not be overlooked. In the trials mentioned a prompt infliction of punishment has been the rule. Buddensiek was allowed his liberty Hinch too long, but is safely behind iron bars and stone walls at last. Trial by jury is still effective. Substantial justice is the mle in our courts, ijury-flxera have been outwitted in more instances than one. Crime has dimin¬ ished and crimiaala are acquiring a wholesome and lesli.lining respect for the laws. Life and property were never safer iu the city than at present, ^^_ ANOTHER CHECK TO PASTEUR. No soonei has the English commission ap¬ pointed to examine Professor Pasteur's system ol inoculation against hydrophobia reached the conclusion that it i> sound than one ot Ida most recent cases tel ruinates in death, and what is wois,., death from hydrophobia. The fatal out¬ come in the case of thia Rumanian fannel is rendered the more embarrassing by the attend¬ ant circumstances. Winn the Russian patients who had been bitten by wolves were shown to be beyond the protective inflnence of Pasteur's virus, the professor said, or it was said by his friends, that he did not claim to have discov¬ ered a cure for wounds inflicted by mad wolves. No doubt in such cases the principle could be tafely applied* bul it would be necessary to have preparations of wolf virus for use in all inch cases. The dent li of the Russians, it was uglied with plausibility, only proved that hy- Iropbobia derived fiore the wolf could aol be .med by inoculation with vims derived from lbs dog. These considerations being admitted, M. Paatour was given Ute benefit of the doubt. But the latest death is a new aud distinct cluck io him, for the Rumanian who has jual died of hydrophobia aaa not bitten by a wolf, bul by a dog; and, what is perhaps oven more embar¬ rassing, he was subj, cied to the treatment of af. Pasteur well within the limits of what had been supposed to be the period of incubation followed by the disease. Eleven days ooly in¬ tervened between the inilictiitu of the wound and the beginning of the inoculations, ret the treatment evidently failed hdtogetuer to ar- rest the progress of the malady, which indeed manifested itself willi uiipicce,louted rapidity. It seems impossible lo diapoae of this awkward aaec in such a manner os to leave BBWeakeaed the conclusions which M. Pasteur aud hie fol* lowers have accepted. A uiutUod of lr* kt uuiit which this iustance provan to be by nu means trtietwnrthy.which in fart ia liable Ui (all com¬ pletely under conditions whiah Cttuuot bo toro- seen.certainly will not bi adopted by the scietitili.' world aa the last word on the subject. is PATRIOTISM I'LA TIA) OUTt Democratic and Mugwump pupers hero at tho North have been eating a large quantity of dirt of Into in Ihe hope of Billi further "conciliat¬ ing" Southern Pom hons. These papers had no wold of condemnation for Jellerson Davis's treasonable insolence, lint they did roundly ..ibiiso loyal Hoys in Pine who ventured to protest against the atrocious utterances of the ai ch --». ces-ionisi. They found great fault with Pepublican journals which criticised Mr. Davis, but the Southern Democrats who applauded his assertion that, tho lost cause was not lost went, uniebuked of these toadying admirers and upholders of the silid South. lt is little wonder, therefore, that in tho pre.-ence of such cowardice and sycophancy Southern Democratic newspapers should become presuming. It was only tho other day, as Tin: Tumi sr. has already shown, that the leading Democratic organ in Tennessee brazenly came to the front as the defender of the prostitution of the ballot-box. The denial of tho right of sn ll rage to la wi ul voters it char¬ acterized as u justifiable homicide." And now the leading Democratic organ in South Carolina, The Charleston Newt and Courier, actually argues that the feelings of our North¬ ern people have undergone a radical change in regard to treason and secession, so that whereas they once regarded treason as an odious thing and secession its most odious development, they aro beginning to bald that seces-ioti is justitiublo if uot commendable. It is difficult to believe that even a South Carolina Bourbon organ could talk in that strain, but here are lite Sews and Courier's own wolds I'lit- i!iink' nat i-i sure to como, anti ls comiiiK very fu*t. Bini sooner than wile to bo experted, ... ls a desire, rat lier, to Justify the iantaara people m the Unlit tiu-y ina i". aad to relieve thom, uno Bad au, treal .half to! BBBeal leader te their humbles! soldier, <if that stain af '.liuiid-svniiiiii's. Breton wus fastened upon thom in mon's mind* so lunn as it could lie held thal the wur was, on tho pert et the south, a treeton aad taaxcoearttc reftelllea ;o.'aln»t a in-t and uood Government. When we eoatS SS tin. ima.., that lt shall he admitted everywhere that the f-oiith a-iis righi under Its roiistrin timi of tho Constitu¬ tion; that its construction nf tho ('.institution wm the constriiitioii wiii'ii ebtalael bi the Boas the Constltntlon Bras formed, and was in the minds of tho conventions willoh ir.ive Unit ('(institution the*JBlQalh of Ufa, and was aaaartetl aud porsortes] to lie acted apoe in Penn¬ sylvania and Now-liiicjliitid, Whan thoso State* hui frtevaaeee under tho utare of tho Baited Slates; when all tin. i- tBIly and frankly ulmitt 11, as ii ls licitlnulnu to he :inini!ii'cl hy taottibtfal Northern mon, the taint of -n will bo talton forever anny from the people of tbe South. Soldiers of the Grand Army of the Republic, what do von think of that I Have you come or are yon coming to entertain the conviction that you yourselves anil your fallen comrades whose graves you lately decorated made a Colossal and most cruel mistake ? Are you conscious of beginning to take kindly to secession, of winking at flat treason, of revising (jeneral Dix's onler so that it shall read as your plat¬ form of patriotism,.If any one attempts to haul down the American flag commend him for doing so under his Construction of the Constitution ? The .voe* and Conner no doubt would rejoice to see the North adopt the Southern view of treason ami secession. No doubt, too, it tunis not a little in the Democratic and deputy-Democratic press at the North which induces it to believe that patriotism in this section of the country is played out. But it must in it deceive itself. On tho question of -i cession the North stands to-day precisely where it .stood when Sumter was fired upon. And that is where it will always stand. Tho daily habit of making vaeanciec for Demo. iTuf.s m tho Custom House, hy the dismissal ni Re¬ publicans waa not deviated from yesterday. Be* Btovala were reade tor .'consuetudinary " reasons. tba Places were wanted. on. tbat tba Board of Aldermen woald <li>s.iTi) sad go to thc country ! ,-.4>-. Ii bm generally heenrapposad tbat neither tho Republican ii'»r the Democratic puny would Inibt a state Convention in New-York this!alhatoce tbe only office to ba tilled at tho November elec¬ tions is a (.'onrt nf Appeals JudfBebip, Hut already Pciiim rats are indicating a disposition to kick :i!ja!iist allowing a state Committee to selei t tho candidate for Judge. "Many leaden ba* lieve," remarks The 8grocu*t Courier, in dis- cussing tba question of a Convention, "that it is advisable to call a convention tins fall if (or in> ethel inn pose than to enable tbe leaden aad mpre- teatative men of the party In all sections to coater together on questions concerning the future policy iml plans of i lie party. They argue that the taroo* Tuts ought to gat together and talk matters over nt least once a year, sad that a State Convention nth mis the pinper opportunity tor SO doing." It probably will not taku much of this kiad of talk tn inaUe the beiiiniTiitie Committee unwilling to as- .liiiie tba responeibility of making tbe Domination. *>- Inna newspapers make BteetiOB Of B little girl residing in that State to whom objects ten feet dis¬ tant lrnin her look Inverted,who tims nei figuring md writing with Inverted characters, and reads with her Iniiik upside down. Can it bc t hat Gar* laad has that sort of eyes! ll du s seem, you know, that if lie .saw things as other people see them he would l.avo not out of tho Cabinet long 4> - Kx-Aidennau Kirk, ot tba indicted baud, says thal be aaa aol "skipped." We trust that justice trill not skip him. Texas must needs lie sittiug iu sackcloth and :sii.-s these days requesting her children sa a par* dottier favor to cleb Ber. For she lately received | t blow from win h a Southwestern State cannot ba .xpeeteil tu rally un-ler a querier of a eentury. Mi. Vt illiani H. Dana, of Bootteatcr, entered a five-for- kUabootiog aoateatat Uouatoaa few weeks ago, mdaltbougb tba local competiton wen- many ho aron tbe first prise, making a scon of 89 out ufa cjoseibie po. That's what'a the matter with rexes -beaten at handling a p,st"i by a lad from Weet- .in New-York. If Texas had been vanqniahed at eviniiiK the lilllie, ot at tile Coin; ntl Behool of Philosophy In a dlacntaion on the authorship of Shsknpean, et if Dana had got a decision against ISt mi home Dice point of social etiquette, tba wouldn't have Band sn mach. Bal to havo Dana if K"i beetei taai h her how lo shout! ? . Cooereeatuea l.'et-tl, Boatclla sad Diagley have ilready been reoominated by their Itopublioan ailis! il llelicles. Uley have all llinde excellent ei i,nis as tba sturdy champions of unod measures uni the unoomprumlaing foes ol bad oaea *> . 7/n st. Luau Repmhttewn givea Oovornor Hill 11 iindei.st.iiid that "tho general tono of dla* iis-iuii " is against his proposition to takeaway [min Senate, the right Which they BOW enjoy of iiiiiiruiiiik' executive nominations, We woald itig- roetto Tai /fejatSliosa that if Mr. Hill could have waxedtba8eoateol ibiaHtate to confirm States. nun Oeerge ll- steeling and other of bia appoioteaa in- woald probably agna wira tba tnaieM of the L'oBstitBtiofl thal conAraiation is a wise check ipon tbe appoiuting power, A Qovemoi with 9 int of njected oomioeea ea his hauls cannot be expected lo have ¦ pareonal admiration for tba power of cotilil'iiiulioii. -a)- A British spurling paper, I'te Enid, insists on BBaracteruiag mir new sloop yachts 99 "lug celltre-lioill'd cutter.." Wu dec lin- to asgard tin-Ill iiiciitteis in any IBSBeoti bat it the] ..ie, what tim BagltSb ciltter-billi'liT* nee I tn ad Ult 111 their future luoilels SB B tilt bot 1"lil ililli a cell! I .