Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 19, 1873, Page 3

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> l . THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY, MAY 19, 1%73. " iisSermon Preached Yesterday Morii- ing at McVicker’s . .. % - Theatres o1 A Discourse Suggested by thé Déaths of Chief Justice Chase and ™" ' . John Stuart #ill. % 59 .2 .l pexT: One star differoth Trom ‘anothi .- glorg.—1 Cor. 1541, .- ¥t ! -, This passage comes aften into ‘mind when'we observe the diversity of “chiraétér reached: by eminent men livitig and dying in our sight7 The’ excellence possible to human -life never revesls .-+ divide itself up into fragments and to parcal pnt; ¢ ;- these fragments: to the care’ of différent haarts, s+ +Ad »_kind. father surromnded by dutiftl tchil .. dren, coming at 1ast $o tho end of life, males fnal will and testament, dividing fup Chis i \. - mense estate to the dear . children; 8o thatieadh a8 & part, thus xiature rich, in :all the shapes of gonius, talent, and virtue, portions..out her i ‘mense fortune, and many children belovéd come, sway from her:presence carrying some preciods : - . _The soil that.grows men is'much- like the sdil that grows plants and fiowers.- This litérat soil! lying in its blackness beneath the sun, is ready, toproduce an onk or.rose, s clambering: vin: - ..ora violet. . Often wo find 'in June:by 8o :+ { stveam & rich spot, which with ‘rare prodigality” ¢ has gent upward s whole bouguet of spacies, and® colors, and perfumes. - The soil that grows:men .is guch. :Thoy emerge from it with, differcnt’ .1+ shadings of intellect :nnd sentiment, and taste The illustration of Paul, that one star differ- oth from another in’ glory, finds . an - increased eaning in the modern time, for astronofny hss-| - discoversd that some’of them' are “suns that ghine with & pink, or emerald, or amber, light. { grave, - It has often been necessary; in _tha his--|: the sentiments And hence, the plancts eround these suns are nof, bat. ‘" bathed in ‘s white light like our day, ~in s flood of pink, or gold, or amber. g - -The human soul presents this variation of’ . _glory, and bence fills the 8n out= +“Iook thit never wearies wif sands of minds come snd go gurrounded with .~ ‘any sending forth'their-own peculiar light: - 1f you wonld realizo’this® truth yag"ileed-only . - lookupon those who have just_gono from earth, . for there is always .something in the ward death’ “+ = that causes the peculiar tint' or colox of “asoul: 1o flash up suddenly before us. The solemnity.| % - -and sorrow of the tomb erresi- both- our-atten- tion and-our. eympathy and, for the first'tims jwe» see the image of the scul that hus gome hence. The grave, .though full of literal darkn.ss, iy full of spirit light.” The soul becomes most vis~ ible to us when it has entered .that great | ghadow.. The recent months have afforded us \ Erequent opportarities for this full view-of great . eouls in: their’-rich’ variety. The hunger for -empire fiashed forth in the spirit of Louis No- tpoleon.- A worehip of the common people and a - _’wonderful industry and information wasvisible: |. in the memory of the grest editor. who, died Iast. autumn in_the sorrow,of defeat. - A noble form of Christianity, perhaps;one of the best embodiments it ‘a3 -enjoyed -in -our genera- ion, may be_observed now in-the pale image jof Bishop McIlvaine.: Uprightness and moders- ‘mn&mflldavufim to frce }x‘im!iple are evident s o character of Chiéf Justice Chase, while --“1g}l- that was most -intellectual; ‘and dignified,- +- and powerful inthe himan mind, shines fo : ‘nowfrom the namo of John Stuart Mill. How these stars differ from each other in‘glory!. . Tt has long been the custom of ;our Iand in its - religions - press, ~. and . in; its « --pulpit alko, to draw-whatever lessons ‘they conld ITrom the great soldiers or’ politicians that: pass® «-awny in their presenca.. This partiality. comes: in part from tho: public benefits that descend direct from sach men, 'and from the absence of lsuch charscters as the world now laments in the name of Stuart Mill. There isno evident reason ~jwhy we should &ll speak of & great soldier, or great editor, or great Chief Justice, and pass in - gilence a man greas in his acquisil 2 tional faculty, in his humanity, in bis morals, in his disposition, and in - his domestic life. It ~would not be fitting this secred day shouldl of this illustrious man in his ‘zelations to © logical formsand political systess, and meta~ A As.kysiulinqmflu,,fnrmmkinihu ;38 of soven for reflection and all :toil in these, . departments- of thought;.buf it 3 bé- | . comng the hour if I shsll recall to. your, minds some of those points 1n the life and character of Mr: ll, at wiich he came into” contact with tho, world of religion. - Into the world of Christianity ‘proper he never entered, but ix" the splendor of .- -an intellect,which: revealed a divine origin in hie devotion to his brother man, in-his elevation sbove the world's vices and sififes, in his"love of trath, and in his domestic life, he illustrated powerfally the ideal humasity -pictufed in the pages of the New Testament. .. ./ . ‘Uhe scriptures are full of delineations of char- acter. -From the writings of Solomon to the e " mon upon the moant, and to Paal's-letter to the: Romans, there is 8 perpetual effort'to_paint ,a: ‘human character in such lines that soc i _ | 16vo it because all despotism i : |-humen eonduot as set apert six | Al such a'lover of liberty. binged - geeker.” of - come 1 imth At 1 & lover . o ersonal liberty -t Cgromt Hing-l med frebdon: and scienco. and. religion, possible, caugo 3 itsel! a talsehood, ;8 Grime.. slatta : The world af ith bef large for any one oot to travel over, it is parceled and assigned in districts to:difforent xgmf. ‘While ‘Tyndall seoka . the tith of tho inanimate. world and while & -encantlarge secks the frath of natire, it was. the province of Mr.