\ ffmrg fflaindciilcr I. VAN SLYKE, Editor and Publisher. "McHENRY, "ILLINOIS. THE great Arizona canal in the Sftlt Birer country to Phoenix, Arizona, is about completed. In about twenty-two smooths the company bare cut a chan nel twenty-six feet wide at the bottom, with banks seven and one-hali feet deep, forty miles long, at a cost of nearly $500,000. The water of Salt River is being carried around the side '•of this valley, and emptied in tke Agua JTria. ' ' • THE number of foreign residents in the treaty ports of China last year were 4,894, one-half of them being English. Great Britain is represented in China "by 298 business houses, Germany by 56, America by 24, Russia by 17, France by 12, Spain by 7, and Italy, Attfttria, Holland, and Denmark each by 1. The tolal of exports and imports for the twenty-one ports in 1882 \cas 1,000,000,- •000 francs. THE Indians of California manufac ture baskets which are waterproof. Dhey are made of a kind of willow that grows on the mountains about eighty miljes east if Los Angoles, on the bord er of the Colorado desert* The baskets are said to be light, and better than any tin, galvanized iron, or other kind •of recep:acle for water. They are ex tensively nseil by Mexicans and old settlers, and will last, with constant use, a dozen or fifteen years. ^VISITOB at the bird sbo.w was ob served to be earnestly trying fo engage one of the parrots in conversation. "Pretty Poll," said the visitor persua sively. There was ho reply from the parrot, who obstinately refused to ex hibit his accomplishments. The visitor used all the powers to interest the bird, but to no avail, and after a long period of useless endeavor turned away in dis appointment. "Good-by," screamed the parrot, very distinctly and provok- *ngly- THI.T anecdote took a prize of £1 in an English weekly paper: "I was out at a small dinner party one evening recently. A boy, evidently from the green-grocer's shop, had been engaged to do the waiting. When he placed two dishes of tarts before the hoste&s, she, probably thinking it not correct to know what was coming, asked: 'What are these, James?' Whereupon the boy, pointing first to one dish and then to the other, replied: 'Them's a penny each, and them's two for three half-pance.' " ALTHOUGH the nineteenth State in the Union in population, New Jersey is seventh in the amount of capital invest ed in manufacturing, sixth in the num ber of workmen thus employed, and sixth in the value of her manufactured products. Of the seven great manu- • facturing states she is second only only to Massachusetts in the propor tion of her total population that is di rectly engaged in manufacturing, and second only to Massachusetts in the rel ative value of manufactured products %o population. FRENCH haters of Thiers pub lished a story which they think reflects upon his patriotism. They say that Gambetta oncc told some one else that Thiers cared but ltttle about the Alas- tians, and, when the question of ceding them came up, said: "Let them go; they were Germans once, and they will become Germans again. If we lose a province, we can bring it back some day, with the millards which we have .kept. But we can never hope to .get back the five millards which the Ger- mans ask of us as a war indemnity," ^ Stx of the largest photographs in the world were recently sent from Washington to the Cincinnati exhibi tion. They represent the different prominent buildings of Washington, and are five feet wide by seven feet long. They are taken on a rough paper very much like that u ed for drawings and water-colors, and it is said will with stand the fiercest rays of the sun. After the close ot the Cincinnati ex position they will be forwarded to New Orleans, where they will form a con- spicuous attraction of the world's fair. DANGER lurks even in the corn-fields of Kansas. A narroAV escape is de scribed by a local paper: "A painful acoident happened to a son ot Barney Heeney, of Union Township, a few days ago. His mother sent him to the corn field for roasting ears. He had to use a ladder to get up to the ears, when he climbed out upon an ear and proceeded to saw it off. He thoughtlessly sawed it off between him self and the stalk, precipitating him to the ground and bruising him severely. Had it not been that the shade of the corn had kept the ground moist and soft I lie would have b^en kill." THE Current: It is reported that Captain Renard, a Frenchman, has suc ceeded in navigating the air in a cigar- shaped machine, and that the British, Russian, and German Governments are intensely anxious to ascertain the secret. Captain Renard claims he can direct his aerial vehicle as easily as a water-ship. The world has l)6en very frequently disuppoin'ei by enthusiastic inventors of flying machines, and there will be no harm done if it is found that Captain Benard has deceived himself; but if he has certainly succeeded in solving the problem, the inventors of the Nineteenth Century will have left little for those of the Twentieth to aohieve, so far as the human mind can aow conceivc. MR. ROBERT BUCHANAN, an English poet and dramatist, now on a visit to this country, nays he admires every thing that is American: Walt Whit* tnan is tlie most original poet in the world; Sherman the noblest soldier; Draper the profoundest physiologist; Twain the quaintest humoris; Joseph Jefferson the finest living actor; A1 .ra il am Lin coin was the wisest and honestest statesman, towering head and shoulders above any politician that was ever raised; and feminine beauty here sur- pases any to be encountered in any part of the world. Itis needless to add that Mr. Buchanan has two or three dramas for which he is anxious to obtain the approval of the American people. After what he has said, they would indeed be ungrateful to stay away. "CLARA BELLE," doesn't believe the newspaper stories about the gorgeous apparel of actresses, and says: "It isn't that the reporters lie, but that they are lied to. What do men know as to the actual qualities of feminine finery ? I went to see the wonders of one foreign actress' clothes, after read ing a glowing account of them, ond, deary me, how that wieked woman had led the journalist astray! The real laces of his article were weak and cheap imitations; the flashing gems in the adornments were colored glass, the fabrics were awfully fraudulent^ and in every way the reporter had been taken in." A GEORGIA'S youth's gallantry led him into a rather unpleasant experience, which is told by the American Re view : "A few nights ago a young man of this city was at a church across the creek, and was introduced to a young lady. After services he asked permis sion to see her home, to which she gave a shy consent. Taking the big road he walked by her side talking nonsense some two or three-hours and began to tire. He then asked, 'How much far ther do von Lve?' 