-lin.ii,I. mt . Int N'Kw-Vnitk Titini Sf. ls a pee! ami jtooa joilran!. -(Beaten Hstale, I ms is a fart which impresses even the most cm- tunkeioiii Mug wumii. ? . I Hs election of Souutor Aldrich by the rioiitr.il tWeuibly ol Khotld island lo suoossd himself iu the United States Satiate was a fitting compliment to an able statesman, and secures to the State services which cannot fail to add to its renown and accrue to its advantage. The JftW-Jtfh World declare* that "the Mug¬ wump* have al) benn disposed to salk over the I'msldent's marriage.." The trouble ls th<vy were not consulted about it. They would sulk over tho dawn of the Millennium if it should occur without their previous eotisent. PERSONAL. Bolton peoplta stv Unit Dr. Brooks'* reputation for gael seuss mul sound Judgment ls now mun: Uruily established tuan evor. Lord 8t«lll>r|.1-Jjn Ittohiird Grosvenor), aa financier of tin- Liberal party knew all about its miuiagotnent. Recently sumo one showed lum a list of Hmso roembflr* who would amata Mr. (Hailstone's Home Rule lull. "Why," hs ext liiimoii. "it coolatai the anne ol every man who lins ever siibicrir.ed a penny tu tba election cxpi.-iirtds u! the party'." I>r. Oltvor Wendell Rotates will go to Cambridge on Juno 17 to receive, his honorary desiree. Tho writer known a* loutit Paul Vasili says hiv doubts whether Ganami tgaettef tvee arlll return to power in BuaatB, ea theCast bea lost all confidence in Mm. Bel he may yet hive an hour of triumph if the labors of his whole lifo bo crowned by tho enaltOB of ii gnat Slav Kmplro e.Tteridlnu: south nf tlie Bethena Then people Will do bim JuatlOO, hat too late. As for the Countess IkiiiattetT. alie is the most ambitious unman oe tba rana of tho cairn, sim played the nert of a tineen at Constan¬ tinople, and certainly once dreamed of wearing a crown. Dr. Pliny Ii. Chase sat been ar pointed ActingiPresI dont of Ifavor.'crd College foi a year. Mrs. Oliver Wendell ilolmca has gone to Beverly Farm* for the sn minor with her son, Judge Rotates, and his wife. A tine murillo nieinorlal of l-t. Leger Herbert, the oorrsapondon! of IBs LtnMon Momittp Pott who wa* killed ;it rjebal mi rho .vii.-, has teen sxeeatotl hy Mr. f, 9. Sheldon, and wlli be placed in the Icleton Cliurnli. It roprestuits hiui lu the thlek of tho hettie* BOtO heoh and pea lu hand. lribi TALK OE HIE PAY. An Bt-mombsr of tlie Brooklyn Common Council has benn accused of extorting the sum of ¦S50. Some present and former Xow-Yurk Alderuion must think that their brethren iu Liooklyu havo uol livod up to their oppor¬ tunities. Champ'dreau assists nt a rall way accident. An Idea strikes lilia mid he hunts Bp tlie roti'liieior, "Monsieur." ;." ,a> -. >i :,'-..' v. M lt le always aaU that ll is tbe tte. ward car which suffers the greatest damage In an acci¬ dent of this kind. Thou why not uo without lt here¬ after i" Preach Joke. lu the little Holstein -Milage of Sefeberg there lives I a humble shoemaker name Monei.ioti. who has o illected 2.563dtatareatbladeecbeatles, 1,390halag native anet 1,17:1 foreign. They are all acieniiii.ally arranged and ciassiti'.-.i, aili theeoUeetion Ulan exeaedtegly valuable one from a ncieiitlflc point of view. A'lhough lie ls now eighty yeurs of agu, Hcielaeh is salli -iu enthusiastic ilodeal of beetles, sad he prohahly knows more about these insects t lian any mau ii vin ;. It ls a ri«kv thing to play tricks upon newspapers and even upon newspaper reporters In (l-miany. A jovial spirit reoisntly ifiive a Frankfort reporter a -.crap of news wlileli wa* false. It was only done for a |oke, inn when tho new.-, appeared, an 1 tlie reporler's reputation for trustwortiiiims, suiiered in consequence, the Joker found out thill lie lind made a mistake, li" B as iv ..itel upon i>y ins innocent victim of the press with a claire for 12,000 murk* for "damage to reputation.'' The parties bavsslneeso f.ir reached n ooraraon steadpoint thal tie- iiuihor of tho false report oller* to atone for lil* error by forfeiting a twelfth of tbs sum demanded. "Nemo rae itanana Isoseslt" li the Journalists' motto everywhere..[Pall Mail Dazette. The ventilation In the General SocslOBS building il ex¬ tremely bad. This ls unduubtoiily a eriiiiinal offence. When Baddesatek'S ped Iii ree wus takes Bl BlBg sing lie said t ii ii »¦ his .. regular huslssss "waa thal af a butcher. Be hept nt his regular bpsiaess. ll apneara. when nc weat to billiiliuu houses. The way WSS -oiiiowli.it round- aliiiut, but it was a sure one. Mrs. Maternal (Boanning witii a Mend at whoso house she 1* oallinjt, is disturbed by seeuii: her little daughter In another part of tue romu examining seres ornaments)." Hortense- dear, I wouldn't touch tho*., things." Hortense." Oh, they're not so very dusty, mammal". Harper's Baser, Instruction mid boar! free tor tlireo months are given to 1«arsenal tlie Boaton Young Wossea'eCarlsUoaas- -ic, tattoo's school tor house servants. .. How i* it, Mi. Leader," asked Brows ol the editor of rae WethHy Ptaelnt, "thai you saltton* touch upon tbe current questions of the hour I" Mr. Leader---**Well, vu i se, in tiie first piece, I feel fiat I must write sonie- thlngta regard ru waa! everybody i* talking about, sad theil. In tbs second place, it OOOUrs to me that I nu.-iit Waar? By readers it I did wr.te an editorial about wliat ls iii ever) lu),ly'* month. CoiisciiueuilV. I sal" nothing, ami everybody is saiisiled.".{Boston 'transcript. Bogus '.Hitter is to be tined 5 cents a pound, if all works well. As lt ha. already been taxed with being a fraud, a de.ii-ioii and a snare, it will now be. -ally Iniiiiiti'appcd iu thu struggle for exlstenoe in tho human stomach. The enthusiastic Chicago pross declares that the ">ylvu" Ballet is a revelation. Did anybody ever eaa a ballal thal was not a revelation I What 1* a ballet for if not for revetatloBl.[Kansas City Times. If the tailors can't patch up their trouble-, win can? As tho eross wita eenuin young women i- taning from coachmen to oystanaea tho brides are on tho way tu ^ettiii-' inio deep Wilier. Cine who freq-.ients the beaches In the bathing season cannot help wondering how it i* thal stout aten get Ute ¦mell bathing anita, aad uti tue small, thin men Hie lame uno*, a tali mau goes into the water like a striped Bolognasausage, while his neighbor, the little n an, when he.strikes a wave, looks like au inflated bal¬ loon. There seems to be a conspiracy amonu bathing- house proprietors to render their patrons ridiculous hy niistltung Hu m. (.ii'hcrvnii: the bathei* ns they go into the eerf, one ll reminded of Mr. Alfred Jingle's remark to Mr. Pick wick, concerning the London postmen's coals: "lancer coats thole .made by con¬ tract.uo measuring. mysterious dispensations ol Provi¬ dence- all tue short men uet long couts -all Ihe lung uieii get short coals." [ boston Courter. The amalgamated Association I* ls a predicament, lt daes not like the idea ol' being absorbed by the Knl-lit* ut Labor. That is. if it amalgamates it will have to change its name. If lt does not change its Baan it will still be .Imaijaunted. A writer la Lend -i /furn/denounces the domestic (ly, especially In the sick room, and urges housekeepers lo take him in SaaeeB anti " do for " him. It ls cit unsted that a healthy fly, lu five weeks' lime, will produce a progeny of Uno, ami If these keep OU nr.iliiplyitig at tlie same rate every month iliinng Hie tammar, without accident or prevention, tlie result will lie, between the beginning of Baron, and tho emt of August, no ;ess thau M,loo,ooo,ooo file*. This arithmetical demonstration of fly tune is eatily wm te 1 out. In the word* ol Josli liilliutfs, " Drat a By ".{SprtagBeMl I'niou. BLT PEGOOTTY MUST BK MOKK AMIABLE. fruin rt* i 1,,-fltuiil I.railer. Crip, the Cluan! ni comic paper, suggests in a cartoon thal a good way to eu lin* little till about ooiltlsti ls for the parties to get man isd. Wu aro luclliiod to believe ihat i;.ti si. ls wilina'. A SKILLED AM) DARINO LEADER frets ros Sall Leta rriaaa*. He [Blaine, is to polities what Ney was to His French army.lue rear guard ou j retreat trom a Moscow, Hie leader when the old guard are deployed and sent iu SaablDK column to break amt roll back tlie enemy', cen tic, a mau who will Oe tho cuiiceriiiueiilol Ul* fe.low lueu jo loan 98 ho lives. I.lil' CAN AHA BEWARE! Fruin The ti'I i'i n'i tl'( HmiHIT'T. "Salmon l-'ishiug at Homo" Uk tbe Bead-line Of e NSW- Y..KK I'kii'.im. eiUinri.il. Itlsalairy story ot how they aro Bullina ni the lng lish in Manie. Hut it will uot ne lung heroin we are indeed catching salmon "at homo " .and loot will bo Illino rivers of Canada. RIGHT YOU ARE, MK. CLIFFORD1 fruin The st. li,ut* Hub* Ora.rif. At the recem Deiiioeiauc siau- Uouveultuu in Maine, the chairman exclaimed, "When the right* of the people are in danger, Hie Democratic party ls always near." The statement u unfortunately tao imo. If tho De mo¬ oralla party wa*n'l alway* so near, suih daubers w ould uot so Ireiiuenlly arise. LEND A ll IND ),ciui Th* .VcMiic/i i,nu.) Iiutlfttn. Th;. ; Tilt-. I null -i. . i'c-.ii-.\ii 1 una, it a nobie charity ead deserves ina eaeouraaenteat ot ever) aaa waa ra. alizcs tbe pilltul eondiUon of me pour, coupe i-ap emi¬ li rou ut Ibu Kraal nirtiopolis. .. * NOBODY A-KKD VOL. sn:,' SHE PAID." rr ni iht Hillturn,rt Amil timm. Ur, Blaine's Irish apeeea, doaea'i nun the Bunsil pa¬ pers. Well, ll wesa'l muutie.1 lo salt them. No TORIES OVER ll KKK. fin. Th* caicos's ImUr-Oceon. All tba Bums rous a poocha* wbleh have been called out by meetings held in lui cmintiy lo discuss the lr -n i|iie»iiou Uavo buen cordial la the support ol Hailstone ami l'ai'aeil. Nol a lu ce lia* lalteU lu support of Balle* bmy, ciiaiubeiUiu, or li irtlngtaa. MK ( Hil.Hs DECLINES. mai / c- / 'imd lu mi i-,i wr. Mr. Childi ti iimie well aware tti.it the Mttmobla taareala ihai have Binda taronbie meutiou of tho su**- liotli.iii, and Hie iiiiiueroii* lnfliieiill.il friends who liave written him on Hie subject, ito nut proleud to be invested with Ihe authorities aud powers or National Conlon Hons, uud lie ts thereloie mil ilenilling an oiler which li liol yel made, and 'hal l* not ul all likely tu be luude, by Un- oiiveiilioii nf any party orueiiU ilioli; atlll lu lils view af wliat ha regards as iiecctsary lu thu par¬ ticular iiKtatioe, be ihiiik* Hut not eveu his silence should be permitted to give en- C'.iiiaj'-iiiriit or to look like giving encouragement, toa pr-tposal lo make him a nominee fur Pieaideui. Indeed, lt lu. very parttal mend* iii the newptiapei- press and oilier »m allun* wno have la.-n favorable nollie ot the proposal were dentally I n vet led wno tull contention power*, ur could Influence and control a siilllcieul nu in¬ lier ot the voters of Hie I ulled states to stake hi* elec¬ tion al'snliitely c l (alli and nu ter ihote cir. uuistaiioel wunlit make tue ofter -ne wou.il then only have Hie uroager reeeea ie Bay, oed would say sun mure em pliaals, if that were possible: "This manifestation of jimii' goo..