Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1881, Page 4

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Tye Tatbune, TERMS bvililziulm"rms. W AAITA—IN ADVANCE—DOSTAGR I'REPAIIL Jnly «smm one ¥ 2,40 oF 106 Rl iy a AN uym e Memday, 3 ~|‘u:'u:y'. 1depaze e-f \xuu. vorym oo 2.0/ . WEEKLY EDI s Tt T e n enpt, yer yeu : )lrfillb{“’“‘l':.-’n. G5.00 Twenty-ono eopl ! Epeeimon copin . Giro Lost-UNlcy addiess In fufl, fncluding County wd State, Hewittances mdv he fudo citlier by Aralt, 0¥Dress, TO CITY SUBSCRUMEHS, :{tv delivered, Siniday pxeepted, 255 conta por week. 1Y, a8 3 Rirees THE FRIDLNE COMPANY, nd Dearniothsus., Chlcad, AR V'oHAVARY Yrdar, OF In réxleternd lostor, ntuur Fisk tvitrdd, Surfday tbinde. U brits per weok. il Lornbr Mudin U, i h ntered at the Dost~afiée at, Chléingo, m.< ar Second- Class Matter. e banent ot ot patrons wha desiro ta, send u:;l:‘mmfimnr'lrlh IuUNs throuh e il o sive h¥feopitls tho trahnient pito uf Bostuge: . Domealic, Aght " ‘Fwelvo Dage I'apOr.. B Dt Laerorsee Filuht ang Twelv lxteon Pugo I'a TRIBUNI BRAN l’rrl}l 2 Ter cony! It OFFICES. AGO TIINCNE lins established - hranch o ocetut il subscription und Bdsertisge wents ns follaws: - mw\oux—nmmmmuum Buliding. ¥, Me- FAUVES, Manago GLANGOWY, .umml-Au:m- Amisican + News Ageney, i1 Jtenficld-at. LONDON, Eng~Ameriean Kxchango, &) Etrand. FLENILY F. GILLIG, Agent. e, 1R bt 17 Tientbom street, curner of ionene, Miastrol ene terininment. Afternoon snd eventug. Tandolphi street, between Clrk und La Salle. gokementof ltice’s Hijon Opers Loritgany, - Epectre Knight,” and Cugtity teging ut Home." A teruoun ond evening. @y Grand Opes Clark strect, opposit new. ment of tho Meado & Mazirley Combinutlon, * Dea- con Crankett.” Afternioon dind evening. o M) n:kfl 1hcnlrn. Madibort strcer, . botween #tnto-nnd_ Donrborn. Engugement of Mile. Elflh flur‘llhnfllL “Camille ™ ut g m;—mplu ‘Theatre, . “Clurk stroet, between Lake and andolph., Fnzates ment of tha Hyde & Behmon Camedy Company “Autdoon's Pente” Aftornoun and evening, Court-llouse, Fmiuces " .!mnu-lll} 7 M Tinated street, near Mndison, ment of Mr. Joseph, l‘mtlur. ‘Atvernoon und evoriing. Contral Musle-Trl. / Corner of itandolph und Ktatw streotd, | Entertalne , mont by Yelen- Putter's 1'loindes for tho Boneiit of the Newsboss' 1lomo. Afturnoon and eventig, Te, $ Vest Stde, Enea Nick of thi Wouas” -0 ] < Fxpoaitton Tullding. 1.0K8 fiont, Uppositd Adning Sudat.’ bitton feotn ¥ a. m. to M p. 01 \\'len exhi- T S:\TURDAY. o2, 1sst JANUARY . Pror. B 8. Horpex;.of the Naval Observ- mm-y at Washington, who hag aceepted the " yosition of Director of tho Madlson Observa- ton. left vaeant by thie denth .of Prof. Wat- son*i¥n young man, but hins had plenty of experience. Ile has alrendy.n high standing + mong .selentific men; Is the -author of an excellent téxt-hook on astrohomy. and has the esteem and. cohfidence of Prof, New- . coinb and other equally competent nuthorl- i tles. Hawil be a \\orthy suecessor to u'e lnmentull.’ro Wals onTi CAROLINA I8 tho lending Stato of the Unlon'in point of Hliteracy, It nlso hns “the lenst proportion of forelgn populution,— oniy 1,078 all tokd, < Yet this is-the State in ‘'whicht John Loeke propused to establish an -aristoerncy 175 years apo. It wonld be curl- us'to, trace out the effects of the settlement fNunh Carolina by tho refuse of English ' prigons on ity comlltion to-day. Georgln, ‘wlilehi Was o haven for debtors, hns flourished ! nmullm:ly, but its early setilers w m‘e atmost { untnfl.' ate, not eriminal, | It isnotaticprlsing’ that Mr, Edmunds Is 1 the appol Flé\], vhamploh of the Senato In the proposed : ‘cr uile agalnst the newspapors, - He contes frnmn State that hasbut fonrdaily papers within fta borders, and he has beenre- - elected to the, beuf\la for six years from the 4th'of Mareh Hoxt. Desldus, it 1§ Impossible that the newipapors should bear Mr, Fd- | muids any Hl-wil, “They know that he s 1 nblednd lionest; and these qualifientions for igh oftiee kre, in these days, so wimsunl that - the press enmat atford, on personnl grounds, o disregard thei S LA e —— Mu Hesey A article on “'The Fut- dre of Amerlean Shipplng” in the lnst num- oer of the Atlantle Monthiy 18 singular in Joibie: thot it does not propose remedy. The writer lenves the whole subleet In the ajr. - o carefully proves what diil not need . demonstration, that Awmerletn shipping s deeaying, and then stops. It does not re: ;7 qulre u powertul hunglnatlon to see the . mdrks of the editor’s sclssors below the last ¢« ‘fine of his copy. Lvideutly the rtlantic « Monthly was not prepnred to take tho re- * »aponisibllity for the remedy which reason and .- experienco alike suguest—numely:.the re- ' moval of the restrietions now Imposed upon ' Awmericans, and the granting of the right to " buy aljips whero they ean by got for um least . munt- ¥ i, M Lo\ £, the Sonator-elect from ‘llnh- s Tizan, fs deseribed by the Noshvillo Amertean, i‘ edited by the present Secrotary of tha Sen-, oL nte, a8 “nsort of Tespectable 'Thersites, who “x §8 not required In the Senate,” Admitting the ‘abpropritencss of the description for the ke of argument, it does not follow that the ; eovollary {8 true. Thorsites Would not find ‘. hls afilee a stiseeure In the Sehate, . 1o might . bektn, for fitstinice, by Beourglig - sentatjves of grent eorporations in th ! the rallroad attorneys, Standard O11 mey, A " mblionnires,” ‘Thei ho ight proceed’ loum - sidlor the publlo scundals affeettng tho repus tatlous of.some half-lozen Senators; -Bofore + "Phersites was done with theso he would wish that e were back. fmifn Tn % Greeco—but ~ Mving Greeca no more,” And yet he' wonld ¢ lmrdly have got below tie :aurlucn of affalrs, . . Bfxiron “Jonxstos, of Vlrgluh\, s 5 wrritten n h.mr ontho subjéet of ‘the indelt- «.edness of that State and i opposition to the '} pohicy of tho Readjuster _ party, in which he * . clahins thatthig old StatoIs ublotto meel hor ' obligationd Bad edn afford to be honest to ull 1 hor ereditond, : o eans and nbllity of the o Binte ho elainis'aie, Juproving annually, and “ in due timé sho will he ablo to ask no favors V I that Tespect, «Am:r an eluhormte review of ,,‘hcr wifairs, o thus ‘ebnikes the Readjusters 2~ Hetenso of repudiation, He says: Tho Reudfusters ha A!)cnupu'd and eontinug to wuple thelr clumor -ahont'thy debt of Vieginiy th the must hLurtreutllux uccounts of tho ?m erty of 1ho pi lmplu nud the Btute, Accordin 0 tliom tho mu 18 only - visg humr-umnu uuY s citlzens €0 many pupperd., Thoy prufess o want fnigrants (0 cowo Lo the State, and by Wwayof inducing thom tell them and tho world lluu tho taxd DppPressivo snd alimoat futolie- thut the peophe ure poor; sud thoy otfer the fi. Immumgnun 8 1ho chinied Lutweuil ropudia- uy s poverty wud Lurdship. It 18 trilo tat many were mude bunkrupt by the War and its Csonsoqueneed, aud the peoplo of the Bmluhnvw Wuderknio wuch trouble. 1ut they lm\u mudo 8 brav fnd manly olfort, sud this day | bolleve tho ‘numuu of tho State 1o be more promising and s lun ro brighter than ut wny perjod ot its 1 -hiktoey. Thero 18 moro oueryy, more industry, N2 uulerwhw, wore deyclopmont nuu krowih i e e il mm)mmim 1 fiently 500,000 In hier popiation. tities huve bnsinesa, I;;lwn statemont Just corpleted of eI, Norfotk City ind Codnty,., Jdohisslon cohicludes by Jioro ver cont: tho. populition of the Binte wwi pop ccnl. A, n‘ itd tawns more than doubled: new raflronds budl, and Loilding; new Hnes mers cstublished, and yet the Readjuste continyaily whinlng about the eannl scheme that fins eome from any guarter I3 that of the, Pilindelphia Daillctin, - witleh Nt iligeavered In it tho germs of 4 deaily Bonapartist cnnaplrm')' follows: » o L \\ fi marefed Hmmmuw. the grant wis cope veyed to Do Lesseps, wllu 18 cousin of the exe Bitpross Bugénio's; n I lluunpur Iste, Thosg t |l||(, em to Indfeate with “clearpess that tho, onts lrl!u 18 largoely it Hivolres a ronewiil ¥ phes w spillelent renson for tho uPnllmnmn of o Monrosdoetrine to the sehicineof present for o Bonapartist conspitney—exeept the Bonapacte, forgotten this little omisston, nh)crhnps cuu- sfdery 1t iivial atid ||nnhm-rmm. few dnys ago that dhill pe sehts to ghve him the soine members, amd recognlzes N forihé purpose on - he R 3lcmmmo tor rinument, thiat i TR i1l CIIICAGO TRIBUNE s,m‘unn‘w, JANUARY a9 3E1- lssl-'—sm'l‘n‘LN pAGES : : han rlmld have l»ben«rpoflm‘ or W, rm\emul aifbstantliite hmnm\ly 0 thehtidi o few fdcts, Virginin in tha_last ten, yoprs hnflnmmml fler towns and enplo nnd wore in from the cehaus grown et In some of the hwnn and citfos: I, LAY 15in. Uchmon Ly noti 160 statisties Senntor nyihas llnr)l(*n. topper, Mkom, 7ine, toaly salt, plaster; and umm‘mnesn. all found n slx cne luuu- coflirties il Virginia; tho cotton fruk: Norfolk [herensed: 1213 per cont, |ucx|mrlu After detalling variou: Lead, hoverty ryluin, and doeluring umt sho s u,smrcd in nll ber resonre Trx oddest eritfelsm of tho e Lt-mm "The stitement Is us dthorant for the Pana- i9 0 Bonaparte by births the Compuny r which e neted has for its President u tiin Tho Dy i obtalii 1hio Congress Whick np- w8 peked with pved, tho l'mapnm nuln'm politied] i itk mn—vuufls he tho llanapartiats of tho um\mms of the e Emperoe Nupotead to obtiln u foothold for neh influonce npon this eontinont, Itsup- De Lusseps, 1t will- hesseen that afl tho materinls are The Bullctin has apparently Mt Bt mrn, of Calorado, m\\u notiee n Raidall con- Vlege as other of calling wp a blll authorizng the ercetfon of publie bulldiugs i Denver, e will insist regular order . fu each morning hour, e sworkings of {his benutifil liwof compensatioh are seen tn nlate number of the Congreaslonal Record, ds follows: ay, J 3y eltord ot Gallfor o remular o, Pho & "Pl'nk(‘r—-’l'lw rcsulnr okder 1s uu.- eallof commitiers for tepo Ssdah, 1 Mr, Price (!m‘rm—l it uLunlmous consent to , tuke fromn the Speuker's ta \lr. lnlmrd(&olurmlu}—l eall for the regulur ‘Ir. Tunton (\'Irxlnln)—\vlll the wentleman iy offer reso- \lr. llelhrll {Cotaras Ist on tho regular e s ponker=Thig rewtitdr drder, this bt Friduy, ls the eall of comniittecs for reports of u privaié nature, | !‘-mmla( “Mr. Upson (Texasy—| 1o Introduce n biil, Mr. Betford (Coldrador~1 “eaft for tho regulur order. * Tho.Spy enfier—Tho rcuulm' order s tho cnll ot wmmmcms for reports. By ndonting these tacties Mr. Détfori'ls bringlag a tremendolts pressure to-bearupon the Speaker. Everymember who has a bill which he desiris to iive cotiid iip ont of the regular ovder will wish to see Belford’s grievance removed. 1UI evident {ha meni- ber from Colorado knows what he Is aboutt and the boys out in thé cdfions and mines who have christéncd him “The Red-Headed Ttoostei” liave o propet dppreelatioi of’ hls stuying qualitles, - THE FORGERIER AT HALu?Ax "T'hé forgeries and faléitientions which Prot, Niid discovered ‘In the Canadian flshery statisties were of sit kinds. (1) Subtractlong from the value of the mnckerel eateh lefore the, Trenty, of., Washington; and additions to the same In the treaty perlod, the Intent be- 1ng to show that the yleld of tho fisheries was constantly Inerensimg, (2) Additlons to the hecring catch, fis If to support an afgument that the. snpplies of balt furnished Amerls can_fishermen were abindant and-chen (8) Enormous adeditlons to' the liiports of fishe produets from the United States into Cunada, ng, tails; and fury of animals” being for this purpose Included niiong marine prod- uets, - (1) Corresponding subtrnetions from the exports of tish praduets from Canade to the United States, tho cbject of this nnd ths previous Item béing to prdve that the Domin- lon derlved 1o benelit from the adnilssion of fish-prodaets free to the States. - (5) Large nilditions fo the valug * of 'Cavadian ex- ports of fish {0 foreign countries ottiér than the United Statés, this falsjlication betng Fes quired 1o malntain the reputation of the fish- eries for an abundint ylield while necounting for the alleged diminution of exports to the Unloir, (U) Gross aid palpable blundérs, due to the stupldity of Canadian oflelals, nud not corrected by the i nmnagers u( Lhn umlsh ense. Some of the absurdities contr\lnou tin-tho statlstles are polntéd ot by Prof, lind. For, examplo: Noya Scotln, New . Bruns: wiek, and Prines Edward Island, all fishing proviices, ave represonted as Iniporting lnrge Guantitles of, fresh codilsh from the United States, atid paylug for the, swio 10 or 15 ceiits 0 potnd, while oy ‘exported {o- the: bu\tcn yunntitied of the sume fish at n shude overt e cent n pound, Nova :Sootin-is credited'Witl tho extraotdinars Inwortation of 1,014,5007 pounild’ (or 800 tous)’ of freshy ke ol from tho Unlted Stutes, valued at* 870,70, orfive cents u pound, nearly, in 1874, when at the sunie’ ting . mackerel was solil in Nova, Sealln for shipment to tha United States alan wveruge prico of $1Q par burrel, or nbout four cents jier pomrid, Anothor falslileation equally gross was the nlleged expurtation of large quantities of fresh fish to the West Indles, South Amgriea, Italy, and Tortugal, ot from 10 to 20 conts n numid. while the exports to’ tho Unltéd, States Wera entored nt from ane-half to one cont i pounil, 1t B4 bglieved tho fovmer exvorts were ivholly fictitlous, as thoy correspond curlously with the wmount of “furs, skins, and talls "—ter- festeinl products—hmported Intd the Doinine Tou, und the presumption Is that