Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1878, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

““ YELLOW FEVER. | The Weather a Little Warm- er, and the Mortality QGreater. Fugitives Will Die if They Rush Back into Danger. rhoughts Inspired by a Study of the People of Mem- phis, Conspicuity of a Feeling of Entire Conciliation with the North. Tho Negro Much Reprobated, but Very Handy in Times of Sickness and Death. Plenty of Fortunes in Memphis for Men with Money and Energy. VICESBURG. MORE BICRNESSS Bpecial Disnaich to The Triduns, * VicxsnuRra, Miss., Nov. 3.—The weather has moderated very materially, and the sun during the day has been unnleasantly warm, Conald- erable anxiety is manifested regarding the refu- gees who havo returned lately, four of whom liave been taken down in the past twenty-four hours. There was but one deatt in the city to- day,—an infant of Mrs, O'Neal. Dr. and Mrs, Cushman died in the country to-day. This has indeed been s sorcly-aficted fai llv. There were three brothers, with familics numbering fn total fourteen persons. Thirteen of these have dled o the last few weeks, leaving one child, an infant. DR, BEMIS AND PARTY, of the Yellow-Fever Commisalon, who have been 1n tne city (or the past two days. will leave In the morning for Port Gibson and other yellow- fever dlstricts in this part of the State. Two new cases of fever are reported {n Edwards, and thres fo Clinton, on the Selma & Montzomery Railroad. The latter place, ‘it was thought, would escape, but thelr rigld quarantine seems to have proved inefMclent. At Mr, Pettit's place, fn the lower part of the county, Mrs. Pettit, Miss Bue Knight, Robert Pattit, Miss Willing, and snother Iady are all na very critical condition, Dr. Morrill’s con- dition was also very unfavorable, The muthor- fties of Sataitis, on the Yazoo .River, have re- moved all quarantine restrictions, and- po far- ther obstructlous to trade or travel will be ex- perienced. CHOATTANOOGA. THREE DEATHA, Apsctal. Dispate to The Tribune. CraTTANO0004, Nov. 8,—Three deaths to- day~Mrs. Eliza Moy, John Bullivan, sad a col- gred map. There are two new cases, botn cofored. Sallivan was tho oldest soo of John J, Suliivan, who died recently from the fover. No frost-this morning. Clear and warm to-day. Thermometer at 9 p. m., 96, Tho Rellet Com- mittee hos dectded to wind up its affairs by the 10th inst. Col. Burt {s convalescent. Dr, Price, a leadlng homeopathie physiclan, Is sick to-day, bt not from fever. Blake Wood, tele- graphioperator ot Big Shanty, Oa., was found desd on 8 Jounge yesterdey morning, He bad snattack of quinsy. The man nuraing bim went to aleep, and Wood got into such a posi- tion that he choked to death. MEMPHRIS, THE DAY'S NEWS, Mestras, Nov. 8.—The Board of Health of- ficlally reported eight deaths froth leVer'auring the past twenty-four hours ending &t 6 o'clock. Among those who have dled are Michael Burke, Timothy Counors, Michacl Costello, J. C. Jon Mrs. E. C. Cobb, W. J, B. Lonsdale, and Mary F. Busch. Dr. A.C. Ewell, & local physician who bad been abscnt since the appearance of the epldemlc, but returned sight days ago, dled tals aftornoon of fever, NEW ORLEANS, NINE DEATHS, Nzw OnvEaRs, La., Nov. 8.—The westher Is clear and picasant, Deaths, 0; cqges reported, :.’l,"l‘:{l told; total deaths, 8,054; total cases, FUTURE OF MEMPHIS, 4 RAINBOW IN TN VALE OF THARS, Bpectal Correspondencs of The Tribuna. Mzwrms, Oct. 25.—The Howara medical €0rps, 30 soon to disperse, after nearly thres wonths' arduous and falthful service, was eater- talned at & supper last Monday vight, given at the Peabody Hotel, under the auspices of Dr, R, W. Mitchen, MedicalZDirector. It was a worthy compliment from a competent source, sud an evidonca of the appreciatlon the people of Memphls fecl for the services rendered, as 140 an acknowledgment to all who came to the ¢lty's rellef fn & time of trouble. The phys!- clany, nurses, and those who vamo hither to re- leve suffering humanity have left & glorious Tecord, that will be perpetuated in the hearts of the peaple, and serve as a consplcnous example 10 guldo others who may coms horesfter. In hls address of welcome, Dr. Mitchell gave ex- Ppreslon Lo a sentiment of Rratitude felt by TIR SOUTAERN PXOPLE towardthe North, which was followed by speoches of asimilar tmvon. and called forth a resolution ¢mbodylug the {dea that the ready response of orthiern men las forever burled the Latchot of sectional politicat eumity, aud heresflter the Ppeople of our common w\lnt{{ would rojoice in ono Federul unn.{l This sentlment may indeed by be regard n: expressiou of the le ln L bchll(. 'I'he bloody chiasin bas lu\r:flrbnu th ged, and the bloody shirt consigned to an ?l Ivlon from which it will never bs murmuu. li‘tl"m‘ no North, uodouth, no East, no West. ;l obtaly, and the animosities boro of the War 8y be od us forever passed. Gratifyfug m1anm Of this fact are apparent on every shle, and feelinga of ulncere. heartfelt thanks for the Fr:fllnl syampathy w! has been evidencad by b Northern people Am heard at every point., lhluk it ia the compeusation with which lnuel::ulcl,h..{:“{fl:: 'l.:vn hfi accompauled the Banaturan ¢ epldemic itself was fu A UNAVENLY DISFENSATION hrmomnlhn what political maneuvering -nd u".‘;;‘f“‘ thietoric bas fafled to sceure, M ned {uto the condition of public unuml:nl SR D T, e e ot S an conving aro trye, Thero are sald :: b: St preciaa MINORITY OF BOURBON! -m‘l exuteu& who think that no g(:.nl‘ can come !;&:: Nazareth, but I have fulled to find such. T uut they atill lve, but lke thelr couuter- ol at the North who regard evarythiog South- hmnlcuncelvm 10 waluvoleacs “and brought v n nu. ihey staud by themselves, and are it G ed a5 an fudex of the popular b Lnlh.uu.n of character liers assert that ‘m;n‘m.uuum Whick bus been sald to exist lo- Pl tie North bas cowpleteiv died out, it it ang ound exvressiou. Mauy go further ey “TCE bt none was ever fell ’mz' clam “that &l the sntipathles Witk (18 o JuE of the War ceased i) € surrender at Appoiattox Court-House, um‘:hlhu Blus and the Uray settled for all vl Uiffereucea Latwesn tho sections. What lan:q Lo be a 6pirit of autagontsus manifested Eouthy. Nonh grew out of the fact that tha e “?uhl Iy, Wes 8 unit. This political lm 4 14 clafm, ed, was furced upon theBouthern 775 08 ill-advised eglslation, by the passsge |bluu:hl|‘i::)fl,.4'j;““m !md lILumer easurcs ene ) By s mm.“wu"o of tho Republicun party, NOKTIERN ADVENTURE! "'hh: \wook advuntage of the Telvleas conditton of au] pUth to folat themyclvea into promiuence it lbulxxlulu Of trust, wien they robbed the l) odnd commiited vutrages, published h 804 were «ullty of acts which would be Coudeinued at the N w Nurth, aud wbich Northern ros ¥ould - worn, The Republican party, K’ummcd £T usuising to be. by public opision bere 5,48 the cluke of ths W-ty. puv Tosdents Siro dlummd 10rth & series of measuies which M‘f.lmuln torevublicau Uberty aud the ln- 4400 Of Lie Btatva, Thieso wessuies pro- THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 18'78 voked opposttion and furnished the warp and woof from which the bloody shirt was woven, Yet the Bonth bears no good will towsrd the Democratic party, A LEADING POLITICIAN in this Vicinity stated to e last evening that & varty could have heen formed in the 8outh, at any Uime within six months after the closo of the War, the leadiog planks of whose platform would have been a bitter hostllity to the Demo- eratic party. The people here héld that party responaible for d." UVAr fta canses and conse- quences. Viowing the situation from this stand- point, they were ready to unite with any con- scrvative element, and would have aided In vis- iting upon the Democracy the severeat punish- ment posstble for thelr losses of life and prop- erty,—complete and {frretriovable annibilations bui the recoustruction measurcs aio| |plcd by Congress prevented this, and completed the po- Jiteal and personalunfication of the Southern peo- ple. In reply to a suggestion that tue Repub- liean party n there particulars did not talrly represent the Northern people, myhllormnnl responded that was uot bis conclision. 