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FUE CHICAGO TRIBUNE:* SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1881—SIXTEEN PAGES ; “nm * tae t TCUUBISILOR CIROME. | Auupien Okara ania xe | ateraaiimue camo! view tion /, ” RANY-HORSES. | Ruse Woden i teal | Mot Henna ee ary elle | LeeLee, i apn ty. F a e hbred desdales, | horses from nll parts of Kurope, Including Be Ot oe is diocese dusing a enone dolivered at ita fshosal to We HH Wit audictent tlma: tt { and expects to return in time to enter his | French, Clydesdale, and fonelish horses. Tiaif «Preheat, eC. Oe ce usa! to devote to the consideration stable Sept, 12atthe Chicago Fatr, Heln- | is conceded to be the most extensive iin . Wa itionnond, Axtlagtc The Hochester Norman Wore Company, Rochester, — ‘the Clerical Land-League Usader | six or eight speccties, in all of which ho dis- | of them, Great Extent of the Business in | tends, also, to bring homo with him an Ox- | porter and breeder of draft horses inthe | jogy & Trimble, Walnut. _ cnssed fully the statoof public affalrs, ‘Those “TE may add that the Irish popular party in ford bull, ‘Among his importations this sen- | world, Ilis barns are capable of accoin- The Most Popular Priest, eae So noging wii} pt laedL to the British Aloiise of Commons enn, and £ Minois. gon Is. 2 year-old pure. blood, weleit 1,450 | mounting 30 heatl, mostly WM hox-stalia, ‘The | ituss Kainitorye Onarga. i Ireland, fre tee enh Ae ine DB H old and believe A |) ditehten their diflentties from pounds, tint stood second at the Glasgow | stables hnve n frontage of 660 feet, with a W, HI. Russel, Sandoval. in { Litter ¢ nungial tH of ee ’u ne olnes, offer- | day to day, and, ulthnately renter them in- show In May last, Iola n dark bay, clean | renrextenston of 600 feet more, andabvout | Mr, itexevat, Sacomb, onto taethiee enarts in thot Own, portant ae cof opinion that independent | English Cart-Horses, Clydesdates, and prot aati ween ¢ tame ails 0.000 yeaa eds Dials, Wibalinpot, Hamtton, y : gon tho Land Bill—Effect rominding thom of the heroes of their history | self-rule for Ireland woul] weaken hier bonds the Norman Breeds, iam Sterling ‘Alenia. at Ph. waite x ar a dames 1, Totman, Dolind, Vier! and the great deeds for Mberty neconi- | with Kugland, as many belteve, orstrengthen Dye De a NORMAN OMSK. Bans & Decker, Honus L’ralrie, Boone County, of Mutilating the Bil plished by Lrishinen dead nnd gone: while | them? z ss Ha eee oe mre al aU 70 IP BANG of. 1a UMiena TG Wa ik. keott, Abingdon. . py the Poors. he tinal speeches, thottah withdrawing | "There, oan be no doubt that tho bonds | Tholr Introduction Into This Country-— | brilliant promise, Altogether, Mats OL | Cenrnarsa, Lily July 29, 188L—Within the | PAIL ene aawelit nothing, advised ‘the neeeptance of thy | would be strengthenci. A people discon- pure bloods and gindes, Col. Jfollowny hing | past six years three Norman horses (stallions) BitJonae & Bony looral 3 ee Fant bill as tenporny tt nz the auth aul ut alnst resisting the authori- Juteresting Talk on Irish Politics— | tics, who were gonding then on to violence tented and dissativtied with those who rile Tho Great Ilools Importers some 140 horses on his farm, He lost Lord over'them have a natural tendency to seces+ 4 i ‘i + st Lore sion, ind that lendency will be in Proportion Keir, avery fing horse, nt sea. Ile lins re~ have been imported direct from France to Smithy Earlville, Centralia by a couple of our farmers, and in Staniey & sliver, Urbann. J, Stephens, Bloomingdale, i fused $7,000 for his Prince Frederick stallion, and’ reslatance Jn order to putthem tn the | to the discontent, Diminish the grounds of vely ig B | addition to these several hinve been Intro- Fmy Gtetaon, Neponact: Belf-Government for the Wrong: ‘Tho speeches all through lind been | discontent and Ini so far you atrengehen thy Namos of All the Dealers in Imported wad poutively refuses to put any velco spon duced from) Northern | Ilinols, | ‘thelr | jt tention, BANC Island, ‘othing more and more moderate, ani | unlon. Draft-Horses in This State, gnuer thoughe. tis Ciydeadntes cugnttobe | Brokuny (halfbluods) ts eonsideenble ete. | (Ned ihieneld @ Co. Dloomtngtom, many thouglit His Graco was recanting, No “Tn conceding setf-goyernment to Ireland enrefully qf s ye would you consider the federal form of gov- 7 et they er eer He tea tuitden a ernment the best 2? Saturday, July 16, ‘fue Trmunn printed | the yearlings stond the nia yoynge budly. © T think such a Government os thatof the | an article upon the subject of Linported draft | Whife at Cot, Holloway’s Titis ‘Toinuny United States ts of all others the simplest | horses which exeited go intich generat and | Tepresentative was informed thats party of abotits, and thoy ure generally niueh thought of ns draft and heavy carriage horses by the fariners and teauisters, No effort las been made to breed full Normans, and stich are not consitered profitable, wherens the lalf- blood fs a profitable horse to ralse, 1, B. Bmith, Borline D, Sackrider, Berlin. Mr, Bluttery, Gnnrga, John Short, Heighton. + Miles Spaulding, Soneca. A.M. Stuphens, Flora, 7 such thing, When he began the people Dons, July at, 1981,—Imagino n tall, | were fully arausedt they had been aver ed t, aud perfectly proportioned stately fig- | with strong words and national sentiments, bi clad in a Catholic ‘Arehbishop’s robes, a-| aud would listen to nothing else. Dr, Croke " Avo, ’ a: c f face Inmndsoie, freslt, Trawky eet gave Horm what they ranted one NaN i cae mainly. cael at eet favorable comment that ft was deemed ad- SA fats dere wt ine eau lips 8... Torts, Frank Silsby, Carlinville, and genial, and you have eee ath fa O tempor his words with reasonnble advice. | cration, as the dferatd las sugested, Ireland | Vistble to pursue the inquiry further tthe ardund Alesis and Mumnoutne es paged Milo,E. Snowdon, Harvard, pleturo tor Dr, ‘Thomas W. Croke, tho fa-{ Ehave heard It sald that tind the Areh- | being a partof itand holding to the other | lnjerost of farmers, hotsc-breeders, and ; ; MACON COUNTY MEN. 1}, W, Taylor, Eidena. ‘To the Editor of The Chteago Tribune, tmiros Trotbo, Ottawa, ig Atchbishop of Cushel, o ninn for many bishop delivered his last speech first he | confederated todies and to the Imperial Par [ dealers, Once again the statement ts made TUR FRENCH, DIRAPTAIONSEs F. K. ‘Taylor, Barcla; the people, not only of his | Would havo lost his case, Be this ns itimay, | Hnment the some relallonslifpthat California, | that this sub; Ithough of vital | In this horse fickt thero {s more capital Dereatun, UL, Aug &—During the past | Vietor ‘humps Monticoll pears encdearetl to he retatued and added to his tremenduus in* | for Instance, holds tu tho other States and to ig subject, although of vital hnport: | oterprise, and rivalry than It vo. | two w carrespe! < fournes, Adrien Fn dioceso, but