Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1878, Page 13

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THE WISCONSIN. The Bourbon Democracy Toying with the Greenbaekers. Neveriheless, the Repablican Out- look Is Encouraging. Matt Carpenter Misses the Oppor- tunity of His Life. An Aotive Oampaign Inangurated Against the Fusionista, i SR . Epectal Correspondence of The Tridune, MILWAUKRE, Oct. 4.—A comoleteTist of the candlantes for Congressof Jhe varfous parties fn all the districts can now be presented, as fol- Tows: s, Republican, Democratic. QGreenback, 1.¢C . Winhama, C. H, I'atker, C. 1. Farker, 205, B Cpewoll. R R, Davis, 1. A. Tenney, AU, ¢ Mazelton, =——"—— " Owen King, 4 Frisby, P, V, Denster, T, 11, Jndd. Afirnin Smith, Edw,'S, Biracg, D. Giadings. s, V. lonen, Ginbe Boack, —— — “I, L. lamphrey, C. D. Parker, C. D, Parker, “Vhad, C. Pound.A. R, fiatrows. A. R, latcawe, Judge M. M. Cothren bas declined the sep- arate Demoerafle nomination {n the Third Dis- trlet, and no candidate has been nominated in Nis place. Judge Cothren was by far the ablest and best candidate running on the Democratic ticket Inany of the alstricts, and was onc ol tho best names of elther party before the people. Hle is Judge of the Fifth Judiclal Cir- cult, comprising Crawford, Grant, lows, and Richlaud Countles, and it is a good Indication that he respects bis office sufliciently to keep out of politks. 1t Is Mkely that, as the case atands, the Democratic vote in that district will bo cast for Owen Kiug, thie Greenback candi- date, on a trade for the Greenhack vote for all the Democratic legislative candidates that can be eecured. . TIE BIGNS OF A CLOSE COALITION letween the Democrats and Greenbackers fn- crease and thicken throughout the State, The Greenback candidate in the Fifth District i running merely to draw the Repub- lican Greenback vote, and Bragg will get all the Democratic Greenbackers, The same state of nffaira exists in the 8Ixth Distriet; Democratic Greenbackers are all at work for Bouck, und the reantar Greenback candidate will Le ooly a decoy auck to misiead Republicans with Green- back political vews, 1n the Legtslative Distriets,owerer, the coal- $tion will be moere thorouchly perfected. ‘The Democrats, while apoarently ille, and while they are fle as un orranization, are fn fact, by spuntincous fndividual actlyity, simultancously, 11 many localltics thiroughout the State, doing eifective lahor {n consolidating the opposition ta the Htepublican nnnr in every close Scnotn and Assembly District {n the State. This EUVBTERRANEAN MANAGEMENT of the eambalizn is more danerous than an act- iyc cauvass on the stump, swl by large public wcetings. By speeches the diverse factions of the ppposition would be arrayed against cach otuer: for they would find it impossibie to de- fine thelr opposite inuneial vlews without giving offense. But in the manipulation of cacuscs and conventions to work to thelr mutual ad- vintage by an cxchange of support and by “spiicing ! tiekets, and {n the fntricues of mero politionus to organize the votlug element of o eampnign, there s no room for disbute over terms and phrases. They have simply to agree fu each locality a8 to who can poll the most votes auninat the Republican cundulate, and to wadfe upou him in a caucus, or run hit us an fudependent, orin auy way to fovetzle into hils snoport more than hislegitimate party strength, ‘They cau wll azree on this, nud wake oo dis- Tressing saeriflee of prinel ‘This comblnn. tion thy Republicans wiil tind wote and ware farmidully s election-day ap- proaches, o e couniy where there Is a chanee to dispute titles on members of the Leg- Islature and county oflicers. IN TILD FIRST DIRTIICY the combinations opposeil to the Republicans arte making extrnondinory but improtable clans, Charley Willlams ought to be vlected, as (L 14 an oll vear, by 4,000 majorites in o U're: tdeniin! year he ought. to have 7,000 majority. But the Greenbaek and Demotratle conlition cinim that they will make Rocki County nearly even ou Congressman and elees two members of the Adsembly ; they allow but o small Republie. an wargin_in Walworth County, and clay Paewe, Benosha, oud Waukesha Countl larg majorties. ‘This {8 absurd, bardly oppears to an, ordimry obaeryer, oF t0 0 man up a tree.'’ as wo might ay, now it is posaible fur theaverage Reoublic. an majority m the Fiest District tove casentlaliy duninistied, Mr, Willinme has fu every respect sented the average pubhis sentinent of the e I o schwlarly, cloquent, and able mun, and represents the advance guard of the Repubhicun garty. He has conservative tinancal Viewe, not the hardest of the bord, bue sbout wtichas are held by honest, thoughtful men of wllpurtics i that old, wealthy, substantial s trict which has bad lm for Its megber fu Con- wress sluce 1872 There does not appear to be any resson to anticpate o revolutioniu that dis. trict this year. * 1IN TILE 8£COND DidTIICT the Republican cauvuse Is making betfer prog. ress than wis expected, ‘The fight between the Democrats and Greenbackers §s evidently rreconeiiuble. I3 18 not likely that cither e, vis, the Democratie candidate, or Ma), Ten- ney, Greenback candidate, will withdraw Trom the canya It nopeurs to bo at least sulllelently ascertalted that Tenney will atiek,” TIf Davis should withdraw 1t 3 quite certuln that Cuswell witl gret the votes of alout one-kalt the hurd-money Democrats tn the dis- triet, and that the other half witl not vute at nll.Thie number of hard-money Democrats tu he district is not lure, but tiey are fntluentiol in the Important busiucss centres of tho several countics comprising the diatrict. The Demo- crats in Dane County also complatn that o weak und Ladly-orravged county ticket has been pluced upon thens, and that they will lose yotes by that meats. ‘Tne Twenty-fifth Senatorial District s in Dune Conuty, ond George B, Burrows s the Republican candidate for re-clection as Senator, Mr. Barrows has represeuted th district for the lust two yeurs, and e $s the preaent Chalr- mun of the Leglslative Republican Campalin Committee. His Demoeratie competitor, Lars Grince, 18 a_popular_mun, and whil ninke a pod ran. But the Democratle candidates fu Luane County are weighted down by a weak and unvopular county theket, and it 18 not iniprobu- ble 1hat the Democeatle majority fu that county fur the last few vears may” bo “reversed, ‘The Democrutie campuien 8 badty ovstriscted by the toial recaleitruncy of the Greenbackers, who g o atlillute uu caudidates for Covgress or any wnor ofllee, 1N TUE TIIRD DISTRICT 8 Lo reason Lo apprehend any Demo- cratke or lircenback fnlns, As vlsewhere mene tuned, Judwo M. M, Cotliren Lus declined to be the Demucratic candidute, 1t {8 not provable thut any targe proportion of the Democratic vote Wil L st for Kinig, the Greeuback caudidate for Congress, — Gicorge C. Hazelton, the lte- publican wember ol Coneress from this dls- trict, s o candidute for ro-election, Ho ds oug of the best public speakers fu the Siate, (s mwan of clear convietlons und finm principles, ihs perounal poputarity Is great, snd, au the rupture between the Democrats snd Green- backers I8 cotwbiete, there appears to bo no resun Why he should ot be re-clected by un tuerensed