Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 12, 1874, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

b s s ki s e 4 O .- b = o A S L R e i AL S R A Gl b ir et b b . Al .. 454 i ztme SO AP R VP P S WA s ok e 0 A AR b £ e e i o b i L THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1874 whero preceding speakors had left e simming up their resits, proceeded ‘oo viow Her opening was deliberate, Fvees of Fome mnssive farce guining e D¢ TTeEbut, 8 she felt Lier way, and moving in B Qemelt, o sweep of bt speoch became ed tho subject L eixlo of her cloguenco was scntentious, o, , direct, vigorous, charged with I . Articnlatcners, just emphasls, o varied + ‘ailieate shades and brilliant 4 brought out m 5 1 B ning; while s rhythmical colicction of ponts Of e form 1o every thought. Sho s ot i bustoric llustration und_ literary e, Pvell s in wovd hints Shio ATSio % Coneontrate into mey phrases tho e R gatiered from wide rescarch, aud dis— et ieat foil ; sud, by ekilifal treatient, sho iled T eroen again (he ' wastes of commonplace, ot B B, lowever rapid, ahowed breadth of B8 o, ready memors, Lapartil Judgmeaty comprebitis of dillereucen, power of Peaetratin e rfaces to reaiities, fixed regard o centrl oogl e ol communion with tho Life of life, iyes, 0 B0, Gt Bave been tempted to gacer. at & . e ralsr grandiloquenco that bore ausy ber e nioments of clation, though even tho R tious must presently Linve smiled at tho ot o Pher dencriplive touches, Lier de1trous expo- bt oF % 8 prelenston, thc ‘swift stroko of ber e er shrewd lsceraument, promptitade, aad ence of i i e clsescs in conversation were continued {urough four euccessive ecasons, and wero the e of atiuulating many minds to active en~ flucnt niterance. bout this period that tho mysterions m ergyand Tuwas al it of TRANSCENDENTALISY oured cut over New England. This wasan wth of the culture of the time, of the re- Study of the ancients, of 3 first acquaint- ascp with German idealism, and of the restloss fermsnt of men's mnds. The movement, yeain- o for expression, pout ilself in tho orgauiza- Yewof & comuuuity at Brook Farm, and of & qurterly journal eptitlod tho Dial. Of tholat- fer Margaret undertook tho editorehip for a touplo of veare, bt with tho intorosts of the former she never associated hersolf, Sho sym- ized with tho motives which led to the prac- tical illustration of socialism at Brook Farm, but 1sd oo faith in tho permanent success of the coterprise. She, however, often visited the lit- 4 band of heroic souls who wora endeavoring o prove, with much sacrifico of esthetic taste 42 bodily comfort, tho naturel equilibrium of Iabor end capital Hawthorne, 1 ** The Blithe- aslo Romance,” has commemorated tho life at ‘Brook Farm, and charncterizod Margaret in the eenly and ill-starred Zcoobin. Bat, wearied with pecupiary anmeties, with domestic cares, and with incessant exertion in {esching and writing, Margaret craved a chango of work and 8cene. She had already published ber trapslation of ** Eckerman's Conversations with Goethe,” the ** Letters of Gunderode and Peltine,” and ** Summer on the Lakes,” end had reads for the press her noble esssy on * Woman in the Ninsteenth Century.” In December, 1844, o consummated an arrangement whereby sho 100k up her abode with Mr. snd Mrs. Greeley, of Xew York, and becsmo a REGULAR WEITED OB THE TRIBUNE. Fors sear and more eho continued in this rela- tion, to tho mautusl satisfaction of herself and the editor of tho Tribune. We mako an oxtract fom Mr. Greeley's personal recollections of Margaret at this time, 88 it throws an agreosble liht mpon the writer's disposition, as well a8 upm certain of her charactristics : Twas myself barely acquainted with her when she o3t esme £o reside with us, 2nd X did not fully appre- Cate her noble qualitics for some months afterwards. Toough we wera members of the ssme houschold, we 28 P utgro! pewed She saw the secret capability that might be de- ~veloped into beauty and power, and Leld ity owner true to the duty of its highest culture. Thus she was ever, to thoso she loved, a help and inspiration,—calling out tho best in every pature, and assisting in the constant refining process of transmutation. Her constancy toany genaioe relation was as notablo as its truth and fervor. * Groat and even fatal errors (so far as ihis lifo is concorned) could mot destroy my friendship for ono in whomI am sure of the kornel of nobleness,” she writes in one of her lotters. It was by this powerful and widely- diffused personal influence, inciting and encour- aging to tho noblest aimsall who came in contact with her, that Margaret accomplished the great— est work,of her life. It was not what sho incor- porated into her books, but what she uttered in specch and by esample, that has left the most 1asting impression for good on the world. Tho grace which crowned Margaret's talents and virtues was TRUTHFULNESS. Io all herrolations with others she practiced the purest sincerity. She never shrank in any extremity from passing an honest judgmont, thongh it condemned the one- most dear to her. But she tempered justice with mercy, and knew how to rebuke wrong with tho deopest tonder- ness. She was nover recreant to thut most sacred daty of friendship: pointing out error, weakness, or falsity; but sho performed the task with & kindness and delicacy that more closely knit, instead of loosod, the bonds of af- fection. A singlo instanco will forcibly illue- trate this most brave and besutiful habit of plain-dealing. The scone occurred in Boston, 2t the Academy of Music : A party had gone early, and taken an excellent placo tohear one of Becthoven's symphonies. Just below them wero soon seated 3 young lady and two gentle- ‘men, who made an {ncessant buzzing, in spity of bitter looks cast on them by the whole neighboracod, and destroyed all thio musical comfort. After all was over, Margarct leaned acToss ope seat, and, catching tho o of this girl, said in her blandest, gentlest voice: %My I spesk with you ono moment?” # Cartainly,” £aid the yourg lady, with o fluttered, pleased 10 bending forward, “Ionly wish to say,” sald Mar- garet, *“that I trust that in tbe whole coursnof your life, you will not suffer 80 great a degreo of annoyance a8 you have inflicted on o large party of lovers of music this ovening.” This wag said with tho sweetest air, a8 if to 3 littlo child ; and it was 08 good ns a play to geo the chango of countenance which tho young lady exhibited, who nsd no replication to mako i0 so Chris- tian @ bleasing. 