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PHE CMICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: FRIDAY, JUNRE 20, 1873 TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. TERNS OF n\mlnmynnh (PAYADLE IN ADVANCE), .00 Svielay takos, ho suro and givo Post To provout dolay snd m Ofica nddrosa in full, including Stato and County, Tlomittaucan may bo mado olther by deaft, oxpross, Post Ofico ordor, orin registerod fottoss, at our riak. TERAB TO OITY BUDSONIDNS. Diatly, dalivorod, Bunday oxcoptod, 2 conte por wook. Dolly, dolivorod, Bundny inolndod, 80 cants por wook, Address ‘THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Cornor Ma nd Doarbo Ohiongo, 11, TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS, ATKEN'S THEATRIZ-Wabash ayopuo, cornor of Con- +*Zolno, " * groms stroat,” Spootacular oporn, HOOLEY'S THEATRI-Tand . IR AG, Lasaito, H Gurma af Jarpotirests Betwroon MOVIOKER'S TIEATIIEMadison steoot, 1 Doatborn and Siato, Tho Kats Luiser Trovpe Fi5indo & irass, AQAD) MUSIO — ifa) bt Dingon and Mbaros. et ooy S Toen \YERS! OPERA HOUSE-Montoo atrost, Letmoon M Btato aud Doarborn, Moran & Manulng's AMPHITHEATRE-Oliot o A58 Tandbimn B Wag! BUSINESS NOTICES. LYON'S INSEOT POWDER WILL NOT HARM A baby, but tuoy aro doath ta flous, cockroachos, snd bugs, OVAL HAVANA LOTTE it BOLD 1N d":\?ln n!B}A‘;d}'lnl tho :‘mn,om l{flm. Clroulara sont: forma givon. J, B MARTINKZ & GO., Bankors, 10 Wallat._ ¥, O, oz 485, Now York. AND MOTIL PATOHES, ABIC e Niraneler T Botryn Bioth. and raoklo:tation, oty 28 Sund-ate; Now York.. Kot Fimplovon the Eaco, Hipr b et A A R L REMARKABLI: BUCOESS.—~WITHIN THE LAST ton days 2,80 bottios of - Dr. Howo's Arablan Milk Oure #nd 'Tonic havo boon sold in thiy elty. Tha Doctor ra: colvot ovor 200 visitors Isst woek, whom ba oxi sratultously, and ovory ono nll)rm thomeelvos dullnm- o with tholr troatment, and the advice recolvod. It {sto bo hopod Wvl“fl} BoaD i \'or‘l_l wldlh ll‘wfllg{l\'ll:y l‘l’flll: Aotor, whio lonvon ua tu & fow days for his Bo Howvorke' His Tmodicrios ean bo. fonnd at tho drog Sorse, GONEUNTTION. OAN N OURED-SONGNOKE piloanio Byetp, | Bchonok's Keaweed Konio, Hohonok's Binndrako Tiile; ara tha ouly modiciucs tHat will Guro Plinonary Consmiion. . - s Hrequeiy”wodioiacs tiat alopa congh il cocn- son”the radh "ot o vationt, ey ook o e v %0p tho chroulation of! tha bisod, hiamorringo follows, £, b okt Shog tho ot o thd vory orgave \itod tho el “Yivor Complalnt and Dyavopata aro tho causosof two- thirds of tho bases: of Contiiytion, " Aany parsuns com: Inin of a° dut]. pALn In ho, auib, constipetian, soatod Bitios psin . Lt sioulior.blado, foolids of drowaincss sndrostlcasnoe, tho fond Tiog uarlly o the. Alomach, Lecompautod with Boldity And Balohing up of wind, s sypaploms wauelly erlginal (i o dsordorod sondition af the stomach of a forpid Iivor. "Porsons £o aifoctod, i1 tiey tako ane or two heary colds sad 4t Gouet in thoeo cares o suddanly” oliooked, wil i oot anafior clogead, Tomatbig taeplt nd Sinotive, and alinost bofora they Ao’ awara tho inaes of soros and uloaratod, tho Fesult of whleh is HOHENOK'S PULMONIO SYRUP {a an oxpostorant W‘I‘l[ce docs x’m! fl““lfl ‘opium or anything oaloulated to PHERENCR S SEAWERD TONIO dissotvos tho food, mixes with 1tho gastrio julecs of tho stomaok, aids diges- O hoR 1 Howate ars ostiver Siln shtlow, o tho & o bowolh are coutivo, sk - somalathorylne of & biflonatondoncy, SONUNOIL'S BAN- D}‘é\ KIE l"l.]'.,‘,s Aro anl[md‘d e by en art, prepace osa madleteen a7 PTSOHENOK & 8o, The Thicags Teibume, Fridey Morning, June 20, 1873, Tho whoat crop of California this year is ox- socted to exceod 22,000,000 bushols. Awoman was banged ab Sarnis, In Conads, yestorduy, for the marder of her husbsud. e A usury law, fixing the rato of intorost at 7 por cent, hes boen peesed by the Connectiout Benato. The Farmors' Board of Trade, instituted by tho producors of Kano, Kondall, DuPage, snd De- Ealb Countios, held its firat meoting in Aurora yesterday. A boovy mall from Now York City snd New England, for tho Western Statos, was burned Iost Tuesdny while on route by the Now York Central Railroad. Unitad Statos postal cards may be sont, after uly 1, into Canads, under an arraugement made Dby Postmaster-General Crouvoll, upon the pay- mont of ono cent additional postage. .. Xtis proposed that all {he Spanish-Amorican Republics unite in & manitosto calling on Epain- to concodo Cuba her independonce. Colombis Jends In the movemont anid has been joined by Coato Rica. The Warehouse Commissionsrs, who have boou in consultation with the grain men of this city concerning tho changes to be mede in grading grain undor the now law, bave deoided to abolish tho *woighi test” of No. 2 wheat, and to establish a now grade of oats, covering & slight mixture -of biack oats with white, and » now grads of corn containing thres-fourths of yollow grain, = Mr. Prussing, of tho Board of Education, com- Plains that the proposition of the German mom. bors-of tho Board ot Education upon tho subject of German in -tho public schooly is misundor- stood, The proposition is not that Gormau shall be compulsory upon all ; but that & child onco beginning Gorman suall not bo atlowed to dropit. Once bogun by o scholar, it becomes compulsory upou Lim to continuo it or leave school. ‘Tho French Assombly hss consonted, by a vote of 465 to 187, to’ pormit the prosccution of M. Ranc, one of its momhars, who is charged with hiaving takon part in the outragos of the Com- auno, Gon. Cloderet, anothor Communist leador who i under sontonco of deatls, and, to cecape which he has boon wandoring about Europo, haa %aon forbidden by Bolgium to enter fts territory ander pouslty of being given up to thoe French Government. - - y Althongh Busan B. Anthony, whon asked by the Court whet sho Lad to eay why sentonce #hould not bo passed upon Ler, osgorly soicifod the utmoit rigors of tho law, sho was trentod with what muet havo boon uflicting tondernoss o tho would-be martyr. Tha Judge condoanod.