'O, we've got about half way.' Two or three times he had to sit down and rest, and at last he got her home. When he got back to his roosting-place it was 4:30 o'clock the next morning?" An English Countess and her cats are now exciting curious attention in London on account of much persecution from the courts. The story is interest ing, since it shows another instance of the cruel effects of ingratitude upon mind. "I have spent enough gold to fill this room - aye, and more--to bene fit my fellow-beings," says the Coun tess. "Ihey have proved to be ingrates. My charity has been abused. I now devote my small means to the cause of suffering cats and dogs and dumb ani mals." But, unfortunately, her charity is not appreciated, and she was ordered to git rid of the nuisance. She has now twenty-one animals, and has to pay a fine of 10 shillings a day for her men agerie. As she has had unusual experi ence with these animals, her opinion of their care is valuable. Bread and milk are good food, but soup with biscuit is the best diet. It is almost cruel to wash a cat, but the brush is excellent Of all the cats the tortoise shell iB the most intelligent. / Dox PIATT, writing from London to the Louisville Courier-Journal, tells this reminiscence of a few years ago: "The Dover hotel in which I found my self was a common enough looking af fair but possessed of comforts, and I read novels and gazed idly around me at the badly-dressed women and worse- dressed men,in and out of uniforms, when my attention was attracted by a woman some 40 years of age, who was gor geously attired, and seemed in her man ner to feel t at she was somebody, and anxious to impress others with that fact. She was tall, well set up, with England's limestone formation in the way of bone?, well covered with adipose rather coarsc in tissue, garnished with light-blue eyes, and au abundance of yellow hair. There was something vulgar in this woman's appearance when quite, and it became oppressive when she moved, and that was nearly all the time. Sho seemed to court observation, and at the same time to despise it. I cannot put in words precisely the very unpleasant impression this loudly- dressed woman caused the looker-on,but her dress and manner were the essence of bad taste and vulgarity. She at tracted one, however, and I was not sur prised when a friend told me that this bumptious person was none other than Ouida, the well-known novelist." French Babies Drinking Wine. Last year Paris consumed 107,426,000 gallons of wine. This was about forty- seven gallons for each person, or over a pint a day to each man, woman, and child. It is a very common thing to see French mothers feeding wine to the nursing babe. This is why babies al ways look so sickly in Franee. In fact, this drinking of wine in place of milk and water has changed the looks of the French people. It is seldom that, you see a rosy cheeked girl, and rosy-cheek ed, cherub-fa<ed babies never. They all look sallow. America has more beautiful women in Savannah, or Phil adelphia, or Chicago, than there are in all Europe. I asked Mr. Morfon, our minister, what else tho Parisians ate, and he said; "They drink annually 25.Q00.000 gal lons ot milk, or about two-thirds of a gill daily to euch person. I suppose New York consumes five times as much. Paris consumes annually 3,t00,000 pounds of cotton-seed and olive oil, and 1.595,020 pounds of horse-flesh. The Parisians consume annually 312,000,000 ]>ounils of fresh meat, or about one-third of a pound daily to each per-ton. They consume nearly a pound of bread a day to each person. So you see, brt-ad and wine is the chief food of the Parisians." What health, and strength, and beau ty would come to the Parisians if they would reason a little and change that pint of wine daily to a pint of health ful mdkl A pint of wine to a gill of mi k is hurting the French nation.-- Eli Perkins in Ch icago Tribune. Absent-Minded. "Now, sir," observed the Judge in the divorce suit, "what have you to say for yourself? Your wife said she caught you kissing her maid." "I am very absent-minded," replied the man. "I thought she was my wife." "I suppose she thought so, too."-- The GraphUx. DEMOCRACY UNMASKED. The Soiled Career of the Bourboa Party and Its Impure Motives. Afb, neq«»t Speech by . Otfar.f. Morton, at Intiaft- spoils, Ind. « payments WW resumed and the nitr bad kept Its p; omise, all at Democratic party had declared to be aa<t had endeavored to make so. They cannot nr the llepublioan party has In jured our credit abroad. When the Democratic party retired tat disgrace (torn the management of thl* count y onr <i-per-eent. bonds were be- in* hawkei about Europe at 17 per oe&t dis count. and yet we were a n tion of 30,000,00. of peo leandof illimitable resources, under the rule of ihe RepuDlican party our 3 and * per cent, bonds command from 12 to 20 per cent, premium, and onr publico.edit is the highest of the world. They say thit the country has not prospered under the rule of the Republican party. Mr. Blaine tells ns in his admirable letter of accept ance that the true value of property In this country in intvo, the result of the trill of two cen- tuils, was Within the past twenty-four years the amount has more tnan trebled, and is now $U,I*X),(MH),OOO. The Rands of iny time are running low and I have been able only to hint at the (treat deeds of the greatest party in history. We are here to-nlclit as Republicans. We are here t • say why we ar > «hat we a^e. We are Republicans because that party wounded unto death the diseased aud infamous doctrine ot State sovereignity: because that party made the flae o( r; bellion the shroud of treason; beca"se that party struck the manacles from 4,<HIO,0(IO slaves; because that party s iid the ballot and the lite of the voter were sacred; because that party vindicated the national financial honor; because that party touched the dead body of onr national credit and it sprang to its feet; be cause that party has added five States to this I nion; because that party has given homesteads to the poor; because that party has been a shield to the laborer; because that jiarty fosters the education of the masses; because that party touched with its wand th • nutilled prairies and they waved with uolden (train; because that party is the torch-bearer of Western civiliza tion, and lights th • way of prop: ess. We arc Republicans because that party sprang out ot the black night of ti e war-times, like a fair god, cla I in the panoply rf war, the hope of libe-ty to unborn millions, the prayer of the slave, and stands to-day, as it stood twenty-fonr yeais ago, the best repr sentative of the intelligence, the honor, an t the patriotism of this A RINGING APPEAL. Republicans Urged to Keep the Demoralized Bourbons ^ -v: - on the Rnn. To the novitiate the broad Haw which sepa rate the great political parties are bat faintly legible. A comparison of tha platforms reveals but little diflerence between tuem. The plati tudinous verbiage of the Democratic Instru ment shows nothing of the soiled carejr ot that party and its impure motives, But an experi enced observer will discover behind the mask of virtue which it as -times its wou.sh tongue. De mocracy tie s from its post like a futriti.e from justice, like a criminal from the s;>ecte;of his victi.u. But they canuot divorce their past from the present. As freeman says, history is the Doluics or the past, and politics is the his tory of the present. >o present event stmds isolated, but is connected with th ' past bv the indissoluble links of cause and effect- The doc trine oi the heredity ot c. ime is the only rational explanat ion of the con inuo.is misdeeds ot the Democratic party, its antecedents are notori ously bad it changes its professions every four y. ars as regularly as ihos j years roll by. It jugg es with political principles IIKC a mon ite- ban», and treats an intelligent public as though they were a set of bumpkins, devoid of me.i-ory, sense and judgment. buppose you intend to employ a man to fill a position ot trust in your bus ness. You would not pay the slightest at:ention to his preten sions; you would demand recommendations at testing his punctuality, honesty, efficiency. The Democratic i arty pre-en s to the country this year a hand-bill of moral ptntitndes, termed a platlorm, which vaguely promises some th.ngs that are good and others that are no; so. But how can we belieV© one word which that party of faithless pledges and broken premises say5", when we recollect that the Democratic party of the North, in 18(>0, fav red sec ssion f in tst-2 it opposed secess on «nd favored reconciliation on the basis of slavery. In 1804 it declared th^ war a failure; in irtiit! it declared the war a success. In I8tk> it opposed the constitutional amend ments; in i87'i it apuro\et the constitutional amendments. In the samo year it demanded the immediate resumption of specie payments; in 187ti it demanded an immediate repeal of the resumption act. In ISKO it demanded a tariff for revenue only; in 18-;* it tried to get on the fence, slipped, and tell on the thorns of tree trade, where it ignomin ously lies. What that rugged oid philosopher. Dr. Johnson, onoe said to the young man applies to th« Democratic party: "Young man, you must have taken great pains with your education. You could not pos sibly by nature be as stupid as you are." In view ot this trifliug with national questions of grave import, it may well be inquired what States the liemocrats will carry in the coining election. To answer this Question I must open the darkest chapter in the annals of American history--tht* reco d of the Dem« cratic pai#Nn the South since the war--a record that detiles the page and shames the historian. They will carry the State of Mississippi, where, until 1ST5, the Republl ans had a ma jority ot but which was overturned in that year by a revolution so cruel and so liloody as to blanch the face of outraged humanity. Public massacres, midnight hangings, ostra cism--those threats of violence that spread a nameless terror through the community, that ferocity which stamps barbarism on the savage --all tended to show to an astonished world what the Democratic party meant by a white man's government. In Yazoo County, where the Republicans had a majority of i,;>uo and more, seven Republican votes were cast, and there were many others in the Bame ratio. They will carry the State of Louisiana, where, between the years lSCti and ls74, more than 4,001 Republicans were killed and wounded simply for ext rcis ng their constit utional prerogative of casting a vote. Negroes were pursued like lepers, and justice was so prostituted that slavery in comparison seemed a protection and a blessing. They will carry tho States blistered by the ma saciesat Hambnrg, Danville, tlinton, Cou- shatta, Colfax. Vicksourg, lied River, and Me chanics'Institute. The Republican vote in Ar kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, North and South Carolina has been literally burned out--van shed as smoke m the heavens--leaving only the cinders behind To tell the ghastly tale. Hundreds of thousands of votes have been an nihilated. They will carry every district in the South where there is an illicit distillery; every district where a Government revenue officer has been killed; every district where there is no school- house; every district where the ballot-boxes have been stuffed; every district where men, illegally armed, have surrounded the polls; every diBtiict where Kuklux and \\ hite-Leaguers ex isted; every district where the Union soldier sleeps under the sod ot the battle-field; every district where man has been held as a slave; every district where the blood of the negro has stained the soil; every district where the tyranny of one party remains; in tine, they will carry every district that is controlled bv the despot ism of ignorance and that is enshrouded in the black mantle « f crime. 1 do not say that every Demoorat in the South, or a majority of them, were Ku-klux and White- Leaguers, and favored the measures of these organizations, but I do say that every Ku-klux and Whitc-Leaguer was a Democrat. The Democratic party, that putrefied remin iscence of treason, crime, and blunder. Is en gaged in telling the country to-day that the mission of the Republican party is accom plished. The mission of the R publican party will never lie accomplished until the Democratic party is dead. They ask that we shall no lonser talk of Southern outrages. Mow that the bloody work is ove., and they are masters of the situation, their sensitiveness may be accounted for. They have trained control of every electo al vote south of Mason and Dickson's line. The South presents an Impregnable and sullen front to day. as it. did twenty-four years ago. and is a menace to the peace and prosperity of this country. If the Democrats In the North desire a change so ard'i.tly, let them adjure their Southern brethren to permit a fair count, and some of the Southern States will oast a legal Republican majority. The Democratic partv not only threatens, bnt absolutely pi dges itself to cut off the pensions of Union soldiers. It said, in a plank unques tionably dictated by tho Southern members of the convention: "We denounce the Republican pirty for having failed to relieve the people from crushing war ta\es." And again: "'1 he system of direct taxation known as the internal revenue is a war tax, and so long as the law continues the money derived therefrom should be sacrenly devoted to i he lvlief of the people from the remaining burdens of the war, and bo made a fund to defray the expense of the t are and com ort of worthy soldiers dis abled in the line ot duty in the wars of the ro- publi •, and for the payment of such pensions f.s Congress may, from time to time, grant to such soldiers, a like fund for the sailors having been already provided, and any surplus should be paid into the Treasury." They favor paying pensions out of the pro ceeds ot a tax whos i existence they denounce The spirit of prophecy moves me, and I predict --in view of these words and the light of the past--that a Democratic government will cease to pay pensions to Union soldiers unless the South is similarly provided lor. The first step will be to pension Southern widows and orphans, who, they will sentiiuenta ly urge, are innocent victims of the lats strife. That will probably prevail, and more will follow. This threat and the talk of Vrushin.' war taxes" come in bad grace irom the South. In ls7M the Republican States paid fifteen-sixteenths of the whole cus toms revenue of the nation. Between the years and Is',8 $2.ori.ri,:i;i7,S4ti. 18 were collected as internal-revenue taxes. Of this sum the eleven Coniederate Sta'es paid $2(II,KLK;,0»O.I5-- a les.