1t is impossible in a brief skotch to give more than & hint of the manifold talents and traits that gave Margaret Fuller, from early girlhood, & marked predominance, in tho most intellectual and cultivated society of New England. When Emerson, Alcott, Chanoing, George Ripley, J. F. Clarks, Theodoro Parkor, Hawthorno, Cur- tis, and & numerous circlescarce less distinguish- ed, were in'the first flush of their strongth and sctivity, she was rated, with one accord, -THEIR PEER OB THEIR SUPERIOR. All looked up to her with wonder and with ad- mination. BSho led, swayed, snd inspired them by her genins, and her noble, generons charac- tor. All who came within her sphere wore at- tractod and fascinated, first by the charm of her manner snd conversation and the exhaustless wealth of her intellectual resources, and then by the purity and loftiness of her purpose. In nothing that she bas written is her genius ade- quately expressod. It was only in verbal utter- ance toat her soul poke without hindrance. Yot, in this biogrophy, 8s she is pictured by the sarecly met save ot breakfast; ond my time and 4houghis wero Absorbed in duties and carcs which left e Little letsure or inclination for the smenites of social {ntercourso, Forture seemed to delight in placing us two in relations of {ricndly antagonism, or, ather, to develop oll poesible contrasts in our ideas and social habits, She wea actually inclined to luxury and 8 good appearanca before the world. My pride, it 1 bad any, delighted in bare walls and rugged . She was npddicted to strong tes and coffce, both which I rejected snd contemnod, Zven in the most homeopathic dilutions ; while my gemerad health being sound and lers sadly fmpaired, ‘eould not fail to find her dietetic habits the causcs of er almost habitpal illness ; and once, while we were till barely acqusinted, - when ebe came to the break- fast-tablo with & very severe headsche, I waa templed foattribute it to her strong potations of the Chineso Jeaf the nightbefore. Sho told me guite frankly that ehe * dechined being lectured on the food or beverage £he kaw fit to take;” which was but reasonable in ono ho had arrived of her maturity of intellect and fx- caness of babit, So the subject was thenceforth tacitly avoided betweon us ; but, though words Were sup- Jooks and involuntary gesturcs could not so and an utter divergency of views on this and Well be ; ‘hemes crested s perceptible disturbance be- Kindred "B, a8 timo wore on, and I became inevitably better 14 better acquainted with her, I found myeelf drawn, almost irresistibly, into the geners current. I found that har fanlts aud weaknesses o Xnowleds, or, ‘took on new end_brighter a8 Tecta tu tmo light of her radiant nod lofty soul I e Taed to Enow her as a most fearless and unselfish thampion of Truth and Human Good ot all hazards, Tends o Lo thelr standard-bearor through danger and Stloqus, and, if nced De, their martst, I {hink fow Savernace keenly sppreciated tho matersl goods of 1iferank, riches, power, luxury, enjomert; butI Jnow nonewho would hate more choerfally surren- dored thom sl if tbe well-Leing of our raco could {hereby Lavo been promoted, I havo mever met an- ‘otlier in whom the inspiring hopo of immortality was . "o strougthiened into profoundest conviction. She did ot beliese in our future and unending existenco,—ehe Fnec it, and 1ived ever in tho broad glare of 1tk morn- ing twiligk % In the summer of 184G, Aliss Fuller's long- deferred wish to visit Eurcpe was destined to falfillment, and ehe sailed from New York in August, in company with hor fricods, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Spring. ‘The first six months wera gpent in England and France, snd in intercourse with the distinguishea intellects of both coun- trics, and thon Marparet psssed into Italy. ‘Bers elie was fated to spend three of the AMOST EVENTFUL YEARS ofherlife, Italywssom the eve of & political outburst in which Mazzini, st the head of the Liberal party, struggled fruitlessly to establish 3 Bepublic. Margarct throw Lerself, heart and son, into the contest, espousing the cause of Mozini Her long familiarity with the history 20d fondness for the literature of Italy endeared the pation to her, and eho adopted its interests 4nd its fortunes with enthusissm. When the struggle wea over, and Italy lay agein gupine at the feet of her despotic rulers, Margaret prepared to return home, but it was with her hueband, tho Marquis d’Ossoli, and their little son Angelino. She had been secretly married, in December, 1847; and, amid great sorrow, snxiety, and privation, her child was bom in the September following. With the fortune of her husband confiscated, with a heart sorrowing for Italy, and with many fears for the fature, ghe embarked in the merchantman FElizabeth for America. After many perils by the way, tho vessel neared New York, the mght of Juiy 13,1550, The passengers weut torest with the confident hope of entering the Larbor in the morning. But a fearful storm arose, aod, when daylight dawned, the vessel lay & wreck on Fire Islend beach. A fow of the passengers and crew saved them- #elves by a perilous passage through the break- €rs; but Margaret would not risk » goparation from her busband ond child. She preferred death with them to lifo without either, and to- gether the threo clung until the boat was bro- ken up in the afternoon, and a single wave SWEPT THEM INTO ETERNITY. The body of the little Angelino was washed npon the sands, but Margarot and her husband were buried beneath the billows of the Atlantic. Madame Ossoli had not personal beauty, but her face was relioved from plainnees by an sbundance of blonde bair and by excellent teeth. Mr. Channing writes: The high arched dome of the head, the changeful eiprocsiveness of every feature, and her whole sir of mingled dignity and impulse, gave her a commanding cherm, Eepecially characteristic wero two phyefcal tnits,’ Tho first wos s contraction of tle evelids #lmost 408 point,—a trick caught from near-sighted Zest,—snd thea 5 sudden dilstion, till the iris seemed %0 ezt fizstion ; an eect, no doubt, dependent on bex mr-mgneuud condition. Tho second was 5 sin- “pliancy of the vertebrs and muscles of Lo neck, E;";hns er, by a mere movement, to denote each =rving emotlon ; in moments of tenderness or pen- &ive feoling, its ctirves wero swan-like in grace, buty ‘¥hen she was scornful or indignant, it contracted and made ewift turne, like that of o bird of prey. s the snimation, yot abandop, of Margaret’s attitude and lock, were rarely blended the fiery forco of North- e and fhe soft languor of Southern races, The most striking featura of Margaret's char- acter was her CAPACITY FOR FRUAENDSHIP. Ehe had a remarkable power oi discerning worth, and of attracting it. Her intimacies included an eadless diversity of persons,—the only requisite common to all being & faculty for aspiration. Bhe divined the good in esch, and, by a potent Infinence, stimulated it to exercise and incresse, Joving hand of frieads, much of the interest and captivation of the porsonal presonce 8nd influ- enco is reproduced. i Y PROF. HUXLEY AT ABERDEEN. Tho reappearnnco—so to eall it—of Prof. Hux- loy in public lifeis an event which may cause mutaal congratulation smong students of sci- ence and the promoters of liberal thought aad cultare. The hopes entertained of his complete restoration to health, after the winter of 1871-2 spent in Egypt, were not st the time {fully real- ized, and for twelve months after bis roturn to England he waa unsble to sccomplish anything in tho wayof work. The announcement of cighty lectures on Biology, commencing Octo- ber, 1873, and the delivery of the Lord Rector's address at the University of Aberdeen, indicatea the resumption of official duties, and readers, of the address will boar witnesa that there is no lanl ~¢ #ha nld vigor in his spoech, nor does his right hand forget its cunning rom the enTorcea resting spell he has taken. The Lord Rector of a University is something liko the fifth wheelof s coach, and, whatever msy have been the case formerls, the position at the present day has become that of an honor conferrod by the students upon some person, eminent either in scienco or letters, who, in To- tumn for their suffrages, presents an address upon somo topic connected with tho higher edu< cstion with which they are presumed to be con- cerned. ' No name is more prominentin connootion with education in England than that of Prof. Hux- ley. As Professor of Natural History in the Government School of Mines, us & member of the Roysl Commission on Scientific Instruction and tho Advancement of Science, and of the Tondon School Board, his influen:a has been powerfal in reform, and, 28 he himself sy, in season and ont of season ho has advocated the claims nnd shown the value of Science aa an es- gential ingredient in education. In his Aberdeen address, after rapidly sketching the origin of tho University of Paris, upon the model of which the ‘University of Aberdeen was fashioned, be shows hov fromall learning being st first comprehended under the Faculty of Arts there have sprung up the Facultios of Law, Theology, and Medicine. The Scholastic Philosopby was built up from the Scriptures and Aristotle. They contained all the Imowledge worth baving in those dsys. But {0 influences espped and mined this system. First, the study of classical literstuze; second, tho slow, sare growth of physical science. This lattor, upon which tradilion und suthority are aliko powerless either to ndd to” or take from, is an irreconcilable enemy to the Scholastic Philos- ophy, and demsnds ‘recoguition on account of its bearings on the wanis of mankind. It presses like & flood wupon the Uni- vosity system of Grest Britain,” and already is receiving something like a proper. ac- Inowledgment of its claims. At Oxford, within fwenty years, over £600,000 have been exponded upon Physical, Chemical, snd Physiological Lab: oratories. At Cambridge less is being done, but within o few years it will be for no lack of the means and applisnces of sound teaching, if the ‘mass of English University-men remain in their present state of barbarous ignorance of even tho rudiments of ecientifio culture. Addressing himself more particularly to stu- donts of the medical profesaion, Prof. Huxloy sketches s medical cwriculum as follows: Two years to Anatomy and Physiology, with Physiological Chemistry and Physics. After a thorough examination in theso there follow Therapeatics, in its broadest sense, Practical Aodicine and Surgery, with instruction in Hy- gicoe and Medical Jurisprudence. Thoroughly grounded in these, the student has all that is Tequired. Of Botany, Zoolog, Physics, Chemis- try, and Biology, upon which ab present much time is spent, & knowledgeof the fundamental principles to be gained beforo commencing special medical studies will be sufficient. The popular superstition is that doctors know all sbout things that are queer or nusty fo tho general mind, but “to know tho nsmes: of snails, snakes, or elugs; to be able to give &n scconnb of the leading pecu- liariies of the AMarsupialia, or enumerato the chief characteristics of the Compasile,” will not aid a physician in forming & rational theory of the condition of the patient on the eick-bed. A broad and comprehensive culturo is & grand and noble attainment ; but, limited as students are by time, by the capscity of retaining knowl- edge, and by the practical question of guccess or failyro in life, it is s stern necessity that points out this restriction to the branches of science which undexio & special education. “Chunge,” says Prof. Huxley, * is in tho air, 1t is whirling feather-heads into all sorts of ec- centric orbiis, and filling the steadiest with a sense of inssourity. It insists on reopening all questions, and aeking w1 institutions, however venerable, by what right they oxist, and whether they are, or are not, in harmony with the real or gupposed wants of mankind.” Change—a sweoping change, indeed—has taken placo when one of the foremost advocates of the new Psychology—Alexander Bain—occupies the Chair of Logic in the University of Aberdeen; and the Academical magoates of the past generation ‘might *:2rm in their graves could they seo filling the Lord Rector's chair that advanced and un- foaring iconoclast of tho doctrines thoy 5o sturdi- 1y held—Thomas Henry Huxley. T e B ) Peter Cooper has suggested a plan for an ele- vated railway. He would cover tho presecnt ‘Thorse-railway tracks with an iron roof supported by iron columns. These columns would, how- ever, be o very great obstacle to street traffic. The plan suggestod by Mr. Eastman, 1n yester- day's issue of this paper, of building tho rail- ways over the alleys scems much better. Alr. Gooper's proposod motive power is an endless wire rope, coiling about drums of 100 foet diam- eter at each end of the line. The drums will be turned, of courso, by steam. There +will b an almost endless line of cars moving in both directions. They will be light and narrow. The rope will be fistenad to the back, side, and centro of each. Stops will be made every five blocks. Tho drum-wheels ‘¢ will be mado to take up all the power required to stop the train of cars and give it out instantly to aid the engines st each end in starting the chain of cars.” By this mesns it is estimated that onc-half the propelling . power otherwiso nocessary will be saved. Platform cars can carry freight through the city, and might thus sparo us the snnoyance of having long freight-trains switched through and scross the publio streets. r. Cooper claims that his plan makes traveling safe and cheap. Ho esti- ‘mates the cost at one-half that of other proposed plans. Relatives of tho gentlomen who wero Lilled by the fall of the Greenwich street elo- vated railwsy in New York may, perhaps, doubt the perfect safety of any such plan. It would certainly, however, be weil to sccuro rapid tran- sit without running noisy locomotives through our thoroughfares. T g Lo Tha intolligent juror has been discovered in Atiantic, In. Thero wero nine obstinate onos snd threo shrowa fellows, who finaliy prevailed. Tno case before them was = suit for broach of promise which had been tried onco before, when tho jury disagreed. The suit was brought by AMies Ball against Mr. Helmer, damages being Iaid at $10,000. Four days were consumed in the trial, at the termination of which timo tho twelve good men and true wore intrusted with tho duty of deciding it. The obstinate nino wero in favor of s verdict for the defend- ant. The crafty three were not. It was argued, with great offect, by the minority that the plaintiff had no money, and, in case of a verdict against her, wonld be unable to pay the costs of the suit, which would thus be thrown upon the county. The nine +wise men saw the sound sense of the argument, and found a verdict of 81 for the plaintiff, thus throwing the costs on the defondsnt. This was tempering justico with economy, somewhat after the manner in which Wouter Van Twiller 8 re- 1ated to have assessed the costs of the case on the witness, being unable to determine in his own mind whether the plaintiff or the defendant was entitled to judgmont. it i e R The sinking of the steamship Europe in mid- ocean a few days ago, while 1t was, fortunately, attended with none of the tragical details accom- panying most of those ocean disasters, suggests a retrospect of the loss of occan-steamers within atwelvemonth. A year ago the Atlantic, of the White Star Line, was lost off tho cosst of Nova Scotis, and with her were lost 546 lives. This was on April 1. On June 2¢ the Inman steamer City of Washington was wrecked near the same spot, fortunately without loss of life. On Sept. 29 tho Ismalia, of the Anchor Line, sailed from New York for Glasgow, and has not sinco been heard of. OnNov. 22 the shock- ing disaster to the Ville du Havre occurred, and a few days ago the Europe went down from s leak in the engine-room. This is a record of five large steamers and nearly 800 lives lost e 5P %0 TR FURS t haa Samatlor, She was constructed in four water-tight com- partments, whoso nselcesness has becn demon- strated sovoral times with bitter cmphasis. When an unusual chasm yawned bofore the astonished _citizens of ancient Rome they straightwsy consulted an oracle, and learned that, by throwing their most valued treasuro into it, they conld efectually close its month. The brave Curtius, whose namo has never yet been connected with the local politics of the Eternal City, ‘with trae self-appreciatior, mounted hishorse, and, ** accoutred as he was, he plunged in.” The gulf immediately closed, and Curtius received a vote of thanks from the poo- ple. This pratty picco of Roman history would not have been ropeated bat for the repetition of the freak of pature at Gold Hill, Nev. Here the earth has again opened its mouth, which is & quarter of & milo long and from one to twenty inches across. Nature has dispensed with any oracnlar necessity in this case. The chasm is directly opposito the house of Postmaster Chul- buck. If that official does not take the hint it ig his own fault. The New York Cromation Society has tried its *prentice-hand already. One of its members was lito cnough to dio within a day or two after he joined the fire-worshipers. His body was put upright in a fire-proof receptacle, through which intansely-heated air wos forced. His father paid the bill,—§8.25,—and now has the ashes of hig son in & neat little urn on the parlor mantel- piece. TEMPERANCE. The Pledge - Physical Aspects of Xnebricty. Thore iaa deal of eatisfaction, in this world's brosd field of battle, tn gotting hold of some~ thing tangiblo to opposo to the towaring forces of evil: Luther’s personal deviland an inkstand to hurl ot him, Principles, sod sentiments, and satmosphores secm g0 very vaguo to some of us. Whisky-barrols, and beer-casks, end petitions, and temperance-pledges * amount to something.” Salvation by works has its fascinations ; 80 much for so much ; this for ponance, that for super- erogation. Perhaps this {5 one resson why the latest form of the temperance movement—tho pledgo—meets with 80 much favor among the workers for the cause. One likes to know what one has accomplished, —to seo tho summing-up in black and white. It might not be amiss, however, to reflect that thero are PLEDGES—AND PLEDGES. Thero s, it is to be hoped, the pledge that was recommended by Miss Wullard at the mass meet- ing,—in distinction from the mere careless auto- graph,—the consecrated pledgo, bornof religions exaltation, and inviolate by sll the sanctities of religion. But then, again, there is the political platform pledge, ond Mrs, Grandy's pledge, which sho circulates in the boarding-house, to mark off the shoop from tho goats, and draw the stand-by-I-am-holier-than-thou line, and which sho offers to her grocer and druggist,—church brothren,—to help Descon Grandy in_his efforts to weed out the tares from the wheat; and which she presents to the young men of the con- gregation, with s view to assorting and classifying Mies Grundy’s snitors; end to the young women, with the design to reduce the number of Miss Grundy's rivals. Then, too, there is the pledge which young Master and Miss Grundy—Suaday- achool scholars—carry around to get * the most names” and make theirs “tho_banner clasa.’” Yes, it is certain, the more we thiuk of i, there aro pledges—and pledges ! Tho **esthetic pledge™ was also suggested in the same line of thought as the consecrated plodge,—the motto made beautifal with illumins- tions and devices, hung up, 28 3 standard of temperance morals, in parior, nursery, echool-room, for tho young and suscept:ble mind. But this borders too nearly on tho meer- Iy-sentimental ever to boa favorite or potent woapon of Mrs. Grundy’s warfare. I well re- member, however, tho appeal of it to my own early imagination, in those long years ago when New-Englund rum was the foe we wero figatinj by our “cold-water armies,” and our teemtfi icnics, and our temperance-tracts. That proud ay— CAN I EVER FORGET IT?— when we girls, arrayed in white muslin gowns and blue sashes, our heads aching under broad- brimmed white ** foundation™ hats trimmed with oak-leaf wreaths; and our brothers in white shirts and blue tronsers with red flannel etripes dovn the logs, snd straining every muscle to hold high in air, and keep from toppling down on the line of hoads, the pink,and blue, and gold banners,—marched under’s broiliug sun, over & dusty road, somo 8 miles to the Temper- ance Grove, where wo mado ourselves sick drin) ing lemonade ond csting cream-cakes and sand- Wichea! How cool aud refreshing the crystal fountains dn;;ncwd with 80 much art on our banners, looked to us on that Tiot summer's day! How we blessed cold water, and pictarod in imagipation tho spring in tho Wood, and folt ourselves already sipping up ite briglit d.ra&m from loaf-caps and toadstool-gob- lots! And how soon we forgot Nature's fount whon we got in sight of tho big, clean washtubs of man's dovico, with their honoyed sweets and yollow lemon rinds floating on the surface! My satin badge of membership, which, in vir- tue of that day's duty, wes given into my de- lightod hands,—how chiolcely it was Lept, &ill it gow yellow and faded, in tho ebony work-box of the spare chamber! ~Tho inscription on the badge scemed so poetical! I used £ wonder if the words were thoso of Shakspeare or Homer, from whom my learned collogo-cousin msed to ilum 80 many fine passnges, 58 ho called them. was afraid to ask, for fear of betraying my ig- Torance. I lave mover yet seen the original of the couplot : T4a here wo pledge perpetual hate To all that can intoxicate ! - The bard thereof is immortal in one heart, inseparable from that picture on emory’s wall of the dim old forest, and its cool arclies and swaet odors of pine and hemlock, and the d chorus of Old Hundred that rolled its mighty roverberations ovar thejheads of us youngsters, when our elders had got tired of ‘our smaller artillery of tutored melodies, and *joined in singing to the praiso of God" the final doxolo- gy. It was thenIssw and heard for tho first timo % oLD DOCTOR (LYMAX) BEECHER.” Ho Jooked venerablo even then to my childish eyes, us ho_stood under s leafy canopy, behind *rastic pulpit,—his head thrown back, his long gray hair stirred by the breeze, and Lis stento- Fiad voice thundering forth anathemas against tho powers of darkness. DBeing used to the persussivo pleadings of milder faith's apostle, & roverend grand-uncle, inheritor of the gentlo Pil- grim Alden's rresistiblo spooch, my youthful ear waa shocked by the stern Puritan’s frequent and vehement allusions to His Satanic Mujesty aud tho realms of his dominion ; and also by the forco with which the good man's fist came dovn upon the sacred volume, a8 if *all the dovils in hell” of whom he discoursed had taken refuge betweer the leaves, and he would beat ont the “foul fiends' " life breath with thoso ponderous strokes. It was very humiliating that my mother would not, at that time, permit mo to coroll my nemo high among the' Daughters of Temperanco by signing the pledge with thohosts of juvenilotes- totalors. Indeed, it was almost convincing proof of the truth of what I heard some of our kind neighbors of the orthodox faith whispering to cach other at the picnic,that poople of the other creed “gouldn't know anything abont experimental re- ligion.” 1t was surely something quite dreadful, such ignoranco ; and this refusing o lot me puk my name to tho pledge seemed to imply lnck of enlightenment that bordors on *tho darkness of heathenism.” Some years afterwarda I mado » discovery that illustrates my point sgain: It was MY MOTHER'S FLEDGE. Liviog in our neighborhood, & country town, “ancient aud homorable,” was s woman whom we school-children were taught to fear and dread: & To point many & moral and adorn many a talo of lecturo and_ exhortation, this woman's namo and miserable fsme were nsed. I remember wo girls were afraid to pses tho House singly, but would look on whilo tho more daring boys in squads threw stonea over tho fence to tempt the tormagant’s tonguo or her ready broomatick, and, at her first onslaught, would run shrieking away. She was, I suppose, & woman thoroughly depraved, s tho phraso gocs. I nover saw _any rospectablo person go foto her house, What was my girlish horror, thoreforo, to find, among come bundles of pa- ora which, years after my temperance-picnio aye, I was ruosacking, & yellow sheet with this Woman’s pame afixcd in a trembling, irregmar Serawl. Atfirst] had no doubt it was some thrent of vengeanco upon my mother for her child's misdeeds of mockery with tho rude rab- ble, and I wondered st mover having been roprimandod. But my mother's nomo waa Tritten . above the woman's, and, exam- ining the writing which the two names cabseribed, I read & mutual pledgo of purity. of abstinence from intoxicating liguors, of striving for a better life, The saintliness that necded no safoguard had gono out aftor and bound itselt up vith tho sin-defilemont which, to buman hope, ‘would seem beyond and below ol safogaard an plodges. I donot know whother tho woman Kopt her pledge. It would not b surprising if eho did not. But she was the better for making it, a8 I should have been the worso if 1 had been aflowed to make mine, 8o much coveted. . 4* THERE. 18 NO EXCUSE ledge. He can Nobody compels Nobody puts the ledge it is Lis ous advocate for the inebriates bresking his keep it 1f ho bas o mind_to. him to turn into the saloon. cup to his lips. 1fhe breaks the own fault,” 6aid to mo o ze of the ' womew's crussdo in all ita phnses. #Do not waste sny pity on drankards, Keep it for their disgracod snd roined families.”” Wortunstely, pity is not wasted by giving; and, from that bestowed on the unheppy families, 8 drop may overflow, with- out loss, to the wretched cause of tho misery. Speculate as wo may sbout the * might bave beon " of the inebriate's pledges, thossd and in- disputable_fact of its frequent impotenco re- muins, I have an instance in point. In an East- ern city, T often usod to soo, walking in tho gar- den, and busying himself with tho sg.mhbery of tho' beautiful _pleasurc-grounds around” his home, & somewhat foeblo-looking gentleman of 70 yoars of ago. He was o man of wealth and social position, but, T was told, the victim of an ungovernablo thirst for strong drink and of eriodical attacks of delirium tromons. Ho fod 4 wifo—s eweet, pationt womam— and one son—a youth of 23 or 23. The boy came home one evening s little earlier than ho sometimes did,—for ho was fond of wild com- punions and late Tovelries,—chatted pleassntly &nd | writers, artists, teschers, merchants, ith tho family snd o visitor who was present, who told moe tho tale; took & glass of water, an bidding good-night, went to his room. At 1 o'clock the visitor was summoned to stand by his doath-bed. He had mixed s poisonous drug in thnt glase of waicr, and died in great agony {rom its effects. He left o letter to mother giving the renson of this sct, which was deliber- Ste, ho having proviously given an_order to tho andertaker (which tho lattor regarded as & hoax) “to como t0 the house” on & certain_day, whon his services would be wanted.” *I have for tho third time broken my pledge to quit drinlk- ing," ho wrote, “ I cannot keopit. Nor can I 1ive to become snch a man 8s my father, and add to my mother’s sorrowa.” 8o Charley B. went to meet his Judge. Thatiwas a terriblo despair for young heart, and o tefribla_cousciousness of tho Zontrolling destinies. I do not pretond to offer any theories of its possibilities : It is not ours to separate The tangled skein of will and fate, And, betwoen choice and Providence, Divido the circle of eventa. Bat I recognize the lesson that we must fight the inebriate’s foa—this raging monster appetite —notalone with pledges. We must enconnter Lim 0N PUYSICAL as well as on moral battle-grounds. - That zeal of God thatis not according to & kmowledgo of His laws, physicaland psschucal, is not only mistaken, but often harmful and culps- ble. I think we want not only a volce {rom our ministers and quotations from Scripture, but we Want tho inteiligent sdvice of our best phy- gicians,—the_verdict of physiological and psy- chological scienco. Perhaps, if we had s Lt faore Enowledgo of these, and the facts of Soci- ology, we should not talk so finentls sbout +can o saamot." o rash fn, with somuch confidonce in our prompt ppacess, when wisdom moves caatiously. YetI would not by s word block & wheel in the car of the advancing causo. Let it go on, though it go as reforms always do go, over many crushed and bleedin, ‘humanities. Lsat let ns not make a mock or a derision of the iaggacds, who, though they caanot_quite keep ace, are still mlling_to lend o belping hand to ift up some of the victims left groaning by the Dighway of themarch of triumph. i‘mbabl many of us recall some remarkable articlos which appeared in the Allantic Monthly in 1869, written by AN INEBRIATE IS THE NEW YORE STATE ASTLUM, “Qur Inebrintes Harbored and Helped.” ‘Here,” ho eays, “in our literary club, are the pames of men who, in their respective walka of life, have edorned and taught superior commu-~ nitics. Here aro divines, phbyeicians, lawyers, and more than one scholar Lonorebly known by his attain- menty in tha exact ciences or criticism.” After describing the regime of the houso, which is con- @1cted sfter tho mauncr of a temperance hotel, in1 is located in the centro of a county whero, for & Tadius of four miles, the sale of intozicat: ing liquors is prohibited by legislative act, ho Rocs on tosay : “ It can bo honestly claimed for any well-managed inebriste-asylum that it ‘re- forma’ & man by helping him to reform himself; it promupposes in him sincero longing and an earnest efforr, and it offers bhim wige moral conditions of patience, encourage- ment with kindly admonition, trust with well- timed wamning, rofuge from care and from temptation, cheerful and eympathetic compan- ionship, improving and diverting mental exer- cise, and all tho devices of eagacity and tact which bis tomper or his trouble demand; sound physical conditions algo of rest (for there’s no such tired wretch as your worn-out inebriate). regularity of habit, wholesome and substantial dict, pure air, froo motion, animating games, hearty songs, and jolly langhter. And that is all that is not bumbug.” This is tho testimony of & man who characterizos bimself as a ‘“‘con- gonital periodical incbriste.” He says that this poriudicity is 8o cloarly defined that one might, a3 the ~old mimanacs have it “sbout this time expect” modness. He ndds, also, that “Tho inebriate has his rights: but they are the rights of sn_occasional mad- man, however long aad lucid his interests may be; and no man knows this better than him- self.” ¢ Thoro the rudo baud of the lu, insen- siblo to sentiment and scornful of psychological analysis, will be laid upon Lim; & policeman’s coarse paw shall bruise the raw of bis fiarce sensi- tiveness.” Hore, a8 ho esya, tbe asylum is bound Ly its moncy, as well its moral bond, to come inand help Kim, and, if meed be, punish im. Not to quote farther, but to como back to my position: It scems to me that only when we Tecognize inebriety as in some sense A DISEASE can womake headway sgainst it. We women who havo hysteria and aro * drecdfully nervous,” have no right to declaim the doctrine that there is no exouss for the ioebriate, unless wo aro wilting o accopt with it the parallol doo- trine that there is no excuse for mervousness. The will doubtless has much to do with both, but unfortunately it is sometimes o vory weak will. Wo havo among us a Washingtonian Home, which is doing something in the way of barbor- ing and helping. But its eurroundings sud p- pointments are, to say the least, somewhat depressing and repulsive to one used to the com- forte and refinemonts of life. = ‘But if, with overy pledge we get of total abstinence, we got alsoan *I promige to pay —— dollars to found oo asylum for the victims of appotite,” wo should not only have something tangible, but somothing truly helpful. It would be worth the whilo for all of us women to dis- ?cnxe with & le!;niet ornaments and flounces rom our overburdening skirts, and a bucklo or feather from our overtopping hats, and a di mond from our overbedizened fingers and over- manacled arms, and pué the money saved to- gother into A HoME in some pleasant country-suburb, where, instead of turning out and disinheritiug our own flesh and blood, we can givo tho unfortunste patient & chance to retire from the feverishness of life, and enter upon & strogglo where Nature, and Man, and God shall unite to help him. ‘Some women aro trying to do thiswork of help 10 their own homes ; I could nsms gome who bLave in silent faith longworked : but the tempta- tions of tho city are too powerful, and the danger to other members of families too great. Will some one competent to deal practically and intelligently with this Physical Problem of Inebriaty take 1t up, and let us have something hich will help inebriate mon and women to keep their pledges. Priscrura MULLENS. A Jewish View of tho Temperance 9 Question. To ihe Editor of The Chicago Trivune ; Bm: You would oblige many readers of Tae TaisoNE by republishing the following from the Jewish Times (New York) of April 3. ANOTHER VIEW OF THE TEMPERANCE QUESTION. A few weeks since, quite s stir was created in Gentile circls in Kansas City by a locture that Mr. Hess de- livered 10 his congregation, the subject being “ Tem- perance,” Amony other things Alr, Hesa sald : My friends, T will bo choritablo enough mot to doubt the sinéerity of the instigators of, or there: spectability of the participants in, this petty scheme of Teformation, Meantime I alwsy bad, and still have, 2 better opinfon of the falr sex of ‘our city than to sappose for an instant that ono single memer thercof ‘would over invest in such nop-paying, foolish enter- ‘prises, but, to this question No. 3, nllow mo to reply by telling you o littlo parable thiat I found on the 54th page of tho Talmud : % Onco s philosopber eame nnto Rabbi Gamsliel, and accosted him thus: * Rabbi, your God in eald to bo jealons God—one who does nor tolerate other DRY _GODDS. 600000000000000009000000000C00000CAVV00 (000000000000000000000C00000000000000G00 FURNITORE. GH0. GILBERT, jonN 5. 0AVEY & 00, [ FERNITURE. 306 West Hatison-St. STITL Goeater Rednetions! To Close Out by the 1st of May. BLACK LLAMA LACE SHAWLS, WHITE LLAMA LACE SHAWLS, AND OTTOMAN SHAVLS, At One-Half the Original Cost. BLACK SILKS, BLACK CASHMERE, And BLACK ALPACAS, At Away Down Prices, LINENS and WHITE GOODS At Prices to Close Out, LADIES, GENTS, AND CIITRDRENS HOSIERTYX, At Still Lower Prices. LOOK OUT FOR BARGAINS! JOHN H.DAVEY & CO. Corner of Aberdeen and Majison, 000000000060000000090000000000000000000 ©000000000000000000000000000000000000000 JAS, 1, FOSTER & G0, 'Will show on MONDAY, APRIL 13, a splen- LACES & EMBROIDERIES, COLLERETS. FICHUS, CAPES, AND RUCHINGS, In all the latest styles. STATE-ST., UNDER THE PALMERt HOUSE. CHIROPODIST. i A, WILLARD, M.D,, 200 STATEST, Sontheast corner Adams, TREATS ALL DISEARES OF TEE Corns, Bunlons, Ingrowiag Nails, and Chilblains eradica- ted in's fow minutes, without pain, blood, or theslightest iaconvenisnce. Dr. W. C. guda io bo waraliped beside Mim, Well, then, Tubti, Why does Ho not then, instead Of punishing tuo idoias tors, at once destroy the 1dois?” Gamalicl answered calmly {somewhat in the Yaukeo stsle], “y good friend, suppose thero is a father who Las a degenerate, Qdisubedient son, and that boy keeps a little dog (aow, thara s cortatnly oo wrong In Lecping 3 dog), and, in otder to ¥os liis parent, ha givon that dog his fatber’s nemo. The futlior naturally gets angry at this pro- caeding; against whom, now, wy {riend, shall hetura his wrath 7 Aguist that poor littlo puppy, or against his unruly eon 27 * Well answered, Rabbi; very good indecd ; but yon must admit that, shouid 'sour Ged destroyll those idols and images, idolstry would necensarily coase of itself.” That's true, my friend,” answercd Gamaliel; * that could be done if those fool- 13h people worehiped only things that were of no earth- Iynuso at sll to others, But, behold! they worehip Tivers, the air, tho moon, and the stars. hould now, because of their sillincas, imbecility, snd folly, the Lord go and destroy s beautifal creation?Supposo 3'man steals garden-sccds snd piants them in the fround, should they not sprout becauso they wers Stolen? Should every river, every knifc, be destroyed, Bocatse now and thes wo find o person foollsh and cowardly erough to drown himself or cut his throat 7 Nature follows ita own course, and those that abuse It punish themselvea” So answered Gamalicl’ *To vou, my lady-hearers, one more word: Iam far from liéving that there ia onenmong you here sssembled that would ro dogrado herselt a3 to Tarticirate n the proposed reformation-scheme, which is no lees silly and - preposterous than it is novel. Common Toglo teachea that, if raids on any one branch of licensed trade are folerated, every other branch 15 cn- gangered. Dear i mind"that intemporance beside being spplicd to drinking liquors, s spplicable to more than a dozen other habits, 1o legs injurious, Card-playing, for fnstance, 13 53idt0 bo o very ngree- ablo pastime (though I cannot speak from exnericnce, T hiava no resson to doubt it) ; will you deny, however, that intemperance is displayed in this habit 7 ¥ Stylieh dresscs look €0 well, you yourselves sa3 3 are you, thongh 4rictly temperae on that score, my 1ady.frieadsT Wearing jewclry decidedly looks well; intersperance, ort thou not here? ‘Extravaganco is almost synonymous with Intemper- ancs, Cannot a person eat intcmperately ns well cs Qrink beyond measure? Is there no intemperance dis- played in so-called religious matters? Does prayer alone conatituto religion 7 “If you foel inclined to pray, pray at home, or st places set apart for that purposc. To make ai ont- ard show of your prayers denotes blssphemy, and Eignifics cither hypocriay or intemperate picty. In- temperalo plety is frmaticiem, which (history, oncient and modern, testificd) has wTomght more evil than intemperate habits mortal mon is beir to. Hence, bero is tho placo Whero reformation should begin. “Not, stipposing for & moment that raiding should De instituted, and your husbands, for instance, should follow your exnmple, and, esying in the words of Shakspeare, * Tho Villainy you teach us we ehall cxe- cute, but well better the bargaln,’ go and raid every ry-goods and millinery store, cvery hair-droseer’s shop and feacream ealoon,—you would mot tike it much Imy good lady friends. % §iat you ‘may be incredulous enough to say, ¢Oh1 that cant be doio; and, if it could, it would not eure Uho evil TWell, that is exactly what we say, snd, last of all, consider, Shiould thosa who endeavor to make an honest living be made to suffer because thero are 50 many who cannot say Enough? No, my friznds, no matter who advis you otherwise, bear in min the words of Ezekiel: *Only ho that sinneth, hoalone shall suffer.’” A French Idea of an American Notion. The Journal Officiel gives tho following de- tails relative to_a gigantic tower which is to be constructed at Philadelphia, on the occasion of the Grest Dxhibition, in 1876, in_that city, to elebrato the centenary of the declaration of American independoncs. ‘This stracture, 1,000 feet high, ‘will be an unexampled creation as the work ¢f man's_hand. In fact, the great pyramid of Cheops is only 480 feet, high the capols of Bt. Peter's at Rome, 473 feet; the prramid of Cephren, 454 feet; the Cathedral of Hirasburg, 433 feet; St. Stephen, at Vienna, 436 foet; and St. Martin, at Laodsbut, 434 foet. Wo do not speak of tho tower of Cologne Cathe~ dral, since it is pot finished, and_which will be, at least 50 it is £aid, 500 feet above the floor fine of the edifica. St. Paul's, London, 875 feat, follows those colossal structures, and still fur- ther bebind them the moat remarkable monu- ments in the United States, The cupola of the Cspitol, Washington, is 237 feot; the tower of Trinity Church, Now York, 236 feet; and tho column commemorating the battle of Bunker TTill, 221 feet. Wo are nearly forgetting the cupola of the rotunda at tho Vienna Exhibi- tion, which was 343 feet high. Thia eighth wonder of the world, the idea of which is due totwo civil engineers, will be constructed in American wrought iron, in plates, connected by ‘girders, both horizontal and disgonal. Tho form ‘will bo round. At the basse the dizmeter will bo 150 fect, diminisbing graduzlly to the top, whero it will bo only S0 fect. 'This structure will be traversed through its whole height by & central tube 30 foet , sod which will, in fruth, constitutoibe whole of tho monument. In that central cylinder will be constructed four saconding chambers, 8o arranged that 500 persons can bo carried to the top 'in threo, min- htes, and a8 many brought down again in five. CES. MARSHALL FIELD, C. B. FARWELL, Dr. W. W. ALPOKT, LYMAR, L.C. P. Offico hours, 93. m. 0 6 1. MILLINERY. REER. . anday, 9a. m. to1p.m. 1. MRS. J. T. WARD (late 344 W. Madison-st.) invites her former patrons and all wanting FINE BOXNS, ORNAMENTS, cte., to sce her elegant display at the new Cor. CORTIS & W. MADISON-ST. BATHS. Turkish, Electric, and Medicated Gontomen. _The finest In_tho country. Grand Pacliic Howl Privalo estrance on DR. G. C. SOMERS, Proprietor. MRS. DR. SOMERS will be i attendance, for ladies, REMOVAL, : REMOV.AT. HAVE REMOVED 70 86 Washington-st., R S L e ] A A Lata of 8 Twenty-fourth-st., bas removed to 248 Wabash- av., where abe b fi0 of_the best Paitern-houses MILLINERY, FLOWERS, RIB- Store she has just occupied, AN AN AP RA e VAPOR BATHS, for Ladios and Jackscn-st., near LaSallo. from 10a. m. to 4 p. m. 0 J. C. McCORD & (0. Where we will offer great bargains in Ele- ere a8 opened of the West. Sho isagent for S. T. Taylor's Jmpa French Fashions and receives {rom bim all New Deaigns 28 000 88 theyarrive from Paris. 8. T. Taslo ect Srstem of Drows-Catting tanght., Agests watodia dit feront parta of tho city for Taslons Patoros. Fatiera Casos for sale. Address to L. P. WYANT, 248 WABASI-AV. CARPET CLEANING. Prfeet Carpet-Cloanine, The New York Patent Cargel-Renorating Co. 195 and 197 Randolph-st., “ (loan as New, and Colors Restored.” Can be cleaned oqually well on the fioor, if desired. MISCELLANEOUS. ik day of April, 1874, for the erce- iotion o School. Housa for District All bids to i d complation of a Bric! Hon 47 ki7da Pask, Cook Couatr, 1. B o st stato the Amount for which the enttre wark will be doze. Fosorss the riaht to roject any or all blds, 1nd Board perform- Th will z:?nu' ‘satiafactory socariy fos the falthful &nce of the contracts. B o e s mako bid will apply to GEO. G. R de e N Vo wi farnish alf nec- essary lnformation. 2455 I e GEO. 0. CUSTER, e ‘Now Is the time Lo order that beaatifal Picture known as the Lact Parliament of Ireland. Photograph of the sge, and moats & wonderfal salo eve: where, Mechanies {3 the country should sond i thelr TT, KENNEDY & CO., 34 Ma. ders 3t onco to EME ‘Chicago, Genesal Agents for the Northwest. DISSOLUTION. Leopold Meyer's intorest In the Stock and Book as- conntsnf tho firm of Goodman, HBarbo & Meyor havin beon rchasod by W, s will coniious saig Dusinesa under tho frm namo and style of Goodman & Basbe at otr proedt loszilca, % aad & Wabsibar: LEWIS GOODMAXN, bALRUE. Apsil 1, 1654 wellat., rice, Millinery. “We have now in store, and arriving dally, an tmmense B ey 2 Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Library Suits, Dining-Room Suits, FURNITURE, or kind and variety, : Ot gvery kiad and vartety, at LOWER PRICES than cai RELIABLE HOUSE ‘West of New York. We particuls examine e o B e peies botore paraaiey GEO. GILBERT, (Liate Sampson, Gilbert & Co.) 2687 & 269 Wabash-av: $80 Will buy a good MAR- BLE-TOP DRESSING SUIT at PARMELEE'S, 276 State-st. APRONS. GIVENAWAY We will give away soms 6,000] Ladies’ and Children’st APRONS (slightly soiled) at/ just HALF PRICE. R MeDowell&Lo. 234 WEST MADISON-ST. SHIRTS: SHIRTS TO ORDER. B.C.ROGERS, 209 West Madison-st. DRESS SHIRTS JAMES H. FOSTER & CO, State-st., under Palmer House. DENTISTRY. BOSTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION, (0. E. SNYDER, Denfist, Manager, Northiwest cor. Dearborn and Madison-sta. Fall Upper and Lower Sets Best Gum Teeth - $12 Plain ffeglh = - = = e s e 2B No charge for extracting witlh gas when we insert new teeth. Filling at_greatly reduced rates. We use the best materials, and warrant all work first-cls & Please bring this sdvertismeat with you. DR.H.R. PHILLIPS Dentist, 169 South Olark-st., bet Madison and Monroc, Silver Fillings, from. Slto ST Teeth Extractod without pain. 50 cents. All Work Warranted. DRY CLEANING. I ADEEISE THE Dry-Cleaning Process enables y0u to economiza by taking your Drewes {of material), Suils, Embrolderod Secques, Dolmacs, eto toAug. Ychwarz, wLo thorouskly renovates them with out ripping the garment or removing trimmings, B TG ods, Farv, ote.. troatod by ia Procoss befare putiiag away for the iummer is & surd gurrantes azalast motbs. o orfainal lustrs and shapo are not destroyed whers cleaned in thils . way You are Invtted to_call at elth ol mine o Ay e D Cistning Procean, -0 cxamiae ATG. SCEHW.ARZ, 158 Tlino; t., and 264 West Madison-st. Gentlomen's olothing also renovated in the ssme mane ner. SCALES. FAIRBANKS BTANDARD SCAT.ES OF ALL BIZES. FATRBANKS, MORSE & 00 11 AND 113 LAKE-ST. TO RENT. TO RENT. - the Metropolitan Block, narth Mosta. ; butldi Offices in Randolph and LaSall and basan weat ooroer: ding hezted with »! i sto E ¥ ok, Hoom3s FRACT! 85 Packages or FRACTIONAL CURRENCY FOR SALE AT TRIBUNE OFTICE.

Other pages from this issue: