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reeh we Pardew Acrovs yao Comtionnt Theatre. ‘doeen ‘Overa House Terrace Carden —Ji)) to Cratd Concerts, Ollnon’e Kine onde Mapewm Nick of the Woaks, Matinen, ee Flor she accommodation of persons reeling ao WHA pdyerinemonts for THR SU Will De received at our regular rates at the wp-towa aivertisemeat office, 4s Weel Thirty-second street, at the Junction of Broad- Way and Sixth avenue. trom s A.M. to# P.M. —— ‘The Hunt Coautry Persone going to the country may ‘Tar Sun ent so them daily by wail, for Miy cent per month, Dy cadreonng the Rupiianer — FOR PRESIDENT, PARMERS' AND MECHANICS’ CANDIDATE, TRE ( (EAT AND GOOD USEFUL H.GREELEY, gv TEXAN and NEW YORK. pared inr anna Is the New Departure Ola Depart. uret When Mr, VALLANDIGHAM brought out big lopg and elaborate series of resolutions in the Ohio Convention, it was announced that the Democracy had taken a Now Departure, and all newspaperdom was convulsed there. at. Now it so happens, that jn the address ny forth months before hy the Democratic mepabers of Congress to their party, written by Senator Bayano of Delaware, the Do- miccracy are advised to accept the situation, eghmit to the Constitutioual amendments, and utilize their strength in combating the living jesucs of the day. There is no real difference between the policy embodied in thie Congressional address ani that ect forth to the resolutions offered by Mr. VALLANDIG- MAM, dave that these last were marked by thot amplification and verbiage. Yet to read the great majority of the Republican journals, it might be supposed that VALLAN- biowAM w.s the originator of the policy, and to be credited for whatever wisdom or wint of wisdom it might display. Surely, the editors of these journals could never have read the address! Mr. VALLANDIGNAM's views, which were ignorantly supposed to be extreme, made this apparently suddenly assumed position of his « startling one, whereas in reality it was in entire harmony with the sentiments he had entertained ever since the close of the war. He was in possession of much more sagecity th than the timid and halting men “whom short sighted Democracy turmet to the front as leaders. Brought into the Con- | vention of 1868 at a late hour, he might have saved the Presideotial defeat by the nomination of a conservative, had he not been forced Ly the treachery of the Henpricks movement into the nomi nation of Seyuocn He never could comprehend the practical utility of the PENDLEION greenback theory, and was averse even as early as 1868 to mak- any one of these institutions the ex right of admitting men to the bar woul be utterly subversive of that competition jth the others which alone will maintain the efficiency of all. Ifthe Inns of Court, with their monopoly, have failed to moet the growing demande of the times, and to adopt aodery unproviuments, it is eaay to ave tat the new London Law School, if established on the terms proposed, will be exposed to the same danger, and in all probability ran the same carcer. a The Confiding Indians. The vast and exceedingly rich territory lying southwest of Missouri, and bhelong- ing to what is popularly known as the Indian Nation, is destined to create a struggle betweon speculators and profes. signal Congressional lobbyists, and the rightful possessors of the soil. ‘This contest will be more interesting to the unprejudiced public than any similar attempt to misappro- priate property in America. The facts are singular. The United States Government years ago appropriated by sol- emn treaty to certain Indian tribes, in return for relinquishing disputed claims to Jand in civilized parts of the country, an immense and valuable domain. The most stringent precautions were taken to give the Indians, some of whom had belonged to very turbu- lent and unmanageable tribes, complete titles, #0 that they might bave no excuse for break- ing their treaties. — But there was an unfortunate oversight. It was not supposed that civilization would reach so far, and that the forest land, on which these Indians with much chuckling had been settled, would ina few years be- come of such {mmenge value ag to make the popwation of sayayes established there ove of the wealthiest communities in the world. This unlooked for event has, however, taken place. The Indians who were recently represented in the Ocmulgee council, living in cabins and exercising no enterprise in agricultural or other improvements, are to- day o richer community than any other com: prising the same number and spread over an equal territory on the globe. Every Indian family to-day can allot itself a farm of six hundred acres, which in™a few years will be worth on an average five thousand dollars, while at the same time the tribes will have surplus of lund remaining in their possession which in the market to-day would bring them ten millions of dollars. Some of the Indiaus who have been toWash. | Lagton and have seen Gen. Gray, and have learned all about giving aud receiving pres- ents, arc in favor of making an imniediate allotment of all the lands open for cultiva tion in the territory. It is undoubtedly true that some of these lands will have to be thrown open to the occupation and im- provement of white men; but it will be ex- tremely unfortunate for the Indians if Presi- dent Gwant’e special friends have anything to do with the allotment padre 2 Will Mr. Fish Please Settle Upt Administration and anti-Administrat'.y jonruals seem to concede that Mr, rant ig no longer Secretary of State, among many points there is one 52, particular which Mr. Fisn, a8 paid “Levant of the American peo rile, Waid do well to explain before be ing the iseues of the war prominent either in the platform or the canvass. “ The ‘war ie over,” was his constant cry ; “ Yet the dead past bury its dead | pe living present contains our Ov ortualty.” He would have Made his public stand upon this issue long before he did, only he was held back by the timid counsels of those whose positions in the rauks of the party in Ohio gave them a right to advise. We have no doubt it was his spirit and