the chicago tribune, sunday, july 11. new york. …€¦ · thebesavans werelothto assume,...

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Page 1: THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE, SUNDAY, JULY 11. NEW YORK. …€¦ · thebesavans werelothto assume, andtheyde-termined to resort totome infallibletest. Ac-cordingly, they one evening vbued

NEW YORK.

An Outfit for a FashionableWaterine-Plaoe.

The Picture Galleries.

"Flic Manual of Manners.

I FROM Otß SntCUL CORRESrOKbEKT.]New Yoke, JuneSO.It Is, I believe, afact historically authenticated,

that certain scientific travellers, havingreached*In the remotest regions of their explorations, awell-populated town In the heart of Africa, ex-hibitingthe phenomenonof only male Inhabitants,•exhausted time, energy and ingenuity in searchcf the missinghalf, whose existence theirphlloso-j>hy coijectured. The old men of the place hailBorer heard of 'a woman; the young men knew nosuch wordas sweetheart in their language; andthe infantile blackamoors f&Uea to affordany in-telligenceof their mammas. To leave the townl«hlnd them, simply classified as one of thejdiosyncraclcs of nature, was a responsibilitythebe savans were loth to assume, and they de-termined to resort to tome infallible test. Ac-cordingly, they one evening vbued a tree thatflourished at a distancefrom the settlement, in theBolltude of a desert plain, and hung upon Itsbranches two bracelets and a collar.

Early the following mundug. stealthily ap-proaching their trap, Imagine the pleasure ofthese boas of science to perceive—very compo-sedly seatedbeneath thetree—two native women;cue arrayed m a pair of bracelets, the other ap-propriately dressed—ina collar.

The faiththat Is In us, however, that the femi-nine loveof dress la lunate and universal needsno scientific corroloratlon; and to comprehendhow capable this instinct U of cultivation. It Is butnecessary to survey the wardrobe ol some wnler-icg-placcbelle, or to have such a glimpse of oneas weenjoy ed to-day, or & peep at the “finishingtouches" of a summer outfit now WendingIts wayto Newport, where its lair owner will arrive inlime to witness the presentation of the boat“Kescue" to Ida Lewis,—a gift appointed to bemade at lb** Newport j<anuleground, on the morn-ing01 July 3, and in tbe afternoonto be rowed byita all-honored possessor to her home at LimeEock.

TheParisian package containingthese “finish-ing touches" having encountered at the CustomDouse a dulyof a little less than two thousanddollars, disclosed, as you may Imagine, someir;Cea of elegance,—the last, perhaps, till Septem-ber. As midsummer preparations are now com-pleted, few fashionable people are still In town, asthe many missing guests testified ul a recent wed-ding; and the Fifth avenue drawing-rooms aredesolatewith shrouded marblesand bronzes, anddreary swathing cloths of brown holland.

One of the prettiestol the reception dresses bada skirt of mauve silk, bordered with three baudsuf snowy book-tnuallu laid on In narrow plaits,and edgedwith guipure:ace a pattern of deepl>olms. The tunic, elaborately festooned anddraped, was without trimming, and made ofcordedsilk, the rep stripe being alternately lilacand white—the lilac dotted wfrh white. Thecash was of book-muslin, lined with violetbilk and trimmed with lace like the Bounce#;the barque of mauve, also with book-musliuinnarrow plaits. Tbe hat was of white straw,ordered with wld e block (Chantilly) lace, endwith a garland of fire roxes—made, perhaps, bytheSpanish nuns, so devoutly true were they tonature; three in delicateLuts of cnuiavu, one yel-lowand one white.

A carriagedress of chlna-Mue was trimmed withraniie of Mack bilk, embroidered with flop* inarc,1.lops, and a cinquc-foll figure* in each Bcollop ; tunicofbine eilk and gauze, untntmned, save withrorettes at the looping*; basque with rtrn», andcoal-eleeces W-lere-d like the -tlrt with embroid-ered rutiles ofblack. A turlma urcompank-d thistui:,with plumes of every possible shade of brownflung backward from thecentre toeach aide. Andthe ornaments, Including parasol handle, were oftortoiseshdlrthe chain and bracelets wovan In•wondrous uttie carved links (all from one piece',the locketexquisitely designedwuh tilemonogramJii relief, and tar-nugs to eom-spoml.

A costume of palest Kilvtr gray hml Us silk skintnnimeUwith flounces of grenadine (of theMuiOe), barred at graded intervalswith a singularlyembroidered rili'xm fn colors, with Muck, of sea-green, orange, darkblue and vennlllion; the oier-dressof grenadine,pliedat the back in a lomultOf lightcloBds; the trimming of the waist (grena-dine over* Joir-cut silk I*oddiee)relating the col-ore with bars of rlbton; and the rlmleas hat creat-ed high,w ith a sort of bandeau rolled back anddroopingupon one tide, com]K>.-ed (of theeyes) ofpeacock plumes. Neckties and sashf s w ereofalbeautiful colors (ribbons for sashes al»oul half ayard wide), embroidered, fringed wub gold ortrimmed elaborately with lace; one Russianact, heavily corded like the Roman, withJhe Russian colors act la biark betweenbare or gold. As for the lingerie, withUs daintiness of needlework, and Its miles cfnarrow lacc, it la a pliy itmust be ever worn. The

■collars wereull made standingbehind, and turnedover tn points tu front; and amongthe recherchejewelries was aset fromRome, including a locket<Ol breast-plate about four inches long), with ecar-abell inprecious stones of various red hues in re-lino, upona caned mosaic of equally rich batcontrafittnp tints.

And with those toilets have been packed cm-broideiy patterns to whilesway the lounginglimesupon the piazzas—a lambrequin upon Javacan-vas of Oriental birds, und buds In floss and zephyr;

ol wild roses upon silver, with agolden cluster of Connth grapes. Thelatest novels, too, for whatever lime mayremain from pleasure lobekilled: “The DeadGuest,” “The Lost Manuscript,” “The lla-beraiclster,” “Stretton,”—and crowded In some-where, for theKnei/f of a pretty sister not vet lasociety, hut only in white muslin (and those sash-■cs), la (lie album of “Mental Photographs,” Withfiuch leadingquestions as - What is jour favoritefli-ntr?” “Whatepoch would you choose to harel.ved In “What is your motto—youraim In life—-jour favorite character In romance ?” “What arcthe saddest words—-the sweetot wonla in theW..rid:” which latest luienopUlua would it be pol-emic to answer, luaualbum of “ sweet sixteen,”Inany other wav than **f love you:”—answers that,altogether,are expected to drewout the lines ofthat Inner lorm,sooften veiled in the outwardimage, ai d artfully concealed.

The pl< ■ are galleriesarc almost os disconsolatefis theF h avenue drawlng-ruoniH. Avery’s Is tobe clou . a few days, and we have taken ourlast ghm, of lurefreshing landscapes by Hartand Casih its ,mire picturesof French artbu;1U RePo' vatcr colors, around whose easel hasl<een nut- brightly-flowered Japanese scarf; Itsflower-p.- acamellaand sprays of iiuarncn, bythe celeb I Kuphetnui l*aMd;iis many littleobjects o t»: and ns gem of the hour (sincellougtitci First Sabbath at Plymouth "hasbeenAdd), “T Jtfle Musicians,” by Kastman John-xon—Uir • Italian children, with violin and lum-bering a. aims rap, lu that picturesque costumethat arris., make ol poetry and rags: and theirUtile shad, wed fares meeting life’s realities asLest they may—w Ith drratcfl.

Konedlerundfechaus are In Europe collectingpictures for September; and there is nothingnewer at Guuptl's than that picture of Brioo, inthe realistic school, representing the flight ofpeasants before an invading army—leaving theirhomes to the destroyer, and pressing forward tothfirunknownfate; bearing the child in Its cra-dle; the dying woman; the storm-swept youth,and the helplessburden of age.

At Seliaus’, uu mtereaiiug engraving, drawnafter thestyle or Kaulbach, Introduces In a lets-j>te,the prneipal composers and musiciansknownIn German mtndc, uuml>erlng in all elghty-twofigures, with the “likeness" carefully given, oswe may conclude by a comiiorison with a collec-tionof photograph*sent from abroad to one ofour muacal amateurs. The portraits in iheprin-cipal groups are, of course, immediately recog-nized: Bach, touching the organ; Beethoven,llaudeh Mozart, (duck, Mendelssohn: but formany thekey Is required.

Near the foreground is Offenbach, looking atthe spectator through bis eye-glasses witha flat-teringexpressionof gallantry, and quite oblivionsof our mystic Meyerbeer, and dreamy Weberwrapped ina cloak, as bis music is wrapped lathe shadowy wings of the wind. Beyond them,Rclchardc andAbu not unlike in expression, and

*t>olh looking upwards, as if to seek inspirationfornew songs. And sadder than “Ob, ye Tears,"arc those thoughtful faces nearer us—Schumannand Clara Schumann. In the gallery above themis Vogkr, bending over his took, and Marpurgwearinghis dart cap like Raphael. Again, in theforeground,we find the intellectual face ot Flo-tow, looking up to Mozart: and in a recess ofshadow the Mueller brothers, with theirviolins;find, conspicuous m the groupof women, the spir-ited protlle of Scbroedcr-Dcvrient: the lovelyface of "heavenly-voiced** Sontag; and dark-cyod Lucca glancing from under her statelyplume.

■ This picture, entitled, in English, “The Heroesof German Music,” Incudes Id Its portraits thecelebrities of a period extending from lUOtol“€T. The art lot baa grouped them, not accord-Inc totheirtime, but ina musical classification ofhis own. and be bas met with much grace the djf-

scotot reconciling modern costume with his-toric dignity.

“The fashionof dress Is of to-day; theruslhctlcsof dress is for all time/' says theauthor of “GoodSociety," In a boot (recently published by Rout-led?!-, purporting to be “A Complete Manual ofManners," and reviewing, In its introduction, the«>rgin and {.regrets oi pol.tcuesi, with what flat-ttncfjdtductlona for the yrewnt day you mayniter trum quotation?of the extremes In Englishn-anner. thatn.c*c stepsof progress harelinked.

* Take forexample, says theCountess, ; •‘

•ho >;r»tige, barbarous wooing, and the still«ranp.-r wim.mp. <.f the Wautlful and gracefuliatiiiiau! Handers, by William the Conqueror.

v<- are told, was at first disinclined toenterUm hini as a lrm-r. She preferred another;but tin., noble suitor wouldtake no refusal. lieresolved to win the ladv. Having so resolved,bowcvir, what course did be pursue? Hid he

4 compass her with *wect olmcrvuncles ?’ Did henatter. I'ersuadc, entreat? Nothingof the kind.The old chronicler who hands thestory downtooe relates that Duke William, infuriated bv theladj *s refusal, coupled a- it was withan allusion tohis UU'pltioiatc bis war mtoher lath-er's ptlacc, seized the fair Matildabv her longtrews, dragged her by these gentle aboutthe chamlKT. struct herrepeatedly. and endedbyflingingherupon thefloorat his fctL

And this rigorous mannerof wooing, strung!toaar, produced the desired erf- cu Matilda ac-cented mm at once, and, oot»rtag quesuonou byber father as to her sadden change or opinion,said pleasantly: * I did nol know the Duke soveil then as Idonow; fur he mustbe a man ofjrreat courage and high daring that couldventuretocome and beat me In my father’sown palace.'"

This for the past; and, as a definition in thepresent of a true gentleman,theCountess quote* |ihc description of Prince Albert, In Tennyson's

dedication to“Idyllsof the King.”« We see him as be moved,

Dow. modest, kindly, all-accomplished, wise;With whatsublime repression of hltnscli.And m what limits, and now tender]ly;Not making his high place a lawless porenOf winged ambitions, nora vantage groundi*or pleasure; but thro'ali this tractof JJ-J**,,Wearing thewhite flowerof a blameless me.The opening chapter on the “Arrangementof a

' Lady's Douse’’ premises that *•everything shouldbe on a scale exactly proportionate to her bus-bond's income,’’ the Countess deprecating pre-tense as warmly as doe*Thackeray in his “Bookof 6nobe.” punctuality, kindness to servants,and conscienuous care of ’‘every.detail of thefentQy commissariat,”are the duties inculcated;and as ornaments for the drawing-room arenamed (to the suppreaaon of worsted-work andbijouterie}, flowers, books and minor*.

Sates ol etiquette are givenfor lettersof Intro-

duction, invitation*, Halting, morningcalls, letter,writing, riding, driving,and the promenade, belliand dinner parties, and ire are the moreready to accept many of there conven-tional mice, because the writer bar alreadymade na respect her authority, by her crl-dentlyheartfelt appreciation of thepure founda-tions of the fanciful and, sometimes, capriciousstructure of politeness—elnceslty, setf-rerpectand • kindness. Without these, ccnld all the“good society ” In the world give true grace,composure ana sweetness ?

Oarfavorn&cbapter la- the 'Manual is thecaeentitled“Dinner Parties." We almost believe tuopeningsentence to be literallytrue.* ‘'lt ia im«ponlble toover-estimate th« importance of din-nera.” The sentence, •'a small glass vase con-taining a‘button-hole bouquet’ placed at everycover is very dainty, "recallsa certain little pic-tureof a home-table that makes either the mouthwater, or the eyes water, we hardlyknow which;and wc confess toa sympathy with the Duke ofWellington's cook, la his hour of suffering, relatedthus:

“The Duke of Wellingtononce requesteda con-noisseur to recommend Wma goodeKe/dt euUint,

Felix, with whom the late Lord Seafield was re-Inctantiyabout to part on economic grounds, wasrecommended, and engaged. Some months af-terwards, this connoisseur was dining withLord Seaflcld, and before the first course wasover said: ‘So I find you have got theLuke’s cook to dress your din-ner?’ ‘I hare got Felix,’ repliedL’-nl Scofield, ‘but be is no longer, tbeDuke’s cook.’ The poor fellow came to mewith tears m his eyes, and begged to be takenback again at reduced wages, or no wages at all,for hewas determined to remain no longer atApeley House,’ ‘Hits the Duke been findingfault?'lasked. ‘Oh,no,my Lord,’ replied Fe-Ux; * I would stay ifhe had- lie Is the kindestofmapfera;but I serve him a dinner that wouldmake I’dc orTrancatelli nuret with envy, and hesays nothing. Igoout and leave him to dine on adinnerbadly dressed by tbe cook-maid, and stillhe eays nothing,Dat hurtmy feelings, myLord.' ’’

In the appendix,amid rules for various court-etiquette, tables of precedency, toasts and hintson carving, we finda short vocabulary of the lan-guage of flowers.

And from this eloquent bouquet, from whichmightbe culled mauv nosegays, I select for you,a honeysucule, a jonquil andariolet.

Pakcbom.

FAMOUS ETTEOPEABS.Karl Gutzkow, Novelist, Dramatist

and Critic.“Are Americansripe for Gutzkow?” wrote a

friend, theother day. “Yci ibeyread and enjoyAuerbachwith his strained enthusiasm fur Theo-doreParker. Perhapsour German novelists mayhelp elevate the religious standard of yourpeoplefromits present fetlclsm—from the current grosstheology which can produce, as rebound, I amtold, a wortso piously irreverent as The GatesAjar. You Americans are a strange people. Be-holdthe result of a Calvmtstlc, Puritanic creed!Andyet you claim to be the electof God—the soleexponents of &pure Christianity! ffj*ru meliora!”It remains to be Been whether It Is the specialmunonof Gutzkow, a* theablest novelistof Ger-

many, tocome to this Western laud as theapostleof a more transcendental creed, denying, Orel ofall, theexistence of a materialHeaven—the “ fell-cl-m”6O obnoxious to oar friend, the doctrineeagerly seized by the mos6, hard to accept by morewise in this world's loro. As yet be Is totally ua-known to the general public—asingular fact, con-sidering the man’s reputation; not wonderful,when one remembers’ that philosophic novels,w here an astonishinghistorical erudition is doneup as our physic—sugar-coated—ls thesole fashionIn which the majority of readers can l<e only spaa,medically induced to swallowphilosophy or historyul &1LClTiils greatstandard-bearer of the Idealistic pro-gress of tbla sentimental nineteenth century wasborn in Berlin, ;n 1611, Ida father filling a subor-dinate clerkship in theWar -Deportment. At theRcrlln University, Gutzkow studied philology andphilosophy, intending to cater the clerical profes-sion, but from the first Whitsuntide sermon,preached by him from Schluemachcr'spulpit, in1?32, be betrayed theheretical bent or his mind,clearly and defiantly set forth a year later la“Maha Gnru, theHistory of a God." Already, inIS3I, he had begun his literarycareer by brilliantnew Bpapcr articles; in 1638appeared “TheLettersol aFool to aFool”—(the two fools in questionwere, resjvecllvc-ly, masculine and feminine.) TheJuly Revolution of Paris upset hosts orGermany’sym ng men, helping to start adangerousfermenta-tion, culminating in the sorrowful Casco of i&t*w■-JH; and Gatztow would not bear patiently theyoke imposedby theState as well as tae Church,lie abandoned his firet profession. He had al-ready, young as he wan, won the degreeof Doctorof Philosophy, and went to Munich and Heidel-berg, to study Jurisprudence and politicaleconomy. Here he laid the foundation ofthat profound condition eoremarkably apparentin all ais important work*. la 3635 he went toFrankfort-on-the-Main, where he became the lite-rary mile of a prominent Journal, wrote va-rious short novels—among them, “Wally,or theSceptic,”and published a scorching attack upona living noted poet. In the shape of a littledrama,“Nero.” Ills “Wally ” roused the theologians,and, os first fruits, secured hima persecuting trial,and condemnation 10 a four weeks* imprison-ment.

The literary clique known as “Young Germa-ny ”sprang Into existence about this date, andGutzkow became one of the shining lights. Itwas composedofa numberof young authors whohad chosen theH'-trary life as a profession, mak-ing no elegant style of more importance thanpro-fundityof thought ororiginality of Idea. BesidesGutzkow, the ablestamong them, themost prom-inent are Mundt, Wlcubarg, Kuhntl and Laube.It is not to be supposed there ever existed anyunderstanding amongthem as to geuciolaim andcharacteristics. 1 hey merely represent a schoolw hich had Us day.