< amount than that collected In the State of O.'do. The charges of misgove nment preferred against the Republican party by the Democrats may be shortly dismissed. They tay the Re publican party does not protect its citizens abroad, and quote McSwteney. McKweeney lived in Ireland live years, took ids oath of office as Poor-Law liuardian, thereby severinir his al legiance to th ' Unite i Sta.es. He was released from prison through the demand of Secretary B1 ine,; lthough that gentlem m s right t>> make the remonstrance was not at all clear. McSwee- ney is now running as a candidute for the En glish 1 arliament. The Republiian party pro tected its citizens abroad when It Mattered down the forts ot Corea; when it drove the French out of Mexico; when it forced $15,OOJ,«M out of England as a settlement of the Alabama claims, and finally when it made it possible for a Ger man to return to his own country without being impressed into the army of the empire, and to have his naturalization papeis resj»ected. They say tha' the Republican party is reduc ing the public debt too rapidly. In the imbecile administration of litich .nan, during a time ef profound peace, the Democratic party ran this country into debt fVi'.iKM.'juo. Since I8u .not withstanding the most destructive war of the century, 'the Republican party has paid off fl.HI*'.ooo.ouo of our nat onal debt, an unparal leled achievement, lint that party which voted against the fourteenth amendment, and which has repudiated the whole or a portion of the debt of every State in the South, says that we should only pay the Interest on our national debt, and let the princii al Iructify in the pock ets of the people. In reply we urge that nine-tenths of the United Stati s bondholders are Americ ns. and that if you liouiuate the national debt you pay the money right back into the pockets of the people, where it does fructify in business enter prise, in the ventures of capitalists and the sup port of labor, and in addition you have swept away the interest, a sound econo nical operation. They protest against the surplus, apparently Ignorant of the fact that it belongs to the peo ple. and not the tiovernm nt. To touch it is robliery. R»deem the Treasurv notes, sold and silver certificates, bank notes and called bonds, fail to provide fo: current expens< s and the sur- innnna of this camnaiim plus disappears. A certain portion goes to the 1HE campaign are payment ot ourna tonal debt every m<.nth, s nee moral, declar a the truly virtuous Indo- we'»re bo nil to do nationally that which we do pendents soma lime since. This circum- intlividually, pay our houestdnes. Dcmagoglsm, j utADCP. however, has uot prevented their 'k'i'he^sav the Republican party has misman- I indulgence in lying and forgery--two Dem- aged the nnanoes. When it came into power, in i ocratic accomplishments in which thoj i8<; i, most of the specie had been d nven out of ! have attained great proficiency. t.he countiy. To me t the obligation of the i great war, a paper « urrency was ssueii, to the ~ The National Committee Issues a Stirring Address to.., the People. The Republican National Committee imit*. In the glorious victories already won, a sure omeu of the greater victory that is close at hand. Vermont is still the st ir that never sets. Maine, captured in lHrt , rebukes slander by a nlurallty of 20.000, a gain of 11 per cent, of its entire vote. W est Virginia, in place of 11,000 plurality for Hancock, now tails below :i,ooo, a Republican gain of 7 peroen ., w|» ch klnales hope that the lfta votes of a Solid South may be biok >n in No vember. Rut the result in Ohio is a revolution and a prophecy. Only a year ago Democratic by l'2,ii o, and two years ago by f.i.OiO pluialitv. Ohio now gives 12,»M» plurality for the low st Republican State candidate, and on national issues is.ooo for the Republ can Congressmen. Holding the State and local oftic s, and the whole machinery of elections, the Democrats scattered corruption money with a lavish hand, colonized voters, imported professional repeat ers, and, in spite oi the most strenuous efforts to enforce the law aga list them, cast manv thousand fraudn'ent votes. Because of this power they had chosen to stake all upon that State, declared that It would foreshadow the re sult in November, and were strangely c rtain of success. Tlicy filled the air with slanders. Lo cal issues led many voters to disregard national questions. Against snch odds the magnificent victory is a prophecy of 40,0tH) pluraliiy for Blaine and Logan in November. With the ra tio of gain in other States, it foreshadows au increase of 700,two in the Republic <n national vote, and the largest popular majority ever given any candidate. These victories show the determination of the peo' le that, as Lincoln, Grant and Garneld were slandered in vain, so the foremost statesman of to-day shall not be driven from the people's work by the tongue of mdice. They show that the Republican party, which was the first to re sist and uproot the dojma of "perpetual al legiance" to a foreign power, is chosen by the nation to defend all rights of American citizens abroad. Th»y show that so long as the bemo- cratic p rty rests all hope ot success upon a de nial of free suffrage in the Southern States it will ask in vain the confidence <>t any Stite where a free vote is recorded by an honest count. They show that the people will not abandon the protection of American industry, under which the country has trained twice as much In twenty years as it had t ained in all its 1 revious history --the protection of American labor, which has lifted wages 62 per cent, higher lu re than in England. The people see what stagnation a Democratic "first firm step towi.rd free trade" lias caused within the last year. Nine months ago, flushed with victory und boastiug of certain success, the Democratic party mad no seceetof its blind adherence to British theories of lree trade. Now, neither a deceitful platform nor a dumb candidate avails to check this stampede from that party, for its voters know that pro tection has made t,;e rewards of labor greater here than in any other land on earth. The National Committee appeals to t&e peoirie to make the victory decisive. It is no time for over confidence or fvr neglect of any prop r elTort. Rare success is not enough. It is time to put an end to the ag.tation by wh.ch the Democratic party prostrates business every four years; to nut an end to th • hoi e that the nation can be ruled by shot-guns in sixteen Mates and frauds in two: to put an end to the vilification of the foremost champions of American ideas by men who do not dare to meet vit-.il issues of national policy; to make the irincipes pro claimed by our matchless leader--"Peace with the world, co nnu rcial expansion In ev, ry prac tical d rection, encouragement of every form of American industry, protection to every citizen, native, or nat ura iz il, at home or abroad"--not only triumphant, but so overwhelmingly tri umphant that th-; splendid prosp rity which they promote shall not a.ain lie Interrupted by the struggles < f ( bsolete theories and foreign interests for the m st -ry of this <ont nent. The grandest part of the grandest history ever made l»y any nat ion is the work of the Republican party. It r sts with you. Repuollcans of the nation, to carry forward the work which you and your lathers have beaun, and to which so many brave and faithful nvn have given pre cious lives,tiinf thegovcrnm ntof the people, by the people, and for th • people, shall bo main tained in the land. B. F. JONG , Chairman. SAMUEL FESSENDEN, Secretary. fHE VOICE OF TRADE. Thirty Thousand New York Business Men Indorse can A Procession Never Before Equaled in the History of the City. on live tarj Uresliain, George S. Itoutwell, and Other Eminent Men* OHIO. Address of the Republican State Committee. To the Republicans ot Ohio: On behalf of the Republican State Executive Committee we congratulate you on the