counsels that dictated the tone of the Congressional address. We have never doubted the wisdom of the now accepted policy of the Democratic party. It was but the last step in the process of a development that has been going on ever since the close of the war, and which has now reached its climax, Archbishop WHATELY well remarks “that there are in most lan. guages two sets of proverbs, one in favor of change, another against it ;" aud in truth these are but the accumulated wisdom of each of the opposite political camps, between which the warfare ever rages, though the standards and watchwords vary with the warriors. © "The the past Contentine with the present; and in ture ach bas (he mi, The Education of Euglish Lawyers. Another venerable English institution is ja danger. The old Inns of Court, where young gentlemen have gone for centuries, nominally to read |; but really only to eat their dinners for a certain length of time and pay certain fees, are threatened with the lose of the monopoly they have hitherto en- joyed of creating barristereatlaw. The emi nent Bir Rounvert PaLaer has laid before the House of Commons a proposition to establish a general school of law in London, for the education of members of the various Lranches of the legal profession, with a pro- vision that, after » certain time, no person shall be admitted to practice in England ther at or below the bar, or as an attorney or eolicitor, without a certificate of proficien- oy in legal studies from such school. The high position of the mover, and the cogency of the arguments adduced by him, render it more than likely that his proposition will be adopted. The whole existing system of studying Jaw in Boyland, like many other important branches of education in that country, is wretchedly Incomplete and inefficient, As Bir Rounven said in his speceh in Parliament: * Ages apc Hegel wniverni stern aud within We recl Tons of Court as @ «wudy tell iwio ‘and emp) emnentary ned nis bw the bar, witnout Waving had any bi ¢cleniide foundation in'¥ 93. @ muller whieh con {nol ouly practitioners, but the public, The We smibent Gembers of the’ Frutession Wou'd do Meeir Work boiter ther were bebler prewared (or Mi. Day Wantof sbrosd and science foundaiog Woe foil in our erude end wodiwented legulition, var yet showed no tendoney toward amend suflored with tho mu Phe ouly wonder is that the reform hag hot been propored sud, Here, in th country, we found out yeara ago that law tould be taught as u acience as well ax mddi ting oF theology, and the law schools of Cam bridge, New Haven, and New York were tho re@ult of the discovery. But we have found ‘out sino, which doce mot seam to have yor evtered (he Eoglivh miud, that the giving te Uinclally retires from @ position which many Delleve he has disgraced. The Spanish Cabinet admitted on the 10: inst, that Minister Bickies had made pro positions in the name of the United States to purchase the Island of Cuba. Mr. Fren, as Gen, S1ckLes's instructor, is bound to in form the American people what was the nature of his instruetions, why he thought such instructions would be amicably re- ceived, and what hope he bad that any treaty of sale agreed upon by Spain would find favor in this country except among thoge who are pecuniarily interested in the acquisition of the island; in faet, who would be in favor of it exeept the friends of hie son-in-law, Sioney Wensten, and that set who were to be benefited by the success of the plot. ‘Tens of thousands of lives have been sacri ficed in Cuba, property to the extent of mil- lions of dollars has been destroyed, since the revalution broke out ; and it is time to speal plainly. Everybody who knows the secret history of the Cuban revolution, and the difficultics with which its sucecss has been attended, knows that such difficulties have Leen set in the way and such success delayed by the criminal ageney of Mr. Fisit, whose role purpose has been to enrich his diate friends, relatives, and retainera, by a wale of Cuba to the United States, which ho foolishly hoped to consummate. A school boy would long ago have been convinced of ite impracticability Mr. Fis is bound in the interest of his personal honor either to deny that (ien SickLgs had any orders from him to propose purchase of Cuba, or to prove to the American people that he had reason to be- lieve that Spain would accept a proposition which he made in August, 1869, for the trana- fer of the island to the Cubans, providing a eortain sum was guaranteed by this country, which proposition was afterward spurned by tho Spaviards, even under @ threatened re- cognition of the belligerency of the Cubans. If Mr, Fisit does not clear himself on this point the general conviction will Le not only that his vanity and stupid obstinacy imperil ded the existence of one of the noblest politi cal bodies recorded in history, but that to his determination that his friends and relatives should pecuniarily profit by his chimerieal purehase of Cuba are justly attributable uinetenths of the losses of life and destruc. tion of property of which that ill fated islaud has been the scene. imme — It is stated that a few days ago a most ex traordinary exhibition of the force of gunpowder was made in Massachusetts, The Cape Ann Granite Company, with a blast of seven ki powder, started @ block of granite in their quarry at Bay View one hundred and twenty-two feet in height, forty-five feet wide, and ¢ y feet deep, containing about one hundred thousand cubio feet, and weighing over fourteen thousand tons—supposed to be the largest Yinck ever quarried iv this OF SAY other country, Gen BensaMui #, Butuna be supposed to be the pring cipal propmetor of the Bay View quarry, and it tw generally believed that he has an interest in fusuisbiug material for various public buildings now in Course of construction at the expense of ouv heavily taxed people. It appears that Gen, Rorren's representative has been experimenting 40 regard to the force of explosives, and that he hun performed hin duty with great intelligence Kow, if thie same gentleman who Ggured up THE mecessary to iM the