For several years he maintaineda high place ascriticalessayist, going in 1637 to Hamburg, wherehe published, under the name of Bulwcr,“Tne CotetsiKirarles; Their Alms, TheirFate, Their Great Character," which wasfollowed a year later by “Gods, Heroes,ano Don Quixotes "—both work* u col-lection of superb characteristic sketches andcriticisms. A little novel. “Seraphine,” of noremarkablemerit, next appeared—a sortof couu-ter-bhutto his own “Wally,” for the heroineIsdecked ont with all that rationalistic piety onefinds exhibited in Zchokkc's “.Slui.J.u CerAn Jac/if.” Then wuspublished “ Blase-lawandhid Sons,” a humorous picture of thepedagoguo-uke spirit of the lime. Various other works up.t-mired lu rapid succession, all aiding to estab-lish bis reputation ata brilliant writer, mid also—-the usual fate of Independent thought or actionabroad—to rouse a host of worrying enemies,who «y>on the pretence of detected heresy toChurch or Slate, (mused him to enjoy frequentopportunities for solitary reflection safe nailer1.-olt and bar.

Hutat la«t Gutzkow fouii.l the path worthy ofhis talent—lending to tlie regeneration of theGerman stage. He has protocol a long list ofnoted dramas, sufficient of themselves toestab-lish a great reputation had he never writtenanother line. Ills influence m Instructing thepublic tuludupon many subjects only to be ap-proached, la days of strict censorship of thepress and drama, with the shrewdlsc cautionhas been astonishing. Under some subtiy-ex-ccnred veil or other, he has handled everyleading question of the century. The first ofthese dramas, “ Richard Savage,” was giveninFrankfort In 1&38, with Emit Devricnt In theprin-cipal rrde. The acute artist at once recognizedthe worth of the worn, and introduced it withsuch enthusiasm that be won the life-long friend-shipof the author. In a short time Gutzkowoffered his fneud two new plays, “Werner, orHearth and World,” and “TaikoV’ Then fol-lowed “The School of Ihe Rich," ash&rply-de-bnedpicture of Hamburg life, received with ap-plause everywhere save in that city. A shorttimewas now spent in Parts, Switzerland andNcrtht rn Italy, the man working with the sameastonishing rapidity always distinguishinghim.

Ills historical tragedies are thebest of Gntz-kow'e dramatic works, andof them “UrielAcos-ta ”is perhaps the most signlQcant modern ser-mon play of this character. The religious move-known as therise of the“German Catholic Par-ty,"a free-thinking religious body, afforded theopportunity for “Uriel Acosta’s ’’ composition.Theplay pictures thestruggle between the ortho-dox creeds and freedom of thoughtas displayedby this “German Catholic Society,"hot thesceneis laid in dally Jewish life, osa dueregard for thecensor rendered necessary. A year orso later some of bis best comedieswere written, “ZopfunJ Sfhteert," and “Lhi*UrMW art Tortuft "becoming most popular. Theformer, though forbidden In Berlin, was receivedwith themostapplause everywhere outside of thePrussian capital.

Id the meantimeGutzkow was offered the posi-tion of dramatistto theRoyal Theatre in Dresden,removing thither in I&4T. But a abort time wasspent there, however, for the March revolutiondrovehis invalid wife to Berlin. lie followedher,to witness all the horrors of the outbreak there,theburialof the two hundred dead,and to ex-perience the poor triumph ofbeing appealedto bytheMinistry toaid in quieting thepeople coUectt diwfore the royal palace. It was not the Oral timeIn those troublous days when the governments

were compelledto petition those they had perse-cuted to aid in restoring order. His wife,after along illness, died,and he refused to return toDresden.

His wholeheart was with thearose of the revo-lutionists,and he cherished the plan of picturingworthllv the political and social fermentationofthe tune. The idea was earned out mone or thoselong romances which has won for him fromBayard Tfcrlor ihetitle ol the “Creatorof the Im-mense." Sinr volumeswere requiredto developId "hit Jtitlrr Ori*u "the conception of theInexhaustible author.

in ls*a several shoncr novels had been intro-ducedto the reading public, and the next greatwork was “TheSorcerer of Rome," a profoundhistorical romance—the scene laid in Anstna, onthe Rhine, and in Italy, during the Middle Ages,

and picturingthe different aspects of Catholicismin those countries. Gutzkow removed, shortlyafter its completion, to Weimar, where he wasappointed Director of the society known as the

avMHmH/fWTwi. By this time the man begM to

feci theresult of long over-work, became physi-

cally and mentally m, and for many months the

brilliant intellect wasthreatened with permanent,utter destruction. The danger passed •

time, so that, in tfiOfi, he was able to prepare for

the resumptionol an uncompleted work—almosthis greatest—bis flohsruchwaiwwu, a live-volumeromance, published in JrtS. The book betrays

not the slightest diminution of his intellectualvigor• has already been followed by three smaller

works, and, regardless of past danger,he is raoid-)y resuming. la his new home in Bregcnz, on theLake of Constance, his old active literaryUfc-^The Century Plum In Iloclicalcr*

X. Y.From tht Jiothttltr Express.

The Century plant now about lo blossom inRocheaterhas reached a height of fifteen feelbine inches, and will probably reach twenty feet.It has twenty branches and buds now visible,which are to bear the cluster*. The lowerbranchesare about fifteen Inches In length andflve Inches apart wherematured, and they gradu-ally shorten until they reach the ton. The lower-most am Is eleven feet ctx inches from theground,and there are 100 distinctlyformed badsin this cluster. Weestlmase there will be 1,500Sowers on theplant. Inother plants which haveDowered In England and elsewhere, these arms,when fully developed, hare measured roar tosixand a PaJffeet In length, and the clusters of flow-mton fourteen to eighteen Inches in diameter.Thesingle flower U not handsome, li la only fourto flvs inches la length, of a greenish

yellow color, bot -very fragrant. The greatbeauty U the wonderful pyramidalcandelabra shape or form which it attains whenInfull Uoom, (he large clusters and munerouanowe« in each, winch will appear at the ends ofthe ansa or tranche*, the lower ones being thelongest,and gradually shortening m pyramidalform till they reach the top, where therewill beahuge cluster of flowers. This particular plantwas brought • from Canandaigua to Rochesterthirteen/cars ago, and has been In theposses-sionof Messrs. Frost a. Co. ever since, its age IsTery accurately knows, haringbeen purchased laUnit,by the late Dm. John Orelg, of Canandaigua,

•andowned by until issc, when U wajpnr-cbased by the Meaara. Frost, making it aboutseventy year* ufage. Jt has thirty leaves,aver-aging tour anda half tosi*, feet in length, of aWalsh green color, finely marked with .yellowstripes, the leaves, being six to nine inTbes inwidthand three to five inches thickat the have.

A CtJBIDQS COLLECTION,

TbeLost Glare*at Wood’a Maaetfm,

Wood's Museum hasadded to Us numerous cu-riosities a number of gloves lost by vlaltora to theestablishment. They hangup tn the ™«in hali/orthe Inspection of the curious. There are somenineteensingle glove*and onepair. Each haulsstory. A web of romance mightbe wovenaroundeach. They compriseall sizes, creeds, colors andboth sexes.

A woman a right glove bangs first in the row.It nuella of suff.age. It la strong-minded. Yearsofoppression have left wrinkles on Us surface. Itcraves ilic sympathy of the lachrymose JudgeWaite, and the consolation of Mrs. Livermorewhichposseth all understanding. ’

A chiup cotton female glovereminds ns that Usowner couM afford no better, and weare sorry Itwa* lost. I’erbapa theowner was sorely troubled,and had to go man}* a day liarehauded Itecauseeven the smallamount that would tmy a new paircould not i»eafforded. The hand that ll enclosedmay have tolledthrough theweary nightwatchesto earn thescanty wages that kept hungeroutridethe door and virtue .nsldc. We are reminded oflieou'a pathetic lines:

"With tiarr'n weary and worn,w ith <y« lifi»lu-avy *udred.Aw.,manrat in unwuD.anjynn,Plying her needle and thread."These lines, like Brother Moody, do not get tn

Chicago, the appreciationthey deserve.A delicate whilekid tells of thenew-made brideon herwedding tour. She came to the city tospend the honeymoon and see the slghti Thebole proprietor of a man, la chargeof a new-madehusband, she has euuuga to do to think of himand how happy the is, without oclag careful ofhergloves; to she lost one of them- May Jt bodeno til luck. >\ hat a curiouseffect marriage musthave to make people careless of their gloves.Wonder Ifpeople lose their heads when they mar-ry * Some lose theirhearts ’tisaold. What a tinymoredont? * *

That block glove Is ominous. It preaches a taleof woe. A widow iu weeds for the husband; anorphan for her father;* sister for her brother.Visions of a sick bed nre up before os. Tuodarkened room w here the prostrate sufferer borehis sickness, where Lind hands smoothed theuneasy pillow amt cooled theheated brow. ThepnyMcum a skill is now In vain. Death hoversaround the dwelling. The grus monster, whowill pay all ol us a special visit some day, entersthe chamber, and with his srfthe cuts the lifesmogs thatbind the soul to the body, and it utree. Breakingbeans arc lelt behind, the worldmoves on, timeheals tbe wounds that have beenmsileby death,new ties arc formed, and eventu-ally be forwbom themourning was mounted latoruottenforever.

We examine a small, delicate kid glove. Apretty baud must have filled il a young ladyowned the glove, perhaps. WhoownoJ the baud?The lady hersell. Who owned the lady? No-l«'dy. She was in the market—for sale, to thehigh*-’*! bidder. The man wl»h the most moneygot her. That Is au aristocratic kk»vo—a fashion*able affair. She wanted u fashionable man—adandy—a nuuibpkuli—a i>oobv, adorned wlihgr»-■••ubjckr,thatshe longed to spend.

Here Is a warm winter glove,lined with fur. Itertated a rumpus. Two mouths since, itwas lost,by a lady. She tutted the Museum with her loverand anotheraspirant to her hand. When she dls.coveredher loss, the lo»er went back to find it,and she went home with No. a. There was a rowiu thecabin, and No. 1 gave her up id disgust, liewunumicued. WLat a harrow escape eacu hadIro n theother!Next comes a plous-looklng glove, lost by arural divine, who wouldnot visit a theatre for the

world, but went lo the .Museum and then wenthome to preach lo his flock on theIniquity ofamu-cmenu The glove hadu smellof sanctifiedhypocrisy,’Wc noticed an Irish Republican glove, an anti-fnetrade piece of French kid, lost ny one of thegentlemen who were here the otherday. He wenthotneuml will pay tor hU protection even in thepurchase of flo small a matteras u pair of newgloves.

We saw an anti-Masonic glove, a poor, miser-able, nigged thing, completelyplayed out.We were struck with the peculiar, shape of alegislativeglove. It looked as 11 thebaud wereilKjivs twistedbehind the owner's back, with thepalmup In a begging attitude.We werealmost overpowered with theodor of aChicago Justice's glove,though few of them areacquaintedwith the use of tne articles, and can-not we the of wearing “stockings ou theirhands.” This poor glove,which bad the xnDfor-tune to fallInto such had bands, is, therefore, acuriosity. It smelled of lager beer, sour krout,cabl>age-leafcigarsami injustice,one glove,halting from the Young Men's Chris-n Aisoclation, and lately in the possession ofa Ministers’ Union, struck us with astontsh-

;iit at first, but on reflecting that theunion wasau we were not astoni-hed. Certainly theyjuld reorganize and make a combined andattuned effort until that pour lost glove Ucued irmn the vile vicinity of a theatre. Its■rual welfare is at stake.

Then there wasa second-hand glove, which,like second-hand sermons, was prettywell usedup, and hardly fit toappear In a decent chareh-

Therewereothers there, 100. thatwere typicalof something or reminded the spectator of asimilarity l>etweea themand other things. It Isunnecessary to dwell upon them all. Personawho wish to pursue the subject further can dofo by visiting the Museum and taking stock forthemselves.

THE POLICE COURTS.

AltaOHV OOI’UT.The attendants ou the Police Court vesterday

had u hot and dustv timeof it. The wind beingirc»hand streets dry, dustpenetratedeverywhere.Windows and doors were closed against It,butthat wnHnlirtle wall, and only added to the In-tense beat of the court-room. Twenty-eight caseswere disponed of. Fred Vockland, an itinerantaccordi on player. wa u present for drunkenuesa.Mebrought with lum into the court-room thecom-panion of hla Joysand sorrows, his evcr-faithfulinstrument,ana seemed, as he stood before theJudge, a being irum whom all sweet sounds haddeparted. But such was not the case, however, foron being sent back lo the prisoners' i«n, after ulice of timl iweii ilectured against him, he start-led tne court hv a strain of “Home,S sect Horae.”uhi ther his heart wandered hack to brighterscenes of Fatherland in contrast with his pres-utforlorn condition, or whether he thoughtthesoft-enli.g eileetaof his music would work npon thefeelings of the Court, it would be hard to tell;but thefamiliar nir resounded inrough thehall ofjustice in strange contrast with the scene l«eingenacted there. It was with some difficulty thatthe pi lyer was inducedto put a stop lo his music;he finally didso, however,amid the general mer-mrenl of those ptvsent. But. present]v, as theprisoners were marched away irom theroom, theitinerant,at the head ol a squalid crew, madeac;lc us he Went, till the echoes diedaway In thedistance. The Judge thought kindly of him andremitted his tine.—John Kelly, with anewsboj’abulge, had beennai gii'Falxiut Billy Ipiishaw's saloon, and wa»arrested us u vagrant. Thepoor boy u evi lentlvcrazed, though, U Is believed, harmless in hiswanderings. He clings toa handle of sticks, andbaa his iHK-keu fullof trifles. He w often seen inalley wavs counting e ver <xhls and ends,and iswell known on the stroi u, having been a news-boj for many tear.. An old knlic wasfout.d among his ethc’ , which he Baldhe intendedto make Into a saw to present to aIrtt-Ld- That knife and a tooth-brush, be de-clared, were the only dangerous weapons he bad.He wished to be let off, and promised to leaveChicago forever, and go to sft Lons. As he saidllffsbe placed his hands to his eyes and wept.Evidently the Ideaof leavingsuch a glorious placeus Chicago was too much for his feelings. TheJustice finedhims23, and suspended Ufortwcn-tv-lour?, to allow thebov to leave town,

Marv Roberts, colored, was twfore theCourtfor larceny. EllenW. Avery, boardingat No.814Monroe street, left some articles of wearingap-parel wub theprisoner, and says that when suecalledfur them they were not to be had. Thear-ticles were produced la court and deliveredovertoMra. Avery. As a disputearose about al»oj;d Mil, the prisoner was dl.*charged.—l’. W. Keys was op forlarceny. Keys and a

man by thename of Henry Wblineykept a saloonon state street, near Nineteenth. There won amortgage on the fixtures and goodsof the saloon,which was foreclosed by Tboa. McGovern. Keyswas charged with abstracting »ome of the goods,liewas heldfor further examination.

—l*aul Anthony lives on Archer road. Hla sis-ur and brother live directly opposite him. Afamily quarrelhas existed for eome tune, whichresulted, on Friday night, to a general row.Paul, as theaggressor,hud topay Slh Hoc yester-day morning.

—Job. Clark has been annoviug parties in No.328 Fcacc tcreec, by flirting tits handkerchiefas hepafßcs to his boarding-houseevery «kiy. One ladydeclares that be has pursued her for over sixmonths with hla disgusting manifestations.Clark's feelings were somewhat cooled by a nncof si.

—James Levine meta friend and attempted torob him. Theoccurrence took place at the cor-ner of Adams and Clark streets. As no moneywaslODDd on Levine's person, he was lined |ioforbeing disorderly.

—Henry owens, a calorod boy, at 10 o'clockyesterday morning stole a pair of pantaloonsfromA. M. Martin. Mo.ass South Clark street.Theboy was fined fis.

—Nathan Frlcndt, living at No. ha Fourth ave-nue, was charged with swindlingIn the purchaseof calves fromSilas S. Whitney, doing business atNo 1MHlDzJe street

—Amelia Beckwith was chargedwith the lar-ceny of gtlh ironMrs. Uannlgan. The case washeldover forone week.

—James Maguirestolean axe fromthe carpen-ter shop of T. I.CUngtr, on Archer avtnue.Frl-dav last. Be was fined

uckos sTHtrr cotrr.T.Charles GUAon was arrested on Friday night

forKing drunk and disorderly, and placed in acell at theHuron street fetationwith a lake Cap-tain named Pal McCarty. When the station-keeper opened the doorof the- cell, in the morn-ing, thenautical individual was In a deplorablecondition. His eyes were black and blue, bislace coveredwith blood sod bis headwith lumpsand cuts. Upon being interrogated as to whathad caused his injunea, hereplied thatbe badbeceo “licked." itmost have been with a roughinstrument. Charles was chargedwith doing the-* ticking," and, as he did not deny it, wasfined LA _

—David Lillekeeps a raloon on Oak street. OnFtidtv evening a dapute arose betweenhim and,uaeol his customer*, and one ot them, FrankJennings, called him a liar. David became angry,fe zed a botlle and broke it on Jennings'bead.He was fined 17 for not U-mg able to strike a manon the caput with a bottle without breaking uittebottle).

..„ , ,

—Charles Wordcll is indebted toa Mr. Cook lora MLsill amount. Mr. Cook went to Cnarlcs'Bouse onFriday, to collect It. Charles, insteadot pay lughim, caught himby the threat, chokedmm. threw him down, and kicked him. Forailoptlogan old method of paving debts, aad notiKXbestiugsuacieut originality to invent a newoi.c, be was fined 17.c_ WilliamSei»«ert w-as asked {lO for the amuro-nnm he derived from sinking a man on theheadwith a clidi. He thought it was dear, and re-marked ihe next time he wanted p'easuro howould go to a concert saloon, where he could get

a glassof liecrand see lots of pretty things, allfornvecents. . ,

Theodore Stenzel. is yeais old, stole ftofromRobert Kelly, who resides at No. Michiganstreet, and was sent to the ReformSchool becausehe didn't take more. The amount was too smallto secure hlarelease.

