Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
© TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE, RATEA OF RUBACKIPTION (PAYABLE IN ADVAROR), 2,00 Sunday,. o Rtk )y 82,50 BNkt Weoklyyeioss it Partaol a ear at tho sanio rato. o provent delay anil tlstakes, bo sare and givo Post ©0 cosddrens in full, including Stato and Counts Remittaces may bo mad oither by draft, oxnress, Post Oficooidor, m pn reglstorad 10ttork. nt our rlk, TENAR TO CITY BUIACHIKI, Lially, dollvered, Bunday occopted S conte poe wook. Daily, aclivorod, Sunday Includod, R conts par wooks Addrom "PUK TRIBUNI COMPANY, Cornor Madisnn and Ueatbornenta., Uhicago, 1l SEMENTS. AGADIEMY OF MUSIO—1ialstad streol, botwaen Mad- Jon and Monroo. Kngsgomout o1 Bchumant's ‘Trausst~ Iautia Novolty Qompauy. TOOLEY'S THRATRE-Randolph stesot, betwoon Clark ond 1.a8allo. T'no treat Adotphi Compsny. Aia- strolsy, Farco, sud Varioty. WXPOSITION BUILDINO—Takeshoro, foot of Adams atroot, ** varla by Moontlght.!! Altornoon sud ovoming. BUSINESS NOTICES. DIt MCOIWSNEY, CORNER OF OLARE AND . Ariost and Doxe: full ot e S Eiaction kivon oF ionoy rofundod. "800 § TED 1N S AND GOLD 10,0 $1,000 INVESTHD TN STOCKS AND doLD V3204 oy Sent uath for part ROk 0k amkorn, 8 Wallat., Yo York, The Chicaga Teibune, Thursday Morntag, August 13, 1874. TRIBUNE EXTRA. o sond out n supploment and glve tho entiro Tilton correspondonco with Lho whole of our ropulnr odition. Aside from this, We have had an " extra " printod containing theso remarkable Iettors, for which orders will bo recoivod in tho counting-room. Gormany, Exxglunnf. and Franco havo agroed to rocognizo Spain ; and Lbe causo of Maguificont Don Carlos Is abeolutely lost. A Convontion of Rtnllroad Commissioners in tho Northwestern Btates is now being held at Dubugue, Tows, No business of importanca s « yot heen tranmacted. Tho nttontion of tho Con- * yeontion will be chiofly aivocted to a fow quos- tions of expodioncy, which aro fully stated in anothor colwinu, e The City Governmont must not bo allowed to forgot that no nction has beon taken upon the recommendations of the Yiro Commisaionors. Chicago i now as fully oxposed to the danger of dostruction by firons it has been sny timo \ for tho Inat two yeara. The benofity of oxtonded five-limity aro wholly prospective. Evidently tho Joker of the Chicnga Times docs not dare to bo ns funny as lio ean over tho MeClenthon affair, Nothing that he could say would be likely to amuse hia cmployer orto placato M., Hesing, Tenca tho toudernoss of his wit, And when (e jokor docs not do bis best, ho 38 inoxpressibly stupid. Under no cir- cumstances ia ho tolorabla. Penco bna been declarod in Mississippl. A small body of traops onterod Austin yesterday, 1ho nogroes disporsiug without show of opposi- tion, and there have beon no furthor indications of riot. In the meleo, Dr. 8mith, who was the ocension of it all, made good his ascapo ; snd horo fu really nothing more to contend for. Ho might have boen taken away to a bottor world without being missod from his family, , Thero aro tho County Commissioners, charged I with brikery iu tho mattor of tho County-los- ' pital lot. They aro mot averso to discussing . other questions of public interost, ns, for in- stanco, .whothor Mr, Hesing was justified In beating ou impudent roporter, or whothor the TFiro Dopartment 1s complotely equippod at all points. Anytling that sorves to divort atton- tion from thomsclves, even tho weathor, soems . to the distrossod ones like o now dispeneation of Providenco. sesterduy, and rgreed to appenl tho lax eases to the Bupremo Court. Justico should provail thongh thoe beavens fall ; othorwise thoro might bo Romo senso in advising the delinquonts to " puy up like men, without putting the city to the juconvenionce and cxponso of a long delay. Auothor roason why thoy sbould nob pay until compelled vy last to do so is thut our law-mukers at Springfield ought to know tho oxtent of their own blundering ignorance. zod in pickle for the insolent officials ab Washe ington who havo delayed the publication of the pgucullural roports, Tho blamo lics botwoon the Commissioner of Agriculture and tho Con- greasionnl Printor. Neithor