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TIIE CHICAGO DAILY DULUTH. The Pine-Top Town in 1873--- The Pulse and Peri- if cardium. People, :Pruspecls, and lrfipr_qvcgpen}s There---A Quicter Ambition, but Hopéful. ) Gountry Opening Around the Lake- Head, *= - From Qur Own Correspondent, Duswg Jund, 1870, When T arrlyod at 8t. Paul,"in .the afternoon of Juno 12, my atiention wns most ongagod,— ot with tho striking sppearanco of tho ecity a8 it stood on the bluft with its long linoes.of stono hiouses and atores, nor with the bold bridge which crossca tho Miselssippl at n steop incliua- tion, and pormita stoamors with tho tallest ptacks to pass under ita upper pior, whilo o com= mon cart could nob go under the plor attho othor gide,—~but with n long linoof cars ou which ware {pseribed the words : 4 NORTHERN PACILFIC RATLIOAD,"— tuat topic of logislntion oud financo for Bo many gyears in oll parts of tho country, but which now gave mo for the first timo n viiblo presentation of;ilself. Ina fow days, I found mysolf ona comfortablo blooping-car, of tho Pullman pattorn, on thia road, looking out of tho window upon passing Inkos, ropids, and groves of alm and fir ; and, svhon I awoko in tho morning, after s “comforl~ ablondoe of 130 miles, I hesrd tha roaring of the " DALLES OF THE BT, LOUIS MIVER,— perhaps the most isolated of all ouz benutiful stroams in the interior, ‘ho wator camo thun- doring down & gorge, its surges Linted brown with tho juicos of balsam and tnmarac,—green fslands nmidst the billows, and groat, casteliated pilos of rock toworing abovo tho smoko and churn of tho watera. At this point, the Northorn Pacific Railroad proper fell away in the forest bobind us, aud wo do- seanded tho high bank of o rivor, nmidst scon~ ory ns unoxpoclod na it was startling and won- derfal, For 10 miles tho St. Louis River pro- coeds in this manuor, widoning in places almost 10 the oxtont of tho Horscshoo Falls at Niagsss, aud again narrowing betwoen precipicos, whero the stroam ceasos to appoar, snd only tho hoarso rorr and smoke which ascend mark tho fact that ihore it is engaged in & torriblo strugglo with it- pelf. Tho banks aro ofton 200.feot lugh, com- pased of shale, eand, and bouldors; and tho road i copstructod on a sholf Lown from the face, or scarp, of what 18 nomly © mountain covored to its summit with forost-oals. Tho fall is 500 feot in ‘the course of this ride, and I am suro that nono of the sapids of the Bt Lawronco River preaonts such grand scenory,—all tho moro won- aorful from tho fact that, m the forest-lovels above tho Dallgs, tho Bt. Louia overflows its banks, and lios in boundless shallows, which rove through the untroddon forests. A great number of d r{ gorgen and bnnndiufi brooke pass under $he sailrond to meot tha Dalles: and horo thero aro trestles 100 foet high, braced one abovo tho other, until tha oyo is madv dizzy by looking down_info tho boil g caldron, Along _this strotch of road avo the huts of bridge-tondors, And tho old-fashionod cottagos of half-breed fisbormon 3 and, at tho foot of tho Dalles, the birch-canon is_frequontly seon gliding over tho water, paddled porhaps by 8 Squaw Whoso lord Js meantimo ppearing piko and pickerol at tho bow. ncs ahong hin part of tho 1 18 the largest place along thin part of 0 lino ; and o as;m\lpntunmhnn%, called tho * Btillman Witt," licu off this place, behind tho vory clo- gant warclouse and dopot of the Northorn Pa- cific Company, Below Fond du Lac tho St Towis River it & sories of Iakes, flowing bohind inlands aud fields of wild rice, wilh the north- orn shore still rugged 3 ond tho Lills in the via- tn aro covered with hard-maple, sugar-maplo, bireh, basswood, and white-pive, Great baul- dors sre scattored over tho precipitous ground, and one mountain nesr at haud appoars Lo riso 1o Lhe height of 500 to £00 feat. DULUTIL TO LOOK AT, 1 was sot down in the main street of Duluth, and fho view wau cortainly moro agreeablo and choorful than 1 bad inferfed from tho colorloss photopraphe which roprosont tho place 23 a stony foroground and wild-forest background, alike doad Bud gray. g Justend, I found a amart, not-over-sxcited, svoll-oquipped young city, with au abundauco of room, govd stréets, aud a very singular harbor, —the most noval, I think, on'tho Lakes, Tmagine the town rieing up the steepy ridges of & forest that is still bearding tho summits, so that tho backing of the town iu bold and nearly tmountainous, and tho long streots run parallcl with ita spine, thua aproading tha city out to the wye as if i1t had been tilted up to bo looked upon, Exory house in it can bo soen from tho Larbor. As it continues to_spread, it must ovontually 1pok like another Gonas,—no poople and all sur~ fnco, Two-thirds of the way down tho town, it confronts a long, nerrow protrusion of land hsich oxtonds out 7 miles, and makes tho wos hore of Lake Suparior. = Thia apit is porfectly lovel, and paved with innumorablo thousandsof tons of rad pebbles, thrown ovar it by the lake; while n calm ' bay bohind it, roceiviug Do Bt. Louis ltivor, hus ‘wafted to thie bar tho seedlets of tho ploasant groves which make it ehady all the way to tho ond, Over this capo, 88 well as the hillside, Du- Tuth is built, snd a brond canal, cut artificislly ¢hraugh tho' epit, makes ‘the beautiful inmor hurbor, Tho railrosd comes down tho wholo Jengztl of tho town, built apon piles in tha bay- waler, and, crossing -the capo, torminates at & high grain-elovator on the deep brink of Lake Huporior itself. BUB DULUTIL Minncsota Is, iu_nomo rospeots, amongst the most matuved of all our Commonywoesulths, Its litorary wpirit i4 quito remarkablos and tho fifth net presed by tho ‘Cepritorinl Logislature, in 1849, put in operation & Historleal Boclaty, whase publicatious ‘ars not excelled by those of any imilar hle in this counity or Europe. L am indebted to Senator Ramgoy for the tirst volume of the Btato Historical Colloctions, which covors 500 Inrgo anns, all writton in tho muin by tho woalthiost and’ ablost won in the Stato, which show a degroa of rosearch and o styls of diction origiual and mauly. The atamp ‘of Tovorence in the Commonweulth for the great voyageurs and_travolors who dovoloped” tho sountry while it was still in Indiun bunde, is shown in tha nomouclafiro of tho towns aud ptronms. Tho largest holol In tho Btateisat Minneapolly, aud it is meunull{ nemed for Jonn Nicollot, & Savoyard aud alezrned man, who camo to the country in 1832, und took with him yotug John 0. Fromont iu bis oxploratlons through Minugsota. & In ko mannor, Dulatb, who has givon Lig pama to the young city ut the hieid of Lako Su- perior, was tho first white man to ascond thio lake from Lowar Canuda, aud pass to the Missisaippl. The inbabitsnts of that Nitle village uro seid to have Lestowed his nama upon their town while it wan ntill & patty hzmlot, away from tho world; andd thoy adopied the oceasion of & {ucmc in tho sil'ago to disonss tho whole wubject. Ho had seen dond 160 years when his namio was thus re- sived. DULUTIUAN FINANCK. The honded dobt of the City of Duluth is 2160,000 ; tho Hoating dobt is $40,000. The m‘p- Alation i8 du the neigtborbood of 5,000, and the Jopulation of Bt. Loiis County; of which Duluth {1 tho motropolly, is 7,600; that of Suporior, tho rocursor of Duluth, which is tho sout of Doug- {’m County, Wis,, acrosa the bay, fu from 600 to 71,000, 'Tho assoksmant upon tha property of tho City of Duluth, which is enid to be 40 por cont of 110 ool yaluo, 16 $3,0110,000, DULUTILS REGHLORY are sa yob fow and fur off, It i 480 miles dlu- {ant froin Baulb Bt. Mavio, whinh s at the other pud of Loko Buporior; and from the British pntrepot, Fort Williaus, 5t ia 180 milés, To Buy- fvid, tn Wisconsin, the distanco is 70 miles; to Ouonugon, - 150 milos; and to Tugla River, 200 miles. Theso Iatter towns, a8 you lmow, aro promincnt puints fu the fron- and coppor-leldy of Lakoe Suparior. The Aistanco by roil to Bt, Poul Is 105 miles ; and Lo Ohicago, by ths now mooted road, will be but 418 malos, Duluth ghippod gt