thiest figures wern holdly used to represent the wxports of Jresh fish from Nova Seotln to tropleal countries und to Birone, The statisticlaig . furthoi helped out tholreaso whenoverneees: ‘wary by transforming barrels fivto hogaliends; hundredwelghts Into burrols, burrels futo bushels, boxes, (g, enns, quintals, oF single “Msh; nad viee vorsa, | Nono of thoss ervors wero tiscovered by thie sapiont «.uunwl who mannged the Amerlean ense, + Apart from the question of natlonnl lionor Involved In tha discosures . of Prof, Ilind concerning these lshery statlsties, it Is worlh observing Uhat they reflect indireelly oit the capaeity and fdelity of our State Departmont, Thio-errors and frauds nre .50 gross that a child might huve discovered them, yet they slipped by our vepresentatives at Talifux withdut serutiny or guestton, “Scerotary Fish lan, 1 Wk mmlmuus consent wits Tesponsiblo for the first biunders by coynection with the Hulifax . aifudr,— the choleo’ of ..the .paral. Delfosse us wmplre and of Tlalfnx ns the place for mecting,—but Seeretary Bvarts 1s enurgeable with the subsequent negligancs by which our enso was pennitted to go by default, ‘Tho Amerieny represntutlve mi the Comumisslon was o gentlenn froin Western dassnehiu- setts, who knew nothing about the subjeet, und was o matéh for tho shrewd Aléxander I Galt, the Canadian ropreséntative, whe, With un expérlenco of thivty years fn_ public Jite, was ablo fo carry every pointhie maode, 1t 1s showir alse Ly Prof.” Hlid thét the British Government had two young Qlplo- matlsts renowned for thefr-shrowdness, and, perhups, tor thely \lusnmyuluusuesa-)lr, ,mu! ‘nny further rétéreieo to the shatser. o il Mr, Bergne—working up tho case foi twd years beforehand, ahd the siteeess of the Conadian offieinls was anhinost entirely dite Lo thelr efforts, The United States find 1o such work done in thefr behalf, ‘The heg- ligendn was owing In part to the professionnl ot propreot Snérn!drlm Fiahand Bearts, - bofh of whont '§étii 1o fin grliited thint omly lawsers eoihd by of the least sery! tob hit this hingotthe easen CINEY seht to Halifasxd hamtice of Tespeetatle al- torncu wiio split halts tearhidly. abuit the. @ takou b fof; 1 of the treaty; and permitted their ‘to bydrpiswek thivng with cooled. \mlsmlhflm. A shrowd fervuntant and sto- 5t Wil 15 bewit iworlll Infite ta the: eade (hitii il tho Amerléaii lawyers tind b vauded Halifax on that hlll'l’eflhl]{ acenslon, 'Tlie truti seems to e thit our diplomatic sepvice Is the lenst efidient In the world, largely Ubeanatt it lind OF Jnth pnssed under thia dlrection of profiesslonnl Dryaddusts, who DAY e diploimdtte: expiriéncd themselves: atid do not uindeistand the vahue bt it, Mere afe ronsequently no ‘professtonal diplomats: I the sefvice of the Unitell Statey, npd én an aston ki that at ILlfas onr vepresehids tives are casily overreached, ‘I'he experienés of thal easé lins been dengty lmunlm 1t Isto De hoped it will be uséd (o good ndyaninge, Ong word remuing to be sahi of the sup-, position, commonly nifered by ehnritably dis- posed persons, that -the errors In the fishcry statisties may have heen infrocently made, ‘I'his Iden must e ut ‘oneg and peremptorlly distnissed, Prof. Ilnd avers hi his letier to ste A Guies When imlrneg(n;r from . mh\\}n fo, alifux, el fin Junie, 185, one week befoto. the Coni- 8B inot, With Mr. Ford wad M, Neggne, [ rmratsied, ot tha regifest of thosd gent et Tor thelt hununl thon dnd thore: sg tattch of tho maitnserint of uq paper on *+THe Eiect of the Hishory Clalisbs 0F the ‘Tremty of Washlugtoh i tho I"!‘hl)l‘ll'r! and Flsherinén of Neitlah North Amerien® as Thad written: At thls thme 1 said tn these, n‘m:cnwn. " Yonr statisties aro wrongr” bivgine iy, cisng upon nbivge, seps nrulvsht-ux of stal Iallm of the \.umnlhm tishup- , it T afteewdrd tomid to L fdehtiedl \\ (1 1hd tahle 1 the “Cast ™ In Il detalls na 1o i"“r” 13 40 1875, Hlllhn‘lfll”?mul x;;flmnl) r)*pl o) thitt thoy knew It - i wers vorrected, and at that thne were m\mn rr.-prlmml nt Ottawit, Mi Bergne wits p Lhruuxlnru exceited, tand descunted on the trouble he hand had, in “puuhlwlhum right.” Neitver Mr. Ford nop Burgne asked me to point out. the orrors T detected 13} Lhis Shegt of statistics, or made 1t further nppeats that iy ot the fals catlot$ correspond fighro. for Ngré wi At othier stitement ports so that the chaiges could hot hivé béeii ncul«lun!ni niid Urof. Hind luls {11 tifs pogsession the orlginnl draft of i balance-shebt, shiking the erasures of the tiie figurés aind the Interlineativns of falso ones, ‘Ulits. balance-shect was fur- dished hinl, it - testlieony before the Talifax (:ml and has -Deelt’ piinted 1 reports. ¢ _ BYPOS MATCHE'S INIUNCTION. ,'hére,}s no doubt that the suit brought by Rufus Hateh n New York to enjoli the annatloin of the, Western. Unlon and Amériean Unlon Telégraph Coipintes Is fuliy warranted Ly the nature of. the pro posed consolldation, mnsmuch fis this con- solitlition 18 contrary td gmul morals wind publle lmllcy Unfortanately, there Is littie reason to hope thit inls Buit-will pired nny perindnent eheck ution the: consuintithtion of the project. | Whatever Mr. Hateh's motlves In tinging the sult muy be, there Iy Htlle re- Ilnitee to be placed npoir any tudiviliial éf: fort or un tntervention tepresenting ouly 100 snares of stock for blocking. & Lig game in which the'stakes amount to inllliond, The same I8 true of ainy mérb 10¢al ‘6ffort 14 fm- pecte tho work of consolidation, whether it s ninde &1l thb Courts o {n the Leglslnturey of afiy bf the. States, Tho promoters and Lenefielaries of :thenewsimonopoly-may- be subjected to some annoyance, embrrrass- ment, nml veil oxpense, Lut they edntrol the menns elther fo buy off orerush out all oppo- sition of thiskind, ‘I'le only protection ngainat lgantle monopolies of thiy kind must come froin the Geilerdl Goteriinent, Theie ovight 1o be, but 1 not, soms summary. process for the Uoveriment tu frrest contraets hd cotii- bhintlond which' are eigitrly In Vlolaliow. ot public policy and’ hl]llllbll!ln tho commier- clal Intorests of the country, - it the absente of sich nuthority, or the fatlure to exeréise it 'on the part of the Uovérninent, the people will alwayis bent the merey of the munopn- Itsts. The telegraph nuestion, llnm.\er. 13 one whicls - miny- be- suceesstiilly -trented. apnit,: without referenco.to the other cinsses of monopolies, 1t comprehends the transmils- slo of fifarimation wil the spicid'of Mtél gence.. 