-Mill’ to -seek -the trath of - pertaining to the individual or. Swefi Hence, loving truth, he furthor digni- fled hisnainie by developing the trath of condust | rather than of geologf, or mechauics, or of mate- rial things. This nodle puth led him,mmt{um- el irito thestudy-and dovelopment of civil and epiritual liberty, ~All the falseness.and crelty - of. tyranny..in State and. Church stands forth in allita‘ deformity. The light of Mr. Mill's reason ‘powarful that it dispels. all:the fogs of con- Auries. and fully reveals the world of froedom long dreaméed of but unseen. “The fow téars we ‘wére'all accustomed to :shed over Galileo and'a few.martyrs ho multiplics into a great rain aud. sheds tham’gyér tlie human race up to the lagt hbur'of yesterdsy. - Qur tears: foli- only--fora afraud; was slave,of s Kiny X E 3 0 slave of her employer orher husband: *His judg- ‘ment waa simply finiversal,'and 2s just as is pos- sible in any.one man in this generation. England ; ad in his'sight ‘imprisoned s manof ‘perfect in- tegrity, foruttering_his disbelief in some Clhris- tian tensts, and had forbidden a foreigner from - Castifying Agamst s thief because e confessed. ‘that heheld no particular - religii i ul calm e!o?uenca- and Jlogic, poured out for a gen-. eration, fought and won -over again the battle of personal freedom—not for an astronomer but for race. Unquestionably, freedom is th'only soil upon which educated-men can'grow. . Bondagoels atonce the enemy of intellect and religion..Men, ‘cannot grow where they-are cramped ‘either by a King or-by afixed syotem. If, therefore,:the x!ny shell come, and_come it no donbt will, shen the sdvent of reason elial ‘have ~overthrown. the - falsehiood in Romanism’ and Protestantism, and -when . the enthronement of . individual liberty- “shall “have made the English establishment - shake hande with the Dissonter, and the Jew sit ,dovn in friendship ‘with the Christian: , Much of this humane brothethood will go back far ita origin to ihat name written this monthupon the tory of the Uhristinn Church, that heavy biows should be struck sgatust it by minds outside of it, d;l intal{liecmnuy :;os ile £L it. ufiel[—}nvs; ice, and vanit; W) ke form. it The wili 31t oo, tha 5 “* ‘Somé one could the giftie glo us, "5 .7 To sea ourselyes os others 26 us, s paints-ont not anly & weskness.of an .individual, but of a,Church or-a_governmont, A despotism or & monarchy nover doubts itself. - I¢ is seces- gary ' for ‘some- ontside man;.some Republican | . Kossuth.or Patrick Henry, , t i first doubt. " Bo with the Church’ tniversal. Blinded by self-love, it has hiad to accépt of reform atihe’ hands, of those standing outside of -itsatmol pheso’ of mutual ndmiration. The " Calvinietio faith could indéed reform the-Armenisn, and the -Armenian the Calvinistio, and sa on,-until each “sect had pruned away something from its neigh- “bor's folly 3 but beyond this slight work thre ia -8 vast region in which all the denomirations sat down togother in a deep and mutual .admiration,: fatal to all sensé of fault'and to all hope of re- +form. :It is necessary in these hours that .blows shonid come from parties outside of itself. - “All tho Christian Church’held to the justice of persocution even to the death.. From ‘Rome to ‘Goneya and Edinburg, the: stake and the igag- Iaw were 88 universal 86 the Ten Commandments. In this awfal condition of things, it" was only & kind: Providence that turned the French infidels Joose into that field, dripping with the blood of ‘the "innocent Huguenot, ‘and Covenauter, and .Catholic. So the Ch once sastained such relations to slavery that light could not dawn apon it out of its own h"m”“& but was poured upon it by a free-thinking world moving in an orbit beyond thie realm of thesanctuary. ‘There- lation of the Church toscience and to woman awaits 2lso s schooling from her enemies, and while it will never -accapt the whole argument of- sci- entists,nor :tha whole .declaration of - woman's Tights, a8 8ot forth by Mr. Mill andhis school, et by theso - ontside voices it will beled into _Bome new world of truth, brighter with the glory of both msn and God. 3 4 * - There was another feature. in the character of -, Mill that illustrates 3 cardinal 1dea of Chris- ianity. You know tho .Bible is full of the idea ‘ that the sonl” i#'the" chief “thing. * The -Bible is thé book of tho soul. .. Christ came: in the name _of the sonl. . Ho, Himself_ had no property, no officé, no' empire, no ‘equipsge, 1O retinue, be- the mind divine The X is;the grand- Y il's greatnees that ever. | A éarth u}mugl}fln m;{;’mei If m; | read the pages of profane 7, you read o wars, armies, tgnhcen, dindems, royal families. -But, opening the New -Testament; you read only of the: immortal spirit. Over: bach,:pagé the .golden wdrd soul ”.might well be. written. In 1l profane history, the fast word is dust; “but of the Testamment, tho last word:is always immortal- .ity, b the ynter John, or Paul, or the Bavior. ! . ~“If it were not fof such men a8 Mr. |"com- in%mare and there in_harnan ‘life, we might fail to kmow what that thing called sogl is. ;I do not ‘know.where, in the public men of _our land, we ‘can soe 60 well - thie- picturé ‘of | huiman -dignity. swayed outrof “balance by s love of office- and | gold; disturbed, by » storm of bad passions, our ablic men revesl the soul, not in its-noblcness, bum may © .| not mistake the good God has :set before it, and"| in reaching whick it will find its perfect. succees - and happiness. 3 R WS 7 Aflfr ‘Solomon - bad Belxha:;ud bismmngims" Christ came saying, Blessed are, tho~ et ™o " Tnektifal, - fho'" péscemakers, And then Paul comes with-many ‘s chapter” of summing up of human virtues attainable in ¢ . this life. - ''he reader of .the Bible will see ‘that, <" character ia the object of all these earthly years, <~ the thing to be sought by all alike from King * “to subject, from philosopher -to child.” Buch: 23being the Jife-work of man, hie may well gaze upon any beauty and impressivencss -of- charac- ter, come whence it may, in’ politics or philoso~ % B‘!}. or in the humblest walks ‘of earth. - Even Strart:Mill stood nominally outside of- the Christian religion, yet there isa -genso in * which b stood, not by choice, but by. necessity, i . within the boundaries of the New -Testament. . Itis within the power of an_individnal to reject’ the epecial doctrines of o religion ; but' if that| ligion has moulded his conntry -for. centuries in all its morals and aspirations, then each indi~ <+ vidual born into that atmosphera i colored with' *~ itahues, however much ko msy repudiate its o uflmdogmu in after life, . It is possible for - afres will - to exim-lsto ong’s self , - connry, bat go whera he msy, he will ‘always be the Enplishman or American of his formative’ . iun;. Lady Hester Stanhope. tried ‘o escape - her country, weary as she .was -of. its political ; - guels, but in the mountains. of Lebanon, . in 5 b dress, and with only Arabs aronnd her, she. ... e =till only an Englisgwoman. Iu. Christian lands Christianity, berides being & -set of dog- Inas, is also an_atmosphere, ond hence ‘those ‘Who &t last feel ¢alled upon to deny the proposi~ . tions most difficult of belief continue &till the + . children of the place, and if they, do not catry - $he public baptism upon their foreheads, they * bear the, Christian character in' their heart. 1+ Hence, to find a beautiful character outside the .. Christian Church may yeu be to find s good illus- ‘tration of Christian ideal'and Christian destiny, . or the ideal becomes a public inheritance,” and flows beyond the walls of the church, a5 the Xight of the cottager’s Iamp pours out of the-win-. -dow, far away from thé loved family group. 'Of "this eminent man & prominent . pas- , ‘gion was his love- of - truth.: To - know . ~thefacts in the common affairs of life was 80 " xleep & wish in his sonl that it became & passion | 60 strong that all other passions died around it: .. ;sathe shrubs of the forest die when the oak be- {gind to"overshadow them.