Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1879, Page 4

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they aro resolved to niate himn with another %2 rih‘tnn . ultra_Confederate. Tha Iepublican plends 4 . THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY. JANUARY 6, 1879, B =TT TR ke e St S ket ool M ot el Mo lioved to have been implicated in the Chi. eago Custom-1lanse frands. . ‘The outcome bf tho fire is na fortunate s could havo Leen expeeted under the cireum- | Evidences that the Crop of Can- wtances in which it originated ond sprend, didates Has Not Been nud with the conditions surrounding it. ‘Cho Winter-Killed, firomen did nobls work in a temperature g which nlmost paralyzod outdoor ecnoryy; S 2 soveral of them wero oarried off looking like | SPringficld’s Populntion Alrendy frozen carcasacs of humnnity, but it s hoped Increased by Nnmeroup that tho bLost of cara will restore thom. Tha New Arrivals. polico, too, acted gonorally with discretion - aud judgment, but it would bo bettor it the prophetic observation the speaker did not, fu bebiolf of Frgland, propose to abaudou the single gold standard sor England! Upon this pecnlinrly Eogiish nttitude of M Goscnry it is searcely necessary to remnrk, It in 08 if ho had said: ** Gentlemen, silver is good onongh for other nations, but gold is 1ot too good for England.” When England domonetized silver in 1816, her statosmon did not foresco that the young Republioc ncross tho water, consisting of a people sprung from British loins, might in little mora than half a century become hor they report are dijo solely to thoe diversion of the earnings of the road to the pocketa of the stockhclders instend of applying them to tho matorial wants of tho road, and en- abling it to moet in a liberal manner tho wants of the business public, ns such n great trunk line should, IIad they not been oceu- pying the position of sinccures, laying in with'the rond and drawing pay from it, they would boldly have condemned its unjust dis- criminations, ita combinations with ocenn vessols to keep up extortionnts rates, its seorot contracts with favored parties, er. Though not secking the honor, many * of s friends are pressing his nomo here gy, nigitt. > ¢ SENATORIAL. in vain for the clection of a Unfon Demo- crat. Its exhorlations in this behall are troated with jeors and contempt, nnd the WY MAIL~IN ADVANCE—POSTAGR TREFAID. peper itself with sbuso and contumely, by Fany Edition, ane ye 813, ths dominant Confederate faction. With - Bundayk; Tienr ,aq | this evidonce of sectiona) prejudico and Rebel 3 bxii] intolerance right under its nose, it wonld bo «-8 L.50 | more becoming the JRepudlican to preserve Gy of fa "::jh silenco in the tatter in issue If it no longer :""""';:"" ALy 20 possesses the courago of its opinons, Tho e Povt-Otice sibrema fal, taclading Stato and | roseriptive, Rebel bulldozors will not hold TIIE GANG AT WORK. Tn the Editar of The Tribune. 8rrisorie, Iil, Jan. 4.—Fust on the eve o the meeting ot the Leglsiatira a word may not be ont of place on tho Benatorial question from onu who Lins more interost In scelng the 8tatd croditatly reprosentad than in the sticcony of the mere politielan. Tt fsno 1die thought 1o nssert that If the Intelligence, the progress, the futegrity of the Republican porty can assert fi. seif fn the Senatorial caucus, then Tifnols win TERMS OF SUBSCRII™LION. Qna copy, per pea b o County, it in any highor respect for denying tha truth | Broatest compotitor for tha gold reserve of | and its systom of unjust and {llibernl | praatice prevafled in Chicago of makiog n Logan 1:':‘:5;::_ ?; to ?":’P‘i‘l’-“ Hen, "°_’l{'.::r:“|:"n""¢d‘;';‘l""&';";;':":’;““I’I'u-'ofix’;"l’zn“ " phtmittances mas be made elther by drafts e | inthe way of apology for them, the world. England wanted dear monoy be- | dealing wilh other parties and ronds which | cordon aronnd three or fuur blocka In cage of e as to Legis: gang are making the most mofse, and tugt m'o'!".,;';m; ’,:,'“cj’,‘}":g,;’,’;,"‘,’,,’;;‘;"" 5 e —— cause low money mennt low wage-rates, and | cantiot protact themselves, They would om- | such a fire, and nbsolutely prohibiting aevary lators, wherever you lind a Logan man In any part of Dally, delivered. Bunday excopted, 25 cents per week It will be with surprigs that Gen. | Jow wago.rates moant the command of the phatieally notify the Government that it has | one from stepping inside the limits exeept tho State, ha secms ' to be acting under strict iy dalicerea) Surasy !;:’l;‘é;‘-l";fig:\f{,"“'- Grnay, after meoting with a handsome ova- | markets of the world by Dritish mauufac- | foiled to carry out tho provisions of the | those netively engagod. The warningwhich | gy Soramble for tho Alinor Officog:| orders totalk as long and as loud as posaible in Corner Msdlson and Dearborn-sts., Chiesgo, 111, | ton in Dublin, has met with a boorish and Orders for the delivery of Tux Tainuym at Evanston, | inhospitable recoption in Cork.' The cause 5‘;"1':_:;‘”".‘; ;:‘::: dolark Ieft n the countlug-oom | of his snub we presume to b remark mada 5 r————— 3 by Gen, Grant some time ago relative to the TRIBUNE BRANCH OFFICES, use of public money for soctarian schools, < 2 the exact purport of which wo have forgot~ J'-'Eefilif&‘lf’-‘é&:"h‘.l‘::'nf".‘..'fl"l'.-'v‘e'l{?.’éi"'e'i".'.‘:.' ten, and which miado little or no impression tures, But the tension was too great; tho last hafr was placed npon the Iaborer's back, and bis back hes been broken; he *‘struck,” was *‘locked out,” and in idleness drawa his menn pittance from the resorve fund of the ‘ Union,” but in tho nenr porspective the horriblo alternative of tho lmshouso daors Trunaay bill, and called npon Congress to compel {t to perform its obligations. Apologotio ns this roport is, it nevertheless contalns enongh to convince the country that tho road is not managed s it shiould bo, that it ia a monopoly operating against trans. continental trade, nnd that it is not fulfilling the conflagration shonld fmpross nupon all at this time, when furnnces and stoves aro stoked up to their ntmost capacity, is the oxorcise of strict and constant care, aid of Yils chief, ‘Tt nolee, Lluster, braggadocln, and wind were to dectde the matter it would Ly uscless to hold a caucus, for In. such a race the Lugan evowd conld, to use & aporting phirase, distanceall compotitorson thefirstquarser. Herg at tho Capitol, which is rapldly becoming the centre of the conflict, there Is & rezular holiday parade made of every stranger who pronounces Engaging Its Bhara of Attention. AT SPRINGFIELD, Sectal Dispaled (o Tha Tripune, Srnixevirrn, 1N, Jan, 6.—The spontancous patrlots of Titnols are raplaly congregating at Tho New Orleans Times offered a premium for the best poem expressing the gratitude of : 3 . " tho Boutharn people to the peoplo of the North | 1ho grate C; 1. sllaws: ) nt tho timo even upon the Catholic Irishmon opening to recoive his half-famished family | its obligations. There is enough in it to 3 the 8tate Capital, and none so humble that he | himeclf for Logan, Tho State-House gcrowd; :‘5" :","'_‘:"“"""“ aiikehs NG WXMar ) el cauntry, The Corkonians, howaver, | haunts his mind. And assnro ns offect follows suggest to Congross tho necessity of prompt Yor thielr gencrous atd durlng tha yellow-fevet | docs not want an ofice. Tho Sabbath stillnces | smbitious to retaln thelr presont places, but epldemie. Over 150 poems wers *offercd, and the Committen finally, after & threcomiehs’ of tha atreota of Springflelt was disturbed this 3 ¥ ge 3 H FARIB, Frafte—Xo, 16 Bue o 1a Grange-Batelere. hnv'g soen fit to l"c]( up an idle rnmor about tnoruing hy tho tramp of the unballowed feot . BiMamren, Agent, cause, as certain it i that a grent exodus of LONDOX, Eng.~Americsn Exchange, 449 Strand, | S0mothing that occured in this country of and enorgetio action,, ITitherto this groat British peoplo will set towards our shores as monopoly has not only held tho conntry in willing to sacrifico any Iviend to ald their own selfish achemes, wers carly eaptored by the hue strugaie with their dutics, awarded the priza to | ¢ ¢ng ewazgerlng nolltician as ho journoved | and ery of the Logan gangg but thess ontics BExxy ¥. Qituie, Agent, £ {reo speech @ long time ago, and which has | a result of tho misory which provails through- | its grip, itposing such restrictions ns auited | Mr. IHaxar Gur CantzroN. The podm 18 | from the rallway-station to tho hotel, .cold, | men arc carly to lgcut.‘:lcfflt from ofar, End the MAN FILANCISCO. Cal. —Palace Hotel . passed out of tho memory of our own people, | out England, its solflsh, grasping purposcs, but it hna | printed at length in tho Times of Jan. 1, and if noisy, and profanc, At the Leland this morn- | developments of the last two weeks havo caused avd to make it tho ocension of a display of animosity which is vory remarkable, consid- ‘MoVicker's Theatre. v, | €ing the - proverbinl hospitality of tho nyiomstreet, between Deatbomand State. “Det-| pgh poople, Gou, GrawT | is visiting s n 9% TReitio Treland astho ropresantativeof the Amor fcan Dearborn street, cornes of Monvoe, Kneagemeat of | POoplo, who havo always been friendly to tho 'the Park Theatre Company. **Hurricanes.” Irish, and of a couniry which lias mora Jrish Hooley’s Thoatre. peoplo among its citizona than Quaen Vicro- Tiandoiph street, beiween Clark and FaSalle, Eo- | Riarules ovor. Iis viows on the quoestion of *his 18 the best of the lot, some of the balance of tho 140 must havo been bad cuough, We will not be guilty of such soctionalism as to nllego that the resson of the wurthlesancss of these poctie efforta {s found n the fact that the Zimes limitod fts contributors to roal- dents of tho South, because that scction has Elven us somo of the best and brightest of our poets. Dt we aro inclined to scek for the cause {n anothicr quarter, to wit.: thal genuine AMUSEME Already tho Irish and their descondants in the United States outnumber tho ,Irish in Ircland, as was mignificantly romarked by Gen. Grant at hia Iate reception in the City of Dublin, and native-born Englishmen, the immigrants of former yoars, aro liternlly scatlored over tho face of the country, from Mnino to California. As wo have already re- niarkod, tho thing exported is tho choapest controlled Oongress in such o manner that evory momber scomed to bo paralyzed whenover the country demanded reliof, Thero is little probability that the presont Congress will do snything, but If the next Congress hins sny regard for tho wislies of tho peoplo it will nddress itself to the wark of reform, It will select mon of courage, ability, and experienco to fill tho ing about 100 mentlemen have elready arriveq, and searcely a room of any kind can be had ot that hostelry without it having been nreviousty enmoged. ‘This crowd will b ereatly increased by the arrival of tho mub to-morrow morning. Those on the ground at tho presout time aro mostly candidatos for some office, commencing with that of Unfted Btates Bcmator and gelog on down to engine- a quaking in mavy officisl knees, They have no anawer to tho fact that two genn apo Logan sbsolutely deprived the Ropublican party of & United Statey Senator, and Tug TRIBUNE'S [n. terview with Armstronz, Herrington, et al., Is s nall tn the Eflmml voflin of the followers of the swarthy Epyptian, In view of tho stale. ments of_Mr. Farwell, ~the truth of which can. not ba dented,—sud the corroborating statee ments of other gentlemen already bublished, the Bpringfield end of tho Logan gany lave atoker for tho louse of Hepresentatives, ANl | hard .work with the occaslonal rural "Ropre. | Eakewment of licss Opera Companay. **Mignon. popular liberty aro coincidont with those of | thing in tho markot. It follows that when s | Governraent Directorships, and omancipato {;oalry eapnot e writion to ‘"';]d"'" ; ‘T g" et ' | of these have clalms upan the party; and, like | sentative who comes here early to securo boord, —_ . ; orn, ot made, and £0 It 18 seldom Indeed that | v 7 oo Hunters friends fn ** Pickwick," they |.and who Is an honeae, fair-tninded cann, Academy of Ausic, Daxtes, O'Connt, tho grontost of Irishmon. | nation oxports its man, woman, and childron, | thom from any pressuro tho Company may | opot 190 produced upon contract, as a snit of 3 ) y “ » | The friends of tho 1o, Jehn Baker are more gra + colebratod for their works and talonte.'™ | e fFlen they have been, and seem to have hope that he may ba succosstul, These gontle- man nolnt with pride to the success of their candidate s an orators but tha chiet point upon Which they dwcll is Mr. Baker'g excessiva popu- lnmr whero Le 1s Lost known, as demonstrated in the Inte clection, where he made a gain of over 2,000 votes on che Han. W. R. Morrisun for Congrusy, and they baldly asser—und 1o Democrut acules ft—that if Mr. B, had been iu this_country 1o make a porsonal canvass. he wonld have'heen elected. If electdd, his friends elaim he would be perfactly frea from atl * ene tungling atifances,” would baye no *friends to reward or encmies to nunish,” but would uso the lxcsluun. first, for the benetit of the who's peaple, and, secondly, for the benefit of the par ty at large—not sacrillcing it members or prite vlpllu to perpetuate himself in office, Cho candluncy of Mr. Farwell, his dignified manuor, and open avowal that the oflice 1s one - 1o Le accepted rather than sought, fs a propo- sitlon 80 now to the parties who hava mssumed to be proprietors of the Heuatorial oflice that thioy arcsomowhat startled. ‘Fhio machliue wayof doing theso thiugshas beco Lo purcel out ofllces In the way that will most fnure to the benefit of some rinz or combina. tton, In casting nbout for a man wno could best ao the bidding of the purely machine politiclan, they would not select a maan ltko Mz, Farwel), Buv there aro strong surface indicatlons of a movement in bis favor which muy mstonlsh mmany,—that 1s, 8 move on the part of husiness- men to cluct him,—of men who live by legiil- mAte businoss, conducted upon tezitimata prin- cples. These mun can 800 much good which Would ariso from having o man like Mr. Farwelt in tha Nenate, Ilis large {nterests in business ‘matters would bo the strongest Inducement for him to wark hard and unremittingly for any measure which would aid the material intercats of tho great Northwest,—and thesc men say that this {s of more Interest to the pnckel-hooiu of the people’ than the success of some one who fs {xmud only in political Intrizue. Agaln, t fa asscrtea that Mr. Farwell would have attached to Wim none of the preju- dice which must attain to his two more proiut nent opponent; the next Benato will be Demos cratic, aud a man- who has been firm and uge ylelding, but vot offenslve, can, of course, it Is urged, do more good than ono who has been flaunting tho rea flag for years. Again, the friends of My, Farwell urgo that neithor Locan nor Uglesby have now, have had, of can have the infuenco with _the Administration which n new man would. The most fatal thing to Mr. Far well has' been the kind. words said {n his favor by the Chicago ' Times, for it must be admitted that thu decent and respectable olement look with Iciun npon auy one whom that sheet favors. But all shounld romember that Mr, Farwoll is not responsible for tha "editoriul vonduct of that paper, and no donbt is-as much vi—lmgx‘-lmud At fts fulsome praiso as any of Lis eds, 'lie past week haa o no way diminfshed Gov, Oglesby's strength,~bis frionds are truo and tried. Thore s a laree and respectable class of Republicans who recollect that overy two years for twenty yenrs the F‘llnnl Dick has rafsed his volce fu"dofense of the principleg of the Republican party wherevor and whenever he ‘hios been called upon, Two years nsn - Logsn came tu tha lront demanding 'an indorsement of his course, and, If ho could not be elected, demanding that no other Republican should be, By tho sune reasoning why should not Gov. Ogleaby’s course be {ndorsed! The Logan gang tell of huving sixty men for him; why do they not giva their namesd - ‘Uhey clalm that Farwell or Oglesby will buy up some of Logan's friunds, 'Who is it that’ they aro afraid will scltout? But thero §s no right-minded man who will make this charge aguinst gallant Dick Oglesby; he has won his past triumphs bocause the gumf sevae and intelifgence of the people trivinphed. Ho will wio agnin on that basts ur none. b For Logan thcre are just two classes,—the professed politiclan, who 'gets his living h’! the crumba which fatl fromn officlal tal nd the political bummiur, Theso two classes unitu In ainging husantias to the man whom a few short years o they dubfRd “Dirty-Work Logen.” To the first crowd the Btate-FHouse gung belone, and they will desert him Just s Tlalsted street. between Madlson and Mooroe. Va- | Heo fought to liberats millions of bondmoen, it doos o Locause they aro the chienpest tiety entertatnment, . thing in the marke!. But Apast Sarrrizsays : *‘The most decisive mark of tho prosperity of any country is the increase of tho num- ber of ita inhabitants,"—nnd nobody has had the hardihood to dispute tho proposition, Mr. Sarrrit further romarks : Though tho wealth of a conntry should be very ®reat, yot If it hns boen fong statlonary, wo must not vxpect to Aud the wages of labor very ligh in it Tho funds destined for the payment of w: tho revenue and stock of Its Inhabitunts, may be of ihe greatest extent; butif they have continned for several centuries of the same vr very nearly of the pame extent, the number of laborers employed every year conld casily anpply, and oven mora thau aupply, ‘the number wanid iho following car. ‘fnero could seldom be any rearcity of unds, nor wonld tho tssters be oblived to uid agalnst one another in order toget thoi, The bands, on the contrary, would in this case natu. rally multiply beyond “their employment. There Wollld bo a eonatant scarcity of employmant, and thu labuoeees would be obliged to bid sgainst one Another In order to get {t. " If in such n_conntry the wagas had ever heen moro than suMciont to maintaln the laboror, and to enablo kim to brng un & mmllr‘ the competition of she laborers and Iutoreat of the masters would swon reduce them ta thio lowest rate which I8 consistent with comuwon humanity. 4 ‘To {llustrato his proposition Mr, Swrric cited China, but, curlously enough, we find ahundred years later that the country in which ho lived and wrote is approaching the condition ho described, Tho immediate probable international ef- fects of thonew cra of prospority upon which the United Btates scoma sbont to onter aro sufficiontly startling. . But the remoto ef. fects promise to be moro startling still, The resources of the country may bo said, for the present, to bo simply inexhanstible, If thoy are judiclously developed and husbanded, they are undoubtedly suflicient to attract to thoso whores a large share of tho aceumulated troaguves of art in all other countries, Na- roLEQN sacked conquered cities and appro. priated their hoards of precious objects in order to lavish them upon Paris, Ilis tri- uwphs wero triumphs of the sword, He was tho great art-robboer king of modern times, and to this day Parls roflocts hia rob- berios In lor museums and tronsures of ancidnt art. Itis not improbablo that the balance of trade is destined to do for the United States what tho sword of Nirorroy did ‘lar France, bring to benr upon thom, by paying them out of the Public Treasury and domanding of them a rigid and impartial performanco of their duties. It will enact such legislation ns will mako it impossible to estnblsh un- Just diseriminations and extortionato rates, and to compel 1merchants to enter into ruln. ous contracta, It will mnke the Company live up to its ngreements, and carry out in good faith the obligations which Congress bas hitherto imposed. Until Congress has the courage to grapple with this great monopoly, and reverse the presont aystem of mnnagoment, there can be no Lope for re- lief from an oppression which will coptinuo to incronse in soverity and to operate with renewed detrimont to the business interests of the country, clothics Is nade, or a plece of machinery manu- factured, nccording to a glven pattern. The pact hates limitations, and despises the require- ments of tho revleed statutes. But to come back to our muttons. flere is an extract from tho poem fa question, and if anybody an got much satisfaction out of ft, hovan do bettor than we have been sble to do: & In l’nl(nnlhn reas behold Tho shining sequcl | such as—czqulsite In maze of feathars-frondad palm und ferns And Intticed vine—idyllic Fancy holds, o shatno Leloved A Prominent among the arrivals here are John A. Logon and bis friends and family, who bave en- trenchied themselves behind o bacrler of reserve which no newspaper corrcspondent can pene- trate, The warm sympathles and the tender scnalbilitles of the nowspaper man aro chilled by tho frosty reticence of these neople, and hls enthusfastic naturs s awed und lls ardor dampened by their lofty bearing. Withn modesty characteristic of the man, (fen. Loxan claims the caucus and clection on the firat ballot. Having conlidence In his strength, ho will pre- cipitate the Senatorial caucus, and rush into the fght ot a8 carly a day as possible. By an act of Congress, Jan. 21 18 the day fixed for hoth branches of the Legislature to meet fn their respective chambers und ballot: for tho eloctlon of United States Scnotor. They will mect In Jolut scasion every day thereafter, and cast at least one hatlot for Senator until the candidate Is clected, Thursday, Jan. 17, has been spoken of by tue Republican porty managors as the tme when tho Benatorlal caucns will tako blace. The timo for this impurtant conference has, however, not been irrevocably fixed, and, 1t Logan continues to bo conflilent, Lic will en- deavor to appeal to his Iricuds and aupporters to fix an carller date. Gen. Ogleaby has not yet arrlvod on the ground, though he Is expected tomorrow. Maj. Still- well, of the United States Marabai's oflico at Chicago, hias, however, arrived, and lighted hospitable fires in the npartinents of the old veteran. The Hon. C. B, Farwcil his not made his appearance here, cither, and anx- .fous inquirics are belug. made for both these promnfsing candldates by thelr friends. Bome of Logan's fricnds sro clrculating tho robust rumor that Farwell s going to mako his appear- ance hero with bags of gold, and that he is go- fux to try to prejudice the minds of plastic metnbers against Logsn and in favor of him- self by this kind of argument. 1t will thua bo scen that Iylog bas begun early, and it will probably bo vigorously kept up yontil tho end of tho struegle, when an era of truth will dawn nguin, The fact fs, from the appear- ance of things here to-night, i Is fmpossibla to form any judgment as to the status of affalra. The vancuard of tho grand srmy only bas roached here, and thefr talk forms no good baosis for un optnfon. ‘Thero will bo a wider fleld for eqllr}llslmcnt to-morrow night, prob- ably, ® » ‘Tho Bcnatorial question, howover, fs not tho exciting topic of conversation at the present moment. The questlon ot the hour Is, ** Who shall bo Bpeaker?” ‘Tho candidates for this honorable aud responaible posiiion ars Loth oumerous and respectablo, No¢loss than fivo aspirants are in tho fleld, and are now on the ground pressing thelr clalms. The on, lsase L. Morrison, of Morgan, for tho wuioment has the lead, apparently, for tho reagon that he comi mands the support of Logan, und that states- man's friendn, It is sald, have agreed to support Murrison fcr Speaker in consideration of certuin votea for Scustor which Morrlson ngrees to de- llver to Logau. 1t scerus very probable that Morrison and Logan will* sluk or swini in the snwe boot, If Morrlson s clected Bpeaker ot the House, Logsu's chauccs will be euhaueed. 1€ thut gentloman is dufeated, then tho reverso willbe true, ‘Tha Hon, Thomas ¥, Mitchell, of Bloomington, brobavly hss uo Bunatorial combination,—ut least no traco of auy cau now bo discovered by careful inquliry. Mr, Mitchotl is @ man of talunt, character, and long exporlencs In logislative bodica, and would make an ablvana ofiivient presiding ofileer, and wns mmccessful. For two tormns hio was Hamlin’s Theatre, President of this Republi d in hi - oemt ot Niss Fanay Yopion, it ftsut, visit to Ireland is, as ho stated in bis Dublin apeech, for tha purpose of sceing the coun- try wlonee so many have emigrated to the » T United States and to got sequainted with ita Lake -nm.“x'.::?u?'"\5:“::"“:{:«::. Grand | peoplo. s visit was in the nature of Bkating Carnival, "Iinsa Nail a compliment. For the people of Cork, therefore, to hunt up nan old and porverted story, for tho sake of putting an affront upon o i, not only nb‘o\wdln wl:mnl. of n;;?runintiun The antiquity of religion 13 a Iife-motive | of Gen. Gnaxt's real ¢ aracter, but was o 18 tho topic treated in yesterday’s sermon by | direct insult to the whole Amorican nation, Prof. Bwina, which is printed in thisissue, | which hos dono so much for Ircland, It togother Wldl aa interesting Biblo lecture by | was tha not of boors and bigots, and will be the Rev. J. Mounzo Gipson nt Farwell Hall. | resontod not only by tho remainder of the To Brooklyn Mr. Tarauan took up national | people of Ireland, but by all respectable affalrs for his subject, handliug them in his | Irishmen in tho United States. Tho larger- customary sensational style, winded, more appreciative, and hospitablo i i o i guopleaof other pl;fl-fl of I'r'lelm;d w::ll mc:s 8 gone:! sposition of o yoar 187 en. Gnast amplo, awmends for tho to mako itaolf disliked nt tho very outset bus | troeding and churlifhuess of the Southern iruprasaed people in localities whera little | Gorkontans, whose religious bigotry and attention is usually paid to tuls pecullarly ( hatrad of the black race, for whom Gen. Northern g;xnpll::;fla:lmu;n. mflu\vfl\v‘t‘!i D!;m: :‘:: l(:‘n.\)fl' npall:ed th;; \lvny ‘:ol ‘llilhm_y', huve led .sunny regions ho Sonth suffo r om to ench n pitiful exhibition, tho frosty invasion, with snow blooking up L railroads where snow has not been seen be- THE FUTURE OF AMERICA. fore for twenty yoars above a flaka or two at ‘Thoro is ucarcely room for doubt that this a time, and oven the oraugo orchards in | conntryia nbont fo enter upon an cra of Florida in somo peril from tho extraordinary | Krent prosporily, ‘Iho resumption of spocio cold. puymonta lias been nccomplished, and it {s Yeitirdios ot e s sE e predicted, not without reason, that the coln on of the scene 1 i aioy's o showed tha, tho st skoamont | e i e L incrouss suthoe of losses had been' considerably exnggerated, theory is supported by two substantinl reas and that $100,000 will restaro tho Luilding | gopg: - in good order, while 815,000 will cover the | (1) Fhist the mnintonance of eofn poy- Joss sustained by privato Individuals, It i | yonts for o short tiue will rolenso and throw expected that tho building will bo repalred | juto cireulntion the bulk of privato hoards of roady for ocgupancy witlin about threo | yod and silvor, and that those will naturally months, and i the meantima the burnt-out | jloy into the T'ronsury, sinco all exporionco .Post-Oflice, military headquarters, and other | gemonsteatos the fact that, by an intelligont tennnta will bo comfortably installed elso- [ 00t convertible paper money Is alinoat V’{-“““- . invariably preforred to coin ou tho obvious ¢ The Bonatorial clections which took plaoo l“"’.“'“‘ of itg groater conveniguca, ta ¥ranco rosulted in a sweoping viotory for | (%) ‘Thore is good ground for the oxpecta- tho' Republicans, whoso wafority in tho tion llm}. the presont state of ‘our foreign Upper House is groatly increased, being now :;n;!:m:nll continng, at lcast for some time ostimated ot ifty-soven, Tho Conservatives 4 fared badly all over the Republic, a large | Important trado changes do not take placo number of tholr most distinguished won | B1ddonly, oxeept upon tho intervention of belng rejected by enormous majorities. Thay fmportant causes in tho nature of revulsions. -elected fifteen and the Ropublicans sixty. [ Tho currents mado by trade are atrong four Bonators, tho votes rocoived by the | 824 the channels deep. We Liave lutter showing o tremendous galn among the { 80 loug in rouching the conditions people ainca the last elsction. which permit o favorable balance of 5 i trade, For tho year just closed this balanco TrurMAN's gamo i to urgo the renomina- | Smounts to §300,000,000, and for tho last tion of Gov. Lisuor a8 & matter of juatica | thred yenrs it aggreyates $600,000,000, This and oxpodiency, but the troublo will bo to | vast sum cnme back to us in the form of convince the Ohlo Democracy that tho pres. | ovidonces of debts contracted in Europa,— ont incumbont could lead thom to vietory ay | Government, railway, and muniei pal bonds. Y agninst o posmblo Fosres, Gaurizwp, or | Had not Europo been ablo to lend us money eBuzuuaN, Thera is bound to L a differonce | it our time of tribulation, hor Govornments of opinion’on this poiat, with tha chauces | Would not have been ablo to stand tho bale very much against excusing Trunsax from | Ance-of-trado strain of the last threo Years. making tho raco. Uncle Drox would do well | The gold of England, Franco, and Germany onough for n slower class, but wonld be no- | Wonld hnve flowed into our coffors, and thoso where among tho speody ones who will try | nations would inevitably havo been in a stato Metropolitan Theatre, * Clark stréet, opposite Sherman Hawse, Variety en- tertatnment, . MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1870, verspective. Thero, englit Dy wirror-waters, scintillant, it lfeg— Aspectacle of color and of {ife, Serena to pawsing maringra—and dreamp— Whore Innguid-idle winde weave pussioned thread Of ever-trupic hioom through zorgsone miles; And orchidaceous huas, arcliod Gothic-wis And vivid verdure, pendulous, woo af Of blundest oaora nardine, wellowing— A senwuous, slow-drawn, lazy drcam, And g0 an to the extent of over two mortal columns o tho Zimes. The yellow fever was bad enough, and we are glad that Mr, CAnLE- TON'S poctry differs from it in that it fs not contaglous. The Southern peoplo cortainly cannot bo satfsfled {n exprossing tlelr gratitude in that rouud-about way. e e Loaax's Literary Buccau says “ Tig TRIsUSE botted the vomluiton of Geunos E. Wimnrs fur State Senator because he was favorablo to the numination of LOGAN for Benator.” The first e s the assortioh that Mr, Wiite was favorablo to Loaan, Hotook particulur pains to cyntradict thas report started by the % Liter- ary Bureau geng,” as he well know it would most certainly deleat him if’ belleved. It {salso alle that Tus TnisuNs “bolted lis uomina- tion.” Tho Conveotion split in two besore making a Senatorial nomination aod each fac. tion nominated o eandidates Tus TRIBUNG sup- ported thenomineo of the east end of thedlstrict, whils the Jonrnal and Staals-Zeitung supported tho candidate of tho west-unders; tho beaten candidate, Col. TATLON, recoivad 1.311t0 2,247 for Wtrr, the successful one, while the Demo- cratie candidato only got as many votes as Tay- Lo, showiug that the alstrict was lu no davnger of being lost to the ilepublicans, But the most signiticanc part of the contest was the numbor of votes tho Flat concern was ablo to divert to Mas- KELL, tho ** Natlonal " candidato, viz,: 318 votes. That was tho mensure of its influcnce in the First District. If1t openly, as it had covert- Iys by its herctical tcactings,, supported tho Fiat canaidate, he would not have received halt 84 many votes a3 ha did. Treacherously calling itselt a Republican paper while prosching Fiat- Natlouol sophlstry, it poisoned a good many Re- publican minds, and caused them to support the Natfonal-Fint ticket, By thus sailing under falso colors {t did vastly more mischief to the Repub- lean causc than Brick Pomenror's * iot Drops ' and 8ast Cany’s barangues put to- togother. It s pretty coucern to prate about boltlug! BATURDAY'S FIRE. Tho ldcal columns of Tne Trrsuxk this morning presont an claborate and graphio nccount of the bLurning of what has been knownas the Honore Building, located on tho northwest ‘corner of Adams and Doar- born streots, nnd opposite the incomploted Oustom-House. Thé firo oceasioned unusnal commotion iu the city, for suvoral rensons, Tho'blogk of Luildings—for snch it was practically—was one of the largest and most costly cf tho New Chiengo, It was the temparary nbiding-placo of tlio Poat-Offoe, and Gen, Buenmax's Military Headquarters. "Tto Ghicago & Alton Rnilrond bind recently moved ita general officos thero, And thero wero also sovoral of the leading Inw-ofilces of the city, including thoso of Ismam & Liv. coy, Lawngxcr, Caurprnn & Lawnzsor, and Papbpoce & Ine. The location of the building, nonr the centro of {bo city, aud in the neighborhood of somo of tho londing hotels, theatros, nowspaper offices, and other business blocks, natu- rally avoused a general focling of ap- prehonsion. Fortunately, thero was little wind, and tho prompt uppearance and cffi- clont working of the Fixe-Dopartment, In apitoof tho intonso cold; Confined tho confla- gration within the walls where it originated. ‘This was the second firo on tho samoe spot. A similur building had boen comploted just befora the Great Firo of 1871, and shared then tho common fate of destruction, Tho pres. enb structure was crected by Ar, Ilovone nlmest jumedintely, but chiefly at tho ex- penda of the Connecticnt Mutual Insurance Company, which ultimately bought it under o mortgago sale, It remaiued unoccupled for soveral yoars, and bns ouly boon fully tonanted within the past fow months, 1t is the third cxporionce of the Chicago Post- Offloe with tho famillar fire-flend, Tho firat was {n Tho Fire of 1871, when the Govorn. monut Building, now known ns Havorly's Theatro, was gutted and abandoned. ‘Tho sccond waa in the largo firo of July 14, 1874, whon tho offico was located in tho old Methodist Church cdifico corner of Wa. bosh avenuo and Congress stroot. Tho Pout-Oflco has mow beon moved to the now Binger Building, which bas nlrendy passod through tho ordeal of firo twicd, and THE REPORT OF THE UNION PACIFIO GOVERNMENT DIREBOTORS. Tha Government Dircotors of the Unjon Paciflc lailroad monopoly have made their Annual Report in o gingerly fashion, as might bo expected of mon holding tho position of censors of tho road and at tho samo time re- colving pay from it. It has slrondy beon snnounced that oue of tho most useful and prominent of tho Dircctors, Citanres Fraxos Apats, Jr., o man who from large rxporience aud observation of railrand matters was ad- mirably qualified for the position, hos ro- signod, becanse ho recognizes the nbsurdity of attempting to nst as o consor upon the Company wlnlo enjoying its hospitality and salary. It Is ensy enough to sco that no DI- raotor acting uuder such an embarrassment can do his duty with thorough Impartiality, aud that it he attompted to do so the un- plessantnosa of Lis situntion would ——— The publlcation of the Annuat Reviow of tho Commeree of Chlcaga for 1578 bas buen an oye- opener to soma of the peoplo down at the byg bridge. Tho 8t Louls Jiepublican, commentiog on the gratn statlstics of Chlcago, makes this candld confesslons In 1877 tho recelpts of corn §n Chicago amonnt. vd to 48,000, 000 bu-nel-L in 1878 ‘the quautity of corn rocelved in that markot iw reported s sygro- gating more than i3, 000,000 bushols, on incrosso of shout 15,000,000 bushels In one year, In 1877 thoro wera raceived in Loufa markot 1t, - ! #47,771 buhols of corns in 187H, tao total recoipts of corn by St. Louis uperator ounted lufl,lfl!l. ® a redaction in tho amouat of recoluty G4t bushel f 3,031,227 busheis, While th, L gatn in th ] T soon oa” they dlscover that some one to cut out the work for tho gruud Prosiden. | ©f susponsion to-day. Whilo tho present | at oneo forco him out of it | may hopefully bo rogarded as exompt from Corr teada of u'l‘y’c‘:u:: amounia t:lg.'o(x'f’.“ogu Yhehe T"”{‘,tfl"’" A“tl b\ “l r"f;""";“'"l‘l ": C:nk. else can develop more streugth. A bad feature tial wwoopstakes of next yocr, stato of our foroign trade continues, thero | No porson likes to eritilso anoilior any now attack for some timo to como, {‘:;,{{,‘J'L"L L ,“fl',’."‘,:.;fi',‘,“.,f“,flf,",,‘:fl'fi.' o ::’: |;byll|::|l;ly .."-‘;n :x::u‘:tlll; :'uufl'ile: l: :l.,:: f.?.’n'fifi."i'o'«’u:':-':‘fa'o'fifl‘i'fi-"’:xfififil'ndfi'&'fifin'l’ — will bano dificulty in muiutalning spacia pay- | who is lavishing favors upon him, and {t was | The lous by Snturday's firo-will bardly ex. | 000 bustels, - And yet wa ara o0 that 81 Lol in I charge Lhe ordinary dutles ot the posi- tiou, Mr. Thompson was a member of the ‘Thirtleth General Asscmbly, snd Dbas hud consfderably expericnco tu legislativo bodies, while Mr, Jaues showed hhmsalf, as Chafrman of the last Revublivan State Conven- tion and ns an occupant of the Chalr tempors- rily during the Thirtlesh Gencral Assumbly, a man of rare avility asu presidivg ofllcer. The ou, Jawes Shaw, of Mt Cargolly who was Bpeakeraf tho lust Mouse of Representatives, But & now clada have sprung up In that sectio —they arc men who have arrived at ma; 1o sluco the days when John was noted as a rider aL scrub-races and 8 champlon st draw-poker; they know him only by the record lio hins made as an _advocate In the “Lllivuls Legislature uf o law which would seni buck to slavery a nogro Ty B4 & AN Who voted salury-grab, und st 0 asplres to fiye by politics " who shines only by bor- gy out e bri¢f, and & il ; aud, s0 know- Our dispatches’ aonounco tho arrival at | monts. But it is strongly probable that En- Springfleld of the advance guard of tho | gland will have much greater dificulty in army of candidates whoso fortuues uro to | wointalning her speciv roserve during tho rise or wane according ns they shall | comlug yoar thay she hos bad durlng tho manage to impress the Stato law- | pnst six wonths, Tho oasy maintenauco of makens with a senss of their aupferfor | coin payments in the United States moans fitness and of tho strongth of thelr cloims, | increasing confidencoin our sccuritics abroad, Another day will see the members of the | I'his aguin meaus advance in their markot Yegislaturo themselves on haud in full force, | value. Aud it must be Lorne in mind that aud theu the trouble will commencs fu var. | tha thing oxported is the chenpest thiag in destined Lo be the great corn cmporlum of thy world! Our people have duvaied too much time 1o Fruphuylnm aud, alwl.'v()mr, um{ Nave bestowod 00 11tt) attention to tiic courso of avonts occur- riog i thelr natural order, -<in other words, white the peonle of Kt, Lotils have boen ninusinie ' them. selvus ln predic othore hava cogaged fn the severs abor of scting, .o probably in his efforta to do his duty as it ought to bo done that M Avaus st onco recognized the embarrassing {f not absurd position in which Lo was placed. It adds to the absurdity of the situation that the Dircetor is nlso shorn of the propor amount of power that he ought to excroise by the Executive Commilitee, who manuge the de. taily of its futernal orgauization without in. ccad 115,000, of which $100,000 is on thoe building. ‘Tho structuro was ercctod in 1872 on the sito of one destroyed by tho fire of the provious year, It cost §250,000, of which amount $100,000 was borrowed from tho Councetiout Mutual Life.Inkuranco Cow. pany, which bad loancd £200,000 to orcet tho old building. The property fell fiually 1nto the hinnds of the Company, which bid it T i f Tho Nashville American thinks that “Tux THinunx, perhaps, forgets that the whipplng- vost aud pillory, thoss twin relies of tho past, are older than Slavery, and fu this country cer- rowed light, aw; olitician whose only cr terveution on the parvof tho Directors, I at tho mortgoga ualo for §500,000, tho 1n- | {1 i G FYER G e SO € England | ' skein au aspitant, but with not muchi show [ i b there will Lsa s m‘&dj‘")‘l"&u’m‘b““: uest. Vory littlo logislativo business will be | the market. Even with the préssura’of thesa embar- | debteduess having been swelled by intorest, Colonles, If not States, #s to any Southern | 9! $9ccoss, su far as proseut Indications Ko, The | Tiiihais minarity membors: done until the Senatorial coutost has been Gilvon, thon, a contlnniug large balance of fought to a conclusion, and the soonor that | trado fu our favor with Eugiand, snd it fol- matter ia sottlud tho bottor for thy interests | lows that, ta retaln gold in fts vanlts, the rassuents upon thow, the Dircctors aro not able to escapa the impression that, judged by tho propor standards, thero are many Hon. F, K, Granges, ‘Semporary Speaker of the lust Houss ol Representatives, was = candidate for Epeuker varly n taxes, etc,, to @340,000, and it cxpended 860,000 in comploting it. ‘There was -$200,- 000 insurhuco on the struoture, scattered in “Ihe latest tactics of the Logan, Jones, Sliop- ard crowd {8 o try and ¥ gearg P lomubod{ by # tbreatesed boit, Uentlewen who are hers Btate” 10 the American will post up a 11LLlé on Bouthern hislory 1t wiil discover that the whipping-post was erected In the South as early thd - Kagon but 1t s unders seaking subordinate pon;uuul %‘Vu yuiur of the Btata at large. Nauk of England gt woko it tho dearest | doficiencies In the maungewent of the road, | sums of from 82,500 to $10,000 in varlous :‘“':3_:!::‘}::‘g,'fr":{m‘:w,‘g;'ffl:::‘;l":'u":n“‘l"::::{‘l";‘: thut hu bas dropped entively ou% of the race. :".’,’;""'l“','l',fl';"" of At Pl e G e —— thing in the market, Ihis ean only bo dono though thoy seck to gloss it over with coupanies. RIS LY i ‘The llon, £, W Sherinat, of Cook, whoss nume | because thuy say thut Logan cannot be omi- barbarivm has continued to be practiced fn the Houth ever sluco; whereas both tho whipping. post and the pillory have been aholishied i the North s0 long that the memory of no man run- ueth to the contrary, The yucstion fs not thut the vilo and disgraceful brutality weg practiced in both sections soveral centuries ago in the days of bigotry and crueity, but the pont fs, Why does the South continue to dlagraco tself by rgraluini the plilory and whipplug-post! ‘Tuw TrIBUNE says agaln that no whipplng-post State will furnish the wext Presideut. Does \lie Apierican doubt ft} The nueinpt of MaTt CaupesTER {0 square | by advaucing tho rate of intercst—making Limself with the Lousst-money clement in | the prico of tho ugo of money high, If the Wiscorsin by denying that he was in sym. | year 1879 shoutd show a balauco of forefgn pathy with the intlationists has oalled forth | trado fu our favor equul to tuat of 1873,— o strong letter from Mr. Gronae W, Auvey, | 300 willion dollary,—tho strain upon England of Milwaukee, which we print this worning. | would bo fmwense, The- effect upon Ger. ‘The writer hias been ot somo pains to hunt many would ba equally, and probably more, up the, ex-Benator's rocord on his point, and | disastrous, uinc, in o coutest for tho pos. € thers iy any way in which tho lattor can | session of gold, England has the advantago disprove the facts sat forth he should lose uo | of & vastly groater accumulation of Loarded .Jimoin doing 8o, As thecasanow stauds, hois | woalth, Yruuco is very strong industrially ronvicted of having invariably voted with | and finoncially, and heuce would be able to the soft-money crowd whilo 1n the Senate, | holda nearly sven raco with England. aud of haviog more recontly indulged in the Assuming, then, the contiuance of our Lope that he might become the candidate of present volume of foreign trado balance, it that element, sud of having denied that he | is by no means jmprobable that the Bank of id 50 vote and aspiro, England will be compelled, duriug the cur- = =] Tenl yosr, to advance the rato of inlercat to The Bt. Louls Republican wants to have a tho highest point kuown to its Listory, and monopoly of the right to censure and ro- perbaps to the point ¢f collapse, involving a prove the tendenoy in the Houth to push suspension of coln paymonts, ‘That this cousplenous Confederates into Congress, 1t | state of thiugs, with its poasible, ot 10 soy takos Tux Trinuxe shaply to task iu one prabable, iuvelvement of disastrous conse. isgus for reforring to this tondency, aud in tuences during the uext twelvo, wmonths, snotber issue denousces this very proclivity | cuuss sorious epprebension iu tha winds of in a Btato as far North as Missourl. ‘Cho | British statesmen end political economists Confederates of that Btate have placed in | i3 not to be doubted, | 3 the Senato F. M. Cocxmein for no other Mr.. Goscury, Chairman of the English werit or renson than bis bittey and uncowm. Aelegation! fo ke late International Mons- promising border-ruftian, Rebel rocord, for e tary Conference at Paris, gave voice ‘to this iv a man of not 1much ability, and knows feeling of slarm Whel be #aid: “ Wero tho nothivg of wtatesmanship Loyond what | movement for ‘the' rejection’ of silver, as Le bas picked up since ho was sont taoiey of full power, to procoed from State tho duclarution that the property of the Company is being bréught up to a fair degroo of average excellence, which s uot saying much. We find further from their report that the polioy pursued by the Company is not os Mb- wral 8s it sbould Le, uor snuch as the coun- try has o right to expect or the Govern. went to insist upon; that its treatent of tho buslness publio is marked by illiboralitys and that its monagement i characterized by crudoness sud waat of system, Had those Directors been in a position to espress their houest convictions, without the inavitable bins that grows out of their dependence upon thoe Company, they would bave gooe moro deoply into the details of this gigantic wo- nopoly and the causcs of tho yoneral defi. cloucies which they touch upon so tecderly, They would boldly bave anuounced what Lias long been appurent to the cotntry, that this road, ome-bulf the expenso of which came out of dowatlons from tho public, which divided an amount equal to its Gov. erument bouds among the corruptionists of the Orodit.Mobilier, which bas issued an amount of stock equal to its bonds, and paid out ite nes earnings in dividends to its share- bojders, whioch is & sponge taking in overy. thing and giving back nothing,—they would, we say, have boldly and without ovasion de- clared that this great road i administered fu "Tho firo is supposcd to have originated in the engine-roum or some contiguous apar-y mont in the basemont, nnd it took a sudden shoot up the elovator-shaft, which furnished it at onco with matorinl nud & draft, It way this fact which -rondored it impossiblo for tha Five-Dopartment to fight tho flawmes from the top or jnsido the build- fug, aud this also which so serlously en. dangered tho lives of soveral persous who were uaved by the skill snd intrepidity of the firemen. There was a largo ninount of frame- work iu the building, and it bad one of thaso patent fire-traps known as o Fronch roof ; nnverthclcuhmd tho glovator-way beeu con-. structed of Are-brick, or liued with bailer- iron, the Are might buve Leen swotbered fn its iufanoy, Tho loss and confusion which will result from this third burnivg of the Post-Office will increaso public indiguation at {ho neglect aud rascality which are resnonsible for the unfinished condition of the ow Goverument Bullding. It is soine saven years since work ou the now Governnent Building wes begun, and thero is not a xeasonable doubt that it would have beon comploted, and the Post- Oflice safely housed in & 8re-proof siructure, it the work had beon dons houestly, con- scientiously, aud economieally. ‘Thero seems to bo scarcely avy oveut nowadays i the uature of a calamity {n which official corrup- nated, and his cspectal Triends will % bolt In vosa he ly defeated. ‘This ls only » part of tho bite wnd cry—~it s the same us thio tactics of tau years auo, when the quiet bub firm watchword wufimml sluug ‘tha lue of Logun or uo Re- ublicau. y s But the old guard of the party,—the men who stood by Tus I'RILUNE In the deys when Logat would willingly bave beaded s luoh to ssssult its editor,—ihe who were Republiiavs when it cost something to be such,—~the men of honeaty, aud who not corrupt, eré comlog 10 tho front, and, while gallant old Dick Qglesby may be defesled, it 1s an established fact thut he Will not be succeeded by Jobg A. Ll;‘nn : BLLs, was mentloned frequently in this connection soan after clection, has retired from the cou- test, §f o fullure to follow up tho clamor his frivada ralsed for him can be considered & with. drawal from a_buttle which he did not volup- tarlly enter. Mr. C. H. Frew, a Natlonallst, of Ford County, will bu the candidate of hls clan, it fs understood. The . candidates for the mincr ofllces wre WO upmarous to mention by name, Mr. W, 4. Tay- for, of Marshall, and Mr, Bam Parker, of Cook, ere rival contestants for the ofhea of Chiet Clerk of tho lHouse, while Mr, James Ii. Paddock, the former Becretary of the Benate, will probably bo slected to bis old position. Amoug the caodidates for Postmaster of the House are three ladies and scveral gentlcmen. ‘The ludies' names are Misq Lillic Ray, of 8pring- fleld, Mrs. F. I, Chase, of Henry, and Miss Kate Wilsou, of Cass. Threo ladics’ names also ap- pear us candidates for the dutics of Postmaster of the Senate, viz.: Mrs. L. D. Whiting, of Bureau, Mise Lillle Harrls, of Springfield, and Miss Kate Huyes, also of Springfield, It scems, therefore, that the haukerings for the spolls of ofice are nut contined to the stronwer sex aloge. ‘There are alreudy n swarm of candidates for commlttee clerkships and other smal, but yery comlurtable, positions sbout the Legis- lative body. ‘Ihesc places are usually flled by au army of gumlul tramps, whose famlijar faces appear biensially with tho regularity of the sun, and thejr pertinacity fs only equaled by thelr aguniziug aud conspicious poverty, It seemns provable this evening that the Reputlicau caucus to sefect otlicers for the House aod Senate will mect on Tuesday eventng mext, though the matter 18 not definitely dotermined. ——— THEY WON'T HAVE IT. pecial Carrespondencs of The Triduns, Orrawa, Il Jan. 4—A fow deyssioces “8tar-Chiamber "' conclave was beld in the First Natlooal Bauk for the purposs of lutiyenc {ug the action of the LaSulle County Repre- scntatives jn the Legislature on the Senajorial questiou, Ppius were takente Iovite only kuows Logun wen. 1n'the resolytions sdooted st saul tecting, those prescot assumed that they yepre- scoted the eentiment of Republicans of this viduity, Great dissatisfaction is Jqlt at ‘such action, and tbe followlog proamble sud resoly- fous were adooted ab & meetivg beld Jast vens ing, to which Republicans of alt factious wore iovited, the doors belog open to all: Wisnzas, Belog frm and earnest supporters of the Hevublican parly, and candidly and” emphatic: ally dumlleflnf in dnd unanimously condemalng the practico boldi Tux Cutcaan TRinuxE Lav boan read ont af, the ]|_ll5' l:l iuols by tho pullllclllu.—.lhhmulgl Seutinsl, ¥ < Yes, by the * oliticlans composiug 1.00AN'S Literary Burcau, who run the dusd-beat Fiat or- uag. Fus TRIUSE has also been vead out of tho party fn Wisconsin by tho back-pay satary- grabler who ruus 1he Dally Murphey, Tum TRIBUNS I8 read out of political fellowabip by detaulyug ofticeholders, subsidy agents, whisky- tuleves, undervaluation ‘Yreasury robbers, pro- fessionn) corruptfontsts, lobby voltures, and tho whole tribe, of loud-mouthed loafers who prey on the body'politie. They takq a turnat, seading-out Tz ‘TRIBUNE #8 often as It fiter- feres with their little wames, and that is quie Irequond 5o, piu. g o PR T E:0 b oo TET ol DAVID. Ay lz'uhw 1.psklra from: e Predl- doocy'of - the. Amerkian Soclal Scde v nvited 10 bo res: €nt) Jur the puzposs uf gravely sud mflnudiulll instructing wembers of 1o Ugaeral Asscmbly Bearlet fever Is soresdiug so rapldly {o New York that an epidemic is feared. the interests of tho stock warket aud spucu- | tion doey not cut soma figure Saturday Tha Hou. Jawes Hetrrington, of Kaoe, au old | 800N oo 0rRatet sy one st pestin, sl l i % = 2 _ v e - e ————— oK lust liftec: Mem- ¢ 9 3 to Washington to ueeupy the eliair | to Statw, the result woud slot ¢ Less than dis- | lators, and not in the intercsts of the busi- oveniug'y fire furnislies & now reason forthe | Sweet cider st ths Woite House o New- fi.‘,mt‘,'fi,‘,,'"(m:':,,',‘I’EA:::H,l,,fl"':,gyffi'[:,;(" will | larly wheu end wicre the few bersous: conpuain filled 1 kY STON. " e v i At , such gatherirg are from the ¢Nty of Jitnwa atone, onges. i iy Toxt Bestos, Avd | wtreus” But iu gi g utterunes to this | ucss public, and that tho deficiencies which | vigorous prosccution of the mon who arg Le- | Yeam’s Day. No sticks tu It, 1robably reeelve the Democratle vote £0F | aua without evee te: 1oe's 613 wh « sves of o 250ilT

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