Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois (2024)

-TTTW n.TTTn A HCi "TO? "TO IT WC A TTTT? Tt A XT A TJITFI Ifi. Ift7f- I fnlitwwt J. a. twwHt 4 FTMAJICIAIi O. LsnfiinriHt Mnmvmi lmii i i ka na taiitait in irnnp i THE KEW BAmTSHIEE ELEC- 0nlUliMTUH)i subject, or vaunt the benefit which the committee of Councillors and citizens are about to proffer to the Solans at Springfield, If they want them, well and good If not, all the same bnt the committee must make aaetr proposed guests understand that sa asespt-tanee of our offer does aot imply ia any manner a psramaawat engagement.

Involving a breach of promise suit in the event of any disappointment of ulterior expectations. Let it be distinctly understood tbat this ia merely an innocent little flirtation not a courtship, NEW 7-30 GOLD LOAN. SAFE! PKCriTABLEI PERMANEhTI JAY COOKE CO. Offer for Bale at Par and Accrued Interest the Ftnt Mortgage land Grant Cold Beii. or TUB Northern Pacific Eailroad Co.

Oor. ens rear. Mviaaa.iiHkooFf.MfM M-Weakly MBoa. Start. Omr.

ee ar-iW Wastry Kdittaw, Sinsls Oooy, mm rear S4M WssktyMraos, Tea Otw, ess UM at SAva bats. I TO CRT I Party. danasa, sssdar tTtmna.ua seats par wash aWUr. aeteTaeaa. day todna.

seats par CaUBBM OOMPAaTT, SATCEDAY, 18, 18JX KOEE KEAL ESTATE. The now King of Spain fin da himself. Bka tha provisional government which preceded him, fa want of money. It ap- ears that General Prim authorized Gen eral Sickle to mr that Spain would eede Cnba to tha United States for 200,000, 000. The offer waa not accepted.

Am. dens L. however, has abated tha prioe. It rosy be that he does not understand his own lease of offic to be a very secure one, aual anas IA IHI COUU1 Ouuvwat UU1J or IM real estate into United States 5 per cents, it would be a comfortable provision in ease he should have to return to Italy; eo ha has authorized General (Sick lea to state that be will sell Cnba to the United States for $100,000,009, and throw 1 orto fiioo in. The price, as the offer now stands, is a Very large one we may say enormous for property which will eventually fall to as by tha bwa of political gravitation.

We fcolisve that Six. Bach an aa ones offered to purchase Cobs, and to pay 100,000,000 lorn, but Spain declined the offer. At that time Cnba was the "Gem of the Antilles," and a source of great revenue to Spain. Now it costs as much as it produces to maintain Spanish authority on theirland. While we do not think we Should purchase Cnba, nor think it is worth purchasing at all.

we think it emi- Centry preferable to San Domingo at the ceitaisedcost of that republic. In purchas ing Cnba and Porto Kioo. we should obtain an equivalent for a score of San Domingos, cd secure something substantial. Bat we have enough real estate now; we have econgh of political conflicts and reconstruction to manage at home, without going sbroed to procure others. The President does not seera to regard the offer of Spain as worthy of any official notice, though he persists in the San Do-klngo business.

The annexation of Cuba, by purchase or otherwise, was once a favorite policy with the Democratic party it ia true that that was in times when it Was considered advisable to strengthen B'sTcry by the addition of slave Whether the Democracy will incline to its jnrefcase now remains to be seen. Should they sdopt the annexation of Cnba as a party measure, they will flank and overwhelm those who want to run the Bepub-Iiean party npon the comparatively smaller issue of annexing San Domingo. OfSee Utm la fsB. tneueta 8la aad mutr. hKBiMn an afiewsd 1 per 4eas mm Maai rwrlr se.ealBtl.s., BUtkraran.aorna,raatoaMaraat.atkin latere latar.

at sar dak. rl Blvtrsa eFlartoi he. ruOHm amrtu, raBia larhireaoiW.il. Walaeley. a.

Ill aertiaocanBS ssed. Owi-J-K- Ho. Ill llii'ti'mate W-QseeaAOs anscEnuBneona. 11 Totlee, Blsaenlar eye pleea 11 Smlth'a atecbsnleml Ftoeer. Pie.

H. a- UmilM US Orawinaa. IUMrtil Oouiuae- Ufl.BC ft The Sorby-BrowniDa Spectroi TZa hi hv J. .1 Wi Brig. OOdwarn, reselunofl er nne PrrrtOT-rvnCa, J.J.Sml'irt.

Srletr. MFir.tt.icroeeop5m.2em Caw ei Wood SstrtoBa, leoun, jinj. Cflja of lorcf-ts Wheeler, rxwww. f-1-. Kns.

eerrksof Paotos7apiis oi Army Medical 'r- of aiiotograrhs of tent orijeets, Br Dr. Maddoa.ef lsdBjj tieT Brl biIaks 19S PtflStstraBbs, By Dr. Woodward, Illtatratiiat the value of Wirneaima, Sasrtrls. Bat" I.iicl*tr. for Pbotosralitue lwrpoaesl qeeocieii .1 1 141 Back Stand, for cagmiU, merits.

Ac J. O. tanrtli 149 Soctioa cutter J- O. Vmnxxata 148 Caae of direectinr tnatrunenl J. G.

Lane aula 146 Photographs uloetrBtinc tne ever on insect J. Wcodwaco, H. tt J0H5 WESLEY. As EetsesesllBB View mf tbe Thewtotrr ef the OrtalBml aiethediat. The Bar.

Dr. Bones delivered sermoa oa last sventng, ta the lecture-room ef brace (Episcopal) Church, taking for his text part ef the sixteenth verse of the sixth chapter of Jeremiah "Stand ye in the ware and aus. and aak lor the old piths. where at tns good wsy, ana want tncrsm, son ye shall Snd rest for your soula." Tne attendance was onlts good, snd toe ract taat tns eenuou aaa i nr.rtrMt eartft extenalvelr sa a iec 'ure oa "Tne Life aad Tunes of John Wesley" had ths etfeet of giving the lecturer a very Intelligent and appreciative audrenoe. The speaker began by mentioning the fact that the Danders of the three principal denominations or this ccantry bad formerly been presbyters la the stebubea Chares- He referred to Brown and Robinson, of the toagreganonalisra, Buffer tula ma, ef the Baptists, and Wesley, of the Metho-deta.

Of these, Wesley alose claimed that he era adaavain tae rrharch? the others called the Church wrong and openly repsrsted from it. The WBOIS ooject ox tne lecture, or seriuuu, imwuj desaioned ittelf into sa snrament to Drove that the rounder of Methodism had never been aeparatttt; that he had always conaemnea snd wii'tsa sgalnst those wso dealrtd to break away from the Church or England, and that tberef was sow so great difference between the real followers of Wesley sad the Established Chareb. To carry ont this dea, Uie apeaker did not and It necsasary to speak mncn concerning Wesley, and what little he did volunteer was only to prove his own view of tbe case. Us expressed the u'most love for John Wesley as man, aad rrgreoed that there should Bsve been sach political dlffereBcsa In ths Chorch aa to have caused hia apparent separation from it- He referred very briefly to tne early IL'e of John and Charles Wesley, and stated that they had always asserted that their life-work was to carry out tne tescntntaof the Boos of Conms Prayer; not to fr-nno a new sect. Their wotk wss the work nf 1-rH and thiv tailored tnsarrv ont the views of their lather, who waa a The simple tact awej whtn dut the cbservance of tbe festivals and tests ot the Church hsd led to their itng called suucessiieiy sacramenta-rians, Mettiodisrs, snd Papists but through ail their nersecntlons they remained faithful to the Church of England, and asserted that, They tnat leave tbe Church leave as.

For more than half a century John Wesley resisted all efforts looting toward separsttos and kept np his allegiance to the Church. At last, in his gad year, he was said to have made himself a Bishop in sn anser room of bouse in Bristol and to have there contecraLed the Bev. Dr. co*ke to the same office. To oppose the ides that Wesley ever assumed tbe Bishopric, the speaker ton nght forward a mats of testimoay which he thought amply sufficient to prove that the old man intended merely to set apart the Bev.

Dr. co*ke to anperintesd tbe work of the is preachers thee st work In toe new world. This was proved by the express declaration of John Wester himself ss wed as by the cocormstory letters of Charles Wesley sad Dr. co*ke, who hsd mors facilities far knowledge than any others could have had. 1 ne eiaooraiion or us teres lonnew tae wjvmuzr Bert of the lecture, the rest being devoted to exhorts! mr to the various sects of Christian be-hpvers to unite onoe more In the errand work of converting the world.

Thtsuottirg course, secordlag tofthe reverend gentleman, to be made cn the basis ot the P. lmttive Church, which he explained to be early the same as tbe Protestant Episcopal Chnrcb. He explained that what Mr, Wes'er did is now done, withcut sensrstlon from tha Church, under the name of Pusevism. Unity could oaiy be restored by the return of tliose who hsvs broken the unity. Tns rest of the lecture was devoted to the repetition of argument snd assertions to the same end and of leaser fores than the above.

EDUCATIONAL. Meetiac tthe C'mIc t'oaniy Srheol Bonrd. A meetiBg of the Cook Ctrantr BoaM of Eductw tion was belt! jecterday Afternoon in the office of tne Cocnsy Sapenntemlcnt of School, Albert Laoe. Jobn Sammerflrjlfl pre-lded. Tnere wer ftino nrewnt 6frj W.

WJf. Henry Aievrma, fid ward Gavrnty, J. V. Cochnae. W.

tt tae, aad A. G. Lane. tdc repon ot ur jvminii.Lcc on waaiiur uin Supplies, wu preaKnted. Tbe otmmittos awarded tbe contract for tbe of ooal to tbe Nor otai M'avooi at tmngtewooa to u.

tiomrooc. at sio iter ton for bard coat, and 98 for eoft coal, at tne ccnoof. Tne report was approved. Tbe report of tbe SertAir. showin trte amennt of bius sod red smoe September, isro, to be was.

on motton, placed on Ale. a commonicanon was recssive4 iron, um uoara of Soperrlsors Tecommeiuimg tbat tbe aAiary of Ecgtneerof tbe Normal School be raised, and tnat further SAlsiAnce be denied him. Mr. preue moyea tbe adooiion of ue fouowitur lYsolnnotf, and it was adopted: vv bkKbAb, i ne fornmitieo oo Koneanon or tne Boatrrl of 8 nnrrt-vi wnre hfiw-e rrvrnmTTMr.flrrMl that the aal- ary of the lnfnneerof the Normal School be lntrreatied from to Sl.NXi per aonum. from Jaaaary 1.1871.

and that tbe t-rrvicea of aiiy other penoa ai ianitor be mvnrnsna nrnn. uipinnrn JteMoived, That aalary of Oeorfo Muirbead be in- ereaaed to S140 ror montb from rcDrnaivl. lav I. and ttiaf he be held reponuiIe for the entire care of the buiidinaT. a com no rcanoD or i.

hiok. rroreseor or ren- inanthJp In tbe Normal School, waa, oa motion of Mr. waite. referred to tbe CoounlUee on Couree of Stndy. Km mouoa ok Jtz.

aian. mm louowiOmX oraer wetat aoopcea: OrdmrmL That a mmeitmt nrimber faT nnmarrr aefaoian ef LM strict No. S. town ot Lake, to constitute the train- ips; acparuiiexis. ox lae "onuti ecnooi, am piavora mi'irrr tbe cootr.l of the PriracipatJ tbat tlie High be boo I rlacs nf thrlirifTrirt haw atlnnrf In th rTiaP- rriaJ Behoof bf*cklims, for which the UiMirict hall pay aa.au er aUaSBTJja.

The rfcnnn of Priccir-al of tbe TTornal acssool was then STibmittd, Tbe wbole nnmber or puMli tne fall term of lui was arerssre. sz, Kamber In senior elav, 87; middle ciaas, 12 jaoirjr cImm. IS. Total nnmber beloDar off for winter term. SI nnmber in aeuror elssa, S3; middle class, 10: jonlor ciaes, 41; mo ond Inntor claw, IT.

On sccoant of the increased attendance, tbe B6rtf bad employed Miss 8. cfiiAi tor one nau or tne ume. uu tne end of tbe year. Tbe German elss-ws were taught dj Aiai merRieT, wao was wnouy paid dt ij strict Sa 9. Town of Lftlte.

The Amount of taltim re ceived from pupils onts.de of Ooet Coanty since juiie was 186.7S, In aroortlaace with the order ot the Board $stW bad beea expended tor lncideAwavifl eoalk, paper, eut. Tbe expeadi-tnre over reoelpts bad been f8t ea. Heaciaiion or ooorwiMor waterman. Tnat ne Board of Ed taxation be ivwwsted to draw an a srstem of rnles aad Klattons for the admismoB of papiis to each djMitntent of tM Normal School, and that all pap lis properly qualrtvd be admitted to tbe Hisrh School Impart meet, free of eharire, tbe district where it is located, waa. oa Bfeottoa of Mr.

referred to tbe Fresklent and secretary of the Boam, witn insmKtiona to repon Dace to tne Board of Stineiiavors the prent aygtem of raiee ana rejrnlationa, end also rarte coecerniatf the re-iationa of tbe Hsrh School deDaVrtmerit. to Uie ISor- Aial School at Si iHewood. The soare uen aajanrneu. AinTSEaXSTS. IHI OPSBA.

Weber's grand romantic work, Ooeroo," was (iven, foe the third ume la tats atj, last evening, st Uie Opera House. Tkscsst was substantially toe Fame aa Uiat of last fall, except that Miss Bow son took the part of Bfm, whick, st that Uce, wss tasea bj Pare pa. It ia, perhaps, too mnch to expect that sock a wont as Ooeron," which rrqnlras lavish scenic displaj, sad (ener-ons nst of the stage sdjonots, csn he given with aer large decree of saccess when It Is sn incidental opera of season. It should properly be made the sole opera of season, snd mounted with all the splendor ot which it Is capable. Notwltb-tax ding this, no musician oan fall to be thankful to the management of the troupe far prssenUog the work la soch a manner as to aHord a very slesr Ides of the great beanty of tbe tnstnunentatioii, and the highly dramatic color of the music.