fall, down the Inko, 1,600,000 bushiels of grait, THE WAYOR of the city I8 Dr. Vespasisn Smith,—s Roman chavacter, as you 6an soa by his name, Ifo is & ‘mild, humorous, big-statued mun ; and undor s control sre six policowmon, whick ia gaid fo be quita enougl, the morals of tho placo holng somowhat atriotly Now Englaud, 1 should .E.’ probond tho hlnf,dnni;or‘of the place” would bo ‘a_ gdod ' firo, - prtionlarly, nb such son- sons:! nny (ho iaké s frozon aud iwa- tor d!nh&\t' of nccosd,,- They! liave n. stoam firo:ongine, ' ‘trucks, -and “iook-snd-ladder but’ the majority of tho housos ara frame, nnd thero Is much shaviugs and plne-tmber nirown around, which, with s northoast wind, would carry- tho- flamen and wreele tho hopos of this maguificont North-8tareity. v THE PEOPLE of Duluth aro oosmopolitan ju their derivation. Tho Jay Cooke intorost Ligs contrilnted a cortain Pounnsylvania’{nfusion, of which ono of the bost oxamploa {8 probabl grain-movor, who hnils from Towands, in North- S Ponnsylvania, Ex-Gov, 1ayoa,.of Olio, hos built & good briok block, madeof bricks baked on {lio spot ;- which_cost $18,000.. John D, Howard, o Capo Cod Yankag, ovna one of tho finost ' rosidoncos, and {8 comaidorad oue _of tho wealthiost men, Jamos G, Tay, of Ashiabula, 0., has also Duilt some good cottages, and possesses moans. J. B. Oulyor, of Michigan, is at tho hoad of one of tho banks, and appears to be s sbrewd, noif- calloctod eftizon, not unlike somo of tho boat of your Chiango public-upiritod mon.. Mr. Ray was for many years & proporty-holdor in Buperior City, and lio is snid to have sold Douglass County out undor the hammer a8 8horiff, “Tho firm of Norton & Bro,, bankors at Louisville, i, invo investod §260,000 in Duluti proporty, chiofly fo tho onst of tho town, op tho laka- shore, Bat tho most driving man fn the placo is probably Georgo B. Bargeut, now o mufi)unl of London, Eng., but formerly of Daveuport, In.,—n brothor of Epes Sargont, of Boston, tho nuthor and novelist. Br. Sargont laa plauned nud osrried out what ia callod tho : *{ LONDON EXTENSION " of Duluth, & miles to tho onst of tho town, on tho north shoro of the Iake, With him are nsso- olated 1, W Olarke ; Bishioffacheim, a celebratod Hobrow capitalist, of London ; and fIugh Mo- Culloch, ox-Secratnry of tho [ropsury. Thoy have Inid out & rond tho entire disiance from Duluth to London Extension, which crosscs Choator.Crook, Fishor's Creck, aud soveral othor romantlc stroams, monr the point of their do- bouohment . into tho Iako. Thera are probably helf-a-dozen or o dozen bridgos on this road, of good coustruction; and, during the coming fall, u street railroad i8 to run out to the Extension, and pormeato Duluth. London Lxtousion at prosont consists of oight or ton stylish cottagos, -tho mosb ' notablo of which is Afr. Sargent's houso, whero his wifo aud family now resido. _ Ilis noxt neighbor fs her son-fu- 1aw, Mr, MoNair, who bas tho ocustody of tho laco, This fall coming, the foundstians aro to Bo'laa of large hotol gt London Extonsion, to o copied afior the admirablo hotol at St Paul onllod tho Motropolitan. . Lotweon London and Duluth, the woods have boou cloared for half-n- right anglos. Thoro is comparativaly littlo spce- ulation in lots, however, as tha capitalista Who have bought the property in tho environs do nok desiro to sell for tho predout, but profor to im- prova gradually, and realizo in bulk, I was as- Butred that {horo was very littlo proporty around Duluth, for sslo, Many of tho pooplo who liave Rottled thore hnd proviously roallzed groat praftty by buying ror] ostato st Chicago &nd 8. Poul, and ‘thoy say liftlo, but keop on ‘building, grading, and Buggesting, OUTLAY FOR OFFING. Tho elsvator at Duluth is now working night and day ; it cost $160,000. Tho groat bronk- wodor in tha lako, off {his olovator, which was Dadly doaigned, and torn to_piaces by tho galos Tost Winkor, cost $150,000, of which tho Govorn- ment gava 360,000 and the railrond about $70,- 000 ; it is now but 260 fdot. long' in tho moro durable portion, but the citizons expect to_re- gtoro it, partly with Government belp, and to ko {t 1,300 Toot long, at un oxponse of $200,- 000, : Tho Bay of Duluth, er St. Louls Bay, has Dbeou tho subject of o curious wranglo, snd it is bisscted artiiicially by on ;i . INNEI DYKE. Tyie lang dyko of timbor, which has cost 8100,000, {4,700 foot long ; and the inner har- bor of Dulntlh proper, which ia_partly bounded by this dyko, i 2milea by 13 1o oxfont. Tha dyka itsolf was- oxtorted from tho resources of tiio people of Duluth by tho querulousnoss of tho inhabitants of Suporior City. . ‘THE SUPERION'S INFERIORIZED, Tl poople of Superior éattlod that placs soma twonty years “?o and anticipated that its posi- fion on'n_geutlo boneh, or olovated plain, at the mouth of the Louis River, would make it tho sito of o formidablo city. Bo that mauy of tho slavoboldors of Konfucky and tho Bonth, like McCioffin, Brockinbridge, Beck, - Guth- rie, and _ others, 'pub _their = monoy into Buparior proporty at on oarly day, confldont that o railroad must-cventunlly come to tho and mako it tho Chicago of Lake Bupo- tior, ' 'Lhoss Southornors bogdn with an old- fashionod civilization pgeuliar to. their soction, and ant up Inje ab nighta Yhyln;; poker, sud paid Dar-koopets for drinks with 820" bills,—rofusiog, aftor tho mannor of thoir chivalry to accopt auy chango. Conssguently, that sort of domoralizn- tion has oyvercomo Buporior which is said to navo attondod the msn st tho wayelde whom o assing suwfiur taught to put .groems in jg liguor. ‘The offect of “the ~miub tho whisky was said to have boon such upon the way-side mon that, whon the travelor rade prst & yoar or two afforwards, ho found his host buried in tho gnk:h of mint, and the | melancholy old nogro who bad survived upon {hse promites reportod that his master had got Linto " docay over uiuco Jio wna tavght o' put greons in lis whisky, Groous is what is the matter with Buperior; and tho poople thoro tolt nutx;Fna whon_the Northorn Pacific Rail- rond, avoiding the Wisconsin shoro, pushed out to Duluth, in arder t0 give Minncsota a port on tho Inke, Thoy had waited dnd suffered for yoars, expooting to bo caught up with ; and their'chag rin may be imaginod whon thoy say, on the rocky Tmargit uf tho Minnosota shoro, tho town witl tho smbitious namo of the Chevalior Duluth, point its spiron into the cold_lake-sky, and ro- Colyo daily traine and stenmors, and got all tho itlux of “tourista and lot-peddlors which had filled the droum of tho SBuperioritos. PIZEN, ‘Tna establishment of a depot on the Minneso- ta sido reduced Suporior to a dependency of Du- Tuth, and the poworful nid of thio State Govorn- mont of Wisconsin was invoked to stop tho mushroom across the bu;. When the Duluth peopls, at ‘an expenso of £200,000, cut n connl throngh Miuncsota Pofnt, which - gayo them 14 foot of wrakor, sud good anchorago at from 9 to12 foot, Buperior crled ont that this channel \wna ‘changing tho natural courso of the St. Lonis River, and wes an injury to Superior. Thoy de- width of St, Louis Bay—snpporing that, when this should bo put up, the ‘commerce of Duluth wonld bg driyou to their side of the dyke. " But, when the dyke was put up, tbe Suportor poople, stlll discontented, eried ous that thoir barbor waa destroyod by an_obstruction; and they do- manded that & draw bo puc in the said dyka, and a channel drodged through it, “All thieso bills the new gettlers at Duluth liad to pay; and st Inst Suporior hus, for tho third timo, changed its mind, and demanded aqunl appropriations from Goverumont for buth Buperior and Dulutl, gnd that tho bay flowing between tho two towns shail bo oqually proteated and decpenod by tho Kodoral Freasury. 