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il ’ THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 13, 1876 % orate demand and ruled stendy. Bhoep wera | for blood, and aro anxious to proclaim a war, 2 @r’i’hun c firm at Monday's prices. TLast Saturdny | may safely wait until Congress hns got < “¥/% & | evening there wna in store in this city 2,950,- S in the prosont erisin. Hao should have beon more moderata nnd not so ensmly have sur- rondered himself to the warhike importuni. tics of Lres aud RopmvsoN. We nro not sur- prised At tho course of Lrzn. The Gonoral is a warrior, Ho hns served his country in many n well-fought offics, Ia has written morp belligoront lettora and mnnifestoes ovon than Gen. Scorr. Whenever an —— Socrotary of tho Treasury to fand green-. | of the kind, and thereis an ond of that mat- | ty. backs into 4 por cent honds running not lasa | ter, Tho Government is merely tho reflec- mh:‘oi w:;zfllu‘: l:;im #ervant paid a cortain than forty yenrs, tho procoss of funding fo | tion of tha sentiment of tha people, and tha | which is to ste that meertnln things, smony ba confined within such limits ng diseration | pooplo aro not ndvoenting and inslsting on | wigl, the comforts an : '":“:-""“ re provided Ty suggest. any such programmo. The blacks &t the | for thewm, Inig famlbhp o "‘lh’“ Pprovided 4. Tlaving done this much, the policy of | Bouth, liko other freemen who want to en- | mato wag malignant and 'ffi“ o of ti the Government<hould bo.to let the finan- | joy nfull mensure of rights, muat strike for | man hag writton 8 lette agraceful. The cinl problem severely nlorie, It will theu | themsolves whon they aro assniled. If they T correcting some ex. tako care of itself, and tho result will be, in | will not do this, then we sec no hopo for published W through with the buainess and a decision of = s 070 bu wheat, 261,369 bu corn, 452,763 bu | somo kind has beon obtained. It will be o TEBRMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. oats, 83,469 bu rye, and 1,114,420 bu barley. | time onongh to pronounce upon the notion . e One hundred dollars in gold would buy | of Congress when Congress, in the light of —r03 PPAID AT TIIS OFPICK, fid i:"ui!"%‘«fl’ffl vo‘;‘l];a%gi;e'::-r 12.00 | 3107,374 in greonbacks nt the close. all tho facts, shall have reached un authorita- A aears s : ——— % S ————— .g\;"!fi'{'fi&?fmdfifeflfy' "o Reilxions Boibia 2| 'The arrival in New York of M, Ifmwns 103 tive conclunion. aggorations and confirming some ‘atatementy ——— Ty, pombATd, 1 yea Crniusont, tho distingnished French econo- THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE. office is In dawgor, Gen, TLizn may | nshorter imo than anybody would now bo | them till the racoissna siall have disappenred | pital, H“byh:dp‘:::;‘;u:{”‘;"“ of tha Hos. S mist and advocate of bi-motallio currency, | 'The objoctions mado in debato by Senntor | ba found in tho thickest of tho fray. But | willing to prediot, that both greonbnoks and | by renson of thelr surrendor, nnd tho whites | which ho had violated tho rij htfl e by ‘WEERLY XDITI isan ovent that may lead to important re- | Mortox to Mr. Epmuxps’ proposed constitn- | whon did Ropmsoy, the Big Injun of the | silver willbe worth par in gold, that tho | of the South shall be divided among thom- | in the Hospilal, and Mr, Dg L'D‘ it “One.copy, per ye sults. Hisschemois fora universsl odop- | tional amendment giving to the Buprome | {hree, becoma awarrior? Upon what fleld | greanbacks will geadunlly disappesr, and that | selves, when cach party will cater to the dontly b!linvlng'nm » MoLavonuiy, ovi. Club of twe ot tisn of bi-metallism as enrroncy, with an | Court tho final docision of ‘all qnestions of Bpectmen coples sent freo. interchangeablo ratio of values bsed upon | disputo in coses of contested Prosidontial o;ow;-d;gmgglmgg;mfl{;;".;“’;gfi:;,';_"“‘ the averago quantity of tho commoditics | elections, were direct and forcible, To con. Remittances may be made stther by draft, cxpress, | through a long torm of yoars, rocognized in | for on that Court such powor and jurisdic- ‘Post-0ftice arder, of In nw'-'efflsl;:fi;;;;"“""‘- both Europo and America. If tho ratiois 15} | tion would have the effact of mnking that TEINS 20:CIFT SUA ' of silverto 1 of gold, then thero will be n | tribunala political and partisan body, there- : ™ ] 1 p y, g:mfi fl;z’l‘(:‘:“fl:l‘.i‘:::;-’y “’.iif‘?.ii".: ::::«L: m:::t univorsal standard of valuos, detorminate at | by deatroying the Court by destroying its Adfress THR TRIBUNR coupllm l'.m all times and in all conutries, and mnintain- | usefulnoss. Iloalso objeeted to the nmend. Corner Madtion and Dearbornth Chicse 1 jug & petmanent equilibrium between the | mont becauso it porpetuated the uscless ma« two motals. AL Cerxusomt will not fall to | chinery of tho Eleotornl Colloge, which was - commond a respectful hoaring in this | one of the most dangorons of all tha obsta- # Waod®s Munsenni, oconntry. cles in the way of n fair and honest election. oilcaropatitaty e oo A :':gnll'lfl'.' pam,. THe ‘We nre glad to notice t:mt Saun).or Monron has himself progressed in sentimont on this [ 4 Rne point, and now abandons his systom of choos- el o:;s-'ii r}!‘?""e‘m\fl;fisr{-fld"‘fif: "Broaks ;tnmn:m'u ““"; wmnax:nlscon u'l" ‘;op;n ing Electors by distriets, aud ia in favor of P e —— P ottor " addressed to the General of tho cleoting Presidents by the direct voto'of tho Mevicters ’l‘lllenll,:c. 3 chiita Army 88 coming from the President and i.ef- peopla, 0 far s 1s possiblo, Wiy tho poo- y gy:!fi:?fl'mfltafllli SRNIEE Florance. »the afighfy | Totory of the National Voteran Reform As- | 1y 'or s giato who aro competant to olact a v, socintion. The connection of Gon. Conse . Governor cannot be safely trusted to voto Adelpld Theatre, with the promulgation of the lstter lsre- | 1oy progiaont is cunnnflmm "which is an- . Monroe sreet, corner Dearhom. Varlety entertain: | ferred to Ly Gen. Caumnox in terms not | = e abeaially ot I nsdniolion. Pem M"mflmu UL caleulated, and we presuma not intended, to ;no‘f:“:z niiberiof gmm‘ the 00& FHiGE SOCIETY ME acquit the former of Lis full :share of re- [ ;""" (o4 o aunually ; in’ oltiar Siatos sponsibility fn tho mattor. What that share | TR et’mr nd dn lh:: was is an affair nolely between Messra. ¥ 4 1 t others, once * in four years, and Weall | Conse and Opverow, ond s mo af- for ninety years the work has been done suc- fair of ours. What we lhave to + 4 WEDNEST'\Y, DECEMBER 13, 1876. say in onswor, to Gen. Cawaon's ceainug-. In moo{smho':o > o'( Nflwl Y‘:}:{' §n ———===———=——— | defenso is, that tho **open laiter,"” standing Notenibar, aver1,000,000'af, peaplo particl T g % pated in the election of Governor, and this | Grecnbacks at the New York Gold Ex. | alone, was a gross violation of propristy and | 10 0 o o peoplo -voting in that Stato ex- ehango yesterdsy olosed at 03. good taste in its assumption that Gen. | o303 4o wholo number of persona voting S Smenuax wos in any dangor of using the | g progigent in oll the Btates down ton ! The' preliminary meoting of the Confer. | ormy 03 an agency for the destruction of the | o0 iivaly Inte dato, 1 wence at Constantinople promisca wall for a | Republio or for any unlawful or unworthy | "o 0 "op 7 '001q not theso million of i harmonious sottloment of {ho voxed Eastorn,| ond whatsoover; that tho obyious intontof | oy, 41,0 Blate of Now York hava votod , problem, Representatives of the diffront Higlattenwidiio Haitt disobedianta and in- as intelligently by voting directly for Tir- 1. Powers havo had little diffleulty in .ngrocing | subordination among the rank and filo of the | | "0 o1 vl o prociding ag they ald for upon the terms to bo applied to Sorvie and | avmy, and I ihis respect its purpose was | p o T At e Govornor? Ine i Herzegovinio. The following points have | treasonible and jnfamous, and open to tho | '\ o 0 doing this, the old and uscless and ! been decided upon: Montenogro is to bo saverest censure, Taken in tx.mnoutxon with arirabiersoine mashinery.of ‘o Elastoral Col- gronted n considernble territoral addition, | collateral cir'cumstancas-hth issunnce of tha lego was in operation, and each of themilion and tho boundary of Servin is to bo rectified, | circular inviting *‘tha co-oporation of ovory | (" oiory voted for thirty-five other mon to by whioh that provinco will also gnin torri- [ man who ever camied & muskeb or | o000 aome fature day and vote for Presi- tory. Tho Turkish army will bo roquired to | wielded n aword," ete, and the well- | 'y, “ar ‘Moprow i correct fn declaring withdraw from Servia, and tha armistice will | known fact. mnz' a considerablo clement of tho Eleotoral College an idlo, uscless, cum- bo prolonged for a term sufliciont to cover | the Democracy in Chicago and throughout { '~ ~° ‘piece of muohinery, which hat long the time consumed in the negotiations. tho country ara oponly cngaged in the agita- | o0 S theory which called it into ox- 3 = i Yo of tho, prijeck of orgnl?lzing Ly "f"‘““ istenco, In roforming tho systomof electing Tho case of Oregon received somo ntten. | force to resist the innugurntion ns President Prosidont and Vico-Presidont,. the wholo tion in tho Senate yosterday, and authorities | of any man excopting TiLpeN—taking every- s wil rijolcs in L’hu abolish- nnd precedonts were froely cited in support | thing togother, tho “open lotter” was a -y ryo‘ the machinory of the Eloct. of the principle that the incligibility of the | docunient which the more prudent and sen- i | i l N oral College. Wo do mot think it i porson recoiving the highest nnm.lm.r of votes | sible Democrats have done well to ropudiate, advisablo, oven i it wore possible, to take E does mnot olect the person receiving o less S the National Banks, under the free.banking | black voto as an important eloment in poli- | to him,_ for charity, ,z‘:;:b’;‘;fl k::: )i;:iu{lxr?: Iw, will supply all tho curroncy, redeomablo | tics. Looking at the mattor from a practionl | his slok-bed ang in gold and silvor, that might be needed in | standpoint, it is vory cortain that nothing night, with !.I:x tl;?r:olx:&: nltn‘;' doorsigy addition to tho gold and silver coin in actuat | more will bo done, no maiter what philan~ | It {a uselons to apponl o tho c:wgmm. circulation, The rapidity and facility with | thropists may argue to bo the duty of the | thorlties or o any tribunal gel “‘; Y At which silver coinhas beon substiluted for the | Government, Our correspondent must drop | the County Commisslonors, Whnta:u ol l’-‘! frnctionnl enrroncy furnish somo iden of the | the sentimental and comb down to the sur- | must Lo had must ba him; by um“r action ease with which résumption can bo achieved | face of tho earth. and indopendent body, We have h:r:r;;,:-: x conditios h o ey T ey smttond. el Bave gy CEEON AND TOUISIANA, e e o Jopont the suggestion ow, — at Oregon business is too much for de- At voapictable chiuer snju“(nm“ Bociety THE RACE 183UE, cent Democrats to stomach, Even the Mem- denco of the whole c’o mmu{fl 1:8 tho confl. Wo print this morning nuother long—vary | Plils Appeal, ono of tho most extreme of the they can serve tho camso of hy' e at long—too long—commanieation from Mr, 0, | Journalu of the extromo Southem school, fs | | = offectually than thmuoh umanity no D, Trimnze, of Ottawn, on the subjeat of | Qisgusted with the snonk-thief attempt to invastigating the alloged 5 bg a u:lmm(tten “1Tho Itaco Issue.” In spite of thouscless | Btenl the ono I-‘.leow‘x;n:l vote needed to elact | ;- of tho County ¥ [%‘: ot “: and ruffian. verbosity in which Mr. Tniwnte hns in. | TrLoEN, sod Ay The Demoorats would Huih 5 corimities Wmfls g l'egifln‘r from dulged, he bns only succecded in showing | 8corn to elect '1"‘.”“ by the ona vota of the public mind, and mi, mu:o ’ ufl“nuw that he doca not understand tha reat point at [ Oregon, 8 %tnlu which unquestionably voted the sick, and tho lxomalllm o l\]rla he poor, . fsanc. He dwells upon what ought to be, | for Haxes.” That undoubtedly is the senti- practiced on them in the name of ehcmallios Wo have discuased the matter on tho basis of | Ment of men who had the courage to fight in [ it b ority, did ho shed his firat blood, or slay his first victim, that he should suddenly appear in this erisis, breathing sulphurons biasts from his nostrils, brandishing tomalnwk and sealp- ing-knife, besmeared with war-paint, shout. ing the war-whoop, and demanding vietims, and bodies, and gore? ~ When did this small lawyer, clected by a soratch ina powerful Republican district, which ho now misrepre. gonts, fight Liis battles? Whore has lLie slain his cnemies? What fleld of carnnge hns witnessed his prowess? Where does e keep his graveyard ip which ropose the bones of those who have had the hardihood to en. counter the farociols Ropivson ? Lven Gen. Daw, with hll his scalps hanging from his belt, is & mild.mannered, innocuous warrior ps compared with tho Ohicago TAMENLANE. But enough of the warrlors, Gen. Stirzs snuffed them ont more effqetunily than wo can hope to do with one slroke of con. tomptuous frony: * When the pinoh comes, the man that talks war don't como to tho fromt.” With regard to the holding of npublic meoting thore is nothing improper in that proposal, constitu- tionally, legally, or morally. It {s the natural and demoeratic way, when people are in dis. pute over an important question, to get to- gether, talk it over calmly and dispassionate. ly, aud pass resolutions. Such a meeting might be productive of great good and lend to importunt results, provided its sentiments wore not dictated by such hot.-Lended and sulphurous warriors as Mitrrn, Lres, and RopINsoN, The constituency which these warriors ropresent may be divided into three clnsses. Tho first is composod of mon out of employ- ment, destituto and desperate, who ‘own no property, pay no taxes, have no work and want none. Thoy care nothing for Tiupex, nothing for principles, They thrive best in times of civil commotion, when opportuni- ties for plunder aro more abundant, and at such o tim3_would steal and pillage from Tepublican and Democrat alike, The second class comprises the office-seekers, who view with approhension the possibility of losing thoir hold upon an office and its fat pickings in these hard times. They are the mon who want to distribate tho lotters, to handle the moneys collectod from taxation, to run the custom.houses, to have the koys of a distillery over night, and to conviuco the country of their ability to withstand tomptation. They aro all for war, Tho third class ia o set of mischievous newspapors, which, for purposes of sensa- tion and in order to sell more copies, bellow for war. They belong to both parties, and protend to beliova that their own side is right beyond nll quostion ; that thero is no issuo ponding, logal or othorwise; and that thoir own man will bo put in the ghawr be- @ Elsowhero in this lssue will bo found n ' Haverly’s Thentre. letter from Gen. OamenoN in reply to Tnr what actunlly i, His views aro nll senti- support of their opinions, 'The proposition Dmomm‘“sfi. ER, mental and mostly visionary, while we have to stenl that one Electoral vote of Oregon Ponr, m’."\i'“xi,.’":’:‘.’:’éf i’{.l‘\’mfi}"""': boen looking the case squarely in tho face, | Smonates from men of another typo, nud 18 | of the ** demonelization of shiver. s 1 S0tk s% and socking n practieal remody for a prac. | WOrthy tho cowardly ememy iu. the vear ;f“;};x:"{:;“'x{':';en‘m:r" 4874 the colnaye of thy . tical ovil. 'That which he suggests na n | Who conspired to burn Northern citfes and utare; and lh‘l'llhllwunpm‘(lcizlio}'}lé‘e‘:l‘%:‘:”fl‘: romedy we had nlroady considered and dis. | impot small-pox to decimato tho *d—d | Hon ofsliverv but Jngflz;’:‘x:m"fi";“.?d St missed na impmcticablo and inoperative, no | Yonkees” They oo nob the men | foucor oual tondsra 1 1 am mistien S, mattor how much it might bo approved from | to scruple at stenling that Electoral | ton fo8 P ‘fl'?h‘l'."’-‘-‘ae‘fi"an’n"fii‘e".“n°!y.:"21&‘“.f' -4} & humanitarian point 6f view. It would bo | Yote, that by it they may steal into offico to 3°2’J{ or u:m'lI operates o demarietize it Aelnn vory desirnble to induco all men to do right | 40 moro stealing. Tho decent runk and lo | have not hien fil-‘:fi:ll:;ln;rnl{'nsl‘l?n?}dl; "I.'h'l“l]n"“ at all times, but no scheme of law or govern. | Of thie party, however,—thoso who are not ,i‘:;]:fi;“n:lhloee‘&iflf mors of them ars to be Colned. mont hns yot beon invented that willcomposs | tolking dreadfully sbout offic or gore,— | of Uions coined, ‘ander cmf;,'e‘:i‘fi';‘u?".{’fic‘fi:”’ this millennial condition. 8o, in the relations | MUst concur with the Appeal when it soya: | Yours, for siiver, . J. Tenxen, - of tho blacks aud whites nt the South, it | It would bo n monstrous outrage if, Ly | ANSWER.—Tho st of Feb. 14, 187, sct fortp wonld bo oxceedingly desirablo to render the | froud, or o mistaken idea of duty, Oregon -lx;uldm:)ir::;t‘::nbeflrllm N"[‘*‘}?‘flf S former immedintely courngeous, manly, intel. | Showld be mnde to cast one vota againet | voq omitted as being nmong.thn :u'mfi:d"q'!fi tefligent, self-relinnt, aud as exacting in their | HAY2S in doflance of a majority of the peo- | Revised Statutes, Sec. 8,515, says that “The ol rights 0 the Inttor, and it wonld be equally | Plo of tho Btate,” The Appeal goos on to | ver colns of the United States shall boa trade- Qesirable to rendor tho whites forbenring, | 87gue that it would be no less an ontrage to | dollar (of 420 gratns, troy), s 50-cent plece, o 25- Just, charitable, and kind-henrted toward tho | count the Electoral vote of Loulsiana for | cent plece, :fl:lfl 10-cent plece.”” Bee. 3,518 de- Dlacks; but, if this can’t bo done, wo must | FHAYES *In deflanco” of what it styles o ma- “"l‘“" that ‘\”“:'"' clther of gold, ailver, op search for somo othor solution of tho troub- | Jority of eight thousand of tho peoplo of the R: O:I‘fl"ufi’e: ':": hare:flcr be fasucd from les. State. But tho Appeal overlooks the dis- b an thoto denomivations, standards, and welghts set forth fn the bi,» - “Enforce the amendments,” cries Mr, | tinotion botween tho majority in Qrogon and |-gec, 8,53 says *Tho silver coins of the United Tnoniz; ‘“no matter how, only enforce what it calls the mojority in Louisians. | States shall b a legal-tender at thelr nominal " There was mo bulldozing in Oregon, | value for any amount not exceeding five dollars them.” But it doos matter how. If they. R dro to bo enforced, tho menns must be found, | B0 rougb-riding over the country of l'n any one payment.” Wo_submit that the 1£ wo geok it in Iaw, wo find that the Genorsl | DiBhts by White-Lino rifie-clubs, which | foregolog scetions demonetize silver pretty o a’nly Gind e \rtopain whipped and shot mon {o prevent effectually, Previous to Feb. 14, 1873, the sfi- R Yer dollar, which cannot now be colned, o Bouthern State whon invited by the Legis- g‘:“ vogng dnmbt E?r’:’“fl‘: fic‘:’:‘ lezul-tend‘er for any amount, or for any )’d‘;:llnr; Iature or Governor thereof, and, ns the Logis- ero can'bo 1o doubt but that the majority debt, whether publle or private, « | for Haves in Oregon waa the result of & frae, ———— f thirte f th 7 " g‘::t:;!n:;nsmu:::r:::xt:fivu:ofm:h: ‘\Vh?::- Iair clection, at which the will of the people [ _Bomeof the Democratic papers are printing Liners, they won't eall on ‘the Government | W88 expressed. 'There can be as little doubt, | statements to the oflcctv that, in the electlon of for nn’ Sidlt maaislarice upon tho proof taken as to the election in | ® President by the House, the Constitution e fobege " Mr. T . | Ouachits, Felicians, and tha other bulldozed | Brovides that the presenco of two-thirds of the Nover mind that,” soys Mr. Triypre; arishes in Louisiaun, that what tho Ippéat | Btates shall be nocessary for a quorurm, and “ enforco tho amendments,” Then we look Zdl the, alght thi i 4 D t ppea that, as the Ropublicans have s majorityin more to tho * Enforcoment acts,” and we find they BLNC. M ousand Demooratie major- ;i than one-third of the States, they could prevent have beon sarionsly crippled by the Supromo ity in that State wos the result of bulldozing, | guch an election by remllnh;g away, Thiz would 1 murders, and outrages unspeakable, por- | hotruc if all the membors from more than one- e e o v | potrated by tho rifle.clubs, and that tha | thid of the States were. Repubiicans, s thes boen construed.by a Court a great majority rosult of o fair olection, at whlc:h every man thelr withdrawal would break u quorum, but it of whose Judges have been appointed under was freo to volo 04 lio ploazod in Louisinus, mpp.m! :t:] 2t i, Sy thuh ollgwitg Sisten Ropubliosn Administeations, We find the | Would havo been a majority of not less than | 30 et e s raant: RLANKY LODGE NO. 271 A, F. & A, ('Dmmllnlcllllln“!ull;nemlngvgg ':mlc‘e’r:é Pl Nedneny R CooR, : A THE SITUATION AT WASHINGTON. from the States the two votes now awarded n;u;l;u:;lk;l;he i‘,? ;‘;L’:;:*sol::ffir di::‘;:" The Intest from Washington shows that | to cach of them for Senators. Nor do we Tato, whtls (s Domoorats lind bus little. to | the desperato politicians aro falking of TiL. | think the Blatos would ever agrao o an say. A diaposition was shown by thom to | PEY OF war, and that they are Isboring with | amendment clooting the President by tho ag- LA e b il apon tho | Indifferent snccess to firo tho henrt of tho | grogate popular voio of tho country. Tho theory that he suppose d‘hn Wk tod | Dorty to take up arms to scare somebody. | distinet apportionment of votes to oach Statep i by law in falsely @ c.?rtllyin g to the clection of The revolutionary ngitators are troubled in | according to tho number of its Representa- l Cronry, but it was ovidont that the Domo- their offorts by two-circumstauces,—tho one | tives and Bonators, must be retained, or the > that all the better class of Democrats in the | smaller Btatos will roject any change in the ::‘;2:;:“:;? ‘;‘r:vz: ;’g"‘?;::ih?‘::g:? g: two Houses won't enthuse to the fighting | Constitntion in this respeot. But itisnomore dn‘miuggflm bunngt of tho one Electoral vote point, and that tho other sido don't scare in | diffioult to award Haxes and Wusersn the Maine, Minnesota, Nebraske, ‘Nevada, Rhodo i i e the least, Not a Republican in Congress or | twenty-ono voies of Ilinols, upon thelr re- | cyugg ho ‘hns beon clected bogond the | 1aw has boon held to be broader than tho %2::: t‘houé;“d ?:ifl‘:fi‘h "::e Izfi:z:g Isl-nd’, South Carollua, Vermont, and Colorado, \{ g < out of it hus hesitatod s moment in doclar. | ceiviog & majority of tha popular vole in th | ghgdow of o doubt. Thoy know that thoy | constitutionnl provision, It sought to pro- i waa’crznles ;x :huul‘fnu[ainzn Eamu %o ox, | In threo Etates only—Tows, Kansas, und Michi- B The Oong—t:;hunl Committeos have ar. | 1u8 that unless it be proved aud established | State, than it hea beon to cleot twenty-0n0 | nre linrs and mischiof-makors, and thot their | toct all men, the whito Republicans na woll y gan—thelr representation fs confined to one 5 beyond a doubt that Haves was not eleoted | citizens to go to Springflold and thore vote for ::;I::n?,;c';h:?;,;a‘;fil‘;}uug;:“;‘;:d‘&:dcxa ho must be doclared President according to | Haves and Wazrter. o this day thero aro iftteo appenrs to*have. plain sailing so far, thie roturns sundebiy law,, || Hhiousbnda of wolars i Ml pasier. fig sanntey aa the nuthorities hove signifiod their willing. | 118 well for porsons who'think or baliov | Who donot comprehiend this Eleotoral ma- ness to yield up the roturns for the Com. | in Violence to remembor that all such nntici- | chinery ; but, of the mass of voters who do mitteo’s inspeotion. Not so with tho | PAtions are premature, In the first place, | understand it, the number who approve or Louisiana Committee, 'This latter body | there can be no counting of ‘votes mor | desiroits continuance is very small. Con- hios met with an obstruction in the shape of | declarations of results until the 14th of Fob- | gress, in making a change in the matter of 8 Returning Bonrd, which Board douies the | 8rY; that being the day fixed by law for | electing Prosident, should make a cliango xightof the National Houso of Representa. | OPeuing and counting the Electors' certifi- | that will probably last for n long series of tives to roviso the cauvnss of the votoof | ctes. No less than sixty days, therg- | yosrs. So no more patchwork business Toulsiana. Tho Board also, throngh its | f0re, interveno beforo thers can be [ should bo tolorated. Injwhatever chango be Becretary, informs the Committee thatite [ 80y netion in tho matter at nll. In | made, the Eleotoral Colloge should bo dis. documents nro Stato property ond cannot bo | tho mesutime tho Democratio Iouse hna ap- | pensed with, and the people, who aro credit- Jonned, but that safd documents may bo | Pointed three committees, one each, to visit | ed with intelligence enough to clect Govern- copiod if the Congress of the United States | Loulsiana, Florida, and South Carolina; the | ors and State officers, and mombers of Con- sees fit to pay for tho copying, Tho Now | lepublican Benato has appointed threo com. | gress, should bo assumed to hava tho capac- Orleans dispatches for the mext week are | Mittees, one for each of tho sama States. | ity equalto the election of o President and likely'to Lo interesting. Theso Comimittees aro composed of men of | Vico-Presiden! —_ both parties, and they visit the headquarters = o = The question of the Joint Rules is one that | Of tho recont cleotions clothod with ample | THE DEMOURATI0 WAR MEETING. 46 cortnin to becomo the subject of a heated | Power to colleot all tho information and alt Tho Democrats of Chicago, who mot at the ocontest in tho House, It was raised incl. | tho facts in ‘all theso States, These Com- Palinée Houso,on ?and'y st to consider dontally yostordny, and, although no definite | Mittees hava gone to the three States, aud | thoquestion of dec 1“11‘1‘8 Wfll’-‘dfl not Bfll:l action was taken, enough was doveloped to | beforo this week will bo out will bo in full | %0 l‘"‘;” be"‘“ very fl(l'mfln ous in thelr sliow that tho Demoarats, hended by Speaker operation. Thero will be litle on cither A_sound 5. Whilo ono faction was brandishing Raxpats, will bo 0s o unit in holding that | 8ide Laving tho remotest bearing on the ita tomahawks, tho other was waving the tho Joint Rules oro atill In force, and that | Question which will not. be brought to light | White banuers of pence, Whilo ono factlon the fact that tho Sonato s olrendy declded | bY these Committces. Tho reports of the | raved and blustered, the othor counscled to the contrary in the most emplntio and | Committoes will not bo ready for publica. moderntion nad respect for law. Itwasa conclusive manuer will mnako no difforonce | tion beforo thomiddloof January, - Congress | competition betwoen idiotlo fury on tho ono with fhe courso of the mofority in | Will then have a wholo month in which to sido and calm senso on tho other, in which tho Houso. Thoy will claim, undor tho | Gigest thia testimony, waigh the facts, and | the lttor scems to have iad the advantage, Twenty-socond Joint Rulo, tho right to a | Toach » conclusion. We have not had any | A foll roportof this moating has lroady ap- aud in tha count of the Elactoral voto, and | doubt at any time but that the twoHousos of peared in Tire TrmuNe, but thesalient points thoright to rejoot tho volo of Lonislana, | Congross would gettlo this wholo business, | doserve little more extended comment than Florida, nnd South Carolina. This right tho | 1t should nover be forgotton that Congross | 1as yet boon given thom. Gen. Srives, who Honato hus denied alrondy, ond will refuso to | 195, from ns onrly ns 1702, oxercised tho logis- | s had some experfonce with war, and has Tecoguizo whon tho day nrrives for aounting | 18tve power of providing for carrying iuto Yeen where bullots are fiying, failed to seo the voto. What the Homse will then do | ©ffoct the provisions of tho Constitution gov. | any sufllolent causa for war, and gave the Rbout it, ia a question to bo detormined here. | erRing tho clectlon of Prosident, 'Tho Con- usseumblod Democratio warriors some timely after, : : stitution declares that the Electors shall be | and sensible advico. ‘The hot-headed orcise, and followingtho precedont set by the | member, and in Michigan' thero ars ?&131:;]:';;3 f;;zlafi:fh:ngn‘;;gdngg Democratic ReturningBoard in 1872, dofeated | two Independents, The Democrats have G t ly interf hon th the monstrousoutragoby which thebulldozers | 8 majority representation fu * the dele s e DL (DAS (RAE D nttempted to make tho vote of Loulsiana be | gatfons in four more than'halt of all the Violenod or iorsorullug iy been alloted fn cast sgainst Haves *in dofiance of o ma. States, 80 that the scheme of abscntation to de- distinction on account of **xace, oolor, or |y PN (S H ¢ Keow What | feat an election, IF tho House shonld bo caled provious condition of sorvitude,” ;i 4 peop! . % upon to choose a President, ts impossible, Tho “Nover mind that,” soya Mr, Tnnmez, | V9 attompted in Orogon sneak-thiof fashlon, | \o.3g of the Constiution are fhese: “A “ » was attempted in Louisiana after the manner | quorum for this purpose shall conslst of a mem- mfififi,fi&fiffiwfimflxfii ?,:g of the highwayman, That is tho onlshdilfor. | ber or membera from two-thirda of the States.” intolligence to seok the intorvention of tho | 2B°° betwoen the case of Orogon nnd tho | Scedti Any State baving a Democratic mem- Federal Courts on their behalf to the extont | €289 Of Louisiana, Unless the full votes of | ber would b uonamuuulnlmllv represented 1‘: llvxo that the Inw protects them. Thero is not o both Oregon and Loulslana be cast for Hares, )‘::mr;:;:!e(l‘ fu l‘,l,],u;:: ‘Zfi :{::l‘:m:;,fl,w'nm c:,.: siniglo complaint of a black man in any | they Will be cast i in deflanco of the mojor- vesaens yeco o y - gress whose members were elgeted this year, of the United States Courts looated in | ity of tho'pooplo " of those Btates, And that () Republicana would wiu, for they have car- the thirteen Southern Btates that have | 40D tho glaring fact would romain that the | 10q o majority of membérs fa a mofority of the passod ontirely under the control of [ full Elgctoml V‘;t:h of Mimltuippl{ w;ll T Btates. s i i —— the White-Liners. The Judges caunot | o8t in doflanca of tho unquestioned majority it wonld be to_ have Gnas forca the negrocsto complain, egm,a Turles | OF the peopleof that Btato ; and that, of ite | ,\ tas Jayiey iz g oL Unlon v iher cannot indict without prossouting witnessos, solf, is full as much doflance of the majority | have destroyed the Constitationt Would not tha Houth have her Al of 11 aho could feel re- and courts cannot summon the soldiery till | 88 the country can stand about this time. Vonge at all_at aichi & conswmmations. Diive o = = that apple-carti—Atgusia (Cu.) Conafltutionallet. theie Manilidls- nad pacesscs liave! boshisus: BOUTHERN P, 'URANCE, Whenover n Southern fra-ater hos occasion cessfully resistod. The Richmond /Znguirer wauts the Demo- | touso the expression, *destroying the Consti- “ Never mind that,” says Mr, TRiMBLE, | erots of the North who are for Trzoex or | tution, he juvarlably means abolishiog slavery. “* enforco tho omendments.” Thon wemust | « wah * to pitch right in and do the fighting, | The Emancipation act is regarded as the samo look for ndditional logislation from Congress, | The Znguirer ozplains with wondrous lucd. | thinges the destruction of the c"“:;““:m: whioh shall be comprehionaive cnough to sap- | ity why the South isn’t ready, at this time, | With these people slavery was "lflu it defects and sustain the po- . tion, Without human servitude there ply the prosont defects a Po- | to take a hapd in the fight : no Constitution. The Constitution sud litical rights of the nogro, whether he liftsa | The South, though, Is now, and must remain, & slavery were correlative terms. Now fhat flaget or not, whothor ho entera n complaint |.passlve spectator, Blie hus slgnalized ber devo. slavery Is defunct, the Constitution is no more. ornot, on his own bhulf. But how ara wa | Hlon ;‘:::l".‘;gv:"dn‘i‘::;":::L"';::(E?"“:;‘:r‘:‘-&:“ Tho loss of slavery fs the “lost cause™ for to got this? Will tho present Domacratlo | Wi voruriy'lo chliengo the adumiration of fature | Which thoy moura aud will not bo comforled, Honso furnish it? Wil the noxt Honso, also | generatlons, She keenly feels her wrongs, both | As the black man has been prtty well d‘““': Democratio, furnish it ? past and prosent, Lot she understands that her { of hiscivil and political rights in Georgla, au % Never mind that,” says Mr, Trnmre, uatt now, as for the last ton years, I a dignified, | has censed, practically, to be a voter or Juror, “onforeo tho amendments.” Then, nt last, | Pitiontendurance, the Constitution has boen considerably restored the North t tsido the f 14 & That is it precisoly. Very, .very pationt | in that State. What the Augusta paper mesns Al Fen el A e would ba tho ex-Confedorntes while the | by Granr and the Radical party breakinzup procesios of la, and resort to martial1aw | ¢ oup.uiting businoss hiore st tho North, | tho Union fs dark and mysterious, Nobody aud other warlike messures, We must t | bus heara of It hereabouts, but then one muss 'w | inaugurated by Northern Domocrats, went The ogein doclara war upon tho *Bouth” | 0o o \way fighting in the stroots of | RO AYAy from Liome to get tho mnawi, in bohalf of the rou-resisting negroes 1 Bl ng “8outh " will have to wait a long time before s tho “notlon’s ‘wards” and hold | Obicoso, Oincinuati, and Bt Louls, aud citles | g get per revengo in the shapo of a break-up 1 and towns wore fired nnd brothers crossed | of the Unfon by the Radleal party, which party the Sonthern States in actual subjugation for boyonats with brothers, Why? Becauso it | isin the unlnnyw stay there and to presere [t the purpose of permitting the blacks who begins 0 bo cloar that Truoy can't ba e w0 0 o't help thomselvea to votawrithout fear of | 4441 1 gud the spoils of office gobblad | 75558, 8pd Axpmnscit sre bR AGT Hibed, favor, o lmproper fufluencs; ,Nothiug short ) %1 ki They haye commitied s crime_againat soclety an of martial law, enforced by the actual pres. biy the. fellowy ho would proroke & dlyil Yin 3 fons for which there 1s 5o excuve.~ once of nvast army nnd extending over su war about absolutely nothing but the pos- 5!"/‘.‘"‘21'1},‘»‘.“}? ?'“.'.EZF :' ! indefinito period, could positively assure the séssion of the ofices, Of course “the | No, they are not 20 hw.é by a long &‘,’L 'l: U‘l:l'i i th will understand har part.” When the | Grovan and his man Croiv . eample sprotaction i palitioal sights -of gf:m.:;mx:; bogina i the North, and whon | ANDERs0N hud the autorlty of the Jaws of & clasg of people who lio down or surrendor | vy oo ooty desolated by the fight bo. | Loulslsus for what they bave done, They ;:; them for a bribe or under a threat. Of % “w | 1egal members of the Returning Board, clof do not dony that this could be | BB f0rthe offcas, thonthoBouthwill © walb ™ | \ iy, ¢,1y ang ample potwer to go bebind thy fsee zcnm.e.t;m 2 n; :ny hneb “m"m b with ¢ s dignified, paticnt endurance.” Nob | of (10 roturns aud Inquire Into the frauds and done, \V; ql‘:l“k S B'Mw ,; o8 'tm a; oan unrepentant ex-Confedorate is thers who | jntimidation that were perpetrated, sad fi: one, Wothivk even Mr, Lanms willade| g gaty potiently enduro to sce it going on. | purge tho returns of bad votes, It has nd mit it tobe most unlikely, We will not But it §s all in vain for the Enguirer to ap- | been proven that they threw out precincts which discuss the advisability, polley,or expedioncy | o1 ¢4 o Northern Democracy s it does | ought to have been retained, although the Dem- y 8 | ought Gnovas, of it, because it must be dismissed ns ";b on It says : 2 . ocTats 50 suspact- and c;m:cl g-n;(:“ :: bl impracticablo, Gon, Gnayr has not beon | “yyq paye plighted our faith to the Northern Do | he knew and sdmitted that Cn X ablo to do ¢, nor ia Gov, Haves, if he shall mocucy—n?u contract hisa been fulfilled—our task | elected. O thecontrary, heudmg;l.] ‘:;S:":"l 1 succeed Gon. Grmant, likely to under- | is donc, sud now we wait to see how they perform | was defeated by the lawful, un Red, take it, becauso lhe would not roceive | theirs. It does not oven become us to advise | accepted returns;y but, without Jaw or ‘t’ledl" th » + : th t At them; for, If thoy desorve thenameof froemen, | of legal right, he proceeded to ey o) SUpIRER: O i A Te | they kuow thelr rights, and knowlng, should dare | ons of the Electors ineligible, su . Tanste seoms to proceed ' upon | maintain then. give his certificata to (he man whom the peopl : the notion that thore is n *Bolld North" | Outsid a handful of mischiet-workerswho | rojocted, Tho rascal sccepted 1t, and then :::d in favor of any moasures, no. matter | would take procious care toleave other people | the vote of the beaten minority for"l‘]::‘“h’:' dis how oxtreme, for pratocting the political | to do thefighting, noither tho NorthernDemo- | the scoundrel GRovER luppo!::‘ St ek rights of the non.rosisting blacks ot tho | orats nor anybody else at the Norih propgses | elected Old Usufruct by-this Bouth when thoy voluntarlly resign them, | toinaugurato o civil warhere abontthoposses. | buthehasmot, o which I8 the case ot least in all those States | alon of tho post-offices. It doea uot require Tho Philadelphia Times,which (uran‘\:";‘l::‘n whero they arainamajority, B, Tarusie | a vivid imagination to dopict all the horrors | paper, can't swallow the OreRon sWIACE: - was never more wmnistakon in his life. He [ of the war which the ex-Confoderates exhort | says that *Gov. GROVER'S .mh:;::“xho ‘netl- evidently haen't scaunod the election roturny, | the Northern Democrats to inaugurate; and | dication of his refusal to ;30‘;.“1‘55 spoclal plesd- o makes no allowance for the palpable 7uct | whoever attempts to inaugurate it may rest | gible Rayss filufi:rml; ;l :' raad to bo palita- that nearly one-half the peoplo even n¥ the | nasured that never were anybody's prospects \I:K'tg‘:'t'x:"mr:ni ded people of Ails country: North (tho Democrats) rather favor lozs striv- | for being hanged better than will be hiswhen 'l‘:n ‘Jow certainly never contemplated that l:‘;: gont than moro stringent moasures for the | he makes that attempt. Jegsl trickery s Gov, Grovan has p,m-u;: e political protection of a race of men that — — Oregon should defeat the popular wt Predie surzender and lio down the very moment it The oxtraordinary conduct of the Wardon election, and much less in the cholee ln“ :n ot bocomes necessary to make the slightest ef. | of the County Hospital in ejecting a sick in- | aant, 1f common honesty has mll Yo fort in their own behalf, mate at night from the Hoepltal is one of | gress, it will bo mantully mrecl_ . i We flud, then, that Mr, Tensrx's en. | those cases of barbarism which goes a great Treoat of the Egyptian Minister o forcoment 'pcl.lcy ts nothing more than what | way fo confirm the allegation of the geeral nm‘:':“'fi:fi}:‘ Orlental mmnfuue I;m‘:' we had'alroady fully considered, It is essy | unfitness of tho Warden for his place, and of | o ™"\ inoudent of the Pall J:m S onough to way, ‘‘Led tho Government | the general Lrutality which governs in the | 0,0y hut the Khedive bad b:“w:a e oter- march & great army into the South | institution. The Hospital is & public instl- | pig Mintster, IsMalL sw:lx. V"h “usmlkhnw""" and proteot the nop-resistant blacks,” | tution. Itis not Mr, MoLavourin's hospital, | brother, had been luu?fi:k ‘:m el .pm-‘ but practically it will do nothing | nor biu hotel; he is not the dispenscr of tho | him. aud on the 17th ult. courso Is inspired simply by the desire to maguify themsolves and soll extra papers. The gront maas of tho people, composed of respoctable, honest, industrions, law-abiding mon, have no sympathy with either of thess three classes, hended by the Mrrrens, Liens, and Ropmvsons, Thoy have no sympathy with the reckless Communistio elements of society, with the ravenous horde of office- seckers, or with sonsational newspapers. They v:ill demand that the settlement of the pending questions shall bs accomplished by roferonce to tho laws, and in acalm, just, and upright manuer, without prejudice or malice. DR. LINDEEMAR ON SILVER, The Bocrotary of tho Tressury recommends logislation suthorizing the issue of silvor coing in'oxchange for the greonbacks of small. denomination to the smount of $80,000,000, and making silver a legal-tender to the amount of $10 instend of $5, as it is now. Dr, LinpErMa¥, the Dircctor of the Mint, thinks that $100,000,000 of silver colns can bo used advantageously in this country,—n conclusion which scoms to be fully warrantod by' tho fact that England, with not quite three-quartors as many peo- plo and Infinitely closor business relations, employs that aniount of ailver, though gold istho money of coin payment, Dr, Linpza- MAX also agrees {hat the minor silver coins should be madoe a legal-tender to the amount of 10, but recommends further that large portion of the silver issuo ba colned in trade- dollars, and that the’latter shall be made legal-tender to the amount of $100; and Lo thinks that this would matorinlly nsaist tho banks to accumulato coin as a part of their rosorve, with a view to tho neceasities of ro. swaption. Theso two suggestions ara mainly valunble beoauso they are a recoguition of the im. portantinfluence which sllver may exert in the solution of the resumption prablem, but they go scarcely half way in tho right direc- tion, The firat practioal step toward mpecle- resumption i the reatoration of the standard silver dollar to the coinago. It is singular to observe that Dr, Linpenuan's objection to this s that tho silver product of the country is not adoquate to tho demand thers would be for silver, This is on the assumption that the silver dollar would be the exclusive coln of payment for national and individusl in. debtodness. It would undoubtedly be pro- forrod at first, since ailver is now relatively cheapor than gold; but, justas soon as it should become appavent that tha supply of silvor is inndequate to ita use ns the single coin of paymont, its relative value would in. oressa nntil gold and silver would be equal- ized, and payments would bomade according to aceldental convenience, Following tho rostoration of the standard silvor dollar to fts original status should be : 1. Provision for tho fres coinage at tho United States Mints of both gold aud sllver brought there for that purpose. In this, also, thero has boen and is still 8 dlscriming- tion against silver,—the coinage of gold be- ing froe and that of silver not free to the in. dividual owner of bullion. Silver restorod to the rocoguized coin of the country, and in notusl olroulation, the owners of bullion would specdily avall themselves of the privi. loge of freo colnage to put it into clircula- tion a4 monoey, 2. It should be provided that, ih carrying out the terms of tho Binking.Fund law, tho debt to bo redeemed should be the ontstand- ing legal-tender notes to tho amount of $100,000,000, and at rate of abont $33,00,- 000 a year, for which silver coin should be issued iu payment. - 8. Autirsily shiould be conferred upon the appolnted in such mannor as the Loginla- | Fonsyr was cool and temporate, and dopro- An nddress to the country i contomplated | turcs of the States may dircet, But Gon. | cated oxtrome measures, Col. Sminver, ‘by the Democrats at Washington, but when | gresas has at oll times exercised tho power to’| 8 Virginian, herotoforo supposed to to fsun i, and what to put into it, oro mat- | rogulato the wanner in which the Eleotors | bo an oxtromo Bourbon politician fers of dificronce in the canous, Ranpaty, | shall vote. Thoro is no quostion that Con. | and Southern Radical, also warned tho in. ‘Woop, and others of the violeut'persuasion,| gress may now by Iaw provide all that is | cendiarics of the folly of thoir nction, There are bent on an nbusive attack on the I'resl- | neoded for counting tho votes, invostigating | Were othora who in thisimportant erisfs man- dont, and favor th calling of mase-mectings | tho roturns, and for deciding upon the | ifested o calm and moderate spirit worthy of throughont tho ontiro country. upon n | validity of roturns, This is o power noces- | 81l praiso, but thore wera some warlike and apecified doy for tho purpose of giv- | sarlly inherent in ' Congress, not in one | turbnlent Gen, Bovus, sounding thelr rata. ,ing their most fiery orotors 'a chance to | House, but in the two conjointly, as n law- | plans and snuffing at their pistols in & man- ‘inflame the masses with a recital of the | making body, Anact of Congross, there- | ner caloulated to suggest gore and corpses torriblo blows aimed nt tho liberties of the | fore, in 1876, will bo ns cfcacious in the | and to disturb timid householdors with vis- peoplo by the despot on hia throne in tho | matter as was the act of Congress in 1702, | lons of grim-visaged war, The prinoipal Exccutive Manston, It also proposed that | passedin tho doys of Wisumarox, No one | dangor which now threatons the poaco of tho theso moss-meetings shall be mado the occa. | House of Congress can make a law, aud, in | couutry seems to come from Judgo Mirzes, sion of a genernl displuy of numorical | tho absonco of any law, then the whole | Gen, Lien, nud Benator Rominson, and, un- strength, with a viow to improssing peoplo | business falls back upon the faw and simple less thoy are placed under bonds to keop tho with the formidable charscter of the Demo- | words of the Constitutlon, All admit that | peace towards thoir aflicted country, noy day cratio orgauization, It was expected that | these provisionsof the Constitution are indofl. | may find them inounting their barbod steeds tho nddress would La made public this morn. | nite, and need legislation to carry out the | and galloping down Wabash avenue with ing, but certain points of disagrecmnent re. | purpose of the Constitution, but no one | drawn sabres, blazing eyes, and flylng hair, ‘naln to Lo harmoulzed beforo tho document | House can logislato and uo one House can | striking terror to tho hearts of housemelds, is promulgated. ostablish a logal regulation. % and domoralizing overy boarding-liouse E—— Within the noxt sixty days, and with all | from Twenty.seoond to Madison street. ‘Tho Ohicago produce narkets were mod. | the facts and evidence befors thom, it will be | Thelr warlike propensities vary in eratoly active yesterday, aud thie loading do- | strange indeed if, in {ho intorests of the dogree a3 wo Jiave mnamed them. partments wero firmor, Mess pork closed 6o | country, and of peacs, and of fairness, and | Judge Mmien, not boing a warrlor per bl higher, of $10.25 cash and $10.82) | huinanity, a majority in each Houso of Con. | by profession, is not quite sa forocious ns @10.85 for January. Lard closod fGio por | gress will not bo ablo to reach & eatisfactory | Likn, and Lixn boing *now 50, and having 1001hs highor, at §9.05@9.07} for Docew. | determination of what wos the logitimato | raised three children xince he was marred,” *ber and $10.00910.02} for Jonuary. Moats | and logal rosult of tho eleotion. 'The conntry | {s not quite no sanguinary s monster ns wers steady, at }o for new shoulders, box. | is now paying the penalty for the past nog- | Roinson, Wo confoss'to some surprisa at o4, Bjo for do short-ribs, and 8jo for do | loct of Congross in this mattor. This was a-| the conduct of Judgo Mirzzs, We had short-clears. Highwines wore unchanged, at | trouble forosoen in 1868, aud ogain in 1873, | looked to bim nbova all others for modora- $1.00§ per gallon., Flour was dull and easier. | and the nocessity for providing a remedy was | tion. Hohasnover beon s Bushi-Bazouk, has *| Wheat closed o lower, at $1.16§ for Decem. | pointed out frequently during the past four | never ulain his thousands, has never fired o ber and §1.17 for January, Corn closed jo | years. Even st tho last sossion s Lill was | blunderbuss or touched off o cannon, or 80 lower, at 4040 for December and 44]o for | matured, but Congress adjourncd without | muchas beat adram or sounded a wry-necked Jenuary, Oata closed a shudo casier, st 33} | action on it. The necossity 14 now upparent, | foin loadiug a deadly assault, Havipg been @830 cash and 83fc for January, Rye closed | and we have nq idea that s majority of the | heretoforo a meek, mild-mannered man, par. &rm at 720, Barley closed 1o higher, at 640 | two Houses will permit the queation to drift | ticularly xioted for his conservatism and fn. cash or sellor January, Hogs wore dull and | fnto a case of disputed eloction and conflict | offeusiveness, we are, as we havo sald, sur. 30@16c lower, with wales of common to | between tho Senate aud House. In tho | prised that he should have adopted a tone prime at §5.40@5.85. Ositlo wore in wmod. | meantims, the gegtlomen who are clamorous | and style of speech which are out of place