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Qlmnstmciuo ano Hireling? &o- Night BoKini's TiiKATKK. -" La vie Parisleiiue.** Almoo JtAQLS Tnr.ATaii.-'"I'artoii" fll-TIi AYLKOS TliaATKIl. -*' Fume P/.HK TiiSATSK.-'Tl.r Kerry (??"A. TiiRD Av.mi: Iiiivrin V.iti, iv KntiTtftlnintMit. Twkntt-tiiiku tirui_ai Oreas Uooea.- Kelt?/ <i_ icon's Minaticl? , _ WALLACK'a IllKATKIt. -"Might"? Dollar." QBBataaflB) Bau.?Ceaeart. QlLMUBK'a ?; ?vi: nK.M. ('?ni?- it. larisa Ball Billiard Tournament. Jii?fv to ^Vunerusrtnrma. AnntmrsTt :;?/ "nut?tap sadSth eeluaias Bank?m. Hot?!..? am. BAMU IBS - 7>li ISnt Oth rnhiiiiD. Bi.aki.m. Ilium? :;/ name let, -?! ?in.I ltd c?.lui_nia Bt sinii-s (iivs.is :t/i fBOS?Stil COlniUU 1ii.si.nik? N ,11 i- i.',', di it let colaran. OosrossnoN Si-tices??Bu Fat* -5th ?golwaa. HKN-llSlKY tl!.', Civic It?! c.illiinl? I)IV|I>I.M) Ni-ii- K? -Tf'i Futir-i\ih .?nlnniii ?ivi.i* ink Mitiisi.i.Y JlVunr ?".Hi column. L?ky tioooa?Oth Fag* 3d oolomn. 1-INAN? IAI.- 7th l'une -."illi Hint ??t.i ?Olunill-). t'l'UMTi'iib - Olli l'uar?7,tb minim. Hi: Li* Wamii? 3d Page? th eolamn. llim-.it?, l"AUKU?.i_H, ?v?-.? Cth taue- ltd column. II?.ti l.s Ail I o . li. c.iiiiinn Rocses am? iviiM? \\ in mi??Cth Fagt?itb column. |CB CB BAM- lii /.it? Hill c.ciiinn Ikhi til it In? tl.'i Ciu,- Jil ntnl ?il oliini?i. LaoTvaas san Mi ihm.? ?si Foot -tubootetaa Ll.liAl Nl.TI? I.? Jit Ittijr Util ci.Il.lliI Al a mur ahn ?ma-i MANTKia-?>//i Faoe?ti'b colunia. JU.lHKIAOK* AN? 1)1 A ril.?*? 'nit Vtlilt lilll toll'lllll Mix? T.I I. am. hi i? 7th IWBt QUA COlUtBB; stA Faje-'Ah Sud tilli column*. Mean ai. ixsTnoassra -::.f Fane- i.tit solean. Nltv l*i ni.t. ATIONS 01k Vil-te 'JA column Huai ?aTAli TOO ?A1K- I'll v- tlf/i /'li./r lili dilninn; BaoosLi tt - liih Foot itii column ; Ohontbt?Oth Foot ?Ill) eiiliiinn: T?> K\' it VN , ? 6th Ftrje - -Uli ?'?litinn. ?ALSB SI Al'li"*? 2,1 l'une tlilt .-?iliimu. Satin?.- lim,- its Fnoo Otheolunin. 81 h?tions IV.ivti.n Mvti.??'.Pf Faae?lih column; Van Kit? A'l Imta tlb, Mb. aad t'th l'niiiuiii?. Braci-L B?ricas? Oth Faut su.huaa STKAMnOATl? A.M. tt-.l-BO._U*-bill Fai,C Mil llll'l Olli roluiutiN. SiBAOKita. Ocess?34 Faae-Y.tti i-oliinin ; ."></ Fn.ie Isl cnl un i ii. 8t eni-it BmtSATS .'!?,' latje-AA und 4tlt coluiune. TaACUkae?'OH, Imoe?O I eoiwaa Thk Ti'iir?T? I'titJe???tit (-(?liiuiii VoLCT?Cm rm.i-i.UTT--lith Fa.ie?tth rolnrnn : OOUV TRT-c.fA Vaya MBeaiaan; Baooai xa SB) Faae?,*>tii eoliimn. Dnoinco? iXotirr?. Brciiw's CaBBOLIO Soaps lire tlio best erenaraiiona for the aareerr, laeinllf. and toil. t. llioNn. 11 Beatroyatl?-?*!? <>u ?log*. B3 1i.Iih.nI. _ Cbhtadobo's Hair Dts produces stich per? ltet ling, a Unit Hie atncleat ?.< nillii. ciitiliol .lel.it 11.em ?ia :ir tiflrUl. Maiurc rrpnaluced eltn cotuulei., iaec?aa. an Jobn-aL Btbblb's Ostbicii Fbatiirb Di'strbs.?200 rerietl.-a rrtailinic ai w hoi rae le prtoee at lbs Factory, Be 3 l'ark-row. opj-oaite Poat-OBlce._ To Crbteknixi. Exmr.iToits.-~Till. Daii.t TUBUBB ta deHvered to eobenthera la the Exhibition, at I ?:r ?talon? in the lni;!iiini_a.?mu tin? ?unitul??. ut S 11 in. Orden ?tiu.ilU bt lefiai TUB liiini ne Pavilion, Belmout-er ?._ Tup Ci mi NMAi, Exhibition Obficb <?f Ink TaieiNKisIn i:.. iiiiiinc paviiimi, Bclaeet are.. Centennial Umunda (on tin-l.atili of the Labe). The Phildelphla Rmm-ii Office ie at No 713 ?tieiin.i-.at. (oM Maaouir Taiuplr). Bot.iorlplioni ml ?itvertn.-nieDta rweire.l at r??ri!'ni t ?'.?? at both ornee? i tti- Daily 'Ikiiukk eerreS by uaiiles ?u all parta of llie ? it.v earl; hi the uinmiug. Daily Thiiunt, Muil Baaaanban, |10peraaaaab Bkmi-Wkkm y I B1BUNB. Mail Subearibera,??JS perun. WBBXLT TltiM'NK M nil 8 u been Urn, $"_!p?ir nuuuui. Terms, cash in :vdv,i:i?-??. B?iliaaa Thk Tbibobb. ?Waw-TerrtL Ptrton? unable in obtain Thk 1 STOWS in any of the train?, boat*, or hotel? in uhichit it uir.iaUy told, trill con? fer a faxor by in'vrmow this ottiee of the ?reumttaners. TnKfKMI-WllKKl.Y TltHM-NK will lie rfA?h tllil? innrll?li; st B o'clock, in snappers for sseBlac Pri?e ,,> cent??. Cpt*?wn aflTerttuT? can Icare their fator-i fur TheTiiimi'M! at l.osa Etemiwnr, ?or. _n?t-?t.. ?.r-tos w. an it.. ?or. Kth av?. ^_ru'|)i?rk ?mXp sZxibxint? FOUNDED BY HORACE OREELEY. FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1870. THE NEWS THIS 3J01?.1L10. Forekin.?Witnlow baa ln-i'ii r<'l(-ai>^?l in LendeSL __________ Mah-oluiMSB ?& Co. at Ilelfast (ailed, with im bilities amounting to about !}?7..*)00,000. : __= Hi?? French ministry will ?iot riysix i if M. Hu:i??t ia electeil Senator. ??? M. \\a?i?liiiirt?)ti, ISM I'lmnh Minister of Public Iiistrurtion, peepeaaa compii'mnry education, ami intonils to bave tinivernitiee at 1'aris. Lyons, Beadeaax, antl Nancy. Domkstic. -Tin- Cinciiinati ( .nix-ntion mmwSBtt a platform wliiili fav?ira sjiecie j):i\ imiits, civil mtvic?? reform, ami the abolition of _H>l_-_.ainy. aad r.-<'"in moiida a constitutional aiii?-ii<iiiic-ut forbidding ap propriationa for ?vctarian acliool?,.- Tbe foUoW" ing canilidiit??.?? for tbe nomination wate naint-d. Messrs. Blaine, Dileiow, Cea__l_s% Hayaa. Uattraaft. Jewell, and Morion. Tbe Convent ion iiiljmini???l witbout a ballot. ??? ProceuditieH in the impon? li? ment trial of tien, liolknap will lie reauiued t?> d%y. ., ".'~ Gen. Crook's exp?<dition has leaehed a point 187 mil.??? from Fort l-YUeniian. __________ A jury has dcci?lu?l tbat Mrs. Abrabaiu Lincoln ieieeteted to reason. - Mr. Blaine paeaed yesterday at bi* house witb fricuds. :-~ Dom Pedro visited the Steto capital. CosoKi.8.a.?The Senate appointed iiConnnittee to eonfer with a House Coiiiinitt???' on tbe Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Apiirnjinatioii bill. --.?: The House debuted tbe Army Appropriation bill. City am? St'ui'KiUN.-Sum-Kate Calvin beard arguments on tlio petition to aiinii! A. T. Stewart's will, sud the answer of tlio defendants was tiled. .? The New-York Centennial OsBUBittee ?leeiiled apon tbe arrang.'inenta for the Fourth of July cele? bration, and issued an address to the propio. Leander, Sultana, Ore Knob, and Siinlninit won the Jerome 1'ark racea.