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1 THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY, JANUARY 13, .187 TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. TERB OF STBSCIITION (PATADLE IN ADVARCE). Dellr Ly 12.00 | Sunda; Tri-Wealy. u.ubl Woekly Periaolar L the rame rate. To rreyent delay and mistakes, bo suro and give Post Ozice sedrest in fall, $ncluding State ~nd Countr. Remittances may be mado clther by dralt, expross, Post Office order, ot in registered lottere, at ovr risk. TERMS TO CITY EUBSCEIDERS. Defly, delivered, Sunday excepted, 25 con . Belly Clvered, Sz Sacmicd: 56 coue parveek: Address Z ‘THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, ‘Corner Madison and Dearborn-sta., Chicago, il TRMCSE Branch Ofice, No. 469 Wabash-ar., in the Booketcro of Mesers. Oobb, Audrows & Co., whero dvertizements and subscriptions wiil b reccivod, and will bavo tho same attontion 28 if loft at the Main Office. CONTENTS OF TO-DAY’S TRIBUNE. FIRRT PAGE—Washington, New York, Forelgn and Miscellancous Telegraphio News—Advertiscments. PAGE-Saturday Night's Tolegrams—Roal to. 4 HIRD PAGE—Railrosd Kews—Hydo Park Matters— The Perfumery War—An Unmazaerly Audience : {Communication]—Raiiroad Time Table—Adrcrtize- SEC ments. FOURTH PAGE~Editoriels: Tho Valueof Impudence; Tho Hyde Park Nufsance; Tho Raf!road Afd Law of 189; The Nortliern Pacific Rallroad—Current News Tioms. v FIFTH PAGF-Tho *‘Tipperary Courls"—The Farm =2 Garden—Tho Aplary—Adsertisoments. SIXTST PAGE-Monetary and Commercisl. SEVENTH PAGE—Firo Undervriting: History of Its Oparaticns {n tho United States—Tue Law Courts— Th2 lowa Tragedy—Small Advortiscments: Real . Tor Salo, To Rent, Wanted, Boarding, Qucstion—Tho Columbus Cenveation—The Rome Ceatrs Mysicry—Adrertisements TO-DAY'S AMUSEMENTS, ’S THEATRE-Xadicon strect, betwecn . Enpapementof Dion Boncfesolt ral-va-Pozne.” f ZCADENMV OF MUSIC— Halstad strect, soith of E roent of John Coliius, the Irish Come- “*Collzen Bawn,” HEATPE—Wabssh avenne, corner of Con. ot of Joseph Proctor. **The A HOUSE-Rsadolph street, be- Tew Comedy Compiy. fIODLEY'S OF oan Clask zad LaSelle. 12,7 MYERS' OPERA JIOUSE—Morroo strect, botween ‘0 cnd Doerborn, Arlington, Cotton & Kembla's etroiand Barlesque Treupe. Ethiopizn Comiealitfes. GLOBE THEATRE—Desplaines street, betwoen Madi- coaand Washiogton. Drmatie sad Musical Varietics. "BUSINESS NOTICES. CONSUMPTIVES, READ THIS CERTICATE. IT rocms Jfke raising ono from death. her minister: 1t s certitied to by PHILADELPHTA, Penn. =: About two years ool wes a pain in oy t, Ko =uy witbont my angthun 16, Tuon { appliod to a physician, ‘Attendud e for about threo monihs withont rendar- - Tatso chizined the sdvice crnd frozs, mo parpose. ‘Savoral tiros my 1 3 my exit into the spiric world. 1 was contined o months une tmo. My broathing was ox- 1 gevo-mp savorel times all hopo of Seregurds gotting well; that was tion. And 1o tnink, thl azm ms frieads to gatting better; ax Satirols ant of tho weltwnd pearty | Faae adttdua by eonto o s Dr. RCHENCI'S Medicines. 1 accordingiy- bought hottic aficr hottlo until I reaciied tho uinth; thenl fuund & docidzd elango jn my cough for Lbw becter, | ' sulrcd cvercly irom 150 paIpItAtion of te Bnd two weeks Fror T Sommonted Laking your medicincs thls AiBeuty ezzsad. “When T first west to Dr. Schenck's office 1t wes with disficulty that I could got up into his recsption-room. L \zs o weak and so swelled: yny ekin wis though 1 bad 102 jaun: 1t dull, hoary, and eleeps. 2 8 Dr. Scheack, afier o 4ag e, seid Loth my lungs bt TSR pn R, o | tock right Bold «ciues, in about Tiro week e 4o o Fight through fuonle Syrip, Seszod Bl Thok Hghy eald ta top riabt 3 of me,—it ssatem. The Pal- b 30 snd "hncnkfi. Pills, ail thiog ec: ‘o show what groat power The Socicins had in rariiptngzay petem, <80 o sl Fonr b I mek, Desids 2l the bilo that pasaed my_bowels, st oot ios o phicgm ond matier [ expeat § Erots pat ali ovet in fargo boils, (hat womld D rata un for_aboat shx weeks, aud 1 Srar trents-five Loiia, -1 avo nothing of geatiads to pa iad v oo time e tiad Bov. and frol Liko snother pérson altogether, 1 &nm eafoly pay hat X havo ot enjoyoa such hcelth for £xo “cannut raise you and your medi- i Ged abnndzadily bices and preserse Lu is tho = has been s wonder- il rrifered through yonr cgency i and §f any ora desiros card 1o the trutbruinss of this Fosort, If (L ou an of my. feiends, -or upon. e Ro. 514 Thompson-at., Philadelphiz, 1hoy-will bo it Toetly =atisii~d with 13 validity of the cie. Yours, p . ith mueh TV, 50SEPH H. BALDWIN. The abnre exco, ca daseribed, s parlootly corroct, T S 3 K . . MILLER. - Pastor. of Hancock i, k. Church. CHARLES G. JOHANSON. of Bristol, Pesiv, nliowss ounc s inear:.bly fixed in tho last stage of Pulmonary Dayiion by 150. skilful physicisns, sad at tho Lmo PR eunanelcis w1{h these medicines, saye: . * 1 was CSfuring soforings that mado lifo 2, cxperl: eacing great paia o coughing, cxpectorzting from a pint 10 & quart of uauleoUs Imailer every tweaty-four hours, S adusllr eiaking undortha weakeninz Brogross of my 53&.] :, rad had felion away fn {lesh frow 170 pounds to 3 catirely cured, andat this time, after many & labar, my welgh: {8 ovor 200 pounds. T hive BT 25 for s long (im: 'S’ PULMONIC_ SYRUP,' SEA-WEED NDRAKE PILLS, prepared by J. H. N, nor:hieast corner SIX1' and ARGH. LPHIA. Forsalo by all druggists and [Tobocontinnod.] The Chivags Tribune, Ifonasy Morning, Januery 13, '1873. Ars. Lydia Sherman, of Connecticut, conviet- ed of Killing Ler husband by poison, has been sentenced to State Prison for lifc The Springfield Repullican thinks {hat Ogkes Ames (tho three-millionsire) onght to be sshamed of himaelf for taking $600 a8 » dona- tion from Schuyler Colfax to koep himeelf (Ames) out of bankruptey. The Senzte Finauce Committes bave decided that Secretary Boutwell had mo right to- isene exny of the resarve fund of £46,000,000. If they ere upheld in this view by Congress, the Secre- ey will Lo compelled to call in bis issues of last October. Stokes' lawyers Lave finiehed the bill. of ex~ cesptions to the rulings of the Court in the last triel. They will take it, beginnidg with Judge' Besrdmen, in succes: to each of the thirty- oae Judges of the Supreme Court of the State, wuiil soms cne in found to grant wnew trial. If one euch s found, Stokes will be banged, un-, less the Governor interferes. - To-day-there will bo & double inauguration in ew Orleans. McEnery and Pinchback willJeach te proclaimed Goveraorof Louisinre, The peace ©f the Stata has cailived the simultanecns ses- , sions of the two Legislatures, both of