ww will anter into anothey pale’ fa ouch powder it will thke, gn $e oan at Iple, at the public ex- pense, to blow Geo, Baxsamtn F. Boren entirely out of reach of the public Ail!, and will supply and fire the train, he will honestly earn the high reputation of a man of science, « patriot, as Christian, the big — We have had occagion te comment upon the stupidity of Gnanr's Attorney-General. A freah ilimateation is now before us. The Post masier-Goveral submitted to Mr. Awennay the question as to whether #he stamping of blick lines on the inside of Government envelopes was printing within the weaning of the statute of March 8, 1871, which provides “that no en- velopes as furnished by the Government sball contain any lithographing, engraving, aud no Drinking, except @ primted request to return the letter to the writer.” The Attorney-General decided that the stamping of such lines was printing, and therefore in violation of law. In announcing this decision, Major Axeamaw acknowledges that “it is possible that such marks as those in the sample you hare sent me were not within the special contemplation of Congress ;"” yet he claims that the wording of the ptatate Jeaves him no alternative. Not quite satisfied with this opinion, the Post- mastor-General privately referred the matter to Mr. M. B. Frexy, an eminent lawyer of this city, and that gentleman in his reply says: “T feel it my daty to state that I entirely dissens from the Atforney-General's Construction of tae Tibia palo ie ine be the exprassion bf my su i Hilo with users. 1 Hive feoel therm congrmee tv sa fiat Dig opinion gives le cen RaakseaT pti & Mp i, ‘cHiaracters oF marks on poser or attater ae 1 by impression” Waeneten's defial it Ltorney-General relics upon the anives ty of the language in the brovies Sra supreseton ypou ibe reve of the envelade o on ina. jntended to tactli wpiting of a of she x Fens oF superteription ypow The @ooting hie definition of p ie appuieaste te the cousbruction of aie etgeane, 1 requires no Ment bo show Ahab Wie Ham aod the water ont! the envelope are prohibited equally with the black Itnes.”” It was clearly the sole purpose of Congress in framing the statute to prevent the Government envelopes from being made # vehicle for gratu- itous advertising ; shut of course po one would suspect that Mejor Axermaw could know that. — —— The decision of the Police Commissioners in the case of Capt. Hetwe reminds us of a story. 4 colored man stole a wasbtub. He was put on trial, A respectable gentleman swore that he saw him steal it. Twenty witnesses were sum- moned for the defence. They all swore posi- tively that they didu’t see the colored wan steal the tub, The negro, however, was convicted. He was unfortunate, 1f be had been tried before the Police Commissioners on Wednesday last, be might have been declared innocent, and Bex, Maxienne might bave complimented him for his honesty. Mr. JOMN FORSYTH oF tho Mobile seyie- fer begins to think negro voting is not so bad » thing ofter all. He says: “The South gains in political weight io Congress by colored suffrage, and some of ‘yee days the Radicals will wish they bad ‘et it alone.” He then aims at eoneil- iating the rabid sccpasion elements by telling important gain, particu- as in many of the reconstructed States it is likely to enure to the benefit of the Democratic .’ This is a far more sensible view of the , aud the future use to be made of negro voters, than Avex, Stermexs’ the {nvelidity of the Fifteenth Amendment, We shall soom expect to bear Mr, Fonsrra shouting for the New Departure, af even for “ Gaverer and One Term!" A renewed outery is making in England against Queeu Vicrorra, for neglecting the duties of her royal station. The oecasion isher absence from London during the visit of her daughter, the wife of the Crown Prince of Prussia, and her husband, There being nojroyal residence open nearer than Balmoral or Osborne, the young couple were foreed to accept the hospitality of the Prussian Ambassador. The English news- papers y plainly, that the Queen is paid a large annual stipend to represent the national sovereignty, and that if her health requires her to be absent so coutinually from the capital, she had better abdicate, or af least transfer her social functions to her son. We learn from an authentic source that the only time that the Hon. G. @. Bauwanp was ever seen riding with the Aztec thief at Saratoga was on a single occasion, when they both happened to be guests of Mr, Hane Surv, The usual companion of the Judge at the Springs was the elegant and popular Mr, B. L. Sroxes, a great favorite with both men and women, ————— ‘The people of Chicago have appropriated one thousand and fifty-five acres of land on the south and southwest of the city, at a distance of some six or eight miles from the business centre, for the purpose of a public park; and Mr, F. L. Ouustep has been invited to examine the land aud to prepare « plan for the work, The site onsists of two tracts a mile or a mile and a half apart, Que of these tracts contains nearly six hundred acres, lying upon Lake Michigan, on which it har @ frontage of a little more than» mile and a half; and the other three hundred and seventy-two acres, entirely inland, To « superficiul @bsarver, nothing eould be more un- promising for any picturesque purpose than these two tracts of land; but, under the artistic hand of Mr. Ouusreo, they are made to grow into something excoedingly beautiful and charming. ‘The tract upon the lake is simply # swamp, and that in the interior, like all the country about Chicago, 1s but # monotonous prairie. By excavat- ing a portion of the swamp, Mr, Ouasrep obtains material to raise the surface of the rest, while the excavation furnishes that part of the park with # harbor aud lagoon in which sail boats and row boats can be used, and @ safe place found for water sports that are out of the question on the broad expanse of the uncertain and tur- butent lake, At the same time, by am in- genions system of planting with trees adapted to the locality, Mr, Onsen produces the ar- tintle effects that are ordinarily expected from a varied This part of the park is to be conneeted with the inland portion by a belt of pleasure ground six hundred feet in width, which he treats with much ingenuity, He proposes to open @ water channel through it, making # passageway for boats te » luke of eleven acres, which is to be excavated at a suit- able point inland, Several streets and one or two railways (reverse this connecting belt; the streets are to pass it by means of elevated bridges, and the railroads arg to be masked by suitable pian tations of croes and shrubs, In the western portion of the park the largest eatent of lawn occurs, containing a hundred acres, ‘The same system of vavied plantations is also to be emn- ployed here to increase the apparcut diversity of the surfuce, Mr, Orausran’s report to the Commissioners contains merely a general exposition of thi plan, without estimates of the expense, This must be considerable , but if the design is fully carried out, Chicago will possess one of the most admi: rable parks ia the country, although there ie no pluce where the difioulty of achieving much © resug appears to be 60 great surface LY 2 fe Valcopwaod, with the micbty eucnent of Niagers river rotiing tn front of its grove of oaks. The seene is without a rival, It is a dosen or ffieen wiles from Buffalo, on (rand ssiand, where she ‘once famoas Major Noah attempted to colonize the tribes of Iaracl. ‘The only approneh i by water, ana the members of the Clud drive down there With thetr fast etenm yachts im seve than an hou When we drew ap at the wharf two or three yeeh Were lving there, while one was off in the strenm fivhing, ond severnt rowboate, manned Sy boys, ‘Were pulling aboet near the shore, Tve brosd lawn in front of the club nomse was filled with Kroups of laéwes and chikixen, It wae charmiog Spectacle, Falconwood is rot kept for the excl- sive amusement of ite ownerr—aboat forty iv nam- ber—bat their families and iriends also enjoy ite Dlearures. The house is plain ond spacious—every- thing for comfort, nothing for ontentation. The dioner was simple and delicious. We praine the hoxpitelity of Falconwood, aud remember with all our hearts the gentlemen who #0 cordially dis- pense it. ‘There is wonderiel duck-shooting im the Detroit river Pleasvre-seokers ought to make this voyage of the Kress lexes. It is like a voyage op $0 many succes- sive oceans, with stops now and then to go ashore and learn the pews. The sir is magical gud men is happy. Every doy is inspiring, and the delichs of nothing to do perfect. Tue thermometer averazes and twis for tix days between Jn Superior the genine brook trout t mkra About the rocks on the shores, where the water is ten fect deep or more. This is made possible vy the coldness of the water. Its temperasare mover rises much above that of tee water im any pare of the lake. Experienced anglers have taken there trout Weighing six and feyen pounds, They are evucht ‘with bait only, and will not rise tog My. Thir, we repeat, is the speckled brook trout, and pot the Freat lake trout. ‘That jordly fish ie taken by troll ing, Spd ip often of the weight of Wuirty to forty pounds. Rupning the rapids of the Sault St. Mary wish In- diana, ireh-bark canoe, is an orthodox pleas- ure, and much commended. It ts brief, snd there is no dapger im it Ladies may try it with entire confilence. jet scenery is about Thunder Bay, on the ‘Thunder Cape, a precipi- toue cf of reddish rock thirteen hundred feet high and half « cre Jong, stands on the eastern side of the entrance, while Sambers of islands, some lofty and fint-roofed,; others lo aad Found, and all of them wooded, are scattered alcme Westward. ‘The outline of Thunder Cape ts superb, thémed fs tempered and fringed with trees that break the level of its long summit. At evening ite beauty was indescribable. The setting sun flooded the mountain and the islands with s golden Nght, such 48 Gifford loves to paint, and the clouds and sky overhead were such ap none but Turner gould tempt. Such a deluge of glory! The gray expruse of water and (he purple-shiadowed sides of bills and islands, darkening as the day faded into the solewa TWLlighs, Were the setting of the picture. The famous wine of Silyer Islsnd is in » little rock near Thunder Ray, It was discovered a year Or more since by the glitter of silver at the bottom mers, ® company in to advance the money necessary to de Yelop it ; and it was sold, with 107,000 acres on the neighboring mainland. to some geatlemen iu Now York ond Detroit, The Was about $250,000, Te & bulkherd of substantia! timbers had tobe built wp around the rock, and this, with the other buildings erected by the pregent com- Pany, hae cost thew atout $400,000 The ore is of extraordinary richness, averaging above $1,000 ton, ‘The mine began tobe worked in September or October last, and siresdy §600,000 worth of ore bas been takem out The owners hope to discover the same vein on the maip shore opposite. ‘This vein about four feet wide om the is! if it does , its value wil; be enormous. ‘The min is mow about sixty teet deep, and, with the help of « fteam engine, 8 Worked day and wight. ‘The valne taken out daily le mow abou: $1,001 The ore is taken to Wyandotte, just below Detrait, to oe melted. ‘The miners, mostly Canadian French, live in a hamlet on the mainland. Most of the houses are of logs, but there are some frame buildings. It is a curious spot, with «(umps still standing where the Streets ure to be, bus with all the signs of busy life. ‘The steamer lands at « large wharf, and two or three stesm tugs ply between the town and the island, ron (ndustry of Lake Superior bas attained an immense development. Ite eaicf centre is at Marquette, an active, thrifty town, beautifully sita- ated on hillsides that look northwardiy upon the jake. Its people are said to be as many as 4,000 It has no natural harbor, but the port ts protected by an artificial breakwater, ‘The principal mines are abont a dozen miles inland. There ate some twenty of them now working. The ore is sent to Chicago, Cle Buffalo, to be worked into tron, a dozen fornaces, besides & rolling mill,in the neighborhood of Murqnette, ‘This is the only plage on the south tide of Superior which has @ railway ¢onneetion with the outside world. The Peninsula Railroad, 234 miles long, extends through the irom region to Escanaba, on Green Bay, Vast quantities of the fron ore are carried to market by this route, The iron of Lake Soperior is renowned for its Smenoss and toughuess ‘The value produced by the hear Marquette in 1870 was four millions and 9 quarter of dollars, The chief focus of the copper production ts at Houghton, at the head of Portage Lake. To reach (his lake, the steamer winds inland from Superior through 4 crooked and swampy river for some filty miles. Honghton has a large hotel and a prosperous Villiard room, besides three breweries that produce the universal loger. Ther mping wills and & furnace for smelting copper at Hancock on the other side of Portage Lake, The crop of copper last sear was much larger (han ever, and five-sixths of it uli eame from the country around Houghton ‘This place is wamed for Dr, Houghton, the former State Geologist of Michigan, In vis explorations he discovered a rich deposit of gold, ana made notes so that he could find the spot again, He was drowned, his motes beeame unintelligible, and the gold mine is lost again, ‘Two nuggets alone rewain to the fact of his discovery, Next to mining, the chie( industry of Lake § rior is fishing, ‘The special seat of this busivess is Rayfield in Wisconsin, about eighty wiles frow Duluth. Lake tout, whitefish, and siskiwit are caught there aud exported, fresh and salted, ia every Bayfield is & nice spot to pass & week or summer, Daloth ts oll that our fancy had paluted it, It & magnificent sitvation om the slope of a high hill, looking to the routh. The opening af a canal some hundred feet or more iu length, into an inner bay, eives ita much better herber any other place on the lakes, The operations of the North Pacific and the Lake Superior and Mississipp! Railroad Companies have already drawn some three thou- sand people to Duluth, giving the little place an air of unusual life and enercy. Streets are laid out end gravelled, shops and houses and ehurehes built, While due dwellings rise amid trees and stumps, aud the town is extended into the very forest. ‘The great tations of Duluth have been Jauched at, but they are well founded nevertheless. Minnesota, northwestern Wisconsin, and northern Town already produce immense quantities of grain, thathave hitherto beem sewt to market by rail to Chicago, Now the rnilroud—155 miles long—from St. Paul to Duluth takes this grain to ® shipping port for about one-half what it has cost to convey {t to Chicago. ‘Thie bosiness aloae is sudiciont to make Duluth an important eity, but its future ex tent wil not be limited by it, When the valley of the river and the Manitoba country are settled, and Dakota begins to raise crops, people will anderstand the foundatio Which the builders of Dulain have proceeded, It is m simplo question of the Cheapest possible transportation for the productions Of Au enormous ADd Most fertile agricultural region. ‘This, however, is mos all, Jest back of Daluth, i the Dales of the 86. Louis river, ie water power Wat wight do Ihe Work Of the World, Por twenty 1871. miles this stream rushes dowo o suscensiog of apie and cascades, where mille 5/4 #8 thickly as the shops on Broadway. ne Af the orth weet will de ground Rere, Pded er be fewed bere. workshops and minagiactorits of svery port will be built here, In this vieiniky, too, there is iron ore as rich as Ahatof Mirquette, in in- gqhauatibie deposits ; onda rlate quarry, the only pone in the Northwest, has already been opened. Doiath need wot be alzaid. Hho will be able Lo Loe her own cow. ‘This Gr North hos mnod thet fe grand and te- pressive, but the general effect is dreary and not fascinating. The trees are stunted, the vegetation quite feeble, The cool summer weather uegents # terrific climate fn ‘winter. Forty degrees below zero Ws common, then, but those who have tried is protest that itis wholesome and not ungomfort- atle. The air is ne dry, thay say. and generally so inee Grom wind. that they go sbout thelr ordwery Avocations as regulerly as in Pepnsylyania or Ohio. ‘They drones little warmer, apd thet is all. The Snows are not very deep, and the railroads are not stopped by them ¢0 often as in the State of New York, Besides, the air on Lake Superior at all rp.iaingly cheerful and bracing. It is al atmosphere of the Catskills or the Mountains, guslified by the presence of the lage, but never humid, because the water is too cold toafford mach evaporation. This sir is wonderful to breathe, and people who eannot live elsewhere find health and vigorin it. ‘The sick become well here, and the weak strong. Tois North land is « boundless aapatarium for weak lunge and all pul- monary and brouebial maladies. The Lake Superior country can never have much agriculture, Grass, potatoes, and oats must always form the mato products of the soll, Nature desizned it to be tnbabited ebiefly by workers in ores and metals, It fs pow little more than a wilder- ness, but its time Is at hand to become full of life. Branched through ang through, w]th many & vein, fees obi eet ipo”: ian erage ag 0 mes {i fr Sopp ‘#Fea! seashore. seasons Is a MR. BONNBR'S HORSE JOE BLLIOTT. pinecone Another Great Performance by the Trouing Morse Joe Eilon. Prom the Hera. Comac, July 24, 1871. Revert Bonner, Bag. pon Shy Be Dean Sin: According to prvaae E eny, ios Joe Biot o gal Le this OER Mag form you that fiers wade the tsi 313, a ede in which Jo be Sat ly two you e khov Beek Oe | ie heb feet 9 iFetttors- et ala i Teast. yours, wot mind }t ARL 8. BU! it” | § ‘Asionushing as the above pict is, coming from the well-kyown and reliable trainer Carl Burr, in order to fully appreciate it, it is necessary to bear im mind that Mr, Burr bas had many of the Very best norses in the country in training on his track, aud that the fastest mile thet the great more Lady Emma ever made on it was carried much less weight than Joe Elliott carr! the above Uae ur. Joe Elliott was sir poeeer't eR rett, the sire of ae TFimous. Mountett and of itr ‘Humph: Hempbres erest colt, who Bu ma: wood within ontaning | fime Re iver ol if & stallion fo the world f 44 Fee sucl prod’ gis say Do may ciner foot tee Of ward Brpreite gets W Rt believe is one horse ip the to xter alone excepted, that could equal ge Wort’s performagge. oy the ssme t supe Weight, em BY THE SAD SEA WAVES. ——— +> ator aud a Congressman F Washington Corr epondence ied Commercia. io aud an ex-Senator last git wih vin ont "torued “frost Lon Braneh. One of them bad beg there & week or more, and u ther went vine their thing suen a eharneier as led tacm to believe they not wanted at Long Bragch. rae “Why, d—n it,” man, who isa joo Repubhe.a 2 pions . seit go we be late, fe ti soe 4 ep et ee! to go to sivep. I was talking about, ne that he didn’t lilse to be Is ail rt Ye me the imoressiou ed in his own cottage. f course. 1 appreciate his as, DUE i don't understeud the principle. Now 1 os 18 see him on important Dasiness, I tis pubic business ee ms Facies, edide's wecte: ry seem 10 ither. i, it's ail right, Of course, but till be dd {1 wouldn't like to kuow What leis paid tWo thousand dolias © momia for, unless it is to wtiend to the publig businces, Now Lgct about $400 « month, but T am always Feady to attend to pabile vusiness. No man in wy district ever asked me cia INES ‘withio reason Tha’ Washington again heat of sum- ‘hy suould not ummnert Weil, son “t koow how it seems to 300, bub 1’ be d—d tk 0 Ab THE BE-SEYATOR'S COMPLAINTS ry because some Vised upon the 8 Petronace while be the ease of the new San Domingo controversy’ his vote migat be of striking importance. Whe ‘expected. to control goals Tender no equivalent, In ator, ie hae votes, and —— - PLBASONTON MUST GO, w Washington Correspondence Cineinnad Commercial The President does not show any anxiety to got back to Washington ; and, at thi a there is no cestaimiy of his cubing or going. Every Dody Wishes be would come, for It is UmAversally tue opinion that the outwell-Pieasouton unp:casant Bess will be patebed up or readed asunder when very dry sudject, but It is Teds the sort that in- ty ¢f principles or pre- ferenees, but because of a morbid tse Which is felt here for sensations, Those who say there is no real quarrel with Bout well and Pleasonton, are simply ignoramuses, Tuere is suoh a quarrel between tue L¥o gentlemen as cammot be compromised, Boutwell never shown 0 much feeling op any subject since he has Ket openly to bis . Abe Lotereal Rev- tha: it Is a8 rotten a8 heli and so on. He docs that Pleasonton je corrupt, but I should not jer if be had his double. He says heise weak man with « muddled brain, {did wot Vaink Boutwell could manifest ao much RY su) Jeck, but he is furious at the men- From wast I have seen, and L have watched very earefully, Lam satis fled What Houtwell bus #0 muvl feeling iy thi Pleasonton is tor that he will surely retire unle foreed out J to sbow that fant Pleasgnton, in competent uring t which Plonsonton has held off the tex on whiskey has been somethice like ei willions less than for the ¥ix months preceding b entry into ofee. Both Bontwell and Pleasonton w: turn, both being satisfied, as the publ trouble will be settied when and eseh being confident that be will win. quarrel be reached that point where recone ati is impossible, how ean anybody suppose that Bou well will not win? What use is Pieasonton to Grant, and wot can do without Boutwell? As much as President is attached to Pleusonton personally, how cam he throw aside bis ehances for renomina tion by saprorting ulm and tosing Bontwell. The iatter, Lam Pericetly surg bus come to the point thers leis indiferest. “Hd crm make nothing by Stayiog with Great, sad con tuske uetbing by le. ing him; theechances of benefit in the Iaiter being better than inthe former, Wait aud see ? — A Child-Murderer at Large, Prom the Indianwan. The following outrageous affair oecurred about five miles from the village of Bourbon A Nttlo orphan girl e>out 19 years old, 1d of & well-to do furmer, disple the " found in the fearfully bruised and marked from her lead to ber nips, the neighbors say, The coroner was notithed to invest) e Case, DUL On BoMeE pretext Teiared to do bone one else (0 attend bo hi nO Investigation Wi id wae buried in paw ger’ that hides from ihe eyes oF tie work! @ head Shaved wt cruelty thet, Wf ouly ba told le trae, sbould have caused be perpetrator to dad s home in @ gonviel's cot, if a halter Soo net omerded her sete of savage violruse apen an wuprovecied aud MaMOG UE OF) vam @inbbely TROUBLE IN NEW JERSEY, en im W. Bowlby Declared net to be fe ao Fine- : in your iamue of the 96th inst. you men- tion that in the event of the election of the Hon. Charles Haight to the Gubernatorial chair of New Jer- 10 an office om his 6:0, for the reason tat the Doc tor is the handsomest man in the State. Now, Mr. Rditor, there are some people in Now Jamey inet take exception to sour semertion, on We erownd that Dr. Bowlby is mot @he handsomest man Jersey can Produce. Allow me to introduce Mr. David Dood of Orange, N. J., who t ene of the best, f mot the Goce! built and handaemest men in the country, aed furthermore, is sound in the old Demoer.tie inith of his forefathers; not thet I would wish you to inter pon comarks tbat Dr. Bow!by is not sound I be! that most of the wen tat meres, and oy ty AS ae he Bros you, nad you dasire, we will trot a fooklag joan fom Newar pur we have o ty @any fize nos, to wi by the Judgment of the Court. In the United States Circuit Court yesterday, Judge Blatchford rendered the following decision 0 the motion for an injunction ko rentraip the Evie Company from tesuing aod renistering the 90,000 shares of Brio stock issued on tho basis of the eon. vertible bond: ‘Tals Court mast, i) we Pee Crate lnitroad, ‘retohred ueb a power | of was "exercised Company in the instance Rerein mp haere New are at “t pi aa oe eae ‘aioe Soe te ming ‘conyerubig iealct ak ae of in, the ih there Js y ra pany ait ttn "sate feared 1 ak Pit e boa rae: son verron to Warvai TRE eae nook iasted, on the