mujorty. ‘Tulsfs substautlally the district represcuted with ereat credit by C. C. Washbura, Orsatius Cole, Amasa Cobb, and J, Allen Harber, walle ft coustituted the shect wnchor of the Renublican majority of the Siate: ‘MI_LWAHKEH DlaTiCT, Leander F. l-rhm,{ 18 the Republican caudi- date for Congress In the Milwaukee District. Hersu woss capuble and worthy entieman, His persunal character 15 pure and above re- roach. Il 15 o lawyer of more than ordivary curning and gapacity; is aftable lu bis munners, and o fueid aud eble’ exponent of the opinions in which he claims his bellef rests, 1fis ver- sonul popularity 1 very great, and, lu i when the combination” of Democrats an Grungers carried tho Btate,—b 2 the Re- puotleen candidate for Attornes-Generul,—to Was the bighest mau ou the Bepublican tivket, runnivg rome 4,500 ahead even of Gov. Wash- Lurn, The contest wiil bo 8 close aud severs oue, but the Republicans are caruestlv cu- wayed, und will secura & victory i possible, THY SISTIL DISTRICT. Baracious sud conservative Republicans ex- prees u strongr nope of carpylpg the sixth Dis- trict youinst Gabe Bouck, Dr. J. Couper Ayers, ul tireen Bay, was In Milwaukee yester- cexpressed” the bellef that by & thor- vush cauvies the very acceptsbls Republ'can * cutdudate, cx-Mayor Joves, of Ostkuosh, cab ba elevted. Mr. Jones §s @ wan 0f - great purity hitucss of chisracter, and’ hie 18 o cledr- ol business, tdentitied for tweuty with the business und industnal tercsts 08 Lt section of the State, e has the some- What curueat but utlable and eoguding man- Bers o B salizen who | incets his Iellow mew dady fs e honest walks of llfe, " preets them with , wlland geulahity, uod who bas a regard for toe common humane feelings of manking e does not fudulze (n boisicrons and oftensive profanity, he does pot habitually nae bratal ob- cenity in his every-lay talk, and be docs not alivek every ordinaey sense of the provricties of 1ife In his aally walk and conversation. [fe has B bigger head than Gabe Bouck, with more braing In it, and be possesees all the quaiitics which bellt a man to represent the decent, cleanty-clad, unverminly peonie of that district 1n a degree which renders him fndescribably su- verfor to his Democratic competitor, It {9 soid that while Gabe Bouck served in the War he once found on tho outside of Nis Dbiousc A parasitical” speciuen, which he removed from its place of parade and recrention to the caplilary region of his aem-pity saving, with an accustomed onth, * Go buck where yau belong.” “Tlie viilgar nectote was at one absurd period thought to be so atrocions- Iy fupny that it found a place in the humorous ddepartment of anc of the literary magazines. In profanity, obscenity, and yulgarity, Gabe Bouck is A REPULSIVE EXAMPLE to be ahuned, net copied, In every respect except as to_tutcllectuat capacity, 3 Gabe Bouck's opposite, and In that he is Boue equal. He cannot bluw and yell as loudly as Tiouck can, aad many think that this s an addi- tlonal claim to tho respect and votes of tho people. Besides, 8 great many of Bouck's _admirers think that he blows wiore laudly st the curbstone in Ushkosh than he docs in_ Congress, und that wind, bad manners, and notsy elfervescence do not make up a statcsman, nor even a muilel for anavernze Congressman. There Is a strong expeciation that Junes may be clected. He will be If the Republicans of the district will harmonize their lucal difticultics, unite o suoport of the party and fts principles, and make up their minds that they desire & grand Republican. success mora than they desira a petty triumph over gome local advereary who happens to be & can- didate for some littie oftice. THE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN tsone of marked activity In ail parts of the tate. Senator Howe has a long list of appointments, a8 follows: Rncine, Oct. 8; Delavan, Oct. 05 Teloft, Oct. 105 Janicavitie, Oct. 113 Madigou, Qct. 143 Baraboo, Oct., 152 Bparta . 103 Crosse, Oct, 174 Hudson, Oct. 215 Menomonce, e, 83; Eau Cintro, Oct. £33 Hiack River Falls, Oct. 243 New London, Oct. 25 Henatar Windom, of Minucsata, will soeak nt Sparta, Uct. 7; Barabeo, Oct. 83 snd Food du Lac, Oct. 9. The Ilon. U. B, Thomas has o scries of an- nouncements in Grant County for next week, hard-moucy specehies Prof. Eccles is making aleo throughout the State. L. B. Cnswell fs addressing meetings during the present week in Sauk County, and will speak at Loganville, Oct, 85 Ironton, Oct, 95 cedsburg, Oct. 103 and Baraboo, Oat. 11, | Charles’ G, Willlams will_speak at \White- water Oct. 7, at Waukestia Oct. 8, and at Ocon- omowoe Oct, . Col. E._W. Keyes, of *Madlson, and Con- gressman Pound, havo'been making a thorouh stumping tour this week of Juncau, Portuze, and Wood Counties, Gov. Pound has a sty le of srcnklln: which Is marked by superior furce and clearness, and he da making a splendid canvass of the Inuncnso alstrict which he “represents, Col. Keves §s a forcible and effective speaker, and he is & _declded, argressive, and important element in State politics. Tlorace Rubieo, Chalrman of the Repu'ilican State Comunistee, hap opened Commivten Head- quarters at No. 8 Michlgan strect, in Miwau- kee, and will conduet the campaln fu person. The Republican Legislative Campaign Cotn- mittee, with headquarters at Madison, will do effeciive aud fruitful work. Senntor Ueorre L. Burrovs is the Chalrian of the Legtslatve Cominittec; bis address ia at Madison. MINOIL XOTES, Col. J. F. Willisine, of Praime du Chien, Chalrman of tho Hepubiican Coneressional Com- mittee ot the Third District, wns in Milwaukes yesterdar, and ho nicnku i strong terns of the prospects of the Republican party In that dis- trict, Ilo estimates Mr. Hazelton’s majority ad 5,000 aver Owen King, the Greenback candidnte, Uen, Edward 8, Brage, member of Congress from the Fond du Lac District, was in Milwau- hee yasterday. He had been up fn Dodire Coun- ty attending the Democraties County Conven- tlon and attempting to orrantze and harmonize he Domocrauic factions. Charles H. Willinmns, the present State Senator from that dlstrict, was pominated, defeating 8at Clark, ex-Mavor Lander, of Beaver Dam, - ex-Attorney-General A. Scott Bloan, and the othier candiuntes, ‘Ihe Democrats bope that'thoy have made a combl nation tieket which will save to them that fni- portant county. Results wiil tell, A conven. tion called by **The People® will mectm that county uext Saturday to nominate a county tleliet and a eandidate for Stato Scnator, 1n tho Ninth Senatorial Distriet a formidable offort is belug made to defeat Seuatar R, 8. Sockett os o candidate tor re-clectlon, It fa altogether Improbable that such a result should ocenr, bat the Republeans of tireen Lake, Mar- quette, and Waushara Counties will find it worth thetr while to Jook afier the elections, Mate Wadleligh, of Stevens Toint, the Demos cratie eandhdate for Stato enator In the distric componed of Marathon, Portaze, and Waupnea Counties, was here yesterany. H, C. Mumbrue (Demuocrat) hus represented the district the lusy two pesstons, Gen. John A. Kellogg 18 the Re- publican Sceuatorial candidate fu the district. 1t witl b & close fizht, aud the result will be Jook- el for with futerest. 1t 1s generally coneeded by Democrats that i€ Matt Carvonter had secepted the Hepublican Congresstonal nomination in the Mliwaukes District ho would have been elected, or, £ hio tad been deleated by o small majority, o would have received an frreslatible *send-uff * for United States Senutor, * Helias missed the opportunity of his life by bad advisers,” sald oue of Lils most falthiful admirers to-day, —m—. MARITINE DISASTER. Thirty Years of Fatnl Shipwrecks, London INsll- Mail Giozelre, The aunals of marltime dlsaster during the Ppast thirty yeurs fufl to show uny catastrophio cotalline such o Jamentabic loss of life as that wuich has marked the sinking of the Princess Alice by the Bywell Castle. Setting asido the loss of tho Grosser Kurlurat, the snost fatad accldent of u 1tke character that has taken pluce in British watera during the veriod In question was the running down of tho Nerth- flect einigrant ship while at anchor off Dunge- ness on the night of Jan, 3, by the Spanish steamer Murillo, when 203 persons wera drowned. A collisfon almost equally disastrous, und strongly recalling in sume respeets thut which has just ocegreed on tho Thames, tuok vlace on Lake Michlgan Bept. 7. 1863, The stenmboat Lady Elgin, which bud started from Chicazo on a pleasurs trip with ucarly 400 excursfonists ot boprd, wns run into by a schooner, aud sank within & quarter of an hour with 935 people, amonz them Mr, Herbert Ingraw, the member for HBoston, The vear 1854 was marked by a serles of fatal collisions, ‘Yho Ttallan il steamor Ercolave left Genon on Apnl 24 with a number of pusscugers, lucluding severul English Fi . and Itallan fundlics, sud ut mids waa cut duwn 10 L vater's edeo by th S Outy fourteen of the passcuturs cscaped, nwonget thein belng Bir Robert Peel, whose secrctury, Mr, Charles Hulsey, the mumber for Hertfordshire, wus smong tie drowned. On Aorll 23, the cmigraut bark Fuvorite, from Bremen, wus run Into off the Start by tne Hesper, and went down fike o stone with 2L "of her paasenzurs and crew; six of the crew only saving them- sulves by clamborligg over the Hleaper's bows. Ou Bept. 27, the Arctiy a splendid ship of the ne, catne fato colllalon with the screw r Veata in d for off the bunks of New- foundland; and _out of the 383 sous ou board 823 perished, smone thew tiie Duc do Girsmmont and the Due do Uuyiies. ‘' sae year was also rendered memorable in citiaie Qlaasters by the disappearancs of the v of Ulasgow, acrew steamer, which left the Mersey for Philadelphia ou Murch 1, with 430 pervunis on bosrd, sl told, aud of the Lady Nugent, trausport, which salled from Madrus onu May 10 with reforcemonts for the army at Hungoon, forming with ber erew a8 totai of some 400 persons. Neither of theso vessels wus ever heard of sgalu~a fate shared by the Pucitie, which Jeit Livespool on Jui. 23, 1530, with 153, and the Ciiy of Hustou, which surled troim Halifux on Jan. 28, 1870, with 101 versons on board, ‘The mail steawsbip Europs, oo ber way to Bugisnd In duly, 1549, ran down (he ewde srant bark Charles Bartlett, causiug tbe death 0L peraous; und the Irish steawer Munger- ton blundered luto the New Zealund chpoer dosephlne Willls Juse off the South Furciund, and seot herand sixty-nlne people, mostly buss l\:'ul.!\'l'l. 10 the buttom. be Joundering ol the Captaly off. Cape Fin- Isterre vu the picht of Sept. 6, 1570, with Lapt. Burgoyne aud 550 ottfeers und seaunen, remsing the Leuvivat calumity that lius befalicn the uavy duriuz the latier balf ol the present eentury, The severest foss silfercd ut sea bY the ury was from the contimgent furmished by the Twelith Laucers aud Fortv-thirdand Nuvty-sevond Foog towards te 405 lives lost wath the Birkeubead off the Cupe of Guod Hops Feb. 20, 18523 The Amerivan urmy sustained an alwost equal toss, when auout 800 ot the tuups o bosra the San Fraocisco were washed overvoard, or died from cxbsustion upd cxpodure, durtug ber passsue from Califoruia in December, 1533 The woat disastrous condagrativn Ju Britisn waters wos that which caused the deatbs ol 173 people vu zhit board the emigrant pacl Abergele lay on the aftérnoon Ave. 81, 1MR Dut fts horrors were even echipsed by thote attending the burning of the steamship_Austria beteeen Hambiteg and New York on Sept, 13, 1853, when 401 ont of the §28 persons on baard were burned ordrowned. A like fate overtook 204 of the #8 persons on board the (iolden Gate on her passage from San Francisco to Panama on the' T of July, 18623 while tho number who pers Fahed In o similar manner, with Ellot Warbur- ton, on boarid the Amazon in the Bay of Iiseay on the 4th of January, 182, amounted to 103 ont of 16l persons. The author of “The Creecent nnd the Cross’ had written that e gince the days of steam navigation the Nay of Blscay was no longer formidables" yet the Lon- don stenmahip went down in It on_her way to Australta on the 11th of January, 18%), carrying with her 230 out of her complement of 258, ‘and. among them G. V., Hrooke, the actor. Two most dirastrous shipwrecks of recent date were those - of the Atlantle and . the Rogal Charter. Tho latter a homeward- botml Australian clioper was crushed like an euslicll on the rocky conat of Auglesea just be- fore daybreak on Oct. 25, 1859, and 450 men, women, and ehildren were drowned, some forty or so managing to scramble ashore. The hum- ber af lives lost with the Atlantle, onc of the White Star Line, was even mare nppailing. She struck on a sunken rock off the coast of Nova Seotis on April 1, 1573, with 031 persons on boan], and the breakara swept away 4810t them, The AunaJane, of Livernool, buound §nr Canada, with 450 emizrants and a crew of forty- five, was driven on shore on Barra * Istand, one of the Hlcbrides, on Sept. 30, 1853, and. 303 per. sons perisned. The Pomong, another emigrant ship irom the same port, wos_suffercd, Lthrouzh an etror In hier reckoning, to run on the Wes- ford cyast during the night of A;g(l_l 28, 180, the result belng the loss of @36 lives In 1854 the Tayleur, another erpool emi- grant_ship, ran _on to Lambay lsland, neat Howth, onJau, 31, when 200 lives trere lost and a similar fate overtook the Powhsttan, from lavre, on the cosst ot Baruegat, ou April 15, not & soul of the 250 on board her eacaping. In the terrible gale of April 30, 1850, the Roval Adelaide steampacket, from Cork.to London, weuton to the Tongue Sands, near Margate, and of the 260 persons forming her nsscngers and crew not one survived to mve he details of ler fate. Amone the ships lost during the storm of Feb, 24, 1840, was the tiers tuan emigrant bark Flotidian, which was driven on the Long Sunds and went to bicces, ple perlshing, aod four buing rescued by o wevenue-catte THE TEXAS "PACIFIC. ‘The South Cooling O Towarils Totn Scott’s Sclreme. New York Timge, Col. Thomps Scott lost lils inaln chanco when Coungress adjourned without having done any- thing to help his Texas Pacific project. There was hovo for him as long as it scemed possible to persuade the South that his piana were fa- voravle to ite luterests. Fur, thougzl the Bouth, unalded, would bu unable to carry its point, It might, by an adrots use of the log-rolling proc- ess, obtain the co-operation of other interests to an extent that would mike success reasona- bly certain. The Southern members did apply tlicse tactics