Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1880, Page 9

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THE CiHICAGO Everywhero tho tariffs are violations of free | Fr trate, Bort every Wviiery bie will bo ud sary tren diritits Connda duly tie. sven: on te Srithinalaaiy va rejoteln. finbitton takes its de ‘Lure and aves | otherdand theraaienotafew Americansinthe | yet step info ne, net unlike * My - - tho world nt peace eee a ae eet dns During the | the nomination of Gen. Granta curtalnly | led nt the expense of, much time nad neey U have said that Str Francis Lincks ty of | Civil War, while the Canadian ‘Torles, In | long before the fall morning shail urrive:-to | pet that tie troubles of tho University orth the number of tose whont sympathy witl:thoge of England, were tak- | witness his grandest triumph... Fhese state- | Cage will remain a subject for nowapper com- THE PRESENT ABPECT OF CANADIAN FE | Sng part with the South, numbers of Cang- | ments are not hilsplaced yefikeditorials, not | ment fer many years to come. NANCE. dinns—L have heard on good authority as | unfounded guessavork, butitltey: are the ‘The management of the affairs of tho Univer- Aisqulots, If to say nultating things isto | Wary os 40,000—enlisted in the nrmics of the } sober geuerallzntions Of dscorg of talky | sity ls better than it has been for nv long time, bo an ogitator, he ‘st hardly esenpe the North, A ‘Canadfin youth, if he docs not | with representative Wixconsitt mi. One of | and, were it not for this outrageous turden of it y pardiy escape the | in his -. jrous to souk | these, aud & mere sample of Inter- | debt, the institution would be in admirable con mame. i a recent article In hig Montrent | {il career fh his own cauntry, oes to Bee! 4 Bul Amore saple Of B her inte litiatt. President Aud dg 4 Journal of | Commerce, roviewnz the | llsfortune at Now York or Chicago with as | views, was with the Hon, Mr Aprvhey hin | dition, President Anime mane pon 24, 1880—TWELVE VAG ich Cunads inte the Eastern States, and | Badgerdom are weleomed will widespread | put to ita bualnews In this Sta fsconsiy will | Gonullty of thia law, howeve soven hefare | (Hi eubsidiary question world fave to be sel: —_— CANADIAN RECIPROCITY . The constitu. $4 dented, and 1s font hol: notes tho figures ou the bell-punch with te |. Lam sorry to havo frightened a smany lookers-on, and am not a little frightonod name woul have | myself now when considering that had f been been found in this sketel a litle while azo, | s¥ept off 1t would have been sure death, and whose peculiarities are mine tatked of Lrltoy Garrs, Dell Pilot. still, has been gathered ‘o lis fathers, wnel u his millions have become tho heritaze of iis | THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE. sons, who, it ts understood, have added Nt Srieatentt of th test paeking-honse fi Cantiito—Rogardus. ‘The heat of the greatest packing-house in n = 5 the world ts 2, D. Armour, ‘The firm ownsa To the Eatlor of Tha Uhicago Tribune, chain of houses frown Kansas City, Milwau- | Crtcaco, Juno 2.—In requir to dre. Cuniitfo, Commercial Union Between the Dominion and the States. Who Are For and Who Against It *. "In Canada. " 0 he college proper is tnehallenzed, and Mr. Fatrs y ork, 7 ‘ " 3 i little compunction or hesitation asa young | self. fle was quite reluctan! spenk at | 4 + 7 r+] kee, and Chicago, to New York, and kills | tho wife of William B, Cuntiffo,who whsarrestea . : Suanclal ae anna ly ra Srnec 484 Scutetmun sous to seek lils fortuna at Bfon- | first (2), but whet -pressed tang that his Pe eet eee ete uivenui | hogs by the willionavery year, ‘I'he capa: | for attempting to munter- Mr. Dygardus, hee Irresistable Gravitation Towards vheater or London. change was a genuine one front ‘tap Ww bot | business talents of no tenn onlor. Tho Dyard city of the house liere alone, when ran up to | friends deste to maken fow eo: “drifting Into bankrupley, ag being hur- ried “to a day of reckoulng”™ which as- suredly could not be far distant, Te de pictact ‘the situation of the Province of Quebes | ay equnily bad with that of the Dominion, Tho main enuse ofall this, he distinetly intimated, was the expenditure on * public q ton, and that he lvl ne wish to keep back | bas lost recently soi of tts older members,— to regarit two nations whlch aro raptdly come | his hotlves for the great Steg, certalinly nat | De. Rurroughe and Dr. Hoone—hue they hae inlngiing ay nitaral enemies, and to adtempt Tf, as Wis interlogutor urgedsthey inight Ine | been roplaced by mn who, thous not so long perinancutly to found thedr-relations and the Hisney athens te 60 sli lke wise, ni Be peer re nkcreatn fully us inc: ke neni as f .j-help this Nation put awayethe Indetible Lintekonte Feil! " by polly of cals cet Apa thnk suppoatt tg | Shame of disowning its greatest citizen.” tobo equally as emclent workers, Its Hinit, ky over 10,000 head per diem, | lady was not boarding, but, keop! He fs ns “brond-gauge inane? as they | consequently owed no one for } , ? put it here, and personally is tatl, portly, | ily consisted of Me, Cuntifo and’ wife only. no- and fine-looking; ngcod liver, soinething of | children. Mrs. C. was orderod hy her phyuiclan an epleure by reputation, and’ the reputation | * feturn to hor parents ta Phitadelphin. + has the Indoraement of hls personal nppent | . One oF Hey Many Fritempg, ol Such Union: “The Economic Forces in the En Pye Me f% - “ a " s Murphey then opened his inouth and put: _ a Sn ance. Hels the acknowledged hend of the 4 Must Prevail. 4 | works milion lato any, unt Ue potitleo antl jntensity IN alt. Cannes aa Mant his foot In it. He saw. thingy fron ‘tekns LHICAGO'S MILLIONAIRES. great packing Industry of the West, looked 5 Goldin Emithy of Toront tn North Gndadinn Tele, ts well ns_on. equals, tho | wiation there. ts very mixed; and koly fo | Mianuguants angle of vision. tne Murplieys Ly? tip to by every man fi his line of business, ‘The Chicago Tribune. Tirohs Moblerkes | Bealtts ot aor are construction of ‘which is partly dictated by | bu si] more so; the division is. mere pollt- peace thee ee en E uvolvit Whime, Snips, nnd Oddities—Ien Who pial We aaldt to use two figures In reckoning Serica, Pekar motleg in The Teno “gir Frauels iftncks is one of a party which shmillae ews. eeeng culstlttnae 8 ‘stein, {ne leat Hine, nud there ar 1 trophies or memo- | Convention except ollices, That wag-all | Wede Money and Kepe it~ flow They “Old uteh,? which fs the common and at- | otkects ‘A mth rollet a lee oe where does its utmost to rive tho polley of Canada aie ton ways, cannls, and veumn i yusint the. eat tive ot six years Canuda, | C¥Or¥ body he thouant, tpelacitng: himeett, me ay onan 4 oy ee a toguther friendly though not vary Murr LAE Wilkyot some of tts: members, or thoso of Ae. what may be called an nntl-continental turn, | rehieons genomilyy 18, tn tact the principal hag come, for fs thys reported nthe | Great fun hie A hundred Chicagoans | Titty cad tad te Corn Helmet | Is | W., ofoe the Illnate Sucint Selene Aswiclation, like the rest of the Enplre, hag been ay pe by Bosses’? ut; . it nave of JIngoiam. AIL engines, soelat nui Tt looks to me justcike this,” sald Mr, | have mate thetr millions, Thelrmoney made, political, have been plied to sthunilate impe- fie | : ff Hlalist ntfstocratie, and antt-eontinental {uel Airplay tn, at Hat, ccna nal a eee | mont uf thera ave pony ferthwith to. gone ing; the Governor-Generalship hus been | a git between the ‘Outs And 113 of the man metropolitan City of New York, where cnpi- cour ave heen (nid ate ron etn auing prt of the Repiblican party. ‘Chey | tl ty notso plentiful as its uses. But the j dois want Conkling, of New York, nor | town is proud, and justly so, of the score or i ith BE | done want Ce tell f New York town fs proud, and just ful has boun manle, Tee i \aslitfereie alte Cameron, of Pennsylvania, nor Login, of | twenty-five who reinaln and reluyest thelr tawa have been required to pit. on Windsor Titinals, to tvide the patronnge, Lhat is all) money where they inde It. People talk of uniforms. A body-guard, In hinitation of the tore ss tan Ee penn fol €0 | ‘shein on tho streets and in the hotel corridors, English Gunrds, hag been created. ‘There | any} nd Chileago’s hotels are a ty | i ybody better qualified than these thre | aM Heago’s hotels are more cosinopolilan, thoy been tableor eaislag A Canada, content gentlemen, Inthe three States named, todo | bigger, and more gencrous than those of the hiave been mnde to Yio nillitary spirits and Just that. “‘Nhey have lind practice at it, and | metropolis, The people are proud of their i Moitetprise | Wey ave, dane It well, mun better Sat | open-tiaudedness, whieh ly more Wberal ancl, pe fs the f iiuithcontinental holley. ts ratty So tule few that, e, In my Judy: | asks fewer questions than the older and mores| Rm ley ras fet a poet Phe whole of the opposition, so far ns itis | stald tinanclal centre, ‘The town brags of It, ,| seemed" ty ave come for practlenlly | goss utited a: it A | rawlng th: conee: Alf-oyern ed agulist lin by the most sensible | and glories in its ability te pay tho penalty, See eae eatn: wunderratiate. | poutieluns, consists fest OF the allewed third: | Ay present Chlea nnd the West la the ea a ment, bringing Canada ain under aristo- 7 torr theory (which, In hig case, Ig a mere BU s ip! hange, and Me) take tthand vode, Ce head and front of the offending of the $0- | Jepson: i conus from, Sune sevounte i of he 4 fh i! called “corn ring,” of whieh he ds the ne- | ehe fs with@nt tnoncy or ‘friends. Counsel + credited leader. A man of great wealth and | of course been provided, Sue nt this moment diversified experience outside of his regular | she probabty nods mirsing aswell ng sympathy: speamative business, he rans a bank, « pack- perkins needs hospital care, Cannot one of tho ing company, an Inimense grain clevator, | Wie arspttnls ee which women prneticy recive nxt a carpet store, the lust of whieh is in | Hettostead of “oravitling for Mer at city oe charge of his lucky sou-in-law, He ownsnn | (onine tor work"? cee Sable “to wo DURANT, Iinmnense amount of tne business property, 1s farsighted, aman of clear views and great pp. personal popularity, and ts regarded as one of the solid men of the city. Of the business men o: Hie must not reproach’ those who, believing this to be o mistake, take the Mborty of ex- pressing thelr opinion, and of endeavoring to counteract the estrangement which {t 1s his object and that of his friends to produces hey feel that they may do this without placing themselves In any way Ina false po- sition, Slr Francis Hincks ovidently thinks that he places himself in no false position by. writing about tho relations between the two countries In-an American journal Io js right. I have spent some years In the United States, not ns a mere sojourner, but engnged tn educational work with my colleagues; I think I may say 1 have had full necess to the real sentl- ments of the people, and I can truly say that soures of the evil, and the admission is mest significant. when [t comes from Sir Francls iiincks, who, a8 0 Canadian ‘Tory Minister, hag beempersonally responsible for the course. whieb hag been pursied. ‘The Crnadian people, apart from any ; wish for political change, are disquietedl, 0, well thoy may be, by the financtal results of | a poticy which adds the ruinous expenditure of chimerical Unpertalla to tig commer celal atrophy caused by the severance, o: aCanada from her own continent and her | natura) markets, 1 1873 they voted out the “Grit” Government, of wihiteh the head wns Mr, Maekenzle, beewsy it de f tho Pacifle Railway, the grand elared its inabitity’to do anything for the. Improvement of the commercial situntion; and they voted in Sir Jolin Macdonald, who undertook to mike an attempt. THK “NATIONAL PoLicy? Our Dilema. ‘To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. reat wealth who Citcaco, June 23.—Whoever takes 1 survoy have found their way to Iiigh social position, | Of the river nnd sniffs ite. sickoning stench, and =" |). N. K. Fairbank, we refined:lard mannfaet- considers tho long distance: ti. tho future when. {+ urer, Ig the most prominent: He ls Presl- | aremedy may’ be hoped for; tinny well bop. - dent of Chicago's Board of Trade, which | pulted at tho prospect. It gecins utterly out of gives himall the éclut of business success | the order of things that such a yust body of and leadership, — Physleally he is a six- | dafly accumulating fith ean exist in the heart footer, with English whiskers and English | of a reat city without breeding tho pluguc. ul completely detaching her, = tullst. ‘I'he stald and sober East fur nishess! e oy my wover heard a syllable implying the slight- |-had essed upon them by protection- 4) STAHE rule, and iaile, thy | sentiment, becuse there has snother tert nrinners, lives well, has hosts of friends, [3 | The situntion ts now worse than before tho low- ‘ aie Pais ae ges been Bresso ty Without revincsenn| soliieulhy und commercially, trom the New | fiervened in the oflee since he held It), and | teexperlence, Itis the ol story, ** Walks] rorarded as a thoroughly goull fellow about | ering of tho canal bed, which bad « sulutary |; est desire of interfering with the Independ- ence of Canada, or in any way doing vio- lence to her Inefinations, [believe we may discuss these questions with the freedom of friendship and of natural partnership in the advantages nud destinies of the New World. CANADA IS.ATTRACTED, ECONOMICALLY, to the rest of the Continent of which she ts apart; while, as tho recent application of the Bostoy) merctinnts to Congress shows, the sesr of the Continent is at the same time at tracted econotmcnily to her, Thisisthemove- ment which is really going on, and which by its Incrensing * wanLfestatlons World, | Hn the fast clays of the Jingo Gov | the tact that he was. unfortunate In having | tnt my parlor,’ said the spider to the fly.” ; 4 ane rt the cltibs, and’ has acknowledged social dig- | get for Royeral yenrs. ernment a Canadian [gh Commissioner was } ghout him durtag his last term someun: | ‘There are nubas miny milnonaires in all pure iat tinction wherever ho chooses to go, AA be sal: of the. nextout, 2 4 Matthew Lavin, tho retired iniltionnire, | Hon 'to the erection are pumps ne ao who was once the head of the powder matte | mouth of tho canal, which might alford tempo- : facturing firm of Lattin, Rand & Co, who: rary reflef at feast? ‘Never did the fnet stare us energy at one time gave them a practical | inthe fe ously thin now of tho monopoly of the trade, has a residence here | bitinder madg by elceting 0 politielin to the n= and J4 regarded as ond of the solid men of | spousitile postion of Muyor of 1 clty: Chi- this inuch-advertised town. Advertising-has | fudo. This elt j roauirne Bractiont nen of large: ae huade It, and the people cling to the lien, He | husitess eupuelty, not windy partisan poltt's «|. Is nixon strong, warm, firin friend of the | quence inthe iniud of our Mayor who sulla | Graqghte, and one of the men who belleved in Hrealdont than whother the plazue shall deet- - it even before its now acknowledied artistle, | mate our population, For one Lam not ony” news, and business success was assured, Utterly disgusted, but alurmed at the prospect C. b. Bult, President of the ‘Third Natlon- | before us. AanicoLa. al Bank, was one of the few moneyed men clearly what, it meant, thoy determined to: give ltatrial, This was the real meaning of the eleetion of September, 1878, so far as the sproputlar feeling was concerted, hen from thy people the “national pol- || appolnicd and sentto