'That party, he maintained, lias ALWAYS ABSUMED TO RECRESENT the Northern States. The South, thouzl not acqulescing 1o this sssumption, snd opposiog the Republican party end Its mcasures, have not regarded themselves as opposing the Ked- eral Government, and desire not to be misun- derstoud In that respect, There always existed a certafn local nn‘m]lw here, for the indulgence of which the people have & precedent in the rivalries which prevail between Northern cities and 8tates: between 8t. Louis aud Chieago, for u-n:f But even this has been mmrlntcly wiped out, and to-dsy—in Memphis at least— the most complimentary recummendation s stranger can offer { the fact that ho ls & Nortn- ern man In good standing fa nis section. o tility bas been oxorcised by the kindness, liber. slity, sympathy, snd fellow-feeling monifested North during the continuance of the epldemic, both at present and (n 1870, TINS LIARRALITY 1s all the more appreciated because It was unex- pected; 1t was unexpected becouse the bitter- ness of the Republican party, as expressed by the leaders thereol, had Induced a belief that the North was vindictive, unforaiving, and in- 'dulged but one hope,—~the complete and perma- n‘nnl. subjugation of the South. These animol ties zave birth to the bloody shirt, the publica- tion ot crimes alleged to have been commitied in the South that were brutal Inthe extreme, and deserving of a penalty thal never was ad- ministered. csa crimes, which at the North would bolaid av the door of thelr proper au- thors, wero attributed to the Democratic party. To charge the party with thelr coinmission, it 1s Insisted, was rndlull{ wrong, without founda- tion In fact, and simply a political mancuvre 10 FIRM THE KORTHERN HEART. No one denfes but that crimes have been com- mitted; but what ovug ona with whom I hava conversed on the aul ject avers (s, that the guiltless have been ndicted at the bar of public oplnfon North, They maintain that no party ought to be held responsible for the crimes of 1aw-breakers who would be pullty in any section of the country in which they might be located. In the aparsely-settied portions of the South ls to be found the same class of desperadoes who frequent Deadwood, the Black flills scttio- ments, and froatier towns geuerally, This class has been guity of the crimes charged to the Bouthern people, of which they are innocent, and which they protest they are unjustly ac- cused of. ‘Thus another origin of tho *bloody- shirt bosfuess " is truced to its source, aud found to be untenable. In rezard to INDIVIDUAL PREJUDICES, they, too, have heen oblitcrated. One can uurcely realize the changed feellogs that have grown up herc, it I8 said, withio the past tirco months. I overheard aconversation at break- fast yesterday between an ex-Coufederate Gen- eral aud an ex-soldlcr, which gives a fair ides of the condition of aflairs. After some prolimi. naries the soldier remarked to the General that when he surrcndered he did so with a mental reservation, but hercafter ho could onty have but one {eallug toward the North and Northern men, aud that was a pride that_they came fromn & common ancestry, were united under the same lhn 20d were marching onward, hand fn band, o the same destiny. And this feeling (a enter- t.nhml by cvery ol dier who flushed bLis aword in dclemu of s cause that {s lost. The other { visitod . the warcrooms of tho lef and Ald Commlittee, and was shown throunh the varlous departmeuts by an ex-sol- dier fu the army of the Confederate States, o spoko of tha sympathy tlat Lad been manifest- cd at the North WITIE TRARS IN TR RYXS, and alle\l down the blessings of Heaveo upon those benefactors who in the liour of need ylelded to the promptings of hearts that beat with & & mnl;:\fv almost Godllke. The day of F.mmnl fon, socfal and commercial ostracism, passed. M-uv Northern men who came hera u response . 1o the call for aid have decided 1o nulo at the Bauth, and will be welconiéd 16 the hearts of her people. To-lay the ex-Confed- erates have inaugurated o movement looking to the erection of & monument to the memory of Lisut. Renner, who died at Vicksburg, and other measurea will- be taken to vommainorate in marble the deeds of the Northmen who fell while ministering_to the dying, burying the di and comforting the widow ood orphan, Bectional prejudices arc forever obliterated, aud a future will be born of the travall through which the South has passed more }mporoun than the past could have conceived of WITIL RKOARD TO THE NEGKO, he {s regarded by his late masters and the peo- rle generally as’ nm warst festure of Bouthern fe, His improvement or deterioration is & problem the future only can solve. His teo- dencies are tofcleness and Improvidence, e ls claunish, and, while not vindictlve natorally, has been madc 8o by the teachings of unscru- gum“ political mendicants who overran the ath fn the years immediately succeeding the War, -This, coupled with his {znorance, for which there i3 no practical remedy, resolves bim Into a burden, espedally o sll the border Btates, which cau only be lightened by tine and the gradual Immigration aad settloment in those tes of whites, who bring with them that tndhistry and enterprise ineeparable from the development of resources and accretion of wealth, ‘fhe question has frequently sugwest- ed {tself to economists here na to the practica- bility of enforeing a system of Inbor that would remedy these ovils, bul none hus been discovered that can be made avallable. The practice ln old times of ARKNATING ALL VAflRAlTfl AND SHLLING 'rlln( to the highest bidder, wh!ch would seem to ho ble. would not bo toleratod by the whites or au {ustant. They are lovers of liberty, and, aside from the manifest injustica of such a measure, realize how forcibly it would react uoon the unfortunate of thelr own race wlm would be affected by its sdoption. And right bere in respoct to levery: the people, withont regard to casto, poeiuun, wealth, or intluence, are not only mconnlled to the pruent situation but could uot o persuaded to_ restary the old regimo. Jetf Davis has placed hiself on rec- ord ss unalterably apposed to the res- torstion of the couditlon of sorvitude to which the black was commlited prior to the War, and his ulthoatwin s but an expreaaion of opinfon wherever slavery existed on thia continent. The plautations on which the negro is employed are either run ou shares or shinilar to the ‘manucr in which farms are mauaged at the North. But maay of THE