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4 THE CIIICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1875 depondence, flaw like lightning through every paper, and kindied both siden of the Aflantle, this flaming declaration of thossme date of the independence of Mecklenberg County, North Catolina, ablolving it from Dritish allegiance, and aburing sll political cone noction with that nation, nlihough seut to Congress, 100, Is never hieard of, 1t is not kuown evon twalve- monih after, when s similar proposition 14 Arst mado in that body, Yet the examplo of independent Meck- lenberg County, fn North Carolins, was mever once quated. For the prosent I must bean unbellover in tlie Apoeryphal Gonpel, Although Mr, Jerrensox was an interested party to tho cnso, tho strength of his argu- monts muat be ndmitted. It was, morcover, confirmed afterwards in a striking manner. oxtont he may ba regarded as & ropresentative of the Government, A neglect to roflact tho will of the Ex- acntivo in ndminlatering much publio trist would, in ‘my opinion, Jnstly ineur consure, In thisreapect, my duttes Liavo Leen to sustain and promote the Trenl- dent's Indian poticy, which I fully indorse, and have endeavored 1o ninfntain, T have not found it my duty to look to Btato oificlala for my nuthority, whether they are supporters or oppotonts of this national poliey, and, {f oppencuts, ero fo o ex tent of such oppositfon not supporlers of (ho Na- tionat Admintstration ; mt T havo lnoked ta thehoad of my Department reprosenting the Prestdont; and T om nnable 10 820 the propelety In tlie arraiamment by dov. Ornionn of & United Btaten oficial for infllelity to hia trust tuntld hio places himaelf {n & rosttion of logalty to tho Admintatration on this fmportant national tnfor~ TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. froighta were dull and nominal at 4o for corn to Buffalo. Highwines wero in good de- mand, and firm, at $1,13)@1.14 por gallon. Tlour was qniot and steady. Wheat wan less netivo and Jo lower, closing at $1.01} cash, nand $1,02} for May, Corn was tame and {o lower, closing at 7330 for May, And 74}e for June, Oats wero quiet and firmer, closing at G120 for My and 62J¢ for June, Iiye was quict and firmer at $1.00§@1.08. Barley wns quict and stronger, closing at $1.26@1.26 for April and $21.22 forMay., Hogawero in good demand at steady ratos, Bales of poor to chioico nt 97.50@8.76. Cattle wore netive the white man, but willcontributo Inegely to the wealth of the State, The policy of forcing thess negroes to Africa {a suggostive of harbarism, ‘They have n residonce hero ns long as the whites. They would Lo nd lost In Afries an would their white neighhors. The wholo suggestion is visionnry ; it is like nino.tenths of all the Southiern proponitions, a meve suggestion to divert nitention from tho gonoral fret that ho white peoplo of tha South will not work for their own support. Mr. Jaxes Tusskes Lowridls “posm at e of tho Common Council {o the charncter and importanco of a Legistature,” > e s CON. SION OF JUDGMENT. Now thnt the Ring charter Jina been nom- inlly adopted by frand and violenco of the Election law, the Ring organ, the Chiengo T¥mes, ndmits the dilemmn in rogard to tho interregnun between fnll and spring when wo shall Le twithout any legal City Govern- ment. 'Tho 7¥mes confesaes that the consti- tutionnl prohibition against the oxtension of the term of any pnblic oflicer after his elee- tion or appointment provents Mayor Conviy nomiuation by agrooing to « cortatn trado, tho natare of which ho doos not disclore, 3z, Drtano has boon foeling about in a roally pitisbla manner for a newspaper organ in Ohig, aud an yot o lins boon anable o fiud ono of any prominence. ‘Tho Clucinnatt Gazelte, which i thoroughly loyal whon cirenmstances win pore mit, comos down upon tho Becrotary in heavy tragio atylo, aud intimaten that it a not so muey n quostion what are his motivea for resiguing ag whother ho will resign. Tho Gazetle han goen fn but one newspapor an oxpreasion of rogrot that Drravo {8 likoly to faave tho Cabinet. EATRS OF SUBSCRIPTION (PAYADLE IN ADVANCE). TPostago Frepahl nt this OfMce. WANTED-Une activs agont in cach towa aad village. Speeial arrangomonts mada with suoks, Boeefmen coplos sont freo, Ta prevent delay and mlatakes, Lo sare and giva Post. Ofiica eddress in fall, Inoluding Stats and Connty. Remditancesmay bomade eltherby draft, express, Post- Odicaorder, or In registered lotters, at our risk. TERMA 'TO CITY SUDSCNIDRRS, Diafly, delivared, Sunday excented, 23 centa porwask. Dally, dnliverod, Bunday tncinded, 30 conts per waek. PORSONAL. Address TIE TRIBUNE COMPANY, swr v | from merving eighteon months beyond the | Beforo tho confirmation, howover, North | €at, which for six succesnive osra has claimed from | goncard Coutennint was not printed, the nows- i and firm. Sheop sold at about Yriday's B Ci) f v i the Presldcut of the United States special cousidora- Daxies Wrensten's fine miscollausons li, Cornar Madlton 84 Detcbarmate, Oblsger e [ 100 term for which ke was elected, ns i expected | Caroling atood by the record of its alleged | Lo Frerettn o b hin, annual mesango to | PAPOTS considoratoly supprosalug b at hls ro- | 0y By ey, o ————— ‘The Third Ward contains many moro voters than cither the First or Second Wards, and quost, though mnny of the reporters had taken it down in short-hand. 1t wiil appoar in the nozt Allantie, aud thio author will recoive 300 ag to bo ablo to do when ho entered inlo tho combination for carrying thia olarter. What then? The Zimes thinks that o glory nobly. The Legislaturo of that State published the Declaration in 1831, and print- od much pretonded evidenco of its genuine- Congresa, and the ITon, Bocretary of ke Interior, sud Commtsslonor of Indfsn Affairs, and {he President’s lloard of Indlan Commissioners, snd {helr pre- TO-DAY'S AMUSEMENTS. ACADEMY OF MUSIO—Halated streot, batwean Mad- ¢ Gon. J. B. Hoon, C. B. A, 18 gaing to atart N farm in Minnesota. tson and Monros. Engagementol the Emily Boldeno N = P docensors in office durlng tho period mamed, bave | Lin konorariuni, Ono of the newspapor corro- Oranexce W, Bowex, of the Now York Inge. Traupo, **Genoriers Do irabant." tho people theraof wore just na deoply inter- | special election must bo orderod. To | mess. Thisevidenco consisted, in part, of | (oM " el teatimany, from thelr petnoms! | spondants, by way of rovonge, desctibes tho Jm- | pendent, ia at the Palmsr Honse. VICRIIS TIUEATRI Stlon «teeet, batween | €316 10 tho mow chirtor question as thoso in bogin with, it is- doubiful whether | tho depositions of n number of porsons than | knowledge, derived from their persoual supervision | proaulon loft on his mind by tho readiug of the | Tila thiog ahiould bo sottled without dolay, 1, SVICKLS RATRE-Madlion steeat, batween | 41,5 other two, and turned ont to vote on tha | the Mayor and Common Conneil trould | living in North Chrolina who had ottondod [ and inspectlon, to tho suceess aud wisdom of tho Tiesagsr *3fs, LowrLe's maptior waa Dearborn and State. Engagoment of M ** Jano Iyre.” ADELPII TRRATRE—Dearbarn stroet, cornor Mon- roe. Varloly entertalamont, ** Alarked for Life."” poem. oarnoat, and implied that is was reading noble and postia words, but the poem has not yot boon printed, and all we hoard wam an oceasion- al reforouco to a maiden with n good in- stop, whom wa rupposed to ba Fresdom, as tho inatep is Lior distinguishing featuro.” Evidontly tho poom waa road in s perfunclory sort of way, morely to givo eclat to ita publicstion as o maga- zine artiele, It was not a whole-souled, generous contribution to tho Centonnial proceedings, S PP s If the Chiarter aot of 1872 shall go Into foreo In Chieago, all the wards must ba radistricted and reduced to aightoen, ‘I'his will necassarily wipo out the Firat and Second Wards, and con- golidato thelr poputation with tho Thied Ward. And yet, strango as it may soem, threo of tho four Aldermon reprosenting those wards worked Iiard for tho adoption of tho act which abolishes their seats in tho Coumcil and wipoe out their warda! And it was by tho monstrous ballot-box stuffing practiced in thoso warde, if not under their sanction aud Ly thoir ordors, at loast not ngainst thom, that tho not i reported to bo ear- ried, Theso two wards are mado to give 2,540 majority in favor of their own oxtinguishmert! ‘Thoy aro roturned ea having voted 2,025 nyes to 853 noca for heir own abolitlon. tho fathor of Axna Loviex Dr. or Capt, Cany? Givo mo to write tho souga of a nation, ang 1 care not who does tho ouldoor work,—XNew yo World, Mra. Sarrrir mays bo colebrates hor waoliy nedding evory day, Sho marricd s stick, ug thal's how it in. Franco publistien weather-roports by tolegra:y, now. At lenst two papera havo ventured up p the {nnavation. Lawnexce Bannrrr, tie colebratod Lragedien, stopped at tho Pelner Ilouse yestevday on M; way througl: thin elty. . Tho Liolght of anticipation : A dentist siting in his own chair all day and grinniug at g1y candy-sliop ovor the way, Loxington, Xy., colobrated tho contonaly . its namosake by s doublo murdor, Me, ¥igy Topy did it with a revolver. The original scoro of Gouxop's * Paljerty” having beon stolon, tho compoaor is bl v.g writing it ovor again front memory. s, Citanres Mourton, tha celobratad uipzsy, is now in Rome, “resplendont in white ailk, black velvot, and Valencionnes laca." Bonptex, of Oloan, N. Y., in known a- (i geateful murdoror. ITia counsal gav Ing d . ;;mtunco commuted, and Bunoick Las son: Jim 10, It is rumorod distantly that Deprara w. ba Mr. TriroN'n ogont nexe measop, andi; iy booa whispered that porhaps Mr. Tinton wi) wurvivo this calamity. Parrr bas had morn dismands, Tho €. Russia gavo lior o bracelot of sapohires a:d monds to match that given by tho ops. ‘seribors at her boaailt. April 18, 1775, Tonert NEWMAY, sox{on of {1y old North Church, Doaton, hangout tha I in tho towor. April18, 1876, Rosenr N.. Lis son, ropeated tho act. + Hemuieysany, tho excavator of Tray, § digging in tho sugar of & Mocklonburg- grocory-atore. Hopays eand is sand, oy what kind of & shovaol you nso. Prosilent’s Tudian poticy, ‘The controvorsy is but a repotition of many that have gone before, and n enmplo of many ihat aro sure to follow, ns long ns therois a distinet vestige of tho aboriginal race on this continent. It is ono of the penallies for the linrdships and abuses incident to the advance of civilization, It opens up tlie whole ques- tion whether the Indian Affnirs shonld Le ngain turned over to the War Departmont and conflded to the anny, or left with the Interior Department, with its agonts and the mild poliey of the Quakers. The question is perplexing, aud wo are content to let Gov, Osnony and Bupsrintendont Hoae fight it out in Kansas, and other contestants do tho same in other States and Territories, order n specinl clection to put themsolves out of office, if they conld do so0. Dut how can they order it in this cnse, oven if thoy would? "Thore can only be n specinl eloction to fill n vacancy, But no vacancy occurs nne til after tho term of the present city officers expires ; and the dayor and Common Coun. cil will then havo censed to bo the City Gov- crnment, aud will have no power or author- ity to order a special election or perform any other ofilcial net, 'This is just tho dilemma which we pointed ont befora the clection, and which the Z'imes deliberately nnd purposely suppressed. It had been retained to assist tho Ring in car- rying out tho frauds, and it refused to con- fess the real embarrassments which would re- sultfrom nn adoption of the charter. DBut now that the oloction is over and the harm is dono, it slashes around in a meudiin way to mnko somo rort of o City Governmont con- sisting of thirty-six Aldormen, whioli no char- ter authorizes before April, 1876, in order to Dridgoe over the time botweon the oxpirntion “of tho terms of the present ofilcors and tho lognl election under tho mnew charter next spring. This i3 tho sheercst twaddle, Tho fact is, 08 wo said, that, if the constitulional provision is operative in this case, wo shnll be without a legal Government for six months, with all the ovils and embarrassments inci- dent to such n situntion, There is some consolation in the knowledge that tha Mayor who plotted with the Alder- nen to earry the charter for the expross nud declared purpose of kecping himself in office, will havoto goout, It servealim right. Dut the ponnlty the city may have to pay to got rid of him under tho mow charter—that of running a city without a legal Government— is 6 severo ono. ‘Tho only esenpofrom this di- lomma is in the courts. Unless thoy declare the meoting in 1775 which fssued tho Decla- mation, The Rov, Dr. Hawxs, who wrote n history of tho Stato, maintained the gonuine- ness of tha Deolaration, and o Mr. J. 8, JoxEs took the trouble to writo o *‘ Dofense of tho Rovolutionary History of North Caro- linn from the Aspersions of Mr. JEFrEnsoN,” Theo interest exoited by theso different pub- lications, pro and eon, induced tho 1ate Peren Tonoe, who tas, during his long lifo, the highest authorily on Americon history, to in- vestigoto the subject with grent eare, Tho remult of his researchies was well-nigh fatal to the Mecklonberg elnims. Jlo discovered o ot of resolutions adopted by **tho Commit teo of Mecklenberg Connty " May 81, not May 20, 1776, 'These resolutions wero published in the Now York Journal of June 29, 1775. They nro verbosa ond of tho same stamp as many declarations put forth Ly colonial gath- erings shortly nftor tho battle of Lexington. Thoy are not a dcelaration of independ- enco, , Thoy conlnin nono of tho strik- ing expressions of Mr, Jrercnson's immortal poper. Thoy emack of rebellion, but, in- stend of abjuring British rule, they declaro that thoy nva to “ba fa full forco and virtue until tho legislative body of Great Britain ro- signs its unjust and arbitrary intentions with respeet to America,” Thus, instend of do- claring independence, they expressly recog- nizo future dependende. It is simply incredible that the pretended Mecklenberg Declaration of May 20, 1775, and this gomi-declaration of Mny 81 should both bo genuino, And since the authenticity of the Iatter is not disputed, the first muat give way. The Cincinnati Commereial sug- gests what is donbtless the true explenation of thomatter. Tharesolves of May 31 wercgontto ‘Congress, then sitting at Philadelphin, Thae rurvivors of the Committeo which adopted Hore question in just s large proportion, is tho vote cast in the Third Ward: ¥or thenct of 1672 Againstu..e.. Total vota. A0JOTILY BanAL.vessseeresseres sarsvsnsrressnersss 163 Look nt tho return mado of the votein tho Seccond Ward, which adjoins it on the nortly, and which contains fewer volors, and who felt exnctly the same degree of interest or indiflerenco in the result: For Act of 18: FATIR—Randoiph strost, between " Monto Cristo." U0OTEY'8 Olark and LaSaile. GRAND OPERA-HOUSE—Clark stroct, opposite Bhormau Honsa. Kayne, Hall & Wambold's Minstrols. AMERICAN RAUING-ASBOOIATION HIPPO. DROME -Lake Bhoro, foot of Washtngton atrest, Aftor- noon and evealng. EXPOSITION BUILDIX Adams atrost. Kahfbition of ko Shors, foot of ‘alntings. UNION PARK CONGREGATIONAL CHUROH. The Grand Allegury of the Pligrim's Progross, v roeeendd,015 at the next ward adjolning the Second, which, with all the mking and seraping that could bo done last fall at the State, Connty, Congressional, Legislativo, cfact complozional benat and city election, only cast 1,004 votes: te, ¥or Act of 18; Agaiunt Total voto, Now leck BATFLRD CONBPIRATORS. — DURING TITE toslve yoars' triumph of ** Lalrd's Bloum of Youth," Iiindrods of charlatans haro conspied ta rival it. oilorts ta deceite the pubilis havn rocniled upon th selvor, wislothn «* filoom " 1s accraditad ovoparhorn tho ouly puro and or fu ex. Istanco, ' Bold by all drugyis EXPATRIATING THE COLORED RACE, Mn. Arexavorn Munnay, of Georgia, who is lornlded through tho local pross of that State as an * eminent lawyer and Repub- lican,” hing published n pamphlot urging the deportation of all persons of tho African raco from the United States to Africn, which conntry ho claims was set apart by Providenco for their lome. Mr, Munray intimates thaé it President Granr will publicly faver this schemo ho will support tho President for o “'hird term.” The indictment praferred against the negro is: That ho is and hos boon tho causo of troublo in thoe United States ; that ho is uniit for tho exerciso of political rights; that he is natarally indotent, improvident, andshiftless ; that Do lives in tho present, taking no earo for the future; that ho s deficiont in moral intelligonce, and thet ho will steal to tho ex- tont that it is impossibla to raise crops of food in tho Southern Btntes, the negroos stenling in their inciplent life tho growing corn, the sucking pig, tho sprouting vegotable, and tho FLAVORING EXTRACTS.~THN SU- stracte conalsta in their porlect purity “They are warrantod troe teoin tho e T Ifaro was nearly double tho voto of lnst fall returned na cast at nn election whero thero wns no oxcitement and very little interest felt Ly tho bullk of the voters, Of the neatly 3,000 votes returned * For the Act of 1872, in theso two wards, not (00 wera enst by logal votors. A few of the remainder were voted by repeaters, but at least 2,400 unvoted tickets wero stuffed into the boxes by thoso employed for that purposo. Thero was no poll-book kopt in either ward. It is reported that thero were no clerks appointed, and that the judges wero not sworn. The names of the voters wero not rccorded; the tickets wera not ntunbered ; and thero is no record to show thnt any lawful election was leld in cither ward. As conducted at those two polls, tho clection was utterly illegal and reparsd from of 1ha best quality, and are gonsentrated thay ' cumparativeiy aaill quantity ealy e, A now roligions nowapaper, roproseuting tho Anglican Church, i3 to bo started, to be known ag tho Chureh Quarlerly. Itisto bo published in London, undor tho joint fmanagomeut of tho Dean of Bt Paul's and 3Ir, Brursrorp Hore, AL P, Its editor will bo the Rev, J. Q. Cazerove, D.D. Iis articles are to bo aigned with the namos of tho aatbors, and tho papor is toba worthily representativa of tho toaching and position of the Church of England. Its cditori- ala will bo ox eathedra, or should ba, The Chitage Teibune, Monday IMorning, April 26, 1875, A cnblo dispateh pronounces as entirely without foundntion tho report of the death, in a duel, of the Marquis de Cavx, husband of Apzrina Parrr, The relncorporation wae earried by tho zoal of & faw perdon, econded ably, altough indirectly, by tho indiForonco of themaln” body of citizens,—Fcciing Portand Mail, If the *fow porsons” in its favor had em- ployed nothing bus **zoal,” they wonld nover The amendment to the postal laws, smug- gled in at the close of the Forty-third Con. gress Lhrough the joint ageney of Sonators have carried it. Iy and Rausey, continues to pan out immensely for tho express companies, for whose espocial benefit the job was put through. Under tho now rate for third-class mail matter, the shipment of bullion from iho gold-producing rogions to Chicago aud the East will bo taken from the wnils and trinaferred to tho expross companies, who will be able to oxnct from shippers throe or four times what it cost them before. The Haurw amendment develops slowly, but vory surely, into something vastly worse than any- body expected of it. fraudulent, 'The whole thing was worse than o farco—it wns a swindlo -and fraud of tho most onormous dimensions, THE NEW DESPOTISH, The Chicago Z%imes approves tho cliarter of 1872 beeause it ¢ elovates tho Common Conn- cil to the character and political importance of a Legislature.,” Wa think this one of the strongest rensons why. the ndoption of such n charter should bo coasidered a public calamity, Tt mikes the Common Couucil the absolute Government of the city. It clothes the “ring” of that body with snprome authority over all branches of the City Government ; it confers on that body unlimited power to fix the taxable value of all property, and to levy on tho same a rate of tnxation ns high s three per cent. It reponls all existing laws for tho government of Chicago. Thera are but four officors to be olected by the people,—the 3layor, City Clerk, City Attornoy, and Treas- urer. All others are to be appointed and pnid,as the Common Council may direct.” It anthiorizes the Common Council to pro- vide otits diseretion tho number of officers of all grades for tho city, It authorizea the Council to fix their torms and their salaring, and on thoss points there is no limitation, The Mayor is reduced once mora to tha condition of a cipher. Ho mny appoint and he may remove, but the appointment and the removal have no force until the Council give their consent. Whoever, therefore, & major- ity of the Council may favor for an office, or whoaver will pay the most for their approval, can obtain the offico, Thoy cra coerce the Mayor into appolnting tho man of the cau- ous’ choice. . All oxperience lias shown that when the legislative body of any Government unites within its powers the right of appointment, the distribution of patronage, the fixing of solaries, the creation or abolition of offices, the power of taxing and of making expendi. tures; in othor words, combines the legisln- tivo and executive nutlority, the legilative body becomes corrupt. It is impossiblo for it to be otherwiso. For thia reason, nearly overy Btatoin the Union has had to amend its Constitution by nbsoluto prohibitions upon the Legislature exercising the power of ap- pointment or the distribution of any patron. ago. The entire corruptions of 3funicipal Governmont in this country have been due to tho unrestrainod powers of the Common Council. ‘Wo know what Common Councils are in ‘We publish this morning an interesting paper on hospital construotion, propared by Dr. Jony M. Woopworry, Supervising Sur- goon-General of the United Btates Marine Hospital Service, for the benefit of Chicago, and hnving e.pplication to the plans of the new County Hospital soon to bo built in this city. It will be noticed that Dr, Woopwonrn gives his verdict in favor of the pavilion sys- tem, involving temporary wooden structures whick ghall be torn down whon so complot® ly impresnated with disonso 28 to conduco to the dotriment rather than thd bonefit of patients, and roplaced by new buildings ; tho only permanent parts of the hospital being those wot intcnded for the roception and lodgmont of sick psople. Tho system roc- ommended by Dr, Woopwontm has been wloptod by the United States Government in the canstruction of Marino Hospitals, and the counsol and advice of £o eminent an authori- ty upon this subject comes opportuncly just ot this time, and should bave great weight in detorm Ining the plen of the now Cook Coun- ty Hospital, The part played by the Aldermen of the First, Sccond, and Third Wards in tho late clection of the charter of 1872 was a spocies of biting off the noso to_spite tho face, If tho new cheter is permitted to go into offcot, theso threo wards will bo consolidated into one under the new apportionment of tho oity, ond inatead of six Aldermen in the district covered by these three wards thero will bo onlytwo, Yet the Aldermon from these throe wands all gave cither an open or tacit support fothe now charter. All of these men, ex- cept perhups Drxox, are believed to lave supported the new charter, and Dixox" per- mitted the grossest frauds to be perpetrated in his ward in favor of tha charter when he might have prevented thom with tho exercise ©of o small cxoount of personnl opposition, If we are forced to submit to this now charter, the Into clection to have been null and void on nccount of tho flagrant violation of the Tlection law and tho cnormous frands in vot- ing, Ohieago will Lo in o sorry condition. THZ MECKLENDERG DECLARATION, 1t would probably be unenfo to tell n 3lock- lenberger of North Cavolina that the Dec. laration of Independence, tho centennial of which he will celebrato on the 20th of May, s afraud; but irreverent porsons at o safo distanco are snying so with great boldness, ‘Wonmso than this, they aro doing something which looks very much like proving their position, Tho question is one of great inter. est to students of history and of American politiecs. We thorefors transfer the famous Declaration in full to onr columns : Resolved, That whonoover directly or indirect)y abet. ted, or in any way, form, or mannar countenanced the unchartered tnd dangerous invasion of our rights, oa claimed Ly Great Britaln, is an enemy to this country, to Amorica, aud to the inherent and inalienablo rights of mon. Resolved, Tust we, the cftizens of Mecklonberg County, do Liorsby dirsolve tho polftical bonds which hiave connoeted un to thio 1nothor country, and hereby abaclva ourralves from all oilegisnce to tho Dritish Crown, and adjuzo xil polittcal connection, contract, or sssociation with tbat nation, who bhave wantonly teampled on onr righte and liberlios, and {nhumanly shicd the blood of American patriots at Lexington, Resoleed, That we do horeby declarooureolves » fron and indopendent poopla 3 nre, and of right ought to b3, 3 sovazelgn and self-governing ssaoclation, under the cczt)l of no Power other than that of our CGod and the Ceneral Government of the Cangrees ; to tha mulntenance of which indepond~ enee wa solemnly pladge to each other our mutual co- operation snd our lives, our fortunes and our most sacred honor, Reoolced, That, as we now acknowlodge the oxiat ence aad control of no law or legml ofilecr, clvil or mil- itary, within this comnty, wo do heraby ordain and adopt a0 s rule of life all, each, and every of our for- mer laws—wherein, novertheless, the Qrown of Great Britaln never can be considered ss Lolding rights, privileges, immunities, or authoritles thoreln, Resolved, That it in further desired that i), oach, and overy military ofiicer in this county is heredy ro- Inktated in his former command and suthority, ho act. ing conformably to thess regulations. And that every mombor present of this dclegation ahall hencoforth be n civil ofticer, viz: . A Justice of the Poaco in the char- scter of a * commiticeman,” (o isauo procees, besr nd determine alf mattors of controversy, acoording to 1hie n2id ;ndopted laws,and to preservo peace, union, and harmony in sald connty; atd touse every exor~ tion to apread tha lovo of country and fire of freedam turougliout America, until s more general and organ- 1zed Governtent b establishied in this Provincs, The majority of the pointed phrases of the Doclaration appedr in this remarkable papor. If this i gohuino, tho infaronca is practically frresistiblo that Tuosmas JEvrEmsoN was o plagiarist on a gigantio scale and on ons of the groatest occaslons in the world’s history. ‘This assertion is as startling as if wo wero told that Mngna Charta was a them had no copy of them when, in 1819, thoy tried to roproduco them for publication, They fell into a natural airor. The real Dec- laration of Indepondence was wrought into the memory of every survivor of that time. The old men confused thoir rocollections of the two papors, and eo produced a componnd of both, which was true to neither. A slight mistako in the date, after the lope of forty- four yearn, was inevitable, It i only strango {hat the mistake was not greater. This ex- planation ought to hurt nobody's feelings. It diminishes, but by no menns destroys, the credit duo to tho Mecklenbergers of 1775, and preserves unimpaired the riame and fame of Tnosas JEFFERSON. THOE INDIAN QUESTION IN EANSAS, ‘I'he Indinn question in Kansas lns brought on o semi-qfficial contest boiwecn tho State nuthorities and the United States Indinn Agoncy., Gov. Osponn recently addressed o lottor to the Secretary of the Interior, in which ho chorged Indian Superintendent Tloaa with unwarrantable interferonco with Btato logislation, and with using his official position to dofent approprintions for the proper administration of the State Govern. ment. The chargo was ,busod upon informa- tion furnished by Superintendont Ioaa to Mr. Ronison, o State Scnator, which the Iatter caused to be published and nsed for socuring tho defeat of a bill appropriating $140,000 for maintaining militin to operato ngainst the Indinng on the border. Superin- tendent Hoaa has now addressed a letter to the Secratary, in which ho explains his part in the affair, and defonds himself from Gov, Osnony'a praotical domand that ho shall ba removed, Tho whole controversy turns upon a differ- enco that haa arigen between the National Administration and the dominant party of the Stato relative to tho Indian pence-polioy. Buporintendent Hoao says; The last Republican State Convention ‘Resolved, ‘Tliab the prasent peace-policy of dealing with the Io- diana hos fajled to afford sdequals protection to the frontior wotilors, and we sro in favor of transforsing the Indlan Duresu totho contral of the War Dopart- ment,” Everysoniiment in reference tathe Indinns, st varianco with this Btate platform of the party, has been anppresssd from publication, Ly moat of the newspa- pors of tha Stato, althongh this zame policy, through ita workings, thus Tepudisted by the Btats, hns tended largely to advance ita seillement and incresso ita wealth, It hoa caused $he pesceful removal of the tribes to the Indlsn Territory, Those removed em- brace the Bhawnoes, Wysndottes, Miamis, Peorios, Bace, snd Foxes, Kaws, Ouages, and others, This policy bas cansed the abrogation of sn Csago trealy, ‘which providsd a tranafer 1o a rallrosd company, 60 miles in width , of Bouthern Kansar, and reserved the new-laid egg, ng well ns the fledgeling chicken, Tlo is reeused further of refusing to labor for tie whito raco, while preying on them, and refusing to worl for his own support, sctu- ally sustaining himself a3 a pauper and a8 o thicf. Hisvemovnl to o land whero ho can subsist without Inbor is demanded as n bless. ing to tho negro, and as an act of justico to tho whito race. conceded that the negro, in . slavery, worked under the coercive inducement of the lash; it he produced no more than enough to os- capo the lash, In this the negro was no ex- coption. Inbor, he performed no more labor thon he could avoid to appropriating whatover articlo of food he might be ablo to Iny his hands on. ¢merged from slavery without Iands, tools, monay, live stock, or even habitation, The colored poopla were homeless wanderers, They have boen for ten yenrs gotting o pre- carious liviag by labor, woges, gd must accopt such wages ns are offered ond they cannot work on their own acconnt, That many, of them aro idle, and shiftloss, and lmpfidenc, may be truo ; that ind boen their natural condition under the system of slavery. They saw tho whites idle, shiftless, ond im- provident; thoy imitated tho race,” except when actunlly under the lash. Novertheless, thoy did nearly all the work when they wore slaves, and they have done nearly all tho work of the South sinco then. labor? Exocept that thoy no longer carry the whip, they have mnde but little progress to- wards industrial labor, than one-third of the whols population of tho former slave Bintes. Northern Stntes, whero they aro surronnded by a white population which labors for its support, are industrious, and laborious, aud self-gupporling. If thoy are mnot so at fact that their white neighbors do not labor any more now tlian formerly, and This indictment is worth examining, Itis Deprived of the product of his and ho folt no moral objection o They now work for ; they have no second choice, ] They wore an imitative people. * guperior ‘What ave the whites doing in the way of ‘The blacks are less The blacks in the the South, is it not dne to the porsist in making lnbor a sign of degradation? Tho old story was that no white man could work alongsids of a slave without personal degradation, But thero are no slaves now, and the man'who cannot afford to hire labor rofuses to work for himself, railing at the changed condition of affaira from the time whon, with pistol and horsewhip, he covld compel tho nogroes to work in his flelds for * Indifferenco of thio main body of citizens,” it roquired tho insertion ot 5,099 to 6,000 bogns ballots in tha boxoes by tho stufiera to consum- mato the fraud, sob of enbecribers, According to an editorial parsgraph in that paper, tho words **bomb,” ¢ Banlzebnb," ** Porsinn,” * decade,” **adult," **loniont,” and such, aro beyond thoeir spolling powerd. A nowspapor should havo somo mercy npon its eupportery, and not recklossly expoae thelr doficlencies, especially whon thoy frigntiul, notice of matter of duty, therefore, to rocord the abservation that we Liave seen i one nowspaper an exprossion of 1egcet that DELANO I3 kely to lowve the {10 otbier band, we pato seen coveral distiuct and cheorfal ballolujalis ovar tho announcoment,—Cinctni- nati Gazetls, an the Civil-Servico Roform, his intoution being to shiow that it Ia not dead but sleapoth. Any way, for all practical purposes it might sa well Lo doad. to oxplain in his nowapaper what is moant by an indepondont press. Is ita falr inforonce that ho intends to give iluatratod lectures on the subject ? fleld Republican havo sccurod fat Covernment sdvertisoments, thoy undoratand exactly why It ia propar for indepandent nowepapers to do ench gularly obtuse on this point. ToN, in private eonversation, avows himaalf a candidato for the Prosidoncy. He Is opposed to a third torm for the prosont Incumbent, though Lio eses no ronson why the people ebounld mnot clect the right kind of man throo times, In addition {o **zeal ™ and tho e 'Tho §t. Lonis Republican must have s quoer aro 80 ——— o supross t i tie duty ot a publlo fouraa to take nogatlve ax well ss poeitive facte, {tinn abinet, On ‘What papor waa it that oxprossod regrot that Derano wag likoly to loave the Cablnet? itis not emong our oxchanges. The Cincionat! Commercial eshorts Tnn Omiosco TRIBUNE o cotno up snd atand with It on tha wublime Relghts from which 4 surveys tho perdlo of o thisd term, Journal, Tug Tawoxs declines to climb.—Courfers ‘Lax Tamstys {8 not alarmed enough at tho “poril” to encountor the fatigue of so high a climb, POLITIOAL NOTES, Compromiser WHEELER is backed by an en- thusinutio rural editor for the Vico-Presidenoy. My, Donuax B. EAToN is proparing o specch Gen, awrey, of Connecticut, has slarted out Now thas the Now York Times aud tho Bpring- things, It is not eoloug sinco they wore sin- A Washington dispateh says that Benator Mor- It ebould bo romemberad that tho FAnwerLn who baa‘left Chicago to join 3oony and Basnay in Englend ie not tho Congressman, but the omluont merchant, The two ought not to bs confounded ; though the Congressman msy bo it any ono can find comfort in so daing.—De- troit Free Press. Albauy-beof-oators, who felt grioved thal('sr canld not come nigh unto Armasg » with reliof that the Engliah bulldog of .. and not the Jady, wna to blame, A bashful Jamealown youth foundn go'dr on tho stroot, which has an intrinslo “oluc, izt he has no uwe foritat present. If buars ey initials * Baby, —Tilusviile Herald. Infidol ecoundrols in a Misgourl cor freniin, hearing that the collections ‘made Ly a l.x:en wore inveriably short, oxamined hif het. ent found it coverad witli shoomalora’ was. inrite. Davsep Tavrom triod to juatify tho co: that Jio had traveled furthier and soon le: tou mort people. A Dubuque man tried to v~ & tioket to his own leoture, and ka e oeo it. Prince NavorzoN now threatons ta entabiish & nowspapor in Puriy. Dz OassaaNAo it would appoar tha: heraafier all nowspapar-srticlon in tha city wouli b leaded. DBatween him aui It ‘The @raphic says of tho iwo lendfng ma ol Wall atroet, Daxier, Doew and JAx tiovL: the first namod bas forgotton what b moans, and tha other bag not yoi lo: moening. thet 87 i CusnuaN prosontod. Iistort whdh o #iperd bouquet of tho Itallan colors,—rac . swaile, sud groen. The probsblo xoason for glvin this 2ction tho widest publicity is to diss patu cailn enrrent boliofa. A Boaton woman, gazing at Mpar's stazv of Eruax ALLEN on tho portico of the Jtate Howe at 3ontpelier, oxclumed: CYall, T deetere, tuni's about tho moanest pleture of Gives Wasunsotox I over sec.” An Inglishman, st & dinner on the n:I:l:n; tlon-dny, in rospouse to the tosat, * Fic (0 safd: *I wish to express to you m: u.tmf_x({an ot boing heto to-day, and my oqual aatiniacin at having boen absont & hundrod ye::s #go.” - Tho Direntors of tho Brooklyn ] hillin:monie Socloty quistly presentod Tigope.in with o cheols for £1,000 tha othar ds 7, And b wore no kipees exchanged, no Iwo-t| mado, and new wishes expresasd that o Were dond, Avrexaxven STErucna says (ba not will be & newepaper man. word tho boy s have hsd for many & ‘ehut 8 1ho Koep on, old man, and the boys somothing nice over your tombstore, lot thom kno w who i 18, #1In some ¢jusrters,” ey tho Nev- Vurl: T une, *‘surpri ee lias boon oxpresse ow and chil ron of DaN Boyaw will 3y it youd e d that the wide T aho1.d bave boon lolt in poverty; it is not enc 3zt remete Dberod that tbo ssmo nature which 1 coasod minstial Auccesaful as su & 1o the de- line may bave mado him also thougk:les? of lh: uncertainty of lfe and coreless of {ho fulure. In other words, 70 long o9 & man is a Jeli¥ ponion, and lives boyond his mosut. ke should psy oll his dobts withoat a marmif thore will bo some consolation in the thought | Chicago. Wo know that mon seek the place 4 same {0 sctual nettlers, It has defeated s lketreaty | him. Whoisto perform the labor when the { Bome political stgnifieance in gupposed by the b *od wp fret that out of Foury, Tiouanpsoy, Dixow, | of Aldermen, and, without salarics, gobprlch forgary, or that the Bible was written by a0 .| with ths Raw Indians, socuriog thelr lands aliotosst- | negroen arooxpatrintod? Mr. ALzxanpendun. | Boston Adcertizer to attach to the diuuer which u.m° hri:-; g: m: tfi_fl‘a‘:fl; '::;:a; o e Wanney, Corx, ond Frrzoemaro, certalnly | in the publio service, How? If tho Com. | industriousand cunning Habrow who lived :}’;‘”fl.’;’:&‘:‘ Janes. Lol en “m‘“m""""“d' rAY thinks laborers will come in from ather | he8 "I‘“’“ '4:;"“‘1 lo “'5‘“‘"“’; Bfi""“zb’ ':‘L”' W:n‘: s e drout DaNtzn, WE TR, UEL J tain their Council undor the progent chartor Ling | 8bout 200 B, 0. Yet no native-born dlack- | ' T L ustry and | suntries to take the places of tha biacks, for- | tuuished tizeonsde:, New Yoite aud inther |V xt man of Lia tine, > not moro than two of them can rel mon u m finbe Heattabia bo mert thid: vive: it self-support amony sdults, and keap peaco botween the y States. The dinner is sot for to-morrow nt Der. | **that bo was tho nicanest m: ¢ vors places in tho next Council. beon lnrglyi' dishonest and corrupt, what will ;:1 *;?:mm;m it whhfis o f; 5:;“;7.7‘.:‘:‘{,, t:’:l:n‘:-" l;:a there has hean great ad- g:u:;s &Jlmt v‘v');finswli‘l:o laberera go N:s the | yoxrco's. Posmbly, thera will ba soma loose talk | cause Le b:um u,.:‘ governing :‘-;:»;"fl”@ o it bo when it can expond $10,000,000 a year ; s u 0y 0 there as ownera DrO" | Ghon tho wino I ciroulating. ity.'" Tho obsorvation was mado ulICEeC . Boston s in a bad way. Htagnationin | when it can nholisllx and cr::nh'all d.\ey clt;' Lold four weeks honco ab Charlotte, tho | his makesup the fssue. Bince the Ropub- | prictors, and not ns substitutes for slavos, t Wiestaw's advocaoy of tho pro-slaviry cobi offices (oxcopt four) at plensure ; when it can fix snlaries, voto nn increase of the number of omployes ; when it excrcises within this city a greator puwer than the Logislatare can do in the Btata? The Leglalature of Mlinols is restrained by tho Constitution ; the Common Council under the charter of 1872 is re- strained by nothing; it is a law aud a court unto itself, clothed with unlimited discrotion and power, Instend of getting o responsible Govern. ment, this charter abollshes this Iast vestige of responsibility, Instead of securing respecta- blo exeoutive authority, it transfors all oxecu- tive oontrol to the Comumon Council, Instend legitimato business, with unemployed capital rushing into speculation, is the burden of her cry. ‘I'he groat advautagoes of the New En- gland motropolis as a commorcial pors arent a ‘Nisoount for lack of railway compotition with the thiree great linos who pour thotr.business into the lap of New York, XKeeilly appre- cinting thya fact, the Hub demands direct conneetion with Ohicngo by the construction of a now and independent rallroad, built with the proceeds of stock guavanteed by tho Btate of Maseachusetts, A special joint conimittos of the Legislature, to whom was reforrod o monster petition for milway relief and, choap transportation, have reported a Dbill to incorporate & railroad company whoso charges shiall not oxceed those upon lines ter« minating at Now York; which shall have no entangling alliancea with colossal organiza- tlona; and which, through its eamings, shall gradually rodeem its stock until all is extin. guished, when ths State becowes the owner of tho property. ‘Che appeal of -Boston s seconded by other seaport and inland citios of Massachusetts, and & strong prosswre for Btate ald {s bearing upon the Legisature, emerere———— The Chiengo produce markets were gener- havo a logislative despotism, restrained only by its own discretion, It meats in the Com- mon Council have horetofors baen sought for tho plunder and profit which might bo ob- tained, tho desire for sents in tho new Conn. el will be intonsified. 'Tho chauces for corrupt gaing; for dishonest pruc- tices, for sweeping robborles of the public, have been.increased & thousand- fold. Seatsin the Common Council under the new chartor will b, to tho class of men who will seek them, worth more than any 2 y : { 1 ) licy of pride and poverty,, | faltbful men for this service. Gojdey, Mew York; @, Oa ally steadier on Saturdsy. Mess pork was | other clectiva ofice in the oity. The public [ jjove it epurious.” He reminds his cor- Ossoay's charges against him, still the old policy of pi poverty,, 3 Mmm; & g dulyl. but 100 +per brl ymghar, closing at | know tho class of men who will pack ballot- | respondent that no writer or speaker of the Buperintendent Hoag, after making this | The best mode of maldng the negroes an hion. n;l;:’ua S&n;;;gz; ::l :::n flinn:n('l:am :::‘ Bl &flr oy wc . A 21,85 for May, sad §22.19} for June, Lard | boxes, and resort to sll othier infamous prac- | Revolutionary period mentions the resurrect. | explanation, deoleres it to have been eu. | est and indusirious population is for tho TalvEs without making & nomioation. B. H. i “‘“’“‘“"'5‘"‘“.“ Bh Kearne, fiusrm vias in good demand, aud 160 per 10010 | tices to got thelr ofices; and when those | od dooumeni. Then, with an uckind dls. | tirely propor. 1o says: whites to givo up lounging and loafing, aud | 11,17 10y mude sppolntmonts fo oddress tho | Georke T Terioy Wow fork; 2. G; o Ligher, cloaing st 16,723 cash, and $16.02} | men get clpeted, and avo clotiod with 8boo- | rogard for the feelings of the Mecklonbergers, | 1 4io Wl avare Wit foo mbordionts oors - | drinldng and droning, and g0 to Work and | paqple of thie Diatrict, offoriog bimsolf a8 w oan~ | Vieow, New Yorky' & 0 mirt. s Lotlticow, o T A b wore moderataly aetiva, oud | lute and unlimited power in tho government | and with o kean zeal for his own eputation, | Bopmere e e e e et ety | b tho blacka o propor example, Let thowm | didate snd preksiog bis claims, e axsorta that | Estar, levoonu 136, . srelop, Rack u‘:‘h steady ot 8lo far sbonlders, 11§@120 for | of tho aity, the city, instoad of rojolaing, will | he says s breach of tha publio wuqinmglumum, to | make labor o and profitable, and | tho Convention wos controlled by political hacks, 3 Yo shavt ribs, sud 4o for shozt elaas. Lake have sed. % mowsn the ' alevailon of a Government of checks and balances, wo county-sent of Mecklenberg County, will doubtless lend to the reproduction of thestory thronghout the countyy, It is juat as woll to tell tho othor sido of the story beforchand, The Mecklenberg Declaration, in its pres. ent form, was first published in tho Raleigh Reginter of April 30, 1810, It excitod grent interest, and was ropublished evorywhere, June 22, 1810, JorN Apius sent a copy of it to Tnouas JerrensoN, inclosod in a lotter in which Ar, Apaus spoko of it as ‘‘ono of the grentest curiositica and deepest mystories” that had evor come under his notice. Ho went on: How 1s {8 possible that this pzper should havo beon concealod from mie to this day? Had it been com- fuuuicated to me in the tims of it, I know, if you do not kinow, that §t would have byn printed in every Whig newspaper on this continent, You kuow thatif 1 hiad posscasad 1t T would bave made the hall of Coo- grees acho and re-ocho with it Oftcen monthe before your Declaration of Independence, The tona of tho inquiry suggesta that the famous reconcillation betweea the two ex- Presidents was not so thorough but that the Whig would bave refrained from intense griet if his old adversary had beon caught in a flagrant ploce of plagiariem, Ar, Jevyzs- gox repliod, under date of July 8: * You scom to thinlk it genulne,” he wrote ; ¢ I be- ‘Wi Ravaion Huxay’s resoballons, far shord of lae lean party mansgors in Kansas have taken a position ndverse to tho peaco-polioy, Mr, Hosa says that it has been impossible to have the other side fairly represented. It wos on this nccount, as ko allegos, that State Senator Roprveon requested him to furnish the facts concerning the Osago troubles, oo that they might be used to determino in some mensure the necessity for tho proposed militia appro- priation, Buperintendent Hoaa therenpon gavo Ar, Rouvixsox tho results of his investi- gation, which were that o number of the Osoges hud been Lilled by the militia ofter they had been disarmed; that somo sixty pack-mules and @ lot of camp- property hiad been talen by the militia from peaceful Indiana; that the Indians attacked were a peaceful huuting-party, who did not return'to the Agency slmply beeauso they had not received the arder to do so; that thoy did not firo o gun; and that neither before nor after tho attack had the Osage tribe de- clarod war, Tho deduction made from this information was thet o State wmilitia was not needed far the protection of the border, and that the appropriation was superflaous, This was Superintendent Hoaa's only offense, ss ' he stotos it, acd the only basis for Gov. whichi Buob appIiTiee sy La easlguad, L] 'Thoy will cultivate their own crops, and reap the profit as well as porform the labor. This will not bonofit the existing raco of whites, which, according to Mr, Murray, want some persons to Iabor for them, He says, how- ever, Dut 4f the negroes wore all gona from this conntry, 20 800n g4 the fact alould bo sunounced in tho cotton- markets of the world, the anticipation of @ great fall- off in the production of cottan would immnedistely atinulate the price, and tha firat crop afterwnrds would shiow euch & decreasp in production that prices would runup to 40 or 560 cents per pound, if not Ligher, Pro- ducing cotton then would bo such & moncy-making Luslgess that many of our youug men who aro now lounging sround the streets, spendiug thelr timo (n 1dleuess and diss!pstion, would hio away to cotten. patch, and tecomo useful mombers of the community, inalead of drones, 88 npw, The ides that going fo ‘work would dograds tliem (o tha lovel of the negra | wold te banishod from the land, and in & few years our country would bave on an entinly new phase,— greatly bonefited both morslly and financially, The young men of the South who have omerged from childhood during the last fif. teon yours are not laborors or producers, but are litorally ¢ drones” The idea of expel- ling tho only clnss that docs auy hard lsbor, that produccs moro than it consumes, bes causo thoy aro not fit asioointes for the “‘drones,” is peculinrly a Southernone, Itis ke negro will nat caly bocome tho helper of The Albany Jowrnal, which preaches sound TRepublicanism i any papor does, comon forward ond remarhs, spropos of the resignation of D~ raNo and Wiruana: * Tho country would be sorry to zec achiangein the othorlszding membora of tho Cabinet,” Thoro is scarcoly s bocoming smount of weaplng at the funcral, ‘Thoe impeachmont of Auditor OLINTON by the Louisiana Legiulatura s not alearly andoritood at theNorth. The proesodiog hasno purtisan aspect. It wan not instituted by the Auditor's political adversarios, but by hiapolitical friends. 1t waa begun in the Hauy Housa of Ropresenta-~ tivos, eomposad entirely of Ropublicans, " Tho Momphis Avalanche still worku itself up poriodically over the Third-Term queation. It #ayu tho oflice-holdera will control ali the prima~ rioa inthe Bouth, and this will mesu 138 votes in tho Natjonal Convontion for Gen. Gmax, it Lo wants them. Only forty-seven additional votes from tho North will bo requirod ta seours tho nowination. The mnew Licenss law of Maseachusetts will haves fair trial in Boston. 3fayor Conn do- clared bie futention in his first inaugursl of enforciog rigidly auy temperance legis. lation that might ba adopted, Under the ngent law Istely passed, tho Aayor Las the appolatmont of thrée commissioners epeclally chargod with cmying out lta pro- 7inlons, Mo hes promlised to find energetic and aud tlat be might st coy Uma Lave deoured the | miso measuros of 1830 and bis famous fogitive slave bill. publican, wbich was a Pro-8l in those days, thus spitofully “And ¢ 8 such & mam W Priest of Plymouth Church denoonc pulplt a8 the meanest man of his tlmo, he lacked ¢he govorning senso of 1o 0 ‘The momory of DANIEL WEBHTER balmod {n tho lcarts of his fellow- ocenturies after all record of Hz¥ Beecuen's fantsatio trncks slall have iV oblivion," nurg; Jola " Yok oW, Morrisou, Bt Now Xoeky D, . Ilolowan, Washington Tremont Llouns—Chntlew . HOTEL ARRIYALS, Gatlop, Oculin | Edwaxd D, Kays, 31, R, Dav ey ‘Webb, Faston, Shernion Hous—R. @, Lareson, Now Yot @, Noil, Bt, Louls; Taylor Flerce, Des Molo Webb, New York ; Jacob Klelg, Bt Porter, Augusta, Me.; T, M. ¥, Q. Brown, Ulica; R, 1, Davenpo! Isasa B, Rubinson, Loula ¢ 3 Wat 1lngo3i b, Neo YK:'I. Tl % Oakuhott, Cincinnati; ¥, i, ochistor Rufus Orecne, UrneT, s T Now Yor g 3 v s 3. K, Gowoy, Colum ; Be%ird, Now Yok’ D, K. Batcer, Daltimorad ¢ o M. L. Haver, Toredoq It B 550 Baker, Ulevel 3 M. . New York; Duncan B. Canno, New suppor: of (18 1 Tths;. Fionis Bt avery V'big l"l""" Totu fly at BEET s the i3 4 from 40 pesaat pality'| will b e LR York; contrme? y Wi ti00 6h I g et