-wi,i ana gnat tavor ls very welcome to me, but you propose lo do what should aol bedoue, aud what I eannot nader any possible clrcumitoeoenajtr T lhat you shall do," ""*** ¦eV-*9 THE PRESIDENT RESUMES WORK. MRS. CLKVEI.AND KKCKIVKS KO CkLLriW-t, p,^ l'i,SKI. STATS: KKI.KPTION. Washington, June 9 (Special)..T]^, i»reJi4. dent waa In his office hard at work as usual at lo o'clock to-day. There were uo bill* there for hjBjj wm sign or veto, ai none have been sent during his ahienee. In accordance with his reo,ue*t. Mr. Kendall, -Goatee Barry, of Arkansas, and several other member* of (Joa* grass called to pay their respects. A number af ladloa called to see Mrs. CievelHnd b it wero told that it waaia be impossible to see lier llien. laaSBrla IBS BBB BBS President received the St. FlStsast de fae! .Sooletr which has been in session lu tin* eur. (hen w^rs a el many general visitors present ht the BSththj rtceDtloa Ibis afternoon and tim work at the White Beast trent on apparently in the usual routine ra inner. I as PresU dent ami his wifo do not expect ti* leave the ally aram until after the adjournment af Congress, n -r will thee Beaupy Ute Prealdeaifa naetry reakteuaa thli * mimes- I In- iiiiproveinent on the house will aol be e ,-,,,, ,.l(sl JI lime to make lt desirable for a resld>Boe ti, * ,e',r" * The Ker. Mr. Cleveland and Miss ( levelOO I !t VV**h, itiiitoii tm. morning for New-York, A stale reception will be given hy the Pre.id«nt aral Mrs. Cleveland on rueeday arealag i. ... x -. ti walsh tea Cabinet, the diplomatic corp*, the judie arv. ( sagtBBB, the olll.-er* of the Ainu/ sod Navy, tue bea li of --.-rtara imreaiis and the ladles of their IBmllNM Wi. :..vitad. The hour* of Hie reception wiii be fro n '.( IIBUJ ll o'clock. A ireneral reeapttoa, te wbleh Hie pub ie |4ln. rited without card*. Will lie given on .|u< e 1-froine until II p. in. Mr*. Ciereiaii.t will Bot tm at home aa callers until after the reception* WF,liI>I\i,S. Grace ("lnircli Brag lilleil featenUy noon with a brilliant assemoiajo gathered to Bte wei ana of Mite I.dilan Livingston Jones, tlie sister af Mr*. Waiter Kiitlisrfurtl, ant Dr. ( harle* RansBBB, of th,s city. Tba Kev. Dr. Huntington, rector of the church, officiated, and the bridegroom, attends 1 by his BffBihar, Gcaagej Kemsen. a* best mau, mot the bridal party at tho chancel rall. Tue bride was e*cor,ed hy her tonkin. Joiuutoa Livingston, by slmiu sae wa* niven away. Her cosluiaa was a rich gown of white satin, entirely covered with old point lace, and retl ot the satae material. The bri,lal houipiet was of Mites ot Ci* valley. The eight bridesmaids, cacti prettily dressed in white silk mull, preceded the bride. They were the Mmes Reasne, suteis of the bridegroom. Hies J utletta Morris, Mis* Miutou-Fust, MISS Charlotte Pell, Mis* Monia Kuthorf ,r I, Mlts Louisa Bruen sad Miss Anne Hoyt, Tho ushers were Jame* Duane Livingston. Fretl erick LeKoy, Frank Itutherfiird, T. J. oakley Kliiii.-iaiider, 1.Ju Darr an l Wi.liam Mauico. A we-ldlug breakfast wa* *-iten after the ceremony at Mr*. Wa.mr Luther- ford's. No. il Knit Foi ty seventh-st., to winch only tee relative* of the bride and liridegioom were invited. This was owing te the reeent death of the br.de^rouin'a moiic-i, Mrs. William Kemsen. Miss Anna K. Cook the daughter of John C. Cook, w»a married to Dr. Frank Baldwin yesterday, at the notna i-f the tiri,Io's father, No. 091 Wllloojrbbv-ava, p.rook- iv n. by the Kev. L C. Foote. The brtdeewstds wan M -. i,race Cook, sister of the Urida, and MISS A.ioe James, and the bett man was Dr. Letter Hal'.wm. \. A. /.ender. Frank Jennings. B. (,. VV o-k-tt and ll. I*. Van liortio wero the u*li»r». The bude entered on the arm of her father, attired lu white «al!n with train, Ihe flout of brocade and old luce. ion*; tulla veil nnd pearl ornament*. Tho br flffsldl wore white satin with diaping* of lacs, and carin-! large Bouquets of yellow rosea. The bosses waa decorateu with flow, rs and palin*. Among thole pres- siit w.-re Mr. aud Mr.. K. M. McKe.I, MISS McKee, Mr. hihI Mr*. Kdbeit Henderson, Mr. .ui Mn. Sm:tn. Mr. lilt. Mr. and Mrs Phillip Jennings. Ml->* Baldwin, Mm James, Mr. and Mrs. IL Adam". Mr*. W. Woolworth, and Mr. aud Mrs. lark. Tlie marriage of Thomas HwtnyaM. pren lent of the Dominion Telegraph Company ami assistant president ot tue New-York, Oatarlo aad Weetara Kailrood, oed Mrs. J. Armstrong Murruy took pice at UtlbertSV illa, N\ Y., ou siturday. Tho eeromoiiy weenarf.. mid by th-- Kev. Dr. Beesley, assisted by tbe Rev. Dr. Be j.a Thomas-. Moir's ni end Miss Florence Bogart wera married last evening in St. Pan's Protestant Eptsoesal < burch. Norwalk, Conn, lue Kev. Il iwarl ."¦. Clapp, rector, assisted bv the Kev. C. M. Sel.itk. performed the ceremony. Mi.* Jennie Vaeh was Ute orgeats*. Hie altar w,i* decorated with flowera lhere w.-i-e sic brtdesmalds, Utile girls attired in white carrying boa. quote: each one wa* au intimate fr 1 of Hie bride. Mi-s Mabel Vunderbool was mai-t Ol honor an 1 I. W. Kmory, of Brooklyn, beet man. rae bndesm o ls were Ml*s Annie Coles, MUb Lobb Calec, atlas Bertie Hyatt, Mn. Fannie Leonerd, Diss Daley Bird and Mt** (.raoe Cola The brine appeared in white corded silk, wits peerl front, diamond ornaments, sad carnet a white prayer-book, inc dniren was well lided. Inebrhla was given away bv her mice, Samuel Beattie. Tba bride received numerous gift*. There waa no ra eption, bat Immediately after the oeremoay Mr. ead Bra, Mor¬ rison st.Tte I on their wedding trip. Mr. Morrison isa member ot lbs timi of Hutcniusoii, Pierce .* Co., Noe. 7Hi-7Ji) Broadway. --a Mn. DEPEWM TIEWi OM LABOR TROUBLER The tatara* Clab, of Broo'xljii, Ins just adorned Ita saw picture gallery In the clubhouse, al Lafayette-eve amt south oxford-st., wau patatanga costing 99,000. They wero exlniilted last evening la UM presence uf B Urge, i,.:iu mr o: tho ineinbors of ms club. Chauncey M. Depew was a guest md ni ai le a linet speech. He referred to tho recant strikes and labor troubles and saul that club* were a remedy 'or Hid ua ii ippy state of thing* now existing. In tin Stall all mea wereeriuiii aud mit upon the same tenta Tue ta Suanceot clubs eBoeut extend lulu pollttoaeed re.ieem poiitu'a! aft ors from tue rule of mere politicians. Mr. Depew related what he saw of tuc struggle between law and order Bod the Anarchists In ChJeoga As pre-; lent of tho New-York Central Railroad Company ne said that be wm probably tba largest employer of labor letha world and ne teaed that in so fal as lie mat down aumin ibo men employed ou the mails la so tar was tnere success la running them. Trouble was largely dee99 the fact that employe* dbl not look et corporation* SS r. presenting the money of many persons, perhap* 40,000, but regarded tee money as a Mg lu mp used against them Many af the persons interested lu cor¬ porations looked upm Hie men eraployed aa simply so ii. ni-! i linne and mu-e!e. So loin/ as Hie..- false rtawa af both employers aad employed lasted. »o terna] would lhere lie insurrection and trouble. .1 WELL-DRRMMRD MAA For sn IX HIE FIVER. I lie body ol'an unknovv ti man wus picked up in tim river at West Twenty anead et, about s o'ciouh last evening. Tho appearance of the body Indi¬ cated that lt bad been In the water about four day*. Then wss ss Indentation epee the beek ot tba bead vvlit. ii may have b-en ibo result of a blow Indicted either before or ofter death, rae body woe -inuit and sion', and the face mille.kted.evea In its distorted con¬ dition.au unusual dejreo ul reliueiueiit The luau was about filly years of aga. wore a laabloaaMy irtmaaad mustache and goatee, mid hal ou B black diagonal suit. apparently new, ead a aaa grade or uwderciethiag, There was a large diamond stud lu Ins shirt, and a heavy gold BBBttug-Oasa watcu ni lila waistcoat pocket. A nneiv ambroidend bead* kerchief had the lotter "T" worked in nae corner. There were no letteri to identify the lu.dy, and the potiee are of tba opinion that ll is iee hedy al a broker ortaerebani Tue' b dy waa sent to tho Marges, lils Uol b0.lt.vcd to oe a case of suicide. MEDALS WOE FY ABTIMTM. The galleries of the American Art AtexietsV- Hon were brilliantly lighted and well tilled last evening nt the reception given to thu pt ISaVWlBBOn ot the preier.l exhibition. Thomas K- Kirby, the vico-president, pre¬ sented the medals lo tlie successful arts;?. Thc meda a are each of a 9100 bulli ui value and are handsomely stamped. Hie ten med 1* Wera award d :<¦'Hluerl i.aui. Car, Marr, ll. ll. Kitson, Alfred Rapper, Arthur Portee, i,t-oico Inness, lr., C. II. Davis, Kuo.la Holme* Nichols, IX ll. Tryon and F. K. M. Kehn. ACer the award* were '.mete a general Inspection of the galleries was enjoyed by tbe 200 uuest*. A tauobeoa wa* serve i and then the floor w is cleared for dancing. J I). Brown, Q. W. Bren- Barnett, J. ll. BuetonJfW, U. Birney, l> Forest Bots* r. 97. a. collin, Edward i;.»y, and l:. Kwala colloid w.-ieamoug mose present. UORDITIOX OP BOEEBT TToE.Jlt. Robert Hue, tlie nephew of Colonel Rich¬ ard M. Hoe, whoso death occurred IB Fioieuee on Mon¬ day, wa* slightly improve 1 last svealug. Ma aaa beoo ill for several days, b it it is ne leved that lie I* 1" "e immediatedauger. Al ni* home lost neening ll waa st Oed thal ho hal uni yet btou informed oi hit uncle's death. ?- STEOD OP VSW-BRVEMWIOR HUSTATS ED. In regard to the Tiiird ttoforaied Church ap¬ peal oaee, tb* Syaed etta* l*vettM.med Chare*,, al New* Bnaswlehi yesterday aeelded, hy a vue af 89 te 34, to sustain thc decision of the Particular Mimd of V-w- Itrunswlck. from which ihe ('ia*»i« of Phi,a.ie.pi.la Og* poaiod. Aa effort na-ie by Dr. Charles H "it io have tue matter relsired back to llmclassls was defeated by au overwhelming majority. _-m.- BOOMI OE si. riEORET DR PAUL, WaSHIBOTOB, Juue !>..Al the .s.-.i.iu ut tho Bnotaty af Ht. Vlnrrat i* Foal tala morning e co.umit- tsasnastanaitf Uta liava Patrick Curngan. ol llunokeu. N. J. ; J. F. korry, of New-York; (iaO'lel Healy, ol New Volk, nnd Joiiu BigglBO, of Bililmoiv, wore ap- pol itel lo*end a cab edlBpOtOh of greet nj IB IBS Pope, lather Riordan, ol N"a Vrnk. wac is iii c liss'gs of like work al Caatle nordon, made an lutareeliag stelsBxeet ot what waa benn doon ta aid l.uralgrauia univ ngia llial city. Tue delegates in a bo.ly -a..od un tue 1 resi¬ dent._ PLAEMOPMtMM MAUD BARER Bostob, Juno '.»iSpeeiotU-UiMi UmwA li.ciks, the daiighle. of (ieueral N. F. bVBBsS, b..s o..ui;'.cted ar rangemeut. lo.taru«il.e4Vs..u undei tho StallageBBCal ot Napier Lothian. The stays ntastsd an "A. .ou Like ll." .' ingomar." "Pygnia.iouaud i.aUiea," .. l.avly ot li.us" and several modern plays. Mike will sari upon her tour BB August M, Bud WI give ilia lu, per loriiiaiicesin the s-iMiiei0iU«s. aftei wald ellen 8lag bet clicuit to tba largor places. xo t/RARRR IB JiK. ARTMUMM OOEDITIOE, There 9ra9 no BlBoaHM ia the lonilition ol ex- Pre-ldeul Arthur yesierdsy. He waa up and look a little BSsBBtaa at limo*, bul still sutlered from physical .lepresatiiu and etUauillou. Ile cauuot sleep al ulgbl, aud is cempelled lo gel all Ibo rest be eau duilug tbs dav. IDs appetite ls poor, and the food that be eats gives him nunnie front indigestion. tmtMM B99Jj .peciallyaotivesymptoiiuiubis ease at BrBBA aua Dr. Peiers, wno cai.ed yeelorday os usual, does net be-

Transcript of New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1886-06-10 [p...

aAmu8cmcm«.

fluor orxR* motisb.8.The Bridal Trap.fjj,r-iv>.A.ErminieBrtBN MrSBK.W axworts,Oassr orvKt Horst.s.«street* of New-YorX.Maiuson bocakk iiiRATaK.Hi3(i.Trlnee Karl.

iisiusos-Avr. ami .S!»tii-st..o s, ru. to lip. m..Marri-m*csnd Monitor Naval Hattie,

Hrw Cfstrai Park AABBSTB-n-Cnncert.Plato's Wsbuvn.8.B und to Succeed.Poi/i Qboubbb PaseheiLBTAisnAKi' Tukatbx.».lin Poldler.Bali-ack's.h.Tneurewlne lien.du AvtM'S lHKAtKR.H.l.itile Tycoon.

Inott to aAoncrUBcmcnto.

Page. Col.' Psge. Col.

Amnsements. 7 j Mnmsees * neath*.. 7 tv

AumniiiCi nunts. S f> Miscellaneous H 6«

Auction Mt le. ol Heal Nen I'llb'tcillnus ... ti 1

Kstale . 8 ( ti. eau strainers. 0 e4

Bos- iicbs Notices. 4 i U.-.ii I-..talc . 7 1

lurid, nd Nollie*. fl J Kminisanti Hats. .'1 8

I)ns«iiiakiiiir. ti 4 BnerJOJ Notices . ft «

Aiciirsions. 7 fi situations Wanteat. .7 4 0

jVrnaticlal . ll ;l Meanti»o.it« sn I lt. H. 0" 4-*

MelaWaatee . 8 4 unarsaer He*,uta. 7 'ji

He!-cs and Currisces ti 4 Teacher*. (f ll

Ilistructiou. 0 1 J Hie Turi. 7li

JDneincss Xcltccs.

Dyspeptics. Liquid Bread will relieve vonr

trooble It is th- gr-ai aM to digestion. Ka-ilfusslrai'sK'*willi the teed, ann tr.ve* sm-nnu to the digestive uigaus.Your ilrugKisl amt grocer have it.

Till' debilitated weakened system needs a

mildly amnuiaiing tonie. Liquid Breed ls recoanteaslad naanch nv p'oinineiit physicians, (.ive lt a trial Pruigistsai 1 gre cers keep lt.

TBIlll'.NE TIRMs Tn M VII. sIT.-i'-llIiJKfl's,ici'Otvr .itt,}, Ik* I MM Mofes,

1 Year, ti Months. I" Months.

{.tit withSunday.«s.) -44 j5 gJISsily.witliout Holiday. 71»0 350175

ftvaeavTribune ...". iso ..rienill hy labial order or Express Cii>r or Reg'isteied

Illtrr.Pr Postal Nr,|s the remitter win please write on the Now

.Jeri ur NEW-YOBS Trim mc "

kl sid omreof Tur Triiuhk, 1 "<4 Vnsssnst.. few-York. Ad-Siiiialicorrcboniience simply "lug Trihi xx. New.York.

BRANCH OFTICE9 OPTUS TRIBUNE.Advertisements forpublicsilou la Tim TlillirsK. and orrien

?tl rem,ar delivery o' the daily paper, vi lil bc moSIVCd at Ultrnaswbte breach ofllcce in Sew-YorkiBranch office 1,'J.lH Rmailivar. 'Ja. m. to 9 P. m.

JS " lc' Hi-... lu nv tietween JJd Mi 1 Jill St*., till S p. m.

ge. BOM West I wentv.llilnl.st.. lo a. m. toK n. m.

Bo. Ttil'Tcird-tvr.uear Km tv.seventh.st.. lo .,. m. to ( p.m.Bo. 1.no7 Third ave., near Blxtietb-st,, Ina. Ba. foS p. m.

PO.90BKaat "Iie.huutlr.-d an teeiiM-.imn «t., 4 Ins p. tn.

Velor Sijuiiie, No. 189 IJuiith.ave rot of Itiurtceutli-tUIN OTHER 1 III):-'.

Wi'jipisi.io.x.1.321'F-st U-xpox-99 B fcrn-it. strand.

t\XttoQj&WOnilr) fctilmitFOUNDED BY HORACE GREELEY.

THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1886.

tue yr. irs nus morning.

Foreign..Thc Roane Role question; dissolutionimminent; Mr. Laboiuiicie on tlie issue, s_-

Hint Ulu in Belfast; tell pcisoiis killed mill KKI

houses il.>trovetl. ==.-: The Hiv Ntclioils Fletit 1) ex-

jM-tlitit'ii. -. TIw lisl'i'iie.s tiiiuiilfs. . FamifMiin Colen.Conches*..Both braaebea in session. n_ gea-

ate : Debate over alleged bud treettaenl of olaimiagainst the (Joverninent; a number of lulls nstesetl*===Hcaiae: Ihe Civil Service pruYiaiou ol tbeLegislative, lull discussed. In CoBUBlttae:Continuation of ihe Coliiliiissioller Wadi invest iga-

1 HUI.

Dome* nc..Coiiiineiicenieiit ol Vaaaai College,-l'olitiion lindie building ut Weal I'oiut. l_5

J. It. Bodweli, n..iiiiii:it(ai fog Governor ofMaine hy the Repobliceaa, " The

junker City Yudit Clob reiraita near

riiilaihitiliia. Labor Commissioner Peck in-

Bpr-ctitiK the ttrlkea ¦ j ReedgnatioB of 1'rolessor Bm kiiani, of tba Mate Normal Babool, s_burglary conspiracy discovered in East St. Louis.Cut asp BVjaoBBAJl..Columbia CoHcre coin-

¦aaceaacBl exereieee. rr.= Mr. Stark linnie pres.iik-iit el tba Dick li'.ard. ¦ ¦¦: Aqueduct Coiiuni-

eioners stirred ap, : =Chieagoa bceteo by New-Yorks, ltiooklyns hy the Mets. .. Sale of Ten¬nessee horses at Madison Square Gardes,.Dr.ll. P. Farnham dead r.. lleetiag ol tlie Repub¬lican Cluli. aa.i (idhi value of the legal-tendersilver dolar lill'i-j grains', 76.22 cent*.-;.stocks duli early and active n the laM lumr. wiihBlimp advances, closing excited and etron g.

lilK WBATBBB.Indications for to-day t>liifhtlv¦efinner, with ram. Teenperatarc yesterday lli«hett.Tsis; lowest 00 : average, G7r,i-.

Imer

J'f inonu Icanit'j tow* tm- the season, and sum.

.er titntllas. con loire Tun DAILY Iiiimsiwioi/m/ to tin m. poetpaid,for 7r> centeper month,tht Bsftires* I;ina elmnoed «« often ns desiredInn Daily TbibUMI in ll hp sent to eiinj addrmin Bmropt <tt ^1 LJ") per month, whick rac/udeithe ocean imshnje.

-4>-

Mnjdi Batterwortb'9 witty ;md forcible i|weelIn the HOsaBt yc-tenlav was not calcu hi le il tu

uiuke the Dcudci.its happy ifl view of thenBliiitm-r nilli evasive Civil Service policy, Ncwonder they writhed when he read the pub-lndicd utterance,- ol QoTtJTDOl Hill and otnei

proiniiient Denaoerata in favor of the ii-iurin..- s*>

Tho nomiuatioii ol J. R. Bodweli lor Gov-crnor bf the Maine Repablicaoa had been dis¬tinctly f.jrcsliiul'.ived in the preliminary CBDVatland was made in the Lewiston convention yes¬terday byan OYerwheliuiog Biajortt; on thcbtst ballot. Tho candi late is in every napedcajmblo and Worthy, and his lelactioB will uu-

douhledly give full tatiafactioB to the bulk olthe Kejiitblicmig tiiroii^hout the State,

-ty .

I The most inteiestiiiK thing about the Colum¬bia coiiiiiieiicemeiit was the contailing of u de.grce on a woman.the hist incident oi the kindin tho history of tho venerable iii-stitution. TheWBaBBlal thus distinu'iiislied is Miss WinifixdEdderton, a i-radiiiite of Wclleslev. She was

already a Bachelor ol Arts ; noni she is a Doctorof 1'hilosophy. It La safe to predict that sheleads what is destined to bc a hui*; line otwomen on whom de-jn-es will hereafter he be¬stowed by Columbia.

Now that tlie New-York baseball nine has

gone East its friends aud trelUwiahera expectto 9M it make a better record than it did le-

SjBBtly in the West. The defeats in Detroitind CMcsjjni were decideillv n mu t i tv in*-', aud ofthe len gataaa played on the West* rn tom our

Jlub lost live. The Beaton club, however, iswell .lawn in the list, and it the New-Yolk men

do not win fhe tln.c Kanns tc be plaved inBoston this week it wiil probably be theil own(ault.

-*>-

The coldness, alas! between the Ticsident ofthe Baited states aad the Governor of Nea .

York haa paaaed Uta preliminary atagaa aad ieHow in an adv ann d state of developnient. Nut©nly do they no loogei trjeak bj th. v rjajog l,v,but Mr. Cleveland reiiises to sit on the saine

platt..nu with Mr. HUI. Al lc;.st so a letterfiom VVaaUrijrtea printed o.. our Pre! pace actaaTorth. The fiienle of a uniled Ix iiiochk v can-

Jiotcontemplute this soectafle without sht'iddei-liiK. It will be ¦rciieially felt that the I'resideutaught to have been in a more amiable moodtwo days before his marriage.

Mr. Villis has brought so much discredit uponthu country and caused sa much inconvenienceto merchants bavin*: dealing- with countriespeached by American steamship hues, by hi*refusal toohey the law in ie-rard to the carry¬ing of maihs, that any move on his pan ra con¬

nection with this matter no longer excites

¦^riee. Bia latest scheme ls to get the mail*lat Mexico carried from this pott by the Alti-

andre Line at the expense of the Mexican tlnv-

ernnient. This univ seem shrewd tn the Post-

nnistei-General, but self-respectmg American".

who pty as tiny go and wish their (iovetninent

to do the same, cannot look oa I* wit h un¬

bound ed admiration.

Yesterday's meeting of the Aqueduct Com¬

mission showed that the new members and theold ones are not pulling together in entire har¬

mony, lt would be a sorry outcome of the en¬

largement of tba board if its meetings should

partake of tho character of some ol' those held

by other commissions in recent yeuis in I'uionSquaie and at Castle Garden. There is no cry¬

ing demand for bear gardens when meet ines of

public olliiers take place. A communicationfrom Commissioner Squire was the feature oftlie meeting that, viii attract special attention.He proposes to iediice the engineer corps ol' the

uipieiluct so as to save $100,000 n year. If thisamount, or even half of it, can be saved with¬out impairing the elliciency of the work, it

ought tobe done of course. Tile aqueduct isbound to cost so much that economy should he

the order of the day in every dep..rtmenl of thework.

