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TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. RITEE OF ATTFCRITTION (PAYANLE 1N ADVANCE), Puntage Prepold at this Offices Paily E(llll.)n.l;(‘n! 81,00 at .‘h:llmlhl ny tdudre . 1,00 5 Eathon: Urie Weckys DSt PAI, T FeRT e rresreesinn s .50 'Arts of yoar At esme raty, WE Qoeenpy, por e £1.50 Clubaf flve, per ¢ 150 Linbof twenty, ops i Thnpostage In 155 caate a year, which we will propsy. Bpecimen copiea acnt free. o prevent delay and mintakes, be muro and give Poat-Office address in full, fnclnding Statoand County. Remittances may be made cither by draft, expross, Pust-Offico order, or in registercd fetters, at our risk, TERMS TO CITY BUBSCRIDERS, Daily, detivared, Bunday excopted, 25 cenia per week, Datly, delivered, Sunday fuchiied, 550 venta per wocks Addrean THE TRIBUNL COMPANY, Cornor Madicon and Desrlorn-sta,, g0, 1L o AUSEMENTS. NEW CHICAGO THEATRE~Clark sireat, hotweon Randolph and Laks, Engagement uf Charlutte Thomp- . 3ang Eyre.” #ou, ane Eyre, ADELPHI THFEATHE—-Dearborn street, IMouroe, ¢ Lispet,” corner McVICKER'S THEATRE—Madison sirest, Lelween Dearborn sod State, Engagement of James Lowls, * The Dig Donanza,” HOOLEY'S THEATRE—Rondolph strect, heiwesn Gk nx;\! LaSalle, Engagement of the California Ainstrols. WOOD'S MUSEUM—Moros atreet, hetween Dears born and Stafe, Afternoon, **The Marblu lieart,” Evenlog, * Unlo Tum's Cabin,? PLYMOUTI tand, ‘Bubject: Lretnre by Dr.d. G, lol- iding.” SOCIETY MEETINGS. THOS, J. TURNER LODQE, No. 409, A, i o%loeke ara cordially r0e-at,, thin (Thursduy) evening, Nov. 4, at Work E, A, Degree, Vidting brethren invited to sttend. TIBONE, 'Ehe (Ebifa_gu Qribune, Thursday Morning, November 4, 1875. Greenbacks, at tho New York Gold Ix- chango yesterday, roso from 56 Lo 87, fell to 863, and closed at 863, R The majority for Huct, though falling be- low the original cstimate, will be between 3,500 and 4,000, The retwrns yet fo bo re. ceived will tend o inereago rather than diminish the Republican majority. New York State isin doubt, 1 is claimed 1y bath Itepublicans and Democrats by small majorities, and neither side are disposed to i evs on the Ring ticket, two of whom wero un- ! Buffalo, Flour wasquiot and easier. Wheat was quiet and {@1¢ lower, closing at $1.07] ensh, and 21,071 seller November, Corn was active and 1@2% ligher, closing at Sie cash and #1he soller the month. Oats were aetive and easior, elosing ut 31le caxh nnd d1fe sell. er theyear. Iiye wax te lower, ab 676 G7}e Barley was in goed demand and firmer, clos- ing at 81}o cnsh nnd &tje for December. Hogs wero active and closed firm. Sales at £6.75@8,00, Cattlo wers dull and lower. Sheep rold fairly at former prices, On Saturday Inst there was in store in this city 1,831,000 bu wheat, 1,207.390 bu corn, 676,~ 462 b oats, 189,510 b rye, and 200,953 bu barley. One hundred dollars in gold would Ly 115,25 in greenbacks at the close. Ranb A Ly Tvidence acenmulates of frauds and irceg- ularities prcticed al 'Tuesday’s election in Chiengo. Tt i3 considered probable thnt enough of illegal voting and of questionnble proceedings by judges of clection can be tablished to reduce the vote of IaT Creany and elect Monay N Connty Commissioner. 'The matter of investigating frands and institating tho prescention of the guilty parties Lns been placed in the hands of the Citizeny’ Associntion, to whom all information nud evidence shonld be con- veyel, We nvo tn have an importaut city election in April of next year, and a few trials and convictions of fraudulent voters and dishonest jndges in the meantime wonld liave an exc rfToct, e A THE GERMAN ARD IRISH €OALITION, The Lenefit to Chiengo and Cook County of the defeat of Mr, Husixo, tmder tho cir- cumstances in wl he appealed to the suf- froges of the people, ia considerably tempered Dy the election of three of tho Connmission- THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: TITURSDAY, NOVEMBER ¢4, 1875, ar {he fight was simply between him and Kuenev, DBut when it was found that the Opypesition Convention had made upa Foreign Know-Nothing ticket, ignoring and ostracis- g the Admevieans, the latter hegan to think it was time to do something in self-defense, ‘onseduently the Republicans ealled a Con- vontion, and nominated a ticket reprerenting the three great eclements, vi Amwcricans, Germang, and Irish, and placed it before the people and resolved to make for it tho est fight in their power, Thousands of anti- Know-Nothing Domocrata cano to their ns- sistance, and with this aid the unholy al. lianco ticket wns beaten; and it is to be Joped that wicked combination agnin be attempted in Chic ———— M. HESING'E VIEW OF THE MATTER. The Nteals-Zeitung yesterday, presmunbly speaking for My, 13esixa, aceepts the resnlt of the eleetion in a spirit anything but recon. ciled nnd concilistory, Chority suggests, however, that so sore and trying adisappoint- ment should be forgiven an outbnrst of ill- temper. DBut, passing over the asperitios of tho Staats-Zeitung's comments, there are gome points in it which have peculinr significance, It rdmity, for instance, the finnl mpture of thoe coalition of the German and Trish voters, which M, lnsive aud the Staate- 20y hd hrongLt abent, It attributes Hesixa's defeat to the treachery of tho Infsl, and adds: “Thero will senreely ever again be a thought of & coalition Jike that of two years ngo; the recollection of the vilo ireachery practiced yestorday will not easily permit of nimtual confidence hereafler.” 