- hor to pay s fino of §100, aud Lastenod to add 4lat the uaual yule roquiring prisonors to bo <omumitted until their finee were paid would not o onforcod ngainst her. Anothor project tor o Govarnment freight- Zallroad i submitted by tho partios who met yostorduy in New York, to not in unison with the Amorican Chosp ‘Cransportation Assoclation, formed by the Astor Houso Convontion of Pro- ducort and Consumers last monih. Thoy pro- Poso that & doublo-track roadway, tobo used for roight business only, sliould bo built botwooen Now York and Chicago by the Govornmont, and int it should thon be thrown open to privato 4ransportation companies, who woyld relieve tho | Government of tho oporation of the road, DBo- aides othor ndvantages, thoy olaim that the time «of trausit would bo reduced from ton days to threo, The Now Orleans Tivies donles that there is or Lias beon any Aslatio cholra jn that olty, and insistu that thore ls not a healthior oity in tho country. Upon the basls of this sasortion 1t vigorously assails (Gov, Kellogg for issuing his fuarantine proglamation, aud pronounces the quarsutine & ugoloss nud oxpansive Tumbug. Tt makos, in thia connoetfon, the romarkablo as- bortion that, for sovoral yoars togothor, whon Now Otloans was without quarantine rogulations, the city wos exompted from yollow-fovor visita- tions, but. whon such rogulations wero strictly onforeod tho disonso invariably provailed. Tho Prineipal objection, howovor, which' tho Times maltos to the quoranting s the faot tuat it ia etill further rostricting commorco, which was sufliclontly trammoled bofore. Tho stoadingss of tho movemont up tho Mis- slusippi Valloy from Now Orlonus of a distompor which, swhothor it Lo really the Asiatio cholera ornot, Las counted its acores of victims in o day, and tho possibility that our reoking siroots moy offor {t an invitation it cannot roslst, aro rossons onongh to induco ‘our roadors to turn to tho ciroular from tho Amerfean Publio Honlth Assoclation given p our colums this morning. This momorandum is proparod by porsons of wide exporionco in sanitary mattors, and will bo found to contain valuablo direotions baged on tho oxporfonco of tho Boards of Health of other citios for tho proparation and application of dls- infeotants for stroots, housos, olothing, and siok- rooms, and for proventive moasuros of oloanli- noss which, if used in time, will leave no occa- slon for disinfoctants, Burlington, lost its Opora-Houso, Tow, Gourt-Houso, two hotols, snd all but nino of tho buildings on four blocks by tho dostructive firo of yostorday. conflagration bogan nud tho northenst wind combined to give it a sorlous hoadway, and it was ovorcomo only with tho Lolp of onginos and firomon from noighboring towns. This wns rondorod prompily, the rolicf from Ottumwn traversing o distanco of sovonty-five miles in an hour and o half. Tho loss for a town liko Burlington 8 very henvy, amounting to ovor 8800,000, but Lalf of which is covored by insuranco, . The fivo began at 8 o'clock in the ‘morning, and bofore sunrise tho propriotor of ono of tho hotols destroyed Lad contracted for tho. matorial for a now house. The snme buoyaut spitit is genoral, and it {s promisod that tho burnt district will Lo robuilt within a year, The Chicago produce markots were genorally wonk yeatordsy. Moss pork was ‘quiot and 5@ 100 lower, nt §16.60@15.70 cash, sud $15.70@ 1676 sellor July. Lard was quict and stondy, at 98.30 @8.923¢ por 100 1bs cash, and £8.35@8.40 sollor July. Monts woro quict aud unchonged, at 63@634e for shoulders, 83§@83o for short- xibs, 814@85¢0 for short clonr, and 9}§@1134e for sweot-pickled hams, Highwines woro quiot and stondy, at 89 por gallon. Lako froighta woro Joas activo aud unchanged, at 53go for com to Buffulo. Flour was dull and easior. Whent was quict aund 1@lio lower, closing at $1.20 cagh, and $1.16 sellor July. Comn was sctivo and 10 lower, closiug at 29%¢c cash, and 83}¢o soller July. Oataweromoderatoly active, and }4@2(o lower, closing at 2530 cash, and 26%o sollor July. Byo was quict aud 3c lowor, at 60c." Barloy was dull and lower, at 50 @~B5¢ for poor to good No. 2. Hogs suffersd n' furthor reduction of 10@16c, declining to £4.00 @485, whore they closed steady. Tho cattle trade was dull at woak and irregular prices. Bhoop were steady ot £3.00@5.00. At tho mooting of tho Board of Directors of tho Chicago & Northwestern Railway in Now York, yesterdsy, Mr. Jobn F. Tracy's resigna- Hon of the Presidoncy was accopted, and Mr. Albort Eeop, of Ohicago, was olooted President. Tho result, in & moasure, oxplains tho myatory attonding Mr. Tracy's proffer of his rosignation immediatoly after election at tho annual meot- ing. It{furthor indicates that the Clark-Gould party were not in the hopeless minority that tho Grat oloction led the public o -supposo; but that. “they wore rather in & posi tion to dictate tho terms of ecompromise. Mr. Keop is & Chicagn man, & capitalist, intorastod inl tho development of tho oity, lus boon for many years and is now a Directorof the Lako Bhore & Michigan Southorn Rallrond, With the monagament of that road ho kas long boen sctively idontified, aud will bring to kis now position the cxporionce thus advautagoously gainod. Ho s & cousin of tho late Honry Keop, formor President of tho Northwestorn ; isabout 46 yoars of age, of vory pleasing addross; fa thoroughly conversant with tho requiremonts of the position to which ho hes boon called, and is concilfatory in his viows regarding fho apparent conflict botwaen the railroads and the farming intorests. THE * LEAGUE OF JUSTIOE.” The 8t Louis Republican hosinformation of the oxiatonco of aBocret organization ontirely diatinet from the Granges and the Patrons of Husbandry, known as “The Leaguo of Justice.” The primary object of this Loague iareprosentod ta bo tho ro- pudiation of tho railrosd bonds issued by various county, tows, and municipal governmonts throughout the Northwestorn States, and tho soizuro and common division of landa that havo beon grauted away to corporations by tho United Biatos Congress. Tho information comes from # Bt, Louls gentleman, for whose rosponsibility tho Republican vouchos, snd was obtainod by Lim in conversation, on two separate acoslons, with two men purporting to be membots of ‘the Loaguo, ono from Kausas and tho othor from Iliols, The charscter of | tho Leaguo, os communuicated by thoso 'two