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Show dti xt; our. The San Frsnri-co A flair Los-Ice Los-Ice Its IutereM. m OeVounu Cuius no Friends - New Yo.-k, 2S. News to-day is meagre. Tue excitement regarding t:e Francisco episode has nearly died out here, as it nas in California. The Herald says S.u. Francisco deserves more than ordinary credit for the entire subsidence of the ex dement over the Kalloch-DdYouug affair. The TnLujie has a dispatch from Cincinnati giving tue life of te Da-Youdcb Da-Youdcb a quarter of a cautury ago, when liiey lived over their little store in Fifto ctreet, together with testi-m testi-m on ais lro:n a Jewisa raDbi and editor of an Israelite paper, in retard to their respectability . Ibe departure for Iexas and later for California is described. Editorially, the Tribune says : The condition of society in which public peace is at any man's mercy can Dot be regarded as a healthy one. We are much obliged to Kearney, but euppose that he instead in-stead of Kalloch had been shot, what would the mob have done then ? The r.'wiM says: It may be that the DeYoungs, of San Francisco, really believe themselves to be of French descent, but their name ia not French. Mauy Dutch names begin with De. DeWitt means "Tua Wise;" DeYcung or DeYonge, a3 it is commonly com-monly and correctly spelled, means "Toe Young." It has nothing to do with the French "De" which means "Sn ol" or "From." De Quincy means "Iron Quincy," and is a French name; De (iroot moans "The great," and is entirely Dutch. It may give our French compatriots satisfaction to have it remembered that the assassin waa not of French origin on his paternal side, noiH'i-st&niir:; noiH'i-st&niir:; that New Orleans was bis b:r'.L.;,-.ace. l'je Philadelphia Xaticnal Bnptiat: "Of Kalloch personally we have not ing favorable to say. We have uo doubt of the extent of his abilities and poer of leadership, hut we do not believe him to be a good man. In .-cu. opinion tu3 tendency of his recent teachings has been disorganizing dis-organizing and de moral izi n e, yet he had the right to eay his aay, offensive as his ay is. If he violated any law, ho was amenable to law and not to tho hand ot" violence. vio-lence. The Tribune thinks Kearney could not have done less than oppose mob violence against DeYonng. A dema gogue infinitely lens shrewd than he would have avoided euch a blunder. Tuere micht have been murder. Tuere might have betu a conflagration, conflagra-tion, but there would have been no politic.! future for Denis Kearney or for his party had he counselled violence. |