1t.1s naturnily a part of the postal system of the coufitry, * It {3 a proper func- tlon of the Government to furnish the beo- plo with ‘facliittes for intereoninnintéation by tulegmuh fis well ns by fetter, The very sdiiie tensois hieh prompted hnd author- fzed the tio nent to assuiiie the bushiss of earrying .and distributing the mails warrant and demnnd that tho . transmis- glon of telographic letlers shall ho underfrken by the Government fn the Literests of tho people. Forlnnately, the Guvernmént I8 fin n position te provida this new benefit without dolay, * ‘Thosrplus feveritie of ‘probubly not meroe thait thredor four nionths would serve to establish a o pleto systemof telegraphle conimunteation {n connection with the postal sorvice, Such A Governtneit -project is not new nor expérl- mental, It lins aliéady bien' deinonstiated {n other ountries that the telegraph servi under thé nlls]lll.‘cfl it control of the G ornincnt, at once cheapens rates, nl!or«lu abs solute protection against private or edrporato nonupoly, aid s self-suatainfing, The Gov- Frnménthas the' powek to dvall lself of all the putents aind appilances neeéssury ta the succesafn! manngement of the busthess, The pordonnet cf tho gervice Is smal) as compared with that of the Post-Otflee, mid tirero 18 no’ danger that it will beeume nn aggressive po- ltieat minclitue, - Flnnlly, it s the only way which_ affords @ certhlil girdnteo dyainst uxtomun and oppresaton; ‘T resotutlon Antradiiced into !he lousé ol Representatives by Mr. Springer_siiguld bo urged to lmmedintd pussage, Congress shauld striko while the fion Is hot. - In'viw of thi wiviversul Indlgndtion ngatnst the bros posed amnlgmuntion and the popular, appre: lenston bt future extortion, Congress contd do nothing at the prédent tiing thitt \vould secuio io mueh approvil from the masses of ‘o) parties wid factions usto proceed envrget lenlly with the ascertaiiunent of the cost of o b, pormineit, and lindopundeit telegraph system, to’ be follownd by tho estublishment thercdf. Such fn Investization, progecuted Tiontstly anit vigorously, wonld nndenbtedly roveal the folly of ejther permitting the peopls tobobled fu-order to payn dividend. on a Hetitions stock of $80,000,000, or of buying the old material of tho present telegraph mpppp- oly at uuy suoh figure, It will ulso show thut ho cost of constriteting o new Govermuent telogeapll systdin, in donitection: with the fucliitios now cuntrolled by the Government, will bo comparatively Insignificant; will lead to the estdbllshient of a chéap and uniforin rafe for messages to and from all paits of the United States, aud at such a tariil us \vll)l {mm tho interest un tho requlrtd Juvest- iieht, | 1t the present consolidationr the stock-jobs- bers hiive overreached - thomstlves, They havo suiniioned the opportunity for Govetil- ment; action, which might have been phst- wned Ihdetinitly under ovdinary extortlon, 1t Congress nlml‘ not now procewd to fur- nish the people with an endurling protection agalust the telegruph cormorsuts, it will be ' ln‘cn\mu the people's representatives Iy Con- gress betray them fud thelr dufeests, -Tho fan or men In Congress who Shuil block the wayton proper iavestigation and exposition of ‘this wholo guestion will do 1t ab thel: peril, Thoy will therehy confess thuinsblves Lo bie the attarneds br tirelits of tho monop- 13ts, il thioks s ot a codatituency in the Tnnel wirkels swilt, not dinit such traliors, D!D SHAXSPRARE WRILE BACON'S WORKS1 Autovg the frotablé papers In the eurrent ‘Mnibor of the North Amerlean Hevlew 13 ond by the Ltev, Jatned Freemnn Claike, with thie nbiove ittt T il b, observid thdt he hins revérsed the ibual forin of thie qucstion, el |h(dcm| of usking whethor the. dry old philosoplier Aviote ~Shalkspemre, ~uliitesses Wimseff to this tdsk of Shoiing, without be-- Heviiyg tword e himselt sayss that il 1s mueh rore (ikely Shakspbare-wrole Dacoti's WorS, frin (i * Novaits Utieantm* down, rembnding. one, somewhat of Archblshop Whateley! s\ngunlum uso of Hume's argi- nient Hignhist iitdelisto sliow titt Napoleon Bonaparte eqidd fiéver tnve liveld, After giving the substaneo of the yarious atEumaniis adduced by Helia Raeoh, Willlam Henry Silth, anid Jiidgé Hohnes In favdr of the Bacon authorship, Mr, Clarke states his voint—natinely: that It we ave to betfove that ofi titlitl tenll§ wrotd Loth Bacofi and Shak-* speare; thon the odds are in favor of the fat- fery F there 18 1lo etidehee that Bacon wos a poet ny” wall a8 phllnmnhor bt therd 18 aliple. evidence that Shakspeare wis o philusopher well ns poet.” He attaches very litle fhit to Judpe 1lolmes arue meiit that it Wid" Iniposslblé foi Shalkspenre 10 huve aequired the knowledge displayed fn his plays, for I tht pertod of the Renals- siifea evéry ofie studied bybrgtititg, and Gireck and Tatin books weré réad by Prince ani pensfiity mul. ns shuly was: the fashion in that dhg; thete 1y every reason to belleve that Stakspeard ind the désire fof knowl-' mluu as he certalnly had the means for shtisfy the sante nrgiment would stiviv that' Dt Jaiisch and ather cele- brated dramatists; who ind no more oppor- tunities than Slinkspedre, could not jiive wrlttih their own plngs, S ,Afer, establishing (hat Shalsbeare wrote the pliys, he then pddresses himself to the fisk of showhig that it s very likely lio wrole the, phllosephy which now passes for Bacon's. First, the assuuiption witl expliin ut onde thal eontradiction, waieh hins plways béeii fipparent betwoen Bacow’s life anil works, so aptly expn.ssml . Pope's line, “The wiseat; brightést, meanest of - ninj- K" Belng_fdabitiohs 10 U6 knovn 43 a phtlosopher, this difleutty is removed at onegy I we suppshe that he iftduced Shalke- upm\rc o help hlin=nut o ksl summsilhm, stirée- Bacon lilmself fins conféssd In oné of his letters that 1o onght tho aidor deasmat- Ist4, nmung titem 1|un Jonisoit 117 Bet Jon- péaré? Aridmore so, fis the.wvorks of Bacon werd produced at stlme when he was engaged as Crewn lawyer in ctusliitiz éonspiracies, dnd had nb lelsurd, white Shakspeare hnd. finished his plays aud was lividg near Ben Jonson, one af Baeon’s'assistitits, dntl had ample time, Suyd My, Ularkes - We cair enslly concefve that bln\knp("m', havihg .produced In. his prime the wonders dnd glories of the plays, shiould In Ws hitér lelsure have developed the lea ding tdens of the Biconinu philosonhy. B it iy dililedtt to imagine: that Dagof, Wit dévoting it umln strefgth to polities, to.Inw, and to philasophy, should have, as n wete pastiine fob his lolsuré, produeed In his fdle monients the greulust intelleetunt work averdone on enrlh " Andther pojnty. most. hur \laly made by Mr, Clarke, i3 the. following:™ If Bacon reafly wrota the plays theré 1S no way of ne- counting for his concentment of his autior- ship, for lie was very,valn mid anibitlous in s divgetldn, Alwdyy attaehed his name lo hisbooks and sent them round very, widely 08 preséhits, and even took the trowble to put Ills hame on a very inferlor play swritten by Him for lcprewuninnun In private, On tiio othor linnd, ‘thers Is. nothlng sur- prishigg in SImLsanruq advaneliig no cluim to - the m;(lmrslup of " the phi- losophys, “Shakspeare was by nature .as retleent: /o mudest as- Bacon was ego tistical *and_ostentations, What w vell is drawn aver the poet’s personality fn his son- nets] Wo rend in that his Ininost senthuents, but they tell ®us absolutely nothinz of the ayents of his lifo or {ha fnets of his position.” Even the portraits pf the two mer, ns well as thelr Writings, says Mr. Clarke, sliow whieh of the two difiuds Wyas eapablo bf chninlnitig the other...*'The hend of ‘ahr\hspuurn‘, ne- corting to dll the busts and pletures \which remain to us, Ielonga to the 1ypo Which antiyuity lns trahsmitted to s 1 the por- tralts of lomer nud Plato;- In this vast domo of thought théro vis rooni. for every- thiug, LThe huead of Bacon 18 also a. grand une, hut leas mple, Jess complote,” Wo have barely outlined In 1t ibove sketch the sallent poitits of- Mr; Clarke's ar- guniénts, but - thoy are sulliclent to show what i powerful wedpon in the hands of master playful tdlenle may e, Aud Uhils waeapon s used with sueh skill that, though . Clarke belleves not n word i I3 ivritiug, it 18 Tird1§ possibla to tiso fro i perusal‘of Ms paper without the convietion not<enly thist Bacon Aid not wrlte Shakspiare; but that Shukspearo did netually wilto Bacoil 'BERGI'S WIFE-BEATING BILL = . 3. Monry Bergh; of-New-York, whom- all anlinals rlss up ntid eall blessed, and wiin Hing dono aitel n great work for sufoving humans and beasts, both by, hia persanal effort and hy awaking public smumthv for sumrlm: and Indligiittion nguinst cruelfy, has now bikned lils attention td o representative elass. of Drates fn human shilpl; whosa evuelty. hos never yet mot with.adequaty punishiwnt 4t thls.country—numely: wife-bentars, 1lis bill, which is now pending in the Now York Log- jsinture, provides for the castigation of any winle personsvho * shul willfuly Beaf, brulse, or uintilate s wifo or any otlier femyle human betng,” nid the funglstrate befdte whom tho wifo-beéater §8 colivieted 18 1o sped~ ify the number of strukes to bo_ infileted, which shal not b(i less than twenty-five, to b stiirdlly 1akd o tho bato back “of - sald of- fondor Ly meas of , o whip or lnsh.of sueh proportions ad steeugth 4s -will ‘insure ths earrying vul of the spirlt aud lotter of thls atatute,” Il prilshment §s to be thilleied by the Sheritt ot ons of M3 deputies, within the Inelosura of tho cofiity prison, “in ns pilvate o winimer aswdy be,™ bt *in’ the pruuunw ofivduly licensed pluslclml or suz- Beul At nm slght Mr. Bergh would appenr to bis gulity of au fuconslstency tu seeking 1o pro- yvent eruelty by tho' practleo of cruelty, but i veality his remédy Is bnsed ou the connter- friltation thieory In niedichire, whicl his now. becomu 5o generatly recosnlzed and adopted by the profeysion, A lttle, stinging, sinart- g pluster, sprend wpoi the chest dfid ro- -dueing an putward ivelation, will sometines prevent an fuiernal inflsnmation or congesd- tlon which inlght prove fatat to n patlent. Bo, by tho applleation of a small amount of punishment in kind (6 _the wife-bentor, dr, Bergh,woull pre utnurontnnmnmur:.ruul- ty, ot only In the euse bf ilié wife-beater re- ceiving the lashds, bug in thuse of numuious otler wife-lieaterd Wha . nlight * b8 “dos téreed by this, Tdivididl punishment, 1 lu h el Way the “upplication of the Old Tesinment doctrine, “ A oye for an eysand a footh for n-footh,” snd It IS the obly e doetrine whieh cnnvprnvn‘ salutary in the cisg of 0 wife-beater, "I New ‘Testampnt doetrine wasenuncinted for goud veople only, "Lhe poor, defenseless ereature In tho hals of en hiabitunl and witlful wife-beater would recetve lithlo comfort or solnee by tuining to the brute who hay Just smitten hier on one elteck {he offier, Mr. Berih's bl witl eonnmend Hself to Wié good sense of the publie beeanse there 18 na virtue in tha present. mothods of punish- ment: Under_existig Inws, o wifeshonter, conyieted of hiz abhorrent crimey Is fined, nitd, Incaseof fallire to puy his fing, i8 put. I Jadte. O Nie phuys s fine, le takes Just that ntbuht s of - fuaney. . awag fron - the. suh- slatines - of - Wiy Tl f-stirved - fiantlys dnd only aggravates- the brigiual evil by adding “aidthér o (h " If ~he eonnot piy N4 fie, and I3 locked up for sisly or i that b Pt brute himselt dogsn't ety pied probably hus no ferling of any sort !‘\!‘tpt of hulignation nt his wife for pulting B In Jadlnnd then wmnking no effort to got bim out. When he has served out g tenn he comes put of Jall ol tg fnd that hs fumify has beei sufterine disrbng histabseiréo for wint of food, warmth, amd clothiniz, amd the it Bnselr 1s not evired, while the wife 18 Worse off than she Whs hefore, and soelety 13 ot avenged for thie horrible Infraction of its taws, Bt on the othor hatid, i & Depuly- Sherlit b sulu lnshing of the brute, and 1f, best of all, that nlt-lmlv hnppens to be a stal- wart negro, who eun’ mlmlul-(h'r the Inshing with gusto and enthiisinsty, and tho wife- beater knoiws that the doke will be dotbled whefiever i repents the offense, thers cin tu g wasto of tme or ineney, tho wifd- benter will have somethiag to think nbotit, ull thic othet wite-beaters fi-his Sieintty wil davote considerable tilnt to meditation be- fore they Indulze fn thelr peeliliar ailiige- nteHt, Kt selety Wil have the sweit solties of knowing that the bruts has revelved “Til§ deserts aniil *kuoivs how It Is hiniselr,” The abused wife now has fo champlony bit fiér own relatives, ‘Thoymay beat the hrate In turn and get some satls netion out of that, hut In too many eases the wife hos only an old futher who cammot avenge her, or.the brutemay be anned and intimldate those whu would protect her. - Even divores Is no remedy. Some of these wife-beaters belong o-the Calholig Clinrah, . whilen llu'us’lml-nn- fiove of divoree; miid -even -Supjiose the serefehed wwonkfin obtafns n divoree, howis she to tiko eitre df herself imd her fawily or children ? Mr: Bergir's bill I3 o gdod ohe, but itstionld te earenifily revised hetore prasiigy, At least thie puntsltinént by the' lasti shoulil be left disereflonnfy With (o mazist ‘Uit are cases,” espechally Iy the 1o s where women may be termagants and pro- vole nman of violent temper purposely to strike’titeny that. they may get him fashed, At then proeuro w divoree. All women are not angels, and there may b edses where a man might plead-sotie shaidow of excuse for o fiasty Blov /which n slivewlsti, wigureri- able, afrd Irdselblé icotfan might pukposely draw upon liersell, and there aie jot wini- fiue cises where tiie weaker vessel IS ah Amdzon ag compured with the husband, and niny. linhid over ‘the eulptit vl et airmis to the publle whipper as o lhindy ffethod of ve- veiige, " And, s, the i Sliosild hot be so drawn as to-adnit- of Inshing for sinall of- fensed other than wife-beating, But for cases ot whifal and habitual . wi ating, Mr. Beigh's remedy I8 none too severe; and, it thoronghly enfoteed, it *wHl: go far towards removing an evil iv hlch Is manifestly on tho Inereage I this éountry THE CONDITION OF THE soum. The most promisling slgn of n returi fo politicnl snulty at the South fs furnished by the election of Gov. Brown to the, United States Sennfé from. Georgin, This gentle- it s piit hiimgelf tu open hostility to that sectlont of the Southern politiclans led by “Loonibs ticd otlier f cllcnblvn; Who elhig to the detusion that the yibiver of-the South éxlists n its- perpetual Iolation from (he rest of the country, so that when the vpportunity comes it mny strike for- lndependence: Un- fortunntely, this factioh hing so far been able to control. the politled” of tlig boutlmm Statés, T disiver, 10 ' o qiestiofi 08 to what \\ns tho - first duty of the - Soth, Gov., Brown _promptly answered: “To get . away from poilties; nml to give th fime al nttentlon of her peoplo to prac- ticnl matters,” By ¥ politics . ho, explnined that he nicint **sentimentnl abstractions,” which nbe fierétofore abotbed too much of publie -atlention, - - Hssuitlal prinelvles, he thought, will ll\u- ithotil sierpitunl :aglta- {lon, biic the aiestion of pmedcnl atvahee- fneitt Is u prosying ohe, Gov, Ilrown'is right. The “'lll‘ 1ot thint see- tlon i prostrato and impoverished viethn to her *sentimental abstrnetlons.” A moré practleal and less sentimental pédple Wil have nddressed thotnselves first to the recov- ery of thelr ‘matertul prospeiity, instend of wadtlng, ds e Soitth . has doiie, fifteen years for n miraculons . reversal of the consequences of the War. Ilow differ- ont In thfs’ respeet would be the con- duct of the Northeripeople i avertuken by wserious.cominoretal, Ananclal, and In- dustrial enlnmity! The irenmr the testitu- tlon, the pover(y, nnil thé Want, the grenter woitld have been thelr effort 1o repair the Josses, and the grenter the encrgy to restora the “wiste plages, ‘dnd to agahi gutround themselves with tho comfortsand means they foriudrly enjoyed. ‘The South has dlsthignfshed horselt for tho stmost fotal neglect of her fndustriul re- sources, lus licen. sumewhint pitilarehiil, and alwaykaiming ot aristoeruey, The yuling clasi lias alwiiys songht (o have a1y Ways, o umm othithg dnr- e, il Lils fadilly migt suird but two ‘ranks fn soclety,—one tho wealthy Inndholders, and thess of the emutlest possi- ble inhber; and thia uLhor .8lnves, or as near tho condition of sluves us ogild be, In olden times it was safathat the Domo- cratle leadors Hh Madsiehnisbits were always ntensely pro-slavery, because théy wanted the purty In that Statd only Just numerons cnovgl to Al the Fédéral olliees, Su at thy Sauth, The rullng cliss wintial 16 havd wl! tho wealth, and ol - tha, power Umitod to o few, und to havo -the rest of the population were serfs ami laborexs, They wanted no midale elusss thoy wanted no wealthy shop- keepers or minsufacturers; thelr opposition to trade was fountled on the same theory that suggested Mr, Jpiferson's regret, tliat.n cod- fish hiag beon enught fu the waters of Chesas peake Bay, and bis hope that no mord wonld Lo fouid there, lest thy plahtersot’ Vigginia wight become tisherinen and {raders, Fo'be plunter, with plantations worked: by slaves, wis the soclal ambitlon of the South: Ilonce, the ron, the conl, thie tiinber; the stoné, and the entt of the Bouthern States huve Leen “pirmitted fo Ho undisturbed for & ceitury, while ju thie North these hiave icén the great agents on which have been bullt the grpat wealth and prosperity of that section, - -+ ThIS ol [en of confhilng production nt 1he Bouth to_plantatlons, pwned by pluiters, and {6 perpetuate the soclal degradation of Inbur By ¢onfihig It'to an inferlor race, workud afier the old muh\rclml systen, hins buon tha renson of Her compurative stag- ‘natlon In a centiity of: genoral advancenient, Yot the Bouth has beeir ¥lelt 18 the posses- uns of unnll-lmmmrulxuure. Ftie mineral déposits of Virgininggré 8 great und aro wore divarshied than Thoss ot Pennsylvanta, Ihe comparatlyely burren hills of New Lo ool his ||II|I|~I‘1‘ nhmnl and fivr streamgs for o ventury been utilized until thit seétion s now fhie grent money-lendér of the country. In tho meantime the genlal ellutate and gener- ous soll of Georgln, Alabamdg, nd ‘Tennes- a0l Tuud the vast watei-hotver of these Sintes hava heoh kdle widd -unphiduétive undoer thy piilstd hinnd of shivefy, aud the governfng pinetple that intelllgent. and eduested labor wits dnngerons (o g Sinte, Senator Brown hrings (o the Natioual C one mress wiser connels than (g, Jle bs.upr thenl matity with practienl hdeds, fHs adviee 1s to ahuwdon tho unfortunate polieles of the paste I sltort, e ndvisis that imlustyy bes |, volng as-imivérshl ot the South a8 it ts It the OtHBF (ALY of the colfitig, e idbisés that theit bie a geners] effort to develop the gi 1heand and resonreds of thié Houthern Stude Labor ought o he made respeetable, Tnoni- umll(m 14 1o die Tuvited s maiifnetories are to bis established s o protuetions -of the tekl und the forest and of the miues are to ha fu- ereased, In faet, the haid of Industry shoutd he recognized aml felt everywhere. Senntor Brown comes to Congress o thismission Instemt . of. .coming there s an apostle ul' Ssentimental nustrnetiony” Sonrethlhg lad altendy bodii doti in (hls wig of Industrind hiprovenient, and we givtt, In lilsown words, the change nceomplishied of lnte yeary, “H& ! “Wa want oue peoplo cducnted, ihelr mhies des \,l'lmuml. afid to these dnds e repredentatives this, hewevery, wo ato not [ntlmate nbout to mnrry Mra. Wondhull, e — Camnrs, tho new Demoeratin ll'rmfl Weat Virginia, Is o Standacd-u)1 I8t b ———————— PERBONALS, colelrted Ewelisth Pugitiat, 13 e, T opening for Mr, Sparks, . -4 Now Vear's eiidling-eanis ate this yonr a8 usunl. Nothiingy 1eas than 18 0f any fecolinte=S, J. ilden. ‘Ll bibl-honteds ate One Hundeed Wiy etk Debiit Juhe, 1t 13 very gratifylng to Enow that one ture cannot bo henrd from, Nedert Cinclnnatl in the night and st erussed frone Detrolt Lo Windaor, after tryd mu 10 geeh rlmv of the stuge bonnet In front_of s ¢ what thoy mean by o A Wltnesd In tha Bufofl trinl tés ho defondunt was not i tho hnfit of u harse pueds 10Uy Tetitor Urhience iy I8 needed In Kentueky, ouk. Courts well b nbubished, #hotld tcark, Thy -South W peasperiie, bt o o g Hioro wre geriuln dgencies of ddvaioment gt | feoutiy-tnbistod toton woom, - Do dyed 1o husten nnd muko eesy hee 18 gone she Wil Tl tievalonient. Any tuan who rliles throigh € fou agatn, Tl our geetlon. ennut il o tsto, the mlvmm» luent T el o L e rackes in Chivngo: o wvill seo beiter fonee: - utoc it Kol T Datturs - bitend, e thotorivs, | A New Yok Jud iht “vigie towns o (m\ ymm iz | Vigell alf younie tnwy aund towns that rere viiluges. Tt i 18 | feroneo botween Iny fust now prepared for real devel Wo Hiatn Just fateil smeasthing over th htion ul' wir, ehadiiitating oure farms, tnd puyiie one debys, The reenperation: shown by Uio Sauth Iy xi e, without pmulld. Just look at ber cons tihn Ut tho elogo uf the Wi, She 10t 1ot by anb Keop of i yien alott L0000, 1K) sForth of Bl there l"“r;“’; bLpen freed nbout hoes warth $7N onch. She i Jost a8 ek noro b equipping aud Alll'l'flrl- ln;r her grmles for fae, yeiars, for evorything \u« !ml:l Tar I Confeterate "notes-ur ;nml-i. ne tu sttt podt, v3 and clients Iy thiels poverty nt the end, Journatlsm 18 looking up In O} Cleveluid roporter was recently publ settlement of a thi Ill!“!]llll)l.‘r'lflxl||l\ FERT HirO. *Life's Sadness,” s tho fitte of sent to thlsoflice by Athert Williame, of Ahat by gy e that there 4 i Delenit noxt ‘There are more thun 100 wives here now, Every t Nrnrnph wive In Albany, N, y reportod o b down, tho resuit of nrvm :nq- Another Ohie T UME 70 to th #Now, [inderstond,” remarked Oliny M Chisitolin, n wen ity vosfilent of that cliy, iy ping whicl: he Luve the Senatoy tvngpy: We notiee that “**'Ie "Tipten Sladhern Tuis| Il tho ,;,m 4w paje Will by week, -~Mm 2 ity Lglelge e frong, oxl ning. fously_an tho front ond of o ferryboat pa g nlmu ver nm w1 inderstay, Bl of Tashion,' » 1 fherl tho ttending OF Insan. igh ag “ON, Love, Come Baek 1" 15 tho tite of g T tet her, iy Youtuyg s * A soin A8 tho slelilfig 15 un ol 2, 1 recent s.pucrh fais The it ] 1 T s speet ks stmply 50 of posislon, uhu elivnts taky hlo, A\ $5.000 by 1 poem & F Sy Nm“ lh“:""rc m;;‘ll!}; k!s"n Hh‘r;m \\n:“ml; 4 :;; ahon Cointy. 1t 1ooks as thowgh some uuonfi tho uemles of the _North by s of | Bitbseribed for a Uetrolt paper awd ordered g Jee property wherover they needed it. 8 u.-lu-t“ seiit to the guntleniun's alldress, UGS OF dollnts” st 6 propeity destroyced Uy hoth nimifes—-ug Rowsed; stovl " fenedd, ote, o close of tho, War her: poople lmunl thein. folves steipped of ilmosl overything oxeent thelr lnmls, W bl of Lt wid duld “fod Feds ohil taxes, thelr fedolat, tholr homes nll«nunul-nl,umlu-up € amilieamd frins deid, tho ol orIGE of . thligs subyerted, nid tho peod ple ieavily tn dobt, “o werg then fiot only wlven mlxl' proportion of tho Nauddoal debt to 1t 9y press -Henator Hruce Tor i place fn @ Fhis snrenstle vemark 13 fiom the N Appeat: Mk, Htates Nip tles removed. Congress should grant quest, 14 e wreat harm, The Paris Pigare draivs au pavlson Letween President 6 Tiuyes, 1Eways that President 1k taxes Juid on our cortonynnd oW, ol ln-nlrlu are altiost ot of hnve almost restoclivd i Fefitted hoy' wro. usthg Improved ngricoits nmu rebuife their oities aid v Feniy. fol their ||ull Implon oI, RHE U vélipment, This humomu mull uther erops thut byt been for.the past ten ¥, it tloe e from_cotton 3 devotml to n‘hnb!l{lumvn nml 4x. tracnt, sund it tho highest ity 0F statesmanship to. encourpge niensutes hm Mll leidt to a lugltlmaio Invests ur this money: With this doie, the Sonth w n e years, Bo wehlthy nnd Indepéndent, luul llm 13 nw shortest ruidd gho can tuke to respeet. + i tie South eeir ropr gross durlng the las! by men enter. talning the views of Goy, Brown, aud pot by mere demngogs of the, opposit. sehool, the prosperity aud pence of . the whole country would have ! ‘.‘ z oy two publle hnlls.'aml thost of i mg serlntion. £ T'he Fow Tork pafiery stille tht at m.-d, in . Con- | Atk N(-L'dlo\\'nrk, her vl béng of antin selst polated Itecefver of hot (atlier's tatnté been mado publie. “Julius Civsar,”.'and;. aic-tholr way seetned to aftdet lier ao much thnt she t Algernon ant exelulingd, cut up £a horriblyr” Ay ally responded Alo:r-ruou ou his tiest clothes."! ‘Mie puibiieation’ Tn Albany of the takers' llght tho, 1 hat i n Andunts hiivy beeh pal borne by the dectiseit ferdon’s fusetts -Teglslatuve, On Monday thb Commiitee un Taxation HAYE 1t hearluge on the LI tor the Telel of mortgaped property from taxation. The, Hon, A, W. lenrd sald fe presented this idea ten years uga, and In the thne thut had clapsed it by #rown b pulitic fitvoi, 11d 1N Tlolke il thvide plissed i Lillth cirry oul the prineiple. . Ho urgued that b tak Iuhf upon mdrtgages f8 in reaifty’ u double tnx, and, ua nc-payerof takes on mortgnged: propi- erty, he neked thut be milght bo nésesscd; ng ciwporations ntée, -fur what ht 18 worth, He showed thit o ttx of Lper eent, or 15 por coit, Wipan mortgages I8 a burden upon those who hold thent, dnd snld that this aysten of doubly tagition mudo fiechuiles fonauts Whei they shoulit b6 owners of proporly., Mia, Drlzhnin neldrexsint tho Catmilites, “and gitve b aceount of how sho nd suffergd under the aiiefatioit of tho presént v, nid Mr. Witliim Minot, Jr., stated it curlous caso In kg expeil- cnee, In which a womtin pnys i per eent ‘tn $0,000; -0F which ‘sho owns ubthlily,. whckvas when shie owned $10,000 clear sho. paid only 145 peru 1t an thnt amount, e know puruunhll} tal Gstates whioh net ouly 2 per eont runml. nud thoight that 41 fier.cont would bo ood'nveruge. e 18 in tie hubit of chariinir 0 ler cent for mondyy Ut WHEBITeY §t Tof 312 per cent If tho bariower bun kive goud security, nud will nny hig tigxes. e —— Tue following. table shows the wonderful - Inerease In ttre construction OF telegraph lines . and tha profits of the serviee: Statemont ahow- I the imfldngo ot ifued und wivés, number of otneen, qud truflie of the Westorn Unfon.: Com. buhy-tor cnch yeur, from Jute 2, 1864, t0 June Bytup e “Irfends o bodies for'witich thity iy the chavires, -itasepli Sivow, of - fndiana, told- his and she his ot s;mkm\ Binee, thongh co Tlmes, A Chledge man told his wife to head: That wis u iveek ago, but it fn for severnl duys., . Lord Wentwoith, yxmmlqml of Lord 8t Anne; Buly fett Pik Itouse, Worth, burglurs broke manston aid Fobba vuldables, " Lord W 10 by maviled (o Mish Dudit l‘ll. @) £y 5 youig Atilorle u Lh‘l thut Wrmu‘ Kismet" ind h)”.uw W 0h - Mty trip the watiteny - Qver tHo Blushy stredt, - Lifting thoir costiy dicdsus “Up from thelr dalnty: 11 rnmr.'.' 03 fllu A ll:l du fnd: rels -y ol kot biverd to tolt tho,taly, . Ifo biid his Lead Dbetween the butnpers . was g0 gqueered. it was nat adeemed possible Tudivin I 0,112, 25 TR0 nl ot oty and slim, o lsal BATIITA0 of ollicos Uolivean 184l ‘and 1850 noroaked roi 250 €0 MTT, TG Fecolpt I | Rk mfdo him eross-eyod, bt strange b br , yodp \Mni 20,008,835, and tho | So¢ i3 mind f3 a8 cluar anil bright o was hili lm in tha latter yem' i foe celpts wero 215,782,801, and-tho r.-xpuu:us £0, B850, !’UBLIC OPINION, e i St Iy his speech on the rucemlnn of Gen. Grant at Albany; Qi Cornell sutd s My rullmv-flumuu.;fln Ity eotiio. hora . t nleht to do honor to ey who,auors than \\'nsh- frgton, wis * et In wnr, Orst iy pesee, ind tst In tho hourts of his conntrvinon,” tho filustrivus soldjory suiesani, und oltizen: Gov, Cornoll whinld dotlbitiess Lkmnln. ir put to it, that Don. trant was more tiin Wishing- Liin firtho hoartsTof his eonntryiion, sl there iiro gomany more countrymen to bib it the -hiearts of now than thore wero 100 yours ugo, Tu the Editor of The Chicago Tribunes - Caeaao, Jan, 20,—Can. you siate throngh T FITMENE 0 bt el SIVLY IS and yuartor dollaes winted i6- 1870 wud [ 1880, to set- tle n dispute? A, ~.. Tlo allj'r colnhgd at thd mintsof; tho United Htates for th flseal year cuding Jutio 50, 1850, 18 thus stuted in the repart of tho Direvtor of -the reen B " Boston Terald (Ind,): Gartieid ¢ leaf botore |‘llnrlsk nor'woster. 1t only 1o fiear srhothor ho cuty box down Cuniil tha, eholeq for:’ Seatdtdry of the W vonily 1les, i ovbry onu 14 sl ing; otwe W ltson nud A Lottor inam, > -Sk; oty uind aind: ¥atfablo- Gubneld Ly 4 mny Lo redled on, us Jfroimn fl"““&‘l{l’u.fl \Vlll;’kllfll\“‘fl. . i Quiney (10,) Wity (Rep) . pare M. Pibinng cmmnllwnu Ao W ‘watiatiietdully “nrranzzad, thore ok lsh, mtteh grimbling un bers -nboit-tha pronpfichiol County hi the usslgument ot Olm Madlson Jouriial {Keyes* paper): \00T801 halt-dellury, $8.2i0: sdollits, $L815005 dimes, #1578, 1%inl ity r.....vm.wn Dleces, of thy valuo of €55,012 ABT.00, v BrvATon lhwc A1 o alollsh the Com- missloncra of tho Frecdnien's Bank-=-thero nro thred sirnwing sulnried of J§2,000 n year tuch— pussed tho Benuty Just svesion, and 13 now burled somowhore on the Bpeaker's inble, it should bo tuken wp and possed. The bill proposes totrane- for $uo dit 1és o the Comnilisloneri to tho Con- troller of tho. Curroncy, und linérease W& oonie pum‘:\llun by 81,000 por nnnum tul- dolug tho work, triie, mud on ol poliiledd arfse o will never bo touny + Joltet (111.) Republiean: kni pezampiiahied tho.waking tp 4 tho people, + Harrisgn te stivred by means of S S n, Jon Ls Stonnaun, who Is to deliver o series of fllustrated icotures on bcones and studios in Europe fn tho Musie-Tiall in thls city D next week, Is i oultivated sohotar, o forcible pnd iicerul wrlter, und un weeompllebed orator. uh leétures have been highly I\lcuu‘ul n Loston, Now Vork, dud Fhitaduipnia, s thoy will duubunu bo well attended bevo, [ — urninm o get botl, oluucrats whi -ban seriously- nomile Lutler ay thelr candidwto for any otico us of Batan repraving sin when they s0in0 buttor mun than Dawes. Dawes cnough, but surcly Hiutlor is worsd, Davenport {ln;; Gazette (Rop.): SKN‘\'flI“ Brasxe it 1L exaclly. wheih ho | been incleadingly etident to nlmmuolm .thyt ‘tho, drife of nftnential politichl opL revkloas mond.” “Buiy of ihoin voted for the | outside’ of Toiva, huis stoudily Deen towdl solection of 3ir, Alliton for the ublm'b sald tho Deinoteuis in-the Housa-wevo »iu a Pundiig bitl, thougls thoy kuuw 1t-Wus an ith- practicablo measuto, beeauss they did not tire what bocuwe of tho evedit of tho Government, e e . ruul. hus bid emu-mu‘ q lerum.r e 0 ‘ s ilcant wditoria -publlnnm in It th &wm dnst. wnd sppled ltullm HN thi unuru ) b “wen tho oul than Mr. . Wilson. - As 1o this fuct Wb in 4 husband iy ot, s v ported, “u clonafa 0hluhnm." but only K, C. D. " Sir .Ioupln it . 1 Inwaying | N ", = "(h“ ag'nld Luya thi 165300 iesriges | .,‘ Ihiit for Bueh this we py. tent mllu:‘t'.m 2 l’.,,,u,, =0 ;:ms Fyunet Adawng -+ - o 3 “ Oré of tho most: (f\\ruq\ Inpry Btorids éver 9 yw told appoars It tho Frlo (PILY Disxiteh of coukd ifve, but he {8 now gettiog nlong which wns oniee round, wis pressedby and what s now deatned fs that aligo n ¥ rour, . Whgt tho riohplo wang I, irat, (o pEE T0r-Warke: ant, vognndry, tho ship-cnut 16 beon. no poot fur doubt. - Peechicls B The Clietunatl Cortmerctal eintinnes to en. Gar Held's Cabihet, Tho Retator, tibtongh o eolored amnt s an Ohto nudn by marrhze, bis wire belng o Cleveland nogress of lgutish complexion, Temphls Waddell, late of the Confederato 2 ks b Ty tils pofitieal disaille tho res ever dhl the Uuhr:xl Stutes any ahorate come and Presid irévy I8 stin that i suvies iore thut half by sulnry. andd not ‘entertaili né 16 onghts f fiet, hus given » odest des i Feeent ’m\wl and | wedding I that elty “tho Iinidw's white satin ZOWA WS t-mhrulllcrml by thie Taynd Setonl of ue itrug “Tie tinnio uf tho prersdn wha I to lie ape L3 not They hnid leeti {o-gee: the tragedy of hons, thougins of the duath of . thy great hlumr urned to 1t sidtobe patheticd and he probably bal Tnders ms pald by Wi connty: has brought to A €rous enses - largo 509 et or sneles tlea with which they ol been conneeted. Ja cases tlie undertakers never cven saw tks wife to shite hier heud, Thht was tivanty-one yearsapo, mstantly Uving tokothior- 0 aman -aid wife,~Neie Yok shut hee n6tbes leved thag fho tunp on luu head will disappear Bywon -Wng murried on thy $01b it to Mary Catollng, cldest daughter of the Right Tion. Junes sad tho Hon. Mys: Stuart Wortley, nt the Ctinrch ot Walle Lord. and Ludg Wents worth wore spending tholr honeymont at U b Intotby tho clever n xFads, DL Corryy mel-With mn neetdent n thit Plisct whila fiaking a catipllige that fas protridly nhver befdre bedn akmh'luxiu.l -by-qnge i who canght Horelly thint be tinelfe 30 from onuit o thiceeqtirters of ai hich iollén Tho terHblo squtezo which his bead ecelvtd g ity 8 it eve ] am‘lw'sl’;-nrlmp(lu,-p,) eehinrgenagalns Hnuni—not that ho was n Grant 1wt 0 wig nOLui honest Qrant wan, an P Galt, swim 1Ko if tixh, and skate Hky un wuumes vetnuins ng- Springlield (Maks.)" Tepiblcii ly: 1T rpnsurf a3, T .Allmn( of lowa, Mllsan {sibe Dhis mrflmlhm:hmu (Dpyn,) The et 4 noi- it process -t olnmm(mu. srith Blainosd Hehrftnrr OFSHItE nnl - AIoif is Kecreniiy feod or, the most’ cll pevertks hu‘l yptian e glven to Lok irl\lllunh“"' Nestto ouy st cholees wo-nro' plensed and sul iflfl: with tho olcetion- S8k, Bawybr as United S Bonntory . Ja s Ropntblagmism ho- is sound uestions that S7 on the wroig ¥ Senator dund Chleas? et Richmoid (Vo) Dispateh (Dem): T 2 reaisd prow“’ vote with the Repabilesus (f the Inm-r wl" bl 03 s uu 9 ere i« 1) o “‘f.‘u

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