mon, ia -rovolutiomary, and its purpose is not morely o provent bond-swindles, land- stenls, and the growth of monopoly in the fu- taro, but to ovorthrow thoso of tho past. ‘Tho Illinols mon and the Kansas man sgrac as Lo tho chractoristics of tlio organization in goneral, but refuso to communicate any of tho dotails. Thoy claim that tho Loaguo is cstublishod in Kansas, Nobraske, Towa, and Missour), and is making hoadway in Toxas, Illinols, Indiane, and -Ohio, Thoy ropredont it as moro Masonio" in charactor than tho Granges, and tho organiza- tion s divided into lodges undor & contral con- trol. A mombership of 200,000 Is clalmed in tho varlous States, Mon alono aro admitted bo- twvoon the agea of 21 and 50 yosrs, “Wo havo arms,” says one of thom ; * wa will heva fuatico, poncably if wa can, but wo will have it by forcs of arms {f wo must.” Roforring to tho local soilrond-bonds and land-grants, ho continios 1 "The League will mako hot work for tha thiving scoundrels yet. You mark mywords: The rallroad compantos that bave hind grants made by Congress will never got ouo dollar after tho noxt year—for the lands —nor will anymanlinves title from them, They shall not hava It, The land belongod to the yeopls, and thoy 1 not fead men to Congrosa to dood away thelr fn- heritance to make s fow men Fich, That {4 not to bo thought of, Wo have 10,000 men in Kenwas who sro sworn to provent it or die, and they mean business, Tho origin of the League seoms to have bsen among cortain ¢lassos in Kankas who had squat- ted ou lands purchssod from tho Indians by Jumes F, Joy. . Thomo wore Indlan lands, and —e ‘Tho eorly hour at which tho | .crushed out. wero novor abject to tho omestond law. They woro givon to tho Chorokeo Nation in oxchango for corlaln lands in Goorgle, whon the Indians woro romovod from that Stato. Bubsoquontly tho Indiana concludod to soll thom, and, at thote roquost, tho Unitod States Govornment offerod thomy through Mr. Ifnrlan, thon Bocrotary of the Interlor, to tho highost biddor. Thoy wero first bought by tho Conncctiout Emigration Socloty, subsoquontly suspeoted to bo o myth, at nlow prico and on long time, Thfs salo was aftorwards sob neide, ond Mr. Joy bought tho lands for eash. Bquaitors took possossion of thom, and eithor rofuscd to pay Mr. Joy any- thing or would congent to glve only tho Govorn- ‘mont prico of $1.25 sn acro, olaiming tho right to sottle on them undor the homostead and pro- omption laws, This opposltion to Mr. Joy ox- tonded to o railrond wlich ko undortook to build through that soction of tho country. Tho rottlers toro up the rails and committed such other ovort sots a8 to roquira the presonco of Unitod Btates froops. Tho purposo of dispos- sossing Mr. Joy sooms to havo boon enlarged to that of dispossessing all railconds who have had Indisn Iand-grants, and all porsous who hold moro than o quartor-soction of such Imnds, no mattor how obtalued. To this purposo hus boon &dded that of ropudiating local bonda issucd in oid of railronds, whioh accounts for tho mem- borship in Ilinois, indiana, and Ohio, ‘Wo should bo slow to beliove in the oxistonco of such an organization ns *'The League of Justico " {8 desoribod to bo It thero had not beon vogue muttoritigs and opon thrents in various quartors, looking in ,that dirootion, Dut, ‘whothor thero is actually an organization of this kind or not, thorois o spirit that euggosts its oxistonco, snd this spirit cannot bo too quickly Thero has boon nowhoro moro stondfast and copsistont opposition to railny land-grants end the loaning of munioipal credit to corporations than Tae Curcaco TninuNe has givon, but wo cannot concodo tho right to any man, nor to auy ot of mon, to undo by violenco what hos beon done in o lawful mannor, Ours is n ropresontativo Government, and tho peo- plo aro dircctly responsible for the land-subst- dios snd lend-stonls which thoy or their rop- resontatives havo voted. Despotism has liad no hond in the busiuesa, . Tho proposition to ro- pudiate tho bonds and seize tho lands which rail- ronds huve socured from Congross, Logislntures, County Commissioners,: or Tovn Councils, is rovolutionary, not in tho sense of putting down dospotism, but in sonso of turning reprosonta- tive Governmont ' into - anarchy. Thore s sovero losson in thesoland-grants and bond-sub- sidios, but it doos not toach that proparty can bo taken back by forco softor it Las been disposed of lowfully, The lesson is, that the peoplo must take caro of . their own in a popular form of government; that thoy must not be blinded by party projudica; that thoy must not pormit thomselves to bo mislod by knnvos; that thoy must koop thoir oyes in their leads, and etop villain in It incoption. Tho peoplo muy make this losson usoful, if thay will, but not in tho way suggoested by the “ Losguo of Justice,” which is uttorlysubvorsive and do~ structivo of ropresentative governmont. | Wo cannot believo that tho farmers, or any cousidorable numbor of thom, will think of dlly-- ing thomsolvos to a rovolution of this kind, Tt s ultimately opposed to thoir most vital intorests, Thoy aro land-ownors. Such & movomont aa this nims at tho destruction of all ownership, It lond, or bonds, or franchiscs, Iawtully acquired, can bo snatohed away from ailroads, then furms may bo soizod aud divided. 1t tho communistio rovolution suggestod under tho namo of tho “Losguo of Justico” should over bo startad, it would socuro its rocruits mainly from tho ranks of {hoso who have noth- ing toloso. Tho farmora cannot afford to entor into & combinntion of this kivd, and it Is gratify- ing to know that tho Grango orgavization has nothing to do with tho “ Longuo of Justios." - - THE FOUNDLINGS HOME, - . One of tho noblest pud most doserving chari- tios in thia city is that organized by Dr. Goorgo T, Shipman, for tho care and maintonanco of foraaken childron, T'he project grow out of his own good heart,and he sot to work with no other capital than tho contouts of his purso aud oi abiding faith that tho importance of lis groat work would ooner or later commend itsolf to tho attontion and eympnthios of obaritabla poor ple in this community. His faith in the ultl- mate succoss of his Isbors and his invinciblo dotormination wero such that ho has nover yob modo o diroct appeal for holp, although the nocessitios of tho institution must havo frpwn Doavily upon his moans, o labored along pationtly, discouraged byno obstacles, until his work bogen to spoak for itself, Obari- -table people began to fiud out the noble work which tho good Doctor was dojng, and dotor~ mined to md him. Tho nows of this oharity aluo bocamo known outeido of tho city, ind ho s00n found that Divine Providenco had rajsed up many frionds who wore glad to contribute in monoy and matorial, and thus strengthon the Lands of tho Doctor aud pucourago him for fucreasod effort in the fulure. Dut the recoipts of contributions havo not kept paco with the noods of the Homo. The tomporary quarters 800 becamo too small. The littlo waifa who had Lithorto boen left to die upon the sidowelkis or in tho ditchos incroasad g0 fast that tha Dovtor was compolled to look about bl for largor and more commodious quartors. With the snmo ebidiug faith in the excellonce of Lis charity and in tho sympathies of charitable poople which ho tied manifested at tho outsot, ho at onco come monced tho eraction of & large and handsome Home. ‘fho walls of the now Ilomo aro nearly fnighed, bub tho work s beon stoppbd for wont of funds, To finish tho bullding will roquio mob loss than §26,000. Tho Tomo e no funds to draw " from, nor ony momms of finishing tho bulldings oxcopt the voluntary contributions of those who aro intorestod in tho work, Mgenwhilo, the “building which s now ogoupiod has boon sold, aud tho prosont. propriotor doxiros £ take poar uosslon In Beptomber next, Tho nocossitics of tho work ara theroforo vory prossing, True to the systom upon whioh ko startod, Dr. Shipman tonds out no solloltors for tha liomo, so that thoso who walt for & sollettor until thoy give will ngver glve at all. An oxtract from tha littlo papor published jn tho interosts of tha Momo saya: *Moy28—~Tho Lord iss mout wondors fully answorod our prayers this moming for Lelp, and givon doublo the sum that was asked. Tho mow bDuilding has again como to o staudutill for tho want of moanu, Yot wo havo no fears but wo shiall bo provided for In somo way whou tho timo comes for us to vacato our present quarters,” In behalt of Dr, Bhipman and Lls benofieont work, wa appeal to tha charltable poople of the community to holp him finish the new Ilome, It s bub o small maount, comparatively, which 1o noada, nnd his work shiould not bo hindored a’ singlo duy for tho Jack of.1t. Thero 18 no moro dosorving class In tho community than thoso 1lttlo waifs, dosorted by thelr” paronts, who, but” for somo such fustitution asthis, would oithor bo loft to a boro ohanco of Jifo or put out of oxist onco by violonco, . Tholr forsakon and lolplaps condition appeals eloquently to the charitable. All other olassos of unfortunstes, tho poor, the slok, the {nsano, aro amply provided for. Tho cliaritablo ‘poople of this clly should now 80 to 1t that theuo littla onos, offsprings of mig- fortuno or shiamo, homoloss and parentloos and: Liolplons, have parontal caro in this oxcollont in- stitution, . It csunot bo oxpeotod that Dr. Bhip- man alone can carry on this work, which lne Inttorly inoronsod go rapldly upon his henda, Ho Lg organized i¢, sot it 'on foot, and got it into good working ordor, . almost unalded aud without troubling the publio with constant ap- ponls. Tho publio should now rocognizo the worl ho has dono, and como forward and-hand- somoly sustain him, and all tho mora gonorofis- Iy fortho renson that ho has not importuned thom for ald, but Lias trusted to thooxcollenco of _his’ couso for ita support. Ho has had his ro- ward in the good lio has slroady done, and no man could wish & prouder and more onduring record than the sucocssful establishment of such on institution. It holongs to our citizons now to do tholr sharo of the work in guarding the Homo againat any possibility of having its neo- fulness impairoed for Iok of funds. © BAILROAD PASSENGER RATES, - Tho now Railrond lnw will boneflt the traveling publio, ‘Ratosof farearo tobe lowerod after July 1. Tho proposed roduction is not very Inrgo, yot it will Boa woleomo concossfon. It may not fmmediatoly apply on all the ronds in this Stato, bub tho Joading lines will Do forcod into the reduction. 'Tho Ohicago, Rock -Txland & Pacific Railrosd Company insugurated tho downward movement. Thoy would b compollod by thofr charter toraduca tho rate of fares in Towa. 10 83¢ conts por milo aftor Sopt. 1, and, thinking it bost to malko their rates uniform, thoy resolyed to oxtond tho reduction ovor all portions of thoir Yuo. ThoNorthwestorn and Ohicago, Burling- ton & Quincy, bolng rivals of tho Kook Taland Dotwoen Chicago and Omahs, wore forced to odopt the snmo rato, Tariffs on that basls are now boing madoup by tho throo Companies to cover all their lincs and branches in illincis, Jowa, and Wisconsin. North ‘of Fort Howard, tho Northwostorn will rothin its prosent taxift aa {ar as Escanaba and beyond to Nogaunoe, where, by tho rocontly-onactod law of. Mickigan, thorate isfixedatGeontapormilo. Byawizo provisionin- gorted in tho Tilinols law during its passage, an oxcoption’ was mado, ‘pormitting the'issuo of oxoursjon and commatation tickets, It isnot oloar why the samo principlo should not equally apply to tho Lioavy shippers of freight. ‘Tn thoir rospeative olassos thoy aro fho mont constant and profitablo patrons of tha ronds, and, as such, ara ontitled to spocial considoration, Tho Xilinots Contrs] has not yot come into the ‘arrangomont. InIows, tho Company cauuot de- Iay complianco longor than Bopt. 1, boosuso, boing a land-grant road from Dubuquo to Bioux City, accoptanco of tho grant recog- nizod tho right of tho Legialture to prosoribe tho 7Tates for passongors and frolght. The ' ssmo obligation reats upon the Rock Island Gompany, aud upon & portion of tho Northwostornin Towa. Tho threo lines and the 0., B. & Q. boing parallel, aro compelled to nccopt the lowest rate forced upon elthor Com- pany.’ Tor a timo the 0., B. & Q. objooted tos reduc- tion of passongor ratoson its soversl branches in this Btato, ‘Thoy could woll sfford to trans-. pork pussengors over tho main line at 83 conts por milo. "Bt the nocosslly of muking the rato umform was recognizod, aud tha probabllity is, that comparatively fow railrosds in Illinolu— thio oxaaption boing tho -struggling, non-divi- dond 'compgulos—will chargo mars than 83§ conts per mile.aftor tho 18t prox.’ GRANTING ABSOLUTION. Tho Buftalo Commercial Advertiser, an ordi- narily intolligont papor, fu o lsto number saya : ‘There woro many smong tho rauk and filo of the Ldboral party whoso defection ths Republicans can “forget nud forgivo, Thoy wore deceived by their leaders, and led astray iikeshoop, Butas for the arche conapirators in’the Liboral revolt, there is no room ns et in tho Republican heart for eympathy or forgivo- esa toward hom, Sympothy and forgivonoss are sdmirable traits of charactor, and ought to ho cultiyated on' ail propor oceasions. When, Rowever, it js pro- posod to oxtond eympathy sud forgivencea to othors, tho rolativo positions of both partios havo o beatlng ou the matter, When forgive- noss oand sympathy are not asked or wantod, tho offor ‘to’: glvo o with- hold tho - eamae- is bLoth euperfuous sud chocky. It moy bo worth whilo to axk, How- oyor, What party stands most {n neod of forgive- nosa? The parly which elected the Progidont in 1872 olso oleofed {ho Gfato Govornmont in Pounsylvanis, . The latfor was o pio- requisitoof tho formor, Dogs tho cltizen who mneither approved nor contributed to the vigjory in the Pennsylvenin election stand inxoed ‘of, sympathy from those who porpotrated that of- fongo nguinst publio degonoy, which sot a pro- mium on forgery, perjury, aud robhery? T tho parly that ‘stands = rosponatlie for " the Orodid DBobilior, with its at- tondant perjury, falsohood, and gorruption, in a condition to oxtond uympathy and forgive- nosa to those who are nob within the pale? Is tha party that rocontly perpetratod the salary~ grab,” and robbed tho Natlonal Treasury of o 1illion and a quartor of dollars, in o situstion to talk of sympathy and forgivenoss to othora? Whion, in tho history of suy Administration, wps thore such & humiliating apgetacio as tho proven bribery of o sooro of loading stateamon, sud the Executive pardouing & conviclod: bLallot-box atyffor, aud appointivg an impeachad Govornor to n high Fodoral position na evidonco that offcial corruption was mot rogarded by him as o bar to Exoculivo or Republi- can rocognition? And tho “purty,” from' ono end of tho country to tho olber, spplauds tho disgracoful exhibition. Do thoso ‘who are not responsiblo for these aots, and who continue to hold publio dlshouesty as some- thing roprokeusible, atand in nead of sympsthy and forglvoncsa from the ofMop-haldivg crowd whoso busincys is to Uuk tho laud thet feods thom 7 * Wo do not aupposo there i & poreon in tho United 3tatos who left tho Ropublican organiza. ton in 1872, sud who dogy pot now Kook au of- flco, who fels tho loast regret for bis aotlon, nnd who {8 not proud that be is no longer, oven in appoaranco, rosponeiblo for tho practicos which dofile the Ropublican organization, Natlonal, Btato, and municlpal, throughout tho country, The Ropublican party has nothing to do bub to make mouoy for ity managers, It doos not gonorally fail in this objact, but whon it deon 1t comos bhiort of Ita mission, Aud this would Do bruo inovitally of sny party whono principlos woro da faclo ncoomplished, At this day, tho Proaldont of tho Untod Stntes, ot the ery of his associatos, bids tho troops of the United Btaten to hold Loulsiana to tho eartl, whilo the party, whito and blnols, rob and carry off every vostigo of tho proparty of tho paoplo. * o Buffalo or- gon offors sympathy and -forglvonoss to thoso who protost agalist this orimo! It, howoyor, succoss 1s suporior to all othor considerations, fa tho proont condition of tho party such ag onlitlos ftfo oxtond sympathy and forglvenoss Lo thoso not within the palo 7 Has tho Buffalo organ hoard of tho Farmors' Movemont in the Woat, whoro tho poople, do- elariug tholr putposo no longor to bo gulled by olther tho Republican or Domooratio party, bave rosalvod to linvo a party of thelr own ? Has it heard of tho Ropublican party in Towa, with its 60,000 majority, now on ita lmees bogging for ita oxlstonco untii aftor tho oloction in Gotobor ? JHus {t hoard of tho goneral rovolt, whon Ro- publicans who, in 1872, votod tho Ropubii- can tioket, now resolvo that thoy have no falth in tho Oredlt Blobiliors, tho Chotponning sud ‘Becor jobs, or 'tho snlary-grabbers, and will honcoforth support no man for offico who nc- copts n Ropublican or » Domooratioc nom- instion? If tho Ropublicen party in Towa, by eraven supplication, do manage to cloct their Govornor at all, it will bo tho Inak time thoy will oloot onytbing in that Riate. The' municlpal and ;local governments and Legielatures of the Westorn States will bo wronchod from tho Ropublican pacty as fast as tho oloctions come round; tho rovolution agalust old party humbugs will oxtand until tho Placos which know tliem now shall kmow them 1o moro forevor. For a party thus standing undor fmponding annihilation, desorted by tho groat multitudo of its mombors, to talk of granting abeolution to outsidors, ia a pioca of romarkablo insolenco and stupidity. HOW PROTECTION DEFEATS ITSELF, ¢ The question s ofton askod by candid men, ‘“ How will you raieo the rovonue which wo now neod witbout high- dution; or muok incroase of imports 28 to completely dostroy our manufao- tures? Is not tho tariff quostion proctically sottled, for tho prosont at least, by the oxistonco of & lieavy dobt wwhick compols us {o raige o large rovenue?” ‘Iowéver absurd edch fnquirics 806m to thoso who havo. oxaminod tho subjeot, thioyaro tho natural oxprossion of doubts which want of information prompts in candid minds, and should bo mot by facts, Bt ‘It {s truo theso doubts would in part bo ro- ‘moved by a fall undorstanding of ono of the first ‘principles of political cconomy,—a principle cé- tablished not ohly by thoorotical reasoning, but by tho oxporionco’ of sges wnd of mony pations,—that within cortain limits evory reduction of duty will rosalt in on incresso of rovemuo, Ib causes an in- crongad consumption, and tho lowor duty on tho Iarger quantity imported will yiold more revenuo than tho highor duty on the smallor quantity, firat, bocauso the highor tho duties the higher tho additional charges which triders must make to protoct thomsolves from logs by fluctuntions in tho market, and o obtain roturn for tho Iarger‘capiial requirod in tho handling of & given quantity of goods, thoso charges oporating aen gort of duplication of the duty and ns nn added obstacle to consumption ; second, becauso \tho higher duty tends to causo more of ovasion and undervaluation ; and third, becauso reduction of cost within cortatn limits prompts In- croaso of consumptfon in n etill greator ratlo. Dut in epito of thoso reasonings somo doubt atill romains whothor {norohsed ime portation might not destroy our- manufacturas, &nd whothor such an incroaso as would not break thom down would sufiico for tho large rovenne now noeded, But fow, oven of tho most intol- ligent froo-traders, are aware how complote au answer to thoso doubts ia furnishod by our own experionce. Lot us oxamino the faots regarding #he manufacturo snd importation of cloth, and supposo that the dutfes and prices of 1860 had in 10 way boen altered by protectiva intormoddling, Wo may infor that tho growth in production, in importation, and in consumption of cloth would each havo advanced at the ssmu ratio at which onoh actually advanced during tho ton yoars of low dntios ending in 1861 2 . During that poriod the manufacture of cotton, woolon, Worsted, sill, and linon goods actuslly “adyanced 76 por cont, according to tho consus Teports of 1850 and 1860, According to the Treasury rogords, also, the importation of all goods of tho eame kinds actually advanced 76 per cent. Both progrossed with romarkably ovon pace, but cach increpsod far moro rapidly than the population. Clearly, an equal incronsp in ‘Doth during the Inst decade would not hayo do- stroyod monufaoture. Rut, would it have ylolded sufticiont revenuo, or pormitted a growth of manufacture materially loss than has actually aceurred ? e From 1850 to 1860, the manufacture of cotton 008 pdvpncsd 76 6-10 por cent, and the lika incroase until 1870 would have /givenus & pro- duotion of 2,021,813,749 yards, whoross, . no- cording to the cunsus, we actuslly medo only 1,003,000,000 yards in that yonr. But tho roduced consumption of cotton during tho War L oaushd p cpnsiderable chango in tho use of woolon and worated ingtend of cotton goods; lot us supposo that thokame chango hiad fakion, plage ynder lowor dutios. - Wo gousumed in 1800 soven aud one-fifth yards per capita of woolon and worsted goods, aud {n 1870 oight and ono-Afth ; on incronso of ono yard tocuch poraon, Bt opo yard of woolon sud woratod goods in tho avorage caunot bo counted as equal in wear to more than four'yardsof cotton; if, tho, wo had sybstituted ouo yard of woolen and worsted for four yarda of cotton, thoro would have boon & docronso of about 160,000,000 .yords in tho uso of cot- ton, which, divided botweon manufacturo ond ” imports, ot the ratlo of produc- tion to fmports in 1860, woud bo = losa of 108,000,000 yards in production and 53,000,000 yards in imports. The produotion, inatond of 2,037,813,740 yards, would thon havo beon 1,019,818,749 yards, or 850,000,000 yards groater than the actusl production in 1870, Again; tho manufsoturaof woolen aund woratod g90d5 proguced, in 1860, only 82,200,053 yards, sud in 1800 {¢ producod 147,647,802 yards, au' in- croase of 79 8-10 por gout, Ifad thy manufed- turo ndvanced at tho samo ratio until 1870, wo should have produced of woolen and worstod gooda 205,400,855 yards, whorsss we sopyally producoed only 190,077,042 yards, Hondo, with- out any allowanoo for ohange from coiton to woolon goods, and without protoction, tho manufacture should have. produced asbout 76,000,000 yards more of woolon and worstod goods, advancing at tho rate of the last docade of low dutles, than it hag potually produged with protoption, and with tho chango from cotton to woolon! It you now ollow o farthor licronso for that change, divid- ing tho one’ yard per capita nccording to tho rolio of imports to productlon of woolen and worstod goods in 1860, wo hinvo 25,063,000 yards moro for production, and a total product, of 290,528,805 yards as tho resnlt of mannfaoture undor low dutles, whoroas 100,677,042 yards has boon tho rsult of " protacted " manifaoturo. But the question still romaing whother the imports would havo ylelded at low duties tho rovenuo neoded. Now, tho Imports of catton 8o0ds advancod 76 por cont from 1850 to 1800, and at tho same rato we should have tmported 906,069,798 yarda of ocotton goods In 1870, or, doducting 53,000,000 yards for the chango from colfon to woolen, 84 069,703 yards. Tho fncrosso in number of yards from tho 320,776,080 importod in 1800 s 63 por cont; hiad the importa of other: cotton goods advanced In tho samo ratlo, tho ontiro ‘valuo of imports of cotton, which- wes 893,660, 000 {n 1860, would have boon 848,040,000 in 1870, nnd ab tho 24 por cont duty of 1860 would have ylelded a rovonuo of $11,678,000. But tho pro- tootive dutios of 1870 satually yiolded from cot- ton goods only 9,206,000 rovonuo, Again ; tho imports of woolon and worsted §oods (oxcopt carpets) in 1800 woro 05,304,423, and tho incronso sinco 1850 had boon 120° per cont, Had tho samo incronso continued, wo should bave imported 877,807,628 of such goods in 1870 without allowsnoo for tho chango from cotfon tfo woolon. Allowlng, thon, for that chango - 19,495,000 yards at the avorago pricc of Imported . goods. in 1870, or £4,729,260, wo havos total importa~ tion of waolon and worated goods of 862,690,878, aud 6t 24 por cont duty this wonld ylold s rov- eonuo of $19,218,107, . Tho notual revenue ylelded by protoctive dutios on all woolen and worstod goods (oxcopt onrpots) in 1870 was §20,577,900, Houco, with tho samo dutics in foroo in 1800, and with tho incrdased consumption prompted by low pricos undor the last docado of .low dutios, wo should havo obtained almost tho same rovento that protactivo dutios bavo yiolded, and yot man- ufactured 100,000,000 yords moro of woolon goods. Tho ontire rovenuoobtained from woolen aud cotton goods, nt the low duties snd with tho