-(!ol?l. 11-34, 11-?"'s. 11-V Gold Taino of the legal-temlei dol?as at the ?lose, 88810 cents. St?ka ?lull end higher, closing strong at a reaction. Tkb Wkatiiui.?The Goreniment report predicts cooler and partly cloudy weatbti. z= _ In thia city it was cool, pleasant, and Kem-rally clear. Ther? mometer, 71?, 78?, t>!).-The iuilicatioiis are that in this city ami vicinity there will be fair weather, witb occasional clou.liness and modi-rale temp?r?t ?ne, f?>r a week to come. Readers of Tin: Tin bunk leaving Unen or trav? eling for th* Summer can fuite the pajirr mailed to them, post?Hiid, for ?}?l per month, the address being changed whenever desired. I?et?ne>tts fur a change of address should ahrays mention the edition (Daily, Weekly, or iyemi- Weekly), and both old and new addrei*es. At Jemm? Park yesti-nlny the favorito homes were ajrain beaten in two of the races. If this sort at thing loiitiiiins, there will be bo favorites. Gen. Belknai.'a counsel are experte?! to move for a nonsuit in th?- inipeitchine it trial t?i-?lay, be-rati-ie a two-thinls vote was not ohtaine?! in fseor of jariadiction. It will In* -rather ha??! on the .-.?enators win. have al>?taiiii-?l lioin a trip Bo Cinninnati to lx- bsssi with this tual while their th??Ui<h'.s axe far away. Gao. Crook's exp-eilition aj;aiii?t the hoxtile Sionz fiiob? i'I the first '?OU mil??* of the route trmeea thai the In?li_o* hive lieen removing the bulk of their forces t?i the, .toril), out of harm's way. A few, howev??r, arfcs were 1? ft lu - bind, icare the < ip*?h:iori w.tne tr?.iilile, \njm\uSRt at Ion*; BSBge fiotn bluffs along the. route. It la ST?leut that thfev? In'iians are well arm? ?1. Tbs New-York Centennial Celebration l'uni Bitte? h?a StflBjlflSi fhe programme for Fourth of July observance* in tbi* city. The Committee deair-es that ev?-ry btnbling in Sew York shall l-e illuminate?! ?luring the night previons to the Fourth, and shall also he ?decorated then and during the Fourth. Ar _rao_cemeaU are partially matured lot ft nty large prooeaaioa. _ It to ?ported st Vienna that Austria am! Kaaaia have agreed U> prevent further msisi. aaea reaching the Boaniaa in^urgenU, who ara likewise to be prasetd U> negotiate with ?t?B Smith?, Tlito ooexurs polity hss basa triad already and proved ineffective. So Ion-i an the ilium "-.?-nta have the hearty sympathy of the neighboring peoples, AtiHtriit and Kussi.i cuiiiiot prevent substantial aid reaching them. ?_? The claimant* who tile endeavoring to break the will ot A. T. Stewart Ii:i<I a hearing JTSB* tinlav. Tin -it? MSflU to Ik* far morn plausi? bility about the fust point rained?that there was undue haste in admitting the will to probate?than nbont the eeeond and more important one, whither the lute Mr. ?Stewart was subjected to iinilue lnlliicticc. Much curiosity in niiiiiifested M J?? what pOBBlbls ??vi?l??ii?'?' llieii? ?-.in I??- on tin? hitter point. 11 Mr. Stewart was not of sound iniiiil, the instances of absolute sanity in this community must be extremely rare. .__.-._ In Frame, M. Waddingtim, the Minister of Public Institution, proposes In establish coni imlsory etlneation, an! fonn 1 ?list hut iiniver Ki!i?s at Paris, I,vous, l.ordeaux, and Nancy. Tin* distinguished Minister w!u? sulunits this progiesshrc soheiae ti? the Legislature is a l'iote.Maiit, and by birth and marriage w enn iieetoil with this country. Sineo hi-* ntipoint inent last March, M. Wii'ldiimt ?n has displayed Bftarked ability, and would recently have been intrusted with the Ministry of the Interior luid Im de-iireil that responsible post. His success shows the advantage gained by ignoring ereed aad raes in reorgaahaag th? PrsBch govern - mental system. _ Nothing which took place yestcnhiy ?t Cin eiiinati threw any light on th?' prohiil'le votes l'or candidates. The Plaine men were tlc feated in an endeavor to font' the voting in advance of the platform. The vote throwing out the Alaliaina delegates led by Speneer, was expected to te-t the Maine ami anti Blaine strength, but failed t?? do so be eause the reform clement vote?! against the Spencer crew, while the New-Voik ami Pennsylvania delegations favored thein j s.diillv. The el.'oit of the niiti-P.l.iiiie men to form a coalition proved a ridiculous | failure. Mi. Bristow is reported as declining to take the secoml pine on the ticket. Judged by UM ajiplaiise their names received on call iii*_r the roll for nomination)-, Blaine and Ibis tow divitle the heal Is ot the Coiiveiitioii. The reform iiioveineiit is not contined to Mr. liiistow's ranks, und a majority was readily fountl to turn out Boss Shepherd's irregular delegation, which unhappily included I'rctleiiek Douglass. _ THE l'I.AIEOinf. The platform is plainly the manifesto of a party which feels that it BBS tew votes to spare. i It is the result of an attempt to reconcile I conflicting interests without liny real i saeiitiee of principle, and to render disputed Until?, as little unpalatable lis j may be to those who do not like them. I'pon the whole it -.??ins to Imve been construct?'?! ; with ait, ami the Republic.m party has reason t<> oongratalsto Itaelf that the faults in , it are not more mi mus, and that the good I points are so strong, The currency plank is the worst of it. To he siire there is nothing in this mild IBSOla* I lion to which a liard-inoinv man can reason? ably object; hut it falis fur short of the manly ?mil decided Utterance of (?ov Morgan, far short of previous promises of tin- Republican party, and far short of the bobl language which the tune d? mauds. A pledge to it-ileem 1 nitcd States nous in coin at ?BOOBS day not 1 ipt citied, und to make steady pwglBSa toward sj??'?ie paysasnl nt a rat? and by means not delined, has surely no fT-SBl -i i_*n i i i - ?mice. The Civil Service lb-form resolution is eq-oaHy vague. We have not a doubt th.it nil Senators ami PapS-SSOBtS?TSS will agree un? hesitatingly thiit tli?