Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1881, Page 4

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. again the King flatters his Wa)laghian sub- * tiopary ldeas are propagated awong thent, | Washinglon before he went there hlmself, | boys to iutérvieyw aud compare notes with, ?g-uu- cotits héro we van got thero snd work i JOR ¥ | XS and they listen willugly to those who preach | and before ho entered upon his Senatorial | new fonces to olimb, & new house not yet set- ro 8t & cost f 45 eunts, and cun Adord lo pay | 'y, "t wnder the Prohibition law, there Jiberty and equallty, Thoy have begun | torm, toliave s eeat sscured for him on the | tledover which helsfYeeta ramble, nawoppor- Hnd 1o 2 4 ) THE CHICAGU TRIBUNE: SATURDAY. APRIL 30, 1881—SIXTEEN PAGES a8 there was the slightest hope of winning himn, and when he refused to keep company with them they turned about and abused him. Everybody who i3 famlliar with thé facls In Mabone's cnso knows this tobon fair statoment, ‘There is no special significance in polnting ont that Mahono has boen made Chaleman lnoked upon as a superior bang whoso re- gard nust ho scenred nt onee,—this font bes ing nehieved usually In a4 manner whieh brings the matetnal parent to tho verge of distraetion, Ietween the wrong-headed in- dustry, prefand zend, atid Inflexible determi- natlon to do just the wrong thing at the of stuekings in Now 1lampshire. By making theso atockings on tho other slde of tho Can- ada Jine they can pay 35 per cent duty and sell them In this country eheapor than fs now possible. ‘Tl stocking manufacturers havo discovered that grotoction does not pro- tect, but that wero It not for the heavy duty 10 be taken up in perfecting means for his snfety and pratection, Thecomlition of Rus- sin 18 volennic, and any oxtremo teasures niay be counted o HUNT THE RASUAIS DOWN, ‘, Iy - mand ns tho price of his Hte. 1{is wholo time Tye @xibwe, | ufd that of hiis courtlers and officinls seems TERMS OF SURSCRIPTION DY MAN~IN ADVANCE—POSTAQE PREPAID, Dally edition, one yoAr. {arc G Yanr BoF s 1 = , : wrong tima manlfested by the lord of the | on wool, lovied 16 protect the wool-growors, Dty pud fundy m‘""‘?& "k;" 14.00 unt tho raseals downl” This Is the | of a commitice, and that Riddleberger, ono of | louse, rud tho absence of the suidll boy who | theso Now Ilamipshire mrhufacturors could o "’Il'a i »crrn)‘m’l( xd nnltls:‘”!fintlull nlomx I‘;';‘:l“oi fi!rmly‘u ‘Oil\rfnh his followers in the movement wgalnet the | 13 enjofing tho Nospitalities of otheér amall | eommand the whplo stocking trade-of tho dunday, 1G-puo ed are idle—they w! reated as audaclous Bourbons of Virginin, has been nominated for the pince of Sergeant-nt-Arms to the Sen- ate. ‘The Republiean Senators would bo at onee ungrateful and unwigs I they fatled to recognize Malone's cobperation, Whon hd reslsted all tho overtures ot the, Democrats, and enabléd the Republicans by means of his voto to gain control of the Senate Cominit- tees, o certainly hnd aclaim upon Rophb- llean gratitude, 1t wns also avowed froin tho ontsot that the Republicans belleved it to bo prover and deslrable to oncouraga and duvelop the signs of dissolution In the Solid’ South, Politicians on elther sldo are prac- tleal people. Thoy want to see nclul\i 10 stilts, To have sald to Maliono and his fol lowing In Virginia that they ml:‘m furnlst ‘new strength to the Republiean ‘party, that they might nssure Republicans the control of tho United States Senate, and that they might continue in thelr good work of breik- fng the solld Dourbon ranks, but that thoy need not axpect ny favora from the Repub- Mean party, would have been the surest way to discourage the Liberal movement aid ns- sure the contintad supremncy of Bourbon- fsm in the South. The other “*ovidences of & bargain® fur- nishied by Senator Butler were even more filiisy than those we lavo cited. ‘They nro not worth scrious consideration. 'The elo- tnent of * proof” whicl hepromised, isInok- ing nltogethier. There I8 not one partfcld more nvldenco of a corrupt bargnin betwéen tho Republieans nnd Mahono than there Is'of & cofrupt bargaih . bettveen the Democrata and Judge Davis, of Iliinols, Doth theso gentlemen wera clected ns Indegonddits to the Uniteu States Senate. 'I'he nntécedents of one were Ropubliean; and he now ncts with the Democrats, The antecedents of the other were Democratic, and he now acts with the Republieans. The Republicans have not on tnls nceount denounced and vilied Judge Davis in the Senata Chamber after the, mnnner the Democrats bave treated Mahone, Porhaps this is because the Republicans did not try to conx or bully Judge Davis to dct with them, and consequently aro not dlsap- pointed and chagrined, ns the Democrals plalnly are at thelr fallure to secure Ma- hone's vote, 3 * MOVING-DAY. Tho annual moving anniversary fins com- menced, ng! already tho erowded condition of tho streets, tho teams londed with the household gods and goods in heterogeneous confusion, and the worn and {aded looks and attire of housckeepors, show that the great domegtic.cyclone of the year, which uprools households, breeds family jars, and ongenders socinl dlscomfort aind discontent, has set In with more than ordinary violence, Thein- boys, ot eitertaining them atimpramptu plo- nles In the cellar or attle just when he s nost wantetl, the Jot of tho niatorfaniliiag {8 nota happy ote, andd any infraction upon the abservances of the Sabliath which shd mny mako ars not to bo ontercd up ngainst hor. Bhe alone is the victim of this horrible legira Whose comdition §a to bo deplored and ‘whoso sing are to bo forglven. It is upon her devoted head aloné that the anger of the perlpatetle Lares dnd Penates I3 tls fted. It ls sho nlons who goés hungry while the male wretel sumptuousty luncies down- town, It I8 sho alond who has 16 endnro the critieal curlosity of tho nelghborlicod feo- mnles, and feols that her position may be fm- verited by the manner of lier cntrance into Its prdcinels.’ 1¢, 18 sho_alofta who has to confront the dust, and soot, and grenso of the fiow houso, It I8 she flond for whom all kind souls té-norrow should pray. e o i 5 country, The tariff at presont gives that wholo trade to tho forelan manufacturers, At present the whole protective faction or school of stafesmen are laboring nt Washings toh to Induce the Bearetary of tho Treasury to roverse the declsion of the Supreme Court, and send - it baek to that body with Instruc tions that the whole Ameriedn people shall continua to bo taxed 0 por ¢ont on all thelr loslory In order to mnintaln the principly of protectlon, even It it does not protect, WEEKLY BUITIOR== n or ye RSPt Frouty-one topio) Fpacitnon coptes sont fres, (avo Pam-Ofiice addross in fall, Including County and Stato, Itemlttancos may be mnde elthor by draft, 0xpross, I'ost-OMew deder, Or In rexistored letior; At our risks T0 CITY BUBBCRIBERS. gnsconade. The -Qovernment oficlal who steals tho publiv revenue, no mattor how gracefully or with what parade of party da- voilon, fa no bettor than auy common thief, o s not only n public enemy to be exposed and punished, but the porsonnl_cnemy of every upright offtelal and every privato cltl- zen In the land, The display of his ill-gotten wenith aan insult to honest poverty, whether inorout of office, Thera was never a bottdr time than the present to inangurate the prac- tice of prosccuting to the Penitentiary Gov- ernment oftletals found gullty of breaches of trust. ‘The history of the ‘star-routo infamy is replete with disgrnco and shame to the administration of the Government of the Unlted States, It fs now plaln that the Congresslonal Investigation was o holthearted affair—thot It stopped short on the varge of disclosures which, had they been made publie; would have com- palled Prestdent inyes to 1Lt and lot fall the. offieinl deeapitation ax, It should be tho Dutsiness of the presént inqulry te bring to light the éauses of that miserablo nbortion, ‘I'ne Demacratio party hnd ovory political reason to desiro td smirch’ Republican ofil- einls. What Influence palsied the lips of Democratic Congressmen? What power befifd the throno of tho Demoeratic Invosti- gatiop. Commiltteo withheld from tho public tho testlmony of Roedell? "On the 2d of June Inst: Reedell swore that lie was attor- n3y and ‘representative of ,Dorsey & Co., of wiich 8, ‘'W. Dorsey, onco United States Senntor. from Arkansns, and late Secretary of tho Republiean National Com- mittée, was thé sonlor and chiet part~ ner; aud that -this firm was enguged in the “star? routo buisiness, According to Reedell’s testfmony the ‘“star’’ route con- tracts’ standing In the nnines of J, B, Price, J. R, Miner, J. M. Pack, and J, W. Dorsey (S. W. Dorsey’s brother), belonged in. fact o Torsey & Co. These contracts cover thirty-one of the ninety-threo favorit *ex- pediting” routes; and of the **expedit~ ing” money disbursed by Gen, Brady they recolyved five hundred and asventy-sle thou- i A e S, ‘o | PR ndr s ) oty a g ell also testifies **the old firm ? of “""’""“'""',““‘:“"%"m:'"""" “liner, Péck & Dorsey once had 158 Toutes tral Mogle Hall, * | of the star servico.”” This must have been ,;fi";:;':,:‘,:‘: ;"',',r,.l.l,mm’h sndStato streeta. Juble | 4 ing the porlod.of 3ir, Dorsey’s. service in Ny YWhite-Broruing Tari the United States Senate, for Reedeoll adds: J.ake-Front, opposit Washington stroet. Ha “1 took 1t [4 certaln routd] from S. W. Dor- aL3:Np. m. Cloveland vs, Chicagos. sey ns nmatter of form, as It was the only way' in which it could be legally done; that 1was about o month after he ceasol to be « wmember of the Scn- ate.”” These facts wero known ‘to the | Democfatls Congressmen {mmodiately In chargo of the investigntion. Mr. Dorsey was Dally, dolivered, Buriday oxeaptod, 85 conts por woek, Ualy, delivefed, Bundny Inchidéd, 10 conta por woek, Addross THE THIBUNE COMPANY, Cornbr Mad(son nnd learbornests., Chleago, 1t S——— . STOUE-JOBBING A8 A FINE ART. The skill and boidness of fhe 1iodern stock-Jobbor Is woll Tllustrnted Iu tha caso of tho Mnnlm!!m;]!nllrond Compnny,=n edrpo- ratfon which hdsuines the inénopuly of oper ating the elovated ralironds of New York, and has mnda itsolf consplovous by asking exemptlon from taxation In order to inke its enterprise profitpble. Tho Manhattan hogn capitul stock or outstanding bonds of some $13,000,000, we believe, but there s no ovi- dencod u:n‘ any tibnoy was bver pald Inor that it has any tahgible proporty of its own to. represent an investnient of that ot any athor hmount of enpital, Iis busliess Is to operato lensed railronds, -Its own capital and bohls nro simiply so muel “water? over and above alt the water ropresented In the capital and bonds of the elevated roads 1t has ledsed. Tlila 1s.the very reduotlo ad ab- surdum of stoek-jobblg., It seems to bea grent didyanc over Crédit-Mobller opera- tlons, which at least pretended to give somb Qonsideration for Its profits, -"The following extract from the Now York Thutes will give sonie idea of the chatacter of the Manhattan Compnny: ° It fa n diflioult matter ta arrive et tho actual | cost ol the clgvateid roada. - Dr. Gillore testilieq that tho cunti mtl)rlw for_tho uwonstruction of the 8ixth dvenuo line wns $300.00) per mile, bug the vrighml iive miles wits bonded Tor §1,600,000. Asalstant Brite Buglnodk Bwoet, somathing over ‘n yenr awro, ealowlired the cost of thd lines owded hy the Nuw Yotk Compuiy -at €8,510,518.25, and those hulmmln? 1o tie Metropolitan Company at W, AT.00, 16 il not ko below tho apeciiln- tivo murgins of edutpiets to tho otttn ligures, buit the sum of §18,864,185.45 wits refarided ity cove orlnf every legitimato item bE cost at tho thno tho lenke to the Manbattsn Company was made, Tho two compnntes that owned the lnesbnd the Interest on thelr bunds to pay, #nd wero ilable 1o tuxatlon on thelr )mp%rt . But what sort of . bargaln did the Matihattin Cum{mn{ make? It 1{s to bo romembercd that It wns - thon a - cofporation -on papér, with a_nominal capital of -$2,000000 only $i130- 000 of which s’ ever -hoon paid In, It ll'nd no ralirogd #nd no property of nuy uceaynt, ut it hidd wohattor and n namo, aud Wis & cun- venlent device for the ownofsof tho clovuted runds to use for speculative purpuzes. In ' fix- inx up things’ for the vd-yenr leaso tho New York Compnny catdo fotwhrd \with 28,600,000 of § per cent bunds nud tho Metropotitin wit tho 8samo aniount uf 6 parcous b&mu. Ilow much of the pr%t:ued.s of thoso 817 v{.lm of interest- biiariug cblightions were actuully oxnenried on the ronds we canuot conjeoture, ‘Then thero gefiu $0.500,000 of caplial for, egoh . company. or 13,000,000 kn ail, Hero iy a cupltalization of 000, to cover un nlleged cost of $161158,% (Entered at ths Post-Ofice at Ohleago, 1il, as Seconds # . Class Matlar. For thé bonaiit of .nur prtrons who dosira to send Hinglo coples of TTTRTRIDUNE through tho mall, wo sive barewlth tha translont rate of postago: Dflmflla Elght and T'wb]ve Pagd Papor. fixtosn F'ago P8porise., e SRR e TRIBUNE BRANCIL OFFICES, PROTECTION PRACTIOALLY ILLUSYRATED. A pretentlous political doator from Massa- chusetts proposed In Congress some ydirs nggo, 08 nn unfailing mmeasure to hilld up the forelgn trado of Amerlenn shipping, “the lovy of & hoavy discritninating duty on Al mer- chandise brought to this cbuntry in foreign vessels, The