Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 1, 1879, Page 4

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tain in the genoral distribution of §8,000,- 000 of plunder enough money to aid the Slata in building even one lock and dam on tho Iilinoia River. “The Tribme, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. o == —= Cranmson N, Porrer, Ohairman of the Committaa appolnted to soarch out Ropabh- can frauds in conneotion with the Eleotoral contest of 1870, and roluctantly compolled to vetitilntd the Dothoeratid conspiracy to puir- chnso tho Prosidency, has prepared tho ro- port which it is oxpected tlie Dentocritio mnjority on the Committes will subseribo to, All thnt is known of Mr, Porren's draft is that it s too strong to suit the Repiblicans; nnd too wenk to meat the views of tho Dom- ocratio mombors of the Committee. Tieta will bo threo reports presented,—ono from the Demooratis majority, ohe from the Re. publican minority, and one from Gon, Dur. nen, o st will thiow bricks at 1aves, the second at Tirbex, ond the third may be cxpeoted- lo lot loose a whole brickyard at overybody. PREPAID. 1 2.“8 NY MAIL—IN ADVARD aily Edition, one sexr i 0 'l X Eunny Haiod: Tterary Mnd RENG i i Edition, sisive WEERLY EDITION, T'OSTPAID. M [nicn conlex Rent free. e Most-onies sddress 1n full fnoludiug Stats and Countys uvm’lnnn:u ey lsa mado elther by draft, expreis, Tost-Uniiea order, U in rexletered lettes, at uur rlak, TRIMS TO CITY EUBSCRINENS, Datly, deltvered, Bunday excepted, 23 cents per week. Lally, dellvered, Bunday ieluded, 50 eents per weeks Adiress THE TIRIDUNE COMPANY, Cornet Madison and Peathord-ats., Chicago. 1l Orders for the detivary of Titr Entnting at Kvanaton, Ltiglewond, and Hyde Park feft fn the couutlugeroom wiil recelve prompt attentlon, ARIBUNE BHANCIL OFFICES. Trix Qiitoany Tatnexh hsa estabilshied brhael offices tor the recelptof aubbatiptiuny sng adsertiscrients a4 tollowst ux::\:v TOHR—Mooin 20 Tridhne Buliding. F. Te Mo~ Fapnes, Matnger, ;‘I’Hll!. Franee—Ko. 16 liue d¢ ta Grango-Batellerds Gronar T, Bewanp, Minlstor to Ohing, wns yestordny arraigned before tho bar of the ouse for his rofusal to comply with a snb- pona of the Committeo ongaged in investi- 10 Aassxn, Auont. gotihg the olinrges against hitn, and for bLis LOSIION, Gig.—Amerlean Exchisnge, 49 8atd. | rofuagl o bring beforo the Committeo his AN PR ARG Gl —tatnco fiotel, private books and accounts. 1Ife stood wpon WASHINUTON D, C.~1310 F streel. his rights under the Qoustitution, and when M USEMENTS, questioned by Speaker Ranpart ns to his purpose to defy the authority of tho House, ho reitorated his rofusal to gratify his onomics by obeying the mondate, A MoVicker's Thentre: Madieon street, betwéen Dearborn nnd State, En- gagement of ftice's Suiprite 'arty, ** Itobtnson Cru- X atid yening. motion deolaritg him In - contempt e Murnuonl —'5—",-“-::’- of tho Ilouse was offered by MMr. Densbarn strect eomeatof stonros. Engagement | SPAINOER, of Iilinois, but tho House of the Now Tork Standard Theatro Company, ** Al ndopted instend o substitute referring the tuosta Lite,” Afteshaon snd ovening, matter to the Judiciary Commiltes with a viow to determining the legal benringsof the case, Baven Domoorats upited with the Ropublicans in passing the substitute, which was virtunlly o victory for Sewanp nud a defont for Hemivaen. itk U WHAT THE TELLER COMMITTEE FOUND, The roport of the Teruer Committee is particularly tiseful just atn timo when tho Democrats in Congress threaton to refuse approprintions for carrying on the Govern- ment unless the Ropublivana consent to the ropenl of tho Congressional Elcotions lnw, which furnishes tho last vestige of protaction left to tho colored voters at the Sonth, 'This is tho Committee, it will be remembered, which wns appointed under Benator Buan's resolution to inquiro into the nllegod abuscs and corruption in last fall's cleclion in cer- tnin of the Southern States. The time for tha mvastigation has been too brief to sdmit of {ravorsing tho whols ground, but ninety- ono witnesses havo been examined from Louisinna and 107 from South Onrolinn, and tho evidence lenves no room for doubting that the Domocrats in both States eatried tho’eleotion by a systom of intimidation and fraud. In Lonisiann violence wns maro gon- cral, and in Bouth Oarolina fraud was the main relinnes; the rule seoms to have beon in both States to prevent the blacks Irom voling, or coerce them into voting the Dem- ocratio ticket, by tho well-known methods of intimidation, and when theso mothods mis- Hlontey?s Thentre. fiandaleh rireet, teiween Clark and LaSalle. Eo- rézementof d, K, Emmet, **¥Frite.” Aftornoom and evening Mamlin's Thontre. Clark street, oppoaito thie Coutt-lonse, cont Pastor. Varlety entertalnment. Metropolitnn Theatre, Clark strect, opporite Shernan House, of Clarah.*: Aftoriioon and venings 0ur Inno- ! The Falls Academy uf Afusie, Italsted sireet. between Madlion nnd Monroe. Vae rlety catertainment, Afternaod and evenlog. Plyimontl: Chinect. Michizan avenue, between Twenty-fifth and Twenty: nlxtl streete, Leeture by Prof. 0*'Nelll on ** Helenco Art, Litotnture, and Travel," with {llustrations, Af- . ernoon aud evening, SATURDAY, MAROCH 1, 187D, A Now York dispatch confiring the report of {he snlo to Frern, Luren & Co. of tho Binger Duilding, comer of Washington and State streots, for $750,000. The price paid would seom to indicato thiat renl estato in Clicago his some life in it yot. One of tho strongest of temptations o ox- travagnanas thnt tho Common Jouncil has to contend against ocours ench ‘yoar in connec- tion with tho appropriation for sewers. 'Thoy liad o siege with it yosterday, and, ns usual when deallng with this item, economy took a bacl soat while visions of re-olection held the foreground. - — carried, then to swindle tho blacks Particulars nre given in our dispatches of | out of their voles by frands on f most sickoning horror at Cnrbon 11, O., | the bnllot-box, The Senate Committeo Ins taken avidence ghowing that somo thirty or forty murders woro committed in Loulsinon for politieal ronsons; that fraudu- lent tissue-ballots woro used iu overy county in South Caroling, with a single oxcoption; and that in noither of these States hns thore been auy offort on the part of tho nuthori- tios to punish tho violenco or fraud, but, on tho contrary, the Btato Courls have boen used to defont every attempt to sccure jus- tico in the United States Courts under tho Election law which tho Demoorats in Con- gress now insist upon repealing, According to the testimony taken by tha Terren Committee, frea speech is intordioted in the Btates of Loulsiana and Bouth Caro- linp, Jad the Committco beon able to ox- tond tliolr inquiry, they wonld undoubtedly hava found the same condition of things to o groator or less cxtont in Mississippi, Ala. bamna, Florids, and some other of tho South- orn States. ‘There are certaln subjects which the negroes aro not pennitted to discuss at all at their meetings, nud these aro the very matters in which they are chiefly interested. 'The relations of lnbor and capital, the ante. war and post-war condition of the blncks, the political rights of tho enfranchised race and tho conspiracy to break them down,— theso are the vital quostions for the negroes to discusg and think ont; but tho whites for- bid tholr mention at publio meotings on tho ground, forsooth, that thoy are incendinry and may lead to uprisings among tho biacks ngninst the whites! This ropson is ridiculous on its face, as none of the white men, in. cluding the oldeat juhabitants, ean recall o negro uprising, and all are forced {o bear teatimony to the good-natured and forgiving choracter of the blacks as a race, Indeed tho negroes bave shown themselves in- capable, oven in localities where they nre in a large majority, to protect thoir rights or defend thelr persons from attack., At thelr publio meotings, the Domocrats have only to put in an appearance and dictate oither uncoremonious adjournment or a himit to tho discussion fn order to sccuro sub- misgion from the blacks; and, whoro thero hag beon auything like resistanoce to tho bull- doziug, tho result has shown whipped or murdered negroes in greater or loss nume bers, but no ‘casunlties among tho white nsunilants, Thoe fearof negro insurrcetion s nlmost confessodly a protonse, and the ropression of froe spooch, as ono of the first steps In tho abrogation of personal and political rights, ia tifb renl object sought aud nccomplished, It is truo, the laws of Louisinun and South Carolinn do not warrant theso outrnges. But Is it not n more dangerous condition of things whon such outrages can bo practicod in deflauco of law, and when there is not so much o8 an atlempt to suppross or punish them? Tho Btato and loeal officinla aro privy to these outrages, and oven the Stato Courts ara prostituted to the protaction of tho bull. dozors aud ballot-box stuffors. Whenever an effort §s made ju the United Btates Courts, under the authority of the national law, to enable tho blacks to exerolso thelr political rights, or to puvish whito men who have conspired to doprivo thom of such rights, the #tate Courts opon their doors for the prose. cution of witucssos on the churgo of perjury, and thus rob the United Statos Courts of their power by intimidating or sotually pun- Ishing the wen who dard to testify in the lat. for. ‘Thero Ia in this procesy an assortion of Btate Sovercignty and tho right to nullify the authority of tho Gonoral Government which way scarcoly exceodod Ly the ncts of sccossion. The pomsecution of black voters and tho pollution of the ballot-box are gustalued by tho Biato authoritios in their rofussl to prosecute or punish the mon who are guilty of these outs rages, aud these snmo authoritios uso the contrul of tho Btate Governmouts and whura suven persons wero burned to denth, —n father and six children of nges ranging from 20 dowh to 7. 'Tho family lived above astoro in which the flra eanght whilo nll waore in bed ently in the morniug, and the father, hnving eavried dut his wife and baby, roturned fo roscuo tho others and perishied withi them; 'To complote the fenrful entas. . {rophe, tho mother {3 1ow a raving maniac. The appropriation for the completion of the Ohicugo Custom-Houge was yesterdny incronsod by the Benmato from $350,000 to £32:,000, and it now only. romnins for the [Housv to coucur ‘iu order {o provide the monoy necessary to put the building in a condition for oceupnucy this year. A ro- fusal by the House (o vote the incrcased sutn would ba the poorest wconowy, ns the rmount needed for rents another year wonld be threo or four times the intercst on tho - §175,000 proposed to be ndded. By a very emplatio voto the Housa yostor- dny put a voto on the shameless subsidy job workod through the Senate by tho Roacw 1obby. The Committeo on Approprintions reported advorsely lo- concurrente u tho DBrazilion eubsidy, and the report wa9 sus. talued Ly n vote on the amendmont of 89 yone to 107 nays. This nocessitates n Com- mitteo of Conference, and settles beyond quostion the fate of ono of the most objec- tionable monsures sought to ba lobbled through at this session of Congross, ‘Tho nnuunl roport of the President of tho Ohieago, Burlington & Quinoy Railrond for tho yenr endiug Dec, N1, 1878, shows the gross earnings to have bean 14,119,165, and the net carnings £6,237,740, out of which to poay rent of tracks aud depots, intorest on bouds, siukivg-fund, judgmonts for {ax on ceapital stock, dividends, renowal funds, ote,, - Jeaving a not purplus for tha year of 286, 286,40, Tho showing ns to tho volumo of Lusiness is oxtremely flattering, and tho gon- eral resulls produced ara creditable to tho manngemont. ——— Tho County Comimissioners are Lrought faco to face with the question of wages In a. form that compsls their serious considora- tion thercof, Tho time has nrrived for voting thomselves tho customary per diem aud mileage for the quarter just ended. Merotofora they have, with vuo exception, taken €4 n doy, but the opinion of the At. torney-Gienceral of the Stato thut they ara by law restricted to $2.60 a dny seoms to ro- quira o pause. Tho wiser plan would prob- ably bo to content themselves with the smaller suw, and wait for n decision of tha Courts ns to their right to vote thomselves lavgor pry. ‘We have liad occasion ropentedly to eall attontlon to (ho action of tho Houso of Rep- resontatives {u passing, without allowing ono word of debnte, the bill approprinting nbout $7,000,000 for so-called river and harbor fm- provements, '"Tho gront bulk of the appro- vriations. were notorious und scandalous frauds, The bill went to the Bonate, and tho Comimittoe of {hat body Lave reported wdditionul appropriations to tho amount of 1,100,000, includivg, of course, §50,000 for tho inevitablo Fox River-Wiscon. sn job, Nearly $100,000 is usppropris ated for tho Yellowstone River, Among tho wnow appropriations is oune which 5 thus reported: * Laquike, Arkansns, £200,000." Whild no ono knows exactly what thix, particular job meaus, it mukes vory little difforenco, ‘The Arkansas Beua- tors demanded it, und, be it what it may, it is L of cqual wucrit to nine-tenths of the other appropriations in tho LA, aud there s no oo for purtieular eriticism, Ilinofs, with uineteen Ropreseutatives aud two Benators, £oems 1o buve bcun/uuurly powerless t0 ob THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE Qovrta to defent tho United Blates authoris ties in tho excontion of the General Govern. mont's Iaw. Ono notablo and signifiennt fact olicitod by tho Tarten Committo is that these frauds and outtages aro not meroly dircoted agninst Topubliean maotings and Ropublican can- didates, bnt ngainst Oreonbackers, Indo- pondant Donoérats, og auy otheér movement in opposition to the' regulnt Domoctatid nominations, This cltatimstance shows that it 1s not simply n denfrs fo rid the Bouth of cnrpot-ling rule,—twhich, indeed, wns long sinca nccomplished,~nor to maintain the thoory of * Iome-Rulo,” which prompts tha murdors, whippings, raids, and stnfiing of ballot-boxes, but that tho oulrages aro practiced In tho interest of the Democratio pirty with tho purposo of stifllug overy oppositiont to {t, whothor white or black, native or otherwise, 'T'his rovelation explaing why the Doemocrats in Congress, whethor they bail from the North or the Bouth, ara o desperntoly dotermined to repenl tho Congressionn! Eloctions Iaw. Btich ropenl will leave the control of olections in tlie hands of Democratly Btats mnnngors at the South, and they will not brook opposition from any quarter; thaold-lino Whigs amotig the nativa whites, aud tho conservative men who resent the injustice with which the blacks nre treate ed, will not bo permitted to opposs tho Dom- ocratio tiokotd any more than tho blacks hnve been, No putiishmont of those who have been gnilty of frands and violencs in the pnst, but an encouragoment of the same pol- joy in tha future, in the interest of the Demo- eratic party, iz the purpose of the despornte nttompt in Congross to repenl tha Eleotion lawa, The roport of the Ternen Committeo tonches that not only should the prosunt National Eleotion lnws not bo repenled, bub that other laws should bo pnssed which will onablo the Gonoral Government to tako full control of the Congresaionnl 'eloc- tions. ‘The Conatitution dxpressly tuthor. jzes this, nnd nll other nations pro- serlbs nnd vegulate the machinery for electing mombers of Parlisment. The Tetuen Committee explicitly recommond such logislation ns will pnt the times,'places, and manner of holding Congresstonal olec- tions under the control of the Genornl Gov- ernmont, as the only menns whoroby tho political rights of tho blacks inny be pro- tocted, the proportionats reprosentation in Oohgreds nceording to population nssured, ,and the harmony of races aud consequent buslness prosperity of the South maintained. As only a fow dnys remain till Congress will pnsa under the complete control of the Dem- ocrats, thore is no prospoct of securing auch Jegistation for the present ; but tho nctual political condition of the South, as rovesled in the investigation nnd repott of the Ter- wen Committee, will warrant Republioan tesistance to tha Demootatis schome for re- pealing the present Eloctionlaw, no matterat what sactiflce, and freo and puro olections is an ssio upon which the Republican party can appoal to tho country with evory confl- douco of success, 3§ THE OHINESE QUESTION AND THE MIs- BIONARIES, Tho eurront number of the Interior has an artiela upon **Tho Clineso in California " which, while it avoids any discussion of the sooinl, political, or industrinl phnses of the Coulia guention, tales tho ground samowhat timidly that the vestriction of Coolio emigra- tion, n8 proposed by Congross, is inexpedient, first, becauso it i o violatlon of trenty atipu- latlons,—tn nccusation which hey ovor and over again been shown to bo groundiess,~ and scoond, beenuso it will bo likely to re- tard missionary work in Ohinnl Tho first poittt is not worth considoring, bocnuso thero i3 nothing in it. The Ohinese have wantonly ond deliberately violated tho treaty from the very day'of its ratifiention to the present, which would justify the Government in im- medintely sbrogating it, even it it lind not been decidod by tho highest authority that it has the right to ond any treaty at onoo that is pernicious Lo tho State, The second question, howevar, is an open one, Tho Interior assumes, what we do not caro to dony, that the progress of the Amerl- can misslonary work in China of the varions sects has beon unprocedentedly successful, and that the ropresentativos of the difforont sects have of lnto yoars obtained o consider- ablo hold upon the Ohinese, which, if true, only goes to show that the Mongolinn nature in Ohina is difforontly constituted from the Qoolie naturo in America, which is ns far from what tho Jnterior would esll ** grace’ ns thosun la from Baturn. It iu n littlo ro- markable, if the scotarian missionnries are all succeeding so fivcly, that none of tho converts ever got ovor to this country, and that thero s scardoly one among tho tons of thousands now here who does not heartily despise the Ohristian roligion, a4 well ns ovorything olse portaining to Ocoidental oiv- ilization, Tho Jaterior fonra that all this vantage-ground in China {a going to bo loat, ond that this great missionary work will Lo rotarded, if not actualiy dostroyed, by tho notion of Congress. ** Lakon in conncction with tho harsh {roat- ment which moltitades of Chincse omi- grauts hove already rocoived in Califorain," snys the Interfor, “‘it moy lend to tho ox- pulsion of our Amorican 1nisslonarles from Ching.” *“From what thoy' have seen of somo phoacs of tho American chiaractor in Califoranis, the Ohincse who have roturned to their native Jand bave probably not cmrried lowe a very oxalted apprecintion of Chrls. tianity.” . . 'Chair oxclusion or ro- turn may bo no great onlamitygto thew, But it would bo & calamity of invxprossible sadoess to excludo Awmorlepn Ohristinns from Ohius, and to broak up tho grand missfonary work which for yoars lins beon muking steady progress in all parts of the Empire” The JInterlor makos thls point very innocontly, nud undonbtedly very consoloutiously, with. out peraciving that it contains n non-sequitur that will undoubtedly reliove its fonrs whon it is stated, and induce it to ndvocate the Anti.Coolle bill for the sake of inorensing tho good that may accrue to tho missionary. As it happens thot the Chineso in this coun. try are Pagans (or Confucians) aud Lave no ijutontion of bocoming Ohristiana; thnt they aro contract Coolles and have no purpose of stayiug hero pormanontly and Lecoming citizons, aud could not if thoy would, as thoy are mot thelr own wmasters, ond thoro has grown up eu ire. pressible prejudico agalust them for reasous often stated and which hos more than ouce taken tho form of harsh troatment, hence all dangor o misslonary work in China in tho past has grown out of the bad roports taken back by the Coolies to China. 'The moro Coolios that como over hore, the worse sod more froquent theso voporta will Le, The fower Coolios that come hero, the fower and aatlder will bo tho the quarrels botween them and tho Amerlcans,/and the more favorablo will bo the reports that go concorning the ¢ffect of Clristianity upon the Americau peoplo in softenivg their autipathies aud con. a :+ SATURDAY, MARCH 1; 1879—SIXTEEN tompt for tho * Celostiale,” If thia Dill s defented, and the Six Compnnios contituoe sonding their Qoolic sorfa over hiero by herds and droves, §t is a8 inovitable as fato that the harsh trentment will increase, nnd that it will fequiro a largor army thau the President hins at his disposnl to protect theso Mougo- lions ngaluat tho attacks of the indignant and furious whito Oltistions ns' they find thelr placss for work usurped nnd bole labor ruined by tho sorfs of tho Chinese citios, If this bill is dofented, it will ex. asperate the Californions, nud the JTaterior may apprehend that worse roporis will roach Ohinn coneorning Amerlonn Christians than hove evor gona thero befors. On the other hand, i the Lill becomos a law, 1t will accomplish just what the Juterior wants, It will not affect those who are here now, ox- copt to improve their comdition by pro- moting a botter sentiment towsrds thom, whilo the restrioted number who como—n restriction which will corer all who wish to como hora voluntarily, and nono others aro, allowod to coma by tha trenty—will find that thoro fs less projudica agninst them. Tho improved reports that wilt be sent home by the Qooliss under suoh clrenmstancos will bo of n character’ to canso ‘the Celestial Gov- oromont to rogasd tho various American sectarlan missionaries with more kindly conaidoration, As'n mensure, therefore, in the interoal of tho Ohristian sects and tho growth of Amerioan roligion in China, ono may well be surprisod to find tho Tnieriop advocating n contrary policy, which mny sooner or later drive every missionary out of Ching, as a mattor of ratalintion, e e The Fronch Government finds itself in- volved in n sorious financial diffioulty. Tho Gavernment findy {taclf with such credit and rosourggs that it may roadily fund a large portion of the national debt, but the holders of the & per vant bonds refuse to give thom up, ond the Government has ‘nob reserved nny right except to pay thom, 'The cost of tha war'with Gormany and of {lio foreign oceupation from 1870 to 1873, including the finca and indemnitics pnid to Gormony, was ,287,883,000 francs, which, counting five Irancs o8 equal to a dollar, was £1,857,576,- 400. 'Tlus was largely met by lonns. Ite- duced to Federal monoy, the bonded debt of Franco distinguished as that existing before the war and that at the present time may be thus stated : th Principat, Intereat. Jan. 1, 1870, bofore thio war, 009,203, 844 $71,01%,603 War debt, wvep 1,747,198 08, 700, 625 To this there hinve been somo additions, making the present national debt 23,750, 807,129, benring'n 'total nontal interest of $149,080,094, Thio.pnto-war debt boarsmain- ly 8 por cont inlorgst, with somo portions at ¢ nnd others ab 4} per cont; n portion of the wnr debtcin at I} per cent, nnothor nt 6, and tho rost ht's por cont, While the principnl of tho war debt in far bolow that of the provious debt, tho interest nmounts to nenrly as much, " All thedo loans wora uo- gotinted below par, - The annual cHirge for interest 1s now about $160,000,d00, and it is a grievaus ane, ‘I'ho holdors of the G per cont bonds number about 1,710,000 ‘porsons, and thoy protest ngaingt having these bonds converted iuto 8 por conts, and that is tho only wny in which the Iuterost charge can Lo lowered. Thoe Minister of . Finunco concedes tho diffientty, and has’decided agninst tho con. version, and on thig.question thero is o wido differonco among tho represontativos of the Rapublican party Jif Franco. - This dilonuna of the Fronch Government illustrates the wisdom of the flurncial policy of Mr, Cmase duslag our War. . Ho made’ many loans, but hp never surrendered thoe powet of tho United States to control tho debt. Whon he'borrowed monuy at 7 por cont or 7,80 por ciht, ho raserved tho right to convert such loaus in one, two, or threo year futo G per contk. When ho borrowed at 6 per cont ho resoryed tho right of the Gov- ernment to tako up such bonds at any timo nftor five years, Tivon whon he borrowed at 5 pot cont, tho ¥ight to convert the bonds ot the ond of ten yenrs was rotained, This resorvation of this ‘powor of enlling in the londs at conveniont dated hns cnubled tha Governmeat to take up over one thousand nifllions of 6 por cent bonds, and fund them in b, 4§, and 4 por cont bondy, and which in timo will ouable tho-Government to take up all th 6 per cont Bénds and replace them with'¢ por cents, or possibly 8 per cont Londs, 'Tho want of eomo systom of this kind by the Frouch Govornmont hos result- edein the present complication, leaving the Governmont no altornative but to submit to tho onormous charge for intercst, or go upon the markot aud purchase its bonds at the Jligh premiums which the holders may do- mand, THE LOBBY AT WABHINGTON. \ Thera was a fistioulf tlght o fow nights ago in that part of the Senate Chambor lo- eated fmmediatoly m the rear of tho Vice- Prosident’s chair, It was a regular knock- down, soveral times ropealed, It was in that part of the Bonate from which the pub- liv ia rigidly excluded, aud to protoct whose privacy the Bouate employs nbout ten doot- kegpors, not inoludipg the Capitol police. The fight was not botweon Benntors, ne might be assumed from the place whero it aceurred ; it was botweon mon who were then lobbying their respectivo and opposing schomes of plunder, Ono claimant ex. pressed his personal contompt for the other, whercupon ho was kuocked down and pum- meled, the Benate being in soession and tho nolue of tho rufiianism being henrd nbovo the din of dobate. Tho natural guostion which suggests itsolf to every man not amombor o? Congress s, By what right were theso lobbyists in that part of tho Beunto whilo the body wns in sesslon 2 Wora these men eotitled legally to the privilege of the floor ? Had thoy distinguished themselves in the serviee of tho country andof the world ? 1Iad thoy ever received the ** thauks of Congress” for their ominent abilities ? WWero thoy men of eclonce, philosophers, statesmen, or horoes ¥+ Nothing of tho kind, "I'io combatants were two low, vulger, pro- {ossional lobbyists, ‘Tho question agnin re.* curs, By what right this clase of persons swarm in tho halls, and ente-chambers, and coiiferenco rooms, and on tho floor of the Senato when the Benate {s in scasion? Aro they tho peoplo iu whose behalf and intercst Congress is leglulating ? Aro thoy thero as aids and advisers’of the two Houses ? Jomy Rosou or any other pnauper who fs around the halls of Congress begging gratui. ties from the T'ublic L'reasury is no batter than MoGannauan, ono of the blnckguards engnged in the fight wo lave ro- forrod to. 'Ihere wro perkaps somo Lundreds of other profossionnl beggurs, —those who Lave no lame, blind, deformed, imbecile ohildrou of their own in whioso uama to crave charity, but who aro there begging money for other people’s de- formities. 'Fhe steamship subaidy has a lundred hired solicitors; Roacu's poverty is recited by scores of male and femalo voicos, —by professional boggars iu vags and boeg- gora in senl-skin and satin, 'Tho Wondor 8 not that lhero waa 'n fight, but that such fights aro not a mattor of ns common ovenr. ronco ns thoso between othier beggars, Theso professionals ought o bo all arrested ns teampa, and committed to the work.house ar put at work on tho stroets ot Washington. ‘Phiere people nro engagoed fn a profession wlich tho Inw refuses to rccogoize as honost, Thoy catnot enforco a contrnct for langlng round the Hovalo and Houso begging mubsidies nand monoy out of tho 'ronsury, beeausa the Courin hovo declared - such sorvicos to bo disbonest and demoralizing, foundad ‘on cor- ruption of, legisintion and plundor of the l'ronanry, Why, then, ato they tolorated in and around tho two Ifouscs, swarming over the floors, dogging conferenco commiliacs and bulldozing all opposition to thelr schemes? If tho Behnte shall {nvestigate tho recont disorderly proceeding, lot us hopo that out of it will come alaw tunking it o ponal orimo for any.nan to solicit money legisintion within the Capitol Lnilding, nud mnking it contempt of Jongress for nuy man not a membot to ndvoeate or opposo nny log- islation of any kind in or around oither the Sennte Chamber or the TRepresontatives' Holl, The New York Times pronounces the speech recontly delivered in the House of Kepresentas tives by Mr, ITazirTON, of Wisconsin, In de- fenso of the Natlonal banks and opposed to o return to the wildeat system of bauking, ns ono of the best nhd most logieal that has been de- llvered by any one upon that Important subject. Mr, HAztmroN's nddress, printed in yesterday's ThtiuNe, shows great varo and research n s proparation, and was delivered with an earncst- pess that challenged und recelved the closest attention of both sides of the Houses The oc- cnstoni for its delivery wds sclzed upon wiien ‘Tost Ewina, of Ohlo, was trying to get his old worn-out bill of two years ago up to repeal the Resumption act. HAZLETON'S rpeech drove a Dig unll In its coftin, nnd on motion of Gar- FIELD it wns Inld upon the tablo by a tremen- dous majority, Mr, ITAZLETON does not owo the Greenback lunatics anything, and has foueht flatlsm In his own district as persistently aud as successfully ns he has fought it in the hatls of Congress, 1Te was not deterred frota vitching intu this old deluslon of Ewinag, Kernev & Co. by the fact that his seat in the noxt Congress will bo contested by Kixa, bis Greenback op- ponent, « i Mr. BMALLEY says that tho Princetory Review 18 disturbing the Enclish market by the ex- tenordinary sums it pays for iiterary work, and ha hopes that,{ts judiclous liberality 1s spprecl- ated by the American publie, Probably It fs not. Fhe P'rinceton contalns more high-tlass magter than any other perlddical printed in Awmericay but it 15 not pushed In o busincss way, nor sulliclently advertised, The Uberality of tho Revtewn dealing with llterary men in Englaid fa attributed to tho connection of young Mr, Linney, n son of Alr, STEWART'S partuor, with 1t; but why young Mr. Linphy should be anxlous to pay two or threo times tho minrkat prico for work fa not cxplained. Inex- perience may have somothing to do with it. e e—— Misfortunes nover como singly, .8 DoNN Prarr 8 Just now in a position to ubserve, It ivos bad enouigh that, CuiaxpLer should go back to Washington ns u Senator, but the ignominy of being pounded by McUARIAIAN [8 almost too much to be horye, The affulr rulses ono very vortinent question, namoly, Whav were MoGaks RAUAN, DONN Prarr, and Onanney Erpneoag, all ruhit lobbyisty, doing In the sacred prasage ebiud the Viee-Prosidonts chalrl They must have been thevo with the knowledgo und con- sent of the Benate, or sume members of it. Un- der the efrcumstances, It js absurd to speak of the dlenity of tlié Senate belnlz outraged by the oeeurrence. ‘The diganity of the Benats wus nat 8o much burt by the tightlng of Doxy Prarrand MeGArRAUSN a5 by thelr peacelul pursuic of thelr private business fn that place. - i An sstoundinjg blll has been introduced la the Pennsylvania Leglslature, authorlzing any com- putiy to usshny street in Vhiladelphia for nn clevated raiiroad; withous the consent of prop- erty-owners or the Commou Counetl, aud with- out paylng for the privilege, ‘The experlence of New York ought to put o stop to foollsh moas- ures like this, ‘I'wo fauts havo beew established therm—that . the eclevated railronds are very profitable to the corpurators, sud that they damago real property along the streets which they occupy. It would bo simple justice to dlstrlbuto part of tho extra profits utiotye the property-owaers fnjurcd. Thers s no reason why the stock of uno rond should scll at 800 and that of the other still hizher, while romta have tumbled fo consequence of the roads wher- ever they run. —————— The London sclentific pupers, and the Times, of that ¢ity, nro moking o fuss over the reported discovery of arcal writing telegraph, Nature fmproves the oveaslon to cast au slur upon EpiroN's electric tlght as ** o mero panlo post Juturum invontlon,” Probably Englishtien will bo surprised to hear thut the writing telegraph Is one of EpssoN’s fnventtons which has uever been put to any practies) use. - Jis Iahoratory at Menlo Park coutalns such o machine, which works perfectly. 1t was offered to the tele- graph companles, buy rejected by them on the seore that [t would not facilitate busiuess [n any appreciable degree. We bolieve it §s patented. ‘Thie Engelishman who fs golng to get uliead of Episox will have to et up carly in the morning. g S Frequent inquiries ave mado regarding the au- thorof the Il Introduced fu {lie State Leglslaturo to restors the old nutsance of Polies wid Fire Boards, One correspondent provoauda hls ro- quest for Informatton thus {ucisively: * Who i h=11 18 this dw—d fool Munnay, suyhowi We nre able to lnforn 8 disgusted community that Mungay 1a o product of the Eighth Ward, und that in respect of bralas, good sense, or respectability, hofsa pua out of the same pod with LawLeR, the intlated blathorakite whose voice fu the Common Councll {8 ever raised in behalf of more tux-eatora and more taxes to feed them witl. L ——e—— Honario BErymoun said, in convorsation with a newspaper correspondent o few days azo: “The man who voluntarily takes on hlmsel! now und exacting duties at tho ago of 70 must bu sadly deficlent in sound judement, or he must be bleased with mental and physieal strength far greator than mines* Mr, Tipey 1a only 05, but ho is not uearly so well preserved, physleally or mentally, us Honatio Ssysoun, s political ambition, under the circumstances, 13 evldence that ho ks *sadly deficlont fn sound Judgmout,” e —— The Waeren ({1l) Sentine! ndvises Senolor LowAN to tuke the nomination for the Prusiden- ¢y in 1880, und stump the Southern Btates {n his own benalf, If Senator LoaaN {3 nomivated, wo hope ho will carry out tnls programme; It would glve the people something to telk about. et e It was s reflnomont of cruelty to put a man of Axorrt's temperament in dirty old striped wrousers, Nothing less than this could bhave brokeu down hls courage. llo had o soul for trousers, and atripes have gone out, i o b b Byuoy studied tho greenback question thor oughly, und his conclusion laz Since Biabon BEuksLEY says there s no wmatter, undd proves {8, * "Ta 1o matter what De LA Matyn says. e — According to the alinanae, yesterday elosed out winter, aud to-day spring begins; but ono must go' farther south to obtain suy striking corroboration of the almauac assertion, o S e Tuau TRIBUNE was tho flrst newepaper jn the couutry to uttack the Mutual Life-Tusurancs Cowpauy's rebateof 80 per cent on now policies; ‘ matols ™ detracted somewhnt frotn tho it of dre and the flnal conceesion of 18 ner cent to ald and now policy-holders nliko’ fa due solely to the mavoment that was startod in theso cols umns. The New York Zimes helped very e em— Beveral years nzo ANGELL took an exctiralon~ party to dollet, showed them about the prison, nnd gnve them luncheon #lthin the prison-walls, Yesterdny hio woht Instde ngatn, bub for a diffor- ol resson, ' — Belors ihe youne Princs Imporind goes out for another * Baptlsm of Fire ¥ ho will "do well to find out whother the Zulns aro Immeraiontsta. ———— PERSONALS, The Cbinese bill must be paid or the Chinese witl not give up the ahirts, Mr. Poltor's roport will show that thero waa n great smoko, but no fire of any conaequence, Mr. Weaton's walking is done by traln, and 1t posscases tho advantage of keeping the track clear. John .B, Qough says ho ling done leo- turing, ~done & good deal of it, wo suppose he moans. The London Z'ruth gravely siates that smoking In moderation, oven by boys, navor hurt any one, CUommissioner Le Due is quite astonished to find that Congresslonal pairs arc not in bis hor- ticultural catalogue, At home the Chiness onll tho English ianguaga **‘the yulgar tongue,* and they give It **1" whon they get hete. Thore's somo little consolation in goitig to prison after all, Mr. Angell.. Your frionds will always kuow whera to find yoa, Mr, Angell made a mistake by not puiting hilmael? 1n the hinds of the New York police force and abarlng his plundor with it. Dr, Fulton has atarted his now church and catled himeelt as lts pastor, but he has not yet muceeeded in calling u congregation, ‘While tho country is wailing with desp anxiety to sco what will become of the Chineso bllly tho President takes it vory Coolie, ‘We notlco that n nowly-invented fan costs 820, which }a too much (o pay for n fan thls weath- er, unleas it whl blow hot na well ns cold. An Olio girl belioves that sho daily ‘goes 1o Heaven, and thero appears to bd no place whero the Ohlo person will not hunt for ou ofiice. T'he Manitoba wave arawls off somewhere nnd cries with the eold when it gets down East in the neighborhood of Chorlos Francis Adams, A fashion journal says ¢ ahort jackets will be fashionablo {n the spring." We lind hoped that sjraight-Juckets would be moro gencrully worn, . IE the Chinese bill is, for swashing it is probable that the Presldent can't read it, snd ls do- termined not £0 sign It uniil ho knowa what 1t is about, p ‘I'he James Lrothors are sald to bo in Lend. ville, and Lendville, wa should think, ought to be the proper placo for gentlomon who-usa 80 mush of the urticle, Auna Dickingon says sho will nevor be eatlaficd until she has made a tremendous hit, Anua ought, thien, to joln un opera company and get up hor muscle, It is rumorod that Carl Schurz is going to bo mirried, Mr Schurz bellovoes, doubtless, that his fight with Bherldan Lns fitted bt for tho oxi- goncics of marrled 1o, % A Now York barber gives a shave and n cap of chocolle for ten conts. Wo supvosc ha gets even by talking people to death and selltug their bodles to medical collogos. Fighling has become so general af all our Institutions of learning that enterprising newspa- wers will b forced to keep war correspondents at -every point whero therd i8 o college. o Atlanta Constitution coolly fhforms Ben Butlor that the South doean’t want any pen- slohs. 'The Bouth, apparently, 18 determined not to et Ben Butler tako ner to ha throbbing heart.’ Thore woa no wine at tho Prosident’s re. ception tho othor: night, and the male purtion br tho gosts found that the carrying of ** pocket- P T BT Mr..Counkling, wo learn, pores his nails in tho Benato Chamber, We blush, we deeply blush, for Mr. Conkling's msuners, Buc perbiops ho pares them morely 0 keep himselt from seratche ing somcbody, . % A writer fn the Woman's Journal com. plains of mecting in Boaton young ladies reducea to tho appesrasico of ldlocy by a pecullar mothod of comblng the hale down over tho forchead, famil. farly knotett an ** banglug. " A “ Contonainl safe” containing n lot of photographs of **distingtulalied men" was locked up at Washington the other duyt nnd §t fa not to bo apened till 1076, and then by the Presideat of the United Btatee, The photographs will bo chleily valunble then n¢ Incontestablo proofs that the men of ono hundred years from now were descended fromapes, et FIRES. AT MILWAUKIEY, Speclat Disduteh to The Trivune. MiLwAvxes, Wis, Feb, 28.—This cvening firo brokoe out {n the ship-chandlery of Willlam Day & Co., on Ferry stroot, nud, boforo it could be checked, damaged the stock on the niain fluor to thé amount of 85 per cent ot the full value, Nono of the veasel outflts stored in the loft mnl bosoments suffered fujury. The firm carried §3,000 worth of stock and eatimato tho loss at §3,000; tnsurdance 87,000, distributed among nine companles, J.°T. Glinschield, o mauuface turer of cigurs, sulfered damuge on stock to the extent of $1,000; fnsurunce, 81,000, Other oc- cupants of the bullding nlso suffered pecuntary loss, mainly from smoku, ‘The damuage to the buildiug, which 15 known ns the Murine Block, will not exceed $100, CHICAGO, ' Astlll alarm ot noon yesterday to Engine Company No, 8 was causca by the burning ot of a chimuey at No, 041 State strect. No dam- age, A still alarm to Engine Company 17, at 4:60 yesterday afternoon, was eaused by the burning of s woulden mpout at J. F. Matlen’s colfee. mil, No, 97 West Lake strect, Damiuge, truling, iF AT PAROLT, IND. Naw Arvasy, Ind, Feb. 23.—An estensivo conflagration at Paroll, the county scat of Or- unge County, Ind,, at 8 o'clock this mornlng, destrayed 840,000 worth of property, including the Afvert Hotel, a boot wnd shooe storo, a gro- cery store, and ulne dwelling-houses, the best of the place, Smoll fusurance, Work of an in- cenagury, ' AP VESTABURG, MICII, Spectal Dispated (0 Tha Tribusis, Easr BaaiNaw, Mich., Feb, 23.—Thoe saw and shinglo mill of George Farmer & Sons, at Vest- nburg, o small station on the Chicaro, Saglnaw & Canada Ratlvoud, wos destroved I.:I flra thls morniug, Luss, $3,000; tusurance, $3,000, FINANGIAL. New ORLmAxs, La, Fob, 28.—A run come menced on Monday ou the New Orleans Savings Institutlon, simce which thne half a millfon has been pald out, To-day the mauagers decided to pay 15 per cent cash to depositors, the balance after the ninoty daye® notlce allowed by cliacter, ‘I'he ofilcrs roport the bank solvent, The Junu- ary statoment showed thut the depusits megro- guted $3,,030,000, 1t {s slated thut the rush was cuttsed by ruintors sot ufloar. that the {ustitution was heavily luaded with Stute bolids which re- ceutly dopreciated 23 per cent, ———— ¥ BOYTON'S SWIM. CINCINNATY, O, keb, 28.—A Stenbenville (0.) diapateh suya thut Capt. Boyton left that place at 9:80 this moruing, and hay been inaking four miles oo hour 80 far to-day, nowwithsisuding tha river 1a full of floating fee. The weather [y very cold, Il oxpeets to resen Ciscitoat] Mareh 7. 1o mode the distance between Wells- villo and Kteubenvitle, twenty miles, In just tive hours, Buveral thousand of peoplo gath- ered on the shore at Bteubenville to witness the lunding. * WORK RESUMED. Ponraxourit, N, i1, Feb, 28.—Cliaae’s woolen miils st York, which have been 1dle six months, 8ro to resume hnmedlatolye ‘un tea wihl be inade aa vnlumu."" Aiscussion CANAD The Montreal *copy» Votes Agalnst a ? *on Grain, —_— T'allure of the Eplscopat ¢ tion 1o Agree on g kg Bishop. TR N Proccedligs of Parlinmonte--fin; < all.} Proteotion, and Other Ills, e * ——— TRoport of tho Mintster of Agyy Rogarding llleurn.l’ucunfimlt"m Exchange Tatift 5 ! Enrclal Ditpateh to The Tritune, Moxtnrar, Fob, 39.~A spcelal meetin the nembers of the Montreal Cory qulg * was hold in the Association bultding L;al“,“ the purpose of ulving cxpression to (g v{ i of Its members upon the question of pl]lc]“c" duty upuu Ameriean graln Imported Iuto lfh. Dominlo, .On the President taking the o ‘B Edgar Judge moved, scconded by Mr, \Ic\':: 5 thatyi*fu the opinlon of this Assaciation, 4 g on flour would teud to the lmxurovcmem’ ol ‘:1:’ flour trade of this elty and the Dominjon < erally.” Georzo Denholm moved iy umfi:. mont, seconded by J, Lord, that o duty of m ecuta a barrol on flour, 7i¢ cents per bushel o wheat, and 5 cents on corn swould Rreatly hm:. 1t the trade of thle country, Mr. Beddull the moved, In nmendiment to the amendment, n: onded by Mr. Crulkstnnlk, that ¢ gnis mel‘:',(n hears with constderable nlarm o report (bn\.hfi the intentlon of the Governnent to put o pro- toctive duty on breadstufls, and sincercly hopey that, in adjusting the new tarlfl, they will e slder the great hardships that wonld thus pe Ine flicted woou tuls Dominlon, and carnestly hopes that all graln and flour from thy United Btates will be admiited + free, g lieretofore” On’ the Presiaent putting Jntter to the meeting, it was carrled by a very larro majority. Snectal Dispatch to The Tribune, Wisnereo, Man., Feb. 28.—It {s reported thay the Dominlon Government are going to preveat Amerlean' boats ruuning in the Canadian waters ot the Red River this summer, Hotetal Dispateh t6 The Trivune. ‘TononTo, Feb, 28.—The clection of a Bishop to fill the vaeancy caused by the death of thy late Bishop Bethuno hasso far proved abortive, On the seventh ballob Archdeacon Whittaker obtatned 74 clerleal and 40 lay votes; Dr, Sullivan, of Chieago, 25 clesteal and 53 tay, The Synod then ndjourned Ul to-morrow morning, when tho balloting will bo resumed, From present indlentions It fs probable that the Syuod will not neree upon a candidate, in which case if {8 ltkely the Bynod wiit bo adjourned till after” Laster, 60 that the different parishes may clect new iy delegates, and n chancs be afforded to break tho present dead-Jock, Spectal Dinpateh to The Tridune, OTTAWA, Feb, 98.—In the Senate, the lon, Mr.1Iaythorne tnquired whether the atteutton of the Government had been dirceted to the aub. jeet of ' the prevaletico of small-pox In Csnad, with o view to nrrest the spread of that disease by n general system of vaccination or otherwise, The Governnient should glvo the peoplo evety imraunity from ‘the spread of tits disease that 8 possible. Io read an extract from an fmpor- tant report of a Committee of the Britieh Iouse of Commions, mado somo ten years ngo, anl other documents bearing on the subjeet, to I1- luatraté the pportanco of a general system of vacelnation. "o thought all Goverumeuts should legislate for the health of the prople, Ilo instonted the United States, Frinee, st Russly, and other countrics whose lezislativn bad largely reduced mortallty, The ton Mr. Alking, Sceretary of Htate, salid the Government hud 1o power beyoud naking Quaranttne laws und regulations. The matier of public keaith came within the powera of the Loeal Goverue [T S R % 5 Tho Ion. Mr. Recsor has given notlcs that bs will move *'That, in any readjustment of the tartil, duo regard should bo had t the fnterests of our farniing populntion, umd the development of our vust agricuitural rexources,—an inteest in which the future greatuess of the Dominlon 1a futhmately {ovolved, aud in which fully 80 per cent of our entire population is dircetly futer- ested,” 'F'li statement made by the Premierand the Qovernment press, that tho negottations nads by 8ir A, 'l Galt, In France, for o recprolty treaty, were progreasfuy favorably, is beteved on credible tnformation to be unworthy of much conslderation. 'I'ie truth s, the negotiaveas with Frauco have been far from successful Caundn canuot negotiate an fndependent tm({ with Fraoce, but must form a party 10 4 genent treaty entered into botween Ureat Britam and certatn of her colontes, on the one part and Yrance, on. the other, Such a treaty 15 far from probable ot the present —morcut It s well kuown _ that. the existe ing treaty botween Franea and Engiud isnot very popular with the Doarde of Lum: mereo in Franve,—for ahnost evers Board, being interasted Iu speclo) industrics whicn are ad- vesely nffected, has ropoited agalost the treatt In obudienco to this pressure, tho Freu Government hos iven notlee to Great urunu; that, in twelve months' time from the I!I?! lnst’ Jununry, the treaty will Do absoxate ] “I'lierefore, It 1s ovident thut the much-talsed o treaty betiveen Frauco and Camade caunot bo nem)tlul‘nd lr‘xfmc\lmulv, !xng;lnflunn: [ ¢ rute treaty, “utl\h:!‘:;)\\r:t?uuuflgnfiu.{,l‘:zutrunl and other places, headed by Dr. Forten, M. P, liad an audicocs with the Xnn(alur of Finauce, for thie purpute demanding o reduction of the duties o l;.u_ . und molosses, A few days ago, o deputathy desiriug an fuerease of thesa very duties % lte I on the Finance Ministor, A reduction will ro: teet ono clugs, nud an {nersase pratect mml‘ ety In the Purllamentary Library, 8 nmmm‘b l0 specimens of marbje from Lo mines at Mo b“ Mountain, Cnpe Broton, are cxhibited DY Mr, McDunald, M. . wid accompioyis the gomu 18 o circulnr jssucd by the murhlu-nr;r ducers of Nova 8cotin, domundling & yum\lnmli duty of §6,25 per ton on Ameriean murulu-d - 13 not. tony sineo the marblo-cutters ‘m"":uun the Minlster of F:imncc.'u‘l;.nxllrxir‘c[\mwd ugs mnmun‘fi'}x}?{fl“l‘:fl%fi)\um Te Tribune o MoxTaEAL, Fob, 23.—The five ¢ 1pscs SO from the charnel-iouso of 8t. Fustacno ¥artes Que., last week, haye been fouint hldden "lll'hm Wuuds, sevon miles from 8t Kustache, TH of the resurrectiontsts—Alexandrs \unul: i ‘Cheophile 8avard, and Thomns l!unlxc’::l = have Lcon urrostell and seut 1o tho Assined: A atatuts 8 to Lo crocted to Mussoneutty Jo0 founder of Montreal, 1t fa suppested Il; uw o it tho Plavo d’Armcs, ‘The statue B estal aro to bo abuut wonty-six feet bieb. G Capt. Currie, of the Momreal umum“ T tiilery, hea been committed for trial .lofi glh holding ucnf pay of h:;u men after reecly ment TFO drio Bumper of marringes wero tx‘l_fi“,'“’]‘ll",", in' the Roman Catholle churches of the ¢ : by fugg tho first doys of the week,=—tlie neaf B D}:u\u:h lu!‘Luuz :un?!le:‘a!mng {ho movenen! A4 hat way inclined, e Toasells rebarta thig caso of blind faon ber fng cured, at the Hotol Dieu, by o mirac f - fousrs. W, Ditno & Dras., snipbutlder Dunbarton, Scotland, have recelved L trom Mexgrs, Allen,'of this clty, for Bt whicls, whon completed, will bu one, Jurgest stown vessels (i the world ementy nuze 18 to be 4,000 wross mcus!u ey and she fa to bo bullt eshestl for thy purposo of earrelng CURG e tween Caunda hod Great Britatne att Co) River Platto nu Great Beituin, e nuv“l::'iu". will presout mauy novolties of mnfilvr bl "Tha rlvets will bo of steel, und bee oliert f nfimu ||IllL’rI\Il; nid sho will have adv throughaut, ectat Dispateh fo The Tridune. o, Toumc-l:‘;.“l;:m. 03, —Tho Irlau-u‘nh«:fle lSo ties huve rosolved to wulk us usut lu’ll" ) rick’s duy this {cn&. und h‘l:n:;::x“lu\u ng 3 iy brocessiot . " DAy b B hio dutics 0855 and wolusses will be reduceds mu:l u ;:.»uull Minfster suys, if the dunuces \ruuxI -lI-eu P und coffe” would bu pliced on the S5 Gy ordor to encouruiza tnido with Jupot The House of Cmumumdcl e neces ed duwn the resolution declariis fie mt;duf fi n‘trlct and unifors "hw"(‘m;oubllfl LUy ut 'oatiinil 1 e icle ctoes during the whote of S Aty dyz::m, Dispatch to Tha Trivust. 1y QogoEC, e, 23— The Chronc ey i 2

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