'T'his is tho most im- portant admission that be meker, and we have commented elsewhere on its significance and (he public benelit likely to ensue there. from. We nced only say hero that tho subscquent clrgoof the Staats-Zeitung, that questionably *! counted in ¥ by held-back re- {urns from certain elty precinets, Mr. Ilgse 1va must bo infinitely disgusted to find that the very men who dragged him down lave flonted on tho scum. The only componsn- tion the general publio can find in contem- plating this phaso of tho result is that tho unnatural, uvpatriotic, sud dangerous con- lition of tho Irish and Germans bas been samminrily rent asunder, ‘The canvass ofthe vote shows beyond any question that the two elements were antagonistio in spite of their professed union of purpose. Mr, Hesrvo nnd his German friends cannot doubt that the Irish defeated him when they look over the vole polled for Kemiey, Fiserry and his friends havo good grounds for be. lieving that tho Uermsny defvated him; give up until the oflicial returns nro canvassed. Lupmvarox's mnjorily over 'I'avron in Wis. consin is placed nt botween 4,000 and 5,009, Judge Dnuastoxp, of tho United Stales Circuit Court, vesterday confirmed tho snle Dy the Master in Chancery of the Liocklord, TRock Island & St. Louis Rtailrond to Hen- MANY OsTERNERG, tho purchaser in behnlf of the German bondholders, 'The North Chicago ‘I'own Board have made rome wholesomo reductions in the sularies of town ofilcens, leaving the compensation lib. cral enough for the services porformed, but Yot the figures uro gratefully small compared with the allowances heratofore voted by the Chicago Town Boards. During the past threo months sixteen new Netional Banks havoe been organized, with a cireulation of 1,016,710, but for the same period tho ** wants of trade” have led to the deposit of £6,752,536 in legal-tenders for the redemption and rotirement of Nationnl Bank cireulation, of which over £5,500.000 lins i been actually vetired and burned. So it will appear that tho plorious privilego of cstab- lishing Nationnl Banks at tho expense of the yeople bus not been very freely oxercisad, | The voto }clllrr;cnl ns cast in Chiengo on Tusrday far exceeded that ever before polled in this cily. It was as follows: 1reen, Tepublican.. HeatNo, Opporition. haxtry, Independent, Total vole 180 0uvensaarieneasan: While this far excoeds any vote ever polled in St. Louis, Cincinnati, Daltimore, or Boston, it ia considerably short of what Brooklyn hns polled, is senrcely half tho voto cast in Phil- | edelphia, and less than two-fifths ns many s bave been polled in New Yorls, but still it is a very respectablo vote for nnow Westarn town, and it would b 8,000 or 4,000 larger if the suburbs wero ineluded, which are, prop- erly speaking, parts of the eity The disgraceful scenes of violenca and in- timidation enncted last Tuesdny at the polls in Baltimore by Democratio rufllans hired for the purpose revive the former bad eminenco of that city na the oo of the plug-uglics and the blood-tubs, There, ns at some of the polling-places in Chicago, the police were iu league with the roughs, and the Balti- more American charges that the large majority given for the Demoeratio ticket was duc to tho facts that -the colored voters wero driven from the polly a8 fust as they appenred, and that Reformers protesting against Tepeating und ballot-box stuffing were subjected to murderous assaults and woro forced to abandon the field early in tho day, Al this might lave Lsppened in Chicngo but for the determined stand taken by our merchanty, business-men, and re. rpectable cilizens in general. Baltimore wight profit by the lesson. 1t soems that while the Contiuental news. papers have been settling tho Eastern ques. tion according to their various pet miocthods, thie Northern Powers have resily taken tho matter in hand, and are well advancedin n <oncerted movement looking toward pesce in the Turkish provinces, To this end they have deported Austria, through her Prime Minister, Count Anprassy, to draw up for Presontation to the Sublime Porte s propo- sition which ehall guerantce radical ve- forms to the geveral provinces, this proposition being rather of the nature of a command notifying the Sultan that the nced- «d refonns must ba necorded to the vassul Blutes. Late advices intimato that the Groat Powers do not antieipato ou carly suppression of the rebellion in Ilerzegovina, helieving that Qo Turkish Government is unequal to the task, and active mtervention by Austrin, with the countenance of the other Lowers, is predicted, The Chicago produce mnrkets were steadier yesterday, with quictness in options, but ore deing fu breadstuffs for prodentdelivery. Mess pork was in fair demand und 10200 per barrel higher, closing ot $19.70 seller the wonth, aud §19,074@19.10 seller tho year. Lard was dull and uachanged, closing ut F1LT5@18.80 per 100 b8 cash and #1214 seller the year, Bleats woro in good dewand and frwer, at 8lc for part ealted shoulders (boxed), 11}@11{0 for short ribs do, and 12¢ | villaing, and scoundrels.” and, thongh his own counlrymen probably had moro to do with it than hae is willing to admit, it is pretty certain that a large num- her of Germans who voted for Hrsiva cut thorest of tho ticket, aud voted with tho Republicans. ‘Treachery will bo charged on Loth sides. 'Tho Germans claim that they wero betrayed by the Irish, and the Irish see that they were betrayed by the Germans. ITowever much personal sympathy M, Hesive may have in his misfortuue, which is peculinrly trying under the circumstances, Lio must blame himself Jargely for the resuit, 110 organized the dnngerous politieal coalition of foreign-bora citizens, and took advaniage of asinglo and exceplional issuo of cowmon concern to cement them into a compnet organization against the native citizens which he intended to be permanent for local pur- poses, To insnure this organization the con- trol of local affairs, M. IlEsixe also con- gented thad tho most depraved classes of metropolitan life,—tho roughs, bullics, gam- blers, and thieves,—should forta a pert of it, and have thcir representalives in public places. Nemly n year ago, shortly alter the election of AoNew as Sheriff, Mr, Tzstvo perceived how strong ahold this vicious element had upon his local party, and he set about to break it down, 1fe made a vigorons warfare npon AcNEw and tho roughs with whom he had surronnded himself in the SKhorifi's oftice. 1Io attucked tho ecorrupt Tting in tho County Bosrd, and singled out those whom ho demonnced as ‘thieves, He dropred Cor- vix when that individual began intriguing to hold bLis office beyond the term for which ho hied been elected; and, after the charter had been carried by open fraud, he apologized in a large public meeting for having discovered or invented him ns n candidate for Mayor, and for having placed him in that position, Yet, when Mr. Irsivc bocamns a candidate for County Trensurer, ho waa wiiling, virtual. 1y, {o eat his own wonly, and utilize all tho corrupt elements which he had previously denounced with all his characteristio bitterness, Mr, IlusiNo could scarcely expeet all his German friends to follow him in this retrograde movement ; and many of those who voted for himn on personal grounda rcfused to socept tho senm and riff-raff with whom Lo agnin cssociated himself. Meanwhile, his former position had sliealed somo of the support on the Irigh side, Hero was the break, the full effcct of whick was only discovered in the vote, The coalition can never be revived, MMr. Hestxa knows thit, and admils it in his pa. per. 'The Germens do not want thoe alliauce continued. The Irish can mnever bring it nbont, even if they desiro it and should at. tempt it. 'Che breach may be baed ns siguillcant of n botter state of things. We eannot but regard such a coalition ag oxceed- ingly dangerous to the peaco aud welfaro of the comunity and a menaco to tho popular government, 'There is no more justitication for a nativistio nllicuce of foreign.born citi. 2-n agninst the native-born citizens than thero whi for the condemned association of na- tive-born citizens twenty years ago against the foreign-born, Al naturalized citizona should regard themsclvesos Americans, and should bo divided nmong the politieal porties of the country by tho same motives that induce Amiericon-hom citizens to arrango thomselves onouowide or tho other, Nativistio {ssucs counot be encouraged or tolerated, whother they cowe from forelgu-born or Amoriean- born clm.?us, without meuscing tho fonda. mental principles 131 populur government, The Germun-Trish coalition ut nn end, the political cawpeaigus in Clicago herenfter will bo fought out by tho two great partivs of the country, which the Presidential election of next year will bring to 4 foir yua Bquare test of strength. A pood many Democrats who voted the Republican ticket on 'Tuesday, in order to defeat HexiNa and the had erowd he was nssociating with, will undoubtedly vote the Democratio tickot hereafter; png thousands of Germans, Who went off first on a local sumptuary questionand who retauined away simply on Mr. Hesrva's account, wil hierwafter voto the Rupubflum ticket ay they Lave done fu the past. tha resolt attests a revival of tho Know-Noth- ing sentiment of 1854, iy dictated cither by gross prejndiee or willfnl misrepresentntion, All the Know-Nothingism was on the other side in tho attempt to maintain a conlition of the foreign-born citizens, ns confessed by the failure; and the best proof of the entiro nb- seneo of any snch purpose on the suceessful side is tho fact that two representatives of the foreign elemont—Messrs. Huck and IeaLx—were chosen to {ho principal pluces on the Republican {icket, On a par with this misrepresentation is the assertion that * the viclory of the Know- Nothings in this county election will be looked wpon by them as the forerunner of their victory in tho next city election (April, 1876), and that, inthe event of such a vie- tory, will follow tho cnforcement of the State Tempernuce Inw and the city Sunday ‘ordinance.” Mr. Hesive and the editor of the Staats-Zeitung both know very well that the tewperanco, question and the Sun- dny question wero not in issme in tho campaign, and will not bs in tho wpring eclection. Tho choico of Alr, TMecex, thoe son of ono of tho oldest brow- ers in the city, and himself a maltster, is suf- ficient answer to this, The Sundny question iy settled for wany yoars to como, The Ger- wans have gained their viclory in thet fight, ‘I'ho Republican party did not oppose them at tho time, and it certainly has no intention of doing so in the fature, As to Mr. 1Tuck, the Staats-Zeitung oxpress- o5 itself as satisfied that ho will administer tho oflice honestly, though it does not malke the admission In & very gracions manner, and it refers in contemptuous terms to tho Ger- mans who have excrcised their right of sup- porting and voting for him. All this, how- ever, is probably tho result of a honted cam- dentint election, was eanvassed s thoroughly 3 ever a State was eanvassed, Tho hard- mouey Democrats reluctantty voted with their party, thousands of vag-money Republicany voted for Arzes end * mora money,” Imt {ho intolligenee of the Siate, avonsed by tho dise ensgion, revoltml, amd the State was recovered by the Ttepublicnns on a specie-payment plat- formn, Pending this contest in Ohio, the Dem- ocratsof Pennsylvanin abandoned their specio- payment doctrine of the previons yesr, and, under the lead of local demngogucs, adopted the rag-baly. Especinl hopes wers based on tho jden that Pennsylvania was a workshop, and that two-thirds of the workmen wero idlo for want of money to employ thew. The 3.65 bond delusion was born in Phila- delphia, whera its parent represented that teng of thonsamds of working people had been driven to become trompa beeauso Congress wonld not inflate the ewrroney, But the dis- cassion of the paperanoncy question, begun by tho Tresident’s veto nnd earried on in Ohio, proved disastrous ; Pennsylvanin re- jeeted the wholo rag-money lunacy, and the Democratic nscendency in that Stato was lost. The elections of Tuesday are evidence that the Democratio party North hss gono to picees on tho currency question. A fow thousands of infintionists in New York “avenged" the lost cause by voling on Wednesdny against the Democratic Stnto ticket. But the fact remains that the Dem- ocratie party, repudiated in Ohio and Yenn- sylvanin, has gone in fwain, aud the factions now exist merely to destroy each other, Thero can ho no compromive between theso Tuctions ; whichever trinmphs in the Na- tional Convention will hava to enconuter the opposition of the nther, The Republicans may find in this a warn. ing to themselves. ‘The country will not tol. crate nor approve en inflation party in 1876, ‘The Republicaa party must bo a lisrd-money and anti-inflation party in 1876, or go to picecs 08 hns tho Democratic party. 1If ovil coungels ond wicked combinations shall place the Republican parly in even nu equivoenl position on this guestion in 1876, then it will amonnt to an invitation to all friends of » sound national curroncy, no mat- purpose of saving the country from general tuin and disaster. BRIGHAM YOUNG'S LIISFORTUNES. And now come tho inexorable ministery of justice und lay their ruthless hiands upon the Trophet, the head of tho Church of the Tattor-Day Saints, the Lord’s anointed, the Chief of the LMurem,—iriuzax Youns him- welf, Whether these ruthless hands are laid upon him justly or unjustly remains for the Courts to decide. Whether the law in com- pelling him to pay salimony to n seventeenth wife, and imprisoning him io default, is not recognizing coneubinage, remaing Lo be seen ; but legally or ilMegally, justly or aujustly, it is none the Jess truo that the Prophot sighs behind prison-bars, and cursos the day when his eyes fivst lit upon Axy Entzy, wife No. 17, nnd he, although in his dceadenee, o sero and yollow leaf, becamnc infatunted with her protty faco, nover dreaming of the miseries sho was Lringing into the harem, whera poace and barmoay had ruled before. It will be remembered that Axy Epiza, seventeenth wife, somo time ago took it into her head (hat sho was not nilowed pocket- moaay pro rata with tho other wiven ; that the Prophot visited the others moro frequent. ly than her; that they could ride out with him, and go to tho templo nnd to the opera with him, while she was compelled to remnin paign which Las not yet had time enough to cool off, THE LESOON OF THE STATE ELECTIONS. Republicans who read in yesterday's Tars- use the news that Pennsylvanin, Massa- chusetts, Now Jersey, Minnesota, and Wis- consin, and perhaps Now York, which had last year voted Domocratic, ind now gone as decidedly Republican, must not mistake the true import of the facts. The Democratio victory in Massachusetts in 1874 was won on a side istue,—Prahibition, That in New York was mainly & personal tribute to Mr. I'1Lpex for his ability and patriotism in tho prosccution and conviction of Twrrp, but tho result in both cnsen was nided by n popu- lar disgust and discontent on the part of the people with the Republican majority in Con- gresa which bad permitted and largely shared in the back-pay swindle, and in various job. bing and speculative legislation. In Ohio thero was a chango in favor of the Democrat- ic party which promised to be permanent. Tn Penusylvanin, the Democrats in 1874 took advanced grouud in favor of hard-money sud against inflation, and thoy elected a large mo- jority of tM Congressmen, and also o major- ity of both branches of tho Logislature, se- curing n Senntor of the United States There, too, the Democratic success promised to be perrunnont, Confldent of carrying, in tho evont of the nomination of any respecta. ble Democrat for Presideut, the whole or sub- stantinlly tho whole vote of the old Southern Btutes, Ohio and Pennsylvauin certain, and possibly New York, Iudiann, and the I’nc)inu States, would place the election of a Demo- cratic eandidate boyond all question. In tho meantime, bath parties in Congress, under the lead of ignorant mon and weak demsgogues, wera drifting wildly on the question of uational financos ; the disastrous panic failed to dovelop a statesman willing and ablo to meet the question. ‘Thero wero scoros of ndventurers with patent devices which they noisily proclaimed, and Congress actnally patched up and passed ono of these schomes, which proposed to curo the ovil of inflation by further inflation! 'Che country was a4 distracted 08 was Congress, aud every county orator had fils pet schemo for curing bad monoy by making it worse, The Presi. dent at this timo arrcsted the attention of tho country by vetoing the inflation bill and pointing out its incvilalle disastrous results, Iis appeal evoked a prompt vesponse from the intelligent and experienced men of all parties in the country. It strengthened tho previous helpless minority in Congross, and compelled the hesitating and tho care- less to meet tho subject dircctly and fuirly, All over the country the dis. cussion took & wew shape. 'T'ho growth of sound finaucial knowledge has sinco then beon atoady, and in onelulf the Btates both partics have been educated up to the point that the proper substitute for evil is good, aud for whot is destructive that which is preservative, ‘I'he Ohio Democracy numbored among its ablest men several cxperienced hard-monoy at hone and look through her Iattice at these unplensaut sights, So she broaght suit for divoreo and alimony against Dnianan before Judgo McKeAw, obtained a decree with a ver- dict of $3,000te pay her lawyoers nud alimony, sineo when sho los mounted the rostrum nnd nightly tells hor {roubles and wrongs to wondering audioncos and fill her pockets. ‘The Prophet pald the costs like a man, but he kicked at the ali- mony, and bhas over since kicked at it and refused to settle. Shortly aftor this disposi- tion of the case, Judge McKray resigned. Ilis successor hnd havdly become warm in his seat beforo ho discovered that the ali- mony had not been paid, notifled the Prophet of his delinquency, and, upon finding him wtill obdurate and recelcitrant, thrust him bohind the prison-bary, to remain until prid, unless his attornoys have skill enough and law enough on their side {o sccure his rolonse, ‘There is o ludicrous and o serious side to this encounter between the Prophet and tho blind goddess. Thers will not ho wanting those who will look upon this incarceration 88 a species of poetical jus. tice. This class of people will claim that they who dnnco shall pay the fiddler. The Prophet lLay spent the very heyday of his lifo with his numecrous wives, and Las had their consolation and sympathy, and lived in maritsl clover of n most luxuriant growth, ‘The clover has not annoyed him, nor hna it been mixed with woeds or thorns, until now, becauso he was master in his own honae, snd a3 completely lord of his harem ns the Grand Turk or the Caliph of Bagdad. Now that he Lias reached the nutumn of life, when the joys of tho world and wedlock aro not 50 keen and the passions cool, thoy will cinim that ho is not deserving of sympathy ; that ho has hod his good times and ought not to complain when fimes aro changed; that, sfuco ho hns seventeon wives and forty-two others seeled, and is thus fifty-nine times more married than other men, he should not complain if ho suffors fffy-uino times moro than the average mon who bas the misfortune to have but one wile. Thero s also & ludicrous fenturo to the affalr in the despalr which must seize upon the fifty.uine wives as they hehold their husband behind the grates, they themselves being powerless to aid Lim with oll the cunning of their fifty-nine hends or strength of their 118 arms, It is also lu- dicrous to think of the curces that must Lo heaped upon tho head of Any Eviza from theso fifty-nine mouths, and of the 590 fingers which acho to get hold of Axy Eriza's protty tresses,—the falso and flekle Axx Erza, who hies brought them and the partoer of their fifty-nino bosotns into this trouble. But, with all tho ludicrousness of tho siluation, there is a serious eldo to it from s legal point of view, and, if the legal point bo o valid one, then the prosecution of the Prophct looks very mnch likuporucention, ANN Eviza havingbecomo his wifo and his soventcenth wife under Mormon law, is she not under {ho United Btates law a concubiue and wowife at A? Can the law of tho United States recognize ihis men; the bistory and Yyaditiona of the party wera all on the sido of bard-money as opposed to on irredecmable currency ; but a factionfof the party in Ohio, with n viow of securing o it —————— The Republicavs hesitated for o long tima Whether or not to nominate a county ticket, As batween Kezeey and Hesing, the bulk of for short clear do. Jlighwines wera quietand | them did not vare a button, and there wero weak, at £1,12@1.19 pergallon. Luke freights thousuuds of Hepublicans who would not weze aclive and strong, ab Glo for wheat to | huve placed o stravy in lzsina's way so long local prestige, procipitatoly declared in favor ot rog-monoy, and invited every ignoramus in the country to go there and proclaim the mu?t extravagant fallacies, 'The Htate of Olio, which at that timo was probably lost to the Republicany ut Joast until aftor tho Presi. woman, tho legal wife of one man nowlivivg, the divorced wifo of n second man, and the sovonteenth wifo of a thivd party, who made her allianco with the latter knowing that six- letéun athers took precedence of her,—can tho Inw recoguize hior a4 a proper subject for divorce and alimony ? This s the question which the Prophet has already brought bafore the Attorney-Goneral ot Washington, The ter of what party, to unite for the common ; Eriza may then whistle for her alimony, If it does not, {hen ANN Eniza will be an objeot of envy to nll the rest of the fifty-nine, i hihin Rl ) A NOOMED CITY : VERICE, It peems that the Italian Pardinnient is confronted with a more setiout prablom than {ho dradging of the Tiber and tho purificn- tion of the Roman Campagnn,—projects which tho patriot Gantaarpt introduced toits altention, 1€ tha Venico correspondeut of tho London 7imex i3 to be helieved, tho “ Queon of the Adrintic™ fa a doomed city ; and {ts destruction is now regarded a8 so cer- 1nin, it left to itself, that tho Ttalian Govern. ment hins appointed several sciontific Com- missions to ascertain the actual imminenco of the danger, and to suggest ways and ienns whereby it may b overted. ‘Thea Zinies eor. respondent snys that the danger is gravo and imminent, and the romedies suggested remoto and uncertain. ‘Tho danger is not from the rinking of the city, which hns been going on for centuries, but from tho filling up of the Ingoons from tho washings of tho rivers, after which it is lield that tho wholo district will bo swallowed iip by the sen, and that the Inst vestige of the great commercial and republican peoplo of ensly times will disappear. There are in Venico what are calle the * living Ingoons " and tho * dead Ingoons,” the former of which aro flooded by the ordinary tide, aund the lat- ter only reached Ly very high tides. The nocient Venetian Republic apprehended the danger of disease and disaster from the riv- org,~—the first from the mixture of ithe wmalt and fresh water, ond the second from the washing of tho sandy,—nand so contrived to turn tho conrses of the Rivers Brenta, Bacchiglione, Piave, and Sile, and forced them to empty into tho son outside the lagoon, But the Brentn fre- quently overflowed its hnuks, spreading dis- ease throngliout the ndjoining districts, and the Austrinn Government, then in dominion, aud at the instance of the Provinee of Padua, diverfed the Bronta from its channel, and pormilled it to ciply into the lngoon. This was In 1840, and over sinco that time its de- poxits havo been filling up tho bed of the In- goun, ruining the commerce of Chioggia, n seaport town of 27,000 inhabitonts near by, infeeting the surronnding district with marsh fevers, pud (hreatening the existenco of Venice. The problem is naw to dredge aud clenr out tho lagoon, and again turn the course of tho Brenta, An enginecr named LaAuciana has & plan which isapproved by Prof. MiNtcit, o acientist of high standing, for rectifying the courko of the Brenta, and at tho samo time avoiding the overflow which damnged the Padus distriels before; but tho cost of this schemo is estimated at 7,500,000 lire (abont $1,500,000), asum at which the impoverished Italian Government must hesitate. It s proper to say that thero is another view of the subjeet, not altogother unsupported by scientifio wmen, which holds that, instead of turping away the courso of the Bronta and tho other rivers, they shonld Lo assisted in filling np the lagoon, and thus oventually making an inland city and terra firma out of Venice ns the only hopo of ity future exist- enco. 'The problem is certainly n serious s well as en interesting one, Tha Now York flerald of Monday had a few last words to say iu support of Roecorder Hack- 1T, anti-Tammany nominea for re-clection, aud, ag hoing tho most offective, qnotes thom from his famous lotter resonting Tammauy's attompt to dictato tho removal and eppointmont of his court ofticials. 'ho \Waanington epecial of {he Ilerald concerning Ministor Cuanivo's mema- randuni on Cuban offairs reads thus @ ut slavery eannot long continue in Cuba, environed an that f{slind s Ly communitiea of emancipated nlaves in (bo other Weat Indis Islands and In the Uniled Btates,—Jecorder SACKLTT suys + 4 Whatever may liave becn the volitical siua of former leailera in Tammany Hally thry have mever inereused them by eren suyaestivety fnderfering with the independence vf tha Cotrt in which 1 have the honor to Le @ Judgs."— “Thio President haa not been withont hope, ota, In the shipping newa woe flad the following: Brta @, P, dugnwoo (Br), Turner, from Cow Bay for Hew York, with only fore and muinmasle Mg, having carried sway the other spars A M of tho 24th Oct in & hoavy—Reconbrn HACRETT saxs : ¢ 1ivEN 17 DINPORED TO TULOW OPEN THE LOJLS AND LECORD3 0 TiE COUNT TO A POLITICLAX I COULD NOT DO IT, BE- €AUSE THR DEPUTY CLERE I3 NOT APPUINTED UY TIIR Junars or 17 COURT ov GENENAL SEs8I0NR,"—WNW @ale, was spoken aums day. In ¢ho railroad nows, i & lottor from Turkoy, In tho teport of tho yacht raco, in tho stock may- ket quotation, in fact {o every article over balf a column In length in the Herald of that day, is Intorproted into tho middle of au important son- tonco * Rocorder Hacgery says,” followed by an oxtract from bis letter. Rven the reports of Bunday's sormons are not freo of it, and the Herald priats Mr, BrEcugn thus @ I havepot iad my heart ao filted with thanksgiving for n great—IHiecorder HAGKETT gaya: “1f thero exlsts an offico which moro than any other one shonld'be ut- ferly divorced trom political conslderstions it {n that of & Clork or Ddputy-Clerk of a Criminal Court"— while ud when I listenod to him “and saw ono person rine Witk u proyer for o childand another with s pragor forn drunken Loaband, saud so on all sround the room, After that, who will deny that the IHerald, in the art of * koeping it bofore the people,” anr- passes all ite contemporaries ? - The mouths of tho artists who oxbibited in our recont Expomtion will waler aa thoy road of a salo of six paintings in New York the other day, which brought reapectively 11,000, 812,000, 810,000, £8,000, 4,000, and &5,000, Tho piet- ures were ‘* Movtene and Louts XIV. at Broak- fout,” by Genoxe; © Tho Loat Gamo," by Mets. soxren; *The Day's Work Ovor,” by Junrs Dreroy; *Young Ganls Instructed in Msoly Sports,” by Avua-Tapesa; Indircet Contribu- tions,” by the late Fvovanp Zaismacois; and ** $panfuh Malt Conch Station," by J. G. VinEnr Tho works were formerly ownod by m gontlo- man {o Now York, who sold them to Hexny G, Breppins, tbo American arb culloctor—now liv- iug in Parig—at tho abovo figuros, Itis o mat- tor of regrat that such represontative plcthros ay theso should leave the country. g s Bince ho paused in his labor of nominating Cuaures Fpascis Apays for something, Bax Bowiys kas grown concerned about (he lack of positiva loadors, and that the peoplo are left to lead the so-called Joaders, Ho says: Both partios are nufferiug to-tay for leaders, That fan't the worst of it; the country is suffering, too, ‘fhicto are pienty of Yuliticlana, Demiocrutly sad Hes publicats, who preteud to the tiile aud get it accorded f0 them by admiriug orgaus, But they sre, in tiearly evury case, tho Jocreat pitchbeck imitation, They lon't leud ; they wull to wes which way the party is golug, and then go alouy, They aro fndierout & to the divection, or the rata of apoud, Thelr euly sud cosurotng unxicty 18, aut to get abead of tho party, ot bo Jeft behiud it, oF by any accidont gob separated frous it un tio uarch, This 18 nob leadorsbip: it is cowardly, calculatiug’ seitshuces, Tho practical ro- Sul is, fiat tho veogle lavo to dbavlutely pusls thess *1eadors Mulong, ) mado fu wpite 07 (kem. % Mr, Bowres has forgotten Apaxe; lot bim nomiuste Cusnres Fraxcis sgain, 4 Batever Progress 1y mado fs e The cable dispatchos yosterdsy morning briefly sunounced tho death of the Most Raovorend Avexanpan Lycunuvus, Bishop of Byra (Ureek Church). Ho wus o nativo of ‘Larsus, Ho com- pleted bia cducation in Germauy, haviog boen o student iu the Univorsity of Halle, sud a pupil of the distinguisbed ¥zof. Tuorvox, He visited England 1u 1870, and received honorary degroca both from Oxford and Qawbridge, He was Vico-Prosident of tho Sacred Hynod of Groeco, and Syis, Tenos, Melos, aud Delos, wero in hia Archiepiucopal See. g s The 8t. Louls Republican has loventel schems fur gotting beck to & ealid basis, without dlaturbivg values or contractivg the currenoy, which i a8 easy as to lift one's self over & houso- declsion suny result in hia releaso, and ANN j top by tugglg ek cno's boot-straps. Lot all dobts cantractod after n givon data ba mada pag- oble In gold or ita oquivalont n greanbncke Tooplo would then know, arguen the Renublican, that when tiev coutraeted for n dollar they would ot it nnd busueds would npt bo erbare rarpod by glio fsctuations in groonbacks, P'ro- cigoly. DBub If tho Loegal-Temder act wero not repenled, who eonld tell what might bo the cost of tha gold to pay the debta whon due? If tho Legal-Tonder act ba tspesied, what woull bo dono with tho greenbacks ? e Tho Times recontly put at tho hoad of ite ed- itorial corps & writor Lrongbi from ono of the rutal precinets in Indienn, and this I8 tho way Lo slashos tho defunct Demouraoy : Notw Jerrey will bo a disagreeablo murprine to] the Democracy,” [t was conflgently connted on to keep up tho high-water apray of tho iast year tidal. penator Usvann won't loom’ up ko big for the Demnoeratle nye oual nomination £ ho did, ‘Cliora wead geeal doslof ‘very valugble Presidentiol materiat spafted yestorday, i New doraey's Oanvod, in Masmachuvetts ; Pavion, in Wisconsin ; HILDES, 0 New York s and Braok, sad Costyven, and Woonwanv, In Pentrslvania, Bonator BAvAnD wilt bo dizagreeably surprised to hoar that ho was spoiled in & local eloction in Now Jersey, and that Lie *won't loom up' ny usunl, on hig Dolawaro estato, Judge Woon- wanD died somo yoars ngo, and will probably nover hear of the election of, Tuosday laat. DBt so faran Costvent s concernad, wo admit bis cago {s a bad one. Tho eroction of n statue in momory of tho erratic gonius, Enosn ALLAN Tok, has bronght ot woveral differont versiona of Lig laat hours, Most nccounta of his denilso bave ropresented himi ay dylng from delirium tremons, though differing in tho detnils : but a Dr, 3, J. Monay velates how Por was brought into a Lospital In Baltimore, of which be lind chargo at tho timo, and that 'og, though in n atupor, had no indicationa of lquor aboug hinw. Tins gentleman says that I'on 1efused to tako any stimulant, sayiug that * if ita potency wonld transport me to the Elysian howors of the nndis- coverad spirits, I would not tnsto it "; ond that lio gent tho tonderest measngen to his mother and his futended wife. The acconut iy certuinly more comfortablo than the others. The Now York Jlerald voes unthing iu the Cuban flurry renowed by tha discussion of Minly. tor Cusuva's note, and remahs of Cuba: Wo do not neal the_country. Wo da fot want any trouble with Hpain, Wo du 1ot care to offerd tho eu- centibilities of the other piwera, who, when they are ot robblog thelr neighbory, constantly declaim apainst the sin of rabbery and mitioual ambition, Wo hiave as tnuch an we can do in this gonoration to ob- literato the traces of the war, aud re-eatabilrh anr Suancen, Tho unuoxallon of Cubi, except in cuy way, that of harmunlons capcession nn the part or Bpafn, would bring on a which, even i€ wn had 1 werien of uninterrupted victorlsa, woitld cost vs more n tmonoy lokyes slone fo onr commeree, onr in- uad our credit, than ten Cubas wonbl bo b+ oo Thorefnre, all that tho Governtent seell do witl' Guba 1o to- Tecognlon thy lusnrreetion #0 far a3 to couceco 1t belligerent rightd, As to the currency insue in tho next Congress, the Now York Zimes, commenting on tho probne bla conrro of tho Southern mambers, sayo : The Bonth rmay ncqulesce ju the results of tho War, and liewdtate 0 do anything that brars even s some blance of bad faith toward the Uniom, thy per of which wan the object of the War, Tat that the Houthern miml will be moro opon b wort can any s by whdeh n ajnry to e vational devt miag b som ported thon the Northern mind wonld be, Dirsct ro pudiation 15 not thought of and wonld not be proposrd 5 any ono ¢ but Iudirect mesmures fo keeura 1ho #imie ond aro distinetly favared by prominet men in the Demoeratic party, and tho srgniuents in rupport of thiem will Sud favorable rofl 0 tho {uovitabie prediles: tious of the Konth, ~Among theso messures, fiie Mot formiidalio ikl be tie posthaniemant of th wnerfe piy- went and the direct ar fudireet {ercoso of the Goy- crnmcnt noten, 1 tho Soutiern 1cproantatives not found actively swdalning (heee, wwe shiall be graats Iy and agreeably surpri S S Mr. LasE, tho newly-olocted Congressman from Oregon, Ia collecting wmatertal for what it is claimed will bo n startling expose to bo aade at tho approaching session of the condition of affuirs in Alasks under tho management of tho Aleska Commorcial Company snd tho military suthorition which thero take placo of a Torri- torinl Governmont, Mr, Last's erpose will doubtless consiat largely of buncombe, aund will g0 tor very listlo until voriticd by proof. Dut it will not bo wholly hootless if it leads to tho dovelopment of tho facts an to the alloged prac- tical enstavomont of tho entire native population of tho Torritory by the Commorcial Company, and a8 to the extiaordivary mouopoly which it is seertod it oxorcis s SIS =S — Tho kind of toloration which the Church of Tomo bellevesa In is woll sot forth in tho follow- g oxtract from & recent address of tho Popo to & deputation of pilgrimy: Why Is it permittod Licro, here u Ttome, In the centro of Cathiolictim, to exarclea froely avery fali religion: allowiug 10 _the masters of error to tesch all rorts of horess, and atthe sawo time to pesier and torturs clertcal teachers, and rspecinlly nuus, with troadhor- ous examination®, Aciting up judges In matters about which they know mnotulug; fullowing thelr vwn capricos, g Tho Cincinnati Commercial har bhoretofore been dispoaed to derido tho idea that the Pope's big toe wae belng obtruded into our politics, but now the Commercial says: Fathier HzusiNo, of St, Loule, and ather Ultramon- tanists, need only to keep preaching that * theru §8 1o such thing as an abaolita Sndepondence of the Ktate from the Chuzch,” and that uuch soparution * 1y plun- ly politieat otholsm,” tosronse n prejudico that may o not only inconvenfent, but wncomfortable, Thy 'mllllcmm ‘need not Jifg thrdr fuggers (o uselst in atinm- ating it futo futense setivil Tho 8t. Louis Kepublican totls how it carried the naw Coustitution of Mivsouri, aud the pro- cosa {a 8o simplo that othor oditora in the South. wost are liablo to bo nttempting to carry po- litlcal moasnres in tho vamo way. Tho Repub. lican, to ueo ita own phirase, merciy took tho uow Constitution “ by tho hair of its hond, and litted it from n condition of acknowludged and unregrottod defeat to o poeition wwhore ity eue- ties could nat rally suflicient oppodition to give excitoment to tho contest.” i S A. O, Hratxa §9 beaten, Tho man wha steod by hin conntryinet in his yrent isbors g been forankon by Bia couutrsinen,—Stuald Zeuturg, If * tho man " hud stood more for his country, aund less for his * countrymen,"” tho rosult with him would have beon difforont. Ifo signally failed tocombivo tho Germeuy solid in allinco with tho Irish to put down mud rulo over the Americans, A portion of tho Cermans and » portion of the Irish rofused to cnter mto this uuboly aliiance, S I e Nobody will doubt it, beeauso tha Tires esys 80, Cosrvesr, ono of the Pounaylvanis Domo- cratlo aspirants to tho Presidency, will bo lald out, 8tark and cold as a picklod mackerel, by the rosult in that Btato on Tuesday, But now will not the Times gratify sn astonished public by tolling who CosTvint fe, anyhow ? e g e B H. 0. Houantox & Co. havo just published s 1ife-sizo portrait of tho poet Loxa¥ELLow. ‘Tho artistis Mr. J. B, Daken, and the work possouses considerablo merit. It is furuiehod ouly ta sub. scribora to tho Atldntio Mlonthly at &1 in addition ta the prica of tha msgaziuo for one yusr, ———— e The namo for the rag-monsy inflation-repudia- Uon that will sorvo to veil the bare-faced dis- houosty of it has boon invonted by tho Rich- mond (Va.) Whiz, It 1s siwply “The Hacal system proposod by the protectors of the peo- ple's wtorests.” Porbaps Sacbem KeruLy and the roat of the Tammany bravea would now be wiiling to sccept the Herald’s proposition that they be sent toa resorvation with an Indian Ageut set over thom to supply them with boads aud thiugs. it ity hetolnii Congressman-eloct BeN Hiry, of Georgis promisos that the Southorn dolegation atthe uext seasior, will be distivguishod for ita conser- vatism, and will opposo payment of one dollar on any of tho cotton war-clzims, e Clilot-Juatico Wairk is mentionsd by the Hart- ford Times and tho Boston Adrertiser a3 snother 1wan whio i8 Jooking up tor tho Republican Presi- dentlal nominativn iu 1874, " A now {ssuo liws been introduced tnto Indlsns politics by thoeoldiers who at their reunion at Indianspols adoptod sesclutions declarivg $had $250,000 rhonld bo expended for the oraction of a momonal hoilding at that city, for utury ronntonn and for the recoption of warererqryg ot nd pledged tHhomueiv=a to o pane gyery Teginlativo candidnte wha wonld uot deelare Mm'. #elf {o Pavor of tho appropristion Lo bLe noko} for that puspove, 2 PERSONAL, Republican, oh ? - . Bodney Bmith, U, 8, A, 1a at the Pacifle, Ttussell Sago, Jr., of Milwankeo, fa at thp Tro. mont. Ably Bago Tiichardaon fs locturing in New Yorl. "The ITon. C. 11, Bheldon, of Michigan, ia at the CGarduer, Tho Hon. W. Cockburn, London, Eng. Al thn Dacific, . — Tho Hon, . 8. Waterinan, of Syean the Tremont, el Col. 1. 1, Banborn, U. 8, A, the Saeriman, Tho Ifon, Ntichard Warron, of Herkimer, R , inat tho Garduer, 4 Ex-Gov. Evana and ex-Cov, Etbert, of Tado, nro the Pacifie. P20l Zacl Chandlor naod to bo a clork § atoro gl Naelun, N, 1. ‘The Hou, Francis Colton, guest at thoe Tramont. Alfred Joel. agant for Tition's Concert - nany, is at the Sherman, Cors J. A. Ayara and bride, of Tackson, I, atopping at the Tremont, A givl heing acsusnd of trifing with man's feelings roplied. ** T pload jilty,” ‘Ihe Hon, M. T. Wiser and Maj. I, M, of Rock Island, are at the Sherman, Qeorga M. Collurn, of tho Niagara Fi Cliftan ouso, stops at thn Tremnnt.g sl Cntpenux, the Fronch seulptor, 18 (o baye 2 monumont nt Valenciounes, whera ho woa born, Tt was snid of Gladatone, somo voare 280, that ho would dio In 8 Lioman monsstery or fn amagd. house. Dr. 8torrs hng not decided 43 rouign his Brook. 1y pastorate. ‘I'hie first announcoment was pre- wularo. Larkin 0. Mondo {8 preparing a naw asi unique dozign for a goldiera’ monument at Hol. yoko, Maza. It fs £aid that Blind Towm, na a pinnist, fs the i antipodes of Vot Bulow, tothin futellectuality aud in fecling. A duily illusteated paper {8 projected for Lon. don, My, Mortimer, of tho Figaro, is the pos elhle publishor. 1lonty Vincent, the English workingman's ad- voeato, was the guekt of Williawm Lioyd Garrlsop duing his stay in Boston. Dan Yoorbieor' kon mado & nucessetul dobnt ay Tiamle! at 'Lorra Haute. Ho is trying to securs i en engagement at ludianapolis, Thimsoll 5 inspecting vessola st Black-Yes porte, to keo that tho recont ousctment ngainaf loadiog gran fu bulk is enforeod. T.ouiy Quinza thoes, with bigh awelling hoels, aro the fuesion in Faris, 1'ashou goes sbout mincingly on tip-toos, with hor bool-beols in ths widdle af hor (eet, Mra. Burnhnnt say: { ansthing but ago thy reason why infied with horsclf. " Yon wonld say it was nbsurd,” said M, Mocdy in his sermon Jast Sunday, ¢ for Dr. Tal. | mago to ride around on o horse, blowing n ram's horn.” Atsurd—yes,-~but nod surprising. Adams Acadomy, nt Quiney, Mara., atively now proparatory ncheal for brated Founder's-Day last Satnrasy, which v tho 140th anniversary of Joht Adams’ birth, DProf. Tulnta Hall, of tho Prosbytorisn Theos logical Seminary at Auburn, N. Y., tind a severo i stroko of paralyais on Wednosday last. Hiy condition is considored critical, as he 1 nearly£0 yoarn old. “‘Kato Fleld is grazy,” savs Tur Cgicado Trmoxe. It it means to insinuato thnt sho ha tiane to graus, Kato ought to givo that editer o Vlald-day of plstal-practicn.—St. Louis Times. ‘That Is an unflolding sugsestion, - Therais a waman in Milwaukes who declaced when Misa Cary was singing in opera st thah city thag tights wore valgar, That vory same woman now promenades the streols in the pall backodest pullback in town, The Sentinel saya 80, Littlo Lotta {s adveriisad to mako her appost ance in Springfield, IMl., Saturday night ; soik muat be undergtood that hor mothor {8 in 8 fale way of rocovers. Mr. C. W. Coutdock and Mr. E. A. Lockn are playing supporting parts in kee ** Mugotte," Florenca NlIghtingnle was obliged to declioe an nvitation to tha Dalaklava bangnet, recently held Io TLondon, Sho has beon for years cons fined to her room Dy illnesa arining from overs work,—* which work,” sho writes, **I still do, thank God.” 1t has boou said that tho name of tho celo- brated Italian tragedian, Carlo Rossl, is oasnmed moroly for stage-purposos, aad that Lo is reslly the missing Clarloy Hosa In disguize, Tomaso Salvlni was oxpired and gibbetod in this conatry us Tom Ballivon. An ol 8t, Tonia morchant wont ou bis travels and renchiod London, e offered a draft on the Firut National Bank of 8t. Loulu to tho casbier of tho Londen Orientat Bank, * 5t. Louis, Bt Louis,” mused tho Cashior, I nover beard of 8t. Lows. I shsll bo obligad to tolegraph to Chicago for information and instructiona.” The Bt Louls wmerchiaut expired of moriification on tho spot. Mr, Gladatouo vory recontly sold his entirs library to a second-liand booksoller in Loudan, Ho parted with books which one would thivk bo would have hold almoat sacred,—prosontation coples, dediestion coples, boaks (tiled with bis own mayuscript notos, ote, The library wad bonght bk by Lord Wolverton, ono of Lis nesr rolatives, atn emall advance, Tho procesdiog on Mr. Gladstono’s part is rogarded na vory oX= treordinary. nud o few persons untriendly tohim fyeely oxprous their bolief that ho1s inasno. "Tha youth of tho poworful mind imported slt tho way from Tndianapolis to [nfugo sutelligencs fato tho wditorial page of the Zimes ya-lenlsv brought his masaivo intellect to bear upon |h. result of tho election in Now Jarsey. On the ssaumption (hat whon a candidate's Biate s\mf agamst him ho is dofunct so far a8 national pol + 10 quarterad ay Y an country. of Galoaburg, is 5 Ly an Baford, that New York will forgive wglinees. Tothaps that js Yorl 13 never porfoctly sste tics aro concerned, tho powerful mind “?l"ld that tho rosult in Jorsey wa fatal to tho Lresls dcutinl aspiraflons of Sonator Uayard. Youog man, you cannot bo expacted to fotch tho paflll:‘ fal miud from tho sltitudinous hoights dnw-nh 1: tho aonsidoration of such tnfles ss Whe tato » Bouator ond piominent Presideutial nn‘n'~ didate is from, and, s everybody else hn“:\u: wo don't mind tolllug you conBdentially Dayard is Hevator frum Dclnw:;s. 4 NIVALS, Patuner House W, . Careon, Sewburgh i nhn'ng' Lakurly sud Androw lierr, Kankskeoq J. 3 HE0HH Dubuque; 0. F, Henuett, Bostong J, W, u,‘fnmm- Denver; L 8, Hiwk, e, TLovis; o i e ‘i{:’x‘.‘fié A ?R.%’.%:‘fl:'r‘:'l}f?flu; " Jolis 8. Jenness, D3« V' M, Russ troft ; Theodore L. Parkur, New York. H, n Cinledburg; Charlos A, Hoyt, 8, A Bul Brooklyn Pacitle—d. . Dea Molo g or Masi, Urand i lllxnu'tf' Llnud; J, worthy, Clevel Do, sy Dot e, Carl Mathiows, Carlin A dy B, Troat, il AMonros, Wh. i bt ‘Thres! h Cnilde, Tiowtou s & BLTHE Dol SOl Matuttay, bty Filter sud Willan Craes st Lo, Fresont ¥ phis: A, G. AL e 53'3'.‘31' &?‘B‘lllul-n, Tialtimore; J. AL Ad{iml'l;n oyt Q1. Banford, Now laveu s ¥ A Hooker, Joraey, 0,0 ¢ .1t and Miss Alice Larrisiore, Bloominglon s, 6o Fiifots, Hanulbal, 3o, ; Audrow Bardety ORZL 5 Tule, Miinncapolts; 1f. B, Butler, ea Nolueti 7 et Now York ;. Jay, Coldwster, Mizhogy Shoraan House—E. D, Farbor, Tochsieli Daluter, Pittaburgy Lewlls Par . ¥ e o eanton s Fox, Ladoris, Ind, Ve . Augler, i vt o Cariton. Buttala; 4. Dy hwmuhflt;ulrgln. : Webl, Ciuciunetly L. B, 4,”.' X ,fi’lflh Baras, Wions, Miu. .. Guraner House—ts G oyt Qien Fare tpritasi & A, Perker and (s G, W, Peasley, Now Tork; Cul 3L ,