'Chereforo, at tho progent timo, we find mud-machiuey seking to Inake gomothing. of Euporior, and uud-ma- chines doing as_much for Dulnth. Two littlo forry-boals ply botwaon tha two ports, snd tho Suparior potplo must buy thoir dry goods and hngerdnahuy from the upsturt town on the north sido. All this for no errthly use except tho disappoinimont of ono pluco and iho onter- prige of suothor, A RTATE PRIDE, : Tt gcems that Duluth owes its existonco on tho spot whevo it standa to tho kagacions prognonti- cation of the Northern Pacific engincers, that the ftata of Miuneaotn would demand nt least ono harbor on Linke Suporlor, and would support that harbor with alt the inflnone eof tho Btato in Congress; wherons, if the railrond ehiould bo meda to terminate” on the south sido, there would be & wrangle botweou hnlt-n-dozen har- ora in Wikeonsin aa to which_sbould bo the ul- timato torminus of tho rond, But, whilo the poople of Minnosota support Duluth, and the citizens nud journals of it Paul are alko foroed Ty Htate prido to backc tho placo, thore s u little approbonsion in Bt. Paul that Duluth moy ong dny da somo of the trado which ls now monop- olized by tho Minnosota motropolis, Altogether, tho condition of things is mixed Garn, —_————— A Remintucence of Choleras From the Lufayette (Ind.) Cotrier, Tt was on the 80 dny of dily, 1849,—just twena ty-four years ago,—tliat tha cholors broke out in Lofagotto. 4 foarful panlo ousued. ‘Tlicre wag but one phiyalcian in the city (Dr. Doming) who had had sny oxporienco fn tho treatsment of the disease, Yho wifo of Gon, Walker wes among the first vietims, The people fled the oity, Tusinows was alaest entlrely suspendod, It was Jike Bunday, Lvory farm-lousa on tho Wea was hronged with tho panic-stricken refugeos, Over on the Ircquoli they Pufni out tho chimuoy storips of an old log cabln_in which four or five prostitutes, floolug from Lufayotte, hiad taken rofugo. Thoy all sickened and dicd in a day, Tho poople in the noighborhood waro afraid fo bury them, aud, approaching tho cabin cautious- l& fot 1t on tiro, aud medo it a funeral pilo for 0 doads Mr. Ruesolt, bankor.and | ‘mile back from tho lake, and sircots lnid out ab. THE LAW COURTS, "An Tntevesting Will Cnse-i-Medi- B . -¢ine Men in Trouble, -~ 5 il Juige Tipton’s Day’s. Work-=-Matters in Bankruptey=-~The Courls In Brief. L In Judge Farwoll'a roor tho cans of Wolcotb ¥. Smith {s boing triod tho second timo. Chiuis on intorosting will oago, and iis origin in as fol- lowa:' Ono J. Brown, of - Nllos Township, dur- ing his lifotime mado two swills, By tho firat, ho boqneathed the bulk of his proporty to .o Mia. Wolcott; by the second, to his widow. The wills romain, while both thoso parties are doad.: Mrs, Woloott's hoira aro endeavoring to sot aside tha accand will, on the ground that, at the timo it wna mndo, tho old gontloman was non compos montls, sud had beon so over. Aince. ho had ro- colvod a stroko of paralyais somo time proviouss Iy. Tho day waa takon up in hearing ovidenco for tho dofonso, showing that the montal fcul~ tioa of John Brown wero unimpnirod st tho time of the will-making, ‘e property iuvelvad is valued at somo 30,000 MEDIGINE MEN IN TROUDLE, Tho Wamor: Propriotary_Mediolno Gompany 6le o Lill {u the Suporior Coust against Alfred and Willism Warnor- Strickland, Tho Company avor that on the 7th of Decomber, 1872, tho; purchnsed from the respondonts 1hd recipss au formulas by which aro dompoundod "cortnin mediciuon known as the \Wina of Life,” * Dyspopaia_Tonio," Cough’ Balssm,” *Lm- mouagoguo " “Tnglish Gin," und ‘“ Aromatic Bitters,” nll of which aro, no doubt, faintly dis- guised lcobolle. beveragas 3 thnt sifico thon tho xn?ouduum notwlthntnmlinfi complainants paid 890,000 for tho rocipes and the right of salo and manufacture, aro going on making and sellin cortain of the decoctions, in consideration o which tho complainauts pray that the respond- onta ba brougnt to answor thoir misdoeds ina Court of Chancery, and to make o strict sccount of tholr salos aud profits ainco tho tranafer to complninnnta of tholr rights. Thoy also ask for an injunction restraining dofendants. from. furtbor prosecuting sucl manufacture and sales. DANKRUPTOY MATTERS, ° E"m? to say, thoro waa not sn(nglu ontry in tho Bankruptey journal yostorday. In tho mat- tor of Chandler, Pomeroy & Co., tho Assignoo, B.-A. Kont, yesterday fled bis monthly rnrnn, showing roceipte during tho past month to amount to $60; pavments, nil ; mako the pros- ent bnlanco at credlt of tho ostate $14,810.09. In tha mattor of Poyton It. Chandlor, alio, tho eama Assigneo filod o monthly statemant, aliow- ing rocoipta ns foltows: Condy & Hooper, noto, £200; Root & Ondy, noto and intorost, $9,050.~ l; 1. Mailloun's note, §055; puymouta, nil; the balauce at credit of the estato, £30,160.87. JUDGE TIPTON'S DAY'S WORK. Tu Judgo Tipton's room a largo amonnt of work was accomplished. In tho casoof Choster W, Clark of al. v. Ambroso, Audrew, and Poter Rand, 8 suit of sssnmpuit, tho Court, to whom it wag submittod for.docision, gavo judgmont for plainkiff for 2028 dsmagos. Tho following carea wero also- triod, with vordicts for plain- tiffs : Edward B. Holmes otal. v. Iranonnd A. . Robinson; nesumpsit, #26141; Antoin Baillargoau v. John 3], Argstrong ; assumpsit, 26684 Stoubon ot al, v, Nichards Iron Works 3 oesumpsit, 51,088 «%; Ludington, v. ollmoyor, £346.70 ; Gorman Mutnal Insnrance Company v. Schloodor, 8i22.02 ; Bumo v, Fritz #2005 5 - Bomo . v.' Langborgor, §07.63} famo 'v. Willinms, 918024 'Samo V. Kollor, 191.78; ‘Bamo v. Roich, $152.533 Bame v. Enders, §8240; samo v. IHucbner, 81007 ; Aamo v. Kostel, $117.18 ; gamo v, Rob- Zoin, $180 ; samo v. partios. following = Mahl- Dacls, $168.06; Btailo, 8122.02; Wenning, S01.50; Tdig, 596,545 Bonton, $00.13; Folly, 8260.21 ; Blio, "B108.78; Yorgon, - S1000; “Lodgvie) ©00.91 ; Boinmidler, 3102.75; Voss, ©137.27; Teobitor, $164.12 ; Bootialior; €137.30 ; Droohton® dorf, 116,60y Feschor, = $122.027 Wedler, 89,59 ; Zabel, $112,00 ; Talm, $160.56; Ward, 69,08 ; Lam, 991,49 ; Possott, $87.86 ; Matios, £102.75; Deltz, 9102.75; BSchnbok, $288.731 Wernor, 297.60, in all_of which insnranco cased appoals'wero prayod ; Frost v. Honley, §219. COUNTY COURT ITEMS. William T Bellon was, on the renunclation of Titizaboth M. Sollon, appointed guardian of tho ostato of the late Goeorgo W, Nelson, under an approvod bond of §1,000, s Tho will of Michael Quint was yostorday rovoed and Jettors lostamentary wore granted 1o Kllwin Quint, undor an approved Lond of $9,600. Nanoy E. Nowman_ws appointed administra- teix of (ko estalo ut tho late John 2. Nawman, under an_approved bond of 31,000 . In the mattor of the estato of the lats Navin 8. Knight, tho folloviug cluimy wore ullowed ; W. B. Thompson, £3,200, and Robart Bonkor, $18,886.60, " Houry O. Zottermoister was appointed admin- jutrator of tho catate of the late Menry¥. Eg- gers, under an spproved boud of 32,000, ORIMINAL COURT ITENS. manded that a dyke bo orocted acrosd tho Wholo, In the morniug scssion of tho Court the cal- oudar wos called, and trisls commenced at 2 in thie aftsrnoon, for assaulting ono Buther- Gaargo E. Lewis and costs, amouuting in all Iand, was fnod $25 to 282, 262.60. Tn the care of City v. Michncl Hernoy, the de- fendant wasi found guilty of disordorly conduct, and was fined 210 sud costs, Tu the caso of Gity v. Chicago & Alton Rail- road Company tor Dlockading a sireet, o verdict cé!m%uilty waa returned, aud dofoudant was fined TIE COULTS IN DRIEE, Samuel J. Walker bogina n suit of ojectment in tho Suparior Court ngainst Johu and Jobn B, Nolan, for tho 1. }{of N.E. {ol B, E. }{ of Hee, 26, 90, 14. 2 Jamen B, Thompaon and Goorge A. Beaverns file s potition in_the Buporior Court agrinst TLuorotis W. and Jobn King, Jr., for a mechanics' lien of £1,611.67, on Bullots 1,2, 8, 4ol Lot8, Blook 42, original_Chlengo, being'on the corner of Franklin and Washington streols, with the buildings thoreon. Phillip Jampolis files his doclaration In tres- Il‘l!l in the Superior Court against Willinm Burk, is landlord, chargiug bim with_having causo him $2,000 damage by being tho cause of ‘the hm—ntln(i’ of water-pipes in and deluging of com- plainauf’s storo, at No. 178 South Hulsted sirest, durivg the rigorous weathor of last Decembor and Ji nuuhra. 