P088IBLR RRNOMINA TICS.President Cleveland's renomination hus been

predicted bj several people of late, on c irioiislydifferent giounds. Gue urges that, sirce he hastal.en a wife, the hearty sympathy of the peoplefoi the President and his jrOBOg bride will leadtoa more kindly judgment cf his acts, lt isthought that this sympathy will bring himstronger upprovnl of his course, if lt proves un¬

popular with the politicians. Another, an ob¬server so sagacious as Mr. Elkins, is reported as

savins; that the President's nomination is likelyto be insured by his control of the patronage at

the South, and in New-York and a few otherNorthern States. Still another, of the "Kc-form" variety, observes that a prominentDemocrat at Washington, according to accountsin 'The Louisville Courier-.louriml, proposes that

Cleveland shall be boycotted by the Democraticparty, and left in a helpless cinidition, as An¬drew Johnson was by the Pepiiblicans, and con-

cluiles that this would insure him the delightedsupport of all '.he people who belong to no

party. Now if Mr. Cleveland ls ginni, to havethe support of all the "reformers'' becaoae he

resists and enrages the politicians, and of al'the politicians because he uses his patronage to

win and control them, and of all tho people ot

heany hiiniau sympathy because he has a lovelyand loving wife, any opponents will have a

haul time in the convention.It may occur to some that the President's sup¬

port on these various theories would be a littleinharmoniousnot to say inconsistent. It wouldbe hard foi hun, one would say, lo offend thopoliticians so ellcclnally as to win all the re¬

formers and all tho people who have human

'sympathies!, and at the same time to win thepoliticians by his uso of patronage. Put thatwould hardly be stranger than his election in188*1 by the zealous co-operation of Hubert 0,Thompson ami George William Curtis, OB a

basis of Civil Service Reform; <>f Soveu-MuleBarnum and Mr. Beefher, ob a basis of resist-ance tn cotraptioB] of Mr. bundall aud Mr.Cai lisle, on the basis of a protective free-trade"refom "of the tari tl. Many people of manyclasses chose to juill the wool over their ownives in 1884 ; -nrhy not again ,'

lt is line, that was a matter of promises in

1884 ; in 1888 it will be a matter of peitoriu-ance. 'To promisa 9*9oral contradictory thingshas been found easy bv many slippery poll*ticiaiis. Put it will require all the ability thatMr. Cleveland possesses, to say the U-a-t, to do

several contradictory things, He cannot usc

the pattouatre to secure his own nominationand at tlie same time refuse to use it, thoughpossibly some reformers are bat-eyed enough to

be made to believe that he has performed thismiracle. He cannot win the support ol'poli¬ticians of his party, and at the same time cap¬tivate the people by enraging those politicians.He cannot keep Garland and Lamar in theCabinet, and cling to the odor of telephone andncus-selling scandals, and at the same time putthese scandals far from him. He cannot pleasethe workers in iron mines and mills, and themillions who are employed in industries whichdepend upor the maintenance of the turill, andat the same time insist upon the "reform"which he indorses in his letter i > Mr. Manning.the collection ol the entire revenue fromuntie* un "a few score articles.'1That is Mr. Cleveland's radical difficolty. Ile

luis behind him a heterogeneous concatenationof wrangling and ai tagotiistic elements, whichby no possibility can bc united in hearty action.<Mi the basis of desire for spoils, the old Demo¬cratic element can be united, whether freetinders or not, but not Um independent voterswho really want reform of thc service. Ile hasput himself nearer the ultra free-tn de senti¬ment ot the Democracy ni the West and Souththan any other public man living, if his declara¬tion to Mr. Manning means anything. Pat hecannot do that and al the tame time satisfyvoteis of New-Yolk, New-Jeiaej and Connecticut.

THE CHANCES OT Al'I'EM.Tba electoral cant ass bas begun in England

and Scotland w ith mai ked animation. Oar Lon*j don cortespoiidei. t in bistable litter describesMr. Gladstones eloquent apeecfa as made to thecountry rather than to the House and as foi ni

in*; the basis of Liberal canvassing, Mr. Par¬nell"-pnv\ cit ul speech in his judgment mighthave changed the tate of the Home Pule bill ifit had been delivered eailier. It now goes to

the country with the Prime Minister's impas¬sioned appeal for reconciliation with Inlandand imparts definiteness and positiveness toLiberal electioneering. Mr. Gladstone will not

oniy go to the country with a distinct policy forsettling tue Irish question, but with a plan thalis accepted in detail by the Nationalist leader,whose will is supreme in tho political councilsof the island. The Liberal canvass may bodeficient in candidates and money, bj Mr.Labouchere states in his trenchant cable letterto The Tribune, bul it is nat lacking Biideas or unity of purpose). With these two

speeches flesh in the minds of the ConstitU'encie.s, tin- toilowers of the Government viiihave no difficulty in framing their election ad¬dresses anil in appealing foi sui port on a well-deli i.ed Issue of overshadowing importance.

lt tbs country eui be depended upon to ta¬tura a Home Pule majority, the defeat of theseconil reading will be a most foi lunate out¬come of the debate. If the measure had beenpostponed until autumn, reconstructed in tin-Cabinet and icvised in committee, it would in¬evitably have been defeated by the House ot

Lards alter being seriously damaged in theLoWBI House. Pet the constituencies now de¬cide in Mr. Gladstone's favor, and the hill willbe paaaed very arneb aa it was dtafted by himami accepted by Mr. Parnell; and the House ofbolds with the verdict ot the nation ringing intheir ears will imperil their rapidly ci amblingpolitical authoiity by vetoing the settlementof the Irish question. The prospects of HomeRule Will be bright indeed if Mr, (Hailstone'sconfidence in his appeal to the country be wellgrounded, since harHssiiiK obstruction in bothHouses will bare been overcome. Pilton thejthcr hand, time would unquestionably havomultiplied the chaiicea of electoral success jaud the rejection of the bill hy the bonis wouldhave lie parted a new impulse to the democratic

movement in the Prime Minister's fa\or. Theelections will be held before ihe Government is

ade<|iialely prepared tot them and under ad-veise conditions which seriously cloud its rjreaV

jtet'ts. riii|neslionalily both Mi. (.hillstone andMi. Parnell would have preferred aa appeal inNorembei to a premature dissolution In duly i

and this fact will tend to discourage their sup¬

porter at Hie outset.The cable letters published this morning con¬

tain partial forecasts from two trained ob¬servers of the result of the approaching elec¬tions. Mr. Labouchere is not over contident,but predicts that while the Conservatives willbe strengthened, the Home Kuli' coalition willobtain a clear majority by icplacing Liberal-I'liionists with (Madstonian Pilietals. Scotlandwill naturally bi- the chief battle giound and ifMi. loadstone in his advanced veins can speakat Midlothian with the same marvellous powerami impassioned ferrel which he has displayedthis week, the Libeial canvass will be at

once ltivigoiated. The {ormatioti of a HomeIbile association In that quarter under PoidK'isebei.v's presidency betokens immediatopreparations for canvassing. The NationalLiberal Federation has taken decisive action inthe same direction, and with the conferences of

various bodies of the anti-Home Pule coalition isan earnest of the most exciting clcctiou Leld.inEngland during this ceutury.Conjectures respecting the outcome of this

in pending struggle are of very slender value,lin the one hand English prejudices arc very

persistent and tenacious, and on the other handthe English mimi, when il is once fairly openedto new ideas, moves willi extraordinaryrapidity. Whether the old prejudices ate stillstiong enough to repel ihe new ideas it is im¬

possible for any one to forecast intelligently.Put events must be marching fast when theEnglish people are confronted with the amazingfact that even the Tory Viceroy in Ireland,Lord Carnarvon, remained in Dublin "Castlelong enough to become a convert to HomePule; that he actually negotiated with Mr.Parnell on the basis of a sepaiato Legislatureand protection of the island's industries ; andthat his proposals were considered in Cabinetcouncil. This very important intelligence ap¬pears in one of our cable letters as the explana¬tion of Mr. Parnell's sensational disclosures inhis recent speech. Coupled with LordSper cer's hearty concurrence iii Mr. Gladatooe'spolicy.it goes far toward prov ing the imprac¬ticability of reverting to old-time methods ofgoverning Ireland. New ideas and radicalchanges are required. Mr. Gladstone advocatesthem. His opponents cannot agree minn any¬thing BBVC unicleiitiiig hostility to Irish as¬

pirations.

CRIME AM) CRIMINALS IN NEW-YORK.The doctrine that a man must reap what bs

sows has received subsiantial con til mat ion inthe criminal tliala that have taken place in thistown iu the past tivelve months. Not long ago

the cry was that " trial by july is played out.''This has been emphatically disproved by therecent course ol' justice. In part this is due to

the higher Standard ol' qualifications now re¬

quired of Jurors. To serve ona jury it is no

longer necessary lo bc in absolute ignorance ol'what is going on in the rorld. Law)els havecome to recognize -w hat has long been appar¬ent to the common peoph..hat a man can passfaiily ami without prejudice upon tho testi¬mony laid before Inn. even if he has n-ad thenewspapers. There has also been an unusualdisplay of energy on the patt ot the District-Attorney and his assistants.The conspicuous trials which have occurred

here in the last fifteen months have been thoseot Wind, Pish, JaebBBi Crowley, Most, Pud-denaiek, Holland, Schwab, Short, Shaler andVbo11lt Dudley. All except Pish were triedby the District-Attorney ot the county eitherin the General Sessions or thc dyer and Ter-inincr. Six of these defendants are now servingterms of imprisonment. Mis. Dudley was

tequitted on the giound of insanity and was atunce tranaferred to an asylum. Two jurieshave heard the Shaler case, bul neither was

able to agree. The verdict of acquittal ia thecase of Holland was not unfavorably regarded,largely on account nt the disreputable char*acter of the man whom he pul out ol the way.Schwab was indicted tor inciting a riot ; thejury disagreed, but the effect on the Socialistagitator has been salutary, fut since his trial hohas been a pretty well-behaved citizen. In thecasi of Short alone was there a marked failureof justice. «if his guilt in tile slabbing ofPhelan in O" Donovan Elissa's office the publicfell well assured, but when the verdict was

rendered it was tell thal theie had been a lackof v igor in the prosecution. Thc case hail notbeen made out.

I »n tlie whole, the record is decidedly goid.Besides lhe.se cases Ute numerous gangs whichhave been partly Or U holly broken np shouldnot be overlooked. In the trials mentioned a

prompt infliction of punishment has been therule. Buddensiek was allowed his libertyHinch too long, but is safely behind iron barsand stone walls at last. Trial by jury is stilleffective. Substantial justice is the mle in our

courts, ijury-flxera have been outwitted inmore instances than one. Crime has dimin¬ished and crimiaala are acquiring a wholesomeand lesli.lining respect for the laws. Life andproperty were never safer iu the city than at

present, ^^_

ANOTHER CHECK TO PASTEUR.No soonei has the English commission ap¬

pointed to examine Professor Pasteur's systemol inoculation against hydrophobia reached theconclusion that it i> sound than one ot Ida mostrecent cases tel ruinates in death, and what iswois,., death from hydrophobia. The fatal out¬come in the case of thia Rumanian fannel isrendered the more embarrassing by the attend¬ant circumstances. Winn the Russian patientswho had been bitten by wolves were shown tobe beyond the protective inflnence of Pasteur'svirus, the professor said, or it was said by hisfriends, that he did not claim to have discov¬ered a cure for wounds inflicted by mad wolves.No doubt in such cases the principle could betafely applied* bul it would be necessary tohave preparations of wolf virus for use in allinch cases. The dent li of the Russians, it was

uglied with plausibility, only proved that hy-Iropbobia derived fiore the wolf could aol be.med by inoculation with vims derived fromlbs dog.These considerations being admitted, M.

Paatour was given Ute benefit of the doubt.But the latest death is a new aud distinct cluckio him, for the Rumanian who has jual died ofhydrophobia aaa not bitten by a wolf, bul by adog; and, what is perhaps oven more embar¬rassing, he was subj, cied to the treatment ofaf. Pasteur well within the limits of what hadbeen supposed to be the period of incubationfollowed by the disease. Eleven days ooly in¬tervened between the inilictiitu of the woundand the beginning of the inoculations, retthe treatment evidently failed hdtogetuer to ar-rest the progress of the malady, which indeedmanifested itself willi uiipicce,louted rapidity.It seems impossible lo diapoae of this awkwardaaec in such a manner os to leave BBWeakeaedthe conclusions which M. Pasteur aud hie fol*lowers have accepted. A uiutUod of lr* kt uuiitwhich this iustance provan to be by nu meanstrtietwnrthy.which in fart ia liable Ui (all com¬pletely under conditions whiah Cttuuot bo toro-

seen.certainly will not bi adopted by thescietitili.' world aa the last word on the subject.

is PATRIOTISM I'LA TIA) OUTtDemocratic and Mugwump pupers hero at tho

North have been eating a large quantity of dirtof Into in Ihe hope of Billi further "conciliat¬ing" Southern Pom hons. These papers hadno wold of condemnation for Jellerson Davis'streasonable insolence, lint they did roundly..ibiiso loyal Hoys in Pine who ventured to

protest against the atrocious utterances of theai ch --».ces-ionisi. They found great faultwith Pepublican journals which criticised Mr.Davis, but the Southern Democrats whoapplauded his assertion that, tho lost cause

was not lost went, uniebuked of these toadyingadmirers and upholders of the silid South.

lt is little wonder, therefore, that in thopre.-ence of such cowardice and sycophancySouthern Democratic newspapers shouldbecome presuming. It was only tho other day,as Tin: Tumi sr. has already shown, that theleading Democratic organ in Tennesseebrazenly came to the front as the defender ofthe prostitution of the ballot-box. The denialof tho right of sn ll rage to la wi ul voters it char¬acterized as u justifiable homicide." And now

the leading Democratic organ in SouthCarolina, The Charleston Newt and Courier,actually argues that the feelings of our North¬ern people have undergone a radical change in

regard to treason and secession, so thatwhereas they once regarded treason as an

odious thing and secession its most odiousdevelopment, they aro beginning to bald thatseces-ioti is justitiublo if uot commendable. Itis difficult to believe that even a South CarolinaBourbon organ could talk in that strain, buthere are lite Sews and Courier's own wolds

I'lit- i!iink' nat i-i sure to como, anti ls comiiiK veryfu*t. Bini sooner than wile to bo experted, ... ls a

desire, rat lier, to Justify the iantaara people m the Unlittiu-y ina i". aad to relieve thom, uno Bad au, treal .halfto!BBBeal leader te their humbles! soldier, <if that stain af'.liuiid-svniiiiii's. Breton wus fastened upon thom in mon's

mind* so lunn as it could lie held thal the wur was, on tho

pert et the south, a treeton aad taaxcoearttc reftelllea;o.'aln»t a in-t and uood Government. When we eoatS SS

tin. ima.., that lt shall he admitted everywhere that thef-oiith a-iis righi under Its roiistrin timi of tho Constitu¬

tion; that its construction nf tho ('.institution wm the

constriiitioii wiii'ii ebtalael bi the Boas the ConstltntlonBras formed, and was in the minds of tho conventionswilloh ir.ive Unit ('(institution the*JBlQalh of Ufa, and was

aaaartetl aud porsortes] to lie acted apoe in Penn¬

sylvania and Now-liiicjliitid, Whan thoso State* hui

frtevaaeee under tho utare of tho Baited Slates; when all

tin. i- tBIly and frankly ulmitt 11, as ii ls licitlnulnu to he

:inini!ii'cl hy taottibtfal Northern mon, the taint of-n will bo talton forever anny from the people of

tbe South.Soldiers of the Grand Army of the Republic,

what do von think of that I Have you come or

are yon coming to entertain the conviction that

you yourselves anil your fallen comrades whosegraves you lately decorated made a Colossaland most cruel mistake ? Are you conscious ofbeginning to take kindly to secession, ofwinking at flat treason, of revising (jeneralDix's onler so that it shall read as your plat¬form of patriotism,.If any one attempts to

haul down the American flag commend himfor doing so under his Construction of the

Constitution ?The .voe* and Conner no doubt would

rejoice to see the North adopt the Southernview of treason ami secession. No doubt, too,it tunis not a little in the Democratic anddeputy-Democratic press at the North whichinduces it to believe that patriotism in thissection of the country is played out. But itmust in it deceive itself. On tho question of-i cession the North stands to-day preciselywhere it .stood when Sumter was fired upon.And that is where it will always stand.

Tho daily habit of making vaeanciec for Demo.iTuf.s m tho Custom House, hy the dismissal ni Re¬

publicans waa not deviated from yesterday. Be*Btovala were reade tor .'consuetudinary " reasons.

tba Places were wanted.

on. tbat tba Board of Aldermen woald <li>s.iTi)sad go to thc country !

,-.4>-.

Ii bm generally heenrapposad tbat neither thoRepublican ii'»r the Democratic puny wouldInibt a state Convention in New-York this!alhatocetbe only office to ba tilled at tho November elec¬tions is a (.'onrt nf Appeals JudfBebip, Hut alreadyPciiim rats are indicating a disposition to kick:i!ja!iist allowing a state Committee to selei t

tho candidate for Judge. "Many leaden ba*lieve," remarks The 8grocu*t Courier, in dis-

cussing tba question of a Convention, "that itis advisable to call a convention tins fall if (or in>

ethel inn pose than to enable tbe leaden aad mpre-teatative men of the party In all sections to coatertogether on questions concerning the future policyiml plans of i lie party. They argue that the taroo*Tuts ought to gat together and talk matters over

nt least once a year, sad that a State Conventionnth mis the pinper opportunity tor SO doing." Itprobably will not taku much of this kiad of talk tn

inaUe the beiiiniTiitie Committee unwilling to as-

.liiiie tba responeibility of making tbe Domination.*>-

Inna newspapers make BteetiOB Of B little girlresiding in that State to whom objects ten feet dis¬tant lrnin her look Inverted,who tims nei figuringmd writing with Inverted characters, and readswith her Iniiik upside down. Can it bc t hat Gar*laad has that sort of eyes! ll du s seem, youknow, that if lie .saw things as other people see

them he would l.avo not out of tho Cabinet long4> -

Kx-Aidennau Kirk, ot tba indicted baud, says

thal be aaa aol "skipped." We trust that justicetrill not skip him.

Texas must needs lie sittiug iu sackcloth and:sii.-s these days requesting her children sa a par*dottier favor to cleb Ber. For she lately received |t blow from win h a Southwestern State cannot ba.xpeeteil tu rally un-ler a querier of a eentury. Mi.Vt illiani H. Dana, of Bootteatcr, entered a five-for-kUabootiog aoateatat Uouatoaa few weeks ago,

mdaltbougb tba local competiton wen- many hoaron tbe first prise, making a scon of 89 out ufacjoseibie po. That's what'a the matter with rexes-beaten at handling a p,st"i by a lad from Weet-.in New-York. If Texas had been vanqniahed at

eviniiiK the lilllie, ot at tile Coin; ntl Behool ofPhilosophy In a dlacntaion on the authorship ofShsknpean, et if Dana had got a decision againstISt mi home Dice point of social etiquette, tbawouldn't have Band sn mach. Bal to havo Danaif K"i beetei taai h her how lo shout!

? .

Cooereeatuea l.'et-tl, Boatclla sad Diagley haveilready been reoominated by their Itopublioanailis! il llelicles. Uley have all llinde excellentei i,nis as tba sturdy champions of unod measuresuni the unoomprumlaing foes ol bad oaea

*>.

7/n st. Luau Repmhttewn givea Oovornor Hill11 iindei.st.iiid that "tho general tono of dla*iis-iuii

"

is against his proposition to takeaway[min Senate, the right Which they BOW enjoy ofiiiiiiruiiiik' executive nominations, We woald itig-roetto Tai /fejatSliosa that if Mr. Hill could havewaxedtba8eoateol ibiaHtate to confirm States.nun Oeerge ll- steeling and other of bia appoioteaain- woald probably agna wira tba tnaieM of theL'oBstitBtiofl thal conAraiation is a wise checkipon tbe appoiuting power, A Qovemoi with 9int of njected oomioeea ea his hauls cannot beexpected lo have ¦ pareonal admiration for tbapower of cotilil'iiiulioii.

-a)-

A British spurling paper, I'te Enid, insists on

BBaracteruiag mir new sloop yachts 99 "lugcelltre-lioill'd cutter.." Wu dec lin- to asgard tin-Illiiiciitteis in any IBSBeoti bat it the] ..ie, what timBagltSb ciltter-billi'liT* nee I tn ad Ult 111 theirfuture luoilels SB B tilt bot 1"lil ililli a cell! I .-lin.ii,I.

mt .

Int N'Kw-Vnitk Titini Sf. ls a pee! ami jtooa joilran!.-(Beaten Hstale,

I ms is a fart which impresses even the most cm-

tunkeioiii Mug wumii.? .

I Hs election of Souutor Aldrich by the rioiitr.iltWeuibly ol Khotld island lo suoossd himself iu the

United States Satiate was a fitting compliment toan able statesman, and secures to the State serviceswhich cannot fail to add to its renown and accrueto its advantage.

The JftW-Jtfh World declare* that "the Mug¬wump* have al) benn disposed to salk over theI'msldent's marriage.." The trouble ls th<vy were

not consulted about it. They would sulk over thodawn of the Millennium if it should occur withouttheir previous eotisent.

PERSONAL.Bolton peoplta stv Unit Dr. Brooks'* reputation for

gael seuss mul sound Judgment ls now mun: Uruilyestablished tuan evor.

Lord 8t«lll>r|.1-Jjn Ittohiird Grosvenor), aa financier oftin- Liberal party knew all about its miuiagotnent.Recently sumo one showed lum a list of Hmso roembflr*who would amata Mr. (Hailstone's Home Rule lull."Why," hs ext liiimoii. "it coolatai the anne ol everyman who lins ever siibicrir.ed a penny tu tba electioncxpi.-iirtds u! the party'."

I>r. Oltvor Wendell Rotates will go to Cambridge on

Juno 17 to receive, his honorary desiree.

Tho writer known a* loutit Paul Vasili says hiv doubtswhether Ganami tgaettef tvee arlll return to power in

BuaatB, ea theCast bea lost all confidence in Mm. Belhe may yet hive an hour of triumph if the labors ofhis whole lifo bo crowned by tho enaltOB of ii gnat SlavKmplro e.Tteridlnu: south nf tlie Bethena Then peopleWill do bim JuatlOO, hat too late. As for the CountessIkiiiattetT. alie is the most ambitious unman oe tba ranaof tho cairn, sim played the nert of a tineen at Constan¬tinople, and certainly once dreamed of wearing a crown.

Dr. Pliny Ii. Chase sat been ar pointed ActingiPresIdont of Ifavor.'crd College foi a year.Mrs. Oliver Wendell ilolmca has gone to Beverly

Farm* for the sn minor with her son, Judge Rotates, andhis wife.A tine murillo nieinorlal of l-t. Leger Herbert, the

oorrsapondon! of IBs LtnMon Momittp Pott who wa*

killed ;it rjebal mi rho .vii.-, has teen sxeeatotl hy Mr. f,9. Sheldon, and wlli be placed in the Icleton Cliurnli.It roprestuits hiui lu the thlek of tho hettie* BOtO heohand pea lu hand.

lribi TALK OE HIE PAY.

An Bt-mombsr of tlie Brooklyn Common Council hasbenn accused of extorting the sum of ¦S50. Some presentand former Xow-Yurk Alderuion must think that theirbrethren iu Liooklyu havo uol livod up to their oppor¬tunities.

Champ'dreau assists nt a rall way accident. An Ideastrikes lilia mid he hunts Bp tlie roti'liieior, "Monsieur.";." ,a> -. >i :,'-..' v. M lt le always aaU that ll is tbe tte.ward car which suffers the greatest damage In an acci¬dent of this kind. Thou why not uo without lt here¬after i" Preach Joke.

lu the little Holstein -Milage of Sefeberg there lives I ahumble shoemaker name Monei.ioti. who has o illected2.563dtatareatbladeecbeatles, 1,390halag native anet1,17:1 foreign. They are all acieniiii.ally arranged and

ciassiti'.-.i, aili theeoUeetion Ulan exeaedtegly valuableone from a ncieiitlflc point of view. A'lhough lie ls now

eighty yeurs of agu, Hcielaeh is salli -iu enthusiasticilodeal of beetles, sad he prohahly knows more aboutthese insects t lian any mau ii vin ;.

It ls a ri«kv thing to play tricks upon newspapers andeven upon newspaper reporters In (l-miany. A jovialspirit reoisntly ifiive a Frankfort reporter a -.crap ofnews wlileli wa* false. It was only done for a |oke, innwhen tho new.-, appeared, an 1 tlie reporler's reputationfor trustwortiiiims, suiiered in consequence, the Jokerfound out thill lie lind made a mistake, li" B as iv ..itelupon i>y ins innocent victim of the press with a clairefor 12,000 murk* for "damage to reputation.'' Theparties bavsslneeso f.ir reached n ooraraon steadpointthal tie- iiuihor of tho false report oller* to atone for lil*error by forfeiting a twelfth of tbs sum demanded."Nemo rae itanana Isoseslt" li the Journalists' mottoeverywhere..[Pall Mail Dazette.

The ventilation In the General SocslOBS building il ex¬

tremely bad. This ls unduubtoiily a eriiiiinal offence.

When Baddesatek'S ped Iii ree wus takes Bl BlBg sing liesaid t ii ii »¦ his .. regular huslssss "waa thal af a butcher.Be hept nt his regular bpsiaess. ll apneara. when ncweat to billiiliuu houses. The way WSS -oiiiowli.it round-aliiiut, but it was a sure one.

Mrs. Maternal (Boanning witii a Mend at whosohouse she 1* oallinjt, is disturbed by seeuii: her littledaughter In another part of tue romu examining seresornaments)." Hortense- dear, I wouldn't touch tho*.,things." Hortense." Oh, they're not so very dusty,mammal". Harper's Baser,Instruction mid boar! free tor tlireo months are given

to 1«arsenal tlie Boaton Young Wossea'eCarlsUoaas--ic, tattoo's school tor house servants.

.. How i* it, Mi. Leader," asked Brows ol the editor ofrae WethHy Ptaelnt, "thai you saltton* touch upon tbecurrent questions of the hour I" Mr. Leader---**Well,vu i se, in tiie first piece,I feel fiat I must write sonie-

thlngta regard ru waa! everybody i* talking about, sadtheil. In tbs second place, it OOOUrs to me that I nu.-iitWaar? By readers it I did wr.te an editorial about wliatls iii ever) lu),ly'* month. CoiisciiueuilV. I sal" nothing,ami everybody is saiisiled.".{Boston 'transcript.

Bogus '.Hitter is to be tined 5 cents a pound, if all works

well. As lt ha. already been taxed with being a fraud, a

de.ii-ioii and a snare, it will now be. -ally Iniiiiiti'appcdiu thu struggle for exlstenoe in tho human stomach.

The enthusiastic Chicago pross declares that the">ylvu" Ballet is a revelation. Did anybody ever eaaa ballal thal was not a revelation I What 1* a balletfor if not for revetatloBl.[Kansas City Times.

If the tailors can't patch up their trouble-, win can?

As tho eross wita eenuin young women i- taningfrom coachmen to oystanaea tho brides are on tho waytu ^ettiii-' inio deep Wilier.

Cine who freq-.ients the beaches In the bathing seasoncannot help wondering how it i* thal stout aten get Ute¦mell bathing anita, aad uti tue small, thin men Hielame uno*, a tali mau goes into the water like a

striped Bolognasausage, while his neighbor, the littlen an, when he.strikes a wave, looks like au inflated bal¬loon. There seems to be a conspiracy amonu bathing-house proprietors to render their patrons ridiculous hyniistltung Hu m. (.ii'hcrvnii: the bathei* ns theygo into the eerf, one ll reminded of Mr. AlfredJingle's remark to Mr. Pick wick, concerning the Londonpostmen's coals: "lancer coats thole.made by con¬

tract.uo measuring.mysterious dispensations ol Provi¬dence- all tue short men uet long couts -all Ihe lunguieii get short coals." [ boston Courter.

The amalgamated Association I* ls a predicament, ltdaes not like the idea ol' being absorbed by the Knl-lit*ut Labor. That is. if it amalgamates it will have to

change its name. If lt does not change its Baan it willstill be .Imaijaunted.

A writer la Lend -i /furn/denounces the domestic (ly,especially In the sick room, and urges housekeepers lotake him in SaaeeB anti " do for " him. It ls cit unstedthat a healthy fly, lu five weeks' lime, will produce a

progeny of Uno, ami If these keep OU nr.iliiplyitig at tliesame rate every month iliinng Hie tammar, withoutaccident or prevention, tlie result will lie, between thebeginning of Baron, and tho emt of August, no ;ess thauM,loo,ooo,ooo file*. This arithmetical demonstration offly tune is eatily wm te 1 out. In the word* ol Josliliilliutfs, " Drat a By ".{SprtagBeMl I'niou.

BLT PEGOOTTY MUST BK MOKK AMIABLE.fruin rt* i 1,,-fltuiil I.railer.

Crip, the Cluan! ni comic paper, suggests in a cartoonthal a good way to eu lin* little till about ooiltlsti ls forthe parties to get man isd. Wu aro luclliiod to believeihat i;.ti si. ls wilina'.

A SKILLED AM) DARINO LEADERfrets ros Sall Leta rriaaa*.

He [Blaine, is to polities what Ney was to His Frencharmy.lue rear guard ou j retreat trom a Moscow, Hieleader when the old guard are deployed and sent iu

SaablDK column to break amt roll back tlie enemy', cen

tic, a mau who will Oe tho cuiiceriiiueiilol Ul* fe.low lueu

jo loan 98 ho lives.

I.lil' CAN AHA BEWARE!Fruin The ti'I i'i n'i tl'( HmiHIT'T.

"Salmon l-'ishiug at Homo" Uk tbe Bead-line Of e NSW-Y..KK I'kii'.im. eiUinri.il. Itlsalairy story ot how theyaro Bullina ni the lng lish in Manie. Hut it will uot ne

lung heroin we are indeed catching salmon "at homo "

.and loot will bo Illino rivers of Canada.

RIGHT YOU ARE, MK. CLIFFORD1fruin The st. li,ut* Hub* Ora.rif.

At the recem Deiiioeiauc siau- Uouveultuu in Maine,the chairman exclaimed, "When the right* of the peopleare in danger, Hie Democratic party ls always near."The statement u unfortunately tao imo. If tho Demo¬oralla party wa*n'l alway* so near, suih daubers w oulduot so Ireiiuenlly arise.

LEND A ll IND),ciui Th* .VcMiic/i i,nu.) Iiutlfttn.

Th;. ; Tilt-. I null -i. . i'c-.ii-.\ii 1 una, it a nobie charityead deserves ina eaeouraaenteat ot ever) aaa waa ra.alizcs tbe pilltul eondiUon of me pour, coupe i-ap emi¬lirou ut Ibu Kraal nirtiopolis.

.. * NOBODY A-KKD VOL. sn:,' SHE PAID."rr ni iht Hillturn,rt Amil timm.

Ur, Blaine's Irish apeeea, doaea'i nun the Bunsil pa¬pers. Well, ll wesa'l muutie.1 lo salt them.

No TORIES OVER ll KKK.fin. Th* caicos's ImUr-Oceon.

All tba Bumsrous apoocha* wbleh have been called outby meetings held in lui cmintiy lo discuss the lr -n

i|iie»iiou Uavo buen cordial la the support ol Hailstoneami l'ai'aeil. Nol a lu ce lia* lalteU lu support of Balle*bmy, ciiaiubeiUiu, or li irtlngtaa.

MK ( Hil.Hs DECLINES.mai / c- / 'imd lu mi i-,i wr.

Mr. Childi ti iimie well aware tti.it the Mttmoblataareala ihai have Binda taronbie meutiou of tho su**-liotli.iii, and Hie iiiiiueroii* lnfliieiill.il friends who liavewritten him on Hie subject, ito nut proleud to be investedwith Ihe authorities aud powers or National ConlonHons, uud lie ts thereloie mil ilenilling an oiler which liliol yel made, and 'hal l* not ul all likely tu be luude, byUn- oiiveiilioii nf any party orueiiU ilioli; atlll lu lilsview af wliat ha regards as iiecctsary lu thu par¬ticular iiKtatioe, be ihiiik* Hut not eveu hissilence should be permitted to give en-C'.iiiaj'-iiiriit or to look like giving encouragement, toapr-tposal lo make him a nominee fur Pieaideui. Indeed,lt lu. very parttal mend* iii the newptiapei- press andoilier »m allun* wno have la.-n favorable nollie ot theproposal were dentally I n vet led wno tull contentionpower*, ur could Influence and control a siilllcieul nu in¬

lier ot the voters of Hie I ulled states to stake hi* elec¬tion al'snliitely c l (alli and nu ter ihote cir. uuistaiioelwunlit make tue ofter -ne wou.il then only have Hieuroager reeeea ie Bay, oed would say sun mure em

pliaals, if that were possible: "This manifestation ofjimii' goo..-wi,i ana gnat tavor ls very welcome to me,but you propose lo do what should aol bedoue, aud

what I eannot nader any possible clrcumitoeoenajtr Tlhat you shall do," ""*** ¦eV-*9

THE PRESIDENT RESUMES WORK.MRS. CLKVEI.AND KKCKIVKS KO CkLLriW-t, p,^

l'i,SKI. STATS: KKI.KPTION.Washington, June 9 (Special)..T]^, i»reJi4.

dent waa In his office hard at work as usual at loo'clock to-day. There were uo bill* there for hjBjj wmsign or veto, ai none have been sent during his ahienee.In accordance with his reo,ue*t. Mr. Kendall, -GoateeBarry, of Arkansas, and several other member* of (Joa*grass called to pay their respects. A number af ladloacalled to see Mrs. CievelHnd b it wero told that it waaiabe impossible to see lier llien. laaSBrla IBS BBB BBSPresident received the St. FlStsast de fae! .Sooletrwhich has been in session lu tin* eur. (hen w^rs aelmany general visitors present ht the BSththj rtceDtloaIbis afternoon and tim work at the White Beast trenton apparently in the usual routine ra inner. I as PresUdent ami his wifo do not expect ti* leave the ally aramuntil after the adjournment af Congress, n -r will theeBeaupy Ute Prealdeaifa naetry reakteuaa thli * mimes-I In- iiiiproveinent on the house will aol be e ,-,,,, ,.l(sl JIlime to make lt desirable for a resld>Boe ti, * ,e',r" *

The Ker. Mr. Cleveland and Miss ( levelOO I !t VV**h,itiiitoii tm. morning for New-York,A stale reception will be given hy the Pre.id«nt aral

Mrs. Cleveland on rueeday arealag i. ... x -. ti walsh teaCabinet, the diplomatic corp*, the judie arv. ( sagtBBB,the olll.-er* of the Ainu/ sod Navy, tue bea li of --.-rtaraimreaiis and the ladles of their IBmllNM Wi. :..vitad.The hour* of Hie reception wiii be fro n '.( IIBUJ llo'clock. A ireneral reeapttoa, te wbleh Hie pub ie |4ln.rited without card*. Will lie given on .|u< e 1-froineuntil II p. in. Mr*. Ciereiaii.t will Bot tm at home aacallers until after the reception*

WF,liI>I\i,S.

Grace ("lnircli Brag lilleil featenUy noon witha brilliant assemoiajo gathered to Bte wei ana of MiteI.dilan Livingston Jones, tlie sister af Mr*. WaiterKiitlisrfurtl, ant Dr. ( harle* RansBBB, of th,s city. TbaKev. Dr. Huntington, rector of the church, officiated,and the bridegroom, attends 1 by his BffBihar, GcaagejKemsen. a* best mau, mot the bridal party at tho chancelrall. Tue bride was e*cor,ed hy her tonkin. JoiuutoaLivingston, by slmiu sae wa* niven away. Her cosluiaawas a rich gown of white satin, entirely coveredwith old point lace, and retl ot the sataematerial. The bri,lal houipiet was of Mites ot Ci* valley.The eight bridesmaids, cacti prettily dressed in whitesilk mull, preceded the bride. They were the MmesReasne, suteis of the bridegroom. Hies J utletta Morris,Mis* Miutou-Fust, MISS Charlotte Pell, Mis* MoniaKuthorf ,r I, Mlts Louisa Bruen sad Miss Anne Hoyt,Tho ushers were Jame* Duane Livingston. Fretl erickLeKoy, Frank Itutherfiird, T. J. oakley Kliiii.-iaiider,1.Ju Darr an l Wi.liam Mauico. A we-ldlug breakfastwa* *-iten after the ceremony at Mr*. Wa.mr Luther-ford's. No. il Knit Foi ty seventh-st., to winch only teerelative* of the bride and liridegioom were invited. Thiswas owing te the reeent death of the br.de^rouin'amoiic-i, Mrs. William Kemsen.

Miss Anna K. Cook the daughter of John C. Cook, w»amarried to Dr. Frank Baldwin yesterday, at the notnai-f the tiri,Io's father, No. 091 Wllloojrbbv-ava, p.rook-iv n. by the Kev. L C. Foote. The brtdeewstds wanM -. i,race Cook, sister of the Urida, and MISS A.ioeJames, and the bett man was Dr. Letter Hal'.wm. \.A. /.ender. Frank Jennings. B. (,. VV o-k-tt and ll. I*.Van liortio wero the u*li»r». The bude entered on thearm of her father, attired lu white «al!n with train, Iheflout of brocade and old luce. ion*;tulla veil nnd pearl ornament*. Tho br flffsldlwore white satin with diaping* of lacs, andcarin-! large Bouquets of yellow rosea. The bosses waadecorateu with flow, rs and palin*. Among thole pres-siit w.-re Mr. aud Mr.. K. M. McKe.I, MISS McKee, Mr.hihI Mr*. Kdbeit Henderson, Mr. .ui Mn. Sm:tn. Mr.

lilt. Mr. and Mrs Phillip Jennings. Ml->* Baldwin, MmJames, Mr. and Mrs. IL Adam". Mr*. W. Woolworth,and Mr. aud Mrs. lark.Tlie marriage of Thomas HwtnyaM. pren lent of the

Dominion Telegraph Company ami assistant presidentot tue New-York, Oatarlo aad Weetara Kailrood, oedMrs. J. Armstrong Murruy took pice at UtlbertSV illa,N\ Y., ou siturday. Tho eeromoiiy weenarf.. mid byth-- Kev. Dr. Beesley, assisted by tbe Rev. Dr. Be j.a

Thomas-. Moir's ni end Miss Florence Bogart weramarried last evening in St. Pan's Protestant Eptsoesal< burch. Norwalk, Conn, lue Kev. Il iwarl ."¦. Clapp,rector, assisted bv the Kev. C. M. Sel.itk. performedthe ceremony. Mi.* Jennie Vaeh was Ute orgeats*.Hie altar w,i* decorated with flowera lhere w.-i-e sicbrtdesmalds, Utile girls attired in white carrying boa.quote: each one wa* au intimate fr 1 of Hie bride.Mi-s Mabel Vunderbool was mai-t Ol honor an 1 I. W.Kmory, of Brooklyn, beet man. rae bndesm o ls wereMl*s Annie Coles, MUb Lobb Calec, atlas Bertie Hyatt,Mn. Fannie Leonerd, Diss Daley Bird and Mt** (.raoeCola The brine appeared in white corded silk, witspeerl front, diamond ornaments, sad carnet a whiteprayer-book, inc dniren was well lided. Inebrhlawas given away bv her mice, Samuel Beattie. Tbabride received numerous gift*. There waa no ra eption,bat Immediately after the oeremoay Mr. ead Bra, Mor¬rison st.Tte I on their wedding trip. Mr. Morrison isa

member ot lbs timi of Hutcniusoii, Pierce .* Co., Noe.7Hi-7Ji) Broadway.

--a

Mn. DEPEWM TIEWi OM LABOR TROUBLERThe tatara* Clab, of Broo'xljii, Ins just

adorned Ita saw picture gallery In the clubhouse, al

Lafayette-eve amt south oxford-st., wau patatangacosting 99,000. They wero exlniilted last evening la

UM presence uf B Urge, i,.:iu mr o: tho ineinbors of msclub. Chauncey M. Depew was a guest md ni aile a linetspeech. He referred to tho recant strikes and labor

troubles and saul that club* were a remedy 'or Hid ua

ii ippy state of thing* now existing. In tin Stall all meawereeriuiii aud mit upon the same tenta Tue taSuanceot clubs eBoeut extend lulu pollttoaeed re.ieem

poiitu'a! aft ors from tue rule of mere politicians. Mr.

Depew related what he saw of tuc struggle between lawand order Bod the Anarchists In ChJeoga As pre-; lent

of tho New-York Central Railroad Company ne said thatbe wm probably tba largest employer of labor lethaworld and ne teaed that in so fal as lie mat down auminibo men employed ou the mails la so tar was tnere

success la running them. Trouble was largely dee99the fact that employe* dbl not look et corporation* SSr. presenting the money of many persons, perhap*40,000, but regarded tee money as a Mg lump usedagainst them Many af the persons interested lu cor¬

porations looked upm Hie men eraployed aa simply so

ii. ni-! i linne and mu-e!e. So loin/ as Hie..- false rtawaafboth employers aad employed lasted. »o terna] would lherelie insurrection and trouble.

.1 WELL-DRRMMRD MAA Forsn IX HIE FIVER.I lie body ol'an unknovv ti man wus picked up

in tim river at West Twenty anead et, about s o'ciouhlast evening. Tho appearance of the body Indi¬cated that lt bad been In the water about fourday*. Then wss ss Indentation epee the beek ot tbabead vvlit. ii may have b-en ibo result of a blow Indictedeither before or ofter death, rae body woe -inuit andsion', and the face mille.kted.evea In its distorted con¬

dition.au unusual dejreo ul reliueiueiit The luau was

about filly years of aga. wore a laabloaaMy irtmaaadmustache and goatee, mid hal ou B black diagonal suit.apparently new, ead a aaa grade or uwderciethiag,There was a large diamond stud lu Ins shirt,and a heavy gold BBBttug-Oasa watcu ni lilawaistcoat pocket. A nneiv ambroidend bead*kerchief had the lotter "T" worked in nae corner.There were no letteri to identify the lu.dy, and the

potiee are of tba opinion that ll is iee hedy al a brokerortaerebani Tue' b dy waa sent to tho Marges, lilsUol b0.lt.vcd to oe a case of suicide.

MEDALS WOE FY ABTIMTM.The galleries of the American Art AtexietsV-

Hon were brilliantly lighted and well tilled last evening

nt the reception given to thu pt ISaVWlBBOn ot the preier.lexhibition. Thomas K- Kirby, the vico-president, pre¬

sented the medals lo tlie successful arts;?. Thc meda a

are each of a 9100 bulli ui value and are handsomelystamped. Hie ten med 1* Wera award d :<¦'Hluerl i.aui.Car, Marr, ll. ll. Kitson, Alfred Rapper, Arthur Portee,i,t-oico Inness, lr., C. II. Davis, Kuo.la Holme* Nichols,IX ll. Tryon and F. K. M. Kehn. ACer the award* were

'.mete a general Inspection of the galleries was enjoyedby tbe 200 uuest*. A tauobeoa wa* serve i and then thefloor w is cleared for dancing. J I). Brown, Q. W. Bren-

Barnett, J. ll. BuetonJfW, U. Birney, l> Forest Bots* r. 97.a. collin, Edward i;.»y, and l:. Kwala colloid w.-ieamougmose present.

UORDITIOX OP BOEEBT TToE.Jlt.

Robert Hue, tlie nephew of Colonel Rich¬ard M. Hoe, whoso death occurred IB Fioieuee on Mon¬

day, wa* slightly improve 1 last svealug. Ma aaa beoo

ill for several days, b it it is ne leved that lie I* 1" "e

immediatedauger. Al ni* home lost neening ll waa

st Oed thal ho hal uni yet btou informed oi hit uncle'sdeath.

?-

STEOD OP VSW-BRVEMWIOR HUSTATSED.In regard to the Tiiird ttoforaied Church ap¬

peal oaee, tb* Syaed etta* l*vettM.med Chare*,, al New*

Bnaswlehi yesterday aeelded, hy a vue af 89 te 34, to

sustain thc decision of the Particular Mimd of V-w-

Itrunswlck. from which ihe ('ia*»i« of Phi,a.ie.pi.la Og*poaiod. Aa effort na-ie by Dr. Charles H "it io havetue matter relsired back to llmclassls was defeated byau overwhelming majority.

_-m.-

BOOMI OE si. riEORET DR PAUL,WaSHIBOTOB, Juue !>..Al the .s.-.i.iu ut tho

Bnotaty af Ht. Vlnrrat i* Foal tala morning e co.umit-

tsasnastanaitf Uta liava Patrick Curngan. ol llunokeu.

N. J. ; J. F. korry, of New-York; (iaO'lel Healy, ol

New Volk, nnd Joiiu BigglBO, of Bililmoiv, wore ap-

pol itel lo*end a cab edlBpOtOh of greet nj IB IBS Pope,lather Riordan, ol N"a Vrnk. wac is iii c liss'gs of like

work al Caatle nordon, made an lutareeliag stelsBxeetot what waa benn doon ta aid l.uralgrauia univ ngia

llial city. Tue delegates in a bo.ly -a..od un tue 1 resi¬

dent._PLAEMOPMtMM MAUD BARER

Bostob, Juno '.»iSpeeiotU-UiMi UmwA li.ciks,the daiighle. of (ieueral N. F. bVBBsS, b..s o..ui;'.cted ar

rangemeut. lo.taru«il.e4Vs..u undei tho StallageBBCalot Napier Lothian. The stays ntastsd an "A. .ou

Like ll." .' ingomar." "Pygnia.iouaud i.aUiea," .. l.avlyot li.us" and several modern plays. Mike will sari

upon her tour BB August M, Bud WI give ilia lu, perloriiiaiicesin the s-iMiiei0iU«s. aftei wald ellen8lag bet

clicuit to tba largor places.

xo t/RARRR IB JiK. ARTMUMM OOEDITIOE,There 9ra9 no BlBoaHM ia the lonilition ol ex-

Pre-ldeul Arthur yesierdsy. He waa up and look a

little BSsBBtaa at limo*, bul still sutlered from physical.lepresatiiu and etUauillou. Ile cauuot sleep al ulgbl,

aud is cempelled lo gel all Ibo rest be eau duilug tbs

dav. IDs appetite ls poor, and the food that be eats

gives him nunnie front indigestion. tmtMM B99Jj.peciallyaotivesymptoiiuiubis ease at BrBBA aua

Dr. Peiers, wno cai.ed yeelorday os usual, does net be-