Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 30, 1874, Page 2

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e 1, : T : ¢ : seve ! | new and novol osreor, When thoy wers to b history. Bub I 'om rambling, only for such candidate AKE 'DITCH. . tinguished that well-known . grin - 88 . i WHAT ARE WE COMING TO? bopor my doax black | brothor, E‘,};‘) gg:l{.};’.é&'fifi-fi,fifla‘u&fi&%‘%‘:‘.un prr KE 'DITCH. . {loatal ushed o ualp bl o bla foo, | 3 i o sppicanta would. o seqdird to dogonit nal 1y, . | il ; 15 for & e il R sho othor things already obtainad. Mr. Orawford and DMiss Enrly W But lnnpgoult%en ‘;'[Z‘mn m’n‘.’m thoe n:ntll:l- lous enr-conduotora did not ofilciatly mount the Bring #560,000 Libel Suitd, | knife,board, .Ho far s raporter p R = 4 can_loarned unoMainlly, but. was dircted to nppll,y ul) !hu‘ 1:“'?,"'""“"15‘"' Aulnln%nné g::po;lln. tendont of tho Jino at_ Pine aud Fourth, ‘The Tho Fooling in Rockford, Buporintendent™ was moved to'the mulo doptha of hia manly bosom agatnst the applicants, and 2 ho gavo thona reasons, The Iadics ltving on the TWO LIDES BUITS, road bind declared thelr intentionnot to travel on The editor of tho Times hns roveled In the | the road it women woro put on 8 conductors, worth of tickets, 82 in chango, and et ™ Taklng “tho. provisions of. the Olvil'|. 8BTSt TGP ARG, RIEe e Tights bill as & basis, whnt should bo the pon- | AlLy, 88y fivo yoars henco, for ono Ql our t|;nlr danphtors or slstors rofusing & vegro's h\vllpn on. to dance, or to_an ovening-entorinimmnont l—orf ten yonrs houco, rofuslng his offor of marr ‘:w’ Tor to tuls comploxion shall wo conio at Ins ] gr 1 mistako onr mastors. Gessier at Altorf will bo ropresontod by n Louisiann foid-band, and, nlr:. Btowo, Phillina ¢t al., wiil only bo too roady to Tond tho worshipors, Shalt w then bo ablo to produco o Tell 7 J AL D 1" Cmicaao, May 37, 1874, lizous Laving at heart Lio beat intorosts of sacloty should yote for mich can- didates only as are known fo Lio {n favor of feginlation tonding to fostor temporance, virtue, and Lappluess, .l”?hu thopeoplo, ... . R eaolvzd, That, n¥ tho womon's movement has al- roaily sccompliaiod gront good in aducating the publia 4 . . nmlxlflmun‘lmi:P ;?a- lx;:ghor llfm'ld:lul‘ o8 :n Alhul fnnl’lllll i En e A ovils rosulting from {ho uso of_futoxicants, fhin mect- T (oo BRI Jnovemont 18" most lsearty ongiatil- .Thoy Find Things in a Very Unsatis- Intions, and.plodges its earnest sympathy and active : fdeldry' Condiilon E 5 3 Jdn raply, ‘and -tHo_ tppor teslh ‘wers exposod” lgllll? “Vm: trug for, Por:mlnnua of nalfL his flrat anxioty was for Gon. MeArthur, Wha hiad bo- como of him? Suro onough, how farod the } - Pontmaster P ~Tho accldont_ was o 1Rughing mattar with him. Iie -waa, last In the wagon, and kopt: bia foot wnilo: tho mulos gallopod & quarter of & milo,.whon Lo was suddonly.pitahed out, and foll hoavily in tho, rosd.. Dr, Millor ran'liko o rado-horao to thospot, and found the Gouaral leaning. up. agaivst. tho -fouco, white an _a shoot, and vyory badly hurt. o bad strpnod his back sevoroly in tho A Visit by tho Major and Ofher _City Ofcers, - - Two Rather Remarkeble Let- ters, Which Rofleot Cortain Sontiments at tho North and South Touching the Politioal Carcor of This \co-operation, \ AN ATROCIOUS CRIME. flithy outpourings of his own mind f al | though whot ‘businoss 1t laof theirs if tho 7 : in, Dr. Miller oF:Aovor ¢ _good ol i thy Country. | [Answn.—Wo havo_ nlready exprogeed our {i A Stiies fall, ond was ‘in great pa F oo ot | 70678 fu Ohioago. - Ho hns doflod faw and do- | JYomenare of good character s more than any —_— ' opinton on fito Otvil Righta bill, and are declded-.| ryva’ Mon Throw o Railrond-Traln “"““f“ to Gen. McArthu wad prompt’ with Buch , romodied .aa' WoTo . af a3 follow can find out. Dut thoro are roasons, ox= 1y opposed to {t. -.Wo print. the aboye .contin- drums for the bonoflt of all whom they msy con- corn—ED, TripuNe.] i cenoy ; hag pablishod n newspapor on tho theoty | cllont_ones, why women shouldn’t bo put on $hiat tho offal of “his own imngination could bo | ‘as aonductors, and thoy aro theao as givon by tho Bonsoned to sult tho Appotite of 'the community, | Assistant Supermntondent: Tho hougs are from Hearcolyan fasuie of thot journal but lus hoon | 08.m. to 13 p.m., of sbout sn sverago of 17 an {nsult to tho: doconey of - th hourp & dsy. This s moro than soy womnn i 'y of “thaolty, and yob ho | oy any, * Then thore ara the rough mon to lina failed to ng:olvo the punishmont which he koop {u their placos, the drankon mou to sond oft has dosorved, ~ By.dint of his battorios of ‘smut | on tholr ears, the boosting the oar onto tha and abuse, ho hias kapt at & distance thoso whom | track, the hoisfing abalky mule on hia chooring ho bas injurod, and who would not, for tholr | WAY-with & brick-bat, and other athletic oxercizos roputation's emke, toke him. to task | }00,numerous to montlon, whioli, porhaps, wonld o i tat 0 tagk | pigke it altogother too lovely for lovely woman. or his offenses. Tl ab ho hias beon enabled, by | Baid tho Superintondanc ™ ** I have worked hard surrounding himeol? with filth, to koop oven | to get this rond running, have beon on it from tho seaveogors of tho police ab o distanco, 18 not | thie fivst, and I can't keop up syatem if T'mto ba altogather croditabie to the apirit of tho city. | troubled with women-conductors, No, sir. The At T“‘ l;ofilnvur, he will bo mode to pay tho’| managers havo given them a punch sploce, and P“llvfl ty o 5 8 ?ut:nxus-. . thoy've got & book apiece, and that's ail thoy gat. Wednoadsy last a sfory, dated from Rock- | A woman's & woman, and I go In for woman in | {g;d.u:r;g;-:lr:&yh;ntgelH;lmaz.‘:hio!;nl;nu :gln-ml hor placo, right ap to the Lub, Ido; but thera's ' y BOnE0 0 't do; | moral ooae-pool thoy ave allowod 10 oxist In | hobetafloio © "ORAR can't o sho ca't hoss & thelr midsl It purported to give an ao- —_—— count of an {intriguo betweon a young [ A Wennessce Indy of -that oity sud a_well-known au with an Addor. {:i!xuoh}blfl gontloman. Tho. story was From the Sprinafeld ('enn.) Itecord, May 14, o tho cowrso lmguago which | ° ohorastorizes everstiing writton for that paer. | D o G n o Eoieman of Coopariomn, alm lwrm;r rflluhm}tli:m aulaj:ct'. .;n? rolres T;fi,] Titss Glover, wo got tho following particu~ s imogination with rocords of infamy. Tho | * sa- Allco D. Farly, danghtor of Liout.-Gov.' Eaxly, - It 8 untioossaty 1o giro the dotalls of | Hors S Oherioms, snd daughter of Robart . ot | Hond, Eaq., ol tiio storgs It was ullolont fo BLELE tho fabiro | baterie ts'yend fote fo pon county, steppod of both partics,- if - published .in n reapectablo | tooth-brugh, and, whiloin the act of breaking poper. Undauntod by the nrospect beforo them | u twig, she folt something move about hor right of daily susaults from the Times, thoy .have ap- | frmt.g‘ Hho stooped mm‘frd to soo what it \E’ng poaled to,-tholaw. *Buit hus boon brought by | whon & largo spreading adder struck her in the both Bglunlm Wilbur T. Biorey, the damages | bronst, fastoning his fangs in the bosom of har ¢laimed _boing $50,000 In cnch cako, - Mesars. | dross. It then fil’ap[led Ennk, and, to her horror, Sraall; - Burke . & Mooro ; aro tho attornoys | she found sho was on the reptile, near its tmil, for the plaintiffs, nnd itis hoped, for tho good | Her firat impulse was to run, but she dlacovored o6f tho community, that o vesdict will bo givonin | thnt the monster wes coiling himself around hor each casp for the full amount. ' A crimiual guit | ankle. Bho stopped, and with great presonce of should : thien.;be brought against thls man;. to ( mind, solzod tho only opportuno movemont of- convinco the wondering world that Chicago i8 | fered, that of putting ber loft foot upon hia head, not lost to all souse of shame yat. -Tho uni- | wnich sho did, theroby fasiening him securely to versal approval with which Lydia Thompaon's | the gronnd. ~'Thoro sho staod, all slone,with ona horsowlnp - correation of - Mr, Ktoroy was -ro- | foot on the roptile’s head, whilo nearly his whols Goivod, should encourngo othor