of theso gontlemen, wo Fear,undorstands that the Croat Wost cannot o nbuul ity business until it bas boon advisad by tho Agrieultural Depurtmont; and yob this terrible rato of depondenco was sufliclently dwelt upon when tho Postal Approprintion bill was under consfleration in tho last Congress. Then it was oxplained thet the farmers wanted thesa reports so much as not to bo willing to pay + tha postago on thom. - Whon Tite TamuNe conteining * Gath's!' con- 1 tribmtion to the Beochier seandal ronchied Brook- ! lyn oneof the newspapers thero complnined of *f “tronchery.” ‘o word In this connactlon, 1f it monns anythivg, mosns that somo facts were divalged by “Gath® which Mr. Moulten had ! agroed should ho kopt wecrot. Whather thin is a 3 Kind of treachery to juslify public mowrning is & 1 question that may properly bo suggosted for con- "I gideration. ‘Lhe truth is that M. Moulton, at tho "} tigpof “Untl's " intarviow, hud dotermindd to ¥ tell ml hio know, and with this purpose kad pro- § parod o long statemont giving the documonts In 1 his possension und appropristo commeonts, ilo £ wan aftorwardy lnduced to suppross thiu, nud § substituto for it & short statoment of much fi mildor tono. Iiut thio mischiof hus boen dono, iy Tho truth hag heen told Lo the world, and thus b an attompt nt o compromine hra heen defonted, N ——— ,: I'he Chiengo produce murkels woro gonorally € wenk yostordny, - Mews pork was dull and ' lowor, closing ot $25.50 casb, and $16.60@ t 16,55 wotlor the year. Lard wos fn fair do- "' mand and eleady on cash loly at 14.G0@LLTS, ¥ and firmor on gollor the yoar, at £10.70@10.75, € Monta wora dull and oasior, at BX@8io for G ghoul lors, 113£@11560 for short ribs, 115@11350 W gor whort clour, und 193/ @183o for swact-plelkled y{ g, Highwines were quict. and firrn at 3 g7¢ per gallon. Lako froighta woro in fuir ro- t quest and firm, at 23{e for com to Buffalo, "0 Flour was dull und easier, Whoat wau dull and A 10 1owor, closing ot §1.03 ensh, $1.02%¢ sollor W tho month, and 937¢a for Hoptemher, Corn was nOr0 aotive, and 1@13{o lower, closing strong nt AT G5c oasli, aud 6137 kollor tho month, Oats wore lesn active, und nvornged Yo lower, closing at ' 99340 cashy, aud 8740 wollor tha mouth. Rys ‘was moro activo aud oasler, closing st 720, W't CHIVAGO DAILY TRIBUNE; TURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1874, Darloy waa qulet and stordy ot $1.02 sollor Sop- tombor, logs wera activo, with !M‘ns chiefly nt $0.00@7.10, Cattlo woro without jmportant chango. Bhoep wora stoady and firm., P e Tho Liotso Goldsmith Mnid has necomplishod Bomo romarkablo fonts during tho past serson, At Enst Boginaw, Mieh,, sho trotted & milo in 2 min,, 10 so0. 'hly record wau reduced at But- falo to 2 min, 1G)¢ seo; and yosterday, ab Tochoator, to 10 min,, 14%{ sec, Timid gontlo~ mon are bogiuning to foar thai tho time will como when horsos will gon mile in no time nt sll, and thon the agenoy of Old Harry, which 1¢ mow only suspectod, will Do- como cloarly apparont, Wo must look for tho rocont extraordinary apood of American race-horsos to Improvomonts in broeding, train- ing, driving, and tracks, It is in somo of the Inst threo particulars, of course, that Goldsmith Mald hag boon bonoflted ; and wa suspoot that all of thom have ontored largely into Lior auo~ cenn, Bomo euthusiastio historian of aporting ovonts would do woll to onlargo upon recont progress in turf mattors, making some such divislon of tho subjoct as has boen judiestod abovo. A ghort time boforo tho English Liborals lost povwer, thoy passed through Parliamont n bill to chieck adultoration. Tho objeet was docrioed ag an imposaibility, but the forvont appenls of sov- oral mumbors—nmong thom Thomas Hughas, who paid for his advocncy of the bill by losing bis sont—catricd the day., 'The Parlinmentary Committeo on Adultoration roported, just beforo the Inst adjournmont, that the * Act of 1873, 08 it ia called, has checked adulteration and has changad its character whero 1t is still practicod. The doalers aro now afraid to poison their cus- {omors. Thoy only obeat them. Alcohol has water in it. Boorcontaing wator andsalt, Bread hins only alum and rice-flour