Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 27, 1877, Page 11

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MISSISSIPPI, An Intervicw with a Prominent Mis- aissippi Republican. Jlis Views Regarding the Present Po- Mlical Situation There. Tho Edecated Whites Combined to Keep Ignorant Negroos Out of Politics, The Negroes Degin to Realize the Silaatton and Draw Into the Background. ‘The Bost Colored Mon Opposed to Po- litical Prominence. Some of the Now Issues Upon Which the Southern People Will Divide. Special Correspondence of The Tribune, New York, July 24.—I met yesterday an old friend of mine from Mlsalesippl, a gentleman who helt a high position In the Unton army during the War, and whom I knew tu bea gtanch Republican, 1 bad tho curtosity, there- fore, to Interview him somewhat as to the poilti- ¢a) situation in that State, A man of hfs stind- ing and {ntellizence, with bis opportunities, [ know could not fail to be well Informed as to the sentiments of the better class uf citizens of that Btate, The information he gave mo was of such ranatura that 1 think Its publtcation will con- tribute something to a correct understanding of the Southern altuation, In reply to my qucs- ton, “ Tow are things polltical in your Statel"* he replied, *' Well, ‘THE DLACKS WON'T YOTR this fall any way.” “Why not”? Casked. “ Well," lie repticd, “the fact fs they wilt re fratn from votlng because they think It ood polley tu do sv at present. The whites~Deino- crate and Republicans—are a unit at this tine In opposition ta negro rule. The white men are the property-ownera of tlto State, and_atso-con- stitute the educated and refined portion of the population, It{s unnatural that this eleinent should bo controlled by thy fgnorant, the fin. provident, and the tecklesa class. For somo years the negroes had the upper hand, sup- ported by the Federat Government and North- ern sympathizers, but they very naturally nade bad work of thelr attempt to adininister Gov. ernment affatre, Asa consequence, the whites, + representiug all shades of political sent{ment, { have combined trith the determination that {n- telligence and ability shall control State nffaire rather than fgnorance and ineapaclty. Upon this one point ‘THE WUITES ANH SUNSTANTIALLY A UNIT, and they aro so carnest in the matter that all yother Issues aro apparently forgotten, The more intelligent of thecolored people appreciate the sitnation, and ate free to admit that they Jaye been placed hia false ght heretofore, by belng pushed forward into polltics and into yublle oftices where their Ignerance and in- capacity were paraded conapteuously, Walt awhile, thoy say, till we get a Httle more editca- tion and a Httle more property; we've been trying to walk belore we could creep, It ts thelr polley now to keep out of polltica-for o tlne, walting for dissensiona to develop, as they are sure tu do, among the white people, when the negrocs will take sides and be made much af py the cunteatants. By simply LAYING LOW FOR A TIME they disarm the aggressive antagontam of tha whites, who, having nothing to contend with, gradually drift: apart, antagonizing each other ‘upon other Isauca, Some of these faites are, already dimly seen, but have not yet become promtnent enough to overshadow tho race-Isaue, Ttell you, my friend, 1f you had seen the evil effects of negro supremacy, you would sympa- thize with the white people--thut ls, with tutel- Vyence ngahist fnorance. ‘Tie negrogs seo that ev Igng as they are prominent fn polittes so Jong will the whites keep up tila war of races, therefore It becomes the policy of the negro to step aside for a tine til) the superlor race splits Np on some other question,” “Tlow ts it about bulktozing, about which wo have heard so macht T asked. “Tf by bulldozing,” reptted my friend, “ you mean the exereise of physical furce to prevent the noegrocs voting, why I reply thers is very Aittle bulldozing fn Misalsstppt, That Is to say, ‘THELE 14 NO ORGANIZED VION There aro ucvastonal electlou-day [racases bo- tween our rowdles ond the negroes, Just as thyre Ja between respectable citizens and rowdics at the North, anil aa the negro has no splrit to fight agatnat the whites he generally geta the worst of it. At tha same time thero ise doubt but the negroes are restrained from voting py a force thot a more powerful than physical force, and that Is sclf-lntcrest. Tho whites are the property-owners, the money-hulders, and the employers. The negro fa tho laborer, Whe must Jouk to tho white man for the means of carping aliving, Ho ls shrewd and sharp, ia the darkey, and beargues that If the mun who gives bin bread and meat Is oppoacd to bia voting the No- publican ticket the best way for him to insure the continuance of the bread and meat supply dy to keep away from the polls. Therefore he abstalng from voting, or else vutes the consery- alive white man’s ticket. Then, too, A ATHONG CONSERVATIVE INFLUBNCM 19, REEI- CINE woe over the more ignorant negroes by the more in- tuiligent among them, Jt fa a angular fact tat when 9 colored nan beclus to get atead a (lttle iu the world, acquiring a ttle property, he be- ting to grow conservative, He begina to crave business and social recognition; he tikes to be patted on the back by hls white neighbor and called a goad fellow; he tikes to have bualneed drunsactlons with tho wiiltes, to buy and scl}, and tu be recognized und spoken of by them as a progressive business man, So it will be found that nearly every colored merchant, trader, bare bur, or mechanic of any kind who is in business for himself, ls consorvative Jn bis polltics, yot- dng the white man’s ticket, and deprecating thu etforte of the radical darktes tu muke themaglyes prominent, And so they will continue, uuless sume Issue is rulsod affecting theix Intervste as a racg, when, of course, they would become united egain.. But this {a not likely to occur, ‘THE NEGO QUABTION 18 4 DEAD 198Uz, and uo party can ever hope to reviveit. The darkles have all thelr rights, the same as the aa relative classes have at the North,—the right to work for themselves; to make ail they eau, ty take all the comfort they cun; to yote ff they choose to do wuz but they ail uever aguin by ‘permitted to ride rough aliod over the edu cated classes und the pee perty interests as they aid atey years atc tu ad Cay baka td eR Fou regu 6 Repul dexg in Mt alate ia : ee “Yea, ] inay say thai 10,—slecping certainly, auiprebublydeat. ‘The Republican aud Demos ecstie purtles in the South have heretofore dl- viled upon the rice question, and fo Missisalppt that will nut be allowed te come up again ut i “sent, owing to the fact that Republicangand stuocrats have united to keep the negro out of piltica, But Tethink the people of the North sve never hada just appreclatioa of the muke- uy ofthe two pasties iu the old slave-bolding States. The Democratic party Suuth bas cou- trolted the UHAINS AND CULTURE OF THE SOUTH, as generully as the Republica party-las con- toiled the better classes of the North, while the scaluwagy, roughs, and cuuracterless per tons of tuy South have been enrolled im the Republican party. as they are in the Detwovratic party North. jut for’ the anti-slavery issue Wleb furined the keyatoue of the Republican bein thuse who ara Democratic leauere in the ‘uthern States tuday would been Kepub- lustead of Dumucrats. ‘Chey are the fps utauve men of thelr sectluu, aud would piwally have beew fyund witaia the Repub- Hau trunks. With tite organization of bew Virttics Upou ucw lseuce consigniug the race (deation to the grave which thes War prepared, tals ail she: progressive Democrats of the uth will be found eide by slde with the cou- Sreative Republicans of the North. This fhm of partles must cule Woz; whlly thy preacut di \. beture tuetive names may ar nay not he fe-uea will qost certainly be ¢ stained, the Thee For . wae fee ene VES esl veq tiem emery Moya Seas THE CIICAGD SUNS: FRIDAY, JULY 27, (s77-TWEIAH PAGES, fone) suoporting what are new Republican MU INT GOSSIP. cau do in sat air ofl tone sear nearly eqaal PT tilinic tie breaidentes pattey of testo: CURREN FOSSIL Ue coed of the tanned, mm States are Tt is expected: that the gold Inthe ore, now twenty yeara, the people of this vee been divbled on thee: yiiestion; the pecrocs are now free, and are slowly but eurely demon- élrating thelr right ty vitlzeaship, and WORKING OUP A GLOWIOUS FUCURE POR THEM: ace of lahurera, contrib- ullng largely to our agricalinral wealth, But the man who gpall seck to again precipitate the negro into off politics, digs his own political grave. Tho axtreme Rascals of the North, who till regard the negro na somiach polltical eapl- tal, to bo ured ta promote thelr own seltiah polltteal ambitions, have thelr counterparta int few extreme fire-caters of the South, who fall to ave how completely tost is the‘ Lost Canse,’ and who. continue to ‘damn the nigger? 08 feroctously as they diel in the palmy days of the slave oligarchy, Bat neither of — these extremists’ have the aympathy of the inasses Of thelr respective sections. ‘The mis- ehievous teachings of the Northern Radtcats fall unheeded upon the conservative clements of the party, while the monthings of our fire-caters find no echo amoug tte people. Emancipation Is aceeotet! not only as an aceomplianed fact, but aso blessing fn disguise, ES WANT THE s Shey with become a VADOR OF THR COLORED MRM, and are ready to pay for It. In Mississtopi the labor question has already adjusted Itectl antis- factorily, and both races‘have gone te work witht enerzy to restore prosperity to the State. This var there has been more corn than cotton plart- ed, and one planters are gradually diversifying thelr crops, Hke the farmers of the North. They propose to become agricntturiste In tie true rene of the word, and ng lonyer concentrate thelr energies upon the production of cotton, Dnytng from others the necessarics of Ule. «Ina few years we shall bave breadatuffs te veil, In- atentt of relving upon the Western farmers for every pound of flour we eat. Vere little trouble oecurs between the planters and the nezro }a- Uareras contracts are made satisfactory to both, ond are carried out In goud faith by both parties tothem. Atone tine there was titich dillculty fn getting the negroca to work steadily; they were Impressed witu the Idea that FREEDOM MBANT IDLENES$ AND POLITICS, and they coukd not by induced to work regular. ly,-only just enourth to keep them from starving. ‘But seradually they have come to realize that hard Iabor fs the lot of tho black as well ns the white race, and settle down to it cheerfully. Thoy very soon get an {dea of say- {ng, of Improving tliele surroundings, and to appreciate thelr carnings. ‘This makes them In- dustrious and faithful. Indeed, the labor ques- tau givce ts (ess anxiety just now than {t dous tha peaple of te Northi”" “What are the isaies that are likely to divide tho whites of Mississipp! in the near ruture{" “That {3 hard to tell, they will bo substan- tally tho sane: frlitical questions that partges at the North will divido upon, although it fs not fuuprobable that the Soutu will exerclse cunsid- erable in fluence In declaring what thusa Issucs ehail be, Upon i THE PINANCIAL QUESTION Republicans and Democrats are divided into hard-mot ul soft-inoney advocates; If tls dase mes prominent it will tend to dlarupt parties there the sume as it will Jn tho North, 1, for fnstance, am a hard-movey man, and believe that the fate of this nation depends upon a return to specle paxibants at an carly day} yet, pronounved Kepublican as Dam, and muchas T distike Mr. Tiiden,T would vote for hin as a hard-money man in preference to the best softemoney candidate the Republicans could nominate. My own impresalon is that the fluancial question ts the oug upon whlet parties should reorganize, | take tt for grant- cd that reoranization {6 necessary to both varties before entering upon another Pres- dential eampalg, for the Yemecratic party South 1s “drifting and dl<integratiny quite as disastrously ns the Kepublican party fs. at the North. As au ingtunco of how out- en men are nowadays, I may elte o remark recently made by a promluent Southern Sen tur in tho presence of a lurge number of gentie- men, Hosaid: ‘A few years ogo [indulged in A DREAM OF TWIN REPUBLICS on thia continent, existing side by elde ia per- fect hurmony,—one at, the South und the other ut the North—the Southern republic based upon itasystein of lave labor, and the Northern republic’ tipan free tabur. Lohave had that ream whipped out of me. Iu the atraggle which ensued upon the attempt to realize tiie dream, [drew my word In behalf of my State and section, aud agalnst the Unlony {¢ that atrugule were to be renewed I would by found fighting fur the Union og against te South, We have now, but one Union, and Tama Union man. Our business now Is tu upbulld our gece tlon of the country, to secure proaperity of the whule nation} and the man who attempts to revive dead Tesuvs fx an enemy to the South as well na tu the whole’ country. It ts an Indication of the change which has come over men When such a man could make remarks, of which 1 have given you the substance, not only with impunity, but with che hearty indorsementof the geutlenian whe heard them, Ihear slmilar expressions copatantly around ni < TUK PEOPLE HAVE HAD BNOUGIE OF WAR, and have now resolved to accept the results of the lute ptrugete, and ublde by them. They want now to develop the resources of the State, recuperate their scattered fortunes, and live in peace and quiet, It must bu remembered that the olf class of tre-cating slayebolders has given away largely to the new goncratlon which hus cote Upon the stuge withla the past sixteen yeurs. ‘The young men who have growa up wold the trhila and tribulations of war times, including the subsequent lnpoyerlshmeut of thy State, who have but little revollection of the ald glaye system, have very different ideas upon ‘subjects of national fau- portance fro thosu = entertained = by heir predecessors, ‘Tieso later comers having bad a hurd strugule for extatunce, know the sweet uses of adveraity, Uhelr ideas are practical, having tedeal with the practleal ques- tion of how to” make a livin Nut afew of them, as they glance over tho devastated plunta- tlons that should have deacended to them fh a prosperous condition, ure free tu characterize ag it deserves the fully that preelpitated the South intva rebellion. Sudging from my own experlenee in this State, thore 4 vo nore rebell- Jon ta the South, Antler fica of vital Unportatcd ta the Boutt ts that of + INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS. ‘The