4 : William Guotschow ftles & declaration in tho Circuit Court againat . Rothbarth, on a plon of trospass, churging dofendaut with bhaving, on tho 7tk of Jul{‘, 1879, assaulied him, kiok- ing biim, hacking bim with & knifo, and causing n-fnrloa 'which ho still suffers from, and laying hia datnages at 216,000, Knud E, Honesyelle begius o suit in tho Unitod States District Court.ugaingt 76,385 Teot of ash lumbor, eargo of the achoonor Floronco, and tho proporty of A, E. Smith & Co., on. which thero are aileged - to bo due and nnpaid, froight-charges from Port Peutwator, Mich., to thia city, amounting to $217. The Gilbert v. Fost caso camo up again bo- foro Judgo Rogers, and {ho day was spont in brondsiding Lotwoen Judgos Swott aud Van Durey, the shot being’ Jight, 'and no harm dono to cithor party. Oceasionally somothing wns anid which causied the ladles® Tans to hide their ownory' faces, and Van Buren got 80 very pecu-. liar in hin remarks that tho Court sent out forg bale of cotton Latting. It was dispenned with, In Judge Troe's raom tho case of irespass of HKom v. Chicago & Norlhwostern Itailway Com- pouy wan rosumod, in which pIRRKIT Asoks to Tecover for the Josis of two fugers whilo coupling acar. Franklin McVeagh ot al, filo a precipo in o auit of agsumpsit, in tho Soperior Court, againat L. 'Chorpo gl John Thorne ; damagos, 54,000, Wallor McDonald ot al. filoa priccipo in suit of debt in the Buporlor Court, agninst R M. Dnmlzlu», Stopben A, Douglas, and Adele Williatuy, dovisoes of the lala Stophion A. Doug- lay, Robert Willlams, busbund of Adols, and Danlel P, Iihodes, executor of tho-lato Stephen A, Douglas : damages £16,000, Lilen J. MoLonu files n prcine in o sulb of trespaug on the case I the Huporior Court agningt, tho Pennsylvania Railroad Cowpany ; Aawagos ¥3,600, NEW SUITS, Tux UstTep StaTew Counts,—Knnd E, Henlavella o al, v, 70,345 fecl of anh lumber, eargo of schoouor Flotento + B, I, Jeuking, Aswigneo for 11, Hubbard, ¥, John Howurd § pseumpait, $1,660, Alexsudor Grus ham v, Chrlsti Bebamblo, ojoctinont, Tue Crueuir Gounr,~1,678~Jokn 1, White v, Wille {am O,.Coffmun et ol appeal, 7,670~Charlew E, Howe ard v, Willlun J, EdWards andJostun Edwards ; aie sumpslt, $400, *7,080, 1, 2~Appeal, - 7,085 Whliam Guetechow v, I Nolntlli ; trewpass, $16,000, 7,084, 5; 8, 'I—-Alqwb). T.688—Dhaviil Bruith v, Guorgs Burtolett, draco ¥, Rumsoy, and Johw W. Iniusoy ; usstmpslty 600, T0a0—Augustug N, Eddy ob al,'v, Willian) Blovony? saine, 400 7iGi0—Suino v, Polor Thund Famo, 100, 7,091—Dadgio ML, Kelth el al, v, Joln Liar- uard 3 samo, $300, 7,002—Lucina G, Tuttlo et al, Lonis Fortfo; famo, 300, 7,090~estorel 7,694—Fhomnn 1, Bhiny v, Nila Thiomas Dalilme Lession of fudgmont, $102,80, ‘Tow BukkiIon Count,~—44,085—0tto Klopp v, Ab= drow snd Cnroling Katz ond_loufs Bchullze ; amsuip- slt, 3500, 44,080—>ary L, v, Henry Bchrenier'; divorce, 4,057~Hamuel J, Walko? V. Samuol Pallott aud Joh Vaywang dobty €00, ¢4,085—Hsuuel 3, Walker v, Jobin and J, B, Nolani{ ejoctmfnt, 44,080—Tacob D, v, Mdry Ann Vandyko: divoreo on ground of adullery. 44,000—Waltor) McDonald', of al, v, It B, Douglas, 'Btephdn "A, " Douglan;-t Adela ' \Vl"hml( dov] ol 1Biuphion A, Dovgina,g dbchasoid, Tobost, (¥illlams, huss bond ‘of | Adeld, anil Dhufol' I\ Rhodes, excontor of Stepben A, Dongins, decossad s dobt, $16,000, 44,001— Thg Watnerls Proprieary Medleino Gompuny v, Alfred and William Warnor Btrickinnd’ bill, 43,003—Ellon 3, MeLean v, Pennaslsan{a~Tulifond Conpuils i trenpues arbrow; on tho caso, $2,600, 44,003~Torn of al, v. i, gnrnfskment, $110, 44,004—Jamen B, Thompson ct al, ¥. Join -King, Luorotia- W, -King, and thn Unilad | Htates Morigngo Co ny ; potition for mechanio's o 44,005 ki i ydayh of al, ¥, Alozaudor L, ‘Thorno oud John Tliorno] assump $3,000 THE, FARMERS' FOURTH, - “ At Brighton, Dl Corresponidence of. the Chicago Tribune,' t Butauton, Micoupln Chunty, July 5, 1873, 'The Brighton Farmers' plonfo colobration of tho Fourth of July wna ' grand snccoss, uobwith- atanding rainy wenther for soveral dnys provious, which intorforod with tho whont-harvest; honee sonio wero compoelled to use that fino day to #aya thoir whont, . . - By 11 o'clock a lsrge number hind assombled. Tho Brighton Brass Band enivened tho occanfon by discoursing patriotio and popular muslo. Thon prayor by Dr. Diamond. Muslo, * Amori- ca,” by the Glod Olub. Readlng Doclaration of Indpondonce, by Prof. ‘McPlorson, Columbis,” by the band, Rending Farmore' Doclnration of Rights, by O. Brown, *Btar- Bpanglod Banner,” by Gle Olub. Musio by the baud: Anthem by the Gloo Club, Then ad- Journment for dinner. Tho tables wero londed from the woll-filled baskota, * Amplo juntico was dona to this park of tho porformance, which was sossoned with soofal mirthfulnoss. 4 Dinner over, speachos followed, intorsporned with musio. 'Tho addrosses woro pointed and oppropriate, by Mosars, Gore, of Oatliuville; Bnedeckor and Baity, of Jersoy County ; a farm- | ar’s aon, of Woodbiirn, aid Martin, of Brighton. T canonly give you a sketch of tho viows pro- sonted by tho sponkord, A short doscription of tho onrly sottloment ; tho causen that produced tho separation from tho mother-country, 88 got forth’ -upon ‘tho ever ' momorsble Fourth of July, 1776'; then o short desoription of tho bistory of our countsy down to the- pres- ont timo ; and mpon this dsy do we sot forth our sights oud griovances, Wo opposo all rings, movopolies, nnd corruptions, We should on- courago homo-manutacturcs sna: home-indts- triog. Our children should bo taught that Inbor ia'a duty, and is honorable. Our olothing and fosbions ' should not bo imported, but wo should wenr home-manufactured motorials, and dross _in 6 plain, common-sgnse stylo, Mon should bo alected to oflico of. kuown *Integrity, and who aro willing to omry out tho ishos of the peogle; and every mon should be ot tho couvention and polls to Lelp, and not leave tho businoss to ofiice-sackers and_politicians any Jougor. No salary-graba-or official gwindling, Weo should opposa monopolies in’.all . forms, whothor Iaborors’ strikes, Entunb-flght oxten= gions and extortious, or combinations of manu- facturors and middlemen, causing the consumor {o pey,doubla prices, thorehy supporting o large class of leochos in pomp and luxury on the hard onrnings, of the swaet of tho brow. The rings phould bo opposed ; thoy aro an eating eancor, whethier thoy bo Court-Housio Fings, political ringa, Orodit Mobilior ritigs; gold rings, Congressicunl rings, or railroad rings, Capital and labor ave both usoful; in what woy can thoy best be used to bolp each othier ? - Tho farmors hove donated liberally toward' building rnilronds. Tho douations of Govornmont lauds, city, county, und town bonds, in connagtion with privaite _donntions, have largoly built fhom. “Thoy did’ & in hopes of mu- tunl - benefit, but now tho monopolics nd rings say, © Wo will carry at largo profits ; {/ou nocd not uso our roads ; wo want from threo o four bushola of carn for cnrrsh\% ono_to food 2 Yaukeo.” So tho farmers got 80 or 25 conts, and the Yonkeo poys 803 tho railrond gets, eay, throo timos,—32.40 ; is that tair ? Tha atock- holdors sxo bocoming millionarios,—groat rail- sond kings. Wo oppose such tyrauny, aud sl tho Jow-making powora of tho land to regulato the carrying trado, sa well as passongor ratos, Mr, Martin gave some oxplanations In regard to tho Court-H{ouse bond swindle, Tho bouds wore isaned coutrary to the Constitution. Then the ring got tho Logislature to legalizo them ; u\thong\x they asked for '$500,000 tho? said it ‘might requird a little moro; 80 tho bill atlowed ouough to finish tho building, _ Tho ring issucd $1,000;,000. Tho moJorily of tho purchasors, it not all, kuew of it. A recent decialon of tho United Btatos doclared that, undor tho Inw, we should pay & tax, or 1por cent, which will bo be- twoon 4 and 6 por cont on tho assossment, and nothing ta pay tha principal with. 8o tho bond- holdors must como to reasouablo torms if thoy want thoir monoy. All wo wantfsright. A ‘bondholdor agked if the county would givo u] the