Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 1, 1876, Page 4

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TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE, JAYES OF SUBSCRIPTION (FAYABLE IN ADVANOR)} - Postage Prepnld at this Ofice. Daily Rdition, r;‘olllulfl.l o ar! 13.00 s of 1.00 %‘5’.‘ {Rdiioms Litor o W eakly, pos .00 'WERKLY KDITION, POSTPAID, R 1 e soniage is LB coate & yoar, which we will prepale Bpecimen coploe sent fres. To prevent delay and mistakes, be vore and give Fost- ©oa address in full, incladingBtate snd County. Tiemittances may be made eithor by draft, erpress, Post-Offis order, or In regiaterod lotters, at oot Fisk. TENXS TO CITY SUNSCRIBERS, s, delirered Boaday osoupld, 28 conte ber week, P g " By R Bie UM AN T ‘Corner Madison and Desrboro.sts.s . S—— AMUSEMENTS. NEW OHICAGO THEATRE—Olszk strest, betwecn Randolph and Lake, 1looley's Minstrels, ADELYHI THEATRE—M{onros atreet, corner Dear~ vorn, Varioty entartalument, HOOLEY’S THEATRE-~-Randolph street, belween Dlark and LaSslla. Engagemont of Balabury's Trou= badonms. ¢ Patchwork.” AMoVIOKER'S THEATRE—Madlson .Lrn!.‘ between Dearborn and Btate. * Merchant of Venice.” e BOCIETY MEETINGS. ATTERTION! INDEPENDENT PORESTERS.— Yhere will be & special moetiog at 0 a, m. to-day, a% sur hall, 13 Bouth Halsted-st. o make arraugo- et in ‘reqard to funorsl of Brother Patrick Car- erry, By order of by @EQ. 1T, DLANGUATD, 0, R, DAVID DRUMMOND. Boc'y. The @bicage Wribume. Monday Morning, May 1, 18786, At the Now York Gold Exchango on Satur- #ay groenbacks wero steady at 883, The Bignal Service predicts north and east winds, incrensing cloudinoss, and lower fol- lowed by a highor temporature, as the mete- orological phenomena spportioned fo this vegion to-dsy. Indianapolis Democrats are propared to wade in blood up to their armpits, if noces- sary, to carry the eloction to-morrow; at loast, they have passed resolutions to this pory effect. Somo of them, it appears, havo waded heretofore, though in o more quict way, and without tho risk to themselves that will attend tho sanguinary experiment in caso it is attompted at the polls. Tho Re- publicans, forowarned and forearmed, will bs on bhand when tho wading is dome, andif nocessary may have a foot in it. Thoy are confidont of successin a fair clection, and axpect to inerenso thoir former majority. Mr, J. V. Lo Movyz fecls himaelf every inch & Congressman, now that s majority report in his favor hias been submitted to tho Houso in the case of tho contested seat in tho Third Distriet. Alrendy he haa had great- ness thrust upon him in tho form of a Trin- ONE interviower, to whom, ina modest way, and interesting withal, ko has unfolded bia views upon various matters of pith and moment. Bince it sooms to be sottled thnt Chicago ia to have three Democratio Repro- sentatives in Congress, Heaven grant that iho new member from the North Side, unlike his collengues from tho Sccond snd Third * Districls, prove to bo neither a nuisance nor % nonentity, “The consideration of the shallow charges in tho *Mary Marritt " caso hna ocoupied four days, roquiring tho attondence of Secretary Brisrow to defend himself against the schomes of tha conspirators, and nocoessitat- Jug in great monsuro his nbsonce from im- portant duties. Having given the matter his porsonal attention thus far, with tho result of complotely smnshing the intrigue against him, and boing anxious to return to his offi- cial responsibilities as soon as possible, the Beeretary will to-doy ask the Committee to eall two wilnesses from the Treasury Depart- mont, and then to hoar his ownstatement un- dor oath, This dono, he will go about his busindsg, leaving Oate and his goang to fag out thoir contomptible fizzlo s best thoy woy, Nothing will ploaso Senator Morron botter at this timo than a prompt investigation of Lho charges relntive to his disbursement, ns Bovernor of Indiana, of the war fund of 250,000 which a Copperhead Legislnture ro- Iused to appropriate for the arming of Indi. noa eoldiers, and which was thoroupon ad. vancad by Becrotary Stanron. The Troasury Department, doubtless at the request of Son- ator MorToxn, will order an investigation of tho matter, and if tho Democrats can stand It to have the fine recordot Indiana’s famous ‘Wur Governor shown up, togothor with a fresh reminder of tho difficulties ho had to contend with at tho hands of the Union- thating and Rebel-sympathizing Democracy of Indiana—if tho Confedsrates like this sort of thing, certainly Mr. MonToN will not object. The report of Bank.Examiner Watsox in rogard to the suspended City National Bank of Chicago haa been submitted to the Comp. troller of tho Currency, and its conclusions afford gratifying assurance that this suspen. sion will be & notablo excoption to the gen- eorol rule, in that the bank will probably bo able to convert its assets nnd pay depositors In full without oven calling upen the stock- holders. A majority of the depositors, con- Hdent of this result, have petitioned that the managoemont and conversion of tho asscts bo Intrusted to Mr. Bosunery, Progident of the bank, in order that the bank may go through voluntary liquidation, and settle with its rroditors withont official interference, It is probable that this will ba done, as the Comp- trollor has no authority to appoint a Receiver nntil & noto is protested, which has not yet pecurred, and he has confidence, morcover, that tho bank asseta and resources, properly bandled, will be ample to satisfy all claiins, ———— The Chicago produce markets wore less nnsettled Saturday., Mess pork was quiet and 25@80c per brl lower, closing ot $20.77} for May snd $21.07§ for June, Lard wos active and declined 174@20c per 100 lbs, closing at $12.70 cash and $12.85 for June, Meats were quiot and flrm, closing at 7§o for boxed ehoulders, 1130 for do short ribs, and 11fo for do short clears, Highwines wero «quiet and unchanged, at $1,07 per gallon, Tlour was quict and steady, Wheat was act- Ivo and }@}c higher, closing at 08}o for Muy and $1.00§ for June. Corn was lers active and closed o lower, at 45jo0 for May and 464o for July. Oats were active and {@ 4o lower, closing at 80{@30}0 for May and B0}@81c for June. Rye was slow and easicr, 8t 63@68)c. Barley was in good demand and 1o higher, closiug st 60 for May and 6§ @670 for June, Hogs wero In good de- mand and were firm at Friday's quotations, poor to prime selling at $7.25@7.90. Cattle - wexe falrly active and steady, at $3.50@4,76 loe common to pnme. The sheep markes single car-lond—quoted at $4.00@6.25, hundred dollars in gold would buy $112.75 in