Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 14, 1881, Page 4

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TIE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: TUESDAY. 1881—T PAGIN, ; om ry solleltation for Aimlrew D. Whit the rane tho people,—and not tome. Ff Join | Judge Robertson w 1s “*allrectly con- nto the seeond place in the | cable Is then continned through the ay AMEN OW Otter ptr ¢ ay . roy 9 4 rire and Cornell, If the attempt had been shiply | YOUN your congra mint ae F. Buteen, trary fo Republican prinelples aud National | Government one of the most noted of its | tnstened to the crown of the arch with rant atuek up and wiaterutee? a! ic ‘ V4! ¥ BEY» | todetach him from tho Huck forces he mlxht | ye autmit this tittle precedont Inthe his: | custom." ‘There Is nothing In any nuthor- | Chiefs, er aa bate En eE Soe ee hovels sfuitiea; thoduntanewisenttinc ate Gat 2 oaaily have been persuaded to renew bis | tosteal recodd of Preattent Ceant and Miz | tative exposition of Republican principles, | ‘The wemination of Arthur shocked tho | should any brenie occur, whiel ta not Nee ee Harvard, and the latest selentiie dert® ‘TERMS OF SUBSCRIETION. vote for some antl-Conkling Stalwarts. Dut there fs at teast probable evl- POSTAGE PREPAID, | denea that Bradley was vol. “appronehed” 812.00 ab onl), ant that he is a purty to nm conspirney to assist ‘Mr. Conkling Conkling to the poblle alongside of the “Ine | Herta the reeord of the Republican party, | country, Before the delegates could hurry | po the case, tho sewer Is nceesalbla at every . wae ; suit whteh thoy clalm has been offered Mr, | Which denles to the President the exercise of | ont of the hall the murmur of disapproval | manhole, and easily traveled, Tent. toxte, cbt oi “Waotenger Ce Conkling by President Cartletd, the appointing power which the Constitution | sounded in their ears, and they hung their | who tein charge of tho eewornge xyrtom In tho | xeiyuita were Strickinnd Knvense RM Prine Gen. Grant mistook his man, howeverg in | Cotfers upon him, nor to the Senate its cons | heads In shame, ‘Che man who hnvented Ulstrict, states that ho thinks thore can be MY | stig flenrlotta te Kuenss, and the Hee hs RY MAIL-IN ADVANCE Dally edition, one year. Parts ofp year, por mont salty und Sunday, one yon The Idenot the Conkling ense, We reproduce tho essen- | Excentive appointment and Senatorial con- | proven that conetiiation doesnot coneltiate. Heche tbeentin eine Tac reemiote preherde Tee ree aren Mecentiety Overs tial partof his conversation within representa. | fitmation to Government offtees In New York | "Tha Hopubllenn Convention of 1880 acted | tory to tho distribution of tholt oarensses. A | 4 Sr. fteld would aay, Just tov, vreposter tive of Tre Trtinunk: In spite of his protest. Mr, Merritt was ap- | with consummate wiadom im tho morning of | recent yisitor nt tho Agenoy thus descritios the | ridiculous for any use. ously Do you think Conkling made a right move in | Pointed ani confirmed ns Collector in the | the day on whieh Its Inbors wore concluded, | scone: Me Addrona THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, coinbined vote of the two parties in tho Leg- Corner Madison nnd earborn-ate, Chicago, I. | isinture. (4) Ils vactllating conduct in AT-Old colte | voting first ngalnst Conkling and then for fatty 4 scar, <i he i : stitutional right of cojifirming his appoint- | Arthur's candidacy showed a keen apprecia- ablcction to the use of sewers for this Purpose TC, Knenss, The balance of the Mek Thine : te ay weaning and PPtday, year. by trnmping upa false acensation agalnst his fepeoriie See ahaa ee re mets. Gen, Grant hinself did not always | ton ot Conkling’s reat character. He fore- LA atl ade ae Ee will goovor ns soon a8 more tensors mre ant | pura AYRERE . Roleten opponents, Some of the points against hi | trom machine pollties forever, and that he | couswlt. tho Senators from any Stato | saw that Conkling would support Arthur, | privitega would havo to be denied tho com- | A voet exponds w three-cont stamp to tp » ne copy, por roar, are: (1) Hla previous bad character, (2)The | jad no purpose then to lower Himeelt tothe | from which he imade an appointment, | not only for love of him, but fo be ro- | panes.” He thinks It would not interfore with | quire: ip ( RU eee efforts of his friends to drag ont the it | sointot hanging round the barrooms of an’ | Nor did individual Senatgrial opposition | venged upon Ms enemies, But tf ho | the flow of water, nnd that tho wires woul! be Pinateunnenea care ns tbe 20m ! Bpcelman coptas sent feos vestigation, aud postpone a falr trial anda | Aipany hotel with the Vice-President and | “Ways prevall upon him to withdraw n | thought to permanently conctlinte Conkling | reure fromm many of tho damuoa Inchtont to | and sofurth., We do not know, unl Gieo Post-Omeo address in full, tnetuding County | verdict, (9) The netlon of Speaker Sharpe | poor Platt begging votes for a revlection, Nomination of upon the Senate to reject ils | he miseateulated. No sooner was the elee- Silat enone: She array uae ee toy, of tho New York legislature, _ MEANING. aa may bo mada cliher by draft, oxprom, | It MekIng. the Committes on Investigation = . x numtnations, ‘Cho Simmons ease in Boston | tlon over than Mr. Conkling resumed Ms | Guity, ana to-morrow ‘wilt tse thom for tho | Yl | ost-Onico unter, or in rogtatored latter, atour risk, | With a majority of Conklingltes, though thoy | GEN, GRANT ON CONKLING'S CASE. is neonspleuows Instance of this, but there, | game of sulks,—became a subject for more | frat time, ‘Thqeiltors of Amerion are Wwalting fo , Saat alia aS cry BUNGEE, caperwnail compose less than one-third of the Repub- Gen. Grant, while passing through Chica. | Were many others, Besides, Mx, Conkling | concilintion, Again, in the parson of tha 0 cha NGE Movelaaatnte ‘ths tant site naee slo soroe} ithe, In England it 1 pale delivered! Sundectactated. AO contaperweek, | Heat strength, and barely one-fifth of the | go, expressed himself very wnequlvocaly on himself had acquiesced fn a precedent of | Clief of the New York machine, it was NH Of tho most novel and Interesting fen © papers, : a POSTAGE, him, whieh creates a presumption thet he Entered at the Post-Oftee at Chieago, Aly ae Second | was persuaded’ by the Buck side rather Chess Matter, than by the other. (5) {is own confession For tha vonefit of aur patrons who desire to sond | that he either solicited a bribe or tempteds "After the rations of Slour, sugar, and Mr. Hayes having stoppetl butlding ony " resigning faco of Conkliing’s violent oppositton, and | only to play tho fool $n the evening. It | coffoo had been issued, tho entire assembly of | coops lorie enough to remnrk th ote Che wanted to resign 1 think he was all fi Tet trod to. th 1. Six fat onttl hat Mr, Conti rightin doingan, Mele aprout maneand felt | Yet Conkling did not resign, Why should | nomtanted an unfit man to the Vice-l’real- | Tulane rupalrad to the cotral Bix bat onttle | Is undoubtadty m lunatic, Cen, enn atogy huirt that not only the Presitent but Republican | he resign, then, when Merritt was promoted | deney to conciliato Mr, Conkling. In this ¢ Were thors. ‘Tho Indians Tountod tho corral } amoking tong enough to remark that Str, cat Ingle copies of TIF THEN through the mall, we 1 . . Senators should go eo directly contrury to He- “Hh re fenco. Thoy had their Winchester rifles and | ing fan high-toned gentleman, Mr. Cooke ee MI ae LAnnleHitrataut posianat Senator to do an unidweal net with dhe In- | pupitean principles find ‘Nationat-ouston, ite | at his gwn request nnd Robertson appointed | nominntion it violnted a great principle, and } thot tong-barroled rovelvors, The squaws lavchenended: ‘ll the cx-Trentdoee dee ant Dameatic Per Copy, | tentton of exposing him, and took xo man Paporeses gents | int bis confidence, unt! after he had got “| the money. (6) His assertion that he went TRIBUNE BRANCH OFFICES. to Sessions 0 few mintites before the meeting : qninvge hes pilshed branch | Of the Legisinture and asked whut reasons omices tor tha revolpt of aAtecriptions and ndvertisa= he should give for changing his vote. Ifthis felt that a gront Injury had been done to tho to the vacancy without asking his (Conk- | to-day it 1s reaping the fruit of its error in | sharpened tho sealping-knives on stones. Somo 7 8 party, and that go much dissonslots peevalled i | jing’s) leave? Gen, Grant is mlataken In lils | the conspiracy to Injure it outered upon by fn small axes. Whon each bail_chosou hls po- ent eae ond smoking olitics, And I botioved that Mr. Conkling, when | facts {f he thinks Judge Robertson's ap- | the man sought to be concilinted and aided | sition on the fence, all was ready for tho-) On} what is sweeter than a rain ind On feeued, dtd not intend to enter politics | polntment was in violation of any pledies to | by the nan used to concilinte him. By both slamanter, The on beens neatly Fenntle at Abl nuthing but the first sweet tai iitet ctWhat thon do you think induced him toseck | Conkling, and heneo Conkling's previous | theso men the Republican party ts disgraced, | thofleht of tho Indinns on the fonco. They ran | mon evory fuuthored warbler Is in tone, srptlectiont acquiescence in Merritt's appointment and ——— 1 about tho corral ne moments. When | Ang avery brook aud rill inne Forelan: Fiehtand Twelve Pago Sixteen Page Papor. Ho: bis son bf he di thoy boeame quict tho ‘solocror,’ us he 9 called, pe CS plearagy ments os follones: : aeae, episodes truly related, It eonviets Drndivy | sirestn tow tie piblfe tat the dorsandineatis | confirmation made iogleal his subsequent | 7 MURDER OF OFFICER MAHONEY. | hose tho Indian for tho ret anol, A tito wa | mon gues the weary ‘ SEW YUK oom 2 Tribune Mullding. FT. Me> | out of hlsown mouth of Incredible mean- | IrowA, at hint since his sealenniten ew not tus | resignation when tho offlea was conferred | ‘Tho kilimg of Ofleer Mahoney of the Clil- | almod, tho word givon to firo, and a atcor oes tho weary mortal bnre his brow, GLASGOW, Scotlané—Allan's American News | ness. Ainnn capable of doing such a thing > Agency, 51 onfleld-at. would bo equal to any baseness that might LONDON, Eng.—Amorican Exebanye, 49 81004 | 9 required of hlin. = While fragrant airs, nade coot py; . “ upon Robertson. engo police force on Sunday night Instought | droppod. ‘This wns a boautifut shot nt 100 yards « showers, pres ¥ eryatel eu te ci Lee binge er vey People generntly will admire tho sentiment | to lend ton revision of the laws governing aenea 1 Rie rh eenae ata +Retresh tim awectly, ns they do me now, From tho sentimental polit of view, 10° which underiica Gen, Grant's sympathy with | the sate of pistols and revolvers,—onght to | aponrontly nof moro thin 18 yonra of ago, It | With rich perfume of ratn- body will bo offended at Gen, Grant's stick Conkting, but they will conden.n nis logic. Tead to the adoption of a rigid codo on tho | was made with n United States army pattorn =x AaNert, Whose Hair D1 Ing to Conkling throigh thick and thin, right subject of concealed wenpons, and to the | Coit's rovolver, ‘Phis distance about sixty yards, onng Mon Whose Hair Pulte, or rou. IE le oowalldcinwih charsetertatle: COMPROMISES OF PRINCIPLE. falthful administration of it. i ‘There ls no femrounte dove. lnusatoes ‘yn: dline ovur pie ¥ PUBLIC OPINION, of Cirant's to remain loyal to his friends, | ‘The wise statesman may well any: “Com. | Teasdn for the carrying of a revolver by any t Pr ateax —_— pe " tho Inst shot, so soon as tho sixth steer hart even through the most disconmnging condi: | promise mé no eomprointses.” In statos- | Weneenble citizen In a elvilized community | dropped, mon and aqtavs rusuod poll-mell into | Albany spncial to New York Ierata: yf tions, and regardless of what thoy may have | manslip compromises settle nothing; they governed by law, excep! nc! 1 ite the corral. Thoy began skinning the cattle | Chauncey M. Depow made tho following ate done; and It {ga quality whieh has won d- | merely postpone the evit tay. Meantime the | cltzen ts Hable, at any moment of his life, | white yot kicking. Tho navalty of tho slznt waa | mont for publication In tho Herat, in answer's ifration for thesentorex-President, notwith- | rel difference which enused the contention | (Y or night, to bo confronted by a plug-ugly | amusing, Within twenty minutes thoso Indiana } cortaln questions, being met at tho Kenmon standing tho fal ition in which’ It often | and which tt was proposed to settle by the | With m cocked pistol In tls hand. But in | had thoso six steors * butchored ‘—{t butehoriogr Houso ata Into hour: Filsh you would sap anding tho false position in which it often ninoty-ning eases outof a hundred the peace- | !tmay be enlted—and portions setected Inshed through tho Herald that T brought no moneyty nt. ‘Wet leaves —131Y F atroot, = GEN. GRANT ON INSULTS TO SENATORS, Tho defense by Gen. Grant for Conkling's Hootey’s Theatre, resignation Is romarkable for the point-blank treet het Clark’ and La, Salle, ‘here! : Fane er ee area srmngaas | essertion wherein he sald: Silver Wedding." tam not paying particular attention to polf- a tles Just now, but. pppanteale yt you want my MeVicker's Theatre: views on tho Conkling matter 1 rhuall not tesl- Madison stren’, tetwean Stnta ond Doarhorn. | tate to eny that ) am with Sr,Conkl ing and with Engagement of the Vokes, Famby, “Helles of tho | My, Piatt,—all overand vil tho time. Tha Now ‘Biteben” and“ Cousin Jo York Senators were lusulted by tho Presidont, who mude an appointment obnoxious to them, e " fen ly 9 coulpromisa becomes more anid more pro- vo | Albany. } teen Clare. etreat prone eee cnet iao4n, Enganc- Hd Ue de Mttce Fhe Foust HANG. boo oe ation between Grant and Conkling Tetncbal Slavery, about which so sai ableeltizen's rovolver ts of no use; itis in his | Ore, ery owe Killed for sho cniofa, cues favo paid for uo man's vote, Gor have Tuten 3 sites ee ila sree pete Compeag NTs suc anniterefvs tneariably Heewthe exaont thats | nave been of tha most intiuate charncter— | compromises were made In this country, | Pocket, While that of tho ruflan fs in tis | pies, Oueay’s widow, gota n bind-quarter trom | Hopo tho matter willbe. peated iu tue eRe Giang etree, AEMRG TMM. cotphy ethe Prostata "anpatitinen da fn Ua Staley tie ap: | like that of David and Jonathin—during | gtew more ant more hideous with overy at- Hu on eel tie! Melati ai manera this tot, tu honor of berdeceased busband.” | nnd that: @gmmeluston wile reneted 3 3000 94 } Remotes” a many years. All tho tlne Gen, Grant was | tempt to harmonize it with [ts opposit, free- sere Tf he a gn AR resign I think he ‘ ae was all right In doing 0, Me Is 4 proud man, ‘ SOCIETY MEETINGS. and felt hurt Unt not only tho President bw _—— Haggai Sere tere whould eo sodirectly cot {OLDEN ap Loar, . & AM— | trary to Republican principlos wud Nutlonnl 5 eee EN er aan Aen A sree m. | cuatum. He felt that a great injury had been : sharp, nt 121 La ballast. fhterastitue morn, Visitors | done to the party, and thut so much dissension weleumne, THOMAS G. NEWMAN, We Mf prevallod In [t that he did not care te romain D, GOUDMAN, Becretary, any longer in polities. And 1 bellove that Sr. a Conkling, when be resigned, did not tntend to Preside’ + dom, The Justitutlon of slavery has two | Benceable eltizen becomes Inflamed with pns- | Ix commenting upon the new project ot Albany Argus (Dom.): 'The real tourne A HOTMTUR ae He Ontnunentioe oo oy synonyms: bean and MEERA with sion or wine that lie uses hits pistol with | cutting @ onal through tho Tethinus of Corinth, | was between Assembiywan Bradley and Senta u for which Do Lessops fe reported to haveaccured | Seastons, Tho firat ia 05 yenrs of axe, fed continuonaly on Lonbony and taffy, He } nelthor 1s compromise possible, ‘Tho only deadly effect, and thon his victim Is a concession, tho London Giube saya: “ Tho.dis- | than medium hight, thick nel, Dink eee vay ’ Iso. % pencenble citizen whose death vod by had only to hint or intimate what ho wanted | Way to compromise with the barbarian fs |" f tance to be saved by it dacs not look very grout | strony features, sbowing under n mass of sbor to get it “Lhe indulgence shown te hin | first to conquer and then to elyttize him, aud hedeplores, It follows that the carrying of-) upon tha map, and ie atthe heat not. more | black hulr and Uehind an aggressive inuetacte, seemed to grow upon the use he made of It, | the only way toeifect n compromise in war pistuls by tho so-called Inw-nbiding | class | than woud be anved by wuttlig a canal noross inode ate grand ike that Of Wy long tee It was during this: porlod that Conkling ace is to rust the enemy and then nllow hin to does notin fact arm them against tho dis- | tho narrowest part of Scotland, Morcover, tho | 1! Ht, at of is lony-henited coun FAB Aa GASHIAN LODGE 50. ML To enter polities aman, reputable eriminal elnsses, ‘Thoy almost | saving would bo of iittlo valuo tntornauonally, | tart looks, sininontiy. solt-posserrer oe 5 RRR ee ioe ah aon Now, Gon, Grant was Prostdent for elaht | aired the habtt of regarding the New York | vouelliate himself. reeee kit bloouthirsty villains or robbers, | xcept to ships plyine botweon the Adriatic or and Yenlloetcalelteetive, and precise eta a ayerequestuy tw be pr te ARMM yenra, and unless lis memory has forsaken patronnge as his private proporty, or at least Compromises with factions in a pollteal butsometimes Jl x mewber of thelr own Itallan porte and the Black Sea or a Turkish | Words, aro us well known na his clerical clothes port in Buropo or Asia. Noithor on the road to | 884 bis piratical hat to our citizens, Crote, Cyprus, Tripoli, nor to the Syrian Washington dispatch to tho Boston Eeratd: consts, ‘vould vessels bo bonefited by | Itis understood that Mr. MacVeayh proposes to passing through it to any material ox- | retain eminont counsel to proseente tho cases, tent, or, at any rate, to such .un extent | W.A. Cook will play an important—but not the asto induce thom te pay any tolls. It will be | {mportant—part in tho cases after indlctmen, ehlolly as n benoflt to Athons and the Grovk | Ha will conduct the cases before the Grand towns thut tho work will bo appreciated, and it, Jury, William A, Beach, Seott Lord, of New must be expected, thorbfore, that the Grocks | Yur, NonJamin F. Macy, of Oki: eal ‘. viphain, willeome forward most readily to promotdand | dry suokon of as probable special counsel. it pay for tho schome. Indopendently, however, | understood that Enoch Totten, who {s one of the of its commercial value, the proposed now canal { Ivers of tho tocal Bar and an ablor lawyer will havea great Interest In tho oyes of all en- ort pants ed Fupeiapabetve i nll tho cone ginoora, The projoot must ofton have occurred | {hina hin, lnyersoil 1s counsel for aie tw tho active and cntorprising people who lived | Shattabarger snd Wilsou for Hrady, Bon Butler in thogo regions in tho goldon aye of Greuk his- | fs spoken of as adyigory counsct, tory; and it is somewhat surprising that the Omaln (Neb.). Bee (Rep.): Apostates are work should uot have beon curricd out at one of | qtways more zealots than tien Lorn and rated tho times whon a strong Government was at last | in tho faith, Jim Witson protests altocethertoo established ovor the wholo pentnsule. In most } inuch,and his rampant nntl-mononoly tj h pec. of tholr engineering works, auch a8 aquoducts | shows him to bo a domagog and bypocrit, The and vinduots, thoTlomans wore far aheud of U8; | raat that Wilson xoos farther than Jero Black and it will be rathor a now triumph to outdo ans | jn his tirade ngalnst tnonopotics fs within tet tiquity in the very hourtof tho ctassictorritory." | cnough to raise wruve doubts as to bis sincenty, Tm And when monopoly and ring organs oe Shum attacks on Wilson Lecnuso of hls extrene ‘THE Appolutment of the husband of Ma anti-munopoly views we ire inore than ever dame Gerster, un opora elngor, to an American } convinced that Wilson and. his trained alrhers Consulate in Itnly would suom to bo not entirely ara: blastn - vor ye Coat be fen aeons, r has supported her magnjilcontly for two yours, | to crenta sympathy for bin. Wo apprebent, she doubttess feols that it owes it to her that sho | howover, tho Huwicoye farmers have bul thelr should be token care of In the vacation season, | eye-teoth cut and can’t be deceived by such ‘Tho namo of Madumo Gerster'a husband is | **Wnaparent humbug, Gardint, What his diplomatic experience has The New York Tlince takes this view of ‘Deon or his familiarity with Amorfean custome | the Confedorate and Federal army reunion st and tho requirementa of American commerce | Chattanoogn this fall: “Blavery was not only wo nro notinformed, But it 1s falrto presumo {| 9 wrong that outraged tho morn! evose of the thnt they are considerablo. Othorwise ho would | North, and roused tts people to wrath when it not bo promoted to so comfortable a position as proposed to force itself Into the free ‘Territories that of Consul at Bologna, which hus much hon- | that wore the common Innuritauce of both sce or, but little salary attached to it. Madomo | tions, but ic wasn blight and acurso to the Gorster will be under tho managomont of | South, preventing He adaetein pod ermine Strakvseb, who bas elyned and sented a contract | dovelopmont, and holding It back from Its prop, with Ber for next season. Strakosch's own ee EA TA he i ea finances aro Ina bad way, ho having latoly gone | Hoople that thoy dewmod It esyential to thelr Into baukruptey. But os the custom (s to re- | uxistence and happiness, aud all thelr quire a heuyy depoaltin London or Pacis boforo | political ideas and sentiments wore naked so distinguished a singer as Madamo Cerstor | Upon ft a8, an auepervdiig, polite and sote gall for America, It Js probable that abe 16 | gaciut structure, util thofr civilizeton amply scoured against losa.. was of a ditferont order from that of the Nort, . " 2 nu Gov ‘Tire lively and irrepressible Mosquito has War threw tint barrier ilown, Tt hroke up the turnod up In tho British Oapital, and the alarm | goundations of tho Sournern civilisation. t he hus caused is by no mienns tncouslierabla. | opencd the way for the Intiux of the currents of Hatt as much spaco Is given In one of tho nows= | tho National life and tho inal bulidine oy pox opidomlc. A momber of Parliament bas | end with the War, It passed trom battlebeldt beon stung Jo South Bolgravia, and, sinco ery+ | to tho political arena. ‘ho contest is not ended sipelas ensucd, ho was unablo to attond to his yeh. Or, at lunet, ite reantta are not fully estate publi dutics.' Reports have alroudy sproad | listed, but mora and more It, becomes Ate throughout England that the prosumptuous tn- | ipy'ig eho Nation asa whole. Tuy North bas it vader enmo from tho United States, and thut an | shure In the benofits, but tho South Is destined jer took him ov art of | toa sharo commensurate with tho sulfering latent Al aia ad the loss, and the saxcrilico which tt was ect saa domned' to bens, Ita peaplo may rot yf subject to his persennl bestowal, and, along | party, where a principle 1s involved, are the swith tis habit, the imperious inanner which | very essence of folly. The offer to concilinte has distinguished lis relations with public | the defeated faction, defeated because In the nen and public affairs generally. Gen. Grant | wrong, is anabandonment of the very prin- very naturally resents any slightputupon iis | ciple which enabled the winning faction to favorit. ‘There fs sort of personal humilta- | triumph. And by virtue of this fact the scc- tlon In the reflection that a nan who received | ton of the party which was. Intely a faction so-miny marks of consideration from hline | has become the party Itself, and ts entitled to | eon the Ladd at Iarbas tonne self should be refused his overy-wish by any- | dictate Its polley and wleld its power, | Cuoetment of a law empowwnns tm bore boily else. ‘Yo allow the defented faction to dietute tha | Suthoritles to searc a sane alee OF ate Morcover, Con, Gant evidently feols urider | polley or namo the purty standard-benrers Is | Getled wenpons, to, daninnd tell sheriniot great obligation to Conkling, who chatn- | to surrender the first fritits of a justly-won | Md to sutoras Hy i hy et 1 inva mnt ploned hts eauso so powerfully and persist- | vletory. It Is equtvalont to an admission | OMtside the ran! . ETS tater ad He as ently before and In the Chicago Convention. | that the Inte contention was a mere scramble Scan sotiornlad A ode ses ©. ria Mi ne ILis not known Just low far Grant was por- | for place and power, devold of principle. ehtzatt LA aaa Hee A caSHE: OFF ie sonally enlisted in the third-term movement, A atriking oxemplifieation of the sound- 3 saith ah rn te bear arms, That right for hw has not, to our knowledge, given ex- | ness of this proposition was afforded by tho gestae} at sah only as 2 meniber of ns pression to hig ngpiration gr disappotntment | Republican National Convention of 1880. In eee cacainted initia?” force, Indeed Incident to that movement, Itimay be sufely | that Convention n great question was pre- iia ken rch : of concealed ‘syoapons may, be re- concluded, however, that he entertains the | sented,—tha question of the right of indl- aiale SD stderta atallin relation to the saine senao of obligation and gratitude for | vidual opinion as opposed to tha demand for Bre ae ii naco to its extstencos and the Conkling’s pirtlsanship which he would have. | the enforecment of the unit rule, What ls | oiivont we nora zl ht to conspire agalnst felt had he desired the nomination never so | known as “the machine” in the Republican th wanes ie the ‘Stats has to Interfero badly and had he boon nominated, ‘This | pnity undertook to pack the party Convene id rH watt his lawful righta Why, sintiment inorenses Cen, Graut’s present | tlon, to stlijo. the Individual opinions and a “a ant the Binvs enachiaea requir. attachment to Conkling, and his regret nt | wishes of w (clegatis, ‘and so to force upon Toe che tite eudor of all concealed weapons, the- critical situation is which the Intter has | the party a hominatlon which was neither ap- ne covided thotrrigid enforcement? Tho bhindermaly placed himself, ‘Tho loyalty | proved by Its eanscfence nor sanctioned by bese ae ptat te re ad brs citizens would which Grant shows to friendship in this tu | its judgment. No moro vital principle ever babar wit heli Pavblvers ‘and knives, stance will serve to galn him new adimira- | divided tho cotincils ofa politienl party. On ieee Wikh nm good assurance that tlon, though it fall to help Conkling, the one hand was tho faction which Insisted caval uaa ae i it ba ele theirs, As tho ultra