—HearvLough was held In fiooball to aniwcron the 17th last, the charge of threatening la puta Mr. Lower's “lights out," or male him “passinhla chips." *■

Kxnifos Brumccrurr.John Monahan,aged to, was charged with lar-

ccnr. lie with two others got into the office ofLearning * Co., lumber merchants on feouthCana! street, broke off a quantity of lead pipe, andsold it for thlrtv cents. John said be foundunder a bain, and the Justice fined him |lO fortelling thetruth IT). Thejunk-dealer who boughtthe leadwas cent for, and she willprobably beexamined to-morrow morning. Her store is onCanal street, near Hamsou. Justice Salisbury Bdetermined to break up these placci, ff the pro-prlcton donot cease encouraging boys

John Gora, who shot a lad named Kramer,on the Ist Instant, witha pistol, was chargedwithassault with a deadly weapon, but, as ihe evi-dence-showed thatthe shooting wasaccidental,he wes fined{s forshooting within the city limits.

Richard Flvnnwas fined flO for entering a

house on Canal streetand assaulting alady.

The British Lords of Admiralty hate beenpleased to permit the offlcers, 6camen, and ma-rincs on board Her Majesty’s ships to dlsrontlnuotheusa OTthe rotor under certainThe UV or beard, moustaches, and w hlsk«s la tobe keplwell cat and trimmed, anO not too longforctcsßllncas. Care Mto ho taken thai thoseeffleereseri men who avail priv-ilege arc not tobe whiorical The beard la notto be worn without moustaches, nor the totterT»;*>ctt ttfi fOHBOf.

RELIGIOUS.

laying of the Corner-Stone of theHew First Congregational

Church.

Special and Regular Senloee *n ti«Churches To-Day.

convxn-BTOsTs utruvo.Notwithstanding the wind, the dost and thetun, quite a number ofperson*—mostly ladle*—,were present yesterday afternoon at the layingofthecorner-stone of the new church building, nowerecting at the southwest corner of Ann andv\ashtngton streets, and which Is Intended tor theFirst Congregational Society of this city, 'Themembersofthis congregmion, now worshippingat the comer of Green and Washington afreets,have for some time intended to add totheir accommodations either by extending thepresent church or building a new one. For van-oos reasons set forth In the remarks ofDr. Good-win, It was decided to builda new one. A lotwas

accordinglypurchased Sot fto.m, and theerec-H"n Q }.a buildingcommenced, under thesupervl-sion of Henry L. Gay, architect. This church Istobe bum of Illinois sro£, With MoKonetrimming,and will be Ha feet by H» costi**!rgso.CKXi. lt will seat 2,800 Ld ihcfi£a JL«^^£?awd £te I ’aw children. Next tochurch la a house, which was purchasedwith the lot,and which win 6*rre as a parsonage.were begununder the lead of Dr.natiom" b> 6lnfflnga couple of verses of “Coro-

P*afm w* Williams thenread meForty-cighthDr. Goodwin said the service was notsimnivone of pleasantrecognition of a pleasant fact. Tnilayingof thestone was theembodiment ofan ideafelt by thewhole church. It sprung from tnede-velopmentof a certain sentiment. Thev foundthemselves straightenedfor room and decided that11 was not wise toadd to the present church.whichwas diluted on the very wtrge or thepamh.huttobuuda large church lu a more central localitySome provision had to be made to make the Gos-

pela Gospel for thepeople, so that by free scats,or seatsat reduced price, the Gospel of Chnstcouldbe given thepoor. All felt the ttlfflculdefof churches in this respect. Tne expenses ofchurches generally rendered highrents access*-ry. It had beta the feelingof his congregation toattempt the solution of theproblem, and thevwere assured of success. They proposed to se-cure good sitting* for all. and make tba rentalsso low that no man would find them toogreat for him. There would be a com-fortable place for alb To that thechurch waspledged. Theheart of thepeople wasIn itand they wanted itknown that that was tobea people’s church, without forms,ceremouv,artftocmcy and caste.It wouldbe 60 pleasant thatall who came oncewouldrejoice to come again. Of the success oftheirhopes he had no doubt and be was assuredthat it would ultimately be dedicatedand thatwithoutdebt. The good fortune of this wouldlead the way to other great moral enterpriseswhich would resound to the glory of the city.Dr Patton said their church had always beenunanimous, and bad been characterized by heartl-mssof action. Its present enterprise was oneintowhich the Congregational Church was cater-ing, la order to carry out the work of Christ mthetOJuuiuniiy. and not to rival other churchesin costly buildings. To do that work requiredgranderplans. The fundamental Ideas of thechurch wereof ‘‘special value. It began la thestormy days of anti-slavery agitation, whenit was comjielled to go out of anotherrhurch. It was organized to stand upfor me i<crest class la the community, who werethen slaves. Now it was well with the latter*but Christ’s poor still lived here, and they were tobeprovided furequaliv with the rich, lie hopedthey would never forget these principles In thedaysof theirprosperity. God had thus farpre-served them, and he prayed lie would In the fu-ture.

Thecorner-stone was then laid. The articlesdeported thereto were; a copy of th- A'/rance;CougregauonadbtManual of tne Church; lUv'sManual of Congregationalism; llkeatsses of theIbree pastors of thechurch; Jiat ofofficers of thecharco, ami of thesociety.

Prayer was thenottered bythe Rev. J. C. White,after which the services were ended by a closingprajer by the Her. Mr. Ilelmer, of the UuloaParkChurch.

RrECIAL SERVICES.The Rev. O. B. Frothingham, of New York,

willpreach in the Church ol the Messiah in thiscity on this and thenext Sunday, Mr. Frothing-hum is not a stranger among us, though this willbe thefirst time he has preached In Chicago. Hela known everywhere In tnls country as the tut-ural and accepted leader of the most radicalwingof the LiberalChristian movement, the manon whom has fallenthe mantle of TheodorePar-ker. He will receive a great and generous hear-ing and a worm welcome.

Tbcrv willbe ,fl Bible class lu the lecture-roomof the Vounf. Men's Christian Associationat £) o'clock morning. Ladles and gen-tlemen, and f ‘X-Hlarly those havingno reg-ularplace ofwoftjWb, are invited to meet lor theMudyof God s won*.

Services appropriateto the second anniversaryof theUnion tdock Yard Missionwill take placeIn the chanelat half-past2 o'clock lidsafternoon.

Rev. s. R. Brown, late missionary to Japan, windeliveran address on Jurat, this morning, in theThlrty-flrststreet Presbyterian church,comer ofWuba*h avenue.

Therewillbe preaching, at 4 o'clock this after-noon, ivy the Rev. Norman A. MUlerd, at theUnionMission, comer of Randolph uad cantonstreets.

Rev. o. T Walker, pastor of the North Church,comer of Dearborn street and Chicago aveuae,will preach this morning and evening.

Rev. a. N. Arnold, D. i>., of Madison Universi-ty, will preach this morning at the UnlvorsltvPlace Church.

Rev. E. G. Taylor will preach, morning andevening, at the Union park Church, corner ofWashington and Paulina streets.

Rev. J.R. Thomas, D. D., pastorof the WabashAvenue Church, comer of Eighteenthstreet, willpreach this morningand evening.

Rev. J.N. Williamswill preach this morning atProvidence Mission, corner of Warren an 1 West-ern avenues, and Rev. R. A. Patterson, of St. Paul,in the cvcnmg.

Rw. Mr. I’atterson, of si. Paul, willpreach thismorning at theSecond Church, and the Rev, Dr.Arnold, of Maduom N. Y., in theevening.

Rev. £F. William*, pastor of the TabernacleChurch, corner of Morgan and Indiana streets,willpreach this morning en “Repentance,” andibis evening on “Decision.”

Rev. Dr.Goodwin, pastor of theFirst Church,corner of Green and Washington streets, wblpreach this morning on “Hints us to ChurchWork." and thisevening on the “ Religion Adapt-ed to Chicago.”

Rev. W. W.Patton. D.D., willpreach this morn-ing at PlymouthChurch, vomer ol Wabash ave-nue end Eidridgc court. Therewill be no even-ing service.

Rev. C. I>. Ilelmer, pastor of the Union ParkChurch, willpreach th s aHernoon In the BaptistChurch, corner of Washington and PaulinaFtrects.Rev. ?. 11. Emery willpreach at the New Eng.land Church, comer of Dearborn and Whitertree's.

Rev. c. M. Tyler, pastor of the South Church,•■ill preach this morning and evening.

Eciricorai,Therewilt l»e cervices at St. Mark's Church,

College Grove, this morning and evening, theRev. Canon Street officiating. The Rev. Brock,hoistMorgan, of Mhburu, N.J.,hxt accepted arail in the rectorship of this church, and willccmmence on theI*: of Sopicmi-cr.

'Hie Rev. Dr. Smcort, of Raleigh. N. Cv willpreach, this morning and evening, in tae Churchof the Aiommciit, corner ol Washington andRi Ih v streets.

There will l>e full service, this morning andevening, at the Cathedral of Saints Peter andPaul, corner of Wa-ningtcn and Peoria streets.The evening service will be full chorab

Therewill Im* morning and evening servicesin the C mrchof the Epiphany,at Jefferson Pork.Lev. Dr- R\lancewill preach a: night.

Rev. C. E. Clicnev will have a morning andevening service at Chnst Church, corner ofTwenty-fourthstreet and Michigan avenue.

Rev. 11. N. Powers will preach, rooming andevening, at Bt. John a Church at Union Park.

Therewill be morning and evening services atSt. George's Chapel, comer of Hanover andTweatv-sevcnth streets.

The Dlaclplcsof Christ meet in Rromncr Halt,No. 344 North Carpenter street, this morningandevening.

TheSunday eveningmeeting at Farwcll Hallwill beaddnt-sed by the Kev. R. P, Burns.

Therewill Ik* preaching this morning at theNew Jerusalem Temple on Adams street, andibis afternoon at the Free Church, corner ol La-Salle and Clark streets.

Rev. J, S. Sweeuev, pastor of the First Chiis-t’anChurch, corner ot Wabash avenue and Six-teenthstreet, will preach, morningand evening—-in the forenoon on “Something that NeverChanges, on 'rhlch to Rest."

Rev. A. X- Shoemaker, pastorof the Church ofGod, corner of Warren and Robey streets, willpreach this morning and evening.

There willbe morningand evening services attheChristian Church, corner of Indiana avenueand Twentr-Ofth street.

William E. Hathaway will speak at the Friends*Meeting-House,on Twenty-sixth street, betweenIndiana and Prairie avenues, on “The Geniusand Mission of (iuakensm." This Is to be thefirstof a series on that subject. Strangersshouldrememberthat these meetings are in the upperroom of thebuilding, another society meeting onthe ground floor.

Mites Grant, of Bosun, will preach, morningAnd evening, at Advent Christian Church, onGreen street, near Madison.

Addle L. Ballou wTd lecture, at Crosbva MusicHall, morning and evening. The- ProgressiveLyceum mecisju half-pastIk.

Rev. F. Ricb&rda, pastor of the English Evan-gelicalChurch, corner of Dearborn and Ontariostreets, win preach tuts morning.

Rev. Charles L. Bolch will review the Rev.Messrs. Tyler and Flanders, at the Free ReligiousAssociation. 814 Wabash avenue, this evening.Subject: “ The Orthodox Hell, from theFree Re-ligiousPoint of View.” In ihomornlng. a con-versation on “Money.” Seals free, and thepub-lic cordially luiRed.

Rev. c. E. MaadevilU*. pastor of the OakhtidChorch, willpreach, this morningandevening, atCleaver 8011.

Rev. J. Buss will preach, tbitmorning and even-ing, at the Free Church, oa Morgan.street, be-tween Lake and Fulton.

Rev. E. B. Snyder, pastor or. Trinity Church,comer of Indiana avenue and Twenty-first street,will preach this morning and evening.

Rev. Watson Thatcher, pastor of SimrsonChurch, win preach this morning,and the Rev.Uoof«r Crews in theevening.

Iter. O. 11.TlCany, D. D., who la now on hiawav »o the Pacific lo spend the summer, willprtVh this morning at the.'Clark Street Qurch,end theHer. J. M. Reed to toeevening.

Rev. Dr. Hatfield wlll3»rcach. this morning, on** The Cause* that CoinUnod to Secure the Judi-cial Murder of Jesus of Nazareth.”and this even-ing on “The Certain Destruction and Punish-ment i*f sin.”

1 here wuibe preachingat the church corner ofIndianaand Sangamonstreets, by thepastor.

Rev. Geo. T. Folsom will preach, morning andevening, at olivet Church, corner of Wabashave-nue and Fourteenth street.

Rev. W. W.Faria w 111 preach, this morning, atthe Twenu-elghthStreet Church, between Michi-gan and Vt abash avenue*.

CMTUIUN AND fNIVXBiIUsT.TheRev. o. R. Frothinchum, of the.Third Uni-

tanan Society of New York, willpreach, morningand evening, at the Church of theMission, cornerof Hubbard court and Wabash avenue.

Rev. Dr. Ryder wOl'tceach, this mornlr* andevening, at su rani's, on Wabash avenue, nearVan Horen.

Rev. Robert Collyer will preach, this morning,at ClnttyChurch, corner of Dearborn and Whit-her streets.

{lev. C. A. Staples wUI preach, this morning, inthe Third Church, on Aaa street, near Madison,and Rev. RobertLollver in the evening.

Hot. G. T.FUunlerLpastor of the Church of theRedeemer, comer of Washington and Sangamonstreets, willpreach, thU morning, on •‘Relationof War to theFuture Life.” No evening servicetin further notice.

Religions Intelligence*It is announced in European Journals that the

Christians who send their children to the TurkishCollege are threatened with excommunicationby thePope. It adds that thePorte will, the be-lief is, expel the Jesnrts from the Ottoman Em-pireby way of reprisal.

The Church of Englandholds in feethe righttoproperty worthf140,v00,00u, the Income of whichgoes to support the clergy.

There are probably not less than 1W coloredmen now in Rome, preparingfor the priesthood.Of course the majorityof them will become theteachers of the freedmenof the South.

Theproposed union01 theUnited PresbyterianChurch (Scotch) with theSynod cl Presbyterians(English) baa failed by the unwillingness of theEnglish tobe subject to the Scotch majority, butthey win unitewith the English portion of theUnited PresbyterianChurch.

Archbishop Blanchet. of Oregon, in a recent“pastoralletter,’' fulminated against the pobjicschool system that prevafis in these UnitedStates of America. The Roman Catholic Arch-bishop considers thepuWlo schoolsas “dangerous

• jnsUfntioaa.” He declares.themtebe ** nurseriesof vice,” aud'tfce ”proMOc source of infidelity.’

I Tteyaw,U»«js,‘*K;ivniyCaaj«otiatoooraU

"flitGeorgeforty-esospeajoined

, «fe«ls°Tery<l4 iig«t>_BSto'reUgloa anaTheKaahvllle A dweau n&yi that a missionaryla cue booth resolved, at the beginning of thisyar, that tte would try to establish aSondaytcnool forevery Sunday m the year,and to gather

lu a scholar foreverymile travelled. Inteaithanfive montha he organized forty-seven schools,with5.? teacher* and 2.330 scholars. In several ln-aaacea the ichnol has more than doubled UnceI a formation, and everyone of them has increasedtie mente.a.

Her. Charles G- Ames Titles to the ChrUtiani JU‘jttUror stairKing's old chnreh lo San Frao-asco: “Theold property baa passed Into thehands of ihe African Methodist*. The am Big.wnranl thingI e*w *utheemandpatlotrprocla-cuuion hangingin the vestibule, un the innerwall is a medallion boat of Mr. King, who is canon,lied in their hearts along with the martTiedITrrldem. Aemail Sunday School was in sessionin the gallery. A handsome mulatto was adjust,ing flowers in vases about thepulpit, behind andai- xe width blazed the goldenletters, writtenona s-n, ‘ God aald, let therebe light.’”Twice as many young men fromthe TheologicalSeminaneaare offering themselves to theAracr.lean Hoardas oflered las: year.The Bev. Mr.McColloogh, of Delaware.that thereare soo.oooEpiscopalians in the world •

that la, theAmerican Chnrcn, the sngn/>*r>Armenian, the Greek and theEomlatLThe common nouon that the Friends aredwindling away is incorrect. Daring the lastyear the orthodox branch of thesociety alone re-ceived about i Fwo new members. There arenow twelve yearly meetings;nineIn this conn-try, and cut each in *rui Fng.laad. Thesociety la growing quite rapidlyat tne” cst. They have tbree colleges In this countrr,viz.: ilarcifcrilCollege, in Pennsylvania: Earl-ha™ College, m Richmond, lad.; and Whittier

College,at Salem, lowa, it is a noteworthy fact,and one notat all difficult of accounting for, thatthe society flourishes mostIn those States whosebuskers believe In Sunday Schools.A coloredpreacher In Georgiacan be heard twomil c when he gets warmednp tohis work.

Ex-Confederate General Frank A. Snoop, nowan Episcopalian clergyman,preaihedla Memphis,on Sundav last. *

The Young Men's Christian Association, of theUnited States and Canada, will holda conventionin Portland, Maine, July it.In Great Britain there are thirty-one Catholic

Peers. City Catholic Baronets, and thirtr-tightCatholic members In the House or Commons.TheCatholic priest at Klein Zell, a place on thecontinentcelebrated for Its Catholicity, has latelyturned Protestant,and marrieda pretty girt.The Spiritualistshave obtained control of theUnlverealiat Church In Sycamore, Illinois, beelecting a Board of Trustees of thetr peculiarfaith. The possession of the property Is to becontested In the clnl courts.tome Baptists In Kansas have ordereda largetent, or tabernacle, from Chicago, whicha corpsof earnest evangelists will pitch successively atvarious county seats through the destitutepor-u°cs of the Stale, They will tarry at each placelone enough to preach the Word, and If possiblegather and organize a church, and inauguratethebuilding of a houseof worship.TheRev. W. Hamilton, ITestulcrtan missionaryto theOmaha*. has received to' iheChurch sinceJanuary l, thirty-slx new communicants, thirty-threeof whomare Indians, and one his own son.A letter to the I.‘n;iiu/i liulfjfndeni, from MrI oo’, of Madagascar, utterly denies the reportthatthe Queen hascome under the influence oitheRoman Catholic Church. “She heartily andIntelligently accepts Evangelictruth."

Not 1c e than niuctr-Qve Protestant churchesare to be erected in theIsland of Madagascarthisyear, severalof wnicharefo be targe enough toaccommodate a thousand worshipper*.The Cumberland Presbyterian Church (colored)at Leavenworth, Kansas, has voted to becomeCongregational. The presbytery hid voted thatColored men could not be membersof thepresby-tery, but only under Its care; and thepastorand church chose to go where they could enjovtsiual rights.

itcv. Thomas K. needier, pastorof tbc Congre-nul Church of Elmir*, gays the A//f*fyfrrinn, “baa preached a most remarkableBern on onPresbyte.lanlsm,distinctly, ably aud ear-ut-kUy advocating thatsystem of church ormnlza-Hon a® themost simple, natural, scriptural andpracticable of all systems.”The (EcumenicalCouncil meets with bat Jmiefavor among the Itom&nUts of Germany, most ofwhom are In favor of free thought, it Is eventliuu«iit not unlikely that if, under the tntm-nceof the Jesuits, and of Ur. Manning, ami the newparty vfproselytes, the council should take ex*ireme L [tramontane grounds, ns now sc-ems prob-able, there wouldbe a serious schism In the Ho-man catholic Church.

A New York Conference or Evangelical Episco-palians has appointed a committee for the revu-ion of thePrayer Hook, of which Hr. Thrall isSecretary. HiiTerent portionshave becu assignedtoprominentchurchmen.

The Hapust Convention of Connecticut has pe-titioned theLegislature that divorces he allowedonly foradultery and wilful desertion, and that asecond marriage, between the guilty party andthe partnerof Ms guilt, be forbidden,as the crimeis oiten committed inorder to secure a divorce,sThe5 The Portland Mirror has beardof a parish laiissachusetts where “floe music ” was wanted,and the discussion of the subject was compro-mise d by allowing each person to subscribe as hepreferred for the support of the preaching orofthemusic. After the society hadbeen canvassedIt was found that jl.Twwmi subscribed for sing-ing and fi.Roo for preaching! Some signed fas,«:> i and Jltwfor •• singing—not a cent for preach-ing’." Accordingly, a choir wat hire! to come outf.om the city every Saturday to perform In theOrthodox congregational Church oa Saadar.

Some of those who were avcr»e to tbU arrange-moot, nonliving contributed to this musical en-lertalinnerii, at*«enied themselves from church

the_clo!*o of themtn>juctory exhliiltlon!The ponies in Judaism which favor oroppose achange tu thepractice orfaith of Hebrews werecompared in a latesermon by a radical Rabbi ofibis city to the three stories of the art. The up-per story, according to the tnulUlon, was devotedto the human occupants, the second to the am*uiuls. uud tn thethird theexcrement was collect-ed. These he compared severally to the “lib-eral/' “moderatereform ’* and “ orthodox ” par-

The J'allMall Oaiftu states thatDr. Cummin?,at a nm-un*field at Leeds recently, read Homecorrespondence which liaspassed between him*seif and j)r. Manning. Dr. Manning coaM norany what freedom of action or speech would beaccorded to Dr. Cummin? should he attend theGeneral Council, and referred him to the pope forinformation on the point. The doctorsaid he wasnow busy writing a letter to the Pope,and hehadno doubt if IliaHoliness coaid not answer himCardinal Antonelll, who was really Pope, would,and it he had freespeech grantedhim he shouldgo to the council. It thisopportunitywas afford*ed him he should bare an opportumtv of showlm*fh.it in theProtestant church we had unity, butno uniformity, while in the Unman catholicChurch they hud perfect uniformity, but aoi

A Catholic priest has married in ClrcleviUe,Ohio. He was promptly excommunicated.It 1? proposed to C'dablbh a joss factory tn Con-m-eiicni for the purpose of luini-hlng theCmnescwr.ii patent idols.Acecrtiuig to the statementof the Sccrctarrofthe American(Hoard. the treasury must receive

during the month' of dune, July and August?V3ii.i"-i to enableu to dSctiarge Its obligation*tothemtstijuarlcd and preserve Us present scale ofoperation'.

Won ester Cathedral Is to be restored at a costOf i-h'.ISMI.

InWiT, reruns in Russia left flit*RomaChurch for theGreek.A Maine congregational!has given SIOO/-00 totheFreewillUauttot Collegeat Lewiston.

SL I'uul’s, Lowell, bn? the largest membership(»ci‘) tifany Methodist Church in New England.

The Methodist church Mouth hasremoved thepenalty of expulsion for neglectingto attendclass meetings.

An iittcQiiii to moVi» preaching legid In theUvvruool iwiku tiu M«st defile*! br tbaTownCouncil.A church, the outgrowth of a Sunday School

founded ina lager beer saloon, a few\eiru ago,has jurtbeen organized itsAllegheny City. !*&.

A case of Interference with religious cou%dc.tioasoccurred the other <Uv In Buffalo, whichcame verv near terminating' like the sad MaryAna Multh case, A young woman, named EllenMannie, a domestic, 19 year? oM, was convertedat a Methodist meeting. Her parents,hearingofIt, tried cverv means of decoying her home, thatthey mlirnl gether In their power,but she fearedthem and would not go. At length they procureda warrant for herarrest. They asserted that shewas hut 17 years of age, and ander her father'scontrol. She gained permission to retire to herchamber, when she leaped from thewindow upona buck shedand escaped, and to now where herpersecutors cannot nnd her. I* to betteredthattheUdcntlon was to confine her to a nuimerv.

On the late occasion of the fiftieth celebrationOf mass by Pope Idas IV., a general collectionwas made throughout this country In his behalf.Among other contributions, that of the GermanCatholics of the North and West amounted to|3h,wmin gold,which will. It is expected, be soonconvfved to the Pope. The to thishandsometestimonial hare had their names arm-ed, followingon address, the wholeharing been)>ouud In a most handsome manner by JosephI‘ebsncr, tM West Pat ettestreet. Thebinding la01 watered silk, heavily adorned with pure silver,band.'Otm'l) clasped with the same metal, withfjlntinz m oil on the cover, all Inscribed: “Plo

I*. Xona a FdUs suls Teutoalbas America;SteptentrlLnalto.''

The Pope, replying to the congratulationsad-d:e*scd to himon June 17by Cardinal Paine:, onthe occasion of the anniversary ofbis successiontoth# I'apal throne,paid; *• The wortd u dividedinfotwo societies. On theone handthere la therevolution allring Itself with socialism, and rts.icctingl'Oth religion and morallt*-; on theotherhandwe see the faithful calmly awaiting the tri-umph of religious principles.” ills Holiness addedthatho misted in Providence for the protection

* Uelonued Prta&ytertaoSynod’tbat expelled;e U. smart last year b&s loet twenty or itseU ministers by that action. Some bareaded their relations to it, sad others bare. outer denominations.

In ••Schema Ecclesiastical Almanac,** forls<3,thetotal number of members la evangelical de-nominationsintins country la placed at 4 >*Ht92»,tna popoiation of not leas than 115,000,000, or oac inseven.TlieRev. Dr. Spaulding is theoldest missionaryotthe AmericanHoard. lie has been laboring tnCeylon (or(orty-nineyears, and Is stillactive andefficient

The Utc meetingot tbe Presbyterian Synod atHamilton, Canada, was vexed with the question:What fhorJd be dose with the Knox Church, ofMontreal, v/hlch has Introducedtbe organ? Afteralong dls.-usaloo,the Synod passed a resolutionmildly rebuking tbe chorea for Its apparent“contumacy " in “takingaposition having someappearanceof a disregard of the synod author*ity.” l*he synod was distinctly Informed thatharshaction wonld probably drivethe church Intoanother denomination. There are now five otherchurcheswhich use organs, and quite a numberofSabboih Schools which hare instruments. Illsbetashort timesince these Canadian churcheshaveallowed even paraphrases of the Psalms tobe esed In worship.

The American I'rrtbjtrri.tn,an organ Of theNew School, does not intendthatthe old Schoolchurchesshall misunderstandhow completely theorthodoxy of New School theology 13 admitted inthe proposedbasts of reunion. It says for thecomfort ol I’nncetonand Allegheny:

“Thesrvat. fccerdllo:;*, arr.-cact, rigid, esnaorva-tivr. r<r»«iillar Old School (Jbareh I* so mare. Al-ready at Alliioy lut year tears were shed over iuymwnlns jrr.ve. Tie ttctij article, with which therti-0.1 ol New Schc oltsm »«to t>w dimmed out of lafrr*t« tfri<v. away. Mothinc. ahrolatelyroch-int, rtitudn* u a drloneeor a prutr*! axainit the ‘tiiTe-ur»' ~f tl.r »wSchorl ta the ta»U of rcuoloo. Re-iidlob with tu if a curoiUry from the pahficlr aad tM-ettu'y admitted tact, ftatrd in the preamble to thethat we area teend and orthodox bodv. ThliUthe b-fcical farmof rvumrm atdrtiitipctlvc liU School*Urn. at a mhnerrioclple. Alee just there."

papers cave accounts of a RomanCatholic commune la D&uphlny which has,almostto a mas, embraced the Reformed fatin, andsicced a document of adherence to theReformedilocij Ice, order and worship,after which they re-ceived(October S7.lb*«> the sacramentsupper after the manner of Protestants. Theinovrtnent began on theirown part la whenUvayhad quarrelledwuh. the diocesanauthorities,but Pastor Fernand, iTesldent of the GrenobleCousistorv, lorflvc )cars discouraged their ad-vances, and exhorted them to seek redress fromtheBishop, pajleg no attention to -their urgentroquol that be would visit them or send an evan-gelicalpreacher. In thebeginningol I»*> he scata suffragan pastor,, whose labors have resulted asabove. The Mayorand nineof the ten Councillorsacquiesce la the change.

TheRev. Mr. Punshon. writing to the Mtttaitttfon-rdfr. In England, respecting the dedicationexercises ofthe new Methodist church at Wash-ington, makes this criticism on our national lackof reverence:

- phrvuo)<wu*llT freaking,the Americas h*j a finelydeveloped bod; but I have frvmetirjc* thacfht that

where the oncaaol veneration thoaldbe,there mail be■ ixrfi-ct bellow. There is anlohnitcaimalreverencelor facred placer, daytand thine*. 1 have teen thebatwon aio-oit up to thealtar, the newgpaner read duringtheHflcon, thereporter writing btaleading article dor-its the minuter’* prayer. I ahocld raintr welcomethanrtbeke anvxhitw that weuld have a tendency toiocreaae the nationalreverence, for. as theesrresoonsof bob- things lannlah. the thing* themsclvea areapt to beeivue redeemedand die. Tune honored, more-over. a» the Amcncaa practice for railing meney foreburehr* on the halthathhasbecome, asd great as mayhave been infucree*. I should like ta u buried Inthe * ti.mb of ah the Capelets :* and 1 should like to fed.»» I fallowedlufuneral, that a sworn toe ta the hitherieteretlsof chmebra lay there Interred. We (pentcifhthours in the (Mitrcpolllan church oa the day ofdcdicatjco—five in the bouse of God. and three la thehouseof merchandise—that{«, five boars were fpcat inwon hip. and three In raisins money."

A CorL from 3Lr.Parent.To *ht Editor of Tht Chicago TWbtine ;

In this morning'sedition of Tns TRntrxs I no-tice quitea lengthy sketch of a real estate swin-dling transaction,m which my name appears con-nected with the transaction m such a ™»nn-r uwould leadpeeple to infer that 1wasdirectly cog-nisant of, and a party to, the transaction. Ci-jus.uce to myaelf,Ur. Editor, I hopetobe allowed aword inexplanationof my connection with T.E.Hftlltck&COn juo, C,HeUey, C.2. Orrisand an

Within tbeoUrira limits.Ncrth of old city limits...Wwt of r ift rifr limit*.South of old city limit*.

THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE, SUNDAY, JULY 11. 1869.tie parties to this affiur. Some timaAtjoot the middleof Apia, t. e. Haßectana c.tcorris came to my office and represented thatiney were aboutpurchasing & large tractoflandiSf.8t

nMi?li:oft to know If I wouldselll?-. r

.or tCem' Prova.d :~.nwm;aa*ed. I replied

oaJtl d 0 80 i provided thatthe propertyWMpod and suitable to MIL On the 50th of5*Uec¥came to mesod representedthat they had concluded theirpurchase.fJt -ti e^iBce!7cd **>»«■ of salefrotn T.E. Hal-* Co. to goon and sell iota. Mr.Bailee*famished mewith mSps and plala. Subsequenti?,, 5U

..ana upon the 3«hof May, Mr. Orris aod

Mr.Keileycame to me toborrowmy chec* forI*o**j, until they could make some amtnge-taentv I. told them I had no mmeyJo • and dll not wtsnmy • eheci: to go emu They saidUa they would place inn a party** hands who-would not use it. I loaned them thecheik, andthree or four days after It- was returned/ theyrepresentmg.that tt had answered their purpose,and that they were much obliged- The first laiJ-maUon which I had that the check had everbeenmadeuse of was from Tmt TBticvi this morning.I tad been selling lota under theaathorirypreviously tfreo,and passing themoneyreceived to Messrs. Hall ck and Orris, and when Ireceived the first Intimation thatall was notrightto sell, and iromthat day have not soldasingle lot. I had sold op to this nearly one hon-ored and fifty lots. About this limeI receiveda power of attorney from A. Vail A Son tosell theproperty, as subdivided by Colna. Mr. Colvinalso visited me, 1 gave him thenames of partiesto whomI had sold the low; he ai«v authorisedmetogo ahead, and all would be maderight,andwratever Sir. S an agreed to would beperformed,or the contracts 1 nad given, Sir. Vail has ex-punged and given ms contract to parties. To alirge camber of others I have refunded the

Of the money which Haiieck A Co. re-ce.red from me I have receipts to show to theamount of several hundred dollars, which isprobablyall I ever will have. The sketch In TintTiuncbßrtrre jenu that Mr. Colvin sold tot’orbettof April, when inreality it was on tne13. hof March, as theabstract will show,and againthat».y check was given during the 50 days* in.terval subsequent to the2d of April, when mreal-ty it was on the 1-ttb of May. Theamount offunds given llaiieck, and what I have returnedtoparties, Wouldamount ro over 14.2‘jC.

Respectfully yours.Geo. VT. raca.vT.CQICiOO, July io.

UAD PIPE STEALING.

The New I.ow for theProtection of Property-Ownei>—A !*naec«tloo toPolice

Jo>tice»,

Ina city tike Chicago, where the erection and, completionof first-class business and residencestructures Is a matter of daily occurrence, Itwould seem that there might be affurded toproperty-owners protection against one or thewornand mostannoyingand damaging speciesol crime and vandalism possible tobe perpetratedviz, the wholesale, indiscriminate cutting awayand stealingof lead pipe and brass and copperfixtures from nnoccnpicd buildings, inno cityoj the continent Is this protection more vitallyno'-easary. The damage is done almostexclusively by young boy/, who, with thea d aud connivance of dishonest tankdealers, retdy at all times to purchase thep iiut'cr at half its value, pursue a systematic™ui>e ol prowling about buildings Justready foroccupancy, and, watchingtheiropportunity, slipinana bhuhanayat theicaa pipe. The youngrajculs Invariably go provided with tools forcutting—a handsaw or a hatenet does the work—-and a etoul bug for holding the pipe, usuallychoo-mg some portionof the building least fre-quented. It Often h-vpi*!,* ihatthese predatorycxciiotunb ore drat found out when the water Isturned on and the premises are flooded therebylimes without number the thieves have beendetected la the act, arrested end broughtbefore the police magistrate/, who haveheretofore Cad no alternative but to dischargethtm, by reason of aruling of theSupreme Courtto the effect that ll.e leadpipe and permanentfixtures of a building are real estate, cud aretuereiore not capable of being at jleu. Marvel-lously apt to get coldof any defect m the lawfavorable to tnemsclvca, the jsuug»iers havefully comprehended the situation anl haverevelled m th* ir security, as many a buildingowner can testify to Ms sorrow.Bo prevalent and disastrous had the evil becomeat last, that State's Attorney Reed, of this city, InFebruary fast made a joomcv to Springfieldfor the purpose of urging the passageof a law which should cover such co*es. ULs ef.forts were successful, as Is bhowa bv the follow-ing copyof Beetle* 6 of “ An act In relation to thecriminal code of this State, and amendmentsthereof:'’

BEC. 6. Every perron who shall feloni-uidy steal.Uke and carry in«y wiy leadpipe faucet. or faucet, orHop-cock, tmtn anv dnvlHs* nou-e or other buHdlcc,whether the same be uttwhodto such hou*ecr Imllrtlueor tic,t,<>r vvhetlierthy saute belaid In the cruuade.'Jiarate from »ach house or biuldlap. shall he deemed-piiltyof larceny, snd raaUhed ,•

From the dispocition of a case wnicu came be-fore Justice illmkca at the Armory Police Court,hut Friday afternoon, it would appear that lUefact of the enactment of the above section hasnot yetreached theknowledge of that function-ary. Two boys, Charles and Fever Wickers, werearraigned on the charge of stealing lead pipefrom the Mercantile Uuildiug, on La&illc street.Tncjaultor, Edward Williams, tostlded that, onThursday last, he discovered, laan nnfreqaemedport on of the basement,a bag containing pipewhich hodbeen cut m the building, and, keepinga strict watch, detected the accused,on the following day, m the act ofcutting some more pipe in the area under thesidewalk. The Janitor took themIn enstodv andhanded them over Toa policeman. lutheDoiiccCoon the boys were dischargedin the faceof t jistestimony. It is. therefore, to l»e inferred thatJustice JflHlkeo has cat heard of thu uew(aw re-latingto lead pipe-stealing, and he, with the othermagistrates of the city, whose plain duty it is torigorously enforce me statute, will, doubtless,beglad to learnof Its passage and existence.