of nll Ireland, becattso is | Hance aut yet restrnined his countrymen | the supremo Jogisinttre at Washington, 1, | cet the people, fs one that, for various | Ay Stted In the. bextunting of Te eatcle ge nly Sethe yous curtesponiltt ee ee Homme Bros siitord, of country followed closely after his | from oxcesses greater thau any that had boat tho Almighty, and because he was | been cominitted before. ¥ never afraid to brave his superiors and his INTERVIEWED. Willinm Thomas, Ashton. ’ I. Taylor, Monticelto,, ’ A. G, Vanhoreboke, Monmouth, * IL SP. Vaughn nm» Oneida. Jobn Virgin, Fulrbury. for ane, would be thoroughly satlstivd, and | causes, has been handled very tenderly by | required n greatdeal of push nnd carnest- fvel thatnothing better could he done Ih thls | those papers whose duty it is to give the ness to get the Hnerienn people to ue ih, respect for Lrelaud. Hut this supposition Is, | facts to their readers, ‘Cho -ngricnttural | Nemuan worse for there were all kinds of from all partsof the seventeen townships In the county with reference to the horse ques- ft those who In the course of'lils conversath ith to my mind, practically Impossible, ‘The ss, whie! Vi ¥ unfounded prejudices: to be overcome, But | tle. Owne ff imported Ne and fovermment for tho beneflt o} pind is conversations withine, | coiontos will before ionic bi Stole. ert | press which etalms to be wholly devoted to | to-day the I ‘ . . Owners of fuported Norma an up tohimfor advice, Many have | Dr, Croke expressed himself frantly as re ; 1 0 loner become independ: | the interests of farmers, [ f los fo-dny the Introduction of te Norman horse | Clydesdale stallions wre unanimous in the | 2.8, Vile, Rochelle, Hooked UP to Parnell—cold, “ mgthodical, | &itds tho situation in Ireinnd, and 1 have cnt or confederate muong, thoinselves, nul farmers, for fone. of losing | hos become 80 general. Wiis excellencles 80 | opinion that farmers ean do more farm |. 7 Venuh, Lexington, we inst contiie ourselves, therefore, to Eu- | advertising patronage by publishing that) well attested, his dociiity and strength so gland, Ireland, ana Scotland alone. Now the | which would injitre anybody engaged In | firnily recognized, tat the years are near ab dwestfon comes, would 1 be sutistied with & | handing what is called improved stock, has hand when the Norman fiorse will be the ERR ent Tee ihe ree Brent con | attempted to pursue a course that would con- qimerican hots end ie preset Aumerican hesltatingly anawer In the aflirmatives” ciilato nll, ‘Tho result hns been tho mystl- | "Ar. ‘Commissioner Sanders, in his, Per- ieee you think the Intense feeling of dis- fleation of the people, who are at moro of a | cheron Norman Stud-Book, says thot it may t 8 for England will eyer dio out In Ire- | loss what to do than Jf nothing had been be safely stated that to Normandy and aT to not think this feeling will dic out tn written, + ‘ Goutlnenta va edeied for thelr’ var our tine or at any future time. unites Not one inathousnnd of our people tins | ous breeds Oren atotece hese gland alters ler altitude altogether us re- | the slightest conception of the magnitude of | breeds wero , seint-technicnlly described gards this country and treats Ibns she treats | the Industry carried on in the timportation {in ¢) Tare Trent of July 16 ench aud oyery one of her other flourlshing | and breeding of draft-horses. And tho very | %3 Percherons, Porcheron-Normans., Nor- SV iat hae bees the effect of the C people who are the most desirous of being man-Dercherons, Normans, | and | Frenet, ALA oerclot benefited by this Industry are. th 1 horses. Not bemg versed in horse lore, for pie k y dustry are the ones who } the purpuses of tis article the generle term tet he Coercion act tins dono no good to | know tho leust about ft ‘She heavy draft- | Norman will be used as embracing all tho he Joy ernment, but has dong. (Boat tothe | horse las become almost n necessity in our | above, classifications; for to the practical popirlar cus, in ieelantl f fins mils | cities and larger towns, yet up to the present Amerloan they, aseny distinctions without a {armiiiation of the people to freu thenisulves | tity the Importers and owners of them have ND linys, acelebrated author of horse from rack rents, and its has Intensitled the | limited thelr advertising to tho agricultural Hierature, gives the following almost perfect horeditary hatred of Saxon rule.” jourtials, wich it is well known are not read | description of the Norman horse: “To no $$ yy One man fn 10,000 outside of the rural dis- | ordinary strength, to vigor which does not lets. VOICE OF THE PEOPLE, | “it's the object of this nrticte to st —— the value oeite Ciratt-horse fndustry, D, It. Vandolah, Lexington. Vaughn & Co., Kankakee, Whiteline & Ginnsel, Mornstown, A. Walker, Macomb. Hugh Waite, Annawan. Gen, Warren, Huckloy. I, It. Westfall, Macomb. W. A. Whitmore, Charicaton. Wilkinson & Hadicy, Nevada. 8, Witlinms, Montano, W. H. Winter, Princeton. Ed Wilson, Mackinaw. Welsenholiner & Enylchardt, Mendota. W. 1k Wilts, Pittaticld, Ih. C, Webster, Milford. Vhitlip Webber, Mendota, Jona Webber, Mendota, Adam Webber, Mendota. oF E. 1). Wolte & Bro. Munster. York Horse Ureeders’ Association, Mount Bofomen Yates, Flora. ON THE RAMPAGE, Yeaterday's Experiences in Wheat Onatn, Corn, Kye, Ete, “ Everybody is selzed with the manta of speculation,” said prominent Board of wondered how inde note of some of his more iinportantand nnmagnetic: allke ignorant of ond Un | interesting utterances, which are heregiven: touched by the poetry, the battles, tho heroes, | Correspondent—Do you think, my Lord, and adventures by Hood and gl ave ill ae ; the Uiadatons, jane eu witt settia td h question in Irelans the vages of Irish history and apneal go | Serr nishop Croke~"Cliera ts not the lonst ly to Irlsh imagination—could ever nT so warm n plnce in: the hearts of Mkglthood that it will Kents under tig new Mseouutrymen. The moan whom all Ireland } Mei and tho inndionds- In ‘many. Instances quid haveselected fornleaderisthelrfavorit | cannot afford to lower them, while in other Ws bishop, fitted by nature and education cused they will not vousentto do so, Arcll ' . |. “Is.not the Land Commisston to settle dis- to direct. tho people, to control thelr pas: | outesa good iden?” gions while arousing them to energy and | “ "Ihe Commission will at best haa very actlon, and to nppenl to thelr noblest feelings, | moderate affair, and no striking offect will be * Pipperary has been anational county as long praquead by HE In {hls matters licdamapear weet + Lords ¥ er - back sliving memory, con rnc emegurd | Ously Witt Une Land bil 3 Se Jon B, Dillon, a Rebel of 4, 1 Ly “f think the House of Lords willcertainly representatlyo3 ihe present Jy Be Dilan te attempt to mutilate the Land bill and really ' tin member, and lias giv arty 80; but lam atthe saine tine of opinion tals ostnionss Ld Smyth, another Rebel that S[r, Gladstony will not allow then to 48, 13 Ditton’s fellow-member. What alter ,the measure materially for the worse of 43, 13 that Tipperary lias AW AL fi without 0 strugizle, Should’ he, however, wonder, then, tha ft TN ais é Hu erena.| Buller thom to have their way, then te use; pishop in gyi if x Mn th A Re ‘t Jess character of the Land bill will bo placed what would be Getter nt He HS rents 9! beyond a doubt” humanity than that an ardent populace | “What would bo the fealing in the coun- work, and doit quicker, by securing colts from their stallions, and quite 9 number of farmers share this opinion, But there are Tarmers who deelary that Normin and Clydesdale colts from common mares to not quiswer as well ns coinmon colts for all sorts of farm work, ‘They nre too largo ond clumsy, they claim, and move too slowly, Owners of are mares say that they will get Norinan colts when they can, 25 n matter, ofspeeulation, ‘They always bring a good peice for use in the large citles ns draft horses, and sell quickly at all thnes of the year. ‘Here and there a farmer was found who strongly favored breeding large nares to imported stallions, and the use of larger horses on the farm, but. they were few and for between. One farmer anid he hitched up two #-year-old Nornian colts last spring, and they did tha work of three common horses— turning over four acres of ground in one day. They moved along like clock-work, and showed no signs of fatigue. Below are the names of owners of imported stallions In this county: Ee DAW. Brenneman, imp. Norman, “Niger,” fet to 100 mares this season; same, Imp, degenerate, and to a conformation which first, does not exclude elegance, it Joins docility, 9 our | mildness, patience, honesty, great kindness, Id be Led and controlled by one in whom e Donaldson Fate. people; second, Its magnitude, Ilowever, ye onic | Clyde: 2 OM ft East, v . ry 81. PAut, Minn., July &—Will you please in+ A WRIEP HISTORICAL BKETCIE ted, and light, It exhibits great endurance, | ty-live mares, Sin Bronnentan also owns | &°?! estegetl by people who are twenty graded mares of the Norinan and Clydesdale stock, Mets quite an enthustast on. the blooded-horse question, and is doing much toward introducing fine equine stoc in the county. B . Samuel Weaver, of Hickory Point Town- allip. owns elght grided Clydesdale mares, Hugh Mooney, of Niantic, has one bn- porte Norman’ stallion ond ten graded colts, that the natlonal cause may best be served by | "Phere are many, L think, whozwould ILk eaceful means? In the present crisis ho | to see the bill Trove out by. ea pana oe ag sprung to, hee por hae poasnsseil seriously injured by them. J know several before, but, nor fore ee a iene ata zed, | among the best thinkers {n the popular ranis and he skillfully ¢ hecked Ly ie DE ae who belleye that the people alone can seltie the ylolence, without sacrificing di ai rH ong Jand question, and that It will never bo sntis- the people nor yet eon atic: sary io factorily settled by Dritish legislators. © Let ‘the. raise ff nel Hatt on a eed bie the people, they say, now stand to thelr guns, which may bo cons! HED hi pide lonable | keep united, determinedly object to pay ex- siuin Iretand—and it 1s ‘0 him equally with | cessive rents, avold land grabbers, refuse to Parnell that the people look at present for | hid for or take a farm from which «man anxious to send orders to Chicago. ‘The erazo spreads like wildfire. There's the Indies’ bucket-shop; it ins a bad attack of the contagion, und:the Open Board fins at lust been obilged to biild a corn-pit. The tallers are legion, They are catching on wheat, lard, corn, timothy seed, onts, pigs,” “The wheat clique,’ said on old operator, “are helped by outside news. Eastern aud form one ol-your renders: whothor Donatdson | of tho several families of draft-horses no | both when hard worked and when foreed to gtartod from Chicago on his fatal trip orfrom | doubt highly interesting. In the early day maintain for a long tlme any of its natural fe ila an a oblige Louis Romarse, =| before the era of railroads, and when civil. Falts, and it possesses the inestimable qual- BO» ization began to push Its way west of the iy of AON IN, fast with heavy loads. qechap aivcae Alleghenles, a public necessity brought into | 18 partleularly valuable for tis astonishing tae ee use t heavy draft-horse of unknowi pedi- | Precoclty, and produces by lis work, ns n 2 01 ci cage Tribune. ere, but locally Known as. the Conestoga, yenrald. more than the cost of its feed and CnreAqo, Aug. 4.—Cat you inform us by what | and supposed to have Fiemish blood in his | Cep. Indeed, it Joves, and shows a real apt- authority nnd upon whose petition Robey street | veins. ‘Che freighters over the. mountains | puss for Inbor, which Is the lot of all. hag boon narrowed some olght foct frou Madi- | prized these horses very highly, und, so fur | knows neither the whims of bad humor nor quldance and instruction. : has been ovicbal for. non-payment. of | aon strect gouth? With the rapid Incrensein.| #8 thoy were able, kept the. strain’ pure, | Nervous exeltement, Women and chikiren, | Albert Howland, of Blue Mound Towne | oro :, YOrULAT, WELCOME, ik e Large x For. | from whose lands dt is fed, can ae wns one imported Norman, foreign markets are Ligher, and a private A Pore! a rack rent snd continue. the ngita-| popntation and business, of which we rightly | 18tee numbers of the Canadian and Ver: att ‘ et, can approauh It ality, OW iL. Casnet at ‘Casner Station, tiasthe | cable says the Mrench harvest is turning out Had i mee iiotit Morgans were also. purchased by tho | Without fear. In a word, It is nn honorable Meee dedtinad. to" bose milioh, sed ae ts Hoboys| eRe ia Cee eT ene Oe Ee att eds ot tha fields Tt eatin used 1 vithin five years after tho rillrouds super- s < strong. 1s a exautly eas Bet wach Ashinnl seded the slow and Jumbering freight-wagon 15 exempt from the hereditary defects of strooty] venture to inquira tuocanso of thosnnil- | te Conestoga horse almost disappenred, and other brecils,. ule. 4 Ike progress in the improveiment started on this | te Morgan horse went back again to in 1857 the Messrs. Dillon purchased Louls eee ne Lake creer hat falicand now | Vermontand the lumbering districts of Can-| Napoleon aud removed him ty their fart tn barely finished to Stadieon atrcot—fourshors | ada, ‘There: fs n tradition (horse gossip), | Melean County, He was bred to a superior blocks. Wonderful city! Lively Stroot-Supor- | that ns early ns 1816, n French dratt stallion grade of mares, and his get In due tlne es Infondentt lie Caceres Waller, butdo | was hnported into. Canada, butit was’ not | tblished the possibilities of the excellencles ot bellove ho knows about thia street. WitL S30 chat an Amerlean'attempted to im- | Of the cross. These gentlemen have been en- When I arrived in the South of Ireland a | tion for n: year or two longer, and few weeks io. Lfound his name on every | then landlords will have to come and tongue; all his movements wero toples of | ask, tertis from the tenants, who, can this public interest, At ‘Tipperary, when gotne | settle the land «question on an equitable and toagreat public demonstration, I followed “Jetelive’ basis. Speaking more geserally, inhis track and foitnd tho roadways arched | however, Iam deeldedly of opinion that tho atintervals for miles with floral einblems of | great bulk of our farming and, indeed, shop- devotlon to him, the trees hung with mot- eeping, elasses would be glad to sev the toes of welcome, and‘ flowers strewn along | present Land bill substantially passed into his path, whlch was Mned by thousands of | Inw, especially if fair provision be made in ‘cheering people, “Wherever C went, nothing it. for leaseholders and. tenants in arrears, could exceed his popularity, no. chiracter In |.and atill more so if the Commissioners ap- poorly, and the Riisslan crop has been ine jured by too much wet weather, Wheat is advancing on Its merits, and I wouldn’t wou- der ifit would have been higher than ft is now If it were riot for cliqne manipulation, ‘'Yhe winter wheat is also sald to’ be ‘so-so,? and kere are Indications of rain while the farmers are in the midst of the harvest, It Isa bull day, ‘Che combination is snid to have put Young at the helm jn Milwaukee, only imported English stiliion In this sec- tion that your correspondent has been able tofind, Hels a fine speeimen, and hits colts ich sought after, JV: Faris, of, Niantic, has a Noman and Clydesdale stallion. Davis & Carter, of this city, own an tm- ried Norman stallion, and Norinan and ‘lydesdale colts are owned by John Moffett, Frank Browning, Thomas Lord, Wash Sute ton, ‘Thomas Kern, James Patterson, au Tomance was over the hero of more inci- | polnted by the Government under tho act bo Wesi-Sipen. | port French horses, and hie, Bdward Harris, | gaged for twenty-two years in breeding and | others, dvd. | and that market, has risen to S117, Tho re- denis creditable alike to lead and, heart, | such ns to inspire contidence,” + _Incenttven to Crime. Of New Jersoy, had I-lueli his tallion died | ee tae rarer reerald words. “Lives | ‘The following fsa list of Heat ners dont ‘sppeat to be aaytalng Spurred by curlosity, 1 ventured to visit Do you think the resentful feeling of the To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. -on thie voyage ny did one of his mares shortly ousehold is hey for therelique to worry about” e after renching Naw Yi rt ~ | have made eleven {importation: poing Guidido, Aug, 821408 Aho voutso Of exiina Io: | ete te eons wile tees Thame, The sate | itn person to France to make tholr selections, pconsldorable oxtontowlng tothe sonsntional, | year he returned to. Franee, bought another | 80d now have forty odd full-bloods and over trashy Paport, illustrated by tho cheapvst and Btelllony, Fot him sufely over to ie farm but a lund: shales rules, dt Sieit to thuir most miserable woodeuts, thathangup in every | before getting much goo out of him he went By number, sattstle i Tatu atationér’s window, oxposed to tho full ylow of | blind, “From that date until 1851, no attempt | UNE representative that tho elaborate catilox tha publio? Is not tho avorago biman mind | Wis made on tho part of any American to Jately Issued by the Dillons was but an im- taatty tntluenced by these ovil productions? ta | Waport draft stallions .or inates, but that | pertect guide to the treagures they possess In not thehiman mind, apt to. fulate, espediull spring Charles Fullington and Erastus Mar- | horse-tlesh, Tuesday, Aug. ty nhother con- Where: hore ie no self-control? tow. many | {if of Union County, Ohlo, brought over a signment ts expected to land in New Yor un many | three-yenr old Norniny horse to which thoy | 80 large In number that it will require se Youngeterg ure found rending these erimeredi | vis die nano of Louls Napoleon, So thor: | teen cara and a special train to transfer the ai TN S'6 101 1a lows b coil, fs classes thoso papers are’ mostly tends Whar n | ollghiy had our people become ftterested in | animals to MeLean County, 4 genool fav crhuee in every wromnole thore curt | brewing to racers and lijgh-steppers that it | ,sames A. Perry, au extensive deuler nt tound a well-known polico Journal, of trashy, | wasithreoseasons beforean: wctable num: | Wilmington, informed Tite ‘Linus: repre- sensational plotures, combiued with obscenity. | ber of farmers could be ado to ses the | sentative that he began the handling of heavy Whata place to apply the torch which Kindles | yalng of Napoleon's gat for farm and draft | draft-horses twenty years ago. He then had into ngreut flame. If those *litorury produce i ly “ s ty [ purposes, When and by whom tho first in- | the fmpression that the Clydesdales and En- Bee ae Devi hima wate ve Suppreused, porintion of English and Seoteh or Ciydes- | Blish breeds were the best fordratt purposes, DEALERS IN IMPORTED DRAFT TMONSES IN ILANOIS; Bono & Colby, Tallul peerety Ep pton & “ ». Derinda, abeoe: rown, Onurga. iextor Narrows, Harvard, Meflenry County. Granville Bat iden. Herlin Stok Aasocintion, Berlin, ©, & L. Berop, Bureau Junction. T, Headley, Dunton. A. ¥. Brooking, Macomb. , C, Buswell, Princeton. William P. Guswell, Princeton. Jacob Breeze, Irvington. Rien Barnstable, Chesterfield. Edward Budd, Milbrook, Kendall County. Dan Howser & Son, Nocomis. Barrett, MeGarthn & Shipton, Dorinda Centro, Brown & Cox, Centralia, Harry Benson, donttcello. Dan Lrennemann, Decatur. . “The syndicate,” said unother, “are buy- ing September wheat. Probnbly after the: hive boosted it high enough they wil turn sellers.’ Some say they have goue into the dairy business on September, and. are drawing the mllk out of the short sellers. . ‘There is sollur the year braced up to $1.15, with the clique ready to sell it as 5 pron tection ngainst_& possible accident in their August deal, ‘The trading in this month was considerable In settlement at $1.213¢@1.03, The August shorts secmed to bo a litte seared, ‘The clique have plenty of money and strong men with abundance of nerve, ‘Thera is no doubt about that, but don’t itsound natural to hear Joe McDonald talic ubyut $9 for enhe as f tari Corn was on the rampage gain yesterday, Prices advanced 15¢@3 conte: seller oe eine I hurles, the seat of the Archbishops ot | populace would lead them into committing Cashel, a Sunday or two since, and finding a | ac of violence?” crowd making its way to "The Palace,” ay “TY think thors may be desultory acts of the residences of the Bishops of treland are | violence here and there In connection with somewhat fanclfitily called, 1 followed | evictions or process serving and the like, but in {ts wake and soon found myself on | Lam posttively certain that no attempt at in- 8 velvety Iawn befors a house which, slrrection or even serious disturbance Is to it not actually a palace, is a large, | be anticipated in the event of the rejection beautlful, and exceedingly ‘come | OF mutilation of the measure,” fortible mansion. I found the Archbishop | “Do you think that the influence of the suldressing the people, who turned ont to bo | clergy could possltily prevent violence iu tho adeputation from Waterford, and they had | general outburst of nclgnation a been presenting him with an address which |. ‘In the event just spoken of the indigna- testified to tholt davotion to him and to their | tlon of the people would undoubtedly be approvat of his recent actions. After they | Very great and general, and justly so. 1 do had gone, lils Grace greeted.me cordially and | not ‘think the clergy would, as a rule, Inbor invited me into the house, the Interior of | hurd if nt all to allay tt, but I feol nysured whieh offered numerous evidences of the | that !t would not show itself in serious or taste, the travels, and the popularity of its | aystematic violence of the law.” occupant, It was replete -'|. “There lins lately been a good denl of wild | mitted. “en. | dile draft-horses was made Into the United | 28 there wero some twenty-live of those | John D. Cuton, Ottawa. mM i, {art tie tables ‘covered te ih avery tie tallcainat rising" and sckell ware Do you OHTIZEN: | States Is lurgely nm matter of speculntton, | stullions, In Tiltnos, an only two— itronnoyman & Jones, Warrensburg her touchins 65% cents nad SEiloF Orta ere Walls Witlt rice Giotares, “hecoamerous if | tink In enso of such unilkely events tho | Tho Sonth and West Clilcago Parl Tivreto is appended tho historical matter rez | Louwls Napoleon and Rolnnd—of the Nor. | 1}. Caldwell, Daus, I. Bulls ‘had the inside ten aS ti outset, but luninated nddresses froma town corporations | present garrisons in Ireland aro quite able to Honda. ferred to abovo: any, hha Gon eae ee Pair (en B. Carneate, Frincotons they had to give way to. the bears. Avie tle and socleties are an interesting feature of tha | cope with It? 2 ‘Jo the Ealtor of Ihe Chicago Tribune. THE ENGLISH CART-IONSE.: breed to cross with our native eae ates W. H. Case & Co,, Delaware, clouds threatened to close together ond de- dning-room, and curiosities characteristic of “No ‘ristna? is anticipated, nor would any Australia, Naw Zealand, Fil, and the Conti- | sane man contemplate sucha thing under nentare In every room. Perhaps the impor- | existing. clreumstances, -or, Indeed, under tation mmost Mxtly valued in the palace at | any sot of elreumstances that we of this‘genu- Thurles is 9 restless, senred-Inoking little eration may assume to be worth practical dog from tho Fiji Islands; which accom. | consideration. We need not, therefore, apec- pantes the Archbishop wherever he goes, | ulate on the military aspect of the cuse.” §, Chainberinin, Genesco. Tt, B.Chisholin, Elylu. n EW Fappla & Brcotz, Irvington. varrop, Elgin. M. D. Covel & H. 8. Valle, Rochelle, 3, d. Crandell, Watseka. aA, A, Crane, eo, AY. G, Culbertson, Paris. Jiver a sinart rain. “The drought,” sald a fellow who felt 9 little bearish, “is a humbug. Why, didn’t it-rain all over Jowa two weeksago? Didn't showers stop the races about ten days since? ‘The hot weather may hurt some'of the corn, but. it can stand a good deal of ,heat so Jone Cmicaqo, Aug. 6.—Havoe eltizens and taxpny- The Interest that our English cousins take i of 5 orsany righta, or must thoy submit without a | in the brecding of their ‘draft-Lorses inny be tho Clydes or the euallsh Fo been murmur to any and all speotes of Inconventenco, | surmised from the fact that they have whut | went to neland: and France, purehasing a and ono might guy imposition, thatthe Hoard, | toy call Tho English Cart-Llorse Socloty,” | g-yeat-old Yorkshire horse, one of the finest 4 contractor, employé, or even an intruder af which the Prince of Wales Is the Presl- | cart stallions in England, and four Norman whom thoy do not expol, may cause? Look at | (lent und Sir J.D. Astley Chatringn of the | stallions. Ie soon ‘ound that tis Normans ‘i Exceutive Committee, embracing’ many of | we; ses, getting = Michigan avenue and West Washington stroot | tha most distinguished men of Great Sritalne wero, tho superior horses, getting font with will take his dinner from no other hand, and-|'. ‘Is not somo legislation neaded for tho -y dew: on free 2 23, WI orks: N. Craig, Brhgbton. ns heavy dews are deposited at night, The ee ERR Gee eS aG | ing ime obmmion nied We | nsec cena mlonadauntans | ison quae ie oligrngof | Za agus coul falar ngnngye | fc Ea sae herr ee tt co om i eS Y slo. Bvt stalllons fonles provious to ~ ‘orl =F 4 x $0! for future delivery a; jnst the content VENSONAT, APPEARANCE, pra, butt, is ity, opluton fiat a ania haxardoysto both hore aad veblale., Byory | whlel nny bo ndded 1,500 select ‘wen- | Fehe ered Manes eas ahaes, md aiees Bf Carl, Caras, ol thelr conmeribs Have pot scared at tho ‘The opening words of this letter suffictent- 1g ward fo: 18 {mpi nent oO: Wally well and probably more economically yrade stallions since that date, Reynolds, | Mr, Perry maintains that one horse out of % " ¢ rapld rise, and bought In their options, Keep a ing their corn-on-the-cob, ‘Thu advance Is Increasing the recelpts, and a good rain would probably knock prices down 2@3 cents abusiel, Everybody feels strong, though, and the bulge has made heaps of money for some folks, and left innny a poor wounded y thelr condition should ban distinct and tn. Wuteertbe yghbishon Croke's borsonal ay.) dupendent one, aud not simply an appendix Sonal acqualntanes of ‘ot know. A pet: | or supplement of the Land bill now before Tie thit he was O,- Se ile: Lonuahiy aaeureil the House of Commons, Indeed, I appre- also “knew” informed me, with Impllelt hand thar sarious trotties pad complications Cr wht tie lors (0 tho public of tho use of not to | Professor in the Royal College of Veterinary of i Bilton importing Coumnns, 7 exceed two blocks atone time, In other places Surgeons, prefaces the stud-book with an ils oF Be ae FE tke ee PRC ats itis one ong block at atime, ‘I think thiscom-*} exhaustive genealogy of the English eart- | experience, hehns abandoned the English ond of system) of stroot improvemonts (2) (huavon | early times, aut that inet Gee eatifod is an oxtensive dealer, and, ike alle Norman Canton Import! Dunlel, Dunbat, Wayne, DuPage County, A, Dawson & Ca., Lexington, Depan ftros., Ottawa, A 4 Diamond, LuSatlo. M.W. Dunbam, Wayne, DuPage County, confidence In his own Information, that tho savo tho mark), ty : h . cl l. 3 » ESLDENT, e horsemen, prospering fairly. 4 Acibishop wos 44 1 ald not personally | utter lesson froin He aind agitation tnd Lege to the samen his invasion of the.country oy | "te ploneor in the work of bringing to Ints | Croghan Dawson, Lexington. ' duck inthd slows J salt buy again after tooutweigh his diseretion, ** Y befory the world Is inuch older.”” ca breed was held tn very Nighy estimation.” s TO Geena % GH for next month's dolivery, “A fuuny seston ae ig diseretion, Have you aiy | tt What. would you Droposo us a remedy for | 9 crete oc orfes of lesiers in wate C | Sulield, In tho Une of Henry Thy wus tho MI. af, We DUNTIASG et part Cptun aay ETE hing oveurrod in oats," sald an operator TrtwuNe published a sorics of letters in whicl L contral horas market. aud King John mado | of Wayne, Du Page County, ll. and to his bab mista a plan for accomplishing tha above- | the commerce in horses still more valunblo | enterprise aud jiberal views tha yeople of mentioned object. Tho substancoof tho plan | by importing 100 Fictmish stallions of choson | this country, and particularly the West was to wonatruct a conduit, elther covered or | blood, ‘To this and anbsequent importations | almost wholly indebted tor the thousands of open, from tho hond of tho South Branch at tha | Younit attributes the development of tho | fine dapple-gray draft horses that one meets Stook-Yurda to tho river below Jollet. ‘Thia | massive war-horse so highly prized in the | with so frequently.—they belng mostly the condult, I roaintulncd,—thore boing a fallor | (days of | the tournaments, tur- | product of thoroughbred ‘Percheron-Noriman ovor forty fouty—woutld entry such a volumo of | ther excellencs was obtained throught stallions crossed on the common work-mares water Ba tu create h constant current from | %, edict, of | Henry f whio | of this country, the result being 1 elass of the luke “through (ho river, to euch an | vforced tlie application of stirpeculture, or, horde that for draft purposes ig unequaled, oxtont ugto keep astroam of pure lake water | 23, Darwin now puts it, the survival of tha] and more than half the dapplo-gray teams 80 fowlng through tho city, to which the addition | fittest. Unfortunately, Prof, Reynolds 1s noticeable on tho streets of Chicago from of tho dinily eewnge of ta city would bo butus | compelled to admit that “the dratt-horse of | the ease with which they draw Jonds that. adrop in the bucket. Hence, not only woul! It | tha present day Is one of mixed and impure | woul 8 strength of four snl supply the rlvor betow Jollot with better water | breeds there exist very few, if any, whose | mals of ordinary breeding are the di- than ft now contains, but wroatly bonotit water | guncalogy on both dam and sire’s ane can be | reet result of Slr, Dunham's enterprisy, ower and navigation iu thosa rivers. Aud thotty | traved for even four generations,” And th ‘Mr, Dunham beean the importation of y the constant imwurd How from the lako, {n= i fr peneratious,” Aud thei . tae rt iat oa okt or uutward, ua nt prosont, one water-aup-, | Ho glves notonly the English but the Ameri these horses in 1872, and since then has nly would be frea from contamination for all | catt the vor sepalble ndyleo: “A too extund. | Drought over more than 000 atallions and Hine ta come, and perfect drainage would also | et application of crossing is at tho oxponse of | inares, his business now Fopresen tiny an ine by accomplished, deterloration in strength, and becomes a de- | vested capital of someti int like halt a ‘Thero 1 provably not a man in Chicago who | fect for tlio purposes of town work.” The | million dollars, ‘and everyth! ng connected asked this bold individual. —'Lhave, air,” | ely eondition ? . , Bit,’ “ ple tho Archbishop with mock sovOHl; | and't would Peete eee bratys elena me what my iioome Ise dente owe lag | with asmli pateh of land adjoining be pro- fafely Tinga tite wivalis “If De. Goniea hg | Vided for every Inbor with a tantly In’ the Whe has dealt Kindly wit: line Le he be |- Proportion of one such tenament and allot 4howears his honors 3 ne be | sent of land to every thirty acres of average the dient honors and his youth with | yulue, My persanal symputhies ure, Lown older eyity aud serlousiess of ono much | rather more with the, Inboring and’ artisan Beene bust Hinged with silver, [sclasses than with the farmers themselyes,— felt, eyes aro bright and piercing, his | to gay nothing of the landlords.” ij fe ins not uw mark of age, his step is ‘rm, ' Whntdo you think of the general state ro Ww gripot his hund Warm and enrnost. | of the country at tle present time?” ohn this time L had several opportunities wT think the state of the country may.be ny Tyetalhw wit ib ig Lordshp, ane fotnd said to be fairly progressive In almost every Ming talker, with opainal ideas a ‘fasein- kenge of the word, ‘That ts to say, the ped- Rraceful ways of OXpressine te das ting | Ble aro better fed, bettar clnd, better lodged, Traveled mere. Chin nr eae even anny | More Intelligont, belior educated, and. L be- countries ofS tht most" men, seen maALY | jeve, more practlonlly. and reasonably Tu ny Pasion Rete ye Polnbisia Nalous than they have over been before. But biany years! re ed by educition wut | they are more discontented, und if you tinllationse—Htalyo wide aera tie gidest asked me why I should say the reason dence Rf Tesl- | was pretty obvious, LU itherto they linve HN, Breakin, Mendota. AIL Eldrod, Carltnvitte, H , Fldred, Carlinville. Fe Store Flora, Clay Co. nl silingswor! "Ol Kare ; Deka. James Palthor, Sunbeam, £. D, Fultor & Lro., Tromont, A.D, Freeman, Arrowsoilth. N- 8. French, 'Thowpson. Baar ey caieean sé Follut & Martin, Deor Park, William D, Geuber, Grand ey Tn Ballo Co, Il, HL Gandy, Byeainoro, Dekulb Co. ‘ Mark Gundy, Syeumore, 8. Gay, Creentiold. W. W, Groy & Son, Chobausco, » Mr. Grahaiu, Crescent. HL W. Gove, Washington, Whitanv A. Glottelter, Sintor, W, F. Garvy, Iliopalis, Summer Gates, Crystal Lake, Mr. Ganiner, Bureku, Hall & Tourney, Carthage. who fs soln north after tha Manitoba wave. “The short sellers were terribly anxious to fillin and getout, In thelr huste they bi up seller the yenr onts to 33%, letting. Au- gust stand “at: 83, ‘Their eyes were Not opened till a party had purchased alotot August onts nt 33 cents, and sold them out forthe year at. 3g of n cent profit, Then tho crowd saw Augist oats were deliv- erable on year contracts, jPhey Inughed at their own stupidity, and seller the year was goon nt a discount.” g Ryo jumped up 4} cents per bushel, closing” at OL conta for saller Qc- fober,’ - “Corn, shorts, and = St. Louls are bulgingylt, ‘Those South western fellers have'a lot on band they want tocluse ont without being out of pockes ‘That [s about the sense of the meeting, ay would express It,” ‘They siill say Armour hos the lard deal, but [snot quite ready to give itn twist, r ‘With govern : will allapuite these proposittons, and yar, through | carllest hes english i z do) th a . | dohn Hepperly, Himiro Hay leaned to the bull side yesterda; tnlnd fs ‘alu bad tere Smbe been satisfied to liveon offal, to be housed | the influence of intorgted and presunilog pune in Le ee cote ad Doras Se ineaetcs oft ‘he te situs ry Arba: Bir, hiuekabonG, Ottawa, ay eee " Sed. Iie ly fond of the. Impressive core: Iike plaza, clad in tatters, and they thought Pd einem ae ects will prubily: We, shire, and from there spread generally over | ham's enterprisa, tt may be atated that to- | Wiliam ffurt, Arrowsmith. SOLILOQUIUM PUERIS. Wonial displays In the conductof the service | Wey had hurdly aright to an: thing better, | EogM the peuplo will anifor Thoretrametor aay |S! England and Wales, ‘Chere are very few day, by special charter, tha {nman Line | WwW, Huston, Harlan, —— id Hodgson, El Paso, of his Church. and 1 could almost believe £ But now they feol thelr necds and kuow Bs E. Hills, Bloomingdale, EEL ay 3 peters Roush or Parisian chureh nt Mvale xtetits ain ate: dotermined accordingly ateally Hau T wanders into the aisles Uf “What would bo, the probablo, result on Saw the Pneeltie multitude by the din lights Jegialation and on the Mouse Of Conunous it iftIdo Hou dh rat alan hard ho low ebant | RK Gtadaons hinge fas stated (weet music pf the organ. Yet the ‘Arent not mistake, that {f tho vresent bilt were Dishop Ly aw: | thrown out a more: searching und compre- popeag ea evar New Wert i heusive measuro would ecrtaluly. ba. Intro- In his travels been a close edaeed ie ducad instead, This is plain, because lf the lkes to talk over his experionces 4 tenant farmers and their friends aru, not sat- Various parts of tha orks ces IN | fjatled with this measure, nnd English: poll- nothing of tol cost-bofuro ci th English ataltions In iliinols, In 1843 Col, | steamer City of Limerick will sail from tls aimapio, intelligibte, and viustiooabi | Uakloy, of Tazawell County, inported San- | Havre with 200 Percherons, maklug the Im- Plan... gon, Who served In the stud many yeara, ‘he | menso number of S60 head that Mr, Dunham ‘However, my object in this {s to propose n | Messrs. Drown, of Aurora, are the leading lias imported within seventeen months, bel moditleation of that plan; tuat {s, to belog the | importers, ono of then now belng abroud’Lor | a targer nutuber than has ever been Importe gost within such bounds cry oF inukes tho panes the purpose of buying stallions, by any other man or firm durlue on ayallable for the prosont, loaving tha costly THE OLYDESDALE DItAFT-HONSE. entire business career, aud more than the part of the work for futuro yeurs. Tho expen 3 Part Of tho work for futura, yours, Thoexven | Our Scotch cousins are not beliind thelr | Combined importations of all athe importers cutting of about cight rlles betwoon Lomont | English brothers In devotion to the dratt- of alt Bat tes cg us| Rue yin teat ag | SA MG Pan? SS aac ralively mexposeiver Tuorofore, lve fi ee Earl of Dunmore ts trosidont, who, | shipment arcives, the greatest collection of dul that througuiheeartodigging-anawnen | (Heselh compiled the Cisdesdate Btud- Book. | drot-horses aver owued by ole mnt. 4A hee, or not a bee." Thus mused an urobin, Feoltnx something creoping up bis trousers. * | wonder if 'twere better to let him wander All untmolested o'er my naked aurface, ‘Than to dispel this grin anxioty Hy Nlercely striking bim? ‘Lo striko—to kilt No more.. And by a Kill it mouns to guard Against the anguish cousoquent upon F His charge In buttio—'tis a oneumima tion | Devautly to bo wished. ‘Fo striko—to kill— To kill! Perehance to miss! Ayo, thore's the ruby : ; For, in that fleree attack upon the beast, Rorbpuse.a iniadirected iow sould leave J. WHI & Bro. Brighton. St. Honabaw, Garda. John Hounseloy, Chestorfatd, Maonypin Co, Serseyyiile Sook Company, dersoy ville, 4). & W, Joder, Tlakilwa. Johuson Hros,, Watseka. Johnson, Copplo & Nreez, Centralia, W. 11, H, Johnson, Cuntraila, N. M. Jones, Towanda. Bion Jacovis, Hoynton. - 4 ‘The Earl strenuously refutes the tradition ed re’ pect ory for pluces Isr Kk Mls mens | tictns really desire to gratify thom, they | the rock ts roachud carry tho watur over tbo ine a4 Among them are nearly all the famous prize- : Tia little harm ‘There's tho respect the deta omarkabley ead even. to | Hokwua really desire te et wishes of Lis | terveninesnace by aaypbou, sua syphon can | that tle Clydesdale horea owes ils superiorl. ‘rance, Mr, ee see lor Clay Co, -| Aish haan calamity o¢ auch a cota. He detally of streets and naines of minor | Vist peoplenad alfer thein a botver bill. | BO partialy ov wholly buried, ‘This woul ao- | tY toa atin of flomish Blood, and clatiag | Winners in Krance, Air, Dunham salle from | - Hara Kornoy, Vlora, Clay Cons oo, For wae would tak coufunotion with the rear coupiiau tho opjoct, at least to the extent of ar | that.the superior brecd camo from the Uppor his alud horses to ko Lo avery Stato, al Tore vat hy oultiow into the luke, and th ard of ritory in the Union, to Canada and Manitob: esting wo Quinn, inna the ake and oe | aura earacit cocealt and jusielows wa | Ad ie Mis fuporintions: continuo 1s wil nu Of yollow-jackot, or the yospa tril 0 J gow Janta, be ourbrous BuEblo-bee, with vleasury nis vise io Fomembors |" Wartld the next Pariiument contaln moro And—worde than all-tho anes Ina ae: of those United States, | parnollites ? and particutarh: - J. 1, Lague, Kankakee, sed and Wd (© New York and San Frans | ~ “1 think the noxt Parliament, ao far as the J. M, Landreth, Jackson vilio, " ¥ ¥ Williata Laughile & Co., Stre aror, HULSE, Aube ee FeoRtes, RerloUs Irish’ vapresputation may bo conesrned, | boerua wholly deforrad fora, yey ouurn OF Ky agunent, Novertholons, be admits a faint teeone (othe Teed Bates to Guy backs Lhe vi ease, tt” - Soe eee tae git bis earerus inaKe ter, ant of th ahon Aumérlean charno- | Hout permuch tie sane asat present, Mr. | “Whe outranae Into tue conde from the rivor | ce of truth in a tradition thot In 1715-20 | jorges they have foollshily parted with oo & Clough, Paw Paw, Whon be uitnnelt rahe nS would cuanesa take Te With hot? UAbounded hospitality ho | Parneli’s party would wot, Z think, be great | will be by qutes, by which tho water can be oo; Jolin Vatterson wentto England and brought | “Ty ios W, J. Hawarda, of Clifton, Ul, tm- | ptineou' & Ktaiubo, Knoxville, a ene ahd dauedy ould bitn the epirit Tova, ba a Nnereased, fatal, County Cork would, £ | tirety cut of sa as to enlargo, or wall up and thonea a Flemish stallion ‘which dla service | ported two horses, French Emperor ®'and | Byscch oranou, Taylorville, a Tiut that the drvad of only maiming him— POLITICAL ATTITUDE, etree or the League, and ‘awap! Ita | cover, the conduit at pleastrs. ‘nis planavolds | [i the Upper Ward of Lauarkehira, £0 Rrcat | i 8 i? and sold. them shortly afte doho hulke, Quel Aut pouting in thy foe such vangofulness adhe, attitude of Archbishop Croke has, | present members for Darellites, County Se ae ee ee tate ints | noted all 8 bread ad to lake ew | xe \¥, Dunham and ‘thereof Waytion “This | otenee Lipparts Weney, . ‘Tuat thru ba no escape witheraya tha Lend, bea folanohiegTeny Of tne and aatatin, | PRpSTnTY Yate amne ai “ght ecu in fader, fully curied out the water iy sue | noted “all, over, Seotiand. , Fitieun, years | wae tie Doglnuing of the éxtenslve porta: | Ji Leouale craters ‘And muikes us rather suitor with suspon4e. rin Pf ° 1 man; urposes Which now require ter fru lons 111! nols huye placed her, in le H. Loo} ai be oy filiciples and good senge, though to be sure | ope or two other places, Dut these tay be oe ‘ quire water fruwe | price for ure-blood stallion, | but | the breeding of draft-horses, far in advance 4; una Caastorteld, ‘Tous duuber dooe Cie Omar ye : tho Water: Works, It is truc that! Ins i Be eee oree cityherexpeeied so muck | erauually the arloo has gong up until 87.000 | of oll other parts of the country, Jn 1873 Al. ay Nay Not ¢ asada eeuped ealumiiy, Apnouring frst | possibly counterbalanced by defections else- inols people Lewiston Stock Company, Lewiston, ivsloulog or with tha pale aux of doubts mi Y Y yi m ler of Parnell and the move | where.! Money e-without puluplog at Heidgeport, milznt | 6 al average price, Bevera| Du i : a a idee aa | eon tae rag woul to event | Seen ee Ue | Nae rE cui a | aa uo ea | A arcs nc dedi ene rl he Church, he ling in a came to Irelat y y ithe 7 . ro lost through hesitadon. Here she mga deetee been forced to appeat in the lists | | Leo no rouson at all to suppose that Afr, Sertarinie Witt ‘nuvigasiont bute tho cana ie | ported dratt-Horses probably belng that of TR ee erate Diahamaturiy, | sartieeeos sinlford, {ieaweitrepaeot tiveue Htouyen, i thy pray 7 ie dictator, by ndvising thesaccept. | Parnell would be arrested. if he came to Ire- | fio’ Intercat of the Lockport mills, | Cor, ROBERT HOLLOWAY, OF MEWCER COUNTY: Hon he was named “Alpha.” |, ptt. startin, Utes. Bo all ny sine romombered! bt use Of the Land bill’as on installment of | Jand. Je @as really said or done nothin, {iste though Parnell ener ail gern bane such a istinetion,--aud MeLordltp tenet at MAPEeI, te | apy kos ou of ae Tay Ara? a BAN Ne ‘ways Mh We ellect of the Land Diiiawill be soon eg uppoatny the Land bill assed, would tho hopoof rollot from that quarter muat’ be | A vistt to his farm: lost week by a ‘Tain W ant mic . MM, UNE | When 7 months old he with his dam was abandoned, Jeet aus) ropresuntatlve found the Colonél ubscnt In | sold te et a itt, of New York Clty. Doudttul Pratec, Scotland for another large purchase, and sov- | Mr, Babbitt at this the bought of Sf. Ws Tho late Arohduke Francis Charlos,of Aus: gral of hie fiueat stallions stilt absent on | Dunhain $40,000 worth of, stock, probably trias father of tho prosont Kunperoand broihure | Service, @ has, however, asplondid stable | the largest amount ever paid in one purchase Chas, Hf, Lurner, Anll-J. het ne _ fore m a Tho Serle Nations ean of Nery puv- WwW. igus, Loc! port iessonholmer & Englehart, Mendota, ir & Son, Onurgti. y ‘an yi conversation below, bi bas rs t wy ES Wa low, but it was mecca: | the Land Leuguo be Ilkely to be held together | 4,,.; j ~ | of stallions, mares, full-bleod and grade co di i. t welche weeks aga tocalih tho people who | for the pupae of agitating for ater ob- ind" aig over the Nuvoleon, ‘whuo Fordi: | ti duultes, “Col, tialloway TO a eee ei owniel and stil owns Pens ae Ole ieone OF serious Tumult Beg ate tonto. | ogra ff MENSCH Ey connod | feetaelt SY'da't FA Vente ses | Mar poe of Cyuesals eas | Haste ta pared ieee at «| Ree ig ge Rs et a aa Pelucrest ‘The people wore Irritated at that the oand League will bokept up Ingome |-but Tt woul, make & Cod aporone ine | the head 0 © stud, thougts onuld Dinnle, bred tho first purebred colt ever fouled in ieintiag oblee at the eushettiner Zeltuny weroden Eon ta veer eu | atabva fo SU, crt | demu. hr winrar ena | Cig, Me Ate ANS th “fs | sees optima enra nl tore s | Reeeadeaiae ath te ado a eo favorit pric: 98 ,¥ | Leopold von Moyer, oncu. played before bf ae "Alexan ‘ ttiner Ze F utd oan at Gi hrencned ate | Ah bua soy aut roland | Sten seamverant tate tater evevtont | Uorgugl Qttok trator” iit ehage | Salat nutans tn Vena peltdag | a Ri dae oui ya tee guia ston oy thlets being th Pasion eet ete cha tha | ultlinneoly secure tudependont self-goveru- | Wurm aud dtere vu Moyer wassomowhacuse | Of the stables, and Heats Beat” pieaatks | ths tworgraud prizo horses of the Universal | “Noy? acuis ally Blesatary Haiied Laverton Me a eooett aso artisice> owing ness element of the eaguo Was mente: ey Biot Sitiavoa by 8 Se dain’ iis fated face ead In showhy Tits ‘TUBUNE, representative Exposition oft Paris in. isTé—tho grenvent Fidk eRe endota. F WXou ure, the iat WhO wrgte taee rio Fi ean gag seit. The rising could never have fam deoldedly of opinion that It will | wnliunited convvit wore toa much for the Arne | arounds Bue, foaled In 1874, weighs 2,160 | horse show the world has evr known—doea Ju Nisholay umbeldo, ay Ocangas anti-Jewish proceedings, a shoroupony Part » Onarg , upon dim so ferovluus: 7 butted s ‘Tho country was full of mill- | soon become absufutely necessary to Brant duke, sud when tho urtist, with munifest acif- pours: and stands 1034 hands, a dark dapple, | him great crodit, ‘The two stalllons raferred Pia TTT ete aunty tO gooevoriine COs lent to quell any disturbance, bug | some shore, and even & considerable ¢! complacency, looked to hin, For praise, Franols | bred by Andrey Jleming of Palsloy, was lm | to, named respectively * Romulus” ay Was desir th : i re) fing tha ‘us that thers should ba not even | of judependent governuient to ireland, “The tly Ba ave bodrd Thule | ported to Canada by thellon. George Brown, | * Cherg,” were awarded highest prizes | James a. Ferry, Wilmington, solousucss, and baying obtuluod surgical asslat~ auuillkhtest bloodalied, ‘Che resistance ta Buta Barilament rene Wo Acuatectoriiy | borw and 1 bavo listonnd to Taszt (profound bow ( be'forouto, and by. tin wold to Col, Hols and deed geht modal, ‘there aye buen del pa ural Winnobaga, aoe, bo ‘was ablu to prooued on wa fotraey. ie 0, from the plait), aud 1 must say tut noltier of | loway., Duke won the first prize in Canada, | about 125 persons engaged In the jinporting al the moet obsoguious of salutatious}—L ropeat it, | Arst prize {n Cleveland, first prize Jn Minne- | of French horses, but most of thein have thas neithor of those famous mi apolls, first prize in St. Touts, ‘aud second | been brought over by afew, meu. M. W. BER Tesly at ron dares are PoE | TS Ay dup Uilinola Glaio Fat, Goh hollpe | Dunuaia bis Lmporied About one-third of erent gone a step too far, the Gov- affulrs for many reasons, bul ‘as necdes Tay _ Pvulace back to Wo tne of gagsty, |-tbeau bs : A. F, Plorve, Bigfoot, Polo Breed! M. G. Pottor, Douovan, Davis & Wprsoy, Tiki roce! e8 thr vivlenoe, aud even death, at a et WI outcome Of Bolt 9 Sapaticlea, fs x