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A [} WA a3 b / hardly carried through. J 1 EDUCATIONAL. Commencement at the Univer- sity of Michigan. Exorcises on Clnss-Day--Meeting of the Alumni. The Thirty-second Graduating Olass of the Literary Departmont, Thoe Graduating Clnss of the Unlversity of Chicagos Mecoting of tho Alumni-The Efforts to Raise a Fand, Twenty-ninth Commencement Exer- cigus of Bt. Xavier's Academy. MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY. COMMENCEMENT EXENCINES: Spectal Correpondence af Tha Trivune. AXN Aunon, Mich., June 27, —~Comuencement- week at the University of Michigau ls an occanion of great interest ta the people of (his Stafe, and it 18 worthy of note that yeur after year this futerest increases, 1t 19 unt muny years azo thot ono day, the lant Wednewndny in dune, contained nll that was af auch poblie fmportance a8 to call the proplo together; bt auw the threedoys of Monday, Taes- fuy, and Wailnemlny, are not suflicient fo hold the rennlons, Alumni-meetlny, couccrts, receptions, Cummencement-speechies, cic. An eflort was mada thia year to put the exerciuen of Graduation- Day on Thureday, thua sdding twenty-four hours fuoro; bot this was conslilered an Innovation on Alie time- honored programme of things, snd ao was The alumnl have shed many tears over the brief perfod of timo that han been allotted them, as they wny they have becn wedged In where 8 narrow openlng offered fteolf between other less Important proceed- Angs than thelrs. Herctofore the moetings of thin wast body of grown-up children have been Aome. what Irregninr and without deflnite purpose: but this year the Interest has increased wonderfully In thcir reunlon, and the University fn smlilng over It a8 nn auspictans omen In hier welfare: for her boys ond girls haven't been over-appreciative of her claima upon them In the past. “The endowment of {hie Wititama Professorehip ts still (ncomplete; it "1" Ylalupml that this year will see the full $25,000 zained. On Monday the studentn Indulged In A GEAND ATHLETIC TOURNAMENT, after tho fashion of the timen when the celebrated Tnledanian gamen were centres of attraction, n the'mornine, they paraded the streets of the elty, arrayed In the moat fantastic of costumen, and ac- cumpanied by bands of munic of thelr own {nven- tion, Tmmedlately aftersard, they proceeded to the Fair-Gromds. ‘southof the city, and enter tained o large audionce with their performances. Yeatordoy was CLASADAT)~ the one day in the yenr of pccial Interent to the members of the Seiilor Class. 1t iu_then that they take o lnst, Jong look down the course of thelr col- lege-Jifo, and sum up the goxl and the ba which are now mntters of history, It is outwardly o day of rejoicing, but within aré many heart-pang for wisspent hours, and even viclous pastime, and ovor the Anal hand-whakings, Whe Impressive thongbt beging to creep S, that herc is tho thresh- old of real life, and It inat bo crossed, Yet the day hnn had ita lessons, An able oratlon .wan dellvered In tho morning by Robert d. Young, of Akron, O., toa iarge audicnee In University Hall. e epeaker announced os his theme JSOLATION, He ratd the word has o double meaning. When used with reforence to man as a membor of society, 10 slgnife sechusion and separations sach Ja the irolation of the hermlt, of the cynic, and of the sorrow-atricken; it §u o ready refuge and o frequent remedy for wearineas, misanthropy, and woe, But, with reference to man as an_futellvctual and moral helng, Irolation becomes the aynenyin for tndepe donce, Strength of mind and dignity of character are Ita patursl offaprinit: and inan aitains hia highest, best development through its inituence and Insplratlon. The ago of dogmatiem hay pasacd awny: tho cra of Inqulry haw busun, Men na Joncer recelve their opinlons by dictation; they now form opinlons for thumacives, while traditfor. s madu to indorgo the searching Ingnest of free thonght, The world, which ance scemed u mane of nobodics under tho Tendership of s fow superlor inds, fa grown inte a vast nrmy of Integers, each of which ncts under_the fnflucice of an Independent fntel- licence, There s food for reflection In these chanees, They teach un that the nohlest und hizhent condition of mental and aplritus] life Is an independent one. ‘The lifo of man is but one per- petunl process of Inolation. The speaker then yroceeded at wome leneth, to trace the naturul develupment of human life,~frst in o phystcal senre, begliming with the consclousness of tho child that it in a pereonal belng, and hns powera sud rospounibilitlen, which aro gradually nnfalded as youth and manhood aucceed; und then, by anal- ogy, Tollowing out tho personality of tho sonl, and finding In solitudo Itw most abundant nonris! cnt. Jrom De Quincy ho quoted as followa: * Solitude, though silent #a light, {8, like lght, + tho mightlest of agencies; for aolitndo [s exscutin] tomany. Allmen come [nto the warld alope ¢ all men leave it alone. Even a llitle child has a dread, whirpering conaciousness that, {7 he should o summoned to travel Into the Eternal Presence, 1o gentle ntiree will be allowed to lead him by the hand,~—no mother to carry him In Lier arms,—no Jittic aister to ahare hia treplilation. King and pricat, warglor and malden, philoroplior and child, 811 nunt walk these nightly galleriea alone, The solitudu, therefore, which fn thin world appalls and farcinaton o chitd's heart, 13 but the ecio nf o fnr decper solitude through Swhich alrendy he has nssed, and of anoiher wolftude, deeper il hrough which ho has to pass: roilex of ane soll* tude, prefiznration of another,™ TR WORTH AND NECESSITY OF 1SOLATION aro most happily exhibited in the proper prosccn- ton of reforius,” Triiw refarm, like true charity, Dogins at hone: and the man who sincorely wishica to do good service In humanity's great catse will firat equip himsclf with power and purity, The character of the wholo depends wpun Bxc character of the parta, Society can jiossess 1o excellenco which It daes not get frowm ita fudividual members. 1o it not woet areaut cgotlsm o preach crusades agninat the faulta of others, whils one's nwn char- acter lacks the very clements that aight mako him Belpful to his tellowe? Caeiylo lias plilily told ue that the man who trica to reform the world Is a fool let him tirst reforn himeelf] Many a good canse liss been doomed to Taptess filure for the simplo reason that {t woa cursed with nnworthy champlons, Irolstion [n the truc reformer's armary. Many 6 nohls champlon Jias there found the weapons vwith which to win o glorioua vld.nr{. v Mr. Young then recounted some Justrious ex- ampled, fu_the world's history, of men who have Denefted mankiud by pewers wiich they acquired inwolitnde, 1le majd that to laolation England owaen the character of hlni_who Jel the Barons In thelr strugale with King Jobn which resulted in the fnm(!uu of the Magna Chorta. To Stephen Lang- ou, Archibishop of Canterbury, the richest mced of victary belonged, Modern Italy firnishes another example of the Influence of leolation. In the contestof 1841, Garibaldl waa the leader of the people, He, above oll others, was moat earneat and most brave, The story uf Garbaldi's 11fo reads liko a ramance, It is tlie history of a prowlng Indisiduality, stataped with tho Jmpresa of ane unwavering pirpose, e nourlahed It through Ufe; and, when the time was xipy for action, the peut-up piwera that had been gatherlnz within Tim hugst forth {n such a blaze of glury that the whole world macveled ot hi decds, Ouir owh times and country are notlacklng in e; amples. Thero was one man In_ publie life, of whomn denth has bat lntely robbed us, who \wan conspicuous for hixJave of tholation. ‘Through it hie attalned o inost marvelous development of mind and chiameter: and, withal, e had o pusslopate love of tho flght and haired of the wrong that mado him prince of atl refarmers ot our day. This man was Charles Sunsner, His whole life fs o trib- ute to tho worth and power of & well-rounded in- dividnality, Tsolatlon, indecd, mourned a worthy 8on when the funeral-betla tolled Charles Sumucr's Tequiem. 1 fine, aald the r, Isalation la the power thal moves the worl 1t worka on soclety through man, —-Fegenvrating und purltylng tho one by fe- Veluhing ‘At atzongthening 't oilier, It eads AN L0 Tecognize Jus own peraonaiity and e rlghts which naturally nttach thereto. 