REAL ESTATE.The tendency of transactions in real estate

seems to run more end more to sale? of insideproperty. There has been more than the usualDumberof transfer? during thepast week w prop-erty for sums rangingover |25,080. Amongthesehave been a good many choice residence loca-tions inall pans of the city, but '><pcctnit on theK-et avenues of the South Div .... i, a id withinthe old city limits. This incn activity inDr>Uclßi3 projierty has run me aggregateamount shown to be convoyed bv transfersrecorded during the last five days to over a milliondollars, whereas the average for a full week dur-ing the past two months hasonly been about8«eo,ooo. The delay in inaugurating the actualimprovement of the proposed parks, ciused bythe questions raised la regard to the constitution-ality of the several Park acts, has had theeffect todiminishthe inquiry ior themost distant suburbanproperty, and while there is scarcely a doubt thattheacts will Ik* sustained, theeffect for thepresent•s that the \chime of purchases and theactivityof building have l>eeu turned more luwarJ,and the dry is bring more compactlybuilt tip Insle-d ef spreadingIt?,s<ibarl>s, asprob-ably would have been the case if the actual Im-provement of the parks bad begun. The unset-tledami unnaral conditionof financial affairs intheLaHcrn cities has also prevented the invest-

’ tui-ni «.f some capital here. Notwithstandingthese unfavorable circumstance?, and natwnii-Btandlng that sales of real estate alwava havefallen off at this season of the year.It will be seenby the usual tablegivenbelow, that theaggregatevalue of property conveyed Is increasing, and anumber of Instances are known where capitalists•jawidunc with ready cash to pickop “barsatos' ,jnrimer?oo<j biiiinram or residence property, any-« here inside of the old city iimiu. Thereu. bow-ever, scarcely any laud within matboundary thatIs not heldby persons who are able to gesp inNone of them arc obliged to sell to meet pay-ments. a« in some case? the speculator? in ennnr-ban laud, from dve tu seven miles fromthe Courtlloose, may t:c. Anothercircutaaiancetuat has afavorable effect on th; vaims of insideproperty is that, owing to the cheapnessof bnck and stone tlus season. thecentral propenv can be Improved with theclassat buildings* suitableto such locations, at agreatly winced cost, and, noiwliujjaudlng thathouse rents me lower than they have been for flreor?lx scar?, namhersof (docks of good residencesarc now incourse of construction, and more are

being started every day. In thebusiness parts ofthe dty many One buildings arc being erected.anda jrrear number of new ones are projected, whichwillbe erected soas to get them enclosed thisfall. Among the more important of those to beerected soon Is one by the Republic InsuranceCompany of this city, ou their lot on LaSallestreet, soothof Monroe,and fur which, as will l>eseen by the list of transfers recorded on Friday,the companypaid Sl*n,(«<?».

Thefollowingfableihows the volume and ten-dency oftransactions in real estate, sttune withina radios extendingseven miles from the CourtHouse, duringthe five days ending July 10, theaggregate vaiueineach direction, and the totamall, being compared with the aame for las;week:

Total*Total week «dl=r Jx9* 3Totalweek ending J«se>Total week ending Jane 18Total track coding Jose 19

. nJihUTJKI i. 191, 7*»Aul.. 14?' Wo,K>l'., TTSi KMdfftl,. a»! 923,029}.

!f4»I4T«9u.^a! 193.853

ta.uffjr®A43

Warrantee-dceda conveying city and snborboaproperty wirtilnseven milesof ttie Conn Eocae,nieil for record on Samrday. Jnly 10:Western av,a e cor or IhgSteentti st, tv f,

75X100 fl ; Jane84 $1,200Western «r, ts ftsof Eighteenth si, wr,251100 ft; June 29- 400

West Twcnre-flret st, 141 ft e of Westernav, b f,85>»»i23rt: Joly id 800

West Washington st. 100 ft tv of Sheldonst, «f, SiiisiS' fttJQJy?....

Aberdeenst. 840 ft s of Harrison st, e f, 2tznon;Joiyio.~ two

Henben st.nc cor of Tyler st, w f, isoilbOitjJuiya 30,000

Qeurr st, a wcor of Loomis st, a f, 43X134fljJolvS-. 1,650

West Indian* st.» it eof May Bt,sf, sextifin:Apnl23 1,900

West Indian* st, 76 ft e of May st, e f, Sixno ft;May » L2»Jefferson st, 74ft s otSixteenth st, e f, ssz9on;JaiyJO i,MK>

Warren av, s» corofSouthwestern av, nf,14% fl; Jujy 0 53,000

West Eriest, 74 ftw of Bobey st, n f, 24S131V, ft; Jane80 325

Mttrhe'lst. Sou ft 0of Throop st, 9 f,50X124ft; April 27 1,2*)

EnUemldsi, b * enr of Seventeenth st, w/, 63 4.10XJ343.10ft; April2J 8,000

Calumet av, 93v ft n of Twentieths!, ef,iooxi77t< ft; June29 30,000

Colocce st, tv *f Mary st, n f,50x100 ft;juiv s 500

prairie av, 75 ft a of Twenty-Crst st, tr f,50 o-lOxiTS.vj ft: May 5..... 14,234

NormState st, 109 ft s of Erie st, e f,432-3x79% ft, withbulldmjre: July 2 20,000Von Horn st, 45 ft wof ifobey st. a 1,24x124

ft; Joly ] 250Coolldge sf,SCO ft eof Centra ar, a f, SSXlitft; Jane4 900

Pafmer«, n e corof Leland ar, wf, 92xIS*,% ft; May 11 1,200

Wolcott st, 43 fi sof Wilson av, tv f, 2ooxtss.S'ft; May « 9,0»

Egandalear, secorof Oat st, w /. lOdxI(4it: July » 4.00*

WoodUwn av, n w cor Fllty-flrst st, e f,2318 10x287ft: June is 14,500

Lot 5, Block IS, Soowdondale. w #n w V.Sec. IT, si, 14, e; July8 fi-'

Michigan av, soo R b of Fortieth Eh e f.lOuxiTT ft; July i 7,W0

Paly st, B9* ft n of Wrightet, e f, MOWfl.-JoncsM 1.200

Merton ft, a cf Chicago av, e f, Will 9 ft;March 1 400

HETEQBOLQ6ICALMeteorologicalrecord (or July 10, is£9,as report-

ed by J. G. Laoggclh,. Jr., optician, 117 Randolph,street, correspondent to the Smithsonian insti-tute. The «rna!i icttcn ere the initials for thewords ** veering.” “gentle," “high,1- “dry,”“moist atmosphere," “ram,” nod " snow:*’

J\:estPre’cg - iH dee F. To2pm,7a.m. 1 S*» IS. W. tu 177 a .TTHjp.m. i i-_saj ,S. w. b I?? **

.........

m. I feai ’.S. W. h. I*6 “ Inches.

July 6.

July S.July 9.July to.

Corn, bu.Data, bn.

A Philadelphian has written apamphlet givinganew theory of tne origin of the American In-diana.- He thinks the Israelites, lu their 41 years’journey tog on theirway frem Egypt toPalatine,passed through America and left some stragglersbehind. Eden was ac island tn thePacific Ocean,submergedluthese days. Plato had It In viewwhenbe toldof the mythical Atlantia,bat be wasalittlecut tn his geography. The ark groundedon Cub*, bodom and Gomorrah, being situatedsomewherenear Trinidad, perished tn the convul-sion, attestedby geologists,which formedtheIn-dian Archipelago. The Bed Sea was theGulf ofCalifornia, the golden calfwasa tapir. The Isra-elites, driving cocks ol llamas, vicunasand ai-

.pacas, proceeded to Palestine, rfij Behring Straitsand the great Desen of Tanaiy, which satisfac-torily accounts fer their having tpent ream cuthefjvtney,

MONETARY AND COMMERCIAL

MOHETABY.Batukd.it Etwiko, July 10..Notwithstanding that the supply of loanable

toads In this market has been tolerably fair, theactivity of the demand lor accommodations sounusual forthis seasonof the year, togetherwiththe remarkable TnanJpolaflons q[ the Ifcw Yorkmarketby the moneyetLchque*. has keptap an un-caiy feelinghere. Thebanka have been disposalto go rerr cautiously,for fear the market mighttake some unexpected tnm Financial acr-Tonsness is the most catching" com*plaint in the world, and the oneasy fcehnghas therefore pervadedbasin ess circles pretty gen*etaily. There has, however, been no very serioaaInconvenience here. Theapplications of the mer-chants in all departmentsof tradeharebeenlarge,and theaggregate of their depositshareran downina corresponding degree, but the balances ofcountrybanks hare been large and hare more

| than kept op theaverage ot the aggregate of alldeposits here. There seems no probability ofacoan try demand for loanable funds that would de-plete these balances, before some time In August,and the New York market seems to harebeen released for the present fromthe control of the usurers. Thetendency of theoperationsof the National Treas*nry also u now to pot thecurrency held there intocirculation again, so that circumstances appear tofavoran easier money market next week.

The common rate to regular customers of thebanks has been 10per cent When outsidepartiesappl.-for loans, they are in some instances re-ferred to particular brokers, who get the moaey,not of thebank, butof oneof Its Directors or oneor theofficers, who loans his “private JDnd3”andgnaacommission, and in this way the law whichprohibits the National Banks from taking agreater rate of Interest than is allowedby the laws of .the State is sometimes evaded.Good paper with undoubted collateral securityhas been taken this week la this way, and also byprivate bankers, at from to 2 per cent ptrmonth, bat the tact that such rates have beenpaid is not an evidence of any unusual tightnessor money in this market,as there la scarcely anytime, when money is active, that such rates arcnot paid by parties whoare not regularly in trade,bat arc general speculators—men who can givegood security, but who dobat littlebusiness withthe banks, and, consequently, have not the usual“bank facilities."

Exchangewas firmer to-dayand sold at par,andSSc per ft,000 premium between banka. At thecounterbankers are selling New York fund* tocustomer* at 1-10 premium. The rates tor takingare frompar to i-io discount lor New York bills;Boston demand bills at 1-10 discount; Bostonsight, l-s discount; Montreal bills, “ with ex-change, "at M discount,and Buffalobills at dis-count.

A number of responsible gentlemenof this cityhave purchased the charter and franchises of theNational Bank of Commerce of Georgetown, D.C.,and the proper official consent to the removalofthe bank to this city has been obtained. Thestock hasbeen taken and the association have se-curedNo. 107 Dearborn street fora bankingoffice.The hankwill be called the "National Bank ofCommerce of Chicago," and will begin operationswithina few weeks. The capital of the presentbank u iioo.ooo, witha limit or $300,000.The manager of the Clearing House furnishes

thefollowingmonthly report of the avengecon-ditionof the “assoc*aled banks ” for the monthof Jnne, with the changes from the previousmonth noted:

ei.ecidcg.co Xac.....fiSQ.tUCLOOCirculfcilou 4,s;i.mi.uo Dec. .. 5.}5»00

Loon* and 1nc.... £730911Cm«b»nrt City iht-cL*... T.Tj;i,l6&fis 1ac..... Sir.ilT.MAvailable Kichargc i.ltiTw.ei i»cc ... C'T.flv.Tl

The follov-lcg la the report of the transaction*of the Clearing Uouse for the week endingJuly 10:late. Cfrarinv*. Cola tier*,

.t 3,226,653.57 8 b47,0t040. 2 t761,14«.81 336,605.43. 2,C95,55'9.05 25J.2i4.5l. 2,W7.760.8« 812.752.0S. 2,745,847.39 841,027.79

Total 5U.5T9.4tt.74 Sl,C»i,aT^6aLast week 14,759,7».C5 1,475,90'1WCorresroQiUog week List

eear. S4 1,317,59390Dealers'quotations for buyingand selling gov.

crnment bond?, local srocSs, gold and surer, laUic market, this afternoon:

Buvinq. SfViiui,T.S. Cp. IS3I U~.*J 11s VU.S. 6-2"?, 11-C2 121 V 121Vu. s. &-2VP, i-*u nsv 119V. S. 6-203, lsC5 119 119VU.8. .V2"3, IW, new issue H7V 117‘,U.S. B-2U3, ISC? U7j< 11?VU. S. 6-2US, ISC6 ll?v ll?vV,S 10-jos,mrgc K‘s', 10? VCook County Tb 9Cv . ..

Chicago City 7a {municipal) w' ....

Chicago City 7s (water and sewer-age) w.vAmerican gold liav ....

«iver

The lowest and highest quotations tor goldsince June1, were: 139J»' on Jane 9, andon July 7. The range In New York to-day was:10:30 a. m 135% 112:30 p, m 133’.-lil;U l n is».r i 1:30 p. m last:11:00 a. m 135*4 1 2:00 p. m 135*4ll:ia a. m ISS», i 3:oo p. m i3s*r11:30 jl m 130 ) 3sop. m 135\11:45 tL 01 135 i 4tW p. ID 135*4I2:w) to iis»; 1

LiTEST.New Tons. July 10.—Money easier, closing with aixdeunlyat 6(47 per eeuL Considerable currencyift.* been received by the hanks from the WvafccueJem*receiving nearlv half a million.Sterling firmand <ril«-t at lA-VadlO.O'.dd—Firm. wftfi Ie»» fi>eculiil,n. It {• tn-tlc vetintrhit'iiieut’ here in a few weeks w IU bequiteliberal

ShipiueLta include to AeMowalL making a t-dalof ?t>49.:00for to-day, and *l«oat a million for the u.-ek-The i rice opened at U2’,. advanced to 13d,and dosed atUM(.

uuk oiAii.ai.'.i.Thebark statement »ho»«* ■ rnntrartionhr thebankaand an Increase rt speciefroni Treasury disbursements •.Loan* Drew?.. i 2.513.1.USpecie au.Uki.9UCirculation 34.277.525 Increase.. ' W.972D*pf>*ita. iBAIICdKJ Increase. 8.857.TT8Lepxl tender*... 43. TIC,725 Increase Cle2,<-3Governments opened stexdv, conunmd firm, andcL*«d actU« and hither. Nothing ii knownas to fur*fher i urchxsrs o! bonds by governmentCoupon* >t....Mf*l ,i^llsS I Coupons D'*w..117, /(3118Coupon*Vi....lvd (iTA 1, C.op.us 'cT....UT, i«sUSCoupons '04.,.,119 , Coupons '66.. ..117:.liltsConpen* '61....11?vamV bH'» 109 i?li»M

Slate bond* dulland lower;Ter.ocsNjs M 1 N"nh Carel'oa# WVirginias 61 1 MU-oiiria “T.l*r ! Psrtfie-.... lL^*;.alosSlRailways opened rather dull, but became strongerunder the bask statement ntid ease hi money, nadcloeedhigher, with considerable actlvxtv in Michiganfv-utheni. NVt York Otnrral and Northwotern.FvjTeer stoctrduli, except Wells, Fargo i Cj.. whichhns advanced.

patexs at R;3or. it.Canton „... 62 1 Michigan Southern...los'*Cusnlxrlaud.. SJ I >••!» Central lid*W.U. Tel,graph T,\\ i*m,l.iivh IWkaaifksilver. 15 j Northwestern '•Ih»

anpoaa 6 , Northwestern, t-ief,,., 95kPacific Ma11... I Cleve. i Cin 74ilostonWaterWorks, 11>V lluck Ulaud :..Il«l rWeUa. F. ii Co,*» Kx.. S3i* SL Paul "«>*

s' ».sss- rrrf %UnitedSlater Ex V2Sf P«n vrai0a.57. -.’^

New Vtrfc Central....lWS Terns Hants.. *7Harlem IW Terre Haute, j*rrf MHude0n................165*4 O. C A1t0n............1bsUeadiag 93k C. 6 Alton. frtf...,...1MKrte 871* OlrioiMle* S3*.Mirlugan Central I!7‘. t Rt. Joseph lm

Treasaty receipts. pgymenfs. SHii&S;balance. 4t!JSirf.s/9. Coin dl*buraeaienu.041U>67.lmp.uU lor the week. d4,ITuAU.

Mining '*.ockf at Boston:Calumet IB 1 Hancock 3Copper Fiille “H fMinnesota 1Franklin. 12 Quincy 25lied* » I Cary. 7V

COMMEECIAL.Sattudat BrsKiNG, July ia

TtwfoCowlng tables mow the receipts and ship-minisor produce for thepast cwenty.foor boors:

niccinaron the past twenty-focb noens.■ tw». 1565.

Flour, brls. 3,761 8,5*5Wfiear.bo. Tcsoo 7,73*Corn, bo t1?,343 153.110Oats, bB 17,953 89,738Rye, bo **W *55cured meats, Da. ST.S2O *7,060Tallow, cj s,96t> *OOBatter, 2* 7S,*so **,*7oLivehoga.No, S,bBB *,*>6BCattle, Ne I,*B* 1,715Hides, 48,595 13,090Hishwincs, brls S3OWool, lbs 158,978 871,353Lumber, m B,BSI 8,919ShlLglea,a 1.910 L857Lath, m *7O , 833Naif, firls 67 ....

gmrstKvre fob tot past twenit-pocr hocks.ISO. 1858.

Floor, brls *,si7 a.9o'Wheat, bu 83,500 17,79*Corn, bo 49,93* 346,469Oats, bu 66,319 113,4*5Bre 2,173Cored meats, ,c* 54,485 ....

Beef, brla ...‘ 71 ....

Fork, brls 58- 20Lard Ds 370 7,500Tallow, lbs 17,580Bolter, Da *1,706 ....

Lire bogs, No s,a» COMCattle, No 1,133 1,077Hides, Da 101,559 £0,102Hlghwtnes,brls it* 8Wools*Lumber, m 2,402 2,l«lShingles, m I*lo7. 1,733Lath IB 35* 90*Salt, brls 3,531 4.359

TOT BBKASSTXTTS MOTOTXNT,

The followingtables abowAbereoelpt&acd sblp-Eoentaof floor and grain during the past week,and for thecorresponding weeks codinga&oamed:

EECEPra.10, Jitltt 3,’ Juiv11,

1569. 1569. Iw.Flour, brte 28,217 S*Jlff 15,378Wfiest, bQ 323,963 396,763. 82,119Corn, bn- J55.533 311,697 9*1,651Qaw, ba Milia 93,11 A 136,574Rye.hu 3,422 5,1» 1,974Barley,bu ICO- £9S

SHIPMINTS.Flour, brls 85,821 44.090 82.543Wheat, bo 190.783 499.5 K »5,13 tCorn,bn 34*,®3 551,379 L052.355Oam, bo 156,210 23A.2D9 261',215Rye, bn 5.01 17.135Barley, bo 600 1,176 ....

The following were the. closingprices:Jui: 10, ffufyll,

1869. 166 AFloor, sp. ex. 13*72 (46.73 f123Wheat, No. 2 L3l LBCore, No. 1 W 91. VCom, No. 2 VSV 9lkOats 63 C6kRye. Vo.l LW 1.43Barley. No. 8 L45 L6OThefoliawinr erxti has been received sines theThe foltawing grambaa been received since the

above tableof receipts was madenp, as 7a. m.:231 ears wheat, 845can com, 23 can oats and 8can rye. Total, tSQ can, or 200,000 ta. -

Then was a goodattendance on ‘Change to-dayanda more active sec of markets in grain, bat tumuch lowerprices, owing principally to increasingreceipts andbetter weather. There was more do-ing tor shipment.

lake freights were much more active, and ashade firmer. a total of 12 charters was re*ported,ofwhich II were farwheatat toBuffalo, and 7j4@sc to Oswego. It is noteworthythatthis freemovement inwheat was largely onowner's account, and it was thoughtby some thatIt Is hut theprecursorof another bull season inthewheatmarket, towards the end of the month.Predictions were free that wheat will go toft-50before August.

Eighwlneswere quiet, hut iqsc higher, therebeinga better Inquiry here, and a reported ad-vance in New Tort The market closed dm attheoutside. Sales were so hris at 97c, and 100brlsat 96c.

Provisions were inactive and dull, the onlysalesbeingof three or four jobbing lots, whichsoldat thenominalwholesale prices. Mesa porkwas nommal, with selleai at $22.00; lard at 1&3isxrc; dry salted shoulders at 1234c; rough sidesatis\£lCc; short ribs at and sweetpickled hams at Sales were: HO tuispork at $33,00, m two lots; so tea summer kettledlardat iso; 40 tea winter steamed do atand 100tea sweet pickled hams at 17c. The re-'celpta of live hogs hare faUes.off this week, andmany operators look for better pricesoa products,in consequence. Tallow was nominal a;1034c. Grease inactive and dun.

TheUnity 3tarke< J&vine gives (he foQowing aathe ahlpmetta oC irqvlMqns trqoi Lb]#paint from

November 1* 1565, to Joij b, iscj, taclasive;comparativeshipments;

I ” FI ?l Fli! ?l= = = j i? ;■*

80rt0n.... U37S *WJ XJO9 .... U.OOO*

PWl*. <6eU 5.686 2.790 J,6i7,00lOth.pt«.E. 18,880 13.W0 IM«J UM« uSwsBaltimore. KNO UU 1,(18 .... 7.0C*.<»0 X7l£uj

-TJItISOVOrieeo* 10.714 1,179 76 .... 309.978 tiVISOOth.PU.S. XS2I 3&1 Sri 73,4(8 378.710 LSTH.TIiCmiat... 9,(94 SSD $32 .... .... K7,wSTot*].... lose 5X474 57,717 %U5« 1407X07 34^081

WeeST** no 945 119 .... 340.713 44.179g.»M.4M8jn7,«0 64,«M lI.M .... 14,1844774 38043,(85Week. *6B.| 739 SU 343 .... 28J70 67.940

favorable character,of meNew **■-1* depremsg effeaan eict^'*'

Tbetuir* .able characu-roltite New Tortad-vicesbada depressing effect open tbe msrtet lordoor, and an exceedingly ttgtu trade transpired,tteprices realised beingabout the same as ontwo dan preceding. A small lot of wblte winterextra soldat f9.00; spring extras at|3.T5<3«.75;springaaperOnesat |i2o, and rye floorat |s.t2tf.Sales were as follows: Wblte Winter Extras—Mhris not named at J2.oa Spring Extras—uw’brts“Chi’s Triumph”at$a.T5; 300 brtsnot named at!U2,v; SOObrts do at |a.00;50 brtsdoai|AT3;100bria, brand given, on private terms. SpringSnperflneo—&) bits not nmxi at fr,?A L RjqFloor—2s brls 44 Delolt City” at |AI9V. Total,SSSbrla.

Wheat was much lower, bat more active at thedecline, the shippers taking bold freely, while nu-merous options were sealed. New Vort wasquoted“oiL”and thereceipt* were more liberaltaan for some time past, wtuieoperators were an-UelpaUng largerarrivals now ihattho weather Issettling down to “fair, "and the prospects ofharvesting the remainder of thecrop m good con-dition are materially improved. The shippershave been unwillingto take bold at the extremeprices rulingfor some days past, theexports madehaving been made onowners'account to get thegrain off their ban la,evenata loss, and thns en-able them to deal moreeasily with that remainingbehind. To-day the decline enabled the shippersto take hold, and freights rose accordingly. Nos.1 and 3 spring were in fair demand, but the latterwas heldoff the market. We note that the newcrop has already begun to move in upon ua. a flue.samplefromCarbocdiUe.lll, wasexhibited to-day,On the Open Board No. 3 spring was dull atfi.31(g1.33,v, seller tha month. On'Change, thema*ket opened panicky at IL3OV for car lots,soon declining to |i.w, with seller the month at|l,v9„V, being s\c lower than at the close yester-dr.y,and ruled steady at thatprice Ull noon, thenimprovedto Jl.Slv. eased down\c, and-closed atBI.S«V9L3L Sales were madeot a,4ud bu So, il spring at fI.SS>;; 6.000 bu doat 31.3a; ao.oon boNo. 2 springs: lI.SJ.v; 13.&Wbn do at J 1.31; 1,200BU do at f1.301*; 43, WObn doat (LS-litf; «,s>J bndoat 11.00; 1,000 bu No. 3 springat )i.22<4; a,*>)bo do at #i.2«; 2,00<) badeat 11.21.V; i.fiwbn doat 81-21; 1,600bu rejected springat 2,i>00bu do at 81.09; 600 bu by sample at jL34; 4>obuNo. 1 while winterat 8LB0; 400bu No. 1 red win-ter at 81.35; 400 bn No. 3 do at81.30. Tota*.152,000 bn. Seller the monthsold at 8L23Vd LSI;tellerAugust was nominalat 8L26*i.26.Cora «u ddll and weak, in the absence of buy-era and underfreer offerings, owing to larger re-ceipts both lor to-dayand to-morrow. No. 2 waaalmost lifeless on cash lots, thougha fairbusinesswas done in.optlonsat the decline, largely in set-tlement. There werealso a fewpurchases madeby panics who believe In a reactionon the pres-cut dnlncfs. No. 1 was inactive and weaker. Re-jected was the most active, at liwucbelow No.2, being taken freely for shipment. It Is nowolmuch letter qualitythan heretofore, owing to theimproved weather,and is so much wanted that itwould probably soou nse to within5c of the priceot No. 2 were It not lor the fact that dispropor-tionately large quantities were Inspected os re-jected during the damp season. The betterHeather had not so cinch edect to-day, because allexpect a short crop now, but the weakness waadueto thefact that receipts are expected to in-crease, while there wasa general feeling that therecent movement was excessive, and numerousholders were anxious to sell out beforequotations should recede too far for profit,on the Open Board the market was weak at 79,iSiicforNo. 2, seller the month. On Change itopened excited, at ~sxc for strictly fresh land7Sc seller the month,) being Sc below the closingprice of yesterday; soon decliningto 75c; thenceruling dnll and little better ttanljominal till noon,thenImproved slightly, and closed at 7?>viwith No. 1 nominalat Sic, SHm were made of15,000bu No. lat?-4c; 5,000 bu du at 5-M budo at S2,vc; 1,200bu do at s2c; 21.C30 bu No. 3at79c; 5,200 bn do at 75\c; 12,2>h» bu di at»?Sc; 6,00 u bu do at 7?Hc; SO.ooo bu do at ;>c;lo.i" o bu <loato p-2idbu iloatuo grade at 57c; -too bu do at Me; -*■*<• bu do attec. Total, 159,400ha. No. 2 soldat 77fellerthe month: 73yi79c, seller last halt; 7oves"e, buyer the month; and 7»;-*(tf!j0c, seller Au-gust.

oats were dull and lower, there belnp no buy-ers exceptat saefi very lowprlct‘9 that few couldsell unless forced to lc This, in face of reportedactivity and firmness In New York, showed thatnobody expects present prices to continue excepton the options now ont, and even thatcannot lastlong,astbe new cropwill aooa be on the market.Numerous settlements for this monthwere madeat 65c. Kejected were dull, on the Open Hoardthe market was inscribe, on 'Ciaugo ;it openeddollat 65,Vc, being lc below theclosing price yes-terday, selling immediately atesc, and fell to67cby noon, hutsoon recovered to 6?c, closing nomi-nal at'that figure. Sales were madeof 1,500 buNo. 2at 6Sxc; n.coo bu do at C6c;*N 12,200 bu doat CT\c; 3,000bu do at OT.Vo; 4,200bu do at OTc;oco bu do at tj'ts.v; in by sample at T3c; fioobn rejected at ftbc; 1,50-1 bn do at Mysc; coo budo at Wc, Total, 37,0<)0 bu. Seller the monthsold at 6C<iCsc; and 4Sc wasbid forseller Auguit

Ifye waa dull and neglected, though openingwith u showof firmness. Sales were: toobo No.lat JJ.OS,and-ion bu No.2at J1.02. Tbo marketclot-ed nominal to-day, at |1.06,<i1.05 for No. I.

Harley was Dominally uncliange-l on No. 2, ata bid was made ou the new crop at

fl.oO for seller August, and refusetL No saleswere reported.

There *mj limited demand for £ce>ln,andprices were nominal, sale* l»elng coruinedto ,v fewlots of Hungarian, which sold at a tinge ol -:»s

The St. Icula Gram Aasaclatloa is oat inalengthy report, the plst of which la that they havelest money by theiroperation*; that there U littlehope of being able to rercree theprocesi, unlessby Cireetlng a completerevolution In the courseof ocean traitlc, and that they *>utl have madelac per bu on a lot of wheat ijtoain Kew (>rleaasij they could only have beenable to And facilitiesformoving It at the nick of time when the mar*Vet was in their favor. Yet, la the face of thislaiinbrluuit showlnjr, they recommend an increase«< uairwriui iu a> mtinan •Satimra. Tilercould probably loac on a Rmmtcr scale lu tnatcase, and fall so onuthUlcenily os toexcite theadmiration of a world, while their present punystrugglesonly call forthpity.

•* A discussionat New York on the questiono(freight earned by the three great rival railwaysfrom New York and Philadelphia to the West,has broughtout some important statistical facta,which showresults decidedly la favorof the I’enu-(ulTimlaßoad. Itappears that thlsroa'lhmt lu*creased In freight business 59 per cent, while ubad reduced lu charges oa thefreight per too permile 2S per cent. The Ene bad increased itsfreight per mile 5T per cent, while it increased Uscharges per tonper mile about fty per ceut. InIrfiT the New Y'orlt Central JUxvl was laa transtuoD state from the oil tothe new management. CompurTf 1533and I:CT, the increase of freight ixishiess wasatiout 29 per cent, and the Increase in chargesper ton per mileabout it percent. In Com-moloreVanderbilt became President of the NewVort Central, and will doubtlcvi endeavor to de-velopthesame policy morder to be abb 1 to paron bO per cent additional capital. TheIdeaofthat policy Is toput aa highrates of charge onlocal freightas Itcan heravle to pay, the rateson through freight beingKept downby competi-tion of the other great trunV Hues— the Erie,Pennsylvania Central, Baltimore ± Ohio, etc.- ’

Tne following telegrams were received on’Changeto-day:

Tore. JulyV).Flour dull and heaw. Wheat inactive, tame.

Corn firm, quiet, oats active better, Stc bid.;-u>cV of whUker light; holders firm at tl-02.Pork nominal Lard steadier. Gold, 135^.Bckpalo, July 10.Markets generally inactive, and quotationsnominal. Wheat, jUSi. Com, SiAStc. Oats,

75c. Receipts—wheat. ft).uOO uu: com, sd.ooobn; oats, IT.OuO bu. Shipments—Wheat, so.oxibn; corn, W.OoO bn; oau, so.ooo ba Freights,lie.

Mawarm. July 10.• Wheat quiet; Ko. 1 spring at t1.3«; No. 2 at

Litkkpool, Jnly 10—11:15 a. to.Floor at 21s fid. Bed wheat, 9s bd£fi<); white,

10a 6d- Old cem, old, 23s M;new, 27a Pork, Wa.Lara, 71s.

Tied wheat, »s M; white, 10a Td. Hast on*changed.

LATER.At the Open Board there was a fair movement

la the leading grainmarkets,and alower range ofprices prevailed. No. a epnng wheat closing atf1.30 for seller the month, AndNo. S com at Tte,same option. Oats were neglected. In theeven*lugthe markets were quiet, and quotations werelittle tetter than nominal. Lake freights wereneglected.

The bog market was quiet and easj at jester*day* prices. Bales wereeffectedat forcommon to good grades. Beef cattle were inmoderate request at unchanged prices. We quoteat fIOO&LTs for inferiorto choice.

CHICAGO LITE STOCK MAEKET.For like WeekEsdlns Jolf 10.

Satchdat EVfcsutq. July 10.BEEP CATTLE.

Jtr-ipu. SlUpWcnls.

uca. lows. i*a, i*a.Sunday mdMonday...... LISI *a i.Utf itsTiweday SJ<9 L6U <l«Wrdnfxi»r . S.SU I.WO 1.532 UTtjThurtda* �. UfcM 1.231 1.22 J SJ3Friday LTIS L'JS 1077Saturday eUU .... M4

TotalI-&jt »retWeek before l»rtWeek eedio*Just 19.

10.171 Asl? 4.C3*,6J» .... 0.931“.CM 7.54 J ....

lU<*....

AW«Totalfor four trifles., M.067 .... 5c.015

Since January L 180....*19.iM .... KdcaibarceptriodUxtjew... iffijis .... Uu.eaZocresstf....In mirnarlcc tb« receipts tot this week aaiUat we

snd ihefoiiowlng; , ...

Ihce/pts meretikuiU/$ •• ...........I^l*•hi pinCDti Sioß Uua last egt 31. BTnrr veEXacn.

Oa acd after Frss", Marti la. IS*. uadi further no-tice.allUre stock nr to Chtawto to common orcompetingMtnteE*t *iU be tAk«n utUy by actual weight, u lob

ToßaSdo.Suspension Brides, Pittsburgh•nd UalUtfe... ...... ...40 e<?lH&aTo Dunkirk. - ..^TJie&UOia

To CxrcUAd... ...» crS 100 tbaTo Toledoand Detroit 23 c ff l3iK*

Tbe-foQowliig mtnlmtsa weights are tie lew. thatwtU be taken, mad ail excess W ertraal weigh: will bochaired at the current tatee:Doacle-deekcaragl hog*. ‘5cu........ a*

Slacie-deckcarsof hog*. ear. houj tbcCattle 19JXK &•

Double-deckcan of abccp,_£fcar ...19.000 DaStack-deck ears of ywt HMQ a*NorctunjnaMcawlU be givenbetweenany of thesepoint* to ahlppeia or men ut charge of etsex. and nopasses. free tickets, or fndneonenta of as; kind onpassenstr trains tneither direction.

There Is nothingof special Imperial*# to mention inconnectionwith thecn:Ue market for the week underreview. The sneply haaUa.nrather tanwrlhan I* usualat this reason of the year, but the healtbveendhianc(the markets below ha* Insured a fullattendance -dEv*t.eraoperatrr». and. under a brisk competitionbetweenbuyer* for the same and dliterectpoints, the yard* barebees kep* pretty well cleared of stock, there being noconsiderable aewmiwi.riwwfrom day so day, save of tbepoorer sorbs.such atcommon oowa anil rough, half fat*tened steers. The offerings averaged better thanthoM of last week, tn whit of aaltty, the pro-portion of food first and seeand«tfas> steers bring,m uch morsproahunt, whileat poorcows and *cauawag"rteera licrtwas a sanaihle falUng offi to valuesno material change hastakeonlaee. Holders. generally.tnsUted Kponfairpncea,and for roodmarketableaStSSSSSBSSif sbanv. Pittsburghand<Baflato tnjent at prases rangingat M!v9&n for mediumto falMteuy *“era. averag-

tb« aeerace. with two or three traasaetlcnt at*7.P7H«a,00 for extra traded itcera. The demandfor taubm*Mockfur locdo»b«uupU<» bar not beea

bcoce tbe trade* o( atoek tiauallyaouxnt after by feed*era and dxy botebm bare been mber alaw of tale,andprice*, tbooxbaafferioc no quotable decline, wereB>t enetalaed with aa nnea firtoneu aa forthe uppertrade*. fbreoamoato jrood botebcra* cattle •1.00(46 IS waa about the raneeof the market. tbooifb VLKHwere paid ta a few Icataoec*. Common to foodatockera were heldat •S.OOT&OB. and the bulk of tbe•aleereported were at ana within thia ranee. Somelota of Tezaa and Cherokee cattle, acrabhyoowa and“ vagabond"ateer* were eU»ed outat CXB3>«34.TS. Of

latter description* aercral ~banchea 1* remain Intbe res* tmrold—enough- probably, to aatlify all dtsmaadafor eocb loraweekiaooOM. The marketdoacdquiet at theannexed qootatlona:

aatap v0x 10L3Q0t5?..?.... XTVZmaoca*™MSISm ca*—-Mertlnm uwTi&";s£f 41*

«w*fcrdtydaughter. andareraslngamStock Cattl^Ccrcmon‘ein fr.**ja’dceiS 5.50<34.55draft, andaveraging SOO to IASI ho. uyvnamInferior— tto^oo

Tbe following are thereceipt* and ikfpmenta for thecurrent week, and iqt the corresponding period u«t

- W .1969. 1938. 1969. IS6(L

Suudayand Monday.... ?*i 913 &<t :wn2*«d*y. ISM- L2« LSM 2.«WWedßAday. LiiS &o*i 4.467 a«sThuraday n.;ts 4j*j tfc* 031Jniay -IAS L96H sjao 6jj«

Saturday 1.573 LOS.... 3JSO

.

Total,. fCUS EE 19.757Last week.... a.otiWeek Ulore fiat, 2(.iii3.... 37Aot ..**

Weekending June 19.. iAiid .... 46,156Totalfor fourw*ki..UL34s 126,417

. The rcceltts for this week and U*t compareaafolow*:Becvivpdthis weekUretired le*« this *wk.

.—.,30.405asstB*J7siviantA Keady.fair demandhaa vxlnedfar the better grade*ol liogr, and for such, lari wivk'e cloeing price* ba*el-een thorr-ughlyeaetaint-J throughout, huton commonaadm.Aiatn.fuch a* are luually eaUed~York bopA"a rntmtioa.;'; luAIV VM • ttfered on Thnraday last,rn<v- recedine tr f-j.OOJ-.35 f >r areragee of from im toy have «mee rulid *teadv-. Good to*95SS*«

hT e^lJK*, iblc M *»d

! ~Tz _1 _VH T->day the dewan4 wa» moderatematerial change. aaW““““.S •* i9s.o>*9.tti for common to good grado*. Wenote the following: ' v

...M *430

.Art B.S)

..£U 8.«. STS 8.70.AM B.SS..2U &.TS• Jh2 a.50..\r 9.33..250 Adi*..Sio iii..an ais..is* BAI..in a*j..361 8.75

.lr. fnrr. > .V..<5 2C I 6?..0 ass s:.w 6Ji5 I ».

4i -JUS 6.25 ; *5.W £ti 6.25 54.*> 235 6.W sd.

,JS IM h.25 ! S3.n* .JU2 5.25 i To3* tus B.JS 8VW l» 6.15 «.

49 *M 8.25 1 s:.W 21# KtW 55.M "IT J.rTI 65» .ITT U» 1, £rj {■> >J»y. Hi: received thU week.2„w\ bhif-tx-d. noae. The demwd (or tht» cUm o(jtoek h«# Iwn extrerurl* lieh*. fromfirst Ulad. andItmued aa ha«bees the iiipplv, the want* ot the tradehave bet-u fullr tuet. Wof tut:' rule,! weak titd fr-n-riUr. and afe2V lower. We amieati1.75-42.05 forcobuiou, to f..r 2.>c4 cation <jaalJ:Je*,

MASSETS BY TELEGRAPH.Fnrcitra .lltrkcM.

UnitedStt*. !■» bond..MV XS *

Lojhjon, July lo—Evening.Wothi f Mr.CooMb fur <.a MS: S-iW bond*.flf* : .‘‘v, »* Irmklort, MS; Erte, UstUIoofe,MS- Stocks dull.

_ „

. Li'XttPOou tn.Flolir, .4r •»!. wheat*?F »«1; white wheat.10* el. L ore. ;?• 6-1 forold; 57# tornew.Pork. ft*. £arJ,71*„ . . , „ ..

IdTECTOOI-JuLrlo -3.00p.m.tu-d wheat. t*l; white wheat, 10s Td.JtiTluurliau^rd._

. Lirxnroou Julv ta-Ewalnc.IfA.m JdliUS ul UDd-"’U. l*^; Oficaa*. 12VHiradstuffs—California nhito whoat. tOaTdtrvd Wot.oniNo. i m M<£9# tU. Hour,ill6d. Cora—Xo.amixed,;f tJ**: ,; M* *?• W. Pi*as. i'j,l*rwvnl«n» finiwr. Pork, ftra. Uwf. Mi Lard. Ha.Clvw»e, 64*. llacoß. C>Rosin. common. 4» *d; fine, 15*. Spirit* pet-oleum.*dl refined, 1* 6*t«t- Tallow, gis. Turpentine, ST*Linseed oil, :Ss. Linseed cake*. £IU is.« ..

Losiyis, .Tiilr 10.Tallow.t*«. .Sperm oil. ?>#, Sugar. Ms SSL Whsk* od.40s. Calcutta licnid.ele oj.IV.Tolcuci at Antwerp. C\{.

New YorU Provision. Hrcailalntl* aotl (>ro<eery .tfurUcU,

Special Despatch t j The Chlcaco Tnl-nnc.New Yobs.July 10.

. nEEKrsrrrruvi'ry unsettled t!ir■•iklkhii, ••nrveivllv for wh.-at.(m-Nu further advance (n the British market nvn.<

>be anticipated, bat ocean Heights wen- lower, withnm-Imliratl.ns • f a materialdecline, whi-h may aidisupj-ertlun price# here. Oat* closed at rJc.

OU*H'EUtEa.Sugar firmer: fair to prime gr.wery. ll\ il’\c; re-firel brcii-r, < xc. nt f. t thu lasher grade*; StuartUU. teiN-ncruihed.lo'uc; beet Bolt white, ll'.c; bestyclluH. U^c.

PllilClslONS.r>.rk rioted firmer, with Laver* at 3,13.2*. regular.r.- 1. rail tlie Lard lu m-irv demandr «»Uj.v dollvary at !!• .'•>Ts* lpe forprime rteata. Cutfats snd tact«:i lirtuer. but irregular.

Nrw York Uvi* Slock .dlarkctiSi-ecifc! DtrpsUli to The Chicago Tribune.

ss„.du«. Sale* trinlnc.at I. **l3c for Texas, and U.rflde fofurdfoary ii> prime ll.'inot-.,Cc.•hi*r—Kn'-'lpl*- <ini| gni w<**k: rui-dlitrn to-ir r 4 n l,li CUli* 111 *“W'sU.Ou perbi-od. Lambs,.lA-: o. mioxl and cuMde lot-vjry..cult to Jitpi.' jc i.f; city dressed. ItVjU.‘.

Sew York Dry (food* Market,New Yobv, .fiily Id-—Trade Is daU.pnev* arm aad

*cme dealers ha'e a.lvaur<y] caocbncs to-darV> ashingtiin.Vietnry, A IUU >a snd Bed Cross at 10kr;highrotor* at liv.es plnki un.l purples -at 13c. )till’aMrartisrf innslfn*are selling atbar, and lye S Hutof thvlgxim usd Lon»la]f, 19C; S Y.Mills,tbc; heavy Lr.nvuul lk«t makes LrimtlTci sec-ond, 16m*14>s<-: S.uuhcru. Pittsfield. 13a;Goidlngitrammills 4-ishirtings, 12 vtc: darkprint ?.13>*<•;which!* »reduction bom tin? opt-ulugprlcuof the fall.

Ori xa Krricliu.Sf-cd*J Diypofch t 1 The CMotxi TrPcr.e.

_New YnKc,.fulT M.

FrEIOIITH—»S.<£O bn wheat to Uvrrp.- J at -.I M saillidhxftt-am; nrs wheat to Cork aids.Tits* I’mduot* Market**

NRW YORK..*,.*, i imn.,New Y obk. July lu. - Akiuss—lVt* Heady at dr.r-d.62: pearl, nominal.trxius-Uii uiti.lull i;ul el n‘4 with rather tuore-• I»l » Ul s:i Laa-. ki Ui-UaiU.11r nn’l It-- *rtlrr • »>o-« -f S.tw. hu *,*

Slut- air? Wi-ptrTn: lf*r «-«ra(or .1,

tur nhue win'd! i*xtr»; •?* &j<<*7.cu lor nmud hoopOhio;(of extra St. l/iuit-, lor soM

cluicr .!o; olii-hi< dull.', C-Jllomia nu!et:ial<‘« o*aOlirlsat Onjni) .jalot at il>e:r firmer; »ali-*'..f ;•«» l.tl* at i«t.Wi»s.«. 'Wheatwill*. Pt-NW l.u; 1,,-Af y arid 2-«Jc tower;<•*!,-« of

<U<w f'ii »t t'ir N v 2 cprinp. tin*Utter irie*- an vilrcme; xl.oi f.,r winter redWestern,-1.60M.61 fi r »h*Jm r MkhUan. Rye tcarceand line. ISsjh-v dull; >■.). s l)u OiT«»a a: jjl.liUarlt-y malluIU;. »' >ra--lv.c-.-:;tc. 73,272 but ojH-ned■ teadyand cliwed dull and d' elininc; »aK-«of tiVUC ba•t Tlr»;e>r furrv'v mixed Wi-eiern via eaaal: 93-i'.He forJovi* rsliroaii: • t >r hwh mixed nniriv yellow.(Jals—Uro i; \r. l;wh l.n; tinner, ifl> Bulaf and ua—'t-l)id; Sale* bu sj til Weaictll clyf-in« »t k.'ijnv.

OBOexiUEs-Ulrc ’j”li t oa.l mie’iViS 1':!. Cnffw uuiof;**!<■« ?10 Iinch IU.I ,(»i private term*. Sacaritead*; r*l«X’Ahhdt Cub* *1 ll all .ci <6 r>9i."> lUvAO* atl.’c; :a*) hagr St. UouiiiU"at lr’»c. Molasses dull andnominal.

FETuoLEUii - U'ii. t at 17c for crude; 32 furre-fined.l EJTJJEM—IIeinJ vi *,lc •inletand fir-nat £V»33<* forBnrcos A»re* aod Hi.. Ursodi*. lltht sod raid.lie

i* *ht»: 2<s\<ais7l..r h«**vy do: i*«d;iSo for CalUur-and for heavyCoat- t'omertlcflnu at STb>SVUi pi r tia bytti*

W«K)h-Q.iM and linn: sales of3AJ.COO P.S at ,>V AVI?nrdoiin-siic *!'•«'*; b>A2rcfor nawashed: 25*»4n- forhnnt«»; f»r (.uili'.l; Tile iut tubbed: JS.A33CurTexvi; JSs*tW*f..r liulifurnla.USMFjj On.-F.r-i at $1,00.»l.0Asunns Tnu'tsTu'i-<i .let.MtT*u»-Sheathia*: < ■ r,“T ';n(ct at 32e; Ingot copperIn limiteddemand at ?2'« -.r Lake Superior and

Kaltin.on*. Ibg iron umet at < &>.(*>«U.UU f>r Sc-.teb;»2dJUatlUo/..rAiuiricoii. Sbr.-t i.-ca dud at lb*|jein tvld for Rar*ia. liar mm aud drooplu* atJMftsiKiOhf.irrrhuiil American.Naiia—Doll*t*V fer cut; 6He for clinch;

»r horaffhoc.Ptomuoss—Port inlet and firmer; «al*s 17brl* at3.’MM2 for new n.e»«. rioting at fJiii) regular;Sl.F2.for old do; lor prhuc;irrnmvtuess. licet»v?adr; sale* Uai brls at tivWifor oexv plain tuesa: sLluuciSdM for new extra:etr. Tierrc U-ef nnuuaal at eJJwihtSfor primeaic««;

#25 OCi<tA)-Cli fur Indiame**, IPVf ham* dqady: «*lr«liXp LiU *t r2D.CV>Aai Hk Cur znvatf mod heavy;rale* 550 pk«» at far ■boulder*; K-416,Hr forhaiM. yllddli* firm ami 'ii.lcl; 25 l<-nci Ice-curedat RHe. Lard wulct aud tl.-v.ly; rate* 3-0 tc* a:If He lor ttcam; for fcettle rer.dcri.-d. butter'jun-tatl6v*a>c for Uluo; ltA.A3lc for State. Chce*eijuiet at

fEEUiUts to LivrupooL—Firm; eaeageiueatJ furC,:xOLu mLett at o' t-er taiL 9c per ete&ia.laTEST-5 P. u.

RacAMTCrns-Fl-ur quiet and a (hade lower.W brat cl:dU liraw. 1>-jc lower. Rvp 'jtjetand firm at<J.til Jor Wiftirn, U*l» dull at KMuje l„r Wrrten.afioat. Cere luw.-r and dull at for aound mixedWvaurn.nu canal atd railroad."I.CIU. n. UU.U uui AUI'.AR.ruovnnos*-P,)'k ijulvtand »tc*dy. Be.-f dull aoj

i mlaally unchaorid. Cot meat* In moderaten.-iai-St,rltlont decided chance lu trice. Bacon dull and aum-b»l. Lard qr letat f**? toprime etuam.Kqcn -.Steady at £b«rfe.Wmkxzi-l'lnncr; taicitUO brU We*tcmat <I.CS i

LW. free.OSWEGO.

OonctfO. July 10, is tv ut-’anEADETUTfs-Flcmrftcsdr and cnchann-d; aaler ofDC !*U at 97. CU -7.51for So. I rfrtoir: fT 804175 for amber winter:■_tO ter white: tu.oUi4y.Ss for double extra. W heattrmhot quirt: «alc«oX 2.000 bu amber illchlaan atCl.U<a: S.MA) In prime whiteCanada at tI.M: Milwau-kee clou h.-ld at ll 51. with buyer* at 11.50. Oimictmand ocmihallj hither.

CaHaL VcaiGUTa—Wheat, *Hc; com, 75;c; ryo, *c—-to New Yurtlatx Iso-outs—<o,ooo bu wheat.

ihOO bu wheat;Casai. EinmTß-6uo bria Hour;ItSojba Cora; *.700bu rje.

SKW ORLEANS.New Onttass, JuljIQ.-Com>x-Uochac«el; as• U-s.MoxnafiT—Gobi, 139*.; (terllnc. Uot{.BiLEAKirrTTa—Flotir—Low grades tn demand;

ratvrfiDf. <S.U); double extra. €o.SO treble eitta,*67ft. Whitecorn. aLOT. Oau, Bran.eUJ.

Fsorajoyn-Pork. *3150. B*eon_l !>»<-Lxrd-T.eree.lS’iiamMc; ktf, aKSUI.V.

Gaocniixa-Siuar ana; uao<g. Id Sic; prime,Is*.c. MoUmt*i< minal; choice unntnfcn*.Coptic,

Wibuat-SLCCA"* U*.„ , . OT. X-0813.a i. uvuis.St. Locn. JulyIQ.—Toeacco—Quiet, withnot ouchmain*.C'orros—Nominal «{2JH /3JSaHrsrp—ln better demand, with sale* of tmdresaed

at eao.aottu.oo.Bitaatwrrm—Fkiar—Active and lusher for towgrade*; tapers told at X. *i.7>S4.oa;XX. XXX. #7.*®;W; fancy, f7.75319.40.Wheat—Chuioe old ana dry new fall niff, at lullprice*;Nn. 2 erring rold at 41 SO; prime new andold red (all,11-30; choice new ted and white, el.it. Cora firmand higher, at&&>3Me lor mixed: for yellow;SAWMc forehtlccatd fancy white. Oats rrrv tinu.andbold hitler; tale* at (or mixed; Tic forprime white. R»e. thtO.

Wbuxet—Advancedio9Oc3CLOXPaovlsjoss-Flinxr, tut Dot much doing. Pork solaooorders at dittl. Bacon—titrihocUrn sold stile:clearribsldeaat 17i»c; clear aided, at I8bc; au<sr-currd liana, ea .vaeied.at He. Lard—Sotlun* dulog;ctirjre held at Me tor small lots.

R*dXKf»—Hour.itCOtrts; wheat.5.M0 l>a: corn.UWJbu; rye. 500 lu;oat«.LSool'<i; Logs. 3M.

CISCINAATL _

CutnxitsTL Jule ia—BaisDdrrTT*-—ripnr Brin.' demandl:sbt: family. 48 0O«dM. Wheat held at*\.S£hL«o—closing cull tTurcseaw and crui<r; .iC.Oat* advanced tu ri-ATTc. and in L*ht aupplj. «jc

dloMcand la gooddemand;heldFirm hut oachasgol: neaa tortheld

at d31*>. bulk tuiaUI2\c, 15\c. 16<%eand lol,c Ba*ctslu. l‘r. I7*c it J l»c: no tales. Good demandtur•nfa.'.‘ond h*iu»; fi-’r* >f St'S tea at^io—cow asking3c. L>rri dull »t ly«; not a lihie«t better thaa lac,initn-. sci.Tf sad fim ar Js3*Jc.

KOOie—l7(jt Ise.Mosr.iam—Gold, l3Si* buyiae. Mcc?v market na-cbacccd. Ccrrrcey Inbetter rtirpljr. Exchange filmat 119discount buytegt par selling.MIL.WAUK.KK.

•Mxlwacxi*. Jujj h—iiarazwrrTTs-Floor dail;thi.lec low* and Minnesota. dS.IAM'iUJ. Wheat ’Teakat 41.14 f,.r >o. I; is Lai forSo. s. Oau ra*itr at TOeforNo. 2. C<*n gnu. atTTe forSo. S. Bye firm at il03for No. L

FetiqUTS-Dull at 4Kc to Buffalo; B,’4c tozcrrrrs-I.CCO bri* Ccur. 65409 bu wheat, t£oobn

tjraPVEfT’t—J.',W hrisSoar. 4&KQba wheal.•CJO p. m.—Wheat dolland nominalat €LM for No. I

lattore; auoivr h‘c.2. No sales.DETROIT.

DlTßOrr, Jclt la.—BarADsrCTTa—FUmr—QuietumlArhaßecd. Wheat—VTeatUer tci j fine «UJ<l marketre»l;No.lwhiic,aLM;So.4 tfa. Oat*carcewTCuv,

air\rpmsMutes.July ll—Corros-Dnll at 22*ic* EcccipK

9 haks; export*. S7H balea. _Rr.rAiwTCTra—nojtunchanged. Wheat—New. gt-m

Corn—Sales at fcKiSOc., Oats, sfc. ___

Peovisions-IVrt fiSLte LenfcT.'k-SJc. Baeoenominal; ahvulden. 14|*e: *».**»

Tntmn, Ja]r 10.—Bbupstctts— Floor onietandsteads- Wh-at 3c lower: amber at <LC; while

regular,at I red «;»1 T-fltrrgr-tier Cm at qu-utioa*. Com Icloircr.cljuir rteady iNo lat Sia; No. 2a:sle;condonined al®c. Oa»‘tuic»and firm: Michigan at TlJ*c ; No. 1 canal at Tie,Hieismantai Bart?;ncmmal,

jtKCWFT*—Hoar. Mu brts; wheat, L9SO pa i com*IS.i*ai bu; oala. IJM^a^yeayjKt,Clevilajr), .Tolv 10.—BaEAr*ruTT3-n->cr—City

nude—<2.ooforXXXwhlte; fT.73£iAW)fDf XX amber;fi;N?7.OD. XX Trials ter; gdSHor-'vd winter; g&Mfor XX erring. Conatrr m*de--f7.»4tJi for XXWhite:K3S&US (onVCX red and amber: *tartWT*forXX spring. wSat—Sale IJOQha No. Ired wfeetorsi 9L«; tocobaSo.»doai*Ltl;3carsdual»UUM.Corn—Sale 1 car No. latBe: I ear ear corn *g TV.Oats—Sato Z carNo. lat IS* Bye—Sale leans No. 3at

P*T»oixrv—RrfaM. M&er July mdAu-Caat; crude bcMtijFUO.

- PmtiDElPHtiu Julyla.—a^fiii«lcyT»—Tloorflira-

Penarrlvaola do. o!Jodc.rj»»-Bo;l'aaer , Wt«* t*2jeuve; old red. *L«»*(4»S; new do. «t u?4L«w£2fiT.sS®18* «l£ B?i■vareo aad advancedwe*?eTn*77§Mcf **** mtlcd "‘Wtem. °*** Mar;Paovmoaa *s» P*notroi-Cb»

Wstsxxr-«ee3sl.o(.„ BAXTOfORK. • -BatTaeas. July la-Bitiiwrcrrs-nw firm »Cvrerlour quotaliona. Burinea* reetriet«d f«r want ofnocc. Wheat firmer and hither;emlee at ai.aaiat»«ssr si-oaißisa».Paovnxose—Caehueed. 'WHUrrr—Quiet at fLtirai.OC.„__ • U>£riBT7LLH.~tocssvxu*. July ia-Buunrm-Floor-St.

perflo«.9xai Grain rteady and nneharred.Toaacco—BaWof U hhdsat *AdCMlO.iaPBpvuxoNa-Finn: meat pert fitioo, Baeoo—Sbooldera 14Me;ele*rrib. lie: dear (idea, nwe.Lard—Tlefeo. Hama—Sugar-cured, lS>*c.

Illinois ud flichlcu Canal.Special Dopttcfa to The Chicago Tribune.

__

Ban»»oaT.July 10.CtrAmD—GenerleTe, LaSalle. 94,50 ft lumber;Barry. Leanest. Ught-Auim>-W.A. Ste«L Joliet, S 3 yda time: Rescue,Lemoot, 75 yd* atone; CaL Manatngt Lemoot. to yds

•tone; H. L. Feaaiee. lament. 41 yda atone; W. 4.Gomee. LemonLUyds atone: E. O’OonneU. Lcmoct.Wyd* »tone: O. Walker, Lctnoat, 69 yd* stone. 90 bri*Ume; Cooitltatloa. 81£&5a,94 yda atone: Erwin, Lo-tn.mt. M yds rtoceiMaiy Walker. Laaoat 85 ydsJudd,Lemoat, 69 yda atone; Thunder-Ooit, aac.99 yda stone.

—. BbJDOEPObt, July 10—9p, nt-u«n ?* °urne«, Lemont. light; Oocrtlta-Uon.blgßuiuliaht; Colonel Manning, Lemont, light:i,;ni light: EUie O'Cocreß.Le-SwlWiiih*E

»ln*. Lemont. light; George Judd, Le-

in Wn.&. Ste*L Joliet. light; Oommerte,SS!«W«IJwo2;lW K l^GSLSOettaiding.4AOOO

StlrX^fSbV'1-' US‘”i- «

TmkU Passed Detroit.Special Despatch to The Chicago Tribune.

_ „Detboit.July WDowx-Props Active, Comet, Milwaukee. Luha,

‘.■.fa. i*(7.Kte2>!fp t*t*te; *tmr Kewprnaw. hark* Fair.fMU. Ocarita..Maitland; achis Denmark, fhomaabimma. White s-iusU. Clayton Belle. Norwedsn, Hat-Merrick.LV*tnwaiie. »t. James. So-phlaSmith. Miranda.

Up—Pmr» (lity r{ Detroit. Lawrence. NorthernLight, Mohawk, ualeos. KjuJoox; h«rk# Alice, JanaBeu. Tf*t*on, Tanner. 3iar»h, Homer; br'e LucyClark: aebra BrtghtleJDcnaldion. Hoboken. IVluiaaCase. Card. Nett, Woodward, Thornton, tChitmao,Comanehe. Latham. ATerr.lßiiirg Star, New London.Mlneh.Clara Parker, KxUa Urtxt. Holt. Jura, Del taDe Wolf, S. A. Wood. Ancle Grorer. AlghUcgale,Scarof Hope.

An&rvzri— Scbr Pamlico Sound.Wcn>—Southwest.

MEDICAL CAEDS.I>r. Whitmore,

183and 183Booth Clark it..Chicago. 111., devote* hi*etfetire timeandattention to the treatment ofDebility ** TheDoetor*» mere** laall Private DUeaeo*U truly wonderful,a* hundred* ran atteet who bar*been relievedbvhlta. Female Pin* taieand eitrw. Es>t»-eitiua tent free to any addrev*. Corrapoadcnoaetriciiy confidential. AJ cure*efleetod or no foo re.

The Great DiscoveryOf Dr.LeBRUN, Every married maaand woman iathe world ehould know ol It. fir to them jt i* of moreT

. f *kan irold. Hundred*whoare DownlineIt wouldnet do without it for a th time* tt* cor*. K.\pr*nicn(ar» *ecd three cent stamp. Addreae Poet OdicoDrawer 5e73.

Dr, RaphaelDeaeribM fflieue without *aj iafomatloa treat the m>tiont, md cun* without *iyr csjwtmfDti, or the bm ofcfrocnairy. thoj••�feryiurhealth as.l life trim wroc*treatment. HI Rut SkdWin-et, GoneultutNnuSb *«UU>Ji TO HKALT3

SPECIAL NOTICES.Keep Your Blood Pure.’

Durin« three hot months you oorht to been roarV, 1iSiRITS and hralthr l>y u>in« MISULKIPS UKRaUITTLBX This tofifeis 4 sAluktuTti tfmhitt disease.

GENEBAI NOTICES.Payment of Sac and Fox Scrip.

DETA2TMr?fT OT THE IXTEEIOO.)t)fralxru> Arraia*. *

VOTIOB IS UXHEBT GIVEN, TIU«XI taryOf Iteliuert.ir Is prepared to pay tbo out.*l&4iuSißpet>tedr.cuc>tttt luted Kor Indians oCthe represent*! by certificate* Issued bythe Indian Horuati. ■*The certificate* shooW he presented for paymerAxVil'J0 urdti *• I??* “• »**« ‘hat date, bo Interactwin be allowed on them. Thcv should bo traosmittedthroughthlicfficc,aid the arp!!cstl.jiia fir paymenttuntt, inevery ea*<\ give theFoot Office addrea* of theclaimant.

It. S. PARKER.Oormnlaaiotw.

LEGAL.TRUSTEE’S SALE.

Whereat,WilliamM. Butler, and' Celia T. Batief, hitwile, ol theCityof Chlcaco, County of Cook. ai.H atas*cf Illinois. did, en the lit day of March, A. D. I«u, »fcute, acknowledgeand deliverto theuudenlgaed,JamaCarter, now ot the City and State of New York, funner*I?'t the Cityef Chicago, afumald. a certain deed adtrait of the premise* hereinafter c seenbed, to teem*Ih ,/ayßienf ot tr.o<2> certaincr.mlioorr note*, bear*lu/t even datewith *aiddfa-d oftrait, madeby the lUdWm. M. Bstier.cre for the nun of two thousand*LilianlsC.uX). and payable to theorder of Alexander Leibftat the Amenan Rxchsnie Bank, in the Uity »{ NewYcrk, .in mo (3) year* alt« the date ther*if. with interest at th* rate ol ten <t*jper crut per annua. Payable aetul-aani:a£»tand the other for the mm of lour hundred p-msjiiteri;at remey (fW). paxable to the orderof WilliamLeslie, at the other of George Smith A Ccmpasy. in thtcityof Chicago, aforesaid. in f.mr (1) year# alter thgdate thereof,with interest at the rate ol ten do) p«rrent per ar.nr.m, capable seal-aneasily. which (Uftrait deed was filed fur record on the twenty-fourth dayol March, A. I>. 1.-afl, and duly recorded in the Kecoritre's Ollicvof O.>ok Cocnty. State of Illinois. labook tMot deed*, page 4li, and Inand by which trust deeditwasand l* prodded that U defaultbe madeIn the paymentcl «aldpromissory note*, orany part thereof, accordingto the and erect cf the uaa. thenon the appliestloaof the leffalboUerof «<JA peomlsauryand might be lawful far the nudersignra, hi# heirs, a*lien*, or successor Intrust, either Inperson or by attar*r.ey. to sell and dlrpcie of the said property cr premite*hcreinaftef and all Che right, title,benefitc*iui:> ct redemptionof tho said W nii«m ii.Butler -a#Ci liaT. Butler, their belts or uHxna therein, at DubifeAuction, at (he north door of the Coort HomeIn the etryof Chicago aforesaid; to the highest bidderorbidden leecash, cm string notice ot the time and place of nearale, hrrtibllihing*oeb notice la one ot the newtpapeap-.ibliihedln the city of Oalcago aforesaid, thirty (V)•lariUfere inch sale,and to make, execute and delfr«to the purchaser crporehasen tLonjof, good and ram*cient oci'lor deed*cf cui.reyaaee for the premise* said,and out cfthe proceed* of er.ch lift, after entparingaMc<*ets ot adxertuing and tale,eammiiiiocaana other ex*

Sense* of said trart. Including all money adraoert (atii.trancs. taxe*, awessaieOtN or lien# wt any kind oasaid pretniata, with interest thersjo at tea pcf feat

per annum, to pay the amount of brlccipaland Interest which ahoilld appear or laid note* w te aapaid at the timeefsuch iaJe; And. whereas, deisulthubeen made both in the payment cf the pnoeipal and in-terestof each cf said note*, the sum at two hundreddi liar* iTlnrtPiX and andunpaidhundred(4,U) pounds iterting moneyand Interest Uunecasince the first day cf September. A. D. remaindue and enpaid on the said note secondly alx-rescribed: And. Whorocs, «fpUeatloohasbeenmadetoagby Alexander Is’-fte ana Wiiliamina Lesha, the r*#p<«tito Ugal hcldcn ol laidacti*. ts icU and tllspcsgof the [retuiies hereinafter dewnbed. in omphaoeiwish lt»Urmol the said Trust IXwc:W <;u Vi.t wri t—«ut .4.C,a,a ai uet iatu -

l.ow, therefore.rathe notice ti hereby Riven that. byriftceof the rawer and auth.«;tym me vwted lu iMbv mlrl TniftDred. L Jaa.r» Garter, Trattee, will. MlSATURDAY, the twcn(/-».i;b ib.taJ iloj'.t June, A.U. is®, a: the hour cf tea tl'J)o’clock in the forenoon«

that day,at the i.'irtn dr-r ti the G> art llovu&la th*City ct Chirac', Oo*i*»?y *f 0.-A and Stated lUinata,ecrcae t-vr tide, and r-il at public auction, tothe hialicet b-.dder or uidderi fur cuh the

_real

t-ilate. «tuat« in toe city ol Chicago, Guontj of Oook,and Stale cf Illinois, it >o manhtLcrvol aJ may be os-etttary tocaflify the avid Indvbfcdawa, and de*-rlbe<in aaiJ tiu»S deeda* follow*, tc-wit: Thatpan of Blockthlrty-eU (To -) InKlaalt'a Addition toChicago. and drK tihcd aa follow*. to-wit: Bcitmninx on the couthlicaof caid B’-jcV this'.r tl* (od>. Coe hialred iIJOI IcH <re«tfromthe m-.tneaitearner thereof, ihrneawtst(izty-firt(65) htl. thenrearrCt two hundred and eighteen (all)fe-rL thence eMI sixty-five (651 feet,ttircc couth twohundred and clfttreo fxir' feet to the flare d bona,nine. AUolet numberflce(fi) tn Chnrlec IPMUr1 * «#•

division cf Woet tweetc-one (li) In the northpart ofW. frtitt’c Addition fa CTucafo, wrth alland *fa*nlaf thiceo'-mecu rricileeee and appurtenance* thereunto b£Uoxlnaor tu any wire api>ertaJnlt'g. topetherwith aBtherein, forth*ratpoM ofdue on the **id iTomUcory note*.e««tf of vale,eommuftooe and opens re of caid trust, aaprovided Ui *ald trust d««<L JAJdKiiOAR Ttß,

Chiracs M«cai,W . Trusted.TtK-sbiieeeale lc herrqj adjourmsiuntil theUttdav

Cf July, A. D. 1-s*. at the limeb'rtir and placeJAdtKhCARTER, Trustee.

CMcac\ June53. I>3. .

SCALES.jjSf FAIRBANKS’M i STANDARD

SCALES,VOHHB _or aix um■mHoI rAtR3ARKS.GBKKNI.ItAF A00U A £ML*lt>» «t_ Ohlea*r>

AIALT.Wyeth i Vsndsf/oorr Malting Cc.,

• s-,-. • ,v 1 UI-U-uan-aT.Weh*v**lt.>. • • i ;.--rr- • cu«f !/•».

Wb«atui VtatXal• til Vofle* ••••>*

dittillert atliowetl mai-.' Alto. Millie-,' ,-u aat the Jewett ralca, and ULc - i adranae* maAj . u J Jtrain- --

BAILEOAES.Arrival and Denarlura of Trains.SUMMSS ASSAMOBMEMT

& soe:ciijcago .

Tklet Oihee, toiitheutcorner ct GUrk tad Toocsco. blcvts m oauruuaPirox-flartb WeU* *trwt

Lttm, JrrUt,Odu-Bapldi PMtniet.—...*a.-oo *»* ( im*«pyaflcKu'.Li.-ie......*ia;ii*a I «Oipap>agcKKhtfciptw«.M ...w~.» J9:ls*a h«iap—-p» 4=xpa *llaITMBeitandDonidthPim,....' am * 1:11 IHFreeport andPaalcithPa—»;gpm®g£&S£-.“S^M»,rnGesevaasd EWO Passenger—* SX pm • 9;Uaoa

*7aM«aa~ MKI m.—„o M.WM.

htcndnf ,»»;tian *U;IS»aElchin. Calvary andSvanatoc.* lApa .Ctup^AfternoonPawecgec.M..iisOpm • 8:00 pisKrot«h*PnJs<m<M,.w^«^—.’B*l >ni P 3-JOw*uk«ia da -■•x-i&y.m *acs»aWauki*“ Pastcogtt,.,M:Upm •!«»«

Milwaukee do ps *IMSB|h*Si n.LTif nwram.wgsatgeromarox

UEroT—Coracr Canal aadKince itrecif.5L Paul Express..*lo:ooam *MJPESight Fauenger. *i«lpm •8J3»o»JanesvilleAccwnwUttoo......* aJOp ta *3£UpaWoodstock do 6JQ p m *B£o*m

GKO. L DUNLAP, General Sira sHoUadeatB. F. PaißlC*. GeneralTicket Agt-nt.

CHICAGO, ALTOS AST. LOUIS RAILROAD.Kxprrw 51 all , apt M7<BWas * <:ttpn * 9;UaaLightningExrw«— M.....d8A1aa * (dliu

TT T tsnts CENTRALRAILHOAU.VszaaiVzsoz—Vooi of Lake sirecs.Day Exprea*..- B;«Uam •SHOptsSightExtreaa.Ktciuk D-.j Passenger. *«rWam *8:19paKeokuk Kisht PasumKfr.w....* 9.20 p m * g:-J0 aaKankakee Acct-mmodaßon ,*tlOpm *9:15aaiiyde Park and OakW00d5.....* 530am

do do do ,»....

, 12;l9pta *l:»poda do do *s.lipada do da ...... * 6:10 r> to * ?-es pow

4L HfcmiT. Geo’lcittpiW. P. JoaSMS. Gen*l Paweager AgentJdagraf. Thcxxa. Gent Fmgbt Atcat __

MICHIGAN SOUTHERN RAILROAD. •

DEPOT—Corker ul Van Buxetj and tiiurmaartreotaTicket QrT'Ca. W Sooth ClarkU.-c**.Aeeommcdaaca.. *4Jim *7;<SpaD«yP*ci3e Kxpreu (diJJy1........... i;ispa IKiaSittt f» p a *WJD» a

fiKJD&a 'S’lJpaDtf KlT«g«—....Kufat JUpttawM.

wichicaji ozxtbal raiuioajx

Usioa Owes— Fact oILakestreet—'Ticket Oics. Lakgwan. *£•= ; r '«J2Day **T ' - 3 ®

Paczsc £xrreu...w -

MkitKrprw*—— f* •.-

g.i.m«»nQAatnnirondmu-u..... *■ -1- t.lo«acacsniartA*DicrT‘-:r> _s

Day Brprw. . ; . ,J3?5***** Eirrß“--*iiiS3X c * jg£“gggSMSS?si^'i«.^^

TBZCQHErriasuai-iJira. '"sr^Snh-alnr>w.• *SCSdonati NlfbtE*sn*.. -2 *

Ocfa»bc« Might8xtmn.......,�sft® *

G«nK*lCEIOAQO3OOK ISLAND *PAOITO

moT—Corner VanBares and Shota** soTicket Office. » Huc'A CJUrk ctcse^

PicJficDar Eipta.^.—- *i*»o * {Pactde Migot topwea—....—*ptm <ja»q

Kailand., prnSBUMH.ICBT'WAYCTi CSHUGCI -* <‘-11 MB |l:U9l«.

I 1 vK€sSt'..--^^'—‘3s2 «25Sii

?!SSS*liE!lahsE2slS» =1545te*goowuoH,s pijsxaazs rmuu

me (&4SA9I15| *4.72514 6VCBH 6A7TS