Alias BowaooJfau-yaaUiiiaksd all who beerd her, aot by the success wtta which she rave the mnste of ker rou. bot By tbe esroest, honest effort wuch she mane. That tire so young and ecmparatt-rely a novice on the operatic staare abooM sing snea a massive ana as the Ooeaa ADostropae with a foil reaiixation of ita draeaaec effects, and as execnttoa of them, which was te ssy tne least highlv creditable to her, was some-ttiins smosi mcrerfibie. "Nothing oonld be more charming than Mrs. Begnln's singing of her arias Is ike fl-st sad fourth sets, which mast rank among the very best of her lyrle efforts.

Miss Goodwin also showed a ready improvement la stage know ledge aad mratea intelligence by the very a-racetol -nanner la which she took the part cf jPbcs. Mr. Castle's voice was veiled aosiewoa, snd ae sang with eXfficnltT. ao mnch so that hs was oMit-ed to save himself by catting his great ana ta the arst set. In the Prayer of the third act be wss himself seam, sad sang with admtra-bieexprrspic-D.

Little seed be aald concerning the other artists tn the caa aa their parts are of secxraiary txaxt-orraooe. with the exception of Hr. tDbatterscB's (Or-on), wblca wonld have beea better If he sea aot man if rated- sa slmost constant tendency to sing false. TMS afternoon Marl tana wm be glren, and this evening Tro valors." ajntot'si'iaiirtm. We are reqsesw by Mr.

Alter), maDtMrT of tbe Moseum, to state that the reported transfer of that theatre to Mr. Sina is larjorrect. The la-fotmaiioB srhioh we prtored yesterday oams rrotD one or tbe tetervsted psrtlea. presnmed that he knew wheatuf ho spoae, aaa acted on tha bint. As ins Butter the party of the Brat part says it a aot so.

The party of the sec ood part saysjlt a so. The party of he third part, which at oorseives, iaerfore prefers to keep Blent. "Help- at MTtoksr-B tals aftanooo and evea-teg. "Keek and Hack aad 'Horsaahoa Rooin-aoa st the ttasenra vaesafBtraooa sod jevea- lBg. -Mr.

Roberts ss trxtasXad atthsaiobe this leveniBir. "Mosey usansr 'aaatas-niiiaDBvtBHxn-at Uosisfa. MasBtDg's Mbsstreat stTev Trts ItoaaaV ths fats of rvrap," and stBer ncta-aata at tl afiernooa aad svenjng. iXBXaXfiEK OOIaEOTIOS. To ths VsitDr sf TasCbicaeo Trrtwae: la yoar aticie ef toay (ITU), ontamenting oeea the ieesat tall nrs ef Mr.

Joan f. ftrtrsartei. af iumoa, yon ssy: sir. AiftsnrVfrr Is eaeef the broth era, whose eperaoona ta biooosd stock, especially tAoroBghbred bones, ta AntQcky hsvs been so exuaaivc ss te glte toem a tepa-tawen-' Ttis is mistake, ocmrrlnr pvobaoly trora tbe stniuamy of same. The of Wood-born, tsmons for ralsinc tbrawaghbred hones, are net mated to at r.

Ooha T. Ajexander of Iltliioir, ta any mannar, sllAer by blsoe or coav Bxae fa bar! Boss. Of the Aaexuuisaa, of Wood barn. there were bnt two broUieraT tbe elder ef whom a dead; the survivor, air. a.

J. der, a bow Itvlxg at the osl boatsstead, enioying iratetly and wttboot ostentation hia large orrnta. Fteesaauae tbe comctsa. yoora. Chicago, Marei IT, im.

to. o. KAUta, Anew Optra Psasi. eesea the "Treraoe-," baabeeaos4BeMta a vexuaa. It la loeatsd ta Market street.

Tss proaeeatiua la forty-are feet at width, the stage thirty-Bine feet atx Inches deep. On ths opening nijrht, tha School for Scandal" aad JernjlJnd wrr acted, and a poem was rsclted. Tae artists who appeared were Means. a. It orris, T.

I. Hrad. Pratt Bvana, A. B. Daveaport, Vming Bowers, Josepa taobey au C.

Daly, eeorse Jordan, Jr A. A. Montawr, Joha A. Bens sad U. Gilbert; Miss Augusta IM-goe.

Miss fraiuie McOlelian. Mrs. M. C. Daly, Mrs a A.

Boons, MUS SaiuoTaoe, and Miss state Tj- aell aav Ko. isa Of Of For at Cor A i Bill sf A.A, AU The leasnna of the hour must be well studied. The warning comes in good and abundant season. It is not too late for those who pretend to sbspe the course of the Republican party at Washington to see tnattuey navumauo uiio-takda and thai thev have commenced to walk in paths from which tbey hsd better retire. New Hampehire is, to be sura, but oneoat of many Republican States.

But, while at is comparatively eaev to jld ground once Been red, it is always difficult and oftentimes impossible to recover a field tbat has been lost. Kew Hampshire has expressed ths popular scd party judgment on the deposition of Mr. Sumner in a way that cannot be misunderstood. The Republican press of the country bad already told tbe iremaenr. tnat ne maae an unfortunate if not a fatal mistake when he sacrificed tbe Chairman of the Foreign Committee on the altar of San Domingo.

Possibly the President may not have heard the votoe of the press, but the transformation of New Hampehire from a Repub lican mto a Democratic state is an aot tnat anaaka loader than woria. and be wiU be convinced at last, it gives us to Know tns sentiment of that part of tbe country which has hitherto been the mainstay of the Repub lican narty. and it may lead the President to auk himself. What can it profit an adminis tration to gain part or a email ioreign island, and lose the wnoie or aew England THE CEBSTJ3 OF HEW ENGLAND. The Pepnlattlea ClstsslfleeU swum w-e- Vnrk Trfhann.

If arch IX. The folloains tables show tbe population of tbe six NewxSEglsna Blares, wren tne proportion of white, colored. Indian. Chinese, native. and foreign inhabitants: Total.

A ndroeeoaein 36,815 81,503 38.358, 2,621 7.607 1.S38 avast Arooetook Cumber aneock.H...M Kennebec Knox. Lincoln. S.1 S0.7U6 18.511 2WS 1.3SJ tS.807 M.47S SO.Sti 26.597 SX.4X8 tu.9tf 29,746 1.07S! 35j.11 624 668 SJ80 470 All 53.Hj.-S 14J38 18,695 31,583 4,4 67,711 13333 17,969 X3.t88 74.V1 P-' ecataq ui. Wiklo i4.au l5 34.611 Washington S3.I9I T.l 43,143 S1.174 SMS1 au 1 824.934 1 tM07' NEW nUdtTSBTBB. Be4anap.

Clrealiire 17,640 17.316 S7.260 14.9U9 0,1162 64.109 42,055, 45,144 S0.197 1S.014 16.9011 17,156 17.681 1761 17,339 1.807 ft'sfron Hilleboro. Strafford 11.782 3.10 1,156 11.472 S.825 W73 WIS 14.99 By. 103 64.2 3 S2.7SI 38.V3 44,173 ITHJ 411.151 47.299 3D .212 1M58 StiLiviUl. Total L317.896 1 Itlgjno VBBXOHT. Bern ineton 13,378 11.176 tt.Ksl Sf.l'.O 1061.

JC.45.-I 18.574 I9.S55 1.034 23,484 J1.32S S2J47 96.460 S.8H 4.0SS 15.448 J8.I6"! 12.0BS .651 JtS 96.036 SMtX S.7P1 Tun X.692 UXHiB 1.342 6.759 9111 X5'2 1.1711 61 rS-flnkihi Grar l.m.-.ille Oi Borland 4,071 11,4:: I77 21 A 6 40.470 S6.4S2 11.5441 041 runs! 17,174, 1J47 S.7&I 3S.143 31.15 ll S4.781! 339 7.50" SU55 WashiDCton I J1iS Vfindeor. BUM 46,993 330,561 cos a bctic nr. artf ord Mrddleaex Wew New London 9J.SK3l,6Sn 77.4001 17.8ft 96.291 95176 102,007 41.737 36,099 191,997 r57tl 99.000 83.518 83.7161 41,655 98,545 91.415 7.072 .722 7.SM ntrjiiT J.7S4 99. -42 12JM! U71 S6J11U, M19 Trlland. 91.81 11 tM17, 1W 16,4691 Total I6S7.S4S! 1 537,44 BBOOS XSImUTSw Rrtetol 9.KM1 17 9.421 IMS.

149. 19S Newport. Providence. Washington 18 si 19.1151 731, 146.9781 1,898 19.3691 613 14 .041 1 4.321 16.167 263 lrA58SI 43 211,9681 4,990 16L971' 96.3841 Barnstableu. 32.311 am 1,846 1V35! 9319 15 43.776 X2.7T4 64 "37 109.686 9,787 900,841 78.409 64,388 4.U3 89.449 tiers? BriitoC Dnkee Fflaex.

.6327 1,323 9.062 246 1,029 ni 3.541 199.800 157,067 99,0421 S2.543 UamtMlen 1.090 44,036 STUM 4338 19.068 613 6713, Hampehire 351 6.8221 iddleaex. 1,744 70,904 aii 19,118 BU 1.U4 8-9211 nortolt. Pivtnonlh. Snffolk- Worcester 70,025 59.574 178.67 64,844 967,046 1 uum. 6.691 9S.995 4.Jt.l 176.809 199.716 1,443,191 363431 1.45751 traxiarrrtnLATiOst.

1,443,193, .104.068 1,451.351 S4 rune 624.8H4 S77.641 48 807 onDec-tient 9.666 1 626,451 527.454 91756 818.200 423.815 113.639 56.3811 Rhcde Irlnd 912,2561 17.6961 4.961: 161.972 9S8.6M1 Pi UrtrrMbn 590 921 99.61 'til Tri.ftfa 3,456,139 31,636 589 1647.772 3,461.464 ChineBe in MwacJiaietts Berkahlre. 7S: BrittoL 1 rTstex-S: Middleaex. Nnrfnlk. 9. Plvmnnth.

1- ftnf. folk. 8: total, S3. Japaneea Hampahire. 1: Woreester, xxancoca vonnty, name, mere unueas.

THE 12X1X013 HUM4HE EOOIBTT. Tn the Editor mf The Chicago Tribune: This society needs material aid, snd faithful hearts snd working hands, to make it a socoess. All btatlneas men, and especially those who are eiuueity owners here, sad sre mterested in the propony of the city, snd women too, who sre blessed with means, should feel that, ia giving freely to this cause, they are easting; bread upon the water to retarB to them again" In a material as also in a higher and holler sense. Everybody feels that tbs work is a good one. Soch a society will prove a blessing In our city." says one.

"This reform la greatly needed In Chicago; I hope it will prosper," said another. God's bteserog noon yon snd yoar work," ex-ctsimed an enthusiast. And thus it ts the people talk so n. Bat, ss a quaint old gentleman once remarked to a large aeaemoiy oi people woo were very earnest in expressions of sympathy and desire for the success of sn enterprise which was being discussed, snd wss to bemfli them If incceerfiil, "My friends, vmpettiy good, very good, but It wont mass bro'h; money is what we want to-day." This society, now organised and la working order, haa received many good wishes snd aonte material aid, bnt needs more. It proposes to lsy the axe to the root of the tree of mighty evil in Chicago: to use Isw when seceessry.

bnt it aims to educate the masses to maze practical a system ef education which shall exercise a tender, loving mflnenoe toward all those who need instruction tn this dtreotion a method whereby kindness snd mercy to our dumb animals shall by-end-bv become toe role, in Biaoe of the terrible cruelties which are to apparent in onr city to-day. II Is oss important step toward the realisttloa Peace oa earth and good will toward" not only an men," oat an living. Corns as snd help as. Chicago, March 17, 1671. BIBB BALL.

THE AHATXTJB aATfOStAL AWAOCIATIOM. Ksw Toax, March 17 DtnrjratM from the lesdtsg amateur base ban dobs throosrhoat tbe raited States atst ta ths rooros sf tae Kxrwlrirnr Base Ball Club, of BrooSira, taat evealntr, So form aa assoctsttoa of amatear base nan piayera. Dele-rstes were present itpitsuittnr thtrty-two dttes In all. Tbe committee appointed by toe Chairman to draft a eorstitntioa and by-is ws for tbe convention, reported that tt aad adopted, wltb few alterations, tte constitution and by-laws of 18s. Ths report was accepted.

Tbe foliowtna; crentlemsa were elected officers for tne nsninc year: Arctfbald Both, of Albany, Harvard Clob, President: H. 8. Jewell, Excelsors, First Vice Prealdent; G. W. Albro, Fleetwood CTlnb, Seeond vice president; J.

H. railoolLPaiitlaia Cinb, Bat-ttmare, Secretary, snd A. Thatcher, Olympic Club, Philadelphia, Tressnrer. It was taea resolved that tbe organization shtmld be known aa be atiaoaI Association of Amatmr Base Ball Play era, TiTt BOCKPORD POaSST CTTTg. TTudeleued by tea secession of Barnes, Cone, sad Spalding- to tae Boston Club Simmons aaa Foley to tbe ChiearoA, and HaAtrnea to tae Lone Stars, tbe Forest Cltrs of Bockford aava fvea cot tbe aaircaincement (bat tbe alas tor tea cinb tas bees selected tor tbe comtnc bus em.

Tae Directors of tbs clsb stats that itbey ara nearly reedy to annotinoe tne are aaarnins enoutrh to assert that tbe nine win be taa beat ever sent out by the Force City duo. nrs caiCAGoe. fr. Lons, starch Chlcaro Bass Ball CTab raised ttrronih sere to-day nmit to New Orleans, where tbey will remain about a mwtn. Oa their return tber will play one or two series of match sanies wlta St, Lotus dabs.

