Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1873, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

e e e e et "R THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: $9NDAY, JULY 18, 1873, — THE WOMAN OF TO-DAY. Mistaken Attempts to Botter What Does Not Need Bettering, The Woman of tho Prosont Alono Fitted for the Man of tho Prosent. ! Man Satisfled with Woman Just as She Now Is. " The *Coming Woman” to Stand Side by Side with the “Com~ ing Man.” Impossibility of Arraying Man and ‘Woman in Antagonism to Ench Other.” Xt bas boon froquently sald that women s in- difforent to argumont. 'That sho ia ot indiffer- ent to robulo, might be testod by tho experience of evory man who has rashly undertakon to chide her, and boen mot by fainting, hysterics, or . flerce rocrimination, according to the tomper of the woman nddrossed. Indeed, if thomon who know wero to offor counsol to those whoso knowledge of tho weaker sex is yot to como, they would say with ono volco: * Novor attompt to find fault with & woman,—for, it you do, you will - find yourself routed in moment, and compelled to suo abjeotly for peaco.” 1f, thon, woman individuslly is not smenablo to reproof, how does she,*taken collectively, be- have undor censuro? Doos not she rise in wrath and wreak vongoanco upon her rebukers? Far “from it; rather dooa she endure thoir condomna~ - tion with seraphic patienco. For years sho haa boon encered at and acoldod; sarcasm and do- nunciation have beon hieaped upon hor times be- yond number ; and still she continues to presont the same speotacle of BWEXT AND VTAOID OBATINACY. It will not be unkind to say that many people congratulate thomeelves bocause of her depravi- ty, since Ler follies and shortcomings furnish o topio which may be called an especial boon to evory one who, having nothing to eay, muat yot sy somothing. Tho topio in question is & godacnd to clorgy- mon grown weary of mild skirmishes with sin and stardy warfare agalnst brother-Ohristians of difterent denominations ; it is eagerly welcomed toaplaco in mewspapors, where, either through accident or design, it is always the pendant to an elaborato *fashion article; it fita enugly into the editorial chit-chat of magazines, betweon gentle protests sgaipst comio opora and sensa- tional drams, and tender, half-rogret{ul allusions to the bygone dolights of Paris; and, to o acoro or more of locturers, what o fountsin of inspira~ tion has it not beon | Tt is quite an casy mattor, indeod, to farnish & st of materials by tho proper use of which any porson of average intelligence may got up a lec- ture or an essay on THX WOMAN OF TO-DAY. Thore must be sarcastic montion of purchased bair and cosmetics, high-hecled shoos, snd Qrecian-bend ; hint at other and unnameable dovices which naughty women resorts to enhance hor' charms or conceal the laok of hair; sad beo- walliog of the social degeneracy consequent upon femalo ignorance snd oxtravaganco; s pathetic statemont to the effect that ‘“Home has consod to bo Womsn's world ;" flowery illusions to the fair and gracious ideal of womanhood en- sbrined in the heart of every man, and tho mourn= ful disenchantment which ho suffers too often on discovering tho wide differenco between tho womsn of whom ho has dreamed and the one he has choson ; thon the virtues of “tho woman of fifty yoars sgo " must bo on- larged upon ; by way of conclusion, there must bea PROPHECY OF TIK GOMING, at soms fature day, of & woman who, in addition 6o alldhe good analitios of our sainted grand- mother, shall be dowered with beauty and graco, intellact, and culture, almost boyond our imaginations to conceivo. Having, by ajudicions combination of the afore- montioned ingredionts, prepared ** an article,’ tho writor may dispatch it to soy periodical or nowspaper, certain of its being accopted by the editor (who s sure that it will {ako"), as though nothing of the kind bad over bofors boon given to the publio. Once in print, every exchange will copy it ; it Its author have a mind to look, he will see it staring bim in the face from the SBunday edition of each greatdaily; and, if he should chance into a villago in any cornor of this broad land, ho would find in the soven-by-nine county pa- por thoarticle in question, badly maimed, and full of typographicsl errors, boldly contronting him. Bhould the lecture-field be preferred, there will be no diffictlty in making up & locturo from the same materiala ; and, if he be blessed with passable looks, & strong voice, and unbounded asgurance, ho will soon find himeelf, if not on the road to famo and fortune, at least in the way {to make somo money and to achiove considerable cheap notorioty. For a dissertation on tho faults of the Woman of to-day—vwith a capital W—is somothing of whioh tho public seoma NEVED TO GROW WEARY; though it bo monotonous as & ouckoo's song, it in always listened to intently. It is nota vory difficult matter to find & reason for this, Of all the happiness consequont upon tho fall of man, none is more intense than that which is experi- enced on loarning of the sins of our fellow- ereatures ; whilo next, as asource of enjoyment, gomes the thought of the rago into which an al- tsion to his or hor depravity will be suro to dhrow the alnnor. To know that tho guilty one is storming, protesting, denylug, is always a Lkeen de- light; aod it is probable that tho accusors of womean are spurred on to fresh effort by the hopo that, sooner or later, sho will, in her turn, take to denial and recrimination. Bo far, such a hope hna only MET WITH DISAPPOINTMENT,— for woman attompts no mesaure of retaliation,— makes no effort to defend horself,—does not taboo the reformers' books and essays, nor ro- main beyond reach of the misatles which are let fiy at hor from desk and pulplt; but goss on reading and listening to it all,—alternating it, in fact, with the perusal of novels and attendance upon time-killing amusementa. ‘What i8 tho reason of such indifforence on her part ? Is it becanso sho belioves all this fine writing and talking to bo insincers, and refuses to honor it by anger or denial? f thoy have arrived atsuch s conclusion, 8 it likelytobos correct one? Only partially so; thero i doubt- less, & large ehare of ineincerityin it, but thereis earnsstness and sincerity as well. Good poople there are who really hopo to compass a roform by constantly dilating upon the shottcomings of woman at the present time; thoir intontions are honest, and it is & pity that they shonld so wasto time and effort in n mistaken attempt to better WIAT DOES NOT NEED BETTERING, They do not err in acousing the woman of to- day with faults snd follios manifold ; thelr mis- take®is in fancying that, were sho superior to what sho now is, she would Lo a fittorcompanion for tho man of the presant timo, It is amusing to note the obutinacy with which roalous would-be reformers refuse to moo that sho s now, as she has always beon, just what it fs most sdvantageous to hor to boj that, through evory sge, the one lesson faught hor as been, TOW DEST TO PLEASE AND BATISFY MAN{ ant that gho has novor falled to Joprn it thor- nughiy ‘While to man the world has always openod many difforont avenuos to succoss, and tho achiovement of his hoart's dosiros, to woman thero has been but onc,—the approval of man ; and this faot has nover boon bottor undorstood thanby tho woman of to-day, Bo, while ro- formors fancy sho Ia blind to hor own intorosts, sho ls, in roality, shrowd aund cloar-sighted bo- yond all noed of guidance, Although woman hns novor boon responsible for the epringing up elthor of abuscs or roforms, still sho hne always, following tho load of man, sccustomod horsolf to thom agsho saw that he did #0, In all things bolng governod by tho desiro which instinot and training havo mado tho strongost in hor naturo,—that of plensing him. Honce it hiaa followed that tho woman of ovory ago and country has beoen porfootly suited to the man of tho samo period sod nation ; so it is that woman now, with all hor slns and follics upon hor head, ia ALORE FITTED TO DE A MATE i for tho man of the presont. Evon in this material ago, there is onco in & whilo & man whose naturo is too fino to ondure contaot with tho roughness of tho world; wholsa droamer, atud Lag a roalm of his own, poopled with bolnga of his imaginntion; conspicuous among those foir fancies is the ideal woman,—o creaturo, like himeolf, all unfitted to tako n placo amid the actual ronlitios of existence. But the man to whom this world of turmoll and striving is “not so bad a place after all;" who has neithor time nor inclination for doy-drcaming ; whom tho ploasures and succooseos of life snt- isfy,—does not lave idoals of any sort; they aronot inhis line. And it s this lattor sort of man who may be taken as a typo of tho AVEBAGE MAN OF TO-DAY. Destitute of sontiment, untroublod by ** yoarn- ings," except for tho good things of life, with no tondencles toward esthotics, it is needloss to say that to searoh thoe depths of his nature for hid- don romance would be sheor wasto of labor, Yot thore s nothing essier than to make ox- traordinary statoments about him, and there is no necessity of atopping aftor having told of his longings for a congenial friend and companion, and of the fair and lovely “ideal" of feminine perfoction onshrined in his heart's doopost ro™ cossos. Hocan bo ropresented as poring by mldnight over the pagos of Holmholz and Herbort Sponcor,—rosting his weary brain, in tho intervals of leiauro, by studics of Sanserit or Chineso; it may bo told of him that ho has oxo- cuted work whic' -ould make Hart or Church pale with envy could they behold it; that his touch on the plano rivals Rubinoteln's ; or that, 1f hie wore to appear upon the stago, his dlsplay of histrionic ability would min a world's ap- plause. ‘Who would there bo to contradict such sssor- tions ?-~for assuredly ho would naver, unsolic- ited, trouble himsolf to do so, But if an anxious inquirer, wore fto “inter- viow ” him, individually and collectively, plead- ing to know it ho wero i tho habit of doing any or ail of the astonishing things cnumerated, tho reply would be A FLAT DENIAL. Bo, likewise, were this oxcellent man pressed to expreas hia ‘“idonl " of womanhood, ho would roply : “I noverhad any, —don't wish $o, oithor ; Iam satisfled with woman just asshe is now, and think, young man, that you have boen roading & little t0o much pootry ; and the inquirer would at Iast turn sadly away, convinced that the man of tho prosont had nover, at any poriod of his careor, thought of having an “ideal” woman, any moro than an “ideal” Cobgrosaman, or police-officer, o railroad-president. But woro 80 soverely practical a man to bo yoked with such & woman as ho has been do- seribed as sighing for, U8 DISCOMFORT WOULD ONLY DE EQUALED BY uEns ; he would find the atmosphore in which he could alone breathe freoly too rare for him; his ‘world-hardened nature could ‘not respond to her truth and purity; his ignorance would show in sharpest contrast to ber fino oulturo; and, 8o far as comprobending hor and her noeds and as- pirations waa concorned, it would bo impossible, —she would be to him as an enigms, growing more puzzling and disagrocabls with ench attempt at solution. The much berated woman who is in reality his companion makes, howover, no domand upon him which he cannot readily meet ; he has but W BLYS Liow plumeure amd emsitamant, aipply hor with moans for shining in society and vieing with hor aistor woman, and he has filled her cup full to .ovorflowing. She—admirable croature—re- nlizes that ie has no nonsonse in his composi- tion, snd govorns horselt accordingly; indulg- ing in no idla rogrets, and woaving no chains to | hiold bim to hor side, an unwilling captivo, In sll this tirado sgainst woman, nothing has been thought of HORE ADSURD than that man is oithor decoived or disgusted by tho msoy dovices to which sho resorts to %in~ croaso her attractivoness. It might puszlo any ono to toll how hie can romain blind to the fact that she wears the various aids to bosuty, a8 sho does hor jewelry, as a mattor of course, think- Ing that thoy ronder hor more plensing, but not flattoring herself that a man ean be found whois doluded enough to beliove them Nature's own gitt to her. There may have been a period when woman adopted such artificen with the intent to deceivo, and shrank from tho thought of deteotion ; at any rate, it is past and gono foraver, and lovoly woman would now choerfully consent to enlight- on hor admirer s to tho cost of hor Jetty braids or sunny trosses, and givo him hor reasons for preferzing Poudre Blano to Bloom of Touth, without hesitation. Andsuch information would fail to shock his sensibilitios in tho loast, while the only .“pain' caused would be incident upon an attempt to estimate the probable yoarly cutlay for such “rovolting decoptions.” It is distressing in thq extremo to be com- polled to ray, just hore, that THE DELUDED WOMAN who eschews * unwomanly dovices,” and trusts to her dower of youth, and beauty, and sweot- ness, to win admiration from man, finds herself studiously ignored byhim instoad. Whon not ongaged in something of greater importance, this gort of woman occuples heraolf in pondering the roaeon of such neglect, vainly endeavoring to discover why it i that, if man bo o repelled by *the tricks and manners” of the artificlal and frivolous woman, he so Invariably chooses her to sharo his fortune and woar his name. # 0f course,” thinks tho model woman who Ia not wise in her genoration, * #ince so many poo- plo say that man disapproves of folly and deceit in our sex, thero can bo no doubt that he docs #o,—only his way of making the disapproval manifest, 18, to say the least, very pesuliar.” ‘While sho is thus musing, hor youth is floot~ ing; aud so it happens that tho woman who, ac- cording to excellent authority, ia the bost reali- zation of man's idoal of womanhood, one day makes the discovery that ehe has bocome an old mald, and must thenceforth be content to accapt. s hor portion lonoliness and obsourity. All this is vory straigo, and might scem, to ono unac- customed to our ways,—n Polynesian nativo for inatance,—to indicato a wayt of consiatonoy,— though, indood, it does not. . A clover writor not long ago sald- that thero had nover beon an ago in which ths boauly of woman produced go little impression upon man a8 it doos In tho presont, thongh such indiffer- ence was not dus to Incroased admiratlon for tho nobler qualities of mind and heart, Far from i, Tt is slmply becauso man has coasod to value the reality of beauty ; ho will Lavo it wot off, addad to, by alarge dogreo of artificialily, by number- less trappings,—otherwise ho will pass it uu- hoeding. ‘Thiy 18 an era which BOOLNS HIMPLIOITY AND HONESTY} and the marked indifference on maun's part to pure snd simple beauty in woman is born of tho same epirit which makes succossful ignorance and coarsoness admired and courted ; which puts domagoguos into statosmen’s placos ; which, in ostimating mon, rates assurancoe highor than Intagritv or abilitv, To obaorvant oyos, nothing can ho more palpa- blo than that man at tho prosont day, in small nffalrs allke with gront onos, delights in shams, 1Io Lae o tondornesa for politicians who promiso roforma which he too well knows they have no intontion of onrrying out; ho takos to his honrt tho architoct whose Lulld- ings tumblo over in tho process of erco- tlon; his * idenl” dwblliug is thin-walled and marvelously uncomfortablo, but las a marble front and o prodigious oxtont of gingorbroady cornico; imliintions of ebony and rosewood, lhorriblo to contemplate, aro his delight ; ho joys in tho possozsion of paintings by the old mastors, on tho canvas of which tho paint 8 hardly dry, It is truo that custom doos not require Lim to dress olaboratoly, thus saving him from making himsol? ridioulous in one rospact ; but, from cor- taln indications, it may bo iuforred that, had it dono 8o, ho would havo far surpassed woman in Ingonious tastolossness. Noxt to tho dopravity which woman displays as rogards hor porsonsal appearanco, comes tho sin- fulness of NEQLECTING HER HOME ; Laving boguiled trusting and innocent man into providing the homo for hor, sho fatly rofuses to find hier chiof happiness thoro. But how long, oh condemners of woman, did homo cense to hold achorm for man bofore his mato grow woary of it? Did she not roign long in solitary stato be- foro rousing Lerself to aco that, for her as woll og for man, thoro wore moro ploasurcs abroad than at homo? How much truth Ia thore in the snying that man craves affoction, and sympathy, and tho privacy of homo-lifo, for his lolsura- hours? Doos Lo do 8o in one caso out of & hun- drod sftor the first novelty of belng married hios worn off ? And was not tho domostic life, now so highly extolled, as much tho result o nocessity a8 of choice,—duoc mainly to thero boing more of croature-comfort obtainable at homeo than clsowhero ? Did not tho absenco of outsido smusoments and attractions, and tho old-time projudico aguinst recroations and enjoyments, alao oporato largoly in favor of domestlclty? Now, whon every considorable-sizod town tooms with amuso- ments, and the projudico againet them has al- most worn away, pacplo are loarning to find roat in recreation, not inan attempt to keep quiot ; 80 that man will no longer content himself after o humdrum fashion ; nor will woman either, un- lons sho is likely to bo in great moasure ignorod or forgotten, Itis, perhaps, lamentable that people have got into such » way of thinking shout home-lifo; but it is moro reagonabla to sny that they should bo congratulated on account of it,—for, despita all that has boen said and sung about the charms of the domestic Lioarth, it is only too truo that the domestic hoearth I8 A VERY DULL PLACE. And it might trouble evon a philosophor to tell why all the virtues should be oxpected to flourish bost among a peoplo whosemen and women, after marrisgo, spond their loisuro-hoursineachother's oxclusivo companionship from a sonso of duty. Burely, thoy have 5ot so florished, if the lapso oflittlo moro than a gonoration has sorved to bring about tho appalling condition of offairs which the reformers are now so bittorly do- ploring. But, whatover may have been its excollencos, tho old-time lifo, ever walking it narrow round, was s sadly-straitoned ono, intoloraut and un- sympathotic, and overhung by gloomy shadows. What pooplo more healthful in body and mind, cheorful and long-livod, than thoso who habifu- ally seok society and recrention OUTSIDE THEIR OWN NOMES ? Of courso, many good souls, if asked the ques- tion, could say, with n shudder: “Look at tho Fronch I" iguoring tho fact that otlier nations, whose record for virtue and intelligonco is a proud ono, and among whom family-ties aro of exceeding strength, are passionate lovers of amusemonts, and find the chiofost portion of their pleasures in public. + Botting aside, Lowever, tho quory ss to whother the chango which has taken place as ro- gords home-lifo is mattor for rogrot or rojoicing, ono may say that to attributo it, in any larg do- greo, to tho frivolousness of Woman, is UNJUST IN THE EXTREME and it would be woll for thosa who bid hor cnl- tivate n love of home and fireside, to name the moaus by which, while 8o doing, she may gain thie sympathy and companionship of man. One such snpgartion wonld nrobably bo of ‘moro valuoe in offecting a reform in this respect then all the denunciationa which could be poured upon the head of Woman in twenty yoars to come. + It is hardly possible to oxaggerate whon allud- ing to g ‘WOMAN'S PXTRAVAGANCE,— for it is true that, while man often donies him- gelf presont pleasure, tho bottor to obtain somo distant good, Women, donying hersolt nothing, looking not beyond to-dey, eponds monoy rocklessly. But this is duo to the different training of the soxes, For what doos money stand to man, and for what does it stand to woman ? For man, it has a prospective valuo; he knows that, by careful investmont, by fortunate spocu- Intion, it may be mado to yiold thirty, sixty, or a hundrod-fold; whilo, to woman, it means somothing by the expenditure of which she can obtain instant gratification; and theso two ways of rogarding the power of ‘mouney bridges over the wido difforence betwoen man's knowledgo of business and woman's ig- noranco of it. The allurements to oxtravagance are daily on tho increase, and this it is which leads to such displays of worldlinoss (much sbused word) on woman's part, and canses ber to sob solittlo value on the intangibilities of sentiment, which oformers would fain havober judgaso highly Man, burdened by caro and vexation in his pur- suit of gain, still pressos on toward tho wished- for goal, too ofton sacrificing in the.attompt the bost part of his life, and he to whom tho largest measuro of success has beon vouohsafed, hns usually the loast capacity for enjoying it; but, ‘with woman, tho cago is far different. It wonlth and worldly sucoess bo her portion, thero Ia NOTTING TO MAX HER DELIGNT ; shois froo from caro and anxioty, beyond pain- ing sights and jarring sounds,—dwelling in a shut-up world of sensuous pleasure, Tooall her luxury-loving naturo, contrast her temptations to worldlinoss with man's, and thon blame her not for yielding to thom as ehe docs. Romember, too, that, in this respeot, as in every other, woman is to-dsy but the product of the time in which sho is living, and that he who would ascertain tho true reason for her being what she now ia must look at the 1ifo of tho prosent In ita evory awect, taking into account all the causos which sorve to mako one gengration differ so widoly from another, That euch & task has not boon attempted by any one among the many who have deemed it their miselon to amend and ro- vlso tho orrors of to-day, it ovidont; had it boon, wo should have heard less regarding *TIHE WOMNAN OF FIFTY YEAUS 400," That much bepraised lady was doubtless an admirable porson ; sho was thrifty when thrifti- ness was in the very air peoplo breathed; home-staying whon tho burdons of work and care pressod so heavily upon Woman that from thom thero was no oscape; singore when Woman's sincority found rosponso in tho hearts and lives of NMan ; a shining oxam- plo of domestio virtue in a timo when dowmestie virtue was * all tho ragoe.,” . But sho should bo loft sncred to the days of log-cabins and stage-coaches, and dress-fabricys which woroe not out, A woinan possosked of such qualitios as dls- tinguishod hor would be utlerly unfit for the lifo « to-dny ; ond it may bo safely prodicted that een tho ** Coming Woman," whoso portrait has bewm so ofton drawn for us, will ber Litile re- sonblance to tho paragon grandmothor, WIATEVER THE * COMING WOMAN " MAY DE, ehe vill stand side by side with tho * Coming Man " if ho be Inforlor to tho man who ia now have. then will «ha ba moro fpully than the woman of tho presont ; if lio shall atrive upward to n noblo modo of thought aud lifo, then sho will do the same. Of this much wo may rest assured, for, no mat- tor what tho offorts or the eloquence of thoss who havo #o loug aud unsuccessfully robuked Woman, to UNDO THE WORK OF NATURE, and nrray Man and Woman in satagonism to ono anothor s not possiblo. ConxuLIA. UNJUST JUDGES. DY MAROARET ¥, DUCHANAN, Tho rocont actlon of Judge Lynch, of Now Orloana, rofusing to pormit two jurdrs to ad- dress him in relntion to thelr verdict in tho Howking-Picayune suit, svas not nocossary na an fllustration of tho tendonoy of tho Amor- ienn judiciary, if unchocked, -to commit violont outrages upon the rights of porsons in court. The dofeat of Judgo Lawrence in Illi- noiy, on tho ground that ho wne lable to rendor judgments iuimical o cortaln por- tions of tho pooplo who might appear a phintiffs boforo him, ia' proof onough that publio sentiment is not ouly tho cause of the dogradation of the judiciary, but that public sontimont is na reckloss of tho judicial conso- quonces of Its influonco, and a3 blind to publio dunger, a8 the corrupt and cowsrdly mon whom it can affeot ara rookloss of thar duty, and in~ difforont to tho rosponsibility of thelr offico, Natiounl suicide can bo committed in only ono placo—in the courts. Thero ia ug dangor for tho futuro of the American Ropublic in wars or postilencen ; in party organizatics, or the ambl- tion of poraons,—in famine, or fuancial rovolu- ton, While tho courls romain calm, tho Constitution is socure. s . Butitis opportuno to ask if courts aro re- maining calm, If thoy aro not, tha rights of no man are safo. Tho nation can be aseailed only through the individual If thoro bo a marked disposition in tho courts to asail individual rights, approliension may woll bo folt for the maintenanco of rights out of courts, Publio eontimont s nover judicisl, The mass does not discriminate, A herd rushos, if it move ot oll. Just in proportion as courts are affected by this public turbu- lonce, thoy bocomo umsafo intorproters of lIaw, and ocormipt administrators of Justico. Tho condition of the courts in throo or moro of the Bintes is not one toin- splro seourity, and, whilo tho crimosof tho Judgos may be tracod in many cases to the desiro of porsonal aggrandizemont,—for mere money, ~—tho pages of judicial record which Americans may yot wish to erase have not been written for that kind of pay. Tho man most dangorous on tho boncl is o who bocomes tho puppot of pub- lio passion, A Judge who gives a decision in ac- cordance with publio sentiment, merely for that rongop, is & more dangerons demagogue than any on a rostrum, and s consid orably worso than & highwayman, who, it ho snatch tho traveler's purse, loaves him & lsst resort, in caso the thiof bo taken. But tho Judge who invades individual rights ont of sympathy with publio opinton robs Lia victim oven of this finnl romody, for thoro is no redress againat the judicial thiof but imposch~ ‘mont,—and publio opinion can alono do that, It will not punish the servant who oboys its own mandates. It {8 more apt to honor him with a sent on tho Buprome Bonch, Tho patriotio American citizon may feel him- solf aggrioved to have it said that his rights wore griovounly uwssiled in the porson of William M. Twoed. Yot such was tho foct. Tho Ring trials aro an alarme ing tostimony to the subjootion of Judges undor tho trampling feot of public anger. Lot it bo granted that he i a groat criminal, whom ail tho powor of tho law has not yet been ablo to punish, ‘That foult is the lawmakers’. But he had rights bofore tho lnw which no Judge con taka away. Bofore tho bar of a court ho was an American citizon armed with the Constitution. The lnw was not to bo applicd to him differently from othor men. Ho had the samo logal rights, onco undor arrost, that. Cbarles O'Conor or Josoph Medill would have. Yet so impressed wore tho Individusl Judges of New York by tho fury of popular clamor for his lifo, that any one of the majority of them would have been glad to rob him of every rightin court for the triumph of delivering Lim a con- vict to the public maducss, Tho Constipption Bpeaks oxplicitly concerning extortionate.bail. Yot a million of dollars was demanded of -him ! And if a newspaper of New York had dared to denounco this scandalous syaophanoy on tho part of a Judge, scarcely a copy of 1t would have boon bought on tho streots tho noxt dsy. Throughout his trisl tho bonch was ompty. Judge Davie' figuro sat upon it, but he was roully down in tho Prosocuting-Attomey's placo, and doliverod his rullngs from thero, His chargo to the jury was tho raving. of an ad- vocato who losos his cate if the prisoner bo not convicted. If Twoeed esaped, Davis was in dan- gor, ho thought, of publio oxceration. It Twood wero convioted, high judiclal proforment Iloomed up bofore him, anl he would become im- modiatoly great in publio ipplauso and nowspa- por loudation, Tweod roed mover open his palm to receive public synpathy for the ont- ragos ho sufforod in Judge Davie' court; but it i o fact, nevortheless, thatthoso outrages wero dirceted againat the civil riglts and tho personal liborty of overy citizen of the United Statos. ‘'ho trial of Susan B. Anthony by Judge Hunt was an atroolous outrage of tae rights of tho citizon 8t tho hands of tho judiciary. For, whother Susan B, Anthony bo a ¢itizen in tho aggressive sonse,—in tho sensy that sho Is on titlod to protect her citizonshig by hor ballot as o man does,—it is cortain that she is a oitizen in the gonse that she is entitled to protoction of tho laws, This oltizenship i8 sccordod to all men, native or foreign, naturalzed or uunatu- ralized, to all women, to.mon under age, to idiots, to infants, Busan B. Anhony was s por- feot citizon in that dopartment ¢ American ju- risprudonce which guarantees t¢every criminal o trial according to conatitutiona methods. She was taken bofore Judgo Hun on o oriminal chiarge, It makea no difference vhat that chargo was. The Constitution of he United Btates and the Constitution of Now Yak doclare that a porson accused of & criminal ofoneo shall have & jury trial. Judgo Hunt robbedhfiss Anthony ot this right. Tho formality of ummoning s jury was gono through with, It b incssentinl that Miss Anthony denled these trolve to be her poors, If a 10-yenr-old aild were being tried for murderlg a playmate, it is scarcely ressonalio fo dmsnd for him that his jury bo wmposed of ten-yenr-olds. A jury of murderors to try a murderor would be difiicult to procus, but, under Mlss Anthony's logio, the murdawer would not otherwise bo fairly tried. Cousidoing the equity, and not the law, of Miss Anthmy's rofusal to botried byany jury but one of wmen, one of hor chiof appeals to popular gynpathy must bo condemned as ro- markably acllow for a woman of a somowhat substantdl mind. Noither justico nor o fair in- torproteion of the Iaw demands that an unen- franchaed porson shall bo triod by twolve persons who srounenfranchised, simply hecauso the de- fondans claims to be disfranchised. DBut Judge Itunt,baving suremonad a Jogal Jury, did what with it? Absolutely nothing, Mo told themen com- poslug it that the dofondant was gullty. Ifo ro- fusodto pormit thom to loave tholr seats for congtltation, Xo rofused to pormit them to bo poliel in open court, Porhaps no jurist will dis- wont jrom his docislon that Miss Authony was guiltr ; but is it not to boregretted that n Judge capallo of rendoring 80 correct a judgmont was ineagato of pormitting it to bo rendored In a consitutional mannor? When were the iwo conditutions altercd to road that whon a Judge is couvincod of & prisouer’s guils, he ehallignoro the jry, domy them liberty to leavo tholr .scats and opportunity for consul- tation and flatly refuso to have thom pollod whon requosted? It {4 uot cloar low thoy couldpave reachod o vordict difforont from the Judgds, under hls rulinga, But doos that Justl- fy ug infringomont ou & constitutional rizht? 1 Bupposo tho case wero robbory, or murder, or libol? And tho criminal s man? Would ho havo refused to pormit the jury to record thoir opintons? And if ho had rofused, what an out- ery would not the country have ralsed! If a Judgo may antul a constitutionnl right in one cnse, why nol. tn anothor? Why not, at his dis- ciotion, in nll cnees? And whora is this dis- cretionary judloial independenco of constitu- tious to tormiuato? Porhiaps, aftor nll, Miss Anthony rocoived only Justico ab Judgo Hunt's hands, Dut it will not bo afirmod that it was accorded hor inthat ovens banded manuner which commends the polsoned chalica to her Tips. 4 If this portion of the official conduct of Judgo IMunt, aud of Judge Lynch, of Now Orlenns, bo abova crlticlsta, 1t in ovidont that jurios may bo disponaed with, aud the Clork bo Instructed to ofitor the vordict at enco. 'he expeuse of tho Jnry jn Miss Anthony’s easo should not be paid by cither tho United Btates or Miss Anthony. Tho arrost, indiotmont, oxnmination, com- mitmont, and imprisonment of Victorin 0. Woodhull constltute an appalling instauco of tho abject supinencss and the caleu- Inting cowardico of tho administrators of tho Iaw, bofore an excited and prosumably virtuoun public sentimont. It is difoult to find excuso for the unfortunato victim of her own—and othors’—crime and folly. But tho lotter of the Jaw hine no passion in it. The Judgo who intor- prots tho law shonld bo ne cold as tho lottor of tho law. Ho should consider only tho offonso as it rolated to tho lotter of tho law. o should have seen noithor plaintift uor dofendnnt, but only the causo itaolf. Yet, what {8 tho record? Bho wasat first denied bail. The offonso was ono that is bailable, Ifit nd boon o man, acensed of a bailablo crimo, who was thrown into o foul and filthy jail, to bo the compauion of murderers, the pross of the country would lavo made it impossiblo for tho Judgo to romain in bis seat. A Judgo who com- mits Joffroys' crimo is not 80 sure now of ox- ecration. When au offer of bail was finally lis- toned to, what sum was nsked? Two hundred and fifty thousaud dollars! Tho Constitution of thn Tinitod Btatoa doclares that in no cnsp shall oxtortionate bail bo roquired, Tho de- mand of this sum wil provo, when men have forgotten tho partics to the affair, ono of the profoundest humiliations in the histery of the American judiciary, Ior oxamination Wi not tho calm hoaring of an accuention, o Jjudgmont on which was to be rendored Indo- pondently of porsons, and indicated by proju- dico.#'Tho courts boforo which sho appeared wero conducted as if they wero the court of pub- lio opinion, Tublio indignation was mado the plaintiff; tho holy roputations of several por- sons ontored as weoping and dishoveled witness- ¢a; judicial calmness was expelled tho court, ond & moral verdict rendered, perfoctly sat- isfactory to tho scandalized publio; pro- cisoly sucha vordict as the court of public oploion passes on Judas Iscariot,—from whom it ‘would undoubtedly take the thirty piecos of sil- vor to pay the costs. What is chiofly to bo re- grotted is that, dospite her condemnation in legal tribunals and throughout the country, it s not at all cortain that the real criminal hes yot boon caught. It is possiblo that tho acces- Bory laa sufferod for the principal. Sho has boon hung, indeed, by the neck, until sho is dond ; bub hor gibbet is still standing. Its 10086 may yot prove a white-choker, Ts it difiicult to surmiso how differont wounld ‘o the Clerk's record, had it beon & nowspaper, and not Victorin Woodhull, that had boen triod in the Boochor-Bowon caso? The conduct of Judge Lynch in New Orleans is meroly tho latest illustration of publio pssion firing en official whoso first duty is calmness. And, go long as publio sentiment continucs to domand that judicinl decisions shall harmonizo with popular fooling, 8o long s judicial dograda- tion to be looked for, o long will the invasion of privato rights bo continued, and closor will +@RaW tho davgor to all Mberty and law. *XLot ut tho public mind once become thoronghly corrupt, and all attompts to secure proporty, liberty, or lifo, by mero force of laws writton on parchmont, will be as vain a8 to put up printed notices in an orchard to keep off caukor-worms,” snys Horaco Mann, ) S T The Last Days of Paganini. In1838 Lo was a dying man. Ho siruggled with indoimitable onergy against his deadly foo. Honow often took up thu” gultar, which, i the spring-tima’of Lis life, had beon so intimatoly aysooialed with his first romantio attachment. o was a great ndmirer of Besthoven, and nob long bofore his death Lo played one of that - master's sublimo quartots, his fovorito ono, with ostoniohing ouargy. In extromo weaknoss, Lo lnborad out tohear a roquiom of Chorubini for malo voices, and oon aftorward, with all but his last anorgion, lio inistod upon boing conveyad to ono of tho churches in Marsoillos, whero ho took jpart in a solomn maas of Beothoven. His voico “Was now noarly extiuct, aud hissleop, that groat- ost of consolations, wos broken up by droadful fits of coughing, his fontures bogau to sink, and ho appeared to be littlo moro than a living skeloton, 8o oxcossive and fenrful was his emaciation, Biill ho did not believe in the ap- proach of death, Day by day he grow moro -rostless, and talked of wmaiug the wiuter at Nice, aud ho did live on till tho spring. On tho night of May 27, 1840, nfter a pro- tracted paroxysm, he suddenly became strangely tmnqufl‘.’ He snnk into a quiet sleep, and woko refrosbod and calm. Tho air was soft and warm. o desired them to open the windows wide, draw tho curtaine of his bed, and nllow the moon, just rising in the unclouded glory of an Italian ky, to flood his partmont. Ho sat gazing intont- Iy upon it for some minutes, and then again gank drowsily into a fitful ma)l’.' Rousiny himself once more, his fine car cought tho soun of tho rustling loaves as thoy wors gontly stirrod by momo breath of sir oulsido. Inhis dying moments this sound of the night wind in the trous soomed to affect him strangoly, and tho summer nights on tho banks of tho Arno_lon; g0 may Liave dashod back upon his mind, au called up fadlufi momoried. But now tho Arno was oxchanged for the wide Mediterraucnn 8ea, all ablaze with light, Dozt in his last moments pointed io the scors of the Requiom, which lay boforo him on his bed, aud his’ lips word moving, to_indicate: the ofoot of kettledrums in & particular placo a8 ho sank back in a swoon; and it is recorde of Paganini, that on that fair moonlight night in May, as the last diminoss camo over his oyes be stretched out his hand to grasp his foitbful frieud and companion, his Guaruerius violin, and bio truok its chords ouge mora, aud found that it consod to speal with ita old magio power, ho himeelf sank back, snd ux{n‘nd, like one broken-hearted, to find that & littlo fooble, con- fusod nolse was all that was now left of thoso atraing that ho had created and the world had worshipped.—Good Words. —_— Hlow Napoleon Arranged & Marringo. Ouo dn{, says Count Lanvellotto, wheun I had accompanied Bonaparto to tho Trensury to expo- dito the soudivg off of the sums that wore re- quired ot Toulon for the floot, ho ordered Lis conchiman to drive along tho now boulovards, that ho might have at his lcisure o conversation with me, *Icunnot muko a Major of you," ho said ; “I'must, thorofore, give youa wifo; you shell marry Emilio do Boaubarnaiy, Sho s vory haud- gong, nnd vory well educuted. Do you know hor™ @I have soou her twico, Iiut, Gon- oral, ¥ hjavo no fortune. 'Wo aro goiug to Africa, I may vo killed. What will beconie, iu that caso, of wy por widow ? Desidos, I have no grout liking for marringe,” ** Mon must marry lolimvu ohildren; that is the chiof alm of lifo, Killed 7o cortainly may o well, iu that caso, sho will 0 tho widow of ouo of my aides-de-cump-of o defondor of his country., "Sho will havea pon- slon, and mor oeain marry advantageously, Nowshe s ths duughter of an emigrant that nobody will have; my wife cnn ob intro- duce lior futo socicty. Bhe, poor girl! desorves o bottor fate, Como, this businvss must bo quickly scttled. Lalk, this morning, with Mad- amo Bonaparto about It ; her mothor has niroady given hor consout, Tho wedding shall taka pinco in clght duys, I will nllow you a fortnight for your houoymoon ; you must thon como and join us an‘Coulon on the 2uth.” (It was on the Uth,) 1 ecould not help laughing all tho while ho spolio ; atlnst I said, ** I will do whatever you please, Bat will the girl have moe? I do not wish to fowo lior incliuntions,” “Bho s tired of botding-school, and sho would bo unhappy it vhio word to go to her mother's, During your absonco shs shull live with her grandfuthor at Fontainoblenu, You will not he lullod; and you will find Lor when you come back. Coiue, come, tho thing is sottled. Toll the couchman to driva homo.” "Iu the evoning I weut to seo Madawme Bonaparte, Bho know what was gong forward, and was kind_onough to show sonio satisfaction’ and enll mo hor nophow, *To-morrow," #ho aald, * wo aball go to 8t. Gormain. I will futro. duce Kon to mi nicoo, You will bo dolighted with hory shols a ohinrming giell" Accordingly, noxt day, tho Gonoral, Madame Donnparie, Figono and I, wout in an_opon_earriego to K, Gurmain, sud astopped at Madamo &unpnu'n. “ho vlsit was o gront ovent at tho bonrding- achool; sl the yolm{i‘glrlfl wero at tha windows, in tho parlors, or in the court-yard, for thoy had obtninad holldny. Wo oon. entored the gar- dong., Amoug thio forty young ladies, I sought anxiously hor who was'to ba my wife. lor Cousin_lortonus led hor to us, thatsho might snluto the Gonoral and embraco hor aunt. Bhe was, in truth, the protiiestof thomall. Hor “staturo was tall, and most gracofully olegant; hor fonturos were oharming ; and tlo glow of hor benutiful comploxion was lightoned by her confugion. Her bashfulucss was so groat tho Qonoral could not help Inughing at her, but he wont no furthor, It wad docidod that wo should bronkfast on the grass in the garden, In the mennwhilo I folt oxtromely unonsy. Would sho likomo? Would she obey without reluctance? This vory sbrupt morringo, and this speedy do- porture, grioved mo. Whon we afterward got up, and thio cirolo was broken, I boggad Eugono to conduct his cousin into o solitary walk. I Joined thom, and ho loft us. Ithon entered on tho dolicato subjoct. I mado no sccrot of my birth nor of my waut of fortune, aud added: 1 Y‘oaaeua nothing ixt the world but tn; sword and the good-will n% my_Goneral, and must leayo you In a fortnight, “Opon your henrt tome. T fool disposod to lova you with all my hoart, but this is not suMMcteut. “If this marriage doos not Hlmxun you, repose a full confidence In mo; it will not Lo diffienlt to find_a pratonso to break it oft, X shall dopart, and you will not bo tormented, for I will keop your scorat.” ‘Whilo I was uponkmlz. sho kapt Lor oyes fixed on tho ground—her only answer was a smilo, aud shio gave mo tho nosogay sho bLold in Ler haud. Iembracod hor. Wo returned ‘slowly to the company, and oight _days aftorward wo wont to the municipality, The following day, n poor ricst, who had not taken the onths, married us, n tho small Convent of the Concoption, in the Ruo 8¢, Honoro, s e Musical Intolligence, A 8an Francfico paper romarks that in ono of Mmo, do Rythor'a songs, “a great doal is writton in the lower regimo.” Attho Grand Oporan Parla tho dirction s pro- paring tho ropriso of the * Juive," with new prima donun, Mile. Arnal, It will bo followed by “1'Africnine”” Tho * Jostno d'Ara” of Mormot will be given fu tho fall. Tho reprosentations of tho “Lo Rol I'a dit," at tlie Opora Comique, will closo at tho ond of {l mouth, but they will be rosumod in Boptember. An “incidont” happoned at the Aloxandra Palaco on Whit-Monday, r, Sims Reoves was singing the “ Pilgrim of Lovo,” and had just commonced the second vorse, whon an attend- ent, charged fo post somo bills, mud- dled across tho platform, and commonced sticking a large poster immodiately in front of whoro the tenor was standing., ~ Mr. Sims TReovos Htvpflmfl and waved our dpnst(ng friend magnificently away, The man demurred, and, paste-not In paw, soemod as though bo dhould iko to have it out with the groat tenor in true British stylo. Ho was, however, caught from behind and hustled to the Elnu‘nm stops, down which he wont with more t| &y nntural velooity. Tln:l n&lfliouce applauded and”Mr. Roevos pro- ceeded. Tho Boston Saturday Evening Qazelle ot the Gtheays : “ By invitation of Mr. Frank O, Dit- son, of Boston, a party of four gentlomon, woll known in musical cirolos, loft lasz Monday for a doy's fishing of Bwampecott. A quartot was formod, with Myron W. Whitney as' first bass, A. T. Rydor sccond baes, H. F. Gates firsl touor, W. II. Fossoudon secoud tenor. After & succossful flshing of several hours, and an oxtromely ploacant sail, tho party ad- imu'uuv.\ to the Lincoln House, where they were oinod by Mr. Neleon Varley. In the ovening tho guests of tho houso were entertained with one of the choicost musioales that over has beon given in Boston or vicinity, Messrs, Varloy aud Gates altornated the first” tenor parts with onch othier, and the male quartot singing wos very fiuo, The audience wus mado up principally of Boston peopte, most of thom Eu!n;; associato mombars of the Apollo Club.” The London News says: *‘In {ho shadow sceno from ‘Dinorah’ genius woun o splendid triumpls ovor curiosity. Whon Madame Patti bogan to sing tho musio which falls to the char- acter of the goat malden, tho house was full of ‘the buzz of converantion about the Shali, every gloss and overy oye were turned in tho direction of the State-box. " But ay the euchantross wove horspell of brilliant harmony the talk slacked, faces wero turned from ‘the state-box to the stago, and the scene drow toward s close awmid rapt silence, that was broken by thundors of applauso when' tho curtain fell, During th interval tho Shab, who had aitentively listoned totho strains of tho prima donn, talked ani- matodly with the Princoss of Wales and hier sis- tor: and when #he_ourtain had ricou Upon tho {,n..st m;h Olh‘{lnmlut,' 1‘10 mado lthrullgh bis inocular what apposred a very close study of tho ballet that neclurns thorein," g ¥ ‘Tho Now York Sun of the7th inst. narrates the following sceuo in Thomas' Gardens : *Ouo of the most remarkable conteats botween an orolies- tra and an audionco was witnessed in Thomas' Gardons on Saturday night. As ususl the ball aud gardons woro crowded, and at tho boglunin of the third purt, ‘A. Thomas' overiure of Diguon ' was roudored in 80 mastorly a manner that the audionco, with one accord, broke out in an opplause tbat should havo obtainod them an encore. Unfortunately, Mir. Thomaswasabaont, and in his place Mr. Lis- tormana wiolded tho baton. Instoad of gratifying tho audionco ho procooded with tho next piece, at which thoro was tho most uproarious hissing, shouts, and rapping on tables and chairs, For & moment ho Pnuuu«l‘ a4 the audionco shouted out, ‘oncore Mignon ;' then waving his baton, he Fraouedml with tho pioce ho had begun, Upon tus, half the andionce in indignation arose to their foot, and whilo some shiouted- programme, othors domanded an encore. Bo _great woas the exciternont that Mr, Lister- mann throw down his baton and, amid hisses, ro- tired nmong the musicians, while a_gentloman in o dress coat arose from the audience and, standing on n ohair, said that the public owod it to the artists who were present not to de- mand what by the rules of the concort thoy could not give. They wore paid 0 perform &0 ‘many piecos & night, and it thoy had to reply to evory encoro, tha porformance would never conse. “Soveral voicos—‘Wo meant this as a compliment to Thomas.! A voice—‘ Why don't thoy eay it is againat tho rules of the concort to give oncores? Tho confusion at this point threatencd o sorious outbreak, a8 soveral gan- tlomon engaged in hot words, and one or two cauo L0 opon fight, Nr. Listormaun finally was persuaded to givo the lust part of ¢ Mignon,' at the oclosa of which, with very il graco, ho skipped tho two pieces which should lave followed, = and ro- cecded rapidly through the last—¢a march'— noticing which the audience simultancously roso to thoir foot, and propared to go out of the houso, amid hiesos, cat-calls, and doafoning shoutd, ‘o nddto the axcitemont, the gas was suddonly turned off, and tho time-pald musiciang baat » hasty rotroat, Outsido tho pooplo en. gaged in & hot discussion, evorybody saying it was an outrago.” HOTELS. Barnum’s Hotel, Broadway, corner Twentieth-st, New York, This Hotel s now finished and roady for guosts, enmplata with all modurn b Itoams en suita and Otls Brothors It s mprovements aud convonlencos, ' Private Parlors, Bath st fmproved Klovator, and fn ity to all tho Plaocs of Amussmont and Dry a Palacos. Bir. A, B, BARNUM, for tnany yuars connested with tho mansgemont of Bartum's Hotol, Hal: timoro, takes an aotivo dopartiment in the mansgemont of o i)l bo pleasod ta soe hin old friends and Tlia othior deparimenta af thio Liouss aro under tho managemont of I. N, EEN, menly of Dayton, Onp Inta of Now Yokl ani FithMAN and BARNUM & GREEN, CITY HOTEL, Cor, Sixtcontl: nnd Btnto-sty, TERMS, $2 PER DAY, Good rooms for famillos or slnglo gontlomon, with ‘bonrd at roasonabla pri FOR SALE. NOTICE T0 COKTRACTORS, r mill olndors for sal in lots of ong oublo Apply at North Gbicago North Hrauch, FOR SALE, AT A BARGAIN, If sold within ten days, tho two houses and lots, 157 and 160 Bhurtlefl-av., near Thirty- first-st, A paying investment. LEVI WING & 0O., 98 Donrborn-at. FINANCIAL, Trust & Savings BANK, NORTHWEST CORNER Madison & Market-sts., ‘Will loan money at modorato rates on unincumbered productivo . Chi~ cago Roal Estato, and will make loans for building purposes to MECHANICS, LABORERS, And othor persons of small moans, who own good unincumberod lots that evo availably situatod. Citoado NOVELTYFLYTRAP AND Destroyer, Fatonted May 16,73 Tho Best and Mant Satla- Inctory in the World, 1t bt dostroys thera ae wall, Ty pushing down on tha cavor they are foroed inte Hio watar, whei - they ney drownod. ' Agonis wanted, Ofiicu and salosroum, 199 EAST RANDOLPI-ST., Room 0, Oblengo, , OCEAN NAVIGATION. NATIONAL LINE OF STEAMSHIPS. Bafling from Now Yotk for Queonstown and Lisorpocl evary Saturday, and for Londondirect overy fortnight. ot QUEENSTOWN and LIVERPOOL, from Llors 44 s oRatacdar, July 131 Cannila, . Satusday, duls 28 0b....Katurday, July 19] Cannd . Juts o Theyit.c.: Baturdays July 19 Spal Atucdny, Aug. Cabln Passnge, £30, 890, nnd $100 Carrency. Kscursion Tlckets at Reducod Rates. STRERAGE PASSAGE, 2. curronc Passongors hookod 10 or from Gorines and vinn poluts at low ratos Fenndion- atos, Tho Stoamehiipa of tila lino aro tho Iargest in the trado. {ta on Groat Britain, Irolnad, and tho Continont. WILLIAM MACALISTER, Gon'l Westorn Avent, Northoast corner Clark and Randolph-ate, (oppoeita new ‘Shiorman Houso), Olilsayo. Bailiog twice a wook trom Now York, and carrslug pass sangors toall parta of Groat Heltain, Irolnud, Contineutal Tearope, and tho Moditorranean, Jabin from 4 nge, Jiritish and [rish ports oast, £30; wost, B33, Tiatal ports saimo as othor repulnr lines. ~ All .8, clirronoy, Anply for full information nt tio Com- panyls otlicen, Mo, 7 lowling Groon, Now York, sud N. 15, “ormor LaSailoand Madison-ats., Chicago. HENDERSON BROTHERS, Agonts. NEW YORK TO CARDIET, BRISTOL, LONDOX, And all Othor Points in England and Wales, Tho South Walea Atlantic Stoamshiip Com any's now unfl from Ponneylv.uia Tall- GLAMORGAN % “Thiosa ateamaliips, Luild expressly for (ho trads, are pros sidod with all thy Jatost improvemonts for tho cot-fortund couvenienco af 3 OABIN AND STEERAGE PABSENGTY Firat Cabl 2 Hucond C: St o Propali Stoosako coritiicates from O3rdl ¥ Dratts for £1 and upwardn, Eor furthor particulare auply o Cardl, at the Com- panys Ofiices, Moo § Uncle Onwinbiers, and h Now York ta ARGUINALD BAXTER & 04 0. FOR EUROPE. TNMAN LINE ROYAL MATL STEAMERS, Will sall from Now York as tollows: LONDON. <Sturdas, Juls 12, 7 A, 3. RO Narudnsy July 17,11 A: Al hu: reday, i Aud anoh muccouding SATURDAY and THURSDAY, from Pior No. 45, North Htivor, Cabin Prssage, 870 und $90 Gold, Staorage, to British Pe verserese 830,00 Curconoy. Tound Trip Tickets at Reduced Kates, BIGIT DRAFTS for salo at low ratos. FRANCIS C. BROWN, ‘Gonoral Wostorn Agont, 82 South Clark-st., corner Lale. OARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAIL Between New York, Cork, aud Liverpocl Tho magnificont now and full-poworod Steamehips of this Lino oifor unrivaled_sconmmodations toall classus of nesongors. 'The stoamors being aliko, travelers secura o erialadvantaxo of havig an equitly wood an s stonmor far each anid uwn‘ salling, OUEANIO, CELT BRLGIO, RIEPUBLIO, BALTIO, ADRIATIO, ALA 110, BRITANNIC. Seiling front New York o 5T U1 DAYS, fram Livertiool on THURSDAY#, calling at Cork Harbot botls ways, Jiatos as low as any irat.clans o, For farthor information lnl!ly to Unmpany's Westors 0(\:!0. 97 and % Bouth Clark-st., noar Wusbingion, cn Chicago. " ALFRED LAGERGREN, Agent. CUNARD MAIL LINE. BESTABLISISD 1840. Steam Between Now York, Boston.and Liverpool, Crossing Moridian of 50, comiog wast, at Latitude 43, ot nothing noeth, tierot, Goloy oast &t Lattuda & or not thing nor oruot, FROM NEW YORK. Sl Alga July 24 Jul i “Kid Troin idston avory Teaday. Oubln Passuge, $80, 8100 and 8130, Gold. Excuraion Tiokets at Roducod Ratus. o Passago, 61 ourroncy. Passongors und frolglt boaket o abif ffci il parivaf Europo & Towout ratus SightDratta on Grem Dritain, Troland, and tho Continoat. BN BY VIHNET, Gon Weatn Ao N, irk and Randol SCALES. FAIRBANKS' STANDARD SCALES OF ALL BIZES. FATRBANKS, MORBE &CO 11 AND 113 LAKL-SE. MISCELLANEOUS, Wilson will Open 2 Lamdry Offce AT THE CHIOAGO SEED BTORE, No, 110 SOUTIH OLARK-ST., On Moniny, Jult 1. Yl clotes washeit and. rugh Gt Pocon: au. Tamily i Tt o n2o e et calind £ ud doivera? GE% ' Co : wautoti 0 g HISONS LAUNDILY, 200 South Satesst, Western Rag, Paper, Twine aud elel Warehouss, JOHN E, PETTIBONE, ‘Warohouso 280, 288 and 200 I'ifth-nv. Tato of 10d and 100 Randolphiat, 1 o tiurnont Oot., 1411, Stook ¢ Y ik MUSIC. Wo arolisppy to loarn that oue wall-known tanchor uf mavio & Be. ADOLPIL BAUNT \CHL Wit bu roady by tho wiifdiv of Buptombor, ta roceive puils | 2or," Hurtior pacticulars herattor. Il bo rucotvod until Wodueaday, July 10, for taking 7o 1% and 213 Randotpl-a, sway tho dobris from v O R T LD

Other pages from this issue: