Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1873, Page 4

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4 TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE ?'-ulv'n nrulwmmrmox (PAYABLE IN ADVAROR), ails, by mnl .(10) | Sundn, 82, Biankdrecs:s:S 1808 | ey S5 Partaof aycarat the samno rato, To provent dolay and mfatakos, ho sure and give Poat Ol canddrosy In full, tncluding Stato and County, | Remittuncos mag ho made olthor by draft, oxirosd, Post Ofico ordlor, ur tn 1ogiatorad lottois, at onrvisk, - i TEUB TO CITY SUBSCINEKS, Dafly, delivorod, Buniny excoptoa, 25 conte por weok.! - Dally, acliverad, Bunday includod, T conts por wook. Addross THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Coruor Madison aud Dearborn. Ihicago, 1l TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS, stroot, hotwoen HOOLEY'S ’l‘flEA’NHL—!undMflh Afe in New York." Dlarkand LaSallo, ** Fashlonyor, MOVIOKER'S, THEATRE-Madison strast, botween Donrborn and State, Iingngomont of Misa Notlson, “Romoo and Jullot. i £ AOADEMY OF MUSIO—Halstod atreot, betwoon Mad- faon anid"Bluntoo, Engagomont of Carlotta LoGlorea. MYERS' OPLRA-IIQUSE-Monros stroot, botwoon Dearborn and Stato, ** Funny Mokes (na Fog.” Min. strolsy aud comicalitios. . GLOBE THRATRE-Desplal: troot, botweon Mad- U ang Wishingion, Eousgomont of 3. 3. Wallsce. Btk A-Otorra. 10 TIALL-Clark stroet, batwoen B&%‘:fi%‘fi}{:&‘?mm Toyal Yoddo Japaneso Troupo. LEAVITT STREET CONGREGATIONAL ONUROR ~Lacture by Prof, Swing: **Tho Novol.™ REET __OPERA.TIOUSR_Halstod ng':x,mng?ngr IRt Mackivoy's ** Litbornisom. " INTER-STATE EXPOSITION—Lako-Shoro, foot of ‘Adams street. m————— BUSINESS NOTICES. ¥ SUMPTIVES-MANY ITAVE BERN HAPPY O arimony 15 Taror of tho ko of -+ Wilbor's $ b God Tiser Ofl and Limo, txporionos hine proved 1t 1015 8 vateatlo vemody fo¥ Sonsumption, avthcom diphc o fhron 5 g 3"2:';'12 e WILBon, *Gheist, :Dovion, 33as. _old by drugalsts gonorally. OO Pt P B 07, Mratimions, rotiable, and (nstantanious; nodisap- aimimant ; norid{culous tints or unplessant odor, Roma- 8fen tho il ffeore of bl dycs and waskics, cos imo leaves tne ondioe NERRLES s, Y44 sOAAOK, THIS SPLENDID Tho only truo and por odiately » suporb black of natural brawn, i gleat, forh and Yopatiful, "o ol 5 S By il ATONULOT,, Droyristor, No STEVENSUN 't REID, Agents. ———r e, The Thicage Tiibune, Thursday Morming, Ootober 30, 1873, The town of Amoricus, Ga., the county-seat of Bumter County, was visited by s disastrons con- flagration on Monday Iast, which destroyed tho business part of tho town, involving & loss of over €300,000. l Tho Modocs have at last renohed their final dostination, and will hercafter bo ‘“at home " on an island in tho Platte River, near Fort Mc- Pherson, Colorado, whero there are mno lava bede. 1 An Towa dispatch, printed elsowhore, gives somo interesting facts concerning tho Catholic denomination in that State, showing that 1t has 94 churches, o membership of 100,000, and G6 #chools, attendoed by 8,065 pupils. | Winter soems to have mado o general assault all along tho lines, and las not only beon hoeard from nll through the North and West, but also in tho Bouth, Texas and Georgia yestorday not only having had severo {rost, but also ice. The visitation was & welcome one, howaver, a8 it hos effectuslly stopped the progress of the yellow fever. Gen. Van Buren, the late Commissioner to the Viennn Exposition, is still tryingto clenr his slirts of tho corruptions charged against him in connection with his administration of his ofiico, and yesterday had interviews with the President and Becrotary Fish, the result of which ia not stated. In the course of the interview, bewas very sovero ageinst Minister Jay, who proforred the charges agnnst Lim originally and cnused Lis removal from office. | The third trial of the murdoeror of Fisk bas como to n close. Two years of tedious litigation Leve been consumed, thousands of dollars heve ‘been spent, and all that influenco and wealth and station could accomplish have been uscd to thwart the cuds of justice, The result is a mockary of justice, and it is no wonder that Now York City is indignant at the verdict, The murderer has been found guilty of manslaughter in tho third degree, and sontonced to four year: impriscnment at hard labor, 2 Tho old Opein-House which was burned in Puris yesterday on the Rue Lepoletier was just about to be pulled down, its place to bo suppticd by the Grand Opera-House. As-a structuro, it presonted nothing specially ‘worthy of notice, end will bo maiuly remembered for the operatio triumphs within ite walls, aud the fact that it was in front of it that Orsini and his confeder- ntes made their attempt on the lives of the Em- poror and Empress, on tho 14th of January, 1858, The great battle in the Dominion Parlisment still continues, It ia expected that a division will mot ocour befors Friday night, as many members have long speeches to make, oépeninlly the Premior. Day by day the chruces of the Opposition improve, and soveral important se- cessions from the Ministerinl ranks aro an- nounced in our dispatelics, 'Cho pitch of despe- ration at which the corruptionists have arrived ‘may bo inferred from the spcechof Dr. Tupper, ono of the most promiucnt Ministerialists, who boldly took the ground that governments could not exist without practioing corruption In olections, 4 Mr. Gago has achioved an important victory for the tax-payere by cbmpolllng Dan O'Hara to publish a card utating that, if olected Oity Trona- urer, ko, too, will pay the interost on the public doposits into the City Troasury, ‘The publio will boar In mind that the Convention which nom- inated O'Huva dodged tho question of paying tho interest into tho Tronsury, and that Mr, O'Hara bimsolf bas remained mlont on thls subject until within six days of tho election, Cun there bo any doubt that his present generous offor to givo the taz-pnyors what Lolongs to theta has beon really extorted from him by'Mr. (age's ox- ample? Now lot us bear from Buffalo Miller, Has Mr, Gago brought him to taw also? ‘The Ohieago produce markets wore loss weak yostorday, and one or two dopartmouts wore qulto strong, though without importunt sdvance In prices, Mess pork was quiot, und a shade easfor, at B11873¢@12.00 for now, cash, aud §11.86@ 1190 . soller Decembor, Lard was moderatoly activo and unchanged ut 7o for now, cush, and 7.05@7.10 sollor Jonuary, Monts wero qujot at 6@6)go for sbort ribs; 614@0){a for short clear, and 8%@100 for swoot plokled Lume, Highwines woro inaotivo and -1o lowor, closing wt 880 per gallon.. Lake freights wero moro notive and easlor, at To for corn by sail to Buf- falo, Flour waa dull and rathor wosk., Wheat ‘wina less aative sad s ahade firmor, olosing a¢ 99540 cash, and 1,015¢ soller Decomber, Corn IME CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1873 was moro active and' 340 higher, closing at 30@ 80)¢o cash, and 07%o meller Decombor, Oata were more notive but ensior, closing at 30@800 casli,. ana 1o eollor Docombor. Tty was dull, and 1@134o lower, rocoding to 60c. Barley wos dull, and 5@70 1ower, olosing at £1.26 for No 3, and 000 for No. 8, Hogs wore nctive but lowor, olosing wenk ot €3.85@4.20. Tho cattlo and shoop markots woio dull and unchanged. The financlal news from Now York may bo summod up in the words, Wall straot remnins quiot. Yesterday waa, dovoted mainly“to in- atituting proceodings in bankruptoy, making gottlomonts with croditors, loiting off flights of rumors and thon correciing thom. Prominont among them was the an- nouncemont of . tho fallure of the Rhodo Ysland Spragues, which was ultimatoly found to be untrue. From abroad thoro is nows of & panic on sho Vienna Bourso, o hoavy decline in American rallway bonds at Amstordam, and an oxpoctation that tho Bauk of England will shortly raise 1ta rato of disconnt, owing to heavy drafts on London from tho Continent, Tho quarrel ovor the romoval of the county soat from Centreville to Richmond has given riso to another of those disgraceful mob-pro- coodings which have disgraced the State of In- dians &0 froquontly of late, Yestorday, omob gathored in Oontrevillo, 5’“” aftor laboring all day with fire-arms and stones, at last blew down the jail doors with oannon, and effected on on- tranco. Upon tho arrival of an armed forco from Richmond, thoy were compell- ed to rotrest, &nd thelr « caunon woro captured, and tho Riohmond p'osso now holds possession of thoe jail and tho town. The constant reourronco of such outragos as theso suggesta tho nood of insugurating some sharpor mensurea to quoll this mob spirit, which s moro than oneo successfully dofled the laws of tho Btate. Wo understand that the opinion of the Bu- premo Court in the Perteet cnse, afiirming tho Judgment of tho Criminal Qourt of thia county, will not be given out until the opinion of tho dissenting Judgos (Scott, Soholfield, aud MoAl- lister) is filed. - The overruling of the superse- deas, grantod by Judgo MeAlligtor, upon tlio gronnd that no official remittilur had beon ro- coived from tho SBupreme Court fixing tho timo and placo of & now trial, virtuslly sottles tho Tinfforty case aleo, where tho same’ ground has boen taken by Mr. Small, his counsol, and is in necordanco with the position taken by a writer in Tue TRIBUNE, some time sinco, that tho de- foneoitself, having watitated tho renowal of pro- coedings, was estopped from complaining of any irregilarity thoroaftor. The decision settles tho same question in oach case, and sottlos the fato of both Perteot and Rafferty. Tho death of King John L. of Saxony, the par- ticulars of whose lifo havo alroady boen given in Tx TRIBUNE, recalls tho history of that family. In 1500, the possessions wore divided botwoon Ernest and Albort, and in 1800, after the battle of Jonn, Napoleon erected Baxony into a king- dom, making the reigning Elector, of tho line of Albert, King, by the namo of Froderick Augus- tus I.. After the batile of Leipsic, tha allied powers took possession of Saxony, making the King a prisoner. At the Congress of Vienns, s Iarge portion of Baxony was awarded to Prussin, but the King wasallowed to retain his titlo, Tho monarcha have all .beon long-lived, ,The 1first King Frodoriok, born in 1750, died childless in 1827; his brother, Anthony I., born in 1765, diod childless in 1830 ; the third brother, Maxi- milian, being 77 yenra of sge, remounced tho throne in favor ofhis son Fredoriok Augustus IL., born in 1797, who died childless in 1854, Ho was succeeded by his brother John, who was born in 1801, and was 72y0srs old whon hodied. His son, and heir to the throne, ia Albert, born in 1828, who is married, but has no children. Tho noxt in line of succossion {s Princo Gaorlge, also son of King John, born in 1832, who is married, and has & fomily of'three sona and two daughters, The Hesing purly i8 relying mainly upon nnturalization to supply the necessary numbor of votes to give Mcesrs. Hesing and O’Hara the control of the City Troasury. Nearly every columa of the daily issuo of the Staals-Zeilung Lims an appoal inlarge black types, calling upon everybody who is not alreadya citizon to natural- ize, andinforming thounnaturalized that thoy can. gat tho neceasary papers at the headquartors of the ‘“People's Party” up to 9 o'clock every evoning., We seleot at random one of those flar- ing announcoments, though we cannot spate the room for display which tho Staats-Zeitung gives: DE NATURALIZED | BEND YOUR WOREMEN | BEQUEST YOUR NEIGHBORS AND FRIENDS! . LET NO ONE REMAIN DEMIND | COME ONE, COME ALL! TARE OUT YOUR CITIZENS' PAPERS| vore!} $ * The Blaals-Zeilung is very careful not to ox- plain how long a rosidence in thiscountry is req- uisite to citizonship, It makes a genoral call upon all who wore born in Earopo, and tells them that all they have to do is to go around to headquarters and got their papers.. Wo under- stand that tho number of porsons naturalized for this clection already reachies 8,000, Wo pro- sume that the judges Lave beon careful to see that in every ono of tho 8,000 casos tho procoss has been judiclal, that is, in their prosonco and with the necessary examination, INTEREST ON OITY DEPOSITS, The Slaals-Zeifung, Mr, Heslng's papor, states that it has examined tho books of tho Comptrol- lor, and that it does appear thereon that Alr, Gage has, from timo to time, pald over to the oity over 8130,000, received by Lim a4 intorest on the doponits of city monoy in the hanks, wheroupon Mr, Hesing procoeds to borate Br, QOago because ho hag not paid more than thut s, It 1s sufficiont to state that Mr, Gago, at 1ho clowo of his firat torm, made s statoment of ihe entire gurn in hisnhands snbject to doposit, and ou which ko hos recoived: intgrost, That account was open to oxawmination, and- hos beon ever minco. It whould be borno fn miud that the psyment of thin intor- out Lo the clty 1s u puraly voluntary uet on the poartof Mr. Uago. There fs no law requiring it ; on the contrary, Mr, Mesing and all the friends of all thae provious U'reasurers huve alwayn con- tendod that ft fu unconstltutional to pay over nuch Intoreat. ‘I'hat was tho solemn judgmont of the Heaing members of the Comnon Couneil whon jt was proposed Lo requlve Mr, Gago's pres qecanyor to ncoount; for tho interest rocelved by him, Tt 18 & sullclent unuwor to the Mewing ohjuo- tion thot Mr, Qago hins puld only 180,000 Into tho Ulty Treasury thet he might huyo lawfully rotalued, that it fu preciucly 150,000 iimes py mugh a4 wan ever pald into the Oity 'ronsury by a1l tho ity ‘Lrossurors supported by MMy, Mosing durigg the oightoon yoars of his political dlos tatorship, This comparative sccount may ba thus atated (e £D, A, Gago, elected i wpito of b e s $130,000 riod by . Difforenco in favor of Gago. With ouo year more to hour from, Iow hns it beon with Ifeaing while Mr, Gago bas been puying 180,000 into tho Oity Tropsury? Mr, Ifosing has beon printing a papor all this time, In that paper is publishod Common-Couneil proccedings with moro or loss {rrogulnrity, and for thia work, which is of about 8a much uso to tho publio us last yoor's al- manuo, he has boen pald nlmost as much as Mr. Gago haa puld fn, Trom 1866 to 1878, thore has ‘beon paid to Mr. Hesing out of the City Trons- ury, for the usoloss publication in Gorman of city noticos, the sum of 8S5,827.25 5 whilo Mr. Gngo, during tho threo yoars of his torm, "hiae poid info tho Troasury 180,000 of monoy’ which he might have lawfully kept to himself, and which all of his prodeccsaors had put into their own pookets, £ Mr. A. O. Hosing, with $35,827 of the publio monoy in his hands, objocts to tho election of D. A, Gago, who has paid into the Treasury $180,000. " Tho policy ostablishod by Mr, Gago, of glving up the plunder of office and returning it to the pooplo, is, in Mr, Hosing’s view, s political an- omaly for which thore i3 no justification; and when it was proposed in Hosing's COonvention that O'Hara and Millor, if elootod Treasurors, should do what Gngo had dono, the resolution was 6nuffod ont. If thoso men -bo olected, thoy must divide tho monoy which Gage now pays into the Publio Tronsury among tho loadors of the “party,” and cspecially among the newapa- pora which support them. If thoy should pay any of tho interest-monoy Into tho Tronsury, it ‘would bo bocause Gago has compelled thom to do so. THE GERMAN CITIZENS OF CHICAGO. . | Tho German citizens of Chicago have alwaya boon distinguished for their thrift, Taken as a whole, they can show more homestends in pro- portiont to their numbors than sny othor nationality, They include, also, not only a large numbor of wealthy mon, but many hundre@s of wholesalo and rotail morchants and traders These persons all have familios who aro oducatod in this country, and who in the future are to have no country save this; thoy are to marry and Intermarry with descondants of American familics, and inafow yonrs thoy aro to bo loat in the gonoral nssimilation of all nationali- ties, -under the genoral title of Americans. Theeo merchants and tradors, profossional mon and mochanics, are engaged in activo business in fair and honorable compotition with their fol- low-citizons of ail othor nationalities. The lawa of tho Stato and of society know no distinction by reagon of birthplace,—individual worth al- ways bearing off the honors. Mr. A. 0. Hosing, whoso influence upon tho destinies of tho German population of Chicago has always boon unhappy, has now put them in an atfitude the most unfavorablo that could possibly have been dovised, by eccling to array the Irish, Seotch, English, Scandinavians, Fronch, Dutch, and Bohemians in-an alliance with the Germans to overwholm and dofoat tho native-born popu- Iation, Ho has done all this, claiming to be the organ and mouth-picco of the eutire Gorman- born population-of this city. Wo do not bolievo. that Mr, Hesing bas any such suthority to spehk for tho whole Gorman population. We do not bo- lieve that ho truly roprosonts tho sentimont of, the large body of Gormans who are engaged in mercantilo and banking aud other profossional pursuits, in doclaring o soparation botween thom and tho American rosidents of Chicago. Wo do not bolieve that any respectable and intelligent German in Ohicago, not an office-seoker, Lias the least sympathy with any such proceeding, nor that there ia one who doos not disapprove heart- ily this wholo proceeding of Mr, Hes- iog. Now, can theso persons, thus griov~ ously” abused by Hesing's unauthorizod decloration of war upon the Amorican citizens, render themselves a botter service than by joining with their American fellow-oltizons in giving this presumptuous individual a dofent g0 marked and so, emphatio that Lo will stay quiet for one while? Weo do not miestate tho fact that among tho native-born population thoro is a strong feeling of indignation that any clan or cliquo should declare an aggrossive war in the name of all the foreign-born residents of the city against those who Lapponed to be born in Ameriea. Nor do we misatato tho fact whon wesay that the American rusidents of Chicago pro~ pose on Tuesday noxt to oxpross that indignation through tho ballot-box in an emphatic manner, In so doing they would cordially welcome overy .man of foreign birth who might seo fit to unito with thom in the déclaration tiat Know-Nothing- ism 18 nof tho less roprohensible and infamous .when urgod in the name of the Gormana than whon urged against them. Tho opportunity s now offered to ovory citizon, American; Gorman, Irish, aud all othors, to unito in putting down this turbulont diforganizer, who, to promote his own selfish ends, proposes to divide tho peoplo of Chicago sccording to nationalitios, ... AN INCENDIARY DOCUMENT, Mr. Hesing was yoslorday engaged in distrlb- uting about tho city & seurrilous and incondiary ciroular, sddressed to tho Trish Cutholicy, and intended to fuclto them againet tho * Puritanical Yonkoos.” Mr. David A. Coago ju mado tho special object of aitack, and g charactorized as tho typleal Yankoo Purl- ton, who has boon pitted ogeinst the honest Irish Catholio, Dan O'Hara. Tho cam- pulgn Is dolined iu the following tormu: * Down with tho honest Irlsh Oathollo; up with the upeculating Yankeo Puritan ™ The clreular then procecdn to rocito thut tho object of tho unti- Honing purly I “to hunt down Zlonest Dan O'Hura iu the sawme Infernsl uplrit whioh, in 1842, burned down Catholio churches and con- vents at Pllladelphla ; which, In 3864, expetled Uatholies from Louinville; whioh,' i 1866, mode Dunlol T Boono Muyor of Chione go' Chore I wmore st of the mune kind, wrilten in tho swmo wpirlt, and winking an offorl tg stjr yp tho wornt foolings of fanntiemm und vindlutlvonoss, We ara vory much mistukon it the Irlsh wud the Cathollus do not discover L thl olrontur un Iusult Lo Ligir lu- tolligunco und o low oatimato of tholr ohurauter a8 altizonn, us Irdimon, snd as Oathollen, Hiol un uppoal presupponon s debusal mentul condi= tion and u doggradued moru) sunue wmong Trishmon and Gutholiey gonoerully, aud thay will, wo hos Hove, it bl wiwuob, it thoy huvoe any other fooling L.an Lt of Intonpe diuguut whon they roud it Phe protense of fgmmlng thin Althy ofrantur 14 » parsgreph which was printed in p Juosuiug nowspapor with the purposo of injuring Mr, | Gago bocauso ho hinppons to bo an Amorican and # Protestant, Wa aro of tho opinfon that noth- {ng whilch an irresponsiblo soribblor employed on Mr. Boammon's newspapor, or whioh Mr.Hosing, in bis low ostimato of tho Iriah, may write wili sulico to convinco tho Irlsh or tho Catholics that tho'offort to eloct Mr. Gago City Tronsuror I simulianegusly an offort to burn down thofr churchos and ssyluins or ox- pol them from tho clty.” If there i any ‘¢ Know- Nothing " olomont in tho prosout compaign, it ling boon organized under tho load of Mr, Hosing, in & nativity-movement against othor classcs, ‘and Mr, Hosing is ondoavoring to uso tho Irish and the Catholles to work out this purposo. Wo havo mentioned the protonso for iasulng tho fudecont ciroular, Tho real object of the ofrou- Iarfs this: It hos boon discovered that o largo numbor of Gormana proposo, to voto for Mr. Gago and against Dan O'Hara ; somo of thom becauso they would rather trust tho city funds with tho former, and some of thom becanso tho iatlor is an Irish Oatholio. One of the Ger- man papora alrosdy supporta Mr. Gage, It ia naturally fonred that tho Irish Ontholics, as they find this out, wiil bolt the wholo Heslng tickot. Heuce Mr. Hosing unncqlved tho nocea- sity of doing somothing to exolto tho Irish Ontholics. This timo ho hes dono it 8o bung- lingly that ho has' insulted thoir intelligenco. Wo only hopo that his misguided zeal has led him to circulate tho irfamons documents widely, If onough of thom could bo distributed, tho Hoslng-0'Hata tickot would not got ono hundred Irish Catholic votos in Ohicago. Y " THE ECLEOTIC PRACTIOE, 1t §s woll known that tho old school of medi- clno has como down to us from Esculapius, whose syatom was 80 much in favor in the an- clent world that Bocratos, aftor ho hadswallowed homlock, adjured his friond Crito to sacrifico s cock to that remowned looch. Thua tho wisost of tho Grooks paid homage with' his Inst words to "the founder of tho rogular practice, snd helpod to tronemit his fame down tho long vista of ages. Tho firsb notablo contestant for the honors of Esculapius was the colebratod Spanish phlebotomist, Dr, Baogrado, who flourished in tho days of Gil Blas. One groat advantage possessod by tho Bangrado sohool was its simplicity, which énabled studonts to qualify at short molico. Blood- lotting and warm water wero the funda- montat principles of thd new syatem, and 80 slrong abold did it tako upon the medienl mind that it constituted a largo sharo of the practico in the old school for more than & con- tury, Meanwhile new clsimants for the laurols of tho Lealing art appesrod in various parts of tho world, Hshnemann arose in Gormauy, and founded a schiool on the phrase similia similibus curantur, His ingonious theory was that any substance which would produce a givon diseago would cure the samo if adminis- torod in suficiently small quantities. To obtain the infinitesimal dogreo necossary, ho wonld rocommend, for instance, the dissolution of one-sixteonth of a grain of aconito in a gal- Jon of wator, s drop of tho mixture to bo doused in o barrel, o drop of this tobe dilutod in a hogs- hend, to bo given in doses of half a spoonful for adulte, and six drops for infants. This course would almost havo justified the disciples of Hahnomonn in assuming the name of hydro- pathists o8 well na..homoopnthists, -but thora woro certain oxtromists who, un- mindful of the harm that water had wrought at the time of the flood, adopted it as tho romedy for all discages, with the harmless accossories of blaukets and such like. The hydmpnthlats"fouud groat favor for a timo, in gpito of tho wide-spread antipathy among the ‘human kind to water. Thoy could not expect to carry ovorything bofore them, na the flood did. Liko Esculapivs, Bangrado, snd Xahnemann, thoy found opposition in mow systems. Dr. Thompson at one time promised to rovolutionize all the schools of medicine with o numerical system. Magical numbors were introduced to command tho veneration which human nature accords to tho mysterions. Tho medicines woro knowa as No. 1, No. 2, ote,, and, though Rory O'Moro haa left o tradition that thoro 18 luck in o0dd numbers, Dr. Thompson's No, 6 recoived the grentest favor, and was prescribed with an abid- ing faith for all ailmonts resulting from catching cold, which aro supposed to bo five hundred and sixty of the thousand natural shooks (hat flesh is hoir to. In poiut of fact, botwoon tho daya of Escu- lapius lqd tho presont, there hias beon an inter- osting varioty of medical gchools, 8o numorous that we can only barcly mention thom,—such as tho Grabamites ; the practioners in ** roots and yarbs; the Chinoso systom now popular in Cal- ifornia ; the Indian Doctors ; the Old-Woman Doctora; the Good ‘Samaritans ; tho Swodish- Movoment Curo j tho Turkish Bath ; tho Laying onof Hands; tho Clalrvoyant practice ; tho Health-Lift, ete., oto. Groat and learned men Dave arisen, having accrob romodios, such as Dr. Ayor, Dr. Brandreth, Dr. Helmbold, and A, Winslow, whoso soothing syrup the children ory for. Fiually thore aroso an Eoloctio schools whose syatem consists in choosiug tho good things of all tho othor systoms and rojecting the bad. 'Fho most distinguished protossor. in this lino of practice is Dr. Wilbur F. Storoy. 'Dr. Btoroy hns mado suporhuman offorts to xeform tho Chicago physicians, but they, obstinate and bigotod oronturos, have rofused to liston to Lim, Disgustod at thoir narrow Ignoranco and folly, 1o Lias widonod tho scopo of hls Eclootis practica and gone to work, with moro enconraging pronpoots of succoss, at tho body politic. After n onroful diagnosis, ho flnds it to be in = disossod coudition gonorally, but in tho munioipal functions particularly. e lolds that an ounce of prevontion s worth a pound of ourc, and lins, thereforo, do- yotod himuolf mainly to tho prophyluctio tront- wmont. 