- In his: writings we \perceive s heart without enmity, without parti- : ‘eanship moving along in the vast sea®of truth, occapied wholly in search of a shore habitable by -the pilgrim humsnity. One of our own leading: 2 tesmen, having been asked why he néver be- _came angry, replied that he conld not_zfford it. . #uch & passion. 5 * =~ Mr. Mill's style is the picturo of & sincers in- tallect from which all malice had been climinat- ‘ed, all language of abuse, snd into which had been 8 gathered the ‘breadth of & Plato, the learn- _Ing of a Milton, and the humanity of a Wilbor- foroe. In the careers of such gifted men as Theo- .+ dore Parker and Charles .Sumner, thero is 50, much partisanhip and individual pride that tho . ‘Pumsuit of trnth with them seems too much like & contest for officc or fame. The heartthat eads these writings has st last such feelings as ...Tust have filled the bosoms of the Bomans Beated at their gladiatorisl shows, but reading ./ Btuart Mill you feel that the light around you is i‘nflt that of lightning but of & morning sun shin- i 0t a8 uny terror, but in beneyolenca. ess, fm iberefore, the Bible speaks of trut] declared the glory of just balances, n Bolomon if the Gospels speak of our being withont guile, 1f another gacred writer said * He that would sea o 5:3@: let him refrain his tongue from -evil all this Seripture signified. It was this love of truth that made Mr. Mill om, cne’s | Life was too short to be consumed in part by |- that they ‘speak- no- guilo,”;we may- | call o memory this En?lizhnmegl:ud friow what /| tin somie. shape. thas. begs. for pity. and for- givenass, - : R TR “Our great mon are all 'said to” dio disap- pointed and- half -broken-hearted,” because they . Zail to catch afour-yesr baublefrom the tumultd-- ous crowd. ~ To run ‘for-President, aad then die . in glory or in cloud, sccording t6 the'counting of the votes, has become a.brief history-of:ona of our greatest men. It is a sad remembrance of Mr. ‘Greoley and Mr. ‘Chase; that their failure to reach & great office turned their days into a'win- “ter of discontent. N e A *:- All ‘over our land, it seéms to be forgotten that _ahuman.goul. may be {something. £0 which no +office can add snything, and from which no po- ‘makea. the ‘pursuit-of :all truth of fovemmenfi Iisge BNPERTH 38 -8 MAANG: lackman in chains; chis foll wherpvera gubject |- love mingled as an interweevingof intelleot; and - seniimont, aud equality. - .- ;- : _._Before the spectacla of sicha f; “the modern discourse about the back from this tomb a3 though God saying, “Thus far end no farther.” 1 Theso two studied‘the 8amo works and allor- -nated with eech other in writing for tke Reviews -and in the deep, worl upon.hiuman liberty. *~ With thexe'two: words -about.affinities, . in- the' Fecoat sensé of. that, term, como to ‘ue &3 from,a world imingled vico snd brutism, and leavo us Fipt m “the admiration of an afinity:of mind, of oflxé\!{i?x, of inimort: Tk taiy bo'tha ar. fnother’s:-love: fur ther child:. demands. 1o _exchange. Ther ‘mance * that 'may ” trausfer her:.child ;to cthat - of :some foreign.- - This friendship is_bafled only by.de; Tiagé is Tust” such”ad iroperishablg The mother ,is , ng, 7o~ Ry, bt i \When one of our leading citizens, since, ‘mmglhxs hands in nguny_uazo of % river while his only son- was dyi -the wayep, -whien tho -eye counld nof see him nor | tho hand heip, wa beheld in that scono a friend- ship that “nothing but_death -could ‘terminate. .The only divarce.of s father's love .for : his son isdeath. R A e ‘While the tears of Stuart 1Mill were falling over. mb: ‘civilized n the banks his nrivaled:-vife) 1o v b e ‘profound sorrow.-.” T ] -But there is no perfection upon these shores., And now we come to the shadoyw that {alls across this' grave-by day ‘and night: That- Mr:* Bill did not accept the orthodox creed, is not. what a | liberal world need regret the most, but thit ho rovealed little of the -religions sentiment® and hope is what we must'confoss to bea shadow upon his memory. P N ‘His “career” verfies what T ha: often. that-it hns become, .I fedr,” wearisome to gan, that the intellect .alone does not, lead to a Savior or.a God in thoe religious sense, M. Mill,- like Locke and ‘Backle, Darivin-and Tyn dall, so idolized the rational facilty, so " idolized tical defeat can take ’lnyl'hini awa, ; "God has inno way connooted humsan greatness .with a ballot-box: =, o = . The boast of heraldry, of power, **And all that rank and or fortune e'er gave, _Await nltke thie inevitable honx j "And patha of glory lesd but to the grave. - a to tarn to From guch s scene it is sweet to o man who might heve - honéréd-- any office; but whom no office could ‘haye honored. Nothing hsungbgor four years could have added to a soul great before the four' years wnd- great efterwards. .- Mr: Mill wonld scarcélyhave kmown when an earthly honor came to.his forehead, or when' it departed. - Like - Marciis' Aurelius, whose laurels of virtus wero greater than the throne of the Roman. Empire, Mr. Mill's own forehead was nobler in itself than it conld have ‘been rendered ‘by all the political “wreaths of his generation. ; © .. 0 oo i acr “ True greatness néver reveals nor cherishes fruch “ambition, -for t of mind aad the | the’ i“ possgssion of.a profound character leave litile | for.the soul to wish or for earth to, confer. “Honco'in' the blessed life of the'Savior we per- Cceiveno trace of popular ambition, but. every- here simple grestness of spirit, as if that were the supreme destiny of rational being. " " . . Oh, what'an era wonld b:fi: inour land if, instosd of waiting for something ontside of gelf to come to us and honor ns, our citizens should unfold the glory within them s’ s flower sends forth beauty and perfume; from its own opening heart! . S . “Let mo ssk you mow to come to ome smore point whers™ Afr. Mill illnatrated a-trath that belongs by &doé)fion to the fnmxl‘y‘ot‘re— “ligions ideas. ' Tho ‘Catholic Church makos it a Bacrament ; the Protestant churches little less fhen that. But let the ceremony be considered civil or religious, the relstion itself is all in- woven with the past and fature. of Ohnlhllntf. There, is no, debate so loud and so apparent disgraceful as that now flllmfi tho civilize world over the natnre and obligations of the marrisge relation. It seems now to_have been.