Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Dhe Tribune. TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTIOS. MATI-—IN’ ADVANCE—POSTAGR MEAT. tion, 78 Fea 812.008 i day, and Bat ARC ont 6.00 Any other day, por yen Pasiteces OKO * WEEKLY EDITION+108°" ‘ne en) Tuer rent. Bin of out + Sinb of ten. Bpectmon i, . tive Post-Oftice nudress in fult ineinding Btate and Tomnty. A Remittances may bo made aither by daft, oxprars, Jost-Oftics onter, of In regatored etter, nt our risk. TO CITY BTHSCIIBERS, . dally, delivered, Bunday excepted, 2 conte par week. dally, dolivered, Sunday breluded. 80 conta par week, Atdrons THY URIUNE COMPANY, Cornet Madizon and Denrborn-sts., Chicago, LU, AID. s POSTAGE. te tered at the Post-Opice at Chicago, It, as Second Ulusa Sfalter. + lorthe benent of onr patrons who desire to rond ‘ible copter of ‘THE TINUE through tho mail, ws + apt) herewith the translont rate uf postaxer . Domestic. tand Twelve Page laper. en Fane FADE oon geese and ‘Twolve Pago Pape: en Hewo Vapor Per em 3 cents eseeel@ CONES so conts TRIBUNE URANCIL OFFICES, s for the receipt of subscriptions ond advertise- _N}W YORK—Noom 2 Tribune Building. Faprn, Monauer. GABGOW, Hontland—Allan’s -American Nows Aggicy. St Nonfiold-st, JNDON, Eng.—Amorican Exchange, 449 Strand. Hrny F, G11a, Agent. 3 VASLUNGTON, D. C1319 F atreot. j AMUSEMENTS, : Haverly’a Theatre. Dilrborn atreot, coracr of Monroe. 'Engazement of Dory Carte's Opera Company. "The Pirates of Ponnnce.” , McVicker’a Theatre. . Madieon stroot, botween Denrborn and Stete. En- ‘Two Mothors.” Mooley's Thentre. é Randotph street, between Clark and La Balle, En- gagoment of the Alice Ostes Burlesque Opera Come. pany, “La Jolie larfumeuso.” ‘ : Marmlio’d Theatre. Clark streot, Lotween Washington and Nandotph, “Tho Love of Two fallurs." THURSDAY, MARCI i, 1880, . " fne Empress of India and the Einperor of Germany will exchange courtesies and chat a while at Wiesbaden tiext April. Tue Jowa State Senate has passed a bill making women ellgible to the officeof County Recorder. The same body has adopted a con- stitutional amendment changing tho time for holding State clectlous from October to No- + vember. a . ‘Tuere' was a sharp decline in English * eonsols and other securitics yesterday In London. Tho cause of ‘the decline {s said to do tho withdrawal .of over $10,000,000 from tho banks to be used for-clectioneering pur- posce, Tum Mayor is maturing plans to enforceo the dog ordinance, and ins few days he will issue a proclamation which will carry con- aternation into the camp of, the canines until the police forget all about it and allow the ordinance to become a dend-lotter again. ‘Tre action of the French Government in refus\ng to surrendor Hartmann to Russin ts “snid to meet the approvalof the principal European Governments, "It is not at all un- likely that had Hartmann been surrendered the action would bave been received with equal satisfaction, iE ge ——ee A CABLEGRAM gnys wat it is calculated :.---emtthe Torlos will loso fifteen seats In Ire- Jand,—eight to the Liberals and soven to the Home-Ruters. Tho Inter party will prob- ably have saventy members In the next Par- Mament, of which number Mr, Parnell will control one-half, “ Tup Welland Canal {s undergoing: repalrs which willnotbe completed untll aboutthesth - of May, and tho owners of vessels which have been Iold up during the winter on Lake On- -tarlo are much dissatisfled because tho canal inanagement will not open that highway for naylgation until tho repairs are finished, . rere ‘MazzINI was the apostle who prenchedthe evangel of United Italy, and to whom more subscriptions towards the expenses of the campatgn, and the lenders had conference yesterday, at which it was agreed to put for- ward the strorigeat possible candidates to contest ench constitnency, and after mutual concessions on the part of the Radicals ant Whigs a harmonious plan of action was agroed on. ‘has stolen a march on Messrs, Gilbert and Sulltvan, ond secured a copyright of thelr, “Pirates of Penzance.” been n case of mutual sharp practice, the manager resorting to this expedient ns 1 miensure of protection against and doubtless of revenge for an act of bad faith on tho part of the “Oytey” agent of the British authors, whose business transactions in America have not, according to.all accounts, beén conduct- ed with that degree of honor nnd integrity looked for at their hands. piratical deal all around. for Bradford, disetalms: for himself and his party allsympathy with any coursa which would endanger ther integrity of the British Empire, and denounces Beaconsfell’s mant- conte } festo as an clectloneeriug dodge framed to divert the attention of the English people from the mischievous, costly, and unright- eous foreign and Indian policy of the Tory Ministry. Mr. Shaw, the Home-Rule leader, 8 CHICAGO TRINUNE has established branch | says that DBenconsfield’s foreign poiley ts a earleatureoft Lord Palmerston’s; that the pur- .t.ao-. | Pose of the letter to the Duke of Marl- : borough is toexelte the passions and animost- ties of ignorant people; and calls onthe Irish electors to resent the insulting missive by uniting to return an overwhelming majority of members pledged to land-reform and other liberal measures, Civil-Service reform was made plain yesterday when that party refused to accept an amend- ment to Mr. Ilouso’s bill which would In- elude the Democratic officers of Congress \pagofiont of tho Hostoa Thentre Company. “Tho | within its operation, New York, insisted that it would not be just to prevent the -Union soldiers, who fought all through, the War, from contributing to maintain the Nation they had helped tq save, while ex;Rebels and their sympathizers might bribe and shoot thelr way to political Power and emolnment, also stirred up tho Brigadicrs by reviewing Services during Democratic rule. whole, the Bourbons did not make much —— A annewn theatrienl mannger of Boston It seems to have It is-n eott of FonstEr, Liberal Member of Parliament TE insincerity of the Democratic ery for Mr. Richardson, of Mr, Butterworth the corruption which existed in the Civil On the political capital yesterday, With the fate of Potter and Ben Hill before him, Mr. House might have known that le would come to arkt, Tx Senate and House Committees on Commerce held a joint session yesterday for the purpose of considering the subject of a rallrond bridge across the Detrolt River at Detroit, In th{s matter the railroad and ves- sel interests are entirely at loggerhends, the former fayorlng and tho latter opposing tha bridge project. On the sido of the railroads itis argued that a bridge with four draws of 200 fért each would inno way impede the freedom of navigation; while the vessel men imatntain that a draw of 400 feet In the mid- dio would be necessary in order to allow of the unrestricted pussngo of vessels, and thoy assert that a draw of this width would render the bridgo unsafe. Tho tun- nol plan, which has been demonstrated to bo entirely feasible, is urged ag the alternative, but the railroad people do not take kindly to a tunnel, and a fierce and protracted conflict between the warring interests seems likely to be carried on, with the probable result of an, adjournment of the present Congress with- out final action etther, way. i 1 Marquis of Wartington, as nominal lenllgy of the Liberals, has issued what may -bo:ferncd the platforin of his party, in the shane of an address to tho electors of Lanca- shire, Jnthis manifesto he justifies the course of the Liberd party in leaving the Colonies -to work out their own destinies; diselalns all sympathy with Home-Rule, but points out that tho azitation was In existence oven befora tho prosent. Parliament came into power, and that it was not until found ueces- sary to nrousa race anlmosities for political purposes that it was alluded to as.more dan- gerous in {ts results than pestilence‘ and famine; in fact, {it yaa treated with erent indulgenco by the Tory party. Lord Hartington fercely attacks the foreign polley of the Qoyornment, and snys that {t.bas imposed serlous burdens on tho nation, produced financial confusion, res order that ‘It might overcharge them for Its issues, But ithns stood with folded hands and stupid stare while Kelley and Conger, Phelps and Gibson, have plotted, to rot it for the beneft of their colleagies, Russell and Miller, and call the plund has decided t amnlust dui Paper-manu sentatives for a repel of the duty, und itis ‘understos! that they are willing to enter Into ot Agreement not to advance tha provided tho duty is not dlaturbed. The duty saguld be reduce nal, Committes were carefully selected by Speak- er Randall with the view of preventing any reduction of the tmport tax, no matter how oppressive on the public. That Committees, ns, constituted, will report no bill on the tariff that does not Incrense it, Seven of the mem- bers aro entirely under the control of special interests. The high-tartff lobby in effect own them, and tho vote of an eighth member can be had whenever wanted, to keep on the proper tax and ratso it if necessary. members of Congress—Itusscll, sof Mas- sachusetts, and Miller, of New York—are large owners of the patent pulp monopoly, and also largely. Interested In paper-mills. ‘They have vastly more Influence with Fer- nando Wood, W. P. Frye, James Phelps, J. A. Garfield, R. L, Gibson, 0,.D. Conger, W. Il. Felton, and W. D. Kelley than all tho publishers in the United States. These gen- tlemen are fond enough of a Iberal allow ance of printer's ink when they are fawning around their districts for reélection; but once safely elected and In Washington, they than any other King Humbert owes the fact | 8" delayed necessary reforms, without any that he ts King of all that country; yot whon | CFesponding benefits, ‘he wars in India 2 x Bcegee Sha Taineeahy taupe ey a eb Sethe thee. mete — yesterday to decorate the grave of the dead “patriot the Italian police seized some of the omblems aud arrested one ot the spenkers, ee Mayor Karzoci, of San Francisco, has Assued a proclamation denouncing the mant- festo of the Citizens’ Protective Union and its authors, and defending the workingmen, déclaring them to be peaceful and Jaw-nablid- ing citizens, ‘The general impresston now ls that the “ Vigilantes” will be able to main- tuin order without resort to violent meas- ures, | PeEneE Dinon promises to moro than rival Paro Hyacinth in the liberality of his sentl- ments, Tho pulpit orator’s. remarks have ‘Upen recelyed with auch marked approval, even in the church, that many good plous _ Souls are becoming alarmed for the old de~ corum and sanctity which was wont to pro- vail in the sacred edifice, eee ‘TuE electors of the County of Tipperary having adopted Messra, Parnull and Dillon a4 candidates for tho Tepresontagon of that con atituency, Mr, Elward Dwyer Gray, the pros: ent member, who has recently distinguished Iimself by bittorly attacking Mr. Parnell in Qis paper, the Freeman'a Journal, hos wisely concluded not to offer himself for redtection, 3” ameeaeneesateanenmemeesees Tig combination among the brick-manu- facturere In this city is having a very detrh: mental effect on the building buslnegs, Cone tractors cannot fulfill thelr agreements while the makers are clurging exorbitant prices for old brick, and are holding back une tl the new bricks come into the market. In the meantime hundreds of workingwen are obliged to lve In enforced ilencss, ee ‘Tite determination of the Senate Demo- crats to relegate the Fitz John Porter case to tho pigeon-hales of the Judiclary Committes, instead of pressing its passage us they started aut to go,.is 8 roundabout way of confessing some meinbersof the Irredenta party met and South Africa were neither wise nor hon- orable, and while the ascendnecy of England in European affairs has been elnimed In public Jt has been surrendered in secret conventions. Leaving thequestionof forelgn policy,’ the Opposition lIcader goes on to polnt out the domestic matters whieh: claim attention. Ireland must be treated justly, otherwise the people of that country have proper eause of complaint; the ques- {lon of local self-government and of the Par- Mamentary franchise also demand attention, The. address ts o masterly document, ani, clearly defines tho purposes and the position of the Liberal party, and isin striking con- trast to the tricky and misleading misslye of Lord Benconstleld, —_—_——— A Wasunaron dispatch yesterday morn- ing stated that Sam Mandall’s high-tartit Ways and Means Committee would on Fri- day (toamorrow) most graciously permit the publishers, whoso business 1s “ unprotected," to bo heard in objection to being longer pjun- dered for the benefit of patent pulp and paper mouopollsts. But what good will that do? Tha Committca {sq packed one, 1t would not subserve the purpose of Its creation If it listened favorably to’ the arguments of the publishers, It was selected for the express purpose of protecting thoge lcenavd by law torob the community, Sheep might as well argue with wolves, as the press to ask such men a8 Conger, Frye, or Kelloy, Wood, Phelps, or Felton, to report a bill releasing publlahers from the oxisting onerous and wn- justifiable non-revenue tax on paper or type, That Committea Js preparing, not to report bills reducing any of the outrageous and op prosalve features of the tariff, and thereby rendering {t more endurable, but are schem- ing to ralye it higher, ‘hoy have agreed to double the duty on malt to make beer dourer, and thereby “protect” and Increase the sale of whisky, They are proposing to whoop up the tux on hoop-iron to the damage of multi tudes for the spectal advantage of a fow, Thoy are trying to screw thelr courage up to that they are tired of getting the worst of the { the point of reporting a bill for the restora- debate day ufter day, and want to drop the | ton of the blond-tax on quinine, and the hired subject. ‘The bill will nut be heard of aguin | lobby uf a score of other epectul interests are this session, and probably never, once {$ hag | plotting and scheming to have found oblivion In the committes-room, ‘ ————_——— Mu Apau, the Liberal Whip, thinks that | fow moro lis party atands @ first-rate chauce to come back from the constituencies with a majority 9640 0r6Q A vigorous compiign and har monious action, he claims, will Insure suo- cess, . ‘The Tories, on the other hand, anticl- pate a majority as large os £20. It is not fine probable, however, that both partles are p. little too sungulny., As au vyidence ofthe “dutgrmlnation of the Libera}s, It la reported slut the Politicians’ Committee of the Refona Club has already received a large number of heave Imposed on the pub- iq so that thoy may glye the screws & turns on thelr customers, ‘Thp press can only obtaln {ts protection bythe removal of duties which produce no revenue, and were not intended to, but were laid for the sole‘purpose of enabling patont pulp and paper-maxing members of Congress tocliarge unprotected publishers one-fifth to one-third more than the lexithuate ‘market pric,’ ‘The press bus not sought to levy onerous dutica on the pulp or paper ar type quakers, that it might thereby be'able to in- jure thelr business, 1¢ hay not asked Con- jer tariff taxes THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: THURSDAY, MARCI It, 1880. to levy any taxes on {ts subscribers In “protection.” Tins Touse Ways and Means Committee io herr arguments for and tho proposed reduction of tho uty oon saver on Friday next, Tho aeturers are Kreatly alarmed, it the prvasitre brouzht to beat upon the Hepre- rice of papery nevertheless, Lrening Jour But it wilknotbe, The Ways and Means Two have no further regard for the Interests of the press which covered thelr shortcom- ings, sounded their praises, and helped to boost them Into Congress, They lmme- diately go into the service of monopolies, lobbyists, and schemers whose aim is to plunder the public. ‘Che press has Itself to blame for the] treacherous and contemptuous treatment It recelyes at the hants of its inis- Tepresentatives. It rarely exposes those who betray it, if thoy claim to. belong to the same party. For fear of “hurting the party ” the press tolerates most ungrateful and injurious conduct at tho hands of its representatives, If the press had looked after itsown Interests one-tenth part as unitedly and sharply as all other manufacturers look after theirs, jt would have had the tax removed from paper, types, and presses a dozen years nyo. It was only necessary totake a few scalps of trench- erous and {ndifferent Congressinen to have secured the relfof its interests require, and unt]] it commences doing this it will con- tUnue to be plundered and bamboozted. EX-MEMBERS OF CONGRESS AS LOBBY- I8i8 ON THE FLOOR. A Washington special of yesterday read as follows: Wastitxaton, D. C., arch 9.—Attention is tie- Ing called to tho fuct. that one of tho now rules ats to ex-members of Congress, who ure often lobbyists, the fullest rights to the fluor, but rig- orously excludes all members of the press, not merely from the floor, but from the liree room which has of late been fitted up at conaldernbic expense back of the hull for tho use of metn- bere as a lounging and sma kiay. root, ‘Thus the Detncerntio mujority of tho House have con- trived, by an ingenious and uprarently hurintess rule, to puve the way for nll kinds ‘of lobby- ing and Jobbing, and at tho same tino to thoroughly crinple tho press in ita olforta to discover tho tricke of lobbyists or get intelllgent and sutisfactory information concerning the business of the House. It is very well known hero that among the most ndroit and successful lJobbylata are many ox-members of Congress. Not ft fow of these persons make 1 business of- using claims and echemes of all kinds before he souse,and tho fast duysot o session, or when some subsidy or othor Jobbing bill 1s be- fore the House, thoy crowd the floor and Mill tho sofns which stand aginst tho walls of tho hell, In fact, these lobbyists ure and havo long been pristici ed class, ‘Tho new rules, Just adoptal hy tho Democrata, not only contimte those priv Hees, but taken very unieunl course to. umke tiem heoure., Tho press has n partof tho gallery set apart for it, but to secure any real informa- tion for wo pubile tho press. gallery Ie. uscioss, To obtain u knowledge of what ts going, onin tho House, good, bad, or indliferent, it Is neces- wey to hive some menus of communicntion with the membors. To animportiunt branch of tho lobby this fs granted; to tho preas it Is rigor- ously refused. ‘At an early day'in tho history of the Te- -bublie men who had served’ long and hon- orably in elthor House of Congress. oc- castonally made visits to Washington, and the Houses, by ‘a -rule, permitted theso exinembers during their brief stay to enter upon the floor and renew thelr ac- qualntanco with those of thelr former as- soclates who stil! remalned in-the public service, This rulo has, however, long since survived its usefulness; instead of bolng a few hours’ compliment to an old publile servant, Jt has long since become one of tho most disgraceful buses of our legisintive system. Every shyster- ing lawyer who by aceldent or other- wise secures an election to elther House of Congress, and then Is dropped by his con- stituents, has forever after a dlstaste for tho slow but honorable Inbors of his profes- sion, and, having acquired a taste of Wash- ington Ifo antdan insight into the methods of logislition, packs up his gripsack, moves to Washington, becomes an agent for the col- lection of clatins, and, having the privileges of the floor of both Houses, becomes a mem- ber of the corrupt Jobby, Ie is for lilra to any scheme which has money in it, and his freo and unobstructed entrance to the floors, the aute-rooms, the committee and confor- enco rooms—his privileges—give hima nseful- ness which no one but gn ox-honorable mem- ber of elthor Houso can offer to clients, ‘Tho Washington lobby swarms with ox- Senators and ex-Representatives parading thomselves. for sale after the manner of shyaters or tho procurers of straw ball at tho police courts of large cities, ‘Thelr highest claim to employment {s that they have tho free entrauce wt all times to both Houses; have access to the personal presonce of mein bera, are oficinlly recognized as associates of Members, may visit vommittes-rooms, have access to all {Mes and papers, aro personally known to all clerks and doorkeepers, ean ar- range Interviews, can obtain letters of credence to the heads and accounting officers of all departments, and generally are onthe “inside” in the management of any scheme the projector of which will pay for success+ fulresults, Weare not making a fancy sketch. Of tholarge number of Senutors and Nepre- sentatives who have been ejected by thelr constituents since the close of the War, tha majority of them turned up at Washington as claim agents,—otherwise, standing in the lobby waiting for jobs to prosecute, under the cloak of vx-uiembershtp, Inside the hinlls and ante-rooms of the two Houses of Con- gress, : i ‘There fs nothing which’ tha advocates of bogus clalins, private subsidics, dishonest Jobs, or nefurious plunder hold in so much dread as publicity; hence there {s un irre pressible conflict between the lobby and tho Newspaper press, Beorecy is essential to dis honesty; no houest or commendable bill was ever Injured by the publication of Its terms, Secrecy ts, therefore, part of every schemo of plunder, . The famous job of Chorpenning was curried on so secretly and ‘so sner cessfully that the warrant for the pay- ment ‘of the $500,000 was actually in tho Treasury, waiting to be passed and pald, when Mrs. Dawes, visiting tho’ Trensury Building, accidentally heard of it, and, re- turning to the House, denounced the job and obtained Instant action arresting the payment of the warrant. ‘These representa- cess of the lobby, and espoctally with tho suce cess of tho ex-honorable Senators and Repre- & tives of tho press interfere sadly with the sue- | sentatives who opernteon the floors of the two Houses and throng the anterooms, ‘To tho preseneo of these the ox-honorable jobbers have an extreme aversion. . At Inst the lobby has found protectio against inqulsitive eyes, attentive ears, and intelligent {nquiries,, Tho Committes of Rules of the House of Representatives, con- alsting of Speaker Randall, Alexander IL Stephens, Joseph C. S$. Blackburn, James A. Garfield, and W. P,.Frye, have devised a schemo for the accommodation and for the better expedition of business by the den: bent adventurers and professlonal lobbylsta who advertise for business on the score of possessing valuablo privileges as ex-members of Congress, This Committee, in revising tho rules, have provided that these lobbyists shall have the free and unrestralned range of the floor of tho House, of the halls and rooms in the rear of the Speaker's chair, and oof all the anterooms, to hold frea hutercourse and conversation with the members ns honored — guests .of tho House; and that to ald them in openly and undisguisedly plyling thelr voention they shull hereafter be freed from the pres- ence, observation, and serutiny of every person known t& be connected In any way with the press, and who would bo Ikely to expose the character and purposes of schemes: pending In the interest of the lobby,. News- paper correspondents are hereafter to be re- manded ton specini toeation in‘ the gallery, wiile all the broken-down adventurers who atany time in their lives ever had a member- ship in elther House are to bo continued in the free enjoyment of all the privileges of tho Ifouse and carry on their traille without fear of detection or observation. This rulo rents like part of tha genernl system of pro- tection, Itopens the dovrs of the House at all times to lobbyists who sro ex-members, and thereby gives them special valug as lob- byists, and to this, privilege thoy liave now added by this Committee a freedom from any observation by newspaper correspontents, whose special business Is to give publicity to all hishonest and disreputable jobs engi- neered by this lobby and openly pushed on tho floors of Congress, Mr, Randall and Mr, Frye, Mr. Garfield and Mr. Blackburn, are not so near the end of their official race ns to be looking forward to beconting claim-agents, and therefore desir ous of continufng the disgraceful exhibitian of these claim-agents working their schemes in open sessions of the House. They ureing position todemand the abolition of this rule, and the total exclusion of every person allke: from the floor sayo the members and officers of Congress and of the Government. So humiliating and disgraceful {3 this active lobbylam on the floors and ‘nthe Iinlls‘and ante-rooms of Congress by ex-members that itisa wonder a sense of shame docs not compel the honest and respectable members to rise up and peremptorily abolish the abuse, and the cover to fraud and dishonesty which it furnishe: BEACONSFIELD'S LETTER, , ‘The letter written by Lord Benconsfictd to the Duke of Marlborough, which was printed in the last Issue of Ture Trimuxe, Is nt once aconfession that the Tory party dovs not daro to face the reforms that are urged by the Liberals and a shallow evaston of the Im- portant issues before the English people. ‘The burden of this letter !s to the effect that Home-Rulein Ireland would endanger the strength of tho English Government ont imperil the peace of Europo, by diminishing the influence of England in the councils of Europe. Tho crafty Premier secks to alarm the people bya dissolution of Parlinment upon this Issue, and with the sophistry and cunning which have always characterized iin says: « Thepoworoft England and tho ponce of Europo wii! lurgely depend on tho verdict of the coun- try, Hor Malesty's prevont Ministers hive hith- erta been cnabled to secure that peace vo unecessary to the welfare of all olvilized coun- tries, and so peoullurly the interest of our awn, Dat this inotfablu, bidssing cannot, be obtained by 2 pasaiye principle of non-interference, Veico rests on the prosenoo, nut Buy, uscendonoy, of England in tho councils of Kuropo. Even at this momont tho doubt sup- Freee ta be {rmopirntile from popular election, oo not diminish, certainly arrests her in- dence, and $4 the main reason for not deluytog tho uppeal to tho national yolev, “Transparent ss clection rallics and war erles always are, never was this kind of buncombo'wore transparent Both branchés of his propesitton aro, absurdly untrue and utterly at vattance with facts, Home-Rulo never yot wenkened the power of a govern- ment. ‘The division of Austria in 1807, which inde it 0 bipartite Empire and established the Cislolthan and Transloithan Parlla- ments, snved the Government. Is Germany any the weaker because Prussia, Bavaria, Wirtemberg, Saxony, Baden, Ilesge, Olien- berg, and the other nineteen Duchiles’ and Prinolpalities have Uome-Rule? On tho other hand, hag there ever veen a thine when the power of Germany was more strongly con- solldated, or whon Its States were more closely nliled to the throng, than now? ‘This country lias thirty-eight States, with their Jocal Parilaments, besides the Terrltorles, each with its Hoino-Rulo; and withoutsuch a system this country could not bo governed. atall, Canada has two sets of Parliaments, and other English Colonies have Home-Rule; but whereln 1s this a gourco of weakness the English Governmont? “ ‘Tho mennce that the granting of auton- omy ta Ireland (and we may include Scot- Innd) would endanger the peace of Europe by reducing the aseendency of England Jn European councils ts almost too childish to be erlticised. Upon genoral principles it may be quéstioned whether the reduction of this nseondency by any causes would ben ‘‘alamity, .The peace of Europe never ean bo disturbed by mensures of reform that fend to allay populur discontent, A discon- tonted people are always on the verge of revolution, ng 13 shown to-day by the popu- lar agitation in Rusala for a constitutional form of government, “Thero {3 no surer road to peace in any coutitry than tho adoption of & polloy which keeps the people happy and contented, ‘Thp case of Irelumd Is exactly represonted by that of Bulgarla before the Russo-Turkish war, The people were with- out represontation and wero ground down Into the dust by tha rapaclty of the ‘Turkish tax-collectors, They wore denied a hearing In court or {n Parliament, They had no redress for thelr wrongs, and the outbreak {n Tlerzegovina which led to the war was tha outcome of land troubles al- most {donticat with those in Ireland, ‘Tho peasunts revolted only when overything lind beon stripped from them and they were unable longer to satisfy the greed of the Turklsh landholders, If the Tory party were wise and really wished to secure peace | and contentment In Ireland, Yt would effect the desired reforms in land-tenure tn that une happy country and make the People who cul- tivate tho soll the owners, Instead of strip ping them down to the last farthing and keep ing thom in continual poverty, and making it necessary for this country purlodically to come to their rellef, Thera could be -no surer guaranty of peace, no surer muthod of strengthening the affection and loyalty of the Irish people for the Crown. Give them possession of the lands which were wrested from thelr ancestors by force, and then give them the management of thelr local affairs, lke the Cunadians for instauce, and there would be no further trouble asinong them, ‘Thoy would attach themselves Ormly and ens thuslastically to the Government. ‘They would bo contented with thelr condition, They would no longer suffer the pangs of rdition ‘shalt continue, poverty and actual starvation. Instead of dolng this, the English Government, doles out a pittance of provisions to them, and stoks in every method to drive them to this country, which has to help support them be fore they come and pay tholr rents to English Iandlords, ‘She plea of Beaconsfield, that tho. inauguration of Iand and polltical reforms will weakon the power of England, and, in consequence, disturb the peace of Europe, ts ashallow, miserable subterfuge that shows. he has neither the honesty nor the courage to mect the reforms that are necessary to the establishinent of pence and of popular con- tentinent, AN ILLINOIS SHIP-CANAL, j Congressman Davis, from this city, has In- troduced inta the Nattonal Lonse of Repre- sentatives the following resolutlons Tie tt Resolved hy the Houee of Repreacntatiece, the Senate concurring, That a committcs con sisting of two Senators and three members of tho House by appointed, authorized and empow- ered to ngeertain upon what terns the Stato of Titinois will relinquish and transfer tothe United Btates all and alagilur its property and rightsot property In and to the ine of water communi: cation known a8 tho Hlinols & Mlebtan Cant between Chlengy, HL, and tho Ilingis River, nt fay Balle fi itelueling Ita locks and dats, canul frane ebiae, und rights of way, or go mitch of the sate asshall, in tho Judgment of tho said Committee, be needed for sald purpose, aud report ita finds {nas to the Congress on or befor the Ist day of Fobruary, 1881, fag ‘The purpose which Congressman Davis has i) his mind {s apparent and commend- able, but it !s n question whether he is nob appronching the matter from the wrong direetion, ‘Tho construetion of a ship-canal between Lake Mleliigan and tho Mississtppt River, walng tho Chicago River, tho LIlnols & Michignn Canal, and the Iltnols River, fs f& profeet which fs well worthy the attention of Congress, ‘The nidvantages to commerce of such a connection between the great In- terlor Inkes anid the ocenn are too obvious to Tequire specific mention, ‘The osisting eanal and the Ilinots River furnish the opportunity for constructing 9 ship-canal at a staller cost than any at which a similar under- taking ever was or oyer again can by secured. ‘The Illinvis River, which {5 almost .a dead level, is n canal in it self, and needs only three or four additional Jocks to guarantee navigation as far up as La Salle during nino ihonths in the year for good-sized steninbonts. It is right and proper that Congressional nttention should be di- Tected to this project. But it may well be doubted whether Congress will assume tho attitude of an eager purelinser of the con- necting link between the Ulinois River and Lake Miehigan, which Is owned and con- trolled by the State of Ilinols, ‘The moment the project shall assume this shape the patriots who are. blennially ‘elected to the Tilinels Legislature will discover and seek to make available an opportunity for securing a bonus for the State if not for themselves. They will be inclined to demand Indemnity from the General Government for the original cost of the canal over and above the proceeds ‘of the public lands set askle for its construction; also tor the cost of malntenanecs over nnd above tho revenues; likewlse for the $3,500,000 ex- pended In deepening the canal. A very handsome sum could be figured up to repre- sent the valus of tha canal upon the bnals of a cession to tho United States Government, ‘The fact fg, however, that tho State of Illinois can very well afford to surrender the Ilinols & Michigan Canal to the General Govern- ment without pay and without price upon the condition that It shall bo enlarged, in conjunction with the Chicago River at ono end and the Itnols River at tho othor, to the dimensions of « ship-canal, ‘The gain to Chicago, to Hiinols, and to the Northwest of an ample, public, and free waterway to tho Misstssippi River and tho ocean would com- pensite many fold for tha nominal loss to tho State of tho money which has been invested in tho canat but which earns no Interest+ ‘The proposition of surrender should come from the Logistature ‘of Illinols, and not in tho shape of a bid from the General Government. A voluntary trans- for of thls property to the United States would likely direct public attention to the chenpness and possibilittes of a ship-canal which might lead to Its construction. The people of this State and the Northwest would have everything to guin and nothing to lose by such o transaction. It should notho a question whethor Ulinois will sett the eanal, but whether the State ought not to tender It to the United States. The acceptance thereof by the Government would iinply the purpose to make it ag useful a8 possible, and thls pur- pose would lead up eventually to tho build- ing of a ship-canal, or rather to, the cnlarge- montof the prespnt canal and the Improvement of the Illinois River for such service. Not. the least among the inducements which Con- gress would have forcarrylng out this project would be the Incidental solution of tho Chi- cago sewage problemn,—a matter of National coucern, since it affects the public health of acommunity destined to be the most popn- lous and Influentin’ on the American Contl- nent. NULLIFICATION IN VIRGINIA. Tho Virginia Loglstature adjourned sine dle without passing the Appropriation bill, but not. until, in its sovereign cupaclty, it had “ reversed and remanded a Into decis- fon of tho Supreme Court.‘of the United States, ‘Iho doctrine of State-sdverotgnty Is more sacred to Vireinia than the payment of interest on its debt, ‘The decision which has called out tho con- demnation of the Virginia Logisiature was that which sustained tho Indictment In the United States Court of a County Judgo (Coles) who refused to have any “niggers” upon the Juries trying cases before him, In tho oyes of tha ayerage Virgluian this posl- tlon was herole and commendable, and it is tegarded as an affront to a soverelxn Stato that United States Inws and United States Courta—the legal machinery of o foreign power—should interfere to condemn and punish it, Tho goneral griovanco of tho sov- erelgn legislators of Virginia is that, if this sort of Natlonal intervention for the protection of personal rights without re- gard to race, color, or provioys con- “every vestige of State-soverelguty will be destroyed,” This fs denounced as “a most alarming doctrlue,”— not State-soveretgnty, but the negution there- of,—and the goverelgn ambassadors of the soverelgn State of Virginin to the United States Congress are instructed to procure the repeal of all laws authorizing any encrogch- jueut by the United States Government upon the Virginian policy of excluding “niggers” from the rights and privileges of white nen, ‘Tho Virginia legislators ought to have gue ta the root of the evil and instructed the Virginia ambassadors at Washington to agi- tanto the repeal of the constitutional amend- inenta, and secnce the sanction of tho General GoVernuient to the rednslavement of the blucks and the restoration of the anclen reghne, * ‘The people of the Northern States have been accustomed. to regard’ the Btate-soy- creignty question-as decided adversely to the old Southorn notion. It has buen gupposed that tho War for the preservation of the Union and the subjection of States, which cost the North #o many thousands . of lives and so many wmilllons of dollars, had settled thls matter for all time. ‘The surrender of Leo and disbandment of the Hebel army were looked upon as the Inst gasps of @ wicked and insane struggle against tha Nation, But there have been abundant evidences during the last few years that tho Sonthern people are diatnelined to arcept the verdict of the War, They claim as local and soverelgn privileges the right to nullify the Natlonal Jaws and defy tho Noe tonal power, They would swine the Gov- ernment of its revenne from whisky and to- bacco, Kill off tts agents, and prohibit it from. using Its own tribunals for the punishment. of offenders against {ts Inws, They would have tho right to substittite fraud snd vio- fenee for an honest ballot, and deny to the General Government the power to provent public and avowed nullifiention of the con- siitutionn? amendments. They would pass and executo State nnd local laws op- pressing and discriminating against the blacks, nnd refuse to the Nation. the right t protect the class of citi zens who were emanelpated by forco of arms. ‘Tho resolutions adopted by thé Vir- ginia Legistature furnish newand authorita- tive evidence of the reactionary spirit of the South, which needs only the opportunity to undermine and destroy the principle of Na- tional sovereignty which hay been defended and established at so frightful a cost to the Amertean people, Itis humilieting for Americans to sco tho grand old Stato of Virginia—the “mother of Presidents *—dlviding its legistative time and effort between the swindling of its creditors on the one hand and the attempt to nullify the National laws on the other, As a mere matter of policy, if there is to bono higher considerition, tlie Democratic party cannot hope to gain syinpathy and make votes for the appronching Dresidentinl election by such an exhibition of Bourbon renction and progressive dislionesty. a * Tim Banker's Magazine gives some Inter- esting Muuro from Mr. Lamb's report ne to the manngement of New York savings-banks. In one bank the frst oMfcer had been recoiving £3,000 per annum duriug the Inst threo years of his Hfe, when bo had been on permanent leave of absence, In anothor bank tho Secretary, with a salary of $5,009, received In-nddition as “extra compensation” $27,000 In ten yenra, Among other !te:;ns reported from differont banks we find such us theso Januury, 1460—For by May, 180—For bust of Seeretn duly, 1860—Hntortainment 0 friends of the bank... Or, take anothor instanes Tuly 2 807—Wedding present to chitd of former Trensurct...... 8155.00 Tung 2H, 1si—HTome * Ausociation. 200, April H, 1870—Wedding present to book- evper's wile. _ 40.50 Oct. 2, 18—M yf bookkeeper 15.00 ‘Thta bavk belioved tu “tempering tho wind to the shorn lamb." It would be interesting to ascertain whethor. that bookkeeper's wife In re~ marrying xot a better husband, as tho prico of tho present was ralsed, Here {8 auothor specl- mens - March, 1468, entertainment. Muy, 1809, entertaininent. March, 1870, entertainer Febrinry, 1871, entertulntn - CHLCTHRUNNICNE. 6.0066. - 3, entertainment, a entertainment. » 10 Fel entertainment, eC) April, 1854, service of allver to President for long 'and fulthful service without BUINTYsseeserse sess ee . + B21. uly, edd, portrait of President 1,635.00 In the nccounts of another bank, $1681 1s put flown for flye dinners given to the Trustecs, No wonder that, with such expenses as these, people lost contldenco in sayings-panks, The experl- enco in New York bas been duplicated In othor States. What thoero was in tho nuturo of a sav- Ings-bank ao different from thnt of othor insti- tutions that its maungers were so ensily tempted to trent othor people's money ns thotr own, is sill an unsolved problem. Porhaps Spencer o1 Myers could tell—but thoy won’: Tirousanns of persons all over the country have taken ocension to say that thoy belloved tho nomination of Gen. Grant for a third term. woutd be Inoxpediont and injurious to the party. ‘This has been said with proper regard for Gon. Grant's great sorvices to tho'Republic and his reputation aga soldforandniman. Yet tho de- cont oxpression of such opininns has been to a fow of tho third-tormites ko the sight of uo red rugton bull. hoy have cried out agatnst it as “ingulting,” and declured that nover. before was 0 candidate for the Presidency porsanally antagonized in such n wuy. This is untruo, Nourly overy cundiduto for tha Presidency promtnont enough to oxeltentténtion boforg tho meeting of tho Convention has been overhuutend. by his opponents. ‘Tho most recont Mlustra tion of tho kind {s offerett by tho cio of Mr, Gristow, who, beenuso he hip. poned.to serve hla country by cleariog out a neat of whisky-thioves, was subjected ta abuso such as fow mon beforo hin were obliged: to endure, It was said by somo nowspnpers, now supporters of tho third term, thut: Bristow was" wenduk “and “acoward"; that ho run away In battle; that ho wis agcotloual reformer, conniving ut fraud fn the South and prosveuting tin the North; that ho wag “not a greit ro- former, oreven a little one"; that bo “ be- Jonged to the land whonce came tho betrayors of tho itepublican party’; that ho only wanted tha opportunity to bow traitor himself, ete., ete. Itis a very diiforont thing to oppose a candidato } in this way, aad to say of vio who bas beon hone cored to the fulloxtentof any Amerloun, ving ordead, thut the Hepublican purty bas othor men it would.now like to seo cloyated to the Presidency. With those who bayo anything to say ugninst Gen, Grant asa soldier and a man, ‘THE Linus hus, and cau huve, no sympathy; but itdocs not conceive that the decunt and manly expression of opluton hostile to 8 third torus is * dierespoatful” to hl, or uubegoming an American citlzer Poratics tlo, indeed, make strango bed- fellows. Amore wonderful oxompliticntion of this was never scon than {In the cue of the Hon, E. 0, Larned and tho third-term crowd he now happens to be training, with. A,fow days ugo Mr. Lurned wrote a letter to tho third-term organ in this olty warmly advocating tho ro- nomination of Gon, Grant. Theroupon tho third-topm orgun broke out in fujsume oulogios of bimaaa min and a oitizon, Now compare ita uttorances this year with what it had to say four yours 1go% L004 Feby 20,190, > ee June 9, 1576, wWe'printclacinere ‘al Wo do hoe aay chat letter from tho Hon. B.| Arnold and Luried are ©, Larned, ylving higjbypoerits, but wo do reasons for dealring tho} silly that ‘wpan tho only nomination of on./occasion when the poo- Grant, ‘Thisexpression|plo intrusted Arnold from Mr. Larned, thanjwith power ho used tht whom no mun In this|powor forthe personat community da moro re-ladvantage of fila part- spected or intlucntialjuor, bir, Laraed, and willhave much wolght/that hig partnor, Mr. with Hepublicans. Mr.|Larnod, farmed out the Larned haa not beonjoica oonferred upon {dontified with the more/hin because he was tho radical wing of tho partnor of Mr, Arunid, party, and in $670 was althe Cal astun, to the warm'supporter of Sfr.|thind partnerin tha Job- Bristow. Tho timosand)bing | oflic + brokern, amore Intimate know!-|concern, (Seo ulso artl- odge of Gon, Grant'siclo entitled . Larned, churacter Induco Mr.|the iteformer,” inthe Le Turned to speak ont in|O,, June 10, 1870, favor of tho foruer at this juncture, and tls} tinely utterinon will bo} read ind appreciated by} thousunds who reapeut, his Judgmont and ‘ap-| prove his cholco, - ‘Tux TrivuNg haa no more sympathy now than it had then with porsonal attacks upon tho char- acter of nen who honostly orpress thelr politic- al conyletions; but it J well to notice that Journals Ike ‘the £-0, sro sincera neither in their praiso nor tholr consure, The IO, now lampoons James P, oot, whom it laudod to tho skies in 1878, and pours fulsomo flattery upon Mr, Larned, who was in 1870 houndod down with vile abuso fn Its columns, ——=. Tu Ohio Republican Convention will prob- ably meot at Columbus March $$ or 31, Tho custom has been to hald tho Btate Convention of Oblo in March in Prosidential ycars, and the Committee will not chango jt, The Shermay cause ig in need of eucouragement, which tha Ohio Convention will provide uccording to pro- ruin, ‘Tux people of the United States are varie ously yopregentod at Washington City, Firsé, they aro representod by the mombers of the two Houses of Congress, clothod with all the powors of Icgjvlation, and with practically the control of all eho patronage, in the way of oMioc+broking, of tho Government, aud costing some six mill. fonsof public taxos to pay all thoir expenses, for thoy aro luxurious gentlomen of axceeding Uberultty with other pboplu's munoy. Secondly, thoy nre represonted by acorpsof actiye, faithful, intelligent mon, eniplayed by } preasof tho country tomeko pubi what tnkea place in nutunl to discover and = muko ‘public In tho way of fobs, schemes, tmuds, and private enterprices having Cor thoi pepe the plundering of tha people and the Puhiie Treasurys Fach day's doines 40 daylight and dark ts published next morning trom one ontop the country to tho other, and teeply Inid must bo any of those aechemes which exon es thi argns-oyed vigilinco of the repre ves n the peaplo's press. ‘There Isa third t is how. over, which purtlelpates netively and ‘ines entially in tho business of Congress, ‘Thiet that nggregation whieh Is popularly atyled we “lobby.” It is numerous, active, influentine dishonest, nud corrupting. It Is ctaployed 14 promote tho extraction of money trom thn Treasury, tho Increwas of oxperiitires ara taxes, tho authorization of contracts, tho grant. Ing of subsidies, tho Javention and allowinee o¢ “alata,” the extension of patents, tho defeat of legisintton for tho’ correction of buses or reduction of oppressive tari? tixes, and, wens crully, directly or tndirvotly to promote trang and got monoy out of tho Treasury ur Meonse to rob the public, Paruoat, tho daily ¢ not only Besston, but. overything, Who woutd have thought the old man had so much blood In him? ‘Tho following Is given: by tho trustworthy Now York correspondent ot tho Philadelphia Ledger ns tho sirbstance of Sau, ‘Tilden’ reply, “dorlyed from n perfectly aus thontle source," to tho suggestion that both ho fud John Kolly should retire from active poltts feal life: If anybody must rotroat, it should John Welly: but whether he rutreuts or nae ey nothing tome, and ft cin be of very little conse quenco to the party nt large. ‘Tho enuse which ropresent {8a Nation! causo, und the prince ple which would necessarily be’ embodled iy ty renomination would he the prinetple that the will of tho people, a8 expressed ut tho batlote box, is aupreme, nnd inuat bo respreted, ‘There can be no retrent from nor nny compromising of. these positions; nud, so far as fant concerned, joy will bo inatutalned at alt hazards, Aw fog Kelly, be ts but nt gross type of n wird potitletan, and, but for his asoelation with my namo ats, Louis, he would nevor huye been heanl of bes youd the purlleus of the East Side. ‘This fg 0 sutticiently dollnit ammouncemont of ‘Tildon’s tatention to be a eundidate, if any wero needed, en Tus third-term ‘organ in Chteago said editorially tha day after the nonitnation of Me, Hayes at Cincinnatl In Juno, 18703 ‘To Jumes G. tlulue the Republican party oy adubLor gratituto witeh tina notin es iste Been fit to dischurge by conforring the Presi. dential nomination; but that it has high honorg in reserve for tnt so trie, 1 public servant so. fuithful, und va purtiaan so fnedomitable and, trustworthy thore can be no doubt, Those “high honors in reserve for a man so: true,” ete, will bo beatowed now, if ntall, Ig splte of the third-term organ's hostility toward Mr. Blaine, Yet he hes done nothing alee: 18% to forfolt tho confidence of the party, and th party bas done nothing to discharge “that debt of gratitude” which in 1870 welxhed so heavil; on the consciences of some of tho presen third-termites, Gon. Grint, in tho meantino} has done nothing for the purty which Mr, Blut has not done; nor ts there any renson concetva ble why the lutter should be preferred to th former in 1876, and the former to tho lutter ug 1880, € } Tie Kentueky Kepublican Convention will not meet until April 1. A fow County Conyen: tlons havo, however, alroady been hold; and about half of these third-term delegates hav been chovon. Tho exuct tally ts five countie for Grant; four counties anti-Grant; total, nine cvunties. As thore avo 116 counties In, Kontucky, this is u pretty “slender isis to predicate a vietory for tho third term upon) thor helng 107 counties yot to hear from. But oven if the result shoukd be faverubla to tho “boom " (as nuw scoins {mprobuble), it would sigulfy nothing. As tho third-torm organ of this city powerfully remarked in 1878, when Bristow was a candidate, Kentucky {s hopelesly Democratic, and ought not to have a voice in deciding who tho Republleun eundttate shall bo, It was thon argued that 1¢ Bristow should curry Kentucky In thoclection that wasn reason why: ho should not bo nominated, for Kentucky wag 8 disloyal State, and whoever her Republici favored must bo a dl Linan nt heart, i that Committes [Post-Olllces and Post-ltonds], and closing with warm expressions of Ered Weill and regard. Ono day aster this pry a when cn route to Washington, Bling f in with Colfax, and, Jn 0 discussion over tho composition of tho cominitters, inthnated that te would pad over'Tyner, Buy ho didn’t see his way ohare to nppoint hi ‘en that farbaek he was pips Jnylng for the Presidency, and when the com: mitices wero numed Burchard, of Mlnuls, was found to bo Chalrmun’ of the Camiuittes on Post-Oftlces and Post-Roads, It wasn bid for. support from the Sucker Sthto when tho ting ahould come that he would’ need It.—Chicage Pines Washington Corrcapendence, Tho Chicago Tincs, in its efforts to injure Mr. Blaine In his candidacy, will have to try agains Mr. Burchard was never Chairman of the Come mittee on Post-OMees and Post-ltouds, nor wag any member from Mllnols a Chalrman of that Committoo during thnt Congress, a enenenmmaaaie Frerp on the Election laws, Field ‘ont negro-jurors, and Field on Paciiic Railways will be rich reading if the Cincinnati Convention nominitea him for tho Presidency, A moro Digoted Bourbon thin Fletd doesn't live. Tr canvass of local sentiment on the Presidential question which has been In progresd at Now London, Conn, for several months now shows tho following yote: Grunt, 110; anti- Grant, 156, Eseny Stonrs wept beeauso ho couldn't have Blaine fn 1876; now he con have him, pere hups, but bo weeps for sameboily also, Anausext of ‘Senator Carpenter: Fits John Porter was a bad man; thorefore, wo must havo a third term. A Dit.ave that is not dangerous f¢ Stephen B,, tho Groenbuok candidute for Pres dent, PERSONALS, It would bo a great schemo for ex-Gov Mubbard’s coachman-marrying daughter, now that sho bas learned drossinaking, to putup & Job with her sisters, got tholr custom, gridually ruin tho old gent, and then receive him in hor pulatial realdonce with tours of forgivonoss, & Uittlo dreasmaking Is a dangerous thing. When the enterprising poot Isn't writing, . Isn't writing Bome melancholy verses about love, About love, It fy safe to bet that ho will be inditing, a Inditing, A sonnot on tho whitonoss of tho dove, Of the dove, When tho young and tender school-gir) {en'® _ thinking, : Isn't thinking, Of tho timo when sho will bo allowed to vote ss "Tawed to voto, The chances aro that sho is coyly blinklag, Coyly bilnking, Atsomo young man In 9 zebra overcoat, Overcoat. Mr. Froude sends us a Httle novel which we print with plonsuro and In small typo, as it paid for by tho foot; 1 turn, Bert, auiden-tinted eutamn, ‘Tha gun poured Hts uuilow rays.on tho lsuuhing Relus Of Hruip und allnaiurosoomed to rojulce in the wiaduves 6 tho alnplo hueveat, ‘Tho littio birds twitterod wid $8! aly ewulust utd ohoriest notes In tho hrauches ge the old On trove tnt skirted the fout nf w clouds topped MIU, while Ue big anes eat, sult and loon! st Fur away -to the right tay a vast mare /h hich watercress. awuvt-aniolling soduos and bul “BERS: dire et lras m patty slant, it from the ma Pere eterna Pe ori Tu the Mile craft aro seal nang & £0 bo strung iiubed and yy the blag of thy burnlng aun wud a broveess she fur wud dolicate, iku thu ily, oF Vith'powarful stfokos be avads, tho -boat, shoollrs Baio ues BaaGoly te salsa ttore w Plak Hiri, thé'e pallor’ o'erapreaty hor lovely counter Sho bas seon a bulte! Gag hone drupe ersataes by hop alte, and, trom iB bor bi daimy thing of struw und cab fumed with fu yyrt v jars, |e Tn eat i The are plunged tate tho Tait 8 ht be 3 3 na ras @ youn Faoover th waves clused uvor i young bond, sven boing tha part in the middle af ite Hur be onilited to up again. she er ng woul 2 butting Relat toas be May. the tuuklen ruse 1 “tho boat au abrtok, it jeud fpr a duck-hat” sho moaned, and fel tarbuded edu, uevor Kuuwing thud ew Lid Sof ofa yond thie. he ‘xbatnight (ho suxton in « Nitle yillago moar th lake Jaid down one pair und bo was nut playing poker olther, ‘Thy pairwas tha two lovers who ir bay and byqu 1) tat he ovenliite wlan wihary ao ie ll deog that cause als cola, a, where induod?