outraged por- | length—about thrée foot—was tightly wrapped Hons,to show oqual spirit, and that in a logal axnund, ym;, mlfl:.r_ Bhe'screnmed at the n}f of manner. ¢ or voicoe, but thore was no ouo near enou t : Tho plaintiffs in theso salts are nowin town. ¥ ol hear her volve or coms 1o, hor roliof, ~Her hus~ Mr, Crawford states that he has not beon iu BIr. | band.was in a distant flald plowing, aud i: harn! Early'’s houso more than six timos, and then only { no lator than 8 o'clock, and having failed e oasunlly. Miss Early's hoalth bas boen soriously | make any of hor’ neighbors hear her—some of - affeoted by tho publication in quostion, and she | whom livod within o few hundred yards—sha is the mero shadow of what sho was & few woeks | gtood in euspenso, not knowing what to do or #g0. how to.act, During her meditations, thousands 4 TUDLIQ SBENTIMENT IN BOCKFORD. of’ thoughts rushed ncross her mind, and nof | From the Jockford ([Ul) Gazetts, Juy 38, Kktiowing butshe, in_all probability, was bitten Rarely has thoro beon 8o genoral and bitter | hug after all, so. far, she bad. boen victorious; Indignation among our oltizens as wag exhubited | thuy encouragod,-she rosorted to tho only altora | on yostorduy aftarnoon,.on the racoipt of tho | sptive loft—which was to unwrap him with hot Chicago Times, containing an, fufamous lottor | hands. Bhe commonced the loathsome ordeal, : from this city, fllled’ with tho. foulcst and most [ tho rusty monster writhing with great forco, | disgusting slanders on ono of the bost and most | yywilling to quit:his hold, Bhe fnally succood- axomplary’ citizens of Rockford, and tho' o8- | od, bus another crials- nwalted har. Ifeha lot* : teemod daughtar of another Lioboved citizen. 40 L pim go ha would porhaps recofl himaolf around Atter making s number of vile-charges against. | jor anklo boforo sbo could disongago her foob the ministry; of, thia city, wholly witkout foun- [ from his head and osoapo. - If sho took hor foob dation, tho:snonymous Times. correspondont | gif his hoad whilo sho held him with hor handa proceeds. to make. speoifio statements, aa mon- | }io * would : moro then likely bite her belore . tigned above, tho whole of whioh are liea out of | gho could rolonse him and escape. With the | whola cloth, without the loast shadow of foun- | same presence of mind-and uudaunted cour~ dation. 2 Ry 350 that had fortifiod_and maved hor thus far, . ! Whera tho Hon, R, F. Orawford ia known, tho | giig looked around and ‘eaw that _she was stande vile epithota appiied to him by tho cowardly A | ing within &:-few feet of & small sapling—~and, anonymous writer in the' Times; and the bass | witls heroi dotormination, sk Fosotned o aling’ charge modo against.him, will' find no echo and' |, yiig hoid agaiust it. Shomnde theeffortand snc= hoyo no weight. * Hero ho has' lived for tho paat |\ceded, which stunned him 8o much that ho bad eiglit yonrs, and no one can truthfully say aught'| put-lifils of lifo remaining; shie then took a stona | against the strict rectitnde’of his conduct and | and mushéed his hiodd off, snd escnped unharmed. .anily walk, and the uprightuoas of bis.doport="|"Blia reports his head a8 appenring ‘as brosd na moent. In all tho graces and virtuos that enno- | kor two hands when ho struck hor in the bosom, bla and adorzi thef thrigtian” goutloman,his rec- | notwithatanding sho thiniw she waanot much ord i withont blejmbsh. - And..tho samo Diny bb (. glarmed "until aftor ehe got back into tha yard,- said of, courso‘ja public as_nriesto_lifo. “1Wo | whan she turnod sick. Bhe mansged to gos luto ‘hayi fi‘"’“ somowhat intimenfoly nopualted.with [ thghonao and took a doso of nervous stimulant, | Me! €¥vvegord for ovor itodc sdwns, aald 8o far | which relloved her., For soveral hours aftor hae from beinginvolved in amours, we know that.ho | hands and-arms scomed ‘to bo swollen and of & ‘has beon_singularly rotiring sud difidont in bis ( garle color, which mado her spprehonsive that intercourso with all ladios outside"of “his own | gha waa bitton, but Andingnot thie lesst soratoh houso,—so much. go,. mdoed, 88 to bo-et--|on thom sho wag soon contont. . teenied tho reverse of social smong the gentler J. - v L o == e sox. | ®1e Northwostern Boundnry Commise i Concerning the young lsdy whoso name hins |: pE slo1. .boen thus foully dragged in alimo, the testimony |' . ryom the Winnives Manitoban, May 23, .of all who know lmrmi thsat there is not s mora |- ‘ghe main body of the English brauch of the Jyirluous and " sccomplishod young lady in ibe| dommission loft Loadquarters st Duferin, neaz city, nor one whoge character ‘standa more do- | Pomijria, on the afterncon of the 20th, and wers servodly high smong oll her many friondsand |t camp av River Maraiathat night. The officors .scquatntances, - Hor respected parents have: the accompouying the expedition wore Capt. Ander~ sympathy of all in tiis outragoons -slandor upon | gon, Capt. Feathorstonhaugh, Liout. Galway, oir estoemod daughter, ) and Liout, - Rowe, *with Capt. Fast in comman ‘Tt 1a uoadloss for us to any that no auch ovonts | Of ‘tho’ seonts, tho sarvices o some thirty of ‘transpired as those. montioned--in-tho Times | whom haye b i O, et o | lettorand tiat the Somator, as i tho partes . Thom, hwve bao .86 tho ato of §2 por - Alston & Co,, flled y . sgainst |.question, pronounce overy ingldont'_dogeribed 3| - \g iave heard that’ the expodition conslated Nothan n;’v‘&‘ %lsim‘mg]sfi,s?;wfbflffnafigfima o apocial correspondenga " eutiraly falao aud. | ya all of souio 900 mon, vith B{ty yolo of oxem notos dnd ah open account. Petitionars:al- | Wholly baselogs. )it - '+ ‘metives comd | M4 8 nambor of horso tosma. . Tl soason tho loge that Davis -.has . mude, -various pre. |, :1vi8 difioult to imagine what motives could | {rangport sorvice is, we underatand, to bo maial forontinl - paymenta 8nd "conveyances, .»in- | Promipt ony ono to pon so hoatilées n libel, 80d | porformad by.oxon—these. animsls. hoing foun, | cluding o trust decd o «Heath .&|-Wo did nob boforo _beliovo " thut Rockford con- | more useful in many-ways. ¢ s illigan to acourq a- debt.af $3,120; that -he i |;tained 8 mian -dograded and vilo enough to thua | This fa.the. Shurd years'. operal A0 Eomoving large quptitios of gobds from hig. |-dnstardly assassinato tho chnraotor of Lwo worthy Duinit-storo, 910 Bouth Btato straot, und disposing | -Porsons, sud bring sorrow to two Loussholds, | can'bo'concluded during ‘1874; ‘8o far survoya“ of the same, with intent to defzaud his oreditors, | .- Tho despicable author ot this last Times libel | juve been comploted oyor upwards of 400 miles Aruloto ahow esuso June 8, and provisional | Fill, wo “““(}"" ferratod:but and Ff“"“" Pins-) of the huunflmE o beliove tho wyerago pro- Warrant of tolsuro, wors issued, .- ¢ .. | ished; andthoBatanio paper which published’| ¢ress hithorto fida not exceedod seven milos por Croditors’. moetings woro orderod tobe beld | thoslandor, and thus . outraged .docenoy, pros«. \-working day; and, &3 there romain batwaon .dul July G in tho onses of G. I. Earlin, Samuel | eouted to tho foll oxtent of tho law, .. and 500 milea of survey yet to bo- accomplished, - Bulzor, Moaes Loob, Julius - Kirohoft of. al,,. O. v 2 0HR, BEPORTHR BEAIONE, aud tho dnys aro numerous and unavoidable, a A. Staples ot al,, J. B, Butler, aud 0..0. Hen! | Tbesume papor niso containg the follaning: =} complotion.can soarcely be looked for thia - year. derson, " . 2 Tmmediately on recelpt of tho. Chicago Times. of ; 0N adication. ogatuch: Gage' & Mafjory | JEIer, Somtiniag ¥ apocial corfesponlonco *trom Capt. Cuvioran, whio fa 10 follow thio narty way ordored to bo sot aside snd the proccedings Tite Sty zoully slandaring the Toput °0 Yozom | pext weer, s, we undoratand, fixed upon AMi ! e Tt Fonsrad” aua vitibns clizous, wo sént tho | Tvor s tho Leadquuitars of tiio expodition thia | dismisaed on flling consent of all tho croditors,: | following dlspatch ool il A ‘nuu;m;’r‘bfihguld :::n J’;‘fé‘xfi{'.“i’.‘,‘“":.fi‘é' z:! vg}ll’ * . 7 St # Rooxye = e 4 a 0L Tooto feraon CODY 1% RATER. oo Avguh | #* Flor Nner, oatcago St D hodition roturming this fell, sud arrangomonts tus Klinko, ;,“‘}mffg sl“(‘i'w“? D 28! L4 * i'Plennn atate If your regular reportor, Who 18 my ro- o 4 ‘ B mny poseibiy be mada with . the Unitod Statea "Silizn Narehall oo ofitors snod J.:A. Kley and | JOreraleoy weole that * apeciel coryeapondone rien | Govornmeut which wiil eoable the Commission 4 from the Tracl, Fyom the Crawfordsville (Tnd.) Review, AMay 23, Tle disnstor on tho Indisnapolis, Bloomiugton & Wostorn Rallroad, early Wodneaday morning of Inat wack, of which we mada briet mention in our last issuo, has beon solved by the confession of Joahua Carliate and Thomas Trenter that they misplaced the switoh for the purpons of robbing tho. expross-train. Tho . parties: namod above wore susploloned of having committod the doad,, tyoro arfostod by tho Wesloy Horso Company, brought to - this eclty, lodgoed in {nll. and’ brought bofora Euflulrn Ramsoy. Inst Wednesday, whon Wallaco and Harloy appoarad for tho dofonso, Plorco sud Bnydor and Kennody & Brush for tho. Btato. No trial was had, but Trontor- mado_the following confossion to the Court : **I mado n confossion fn tho jafl in the rosonce of fathor, mother, and Oapt. Ros; no nducemonts or thronts were mado; mother de- sirod mo to do 6o; Mondny evening Josh camo to our houso and said John Tittle wanted somo porson to work for himj starttd to Tittle's, and svhou in tho woods Josh and I stoppad to Test, and played enrds ; conoluded not to go to. Tit- tlo's; _sbout 11 o'lock, when bolow Qray's Mill, Josh proposod that we throw o train from tho ' tracks I fhought” thal wo would ‘got caught; reachod Waynotown 4 or 5§ o'clock; Tuocaday night. wont up _tho railrond, whon Josh 8ald be oxpeoted I would back out; went home and ate supper, whon wo returned to Tile Bido- ing and laid down, a freight switched, and we thon pryod up o bar and misplaced - tho switch ; - honrd train coming and wantod to put it baok. Josh gaid lot it go to holl; wo atarted togo away and saw tho train coming around the curve; ran across o flold home aud wont to bod ;. Josh wont to bed with mo ; Josh entd wo had bottor go back, the engincor had money; expected to kill tho enginoor and firoman; it was tho oxpross train iwo . oxpected to t‘.\ro\v oft; Josh had Mr.h“'axstmnan (ql\lmdm:\ximdév coréane tvcl\g;x&\u-- t‘tub ug';::mnmthwn-'&n gg';’h“:lfi?ngl:fimvrfib ‘Ifi':],‘: says tho South will sustain Gen, Grant ab-tho 2 Eo?{‘u;' Ho might Love addod, “and in tho gv:gld bo a good many killod and stunnod old." . hend, and the suffefing man wag tundurl{ helped to tho hotel, whoro ho recoived sil.possiblo caro and attontion, Dr. Millor and Mayqr Oolvin ro- maining thore all tho afiornoon, whifo tho re- mnindor of the party ro:ombatked on the Flor- onco, and stoamod on_to Lockport, there taking the ovening train for Obicago, At Bummit Gen. MoArthur camo on bonrd, still suffering acutoly in his bok, but not 5o, badly injured but that ko, will bo about in a. fow days. ~ Mr. Woniworth took to bis bed at his Bummit farm-house, and )0, too, %ill Boon bo all xight, Ho only racolved o fow brulaos, It was & happy cecape from that which might have proved a far moro gerious ao- cldont. 3 The Civil mul-m;n:!m. : iditor of The Chica 4 : flsllhtf ,‘ ;(:'o;“ly[‘ rospoctfully ask you—not mor‘glry. for my own Informntlon, bolok wysolt n" od- olgnor, o rasidont of only sixtoon yeum‘ atan! {ng. a travelod man, and somowhinb nnrt :l\a ro- gording tho working of tho poculier (natitutions of difforont countrion; but als for thio informn. —to ly to s of tho publie at lnrgo: o ' givo & ropl ?z:’mln quostions growlug oub of tho following factas Tho now Civil Righta bill will, as_you yoursolt acknowledgo, royive n lioatihty ‘botwoen tho racos which s practically dylng oub, incroase it probably ten-fold, aud result cortainly in at lenst one condition of things somowhat ingon- sistont with Republican theories and with the futuro welfaro of s country: tho oxtinotion of tho public-school systom throughout the Boutb. You might have ndded,—and 8 sovore blow to our own public-achool systems; for, whils any snimosity oxisting in’.tho South towards the mogro has been engonderod solely by thoe troats ment of that scotion’ by thelr Govornmont, aud not by any real poitive sympathy,—on tho ethor fand. o patural antipathy Cor, Af you will, sn acguired oue—it mattors not) oxlats amoug the Tont mnjority of tho Northern peopls, shich Fendore au social mixing of tho races ropugnant "~ Now, I havo yot to lean b o, o Clolaraut,, just, of consistont with any theortea of froedom,—in the sonse undor- stood, for oxamplo, by tho Boston toa-drink- e ur tho mignera of tuo Deelsration, “for a Government Lo force an. ontira onathird of s poaplo, nud tho majority of tho yomnining two-thirds, to pocket their sooial tustes, projudices, and antipathlos, and to reg- ulato 'their: social intercourso, according to tho goveroign dictates of & foy dozen time-gorvinj ond irresponaible politicians, or of any form of Governmont whatover, You sou’raolr atalo tho coal obiect, of this bill to b o placato the Hopro™ and iusure tho control of Lip voto, ©Of courso; fa nob tho controlling of votes always tho first aim and objoct of your rulers nt Washington ? Belioving the negro clomont down South to be moro docilo aud pliable for fhele purposes than tho whito, have thoy _ not employod overy despotio, cowardly, and vindictiyo menns’.to crush the Intter? - SWill thoy shrink from any means, North or Soutl, to accomplish thoir own enda? What {9 to stop, them ?. Has it ocourred o ou that their audacity is over on the increrso, and tho powar for poad) of your vaunted ballot-box o myth? Slnu t gecurrdd to you to reflect, ‘.i tho light of all past, bistory, and by that'of tho prosent writing on tho wall, what tho ood will bo? The figurc-liend of your political systom, tho Prosi~ dont, 1a tho target for the concentrated abuse of thoentiro uress; butwhy ho nlono shonld benr tue brant of it, orwhy thn ¢ third-term featur of tho syatem should bo {ho only ono laid bare for discussion, I cannob concoive, unless it bo to distraot public ailention from the grontor aud rorl evile,—tho cancers that ore eating into the vitals of to body politie. Who aro your real rulers? Who control tho dostinies of tho pation? Tho Deoplo? Bogh! Passivg up through the differont strata of politieal rings and crucuses, from the ward-meetings and the Jowost cligues of manipulatora who pat the voi- ing cattle on tho bead with ono hand while they |- rifle thoir pocketa with tho other,-to the councily of tho nalion at Washington, we como to ahand- ful of men, sans peur, but seldom sans reproche, moro or loss iguoiant of political cconomy or intornational law,—very many of thom innocent of all scholarship, or oven of social cuniture,— who lave Leen smart enongh, by manipulation’ of tho ballot-box, or the holp of their hireling dopondents, or otherwiso, to folat theruselves into politienl power, plant thomnalves in the Capitol, laugh at both press and pooplo, and ‘“run the whole inatitution to suit themuelves.” Hoto wo huve a fow of tho more .prominent Tesulta of latp: Congress voting itwelf eoxirn ay; the Bouthern States bankrupt and degraded 10 n condition differing from eorfdom only in nnme ; tho Jmnplu of the United States compell- ed to amend thoir tnstes and prejudices, and reg- ulnto their sacial intercourso, according to— - whoso docree 2 ‘Their own, if 1t bo true that the f«-aplu rulo in this Republiv; but, granting the lattor, then you have the spectacio of the poople passing such & law a8 I havo described, and one which you youreelf acknowledgo they will op- ‘pore o the bittor end ; and thus you bnve . ye- ductio ad absurdum of tho whole business, . All tho firaworks, and noigo, sud othor forma of effervosconcs, which may oconr at the approaching Cenfenninl aunivoraary, may make tho thoughtioss multituds foel very brave for tho timo beiug, lika the boy.whistling in the dark, Tho stunsp-orators may ignore -all: the sbove questions, and confiue themsolvos, with truly justifiablo pride, to the phyeical grandour of thiscontinent, and our materisl success andre- sourced ; thexe arotho truo cloments of grentnoss existing within our bonudaries, . But, to theman wha thinks, and is ot soothed futo essy good- nature by plansible sugar-conting, whore creod ia nat contined o making and speuding, and who dnas not, Jilo tlio ula LOLIesso of the ora. pre- ceding thoe French ovolution, reveling in'pres- ont prosperity, ehut bis eyes to tho signs of the future,—this question will appear & :pertinonts ono: Will the newspaper-pross, irne’ to, thelr suppotod mission, have the caurage and true Ept\'iohum, on the. day of tho anniversary, to int to our orators that thero may bo two sides ton picturs, and to point out the eloments of weakness also existing amoug us? . “ I have patioutly waited to meo if the press would 60izo the presont grand_opportunity, and | handlo thoe Civil Rights bill ra it deaorves to bo Bomo weeks ago, Ald, Hildroth introdnced a resolutlon in the Common Couneil calling for the appointment of a spoclal committoo to in< veatigats into tho quostion of tho capnolty of tho Ilinols & Michigan'Canal to answor tho pur- poso for which the sum of §8,000,000 was spont in {ts decponing and onlargoment, vizt the drain- ago of tho Bouth Branoh of tho Obicago River. The resolution was ndopted, and Ald, Hildroth, | Mooro, -Murphy, MeClory, and O'Brion woro ap- polated an tho Committeo, Thoir mission had n largor significance than tbat denoted by the wording of-tho rosolution ; it was intendod thnt thoy aliould examino into and report upon the offact of tho so-called : MUD-LARE DITCI . upon the drainage of tho South Dranch. Ac- cordingly, yestorday morniug was sot as tho fime for an oxouraion to that lodhlity, and tho' light- dratt littlo atoamer Floronce, of South Ohicago, was profferad by Col. Jamos H. Bowen to angwar tho tranaportation requiromonts. ‘The start was to” have beon made nt Adams atroot brm%o at 9 o'clock, and nt that hour o goodly numbor of gentlomon were assombled, among theom the mammoth proportions of Long Johy Wentwortls, who has & specinl intorest in the Mud-Loko Ditoh.. For su_hour tho party walted in the hot sun, and Col. Bowon's atoamar did not como, and Long John was rosdy to swear that the groat Bouth Ohicago outertainer had promised her to somobody elso, perhaps s half~ dozon different distingufshed visitors, and hnad forgotten all about tho muuieipal : engagoment. Not until after 10 o'olock did tho Florence make bor appoarance.: B The party were quickly aboard, but aven then monster propellor barred up the draw for fif- taen minutes, Thocompany included His Honor Mayor Colvin, Gon, John MeArthur, now Post« maater, but. formorly a momber of the Board of Pablic Works: CommissionorJ. K, Thompson, of that Board; Dr, Ben Miller, Snnitery Superin~ tondent; W. N. Brainard, Canal Commissionor; tho .Hon. Johm Wentworth, -‘Ald, Hildreth, : Mooro, Murphy, O'Bricn, McOlory, end Brand, various reprosonlatives of. the press, and other gontlomen. With 3, GREAT FORETIOUAINT, Ald. Brand had provided two barrels of Utah becr from the Busch & Brand browery, and he was tho reciplont of many well-desorved compliments on “the quality of the brewing. Mayor Colvin had aleo guarded againat tho wants of the inner man by issuing a onrte blancho to Tom Androws, who sant along John Moffatt with an excollont funch of solids and fiuids, and tho manner fn whicl'it was sorved entitled John t0 no ‘ordinary rank as " an attentive and skillful eaterer, Ouly ono thing was overlooked—cigars, and these Ald. Hildretn attempted ' to aurply by o hurried vislt to the Usesnrl nt the South. 2 . Dumaxt, Miss., Moy, 26, 1874, - To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune: ‘ ‘Bt Tho poseibility .of Gon. Grant bolng not only a tcandidato for & Third Torm, but gomothing ovon more pormunont in authority, has for mauy months boen a forogono conchu- slon in tho oxtromo Bouth, In. fhls connaotlon, your recont commenis on the Loulsvillo ‘Courier-Jowrnal have baon closely scanned, So far, wo onnnot toll whother you favor or dlacountenanco tho iden ; but we hopo, for tho gako of our scotion, tho. influonco-of THE OntoAgo Trmuss will bo on tho sido of order sad peaco. Horoawny wo conaldor the puccoss of the Ropublican -party -na sssured io any futuro contost, and our only hopo {s, that their cholce may romain with a soldior, and not fall on somo fanatlo, liko Morton. That portion of tho Bouthorn poople not ongaged in politics for a livelihood can roadily yield to Gon. Grant the pratse due -~ hfm’ for .hla- madoration ond firmnoes; for we shuddor to think what our fato would havo boon liad his position beon filled by any othor prominent Ropublican. * ‘Wo have livod go long uuder the despotism of an ignorant mob, that we ‘do hiot dresd the ad- yont of tho dospatism_of a cool, clenr-honded man, liko Gon, Grant,. We rathor hiopo ho may goon bo 5o placod that it will be to his peraonal interost to reliove us of our ignorant and vicious ruters.- Many of us have boon abréad, aud have moon tho pence and prospority of those countrics where the military-arm ig scen and folt nt overy turn; and wo, o far from dronding stich n state of affairs hore, most oarnestly pray for its spoody advent., SR t TIIE COURTS. Miscellnncous Nusiness ‘Transncted Yosterdave e Moulding, Harland & Co, filod a bill yester- day in the Buporior Court against the City of CObieago and Potor Murr, asking for an injunc- tion. Oomplafnnats stato .that last fall thoy agroed to furniak all tho briok neoded by Marrin boildlng tho Harrison Btreot Polico Btation.. They had an accounting when thoy had dons #o, and Marr was found 'to be indobted to thom o tho sum of $1,810.75. For this amount he gave ordors on ' the city, which woro duly prosonted, but have ot a8 yot beon paid. A fow weoks ago & Judg- | ment waa rondered in tho, Buporior Court in fa- vorof Marrand agalost tho city, fora balanco duo on tho orection of the station to the amount of $2,000. Tho complainants allogo that Marr hins 8o concenled and {noumberod thia property, thiat {¢ would bo; imyiosbible” to ‘malki it anion- ablo o nny . excoution . at common law, snd thelr ‘only ‘zomedy ' i8°"to make the omount of .their _claim out of tuls judgment. Thoy thoreforo ask an injuno. : tion agnivst tho clty to pfovént it- frém Paylig tho ©2,000, and, against Marr:to prevent him from collecting it or transferring the: judgment. The injunction was granted, FATE OF TIE AVARICIOUS JUNOR. Judgo Troo pnssed sontence yestorday morns ing_on Willlam 8, Payno, the juror in the MoCord _will. caso_who attomptod- to sol- icit & bribo’ of Ira . McCord," one. of -the interested ‘parties in " tho caso, . Payne. fi6d an aMidavit douying that ho had, sttompted to prooure @ loan without glving accurity, but adwitting that ho wishod McCord ‘to kesp the mattor ufiunb. The facts, -Loweyer, ‘a4 slroady stated, proved voery conclusively that, Payno's motiva in visiting MeCord was no good ons.” ,He took & lorae and buggy, and wout Jato st nighu to-seo & man with whom hio was'utterly unae- - quainted. * Ho was himsol? uttorly unablo to give ay securlty for o tonn, and when he saw that ho was upsuccessful he asked thnd tlie businosd should bo kept silont, - ) v 1 2 Judgo T'ree nmmadverted very severoly on-his .conduct a8 tending to deatroy-all confidoucs in Jury-trials, and as being a disgraco to.an Ameri- Tan citizen, and olosed by sentencing:Payno to thirty days in'tho County-Jail.- - . - No fine was . imposed, as Payne, being. withont “means, could not pay it, and the result would be that the Judgo would bo compellad either to ro- ‘mit that pary of tho sontenco; or elsp compol the prigoner to romatn in prison fur life; .} v v i ANOTHED EQUALIZATION OASD.: ' Hiram _Oablo, a stockholder: of the Rockfor Reok Island & 8t “'Louis’": Railroa Company, filed o .bill . against/ thet. road aud tho Assessors of tho various’ coun- tics through which it-"passes to _rostrain the collection of any tax on tho. éapital stock of tho rond.- Yt was sssessed by tho Btate Board of Equalization at $1,004,488, it being nomiually worth £6,490,570.41, ¥t roally only: worth about 20 conta on the dolldr, * A Lem}?urnry injunotion ' was grantod, snd the motion for o perpetusl injunction mot down for nearing on! tho' third Monday in June,» - Wi ITEMS, 2 To-day being Decoration Day, only the Clerks' oftices will bo open, aud no court business’ will bp transncted, 2 e ' Judges Molioborts and Burns, who have beon geslnling Judgo Gary tho past month, bave gone ome, S e Judga Jameson goos into the Criminal Court noxtmenth.- .. . ool c el - THE UNITED STATES OOURTS. | The United States of America began & suit in Jobt againet the Eaglo Match Company, H. ML Jennings, James Daxter, and W, 8. Foraey, lay- ing dowsges ot $25,000, ' Woman's Adventuro wo ' would . rob _thom beforo" - thes camo to; honrd tho trsin'at Gray's, snd tol Josh that it was a froight ; that we had bottor fix it rand go ‘home;' think I -will .ba' 24 or 25 yosrs old .in August; never had any talk bofore of throwingtho traln from tho track ; bavo known Josh four or fivo yoara; not vory in- . timato; had not seen him for two months, Oar- lislo sald ho was unwoll;. thought Le_would bo yoars old- In Juno, mud eaid Tronter Liad told tho truth : Lo had also made' & confos- sion in tho jail to Bhiorlfa . White and Ross; no inducomonts wore mado to got me to confens,” The Eaquirs waa of the opinion that bail ‘could not beoxoessive; thatit wns the most unwarrant- ableattompt at murdorhe evor heard of. The bond was fixod ot 85,000 each, and tho prisoners taken Daok .to jail. " Ono of the prisonors lives at xl:yéx‘o!n:vn; the ebh&!r l!’F‘h txhe vlcl‘ul:‘y ofh where 0 disaster occurred, Tholr roputation hus ot | Iridgeport grocerios, and brought on, board a boon good Lerotoforo. Thoroe is no doubt that a |. v *vild ™ frolghtshved tho: expras (oarceiug 100 | “WHred villatnous weede. poreons) from-dostruction. 'Lhey thought this - oxtra_train wna tho regular froight, and mis- placed the switoh aftor it bad passod, supposiog tho express would ' follow in & short time, :Tha engineor, firaman, eud brakeman wera- slightly < injured, eleven cara thrown from the track, five Low. 5 B of -which,«with tho locomotive,' wore completal, Correspondence of The Clideago Trivune, domolished. Judge Thomaa yeaterday sontonce: souTit Bexp, Ind,, May 28, 1874, the bwo.prisonors, Carlislo and Trenter, io six The Hon. Wiiliam Baxter, author of tho Indin- | years oach in the Ponitontiary... . no- Tomperanco law, spoke horo ‘un Tueaday., avening, yostordsy aftornoon and evening, and drow largo crowds to hear him, The agitacion which has beon- in progress for tho -past fow months has mode him somowbat famous, and curlosity had boon aroused to goo tho man who | ™ 14 gootinnd the sdlarics of cortificatod tosch- bad been instrumontal in cpuswg so much com- | ‘ers, mulo and fomale, ars respectively 8550 aud motion and antagonistio feelings among thd peo- | $200 por year. plo, armaslug tho tomperonce-advooates and tho [ —A dlerelchrom raverss Olty states that tho ache saloon-keoping nnd imbibing clomonta ageiost | wrocking-tug Leviathan hus gono tolier aselatance, aach other, until a point has beon reached which —The Lisutonant-Governor of California res- will probably make tho temperance-18sucs tho oned:throo young ladiea from drowning rocontly, Ieading foatura of tho fall-campaign. whigh ig pretty good for & Lioutcnant-Govorn 3 ZE. W, Whitman, of Westboro', Hlus., Baxtor llvea at Richmond, aud fa & Quekor | formor, Bia boos eoasiotosof End most out: preacher when :the Spirit’ moves him, but {8 rageous, inhuman conduct toward' bis farm- zendy to act s logislator, leoturer, or i such | stock, and compolled to, pay & fine'of $200 and other capacities as will bo likoly to keop him fa~ B R costs, - ¥y o ; qarably and prominontly: batora tho paople: | 4= tiokers andchaerd may talio Himoly wam- Though claiming birth in the north of England, othor dny, Dio Lowis doolared that, * When this Dia Bcateh arigin ie plainly mauifest in uis font- | war ogainst whisky is" over, we shall go for to- ures and accent. Hois highly entortainiug, and | bacco. f d # 7 Y Sl rank i ologuones with Gough, ‘nnd,gx'nthn —Arthar Lilly, & lad of 16 yours, dlod in cahigo of temperunce, may be mgnrfied a8 & star- Lowoll, Mass, luat.wools, trom o giieot of locturor, who, while the excitoment continues, | & blow in lug low by & bade bal , sustained abou! ':filu\:‘::‘!ogb&dl‘y bo in grest demand. Ho ia | & yeor ago, " His log was ainputated, but this did partienlerly bappy in tho application of his sto- q not save bis life. riee end illustiations, which call forth numorous —According to Ann Eliza Young, who ought encores, -sufficiont to gladden tho hoart fo know, Cannon's four wives are oqually divided .of tup - most vainglorious ' actor. Hia | into two elaves aud two' rulers. Tao fliat wife stylo of argumont is morged fnto this par--{ rules Lim bocausoe ho ia afraid of her, the fourth ticular facalty, - which, for ~the timo | becauso he is in love with her, The two batween boing, * netrs~ to be almost unavswerablo; | do the drudgery and subsist on bread and mo- but; -#tripped - of story sod {llustraion, his 7 lusaes. argument-would hardly pass muster ' befores | A newly- d fiying-: i - Tmdorn 3. B, Mo deolarad 4 tho quostion of e e achingla to o ox b hibited at tho New York Colosseutn in tho mid- Blavory n moro baby besido the giant queation of | dle of Juno, tho work of a Fronch engincer. Tho ‘Temporance; that therais no question ‘bofore | maohino is to start from tho dome of tha build- tha- Amoriean peoplo of go grost magnitude ; | ing ond esil down Broadway, over the roofs of and, unloss something is done to arrost tha ex- | houses, to Union Square, whoro it will land. It inting intemporanco, {n_twonty yeors we shall | successfal, tho inventor, it is snid, is to receive bacome a nation of drunkards,” Mr. Baxtor complaine of tho great ignorance 40,000, “ho 1 f —Up to October, 1870, Senator Jones Crown that ho finds swmong the people; that their | poing ming had cost $623,870 in nesessments, snd seoos oro too blunted to appretiato tho salamity | to prico o tha ook s S8 por sbare, of vbich vl ‘e to como s 5 tho ezt breoth, Lo praisod tho Grangors for | Lhoro Wore 13,000, Jn tho simmor of 1871 tha theic intolligenco, and exhorted thom to atuukrnsuloswflfsr share, The shares have foin in tho tomporance movement. . He g‘?fl“&flfifi’éa‘& 00,000, and are quoted ab. 4 Wa have arrived at tlat period of our history when nny ohauge which will rolieve ns of the continual talk of being Rebols, aud of the con- stant conflscation of property under the gulse of tnxation, will be hoartily wolcome: God speed the day. ** Vive I'Emporour!” ° Renmien. [AxswERr.~—Wo aro not in favor of & Third Term for nuybody. If Cresarlsm is over estab- lished, in_this country, wo shnll hopo for a Cresar of higher tono than Gon. Grant, ' The only issue which could make n Third:Torm for Grant possiblo would bo that of curroucy-infla- tion. . Xf Gen. Graut, in 1876, should be the eole or chlef roprosontative of the opposition to- cur- renoy-inflation, and that should b the loading ieuo of the campnign, e might Be fo-olocted ; ‘Dut in no'other ovent do'wo conslder his chances _worth mentioning.—Ep, Tamose] . TEMPERANCE, ,Addresses by the flon. Willinm Rnxe tor, Author of the Indianu' Liquor BUMAIT, The fivet halting-placo was the Summit, where Long Jobn had in waiting thres mule-tenms hitolied to_lumber-wagons, and tho light Bpring wagon of Mayor O'Brion, of Summit, “Thio littla . Florenco moved alongside the Lively Swill~Inb, - Pat Downoy akipper ; which was just thon 1n the .act of discharging a load of garbags from the city. It wus o Bweot-sccnted recoption, for which the gentlomon wore poorly propared. Up into thio lumber-wagous behind Long John'a mules clambered noarly sil tho party, whilo Muyar Colvii, Dr; Millor, Commissionor Thomp- ,sou, end Tue 'IRIBUNE roportor . wero nesigned Mayor O'Brion's moro ariatooratio yehicle, *Just after the start was mado, Long John urged Mayor Colvin to take o sent in his lumbor-wagon —ho wanted to oxplain matters to him. '&‘ho Mayor declined, and_thereby did a vory sensiblo thing, thotgly A1d. Dixon will doubticss soo in what followed anythiog®ut good luck to him, COould ‘Long John "have arranged to have bis mule team run sway and spill the lond, that ho prossod Mayor Colvin so earnestly? Probably not, sinco Alr. Wentworth 'lumselt took- big chancos in tho schems, if thora was any, - ¢ THE DITCIL. : Over o fonrfully stony road the mules ‘and lumbor-wagona ‘no]mr.l their waytoward the Mud- Lake Ditch, which waa found to bo flowing 6 feot of wator at tho rate of about .4 miles an nour into lhp,omaui;a River, tho natural cur- ront of "tho Aux Plaines- River having. thus been almoat _retroverted. Bolow the point where the ditch taps the. Aux..Plamos, tho bed of the rlvor ' 'was perfoctly dry, with hero and thero a pool of atagnent wator\not a drop running toward tho Mississippl, but ai) inta tho Olicago. Rivor, sad oven: at 1h presont low stagoe, tho volume was such as to tax 1ully one-fourth of the capacity of the canal to carry it off. 1t was plaiuly seen how. tho. big ditch bad diverted tho Aux Plainos from iis ‘natural courso, and- how in the, spring seuson. tho drainage of the surrounding country was carriod into tho South Bruuch, and. met the viver ourront 8o 88 to briug it to o stand-still “for threo monthe at o time, and render useloss tho, ©B,000,000 whioh werc Bpent to nseist in olonunh‘}u tho Chicago River. . This to benefit John” Wentworth and Mr. Ogdon, who happen ‘to own soveral thousand acros of land in tho Mud-Loko reglon, . land whioh conld be well drained with tho ditoh without turning the course of the Aux Tlaines, but tho ownors would not, as i8 now tho caso, enjoy the ‘cortain - progpook of socing tho ditoh o deopencd and widoned by the rapid flow (itself- dopositing ‘hundred of thousands of yards of yollow mud in the South Brauch,. which the city ~must onnually dredgo out at an enormous oxpensd 1o the cily) as to oventualty ————e 0 MISCELLANEOUS. -4 Al right, old slillot-loga,” asid & Kaus: ;i:wyu‘r toaJudgo who bad fined him for con- mpt. B fons on' -tho sarvey, aud it is, we fanoy, vory. doubtful if it/ CIROUIT COUNT. * Goorgo H. Bissell and Tugene Blesoll filod a bill'ngeinst Nonnotte Bohiweitzor; exedutrix, snd Houry Wilson, executor, of the.wil} .of Qon- rud Bohweitzer, deceased, Nannotte Schwoit- Zoxy Bortha M. _ Bohwoitzer, - Irene Reliwoltzor, . Olars Bolwaitzar, . Behwoitzer, Mjunio, Behieitzer,’ . and Conrad Schweitzer to foreoloss mortga;zq for $85,000 on Lot G, Blook 2; alsolota9, 13, and 14, Dlock 4 Liots 10, 11, 1, 14, 16, and 16, Blogl 8, in Peter 8chimp's. secqnd, Bubdivision® of * four noros in thio N, B, partof tho 8. B. X of tha B, E, X{ of Beo. 0, 88, 14. ] i 'Noritz Joseph began a suit in trespaas against Isnac Bamuels, clalming $5,000. b THE COUNTY COUR’ 3 branch of tho rivar, navigablo and | Rockfora i tore st Fory Bont have ‘reulived 5,400,000 fu | ko s new ) mavig Jino Mehogan for §3,600,- Tho samo partios;| Fruit.)- Please snswerby lolograph immediately, to go into wintor quartora s Fore Bonton, handled, I must admit, I regret to say, that I | quoted atatistics largely, and proved, ina manner i g ' | suitable for dock purposes, - . S B .o ., Batxrm, Editor G o "Ph of the United Btates brauch of th am not nltogothor auspolated st thels Takta- | bighly sstistactory to fumaolt tnd mont of Lis | \TIACRdssbovo QUL . e time n | v 1810F this, bRy, It s (houglit, thab Monsra, | 2120 Bucd Jano Mohogan slon, claiming S50 AUBATAN K, Bartany Bitor Gacats o160 of rauch. of the warmaess, Youy owa arlicle of {o-day, though | audionce, that tho Btoppage of tho sale of intoxi- i Wontworth -aud Ogden aro 8o violently in lovo with tho Mud-Lake ditch. Their land would ba woll drainod by sllowing the Aux Plaines to flow on toward its natural confluenco with tho Kan- kakoo, which, at Lockport, is 85 feet below the lovel of the Aux Plaincs at the head of the ditch, while tho Chicago River is but 9 faot below, It {8 spld that, without divorting the Aux Plainos, tho low lands of Aossrs, Ogden and Wontworth aro submorgod in the spring of the year, which Is undoubtudl?&l._n.m, but 1t was o grave quostion with tho gentlemon’ present whothor tho rocla- mation of a fow thouaand aores of land for threo months in the year shall stand against tho heallh of 500,000 peoplo who live in Ookgg, and rendor tho Tilinois and Alichigan Canal ajmost wholly ‘uselésa for tho purpose for which $3,000,000 ‘About & o'clock yeaterdey afternoon we recelved the | Cominission are, we understand, all ready. But following F0SpOTADL . v * ; 0 quarter of & milion of dollsrs, is now peddling 2 W Gronap, Til, May 41, 1874, books for o livelithood. Ho derives hiy largest incomo from a. thrilling brochure eutitled ‘A Programme of the Philadelphia Contenuninl,” Porsons whom he importunes to buy, a copy promptly knook bim down, and he rooovers from £6 to $10 from ench of them in -an xotion for asunult and battery, w2 —Mr.* Bartoris i¢ eald to be & bona-flde Tn- glishman in his mannors and idens. Ho belleves 1 the cultivation of muscular Christianity, and gooa daily to tho gymuasium to koop his poyora unimpairod, Boxing is one of his favorito pa- timgs. He is alno-® good judgo of what the oulinary departmont should produce, and is an adepl 8% wines, d cants would save to tho’ country nedrly 81,000, 000,000 annually, in the shape of . money waste taxes necossary fo the support of pauperism, the proscoution #nd maintenanca of - protection againat crimo, ot Legialator wns making theso statemonts, the lbnfim dwelt in my mind, that his mothod of bookkeeping ouly showed ono gide of tho ac- count,—failod to show up the orodit sido, by giv- ing the number of acres employed in tillage for the growing of grain employed iu tho manufac- {ure of intoxioants ; the valio of labor, trans- portation, and capital’; omployed, and revenue dorivod by National and Local Governments, The difforonco In proflt would bo tho amount lost to tho industrics of the country; which to 2}“]' ’l‘wmintghw nnl:fllel::a 8t. Paul \:_ntll 3 l,ha oGy A ovornment have made the appropriations for . byaham . Suh Bocksucs; £k tho'wervico, A Inat accounts the Unitod States + - 4, ¥, Bronxy, Editor Times,” party were soxiously awaiting the order to Our reporter, determined no longor to boor the | move, and when that comes thoy expect to pro- odinm of spposed autlorship of tho foul Lbols that | coed by rail on the Northern Pacific to Blsmarols, Bivo at difevent . Hones prov ‘;‘;;";‘r“’fhf;"’ Lereatlen | frow thones 10 the Missouri some distance, and sppoar in | , conce 3 b & D bts ia Tioektord, forwardsd th fotlowlng dispat tlon: aros thoplaius to maet tho Lnglish to Mr, Stqrey last oyendng: * . ' ¢ - party. . A oo 0. llooksonD, TiL, May AT, 1874, - | - “* W, F, Storey, Fdilor Jimes, Chicago: 2 . % “h"mz dellx;lug‘lo)m murlanu;nm.: for unnn)'nlll?ul: (Ma ola forwarded from thia placo Lo your paper, whicl 4 3 3 B siumdor ot best oithons, sty my moat honored | - A Boston Globe epaiter, with. gn uabcalthy feiends, I rospectfully reslgn my position as yourre- | honkeying -for originality, undortakes to dls- porter, aud shall Loreafter forward you nelther dis. |- credit.the herolsmvof Cheuoy,’ Collins® Graves, patclien nor correspondence, - R, P, Ponrsn," *| fnd Myron Day, who wared the villages 1 the tardy enouf:h in” coming, is sound as far as'it goes, Will you now favor mo with a reply to these questions, which aroonly a fraction of what I would ask hodItbo time or desire to trespass furtbor? First—\o are all moro or leas familisr with the history of tho tyraunics of ceriain despotic Govornmoits, such an thoso of Russin, and Aus- tria, We have rond, for oxample, of lato yoars, of Polish Jows being deprived of thoir boards by Iow, aud of the Polish lingaage being forbiddon in Boliah schooln, undor sovera ponsltios. Thia Russiavizing and Austrianizing polloy has also been 1nurated in various ways by the Gormans in Alsace, Now, in what way is this worse than our Cuwvil Rights bill? - —_—— . Heoublican, 7 - In'the mattor of the eatato of tho late Jnmes e ; ; —A Washington man proposos that a suitable’ | 43 ' S . |, tineke of tho recant roservolr flaod ”Wa bove (asccond="This bill has passod tho Sonnto, and | mauy sooms o bo o fair- way of wakiog up, o | stz Washmgton man peoposca thial o ullable oo axpondad, @ surslon party of sesiop. | COutn, his wil waa proven, oud lottors tosts- | & WVife and Riothor Renderod & Ohilds (inothing to sy for Clioes, who doos ot socin. the 1ousa on cértain delails; but thoere ia no | . Last evenin e gontleman announced that “"““{“ °'r‘{)"-m"l‘{ o ‘“fi“?““" ‘“‘?h E““‘“é Ady lwuan;n:ub 1o 890, S “éfx?fln"#xfrf«?r u}nv:sn'il:; moaLRry — “.,“".‘,““}1 é? u‘{)%hnT%%m‘;i:;flir el ‘vmuugnl b 'ln‘!clm‘;; Ezvu}%mr;g?\slzxz:;wfilf ey :oux:l‘,r‘t‘g:lu‘x‘:lnng 0‘3\: k % % B warning of broakago, which, as.in the re fi Ly i AN ADProvol ond o o h b From the Evansville Journal, May 25, i d goud routon. rzo'l‘slx;ll%vi p'fi: i ok pass. IF 15 | bo would epenk on the roints aud workings of oty . fosaehiiotte, wnny. livos and | Ocials, tho opiuion was uannimouy that . | vinod hin antige proporty’ o hie hrothor John. ¢ tho low; aud, while ho mado 'bis happy snd popilar hits ol the way through, yot Lus cxpo- sltion of whel ho-intondod - tho Jaw ehould ac- complish, and -hla argument ss- to its powors, word, in 4 logal point of view, a failure, - Ho an- nonnced, at tho outsat, that he wont to the Log-, |: isluture for tho purpose of gnulng through & probibitory lsw ; but, flading that_he could not gob that, ko gob n Iaw o noar Emhlbhlon 3 pos- S niblo; and he thought- that, if ils pro- visions wero ‘earried out, it would A. reliable gentloman just from tho coal excite- bo in _effecot mearly °prohibitory. He | ment nine miles cast of Wells,. Minaesots, ‘was robearsed * © the-* i obataclos ‘'placed in | b this city to:day, and glves vn?' encourngiug’ fn his way on account of the well-known prac- | Teports of tho success in boring for coal, whiol tices of politiciuns, who, for polioy ko, did not | ho seys 18 found in° luyers - from: 4 faob want extrome aws. -Sinco the ensctment of tua | 10 inchos to 7faot in thickuess. He ways aftor Iaw, it bad boen called a wools, wishy-wasby af-.| & #haft had beon pit through the slate rock on fuir'; -yob tho saloon-keopers had combined to | Thursday, the workmon atopped to dlsouss a ovorthrow It, and talled of thoe iuvasion of tho | beoulisr smoll that camo up. Mr. Kogers, who rights of Anicrioan froomen, and at Indiannpolis | Was sitting near tho holo, conoluded to_light ins tliey Lad passed rosolutions condomuing the | Pipe, and &8 soon as-he fired. tho match a blaze violation of ' their freodom and thew vights, | ton fool high immodistoly camo from tha holo, Winlo talking of righte, ho sald that no man nd | burning tho hnir, whisors, and face of . an unqualifiod right to unylhinfi, for onoh 18 | togors, who with the othor mnn, got out, of the amenablo to the grand rights of tho general so- |, Way 88 soon a8 osgible, He suys the flamo cioty; which pagition ho illustratod in varions | finally sottled dowd” {o about B foot in waya. Ono proyision of hisbillrequired amojority beight, at which it burns day and night, 1f not of ‘tho loga) votora of tho pracinot to putition for | extingiished. A second ‘two-juph holo & fow the sajo of intoxicants, and this waa, Lo snid, | rode from ihis has boon put down sbout tho what tho great Donglas called * popular sovor- | #amo dlstanco,” and it burns liice the ~first, both eignty,” 1o gave tho tomporance-peopla o otiior | Of Whioh aro Joft to bura during tne mght, gulde for euforcing the law than what 18 to bo found Iu its provisfons ; and, closing his speech, hio catled upon his hearers to vole for no man SOMLTIHING MUST IE DONE to rostore the flow of the Aux Plaines to iis original nhid nutural chionmol, 80 that it will nmpl.‘)_into tho_Ianlmkoeo River, and not into tho Ohicago.~ Joln Wontworth swoars he_will roolst any_sttomptito dam nup tho Mud-Lnke Ditoh, unless tho city will oither build » dxlm around hialow lands, or olse dredgo out tho Aux Plainos ohaunol® to Jolict—oithor of. which would cm,l inuck. monoy, "And 5o tho ' mattor stands, T'ho Mayor aud the specisl committoe sained much valioblo information by yostorday's rip, and thoy woro groatly amsisted by the raotical kuowlodge and observations of Dr, Bon Lillar, who hos mado a study of tho Mud-Lake Ditoh problom, Somo effort will doubtless Lo mado in tho Common Councll to- remedy the existing avi), though no conclugion was renched flutu‘x;dny 1 to tho precise nature of tho slops to 0 takon. e “going to do nbout {t? 1ird—Should 1t nob pess tho Mouso, haw- ever, what guaranteo lavo tho peoplo against future attempts, 8till moro outrageous, and more wuccornlul, against their liborties # In what I have said (and I have amitted the most comprebensive and pregnant questions of all, conflning mysolf entirely ta one topic), I am actuated, belisye me, by feclings of as warm sympathy for and interest in this conutry and ita future o8 any native Amerionn can possess, I elsim that my opinions of Ropublicanism--not tha -Republicaniam of theory, uot tho Roptblia inangurated by tlio groat and good Anglo-Saxon race of patriola of tho first flfty years of our hittory; but the Republicanium of fact and of to-duy—shonld bo, aud ore, tha opinions of the wajority of _intelligent and cousciontious Awmoricans, who aro rapidly losing their intercat in, und rospect for, our politica: Te 8 uot the impoted cilizen— be he aver so ready to agsume cltlzeuul:l{, to take o band in rannmg a preat Government, and to couridor himsell n-good & man a8 Goargo Wash- ington—who is the bost friend of the country that is silly enough to manngo its affairsina way that no sane an wouldl managoe eithior his houseliold or his business, Ho s not its bost friond, certainly, shaply beoause ho haa taken the outh of allegizuce, 1 think wé havo secn and read of the Americaus being firaanly Inaulted and dofied more than oncelstely by our imported citizony, Twenty yoars ago this vlaump much property might bovaved. The troubls fa thnt witen the -moment cama, for the cannon_ to explode it would. bo foynd.'to ba loaded: with black saud, duly,certifiad to ag the bost powdor "3’; & Gounty, Commussionor.. Pl 2 Tho will was dntod Dac. 2, 1873, ‘and was yrit- n¢ssod by Jamos Keogh aud Michael Kehy. ' = ‘On affidavit of Gharios }Y. Grigge, a certifioate. of good moral charactor.was jssuod to Willism 1t; Coliins, -~ ~ S S e "I'io case of allogad luniioy agaliist Fanby Pep: ping was tried,: and tho jury roturncd's vordiot of lndnnits... 7% ) foE . ‘Grant of guardianship was issued o Voronicp Klelu, under_an.napproved bond of,, §4,000, a6 guardian of Maria Klein at al. minora. i a Judgo Wallace adjourned the Court til Mon- 7 ;. THI OALL MONDAY. . Jupae Bropaerr—From 140 unlimited. + Junax Tlougns—452, 484 to 510, excopt 49, . Junar Boori—176 to 190, . ! Jupos U'ree—2,189, 234, 235, and genoral dock- ot 1,000 10 1,100, i 24008 g Junag Gany—1 to 20, ealandar No. 1, . JuppE Janeson—Gaes to tho Criminsl Gourt: . JUDQNENTB., i .l () Unrrep BraTes Ommourr Oount—Pottemouth Buv- ings Bank v. Town of 0'Hawd, $11,030,00,—A, T, Posk v, Board of Buporvisors of Keudull County, $14,188,05, ~N, C, Forkins v, Town of South O'Iawd, $2,593,06, Bupriuon Covnt—Iupnz GANT—J. D, Lteyuolds v. Ohfcsgo & Great Woatern Tallroad Land’ Uompa- ny, $112,50.—Cloorgo Goomba et al, v, James Davideon ; fuding, $515.84, 4 325 Y Juvax_MoRobenta—T. M, Bradloy, yss, elo,, V. Totor Koller and Albert Oudney, $30, Oiuoulr CovuT—Junar Roanus—Dernard Meeno) ot al, v, ‘liomaa MeArthur, $518,80.—D, A, Hows ot al From an nged ocitizen of Deoatur County, | f;m"l famoof the dariug Gravesand the resolute Tenn., e have tho particulars of. tho followhig | Day sgainst any and all comers, T'hg young wan saried of.appalling socidents, by whick.a happy | of the Globols smaut, i{ully'sniart, —and Lia, and mdnmrnnu wifo and _mother wns boraft-of | editorinl is evon botter thi attor, but whewr hor..ohildren 'and hor husband in loss- than an |-ho ‘endeavors t6° mako out Giaves s ‘“stupid * hour: A man namod Bonnett Kyle, formorly s | millk man,” and rnsxmsums.hlm 88-inking Lho citizan of Wayne Couuty, ‘Conn., baving lost his [ ¢ mill"~he prabably means to”'say " ** hill"—" wifauome yenrs.ago,; married o :socond, and | “‘road, at.a eafe distanca from the flood, and ‘with bor removyed to Missouri, whore ho settled, - |-ronoking Haydenville just 1 time to do'no. * and'engaged _{n farming. ‘'wo childran..wore | good,"—why, then he makes aslanderous 'mis= ' born to thom,’ and- thoy -were prosporing and | statemont, = Too many-0f the best men in'Hay~ linppy.-: A fow wesks ngo a lottor was receivad | denvillo have tnutlhade Graves' arvival in hot ©Coul -in : Seuthern' NMinnesota—Gas = Flnmen 'Ten oot fligh. From the La Crosse Republican. ! Irom tho -wife, detailing her torrible bnreave-~ | hnste.and his rinfilng ory; too many of the 220 iment, 8ho hod gono n short distance | workmen of the brass works have said that thoy from the house to do the family wash- | owe thelr lifo to him; too many in Leods, also, ing, taking “with hor . her infant child, | have told of the warning shonta of Myron Day, -lenving -the -other, some \two years old; at the | tho oxpressman, and of hiscloss quarters wlgh hause with o husbaud working upan the roof, | death in the nnrrow valley ha encered to save Ilnving oceasion to be absont from her ohild for | others,—to leave any room for foar that this ma~ & fow moments, when sho rolurned ahoe found o | licions suatoh at their lauvals will bp succossful. rattlosnake hnad fastenod Iits fangs upon tho | Graves and Day are not apocryphal herogs,—and wriat of hor babe, Bho quickly diupatohod the | tho poo:s may sing on. < iy N = enake and frood the child, which almost immedi- e § ;m‘y dmld. Clgwfig—hr l"gfl"“wurxmfl f,"” § Cholera in Italy, mstened to tho Louso, whoro she found hor | A lotter from Dy, Mavaglisna, Sagita 5 oflior olild drownod fu' @ tub af wator, Iior | misulorse, to. tho AUOuMEnto, of Gotes: Ragma * sereams of agouy upon bnhuldu:ix thls socond | that pincs the ond of Pobruary the cholora’ na boroavement.startled hor. husband, who, . losing | ravived in iho four provincow whoro it had ol * his presonce of wind, fall from the raaf and was | ropdy claimed . certain number ‘of * victime {nstautly kllled. = Thus, by thie slugular train ‘of | pyese Provincos nre respectively Vernazzn, Mone accidonts, wan tho poor woman_ rendescd s | tarosso; Manaralo, and Riomaggiore. Tho ise ‘owdwlfi?udn :Ll::ldms'ln‘ h“ fow .l_mnt ;\«I:lmvu!l‘j cao ronppoared 1 cousequonao of groat earth= ur infor ow tho parties well, aud | yworl i t i 10t 1t f8t%k abovs Yolion. ) works in conncction with the railway, which , TIE ACCIDENT. Aftor roturning from the wagon-ride to the dltoh, o serious accidont occurred to tho party who rode with Long John .and. his apan of mules, Tho barngss wus rotten and defcetive, 88 usual, so .they say, with tho bitehiug-tacklo of tho maesivo Grangor of Summit,—and in coming down the grado from tho Canal bridgo the tonguo of the’ Wagon droppod, and tho mules tartod on u rapid run, First Ald, Mildroth ‘jnmpml ont at tho rear ond, and Ald. O'Brien followod, both landing on their foet all right, Ald. Murphy was not mo lucky, though his did_u0 works than to roll over i " Donth of a Ceritonnvinn, Fronk the Caiifornia (Alo,) Democrat, hove i ks Vo ix K. l.}j«-k &s.szel'.fl’\d. Dstorv, Thomsa B l&mughttu‘\!uetlharl;!l.ocu \{ln:kmm, lnced undor Dbeon rosented witl 'a veugounoo, both by pro for offico who would not plodge himselt to sus- Wa aro oallod upon this weok to chiwomole the | in tho dust. Nuxt Long Jobn tried it. With | JubasCue—Jaues 5, 237508 Ve Nt o most doployablo sanitary conditions, It bas. and poople, f k i t:;notuc:pemneu aud it denth of probably tho oldest man_in the State, | one of his logs xnuontlyimkou, he war not {n | $h0W0. Hossiug o ¢ BobaTail P—Novely Woila Leen found neoessary to dispbrsa'tliom by forgo, an to the Front, ane to isoiato-tho - onolora patienta. and fhelk - . .From the St. Loufs Itepubdlican, fomllios. T'he cholora haa also mado ita ap- A ripplo hias ooourrod on tho surfaco of streot | poarance in Genon’and in dlfferont parta of rallroad mattors within the past fow deys, winoh | Liguria, It has mado its waoy from YVorgatto to . throatona to stir tho bosoms of the aterner sex | Porraits, and thua threatens to invade the con- {rom the contre to the ciroumferonce ; which it | tva of Italy, Prof. Brugnoli and Dr, Nosi, com= may bo romarked would bosome ot aatir, P'wola- | missioned by the Provinelul Council to inforus, diod applied to the Manngers or Dircctors of the | .themsolves of its progross, hisve sdoptod ‘rigor~ Gravol uflu-«uu‘lmlwu Qompany for positiona as | ous measures for the isolation of 9 olioloras conductars, - Tho managers arc said to have | pationts, having. vevitied thé deaths of threa. boen woll-ulaponed tn.gl viop tho appljcanta. a | versons from this disense, which appeats to Lava . -tnl!r'nhn:t:, and’ aftor, they bad furnial‘;;d roll‘x‘nr' t(:‘aontlmporudl by tho hhornxfi of Vornasza. _xeforonces, TBDRZOrA_ gaye oach am @ | Great ecautions ““are,” therel g « punoh snd An agoount-book a8 & start in thoir nauull;ry. - AMSoD RN e Mr, Baxter, with ol his rhotorical vagarigs, | Ar. Jon Dorcor, Mr. Porter died nt the rosi- must be glven tho credit of sincerity and hon- donco of his son, in this county, on ¥riday, May esty of purposo ; and ihe effoot of his avowed 8, ut the advanced nge of 102 yoars, 3 month, purposo of speaking in avory county in tha Btato, and 24 days, Ile was born “in_Roockingham added ta tha rogulur organizations, will be to O‘auuty. N, 0, Jan, 16, 1773, Ila moved to mako the tomperanco-igsuo. at the eloations noxt | ‘ennasseo in 1801, gud from thore to Missourlin Octabor, paramouut to all othors, though the | 1830, IIo rosided for many yoars iu Morgan rogular party-organizations should )gno:n or try | County, Mo,, but for sovoral yoars past lived to ovado it. with ki gon in thia county. IIs was remarkably At tho olosa of Mr. Baxtor’s addross the fol- | hale and hearty for ono ko advanced in yosvs, Towing (among other) resolutions wero unani- | aud was sble to walk about theroom up to within mously adopted ¢ ono hour of his death, IIo had beon s membor Resolved, That, inasmuch a5 an assoctation has beon | Of tho Methodiat Eplacopal Ohyreh for mgro than. formed in this Biate whioss doolired purposo ia to vote | elghty yewrs, . It.iu ansy to stand on your front stops, and in- vite avory stranger—Jow, Guntilo, or Hoathen, Rudical or Conseryativo, ifiuommufl or goholar, ontleman or outthroat, military despot or Com- munist—to enter your houso and enjoy evory privilege in it, trom cellar to gairet, from stable to parlors but, should you find yourself, in the courgs of thmo, in & Lelpless miliority, and your owa obildren kiokod into the back yurd by dome ynung Ishmaolitos, what are you going to do’ about it? Sa e e There are-somo -anociont fables that it wonld sy the people (I meuu the Americans al'lesst ro Yond and ponder over, to gsy nothing of good condition to jump, and in the atiompt ho wado sad work of {t. <o Cavdiit Gisut weld. have bud ditoulty in loaping from a rapidly | running wagon, and so did Mr, Wentworth, e, camo to tho earth with monutrons forco, but, as all that reglon contains o substratum of rook, thoro was no porcoptible shook, Like a barro] on an inclined plane, Long Joun rolled over and ovor in the thiok dust, aud was for a_moment 1ost to view In the cloud whioliLio raised, When discovered ho was on hig hands and knecs, looking for all the world . the. 'celor and sizo”, of Forepaygh's big, . olephant. Fioin out & kalo of dirt aud dush could Lo die= A Child’s Letter, g The Sncramento (Cal.) Union says that among tho advertised lotters remaining uncalled for at the Post Ottico iu that oity is one postmarked at §an Franclsco, aud of recont date, addrossed in o childish haud, “To Mama, Bacramonto,” The hand-writing is evidently that of a litile glrl of tendor yonsn, aud there is something. vory touching In'the simplicity of address which, to ber lnexporienced miugd,’ conveyed all the neceasary information to enable that mystarions ‘messonger, the mall, to oarry her misgive, dlreck to'ber abaent pavont. K]

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