COTTON ESTATES ase worked by whites exclusively, and result In greater profits to the produccr. The negroes thus cwployed live I&) to every dollar they wako, aud urs compellod to work to provide for this continucd draft on thelr resources, Uc- casfouatly one of the more fortunate saves a vale of the ataple, and as soon as it huluned aud baled he fullows it 10 tho vity, sttends sonally to Its disposition, and, baving receive cd thu rosults of the sale, lives {u dleness uati the procceds sre exhiausted, when be, in a wajority of cuses, Joins the members of his race who llu by levylug npon the property of oth- era, until arrost blocks his little guue, and he is sent to thie Island. Ie follows' tbls line of Nifo until hio is marked u asuspicious character, when he emigrates to uitica aud foaulges ® baso repotition. Hn rarely rcturgs to the country, but drazs sut an eventful existence untll Ulscass and exposure accomplish their work, st he {s vonaigued to an unknown grave iu the Potter's leld. POLITICALLY the negro is 8 Republican, aud when feft to cou- sult his own incloations,uuiufuenced by fesr or pursoual futerest, bo will vate that uckit, with- out a scratcl. Ho belloves that bis [reedom is due Qullrelfl to tha varty of Kevublican vriuct- }I'H, and will always rewain faithful to his beac- ctors—oot the lunul:lluu carpet-bagxing ad- venturers, who are yearly becomlog fewer In pojut of nuwbers; bo Las lost confidence fn them and will nomore be lnfluechd by their directions, Ile is anadwirer of * grit," und the ubscuce of that elemcat iu the characier of this class comploted the colored vuters' Identity with Boutberns Republicans,—meu who are Ke- Yublhmu as the result of refiection; meu who have been rulecd ju the same nelzghburbuods with this black constitueucy; whose wtegrity a0d character are ubassalluble, and who possess —must pussess—tbat complemens of nerve, courage, nnd * Yaukee pluck” to whlaa the car- pet-bagger is a stranger, MORALLY the negroes, if not the uslginators, are the prac- titloners of 8 { pecullar st of ddeas vot cutirely in barmony with the cods of ethics sdvocdted by the Whitvs. There is, ludeed, sald tobes wonderful absence of morality among them, but whether due 1o iwuate wickedness, or to the ex- uuwln { which tbey are guided, it ts bard to toll. [u thys conuection it inay be said. as the result of cazeful alscevation by moralists sud law-makera here, that it 18 the extreme of lnllv for philantbropists auywhers to expect that the negrocs can in all respects be what the whites are. The Intter have arrived at their present. conditfon in the scaleof virtua, intelligence, and civilization under the Christian and civil codes, and have become lovers of oral wurth and conservators of law nnd liberty, Those who have mado tho future of Lthe negro a study insist that naturally, morally, and educationally this is impoible to the African, fn support of which concluslon they point to his career since tha abolltion of ulaver( which they claim has been retrogressive. [t (s hard, they say, to de- clde what the end wilt be. Absorption they re- gard as out of the question, and while they de- cline to contemplate hin ggraitual extinction, this, it 18 tacitly sdmitted, must be his fate. AGAINAT ALL THIS TALK, THEAN WORKS: During the epidemic lneX have been & very lever of power for guod, 8 nurses, policemen, eoldicrs, servanta in the care of tho establish- ments of wealthy fugitives, they have by their acts and fldelity commanded the “esteem of all, and descrve well of those whom tnev have t benefited, Some lrguu that this fa due to the pride a negro h: littie brict authority, to his strong sympathles, and to other causes. But no matter what prompted him to act, he has done that which was right, and donc it like 8 man, and iseotitled to every meed of pralse he is awarded. THE OUTLOOK ¥OR MEMPIIS is gencrally regarded ns promisiog, thoueh this morning site bears tho sppearance of a faded buuty without the accessorles of rouge and poudre. Ilad the epidemic been confined to the vity, it Is sometimes safd that the future would be ‘without hope, but its general prevalence In the surrounding m“"“t’a 98 heon hier salvation, Businoss is beginning opcn up with vigor, and the bellef is cxpressed that a greater pros- perity will atiend thess undertakings in the en- :n(ng four months than ever before In lier his- ry. As a polnt to which to emigrate, and for the (nvestment of capital, this city presents many_ advantages. The defectain’ the city'a sewerawe, paving, etc., which sre supposed to be tho “causes of the epldemic, will bo remedicd, and, i health can be malntained here, there {8 wealth for the capitalist, a: for the indus- trious and entorprising {radesinan or mechanic, There must be in a city that furnishes supplies to the surroundlng country and is the market for & lialf million bales of ‘cotton yesrly. An enterurising man coming here and ‘taking patient observation, will ses abundant oppor- tunities for a large profit ou his investments. COTTON AND WOOLEN MANUFACTURES would pay cnormously. A woolen manufactory t present in operation fa rezarded as a verita- blo *bonanza,” the stock of which it Is impossi- ble to purchase. The putting up of canned fruits and the shipment of early vegetables to Northern markets would pay handsomely. There {a also a great necd of clothing, as also oot and shoe manufactories, bothof which would repay nvestinent in the shorleat posaible time. Mcniphis, as {s known, s witbin g half-day's rido of the conl and Iron mines of North Ala- basa, and wowhere in’ the country could & foundry be run so chesply and so remunerative- v as (o this city. The harvest is plenty and the laborers are feiw, and If an enterprising citizen of Chicago were to come hera and infuse a little of the spirlt, industry, and go-nheadativeness charactaristic of thoso representing the com- mercial and manufacturing intcrests of the “Uarden City,” hisroward wnuldbuu'?‘bounded. LLDEN, CANADA. Preparations for Lorne's ArrlvaleLumber— Cardinal Simeoni to Archblshop Lynch— The Death of Chief-Justice HarrisunmSir Francls Mincks, Special Ditpateh to The Tridune. OtTawA, Nov, 8.—Mr, Bidnoy Hall, who acted a8 speciol artist for the Graphic doring the Franco-Prussian war, {8 now on his way to Can- ada, to illustrate the progress of the new Gov- emor-General and the Princess Loulse through the principal cities of the Dominion, for the same paper. Mr, Willlam Boyd is the special correspondent of the London Ztmes for the same occasion, Lieut.-Col. Fred Burnsby, of the Grenadicr Guurds, and suthor of %A Ride £ Khiva," 1s fn this country, It is supposed for the London Daily News. ‘The manufacture of square timber in the Omm Vallev this year is not expected toex- u.-cd 000,000 feet,” There will, however, be & ver go increase in other manufactures.” The mills at the Chaudiere are still running, but moat of thom will ¢loss down sbortly, the stock of logs belug about exbausted. * The * Dominlon Baunk-Note Compan! kl focorporation, to engrave bauk-uotes, snd do neral lithoxraphing aud prlnum business ln ttawa: capital to bs $100,000, in 2,000 shares of 8§50 each. 'Tho applicants ara the Hon. John Hamilton, Georze Drummond, Samue! Dawson, Richard White, and L. R. Clurch, of Mohtirsl, —which gontlemen are the Provisionat Directors of the Company. ‘I'hic lumber-merchants of the Ottawa district are prepariog to commence operations, and & large quotaof men have already been dispatched to the |h|nlles. al Dispate to The Tridun 'l'onomo, Nov. 3.—Archhishop l.ynch has re- celved tha followinz letter froin Cardinal ii‘lumeunl. Prefect of the Papel Prapaganda st me 2ost Recerend Lord Ar:ANMDp. wnuu ing you the lnunlt which you Blaters of 81, Josoph, 1 bay t plessure in bee ing sble 1o assure you that the foly Father has Rricioosly Teceived he oXDreusions of nomage, obedlence, and veneration which you charaed ins to present to him on behalf of your Grace; and his Ilnllnell bas likewlse derqued (o grant to yourself, your clergy, and all the faithful committed Lo your care, his Ap lic ucnuu:uon. Aftectionaicly, at your Grace's Joul Canp, Siuzoxt, Prefoct, Alexauder Hay, the operator at Carleton, charged with having caussd the collision on the Grand Trunk Raliroad by giviog unwarranted fostructions to the conductor of the special frelght-tratn, was brougtit befors the Police Magistrate, and, on avplication of counsel for the Compsny, was remanded untli Tuesday, in order that it ‘ma gbe koown with some proba- bility whether the injured Lrakemau, 8tlll,who remains in a very eritical conditlon, is likely to recover. Should he ale, Hay will be lndicted for nanslaughter. The country Las sustained a great losa in the deatli of Chief-Justice Hurrisou (s motice of whosedemisa apocared In Baturday's TRIBUNE). 1iis Lordehip had been {1l fur soine weeks; but, although at times thers was cause for fear xhn serlous consequences might ensug, 1t waa fond- iy hord bo ‘would soon recover his wonted health, snd resutne the discharre of tho duties Dertaining_ to the high postiion be was calied upon to fill. ChietJustice Harrtson was beld In the very hizhest respect by his follow-citi- zens, and the country at iarge. He wus & wan of aterliug churacter, great abilities, and Kenial disposition, aud owne whoso place o any walk {n life it 'lll be dificult wflfl.huy to il Bpecial Diepalch i6 Tha Tribu MoxtREAL, Nov. 8.—A lememem of the poollog srrangemrut between the local tele- graph companies is aaid to be roferred to the arvitration of Capt. Mayne, . N.. Managing Director of the United States Cable Company. ‘The Boutheastern & Passumopsic Railway Co: pany bas boen unable to come to an arrange- menl with the Ursnd Truok for the right of way through the Victoria Bridwe. Bir Francts 1incks publishes a lotter in which ho declines Lo return to public ilfe. A petitiou s belng gotten up ut 8t, Johns, Que., for the comwutation of the death-sen- m«:a passud on Costafloraz o lnprisonment for American speculators are buylug potatoes ex- tousively in tbis Proyiuce ln’r eXport W the United States. ‘The Grand Trunk Railway is fitting up a 'car for the sccommodation of the New Goveruor- Uenerul and bis wife on thewr passaze from Halifax to Ottawa, No expeuse is belug spured to wake (t luzurious. Attempts baviug lately been made to upset trulve on the Montresl, Ottawa & Occldentad Raliroad, by placing obstructions on the liue, the Government has oifured & reward for the convietion of the guiity paries. Spectul Ditvaich to The Tridune. Loxpon, Nov, 8.—A lunstic at the Asylum here, nawed ‘Thomas McGiveran. wet a horribis death by scaloiug, The attendant Jeit bim for & tew woucuts, aud he turned on the hot water bimsclf,~belug so badly scalded that Le aied suostly after. Apecial Dispatch Tribuns. . CATaBRINES, Nov, &—A. New York nrm s sbout 10 ercct a silk-factore berc, pusting Enmnm 0 tha valus of §50,000, snd el oy- i 500 han MONTREAL, Que.,*Nov. 8.—Tha Hon, Plerre Bacuaud, Treasurer of the Proviuce ot Quebec, died this moruiug. DR, REILLY AND JACKSON, HISS. To the Edllor &/ The Tvid Cnicado, Nov. 2.—~The lelter -len-d Ww.H. Gibus, of M, Morris, 1li., published {n yester- day’s TRIBUNY, asd brsversing Dr. Rellly's card of the 3lst uit., waé evidentlythe rnullotnuw reading sud entire lmuoncc‘:ruun of the Doc- tor's lsnguage. 11 Mr. Gibbs bad read with average dlscernment he weuld bave sceu that the socalled mivstatements . are distinetly averred to be the expressions of tha people of the Stata of )lhnwflppl‘ aud uf which expres- slons the Doctor wrute, * If one tithe llmy uy be true,” etc. When these Devple deuy the rectucss of the Doctor’s reports of the! xpm- slons, it will be time enouxh to call thst geutle- wan a *reckless defamer,' ete. Uutdl then he s lClNE‘{ required to notlcs the abuse he sy wasouably expuct Lo receive. B end- ked in favor of the LOCAL POLITICS. Saving at the Spigot and Losing at the Bung. Business Ressons Why John Hoffman 8hould Be Elected, KEern’s Chnllenge Taken Up and His Pretensions Riddled. Maladministration, Malfeasance, and Over- charging Established, 1f Charley I & Man of His Werd, He Will Step Dowa and Onl. One of Kern's Custodians Arrested for Rohbing a Prostitute. Minor Political Points-- Will Bettle It. To-Morrow BAVING AT TIIE 8PIGOT, Yosterday's Tuinuxe had an article on the subject of the 2 per cent commisslon on the collection of clty taxes by Town Collectors, the legality of the retaining of which commissions by the Town Collectors Is at present under con- sideration in the Courts, there being as yet no decision on the subject by any competeat tri- bunal. In tnecourse of that article, an illustra. tlon was drawn from tho results accomplished by Kimball and Hoffman, working under differ- ent systems, to show the ahsurdity and the lack ot economy of that construction of the law which limits a Town Collector toa fixed, cast-lron salary of $1,500, subject to deductions for con. Lingent expenses und costs of possible litiration. The more this subject {s gono into, the plainer does the wisdom of the couras pursued by the North aud West Town Boards appesr. These two bodles said to Collectors Tempe! and Hofl- man, * You take this 3 per cent on city collee- tions, Out of it you have gutto pay your ad- vertising bills, postal-cards, and ather contingent cxoenses, In nddition to that, we expect you to be crompt, encraetic, and. pushing, The town necds morney, the park needs it, the city, coun- ty, ond Staie require it at the earllest possible moment, The more diligent you are, the greater your reward will be. Bogo ahiead and collect.” On the Bouth Blde tho case was different. The understanding with ths Collector there was that ho was 10 turn over this 3 per cent to the Town Board, Under no clreum- stances was he to receiva more than $1,500, Wiiether he was slow or awift, a good Collector or & poor vne, bis reward was the same. There was nothiug to apur bim on to extra diligence, nothing to fnduce him to gather i the taxes needed by the city and county, The result was that, whflu HiofIman collected 01 per cent of his peesonal-property tax, Kimball collected but 40, This mneans morc than it says on the face of {t. 1t meana that larze sums..were forever lost to State, county, city, town, and park. When a Town Coliector gets in anly 40 per cent of the real-catate tax, that simply means that the col- lectlan of tho other GO per” cent {s delayed for somo time, and the city or county merely loses the usc of the G0 per cent for awhile. ‘The land 18 wood fors the debt, and the money comes in soopee or later. But with personal property it la ¥astly different. 1f ftis not vollected at once the property disappears; it is burned up, broken 1p, worn away, moved nfi, the owners hecome Insolvent, or change thelr residence from oni: Division to unother and evade pursuit. A persanal-pruperty tax mot collecteid by the Towa Collector is generally one forever. o, in arder to insure the equsl Istribution of the burdel of taxation, to make everybody pay somncthisg on his properts, the personal-property taxs should he collected us promptly and ascioeely rw poseible. This can be done best by tho Town,Gollcctors. The Town Collectors will only dol:ft when they have an {ucentive for o dolng.»114. you eay to the Town Collector, * Your pay lgflxed at’ &1,500, which may ol be swallowetl up In lmhlenul cxpenses, and you have also to vive 8 bond uwhich will entnil jucidental responsivilitios’ in the way of recluro- cation, and \ull shall :receive uo more money than this 81,500, no mutfer how good you are,’ but very little tax of oag kind will be collected., If you ssy to 8 Town Ubllector, *The more you are worth tho more you'will Lo patd,” he will go on, ho will collcet clusél'abd will’ hand over to the city, and county, eM} other munlcipalitics the moneys which are 18:them the breath ot life, ‘There was published'yesterdav o little table showlug what KtmballWould have done had ha collected lke Hoflmanfhnd how far short Hofl- man would huve fallen thind Lo collected like Kinball. The table was made to apply only to tlie city tax on personii umu:n). n order to make it complote It {s #rven below tn full, cov- ering city, State, countt] sud park: Kimball's collection cll, ‘personal prap. erty... . What woull $211,700 and Hoftmau would have collectes Loss by Kimoall'n system. . County pernonal-property Kimball collected. Hoftman wonld b Loss by Kimball" Fark warranl. persaal pronesty. aL et Kimosil collected 24,5010 o@man would bave collectod NI.TH Loes by Kimbull's system. ..., 41 Tutal Klinosll's collections. mll&r& 753,021 . 422,020 Rouths ChiCaigooes Bo it appears that the Btate, county, city, and parks are practically out just so wuch money. Even where the Couuty Colloctor does gather in something, that is cotinterbalanced to a grest extent by the fact that the muoicipality to which the mopey goes, lias lost the use of It I some munths, for the Town Collector coll the bulk of his ln .l:nun‘{ the County Col- Jector doesn't do much uutil Moy or June, Ho #ee how ttu proverb ubout saving at the spigot and losiug at the bunghole comes . Under Kimball's systein the Sourh- Town Doard cot a little over $3,000,~ this was printed iy yesterday's vaper as £30,000, by s typographital error. The Towu Hoard of ‘West uxh-gu t nothing. But the Cit of Chicago, through Kunball's systen, luss 0,000, sng through Hollmun's system gained £129,000, ‘fhe losses aud galng of the Bate, county, and uurkn are given in_ the sbove fable. 1o brief, Boutd Chlcazo mado 83,000, the l:uy of Chicago, Btate of Iilinols, the buun},y af Cook, snd the Bouth Parks lost $433,020, ‘These tligures tell their own story, Can any one now doubt sa to whether this policy of pay- {ue 8 Collector the same sulury whether bis cole lections are largo or sumsll, whether he 18 an efticlent or sn incflcicat ollicer, {s voe must dus jurious tothe chty, county, und Statef KERN'S CHALLENGE TAKEN UP, ‘The records of Sherlt Kern, ss loft In the coktres, show that he bas inude an inefcicut snd {ncomipctent Sherifl. Il has left undona those thivgs which be ought to have done, sud dons that which be ought not to have dove. A cor~ reapoudent of Tus Tuisuxe, who kuows what be is talkfog about, writes as follows: T ths Edwlor uf The Tribume. Cnicaoo, Nov, 4. ~Sneri Kern, In his banter- ing and blufty lotter to the peuss, which he chale lenged (0 an immediate and’ thorongh investiga- twn of hh adwiuisiration, uses tho folluwing foolnardy langusge: °*And 1 guarantee. If any negloct, discrepancy, deficlency, ve watadminis- tration of any kind or uature “shall bo found, | will st once withdraw from the canvase in favor of suy candidate the geptlemen of the Central Dewocrstie Commities wiy hawe.' This s u broad clallenge.” but we “accept it on Lis own terme, iu the full mssarsnce that if bag wne of the following lnstances of *‘neglect, die- cropaucy, deSciency, and . wsladministration™ susil prove trus, then will Kero. belnt a man of bonor aud true to his word, placo his written withdrawal from tho csnvase in llll hands of th Democratic Central Comuilttee on or before Tuer day morniag, whereat ihe Dewocracy would re- ice. lalf‘ & few of the 1natsnces of Sheri@ Kem'l neglect 1. To piake's semi-anuesl report on the dt: o= 2-.1.« Uy law, thesuby subjectiug. blmsell W & Falling to der & lull sud_minate roport of each kiud and cl-u of fees recelved. aud of each forw of expeaditure, clerk bire, slatiopery, €ic,,. o4 Jequ uired by Sec. 81, Chap. 53, Hev. Siat. ‘0 keep b regulsr and coustsnt use the record ducnbcd u- Ptuat section. 4. To wi scparate npan of **back fees,™ aa'Fequires by Ruoiber vect 5. 1o atate in which wix nmnlhl paried foes u~ ported collected wiry varme G. ‘[0 awoar (o bis ¢ports 8¢ tbe thne sad in the manner tequite Toaccount for all she **emolumenta ™ referted 10'f bid 0ALD, such as profts 0 his cer-loada of prisoners taben 1o Joliet, 1be dicting of prisoness, Testauruot extras, el Neglectiug W properly odusse his fses on writa and other papers sersed by him, the Jaw re- l}ulr(ng thst Iheln feen shall be elaarified and not Jumped, " aa fs hix cantom. Hers are a few Inetences of discrepancy: 0. Hin fees exceed those named in the statate; 26 I8 overestimated |n almost every case, n severnl writs served snd marked “‘servea’” ‘ bim no feea whatever are {ndoraed, the Bherifi's books he correct when the papers which Iszued from his office show anch grons carelessnenn? SBurely there munt be **discrepancy ' somewhere, 1L In at semi-sanusl report, which ia nut marked ** andited, " thn Doard llowed & claim of $60, which shoald therefore have heen turned over to the Connty Treasurer, bat that officer’s Jsst report shows that Kern deried the Hoard and kept the §60, I that!s nota *defictency,™ 84 well as 8 ‘‘aiscrepancy,’ then what e one? Hat, with more tine and & better rpportanity to investigate the Sheriff'a scta, nomeroas instancen of **neg- Ject.” *“discrepancy " and, possihly, ** deficiency *' might be diacovered, If, without going a step in- #ide Kern's office, all ‘theae violations appear, how mach worse will mattera be should a rigid investi- cation of the ofiice itself be attempted? Of *‘maladininintration .there are inatances everywhere in Kern's officisl career, Dennties (that means Kern), for whom he fs responaibie. neglecting their daties, clectioneering, serving papers and executing process withont promptitade #od dipateh: 1aking private feea or rewards for daing their dutn or for serving one paper soaner than snother; blind and merll reports, weits,and other paners, suggestive of blundering carelessness and toeMclency. Important legal documenta pow on file In a1l the courta Jook ss thongh the Sherift had employed 8 lot of achool-boys as dep- utles to do ble work. Not s single_paper i m 10 properly indorsed and returned. Whu can resist the conclasion mn the Sheri"s own ks ¢ must bo frregulsr and show wrong entries, excemaive fces. excessive emoln. mentas, ele., cle., if the Bheriff's reports and the mont important papers lasning from his ofice are irregalar and illegal on their very face! Hefore praising Sheriff Kern's adminiatration certain law- l‘u had better acan morn closely the law aere- ted tu the SheriTe administrative acts ‘Ten minutes in any of the courts w swrved by ihe Shenf are on flle wi) m.%et prejudicial person in Chicego that g (1] lem\ness, school-boy atupldity, If not somethiog wor'e, ¢l Ir:cltrlln Lhe acts of the Sherill of Cook County, or hies depaties. Take upoua paper after another, snd you wiil not Bnd & nnzlo writ properly retarned or In- torsed. R'ven Consishies nre more lrllcnlnr and exact thay rome Depnty Sherifls, The only rect 8herlT'a retorn out of twenty-nine writa suc- vely e'xanined was that made bya country Bherff "in Winncbago ~County. [ilinois. n ¢ no ezciwe for Kern that Agnew was worse, The .uestion now befors the peo- ple_ s concernl? the gross carelessness and inefficiency of Hn'ltrlfl ern and bt depotlel The law requires, and hence the vrinted nlan! 1bat each ftem of cost. 88 **nervice,™ **inileage, and *‘return,’ s Uall he lmmm on the back of the writ. But the S4erLd pays no more stiention to thess plain reguireiuemts than it they did nat u- int, bat *'lumps ** weryihing to auit hi rather, each deputy cofiects what fees he Tices: Mileage being 5 cewfa ench wayshould be an even number, bt the 1Wherd makes it odd, which 3 facie aqinat him. His feo for ummons [s 50 cenve, making the return cenl mileage 10 c.tots, in the businesn cen- tre of the l:hy Yet the.Shen ff charges 75 cents, an excess of 5 cents, encuzht o pay for a drink. He charged 75 centa for serv ing A sutamons at No, 101 Washingiou steeet, the actual distance both ways being one mile, for whiith his mileaze was 155 cents. 1hs charge for ur\L'lRl.l‘um ns on the City of Chicago was §1 *' lomj wd,*" a8 Tne leul feq would have been: +'ervice 50 cent tarn 10 cents, mileape 10 cen W total 70 c are excess 30 cents. lle charged t be same excen fee for serving s garnishment on the Pullmin Palace-Car Coum B ny—30 cents cvvercharge. His charge was 81,50 for werving a sui3nONe On & pec- 200 at the corner of Nineteentb an d Wood streets. 'flleLcAmlr(n are Dut these instances are enough. 1atl of them, The Instances refetred to are as follows, and may be found on pipers on file wi'h the Clerk af the Circuit Court. They are taken almost st random:; Writ No, 28,382, Polaiter va, City f Chicago: served nm Monroo e Mo “Ileuh,umrur feo charge: nmpe: cents overcl \?. 28,1100, (izrnbhu writ of Georgs C. Smith va. Doggett, Dassett & Hile; charge, 75 cents; 1o mileage indo: No. 24,108, Same vs. 11 _McDald, 101 Wash- Ineton strect; writ indorsed: 75 cants paid. No, #8183, Wrif jndorsed no property foands 75 cents paid. The onlv chancerv summons found correct was served by thio Sherifl of Winunebago Coun- l.y. indorsed ‘as follows: Copy, 75 centa: mile- e, 20 cents; and return, 10 centa; total, 81,05, None of Rer'n writs aso oroperiy Inforsed, Here are more specimens of them : No, 2R, 188, Chancery: garnisnce: Maris Jler- mau v, Ha nmmn Jefraon; fees pald, $L; no \n ki .'.’00‘ Ysammons: Hecelver v, 0° Cnnm‘ll. corner of Nineterntlt and Wood atres clinrged, $1.50; nine miles. Excesstve charge, m cents, “No. 28,70, Garnlsbes writ. of Pullman Palnce- Clr L‘omplny. corner of Adams street and Michi- an avenus; chatges, 31 5o naleaze, eic., mea- tioned, 1, ¥, Chotwell, 60 Madison street; .\o.’.‘fi AS‘.’. o Nor 4,580, Lyde C. Huntiogton, 118 Monros street; 7egmllplld 0, ch .~ Chancery summons; Rebeccs Smiths 1o ml lieago and no retwrn: pala. Teterson, Cooper No. 28,502, “Charfes N. ve. Palash, et i no indorscnsent of fees what- "_‘038.4. Writ Hanseobain va, Iansen- bain .\:mneery jummons to 809 West Twonty-firet ’lfi‘“ id; no record of mileage, eic. Bn. L0, Attachment writ on John J, Mc. B"“:.:"d 12.25, pald; no mileage record men- oned. No, ©8,A85. Return no property found ; 20 cents. )-o 28,580, Summons M. D. Ogden; i cents, 28,581, Bummons C. A, Carr; $1, pald; no mentaned, 28,54, Chancery summons John . Rat- tler, northwest corner of Canal and d.ackson sueats; no feos indomod. ,500. Chancery summans; sorvedy no Ulanke fied aod o feen indarsed. No, 28,303, Chancery sumiuons; no fee in- ‘Tho above aro but specimeu bricks. Kern' has scut out the challence, and the gauntlet hits been taken up. There 1s not one of the above writs mentfoned that has been legally indorsed, or I(Inl. Rives tho liems of charges s the law ro- .aulres, Will Mr. Kern now keep its word and step down and outi OW TO VO'I'R. To the Iiditar of The Triune. Cmi0ado, Nuv. 1.—1 desire to vole in the city Tuesday the stralght Republican ticket, un- scratched, but unfortunately returned too late to register, Wil you plesss inform me what modus operandl it Is vecessary for mu to go through in order to attaln the desired wish! Heretofore 1 havé allowed 1ny vow to go with the Democratic party throush no par- tlcular choice, other than caused by the sympa- thy & person naturally feels for the weaker chicken fu s cock-fight, but the very ahle and lud speech of Gov. Oglesby last evenine. to which I had u.u pleasure of listening, opened my eyea snd set we to thinking. And flllu pondering over lis question, * What has the Rupublican party dooe that it should be turned out of power{” another ove us welghty, 1 thilak, pmuuoa ltselt, viz.: * \What has the Democratie party done that recommends it to power over the Repubiican purty " 1 would say that | have never” voted in Chie cago, baving lived bers o little over & year, uerer registered. and hence wy Uruorunce as o the mesns. Am comparatively » straoger here. | would therefare thank you for iufora- tion which will lead to one mors vate for the Kepublin tiket, now when vmu Aty 80 much neeved, Onp DaMOCEAT, ‘The law on the subject in as followa: No vole sball be received at any Hiate elaction 1n this State It _the vame of the porson offering tu vote ba not 0o the rugister nude on tho Tuesduy proceding the election, uuless Tering 10 vota vball furalss 10 the his -Muu. In writ! atatiug Lhereis t he 1s au tohabitaut of sawd alatnet, and Enllllfll lu‘D(u therelu at such alcciion, aod prove by the auth of » buuseholder and registercd voter of tha district 10 which be offers tu vota tiat bo knows such por- son to be un lnbumuus n{ Use alatrict, aud, if in BRY it ving the realdence of such bersun within ssid_district. The vsth may he admin- ietared by one of the judves or loavectors of the electiva. at the poll wiers the vute ahall be of- fored, "o by any penioa suthorized to admiulster oal KERN'S CUSTODIAN! 