1t fucites bl to sirengihen and adarn that porsonziity, that It may Berve wouie useful puepone In th worll, When In- Juetice attompia to deprive Wi of bla rights, le rlses In the diguity of lils laolation to repel the na- sault. nolation ‘exerctaes a double initucnce an wan, It tends tomake hin worthy of the worlid's regnrd, and 1t noves bim W respect tho sacred and {nvialable rights of others, THE CLABI-PORM, Immedlately after the completion of the oration. . Yeory 8. Marrie, of Y pailantl, was tntrodiuced + a0 the clan-oet, and proceedod 10 reclte a pocin ontitled, **Tho lero-Martyr, " ‘This tale In vorse recoqiited the self-sacrificing herolsm of o soldier in Who eloamy daya of the tovolutlon. The scene was Iald at Valley Forye, where ong John trey deprived himsolf of v aod and clothing for a camrade,. whoae Jife Yio saved by Unls means. But the exposure and Lie Rt wero tou MuCh for ls feoblo. frame, and e 8001 fel) alck and dled himselt. ‘The opening slanzas of the poem ara devoted to the Invucation of the Blusu of Hivory,—the fal- Towing betog the Srat stanza: 1latorto Stuss, who hear [heMyatlc aceull, Tuwerino ull fa0ts I Ry unbowided ken, Bor oo thy icral peged o uarolly 1 d sl whute, weftten with thy damond. Ty Sriillan dovia of DAIoAN B OF Bicn Tt “Lhio panoramiciife of every tine, Mo ¥IVI glare of Ico-buund siofes, and then Thio drean*iife of Ui acllvw, sun-kivsed cline Whiere a0 Loty Stuas hud foat 1hy seat aubitme, The opening “tanrsa described the scenc, snd and then follawa a digresalun about & pruspervuy age, when the story fe resumed ua follows; 116 Winter In the wooded Valley Fore, Fioven thousand patriots a'crspread i colder, ullly-eluves wus alislterd gorae, B ok SAraciSon fhey mun teebly shed il blosulug st } lecatbor's fruste 1t fateful, O the sure ut mient, patntod. hurestng treed OF Denth, whin dtale 7t bus 0 ut, and caxt His induwy mantic o'er the shiveriig forms o passed, Withtu A rougily hten and rogged hut. Whitte sehirly-arting s oifered o seay Throweh wfel L wind, with keen ant esger cat, Lan pie Nowe damp, uneven Aoor of clay Tireeda nuxtoua nits, and nrgcs on decay, In ety e, atritihed protn apon 1 Duiel Furncit 1 auch, & wretclied obfeot 1ag,— Quite nakei, £ave the roie e sttove t i A COTCr o Brule et (s by frin hiiter, biting wenther. h kindly eve, there s his Who manya day bl watehe QF many wiitely oo tie ¢ Anahake, and quicee, 1) it A¥aa nigh. tie tabrrancie aimoat renty e contly Jowel alitioat snnfehed, 10 blend 1t brightness wiUh 4he starry Airmament OF lioly souls nade perfect by true 1ives woll-spent. For many n weary day, Jnhn (irey had watched 1in comrade’s wasting fori, his snnken fi‘fl- 1hin paltng fac: III‘F}'. hiasegr wan, and blotched Iiy frequent foree of fever, and thie tleh OF fochienras wiilch told that death waa nighy “The Innguld gestiife and the fatul reply s Thie wanderiig mind, which, swerving from ita zone, {unuetrembilng and fatterivic i ta ertal iy Hunzer and espoxnra did thelr work, and death anally carled him away. Of Dty settled, there In « 11te 118c: this calin, herole a Ontiviun's past, wid, with & IAZONA © The worda: **Hledted for e The Diving command Inculenten grawth, and nolile acte nraciaim Thoe seare ot 1o tna X k tatta tho dark \ing hrand, Ton ne £ honore ron aFaine 1t irogreas, AN WIEh Allent congue they iamo itaunpriced worth; for, 1ike the aprraiting wave & by astarin, no bonids enfrane b elgéle, over whileniug, til they lave Eteralty'n dim Ahore, far beyoid Ui graves “Thls closcd thu exercise in tho hall and for the forenoon. In the aftornnan at 4 o'clock tha claes again came topether, but thi time out-doors, In the alinde of the University buitdings, and, in the presence of & large crowd of apctators, reanmed their exerclacs, “flicre remained yot to be rend the histary of the clase, and, the still more interesting thing, the taly of (a fatare lifo, Mr. doreyh I, Bteere, of Adeian, wa intradiiced us the conpiler of the pant four yr-lun' cvents, and he fmmedlately procecded to read TIHE CLASB-IISTORY. Tho historian sald he shondd depart from the il CuRtom of pronouneing at the unteet hin cla as the mot remarkalileone that vver matricalnted; hat should ~rather spesk of 1t menhers an A band of lwmblee cltizens, @nthered ont of honies from Norwng's ley ' mountaine to Huwali's coral steand,—dealring to review I upnssuring language, oa becomes an onaasimin class, the teiumphs and tribulations which havo st tenied thelr cotlese-courne, A certaln Profemsor haa remarked that tho clarn haw been an_experinientul oue,~the clss thrangh which the Faculty has tatroduced ita reforms. Hut the speaker would laye it distinctly undee- atooi that it hag becr no panalse princlplc [n texe experhments, When the Faculty has lioen waver- {n anul alow to act, theclass hus gone forward in theae reforms iteelf, “When the Faculty has been forward and Injudiclous, the clas hae restrafned It, as became the best ntereats of tho Unlversity, With Reforin for a watchword, the cines lins rooted out scctarianism in the inatitution: has reformed tho disorderly_demonetentions in chinpel; has re- formed the 1ablt of attenling chrergpiers. i o practies uf azing b has abolluhed the habit of reading report In chapel, ete., ete, FRESHMAN YEAR. In the fall of 1872, 122 membern ancceeded n conviucing the Faculty that they swere nicnially aud moratly qualified to do honor to 1he Freshman clas<, "The firt morning at chapel, they were in- troduced to the Sophomore Clam with the usual prefiminarios of warfare which held vozue In those days; and, during the year, enguged In the cus- tomary practicen af plniping, Lazing, etc. Durine the latter part of thelr college-career, the class has managed snccesefully tho University publication, the Chronlelr, and hus restored thio ald custom of #ecuriny clurs-cancs, and coverlne them all aver with the nomics of the class, and now ench member 18 Mo bappy possesaor of a carved monunient of induatry and fngentty, PERSONAL AND STATICTIC. Of the 122 who entered fuur yeats s remained with the clasa 10 the end, 06 b by the way, and 20 recruitk have heen recelved at diiferent atages of the game. The class of ‘70 will 0.00L 70 trng. The varioys degreos il be aa ollown: M. A., 80; Ph. 1., 113 1. 8., 16; C. E, 11 There are 12 Indice, all'of whom entered with the clars, One of theve In an Attorney-at-law; one in marrled, and another expects to be. Two menm- bers of the class expuct to be ministers, nnd 22 fawyera: 14 nra looklug for schoals, and 0 will fol. tow engineering: 5, medlcine; i, biisiness: 2, Jour- nalism; 6, honsckeeping; 1. drafting 1, wilcrn- fcopy; 1, phgsics; 1, her oiwn busineas: 1, atock and grafn-ruiking; ‘1 will co in scarch of the’ clasa cup, ond another expeets to bo Prosident of the Univeraity. The hisforlan gave the wolght of tha clara na 11,400 tha; average welght, 151 A, Ono {8 100 Ba heuvy, and one is 107 e licht, Axn wholu, the class Iy 1,706 yeurs old. glving an averate of 21 years 7 inonthe and 174 day, The ono most 50 have fainted years 7 . revered for his years fr 35 yeurs 11 months aml dagw ald; the Infunt 1s 10°yeara 11 months and 25 days of A ‘I'he lonzitude of tho cloas s 420 feot and 103 Inchen, The average manstands b feot and 7 inchi's above torra-irma, and one 1s possessed of an altl- tude of 6 feet and 3% inches, The Liliputlas lasa revity of 5 fect and fuches; he, however, hoasia a8 exientive an ciqnator ae any man In the class, “Tho varions ahades of bale were wiven, und the re- Iiglous bellefs of the class, The class hus spent duriug It _course $115, 712, making an averngo of 1,031 The greatest amount expended by opo fn- dividunl was 81,5005 the least, $500, As the historlsn completed hin iengthy task, TILE PROPHET OF THE CLASS— Charles A. Blalr, of Juckson—was Introduced, ani revenled the future to i eager hearcrn, Alter Invoking All the gods who presido over the real of postry, fio peluted liow io”came possessed of his ValutWe Informatlon: The night waa etill, the antumn-wind Jind moancd 1txelf away; Within iy carelexs, wandering mind, 1id wondrous fancles play Methouglit 1 teaveled throuh the atr With tore than Wghtningespecds The Grent Tlear started in ia lair, o fast did I receda. £ length froin out tiis murky night Which shroude ail o loui, 1 aaw s sudden am of lght, 1 heard a eannon's booni, With hnrrying steps 1 sought the land From whenea hind come the soaud; 1 lthited on tho ocesn's sirand, With wild waves seetliing round. T torn beneath & eit Tie[oro & hortx} grand: nnded througl fta hollg, Bwecet strains Frutn soine celestial band. Hlere were the hesdquarters of '70, and he was taken B hand by a young walden, who showed him through the city, and told him and showed to himn what ho relates, in four-line stanzas, of each mem- ber of tho claes, "Tho bard closed as followa: Dear clnssmates, now along tarewel, We may nat meet axuln, onr Jovaand griefs, what tonguo can tell, On )ifo’s storm-besten maln? The past hiath hoen a glad, bright dream Oh! rfuture ho . oue e nuglng, coaseleas atreain Of wwes rentity. Forgive mo for my work fll-doney Aud, conrades, whei We part, Lét not Worde apaien bitk in un’ Dam up the fowlug bears, TIE ALUMNL Dy lag tho Interval to-day hetween tho forenann and wfternoon proceedings of the Senior Class, the Alurind of Michigsn University came together, and Iiwiened to the Oratar and Poct, who, for the first Uime i imamy gears, f over befare, drero both ou the ground. ~ The Orator was Prof. M, L. D'Ouge, class of ‘0 now Profussor of Greek In the Unl- ;‘cr!lly. The substanca of bis uddress waa as fol- owe: THE ORATION. Tho speaker rall he denired to call the atlentton of hin fellow-Alumni to a qaostion of practical In- terest to all the gradunten of the University, aml that was tiio necessity of establivhing a departinent far the study of Art; e at et refeered to the rapid advanco that hisd been mace In systems of study during the post twenty years, not only in providing a greater variely of atudy, hit also in extonding the coneaes of study, 1¢ I but o few ear since poat-graduate courses were ongmnlzed, Zack yenr yuuyg ten are chaoeing mate aud mora the immaterial rowards of a scholatly ife, in prefer- ence to the more ghittering prizes of business and profeaxions, Thepublic syupathy with o gencrons cattare and with erwducation {s undonbtedly on thu gain, It is this sympathy, sl the epeaker, Lo whiclh o wisfied to uppeal unl thld occaston, 1 behalf of ‘tho ecathetic element in education, and especlally in relation to o wants and aidis of Uiulr Alina Mator. I'e spcakor then pnrsued tho subfect of the fm- riunce of Art-culture, —showing thut to teain tho facultics of “obscrvation, of memory, of reason, without cultivating the taste, the eiiss of ftnoss, of hsrmony, and of propriety, In to train force nn+ checked and uncintrofled, Dower without sweet- neas, strength without beauty, Hivtory tenchen thut' the best culture han never been dlvorced frow the gruces, und that the beautiful has alwuyu been combined with the good and the trae in the most perfect systema of cducation. Tue entic cdncatlon of the most cultivated prople of an- tiquity was dirvcted 1o tho outward expression of hosuty, whethier In the harmoniona development of the phyxical bady, or I the rhythmical tow af speoch. or in the weli-polsed und sweetly -tempered 1ife and chnracter, Aud hencn It bs that to-duy we back to Athen for une models I sculpture, unid or our rulow of symmetry In architecturos’ and that we *it atthe fect of her nocts, erators, and philosonhiers, for our ideas of cletunt gictlon, eautiful linsgery, and noblo thonght. The ciu- eation of wur duy inakes Keew tuen, siart uwen forcoful men; but not o much Wetl-tempered men, gracefal men, well-tralned men. That wo noed more of the esthetle cloment (n our oduca. tlon,will haraly be dented. T'he Iack of (¢ {8 vislblo In everythlug sbout ua. Hul there Is & grow- {ng sensu of the nced of the esthetlc element ln our educational eystem, aud an Incroasing Intorest for Art-culture fn the oldor wnid more chltivated portians of vur land, After havluzs given an account of what had heen dony In Tuatoll, und other citics, 1n thy directlon of Att-culture, 1'rof, DOugro mald 11t fs galy when o Art-Sctiou) I# tunde Unlvorsity that it can becomo & Art, receiving lIfe from, and In turn glving 1ifo ko, the'entira Universily, ' A Art-Schaol ina Unk s versity would naturally lave & dvnble functlon: Firat, It would train cclallsts In ihe formative arts, —Archltectire, Seulpture, Palnting, and Decuration. Becondly, 1t would culilvate taste and refiue tho fecllnga of the general student, by the study of the prineiples of esthetics, sud of thu hlatory nnd criticism of Art, ¥rof, 1'Ooge then calted nitention to WHAT HAD BEHN DONE nthe diffezent Collcges aud Uulyersitlos of the . art of th Fenving . and cunntry, ~mentlontng Yala College s the frst ta Al nCpuceesaful Jlopartment of Art, He then mald that Michigan University conld not afford to e outdone by ker rivals, X« Alwmnl, they ahonid maka the pabile opinlon thint shall aecnre o them, by pablie and by private generosity, this new de- partment of the Universlty, 1t In to the erelit of he far-ncelng wirdom of {he nohle men who plan- ned thia Cnicoraity, that, i its srganie o, it 1 provided that there'atiall’ be ane Profersor of the ‘it Arta. Thie low daten el to T84, Under thln provislon, the Professorship of the Iine’ Arta wan el from 1852 (o 1803 by Prof, Alvah rads {alt, Thix wan the fiest Profesaorship of tho kind {n the countey. Bat clrenmstances swers not yorable o (he prasperity of this Chales there was no mancy ta suport i3 no kpecinl enthusinam for it, outaldo or inalde the Uiniveraity; thera wero no kindred Clalea of Avchitecture ar Deawing, to cambine with nndatrengliien it. Rince 1503, no atep 1ins been taken to carry ont thie fandamental I of the Univerity in_cetabllahing s Professorship of the Fine Artr. A sty has been tiken, however, which, the speaker trusted, will resnlt in building up auch n depastment, Thinstep i the reeent ape {olntment of Fraf. . 1, Lo denney, of Ghicagn, 0 the Profesrarship of Architecture. Prof. D'Oove apulie of the recent action of the Board 3f Itegents In Instructing Prof. lenney to make drafts and plansof 0 new buliding for Murcntn and Library huliding and thought this wiis a move taward thie_realizatlon of the hope of the fricnds of an Art Department In the Univessity, At the close of the oratlon, fhe poct, Mr. David B, Taylor, Class of ‘37, wan' Introiinced, ond read A VERY I'INE I'ONM. Tlo opened ax follown: A gunl, hearty welcamn, deat eletors and Wrathers, 1e gives day hy the best of all mothers; Bho {n mtouty yoitng, and handsome, bat not'the lenst 1o mcct her dear children ngaln, « thai four thausand, her sons and her . e'en acrom the wide watvrn. With s famliy like fhat, and grarce forty next falt, I's 8 wouder fudeed TAL ate's JIving at ell. Tut ahe'n prospered and grown {u n marvelons way, For ahe hoan't ot a san whe Is old oF mach gray, The pock referred next to the seenes of thelr cols Jege-1ifo; passcd o aplendld encomlum on the. mer- viges of Prealdont Tappin; spoke of the services of President Haven, of Dr. Frieze, at_one time Acting Prostdent, gnd of the present Prerident, Dr. Angell. He then treated, ina humotoun way ut fiest, and then (n terms of comratulation, 1o admission of women to the Unlversity, the intro- \;lucllnu of Homeopathy, ete.; and closed as fol- owa: Troher bath till enother Centennial sear, May the suns and 1lie datighiters wiia then gather ere, Toalng pratrea 10 Mother while witdoin shinl] flow, oL orget U8 wiio miet liers & contury o |uu¥h wa Jeat fraim our lnbora. loni under thapod, * Sayuf us, ' Uiy foved Muttier, thelr Cowntry, “and Nay our Sather keep pence with the [natlon fn powers S18Y ey scand sbie By Kide i caeh dnrk, 1PyIaK Ronr May Hvl'!r HL ¥ toQether for ever And ave: ay oy f1vo bund 1 Lmnd Gl old Time fodes awy, MENT. Speciat Corresyondence af The Tribune, AsN Aunorn, Mich., June 28,—The Commence- ment-exserclxes of the thirty-sccond gradunting cluss of the Unlversity of Michigan, from the De- partment of Liternture, Sclence, and Arts, were held to-day ot University Hull, comirencing at 10 o'clocka. ;. The day was a very pleasant one, the hot wenther of the past week or two having been tempered by most acceptable aliowers on the dny and nfght prevlons, At the appoluted titae, a procesrlon was formed In front of the Law Bufld ing, and, headed by Prof. Spefl's Orchestra, of De- trolt, wended fts way to the hall. As the partles hecamao eeated, there might have heen seen upon the platform the President of the University, Dr. Jamer B, Angell; menibers of the varlons Facul- and of the Board of Regents; IHis Excellency the Governor of Michizan, Jokn J, Dagley; mem- bers of the State Board of Educatlon: Prof, Alex. ander Winchell, of Syracuse University, formerly of thls University; the Hon. Alpheus Felch, exe Governor of Michiiun; the ltev, J. D, Vierce, the fir«t Buperintendent of Publle Inatructinn in this THE CHICAGO state;, the Hon, Jawes Ashley, of Tolads, Q. 3 and many others, "Llie followlng ta TIE PROGRAMME of the Commencement-exereises: Musie~* Amszonen 3areh ™ Yrayer—it; Muste—0vertite *“Tha Unconsclow HUntyeraitas®, . R O A v Culureor, Ci ife, flenry sfontoc Camghell, Detroft ++e0:0rlaf Varlo. Decurl *Retenee and 1Tt Bryaot Walker, Jo—** ftapsodle Hongroite™. .\, o As Tershinck “Tlie Contifes of Belence ond Porivy, ™ Alice [:ivira Freeman, Otego, N, Y. **Comedy Among the Athienian 4 Clarles A, THlair, Jackwon “0eonge Ellog*.... Annfa Warden EKIf, Topeks, Kas. **Cninese Lmwmlgration, ™ Clurenee Shepard lirown, Milwaukes Murto- Pantaisfe Tagole ' ABOUE "y 1vose Kot T LIbIE AL the Centennial, " Tfownrd lurnham Stmith, Oinaha “4The Scholar In Folitic: ames Keeler iy, Milwankeo ¢ America tn Europe, Willla Shotwell Walkor, Findisy, 0. Musle—Arle far clarlonet. .Neawadho Conferrlug of degrecs. Musle—Waltzea ** Alig und Neua Zelt ".......C. Faust enediction. Harry M. Campbell, of Detrolt, the firat speaker, In a pléasune manner safd that the associations of a_ college-life ars those of & miniatare world. There the valunble lowonr wiich experienca only can teach confront one and he must meet them orfall, As the liand of the engincer controls his engine, seeining to endow the fnert mass of iron with life: o muat the young mauget his own beingg unier control, The ¢ollege-curriculum comnes far from stating atl the lesaons'to e learned ; some of thera nre self-determination, boldness of thonght, and ontside enlture aml refinement. 1t Ja ot the boalk-kuowledge which the alumnl will recount as of most worth to them when In college, but rather that there they grew from boya to men, Mr, Varlo, a Scandinavian by birth, traced in a very forethln matier the huatory of the Univeralty, sald the true unlversity Is that institutjon which deals with [deas, —which bas not for its pur- pone either discipline or the imparting of knowl- adce alone, lirgant Walker sald, on the subject of **Science and Hellzlon, " that the problem of the ageis to reconcile Falth with Philosophy. Are Sclence and Relglon noceanarlly antagoniatic, ‘or are they co- exfutent and co-eqital factors of the human mind? Science {s material knowledge Tteliglon [s spiritual knowledge. The two are separate, yet snpplo- thentary, “Canilict between them is Inposatb] The pride, prejudics, and gnorance of their adv cates are the causen of the controversy which now wastae thelf encrgies and impairs thelf naefulness. Ming Freeman safd that Science had come in, in thwe Jatter ages, and destroyed the anclent pres- tlge of Paelry. 'Tu theso tlnies, thers has been b 10 be no room for, tho Tay of th lyre. JHisto- rlans do not hesitata to asy that the perlod of the preat discoveries In thio seventeenth contury wus alko tat of (ha porlod f the most perfoect calture in Portry. Yt Poctry be studied; for far better ia it 1o know tho music of the spheres than the matho- matlca, Poetry In the firat and Jast of krowledy May tho dny hasten when our University shull teach tozetlier the trae and the esutiful, The omtion wax very well dellvered, and brought down starma of Applanee, Charle A, Diair, of Jackeon, tield up Aristopli- anes na the greateat oxponcent of Athenlan comedy. Viewed fn the Jight of hls own age, and with ro- gord o the mora) tendencles of ia plays ana whole, hie presents himaelf to all fair minds as an earneat, uprightcitizen, loyally striving for tho wel- fareof hia native land, ' Hin comedies comblng Ins wonderful degree biting aatire, and jovial, rollicks lng fnu, He was & complete master of his lun- gungo, and employed it a)l the way from the rongh and lnmodest to “the loftiest themes of the trazlc muss. Inapoliticat acnsc, the writings of Arlatoph- aues are lnvaluable: for tha abuscs of the Athe nian Govermnent gavo themn blrth, and thus was transmiited to posterity what would otherwise have Beon Yoat. It telling of Georga Ellot, Mie Ekin entd that, twenty years aio, Lord Sacaulyy announced that s #tar of the firat magnltudo in the Nterary aky had heen discovored, and that {his was (ieorgy Bt The speaker pald a worthy tribute to the literary ability of the subject of her address. Mr. Brown opposcd Chigese {mmlzration, be- cause the Chincse would nut acceps the neinciples of American citizenship. They proposed to trans. lunt th corpuption of’ Cuin tuto Amerien, ' Wu huve oflered then the right hand of fellowship, but they have rofured it Mr. 1oward Swith held that wo sutfered a na- tiona) disgracy ab Vieons, There are many thige by which wo could Mlirtrale onr materfal pros. perity, our success in Government, ond the statuy of our Judiclary and clergy; buttheyare ol more or Teas talnted with corruption, Let as exhibit at the Centennlu) an_Introspective spirlt, and a detsrml- nation that tho nuw cycle shull shatne the old. The two remaining addrerses wore well recolved, DEGHBEY WERB CONFERRED npon candidates us fallows: Pharmuceutical Cheme {81, 815 Civll Enginevr, 115 Hachelor of Kerence, Lf} Tachelor of Phlloaonhy, 14: Bachclor of Arts, ani boctorof Philorophy, 25 Toctor of Mudicine, 103 Doctor of Dental Surgery, 4, Degrees worw also conferred upon the following: iearge W, Allyn, 19 Slaster af Aris (in course) farcus akir, 170; Austin Barher, INid: Juinca Hlieh, (st Wilbur Luz, i Willlam Mattliews Carrler, 19 L Loyl Bariwur, inksy Willlam Meken, 1 er 3. Vrevisud, Jnio; damurl Chispol; aling’ Chalticrs Chrfaly, Clarlea iy, IHTLL Henty W, ey Gusa, 14737 Marshall Morsh 11 18743 Loyal g Latlan, (8711 32723 Addlson’ Montal, 19733 sherwond §. Peabudy? ingiy 1703 Wil apey. 1n73; tuart, 184 ‘lul‘ hoitiks Chaliwers Taglor Io: Willlam Drown Will< {ai T Thcodora 1. Wison, 16725 Roland Wood. hami, 873, Uliiter uf Science(in conrse)—Ealem Town Chapin, souy Jolity Minsoe arnoll, 19673 Jsmes DuFiiw 1 Joxepls Marvin Lowis, Feauk Heury Lyman, Incn; damen Willlans Vule, 1735 Willtan ifnry 1in° i, 1872, Sfirter af Science (on examination)~Caroliug Ireno Hublard, 1975, Jierof Philasophy (in course)=gamuel T, Doug: tud, 15735 Jaines Ridble Gotfe, 16745 Heebers Dwlghit Peiers, 17i; Martall Key Koaky 18737 L. Burely Bwift, 1470; Cyrus O, Tower, 187 At the close of the excrcises, the oficials of the Uuiversity, the alumnl, and ofher guvats, Wera io- vited to tho Law Lectuio-Rouin whera A SUMIMIUUUS DINNER hadheen prepared. About 400 reaponded to thisin. vitatlon: wnd, whe tho men several apocchics wero made, of thew being by Gov. 1 Elliott, Air. " Dl was fnlehed, 1l moat noteworthy Ly, ex-Gov, Blair, Col. seluw of” Boston, and tho 'Hev. Jichird Cordley of Fliut. ‘T'he ono thing brousht l" pinently befors the alumniand the guests was e need of a new ballding for the Library and Museum, ‘Thls ls almost demanded at once, av Luth the Library sud Musvdw are crowded luto too closu quarters; aud, beeldes, the present accom- wodations precludes any donations 10 the Museur of valualle works of A7t A large wuwber of rounloss bave been held, TRIBUNE: TRIDAY, thn rezalar one of the Alumnl, nise) tlhe clngowe oF DG, 1800, INT1, DN IKT: il an informal meeting of the ¢l An unusual interet was manifeated nlnmnl in thie sweifare of the Uniseraity. 1 may be ynuite safely predicted that nast year will e, mencanent-aay on Thurvag, ~thue ¢lving more time to the varlous meetings and reunlons, it CITICAGO UNIVERSITY, COMMEJGEMRNT EXERCISES, The Commencoment exercisea of the Chicago University were held at Farwell Hall yesterday, There wna quite a large audlence, and tha proceed. nus were very Intoresting, A) the nratione were marked with thought, and the manner of delivery wan much above the avernge, A band of mnele was In attendanca, and Olled In the gape with aps propriate selectlons, Among those who oecupfed seotaon theplatforin wees Bishop McLaren, one of the Keaenta of the University; Canon Knowles, hancellor Bucronghs, Preshient-clect Abernethy, Vice-Presldent Bcamnmon, Kecond Viee-Prestdent Carter, ‘Trustees Dr. Boone, Thomar IHoyne, Jtohert Tarrln, Charles J, ', R, A, Lovehand, w hinckiey, Dr. Cheney, 4, € Boaworth, B, O. Stone, J. F. Bonfleld, the Rev. Mr. lateh, Judge Trombull, Increase C. Roawarth, 0. W. Tlareett. Coneplcaour among the mony fond presenta was & very handwome hasket of Nowara Y!u-l:n(ml by the helia Chapter of the Delta Kappa psilon fraternlty to the meinbers of the Buciety in the gratnating ciaas, ‘The excrclace wercapened with prayer by Bishop Melaren, 3 Mr. 1L 1. Bosworth delivered the first orstion, The suhjeet waa ** Heforne and Their Heroes, ™ ‘I'he author had evidently devoted conslderable tmeto the preparation of hin sddress, §twas well-conceived, amd the dellvery, though o littla oo rapld, was efleetive, ‘The next oration, Eras of Critlciam," was given by Mr, A, J, Fisher. While admitting that other azen had exerclaed o pawerfn! Influence on mudern civilization, the speaker contended that the prescnt was the frue age of eriticlam, —of transition of publle opinions. Onr aue held in fusion the resufts of forner revolutions, which wonid he mobited into 8 broader zystem and more perfect ceards. "The aratlon wan quite a model uf ulile. and ita delivery left nothing to be desired, fr. Wiillam Dwighit Garduer folluwed with a ine oration vn **The New Pecrage.™ ‘Ihe present wan only n storchouse Tnto which the past had emptied ftacll, To forecast the fulure It was slmply necearaty to take Into consfderntion the In- fluences now at work,—the future was only the sumuning up of the past and present. The damand Tow was for honest, \lp‘l‘l‘;m men 1o enter the halla of tionzsear, t norgot the preseut era of corsup- tion, and establish the nation’s honor. Such men would constitula our new pecrage, Thin oration was well wrought out, awl was recelved favorably. ir. William: Granger. Hastingx nect. ook tho platform. 1le had wasted the mldnlght oll over “*John Stuart MIIL and was thercfore prepared to take the ground, and malutain It with ne Jinle abllity, that thut great philosopiier was to exerciso A potent influence on the coming elvifization, Mr. Hauntlngs expresses his thaughts In clear, forcible language, Mis oration wax tne of the most accept- ablc of the day. Ho was rewarded by & beautiful bonguict, +le’ Pagan Element [n Madern Sona* waa nest shown® by Hnrley Hradford Mitchefl. Thia was quite an ambitinun eflort, but Mr. Mitcliell was equn] to It He held that Chrintlanity wan the only clement Which coudd direct the idéas of our moiern 1ife, Christfanliy and song were antazo- nixtic,und f wis ominous that paganism had enfor- ed Inrgely Into the poetry of the laxt two centuries, Tho thrubbing heart of ‘all mankind was attacked Dy this invusion, and we should all make commun cantee against it! “Fhe next oration, ‘*Amerlcan Statesmanehip,* wun dellvered by Afr, Ttinnldo Lawaon Olds, AR a separate cluse, America had no statesmen if she porscsted indlvlduola worthy of thia distinction 1t wae by accident, and not an expected reault, The speuker suttrically reviewed our polltical system, holding that |t was 8 disgrace to the natiop. Our energlew were prortrated and tho great bulk of the peaple_atarving, The remedy for this state of things waxto train up a cluss of profosslonal states- wen and {he conferrlng of honary desrees on every man who hud falthnlly aerved bis ofiical terin. Mr, John Edwin Ihodes wua 1lie next orator. He chiasc for liis subject **Tha Mission of the dour- nalist.” The age of printing gave birth to an art #econd only in benedcenco to_ that which followed the advent of Chrietinnity. The newspaper sought the very heart of the world'a activity; It wus the medinm between the individual and moclety, Hitherto venality had heen the curse of tiv: profes: slon, butIn tlic future, fo be successtul In tho Drondest sensc, editors ' must make justice thele cardinal virtue, and_be Impervious to all selish principles. Thie oration waa loudly applanded, uand Mr, Rbodes recelved several handsome bou> quets at ity cluso. TIHE CONFERRING OF DEGRRES wns next on the programme. The mewbers of the graduuting cluan took thelr places on tho platform, and received their diplomas from Cliancellor Bur- roughs, as followa: Jrucheiors of Arta—Cornellus Cyrus Adams,John Barr, Alvert Judson” Fiaher, Willlaui Dwight Gardner, Lily Gra Wil Granger Nwiings, turley Nraiford Mitchell, Rinnldo Lawaon Uids, Jobn Edwin Ruodcs, Williain Rufus Roney, Tiuchelors of Phflotophy=Tlenry Increasn Bosworth, Owden 1evi Einery, Bamuel Carpenter Johnaton, Wills 1w Wait Orgond. ety o 7in oot orases DS, Thomae % G an: f arker, In, ‘Alired B, Burbank. e The graduating class wero then sddressed b{ Bishop McLarcn. The hoor, he sald, had M)L’nfn arrived which ind neryed them to the triale of the clash-room, 'They stood at the margin of a deep nen on which they were about to take "voyage, Bnd e wished them (odepoed, By this time they must have reached some deflniteconclusion, —have storel up rome axlomatic wisdom to guide thelr futuro career, They must all know by this time that thoroughness waa the only pathway to excellence, ‘There were mnua matterers In the wrorld who lald elaim to knowledge: but e urged e to remem- ber that a single tircek trazedy well mastered was corth a whole cnrriculum of Greek dashed through at race-horse apecd, 1f they were wise they would take the motto that success came of thoroughness, Peruup they iad been restive during the Mudy af ome branch of which they canld not see the atili- 4. In the practical triggle of life, bowerer, thone thinga wonld bs of sorvice, When they went out Into life, they should not forget to pend many hours 1n cultlvating thelr taste forartand lter- ature, Fractical knowledge was all very well in s way, but It would not supply the searning for somethiing higher which was experjenced in every humas breast.” e nxhorted them to carry ont the ides of symmetry in the development of thelr powers aud eapacitier, - Above all thinga, they should not forget i thelr etrugrle for earthly prentness that there was a higher existence beyand this globe. At tho close of this address s targe nwnber of honorary degrees_were conferred. Prominent among them were 1. 8, 10 Prot, Heale, head of the Agricultaral Depariment of tho Michizan Univer- mty, sud LL. Do Prof, John W, &loms, M. A., fofmer Professor of Latin at the University, and s present bead of the Natlonal Normal Behool of the Argentine ltepublic, “I'he excrcires closed with the benediction. TRUSTHES' MEETL At nmeeting of the Bontd of Trastees of the Chicago University yesterday forenvon, the Hon. Thomaa oyne atated that he had been notifled, an Mayor of Chiearo, by Mr. J. M. Gregory, Regent of ihe ilinols Indnairial University, now in Phila dolphis, that tho Margula do Itaclismbean, gratid. o of the Count of Chambord, and party, “would visit the city shortly. o (Mr. Hoyne) forwarded Mr. Gregory's communieation 1o Aciing-Mayor Col- vin, expecting that he would make the necessary Prebantions to seolve the visitura in 8 style bt Ing thetr rank, Me. Colvin, however, lind faken nootica of tho matier, and’ ho decmei it aivira- ble, for fear the Marouls should noz be sultably eu- teriained, 1o bring it buforo the Trustees of the Universlty, On motlon the following resolution was unant- monsly carrleds hat the Untvens| €. Trustoes, and F the Marquls Rochambenu and ago, through g tendes (o sent by thie unfal Eibibition, aud Mr. Hoyne, Tutend (o MIME b ity on o U dAT of July next, th hoapitalitics of the Universty, aud iereby Qelesate to e Presdoptelrct, $he Hun. 'Alonio Abiernethy, tio Cliancellor, Dr. lutroughs, 1r, Raiss, of the Escnlly, and J. ¥ Scampion, the Vice-I'resldent uf (b Board, tn coufunction with the Hon. Thomas Hoyn the diity of waking all wiliahie arradgctients o pru) erly recelve and Welcome b the ciy thiess distingui cdMtrunELr. ALUNNI DINNER, The Alumnl dluner wan held at the Brevoort Tlouse after the Commoncement exercl About 160 et down, and, as the arr; W fect amd the viands were well-couked an: ved, enjoyed themaetves hoartily. Alterthe removal uf the cluth complimentary siveches were in order, Mr. Peirce occupled this Chintr and first cadled spon Mr. Abernethy, the President-clect, who, In a fow well-cliosen noitencen, exprossed ls deepoense of the compliment paid ‘to him, and explalned tho reanons why b had declded to'accept the nositlun tondered hiin. ife had no douht that there wis a glorious futiire before the Univomily, and be would do all ho coull toward the educational ad- vaucement of the studenta, The Itev. Mr. Bunderinnd, 07, aleo made a briet apovch, expressiug his great confidenco 1n the new, Preafdans. Mr, Fernando Jones, In reaponss 1o a hearty in- vitation, atgted that b 'slecting (e, Abernettly ta Al the Prealdential chale they” were gulded mainly by the fact that fis was a member of the Alumnl, hey had no donbt that he would A the pusition ‘)‘I“h credit to himeolt and sdyantage to his Alwa ater, ‘T'lio Prestdent then introdncod the subject of the Alumn) eudowinent, anid explained the Feport tie Committeo had vude, and which was concurred in 1!; luk(xzulmlhwu meeting. 1lu ronewed his nuto for 000, A number of the gontlemon prescnt aleo renewed thelr Aub:ulptlnnl and seyeral new subacriptions were made. Thi suclal gatboring was brought to a close about 8y m. X recention wan given in the parlors of tho Uni- versity at 8 o'clock, and was largcly attonded, ALUNNI ABHOCIATION, A mecting of the Alumnl Axsoclation was held at the rooms of (he a, 77 South Clark wtrcet, 11 the oV . William L. Peirce, fu the ahsence of the Presldent, was elected Chatruian, There was & large atteudancy, M . Wheeler, Bouleld, and Bgbort were nr- pointed & cominftiee to nomiuate oficers for the guauing year. After a briof usenco thoy preseuted the following report: President—W. l'tlm, ‘64 clnsa, 'ice: President~Jamea Goudiay, "63, cretary—. D Davidsos, 73, urer—A. J, Flshor, ‘76, Graior—d. ¥, Niniield; ultecnste, C. A, Baowden, Juper—D. P Butler: Alleruste, Georde C. Jughavi. Tuti=E. O, Taylor ‘08 alteraate, C. & Wendvrwn, 0. ‘Thoe seport was unanimously concorred ta, The followlng gentlvmen were sppolutud the Exe JUNE 30, 3 ecntlve Commitien and 11, 1. Borwarth, Mr. F. W. Peck, Proaldent of the Committee in chirge af e proposst Alnmn! Endowment Fund, revorted et the projesy had fajlml, ¥l Cr mittee reconumended (hat e potes be mrr 0 their issuers, the Inte scriptions cancrleds t 16 TENBW 07 Incrinse 1 Hptione and that new nows, hearing date of July, 1570, 10 maturo In ten years, be Isfued, bearlng § par cent intereat, noanterert 1o bo payadle until the whole amount In mubacribed. 5 Tie matter was discysaed at leneth, and’the res POrLot the Commitioe wan ultimately sduptud. Prof. O)eon vean appolntedto fill 8 vacancy on (ha Camuitu Mz, J, F, Donflcld offered the following, which was unanbmously passed: Ziewderd, That we learn with prido the wiss and come plliitary nctlvaaf our Brantof Tritecs in cailine e Presbleney of the Univeraity our worthy snd highs Tyseetavined fellow-aluinnng, A Auernethy. Feeanlrsd, THAUwR teniler io biim, &8 a0 Association Wt Idunily, onr warmest ad feat support in this field of 1ifs Iahors. aud that, from nur Knowirdg 6F e uat mtcareses ne oy educator, we have the falleg confldvuce In his complete success 88 Prasident of his o our Alna Mater, The Exeentive Commitlee for ohtalning the new Alumnl fund was then sclected. It conwists of Mesers, W, L. Peprce, F. W. Peck, the Rev. ex Goodman, f . F, Bonfleld, the Rtev. J. 7 ¢ land, Frot. Oleon. George Sutherland, N, C. Wheeler, Prof, Edward btearns, T 8. Egvert, Frof, W, W, Fverts, Jr, . amount ralsed duriug tho efening was 2. A, Snowilen, ne The Aseociatlon then ajourned. THE RECEPTION, Tho Prestdent's reception ot the Tnivereit terdiy evening, wnw nnnaually well attew wan matrong proof of the derp Intercet generully taken In tho welfare of the (nstitution, 8T, NAVIER'S, COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES. The twenty-ninth annual Commencement of 8t Xavier's Academy \ovk piace yestorday afiernoon at the building, corner Wabaah avenue and Twens ty-ninth etrect. The etidy-hall was beautifally decorated with flowets, which gase 1t 8 very charming sppearance, Among the notables pres- ent were Dlshop ulr{ and about twenty-five clers gymen, A conedderable number of paintings wera exhiblied, smong the most meritorious heing & warine sketcls by Mr. Clagburgh, two pleces by Garrio Kxeell and orina 1fuoley, and » crayon by Fannle Dillon, A beautiful wax crons by Misy M. A. Farrell aleo attracted sttentlon. The pro- Aramumo of exercincs was us follows: Jubel Overturs, Mlrses Tourlelot, Weadley, I'Ki_"n Daridson, Duplisstes, Jlow, Waahing , and salotatory, Mim L, Cook: instrinental duet, with cb Miwsen Toustelot and I\‘P.ndl!',"‘ SR Thysel **Figaro,” Inatrumental trl T eraay, M 1. Ity Stinkin Durttinia, Din, How,. 1. Poltrasy 1t Huoiey: Claghureh, TIT' M. Poltras, Cook, Duckley, ‘Tleruos, AL Tirven: Towly ak yi reading, 5 £ 3 suie Shontd Flow," Mises Moare and Buntifne and Shadow. " chea) 1. itz Mifanolla Starcti, Stice Matione ary, 1Hakine, I Serey Wirin, and Noona; *The Amnel Moo ) rraay. tean Cenieunty, i “a ey Goarint DeConcert. Mistes Tunfielut, Weadie VHdsan, And on Conly Dirpltaisas vocal uet, M B b". ‘1" ‘nu];[ i p,“}! mhoney, sterling. e Afirra, Sinecs Soon yburgli: ** Snehiie nid Simlo s quasitte, Mibeslears, Coyl lee Hackley, Thunipeo: whrldie: LAt eseny, Mine Ennnie Diilon: Inatrumentsi duet, Miscs Epivcr and eans chorua dunlem: ** lilehte of La, Fongletownr” ise i leny Mis 1he Woplbint's Sang. 4 Clayharahs +Marle Stuart,” Geeinan, M. Behosmhofien; Cultf tare, Mises Buckicy, dMarcey, Mannnhey, Cleary, Webh, Tleruey, Belibeahomtei, snd 6" Hoole! g fie! , Mixa L. Cluyhurgh; vals odictory, Miss MAry Tivan: choris, yofing ludien, A Jarge numiber of prizes were awarded, the mast prominent being the fallowing: Gold inedal for reading, to Mies Mary Green: the geafuate meilal, to Mis« Mars Ryan: gobt medal for aendemic hon- ora, to Mirs 'y Ryan; d medal for Chelstian dactrine, 1o Misa Johanna M. Dorney; pold mueda) for orthography, 2o Mis Knte Conley? pold medn] for excelionce In deportment. to Miss Ollve TifT; dilvetmedels to eleven members of te Seciof Cluss. BELOIT COLLEGTE. WEDNRSDAY'S GRADUATION EXCRCISRS. Special Dispatch to The Tribune, Trior, Wis,, dune 28, ~Beloit Collcse to-day graduated nine young men, who promlse to do honor to thefr Alma Mater, whichalready nnmbers many eminent names among tantumnt, The pre: ent eraduating-class are Iranc Buckerldge, of Pop- J. Dyas, of Sandwich, 1. ; F, 1, f Beloft; E. M. HI, of Befoit: J., F, of Genewrey W, B. Hudbard, of Pecaton- C, D, Merrill, of Belolt; 1t B, Rlves, of nd A, R. Sprague, of Belolt. Mr. Home delivered the valedictory, Afr. Riwzs the ealntato Mr. Hill the philorophical ormtion, and Merrill puem. The masters® oratlon waa delivered i ), Swezey, of 187 An unn large number of claases were represented af the Alumnl dioner, the claws of 1506 being peesent in unnsusl force with wives and children. Horace White, of Chicazn, has been chosen Alumni orator fornest year, Another alumnis, the lter, Heary T, Ttore, of Milwsukee, hon been elected Trustee of the college, making three alumnl now un the Board, The Presbyterian churches have also been given another repreacntative In the management of the colleve by the election of the Hev. dokn Mc- Lean, of this city, as Trustee, - ———— THE CRISIS OF 1673, — Ap Aocount and Review of It and Xts Couses by Horaco Whitey New York World, In the enrrent number of the Far[nl?hlly (k0 calied becatne it {8 publiened wonthly),” Mr, Tlorace White, a journalist well known in Awerlea a8 shie Iate editor'of Tug Cutcavo Twiwusy, and A keen thinker and vicorous writer npon all questions concerning the tarkiT or the currency, hus &n interesting article on ** The Financial Crlsls 1n Ametien” (& fn, e tulnks, o bumillating re- Hectlon that the Anglo-Saxon race cannot aub. rist throngh a generution without twice or thrice breaking into o dienstrons Gnanclal and commer- clal atupede, Duviiees-men look for n crisls cevery ten years, and every twenty years the viwi atluninclides Ameries an well, GUt notwithatami iz the apparent regulority of the vialtation, th apprarunce of prosyerity mmedlately precidin: the panic s so decelifal, and the avidity of trade and upward movement of prlees are ro exhilarating, that the toFnado alwaya ida va with all eail spre.i, thie porta open, and the crew usleep. THE COURNE OF THE I'ANIC. The phenomenn antecedent o the crisly of 1871 were, rays Mr. White, the usuul anes,—a rire of prices, great prowperiiy, Into profita. high wng Crow thoroughfarea, luree lmportations, a ruj wuy mania, expanded credita, over-truding, over- tuflding, and Bigh Wving, Sept, 17 the Sew York & 0n Midland Ratlrosd Company failed and #hook the etock market, the failure being fullowed Dy thiroe anccesive ahucks, 03 on the 18y Jay Cooke & Co. went_down, on the 10tk Fisk & Hatch, and on the 20th the Unlon Trust Company. On the 23 Henry Clewa & Co. nuspended, and It wun resolved 1o Jssue Clearing-Tloure certliieates, a device of which Mr. White eays that, thuugh 1t w peverhefore resorted to as a ‘means of ballastiny commerce nzalnat tlie teniparary effocts of & panic, it muerits the attentlon of economists, for, whily from a legal point of view It amounted to a suspenslon” of all the banke, it notably chocked the prevalling terror. ' On fho H4th the banks ceased piying large ehecks at thelc counters, unlcss requited for the payment of wagea to operatives, but certifed them ++gaod through the Clearinz-Tlonse.™ Shortly af- ter o similar policy was ndopted ln” every cliy but Chicago, to which (shat eity beiug the centre of tho grain trude, and the thme the middle of the crop-moving eeaean) carrency fowed very rapldly, There was u run_at_Chicago, and five banks au; pended, three of which soon reaumed bnsfpe On tho 26t carrency attained a premium of frow toa et but (e pro There was abaol aniywhero. On the 30th the cmployers In the man- afacturing districts begun discharglng their oper- utives or putting thew on holl thne, Next day the New York Stack Exchange opened dtn doors, the grembun on currency fellto 1 per e Aisappearcd entirely b end of the on the 10th e of ups. and-downa [0 the Stock % that turge holders, who were nat wery muklng deaperaty efforta to restore prices to some- thing near the old sigures. Pluctuations of 10 per cent fn o dlngle day in some clavscs of wecuritios wero nol uncommon, Somo failures took place among theso vperators mora fmportant than any that hiad been anueunced i Beptember. On thy 18t the Spragucs, the preat Rhode I manu- tacturers, falled with Jiabilitics of §14,000,000, Tlis was the largest mercantile fallure of the year, e price of gold (rayuble i groenbacks) bl e quite steady ‘8t 1117te 1L before the panic. It K slowly to 1011 on the 7th of Nuvember (the since the Wur), from which polnt it rose to 1104 In Decomber, In INT1 thery were fn the United States 2,635 mercantile fullures for & 252,000 1 1872, 4,008 for §121,050, 000 {n 18T, 5,183 for $22K, 430,000 u 1KTH, b.K10 for £1° 283,000 0 1875, 7, 740 for § 03, 60, 000; and |n tho first quaricr of 1870, 2,800 for §H, 000, 000, Jan. I, 1874, there were rudl to the amount of $78I) 307,005, of which 52, - 400,000 wery beld abrogd. Of this snm there were In default prior to Sept. 20, 1K7H, E220,425, 100, SHGNS PRECEDING THEK CRISIS, To what wus the crlxbs owing? The War had vx- hibited the phenomenon of great prosperity coine cident with waste aud destruction, and durlng the next four years the country was falrly prosperous. In 1860 the opeuing uf the Pacific Hallway was acceyted a8 the signal for o yenvral ra of upeculu- tlon. Heal estate advanced fu price; the fow of {mulgration was qulckencd by appeehensions of & Buropean wars land-xrants ween freely given, aml a raileond mania beesn, with the usual conse- quences of rascality and dlsuster at home und abroud, General speculation spread on all sides; fmports and exporle fucreascd rapldly, and the Toans and discoitnts of the bauke mounted up aix simea wiore rapldly than the deposits. Flhie loun market had heen extremely capriciuge for 8 yoar or (o beforo thy pamc, but thers was an syerage tiso fu the rute of fatereat, culmlnating ju the sutumn of 1872, from which period it grada- slly fell till the spring of 1873, when it suvalu commuenced rising and continucd rising till Sep- tember, when it weat out of slght completely, ‘The deposite in all the National Lanks In InG2 were LY, 000,000, rud 572, 000, D005 15 THTS th M) snd §940, 000,000, I New York Cig thy deposits fell Ot during the same perlud frou E117, 000, 00 10 $111, 000,060, tho foans sud div Counts mounted from ' $175, 001,000 ta $100,000, - @0V, This expauson of bunk luaus is & Boted Londs in defanie non of periods antecedent to commercial »o much ao that one mighit almost ventnrg tn cstimate the nearaces of d celals by camparlng Labien af Hflerent periors. CREDIT AN INOREDIENT OF CRISES, The ciement of credit 13 an essential (ngredient of afinancial crinis. However gress the destruc- tion of capital tay be ot any tlnic, there can ba no Fuch thing nn feyalsion If nobody fain debt. Thiere mny he A famine, but thers can ba no criala AT nohody owes moro than he €an pny. 1 therefora nfler this definitinon: A financial crisia conaista of an andue sccamulntion of debta based npon exa- gerated and fancitul bivan of the valus of propers ty, nsually arcompanien by the destrnctionand 0w of capitai, and 1ho papid conversion of ciren- Iating Into fixed capital. When 1 began to examine the crinis of 1471 had the impresvion that there had been a conrlderable diminution af circaloting eapital, owinig to the rallwny and public And pri< vato bailding imanin, the great tires, and the manls fest dncrumse of expenditures among a1l clanses for priof to_the panic: but when 1 came to bice of the bavk deposita | foand that 1 was_mistaken. From 1808 to Sept. 12, 187 the Natlunal Bank = deposita had incrensed A48, 000,000, but the Toane hod increaned fn the same time 354,000,000, The capitul during this period had beenand continued to be practically o fixed guantity. Only the surplos produced vaeh car, added to what was borrowed from abroad, ad been inveated in ratlwaya, bulliings, sud vther fixed propery: but the agiregate amoint of debt waensteadily increarine quantity, growing more tap-heavy each year, until, like an inverted pyea- i, & vary allghit Tash oF gist of wand wonld tip W in York City, Whero tho avajanche of ency first began to” move, the indeotedners cawed during 1874 by the' saine showing, 3 percent, while the nvaiiale eaphtal decreased percent. The failure of Jay Cooke & Co. did not produce the panic in any other way than this—that L dirclozed (o the public the pre.cxiating fact that the ol iean was 160 preat 10 be pald ont of capital. When the facta were actually disclosed In September, 1873, every Duriness man was quick o recognize their fmport anud al) dutchied slmuitancously st the means of payment. This clutching constituted the panfe. TULE SEA APTER THE STORM. Monetary janics are alwaya of short duration, A fow montlin_ atter the pasic of 1873 wmoney was plentifol in all the busincss centrer, and borrowers with goud collaterale could get ald they winted at 4 pereent but the Celwis—the Nemesis of the vivlat- ed laws of commerce~was takinz vengeance fn all directions pwn, o gullty and the jonorent, A panic ix naually deacribed naa want of confidenee, with the fmplication that [f people would only nve contidence burlucss would settle down Into ite che. wmary channel, And eo it would, {€ the want of confidence were not well founded. Dut If the deck-lond of liabilitics s really too great for the Lallast of capital, the ceaft will turn aver, aud nu proclamation’ of confidence ean tay It up; nor can any issne of bank nutes o Government nutes prop it up. The deficleniey in & deficlency not of promises to pay, bt of the meana of puy- ment. What followed the panic, and what con- tinues ta thie day, Is the painful and Imposaible effort \» pay s very inrge amount of indebteds ness with o reiaiively emall - amonnt of capital. The portion which connotbe padd muat be wponged out by the bankraptey courts or by compromise. Mennwhile, ns taifway estension 00 Inria balidlng uperations have Cops to & pouee, and as uearly all persons are deprived of some oartof thelr nsnal and expected lncome, and sre }ur:cfl to veonomize I Abeir expenditares, we liave the phenvmenon of a glut In the market, and o nt o tine when, aslias been shown, there §s Iy 8 deficlency of commodities (0 pay ezisting A with, The apparcnt anomaly would disap- e 1f the holders ‘of the surplus commoditics Jould give them to the bsnkmpt debiors to oy o0 *helr Ualilities withis for consumption would then revive, The duration of the hard times de. usuds for the mo+t part, ou-the percentage that barkrupt estates ore ableto pay, and on the ex- lw«\mmmw of the payment, To seeortaln what k requisite to restare @ meral prosperity in o com- plicated problem, sl 8 sume trades are depressed wore than others, wheat-growing = being fairly prorpesoue, while | lon-smelting u m»flr{y Drosirate. Pree-Trads would Jesscn the cost of production uy giving manu- facturees cheajer materlols, - and would thereby open new markets to certaln articles, It is, thereture, fuegested aa one step, and an fm- purctant oue, out of the present slonsh, The cur- Fency hue ween purporely lefont of view [n dis- cussfug the tnancial crlsis, becanse it could have had nothing o do with it escept {n one or two L cither in dimluishing the amount of cir- uliting capital, of by Incressing the amount of indubtednosa based thercon, Some persons con- tend that the use of an irredeetuablo crrency docs stimulate the creation of debts, That it should do #o while the curreney I expanding—that js, while it 18 depreciating—can be canlly understoud, since it offers to rpeculators the opportunity af pocket- ing the difference between It value to-day and {ts valuc ot & futare time, but that it should tend 1o this reault Inany_ great d stationary, | cannot percefve. The practicsl exemptlon of Franca from the fnanctn) exjéca which perindically ailet Americas England, Germany, and the Scandinavian coun- triex, deverves ong attentlon. The reason is rim- ply that the Frenchmap is vory little addicted to watne (n debt, very little inclied to speculate, and sery much given to hoarding his zalns. Ferhape fe does nof et rich quite 0’ fast us hix neighbor acroms the Cnapnel, but on the other hani he keepe what he gete, and generally eacapes those terrible financial crashes that smitethe Teutonleand Anglo- Saxon countries wwith anch clockwork regnlarity, It e an cucouraging slgn of the timea that the French people sre beginning to aporeciate thelr hizh po- #ition In the world of indnstry and_commerce, and 10 place thrift, fu which they” indubitably excel, in the balance against military prowess, in which they can no tanger clatw pro-eminence. THEZ PART OF THE BANKR. Much stress in latd by some writers on (he agency of bonks In bringing on Ananclal crises by an undue expnision of oans oF uote cireulution. or both, Perhaps we Liave 8 rlght to expect that bankers will e wiser thun other in discerning the appeoach of these catastrophes, and more prudent in applying the brakes 1o prevent them, " But, s fact, they 1ive in the esme atmosplicre a8 othier peoplo, ani when it beeones rurcharzed with the oxswen of high prices, larce profits, active wpeculation, and B efnuise’ proancrity, ihey beome exhiiaiated with tne reat and make farge foans, 1t is the high prices, the tarve pr the spectlation, and tho Appeatance of properity that bring on bank expan- s, It 16 not bank expanelou that cauece the izl prices, the gpeculution, ete. It s not in” the power of bauks to cxpand efther tiefr lusus or thelr note cirenlution, ex- cept in rerponse 1o B pre-existing ouf. side demand. Affer every great crisia the banka are ficrcely denounced for thefr excerslve expan- elon, O rather, they ace et denounced for nat cxpaniding mure, and then for having expandvd so mueh previosly, Both aceusntions are mafnly une ust. The ficld of employment for copital fn Ainerl. ea (s atill 8 targe one, but it {a not so larze s for. metly. Every yenr witnesses n nearer appronch of popnlatiun 10 ‘the urid plaine of the Weat. The tallway development of the country in a lung wuy fn advance of popalation at present,and that ontlet for warplus earnings 1a closed for a consideruble time. 'What direction the competition of capital will take next s not eertaln, but it is more likely to be [u the way of Free Trade and foreign com- nierce than any other. Jieeumption of apecle pay mente can bo eifected at any time when there {sa real urpose und deefre on tho part of the political mafor- ty o accomplish it 1t ean bedone either by funding tho surplus greenbacks In su interest-bearlug boud, or Ly applying o portion of the public rev. cnued 10 the redemption and cancellation of such snrplus, or (which is the most awkward and ex- peuslvs tode) by accumlating u mass of gold in the Treasucy to redeem them over the counter, Auny mude which msy be adopted Implies a con. traction of the currency to thg volume noeded for that portion of the country's business in which cur- teuey da actually used, viz.: haud-moucy or pocket-inoney as distinzulshied from- bank-funda. auch (gnorance, demapogiem. and uncnliehte oned selishness aro enlisted Inthis batile of Gog and Mugog, that sume stemn use of cxecutive or udfclaf puscar tay be necensary to put un ond to t: for there fa milschlef enough hidden in it to divide the ['nlon snd ravolutionize the comporncnt narts, That thy greenback fv & pael-dae note, 8 defsulted L 0. ., and every rulssuo of it, afier it s been taken 1n for taxes; an Megal uct as well as o shameful one, 1s perfectly cler to lawyors as well a8 economixts. —————— Current Cotna Somewhat Defaced, Belyravia, When Prince Hal, in” vne of his memorable fenciug bouts with Sir John Talstall, quotes verse of King Sulomon's Proverhs, his fat udve sury complinicnts bim upon possessing, among lils"other royal glfta and graces, that of @ ftera- tion with asf emphusts.’? Lawn not sure that all hls princely virtueahiave desconded to these lat- ter —in fuct, I most devoutly wish that they baud done so—but this pertieatur chanwteristic of “ [terutlon uppears to pie o he o poticable feature of the present ern. There are o certain quantity, and & very large quantity, of prop- erty "' quotations nfioat upon the world, which arc pretty sure to make thele sppearance, Soie or others of them, In every printed sheet which comes lnto ane's hawds, utnl to be beard nal- most every speceh that §s made, And, from the favurmacy with whivh some of these are Jterated nd relterated, 1t appesrs no Tuss certatn thut they not been dug out of the ming of those whouse them, but lave passed from hund to band as current coliy, without much susplelon, or perbiaps care, on the part of the users, us to whose lmage sud superscription they bear. The consequence {5 that the naccurracy has growts to be part und pareel of the very casence of the quotation, beyond the hope or posstbility Of BEYUrulics Or Correcth Mr. Thackeray de- ecrllwa sowe uld Lady who lius Shakspeare's plays reud’to hier every nighe; which works, adds thaf een observer, she sall she Uked, e diduity” these wounds appear to describe very nearly the Idioeyncrasy of the omd peopls who use and misitze the passugus in quc-llun‘ Inusmuch as al- most all those “current colng* issug trom that rich uu:«.«nr{. Auny Haudbood of Quotations tncontestably proves the fuct that wo author i England 15 quuted une-twentieth \unlud wiuch ua Shiak- spuare, and thut of all his \J'Lx)'n “ Humlet In ufinitley the muost used, A @ tattee of sta- tistles, Liind thut there are sume one humired and twensy quotations from © Hamiet" alone which are wyrn iterlly threadbare with con- statit and burd use; so uch 80, lndeed, bs this the case, that they sy be suld to have hecome alimost aninuch the symbols of certalu things us the very wonds of the luuguage itself, Not any one of the quotations from € Hamlet " leads, 1 think, a harder 1{fo than the funous und sorely abused “11ts that Aesh 18 heir to,”” whichappears searcely ever to enjoy ono day's, perhupa one zreg while the volume i3 hour's rest: and yot, strango to any, tlo wonls are not in slmknp’uurn at nHanr nn&vhem clae, cept n8 & quotation. The wonls watended to be cited aro of courae taken from the world-re- nowned soliloquy—which, as Hartley Colerldza truly says, "' hias been murdered by h{s own celo- brus' '—~whero Jfamlet coumerates, among the . burdens of humanity. The thousand natnral shocks ‘That fiesh [a holr to} the word “{(1s ! not occurring at all In the sage; and the word “shocks’ being reqnm h{ the whnle context of the snliloquy, which )‘m(.urcu 1ifo ns n prssage through an opposing 0st, and enumerates with sucli surpassing elo- ucnce nnd such marvelous pathos the varfous “ishocks " surtained by tho combatant in that uncr\unl strugele. Nevertheless, “illa' It ts, and *{Hs * {twill doubtless remain. The falsg wond {8 too deeply footed In the natlonal mind and heart Lo leavéachance for the trinone, and, 1ike the ventriloqulst 1ol Esop, will nerml:‘y re« taln possesslon of thefleld, letthereal pigsqueals 80 naturally, SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH. Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasat passagges, discharge falling Intothe throat, sotne- | thines brofuse,watery, acrid, thick, snd tenaclons mucous, purulent, muco-purulent, bloody, putrid, offensive, cte. In others, a dryness, dry, watery, weak, or Inflamed eyes, dnging in cars, denfness, hawking and coughing to clear the throat, uleerations, scabs from ulcers, voico altered, nasal twang, offcnsive breath, Impnired rmell and taste, dizziness, mental depression, tickling congh, ete. Ooly a few of the above symptoms are likely Lo Le present lu any casc at oue tim, When applied with Dr. Pleree’s Nasal Douche, and accompanled with Dr, Plerce’s Golden Medi- cal Discovery as constitutfoual treatment, Dr. Sagre's Catarrh Remedy produces perfoct cures of the warst caces of Catarrh and Ozwna of many years* standing. This thorough course ot medleation constitucs the only selentlfic, ratlonal, eafe, and successful manner of treating this odious Hiscase that haa ever been offercd to the afllcted. ADELPII THEATRE. This Friday evening. Junc 30, brilliant Comia Opery, Intensely romuntic firama, joyous, senan- tinna) Ol Offentach’s Brilliant ‘Comle Opera, restoring all the munie, PRINA DONNA OF A NIGHT. FULL CHORUS aud euremble. Adab Ticumond's #peclal version of Boucleault's ARRAI-NA-POGUE, with n cxceptionalty stronz caet. A brililant Olfa, Willinm Tloeruce Dent, 1evine Lotenzo, Monday. July 3—BAD DICK v Ladies” Night. Yopular prices. HOOLEY'S THEATRE, MAGTIRE & HAVERLY. WILL'E, CILAPMA; FECOND WEER OF SHIOOK & PALMER'S UNION SQUARE THEATRE €0. MONDAY EVED vival of the NG, Juue 2, 1876, grand re- DRPHANS. WITH AN UNPARALLELED CAST. Matinoca WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY, McVICKER'S THEATRE, SIX NIGHTS AND ONE MATINER ONLY, ATIMEEL. ATIMER! cntree, nfter heemost brflilant Enropean trinmph, le, MARIEAIMEE, the Queen of Opers Houtles WRether with her hew FRENBH OPERA BOUTFE CO. Monday, July @& st productfon In Chicaro of tho ariginal ¥ orsinn of OMfcnliachi's tnast popuiar opera, LA JOLIE PARFUMEUSE, Tacslayola Vie Parideane. | Wednouday \adame 1 Aggot. Thirday—Girofle-Girofia, Friday—=Benent uf Atiec, dataniay—only Almee Matlnee. Pojular [ices, Adiitasion, 811 lrcacrved Roatn €1.60; Gaie 13, 0%, Box Lfiice opend 1his morniag. THE_COLISEDM, Monday. June 260, and durlug the woek, week of the ORIGINAL TENNESSEE SINGERS, Mirs Adrichoe Girey, Gu Lung and \Willianw, Goo, Wond of the VAIDIS SISTERS, ¢ Mccaln, He-engagement All the ol favorites re- tained. Every ovening at 8,and Sunday afieruoon atd, Admi {n. 25 eenta, 4 WoOoD*S MUSEUM. Friday Matinee—LOVE IN LIVERY. and RURAL SIM{ TV, Evenine—ORPHAN GENEVIE nd CHICAGO 1 ABTEA Muiiiay, EN BISTERS, with new acenery and mre! FRUIT JARS FRUITJARS Masan's Quarts $1.50 per dozen, At FICHSON'S, 113 East Madison-st. OCEAN STEAMSIHI l’s‘; ANCHOR LINE U, S, MAIL STEAMER New York and Glaagow: ETUIOPIA, July 1, noon | DOLICTA, dalv 15, 11 a.m VICTOULA, July 4,9 p m | ALSATIA July 5 S 'm ANGLIA, uty A pom. TUTORA, oty 22, 2 p. m Kew York to Glaskow, Liverpool, London, o Londnhderry. Cablus, £63 o Bk, atcording 10 accommodations. }ixfll ralon lll:k!';‘l At redoced rat n crmivdlay Atleerage, L ClrTent raten. 165, 1 Washington-at, STAR BALL LINE, TNITED STATES & NIEAZI L MATL STEAMSIIIPS. iy from Watson's Wiiarf. Birooklyn, N, 1. Pernambuco, Batta, aud Rtio Jaceifo, calilig Purto JHco, NELLIE MARTIN, 3.uoJ tons. aturday, July 8 JOTN BRAMALL, . % Aug.— }‘:l!!;h v»mu-nammm! 'n“t‘ fll!l-;‘)l,n.lm Dy 2 T Trehius and baeate, nt rediiced Thten, apply ta e B U & GO Aot o4 Pluc-at., New York, North German Lloyd. The steamers of this Company will #all every Satur« dar Gedne Brenien THers oo uf THIr-A.. Tloboken: Tiutes of passage~Frum New York io outhamplon, Jondon, Havre, and linemuen, Airst cabin, $100; Kfcune cnbin, £, n,\‘llru' 850 cumenct. _Foi frelgut GF paseage apply 1o ., pramMEATN 2 Bowling Srara, Sew York, ONLY DIREC E T0 FIRANCK.~The Geacral Transatlantio Comupany’s Matl Neaniers beiween New York and Havre, cailing a3 Plybiauih (G, D) for tha Inudiug of passcugers. 1he Apendid veasels o this fa- surite Toule for thie Continent (cabing proided with eleciele bells) will sali from Pier No. 43, North Tilyer, LABRADOR, Bangiler, Sattrday, July 1, | ¢ A, Fraagel, saturiay, July s, p. u g AMERIGUE, Coieolr, Satutiag, dily 151 & in Yrieo ot tussnsn 1o "gold (ficluding” wine) - First cabin, 1o Bl wocarding to ceommodationi 724 third caldn. 640, Tieturn tokets w res d rates, icerage. §20, with surertor accomni. 1ous, ducluding wine, bedding, sud uicurtls withont gaten clarge. bleauies warked thus & do ot carr steerage pasiengers, - LOUIS De A e R idiph, Agent for Ciilcazo. Grent Westorn Steamship Line, From New York to Bristo) (Eugland) direct. CORNY, Stampe; BOMEISET, Wosten ‘abln puasage, $70: Bacursion tiekets, 2 A\lxnly to Wil eutral Radroad. July certiicates, s 67 Clark-ak., Michizu EDUCATIONAL. B ST. MARY’S HALL, FARIDAULT, MINN, The RL Mo, 1L, B, WINPPLE, D. I, Bector. Miss , DARLINGTON, Principal, Is onder the personal siupervision of the Hishop, with Cen eAperiened (oachers 1L GMCTE gnperior wd\Alitagea for education, with an Inyigorsting aod healthy cils The eleventh year will lu THURSDAY, N, rl!l regiaters, with full delalls, ad- RECTOR. S’ D ANSTITUTE. FAMILY SCHOOL FOI T D e T AT Ak o end for cireular. BEEICAICHL T Ny Yoo MILITARY ACADENY Opeus Sept, 14, (870} Sralaeut tnatractors riiog pupttss gyinpratimg 0 - ___SUMMER RESORTS, MENASHA, WIS. Bruce’s National Hotel, For fishing. boating, drives, and sporting thero I8 no place fh the State that excels Menasha and ity aurtoundings. Meoasha Is advautageously aituated tho foot uf” Winnebago' Lake, on the Big ¥ox River, withia an eaty ride of Mi{lwaukeo. ‘L'l Na- tlons) s 0ne Of tlie best hotels in tha jutorior, Hons s g o e e e e ¥ Haven, Coun. LEGAL, 8 L% Ol CoMMIBULLER OF CUBRANCY, OrTIeR o mivato, . £ Moy e, | INOTICE ts iereby glred to o) Porsons who mag have iaime agaimat o ationsl Bauk o Chi I IBa1 tls Lhin Presanted o Natban (. %'0 b, lecel 0l Nmflhrrwl.i‘l—:&: {utires thoaihia troia Wia daiey ar' ey whi bo dlact: texsds: (B} Camptiullarai tie Lurrealy,