Couverioe, tthe Doma “Yue mouon tor ‘20 nJanction We, tieretore, t ‘THe 90,000 SHARES TO BR REGISTERED 48D CERTI- In the matter of the Brio Railway Company, Jomes Fisk. Jr., aud Jasiia D. Waite nett overt Au ‘Heath ey Henry: L. Bape dudge Bisichford lias bottled sion. reais Be veneloa Cy ldped In fie Crumeet reported in the 8 ay i of this 0 er is in Feletion to the a iored osiraction by day wld of 90,000 shares of Eri from the Cole- han focetvershtp, and is io the sail have suca priv Sucnprvless: defer dhersot he must wake leh epoltation, pecialnsccnoetee-"stseeeat WARDEN TRACY'S 6 OODSAMARITAN. of the Drawback Frands. Safely quartered in the Ludiow street jail is « Canadian gentioman, weo has been s guest of War- den Tracy for Gfieen momths past. He employs bis time in the industrious shuffling of cards and the consumption of those exhilarating liquids which the hearty jailer turnishes. Rvory day ® beautifai woman, with 9 cloud of goldea lair aud an abun- dance of money, visits the blonde Canadian gapti ci Jeaves the wherewithal to purchase the ward tion, bene nin tho wile of the Cana- jan gentleman, acd always sbroud movements Yo and from the jail in the deepest mystery, This mystery le prose the prisoner, wi Docks Kepitn bis come cr station to bis how fre although he trequently shares bis rich iW het For his geuerosily ne bas been a, J the joo Sagna hs"'bed chance to know the irk- somtuess of ls’ loug soutueameat, be\ssene, per. feotly satisfied with bis condition, end is pointed at by the warden asa vocal advertisement of the rection of Warden Tracy's system. All that {s wown of this strangely contented crimin he was involved with Judge Blatchford the drawback frauds, and it is quiet! that the Judge knows somewhat o! whence be draws his plentiful funds, whispered the parse ——— SEAKV ATION IN A PALACE. — Charges against Cap German Stenn: AugustPischler, master af the German vessel Buropa, was accused fyesterday, before U. 8. Com missioner Shields, of starving lils passengers on the ‘Voyage from Bremen to this port. The warrant was granted under the Passenger act of Mareb, 1405, whieh provides that each stcerage passenger shall be furnished 11s pounds of food per week, Tho captain admits that he did not comply with unis la but alleges that te complied with the German Emi- lj fe Re fone Cats coanael, couten Phat heteo coal ot ae eld wid ar statute, as the United Sta uot make laws of ofthe Diadine op the masters of foreign Nessele, | It was held for the prosecution, on the other hand, that all re expen jug thea aimed howe ents regulating this matter; but asthe treaty was not brought Ww the notice of the Commissioner, Jant was hold ip $2,000 bail for examina. ied ° Vovagi they were all treate — TAB LURK. Horse Chronicles, Aman in Wisconsin advertises his horse for sale, and thus discourses; ‘Thou canst trust why labor to him, for his strength is AR canst bind him with be will bs tue valleys after wall «i seed in the ba is btrencth is terrible, iu Which bo rajologth, paweth the valley, and waxeth proud)in lis speed. He mocketh at ‘fear, neither \uraeth is back from the hobgoblin. Lo! how be morett fis tail like @ ceaar; bis sinews are as cable Hite bones band ta the furrow ; Mike strong pieces of brass; yea, dedold, he drinketh wi e can draw up Jordun in and trusteth mouth Who can opem the door of bis facet canst approach him with a» bridle, His terrible round about, Twill not conceal bie portions, Yet thou tect are parts, nor bis comely pro- He js gent ‘And bia tail I want to sell him for debis, with, is kind, «8 oUt behind, something I cao pay my on Wednesday. ween Bell fe to barnes, Uaree in five. a 2938 for Bi and Hone: wagon; mile hea Belle of Saratoga Honeety bby, 215, 29H” ‘Vine Same Day.—Impromptu match; mile beats, best three In Ave; bo Wagon, en's Jack Shepard are eis Harrie’ m. Grandare ee Ve Faro’s b, Kiger “eh tt 888 Tine —8,'s, ‘est Dead Me ‘The following order in relation to the claims of dows of the velerans of 1818 was reeeived rua) im thin eity Deranrann ov yum [NTERION, ) ON OFLC! D.C, 3 Wasuiwaron, Te Pension Agente 6 HN. in’ the claim “4 T Aeetnition copy o Feb oF pubiie record ¥, An athdavitor the cffcinuing clergyman or tag's trate 3 The \eatimany Of vwo OF wore eye witnesses oF | un tear tao period durlug whieh lower eh bbe sown ‘oe Cou missioner of Peusians Peiah. ol oaa'ai iva welarsnd of te An ing tbe dere) Wan Whe wiaraed bie slay youre ago} Shut howe myeter SUNBRAMS. —Bhoo-fly beer is a Pennsylvania beverage —In Indiana a girl of eleven precocieusiy seckw ores, \ —An off-hand fellow—One who has lost both his arms, —Boston is eating on an average two hunare@ and nity bushels af Diaekberriqs each da —It is said ‘that the chewing of coarsety-eus gentiah root after every meal will cure the taste fow tobearo. =A girl in Wisconsin swallowed forty pereuse —Thomes J, Hilton, under a long sonteace for burgiary, died at Btate Prison at Charlestown, Mace. on Saturday, Of voluotary Starvation oar Ulstervilie (N. ¥.) bed boys choked 4 pounded @ good tntle boy to death booiuse be WOULEME trade Of some ere Which (her had swiow —The meanity of ex-King George of Hanover, who holleves that he t# dead, ts almost as amos. rod abeurd as that of A. tephens.whe thiake he i+ A four-year-old boy at Manchester bead & Biot Dottie Of whtekey in the cof hie fathers hou A dey oF two ago. Mem teod for temperance Kewuserg now. =-A Soeicty for the Prevention of Cruelty te Aptuneis is needed a Saratoga. wiere some of Wie Mle belles are gccused of amusing thouwelves dD) sucung pins into frogs. —Josh Billings says that a large policy of Life insurance doesn't exactly make ® man's corpse suile a his widow, but tt helps amazingly to get aaotaer fol - Jow to do n for him. —Prof. Coe, who made « balloon ascension trom Oedentberg, passed throuzh several eoow equals, end at ono tine bad two mobes of snow im tue daaket, He and bie compenion ufered greatly Gam the cold. —A Georgia paper tells of & Columbus lady ‘Who has not entered @ Gry RoOds store for Lye yours. exainination of the wortuary records of thes w, that the estimable old Indy