magnifi cent victory" which you won last Tuesday. Our e-'emies were made confident by the victories which they had won in is.s2 and 1883. They were strong in having !ull possession of every branch of the State Government, and of the police departments of nearly all our large cities. The Democracy of the nation poured their men and money into our State in the hope of settling the Presidential election by capturing Ohio. All these means were used against you with great skill and reckless disregard of fairness. Against all these great odds you have made a brave contest and fairly won it, having made a gain over last year of more than 24,i oo on the head of your State ticket, against whom all sorts of schemes were devised for the pur pose of cutting down his votes. In the result npon the other Siate oihcers and Congressmen your victory appears in greater magnitude, as ui on these the K«ins were ao.ooo and 3l,ooo. The State had been gerrymandered by the Democratic Legislature, so that It was thought impossible for the Republicans of Ohio to se cure more thansix mem Iters in the next Nation al House of Representatives. With this unfair ness to contend against yon have won ten. While we con ratulate vou upon this victory, we also ask vou 10 enter upon the contest which will close the 4th of Novemier with renewed vigor and enthusiasm. The enemy has renewed the strangle, and by the unscrupulous use of th? State, county, and municipal governments, where thev control th*m, will attempt to rob us of the fruits of our victory. Let every Repub lican put his shoulder to the wheel ot our chariot, and bury the Democracy tfnder such an overwhelming majority that another campaign of slander and scandal will not be Indulged In by our beaten foe JOHN F. OOLEVEE, Chairman. JOSHUA J. BROWN, Secretary. 'jL tNew York telegram ] » W -Hws been the good fortune of *ny Presidential aspirant to receive such a hearty and enthusiastic indorsement of his candidacy by the business men of this city as was given .lames G. Blaine to-day. The meeting whi :h was held in Wall street, this afternoon under the au-pices of the various exchange clui-swas an immense success and was ample evidence that the reprc-en ative busin gs men and me chants of the metropolis are enthusiastically in favor of the el ctiou of Mr. Blaine to the Chief Mag istral- of tho country. Those people who were surprised at thj sl,e of the gathering in Wall street on the occasion ot the Democratic dem onstration a few days ago, were utterly liewll- dered Uiis afternoon whe.i confronted bv a solid mass of people thronging Wall street ir nn Broadway to Williams street and on Broad street from the Sub-treasury steps to the Cus tom House. No comparison between tiie two mee ings could lie ma..e, lor, while there were admittedly not over \o o people at the Demo cratic demonstration, fully 12,000 thronged the streets name i this afternoon. It was the original inten ion to have all the spea kers address the meeting from the Sub- Treasury steps, trom the corner of W. Hand Nas sau stree s, but early this morning it was evi- di nt that tlio crowd was too large, and it was decided iO have three speakins stands, one from the Sub-Treasury ste.js, another from the Cus tom House st -ps, and another from a platfoim erected at the comer of William and Wall streets. The list of streakers included Secretary Gresham, Senators Hale of Maine and Haw ley ot Connec icut, Stewart L. Woodford, George IS. Bou well. Chairman S. Rogers, Alexander Si llivan, and State Senator Dennis P. Mc Carthy. The list of Vice Presidents Included the names of 130 leading merchants and bankers of this city, whiie the Secretaries were about the same number of representatives of similar interests. All flay long in commercial circles the usual talk Ot business interests gave way todiscusslon almoin the afternoon's demonstration. In in numerable trading houses along the line of march flags and bunting were profusely dis played, and immense portraits ot Blaine and Logan were htiug from the windows. Acccnling to th > programme the first or ganization to prei>arc for the demonstration wi s the Dry Goods Association, which assem bled on Worth street, between Church and Broadway, at '2 o'clock, and then headed by the Seventh Regiment Band marched 2,ri0o strong down Bruaiiway. At Ueade street the West Side Merchants' Association fell In line with :too men, and at Chambers street aoo hardware merchants joined. Two other organizations were added to the line before Bowling Green was reached--the jewelers. Too strong, and the Stock Exchange Maine and Log n L<egion. The latter body took the head of the procession with its l.ooo men, and elicited rounds of applause from the populace-darkened sidewalks. In fact from Worth street down the crowds were dense, and increased in size nnt l at the Produce Ex change Building nothing but a mass of black could be seen where the s reets usually are. At the Produce Exchange Building tiio organ ization from that exchange took its place in the parade. Grand Marshal Sabin leading 1,400 men. The delegations Irom the Petrolenm Ex change r>oo strong, the Lower Wall Street Mer chants' Club '2i0 strong, and the Cotton and Metal Exchanges, counting -J00 men, also fell into the procession on li. aver street. The route was down Broadway to Beaver, through Beaver to broad, and up Broad to the Sub-Treasury. As the proces ion WHS seen ad vancing up Broad street by the assembled multitude tlicy broke into tumultuous applause. The men in lino answered by shouting: -O--O-O -h--i--o." "J--J--J-- G--B--1--a--i--n--e." At :-t :3o, the time for the meeting, the seats around the three speaking stan is were simply one mass of people, and the windows in the palatial banking houses were radiant with the j wives aud daughters of their owners. Standing on the steps of the Sub-Treasury one could { easily imagine that al) New York was out en j masse to ratify the action of the business com- I munity in indorsing Mr. Blaine's candidacy, for ! the people were packed together like sardines, ! and their enthusiasm s emed to know no j bounds as the various clubs marched by with | banners flying an-1 cries of "Blaine, Blaine, ! James G. Blaine," filling the air. They all marched by the stands before the i speaking began and then scattered to take their | places among the immense throng and listen to , the speakers. Secretary Gresham was the ora- | tor of the occasion. He spoke from the Bub- Treasury steps, as follows: Mr. Gresham confined himself entirely to a discussion of the finances of the country and a relutation of the assertion ot Mr. Hendricks, that the balance of money in the Treasury should be paid out immediately lor the public debt. "Honest, industrious, Uebt-payiug per sons." he said, "do not favor a currency of fluctuating and unceitain value. They wish that the I'nite l States notes and the national bank notes should be kept up to a coin standard. It is wo: thy of comment that many who arc now clamorous aga nst keeping this reserve for the redemption oi the United States notes earnestly opposed the issuing of them as unauthorized by the Constitution, and that, too, when the life of the nation was in im minent peril. Bearing in mind tho various claims upon the fun:ls in the Treasury, what becomes ot the charge made by the Democratic | candidate for Vice President and others o. im- ! posing taxation and the unnecessary