| the good fortune of Mr.. Mill to unfold by ex- xmpEln this great form of friendship®that was established in earth's first paradise. - After the Greek and Boman picture in which the wife was # semi-slave, safter the French and Am picture in which the wife is an inferior’or & Ccreature of fashion, it leadsus up to the old ideal of God when we behold the wife of & Stuart Mill £0 have been the perfect equal of him in_oduca- tion, in dignity, and in liberty. By educating ot youth along -dificult’ paths, man secka to s onverse withman. He tafks the highest thonghta to his_brother, the humbler at his | home, ‘To this difference of education there ia added the influence of thie possession of power ‘and. authority held by man for thousands of oars. - Separated by long-cultivated vanity and -Jong-assumed authority on tho one side, and b§ difference of studies on both gides, and boun: only by & transient sentiment called romaxce, the mistrisge bond_of to-dsy.stands exposed to constant peril of unhappiness or separation. is a structure moved fromits base. Bntin ‘these .two souls mow gone from this'shore'we behold inge tri g in an‘eduostion exsctly "> and-in -a companionship that extended- S1I tlrongh the Givide spirit of esch. It wss & partnership of ‘mind, a vast friendship and vast °| = 3L Wol the visiblo, the tangible, and theimmediate, that 4 geem to have pérished by-neg- :» When the human mind will go no farther than it can see cleatly, it- cannot go far from its era- dle. It argues liitle against, tha central truths | of. Christianity that theso great brain powers | .have rejected their claims, for they have gone farthe ind " have, for ° the most . parf, dealt with deism itseif just'as with Christiauty, - Their hearts do not fail of Christianity, but of all religion. - R ¥ “This -phenomonon’ of thousanda -of practical philosophers parting with religion does not teach e that the-religions world i8 & fable, but does teach me that there are sentiments’ in'the heart _which, if shighted, w.I1.convert. .the earth into & Iaboratory, and death _and love snd wisdom and virtue all.into dost. .. : - e Victor . Cousin, . of France, was thp rival of Stuart, Mill in yisdom, in_genius, ja intellect and'50' Guizot. “These threo were ‘similar and strikingly. great. ~But the two latter possessed the power .of sentiment. That. golden atmos- phers of love'and hope that hangs around relig- ton_enveloped Victor Cousin in its life-giving. folds. Betting out from the same points of thought, Cousin’_always came up to p to God_snd Hesven, and Mr. Ml to the practical of thislife; 1o the happiness of man here, and then paused. Ob, what & deop_mystery of human ife is bere: " From the same father’a side, 1y o Eom tho samo mothers Knee, c journcys to a gloomy tide,— Gitton peaceful soa. - - And Cousin and Guizot teach us that thereis |- no mental greatness tao large for religion.. That religion depends upon the world's credality ; but they teach us, even beside the _grave of the la- mented Mill, that religious sentiment is a divine | part of human character, and ought to,make its Bunlight play in“every bosom'; and that th& more gifted the genius the -swoeter and more divin may be its colors in the soul’s horizom.- . ¢ - " A LIVELY COUNCIL. ‘City Fathers ot Cincinnati « Do Business. FECEE From the Cincinnati Enquirer, May11, . Somé devilish elemont was in the air of the Council Cliamber yesterday.: - There wad an-itch for fight in different dircctions: . Messrs, Meyer and Titzgerald had shown a disposition to inter- fero with every movement; keoping- up b contin- ual snap and growl. -Mr. J. C. Fiedoldey acted in an_exceedingly ugly manner, made o show of ‘himself fronr the'time he took his place. While | the minutés were being read, Measrs..Wolf. and _Cutter, to the Jeft behind him, were talking in a. "low voice. "Fiedeldey jhmsnd to' 'his fest, and, ‘lurching forward,: demanded.- that ‘all:-talking should be stopped—that silence should be kept. The President called for order, when the reading’ swént on. ' I a'‘minute Fledeldsy was on-his foot sgain, The Sergeant-at-Arma shonld be called in, and put an ond to the whispering which had ‘been continued in & lower voice: ' The President . gid that .such a measure would, he felt suro, be | necessary, when the genilemen complained of “entirély”ceasod. ° Then Mr. Mejor took up tho ‘hatchety and demanded -that “there should be no. smoking ; 4 not dat he objected to in de shtreet, “bat not in dis “Chamber!™ The smoking was stopped. Between: times Mr! Fitzgerald was on his feot, and, -with a voica and. manner particu- larly irritating, was arguing fox a suspension of the rnles in order to et certain business brought up at. an.eardly.hour. . When. the: Twenty- fourth _ Ward was . called - Mr.. ..Jobnson introducod his ordinance to repeal the other ordi- Dance. . Mr:Wolf moved that his motion b re- jocted.. Hereupon Mr. Fiedeldey turned to Mr. Wolf, and, in an_undertone, said, “** Keep your mouth-shut; God d=n youl" whiapeits . Mr. Stephens heregot up. ;He wasin favor of the ordinance as Ens:ed, and hoped that it wold" - be approved by the other Board. He had framed. it himself;: hie believed : that it ssvas for the.pro- ‘of honest men, and for_the good of the city, and had - introduced it “by Ar.- Hedger, be-: cause hia collesgue, Mr. Jolmson, had'sworn to dofeat mflfiflng Put forward by him. , .0 ', Wolf then followed. " Ho thought that Mr.* ‘Btephens was:right; and :that.if ‘M. Johnson ed to dofest the bill merely out of personal, “spite hie should not be supported._ = ot -“Here Mr. Johnson said, in a toné loud enough: hfip,be heard at s distance, *That's:a G—dd—d o B - Mr. Wolf “was sbout to go on when the Cathe-: .dral.ball struck four, and Mr. Netter moved that the -Police. bill, which. had .been_set downasa [ special order for that “hour, be’ called up." This - was done. Bat no'sooner had Mr. - Stephens re- | sumed his sest than . ho and. Johnson took 1] their quarrel, and both sbaking with rags, hels heir faces almost together as they spoke. John- son paid: that Stophens had ‘setod mean, underhanded way, ‘and thot Be. had # gneaked” the bill Ho -hisged _this . under _the - nose. Btophons, . who st thia . boiled "over, ! as Clerk Blockburn had got started reading tho Police Bill, Stephens .drew back in his chair and Jot fiy hus left fist with & force that almost stove in‘:l%hnann'n face, and sent the ink-laden pen flying from his hands, causig his feet to kickup under. the, desk, and his-bhead to knock sgainst. the high back of the arm-chair.” As soon &s ho could get out of the chair, Johnigon was on his feet; so also was Btephens, and both clinched, ‘snapping off the arm of the chair, and falling t0 the floor. Of course, all was confusion. -The Cerk kopt cn reading, bub the Councilmen‘in all aris of the hall jumped up, some leaping. over s«;fls in their eagerness to see'the fight. 8o scon as the combatants feli, s lond voice shonted, T move we adjourn I” at which s louder voice cried, **I second it !" “President Miller put the motion, which was adopted by & tremendous aye. ir. Stephens exprossed himself, when he had cooled off, 8 being sorry for his action, but said that no man’ u'h(mlg call him euch 8 name. = He regretted his action only. because it_was done Guring the session, and wished that ho had wait- od until reaching the street, whenha would have - given him more. l[r.Bt'a'g ens is a. large .man, ushod in the face, with mixed gray beard ; while Johnson 18 ‘small, .cuu-mmi,u and somewhat shabby. in appearance. In To- Tharks on the floor he was particularly offen- givein tone and vindictive in manner. 5 - e ‘Eow the of An 0ld Woman Charged wwith Whole= i saic Poisoning. ; Y “From the Cineinnati Comercial, May. 17. The tolk fn regard to the supposed poisoning affair at Germantown, bad the effect. of inducin, the nathorities to take hold of the matter, an ‘an {nvestization was ordored, which was held | botors ‘Sqaire Frank Ingham, in. Germanfown; to-dny. Thetestimony in thecase points strongly to {0k Earhart and his aged mother, both of whom were required togive bail in the sum of 1,000 for their further sppearance. . Mra. Farhart, from talk in the neighborhood, must be » very devil, far suipassing’ the worst ‘crimes ever: atiributed -to:. Lucresis:: is chargod. with having poisoned; d - past twenty years;her fathsr, two of her Fer son'a vife, sud two of his children, and burn- ing heruncle's barn, about five years ago. ‘| vodies, of her sup ils before' us, all the modern: ot i5 about_70- yoars.‘of “age, “wrinkled; y Ty, and uttarly refases o bo futarstorad. . Say osed vietima will all bo dis- int:f!ed next week.- & " THE- LOUISIANA-TROUBLES, . ry of, Gens, Dick Taylors Visit _to_\¥ashington—A Confidenticl Ine “terview with the Président-Grant ! Promiscs o Throw Kellogs: Grers . bonrd. ond . Hecognize 'McEnery — ‘What Induced Bimto Back Down. “Washington (May. 15). Cvér_r:'z‘.apm of the New Fork tling declarations are being ; ¥ gentlemen who_ are perfectly trustivorthy t0 “President Grant’s her 'Tove ‘from.|. ing bedoath | .| to.sorve. "It reems that Packard has refused to . of this Jand. . They intend to reeist the Kellogg " offense sgainst his pretended Governinent aloce. I his advance. by stories .of. increasing -vigor and Wicough * the' Board, |- Touisisns policy. It is said by those who elai 55 speak by the card that when Gen. Dick Taslor *1-was here ‘in Januery he had'a confidential in- -terviow -with - the President, and gave’, him ‘v full | ustory _of the. troubles in .XKoui- ‘isigns, which produced a Erotound ‘impression on the Presidential mind. : Indeed, 8o much was ' . he impressed that he requested General Tayior £0 ropéat his“story at o Csbinet meeting, which . Gederal Taylor did: ~ The result was a determin- :ation on the part of Grant fo throw the Kellogg. pasty overbostd 4nd recoFniza McEnery as the ogally elected and only Iawful Governor of ‘that: State, . This he at once proceeded to do, by.pre- pusing amessage to Congress,. in which ho took | i ground: - Ho gave General Taylor to under: _stand that he had: determined on this change of - plossant thing to suffer. He is known to be wise and strong, and: the very soul of honor;” hoe has Droven on a score of battle-fields that he kno how to lead the bravest of men; and's long ca- xeor of distinguished generosity, ‘and .almost rimitivo purity of conduct has endeared himi to 5 people as few'have ever been endeared within - the reach of history.. Had he chosen to makeths | ows Proneiels Coger, and Siee Do, | 1;21‘5?]-:::.;:3@1%%;1 Hostsads betorothe | ~ TAMUSEMENTS., . ~ RAILROAD: TIME TABLE. o b s 50 ol o AMUSEMENTS. . . . | . RAILROAD TS ot Blo T Sood o follow, aag For vhosi b woetivea | - - : STANDARD HATL, ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS. o pgs { DCAIDORIEE, i, Spring An-:.mgémen{;.’ Nursery and Half Orplian Asylum, i londay Evening, May.19, 1873.. : © 7 COMMITTEE: ~ ~ ! | i e o e * Sun N .. = | o Snday ar 0w e 4 baly, O O T Mrs. Bshlon D. appeal, ho could have assembled a thogsand Ogden, - Mrs. 7. Y. Sen — 2 instoad of the fow scores who. ware gathered |- . 34 B oo - N ¥, & Romae ICHIGAN CENTRAL ¢ GREAT WESTENN RAILROADS Sareaimeted vent 1o a blind apuise bt revenge | Gt Sraneel, Houlaneop: A Fiker : - Zeare, or personal exaltation, - the 160 Motropolitags | Hastine dacksn Jeger PRl B 0. Ord " 3ail {via maln and atr Yoo who lay, 50 1qany days about his very door could | J B- Barmoad, 'H. X.'Towner, '~ 660.'W- Yo DAy By ]:afl\'ve_befzn‘ghm}?st‘ad‘.n emflyuyou hE“‘h AWEP »‘é‘fll:l):Th_m 83 Tickstssdmitting lady and gentle- %‘hhn: jc Expres. o i TH o Eopross: " But Gen. DaBlanc ias sagacious. s 1o is val- | Solo: o ol il tes Bt soe Aopans ¥ RO LA isnt. The proposition hemade wasthat Kellogg's 5 5 Ohandler.. £ Govéroment only existed by virtus “of United |- 5910 Piaoo—Fan : +.-Eahs | GRAND EAPIDS &30 PENIWATEL. & States bayonets, and he found -his ‘conclusions | Song. Gentiomes's Do, J Ry e e reached withoft .the necessity of & blow.- He:| 8aio. Tho Soow Lios ol Sallinn - VENTHOETH, was strong enough to Iorefo the little glory £0 | Bolo.. Eal King..t oo coers, Lizst ° N i Paaionger st 1 magnan{mous enough o'¢on- S, - : : : 3 g Selections by Orchostra. i 3 &) side that thosimplo confdence of his felows | PRimuet PR e i o soe Bk | o, aucn S o it i, e vt thought ; wise criongh £ soo that Fedoral inter- | . Cogcort o bigla at ociack: Tickols canbaiud toin | Gie X SE AN T (hicorply pmor O Tmiod vention obtained- without: bloodshed: was far | “'2 rormiir Dance Programmo after tha. c,,m‘g". i e Feras ey better g0 than yith it. . . 5 “*That he was right, events have proved. ‘The conntry has been aliown. that Kelloge is not o’ Governor in any of the senses . haretofore ac- copted, and yet there is no g’rpun’d upon which us policy,. and allowed him t0 see & rough dratt of mig:’unge.“ “gm.dr ’.... ones h' .2 This, of course, elated Taylor very much, and e was quito jubilant over the accesa.of his ‘mission, _ He u_um‘ed_zi!uibe a number of gentle- men in thiscify that he had succeeded far be- yond- his. expectstions, and"lo several Le intiy mated that he was, enme!ly satisfied with the ‘courye alfaira L taken. . 1t is eaid also that to ‘one or two' intimate -friends 'he 'gave s detailed nccount of what had. transpired-at the.White Houso ;. aud when theso gentlomen oxpressed their fears of the final result, ho declared that he had seen :and rend .the President’s messago, in whioh ha announced his intention torecog 3 McEnery. N b #Epd L “1t is & notoriona fact that Gen. Taylor operly | oke of ‘the” success of his visit, and . on’ the Btrength-of his déclaration’ dispatches were 'sent. from hore stating that & plan of compromise had been agreed upon, which would be entirely satis-* factory to all-parties; but it is certain now that Gen.: Taylor .was - over songuine. Graot -may have promised him to adopt . his views, and may have embodied these views in a message ;. but all &e world knows uu‘: dm.ma:xaaga, 28 it came to ngress, Was positive on only one point, viz. that, hejntandag to sustain Kellogg. R _The parties who are responsibie for the fore- going statements aver that after the message was_ready-to _be sent to Congress jnfluonces wers brought to besr on Grant which caused: him to back 'down. - What these influences were my informants do not agres upon: -'One_gentlo- inan assured e .that Senator Morton