Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 13, 1881, Page 5

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- FOREILGN. The Home-Rulers Find Plenty of Fault with the Land Bill. ‘ 1t Pays Nobody's Back-Rents, Nor Anybody’s Rack- ‘ - Rents, ‘It Has Many Deooptive Olauses, and Is @enerally to Bo Dis- . trusted, Hr. Parnell Anxious to Mear from Other Lenguers on the X Same Key. —— The * Daily Ne@s!’ a Litlle Rough on the * Skirmisher” in the Role of Nihilist, —ae Only About 1,000 People Killed in the RRecent Barthquakes ° at Sclo, A ‘Whole Oarrison of - Russlans Massacred by Raiding Tur~ comans. Mue Terrible Story from Tunls About Col. Flatters Prohably. Exe aggerated. Germany Wants War in the East~Beao- onsfield—=The Nihilistio Tdea. GREAT BRITAIN. 1 LORD BEALONSFIELD'S CONDITION, Loxpox, April 12.—Beaconstield I3 siight~ 1y bejter this morning, \ DEACONSFIELD PASSED A NESTLESS DAY, and hiad a sgvere nttack of difigult breathing at7In the evening. L THE DIUANDS' CAPTIVE, Suter, the Englishman capjured by brig- ands, was for soipo time during the Russo. Turklsh war correspandont of the Dally Telegraph In the Dobrudscha. Since the conclusion of the war ho vislted Texns. o THE LAND BiLL. Duntys, April 12,—Mr, Finnigay, member . of Parllament, n Libernl aud an advanced Nnationalist, by p gpuech at Enois, gave great eredit {o Gladstong for the Land bil), Mr. Dillon, speaking at Nevagh, Tipperary County, copdomped the Land biit as incopi- plete and compliented, and warnod tha ten- antfariners against boing led to aceept It 0T ¥ EX-POBT-FACTO! ENOUGH. . Mr. Parnel) snid the first portion of the bil) relatipg fo rents ajul {enures was ob- soure, and distinetly prejudicinl to tenpnts. There were 53,000 holding under £8, and 750,- ®0 under £4, many tenants being In nbank- rupt condition, and, es far as it regards theso the blll did not securc free sale, and only Increased the power of tho Jandlords to en- fores racke-ronfing, - .-+ ) E :. ANQTHER IMPORTANT DRFLCT . related to thoso small tennuts who have begn compolled to pecept Jenses, and were thus deprived of those benefits which the, Lo act of 1870 conforred on thom. Therd were thousands of these lenses, which wereof such' chnracter ag wade it Jmpossible for tenanis to satisfy the clauses of the bil} per- talning thereto, Nr. Dition sald the bill, 1f passed, would destroy the ppwer of the Land Lepgue and thacomblned strike of tho tenantry ngainst rack rents, A resolution passed declaving the bill Inadequnte. THE LUSH CATIOLIC MSHOPS wre to hiold i meeting of the opiscopal body to-dny to consider the Land bill, and deter- miue, It possible, upon some conrsg of united setfon In regard thereto, The ineeting Is tonvoked by Archblshop McCabe, and 16 is wsumed that he has been especfally enposy- sred by tha Popo to exercise this it of au- tority, It is thought that tho Iloly See ls determined to throw In the welsht of its In- fluence with the nioderato sectlon of tho hier- archy, and to restrajn the olergy from fovor- Ing gxcossive popular dematids, 8 EDWIN LQQTII COMING 1HOME. Edwin Booth wjll probably cancel his en- l‘!:lxl:‘ments and ‘return to Amerien with hig NS, BUSAN WILLS FLETOHER, the pretended spiritual medium, tried in the central Criminal Court for defranding Mys, liart Daylos, ins been found guilty of ab-. tainine goads by false pretonces, and con- sviracy to defraud, und soptonced: to twyelve wonths' fmprisonment, with hayd Iabor, THE MONETARY CONFLMLNCE, 5 The Times, in aunpipeing tho. forfheopi- Monetary 'Confersnee, says: It Is doubted in gome quarters whether Franco Will join tho United Stntes in an ngreoment toadopt th bimetallla standard, on nccount of the dauger which such an ngrecmont Yould Involve gf nu immjodiate loss of gold. la sources of the imes’ information are ot glven, and the story is held Incqnsistont With tho positloy -of France on' the entlve Questlon, and espeetally with' her attitudo ns ;"W of the prime movers 1 eultjug the Con- eronee, f n DA'l;fl'fllB LANJ-LEAGUE CONFEBENCE i ublin to-day, on the Lang bill My, Dar- nell, whils not at present expressing a definly :ulnlon on §0° camplex'a measure, polntod “|||c niny of its proyjstons ns Nlusnry, patic- T'"‘h thu provision for scenrine frep sale. nihl" b)), he sald, woult pot banefit .the jene S In arrbars, ' Tho balunce of opinlan, ws Oxpreased by tho athor Ifome-Rule members Presont, was upfayorable to the bill, - w2 . IT WA§ 4LSQ BESOLVEDR - | i 2{’:: 8 Leagus Canvention be lield the 21at : 24 of Appll ‘to determine upon’ the uoum of action, Meantime tho views of lfiiel‘:lfmmhes of the Leogug will by ascorr taf . d BILVER, = X lihl'(hnm hundroed werchgnts of the @insgow - tict linve presented o mouiorlal to’ Glad- ‘bl:l;.h B;!:lzml;ml:lfin ulrn\ng that it §s desirs nglng shoul d / the “Inter: Batlonal Monoy (:oultnu;m:‘:;';?znl’l\rll.° ,1 " v . TIIE, RED. PLAG, BEBEL'S NEETING, Wencay, April 19~Thie ‘palice’ have for. of n?x:'«“lrn‘i: l‘\vuh‘i’ lfiofinlm Irlw’luw hnld:ll‘lf ch Ler - 1958 ot Munloh, i ff'pegb.-e;wu\ W . 1A BURLIST ABRESTED Ty TOUMANTA, . " (Eulf:'rumumm. Appil |, 13,~Nighalas runuy::\l:,':,y'g n; mportant Nihilist, was . ri :":lmrmuf vd ab Josey, by tho | Roulaplan dlsorders at Tobigrin, hup escu; v ped pun- tdent by dusgunpini fivat to England and nun Awnrlqn." Hp ateerwards yoturned mmuumnln. He wis fopmerly In Kieff o a1y, and was a companlon of the o us Nibilists Duntach and Stephanoyifah. ® Russlon Govgrpinent hus. Lot hiy cxmdulm)v,v"’ eBt s mw‘; s TUR PENIAY DLOWHARDS. . h’"'-w. April 139,~Notwithstanding the 1to woy juplloatud i tho: paps~| | contempt nlleged in certain quarters for tho reported Fonlun plots agalnst the Hfe of Gladatone, exira polles continue employad whtehing 13 development at Liverpool and Queenstown, . ROVAIT ON THE BRINMISHEIS, Tha London Dully News says:,* ‘Tho Pre- wmler is noble game, and the ‘Skirmishers® must menn to bring - him down with sonte- thing new and neat In the woy ol oxploslves. ‘I'hie noatuess has not hoen marked in fhe ro: cont Trish attempts at misehler,” Asi'old'tin teakettle full of powder, witli,p Mghted' fise witich does notalways gooff, hns been nearer the warlt' of Fenlan, ilextarity,” They have Kkilled a ehild -nt Wnlford and nearly killed two women.© i - X e FOI MENYE RECKLESK, NLACKOUARDLY COW- o .. Auptoe, the Mansion Tiouss attempt mntehes any- thing tho Russlans have done. 1¢° was won- derfully stuphl, " It was . most Ignorant, heavy-handed essay In the art of destruction, It wasn kifd of plot that might comment itselt fo tho beer-sudden fancy of a depraved costetmonger. Tho threats of the 'Skirine ishera? Ao not lkely to alarm M. Glad- stone, “There I3 ona quality of the consplra- tor the Russians have which the Irish lack, ‘Thoy keep thelr secret, The Irish nve too opesminded for this, “If thera Is not A KNAVIS TO SELL 1S COMPANIONS, © ns there generally 1s, tha poltea enu usunlly redkon upou some fool wenk enough to hiave Joined the malevolgnt saclety, but not black- hearted enough to Tecp its worst projucts to himself. ‘The, Irlsh have never shown the skill, and very seldom the sccreey, of the conspirator, Their threats for tho most part we may take for mers vaporing.!* y TUNIS, .| EXCTTEMENT INOREASING. ToNts, Aprll 12.—Tho excltoment ls ine creasing, and doubts are oxpressed at the palace whother the Bey can answer for pub- Ne securlty 12 the Freneh coptinue {o ad- vanee, -The French proposal to ocetipy the valley of the Medjerda River excites Indigna- tion, ns the district 1a the most fertile In the eountry, and fer from the haunts' of the Khoumls, THE BEY'S PROTEST, Loxpoy, April 12,~The Russian Consul at Tunis Informs the Russian Ambnesador at Constantinuple that the Beyof ‘Funis re- auested him “to: communieate the protest ngainst the French ylolation of Tunisian ter- ritory, and nslc tho codperation of Itussin in .protecting the rights ot the Bey nud the Bub- ltme Porte, » aoon XEWS. Pamsy, April 12.—A dispateh from the UGovernor of Algeria states . that o portion only of Col. Flatters' exnedition wits nigs- sacred, the remalnder belng prisoners in' the hands of the Kndours” of Ouargln, 1t1s bee Heved Col. Flatters himself is n prisoner, /I'he Kndours inlend to demund an exchange of prisoners, théy surrenduring Col. Flatters and other mempers of the expedition, pro- vided - the French .aurrepder same of thejr women and ehildren contined in Algeria, . .t PROTEST. . PAnss, April 12.—The French Consul-Gon- eral nt 'Tunis has. protested to the HBey against the imputation that France: intends to dethirons hitm and oecupy the country. —_— 1F TARTHQUAKE, TITANKS OF TIE TURKISH MINIRTERL i Wasmngroy, D, €, April 12~The Turk- sl - Ministor publishes & card exprassing “heartfelt gratitnde to tho charitable and henevolent ladids who mako tho eloguent appeal to the generous Awerican peoplo in Dbehalf of his unfortunate countrymen ‘now sufferipg by reason of the terrihle disaster in Schio,” . DEPOPULATION. CONSTANTINOPLE, April 12.—Earthquake shacks of consldernbly violence haye begun ngnjn in Schlo, Barely twenty houses re- anulphpbltabladnottio s whole, tsland, . Fortys, ‘fiva vilinges havs - been” destroyed, and tiie popuintion iy many localities has pbsolutely disappenred, 1OSTON, : Bosrox, April 12.—The American Bonrd of Forelgn Missions to-day received n tele- graui fram thoir missionary at Smyrna re- Jatwng the. tersible disastar gt Sclo, and ap- venllug for ald for tho suffergrs, Tho Board aynoyuced g willingness to recelve contri- buytlons. . ONE THOUSAND KILLED. LaxNnoy, April 13,~The T'lmes correspond- ent in Selo telegraphs: * I have now visited or obtained Information regarding nenrly all tho vilinges [ the southorn hin)f offithe fsland, and I belleve the ‘numbor killed for nil the villages In question does not much exceed 1,000, and Is porhaps less,” 3 gy RUSSIA. MASSACRE, BEup, April 12,—1t s roported that Narw Kisgar, the most pdvanced fort on the road to Mery, hag'heen tnken by surprise and eapt- ured by the Turcomans,, The entire Russian garripon was kijled. . 5 o NUSSTAN DAD FAITH. . . Loxvoy, April 12—A dispatch from St. Petersburg says that Gen, Skobelefl, lately at Krasnovodsk, has retraced” his: steps enst- ward,. "Plie News does not attneh much po- Iitien) jmportance to_ the above, but points out that It nffects Ruasin’s good faith, ns 8ir’ Ohinries Dilko stated In the Housoe during tho Candabar debate, that the first act of the new Czor was to recnll Skobe HUNGARY, g . FLOODA, "o+ . VikxxA, Apeit 12.~The floods In Hungary aro juereasig, The waters have soaked and undermiped the dykes, which are glylng way. The Jatest news from Szngedin Is that the outer dyke Is I dapger, . sl 2,000 en arg at, work strongthoning it . ¢ the. putop dyka falls the whule country which . hma- dintely surrounds the town will be. floodad. A highiwind would probably “drive the whyes over tho dykes and cause:n grent catastrophe, * > AL THE WEATIER AT BZEOEDIN 14 mare fayorable, und all tho outer dykes aro safa, . Agcounts from other places aro ulso more tayoraple, but the dunger I by no means possed. ! . THE'TRANSVAAL, + L AN APOlOGY, | U L Loxpoy, Apnl 13—A dispatel from Foyt Amlel gays the Door. lenders ndmijted to | Gen, Wootl that Cronje, wha commanded ab’| tha sfege of Potchefstronm, obtained its pur- render by suppressing the nows of the armis- |Ifi , “which -they promised should be com- mi fnlcl\!ed to tho gnrrisons The leaders’ ex- pregsed rogret, and proposed that tho eapltus Inglan be consideyed ps canceled, and acqul- eseed Uiy the reoceupption of Potehufatroom, Wood ageepted the apnlugy and proposals, 5 s e s PTG BAST. . TIOOPY GOING TQ THE PRONTIED ‘Ariens, April 12 ~"The departure of troops for the frontiyr continues, - - Lg% ah (QBUMANY DESIRES WAL, Tntormatlon from Constantinople, whicl Is ontlpled to: full credit, states that Gormany hus seeretly encapraged. tho Sultan to with- stand tho. pressuro,of the- Pawers, ‘fhe Greek Offictat World 1s ity convincod that .| Germony desires wur, and that, it Urecco ne- copts peace, war willcoute toa'late fur hor to vrotiy by I o N " A Girl of {ho Periods New York Cyprravondence (Nuginyut) Hoquirer, Cylling ug & giddy girl, who has yothing uader Haayoyl to do buy 5o foiluw tho fushions, Efoynd oy youllnlgg on & lounge In her boudojr, Bhe wure what Is called a I\la'l'owlr:.h IIIII:.PM nlut un- v pylotat, with elbowesleoves, o :u‘}ulllfgl'fh\lfi.‘h ;ufi urta yuthored up ut tho wristy, 'Tho tjoriul of the Ilmunl. WS fl comploation ef hrm)nludc lnmw ol'iw'lllllvlg u:‘:‘ld ok Ulllll‘ of the Orieat ftself. ‘u fichu u;xr .l“v?.'( "in:‘d e over tho shouldurs An w&%lgued Lwoas THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1881—TWELVE PAGES. helt: hor abundant thhnck I;“Ir waa- brushed Lo hack with _aegileence; tho toea of b fuet, heetiedltitek Into omue brotdercd sundals, wid her Movk e wero o tre toshieenlor, A wlorions ertatura st {ooked tenly,na o Tey thesein hor khidied earel nead of Baory, Buewnnt 1eptont tosay wo il inconse wan birning at her wide. Yea Trngrnnt 40aKo was eising inzlly team an ineins wrating pastilo i bronze dian, ‘Flus 40 ne frouk of tho girls. Tho secnt-bottie {4 put nslde, nid “rooms and clothea nre perfamed with fne ecnro, 1T the practieo inatn lone, tho eanniinl who enta n fashlonatde girl will find bere smoked through nnd through, ke o Law, bt o grent feul spiclor. NEBRASKA CATTLE. flie Great Numbor Left to Shift for Thomuclves Througl tho Kevere Wins ter. ™ Gramt Dland (Neb) Independent, ¥ 1L I8 probable that very few people outslde of the cattle country have iy ideaof the § nmount of stock that 1s raised In the State of Nubraska,, We_oeeaslonally hearof berds contalning 5,000 or 50,000 heud of eattle, Lut ifnsked for the nggresule llumhur, in the Btate, the replies would he '\:é ry far from core rect. o > A careful estimat shows that nt tho begin- ning of the winter there wore wpon the Ne- brasks ronches. more than -half a mitlion head of cattle. ‘Ihese would nverage 816 npieee, making a total of about 87,500,000 in- vested In stock In the eattle-tatsing portion of thie State, ‘Ihe usuni und expected loss from the uifects of cold weather and snow Iy b per cent, Often {tdoes not reach that figure, "Ihis winter tho continued cold nnd tepth of tho snow have ingrensed - the satality (o such nn extent that thera I8 no probnbility of sav- ing one hnif, and in many Instances the loss fins plrendy exeeded thnt amount, and bids falr to taks off 7 por centof the stuek upon many of the m?( t ranches, - *I'he caused of thls wholesale slaughter are very upparent. No hay 3¢ put up for these catile, but.they are expected to gain their Rubsistence through tha winter- upon the short buffalo grass, which cures itself upon the ground whers it grows, and of which thore 15 nn abundanee whon 1t 18 not covered by snow, The snows of that sectlon nre gon- cmllr Hgeht, and there are usunlly ravines and Bilistdes whers grisa cun bo tound suillelent for the fow duys when the stock I8 driven from the prairie by the storms. This year the snow-has Inin deap upon the ground for several nionths, aid asa conseyuenco the sup- Bly ot foud obtained by the - stock has been arely sufliclont to have sustalned life In witrni woather, But, ndded to the weakness epused by starention, fhere has been such vory coltl wenther that theenfeabled animunls invo frozen to death, - or, thui down, have oan too much benuwbed to rise agnin, nud have conseanently perished. I'rom these causes mnuy’ stocknion huve nlready lost hplf thelr hords, and the end has pof come P’ut. ‘I'he faet I8 that the fatal time for eattle ias not you airived, ‘The heavy loss?fl st ally coniv nbout tue last of Murch, just bo- fore thio new grasg staris, and the losses be- tween the middie of Muarch and the middiv of April are expected to exeeed those of the en- thrg winter preeeding, —Should such Prnve to be the egperiencn thls year there whll be no cuttie left upon the Western ranches, Upon pony ratiches the slpte of” affairs Is notso bnl.” Thess animais Wil puw the snow awny and ent the * urass ey uncover, but the eattie will morely drift nlong with thie storm uniil they drop dend with exhaus- tion. One rnnch[nnn 8ays that 875,000 wanld npt compensatn him furol&ls luss up fo this thne, Anothor offers £100,000 to Insure him agatnst furthor loss. "The Olive ranclie, with 10,000 head, hins already lost 7000, ‘These are only instances taken at random, and nre not excep- tions, Liellublo reports from ol seetions of the gruzing reglon shows - that the suu)? or even & worsn state of affaira. exists, A fow, of the sialler stockmen put up hiay for thelr cattle hardly sufiojent fop thelr own use,.|. but probubly enough to cnrri' thom through if they had been lot alone, ‘'The large herds from the ranclies, drifting before the storm, ‘made short work of these seattered stacks o hay, and the whole copntyy Is lefy In the saimu conlition of starvation ond denth. 'The 1osg among the swaller erds will by nealrl)' 1f not quite as largy in proportion s that of the larger ones, il the aggreunte loss ofithe enttle ralsors of Nobraska can hardly full short of #5,000,000. “There *seemg to ho but oni sntegunrd against steh an oxperfence s this, and that 18 for ench ranchman to pptitp hgny unm&;u to aurry hl? own stacle through the wibler, "The cokt, sithouglt yulte an jtem, wonid be nothing compured to tho lusses of n winter even halt so severo as this “FLOODS AND SNOW. G:Jmplete Roports Bhowing the " Condition of the Great/ ‘Wheat. Region, A 'Steady Rise in the'River at Davenport and Other " Towns, Thoe Water Within Twetve Tnches of the Highost Mark Ever . Known. — The Overflow Bu&mning to QGat Dangerous at Rook Island, People in the Lower Part of the City Preparing to Move. . The Entire Missourl Blojo Bl Burled Under the **Beautiful Bnow."! MINNESOTA, Bpeetal Dispateh to The Chieago Tribune Sr. PAvL, Mion,, Apri] 12.—A good denl of gone corn s felt at tho sldw dlsappeurineo of tho £now and the backwardness of proparaton for sceding. ‘The following dispatohes from corre- spoudents will bo of Interests ¢ Austin—flero tho conntry 18 nearly baro of snow, aud seoding might begin on many flelds It farmers felt In a burey, The snow hus gone off gradunily, and the spll Is left iu good condiuon. Tho wheat acrenga ' in Mower County will be Inrger than Jnst yesr, 5 Maukato—Snow golug: off gradually, Whore 1t was not badiy dritted It has melted away, and }en the plowed ground bare. On the griss nnds there relualn #ix Inches toony foot ot Biiuw, with falr weather, Farmers could gom- menoo Reeding -In - about ten dnys. It hos supwed here /il day, but melted as it foll, Ttis I‘\‘I'I‘IJ lchl::‘l'»dy. und the Indicutions ure ot falling Owutonnn—There 18 vory litle snow 'ra- mulping on the . ground. ';-’;fly on the umrm slile of bulldings.. Farmirs | report goorl prospeets fur early *soeding’ now, Somo commenced dnst - “weok, Mr. , Bufum sowed six nores: of wheat Inat riday) Tho ground 18 nice wud dry. It snowed neurf;' RILANY to-duy, but molted us st ns it cmg, Furibunit—=The warm weathur of the pnst. fow woeka his gridually olted the snow, umil none remaing except a few ol dfte, Thore an jngh with eold wind.; Somo sceding bis alr ready heen done., and farmors alj fhink tho Thesa nre trom tho Rad River Valley: . Crovkston—Soad-thna - halids off pretty well, but any time in tho noxt throo weekd will ho ene . tirely watjsfuctors o oup. farmers In - this lopa)l- ty, 'Tho snow 18 disppear Ji 2o Krudually ns to (Ve nskurance of ‘no il und the prepurutions for. yushing tha work o putting in tho secd when tho thue arrives ure ndaguite and extensive, . Breckinridge—Considornblo Lodies of snpw yet cover the ground, cxcopt pecasfonal ptowod feldy, feis dunrueurmlt" gradually, und with wirm duys seeding might begin by the 2th, ;Il‘l‘llsz u\;aumnr Is pleasnnt exeept spurta of snow- uked, S Morris—Tho Leavy snowefhll of the past win- terin this resion hus left a large budy un the uround. This 14 disyppenring slowly, and hore and thore vatches of @rounu uppear. Theru 18 -t prospect 0F ralg. and this wouli nuodily eattle tho business. 'Without ruin. and with suc! LeMPErIture us y bo expocted seeding muy begin ubant the 24, As yet (lmrois un serions apprehension of-a-had senson. There (s com- paratively fittle spring plowing to do bere. . All the farmers ura ready (or un activo camgslyn with saudord when tho snow permits, lonson—Tho snnw averaues ¢ foot deep, Flelts nro bare In pluces. . Qur. streols are well thinngd ont, Tho weather Is rathor coid, melt- ing & tittle every“dag. Where tha ground §s buro, it 18 all ready to pecelve the coreal, Thren tho furiners In Swift County sowlug grajn, Chesu ara from Dakotu; bl Rismurck—The apow in v,)u“,mly has -disuppenred, but in tho countfy the ground {§ istlil tovored: ' [t is warm ld‘fl&h\‘.'mlfi ‘enuons for o warm §pall uf wonthor are favorne bje,* The trunl. hencath the snow in the country 13 all out of the ground, so that farmurd muy hee B THE CONSULAR SERVICE. DiMeculties undey Which Fraithful and Knargeste Commercial Agoents Are Placed by Thulr fmsil Bularies—The Euglinh Sorvieo apd Salarles. New Youk April 8.~To the Xditor of the New York Tribune; Thero pre prevalent some hn- prosajong, angd ciroulating In tho,publie journals some ptutomepts, concorning our Consulur Serye fco ng compared with thut of other countries, ospecinlly in contrust with that of England, which seums ta tho writor of thia tnoro or legs erroncons and unjust.. Ido not wish toolaim Letter inforntionon the subject than thoso who have bud je gogd or botter apportunities than myself o inform thomauived, For tho last twelve years [ have passad nearly half of my thne nbirond, and bwve Improved ‘nppurtunitics in Bouthern, Contral, and Northern Eurnpe, und In Bouth Americu, to learn af the condlton ot the United “Btates Consulur Sorvice, and its rolative capacity and 'vigor compared with that of osuer ' countried, partioulurly . that of ' dront Dritain, Thoro aan bo oo doubt thut Amorlogus traveling abrond ofton wet un lueoprect cstimate of the rolutive el vloney of the Amurioan.and LEoglish Consulne Bervice by an ox partb ar too hnsty view of tho }mmmn ang facts lnvalved. We nro ull not u jttle - nonyiatgmed to soe and npproointe the im- porfoation of thut with whioh wo ara more fne medintely brought into contnat, A greut doal in Buropeait oountrios,' ea) Milllr I _rospeot ta olfictu ite, deponds on eXtornal {mypressions and anow, Our stuld, commoi-sonss, praotieal poo. le at homo do not sulliclently eonslder this, Jopeo thoy, and those who udt for tnem ui \ashington, do n]ul adequatoly estimute tho dis- advantige ut which our Condlle ave placed by tha Ipited sutieios whioh tho lurgo mijarity of thom recelve, © 1 plice gide by slilo the rospeo- tiye sumns whloh ars pulid Amorican and llm.lh Cu:lugls ,tll‘l 'k““""x’ fi(‘»mmuruml ojtios fn” Hurope and Boutn Amerie SN ‘ - Qreat © United Tritatn, o340 Marsollles LRUG o |nlrl|ro iy tho Ui Coneulur sorvice, whlfl‘%o Biltish Guvorninent pags more thins $T00,000 fur 118 Cons :u!nraurvhm. telly tha wtory 1 this regurd. It should not be forgottun that the two Governs munts huyo nbout oqual ipanclul rosoyrovs, ul)d thut g Unliod Statas. Coneuls * reoelye i fovd “for Lo Governmiwgt woro thui 18 oxpanded for - tho sulirjos and othor uruuwl of the Copsplates, Tho sumg uld tho Brithsh Consnlé not * ouly jine la thom 0 Hive I i wanuor far um;n. .t Tapmity to foralkn jdims of ul)Lclul 1ire, upg fo commund tho roapoet duc to tho sgonty af thele dpvepnnunt, but enuble thom uliu . 16 80lqut elr allcos wnd dweillings 1y NGINE 4R BOVKY- sible loculles, wnd 1o rescive ll‘ v UORUE Shoge whio cpil on kol omerwiio, Thoy ury il enghlvd olerivul usglstanod, wid (o copimaind more i for thalr commurcint or. iravulig counteypion whion vireumetances o requice, “Thu aitlulu) teok m‘rflunml re roquived W chivrga the 1ho lel- oilt of tho Guvernmeit trousiry loud 100 Boavis Iy our soaumarolnl wnd slipping |mu?-mvmm tho noiailicisl ubnu? Ium' "f"“ mukp 0F Foe Sart 10 bibat tounn ot 1ving, Injura thele progs L .wflukoluu|lmv‘lhlnum0 Fuglish Lone su) gun dovote to Lhg solicitations aad sequires wentd of Kls countrymen, s . e E—— POST-MORTEM ON TH4 IOWA FASTER.' - 10Wa CiTy, [n April WeMiss Husile-Deyell, who died at- noon® yestordap, was: buried: this afteenoan. . Tppedjutoly nfter hor diath u post-, | woriem nxnmllx-u‘:m o m-dot b‘r gn Bw:nwm! 1 £V lopartuedn R ! or SR ) o wololy ln.uhuw o Ey-Uv; Rl Bt Do Bl Rbc. 4 + *a el sosiling ay oo 1y theaupw disuppears, probe than nsuy), f Fargo~~tho weather Is flattering this month, ‘The suow 8 melting gradunlly dujly, Slolghing 13 disnppegeine fast. wilh less than three Inches |, durquel of snow on the lovel, 1t freczeg but little at night, Buro grotnd I seon (0 .all diroctions, Sueding will bogin nbout the 20th, and probably g finjsbed by tho 10th of Muy, - Towor City,~Thora Is o yood denl of snow on tho grites laiul, winle mony plowed flelds nro boe glnniug to show the soil, Seediug ean probnbly bogia (h spota early noxt wooks and by “tha 20ils Honenda o tho oumor toflowiis thd Burent e o \or owlu| ugen| date. It I8 pow plvun}ut. 4 ¥ ! !v‘ . YANKTON, DAK, . YaNuTow, D, P Avril 12~The overflowes wators of the Missourl nre gradually subsiding, though tha foe is plled to a bixhe otten of thirty feet ulang the bank and un- the bars and bot- toms, Yunkton-s Sliing with refugers from the low lands, and the people nre duing thelr best tp care for thom, OQutside help 18 needed, as the rosourees of tho cltlzons ure not pdequute tatho domand, Thongands of poople_hava, been ens dered hameless,. sl ull . thoy possvaspd bas - becn swept mway. <Nearly. all thousand of head have boen drowned, snd farme Lousea and villuges submerged orset fopting aboug ip the water, On thoe 8jte of Greon Isjind but une housn remaing, und the. foe fa from ton to twenty foet teop, The bottom frum here to the Bl Bloyx, sixiy miles lons and trom flye to twenty inllos wide, ls still under water, Yunk- toi. parties are still out in yawls bringing in ple, Tho Culuago, Milwupkep & St raul tailrond ryns ug'vpr ‘mlr. %mwm and undor ' wator, I8 - ale sonly noand of vommuniegtion with thooutside. Yankiun ls almost destitnte of fuol ind cauball,: and - shore uf provislups, Wintor still balda Jnereasing, tho nuavrm:f LUK the. homeleas famaers wio e beon - drowned ont. ‘.‘;J‘ ton .. ean fure nfsh sholter for about Luds, aud ‘|t making horojo etforts to 4y T ly cluthiug,. fuel, and prue visiong from fta 1ih lm‘ A10re, A soON 1K Tho Horgo byeaks boats eqn o sent pelaw fur sup- pllog, Al the ruilroads north and west- gf hero ure -snowed I, Tho dumago ‘to steambout 'nmuurly will smount to 300, incluihug two iouta unk, the Westory ond -Tha woutor Pvlgruu. hulur lupu, Jlluuk L, ‘unphmu. t T Hoen wew ol Yying tgh Bpow’ the fps and infund, Thuyl;{c dumusod 10 'the extent $30,00, but will be puc atioat ps soon waithor will peemit.” proubly elde of ays. The sttwnory Turey and Far Wi atfoat and M. gnod conditlol Bello (e 3pbud, uém,‘uu tu; as the ihipty Fur Weat aro n. Tha lsses 1o property in_ genersl cunnon In;nnllipuml.mu ure vory grent, 'Cio ond i not yot, | Thy sauann of 1 u'{mn oigly hegun,und pontifo uruulln'l slopu {8 burjed 1o sugw. S aE DAVENIOWT TA . oo h Speetal Dispateh to The Chieago Tribune, DAVESPORT, Tag Aprit J3—4 gurvey.of the river mudo tosnight at 1t o'¢looky by T4k Taau- UNE roprescntutive, togothor, with ndvices ro- cpived from above and below; fyrnlsh, tho foj- lawing: Atda'clocic this ufterpoon thero waka, ‘gengrul shove, covpring the wholo flold hotwoen thiscity and Kok Island, Tho fgo went duwn! tho dlstanca of two blocks below the Govern- maont brldgo aud’ gord. Thoe loa still hange in ‘tha vivee to within two inites of Musoatiuo. Tue’ Atago of wutor kas beon ‘sieadlly rialug sinco Ingt uight, und . ut (WIS writlog - 14 . epyone; tegn . foet -, Apd FONF pidnghes . pbpva lawswator marke—withlin - twelvg lllvh(‘l of 1ho highest mark ever roaghed. Tho viso (s bok-waice frony (ho gorge, und doss not ut tole | thua eatend wans thuly o Iligsubave, . Dty of tho collyrs un} Pirst atredt Arg'rumund Ao on Bueond atrect ago Miking. 4 N In Rook Iulund“The oveellow (s bogtnniog to e E R O AV R Toana gt Wes’ vt thero 18 anothop '"T“' b, alear wator nbout hut, At Byeamore Ghility wnlw.nulw Aboves. hure 18 8 Lo, 1o o, AL T 1 mm{,..v';mm shore, Eoliw, * Frota Leniairo 1o LHIRCCOR (66 FLYOF B OROR iy s s At , 4 MONMOUPIGILL, o { Bacelal Diapaieh 10 Jip Chitays Triyne, | Mounoyri, . Il Apel 1&wBoveral; tnghos. mopa of ypow fell last night apy. sorduys: which meltod about as fuat us i full, ;. [Phe mud Igpf o toreiblo dey |“| and cuuses glmost a complate stoppuge usliees. IRty il e CLINTON, TLE, . Spectal Dissateh to The Chleapo Tridune. - CraxvoN, [iL; Aprit 12.—For 30 lust two days 1t bus beon rulntog in this WWoulity, intormixed with hail, - It fe the worst seasdn kuown heres 'abouts, aud farmers ure grywbling over the | awasalight Il of suow to-duy of abont bnlt gms,xwu aregood for early sceding and good ar ferlon froshot, i Mean i ‘duys of strong south wind would spt ono-hull 'enurr.-l(r tho indi-"| ! 1y shout the 17th or 20ty 11ve 10 ten dnys lutar. | 0 of . tho stock - on tho ‘low lands,. hundreds of ‘| Pl"b& Funteuclle, . o| erlme unt 1 ‘heeny brought under Flr dolny In spring work. Tho fialda aro soft, and thero s ot much prospeot of gstting to work plawing fur ten or fifcoun Aays yot If the weaths | ershould turn around now and ba pleassnt. There will not be tnuch plunting iu Central 11ll« nois bofura May 6. e BTREATOR. TLL, Epectal Disvateh tn The Chicago Trivunes Braratom, 1iL, April 12.=The snow.storm of sesterday atiil eontinues, but the snow (9 meft- Ing nearly or quite us fast aa it falls. Dusinoss of all kinds |s greatly eripplad by the buckward apring. No buflding operitions have licen eum- menced yot, and farmers nee walting anxionsly for upring to comne that thoy may begin pinwing, ‘Fhera will, howevar, bo littie or no spriog wheat suwn, and ' winter whent 18 reported to- bo much njured, : . — ’ Mo OTTAWA, TLL, g Hpéctal Disvateh to The Chicago Tribune. OTrAWA, 1L, April 12.—April keops up fts dis- agreenblu reputation to-day and yoaterday by a suow-storm, which has provailed nearly the whole timo for the past torty-oight hours. The snow ‘meits na it fulls, and the stroots are flied with slush. usiness 18 practically susponded, Guod sleighing (s still {ound in wany parts of tho vounty In thls vicluily, 4 5 PAXTON, ILL,y 4 Spicial Dispaleh lo The Chicago Teibune, PAxTON, 1l April 12.=Bpring still lingors, and thin cold weather wotld do credit to Maroh. Toenlght wé nie favored with a mnow-storm, the wit baing fu the norchenst. . The ground I8 piroady covered. Fariners wenerily sold food during the wintér, and the scarcity of foddor for enitla is troubling thew. % ¥ —— COUNCIL BLUFFS, Couscit DLuprs, Is., April 12.—The. river here {8 once more within its Lanke, and the work of robulfding the railrind tracks washed outia nnn(ruumv. No dumngo wis done in tho eity, nor did tho wator reach the business part ot tho city, * - WATERTOWN, WIS, Bpectal Dispateh to. The Chicaco Tribune. - WATERTOWN, Wis,, April 12.—~An ‘Inch of show fell hore last nights "This morning matters woar u wintry nspect, aud the opening of spring still nppeurs quite distant. FREEPORT, ILL, . Speelal Dusvateh to The Chieags Teibune, Fhrerpont, 1k, Apdl 12.—There was nslight fall of snow {n this eity yesterday and to-day, and tho busincss-men aree very much discours nged at the prospects for trads. 4 4 \ SIGNAL SERVICE. WASRINGTON; D. C. April 18—1n. m.—For Trn= nesseeo and the Oblo Valley, raln, followed Ly wlightly colder, purtly | cloudy weather, winda shiftlug to porth and west, and rising baromgtor, For the Lake roglon, fefr weather, precaded by light snow in the southorn purtions, nerthorly: 10 weuterly winds, a siliht risa followed by fall- ing buromntor, anw stadonury or slight rise in tomperatury, i ‘o $he Yppor Mississippl and Lowar Missour! anlo;’s. penerally fulr weathor, northerly winds, shifting towest and south, glixht rigo Jn toppnra- ture, and by Thursday morsing: lower baroin- etor, 5 : * 'Tha Indientions are that falr woather will pre- vall on the Atluntic coust and that the tempera- ture will rise glowly in the Misslsdippi and Mis- souri Valleys during Thursday. LOCAL OUSERVATIONS, = A HICAGY April 1-1018 . m, tn. | WWeather Lt snw, Huited '—}f"'~—\ SO P \. ' : R weter, o, - 3tenn temperiture, WL, e 2 huuldlty, Wi [ ximum tyluporature, 78, . - Minimuny 10mpyrAtYro B’ ; BRNEZAL OPFEUYATIONS, RN CitteAao,’ Aprll 12-10:13 b, gebupaTE 3 fromy 2 Winnewuce.. Vaidy e RESTITUTION, A Resultof YMoody's Pronching=Blood= ‘Mongy Retnrned Aster u Lapso o ‘Eight Years, ‘Hpecial Dispateh to The Chieago Tribune. Davtisions, M., ‘April1l,—A remarkablo illustration of the results ot ‘Mr, Moody's preaching is furnighed hero In the réstitution of 0 swin-of money, which formed vart of tha spolis of a murder, comuiltad over eight years ngo. ‘The murder was the most noted onp n the history of Balgimore,~that of an’ alkl and,docroplt wowan, ‘Mrs, AMary Al Laumnptry,—ond was attonded with most hors ribte brutality. ' The old lady was murdered m- hor bud oy Jan, 8, 187, - Iler murdorers, Joshun Nicholsqn and 'Chomas Ry Whewler, aling Iallahan, ~ were eaptured after a long-seapel, wud . both wope hinoged - far tho eyime. ‘Thalr plunder consistud of §1,600, unly a smnll. nart ot which was. over rocoverod, - Three hundred dollars In sliver was' thrownfnte Joyes” Falla by fthe’ pur- durers fn thejr Night, $15 was found in peol- lar on ' Bond . street, but what becpnio of tho rest has been a mystery: up to this e, 2 2o 'll now tyrna out: {hat, Imingdintoly after the c'rhne,l\\'l}:luq.jor llnll\ll;m;. tuolk nl trip north, and Jeft i phpwe of the plunder— v oo with 'Mn. othiory AT, svithong telling him wiero Jt camo .~,l.‘|lu, byother kugy nothing<of the after the exceutlon. - 1y rageived Jutter wrikten, by . tha. Rav. J, P. Wilson at hg - nurderars - request, - giving - Win- len's oun) M(‘on. < Phg walfinl‘ [ tolned the woney - for . poarly elght years,. bug . now | comy o Baltimore tg restors jt, with necrued fpterest, to My Lampley,” the - hushund “of the myrderad "wouinn, © e _states thnt Duvinge - Moody's preaching, und’ having heard _his strong seymons ot restitution, hig cosclence traibled hi and e reselved to restore ¢ money, ~ Ts veached : Baltimore yestordny fnm\ vtfuw York, and, lgaening that the Rev, My, Wiison was ‘nowy siationed i Calve County; has gone thers 1 order that resitu- ‘tion iy b peydp throuxh the medlum ot the clurcyman who wis the - murderer’s cotls, fessor, - 7 - . e ———— . W SCRIBNER'S,”, 1} Wil Probably Bo fiullm WTho Cene i AT S Speclal Dungtch to The Chlcage Tribuns NEW Youk, Aprll 1-~Tho. copporation of Scribner & Co, witl on Baturday file an appli- catlon I’ the Supreme Court.of Now York City for-a chiange of W8 corpopate_pame 1o “Thy Contury Campany:" This Is thonght i to ba a woud nuwme for w house publishing two sueh mnruzines as Soribner and 8¢, Nicllus, whist; aro gongrally ngknowledged to be fully “nhrepst 01 - the . dlwes, both fn e literary and plotorial. fuirtures,~whioh-have, In fact, always soyght to. ropresent the - bost oulture Lo tho coptitey, - I this organization It ls vx- pected thot “therp: wil) bo n coBporation bu- tweon ‘lahor and gaplial by the best spnse, two-itihis of . the ownurshlp bulug designed for-the foymer and - threg-fths for the lutter. _'The Prosident of the Uantury Company will, be Mr. Rogwell Swith, who was oue of the orlginal projuctors and pro- ‘| ehief lPnn in.bhringing on ?w American re- ) cf, ;| snbes! v § : prietors of Seribner's Monthly. and who has been the astual publisher and business man- ager of the magazines from the heginning. ‘'he same editorial torce will continug as fieretofore, and the business manngement wider which the imagazines have nttained to thelr present fame and prosperity will still finve charge of thelr destinies, ‘Chere s to- be na change fn the name of | “8T. NICHOLAS," excefiun drop the nams of Seribner in its subetitle, "T'he name of Scribner's Month!, will be retulned for that mainzine until the ond of the present ¥olume, wid nfterward for a venr ad o sub-ftle, Wiether thal magn- zliie will take aa Its principal title the nama of thy corporation and .be enlled the Century fanot yet annotineed, -The. changs in the corporate name cannot be made for sue 1wo monthsy the Court will fix the date at whichi ‘it 15 to be used If -the petition 1y granted, [t s mueli in favor of the nama that the records of the Departiment of State at Albany and the dircetory of the Cityof New York do not show the name to ba ang- wiire iy use, excapt by * The L‘umnr{ Club,"” and thare is precedont for such double use of a nnme in the case of the Athenainn, the e 1wy jiterary wneklly of Londan, and the fantous “ Athotenm Club' of that city, REVOLUTION LITERATURE. The Panphlets, Nongk, und Satires of the Americau IRevolution, A g Ttoston Adrartiser,” # Trof, Tyler gave the second of his Lowell Tustitute lectures Jast night on the pamn- phileteers and song-writers of the Rovelution, In this lecture, he said, we begin to fuspect tha evidence showlng that every passing fase of the Hevolutionary struggle was caught up nudl reflected i the contemporary literature of the Amerienns, particularly In their pnin- phlets, songs, und satires, In those writines we fined the traces of three great glages of ln- - tellectunl progress. The' first stago repre- sents n sliicers effort 1o reconcile coloninl rights with coluninl dependence, and extends fromn'1765 to the day of the Lexineton and Concord fights,1735, The second stage rep- resents & rapidly; spreading doubt of the pos- slullity of dolng this, and extunds from the duy of those fights to July, 1756, The third stnge represeiits a -finnl convietion on the part of the majority of Amerleans that it was fmspossible fo do thix, accompunied by n de- termination to'. preserve : coloninl rights through a strugelo for independence. This perlod - extends from’ July, 1776, to- the end, Each of these stages, In’ all its detnlls of ar- gument, herolsu, sulfering, and- mirth, s photographed In the writings of the thme, The very first pages of ‘our Revotutionary iterature were written by James Otls, who Is remembered ng the first great orator of that strugale, but was alsp the fivet great pame phleteer, “He wos a man whoso aptitude for ¢loquence, oral and wlme‘x, hiad been tratned by the most cnrefil technieal study of de- talls. s * Rudiments of: Latin Prosody,’” published In the midsg of n busy Inw practice, exhivits ‘minute clnsaleal scholarship. But the lmpassioned wrulnr'gm(or of -the lirst saie of the Revolutlon wes also it severe Jo-- et and (e constitutional expositor. 1lis “Rights of the British Colonies” was the prelude to the entire' movement of Revolu- tionary reasoning,” by - which the colonists were to present u Jewnl Justifieation of their efforts for inge )eml,c\wu. ‘That lfmlmhlulln\s ovep ‘yct wonderinf vipaligy and power, 1 was the law-arsenal from whicl other com- batants drew thelr-best Weapous. 1t hnd n OPENING. 2 “Upening Day.” CARSON, PIRIE & 00.'S WostEud Dry GondsHouso MADISON AND PEORIA-STS. TO-DAY ELUGANT DISPLAY Springflshiuns Millinery, Costumes, - Fabrics. A CORDLAL IVITATION 10 AL _ POTTERY WARES, e R e s S Our recent importations of Fine Pottery Wares are unusually attractive, con= gisting of the latest produc- tions of foreign markets. Purchasers of Useful, Artis- tie, and Ornamentsl Goods,’ will find our expogition un-; equaled for quality, style, novelty and pricos. Please inspect. BURLEY & TYRRELL, 83 and 85 State-st., COHICAGO. bound agninat the Staup o "Whic wniversal Joy v Amérien over th re- penl of the Stamp itet in 1764 ywas svon lost anxiety and suspielon eoneernine the further (dustzns of Buglund ; and this troublud luyalty ‘18 finely expressed In a song then lrrud‘:m«u in \'lrululn. entitled ¢ Virelln lenr; of Qaks,” this being the first of & long serles of Revolutionnry songs that were moddied aftes Unerioks snilor lyrie, * Hearts of Oak.” Bu the nlarming acts of the Lritish Government of that year gud in the year followlne ealled to the front the uumu(lfimnt Wiz ppmphiet- epr, John Dickinson:of Pennsylvania, who In ecemmber, LU7, Degun publisiing ks » Let- Jters froma Farmer.” hese were rupublished “in most of the colopius 1 Englund and in Franes, mud .produeerd gn Jnmenss effeet on pubtic opinton, ‘Thuy are adwirable, hoth in lmwemxu forin” Dickinson wns n high- ‘minded and 8 cultivated wan, with genulun literary: glfts, aud, ' though extromely eaue .tions, " was. nlgo . very brave whenevey jy ,llmlmnmn.uud eonsclenes wyra sntisfied, etters are peryaded by g tone of grept noblly ity, roverent, eonmgeous, scholarly, and i:cuflalunnllku; and they exactly expross the nyal and eongervative ‘effort to combine the colopinl righty with . coloplal subnisslon, Thae practieal response of the British Governe mentto these veverent and affectionate lete: Sers was the'send fnig over the Complssioners of Customs v 1768, and the summontng of Gen, Gugo with his troops to Boston. . Fron Iiis homeon the Dalpware Dickinson watehed sprrowfilly these fivu‘nls, and ju the sunnper of that year he vonred nto his famous ** Lib- erty Suiig!’ the unxiety and the stern emo- tion which hie then shured: with his fullow. conTyImen : From the duta of lunt aoni, enward 1o the day of Lexington and Copeard, five years lny Jbuiled s and, by o grotesque sgreasii of fate, Jit happened Uist one wird—the peaceful and tonsnitng little wonl " ten’—came to be re- gavdwl vy all the world, A|‘wrlmum and Eur ropeans, as the syinbol of il the bitwer busi- ness that flled up those five ?'(-nrs. The np- positlon papers in-Bogland chaffed the Gov- er.munt for “its prapostarous ;mllu{ of Tors inie tho Amerienns to dvink teat wh !~ In Anjerien the unllnblu Plunt was dennunge llt song and pamphlet, 05 11 J8 \hre sune poten Ll ppanant ‘il Wit ent refase of the confilel, the niost ejabo- CARPEIS. Chas. Gossage | . & Co. “Carpets.” Spring Styles! 1501, h refurence o th! rawe and duingh ful satiee Wil 1) shouyio i vifshed 1715, 81 hjet ed Tn Boston |;rI| l:vll“ fha «\l’u.\i‘lmn l.runlu\lgs of tha T Lexinrion , Flogant Assortment. fmes,” But an the day of te an, Gunieard BEHIE tho. wiie Wiy fta Tranpl- And Reduced Prices! . tion from fren| W““l“l‘fls l“ ’l':hlyslcfl!‘?\wa. 14 g Vatn L h 1 y b ' fi r‘ul‘;fi"lllh:'t h il‘l!‘l‘l"’l\ll.’l‘i‘élauh cnurl‘s b ..T.{Hiff HI)I Chas. Gossaga & Qo. 106+110 Staterst. the ground that the American wilitin could B6-62 Washington=st. nut or wonld not stand befors Britlsh regu- Inps, Afterthe rotreat.of the Brtish regu- 14rs from Coneord, this accispiion of Amerl- ean enwardjeo was answered hy n lud‘lumus Bbal'al, *'Uhe Regulars 114 .and nally, after tha day of: Hunkuy's . 11ill, - the Dritish theins sylves coased 10 presa Ui acousation. Tiaimy sleep, dgestion, Tich btood, ola; l(ux?lm’d éhogrm?ndvnwln Hn?n Fiitors.o sty e ——r e Give mo’ tho Shukers’ Snrsapnritla in profore eyui tq Wil apherie-C,d, Gulimstte, My Dy Bostan ; e——— ..o ' BUSINESS NOTIGES, Aroudta Becf, Iron, nnd 'Winr, with Cinchony, tho atandard medicinal tonlo of this Vrowrv]'m" [ lawlrlnhul i bloml, prompte r"l\‘ Fufll 08 tHo Dradn pnd norvaus systom, ifnproves digostion, eta, Rtesult: A round form, Lright oyos, huppy stute ul win roni’s hrug = store, ubpner Madlsan streot und Fifth uyonuc, e B llmmlné'n [Bunsia “l‘w' heoat family salye In the world, and exoellent for giuble use, Prica 26 ganta. @ BARING POWDEI_ TEIE CONTR.ASTI lo ofhie: ing Vowlers are laruel LR ot A T R A ‘Theve I8 _nnf.hluf; MoTe uURCoHI= fortable than to le pwake night atter night when even a gaod con- solence won’t bring “‘the swqet rostorer, Lalmy . slcep” Tako a 1ittls of the allace Finch CELERY BITTERS (a pure and powerinl Bxtract of Cojery), and oyun the hour of the poprcorn ficnd couldn’t wake you, Test it, aud ADULe | stemdy your nerves. As o proot of g o | [ty merits, 6 Is cnough to know that 'THE STHRUBEN CO. WINE €O,y 170 DMadisgu-st., hag secured thae xight of salo for l&‘n the United Btates. T'his is the Company thit has done 8o wpuch for the West {n introducing here our Pure Nutive Wines, nud solling some brands g low us $1,00 per gallon. ey AN O ATE, e THE GREAT SUMMER DRINKS. Refveshiag and Iyvigorntiog, CANTRELL & COGHRANE'S DUBIIN AND BELFASY © GINGER ALE CLUB SODA. | O IPA PFONS. Sgu that il r.flfivn‘.fla‘;luo LA S TATAL I i 1] . Ala'rlrlnl T i U tias bera Lept UNCHANOED ln .1{‘ of Its 1 EFRCTIV i e Its belug sod (e e et e L pied Fof thi faat (13 :u“n,m > L0l v s roeo, s GTIRMTNG PORLTT Mads by STEIF‘;E :"fil’nzofi OF parsana BolGInK posllgas f broat Gan bo ayjaiaed Maf 1 of L o Ye oy ) e i Eetrietty oy Chlcsgo sud Bt h;&‘ # | weeyry @ oxbuayny poseany,

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