Engiind to newotlate scrupulously bad men,? hi sf n ural Zoll+ i “ = CAO US 2 ure within nm pistol shot: nomnering An. the rule of, or AL Polke “As to the situation In Wisconsin, the gen- oueaee “ See but Tbe te at Aehawae TEE PO sibly, also, ething tleman said that the anti-Grant element here: | and, unllke prophets, are far from belng me IMPRRIAT: FEDEMATION. tofore [itd been unquestionably pretty solid | without honor in thelr own country. ‘The 7 cca ttoil and pretty consistent, But the Germans were | men who ara leftare not, the wealthy men of! -qalto,renurd the people of the United States | essentially men of reuson, ‘aud whitle the | weckdent, but af fuird and serious work ant agin hostile, or at lenst am unfriendly, uation | great bulk of Wiscotisin would not prefer | honest gun. ‘They stand hard, invest and re--| was tho leading privelols of the dominant | him perhaps ns the first or even the second | invest anu see thelr capital grow almost ass policy in ity application to Canadas aud that | cholee, yet Lam convinced that they ean bo | rapidly aud much more steadily thanit might phrase, used by the High Commissioner In] reasoned out of thelr opposition,’ nt’ Leadville or Deadwood. the aréat tine his farewell speech at Montreal, would have “What streneth lag Grant in the Wiscon- | was atreasure to them and not all a Joss. been the keynote of his confidential commits | sin delegation 2? ‘One remarkable thing ig. true, althonsh ita nientions With the dingy Premier, Lord “Laee that ‘Lin: Trmuxe gives him one, | itn thrice-told story and applies equally else-* videntl promised | and there are probably half adozen, Tue | where, ‘The three ‘winntny classes in wealth 4} Jey? passed into the hands of the politielan for practical nppHteation In the form of 1 ture iff, they guve Ib the mold of thelr own pollt | Jeal sentiments, which are Imperialist, and produced a plan which thoy are able to repre. sent to Hnztand as anti-American, thongh it al thy same thie Increases the dutles on | Britisingoods, But already the people are | clasutisiled, in ras eastern Droviuisep itt Jonsts { so mutch so as to make highly probable anti lol i. that’ ‘a general. election were now to be i) Beaconsileld ps ay c y "held, the xesult of the lust would be rev pusistance ie Palle Rallway | Prinuxe will eoneede that much.” vane almost entirely from the energetic, { here who failed to see that the Graphic was The Dam at Lockport. eae te ae : ra a zane nN Welle feaned on the principle of se In tate Ftd Li poner election, * How do they stand its to listructions 2% thoroughwolnyg, tnanlystoek of Western New ,Maht ond that silver must suce fd Te ‘To the Editur of The Chicago Tribune, : " fee, though the work of able hands, hus | pean Hasan i vert are come fr Lthink the Wiseonsin inen will generally | York, ‘tha backbone, enleulating, wtewly |' bought gold in the belief that silver would | | Locxvorr, ttl dune 23—1 notice inthis morn tho offspring of Intrigue, but tho behest of | yaltedl, ny it will always fall, to touch the rent | Victorious with anew lease of power, Lit | vote not to sustaln the unit rule, but that 1s | nerve and careful methods of | the North uf | agulitbedemonetized,andthntgold wouldeui: | tox's Terwuxe un uevielo auvising tho teuring {* Nature. No conspiracy except tho mutual interest of tho two nations gave it birth: no denunciations will put it down, Let thoso who think that they ean for ever arrest or-oven reverse this conmiercial gravi- * tation consult the map. I do not mean the mup political, dn which the Dominton of Canada appears a3 a coinpact half continent, but the map economical, In the map eco- nomical the Dominion consists of four dis- tinct territories, separated from each other by great natural barriers. Between tho Maritime Provinces and old Canada Ontario and Quebee) Hes the wild country through which the Intercolonial Railway runs; be tween old Canada and Mnnitoba Mes tho desert to the north of Lake Superior; between Manitobw and British Columbia Nes not only a formidable tract of desert but a series of mountain-ranges still sequently be enhanced Invalue. He has pa down of the duin at this plice, and thus give tha athe penalty of faith In gold, but still has se exnul a chance to drain the Chicugo River. The “eral millions of property left, and Is reputed | writer of thut article would do well to study tha :to spend imneh of his tine in enlenlating 113 | puisect a lttle more deeply before giving such income an employment confined to’ the Fash advieu, ‘The locks, here nt Lockport, have ot . Wen open Weeks at a’ tine ive pee .S.M. Nickerson is President of the First chines to see the dtfost Now. what, Bib ree National Bank, the strongest finanelial Inst! | sult? tm the course of about twenty-four hourd tution Ja the city. Te isa quiet, busy iin, Ye—othing bute smitl stream with a Jow volow, and his little, ‘short, stout a boy could Jump over. source of the ev Iis.fatlure does not-lessen the significance of tho vole of September, 1878. On that ocea- slonspeople, In veountry where political fcel-» ing & very.strong, deserted by thousands the standard ‘of thelr party, und broke through the perty Ines under the cover of the ballot, to vote for that whieh they honed) would promute-thels material welfare, Let a simi- ur hope-once more present Itself, and they will dothe same thing agin. * On the whole, from the manifestations of dissatisfuetion with the present state of things onwboth shies, it may be safely pre- dicted thi Canndian and American states- men Jingoisny continued in the aycendant, a de | shuply my judgment.” i oH <tocl terinined, effort to erenta wdistinetly unt. SOAR RTT sido as to the LIlmols Sree a é Dole OF Sentlan woe Or ee Democratic empiré In the northern part of | dimentty? Inenof that much-iatigned, belled, und oft- this continent, under the patrunnge and fn Welt #1 said Mr, Murphey, Inughing, “I repromehed rave which fs not ashamed to. be the Interest of fhe British aristocracy, wou an certain of this: that Wisconsin will weep | proud of {ts Hebrew ancestry, With men no doubt have been made, no tearsif the Farwell-llallerowd are cleaued | who are ashamed of their futhers this troad- et: Awhile the High Commbsioner Was ou gilt seat Will not disturb the Badyer mur | gauge and yreat-hearted West has Wo syme cel is ; 7 jor! r the Chien, mines y iy, EXCH! cl OX] sick: to rise agi. In rn country where wealth Is toriy cleaned out hom eS Be np oxcupt such as it expresses by kicks so powerfnl. aud socint gradations are so) Bit the Wisconsin delegation—19_to 1— or Palmer's oce :! Sa ee ae a eoneeritisn | 1c eae eae Treat house |e ee ee Seat Oe ation, has | farm tay’ be seen any dy tad all day seated | What, ives tre, aw? Ib auows | the of tho ordinury type will always abound, and | crowd,’ and they were utterly cleaned out, } nade hha better known personally than any | at his desk, where oftener than nat he isbusy [aes ane theta ceil the an ne Lockport'is Its necession fo power, ut ay srentulstanee | eighteen of theme and thereupon Wiseon- | other man in the elty, La ta ul of amedtut Tistentng td and noting the “ticker,” whose | Wintean he done ta remedy thedificuts? Nous {* of ys an eee ae ae varreetione “Els ain wept not, but rejoiced mightily. fight, with spare features and gray hair, ly | tape telly to Chicago What New York Is do- | tug short of deepening the canal elghtor -ten +; |: Tor Jingoism there Isny re: etlon. The Sentlact and Murphey forten days de- | not a handsome man, dresses earelesty, ay | Ing, and which so strongly influences thts } feet, nll the way from Ublengo to Joliet, will conditions tuider which Tf was cenerated, faut yoted thelr enormous Inituehee to the cou | yeh people ean atford tu, and Is cecentri¢ in | Western market, answer tho question. Converting the canal Into + the cliet of i wnlet wae a fullness ot tects version of the Wisconsin delegation to tiird- ) his manners and conversation, Gossip iv une | | ‘These are anly some sample millionntres, | 2 ship eagul-would also unawer, tind bottor tuo, 1), enused by ten years o! an ye termnism nnd to“ rensoning thei out of thelr | kind enough to say tint hls eecentricities ure | There are as inany more, but those 1 huve | for the canal wonld then be made both wider on [: merelal prosperity, are not likely to be repro~ gppositinn " to another term of Gruul, us | euithvnted,, Je is an energetic Western New | touched upon are the mien who are best | uddoeper and the current of tho river would "4 /. duced. ‘het uggressive notion of thls sloy nine Murphey said he could {tor with the Germans | “Yorker who cume here many years ago and. | known, and who have made thelr influence low this way. Locurorr, power may Cee federney will wither | 9) Wisconsin. ‘he balloting began, aud the | went into the dry-gouds trade, was sliccess- inost felt, Cuix, me a ND Or en thio lientt Of whiels Ib Wiseonsiy delegation cast one voto for | ful, und invested Jatgely In real estate before er aa To'the # Testa ft. we Grunts Pine Tints: hd previously pay | the fre, whieh wurst ot al bis bulldings | PTE WISCONSIN ON A TEAR. | | sancti Win dune sods tuck bos as the, b Lt would bo idle to deny the existence of | | them, | The secoid, third, and the twentieth aa an 00 deni andl anid recorded to Incloied the result of the honest baller of the,” |* ANTI-FAMENMCAN FEELING bullot still ylelded but ont vote for a third | Jargest tndividual mortguge ever pluced in | The Greatent Preset Ever Known on | 39 SiStrnetlons thw a Hit eee eed ae a In British Canada, I have poluted out tts | term. Murphey redoubled, his efforts, and | Cook County, Ile failed to get the Palmer That River—The Low Landy Along | Neca trmwhieh its clipped? Tahoe tke to sourees,—the chief of which, United Empire exercised his powerful mind to the “utmost, | House inte satisfactory hands,and so hus been the River Submerged and Dwellers | seo a refutation of such statements: In THe Loyatisin, is entirely natural'and respectable, | ahd the Wisconsin delegation continued to | compelled to rut the immense curavunsary | Fereed to Mleo for Satety—Grand | THIDUNE, for, as singular ug it muy seem, the but iy not kely to be permanant, In French gaat 9 for Wasitiurn, i for Deine, 3 Top Iinself. Although not a practical hotel | Scones Along the Della Denes ia aint as fo ftepuzticun paper Ly my Canada the priests are afraid of republican terman, and 1 for Grant. The, Convention | inn, he iy said to have been successful. How Correapundence Milwaukee Sentinel, Henes na Keputtieatto Se Ree agitpuly freedom of thought aud of American gomn- adjourned fir the. diy. Murphey tugged | many tuilligns he ts worth wo aman Knows. |. Kinouan City, June 10.—Thursday morning T pinieng! ru mon gchiontas the people inigrate freely Auto | at ‘i deel ilght an poured on tole: Hennd Fred eat toarried the Honoré als- | the Wisconsin swelled to u xigantie Hood, | [Tho Brentug News had for a'year or two tho United States In ‘quest of employment, | 008 ihe second day’ A elnie DeEr Be eee ee eee aoe ited cavotiier' reached ita climax, and was several fect higher | salted under “Independent” colors, with occa. nnd probably hnye no strong sonthnent at all’) gutes. The second day s vol ny Ute ‘Marshall Meld added anotherto his millions, than over before kuown by elvilized mun ‘Tho | sion! teuntogs towards tho Iepublie ‘a Upon these subjects, ‘There are those who | sult as before—1 vote for third terns, | Mur: | the other day by i littte transaction at Lead. het pete eeepc HI teuntngs towards tho Mepublicnns, and it try to cultivate the feeling In ditterent inter- phey, with his enormous intluence, had | ville, and people now estiuute his wealth ag | memorble joous oO! 42 and April 25, 186, | other times towards the Demovruts. It was cats, chlefly in that of the Dmperialist party, | capiured no reerults, | he thirty-sixth bal- | anywhere frum 35,000,000 or $6,000,000 tn $15,-.| ever referred to with reverential awe, arg now about 'alf-and-’alf, or a lite more Dem. than + ‘Fhero are those who pride themselves on dis- | lot was ordered, and Wisconsin cast her 20 1000, fle aud Jolin Borden and othors | eclipsed by this king of tluods, The riverlow- | ep. A short timy Lefure thy Chicago Conyen: . playing it; the. affectation of pecuiturities, | yotes solid for Garfield. |The solitary third- | mate a blz stake out of the mucietalked-uf.| lands bordering tho stream, occupied by fertllo | tlon {t espoused tho nomination of Grant and Even of pecutiar antipatiles, beng a not une | werner of the Wisconsin delegation who | Chrysulite, wot by ony sheculutlve stock’) farms, growing crops, and lovely pleturesque | becume a rabid third-termer, and tried to bore cominon indulgence of amour prupres Mile was aclected for Grant when SMigphicy, was | trusuetiis, bit by the ubuntout pureose | hownes,arwaubuicrged Yeuenth lakes of water, | quite aw augurrhole vith ta Wile Hime Ae the “United ‘States ns well ns by Canad, | No doubt diMculties would attend It, beeause Ree ae a oe ees extent and intensity of | Lnpassioned ‘appeal Unt, the whole thing aa eae et Eitca thes bend: of ee rip 0 | mee ee ae oN TNe about, like |;roud out of tho Hepublican party ull the antl . ag well nis by Cantdi. | it \ould involve an equalization of turitf3; | tna ‘ This Lwill | wast auestion only of-who should peddle | ¥ citer & Co, and te fo-| deiftwood. On tho upper: river nnd telly | thind-term newapnpers, including Tux Timur, °, cu 4] q b h * Us c| idaw ‘1 . rate u a Conve " . Lav a0 vO rat '| Ta, i Hal re ei t 2 Hf : Gar- CONSEEY: F Ib ¢ EXNSPe ° Thy American ishermen want free necess to '| wonsiderntion; Lt it proves Impractieab Ie tiesto the welfare of the Canudian people, | field and nominated him. “Chat last touch- } Prutrfe avenue, above . the ‘Pullman’ patace, | will soon bo loft high yndtry, thuuaandsof thom | tive cur, and since thon It bus been yelping and * | the Canadian fisheries, 13 much na tho. peo- qoust fall back-on u reciprocity tromy, whlch | fs tuirly set before them, there Is nothing in ing appeal of Murphey’s made the. Wiscon- | and its grotthds rin back to the Inke. His aati oe trom the river, when the flood bas sub- | snarling at Gartield fu the most epitetul :nanner. p ple of the Maritine Provinces want adits | itself would bes gain, 1 | Hho ttitts of the grent tins of then to pre- | Si deletion solld—ngainst Grant, ond | house Is furnished tastefully and contains | 'OVGr a mitlion dollars’ worth of arty baa | {its small way. Whcthor it will tent its puls- Hon to the coasting itude of the United | 2tevolutions'are sometimes necessary, vont thelr giving IL thelr cordial considera- | Murphey fell on the neck ut Flannagnn—nnd-| pyueh of art value, Be eet abet ect hag ey Of property Ba | sant support to tho nomluccs of tho Claciunutl SIates. an efforts have b , BUT THEY ANE "ALWAYS EVILS. . | Hon, “Phoyrare content to be bound to the | Webt. So much for tho infueucu of Logan's | ‘The would-be wiseneres discuss the ques- er alisition niatanees, If 1s eretlean efforts have been made, not by | No revolution could, be mori meces~ : fi WILLeROON BE IN CONFERENCE upon the salyject of commercial relations; perlinps the ‘lsheries dispute, which fs sl ways, rouurrliys fn gone form, may brhu this question niso to. hel, ‘Two plans wil pre- sent themselves for consideration, —commner- gal Anton auld ath TaN Ar ar iy Y 4 the lus wy abjections to moro formidable, Ench of the separate ter- | reciprocity treaty are, in the first place, that ritorles is by nature connected commerchully | it wouli not rid wy of the customs Ho with an ndjncont. portion of the Untan: | the secontl place, that It would be extremely Nova Scotha und New Brunswick with New | ditiicult to render tho scheme fatr to all inter- England; Quebee nud Ontario with the | ests; Inthe third pice, that it would hardly States to the south and west of themOn- | fail toninke Canada im entrepot for Europenn farlo drawing bor fuel from Pennsylvania | contraband, and thuswe give rise to disputes ant Ohio; Manitoba with Minnesota, from | which would ¢be fatal to Nts own exlst- which she ls divided merely by a diplomatic | erice; in the fourth place, that as tho Hines British Columbian with Californian, The | offspring of a domlacwat pitty or pure natural routes between the four territories | tleular tational mood, it would be always tn fie not. over Canadian but over Aierivan | danger, through a loss ofpower by the party, ground, and or n change of the nationn mdod, of being COMMERCE WILT. FOLLOW THE NATURAL overthrown Bg the Hite uth ol #9 ite i .] dustries built npon it, A. eomtnoreli We the politie ml routes... thy ober Jian, would be pernuiment, and yvould in addition that tho identity of commercint Interest. and 4 4 it, other advantages give pertectly, {rea tho evils of commercial saveranes are felt by | gitculution to: cupltal and connnorelal Ife. Lying Dinputeches. rl e SLDE! muny lives buve- been fost. As i sony opel olret Inather-country by affection without the sac- | convert to third-termism, A GAnrisLpEn. | tion as fo whether His wealth or that of lis ae a eed ucabtipon Ur vie ae Herinriapeaeeaty MA Rat, Sak ey Ins the Canadian people, properly speaking, but | sary thin that -which’ released tho rifies of thelr naterial welfare. Jingo poll- # ——— partaer, Lovl %; Leiter, is the greater, He 1s | suroyed property and the names of the drowned E q by Canadian 8 teamtett, etl for pollttent New World: from, bondage to tha British P tlelans and their organs will of course ty to ‘,CHICAGO UNIVERSITY. freguinrattunduut atthe so-called “world | eanuot vow be obtained. Pecunlous candidate.) ib purposes, and in concert with English iinpe- | arlstoaracy, and set it at ibexty lo ‘work ott | Ltiterpose, but the economlen) forces will tn : ly? church of Prof, Swiag, whieh owes no The’ residents on the uplands, long distances Who WIH Subscribe? r rinllsin, to reverse the order of nuture, to | its ova destinies. Yet its blessings wero ‘the end prevail. 8 I 24 illeluice toany denomination. Heund George |, from ihe rivers Lah nearty gubineriedd iu many ho sibackibe: itt saver Canada commerelatiy from her contl- | 'denrty purchased, On England tt brought: ————$__—_— ‘ jomething Kurther Concerning tho | jy, Roberts were not long neo cng sed Tn |’ places. CI arora tt TAN aR etter ‘To the Eiltior.af TN Chfeage Aviat 5 i nent, and to bind her economically to En- | Joss, ‘shame, and estrangement from olay MURPHEY’S CONVERSION. Alloged Nullity of hat’ 9150,000 | some transactions in. the ron intne at | Goo Yi hison ving naar i ee ey mia, Cnicago, June 2.—Truly thia Is a free coun Bland, to the depondencles of England, oven |. portionar her taco; on tho Ireuch monarchy : i. pay . Mortgaro, : Leudville, out of which thoy are sald to | fiver‘on tho river coud, on tue mutin uplunds, 1a | Y Malltho sense that the term conveys when hose on the other side of the globe, und to i brought bankraptey, woleh, ff peace had ‘A reporter yestorday raked tho Hon. Thomas | have divided pretty pool, netting them i | uppurert soeurity from thottoods, ure, With bute | Wa outrage such as was perpetrated on poor gvery, inartion of the world exceptthe dreaded | continued, Turgot’s pulley might have avert- Kow'*tho “Sentinel Man Bwung tho | Yoyne, one of the trustees of tho Chicayo Uni- couple of millions aplh Heisthe daring | drods of othors similarly located, now driven | Cousta Jepson pisses by public notice without epul ‘An imperial Zollvereiu has been | ed, and as the conseqaenceol bunkruptey the ‘Wisconsin Delegation. for Thirds | versity, what ho thought of the clalm of tho aud enterprising man of the firm, with & | from thelr homes by tho unprecedented food. | an vifort belug made to bring tho brittcs who projected’, negutiations | for commorcial | most, Erigatful catastrophe, Uy history, Nob]. Reembains fora Relea -thGe Eid. ror ins OE KU BAGH potable. Sahar sturdy Maniet tnasten 2 | ei iiult aauumerresort pavilion in. tho coles | cemmaltted tf to the penalty of auch a eriine, eaties have wn opened with Eu- he.people of the Un ies, thourt bu: y a ire b 4 k 4 y vitor . #4 vetac! enter ends + |! Topeun nations: - an editorial “ap- victorious, (aan forth unscathed. ‘fhensual | * isthe BAST Te Ne ea a erty to the Unlou Mutual Lite wus a diversion | Titus man, he ofténer tides In tho street- | brated Cold Water Callan be tho tlood. and the Tho spectucly Is prescuted of « pour, frlends JANRSVILLE, Wis. June #.—1 observa | from the purpose for which It wus dovoted, and, a Nae and any plaasant: | Howse ls overturned and flouting at tho merey of } leas emigrant girl arriving in a strange elty. varlons-auusing Incidents and anecdotes re- | thoreforv, thy land raverted to thom. SE Ente ya SUPKILE MULLS, cor tarrtble grand Iqnorunt of Its localities, ate asks ta bo directud lnted In tho newspapers concerning the Chi- | “They havo no clulm,” suid be, “until the | in company with the commoner herd ot Mis id uufe to say that for torrible grandeur tho | tu tho Denmark Hotel, kept by peuple froin her. Della to-day eatinot be excetted on the Western | ow: y. i x senzo Convention, but have noticed no a trust I$ utterly abandoned, A mero ‘abuso of | way down-town, his own usual companion | contingent. Here amid tho evergreen bowers, ae eas "| FE eT tter, . mid a “tho way tlio “powerful aud Influen- | Power by tho ‘Trustecs—an attempt to make & Delng an umbrella, lly firm owns tho | cool shady glens, lovely ferns, and fagrant How= | endeavoring to thud tho object of her search, ahe ata Fie ey anivauhet aid ta able Thortge that I¥ invulid-does nut forfelt tbu‘| eholecst and iuest proituble bullding blocky | urs, wre awute nature, invites repose frum | is outraged uy tends ia tuna ahupoc enn cont, jal”! Sentinel of. Feed right of the public to tho benefits contempluted | 1 the clty, and * mory tit number than any’ | wesry coll and seorebing sun, bt now heard tho | pel her w submit to tholr bellish lusts for the fitor, Murphey, swung tho Wiseonsin delega- | yy ye, Dougius."* twenty offer men,’ as a gentleman put it | terriilzrour of muddened waters, To give av | apne of four houry, whilst her iugonized erles {tlon over to Grawt and third-termulum, or, | “ws you pettove tho mortage ta nvalld?” yesterday, {He has recently put up a hand- idea of tho tremendous force of the waters at] for ussistiuce are only answered byallence from D ata 4 3 tho Nurrows of tho Delis ut this ume, a0 vownrdly denizens vlghh deand rather, how they fafSed to do it, “it fy no fen on the property.” Bame $150,000 summer coltage on Geneva | brive description of the Dells and river Shs ou wily do an HOF tho nblgbtarhood, nd You may have obseaved that the Sentinel | «why note" ot . here given. The Dells ‘nominlly “ex- | world. Such nertme innCheivtianeltyt think [+ : P a 4 ‘George M. Pullinan, who caine from West- | tend about seve cs 1 Paria iy < sopposed Grant down to w few dys befure tho | “Bur tho reason that the institution isa pub- | ern sre Pode aud with bral. nnd Berye, tend auOuE sort ane aia ee fou of Rusa thine of it. brathars, and tn; smecting of the Chicago Comventivn, when Its | Ho charity, The property does not belong to | and pluck founded wi enterprise whose | (thelr foot), but more properly include | with nu one to lend hora helping band, in the i editor was as suddenly converted to third | tho corporation called tho Univeriity of Chleago value hus ide him almost equally known | the Narrows, about three-fourths oF tulle tn | ctutohes of such devilal ‘The papers tell ua that: ‘termism as Logan was tovthe chureh, What | for any otter purposa than to hold It in perpet- | ol two continents, mull us wel Enowi in by trig UCL A, ue patina tena. when tho mlaerenuts wero wrrvated and Urowge |: Caused It, deponent saith not, Somonttrlb- | wal trust for tbe publle uso, ‘That Is wall de- | London, San Peareliy, ail ht 2S | fows Isat ‘Bridgo Bukit blug only tty-two | tuts poor allen? Euie the Juatiee appohutedd Oho ute it tothe promiscof wurofilce, ‘Murploy | Mned by jaw, as woll us by tho original articles See ee cance, ailied with qgat palace ON | tuct in width. ‘the tirst bridge build aver tho | of tho “court lawyers” to undortuly ber ouko w erauiden’ The institution le under the guard. | Prwirlo avenue, itled with artiste furniture | Wisconsin Hiver wus erected atthiy point by my | (and we all Know what that means), | The and his paper had devoted thelr Lumense i | fiuship and protection of the State, and If tho genuine urt work. Tho residence covers | gathor 8. Gates) und Hugh McFarlin, ln isd, | result, was, one of thom hus buen released fluence in Wiseonsin ‘in «preventing first | Yrustces porvert or divert ‘its funds, | Mere ground than any private house in New | and was used asa toll-bridyo wp to the comple: | on 61,64 Dutl, and tho othor will soon follow. + Ki Washburno and next Blaine from getting any | or attempt to discatnbiish it, or change York, and his generosity 13 0 host has made | ton of tho rsitruad bridge at Kilboura City, Tota We have a Sovlety for the Prevention tof delegates from’ this State ito “boom | i constitution, a court of ehuncery will Intor- | its Interior well known to thousands from | beldge stood fifty-four feet above low- | Crucley te Aniinals, but fone to human beluga. lelegates from this State and fore, turn thorn ail ont, aud putinaset.who will | every section of the country, Hg hus not | water mark, and” wis thougut to Lo | Now, will you cousent to net as Treasurer fur ud , fig? for Sherman, Murphey lse opposed | carry un the Institution in accordanco with the | nny equals ag an entertuluer, and his repu- secure Frat ie Ho and yet wus | fund for tho cmploymunt of some able lawyer vn thied term: for Grant. ‘The German Jour. | Wilf the donor, tillon for imaniiness exeeeds that of iis | SWEDE aniy Uy the irwut, treats Aull hy | fo Lob after ee ce all contrib pariles a third turns for Grant, The Garman four, | eatin tity Deer Nexo sor ux varor* — | wealth, -Peuplo used to reckon fis millions | MELEE, Tiydenwuatmtantiy nae to ane | Fubtecies thee ara peat wth ‘would “spire IWiseonain, secured three delegutes fur Shur- |, “ Thoro [sn distinction between the moral and | before he became {dentitied with the elevated | Hav Mon Ue touched the water, WHA. the ox: | qatar tor re troll Tea boreteay Peta B uanon account of his ultra hard money, | the legalobligndon. Upon the moral side tho | railroads id with kindred fnturests fn your | ception that now aud then could be ween nutick | ows are allowed to. Tout at lrge. hone of ONE b ingle gold standard, 10 gremibacie eles, institution cue tu pay tho debt. ‘Though it was | eity, “But in his case It has been repetition | of tiinber ou ond und eplaning lke w topor | families are aufe. These men belong to thooltss |! ATitphey und his Sentinel, with ill thelvvase | conttuotod without authority, yet having used | of tho Liblien! story, of **'Lo Iii tat hath | shooting gut of the water Bie un atti. eee | en Cae ea ah ‘uppunred, oxposo influenes, werd unnbls toaddonetethethree, | BY twawey, thaw Mtetwa ood Hutast | shall be given,” and men now headtute to day we baven Kreater flood. The main’ river | thomselves to the women and children retume —« and thres forShernuin tt remained to tho lost. | said, tho mortyuze is no Hen, beeause 0 put his wealth’ in figures, He Is still full of 7 avout tho Della i about turee-fourtha of ninile | ing from ehurel or from some soclil call, ale"! }, Washburne, whom Murphey bitterly oppose jion’ Gt that kind sete out by assuming | energy aud “nerve, compnratively young, ite tue Ant tale hones isa fe Ue EE ways furking In the alleys and the dirk corners hind nine delegates, Blaine, whom he alsu {that tho ‘Lrusteca can sell the property, | plucky, foresighted, ond Chivago hins Bot | thirty fect, increasliye to titty mE minty uur | of strectss land net tho oppgrtunty oS G opposed, lind sven, and Grint, whom he op- | if they cannot sell te property they cannat | used to the prophecy, that, with ordinary ea OR Ter oe Sree ocempre ay eral Epa ere een aR RTT RAC lotion = posed, had one, And this they stood until | mortgnge It A ‘inortyauy ie utterly invalid | chances of lite, his fortune ‘will be colossal, | ‘This vast body of slow moving water, ia the ro pee wea hope that ft will Aad ripe p Unrilctd strode pon the xeane, Murphey | where thoru is no powor ta convoy the property. | Illy house, magniticent ng it fs. however, Is | wult of the narrowness of tho Hells, which uct its ceive subscriptions tor the olvect imentioned. ? came down to Chieago early and’ got up his | The Trustees hove uo power tu turn over the | not the equal of that of Cyrus HL, MeCoriniek, | adam, checking the force of the witurd. From J es Bonros strovt, F tent, but just before he sett home he expert | PET not to Union Blucual seek te fore | be of the few inventors whom Aterica hag | this poot-up lake at tho head of thy Dells the Pa 2 aes chan fo oF sot ou Grant cloguz" enriched with colossal fortunes, Pits aan of gun yaueion tt aes Dou u each Tho Jopaon Outrage. ; whom he hud opposed, he became oll ab | No, , hoy. ened to da reaper fume has made iniltions out of hls C tu Nure , ‘i once a “shouting? tilrd-termer, He sped 1S ee eae ceat tay Would have bear | bitvesters, and has saved to tho men who Fue.” TERIA enh Yun ie Wate ee Guide sunne PMA de Ren , Fe ee ee oe done | “rift ijn secmod to think, that tho talkod-of Fee a Hee scans otsey ano | Of fenucoud Cou eee AST MUU.) angauyas, tx Loins to Wok doubtful these version, ‘Tle £-O. cane out next morning | ¢lain of tho heirs was a roundabout way devised | most magnificent residence between the Del- oot er Aes ay gy atu atS urescape froin Ws BU ie seapegraces will recelyo the Mftcon yours Nwith n fagboyant annoumement of this vy ‘5 nware nd the Slerras, is on lush street, and The Ningara-tilso rour of the Dellshenrd Intho | ofhardiabor," ete, roferring to the wretehca who highly Jnuportant and significant chinge of THE INAULANCE, COMPANY: Ono of the few of Its-eluss on the so-called | distance ty changed into a fearful, heavy, mnuf- | perperratod the outrage Baturday night. Ie TR whish presaged political suvalution In | forcollocting what ts dua from tho University, | North Sida. Ail its interior finishing ts In | Hod roa ile tat of thunder when te awrul | ‘yyy timuns or {te readers havo w doubt about the Wisconstn delegation, In this, however, Jf such ta bis opiijon, he bes | costly polished woods, most of them in- chusmn Is reached, When once upon tho brink i-br a + Hever to bo in error, though it Is certaluly ty tho Pe eee gurl chnem, AU appalling sight meets | tho tilsereants being wucats of tho atrlinsd-Del~ ‘The 1-0, of May #0 beralded thedmmense | qayuntage of the fnsurance Company that te ported. Me and hy handsome wife are | tio ug Se ee curity tat Heel | cade hotel ut Jollet let thom refer the cus neyifaition to fhe thirdeterns ranks 1. ate | eee oe te oeedc agalnarandnot uy ie, | courted Ii the best soctal clreles not oily of See rarcod au uponliig 1H) eRe eat Fuge Lonich and ave costs. 4 ticle nearly a column in length, of which tho | itis believed to have ben the polley ut tho | the elty, but of your old, aristecrutios Und, 2x | eee ait eee e ce aensenrunugh ite channel | Miteely tho testimony of vix or olght reliable following are extracts: Univoraty to -pamaite on the defensive: that it | chislve East, where wealth docs often buy | on w eternal destruction, ‘Tho hundreds hourly whtnuges aught jo be suiticlent to gecure cons “Among the wiost important arrivals at | would walt until an effort was madu by tho dtute the carte blanche of entrés to “the best | arriving and departing pronuunee {tthe xrund= viction. The following fits were reported ty ©; the Gra Paettic durig the day was tho | wal Lite-Inauemico Company to foreclase tho | circles.” Me las brats und Iniluence #4 | est view of tholr lives. tho writer by a youn nin who was at the hotel Jfon, N; 8. Murphey, of Alitwaukee, propre, tortgayos uid that ft would thon putnpasn | well as money, and was one of the Coumuby | | fue nows cue thut tho Dell Touge, ut tho Batundny Uehtirncted tho attention of. bimsat : 1 's t Loud tatk att i torot tlie Sentinel, well known as the mage | defense tho ullegation thatthe Hound of Teuslocs } gloners to the paris Exposition, At one thing | foot of the Narrows, wis careening list mlaht, Se ee eT ROC or Tanne ta rouuiie Lujtuentiat ant lntgest newspaper published a a eee iceia cobs | le was tanbitlous of political preferenen, but and bug by Us thie boun destroyed by tio’ | Md st eUUTt ey ithe, wharuupon ROMY pe” ; y res: y yaters, ‘this Louse was bulit about fv that elty and State, ‘The gontionan’s com ‘one experiment with the professional polltl: | SYaee, Watel UT the railrond cmployés interferred; as the wlter- ( aultod, and some of thom are stron Ae thirty-five yours nyo, ana was weed: for iw butal | the Balint Ty Ges i oguontly: want £0 tho ing hus a peoultar significance «teks nol Pin the —bollor that tha murtgoae claus fy said to haya oured hin, fur dpwards of tvonty yours. ‘Thin Nous 1s ue fue fy attructed here solely to show | worthless. Itisn polut where there are fow ‘The ratlroad Kings here wre those of the | tuiniitar to all ead int to tho thousands y Begne and iraalated in Keuplnug the bentn front his personnal ond slucera udheston to tint | precedents, und those do not ‘always agrovs but | horse-railways. ‘Three corporations control | of tourists who bave passed up the Dells on the Sutlicttnuy, inoro blows, und gelting the ) part les cause Which up till) new he has se valiantly | tho majority of thom ure ghought tobe on the | the network which covers twlee the territory | atemnerns, Robert V. Allen aud James Winters sopurntcs fq Bate wis pe one Pa ied Sought with pen and types. ‘The conversion alae of tho University, 1 fs bettuved .thag if tt | of Now York. J. Russell Jones, who Is | stein, the occupants oud proprictwrs or the Dell poured: tO See er hs Of the ALIIWWnKeO Sentinel fo the, Grunt | ee ce an dag | Lfeaident Of the et a Bs re- | Houle, aro ald) settlers, tho former baving | Wauvr, gneonk, The MOUS, Siig allubtly a0. boom was formally unnouneed In that pa- | ifthe nuny, thet paint aie At ured na the controlling spirit, Ho lsu | Hved at the Della for upwards of thirty years | Gy or ta men seviiod dizposed th betriond the ved ome ey aa ie ter chunce tu inukt " 1 o id tho latter fur twenty-nine yours. hey? _ per yesterday morning. ‘The op 18 coul- | were tougsume the offensive and attempt to Muu, iat a with w batt head | Myo te Be tynaitlonat i atorniation to bo Jud hor uwuy. ‘Ehy belligorent berate girh and pleted,” sald u disgusted member of the | ‘havo tho mortgage declared null ond youd, Th h rewibids one we once ‘ i 0 | subsequently followed thous. Pppositions ‘no Dori. stulvart could lay It | tnurunes Company, for tbo null and voids The | of Gen Ben Builer, He hns a stubby sits: Re ere TTR elle ins | “shortly utterwurds thoy ruturued without tho down to the sight and left In wuyoro verte | ably,—tho advantage of being on the ‘Gufonsive, | tacho, stubby manners but kindly, uch 1 | growtn flood us thy one of 18U-'43 Lud not ove wie and bonsted that they bad cach repeatedly bray attire erly ua; | ag nay atin, a, amg | nly mot itl Oa a | Seat nen MUL sae | eer inauhai ae son enna yu rence in col jon Of fails ol . “ check-book, all represeuthngs lly be ‘ oy it thine, tI yout this ture: oud Witte ? “ 7 ne Hie new secession. Bboin } rand proprics |-Uf $150,000 iscaow ‘due, aud althongh about siz | S.J, Cobb, the President of the Chilengo | exceeded wore Chae two not by tho ono of | te outrize, but wy woemed bewildered, und”: NF , i : He a ; ‘y “d tor speak out in uniuistaiable torms, nor fa | Yours tntorest tg tn default, “Ba tha movement | City itullway Company, hug prineuly for-.] 180, And now comes uy Uood grouter by about Lae tia ia Vara tire MR therv ono circumstance tut detracts from ee ee inconciver ioe Teas nee | tutie and uo bad habits. ily constant wud: Win ohuiata renting je pee thle | yyus near wifdnigbt, the girl w etrunger, only able this event as one of the most slynbicant ane | for thut corporation, At tho situo tne, hows {nseparable companion ly a clgur, which hey Toit Protubly Ho: person for a lundiod or a to speak broken English, und don't agulneven —— f buylucntial of the campalgn. It shows con | over, If any sult $3 bexun It wil be very apt to | Never lights, but whose ends, one or the 7 hundred und tifty yeurs ta oumo will be perinit- litt that those villaing can escape, : clasively thut tho unseruputons opposition | go to the Unitod Staws Supreme Court, and it | other, indiiterently he munches between hts | eee es tis Imdosoribable scone again, |, Your readers may wonder tut soue of the . -. has created disgust in the housp ‘of Sts | will bow mattor of muny years before It ts teeth. He never chows. His beard ts tong ‘Me. Ife HL. Bennett le engaged In trying to cutoh ‘witnesses did not prowet the girl, bey bad no | ;Peared | sone tlmo ago in the ‘To- | effcets cf civil war were, produced on thelr ronto Globe proclaiming the discovery political character. ‘Their Republic was of amarket In,Australln which would more | launched! with a revolutionary blus tho op- Than compensate the loss of these at our | posit of ‘wlilch was to be desired, und 0 per- own door. At the same tine o series of} manent ascendency was given to o revolu- gigautle rallway enterprises hay been undar- | tionary Senthnent, which In course, of taken, fur tho purpose of connecting the | tlie © gemorated the rebellion of TT four separate territories by Ines running | Southern . States, whose principle of entirsly within British territory, so og resistance :to a Govornmetit which thoy avoid any partroralip in highways with the | did -not lie’ had been often formulated Ameriéan Republic, and beyond the reach of | by Norther: Nps. We hive nother evil leg- the enemy in that war between Canada and: avy of the ‘Revelation fn the relntlons be- the United States, a bolicf in which, as an | twoen Cannda and the United States, In event of the future, is one of our imperial | ordinary cases the ‘yangnished party Ini institutions, ‘he result, while {6 hos been | rovolution romutns in the country, and, when ujurious to the interesis of tha United | the storm of political pasion has subsided, States, has blends ayain with the victors, In the case. NOT BEEN SATISFACTORY 10 TIE CANADIAN | of tho American Rovolution the vanquished. YROVLE. party was driven Into exile by acts of uttiin-. he negotlations for commercial} trentles havo. Wer ‘and confiscation. 1t colonized Dritisie falled, “og It was Ilkely they would, when.| Canada, Dponed by 0 dependency without full, treaty making powers, ‘The first of tho politico-mili- tary railways, tho Intercolontal,” uniting ‘the maritine provinces with old Canada, bas cost thirty-six inillions !n its construction, Is Tun of a beavy unnual cost to the Govern Tent, and fs ‘likely to bo less useful and more of o burden than ever when the nat- ural route’ is opencd, as tt svon will be, through tho State of Maine, From the Lm- niensd expend ituro involved in the operntion - of extending the polltico-military system of ‘ Fallways westward, under the nano of the _Conadfan Pacitic, the less adventurous por *tlon of the community, Including apparent- ly Sir Franeis incks himself, Is beginning torecoll. The leader of the Opposition in the Dominion Parliament moved, the other day, to postpone the construction of a por tion of the railivay within the territory of British Columbia, He was defeuted by & atriet party voto, the Government com- puanding ® lurgo injority, But. there Is Nttle doubt that in caucus, to keep the representatives of Quebec and tho eastern provinces under tho standard, the Government had to glye assurances of cau- tlon and delay, Afore than this, the Minister of Rallways, in his speech, allowed it to be pintnly sean, by 8. slaniticant oniission, that @ construction of tle projectud line to tho north of Lake Superior, through © country desperately dificult, was not to be put under contract, and “that tho Government would’ content itself with the natural route, which Tuns to the south of the lnko through Aimeri- gn fortltory hetweon Duluth and Sault Ste. 0. AND THERE: PERPETUATED, : intho form of n scpamite group of scttle-* ments, dividing the northern section of thor continent fromthe rest, the antagonism off thecivil war, Hud the English Revolution- ists of 1088 confisented the estates of thelr opponents, and driven all the Jicobites lute Seathand, they would hie done their Island the game mischief which was done to this. continent by the treatment of tho defeated. Torles after the Revolution, Enthusiastic attachment to he Crown for | whieh they hud suffered, and which had glyet | them thelr now abode, was wv natural and honorable sentiment on the part of tho loy- nilsts settled In Canada, Lt carcled with it a feellug of antagonism to the Aunerlean Ite- public, whieh was increased by the cutani- us war of 18, .Seareely had the entity begun to slumber, when it was revived by the events of 1837, though the party in Cane aula with which’ tho people of the United States had displayed their sympathy, and which consisted malnly of a later set of tine migrants, while it was defeated on the fleld of batile, triumphed in the political contiict gud achieved responsible government. | Dis- ites about boundartes aud fisheries added, rom tlie to tue, fresh «drops to tho cup of bitterness, and n_ violent necess of imutunl Ufecllng was brought on by the events codneeted with thy Amer- lean Cival War, by the harvorlug of Southorn || refugees .and the St. Alban’s nud on one side, and on the other py the Fenian inya- -sions of Canuda, which the people of the United States viewed, perhaps, with not Ine excusable compiacaney, but which, instead of punlghing the Engilsh ‘Tories, promotad the objects of tholr pulley by further estrang- Ing Candas from the United Stites, The Fo- | ulin raids alyo gave a fresh stimulus to Orangelsm, which isan embodiment of ex- eluslyely British santhuent, Stil, an oumity for which thoreds no good ground, and which in. its consequences ‘muschiovyous to both sides, GVANNOT BE EVERLASTING, ( !Theeconotnical forees have assorted thelr wer, Conunerclal intercourse has softened, 10 sharpness of tho border-tine, Mere, as elsewhere, railways have exe! their unifying fuduence,” Tho social aud business rulations of the peoplvof the two couatrigsure everywhere joiverned, by courtesy aud goud- will, Canadians minglé with Americans at places of summer resort in tho United States, ‘while not a fow Americans spend the sun TIS 18 A VIRTUAL ANANDONMENT (perhapa it would be officnily called 1 post- ; Donement) of the whole project, so far as its jnilitary and political objects are concerned, since’ thery can be no military or polltlea continuity If the line, ina part af its course, and that part the nearest to Canady, runs 4 over foreign. Fround. The nearest Mnk In 4 Hie projectod chain is missing, Tho terrl- wy torles which It ly proposed to weld into a o patted: commuunlty are not even mado con- a y LS, y Tho expenditure cntallod by that part of the separatist polley which consists In con- plructing A vost system of political railways, hn deflanice of the greatest natural obstacles, within - Canadian territory, fatally conilicts ‘with the other oblee of ‘ghtentngs the com- ‘ Tuereiqt: bond with England, because it ren- t, ers necessary an increased taxation and tho l a» Snpost ‘eher duties on dritish goods, juncr in Canada, In fuct, (t muy bo sald: that | friends, and imoru especlully it showy thut | Huully sottiod, Horo, howoyur, tet ehite and full, und hy lias the roveruutial | {hstuntaticous viows of thu watora,, Its hopod | means of Knowlig: who or wOat by was angi 1 cao on bat I nn ff member, t “the a soclu fuslon ot £9 wo nat ony has to, nO Chana ‘atrongth t Wien Jona edt COMES IN ANOTURI niyvicuLery. ae alr Re a patrlurel Us i {arms mune ot bo wiih aucevod for the bunollt or unerations to | UTE Prana ta ag Wr a erreiy AS rie A a bden Club, aud o ver in yatta, nconsiderable extent been goluy on. rus | underestiinated, Suck a rudical rx MM By a law pussed at tho last session of tho ig- | Teal estate vel ry , ‘ Ue 2. f “ide Cui cA .. ny | been asserted that the annnal number of end: 7 f As the, water. recoded from tho pinnacle of | hotel waa prequun tive avi peiae Honea. face itis pot concelyable could be effpeled | lature it is provided tut any foreign Inaurauce known of “ready money men.” Mr, Wop Peg ates sir worrespondent. nude. the Tncniber 0 at | foollah *Frea tradg,’ peace, guud-will among. a" tons. “But my belive is inthe motto us! & whole. ‘My conviction is that, with- out pexco "and good-will among nae : tlons, “the. renunciation of — aggran- dizoinent, and the reduction of armuments, wre can be no freo trade, Caunda hos o turf, the United States have atari, En- laud has tariif—overy nation has a taritf.. runts from Canada into the United States 0 000 and -that there are now nearly aniiiion ofs Canadians, French and English, south of the ling, ‘These estimates must ‘very vague, and probably Include a number of cases not really belonging to the category. of emigration; but there can be no doubt that 4 Sourrent is constantly runulng both from. without o weight, nulur indorsumens and | company socking to trausfer Crom tho stata to | }iko your own Guniliar ‘Thurlow ¥ ‘cupabls of prowutlng themselves. Your allu- demand, fue relaroreliyg the nuw. synipa; | tho United States Courts nny cagu in which it ta | y hon fs frlends think he somew! fool vor e Sara eR STOTT Ae nd pocapaele Tribndless uid jenuftes condition. ta thies of the’ manugement, But this lust | {sldrestod shall forfoit its Heensa todo business | rewembles, has a, fashion of talking to | eae eae vay by tho wrout frost, April 2,,| 8 futbor wevora reprouub uyjod JUNC paint ig mot lett to, probabilities; tigro is | 12 Whla Stato, Theroforw if the Chton Mutual | huis conductors anu drivers as he Roes to aud | teu, ‘his wus douo tnoruly, to Nee ie ight! | , Picasa use the influenes vf suur sticot In Do convincing material evidence ~ that the | garit ae rly, and it eooks, aa it under Miner | sco the elty, te keops a close oye on bis | bt tho water, An unlookud-for surge, uf about.-| Balt of eal! ture 3 Ai 6 a ofa) vigorous -stalwartian ond youupy of | erroUmatanoca oertulniy would, to haye it trang. | business, and one envious op ilion capl- | thros feet depth, came ‘over’ tho places, brace of blot See, Lamas Gen. Grait’s comiidacy which — will } ferrod from tho Btato totho Unitod states Court, | tallst of ‘the Inzy school sald other duy: | wit ch forvs that bo wus so noarly swept " aL now distingwish theapotropolitan journal of § it would mug the rluk of:having a sudden atou © Te counts the passengers with one vye and | shabis was almost 4 mirqolo that bo aera jee Papillion after shaving, aa x t ’

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