learned the resolution Grant had formed, and rushed to the White House to persuade him out of it. : He '] 8 Just in time, snd his arguments were sufi‘: ciently -potent .to cause: Grant to abandon the good resolution +he bad .arrived af, sud the message. was rewritten. Thero ottera equally well informed who tell an entirely differ- ent story about the Presideént’s backing down.. They say it was the influence brought to bear by Brother-in-law Casey that induced Gran to reconsider: his promises to Gen. Taylor, and .abandon the wise and rational policy he had de- termined to adopt in reference to the Louisiana troubles.” - FIEE . SREE + Ihave every reason to believe that these state- _ments, purporting to come from Gen. Taylor himself, are founded on declaritions made by that gentleman while in the city 1ast winter. Of. course it is_possible that Taylor's .friends in- |- ferred more than he intended to convey in his ‘conversation with them, but this can_easily be settled by a statement from him. ; Under the circumstarices it certainly is due the country that the'truth or falsity of these storics should za.gmd.eknown, and Gen. Taylor is the man to o i T Ca e +~ In- this connection'I will'tell the result of an ‘interview: which = gentleman had lately with ‘Attorney-General Williams on the subject, of the processes which Marshal Packard Is trying. give ay information to people in New Orleans 25 to whom thess processés ate to bo served om, or under what statute at large they ardissued. The McEneryites clai they have yiolated o law of the United States; that they have been very careful riot to commit zny indiscretion Government &5 long 8 they can, bu this is an They have, therefore, been curions to know un-. der . what act .of Congress. tho United States Aash 3 acts in meking arreste, and failing to ob- tamn any information'in New Orleans, “they ro- -quest their legal representatives here to..call on the Aflflmerfion«n‘, and ascertain, if possible, whichict of Corgress has beea violated and uu~ der what;suthoriiy Packard is reting.* This was ‘doze, but with no better success. ~The Attornes=: ‘Gencral was unsble_to tell him what law had been violated, or..by. what cuthority Marahul Packard was making oz seeking to make arrests. Ho said they had no information on this poiat at ‘all. All they kiew was that the Kellogg Gov- ernment had to be sustained, and this- they 1a- .tended to do., g i B “What Gen. DeBlanc Ecally Intended, ‘and What ¢ Has Keally Accom= -"'prished, T ; From the New Orleans. Times, May 16. obably thero hias never been an alfair 8o ter- ribly niisundetstood s that of St Martin Parish, : Gen.“DeBlanc's imown charaoter as a goldier of courage and. intelligencs, . and_a man of excep-: ‘tional jnfluence smong his fellow-citizens, seems “to have obscured the fact that he is alsoa patriot _of unblemished purity. . . :- . .. o & The reporter, travoling toward the_.field of ac- tion on Tuesdsy last, was met at every stege of falseliood.. People wero excited between here ‘and Brashear. At the latter poiut tliey were ex- _tremely 80. All.through' St. < Parish meot~ “ings were being held, and the question of send- - BWORT e s e ot puct e angs. Gen, De- La:ura“ Keene, AND HER COMEDY COMBINATION, 13 Tom Taylor's - - ing’ sasistance to Gen. DeBlanc earnestly dis- In Tuoria the excitgment. was. ot fever- heat. “Id tho town of Ne Iheria, only 10 miles from Bt. Martineville; it Wwas confldently believed that Badger was penned jn the Conrt-House, out off from water, and in momentary prospect of being. —sgmk:r}‘?nd lgumhxhd’“ ted. This, g:{ on mn— -day.m -at. daylight, after-Badger acn ,in nndist:r%fid posgession of . St. Martinaville ‘ and its immediate vicinity for more than twenty- T onybody belioved it blindly. Thecirg . . Eyerybody believed it blindly. 8 circnm- farico that Gan, blindly. .fngis o5 e it o Tiths oameidesation. for Others gy =) with hia -rargoral . 5. “#logal Svsatance,” 8o jong and ¢arefully pro- ulgated: by “tho indigrant;” and its perfeot s adaptation-to tho' existing issue—these. things “ wero dying wildly,to the winds, and nothing but blood, demolition, and yeneral war seomed t0 suit this nomnlly.pawefnl;}mhlin. Sins g 8 “Badger's movement, Wednesdsy afternoon, npon “DeBlant's ‘camp’ was maghified into an attsck aud disastrous repulse. lm;ginnfi_a correspond- ents had the Metropolitans fleeing inssnely from the victorious citizens, and just reaching the Court-Hou. ~ by. & neéck. The field was strewn with gore, and the final extermination of Bad- ger's_men was only postponed till after supper- And g0 it went,—exaggeration and misrepre- sentation everywhere, and growing 8 youneazed the scene.. . . - The departiire of two, or ab most three, Metro- politans .on "different: missions was instantane- ously converted into s general desertion ; and the visit of eight young men from St. Mary to DeBlanc's camp Was Hazoned in the veracious Picayune a8 an sccession of forty-five WAITIOTS, armed with Winchester rifles and thirstiog for gore. 3 - Benind the ‘scenes, and , within that charmed: fi"‘l“ wvhflilch .‘;:3' » time &eemed to ’he-clga _szé. artinsville ravent the egress ing ton fack, the' mf:}lfl:{ lookeé:“n‘%{ or was in peacefnl possee: the town, madlfiefllmu invequdly undisturbed tenure - of his camp -threo miles distost. No- miy kil boen killed, snd no_eogagement. bad en placo. That celebrated movement an_Wednaxdny af- ternoon was. simply a reconnoissance by B é ger. He took forty-eight men and & cannoD, anl approached DeBlanc's ‘camp 'in the hope of drawing - him ont and.seeing his exact force. That was all. Tho opposing parties were novor within & quarter of & mile of each other, and 10 ona came within & hundrad yards of being burt. It took very little conversation .with Gon. De- Flanc to discover that o fight was not contam- ‘plated by him, and very little Tefloction to show that his plan wae the only seusible and patriotio one,to pursne. His sttitude was one of non- ocaponion of B Eelleng Coror i ol k2 icy. was w & - Kello; P Eg: _be- enforced without m?nx._:.ucav from the TUnited Statos. i = “1f, in maintsining ‘this, he did not deem it _mecessary to_sacrifice a single life, orsubject 2 single individual ¢ ‘the_penalty likely to follow ~piineceseary viclence, who shall esy he wz8 not wiser than the _publi ly co immense, influence he possesses there, and the 5. the policy af |, Touis on Sound -E;‘Eom "aad tho Explanation of c?c His position -was & |. || ‘singular one. _No man whois uhacquainted with any citizon of St. Martin can justly be punished. Perhaps, in their wrath, the judicial underlings _of Kellogg ‘may geek to wreak upon Gen. De-. Blanc' the savaze impulse of revenge: which P --5copfpnmm$;mmy~nnmi'r o' .J::.khn L, CHARLES H. WILSON; | Wy : Thuraday Afternoon, May 22, 1873, B8 Toots & Banis hcaao dation HOOLEY'S THEATRE, Bt Toukia sy ERE R ‘endered ‘Bim by the entire Dramatic Profession of th o fala R EN T o ot e | Eemich AL it ity their breasts ; bat it will none the less remain’ | ‘ot PSS AL . - City Express, via Jac) true that ho has set Lheir government at naught, | MISS : LAUR A KEENE Jfig::fé;&é'&w”’ o ::;:1 d:‘:ommgl it with contompt before allthe | = . T T TAND Pooria, Keokuk & Buri'n Er.. 1 i e St g ] i 1 % Daily, via Main Line, and dally except Satarday, via Viewad in the light which foliows these devel- MR, EDWIN ADAMS | sscitoniuie bivison. 