HOTEL tWmhUL The latest prominent arrivals are as follows i BOtrsB, vjwrw rraarl. 1 rain. PrealSenrial itrrmat" O. Ttomptn, St. Paul: J.

H. Dranaaand, Tutedo; Joha B.Orol, Toledo; H. P. BartDB, Borloa: a. 8.

Tar-aer, ew York: O. T. S. Towaaeiid, BoetoB Oeaeral Via. G.

Ledac, atinrieaotm; JohaTerhoae, Sew York; Hoxaie, Sew York: Wul Ravnar. Sew Tort-. S. M.Mstetiehl. U.S.

Jisa-s FTOrasorr. D. a. A. 8.1.

CSwaaev. era! aperi Btenae lent Union Pacnle atAilroad, and Um-H. WbittaB. Inr Yorki Joha rU liemeu. Georce Stir.

HHflla, Cleveiaiid a IT. Panl: T. 3. HoTt. BfewTftrt: DaBMl B.

TitaVa and T. aJ Llli S-1D aaa i Dm, lNfMw Tortt; "J.T. MaawaWan. av. Boarpaci, aw: Oentnl atd win Hays tediuavapoua.

G4meri East. C. aV. W. C.

Moniomezya Tnba. IHm, Cal. C. H. fUnlwo; fa B.

htimpeoo, Owaha; C. D. A-mvrtmiam, S. M. B.

Wethorea. Sin Irancioefj; 5. Baker. UwMamta; 8. U.

Jobnaoo, BoaUso; W. L-fcatEdei. Toiio- John P. Brady, Oaoa-ha; Chartf B. Cart, Mtfat-arals A.

B. Stanr. Ckevc- UaW; U. aawaawatT, OC. aOVTa.

OenmA Gm W. Cobb, Jode M. ML Oathroa, Vlnr trmJ Paint. Wia. Cnlotvol a.

JLegrail. 2t. Panl; Bon. Wm. Bravdunridfrs, Rochnter, Mtna.

Kdward H. bayer, CJlintoo (low.) Agt J. WL Bavipiefl. Mpw Tork; v. v.n.

HetDert miner, new lora: U- sr. KootcamB, sretw; Ct Rl rar-at Brtr. Knrifti vtrwa (B. Afs. 1 J.

MeDsniela auimat City O. hhetwvoA. BtkwV H. T. H.J.

frTRN Waayw, Icwm; sV. FaTTaa, U. If llltW, KiMtlM. eOa refnetos; to eontribute to a vrery demagogues, whose action they oespisea, wohavTebeuted er an enom.n their pwfomsnces. WfU the w0? tha New Hamnaairs election be neeaea, or iriS the loads" ho brought drfeat udsthere parsistjn.

their schemes Sntii thaRepublieMrparty is utterly de- doubt not, will be struck the endorsem*nt his Batv.8tio baVgiven to tbe prominent part he bors i in tbe attempted humiliation of Mr. Sumner. rVo humiliated now? tbe Democracy eon Id not penetrate the impregnable front of New Hampehire Rapnblt-Srrism, bat Senator Chandler and Ms friends have scattered tt to the campaign. What rare leaders ws hsvs Are ntHbeWubiiosas ot Wioia8mn proud ot ttamfThZTthd Chandler, Jim Nye! Now is the proverb realised-" An army of Hons led by binds. avomtbe Banalo Ocaamercial Advel uma.

TheuSEe from the State eleefaoii a New Hampshire bsve been reeetved. It would hs barf to tell in-what respect they could be more unfavorable or mortifjing to the Ks- pUBut5thePofueeuon here arises. What has brought about this want of vigor in ths Re-pnblicaa party What haa caused the Repub-Ucsns to refuse to turn out in a State which gave a majority of 7,000 for Grant There is no trouble in finding answers for tbe questions ws have aekei The Bopubh-cana in New Hampehire were mscouraged by the many sins of omission of which ths last Congress wss guilty. That Congress fsilsd to pass measures for tbe redaction of taxa-tionTfor the removal of political disabilities, snd for reforms in the revenue snd in tbe civil service, for all of which a majority of the people were prepared, and which thev had every reason to expect. And then, it is too open and well-known a fact te be concealed tbat the Republican party is out of patience with the administration for pushing forward San Domingo ss a party question, and for overslaughing some of tbe beat, truest and stsunobeet Re-poblican Senators beoauae they refused to fail in with the President's annexation policy.

Tfcere is no use in being mealy-mouthed at thia tima Fanta mnst be stared in tbs face. Beceaey a are broke out la tbe balldlns in which tbe Pest Office wss kept, snd in which shs also lived and canted on business, When the si arm waa given, aaaouga her own property, including stock of goods and all her household turnitnrs and supplies, ram danger of being sawcrovad ta few minutes, she aevertheleas ant of auaeenied tbs money, las aoeounta, aad all ths lettem sad aapars natse omoe; and It waaearr waea these bsd been collected with the greatest care and placed la responsible hands, that she turned her attenUOB to saving aer own enocta. The result of this devottoa to doty wss a great saving to the public, bet a great pecuniary aacnnce oa her own FBRSOSAL. Llttleberry Strange la a Jodaa la Alabama. -Mssslnlaisditmg a new periodical, called the neatas naw, ss ansraai city.

Among the French prisoners in Germsnv hi at senwe nonsparte. Prinoa Charlaa -Joan Miller, the oldest person tn Westminster, Mass, died ea Friday of last week, shnoat yean urn. uio mm auuety years Of BIS hfe as chawea tooseoo ana swallowed the juice. it at am sui ueoerai sickles, la handing his credentials to the new King of Spain, delivered an address tn Spanish, at which the King wss srach embarrassed, sa ha could not reply ia mat Joseph Holland, of Claremont. V.

niatea that he and forty-five of his associates signed tbe pledge ox ujtet anannencs xorty years ago; tkmr ke wsa the only one of the whole number who kept it, sua mat as is w-aay me only one alive. The Hon. a. Btepnens wss sble to walk ts the garden, with the aid of hia crutches, oa Son-day last, for the arst time since December. Tha Prmee Imperial la aald to be in very deli cate aeaita, at vnnreiniuwt, aaa us mother, Eugenie, is mnch troubled about him.

Speaker Blaine has abandoned his purpose of making a trip to Europe this summer, but has accepted an tavHatloB to visit the Pacific coast Staler. The royal family of Belgium has thus far en tirely Ignored the presence of the Princess Ma- tbllde, snd another member of the Bonaparte family, at Brussels. Francis Abt, the composer of many popular German songs, has been dangerously sick since the beginning or jannary last. Mr. Girard Graham, of Brooklyn, and Miss Ellae Bothe, of New York city, were married Berlin, on tbe stat nib Tbe religions rites were celebrated la the cathedral, in the presence of sa American audience, beaded by Mr.

Bancroft. M. Lanrler, lately member of the Gambetta Ministry, ass, It ts said, bought the Grand Hotel tn Parte for 1 ,060,000. As he had but httis property before the war, nls honesty doubted. The Abbe Dotnenech, Maximilian's Chaplain te Mexico, and noted for hia history of ths short-lived Mexican Empire, was, the other dsy, ordered to leave Praak fort on account of the abusive manner la aruch he spoke, st the dinner table, of the "Bofmiache Kaiser," of the Emperor William, and bis uenersissnd advisers.

General de la Marmora entered, the other day. st Milan, a coffee-house where several French officers were seated. He entered into a conversa tion with them, during which they became greatly excited, sad denounced htm and King victor Emanuel aa lngratea snd traitors to Prance. The other persons who were present st the quarrel seemed an to sympathize with the French officers. snd when the confidential adviser of Victor Eoua- nel left the place, he was loudly hissed.

The Pennsylvania Historical Society recently scqutred the manuscripts snd archives of the fam ily of William Fens, a subscription fond amount ing to fa, oho haying been raised for their purchase. it ta also stated that additional papers hsvs beea discoveredn England, which It Is believed can be secured by the Historical Society. A committee has been appointed by the contributors to this ford to make a formal presentation to the Histori cal Society of this couecttoa of papers, so deeply Interesting to Pennsylvanlans. a manuscript vol ants containing copies of the correspondence of Btchsrd, Thomas, snd John Penn, sons of the proprietor William Penn, has also been presented to the His toi leal Society. In the County Court st Nashville, TeniL, the other day.

Squire Buskin Introduced the following resolution, which was adopted Rnolvtd. That the portrait now placed over tnecnairor me dnage or ias court, ana purporting to be likeness of the Father of our Country. General George Washington, bat which looks more like the jack of clubs, be removed from this bail, and the Court House Committee be author ised to Have a true likeness of the ours natriot. uecrge aeniugtoD, pat its place. in New York, William Stern, aged 16 years.

ass been arraigned for forgery, after having ran skorcsreer ss a fast boy. Hs raised $200 on a check belonging to his employers, aad went directly to a barber's and paid tt.83 to kavs his hair curled and perfumed. Then he purchased a suit of olotbes for too, representing himself to be son of S. Is. Pike.

His next move wss to buy an amethyst ring for 128, aad a locket, chain, and breast pia for fit-SB. He wss si tested while negotiating for a handsome horse sad boggy. The New York "Last November, Colonel Burr Porter, of Newark, New Jersey, sailed for France, to attend to some business connected with the sals of arms to the French. last week his family received the news that waa sertoosly wounded while fighting under Garibaldi. To-day the aad intelligence ooaaeataathe was killed tn battle on tbe tta of December, while leading hat men with drawn saber, saying, how Americans -In New York, on Monday, at the eoaclusioa of the utal of one James H.

Brady tor burglary, the District Attorney aald he had his posses- sloa papers whlok indicated beyond doubt that the prisoner had not only beea joary convicted. bat wss guilty of still another burglary. Judge Bedford, In sentencing the culprit, aald: oitlss burning ahame that the social corruptions ef oar city sre each that men of this stamp have friends who dare to approach a Judge and District Attorney with bribes for their release. It is time that active measures were taken to stop this; snd, to show what favor they may expect from me. I now sentence yon to Ova years' imprison ment, which at an ths lew will allow." In ths month of January, 1870, a boy is years of age, named Billtngsley, took psasags oa board tha steamer Ben.

Frankim, one of tbe boata of the Louisville and Cincinnati United Ststes Mall Line Company, for hat horns la Madison, Indiana. Waue on tae boat be became Involved la a quarrel aad a flgat with one of the elerks of the boat, named Williams, Inthewtelee young Biliingaley lost one of his eyes. As soon as the matter wss brought to ths notice of the officers of the Hail Line, WuUams was promptly disailased from the far vice of the company. This did not satisfy young xtulingsley, and he, by nls father, brought nut against Captain Z. M.

Shirley, of Louisville, and others, officers of ths Mall Line Company, for damages. After a hearing of the case, the jury returned a verdict for the plalntUT and assessed the damages at $4,400. POLITICAL. North California claims the champion voter. At the last election hs walked to the polls followed by seventeen sons, snd they collectively deposited eighteen ballots.

The Providence Jmmrnal wants voting tn Rhode Island to stop at sunset, because tbe ways that are dark to elections Snd freest scope, generally, after tie goet down. A Nevada paper, la btdding good-by to the Legislature, bsts it "thinks Itself safe asserting tbat a majority of the members ot tne fifth sess'on of the Nevada Legislature hare proven themselves to be as graceless a set of scoundrels aa ever sold their votes to the highest bidder deliberative body." The Hon. Benjamin H. Hill has publiabed a letter tn the Georgia papers, denying that he has beea off ersd a seat President Grant's Cabinet, or hss ever expected one. He says that he wss earned to the Democratic party by eventa, not by choice, aad counsels moderation In the South, in the full conviction that the "Democratic party of the North does cot Intend to ran the next Presidential race on a fool's schedule." Bonn the Incident of ex-Senanr Saulsbutys forget! ulness, is reminded ot a like circ*mstance when Johnson retired from the White House.

After ha hsd vacated aad Grant had been duty Installed, one of Johnsons family, at the butt end of a temfic spree, pulled at the bell and ticked at the door, about midnight, nntn he aroused tae inmates, when he wanted to know whst Asdy meant by locking aim out la that way. Hs could aot be Bade to understand that there had been a change of administration. The Ctactnastt JSaowsMr says that the ta-aoeace exerted a New York by a few wealthy men, bug twodholdert, tbe Democratic orgaa-taaUon, haa been most disaatroua in the Western Sates, sad has east the party hnadreds of votes. And it Instate that the party stoat have. In 1871, a Ihowga DasMcrstle platform, ai least as strong sad radical as that of 1SSS, aad csadidetas who can be relied upon to carry It out If they are elected.

With anything short ef this, ta either respect, declares that the party la defeated nt advance. MAZLB0AD3. The Kunlrs (N. Adrrrataer Issrns that Jay Gould has purchased from the Kngttah stockholders that portion of che old Enatra a Caaaadaigua Bailrosd running from Watkiaa so Caaaadaigua; and, ss tke Erie Company the Chemung branch from Elmtra to Wstktns, It looks ss though test comnaay were making preparations to resume business again over ths entire road. Tbe next move, the Adsarfiwr thinks, win undoubtedly be to get a broad-gauge through connection to Niagara Fans, though no steps to that have yet bean taraa The St.

Joseph (Mo.) Oatttm ef March IS says: The Midland Pacific Road, running from Nebraska City te Lincoln, hss now twsaty-lrve miles of track bud, sad. alU posh ths work forward rapidly. -Tne Chicago A Southwestern ts completed, and me ears rasniog to Centervtue, lows. The com-nay save rnreaased the track sf the old Calitt-eotse DeaMomes Raitroed beyond Tree toe, watch a already gradsd. Tbe contract for baud-teg the track from Cameron to Trenton hss beea let to Messrs Ocdea A ford.