holding of | fiTiO.O' o.ooti or $vo,'ioo,ooo? The real reserve Is i less than one-third of the apparent balance on ! hand. 1 have too much resjiect tor the intelli gent e ot Gov, Hendricks to believe he does not ! know that this a- parent balance is not available I for paying o;t' the Government debt or for gen- j eial purposes. The leaders of the Democratic i party, with some exceptions, protested against the issue of United States notes; aud | when in the opinion of Congress the necessities of the war reip.iire.l them to be issued and clothed with tho legal-tender quality the utter ! collapse of the public credit was predicted. In- j stead of the e predictions be ng verified, the greenbacks, through the wise and conservative ma agement of Republican administrations, are at a I ar with gold. Those who arc familiar wi.h the action of the Democratic leaders during and alt> r the war on <;u- stious affecting the public credit are not surprised to see them now at wor > by speech and vote to get rid of the re serve without which we might be obliged to suspend payments. The achievements of Re publican administrations in the management ot our finances and the reduction of the public debt are perhaps without parallel in the history of the wo-Id. No one at home or ab-oad doubts that our war debts will be fully and honestly paid it the Republican party Is continued in power. [Cheers. | The issu-'credit has been so firmly established and the debts so largely re duced that we can now safely reduce tax tion within the demands of the law creating the slnMng fund." Senator Hale, Stewart L. Woodford, and Sherman S. Rogers, of Buffalo, addressed that por ion of the multitude gathered around the Court House steps, while the other speakers were divided between the platforms at Wall and William streets. , W0RKINGMEN, READ. i» Eloquent Plea for Protection to -- American Labor. Text of Mr. Blaine's Address at South Bend, Ind. GROVEK CLEVELAND'S letter, addressed to the Hon. Allen G. Thursman, declining to be present at the meeting in Colnmbns, is a rare bit of assumption. "Let ME re mind the people." "Let ME impress upon the people," etc. "Let ME show them a way," etc. And this from a man who four ytare ago was not kuown as a Democrat outside of hi* own ward in Buffalo. As a Democrat he hns never written a line worth remembering, never advanced an original idea which was above commonplace, and, so far as known, is incapable of writing a letter which has even the merit of putting a point with any directness. It would be something woith knowing to ascertain what the Hon. A!le.i G. Thurman said when he read this missive.--Boston Journal. redemption of which ilie Republ.c.-.n p'rtv pledged its honor. A bill in Congress renewing that pledge was opposed by the Democratic p ir- ty. But on the 1st day ot January, WW, specie IT is the same old Bepublioan party that backed Lincoln, and Giant, ana Garfield that is backing Blaine. Hen of Indiana: The struggle in all human society Is first for bread. There is no rise o: propounding fine the ories to a man who is hungry. '1 here is no use in commending a political principle to one who ! is in need of shelter; there is 110 use in talking j philosophy to one who is naked. Food and clothing are the primary requirements of hnman socicty, the primary elements of human prog ress, and to secure this you must put the people in tiio way of earning good wages. I Shouts of "That's right" and enters.) I never saw any man moved to enthusiasm by silently contemplating the prosperity of another [laugh ter! whiie he liimseif was in need. To move him you want to make him feel his own prosperity. '[Cheers.] The beginning, tuerefore, and the end of wise leylslat on is to give every man a f ir and e.pial chance, *nd to leave tho race ot life open an i iree tor a.l. [Cheering.i What agency will best a complish that? What legis lation will most tend to that end? Certainly it wi.l uot tend to that end to throw open our : ports and say. Send ye nil here your fabrics, made by the cheapest and m st depressed labor i ot Europe to compete with our own people who are just opening their shops and building their ' factories, for if you do that yon can not spin a ] wheel or turn a lathe in these factories at home, j unless you can g t your lal>or at the European prices. I tries, "That's so. "I We bculn right there. From these considerations we deduce the conclusion that tho protective t .rift' is primarily for the beneut ot the laboring man, because if you take in your hand any manufa tured article, or cast your eye upon any i limg which can not be taken in the hand, you find that tha cldct con st tu nt element in its c st is labor. In many i cas s the ma erlal is but 1 p> r cent, and the ] laooris 'iJ por cent, in the cost of the nrt cle. I Therefore all lejds.a ion ot a protective charao- i ter is and must be mainly for the ben nt of labor, because labor is the principal clement in the cost of the fabric; hence, it there beany man who is pre-^miuenily and bove all others int r- ested in the tariff it is the l' boring man.: Cheers.] It you compare the two imut political | armies in relation to this *;ue tion you and t at the Ue- pubii.an party lives, moves, breathes, and has its ueinsc in protection. [Great cheering.I A pro tective tariit was oue ot the first fruits ot the eleotkm Of Mr. Lincoln. We have had it for twenty yean on the statute *x>oks, with various amendments, which have been added from time to lime, to make it more protective, and the re sult Is that all history, ancient, modern, and mediaeval, may be challenged for a national progress like unto that which we have made ••nee lsei. (Renewed cheers.J I am merelv re citing the facts and t gurcn of your asses sor's books and of the Uni:ed States census tables when I say that in the last tw ntv-three years of the historv of this country we have added more wealth, doub e over, . ban we had acquired from the discovery of the continent by Columbus dov n to the elec tion of Abraham Lincoln. [Prolonged cheering.! Tberempst have been some peculiar snd potent agent at woi k to produce this great result. That agent was the protective tariff, onerating to n rve the arm of labor and rew.-ird it fairly and liberally, iCheers.] Whether that policy shall be continued or whether it shall be abandoned is toe controlling issue in this campaign. All other questions are laid aside for the time. There are many which are worthy of consideration, but two weeks lroin Tuesday next we shall have an election in every State in the Union to determine with refe ence to this question, the charact r of the next Con gress, and the future policy of thGovernment. You have before you the Republican party, pledaed to sustain the protective tariff, and il lustrating that pledg> by a consistent example extending through tweniy-three years. You have, on the other hand, the Democratic party which in hfty-on' years, since 1 has never in a single instance voted for pro tection, and never controlled » Congress that it did not ojipose protection. ["That's so."] I say, therefore, to the laboring men and to the mechanics, some of wh >m may do me the honor to listen to me, your unions, your leagues, all those associations which you have formed for yonr own advantage and your own sdvancement, are well and proper in their way; it is your right to have them, and to administer them as you choose, bnt they are not as strong as a rope of sand against the iU-paid labor o? Europe if you take away the protective tariff, which is now your background and sup port [cheers]; so do not be deluded by the idea that you can dispense with the protective tariff and substitute for it your labor unions, [lleneweii cheering.] I do not distract your at tention with anv other question. I do not stop to dw. 11 upon the great issues that have been made ana settled by the Republicans within the last twenty-three years. That i arty has made a deeper snd more tlorious imprint in history than any other political organization that ever was charged with a great responsibility, and it is the pride of every man who has belonged to it, and has shared its labors, its responsibili ties, its triumphs, its honors. [Great cheers.! THE SOLID SOUTH. the Southern Wing of the Democracy Trying to Get Control of the tion It Sought to Destroy. Preponderance of Ex-Bebels Among the Democrats in the Senate and House of Representatives. Mr. Blaine's Speech at It Wayne, Hi* "Citizens of Indiana: I- "The October elections In Ohio and West Vir ginia have put a new phase on tho national con test, or rather they have reproduced the old phase. I'Uood.'l The Democratic party, as of old, consider now they have the South solid again; they believe that they will sure.y get l.vt electoral votes from the sixteen Southern States, and they expect, or they hope, or they dream, that they may secure New York or Indiana ['Never!' 'Nevei!' "It Is a dream!']; and that with New York and Indiana added to the solid Mouth, they will seize the uovernment of the nation. 1'Thcy can't do It--never!'l I do not believe that the farmers, the business men, the manufacturers, the merchants, and, last o' all and most of all, I do not believe that the soldiers oi Indiana can be put to that use. I Great cheer ing, and cries of 'Never!' 'Never!'l I do not believe that the men who added luster and re nown to your State through fouryrars of bloody war can be trusted to call to the administration of the Covernment the men who organized the great rebellion. ['No!' 'No!' 'Never!'] In the senate of the United States the Democratic party have thirty-seven members, of which number thirty-two come from the South. Of their strength in the House of Hepresentatives the majority of Representatives come from the South, and now the intention is, wirh an absolutely solidified elec:oral vote from the South, added to the votes ot the two States I have named, to seize the Government of the Union. [,It can't be done!' '1 hat seizure can never be made!'] That means a great deal; it means that, as the South furnishes three- fourths of the Democratic strength, it will be given the lead and control of the nation in the event of a Democratic triumph. It means that the gicat financial and industrial system of the country shad be placed under the direction of the South; that, our currency, our banks, our tariffs, our Internal revenue laws--in short, that our whole system upon wiilch the business of the country depends shidi be placed under tho control of that section. It means that the constitutional amendments to which they sro so bitterly opposed shall be enforced only so tar as thev may believe in them, that the na tional credit as guaranteed in the fourteenth amendment, that the payment of pensions to the so diers of the Union, as guaranteed in the same amendment, shall be under their control; and what that control might mean may bo measured by the bitterness with which i hose amendments were resisted by ihe Democrats of the South. There is not one measure of bank ing, of tariff, of finance, of public credit, of pensions; not one line of administration upon which tho Government is conducted to-day on which tho Democrats of the South are not recorded as hostile, aud to plvc them con trol would mean a change the like ot which has not been known In modern times. It would be as if the dead Stuarts were recalled to the throne of Kugland; as if the Ilourbons should be incited to administer the Government of tho French Republic; as though the Florentine dukes should be called bai k and empowered to govern tue great Kingdom ot Italy. ('Good!' and cheers.] Such a triumph would be a fearful mis ortune to the South itself. That section, under the wise administration of the Govern ment by the Republican party, has been steadily and rapidly gaining or the lain ten years in all the elements of material prospe ity. It has added euormously to its wealth since the close of the war, and has shared fully in the gein ral advance of the country. To call that section now to the rulership of the nation would disturb its own social and political economy, would re kindle smoldering passions, and un ler the pe culiar leaders hi]) to whici it would be subjected it would organize an administration of resent ment, of reprisal, of revenge; and no greater misfortune than that could come to the nation or to the South. It would come as a reaction against the progress ot lliieral principles in that section--a progress so rapid that the Republicans are waging earnest cont sts in those States whose interests are most, demonstrably identi fied with the policy of protection against the baleful spectacle of a solid South. "I am sure that Indiana will protest, and, on the whole, will conclude to stand where she has stood in the past. I believe that you *11 stand where you stood in the war; that you will stand for the principles and the rolicies which have made your State bloom and blos som as the rose, and which have made the American republic in manuf actures and in agri culture the leading nation of the world. [Great cheerinc. I The leading nation of the world, not merely in a mater.al sense, but in a moral phil anthropic sense -a country tn which every man has as good a chance as every otner man, and which, among other great gifts, bestows abso lutely free suffi age. [Cheers.] You enjoy that suffrage, and the 4th day of November next you arc to say for which party, for which policy, you will casi vour votes. lLoud cries of 'For Blaine!' 'For Blaine!'] Not me personally. ['Yes.' *Yes!'J No, I am not speaking lor myself. No man ever met with a misfortune in being defeated for the Presidency, while men have met with great misfortunes in being elected to it. I am plead ing no personal cause. I am pleading the cause of the American people. ['That's it!' and cheers ] I am plead mr the cause of the Ameri can farmer and Amcr cnn manufacturer, and the American mechanic, and the American la borer against the woria. I'Good!' 'Good!' "Good!" and great checrs.l I am reproached by some excellent people for appearing bctore these mu tltudes of my countrymen, ui on the ground that it is inconsistent with the dignity of the ottice for which I am named. ['No!' *No!'i I do not feel it to be so; there is not a courtier in Kuroi e so proud but that he is gl d to uncover his head in the presence of his sovereign. So I uncover in the presence of the only earthly sovereignty I acknowledge, and*bow with pride to the free people of America." [Great and pro longed cheering.] WE have seen what Cleveland did for the corporations in the position of Governor of New York. Does any one for a moment suppose he would be less willing to serve the corporations if he were elected Presi dent? The Presidency would afford him a broader field in which to display sycophancy to corporate wealth. That he would avail himself of the oppoitnnity that snch a field would offer him is as certain as any future event can be. Let ns hope, however, that he will never have the opportunity of so do ing.--Irish World. HENBY WARD BEECHEB once wrote a letter "humbling hin:self as he would be fore his God" to atone for the wrongs he had done a fe low-man. And Mr. Beecher is engaged to-day iu another dirty business that may compel him to repeat the penance. --Philadelphia Pre##. SIXTEEN members of the Cleveland and Hendricks First Voters' Clnb stated their intention to vote for Bliiue and Login. The organization will be known as the in dependent Democratic Bluiue and Logan First Voters' Chib as the resnlt of this flop, --Fort Wayne (ind.\ telegram. ILLINOIS STATE NEWS. --Dundee is now shipping 700 IMBS milk daily to Chicago. --A branch of the Y. ]L C. A. haa beet organized at Belleville. • --Mrs. William Grace -was strnck bj lightning near Joliet, and instantly killed*. --The explosion at the blast fnrrace o the Joliet 8teel Company's works causae damage of $20,000. --The coal-miners in the Belleville dis. trict have demanded of the operators a uni form price of 2 cents per bushel for dig ging coal. ,, » ? * /--The State Synod of Cumberland Pm> byterians of Illinois was In session at tar ing, Montgomery County, last week. --Peter Rheinlander, a Macon Count} farm hand, while returning to his home from Lincoln, fell out of his wagon broke his neck. --A hail storm near Batavia, Kane Coun ty, destroyed over 10,000 lights of glass in the green-houses of John Patterson and H. W. Williams Jb Sons. --The army worm, or that which is caller* such, is dping a greaf deal of damage to fell wheat in localities about Havana, in some instances sweeping the fields bare. --Four murderers from Edgar County, have been lodged in jail at Tuscola for safe keeping. Among the four were the Smith brothers, who were in the shooting scrape nt Paris. --According to the Sycamore Republican, Sylvanns Holcemb, at 82 years of age, reads the finest print without the aid of glasses. Twentw five years ago he could not read the coarsest print without them. --An.8-year-old son of Rev. H. E. Mor ton, pastor of the Congregational Church of Jacksonville, accidentally shot himself through the bowels, while carelessly hand ling a revolver, and it is thought that he cannot possibly live. ' --The Nineteenth Illinois Infnntry ap pointed a committee to consider the ad visability of making Mrs. Charles Shepley, 74 years of age, the mother of Capt. Shep ley, who was killed at Murphrysboro, tha mother of the regiment. --The Chicago Union Live Stock Yards are the largest in the world, capable of holding 20,000 cattle, 150,000 hogs, 10.C00 sheep and 1,500 horses. Seventeen differ ent railroads center in them. There were received, last year, about 9,003 trains, averaging thiry-one cars each, which would make a train reaching from New York to St. Louis and back, or 2,14t> miles. --A dispatch, dated Woodstock, says: "On the St Paul train leaving hare last night were John Crough, wife, and five small children, of Peterborough, Canada. Mr. Crough went to the smokiag-car, re maining there about eighty miles. On his return, one of the children, a little girl of 5 years, was missing. At Evansville he re ceived a dispatch that the child was safe. She started out after her father, and walked down the car steps. The train was running twenty miles an hour, but she was practi cally unhurt, and walked to a t house near the track." • --E. T. Dalzell. aged 35 years, son of the Rev. W. D. T. Dalzell, Dean of Shreveport Parish, Louisiana, born in Scotland, died at Mississippi City of consumption. He left Chicago two weeks ago. He began his journalistic career in Chicago as an editorial writer on the Herald in the latter part of 1881. At the time of his deiith he held an editorial position on a Chicago paper. Htt was educated at an English university, wax on the staff of Sir Garnet Wolseley during th^ Zulu war, resigned at the conclusion of the campaign and went to Jamaica, where he contracted the disease of which he died. During the Chili-Peruvian war he was a correspondent of English and American dailies. . --Philo Carpenter and Timothy Wright owned farms of ICO acres apiece in the very heart of the West Division, Chicago. Carpenter just hung on to his property, and to-day he is alive and enormously wealthy. Wright speculated with his and died poor. At the time of the panic of 1875 he owned real estate valued at $7,000,000, and had cash debts of $1,250,000. He tiied to settle, but the $7,000,000 worth of land would not pay his indebtedness. Nobody wanted it. He left town owning no land, but in debt $50,000. H. H. Honore was a rich man at the time of ibe Chicago fire, which badly crippled him. His faith was unbounded, however. He built one magnificent block and mortgaged it to build another. Then he mortgaged that and put up another. Thre? years later, under the pressure of hard times, he lost them all. Propeitv had depreciated so that none of his buildings would Fell for enough to pay oft the mortgage. He is a plain old man, who eats tobacco as he would bread. His two daughters, both beautiful, were brilliantly married, one to Pottjr Palmer and the other to Fred Grant.--New York tirqfJU?*; For Congress. ; * The list of party nominees for Contrail fiora this State is as follows. Those marked with a star have been renominated: District. Name. Address. Politics. I-- li. W. Dunham* Chi . go Kep. •T. B. Clarke Chicago <-bli. "Wm. B. Gates Hyde i ark. I ro. J--John F. Kinerty* lh ca-.ro Ind. Frank Lawler Chicago Din. 8--'William E. Mason Chicago .Kep. / E. Lee Chi sgo Pio. 4--George E. Adams* t hicago--. Rep. John P. A. Altgeld....Chicago Dem. H. W. Austin Oa*i ar< I n*. 5--Keuben Elwood* Sycamore Rep, P.i hard Bishop Wood-tock Dem. 6--Robert It. Hitt* Mt. Morris Rep. E. \V. Blaisdell ivocsford Dem. 7--Thos. .T. f<< n lerson'.Prin eton Hep. J. S. Eckels Princeiou Dcia. 8--X or man K.il born < Pr«x Ralph 11'.imb Streator. Kept Patilck C. Haley Joliet De<n. 9--Lewis E. l ayson Pontia ' Bern Rev. .Inmes Mrs Me amora .Dem. 10--N. H. ^ ortliineton*. 1 eor a Dtm. Jul us S. S-tarr Peoria Tet*. II--William 11. Neece*...Ma Jtnli Pern. Alex. P. I'etrie New Windsor.. ..itep It. H. Proadus Mucomb l'ro. !«>--James M. lliggs* Wln -hes.er T>era. T. G. lilac i Cla ton 11 p. A. T. Otr Carvo'k« n GL>K. 13--Win. M. Sprinter*....! pringiielj. ....l^eat James M. Taylor Taylorulle !>'*. T. S. Knoles Petersburg OI)*. 11--J. H. Howell* Blconii-ir.on Pep. * C. C l lurk Deo* n - l>elnv Wm. 1*. Randolph Cl nton lira, i.">--Joseph G Cannon*...J>*nvi:le Ttepk Joh • C. Klack Danville Peak. Willis W. .tones t aiusr. o Gbtc. Rev. T. J. Thornton. .Cha'l-'s oa 1 fa LC--S. Z. Landes. Mt. Cermet Deaa. ' * James 8. McCartney.. 1- airfield »p. IT--John 11. Ed.m .fnilivaa IKm. H. J. Hamlin Stielbyvil.e..... Jl®!*. Rev. J. i*. Cramer Irving ..Sro. 18--Wm. It M- rri-on* Wets r'oo IVoa. Thus. J3. N*e >dl a. >es vilie ..Kept l'j--R. W. T<;wnRh'»nd*. ..8hf*w'owa ...T,«a». Tho-». Hid?*--way Hnvaie-'tcwn.,-Ben. H. It. Sherman Faudma!-- 20--John It. li* • tty..Reiv F. E. Albright Mr: hvs::;oro... .I'cm. Rev. Alaneon 1'atia ..WctaSu .lift •« --Leon Ca relet, a prominent x*etc&ui& and politician of Maoou, is dead. >. '*1 * « • • i" *%. A » ' ' 1 ^ > *'»# • v f t * 3 ' * •*4*: $ i ** V' "5 m J- .1 'J JS | -•M-