Bouth VWeral seate to reature her tu prosperity and, upon the principle that the wuecess of indlyidus 4 iiaures [tlie success of the community, 30 the prosperity of the South will insure the prosperity of the nation. ‘Tho great- vat wehwme of futernal improyement wo vlow. iy that which shall ippt River navigable as high up as St. Louts to ocean steamers, thus opening up Un great agricultural regions of the South nud Weat to the slipping of tha whale world. "This would gives stinulus to agriculture which it could receive tn ne other way, ‘The plan is perfectly feaalble, as tus already been clearly daiuunetratud by THY WORK DONE BY Cart, EADS at the mouth of the isulppl, A aystem of fgtiies and levees along that river trom New Irleans to St. Louts ia entirely practicable, aud would accomplish the desirud result. The eost would be cuuslderable, but, iu addition to the parmancat advantages to the country from this work, it would be worth its cost in giving en ptozinenr to thousands of Idle and starving la ireré WuU ure How a source of great anxiety to thinking men. Then, too, we want the Southern Pacile Railroat, and feel thut, we have a right to ask Government ald for it. Such wid has already hecnglven toa Northern and a Ceutrul ruad, wud thy South jy also entitled to durcet communication with tha Pacitic coast. Tuia road would alio bring the South {nto cluse: relajions with Mexico, which would be advan- tayeons to the whole country. There are other plung for internal improvemeuts which the Suuth fecls buynd to ehcouraze, all of which are of national huportance. Thls ts a subject which must play au important part in the poll- ths of the country befure ony, and [ bellevo hat TAU BALL WILL BE SET IN MOTION DURING THE SESSION OF CONGRESS THIS WINTELL There fa notaing that can be done that will furnish so much employment to idle labor, re- Heving the necessities of thousands, or that will act like a stimulant upon Beieat entarprise, 49 8 bers policy for iuterual improvements WHT thy South be unanimous in favor of these linprovemcutel? “Ohf by uo means. There are aome old fozies umoug us who do not belleve In any sort of progress Whatever; others will oppuye one thing uod others another, sq that there will be & Very reapectable minority oppuscd to all the schemes T have montioued. At the suing time, uivet of them will be in favor of some of these sul of others alee ee "Tuer yuu think the -Republican party, as such, ts Udad in Muslestppl Bp “Ido not seo how it can be “revived. The Degrocs, throuvh policy, decline to vute at pree- ent; there fs uo white mau’s Kepublican party tu amount w anything uor has shereever been. Udo not ses how the tepublicaus can gain the white yote without sucritictng ull pretensions to pe eae vote. No, the only thins tu do fa to TUS POLICY INDICATED BY THE WEGLOES, and wait till the whites become divided upon sume question suiflclently to break thelr combl- uation agulost the ueyroes. But f expect to see tho day When a large portion of the present Democratic party dy the South will be support- jn elther the Republi party or the party that takes tts place. They apg to-day more fu intellectual eyurpatby with ‘the Hepubltcaus than with the Detustuts, und “only split ypou the ruce question. Consiga -t to. deserved vblivigu wud thy best weu uf the South will bu feeds Internal ituproveiments on o jucal Governments fo the + He it will fi pail the whites upon other Leaes than th Inder, Af natlonal polities he out of the Sonth for the next four years, and the States allowed fo overn thensclres, it would be the best thing thnt could happen to them, They have hat too much polities, Twelve: yen of the kind of polities they have bid hare heen nearly as disastrous as four years of war, The South WANTS TO NE LET ALONE ng serlously now as she did in 1831, but from a different nintive, Then se wanted the appor- turnity to perfect her plaus for extending the lave oligarchy; now she waits time to get uscd ton system of free labor, and 10 rehnhill- tate lier devastated neres, Four sears of reat from politica! atrifes, devoted to nn honest at- tempt to re! ¢ past nies, and to restore the business of the 1 Sintes, world tnake avast chine throughout the South. To secure this, the extreme radfent dogs on both sides of the tine must be effectually muzzied" T have attempted to put {Inte concise language the substance of my conversation with my friend, whose name, If 1 were at liberty to give It, wontd de ns © familiar as household wordy’? to every Intelligent man in this country. fy spoke With great hopefulness of the future of the Southivest, and was lirm tn the belief that the better and more patriotic and Union-loving: men were votulng to the surfiee, Although fully Imbued with Republicsutsm hihuself, he ald ‘not express very tnuch regret that the par- tenlar kind of Repibieanism indicted upun the South fora number of years had recetved a se- rious {f not datal stab ir Minslaxlppls the bof race, AROS foe ASIV’S USSULMAN POPE. A Mighty Mohammedan Contemporary of tho Aged Pins 1X. Lontan Sanfatr, At Syiloo, tivo dave! Journey from our fron- ter garrison of Pestuwur, there lives, and has tong Iveil, a Mohammedan teacticr, ascetic, and dictator, who has made nlinself to the politics of the HHghlands of Asla—froin Lahore to Bok- Hara and frum Caslimere ta Mecea—uiieh that the Bishop of Rome Is ta the Catholic Powers of Christendom. Not the Old Man of the Mount. aln, in crusadiug aya; t the fanatical Anicer of Boxhara, who martyred Conoty and Stoddart; not the bund old Fevaul,, who con solidated the Wahabec Puritans at Riad not even the Sultan of Roum, who chime to wield the now teeble pawer of the Calipl,— not one of these has exerelsed such au fallaenco as Abdoo) Ghafoor, beat known to the British Goverument—wlich huxguever ceased to watel and even conciliate himmus the Akloond, or “teacher” of Swat The announcement that the Ameer Sher All of Catut has once more Ine vited hia co-operation aud blessing in the imill- tary movement which ts now belug prepared in Afghanlstan agatngt Khelat, or the {tusshius, or the Perslang, or the Enylish,—according to the Issuc of the Nght for Constantinople,—is su probably true, being ouly a repetition of the potlyy of Dost Mahomed, the Amecr's erent rather, thatit ig tune the British publie Knew something of the Old Man of the Mountain, who has lived, and fasted, and Intrigued nearly all through the present century, and hag once, cts bis finger iu the ple of the Eastern ques- jon. Eighty-ecyen years ago, in a frontier hamiet, Abdcol was born to shepherd parents, of the cowherd tribe of Clogjura, and til he was six. teon years of age be loNvwwed the cattle on the hills,” Only then he was gent to a mosytic, and, having earned tu read, sourht the biguer wla- Goin uf Islam under @ tamous saint, dest In the Peshawur Valley, and then Ju Rhutttk. Tt was while under the spell of the latter sahibzadah that he vowed to become a dervish. Duty inl. tiated Into the straitest order of Islam, thenow full-grown man touk possession of the Bokka, onc of those temporary Islets Woleh the [Indus forma, to wash thin aiway ut the next great tnundation. Here, ina hut, exposed to cold bDiasts sue as only high Asia kuowa, and Tying on muk and * shank,” or the ends of a variety of grass, Abdool (ihafvor spent twelve years. Me wought for peaze, as many a Moslem ‘devotee doa, but he found only spiritual pride and fanatical force In such ascettgm us culminot: edin the Zikr. For hours, and days. and years ho squatted, as travelers have seen the howling Rufal derviehes quot at Scutarl, while he sltouted towards Meeca the worda of the vreed and the ninety names of God, * La-i-la-ba-ft-lal- ls-lu.”) Mr. Hughes, the brave and feorned ailssionary of tne Church Misstonary Society at Peshawur, drawa a touchlug pleture of the atsteritics at this stage, and Sir Iar- ry Lumeaden, In a report on the man sent in to Lord Dalhousie, in 1352, when the writer Was Cuptatn of thu Guide Corps, ailiclally coullrms the facts, But the Sikhs were masters of Peshawar when tho dervish was found to be bevoming too formidable for a brutherhood who |i sworn toayenge themselves on thelr former Mobammedan persecutors, Bo Abdo) was riven forth from bis retreat, only to add_po- Leal Influence ty Ply walntly renown. Dost Mahomed Khan cor§ted his aaststance nzaliat, the Sikhs, and in 1835 the Walco and his stu- dents, recognized by the ri hoe soo sip planted as Akhoond, or teacher, fourht for the Affgans fn the Khyber Pass, Wut Runjeet Singh was too strong. for both Ameer and Akuvond, and the latter fled to that Swat Vile lage of Sydoo whieh he has slave made a second Mocca. The Swat Valley, with a breadth of thrco | miles, runs vorthvast for some ifty-tive miles along tho river, which Irrigates it and its branch rovines, ‘The soldicr-satnt found the highiands broken up amotwg contending chicts aud tribes Whily three rival doctors of the aw eompeted for thelr offerings. Alduol Ghafoor used bis peicatly. und, it was belleved, mfracle-working, Influence ta dndted the warring vlinsmen to combine under: one King of hs own selection, Byud Akbar, One of the thre rival satuts he employed his disciples to assasatuute when at jay io other =twe lie | denounced fo the = British = Government after it had conquered the Punjab as Wahubees, and they und thelr followers found themselves fn jail.” Impressed evidentl; y the acyanco of thd “Hufdel”? English, who yet. guaranteed or- der and’ prosperity to the faithful, he repolicd the vvertured of Dyit Matomed ta hlin to preach # religions war againal the British, Only + once has he yielded to tie temptation of cross~ tne the path of uur araies, when, in 1963, Lord Elviu tiled ta win the Umbeyla campaign tor a tine, because the Akhoond Sabib had fomed the Woahabces, whose doctrines he hated, He haw since Iet tb be kuown that there fs onv Crescont- ude mora merttorious than any agaiust the Engilsh, and that is to suppress ‘the Waha- beus, whose assassins’ knife undoubtedly struck down Chivf-dusthee Norman, of Calcutta, and alterwards Lord Mayo, the Viceroy, There are writers who pool-pooh the op- pechousions as to the Akhuond of Swat, which have bern expressed by every Government of Inula fur the hist’ talf-century, ‘Thea persona ore as ignorant of thy [nets of his career as they gre of the nature and extent of bly Intluence ut this very hour, Waat docs the Jatest and best authority onthe wot, Mr. Hughes, tell ust Exactly what Sir Uarry Lumsden wrote tn cold- er, becuuse official, terms In 1822, ‘The latter then reported bu tas Governyr-Ceneral, who hatl Just annexed the Punjab, that this salut has tained such an ascendancy over the minds of Muhamiedans in general that thoy believe bv ts supplied by supernatural means with the neces- saries of hfe. very morntaz, as he rlecs frow Lis prayers, he is sald tu tid money under hte carpet outtielent for the day's expenditure." Agaiu, *'The Akhoond fs cénsulted tn all dill: culties”? We know that not only Yost Mahou ed did vo, but bis successor, the preacat Ameer BSher-All, pied a work expounding the ou denouncing hla uppo- thut the Pop of supremy ag the guide and director of the dearts of men” all over High Asia, The averaze number of bly visitors every day is put ut 800, and these he feeds as well os alyises, blesses aud prays for them, while: cursing thelr enemies, very much as the Christian Vope does in the Vatican in ubliee upd pilgrim seasons, It is the offer. ings of these Visitors thut i jetify the miractes of the prayercurpet. For they tluek from all Janda—trom fur-castern Bengal; from aillicted Bokhura, no longer a land of the holy; from Stamooul iteclf, now fn peril of the infidel; from. sacred Mecca, where pilgrims sound the praia of Akhoond; from BStuah, Peraia, whe Kerbvela abrine; rivals the Mecca stone, and even from slave-stained Arica, whence the succerstui trader comes to atone for his cruel fife. All sorts of questions tre propounded, front the prospect of a luwauit fu the Anglo-[ndian Courts to the lawfuloess of learning English, a language which the uracle denounces a6 tho seed of Inthleltty,” to the healing of a cripple gud the chanco uf a war at once agwlust the Frank aud the oosl- No ong Who knows the Eust, or the spirit of our Indian bistury, will undervalue the rumor that the aged Akhiovud has sworn to belp the admis dng Aiueer of Cubul tu take advantage of the issucs of the Russo-Turkish war, whatever these muy prove tobe. Lord Salisbury's reply to the Duke of Arey the other day is dttet, though we trust not futended, tu imistead, The Akbouud of Swat, thouct now blind aod suffering from a chronic wkin disease, the result, of bis susterities, is as vigusous ia spirit as Plo Non. rough 87, and patriarch of an situa. wreat familly, hy lust year married » girl of 2, whose father was doubtless tempted by bis wealth. [t may be that the samy month, possl- Uly thy same day, shall seo the reusoval ul two old wen, Whosy Ucaths will cunvulas the West and allvet the Bast. J nents, MILTIADIS TP Little Milttades Pet flad been heard to 4 “There's Abiathar Ann, RKIN PAUL, & tein Pal re he feared nothing at all, e wold ray, —" now at her age, One teould think ehe might rhow a little more couric. Why, sally: believe she wonld fall dead with fright If ehe came down the lane hy herself In the night. Lean tell you, though, that’s not the atat fam mare o1 Tnever saw anything / waa afraid of!" Bat one warm summer evening it chanced to befall ‘That little Miltiades Peterkin Pant, Hating been to the village for Joun Menry Jock, Found It growing quite dark when he came to start ACK. But he thonght,. **Pooh! Edon't care for that in a leant.” And he winked at the full moon, Just up in the ts Then with handa in lis pockets he »waggered slong White he kept ap bis courage with whistle and ong. AM at once yout Miltinctes Peterkin Pant, Agho darned duwn the lane, percelved clone by the walle Light before him, a datk, ghostly Shape, crouching ow Woieh frightened poor little Milttaden no ‘That he turned cold ail over,—our valiont yonnz hero, — Jnatan though the thermomoter’d dropped down 0 2er03 Then, lim heart beating loudly. he coverer hie face With nis hanus, and trudged on ata much quicker pace. Rut little Miltiades Peterkin Paul Nad sot yone many steps when he thought, ** After al I may be mlataken; pertiaps 5 mistook Suse old stump, oF & ruck. vf the caw, for o *apook." Why, what could [be thinking of" Then, grow. ings frolder, Ile ven red to cant a lance over hin euonider, When what was tis wonder and horror to find ‘That the epectre was following close behind. Far one moment Miltiadus Peterkin Paul Was so tortibly felghtencd he thousht he wold fal; Then he tinng his checked apron up aver his head ‘To abut out the dread sight, and Inglorloualy fied, But. alas! by the footsteps behind he eoun knew "That hia ghostly pareuer vegan tu run, tuos And be uttercd 4 shrick, and sped on without knowl (With bis 0: going. Dat little Milttades Peterkin Pant, Though ho ran Ike the wind, found ‘twas no aso atall. ‘The footsteps grow fonder behind, ond at Inst Me suddenly found hinself caught and held fast, ‘Whereupon, falnt with terror, he sank to hin OTM ng yes covercd up) Just which way he was And in pitcons accents bovanght, ** 0 str, please, 0 please do Good, Aeud Mr. Ghost, tet me Tam sure { would do a tnach, gludty, fur yout’ But ye then the Ghost spoke and soothed hie alarms, And he foutd be'd rushed Inte his own brother's arm. “Why,” cried Jolin Henry Jack, ‘* What doce this tiean, my lad? O T ace. Mut lat bot Why, alr, that's your oun shadow!" And, sure enough, when ho ancoverod hile face, Gur hero saw plathly that such was the cave, *eWell,** said tttte Miltiades Peterkin Pag), “+ Pleawo don't toll our Atathar Ann—that in aty!"* John Brownjohn tn Wise-Aiwake for August. MWAWKEYE bors, Rurlingion Nawreye, The author of “ Beautiful Snow" will hold o mass convention at Long Branch some thue during August. A famous old horse {n Balt!more kills rata. We presume that horse wauld take the premium for best rodentster. A great deal {s doing sald about the Don Cos- sacks. - The Sultan speaks very frequently of therm also, but healwuys spella tholr front pame as Hom Pedro spells his. You can sell your eat for $10 in the Black THills. 1t will cost you @¥ tu get out there with the cat, aud get home again, but then you will “be rid of the cat, and that fs worth 8120 to any math ‘There Isn't very much eream on milkman's milk, but this year the Teposlt fs sp thin that tho feet of the ilies break through and yet into the mitk. | This is disvouraying tu the tes, and nae of them bave withdrawn thelr subscrit jon. Muhainmed never shaved; so he never knew the ecalasy of cutting off the top of a pimple that had a maln artery running through it, suyen minutes before ehureh-thne, and uot a bit Me court-plaster nearer than the farthest drug store. The St. Paul Dispatch {8 disposed ty be shocked betas the rowing dress of an oars- tan consists of a shirt with to slepves und ao pair of drawers with no legs. Tt/wiil wet so Riter a while that you can’t tell a rower from a Jady in ball dress. Farmers’ daughters often marry rakes.—Fy. Yes, and it harrows uur soul tv kiow that the rakes sumetines turu out to be throes! Youkers Gazelle, Yes, and it, makes us # the more when wo think of the sichley ffCaD ting —St. Louls Journal. Why, oh why, did sho al Jow the rake to cultivatur acquaintance! A lady correspondent fs scandalized because she went into a grocery the other day aud saw the clerks sitting around In thetic shirt sleeve: Good gracous, madam, that {3 nothing. Woe went luto the inust: taainonable dry gouds store in Burlington the other day, amd tho clerks wero ull stavdiug around in thoir trowsers tuys, With a face as red nyo lobster, and back shaped N«e the shell of aclam, the housewife stands over the kitchen stove aud manipulates raspberry jain.—Herkshire Courter, Wille her luywband, with nose ikea suoset, and mouth dike the song of a year, leans over tue counter of “free lunch,” and elevates achoouers of beer. There fa no poctry in the Russlan reyersca.— Graphic. No} thelr Wnes are tuo budly brolk Abomn-bard never dil produce good poet Vather the rayerse,—Nurristuwn dleraid, Re victuuling Nicale was certainty good meat'er,— At. Louls Journal, Yea, and a pontoon bat enna the Danube with several itussiaus sonnet. ‘The other day, on the Toledo, Peoria & War- saw train two elderly ladics separated at Busl- nell, and kissed vach other atfecttonatcly, A commercial traveler noticing the osculat{ng per. formance, remarked to a colleacues Awful waste of good material, Charley! To which Charley replied, dubloualy: Not very: goud govils, but tov fong onthe mark The line's Hood cuouge, but thy goods alu’t tue right Brade.' he Ulprety hoppoty, toodteaty a lipnety hoppoty, toodledty dumt Nobody know lic was going to come; Ringing the rounds of 4 rangelese fame, ‘Now we are yladfully glad that hw cam And when be flies to hia Weetern home, Wo will be bappy to think ho had kome; Winging bile way to that Westerly cline, May he by happy tu think that he kline; Me may bo sure thore'll be nlenty of room, Salting fur Lim the next Une be may come; ‘Ths above fa all weare permitted to publish of an unpublished poem by Mr, Tennyson on the ovcasion of Gon. Urgut’s recent visit to England. We only | present this exquisite stanza to our readers fur the purpose of alloy- tng tue fears of those who thought tho laureate was golug lo negluct our ex-Presideut. THE SUTRO TUNNEL. San Francteco Wurrespondence Lultimore Sun, The Sutro Tunnel will save the miners $10,000,000 yearly, by self-draining the water aud by extracting the ore aud delivering thober ou a level railway, if wy count ou no increase of business, But it will effect much more, What ever the previous yleld of the Comstock, It will be doubled by enatying tho miners to extract Shetr low grade ores uta prot. Yet ajaln fe it expected tu double production by opening yet undiscovered ledges of pay ore In the 2,600 feet to bu explored this year before reaching the Comatock, Auuther great saving will be made in every ton to be melted thereaiter, tn tla way, vite: Where water abounds, with sulllient descent as the outilow from thy tunel, the crushed ore can be reduced in bulk and its riches condensed nino-teuth parte by concentra: tlon, Ore that is rich in metal, be tt of whatever kind, is heuvy, aud that which has itcle of uo metal fs comparatively lizht, By eclt-working mavblvery uine-teuth parts of the ore ure Washed away; all that ia worth so- curing is retalned, being one-tenth part. By this process very Jow grade ure fy cheaply mill- od This would edd 8:30, 000.000 to 500,000,000 extra to the production of tue Couatuck alone above the tunnel level, Tho higuest per cuut of metal extracted from Comstock ory has been 65, und 33 percent hag been lost. By the cuucuntrating syotem 90 per cent will by extractud, making a clear gain on the whole production hereafter of YS per cent. Working Anivers value the tunuel for the in~ ruved ¥eutllation it will give to the wines, ow they breathe a sulfucuting temperature of DU degree Fahrenheit, wolch will be reduced to 7U degrees, aud free curreucy will Ue given to: the stagnant air, Tho iuercuded work » wluer pearly hall, WH) be inereased ns the tulnes reach lower depths. This will proportionately diinin- i-h the comparative over pro luctlon of silver, This js what. the Sutro Tunnel will de for the tnlies abave the Inve] of the streatae below, But the greater part of its added wealth to the hation WAL come from the 000 or 3.000 feet of greater depth below the tunnel level, which the Water-power of the tunnel will enable them to open up to deeper tnining on this ledge. aml on. other ledges which the tunnel may cut in Its further progress. The world does not_contaln anoth whose wealth cau compare with the concen! Casnatovk and fis Sates Tunnel. The Suteo Tune nel will bo four miles long, and st will cont 85,001,000, The Comstock vein is its terminus, hod tect below the summit of Mount David- son, inthe State nt Nevada, It may be sald to tke sfx years to excavate it. Four costly work: Ing shafts, encts nearly 1,000 feet deep, were aunk along its course to permit several gana of workinen to Work at different sections at once, ‘The tunuel is allowed €2 ato for all ore ained by and passing through it. Tt is allow toawn all velts woich (t may cut aud reveal bee fore {t reaches the Comstock. It owns the ta site nnd all mill sites at the mouth of the tu nel, where {thas fall euough to make from the tunne) water a motive power of 10,000 horees, From the beginning all dealers, tnatert and working mincrs have shown contide y freely accepting atock In part pay. The prineteat capital {s cupplled In Europe. It expects to pay twice its cost every year, Sutro was the planticr anid themaster epirit of this great enterprise. He has been bis own pro- tnoter and fnaneter, and the Bank of California was his powerful opponent til the bankrupt of that tnetitution. ‘The object was to get p seasion of the Srancnise. PHASES OF PRISON-LIFE, A recentlyllscharged prisoner from the Phil- adelpbla County Prison gives the Times of that elty the following account of some of his prison experiences “If T could not have bad a book to read oc- castonally {dun't know what I showd have done. Yon sce, prisoners are only allowed a hook unce In two weeks; but ff there happen tobe three men ina cell, why then they get three books {u that time. T read Dickens, and Walter Scott, and Wiikte Collins. [don’t Ike Scott much, but I lked Dickens pretty well. “We are put in the dungeon for ‘fishing.’ Perhaps a man on the second floor is out of to haceo, and if 60 he raps on the window until the tuau overhicad hears him. He tella hin wante, and aed svon a plece wf tobacco comncs down tohin onthe end of a string, The windows are about forty Inches Jong und four wide, and, ure covered on the outside with a wire screen, When the man on the second four sees the to- baces dangling outside he splita of a splinter from a bench, sticks a sinall eliverin the end at right angles, and with this hook haulattin, Where do we get the string? Why, unravel a stocking. = The shoctitters use their waxed-ends. But If we get caught at ‘tating * we are putin the dungeon, asf sald. Thin ts the usual puntslment in prison, and the ian is chained by the ankles and given bread and water tu cat furnong or short period, ace cording ta the inageitude of his offense. ‘Thon we arg put into the dungeon tor talking. We chat with each other up the pipes and heaters, of by repping on the walls, One rap stands for ‘a,'two raps for +)? three fore," aud xo on. ‘That's the way used to talk to Fletcher, the murderer. Suppose I. satd to iitn, ‘How are yout?) Twonld rap cight timer for *h,) fifteen ior ‘a,’ and twenty-three for ‘w," and that would mean show.’ Then 1 would spell out ‘are.’ But fustead of rapping out ‘you,’ I woul merely rap twenty-one tues fur tu." Previous to Mr. Perkins’ sppulntincnt as Super- intendent, If there were two or more inen in a cell, aud one of then was caught talking, all had to suffer the consequences. Now, how- ever, only the offender fs strapped. © J auppose nine-tenths of the trouble among the prisouers arises from tobacco. We get one plug of chewing tubacco a week, but we are not allawed to amoke. Idos't knuw why this ts. unless itis because the doctor thinks it inju- rious But, of course, we break the regula- tluna, and sinoke every chance: get. Where dowe get the piped? Make Vem. [t's casy enough, -All that is necessary fs to knock off a piece uf brick aud hollow It out, witn a hole for astem. Some folks think it mighty burd to makea stem, but it is no puch thing, “Just slice ulf two strips of wood, roure them out, and clap them together, and the thing fsdoue, The next thingisto geb a Nght. One match will wet a tian nearly a IMetiine, We take a towel ora stocking, atid wash and dry it completely, Thon we set tt afire and smother the iames under a box, and there Is plenty of tinder. A piece of a fic ur a plece of steel will somehow wet into the cell, and then with o stone the smoking apparatus {a complete. q HOW A DENTIST BECAME A BARON, IMrie Correspandence New Vor! Wartt, Some years azu Dr. Thomas Evans, the well- known American dentist of Paris, took ina young Philadelphia relation of bis own name, fed, taught, and made a dentist of him, which last favor—the proteasion being very well patd in Parls—was to make a man of him as well, In due tine the grateful young fellow eet uv on his own account in a neighboring street, where he flourishes to this day. ite find 9 taste, os most of us have, wholly independent of his profeasion, One man takes to chemistry tu his Icisure hours 5 anotter to fiddiing, Me Jotun Henry Evans touk to titles, which must csenmid pats on the dignity of & turkey: tn aeartece. “Thitsettlonit with me, FH ever try to oblige another human being? BLACK HILLS. Vepredations apon Settlers---Twenty Mare dera KeportedaA Mighty Outtook for a Toor Man In the Mining Iegions—What & Prospector Nas Discovered. Deanwoon, D.T., duly 2h—Jamen Hyan, 9 resident of Spenrfish City, justin, states that Licut. Lemly, with his company of soldiers, auginented by a dozen civilians, beft that point Sunday morning, with two days’ rations, and hago ‘ot Ween heard from sie Lira Rey. Ie, t! go out fn sea nt them. ‘Two large boulles of Indians were seen yester- day morning, on Red Water, abous tive miles from Speartithe « Keplinger Ranehe, on Crow Creek, was at- tacked by Indians yesterday. Seven men were ovcupying it ut the thine, two of whom escaped, and made their way to the Spearfish. The others have not been heard of since. ‘The Indians captured all thestock and burned the ranche and hav, LATER.—Intenec excitement prevails throuch- out the city. At short intervals eluce yesterday morning horsemen have heen arriving from the different towne and hayfletds tn this viclu- iy, bringing tletalls of fresh murders and out- rages by the savaccs, who seein to have broken loose from the Agencies in large numbers, anid are Infesting the country in all directions, Up to the hour (7 p.m.) at Ieast twenty murders been reported, Some of the killed are e with twenty soldiers, bad just arrived ere froin Hot Creek, and was getting ready to well-known citizens of Destwood, who went to the relief of Lieut. Lemly and the survey party, Nearly every ranche along the Red Water and. in the Speartiahy Valley lus been devastated. * go the Eittor of The Tribune. Omaua Bannacka 4 duly 22.-—E have read with wreat attention the letters tn Tie Tainuxs from “ Lynn," who has just gone to the Biz Horn; and nuw while he is gathering 9 budget of stirring newe, Will you tind plare for a letter which I have lately recelved from a friend in the Black Hills to whom 1 put 9 few questions as to the atute of affulrs in general: “fwill try to answer your qnestions. Firat, to get here, the cheapest I think you vould it with would be $4081) from Omaha to 8yd- ney, and, from 85 to $12 from there to Dend- wood, and the balance for ‘grub,’ a cooking out- fit, pick, and shovel; no frcarins uniess you have thetn already in. your possession; you could) hunt youl for years fu aufety, bat (t fs darn’d hurd to “tnd ft in paytog quantities, There are about five miles of pruy- ing guich. and that wus all taken up two years ago} the balance of the gulches are Just’ rich cuough to ‘keep you poor.’ Some will yield from 0 co Bh centa per day, for the beat of them, There 13 a rood deal of building going on, but ‘ork hard to yet at that trude; o yood axinan can get all the work he wants, 1s there fs plenty of timber, at 81.50 per 1.000 for suwlogs, 81.00 per cord fur woul, and work al- tiost fmpossible to cet for wages. ‘Thousands: are at it, but cannot wet uny cash for what they lave cut down, The timber fy cut down all over to rot; sawmill hands are here: by the thousand, Charcoal burning not tuch,—it ts hot much tsed,—25 ceuts per bushel, and you pack it hte town for blacksmiths’. shops and pe Uke. “4T have been tramping around about efaht weeks, and I have not seen anything larger tian ared squirrel; but there must be wame a niles from here as some make # living at ft, and elk gud ucer meat ts fur sale b wince [left Red “T have not seen an dndhan Cloud. Teve ow t Mavy set almost starvi to death tuat have goud rilles and can use then, tov. The Big Horn news js sometimes good and sometines poor—uothing reliable as yet. Now, fa fuct, John, this is the worst minlog camp that was ever opened; there are a few miles of rich gulch, oud the bataney of the county is poor, Indeed. Fo wish I could have wiven you a little encouragement, but I cannot. My advice would be to stay away If you can yet a fittle to cat, as it is hard ty get he “Jum prospecting to try aud get enough to get away from here with, und expect to be back {nu Osmaha about August, and then I can give you all the particulars. Work, as I sail, fx nl- inost Impussible to get, and if you suceved, wages are from @2 to #4 In dust, and you take that at $20 per ounce, and If you want to sell it at the bank they wlll give you $17.50, and if you want creenbacks fort tliey will charge you 10 per cent; so you see, by having $20 in dust, you Just lose 84.25 to put tt In ercenbacks; if you par it out in small amoants you Jose more than that with it. 1 had $17.54, and paid it out, keeping an account of it the whiles T. just pald off €12.15.—so that will give sou an ides of wages fn this place. “Anything further you want to know 1 will be happy ta tell yoit. 1 wil give you ‘the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,’ to the heat of my knowledge. Yours, ete, 1 Boy “Deadwood, D. T."" Such, Mr. Editor, is the plain statement of a man Who has foum! out to his satisfaction how ft ls, and I beHeve his statement of the altua- tlou fur a poor nan Is correct. Yours fully, : a ra toggite Letter to Protidence Journal. ‘Of late years hotel society at Saratoga aceis al- wavsthe sane. ‘The pater-familases, old, gray- halred, with tong frock cont frests from the tatlor, trold-headed cane, and ni white hat, the reem- Ingly youthful and adipose wife, the inevitalle and often lunumnerable jaunty daughters, thin year certainly be allowed to be one of the most en nobling’of all recreations. A short tne after he hai feft his benefactor the astonished family {earned by the eviuence of a stray visiting-card that thelr plain “Jolin Henry * had become ‘Join Evune.” Thad was followed by un apostrophe; aud there is often aa much vittic {ian apostrophe as inan {f. ‘Their aetonishment grave Way toterror as the Jolin d', on the oe dence of other vialting-cards, was amplified Into John d'Oyla Evaua—thelr terror to stupe ws honest dack ono day boldly wrote tdiumectl Count. Then a feverteh desire selzed theny to fori wc Jon iu tho intereats uf seluuce {l- Justrutive Of oll the stages of this growth of the grub of Republican slinpticity toto the eirseuie Datterily of rank; and coun the following lst of names and titles lay upon thelr table th dmper- fahable pasteboard: John Henry Evuus, as aforesaid (grab). Wy Joby dy Liytey Evana, ” ley Evans, Earl of Ritcaren, Le Chevalie? and Mine, d'Uyley Evans. Le Baron d'Usley Grit a uve of a coronet perched ou top Of the O, Uke a modern bunuct ona rather round head). Finatiy—Joln, Marquis d’Oyley (buttertly). Or, in gnother document, “Jean, Baron WUyley, do Paris, ob du Chateau Douilly, Cal- vailus¢ Comte dit Saint Empire Homa, Chev- aller te Bt. Gregoire." ‘These frequent and beautiful varuttons on tho simple theme of d'Oyle were, for sume the, a subject of the most profound mystica. thou. It Wus ot frat thought tist Mr, Evans bad fullowed the old custom of taxiuy line dealynae ton trom a circumstance of local interest, wud that the dOyle was an allusion to a well-known product of his native Blite—as though, for tn. stauce, a Pennsvivania gentleman, ensiched by a fortunate strike in howd write binsell “Baron D'Oyiey Wells.) ‘Thia, however, was o mlatake. Mr. Evans’ mother was a Doyle, and ag all.the Doyles—und there aro msny thou- sands of them in Ireland aud the States—have always inaintajncd that thie bas robbed them of un apustrophe which was their lawful prop- erty, Mr. Evang simply restored this missing nk of greatness tu his own favor by virtue of his belog bis mother's son, — MIJAI LOSES AN ADMIRER, Detroit Free Pues. Bijah bas lost an ardent aduirer aod a warm friend. For some time puet a middled-aged wilow lady realding on Leveretto etreet has been contemplating a trip to Put-in-Bay, but hud uot beey able, uutil abe appealed tothe old Janttor the other day, to Hud out what the prob- ‘ublu cost would be. “Yes, ma'am, Jean Ggure the expenses to a cont,” he gallantly replied, when she made a call at the station, “1 tayen’t time now, as [vo Bot to tote avven lost children hoine, wake this prisouer stup bollering, and curry tea tous of con ose vellary bur Ui make ouse billend an to you. He kepvats word. He sat up most all uight, used up four steel peus, aud sent ber the Lol- lowing: Euthnated expenecs of trip to P. Six clean shirts: rt viz, 4.00 + £00 + 10.00 22.00 Settiog up drinks for the boy: 7 8.00 “Well, now,” be was yesterday wusivg, “I canrt eae what roale her diate 1 waa trytis (9 do her a favor, aud 1 huped she'd appreciate It. But she didw’t. No, sit. She sent word to ine that J ought to be shot, and wheo shy sally by the statiou abe sticks Up ber wore, ashes ber | with intensely yellow, binck-lined hats, cocked up on one ide, v0 tightly bound up—the daughters, not the hate-av to make thelr hitching waik reaemblo that of fottered hone, and blazing al) over with cream-cluced ribuuns aud ros they are ali tere, a4 Uegal, ‘The very laat faahion able thing for the aforovsul young lady to do, when The plagcas of the reat hotel are (ull Of guents and Viellura fru the miuailer hdavea tolling In their chalre, is to start and amble alongin front, eudden- ly give her head a tas over her lott shontder, as if expecting sume one, proce pa frthur, stop, look dawn ta a reilucting tnanucr, then turn and go back us fastun her puil-back will permit, fouking a¢ busy und ag alutracted us if shy had two fuinutes to pay a note at bank, Mere and there, but ‘awfully wearco" ua tho young ladies say, furngup a best, or, more correctly #peaking, young inn, who plays biliatde, amokes cigar, deluks wins Julepa, and delves a: fast hors pyouern ta” Patios throught the Brach Oftees mn tie ditt boluw, whirry advert {rete q ‘ A nateab co tea for the wa) prive as iy be Alata Ollce, aud will be recetved Paint 3 Hioes fe th, during tau Wee, and UBUD, ous . (i, Hooxselter and stationer, nea? Wabaat a ry ve WILLIAM Hl, WE é talcr, Btalluner, etc, 1000 Fu. Is Twenty: KROQ, News Depot, stationery, etc., thet ¥., COrACE OF Curperl i Le nyalclan’ hs yatue tor auy etl 'lan’e diary, of tw value to Buy othe inuaetl \Milderal icwupd for ita return at 49 bu aaa. O8T—A BUCKSKIN. MAKE, bal ALS, AMOUT 10 rare old, wits back maue and tail, trom Mum potad Fark. ‘Tura! hey wut a7. reward for its turn MALELS BERG, Humboldtest,, near Nore griayen OW STOLEN PROM A CLYNOUI 9 piste, rush co! i tule tall, Any porous will tebura her will be bald for their truudie. FROM VACANT LOT B25 TA s at. uniy bight, duly 21, bay Theres Wiilte atri ih face, white rig ald: foot! wud leg lame fv fore foot, round shoe, weight about B50 pounds, suitable reward willbe pald tur return of muare. “Ad- Orcas W. 8. Mt a. & Market-ot NROWS MAME, 6 VRAIS be rodeeing hy Tapio 2 WAGNEW Ss, DNS WialtING THE! : hey are He GOOL bey AW per © ‘ORE! adapicd ta i Hale A ELV FIRE-PROOF BTORAGE FOR FEI: A ati tnrchavdie: carriages rte, mugey toned Joper cent pear. WARIS & CU. lad Weat Muptus Tu Y BTORAGE COMMANY, TH AND b0 ¥ ny HT Begs ter furaigure aud tyerchapdlec fF yulunbie gira. ehuurauces suuita ", MUSICAL EDUCEION 1 OP PIASOS A eee ieeuuruoue suck of over oy fun Hieaiemuathercduced |= We gusrentes lower pri Thuneau be fou debewhere tu to city. SCORN & CAMB, BU platerat, Gepyy NOSTHLY WILL SLO aad plawy warranted ave y F203, REED 2 Tempio of Muse. 92 PEON WEL Th FE the corucr pf piace an 5 x luvk @ Madbua-at. car, erent an Here Tithe veaticua who Dues ber? sbudrces Zi, Tribune ufive, = = —ve NEWING 30401 it JNES—YOUR CI S two sew sewtuy machiues, luster, Wheeler @ Wilson aud Friday or baturday af 140 Taltiy-scveut taxe Grouse av. THOME: A “HOUSEHOLD GOODS. Ipie USION FURNTTEBR COMP ao WENT PYRE SOS MO Eide uf Yourcbula furulture low prices; Cusy lena, BTOOD ON a. Thureday Home, Wued, cua. Call shear Cote ou wiyptbly payinent ti one Is a cittpenter here, and you | w ict pot hase Vat Hout EXCH r NF ad fuentiare, 8 Son ds sauthetaael WWILL BOY fromdeiot, at Lage doen and €} monthiy cand TATE WANTE Want TO TOR PURCHAS! , farm of 40 tom acres In or adjacent to Comnts of Cook, with of withent craps: mist he watered with Fanning stresmne strings: po atvention fald 1 en munlestloas unless giving fall description. docality, asd Particdisre regarding price and terms. Address Tox aM, Magwoort, IIL Se LSANEERITALE MELB, ‘Frade RS ON TOGA AND Apply to FOHE- “WAKER A MAN ing charge of a takery in ae oqnired, Apply hetween 10 and 40" 47, at KENLY, JENKING & FOUNG'S, Ws aN 0 Understands hia buainess to at kete German preferred. Call at 1 TUXFOULY, nd A Me! co View, mare GEO, GW LADIES FINK, 1 HARE. FOR SATURDAY ‘$5.40; Call to-day (0 secure tho G@ CAUSE, comer Thirty-frst and COMPOSTTONS; ALAO CAN: ig money for good men. 69 North TED-ME onrth "yeas Weents VV AS TRpSA goon CoMPET rror irl to do second work at Genova Laka. Etlday between 4 snd @ or Saturday moruloy Wert, pane Yt GERMAN Olt nepal work and cars of (21d Twenty -ntuthiert, FAN TED: MAN TO 10 GE. hour 450 State-st,, up-stall Way .. TO COOK. WASH, “AND irony Norwegian, or Scandinavian, Apply at ic Went Jackion-at. Come prepared to work, CDA FUNT-CLASS COOK WHERE SE, have no washing of troniog todo. Call at TASTED =A GOOD COOK, ALSO LAUNDIEY \ dl, at 14 Wabieh-ar, ai be OS LAUNDEY. a PMA CRE FiOS age to work {na private Weat Mutirue-at, TO 15 YEARS OF faintly. Inquire at Us Nurnens NURSE GIRL AT 107 LAREAY, eae vent ea AXD INTELLI- fo make large profits by fu traturinig a eee atid valuabte arttele wilt plead CAs at 405 Michigan-uv.. Friday aud Saturday, Crum oto 3, ___ SITUATIONS WANTEDOMALES ~~ Book keepers, Clerlcs, &Ce GITUATION WAS: S$ SALESMAN IN HAT SD sniicap or gent ishing onda wtorer expert chee und fefers a GITUATION WANTED A YOUNG Mt FY either tn ofive or cores ts indgattious ‘and, wittin, HL wilh work faithfully fur hisempluyer. Addrew Z y Tribune oes, Conchmon, Feamsiors, Kee GITUATION WANT 3 COACIIAN, 89 competent Germany understands filet thoraugtsy: euod refere dress Z 17, Te GITUATION WANTKD—AN CACHE 1 FY iiratcelaas man why thoroughly undefelands has @ 7 years recommendation frum bl te the Oldest harseian in the Unfon. Mis THREIPLAND'S 0 mA SITUATIONS Ww a 8) ia hotel or private Camili teamater, the wont te da huwye ‘ari Good ret (TEDIERMALEs | Domesticus ¥ THD $3 COOK, WASHER, AND QITHATION ¥ D tantly, or” email buarding-bouse; ry at 7. an iii N COMPETENT G, ChUTAL Irstkework GF CuUk, wan, Hg tata TEDDY TWO Mpetent citer tO couk, wa ond «HF Keneral huuse work In priv. kiven, (Call at 14s) Boul De and! 1:D=T0 DO GES *, urk or cooking hy a hwedieh gict wi tnderstatile her business, “Call at 1295 8 Sentustrens ITUATION WASTED<NY AN AMERICAN GIRL gh geamietrcas OF sucoud ple” Apply wt 7a) Weat Kauuployment Agencies. Sy WANSTEDOFAMILIED IN WA) Gurinse fuinwle help 173 Nocth Halse <THE MOST COMPAL, forthe money. now pros f Monroe atid Oakley ats. 510 at out vi FOTWIN & CORBY, 40 Dearborn-st, ___ FO RENT-ROOMS. Wout Side. . : W BRICK HOUSE, cite 17°, BENT, A NICELY“EURNLSI | Ton fur one oF (Wo yuiet gentlemen, tng ly Souths Ann 10 RENTANY fat Huon a, 1 Hotels AND 167 sTATE-ST.~THE CLAR- wae, tween Van Huren and Harrieon el turaiahe Win Untechass c buard, €4.60 eu Cool anew ‘AUANI-AV.. Kooms, Su cents), Country, TABLE, i, HAVING fag a woud No ob Aurora, IL WEENANCIALS UN JHAMONDA WATCHES, USHERS’ private office, 13) Hans Houm $ and. Kelabilalied (so: BALD FUL OLY GOLD AND BiLVel ey Gutuar ua watctinn dlasionds and Paluatite jeseript LGOLISMID's Luau and Tullio, tad), Wo East Mattaoa-at, Retabllatied 16U%, APONEY IN WAND TO AYE without removal, oF WILSON, Hosted 118 Vote Fo Loan-asun 8h, Oh AND OTHE en eae Siomaages Dough LONG, Ta Kaas Washingt rie pe CENT=MONEY TO LOAN DN BUM T ‘ourcard ui the fing page. TURNER Warhingtotiat, MISCELLANEOUS, AT-LAW, ROOM G. AT ivlea tes 8 eapinidenice strictly cul 1 lowest Ls Wa: ‘on food collateral, hay ibe Ro) fdcntlal. Terms lower uot. Consult your bwu lntercet by writing to tne, iran, “( GOUDLICH, ATIONNEY- ATL AW, 124 DEAT A. born-a, view free; no fee upless auvcewful “All correapundence strictly confidearial. [SMERALDA—Tile INFALIINLE CURE FOR M, reurnatians, fur sale wt Roow 14, 137 Sadivon, frum Ve. We 16 Up. A, and wt 6a Weet Lako-at F goon hing city of about 126o0 in tle u¥er &atvay4 central lueatiouy ry reambs fur selling. Addrvas et ae clive fur casi. For full pu 2D) RIDDELL, on pre ALENS—FoR SALE, AN process (yr waking coke fruin li- {anations will bs tude on applica IT, Nouns 2. id Wash nxton: 1 SALE Tleve Tuunlog onde: Hleulars inquire uf G sparlaud, 10, » TOY La pew Full wap Pe SES AND CARILIAG) TSINONABLE CAKKIAGES-WE HAVE Ne Tustock « large awortincnt of Gur well-kugwn Hicasure and Dustubas buxgica op eliptle aprluds, Conc Tigh type aud hy tops, ale ‘pets fuckawayy, cabrloleta ‘that We are sctiiog at papu- ‘Of good seconds bald uut. ms Rae : PENNOY ERG CO,, 223) to Sat “ PABTNEUS WANTED. TREL WANTED —AAD-MIXED PAINTS— Ua hia: Lydtaess man with from $3, to $4,000 ty Joly auullie Jo the oye ui uber aad, tend color buslucas ip youd 1 te ‘Tribuoe ulcer. NSFEUCTION, HEI WIL E. LLENT REFEI ft Brat wants jt sulue N = Cale el Elkes We NOWELL, Saldea, Maan,

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