incronso of tholast docade continued, should - havo boon $430,891,700, whoreas tho actual rov- onuo undorprotoctivodntion was only $29,763,900, Bat the manufecturo, instond of productng 1,009, 594,204 yards of cotton and 190,977,042 yards of woolon and worated, it incronsing procisely na it did incroaso undor low duties from 1850 to 1860, only subsitnting ono yard of woolen for foar yards of cotton per capita, should have produced 1,019,619,749 sards of cotton and 200,620,856 yards of woolen and woratod goods. The total production of 1870 under low dutios should have ‘Dboen 2,210,997,604 yards, whereas the production of 1670 undor protoction waa only 1,254,571,830 yards. Protection has rotarded the manufsc- turo by 1,000,000,000 yards of cloth, and has cost tho Governmont over 1,000,000 in loss of revenuo, Meanwhile the une hoppy consumors, the cost of whoso clotly haa boon incrensod 81 per cont, psy ns mpch for 1,254,571,896 yards as thoy would for 2,019,869, 850 yarda at tho pricos of 1800, tho poor soam- etroseos got losa wages in gold than thoy ,did “thirteen yoars sgo, and the ‘much-protected oporatives, recelving 44 por cont moro wagoes than thoy Foccived isi 1860, pay 60 por cont more for tho necossaries and comforts of lifo, 'Buch is protoction ; o solf-dofenting blundor ne s fevonuo mossuro or a8 a stimulus to manafac- ture, an outrageous swindle as a pretended pro- vision for the weifaro of American labor, and s wholesale robbery of the entiro nation of con- umers. Miss Osrpentor is engaged in New York in ox- plaining and advancing the Crofton prison re- form, which has boen tosted in Irand with ad- mirablo results, It 18 o called becsuso Sir Willism Crofton, though perhaps not tho origi-- nator ofit, introducod and perfocted it in Iro- land, Undor this systom, which by no mosns disponaos with tho idoa of puniehmont, ' the prisoner is first remandod o solitary confine- ment, where ho s kopt for o timo on'bread and wator. During tlus confinemont ho'sees no one but his keepor, whoso duty it is to oxphin to tho crimmal tho systom of probation and roform upon which ho subsoquently ontors. Aftor the allottod time of solitary confinoment has passod, tho oriminal ia put to work among the others, Toro tho marking systom begine. Tho labor is all done in common, and oaclt day's conduct haa ita influoncs in shortening or longthoning tho duration of confinomont, In- dAustry and good bohavior msy shorton tho torm at lonst onc-third. After this probation, the prisoner gocs one grado higher, when ho re- colves wagos and has moro timo for application to books. Thoro is still another grado whoro the prisoners work in the open flold withont kegper or barrior, aud ‘retun to tholr barracks at night, whon nothing hindord their aseapo. Tn this grade ovorything igintrusted to thoirhonor, The theory is, that tho discipliue thoy have’ passed through up to this timo has propared thom for this last test, and, if this proves to bo, tho caso, thoy, aro cortainly well fitted to go out into tho world sgaln. Whon they go into nocioty, thoy have something with which to bo- g!n ifo, which thoy bavo oarned during sorvio, and they remain for a time under polico sur- veillanco, reporting: to the publio authorities at sfated intervals, Tho ‘systom hes worked wondorful roforms fn the Itish prisons, turning out, it fa cloimod, thoroughly rofqrmed men, Tho fall extent of tho salars-stoal is not yot thoroughly understood by the people, Thero is la a goneral impression that tho enlaries of tho Prosident and mombors of Congress were on- Jarged, but that tho riso stopped horo, Tho fact in, that the incroaso of salarics included a large forco of othor persons iy the Goyornment sor- vico, Tho salary of tho President wns'in- oronsod §25,000 a year; that of each Con- grossman 92,500 a year; thoso of the Vieco~ Prosident, Bposker, SBuprome Judges, and the sovon mombors of tho Oabinot, $3,000 & year ench, All tho.Assistant Scorotarics had their ealaries ralsed $2,600 each. All tho Commis- sionors nocured an advanco of $1,00Q esch, The Buporyising Architoct of tho Traasury, the Ho- lioitor of the Tremsury, tho asafstants in the Postmasator-Genoral's ofiigo, and all the Audifors fmjoysd sn’ Inoronso of 91,000 each, fTho sularlos of ilio ‘Hocsojary: of -tho. Honato, tho Olork’ of tho Touso, fho Ohlof Clork and Journal Clork of the Houso, and all'tho olarkn and aesistant clorks, tho dogrkoopors, and tho asltant doorksepory, Postmastors, aud As- slstant Postmastors, and everybpdy else gon- nectod with tho Senate and House, came in fora share of thio grab. Aftor speoifying & long list of oftlolnls, Congross seoms to have foared thot somebody might have beon overlooked, and mado & goneral clause providing that everybody i olso {nor abont the Capitol bufiding, not othor- wiso provided for, should have au fncronso.of 16 par cont, aud addod that the now salarlos should bo payable * from tho bogluning of the prosont Congrass, or from tho dato of thelr appointmont during tho prosont Congrosn." Thougl wo hoar of o doflulto mnovement for tho ropenl of tho Balary-Grab Jaw at the noxt sosslon of Congrons, 1t is alrondy intimated that thoro will bo o combination o rapeal the bl whiok abolishod the frankiug privilsge. Ono of tho many lamo oxousen that have boon mado for tho salary-grab was tho sncriflco of tho franking privilogo and mileago, Tt would boa vory con- slatant Congrosslonal polioy to restore tho franke Ing privilogo and then tho miloage, loaving the salary quostion whora It stands now, Tho argu- mont is advancod that {t will roquira batwoon 700,000 and 81,000,000 to supply tho scales with which to wolgh mail matter, tho cironlars of instructlon, the appropriation of atamps, tc., and that tho sbolition of tho franking privilogo is xosponsiblo for thls oxponditure. It tho ox- pondituro of any such smount ns this ia contom- Platod, it bears tho evidenca of fraud on tho faco of it. Instead of sorving a8 an argument for ‘the rostitution of ono of tho worst abuses the Governmont Lus tolorated, it shonld demand an {nvostigation as £o tho waya and moans by whick | anothor million is roquired to maka tha roform practical, — Tho obituary rocord of tho past fow wooks