Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 24, 1880, Page 4

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4 ’ Che Gribwve. TERMS OF SUNSCRIPTION. DY MAIN ADVANCE—VOSTAGE TMEPATD. $12.00 yay ‘erlitton, one yen nen fy Yer, hee mui ‘7 rhesdiny, Uhnesday, amd fi a.00 Monday, Weineniny, and Fritny, per year, G00 Fatueday or Sunday, d He MO Any ator day, } oe OD v copy, Mm 3 1.50 Tnpo? Tour, 4.00 ‘aubof ten. 23:00 Rpcolmen copics acnt 10. -Give Pont-Oflleu nddrozs in full, netading Stato nnd County. Remittancas may bo mace either by draft. Oxpross, Post-Unice onder, or In roatstared tottor, at our risk. TO CITY BUNSCRITIENS: Dally, delivorod, Bu conte nor wook, Datly, delivered, Sunday inchidedt, 20 conts por weak. ddross THEE TRINUNE COMPAR Corner Madison and Dearbarn-ats.. Chicago, Ik mwas Entered ot the Postetomice tt Chicago, Ih, ax Second- = Chess Matter, Fortha benefttor our patrona who denire to nund tingle capes of THT. TRINUNE: throngh the mall, wa give horewith the transient rate of postazes Damestles ¥ightand Twelve Pago 1’ ¥izteen Wage Enpor. \ Hightand Twelva Vage Vay a ixteon Page iat Bes un 2 cents conts cents conts TRIBUNE BRANCH OFFICES, THE ENICANG THIBENK has establianpd branch ‘offices for tha recalpt of aubseriptions and ndvortiso- mentans follows: NSW YURK—loom D Tribune Multding, F.T. Mc+ fannES, Mansyor. \ GLASGOW, Scotinnd—Alian's American News Agonoy. 31 Rontiuld-st. “LONDON, Kug.—Amertean Exchange, 449 Strand, bye . Agont. AMU: MoVicker's 'Thentres * Madison street. botweon Dearborn and Bate. Abbey's Humpty-Dumpty and Bpantsh Students. EMENTS. Hontey's ‘Thentre. Randolph street, batween Clark and Tn Balle, En- Fagement of Powers’ Parnzon Comedy Company. “Dootor Clyde,” Afiernounand ovanioy. Haverty's 'Thentre. Denrdorn street, carnar of Méhrog. avi ,"Mamodon Minstrols, Aftarnoon and evening. Central We Cormor Randolph snd Stat Testimonial Concert. SS . MONDAY, MAY 24, 1880. MEnit. trove A. Farini's Insanity will probably be tho plea In be- balf of Dickson, the nssasin of the Hon, George Brown, of Toronto. © AN excursion train on tho narrow-gauge railway running from Ban Francisco to Santa Crna Inst ovening broke through tho trestle- work at the Initer place, and ton persons wero illod and six wounitod. en Seventy buildings, comprising the greater portion of the latle town of Edenbury, Clarion County, Pi, were burned Saturday night, ‘The + fire orlginated in ¢ yneant hotel building, and is thought to havo been the work of an incendiary, ‘Tho lusa is about $10,000, with litle or.1o Ine . surance. Every buteher ‘should ho a preetical ; minor, Ono of this sert at Fort Mofeod, North- ‘ west Territories, fount, it $3 sald, donivgdtacke _ sand and gravol in thestomach of a enw, and ‘on \ swashing. tho sume, obtained £5 worth of gold, ‘ "Tho cattle rango in tho’yloinity of the fort 18 to 4 be scoured to‘tind tho preciso spot where tho “untmutl grazed on Holy Tova Ia the name of the young Chief who is ‘soon to suporecdu Victoria, his fathor, a3 Obiof of the -band af Indians who havo teon id leading our ¢oldlara such a ively chase In Arte zona and New Mexico, The young man tag promised the Goverment to depose his troubles some parent inside of a month and send, hin to join Sit{ing Bull in Uritish Amertea, ¢ 4 Iris ealeulated that Minnesote’s ten votes 4 at Chleago will net be. avatlable for olthor Blaine or Grant on any of tho early ballots, 0s “the delegution [8 Instructed for Windom, and Inuat support him while thera tea chance for bis ‘nomination, Thoy nro nlao Instructed to votong ‘aunt, and if things get mixed in tho lator bal- Jotings It is thought qtiite probable Washburne Tnay get the entire M] ta vat Donnexsy, the man who tried to steal a ee } sont in Congress nnd Iioldentally « State for the: + ‘ Demoentey for use in tho Electoral count, hus a had the otek to put inn billet §400 for ox- eh pensesinourred in arguing theenseand in pradug- 2 Jug “expert testimony” on the subject of tho » authorship of the anonymous letter written to Sprlnyor. Donnelly really did hig best to help slenl a seat and a Stato, and tt would bo heer dnaratitude on the part of the Democratic ma- jority torofuso to pay him for his pains out of “tho Treasury, Thoy will undoubtedly do it. ‘Tre opportunity hasbeen aforded Senator David Davis for making a bid for the Demos grate nomination for the Presidency in tho Torn oF a lettor written in roply, to a request Tor hig views on yarlous questions of current ine terest, Tho luttor is curefully, shrewdly worded, Whonever a stralght-out opliion is safe, It is » given; on all tcklish questions the Benntor straddles skillfully; and where oven a straddle 1s regardal as portious ho warlly tukes refiyo ‘behind what he regards as the Impropricty of “oxpresding any option upon measures pond dng or proposed in Congress." ‘Tne unwillingness of ex-Cov. Marahalt Tewell, formerly Vostmaster-Genoral undor: Grant, to go to Chiengo na a dolegato from Con- neeticnt, {6 oxplatned by the fet tht ho is op- posod to tho nomination of Grant, believing tag could not be cluvted, and that, Inasmuch as ble personal relations to the ex-Prosident aro extramely frlendly, be preferred not tabe placed in tho embarrasalng position af teellag obliged to vote for the nomination of 1 man who He was confident could not by elected and onght not to he nominated, For this reason ho refuaed to bo appointed a delegite to the Chicago Convention, a Tue Iatust Blaino esthinate of the strength ' Of tho different eg ndidates on tho fret bullut at Chicago fe furnished by Willlum , Chandler, as i follows: one Ths cule ution concedes the soll votes of 4 Mllnofs to Grant and of Ohio ta Shorman, birt ra glaims for Lining 3% trmu New York and 18 frow Ponnsylyanit. Mtr. Chandler expresses the vosltivye conviction that Mlulne will reeetvo HA ae and the nonminution on the sevond ot, News comes from Panuna thats contract - ‘nna been made botwuen A, G, Menocal, repres sonting an Amorioun company, and the Govarns mont of Nicaragua for (he vonstruvtion of an AInteroceante canul, The agreement in order to bo cunclusive und binding only lacks the winor J on of tho Conyrusa of Nivnragna, whioh pas ee ‘been conyuned for that purpude, TE le wuld that oa grout cothusiasm axis aworg the people in the varlous citlos of Nigarigus in fayor of the new contract, und tho dkavenfer, a Nicaraguan Jowrnal, asserte that thy eblof moving spirits in behalf of the American Company buve been Presideut Hayes, Gon. Grant, Adtuiral Aunuuen, aig Menogul, Ovixions differ xs ta whether Grant will ‘ ‘dea candidat before the Convention at Chicugo, ‘ or whether, jn tho event of hig namtnation, bo Mould wot dycliyo, From the Guten duzctte, ‘whose odltor fs supposed to be qualitiod tu speak positively rogurding Grant's views and intone tans, couies the explicit statement that nobody hag any authority fur stating that Gon. Grant Swill order tho withdrawalof bis name ut Chlengo; thot Hie uamo his saver yet gona before tho public uaa candidate tor the Presideney by uny. ‘ word or act of Lisawn; that hu tuost certainty: Me, will not ordgr bls pune withdruwn; end that he ty will nob decline the nomination If tendered H hin at Chicugo, ‘This, the Cazctto ways, it knows to bo a fact,and prints for tho pur ‘pode af yemoying wll doubt, Qn theothor hand, it fs stated In Fornvy’s Sunday Chrontele tn Woahlugton that jaformmuon hus been received uit Grunt willdgelina glthey betere or after the vuominution, und that such w contingeury was dlyuased at a recent coufereace of the Senatorial ByoWcate, whercus Conklug declared THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, MAY 24, 1880. 2 that ho would not Laten to any proposition 1ook- | In bossing the State Conventlon, Mark tho Ing to Grant's withdrawal, and that in no ovent would he support cithor Rtalne, Sherman, or Wasahburne fer the Presidency. Evidently tho contingency of Granta rettroment from tho conteat his leon and is being seriously cone sklored and digcuased. Rervrnracans of Cook County who dosira to protest ngninet tho distranchisement of the party of this county in the late Springfield Con- vention aro invited to meet nt Musie-lHatl, Wednesday nizht, to give expreasion to their views. It Is intended that tha shall not bo an ontinary polttienl gathoring, but rather a public Meeting In defense of the constitutional rights. which Americans tuost denrly chorlsh, A call for elgnattires will be at once putin circulation, and the neocssary arrangements comploted and announced fn due time. All tha regular delus gates to Springtlolt aro oxpected to engage in tho meetlng. Husiness-men and othors who usually tuke lite or no part in politics are re- ported ng boing apecinily anxtons to Join in this movement. It will without doubt bo ono of tho most {mportaut and carnest meotings over held in this elty. ‘ ——e A nertarous event of marked Interest oc- curred yesterday in the dedication of 8t. James’ Cutholto Chureh, a nowand splendid edifice altu- nted on Wabash avenue, between Twonty-ninth and Thirticth streats, in this city, Tho serviccs, which were of an unusually elaborate and tm- prossive charactor, woro conducted with the aid re threo Bishops from outside tho city and a largo body of local avclesiustics of the Roman Chureh, ‘Tho Rt-Roy. John Lancaster Spalding, Mahop of Peorln, preached the dedioatory ser- mon, an cloquent and profound discourse on “Iellgions Thought and Physteal Sclence,” which will be ford in full elsewhere fa our columns, Prof. Swing preached at Central Church an interesting eormon on “Mediation "5 tho ftev, L. P, Morcor, Swedenvorginn, preached fit Hershey Hall on The Uso of Tomptations”; and we give besides necounts of tho Inying of the corner-stonu of a new Swedish Lutheran Chureb, and the ordination of two young mine isters at the Cuthedral of Peter and Paul. THE “ SPONTANEOUS RISING" FOR GRANT IN ILLINOIS, The people of Illinois, and especially the Republicans, have had an Mlustration of “machine” politles which exeveds any pro- ylous operations in this or perhaps any other State.’ ‘The spectacle exhibited at Springticld during the last week was most disgraceful, and merits the severest. condemmation by every man clalining to be free. A Senator of the United States has made a disreputable contract with two other Sen- ators to stitle the popular sentiment of the Republican party by forcing the nomination of Gen, Grant for a third term. ‘The Sen+ ntar from New York and the Senator from Pennsylvania had, 80 far as any known party law or precedent even of corrupt pol- ities had ever tolerated, performed ‘thetr purt of the contract, ‘They had manipulated the Conventions in those States, and had ex- haustod the machinery of Instructions and unit rules to bind tho delegates to do thelr bidding. But even in thelr audacity they «lid not dare to deny: to the Republigans of tho respective districts the right to solect their own dolegntes; they allowed each Con- gressional district to name Its own delegates to the Chieago Convention. But tho man who had inade the contract to deliver the forty-two votes of Illnols for third-termery was bolder in his grab, and more unscrupulous than Conkling and Cant eron, Ile left his seat Inthe Senate some weeks ago ant came here personally to direct the machine, Te summoned tha Revenue-Collectors, the Postmasters, the Vost-OMce clerks, the census-takers, tho route-ngents, the State officeholders, and members of the Legislature, upon their alle ginnco to hin, to resort to every and all kinds of menus to’ secure a majority In the Stata Convention, He made x Collector of Rov- enue his tool, o3.Chaivmariof the State Com- mittee, to Issue an order directing the exclu slon.of ninety-two regularly-tlected antl- Grant delegates, He summoned tho second Gllicer of the Treasury Departinent in Wash: ington to attend at the Convention, nud be Its Chairman on tho nomination of his Revenue- Collector, and his servile henchinan made whatever decislons gud rulings the “Boss dictatel, =, : ‘This same Senator, who frostituted his position as distributor of Federal patronage, directed and manipulated 4 bolt from the Re- publican Convention in. this county, for tho express purpose of giving Ils crontures, dones and Raum, the pretext for excluding the delegates from this county, to tho end tat he might secure control of, tha ro matnder of tho Convention, Hu well knew that with the Cook County delegation ad- mitted to their seats his gameof “ grab all” would be defented and tho “spontancous boum” would burst on bls hands; thoreforo he ileliberately plotted* the treacherous’ bolt in the Farwell {fall Convention and made his puppets do hiy bidding, Fifteen of the eighteen members of the Credentials Connnittes united ina report that there was no ground for contesting the seats of fifty-six of the ninety-twa Cook County delegates, nud that they should be adinitted to the Convention. ° Lt tho Imported Chairman, the Commis- sloner of Internal Revenue, obeying his mas- tur, refused to those fifty-six delegates whoaa sents wero not contasted the right to voto until after a deelsion on the right of thirty: alx other persons to seats liad beon had{ Dy excluding the filty-six dulogates whoso elec- ton was unaniinously conceded, Logan was able by 9 majority of only thirty-eight to ad wit his thirty-six bogus delegates, who had no more rightto sit in that Convention than {f thoy had boen delegutes sent over from ‘Lousiana, * 8 Having kept fifty-six uncontested dole- antes from voting until hg had strengthened Kis foree in the Convention by the ndinission of thirty-six bogus delegates, the Bunntorial Noss then gave his perufsslon to the others to enter his presunce, Previous to this thic—on Thursday morm- ing—the several Congresstonal districts, Grantite aud anti-Grautite, huld thelr Con: ventlons according to previous wsnge and appointed thelr dulegutesto the Chiengo Con- vention, ‘Then, having obtained control of the Convention by means as scandalous os fraudulent, and as disr@putablo as charaoe torlstle, this Boss proclalined that the neces- alty for Granv’s nomination demanded that forty-two delegates pledged ta vote for hin should be appoluted by the Conyentlon, and that the districts should not bo permitted to appoint thelrown delegates! Ina speech In which the bully and the slavemaster united, ho threatened tha mlserable lerd of ofiice- hollers ang. dependents, cracking hla whip and bréylishing his bludgeon, into abject subindaston, and passed an order appointing forty-two delegates to Chicago, excluding and denying to the sever’l districts any voles oyor tholr awn representation in the matter, The machine had triumphed. Conkling and Cumergn had been shown py example of raseality, ishoneasty, Jufamy, and disfrane chisument which far exceeded anything they had ever thought of, of, at Juast, had over attempted. Among thy many men whopayve naplred to tho distinctlon of “ Hogs,” and who when thelr. conduct hus been dénauncod have adapted the famous response of the once ac kuowludgal ‘leader, * What are you golng todo uboutit?” the Bosa of Hlinols now stands foremost, not only as to the mannor Dut also as to tho mgtter of higmendiclty, ‘Tne Senatorial triumvirate which is run- ning the third-term candidate consists of Measrs. Conklivg, Cameron, and Logan, Of those, Logun wenttar beyond hls coufréres | difference: In tha New York Stata Convention, tho firat business tranancted was that tho thirty- three Congressional distritts niet separately, and each appointed their two delegates to the National Convention, These delegates Were subsequently approved by tho Conven- tlon, which clecfed the four dolegatca-at- Jarge. Then Instructions were passed, upon the demand of Boss Conkling, asking thom to vote asa unit for Grant. But some twenty-four of the district delegates had been appointed hy antl-Grant constituents, and fourteen of these lave since declared that, ag the State Convention admittedly Rad no right to appoint the district delegates, It had no right to Instruct district delegates, Hence these delegates will voto ns their con- ‘atituents direot, and not as tho State Con- vention fiag instructed, and it fs highly prob- able the remainder of the twenty-four will’ do likewise, In Pennsylvania, much the same course was, wpursned, with the difference that, In some enses, the District Central Committees fppolnted tho district delegates, who wero subsequently approved by the Convention, ‘The best evidence that the Logan plan was not followed in Pennsylvania Js the fact that twenty-six of the district delegates from that Stato have declared their purpose to vote In accordance with the sentinents of thelr con- atituencies, and not with the Convention In- structlons,. Had the Logan plan been put- -sued, all would haye been imcompromising Grant men, ;, It appears, then, that Gen. Logan stands alone In the tnprecedented effort to nbso- Jutely disfranehise ten districts of a Stato by causing tho appointment of Grant dele- gates for anti-Grant constituencies at the dictation of the Grant districts and a bogus inajorty. This may prove that Gen, Logan is moro effectively “Boss” in this State than Conkling and Cameron are ti thelr respective States; but it also proves that district repre- sentation has been dented In this State Ina manner witch {s altogether unprecedented, aml which will not be tolerated, once tt may be concluded that "Boss Logan has badly overreached himself,—ay error which “Bors? Conkling and “Boss? Cameron wisely avolded, ———_— THE THIRD-TERM THING BEATEN. It is now posstblo for the first time to make up an estimate of the diviston of the Chicago Convention that may be trusted as reasonably ecorrect.and reliable, ‘There romain but twenty-four delegates to bb appolnted,—six- teen from Louisiana, who will probably bo divided between Grant and the opposition, six from Colorado, and two from Idaho, This number, however Ittuny bo distributed, wilt not affect the first struggle in the Chica- yo Convention, which will be betweon the partisans and opponents of the third-term eandilate, There {s renson to believe that the followIng table, made up independently of tha Grant figures and the Blain® fgures, represents the relative strength of the antl- third-termers and the third-tormars: States, Antl-Grant, Grant, Arkanen: soe & t Cy Alubaina.,. Callfornin. BES: oie Sf ae Seu5! &: Maryland, 6 Masaachust ay 4 Michigan. a Minnasot » At teiee head 10 Missourl... 1 Nebraska, 6 Novada, i a 2 Hn u 4s a 3 a 7 ' BY Toxis,. 5 Vermont, 10 Virginin...+.. i West Virginia, 10 * Wisvonsin... 10 i Territor Arizona... a - ‘Dakota, 3 District of 1 Montana. 3 New Moxi a 2 3 1 TOLD secevceresey seseeee coeee MOT SUMMAIY. Full numbor of deleyutes, eceastiry, fora chalee.. fmbor iiroudy alouted, For Grant. Aguinat Gra Numbor to bo appointed. Tho above table requires but lttieexplana- tion, It concedes to Gen. Grant's supporters every delegate thoy can claim with auything Iike confidence, and it leaves them just 100 votes short of a majority, ‘Thetr position Is such that they will never galn, but lose, after the first batlot, if they go into the struggle atall. It may be safely assumed, therefore, that tho third-torm lasuo has bean rejected by the Republican party, and that the elngic cane alidnte who ropresents It will not be nomt- nuteds SHALL THE VU. 8. OOURTS BE CLOSED) Ever since the Demecratic party has been In complete possession of both Houses of Congress Its lugders haye provesded upon the theory that Government tn this country isa mere pleco of party machinery, with no other aim or purpose than to subserve a class of men who aro seoklng to contro! the disiri- butlon of taxes as spolts among thelr retalners, ‘Thu present Congress has been In session altogether about ton months, and during that time It has not matured agingle moasure fgr the promotion of publiv interests, Worse than this, it has actually falled ‘to provide for the proper support of such working de- partments of the Government as Ie outaidg the scope of political machinery, and thia in spite of the enormons surplua revonue which: {3 accumulating by reason of the reduction in tho Jnterest-charge and the malntenance of tho high tarlit duties, ‘The Democratic party lenders set aut to repeal tho Election Jaws, or to so cripple then as to render thom Inoporatiye, in order that tho bulldozers at the South and the .rouxhs of the Northern cities might havo full ewing at the approaching: Presidential eleGion, ‘This unworthy and dishonest party purpode has buen kept steadfastly In view ever since It was adopted asa policy, The Democrats of the lust Congress refused to pass the requisit appropriations for the Judicial service of tho Government because they could nut carry out they nullification project, The President called ay extra ses- lon of the present Congresa in order to per form the work which the old Congress had deliberately neglectod. At the extra scsston there was a perslatunt but futile effort to courca the Presklent to an approval of the proposed nullification, and, when that attempt falled, an adjoutnment was taken without appropriating tha yay for the executive brauch of the United States ju- diclal system. ‘Eho perveralty of the Dem- ogratic polloy was emphatically condemned by the people In the clections of 1870, when the work of the axtra session was in issue. ‘The Democrats were defeated everywherg, Notwithstanding this palnted rebuke, the Democrats renewed thely efforts gt nulil(igas uon at the regular session. ‘hey delayed for uonths to vote the accumulated deficlenoy lr the pay of the United States Marshals, and then passed the bill with # political rider whieh was sure to call ont an Executive veto, ag ltdid, And tharothecaso stynis to-day, During the yearin whieh no supplies have deen furnished the United States Marshals have shown a patrlotism whieh would not have been expected from them if they had heen Democratls oMecholders, ‘Ehoy hava porformed the services required of thom without any compunsation, and without any assurances that they would ever re- eclye pay which depended on tho vote of a Democratle Congress, Thoy have also made personal advances for the recessary ox- pensos of holding court, Bub the Minit of patience, and in many cases of the individnal resourees of the Marshals, hns been reached. Mr. J. W. Chapman, tha United States Marshal for Iowa, has notified the Attorney- Genornl that, after serving several months without pay and advancing something bike $10,000 for the pay of other Court oMcers and necessary expenses, fly resoureas are ex- hausted, Tho Attorney:Genernl 13 helpless. He can only thank Marshal Chapman for hls past dovation to the public service, and repent that he himself has over and over again di- rected tho attention of Congress to tho In- Justlea of withholding tha necessary sup- plies and the injary that would unquestion- ably be done to public Interests, The United States Court in Iowa must be closed with a full and hnportant docket of litigation that demands guttlement, : What has occurred In Towa will soon oc- cur in other sections of the country, ‘The United States Courts will of necessity close unluss Congress directs the payment of thelr officers, and the public who pay so dently for the support of Government will suffer losses amounting to millions of dollars by tho {nexeusnblo delay in litigation, ‘This would be bad enough if It were the unavold~ able result of an insufficient revenue, but it ig intamoua when tho United States ‘Treasury ig overrunning with money, and whon It is brought about to assist In the perpotration of 1 par- tisan .,wrong, lt may bo that the) nullifiers will be brought to thelr senses by the actual imminenee of the necessity for adjourning the United States Courts, and will now scek to make a tardy atonement for the wrong and Injury they have put upon the public. Even If thoy shail do this now, be- eause they dare not longer fly in the faeo of public indignation, the people will not forget that Justice in the Courts, which Is cortainly tho first claim the citizen has upon Govern iment, hag been retarded and In part dented in order that the Democratic majority might urge the nullification of laws for tho protec- tion of honest olesttons, ‘That was from the first, and {s now, the only pretext for with- holding the necessary authority to pay the United States Marshals and keop opon the United States Courts, Never bofore was so outrageons a schema attempted through such Inexeusabla methods by any polltical party. THE ENGLISH LIBERAL DISAPPOINTING PROGRAM, Ono of tho Radical elub-houses of London wos brilliantly HMluminated one evening of the week before Inst, and from the merry sounds which lysued therefrom it was np- parent that thore was grant rejoicing within, A pnaser-by asked the renson, and was told it wag because one any hind passed since the | accession ofthe Liberals to power in which they hind not hlundored or metwith some dig- aster. From the cable news since received it Is quite clear that fow ovenings have since elppsed when like illuminations and, rejole- ing would have béon at all appropriate. ‘The visit of the Prince of Wales to Mr. Gladstone the day after he had accepted office was evidently made to impress on that gentleman the desirability of leaving the Radieals, to whom tho Liberal sucess was almost entirely due, severely alone,—out In the cold. ‘Tho {itled Whigs who surrounded Mr. Gladstone furthered tho purpose of the Princo, and the result {sa Cablnat In which tho old party hacks, the worn-outand washed- out Whigs whose days of usefulness wora sitpposed passed, predominate. ‘Titled no- hodica were given the minor offices, and two: or threo organizing Radicals Ike Cham- berlain wero given places to placate thelr party, while the thoughtful, scholarly Radi- ents Ike Thorold Rogers, Leonard Cour- tenay, and Joseph Cowen were completely Ig- nored. Eyen John Bright was relegated to tha quiet obscurity of a sinecure office, the Duchy of Lancaster. Mundells was givon n minor placo in an ofice for which he ts ad- mitted to bo wholly unfitted; Fawcett is al- lowed togropa his way through the Inbrynth- Ine intricactos which grew up in the Post- ONMtco Dapartment under Lord John Manners, Shaw Lefevre, the‘best informed member of the Liberal party on the land question, Is, curiously enough, mado Secretary of tha Navy, on the prinelple put forth in “Pina- fore,” beennse he “neyor, never wentto sea” he was mado “ruler of the Queen's nave,” Dilke, who has mao n hobby of social and political reform, was put where he can do Teast good, and where he won't be in the way of Royal grants,—In the Forelen Ofilce, "Tho array of high-placad Whigs fs truly for- midable. There is tho feoble, forcible Gran- villa; the prosaic Scot, Argyll; Spencer, who mado a digmal failure as Irish Viceroy; gud Sir Willigm [arcourt, prince of English ogotista and post-prandial prigs; and many othors. With such a Cabinet, so entlraly otit of har- mony with truly Libaral principles and praay tees, blunders and disastors were inevitable. Dilke, out of place, talked foolishly to a French journalist; Fawcett, fancying him- selt in tha Cabinat, took rumor for fact, and hag been obliged to retract his charges against tho Tories In yegard to tha Indian finanees; and Gladstone himself hos had to apologize to Austria for his ante-clection utterances, Tollowing on these came tho mortifying defeatof Igrcourt forretlectionat Oxford for having malo himselfso officiously offensiye,—he proposed five Cabinets, in all of which-ho hada good place, but Gtadstoie had no place whatever; the defent of the Scotch Lord-Advocata in Wigtonshire, and tha loss of what was deemed a secure Lib- cral seat nt Sandwich to the ‘Tories by alurgo majority, But probbly the greatest blunder of all ts tho pollcy whioh the Liberals announced to Parliament through the medium of the Qneon’s speech, Thoy obtalned power by pro- feasions of opposition to Benconsfield’s fore efgn policy, and frequent promises .of many and sweeping domestia reforms; yot they are nowapparently devoting tholrenorgies to care rying out the ‘Tory polley, Muvh-nveded domestig refarms are almost entirely ig- nored, that they may attend to monsures for the administrativd reform of Turkey, Beac- onsield's interference In the affairs of other Natlona hag been denounced Jn clequent purlods, bitter inyeative, and flery philippla, from every Liberal platform In England and Seotiand, yet the indignant; and unree strained, and perfetvid orators, now that thoy aro fn office, send an Intinerant Ambas sador to nearly overy Court {n Kuropo to Ine vite tha codperation of the Powors tu rogue Juting the domestic concerns of 9 cumbyous decaylng—nearly decayed--pxotiomanarcliy, to try to galvanize its national corpse inte a feeble existence, ‘They algo promise to look after the affuirs of the Afghans and tho Boers, and wilt doubtless try by gentle means to changs the predatory habits of tho one people, and try to parsuade the othdérs to phandon playebolding, All thls while tbe Inbabitants of what the | Engllsh Tlberals are pleased to call tho " Sts- tor Kingdom,” and “an integral portion of the Empire,” are starving, dying by the road: sido, or rotting In those Intolerable dens tho Inlah workhouses; while thay are beaging piteously for alms from Amerten and other nations; their chitdren kept in compulsory Imnorance, beenusa they have not guMctent clothing to appear in school, ‘These people are as much misgoverned, aud much worse off, than any Jewish ov Christian subjects of the Porte. ‘The majority of them are being robbed by rioting lurptes, and though dis- armed by Inw are only kept from open rovolt by the presence fn tholr midst of o staiiding army.: 'The young men and wamen are fleo- Ing from the country: ‘ag if it wero a plague apot—and miayoverntnent has mate It so—tn the hopa that they may earn enoigh to pay the tribute demanded by the English landlords—many of | them = Whigs—from tholr fathers for the privilege of Hylng in the Jand of their birth, And yet the head of tho TAveral Govermnent fy tha man whose clo- quence roused tho English-speaking people of the world to sympathy with the itsgoy- erned Neapolitans and Venetians, and ex- elteit horror at tho atrocities In Bulgaria. Much more was oxpectei of the Liberal overnment,—they promised more} they wedged themselves In speech and fetter to do more to enrry ont needed reforms in the terrible Innd-system of Ireland and to further extend the franchise in the United Kingtom, ‘Their promises are not betng fulfilled. Thetr pledges do not seem to bind. Jt lns often beon romarked that when the Whigs were. out of office they promised much, but did Htle when in, was for this reason that © celebrated master of tnvective ealled thom “the base Whigs’? an epithet which he afterwards improved on by calling them tho “base, brutal, and bloat! Whigs.” Ib te evident that the socia influence of the Inndlord element Is too strong {n the present Cabinet to hope that any valu- able measure of Innd reform will be soon at- tempted. ‘fhe oxeltement of the recent ngl- tatlon fs oxpeeted to soon pss awny, the agi- tators may bo quicted with rewards In the shape of office, and the ante-clection pledges will be conveniently forgotton. Themngnifi- ‘cout oratory of the Liboral orators may not innptly—though the comparison bo odions— be Nkened to pig-shaving. ‘There was great nolse and little wool, No wonder that Mr. Parnoll and My followers threnten to resort to their old practicesof obstruction. “THINGS TO BE DONE. There is aduty which the anti-third-torm: delegates to the lnte State Convention owe to themselves, to their constituents, and to the State, and which thoy must not neglect. ‘That duty Is, in every county in cach of the ten Congressional, distrieta which appointed auti-Grant delegates to the National Conven- tion, to hold public meetings and denounce the ‘high-handed, seandalous usurpation, and tho Infamous disfranchisement of the majority of the frea Republicans in thoso districts. ‘Tho dulegates tg tho Iate Convention rep- regenting thosedisfranchised districts should report to thelr conatituents the action of the State Convention bulldozors In attempting to rob the people of the several districts of this Stato of the right of representation in the National Conyention, ‘They should = re- port to thelr constituents the fact that these several districts, In strict accord- anea with tho call of the National Com- inittee, which requests the several States to sond two delegates from each of thelr “Con- gressional districts,” and with the universal custom which by unbroken usage had be- come the established party Inw in this and inallother States, appointed the delegates torepresont thore districts in tho National Convention, and assure their constituents of their purpose to present thelr credentints, and demand admission to tho National Con- vention. : i At the same time, wo suggest to the Wash: burno and Blaine Clubs In every county and olty in the State to hold meotings, and give prompt . and determined oxpressfon, denouncing . the gross usurpation by the bulldozers of the Stato Convontion, Insisting on the priceless right of. rapro- sentation by districts, and sustaining the ac- tion of tho represontatives of the soveral Corgressional districts In appointing ‘dole- gutés to the Natfonql Convention instructed io demand for tho Republicans of Illinois a right never heretofore denied to the people of any Congressional district In tha Union. ‘The several delegates and alternates ap- pointed from the ton antl-third-torm districts of this State to the Nationa}: Convention should also micot In this city next week, and, neting with the delegates from this city, adopt such mensttros as may be necessary to have tholr credentials presented to the Na- tional Convention, and thelr rights properly and yizorourly vindleated bofore that body, Let the friends of Washburne and of Blaino, and all antl-third termers throughout the State, take immediate action in all thetr clubs and at public meotings, denouncing the actlon of the Logan bulldozers, and declare that the free Republicans of Milnols will never submit to be enslaved by any task- TasaOty no wmatter what his rank or preten- sions, From the days'of the Revolution it has boon a cardinal principle of the Republicans of America that thare can be no taxation, and no allegiance, and no obedience, exacted from those who aro denied representation, espectally from thosa whose long possessed right of representation has been unlawfully takon away. ‘The right of ropresontution isn snered ona; tt cannot be taken away without doing violence to every principle of Amorican Republicanism; andno Republican in Ulinois will submit to such deprivation without rogorting to evory Inwful mode of redressing tho present wrong and preyent- ing a repetition Iu the future. Let this de- tormination be wade known ty every precinct in the State, ’ ‘Tur New York Dutly Commerctat Bulte- tin publishes somo figures which show that tho consumption of coffeo has incrensed by nearly 8 por cout during tho last quartor of a century, Jn 1856 the total’ production of coffca was about 800,165 tons, whilg in 1878 1¢ bad rison to 400,810 tons, Brazil, with 263,400 tons In. 1655 and 225,500 tons {n 1878, ig the country which grows tho most; the Dutoh Indlea coming next, with 72,000 ‘tone in 1855 and 91,400 tons In 1878; followed by Coylon and Hritish India, witts 53,400 tons in 1878, as against only 23,800 tons sn 2855, ‘Thus it will be soon that, white in tho Dutoh Indics tha fn= oreuse of production hus beon ouly 95 por cent and in Brasil 05 por cont, tho production has l- | ost doubled itself In the Iifdlan Umpire, Tho greatest Advance, however, hus taken placg in Contral Amorica; for while only 3,600 tons of vasfoo wore grown thoro {n 145 the production in 1878 1s extinatod at -8%,500 tong, Tho consump> tion of coffee, proporonately to the population, ig greatest In Holland, the Dutch walng nearly 18 pounds per heud per annum, Belgium coming next with 0 pounds pur bead, then Norway with 84 pounds, and tho United States with BM pounds; while France, which copsymed only 14 pounds per bead iy 1854, now cougumed ay pounds, Germany 8 pounde, und Great Britain only 1 poyud por head. —— Tue Now Jersey Pomonratio platform bo- ging with a large dish of palittcul platitudes, rather blgbly seasoned with old State-ryights horvaslos, and onds with 9 megs of fraud twaddic, In tho middle fs 8 resolution that is Cynny enongh to makes horse laugh, It upbralds tho Republioan purty for its romporiaiog nancial policy, and boasts of the ‘ Numouratia doctrine (bat a sound currency with o epecio busla iy tho best way of seourlag Husinoss stability." Now thls," suya the New York Trivuns, + frome party that ran ‘Theutag Hwing, of Oblo, only last fall on n fint pintform; nm party thot pro- duced the Obla fidlen, and has tilted the Innd for tho past ten yeara with dishanest and postiforous notions about the currency; a party that ling crowded tho catendars of Congrors with bills for repealing tho Resumption net and for printing Irredcemablte greontueks by the ton.— thisAwo say, coming from such party, is doe Nelous. Tho chook of thase Jersoy Democrats iscolossal. ‘Their Ies, like Fulstag’s, aro ‘gross ns a mountain, open, palnablo, An uninatryct= ed doloxation te Cincinnati, with a varicty of firat-choleo preforencos, but evidently open to the blandishments of Mr. Tiiden, was the tangl- ble result of tho Convention. a Tur detogates to the Springiela Conven- tion from tho’ Gitlena District, 1 which Grant at present. lives, stout as follows on tho third-term ‘Dnalnoga: f . For third torm of Grant... Agalnat third torm of Gran “ “ Now, {f thoro s any part of tho United States whera the boom should havo’ been “spons_ taneous" it wasin tho Galena District. In ad- dition to Grant's own persona! popularity, It had tho oMelous support of Long Jones, who had all tho, manvy and officeholders he could tio to forou the appolutmont of third-torm dolegates toSpringfleld, but he complotely falted ta sut- vert the popular sentiment. And the only way loft to provont Grant’ailistrict from holng ropre- sented In tho Chisngo Convention by two anti- third-termors was by having Logan appoint two- persis td mlsrepresont that district, ant hin fnetion In the Convention to Indorso his appolnt- mout. Rut tho matter hns still to be passed on by tha Chiengo Convention. hat body must determine the question whether Logan hae tho right to throw ont the representatives selected hy winajority of tho dologates of tho Galena District and to substitute bls own cronturos. —$<—<———————— Ix the libel sult of the “only fire-proof ho- tel In Chicngo” ve. tha only firesproof newspae Por ostablishinent tn town, wo admit thatitis a strong point agninst ‘THe 'Trmunn that if Pot- tor had been a Demoornt ho nover could have mustered the cheek to. tako part in tho Blrst Ward Ropubliaan primary, Uut if he estab: lishes hls Republicanism to the satisfaction of twelve Intelllgent bolters,—Jurors, wo menny— Tun Turnune will bring sult aguinst tho Demo- oratia purty of Chienyo for tho amount of Pot- ter'a jrdgment, for having mlaled tt into tho bor Nef that ho betonged to thelr political church and hid voluntarily made his hostelry thelr heudquarters for tho propayntion of Democrite fo doctrines; and wo shall oxpect to get recoupod from such decoivers as Fred Winston, Ald, Wickorsbam, Jobin Forsytho, Carter H, Harriaon, Young Doolittle, Col. Cameron, Perry HL. Swith Frank Lawler, Gon. Ltev, George If, Meech, Jonn Mattocks, William ¥. Daniels, J. Chestertlold Mackin, Ald. McNally, Charley Kern, Dayo ‘thornton, and other Democratic headlights, who have been guilty of circulating the dofumae tory report that mine hogt of tho “only fro- proof hotel” was, or over had been, a brothor Domocrat of thet ——————_—— Kirr-rrxrna fs gn expensive recreation in Bolo, Gal. A snloonkeoper of that mining con- tra recently tudo n kite of 0 $i) plate-glase Ox 10 barroom mirror, tying to It a string of doml- Johns and brown jugs for ntail, Tho novel kite ‘went up with a ruah, nnd, roflecting the raya of the sun, dazzfod tho eyca of ull who bo- hetlit. Its foous oxtondod as far as Mammoth, whore a haystack waa sot on firo by tho convon- tration of tho sun's rays. Tho Inhabitants of the Inttor place wore grontly nlurmed at tho singular object in tho houvens, one core respondent comparing it to ‘n ball “of con densed lightning.” Unfortunately tha enloon- keopor’s stock’ of jugs ani demijohns was not Inrgocnough to supply the ‘neceasnry countce- poise to tho beavy mirror, and, after ascending to great hight with amozing rapidity, itsuddenly turned and fell with a ornali to tho earth, broak~ ing into a thousand fragments. Tho whistling of the wind In tho Jugs and demfjohns made a pe oujiursort-of music, tho atono jugs supplying the buss and the ginas demijubns the troble. It happened that thoy ware nil in accord, anda fino harmony was tho result, ——— $$ Tur New York ‘Times (Grantite), having stated that Senator Chandler advocated Grant's nomInation, and that thera wns an uniorcur- ront in favor of Grant in Michigan which would trunsfor to him goyen to ton of tho Hinine dele~ gntes,the Detroit Tritune—Chandler’s old organ— thus replics: s ee * ‘This paragraph of tho Times doos not contain netatement of any importance whioh Is not ut. torly without foundation, Mr, Chandlor was for Grant. (ng tho letter published posterduy niade plain) “iC ho could be nominntod withouta cone teat’; that isnot the present situation. ‘Thera jg noundorourront” or othor aurrent of feol- ing here that tho State Contention “made 4 mistake.” With tho exception of dir. Thompson, thore fa nat no man on tho. Chicago dulekntion who ia not for Maing without any regard to “ine structions” ‘or the notion of nthoy States, Mich ign adopted no“ justructians” whatever, and any ruling at Chicago on that point will not af tect the course of iis dylegutos, There is not In tho weatorn or the enstérn_ part of the State any pregnant, fooling In favor of Gon. Graut.” Tl fae he rai im ste lupin Oy corre anondent who fgoither wholly ignorgntoreypubla Gf tho buidese iniarepresentation. Me ———— a : A CLERGYMAN was an applicant for a di- yorco in the Norfolk County Court at Dedham, ‘Maaa., on Tuesday, on tho ground of thooxtremo cruelty of his frife. At the closo of his testi- mony he gall that bis wifo finaliy loft him‘in Beptembor, 1879, and Judge Colo nsked jf hq turned her qway for tho Mi-trontmont. Haq ree plied: No, I did not; I told bor I would rathor dio with her than havo the publio know of. tha separation.” “That gottles tho caso," replictt Judge Cole; that was q condonement of tho trouble, and the plainti® has no ground for di+ vorcg on thocharge set up; but, when the propor timo arrives, ho hus 9” good case on tho ground of desortion, Bring on tho noxt cage.” Ho finally ngroed to dismiss tho libel “without projuiigo to thb iltelunt, with the right to bring sujt at itho expiration of the propor time for desortion.” Both tho yilnister and bie largo nunibor of witnogses prosont, who did not gots chaneo to testify, wore ovidently much disap- pointed at the sudden termination of tho gaso. ee E GENTLEMAN residing nenr Holona, Ark, tyé owner of a large pluntutton, and the former ownor of 150 slaves, in a letter of date of May & toan oxralave of bis now residing in thiaclty, after giving him the nows In regard to hia fore pe ussoolatos and his own fumlly, closes 28 fol- owas ‘ ‘The exodus will Anatly tear us to pieces, It iq afixed fuct, No. country can survive without labor, and it a bosh to assert thut we cares othor libor. ‘Tho colored people want to stay hero, but thoy can’t and enjoy freedom. Donwer racy and bulldozing degruito boyoni eadurance, tigso, Under Demooratio rulathe South ia not habitable far Union men nor colored people, All 1 have is hero, and boro Lam onmpellud to stay, Toan't figs away, but watch it, You bot whon Inbor all Toayos, and those bultdazors bacoma plow-boys, tho political eplrit muy become slightly ronovated, ————$—— Tue Committes pf the whito Republicans of Georgia, who lately: mot at Atlunta, having the Hon. Jounthan Norcross for ita Chairman, has fasucd a long adgress Inviting the attend aneo olther in persdh or by delegates of the white Nopublicans and all othora wha pro op- posed to tho present Domocratlo régime in tha State at anothor Convontion tube held in the aumno clty on Tuesday, Juno 22, for furthor cons sultation and tho nomjyution of Klectora. The addroas snys that tho movemont id not intended to bo In opposition to the existing Republican organization, and that, in fact, thera are no whito man, or next to Donp, to bo'drawg gway frou that organization. To the Baitor of The Chicago Tribuns, |. Omo4go, May 23—Have you found out rot whut It was ‘Tite ‘TRIBUNE anid about Pottor Puluier that cet that gentioman tocommenco wuitaguingt it for bel? A great many people ure asking of cach othor tho same question, and lag one scems to know, * Wo undorstund i, was becauag THa Taryn insinwated that he was a Domoorat and hig house bad boon a Denoonitio hundquarters, He regurds {tas a pereonal odlumay and gn Injury to hia Qualucas {o bo suspcoted of suck A disropy utable political poresy, and that it willtakeabout €23,0000f TintpuNY money tobeal bis political rep- Utation and rotetublish bim in tho confidence of the yar “ workors" as an anfl-agpatoher and wholo-hog Hopablican, : Prov, Suaven treata in the tho future of tho inning of precious motals on the American contlagyt. fle prediots 8 vast inv oreaso in tho production of the precious matalay that of aljvor to be the moro important, that of wold to bo tha moro ateady. eR A wosan recently walked from Gunnison to Leadville to sullcit legal adviog. Bho satd that ber busbund wes @ good, moral youn, and that ghe bad wotbing wnder the gun aggipst hisy Cure thorthan that be had refused polnt-bluuk tele ee with his true and lawful wife any a mying attentions to a moan, re ne cross-eyorl, Hook-nosad, double-Jawed, fore tungned, red-hnired, sourefacod, low-breee white-Ilvored, consitmptive, alx-toed, cre Joguod, htimped-hackor, orippled, nubditod ee, an from Sausohe, “Now, Mr. Lawyer at como nerss to tearn what Pm todo sere’ “Why, Cwoulda't stand 16" Tb won't iM ldn'te? “Don't you think 1% Jertainly tis." “Tut what amy do?" Why, havo blm arcested and locked oe “What! havo my bitsband Jrtted? No, art. nover do anything of tho sort. Io ts. kind, int man, and all want to do ts to fixup thin cue that I can marry somohody else.” gid —— ‘Tur Loulstana Republican Coy meeta in Now Orleans to-day, anda y, struggle between tho Grant and antl-Grant f thons ts uiticipated. ‘The New Orleans Drie ae rios went houylly against the third-termers, ba us thoy did in this city's but the Grantites. h bolted na thoy did here and hope to secure lg trol of the pryantzation of tho State Convention by tho same Infamous tactles that were prac tlend in the Springileld Convention, ‘Tho lt tnileations yoru hey would fall, and mt tho mnfority of tho delegation third-term. rit ba ant ntivention ery bitter i ————$—__—. A Wrateey editor, wha “fatters that ho can draw out information ng rel ona E noxt man,” bas been trying his hand on tho g; 4 of Cipher alloy. Ie reports that ho ha efforts In every dircctlon—bumorous, soriny and othorwise—to find out from tho "physlea, wreck" whethor or not he" intended to ry ngain, but: failed utterly euch time. He cone cludes that the old gontloman ta indeed 9 week bot that bis hand 4a ns sound ns over; and that he Ie uncommanty shy. . Provious teati nob conilfot with thin ay tes E ———— Awitr ompPany of mon and we Lowlstun, Mo., the other day, engnged ene prompt discussion. of tho quesuon; “Wh, adldn'tthe Mong eat Danlel?” One sito main, tiined that the rengon was beenuse Danlel wag too good; and tho other that tho lions were not hungry. ‘To upshot of tho matter was that they got into w wrangle, and the police were called in to suppress tho row. ‘Thoy carried ong man to Jail for striking one of tho women, <<< 7 Vinatxta gives weak encourage Mr, Tildon’s candidacy, ‘The result at "th hae yention In that Stato, ropresenting tho faction whicb calls itself Conservative, ia a gentle litt totho Flotd movement. Tho delegation toch olnuatt Is sntd to be divided ne to its first cholcg Lotween Seymour, Fie}, Buyard, and Thufman; but Judge Feld got the bencllt of most of the applause, and the drift of sontiment appeared to run In bis direction. Mr. Cownny, the bad “shepherd” who was oonvicted of willful cruolty to ono of the Inmates of hits “Fold,” hag served four months, or one-third of hig sentence, and bis appeal hag Just been brought ton hearing before the gone eral term of tha Supreme Court. If the pro covdings aro hurried up, tho appeal will probably be deeldud by tho time ls term of Smprisonment expires. Cor, Frenonics Wucren, of Mlinols, fays ina card donylug that ho hus had a secret Inter viow with Washburnes “ho paragraph tn the St. Louls Tintes of May 6 ts hollow, rattling tine ware, ind n stupid tle. Lcaro nota fig about the bosh of thosy Domocratio chutterboxes and clatter-oxon."” Gov. Cognern, of Now York, hos signed tho bill recently prssed by the Leylstature per- mitting tho oltizetis of that State to sua lueolvont ae through tho Attornoy-Gencral of New ‘ork, ‘Tue Boston Advertiacr says that Mr, Tily den holds ‘the key of tho Domocratio situas tion.” But what good will It do him if ho teeeg the combination?"—jashtngton Post. Acconpina to the St. Louls G,-D, tha Grant platform is; “Two bad terms deserve another,” AMns. II, B. Stowe’s orange grove in Florida ia suid to have yiolded $3,000 to thoncrolast year, — RERSONALS, | The tomb of Cesar at Rome is being mate into g thontro, and hereafter somebody besides Caaca will make tho rent, : Noi’ that tho excursion-bont has been de stroyed by firo boyond the possibility ofare- butld, Chicago will become wore popular than ovor ag A Bummer resort. ‘The number of red men in Florida has ‘boon reduced to 205, and, as thay aro all good Indlang, [t {s probable that the tribe will soon be oxfinct, ns good Indians always db young. , + Gon. Robert Patterson, of Philulelphia, ts 02 years old.’ ¥id took part in tho War of 181% tho Mexican War, tho War of the Rebellion, an is patiently walting fora revival in his Hue of business. mee on They buried Prof. Dascamb, of Oberlin, with a torpado at his aldo, but tho fact tbat 00 medical students have como down in adjacont countics, would indicate that tho gentleman's rest has not been disturbed. Columbus Delano ta now a farmer {n Ohio ‘This is not the Columbus that dcovered Amery fon, but the ouo thut America discovered {n 40 important office ata time when he would have bpan a better man in somoborty else's place, A Now York paper-says that tho Agasls Musoum of Hurvard College recently secured tho cholotat calicction of fosalla in’ tho world, Jt seems bard (hat so many Bt. Loute oditors Bhonlid bo taken away at oncos but yernaps(t lt all for tho best, Lack-a-day, lack-a-day, lack; Mabol has sat on a tok: Her brown-oyed beau Novor will know ‘What ails her, until she comes back. —Walt Whitman, ‘A gontloman who writes to know why {t t, thot 60 much ditficuity fa oxperienced this sprias Ingetting men to bout carpets, mako garden, ptq, should rqinomber that avery elreus (8 obliged ta haye a band of wild Zulus, thus pe ing In a great measure the Iubor question, tig sald ‘that Secrotary Schura won the affections of his fianoda by his plano-playls and, ff the roport {s true, wo aro propare to a Hoye that mon who play the French bora & ' sometimes murrled attor tho knowiedse thoy are on intimate terms with that perilout instrument bocomes public. abl ‘New York pavers are making consldert fusa over a boy in that Stato whn bas Lig est over 100 fish In threo: years. Wo have: be " oye In [Ullnols to nocomptish: ‘tha eamo feal pa one afternoon, amply by swinuning under picr and ontling the othar fellows" BITES nes Enst may tend 11s in esthetics, but whon It 00 to fish-gathoring wo aro there. - Horé Ia 0 pleturo-of famine and fare p drawn by Longfellow in his “Iflawatha, ’ aX au appllowble to tho sufferings in Ireland end ous parta of Europo and Asiat fell, an Perisher Ty Wes MnKty Was Fy sky above howl} wer NS Eeeeeaeatnanec ae meat “Many parenta,'t observes the Dipladt (Pp.) Commerctat, * must be entirely Sguorm abo manner in which thelr daughters oid pul fhomselyes on ralirnad trams oF (Hoy ore a stop.to thelr carrylnge-on. ‘The Jo 10g who flirta with the brakgman oo ee seat car stulke with a atavcly alr toward j rope {ntoJt na though gho wero faint fre * i the varth any morert oxortion, thon stares at ibo passenwers, rom aigus to guoh as she chooses to recon an tho frst oppor nity ‘begins ally aod obatter with 4 1, companton poner light-hoaded and frivulous. frac, Pe hied lady isin? a tute way Ot taeitloe fering p wreck ‘of bone kind. Be bere porowndownfall, Too git whaleel nor reserved in. ber dpweanor—who fig tr00 pruifish on the ono: bund nor erent On the Othor,—who jnakes UO. pau ma attantion and ‘oncaurayes NO sare {500 way of love-making, will always “ie annoyance and proof ugalnet scan! ato pert quires gomo gtreogth of churaoter 0! bert of youus ladles tq keop within tho DI {n Fegard to thle mattor, avd If parouls woll agsurod that thofr dausnlers citbor plot enough to trayel slouo they shoul bors dbo yndor yugrdian of withdrar mother Lym tho prelna”” F at}

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