greonbacka at the closg. Senate will dapide that it kns no jurisdiotion in the impeachment case, owing to tho fact Brxnar's rosignation ond its accoptance previous to the presentmentof articlesnagainst him rendered him no longer an officar of tho Government, and, therefors, not nmenablo to imponchmont. To decide differently wonld be to open np an almost ondless possi. bility of impeachment proceedings heronfter nagainat offieors who have long since rotired are yot to come, placing it in the powor of any political party newly-installed to gratify its malice by going Into tho impeachment rate and mako good their escape, and in view of tho remarkablo facilities furnished by rather than to tho officiency of tho jail of- fleials. Thero wero burglars, thioves, and cleotion-repeaters unloosed npon the community, and it will not fail to be no- ticed that ono of the ringleadors in the plot was o desperado who should have been in the Ponitentinry, been but tion of the chompion Acting-Pardoner at uncommon undoer the existing administra- tion of the Bherifl's offico, whoso relations towards the criminal clnsses and whoso sonse of responsibility to the community seem somohow nrrivo at a wholesome approciation of the beauties of People’s party, or Opposition, or Democratio rule in county as well as in city affairs. REPUBUOAJ_W PREBIDENTIAL CANDIDATES, aro conspicuously presented by their friends for the Republican nomination for President, and these aro Messrs, Coxkrnixo, MontoN, Brame, and BrisTow. the indications at present are thatone of thesa four will bo selocted. the popular mind should dotermino whether the candidate of the party iato reflect and indicate the futuro policy of the party, and, if this bo so0, what that policy shall be, what isaucs shall the campaign of 1876 be over again? Shall the issues of socossion, and rebellion, and of reconstruction, and negro suffrage, bo presented ogain gs tho questions on which the election must turn? Shall past *“loyalty” be the sovereign plas. tor crimes, and a noew Presidont bo elocted on a pledge ‘‘to mnko tremson odious and {raitors occupy back seats”? party to look backward, and fight tho enemy on issues that have been accopted s irropealably sottlod forever ? Oris tho Re- publican party, always oqual to new emer. genoies, and propared to denl with the pres. ont necossities, to go bofore the people as tho nassnilnnt of tho great overshadowing ovil of tho day, the genoral crime of corruption and debauchery of tho national Qivil-Sorvice sys- tem, which by the influenco of its exampla has spread fraud, defaleation, and dishonesty in all their forms over tho business and social life of the country? As tho Republican party in 1860 presontod itsolf as the avowed tained corrupting control of all branches of the Government, is not tho Republican party in 1876 to nssail the no less powerful crime of personal and official dishonesty in hand- ling revennos and taxes, which has becomo tho conspicuons characteristic of Govern- ment, both national and municipal, and which, throngh machine polities, excludes in groat measuro the cultivated and moral poo- plo of the country from all voios in politics, and lodges political power in the handsof | THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, MAY 1, 1876. waa lifeless, the offerings being confined to a Ono strong; they aro able and experionood statos- men ; their porsonal charnoters are good, and, though attompts have been made to place thom in disropute, wo have no question that thoy will be ablo to mnintain their statns ns honost mon boforo the people, 3Mr. Morroxn may bo rogprded as the succossful pugilist of tho Benntorial arena ; ho is known toallasn strong partisan, a florce dobater, & hard and uneparing hitter, and from nocossity a Sen- ntorinl lendor and party defender. Mr. Coxg- 1va {8 equnlly well known as a Sonatorial debater, but if ha posscss more polish than tho Indinnian, ho lacks tho ready vigor and tho onorgy of his rival. Both Senators are what {s known s machino politicians of the most confirmed character. They depend for power upon tho manipulations and operations of party machinery rathor tlian on the frece will of tho people. Like Morroy, Mr. ConkriNa has opposed any ro- form of the Civil 8ervice, beeause both have dependod on tho abuses of that servico to re- ward their rotainers, Both have supported tho extromest legislation for the South, and to nominate oither of them is to give nssur- once that, if electod, the administration of the Government will b directed to keop that section in a fever of oxcitement, and to ro- store the carpet-bng rule which brought so much odium and scandal on the Republican party. The nomination of Montox would unquestionnbly rosult in s solid Southern vote for the Democratic candidato, no matter whom. The whites of the South in solid mass wonld oppose him with a fury that would bear down all that the poor fecbla negroos could do for him, Besides, it is bardly claimod by any politician that it wonld be possible for him to carry New York, and, without its electoral vote, his frionds cannot figuro out his success. Sonator Coxrnixa is strong in Now York with the machiné politicians of tho State; but { Troey bo nominatod by the Domocrats Coxgrivg would draw no votes from tho Democrats nor from the Liberal Republicans, leaving that Stato morally cortain for the Op- position. Tho State 8 Domocratic unless thore is n perfoct and enthusiastio union of all tho Republican factions and clements, which is not possiblo on Coxxring, CoNk- LiNa is, moroovor, an Eastorn, not a National man, He is unacquainted with the peoplo of tho West. Ho regards tho Wost as so much raw territory, and tho people as coarso and unrefined, nnd unentitled to particular recog- nition by a gentleman of his cold and lordly atylo. Io is, however, a porfect mnster of the science of dispensing party patronnge ; e is a king among machina politicians, and wonld ba worshiped accordingly. Mr, Buarng has the samo ability as his rivals as o politician ; but he is warmer blood- ad, has more in common with the massos; lio understands tho groat West, has associated with the people, and is infinitely stronger than either CoxkrLivg orAlonTon, in this State at loast, > The 'fourth on the list is Mr. Dristow, wha i less of a politician than the others, but no less n Republican, and whose whole strongth is with the people. e is not the enndidato of tho machino politicinns, The man who arrests, tries, and convicts influen- tinl mombors of his own party for robbing the Tressury is not tho man to suit that class. Ho would emash all machines. To run the Government upon principles of striot honesty, and to roquire all officers to be com- potent, is utterly destructivo of tht politieal machinery which has made our Civil Sorvice a roproach to civilization, and which is snoored at even in Turkoy, and is rogarded with contempt by the untutored savages of the plains. Tlo has mno *‘claims™ oxcept thosa founded on a lifs of irroproachable por- sonal integrity, and of unfaltering patriotism and loyalty under ciroumstances which no Northern man is called upon to exporionce. His officinl carcor has beon marked by a stendy uprooting of crime in the public serv- 1ce, and the prosecntion nnd conviction of public and official thioves. The whole coun- try nnd tho common people of all parties recognize in him the man for the times, the very man to grapple with and strangle tho grent orimo of the dny ; and the fact that he is bitterly opposed by every dishonest officor and politician, convicted and unconvicted, in the United States, shows how peculiarly fitted hois for tho great work of purification so cssentinl to national existence. 1f Bristow bo nominated, ho will utterly confuse the Domocrats, who aro oxpesting to profit by the blunders of the Republican Convention. If Tinoexn bo nominated, Bris- row will break into tho SBonthern opposition ranks. If a Westorn Democrat be nominat- od, then every procinct will be vigorously contested, and in such case Bnisrow can cor- tainly carry Now York, Even in Indiana, ho will be fully s strong as Mr. MontoN, Itis timo for Republicans to consider and deter- mine whethor the circamstances do not de- mand that the Republican platform shall be that Republican candidato who best repre- sents tho sentiment and best meots the wants of the whole people, THE KILBOURN CASE, The decision of Judgo Oanrres in the Kir- BoURN case, and the acquiesencs therein by the Touso of Ropresentatives, scem to mako o radical chango in the practice of punishing contumncious witnesses. Kiunousx was com- mitted by the House to jnil for contempt of that hody in refusing to answer questions put to him in connection with the Washington real-cstate pool. Iiis attorneya prooured n writ of JAabeas corpus from tho Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and the House of Represontatives, by a large vote in favor of it, recognized the nu(h‘ori!y of the writ. In the trial of the question, un- der this writ, Judge Oarrrer has de- cided that the prisoner be discharged from the custody of the Hoise, but that hoe bo romanded to the Alarshal to await his trial under an indictment for the samo offenso for which he was hold by the House. The ground of the decision was probably that it was unjust to subjeot tho prisoner to two trials and two punishmonts for tho same offunso, Kiunounn's indictment was found under a United Statos statute which makes tho refusal to answor o quostion by eithor House of Congress (pertinent to any matter under inquiry) a misdemeanor, and provides that such a caso shall bo cortified to the Distriot-Attorney of the Distriot of Columbia, who shall proceed to procure an indictment. The punishmont affixed by law is a five of not less than $100 nor more than $1,000, and imprisonment for not less than one month nor more than one year. Kirsouny is now held for trial undor this law. Tho issue botweon the courts and tho Houso of Representatives is an interesting one, Committal for contempt is held to be an inherent right of the National Legis- lature, and the English procedonts are that no Court can dischargo or bail a porson so committod, nor inquire into the nature of the ofense. Now the question is ralsed on the ouo sids whother lawyers, by the passsgo It is bolioved in Wnshington that the from publio life, aa well as ngainst those who business at wholesale. If, ns is predicted, the Senate concludas that law, precedent, and publia policy are on tho side of ** no jurisdio. tion,” BergNar's caso is loft to the courts, to bo dealt with liko that of any person undor a criminal indictment. Tho details of an cxtensivo jnil-delivery at tho County Jail in this city yostordny avo given in our local columns, Fourteon erim- innls availed thomselves of an oasy opportu= nity to walk out intotho open air aud sopa- the utter nbsonce of tho most ordinary precautions against such an occurronco the only wondor is that a bundred more woro not equally successful. A singlo officinl was on daty, with the koysin his pocket and no help within call, so that it only ro- quired a littla prompinoss and celerity to overpower him, seizo tho koys, and liberato the wholo jeil. That only fourtoen got nway was duo to band manago- ment and confusion among thao prisoners garrotors, and would have for tho tendor considor- Springfleld. Jail delivories aro not to have been cxactly re- versed, affording to the onoe the pro- tection and immunity which is supposed to belong to the other, What with packed juries and wholesalo liberations Ly the informal process which was so success- fully employed yostorday, the law-nbiding peoplo of Cook County are in a fair way to Thore aro at this time four gontlemen who There ara others, but It is time that On carried out? Shall the Civil War be fought for il ovils, corruplions, and Is the ansatlant of political slavory, which hnd ob. the corrupt and dishonast classos? Wo assumo that the Republican leaders will not dare outrage public mornla by ig- noring the imperious demand for Reform in the matter of criminal abuses in the Govern- ment, and will thereforo promptly declare tho purpose of tho party to execute this Re- form in the most rigid manner, But the Ro- publican party must kuow that mora pro- fessions on this subject will avail little, un- 1osa the candidato in his own person, record, and lifo shall givo the country full assurance that ho has not been, and will nat be, cor~ rupt himself; will not tolerate corruption in subordinates ; aud will hovo the conrnge to s0 brave all opposition that no guilty man can escape, It will be supremoe folly for tha Qincinnati Convention to ignoro tho certainty that the whole American poeplo fecl deeply on this subject, and that they will vote for that candidate for Prosidont, by whichever party nominated, who in his own personal charactor will give tho best assuranco of n therough reform in the administration of the Government. A majority of the peoplo arc prepared and willing to continue the Repub. lican purty in control of the Government, und will do 8o, if the Republican party pre- senta s candidate who of his own record will satiefy thom on this questiod of Govern. moutal roform, 1 Ot the four gentlomen we have named, Mr, Bramve has morae of that personal magnetism which commends him to the peopls of the ‘West. 1o attracta both the politicians and the pooplo. e is largely in sympathy with the popular heart; ho betrays this in his speoech, in his personal address, in his im- pulses. If ho be nominated, Tus TmibUNE, sharing in tho goneral admiration and coufi- dence in the man, will give him a cordial support, notwithstanding somo misgivings as to the success of the party with him pa its candidate. All four of the mam are Iutellectually of » law making contempt an indictablo offonso, conld divest itsclf of its inheront right to commit and detain a recusant wit- noss, nnd whethor this law was not rather intended to provide n monns for punishment aftor Congress shonld adjourn. On the other hand, it would soem as it tho Honso, having passed tho law providing for indiot- ment in such case, having recognized the writ of habeas corpus, and having surren- dered Kiounw to the jurisdiction of tho Court, it may not now demand and recover possession of his body. Cougress will prob- ably boso far bound by its own acts as to let tho caso take ita own course under the trial by law, Mosnawhilo Kiunounx is at large on bail. THE GRAND JURY REPORT, Tho startling report of the Graud Jary, which was made publio yesterdny, has fallon like a thundorbolt among the guilty Com- missionera and their corrupt agents and part. ners of tho Pentorar and Hooax stripe. It hins placed them beforo tho public in their true light—that of convicts who havo es- caped sentence by technicalitios and perjury. 1t i not in tho form of an indictment upon which they can be tried foRfolony nnd sont {o tho Penitentiary, for theso reasoms, among othera: Tochnicalitics and quibbles have been interposed in the way of tho Grand Jury. Wholesalo and brazen-faced porjury has dofeated justice. Two or threo of the jury proved troncherous, and furnishod out- gide pals with statomonts of tho testimony, 80 thnt the witnesses could bo conched and the conspirators protoot thomsolves by know- ing what was testified to and the names of forthcoming witnessos, In this manner tho investigation has boen crippled, but enough has come out to show that the County Ring is a den of thioves that is rotten with cor. ruption. As tho roport says : * Wo aro sntis- flod that tho system of management employ- ed by the County Board is rotten, with sonrcely an exception, Offlcinlism is dograd- ed by its low intellectunl character, its de- precintod moral tone, its constant association with jobbery, extravagance, favontism, in- termedintes, perjury, and incompetency.” There is enough to show that eight men in the Connty Board, like thoir follows in the Common Council, are vultares living by proy, by robbing the tax-payers of the county, by corrupt contract-lotting, and by farming out county favora throngh intermediates like PerroraT, whoso greedy hands have been plunged into the pockets of overy man who has npproached the Bonrd, and who has tho Board in his own .corrupt keoping. A fow choica samplos from this roport will give the flavor of the whole of it. Of Pemromar it §Y8 Iis infiuence scoma sll-pervading, and his oxao- tlona oro wholesalo rolbaries, Mr, Eaan teatifics that fn order to giln access to the Board as a com- potitor be was forcod to sign an agreemont to pay this rapscious go-between one-third of his profita, From timo to timo, since bis appotntment, bo has been forced to reapond to demauds for blackmall from Pe- BI0LAT, to tha amount, ho swears, of some §6,000, and only lately refuscd to further respoud when tho last domand took in mora than three-fourths of the $7,600 which Eaax had just received from tho county, The lightning-rod job is thus oxposed : Tho county pays 40 conts a foot for wire that costa 10 to 18 centa; tips cosling $1.45 cach aro pald for by tho counly at tho ralo of $3 each; in- sulators worth #2 por 100 sro sold to tho county ataproft of 160 por cont, and day Iabor fs charged to tho county at 50 per cent more than anybody elso pays for it, The loss to tho county on'the wire alone—not inclusive of tips, insulators, day-la- bor, and bosrd bills—s nearly $4,000. On the wholo, this Ightning-rod busincss is a fraud of tho most con- temptiblo charsctor, The work costa twico or thrico what {t should, and is belng dono without any written contract, Hero is a pen-pioture of Hooax : From the tostimony, it is shown that with roference to cortaln classos of work ho is mot troubled with sny compotitors, Jobs aro given to him &t his own price, and without any written contract, and hio extortionate bills aro pald without dispute. Occaslonally somo petty job is given to somo other man n his line of business, Lut then Hooaw always appears s Lis indorser, showlng clearly enough that tho work is thnus given out to anothor by his permis. slon, Ifoiss man whoao genoral roputation as to versclty {s such that it waa thought useleas to put him on the atand, it being belleved that the only result would ba toincrease the alzeady onormous volume of perjury and evazlon with which tho Grand Jury were alroady inundated, And here is o companion picture of Com- missioner McOArrnex BantuorLouxw Sarrit says ho mot Commissfoner McOarrney at WiLxiNsoN's placo, and frequently consulted him aato tho best means of gatting his contract throngh, Ho swears that McOArrnEy knew tho money was on deposit; that McOirruer advised bim how to make out his proposition; thst MoCar- yuey agroed Lo keop him fuformod of how tho busi- noas progressed, through the person with whom tho ‘money was doposited ; that in the hall or room of tho County Commissioners, BMiTir (witness) saw Come missloners SomMDT (and McUArrREr standing to- gethor, and that tho former, pointing to witness, askod McCarruy if ho (8x371s) was *the man who had the moncy up," to which McCarrney answered and that finally ho lost the contract Lecause, M x nanurod him, tho matier had gotten bo fore the wrong Committee, We closo tho exhibition of gems with CoomRANE & M. Dusrny wears that Goommane, architect for the County Hospital, **gave tno *quantitiea® of the addition to BzxTon. Doing this s an unfair opers- tion, Healso gavome tho quantities, Bxizon's bid was $15,000 bigher than those of the lowest bidders.” Joun WiLLARD awears : Wo gave CoCURANX monoy for tho plans,” Jzxsex, WILLARD'S partner, awoars : 441 pald CoonmaNE $200 for the plans, 1t 1s the archi- tect's duty to furafsh them without pay,” WiLLanD also teatifion: * WiLrLiax IIANLY n Superintendent of Hospltal. MoCar¥aey got him appointed, Ho fa paid by the county. He Nias taken contracts, such as setting bollers, ote., which ho bad no busiuess to do, hin time bolng already pald for by tho county,” Aw- pREW SMITI awears that he was * told by MicmazL Frerothal Sexron gave Cocuuans $i00, aud eaved woveral thousands of dollars by i, When FizLp wanted a coutract ho went to Pratorat's ofice and found tureo or four Oounty Commissfoners thero, Pxutorat wantod to know what he (Frzun) could do ou tho contract.) “I'wo hundred dollars,” swears HrxTON, waa all the money I pald Coounawx, and I conaider it cheap, LEvory material statement in this report has appearod before in Tux Trioone sod other city papors, but the publication has boon in dosultory form and at long intervals, cover- ing periods of months and oven years, It has produced, nevertheloss, a well founded suspicion of rottenncss which has now boen confirmed. Aftor a month's investigation ond the summoning of scores of witnosses, tho Grand Jury hns brought out thung enor- wmities of corruption in a compact shape, so that thoy can bo realized. The guilty thieves cannot rub the record out, Thoy may be at largo a while longer. Thoy may go on steal. ing until they eventually meet their doserts in the Ponitontiary, but the public now knows tho full measure of their guilt. It now knows that the majority of the County Commissioners aro unsontonced Peniton- tlary conviots, engaged robbing tax-payers and living upon corruption, who by technicalities, quibbles, and perjury have thus far escaped conviction and sen- tence, although they are felt and known to be guilty. ‘They are branded as convicts just as effectually asif they were wearing the prison Blflpw‘. ‘This fall the people will have an opportunity to deal out justico to throe of them, provided thoy do not get into the Pen- itentiary sooner, As they have slready par- tlally ppnflod tho Common Council, the noxt duty will be to clean out tho County Board in the samo radical macnor, Mcanwhile, tho in corrupt thioves, whoso villainies have thns boen exposed, proposs to sue any paper for libel which ehall publish a copy of the ro. port, Tnr Tntnune has alrondy published it, and nothing will give ua more happincss than to bo mado defendant in such a suit, Tho thioves aro weloome to como on with their prosecution to any amount of damngos their rapacity may suggest. It can bo disgnised no longer. DanrEn ‘Wenaten Voornges, the Tall Bycamore of the Roging Wabnsh, is on tho war-path. Thera ia gore in hiz glance, and consternation dire among undor.sized Domocrata whoso paths ho is liable to cross. Domoeratio do- nunciation of thievery and Domocratic bonst- ing of its own virino it is that has aroused his iro. Daniet bas a knowledgo of tho truo- inwardness of tho Democracy in Congress assombled,—knowlodge such only na could bo attained by n Democrat liko Daxter admitted to thesceret councils of the party,~nnd the Democratic nssumption of hofty publio vir- tuo, in'view of the facts, has been tao oxas- perating for him to endure, 'That was what wns tho mattor of Danmmu the other day when Bracksunw, of Kontucky, indulged in donunciation of courts in general as corrupt, becauso Judge CARTTERTC- lensed Kinnouny on kabeas corpus, and thore would have beon somebody *‘chawed up " nbout it if the bystandors hndn't hold DAN- 121, Unfortunately thoro was nobody at hand big enough nnd bold enongh to hold Daxray, when another unwary nundersized Demoeratio momber from Indinna, nssuming altitudinous, oxasperating virtue, made the like roflection on tha courts, and Danizu promptly “smash- ed” that small member, nnd loft his friends to bind up tho wounds and patch up the small member's damaged visage. But most exnsperating of all the hifalutin public virino encountored by Danier among Indiana Demo- cratic mombers was that displayed by Hax- 1woN, of the Fort Wayne District, smallest of tho undersized. Hasuwron ventured upon outspoken donunciation, in Voonmzes' pres- onco, of back-pay thicves. Voonures, who happens to be one of those samo, thercon mado a break for the lenst of tho undersized Democratic members from Indinne, with intont him thon and there to exterminato and blot out of existenco. Sonntor MeDovaLp was at hand this timo to hold Daxrer, and no vacancy was created in the Fort Wayne Diatrict. Tho aw- tul question which it all suggeats is, What is going to happen if Democratic members are to go around setting up as models of public virtue, and if Voonruees happens to escapa from tho keepors who attend him, to seize him by tho coat-tail ng often as such propos- torous assumption on tho pnrt of Democratic members moves him to take somebody’s gealp? * : Tho Oshkosh Northwestern, commenting on tho call issued by WrzLrax Curren Bryant and others for a conferoncs, to be held in New York on tho 15th of May, says: 1t takes but a small amount of crookedness, in the ‘presont tomper of tho people, to destroy confidence in thioao who havo long been freo from anspicion, Not aven tho men who aro personally frea from any talut of corruption, but who have blinded their oyen to thinge which they ought to have seen and prevented, can cacspo publio censure, Consoquently, people ara looking around to find men for tho futuro whoso ro- slatanco of tomptaifon has proved sufficient for the occaalon, and whase pluck has boon tested in a contost with ovil-doers, Platforms sro looked upon s olec- tioneering expodicnts, while persoual charscler aud the connlatent record of a lifetime Lavo been slevatod to thelr place {n publis csiimation. Tho drift of pub- lio sentiment is seen, not only in tho pressof tho country, but §n the colloctive ackion of individuals who 100k to & higher standard of public morality, Thoy may be termed dreamers, onthusiants, theorists, or impracticablea ; but still thoy conatitute & numer- ous and powerful class, Thoy cannot be Jguored it tho party would socure auccess, ‘Thoy cannot bo ridi- culod ont of oxlatence or ont of their proposed courso of action. Late devolopments have made thom moro carnest and more numerous than cver beforo, ‘Thoy roprosent n large constituency, and one which holds tho balance of power in tho country, Infact the Rroat mass of the Republioan party aro in sympathy with them. ‘Wo suggest to those organs which aro ridiculing or denouncing the proposed con- forence that tho surest way to bring it to naught, to disperse the *‘impracticables,” ond to sond the idenlists into tho regions of the idenl, is to nominate candidates nt Oin. cinnati against whom no reasonable objection can be mode. 'This done, the fircbrands will go out, or at all events will prove harmless, Tho only mischief Bryanr, Scuunz, and thoir condjutors can do will bo in opposing candi. dates who are alrendy obnoxions to tho bot- tor sentiment of the country—and that can hardly bo called mischicf. Their effective- ness as o disorganizing oloment deponds altogether upon tho matorial they have to work with. Thoy will be as powerless against- candidates whose nawmes give assurance of the reform of public abuses ns the *three tailors of Tooley street,” to whom they have, with more buffoonery than wisdom, been likened. Somo surprise bas boen ted that the banks should bo 80 actlvé In urging the moasure which pro- ‘proscs to allow them to {ssuo 100 por cont fnstead of being confined o 00 per cent of the smount of bonds doposited 2a colateral with tho Treasury, when tho tendonoy of lata on tho part of the banks generally hiaa boon to tako in inatead of to put out currency, It turns out, however, that thero fs a colored gentloman in this littlo proposition whoso sable hoad came to view in the Committeo yosterday, Tho banks do mot want the law modified to pormit them to issus more notes, They really want £o ba allowed to draw aut the 10 per cent of surplus bonds which would stand to their crodlt 1 tho Treasury, and ell them, Thin s the necrot of thelr snxloty, which has struck so mauy peo- plo as being inconaiateut with tho interests of the ns- tional banking business at the present timo.—Iashing ton dispatch to the New York Herald, The only surpriss in tho matter is that Congress haa not long sinco made the change in the law. Tho banks now doposit an oquivalent of $105in gold to socuro the re- demption of $90 in paper, and then are taxod upon their circulation and doposita. To amend the law 80 as to sllow the banks $100 in bank-notes for $100 in bonds would have tho effect of adding 386,000,000 to the lonnable funds of the banks without in the lonst impairing tho sccurity of their redemp- tion, This would stop the rapid contraction now going on at tho rate of nearly two mill. fona of dollars per month, and would be o legitimate expaunsion of the curroncy. The present law on this subject was adopted whon the bonds had not their present ad- vanced and permanent value, and the margin of 10 per cont was but littlo more than was ossontinl for roasonable protoction sgainst loas, Exivio Casreias, the eminent Spanish writor snd stateaman, in a letter to the Now York Her- ald, seta forih his viows of the present Furo- poan complioations to thoe offoct that it is Dis- Mauck's futention to expel the Turke from Eu- rope and dismember the Austrian Empire, and that he proposes to do It in the following man- ner: First, to extinguish the Empire of {he Sultan in Rurope, snd o give the whol couutry ta the Austrisu Kalaer,'who id fo fix bis Capilal st Conatantinople; second, {0 sunex to (ormany all {he German-speaking Proviuces of the Austriau Fmpire—Styria, Carinibi iho Tyvol, Upper sud Lower Austris, Moravia, su: rstaoably Boheniia, which is being Tapidly German. Biod'sad tuird, ¥ compensate Toauia for this vaa agurandizement of her rivals by giviog hex tho slices of Poland which foll {o the share of Prussis and Ans- tris when that untappy Kingdom was partitioned, Thislaa grand schome, and worthy of Bia- stanck's colosanl politieal gonlus, but while it consorts with many foaturos of the present som- piication, England and Franco, two vory im- portant factors, seem to be lofs ous, Russis would Lardly be satisfied with her share of bor plunder, Ozarowitch on the throne. schomo of Dismanox or not, the axpulaion of the Tarka from Europu [snot the loss cortain aa ons of tho roaulls of the Horzegovina lnsurrection. and ospocially with tho warllke Whother this be the BANKING OF BONLS, To tAe Editorof The Chleago Irtbuner Jaonsow, Mich,, April 35.—Commenting on Jaxes BOOUANAN in your {wue of the 10th April, you ask, 4iAro tie banke to lend 111 meaning pa minde by the Governmont, anl to-day? How do tho banks gef ¢t to lend ? Ty having an introconvertible bond, The Govornment hiss mado their bond convortiblo into papce money for the bono- it of the banXers alono; which money can again Lo converted into the bond at the uption of tho banker, Tt un have tho asatom for the benofit of tha people,— mone) Do not the A lond ft ot for tho exciualvo beneflt of the banker, Then the ‘Pooplo ¢an lend ft 15 aa woll as the banke, f IxTTIUN, " The schome of Mr, BucmanAw was that the Govornmont shiould make money so abundant that it could bo loaned at a very low rate of ln- torost. Wo asked bow this money was to be ob- tatood from tno Governmont. lord It 2" doratands tho matter. Bied to thomon o doposit of bonds with the Govorament. wonna §n the fitss instance to buy tho bonds. Thore are soma 250,000 citizens In tho United Btatos who Liave clubbed their menna togothor, and have bought Goveroment bonds, deposited them with the Treasury, and bavo received iu roturn baok notes in the proportion of 28 in pa- per to $10.50 in gold roprosonted by the bonda. Thoy lend this money. When thie businosa coased to to profitable, thoy return their £00,000 “Who was to Onr corfospondent ovidontly misune Tho banks lond notes is- But tho banks must hLave tho in baokenotes to the Treasury, receive thoir honds, sell them for $120,000 of papor curroncy, and lend that monay. . In thia tho banks have no special privilego. Any balf-dozen citizons having 250,000 of bonds muy becomo bankors, or, without becoming & National Bank, can lond monoy and do a bank- ing business, Thoro is no special priviloge whon it 18 freo and open to ovorybody. To borrow monoy by depositing an interconvortible 3,65~ bond first roquires that tho porson shall have tho means to purchase the bond ; whon he buya tho bond ho lends hia money to the Govermont at 8.05 por cont intorost ; whon ho surrenders hus bond, ho gots his money back and no more. This operation In no wiso roduccs tho rato of in- teroat to tho borrowers. [ — OBITUARY, TIHOMAS AIRD, 'The cablo & day or two sinco announced the doath of Tuomas A, a8coteh poet of conald- orablo prominonco. He was born in 1802 at Boswden, and roceived his education at the Uni- voreity of Edinburg, ogd during this timo was oditor of the Weekly Journal. From 1835 uatil 1803 ho was oditor of tho Dumfrics Journal, Conservative nowspaper, and was also a frequont contributor to Blackwood's Magazine. Hin prin cipal works are ‘‘Roliglous Charactoriatica " and '*Tho Old Dachelor in the Old Beottish Village,” and his best known poom, ***Tho Dovil's Droam." ADOLPII BIORNBERG. Tho Boston papors announce tho doath at Lawronce, Mass,, on Tuosday last, of Avorrn Dronxsrna, one of NAToLroNn's soldiors, An oxchango says: As o cadet ho snelsted In the ceremonles of making Boxaranze the First Consul of ¥rance, and for sov- exal subsoquient years Lie followed in tho command of that great military loador, 1fo was not a Frenchman, but a Swode, being born at Stockholm July 4, 1784, Ho was tho youngest of thirteon children, and 1ia father, who was o Justico of tho King's Doncl in Bweden, lived {0 tho great ago of 102, Dr. DionEno joined tho ¥ronch ‘army when 2§ years old, and march- ol with it inta Poland, and thence on tha disss- trous campaign {n Russin. In the original aquadron of huzzars to which decensed waa sttached s n First TLioutenant, 104 out of 109 died in thns_campatgn, Dionxnena was no boilevur in NazoLrox, his stimato of tho Emperor boing that *ha was a presumptuous man, Taisod to be a tyrant, and aspiring to universal dominjon.” On tho roturn of to army ta Paris Licat. Bron¥uEna was presented with fifty lous d'ors, a pass- rt for Swoden, and his dischargs. o Joft Franco or his natlvo land, where lie scquired s knowlodge of modicine, after whioh ho cama to this country, JOTIN GRANAM IOUGH. Jomx Gramax Lovan, a sculptor of considera- ble eminence, died in England recently. He was & nativo of Northumborland, and first be- camo an oxhibitor at the Royal Academy in 1820, In 1827 he produced an ideal statuo of Miro, which, togother with s statue of SamsoN, was purchased by tho Duke of Wellington. In 1845 ho exoonted the statue of Hor Majesty in tho Royal Exchango, and in 1840 & statue of Princo ALugsr for Lrovps, & OTIER DEATIS, Tho doaths aro also announcod of the Rev. Jony Brananp DArcainus, an omincnt Roman Catholic dlvino of the Drompton Oratory, Eo- Rland, whoso two books on the * Bacred Hoart and tho *“Holy Communion " have gono through sovoral editions and have booa translated into aoveral languages ; of Joux A, Mennrrr, at Rye, N. Y., ono of tho most oxtenulvo cattle-traders onst of the Mississippl, who loaves a fortunes of $2,000,000; of tho Dowagor Duchess, mother of tho presont Esrl of Dorby; and of Prof, Joux Busreep, one of tho moat ekillfal physi- oians in New York City. —_— Tha Louisvile Courfer-Journal Is unalterably opposed to nominating any ** conservative Ro- publican,” such a8 Judge Davia of the Bupromo Coart, for President. Nothing but a straight, original Domocrat will do, No moro GreeLey businsed for it. Horo is the way it talks, Tho Guzriey csmpalgn had ita uscs, That, how. oyer, was enaugh, N party could survive a socond attompt of the sort, This year tho Democratio party needs to do ta campajgning as the farmer doss his olowing—in a straight furrow, A atralght ticket, s steaiglit platform, and & atraight snd bight Sioud L tio word, 4o that, i matter How we corma out, wa shall faaue with solid columns, whole boes, aud tho fleg tiying, No more demorslization, no morn dobauchery, uo_crookedness,—not oven & **strsighte around-tho-corner,"—no sugar and 1o lomons,~per- Lectiy tratght, plaln, ~somoting thet will bo Fecog- nized as good enough without any sossoning, Hex- Dbutons, BLaok, THURMAN, BAYARD, ALLLN, TILDEN,— one or two of them,—Denlocrats aft,—good men all,— will do. Wo are » littlo surprised at tho incluslon of Axven, According to this, {v would even prefer old Birt, the ** Rag-Baby blatherakite," to Judge Davis, Bue the Demooratio luaders of Illinols are talking protty stroogly ot forolng Judge Davis, Republican ag ho Is, down the throats of tho Kentucky Boarbons, —_— ‘Thore is progress aven in China, The Iatest reports show that s railroad has boon formally opened] in splto of tho oppoaition of the native authorities, and that tho inventor of telegraphy has actually beon recopnlzed fn the Pekin Gazelte, Thia projected railroad—the firet in the Chineas Empiro—is 15 miles long, ruoning betweon Wusuog snd Bhanghai, and & miles of tho road have boon completed, This sounds strangely enough for a country which {s as old as tho hills and has » population of 800,000,000 souls, when our new natlon, just colebrating its firat Centennial, aud having s popolation of 40,000,800, hins between 60,000 and 70,000 mitea of rallroad, *Tho resistanca of the Chincsa to all olomonts of prograsa has kept them far behind the Japaness, who have shown a disposition to avail themuelves of tho advancemont made by other nations, and attain a etvilizatlon on s plana with the European and Amorioan nations, Dut now that thore 18 an entering wodga under the Chinese wall, perhaps it may be tumbled down complotely in course of time, 14 4a 3ald by fricnds of both Mr, BLAINE and Mr, CoxxLING that, sithough theas two geutlomen have not spoken 40 edch other for ton years, either would profer the success of the oihier to thatof Qen, Buis. Tow, sud wiil 80 work at the Oonvention. This s un. e e antagoniam, bot in ‘couf lew, D ien sod Comaitina would Uaito sgeinst Diuistow, —Cincinnati 15mes, Why ls ft trus? What would be tholr motive for burylng the hatchot, as betweon themuelven, but uniting to tomshawk DnisTow? What has be done to acquire thelr implacabla animosity? Aro thoy so deadly hostilo to hls vigorous and succesuful campaign sgainst rovenue thleves that they are willing to pool their forcos to de foat him? Whatever may bo Conxrixa's hatred of DrisTow on account of his warfaro sgalnat rovenuo robbors, whereby a good many of Coxx. 2ana’s maching mop aufforad, wo do not bolisve thore is & word of trath in tho statoment sa ye. gards BLAINE. ———— Tho tolagraph dlapatches saveral times of late have referred to a ravolution In Barbadoes and groat destruotion of property, withont making spocial roforence to the eauses. Late advics show that the troubles have growa ontof thg peraistont eftorts of tho Governor, Mr, Pora Hzxxzsay, who I8 the orlginal of Mr. TrovLrore’s Phineas Finn, to torco upon the people tho cone foderation policy of the Homq Government, The Legtelature, ss wo!l as the people of Barba. doos, soom %o bo Inflexibly opposed to any cone solidation of Woat Indian {nanlar {ntorosta, ‘PERBONAL, The Prince of Wales, it 11 ssld, bLas grom stout and unbandsome during his Indisn tour, The Duko of Edinburg st laat accounts waq in YLondon, and had enrapturod the musioal world by graciously promising to play at a con. ceort before starting on bis two yeara' crulse in tho Sultan. Mark Twain appoared on the stags at Hart~ ford, Oonun, on Wednesday ovening, as Pefer Spyk 1 “Losnof a Lover,” Ho rawrato hlg part, making It ono of a model blockhead, and is eald to have acted it with greas sucosss, 1f tho agroeablo and able gentlamman who eol locts porsonal paragraphs for tho Cinclunag Commercial will cousent toread Mr., Monenra Conway'a entertaining lotters in that paper, by may antivipato lus personsl column froguonsly by sovoral days. At & wodding in Baltimore, tho other day, Gen, Grant, Becrotary Bristow, and Mr, Blaine were tolking with each other. A lookor-on remsrked ¢ *I'm suro I se two Prosidents in that group, and I don't seo dauble vithor, bacauso thoro's ne wino hero to-night. Princo Bismarck has boon mado & General of tho Cavalry, 'Chis te the highest military office ho, a8 o non-active officer, cau attaln, Bince the campalgn of 1806, when he was raised from the rank of Major to that of Major-Genersl, Bis. marck han always worn hle uniform In publle, oven in tho Roichstag and Landiag, although bis military oflice has no connectton with hip duzios ag s civil authoricy, They aro telling through the conntry thestory for which Mrs, Cady Blanton is .responsible, to tho offect that Mrs. Fiab was tho first woman in Washingtan to take the now Mrs, Sonator Christiancy by tho hand. Mra, Fish is credited with eaying that sho wonld rather recognizo & girl who earncd £1,000 a yoar honestly and hon. orably than recognize & woman who made $10,- 000 by intriguo and dishonor. Tho Rov. Mr, Buffum, who has been on trisk for unprofessional conduct, wrato to the lady of his choice Boveral remarkablo lotters, which wore road before tho Council of Minlatera, One of thom contaivs the following thrilling passage; *What should I do if the lovo of Jesus was not in my peart? It thoro ia room in my trunk, pat in somo sheots and pillow-cages,” Chops, to- mato-aance, and warming-pans wors nothing to thia, ‘Wo regrot to seo in the New York Sun an arih cle boaring tho maguetio title: **Why We Call Him s Blstant Miniatorial Frand,” and to learn that the Rav. Dr. Talmage, of Brooklyn, is the porson roferred to, The Sun calmly assorts that Mr, Talmago is *‘n shallow follow in intel- lect and fooling, and splashes wbout like & frog in apuddle™; that hia sermons are ‘“nothing but exploalons of intellectual firc-orackers in & tin-pan " ; aud that Lo ia * destitute of slnceri- ty.” Tnr TRIDUNE Togrots to Boe these wtates mants, becnuse thoy aro so likely to be true. Oficial returns from the Norwioh (Coon.) District show that Wait, Republlcan, waa ofected o Congross by only 40 majority over David A, Woells, Domoorat sud Independent. Last year tho district mave Blarkwoatber, Ropublican, 1,176 mnjority ovor Fostor, Demoocrat. Inas. much a8 Mr, Wolls madono canvass of the dis- trict, and waa not oven nominated by the Demo- crata, but only rocommonded by them, sod 88 ha was obnoxious to the Pratectionista {n both par- tles, tho result is momething surprising, And still moro 8o is the vote of New London County, which gavo Mr, Wolls 180 majority. ‘The New York Nation has s bit of etymologe {cal obhervation which would be intoresting but for the awful thought that it may provoke Mr, Ricbard Grant White to say somothing. The Nationsaya: *[c is curlous to soe how ths word quile, tho synonym of *entirely,’ after comlog into uso in tho sonse of ‘very® (which is, lowevor, ‘quite recent'), is now passing cure rent in the sonseof ‘not quite. An {llustration of this came to our motico in tho case of an Invontor of a wow safoty-lsmp for burniog {luids, who found he could make no eales be- causo the solontific experts cortified that his lamp was ¢ quito safe.’ " Tho furious sensitivocess of the Royal Family of England about * afl the little forms and cers- monials of dignity investing a throne from which roal power Laa obbed away' furnishes snother toxt to Mr, Conway. In onforoemont of his principle ho tolls & story, Just before tho lsst Drawing-Room the wifo of & distingulshed nobte- man wroto to tho Quoon asking to bo excused from appearing in a low-necked dross, accord ing to tho ostablished otiquette. The lady hsd been ill, and was vowilling to oxpose her shonle dors, cither becauso sho foared the consequences or becauso sho was ashamod to show them, Af- tor a long and eolemn conferenco the Lord Ohamborlaln wasd instruoted to #ay to the pe- titionlog lady that Hor Msjesty would for once congent to the inuovation on conditlon that it should not ba taken aa a precedont, and that the dress should be out low to front, To the con- alderation of such miglty affalrs lias the majesly of England been reduced, Mr. Conway writos to the Cinclooatl Com met cial of the Royal-Titles bill, aa affecting the domentio bappiness of Quoen Victorla: **Itis woll known that the main interost which the Quoen hiad fu tho new titlo was the addition It would make to her grandeurin Europe, snd Dissacli is ot bla wit's ondn to dlscover somo way in which hor ambition in this respact msy bo gratified, in conslstency with his plodge thab tho word * Empress® shall be supproused fn sll Btate papors not relating to Iudia. Thero s yot to bo a sceno at Windeor Oastle, Thero haa sle ready boon ono, it gosslp is corroat, It is ssld that the Primo Miniator found the Princesa Beatrice pouting, and evon moist-oyed, bocause ho had cortified Parllamont that the now title would not affoct the ohlldron of Iler Afajeaty. Bome of her frionds had already nddressed notos to her, fuscribed, ‘To Her Royal and Imporisl Highoess.' And now aho would have to correct them—it was too bad! Dieraeli tried to coa- qolo *I'rix as well a1 he could, but at latest datss shie was anything but happy." TOTEL ABRIVALY, Palm er tousr—F, Bleals, Georgetown, D. 0.; G, O Fllls, Boa ton; Theodors Tilton, Brooklyn; W. I Ha millon, Loulsvillo; H, R, Bayward, E. Qutchinaos, and G, B, Kinney, Doston; G, O, Kent, Longio, Eng.; John Grsbam, Ottaws, Cavsdaj . A Crawford and Androw Ne: Molbouras, Aur 3y 3 aleaburg ; A, nl vooolirand Pacife—lugo Nob Now York; J, T, Hackworlh, Ottumws, Ia;J. T Allen, Qincinnati: Judge Jswes Grant, Davenport: W, I, McOurdy, Olaveland ; Andrew Allen, Montroaly E. W, Koyes, Wisconsin; 1.J. Kerer, Ban Frauclscoi \ D, Farwell, Now Yor! §, Inman, Liverpool; Jacob Meyer, Quinoy. .. Tyemont House—Gan. Cuarlod X, Uordier, New York: T. II, Malons, Foud du Lao; Ghaclas Buirulim, Now York; J. I It Eyanston; G, b, Do . Hughes, Now Louls; the Hon, J,' M. Bmlt New 'York; Col. ¥rank Washburn G W. Mauafiold, Now Havea; O, I Alled, B, _ Louls,...Sherman Xouss—The H G. H, Harlow, spnnzn-m; the Hon, Jemi Omahs; G, Rol us Bals! ‘Troubsdol uffaloj s L ot ot S5in . 8, A, Lancas! : the 3 tou; the MHop. I, 8. Moody, Boches Gardner House—A. I, Eilmwood, Rosaaburg, Wia. § dom% Baltimore; Mrs, Annlo Aus H, L. dould, Bloux Ciy; ¥red H Now ¥ George kaas, Bay Citye

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