Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1877, Page 4

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L Y Gt THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: FRIDAY," ary. Ryowas dull, at 7lc. Barley closed 1} | and itis equally cortain that the professional | the forly years of Democratic rule in Illinols, @1} lower, at G0§@G0Je for February. Hoga | jealousy that cropped out in some of the re. | He was tho profesaional, political, and per- wore in good demand, and were firm, at 5@ marks and resolutions of last evening's con- | sonal friend and associate of Mr. Luxcorxy to 106 advance, sales making st $6.00@0.85 for | feronce in not the sort of spirit that | the day of his death, and by whom he was for common to oxira. Caltle wero activo | will meet tho present emncrgency and | appointed {o the Suprome Court Bonch. and vnchlngn}l, with snles chiefly at £3.25@ | inspire peoplo with confidence in the | Judge Davis was born in Maryland in 1815, 4.65. Bheep were dull, at $2.75@5.00. One obility or disposition of the doctors o agroo | was educated at Kenyon College, Ohlo, read hundred dollars in gold would buy $100.00 | upon some plan of provention and troatment. | law in Marschusetts, and movad to Bloom- in groenbacks at the close. Another meeting is to bo held to-morrow | ington in Illinols in 1835, Ho has resided in —_— evening, and it {s enrnestly to bo hoped that | Bloomington forty-two years. e served in The conntry may rest assured that in the | something practical and boneficial will come | tho Legislature, and in tho Constitutional Senata Judge Davis will be found always on | of it. Convention of 1847, and from 1848 until his, tho side of justico and the maintenance of Yiilis: Baorecen oan o s b appointment to the Suprome Conrt was Cir- the national suthority, e will neitber jus. | J0068 Tuwnevcs was the nomineo of the | iy Fndge by repented elections daring six- tify nor extenunto tho denial of legal or po- | “°P™ p ;“: E’“’c“‘ nfter Looax withdrow his | g0y yenrs. One-holf his years havo been Titical righta and liberties to any clasa of citi- | B0 ¢ but be Was never nllowed to m“‘l‘): spent on the Dench, zons, . Ho will not sanction fraud, violence, 1“ t“d. ,;‘;‘“ mc’“' :‘“"" least e ““31‘;“ i Politically, Judge Davis was a Whig until Iawlessnoss, or corruption, and no party i:" 2 ”" L"‘,‘: WI” made good that, if | 4 formation-of the Republican party, and affilintion will canso him to swervo in the gfi"' Sou l‘n “‘]’ ; cleoted, 1o °‘xl‘°' n: waa an antislavery mon always., He wns n lenst from the lino of duty which justice and g;‘n "‘i‘l‘ should be. On the (thirtyfifth | goognte to tho Republican Convontion of law shall prescribe, Ho will, at all times and | o ]'l" :;i'xn““ ;;:ceivcd but “tmfi' of 1o | 1560 which nominated Mr, Lixcory, Since onnll occasions, fill the mensure of duty and | ) u";m 'i“:’]l'” o et P;l"“mb;‘“ vOUBE. | ho hias been on tho Beneh he hns abstained dignity bocoming & Benator of the United | O tho next ballot sixtoen Republicans went | 1oy politics, Lut has nover lost his interest back on the nominec of the caucus, On the | ; 1t H States, ————— romainder of the ballots that day only forty I: p&, mm::e m:fi.‘:,:;;‘,, h:,'n "illl,:me;::.; The entire Touzstas Government of Mexi- | of the Republicans voted for LawneNcE. | o¢ tho Government with the cor- co arrived in San Francisco yesterday, baving | Yeatorday morning when tho final yote W8 | 1pt revenue officials nnd whisky thieves, taken passage on n Pacifio mail stenmor to | taken Lawnexca received but 04, and five | 7ugpq Davis was an earnest dofender of B, escapa capture by Duaz. Thoy had intended | Republiean votes were “scattercd.” Thus | ropary Bnmrow, and gavo his whole influence to disembark at Mazatlan and_organizo their | the impudent, scllish threat was made g0od, | 46 guatain tha Socrotary ngainst tho machinne Governmont there, but arrived just in time | that no Ropublican excapt a salary.grabber | giong and opposition of his Whisky-Ring to find that Dnz hod galned the allegi- | should bo elected; that no Ropublican not in | gnomies, Thore i much in the character of ance of tho peoplo of that region. | favorof tho corrupt Benatorial patronage- | tho ywo men, Bawsrow and Davis, that s in louesus and his party were very | 5poils system should be elocted; and thatno | parmony, and wo doubt whether on any carnestly “wanted" on shore, but the Cap- | Ropublican who was not a “moching man” | question of policy or principlo thers is-any tain of tho stemer refused to surrcnder | should bo clected. serions disagreement between them. Thae them to bo shot sa rebels, and they sailed Democratic victory gained in the election of on to Ban Francisco. Tho Chief-Justice- THE SENATE PASSES THE BILL. Judge Davis consists cxclusively in the fact President and his Cabinet aro oxpected to [ ThO Congressional measure regulating the 4 d a that e was elected by Democratio and In. take the Paciflo Railroad to St Louis, thence | S0t of tho Llectoral vote passed the Senate dependent-Republican votes, and the Stato {o New Orleans, and thence to the States on yesterday morning by a voto of 47to 17— | ot o by st t nearly three-fonrths of all who voted, It s o nais e 4 cauniy Have groas reason the eastern side of Mexico, whers they hope f it to rojoice that the Democracy was too weak to find/a favorablo reception. eafo to predict that tho bill will pass the ption. Heonso on Satnedsy by fally s largo a ma« '((;delmt any of the candidates of thoir owan ————— : . : party. The spirit of compromise and arbitration | JOFity. ’I:hn President has .nlmndy. indicated " embodied in tho Congresslonsl plaa. for ad. | 1 intention of promplly siguing it. Thus, | SIS Daris will ot ones taha infuentin justing the Prosidontial difiiculty has found | for the first time sinco the ugly and danger- tS that he will nn‘: u,b N B cxpression in financial affairs in the form of | °%% disputo began, may tha country look for. mfm, el : ik ekl amovemant fet on foot by o large number | Yard to & pencoablo ontcomo with anything )n commnn:lli Pt u'_']‘m lnrgn’expumpnmcoou 3 of bankers, merchants, and other citizons of | 1ike tho confidenco which is so nocessary to a nwdye;i 1:: hn Lt °| e al Now York, for arranging a mettloment be- rovival of business. Tho struggle hos already | ™2 ‘:l cl chm‘nclor. D:ll:sn s moy well be tween the defaulting Sonthern States and | Strained thoself-control of the American peo- ZTRUCOLET D neacnintIvG: their creditors. At a meeting held yesterday, | Ple 10 tho utmost. It bogan Inst June when | yoTE ON THE ARBITRATION BILL. at which Witsiaar Coriey Bnvaxt presided, | tho Prosidentinl campnign may be saidto | Tho Arbitration bill pnssed the Seuate, resolutions of sympathy and good will wero bavo opened. ‘Two parties never Lefore met | nfter a night's session, at 7 o'clock on Thurs- adopted, and a Committeo of Arbiters, con. | that wero o ovenly balanced, and that entor- | day morning. The vota stood—yens, 47; sisting of fiva disintorested Bank Presidents | o4 upon tho strugglo with such desperate in- | nays, 17; absent, 11. Tho voto classifled of New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, tent to win. For fivo months the attention | was as follows : was appointed to confor with the guthorities | Of the people was largely absorbed in the TEAL of the defaulting States and dovise equitable | i55ue, but thero was goneral confidencs nfi{;’"ng:f"';nfi?m' fi(l n'"“'&“‘ I{“!’“ , 3 l, Mass.; Burnside, R, L3 terma of sottlcment. thut tho clection would bo tho endof 1, and brlstiancy, Mich.; Conkling, X. 11, ; Dawes, Mass. ; Edmuuds, Vi, J. 3 Howe, Wld.; Jones, N Morelll, TRobertson, 8. ‘eller, Col.; Windom, Minn. molancholy and finally sulcidal mania.” This is valusble as coming from A German and a believer in beer. The viotims of ama- tory dissppointment do not como in for much sympathy, He spesks of them ns “madmen who have fallen viclima to * tho diro passion* of love, showing thnt he looks down upon love from sereno philosophical lieights with somowhat of pity, but moro of cold contemptuousness, as one who has nover felt the rankling sting of Cupid's arrows, and, superior to all amatory sccidonts, can aalmly and dispassionately view the ruins that strow tho pathway of Venus. CARLTLE startled tho world with the announcoment that the population of the earth was o billion and a half, mostly fools. Tit- LEYRAND gave the world o universal quotation in his apothegm that language wes made to conceal ideas, Other great minds have summed up colossal deductions in little sentences that will last to the end of timo, and now comes our Coroner, sitting upon tho victim of a mother-in-lnw, and atters theso fow words, which will immedi- ately go into circulation: *‘The misery caused by mothers-in-law s eternal oven as mothers-in.law themsclves are immortal.” ‘What moro conld ha have added? From such thoughts as these ho passes o pay n tribute to thoso unfortunates whoso loss of virtuo has driven them to tho suicide’s grave, and he does it with so much of tendorness, pity, and sympathy, that wero our good Coroner to leavo this world before his term of ofiles expires (which Heaven forbid), the erring daughters of shame would bury him in flowers., In this respect, 0s well as for the pathos with which be treata of the victims of unforeseen accidents, his report shows that & big soul dwella in his big body, and that behind his powerful strongth beats a heart tender and gentle as A woman's. Inone other respect the report of our Coroner is noticeable, It shows that ho can be pugaacious as woll as pathetic, County Commissioner Coxry having shown a disposi- tion to underrata the office of Coroner, and to intimato that he does not need a buggy but can conduct his business on foot, he proves that the Coroner in monarchical countries ncts for the Crown, and in repub- lican countries for the majesty of the people, and then procoeds to bolabor the wratched Coxry with Honace, CicEno, SHARSPEARE, and Bcnorexmaver, which must bave left Conry very much in the condition of tho Billingsgate fish-woman after Dr, Jonxsox nssaulted her with his scsquipodalities. A Coroner who could write such a roport as this not only deserves a buggy but o conch.and. four, and driver all over buttons, Coroner Drrrzacn, in fact, hasonco moro commended himeolf to tho respoct and ndmiration of the community, May he be Coroner for lifo, and then sit on himself. ORE CIVIL WAR ENOUGH. The last Civil War was one that had to come. Tho great issue of Nationalism tersus Btato-Sovereignty mixed up with Slavery was one that probably could never have beon set- tled without an’ appeal to arms, unless the pooplo allowed the Republic to dissolve without lifting a finger to mavo it. That isguo waa sottlod for all time with tho surren. dor of tho Robel armics. The issue in the prosent case is no longer whether the United Btates is n nation, but whother, ns a nation of solf-governing peoplo, the Americaus are equal to sottling a disputed cloction of Chief- Magisteate, or whother, like tho miserable peoplo of Moxico, thoy must tear and rend onch other and thelr country over such a dispute. This issue was also bound to come, soonor or Iater. It hes threatoned the country over sinco the Constitution was adoptod, owing to tho failure to ngree upon somo tribunal to arbitrate such a disputo, ond it only needod at any time the samo sit- untion now upon us to proeipitato the strug- gle. If the National Logislaturo had lacked the wisdom and patriotism to provide tom- porarily tho protection which'framers of tha Constitution failed to provide permanently, then there was nothing but anarchy to look forwanl to, with possible results that would startlo evon tho Moxicans, Tha bittorness of the two contonding factions, tho perti. nacity of the office-holders on the one side oud tho grood of the oflice-scekera on tho othor, have threatened tho worst, but at last, and even sooner than was hoped, the power of solf-government has resssorted itself, and tho Amorican poople are shown to bo oqual to o provision by law for any omergenoy that throatons, Of courso, it is undorstood on all sides that the prosent schemo s intended simply to avert imponding disaster, and that tho agrsemont for arbitration concerns only the case inhand. Thore is no purpose on the part of any oue that the presont settlemont shall ‘become a precedent for the future. On the contrury, tho dofocts of the Constitution os ‘munications. by the landing of Turkish forces, which couldl be speedily sccom. plished. To onter Bulgarla from the south- em rido of Roumanta, therefore, seoms woll nigh jmpracticable for any sarmy. Sup- pose, however, that it crosses tho river and gots a foothold in Bulgaria. Then it has to face the Balkans. It i3 in & district comparatively without roads, its rivers flowing throngh steep and rocky ra- vines, and all the principal ronds command- ed by strong fortresses. The Balkans can only bo crossed by soven passes which mn through vory narrow valleys and' oliasms that conld bo rondored almost impsasable with carthworks, and all of which aro com. manded by tho strongly fortified towns of Shumln and Tirmova. Even supposing, howaver, that the Russian army could safely cross both tho Danubo and tho Balkans, it must be bormo in mind that it would bo in districts which conld not feel it, and that it would be linble at al- most any time to find its communications with its commisaarist severed, Thero is, howover, another route, Tho Danubo skirts the western boundary of tonmania, and the passage thonco into Servia would be open to the Russians if Roumania were friendly. Onco in Servia, it wonld Le just as cnsy progress for the Russians towards Constanti- nople as it was for TouenNayery last sum- mer, who penetrated as far to the southenst a8 Bophis, the terminus of o railroad from Constantinople. By this route the Russians could essily cross the Danube and would turn tho Balkans, and by excollent ronds pusson by Nish and Adrinnople. In this direction, however, they aro confronted by a danger which is thusindicated in the London Times: 1t ia not, therefore, sarprising that there araru- mors of a Rusalan advance through Servia instead of & more direct routo which would commit tha srmy of the Czar to a passage of the Danube, and aftorwards the Dalkan range, both of which are eminently defensible. But a mero glance at tho map will show that the communications of » TRussian army marching by this routo wouldboeven more than usnally at the mercy of Austeia, which counld descend upon them at any timo from the Carpsthian Mountalns, Whatever view bo taken of & HRussian occupation of Bulgarla or march on Conatantinople, 1t 18 perfectly clear that the con- sent of Austria must first be obtalned, cither by negotlation or force of arms, In view of tho natural obstacles which stand in the way of the Russians, and tho poworful opportunities for dofonse which the Turks have on tho Danube and the Dolkans, it is not porhaps remarkablo that Ttussin hesitates about precipitating the con. flict, and is disposed to call upon Europo for help. ENGLAND'S INDIAN POLICY. Tha rocent coronation of Quecn Vicronia 08 Empress of Indin has given tho English papors soveral opportunities for discusalon of tho condition of Indin, and for some scrious criticism also. In the latter direction, tho London Spectator does not nltogether look upon the glittering pageant with satisfaction. It will bo remembered that, beforo tho matiny in 1857 the policy of the Governors of India was decidedly democratic. They pulled down the land aristocracy, sot up the farmers, nnd took tho side of the prole- tariat, Thoy forced down rents and titles, ond gave land-titles to tenants, to attach them to the Crown. Thoe aristocracy, com- posed of groat landholders and feudal chief- tains, wore deprived not only of all power to oppress tho masses, but were even stripped of many of their anciont privileges. Tho democratic policy, however, did not work. When the eivil war broke out, the masses of the people whom tho Govern- mont had been protecting as ogninst the aristocracy showed thefr ingratitudo by tak- ing the most active part in the revolt. Whon this revolt was supprossed, the policy was changed, and carried from tho exiremo of domocracy to the other of aristocracy. All that the Government has dono for the na- tives since tho matiny is to givo thom new ronds, & bettor market, reduction of rates of interest, protecting them in their possession of Innd, and guamnntoeing them justice in tho courts.* ‘T'ho Government, however, paid 1o moro attention to the people, but courted the landlords, All actions against the latter ceased. Tho Princes were reassured in the perpetuity of succession and their hereditary rights, Tho aristocracy were petted and honored, and tho peasants correspondingly neglected; and thus it wont on un. il at the recent coronation ' pageant the sceno was so filled with Indian Princes, landlords, aristocrats,and soldicry, that not a pessant could witness the ceremony. The result o, that cool and thinking men in En- gland, whose hieads are not blinded with the glitter and glare of Royal pageants, are stop- ping to consider whother tho Government, in reversing its policy, hau not gone ton dangerous extreme. The London Spectator his ticket, and struck off objectionsbla Repub- lican names, and put on thelr opc~acnts; tut the ticket ftaell which he thus “reformed ” was the Republican ticket. The prohabllitics then ara that ho voted for fTAYzs. There fs lttla doubt that he supported the Republican Btate ticket and the Republican candidate for Con. :.(I"k"l a8 weil as most of the local Repubiican eket, ‘The Tribrare. Y MAIL—IX ADVANCE—FOSTAGE FREPAID AT L TS OFFICE. Rdition, postpalds ) year. Illlihd'ly Kditfon: Litersey and Hellglous A large number of defalcations have como ta light within n few days, which are thus sum. marized by the Springfield Republican : A Flshkill Tlank Carhier i fonnd to bo $100.000 short in hia balances, the Into ** (ien." Baxknow of Philadelpnia proverto avo defailted to the amount of $150, 000, an Annapolis Bank President {8 & defaultcr to'hls bank in the aum of 835,000, and a great financlal fnatitation In New York haa suffered by a very akiliful forgery to nearly tho same amount. Thia Ia quite a llat forono short week, Tho bard times, aa_they lengthen, re ro- fpomaible for some of it, butanilo ‘as faany of ;,‘;i:‘,"{',':,flx‘.‘f.’é“fl“'" A1R She flush ora of pros. g o 2 A0 Hard times expose thome 1" fouy aud eriae, ——————— Senator CoNRLING got ina hard thump on Morrox when ho read the list of names of the leading Republicans of Indianapolts pfaying Congress to pass the Arbitration bill, The Hst fncluded ex-Gov. Baxsn, Gen. Bexaasis Har- RI%0N, late Republiean standard-bearer for Goy- ernor, thelate Attorney-General, and other high dignitaries fn the Republican ranks. e —— Bpecimen coples sent free. Topravent delay and misfakes, be sure and pive Post- Ofca nddrosa i toll, ineluding Btata and County. . Remittances may bemade either by dratt, express, Poat-Oftios order, or in rexistered letters, st ourriak. ' YERMS TO CITY BUBSCRIDERS, s Dally, delirered, Sunday excepted, 21 cenls per weel Datly, delivered, Bunday included, 20 cents per week Addross THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Corner Madison and Dearborn-sts., Chicago, Tik peisidsesekimbtiahan Roome. Occupants. T CARTET OAK LIFE, (Inrurence Dep't.)s 2 PO N SWALLACE. 3. T. DALE. & DUEBRRWATCH-CASE MANTG COMPANT. 5 TOBINS & APPLETON, &, NEW YONK WATCH COMPART. Benator LoaAX s another added to tho list of Benators who supported the back-pay grab, taok and kept the monoy, who.have been discarded Ly thelr constituents. Iilingls furnishes two names to thatlist,~TRusnuLL and LooAN. We do not remember the name of any Scoator who took ard kept that moncy who has been re- elected. 7. TO RENT. 8, WM. C, DOW. 8. WIMGHT & TYRRELL. . 10. CHARTER OAK LIFE (Losn Dep't.)e ¢ 41-12. FAIRCHILD & BLACKMAN. 13, HEKIIY E. BEELYE, W, D. COOPBR. 1¢-15. JAMES MORGAN, R. W. BRIDGE, 10. CENTENNIAL PUDLISUING COMPANY. 17. M. D, IARDIN, 18-10. I\ K. PEARSONS & CO. 20. IUTCHINSON & LUFF. 21, 0, L. DASKIN & CO. 22, ABSOCTATE EDITOR. P 23, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, 24. MANAGING EDITOR. 25. ASSOCIATE EDITORS. 26, L C. FARLE. 27, W, J. BARNEY & CO. 28, WILLIAM BROSS. 20, 11, F. NORCROSS, J. A. MOELDOWNEY, 20, REDPATH LYCEUM DUREAT. , D1, COMMERCIAL EDITOR . W, We DEXTER, 23, GEORGE L. THATCHEI, 33, NIGAT EDITOR. 20. CITY EDITOIt. Offices o the Dulldiog to rent by W. C. DOW. - Room 8. DROWN, W.ROBBING, —_——— PEEBONAL. A wealthy Englishman who committed suicide in Now York donday, left his property to his danghe ter, with reversion to the Clty. The Nacval Nnzlm of Dengsl {s charged with having bribed at least one member of Parllament and soveral corrcapondents of nowspapers ito ad- vauce hia claims, It is alleged that Dr. Russell, of the London Times, was pald £1,000 for hiy services. 'The Russlan Minlster at Washington pradently has his name spclled on ¥isiting cards nccording to tho phonctle system, **Shishkin, ' althoogh he writes it **Chlchkine, I¢ the Tayleures and Smythes and tho other odd-named people wero as frank, what com{ortable consequences might cnaune! Tho hnndroth annlyersary of the birthday of tha late German seulptor Itauch was celebrated in varfous citles fn (iermany onthe 3d of January. ‘The children of Ranch's only child, a daughter, have been permitied to change thelr 1amily name to D'Alten-Rauch, in order to perpetuato tha great senlptor’s memory, Prof. Loomls' Jetter commending tho contina. ance of efforta to reach tho Pole hiaa attracted at- tentfon fn the East. Ilo soys: ** There Isno vroblem connccted with the pliyaics of the globa which does not demand obscrvation from the Polar reglons, and gencm"_lhlhn poles and the cquater are more important as atations of observation than any other portions of the earth's surface." A woman correspondent at Washlngton has tarn. ed the stream of her enthusiasm on Aloxls, Sha says he fa ** the consummata flower of a great his- torle race," and his feot remind her of a Polar bear's, becausa ** they take nathing from the gold- cn splendor of his head nor from tho lustre of his large, over-changing eyes," This means probably that the Grand Duke lios nat blacked his boote, or had thom blacked, since arsiving In this country. The provoeition to remove the Dichton Ntock from Its prescat resting-place, opposite the lower village of Dightan, to Hoaton fanot likely to be entertained seriously. Tho undertaking fs about as feasiblo na wonld be tho transportation of Lake Michigan to New York for an aquarlum. The In- scription which the Bostan people desire to gt is suppoeed tobe proof posltive of thoearly dlacovery of Amorica by the Norsemon, It haa been trans. 1ated by Itunic scholars as follows: **On thisspot landed Thorfnn with 131" One recommendation mado at the late meeting ot the Michigan Teachera' Azsoclation was that at the end of each grade of studles the stundent should ba required to pass an_examination In some famllar English classlc, such ns the **The Vicar of Wake- fic)d.” Theldea merits conslderation, If more time were spent by school-children In learning good English from oxample, and less in learnlng it from theory, thero would bo a larger propartion ol persons competent to writo and speak with frees dom and cloquence. Mr, Menry 3, Fleld's book of travels Is accorded tho honor of & long roview In the London ZUnes. The critic ebjects to muchof his scntiment, Lutta Tittlo of his faet. 1Intho lotter reapect, however, " he has mado one serious error, namely, in express. fog borror at the amount of discase and death In Loudon. The critlc says it cannot Lo denfed that people dodloin London, but it has the laweat death-rate of any clty In the world, —a fact perfoct- 1y recognized by students of the subject every- where. ‘Thero §8 a person cmployed to writo abont art in the Atlantic Monthly who beautifully says of onu of Me. Willism Hunt'srecently-exhibited pictares: 44 There was much that gave pleasure, as tho two Iarge studies of aylvan penetralia, with thelr con- soclation of swartby beles and fropleached strotches of green overhead, fitering the aunlight into ten- der unts, or that othor Instanca of an Immenso, ln- volutea cond-plle steeped In o hyacinthine atmos- phere and seemINg about to roll down npon and smother tho quiet green landscape In the fore- ground,** Tho Earl of Dudloy's remarkable bets In regard to tho accessfon of tha Princs Imperlal to the throne of Franca wore niastated yestorday. ‘Ths offer was of £1,000 to £1 that the Princo Impertal wounld never, in tholifetims of Lard Dudley, e calied to tha throne. Inasmuch as the Lord wounld have todlo to win the bet, aud aa the odde wera enormous, the offcr was ton tempting to bi'tealet- AMUSEMENTS. New Ohlengo Theatres & Clask street, between Lako and Randotph. Le Com- " mandeur Cazencuve, tho Prestidigitateur, Adelpbl Theatre. Monros _street, comner Dearborn, *'3inerva.” Viriety eatertainment. Haverly’s Theatre, Tandolph street, between Clark and LaSalle. Fn; gagement of Dalys Fifth Avcuus Company, **Life. MoVicker's Themtre, | M t, between Dearborn and State. En- ot of Lanlss Tomeroy. - Lady of Lyoas" McCarmick Hall, North Clark street, corner of Kinzle, Concert by ‘Mine, Pappenbeim. — that, in cithor event, the peoplo would sottle Previous to his clection as United States | down to quist acquiesconce in the result and Sonator, Judgo Davis seemed to bo consid. | b patriotic effort to moke tho best of it. Iint ered tho fifth Judge that would be selccted | tho actual voto waaucarcely tho boginning of on the Joint Arbitration Committeo, and | tho ond. For nearly threo months the many Republicans snspected him of harbor. | nation hea been distnrbed by the uncertainty + Cockrell, Mo, ; Coaper, Tenn. ; Davis, ing Democratic leanings, although on what | of thecount, and the well-grounded fenrs that nnis, Md. ; Goldthwalte, Ala,; Gor- evidenco is mot known, But his election | in the absonco of somo Court of Arbitration | dom, G1.; donston, Va.: Jones, Fla.: Kelly, yesterday to tho Sensto by the votes of the | it would result in resistance by the defented rong, 3 Y MeCisery, 16y ¥:£:“{3‘ Democrats precludes his sitting with the | faction. Tho nightmaro of civil strifo lias | va, ; Randolph, X, Sanls- arbitrators, Ho wonld not do it if ho | haunted tho sleep of overy business man who | bury, be could, and ho must not if he wonld, There | hns given the subject tho thought it do. | Ince, Te remains Justices Swaryz of Ohio, Huxr of | Berves, and it has looked ns though n poople New York, and Bnaprry of New Jersey, to | yearning for peace aud good-will would be chooso from. The former would bo ontirely placed at the mercy of contonding peliticiaus | over, acceptablo to Ropublicans. All of them are | 8ud demagoguos, and forced into a war that | lin, 3 of moderate Ropublican antecedonts. woul‘?ubn fatal to tho n:u'nn and the hopa of | ! = republican governmen! The certninty that = — A mow complication s arisen In the vari- | anch o rosult will now bo avertod 1a tho ap- [ 270752 CUa e ons developments of the Eastern question, | Plest tidings that could bo brought to tho | Fepdlicans—Anthony, . L; Ferry, Mich.: Persin Lins recontly taken o position which | mss of tho Amarican peopls to~duy, and this | Harvey, Kan.: Hitchcock, Neb.: Loga, IIL; goes to sliow that sho has no special love for | Beems to bo nssured by the arbitration proj- %‘v',,ffi‘.',’,'h : I,P:‘l)dnk' Hebt Bpancor, Alay tho Sultan, and that, if Turkoy gota into war | ect which will now bo adopted. Democrata—Key, Teun. ; Norwood, Ga.—2, with Russin, the Shali is bound to have somo Theo dobato in the House was opened yes- Total—Ycas, 47;nays, 17; sbeent or not vot. of tho plunder, He hes already scnt forty | terday Ly Mr. McCpaur, who originally | 1o, 11. Dattalions of infantry, sixtecn squadrons of | moved tho appointment of tho Joint Com- o theso absontoes would have votad we cavalry, nd threo batteries of artillory to tho | mittee, and by unanimous consent it s to bo | 40 not kuaw, but it is not likoly that, had Turkish frontiers with tho intention, if war | closed to-dny at 3 o'clock, whon a voto will | they been presont and voted, the majority renlly breaks out, tomako an attnek upon | bo taken. Thus tho long agony is nearly [ for tho bill would hava beon reducod. Wao Modnet-ur-8alam, wsually known ns Bogdad, | Over- ‘Thero are no indications of any or- | &uBgest to Republicans o comparison of tho upon which placo Porsia Los always bad s | Ganized opposition in tha Honso, Tndoed, | Hawes of Nepublican Senstors voting for covetous oye. This new danger in Asiatio | o can scarcely conceive thoro could boin | this bill with thoso voting agninat it. Ex- Turkey bas not heretofore been considered, | view of tho unanimous and hearty approval copt Measrs, Dianmw, Monton, Tamwix, but it 0ay play a very important part in tho | tho measuro hna recoived from tho peoplo of Suemax, OawznoN of Wisconsin, and In- struggle. tho country without regard to party. What. | 0ALLS, the reader will fail to find tho namo — over shortcomings thera may bo in tho meth- | Of ony Benator conspicuons Locauso of tho Ono of tho most eloquent nnd effectivo | od provided, howaver much it may prove in | credit and honor ho has given to tho Ropub- apocches in the Houso yesterday in support | its operation to be in tho advantage of ono | lican party. of tho Arbitration bill was that of Geonax | party or the other, its acceptance in good AR —— F. Hoar, the Massachusetts Senator-eloct. | faith by both partics will preclude any sub- $ OUR CORUNZE. Tho specch of Mr. Hrwirs, of New York, | scquont resistanco, and tho disposition of | , 1t 1% not gencrally supposcdthat tho avoca- was not less interesting, s it containod a | tho people will bo to ablde by tho result in | {10% Of 8 Coroner, plylng his ghnatly business significant allusion to tho programmo whick | good nature, Up to this timo the un. down among the dend men,” s peouliarly {lie Democracy had marked out in the event | cortainty of tho issuo has only en. | PoCtical Ono hardly looks for fSowers of of tho Henato's reserving to its presiding | gendered hard feelings; from now on fancy or gomis of sentiment, lofty fights of officer tho exclusive power of counting the | this very uncertainty as to what Pegasuy or luxuriant sweaps of tho Orphlo Electoral voto and declaring the election of | the award of the Arbitration Cominission lyro, n’xlnong thio/vlothiax af tha “C.rowner'n President. Tho Houso would count tho | will bo ought to promoto reconcilintion, for | 40¢8k" On tho other hand, one fnatinctively voles of Louisiana and Florida for Trpey, | it is that very featuro which constitutes the ghginis (fom Bodied wlllal fn }n-nwlu, floating declsre him elected, aund the Democracy | fairness of tho scheme. “Lhe confidenco that in turbid streams, swollen with cold polson, wonld inaugurato him. Tho result, as r. | tho cleotion will now bo wottled on its merits | P2ugled in xallrond casualtios and boilor cx- Hewirs assorted, would havo been civil war, | under the law, nd will reccivoa peacetul | P1O%ions froron in snow-drifts, rousted in strifo, and anarchy—all of which will b | acquisscence from ull factions, ought to allay | COR88TatOnY, starved in hovels, or Langed averted by tho prssage of tho bill. the high party feeling which hns provailed, | 12 Woodsheds. = Our Corondr, Lowover, fndy Sharon, Nev.s ‘Wright, Towa. Woed' onros atreet, between “the Glsnt Kille senm. te and Dearbarn, *Jack rnam, Conn.; Bayard, Del.; SOCIETY MELTINGS. TOME LODOE, No. 7, A. F. and A. ‘M.—Regalar Communication at 134 Twenty-sccond-st. il Tidsy) der of W, 3. £ it. Z. NERRICK, Sec. ORIENTAL LODG/ No, 123 Lasalle-at. S A aTSE " 4 L. N. TUCKER, Bec, ¢ Morton, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1877. berman, Greenbacks ot the Now York Gold Ex. chango yesterday closed at 943, e —— Mr, Eatox, of Connecticut, was the only Democratio Senator who voted against the Arbitration bill, and the aunouncement of tho fact in the Connecticut Logislature yos- terdny was received with hisses from the Democratic side. The general sentiment of Republicans in this city in relation to tho clection of Judge Davie as Sonator is that they very much prefor him to any other man the opposition talked of orvoted for. The popularity of Judge Davis extonds far boyond mero party lines, Itis belioved that hio will represent the peoploof thewholo State rather than any Inction theruin. The Italian ge of Doputies hns passed & bill which is obviously intonded as o notifi- cation to the Popo that a little more defor- enco to tho dignity of the Btate will Lo in- ;; sisted upon in his numerous specches and o7+ manifestos, Tho bill inakes it a penal offense T4 to publish writings procoedings from nuy clerical suthority censuring the laws of tho Btato, This prohibition has an immediate effect on tho clerical journals, and furious in- dignation among the publishers is the result. ‘There ia an active effort making to throw zold water on tho proposition to hava the Qilizens' Association invostigate the Caxznoy & Aupenc job-printing charges, in which it is allegod by the Alaats-Zeitung that they r— - aud mon will turn thelr thonghts to some. | tBt Lis avocation fs lionorabla and elovated, | 1o" (1" Progldentiel election are mow go | LC1oU83 0 this class, s will be saen by tho | ed, and tyo persons standiug by booked it e, 7 xt fri i : d have defrauded the county out of thousands { A witness wus examined before the House | (hiy, heerful than politics, even as his next friond, tho Grave-Digger iu following cxtract : diately, Thero would have bLeen a thousau of dollars, It is reportod that {lie Secrotary | Committeo engaged in investigating tho con- gaora clicerind 1480 Doyticd, “Ifamlet,” maguifiod Lia labor to tho melan. | P2te0% 80d tho necessity so spparent £or | yyinerto we frankly acknowledgo that tho Drittan | takers ad not the cccentric Earl withdrawn from providing a now systom of choosing n Presi~ dont nnd determining tho result of his elec- tion, that the wisdom of our statesmen will be concentrated in tho effort to devise a pro- ceduro which shall render all such complica- tions impossible for the future, THE RU. URKISH CAMPAIGN. Turkey, baving rejected the ultimatum of the Conferenco, now stands face to face with Russin, and the pending interest sottles upon the question, Will {here be war Letween theso two Powers, to sottla the relations of the Turkish provinces? There is as yot no definite nows bearing unpon this question from which an answer can bo deduced. In caso, howover, there should be war, it will be of interest to consider the tremendous difilcultics tho Russians will kave to encoun- ter in inaking the strugglo on nggressive oue. Tho reader, by taking the mup of Turkey and Russin, can ensily comprchend thom. The war must bo on land, for, as compared with Russia, Turkey is maater of tho Black Bea. From o laud sttack the Tarks have two important natural defenses,—the Danubo ond the Balkans. ‘There fs only ono month in tho wholo yenrin which tho Danube can bo crossed upon tho ice, and that time isnow post. ‘There are no permanent bridges “neroas tho river at any point. The northern banks are low, swampy, and malarial, along the whole of its course botween Roumanin aud Bulgaria, The islands in the river are on the uorthern side, the main channcl, which is very swift and deep, beivg between them and the southern sids, Tho wholo of Roumania iz in- tersccted with numerous rivers baving marsby banks, and the good roads are very fow. Tho best crossing places are at Wid- din, Nikopolis, Rustchuk, ‘Turtukai, and Sil- intria, at ¢nch of which places there aro very powerful fortresses commanding the river; and, in fact, wherover the Russians should attempt to cross, they would find & power- ful naval squadron confronting them. The croesing of the river near its mouths would be very difficult, and, in addition to the nat- ural obstacles, a Bussian army secking to enter Bulgaris at this point would be ex- posed to ths 1oss of its flank and rear com- Government, 8o far from: oppressing tho ryot, bas been slightly too **soclalistic™ in its tendencies, —Las protected the masses 100 arrogantly at the expenso of the indlviduallsms; but the great pen- dulum bas swung In the other dircction, and vur dread fu that it will swing toa far, 1f the ceremo- nial 25 enacted at Deihil Is symbolical of tho new tone, it has wwung too far already, Wo would rather 200 ono act making justico more acceslbls than all that glittering parade, —rather Lear the Queen called Ly the illliens, **Regina protect- rix' than ** Imperatrix sempor Augusta, tho unoqual contest. A Far-West nowapaper brings the cheering intel- tigenco that **the lndiana call the Black Hills Pah-Sapha-P'aw-hte-Sapka,—black,"” At this rata {1t must take half a day to make o proposal of mare rlage in that dlalect, and a week to decline an Invl tatlon to dinner in palito terms, Couslderations of this nature may confinn the views of distin: guished ctbnologlets that the difficalty of express- ing ideas In barbarous phrases is the principal res- son why tho abongines donot make proposals of marriage, buttako such wives &a they cam, and never uuder any clrcamatances decline an fovita- tlon to dinner, Mr, Plerro Bernard (who wmustenjoy the dls- tinction awarded to ono who marrica & famous womon, ond bo described s **Caroltae Richings' busbend®) has had & bltter ex- perience with oficers of tho law at De- trolt. They have been after him for the amouut of o small blll duo the former lcader of his urches- tra. ‘The opera-trouve, it scomas, has boen loaing ‘money heavily during the sesson. Bernard shirked his difculty at Detrolt by feaviug the city between luncheon and dluner, while the Justice and the creditor were walting for him; but the talo of Lis ‘Wocs hoa apparently ouly just begun. Itisnow sald that Mr. Joha Habberton, the author of ** Hulen's Bables," s slso;the author of o Jericho Road,™ publisbed fu this city, He has lately written **The Barton Experiment,” edited two volumes of essays, and has in the press! of G. P. Putnam & ons etlll another book called *+Tha Seripture Club uf Valley Rest.™ At night, 50 abundant Is his letsure, ho writes cditorlal par- sgrapha sor the Now York Herald, snd during tbe daytime, 1t 4 prosumed, L has the routine at poio which ts requlrod of every person connected with that grest mewspaper, 1f energy wero Infused {nto Mr, Habberton ho might bave a carcer beford hiw. Mrs, Julis Ward Howe's late trip through Kansas was in many reepects notsble, She met with a warm reception, partly, no doubt, un 8¢~ count of ber husband's cousection witl tho early history of tho State, but largely also on ber owi account. 'The most amusing oxpericnce she had was in the criticlsms of the nowspapers on her lect- ures. One critic sald sho pronuunced her worndd wroag,—lmsgine tho laughter of u Boaton dame 8t that! Another writer **gave himeelf awsy™ by saying that the principal sim of Mrs. Howe's dis- coarse svemed 10 bo **that women should besd coarse a2 wen.” Thers was much sympathy with ber estholic spirl, o manifested in her amend- ment of & reading from Dickess. Sho quoted: **Who then does belong to s good famlly?™ snd the grandmother's reply, ** Why, my dear, mostly noope.” Hut, sdded Mre. Howe, with geatle um* basls, **1 should say, mostly every one,” T Hoel very wall 1n Kansds, but it s not necessary 0 to read 10 Boston, whore Beacon street doth much sbound and Mra. Howe may msgnily ifabe duct of the cxmpaign subscquent to the THE HON. DAVID DAVIS, choly Dane, e can tell his year's story, and election in roferenco (o telegraph dispatches | The clection of the Hou. Davip Davis, | rhopsodizo, moralize, and sentimentaliza over received in Florida from Mr. Cuaxpeen, | ROW 8 Justics of tho Supremo Court, to tho | it. Heillustraten it with the graces of an. Chnirman of the National Republican Com- offico of Senator of the United Btates, will | tiquity, clothes it with the polish of the clas- wmittes, Tha witness i a telograph operatar | Btract. conelderablo attention all over the | sics, and brings to bear upon it tho fan- ot ‘Tallabasses, and Lo professcd to give | ©0Untry. It will not La surprising to thoss | cics, the espirations, tho enthusiasm, from memmory alone tho contentsof dispatches | Who have watched tho courso of proceedings | the scholarsbip, and the oulturo of sent concerning tho necessity of guarding the in tho General Assembly. ‘The Republicans | his well-stored mind, whose ({ressures Electoral voto of Florlda against tho attempts | 1ad 100 votes, tho Democrats 99, and thero | include the resulls of numberlesa prob- of tho bulldozers to intercept roturns and were 5 Indepondents, of whom 4 were Re- | lems, ranging from the proper broiling sccuro the Btate for Trupex, Ilis testimony publicana. These four Republican-Inde. | of a #nipo to the trae inwarduess of Bcnopey- was palpably cooked up for the occasion, | Perdents would not vote for Gon. Loaaw, | msven's motuphysics, Quidguid teliyit, orna- sinco e remembered not o syllable of tho | he Republican caucus leaders undertook to | vit dispatches received from Northern Demo. forca them to ro-elect Louay, aud the clection ‘We Lope that every reader of Tre Trin- crats, and declined, on the plea that to do so of Judgo Davis is tho final result. 'The Dem. | uNm hos studied this remarkable report, not would criminato Limscif, to anawer questions | 0°Tats tried, Lut did not expect, to clect a | slono for tho kako of {hw official information by Republican wmembers of tho Committeo Democrat ; thoy 'dld not want Axpensoy, | it containg, but also for the pithy disserta- a4 to whethor he Lad given information con. | 824 they wera willing to take afmost any | tions, pathetio and humorous, poctic and sar- cerning tha telegrams previous to bis arrival competent Republican oxcopt Loaax, Four | donio, with which it sbounds, It is as pleas- in Washington, Secretary OuanpLrs has Democraty yntcd all of ono day for Wasu. | ant reading as a romsnce, Scarcely a body suthorized the statemont to be published BURNE, offering n.ru Ropublicaus the oppor- | has been investigated by him that does not that Lo nover wroto anyof tho dispatches tunity to cloct him; but tho caucus was | suggest somo apt aud pertinent criticlsm, or which {his witness with a deformed memory Looax first and last, aud fiually the Demo- | somo instructivo moral, or remind him of refers to, and nobody can resist the conclu. crats and the Independents united upon aad | somoe poetio illustration, i report is stud- sion, after reading the report of the cxami- elected Judge Davis, ded with quotations from the Bcriptures, nation, that Mr, CusNpLen's memory and Wodo not regerd the eloction of Judge | Monace’s Odes, Ciceno's treatise **Da Offi- verucity are tho moro trustworthy of the Davig, under all the circumstances, in the | ciis,” * Hamlet" and ** Love's abor Lost," two. light of o misfortune. 110 i3 & man of learn- | Hantvany's philosophy, Beworesmaver's = - iug and ability, of unblemished integrity, | ** Criminal Jurisprudence,” Vizaiw's Bucol- 'l‘he.pbysiclm of Chicago have at last | profound lawyer, and o gentleman of great | ics, Unrann's Bullads, tho Napoleonio Ideas, fgcogmzad the necessity of organized action | indopondonce of character, Hs will tako to | Gorrue’s “Faust,” Eviirtoes’ ¢ Medos,” and in conjunction with the municipal au. | the Seuato many of the, qualifications of a | the Agrarian Laws of Rome. ‘Ihere is s thorities with a viow to arresting { Benator which are frequently wanting in that | Coroner for you! If an unfortunate victim the _ravages ot sgulut,{nver and diph- | body., Thoe ouly evidences of any sympathy | of tho world'’s ingratitude, of man's hate or theris, Tho meeting of confercnco last | between Judge Davis and tho Democratio | woman's scorn, can have any consolation in oveuing in response to the suggestion of the | party sro tho endcavors of a portion of | leaving tho world, it must be in the thought Health Commiissioner was largely attended, | that party to make him a Democratio candi- | that s gentleman and a scholar will it npon aud the necessity of adopting wmeasurvs of | date for President. This was tried at Cin. | hiw, moralize upon his doath, tell the story prevention was very geuerally odmitted, | cinnati in 1872 and ot 8t Louis in 1876. | of his life in elegant English, adorn it with though tho preciso means to be | Weare not aware that tho Judge counte. | the culture of German thought, give him employed was the wsubject of no | nanced or sanctioned their proccedings. We | Christian burial, and shed a tear or two over little difference of opinion. A very | are aware, however, that for a loug time | tho grave. Thero aro bits of philosophizing claborate plan of disinfoction and isols- | Judge Davis bad a desire to yoturn to active | all through this report that aro worth tion was quoted from ¢* Arxex's Practico of | political life, for which he always had | special referenco. Finding that the lurg- Meodicine,” involving o degreo of expenss (o strong juclination. Ie was an |or number of suicides are Germans, and care, us well 25 an ares of houso-roow, | antislavery Whig before he became | the Coroner, himself a German, at that would practically debar poor people | & Republican, and sn active and zeal | once looks for the causo and rans it down as from its use and bonefits, and thus failto | ous one, and an assoclate of Laxcown, | follows: * The habitual use of beer scems reach the chief localities of the diseaso. I1tis | Yates, Brownmo, Ancuy Wirrnsws, J. Y. | to have a tendency to direct their (the Ger- certain that something far simpler aud less | Scasuoy, Sreruey T, Loaay, and,the * Old | mans) psychological silments into the form expunsive than this plan must ha.ndoptod; Guard " which maintained the fight during | of » mstamorphosis from phlegmatic.ease to } ot tha Citizens' Association is not using any influenco or efforts to havo tho alleged swin- dling investigated, and is not anxious to have the bottom facts exposed, Wo trust ihat these reports aro without basis, ‘We print this morning a letter from Gen. PrrasoxnToN, of Philadelphia, the originator of the Blue-Glass treatment, the sccount of which in a recent issuc of Tuz Trmuxe at- tracted such generul interest and attention. _ Qen. PreasoxTon, responding to tho many requests through our columns for more de- tailed {nformation, generously volunteers to the public the benefit of his knowledgo and sxperience on this subjeet, derivtd from ex- paperis pl with the de- feat of BOUTWELL and the election of Judge Hoan as Benator for Massachusetts, and speaks thus of the new Benator: Judge Tioaw has not the Scoatorial temper and mpartiality, it must bo coufessed, but be hus in high degres the Senatorial moral and fntellsct. 1f Lie i1 one-slded, and partlean, and provinclal, it ts the ono-sidediicss, nnd partisanship, and' pros vinciallim of a great, strong, inuependent, and Lionest nature, —suc Massachuseits has fur- nlshed before in her Apaxsxs and her Bussei, Aud ripening years and the culturo of public ex- perienco are”qualllying the quulities in which ko aily, while obviously developing bis supreme ex- collences, Ho hisa been rapidly advancing in tho rauks of the very best eloments in our Maasa- chusetts politics, and ho taked the place of & won who, unfortunstoly, b becn dnftiue back amon tho poorest. 3¢, Hosi owea something of hla wac- cuas, t0a, to tho patriotic part that he has taken in bflnilnlg the_ Presidential disputy to thosolution of & Ligh, Independent, and inpartial tribunat. It sporoval of Massachusetts, prompt and hearty, 40 the roport and bill which 'ha and bis cul- leagued made 1o Cougrras tho day before, e ————— Real charity is in helplog people to be sell- supporting; in trylog to find work and wages for them ratber than in givlng them alms and destroylog thelr self-respect,—converting thetn fnto meodicants aud tramps. A contemporary observea: ‘The human rats that prefer to be vermin should not bo euconraged that way. DxFox cowplaiued of robust tellows whom bo tried to Lire, who told bim that they could make more by ang. ‘Tho race has not Jied out. ‘Thero la ploaty of that sort who will patronize all the soup-houscs that may bo provided, The wanagems of & Uoaton youp-house sttached to their premises 3 wood-yard, sud gave notlco that no ratlous would Lo ‘jesued to abla- budied men who would noteaw a cortain zeasonsble awount of wood. The nuwmber at vnce fellod frons 160 to 40. Bt. Pavr, while urcivg us to i arted, would let hunger of inany s lazy stomach thy 1f aoy will not wozk, neither ments, and our readers will not fail to properly appreciate tho disintercsted kind- Resa, ‘The election of Judge Davis to the Benato will causo a vacancy on the Bench of the Su. ! 1 premo Court of the United Btates, and wo i supposo that in the whole circuit there is not L ( the least question as to the propriety and f . justice of appointing Judge Tuosas Druvx. ¢ - u0xD to fill that vacancy, Among lawyers E ‘Wwe quostion whether thero will be o dissent- iing vaico, and amony the peopls there will be an equal unanimity. Judge Drusntonn hag borne himself 8o ably and so nobly in his t'%f, tended observation and numerous oxperi- It \ high office that ke has won universal confl- h 1% 'dence and admiration to an extent rarcly 8% »qualed by any judicial officer. Ths Clicago produce warkets wers mod- sratively active yestenlay, and generally v.easler, Meas pork closed 20c per brl lower, _ &t §10.80@16.82} for February and $17.05 @171.10 for March, Lard closed Tio per 100 lbe lower, at $10.85 for February and 11,02§@11.05 for March. Mcats closed steady, at 60 for shoulders, boxed; 8jc for sbortxibs; and 8¢ for shortclears. High- » wines wero dull and ecasler,at §1.05 asked per gallon. Flour wes quiet and finn. Wheat «closed 20 lower, at $1.26} cash and §1.27 " seller February, Corn closed jo higher, ot :.42}q cash and 430 for February, Oats closed Judge Davis would have voted for Bocretary BrisTow If he bad been nominated for Presl- dent. Whetber ba voted for Haxzs or TiLDd 1s not cleasly known; but an jutimato friend of bis says that the Judge never voted the Demo- tickes tn his life, Ho bas often

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