go far as to delay varlous enter- priscs with the view of forcing their prumoters into terms with tbe Texas Pacific people. Folied bimself, Col. Blott resolved upon reventlng the success of others, His obby and his Southern supporters in the House browizht about theideteat of the Northern Pacific bill, thouel providing for nuthiug bespud un extension of time for the construction of the railroad,—thie only coneeivablo motive betug the acquisition of ald from the Northwest s the price of ald to be rendered next seeslon by Southern members, The President of tho Pean- sylvania Rmilroad on that occasion played into the hunds of bis enemica, fie enabled the Union and Centrul Paatic Companies to strengthen thelr monopoly materiaily, And, after alfy ho uecomphished nothing for himself, The seszion ended und the Texas Pacific was nowhere, Theu thie Soutir began to consider wiether its zea) in Col. Scott’s bebait ts profitanle or wises and the resuit of {ts copitations docs not promise much in lus favor, Tho South js 5o anxlous for a tranacontinantal ratlroad, tributary to ttself, that ju the bezlu- ning it did not Berutinizo elosely the preten- sions put furwurd in the namo ot the Texas Pa- cilie, To thoss famillar with the fnner working ot tnat corpuration, with the doubt that hanis over part. of fts tice, with its- exbausted tinan- ctal condtition, and, above alt, with the coutrol- ling intereats nud vurpusu ol Col. Scott,. ardor with which the South sustained it was in- cowmprehensible, Enthusinsm In belinll of a bona tidy Southern enterprise srogld be ineelll- cible, But here §s u scheme ongfuating ot the Nort, managed by Northern men identlfied with Northern corporations, and pointing di- rectly 1ol benell: of Fenngyivania cor- porntion. 'The Pennsylvania sbareholacrs huve allowed their chiel oflicer to remafu ns- soclated with the Texus - Padifle only he- cause 1t would be made tributury to” thelr profita; and Col. 8cott has repaid thelr cuntldenca by 8o managing matters as to bring all there {3 of o Texas Pacific Rowd Into n pusi- tion which ‘will sccure the tnrough traillc via St. Louls to Penusylvania. These facts le so tiear the surface that fgnorance of them 18 ul- most inexcusable, And yet we must assume 1hat public men, of whon Henator Lamar Is u fuir exsmple, would not have committed them- seives to the support of Col. Scott and his reheme had they really understooa the motlves ot one or the natureof the other. Sectlonal centhuslism in this wstauce overcams thetr judic. twent, Fino woras sthimuiated theie eredultty, and they fell mio the trap gesiencd for them., The support uccorded by Bouthern nuvwepa- pers {8 anore easily uevounted tor. The gallant Colunel borrowed o leuf out of Mr. Tiiden's book, omt his agents had little tronble with the press, Thus the South, which cared only for o e of 115 own to the Pacille, was ndu to aceept the Texas Paclile ue the thing fo wanted, Since the adjourmnent, however, skepticlsm has revealed fteelf ju varluus Stutes. Uno of Virginla's Benators suzgested doubts whlle Con- gress wus th sesslon, oud_these haye taken root and broughe forth sbundautiv, From Virgiuta 1o Alabuima, throngh Tenvessee and Misslssipp, and nu:nnlr {rom Loutslana, wu trace thy work- inzof an {uea that must be futal to the Texus Pacitie. ‘The call for a Southern Pacitic Raliroad fa loud ns before, buy it Is moru diseriminat- fug, Thu object beink to fuster Bowinern trade und developuent, the demand naturally 1s that tho road ta be buidt shall sotisfy Bouthern waonte, and shall pive. guaranties that the tratlle I8 _not diverted - from a Southern ter- minus, Thequestion is, asked,'Does the Texas Punlife mect “these requirementsf Aud ver- suns aru surprised o find, on an examina- tion of Col, Beott's bill, not only that it dtoes not furnish the guarmitees demandud, but that {ta orovisions indicate u determination ot 10 be bound by the considerations whics ulone Smpel thy Bouth to eeck u Facitie roud. The present startiug polnt of the Texus Vaclie (s 250 infles weat of tho Misslsstppl. [t must be ex- tendud enstward to the Misalwsiopl, or it will be worthless to any Southern Siate except Texas, But the Beott scheme ukes o provision for a terinftius on the Misstssippl or fur crosslig et river. Of the énormous substdy which Cyngress 1% uakeid to grang, not o dollur would:be appliea- blo to thio comiruction of the road cast ol Mar- shiall, The claises relating to an extenslon this direction are so cvusive sud uvtherwise ui- sullstuctory that it is ciear thut Col, Scott: hus not the sficutest luteation ot cxtending the ruad to New Orleans, Memphits, ur Vizksbunyg, Not & dollar is uvailable tor the purposs, and the conditions susrested show that - the conatriction castwsnds 15 o doluslon,—a pre. tunsy that shouitl not decelve anybody. Indead, the Company bas already butit soveuty miles of rosd northwand from Muarsball, wuking & con- ctlon Witn, B, Louis; sud other of Col, oLt's pluns Bhow thas tuat city §s the objective putng ou the Misslssippl, to which toe tratic of the Texus Pacitic 1s to be tributary, BL Luuls veacued, the Fennaylvania * syswn ' provides fur:ail ese. Thy so-cslicd Bouthern Trans. continental Road will leave the Bouth proper llutnru\'nlnd for, 2 he discussion of the subjget In so many quuriers of the South destroys pll that i cu- couraging 1 the ‘Texas Pacilic proapect, “The sclieme might have been pusbed throtgh Con- press Gad there been no thae for tue exainfoa. tlon of (ts features, = A it 13, the defects uro su mantfest, and the talse pretenves so glarng, thut theonly Bouthernsupoort on which Col. Scott ran liereatter rely §s thut which s may be sble 1o purchise, { course, Mr. Huntington's wireuts havecontrivuted tothe noticeable shango ol feellug, aud ure teying to transler to the Buuthern Paciie the favor walch tho fexas La- gitle has fost. JU J5 un up-biil task. The Peune e Ivant corporation Is not o Juyeable’ vower, sud the Central Pacitic s not much better, A trausfer of dependence from the, Peunsylvania “eystgm? to he Calitoruia monupoly “would not bring to the Bouth nmawny advantages; and lr. uutlogion will bave to fucsish some sub- stuutiul assurauces sbat his Southern Pucliic s not the Ceutral Pucitie I, disguise or he will w00 the South In velu, Al suine uot distany day we shall bave threo truos-coutinestal rul- rvada; but exactly how tny Soutnern uodNorgh- eru roads will bo built, 1s & problem that uday 1emaln ansolved uotil eapital grows e mure yeu- turesvine §o its seare it PR Yale's Penalty tor Haalug, - Hustom Sdeertiaer, % 1t & prizn bad beew offered o the world for the best Fetuedy for buzing in college, no bap- Jer sulutivn o2 the provlew could bave been Lit CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY. ‘disusod to Fnglish g on than that recently adopted by the Yale ulty, They have decreed that any saphomare found zullty of maltreating a fresiman shiall ho summarhiv dropued fnto the freshman class, no matter how high his rank in his own class, S S —— ENGLISIL TRADE. Rteady Deprossion. Jondon Soectator, Sept. 60, English trade has for vears past been hiber- gating and feeding on ftsclf, From ycar to year am! month to. month men have been prophessing pleasant things, yot August, 1878, is no better, but rather worse, than August, 1877, At fiest it was safd that there was just @ temporary gint, and that the forelgn customer would be ouly too glad, If & littlo time were miven him, to consume the bountifn! supply of British coods. Korthe last tiro years the East- em question “has been an excellent apology for n falling demand. Austris, and Russis, and ‘Turkey could not be expected to take Lan. cashire cottons ana Middlesborough Iron when tho world, or at all events thel: world, was In flames. War scemed about to suck (ireat Britain in. Anstling, cried the Btock Exchchges, §s better for trade than armed nentrality,. Commerce had flonrished n the old wars. Of course, it would flourish agalin, Indecd, many sanguine speculators talked, and issibly thought, as ik a cumpaign, or Lord enconsficla’s two or three campaigng, wére tho one thlug needed to set Britlsn trade In motion. Peaco was promised, and Detter even than war, With peace, every cus- tomer of England would develop o flery " thirst for Encllsh " fabri; When the thousand-and- one good reasons In the stato of Luropo why Tnglish apiudles stoud idio and Enciish blast. Turnaces wergcold, had been exhausted, there were always. commercial — deplession in the Unllchlmes aud famfue fg China and India to fall back upon. Now the Berlin Congress has dono it work _acconding to its method of doing work, England 18 at peace, and free to deluge Cyprus and AslaMinor with Mauchester vriata cven China Ts dectared frec_from fumine, and India §s breathipg agaln, Yet the trade and navigation returns for August do not reflect any of the radiant satisiaction which welcomed home the Plem‘golcnuaflu from ‘Berlim, Ths flzures are sulky: They report a lal!ing off in value of gross imports of nearly 9 per cent, ns compared with August, 1877, and of nearly 2}¢ per cent In value of expurts, Qreat Britain is paylue away rmore money and being paid leas Lthan two vears back, That the | mere amounts of expuris and: imports do not halance need disturb no one, They scldom do. Exvorts being calculsted st the Custom-lionse without. and Imports with the profit at which the oods will sell, {mports {1 o country like this are sure to exceed the nominal value of exports. Yet the exports may bring to the exporter a larger aum of monev thao would purchaso all the imports. But if imports continue Lo grow and exports to diminlsh, a thine must come when the country has sctitally to withdraw some of its old savings to buy the halance it needs of imports. ‘Tnis point would seem to have been reached la England, Any ono who could eal- culate the money-vahte of Britlan savings, could caleulate, also theythue it wouald Ipke before Eugtand must ceascto buy frot very {neapacity to pay. ‘Ihe mdverso balance of the Britlsh foreien trade account {8 not represented exactly by the diiference between the Custom-flnuso catimates of exports- and Imports. A larze quantity of foreign produce is re:exported. The residue mav nol be bevond the power ol Great liritalan to pay far out of her euormous invested Incume, and 2q far, the ouly harm done is that she will for tho time cease more or less to savn ond fuvest. Bat the, Jdifforence against Great Dritaln belween the wmoney pakd fn by foreiguers to her aceount, and tho monny slie pays to them, {8’ far frum the total extent of the loss British tée fs now Incurring, I the Nlgures of the present and pust months bo vompared, o very menncing copdition of thines wiil reveal ftself. I¢ will bo seen thut uot, nce was pronounced” merely. have the cxgorts bean diminishing in- cessantly for every month in the last year and a half, but that lnm-r‘g exports _have becu fall- ing fn ¥alue, not (n quhutity. Forclzuors have been obtaining the- sgme quantity for a lower price. Manchester, apd Nowcastly, oud DBir- miugham have been Working for tlie foreigner not half-time but halt-price, English manu- facturers have beeng;in fact, attempting to bribe foreten cu-wme\' Into tiking goods they do not want by thelsheapness. - Our readers kuow what ‘fs wrgel in favor of such 2 course of trade, . British inannfacturcrs cannot offord, It 37 sald, to leave their manufacturlng appargtus (dle. They are still ielr old customera grow 1s.and a prey posaibly to ulien blandishments, Nothinz, it 18 laid down us an axion, Is harde#fto recover than a lost market. Rival mangficturers from Belgium and the United Btatey,[{rho must, liko Eug manufacturers, efthe; not at all, might, 1t 18| unotenpien territory For the thme the evil Drought about by overs trading must bo cnduldls 1t cannot be” cured. Thesu is the excess uli{;muwd capital, includ- {uz the work people ®no are as much caoital as the mitls, Lalf-timé will not bring In the legitimate proflp on a capital which 1s doublo the amount caabloof profitable employ- ment. To close the wjlis atogether migud bo cheapeat In the end, af'it Is to strike o bad dobt off n truler’s books. clde to starve bulf Lotftashire, which has, mas- ters and wmen, {ta subsigtenco Tocked up in them. Hapuity, the prophctd’of good times st jurn out right sooner or latpr, and theéwr predictions are as outrugeous us cyer. ‘Fhie markets of Asia sud of Eastern Europg, which have been closed by war and famiue, my z;t soon aguin bo ppened. Nooue can foretell: whether 1t will be pext montl, or hall n year hence, ur two yearn, But Lancashire Is entltled to trust that™it may be soun enough to renller neadless 80 sharp 4 remedy for past over-trading us comulete cessation df presvut’ trude. We will hope that this change niay come speedily, and Lancashire witl then have an opporiuity of repentunce, If It pursue 8 old course, and suppose that trude enny be developed, not vy fin- proving guality, but by increasing quantlty, and by fuvestiue ail fis proldis 1w o slugle branch of industry, the depressfon of the last sew vears will becomne ehronie. Tl world has discovered It ean havo too much of Mavchester goads, Laucashire must discover o nower tune for Europe utid Asfa to ddnee to than elzed cot- ton. 4f it desirea to inake n ressonable proft on ita growing capital, It must use a Mttie In- ventlveness, and vary its note, BATTLE-HYMN, [Transiated from the (jerman by A, . Harmon.] rlouw.“l(utrnnm rouse! dofend .your tlocks and altatn Cuted b tho traltor now whe ahrinks or falters! Ne'er bu on Earth to bl the slame lorlnv‘lll Death to g soul? 316 Lotk no God fu Tleav'nl REPHALN, Loud crash the trumucle: rolling aromna resound; To-day shall ltowe with fame redound er nieeds are atnnplag: weapous ratile loud; ‘it Is the giorwus day of cungnest proudy Lol flar sud lsnce gloum from every uook and acrive— Santo spirtto cacaliere! . Romans, rouse?”for iiherty and justice! 3 O Earth, that this oar bighoss trust s) Yo sninted oucs and angel bostd sbove, Uuard us. In steife and danger, with your love! (Refrain ue beyove,) T.et the warrlor to-day intono the chant of dnty! Prond hloum pur laurels in inmorksl beagly | Forib, then, ye heroe 1 bloady chadinel Lver linll gleans tho ilitter of our aruiel Ltefra.n as before, ) Qaniionit, Wia, < - ——— 'CURRENS OPINION. 12 the negro dnes not vote with the Damo. erapic parly. he mnst not voto at all,—CAaricston 3 Oy Neies aud Courier (Dem.). ‘I'he old dairyman who osked the Green. bcker if o could get any ‘more cheeso from hils wilk by watering I8, s ethil waiting for an answer, —Aldany Journds (Rep.)s Cinoinnati Domocrata declare that the Fed- oral Glovernment s no coustitational eight to provent Bph lolland from yoting carly and us olten os he can.—Loulsciile Conunsrcial (Bep. ). It {4 sirange that nobody *thinks of , inter- viewing Charics Prancis Adanus on the degradation of Massachasetts politics. 1lis pulso mast be run- n”un- Bk ax 24 tn sl celobs. — Baitimore Guzslle Weind ). Ban Buller, at Inudisuspolis last week, kindly fugnished the couniry with an advance copy of bieqpitaph. Wil bo be goud enoaxl to forpish the COrpeu 46 600U B8 pOSSILIOT—S1. Louls Globe- Democrat \Uep, ). i 5 The early bird does not always catch the ‘worm, as the Obin Greepbackers ore Snding out to thelr sorrow. They began thu campalzn last wine ter, but Are showing o sad lack Of siaylug vower. —New York Lribude (Kep.). 1n this campalgn there ig o roal issue. It 1s houesty azalust dishooysty. Lot it be amply discussed, aud ig wilt theu bs soen whether the people of tie itepublic are, f6 to govern thew- sawew—llartford Pout \lefh)e s ‘The bous aud sinew, the pride and cnlture, the worth aud worals (of Boathera maubooa are With tue Stutes, openly or 8t hestt. in lts Gria snd unrelenting warfaco 1o bobalf of biste soveralgoty and Caucaslan command. 1t is sald that the States s unrcconstzuciod. 10lsl And It reprscuts aa ‘Hut that would bo to ‘de-. neted constitne: The have ta de<tray the last traco and remnant of our people beforo alie can crushont the spleit that promipied our chivalry o bare tho sabre and nnfarl tho ** Bonny Okolona (Mies,) States (Dem. ). It s jnst n little noticenble that, avery time Mr. Tharman makea s publle spsech in Ohlo, Mr, Tiayard writea & private leiter to New York; and that, eome way or other. the private letier gots publisned, —Albany Argus (Dem.). This faper sinco its start has kad but one finaneial ereed. There Is no honeat way to get & dollar but earnit, and the dollar_earned rhould ba 80 good a dollar that i buys & dollar's worth the world over, —Circlesitle (0.) Herald (Rep. ), Batler is Inoorrigible. Wo have told him threo times that the French ssmignats were Tegal.tendors snd that the Government had forced them' fnto clecalation by®resatting to the most sovore Pen-lllu{' yet that hoedless old man gocs 1o Indians and tells tho people the nssignate wero land-warraots, —ZHoston Journal (Rep.j. The majority of the real property in this conntry is hold by the farmers. There are more farmers and their aons who own the lsnd they cul- tivate than there are farm-laborers who own no and, it the rights of property the Lavof-fleform Communt farmars of the conntry arg to bethe great sutfel ~Carroliton (0.) Free Press (Jiep.). It the Nationals and Democrats want fo repudiate the intoreat on the bonded debt of the United Ststes, why 2o t9 the trouble of iamning greenhacks and compelling the unfortnnato hold- ern thereof tonccept them? “Why not pans a iaw atopping interest, and be aone wilh it? 'Then the bonde becomo money, and will circulate the same As any other money.—Toledo Blade (Lep. Tho railroads will now bring a barrel of flour from Chlcago to New York for 20 cents, but the doswntrodden laborer charges 25 centa to tnke the Larsal from the depot to the consumer. But the downtrodden aforesaid makes it all right with Iits **effete ** customer by throwing in a speech on the necenuiol putting down the railroad-monop- oly 8o that the poor man can Ilve, — Lowell (Mass, Courler (Rep.). Unless thero should be an extra aersion of tho next Congrens, the Urcenbackers elected thin fall will not have an opportunity to present their notlons on finance in Congress until the firat Mou- day of Docember, 1870." That will bo nearly & year after tlie Resomptlon nct tares effect, and the Greenback men wilt by engaged {n o vain sndeavor to find out what they were elected for, anyhow,— Columbus \0.) Journal (Rep.). The lnst election at binclqnlll was dis- geaced by the most ontragoons fraudson the part of the Domocratic party. These frauds hava sifice been openly confeased. They Wers overwhelm- inuly proven by legal evidenca in the conrts, and sonie dozen of repeaters, each of whom fiad voted fram nix to & doson times, wers convicted and ron- tenced to the State's Prinon. The Cincinnatl Dewm- ocrats don't want their clections ** sapervised, "— Indiananolis Journal (lep.). Merchants and business psoplein the West, asvwell as in the East, liave written to their friends hera that, though the Greenback craze haa Infected many otherwiso eensible and conststent people In thelesections, It Is ovident from discernible Indica- tions that the folly will be short-lived : that the mon- «grel combination known as the Natlonals may make reat atrides this year, but [t wiil full to pleces of ta own welght, and be ecarcely felt in the Prosl- dential year. — iVasaington Dispatea (o Cincinnatl Commerelal (Lid, ), 1f the National Baaks are to be destroyad, they munt call in their losns and conteact tholr 1ne of alsconnts. Theirloans amonnt to 3900, 000, 000, The sudden calling in of such an amonot of in. debtedness wonld create a financial crisia like that when tho United States Dank wax oblized to realize ity outstanding credits, "The cloaing up of the af. Ialen ‘of that institation. controlling as it did the finances of tue'country, Jed to & widespread nanic anil a commerctal revalslon from which the nation 4dtd not recover for o long period uf .time.—2Allu- delphia Presa, (Rep.), ‘They say Bon Butler diotated the frand fesolation in tho fraud piatform. The only fanit hie found with fraud when it was time to protest was, that It was not camplcted by using Federnl boyonets to force the Packard and Chambesluin Governments tbon Loulsiana and South Carolina. Tie wan opposed 1o the Electoral Commisslon, but anly for the purpose of moro sunmimaty action in favor of the *‘carpet-bagzeers™ and *‘scalawauzs,™ Do Democrnts romember this when they shout for Rutler, and do they bolieve that he has anddenly become B celestial agent of reforint—foston /ler- ald (Ind. Dem, ). "Tho argument Is mado by the Grecnback- era thaf the Qovornment capnot reaume on that day, becanse thera fe not enough coln In the Trean- ury ta do {t; Hut do they expect that on New Year's morning every man, from Colotado to the Gulf. and from Maine to the, Rio Grande, will ba ot tha Treasnry door wathig to got bis colny Portland Domocrat answered a (ireenoack fries when the. same dificulty was preacnted {n the course of an arqumient, thnw: *4Thore are 40, 001 peopio o .the Clty of Partland, aro there not? ! ** Yes, " sald the Ureenbackar, *+Well, they wil 1 coffips in the courso of nalure, won't “I'hon do you keup ' 40,000 Hlaine's Speeeh at Boston. In 1864 tho greenback dollar would buy two yards of calico; now It will buy sizteon. In 1801 the worklogman's ‘$1.00 for a day's work would buy threo yarde of calico for his wife; now his L n day wil buy hersixtoen. Tn 1864 1t fook tho labarer, working fat 81.60 & day, twenty-two sud n Lalf doys to earn emough_ to buy A barral of parks now, it ho only geta S1a day. ho cdn buy a paerel in v eieht or nlne aays., In 18G4 thy prieo 0! & day's labor—$1.0i0—wvas equal te threa yards of-ocown mulin; now tho prico of & day's labor—81—is equal,to that of twelve and 8 halt yards” of brown' muskin., In 1644 .a day's labor at $1.50 wonld buy una gallon of mo- Inssca; now & day's work at $1 will buy two aud a balf galiuns, —Toledo Liade (Rap. ). i Lot ns vemember that it is not onr flag that is dlehonored by the temporary defeat of sound principles, but that tho battle wo have waged hus sorved o good purposs tu welding the sound clements of the Republican party mto o solid column for the maiutonance of Natlonal Tonor, and that we stronger to.day with right on our wide, than sny coalitlon of wrong! Having fongot the good Aght, wo must keeo the faith, and, recognizing that oor party alons atande champl on of prinifo haneaty and sound Anancinl principtes, et us keop our banner nnfuried withouta **»trips oblltorateid or o slugic rar ohscured, andy fne wertbing 44 with the sacred Loachinga of the faiyers, inavo steadily forward to the victory that will surely coe, if weary stead/aet uund troe to our- auives aud our country,—Zdunvor (Me.) ¥ hla (&ep,), iz The nomination of William R, Dimmick, of Wayne, as the Democratic candidate for Con- resa In the Fifteenth District, 42 one of -the most Dagrant fusults ever offored to the peaplo by any party In tho State, IIs woa 8 memberof tho House st Harrlsburg tn 1874, and was detected in a sys- tematic attompt to combine biackmatliug the banks and cankers of DPennaylvania with leziniaiive venstite, aud he excaped oxpulatan ouly by li rosignation. It was onoof the holdost attemots over waie by the lubby to_vxtort tonoy. Circus Isra wero wont out to banks aud privato bankers, proposing to effect the reveat of the Usury laws and thoruby anthorize any Fate of literest acrecd upon, it & cortain amount of money was suoplicd, atious coniribulivus wero forwaried, but tho acbeaio wus exposed, aud traced so clearly 1o Mr. Dinimics, then a neinber, that he resiyaud and floa to escape w record of hiv whameand the punlehs wont it domanuod, — PANadelp sia Tinss (Ind. ). et IRl “IN OCTOBER, At dreamful timo, w0 # ¥or prayer and meditath Iu peasive mood § sl and mosw, Deep In & furest dim and old, Whits evory fit(ul gust beatrowa T round with leayes of gold, Buch salemn whisvera u tae alr, 1 cannot chicgk the rising tear, Aut all my soul §s Nlled With prayer, 1 know nat why, bt every breath Of iangmid a1r seema swoel wita doathy Fur ewesl, ahl swey On such & glurious Btternvon— Beueats yon richly-murolud wicy, "Tu ok {n g delicions awoon, To woftly sini and pass away, Withont a mortal's doabtiue fears, Whils from the treo 'neath whicn 1 lay "The leaves would drop liky golden tears| * §10UX " BuUnARES. —e— Neat, Not Gaudy. 51, Joseoh Onsette, For natlve stinplicity Deadwood beats the world. Al of her tombstones ure simply plaln, struight slabs of sand-stone, ur are made of fuci plank, and when the nae * Jjm » has been en- raved therpon thers 1s uothing more - left for ‘sl arttat to do. 1t werd to dio —————— The Truthteller, Jioatna Advertieer, ‘Tho lttte dgughter of & leuding physlclan in s certaln country towm, presented tig followiog us her first school essuy: 'Thers was a litle irl, aud_sko was very sick; they acot for my vafs, aud stio uled very quick.” ——tt— Wores. Norrtsioien ileraid, The Hoosac “fuuudl s sald to be extremely fealous of Kearpey. Until Denuls’ apuearauce the 1. H. was cunsidered the biggest bore in the couutry. ————— The Empress of Germany. Now York World. ‘The Empress of Germany wears o false neck of wazg, the * jolo” belng coucealed by u broad velvet baud round her necks j OCTOBER 5, I8S72~TWELVE PAGES) furacs, 1onIoINALY BEAUTY: OR, THE i iy SecretofaFair Face. An Jtem of Intereat 1o Xivery Lady who Desires to e Mors Ncautitul + than shs now fe, * Unfortnnately not ons woman In a hundred, anb- feeted 10 the whima of an American climato norsess- s thint buain and startingr point of real Leauty—~s puraand clenr complesion. What naturo Lina thus denied, ntt must be called upon fo furni Tt can_be donoj it is done daily, Prof. W. E. agan plnced beauty within the reach of every un- Jessed ‘daughter of Evo when lio discovered that surprising artitle known in fashionabiecirclos se the truasecret of beauty, and called MAGNGLIA BALIM The Maaxorta TAzst s a aure device for creating & prreand blorming complexion. Tt conceala nll natural Llemishen in tho most sur- ‘prising and effrctivo manner. Tt remaves all roughness, eruptions, redvess, ‘blotches, frockles, aud tan with magical power, 1t drives away all evidences of futigua and exe eltoment. Tt makea the plainest face beantiful, 1t gives tho comploxion a dazling purity and makes tho neck, face, and arms appear gracefuly rotund, and plump. It makey s matron of 35 or 40 lonk not more than 90 years old, and clisuges the rustio meiden fntoa culiivated elty bello. The Magnolic Dalm yrmores all lemishes and cone cealy every drawback {0 beauly: and, whild it {3 az Tarsiless as waler, 1L v to lifc-like fn s glfects thal the closest observer canwet delect il vise, . Ladies who want fo make lhemaclvas nttractive can make on nbeoluto certainty of it by using u“m? Hrontu Du:i. and wglg,x:m mxwu way, It s tho chen repara , TN hiaes coniderod: and sy Lo had at any drug PROPOSALS. The Rio de Janeiro GAS ILLUMINATION Tiyorder of the Traallian Legatlon at Washington o amicrsigne nuken pibile: fat te. tmperinl Gove rmient valls for BrOTORA for Tt Kk tHwniRAK0n Ut 11l o danelro, thi prosent contract expirini i Mareh fexts” o propusals, addressed fa tho. Eavo ity and Alliistor Pleipotenziary of iirastl, sent until 3 o'clock In the afternoon of the 8y of Docmer noxt to tho Brarfiing Conmlate Generat, 12 Broadway. New York, whero coples of the weneral Coudiions and specifications. reteried Lo in the fourih CPalisa an by GotAInGd, 8 well B8 nuy [NFOTIALIOR H Feiation (o thix wattcr. e BALVADOR DE MENDOKCA, Brazilian Consul-Gengral. New Yorg, Sept. 0, 1478, MINISTRY, GRICULTU] 3 l\.\lf»;::;l R SR A AT By ordor of hla Excellency the Minlster of this Dee partnient I¢ 14 advertised that this Dircetory recofves {ropoinie for e scrvico of tha Dinmination by ot of e Capital bt tho Knipire, in tho terms and conditions elow apecitieds “¥lrt—The proposats will be presented {9 a elbted let. ter, until A o'eluck (n the afternoun of thy let day of Dccomberof the. presnt, yuac, 1 this pliy, i thi D= Foctory uf Fublis Worki of e Minfairy of Azriculture, wdon, Varli,and Waanington,at thio reapecttye . Jrajiotora muat proscnt, ertalde of the ¢aselope siall contaln the proposale, ducuinents thut will ll'l("r thulr Dticss for the seryvice that they eyt 19 conlract, Thiri=Xa one can cogeur without having preylausty deposlted In the National Treasury, In tho delegney uf Tl wamia ‘Treasury 10 Londoo, oF {1 elther one of tho Legutiung alave indicated,a cautfon, In inouey or bonus of tlie pubile debs OF th ‘Kpire, B, takL, r & corres l;‘dlldhm nlr{ml}hln '!ll'fflkn moucey (£5,000, 125,000 AN r $2) xald), Fourth—=Tue objett of the concnrrence will be only tho price of furuiahing 8 Cublo mtre of far, and & term of the prvilege, that 16 oo ¢ase ean exeoed 3; ears. ALl U oflic f this contract, except- [ng whatever may be_teansttory, wiil be, without any discrepancy or modification, thav by thy Government In 1ho geoeral apeciications aud condls flons, l'lll‘lL'I“ ba distritited separately (n the Die sectory of the I'ublic Workeand the apuse-meutioned Legufon b 8. Fitth= A1 the proposats will b onenci in thisclty, fn publfe sesaton of the Directory of Pulils Works, on day uf Junuary, 187} 3 1 them witlith 15 d COMMERCP, AND overnment wiil ate, al {s made, tha eing Hecestar) i tho cela) ys of thiat Histh—When the chiolee of the prop contract will be conaldersd couctuder {OF the prefecred proposer (o algn only the moention Koueral conattfons, wiich wiil bo entered hia comipes Tent bonk of tha Departmient uf Apriculture, = For greater facllity, each Gropoice wia Foaides uut ui fle Janeiro must constitate i thia clty and wito s antecedance someboiy with 8 power of attorney 1o the genoral conditious fn caso the prefercuce falls on . reventli—Tho nroroser whe, after having recelved gonumiuuliation of Lo srcentutieq of lls propol, re- fuses to uhan the reforred condfuons will forfelt the cuntian b the banetit of tho Natlunal Treasury, Elehth—The Guverninent rescrves tha plghit to annul he competition within the berjod fixed by (Clauto 8, (0 decidu upon tho propyals thay d, Riv dug S 'lu'“'}u‘ :"x" y * Chief of thu Dirvetary, ngu;:n’»:v or Provio Wonks, 10 v Juneirs, iy Proposals for Horses. Orricx Darox Quazaauswtes, | BT, LOUIS, 30, Sepl, 2, INTH. Realed Pmfiglnll In tripticate, under the usual cons ditluus, witi bo recelved aL thin oiice unti] Ky poun, un Lie Lith day of Uctober, time Gm‘ blncy Illl?' will bo opeued th the presence of ilo tuders, for the deliverly ut ejther Loulaviile, Klm!(rk. vita, or san Autanto (preteratiy oc San Antoily: 30U cavalry horses of the following deseription, withln 1) duye ufter award 0f contract, viz.: Cavalry o ‘10 b geldings, of hardy voiors, sound 1ary, ki good condl welt broken to th sixie: i) hunds bixh, o 1874, &y whlcl fittcen (18 1 1¥0 (5) oF OR Lan uinu_ tth yeand uld, sud wbio In every rusnect for cavalsy scevive. ‘Lho cayalry hopws Wil o spected by a Hoard of reat th blaca of delivery, Alvat o st i an 1 tlaer, propor delivery ab nt, Louis of aix rhiing Burse Uewerfutlo, Within alx dave after avand of co Propuaatewre fuvited for ull ur wny nuiihor, i 10 roject any or £ contrict Wil bo Enclopes con- * Proposals for for tho the sty E3 Tlank pevpueals shd 1orar pirateliog o apylication to thts oill {aining proposals shiould bo inrk ¥l sddresscd to tho uugertiyned, . URIMES, Captaln and A, Q. 3. To Consumprives AND INVALIDS. . Vo WINCHESTEI'S TISTOPIOSPIITE ov LIME DA, For Counttinbtion, Weall I.ullrn. i Autiun, B Eouei e red b Somra Cxperlutices TRY IT) Price, 81 and 8:3 per boitle, Prepared only by CINCHENTER & €°0., Chembvin, Bola by Dvameie E2 55 S O S N Y orks WiThuoh v v For fnunuation, ciccuiary uid Tefereaces, FOND, Aurcea, tane Cu., 1L, i Edd . resy D, ¥y L. affections of thy respiry relieved by the use v Y. L& CO., Akvnts, Now UG drugdlat generally, PHTHIOA P PADLETS FX 10 YL, sreencss, fue Voley, Droachlal AMectlione, Price, 'A\’ Ll ll:u \l" Alatl, Triumph Throat Tablet C Trade Mark. Baitiuwore, Md., 'niversal) or the lipinedlate reliet eud s, U Hem- “‘"g &A“kfi 116 w10 LLo U Ir;‘lfi‘ able to taky aad neve: 3 ton, B GRILLOS, bt e, bold o ILLON, 57 koue Wens X N, M. D. 70 KTATE-ST., CHICAGO, N, %oldBT NagPtehuir Airs uideascs, and :lun . Art sycs4 medlcine, ebS. Cosres e ipondence soliclied. iiroaah, bet cano and Council Dlaffa, on the train léaving Chicars “RUPTURE COMMON SENSE TRUSS, Belected o the hest Trasy n nee hy tha EOTA rZARIzEd by L Hrcretary nf Wear e b of San whiltan Act of Conzroms, composed of Sireon fo ward, comuller of the Medical iliefory of . o Kilrgeon OLtis, conpiier of 1hn Nurgtend Wi reron. andane of the most. The fmuro “Truss, patén worst Kuptue. feam| ¥y Ilec] Bisatle Stockings (i Fupporters, It factured State.st,, Mary ienta for Defurinitios, & BALTLELT, BUTMAN & ' v REREL 'S CINCINNATI. Maoufacturers and {inporters ot CLOAKS The saperiarity of our«oadatn overy sliing quaih over any made [0 this enantrs Is ALtested by 1o, of I6ading hotses seling thein. ~ Writo. for ety Clothes! gt R LADIER AND GENTS, ‘Bliwvls BA ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRILY ‘: “’\}"),_,fi’."f-’%’.fm‘}.', e M Sy OMIOAGO & RORTHWESTERY RATLWAY, ‘Ticket OMces, I'J(,‘l-:‘f':h“sfi:#rman Tlouss) safsy y et irave, | Amve ot foek'd & Damiaiia. ftuckrd & Dubuiue. en Fast M, EAtiiwuukeo Xy b liwaukee Express, bitiiwaukea Fassong DN itway bt T tocktord BFaud du Lag vis Janear(lie:] Thilman Hotel, Car ararin i Al L 5.m. Noother road runa Pullman of aay other fora & hotel eara weat of_ Chicato, a=Nepotcorner of W nnd Kinzle-sta, A=Dapot corncrof Cansl and Kinsle-sie CRICAGO, BURLINGTON & OUINOY RATLR Bepota foot of Lake-st., Iniang-ar. . and Sixtesnr: Cital and Sixteeithests, Tlukes Otlices, 53 Clars. Hud at detots, . g Mendota & Galesburg Txpress. !+ Diaiva & Kireator eyt s 71318 ltovkford & Freepart Prees. $10:01 a, Bubiiquo & ionx City Rxpro ¢ Pacite Fa Freerort & Umahs, Ceaan Foat KX Konsax Gty e Puliman Paiace Dinfrc:Care ana Puilman 1-eie #eeplng;ara avo_run between Chicako and Ommanivl the Paci0g Express, % mamg.uumm & £T. LOUTR AND OMI0AY) KANSAS CITY & UENVER 8HORL [IJHE]. Uptun bepat, West Slie, near Madison-gi. britse, v Wty bitird-at. Elekot Oglec: 17 (a0t Arrire CHTOARO, MILWAURFE & BT. PAUT, RAILWAL Unlan Depot, corner Siadison and Canatexte. Ti:ih Ottice, GAB5OU LIArK-ak., 0bposita Sheriman Houis aad i depot. Leavo. | arrive g & ot T Miiwankes Express.. e Wascansin & Mlunesols, (iran| Menashia tirouyh L1*101100. m. * 4:000. m & Wisconsin & Mlinncaot liny, Btevens lotnt, and Ashe] _aud throuith Nixhi xpress, a e o pom el '|T\'|E e ana eire n eapoliasre ool elt hwr yia Madison an A AT wh. TinCrome, aint Wibuss: TLLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD. d fuos of “FWeL7-Rec foot of Lake-st, sn DRty s otlive. 131 Itan | “licave. S0n. ¢ Calrod > ! aCairo & Springsiold kxpees, pningaeld N Teorla, iuriiniton & Pcoria, Burilagton & Keakuk Duluguo & Sloux City ifit. Duliuque & Bloux City Fx.. Utlman Passaiiger. 2 ‘ On ¥aturday nfxht runslo Conralia oaly, 40n Baturdsy night runs to Pearta ouly, OAIGAN OENTRAL RATGROAD, . Depot e ot ot | oy e it ket Utlice, U7 Clatient. moutheast corusr ipt, Grand Paoits Hotel, audue Paler s, Hati(vie Matn and Atr Line). 1oy Kapress, Ratonazoo Accoinmalatton. Atlatic Exprees (walis) Nigut Eapress Shom, m. ' T 100, M. Bt B RALTIMORE & OTIO. Tratnslesve frum Kx, roeaat, Clleket Ol _Urand Pacitle, w1, Vorning Fxpress, Voukitoree {all—0ld Line.,,.00u0 ® joston Bpecial Fxe.. * Bxpred S0 ik onl s it PITTTSBURG, OINCINNAY- & 8 (Ctueluuath Alr-Lu aud Kok Deroi coruer of Cilutad wud Car Devot foot of Lal |_Depart. | _Awdre Cipctonatt, , (adlanasolls uisviile Day Expross,. T Nt Expred. \N any {Is00, BOETILARE, & pACtEg B2 X aer of ekl SOl o fsd Ularkeais blcriiba bivis: T ATe Davenpart Express...... Uiwaha, Lesveuw'th & Alch Kx Ruu Accoitisodstiva. .o 1Lt Eanreas “Alimeals un tiie O €ai% a4 70 cenls each. 94D k Lo, 13 D) sad Dorn-s, 838 D323 Ticket Ofices: 7 Clark nf. -';4'5 2l Barn 4 ] DRIOH'S BTEAMEI ¥or Racloe, Milwwuden. e:c.. daily Bous dua’s leave Ganl. 0 Uglun. ole.. o ot Josepb. oLty turdsvy a‘?.. Joe boat do EZa

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