2 Bt ol Mek¥ ok oy ‘opments, it is not at all improbable that Badger's . movementlast Wednesday afternoon Lad e deeper | Fare kindly coiicnted 15“.'5pm'mpemmn " DI Dy i So'dlock p. m. : CHICAGO; MILWAUKEE :&'ST. PAUL: RAILWAY. motive than appears upon the surface. He must- have been clover enough- to sec that his adver- sary was: outwittibg. bum, and, by & ificent course of strategy, turning his greet expedition into something very like a farce. Probably, Col. Badger being o brave man’ and-an .ambitious man, did not Jike to se. his. presenco iguored, aud Federal intervention just, 18 eloquently in- -vited a8 though -he had:- remained- in New Or-:|: loans ; and probably that little move on Wednes- day was mude in the hope of enforeing a recog- nition - which Gen. DeBlanc was rather con- ,temptuously withholding. - It looka very much that way. : S The fact of Badgers occupation had no in- fluence whatever upon Gen. DeBlanc.* He did |:. - not call for a single recruic the more. . He did ot change in'any way the attitude of his resist~ ance to.Kellogg, and he did not allow hirggelf - to+ bo drawn into. any.act of violence which could | vwith the L 3 6ty endanger Jho LIbGrEy of the PrODErty Of | Temdayeed Fomatay Brenne Buriioy Cumpbeirs et iends. B = - i |.ond greatestsucgess, L'l i took the trouble to talk to him or hnd the intel- loct’ to understand an argumentmore refined than brute force, and, now that the mystery has. cleared away, nis splendid behavior.appears in vivid contrast with the ingane thirat' for slangli- ter which seemed at one time to :possess his s0i=, . . BEST COMPANY 1IN AMBRIC, ¢ Kovetty Weekt s Brillians Gomadilest Mon. dey, tarday, Mat His views wero_ plan enough {o_thosewho it £ S £ ywarfs ast. a ee anml((?:, T EATLR AV AGE: ™ Syiendit s ¢ 3 Z - ACADEMY. OF-MUSIO; - e elastey oppatie herman Houter ind o Dogets SECOND_WEEK and tromendags stccsis of the .’ n'mnn.etsz. Paul & Minnoap-| [}R.A.N]]; THEA.TRE' G[]MI QUE il ;‘H;B: ey g e Mail and E: 83, . * 4230 p, m.|*1120a. m. o e = .3 Milwauokee, St, Paal D~ . . . COMBINATION. . . .'|_olsNghi Erpros. 2lt900 5. m. e 6:0p. m. 38. STRONG SPECTALTY STARS, | - chicace. sUsLINGTON & ouier RalLRoan. epo Footof Lokest., Pulianagr., and Sizteenth-st. dnd Canal and Sicteenthests. Ticket ufie“zdifn ‘Brigze £7- ENTIRE QHANGE OF BILL. . Prices semain as _ | _Houss, No. 59 Clark-st., and at depots. . HOOLEY'S THEATRE.: Wodawday, Briday, e et s Ad. 5 tinse, Tom - WVICTINIS i S er's Grova Accommodation| S ILLINOIS CENTRAL 1AILROAD. fout of Lakest, and_ ¥ P et e Punatale comns oF adieny MoVIGKER'S THEATEE. | “THE BRILLIANT AND POPULAR ACTOR, e atropati athisr wiser ia ih XETI 5 e @ Motropolitans were rathir wiser in {heir A y B Lo judgment. - One of -thie officers mald o our re- EdWln _A_da,ms Ealinp Lner porter, Inst Sundsy:. * I think the boys are tais- | " . .o ~ . - o =9 | Eatr Xxpresa faken'in saying DeBlanc’s men won't fight. | | Ever seoming untll further dotios. and SATURDAY ringriold Expross. They'd gfht fafvr eri‘onzhir ho QDE‘ thamgnln ?&%efififi s groat specialy tounded on Tenzor's | Dubuqae & Sioux Gy even with our Winchesters, wo wonldn't-have if, | cod with d beatifal Scenary and novel Mochaaioal | *Gilman Passsnger: il fon. Tho truth s, o han mamaged to cary | Flecl Sy : pibion Bl s Ber i is point of getting Federal troops here, and he-|- "7~ - yda Park s et v areand for complaint that I can | - . .- AIKEN'S THEATRE, # u'fi::;}::’{::fig"‘m sce. Ho hamn't molestnd Kellogg's offcers. And et hero we are, 400 of us, and the wholo count in an uproar. 1f I am called on for an afidavit, won't know Liow to begin i Blanc has managed. this matter with an intel- ligence somewhat- too elevated for instaut rec- ogsition by the public. He has sot an exsmplo which other parishes msy -follow at any time, and 80 render Kellogg’s whole .administration & ‘over 1,000 rimes in the United States. - ‘Hyde Park furthe )t d at the Wednos- | Hyde o Bt unee, ot : Hiydo Bido Park and **On Satardays thi traln will be run to Champaign. CHICAGO &{ORTHWESTERN ‘RAILROAD. - $ TickenSics, 31 West Hadisons. 3 Zeacs, | Yoods, Park and Oak Yoods! : " famous i -2 - OUR AMERICAN COUSIN! (Unaltered _and - unsbridged). “ LAURA - KEENE as 'LORENCE TRENCIL ufi). a8 Dfidfllfllflh’?fl»fil‘hu Arrive. satire azid a mockery. And he has done it o edly that, save by the " bitterost “injustice; | - Ro remaina in 2o wise ‘amensble to any violated | - . e S That he has won thie fespect and admiration of his adversary is freely admitted by- Col. Badgar himself. That he will secure the.grateful recog-. nition of every true man in the State, is. only a- question of hours. L He surrendered himeelf yestorday, once relcased on parole until Friday. then be brought here for trial. what they.will accuse Lim, beyond well-merited andwes 8t Ho_will “Phiick vs..Good Luck,” ' Tuesday Evening, May 20- |. salo at Bovchor's, 818 West Madison-at. .LIBRARY ASSOCIATION ‘LBGTITB.B- PYPESTprUpTTPE HUEHBEEBEARERE E, - BY REV. J. 0: PECK, '~ CHICAGD, ROCK- ISLAND & PACIFIC. RAILA Depat, cornerof: Harrison and Sherman-sts. Kdmision, B Weat Madlaon-st.” "~~~ od ‘seats, 50 cents. £or contempt for that most absurd and . transparent. pretense which Kellogg calls a government.” < .7 . The Whipping-Post. - NEwcastrE, Del, May 17.—This. was. whip> piug-day bere, and two white and five colored thieves recoived twenty lashes each. One man stood in the pillory an hour as paré of the: sen _tence for cuiling his wife's throat. % . 'FINANCIAL. AT STORE & MIGHIEAR | SOUTHERN .~ RATLWAY COMPANY. = |Pistsas: st NEW ‘SINKING FOND BONDS, | i COUPON AND REGISTERED.. 1 ‘- $6,000,000. - ‘Bonds Dne Oct. 1, 1882, with Interest at Seven per Cent, payuble semi-annuully, . - April and October, at the office of the . _Union Trast Co. of New York. THIRD WEEK AND' WONDERFUL ST“UESS,0F Y SR T OCEANNZICATION. . B es, s forough to pointa {2 tho. oy oiber Tider, o . Leave. * = - AMPHITHEATRE (Formorly Nizon's.). ey Peru Atcamm Night Expreas. . Leaveaworsh & Atchiaoh Bxpross Lesrenw'th& Atchison Ex|710:15 a. m.. odation.. 5:00 p. m.| [110:00 p. m_ |2 7500 m” 1110200 p. .1 7:00 8- m. ;,LAKE SHORE & MICHIGAN SOUTHERN RAILROAD. CHANGE ,OF PR(SBAMME? & comer Harriton and an-sts, iokot ioeey et morthceat cormer G b ameriieet ooy, Clark oad onoiph aitis NG Sepihennt e i g during.the weel. - | - - . - 2 Leswei J Arelze. Mondag, May 19, and overy sHAY. L o8 ho o e ‘ e i 2 11, via Atr MatnLine/® AR08 VAV RN Bt e P"f pala Line® 6:400. m. |* 920 . ma. Alr Line.... £ in (. - |- cHicaco. DANVILLE & ViRicEwnes mILROAD: Panenger Dy ‘cornerar | Famcnay Depetat P, . & S Lowis Dep- SDpE, L DS <21 Preight and Ticket ofice 168 Fushirptr—ts “and O ~Tt, TRNNning on-thie Shortest | .. ife, Arrive. ¢ M en Boutes-between “ie - R 1A EUR EmmjoréAsskG!;‘: RIGA " PITTSBURGH. FOR1 WAYNE & CHICAGO RAILROAD. 1aTES. B lamer s by any other: ~Leare. _asTow ‘CAR ‘reductlon, e Dt SamACR “TicEsta cithor to‘or from oA 7y e B ie OF FREIGHT: Valparaiso BATES ' artf? arras 1 olasses More from Liver SISO UCH S Caleago. 2o Louia | - - - GHICAGO & PAGIFIC RAILROAD. formation, or ht contracts, 8pply atthe s B S L e et | poiorme i ST PO Bk, et . L go_"tlrvfl”mn Block, cormer “fl!ldfll)hmdmfl“lh 5 Leave. Arrize. $800,000; o Ten per Oent. of the Toan, o be ret** annuelly by the Sinking Fund, . Congon Bonds of...... el Eegistered Bonds of §1,000, $6,000 and 2000 €77 WEW PUBLICATIONS. " A Library for Fifty (60). Qenta, rations.—Literata Solence, and His- o o ATmanao and Eight Tribuae. kxtra Bt oo 1-Tlustrated~Tyndall's stx Leo- 2_Buichiers’ Compulsory Edgcs- a0 Sitaation; Phi Loat: 'a God? . Mark Twain's oF andwich TMhisrrated.—Prof, Wilder's Brain e T Ditsovesics ‘of the Congquests; Latters. d 3 jan Extra, No-! Loctare 53 and Alind; Prof; Berkers SiTs Tectu i, Ye s Astronomis 09D B rosont Kapwledge of tho Sun. 2 fra, No. 4—Siz Shakspesresn Studles, e Azt Studics, National Aca 2is Flprim pafters aa dion o Busiaess; ‘Harte's Argonauts of '49. - Lectare Extra, No. S—Ilinstrated—Thres Lectares by ] d Hearing, Voice and or it B Nasteal Hatmony: Prof. flliman’ ’lacor 3 3 Benf, Sllliman's Docy sren Senses: Parke Godwin on B oies Sclonce; Brof. E. L. Youmaus on The Limis or Science. ¥o. 6.—eecher’s Seven Lectures for ectare s, R afa " Tos ' Blinisters- Thoughls upon 3 o e Batling from Fow Fork for Queenstown asd Liverpool evory Sal ~c London dire: Lo =3 L Gen Noxtheast corner Ciark and Randolph-sts. (opgesite new CUNARD MAIL LINE Steam Botween New York, Boétnn,tnnd.fiive;"pool. Steorag Prasage, 83) currency. Passe ‘bool and 11 parts of Europe at lowest sg‘rff%mu;mczflinmn Treland, az 00 9:10a.m. Eekm| watam. 3:30p.m.| 721p.m. 3 0LIS_ & CINCINNATI THROUGH pelnA, fifi'fi"\flfi KANKAKEE nnul’;:“ & tral_Railroad Depot, % “kk A ‘Park Accommodat River Park Accommodation. ot evary fortaight- Pissigo 81, 40, i 100 CUrrenc. . : Price; 94 and Acorned nterest: ar oL A RS DANTNCAN. (T Q ‘Eceursion Ticketa s Tevoratie vates.. Tatandtog pas’|" T N7 Bhngics " cormar iadicon; 12 Waihingion 53 RflBINSON fiHflSE&GO- T T e b, SR T “’m = a1d s ‘tckots from_Liv iy stown, G pm AUDADUL, b e T | i B I oS T | e B > cazency. e % A < Arriy < ¥ aere O Gy Tine ranaiog Satarday night trala to Ciaclana! No, 18 p.oad-ste New Fork. | suupBRiorsien, |, oo o laramtte thotade.”| Pl portomnieht o Drafts on Great Britain, Irelaad, aad the Continent. WILLIAM MACALISTER, - 'l We Ajent, - COAL. 7 e Goal Reduced oal Reduced. o icawanna st $10; Briar Hill, flfi;fig‘gfii‘%‘%fi.‘.fi .S%a ‘mizots Coul, and all kinds of Wogd 8t BGeip 5 65,y Wabash-ay. and Madison-at. MEDICAL CARDS. DR, C.BIGELOW t., Chlcago. CONFIDENTIAL PHYSICIAN, 16} Stateat., Chlasgo. Bherman Houso), Chicago. ESTABLISHED 1840. o FROM NEW YORK: It §s woll hlmlz readers of Lhusrlm lished {an in Chicago, . Bleslow s the ket o s Dr. B: thomost ro- = nown¢ T of the hopored by the press, e G of tha :}:{g&g‘,fizfi.wm&? ol S dical Insritates of the day, o IPE T perfecting rrmedios that will m&fi R o P SOV AND BPECIAL BTSRRRES taboth sexer. - FREE. RATE PARLORS - CDNSULTAT‘.Igi‘HmaI Cm.szgflARK.Esm.‘Dzscé Cabla Passage, 880, $100 and $130; Gold- gocs aod frelght "2, tho Contiaent. ET, Genl West'n Agent, B DY R Tlaek and Handolptrsis. T Beayer-Alsati 1 T-Tho fdeal Pragar- BT e In Citusclss—Society in the Church—The <o, Hpgers of the Cour g b OB Baecher's conclading Lectures: | REEhirta thg Onoreh- Relicions Awakealags-; Thonghts us Expericace; Al L R ewialias - Crosd Statementa, e Ringy - oo Dosib Momace, ” by Boves, : o ‘CHATRS, CRIBS, AND CARRIAGES, Alzo, Ledies’ and Gonts’, Fine Rockers, Bird Cages, &o. &c.___ SCALES. USSR -~ B . STANDARD OF ALL SIZES. L ie ) FATRBANKS, MORSE & CO FAIRBANKS 111 AND U3 LAKEST- unlimited power for good or evil which he is Dividend No. 2 for ladies and R RPIDRANTIAL, Addressall lewters, with stemps, GOV DTRRLOW, Mo, 46l Satest: COBURN Medical Institute, by Tl anda " tory of Sectarian Appropriatior Extra—Credit Mnbllln—Rddum}nndm oy i S Ea T i e S = . £ Wi e Trbane Mmpsg SR H New York: 752 p el ';;’,,,“;‘;‘,:m‘;‘, 5 Hoggwnfi g g:hlflm B WARE. ling teico s wook {ram NYow York, 41l pes. | B Ak Sores. This Institate fa anguestionably ) 2 L f Groat Britain, Ireland, Continental i L for. the 1t of i ILLOW WABR: o | e B S Crmncan: Obla i 35 Stocr. ihamont seleaits 1 £ rale? claule o eciclon, WIL POTTLE, |Sfesiieretamrntors | it ame b Sig L y | B Rerency. Anply for Tall information at the Com- Torid, aad has had more <) O AANUFACTURE T, 8, cumronche ATRY i Groep, New York, snd N, k. | Bioivho'roquito s puniciaa aoter (all o B Ses e - AD B OF Rormer Lasalle and Madison-sts., Chicago. e herh care 200 bandsof Br . A . HENDERSON BROTHERS, Agents. Send twostamps for bis book alo a2 mflszn. 2401 LINE 0 any addro i and 137 Soath Clarkat., Chicago. 1 SPATB ‘:‘MPANY ‘Allconfd Hico Loars: 9 & m. to8 p. m. 3 Sanday, L5 3 todp. m. s D _GLASGOW, LIVERPOOL, BEL- - FEW YORK AND N5 LONDONDEREY. NO CURE! DI‘ K ea; Horin atety | pRAEp e iene Tk s bn e T | NO PAY LY . n, ned in the Store lately | Bler FaltonFersy Brookim, el 4 2 o EIaTing T Do, 435 Wost Hadi- | EESMSYLVARLL Bmions i 560 Sonth Clark-st., Chicago, Biog b repared o offor fine assort- | GTREINYX, 5,40 tous.. - ‘May bo coatidentially ecnsulted, personally or by mal Bon et fawnand Fancy Beskets, Children's | Foriaightly tha : WIN o B Sharge, on all chronic or nervoas disesscs. e t ¢ " Agents, 73 Brosdwar, N- D J. B4R tno aly piyecian in o city who was- Méersas offce, U Brondeny T2 T een Book sent far 60 centa. Tllustratod with numer- ous fine engravings. . DR. A.G. OLIN, 1672 | et et et SheeiSTia 1 he e ot T peivates : Gocens! X tho treatmiont private, CrzvzLum, 0., Aprll® . | O and nertons both sexes. - Seud twir Noticots hereby ghvon thsty by orlar of the Probata | cpy'tor sfcdical Troatie, Pull ifomaton, Cooy 5) per_ceat, paa tasion fres... Correspondence contiden s Courty # diridend of five’ () DO IO, v of Clevoland, e Ttied and gentiomen. Board, attendance, ste. after May 8, 1573, at the ‘National “PRESCRIPTION FREE DIVIDEND NOTICE. Tentonia Insurance Co. o ared to the croditors of the Toutonia Insur. |. baabeesd £ Gluraland, who have proved thelr laims sccording tolaw. - Eerie & For the spebdy cure of Nervous Dobility, Early Decay, oy caa bo b e soplication to 323 the Wholg taof gloomy attendaats Loss of Mere: L JOHN F. WHITELAW, . Engepy, e Aw, dmariat basthe | ris, Ad Assignoe Toutonis Insurancd Co. DEHILTON & CO., Cincianstl, Ohlo.

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