Their contract pre-videa taat the roots stall he completed by Sent, 1, andtasywaioomplets It "Work win be commenced on the But Isgton dt ftoataweetam Bosd as soon ss the fros Is bat of the ground. ertv vcnrTlee more ef the Aarmson sad Nebraska Bead wal be pot under eoatract at aa ssrlydsy." A correspondent of the Hennepin (111.) Jtavrd says: The Flyna uth, Kankakee Paelfic Railroad ooDawnces at Plymouth, running west, eroatlna the Chicago A Great Eastern Railroad at Jacaaos: thence te San Pierre, crossing the Cat-csaoTNew Albany Loatsvfile Railroad at that iScii tseoe westerly through tbe Counties of 5 per. Newton, sad Starke, to Momeace, IS, tharaerosilns the Chicago, Daavffie A Vmcesnas a suToad tbenee a nttle southwest to Kankakee, erraemg the Chicago Branch of meminots Cem-rjal-tbeacs west to wight, crossing tbsCni-eaao. Altos A St. Louis Railroad tbsnce wast as SSSiar, tbera eroaatsg tan Pox Siva Valley IsTwoad.

sad enaweeunc with tbe Chicago A JaeksoBVilie BAlirosd: thence west to Losaut, iZomuam the Llinols Central; theaee north-westto Hennepin, there crossing the Inmost MttT' and thence north to Bureau, there connecting with the Chicago, Bock Islasd A Facise SaWed aad the Bureau Valley Railroad- Arrangements have been made to extend it nona-west ts PnneswB, ea the Chicago, Burnngton a Ouincv Hauroad, and seat to Xlgoaler, oa the Michigan others Railroad, making a grand total Wrath of tSB amies. Grading at finished from the 8 ale line to Dwight, from Straatorto Lostaat, and boa a SUd ef the way ht Faunae County. Track-la? irg will certainly he commenced abort ewe, tbe tree hsvlpg already bees abte-TfM work ea the htidie. ovarihe idlnota Hirer win beeemnwnced as soon aa the water and weather wul permit. The raltroad mast aad wffi Mcemnleteewtuim the erases year, aad by the end el Mowaausr at a latter might have fared better.

They would have had the moral support of public opinion, whicfa seemingly inclines to the belief that government was in stituted to prwvids offices for individuals, waa, In return for the liberty of taxing the public, attend to tbe politics of the Restrictions npon the. salaries of eounty officials are an interference with vested rights, and calculated to destroy the efficiency of party organixation. Bat sal aries ot Judges of the Supreme Court are a fair mark for' rigid economy, the whole nine Judges together being unable to pack a connty convention. This bill has to be acted npon in the House before becoming taw. The' Common Council on Thursday night bald a special meeting to hear the report of the Committee oa Sewerage, in relation to the bills now pending before the Legislature.

The committee was divided, and consequently three proposi turns were presented. 1. Approving the bill providing for! a special assessment not exceeding 91.40 per front foot npon all property drained to pay for the aonstruetioa of sewers. 2. Approving the bill, with the excep tion of the amount, which it is proposed to redoce to 55 or 7a cents per front foot.

3. Levying tax of one and a half mills on all the real aad personal property of the city, the proceeds of which are to be ap plied to paying for new sewers. The first of these propositions leaves the present sewer debt a tax upon an the property of the city, sewered and ansewered, until paid, and requires aew sewers to be paid for by apeoial tax on the property sewered equal to, say, one-half the whole cost of the sewers. The second proposition is to reduce this proportion of special tax still lower. The third is to construct sewers by the proceeds of a general tax, which is to be perpetual, the amount to be raised annu ally being about 450,000.

The Common Council adjourned without any action. The subject, which is an important one, will come np before the Council oa Mod dsy. The same committee reported favorably on the proposition to make the Mayor, ex officio, a member of the Board of Police and Fire Commissioners, bat not of the Board of Public Works i but why not of the latter board as well as all other boards is Dot explained. The probabilities are that, while the Common Council is wran gling over these matters, the Legislature is liable to adjourn until next year. There seems to be some trouble and eon- fusion at Springfield about the facts in re lation to the Penitentiary, and the Democrats charge that there is an effort to sup press them.

The action of Mr. King is commendable, if it oaa be carried oat We have had a partial report, showing that, of the assets of the institution as reported, the stock on hand and debts due to the in stitution are not worth, by several handled thousand dollars, what is claimed for them. Investigation has not, however, reduced the aggregate of the debts due by the prison. The shortest mode of disposing of the whole matter ia to refer the subject to a small committee with a proper accountant, and, disregarding all offlaial reports by the officers, investigste the whole business from 1867 down to the present time, stat ing where the frauds, incompetency, ignor ance, or other faults belong, naming the persons, and giving the public the results in an intelligible manner. If any party or person can make political capital out of an honest statement of the facts, they have a right to do so.

Bat to long as mlsman agement, if not is oonfessed, and neattempt made to disclose the real facts, the chances of makin political capital are greatly increased. The Democratic party is, undoubtedly, willing to let the whole matter rest as it ia. Mr. Anthony, of Rhode Island, on Thursday presented tha memorial of some manufacturers praying an increase of the tax on all imported machinery made of iron and steel to 60 per Mr. Anthony, if so disposed, might have remembered the fact that there was machinery now standing idle in the woollen mills of his State because of the tax prohibiting the importation of the necessary raw material to make cloth.

To increase the tax on machinery must sound strangely to the thousands in this country whose existing machinery has been atoppsd because their work has been arrested by taxation. The manufacturers of machinery seek to make up the losses on the falling off ia their business by taxing tha public Why not quadruple their business by a removal of all taxes on taw material, aad put tea ma-chic es in operation to the one now in use Belative to the state of government in San Domingo, Mr. Wade ia represented as reporting The government Is in form snd theory con-tltut onal republic. It la essentially a military government, wltb little tbat belongs to a troe re-pub ic, aa we unclealand the term. After one or two more Chairmen of Congressional -committees are deposed from office on account of their personal relations with the President, an allusion to San Domingo, like that of Germany, in a recent Presidential message, as a form of government similar to our own," will be entirely in order.

It mast be this fellow feeling which has made our military Executive ao wondrous kind" toward San Domingo. It ia a favorite practice, in the Legislature of Wisconsin, to assuage the pangs of parting, after final adjournment, by bestowing presents or testimonials upon the officers of the respective bodies. Members subscribe with splendid liberality for canes, snuff-boxes, snd books for the Speaker, and similar or corresponding valuables for the Clerks, Post-muter, and Bergeant-it-Arms. Then, if there is snytning left of their per diem scd mileage, they throw it to the pages. This year the mementoes left with ths Speaker, as reported by telegraph, were Dsats and Beatrice," a Swiss Waterfall," the Waverly Hovels," snd best, though, per-bspa, not most substantial of all, an exceedingly Bsponsosous speech by a distinguished legal member.

Tbey manage those things more skilfully la South Carolina. In that celebrated State tbe members of the House of Representatives show their good feeling toward their friends by rp'iMug them a direct appropriation from the State Treasury. Two years ago, the Speaker got C150 as a gratuity; last year. toOO; and, this year, vLOOO. Ths Enrolling Clerk must have been propitiated, too, for, in enrolling the hill of legislative expenses, he increased ths amount from 1 125,000 to 266,900, and se it pssssd through ths Senate.

Tbe deposition of 8 Dinner has beea almost nanimnnaiy pirnwinnd a national misfortune in what it indicates, if not in what it directly involve. This being predicated ss a main proposition, it must be noted, aa an exception, that one good offset of this event is tbe suddsa awakening of the Democratic press to the many excellences of that apostle of freedom, and unflinching denouncer of sham Democracy, Charles Sumner. Their words of praise ara tardy, bnt none the less lust, whatever may be the motive that prempUthsm. Nor will we aa yet admit that ths demesncr of Preston 8. Brooks' party toward Sumner ia, as a contemporary pu'a it, a little tee sweet to be wholesome." Bufler claims that tbe high tariff men voted to defeat hia bill "for the protection of tbe loyal people of tbe Scuth," and elahns, also, hat they were tricked into it.

It must have been a trick which would induce Mr. Kelley's ooborts to go sgaiaat snything which had protection" ita title. Flirttatar wtaat ske fvearslskaure. Chicago is about te offer to entertain the State 1 gislaturs for a together with tbe necessary Governor for carrying on a comfortable session. Let it be understood thai Chioago has not yet entered the hits with Peoria, Cahokia, aad other towns which are competing for the permanent location of the seat government.

She merely oonsents te take tbe Governor and ths General Assembly on trial. If their behavior ia good, and if they desire to prolong the connection, the city will not fad to meet their advances ia a way at enee friendly and basi-nors like Ws have accommodations for twenty or thirty Legislatures aad lobbies. Moreover, we eaa surround these with all the comfortaaf snosse, iwratsra tbsm with all tbemsdacnconveiiiaaces, and quarter them within Ave minutes' walk of six theatres, four or five library aasoeiatione, sad three tunnels. aO at a late price tbsa the scanty accoaVdaodsttoas at Springfield cost. Moreover, ws will show tbsa their pro: seediags aad spsschss, reported each dsy sa eight or ten newspapers, at aeoet te members Sleeping are ssott per copy, aad to the State nothing.

On Sundays wa will minister to their spiritual welfare Rom snout sww hundred pulpits, affording sonsiderably more than ens parson to each lsgislstor, sad thus to legislation a moral baaia which it must sadly lack under present srraage-sBOBtaW we will aot eanosat upon aais I 1 Cterazlne I ate CToscopleal Society. A Brilliant Assemblage and an 'In- terestine' Display. Ixlat ef she) -Objecaat bittern. aa Exalte n-urMisu gives last evening at Far well Ball by the State Microscopical Society, of mmits, waa attended by a very large and bril-naat assemblage. It was ths third annual recep-tioeeivraatBT the society, sad if, wss a matter of aisrjtra rratnlatioa that its Crst tmblle extdbitiOB proved ao unequivocal success, both aa regards the number of the Instruments, aad the ersrssk tnisrest taken hr the pnbUe at large ta the advancement ef microscopies! science.

The society wss organised In 1J8, snd hiatnrv baa am characterised by the tame rem art able progress which appears, to characterise the history of everything in Uils reosart-abiscity. Bince ita Important ad vances hsvs beea maae ib tns buiuj mLuMKinr. and. tnatrsrt of a few Iso lated students here sad there, through out the city, there has oeea raeropea a spirit of nniied eflurt, whit has made the society beuer known abroad tbsa slmost any other similar organixation la ths country, and created among our eiusens more active interest In the science. It may be Ssuering to oar city pride to record ths tact that last night's gathering was the luroar.

uarmuaft avar sathared tnarstber In tbs United States under the ausptose er a nilcrosconi- cal society. 4w vmi niairnznanta on exh'blUon in the halL seveisl of usn displaying the very latest imnmmmenta la mieroaoonv. Of this nnmber. none were borrowed tor the occasion, as hsd to be done oa previous rxhlbirjoss, but were sent by the exnibltors, sad it was only ths ninlted capacity of the hall that prevented the admission of good many more. The reception was a perfect Jam all the evening, and It was, therefore, out of the qnesuoa for the visitors to do Justice to the many Interesting objects exhibited on tha slides.

In this respect, It was somethiog more difficult to "do" than an srt reseptios. Those who were really in te rested in the siady of the atriects, could hardly obtain but passing glance, after eqaeesing their way to the tables, bbq. tnea tueie were so many to whom the objects described In the catalogue wars simply curious puss*es. It wss interesting to note, in the rush and crush about the tables, the efforts nude by some to get peep, snd the look of puzzled wonderment which rtxieraily followed the inspection. Oaa young lady, evidently bent on aarua-lnf a knoeierle If she had it not, pushed her way to one of the mnlee, and perceiving an elaborate looking irjetriimenl Before her, clapped her one eye to It asd peered In.

Betore she sad time, however, to commit herself to a burst of admliatlon, her escort cams to her aid, and pointed out the fact that she hsd been aox-irusly looking down the brass tubs of a buna. Every one waa satlsaed, however, with the exhibition, whether they understocd It or box. Here Is a specimen of the kind of comment that might be aronno some or tne tables: Mrs. emits, lant this a lovely exMUttoeT Just took st this sMde toeoT wnitsmoese." "VDarming, tea nr -r spends Miss Jones, locktng down at the slide. Anv aonses to rent un your way Tee arrangements mma by ths committee were well earned out, and the visitors had every reason to be satisfied with the manner in which tbey we re entertained.

Mr. Ciutnt, who presided st the organ, ailed np the Intervals very pleasantly by playing selections from ths works of tbe grand old masters. Professor Pesbcdy gave soma tnteresttng experiments from the platform, and Professor Delaiontaine and Louts Beerltn exbib'ted some beautiful experiments in the dark room. During these experi ments the Objects on tne slides were cnangea, and in this way three different exhibitions were given. Dorirg one of the pauses, the President of the society, Henry W.

Fuller, delivered brief address from the platform. In which he conveyed briefly a statement of the htstorv, objects, and purposes ef the society. His remarks were slmost orownea. However, try hue universal otizs bob. whispering througiioat the immense audience.

We present below list of the objects which were piaceo on euuoitiun OBJECTS OH EXHIBITION FB0H TO P. ST. Ia charge of Ijouia BoerUa. Itc. Cltcfc A Boerlin No.

9 Human Parasite Foster Boerlin Nn a (tiruex Potter A Boerlin No. 4 Piiotosraph GrDd Canal Venice O. IT. Foliar In charge of MeeErs. Bulloch a Polachek.) Wo.

10 Large rntaatine of Bat W. II Batlocb. So. 11 Carb. Soda.

(Polariicope.) W. H. Bolkich Ao. 13 Rubies from W. H.

Bulloch Bo. Kiiict and Queens of tCnxUBd (Micro Photograph) PoU click 00. 14 Ten iMicro mo- torrarth) M. Pnl irh i No. Silver Ore irom Nevada W.

H. Bulloch No. 16 Sea from Nevada W. H. Bulloch Mo 17 Tongue of Frog Polachek TAWT.K In chareeof U.

H- llabariek. No. 90 Funara ByKrometrirn H. H. If linger ao, Zl aailcuoiKUB nil, iiuiu aigoe Rv liuano C.

-1. hii-ton. M. No. 99 Section of Human W.

W. Allport, b. H. No. 8 U-Barcode No.

94 Mnrine A C. Thomas to. 2t Foot of Fly Fred. Wnite No. 96 of Cricket Joseph Adams San uyciups unasrieomus i imngj.

nuuts Tn erturve of Masters Adama. frailer and No. 99 Water Fleae (livingl U. Frederick Puller Tto. 30 lltome rrom tce Xo.

1 Voivox Globator Geo. Adams TABT-B UI CDKVC IM U. 1,111 J. No. 99 Hrrman Brain C.

9mrth, BT. nn. 19 'sinaiinr, nr- ra. v. Tn etiarre of Pi.

Danforth. BT. T. Ta 84 Spinal Cord of Sheep. a.

Danforth, V. Ho. 3i Muacie of Turtle, injectex P. Boas, at. In eharce of Lrinavn Warn.

M. D. Ko. 3f Cat's Bram Ware. V.

Ko.S7 axectrtof BdbtLiT. MsJiaJl II ilixMinxari. tta. FrFih F1f3wen fnarta of) G. If.

Uitvinmnm ao.w WT4aVceoiai rotm tjQmuwxi Tn rritrso rvf TV T. Hstlann If T. Ifo- 40 Hitman Kidney T. Melaoii, M. Jo.i DiainoBd G.

F. it ameer Ko. 42 Urinary Bladder otVroiLj. J. Woodward, M.

No. Trtcbtna pirmlia N. Bridge. M. No.

44 Mufxcie at KntMM.ma.HJ. J. Woodward. M. I AO.

a rtajior nerur si. IV n. it Carnnomatnt Breast J.J. Woodward. M.

i Ko. 47 AnDoapberie imparitiri. N. It. avia, M.

TJlHUL a. Tn rharaTe of Charlea Adanw. Sf. D. No.

W0 DtsaloaTta. Aduna, If. mjra.aU Khinocssroa' riorn acanratftr Itn Kfl anhirlan iliw-jnaTt Tiw.mratn Fa 56 Traehea of Mlkwotm Wm. Stimpaorx. ni.

lso. 7 Anttaec and Potten of Maikwaa. t. yuroo TARI2 Tn saraTt- of S. A.

Brim. No. UCiTCTiiatioD of iuooA in Wtoc'i oot. 8. A.

Britrn No. el Group of DUtomavceK A. Brigru No. (SS Feaitiera of Humn2iiu 8. A.

Uriggt So, t3 Map of atorope (Miero-Dnoto- W- H. Byder. D. 1 No. 64 Kidnev of a boat vt.u.

uum, a. No. 6i Helifvyelta-, from Not ting- him, Md Johliaton. M. No.

6B AuiaeodiKua roniiOMliroxaB Bfaiivia O. Job Df ton. Iff. Ho.i7Gauo tro- -chatoe Bad lAfJLa Is. Tn it-btp etf B.

W. Thaniaa. Ka 7t. Potato Uime W. Thomas 1A.BLJL SB Tn ihaw0 ft.

tt WsSaarVrft No. 75 IiriM lnf Derona O. S. W4ateott No. Tt.

Axaha Hair WoatooU Tn eharvp of MeMrtL LiJiaYTith A- Lewia. No. 54. Water -J- ii. iaDpaTQth No.

7i. Weeril A. M. Lewi TASU In eharae of W. BL Adama.

ro.76. Toe of White Morue W. BL Adama No. 77- Circulation of Blocd in tail of dwuh awA.ar TABU In eharce of H. A.

JobDon. If. D. Vo. 79.

HTiman A. Jotuiaon, M. No. 79. Mrs.

K. Fairbank TABLE "Q- Tn saheivw nt Mrmn rrtirhJAm. Mbert. and Nonrse. No.

80 tin real Aw.eu.br an of PUnor- bi B. Dnrham, M. Na81 Anlipcna ScatpttiB ..0. T. Jilsoa No.

Aparaine (Polari-coe) A. N. Kpert No. 94 Hydatid, Hoiavan B. Harlbot.

M. Nx86 SuftarMitee. J.ii.lnKKuth No. 87 Tub -owera parta of B.F.iaUav8 Tn rhnrwp of J. O.

LanirXntb. No. 90 Amazon J.O. unnnrth No. 91 Foam.Baratof Lepldodendwim.

-J. O. Iattfinith No. 92 Scrfga Fly J. i.

Langttiith No. 9S Hpint 8 of Mar Heh J. O. Langrtrth Kn htomach of Fro G. lctt No.

96 Clnaof Lion G. laiiAgatii ta va-ina, aT Rutiarfli .1 4i. Ianarcu' No.7 lecompoadb(a Shell ti. TiBU No. 108 fteetiom of Fed Oedr A- Pool No.

lul VcUuilary Hublu Mnaw w. No. IAS Bitart. Animonia (olanitcope-J. O.

LAnngatt. No. 101 Pollen of Tutttt Lily. (Parabola). -H.

F. Miaroe No. 104 Britiah Coralline K. SUraweatber, M. No.

lui Letr of CTphoa Geniiaiii- J. O. Lrath No. lirfi LiTinc lxaiotiiacejp J. Paschal hniiin.

M. tABU fn rttxTge of W. BL Walnjsley. No. 110.

Fn rs w. tOneeB Oo. No. Ill- MolWs Diatom W. Qiiwn A Uo.

OBJ ACTS OS BXBIB1TTOI FBOH TO 10 F. Ml Xsaatu biclxtbrceof Lukt Berhii. MUretecpm, ExMntarr. No. 1 Eye of it BoerKo No.

I Human Foster it Brim No. 3 Wicaof Bottny ftBoetiia No. 4 Pbowosjapfa: Ml. liiwaar riBLi Iacnarasof Hsvvrs aailaex a rwaenea. Ka.

IS PWlm oi HM'i. Peiflptrfliion Dacts and 1-UjH. tv. H. Bngoch Fn.ll 8lH-iDf (Polricopt).

W. H. BuDoeB Bo, 11 lhrwOW Pm W. H. Bulloch Ko.ll Lcrrrl1.

Prayer urro aLPelacliek Ko. 14 P4rtraits of Knuneoa JAcB. alios M. PolerbS Ko. IS Cinsebai On from evada.

W. U. hnlloch ISO. 16 Geld Ore from Bnlkvh aa.ll Tonaueof Toad atPolacbea terhararof H.H. Babcotk.

Ho. It l( of Psrastts ol a tiler Bile a. A. Mnneer Ko. at ArrichBotaiKaa Korea, from a ohmtOB, Bf-f Wo.

Ferve of toetlu- W. W. Allwi tD-S Ko. tt Kwtion of Wood (PoLrtscope) H. H.

Bsbco*ck Ko. 9t Seen os of Ires a. O. Tbomj. So.

9S of Kaah Ra1. Tc-GJ-Tte Bo. 97 Diamond Adams Bisss IB charas of Masten Adasia, jrallar, and Johnra. B9. Sjorrs of Mors -H Frrd-iict FoHer Na a.

Kn.lt. Joniuoa Ko.ll. Moaaoitolrv. Sourse Adxun In rsharre of C. O.

Smilb. M. D. Ko.39. Itch Smith.

M. D. MO.U. loasueof HedirHoa.H. W.hatar Jonea.

M-O. tabls r. In ehargr of t. W. Danforth, at p.

Fo St. 8kui of Pro. K. Dmforth. If Ko.

IfSS of las J. P. Bwa. a. TABIJt O.

Is darn sf Lvman Wan. M. D. Ko. 86.

Tnccit-a Ware, BL Ko.27. Paixot't emll-r S. ManhaB T1HU H. K-BTrtarie Aejf M. BliwilMOS KO.SS Pobc-fstina.

HsisthiIJ Id change of D.T.Kelaoa.lf. D. Wo. ai Human Inte.Urw-.Ui KdOT, If. 41 Ko.

49 Stcat-m at LoB( Pros. J. J- Woodward, tt K0.4S Head of Taae wom 5. Bndjee, M. T.0.

44 tSSmZmt iSmUd of CmU t. f. Wojdwald.M.D Ko-41 Sdum.o( Sea Moom J. 3.Laaatuth Stioa olCyc 1b of mrt, M. Ko.

0 Uvtef bfaasrls 8. Osria. M. TSBLB J. Ita.

All Palate ot hniil Shanes Una H. Ko. il Whalebons Schneider Ka TcrtictllK wri-'iJl JJSrl Ko. r-JMll Diatoms W. ntanjsim.

a. Ka-B riU.CU. fro Jm. CaVrarasa tabu a. Kef Aphni ob Gerailora mm m.mtwi .1 VTK JlB.

M- A- Ko. Unw Sllarias Moos. A. Kliaxs Ko.61 Soimdniss frrrm Bed a. B.

ftr-ler, 11. O. Haat, M. Ka. uverol Ko.a A.n-l(rtimaoroB.8pala..-C.J Ks.e Ka-nrsl Ke-tB Boot otllSTsa waoBKos.

m. u. naiiatr I. rharse ol B. W.

Thtsaas. W0.1S Mammmt jaia-e, la eaara. af 4A, 8. Wasasott. Bo- 71 -hi4ai -O.

S. Westestt KS.3 GSB-UBA1-1BW. .0. S. WeKoctt Laassnth a lewis.

a Tb ej-anre of BUe W. 74 l.tlw Bird K.n Palatesf 1. a. W. H.

SllaSTS Ko. TS Antrsaje ol Butttrfr--- w. BL Adaats aa. It PJ jcjKla a irwa a t. t-A rijiBor.

io. TtrnM briin-K-if U.A.Juiea,B Ho. TS Fa-ramiaifera A. JofiBrms, aa.s xobbs oTatsm (m maar-n-. iivhun.

ITWit A Woatre-L Ho. at InSamed Boae B- 1ijib. Jf KS.S1 vlfe Ko. S3 l-nli-o. Lime Cr.rtrJslPolariMOBel.

JL. B. Khert Ka. Head of triewr B. Bartbst, I Ko.

St Acstate sf Cwswr J. O. Laurrath Ba, SI Irtin.irrson Jrj s.aoaTss I II 111 Wo. as. (Polanuups)- -J- G-Iaawath Ko.

.1. Bone of lan.norlnri J. G.Lan-niU Ko.99. taw Tv J. O.

LanjarrHi Bo. S3. SaBd fiam Afncaa II mart J. tj. Lanatnth Ka.

U. Cornea of Fros.K......x.. O. Lruutreth Ka. St, nteuiar Fibre.fcatUe FavJ G.

Lancxnth Bo. 98. Wins of Battel (Uraaia) J. G. Lacairnth Bs.PI.

AxbossseeBt -i. Q. isnapiHi behamel BU V.Maarsa, e. MO Beetlss oj Verh -t. A.

Pool As. wt atiisisa siess tUalar. St. a. "stanrTrffll." The government offioers have not bean paid any salary for two years.

and, aa their arrearages will be paid op in ease of annexation, they are prepared to welcome the American flag. Daring their stay la Baa Domingo, Com. las inner Howe eadea-vored to have a personal interview with Cabrsl, the other President "of the Kepnbho. Bat this was practically prevented by Bara, and Mr. Howe then invited Cabral to meet him ia Port an Frinoe, in HsvtL It is possible that the Commissioners wif, re turn separately, and that they may differ, aot only aa to facta but opinions.

From all aceoonta the condition of the country to most deplorable. Bankrupt, In volved in eivtl war, all labor suspended. sad production stopped an ignonsnt and men brought up under chronic state of anarchy; the government holding ita place under the protection of the guns of our navy; a rival government in the field living npon the results of predatory raids, San Domingo presents one of tbe most uninviting spots of earth to be incorporated into this Union at a cost of many millions of dollars. AB0UT H0UDATS. Tcsterday waa St Patrick's Dsy.

Ow ing to some mistake on the part of the clerk of the weather (whose prognostica tions now date from the War Department), there waa no rain, and the Irish people tnrruirl nnt in a sala commemoration of the day. Everything about their demonstra tion seemed orderly and pleasant, and the affair may be pronounced a suooess, uot- wiUos tan ding the Legislature of Kew York has lately refused to make the day a legal Holiday. This proposition, coupled with one to confer the same distinction npon Deco ration Day," has drawn attention anew to the question of holidays in general. There baa been a frequent call, from those who have not carefully considered the peculiari ties of our people, to make this or that additional day a legal holiday, the general assertion being that we have not, aa yet, holidays enough. The examples of other nations are straightway cited for adding this or that date Washington's birthday, battle of Banker Hill, anniversary of Lincoln's as sassination, ratification of the constitution dsy, General Logan's decoration dsy, to the calendar of our national holidays.

We have sow four principal holidays Aew rears, jrourth pf July, Thanksgiving, and Christmas all of which are sanottfied by law, bat few of which are solemnized by any universal participation, nor yet by a participation so general or hearty as to make them compare with the foreign holi days from which they are imitated. The fast is, we are not a holiday people, but a working people. The average American, when set at large on a legal holiday and told to oelebrate, finds himself rather mors uncomfortable than on 'any other day of the three hundred and sixty-five. He wanders np and down, or rashes to some distant point gets drank, perhaps. but still fails lamentably to make himself happy and realize his patriotic deter mination of the morning.

The two things most essential to a holiday are hilarity and paradef; and it so happens thai the American is bsd at both these. The national disposition is not buoyant, neither do we care for forms and demonstrations. While the- Frenchman or the German expresses his thoughts three times over by words, facial expression, and gesticulation the American, if he do not conceal them altogether, simply otters them with his tongue, and whittles away at his pine stick, or digs a hole in the earth with his boot, to make you think he is not at all interested in what he is saying. This sort of genius does not find expression in holidsya. As further proof of this, may be cited the desuetude into which some of the solids jb and quasi holidays which we have been attempting to observe have fallen.