1 anyadditional proof were waunting to show that Bberif! Keru has the unbounded support ol the critnival classes of thls cty, that proof was found yesterday. Early io the morning Harry Robinson's saloon an Fourth aveauq was ‘the scene of & very bold mbbory. A cvprisn dam- ¢d Lillic Dean, who had entcred the place, was thrown down and choked by one of tlrus men, while the otber two went though her pockeis and stole a small red leather pursp, contalnlng $10 cash. She was quits badly injured. and ‘was not able to report st the Armory until some thwe later, The thieves went ous, but returned 8" few minutes ' sfterwards, and Roblo- son, by touching au A, D' T. fostru- iuent, called in the police and "had them u}vtured. At the station xhe( ave the pames Joseph Detincier, alisa McMulliu, Churies Russell, snd Marcdln Moynihau. Thoe former was found (o posscasion of sume of the caab, sad tue latter of s wlove stolen from Misg Dean's pocket. Al three were pasitively den- tified. loyulbau was recogoized by Capl “)'Dogusll &s an old thief, who has frequeutly’ boen 1o tho tolls, lu Lls pochet was fouud ssheet_of paj arlug the slgnature of Churles hem, nunx ot~ Covk Couuty, comstituting Michael )lo?nflnn custodian e furuiture fuctury ol ibauu & G at an Polk street, near Blue Island avenne. Moynihan bad been given this sinecnrs by Joseoh Lawler, brother to the Alderman, who was piven & deputyship after the last election, when Frank Lawler was elected by A larga majority an!'y beeansa nobody could conscientionsly” yote for his only opponent. This man Joseph Lawler also owns a saloon at the corner of Polk and Flalsted atreets, which {8 notorious as & hang-out for crooked men of all sorts. Another brother, Mike Lawler, has served time in the Penitentiary, and has, sioce bis return tothis city, been instrumental several tines in toroing “up to private detective sgencies stolen property. This because private detectlves dared desl with him more roughly that the city Police Department has ever vet uuempted. It was Mike Lawler who raised the gdn for the Race murderers to leave town, he ought to be In jall now for aiding aod nrntng tho esca, Ipe of ‘Lamb and others. The Bheriff onght indeed be proud of the political aupport of snch & crowd. But the best of the story remalns. At daylignt yesterday morning Joo Lawler miceeeded o apiritine away the document bear- ing Sherift Keru’s signature. e was ashamed ta Jetit be known that either himself or Kern had shlelded so notorious & lnle{. aud he called nt the Armory and demanded the document, which was given him. Last nizht be again called with Ed F'owell and H. W. Whitchurch, a Hal- sied-strent pawnbroker, and furnisbed bail for the trio of robbers. —— TH: TATRD DISTRICT. in yesterday's fasue of the Times there sp- peared & letter from John Farrell, slandering Mr. John B. Tavtar, who fs a candidate for the Legislature in the Third District, and saying that the Iron molders would not support him, which Is false. While we think that any nne who knows John Farrell, 426 Archer aveoue, would not give it any credit, but, for fear It should reach the eve of some one who is mot acquainted with blm, we wish to plnce bitm and ourselves right lefore the peovle, sud we heartily fndorse Mr. Taylor, sud will use all hotorable tneans to re-elect him. (_hlfl!l It Fugate, John McGiraw, Mi Frank Miller, John Portsmonth, Danfel Dwyer, James lamilton, Jnllll Hsmiltos, Hagh Maher, Q. . Ronesteal, John il. Thomay, ticonge Rodgers, Frank Moroney.” 2 Swieg, M. Mulcahey, Mnrrl- flw(cr. J. Mulcaley, ) Nell John Sullivan, .L Mnluhv. James Sullivan, dames O'Urien, John Stapelton, John Cahll, Pat Collias, ‘Thomae Geherty, Willtam Coin, Thomaes Moroney, Joseph Mtufl!hlln. John O'Donnall, Thomas Hooney. Thomas . V' Nelil, commmee of Iron-Molders, REPUDIATEB L. To the Editor of The Tribune. Jerrensox, Nov. 8.~In tle list of candidates m last evening's Journal, 1 find my name o candldate for Commissioner for the Sccond Dis- trict on the Greenback ticket. In politics 1 am Republican, snd am not & clmlmnu for any ofllcn ou any ticket. » Horcous, POLITICAL CHIPS, After to-morrow it will be simply ex-Sheriff Kern. Jack Garrick, ex-saloon-keeper, will soou go back to barkeeping. Kern's supporters swear that if he ain’t’ elected that they will raise a riot, “The threat is thiv and wealk. Wanted—Voters bonght and the highest prices pald; bix promises made. Apply to Charley Kern or Frank Agnew, Democratic Headquarters, 40 Clark street, Look out for Democratic repeaters to-mor- row. There is an orgaoization forthat purpose, Voters nmum be on their guard. The Super- visors and Marahals should attend totheir duty. Bpecial dlispatches announcioe the result of the elections 1o Massachusetts, New York, l’enn-[ylvmln. Iliinois, Michiran, and Wiscou- ain wifl be received at the Pacitic Hotel Tues- uay evening, A Soclallst meef.(m‘ was held yesterday after- noon st Mueller’s {1 cornur of North avenue snd Sedgwick street, Mr. J, Buchhuuser in the chair. Messr: Grottkau harangued the cruwd for over two lours. ,They wanted the caplialists snnofhilated &t the polls next Tuesday. The Bociallsts hold aoother muss-meeting in Ahe eventig in a hall on Twenty-sccond street, near Wabash aveoue. The attendance was very sLunll, and the apeakers and speeches the same as at all of the meetfugs they bave hela for mo.uths, Creech was there, and tried to stue s0m.Y songs he Las written, The apeakers thivk they will poll from 9,000 to 18,000 votea to-mur- TOW. " ‘The experiment of holdloga Republican mect- {og Sunday n(umonn (this belng the first one during the eam, qud 8 success, for Foiz Hall, corper of North avenue and Larrabes street, was cownfortably full. 'The buik of those present were Germans, and they were very en- thusdastic. Bpeeches were made by Cispur Butz, Gen. M, H. Thomas, Willam Vocke, \Hlum Flotow, 3Mr. Stimmiy, and vtbers. A meeting of the Youog Men's Democratic Club of the Seventeenth Ward was lcld lust cvening at the Mauiton House, This vrganiza- tlon is hitterly oppused to the clection of Kern, and for this ;'sason his satellites have made fre- quent attemids to capture it. Last oventng was 10 excent}op to the role. Big Jim Hanui- wuu and & crowd of other ward bruisers attend- ed carly and wmade themseives decidedly by thelr foul and bluster- Ik. A resoluMou was offered endorsing thu Republican tickost, and then the retainers cammenced, snd undoviook to have things their own way, ‘The yolng ‘e wonldo't stand i, bat rather tllln have the meeting break up in o row accepted & motlon to lay uvcr it tnis eveningr, ywhen they nvoposs to ad v In 10l sud give thelr reasons for so o nll of which will doubtless be an’. m(unnlng reasou for Kern and his eorvupt backers, Yesterday afterncon a mecdnz was held at 83 West Maaison streel. About 150 of tho most respttable workinginen weye present. Mr. Josejdi Warmington was loudiy calted for, A fo resionse, anid that he had” at the earnest solicitution of his feHow-workmetrcotne furward as idato for the Lesislatwre. e hud done #o 110t alone for the purpiose o eudeavor- ing tu do awsy with the . dissavant.wre under which his own trado had been lsboring, but olso to elfect o cbunge by which the lalior of vonvicts would uot ioterfere with honest _lator. e pledeed bimself to doall inhis vuwer i1”.elect- ed to do away with convict labor Insomucty as futerfered with honest labor, He was a wor, Viog- man himsolf, #nd had been 80 for twenty-c ht i‘uu. and thosy present micht rest ameu.'ed his best endeavor would be used toreniu Yo the great inconverdence under which they wei e "‘%m‘mfi then tndorsed Mr. Joha ¥ o meetlug then fndorsed Mr. John o for sherifl, Mr. O, L. Maun for \‘Jm'oucr.fl Tn‘lfi ::‘r. Abner ’I‘-ylor for Benator in the First I)is- L. EANCH i CES, IN D“Dxfl l'l'U ACCOMMODATE ¢ U N NUMEROUS iy we liave eiahiislied STON N Fadr of Hnniadsen o s Davsh, 4 cwelor, Newsdealer, and Feacy o+, ‘corncr Lincuin. :; HIORSES AND CARRIAGES, Auv ONE WANTING FIRST-CLASS GOUDS AND lionoraule deallig cau v [t with ua fu, the £4l: wing: Nice lop side bar bugiy, Hrewster's mako; iring lop-buggy and tus Concord Broeks’ pris Conconl express wufl ani, two adihicer rorkRuare wisd othe iy sed, in guod order,and very low bricos. Alss well- buguy. itared Sock af BGe eNInilo awd side-epring huruies fhd pisione ¥ wag r wnd o b buu o haress bl-nma.":':.'d Horve furalshs \‘m ".'xz'l Telilumuie prices. FENNOVEI Y. Amrrlu\x iAu-. ‘o¥ . ¥, EMERY & C bl inctt s erery Farmisy ¥6d Sutori m. BLOCK On hand st private sale. P'ariies wi buyor sell wit .wnnw;m ue a call; lbsrsl “POSAIBLE MAN- satistaction r N, Deertield, Ao € B kA C, Me\er. . Stroehle, and P.. CITY REAL E\‘I'ATP» D Lk ['cm !ALD—BY T. B. BOYD, ROOM 7. 