patriot says: “May our coun- | that certaln delegates shoul be com- Labia ch ilovtteunta tl tate police try be rights but, right or wréng, ourcoun-j pelled to vote against their convictions Pia #3 ate Haba er ealiak ft Sar tle ockets try!” So Gen, Grant snys: "May my friends | touching the merits of rival candidates, tthe al sven py nae thal tpeonkd bo right; but, rlght or wrong, my friends!" | and against thelr judgment as to of et re syrarad bs verwhelmin That ends the sentimental view of the cnse. the wisest party polley; and on the other F thoee fi soles my rte py rth Se niinaue From 0 logteal point of view, It may be | hand the faction which mulntaiued the right an pact se ee # 0 eis oltaeaewte sald, first, that Gon. Grant has not had a | of complete freedom of individual opinion na ve 1 ee ants y aie wth ttaolegs ro- propor opportunity, and perhaps wil! not | and netlon. ‘Ihis Intter faction triumphed. me roe gies asthe aalarat the dendl: have, to feel the public pulse in regard to | Gen. Grant, the candidate of thodefeated fac- toiees seh ts fe or verente thls imatter, He says he“ has met but one | tlon, was defeated; Gen. Garileld, who stood revo" Sie 1 sud y ie he re ined and man who does not indorse Conkling’s | for tha right of ench delegate to voto his alt: Na It a dan TS the Stas of the courre,” It is very probable that Gen. Grant | senthuents, beenuse, as he sald, “he belleved preven tty Th i ate rea up becatse might travel all over the United States, | Wt to be everlastingly right,” was nominated, rare Javad lint, ey ani his tte about though he has only as yet been afew days | A few hours after thivsignal trlumph ofa na iH ee IRIE kit ” bod: Seanewenl to go baek from Mexico, without personally an- | grent prineiple, without whose triumph tho | 2 bem . 1 Hae nl teeestrali Ht countering any contradiction of his own | Republican party would have been inevitably free. ‘The vietln o| sat on +4 He the views on thts or any other politleal subject. | doomed to alsintegration and destruction, | Of hs liberty to aie no nt 8 ie Gen, Grant occuples an exceptional position, | Gen. Chester A, Arthur, a prominent repre- fatal contagion, ‘3 inate ner bg Tia Hols ranked with Lincoln and Woshington | sentative of the tetion whose dufeat was | POX patient itd ah pp 4 bette a in tho minds of the American people. ‘There | necessary to the sulyation of the party, was | Role crazy, an ; th t seit tee ia F i is no other Iving man who commands In this | nominated to the Vieo-Tresidency. Onehour Jonthgonie clone va a hi See Skat MAE country anything like tha same amount of | pefore the nomination of Gen, Garfield the | te Saiedeel een ota Te teadita toni deference, ‘The people who mect Gon, Grant | delegate who should have suggested Mr, | than the dealer Nea te ae a he i do not eara to contradict him or argue with | Arthur's name for thishlgh piace would have | der When he se te ity ‘ale ve at te him. ‘They prefer to acquiesce In any state | been Inughed to scorn, ‘Vhore was nothing sumption Is that nine autot every ten pistols him he can recall a proceeding In which he took officially an {important part, In February, 1874, Ben Butler induced President Grant to remove Mr. Russell TUESDAY, SE oy (Rep.), Collector of Customs In Boston, and DUESDAY, JUNE: Ub Ie to appoint one-Williaus A. Simmons, Sim- s mons was a personal follower or henchman 4 Mn. Gonpwre Surri salt with mock-he | o¢ pen Butler, and the tntter, purposing to be voic enrnestness tn his Inte speech at a bane | 9 candidate for Governor of Massachusetts quet in his honor at Toronto that ho repudl- | iy the fall, wanted the patronage of the Bos- ated fitterly the notton that ho Belleved him- | ton Custom-ltouse to ald him in. packing the self to have # tnisgion to elevate tho tone of | State Convention and forcing the nomina the Canadian press. He sald he had awite | ton, No sooner was the nomination of Sim- enough to do to elevate is own tone, We | inong by President: Grant made publie than wish the gentlemen in Chilengo who belleve | there wasn general protest from the Repub- . thenselves to have a mission with reference} jeans of Massachusetts, “Tho Boston Cham * tothe press of this city wonld tay tho sae | her of Commerce sont to tho President an in- ; Anttorlng Injunction to thelr souls, Why | dignunt protest. ‘The merehants apoolnted a ; don’t they elevate thelr own tones? Many | committee to vislt President Grant, asking , of them are Inwyers; and tt should be posst: | jim to withdraw the nomination of Simmons y bie for each and every one af them to devote | poeause, among other things, of the personal fl his entire lelsure to missionary Inbors In the | yniitness af the nominee. : { legal profession and not have any time left ‘The Republican delegation from Mnssn- for an afternoon nay on Sundays. chuaetis in the louse of Ieprescntatives a Se wns unanimous, with one exception; Butler “Pans Is way deep down In the well,” re- | supported Simmons, and all the others op- oarkad the guntleman front Cattaraugus 94 | posed him, Inthe Senate hath the Remul- he tuekod the, $2,000 snuely away in Ws | tican Senators, Sumner und Nontwell, the trousers pocket. It fs evident that there nro | jntter an ex-member of Gen, Grant's Cabinet, a good many things “deep down In tho | opposed the confirmation of Simmons. ‘The well” in Albany, ‘The hopes of tho Bucks | Committee on Commoreg, to which the nomi- are ther, So Is Mr. Conkling’s ambition, | nation was referred, sent it to Mr, Boutwell, and Mr, Platt's feeble. imitation of self-re- | gy a sub-committee, to wrlte and make ore speet. The “well” needs cleaning out or | port. ‘Tint. report, strongly adverse to the filling up, But It will scarevly be alleged | conitrmatton, was made by Mr. Boutwell, that Mr, Assemblyman Bradley is the per | and it contatued the emphntle declaration: son to undertake the Job, He is a prophet | «pyis man must not be confirmed,” entitely without honor in hls own county. On the 27th of February, 1874, after a long SuMlelent testimony to this effect fs furs] depate, in whieh tho two Massnchusetts nished by Judge D, IL Bolles, of Olean, it | Senators, Sumner and Boutwell, strongly Cattaraugus County, whe has long had and | opposed tho confirmation, tho Senate, by 0 stilt has an honorable place on tos Bench | yote of 2% yeas to 17 nays, coniirmed tho and whose character is without repronett. | nomination, overriding the voice of the two In an interview with a reporter of the Buf- | epubtican Senators, and also of the delega- falo Expresa'Suturday Judge Bolles sald he | ton in the House. \ was convinced that the charge of bribery | In the debate, consplenais among those was “a pul-up job"; that tho money came [demanding that the Sennte repudiate tho from the Conkling side, and that Bradley had | sight of the Massachusetts Senators ta ob- not even been tnposed upon, Concerning | ject to the confirmation of an oflicer rostding Bradley’s reputation Inthe county the Judge | jy their own State, and personally and pollt- sald it was notorions that he usedmoney cor- | eally affensive to them, was Koscog Conk- ruptly In the political canvasa, He was at | ing, the same gentleman that Grant says one time very dissipated, and was.an inmate | was “insulted by the President who madean ot tho lucbrinte Asylum ut Binghiuton, by | appotutment obnoxious ta hla” Did Gen, his own confesston, for six months, Re | Grant, when Presilent, dellborntely tnsutt formers are not ay arule composed of such | Senators Sumner and Boutwoll by nomlnat- cligs, and thereafter live only tg regret the insane act. It would not, then, harin respect- ablo sucioty, it would not imperil the lives of descent people, to take from every Inw-abid- Ing citizen In the community his concealed revolver. And what objection would there ASHDAR LODGF, NO. 08, A.B. & A. M- mivetlug’ in thelr hath, 74. Monrocest, ‘nex t Ing. dune $4, for important work. cordlayy invited. CAL CK, ; S sold by the cealer {Ind thelr way Into the pos- —————— “ | rontlze tho fuct, yet. they are coming to sce BA cones Ing Simmons against thelr protest and | ments Seale eG tru tome makesinterms | In his record entitling him to honorble dis: | eos on of men inellned tu uso them for criml- | Tum cloctricity division of tho Patont | moro and moro. *Thoy aro beuinuing to appr ina SATGTuE Wie Tae tie tlie Book Agalnst tol request that lily name might be | 80 emphatic as his expressions of sympathy | tinetion In the Nation, or ina great Nattonal nn purposes, Ofiico fa one of tho busiest Im tho bullaing. | olate that blavory was i gimee ty ee ue iat AF echt ot ia Rid at Oreo withdrawn ? with Mr. Conkling, and espectaily fn matters | politieal party, On tha other hand, thero About 250 iitterent patonts for telephones und | Frenen ee esate for tons us for any part where his personal feelings aro known to bo | was that In his reeord which rendered tt | _Wedo not hesitate to say that free trade In warmly enlisted, Gen, Grant is not in poll- | quitefnpossible that he should be so nuch as | Pistols ought to bo wbolished, Our City Gov. tles, and nothing would bo gained by antng- | thought of In connection with exalted atu- | ermnont provides againat the ravages of mad onizing him, while most people woult regard } ton. Under his administration of the New dogs; why should not It provide against the It us indellente and ungrateful, {C not untnan- | York Castom-House tliat rovenue-colleeting | Dloodthtrstiness of both mad and bad men? norly, to hurt his feetings when it fs not nec | Institution beeamo notoriuusly corrupt, and | The sound of the revolver Is heard almost If it * has been invariably the custom,” ns en. Grant says, “thes when Senators from any State objected te Prestdential appolut- monts in that State tho appointments were withdrawn," why was not the obnoxious np polutmont of Simmons withdrawn? snd 176 patents for tho electric Nght have been | ofthe Nation. If this were not 60, such a meet granted, and new applications are coming Ia by | ing as that proposed at Chattanooga segue 4 altnost avery mail, Thoro are about u80 applicas | be possible. 7 aS Fae has ie EN nyt tions for olectrla ight patenta ponding. The | t2 bevame confirmed an oe nia, the aus convictions rogurding the rights She as narrowpogs of tho principlo und tho great pos | thority of tho Nution, and tuo dutics ot d cuntary interoste involved In tho telophone give Governing, ate hrinelples Pon eae A eople are far in advance “ale rio to muck ttization, A short time ago thore We Riso as ese Hut thore has been a muarvel in packages of $2,000 to weak members ex- plalus, perhaps, the sympathetle chord whieh inspired fitteon of the 110 Republican ment bers of the Lillnols Legisiaturo to send the Yanous dispatch to Conkling telling him that they were “Interested”? observers of the y night in the year Inthe City of Chicago, 7 q why was it persisted in agutnst tha protests | Casary and nothing isto be gained thereby, | Mr. Arthur was summarily removed because every ni sole . wore tifty-ilye casov of alleged Interferonce In eben the veterans of gine he was playing and assuring hin that | OF inetwo Senators from the State In whieh | Phere are more than 40,000 Republican voters | he refused to dlyplace hla Chief Deputy, of | Suit In neatly every ease the weapon 1s dis | tolophous patonts before tho aillloe, oe eo OO ere teinale OF tose, they were on his side in any such contest. | jo wag to officlate? in the City of Chieago, among whom thore | whose complicity fn tho alleged frauds tho | charged by some rufilan, It a police ——— torvening ycars cen fraternizo und oxc but Witt ‘Tue recent publication of a conversation | memories hot only without bitterness. of ox-Prealdont Hayoa, in which au ncourate | ths cordiality of followevoldiers, aife nite photograph of Mfr, Conkling'a obaracter and | Boston Advertlecr: There sna fie mothods was glyeu, turna out to have boen tho | eral impression among many American rer result of tho judiserution of a friend, and not | of foreizn birth that thoy can gu to Int nee an" {ntorviow" with mallecaforethought. The | the present time and pursue 0 lino oan " tulk took placo jna private house and with no | which Liritigh Jaws recognize 13 et ape thought in tha mind of Mr, Ltayes that {t was to | by virtue of tholr American Caer me bo mado public, For this vory reasot, doubt- | urrest and puntahment, Lt fs woll tofu’ Mgt Jess, hla koon and graphla skotch had all the | stand at tho outset that tho fuct of Se sure of life and savor, ultizon of one cauntry docs not enable sue Se ee zon to go to unother country and vise aia Cixersxatr papers complain that glib. | tts lawa with impunity, In other wordy, TT efonse {0 tonguod lidividuals aro going around the city | ship in ono country is 10 defense Cament varnishing front doors at prides ranging from | Breaking in anothor. {f tho Herta oath of a0 Intuitively thoy foresaw the distribution of the $2,000 packagos, and their hearts melted towards tho benefactor of legislators, Wo sypraelien tho dispnteh and the nantes of the | trary to Republican principles aud National Ee iB dn, fasta the naa custom,” ‘That Mr, Boutwoll, who ts 9 PRIN Ud, They y BT! fone, Rasene Conkling and Phanias Copan: We, niomvors of | Proud man, det not fool himself grossly ine the Honse of Representatives of ‘tho Thirty | sulted by tho Prosidont, we assumo from the second General Assembly of tho dtate of Munls | fact tint he was at tho Chieaga Convontion now Jn seasion At Springtield, deom it proper w a zante re tinier neervera 0 ‘ure Inst year, voting nlono from hla State for a rent evente which 4a highly concern you, but | tfrd term, and now peranbulates tho inore blably concorn the grout Hepublioin party, ¥ of which wearemenbura, We assure you uae | country woarlng ono of the "1100? modals in this contest we wre with you, and are your | which commemorate the Spartan herolsin of qrlenge. and hope gat will be reticeted to the aro notonough men who Indorse Conkling'a | Sveretary of the Treusury and tho’ President | man 18 ablo to Joy his hand on extraordinary conduct and insufferable bull | wera firmly convinced. Of these factadele- |e — rufllan, he clubs him aud dozing arrogance to fill an omutbuss and yet | gates were aware, What, then, induced them | Wrenehes the pistol from his qmurder- not half adozon gf these people would care | to so stultity thomselves? “To concilinte the | OV8 erusp. ILow much better It would have to introduca n controversial subjoct or make | defeated faction,” It will bo sald, ‘rue, Bat | Been for tho cause of, law and order to have an offensive remark in Gon, Grant's pros | the defentud faction had been contending for | taken the plstal from the rum before he cnee,- It would bo very strange indeed if the | a principto which threatened tho party with | had an opportunity to uso it! ‘Thore Is a law respect and ostvem for the great inilitary | ruin. ‘fo compromiso with that fretlon was | Prohibiting tho carrying of concealed wenp- lender woro nut so general sud so marked ad | to surrender a part af what lad beon gained | ON% Why lw It not enforced? Ts tt dofect- to make him tho autocrat of conversations fn | attor a desperate and prolonged coutlict, It | vo? It It ts let it be anwnded, It is ect- which he joing, Hence it ia an error for | wagto place high In authority a representa. | taluly prootieablo to fraine an ordinance Cen, Grout to Infor trom a lack of contradic: | tive of tho faction whlch had so Intoly | Which would bo effective; tint is to say, un- tlon tat the Aimurican eople or.the Repub- | struggled desperately. to exalt porsonnl | der which tho poling authorities could wrest Neither Senator Stunner nor Boutwell roe slmned beenuse the then President and Ree publican Senntors went so directly “cone high oflco you ure both vo omlnontly quuiified |: Nmsvlf and his associates, y should undertake to conmpol Mr ey army onl saath 14 ‘Tho result of tho voto In the Senate con- | Hean party aro with him in his Indorgement | ambitton and tha nuitueratle decrees of the vot the tape of the aueordutly elas thelr Fl sents bee ales Serene teemeaibat Gal euniar American Ieee ee ey any pretealt say eae JouN Te Nrcuars, firming the abjoctionable Siinmons was an- | of Conkling's unprocedented course, machine aboye principle, Will it bo pre- | Pistols, Pollccmon know the disrepn +] toaves tho doors Just ns thoy were bofore, A | aNould tala or destroy is property Voie Wi, ALLEN, | Mito Buwin, nounced nextday in all the papers of the | ‘Thelogle of the Conkling case, even as | tended, for a moment, that compromising thoy know thalr dons and haunts, ony ain Indy pald ono of tho raseals 85 for the work | Was oy ng tho Iaws, ous Govern to tote 9 BOON ‘Tnowas ¥.Mircurtt, | country, Omitting our own dispatches, wo | stated by Gen. Grant; shuts out any other | away a great principle in this bol manner glsday would wuflee for ‘them to collect a | gone on m door, and tho next morulng sho had | 2h9 ana wpalogy for ttio insult to tho xoverseny eee Ne TE AUN Te ACW Ete) reproduce only the general announcement | than personal sympathy, 1f Mfr, Conkling | could strungthen a party composed of Intof. | ereat armory full of rovolvors, ‘The thing to | tho same old door back ayaln, of tho United Vsiatos, RUrthorinar ince Geoign We Rion, — ONNAN Vikusox, inada by the Associated Press, ‘That was ax | Wat right in resigning because he was a | igunt, virtuous citizens? But the eae 1g | dois ta draw the ruMflans’ tooth, and then PERSONALS, Ailey Into all complntits of tia churucteh. Sy kB DAV Ee : “proud ian” and could not brook what he | worse thun this: Within tho defeated tac- | ctose the pistol-lonlors’ shops ngainst all at- : it fv tho fivat Juty of a Government (O0r god Citizens iu tho inwraiengaynent of Hert re ‘ 3 fol “J think Iroquois and Foxhall aro just too | property. ‘Tho situation in Gruland 13.08 TP a " Shure is & general condition of Juwlesnent cg, awoot for anything.”—Adud 8, the fettiahe Clovorsmmont ntteitattes 10 8k oy, Charles Foster Is sulfering from ery- | The Hritish Pariiumont has passed ‘pgitatia i Tnkea tho yariote pluses of thy Mi aipolas, Obio wen aro dlways breaking outin a eninet landlords and the payment “tn a now placo, doueanors. Now, whoover brewks U0 god Itwas very wicked In Foxhall to run on | lony of those luws Is liibig to wrtlns utpor be i i it makes no diference WEEE, Suniay, but, uagmuch as Re won, tho matter | pT nM Miran americas will be overlooked, ; British aoll all mien ure amenable toes arded Ite against the law to fish on Sunday in | except so far oy eey ay oN by Now Jerioy, It ought ta be agatust tho smw to | [ROolyieee Of ONT oybich aur Gover live iu New Jorsoy any day, Sout da for Sir. Keupatt woul be tne, Mr, Bradley novor suspected what an exe | Wt aneurin fe cutly Oe Government COM traordinarily giftod Har ho wastinti tho news: | Guiy roquest, since in, all lt papers began tolling bim about it.” {nstirroction ‘suapension of the eco ‘a 0 os wl fo ns “Itlooks os though my vindleation was | labeas corpus te resurtell fy jou with the Order to pruvent wnt wnt, Bal unnecessarily delayed, Perhaps I:had better | suppreusion of the luwiess clo ju ages of borrow John Sherman's boom after all,""—Mov- Hiltan futhasittes Sains pale bee teed (D i coe Conkling, ‘ prover co thia mutter BY + Lovy, the cornet player, ligs heen ordered Sensible people wn Circe aca to pay bis Orst wife $M@a week allmouy, Tho | other wi for Governments to eens aynlnas Court rofusud to allow hits to yive notes for the | fore thole Laws tur the, pally ess.t 3 jount. ‘This 2 a trifle obscure, but d-euess tionality. ‘Pho elt zen of the Unive fy cecil 9 average Wosterucr oan figuro {t out."=S. J, | Ireland, vielutus the prov tai mag Guerntaett Tilden. 4 not, Iaumennble to the dr Sieten sate cts ay ‘A Bostonian iss taken 1,000 notes of tha | 1a Hime tunner that We Tie wou she p 01 o atin’ q vol! conversation of pussing young wouen, Out of | have aided the Hobels (a aay SAHNES (hs Got that number 760 bogin with oltber *And J sald | Anfurican soil, wt ES te “phere fore. to him,” or "Ho said to mo," of “8he told imo | grument, a up ae 1 Rte are tou ale that bo sald"; 120 referred to dresses or hats | yy Shite to thu least uttention. at that wore olther “perfectly lovely" or “Just | tue laws of Great Brituly be will splendid,” and the remaindor were pretty evenly | penalty, ‘ Not being “disinterested observers of cur- fallows: gent avents," it Is presumed that the Inmor- a HER EReUI Ee Mga AULT ay Reet tal fifteen ask no furthor consideration for | afterioun on the nomination of Willian A. Biin- their testimon: inons ta bo Collvator of Custom at Boston, Bone ators Houtwell and Sumner ain soverally spoke In opposition to tho nominee, regarding Tur New York Tinea sums up the merita ite We TBre clita, not shod iy: pelea tho of the bribery Investigation falrly and truth | voptable toa turgor numbue ab tho Ttellgunt Sully whon {t-guys: a ae oi tuare Conkling and Carpontor advocated thi ¢ ay 4 0 ‘Tho teais nive ‘careck, of Senator Boas bas nomluntion, spoal ing in Praise of tho mitted not boen auch av to render it absolutely Incred! ian and of bis busiiess capacity, and were un- Dio that be sould ativmpt to brite o fellows | bie to soe tn the rolnoeks prescuited wny proper member, thouvh it infghe Mscredit tho alle Tomwon for rujoction.. Finully a vote wite eniven, flog of prepayment y nor has that of Mr. Hradloy | and tho Senaty contlemod tho tanilnution by a der ‘tho, thoury Ndicuious ‘that He bascheen | vote of £7 to 1, the Domoorat preacne vortny in was plonsod to term tho “hinmillatton” winelt | tion to be conctiated (2) thiore were others | @mpla to buy anew set, ‘The community Prealdont Gartiold nud hty usyoctute Senators | thin 3tr, Arthur, with unobjectionable | sould domand that measures be at once put npon him, he ough’ to stay “re | records,—Gen, Woodford and Mr, Morton, | taken to protect faithful pollcemon ike poor signed," ‘Tho theory of "vindleation” can | both from New York, too, Elther of these | Maloney aguinst being shot down Ike dogs senrcely be maintained In the face of the des- | gentlemen would have been satisfactory as | by thieves and ruflians. perata struggle wich Conkling finds it | candidate for the Vice-Prestdency, But Mr, ———=— hucessary to muke i order to retaln gamall | Conkling, Achilles ke, had retired aultsily | Wastxatoy bas taken the lead {n the minority of Republican votes in the New | to his tent, ‘Cho absence of tho great Lung | matter Seales amas wie ay, tele York Logialature, Aud oven it this struggle | brought tho machine to a full stop; not a | Mutual Tolerraph comiiany, having beod toc Shalt result In the’ ultimnte return of Mr. | wheet revolved; tho cogs wero all silent. | fused permission by the District authoritios to Conkling to the Senate, which is certainly | And strange to gay, tho opposition, which | orcvot any palus inside tho city.limita, bavo boon sou of £7 to tho ai Jopranibte sue of the eee had been Honllke in their bravery, whieh slriten _bertoree re adout He rian or ‘Tuphing k one sido to tho ullirniative, ee thon, his relations with his colleagues will be | hind saved the party integrity and the party | Solr wires tarou! iB CAE AC WORE ac! tibed by eke oor. 2 Y HM Be Bed Bow) Oy thy sano day that this yots took place | no more agreeable than they would have | orguntzation by a magullicent vistory,—the Sspel aca’ Sh Harner otins: Ibe hich noes OO ‘The Aduluistration cause can gain nothing | tho Butlerites In Boston by telegraph con- } Leon had ho uot roslaned, Indeed, the Sen- | opposition turned pate and held thote breath | (rand Wand sbvlvah nitnowen at petals ener : 4 : 4 broak if it rs the by tmdertaktng tho’ defense of Senator Ses- | Kratulated Benjamin F,, surnamed “Old | ete did not contin Robortson, ang thus rat- | with fear, Me, Conkling would not have Here a varelan trou erxtll tora catia pittes sions. Me ts by nll accounts abundantly ( Cock-Kye,” upon hts successtul defeat of the ify the “insult” which the Prosldent put | Woodfard, although Woodford was his | luld uydorground. Tho mauner of gonturing able to take cnre of Iimself. His tribulne | Republleap’ Sennturs from Mussachusetts, } upon Conkling, untll after the latter had re | dovoted adherent. , He would not have | aod carrying the wires throygt the sowors ly Hons do not touch tho morlts of the cun- | and in reply to this that modest gentleman | signed; and, while thls subscquent Senatg- | Morton, notwithstanding Morton jad stood | dite lntoresting, Whore the polo syetom onde _ troveray between the Republican party and | disgiitiaed the honor, but promptly. placed | rint action cannot be renwonably elted aaa | by lm through thick and thin, ‘Then somo | 484 the underground ono bogineqinrge, steels Mr. Conkling at all, 1¢ will not bo pro.) te *insule” and “bumilladion” of the two | motive tor the resignation, It ‘pannot any | body had p lumtuoys Idea-Arthust. 'Lhq pole ia: planted yors deap arid sacayoly An tonded, or if it-1a tho elatra will be entigery | Massachusetts Senathns Where he sald '{t }inore reasonably bo clufmod thet reflection | nomiiution of Afthie would compel Conklung Terauetty Stra ot wtzes upon “ie ren ara! unsupported, that bribery was reaurted toon | properly belonged. Ils dispatch read as | will render Conkllug’s assuciation with the | to support tho tleket.: Bealdes the nomination | ing it over. This polo husa groove cut in tt avout - behalf of President Garfield, Jf there has | follows: Senators who Joined in the allegyd “insult” | would amply revenge the sulky Chief on all | two inches doup and about tho samo in width been any use of improper means it must | Wasiixaton, D.O,, Feb, 7%, 1874-70 George | more cordial than it would have been be | bi 1us,—on Hay Short id from the top to the bottom, Tho wirod, seven or : p yAguixazon, D. Oy 10 js eneies,—on Hayes, on Shorman, and on have been solely to. promot the Interests uf | Licgerecuived.. Ih the trlumekeot the en voy, | fore th Senate indorsed the President's po- | ull Nepublicuns everywhera who had tho clans ja puree wee ad Ereoe i orcwer 8 purticular candidate, for Bradley hijnself jhe soldier, and the ucacev ing, inay, the right of | sition, cournge to think for themselves, and the | where the cable cnters a terra-cotta pipe laid says that he was opposed on principle to | inote isvindicated: and yout thenkiere duets | Norean Gen, Grant logically maintain | temerity to vote thelr sontiweuts, Finally it | underground woroga the stroct to the sewer, Depew, aud he hud already voted without | the drus und muoly uctlon of President Grant,— | that the numfuation and confirmaiiod of | would bew splendid revenge for “the ma- | which ia reached by way of a manhole. Tho

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