man belloved " thit this conld be done without provoxing retalintory legis- Intion, aitd that thén all the forelgn trade of t]xlls country woirld bo done fn Amoriean ves- sels, . Our toruign trade Is abont to ba subjected to another punishment. France is revising her tarift: ‘on the retaltatory principle, and the rotaliation i3 ntned heavily against the United States, Untll within a fow yenrs Fratee, when eompelled to meet any defi- ¢loney in her supply of ' breadstuffs and pro- visiofis; whs ncenstoimed to obtain what was hceded froin Kugland, but of late years sho Lns been dénling dircetly with tfils country, tho French agents _maklm'; thelr purchnases in Chicago, and ship- ping hetico on through bilis of Indlng to French ports. The demnid for Ainériean Dreadstufls, for provislois, anid fof potroleum nid other Amerlean products has of. Iato years been growlhg, but the. French have resented the excessivo Amnorlean duties on French manufactures, which have prevéntod any reciprocity in trade. Falling to, induco any ntodificutlon of tho Amorienn tarlff, France hus coiicluded to réarratige or own, and for thid purposo now proposed to rotal- Inte by increased duties on all Awmerican productions, There s to by i general ine crease of French dntles of 25 per cént. Franco desires Amerlcan live eattle, and tho duty now is about $1.20 por hend; the new daty will Db S8, .so that trade will probably ba serlously checked, If THE CHICAGO TRIRUNK has- ostabilaticd branch pMices for the pecojpt of subscriptions and advortisoe nenta o8 follows: NEV YORK-Room 20 Trilune Buliding, P.T. Mc- FALDES, Manager. GLABGOW, Bcottand—Allan's American News Agcucy, 31 Rentlold-at. JOXDON, Eng.—Amorlcan” Exchango, 49 Strand. BExuy K. GILLI, Agent. 5 e ~WABTINGTON. T2, O.—151) ¥ stroek. s emg—— Grand Opera-Tonse, rirrk streot, opposit now Court-Housn,\ Xngago- went of the Hoston ideal Opora Company. -After- 007, “ Pirates of Penzaneo” Kvening, “Olivotte.” IXdnlex's Theatre, _Randolph stréct, botweon Clark und La Bajle, Gefaldine.” - Afternooi and cvening. 2 AloVicker's Theatro. Madisan _stroct. Letwdeh ® Blatd and Dontborn. “Ono Hlundred Wives" Aflornoon and evening, . Taverly's Thoatre, Tentborn streol, comér of Moliroe. tortalnment. Afternoon and ovening. Minstrol on- g Otympic Thentro, Cinrk stroet, borween Laka and Randotph, Ene sagemont of Bnelbakor's Combination. Variely on- tertalhmont. Afternoon nnd evoning. 'SATURDAY, APRIL, 380, 188L Iy another column |d-explul_|\e‘(i"at full “léngtli'thé ‘manner in which $3,000 of tha publie- money was ppid for carrying an - | convenfonce of the cniendar this year Is very il 5 185,95, and the Mubhnttan Company ngreed to empty matl-pouch by stedmbont betwoen St. o prominent l\_gfl;e l):‘ dfll e R‘dnulfilmnbfic‘;" aggravating. To-day s the last day of April, not érushdd out:© Amerlean Consuls in {my tho interost on thu bonds und “provide fur ala” find St T 5w paign last June; he had beeit a Itepul n France report that the ‘trade fn, putro- | tho principal, and guarahteed 10 dent divf- Lotls and 'St ‘'Paul, s WS 8| Gounenn Wiy afd fiot the Demoratic tn- | hence to-norrow will o the day upoi whieh |30 L=l St B R R et | dends o the atock of Lotk tonpantes.” As furtbor pretty good thing for the steamboat~ | S ot oo nig connection with the | Onosct of tenants should vacate and tho ouin with this country s now seriouisly | coustderation for 1aa lwml 1t {8annd to tho fens mon, alihough If the truth wers [ \coo® g other shonld make thoir entrcoupon the | Festricted bocause of tho hiih dutiés, bit tho | Ing companies SIAMON tn bonds ef Its wa, star-route servico? Thp matorial wns at hand for n tremendous sensatlon, but it was not used; it wns concealed! Our dispaiches stato that tho document containing the [ Teodell testimoby * 18 exceodingly dificult to get?;-that nearly all the coples hiave disap- peared: ‘Thit Dotsey would have spirited tha documents awpy if ho'could, is to be pre- sumed, But he conldi’t have dona It with- out the conscht of. the Domocratic investi- garorss ho couldn’t deprive the Democratic Investignfors “of o knowlédge of sworn statements made in thelr presence. Ilow, then, did ho stop the mouths of Dem- derptic Congressmen? DId he hold n club over tha heads ' of certain Dem- oordtie Congressmen? Did lo ralse tho club nnd. threaten to strlke? It is not necessary ‘to nssume gullt on the part of the investigators. But it Dorsoy hnd sllent partners In the ranks of Democratic Con- grosginen It was easy for him to bring them to his upport with the Democratic Investi- gntors, Dorsey was dut of office; the Demo- cratie Cdhgressmién' weto ln.\'l‘he Investi- gators: could not afford to cast a shadow npon tha cliaracter of the private Republican citizen, Dorsey, it that shadow deepencd Into Clmmerian gléom oyer.thia. hends of Denjo- cratic represontatives of the people. Clubs are good things under certain cirenmstances, but they aro not worth & rush unless there ara gullty heads to hold them over Brady throatens to ‘wield a eclub, buf it Is on 1dle threat. The timefor him to strike was the moment when President Garfleld ralsed tho X to.cut off, his, officlul head, Brady’s Insinuations to the effect that Gen. Guriield froely accopted ald in the campalgn from tho star-route contrictors are lying slanders, PrestdentGarflold glves thoquietus to thls audnalous fulschood, ‘Brady tried to linplicate Gen. Garfleld In the star-routs frauds, but failed, and his effort to doso paved the way for his removal. “I had de- termined to displacg him before I left AMontor,” says the President. Brady's infa- mous proposnl to the candidate of "the Re- publican party ta raisd nionoy froi star-route contractors for the promotion of his electlon wiis not only disdained, but It seated the pro- poser'a doom, The way Is clear, lunt the taseals down, **1lew to tho line, let thochips fiy where they may.” —y BUTLER AND MAHONE. Beuntor Hamburg Butler, of South Oaro- Iina, announged a few days ago that ho pro- posed to prove that theru was a * corrupt bor- guin * betweeh the Jtepublican Benatord and Mahone, of Virginia, and that If he wero to fall In the attempt he would reslgn hiy seat. Mr. Butler, bolng a South Curolina * gontle- mai” ought to make good his word and ré- slign, for his nltoged proof of the corrupt bargain ” turns out to be nothing more tuan a relteration of édttaln clécunistances which wero _already portéctly well known to the publio, Bome of thiso- clroumstanceg were misstated by Mr, Butlor, and none of them warrduts tha fntéronca which lio draws, ‘I'he firgy and princlpa) renson given by Butler to provo that therg hod bedri u corrupt bargain s the aseertion that Mahone, though now acting with the Ropubijeins, was electod a8 a Dumooraty ‘Fhaut is nelther n falr not correct statemept of th case, Mahone was olectod ng an Indepandent. Ife refused to: act with the regnlnr Deinooracy and lidwise with the regular Iepublicans, , Io/ 7o~ fused to say ‘that lo would act with one party or tho other If liaghould be elected to the United States Benute. But the grent bulk of the popular malority In Virginip which assured Malione’s election to the Senata consisted of Republlean votes. Por- lups it was this fact, alifed with Mahoue's notorfous hatred of the Bourbons, which caused hlm to declde upon acting with the Republlcana. At all evonts, he sent onto oh woro gonverted fnloits stock, ropresenting absolutely nothing, but formiug it basis for now dividends and further speculation, According to this showing, the manipnln- tlon of stocks-lins now advanced away be- yond auything which Vanderbilt or Jay Gould over “coneslved. 'The “‘process of s watering ** used to be confined 1o originnl schemes. of parsite compinles: but now it sceins that after the orlkiiinl stock has been flooded with all the waler it ean oarry, then anothor block of watored stock ‘Is.provided In the sliapo of ah. indopendeitt cdmpany which ins no tangible property, makes no investment, but undertakes, to eamn 10 per cent on the watered stocks of other’ com- npanices, aud also -pay,.s UIVIAAHA on dapithl and intevest -on bonds of its nwi that aro nb- solutely fictitiows, . It Is really notsurprising that such o company should nsk to-be re- iteved of taxation-Men who couid condeive and pnt into netual oporation such a scheme a8 b bueh describbd may bu falrly credited with the fwmpudence to mek for anything, Theérd ar apparently no bounds to Auterfean ingenuity, no limitlo Amoflcan enterprise, no end to Amurican “ehdplk,” but o are al- most prepired to ventuto the prediction that. stock-jobbliiz and kite-fiylng will never be earsled boyond the bold stroke of the Mai- Liattan Ballot inpany, fiierensed duties of tho new tarlit will prab- ably extinguish thdtrade aitogothor. Our ex- porta of moats, Inrd, talloy, mid othér pro- visions, amounting to many millious of dol- lars & yoar, will nlso be serlously affected. Last yéar France pirchasod nearly $20,000,- 000 of Amerlean wheat and other graln, and 11i point of fact that country has sought to bo alarge and prafitable customer for the sur- plus productiois of~the Unlted States, but, {alllng to neot with'any promise or hopo of tcciprocal tarifY regulations, sha his now re- softed to_ tho rotalintaty vrineiple, Tlho ex- clusion of Amerfeais pork s prictienlly a part of this policy. Tho pretextof trichinm is reatly nothiing more thah an effors to ‘pun- ish_ this country for the tarlift prohi- bition of French goods. Thd résult will bo thnt wo will- fmport twenty or twenty- itve millions of dollhrs’ worth' less of Fronch goods thin We do noty, and Franco will purchaso that much less of our surplus products: The two natlons will placo - them- selves In the position of rafusing to tradd with one another, and of maklig faces at each other. Both will suffer by the operation, both will 1ose, byit botli will suetéed In mak- ing themselves ridleuloiis, - 1t {a trie we can Rot along without the French goods, butthat we ‘will not doj we Wit dbntlnué to buy, twenty-four-button #loves, and all tho now designs of silks and velvots, 8o long as wo' can; our tariff 13 as bad as it can be, and our consufners will only pny what they hive been paying; but the, French péople will bo sub- Jooted to greater ‘oxnctions for their bread, meat, and pétroleuin, and other articles’ which euter Into’the dnily necossitids of lifo. Ndverthaléss, the fajling-oft {n trado will bua foss to' both conntries, We will loso o good customer for what we have to sell and what we produce; in exoess of our own wants. But protoction will be vindleated, Qiir countrymen.will sco protoction prie- toally 1llustrated by two nntions of enlight- ened people destroylng what might bea most oxtensive and profitabie tridé to both,~re- talintory prohibitlon of trade; @iven fo the ‘extéint of making bread thord difficult to get ‘and reniloring: nieat linposslble as food, The total yirohibition of alf “trhule, thé éatablish- . mehtof absolute non-intorcourso of a coul merelil afinractor bityyédn thd two countrics, to'ls » porfeot pleturd of protection only wants to he mpde universal betweon njl natlons, Weonly necd to have our brond- stuls, cotton; and provisions exeluded from il nther countries to hnve our protective sys- ‘tein made purfect. o h Wo called attantion thé other day to the terriblo eatnstrophe supposed to have over- takon the mnniitacturers of liostory I New Tampshire, ‘Fhe Bupremé Court recently deelded that tho duty really levied on jm- ported mixed woolen and cotton- hoslery of tho kind called knte goods was only 85 per cont, Instend of 83 por cent and ‘&0 cents por pound ns has beon hdretoford supposed, It 1s declared that thits defect in the Jaw must prove fatnl to tho hoslery industry In Now Hampslilre, whero the labor of woweén atd ohildren Is worse paid thau In any other New England State, nnd where seventy houts nre u week’s labor, . It scoms that the hoslory poo- ple Ju cooklug up thie farift 'on stockings con- serited fo an enofmoug duty on tha ‘ool whidh fhey use, ‘The rgeent decjalon js that the tarift Is defactive, nnd that while the duty on wool contjnues in full force that on stack- Ings Is only 85 per cent.. Oneleg of the pro- toctedt animal has broken down, . - Benator Blalr, In his appéal for ths hostery manhfacturers, read a lotter from one of them; in which he tells the sad story of tho !uu{larynu! fraud of the whole protective ‘lfl om; 1t seems that the duty fmposed on 'the ino . wool they use fur stoekings 1s 70 per |- cént, Xlo thefi declaréss As tho matter now stands, wo bave gnt )iad& ig order x: manufaoture, oilfl mg fully* Xnown It i3, more fhan probable “hnt otdtier partios ahaved his profits, An in- lerview with Capb Wlilte, of tho Rallway Mait Service, shows that Mr. Brady, late Becond Asslstarit Postmaster-Goneral, mus have been awarg of the fraud. It may be In- teresting to khot that carrying the.emply mall-bag from Bt: Louls to St. Paul and tak- ing fivedlays to do It In whs tonsidered part and pareel of the fast-iinll service.. . .. - r —————————— g young King of Rowmnnin.seems to be u level-hended rud politic gentloman, * The Roumaniahs fn the exuberance of thelr loyplty proposed to prasent’him' with'a Jeweled . crown worth 500,000 franes, This King ‘Clarles hos déclined. The crown: ho wishes Is ono to bo made from the Turkish guns capturéd Ly the Rou- manlarg at the battle of Plovna, Of course this propasal eAdnot but be flattering to the Rdumaulens, and ednnot but rdd to- thelr zedlouis loyalty to thelr first King, 'Tlien new scene. But to-morrow will be Sunddy,— henco the Incongrulty, the stidggle bétween necessity and duty, and the danger that Sun- day observancesnny boe wantonly violated by desperato men and distracted’ Women, It may bo safoly sof down that-ieven the best of brethren aud sisters, whoso lomes nre torn up, WHO nre ‘wii- certain where thelr medls are to come from, whiose “go-to-meottng” clothes miy be hacked awny under mountains 6f honsehold débris, are in no frame of mhid for churéh:going. The quiet and repose of tho Sabbath enn bring little pence to disqulctod souls who ard hialt living in one place and half In another, eating cold lunches, slceping on shake downs, apd disgruntled over the dirt, broken, windows, defective plumbing, and remarkable gollegs tlons of old cans, hats, boots and domestic rubblsh left behind by tholr predecessors, Even the most approved of saints deserves to bo leb 6ff at such a tine, and wo nitke no question that if he should do n little moving to-ahorrow It would bo ontred upon-the heavenly roglsters *oxcused on pecount of moving-day.” ‘The aventics, of course, will have dn advantage, and may make consldera- ble of ashowing at church, but tha streotd, which have to mmove and move fapldly, will stpy not - upon tho, drder -of thelr going, Somo will make u virtup of ne- ceasity and boldly Invade the thoroughfures, while other lesscourngeous souls will make clandustino expeditions or wrestle in private, unseen of thelr neighhors, with the total de- pravity of disjointed ' stoveplpes; smoky flues, leaking faucets, broken windows, and’ furnitire dilapidatéd on "route, which aro nover so depraved nson moying-day. ‘Thera are unguestionably ipny o¥il-dls- posed and maliclous porsons who d- vantage of thls dopravity and utilize it for the discomfort of thelr successors, thereby solncing: themsolves with o kind of éwcot' componsation for thelr own misoiies, There 1s n surt of grin satistaction to n party com- polled to leavé oune house for angther Th handing down o legicy of moat extraordi.’ nary rubbish aid filth to thie next conier, not’ because he hos any speclul gridgs agaliist tho next comer, but becanss tuls is the only way In which he can express his disgust withi the great general priuclple 6f - fioving. 1o can hardly bo called sunllclous, because ho knows that his predecessor his tradted nilm in the same maunar, and that, howover much dirt ho iy leave behind him, he will fiid an equnl smount awalting him in his new liome, So far from condemning auy violatlon of the Sabbath ordinances by these unfortunate purgons, thoy are ontitied to cominlseration, Every houseliolder found upoh tha streots porched upon the subimit of his household uffects should bo an object of pity; ‘Ho 18 a vietim grovellng In abject survitude, and at the merey of his teamster, No man can be more autooratic or irreverent than o darky: driver on moving-day, Ie may. plle the kitohon stove on tho ploj-glnss; run the logs of the dining-iable through the .family, portrait, expose’ family sveretd In the most audaclous wanner, but there Is no redross. With o laudablo deslre. to satlafy the curlosity of the nelghbora he will also urrange tho goods upon the walk ki tife most convenlent thanner for inspéction, bit 110 protest- can be made without imperlling tye safoty of’ fraglle goods upon which ho Will bo sure to wreak his veugdance,” Tl only really. happy iudividual upon such oo~ _oaslons is the small boy of the famlly, He s In hls element. }e gots fred yldes andis bappy, however doep down hemay be paeked awny fu tho contents of tho load, o has no compunctlons at leaving the old nelghbor ‘hood, for the suall boy’snssoclations are very' Driot in tenure, What 1 charige to hini, when an entlroly new world openis up to him,—new Jeets by proposing that his sceptre'be made nfter the model of that of some Wallachinn hero pf Wie sixtednth century. King Charles, not helleving he hing become monnrch of {he Toumanians by divine right, does not bo- Iieve in the-anolnting ceremony, which will, In conscquence, ba digpensed with. The young moni nencos wWoll, 3 TEMPERANCE ARD LABOR IN RABSA- <ot OHUSETTS, 'The report of the Magsnehusetis Bureau 6f Statlstics of Labor for tho yeor 1880 has re- cently beon published. 'The subjects treatod of aro: (1) Industrinl Arbliration'and Con- cllintion} (2) Statlatics of Drunkanyoss and Liquor-Solling; (8) UniformIoarsof Lnbor; and (3) Influence of Itemyierancoon Crime. On the subject of wrbitratlon the report is conflned ,to o -history, by M¢? Josoph D. Wecks of the result of effurts to establish such o sysfom T DGR ania and Ohio, egpocinlly i tlio tron and coil Uistricts, De- spite nll tho Inboks 16" nd, the project of a gehoral and peri nt i of voluntary arbitiution ‘has | mide but Wttlo progress, while that of ‘cstabllsfing n legal systein of arbitration hns utterly fulled,, ~, | . 'Ihe report givés as statlstics some, rather Incomplute returns a8 to tho number of. ar- ruats for drunkenness in Mussachusetts dur- Ing tha ten yoars 1870-1870, : The averago number of citles and towns in tho State was Bi4; of which from 155 to 200 mado uo re- ports, 83 made no arrests, ‘and ‘only from 75 to 100 fndde rbpoits be thé niwbur arrested. ‘The reports of the 'number of arresty wore froni less than one-third of the towns, and the jotal numberpf brrebts dirlii tho ten yoirs WA 280,718, Th§ n ] 7 - Dirrox's prediction the other day that tho Irish ténauts would reslst evietlon at the peril of thelr)lves seems tn be borne out by tho eyents which have sinee occurred. At New Palins, in the County Limeriek, yester~ day o party of balliffs, protected by 500 sol- diers mid polleemen, attempted to evict some tonants, Tho people, to the number of 4,00, somé of them armed with revolvers and other wenpons, assembled, and groaned and stoned -the ' Slierl and his nsslst ants, and dired the mllitary forco to do its worst. Tho police chargod the crowd several times wlithout cffect, Finally the baliffs became frightoried and ro- fused to point out the houses from which the tenants were to be evieted, and the mil- itary forco was obliged to withdraw, It is tundérstood that anothér” Attempt will ‘be wmade to eviet, in which ease thero may be Tot work and somd bloodshed, * Tire evidences inerense dally of the success of Secrotary Windom's refunding schome, Asrapldly ns the people fawmiliarize thom- selves with thé mothod of extending the canlled 6 per cents at 8)§ per cent Intorest they are sending in thelr bonds to take fd- Yantago of the onpom'mlty./ Tiva export agents of the ‘Tronsury are poiv on thelr way to Europe to” extend thg/same facilities to forelgn owners of the énlled bonds. Iow Many of these are held In Europo seoma toba dififcult to determine, but it is probable that ‘European holdors wii] befound ;tsnnxlm\u to recélve B3¢ per cent on What amounts to a “call-loan” as the Amerlean boudholders have showvn themselves to be, The Secrotary of the Trensury csflinated, when he nu- nounced his program, that about one-half of tho galled 0 per conts would be oxtended at the new rate, butit now looks as though the entire outstanding fssuc—nbout $200,000,000- 13 to be converted or gxtended Into 834 per eents, and that the Government will bo able 10 make the satue disposition of the outstand. Ing 5 per cents. . 3 4 T was o vigly, prohibltory llyuor luw In forco, in Massuchusatis, pud-.duripg. tha succevding flve years tho snlo of ljquor was llcensed, ‘I'he retyrns are necessdrily incomplate; but during theso two puriods the roport glyes the number of - plnces in tho Htato vhero liquor whs illegally sold, * This : whole: niimber of | towns 1il tho Staté disriug thé teis yiars was 835—844, OF thesd diarTng the fifdt five yeak. tho numbar ot towih Mgéi& thero wora no plades whero Mquor wad Hibgilly &old was fitty-nihe; durini the lilter Hive yeats tho nummbir of toiwis Wiiere 0o lquor was ille- gilly sold was sixiy-thres, ‘Whio following fryrea toll the sestof thoptorys Yoo 0f places iy Tur condition of Russin at the present time may be deseribed as volegnie, Tlio de- mand for reforms, though not loud,—~for a loud demand would bo treated nsseditious,~ i3 deep and earnest, The young peasantsare much more intelligent than thelr fathers, and are sullenly discontonted at thelr pros- ent condition and political status, Hevolu- daty of veut on sgll fi.\{hlg .u!"’ 5 la cost us here, und In m’ln»! the othory wero otllerwise disposed of. In 1678 the numbe¥ ‘of: prodecutions wng 2,887; 124 conyletjons, and 148 Acduittals. There were other forins of flquor offerises; 1n 1671 there woro },628 prosecutions for liquor, *“nulsdiices,” and 548 conyletions: and i the' same year 5,410 progecutions for luuor-keew- were 8,803 prosscutions Instituted; there to ussume o tome of fndependence | HRopublican sideof the Senate, 'Thig wasp |-tunitles for expeditious jnto the nelghbors’ | I mako s botter profit than wearo now got- | \wary 1190 convlotions, i which causes great uneasiuess In ofils | furmal notice to the Dowocrats that hewould | yavds, and o complete retaxation of the far- }m-;yymx(uu%m&fifmfiyof‘fl‘: 'i%«:‘}?&{m‘.fi y . e Mo f th mé 1 o n 1] v Cunad, 4 gladly g back I tuille should bo vatablished therd, us thoy certaiuly wili bo if this decision ‘were o stand. It thus appears that the tarift on wool— supposed to protect American wool-growers —Is the yeal destroyer of the mauufuctury elal elrcles, and they ave well known to ‘sympathize with the ulms of the Nihilists, pven If thoy condemn the means employed by-that body. In the.meantimo the new Czar hus dune very little fu the way of lusti- tutlng thgse reforms which tho Nihiltsts de- not act with thew in any case, and that ho was disposed to cast s lot permauently with the Republicans, But the Democratlo lcad- ers weru foath to lose Mahone's voto, which would give thém u majority in the Senato; they hung about hiw and enjoled blm us long |ly disolpline owlng to the dowestlc con- fuslon § All the bolldays of the year coms blued eanuot equal moving-day with him, for he not only.oves into a new world, but In that new world ho s the envy of all ‘other swull boys, whose pavents dow’t move, and Is -valunble coinpond of facts; praotically ', packoted a. mx} L $4414,828 botwoon thew, * Norsoy eould woll afto: !to puy Cor thist diuvior that wag givon hiwm by his .well-kpowin Cuunl v | ‘braped Bqolullain, and was for yvare tfm Intimato g, fot .which thera were 4,687 convictions, The prosceutlons In 1870 for liquor nusance wero 2111, and 1f8 eonviclions, and for Ifuot-keoping 4,244 prosceitions and 24 con- victions, Thoe total of proscentlons aud con- victions durihg the two perlods of five .yoars cach thus comparo: ¢ 4 who fot montha hds becs Tcrous wild_tribes miong e 2% U the ther to war, This \ myatio fudivigge 5 o In durkness,” s tho Aratis el iy 1o have gainod kreat Infinonen (M 18 Blieiks of tho nativo triben, |1y h‘" iy ponncducntlon, and I possesses” S Bum military knowlodgo and axporionec. °f fug to Informntion from F'ronch source; ,,A I Kabloutl, and bo 8 6 membor of gy o 04y ition Algerian famil erlatog Conviotiops y reslding in the proyent Tho 4w of the Stal Saukahrlas, 'Othurs, howaver, nsery sy now leader of tho Kroumir fs b French Cald of the mamo nn::::"!:“"“' wan dischargad from hs oflice hegne® ™ I5i premises; (2) <o aéll nalt liquor and wines | danworous intrignes among thg ml.fi.c\a,',':f of iy contalning not .over 15 per ¢ont of alcoliol; et 1V0 ey, “01LD JoR" GILLEsPIE, of My, rriillant, well-prosorved nluuuslrl,sn,',fn“'“l. viowed the dthiar day ot the Missigg) en Commission, Ha quotod Tom Nenyer Pt ohoo said that tho tffaloos were \m'“"'ti glncors, the amigrunts the noxt, and y e tary ougineors Inst and—worst, o g, pivintdos e (8) to sell malt Nquor and cider to be drunk on tho proinisds; (4) t sell any, kind of ifq- uors not to bo drunk on the premlses; (6} to sefl malt Mators, wines, etc, 1ot finving over 14 por cent aleohol not t4 bo drunk on the premises, In 1878 n. specinl lcenso to drugklsts for specinl purposes wna author- fz0d. Tho'rntes for theso llechsos Word (1) $100 to $1,000; (3 and 8) not less than 850 nor mora than 82504 (4) $30°td $6007 *(5) $50 TiR ‘sthr-routo tincarthed rlx lakn.lg‘lo redounid aa little to the :r‘:}:l?le :‘rl:[ b expture of the Wi T Grant, Y g iy to 8160, f 8 Ko ——— Undor this Inw In 180 _tho total number of PERSONALS, licenses fssued in the Btate wns 5,034, and "Th star routes iur Ahore whs’ réceibed thardtor ¥58,500.: fins- Just beginning 4 ton lssued 2,134 ligensos in 1879, 1in18j0there were 357 towns nof granting Heeinses and 111 towns granthifg thent, Tht convictions for drunkenness In 1874; the Iast year of the Pro~ hibitory law, were 23,748, and tn 1839 thoy waére 10,311, . Anotlitt branch ot tho feport 14 ddvoted to Information obtained by direet nqulry mnong manufneturers, employers,. and workmen of nl! kinds as to certaln questions, _"T'he tables are véry elaborate, and the teésults réatlied are substantiolly o followas <. 4 Massachusettsis the oniy one of the New England States where ten hours’ labor Is re- gavded with any degree of uniformity.as tho dny’s work. ‘The cost of gottiig cotton anid raw ‘inaterial at the factory and-goods to market s something groster In Maine and Now Hampshire than in tho other States, Dbut the rate of wages.and the ayernge enru- Ings of workmori iro fess In tifose two States than In the othér New Engluid States. Itis evident that Masanchusetts, with ten hours, produces as mueli bt Iian and per loom or lighted. A 3listako Isu’t 80 hadly n 116 won n race the othor ‘my!.'"_‘}:’;::;;lmrd[ Baneroft, the storlan, walk: mitos ovdry dny, althougt Over 8 year o 10 **Don't look for anithing rom me g wook, Tam olehning houso.'—8, J, Ty, ol ‘;,(.:'ngla tlf‘:h‘lnk' of 1t, I don't knoy Wheth, er tue Doyl afaded fraud® ", i Ialstead, . - o el 1613 now bollavad that Slttingull g vy Ing for his #pring pants to b eo i goming in to surreadod, el m" Elizabeth: Cady Stanton’s fourtn s Rt j soon Lo marry a Frencl lady. Qirls beconiing acarco fH thia countryf Aoy Gen, Dutler says * that maligni mortal, Bon shonld not view ufi‘nny nnm‘ nsnd hght. He mmay grow out of it v Tha only consolation to be derl thd battlo of Shiloh -consists ih llxu':ndulm those.who weras killed caunot writo lottersty nowapapers nbout tho fight, L] _ Boneath this lttlo tombstong + And flowergcentbd groon q frprifoney Lles Arabelln Murphy, per spindle as tRé otHer Stales with oleven . As usual=koroséne, aiit yore hotrs; and that wagds fnie 45 Ingli, | —Chicdgo Obituary. We havo often ‘alluded to thé yaluo of « collego eduoation, )whenav%m ‘whio waa fok savoral years Captaln of the Taly orew, . rocontly matried a Philadolphls yousy lndy wuohag a fortuno of 8100000 fn her oxy right, 2 “YoungITusband”—House-clenn for thd womon to tio towela around ::gum;fl ond run the nmien into tho stroot without any brenkfust ovory morning for n week or whllo thoy broak Inwnps aud splil whitewesh o the stais. Tight lacing caused the llver of an Tndfan woinan to'grow fast to tho oplgustrium, catuing hur death. Ludfcs canaot be too careful guarding agalogt such d cndamity s this, Whey tiglie laolng myet bolndulged jn tho opigastriuy should bo romoved asid logked up la tho bureag drawor for safoty.—Charies Francls Adame, Boston Corbett, who shot WilkesBooth, § 8ald to be living now in or noar delphiy and said to be oxtremaly poor. Pverybedy shuuns bitn; ho complaing; no one will give. bia employment, and at tines ho hus not cnoulh i ont. Tl¢ thinks that ho ought to bave bad i Government ofildo nrid a ponsion, and ke has, o stond, beon 8d shamotully overlookdd s toby n pathutle’ dxample of tho togratitude of publics. if not_ higher, thera than in_those States where tha mills run longer; On this point of the hours of labor tha refiort glves as tho settled convletiofi oF midiinfucturers of Now Englond that ** ton hotirs woild be Gdtter for manufacturer and operative, If 1t could e matie wnivorsnl.” ‘The roport dovotes fi lirge Spaco to this quéstion, and strongly urges that tho ninnufactrers thirohgyout all - the New. Edglarid States shail ke ten houts the universal rule, I cdntolidd that'thd ex- perience of every town, every.factory, and every employer who hdas udopted tho ten- hour rule Is nll ifi faver of tho general adoption of that time. Thete 1s not.nn fnstanco whero that rulé has been adopted that the proprietor desives or tvould réturn to the longer lhours. Outslde of Mnssa- chusctts the hiours of Inbor rauge from slxty- slx to seventy-two hours ver week. . The ruport hos this to-say upon one part of this questions . o G Tn bur cotton mills espeoiully the womon and s o pllassgeshl, ho feian st from two-thjrds fo five-sixths of the wholo nnd tho proportion of thom 18 stondily. Incrousing, Aud what aro’ thosu women and children, but tho vory wonkaat and most dopondent of “all tho Peovlu ‘Lhoy have o disposition to. pgitate: They. bave yp poworta ohungo uny exlsting cons ditlon of soclety if thoy wauld.and thalr mind does not work, in Lhnclx;’n‘lng 11 All that 1s pussiblb to thom s ol dorimy, dnd bear. ' Now, fod tios, tig sifong, thoso who benr rule, the suvoreigns of the land, e —— PUBLIC OPINION. Naw York TWorld (Dem.); Now s thotim 10r prudodt Dehuocrats to Iny by amminius for tho cnmpalgn of 1834 by clipping and puw o hours of labur ars but tun all over the coun- | ing in thoir scrapsbyoks whut thg Conkling pr tey, fut whiro tlio women and childrop pre- d'8ny abaut Hueilold oy e pévnnenno‘(hu bours of lubor, ne.o rult;‘ q E.‘l";.nboyu': é’oulglsl’firk.“lq s mm‘a.p e eloven o more, Anr - tho cuestion “"X in this land which aims for ey Il‘l“ly AN thut tho woakest, the inost help! ont, aro Juadod with tho burdert of thp jiore Lours, whily tho jlru,ny. the uble to bear, and tho cantrolling, orily hive thy less hoursto work? And thig question which, an operative wnlle pd in ouir ear n n privito room Wb hinvé tak: {the liborty to utter uloud, 4 5 2 Tho strusgle of the mhnufacturers In,QhF management of thefr wills 18 not with_tho, well- behaved, but with the Hi-behaved: aud ol of the 1l-ohaved hivo two: and modt of thom all throe, of the ovil traits wo. huvo muntloned: The thought of tho mandgbr Ia chietly whero hia rreutest strutu and offort are: and ‘thesy (e to oop within bounds of uso the illbehaved. Houco his tirst thought concerning 10sd haurs 18 that it would unly bo au opportunity for his most trublesomo nm&lloyd- tobo more troublésome, nnd he is filled with thy fear of thig resuit. Honoe his Impulsa i3 in seif-protection to voslat ten bours na bo would an lnundution of thesea. Ulfitl} (h&‘u feeling is ubated; ton Lours eanuot bo obtaing 5 p Lct no operative sack to biolittlo thia dlmnullr. 1t is altogethor tho most doepty and generatly folt objoction ta ten hotrs of unythlug we have found, It is 1ot 100 tuch 1o Ky, thut tho sober, the industrions, aud rr\n[ul oporatives, aad ail who Beck for better tnlugs for thorn, have to oarry the loafors, the tipplers. and the snloon- koepors on thalr bnckss that these aro biofore ull other things tho gréatost ntstnale to ton houra; and that but for.this.katetul ‘lond piled high upon thom, und which, ns thiugs tow are, they cannot m:lg but carry, the woll-hehaved opor« atives might baveten hours in a wonth, A _Ihis roport, like alt other reports of tho Massachusetts - Bureni of Statisiics, is o Bangor (3e.) Whig (Rep.): Many yan ajo thero lved {n o quiet, modest viltageih western part of our Btdtd n good, éredliitly clefgyman, 8 littlo demonstratlve and sutspokea porhaps. dliw Legletaturg got fnto i potlial fix, from day to day perfocting nothing; ool {mmm ao!cugnx rw\flgn‘;n. wad ::ut;n; fof m'ml‘ his wisg: O Lord, bnvo commassion on out by Wwildored Represdntitives and Sondtars, Thet have besn sittlng and sltting sud buve hateid notlting, O Lord, lot theth urlso from theiz et and go homo, and ull tho praiso shull bo Thios" Baltimore Gazette (Dem,) : 1t Isunderstod that tho Teatot party 1n Ohio will nomjuate R D. Hayes fof Govornof, Then Rutticrford il o culled on ta expliyin ajh abont thoso branges with the puip takdn out nd tho vacacy flkd Wwith omau punch, which wore used to moliitd tho thronts of his Cablnot on Sunday eveal whén thoy” bud becomu husky with proloas E’ulmmlf’. 1o publio Mr. Hiyes olwaya e i linorls stralght, but thero have teey Whispors that ho cieelod n his broast-pockits dopy of “Dliglim's Progread™ with o soppr sorowed on, . Baltimore Gazelte (Dem.)t A certainsmall towa In. Ohlo rejoices in o Mayor, Cuoma Couiollmen, Polico dudgb, Céronor; Clly Na~ sl Vaptain of fho Watols, a forcy of resulst and spocinl policemen, an Inspector of Milk s Inspector of Vinegar, & Monsurns 0f Qrain, b Souler’ of Welghts and Meusures, Subvefofel Luuitor. Monaurers of Woud mud 1ark, Welgts ers of Conl, Inapaotors of charconl:oadlethcf Mo, #nd potroletin, and a swall cotior pound-kespers, ficld-drivers, urid fenee-viestrs And yot tho Ohlo wan 18 not hop :mfl huviig alt tho ottices in oas and grouped, and presented with o view of their use In forming sound, judgments and en- ‘forelng the toaclyiige” of Gxporlence, e ——— Arthe thue that remackable dinner was sivon to Dorsoy in Now. York by distinguishod “Stalwarta,” and whioh Dorsoy himesify; It fs ‘8t; Lotls Republlean: 'Ihie Chleas. papets aro fmpking desporatoe offorts to convloed thomseived thut they aro notdisturbed by th oxtraordindry wavoment of graln dowa Fivor to, Now, Orlonus, bilt despite the oot with which they: aro laboring at that tatk not seem o' mdot.with nitieh success. 80 us what conld be done in the way of 8 e3p trude , botwoon 8t, Louls gnd Europe rid o Urlongs was yera thoory, Cbludf{n cmn\hhfl“ eyésto tho possibllitics of ' tho future, but1h nov so ensy to bo blind to tho rcnll(msflk present; and the shipment of w million bul of wraii down tho river overy week i verym! ofaveitlity, - - . “ Clnelnnatl Gakette: “Now that Gen. 14‘: Wallueo hng gat his band lu, would be n,fll“ . well to oxplain why he did not keep onvith B division to &ihloh, and como Into nctionon ! wald, pald for, It wis suggnsted’ thag i¢ wos ot upus an indorsomoit fo ald Doveey In gettlig o friond of his put into tho Post-Dlllvo in ehariu of tho star-route husinesd, How near the, truth thls oxlpunittion prabijuly W miy be'tnferrod from . tho fudt. tint umong tho star-routy con- tractora aro Dorsey’s brothor, his, brother-in. law Peok, and bis foraler partnery Minor, Dor soy hlinsolt ¥ery likoly hud Intdiosts, i oftior contruots, but tha ho ltd uothing 1d complitn of as regivds tho coutruots uwarded to - thuse throo, the following littlo tuble nzq'wll {ncreased Number of Origh 'y {8 aware 3. W.Dorse mflmfi“'“fl‘.’"{é‘.‘r avant, e it P e o o git e} T Teoeate: o 0. o3l | roud tothe linding. Instoad of keeping o8 00 J s luiflfil 186,058 | which would take hiin Into nuuln:n. "":';l:nnw 1 s 3 Feap gl | ., 8 i cust Bl LT | Hoa b tha et (b pubiie nid ] tag alwags been puzzled by thnt affair, oS 4 Camman noLIGH tuay o frah division, 0Bl well prepurud into aotion dn tho thinkatof of un enomy uirendy mugh broken by 'qupm' monts of the battle, would be ne thio a3 Gy tlop ue p commender could ..mmrv.vfl unw almost cortuinly bo deolsivy of the attio, " Memphls (Tenw) Appeal (Bourbait Ufi:i Whan wé rotloot on the sulferluge wh!n( . Davis has endurei for tho Bouthorn pooy e'l " ndmiration of bis charaoter {8 intenstfied. e desorted his prosluvory principles: N:}w suivehng spaniel at tho fout of tho vmf" tlon genqyeror, hy would have mcuhnu‘ e houors lavished upon Lougstreet. lhuflm_e forred obscurlty to disgruco, and endure Mmz indigulty that unuid bo ofturod to s fulleh G g tuln, HO wns @ prisoner without i orie Col sgifust Blm (: bold for courtd Whic BTy 10 {ry him becuusa thore wus no 1aW 300, him, gud tho suprowme tribunal of v“l Bo Wb {on snuuudud il puloaso(y). BU ;io ‘s cor chatnod 1o the tlour whilo fn prison 1 vidtod culprit. agened Dtrolt Tribune (Rop,): Tho oM TL, that has boes roposed in them, and 180 PO Brady lu coneo ppoars s It what may bo called | Dorsuy's’ “iliitary fawlly " “Htalwart adiirers,” -1 0 A —————— Tupe tHUld of Safildu's. Intist plag, Divor- on,'? seoms to huye bscomo the standing motto of tho Von Hatxf f«"’ faially ot Germany, Tho 83 von Hutzrald, who em- friena of the Boclalist Ferdluand Kassulle, In ‘cousoqupnes of which shé reenlved the sufnamo Of “Tha Iteq Countess,” Was divgreed Irom hor husband, Lnesalle copdutsing pertelal, JI6F only son, tho Germun Ambassndor ut Constantinople, who wmarricd it Weplthy *Amerload ludy, wis divoircod from hior anly o short tlino ko, Prince Carpluth-Beuttien hipsuppjlod fog & divorce trom his wite, also a Natzfold, whbd rafi gwhy to tho funny shores of. lealy vlth' Binparck's son Uerbort. Frenoh papers now sjaje that puothor member of the Hatafeld fumily Is about to fo)- loy in the foutsteps of Herbert von Blsmarok and Priicops Chrolath-Bouthan:Hatafeld, by | Felntions vocupiud by Mr. recy W A . ) > 4 1th tho Govornmoyt und Ly Mr. ) R‘;fll:';w:m' mm'"m‘. providedebisoan | b ubiican purty, imposo upon _‘::':, —— : duty of confussing tholr gulll‘i l.',‘,',’unmwh“ , Ture Toropto @inbe, in accounting far the | tho penaities of routremont and PUEEL, . cxodyd fram the Hominign to the “Biates,” ro- of \anlnq thelr ontire inuocence ngrks: o+ : le g aint of syeplcion shull oiug 10 186! onts. For M, Donoy thla ba especlally S0 t oot be conoenled—I - i o PRI m‘m--mn“l oray oF o uonts ['sary, Mo ls & man vt yast cxperienct {¥ncthe Sumooay Neputll bt uls 2o | enqres Bus e sato, e it it ntry, i fauen 1 '“urm for thom. As the rAmurleub;x gulmufl%m:mc:'fl M‘l position aud the Infuessy 8 B v -u:muu wateh the northérn star whi slghing for lberty prior to ms“ m‘:’m‘\,n:i thale vy li; oiropitous routes ta Gmiada, an the f?v‘w\‘)’h:. thoy lhlnklm rrw*fni of im #r::;. Accorning to lute Viennn paperg it ls re- vorsed from Tuuls that the augredsive woves' wmonts of the Kroumr Arubs against the Frouch were caused by un uukuoewn ageut rony 14 gave L to swindi tho Guveruniehs foryg 3 alirsurvion s ponirucié, bo tins U LI for which no condemnation ean h”n Yo wreats His service to the itepublicun party ¥o,qpuly ut, If bo decelved while bo s0rved Foegie o hiv sepvicy u mpany 10 ueeompl 404 olierupt. onde, tho Nepuliict VLol .‘wuun(o'u u:“num l[u. c(llllll:clllir- fi': horsey b 180 3 plahent, e 1, Whtout BE “tha Suurges mudy ugniust Pl | Hepublicun pasty will b gind 1o 5¢¢, Voo uuncucmmfnuuu. It hets uuhl)-‘wmu Heaa party L ju Ho seude KespoLs

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