-y ought not to "tlic " tato appointment??.," but that the party in power OBght to have neverthe? less all "those places where harmony "and vigor of administrntion require its policy "to b?'represented ;" and then matters will go on in the old way. The recomiiM-mlation to Congres?, to investigate the <|ii? stion of Chinese inimignition is objectionable ratlmr for what it implies tlnin for what it snys ; it does not com? mit the party t?i the hostile legislation which the Pacific slope is asking for. The Common School lesolution is modeled upon Mr. Maine's prupusal for an amendment to the Constitution, ?mil it Wat receive?! as might have been expected with vocifeioiis ?lnerti. All parties are sure to concur in it. To the Opposition to land grants, to the call for the pacification of the Smith, ami the equal protection of nil classes of citizens, to the denuncia!?on of sectionalism, am! to the promise of a respectlul consideration of the ?bniiimU of women, all good ? itizens will say **" AbHiB" There is, in short, a great dosl of sound sense and valuable counsel in the Ixidy of the platform, ami if then- an plunks which ought to have lie?-n In-tter, it may safely !><? predicted that the MB responding portions of the Ihinocratic structure soon to be put up at St. Louis will be a gnat deal worse. Hut after all, neither party will win this election by its platform. The resolutions of conventions are cheap. The people have learned to look upon them M promises mad? to be broken. Tlu-y SIS <?nly to he taken as indications more or less accurate of the temper and pur posea ?>f the party leader! for the time being, subject to correction whenever it may be convenient. The Pi-publicans ami the Democrats in the coming campaign will 1m? jmlged chiefly by the character si their nominees, the tone of their public men, the hpiiit of their legislation, actual or attempt? d, and the record they have unset in power. 1 he average voter I ??-ems to l?c paiticularly alert this year. He will a? t with his eyes ??de open. He will sus? tain that organization whose general course ha? been som?bbm? with his Ideal <?f right, ami who-e ticket oilers him the fairer pros jw-ct of a ?1? ?<nt, orderly, ami upright iidinin i-itiatioii._ THE RELEASE <)E WINSLOW. 'Ill? lelSSSS of the forger Wiiislow pine? s the Brittob (bivernment in an nnenvialde situ? ation. It -''mi to be iiilinitteil in London, evrn by the journals which origitially sustained the a?ti'?ii of the Mini-tiy. th.it Mr. Fish's able diapatih?-- liavi- jiroved the Jiosition of the 1'inted States in tin- di-put??. It has been shown that law ami ptBOSdeot alii:?- re?piii< that the a?? ils? tl should he (_riven Up without ?lemamlirig ?if us a stipulation which the treaty does not call for, and whi? h would be worth? less even it we gav?' it. Neveitlieless, choos? ing to follow a doiihtful itiU-t pretal ion of a recent A?t of J'ailiaim-nt, in direct contraven tniii of th?* treaty, the llritish iioviitiment iltn-n what the public opinion or Knglaml de? clares to In- wrong, ami gairiA hy s?i doing the I'U.int i__? of the society of Messrs. Wiiislow, Krefit, Gray, am! other gem lernen, whom au y reapftr-talde rotiiitry ought to be glad to yet rid of aa ?pii? lily as possible. 'His ttea'y h_vui_ thus been biokeu by the ?Htioii of Omit Britain, a formal notire of ?abrogation may bs SKfN?lad from our .side, ami Ihm) we shall have, <>f course, tlit* negotiation ?.f a tit-vv one. It muht Bel t? In* tlilli.-tilt for ihe two eonatrias to ?'?nu* to ?m agraeaseat ??ver a niittii in wiiieh ?tttt interests aro identical. I'm>a?'ly Use ?right of asylum needs t.. ?.t- mort' carefully guarded, ami th:-rc arc many opportunities for abus- in the present tte:iiy vvliieli could be iciiiov. il. No country lias bren more .?cal.m? la BSSCrtiag 1111 * i i ^r ? 11 of asylum than the Halted BtatSBi iiiiil nom* i-* ? lim?- likely t?i luvt.?taaUM for dOIUhttding tin- pledges which Gnat Britain baa required la Um eaaa at Wlnalow. Although ear Govern nit :it ha., no ?power to gfrfl i'"'" Bf amere executive ail, which would not be binding upon tin- Slate to which a criminal nlgfet be Mint for trial, they can bs ghen of tourso by a treaty winch has full force, BOOordiag to the ('oiis??iilion, in all Ihe Slides. - I A JUNE CENTENNIAL. In thcJhiid week of .finie. 177t>, Punln)i's Weekly I'tteltt, published in Philadelphia, con- i tiiincd a brief advertisement to tint eil'ert that j the city ??nl for hroken victuals made its ?tonada every ?evening, nml beoseholdeta were BTgod to contribute, as the ne d of the prisoiiti I was ?great Our .?xchan.rcs for the same week m 1S7U contain the hriclci announcement that the wheat (Top of the We ?t prOtniSM tobe fair. It is -Berth our while to look into ths mean in;,' of the two notices. The prisoner, were in truth mar starvation, tin ii allowance befog half ol a fnurpciiny Mack I'.af pel tliein ; for all else they wire tlepei tient on the refuse froiii kitchens, collected each day in ?i har? row. I'lisomts iu England at that d.ite ein? weise t IT, bring chained in caps ?uni left tn bag loudly for food from paSSBIB-bj. Eifteeti years Inter,*during Washington's iiilininistra- ? lion, the need of the pouin classe ? in the cap ital of the new republic vviis h<> ?gieal that feotpeds attached asen <>n the principal Streets, In London, hangings of lh<- purloin, r? j nl i.civt s ni ?bread were beajaant. The rich us well ?is Ihn poor livid on ??.its and ha? 1? y, ami tiny were neat ce enough, "iinly a wealthy family,'1 says Eilen, in lT'.'T. " couhl all'otd in ('iitiihrihtml a " peck of vvlient llom v.;,ily, and ?thai at " Christmas. Not a penny white loaf ana to Im? "found in town-? as large as Carlisle.'' Meat was a luxury almost unknown to the BagUah and French peasant? in short) there wns aet eooagh food in the civilised world for its in- j habitante, The gnawiags of ?hanget drove as ni.iny earigrants to our Jioras m did re?gioui ' persecution ; and if Louis XVI. could have BUed the empty stomachs of the .1.1? .picric, then* is every piobahility that lie _B_ght have I ?died comfoitithly in his ?bad. Ame.??a broaghl very litlle lood then into the? woihl's maikrt; the naiiow ?nip of soil (Waned fioin the tonst, ?along the Bse-coast, barelj sofflcod t<? feed her own eiiliiinsts, ?nid that so scantil> that the ?nlhix <>f a ?nuill ntiml.ci of troop, into a province produced it fuiiiiiic. In A -in. the need of new produciOg liehle WBS felt mole sharply then than in Europe; and it has iaercaeed with every year since. Be neat to famine ?Iocs the ?orerrrow-diag of population bringtha pomcr . lasa ? of China, thai their praciice of infanticide pleads a InmiM? sort of quasi jus? tification ?ii the ?ground of humanity. Tliott .-aiids ol families live tin y?ar round >>n the y ie.d ol .'. M-aniy in <? Held. Now let Ils see what it means to this ?long hungry arorld when we say that "our arheei " ciop |iii>ini?c? to !?e fair." It uieaiis that in the?.- haadred years we have helped ttteA arerj n.iiion ander hearea m M m iwes was fed he fon-. Tin win at ti? Ids nlone w..' h failed to supply tin- troops al Valhy Entire with l.n.nl, throw into tin- European market every y ?u 250,000,000 bushels] UM exportation from ?Chicago, which ?began la 1838 with 78 bushels, m. re.i?. ?I iu 2\ jrean to 23^)00,000 buahnls. ho lapidly wen tin- va?t tiehls of tin \V? ?t ?spaaed and ?pianted We take wheat only ?im a ganga tot the whale ?fbod-prodncirg power of the I'oiiiitiy,? a poWOI M enormous and Steady that,? -v? n in ?the apean of the ?ivd war, when an emitmoiis ?proportion of the male ?population of both sections was withdrawn from BgriealtUW for live y?nt?. no famine ensued. Tahteg an BVengS of the live years, never vveic armie. M \a?f so well fid. Next month the attention of the world will be directed ?to our political ami social progresa in the century, and tin eiltet WC have hail mi the lilicrty, thought, nml ?civilisation of the ' world, lint in tii?- abundant flnmssca month ?it is Worth out while to look at the cattle upon our ?thousand hills, at the tiehls Moonring , for the ?barreal from sea to ?Mil, where in 1776 was a gloomy, laipeaetrabla wilderneaa, ; Not only ?bare the hungry peoples 9k ?Europe ; emptied themselves lilt.? these Well iilnilii.' | lielil?, hut the abundance of provisions in fag, ?i^n maikci-s caused ?by our exports has tmnle '? ?i nrboleeouM ehaugs in the v?ry aunds ami ! temper of the ?poorer classes. I,'? volutions lose i much of the element of brutality when the labels are well fed. Thero will never proha bly he ?guillotines in ths streeta of r.itis as long as brand san he had for a sou or snst? giation is cheap. "It thine eminy hunget I "feed him,'' is a maxim as politic us it i? ! Christian? We have ?dene our ?share toward feeding the lena and hungry Gaaatunss of ths World in this last century, ami so hlunted the edge of many insurrections. \\'?? ?-Bight take I the yield of Button and wool, and Miow what we have done toward clotltiag tin- world, lint our ?innden can look into theas matlcr? theiiiselv?'s. The more cIomIv* they hntk the mon- they will he conviiicetl that it is in the I most practical as well ?is theoretical work that the Republic ha* contributed to the I "ease of creation." DISCONTENT IN PBILADBLPBJA. Fault-timliii;-.' ami criticism waited upon the Expositions of London,??! Taris,anil of Vienna, nor has our own gTBUt show hy any means es? caped them. Harmony in this Centennial vear would he highly appropiiate, hut the race of ?grumbleft is perpetual, and growlers wa hura always with us. In Philadelphia many vend questions await adjustmint, ami ?there arc mi? I aadecatandings between the bonrda in author? I ity which we should be glad to final allayed. i The debate about Sabbath opening il ?is wann i us ever;.ami now in addition we have the Na | tional Sons of Temp?renos h convention as? sembled in Philadelphia not at all phased with I the sale of stHMg drink within Ihe precincts j of Eaiiinouiit I'ark. " The nations of the earth," j sai?| the Most Worthy J'lttnaich of the Sons, "have bean invited to un inspection ofouiiui " paralleled facilities for arenufaeturingurunk? " arils." The ?loiimls, we are tohl, " have been " ssada a beat gandan.11 Is not this stating tha matter a little- too SWeepingjyl If not, it is tpiit? Surprising that there should have been ho little drunkenness UitUUBSSd ut UN Exhibition. The Hon? de??ire that j il iheuld he eomliicteil upon totul absti? nence principles. They deniie al?,, that all hotel? tlioiiid In- ho iiiiuia^eil. 1'hey iusiat that the aal? of ?pinu, wiuoa, beor ami cider should be p'ohibitcd by law. According to their theory they aro right, only they should reim-uilMT tant their theory is not that of the imijoiity. If it wer-, all liars, beer ?hops and gin-mills would Ik* swept from the face of the earth, ?nul all tue distilled?-? and breweries would isb'iim aud smell no more. The Expo? sition is not I cold-water exposition and dois not pict-nd to be. It might possibly be nil the better if it were; but that is not the point. Now, instead of liungciiag for better broad than ever was baked Ot will bo, we think (he Sons might have gathered Rome comfort from facts within their own paiticular knowledge. Pet us see ! Then ?re, it appears, in the T*iiit?-?1 States I,'All Divisions of the Sons of Temperance, w-iih a membership of B9,S19. Here is a very prosperous cold-water society. It has on hand in cash, or invested, $2t;.ri,011. It made a net gain in its membership last \earof 8,..2_, and experienced a loss of 7*105?bo that the bal? ance is on the right side. Certainly these lig ureS att'onl no occasion for gloom OS apprehen? sion. Think of the number of Sons who have vi>ited and will yet visit the Exposition with? out touching ?i drop even of the mildest beer! All the lacilities for quenching thirst, so far as they are concerned, will be conlined to the fountains of water and of soda-water. This ab-iimnee is to a cm tain extent the result <?f labors which arc extremely creditable to the TempSfBBM Societies. Nor must it be lorgot *ten that these have worked mainly by moral suasion. Prohibitory Paws have elicited very little; exhortation, writing, printing, associa? tion, have dons wonders. The National Di? vision, therefore, should not be di.?? otiraged, arbal?tes may l??- sold or swallowed apon the Exposition grounds. They may bs sun- that whatever the ?inantity, it will be much less than it would have been if than had never In in any Temperance Reform. % Of all yens this should be one of harmony ami good will. Il would be melam In-ly to find us I'clehratiiig the I'liion without agreeing upon anything except disagn? nient. We sus? pect that the gieatniss of the arrangements oeeasioBJ a little instability ; and it is natural for men to think that Batted would have inen better sia?aged if confided entirely to themselves. Then is nothing more becoming the occasion than good humor, and we really think that a lilth iiiore of it even in Phila? delphia (City of Brotherly Love) would not !w .lllli->._ At IsSl there in n chime?) that cremation will be I?r:i. ti? illy !?-teil in this ?niii.tiy. A philanthro jiic eiti/i-ii ?if Washington, Pi-mi., lias liniit a large stitm- hulls?- mi on.- of the hills aarrauadiag that qatol little town, for the reception of ilcad ho.Ins, unil a fuma? ?? U ?.?titilii ally construiteil in whi? h th.y an to he burnsd, H??w many dead bodtoa will ai ihciiisi-lvcs it is not easy to tl.-citlc The Doctor's fellow-eitlaeae ot whom, by the way, Jsbbm ti. Btoina loegwaa aun) beloeg, aa a rale,toeneient i Snitch-Irish clans, who tiiiike a god ?if pre?'?-?l? nt .-nul walk m the narrow but excellent path of their father?, from tin? < ladle to their destlfM-. Th'-y ?? t'.l :i??t be hk.lv to ilin? tli.'tiiH.'lv. s .?ut <>f that bed int.? a bstcrodos furnace. Dr. I..? M.iyu.? Inin-elf will 's- renieiiil.er.il by MB-hsTBOf the ??1.1 Abolition Boeiet. a* a life-loag rsdieal-?sue at tha laadaiaof th?- brisca h"|ie o? the aaaan Ha has rireo. darlas lata M-:?!-?, lassa -?unis f?>r Um audewaMul ni acol? \eeyt f??r fr? .??lu., h m lit.- S..nth. and iiKii. iiltiiral schools, j.ni.h.- bbcartoa. Ru.. in ins own m igbbor? bood. He ?s wi-ii knows n? th.- Weal aad South aa a i?,au <>f ? x? .I?! ?i'ii.il fut? e, hi_.1i ?il II m?-, a ml bfOBd hu uia?ui). His ase mu? hibag bsaltb bava prompted lilil? ta 111? -> llttill attack tl|M?ii .-.nisei Mitistu. W? aadaistaad tbal bisezaeatoia are atrietly beaad to make ??I Iniiistlf tlte lirit offering t" reform BpBS the fiilul.il plia Which h?' has built, after which II is to offer toWanativa town a issdy. shaap^ anddacaut node ?>f dlipoeal of the dead. nata aaaaaa t<> i.e. if ata May -?-i?. aa. aaf'e-pi ill-line ?" of ?.minie ab?.ut tins 11 in??. Wt iiAXf a re |Mirt of ..n?- partit ul.irl.v in I. it a-.? tl.-. Ind.. illm? tratitn; tin- < 1.. 11 ?_; ? - r of ?i nu-i-huinil k.-ihiis tOO ?re it f??r-aiiit>. .J.iiu.s A. M?M?n-, au iiin-iitor and a iiu'iiiiM-r of tin Boetoty al Prienda, reghBeied at tha Lake lions??, ami paid Ins board in advam <? for a Week, lb-then i i-.it.?>! a ma? hm?' simp where In lia.l meted tu the head of a limad a\ t wo liars of iron. Oa either tide, fBateaed to tbaaa boralikaa bandle to aa ??*?. ha arranged a ayatoia ??f woodea basa Tbooztaeaaa aadoftasaa waa hataaadta a ataaaplacasaeBrad t<? tlu> tl?M?r byhlnsio. lboas araa mead aad bald la a nearly psrpeadlealat poet* tmii by i-onN IBalansd to IBa wall. Bstwsaa the aaeda stood a caadla *??> Issd as i?> ban them off ami I. I SOBE the ax. Inder tins M?".r.' i>la? ??il a l.a-k.'t Hied witb ?oiiiiti which hail besa aatarated witb chloroform. lb? pteosd bia basd Is this, ami ^eod ih I'l-caiii?' laasaaibla. Tha cord waa burned, tha ax lall, sad tbe bead woo completely ecTercd ?i ???n the body. H" left a |ia|?.'r on the -.??lu ot lus irnillutine inacrihed: " For esto or rest, lian-kan. Pstsatss* l-lle.l foi."' _ Tljer?' is l.n etui of the " heirs" of the lato Mr. A. T. .Stewart, ami the i ry is still they coiiie. 1'rolu tha farfa'iieil haunts of romantic linn, ami from ?a? h Sjasrtof ?,f ""r beloved country, th.? kinsmen ami the kinswomen of the peal mer? liant eiiieii_e an lbsssntaotsntsatBtolast will ami teataateet, The latoat elaiiiiaiit says that \n? BaBM is Tr.nan, ami that ba lives in North t'arolina. Ha abo sot?, foith that his graiiilf.ither was Mr. Stcwurt's " own titule." This urn-It' li.nl two children. One of tlu-tn inairieil .lohn Halfour. ami by him hail a son Aiuliew, who ? .um? to this country in 1771, ami who Maapaaaad tin? eases of America,'" ami also (to waa Mr. Trojan's words) "gave his life asa mi ti ti??.- upon his country's altar. In-ing BMlderad in .old blsod at his own hotni'." II.? left a ?lau?ditci nuiiicd Tihhi, who uiarrii ?I-lohn Trojan, hv whoin sh?. bad three chililreii. One of thein was John Halfour Tmjan, lim fall?? i ?>f the present claiinant, who ___, it appears front this statement, ami acOOT?Bg to his own >i.-w of the matter, eniiileil f?> ?i very small fraction-of Mr. Stewart's Batato, We trnxt that this Trojan is not aoBBttaf aa it t'?<? esu?deutly. a win eaa baldly bo aal ?rida bocease tha testator had&hun ?lreil BOBSiaa at whuiii he knew nothing. (??aiiisborouifh's |H>rtruit of the Duchess of Devon sin n- has not yet been fountl, nltlioiigb the most skill? ful l.oniloii detectives have been lit wotk for three weeks. This fact gOM to ? onliiin the apiaiSB that the robbery waa perpetrated by some aa railed " i< spe.lalil." psmoa. The Spcetii'.Di- ollers an explana? tion of the crimo which it consiil?*rs "by Im ineiilis aareaaoaable." it is that, aaaaaaiag tha painting to have been -tolen for the sake of gB?B_ the thief re? lied llpoll til?- sp?'?'dy ilemiliticelilellt of til" extiaili tioii treaty with tha Uaitod ?states, after whi. n ha would lie at complete liberty to bring the picture h.i. and exhibit it publiclv ! If this surmise he PBS* it-it, the i riiiiiiuil .should lo.ie no time in iiiemlitii; his ways: t In? diplomatic service is t lit? true place fat a man of his pe?uliai talent. The imivomeiit to lagfltoa canibliii_? in this city and Slut?' ought t?> ba vigorously oppooadt fas H la aadiagatnaejth la unexpected qaartsca Thssnly MfBBBBM in favor of it which we have heard ?ul Valtntl islhat if le_.ali/ei|. the laru'i' gSSihlhH houses, like those of Morrissoy mu? Chaiiiherliu, willmitur ally siiparess in their own int?-i?-sts t lit- smaller or "skin" ?aines. This is bused on the wild as-,iliii|)ti?)li that the IstgS eiitithlishiuimti ur.? fairly conducted, whtch is aaaaariBf atosfathar to?? inuch. The police Should raid upm all alike. ? Tim fre?|tiency of cases of brutality by poli<cemen ItlSSnrWtha mtoni atteutiun of the Police Hoard. MmbbbbI from the force in not siiflieieut piitiishineut fur ???un) of the o?uiinim lately conumitted, ami th? Hoard might impre?*-. npon it? subordinate? a greater ?ens? of prisoners' righto by prosecuting aoino of tho elie m le r s iu the court a. PERSONAL. Mr. Sankey is resting at Benbright, near Long nrancb. He is the guost of Mr. Clinton B. Flak. Dom Pedro was elected an honorary member of the M;.i.Si?cl)Usctt_i Medical ?Society ou TttoM'Civ. (Jen. Sherman returned to this city from West ?Mat yesterday afternoon, ami took the evomug train for Washington. Senator Bunisidc is ?aid to he ill from a dw c.is.-of the bralu, ami fear? aie euterlaiuod of lna coui ptatn reenyrary. Bishop ?Simpson will deliver the sermon he? ron? th?t -...eieiy of Kc1lgl?ua Inqtiliy at the !):1?1 annual Commencement of Dickinson t-'oimgc, at Carlisle, Wttm. l'rof. Tyler of Amhernt College #iD deliver ?i ineinoriiil sermon on the let* President Stcarna during the Autiiiuu tueetiiif,' of tha Hoard of Trustee?, In Octo? ber. Diehop Clark ?fated to tin? Episcopal Con ventloii recently in session in I'rovideni'e, that a gentle iniiii who ?lied a Kliort time ago In Massachusetts bad it-it i lie Dlirtop ?f Bhada l?lumi |0,000i Pmf. Mark Bailey of Yale College will read the Declaration of Ind.-p-ndcnce at the Fourth of July celebration in New-Haven, one feature of the oecoeioti will be a inuniicr ..f boalrea on the ii.il.-_ surrounding the city, Mr. Donulil ll. Mitchell tieinjf one of the eoinuiittoe liai ins* tin-in in charge. Ex-Mayor Eastman of Poiighkeep.ie has given ?r.iKj of the street boys of that city a straw hat each with this advice pasted inside UM crown I "Do ?'! drink, dual awaar, don't ?-new, don't ?moke. Ho industrious, work bard study hard, j.lav burd, and vou will tu-ver be ' hatlc-s.' With the bait wishes for your future welfare." The Italian Government has ?appointed l'rof. riotU (it|M?u whom It recently conferred the tltlo of Conuni-mlutorc) Commissioner to the Exhibition at riiil:nlel|.hia. Ho is directed by Minister Coppino "to r.-|.ort on the moral ami iulcileclii.il pr??greas of the United states ia tills first e.-iitury- of bei- national BSM-BBSBj ?nil on Hint ?vmiderfnl inovement wblch In this In of Interval of tune has raised her to so hl__|i it p.ace among the nations that have coiitribitted most to human progtaea." Prof. n?.tta la la naka this study par? ticularly with r. fercne?? to ihn inti-lli i-tual and moral ? ants i.f Italv, ?ui'l to tliose refuriiiM in public education Which the i ipc?. no- or ihe tint.-?! states may silK;,'c.?t. The pap?is left by Daniel Webster were pre ?enled lo the State Ilist.n ieal .-?ncii-ty of New-Hampshire on W< iliieeduy. '1 hey uicluile matiy hundred? of letter?, ilt.aiiiiH nt?, ami |>.liter?, nome of tii.-m relating to John A?l.uns, J .tines Monroe, and nioMt of the prominent slatts metl who Were ?-..temporal), oils v?i?n Webster. The ?oiicsiMiiiileiici- relating to the dilhYalty between W.b .?ter ?ill I r.:?tiil?il,'ii, III?' eill.ilCl?'?? In iirunu?cri|.t upon A.lain? and .1? tb-t ?on. ami the cut,pit tit Ol 'initial dealt of tin- lliilseinann letter ami papara kiiilr.il toiture among tliein. I'll?n- ?ir?- also many papers matalnlag tin- original notes ??f Wi-bsler's most famous .senatorial | ami fon-ti.ic arguments, sime the death of Mr. I-1.?teller Webater the document? bara becu la the ke<ping of the Hun. J't.tei Harvey of BootOB, ??n ititliii.tt-t? trtenil of Mr. Wclitter, ami tlie.v w. It- ;?r<?? lited by him to the Such-ty. Win n Olivar Cromwell was asked in 1649 to adapt tho po.t of Coiiimander-in-Chief aud Lieuten? ant? ieneral of Ireland he replied that be would gn If he were " sulll? ictitly iuo?i?!?.l" The following facts from 7/tr Pulendor nt St.tte I'aptrt will show the jiscuulary value of lusdeinaiid.which BSSffSBlBi! " He reiiinn-d.lii ?ddltloa t?. the ordinary ?alary of the I/ord Lieutenant of Ireland, iH.">.imhi for out tit. aSOa day as long :?s he re? mained iu Ktiicl.imi. ami ??40.is?) a .tear on his laming In iii .m i. l'moi i liant, i?. CroaawaU'a patent do?-? t?ot ?t.tic Ins s.iiary as l..inl I.louteu .lit of Ir. lauJ, only that l.e ?Inmill hav.? the u?iial fee., stipends, and allowance?; but, judging from analogy, il seems to hare been at l.i?t (.?_ ,.ti m. His total -.alary would be, therefore, $t>.?,000 a >.-ar. wlilch, nniliiplicil by Ah, to represent the compara? tive value of money at IBM period, uiiiounts to f'-Jii.OOO, me ?ai.iry of the present Lord Lieutenant being only -.llHI-tMS)." The fiijnrn of l'aria ?says that tins late Sultan was ?i iliat.int coiinectloii of the lion:i|.arie f.niiily on his k-raiiiliiiothcr'? side, sue being a mar relation ot the Km pn-?? Jii??-i'liitn-. The tuotlier of the Multan Mahmoud Wat Mlle, du LBS de Kiv.-ry, belonging to un old ami aris? tocratie family of Martinli|ue, SBBBSSOBf by mut nage with the lascher de la l'agt-rics. The young cr?ole w a* sent to France to Is*' educated ?it a convent nt .Nantes. sin? embarked for Martinique at the aaa of is. bat the afcip waa captured by puntea, aad Iba girl ?old for ?t large Mm t.< toe \*?-v at atetara, atBa aaal h?-r as a Pi'.--, nt to Hit- Button A limed, wliiiui ?he goon captivated it? I.? i i ttiatutliiiaiv pny-nal ami intellectual ?harms, ni tune I t?-t t ?in in g the ta Milite Sultana. Sne died in ln\H, while ??till m tin- <?nj.?\ on nt of lue prerogative-, which iiiMiK <t to her in- am tank iu the Liiij.ire alttr tin .sult.tu. _ POLITICAL NOTES, The agony will t-nd to-day anyway. lb?' CuSOBBB-hounS liMiks lonesome nowadays. The three clerks who wer? not js-rmltted to go to Cm.-in natl I?? shout for OoakHagBM reading ?iltoul the beauti? ful baud music with tin laiit holy pleasiue. The Tilden anil lli-ndrieks ticket meets with tk'fticrul Hpprobi.tioii fiom the iM-moonitl?? jin-M. lite P,',er,,ln limner .?t\ s it Is se.trcly |M??Mible to ttBBflBf a ?ftainirer ticket, wnee It wotild bariinuiiz?- the party Last ami We?! ?.ml muke ?ucc.-jtit ceituui ill tor doubttul ?tules. What is the Ih-publiean |>arty (Waning to, when it kicks cut of its National ''.invention -in h a noble anil iefaSSS pabraf Mai and faithful servant? as Hie Hon. "Ito?s" rtliepherd. and Senator Hpeiu-i>r of Alabama 1 Iloth of them were in.lnr?. .1 by the AiluiliiiHtiatioii, t??o. ll looks as If the unloading had BagBB. They don't sit'in to like the Hon. S. S. Cox out In Ohio, ilcapltc his altilutle ?luiinit their ?oft i.nuici wairfate la?t Fall. I lie t uioumii An./uirrr inakt it this comment on a report that the ticket of the Democrats Btcht be Heinlrick? and Cox : "Sam. t'ox is a very small animal, li?? can't watt ?n that team." The Mnssnehnsetts ielegatioa at ('iueinnati Is assailed on all ildes. At the ('onveiitiou they dub it the " D.batlni; S .. Iety." a.-d In Ma?? i. liii.eil* the jnii nais which patted its members on the back .?o kunlit before the? went an- now BataUng them for their liide rlslon ??ml k*i neral feebleness. In short, the .wa-oiiiplislu'il (,'. ntbliu n, who were .'?|M-?ially h?-:?t up to adiniratloii baaaaaa they were aot poUttclaaa, are now abaaed ba eaaae thej do aol aaderataad |s?litic?, and cauuut lhara tin ait like iiolitliiaiis. l?en. Ilaneoek is said to be Coming into promiiti'iict? at WaaMagtea as the St. 1..laia iioiiiiuce. The corrcitpoiitli-nt of The gSB*ttnyttnht Hepublieun VrfBtB! " It Is .in pn?iiiK to see ll.iw much BBSBBBBSB. of (leu. Ham tick for the St. Isiuis uoiuinatiou have Improved Inr? within a week. Ills almost certain, If the l-epul? licans take up oiilv a pariv ui.ni.tli.it llaiicoek will win the pi l/.e. Saul a shrewd old Deimx-ral a day or two since, ' If your people take up Hayes or Taft, or any other second-rate man, Ilaiuock will easily beat him. If you have the sense to take Hrislow, I hardly know what we can do. Wi? may fea driven to take Davis, but we hop.- to escape that peceaalty.' Most of the Doaao* cratle leaders here prefer to have Datu on tlie bench, ??ml they won'! l.tke him unit-.? they are seared into It. 'Mils is the opinion of Jltdga Davis. ' Tht-y don't want un?,' he ?aid, the oilier day ; * unless they are iu distress, they will not rare for me.' " Then have been several TOgUS rumors that The Chicinji) Tribune ?voiiltl refuse to support Illalne H In? BBS iioiiiiiiiited. The??- are pat to rest by the follow? ing utterance of 77le Tribune on Tuesday last: " The Trilnine't treatment ol Mr. lilaiut* ha? tx-cn candid, fair, ami sincere; und while it will support the Keputilleau part? ami oppose the Democratic party If Mr. Illaine ia m.iiilii?t.-d. it will have no occasion to retract imytlnuK It has said, and It will still N-lleve that It would have been Infinitely better to nominate some other man. It will do Its utmost, nevertheless, to arrest the ca? lamity of ?lef.at which such a tioinlnetnm will un qUi-stloiiably threaten. ?he Tribune has not thoiiKbt, mid Hot ? not now thtuk. Hint ill of M . Hlaine's ability, brilliancy, alertness, and bravery, which will shine dur tti)? th.- campab't) if his health is restored to him, offsets the political objections that have been urteil iiiralnst him. At the siuiie time, we are convinced that. If he can lu-1 Ittttil in spile of the ol,lections madt?. lie will give the ?otintry a vigorous, upright, uud brilliant adminis? tration." There are evidences of soreness m the Mor? ton camp. /'/ii* ?iiitttuuipitii .imiriitil, which has been pleading for harmony, no matter who wat nominated, broke out on Wcdnesiliiy morulla* vvitli this rasping coiu pi.iitit: "If Senat,?r Morton is ?li-feaied at tiiclnnatl.lt will be through the o??-n and shameless us?, of Adiulnis t'atlon uiflticticc in favor of Senator t'onkling in oiher unid?, he will fall a vicilui u> tirant ism. and his defeat will reiniml his friends Haut there waa a time wheu If he had cut loose from the support of President Grunt's administration he coud have made himself tho most popular man in tint United States. His devotion to the Kepublu-aii party has lei luin to sacrifice the great? est oopartaaBBM <?f his iif?> in ia_Sa?taa the Aa_Ms* trntlou when it would have been far more popular to de? nounce than dcfeml. There is no man living to whom President Grunt owe? as much as he iBSB IS ?SBBSSS Morton. If Mr. Conkllug has been more tggg, oua lu personal praise of Hie President. BsWgm lor Morion has rendered him BBS hi* Administration tar more ? tlicieiit service m those trj lug |s?lltlcal exigencies when great service waa sorely neeile?!. Thus the aentl meut of gratitude should havo added Its weight to the other motives restraining the President from interfering; but KtiitItiitle, it would aeem, feSS been overlooked with thereat. Alter all that un has done for the l'resid-nt. s? miioi Moitoii I? at bist briiu/ln faoe to face with the fact that Un- President is using the whole power ?I Ihn AUuiiniatiaUou aguluat him." CINCINNATI CONVENTION. _CoMBmea trow Tint Tome. called to order the first Convention of tli?T-Wy? can party, may l*o found to have called to order rZ terday the last successive Convention of the pa'-J* Thcro arc three principio? upon which the BcssS can party must stand: Absolute protection to _ji light?, North anil ?South ; the hanlest kind of hJ* money and the earliest possible resumption ?? rings, no eli?iues, uo combinations''of person*)' bx. tcrests at-ainst the interest? of all the people, unter, sonal government. Each plank of Curtis'a pUt form waa heartily cheered by this enthusiastic gi,tu ering. Next. Kichard A. Dana, whom the United -States Senate did not think gooil enough for a Min ist?rto Kiiglaiul, was seen tr.-adins. hi. way to the platform. MsSMChusetto, he said, was grateful for the honor of being allowed to eecond the ?loniiuatio? of Benjamin H. Bristow. When he went on to hint his doubts whether some candi, date* named could carry Massachusetts, then were a good many hisses that had th? only edict of rousing the Yankee bloat in tbe speaker. Gentlemen may make, said he, such real demonstrations as their habita and nature lead them to. Bat it may be well to ask whether Massachu? setts has not done sonio things for the Rcpulilican party. Boaiething ntuat ba done where ouce then waa 7.*i,OUO majority for the Rcpubttaaat- Th? settling down of u gieatelood over the nomination bai nearly lost them the ?State. Mr. Bristow's loyalty had been doubted. Maaaaehaaetta waa sati.itied with the loyalty of Mr. Bristow. But Mr. Dana's speech whs not successful. He had fallen out with hi? audience. 1 he ??rent sensation of the day was close at hand. The presentation of Mr. Hristow's name had Isyj tlio moat interesting spectacle thus far, not unly I. cause of the popular enthusiasm with which it was received, but the exceptional character of th? men by whom it was mail?*. But n greater waa it liatul. While the catoleoi observer was not lookiig lor anything iu particular, Secretary Hasted let, ilip, in his clear, reaonadiog voice, the short, ?harp ?' -itiosy liable, " Main-." It waa like tinder to apewdet iiiis'iizine. Words cannot adequately describe tha tonada of eheeciag that followed. Tho whole ?rat .rowd went mad ?ip from the gallsrtoe ?m either side, up from tho i-allcry at the back aud the gnat _._o l>hitheater al the front AU over the lloor, delegan?, alternates, and bx.k.. n, there vths aa great up? rising at the name of Maine, There was no resisting .iieh enthusiasm- Heu [otead in it who had no sym? pathy with it. ThflCOWM nothiugof the machine about it. It was an outburst of genuine popu. lar feeling su? h as no machine could counter? feit or e un?ate. Bohr it J. lapaasl of lili noi?. who appeared first in lx-'half of Mr. I'laino. meanwhile loomed up on the platform. Ilia tir.->t sentence and its reception showed his mastery dv.t the Convention. " Massachusetts i? satisfied with the loyalty of Benjamin EL Hiistow. _?o am I ; but when Massachusetts says that the candidat? who is to be li.iiiiit.ated In re may not carrv that State, 1 say that I am not sati.stii'd with the loyalty >f Massachusetts.'' There bllowed another storm nearly e?iiial to tho first. 'OoT. logeraoll swayed the Convention with the '.cant ?notion of hit han.l. When he spoke <>f Maine as a man " whoM personal reputation is as spotless as a star aud who does not carry a certificate of character from a OSBBBBBUfB Congress," there a as another at? tack of Blaine emotional insanity. With his speech the climax of the ?lay had been reached. Then were speeches al i from A. G. Turner of (?eorgia, a negro, who ?ailed Mr. Curtis "the ?Teat p?s't of New-York," and had the brutally ba?l taste to ?neer at Mr. Dana as the Minister of England, lint it waa all over. Mr. Wood ford Bfaeeoted Mr. ('?ink? ling in a speech, and Mr. Bartholomew presented Mr. liartranft. The Convention was hurrying, after a seven hours' continuons session, aud brok?> up to meet again to-morrow inoriiing. ANTI-BLAINK KFFORTS. HMBM or tiik BOSSB?Bn nOtTBfWO si t M ?-It OF I -l!'M ? OOBBUBBaM 1UIKM.S Dt PKK&SKn. (BY BBJHB?m TO THK TRllin??B.| Cincinnati. June IT?.?The aiiti-Blaine men Bah a last desperate etfort yesterday evening tofonaa eaaabtoattoa for his defeat, seeing how hopeless fi? them the contest had tiecuiie, hiu! apparently il.-teniiiued that, though t'uey ha?l fail?*?l, their antagonist who hail made such a gallant v.?hi asjataat them should not win the prit* Two delegates from each of the States of New-Vork, Indlaaa. and ()!no fornied tltcmselvee into a volunteer committee ant! visited those d?l?ga? tions whiih were known to Ik pledged fur Mr. Maine, and then in whoOC ISBBB there were sup po.s?->d to bo niante aaeii, and begged thorn to gira their support to MBa ?me els**. The argument muxi la each case was that if Mr. Blaine was nominated the party would snre'y lie dedaotod, beeaOM h? lotild carry neither the States of New-York. Indiana, or Ohio. The friends of Mr. Blaine looked on at this in? f?rmame w ith much unconcern, or, to say tho bast, without alarm. They had earlier m the evening, after the Convent'.m a<l.ourned, esssaaasd their tlatogattoaa carefully, and found the whole line ai tirtii M a -itone wall. They knew that, from the hour when tiltil forces began to Hfifl la Cim itiiiati, every conceivable argument had been iise?l with the Blaiaedetogataa to turn them, but wholly without avail. They felt morally certain that if the Main? men, on delegations instructed or pledged toOttol caiulnlites, were relieved Iront these obligation?, the "favorite sun" of Maine would have a majority of the Convention on the first ballot They had no objections then-fore to any i-ouibiuCTion that would break up the anti-l.luin? delegation. Believing that they couhl not help gaiu lag strength in every ease, anil that n majority of the Convention wnulil vote for Mr. Illaine when one? relieved from their prior obligations, no ?flomWaatias could injure him. On the other hand, it let loose t.'i? Maine iiiuii ami gave them the very opportunity for Which they were seeking, to go over to the support of their favorite candidate. The movement was mailo also with a sho?*king want of judgment. Of course the friends of three other candidates would never unite openly in EBB) an undertaking unless their own eases lisiked hope? less. The very tact that the Conkling, Morton, and Hayes men were publicly begging other delegat? not to vote for Mr. Blaine, convinced Mr. I'lainM friends that they believed he was sure to be?*** nate?l, ami wherever the six missionaries went they were spoken of as conducting the funeral ? those three camlidatcs, and the friends of a?. HI nine were more encouraged than ever. Ot course the mission of these men was not ***? ci-ssful. All the original Blaine delegations oi th? North-West were not only aa rinn ?? that ot Maine, but they were aggressively so. Iu the I?"" delegation, for instance, the six. were reminded Bat their protest would come with a better grace ft0 States Which did not present candidates to the Con? vent ion, ami stmie awkward ?ideations were i kei among them one ?lirci-te?! to IhSBSWbS ram? fe1 the N??w-Y??rk delegatmn, whether Mr. Conkhal could carry the state of New-Vork. Tbe geiitleau* to whom it wiis ?_ddre-.se?! was au honest man.?a? thought it better to make no reply. I" amid** BlabM delegation the Commisatouera wer? asked W the authority by which they came, and oue, tojj pri'ssed for an answer, those fiom Kaw-TalBB? mitted that they had not been avyetuUid bf 0* detogattoa but by the chairman of it. Iu the mixed delegations the movement met ERR no more success. The Maine men among theiu **t only t??o anxious b? be allowed to vote f?r hi? the first ballot, and could not be moved by W such appeal as this. While the coiiiuiis-Mouer? W?TP going their rouada between the hours of ?*-***\"? and ntiilnight. the Conkliug men at the brae** Hotel burst forth in a lit ful sort of lioastmg. w* led a few to believe that something had really btf peued which would turn the scale agaiu?t M? Blaiue. They awaggered alhmt the corridor? BMBW hotel and m the New-York headquarter?, offenaa heavy "*agers that Mr. Blaine would not be ooni uated at all. but not anaerting. it waa obtet**).***9 Mr. Conkliug would. Whether they were l?**9