Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 23, 1881, Page 4

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4 Dye Crile. TERMS OF SUNSORIPTION. DY MATIN ADVANCR—POSTAGE PREPAID, Dally exiition, one yenr, iunday, te ahead rend and alias, poryent. Monda,, Wodnes wt Bn JAKy, Do! Sunday, 2G-pare edition, per yeat.. +" WEERLY EDITION“POSTPA! copy, por year, Sua eoryae2 Twanty-one coplesi.. Speotmen coplen tent frac. Giro Post-UMtea addross tn full, Including County and state, I Romittancos may bo made cithor hy draft, éxpross, Post-OMloo ordof. or in tngiaterod letter, at our risk. TO CITY RUNSCRIBEL! Dally, délivored, Sunday axcopted, 23 cents por woaks Dally, dolivored, Bunday included, £0 conte per wook. Addross THN TRIBUSK COMPANY, Corner Afadison nn ta, Chlenga, 11, POSTAGE. Entered at the Postetymce a? Chieagd, Ill, as Seconde . Clase Matter, For tha henent of our patrons who desiro to send Aingto coples of Tim THUNUNH throwah the mall, wo kivo horewith the transiont rato of posiase: Forelan and Daineatte, ro Maper, Fight and Terelve Sizteon Page Haj TREDUN. THR CHICAGO ‘PHIENK has eatablishod branch oMicen for the recolpt uf subscriptions aud advortines inenta as fullown: NEW YOUK=Itoom 29 Tyibuné Bullding, FT. Mc- Fapnes, Manager, GLASGOW, Scotiand—Allan’a Anuorican News Age Nonfiold-nt, : Al Eng—Amerienn Uxchanzo, 49 Strand. tents * SIRAD OFFICES. Manny Pau it. WASHINGT (aly ¥ straot Hooley's ‘Theatre. Hantolph street, bulween Clark and La Fale, Engagonient of Janis O'Neill, “Saratoga.” After- noon und eventug. Grand Opera-Iouse, Clark street, oppust. new Contrt-llouse, Two Orphans.” Afternoon and evonini “The Olsmpic ‘Theatre. Clark atrect, bo-ween Lake att Mandotpi, “The Wieket-of-Luave Man.” Afturnuon snd evoning. Expan Batting. Michigan avenue, opposite Adanis streat, 'Thouas Bummor Nizut Concerts. Afternvun and evening. Chteage Briving Park. At tho terminus of tho Madison stract car-track, Trotting at 12 o'vlock, D.C. CHEQIRIL LOGI, No. Oh A. We fe Ae Mone The mombers ate hereby notitiod Lo Bidet Nt tele Mall thle ovening utd o'clock, to axe astinganiunts tor the Gingrak et oak late Drutner, diuriaan Lt Sint, rivteh will tas placa to-morrow Mundy) 1 . ° ¥ ‘Jor uiNoenlo, ( Moecutnry, CHICAGO COMMANDEIY, NO. 18 Ky =the members Of this contaund ure heraby Notified to ape peur ae tele neyiuin un wsacuntay, Jal zh Me ti k sbitre, fully equipped, for tie purpuse Of ute tending’ the Finan vuseauidg Of oie’ law ducensud frator, Sir Knuznt Jotin il, Klein, by cirriaes: to Waldielti Comotory. trum ble residencuzes Fultonesh Thal, PUND, E.G. DAVID GUODMAN, Itecorder. SATURDAY, JULY 24, 188 ‘Tne yaw ordinance In regard to the open- ing and closing of tho bridges Ins been, on the whole, pretty well observed. But it has Leen discovered that the ten-minutes rule does not apply after 0:80 In the evening. So far as the ordinance goes, the bridgetenders inay Keep the people walting for an indefinit period after ulehttall, ‘This‘Is certainly an unfortunate omission, ‘The reasuns for crossing the river after dirk are offen the most Iniperative of all, ‘There are trains to be caught, physletuns to be reached, and calls of merey or of hospitality to be answered. Halt an hour makes an finportant Ulferonce in any of the: “Centrvaren thinkers” ave invited by tho Concord School of Philosophy to con- sider the theory that “all phenomena are explained by motion,” Not being “a cultivated hiker,” in the ordinary sense of that phrase, Trin Trmuge emnot at once answer the contndram, Bub if itis true as nsserted: that matter and space ara“ numes. for the saine thing,” and that “force when not used Inthe placa of mation can only mean Ute,” almost anything olso tn meta- physies would seem to be possible. A prize of $500 Is offered for the solution of the prob- Jem by“ the authorof 4A Student's Drenm,?" whose faculty for phantastagoria scems to be far In oxcesy of his conception of phi- losophy. ‘THe smoke nulsanee husbeen In no degree abated by the ordinance relating to the sub- ject. We invito the inquisitive cltizen who may bo at all intorested [1 the ordinance to inspeet tha chimneys of the factories along the Main Brauch of the Chivago River at any hourofthodny, Kirk’s soap establishment Js one of these publie nuisances, and Meyer's door and sish factory isimother, Both of them usually pour forth hige volumes of dense, black smoke, which are proofs not only of careless firing but of waste, ‘There aro a dozen smoke-consumers,. any ono af whieh would abate these’ nulsances; and the failure of the persons concerned, who are generally known as public-spirited citizuns, tu nvall thomselves of any of thom Is cor- tainly remarkable, THEATIICAL managers complaln that thoy do not recelve tha sine editorial noticet the Chicago press that tho muateal: entertalne mnents do, ‘Tho reason Js that the former, 13 arule, aro not worthy of It., ‘They do not re- ulize that Chicago, In its “taste for amuse ments at least, has ceased to be provincial, But it 1s n fact that no theatre In Chicago has this week on exhibition a performunes that would be tolerated fora moment in an Enst- erneity of tho first class, ‘They glva Chil- cago plays and actors that Brooklyn would not countenance, Yet Brooklyn isa suburb, while Chicago f4 n hhetropolls, ‘Te musleal entertalments here, on the other hand, area as good us In New. York or. Philadelphia, ‘This is partly because tho mueleal taste of Chicago has. been eultlyated, and partly be- + cise the critics of inusip do tiot pretend to udinire what Is distasteful to them 23 tho eritles of the drama too often do. Secriahieeeeineetien on aeagenased Tus New York Natlon regards with.a good deal of scorn Afr, Hilton Rowan Helper'’s schenia fur o ‘longitudinal midland double- track steel railway froma polnt. high north in North America to a polnt far south in South Amertea.” ‘The suspicion that this great enterprise owes Its origin to a senti- shent and Its continued existence to" prize"? essays is certainly crue}, It fs well known thut the object of rallways fs to afford n cons yeulent means for the exchange of products, and “tho highest polnt in North: America” has long yearned for an opportunity to trade off its surplus merchandise with “ the lowest polit in South Ameriea.” 1¢ is truo that the chief product of both these countiles Ix ee. Tut we aro ussured that- the !co of North , America possesses u pecullar flavor that ex- elites the South Amorlean palate, and vice versa. Thers would ‘seem to be a yeagon, therefore; why “the longitudinal .double- track rallway” should be brought jnto opere ytlon, ‘Tue Beltlsl congus slows that te Increase < fn the population of the Kingdom hag been \ unexpectedly great.” ‘The percentage of in- crease has been rising In ‘recent decades, The rate of growth depiined continually from the beginning of the century until the decade ending In 1831, when it waa only 34 vercout, Siuce then it bas been slowly ju- . ' THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1881—SIXTEDN PAGES erensing, nnd the rate for the Inst decade was 10% por cont ‘Tho rate In tho United Statos is nearly 90 por cent, Noarly at! the incruasa in the United Kingdom {4 tu be attributed to Bnaland ant Wales. ‘Tho gatn In Scot- tatid almost exnetly bahinces the toss In Ire land. ‘The tnerensa In tho fornior wos 374,853, wills the decreasy in tho Intter was 259,533, In England the density of poptlation has ine erensed In tha towns, manufacturing dis- tricts, nid cites, wiitte It tins decreased tn tho rural tertons. Tt ts.n noteworthy ret that Great Britain ts gaining relatively upon Franee.’ Karly fu the century tho popula. Hons of the tivo countrids stood In tho ratio of 10 to 18; they aro now in the proportion of 15 to 07, Presmest GArerey’s opportunity for Instituling a reform of the Civil Sérvice has bech zentously, If somewhat Inopportimnely, pointed out by the New York ssvening Post, The President svems to be stringely consid- erate at this moment only of his opporlynity for consumlug beef-ten and getting an ocen- stonnl hack at a bit of bucon, ‘This Is strangely Snconsidernte. How a President ean be concerned whout stich slight matters as wounds ad pus while the Civil Service romaine tn its present awtul condition we are totally unabloto imaghw. Lb should bo sone consolation to the Post, however, to re- fleet that while the Dresfdont is conpara- tively passive {1 relation to Cfvil-Servico re- form, the members of his Cabinet tire not so. ‘rhe converts to the new doctrine in tho Cab- inet have been so rapidly made that thelr constancy may, porhays, be questioned, At Inst adviecs Secretary Kirkwood, of Tbwa, waa the only person who hat any doubte’ oit tho subjects and he, strangely enough, had suceceded to te Interior Department, where, under Mr. Schurz, Clvil-Service reform was in the most vigorous oporatior of fitness for office merely onv of race? Are all Jews good, aud all Methodists or Pres- byterlans or Catholics bait? This fs not a taco question, but a religlous question. The ntteinpl to fitroilrec lt ln a polltion! campatent {stn bad taste, ‘The Isrnetites might mee it, aul wt tha saine tlie confess the extunt of thotr defection by voting for the candidate for Licntenant-Governot, and for no other persun on the Democtatic ticket. Tho nunt> ber of votus that the Demucratic canditnte for Lleutenant-Governor ring ahead of his ticket will bo an exact mensiire of the Ie- brew vots In Ohio dts ton cheap compll- inent to the race, hot “boss” tho whole Government; and his third and greatest crror was In belng a can- didato for redlection under such olroum- stattecs, % ap It he had sald, to, hls constituents that he had quarreted with tho President and could no fonger det ha hittinony with hin, aif that he had mado .d yacaney whieh ho destrodt them to fll by: selecting some person who world by Ih accord with the Adinintatration, the people, wlitls regretting his splonotia fet, would have forgiven fin, and If he be haverdt himself white ott of offices would have soon testored hint to public Hfe. Tks future Stitt depends on himself, {Te can so net asto Placen deop and fmpasstble mule betweon Nusselt and the Reprbiiean party, or he ent: repent his folly aud inske amends, and hive a sinners chance of forgiveneas and .recon- eliiation, for with ntl iis faults he fs still a fayorlt though revielllous son. ——Seoreeee FREE SHIPS Vs. sunsiny, Mr, Jolin Ronch lias revived the consider. atlon of tlie relative merits of tree ships and subsidy as © moans to the encourarement of Amerlenn conimeree on the seas by an artl- cle in the Norlh zlincricun Review, wherein he proposes that the Govetninent shall give ait annual subsidy of $4,000,000 of taxes to a Ine of stentnghips which shall be construct- edt In stiel a manner as to admit of conver- slon {nto war-veasuls In casa of emergency. This ty-n schema whieh Col. ‘Thompson, whon Secretary of tho Navy, recomended to Congress in the report while he made Just before going out of office, and whitch met with 9 qualified approval from President. Tlnyes Inhls last message. It was probably suggestad by Mr. John Roneh, who ts fertile {n theorles looking ‘to subventions and ab- atractions of taxes, and who Inbored ft vain to procure a mall subsidy from the Inst Con- fress in its closing days. Tho proposition Is no moro nor less than a bid for a subsidy, ait the construction of the sitips with reference to war uses will not make stich absorption of taxus any less ob- Jecttonable, The advance whieh has been made of ‘lata in the perfection and force of projectiles has probably revolutionized mn ting warfare, It is not now regarded as possibla to construct ship-armor eapable of resisting the shot that can be hurled against (t. If the United States slintl ever becoma involved inn foreign war there will bo two things necessary to adequate defense and effective aggression. One will be proper const defenses by heavy guns and torpedoes to protect Ameriean ports and cities; the other will be light, swift ships of the " grey- hound” build to pursueand ratd the enemy's commercial slilps and escape from thoenemy’s heavyshipsof war, ft docs not appear that Mr. Roach’s plan reaches either of thesecondl- trons, and hence It should form no consider ation for yoting away five milllons a year, or ny othor sum of public taxes, Its equally unnecessary on this necount to examine whethor Mr. Roach is right or wrong In muatululning dat a simple combination of thin, loose iron sheets, to bo adjusted to tho ships when necessary, with ‘bunkers filled with coal, forms better protectton and fur- nishes greater resistance than any arihor- plate which hs ever deer made, ‘This inny or may notbe the case, bub It still, romalns that the United States will never need ns fighting ships the kind of steamers which ho wants to build and gall at public expense for comunerelal purposes; So fur as the finfluence of free ships over American marine connerco Is concerned, Mr. Roach ig of the. opinion that American capital would not be sent over to tho Clyde for tho purchuse of Uritish-built vessels to compete for the carrying trade even if the present navigation: Jaws, were repeated. This statement fs ‘also backed up by a shipbuilding. organ—Every Evening —publishad at Wilmington, Del, whieh de elores that, “if any company wants a fleet of Amertcan-bullt steamships equal tn all réspects to tha steamers of the Cunard Ling, such company can havd them built at pre- elsely such prices as they would hive to pay on the Clyde here in Wilmington.” If alt this be true, then nelther Mr. John Roach nor the othor shipbuilders of Delaware and Pennsylvavia can logically continue their objections so such a modification of tho marine Iaws na shall pormit Amerleans toluy: ships and ‘shtpbellding material wherever thoy can procure thont at the chenpest’price, If, on the one hand, Anicrican capital would not buy foreign ships anyway, and, on the other hand, Aierivan shipbuilders can build just ns good ships for just as little money ag foreign shipbulldors cin construct, then tho shipbullding Interests of this country have nothing to fear from forcign competition in tholr tlie, and they ought to withdraw thelr senseless opposition to the repeal of a law whieh {s Chinese fn jits prohivitory char- neter. * . Tho conclusion which Mr. John Roach would haye the Amerlean Congress reach ts, thatstnes Amertenn capital 13 not preparad (as they maintaln) to invest in ships under any clreumstanees, the Ainerican Goyern- ment ouglit to go into the business and ‘fur. nish tho nioney In the- shave of subsidies, But this sanonscquitur. If ne ageregation of American capital, eagerly sonrehing for. Investments even at so low a rate of Inforest ag3}4 percent, finds no attraction and dls- cerns no profit In compoting with Great Britain for tho carrying trate on ‘the Nigh sens, avon « a wats granted tho priviluga o! U 8 wh they betas in Betnlie se Bick spolls Bossiam when he exclaimed: « "What coni{tlon ts rather a good reason why |.2ro wo here for It not to got the offices?” the American Government should not go | (Tho fellow, wo bollave, was but recently out into that unprofitable business than n ranson | Of tho Democrutle party.) ‘Tho Ameriean why It should do su,” Rotlonal econamists | Peevle wore so habituated to this view that will flnd it dimieutt"to understand why the | Clvil-Servico reform becama 0 by-word. Atmorioan Government should assume the | The polittetans laughod at ft, and tho great burden of current losses at the rato of {2888 of sensible, but thoughtless, cltizons $5,000,000 n yonr In ordor to encourage Jolin | Concluded that the proposed conduct Roneh in hieshipbul{ding In Delaware, ‘tho | Of publlo affatrs ori business principles, as tie aubslty policy has Had an amplo trial, and England, would be un-Amerlean, unrepub- the Amerlean neoply! are disgusted with | Mean, and inconstdt ont with the spirit of our ft. Mr. John Moaoh had his slure and the | {stltutions, Mabit of thought overcame the Paolijc Malt Stonmsahty'Company a goud doal | “letates of reason and common sense; the moro tun its share of Government subsidy, | People falted to apply to public affairs the The only memurablo results were Congres- sliupla rules by which they conducted thelr sional corruption and scandal, ‘There ara no | OW! buslncss, anit tho spbllamen became evidences that Amerlean commorca on the { MOFe and more loud and nggcogsive, high sons was permangntly developed thero- | A great tliroitg of aMlecssoking spollsnien by, : pressed towards Washington uponsthe in- ny ne nugurntion of the now Prosldent; they Mled. SENATOR DAWES ON OIVIL SERVICE REFORM. ofice who brings unasked for by the appoint- ing power tha recommendation of any Con- Breasnin.” In conclusion Sonntor Dawos says: “To willengageto furnish you for publi- catton ty written pledguof avery Massitanit- setts member of Conuresa that he will never While vw member, nnasked by the Kxceutlve, reountinentd n poraon for ofles provided you Will publist the Written pledge nover to nk thom to meke such recommendation?” Bo. far ns Senator Dawes gova he Is all tight, ant for the sike of the experiment tt Js to bo: hoped that Massachusetts will set thd other States tle oxdellént example he proposes. Even fib should ben fruitless ox. amply to othor delegations it would at least re- dueo somewhat tho force of pressuru upon the Executive. But does Seuntor Dawes Imagine that the delegations of the otter States would furnish such an agreement? Would Now York? Wonld lllnols even? Tho trouble with the Senator's romedies I8, that they (lo hot go to the root of tho evil. Even if thd members from every Stato shorld sign such an nereement, while much good would be tone, the remedies would attll only be par- tial, Tho fntlamination on the surface might be relieved somewhnt, but the disease flself would silll be eating away in tho vitals of the Lory politic, ‘ 'The great obstacle and «espalr of the Civil Service fa the constant change for partisan reasons which fs made in the thultitude of siburdinate positions of the Government, and for no other cnuse, to the projudice of the public Interests. ‘Tho question has been repentedly asked, but never answered, Why should all the employés of the Post-Offica or tho Gustom-Iouse, or internal-reyenno, and the Washington Departments, who have no influence In ;shuping or carrying, out f polilical policy, and who cannot control political niensures or [egisintion or nifect party Interests; be tirned ottt en mursré overy time there [sn change of Administra- tlon, and sometiines oftener? The incon- sistency of this change may be shown by an illustration, What would be thought of the coniiict of on mitnager of a lending news- paver who should discharge all his ¢om- positors,: proof-renders, pressmen, mall- clerks, and carriers who did not: yote nt every lection exactly tha same ticket he (ld, and who did not apoid all thetr gpare time electioneerlng for the ticket he sup- ported? Or of. tlie President of a rallrond who should demand that:hls engineers, fire men, brakeinsn, conductors, switchmen, and trackmen should indorsy the same party platform and tieket that, he did? If this would be absiird in the énge of the working: men In a newspaper office or the employts of n rallroad corporation, Ig ft any the less absurd wheu applied to the. clorks and sub- ordinates cmployed by the Government? Had the Demoernts como into power Inst fall, for Ingtanee, the 300 letter-carrters In thiselty would have been tirned out into the street. In tho place of faithful, indus- trious, and experlenced men, aeauainted with tholr routes and accustomed to thotr du- ties, 300 ward bummers would hays been put hi tholr places, withoutany experlonco, with- out acquatntinee with routes or customers, and usurping the places of the others because. thay had been nolittenl blowers and strikers or ballot-box atuffers In the Interests of Deim- ocratle candidates, and this woukLhave bea n done tn the face of the popular protest. The- people enrd nothing for the “pollttos” of let- ter-carrlers, ‘They may be Republicans, Deinocrats, Greenbackers, or Prdhibltionists, provided they. aro prompt, active, rubinble, nad experienced men, and attend falthiully to tholr duty of collecting and delivering tho’ mulls, Would 1t not bo just as consistent for an-Adiilnistration to’ discharge all the soldiers and sailors in thd service who tht nut subscribe to Its polltles ns to discharge tho soldiers’ and saflors In the Civil Setvico for the same enuso ? European Governments long ago recog: nized the wrongfulness dnd absurdity of sucht clvil changes, and, following the lead of Grent Britain, they only change the heads of departments and important officials when on Adnitulstration {3 changed. President Garflold recognized the great obstacle In the way of Clvil-Sorvice reform when ho recom- inended an act of‘ Congross fixing the tenure of the subordinate positions in the Goyern- ment, Sorator Dawes" remedy docs not. zo below the bark, Evon if he should obtain tho signatures of every Congressman in the country to his remedy, the President would still be oxvosotl to tha pressure of the mob of polttical foaders and buminers, Ile must go deoper than surface application if he would cure the disc; Tim trouble with Me. Jolin Roach and the Interested parties who urge the ocean ship subsidy polidy on tha Government 1s, that they do not go deep enough Into the subject. ‘the buiteling of ships ts not the only requislt to the carrying trade on tho high seas, It is hot only necessary that Amertéans should ba able to provide themselves with Just as good, and cheap ships 48 their competitors, but they must also be able tosail them as cheaply sud to furnish the manufactures for freight, In othor words, subsidized ships will not or- ganize free trado on tho high song, So loite as Amorican tnanitfacttirers shall Insist upon the matntenance of high tariff Inws to enable thant to churge muro for thelr goods at home than foreign compotitors ask, thoy will not bo able to sell their goods broads so long as they shall “not be able to sell their. goods sbroadt there will not & carrying tide for, Aineriean ships. But the manufacturing interests in, Pennsylvania dnd Delaware, ard elso- Weere sre not willing to assent to free com- mereé any more than to free ships, Perhaps itmay besalid that the country generally Is not. tonily for ft, Dutthe country eannotenjoy the advantages of igh protection and high prices on shore and also the advantages of cheap free-trade rates on the den, Our pro- toetlvs prices can never compete with tho free-trade prices of Englandon theocean, So long ns“ protection” stiatl be the polloy of this country the ptutits of free trade on tho seas must be left to others, Tum sevonth session of the International Medical Congress will assemble in London Aug. 3, and will continue in session an weok, ‘Tho medical professton of the country, espe cinlly ftom New York, will bo prosent in large foree, Among the Intter. Prof. F. If Bosworth, of thagbellevue Hospital Medical College, will read a paper upon “ Operations on tho Nasal Cavity? and De. George M. Beard, the celebrated physiologist, will also read 9 paper on “Trane and Allied Conditlons of the Nervous System In Man and the Inferior Antinals.” ‘Lhe discussions will cover n wide area fn anatomy, phyal- ology, mid pathology, and, as Sir Jaines Paget, Sir Georzo Burrows, Sir Josepl: Tlovker, Prof. Huxley, Prof. Lister, Sir Will- fam Jenner, Sir Thomas Watson, Prof, Owen, Prof, Allen Thompson, did many other of the most cmlnent physicians, surgeons, and selentists of Great Britain are to take part in these discussions ant present the results of tholr rusenrelies, the Congress ought to da- velop some very important facts, and give to medical science a very decided forward moye- ment, Tene is some dispute in the rewspapats, perhaps growing out of ndatstaken remark in Tins ‘Untuuny some weeks aga, ns to what Mr. Conkling suld snd dhl not any of Gen, Gartlald during the Presidential campatgn. We have taken the trouble to look over his Now York speceh, made in September, after Garfield's nomtnation, and ind that, at the close, he referred to Garticld in the following languages Somo sorvico with him io: Congress has made mo well neauainted with Gen. Gartiold, That bo has intelligence, experience, and hibits of rind which 1t a man for the Prealdential oitlee, I think I kuow. Without enrly advantages, bo years ugo auhieved prominence among lending men in public iife, and that ptominunce ho hus maintained aver since in, all collisions between Indlyidonis and partis. . ‘That he Is competent to disobarge the duties before him, thore seems tobe no reason to doubt. ‘This was all Mr, Conkling had to say of the Tepublican ‘candidate for Presktent. "The Democratic newspapers criticisod it as tinted and “danning " Garfield “ with falnt praise,’ nud It certainly sceined to be meagre and constrained in comparison with the high eulogy which ho passed ttpon Arthut In the sane speech fiumediately afterwards. Of course the Republican newspapers endeay- ored to make the most of the Ittio Conkling lind been conxed to sity of Garfield. In hits subsequent aveeches In Olifo and elsowhero Coukiing confined himself to merely » gen- eral reference to ‘the candidates,” and tho Democratic newspapers of the day were filled with gibes ‘and tiunts as to the con- tompt which he showed for thé Republican head of the ticket. Indeed, it was reported “that in some plices Conkilng’s audiences re- sented his marked uvoidance of any eulogy é6f Gen. Garfield, and attempted: In valu to draw hhn out upon that subject. It fs 9 mat- ter of notoriety that Conkling all along wasa’ inost reluctant advocate of Garficld’s eluc- tlon, though he was constrained by his own polltical interests and by his friendship for Arthur to take part In the cainpalgn towards Its close in behalf of the party. ——_—— LAPHAM ELEOIED, Tho long agoity In New York is over, and the deadlock Is broken. Judge Lapham is elected to the seat vacated by Conkling, a\fter a futile ballet yesterday Judge Rob- Jngon proposed’ a meeting of all the Repub- Itean memburs for a corference, which was held, After sume preliminary talk and o short intermission, © yotd was taken In the caucus for Senator, which resulted: for Lapham Gl, for Conkling 27, for Evarts 10, and for Woodford 1, Whereupon “that man” Lapham was declared the nominee of the party, A jolutsesslon of the Legisiature was held putsuant toadjournment, aud Lap- ham, Republican, received 93 votes and Pottur, Democrat, recelyad 43 votes. -Wherenpon Lapham was declared duly elected Senator for the unexplred term of Conkling; and thus the viuenncy was finally filled after a struggle thut Insted since the middle of May. From the hour of the first ballot iilne weeks ago to the Inston yesterday, Conkling has never recolyed half the Republican votes of either House, Ho has been amluority candidate fn hig own party on overy ballot, and has con- stantly grown wenker, ‘Che opposition, which at first was split up among: a dozen candidates, gradually concentrated their efforts ond Incrensed thelr strength until they finally. ombraced — nourly three-fourths of all the Republicans, Conkling fought a desperate but losing battle from tho start, He thought that tho Demo- orats would profer him to Laphatn, and wlect , hin, as it was in thelr power to do; but they never gave hin a vote, because they did not Approve of the grounds of his quarrel with the “President, betfeving hhn to be In the wrong. [is followers, seolng that hla chances, were nll, and feeling that to force on adjournmest, 1 con dyistlon with the Democrats, without at: election would damn them with thelr constituents, made virtue of necessity, voted fur Lapham, and ented the strugale, Now York has now two Me publican Senators who will act In harinony with the Administration,—who will support the President Instead of nutagonizing hin, : ree resigned lie took the Stato ImpranAtion statistics never falt to av peal to tha Imagliation of the people But what, after all, is immigration? Merely tho pourlng fnto thts country of a yast munbor of allens, for tho most part totally unne- quatnted with our laws, custotis, or Inetitu- tions, ‘Tho major part of the immigrants come from Germany and Ircland In nearly equa! proportions. ‘They drift Into opnosit polltieal relations, and preserve in equlpolse ns betweun alt the eltizens of forelgn birth, Whenever they unite they are practtealty fr- resistiblo In the large cities, But they do not otten unfte—first, because there ia on autlpathy between the races; and, secondly, because they have different ldeas of political usefulness, ‘The opposition of these two races in elvil atfalrs ts the safeguard of the Tepublic against an exeossive tmmigration, ‘There ware more foreign arrivals in the year ended June 30 than in any provious year it the history of the Republic, But this fact excites no apprehension, For while it fs known that the races are nenrly equally bal-\ anced {na political way, 16 ty admitted that, on the other hand, they are Industrially united. Thoy ure alt goud citizens, thongh many of them are bad pollticlans. Is tho Inst fssue of Tas Trmusr a long article In the focal columns was printed ex- posing the aduiterations which are prac- tleed In suaurg, aid, showing to whatan ox- tent glucoss Ys used In these adulterations, dn that article a formula was given by a sugar-doaler whereby any housékeeper can lustuntly detect the presence of glucose, and. that It may have'a still wider ciroulntion we reprlut the test by which this fraud nay bo discovered, It js ag follawas Take n handful of tho niixture and drop it into a ylassof cold water. Stir ita few minutes, and yourwill notice thut the cuno sugar is ene tirely dissolved, leaving tho grape suxur undise solvad at tho bottomn of tho yluss, In the form of uw white, attoky substance not at ull. unilke starch In looka, and quite bitter to the taste. «It wan't do to use hot wator in your tost, howevor, for if you do tho wholu thing will dissolve, ‘Tho test issu slinple that any hougekeaper can make. it, and there fano renson for anybody's being deceived utter discovering the fraud untess ho or #bo chooses to be. . With this. formuta always at hand, house keepers will have no difllculty In knowlog when thoy are imposed upon in thelr pur- chase of sugar, and ns they wil know where they purchuset the adulterated stuff they ean cease buying It, There Is really no Teagon why any one should be imposed upon unless they choose to be, ‘he test is very simple. : DANGRHOUS MENTAL HABITUDES, ‘Tho extent to which mental habitudes dom- Innate human -netion fs strikingly shown by late Important publlc oyerts. ‘The shooting of tho President bya disappointed office- sucker revenled the spolls system in all its odtousness as a festering soro in tha body politle, ‘The sore had Jong been there,—so long, indeed, that it had almost censed to bo repulsive. ‘Che public had come to feol that it was part and parcel of the Republic; that the offices constituted \ lezitimate spell to bo striven for Uesporately once In four years by everybody ott of aumploymont, ‘The Dosses said: “The ofices belong to, the people; they have a right to contend for them, and those who can haya 9 right to got tham—*to the victors belung the spells!’ In the Re- publican Conventfori of 1880 9 ‘foxas Uulugata Eaverr ls now governed, so far as financial fulmatuistyation goes, by two Controtiers,— one appoluted by France and one by En- ginud. ‘Thoy have the suprame direction of all mattors relating to the taxation and reve- nue of the country. Thelr power Is com- pared by an Intelligent correspondent to that of tho House of Commons In England, Wiint they authorizo 1s dono; what they voto iy forbidden, ‘he Egyptian debt amounts to $139,000,000, ‘ho annual revenue ts about $42,500,000, Out of thls $20,000,000 hns to ba pall to creditors nnd $3,600,000 to the Sultan, Yot it Is-auld that the management of thd finnneial Controllers tos heen so good that Egypt was ablo last year not only to pay the interest on the debt but to liquidate $1,500,000 of tha princtyal. Entlre harmony provaila botwaen tho Controllers, bub it ta sakl the diploniatic representatives of the two Gov- ernments are not so well agreed, ‘hero tits been a good dea} of friction between the French Consul-Genorat aud the Freneh finan: celal agunt, and the only romedy thus far has been tho removal of the Consul, Since the presont finanelat man bas been In office tive Consule-General lave come and gone, It Is Bradually getting tu be understood both in France and Englund that the financial Con- troller is the chlef oflicer of tue respective Governinents in Egypt. “ Tun Isyaolites usually resont. any attempt to influence them In pollilcal matters by an Gppeal ta raco projudices, ‘Thuy are ina secular way Aimuricans and nothing olse, ‘They awe allegiance to no other Goyernmont on earth, elvit or religious. : ‘They are pretty. equally divided Detween tho two parties, Wo have never Lhown of an attempt to en- Agt them on one side orthe other that did not react on tho head of fts hiyentor, “Such al attempt has, howover, been made in Ohio, ‘Tho Democrats of that Stato have nomlnuted, a Hebrew for Lieutenant-Governor, They are now making frantle appeals to the Israelites to “stand by their race.” But why should the Invitation bo acoupted? {3 tho question by surpYfse; but when he announced his Ine {entlon to seok 9 relection as an Indepond- ont Senator for the purpuse of: antegonlelng the President the people of New York were firat Alte with ainnzemont, and: then with {ndlgnation. Nine-tenthd of tho citizens of his own party wore imbued with tho conyle- tlon that he was an unfit person to represent that State In the Senate, It was felt that o min who conld do what he had done, who had left the Stato without répresentation In the Senate, who had abandoned the United States Senate to the opposition, not because of any prineie, but solely, from seliials auger at the Presldent, laut proved his essene tal uniitness for a position which requires self-command and . proper. respect for. the constitutional Fights of the Executive, But Conkling affected to suppose tliat the unl- versal condemnation of hls coursu “was a icra artificd of the Newspapers, and dit not reflect popular sontluidnt, and: he stuck to this absurd view to the Inst, Tt was not the nolse only of the unitud press of the Stateot Now York which he heard, but alsq of the Indlgnant voice of the people, 3 Conkling's ilrst mistake was -in attempting to “bulldoze” the President and Senate about the control of an office; his next, and till greater, was iu resigning when be could tho corridors of all tho departments, and chokod up all the paasages to the Executive Munston, Thoy «emanded pfilee, ofllcet Ant the: Senators of n great State made an Issue with the Prositunt In tholrbohalt, The Presldont. resiéted . thelr: dictation, and the Senators resigned, ‘There waa excitement, and passlonyand turmall, bub all theso did not serve to break the forea of that habltude of thought whieh had voine to regurd‘a «fegraceful scramble for oflce og the normal condition of the American peo- plo Immediutely succoeding 9 | Prasl+ dential election, .But ono morning the dul} routine of Ifo at the. Capital In smniner was broken by a pistol-shot} Instantly the Gvil, us he ragards It, 1s Congressional par- | news that the President had been murdered tielpa ton In nppotntinénts to office, but from | by a mantus was flashed allover the country, tie way in wittoh hg Btutes the caso ane | The horror of tho people was: great ‘but It woutld futur thas it wng flog thaovil Itself, but. |, was far greater when the nssdsiy proved to tha personal dlscymfurt of the labor which fs | bu an officcsecking spollsnign, . The Presk oxactut from Congrassyven by pluce-huntora, | dent shot down Hko a dog because he had refused to givo A mau ay oMess Whatan that troubles him, After. sutting forth the oyila of chroulo uilleugbektog. Str, Dawes | awful commentary on thy spotls syste} ox- claimed thosy good, sensible, but careless . Senator Dawes lias’ been dovoting a por- tion of hls smumor hytidays to rellections upon the absorbing topje of Clvil-Survicu -ro- form, aud lids presunted his views In a two-column letter to the public, an abstract of which appeared yesterday fn this papor, Senator Dawes is confident that one of the wrentest abstacles In the way: of reforming the Civil Serylew Is “coo much tempor and too many opinions,” though tho number of the latwr Is now still: further Inereased by that of the Sunator himsdlf, which, wa fear, Js quitons Impradticala a4 any other that ha bubn advanced. ‘Tho worst phase of the sugausts this twofuld remedy: man wilt ba appoluted to any. office while he is i | suuls who had accepted the confident asser- Washington Importuntag for It," and sec- | tionof thespotlsmen that a reform of the Oivil ond, “No man will $4 appoiuted to any Borvice would bo un-Auericau, The sharp, Diurted out,the underlying principle of all: report of Gullidaws pistol, alined atthe Presale dent's iife, broke tho dull, unreilecting habit of thought of the Atmerteitl pedpie, Lhe Whole country was illumined .as by an elec- trle Hight, and fn its witte glare the people saw roveated tt all Its htddousnesd tie apotls monster, 1n the person of the wretch Gul- tentt (hey sary this monster crouching behttid tho President with murderaus titrpose, and Ti hin aa the very inearuation of that atra- elous sentiment whieh beldngs not to elyitl- gation, but to barbarism: “Ta the victors be. tong tha spots.” Quiteau's shot awakened the American people froin dream of enre- less peace tothe conselousness of a menacing danger,—danger that tho spoils system will wreek the Government. The ald tyrannical habit of unreflecting thought ta broken ant the apolls system Is doomed. : . ‘Co dispel these routine habitudes requires Nehtatng-lke flashes of illumination, Ros- coe Conkling, by virtue of at Imperlous, haughty mien sud tho fulspme adulation of feorps of, subservient worshiping satellites, heeams a prominent figura in the political firmnguent. Ie was called " arent,” and the elntin caine gradually to be adinitted without Inquiving as to the grounds thereof, It be- came a mental habitude of the American people to reguril Mr, Conkling as n arent man and stateaman, notwithstaniting his long legislative career had falled to show that hie possessed the elements of grontness, Accordingly, when Mrs Conkling resigned his offices without enuse the-seoplo wore as- tohished and shocked. An tlitsion; tong Ine dulged, had beon rudely dispelled, The act of restgnation entise! Conkling to appear very aniall Indeed; and tho public hablinde of regarding hit as “gredt” belng onco broken in upon, it was easy to sce that the idot was only a lump of commonclay. In a wort, in twenty-four hours after Conkling’s resignation the old estimate of his grentness, formed without -reason, was utterly over- thrown, and he stood revealed in his truco eharneter a4 2 selfish, spolls-hunting, egotist. ‘The failure of the United States Senate at its Inte executive session to cloosd'a Prest- dent pro tempore was Ittle regarded by the public. The habit. of Inertin ‘was stronger than tho ferr-of the Inpse bf the Presidency. Dut when tho President Iny nt tho point of denth, and thera was. but one other life be- tween stable government and: possible an- urehy, the people realized the neglect of which their servants Had been gullly, and ‘against which thoy had only faintly’ pro- tested. Ps ‘Tho sooner citizens of n country where representative government exists, a In ours, realize that careless hnbitudes aré dangerous habitudes, the better It will be for them and the country, ‘Tue Moron high pricsts are urging tho Batnts to soll no more rofl cstite to Gentiles. ‘Tho Salt Lake Zrilune, taking thia Injunction as Qh text; prenetics an excellent sermon to all sensibio Mormons, if such thoro be, It anya: “ Your best putronsare the Gontlles. You wero neurly sturving, were nabjeotly: poor, and your property was almost worthless whon tho Gen- tilea came. Tho Gentiles aro the only ones who hive created wealth hdre: the énly onos who havo furnished you a market for your products, When a Gentile buys a lot he not only pays for it, but ho builds upon its your nttianns are given work, your merehants are prtronized for tinte- rint aud furniture. Your toaders would stop lt this; would, if possible, reduces you to the ox- tremes under which you groaned when the Gen- tiles firateame hore, Buy ond sell your tote ng you please, and 1 any manin:the nome of tho Lord Interfores tall him you have nn inspiration of your own, and that you expect overy moment a revelation to kick him ult your premises. Try it; It witl not be bad for your soul; It will bo splendid for your pucket and your manhood." ee Tr people of Burmalv ard’ compolied by the British to raise oplum and the Chincse aro forced tu buy ft. Snys an exohdnges Tho Bnylishman has an unfartunnto intorant construction, liv wants money and wilt buve it, ovan If bo Wrings the life out of u weaker nition to give it to hin; yet ho ts torinéntad by a cone sclentious ove of fair play, which forces him tucry * Hands olf!" to biinsalt. . It ia quite in ocping with this tinttonal churacteristio to find in the oilumns of tho Londuh Lines tho full-res port made by Chief-Commisstoner Aitchison, of British Buemub, on tho chanye coming over tha Duemeso In consaquenco of the use of this drug. At “destroys the nerves, cmaciates and discnses the body, onfeebles future gonorations, and fills tho jails." Ho fad received depytattons from tie inost influential of the Burineso, protesting . agalnat tho mlscry forced on thelr people by the Government traitle in oplum, Jon Bull not only betongs to that cluss wiom Hawthorne calfs the * untortunntes who ‘ate able to seo both aldes of a question,” but ito the still moro unfortunate: who kuow the bost. road and per | Bistently follow the worst. SNEED ESCSaaSaEEEeE Tnr people of New Mexico do not atand much on tho technicalities of the Inw, What they want Is tho admlniatration of justice, apecdily and olfecttyely, in dealing with desper- adocs, a8 por a casein points .- ve One McCarthy, formerly of New York, and boltor known ag “Lilly ‘the Kid," a promising youtne thin of #1, whose proud Bonet wis that ho jad killed An inan for pvery yoar of his tife, has dately boon pursued and shot dead on algae by Sherl iT Hoar! iis Vegas, ‘Iho Coroner's Jury whieh aut on the body rendored a verdlat ot juatitinbla honilelde, and passed fm yoto of » thunks to tho Bhoriit-for ridding tho heaped BE this young man, who seems to’ have wade biniself a terror to tho region, Furthurmore, tho Shorilf has recolvon n handsome rewird- from the State and lathe reoiplont of a popular subseription, tho. perpen being in part tocncuurngootherShoritls o'du their duty tlkawiso, . 2 Sour ot the English journals have beon sovorcly sarcastic upon the genticman who hip- pous to bo the Commundor-in-Chict of the Brith army, holding blu indirectly reaponsible for the douth .of several ;soldiors who, durlug tho recent Aldershot rovlew, succumbed to tho heat. The Duko, it appears, bug been tho butt af much disrcspeotful wit on teddunt of his dise Uke of ran; but his Indiffercnea tu heat fs not leas emphatic, On the day of thd roviow he found tho weather “not- unplousuntly warm," although the thermomotor murked 12) degrous Inthosun, The rovlow. ended dolorously, In spite of tho Nuke'a gontal (mpurvibusuess to tho suffering of othors, Six suldjors died outright, and forty-six were borne away, disabled tu tho, hospital, : : 8, O, Onanpren's cloments of the orbit of tho third coniet of 1881 aro aa folluwar~ Perthellon passage, Aug. 18, 1881, - Longitudo: of paribalion 223 Slewrens 4d induants Vorinoe Hon ty node, Le degrees St mfiutes, Longitude of node, 0 Jogrees 0 ulinutes,- Inollnation, HE dogreca 5b mints, the -nution being retros gente. Logurithin of rnaTias diet ance Bats: ‘Those clomonts give the following ypbowerls of the comet for midnight at Washington: Right, Declination, gsceuston, north. Date, > My Be or waa 74 4 4340 43,0 ' 4 BE ae | 48, 43 A prominent ollizen wlio réaldos i the @aino town with the Demvorutio candidate for Goyvornor of Ohly vifers to back up his opinions of Bookwalter's home pupuldrity us follows; f wilt put up §f00 that ho won't onfry bis own ward. * se Pisces. Sn 1 will bot #600 that ho docsn't carry. his own townshi i Paes Twill bot $500 that be won't carry thoclty, - Twill bot SUN) ‘that ho dovsw's cary. tio county. Vit bee $30 "tonrey” thts. Con y the erpastonnt distr is hil bot i Btato, fie i nH bg abies it 1 docs That's $4,000 in wilyand tt necessary, 1 don't want'to publish my nam but authorize you to telegraph ma in case any? body offera ty fuke It pp. ’ a Ne ee arnant ~ Tue Bt Lorils Globe (spails' organ) throws Up tho sponge for Conk, alter, sHoktug £9 him upto this time, It sayy: Oanuling. avidoutly. moans to tuko the case Lofaro thé! people if he can. Wedanot evo how he can expoit {9 fare Detter at the hands. of the ponplp: than be bus fared at the hangs of ‘the Albany» Leglalatirys Thu’ sang fiction tigke; will pruduco tha same results anywhore, It. Iga bad thing all sound. Especially fur tho ox+Boss. © *. 5 Semneeenennamnermcemiee : * “Tp conjunction of sara and Jupiter on Friday (yeatorday] morning," -syya tho’ Provie dence Journal, * witl bo worth wetting up tosce, ‘The eastern sky will thon present a suporb pict ure of the glory of tho stura, w sceng tha¢ will Mat combination for tha enjoyment of hopween 3 rid 4 o'el not b3 repentad for tany yonrs. Tho t cts, Marsand Jupiter, will be otoaa tugoty Above thom Saturn will boxcan, nbutt the ales of Mars; below thom Venue will nppoar ty borttinnt Plnises ane stil) lower In tho heavens ihe waning mann will contiplote tha culegtial pleturo, pianols and (ho toot at one Yow form anu WO Dini. Four mg. pasate. Tho beat timo for observation vill te t a aun arent snpour of population ftom ky. rope ts now from Germany, and not, as forme a Is; from Ireland, whict 19 pretty’ much eg, hidusted. Of the 648,000 persons thie enmo fntg this country for tho yoar ending July fie thére camo from— Neca? CeeMANyrseseseses Dominion of Canada, England and Wate: ralal Boandln Reothand, Chinn... All other countrios. pace e Srenanians ‘Tie Boston Post thinks that the expert. monts of Dr, Wolsso’s pistol practies ona" sige to detertintno tho course of Gultenn's butler | tho Prestdent's body shows that © Posslbly ie ball fron Guitenu'a bulldog crossed tho anterior surfico of tho, quadratua Nnmboram mu} : wounded the tila hypogastric and thle Inguinal nerves, roached tha. sitrfave of the illncus 0 tornus musele, passod oloso to the psons mite inusolo, and rumnains upon the lumbosacral) choad ‘of the sacral plexua,”* " —— Mn. JAues G. Fam heads the Dersonal assessment roll jist Mod in Ban Franeiseo wit $12,00,000, Mr. J.C, Flood is nasessed at ¢y 500,000 for himsett and $20,800,000 as trusteg ford. W. Mackey. Mr. Charlea Crockor fa np sossed nt $20,000,000, <n Do onghayaMeN ever fish on Sunday 2. Sthetnuett | Sousney chile Certainly. ‘Chat is their Principal fishing day, Aro thoy not command to be "fishors of men" ? ome PERSONALS, New Iaven, Conn., is becoming n favor suminer regort, Base-batl {8 probiblted thery by law. It Is now undorstood that Guitenu will be Acnteuced to five years’ attendanco at Wagner concerts, It is curious that no reporter was sont to iuterviow Col. Ilood about the alleged matringg of Aire, Woodhull's daughter. Btoud will tell, Lord Colin Campbell is to be congratulated on his recent marringo to Miss Wlood. Lacon tint tho lady {8 no rolation to Victoria Wood. pull a i A Cleveland paper remurks that “a mag often sttibs bis tog on the throshold of success" Our esteemed contemporary’s tovs aro ubdon stood to bo'uninjurcd, Miss Blanch Willis Ifoward, daughter of V.N, Howard, of Bangor, Me., {8 the author of “One Summor.” A Chicago boy's bicycla is the author of ubout 400 falls, Wo ara gind to notice that the Canadian Rite Team has won in England. Tia fs tho nearest that the English huve come to winning anything in thelr own country for some time, ‘The Duke of Sutherland says that the fun -nlest thing ho saw in this country wasthe Amer ienn fop aplugan Engilah covknoy. The Duke ovidently didn't ‘get hls eye on any Caundiag SUD inon trying to look like u stylish Amore jon, At the Bagshot fancy fair,{in which Royal ty ahared so active a part, a young gyntiemm took a funcy ton cortain article, and remarked tog Indy at tho stall that ft wos very pretty, She assonted, adding, “My mother sent {t” “ Honlly,” softly rosumoil tho customer. “ Why, Ivt me sco; L ntmost think I must have mot your mother. Horonamo fe—" "Tho Queen,” re piled the * salealady.” Oh, the young love was sweet, deat, ‘Lito daitity dream of ours; © ‘When we could riot keep our feot, dtn: From danclag through the Nowers; ‘When hopes and gay romances Wore thick ds'lenves in spring, And cares woro old folka’ fanoles, » And Joy thovsolid thing.:s: - Of oll. youth's visions bicst, dear, OF all its golden flowers, =~ ‘Oh, tho young tovo was tho best, dear, ‘That dainty dream of oural Oh, tho old love Is sweet, dear, ‘Those chill Qotover days; ‘When wea tread with faltering feot, dear, ‘Tho sero and silont ways; ‘When carth has lost its glory, . And heaven has lost its blue, Aud life's a sobor story, And care a comrade truco, Though hopos no longer cheat, dear, And droams have lost thotr sivay, Oh, the old love is aweot, dear, ‘That gilds tho autumn day! —Samuel Jones Tiden, — ‘7 PUBLIC OPINION. The Atitance; The Prosident ts sly. recovering his health, and at the present writhy may contidéntly be anid to bo ottt of danger, al though tho public bulletins of tho sunrcons ia chargo of the casd do not ne yat so declare. Dr. Bliss in. private says that bla patient will un- doubtedly get well, aud: tho: little snarling Daily News, which hns hardly rostrulied Its dosire to suy ill-natured things about Mfr. Garllold duriog his dangorous ‘iloces, aud has oxprossly re: HeirSiotitous wpetoteec can intules apie nif-dolirious spovohea, can induly and renow tha Kind of aierwate that hn Ite disc ful Influcnco on the criminally crazy Gulteau. Now York Post (Ind.): The ‘olection of ‘Mr, Millor to tho seat tn the Seuute vacated by Mr. Piatt, and tho probiblo election of Mr Lapham In plave of Mr. Conkling, will bave im: portant .consequonces in National aswell a Btnto politics, In tho first place, it effectually Ls gea tho third term for Gon, Gniotia 18e4, If that wore not alroudy igposed of by ine rently enianeed popularity, of Gea. Gurtield: t algo brouks tho * maghine." in Now York a Opens the way for u reorganization of tho party in this aity.on a forage basis. More than all removes the chief obstacle to reform of i Civil Service... There bas vot been se mud wround clearod for political regeneration aint tho resumption of specio payments, perhaps not | ince the surrender ofthe Rebel armies. ~ Nashville Banner (Dem.); Among the ‘names ofton mentioned in the telegrame In on neotion with the. shooting of Preaident Garilelt Tone have mot with a Kinditor reception than that of James G. Biaino, of Baines whilo 8 membor,of the Bonate, and st while « momber of the House, atuad in bad cord with the Sduth, Ho was coinbative in tho ek frome, and was constuutly tun row with one Bnother of the Southern ‘Repreacntutives, or the Bouthorn prosa, sympathizing with tholr 0 a fovele, puured a conatant stream of wbuse rd HtSatiSe Hla ay OF fe patstotlo feeling wt leation vO one visit i ianmedd, wire, bo fiscinated voryoue Who Gi - tii Then just before and during tho Chicas Conyontion the rine country ugalnat tho aypressive tendencies: i Grintites, and. Hply oer on. Gark pawers of third-termiam anu consol! et i 1 ee nara at PUL 1e , his enomiles ant i ‘inte norton digurmed wll bis Bouthorn opponents l Ol wCOUNT) Ae could nat 0 hii forget ike —————————— SOUTH PARK CONCERTS. ‘Tho second grand Instrumental cuncort one jeaaon given by the Howth Park Caxnmaisslon Z wit ucour Suit atteedogn is i enat division Park, on tho ahorp ol biter eonatig of Swenty’ 3 Nit come under the diroodon of John Hund, and wilt ery munca prompuy 1 4 Gichooks ‘Tho fol ler rate will bo dglivereus AOU | yenire de Post™! Little DUkO "ever s,; 8. { Polka Mazourku, * Blue Byes My ‘OTP, * 7" Bolestiout “oie te (by request 8, sauna tidy, 9 buppe D, Hata a . Lianne wot Sent ee tec ny us rach by Tao. CR beaut Hyde Pupk,Dumesy, oF tho Bou” Pry ny Rk ony +, lepecial Dispatch to é OLayyoN, IIb, July 8—A divorce cate Down commonged in the De Wits Coun! 5 Oy cule Court aver. _ sane! woul ot ret sbanid, at ea res fo bon uteresting ; Mth, Boe . “seated . A. $3,000 damage aillt has been commer Inge his brothorialaw, R is eee gor hia w fs to Joave him aa. Whippad ium vesides,

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