in- cludes sovoral distinguishod namos. Among them aro Fraderick Ludwig @. von Raumer, tho eminont Gorman historlan, whose roputation ig world-widd; Philippo do Sartiguos, who hos loft govoral worka on polltical cconomy of high ropute; Baron von Kubach, the Austro-Iungarisn diplo- matist; John Gemdon Hotton, tho woll-known London booksollor and publisher; Frederick Pincknoy, for-forty years Doputy Stata-Attorney of Baltimoro, and son of tho distinguished Jaw. ‘yor and atatosmen, Willlam Pincknoy ; Halil Posbo, Grand Mastor of Artillery in tho Ottoman army, who crdated tho Ordnance Dopartmont of Tarkoy ; Josoph Broch, for many yoers Prosidont of tho Massachusotts Horticultural Soolety; and’ Wolfgang Monzal, ono of tho greateat po< Tomical writors Germany has over produced: ITo wag 8 violont opponent of Gootle, Hogol, and Voss, and held his ground for many yoars, but ‘waa finally ovorthrown hy Heinrich Heine, who mado him o laughing-stock all ovor Gormany. Tho jury question is about to come to an fssue in Germony. Bayard Taylor, in ono ‘of his lottors, oxplains thut'thoro are two forms of the jury systom in uso, the .Schoffongoricht and Schwurgerlcht, Tho lattor corrosponda with our systom, but tho former ia poculiar to Gor- wany and Gorman Rwitzorland, It reserves all quostious, both of fact and law, to Judges and Jurors, who meot togother and roturn a common vordict. Tho Judges avo gouerally threo in number, sud the jurors mnot moro thon six. In tho draft for tho crim- inol codo which has boon submitted to tho TImporiel Parlinment, tho protoronce is givon to tho Schoffongoricht, Tho pooplo 23 a wholo aro opposod to tho Jury systom altogother, upon tho ground that it is & Fronoh importation. Tho advocates of the systom havo thorefora vory shrowdly sought to show that it was orig- inally the creation of Fathorland, that it thonce travelod to England and France, and attorwards camo buok to Gormany, whero it was completely dovelopod, e The mixod question which so long disturbed the English Coust, what it should do with the four wives accompanying tho Shah of Persia, waa forfunately solved by tho Shak himsolf while at Moscow, by eonding all four of them back to-Porsia. It soems that whon the Shah arrived at Moscow ho found apartments pro- vided for himaolf in tho palaco, but no provi- sion made for his Wives, whom Lo so- corlingly sont to u country houss. Thoereupon tho wives got indignant, ' and | wore loud in thicic complaints ot such treat- ‘mont, Tho Shah gont for them, and, attor giving thom a lacturs upon their conduct, ho informed them, notwithstauding their tears and protesta~ tions, that thoymust go back; anda fow hours b~ Zforo His Majesty loft Moscow the Iadicsatarted by railway for Riszan, on routo for Porsis. One can faindly fmagino tho foolings of tho quartotte ng they went back with tho proverbial flea in their cars, only to bo Iaughed ot by the othor ladios wheon thoy ro-entored the harom at ‘Teheran. NOTES AND OPINION, Tho Administration is preparing to moke & gigantio eftort to *pavo Ohio” in October. —The Davenport (lows) Gazelte (organ with Post-Office attachmont), ‘continnon to lament that the Gravgors will go into politics, and says: 3t il hardly do for men engagad in atch businers to plead o dusito for political resorm, 1t doea mot ffe in thoir mouthis t0 gy,:! The 0ld parlion are corrupt, 2 we must etart ailother ono." ‘Lhey ‘entered thy ‘Grange kuaiving that lts conntifution forbde politieal action, and under o pl!(!f{u that this provision. would be pustainod, If they will {rample down ' rile so easontial to {Lio harmiony aud pornisnency of thobrdor, liow can they bo trusted with tho management of pub. Hoamairs? —Also, the Hllinois State Journal (orgnn with Intornal Revenus attachrhent) lnments that the farmera will colebrate Fourth of July ag an in- dopondonce-day, It says : What are, aftor all, tho presont accilonta of clieap gormand Migh trelgilts, i commariaon Wil fhe rich Toritago of poiltical bickalugs which liava beew senred for ua and our Rostarity by tho founders of our wone derful systom of govornment ¥ Must we forego cole~ ‘brating the lattor, bocausa we have more Lreadstuffa in tho land thon 'thore 4 a profiablo wmerkot for 7 Bl tho glorlous Fourth of July losn its significenog becauso thio rallroad corporations hava 1o ouls and il fusist on clarging oxcossive raies to {ha shipping community 7 ~A list of the fourteon Sonators who had, up ta Juno 11, put their back-pay Juto the Treasury, 1 tolographod from Washington to Administrae tlon papers, with the romark that it may bo rov Yod on, viz: Anthony, Bayard, Cassorly, Chandlor, Fonton, T. . Forry, Frolinghuysen, Hemllo, Pratt, Solurz,. Scott, Sumuer, Tlur- man, and Wilson. Will tho Hon. Oliver P, Morton, Aloxander Rauncy, and John Shormau riso and explain? Thoir local organs, loug ago, anid that thoy had refunded the money. . —Tho throa Congressmen of Now Hampshire votod loud and long ngainst tho ealaty atasf, and #Qid not draw it." Altor tho cloction in March, thoy all drow it. 'Tho four Congrossinon of Con- poctiout also voted loud aud long sguinst the ealery stenl, und, saying thoy ** did not draw it," overy ono wa re-olected in April. Of the Con- nootiout Congrossmon outy Mr. Btarkwoathor hag ‘beon heard from, contributing &1,699,20, Tho othor Connooticut Congrossmon gro: Josoph T. Hawloy, Btophon W. Kellogg, and William H. Barnum, —To what dopth of dogradation tho publio morality of Massachusotts must have some, un- dot ¢ho ruld of party politios. The Spriugfeld Republican pays ;™ * - % TN Butlor'goca fiito fuls ngm wit] s, Aruo, bo Baw tiid sal th unusia)ly propittaye omone 10 2grali on his whouldaiy, sud ig handicspped to that estent, That may lost iy Aho pace, s it certainly ought to, ‘and as fn any Weath ern State of cerfainly would, But ho makes Hght of thin self-imposod hurden, airily pronouncing it i ‘morosy hagatello, which hio would a little rathor casry that not, “Tho ovont will ahow whethor ho judges copy rectly of the tompor and average morality” of ‘Massge chusetta voters, —Hero is & platura of “the naxt Governor of Massachusetts,” drawn by tho Boston Journal Qon, Butloy by 0ot » Felormey of Kbwsos ; L iy [}