hae bec dead precisely five years. —A country editor's sole editorial in ome week's isene of his paper was to the efines that 1 any ‘Wing Wil) Make @ man feel juicy about the be ut, 4 we to talk velvet to # pair of sky-colored eyas, by mean haht, in @ clover fela, —Waterbury has @ “Bachelor's Loague,’* whose articles of association punish bye hesvy Soe any wember being seen twice couseculively jn com. pany with the same woman, and with expulsion fom the order for « third offence. —The number of Lorses in Russia is greater in proportion to the poyulation than ft i# in our crea ert horse region—Kentucky. Ravsia hee one horse te every three persons; Keotacky has one Loree to abous four end a half of its population. —Herman Kibbe, a lad of fifteen years, was towed hanging by the neck and dead im hi father's tobacco abed at Bouth Windsor on Friday morving, It ls pupvosed that he haoged bimself ony whoe experimepting in dapgerous gymnast —A "spirited widow” bas been gerne Wadesboro, N.C. Alter biting aad scratching severss relatives, she was arrerted, but quickly “ chewed ap™ the Judge, annihilated the Constatie with a” detuy slung” Lok bottle, and floored the jailor with # wr ous kick, Mother,’ said alittle girl whe wes engaged In making her aol an apron, 1 oeileve I wil bow Duchess when | grow ap.” “ How do you ever expect to become « Dachess, my @anghier?” her mou askea. “ Why, by marrying & Dutchman, to ve sare,” replied the girl. —A Baltic Irishman earued » barrel of flour the other day by Carrying it to his shanty. a distance of one mile, taking (™§ one rest of ten m putes on the way. He cialme to nayé carried one twice the distance Whea Lue suoW wae @ foot deep last winter, —A Lowell maa, who had taken out a marriage certifioate one day finding the bride her house, that ty ton years younger, was accepted, Rot a new aren and was married, ail ob the same day, —A newspaper correspondent hes sea the. house at Verowa in which Juliet lived, and the ident- courted, dark with age nd ari, now used and over 1 door of the court or main entra hat whien was the distinetive embiem in the armorial Bearings of the Capulets. —When Prof, Felton, reading “ A Midsummer Night's Dream" to the captain of @ ship of whien ke WAS & patsenger, came to the description of Oberon, ‘iting On & promontory lisveniug to @ mermaid dolphin's back, the seaman was digustes. “Tuo phin's Bick.” said he, *i8.as sharp as @ragor, and uo mermaid conld possibly ride the bess unless she fray saddled hin.” —A Haverhill, Mass., man, who lately lost bis pocketbook with $9 in it, 008 to cousole Bimeelf wita this anonymous note frou th 1 am & poor man, and my health t# poor, and it seems to me thse you lost that mouey to benefit me, Isend )00 teen #8 ‘vd the change, You are rich, aud profess to be a Christian, I claim to belong to the same fanuiv, If the Lord blesses me, 1 will repay you I Lesa; if not, you must look to the Lord (or it, —The editor of the Elmira (N. ¥.) Advertinw has poor Inck buying medicine. He says: I wea: to ore early one morning for @ dose of morphiwe k friend. The might clerk onjeoted to civang is aring that I might destroy myself. * . do] look hike a wan who would Kill myself?’ Gazing at me steadily for half ® mluste, be replied, ‘I don’t know. Beeme to mo if L looked (ike you I should be greatly tempted to Kilh myvett,’ . —Chalatongkom, the young King of Siam, who is the first monarch of that country who bis ever been out of ils own dominions, intends to visit ( eutta in November. During his trip in Aprit to Sing pore he was accompanied by asmall Gcot of seagoing Bundoats and Iwo Corveties carrying #0 W pounder amidships and two @-pounders fore and aft, all Eng: Yish Dut. His ships and gunboats are commanded by English sailing masters, who take the rank of cow manders tu the Siamese servies. —Near Halifax, in Nova Scotia, a few deve ago, Mime Geargtana Lindsay, of Middle Marquee Dooit, with her aunt, Mrs. Stewart, were picking der ries, when they were euddealy sot upon by a she bear with cubs, The bear lacerate? Miss Lindsay a & ful manner, inflicting severe wounds upoe ie nd tearing the face fearfully with her claws. ery, and actually deat fide wenge, “popped” nee op the following Monday. —A company of land proprietors, owning about two hundred acres of land near the city of Loutsvitle, for which they paid at the rate of $108 per ere, have managed to pul themselves in the making & go04 deal of money by entering into # ¥ lation which needed only tact, enterprise, ty 1m expending money—in advertisine and otherw x to wake their venture @ success. They bought land on the ist of June, and mediately proceeded lay it out in squares, streots, and avenues, well And whitowashed and named appropriately—estaviis: her ont of exis ing, in fact, a complete town, minus the bo pubie bulidings Having progressed thus far, they vext advertived the sale extensively tm the city aud interior pers of Kentucky and neignboring States, prepared taking" maps of the site of the proposed new built a short raviroad to the line of th expense of $85,000, and g the days anv lunch free to all comers, ‘Ther large ihrong—mortly mechanics—atteudyd enterprise of we parties was rewarded by selling oue Dalt of the Uraet Lor $280,000, The other ball, (he aioe Valuable portion of the property, was rererven by the owners, who, It is thought wi w large fortune within les# tha th thelr enterprise —The condition of the English stage staring the last stx months, influenced « hy te closing of every theatre aud ais, bas Deon vory remarkable. At the (lnsring ( rosy ee Lyceum, the Opera Comique, and now (he Gury Me anies have per 4 od oeendes which beet accustomed for a quarter of a cent tne Winter and carly spring, a third Ltalian at the Lycoun Six of our Li ave been occup Owe of these theatres Las Deen #0 O ‘ by ap Italian aga ai Of the theatres stilt number of unkvown Fre Knglsb stage, in stock ; an pon by Kogiish authors and na the Oye Londo: Figiiae” farce produces ai 0 Wtle of A Chapter ol Ace of at lows dencryws Detter | “adaptation” This is what Ove hesira, Whe o1pam Of Line vb Orca. arene!