Washington's birthday goes entirely by default, and Decoration Day was but feebly celebrated last year. Even our good old Fourth of July annmn more like Sunday than tike a gala day. It is obvious, then, that legalization does not insure any real or hearty observance of a holiday, and that each holiday must depend on its own merits and the temper of the people to secure its general observance. The Irishmen -among us will oelebrate St. Patrick's, the Englishmen St.

George's, the Scotchmen BL Andrew's, snd the Hebrews their religious festivals, because they feel like it. Indeed, oar adopted citizens are wont to do more than the natives toward celebrating our own peculiar Fourth of July. All of which shows that the purpose of the holiday is to give vent to feeling which is generally prevalent, aad which seeks forms of expression; and that, where there is no such feeling existing, there is no use in proclaiming or legislating holidays. Senator White, of the Arkansas Legislature, is to be appointed an Ambassador to proceed North and induce negroes to migrate to Senator White so far belies his name as to be a black man himself and the arguments which he will use upon his fellow-colored citizens of the Northwestern States the advantages peculiar to Arkansas which he will pat forwardmay be inferred from the following dialogue recently held with him by a newspaper correspondent: said wbc are tbe colored people of this State for for next Prealdent Grant," replied he Giant first, last, snd all raettme." This wss before the events of last week. Tbe conversation continued Oa wtst grousds "On tbe grounds taat be baa done more for the colored people than any man tost ever Uvsd," Not mora than L'nvOln.

aately yea. mn than Lincoln." Howdoyoa make tbac oat I will answer tbat qarsttoo by acting another. Bow many colored men did Lincoln ever appoint to office This criterion of happiness office seems to be adopted by the negroes of the South to a too great extent Mr. Mason, the other colored Senator, and, like White, a man ef much general intelligence, havin founded his loyalty to General Grant on the same reason ss White. The fact that a considerable majority of the South Carolina Legislature are colored, shows with what eagerness they rush to avail themselves of the new boon of citizenship, and that they magnify unduly one ef the unetions, or rather rights, of electors the holding of publio We can inform Mr.

White, however, that he will find the colored electors of the North wiser than himself in that regard; in fact, that he will find the most of them in the same category with good, sensible Caucasians, who regard office-holding as a burden, not to be undertaken except at the request of their ellow- citizens. Some of them he can probably tickle into an itch for office, and to such he is quite welcome, as also to the whole race of our miscellaneous office seeking white folks. We don't know any class of citizens which Illinois can spare to better advantage. Mayor Mason, at the suggestion of many prominent citizens, has called a meeting at the Board of Trade rooms, for 2 o'clock this afternoon, to discuss the propriety of sppointing a committee to lay before the Itominion Parliament the importance of extending the charter of the Huron aad Ontario Ship Canal-Oompeny. The friends of this great work believe that the increased commerce of the lakes, caused iby the yvad extension of -our railways, and especially the building of the Union and Central Pacifio and of the Korthera Paeifie Railways, Will aeoa be increased so largely that this canal will become an absolute necessity.

To the suooess of our foreign import and export trade also this canal is believed, by those who have carefully studied the subject, to.be very essential. Oar capitalists, merchants, bankers, and business men generally are eordially invited to attend the meeting. The State Senate has psssed a bill fixing the salaries of the Judges of the courts ia this county at The salaries of the Judges of the -Supreme Court had previously beea fixed at $5,000. Ths salaries of the Circuit Judges outside of this eounty have not yet been fixed, and therefore we cannot say how much of this 97,000 will have to be paid by this county exclusively. The Legislators refused all, appeals to the salaries of the Supreme Court Judges each.

The misfortune of the Supreme Coart Jndges is that their salaries have no relation to these any other offices. If some person had inserted in the constitution that the annual salsries of Constables, Justices of the Peace, Town Collectors, or Assessors honM in nn' ease exceed those of the Judges of the Bopwsae Coax, then 1 th I xiua. Its Imeask Wrom the BTew York Evening Past In Marcb, 1855, New Hampshire, which had tn a Daanccratie State smoe Jackson a broke from tha ranka. Tha Kansas-Nebraska bill was then before the country. President Pirns the too-ready tool of tbe slaveholders.

saw his party defeated in his own State thro ugh his ooaree upon this measure. Bince 1655 tbe Democrats have not once carried the State until yesterday, when, aa the THbame tbis morning remarks, tbe Republi cans ssam to nave lost tee uoveruor, all tbe Congressmen, tbe Council, and probabiy the Senate; wnue me uouse is amy eistmea for tbe Republicans by a majority of from tea to twenty, in a body of ever three hundred members. On ths rots from 165 towns the Republicans gain on last year's vote 960, while tbe Densocrats gala 8.436, a Bet Damoerstio gain of 8,478." xte people of New EanrpSbirs evidently do not thmk so nignlv of tbs Republican admin- Is tration as they Old wnen taey gave uenerai r.tmnl naarlv asrsn thousand majority in 1368 a majority about aa great as that which Franklin Pierce received in 1852, and which be managed to loss three years later, in iooa. I TO ins uay i wwmiwM, 1855, the Evening Pott, which had advocated Mr. Pierce's election to tbe Presidency, more recently it supported General Grant's election, but which bad area cause sharply to oritisats Mr.

Pierce's administration, wrote If mere was any doubt before of the present state of pnblle feeling in New Hampshire, there can be none since tha election. The Stale has pro son need Itself against Mr. Pierce's administration with an emphasis which leaves no room for cava. Nothing eoaid have been more nattering tn candidate than the vote which New Hama- rblre gave Mr. Pierce at me time ot his eleo- tton sx-a scarce may cireummsnoc, we uuua, could mortify him mere than such reversal of Its favorable tadgment, such a declaration, made by his old neighbors, of their utter loss of confidence in him.

In two mn be hss gambled away toe nrrnceiv inherit ance ol popularity with which he entered upon his omciai me, ruiuea sea sfwas an nj a caused a complete revolution in tbe noutacal character of the States which gave him tne moet effectual support. There never was a man elected to tbe Presidency whose pub-io eonrae wss more plainly defined by the elrc*msunres of the time, snd more free from embarrassing perplexities, than that of Mr. Pierce, two years since, snd there never wss one among them who missed his wsy so deplorably." We leave to our readers ths application of this paragraph to present circ*mstances but we wish that tbs President might read, ic this New Hampshire election, a wholesome lesson for himself. His Ban Domingo scheme, which has been opposed by tbe ablest and most influential part of tbe Ea publican press, all over ths country, has, ss yesterday's vote shows, alienated from him, and, what ia of more tenons consequence, from the Republican party, a great body of Republican votes. He would have done well bad he heeded tbe ad vice of such journals as the Concord Jfonifor, the leading jteDUbucan press of Aew Hamp shire, and one of tbe ablest and moat influen tial in tbe country, which wrote, en the 3d of jnarcn: When, some years since, New Hampshire President elect was about lesving his neighbors snd State, a political and personal friend, a man noted everywhere for his sagacity as wen as his wit, remarked to him that be was gotng to a position where be would be surrounded by an atmosphere of lies where his worst enemies would force themselves into the plsces of his most trust ee menus, sua wnere ne wouia soon oe msoe to Geneve an nis real rrienap, woo aarea to ten mm the truth, his enemies.

No truer prophecy wss ever uttered. Hsd General Grant been thus addressed when he left Galena for Washington, by an equally saga clous friend, the prophecy, we lesr. wouiu nave seen nearly aa true, ana nearly as barren of gocd. The persons nearest the President will not tell him the truth, and they poison ms mina sraiBBi au wiiu wuum au ic The oiBce-holders. lobbyist, and corrunttoa.

ists are constantly fillies tne Presidential nose with rhe fumes of their flattery, snd sre most con- sranTiy assuring mm tnat nia most nniortunate ana unpopular measures are tnoee most in xavor with the people. They get up Grant Clubs' for the vowed purpose of his renomlnaaon, and dim oun oeircve tost oe ia ouij to aatisiy inem, and all Is weiu And the great majority of what are called Republican newspapers aid these parasites and corrnpaoalsts by their cowardly et.eace or more cowardly endorsem*nt of everything, good, bsd, snd to different, which tat put fortb-ss pan ui uie puucj wi uie j-rcaiaent. ttere ana there we ana an occasional exception. Tbe people of New Hampshire do not approve of the violent and extra-oonstitu- tional measures the President hss taken in the San Domingo scheme; they do not approve of the President's interference in the organisation or tne senate, or tne manner In which, at his instance, tbe Foreign Relations Committee was so nacked as to lesson the opposition to a San Domingo treaty they do not believe tbat such men as Morton, Chandler, Bailer, and Cameron are fit lead- era lor the itepubiican party they do not believe tbat a President is wise who insults snob men ss Sumner, Cox, snd Wells, snd rejects tne savioe or sucn men as senators Trumbull, Soburs, and Wilson. Tbe Corgreee eleoted in 1868 had in the House a Republican majority of 99, and in the Senate a Republican majority of 52.

In tha present Congress, omitting New Hampshire, Georgia, California, Texas, and Connecticut, which have not elected, the Bspublicana have in tbe House but 96 majority; in the Senate 42. But tbe elections of last fall, which would have warned a man attentive to the people's voice, were not heeded by the President, He pursued hie chosen course, regardless of tbe warnings of those woo, during his whole career, had proved themselves bis most ear-neat friends. And now comes Nee Hampshire a State which has not gone Democratic for sixteen years, scd abandons tbe President to whom, in 1868, it gave nearly 7,000 majority. When Mr. Pierces friends remonstrstod with him.

in 1854-5. uoon his court" a on the Nebraska bill, he replied Let the settlers decide it, let the settlers decide." When the vote in ft ew Hampshire, in March, 1855, condemned Mr. Pierce's course, a wit wrote him: Is this one of your settlers ftmb the Ptttsoarrh Oommerdal. The result of the New Hampshire elec tion ts full of instruction, which if heeded will be worth ss much ss it has cost. When the people of a- sovereign Stats speak out, whst they say ia entitled to respect, and the man clothed with power who haa not learned tbe full measure of the significance of each nttersnces, becomes st onoe the object of pity snd dread for tbis ss government by the nonular will, which only the mind that is grossly ignorant or essentially deepotie will disregard.

Tne majority for General Grant in New Hampshire waa rising seven theutana, and last year the Republicans were even stronger. At tbe election on Tuesday, however, thev were beaten. It would, nrobably. be enough to sty tbat up to the time the Republicans in tbe Senate, at ths instigation of tbe President, aa it is believed, degraded Mr. Sumner, a Republican victory and an endorsem*nt of tbe administration were confidently expected.

Without any doubt the result can be viewod in no other light than as a deliberate verdict adverse to the Sumner proceeding, aod a aharp rebuke of those engagsd in it. The next question is, will it be understood, snd the admonition heeded? Tbe voice of New Hampshire cannot be coughed down, nor her utterances set aside, as it is attempted to set aside the uttersnoea of the almost united voice of the Republican press. Let any other State speak to-morrow, and it would be in the New Hampehire key. Let not General Grant, let not these Senators who have done this thing, for an instant suppose the fact to be otherwise. Vicksburg was bom barded and made to surrender but public opinion can never be.

caucus may record ita decree, and Senators may submit to it, but the Deonle will sneak out. If tbis shall come to be understocd and wisely heeded, then tbe re sult in New Hampshire will be valuable to tne Republican party; otherwise, let tbe reader make his own comment. From the Detroa TTtDaae. For tha first time in seventeen years ths in domitable Republicans of New Hampshire bsve sustained a defeat. There is one simple snd honest way of accounting for the defeat, and it will be altogether profitable to face tbe facta just aa tbey are.

A letter to the New York Tribune from Nashua, Kew Hampshire, written tbe day be fore election, contained tne following "The recent action at Washington whereby Mr. Sumner wss removed from the committee on Foreign Relations, hsd It occurred a week earlier, might have had a disastrous effect on the elec tion, to-morrow, and, as It at, it has taken some ot tne entnusiesm out ox tne nepuoiivua Taa Brevaiuna sentiment is in favor of air. BOBiner, ana tne pruusuic raui pontic movement at using wsrwij uuce The Concord deroatcn to the tsoston -aver- titer, March 13, closed ss follows Pirnilnnt Rennbltcsas la tit* city assert most positively tnat the receat removal of senator Sumner will cost ths party at least SdS votes to this 8ste to-morrow. However taat may be. It la very evident tbat popular feeling is strongly aym-fathetw with Mr.

Saaaer." At the last Republican rally at Concord, the nignt before election, some prominent Republicans were in favor of sd op ting series of resolutions condemning Hr. Sumner's removal, sttd ths following were proposed aad submitted to the Stats Committee, which, while snnrovinsT their tone, feared tbe passage ef them would have an unfavorable effect upon the election, and they were not proposed Knotted, That the actios of tnoee senators nt rvvMTMa- who bv their votes recently dlanlaoed Hon. Charles Sumner from tbs head of the Committee on Foreign Relations, which poaiuoa hs baa ao long and honorably held, aad to waoaa the Republican party 1 more Indebted tbaa to any other man for Its success, snd whom they delight to honor, meets our enure dlsspprobstloa aad coedamaatloa. BmoM, That we are opposed to the anaex-anon of San Domingo, or any other ooun try whose oenlatlaB made np of a aemt savage race, and which weald only be a curse to oar country aad a blessing to bobs bat band sf apscalatora." Oa the aaorning of election, the Clonoord afotewmaa, the leading Republican paper of New Hampehire, same out very decidedly in condemnation of the removal of Senator Suxunar, aayixur among other things the following -It ta raid that when the action ef the Seaab-BeSB Senatorial osncoa was eematnnieatsd to tha Prealdent be waa In high glee, snd remarked that he regsrded the removal of Mr. Ssanaer from rhe Chslrmswhip of tha Foreign ileaooos committee ss victory for 8aa Dominge annexation.

If be had made this remark toea honest fnead, that trtead wcoM have answered ana to tae words of sa ancient gee-rat, that one more sach victory aroaM be ha and that of 8aa Domingo annexation too. Bui ths trouMs with PresKfcjnt Grant IS, that lend aoneatBes honest rrleoae. He Is orrouDded by eetrupUOBaws sad sycophants, who bsve their own dishonest purposes to serve, sod who contrive to pxasoa us mind against sil such aa would like to ten him tha troth and give ana cod advice. These creatures have been mainly instrumental la exciting hat hosttltty against Mr Samser. Tbey It at who have poshed him mto demanding Mr.