building for the bonda, Aot gladly. e The day was plessant, and mutual good-foel- ing acomed to pervado all proseut, in Tazewell County, ¥l Correspondence of The Chicago Tribune, TresoNT, Tazowell Oounty, 11, July 5, 1873. Tho Fourth passod off ploassntly in this county. ‘The Farmors colobrated at John L. “Winter's, and had on onthusiastic meeting of that neighborhood Thoy aléo had a Inrge moot~ ing at Hopodale, which was addressod by tho Hon, O. A. Roberts, of thig county. Tho addross wag able, ind well roceived by the poople, Tho day wos oxtremoly warm and threatoned ralu, but nono foll. Thero weore picuics nt Pokin, no: nlgo at John Boilo's, which wore well attended. At tho latter placo, A. Bodecker dellverod tho address, which ia pronounced an able production for go young & man, Janes W. RopEsoN, Corrouponding Secrotary Favmers' Club. At Aledo, 111, Correspondenceof The Chicago Tridine. Paz-exrTion, Mercor Co,, U, July 5, 1873, Onr Grango participated in tho colebration in- sugurated by tho Patrons of tho county, nnd hold at Aledo, The rains of tho day provious mado the ronds very good,—no dust. The pro- cossfon formed at Aledo at 11 a. m,, proceoded to thip grave, and dinod a¥12. " At 1tho oxorcison at tlio stand commonced with prayer by tho Rav. M. Bhorar, Tha Declaration of Indepondence was then read by Mr. Herroun, Tho speaking followed nccording to programmo. Tho usual thome wos iguored, and tho'subjecta embraced in tho Larmors’ moyement woro substituted. ‘The upesking was distinguishod for brovity. At 3¢ o'elock -tho paoplo roturucd to Alodo, Tho orowd waa said by tho old inhabitants lo be twico. 54 Iargo a8 auy over beforo assomblod in tho, county. ¢ Thoro was no gunpowder, and no acci- denta, no drunkennoss, and no confusien, The crowd was varionsly ostimated at from 5,000 to 16,000—tbo former boing nearost the marlk. The, gottora-up consmder it a perfoct suceoss. Tho now: froight {arifl decoivon no “ono, and fixau tho determination of the farmers to roduce; tho xailronds to subjeotion to Biate ‘u'fifli‘lfiw' °" At Galesburg, 811 ; Correspundence of the Clifcugo Tribune, =~ .GALESBURA, Kuos Co,, IiL, July 5, | _Tho Fourth wau moro obuorved this year than usual, 'tho farmers taking the lond. The now, railrond tariff s Iooked upon'ay tho Bull Run of tho condlict, and they are rallying to xonow tho combat. Thore wero from 10,000 to 13,000 vis- itorsin town on the Fourth, who wore served with a freo dinner, and woro ably addrossed by tho Hon. Leonard. Swett, of Chicago ; aftar which they lmij‘oycd themeolves in sooing tho nuile-racos, srck-race, grosed pig, and gronsod pole performnances; With fireworks iu tho evon- ug. ‘Thoy thon doparied {0 their respoctive Lomon, to attend to their usual routine ot worls, and tulk ovoer tho vilinfnivs of xailroad aggres~ sion. J, 8, L — A Lightning Tragedy with Something New in Kt Trom the Riehmond {Va.) Whig, A fearfal death by lightuingocourred during the storm Monday aftornoon on tho farm of Mr: Jonoph A. Morrikin, sbout amilo from Btaun- ton. Mya. Mareikin, with two or thros porvants, wug having chorrion gathiored when tho storm eamo up. 8he ordered tho colored boy, about 10 onrs of nge, Who was In the tros to como down. 1o started, saying, *“Woll, my buckot is full,” whon tho flash came. Tho boy was Instantly killad in the pouition he stood, his faco and ono pido boing chinrrad to norisp, snd the arm in which lxn‘lmld the bucket tarn apan to tho bona. lin olothing way almost ontirely burned off, hog undor the treo was killed. Mrs, Morrikin waa stwmod, and tho flame soomed, to_thouo gtanding by, to run over hor clothing and irclo aronnd o ring she wore on lier fingor. dir. Mer- rikin, who was goma distanco off, saw,the smoko from the boy's clothivg asvending fram the treo, Whon ho arrived ho fonnd tho littlo fellow'shody hauging nokod in the treo, in uxmnfi the posi- | tiou iin whioh ho Lind_boon killod, -yith ono arm [ hookod ovar iy - aud. tho [incket litnging | fromthia obhier) with tho _chorrion iill nit, 1t in & rbiarltablo fact thit Mrs, Morr{kin hoanl no Polso at Al ngd £aww 1o flamo, while to thoss rifio,_Tha boy was tho 03 of Tlonty Lowls, liv- ing nbor tHo Nationn] Comatory. 4. - A TRAGEDY, An Enragod Lover 8hoots and Wonnds Bt poscd. Rivaly,! and Tl ; Blows Out Kiis-Own Eraius, . - From the Wheeling (W, Va.) Intelligencer, July T, 3. M. A G, Evaus, printer, who -worked in thin ¢ity for sovornl yonrs at lis trado, but of lato cmpl(x{ul in the sl?-u«! HBofvicd Duropr ot Cin- cianntl, was tho ohlef adtor In a tragddy which taok placo on John atrost, noxt to Bilvoy'a drug atoro, in the boarding-housa of Mary Dunlap, on Baturday last, o fow minaten bofaro 11 o'clock, Tivana was apparently 28 or 80 yosrs old, of Tathor small staturo, always drosacd gonteclly aud, nontly, and was withal n vory nico-looking young man. It is aid that while o rosldont of this city bo waa navar known to drink to excons. ‘While bom'dlngxnt Mrs, Parkor's ho bocamo no- quaintod with Mre, Dunlap, widow of Honry Dun- * Hall | Inp, and daughter of Mrs, Parkor. With Mra, Dunlap, Lvaus foil desporatoly in love, Ilis Joyo kiow no bounds, aud finally grow Into o aealon which obtained completo maatery over im. 1o ondonvorod to induce Mrs. Dunlap to marry lim within throo months aftor her Iato husband’s doath, Shortly aftor this Lo loft Wheoliug sud went to_Cinclunati, alloging that hio hind obtained Mra. Dunlap's consont to o mar- riage_if lio would provido a suitabla home for hor. While in Cinolnnatf froquont lotters pnssed batween thom, which lottora show that Livane' lava was, in o montior, roturncd. The hopmo was rcInrad, and Evaus camo to Whoeling for his rido, but sho would not gonsent to tho union, Lvaus, bowover, . concluded that Lo had a rival in tho affactionn of Lie lady-lovo, aud this rival Lo concelvod to bo Capt. Mike Flanagan, of the . & 0. R, R, o boarder ab tho houso of Mre. Dunlap. ~ Jivans roturned again to Cin- cinnntl, but hiss sinco made froquent visita to thia city, all the time by corrospondenco and in otson_brying to induco, Mrs, Dunlap to marry im. While In the city ho would write from threo to fifteen lottors'a day-to her, whick ho would sond in differont ways. Mra. Danlap would ‘somotimes -vond one, but usunlly tirow them unroad in tho fire. . Thoso lottors breathed forth o spirit of love aud hatred whicly it 16 foar- ful to contomplato. In ono entonce ho would call God to witnesa his love Tor hor, nnd In tho noxt ho would eall hor some iudecont name and throaten to kill hor, . Evangarrived in the city on tualast vislt about a wook ainco, Hia lottors woro showered upon Mrs. Dunlap moro_froquently than evor ; thoy broathed a spirit of huto doopor than boforo—n hate that knew no reason, and a love that nmounted . to nothiug ‘short of fronzy. His threats, which had onco boen troated Lphtly, woro no longor to bo thus regarded, for 1t was quite sura that tholr author was torribly in cat- nost. Ho soloctod the Fourth as tho day to oud tha comady and briug on tho tragedy, Ho pur: chonad o little 0. Bharp " four-shooter and a packago of polgon, Tho former was to doaldosth o Mra, Dunlap and Capt. Flanagan, and tho otion waa for bimself. o work biméolf up to ho propor degreo of deaperation, on'that day ho Ho was answorod, dld somathing allogother unusual for him—ho got quite drunlc.. Sgoling Mrs. Dunlip, he found the door locked. sgainnt him, 8ho had concluded ft would bo safer to keop herself in and Evaus out, ao sho remninod a clogo prisonor oll doy, Towards tho evoning of the Fourth ono of Evons' friends took tho royvolvor away from him, and shot tho chargea out, aud kopt tho woapon until the following morning, whon finding livans quito sobor, ho gava it back to him. Evans loaded it, and romarkod that * He wauld havo uge for it boforo noon.” Within o short timo after this wo hear of Evans running excitadly into Mrs. Dunlap’s, aud bounding hurriedly up-atoirs, Arrlving at" tho door of tho fitat room, he looks quickly in, and seoing n man on the bed and s littlo girl 'on tho floar, ho