which are sitting, 2nd, if Piochback may be trusted, thore" / sill be o interferenco with the Fusionist Ex- eutive 50 long a5 ho assumes no official powers. Louis Napoleon be buried .Wednesday. The Eaglich Court gacs into. mournig. for ten days in respect to his memory. * No other official rytice secms to havo ‘boen taken of his death, except in the Iitlian Chamber, in which the denth of Napoleon was ennounced by the Min- icter of the Interior, who -praised Lhim for the part he had taken in the unification of Ilaly. Sanator Samner's physician attends him twico - Itis twenty years singe Preston Brooks eiruck him to the ground, but the’ force of the iow is not epent, and it xiay yet prove fatal. Yesterdoy the Senator was better, and said-he cted to take his seal again this week, but friends are not so hopeful. s g *r. James Brooks’ gon-in-law has been soit | totestify in the Credit Mobilier case, Ad- @:ceal trouble is in store for Mr. Brooks in the just began by Durant against him and Oakes Awmes. This is to recover s large number of shares which, it ig charged, wero fraudulently obteined, and some of which Ames applied to private uses, while protonding that he had given them to Congressmen. e — The State Treasurer of Kansas fostifien that Le was told by Senator Caldwell, bofore the Sen- atorial election, to send him any members of the Legislature whose votes were for sale. He nemes State Senator Sayres s the one who brought the highest price, £5,000; ordinarily not more than 1,000 was paid for a vote. Oth- er witnesses swear to the use of money in Sena- tor Caldwell's behalf by his agents, and name some legislators who wanted as much as £2,000 for their virtue. The Committee of Beventy of New York has done well foritsclf. One of its members is now Governor of the State, another, Attorney Gen- eral, and a third is Mayor of Now York. Three Judges of the Supreme and Superior Courts, the New York City Register, Franz Sigel, the Coroner, Comptroller Green, and a groat many other officeliolders, have bcen its membera. Some of these oftices—those, for instance, of Attorney General, Register, and District Attor- noy—are gaid to be worth from £50,000 to $100,- 000 & year. 3 AMrs. Ellen C. Wharton, whose trial for the slloged murder of Gonersl Ketchum, which brought ont the famous conflict between medical and chemical oxperts, will be remembered, 18 nOW on trial once more, for attempting to take the lifo of Eugene Van Ness, a young gentleman who was ill in her house when General Ketchum died. The main feature of the prezent caso will be the introduction of Professor Aikin’s chemi- cal testimony by the prosecution, which will, of coures, lead to o repetition of the counter-testi- mony which wea introduced in the Ketchum cneo. Tha prospects, therefore, are good for Ler acquittal eyain. .The Common Coucil to-night will again con- eider tho Reviced Ordinances. Thero is no con- troversy npon anypart of these ordinancesexcept that relaling to the closing of saloons on Sun- day. This part has been amended 50 88 t0 per- mit satoons to be open on Sunday aftzr 1 o'clock p-m. There are four or five members who have’ Leen sbsent at the previcus meetings when this question was considerod, and thoso in attend- ance have beon so evenly divided that the change of a single voto may detormine tho ques- tion. There should bo.a full attondance to- mighit, and the Council should vote down all at- tempts to change or repesl tho law. Let tho power remain in the hands of the Mayor, 23 it now esists. It is a conservative force which the community cannot afford o dieperse with. Tho charge brought by Ames, Alley, and Brooks ageinst K'Comb is, that Lie is trying to blackmail the Credit Mobilier Company, and 148 been nsing tho private letters of Ames end the reputations of Congressmen 'in order to ex- tort money. - 'Comb,. on the other hand, al- leges that Ames tcok Lis (3PComb's) stock to distribute among Congressmen, instead of tak- ing what was set apart for thet lofty purpose. The suit in tho Penusylvanis Court was inati- tuted to turn Ames' pocket inside out, and seo what had become of L'Comb's stock. Hence these tearsa! It eppears. nmow by the investigation that 875 shifes of mtock woro entrusted to Ames to be - placed “vhere it would do most good to us’ But Ames has accounted for the distribution of only 180 ehares. There are still 195 shares out. What beceme of them? Are theso the shares that M'Comb is after, or were other Congress- men, whose names have not been published, made the subjocts of Credit Mobilier blandish- ments 2 The Davenport Gazlie advocates &n appro- priation by Congress to - improve tho navigation of the Mississippi River, and especinlly that por- tion below New Orleans. The particular im- provement wanted thore is the St. Philip Ship Canal, the cost of whick ia estimated at nbout 27,000,000, The Gazlle thinks - that this im- provement would carry off & large part of the surplus products Northwest. We think it would carry off justas ‘much as the Mississipp1 River now takes, and no more. Corn at the mouth of the Mississippi is as far fromits principal marketas it is at Davenport. This principal market1s not Europe, but the Eastern States of America. The Northorn Lakes, and the Erio Canal, and tho St. Lawrence River are precisely on the line of this market. The Mississippi River, with or withont the St. Philip Ship Canal, i not. Tho lakes ond canal can be <used 28 many montbs . in tho year as the Upper Mississippi, and the St. Lawrence ia closed by ice but little more. Seven million dollars can bo epent to bottor advantage for tho Upper Missis- sippi conntry than by digging a canal below New Ouleans, The guestion whether E. B. Washburne in- vented Grant, and made thrce million dollars “ by his patriotic devotion to the interests of his constituenis of the Third Cougressional District,” is ezciting some discussion, in the populous and wealthy County of Whiteside, In the Btate of Illmois. The Morrison Independent hoids the affirmative in the debate by insinua- tion rather than by direct chargo, and Mr. A.A. Terrell, 8 Literal Eepublican, mamiains the: negitive in the columns of the Sterling Gazette. * Mr. Terrell thinks that 3r., ‘Washburne, during his career in . Congress, fairly earmed the title of the - bull-dog of the Treasury,” and that the insinuations of the Independent aro tho vilest elander. Wethink | that Mr. Washburoe bull-dogged the Treasory more ‘or lese, according to circamstances, and that he clothed himself with economy as with & garment. That he ever made three millions of- dollars at any vocation, i8 a very wild and b surd statement. Tho Morrison Independent is a rather sensctional, blackguard mewspaper. Mr. Terre informs us that the name of the editoris Searle. - It ehould havo been Surly. *The Chicago produce markets were moderately active on Saturday, and genecrally firm. Mess porkwas in fair demand and a shade firmer at £11.80@11.85 cash, and £12.25@12.30 eellor March. Lard was rather quiet, and 2}¢@5c per 100 Ibs higher, at $7.20@7.25 cash, and £7.55 seller March. Meats were quiet and steady at 83{@33c for ehoulders; 53{@53ec for short ribs 5 6@63go for short clear; and 73@Se for green hams averaging from 16 to 15 Ibs. The packivg of this city to date is 788,210 hogs, against 830,585 to same time last year. Dressed hogs were in good demand, and 2}@3c ‘per 100 ths higher, st -4.50 for hesvy to $L65 for light. Highwines were quiet and firm.at 8% per gallon. Flour was steady, and more active. -Whaat was moderately ective, and 246 lower, closing at $1.20} cash, and $1.2134 seller Feb- ruary. Corn was dull andsteady, closing st 30)¢ @80%ocash. -lnd 91@8} 340 sellor Fibmry. Oata of tho were more activo, and }(@2X¢c higher, closing at 253¢c cash, and 254 scller February. Rye was quiet and steady at 67c. DBarloy was in good de- mand snd firm, closing at 66@66}4c for No. 2, and 5icfor No. 3. Catile wero moderately ac- tive, and steedy. Hogs were active and firm, at £3.90@8.95 per 100 1bs for fair lots, The Soldiers’ Dounty Land bill, now pending in the Senate, is a bill to confer the smallest possible benefit upon tho eoldiers, ot the largest poseible cost to the country. The Government, long ago, offerod its public lands (by the Home- stead law) to actual settlers, including soldiers, for nothing. This bill virtually repeals the Ifomestead law, for it sweeps away the entire public domain. If the Homesiead act wasa wise - and beneficent measure, this Bounty bill is an unwise and nefarious one. We lay down tho proposition as indisputable, that no man needs to get land for less tlhan nothing. Any soldior can get 160 acres of land for nothing. He ought not to have it any cheapor. If it is the monoy-valuo of .the land thatis wanted, then far better wonld it be to appro- priate the amount from the Treasury, and renew the income-tax to raise it, for the laud is e fixed and limited quantity, whilo the monsy that can be raised by taxation is practically without limit. If the amonnt of money which the soldiers would actually got ont of the Bounty Land bill could be accurately estimated and eeparated from the expected gains of speculators, it would not require an enormons appropriation to satiafy their claims. The amendments proposed to tha Criminal Code of New York, by Mr. Clinton, an pttorney of Now York City, bavo been prosented to the State Assembly in the shape of three bills, and referred to the Judiciary Committee. Ozo amendnient establishes o fixed penslty for per- sons convicted of maurdor undar insanity, the penalty to bo imprigonment in a Blate lunatio asylum for o term.of not less than fifteen nor moro that thirty years. Another proposes to divide the crime of murder into two degrees. In this ho holds that ell killing, unlessitbe manslaughter or justifiablo homicide, should bo murder in the first degres, ““if perpetrated from o premeditzted and deliberate design toeflect tho death of thoperson killed, or of any other human being; or when perpetrated by any act immi- nently dangerous to others, evincing a depraved mind regardless of human life; although with- out any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual; or when perpe- | trated without any dosign to effect death by a jereon engaged in the commission of any felony; and that such killing, unloss it ‘be murder in the first degree, or manelaughter, or cxcusable or justifiaklo homicide, elall b murder in the eecond degree when perpetrated intentionally. without premeditation.” Tho other prominent fenture of Mr. Clinton's code is, that whenever g convict shall be sentenced to tho punish- ment of death, the Court, or o major part there- of, of whom the presiding Judge shall always be one, ehall issue o warrant stating such convie- tion and sentence, and appointing tho dsy of exeention, which shall not be less than twelve woeks, nor more than sixteen, from the timo ‘of the sentence.” THE VALUE OF INPUDENCE. Thera can bo no doubt of the value of impu- dence as an economical forco in life. = Thero is 10 surer way to get gold than to Inyina good stock of brass, By moral impudence somo men have even reached canonization. By social im- pudence, many & man, without a dollar in his pocket, or an idea in his head, or & drop of blue blood in his veins, has ehouldered his' way into the very penetralia of good society. Impu- denco may be carried to the verge of sublimity, and, for s time, may the world. Impu- denco hos pushed its possessor to the topmost Leights of power more than once in our political history. In all the records of public’ im- pudence, however, there has been lordly snything to compete with the claim of John B. Alloy, that his partnor in tho Credit 3lobilier, Mr., Oakes Ames, is entitled to a monument as a publicbenefactor. Of courso, if Ames is entitled to 8 monument, Alley ought to have a shrino. ‘These great publip benefac- tors aro moved with virtuons indignation that they and their affairs ghould bo subjected to of- ficial aerntiny, and that charges of bribery and corruption should be brought against them— they, the foundors of the Credit Alobilier, which built the great Union Pacific Road over moun- tains, through doserts, and all that. . Let us seo how far their impudenco is justi- fied, and how far their claim to the gratitude of the country will bear the test of pure mathemat- ics. After gotting & donation of twenty-seven millions of dollars from the Government, and tho right to raiso twenty-seven millions more on- first-mortgage bonds of the road, Afr. Oakes Ames, and Mr. John B. Alley, and the other pub- lic benefactors, sit down with slate and pencil and caleulats . how much it will take to build the road, orrather that first section of 500 miles over a'perfectly lovel country which the Credit Mobilier contracted to build, including fifty- eight miles already finished by the Union Pacifio Company; bow many tons of irom it will fako; how many bridges sare to be built, and how much the ditehing {o carry off the rain will cost. - ‘If they find upon reaching tho Black Hills that it don’t pay to go further, they can abandon the rest. Having figured this up, they turn tho slate over end calculate how much they can get out of " the Government, how much out of the public, and how much into thewr own pockets. Then, having taken measures * not to te interfered with” by Congress, . they go to work. The first 500 miles, 8 level as a barn floor, pays enormously. On the :next 500 miles thoy get & double subsidy, and that, too, pays enormously. In the cnd they present the Government with a second-class ‘road, pocket 1,505 pes cent in dividends of cash, stock, ‘and bonds, hold themselves up before the people as the victims of persecution, and claim’ public monnments for themselves! Has not Oskes Ames built a great publichighway from ocean to oczan ? theyesy. Has he not accomplished the most gigantic work of the century ? - Is he not, therefore, entitled to the everiasting gratitude of the country? Is it not a shame that he should bo exposed to such ecriticism of bis acts, to an investigation of the manner “in which he accomplished his work; and’ even .to tho suspicion of ‘corrupt practices instituted to cover up financial itregu- larities? This attempt to offset a great public ‘work sgainst a great private fraud, to make the eccomplishment of this work, which has been paid forat the rate of 1,505 per cent, an excuse for chicanery and bribery, atrikes us as the very height of impudence. We hear much in this investigation about the wickedness of Jemes Tisk, Jr., and his wicked lawsuit against the Union Pacifle, Wodn: abn .l v A that can be claimed by Ames over Fisk, 80 far a4 mopey matters are concerned. Both had colosazl impudence. One of them bribedat Albany and the other at Washington. But, with all his sssuyance, James Fisk, Jr.,nev- er bad impudence enough, when he was taxed by opposing counsel in his numerons suits with the mannerin which ho had made his money, to pretend that he had conferred a great public benefit upon the country, and therefore was not only excusable, but ought to be admired, and ought to have a public monument. We ehall not ovarlook, nor underestimate, any of Mr. Ames' services in the coustruction of tho Pacific Railway, but we insist that the risk Lo ran in thet onterprisa has boon reduced to & nogative quantity in the light thrown upon it by the investigation. If Ames is entitled to credit for bringing Alley and other capitalists into it, then is Durant entitled to greater credit for bringing Ames in. When the investigation reaches the door of Durant, ifit ever gets go far, wo venturo to say Lo will not proffer hia claims to 2 public monument as an offsot to charges of bribery and corrnption. - THE HYDE PARK NUISANCE. In cousidering the jssue between the City of Chicago and the Town of IIydo Park, the ques- tion erises: What is the chiof end of man? The catechism says it is to glorify God and enjoy Him forevor. In an earthly sense, however, the chief end of man is to bave & comfortable home. It is not the chief end of man to kill hogs and “pack pork; still less to create and diifuso offen- givé odora which deprive us of comfortable homes. The City of Chicago includes among its many branches of trade the slaughtering and packing of beef and pork. In the managemont of its internal transportation busiress it employs & vest number of animals, of which largo num- bers die deily. The carcagses of ‘thoso dead ani- mals, and tho offal from the slaughter houses, at’ certain seasons, amount to 100 tons daily. Tho health of the city and the comfort of ifs people domand that this immense mass of animal matter ebell be removed im- modiately. Somo years sgo = Compeny was chartered with suthority to purchase end remove all this stuff,’and with author- ity to eréct buildings, provide machinery, and generally carry on the business of mannfactar- ing this animal matter into various articles of commerce. The Company, in 1867,—sa long time ago in the history of Chicago.—erected their works near Ainsworth, & station on the Pitts- burgh & Fort Wayne Railway, and at that time within the Town of Calumet. From this station they had their tracks laid to a point south of the city, in the Town of Lake, to whick point sl the dead animal matter of the city was brought, placed on the cars, and haaled off to the factory. In tho meantime, Chicago had mede rapid strides southward, The submbin Town of Hyde Park Dad obtaived an expansion of its torritorial lim- its by the addition of a large slice of the Town of Calumet, ircluding the factory and grounda of this Northwestern Fertilizing Company. How- over remote this estsblishmont may have been from the habitations of man in 1867, it i3 e0o no longer. . Population - has spread out all over the once uncovered prairio, and Ainsworth may now be said to be on the-very boundaries of the city. A few weeks 2go, tho worka of the Northwestorn Fertilizing ‘Company burned down.- Under their contracts with the city, they are compelled to haul away the refuse animal matter evory day, and, having no other placo to put it, they have unloaded their cars upon the prairie, depending npon the frost and the liberal use of chemicala to keop the immense mass harmlees until such time as they can restoro their buildings and works. At this point the peoplo of Hyde Park interpose. They eay that this Company has no authority, and nover bad authorily, to create a nuisance ; that the hauling of thia stuff, and emplying it upon the fields at the rate of 100 tons a day, is rot only a nuisance, but an intolerable one. The suthorities, therefore, by special ordinance, mado it a penal offence to transport or banl any offal, dead animals, &e., into or through the villago of Hyde Park, and thoy caused thoarrest of cer- tain persons connected with the railway trains and fined them 350 each. The Fertilizing Com- paoy bave obtained & temporsry injunction egainst interforenco by the authorities of Hydo Park, and thoro the matter stands for tho pres- ent. This question, however, must bo eottled at some iime, and may as well bo sottled now. That the offel and dead animals are & nuisanco to the city, that can only be provented from Be- coming pestilential by removal,. is undoubted. That tho establishment of the Northwestern Fertilizing Company, or of any other company, for tho conversion of ‘this dead animal matter into any other substance, is a nuisence, the people of thia city, speaking from long oxperi- ence, will affirm as beyond controversy. The fact that the Gity of Chicago would not por- mit the location of suchan establishment within or near its limits is conclusive aa to what Chicago thinks upon the subject. " It follows, then, that the location of such an establishment +in Hyde Park, or Evanston, or Riverside, or at any other place, must be equally a nuisance to the community living Within the widespread ares infected with its fumes, and -breathing the air rendered sickening and atrocions by its horri- ble odors. Baut it is claimod that. Chicago is o groat city, and a large portion of its commerce consists in the traffic in animals, and inthe mest packed here by, our slaughtering establishments, and that we must chooso betwoen sacrificing this immense business and maintaining the nui- eance ; and that it is particularly ungracious for the people of Hydo Park to object to this nnis- ence when'they .are so much indebted fo” Chi- cago for thelr profits. The fect thatit is s nui- sance cannot be denied 8o long 28 Chicago will ‘not permit the works to be located in the city on" eny terms. Bo far as ‘the choice i8 be-’ tween: ‘gacrifiding the packing business and having these works in Chicago, the matter has already . been determined. It is now whether we will insist on maisitaining the npighnce in Hyde Park. Hyde Park ssys wo shall noi, 2nd we' do not well sco how Hyde Park can eay anything else. The claim that this work is done by & chertered Company, and there- fore euch Company is superior to the law re- garding nuisances, is an absurd one. What~ ever rights the Company has are held subordi-~ nate to the requirement that .they shall not be exerciged to the injury of the rights of others. ‘There can -be no such thing 28 & legal nuisance ; there can be no charfered right ‘to maintain & nuisance. In 1867, the City of Chicago required that this nnisance be removed fourtesn miles from ‘the centre of the city. In the interval, popula~ tion and settlement have advanced far into the pollnted atmosphere. Hyde Park protests, and T 2 R S B R PO the nuisance farther awsy. It is no greater hardship to be compelled to -move fourteen miles now than it was in 1867. Having becoms an intolerable nuisance, thig establishment must bear the fate of all such bad neighbors, and move on. Its products are sold at the East, and each milo its factory moves eastward it will be that much nearer to market. Tho talk abont sacrificing the businessof Chi- cago by breaking up this nuisance in Hydo Park isidle. There was s time when this offal was thrown into the river, and it was then declared that to stop that nnieanco would be to drive the packing business away, Bat tho law wss en- forced; then came tho factory at Bridgeport, and at last the one at Ainsworth; and now, in tho progross of the city'’s growth, is tho require- ment that it go' farther off. But admitting that wa have no choice, and that we must endure this fearful nuisanco or stop killing acimals by the million, the question with which we begin this article arises, whether hog and beef killing is the chief end of man? snd whether our morsl and physical health, comfort and enjoyment, must bo subordinated to the privilego of a faw por- sons to slaughter animals and dry their offal in the open air? Ts that the end for which we were ‘brought into the world? Are the heelth and comfort of the 459,000 peopls of Chicago ond its suburbs nothing against the grest charter to slanghter cnimals and convert their offal into manure ? THE RATLROAD AID LAW OF 1869. In 1869, the Legislature of this State provided by lsw that, in all those counties, towns, and cities where bonds had boen, or might bo, issued in sid of railrosda, 6o much of the Stato tax ns might be collected upon an incresse of asscss- ment over that of 1863 should bo held in the State Troasury, and applied to the payment of interest on said bonds. It further stipulated that all taxes levied and collectad for Stato rev- cnue from the -property of euch railroadsin such counties, towns, and cities should be set apart to tho credit of sach municipal- ity, .and applied to tho peyment of its railrosd indebtedness. The bonds to which the benefits of thisact were to extend wera to bo registered in tho offics of the State Auditor, which officer was to be- come {he fiscal agent of the municipalifies in disbursing these funds. This act was wrong and unjust upon overy principle of honesty and law. their proper share of taxation; it was an appro- priation of State revenue to pay local debts, and waa an increase of taxation upon other parts of tho State. In the reports of the Anditor for the last two years wo find 3 statement of the amonnt of railroad aid bonds registered in his office. Thoy are thus stated: 41 cotnties hava registered bonda. 3 1S5 townships.. 13 cities.. 7,000 24 incorporated to: 405,000 557,450 1,299,156 Total raflroad debt. -§13,393,058 The tax collscted to pay intercst, cic., on this debt for 1870 cnd 1871 was $2,079,206, of which £176,565 was accounted for in abatoments, com- miesions, etc. The amount of Slate iax sc- questered to pay theso Iocal debts was 1870. Tex on increased sascssment. .. 1870, Tus on railroad property. 1371, Tax on increased assessment 1571 Tax on. rallroad property. Total {n 1870 and 1871 .. e veeseecvesnenns, $121,167 From tho tax of 1872 there will probably be taken, at least, $125,000, and the amount will increase annually. The whole lovy -for State rovenua in 1871 was five and one-half mills, The revenue collscted under that levy and ap- plied to this local debt was $95,000. Conse- quently, it was a relensd from State taxation of property in theso privileged counties, towns, and cities having an assessed value of noarly £20,000,000. Tho Constitution in force in 1869, 28 woll ns the prosent Constittion, required that tho tax for Stato purposes should be levied ipon all property alike; it also prohibited the State from lending ita credit to, or assuming the debts of, any corporation. In the face of this, hereis o proceeding which is o relense of $20,000,000 of property. from taxation; or a loan of tho credit'and a plodge of tho State revenues equal to tho tax on $20,000,000 of proverty; or it is an annual appropriation of £120,000 to pay the in- terest on the local indebtodness of certain conn- ties, towns, and cities. Howover it may bere- garded, it is a gross fraud upon the other por- tions of the Stato. Had tho - State, instead of following Lise prectice of lovying the taxes npon ‘'a one-fifth valuation, Jowered the rates, and adopted the cash valuation as the basia for taxa- tion, four-fifths of the State revenue in these privileged connties, towns, and cities wonld have been lost to the State, and would bo cp- plied to these local debts. There is notbing to justify or oxtenuato this diversion of the State taxes for local purposes. THE RORTHERN PACIFIC RATLWAY. The address of Hon. Goorgo W. Cass to the | Directors of the Northern Pacific Railway, on accepting the Presidency of that Company, pub- lished in Saturdsy morning's issue, is a brief but very comprehensive document. General Cass carefully examined the country through which the rond runs, and from his own personal | observation came to the conclusion that theline bod all the advantagesthathad overbeen claimed for it. His experience of many years in the management of the Pennsylvania Central, and his great energy and sbility ‘as & railway-builder and manager, will inepire confi- dence that the Northern Pacific will be built as economically as pogeible, and that it will be ‘mannged for the best interesta of its stockhold- ers and the public. There will be no Credit Mobilier under his management of the Northern Pacific. = The road wag_completed to within a ‘few miles of tho Missouri River last” summer, und, -by thne ' time navi- gations opens, it will be finished to that point, and with aline of steamers will at once’ command the trado of Montana.. Should the Company decide to build tho, section through the mountains next stmmer,—a8 wehavo scen it stated it would,—some 350 miles between the head of navigation on the Missouri_and the Co- Iymbis_ Rivers, stesm communication can be ‘opened next year across the continent by this _route. In any event, whatever can be done to build the roadin the most rapid manner con- siatent with econdmy, General Cass will ba sure to do. "A Baltimore journal bas discovered that crime is materially increased by the warm weather. tion between the extent of ‘crime and the extent of population is always about the same. Thiais & principle that has long eince boen demonstrat- ed, but the influence of weather is & new ele- ment in the causes-of crime. Tho number of vagrants is found to increase eteadily from Janu- ary to July, aod then to decrcase s the cold weather comes on. The cases It was a release of certain localities from - kmown a3 * ordinary drunks*in the Polica Courta, follow the same rule. In other words, the num- ber of those who take a drink because it is hot is greater than those who take a drink becausa itis cold. Whether this discovery will te teated 80 ecurately as to introduce excessively warm weather as & new palliation for the crime of murder, or to induce the reformers to ctrivo for au equalization of temperature all the year round, remains to be seen. % ——— Thero is trouble in the Pruseian military cir- cles just now to decide upan 8 uniform system of nomenclztare for military purposes. The 0ld Prussian army retains the technical French phrases which were adopted by Frederick the Qreat, while the new contingents of the Middle States use tho German terms. The older oflicers favor the retention of the French system, while the greator enthusiasm of the younger patriots makes them incline to pure Teutonic phrases. They do not want it said any longer that & Goz- man army cannot be handled without the French tongae. The London correspondent of the Scofsman says that the author of * Alice’s Adventures in Wonderlaad,” and “Through the Looking- Glass,”is the Rev. Mr. Bollgson, of Christ's Churck, Oxford. The author bas hitherto been considered to be one of the Parliamentary reporters of the London ZTimes. Thero are thousands of readers, adults a8 well as children, who will be glad to know the real anthor of the most successful childsen’s story ever published ~* Alice's Adventurcs." There has probably never beforo been & juvenile book that has had 80 many grown-up readers and admirers as this. . Figures are inexorable, and they sometimes cut funny cepers. For instance, a letter appears {rom Secretary Belknap, asking for a special ap- propriation of §100,000 to furnish the army with stoves, $20,000 alreedy having been exhausted for that purpose. As thero are 90,000 moa in the army, this would give each mans £4 stove, South as woll as North. The curions reader will ask what every man in the army wants a $4 stove for. —_—— NOTES AND OPINION. The Republicans of Now Hampéhire, nt Con- cord, to-morrow, wiil nomifats Governor Ezekiel A, Straw, of Manchester, for re-election, and will make their Congressional nominations on Wednesdsy, and complete their local tickets this week, The Democrats have already nominated ex-Governor James A. Weston, of Manchester; and tho Temperance people have nominated the Rov. John Blackmer, of Sandwich. These wers all candidates in the election last March, when the vote was: Straw, 99,671; Weston, 36,585; Blackmer, 478; Cooper (Labor-Reform), 540. What the Labor-Reformers will do is not, as yet, indicated. Their coalition with the Demccrats in 1871 made Weston the Governor that year. The Demcerats will renominate Congressmen Hibberd, Boll, and Parker, who were elected in 1871; and the Republicans most named are: First District—Samuel M, Wheeler, of Dover; William B. Small, of Newmarket. Second—Aus- tin F. Pike, of Franklin. Third—Simon G. Griffin, of Keeno; Lovi W. Barton, of Newport ; H. W. Blair, of Plymouth. Mcssrs. Small and Griffin were the unsuccessful candidates in 1871, —The Kentucky Legislature will most likely confirm tho. Governor's appointment of Willis B. Machen to occapy the late Garrett Davis’ seat in, the Soncte until March 8, althongh other per- gons are named a8 not unwilling to accept the ‘brief honor. —Galens wants Congreas to vote £200,000 for the improvement of Fever River; and Dubuque wantg Congreas to bnild for it a great freo bridge across the Mississippi. —Congress, ‘at tie instance of * 01d Pom.,” voted £300,000 to reimburse people of Kansas for sorvice during the Price raid of 18645 but it séems “that tho Treasurer of Kansas had issued scrip of the same kind for servico in'that raid, end for other service, including the Indian ex™ pedition under Cartis, and that the $330,000 has beon paid out indiscriminately to first-comers. Now the Price raiders, many of whom wers’ un- served in the distribution, clamor for another £200,000, and *Old Pom.” says, if heisre- electad, they ahall havo it. . —8Several of the cpposition members, in feeble minority of the New York Legislature, floun- dered into the Conkling caucus, and took the oath of allogiance. —The Postmasters, editors, and party lesdera in Tows, have notably changed their tona on the Rankin defalcation, and no longer wear the bold front of ** What are you going to do about it "] ;fi"m“ of the organs (ss the ‘Burlington Hawk ,ye) demand that Rankin shall receive the pen- alty of the law, both fine and imprisonment. Others are growing bolder in criticism of Gov- ernor Carpenter, who, by failing to arrest the Treasurer, gave him time to transfer the defal~ cstion from the State ‘Treasury, secured by official bond, to the Agricaltural Collego Fund, unsecured. And now, inquiry into the worth of the property turned over: by Rankin to the fand he hod defranded, dovelops that “it will never: yield-one cent.” There is evidently s grand awakening of the peaplo of Towa to tha fact that the Stato Treasury is now, by means of ‘wastefol expenditurs, $500,000 in defanlt ; that State warrants are protested in bank; and that & debt of eome millions is in prospect, as the work of - A 5 The Desifoines State Houso lobby ; The Anamosa Ponitentiary lobby ; The Fort Madison Penitentiary lobby 3 Tho BMt, Pleasant Insane Hospital lobby ; Tho Vinton Blind Asylum lobby ; ® The Council Biuffs Deaf and Dumb Asylum lobby 3 The Independence Insane Asylum lobby; The Eldora Reform School lobby ; - - The Tows City University lobby ; Tha Ames Agricultural Collego lobby Aid two or turce Orphan_Asstum lobbes, —Tho Iowa City, Republican odited by Post- master Brainerd, speaking of “The Empty ‘Treasury,” soys R . Tow has this trouble tnd Alrgrace come upon ua? Simply because a msjority of our legislators have been incompetent for their work, They have been unable to calculate the resources of the Btate, and have as- sumed them to be vastly greater than they were. They entered upon the building of anew Capitol, which will: «cost at least two millions of dollars, if ever completed, and for which, in such magnitade, we have no more use than for oneof the pyramids of Egypt.’ Upon en~ tering upon this monster job, they had the cool impu- denca (o resolve that it should involve the State {n no extra taxation | A more foolish and contemptitile res- olntion was never passed, and yetwe aro asaured that by it enough Votes were secured 'to carry the measure. Bat wo arain for the two million Cepitol i The “majority of -our Legislature,” declared a8 above * incompetent,” is composed of.120 Re- publicans against 30 Democrata. ~—The Waterford (fowa) Courler, edited by 3. | C. Woodruff, who came near being the Republi- can nominee for Congress in the Banner Repub- lican District, doclares that the Anamoss Peni- tentiary job is full of rottenness, and- that “there has been evidently something of the ‘Tammeny hocus-pocus” in the purchase of the quarry and the location of the prison grounds.”. ‘These the Courier demands shall bo investigat-* ed, ““and let it not be s burleaqio.” The Courier Bay8: i e 39 = With an empty treafury, made so by extravagant, £0d, o bellovs, UNDBCGRLTY ADETOPHAGORS 1 with & State debt now rapidiy on the way to £3,000,000; with Dbeavy individual indsbtednesa, embracing full three- fourths of the voting population ; with low prices for Tl the products of both farm and f ; with a stringency in the money mirkets unequalied since the general crash of 1838;—when to these {s superadded the cloudy outlook toward the fature, fow can doubt what duty requires. E —Tho Mt. Pleasant (Tows) Press says: ‘A new Insane Asslum {2 buflding a¢ Independencs, on which already $400,000 have been expended without completing the central bullding. Two wings, with fur- iture, etc., will run the cost 1o very handsore mill- fon! Our institution hers, completed, inciuding 352 acres of 1snd, has cost less than $500,000! Bat tholog- roliing lobby nowadays ia moze expensive thzn it used 10 be, and the dear people’s money perhaps is plentler | Perbaps 1 B —The Sioux City Journal having remarked that ex-Treasurer Rankin will probatly get enough punishment in -“the pains of con~ science,” the Dubuque ZTimes, a first-rato Re- publican authority, answora In our judgment, something ought to be dome now calculated to erfectuslly restrain any successor of Mr, TRankin from following in his footsteps. We bave Do Tigit to give ay sympathy to Mr. Rankin thst we ought not to expect to give o every other man who the Treasurer'a offics Y o funds, whenho docs Biler thes, Tl eas o8, & 16 is first offence, We shall probably never pos o3 any man wode family nd porsonal retions ot command for him the samo charitabls considenlot nowasked in this case. ATo we to say, then, fhay Treasurer who dishonors bia trazt 30l Lo paahield Certainly that is what wo do ey when wa tay, T ground “ocenpied by, tho Jouri i, Wt the ol g at como from deiestion is pe egough. SHR Y paitiant ~—Thoe Pennsylvania Legislature has begun incroasing the Governor’s salary to $9,00. The menagors wanted to make it 31¢,000, tud eraciag their whip, but some of the followers kickea Spoaker Elliott came down from tho chair fg eay that Hariranft was worths of $10,090, urep twico as much; and, in answor to a fesble Yoles, —we quoto from tie report— : 3. Elliott eaid that tho Republ " canvass, made 10 pretenca nmenfiuTnfle"(‘aEmmh" Tho Defnocrats assumed that position, g —Misaiasippi olects, Nov. %, a Governor ang other oficers for terms of four years, and a Feg, isjatare which will be the making or nnmakiy dear littlo Adelbert Ames. Sonator Aloons ho scorns his baby-collezgue, has determir, to put a man in bis place or break things fn g attompt. *’DeL” wants Papa Butler {o tell hon: rid Alcorn that he ehan't. —The New York Tribune saysof the libad apon itself, printed in’ the Brooklyn Tion asg tbe New York Times: W have instracted our counsel tobr t both, and pross them to prompr st 1o thi summons was Servod on Saturday, W abad oy thelitels (1) by proving that the circulation cf oy Tribuns is nearly or quite doublo what they asest; by putting Mr, Win. Orton on thostaud totestify wheh, the story conceruing him is true or false, o7 wh there in'a shadow of o ehade of fonndation foragjiy rosembling it ; and (3) if the point czn be braught into such zxit, by proviog th= railway speculutor reforred (o never leat a penny. gl xectly or indirectly, cither thon 0 ever in bis e, & tho gentlemen. of the Tribune sta who reqalzed e control, : —Orville Grant's brother has vetosd s bill gir. fng relief to.a brother-n-inwof Carl EEE'L Orvillo and the brother-in-law of Carl had ag n:-lfh“mmees in Chicago, growing out of ths failure of the former to iuterest the Iatter in g, whiskey swindle.— Cincinnati Commercial. i —The proposed prosecution of the Ui Pacific Rnll)lmtd for the five millions of m&' Eltmtuly c_lfin bet?m thpanvunment of the United: ates wil artily sustained by the people.— Dalr&l mIl’DsLT 3 A P’! —VWilliam Tomlinson, & negro from Detroif has been made Keeper of tho g;gak-nom 11'; is tho firet of his raco who has receivod an ap~ pointment of tho kind in_this Staie— projer tribute to_their manly Ropublican principl Tansing (ich.) Fepudtican, o oo —Judgo John A. Goodlet wes oue of the strongest so-called Democratic delegates to the' Blanton Duncan Convention at Louisville, in: September lnst, from Now York. He has been. appointed by Mr. Grant Assistant United States District Attorney for that city. Thia shows thal” Grant is 8 good paymaster for political services —Cincinnati Enquirer. 5 . —A few members of tho Michigan Legialatwa ignore the Indian’s principlo of ** poor pay, poct preach,” and are anXious to sccure in the future, us in the past, first<clasa Judges at fourth-tlax sy. Their ides.of cconomy waa well illastraied. 7 & remark made by s Representative of the Inst Honse, when Governor Baldwin's elegmt turnout wheeled about in front of the Laasing House. “There,” sald the member, *“that's what I like to tee; Ilike to have the Governor of a great nndiuusyemnu State like Michigan® appearin s 8tyle worthy the State and his posis- tion. And tho best of itis, it don't coat the. Btate a —d rod cent either.”—Lansing Leie:. —The Parsons (Kan.) Sun says that it will wager & year's subscription of the Sun that Tom Moonlight can write a letter 8o Like the Russ ot ter of Pomeroy’s that no manin the State ean tell it from Pomeroy’s _manascript. Wo take that bet; and will bot $2 more that Pomercy will not denv writing the . W. Rosa letter; ard’ we will bet &5 that, if he does deny it, we can prove to the satizfaction of any reasonable ma that the denial is false. And ‘wo will bet.§10 that Pomeroy will not swear that the W.if.: Boss letter i3 a forgery ; and we will bet $20,it he does 80 swear, uhat it can be proven thaths has sworn falgely in_. that rega: Again, wo will bet - §2.50 that AL W. Reynolds, editor of the Parsons Sim, is iha samo AL V. Reynclds who wrote tha pamphlet, ublished in the snmmer of 1870, entitlod, “4 view of the Official Acts of Our Delegates fn Congress;” and wo will bet €5 tkst what Reynalds then wrote in regard to Poms is true, and we will bet €10 thst AL 'W. Reynolds knew then and knows now thatitis trme. And we will bet $20 that all Reynolds has written in the Sun ardCommon. wealth- in faver of Pomeroy's honesty, and purity aro lies, and that Koynoids kued they wers when he wrote them, and’ that he was paid by Pomeroy. for writing them, with anay pointment to offico, or other valusblo cougideris tions.—La Cygne (Kan.) Journal. T —The action of the President in greuting . ardon to one James H. Brown, convicted at Lha November torm of the United Stotos District Conrt, before Judge Cadwalader, of “repoating™ at the Octobor élection, will not be received with favor by this community. ~The priscner afters fair trinl was convicted, the evidence of his grilt being of the most positive character, and, in fact, undisputed.— Philadelphia Inquirer. —'This is & timo_of investigation, and, whils we are in the spirit of it, by all means letus. make it general and soarching. Something mora than 8 icion provails that, in the matterof the Union Pacific Railrosd, the cgnn?hubofin; outrageously swindlod.—Des Moines Register, —In conversation with o Western journalist, one of Mr: B. F. Butler’s people has let ont thres- ‘highly intoresting and important facts. Tho fist’ ie, that B. F. B. 18 a candidate for the Pregiden: cy, and looks upon the Governorship as s step- ping-stone to the White House. The eccond | that ho proposes to give Massachusetts s ““sige nal Administration.” Tho third is, thatheasd & 3r. George S. Bontiwell are coming oat 28 Veters, - Puntans acter beforo_the country.” We don't know & actly what this moana, but it impresses us Wi » vague sense of uncasiness not unblended with awe.—Springfield Repubhcan. b ‘o havo looked into the sevoral accountsaf’ the ““imposing" ceremonial of presenting o gold and parple velvet album to the Hon. A B. Cor- nell, Chaurman of the Repablican Stato Commit- tee. The opening page;, we are informed, Lam these lines of Whittier: . % Tho ballot—it descends 23 still 3 As smow flakes fall upon the t0d, Ang regulates the freeman’s will i As lightning does the will of Jod. ! hitticr never wrote that! He spoke of the, ballot which “‘exocutes a freeman’s will.” Tha, idea of “ regulating ‘s freemen's will belong, to the later era of Grant and his follower, Car-. nell and his tosdies, They are now ragulstiog prices, the money market, the Statcs, the peopls, and propoec to “rogulate the prees, the tele graph, tho railwsys, and all public and pritate onterprise, The word “regulators” waa fis: used by a class of men in the Revolution who followed the armics, plandered both m% g robbed the dead on either side with gros! tmity.—A!_Dany Argus. B . Woman’s Love. - "From the Cincinnati Gazelle. o ‘Woman's undyiug love has just been. e ably exemplifid in West Virgiciz, sud the Go¥; eruor of that State has shown himeelf thorcoghls: capable of appreciating tho. romantic. He acted just like one of those eccentric. old uscles: on the stage who alap the ¥oung scapograss o3; the back in the last scone, cry *‘Bless you w:“ Doy !" and put tho nephew's hand withic thatol: the girl who loves, but is too good for him- = Sacah Winemillor, of Whoeling, had. o iover #52 was arrested for horee atcaling. He does DO ecem to have been #o gcod that sha could B3, scorned to believe him guilcy. On the wm- she'took it for granted that he wonld be conviess and only sought a chiauce to shere his lufllflfi' Bho therefore set & school-house op fsg, 3. took cara to have her crimo discovered. .Skewtd: convicied aud sontenced to imprisonment, Fh 89 Juck would Lava it, her truglove was | Here was 5 sad condition of affairs, and Lus. 3% the gallant intervention of the Govermot & would havo remained unimproved. A pNEI. has been given to_Sarah, snd ehe can nO¥ o married a8 soon as she and ber in (1), and expect to “*1cnew their chare, e ey ready. We feucy, howover, that she will ;fi; ; find many followers iu ber rough journey mawrimony. All Governors are not- a8 it hearted a8 tho Chief Magistrate of Wost Virgisi Doston Affronted by an Old Lad¥e The Boston:Adrertiser relates tho lunnfl;ll;' “A old lady, with band-boxes aed buadlsy innumerable, tumbled into a city-bouod lfl':“‘ Chelses, yosterday, and inquired if ‘those oy stopped’at Boston?' On being asspred by &9 smused spectators that c,&o;ai ;;s gn‘l 4 gire ;l:; Bengers a moment Or 80 2l G led expressi atation she alluded to, the trouble oot ave place to one of placid serenity a8 Mfl" fflines, “Lar, I supposo they do stop moat o¥¢ where.'”. —_— A Lawyer Under a Cloud. Posrox, Jan. 11.—Joseph A. Whitman, yer, in under arrest, charged with foF moxtgl;i_s note for $10,000, and nitens g, g 51 Tt o Seeued ia Allefcd to bo impleatel with Charles Cauads on charges of frzuduiod 10! tonder: