Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LITERATURE IN BOSTON. Mrs, 8: M, B. Platt’s New Book of Poems. Corramondence of The Chiongo Tridune, . Tostox, May 20, 1674 * James I, Osgood & Co. publish in s few days » charming new book of poetry, of which I bave meon some of tho advance shoots, entitled A Voyage to the Fortunate Islos; and Other Poems," by Mrs. 8, DI, B. Platt, whoso anony- mous yolumo, “A Woman's Popms," issued threo yoars ago, will bo rooalled by many readers, The Iast-namod volumo was pronounced by leading eritics ona of the most notable books of pootry —for fine qualitios of thought and foollog, a8 well as for delicato and artistio graces of ox- prossion—yot produaced by an Amorloan Indy. TIE INITIAL POEA In Mra. Platt’s now book {8 ono that will coma homo to tho honrts of many pooplo. It is an Imoginativepioturaof tho quen by a discontented housohold for tho *t somothing bottor than thoy have known,” and thelr rocognition, in tha midat of shipwreck, that tho best which could bo glven them was in tho Past, with the homo and sasociations thoy had spurnod and doparted from. It is an imaginative pleture, I eay; but it is full of real and pathetio touches—as, for instance, in » passsge whorein tho littla children are heard speaking, and anothor, toward thaclose, in which the home thoy have doserted roappears, with its Mttlo clroumstances of joy and sorrow, to the drowning oyos of the parents, But I must leave this poom unquotod from ; it should bo road only & wholo, ”ot the otherpooms In Mrs, Piatt's volume, up- wards of fifty in number, {wo or threo are ro- markably piotureaquo with romantie historios,— a8, foroxample, one entitled * It I Wore a Quoen," in whioh the gay and grave, hright.and sombre, fortunos and fats of Queans colebrated in his- tory or pootry aro roviewed iu a light dramatia way,—sometimes playfully, soretinies tendorly, lm{ somotimes mournfully, A child's question 18 made tho starting-pofnt, and suggosts the burden or refrain of each atanzns, Boveral of which X wiil copy 1P I WEDE A QUEEN. 2 % 5 . E Nor Guinovare——¥ou aak; would X % Bo Queon Ellzabeth? Oh | nos oz, tien, should Int e Lo dlo And Toave, oll banging in & row, Iy thonsand dressce s Oould 1 bear Lo it maloalc cross, ond gray, zed paint on my noss, or Wi Down in ny grave il ndgmontDey, ring ol jox burning thore, e o o oo Gloen? Now let me ask sell awhile, Mary of Scotland, thon 7—aince sha ‘Haunta her gray castle with » smile ‘That one man may have dicd 1o 663 Bho, falreat in Homence's light Bhe, saddeat-storied of them ally Bho—but it would not pleass me quite To climb & scaffold, or to fall -Deaide my lovaly Liead to-night, I IweroaQuoeds . . . . . H Bemiramis? Wara it not sweek nTcn hn“f;‘vl’:ne-r‘nlrm; !l:o" o mad Assyria st my foc! Might e down like n lamb? And, eh/ ‘Fa sland deflant, in the glare Of Tiaing war, and softly say: # My Beauty will subdue theni|™ Rare And royal bloom muat drop away Ror wauld X as a ghoat look fair, 1L I wore a Queen, Penelops? No, on my words Coxol e mom&n{nmm suitors, while Much-wandering Ulysses b Fino singing st the Byrens'inle, Toa emall were Ithaca for mo Thon she whose gold halr {(uum ‘high With atara caught in its tanglea7t—So0, How beautiful it il Dut T Elould coose oy hair on Earth to be, Iworea Queen! o slight, blonda Marle Antofnetto? o o ;:"fllu Ausictans called tpels King ? anche, or Margaro ¥or Hussins Cutharinod. Would I bring Fhe Bpaninh womsn’s loath hesrt then, From Aragon to Englsnd™ throno? ©r bo tlia Italian, widowod, when e ina g;mtn-; Colotey Blarved, a gray oxile, shunno O B O Twero s Quean? © Allusfon to s celebratod painting of Semiramis, 1 co's hair, Other poems, again, ars full of the tonderness of love, as one onl itlod Sometime,"” which is as athetfo aa tho woll-known Gorman poem by iligrath, beginning, *“O love so long a lave thou mn&nt." Othors, with » gaunllu ohiarm, 0 express the rogrot, which all at_ times feel, for somo lightor and brighter period of life, as tho following : THERE WAS A ROBE, #Thore was 5 rose,” sho sald, Liko other roscs, parbops'to you, ‘ine yedrs 0go 1t was faint and red, "Away in thio cold dark dow, On tho dwarf-bush whero it grew, # Nover any rose befors “Was 1i%o ihat rose, very well Iimowy Never another roso uny moro ‘Will blow as that roso did blow, ‘When thie wot wind shool It 8o, © ¢ What do T want?'—Ah, what? ‘Why, I want that roso, that woe one TObe, Only that roso, And that rose is not Auywhere just now? . . . God ‘Wheso all tho old sweetneas goeo, knows 3 want that roso so much ; T would tako thie world back thera to the nighy ‘Whero I saw it blush in the grags, to touch 1t once in that saie ol Vg, ‘And only onco, if X migh # But a million marching men From the North and the South wonld arise 2 And the dead—would have ta dic agaln 7 And tho women’s widowod cries ‘Would trouble anow tho akies? #No matter, I wouldnot care; Woro it ok better that this should bot The sorrow of many the many bear,— Mine Is too heavy for mo. And T want that Tose, you soel ™ There are two or thres tonder ballads,—one, poctally, entitled ‘*Aunt Annle,” convoying a Ezmely \fmn pathetio story of real lfe, ‘ Love tm’lul poem of peouliarly charming man- ner: YTho Blaok Princess,” ' Doubt,” * A Woman’s Birthiday,—these are are each noticea- ble, Hera ls somathiug posscscing a swaetly~ religious atmosphere, which seoms to me very ploasing : OIFTS OF A DREAXM, One whispered through my sleap T bring 8 satus Lirg with o, ‘Worth hulf the world, No Queen has ons to keep, Bo precious, Wake and see, 1 glso bring s vine, To plant by cottage-windows—one Whose brood of blossoms miay b fale and flne As over pleased tho gun, 110 sent them, Doar, {0 you o love soh witkaoro divie, e and 100k, and choots one of th "Or let tho exoice be wige,n O ® ¥ K reached my eager arm ot thorile” bord amosn ow iy iasvy hand had crushe "N lelimsaie dead white stane " * AT s murmared, with & klss, oor child)” and mufinm thie lightest Tangh, o statnio was Worth half (ho World, bt thig 10 worth tho otker half," Andlett the roso In dow, Naw, gathering buds, and bright with bees, T fills iy life with honley, Dresms come trio—s Buch lovaly droms a Lheso, The grict of & mothdr upon the taking away of her child, with somothing of hoer self-comfort- ing thereafter, finds expression Elnd many be- reaved mothers will feol it) in this tender poom ¢ IS BUARE AND MINE, Be wont from me 8o softly and so soon, Ilis sweet hands rest at morning snd st noon, The only task God gava them was to hold A fow faint rose-buds—and be white and cold, At share of flowers Lo took with him away § Mo more will blossom bere 8o falr as thoy, s ghiazoof thorne ho lell—and, ff they taar y Lands instead of Lis, I do not caro, ¥is sweot eyes were o clar and lovely, but R o0k tnes tho World's wila Hght and shik Down In the dust they have their shore of sleep § Their nliaro of teara 8 left for me {0 weep. {n sweet maith had 1ts share of kissas—Oh | %‘!fl:-'s love, what snguish, will ho ever know ! f thirat, and murmuring, and mosn, B Ot Hon, Al By b, had lis aliare of Summer, Bird und dow B ofo with himewilh him they vaulsliod too, hare of dying leaves, aud raius, and fros! TaNen ) avery trary thing he loate Y lhantom of the cloud ho did not 56 ;g:ngumnln shiall overshadow me, th amall, #t!ll, snowy foot, T e ath oA mado. e’ Twlight awest, MRS, PIAT? % ethowife (1T Jo Pisk Tt coita United BStates Houss of Ropremeutatives at \Washington; and sho {8 ono of tho fiftesn or twenty lator woman-poots introduced by.Btod- dard in bis new edition of Griswold's * Jomale Poota of Amorion.” A fresh edition of tho for- mer volume, ‘A Woman's Pooms,” will, I boe Hove, Appent at Lo eame timo with Mra, Platt's neyw volume. X, MILL RIVER. The True Story of Oheonoy and Gravos, Xorthamnton (May 20) Dispatch to the Boaton Qlobe. I am about to dothrone » haro, or & pair of ho- roea. Pooplo in this vicinity are beginning to bo very much amused and a litéle disguatod with the ray in which two horoos have beon oreated for thom, namely: Choney, the gatokooper at the roservolr, sud the milkmen, Collin Gravos ; and somebody musb uEunk for tfmm. The nowapa~ por-rending publit {n gonoral believes ab this mo- meont that, in comparison with these two mon, Rovoro and 8heridan eink into Insignificance ; but the poople of this valloy, who know tho trus state of tho caso, rogard {he two ‘*horoca” ina difforent way, : In the courde of his journcyings up and down stroam sinco Baturdwy, your corrospondont ling scen and convorsed with mauy smoua, from some of whom ho hoa recoived information which could not bo doubted. Thoso statoments containod cortain facta which go to show that tho two wen in questlon wore far: from lmlrln‘g Loroos, Hore lu the trus atory of “The Rido": On tha morniug of the awful bronk, Georga Ohonoy, tho gatokoeopor, saw litlo stroams of ‘water av;ullng from the down side of the dam, At this ho bocame grightoned, and, aftor s little Lesitation, ho saddled bis horsa and rodo na Lard ns Lia coutd down to Williameburg. In. stend of warning the poople immediately, and so giving them a chenco for their lives, ho wont, with a sort of animal Instinct, to seok_his employer, Mr. O, G. Bpoll- man, at hia residenco, Many gerumm say that Cheney waa closotod with Mr, Spollman for fully firtoon minutes, but to this assortion tho latter roturns a distinct denial. Ho enys that as soon 58 Ohunn{‘hfld Liim what was going on_at tha reservolr he bade him go on down to the athor villagos ana give the alarm; that OClenoy ro- plied that hlugmma could nob carry him anothor stop ; that then Mr. Bpollman ordered him to go and ring tho factory boll, and that, bofore they could get to tho factory door, thoy hoard tha water coming down with a rush, and knew that it was too late. But theroe is auother story going the rounds hero, for which Spellman oame noar being mobbed onday n!fihb. u8 atated in_thoso dlspatchoa yostorday, and that is, that hedotaln- ed Bhonuy for a quarter of an hour. This story goes that Ohenoy tald Mr. S8pellman that thero was eomothing the matter with tho dam, but that Mr. Bpeliman, dlsbolioving what ho sald, and unwilling to axcito the approliension of the peoplo aud tfiuu brlnfi the dam inte bad ropute, detained the man until tha roar of tho water was heard, and then, though convinced that the dan- or was imminent, it Waa too Iate to do anything Encmuo tha wave waas upon tho village. Now, when your eorrespoppont was in Will- iamsburg, yestorday, ho conversed with a man who keopa” a shop noar Mr. Spollman’s houso. This man, & right honorable one, eaid that ha did not sao Ol\nnay ride up to Mr. Bpollman's house, 50 that ho_was unabla to say how long lLe ro~ mained. - But, happening to look out, ho saw tho horse standing at Mr. Bpollman’s doors, and rec- ognized it as Chenoy's, His curiosity was arousod. In nshort time, Choney camo oub of the house and rushed to a livery stablo across the streot. He began to hammer at the door, but no ono came, ns the keepor of tho atablo had mnot arnved. Chonoy thon ran to tho keopor's houso, which, was noxt door, and atatod whab had thpuned. The stable-man immedlntolf ‘gnva him the koy of tha stablo and told him to fake sny horse ho could Iey his hands on. Chonoy wont to tho stablo, but, meanwhile, your unnnaq:)ndnnt’n informant had found out what the trouble was, aud hadrun off in {ho direction of Haydonville. " After going = short distance he met a milk-wagon and a job- wagon ocoming towards Willlameburg. = Tho for- mer waa driven by Collin Groves, and the Iatter by » young fellow by the name of Day. He told tliem hurriedly what bad happened, snd urged them to around and go down the wvalloy to _warn tho pooplo of thelr davger. Both hoasitated somowhat, seomingly not belleving that thore was ln{‘unng the matter, and apparently unwilling, whether thero was or not, to incommode themselves, In aminute or two, however, the noise of the ap- pionching water was heard, and then bath turnod around their teams and startod, in sheer fright, on the run towards Haydenville, Your oorreaporident’s informant stated that he re- turned toward his shop then, and that when he resched the atablo hio eaw Cheney leu.lmg oub Lorse, but, before ho conld mount, it Lecame avidont that any attempt to roach the villagos ‘below would be useless An Engineer’s RReport, Tv the Edilor of 7'ng New York Tribune: Bin: But little remnins of the roservolr dam of the Mill River and Wflllnmabnrfinsse\’\'oir Company. Thers is, howover, enough to clearly show that grave errors wero committed in ita consfiuction, No sudden accrotion of wators took place to burat thia dam, as was the caso of the numerous othor dams of local mill- ponds further down the stroam of DIill iver—buo it burst, and ‘ovidently hag Leen upan the point of bursting, be- cauge it was totally inadoquato to merve its intended surposa. In engincering torms, the structure had culpably insufliclent cooficients of anfotyand stability, At this writing I have not had'time to go into dotails of calculation to enable me tostato precisoly what thess coefl- ciouts were in this partioular cese ; indecd whon the facts aro fully statod it will bs scen thata trifle more or loss onoway or tho other would have made no material differonco in the rosult. I monn to sny that if the g]ans and specifications of this resorvoir dam, as built, had been submit- tod to any cowpotont onginoor that he would lave foretold tho result which has juet hap enod. 1 havo tried to got tho original speciflontions of this dam, to_ennblo mo to aso if the work was done in nccordance with thom—but I was in- formed by o gentloman who had just scen and rend them that he did not beliovo that the; would bo made publio, or that Ishould bo al- lowed to exuminoe thom. Ican therefore only spoak of what I notuslly saw on tho spot, and from the observations ‘O;hlnlrn mado X shall draw the conclusions which ollow. Tha site of the reservoir dam is throe miles above the villuge of Willlamuburg, crossing n narrow valloy or_gorge, boundoed by steop hills on either side. The location is a {;nnd oue, and thero is evary natural advautage that could be wished by the enginoor to eunblo him to con- struct o pormanent and thoroughly safe dam, Taking a position a hundred yards bolow tho lina of the daw, and !naklu&'l up stream, tho ob~ sorvor sees before Lim the gap or openin through which tha pent-up wators rusbed wit such terribly dostructive forco. Tho romaluing walls show that tho davastating atronm lot looso on this occasion had & width of about 175 feot, and an average dopth of about 35 foot. ‘Pho croey oction of this sirenm was bounded at tho sido by two vortical walls about 80 foot bigh, and at the bottom: by a romaining wall of 100 feet in longth. This hotton wall is about 8 foct high at the deopeat polnt of the raviuo, and extonds nearly lovel on ita top surfaco till it moets tho sloping natural ground. This Intter was the foundation upon whioh tho entire struc- ture was based ond constrnotod, ‘Cho soil aud uppor surfaco for a depsh of about 80 inobes was removed, ang the hard remainiog bottom, con- sisting of small stones imbeddod i tongh earth thua exposed, was the natural foundation upon which trm wasoury of tho dom restod, Thid ig apparent by inspection of e ruins standing on | the eaut side, Tho beforo-mentloned bottom wall shows this portion of the masonry to ba 5 feot thiok, It iy l‘rmwer here to mote that aemall portion Is meda about 3 feet thicker by the addition of .a patch stuck against tho lower side at a placo Whero the main part was not up to_tho exceod- ingly low ltmwtrd shown b,{ the adjacont parto, The reason why this romalning 100 feot of tho bottom part of tho wall was not oarried away inl that it was wustained by a certain oross-wal about 8 feat high, which made au offective abut- ment for it. e office of this oross-wall was to suppart an Iron-pipe 16 fnches In diametor and about 100 faet ‘in langth, through which tho water from the reservolr' was h«i= through tho bl]fl]fl :»r nm&nm. obweon tho oast wall and tho eastorly end of the bottom wall, a distance of 00 rm{m tho natural slope, thora is not the slighlost indica- tion that tho place way aver mupfim by an arti- floial structuro. Asconding tho hillside to tho levol of tho top of the dum, tho general appear- ance of the ruinaid avnoarly s possiblo the #ame na If tho work way part of & heavy rallway embankment, with s vertical wall two feo$ thiok at the top, running through its longth from top wthghm" i i t strikos an enginecr as remarkablo to aco that this wall, fally 40 foot in hejght, should bave been Luilt, a8 {t was, in & straight line from one hillalde o the other, whon by construoting it on & ourye, with the convox gide up wtroam, the ssme wall would hiave been immonyaly juoreased in its resisting power and efficluncy. For with the form suggested, this wall would hava Laon an sroh lald upon ite slde, with evorlasting hills for abutments, Of coutse, such an srch should b? Ibum ‘with Intogrity snd lmn‘nuty I‘u ovory lrmi do T s e oo ie Ak A THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY, MAY 25, 1874 cnso with the miserable straight-line sobblo mural abortion undor disoussion. It {s totally unworthy of the dignity of being callod good rubble - sonry. It ‘was not Inld “rogular” inits courses, nor with suything that an engineor could pasu as ood mortar, Imoan tosay that whora tho frac- ure \as most likely toand did ocour, in the }flnon of good moriar of hydraullo coment, I ound sand which I could roadlly remove withs my fingers, and of which I have rotainod a apect~ men, Ir nnly theory {n renfiwnt to tho duty and funo- tlons of this wall was hold by the incapables wha designod and oxoouted It, no far I have beon un- ablo to ascortaln what that theory wag. Iti 8 mont likely that the wall was rollod upon a8 the principal obstacle to atoY‘ flltration through tho embankment forming tho body of tho dam, whioh of itsolf was flly adapted tosorve this R“'FWQ' “ Rip-rap ™ roulln§ upon a stratum of oarth covering & loyer of brush prosents o face of sloping stone-work on that part of the ombank- mout on tho up-stroam side b tho wost ond of tho dam. Nothing, however, l[:punra whioh would bo genorally imporvious to swator till the vertionl wall is roachad. - I find grave reasons for think- Ing that the wator of tho roservoir astually pass- od under tho wall itsclt, Tho wall iteslf and alons, had it beon mnds of the bost matorlals and {n tho bost possible man- nor, ad looated would have been totally inado- 2nntu to resfst the prossure incidont to a’hond of 0 foot. This muu? have boen alear oven to an unprofossionnl, {f ho gavo the subject any thoughtful considoration whatover, Floneo re- lisuce must have boen plnoed mainly upon tho hoavy sandy ombankmont which tho wall wad In- tended to hinvo rondored wator-tight. Tho water was comparatively {roo to percolate and find its way through to the wall, and the wall yiolding in slight dogrees from ita normal powition of a straight line, bocamo weakor and weakor, till finally tho ateady pressure and weakening peroo- lationa overcama &l roslstances and the crowd- m; masa of wator was sok froo. will not now atate Low thick a wall of mnson- v of noy given transvorse section should bo to exactly " balance tho stationl prossure due toa Liend of 40 feot, and if I did, such information would be ugeloss, but I will hors stata that au- thoritios fix tho proper thicknesa of n mnnonrg dam 40 foot high, a4 28 foot ot tho hase, and 1 foot ok tho top, and I have mysolf oonstructad dams of masoury {n daep water with a top width of 20 feot. No rulo can safely ba givon for gon- eral application, as ovory case Lna its poouliari~ tios, which ahould bo quly considored before the unfilnanr onn dotermina what is safost and hest, and, after ho has done all that1s possible with oxporience and mathomatics, ho_should st lnst apply what I oannot hors desoribe bottor than by calling it the coofiiofent of common aonso. In concluslon, tho Mill Rivor roservolr dam ab Willlamsburg failed : First—DBocauge tho dosign or {flnn on whichit was bullt was importect and faulty, Second--Bocause the excoution “of the work it- solf was slightod and not done carofully in a workmanlike manner. Third—The matarinly uscd wora not of proper quality for the fntended purposes. Haurox E, Towwe, Civil Engineor, Nzw Yonx, Moy 31, 1874, THE FARMERS' MOVEMENT, Mr. W, C. Flagg’s Papor Betoro tho Bocinl Science Congross. In the Boclal Belence Congress, at New Yorlk, on tho 20th, tho following abatract of & paper by Mr. Willard O, Fiagg, of Illinois, on *The Tarmers' Movement of the Wost,” was, in the abacnce of Mr. F, road by the Secrotary: Tn all past sges tho sgricultural class, like the other industrial olagacs, has by forco, froud, or onnning been provented from gaining more than o subsiatence by its Inbors, The robber buron, the medimval mar- cliant,|the royal az-gatherer, and ihe raliway monopoly havo “thrivon; but the men who, in rain snd sun, tolled carly. and Isto, palufully and pemus riovsly, hovo seldom, 3£ nt all, received a duo roward for 'thelr labor. ‘Agrioulture has been a system of epoliation. _Tha landlord, the transporior, and the middloman Tob the former, Tho farmer robs the land, and worn-out lands remain to tall the story of bad ‘husbandry and waorss polttical economy. And yet, in the grest discussion thot has arisen concarning labor and capital, work and wages, in these Intter days, the mon wha do moat of the labor and constitute moro than half the raco, have by soma strange inadvortence beon hardly thought of by our Inbor-reformers, Hamlot, in this nincteonth contury iragedy of ours, hiaa been foft out, and did not forca himaelf into notice i1l 1873, in 'the Farm Laborers’ loyement in England, and the Farmers’ Movemont in our Wostern Btates. ‘A the intalligence, tho ability, and tho will to assoctato for the common good beconia dovelopod resistance to oppression begins, aud vositive olforts aro mada Lo promoto tho gonoral woldare. is notable ihat the farmers and farm labor- ers of tho olvillod world aro smong the lsat to cam- bine—s rosult due nob mo much to lack of iutelll- fienco to isolation, suspicion, aud unwioldy nume ers, Resistanco boging whera oppression {s moat folt, and whiera thoro {s tho greatcat ability to roslst it, Honce, the Furmors' Movement first showed its strength in the Western Slates, Thers, clioap landa and a fortlle soll atéracted s large body of intlligent emi| t8,~it is safe to say, mea of more than avernge intolligence and education, Those wmen, in that rov glon, cowpriso miore than halt the population, instead of th per caat of it s in all Now Englsud except Ruode Ieland, where i 1a ouly 13 per cont, ‘They pro- duce far in cxccss of tha local consumption, and the 1argo surplus from their farme, seokiug the seaboard, must pasi Urough tho hauda Gt dgalor snd trauwpors! er, Tbo farmers' wants, when not supplied by local Productiou, must b gt by purchass ot goods st ave gouo (hrough the same hands, Tho reault fs a Digh cost of production 4nd a low price of products, thut has rondered, even In_favorable scasons, thelt Business unromunorative, snd made them poorer fu tho midst of plenty. This Farmor's Movemont sofzed upon such existing organizations of the agrioultural classcs na secruod most adapted to most {te new wants, It passed by for the most part tho Agricultural Sociotfes, (o Loarda of Agriculturs, aud organlzations genorally that wero dovoted to holding faira and the like, bocauso theas organfzations often contained moro or'less men tbat Rere nolther farmers wor in tympally with faemors, But tho Farmers' Olube, organizod for discussion and mutual improvement iu tho art of agriculturs, aud the Grauges, Wioss object was mutual holp, co-opuration, and soctul intercourso, onme nearor what waa' noedod, and they wera concentrated upon tho mew work, ‘The laoto organizstion of tho Olubs, and fhe secrosy and - prohibition of politles in the Granges wero drawbacks to tholr efioicnoy; but thean diMoulties bLave boon to moms extent 'worrocted. Now tho farmors being s largo clas, thalr intorost is Very nearly the comumon intsroat of tho poople of tho wholo country, Hant the §nfoction spraads or rencts, Tho trads organizations are strengthened, ar, what a ‘etter, become fused togelher in o cloas organization of amochanics and oporatives, with brasdor and lesa selflsh piirposes and aspirations than the aingle trades union can Laye. Soonor or lator theao industrial interoats, comprislng from 70 to 76 por cont of tha population, ‘Dromea to foin hands snd fo combine in puttiug dowsh Whatovor soema o o inconsietent with the funda. mentsl dootrinos of our Ropublio, In this they will witiout daubt receive theald of fufr men of ll cliesse, and will be opposed .only by the mors selfieh of tho privlloged cliaros, wio, t tho expanss of ollior clasicr avo grown wealthy from legal advantages furnished Dy improper logislation, Thus tha movomout whiol Degan with the agriculiural class reacts upon_ othior olassos and becomies gonoral, and hostile to cxlsting partios, dscadout or triumplisut, The disousaion which results in ferrating out tho causes of known ovilw, s moyt_yalnuble in rcforming abuses nud educating o peoplo up to more radical and domo- aratio opinions than havo yet beeu nccopted by the country, Our exlating pysiem of natjonal tazation, wheroby the consumer pays the tux; of Htato tazation, whiol makes the farmer the greator tax-payar of tho country; aurineonvertiblo ourrency, whoso depracia= tlon is's hoavy burdon, first upon farmers, next. upon mechanics and laborers, and fAually upon all men en~ gagod i logitimato bunincas, aur transportation Elluuu by law in tho hands of monopolies ; our pateul e, whereby the many nre lnordinately tazed to meko & faw untisually-rich—all these and other abu. nea disoussed in tho light of more intelligont aud pronounced republicaniamn, tend to bulld up a now Dolitical organieation, which, sppoaling to Ibe first principlos of tho Doclaration, goes forward o war agalnat clazs privilege and distiotion. 1t seoms to Ls tho law of Amorican politics that suo- cessful partioa muat organize on radical principles aud Oght thoir way to success. Bucecss brings quiescence aud cousorvaism—a porutustion and dstotso of ox- fating facts, good and bad, Another party, more radl. cal sud progresuive, arlses aud attacks Abuncs, and marchos ou to more advancod practicos. Such, at least, hius beon the oxpordoncs of the two great partios of tlie country, Tho Domooratio party, deuounced and foared in fts inception au revolutiouury und ugra law, vosorapldly (o powor, bl itloug, abiesd f, and sinke to & dishouored grave, he Ropublican party, duelving its fuspiration ' from tho priuciple of univoraul equality, lald down i oir Devluration, could met be kopt down by (hveats or giles, It bocamo the graat party of the conutry, But to-day, seated In tho Ligh places of power, 1t oan bardly keop its skirts oloar of cogiuplion, or et the farihcr domands of radicallem, 1f it dook not, the near future will shaw a party bullt on the same corners stouo.of equal aud oxact Justico, whoeo gt abiall bo % ar to tlio knife " with the legal, but unjust, privie Iogea of ohartcred manopollos, The Favmors’ Movoment _mioans, then, primarily sn advacomont fu the intclligoncs suu'ability of tho llers of thosoll; au unususl feoling of oppression aud distross, rodulting feorg the mischlovoug Ioglslation of the wunhy. and, finully, s3 effort to roform the abusor, sud ' carry toa moro logloal couclusion the xluciples, of our Republican Domocracy, It da s Figo ‘parl of fio uniyereul” upward tendenoy of the manual workers of thu world, .1t s as irropres. Wblo e4 the progress of domucraoy on the earth, It forocasts the ifme ‘when cuupiug of tho band wbsll bo dirccted by tho brafn of the workor, ¢ Equal sud ozsct justios to allmacu;” “All mon sra creatud equal;’ ¥ Govorue mont dorlves ita Sust powers from (Lo cousont uf to governod ;" #Wiutevor ya would that mon abould do tinto yo, do yo evon o unto thum "—thesn are ac- copiod princlples, and must Work ont thelr Jogical ro- wulta, DISOUHBION OF THE PAPRN, At the olone of the reading of the paper, the Obalrman invited disoussion, Judge Bolley was tho first spesker, Ho eald that Mr, Flagg's papsr was uot sufliciently cloar, It did not wet forth with suflicient distinotness the grievancos of the farmors of ‘the Wets ;l'hc farmors raush e Lo TR Sl be no farma in tho Went. Wera there no railways whoat and othor grains could not bo raiged nt a profit. _With the old modes of convoy- anco tho Waeslorn prairica would nover hayvo boon cultivatod, The cost of transporiing grain from tho Wost, it bad been found, was 2 4-10 cents por 100 pounds por mile. This was far cheapor than tho ordinary moden of convoyanco. The wpeaker akotchod fhe inducomonts which hind hoon held out by the inhiabitants of tho Wostorn Btates to Enatorn oapitalists to bulld railroads, Tho towus and countles had issued bonds te ald the rosds, and then had attompted to ropudiato the bonde, . Now thoy clalm the right to regulate tho froight snd passongor traflio of the railronds. Cho roads of tho Lnst- orn |Btates woro making about 7 por cont on tho capléal invosted, the Middle States abiout 7. per cont, and the Wostorn Blates only por cont. The Wostorn railroads were not mnking snything like the profita that had heon allogad, A vory large numbor had never earnod o dividond. 1Ia could not soo that the Westorn farmera hnd nny sorious ground for complalnt. Mr, G, Bradford lookedupon the mavament as nlmkly anathor manifeatation of 'the ovile worked out by tho pl{)m’ ourronoy, -Ho sald: ‘“Both {farmors and raflroads loat by this iufla- tlon, and inatead of blnming the carriors, the faruers should look further sud blamo tho halt~ ing polloy which loft thom minus any profits from thoir lubor. A tomporary rolief would bo found in mnking tho promium on gold noarer what ‘it actunlly was inatend of by gold salos, eta., holding it down bolow its mnF valuo a8 compared with forslan gold, Tho pormanent and only ronsl romedy would bean immediata and pormancnt return to au honost ourrenoy, Palitionlly, tho contest botwoen the farmers and tho railrords was not a falr one, tho Intter hay- ing no possible ropresontation. This might be romadied Doyl ng genernl raprosontatives olooted on Stato tiokets, aud bound ta no local sonatituonoy.” 8. B. Ruggles sald that tho peoplo of ton Btates lylug north of the Ohlo River owned, .in 1850, farmproporty valuad at 8014,000,000, ‘e population of these Btates hind_doublod in the past ton yoara, In 1870, tha valuo of this farm yroperty was $5,192,000,000, The value of the arm produots was not given in 1850 and 1860, but in 1870 1t was shown in theso Staten to be #078,000,000. Tho farmer was not n serf. He bad no tyrannical landlord to oppross him. It wag shown that 075 out of every 1,000 farmers in tlis soction owned tholr farms., In twent yoars they had accumulated $5,000,000,000 wartz of proporty. Tho consus of 1870 showed that thore ware 2,000,000 farmors. This would give 80 avorago amount of $2,400 {o emoh, 1t is shown that tho{thnd naid thelr holp less than 10 per cony of thelr iucome. They bad paid §91,- 000,000 for Lelp. It was shown that each and al of thess povorty-stricken farmora [Isughter] abova the ago of 19 yoars wore in tho mctfipb of v income of $400, “In the light of this great progress what would be tho result in the year 10007 In 1850 thers were railsed 800,000,000 bushels of grainin those Statoy ; in 1800, 500,~ 000,000 bushels ; in 1870, 810,000,000 bushiols, or 41,000,000 tons of grain, Of this nmount 10, 000,000 buslels must bo earrled from the Inke orts, He had boon a cancl man all his days, bnt 18 needed s that the conal ehall he enlarged, Btosm is nmow {riumplant. Tho rallronds winet disapposr nnd givo lace to wator transportation. Canada is attor governod than the United States, for she hns appropristed 86,000,000 to facilitate water- transportation, The Canadlsns will yet car grain from Lake Michigan to Montronl for $9. por ton. It coste §6.45 por ton to bring it to this olty. We must have more ndequato canal trans- ortation or Montreal will divert the trade of ow Yorlt to tho 8t, Lawronco. Away with pa- por-money ! What is wantod is herd money. The Soorotary said he feltit hisduty on ac- count of the oriticism involked to say that Mr. Flagg was & hard monoy man, and was continu- ally urging that sido of tho question upanthe at- tontion of the farmers, THE GRASSHOPPERS. Where Thoy Arc, and What Thoy Are Doing~No Damuage Yot Rocordeds From the St. Paul Press, May 23, In tho view of the genoral intorest felt in the devolopment of shese destruotivo pests, it has been deemod advisable to socure such faots as wero obtainable in rogard 'to their sccond ap- {)nnl‘mcn in this Stato. Oiizens rosiding in the hreatoned distriots have boon consulted, and the result of the genoral and caroful canvesa is herewith presonted. Be far as can bo macortainod indications of their existence connot bo fouud morth of tho Minne- gota River at the Pream time, and the * grasshioppor ragion {s substantinlly the same a8 that of Inst yoar—tho countios loonted in the sauthwestorn portion of tho Btate. The “orop” of 1874 is directly traceablo to tho awarms of last scason, which oreated such havoo with the firat ?hntmg ot sottlers who hnd but recontly ocoupled tracts of land, ond commenced making homos in Minnosots, ‘Ihie losa was & peouliarly savere hlmuh{fn to the grent majarity of thom, 28 nenrly all woro men of limited menns, depsnding :‘pon the flvst orop for the eub- sintencs thoir families durlng the opproaching winter, Tho loss nocossitnted the friondly * officos of tho State fto provent danger of euffering, If not. positive starvation, can_readily bo imagined, tho prospect of & Bocond visitation from the wingod Fontn is n matter of groat importanco, if not of ife and doath, with a paoplo #0_peculiarly situ~ stod, ‘They are therofors watching tho move- mont and dovulo&wmant of their winged plagucs with intonse anxiety, and the citizons of other Ynnluns of tho State are scarcoly loas intorestod. f thore I5 & danger, it is pottor that all the faote should bo made known now, and zhoufh the re- ports aro not of such a cheractor as to givo thoe grentest encouragoment, yot thero are indion- tions alrondy visiblo that their allotted work of dostruction will not bo porformed in Minnosots during tha prosent yoar, Tho gontlomen consulted speak moro dia- couragingly of the number of grasshoppors than any other fact connected with their second apponrance. It {a stated on tho best sod most caroful authority that the number of gimashon- ers alroady hatchod in the infested distriots {s on timos greator than tho swarms of last yoar, but as tho inscots attain eufilclent sizo ‘thoy show n disposition to loevo thor hatuhlngz- grounds, Some are alroady dotected nying in o southerly direction, whilo- those still” re- maining nt home, nud unable tofly have not thus far committed nn{lsurloua or gum!rnl dop- rodation, Ho far as tho roporter s boon able to ascortain, thore is no marked token of thelr visit to ba found in mmy fiold, and unpleasant !\x‘nguoaklcnuonu aro couflned al- most oxclus \mllyl to the future or prospoctive oporations of the pests. Some of the largest wheat-growors 11l the southwestern part of tho Stato, who, being liable to tha most extensive losses, state that while their flelds show myriads of young insccts, thoy have not inflloted {njury upon tho growing stalke. J. W, Dass, James G, Butterfiold, nnd othors farming on an oxtenslve scalo, are partinl con- verts to tho thoory that the tnuflgammrs ily away bofore thoy mottlo down to thoir worl, and loave the crops comparativol, unmolestod, 'Uhiis scoms to bo the ususl bobit of tho inscct, and it {s sinoeroly hoped by overy resident of the Btate that thoir movemonts this yoar will nat prove an oxception to this customary rulo of bohavior on the partof the grasshoppers. Those who kiavo glven the habits of the pesta tho most caroful attontion arc confldent that th:‘y will movo off as koon as they aro abla to fly, and cortainly their doparturo will not be rogret- ted. Owing to this goneral aud well-fonnded bolief, tho farmers of the gouthwostorn countics are in good wpirity over tho magnificent pros- poots nhoad, {;rovldnd this one sorious dnng;or Is romoved by bonelicent dispensation. of Provi- donog, or through tho fayorable determination of tho *“animals " themsolves. ———— ‘Worcester in Feril. The Worcester gl\lnus. Spy of the 10th males this asertion: “Tho North Pond dawm in this aity, which conflnes a body of water twico ad Inr{m a8 that which wrought such havoo in the villages of Hampshire County, wes pronounocsd unsafe cight yeara ago by Mr, Fraucls, of Lowall, ono of the most eminent hydraulio onginoors in Now Eugland. Six yours ago, on complamt mada to tho Onuntj Commissioners, thoy con~ demnad aud ordeved it remoyed, but, owving to an informality in the proosedings, or for some other roagon, this ordor was not enforesd. Lator, the Commissioners, after anather hesring, ordor- od thut the pond should not be raised above n cartain lovel, whioh, it was thought, might ba yafely majntnined, and that ordor lias boen in force over #ingo. Tho dum is notorlously ine auflioiont to hold the wator at s groater hol&xt without Imminent risk, Yot it in u fact that tha pond lias Intoly boon allawod to {1}, aud was full on_Batuvday “last, Tho olty has nur‘ulwfl the right to uso'the wator from this pond, aud the gntos ave undor tho control of tho Oity Govorn- wmont, It is not u pleasant refloction that, ot tho Yory timo whon the florce sorrent was dovastat. ing that peaceful valloy in Hampshire Qounty, s monstor more pawerful and equally fitiless was orouching st our own doors, teady to spring upon and rend the defenseless and un- warned pooplo, and that our own city officers Lad weakenod the bara of Its oago 80 a8 to make itu escape, with all Ita inevitable horrors, nob ounly possible, but even probablo, The fall be- tweon tho dam aud Lincoln Hquare is sevanty foel, " 'hat immense vohume nf.w-tor xulhlnlu Bl 4 g o loy must unayoldably oause a dostrnotion of life and proporty far boyond that whioh has doxolated tho valloy of Mill Hiyor, The water s now(i i understand, drawn down, 8o that 1o immediato dapgor is to bs apprehended, We cannos use any mildor torm than oriminal recklessncas in nugmntlzlnf: tho mismanagoment which has ex- Ennnd tha ofty to tha gront poril from which it a8 80 far happily oscapod,” i [0 i Grent Tourlst.? A Donvor paperaniota the rotirn to that ofly of * Miss Mattio Gaylord, of Boston, '*the gront tourist of the Northwest and tho Pacifio Coast,” aud say: * Tivo yoarsago sho and her aiuter mado this eity the'initial point of departure for & wondorful fonrnoy of 18,000 milos, which thoy accomplished with their own enrriags, visiting ovory eamp, !amomune‘ villago, an city in tho Territorios nnd on the P'aciflc const. Miss Gay- lord is now on routo to Australin, swhero aha will spond the next two yoars in n similar explorative ourney. TO RENT-HOUSES. ____ NT—7y MIGHIGAN.AV.. GORNKG ALX- ixs 8 Michiganiay., & xoemn onol, aud baron, - - é Hiohlesu . Faioey 'and busoinoat masblo-JoRb: fotilgan-a,, 1 root '8 ron A bnrgaln, and baab-av. W 1 rooray, 0n-at., 10 rooms ; noar ears, 4 Bnennidaat., 7 ogton, ohonp: W, lort, ataro aad dwelling, , 074, and 390 Bouth Olarkat., koond foor, 447 W ackson-al., 8 rooma, ¥ rupal rfla‘ B7 Hoyni oanis, nowly paintnd 0t Sunth Gron wito-st,, , COf 0, € Lt udr ey 8 sontus, afionn. Abave lintisas, ha¥ing alim ronted at vory law prices ta , A ALL, Tiaal Fatato Droker and Ho mn',:?h’.:tm. 1 Bouth T‘zn’fl‘?rxx‘)sim AH{,‘T{A N?.Akv.h ]:EA‘,I LAKE‘».HTw g Unioa. Digk, o, choaph Wi D, PALKEIL, 10 Ladialtaeatcs bastnente - 0 RENT-NEW ©WO-STORY AND BASEMENT oyt only 810 por monéh; alao, Cwo-stary louse it barn, Gaioll-av, Roar coruer of Licoln-it. tnquira 674, datn improvamonts, witl be ibla partlos OITY REAL ESTATE. IOR SBAL R LEASE—CORNER OF OLARK and Jackson-sts, L0x108 foot for 50 yonrs without re. 'valuation, for 5,000 gnr annum_and tazos, Thisise bargain, _J. M. MARSHALL, 97 Clark-s! IOR BALK—ONLY 8200 DOWN, BALANOR e e s 1 R LA AR wAter 1 m 2-story houss and lot i1 U5 g{?«"fi 1 eoardor, “wRUsESDALL'"E Db W 13 Ot BALR-LOTE ON WRSTERN-AV,, POLK, F P Loxiugton, and Campuoil-av, o ‘wishiug to build no monoy roquirod down. Might farnia alittlolf dosirod._Iunuire nt 155 Olark-at., 1n the b I e T, S chtion fohac e tn e are Aank o ar o, 3 sholeo lote o {nUARGAY. o ”i{’k'&"i'g ek fromte Ko I GUMMINGE, "0 lolp] T MENT-MONTHLY TAYMENTS, ommodions cottago, barn, large lot, Wont Thuron-nt., nost Lincoln, b T KING, 113 Doar bomnal, 1309, T BALP—80 0TS IN THE DISTRIOT BOUND. 818, i ' time 0r Q0 o tho wor, ALBINTORANE, 116 Sonroast. Ol RALE-OHEAP—TIiE BUILDING 00 WEET Bladison-at., with loaso of %mlmm Bullding s well ronted, Ownor wants mnm*. OUNG & NEWBURY, 8and 9 Bryan Blook, coruor §fonron and LaSail Joit —NONTH OLARK-8T.—40:80 YERT ON O o O ek iciting, ‘mt-oeod wwith 4-story hiick building woll rentod. ER & izt 14 Nison Balling, nortliosst coraée Manros aad asallo-sta, roR _SatE— TW _6.00M _GOTTAGE AT lBrhzhdnm]-: doub It nlm-d-,,: ;lm: ;nnnr:dmxz "fll(:'n}tun. a ta, with good lof i e, Blcar 81,800, 8150 cash, balance jonthi. J. 3. GOULD & CO!, 110 Doatborn-at. = Oft BALE_ON NOWTH LASALLEST., NIAR Sontllor, 23 ar 46 foot frout, by 160 fcet doop t0 an alloy. ¥, KING, 105 Vincannos-av, ALE_3.STORY AND BASRMENT BRIOK B e e ah « at shordice If akan ibis irok; only 1,60 casiy bilange long time. J, 5. GOULD 20, 11 Dearbara-st., SUBURBAN REALESTATE, MOR BALE—IN TVANSTON-20 HOUSES AND gattagon of from 8 to 10 roums, within the noxt 16 days, at just such figures as X can got, and will offer thomn 25 por cent lowor than auy othor party can offor to sall for in nvm-mn,}nr in anyother suburban town. Iwill noll on 10 yoarw' time, with only interest paid annualiyin ad- vanco, or for manthly payments, You that have no homes, B:W 18 your timo. Isoll only my OnV"\ vaf&:"h “Yflhblf 8603 arly day, and ho man_ ot Quppata wlth e who alast s ‘purohased within o Bt e Sonte L ams AotoTIRInOR 1o ke St iy Hous ast fow yoara, 1am dstorn ] 804 bufld ‘agaia, Tl alea 30l fotx on ong timo snd dah I to bulld," A" fow housvs to ront, low, Q'r'u'in o0 Wiow propurty. 0L B BROVAE, Koo' 183 Monrog-at, OR SALE_OAFAD_OR_TO RENT_A TING resldonca at Konwaod, five minutos from station, oo and barn all in Imr(m ordor; gas, bath-rooma, waler-clowets, and marhle mantals, Hont fow to respon- 3ibln party. ‘Inqulze 164 State-st., corner Monroo. A. LIRHOR, OR SALE—AT A GRIGAT BARGAIN, % LOTS IN ‘Cornel! and Englowaod . 1 prymont down, bal Snco on e We e EANGLEY: Yol Soath Clnek OR SALE~LOTS, BLOOKE, AND AGRES NEAT TR b Bhops ‘and_ Central Park: low Prisgyand enay torms. WEST QIIOAGO LAND dos- ’ANY, 78 Doarhorn-at. [VOR BAL_OR TO RENT_AT LAKB FOREST— Furnished or unfurnished desirable houso, 14 raoma; &n“nd, 216 acros, ln&uln at Room 16 Oriontal Butldiug, D Lagaliost, THOR, Ly PARKELR, DEOIDED BARGAIN IN 4 OR & acren an Woat Madlson i, and iaeey otnt road, bl pres i 5 fow dase, KI 3 HON & WILLUTY 163 Lasal OR SALE-WASHINGTON HEIGHT; 30, 40, "8G aores, on the ridge, east of Femalo Oolloko; noar depots, JANMEE B. GOODMAN & CO., 73 Doarborn'at, JFOF _BALE_JEFFERSON —GREAT SACRITION for cash. ' Owner autliorizes salo of 4 chulos lata noar opat for d1om, il takoa st ooo, TRUENDELL & BROWN, 108 Uitth-av. Olt BALE — SOUTH BENGLEWOOD—§ AGIE blogks-in tho subdiviston of south 3 of Sgo. b la- Tion Misors-fnt . Ninoty-Atihetss CENVDER & LEE, 1 Nizon Buildiog, northosst soraor Monroo and allo-sta, Ti'ORt SALE-T.0T8 AT WASIINGTON HEIGIT; Qornoll, and South Oblcage, ot bargalns. J. GOULD & 1O., 110 Desrborn.st. COURTRY REAL ZSTATE, FD]‘L SALE-LOW FOR OASI, OR WILL EX- 1t clianio for_stook of good morcliandido, irst-olnss fralt farm, €0 n Haoulbal & St. Jos Raflrond, ono milg fromdopots -G B, HARIWIOK, 174 LaSaila'st: RENT—OTL FOR SALE_AT A DANOATN-—ON monthly paymeits, throe ottages aud two d-story lioioos on Talor and | Polk-sis., noar Woatorn-av. ln. wulre a¢135 South Olark-st., in bank, 0 RENT_110URI: OV TIEN ROOMS ON HURQN- ;!. Totwaon Latailo aud Olarks Apply A6 B8 L= 10, JUENT-OR BALE_MONTHLY PAYMENTS, hoautiful, commodious cottaga, "barn, -latgs lo 474 Wast, Huron-at., noar Linooln, '8, 1) KING, 1 Dunrhorn-at., 13 103, Tpo RNt {REE PINST-0LASS DRIOK DWEL: lings, No. 5, 11 and 15 Twoniz-aoaond 0, & story and bissomant briok staro, No. 111 ¥ift ani 3 cottagot, . 131 wnd 187 Aloaghorat.: auc 11 ool tay 31 ) -et. - Inqul L UNZ - ol i s o SO GUNGI- 0 RENTZPUT DOWN TG 81i—TO EMALL, TIDV family only, nice 8-room cottage, 1070 Jackeon-at.t wator fiy ulnhun’unlu want yard, &o. TRULSDELL & i ' 7 _WANTED--MALE HELP. Boolliooners, Olorks, Eto. ANTHD-GERMAN DAY GOODA BATESMAN d trimmer; mnst b 1t G owt Halstad s |0 OO refpck. WAFED—A DRY.GOODE SALESNAN AT il LR L o S ol ‘wonty-ssond-at., ED-0_ OATTARTIRS T e O R e (R S RvAR TR s b AR SIS odens . B IR, Haow 3, 100 Mograrse™ "** & WANTILfi—A 1rx§mr“c5§( e WOOLEN GOOM) “Apply to BOY! SKELL & CO., Deoatar, Tity ANTED—BY G. HAWLEY § 00., JJoGREG PRI R E trimmar." Miscollancous. . ANTED—PROTITABLE RMPLOYMENT. WORK g, o5 torzhady. Good ‘wages., Tormagant emloys on A B 3 ARt V- A HINDENSON & G0v "Gloveiands -Ous or e, Louts, 3o, WARTED-X ndfi\’ Wi AR ll.\lil.a Bl ERPI. e Flenc 0 oan bring mood roloren maka #70 PLfd ulfl |sl fl! a §70 8 m or oyt o ), ., ik Resdon oo is, Faobly DN X0 TRAVEL IN GOUNTRY, Al M e e eV s B £ s T o ast Madi- W ANTED.-COLORED WAITERS &' GALT T e Al e e ‘WANTED-FEMALE HELP, W ANTED-oNE: By ) ST l((nul:tr general honsework at Kenosha uflm":l Hast WANTED -4 GIRL TG U0 KITOREN WORK, AT HBROWN, 164 i) 0 ENT—A FIRST.OLABS HOUSE OF 6 ROOMS, olotlioa- ots and panirios, gns, and wator; also s 6to. " Apply to Air, DOWL fory 831 chand Hubbard-st, rth 8ldos good Jooa on 3 WHIPELE, 103 Wanhingto e Ta TENT-NLW DRICIC, 667 WEAT ADAMR.AT., 78 por month 726 Wout Madison, all 1 inie, $i0 ovionthe D, OLE & SN, 1Hs SWort Bad son-st. 70, RENT—_OREAP T0_A GOOD THNANT, Y P L ol et improvemonts. _ Inquiro at 180 Aams-at., {toom i, 200 Ashinnd-v. ANTED_A GOOOD GOMDLTENT GIRE goneral housawork In all privata (lgll}:orl or- onoaa saquirod, 318 Oalur NTED—-A GERMAN OR NORWEGAN aifi? o do . 5?_“’0} slk:fit:,r:} housowork lu small family. Apply sl ' A GIRL, 13 OR 18 Y%AR! oLD, 15 rk and tako care of a baby; nuu;‘ small, help mork u Apply at 105 South Clinton.st, ANTED-A GonBfeson, . OREN"’I‘—HHDUBIg {LNE BAI':I.N "l’flng”.flTfi' A T T imined i § GOOD 00N od ordor gan and wates i D OO O 16b Moot Mtecisencat "0 Suburban. 0 RENT_A, NUMUER OF HOUSE! 5 Nkl roonn. xt frorm B 1o 30 ver snonth, © O 1 HROWNE, Hoouw 3, 168 Monrooests . oo "oh fmm;o- T RIVERGIDE, .xlmfi‘t DEFOT, NEW ouse, 10 rooms, o 8to.. rlog 3 15, W.THOMAE & BEMENT, 161 Lisallo'ate, oo be- To RENT-HOTEL, FURNISHED, 20 MILLS ¥ROM the oitys aliag, Hunting, do.; suimmas atort, Gall 4478 Doarboru-st., Room a1, " Employment Agencios, W S AN , ARD,, SCANDINAYIA aountfy: &t Bire, BUSK L ed o 50 M Dmaraniars ANTED—LADY SSn ReoR = AND LIMEN OANVAB. luu“fi;m}h‘:fi%flnlgmn wing-Hachine, Liborai SITUATIONS WANTED--MALE, i ggngkegnorl. Clorks, &o, B el ontos & wEniion L s Whoriay HA A d cap houso; best roferoncos glvon. Address Tb’n’m‘fl-n‘wtfiiwxn. TIOUSE OF 10 ROOME, 5 aston of buautitul grounds, noar Btation, 835, Call 4678 Deatbos 0, RENT—FURNIFHED HOUBFE 1N EVANSTO: N, R R ik TO RENT--ROOMS. Q RENT_SIX ROOMS OVIR DARBERSHOP, AWt Lakoste Aoty iibssemmee Ok To HENT—FURNISUED AND UNFURNISHED I rooms in the Davy Blook, cornor of Groen and bindi- and & back parlor, furnished, 28¢ W, Madlsol 0 “FOUR QI Tiilt ST ROOMS IN TilE city, cornor of Madison aud Halatod-stx., for & dontist or a dodtor._D, COLE & BON. 188 Woet Mhison-st, 0 RENT—IN THOMPEGNS BLOGK, ONE 8UITR of raoms; modazu improvenionta; 1igib and af grainod gnitablo £ ;. als0 ano sulto of m. for housokoopin, T0oms, THOMPSO! West Madison ufse 21, filbuis oliger y ‘zados. ITUATION WAmzn.EmeAngg‘fiigflA 8 L. il 3 Rrgnis e g hiongor A TTHATION W:‘ay“a‘dn l\i xafib?'uunsl OR 10 B Adirery forddam, . A WHITNEY, JITUATION WANTED 10 TAILORE—HY A MAR- 20 man, sged X2 yoszs, of yroat oxporience, » prac tioal tallur, as outtor; hos booo with his yresont emplo, 0rs slx yoars, and can furnish tha highost roferoncos an S el ot Gloe it Bt L 10 of Mr. . Htraot, 80 Gornhlll, E. 0., ’gfimfib WANTRD-BY AN RXPERIGNOE an cook, l? 3 hotol or_reatauzanti oue who bas ba long H’I‘IBHSI}GI i hotel cooking, and can llu‘llm ‘boat o olty rolpronos for boing: first-alass in ovory part -+ Ad- rgus U 28, Tribune otffeo. = SITDATIONS WANTHD--FEMALZ OANTLY PURNISHED ROOME BY uth, to ba rantod to_gontlomen ouly, , Room 33, Clierges roneonsblo 10 RENT-FURNISIED WOOMS QVER TR NEW ork store, on-st. ; roferonoos X Avply to b . YA, tn the slorg, o roo0: reautra 776, RENT_VERY PLEXVANT TRONT ROOMS, singlo or on sulto, furnishod ur unfurnistied: hot and Gold watar: iiouse o)l inodorn {mprovataouts, 998 Wabsshi- av., betwoon Sixteenth nd Elgotoenth-sta, ['ORENT-THE FIUST FLOOR OF BRICK TDTLD- 50N, oo n A il 0 RENT_NIOELY, FURNISHED “ROOMS WITI angllfll;ut board, Kingabury Biock, Randolphi-st., four Olark, 0 RENT_VLEAGANT BOOMS FOR HOUSE. keoping; briok houso: every aonvenionce ; rent reason: abloy fas ot Manras: TO RENT--STORES, OFFICES, &o. 0 RENT_DY KRN DAVISON & WELOM e o Fend Boovs, Ot ook, T LAt allo: 5 finieadid zooms and basomonts o, Dastsan, Bullding, TFiftiav,, botweon Madison and Mouropsté, Thoso roomis ¢t be Liad with or without power, Fivo houses on. Grovoland.sotrt. Those housos are furnishod with wodorn imiprovoments, aud 470 very oow. REAL ESTATE WANTED, WANIED-_RESIDENOE, VALUE FROM #8000 0 811,000, Uotweon Lwantioth and “Twenty-ninth~ its., on fot franting cast. ~Also 50 ft. lot in samo location, ain. BALDWIN, WALKRR & CO., Na. ing, southwest coruer Doarborn and Bladi= 0 barg 7 Hawloy Bullg son-at. TANTED_WE WANT BOME GOOD IMPROVED farmy to exchango for Ohicago and suburban prop. gfll]. OHI‘IET h{mw GlB" oF llfldln!l! us. hAl’:g l\;'n-'nfl‘nli Sitian 2 Jous s SEOUADGG for UninGUmLY NG s, “SIORINS ¢ STKRW, oo 3 Hothodiat Ghiuroh ol SINANCIAL, N/ 0K FOR BALE—TFROM 100 TO 200 BAfinrnlEZIOHonk of one of tha lnllllml Eugnbnul Banks f Ohlongo, "BALDWIN, WALKE] ., No. ‘}xnwfié;" o, Soutiwost ooror Donsbora i Madl, sou-ats, (TAINS "AGAINST BANKRUDT INSURANOR Unmpanies, nod Skandinavon and Franklin Banks, WATOHES, aifico, 120 H (TATHE IN ATL BANKRUPT INSURANOE COM: bl vitofied for hihost prise at oo 5, 163 ty, n sume of £3,600 orinore, No brolers need By Tasles st UnioN® FROVE COuEANT M Jowoley, or othor collatorals, ot the' Private Loat Olllco, 177 Clarlcst., up-staivs, Room 6. nds, Randolphst,, nor Clark. Established 1665 ONEY TO LOAN ON REAL ISTATE, STOCKS, DRI ING & CB;. oF Deatbors N[ONEY TQ LOAN ON DIAMONDS, "WATOWES, I n nnd Brank cashod by J. No WITHIRELE, 160 Dearboru-st., Room6, Washington-at. ONLY T0 LOAN ON IMPROVED OITY PROP- £V T0 LOAN ON DIAMORDS, WATCILES, TONEY | AN ON DIANONDS, MOTEGuaOa O RRN Dty bonds, te. Largo amounts at vory low rato Goreroymant o Gook Connty bt :m'u atato bank of lanos, Singor machings, and valuable collatorals. TUNRIOLIEE, Brokor. 15 Olarkate Hoouid. Mfifmfirin OURRENOY, GOLD, BILVER, COU- pons, Londs, wnd susponddd bank 'mofes buught at Lha Natlonnl Bank of Commoras, opposite Tribuno ulfigo, 0, LoAN-1x AMOUNTS OF 81,000, OR MOILE, ON ty renl estato or Iilinols farma within 100 llons T e BIALE, 03 Olackate Hoom B . [0 LOAN—810,000 IN TWO $5,00 EACIT OR 70, | robmsand good board In private family. Torma T sotbor, Tor {hrao or livo soaks on inalde improved | abl kst 2 . "Gash for satuo on and, J. AL, LL EET A0 Raout. b7 Olavkiate 977 JAOKEO] & Officos, 0, RENT-PART OF AN OFR 0 RENT-STORE, BASEMENT, i lknmeu ot 137 Narth Clark-st. Inquire st 120 North lazicoat, fortabla. Will be routod choap. AND 7 FRONT HILES BTORES: NOS, 446, 149, AND 45 n:{uim of JOUN G. ABHLEMAN, DL 193 WEST MADISON.ST., NEAR ind shocs. ENT—5] oI DA T T tion 1o oty o bovi D, COLLE &'BON, 163 Wast Madisou-st. F['0_RENT-STORES 301 AND 208 OLARK-AT,; % andis Olarkat., dzlm nt bank room; offices in Ma- a enulalk Hlook, 8 looke, Kontuoky Blowks al s A stsogtng odme n4 15, 251 and AL IVE and 1ob and 235 hasomonts, Clatk-st. 'J. 3. MAIL. SHALL, Hoal iiatato firoker und Houso and Stors Ront: 0 97 Clark-st. 0 RENT—THIZ VINE 43TORY AND BABEMENT brick store,35 and 37 River-st. ; lmimodiato possession. Inqulto on yroinisca. '10E_ OR DESK. oo {n_a most dustrablo location, Vault, closats, and evary conveulonce, at low ligures, 163 Monroo-st,, Itoom 2, next cornor of 3 O RENT-FART OF OUR OFFIOR TG X Goun rato_van of rom, o asory. sonvenied P TLENTEY & JACOD Walk, T4 S50 148 Donrormiat., eormer Madison, Pliscolinncons. 'Y, RENT-A GOOD BRIOK STALE: OOM FOR ok, 23 horeos s wagons, Inaulro ut 450 ind U1 Bouth nto. 0 RENT—WE OFTER THE FIRST-TLOOR AND basguouly amd thicd and_fourtly flosra, togrothor ov soparate, of bulldlug southeast coror of Monroa and Markotsts,, at vory fow iguror: all modern canvenioncus in bulldiny! POTWIN & QORBY, 143 Dearbora-at, To RENT — OHEAP, DESK-ROOM, WITH OR ritiout dosks, In aa ologuat, furalabad ofiaa. 12 La- Batlo:st., Room 4. ~ BOARDING AND LODGING. West Sida. 128 JEAT WASHINGTON.ST.—A GOOD, ROOM, 40O with board, for a gentlemun and wife; also a roou) forona ar two genta, ITUATION WANDRE e 'TED—HOUSE-OLE. . IN- 125 g\‘tltn at 101 Henry-st,, down-stairs, lnAm,onEO TTUATION WANTED—BY A OIRL T0_DO GEN- eral housework 1s 3 Gaya'at 11 Hubooca-ate Wors Gidarr T Ooll for throe Nurses. SITUATION WANTED-BY A WEALTRY WET Jurse. Good Cl 3 AR e, on 1t el hool st Employment ASecncies. SrTUATIONS R"A NTED_TAMILIES IN WANT 0 candinavia at Hire DUSKIS ohdo, to Miwaakosiane - oo S4Ppllc Nisoellanaons. QITUATION WANTED—BY A LADY A8 GOVERN- ©ces in & family ont of the oity; cau teach all tho En- Ellh Lranches, with music, French, and drawing: tho 03t olty Toloretiats Kiven Addross GOV ERNERG, 1110 Indiapa.av., Chicago. HORSES AND CARRIAGES. A NEW STOCK AND ¥iNit ARSORIALNT OF thoUast Haht and heavy ocarrisgos, bugglus, pony, Bl Jogher stiactona, Curmaniaps, funpsoais wicd -+ o, aroroom, st. B, . MURPHY & GO ey A SNALE CLARENOE FOR SATE ONEAT: SOTT: able for private ueo or livery, at MORRIS' STABLE, Biztounth-t,, noar Wabnsh'av. . AV, & S L gy 3 o.ut. arrluges, snd, Darneeacs overy Tueaday and Friday, 10arme L (JABRIAGES AND BUGGIES, LIGHT, SIDB, 014 0. A larga_sioo ) BEoth Ulinton et e B tHL 7 P , 1o onon buggies, ono linc, op-Liug, and hamois. Alky, fno saddl fod i Ay fnodts Reny a3 ol W68 FOR BALE—A PAIR OF HANDSOMNE OARRIAGH i liorsoa; used to tha city. Call at MORRIS' BTABLE, Bix ear Wabas) gre 1 p. m. n —A FEW LIGHT BQUARE 5: ons, o av ) Sorndhand — top-hugkless "ab HATHARALS, | ba Btato-st. it SALE-TWO OR THREE NO. 1 BUSINESS iosas, sound und wlthopt (aull, ~Cornge or bugg; llnukuvn-n., or RUTH'S Orstor Depot, Thirdav, an 167 Dearbornat, Okt SALE-GHEAP_ONE TIRST-OLASS TWO: s {:‘flml':c,:filtkh(-wiwnn, nniiunl x‘t‘"l.. Llimllu‘ )y ons of i st ko oity. At solthwast cornar of FOR BAL] 3 F-13 HEAD OF GOOD, WALL- i oy et e Bt :'itc?-fedi’a’r? g 1 ot 11 0 ! 's )y Bangamonst, J. Py HUBABLE, Cotuinbia, Mor o ANTED — Y0 PUNOIASE wagon, to haul 1 th. “balj B PRETRYNAR, Sod et Watsr-s BUSINESS CHANOQES. TFIRST-CLASS LOOATION—A NHATLY FUR- aied woll-eate v Addr?n'u\'ilfixshflul\kx“;fifi-vh’m. <Moo for salo. NY PARTY HAVING $6,000 TO INVEST IN AN R L e s o 3y Y Al ing O ' d R, "D 1S vomotatag s will Bovt loyestigaison. " 27 FIRST-OLASY BALOON ON ONI: OF THE DEST e A s Wetonsy usinosn. 3 HAUSDIGG, Room 4 No 1is 1 it WWashingRonst, A ONE.-TIORSE Qall, os addrons W. PARK-AV.—FOUIL YOUNG GRNTLEMEN an be sodqmniodsted " with nywly-furaistiod A G090, ousTOS BHOLMAKLR SHOP FOR o chean, Keeps four men steady at work, Ficst. g&llngnhuw rent. * Hoasow, siokooss, Xauhie FORLNISIIED OR UN- furniahed room, with Board, In & privato family. , 1 SECURITIES IN kX. Ad- V 40, Tribune offico. 306 wE ADASENT. —VIERY DI ABLE ¢ front sutio unfurnistiod, withi boacd; also, oo furnlshed Toom suitablo for two goutlomun, PURGILASE MO! MONTGAGTE 5,000 Gt sated st axiati lovas g:u’lufirtom 81,000 10 310,00, W, df. WILLNER, 136 La~ 890 VEST MADISON-T., OPPONITH ADEI. 4 doon—Largo cnd alry ropims, slnglo or on suito, ail modera lmEmvnumnh. with first.olasg board, by day or Wouk, with hiome cowforts, a rensonuble ratos: Il 30 OOO WITIL WHION TO BUY REAL 8. 10.000! 71 3, o ood L aets o vk cha-yalE hes D patd . cash. didrons N "YORE Hilbbhe ofigas MISOELLANEOUS. —] 'TERS & 00. WILI, OFFER DY A“E.‘.',‘,fl,‘: l\‘l‘l'l" ny 40 Jots in whldl':lr'l Hubdivision, noar South Ohicaga; also, new cottake and lot on T'hirty- first-st, Dou't fail to b presont, s {bia will be & grost ohanod for bay Salo nt 33 o'olook this p. m. AL!: OASII PATD FOR OAST-OI'F OLUTIHING AND mllnullnnm-&nndn of any kind, by sending a lotter @ JONAN GRLDELL, Lonn.Ofioo, 623 State-sts LL Q00D CAST-ONF OLOTUING WILL Bz .A. bought at highost price. ~J. A. DRIELSMA, 89 Bonth Clark-at. - Ofdors by matl prompily attonded to. B’o’m'(u OPENED AND OLONID, COMPLIOATED accounts adjustod; work requiring an oxport solleited, VIR & 3 UOR I, A 3,1 M ooountants, Roum 8, 183 Madlson, w D-VERY ONK TO KNOW THERIE ARE 00d aloan singlo rapmisat the Louls Houso, 48 Wost KSIRABLE BAGK ROOMS, WITH BOARD; pleasant looality, niear Union Park; ruferoucus ro quired, Address X I, Tribuncoflico, South Sid 00 Tusp.av.R¥iR Aaifimon.ar.nuor .l houza; board for Indies or gentlotneu, 85 to gb.50 uor wouk, witl use of plauos dny heaTd. i _A CHOICE STOOK OF HARDWARE AND HOUSEl turalshing goods, with bullding if desizod; businus llhu or * unincumbered rosl co. "‘usllrlu'.ssk CUANGEIIY YOU ANT TG BUY, soll, or trado for a I i #ull upoi THOMAS & OO 51 "Sgut Olack ot s o tholr monthly record doutafnini 4,000 aban it iands, G OFFION, BOALT, LANGE YA Lrsols i oar, fof (Al0, Tonk. oF ‘A for ron] ;’r‘:{? Buitablo far coul; wood of lumber. ~ dddress T 41, Trib: (¥ OF TiiE T tho clty, witls billla oo Wninmon cornor; heart af the . Bull pare tlaulars at 134 Houth BOUTH ST.—AT THE BOUTH 11 2] A A sohmaoaine rooms. e Doat Lable in the oity; tornis very reasonablo. §D00_Miie Iy as TR I gl 50 por month. 113 LaSallate, oo ga. o Prott of Korth Side. . 3 WHITING.ST,, OORNER WELLS-TO RENT ono furntahed room with buard, fn‘a vrivato faumlly, for 0uo or two goutlemet, W Afil‘fi;&tyf%fii OHANOES OF ALL KINDY catate and mooy. Owna aaltor ddrers Holihi3's FidWw) lumm?u.mudu"( v T1SIOP COURT Hfl?lr[?,fcg;" B09, Bi1, 518, AND 615 B Went. Mndl‘l’un-lh, J, ¥, Plor MA(“ nager, is ona of the boat aud moat couvenlontly lovated [MM‘\ holels in Htroot cars aud lfil‘ffll Dpaxs ;l;l\) o g od ‘ll m‘om- ,"Th;unll.l kept imen i (s o o DA oot ue s hotel:" lootnd en suite, with ex. ‘Raudbipis-abes 8L 09ORA POF Gy, Alio, rooms by wook, | olunivo biatiis Atsached. all W ANEED—TO PUIOIABE A TWO AND A HALD BYABA HOTRL, T8 AND T WABAGICAV. A":rwt raifl.t‘imé“ma uu:.v siivor-mansted, N stween Aadfson and Monroc Bmfi. %7 por uhpn for cash, Addruxs A 1, lbuns offict HOUSEHOLD GOODS, . 8- WRINORRS OF ALLICINDS REPATRED: 'gfl'fiu‘? g{‘.’.w. s new wringors &5 sud ¥, st PHAYEIVS, 70 Wast 2t ook and upirards; day board, 83 por Weak) trinslent, Fivog day. A ton, Oountry. DRLIGUTAUL, HOMR 1o) 1o e BT v TAREE OR FOUR ar lake sbore, Evans. it Faabinicton:she NEW T ; WA eksaping, tn oislisnge fo oz, TADLE TOI iaobiiuery, conslst. jug of engin, boilur, Hno-shat Teltnng afioo: &c, Addross W13, LOST AND ND, LDS’K‘-—T\VD LITTLE BOYS, ANRWERING TO THIE numaes ol hurpataln and Willie Haian, rewid. ing at. Ilfimn Unlon-st, Any Infurmation of thelr whero. :Qmm i, 411 Lo thaukfully rucolvod Ly their paronts at val 'RAYED—A O0AOILDOG, TAOE HALF WIIITE, from 13 Plk-at., on the [6tu ult. A liloral roward will b puld for s to 10 Fourthiay, ACHINE on LE-ENGINE, BOILER, LINE-SI Tohteeten b gt 4050 Tlvop s ron SALI-HFATIONARY ENGINES OF 0T o ake, Algu 0no sucond-haus N~ NIt WORKS, 110 Houth O] o l}."“' LT 170 AND 17§ LAKIR: oud-at IRKWOOD & DUNKTE K‘ . ||[unlnu-mflY e AT LA aud bolibr shop waohi ‘stonm.ony oliure, Duitps, belting, hos Lbstou sooling, BaliLs mtgend sapniioe. ot —_AGENTS WANTED, GUNTB WANTED - ILLUNTRATED T\ka Dovaet Wars of s Dobariacin Moms BIY. Fnt Dropeotus frass somminton Iargoar: Gs &r WALL TA% 'ON, WAS OPENED for guugte o . Al thie roomis {u maln haildng aod adjnoont cottagon o taken fur fho torumn by Ohicago Lusinoss ll);lfl Ar‘ tholr familiea. I ll:lhv L3 ) = n ) i 1, 4 Uiks aatorpeivo, SN o WA i 0 Y oloai Sty Miyoollanaous. [ ARGETURNISILLD 1OOM, KAGT KRONT, SUTT- sblo for twa gontloman, Wit keod board. Address N'39, Tribune oflige. N Trbune e SEWING MACHINES. PRI gses el Sest ot s SIS MKSTIO BRWING MAOHIN] 'Y AGH D \1{17';‘ it .mu..fiflTu.fidg.#‘ uh 0 ND 10 i1 montbly piaymonta; ‘sawioy ivon i dusived to | 0,552 i fl';::fl "l.l]kndlu atltachinents, naodles, . Corme A R'f'bk'bs“' TO EXOHANGE. 0 RXOHANGI-NORWOOD PARK-BLOCKS 01 pinihs shales, igh ground noue dopar for improved wne WHELS, Tl Diarbornas, 1+ e OF soustrz. 8. T G EXOHANGE-AT BLATHURST, 24 V Ioie Fliik basemunt houses, colla ok gionads sy ks for i 3 e o Oy o Vo ol |0, EXOHANGE_UNINOUNBERED. LOIR IN & éflfl_:‘_xiiml}‘!_‘gi‘“u for equl(yAn housend fot ou South WANIEDTS + nialn Hoor, vansiu, or & £y Dy, or horsoe, or Sistoa oy OR_ Lo’ g oneriago, or now ton 7, 0 for nzat olssa furpit tini, Lumers will vay' soinawianéy’ 0, T BROWNL, Mo MUSICAL, B A TINGT- TN KSR TS Sy SR Wiiolosalo and votall, st tie fectury. 5 Tagiummnt > s’ RIVED—A VATIGE (NVOTOR. JURERECEIVED oMY BNDIOF, OF THTORR Pt pisno ln thy worid for o oo, | Oall quil oxamine: 2 v % aud lorent. STORY SUANE T iargrge, iollmonta, NE HALLET £ DAVIS, AND ONK BEHNING & Kllx plang; eply h TUN}\‘?DTA‘{"TI - endid in hnmum ieay thun nf ook INGRIL, Arb TWO GROVER & i [ jata buxl.x&w Irl‘ %lgn‘nwldw, ur QIR IGL°0 X SEEAUT) e i S e S PA.RT}&EB-S WANTED. O 1a1) Haker anabin aalo bolow alf prioo, ARTNER WANTED-$3,60 WILL BUY HALE- E"rl'mom Ia.;rl:t&l.lflylw and loxitimate businoss, 1')211'1‘ WAl —LIGHT uuuhfiw@mn busit tabl imonaoly{ B0k h rairnd o TR S4UL Brodiet & INSTRUCTION. TROFIGINT MUSIGTRAOHRI DREIIRS FiT: wAn, Vléf o fmatruot on _.:;_;unnd-y orovenlng, Addross COMPETENT AND THONOUGH :‘ the pl;,n‘owtllr‘v a fi‘:z more soholars, 0d g0 WO, z TP, S ‘[{?" (Faglh beye 38 ke s i Sonn TR Franba rsidaly e e kS quh‘n senton ;Upml"‘:lll. bl v B eraie QITIATION WANTRD_BY & YoiNA 1