Sumner's removal mm a aoauon se sas ansa ever aus ins Ittpublicanparty earns into power, and which he is better qualined to fill than any other mas tn America: aad having, ny coaxing, ureateaing. and brining avumvun, matins aa oatrage which ahocka the moral aeass tbs nation, these same satellites natter him into tbe belief tbat be haa won a victory. Wetei! Uu President and ha advisers tbat he haa woe a JTj whoas trans win be apples of Sodom te hismbath. Ws tell him that by no act or event of hia life bases ever eo carnages, nimasnr ana wTaabsned his sold on the honest rastrit. of the BSncar Tparty.

Ws would ten him. If oar iScoold Teach hhn, that tha man whose coon-lloml mzcilimMag him to aa aeeanc- Wbe eaa donbt, in view of the above facta. fbat the treatment OI sr. numaer try ear nun of bis fellow Senators, ia fnAnsraaes of the urpopnlar Baa Domingo ecberae, has rrjdnerl a J.fnat Nawwa- r1mrairBra 9 It wiU probably have tbe same affect in tbs teotieat State eleettoa, an its auUga win. we fear, not atop even thorn.

Tbs apathy of the HPt pnbheans .7,.,: aOont, IS tns epewj form of protest against a grievous wrong to ea bosred Bettlieaa leaoer, ta eafores an ettaeaioas seaaats, us m-m, ana etui tees an engagement for life. TBE KORTBWEST. nxrwoav Tbe Bockrord Omtu ml tbe ltk bean of aa- Rnstve revtvsls Belvidere, Freeport, Sycaaiore, Belott, DcKalb, BocneUe, Polo, Las a. Jtarengo, ard other places. Toeltev.

M. r. Kkvaey, pssMsef tbe Second Congregational Church of Bockford from ISM to ISTS, died suddenly at Bacon. Msreb is, aged C7 aam. Be came Wast jmm Homer, N.

In 1839, settling at KenoaOa, Wla Be wss licensed ss clergymen to lSu, snd aonsequenuy preached at Kenosha, wattewater, Racine, snd Jsasmne. WnUe itaclne. as recalled every vote cast for Superintendent of Schools, towhlctt omeeae vasraoaea for ave eonsecatlve years. He wss eoastanlly snd prominently Identified wan aba cause of edaosooa, aanagJurtna; bis earaar served many years aa Troates of BeMtt CaUrfe, cueago Taeoiogleal Besttnarr, nd Bockrord Female 8emtnary lows Boceboleralsmaklna' sad ssvoe smosg the porcines of Clark Ooonty. Aaa Fleming baa lost ao.

Captain Carter about Win. Padgett SS, and others a lees nuber. At DeaMoinea. on the 13th, there was an elec Hon of School Directors, la one district two women were elected. la the ether, one max was cDoaen, and tbere waa a He between two worsen.

neceatltatlag another election. wracoMSis. Another freabet, last week, at Spans, swept out tbe woollen atllla Company dam on Beaver creek, besides doing other damage. The old Court House at Sepsre wss destroyed by lire oa the Mta mat. It wss need tor a jail, snd two prisoners consaed serein, Thomas Buckley snd William Howard, were burned with it.

MiHsxsora. At canoe-race at Dnlnth, March IS, the win ning canoe was saddled saostly by aquawa. A Humboldt psper says that place has "the ebanploe nailer of the world, tn the person of Albert a In or, a tether by trade, and a sen of ver mont. Htnor can drive more nails tn one dsy tbsa any other living man. He wul drive nails faster than the fastest compositor can pick up type.

He wul drive sixty lata nails a minnta, tea hears oat of the twenry-foar, the year through. aussotnu. A farmer. Bear Cartilage City, hu Just been de tected poisoning horses, and then offering to core them. OHTO.

TbeCmdnnsn Cmmareiol Is not pleased with ths fact that nearly one-half of tae children of the district schools of Cincinnati are employed In tbe study of tbeGermaa language, snd they occupy St least half taeir tuns with It," bill baa oeea Introduced in the Ohio Legis lature to make the purchaser and drinker of in toxicating liquors liable to the same pains and penalties as are aow prescribed by law for the seller of each liquors. young man from Marios has turned np in Cleveland with bottle of coffee, which he desires tbe chemists to analyse, claiming that hia wits had mixed poison with tbe beverage. His sus picions were aroused one morning at breakfast by two things: First, tha Decuuar color of the coffee snd, second, the extreme sff ability of his wife. He hastily emptied hia cop Into flask, snd took the first trsta for the Forest City. M1SCELLA3E0US.

Arlstoeratle ladlea la London wear black silk StOCklEgf. Tbe Philadelphia Latheraas propose 000 church. Two notable crimes are reported from Aus tralia. In one case, an Irishman killed hia father, mother, and wife; and. In the other, a woman of German extraetloa cut the throats of six children, and then her own.

The trams in little Italian boys, who are sent from then- native country to America and Australia, is said to he brisker than ever before. The Masons of the Scats of New Jersey are at present taking strong scuoa wits view to affiliation with the colored Masons, snd It is probable that the Grand Lodge of that state will be the erst to receive colored Masons npon the plane of com mon brotherhood. The office of the District Attorney at Norris. town, was entered by burglars few nights since, and a fall set of burglar's tools taken swsy. Tbe implements had beea taken from a tatef aow la prison there.

Professor n. d. emita, at ths late annual com mencement of ths Philadelphia Dental College stated that srullcls teeth were in use among tbe ancient Bomsns before the time of Augustus. A California noa was lately killed near Los Angelas, while gorging aim self aa surrepuaoas veal, it took seven rine bsus to destroy tae mon arch of ase beaatar The English Government has ordered that all lis employ ea shall be vaccinated. are over forty woman editorially connected with the New York press.

A Kentucky church Is ssed by four different denominations alternately. Aaoie lad of Waiuagford, Coo gave to a church fair, tke other evening, a quill made by herself, snd eomarnmg two thousand one hundred and forty-six pieces. A lawsuit for the settlement of the estate of deceased ottlsen of Troy, whloh has beea In the courts for two years, was ended on Saturday by tbe discovery of his will la the false bottom beneath a bores which had beea sent to a cabinetmaker for repairs. "IxMgfonragements," elites a young lady ta New Tors, are going eat of fashion, young men being at last can vtncsd of the stupidity of making matrimonial proposals until they are In a poatnoa to an their proausea at onoe." They ngore It oat, down in Brooklyn, that tauty-avs years heaos, st the present ratio of Increase, mat city aad New York will reverse taeir relative poalttocs. sad Manhattan Island be mare-ly Brooklyn's suburb.

New York's population, increasing at the past tea years' rate, ItM percent, will then be 1,543,771, and Brooklyn, at Ms present proportion of tOH per cenf wul be 1,611,49. A Boston book -pub usher, who recenly dunned a delinquent gentleman tn the Sooth, received by return mall a letter from him, saying that just st preeent he Is out of funds, but he expects to be elected Mayor of his city, snd then eaa easOy satisfy the htue demand. A man In Hartford obtained a coffin the other day from the Selectmen of the town for a "deceased daughter." Shortly afterward be wss seen trying to peddle It off st half its value: ana then It transpired that his daughter was no nearer the gavr, than be was, and aot half so near the ooun-ty Jau. In Schuylkul County, there are something over two sandred collieries, with an invested capital of aboot The average loss to each colliery, while lying idle, Is st least 11,000 per month, making tn ail over tSCO.CM a month, and $2,400,000 a year dead loss. This, with the loss to railroad companies daring ths suspension, win sggregste grand total of ssoo.000 month, or a year.

Tals at without regard to the suf ferisgs of miienv King William's exhaustivs demands for men visibly enlarged women's" sphere ta Prussia. By a recant oner of the Minister of Education, women who prove themselves qualified sre to be accepted ss teschers of modern languages In public schools, a profession hitherto monopolised by tbe mascaitne gender. It Is understood that Dr. DsvM Walker, companion of Captain McCllntock on his voyage oa the Fox tn search of Franklin, wffi accompany Captain Hall, la ohsrgs of the sclena.no department of the new Arctic expedition. Near Salisbury, N.

William Bertlg died lately, in his lOlat year. Hs was a German by brrtb, and bad takes part against napoleon Bms-parte la the battles of Jena, Wagram, and Auster-nuc. -Mile. Henriette d'AogevUis, wen known as a tourist, died recently at Lausanne, Swussrlsnd, st the age of 71. tae had the repula'joa of being the atet lady who ever nude me aaoent of Meat Blase Forty years ago, Simon Cameron pare based for SIM a spur of the Broad Mountain, Pennsylvania.

It ta now worth coal has beea mmed out of It for Ulrty-O'e years, sad be has realised, tn the shape of loyalty, shout PW a dsy. -The Rev. Dr. Benows, who st first steutty op-nosed tbe expeiawo of the Bible from the com- men achoolsjhss changed his Bund, aad aow thinks It decidedly the thing to do, both oa the score of policy snd principle, The Kev. Alex.

Fair, of Christ Church, New Orleans, ts totslly desf, yet preaches cntistssuy aad converses fluently, understanding everything tbat taaaid merer by taemoaeaet thehpa. He returns Instant snd peruaeat ana wars te every qtKsCMn, aad II said taat, anleaa the fact of his iltamass Is mimtlnnnil. it tth11 nrrr bokaown. Jamas H. Buyaast died la New York on Sunday, sgtd 70 years, Ee wss a native of that elty, aad a member of an old and prominent 'Katcker-bocker family.

At one urns Mr. euydasi waa actively engaged la politica, aa a Democrat of the Andrew Jackson scbsoh He served several terms la ths State Legislature, aad at one time held tbe position of Naval Officer for tbe port of York. A Fhfiadelphiaa ass ta vested a sleek that win us nuia the oar las thrsissnrtth pin ttf it -Ths clock Is Siiiillnil asavroaderfal agatr. The dtal-Blata, which a sixteen Inches in dlsnieter. Is seperatea ado SOS parts, and ate radicator revolves twice every aeeood.

Tae olock ai set upoa a table, beneath which the pendulum mains, sadthemtrioocy of the affair may behaagmed when the sialiniail a aaade that the enure warts eaa beplaeed maamaaoigar Sox. The govsra-assM ordinance efaees have accepted the Iseni-ment for tbe purpose of meaamlng the relocitr of projectiles. A letter from Boston ears: "Jest before Lent there have beea several large aad brUttant parties smosg ths tsshloaables. At eseot these, ea Beacon sneer, the other sight, the saekates, tired of waiting for the revellers to disperse, oeco-pledthetr urns sad manifested their ladlgaatioa by taking the heavy black watnat eoors of the boose oar their hinges. At aaotaer party, recently, these gentlemen ilgnmed tbetr deetre to have tae festivities brooght to close by blowing tsb-aorss nt front of the aoase." A ttprtsgSeld (Mass.) left her little hoy st home so snrose atmself with aieuaes, aad, whan site reversed, met ana at me street, crying.

He said be only stade a rtttle titan sanea drawer, aad a lot of red ssinart seen caste was a great big tea-kettia and squirted water all evsr Tar saved the oellsr door. rsM of the TxSk says- -A short time ago, a case waa reported ta the Pence Court, ta wklrk a man sought te bnauy the keep. ids lucoxicsuaei uwirars, ins pwa uih was to be need to celebrant wadding ssarraraary. That morning, a somewhat similar, taongh a store amastsg sad sore) cats, was beard, waea Owsa Carroll waa arraigned bv the 6 tats Cuaaualaa, He elahueam know nothing e( the nqner, bat referred to kls wife, was stated tbat tha liquor was deatgned to be used a celebrating a coming event of considerable Interest to her, which would add eee more te the popuhtuoa ef tbe city. Tke Jndaw.

however, ordered the nanal aaa of sis aad easts. was spsaeiss, sad was asks la eass." Kev Brunswick, baa a Postmistress are eat nn rl. Snd. av a tri ft. Kmiftvrajl llellf IT.

r. menta: errosd. my a First Mortfaar os entir. Grant, bring more tbaa Twealr-twe Thousand mTiZ sf Land to each arlM of Road. Tbe bonds are free from Cnfterl Stttnl Tsr- Ska PnnHral and Interest are payable in q4i the r'nrZt gal at tbs and of Thirty years, and tM fnterari s-im snnnalrv, at the rats of aavmi axis Tuacx levTmi Pita Orjrr per annum.

Tbey ara awrnod is cteaomttriltlnw. of gljg, gaa Si 5.0(ia. aad HdifM The Trustees irrMcr ths MortraM are M-wra. gmm Cooke of Pailadelpida, and Hattr Tliom.oa. Preudoot of ths Peuneylvania tkntral AaUroiirl Uof Hoibssrii FaWa.il 74 wflf at all timsav before matuiitr.

ba rvortvsble at 1'en pRa Pbfmitm iar l.W), 1W rxebancv (or tLa OoaLpanvf lcnWi at their lowfiat mb jtrie, 9 In addition to tbelr abolirt mftty. tfasM Bftnfe yir4 nn iscome lauirer' belipvis than tin 7 ntttw rrri-i-taa awenrfty. Pcncm boldinr UatUA SftK Mt'i teaD. by convfvrtiog them Into Kortiittrii Paiiw lacjc thvb yearly tncomea ims-tkird, and till hnTm merlectir iwliabif tnvfvtmfTit. bOW TO bHT TaM.Tor nmrm Buik Bi)atrr wllj fopplr th? troodz ia any df-irt aaiotnt Dd of ur JMdea denominaticsa.

Petvoiu mULtm to tichtnte siocka or otbor bobdtr tft can do with aajofour aeu(a, who wf II allow Uio liiAte tturrtwc prW for aix bxxtlmi.m mccBiTioa. Tboakniac in loeaviititai rmot Iron, banaf. mtrtxA moorj, or other IsorMirt. Atrttiy to ub by Dd wnl fed bavraT orthm Partftc bendf at rvrrr ovs rijat. and arttiiont eotrt to tb inveator.

or m. tber iiAlorinati'rn, ptmj mapa, tc. call on if dreae the or taor at the Eaokj or Biaiikaa BivinrS to avnii thia iota. For aalc by the FOURTH NATIONAL BANK, Agents, 47 SOUTH CIuAIUC-HX ClilcagOy Osrrsl IrtBti for Illinois, Bia. aessai aaa Isrtnera IstUasa.

IPECLral. WOTICEE. Schenek't Pulmonic Syrugf. Sr-awswd Teeie, aad Mandrake PiUa are thr onlr raerii- ciaua weeded te en re eoiaeamption, and there are bat two tfamjra to Ao to make rantfti heal. riret, the Bver aad trtoarach moat he kA into a aeaatby eondlrton, for what the Ixuiava, are rariDcUl4 whole body la waa tine, and tbe food of a amumiAnm erea if he baa aa eptetite doe aot nouriab tbe horty it tne liver ana attomacn aie ioadd wuti iiiina, tt hea there and takea tbe room of food eonarqiicctlT tbe ba- Heat faae no appetite, or rery little, and tbe )tTioe eaitttot mix with tbe food, which lie in te itota- eeh.and apoila, or Mora, aad pa-taei oST withoot oouruh- the eretem.

HehenA'm Maadiadtst Pfllf act oa the liver and rvm ach, and carry etT that ctimo. The Seaweed TntiiriHa rery pleasant timulaut, and avctat as an alkali, wbicli, taken right after eatiDg, anitea with the caetric juice, and digaolree tbe food. Then, by partakfnk freely ot the Pulmonic Syrnp, tbe food i turned into cxvd eh 5 me and chyle; then good blood ia made, and the body begin to grow. A Boon aa the patient beKias to gain in fteab, tbe matter in tbe Innga begin to ripen, and tbey Leal up. 1 hia ia the only way to enre conpiimp-tioa.

No one waa ever eored an lea tbey began to gam in fleeb. Tbe aeeoDd thing ic, the patients moat etar in a warm room nntil they set well, ft ta almoct lu.potJ hie to prevent takinc cold when tbe lungs are dieuLaod, but it moat be prevented, or a cure cannot be effected. Fnadi air aod riding oat are all wrong. Pbyalciaoi who rer- lend tbat ootiree loae their patienU if their lunu are badiy diaeaaed and yet, hecaute tlw are in the bonae, they moat not alt dowa quiet; tbey must walk about tbe roots aa mnch and aa fast aa the strength will bear to get np a good Careoaation of the blood. The pa- ia moat keep in gocd spirits be deteimlned to gi-t well.

1 hie baa a great deal to do with the appetite, and ic the great fteict to gin. Dr. Schenck ia ptxfeaaionallr at bia principal office. No. 15 North corner Oommeroe, Philadelpbia, every Saturday, wiiere ail letters ftr advice aviutbead-dr-Bd.

PTfeeofthe F-moDie Syrop and Seaweed Tank. half dozen. Mandrake Pill-, ase a box. For amir by aU draggiate and dealer. THE CELEBRATE MURRAY IANMAIS'S FLOR FD AW1TER.

Tae most lastly agreeabla, and refreshing of all perfumvf, for use on the EandJcerchlea, at the Toilet, and in the Bata. For sale by all Dragglst aaa Perf uiriers. KatchcIors Hair Dye. Trrh irt-odia arr Dye I. th.

se IB th. world I tss rmlr true andportect dvei hannUiM, reliable, mataa no rSirrapsottjUiiout, Bo ndieolooo eom; rotas. die. the ill af bad invigorate, and leaves tin- hair aod beautifal. black or brown.

Sold try aU druaipt. and aarromera, and prooatlv atrvBeS as Batoheior-i Wia raoory. Bo. IS Bow York. Ovlstadoroa Hair Dye.

HATR DFKTKfl. Tbe sralp is blackened, as Weil as the b.ir, by oommon hair dvea. v'here I. no eair-tre is Ciirartadoro. l-iaLud air le.

aowever, and thereiars It doe. not injure or Mil tae ia. P.Mios into the in. tertorof "eaefa partienl.r h.lr ft flowf thrrmrh the B.tnral ehaluirai inteaded for UrseokrilnaBiatler, asd tiiu. leave, uu etain on tbe sarfawi.

Btud avoir where. Blrmnf.etorr. S5 MaideB-laDO. W. T.

M8- BOTAL BATMa LOTTEBI OF CrBi. is Oold draws svery 17 davs. Prises ratned and inforxoatioB tnmi'hed. rate, ts einhe. S.

B. BANKS, 15 Wall 1. Y. 34.00 Cl'BREHCV. Royal Havana lottery erlxes eaetied: Inforrriattoa rives etreslars lent.

J. B. S1B1 lniLZ A OOn u) Wall lox 4.HV,. hew Tortr Po Offire. WAX riOWEB MATEBIALs.

REDUCTION IN PRICE. Glass Shades! Far t-eTertarj- Wax Flswera, aics lea, Hf atssstr-w, Cleka. Wax Flower Materials. Mme. Scheifi'ele's Sheet Vax.

Vest 140 I-lro-t. REtfOTsAA. We bee to fnforaB the tadlaa fat aciiral that tra mm rnnovt, Hatfirda. March 18, from 371 to Betwtjtro 1 ttirtj-tonrth ard Thirtr Utthttu, wbrre wm wrMl imnrrrvi' tnr hnaii-uBBsi. asrl.

tu-lns? n- ni rMit ea-sii che. per than mnv lar to the city. PartiM httinc goods irmalDliv tritk am wHi pier call for thrum ud turttstr Uonble. jaUbBs9 KKi MM. REMOVAL.

BLISS BHABP, tlruairirti. have nmoved fnsa 144 1. re ts tbelr sew and spacieua store. So. etafe-M.

BUpIHESS CARDS F. BREDT 178 Fulton-sf New York. rMP4TFRl Aanins aad otAer Dvea. Paaw-aaaksra' Soaplisa. fjrtrauarins and HIM rAtTIIKERr) Raaar ef Lead, Aessra AeJd, Ubrome Orees.

sad Kellowa. HOt.U A4.BNTH the Americas AuiSB ardrjbewilealOo. PATENTS. AMERICAN AND EUBDFEAN. MTJmx sc.

co. OoMtluaW it jfiv qpfafaM in recara! te tbo affovaltr ot tavectiooa. Free ol Oavara KLakc Special TrBrnipiHraaai the Patpai Otbce, pivara SpecjacaUv-na, lawltitta. Caveatv and Anifrararats, azbd protacntel appllcatsosW LtHtt Pateot aa aahictTtom. and tn all Baroyaaa CooJitrvaa.

Tboy sjpMial attuDli'n to tb provaseii Htm IteiriMClmUM-. aaVOwVat. KxUmMioa aVTad iaV tr Ppbket of tka if asw PaOaot Isaar for ntihod tnm. Ajtatmm ParkKow. Xw Tork.

ECMTMC AM1ICAN, ttrtMn paag WoeklT. AevtyteH to MasAjmat, tWAmU U. aTwaawTICrS. taWSInT, a-KtsLNK III Ull Ml I II Lai. Ud PortTIetaat fisJIKAva.

afull Of 4fJ3J-TtmtW. a OTTaBa ilvaVW JCMm wTTTbTW ft CO. ST rnrk Itewr W. paoposAia. NOTICE TO CONTEACTORS.

BaarrsaeA Dakot. 9invl tttuar EaioijrazB'a omcx, Moras atlas March A dsn.) Sealed trepouai wail be twsrvsdstilasnaitaf the sninwsiiid. st MBusii'Sa. snlll Ilthdayef AtslUBflUtor ths Oradia. Maaasry.aod BiMsias (trxeevt ths BrMes serass the ktaiiaota.

atvsrstOhsskahsatwuBiy saUassf the Mesons a TrakrrtaBagiisj. issiiisisasin st tha irn rail "'h track ta Bcott Coentr. aad endins at or seat the villexe Carver. Bid. But ba made separately for the Grading.

Masonry and lagans. sUeafsrsradiBsmByhs made by m-Msx or for ths whole twestx miles, srteiervediVSBS tTssassny to. sefeet say or aB PteSeaaBA I annwiiftia t. at the of the Oewj. ia UMunav.

auaawsa ths lata das sfAerll. B. ROOMS, rl-f Wrineer Btinr A Pakoia Ball-war. BOOTS AM BHOn. GET A FAIR Of GABLE SCREW WIRE BOOTS SHOES; sea Oomfcjrt, raasfttcitw, Unra'bllltjr aatt EconoBiy, thsry Excel allOthers.

Cf HlUXS tKin sold not Tear by two laadns Bostse Buuwfactaiert, and warrantee acainat rippua. NOT ONB WAS BJJTUKJv3X Psxrwt sHaasp ea srwerv ees. aVeld bv ell IMaUaa avealera. THE HOME A correspondent of a Kew York paper, writing from Paris, since the peace, refers to the rough hostility of many classes of the' population toward foreigners. He thus describes a conversation with a Frenchman, who believed in commercial non-intercourse, and the expediency of an exclusive "home market I met In the Luxembourg Garden a retire! naval i timet drafted by toe war Into active service.

I Kl 1st: conversation ant aim, aod, ia its course, said: Ara ten an Boglrsnmsnr 'Na. Wbft am pisd of it, for I hste tbe Baalish. I live at aad it drives me almost ma4 to see it am boat uter steamboat leaving with our batter, oar ego, oar poultry, oar wheat, oar den, oar eaten, oar fruit Whatever Is best Is lor (fee Basilah. We French, the owners of all toeae lairga, areoblgtd to contest ourselves wtta tie Iranngs or tbe English. 1 eaa remember tbe day wtuaegjra were a ceota a doses, and as good a catekea a man could eat waa to be bad lor cent.

Mow are S3 cents ana so eeats a dsen. sod caioieo. Is aot to be bad for leas than so In vain I potated ost to tun last this eifferecce of price went late the Franc li peasant's aurker. Increased Sis income, made bun belter S1 to bay land, to give bis dangfiter a dowry, to surcbase a military uoerjmte far his son. Tbe Sal officer eoDUoned to insist that tbe fiaglish, by purchases, were routing France." This is a fair illnstration of the practioal pe rations of a home market.

If France excluded all imports from foreign countries and shut off exports, then the country Would hare the halcyon days wished for Ij the old Frenchman. The advocates of a home market in this country have reduced our agricultural produoers to the Standard of a home market. We produce an immense surplus of breadstnffs and pro- a-iaioES, cotton sad tobacco. This surplus has to be sold, and the price obtained for it abroad, less the cost of shipment, regulate the price of the same article at home. Though we have not prohibited the sale of pur grain, cotton, provisions, and tobacco to foreign ooun tries, we have practically reduced the value of these articles to the producer to the value they wcslj have in an exclusive home market.

The value of gram and cotton which a man has in ex-- cess of his own wants ia precisely the amount or quantity of other articles, which lie does want, that be can get in exchange lor them. If, in the abscnoe of any law to tha contrary, he could exchange bushel of wheat for one hundred pounds of iron, and a law- should be enacted that for that bushel of grain he should only receive 50 pounds of iron, or that SO pounds of iron should be the ex-i" changeable vslue of a bushel of wheat, then the law would to that extent reduce the price of grain to tha standard of the some market. It would not prohibit the exportation of the surplus crops, but would take from the producer one-half of what ha might otherwise receive in ex-' Change for his products. This is called building np a home market. If this exaction of 50 per cent of the exchangeable Value of agricultural products was made for purposes of revenue, then the plea of national necessity might be interposed in Its dt fence.

Bnt that is not the case; the SO per cent exaction ia paid to the cspital-' ists who own mills to make iron, and steel, and cloth. They take a toll of 50 per cent on all oar surplus productions sent abroad, and this they call encour- aging the home market, and promoting a diversity of labor. There waa a time, before the day when we undertook to establish a home market, when, in addi--' lion to exporting bresdstuffs, provisions, cotton and tobacco, we exported boots and ahoes, and many other things, to all parts of the world, thus expanding our tuanu-' factoring industry, giving employment to mechanics, diversifytDg labor, aad adding to the national wealth. We also built all tbe ships engaged in the carrying trade between tbe United States and foreign countries, and, in addition, built hundreds of ships, sold annually in foreign ports to the merchants of other countries. But the effort io make an exclusive home market has est off all this trade and this industry.

We make no more boots and shoes, harness or leather goods, or any other goods, to export we bsild no ships or at camera for the foreign market, nor for eur own merchants. The weasels that pace were familiar in all parts of tha globe, carrying the American flag, and bearing our products. srs seen no more the flag has practically disappeared from commercial waters; but our people are ea joying the luxury of a home market, every val ia asd departure rosn wkiea bear a Svreigsj tg. jtt aslsn os-suied a home market, ia 'which labor, instesd of Jeoeiving its fair vslue, has 50 per cent 'taken from what it recsiras in exchange to endow the stockholders in the home market. It ia immaterial whether the actual exohange of eons-moditiee be made at home or abroad the result is the same.

The "protected "class receives on the a-ersge 50 per cent more of agricultural products in exchange forita wares than it would if the law did not seek to faster sa exclusive home market. In a borne market tbe protected oUss establishes the price of what it sells sad what it bays, and takes the same toll from all exports that it takes on the asks at home. Tbe reports which come from the San Domingo Commission are very indefinite, but they indicate that the Commission srs do not wholly agree npon many pariicu-Vrs. Mr. Wade has made np Us judgment, generally, sad is represented to be an hie way home.

He reports that the mineral resources of the island are sotne-bat mythical. Its present political and ftaancial condition is deplorable. Its population is put at 125,000, with debt roughly estimated at $3,000,000, aad industry and production ef all kinds at a.

Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois (2024)
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