110 recommonds that tho heail bo lopped off firat, and & now hoad put oii. o ovon goes o far an to offor his own hond as » substituto, ov- Jdeptty roposing his confidonco In the now doo- telno of trunufuslon of blood, and doflant of the old horosy of tranumigratlon of sonls, Now this in your truo Folootichm,—thnt which socks in wil mystoms tho bont of oochy aud come pounds thom fn ono harmonlous . and ololont wholo, Ho far, In hia “tronl- mont of the hody politle, De, Htoroy han ralliod to hiu nldu tho famows Dr, Mationon, Ham Auhe ton, M, Dy, awd Prof, Millor, of Buffalo, Thoy all bollove that Dr. Btoroy's Lond slono esn nuye tho Faliligg condition of the bady polltio, Admtrlng, an wo do, the bonuty wnd simplivity of the Loleotio prastles, wo wabmie tha mars plondivon of trontmiont should bo fol- lowed thuis Disa boon ohsarved, The romos g whoutd bo allawad thme to hnve thelr altoab o0t petlont. Ohwuglug tho pro- worlption overy day I nob counted good Pruodlos, oyen among the moat -‘dvmnml Hologe tlos. Dr. Storoy has oftored thrao dlfforent romo- dios in throa days, and henod confldonco {s romo- what ebaken in tho corrections of his dingnosis, ‘What wo would recommond at this juncture s o consultation of Lolectic physicisng, and a et~ tling down npon ono course of troatmout, to ho followed atondily till the pationt dlos, BAILWAY FAQILITIES EASTWARD. The Sonnte Holoct Committeo of Lrausporta- tlon to the Sonboard ollclcod romo hnportant ine formation during tholr rocont investigation in Now York, . ‘They discovorod the main reason for tho perlodioal winter-blookado of frelght. Qontrary to goneral boliof, it does not ariso from tho inability of tho transportation companies to forward the produce. The troublo les at tho Eoatorn termini, whoro the facilitios for hand- ling grain aro so inadoquate that, ag a witness told the Committeo, *‘thoy would not bo toler- atod for a momont in any Westorn city," Lest wintor, whon thoe railroads connocting Ohleago with tide-wator woro utforly unablo to racoive anothor car-lond of freight, it was cus- tomary to ask for half-a~dozon moro railronds to the Atlantio; and it has long been a favorito con- coptlon that an oxolusively freight road to Now York {8 our greatest commorcinl desideratum, snd it would undoubtedly bo a gront boon, but tho investigation locates tho difioulty elsowhere. It assurcs us that Now York's slorage capnoity has nover beon fully taxed, but that hor handling capacity is inadequate. A committes of tho Produco Exchange place the storago capaoity at 18,000,000 bushols, not more than Lialf of which i uoually filled, Woro thoso warchouses readily accossible, liko tho Ohicago elovators, no ombar- rassment would rosult; but the difficulty and in- oronsed oxponso of roaching thom rounders them practically usoless and ocoasions disastrous do- Iays. Caras nro compolled to romain on side- {racks for wooks, which, wero tho storchouses convenlently located, could bo unlonded and re- turnied promptly. ¥ % Tho provalent impression is, that the railronds shoutd supply the want by erecting .sufliciont olovators alongsido thoir tracks, In this way, Commodore Vandorbilt could botter havo ac- commodated the public than by laying down his four-track railway or ovorlonding himself with tolegraph stocks, In gome degree tho urgent nocossity has béen mot. The Now York Central and Hudson River Reilrond Companios have built a now pler at Thirty-fourth streot, North Rivor, with grain-bins having each a ca- ‘paclty of. five car-loads, sand having an olevated track from whioh the cars canbo unloaded. The Ponvsylvania Company are constructing o grain track adjoining their now warchouse, and tho Erio Railway Company have added largoly to thoir “floators.” Tor soveral yonrs past, both tho Central and the Erio have oontomplated tho eroction of largo olovators, ‘but great diffeulty has beon oxperienced in se- ouring favorablo locations, In Now York, the atmosphiore is somewhat molst, roquiring moro surfaco eclovator room for * spreading” the grain than in dry climates like Chicago. This renders construction near tho sea-const costly and hazardous. In Boston, the Albany Road has also added largely to its facilitios for doiug business, which improvemonts justify tho beliof that the cmbarrassments and delays of last winter will hardly recur, Although no now railway from the East hna built its way into Chicago during this yoar, our facilities in that- direction hpve beon materially inoroased. Perhaps the most mm- mediate reliof was expected from the pmnflaml complotion of the ‘Chicago & Canada Bouthorn Ralway, Tho'Canadian portion of tho line has boon in operation since early summer, and tho rightof way upon the gapbotweon Chicagoand tho Datroit River has been all secured, and much of the grading aud heaviest work has been done. Further construction, however, {8 in- dofinitely postponed. Tho branches north to Detroit and south to Toledo will bo in opera- tion by Nov. 1. The bridge over the Amorican channel of the Detroit River ia comploted, and a forry capable of carrylng twonty-ono loaded cars ench trip will mako tho trausfer acroga the international channel. At Dotroit, the line will connect with tho Michigan Central, and asist in keoping that rond olear for through froight ; ‘ihile at Toledo, by taking the greator por- tion of the Toledo, Wabash & Western froight, it will reliove tlio Lake Bhore, and enablo tho latter road moroe promptly to handle Chicago buslnesa. Another advantage will be derived from the dou- blo track laid by the Groat Wostorn Railway. At Gloncoe, 80 milos east of Detroit, this now socond track divergos southesst -to Buffalo, which it will enter ovor the International Dridge, now on tho ovo of complotion. 8till auothor ad- vontagoe will accruo from tho recout chango of gougo on tho Grand Trunk Railway. Freight can now be sont by that ronta from Chicago to Now York and Boston without transshipment. These improvoments aro equivalont to throo ad- ditional lines of singlo-track railway to the East. Moantimo the Lake Shoro and Michigan Con- tral havo kept paco with tho improvoments noted. Both are mow, practically, double-track railways, A few milos on the wostorn ends re- main unfinished, but suflicient has boen accom- plishied to obviate tho protracted side-tracking of trolghts to allow passenger trains to pasn. FEvory such delny incurs oxponse, for which - croagod ratos must bo charged, East of Rochos~ tor, the Naw Yok Contral's four tracks have boon sufticiently laid to altow of their immediate ugo, and tho balatico of this work is being prossod forward with a vigor and au euterpriso unprocodentod in railway bistory. From this eurvey it will bo {nforrod,that the Wostern linos will niot ngain bo required to stop shipmonts boyond Chicago until the sovoral ‘Eastorn roads aro olonred aud in condition to forward through freight, Worosuch ombarrass- imont to bofall us the ousning winter; it would be ‘moro disastrous than horotoforo, Last sonson it sffoctod us loss bocauso monoy was plontle ful; but mow that tho vory oxistonco of ol tho ralironds doponds upon tholr onrnings, and the foreign domand for our produca will bo lhuited ouly hy our abllity to aupply, it would cortainly bo o publio oalnmity ghould tho forwnrding Lusinoss bo again ro- tarded, Bvory Indioatlon foroshindows tho largost movomont of praduco known in the Wost; and, it the lmproyoments onumoratod ounablo us to handlo tho businoss this sonson, tho coriain oumplotion of projegts alrendy begyn, including (o oxtonnion of the Lrie Tnilwuy to Chlongd, wilj, boforo anothor wintor, furnish all tho trans, portation facilition our constantly-growing traflle domnnduy, : NOTES AND OPINION, o Miunlnslppl Toginlature, whish was con- yonod Oot, 40, et dono nothing, at last ace outtnts, Lo uolve the problow whothoer thoro shall b & gonoral olootion of Quvornor, Leglstature, oto. thin yoar, ‘Tho Houio, Indood, hian passod ans aobk whioh would postpone the eleotion until nust yost, but tho Bousto woows dislucliued to oonour, Tho Ames-Alcorn fight goos on a8 lively na over. ~~Tho Burlington (Is.) Hatok-Eye, in its busi~ nosa prospoctus for 1874, doos not pledgo iteelt to unabated loyally and zeal in tha sorvice of U. 8, Grant, and doos not spoak of itsolf onco 88 ** & Ropublican nawspapor,” but snys ¢ Wo sliall carcfully watch the procoedings .of Con~ grom rud tho Togleltur ooping our rendors in. (ormad of all that in tranaplring, and dolng our utmast to aocure tha early fulflilment of the promises mado to thio poople by tho Topublican party, o o o o Our cditor'al nud otlier coniributors 'tnclude numibor of I'atrons of Husbandry, Thi ‘has oxtended with wonderful rnr{ml n‘n?lmgggvnl‘:‘ol!un': prison o largo propartion of th Amtarats of dho colmlrx. ‘o ahll glvo our hearty encouragoment to tha Ordor in evory offart mado by it Lo botter the cone dlllllu‘!‘k and fncrosto :l:u waslth inuonce, usofulnons, afour folow-ciizann, 0 or. indiaponsabls clisa * —Rovolutions liko that just, inaugurated in Towa nover go backwarda,—Keokuk Conatitution. ~—Tho Massachusotts Labor-Refarm Stato Con- Oommittoo promulgates « tho following tokeb s Tor Govornor; ‘Henry K. Oliver, of Balom; for Lioutonant-Govornor, Oliver A. Brown, of North Adams ; for Secrotary of Btate, Oliyor Warner, of Northampton ; for Treasuror and Recoivor-Gonoral, N, W. Stoddard, of North Bridgowator; for Attornoy-Gonoral, Charles Covloy, of Lowoell; for Auditor, Henry B! Maglathlin, of Duxbury. —Uounting majoritios this year is much like counting ohickens boforo thoy aro hatched, Tho fimu mojoritios for Grant lnst year, as all know, id not reprosent the-true Ropublican atrongth, but wore in many ocasos oxcoptionally largoe. Tho Allegan Journal prodicts that Oomstook (Domocrat, for Oflnmn) will be boaten by 8,000 majority, That Willinms (Ropublican) ought to hiavo ot lonat ko many majority thore i6 no doubt; but, unless o full vota is polled, it will not proba- Ezyba moro thou 4,000.—Grand Rapida (smh.) —Another renson why the result of tha Obio oloction daos not trouble us much is that tho R:fimbhunnn will learn & losson from it. Tho will seo that their party must cut off, ita blnu{ shoop. relontlessly whonevor thoy show their color, and that it can only rotain tho support of tho Intolligenco and patriotism of the country, on which alouo it dopenda for its stremgth, by lmnplnf; itaolf puro in conduct, and abovo sus- picion in motiva.—Louisville (i(y.) Commercial, —Trom thia result in Towa we may draw cer~ tain conclusions, rogarding both the oauses that roduced it, and the probablo effect it may have. ho confidenco of the peoplo in_the Ropublican party was serlously shaken, Its rosponsibilit; 88 tho parly in powor for the bad logislation o{ the last fow years and for tho corruption that has crept into many departments of our Govern- mont sorvico, could not bo donied or the odium oscapod. Tha people detormined to give this Kunynmbuku. and they haye done i, . . . 'ho prestige of tho Republican party is lost. Lot the Opposition bnt romaiu togother, and at the noxt election work for viotory, and thoy can achiovo it.—Aft. Pleasant (la.) Press. —Innocont sufforers, will you not learn that you aro the catepaws which politicians usoto roko thoir chestnuts out of the firo; that your Knrty predilections in rogard to national matters nvo no moro to do with the functions of your Suporvisors, Aldermen, and Poundmasters than they have with yourchuroh or your school affairs ? 1t you choose, however, to woar rluga in your nosos, rush right slong to the whipping-post. As for us, wo are gottiug rathor tired of this kind of business hero Brooklyn,—Brookiyn (V. X.) Argus, —Ono portion of community are never allowed to suspend. They ar¢' tho tax-peyers. Como good times or bad, rain or sunshine, thoy must grind out tho publio grist. They cannot Lold on to deposits, get extonsions, or & discount on what is oharged to them. The blood hasto come ovory time, without roference to favorablo or unfavorable seasons, businesa lossos, sicknoss, or othor calamitios. try. When excessivo, they drivo communitics to despair. of blossing now to last it for gonorations,—St Paul (Minn.) Pioneor, —The Farmers' Convention at Chicago rocom- mended farmers throughout the country to with~ hold their hogs from market until they compel rice up to &5, The political economiat tho Y will laugh at this, and it certainly involves the idea that for tho public wolfaro dearness in prico is botter than fow prices; that it will bo well for the people if the soller can sell meat at a Ligh prico, rather than that tho consumer shall buyit at o low price. That deernoss is better than chenpnesa; that the interest of tho producer shell alone bo considored and the interost of the consumer not be, are assumptions that may not But what shall the farmers do? 0y cannot control tho prices of what thoy havo be just, to buy; now, if they canunot control” what they have to soll, and compel & fair price for it, then thoy havo nothing to buy with, Farmers are consumers, as woll as producors. The prico of the articles they have to buy for consumption is mado and “maintained by combinntion among tho wholesale sollera of thom; if they havu to buy at combination pricos, thoir only recourso sooma to bo that they shall gell at combination prices. . . . A fow pack- ers fix the ratos that shall bo given for pork, and then afterward control the price at which the consumer shall buy. A fow railroad men control the prico that shall bo paid for the trans- portation of tho thinga which the farmer sells and which ho buys a8 well. Now, as tho farmer is subject to combination and controlled pricos against bjm all the timo in this way, and polit- ical oconomy doosn't provent it, then political oconomy has no businoss to say that the farmer shall not combine and compel and control, as far 08 posgible, the prico of tho articles that he has to soll, and tho sale of which enables him, in his “pous who nre supposod to have partiviputec turn, to be & consumor.—Keokuk (la.) Gale City. e —_— THE BAZAAR OF THE NATIONS. The following correspondence {rom thie Young Men's Ohristian Association and the Chairman of the Executive Committec of the Intor-State In- Qustrial Exposition is designod to be a reply to the protost of corlain merchants against the Bazaor of the Nations, published in the morning papora yostorday : Ve e - Y.ML 0. A, Rooxs, Oct, 29, 1678, Blessra, N, Matson & Co, and others: GENTLENEN: Wo notice your communication’ in the \‘\‘ednuflnlnshmornlug papers, represooting that the Young Mon's Chiristian Assoclation have cniered iuto sn arrangement in councetion with the Bazaar of tho Nutious to scll o lsrgo quuntity of goods from Boaton, i fact 1, thnt not one dollar’s worth of goods are come ing from Boston, 0 fur as wokmow, Tho principal fos~ turo of tliw Buzanr will bo tho attraotions of the bullde inga reprosenting the 'diffront nations of the Old World, inhsbited by peoplo dresged fu tha costumo of 1lig country thoy représent, Lu additiou, they proposo to havo a restaurant, and in tho houses to sell somo oods poculiar 10 tho nations roprosouted. Thoro lina foen only 815,000 sontabroad to. purchass goods and costumes not 'on sale in Chicago, In considering thia foature of tho caso befors the'are rangoments were concluded, our Board thouglit that tho general trado of the clty would bo greatly increasod Dy Liio argo numbers of peoplo brought i from the orthiwuat to sca the Bazu: 2 i Af, Hanvey, Presidont, Thio Executive Committeo of the Inter-tato. Indus- trlal Exposition, referring to tho protest ngmnst:the nccumdau of tlio Exposition building by thie Lazaar of the Nations, havo to eay that ‘tho arrangomont waa mads umlor the conviction that, so fur from sffecting injuriously any brsuch of o Tl s of thla ity 110 reault would bo exactly tho opposito: Tet. It In oxpocted that only o small proportion of the goods offered for ealo by the Bazaor will be ob- Lalnéd nbroad, und tht (o remuiudor will bo fur- uishod by the merchauta and dolers horo, “'3), 'Thio main attraction of e Bazsar will bo the i« luatration it will givo of the costumes, manners, cuse toms, und peculiar arebitecturo and nimufoctures of of {ho ditforont nutionalilies ropresouted, Tn othier words, tho chfef feattro will bo nat tho salo of commaditics, If the resuita sfmilar to (loso which huve' followod in_cit Tant, it will atractn lurgo number of visitor ontiro Northwest, and stiniulate the genoral trade of tho clty toa marked degse, N. 8, BauroN, Obafrmin Exocutivo Committbs, it NEW ORLEANS ITEMS. New Onreaxs, Oot. 20,—Tho Motropolitan, ratd on tho stonmor Ozark to Grant Pmrish “has beon hourd from. Tholr'objeot is to nusist the Doputy Murshal to oxecuto writs. Sovoral D[I‘< o tho Colfax affair somo months ago have boen ar: rasted. No reslstuuce was offored, ' ‘L'ho colorod Inborors ou tho lovoo and at the conl-yards are on s strike for $4 por duy. Thoy woreTecoiving §3. ———————me LIFE INSURANCE. Meris, Tonn, Out, 20.—Judge Emmons, of this Fodoral Cirouit, in tho suit from Cinolunati, holng the case of ‘Lt ot al, vu, tho New York Llruglnunrnnuu Company, tried hore in May last, whieh involvos life polivios jssued to porsons in tha South bofora tho war, and whioh lupsed the paymont of premiume, holds that the Company Iu Uischurged from obllsluuuuln l_uv aud equity, SUICIDE, New Yonx, Oct, 20.—Alots Molliner, an artist, of D'eath, 1ungary, who wrived on the 24th ine stant, shot himeolf dead in & hotol in Hoboken. 1Mo had $10,000 sud wany valuablos, € Nothing comos about with greator regularity or {8 more certain, death ex- coptod, and that is not more surs. Nor is any~ thing moro dopressing than those tolls on indus- Tho country hag onough of this kind LOCAL POLITICS. Mr, Hesing Still Naturalizing ©_ Voters. Enthusiaatic Meetings in the Third © ‘ond Sixth Wards. J. P Clarkson Nominated for the Sus . perior Court. 1 ‘An Ifiqmry as to Judge Morris' -Antocedonts, Announcement of Rallies This Even: ing. % THE NATURALIZATION MILY ia running all tho timo in the Oriminal Court, and the Ring {a working out citizens fastor than & sausago-machine turns out sansages. On Tuess day 476 of thoso nowly-flodged votors wore turnad out, arrayed in tho garb of American oitis zong, the object Loing that thoy should voto aa Hoslog desires, An equal numbor wero manus {actured yoaterday, and tho ssme numbor may bo expected overy duy until oloction. ‘Thoro I8 neither geruple or consclonco in tho bustness, and perjury {8 practiced with lmpunity, A mode erate estimato of tiio numboer of citizens mado sinco the Ring campaign bogan, is put down at 8,000, tho mnjority of thom fraudulontly natus Talizod, and no more entitlod to voto than a citi- ezon of Timbuotoo, The Hesingites caloulate thng tho North Side will send out majority onofigh to overwhelm tho other divisions, They oxpoot nothing from the country. They sny that it wil Lo ovenly divided, and that thoy must.omrry tho city, no mate ter what it coste, :, They have beon cooking up }hu poll-books on the North Side, and bavo -rogiatorod names in all tho wards for tho pur~ poso of ropoating. That stupondous frauds will bo attomptod on the North Sido and in tho Fif- teenth Ward, thoro is no doubt. Tho judges are on theirside slmost unafimously, and thero will bo no scruple on tho part of many of them to sbuso the confidenco reposed in thom. In the Bocond Precinot of the Sixteenth Ward, thoronra threo Hesingitos, and they pretend the old poll- books aro lost,—a miserablo pretenso to facili- tato frauds, All good mon will eco tho necessity of voting, unloes thoydesire to havo tho city and county handed over to the Ilesing-0'Iara gang. ‘Thoy will hesitato st nothing, and are prepared to resort toall kiods of low and contemptible means fo carry the day. That they will fail, with all thelr cheating, thero is no doubt, aud that docency and law will triumph is nlmost absos lutely certain, All that will be necossary is a full vote, and every man should vote if il rains ‘butchers’ knives. CHEEDING REFORTS, At the Citizens’ Union headquarters there was lifo and sotivity yesterdsy, and the best fecling porvadad overy one. Dvideuce of the alleginnca of the Irish votors to the cause of law and ordor is accumulating every hour, and there is not tho slightest fear that O'Hara and the Crimnal Court Ring can soll them out to Hosing., 'The; aro not in tho markot, and will not be deliveret The wards ara in good shape, nnd_reports from ;wury quarter are of the most cheoxful charace or, JUDGE OF TIE SBUPERIOR COURT, Alr. Joseph P. Clarkson, of tho firm of Clarks &on & Van Schaaok, was nominated for Judge of the Buperior Court, by the Citizons' Union Ex- ecutive Committeo, yostorday, Tho registration of votors ended last ovening. Tho indications are that an unusually larga number of names woro registered. ° JUDGE NOORE. To the Editor of The Chicago T'ribune : + In volume 8 of Moore's *“Rebellion Record,” page 82, wo find the following : Gon, Jolin Morgan hold recoption at Richmond, Va, Judge Moore, of Kentucky, in 8 specch on the occas sion, spoke of tho worth of Gen. Morgan, and the groat credit with which ho lind served his country, Mo was now recolving tho grateful testimony of the Aother of States, Ho safd that Morgan und other Kontuckiang who were battling for tho lbertics of the Bouth would not sheathe thelr awords until her lib erty was achieved, Despite tho thraldom in which Kentucky was heid, tho muster-rolls of the urmy showed that 49,000 of hier sons bad joined their for tunos with ours, and this despito tho fact that tho heel of the tyrant was ou her nock, IHe knew the souttment of tho peoplo thero; they would bo found with the South, Tho Yaukees havo dcsolated her homes and murdered Ler peoplo, Kentucky will ne‘l!tl' Join Lier fortunca with the Northerm Govorne ‘meut, Tho quostion that now presents itsolf is this: Whother the Judge Moore, of Kentucky, aoove reforred to, ia tho same Judge S. AL. Moore who is now running upon the Hosing-O'Hura licket for tho place madoe vacant by tho lato lamented Judge Porter, Andit is also profituble to ask tho further question: Whether Judgo §. Bl Moore was driven from Kontucky on account of lus disunion sentiments, at the time when La first mado his appearanco in Chicago, in 1864, Itis Bozoportod. If mot true, lot tho Judga angwor, Judge 8. M, Moore was Judge, from 1858 ta 16632, of tho Ninth Kontucky District, g INQUIRER. TIIE CITY TREASURY, To the Editor of The Chicage L'ribune Siz: The Convontion which nominated me for Oty Troasurer passed o rouolution pledging ita nominoes to puy over tho socumulated interest of public deposits in tho soversl bauks into the City or County Treasury. In accepting tho nomination at tho hands of *hat Qonvention, I liktowiso indorsed and sccepte ed tho pledge with rogard to the disposition of tha Eltum!l: to ba derived from eaid publio funds, and Ishall have much pleasuro, if elected, to emulate the examplo of my predecessor in that respect. Daxren 0'Hans. THE TIIRD WATD. Tho Union Club of the hird Ward Leld a menting\_lnnt oyening at thoir club-room, No. 613 Btato stract. The meoting was lurgoly attondod, and the speeches, wore listoned to throughout with marked attention. i Dr, Hamill was called to tho chair, On taking his seat, ho briefly thanked the mooting for tha honor conferred upon him. Ho would not oc- cupy too much timo himself, but introduced Capt. Connett to_tho meoting,—na gentleman, ho said, who had at hoart tho iutorosts of the cam« paign. [Applauso.] Unpt. Connett said the iesucs of tho present cnmpaign should command tho earneat attenticn ot all good citizens, and dwolt at length upon the nocessity for maintaining the rights of all = citizens, Ho bad overy feith in tho numineo of tho Convention for Mayor, the Hon. L. L. Boud. [Prolonged applause and cheors.] 3Ir. Bond was the man for the position. 1fo wag Lionest, capable, and fearless. [Applaueo.] With such o man at the hoad of tho Union tickot, ho biog overy confidonce in its triumphant success ab tho polls, o would eny nomoro, buk would withdraw in favor of Mayor Doud, [Olioers,] Mr, Bond was recoivod with groat nrpluuno. When the tumult lad subsided a littlo, he thauked the meeting for tho warm recoption faii | ofered him. 1lo sait ho would do his duty in the high positiou for which he was candidato, He wonld do it without rogard to_coneoquences, maintaining his onth of ollice in the interests of the poopls, and agniust all who proyed upon tho monoy of tho pooplo. [Ohoors,] Tl would tako caro that tho = taxes col. locted for the uso of the city should bo oxponded in tho infercsts of tho city, also. [Applause.] 1o would tako cara that the poopla should hayo the full veluo of their méney, o far as his {udividual activity should protect tho ity [Cheors.] If the now Court Houso was to bo built during Lis term of oftice, ho would tako care that no more monoy should bo paid for it than ¢ was worth. If it could Lo built for §3,000,000, it should bo his caro that no profit nhou](‘bn‘mudn over and above that. Thero should e no suceossful Court ouso ring. [Pro« longed applause.] 1lowas in favor of public improvoments, conductod with economy. IHe bo}inwnd in running tho munlcipal governe ment at tho lowest poesiblo cost, 80 that the taxos might bo lightoned a6 much as possible and _justico dono to overy tax-payer. [Al[:&lnuuo. Mr, Bond concluded b; exxp{‘nx:ahxg confldence in the succous of 0 tioket. Mr, D, J, Lyon waa recotved wormly, ITia speech was charactorizod by pith amd brovity.~ 6 sald ho could not but advacate s union of &il tho rospectablo lovera of lnw und arder ugainet tho clements of dlsorder atirrod luto commotion Dy Mr, Hesing, 1o thought thore was no quoss tion of the trfumph_of such A combination, it the voters would only realizo thelr iudividust e 221 & =5 u us %R 1)

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