17 MADI- 823 ner Toot -1 want to sell 2 mare m-foat fots, by 10 Eaat fronts on Forty-cecond ynu will g0 andare this prod I s 18 thers will be 1) new N1s bloek in the ¥rring. which W Kreatly {ncreane Tis valan, 1€ I8 certalnly ihe ehoap=at R(’“W‘fl{ rver nfitred fa Chicagu. finrse-eqrs. In Lne 1. farge trees #ad other imMprovemisats g thesteset,” Wil aell 35 feet. 30°8. W. cornerof Canal and Monroe-ste.. lot B, hrith all the btldings, Hemta for 8110 per mafth, mhnntcfimnef Haly ta, fert Tlalsted, by 74 feet deep on Adame-at., |fll lll the Ml|l¢|nfl. Mvml'vlrl! 30 per. yur. 1 wiit self this coriier at'a Krest bargain, or trada it vanmele-r farm of 200 acres, near a tawn, 'l wilizell 4 o feei Airep, on brairie-ar. And Furty-third o will be i ot outh far h\ %er”r:oum kear Lineosavat, (It 1 the beat bargain e eepenter-at, o ey yih Cetpenter st Thisly u?lrndld 14 feet north ot \l-uuuu at. $1,000 Ao, 5.00—714 Weat Adsme st Fin’ bilek wetiing, by AL . i ne hrick dwelllng: lot 212127, Good bara. B Trone o Mosree e 9t AberaEencaE e DATS $:01 caah will buy 10-room frame awelling, No. 779 At B4k dwetling, trick bam, on Park-av., nesr il W: Aot IM B R & WILL nUY AR nvlmflvm. LoT o biock from depot. &t |atran ? miles from thellv $1% down an l1 munlhl’. cl !lbell prnwfly I market, xnd zaliros fure, 10centa, shuwn AT WOONLAWY, n\' ll.l.won CEN- fie pouith of Mrde 0 bl , Turnianed: threo 143 Bt n;l:d-‘ml'mwlllri:‘?MAan\W i u:ens‘rvnm- y: varty {8 gotn; ‘ ress owner, Tribuze omee, ©_ONE i3 % ~.....COUNTRY REAL ESTATE, A ALE-T WANT 10 BEL 1CK TANR ntiding. and lot bk antis Cand Hiuive Ib:,lfllz}:l'lfllummnh" deter, l‘;hl noy doine 8 mnkiox u 1o §50,ix0; net gar: all free and clear, Iu one ot e owns Io Towa: aniy hank in Lown. yonag m-n. % €Ot 5, S far ik mmn fora BARTON Lttte Hock: . WANTED-MALE HMEL Arnacs. VAVTF TWO GODD COAT AND PANTS il gl ia re tok laras connl iz tows sbodt Blix Ul Cieaga: expensce Pald. 109201 Madisannte o P pply at vace at Elnplnvmenl Agencies. FANTED=2: CHUPPERS AND TEAMATRRS PR fchigan. fres fare ininers, Dawta, 0 inhorer far oity, GHIISTIAN & Co.y 298 Houth Water-st. ‘ TANTED- Tows. 25 RAl ¢ or exenange by J. H. BOUTHEUN mmhnlnuvy Frea fars, ANTED-LIVE MEN TO TAKE URDERS FOR m nev self-extinzulshing, non-etplosive, safety lamp, money-miking article out. To vea (L sto lnprul-le It. It {e perfect, snd Just what cvery gousumer of keroeear wants, €all early ' securs rholce of territary. Thousands can be sl Tn Ciica, Uones AT LININGTON: 43 a0 47 JacHon WANTED-!‘PHIALE EL| Domesticss ‘vAfiTEn—A Q00D GRRMAK __Birl for gencral housewnrk, ‘ FANTED—GENMAN OIS Tor general housowork in'a smi "84 per week. lnqum OR BWEDISH n Routh I'ark-ay, TNAVIAN Giltis family: wazes alrie-av. urses. ANTED—GERMAN N . ‘v e !Vlbuh"er LISE GIRL, Il'l"JATI o VS “ A "Tzl’—lfllll‘n Iookkeepers, Clerks, &co’ QITUATION WANTED-TO DRY 0UODS AND O Men's Farnishing Merchants—Adversiser 14 yoard gaperience 10 English wholessle ‘and Tanufscruring Bouses seeks employment. Aadress | ‘l'nbnn'. ITUATION WANTED-YOUNG MAY, 21, 50K 0F ‘eqicultiral, seed, Cake. A4 Com mcreban. ho Yoe gland. and %o e hail four’ years in 8 Liverpool olfice nd {» thorou witl boukkeepiog. vol- lecting, and ira 4 & situatlon In ahipping or W. BARWELL, General Poste APPLY AT Sl‘l‘lh\fl(l‘{ WANTE Miscelianenus. qlTUATID“’ WAN A MAN OF EXPRRI- ny ank cusher or feller: ity preferved. First-cias references. W 7, nounen z. 10 RENT—$13 PEit MONTII-PINK TWO-STORY Drick huuse, 13 Fillmore at. $13-Two-sior travie, 04 . lnquire st 33 Western. South Niae, 'ro HPVT-‘I(D FIRST LLAh TPVA‘“‘. A THRF siory and baser rout homse snd um o nrar rnmn L. ¢ wiil Dok he ren| AT bonranachon auire of JACUL WEIL, i . wnnlnnun .., for fiv TD BE“—“(‘IBM "Bouth Sia 70, MENT — A LALUE NICELY-FURNISIKD frout room for { ingle keut, with ur withiout boy 'lVJll TERWEER, WEIL hed rooms, o ltlllll‘m K!nlrfl!ltn ki'D ul mudrraie rates, —___MOARDING AND LODGING, North Sides 5 AND 7 NORTH_ CLARK.ST. — P € Dosnl with reom, £ G E6 per week, piano und bath: day-buan. & Tloteiss JRARYES OUSE. KAXLULPH AND CANAL ETS, N6 04 B Week. Table. DOANS I5T-CLASS Al IO URE~0L, 35L 33 AND 377 lour m.m-nmhur Fatuer Ifoase,” tioard and om 1N ber week. S 87, and s4, l’lrnllhrdnmmnmlnnkhulnuu; L, 18 AND (30 WATARILAV. . (loud tooms an haurd. $1.50 ér ery low | rlh:l u WADAS AND with toons, ut ey o faie TINDSON Xl RITE e Ty Tatd hmnl. $310 30 per weele, Day-busni, £4 per werk. euts, $1.70 d and ings, for & govd Iml'mvul farin cluse 1o town whe thete re cuod shoe! 81,2 -meumu (g blnun.flwnhununnu. lows, ioweres of elepaat la hodre aud lub un icord :uuu No. 'devnnu'n- v Ove wiles from cuttage and lok In n Wayn Cuunu."ziegdx J o Ke-st. ! it it ral Park. ‘Il propern) clewr, an e houscs |lrlll 83 per mo‘;l‘l‘h‘yvll ewch, | want s good swck of atarm. " The wlegaat brick mnulhm Xoown as the i i nm‘ miles from U3 Irick uaru fruita fregund clear, cost Xtnd 0f oods. Siogaathawe YU, ; ure and hlnnm I‘fi"’ Tnias su ursoitie o, ILhoLOKEAp I ny ofive. Htoutn 7, 170 Madisan: ‘0 EXCHANGE=26 ACHE PAWN, 17 SHLES sUth of Uhilcaitu, one iile Trom degots two- tlory 1o rvom dwellinigs It 1 all uider feucy: one of tho beaturcliarts i Cousty: lating matert s a4 wod land as any 18 1llinois. 5".1 ot nn’m e e -hu umu Tor s farem, "Wa will asume € L1 on otk pPoprtY, P01 yuon WAns A kot tirin. Cull 'k we Wil K16 04 & i irade. “Xa foaliu we wean trude dwent aguod farm. et wet, Burth, or il L Lhull-llu‘g and bt Soaiaks, fren wad ol i to bulldr 30 miles weat of Chicagy lall aadseo phutokaply fu 10y otlce. i NCER MADE 03 WATCHR mA_.LW ., 84 LAUNDENS' private ofice IN“lg" Joly, 8-¥., aear Ciark” oow i _Kntabilshad 1334, 1A% PAID FUIL OLD GOLD AND BILY 3300 ey 16 10n 00 watches dlemonds, and vatiy T Acscription st GOLUSML'S Lowa axi Kul e, v Esat Madison-st, y.m.n-n»u TN ATy lowest current Kiw'ul AN Y FIRST-CLAS: Qv‘l‘l’zflli'ru}t FOILYIV Tiiustrated cataluxus kit 1 hm:u o sxu:m BIOCK wlmln 8t warernons of Tom:wluulomm h"\v “A'uAv“ Tmunb-rou GENER ' fret- class brick warchouse. & BISHOP, 10 Sauth Jeilersu rul thu cliy, —— — of '“o"’v'; PARTNERS WAKNTED, pd Y, PARTRRI WANTED=TO TAKE HALF INT ay bk e d nummfl‘ T {mu e o A 341 T WANTED=W. l’l‘ll $5,000 T4 85,00 10 DAL ‘fumm 10 (be sasl, duor, aud bl “l AHHIMJ HACI!NKS, WIII\GIVH CMACHINES, niog uecoies h lmnlu:& :nchmtg Pl achioes. fur e P il pues T ATNORR & CO.: s Wabasi-ay. Beck Inl'n:n oI wiil iven fur Luford FALLTagis! batt ] buslues. Addrvas W, Tribune viice. HA UE WHOLE o2 A usif aterestin g, valuadle pateat fur s alsie uf A0 capleal Wil aart (e bial: aonsble fgurs. v =7, E PATENT HlG .‘ ‘H’n““"m"nu Ctate o Wdiai o Kuukk S A

Other pages from this issue: