Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 31, 1874, Page 4

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4 THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY, AUGUST 81, 1874." TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE, RATEM OF NUBAOKIPTION (PAYADLE TN ADYANOR), gt B1Z:08| Wy 2.00 Parta ol & year at the same rato. T8 jrovent dolay and tuistakos, be suro And xive Post O conddrer in (il footuding 8tate and ouaty. Romiltances may Lo made sithar bydeatt, oxpross, Post Oltice order, or in reglstored Jattors, at ourrlak, THBAS TO UITY AUNACRITERE. i Deny, delivored, Bundsy etcoptea 2 conte por wenk. day Inclnded, 10 conts ner wook, Dyl geiiverod, Bungay ncititine COMCANY, “Garsar Madison and Dearhornenta.. Unleago, il TO'DAY'S AMUSEMENTS. ROOLKY'S THEATRE—Mandolph atrest, betwoon Olark 3ad Latiallo. **Lod Astray." batwoon N'VIOR¥R'S TIRATRE-Mutlson sirect. botroon 1, i roment_of Kdwin IOUSE~Olark _ streot, epposite BRAN LR Ty N Loate SHisatraie MWUBIO—-Hninod strsat, botwaen Mad. O e agagomont f Tobort MoWada, Wiy Vao Wiokio." A BUSINGSS NOTICES. QORNFR OF OLARK AND DIt NCHRSNET, ho tinest and best lfl“u ot Mandolph-ste,, of oot for S5 The Thicagy Gibune. Monday Mpruing, Auguat 31, 1874. ETERU10n Rivols of Rinscy rafundod. 1In anclont Aghons popular sentimont domand- ©od that a Gongral should have clean bands. So much s uot oxpected in thoso days oven from miaistors. Tho irony of ovonts was movor bottor illus- tentod thag fn tho attompt of Plymouth Church to malto & martyr of Frank D, Moultou, who bag avowad himself to bo heathou, A noat santiment waa delivered the othor doy by the Chairman of a Republican Convention in Beott Connty, TiL., who eaid: * Concodlvg thnt tho Ropublican patty is corrupt, X know it {8 not from auy influenco of ming, or suy vote of mino; and I proposo to stand by it to the laat.” Plymouth Church may take that along, Tho Pligrim Tathors loudod on Plymouth Bosk somothing mora thon 200 years ago, snd Row wo Liavo tha spectaclo of Plymouth Clral crying for tha blood of o man who fusisted upoa frao spooch, Tho hoginning of thoir Chureh wae marked by intoloranco mod porsocution, sud the ond of it promises o be in most beauti- ful harmony. . A declaration of principlos, uaid ko havo beon drawn ap by Senator Shorman, hus boen mado by tho Ropublicans of Richland County, 0. An aphorism containoed in 1t is: ¢ National foith is wooond only m importanco to national union.” Thare is o nico poins. Sonator Shormau will bavo somo difliculty in explaining tho virtuea of o foithloss Unioa, Tho new Administration organ in Now York will b started about the middlo of Soptember. X will bo called the Republic. Tho cditors sro plotarotakers, Thore arono caricaturists among thom. Thoy will paint fattering portrait, and succoed by sppealivg to tho vanity of thoir patrons, if thoy succeed at all. It is nota vory nice business, but it eomotimes pays. Buch work occasionally develops a Josbua Roynolds, " but novor a Hogarth, ' < In tho favars, Fronch packot-ships will bo commanded by naval oficora. An ordor {0 this afoet bas boon mado by the Seczatary of Marine, whoee duty it I8 to provide for tho safoty of pessongors on vessels ssiling undor Fronch colors. Thera will be no dispute about tho wis~ dom of tho oxdor, At least two steaners bo- longing to the Transaklantic Lino have boen lost in consoquenco of tho cowardica and ineflicioncy of thelr officers; and, from all that wo can loarn, it 18 & moray that more havo not gono in thosamo way. Naval officors, however grest may be their deficlonciss in other respoots, are apt to bo good esilors and brave. The probablo result of the fall elsotions is o mattor of wpoculation in Washington. Our eorrespondont givos for what they are worth the views of some gentlemen who aro soid 40 bave oocess to peculinr sources of information. Their opinion iy that tho Opposition gnin in the noxt Houso will bo about sixty, thus reducing tho Ropublican majority to thirty, ond that tho Qrangors will not succeod in roturning morn than bolf-s-dozon Roprosentatives. We do not eount much on tho poculiar sources of mforma- Jon poosossod by gontlomon as Washington. Any mon of ordinary intelligenco may sit down in & bick ofiice and avolvo probabilitiosifrom his own inner-consclousness which will be quito o satiutactory as thoso of tha Washingtou geatle- men. The appearance of Fraucis D. Moulton at tho meoting of Plymouth Church on Friday ovening, and his solitary voto againut (he ropors of tho Comumitteo, was an act oxhibiting both morat and physicol couraga in o high dogreo, It ro- quires norve to stand up in the presonco of 8,000 " exnsporatod onomies and sny No, whon tho word Ko is it4olf a rebuko to overy othorman fn tho .aseombly, This is what Mr, Moulton did; it is what lio bad 8 right to do; 1t is what it way his duty, a8 o memboro? Plymouth congregation, to do. Tho riotona behavior of the wmeeting, on tho other hand, when he roso to spealk, and the attempt tomob Wim when Lo wont out, wero domonstrations of morol and physical cowsrdico ~—moral, in that thoy darod not hear what Monl- ton had to soy ; phyeleal, in that overy aseauls "by » multitudo on oo man Iy cowardly. Plym- outh Chureb lowored itaolt in that dlagracotul tuwmalt far moro than it couldever ba lowered by any aot of ite pastor. 80800 in religlon tho samo as iu business; and both ocour at the sume timo, Hon's hoarts seow to bo most opon to the ap- proachios of the exhorter when his coming is a diverslon from moro absorbing and exeiting affairs. They oaunot bear to look upon tha pro. found mysterioes of existonco steadily, but would rathor gooe tbrough & glass dorkly, and with ine tarvala of rost. This is one of many roasions for tha ganeral disrogard of roligious obligatiops in midsummer, when everytuing bt iuclination suits to o moat rigorous alttendsnco ugon the mesug of Orace. ‘There have boon fow summer £ossony of Iato in which lelsure time Liss boon so abundant e in this,and fow iu which the uburches bavo baon so Eyatomatically desortod by rogulsr worshipors, Yosterdsy 18 OChicago was a caso fn polut, Tho empty pows in tho chnrob- 69 waro many, aad tho * pillara™ ware as ofton #4 not consplouons by their abacnos, In bohal! of thoss who stayed at Lome, I may bo waid that fhe inducoments $o do othorwise wore mot powerful, " on Baturdey, with sn easlor foellug lo mout * dopartmonts, Moss pork way dull and IGi0u “,uhdhl'yll.fl-‘lfl@fl!’l}fuflb, and S17.26@17.873¢ sellor the yoar, Lard wes quict nnd 123¢o por 100 Ibs highor, closlug ab $16.123¢ onshy, nnd $11,26@11.873¢ woller tho year, Moats woro aetive aud enster, cloatng at 810 for shoul- ders, 19@12360 for shost ribs, 13%@13350 for short clonr, and 12%@180 for eweot-pleklod lame, Ilighwines woro inactive and nominal a4 07@07}4e par gallon. Lako frolghts woro loss aotive aud unchanged, aé 8o for corn to Buffalo. Flour way quiat axd nominal. Whoat was active and 34c highor, closlng at 9350 cash, and 9330 for Beplombor. Corn was loss activo and o lowr, closing o: 6030 cash, and 0030 for Boptembor. Oats wore activo and woalt, elosing at 403¢o casly, and 98340 sollor Boptombor. Ryo wos quick and strong st Toc. Darloy was in good domand and strongor, olosing at B30 bid for enshy and 890 for Heptombor. Iogs wero activo at stondy prices, with Itboral snlos at £6.00 @7.40. Cattlo wero in light demand and un- chnngod, Shoep woro dull ot 82.60@4L76 for poor to bost. To-morrow tho oystor will ba restored toa placa of Lonor among men. The ruthless months without "r'a” will bave passed, and with thom tho ropressive cdict of the Common Council. The oystor ia & contemplative boing, somowhat moody aud uncompnujonabls in tho aummor montha; but withal a gonial good fallow in season. If tho practico woro not for- Dbiddon in this city, somothing might bo got out of tho oyster by’ o earles of intorviows to-day. ‘Wa shioutd liica to know what hag boon rover- baratiug through tho chambers of his soul dur- ing tho wonry mantha of bis banishmont. What daes lio think of hismothor's oyos ? What doos Lo thiuk of his mothor's breast ? What of Pariolat? Of Beoohor-Tilton ? Of tho protty waiter girla? Of Arthur Edsards, and the Northwestern Aduocate ! Could ha not undertako to come out choerfully from his shell—to stop down and out, ag {t woro—and strafghton all thesa orooked thinga? Or docs ho remombar sll the other stomachs that will acho? Waa his grandfathor a bypochondrino ? Tha nominations for the election in Malns, Sopt. 14, aro now complote, na follows: Republican, Democrat, Goveraor, Nelson Dingloy, Jr.,* o Josoph Titeomb, ross, 1. Jobn I1, Burloigh,* ~ Dion Bradbury, 2, William ' Frye Putlo Clark, 3. James G, Blain 4, Samuet F. Horsoy,* Eugone Liale, Edward X, O'Brion, Gorham L, Boyaton, Charles Bpofford, r ro-cloction, Last year tho voto for Gover nor was: Ding- Toy, 45,674 ; Titcomb, 92,316 ; Josoph M. Will- inma, indopondent, 2190, Tho voto in Soptem- bor, 1873, for Govesnor was : TL917 Repullican, 54,701 Opposition ; and that voto was, with the oxception of ono yoar (1808), tho largost ovor pollod by cither party in tho State. Tho Logis- latura olected lngt year atood, on joint ballot : 136 Topublican, 46 Opposition. The Legislature now to bo clectod will choose a United States Sonator, and the vonorable Hamin—forty yoars in tho publio servico—has oil the * points” in s favor. It waa romarked with somo surprise, last winter, that tho Logislature thea in sossion was & Hamlin concern, and the query went sround whethor “tho old man* hoad not lost his reckoning by o yoar, It {8 now discaverod that tho party-mnchine hae boen set to “ro-oloct ovorybody," including Hamiin's workers {n tho Logislature, and, of conrse, Hamlin himsolf. As ogainst such odds, Moasru. Teracl Washburn, Jr., Josinh I, Drammond, Sidnoy Porhnm, aad othor gontlomen in waiting, Lave indulged thomsolves, inamild sod barmlens woy, 08 candidatos for tholr roport at all, Auother very romarkablo thing I8 tho troatmont of M. Tilton by the Committeo, Whion bor wrifton statoments look towards her own and Bocchor'a gullt, thoy aro uot at all worthy of crodence. Whou thoy look in tho opposito dircctlon, thoy are implicitly trugtod. 'Phus whon Mrs, 1ylton gives hor hus- band o lottor implicating Beochor, that lottor i not to bo trusted atall. Tilton wrung it from Jior by torrorfem. Whon, on tho other hand, Beochor calls on Mrs, Tilton and gota a noto from hor exculpativg him, the caso fs Lravely altorod. Thon tuo lottor is porfostly roliablo. Again, whon it noceseary to uxplain away enack of Alrs, Tilton, she is dncovered fo be oithor sick unto deatl, or sufforing from tho offocts af a miscarringo, or in & Btnto of mind bordering on Intaulty, Just these momonta pro selzed by hor husband to compel her touttor what aho knowa to Lo false] Aund Inliko manner, whon it becomos necossnry to account for Mr, Beochor'ssolf-accusations, lio 1s convoniontly dis- covored to Liavo boom, at tho timo bo uttored them, in a morbid coudition of mind ; and wo aro agsured that whon in euch a state Lo is intho Lobit of using oxteavagont oxprossional Inthis woy the yemomso which Boccher ox- pressoed, nnd which was commonsurato only with » front crimo, i gotton rid of. Whon o demnag- ing statomont cannot bo disposod of in any other way, it s calmly assamod that no man would bo- Hovo 1t o8 against Boockor, For jnstance, the Gomunlttoo oy that no man would belloye that Booohor evor said ho humbled himeolf beforo "Tilton s beforo his God ! Nor would apy mbn beliove that ke said lio hnd Mrg, Tilton's forgive- neas ] Qront stress s 16ld on an expression of Boockior to tho effock that ho would writo a stato~ ment for tho public whicB would boar the light of judgment day. A statement that wil besr tho light of tho judgment day is any statoment which ks truo, and it might very woll bo a con- fesslon, It ia quite possible that whon Boochor wrolo those words Lie lad the futention of mak- ing a confession, tho Unitod States Sonate. ‘Mo startling injunc- tion of Mr. Blaino’s nowspaper (tho Kennebeo Journal) to tho Ropublicans of Maine is, that thoy “Vota for Dingley and save tho American congting tade.” It docs mot, bowever, a3 yot sppenr that the poople of Maino aro aroused to an undue pitch of oxcitomont, or aven to o senso of their dauger. THE COMMITT) .PORT, Tho verdict of tho Brooklyn lnvestipating Committeo in the Beechor caso takes no ono by surprise. It cartainly docs not surpriso those who considlor Mr. Bocchor innocent., Noitber does it surprise thesa who, after waighing all tho evidence, beliove that ho is guilty. Y lsjust such o vordict 0a any ono chiarged with an offenso would have & right to expect from a court aud jury appointed by himself, and from among his most steadfoat fdonds. Any other verdice would, considering tho consiltution of tho Committes, bave boon & marvel. Tha report of the Commitiees, too, 8 euch 88 was to bo looked for from & committes whoso counsolors aro shrowd and skillful, though not profound, lawyers. ‘Clio roport, as a dofonso of Mz, Boccher, is in gomo places plausiblo, though nowhere con- vinelng., It moy satisty tho Committee, thongh we doubt even that; it may satlefly for the time being the crowd which gathered at Plymonth Oburch on Friday night to hoar it ; it niny satis- fy soma oxtrome pertisans of Mr. Bocchor, who ballove that his moral constitution {s differont from that of other peoplo} it Moy eatisfy the Rev. Mr, Halhdoy, who would not boliove the prator of Plymouth Church guilty ovon it an angol from Hoaven should testify agalnst him; it will not sntisfy tho publio; nay, it will not eatiefy Henry Ward Docohar himself, Bustothe re- port itaelf. "Tho first thing that strikes us n porusing it ia, that oll tho ovidouce is not in. Bome of tho principal witnosses did not appoar. Frank Car- ponter, for Instanco, rafused to testify, Busan . Anthony, to whom thera s every reeson to baliovo that,Mrs. Tilton confossed a criminat inti- meoy with Mr, Bocaher at a timo when sha could have bied no posaiblo reason ta male auch & can- fepsion unlees it were tive, was mnot called. Moniton's full ntatement, givonjto the press, the Committes ignoro ontivoly, They say fhat NMoulton bas rofngod to tostify; that all bo has dono is tv **sabmit threo short etatemonts in writing to tho Committes, consistiug chiefly of tho renson why ho deolinod to tostify, ond of Proauises to tostify at tho call of tho Committos.” 'Tho Committoo cannot bo blamed for igooring avidenco not properly boeforo thom; but tho Tact that thoy failod to obtain very important 0vidoncas of tho existence aud paturo of which tho publio aro nware, s o rosson, aud & vory good one, why the publio will not bo satisfiod with their report. Tho objection that noithor Susan B, Anthony’s, Carpoutor's, or Moulton's evidonco-ta betoro thowm, i falal; for thero la no more important ovidonce than that of theso throo pereons, But it is voé only that importsnt witnossos have ok boon hoard from. Umlne weight ;haa boon nttaokod to tho tostimony of that sllly gis), Bossie Tusnor,—whose testimony has no bour- ing on Bir, Boochor's gulls or {nnocanco, but s probably introduced to impeach, in wdvanoco, soything that Miss Anthony may horcafter say, by puteug hor in tho propestorous astitodo ot sitting In Theodore Tilton'a lap, Tho Comimittes would have shown botter taste hnd they not MM-\—-&WM? Tho strongest part of the roport 18 that in which an attempt is mado to show that tho firat oaccusation pgainst Doecher was not of adultery, but of haproper advauces. It Is not Improbablo that this was tho cxtond of the accusation st first, Tilton msy have known woreo things of Beochor, and may havoe tad grounds oven to nccuso him of adultery. Bat, till the onomy took away kis wifo from him, Lo eought to scrocn hor, and, o4 tho sacrot was already known to somo and was likoly to sproad, tho only way to alield Mr. Tilton waa to mako aa littlo of it an possible. Whon Mrs. Tilton abandoned her husband aud children, there was no longer any rengon wlhy ho should spore hier. Tha Committeo sey thet the first acousation aud the sacond aro diftorent sud conflisting. They are diffrent, but not conflicting; since ndultery always o cludes tho oftonse of mrpropor sdvances, No, the Committee have not explained away Bocchor's xopeated polf-condemnntion. Thoy grant that Nrs. Tilton loved him with unduno af~ foction, Bacehor know 1t, and thero is overy ronson to bollove reciprocated. Each found In thio othor what each missed or protended to miss & homo: lovo and sympatby. Dotweon a marricd womsn aod & man not her busbnnd no such “gympathy” can bo tolorated, nnd & minister of the Gospel sbould bo the lnst to tolerate i, for trom such “sympatly” to adultory, the axpari- onco of agea showe, thore i but o narrow stop. That DBoccher did not check the first mani- fostntions of Rire, Tilton's love for him, as the Committoe odmit, is vory much againut b, 3n tho Wy of hla begulial by public opinion thero aro almost insupornblo abatacles. Ho must bo supposed constituted as no-other man is, ‘To suppose him jnnocent, we ‘must supposo Moulton and Tilton guilky o con- apiracy, and whatover motive Tilton may have 10 blackon Boochor's charactar, Monlton can bavonono. Solong 93 romorso monns whot it hae alwsys mosnt,—o long sa the qualms of oconscionco counot bo reduoed to figures of rhotoric,—~Boochior's dottors will still stand, his undying sccusors. EX-BECRETARY M'CULLOCH. Wo print this moming the vory ablo lotter of the Hou. Hugh McCulloch, ox-8ccrotary of tho "I'roasary, ou tho subject of tho ourrency and tho tonff, In this lotfor Lo takes the ground, so strongly held by him whon in oflico, that tho best mode of returning to & specio busia for tho eur roncy is to gradually retiro 80 muny of tho na- tional notes o8 would bring up thoresiduo to par. ‘This courso would work no disostar, and involve 1o curtailment of the real value of proporty. Tho purchasing power of tho remaindor of the currency would be increasod, and tho amount of roal monoy in clrenlation would not bo dimine ishod. o thinks this policy shonld have beon adoptoed av tho olose of tho War, Soond curren- oy la tho lfo-blood of & commorcial pooplo. Nouao but bankrupt nations have ovar adlored to an irredocemablo paper currency, which i in thoir cases an ogont for producing and perpotusting the poverty it indicatos, Ho thinke thoroshowld bo no uncertaiaty as to tho national polloy. Noth- iug but further inflation can bo worso than un- cortainty. Tho plan which hourges Is : 1. That o day (immaterial when, but not too ronioto) shonld bo fixed whon United States notes atiould conso to bo logal tondery, 2, That 860,000,000 per aunum of the Treasury nobes bo rotired by funding, and nov again is- suod, 8, That bank notes be lssusd, if applied for, to tho oxtent that tho logal tondors are retired. 4. Tnat the 1ogal tendors, being all rotired, froo bauking bo suthorized, Tie arguon that, 88 Jong a8 the logal tonders aro iu ciroulatton, tho specis standard cannot bo rastorod ; and that thero can bonohonost monoy until the Unitod Blutes notes ars stripped of thelr faldo ebaructer aud rotired. Mr. MeOullooh noticos tho resolution of the Indiana Domoeratio Convontion proposing the payment of tho 5-20 bonds in groonbacks, aud charactorizes it as & crimo and & Llunder, o alao raviews tho sub- Joot of ralsing rovouus by tarift, and tho polioy of making such a taril protective, Ho favora the appointmont of & Commiseion, composod of compotont porsons, who shall propare for Cons gross o Torifr and ‘'ax bill having for ita solo pasposo the production of suficiont revonuo for tho support of tho Govorament from tho loast numbor of artioles. o regards the principle of protoction sy arelis of barbarism, and advises that it bo abandoned, [ — In tho Kanans Republican Convention, lnst ook, tho voto for a proalding oflices wass Car- pentor, eatlring, 104; Price, ring, D4, Thiy pove the antl-riug mon considaxablo confidonce, but, in the vote for Govwnor, Thomsa A. Qu- bom (ring inourbont) was nominated by 104 to 99, 'fhou, uays thoreports Qa), Garpantertcaktha Hloor sad most seandalonsly robiked Ouborn's nowfuation, prodioting Lis ovors wehelniug defsat, the Colonul cloafug by withdrawing frow the Oonvantion, ‘Theraye, frightfnl hooting, and | pandemantun of volcos thut greetod Lt pacaeih hine tageouity 4o Amoaibe, The omamptnons opithiots wore hurled at Oarpoutor, nud ho was falrly yolled from tho floor. Thon Suodly arnas, sad, aftor apeaking hils mind freoly, fornially withdrow, Baln, of tho Woodson County Fost, also withdrow in & fow woll.chosen remnrks, All this tima a vory delago of abuso waa Aloworod upon the bolters, Lou Blmpwon withdrow without a word, as 2 alao many vthor Bouthorn Ronaoa dolegatos, tho boltors aggregstiug fally onc-thizd of tho Qonvention, Eight Revublionns nowspapors havo alraady Joinod the bolt, THE RAILREOAD WAR, By agrooment, tho deolsive strugglo in tho snilrond confliot will ocour in Oclobor noxt. ‘The rocord of tho enso deolded in tho United Btutos Court nt Madison was sont to Washington ono month ago, and forwarded on tho dockoet. Moantimo the conteaiants in tho sovoral Btates havo dotermined to await tho final result. In linois the Railrond Commissionors have agrood to continue tho tost suit Lronght agalust tho Northwostorn Company, at Freoport, until noxt AMarch. Otherwise tho caso would have boon tried at tho Soptombor torm, In Towa slmilor dolags are roported. Tho Toseors of tho raiironds oporatod by the Iiinols Contral aud Northwostorn sought 4o onjoin tho Iatter from conforming totholaw, but aftorward repolvod to swalt tho Washington decision, Moanwhilo tho citizons of that Biato nro not disposed to harass tho companios. Tho Dur- lington Rond hns disregarded tho law from tho first, yot no sction hins beon brought against tho Compony or its ngonts. This indifforence cau bo reauily accounted for. Tho Iowa law only af- fecta local frolght, and, 88 tho railways must Lo tho roquired surplus for intorest, by ad- vaneing tho rates on through froight—which forma tho bulk of the traflic ~thoy will secure na Touch monoy as thoy did undor tho old tariffs, Tho patural result of thoe law, thoroforo, in that it now costs the rosidont shippors moro to got Abadr produce to market than it formerly did, for whict increased oxpenso the loeal reductions aro a quito inadoguate offsot, In Wiscousin it is not jmprobrble tho Bu- promo Court will resorvo it declsion in tho in- Junction cago until the ultimatodecision is givon. ©Of course thisis mero conjectare, but it haaa procedont in the action of tho Suprome Court of tuls Biato, which resorved e deoision on the lognl-tender question for more than a year, uatil tho oplnion of the Unitod States Bupremo Conrt wos announced. Such coureo, it s presumod, woald not bo objectionablo to the business publio. No further annoyanco is oceasioned the companios, and the cases of passengors tendor- ing 8 conts por milo are now so oxtromoly rare 23 to bo hardly noticeable. In Minoesota tho aspect is difforent. The Tailrond Committeos havo Sasued thoir schedulos of rates, whiel aro to bo acoopted as prima fa- oic ovidenco of what aro reasonablo rates, Sov- oral conferences have taken placo betwean tho Comnmissionars and tho railwsy manngers, with Jittlo benoft to ofther party. I no Stato in tho Union is thio mazgin of profit to tho rallways so amall ug in Minnosota. Of 1ta Lnlf-dozon rall- wafs, Lwo aro in tho hands of Roceivers, ono i8 bavkrupt, tho othors sra on tho vorge, and aro saved only by their nesoctation with outside com~ patties. Yot tho Commissioners do noé fool 8afp in allowing {hom any latitude in their {rotght tariffs. Tho pnasonger rates aro, in many cases, bigher than the companios provious- ly sharged. Bat tho freight rates establishod oro deemed 8o unreasonablo on some linoe tint they will bo ontirely disregarded. In thiscourso the Commissionors woro probably not at fault. Th by woro croated by the voko of tne poople, andd, ns thoy buve mot yot bocn eonfirmed, it would bo strange did they not consult tho wishes of ‘Llhoir croators. Tho natural result will bo, & speedy incrosso of tho suita for extortion and discrimination,—tho difforonce between tho chasgos fixed by tho companios and thosa oatab- lished by tho Commissionors being tho bsals of the suits, ! PUBLIC OPINIOR IN THE S0UTH, TImet Wednoaday, six Degroes were takea out of tho jsil of Trenton, Gibzon County, Tevn., 2nd, shot by & mob of whites. Five wocks g, s quagrel botweon a white man sud & nogro aboat tho paymont of half a dollar started tho trouble, Tho negroes took,up’ the quarre), sud mado throats against this whita man and all hig friends, Soon aftor, two whites wore firod upon. Ono of the negroes arrosted for the orime torned State's evidionce and testified to tho existenco of an onth- bound leaguo among tho Gibson County biacks, which bad for its object tho oxtirpation of tho whites aud the soizure of their lands and per sonnl property. Tho lesguo had received assur- aucus from prominont nogroos in Lounisiana that Grant approved ef such a course. Tho would-bo meorderers scom ¢o have beon stupid enough to bolievo this. Sixtcon of tho ringleadors wero arrestod on tho strongth of this testimony. Tho six of thom conflned in Tronton jad waro taken out and shot. ‘This outsage, one of the fow suthontio ones that have boon roportod of iato, desorves tho sovarost condemnation. Tho guilt of tho pris- oners waa by no means provod. 1t 1t had boen, tholr axccution by lynch-law would still have boen cowardly and barbarous. Wearo glad to soe that the Southorn Coneervative pross talkes, apparontly without oxcoption, thisgamo ground. ‘I'he Nushvillo Banner ssys that thore can bo no apology for tho crimo. Buch casos of *hot and blind-oyed possion,” it declaros, must bo stornly and inflexibly pumened. Tho whito mon of Ponnesseo must boar nagro insults, and oven violenco, 80 thoey must do likooffonson by whites, with fortitudo, relying upon tho law, aad tho Inw alone, for atonomont, If thoy do mot, tholr pun [shment *will como switt and severe™ ‘The Nushville Union and American eaya: ““Wo uttcrly condemn and abhar lynchelaw in all such cases. This dood in & foul blob on tho namo of Teuncssco, and il pevpo- tritors stiould bo promptly dealt with in o mtinnor that will vindicato a law-ablding pooplo, No: punishment csn bo too sovora for tho reck- tocts desporadooa who would wrench prisenory from tha haods of justico and sboot thom by tis dozen., Lat them also huve the justico for whach thoy ecom to thirst.” This samo paper, {n unathor editorisl undor tho caption ¢ Liynche Lssw Mast Bo Put Down," heartily praisea Gov, Trown's sctioa in offering rowards for the arrest of tha lynchova, It adds: “The tfinos are wach {bsis Jynch-low cannot bo tolorated in Tonnossce, TLawlesucss fn afl fis forms, white and black, must and shall bo aupprossod, at all hazards snd atuny coat.,” Tho Momphis Appeal wpoaks of “tho outrago and massacre at Trenton™ chusy #1a cannot lind words sovere onough to cone demn tho outrago at Tronton 28 it cught to be." In #column of commonts, it hoaps the kovorsst roprobotion upon tha ** wauion," ‘*wicked," “bimtal,” and “awful® “savagery " of the doed. The Augusts Conslitutionalist vebukos all ro- Horts to lynch-law as utterly unjustifisble, Tho Atlants Zorald says: “I¢ 1a the duty of every clesrhoaded, sober-thinking man to doprecsto ‘Thie wholo Southorn Congorvative pross, so far n8 wa hiavo boon able to examino it colnaldos with thoso viows. Tho brutal folly of tho Gib- son County whitos 1s oarncatly robuked on sll aldos, Thoro I4 an unanimous call for thoir in- stont punishmont, Buch a dircotion of publio opinlon 18 only what might hnvo boon oxpected. Tho groat mass of tho Southorn whites, what~ ovor olo thoy may bo, aro cortalnly not Idiots. It would bo tho helght of folly for thom to do anything which would make tho Puiladolphis Presa’ apposls for “more thorough reoonstruc- tion" worthy of an instant's conaldoration. Theo thing for wise mon to do, North and South, {a to keop cool, to dlatrust sonsational rumors, to opposo all lawlossness of whitos ar blacks, ond to gtrivotn unison, without dlstinction of raco or color, for the salvatlon of tho States whtch our policy of reconstruction has brought ta tha vorge of ruim. PENNSYLVANIA POLITICS, Tho infamous Philadelphin City Ring has mot with & dofoat, and, 1f tho pooplo of Ponnaylvauin aro true to thomsolves and have suficient cour- ngo and manlinoss to follow up tho victory 1n an nggressivo manner, thoy can doal anothor blow, which will stagger thle band of thloves etill moro, evon it it doos not ronder them inenpable of fature mischief. To appreciato tho impor- tanco of tho strugglo which has beon won, it 8 necessory to briofly roviow the situation. In November noxt au oclection ocours for cortain Btate oflicers and two Supromo Judges, who naro to sorve for twenty- one years each. Undor the poration of tno plan of minority represontation recontly incorporated in tho now Constitution, ono of theso Judges must bo a Republican and the othor Domoorat, each party baving tho right to lect oung, and butone, candidate. The Ropublican Convontion was held somo weoks binco, snd was o monipulated by tho Ring, headed by Till Mann, that lts candidato, Paxeon, was nominsted for o geat upon the Donch. Ho s tho man who way the lobby-sgent for Joyne nt Harrisburg whon the Iatter waa s candidate for the United Biates Sonate, and who had secured a yent npon tho Common Plass Bouch by tho intrigucs of tho Ring, snd of courss is lookod upon as a pliant toal to servo their purposes upon the Suprome Bonch. Having scoured ono of the candidates, this Ring, which, though Republican in origin, s truly impartial i politics, set aboat tho work of mccaring the other, snd, with coloesal impu- douco, irvaded tho Damocratio Convention, If it could carry its progrommo in this Conventfon nlag, it would bavo the peoplo of Pennsylvania bound hand and foot; for, oven shonld a third-party movemont of Domocrats snd Ropublicans bo orgunized to dofoat omo of the Ring candidntes, it would still have its othor tool upon tho Bonch. The Domocrats, how- over, proved that thoy woro mado of bottor stuf than the Ropublicans, and went into the fght with a will. Tho Conveation meot st Pitteburg on tho 26th, the Ring candidate being Honry P. Ross, and tho principal opposition candidates Warron J. Woodward and James R, Ludlow. Tivo ballotd wero taken without dofi- nito rosult, whilo tho mxth looked favorable for Ross. Tho Opposition, howovar, 8prung o coup d'etat by offecting an adjournmont by tho closo olapas sftor tho combustion bogins beforo tho Tiro Dopartment or oven tho nosreat observers o awato of its existonco. - ’ At prosont tho ownors of buildings wonld bo only too glad to pormit an invention to bo ap- nliod, freo of cost, which will bo s surer mafo- #uard agninst logs than Inaurance itsol?, an or- divarlly conducted. And yob tho Com- pavy organizod within o fow months in Now York for applying this invention nro ro- ported to bo alroady in the rocolpt of an lucomo of §26,000 & yonr from thoir porcontage of promiums on tho comparatively fow londing Dlooks in which thoy havo had timo to fnsort it, Mr. £, B, Olnflin fa Prosidont of tho Company, and nnmoes oqually relinbly compose its directory, A vominal capital of $160,000 hes boon sulbsoribod, though npparontly A much loes capital would suaffico, 88 the ven- tiom 1n too roady of application and too slm- plo and ohoap to fnvolve much other outlsy thran for tho clerk hire and mochanical forco ro- quired to put in tho wires and collect tho promivma, I tho oflleacy of thi invention fs s comploto and tho cost as light as has boon ropyrosontad, 1% would bo entlrely within tho seopo of tho ordinsry municipall powers of n Cify Govornment to roquire it to bo insorted upon somo torms in ovory room of every houso in tho city, and thus render it aboon, nos only to the property-ownors conowrring, but tosll It T ——— ! stltutlon Jisolt, which tho Herald prints tn fnfl,s 1y n mode), of brovity at loost, a6 it comprises in ali but sovisn ciapters and sixty-twoarticles, and cocuplea lous than a column of that paper. Tho prinoipsl points of intorost in it nro ss followa: "I'ha invéntmont of exeentive powor in tho King and of logialativa in the King and tho Althing, or local Legislnture; tho gavornmont of tho leland through & Ministor appointod by the King; tho vosling of all power and repriove with the King; tho granting of the right of franchiso to all bondsinon (farmors) who cultie yato o grasa flold and pay tazos, to all townemon who pay & tax of €4 por yoor, and to all fshermon who pay ataxof &0 poryear;the rathor uniquo doclaration thot Doputies are bound only by their own convictions, and are not to rocolvo ipstructions from tho olectors § pousoning of Judges after tho ag of 65 ; tho ‘gatablishuent of the Evangolicnl Luthoran Ohurch na tho Btato Church; absoluto frocdom of ho press; tho sanctity of tho riguta of property snd houses of citizong ; the duty of tho public to oducato tho poor; and tho sbrogation of all mpocisl righta which tho law has sttached to nobility, title, and dignitios, Notwithstanding the liboral charao~ tor of tho Constitution, it does nov satisfy tho Tcolandors, o2 the King still holds practically tho power of governing tho island, but they dorive #omo consolation from tho fact that thoy can voto of 135 to 100. Tho noxt day tho Opposi- tion withdrow all thoir candidotes but Wood- ‘ward, and thus prosented a eguaro fight botwoon him and Ross. At the very first baltot, Wood- ward was nominated by 128 to 108, tho an-. nouncoment of which was followed by & ecare of groat excitemont, aod oxclamations of " Thank God! $ho power of tho Bing is¥ro- kon.® ‘Tho Republicsna of Ponnsylvanis now brive it in their power to complote this victory by srgan- izing & third-party movement sgainst Pixson, It thoy donol, but accopt the candicmin the Ring has forcod upon them, thoy hawo no right to complain of ity intrigues, or objectif thay find thomeolvos a¢ the mercy of o corsupt poli- tician upov tho Supremo Bonch. Tho powar af tho Ring will nover be brokon nntd thoy wom- ‘Toncd 10 rocord thelr votes ngainst it, If they do nat bresk ita power now, whon thoy hu ve the opportanity and the moral forco of the o xamaple sot thom by the Democrsda, thoy dovtrve tho fate which is in store for thom. A NEW FIRE-ALARM, . In no invention which boa been introduced alnee the electro-magnotio tolograpl 2 bavo tho peoplo of Chicogo so deep an intex est as in tho now firc-alarm now boing appliod. andor the suspioics of tho Board of Undorwrl! ers and some of the leading merchanta of Now ¥ ork, The in- vontion consists simply in o thor ostal, or instru- ment to measuro the degreo of hoat in o room, on the principle of tho conunoir thermomoter, with an attschshont which corme sts by wires with the Firo Dopartment’s offices s0 that tho ther mostat, having fret boon ndjwated or *sot™ at tho tomporaturo desired,—say 7 05 dogroos or 110 dogroes Fahronhelt, —tranemits, tho usual tole- graphic signal to tho fire offlo 2 tho momont tho tomporaturo of tho room ox coods tho tigure ob which tho instrumont i 8ok, 8o pertoctly doos s work that, according to + our imformant, in & sorios of experimonta mado ¥ a Now York, the fire- men wero at $he door with t 1eir,anginos in every Instanco within throo minut os aftar the tire was kindled. In ono instance four pounds of wood wero 8ot on fixe in an upy or raom of tha atoro of Mr. A, T. Btowart,. aud tho engines came within three minutas. o anothor instance a room wWaa Hghtly “clomsd aud the gas-buroers turned on, and the engl nes appoarod noarly ay goon, Xnatill auoimer crigo tho firomon, on & vory hot Sunday ntoriu g, buret Into tho front door of a buitdin;; on . Broadway in which tho thermostatlo alaym hud beon introduced, and found, on penett uting ‘to tho roof, that thare waa no fire in the b ailding, but that tho thormostat Liad beon sot 86,107 dqgzroos, and that tho sun shining on the tin roof hod heatod the alr just bolow it to th at temptraturo. Tho invent don being brought to the notioe of tho Board of] Underwritors in Now York, thoy witnessed & sorios of oxperiments, und thero- upon prom' }ly offerad to romit 5 por cont of all premiu ma on fnduranco sgainst fire on all buildings i which tb.0 Thormostatic Fire-Alarm ahould be - insorted. Ag this proportion of tho {nsuranco ,premiuma Amounta to a revenuo out of ail ) oporiion to the cost of insetting tho firo-alar m, it ocourred to those hnving the invon- tion # . chargo to acwopt tuls 5 por oent as their ¢ pmponsation for puttivg in and mala- talning ; tho flre-alaym, sud €0 onabla overy prope sty-owner to have it lnsortod in all his build- (ng) ; greo of ‘oout, 111t ia 88 sliclont a4 roported, the jusuranco eompanfios can woli afford it,ne wh fe thoy romit only B por cont of their promi- W gy, thoy lossen by b loneb 5O por con thelr © wnxiak, Tor it may well bo doubted whothor - aven a singlo building oonld burn up it the Firo Department could invariably have justant notice snything ke lawlessucas on the paré of tho ( tho moment the fira baghia, Probably at the white psople, Kok us bave B0 more huohing” sarege from hn to fost) minated ordinarily muy bo that just at tho critical opooh in our in- swiance bistory tho whole question of rates, and of the safety of tho oity in tho future, is to bo nottlod by this slmple but epportuno inven- tion, al80 thoir own rovenucs and expend thom as thoy please, and that Donmark hag agreod to puy back somo of ita ill-gotton gama. COMMERCIAL SUPR! OF NEW YORK, A fow days ago wo quoted tho admission of the Now York Dullelin that tho jobbing trade ‘wan loaving that city and *sotiling in tho into- rior, and notably nt Chicago," for tho Nerthwost. And now eomen tho Graphic with s largo and vory algulticant carloon, undor which wo read, “Whilo Fathor Knickorbocker ls napping, his ‘offepring in olhor cltlos aro stealing away Lis trade.” Tho vonerablo old gontleman is ropro- sonted in a comfortablo snooze, with bis cocled bt askew on his head nud his bands folded acrogd lis amplo dimousions, while on dho right Cincinnatl s camrglog off & argo package marked * Jobbiug trade;" Baltl- moro on tho left Las on Ler fiond and 8 walke ing off with a largo balo marked *Bugar and coffoo;"” DBoston has got off with the * Mercan~ tilo trado ;" whilo, diractly bebiud tho sleoping old Dutchman, Chicago hos in hor nrms tho * Groin,” with s rallway trala in the roar laboled “To Al Poims in the Weat” Tho Graphio points o “tho empty stores and lofts in tho down-town wards " and * tho vaat shipmenta in bulk of jobbors fn cthor Atluutic and Western cities ** for a confirmation of tbo truth wuge gonted by its cartoon. e Graphic calls upon tho merchants and otber citizons of New York to mako enorgetis of= forts to rotnin tho trads that is gradually and suraly concontrativg in othor citios. This fs alt vory well; but thoro aro othicr and radical roe forms noeded, if Now York would rotsin the commanding position sho bas sttained within tho prosent geueration. In the fivat place, the State must enlargo and improvo tho Erio Canal, and eho must reduco thwo tolls to the moro cost of attondanco and keoping tho canal in repair, fha Now York vustom-House has Jong been the resork of & hordo of thiovos and scalpers, who prey mpon thp occan-commerce of the Motropos iis and of tha country. We kuow of many cases whore importod goods have boen brought to this city oia Montreal, Daltimoro, and Now Orleans, oxpressly sud solcly to avold tho telona of this plundering gang. Theso and other sbusos urst bo reformed if Futher Knickerbocker, wido awake and with all tho energies ho can command, would retan tho trade of the nation. That will go whero it can Lo done in tho cheapest and tho best maupor. 1t tho Metropolis boginy weriously to feal thud bor prestigo is doparting, how will it bo whon tho Baltimaro & Ohio Railway only a fow wooks benco opeas o shorter and a cheapor line from Lako Michigan to tidowator, and when tho 8. Lawronce Canals admit of the passago of vessols of & thousand tons burden to the ocoan ? THE GRASSHOPPER, 3. W. Taylor, Enq., Usited States Copsnl at Winnepeg, bas contributed s papor upon the grasshopper to tho Maniloban which fs full of internsting mformaticn a8 to tho ravages of this pest and the mothods of proventing and dostroy- ing it. As this livoly in'3ect1s now at work throngh- ont noazly tho ontiro Wost, and iu slowly but vory suroly working fts woy Eust, a bricf stato- meont of Mr. Taylar's poper msy suggest somo timely ‘lints to the sufforors by its dopredations. The grasshoppor s an nnclont enomy of the crops and vegetation. Early mention is mnde of him in tho records of- tho Josuit missioms of Californin. Tho yosr 1723 wns & very disastrons ono. It nost op- poared in 1746, and sftorwards in 1753 and 1705, continuing throo yoars. Tho poriods of great destruction in this contury in Culifornia have beon 1828, 1888, 184, sndl 1855, In (840, it did much iojusy in Toxes sud Keomss, Sinco tho settlomont of Bliuncsots thero have boon five grasshopper years: 1850, 1857, 1805, 1873, and 1874, In the Red River sottlememt, it first appoared in 112, then iu 1819, and not again until 1857, .After thatsit appeared in 1864, 18067, 1809, 1872, and now tn 1874, withs s probability that tho ova, will threaten tho crops of 1875 Tho romodies wldoh Mr. Taylor enamorates aro of thres kinda: 1. Remodies provided by nature. 2. Expodicats by man against tho full. grown griégshopper. 8. Davicos for doatroying tho ogge. The romodics which naturo has pro- vided are tho bright sealight, which gives thom an fustinct to “mave on;” insocts, such os t'ao Tachiva, which, dopoeits its dostructivo Inrvmon the grasshappor, tho ichnoumon and 8l sort-winged folmowmon birds, such s the 1 tarling, blackbird, lack, jackdaw, snd domestio fowis; and the drivig of herds of anlmals over tho spots infostod by thom. Tholmman agoncios against tho full-grown ingocts, whicn have thus far boon used with -effect, oo as follows: 1, Swudges, producizy a donso, stifling smoke, which should be kirdled an hour boforo sunrise and kopt famigating so long as tho insects are on the wing. 2. Roping thom oft the grain to tho ground and-continuing the operation until thoy fly. 9. Nektiay them in buge bags made of shoota snd thon plunging them in hot water. 4. Trning in cattlo; hogs, and poultry to foed upon thom. ®he mos!, important question is how to destroy tho lasva oF tha just-biatohod insoct next apring. Ono plwa suggested is doopplowing. A Taxos planter waoto, in 1867, to the Dopartment ot Agriculture su follows : Ansoon a8 the gresshoppor hos Iaid i oggs tho plantors plow thoir flolds and turn the sofl over o that tho cggs will bo buried under s layor of cirth, which vill crush tlem, snd thus destroy the spriug crop of groashoppers, This oxporimeut ha boen mndo in emall epots of pround whoro myriads of egge ‘were depoatted, and not a grasshoppor camp £0m U~ dar tho layor of soit thiat covercd tho eggs. Tho Asiatic teavolor, Locher, also says: Docp plowing, with » viow to crush the oggs under #ha wolght of tho soll turned npon thom, i undoubt- oty recommendable, whilo plgs and poultry allowed 10 room over ko plowed flalds would groatly ssaist in {he extermination of thoso locusts 1n embryo, Pralrio fires, sot as much aa posstbls inv ciroles, 80 that tha young insocts cannot oscapoe throngh tho ring of fixo. Tho Mornonites collect the oggs in tho fall nnd destroy them, snd inthe spring roll the ground with boavy rollors. Inad- ditian to this, thoy employ tho Bmudgo vory fre~ quontly. On tho lsland of Lomnos, tho peoplo ave roguired by law to furnish a cortein moasurs of tho oggy nonually 6 tho nuthoritios. In China, also, tho pooplo aro obliged to aesemblo in tho spring and offect the dostruction of the Murve, InPrance, Italy, Hungary, and Spain, rewarde oo paid for tho egge, Afior summing up all the remodics, Consul Taylor recommends ho pooplo of Manitobs to plow not only all tho flolds down deop this fall, but all tho high-roads and lancs, ag those baro sar- faoon aro the chiof breoding grounds. Thon, if nocessary, harrow the grounds and roll tho sur- faco. Mo also suggeata the planting of tho flald- pen, which is unpalatable to tho grasshoppor, on tho margin of every graln-fiold, as ik msy divort the inscct botoro it has bocomo winged from passing tho barrier ; and systomatio praivic-burn- ing in oirclos, and tho frequent uwso of tho smudge. Whatever ia to bo dono for tho protec- tion of noxt year's crops must bo principally domo this fall, snd for this ronson Mr. Zaylor's Buggostiona aro both timely and valusblo. WOTES AKD OPINION. Tho Jorsoyville Democral says, but with what sathorlty wo do not kunow : 3y, Gioro, tho candidato of the Indopendents for State Troastrer, has aunouuced his intention to witl draw in favor of Alr, Carroll, —Tho Independent Roform Stato Central Committoo (reprosonting tho Goro and Ltter tickot) moets, by sppointment, at Boomingten, on Wodnoaday, —Tho Jonoaboro Gazee (Independont) dis- hies tho Springfield plutform, but will suppost Charles.Carroll for Stato Treasurer. —1t is said that Muj. B. I, Whiting, of Peorir, hos o “cornor” on the Republican nomination for Congresa fn tho Ninth District, to tho duie comfiture of Congressman Barroro, ~Tharo has boen & sharp canvaes for tho Re. publican nomination in tho Touth Congrossionst ‘Diatrict, and tho first bailot in the Convention (at Banhnoll, Sept. ) is oxpectod to bo: Hon Qorson Ritchlo, 37 William H. Bay (prosoo! member), 22; Jamoa B. Poago, 10; W. D. Hes- dorson, 7. ~In nominsting conventions through the Wost, thig year, excops couventions of tho Te- publicsn party, it Los boon tho fashion to “glaughter tho lawyers," and tho Evansville (ind.) Journod says: “Itia averywhero sppar- ont that tho hostility of the profession has bo« como opidomio.” In the Ninth Towa Distriot, “Judge” 0. E, Whiting, being tho Anti-Monop: oly caudidato for Congross, it Lins boon found hocessary to oxplain that tho #Judge® is nok b Lawyor, tho Fort Dodge Tianes aying: Any bog out of his swaddling-clothes i ol enough 10 yomeniber that, under a former Tows law, the preds ont offiecs uf Olerk of Court und Auditor wore in ona, under o title of Connty Judgy, and to this oxtant hat O, E. Whiting been Judgo. A late consatituont of Schuyler Colfax says in b e didate for Oon. B e P 1507 iy docliniug in iz bstanico {8 10 sets yictakes of tho charactor of Colfax’s, who, swesring hs ne'er conscat, cousentod,’ A —In throe dibtricts of Indiana, mado to cone taln onch over 4,000 Democratic wajority, the X D, Ropublicans support Independent cuuudm’:;: sof the ro- | Congross, vie.: Becond, B. F, Rawlinga; T! e e o iy, on the | Jouas A, Crovens; Trolt, Willam D. Wab gant Jochadls Btllleuial ts b dnck ik tors, Thoso Andopendont candidates aro nob Ist of August, tho uow Constitution, which to | 1qoyar of ‘tho Indopondent Noform Hove: King of Donmaale graclously gave tho foalend- | ynene, In {ho First Indiana Distriot, now made org, wont into oporation. Dr. Hayes, who had to contain 700 Democratic mafority, Williant an interviow with tho King on the samo day, haa | Hellmer, the Republicah candidate of ¢wo yoar roportod to the Now York Herald tho views of go, resorts to an Indopondont csndldaey with tho lattor ssto the Coustitution. Acoording to Topublioan support. ~Qon. Eppa Hunton (Demoorat) wag_renom. the royal critlo, tho pooplo of Iceland now have inatod for. Congrass, b Alexsudels, Va., st syutomatic roprosontation and a Jooal form ofad~ | ook, sud James Barbour, groomed by Ool, ministration, Hithorto thoy havo only hed o | Mogby, will run_indopendont sgalnst him. 1t consultative iufluonce through tholr Althing. | wes tho Hunton-Barbour contost for thig pomie Now thoy hinvo full powor of logislation and tax- ‘ation, IHithorto tho aftalen of Iooland havo uation that almost got Mosby into a duol, —MoOrary'a withdanal and doolination have boan divided botwoen tho bureaue of differont Minfuters {n Doumark, Now Ivolnd hag ity not heiped the Ropablicans to harmonizo ia the Tleat I;m Dintrlct, Tho Kookuk Constitution sayut o be - I Dbl it e msny candidaty D e oo "t | Do naycomani o T, 8 s e 03 folle bolonge ol that concerns 888 | corthy ona of A, & We Liave alreudy x‘:x. h«}my‘-x taland, The aftabw which oousorn Dens | MeUrars, toas, Bouvstd, Blagl, and, proably, ¥am old, ¥ —/Tha Toavenworth Jommeraal ('I\opnbllo-a{ waya of th0 ronamiuntion of Congrosnien Phi Up~=yehom 1§ rofuses b SOPPOT— o {4 thia unsorupulous and wueruph Tepresontative oottt oot A i of sty asa mark and Icolaud ln common, such a# tho dynnaty, Intercoucse with foralgn powura, and the ordlunsy xolations of commorae, aro il u tho Lisnis of $he Daulah Loglulutwe, Thu Con-

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