shoots. At whom ho shoots is only conjocturo, bub fust in the opposite comcr of thoroom in tho closot-door is a bullgt-hols, tho courso of which shows that ttio plutol from which it came must fiavo beon in tho direclion of tho door, aud clovated’ about tho height of mu_ordinhry man's shoulders. This, thon, {s undoubtedly the first ball fired, aund it is prosumed to bo firad at tho person on the floor whom ho mistool for Mrs. Dunlap, but which proved to bo her daughtor, s girl of 13 or 13 yoars ofd. Onpt. Flanagan was on tho bod, and jumping up, clinched Evans, when s short but terrible struggle ensucd. . It was suroly ghort, sud, judging from-the way in which tho furnifuro waa scattored around, it was dosperato. Duriug this .strugglo, Capt. Klanagan got tho Bottlor of it, and throw Lyaus. Afrs. Dunlsp ond hor two sistors como in, but all wora unablo to . provens , .Lvans from ghooting oneo or twico more. One of tho shots toolk effoct in Cupt. Flauagan's right hand, the othor in Evans'hand. Oue of thiom passed Evans' chiu, making n slight abra- sion. From this polut, the partios being under s higlt etato of excitoment, tho testimony is not cloar, but tho noxt, or fourth shot, was probably firod after all had left the room but Evans, and wag tho shiot which took offect in his left templo nnd killed him. Persons who rushed into tho raom fouud Evans on tho floor nearthe centre of tho room, with tho pistol lying near him. The wound in fiis tomplo was blaoding profusely &nd ho was inscnsiblo, Ho broathed for nearly an hour, but was insensible all thoe time. Capt. Flnm:Fan holnfi accused of murderin Evaus, walked up to Judgo Johuson's offico au surrendered himsolf, giving bail in the sum of ©2,000 for his appoarance at 2 o'clock. ilpnn exsmining tho mpspum of tho doconsed, ‘many lotters were found writton to Mre, Dunlap, and othors, 1n which* bo expressod his intention to-kill her snd himself on the Fourth. Among them was ono written to the Coronor of Whacling, which had beon mailed on tho Fourth, . and received by that gontloman on the day of tho tragedy. " This had boen ro- turnod to Evans that morning. In it ho said he had killed Mre, Dunlap and himsolf, He nu[;- posed e wWonld commit tha deod. on the Fourth, and tho Coronor would got tho lottor the noxt ‘morning after tho dood. Tho Coroner's jury signed- s vordict to the effoct that the daceasod camo to his death by s piatol-shiot flred by his own hand. ” Tho witnessos wore then sunmoned to apposr boforo Judga Johnston,whoro Capt. Flanagan wag to have an oxamination, No new facts woro elicitod bofore the Justice. A package of lotters found on the decesscd’s pervon were laid beforo cation, Onoe nddressed to his (Evans’) mother informod her what ho had dong; why he had killad Blra. D. and himself ; and nskod to o for- Eivun, snd requestod that she (his mother) would ius o number of tho family for him, - “At tho coneluhion of tha tostimony Judge J. aunounced his decinion, nequitting the prisoner of the charga allegad agninet him, Ho was ac- cordingly discharged, and left the court-room ?\'rm&m od by & largo number of personal rionds. £ J —_—— A PotatesBug Storys From the Jittsburyh Leuder, A snd case las just come o light in Braddock- flelds. A mau rosiding here, who had o smll flold withiu tho Ficlds, found bimself and bis littlo family surrounded by potato-bugs, with stripes up and down, aud soma of ihem oross- wiso, . 1o tried all kindu of remedics, but the Digs snovtad a bim in scorn, and mulle Lostilo demonstrations, Mo was advised to try. the tobisceo cure. _ Ile did try it. 1o bought a papor of fine-cut and commenced to chow 1. ¢ wna 1ifs firat offort at chiowing. Ife wount out and got abaskat full of the bugn and squiried tho lobac- ¢o Juico in thoir oyos, tnd they snappud Lueir tails and parwod sronnd s if they viero awful mad, 1fo got awny with about Lalf of the papar of fine-outwhen-ho commonced to grow whito abont tho gills, e Inid tho basket that had the buga in it down, and Pul hiis hand up to his fore- hiend anil found » cold swont standing wpon his brow. Ho said to his wifo: * My dear, I am ninod Lo nunounca that I have tho cholora. Fly, if you would eavo yonrrolf. Leavo mo to nly faio, nnd noek #ufoty in flight.” And thon ho got 80 pick ho couldu’t contain himeoll or uuything. ig wifo rushod away down {o tho Fiolds, and & fow momonts had Eho wholo borough in a fit about the cliclerr. ITa recavered, but saya ko don't beliove {n oxterminating potato-bugs by tobneeo juice, s T SnukesOhnrming, From the Howling Green (Ky.) Demoorat, Mr. John B, Lewiy, ono of tho mout rolinblo oitizons of Allonsville, and yroprictor of tho hatol at that place, witnossed-u fow days ago the following caso of snake-charming, Ho heard n srquitrol cliattoring fu an unusual manuor, and oropt stoulthily to the {)hcn, whora he ssw g squirrel runniug u{r und down » treo. A largo Dlnok snake was lying ab tho root of tho treo with ita mouth open, but lmzrocuy wotionlony, I'he sqguirrel would run to tho top of tho treo ool tumo, and each timo in coming down wonld como nourar tho snske, uutil it doliborately put §ta hoad into tho wnake’ mouth, and the suaka commencad swallowing it At this juncture Ar, II;Ewlr killod tho snuko and sot the myuisvel at oity around and hort in Btaunton, thio crash was tore” Judge d. _Their contonts woro 1ot fit for publi-- ' papors 2 .. QUEEN VICTORIA. N The Mritish Soveroign nnd Tior Ear: Lnbdrora--Snd Glimpscs -‘:l.l:n.{ll‘::;: | Rurhl Lite-=Interviews Wit tho ‘Royul Stownrd mitd the Dismisved Workni, £ * London (Juno 36) Correspondenca of the New York Herald Tho_royal ostats of Osborno, which I havo rocontly viblted, 1o slluntod In tho Telo of Wiight, | noar ust Cowes, and can bo roached by crossing the wator ofther from Portsmouth or Sonthamip- ton,-.Tho former.1a tho haitor route, and, coti goquently, nlwn{n adopted by tho Queon, but tho Inttor Ia Infinitol I ly more Kinluroflquo. : It miay horo Lo remarkod thet “whorosn Ruck- ihgham Palaco, Bt. Jamoes’ Palace, aud Windsor Castlo aro royal rosidencoa—tho proporty of the Bovoroign for tho timo being—Osborno Houso and Baimoral are tho poreonal and private prop- orty of Quoen Victoria. Tho formor was pur- chased by the late Prince Consort somo twonty yoars 8go, and s & magnificont Houso, in a fino Bituation, looking down over tha brond expanso of groon mondow to tho men. It ia, howevor, not noarly so flnely situnted or 8o ploturesquo & styly in itsolf aa its neighbor, Norris Castle, which wos mauch coveted by the Prince Conaort while mnking his solection. The owner of Norrly Caatlo, however, was a Mr. Robort Bell, tho propriotor of & radical nmaEnpnr called tho eekly Dispatch, to which tho postoss Eliza Cook used. o contributo,and in which s writor migning bimself ** Pablicola® wsod to falminato agaluat aristocracy, and Lo dotorminad to make -royalty: poy for its 'whim, The Frinco Congort, howover, had tho charactor of onrryiuy rudonco to the oxtont of avarico, and docllne IR Mr. Boll his prico. ast Cowes 18 s little villago, very small but intonsoly ronpectable. The poorost shops have 4 well-to-do air sbout thom. “Piacnrds postod on the walls implore tho iubabitants ‘‘not to give monoy or food to boggars,” and inform all euch poraons that thoy witll be immodintoly arrosted ; Wwhilo tho walls.of tho coffoc-room of tho little Modian Hotol, in which 1 wait whilo my carringo in gotting rondy, glows all over wilh loyalty, Thero.are two portraits of the Queon and to of tho lato Princo Consort, s picturo of tha Quoon rocelving the sacramont, anothor of For Majoy- ty's woddlng, and_a third of the rogal party on pony-back in the Highlonds, ._Aftor the ascont of » tolorably steop hill and a short drive along a country road wo srriveat a pair of hiugo irou gates with tlio gilt monogram formed of tho ontwinodlottors Vand A worked in tho middle of them, fiauked by nuoat Btone lodga with o Jirge'orown gravan in stono ovor tho door~ yay, out of which fssues o vory protty portrous, whio very politely asks me whore I om going. My Intimation of my desiro to sco Mr. Maophorson Lalt eatisflod hor, but even then, bofore sho opons tho gato, shio asks §f I mm oxpooted, if T have any ngpolntmunl‘ My snnouncoment, howover,. that. I hed come a long way to 8oo tho objoot of my interview caused the protiy janitrees to rolont, and the fly wan ad- mitted within tho smored procincts. e drove up & well-kopt road, bordored on eithor sido by fioldda of waving grase, whon we were brought to utandatill ot the command of o London police- man; not ona of tho county constabulary, but a posty man, diccot troms Seotland Yard, bohud in o, and lotterad A Divigion, Again was I nsked whithor was I going, but my roply, ¢ Barton Farm,” wag conp dored satisfacto , and I waa lmrmmod to proceed. Tho rond o Osborne Touso lay to tho right, ours to tha loft, and down it wo wont, throngh & broad oxpanso of well-cultivated land, wilh hero and there sub- stantial stabling, barns, sndouthousos, all ba- tokening excollont farming and stowardship, un- til we camo upon & Emtty garden, boundod by n lllg_h‘tl tnrzn railing, whore my driver stopped sud T alighted. - " . . A ‘mado my way along the gravel path, pret tho botdecs Dlosming wity. dowara, Bast $ho brontos Inwn, amooth ss o billiard tablo, to tho old gray stone houso with its heavy porch, undor tho shadow of which lay.tho box .of craquob_implo- meunts and a straw hat, whichihad ovidently beon rucently discarded by Homo cbildish player. In< Qquiring foy Mr. Aacphorson, I was shown fnto & pratty drawing-roow, from. which I fonr my arvival liad scarod the inmates, ag tho musio Jay on tho opon piano, Ou tho walls wore moro Joyal portraits and on the table copiosof tho Dbooks writton by the Quoen. Prosently Dir. Macphorson joinod me—a big, burly Scotchiman, with woll-cut foatures and o hard, shrewd ox- prossion, I told him at onco who I wasand what was the nature of my business—to obtain {ull particulars of the mntter in disputo between b G il hoe laboraaiand G ples foon thio various partios thoir own vorsions of tho matter, Mr. Macpherson—You want to know abont this question with tho Iaborers, . There is not mueh to tell, Thirty-two of thorp signod » round vobin and sent it diroct to tho Quoan, domanding moro wages and— Correspondent—Onoe_moment. What “wages aro puid on tho ostata ? I Buppose 53 good na any othor part of tho {sland ? 7 Mr. Macphorson—3Batter; a shilling & wook bottor thau angwhoro. WAy, eome of our mon got .£1 . wook, many of them 15 shillings, and Tot‘ono undor 14 shillings, while boys can o 10 shillings & weok. In addition to this, cach of them has n cottago—not a_tumble-down' piguty, mind, but & capitally built, q:nd cottage, with balf an ‘acre of garden land. Then Her Mojesty always.sonds them a prosont nt Christ- mas, and thero is a doctor specially kept for them, whoso sorvicos are at their disposal whon« over thoy oro {il, and thoir wages are paid during all tha time of their sickness, ~ Why, sir, I have paid & man_sixtoon weoke' wages And ho has novor warked a stroke all the time. Correspondent—To what do you attributo this digcontent ? Mr. Maophorson—To a comblnntion ;' startod ulmml{ by ono man—I wou't name him—but Lo in s follow who proachies tho doctrines of that radical Arch, at Shofold. I know Inglish Inborers woll, sir. I Lave boen oli ovor England, and I tell you the fact is that thoso mon woro too ‘much indulgod. Thoy thought that they ‘had only to msk and have. And fancy tho lmg?rrfiuunco of them in Bonding their round robin direet to the Queon_ horsolf | Why, gir, Dot the greatost lord in tho land would hnvo dared to havo dono so. It should have como through mo or 8ir Thomas Didduiph, but the: sent 1t direct to the Queen horsolf. My God' I novor hoard of such a thing. “And horo Mr, Mecphorson wiped his brow and’ looked petrified with amazemont atthe atrocity of tho proceoding. . Corrospondent—What did tho Queen do with thina round robin ? Mr, Macphorson—Sent it back tome to deal with s I thought proper. Cnnnsyundenb—l\nd what did you do ? . Mr, Macpherson—Dinchargod sovon out of thirty-two men at & month’s notice, Corroupondout—That wae rather sharp work, wag it not ? < al Mr. Macphorson—Sharp work ] It was the only way of mooting the cane, and what wns the cotiequonco ? Horo are all these mon beggiog and prayiog to bo taken back again ; but thoy. won't be; andnot o post comos in but whnt brings me hoaps of lotters, from all parts of tho coutitry, from peoplo sakiug to bo taken on a8 tho Queon's laborors, Carrpspondent—And you will not taka any of theno discharged mon back again into the Queon's gorvico ? Blr; Macphorson—Certainly-not. X would soon- or send up to tho London Union Workhousos aud got able-bodied paupers from thom} Correspondent—Did tho English nowspapors’ mako any comments wpon tho ¢aso? + Mr, Mfl?flml‘fiun (with great disgust)—Nows- am sick” of thom., Of coursa thoy did. Tho radien! nowspapors—that man Roy- nolds ought to be hangod~tried to mako a grent #tir abont it, but - it _wonldn't- do. - Peopla_ are wick of 1OWRPAPOrs now, sir, and_thers will be & chisnge in thio utato of things, What bas made tho nowspanord have no influenco is, thore is nover a word of truth in any of thom . thoy ril 1iit oither toabigh or too low. No offcuso to you, sir, but you know what Lmenu, . “'hi coneluded our discussion on tho auh‘)nct - and after u fow words of gunoral conversation 1T shook hiand with Mr. Mecpliorson and took my leave. Having (hus obtaiued the viows of ono of thio partios to tho disputa iy objock was, of coutko, to hosr_ what tho ° ofhor side hnd to say, but thia wns & moro diffioutt - task, Lad proviously —obtainod the umnus of two or throe of the ditcharged In- Lorors, but on tho Osborno - estuto, at loast, L could mot. find anybody who either would’ or could givo mo any idea of thoir whoroabouts, "I'wo men who werg clipplug o boautiful privet hodgo, woro vory oivil and connnunisative witil 1 touchod upon tho droadod toplo, whon thoy de« clared lhn¥ would ‘‘rathor nob say anything aboud that “ore," and at one or two of tho cols tagod at Whiol'I called, they professed compluio fgnorauco s to whoro tho incrimivated men wero to bo found, Bug Intor in tho dsy I camo upon £wo of the men who had Lieoa guilty of tho wtrooluns erimo of wendlng w lettor direct fo tholr omployer, nud biere is a record of my con- versution with thew, I do not give tholr names for ohvious rensons, but T will eul) them. B, and J, B, Is n-man of abont 80 yoars of ago, middle height, ewnbuwraed faco, _strongly bullt, the very modol of on Epglish n%n- cultural lobovor, J. 8 an old waen, probo 15 nearly 00, with Lowed back and grizzlod huir an deoply-Turrowed faco, After o little talk, fu which they narratad the cirenmstancos of tho sonding of the yound robin and their dischargo, thelr statament dlmn'lu;s but little from that o) Mr, Maophorson, 1 asked thom why thoy did not | wo appeal Bonito. fifgt_spponl to him j; ‘h;']‘lflg“"- e nstond of going diroctly Lo . B—Appeal to him ¢ Why, no we dld. W ank o }'\]):l;)i\(f:ul.;)&llrolmnn mw’;hm Lot pricen ¥ 1nd rlson 5o that w A wocauld nat fead orreapondont—Slay one moment, 3 or to understand that you hud n.uuulr \v:\;;:; ff.‘,,‘fu any ono [n tho fsland, aud that somo of you wora mglvxixs .Clli\ \moNk. o .—1t'a o lio,. No man n8 0w of had thian fourboen shillings & Wocl, A ont of fey two shillinga n waolc woro doducted for, ront, Thon thoro was no overlime, 1o pay for hinrvest- ing or anything of that kind, Twolvo sbillings a woek waa all wao could earn, - J.~Thoy gavo us boor, sir, In horvest-timo, but it wai go bod wo couldn't drink i, and twolve shillings o wook is nob onotigh for u man with o family, and I told Lim our littlo oncs could not live upon it. = B.—And what wag hig answor, do you think 2 o said wo wore too dainly ind wanted, )l)mno jolnts, Wo ghould by odd soraps -and bits of moat at the hutchor's; thoy woro qnlm,gaag :ulugl\ for guch as usy that's'what wo shoul J.—0h, ha'a & bitter, hard man, this Mrophors gon; hard oud Baoleh ; not Jike Mr: Toward, who wad hero boforo him, nnd who I8 rotirod now and living down at’ Carigbrook. This Msephorson” 'wag hond-gardenor then, and ho wag brought in and mado staward whon Blr, Toward rotirad. D.—That's about it, sir> Wo all love tha Queen, nnd think if sho knew what our “state was and had her own way she would bo & kind mistross to ua; but it's q:nplu that goos in bo- tweon hor and ua lko this Macpherson horo that doca all the harm, Bho nevor knows, you may dnpnndurnn it, that wo sskod him long. boforo lod to hor, and slig thinks it was {mpu- denca on our part writing straight to hor, whore o 16 yas our last ropource. no?'o;reupnndnnh—l\ud what do you intond to do B.—Tcando woll onough; I can gob as good woged aa 1 haye bad in au; Ifnrt ot the cmmglry; I have been doing odd joba for a tradesman at Covwes for tho last waok or two, but I am think- Ing of going whora you como from—to Ameriea 3 :}:‘;{‘ tollmo that'a tho place for s man who can Correspondent to J.—And you, will you ala 80_to America ? 708 FaoR J. Euhlklng bis hond, and with & groat sigh)— | No, slr; Ibotooold. It'a woll enough for B, boro; ho's young, and can work his way, but T bo almoat past work now, and me and my old . )v‘wmun gu &nxng flnh?h (inr days in h%ho 00T~ ongo, CGod help usl *There is nothin, "“X “;‘1';" p ? 4 nothing for ua 8 the 0ld man spoko, the brightnoss meome to fado out of the s:ny ond 1t was somo timo 'htg foro I could banish tho sad look in his faco or tho waary, dejoctod tonos of Lis voico Zrom my moniory. SENATOR THURMAN'S VIEWS ©On the Allen County Resolutions, the Farmers) Movemeont, tho Back-Pny Grab, nnd His Proposed Candidacy for Governor. Clhillicoths (July 6) Dispatch to the Cincinnati Come mercial, .+« . In roply to my quostion s to what ho thought of the Allen County movemont, Judgo Thurman said : Ho did not queation tho motives of those en~ gaged in what is called the Allen County mova- mont, but thought it a mistake, If the Damo- cratic party should over concludo to disbaud ita orpanization, ita purpose to do so will not bo loft in doubt, No such dissolution could take placo wiilosa tho gront mass of tho party wae thoroughly convinced that it ought to’ takae laco. Woro they so “convinced, tho' organiza- ion wonld Lo abandoned at once, not in this or that spot, but all ovor tho country. But we sco nothing.of tho kind. In every State the party maintaing its organization, and the -talk about abaudoning is not tho tall of the masses, but of politiciang, and tio maaten will novor b brought o abandon, by belng told that thelr pary is odious, that thero s nn odor of treason about it, and tho like offensivo oxpressions tuat aro fre- quently heard or Ecou in the papars, Thay rogard such talk as an jusult, and tho only offeot is to make thom adbero to tho party with moro tonacily. 'Poo much stress was laid upon tho fact that the party hnd beon constantly de- fonted for tho last 13 yonrs. Ils oppononts, undor ono namo or andihor—Todorelints, Na: tlonal Ropublicans, or Whiga—had boon dofosted for mora than threo timos 12 yoors ; yot they - ultimatoly triwmphed in 1840, aud again’ in 1848, and again in 1860, If thoy counld porse~ . voro, although dofoated 80 ofton nnd for such long poriods, tho Democratic party could aléo ersovore. Somo. people “si Sunnfl tuat ol that wes. necessary to be lone in order to securo success was to drop the namo of Demooral ; but nothing could be more orroncous, What good had rosultod to tho Fod- sra] party by dropping its name and taking ‘that of Nutional Ropublicans, aftorward abnmfimiug that for Whig 7. A mera chango of name offocts nothing, and au attempt by politicians to form n . now party with no highor object than success, nover did and mover will suc- cood, The Demoernts and Liboral Repub- licans might well enough act togother, and ® it would not bo the fault of the Democracy it * they did not, It was mero slang to talk . abont Bourboh Democracy. To apply such an opithot to o party that could sacrifico ita pride and proju= - dice, 88 tho Democratic perty d.\s last yeor, was simply Injustico and abuse. - He %Mr. ‘Thurman) hud beon ropresonted as opposing the dissolution of tho Domocratio porty from salfishuces and ambition. He doniod’ that Jio was nciuatod by any such motives, * Thero is no man in public life who will leave it with less mm than ho wilt whon tho people eca 13t to rotire 3 . In answer toa quontion what ho thought of tho farmers’ movemont, ho eaid that his in- formation was very limited, but ho supposed thiattho grangoa originated in ho samo way that the lsbor unions sros, from tho dosiro of the farmers to protect and advanco thoir own partienlar industry. 1l thonght thnt tho farmorsa a3 n class wore op- preseod, - and as much - 83 two. yonrs ngo 1 a epoech in the Senato ho had 8o said, and ivon at, conaidornble longth his rensons for so Folioving. - As o the dotails of tho organization of the granged ho had no information. o ob~ seryed_ that attompts wero being made o turm them to political account and promots tho nspira~ tions of ‘politiciana or would+bo politicians, but if wisdom prevailod in their councils they would not bo made mere stopping stones for ambitions politicany, In roply to aquestion about the ealary in- crono, he. anid that ag it fa well known ha hak opposod it from firat to last, and tiad eaused bin buck pay to bo covered into the Treasury withe olit having drawn a cont of it, and boing thua covered into the Tronsury he nover could draw n cait of it s Talludod to the fact thatho was nemed in soma of the papers a4 a candidato for Govornor, o enid ho hnd notieed that suggostion, andwithy rogret; that Lo could not congent to run for that ofiico, although Lo considored nono wore honor- ablo, 'snd Lo hoped that nothing moro would bo said abouy ig being a candidsto for it. A stido for n Hride, From the Salinas (o) Tnidez, Monday st a candidato progentod himself to the Couuty Clerk, roquost| ufilu liconso to com~ mit malrvimeny ; but when the usual rlunstlanu wore asked, it wau’ divalged that tho Iady, tha iutouded victim, was under ago, sud hor paronts lived fully 60 milea from hore, boyond the San n vain tho would-bo Bonedick assorted that ho had tho full conwont of her parouts. - Tyeurbane but inoxorable Clork, Poolo, told himx lio bad no recourao; thoso mystorous complica~ tiona of law, hmauuisémmf, eud abgurdity, tha codlas, waro oxplioit upon that one point st lenst, aud tho yonng man must sbow cause or wait, until bis “lady love” Lad arrived at su sgo when gho could bo her own ng woll as Lis master. + Faint henrt no'er won. fair lady yet," 8o tho plucky faltow unhitched one of the horsos from tho team with which he drovo over, borrowed n gaddlo qud sturtod off, Ho roturnod lato Pucs-- any night, and “suid: ho would ‘heve boen back* gooner it ho had not got lost on tho mountaing, returning tho night provious, 1Io had rodo tha whole 12 miles withaut rest; butbo had ob- tainod tho parouts’ -permit, ani Wednesday morning early tho twain wore united sud mada Lappy. d Now Firc-Extinguishing Apparatue. A now. firg-oxtinguishing apparatus has been oxhibited in Boston, A pipe runs from tho baso~ wment to the roof, through (he contre of {bo building, This pipo s furnished with' valves Which open on_ ovary floor in the building, and onch room s pupplicd with a suitablo amount of . hose, whioh, in_caso of Bro, s tinched ta tha valvo londing fnto that room, anda atroam of water is soon brought to boar upon tho flnmes,, the motive pewer beinga forco pump in tho Dasomont, Which in manufactorios may-bo workod by stoam. In cnso of firo o bell {u struck, wiicl warns tho engneer to uot tho pumps at worke ‘Phis pump, in the establishmont in which tha oxporitucnts wora tricd, hns the capacity of fore= Ing 600 gollons to tho minute, = Two Inoy of, hodo, ono ffty 50 in Jongth and the othor 100, wero run inta tho stroot, aind stroamn of wator forcod through thom roached avor 200 foat hori~ rontally, and perpondicnlarly from 20 to 50 faok aboye the building, which 1505 feat high. The trinl way thought to bo succosstul,