as foreign ingrodi- ents, Milk is skimmed and watored. Tho adul- torations of tonare not **absolutely injurlous to health,” Lard plays some part in butter-mak- fug. GChiccory masquerades ay coffee, All thoua articlos of ndultoration cheat instead of polson- ing. The chavnge wrought by theact is a gratity- fug one, On this side of tho Atlantlo, wo are impaxtially choated and poisoned too. To-day s number of poor children living in Ohieago will ba taken out to Turners’ Park to brenthio the puroe air and expand their souls into somo gort of delight. If Lhe managers of tho oxaeurgion bave any oxpectation of joining bo- novolonco to pretty sontimont thoy will meet with sovero disappointment. The ohildren of the strocts aro not the kind who fold their littlo hands across thelr breasts and com- muno with Naturo so long a8 their littls Lands can got at anything worth taking; and itis not to bo oxpected that their hubita will bo vis- ibly improved by ono day’s work. What tho managors shonld scok to do is to givo theso boys and girls junocent pleasure, not un necount of thoir deserts but bocsuso of their noods. It i8 not justico but pity which is tho coutrolling motivo of tho porsons who bave contributed, in one way and another, to theso oxcursions. They should boe conducted in tho epirit of that charity which gives freely, domanding not oven grat- itude in retura. THE TILTON LEITERS, A short time since, we commiseioned our cor- reapondent * Gath! to ropair to Brooklyn, and, to tho full extont of his ability, to inslitute for Tng Taipose o thorough, indopendont iuvesti- gation of iho facts and ovidenca bearing on the Beochor-Tilton scandal. Wo folt that the publle weroe disgusted with the proceduro of the Investigating Com- mittoe appointed by Boecher limself; that it had forfoited tho confidenco of tho American pooplo, tho rospoct of both Boschor's frionds and Beechor's foos; aud that, thereforo, tho time hind come to translor the came, i Buch & thing were postible, from the tribunal of tho Brooklyn Tnvestigating, Committeo to tho tribunsl of Amorican itportiality, The case, wo folt, had grown too large for the Committeo to manago it. We saw that the country lind resolved itself into an Tuvestigating Committeo; that it was sitting in jndgmont on Boecher, and impationt because no evidenco cxcept such ns bad passed Lhrough tho distorting medium of o Beecher-appointed, projudiced, pecuniarily-intérested court was ltd before it. ‘I'he whole Western country, ot least, was clamorous for & clango of venuo from Braoklyn to tho nation, for . transfor of juris- diction from Beccher's pacled court and packod jury to the whole Amorican poolo. We ondenv- ored to eatisfy tho public domand. Wo are grat- ifled to say that wo have succeeded. *f Gath's” dispatel, published lu Monday's fssne of Tne Tuinusy, has, as it was natural it shonld, created o vory marked Improssion iu tho East, aud, indoed, throughout the land, "That lettor, affording, as it did, original and no honrsay evidenco, boaring directly on the question of Beechor's guilt, took bis cue from the Committeo aud turnod it over to tho peoplo. What Alr, Moulton stated to our correspondont i8 probably tho purport of what ho eaid in the firet sitatement hio prepared for tho Committeo, snd which is now said to Do in Gen, Butlor’s bands. In tho statement fnally presented ho probably conflned himselt to tho lotters from which Mr. Tilton quoted. There has boon talk of w compromivo. Already our corre- spondent’s lotter has bud ity influenco, It has frustrated tho uchomea of tho Commit- teo. Mr, Boecher has, iu consequenco of its publication (so ft 'Is roported), beon compolled to modify his statomont. But this is not all ; it bay oxploded tho intondod coinpromixe, 3 ) In thin morning's iweuo wo continuo tho work begnn in Monday’s paper. . Wo luy hoforo our ronders tho lottors whick passod botwoou Mr. Tilton and his wife during the period of time whon, agcording to Mra, Tilton's ovidenco, her husband was maltrenting nor, sbusing hor, noglooting her, and allowing her to starve, Tho lettors woro fmnished to ik Trisune by IJudge Morris, Mr, Yilton's counvel, and thay are now pubtished for tho first time, Thoy aro an important part of tho ovie denca in tho caso; for it is a quention of very pgrest moment what Mea Tilton's oharacter for voracity i, eapoclully as sho narorts what hor husband denios, and ho donies what sho neserts, It can bo shown that hor atate- monta concorning hor husband's ill-trontment of her aro falso; {f it 'can bo proved that, whoreas she nccusos Mm of haviug maltreated hor, abused Ler, neglocted hov, loft hor without food ovon, lio was over tenderly attached to Lor, and earod for hor lovingly, hor wholo testimony fulls to the ground, Fataus inuno, falsus in omnibus— false iu ono thing, falsein ovorything. Tf Mes, 'Lil ton was guilty of a delluerato falsohood when sho acoused hor husbund of oruelty towards her, wo canuot accopt hor tostimony whon sho acouses hin of other things as bad or worso ; muoh loss ocan wo necopt It whon she proclaims her own funocouco aund hor paramour'y in the faco of lor lottors and Doochor's publishod in Tilton's sworn ataloment. That sho boro falso wituess whon sho ncousod bor husband of unkindnosa and Hi-tront- mont, tho lotiera which we publish this morning provo boyond the shadow of o doubt. DBy hor own words, wo condemn her, By ler husbund’s lettors, wo condemn her. "ilton hind olafimed fn his atetemont that, tl Bocohor on- tored his iomo In tha oharnotor of a soducor, it lind boou an ideal homo, In hors, Mre. Tilion asgorted that it was anyibing but idonl ; that in that bomo eho Lind spent ten yonrs of misory with hor tormentor. Yot {hiais tho husband whom 1n Lor lettora she compares to God him- golf, whom prosont sho adoros, and sbront sho yonrns for with tho intonsest love. This fs tho busband of whom Ao lhad esld that whon God mado him ho made somothing vory good. Andall those lottors woro writton durlng the period of abuso, starvation, and oruelty, For a woman starved, abused, maltreated, AMra, Tilton writen vory bosutiful, loving, sonti- mental, choorful, sunshiny lettors. And consid- oring that hor husbaud was 80 cruel and 8o bad aman, sho loved bim with & vory tntonso and vory unacoountablo lova. ' Theso lottors provo Mys. Tilton's want of verac- ty. They prove Mr, Tilton's uniform kindness to lor, But they prove moro. Thoy provo that Into ler Liousohold tho disturber of its pence bnd como; and that, although she know ho was o disturbor of the sacrod calm of hor homo, and spite of hor husbaud’s manifest oppositton to tho “love™ botwoon the fntruder and hor- solf, sho was too much attached to him to forbid Lim her liouso for tho enko of hor hus- band, They prove hor love for Mr. Beochor. Thoy show that she folt it nocessary to asauro her husband that Boochoer was not muoh to ler, and thoy show, alas! that sho folt it incumbout upon lor to writo to bim that sha was puro! Thoy prove that 3Mrs. Tilton's natural character was precisoly what her husband hod patoted it. As literary productions, the correspondence botweon this now unfortunate couplo will rank among tho colobrated love-lottors «of the world, Thoy aro fit to bo claseod with thoso of Marius and Cowotte in Victor Hugo's Los Miserablos, with thoso of Potrarch and Laura, or with the immortal effusions of two othor most unfortu- nato henrts, Holoiso and Abolard. THE PROPOSED FIRE-ORDINANCE, Tho ordinnuce propared by Gen. A, C. Dueat and Mr, Fredorick Baumann, and submittod to tho Commwitteo of the Common Council, is the bout and most futolligent schome for the: pro- vontion of fires that has yot boen dovised. Gen. Ducdt is an exporienced undorwritor and Mr. Daumann an accomplished architeet, In this ordinanco we Lave tho bouefit of the praotical knowledgoe of tho arohifect, aud of thp ex- perionced obaerver of fivea and their orlgin and spread. Tho proposed ordinanco is somothing moro than & mere rogulation fixing limnits within which wooden bulldings mny bo eroctod, It proposes what Oblcago haslong nocded : intols ligont rogulations for the construction of all kinds of buildings in all parts of the city, We supposo thoro nover wag . clty in this or in any other country whero thore has been such unre~ strainod liconso givén in all mattors pertafnivg to tho material and con- struction of buildings as in this City of Chicago. Thoro Lnve boen o fow abortive offorts to prescribe cortaln rogu- lations, but thoy have bocn wholly disrogarded. Nobody has evor paid the slightest attontion to thom, and architoets, buildors, and ownors, have dono protty much as thoy pleased. Therehas Yeen no governmental suporvision, Tho city has bad threo Fire-Wardens, and these men have had tho sole ovorsight of all the buildinga put up in Chicago sinco tho fire,—a worlk that, to bo done proporly, wonld have roquired the undivided at~ tontion of fifty skiliful and experionced mon, This ordinanco proposos to catabilsh rogulations applicable to all buildings from tip foundation to tho roof, and i all qomlln of the interior “conatruction. Tho flret rogulation s that tho body and facing of the oxtornal walla of all buildings must be constructed of incombustible matorial, oxcept that— Bulldings beliig less than 19 fest in hefght, from tho @grado of tho sidowalk to the highest purt of tho roof, and covering an srea of less than 200 superflclal feot, Ay bo constructed of combustible framework, but 1nust, in Guch caso, oxternully bo covored with » man- tlo of Sncombustible materlal. All buildings over 30 foot in hoight, and cov- oring an ayos of 2,000 superfleial feot, must bave foundations of solid makonry. All chimnoysnot attached to masoury must have solid founda- tions, The firat artlola deals in detail specifications of the general charactor of all buildings erectod within tho city, Artiolo 2 specifies tho thlck- noss of walls, oxtorior, party, and partition ; algo tho walls of public buildings, churchos, theatres, oto., iron-fronts, and framowork of olavators, Articlo 8 specifics the interior conalruction of buildings; ond Article 4 spocifios tho protection to hatohways and openings in walls. Article 5 mukes all that part of the South Divieton north of 100 feat wouth of Hnreison mtroct & separate dis- trict, to ba known ns the “Business District,” in which all tho gonaral rulea for the rogulations of bullding aro modified snd enlarged. Ono of theso roles i that all bulldings in this businoss dlutrict must have substantial irou shutters to all openings not upon a publio stroet over 50 feot wido, It nlso provides that all bulldings over threo atorios high must have a standpipe with propor howe-coupling, All tho regulutions pro- vided for in the ordinanco are for buitdings hor- after to bo constructed, Artiole 6 rogulntes the ropoirivg and romoval of wooden buildiugs. Auy wooden bufldiug worth 50 por cont of its original valuo may, at the option of the Board of Tublic Works, bo removed from its presout sito to uorth of North'avento and wost of Larraboo #stroot; to west of Ashland avenuoe and sauth of Tighteonth streot, or north of Indiann street; inthe Bonth Division, weat of Stowart avenuo. All repoirs must bo fn conformity with the uaw Tognlntions. 3 Avdcles 7 und 8 rogulato existing walls and tho ontargomont of oxisting buildings within tho bustitons distriot; and spocifieations of the apneo to be takon up by aroas and profeotions to alt bulldiugs, Artlelo 9 u dovoled to specifio roguintions or procwutions nguinst firo, Thowo rogulato the kooping of Lay, straw, and sbavings, tho locatlon of stovo-pipos, the doposlt of ashoes, and probibits -tha manufacturo of " ammnni- tion or firo-works, and the distillation of potro- loum in suy building i tho city, The munufuc- turo of lard, seed, or other oll, whisky or high- winos, aud tho storago of tumbor, s prohibited in tho businoss district. No planiug-mill, lum- ber-yurd, or manufaotory of woodon articles, shall bo ontablished, oxcopt in tho districts into whiol woudon buildings are allowod to bo moved, Potroloum, ote,, are not to bo slored oxcopt by spocial pormit, and thon only in cortain olussos of buildings, All fires for the goneration of steam shall be fed with suthraclto coal, unloss thore bo provislon mede for consuming the smoko. Articlo 10 providos ponaltics, and Articlo 11 oatablishos rogulationa during timo of fire. Wo biavojuo question that the ordinanco, it oxo- outod aud enforced, would bo an admirablo ar- rangomont ; but it fs lamentably deflelent fn providing any mnohinery for its own exocu- tlon, It mnkon it tho duty of tho Donrd of Po- lico to oxacute tho law,~—a duty for which that Bonard {4 and muat bo wholly iucompetont. That Board con only oporate through subordinatos, and o exconte much & law requires s now oliss of ofllcors, and o class of qualifi- catlons wholly unknown to iho membera of tho prosont or any futuro DBonrd of Polloo Commissloners. The excoution of that law should bo mado tho duty of s particular do- partmont of tho Board of Public Works, and to this dopartmont shiould bo assigned tho on- tiro rogulation of tho construction of all bulld- ings, publio and privato; it should lavo an adoquate forco of compotent, oxperionced, and skilled mon, without whoso pormit no building should be eracted, ohanged, oularged, ralsed, or romoved ; and overy dotail of all theso thinga should bo under thoir rosponsible snporvision, control, and dircction. To commit tho onforco- ment of such a law to tho Police Board is to make it & dead lotter,~a snaro and o dolusion, —— THE IOWA ANTI-MONOPOLY TIORET, Last yoar, tho Ant-Republican party in Iown lost many thousand votes by the uso of mis- spolt tickots, Each Indopondent nowapapor soomed rosolved to Lo as indepondont in spelling 18 in politics. Tho result was that thoir columng were hosdod by » motley array of the namos of non-oxistent men. Ench bad o differont set. ‘Tholr raadors copied theso falsifying lists, votod thom at tho polls, aud so threw their suffragos awny. Ono such lesson onght to have beon sut- fciont, but iv soems to have bad absolutely no weight whatovor. Prooisely the samo thing Iy ‘belng doneover again. Wahave searched through tho Jows pross in the vain hopo of finding o corroct stotement of the Anti-Mouopoly tioket now in nomination. No two journals have it alike. Nomos and surnamea are distorted in ovory ayllablo. Tho Contral Committeo should attond to this. It will not do to 1ot bad spolling loss tho party the viotory. It fsnow a woll- kuown devico to deliborately print wrong ticketa of tho opposito party and peddle them at tho polls for the sake of nullifying tho eufTragos of thoso who cast thom, Though this isn game that two can play at, it 18 0a well not to have two playing sgoinst one. At tho Arkansas election of 1872, W. W. Wilsbiro was given tho seat from tho Third District becsuso tho ballots cast for his opponent, thongh thoy wore much more numorous than thoso csst for him, wore (or wore roported to bo) ko mis-spolt that thoy had to bo counted for fivo or six difforent mon. In 1870, tho Goorgin Consorvatives oleoted J. J. Parker Bocrotary of Btato, Everybody called Lim Juol Parkor, and so tho tiokots were printed “John J. Parker.” After tho olection, his frionds dlscovored that bis name was not Johu but Jabez Jackmun. Jnck was a falso nickname. #1f tho negro Rapicr,” says tho Mobile Adver- tiser, ‘“had kuown that John Parker was olected Bacretary of Stato ovor him, and not Jabez Parkor, thoro might bave beon a littlo trouble, but Jack kopt mum and all tho rest of us kopt mum, snd Jaboz Iar- ker- mode just as good o Scorotary of Ktate as John Parker could have done, if suchn gontleman lind oxistod.” In 1872, the tickets were agaln printed * John J. Parker,” but the orror wag dotected bofore tho election, and Jaboz Jackman Parkerwas duly’chosen Scerotary of Btato for Goorgin. Let tho Yowa Anti- Monopoliats roviso tholr tickots, that thoy mny voto for the mon thoy bavo nominated aud uot for non-oxistont candidates. SHEARMAN ON THE BITUATION. Mr, Bhoarman, ono of tho counsel for Henry ‘Ward Boccbor, ovidently afilicted with a qualm of conscience lost hio may not bo earning his feo, or perliaps jealous of tho public notorioty which tho sotors in tho drama Aro sccuring,—n wonkness which he has shownon several occasions hofore,— has rushed into privt in bebalf of his client. Apart from the unprofessional conduct of AMr. Shear~ wan in saying anything about his cago or client while tho investigation is ponding, tho statement is not caleulatod to do Mr. Boecher any good or to convince the public that ho is innocont, mere- Iy bocauso Mr. Bhoarman says so. Boys Mr. Shoarman ; “‘I'icro is & pruriont ouriosity sbroad to know overy dotail of this disgusting businoss which is absolately shocking." DBut who 1s min- Istering to this pruriont cariosity save Mr, Bocokor aud his counselora? Who is stimulat- 16 with bits and driblets of tostimony, and keop- ing it alive by withholding portions of tho toati- mony, but Mr. Boocher sud his lawyors? M. Tilton cannot . cortuinly bo acousod of keoping up tho interest in this seandal. Ilo has had his say and was dono loug ago. Ile made his charges carofully and pointodly woeks ago, and Lbas not oponed his mouth sinco, Ho has waited putiontly, and tho public has waited pationtly, o soo tho answer to thom, but it has not como yot. 1Ilo na no control over tho Investigating Conunittoe and no power to intluonce {hom in any diroction. The Commitieo is made up of By, Boochor’s frionds, solocted by Mr, Beocher himyelf, and {s engaged not so much in fnvesti- gating Mr. Boochor as In trying Mr. Tilton with out allowing tho lattor to appoar in his own do- fonsa olthor by counsol or in person. It holds ita sosalons when it ploasos. 1t prints what tes- timony 1t pleases, and it prints only what it thiuke will help Afr. Beechor. It hns not yot shown o sign of concluding its prococdings. 1t surrounds evorythiug it doos with ar nir of mye- tory caloulated to rouso *‘prariont curiosity." Mz, Tilton hng nothiug moro to say, and all that 16 sald, all tho gossip, all tho Interviows, all tho storlos true and untrue, il tho comment pro aud ‘con, grow oub of the action of Mr Boechor and his counsolors in prolong- Ing thig seandal. Thiv is tho sonrce ot which “prorient curlosity ® foods itsolf. Illy fs the fountuin hoad of the **disgusting buslness ;" and I Is within the power of the Cummitteo, or of Mr, Bacohor, or oven of Mr, Bhearman himsolf, to stop the sourco any timo thoy aro #o disposod, Mr. Shoarman sayn: “I know ull that Frank Monlton can sny or has to sny, aud I kuow thoro ls nothing. Isny that I know that thero s nothing in his possossion that cau fmplicato Mr, Boachor ano fota ; nothing, bocanso thero 18 nothing in oxistoncoto implionto Ll Thon in thonnmo of all that is decont why does not Homo ona spoak out, clear Mr. Boocher of the charges, snd utop *tho dig- gusling bustnoss ¥? Why I8 the cavo dragged ‘aloug ‘day after day, woolk after woel, and month aftoy month, it thoro I4 nothing In it? Why is ¥ prurient curiosléy” kept elive by Mr, Bhearman and his oliont ? Why thia intorminanlo dolay? Why uro not My, Tilton's upacifio ohurgos snswored gpooitically, B0 that tho publio ean drop * the disgusting business,” and Mr, Booch~ or oan go buck to hia pulplt? Why is uob AMr, Moulton's statomont printed if it contnins hoth- ing thal con damngo Mr. Boocher? Would an funocent man ack in this monner? Would an innocont ministor of tho Gospol, charged with an offonko which, it truo, would stamp him as tho blackeat lbortino and hypoorito that has ovor disgracod tho ohurch and socloly, allow that olinrge to romain unanswored for months and yoars, and surround Limsolf with ounning lawyora to pol- tifog his cnso and pupproms statomonts like thoso of Mr. Moulton's, or accont only auch por- t1ons of thom ns Mr. Beochor can answer? What- ovor Mr, Beachor's stalomont may bo, and hosw- avor satisfactory it moy bo to his friends, it will not entiafy the publlo unloss it anawors the origl- nnl chiarges in form as thoy woro made, and ox- plain Mr. Bocohor's lottors, aud the soonor thia {8 dona tho bottor will it be for Mr. Beeclior, and thio sooner will Mr, Boccherstep **prurient ouri- osity." Tho continued suppresaion of Mr. Moul- ton's statomont and tlhe appparent pur- pose of tho Committeo not to furnish it nt all do not look woll for tho honesty with which Mr. Boochor’s caso is managed by his Inwyers. It moy bo, aa Mr. Shonrman says, that thoro {s nothing in Mr. Moulton’s statomont, ‘but tho public would rather judgo for itself thaun tako him assurances. At presont it does not ap- poar that such an opportunity will bo furnishod, THE ASSAULT ON BISMARCE. Tho recont nbortive attewpt of a crack brainod religious zonlot to nssussinate Princo DBismarck scoms lo have beon made tho occasion for a gonoral onslaught upon the Catholio party Dy tho Gorman Governmont. Thoro ‘ls no ovi- denco that any one but ibo would-bo nssassin was ongagod in tho assault upon tho Prince, or that any ono was oven aware of his purposca. Tho priost, Manthsler, who lad gono to Kiealn- gon ont of curlosity to see tho Prince, who had naturally enough run ncross tho assassin whilo waiting, and talked with him, and whose long robes had nnfortunately tripped him up in front of tho Princo’s carriago, theroby giving tho assassin tbe opportunity ho was scoking, has eatisfao- torily oxplhined his connection with ihe affair and boon discharged from custedy. The Governmont, however, han sgized upon this opisode ns a pretoxt for & gonoral raid upon tho Catholics. Tho privato dwollings of editors of Catholio papora ‘have been invaded, and lettors, pamphlots, and doouments have boen soizad, and all the Catholio soolotics havo beon placed under survoillance, ovon thoso which aro do- voted to the charitablo caro of womon and chil- dron. This oxtraordinary nction upon the part of the German Government cannot but givo riso to the impression that it is scoking not go much to protect itsolf agajnst Catholio conspiracies snd intrigues ngainst the ponco of the Empire as to root out tho Catholio religion, and what hea appeared horotoforo as a dofenso of tho integ- rity of its laws now looks very much like a re- tigiou porsocution, A great and poworful mili- tary systom like the Gorman Governmont can aford to bo magnanimous and not visit its ven- gosuce upon thousands of innocent people bo- causo ono fanatic has threatencd violonco to ono of its officors. Porhiaps the most ridiculous foa- turo of tho affalr is-tho offer of & prizo which Lgg peon made by o party I Dortmund for tho best musical¥omposition, with or without words, on the Chancollor, Innemuch as noarly all tho prominont musicsl composers of Gormany, among thom Liszt (who may bo called & German), Rabb, Brahims, Wagnor, and othors, aro Catholics, it s puinful to considor tho dolugo of stuf? which will bo writton to colobrato tho cscapo of Bis- marck by the lessor lights who aronot Catholics. Bymphonies, sonatas, oporas, oratorios, quin- tottos, quartoteos, and songs will pour in without ond from overy Congorvatory, Maennerchor, and Gesangverein, from ono ¢nd of Gormany to tho other, sot to patriotio words or describing with fiddles pizzicalo and horus and trombones tumultuosissamente, tho sdvance,. the attack, tho rescuo, Thoro ls but ono man, and ho o Parisinnized Gorman, who i3 ocapa~ blo of doaling with this thome with the soriousnoss it desorves, 8nd that’ man 18 Offenbach. His graphio and fun-loving pen might picturo the gloomy occasion a in Barbe Bleue; tho unlucky pastor, Hanthaler, in tho rolo of Baron Grog; tho Princo himself a8 General DBoum; the wholo winding up with s grand can- can, 1n which Bismarel should ba the contra figuro. 1f Offenbach should refuso, the only man loft to writo tho explott is Strauss, who, al- though o Vieuneso, might do justico to the grav- ity of the oceasion iu ono of his waltzes, pulsat- ing to tho clinking of beor-mugs aud Rhine-wino flasses. BAZAINE AND HIS ESCAPE, Bazaine, aftor an imprisonmont of over half a year, has escaped. Outsido of France, thero will bo littlo regrot that tho old soldier is again st liberty, Even foreignors who' foel friondly to TFranco, and who aro willing to acknowledgo that Bezaino was not altogothor without blame, will rejoica that bo I8 froe. TFranco made an ex- amplo of bor famous Marsbal. Sho has gained Dy the simplo act of imprisonment all that sho had hoped to gain, is cscapo will not mato- rially affeet tho influcnco of tho examplo sho in- tended to mako. And, after all, the Marshal was no traitor. Bazuine, although always crod- ited with great military gounlus, with tho ability of conducting warliko operations on a large genlo, and with wonderful coolness on tho flold of baitlo, wsa mnovertheless . noted for Inck of rapidity of oxceution; for a waveriug, tomporizing disposition; end for tlo habit of countermanding bis own ordors, I1is good qualities lod him to tho Marshalato, his vacillativg charactor to imprisonmeont. Ba- zoluo was both a soidior and politiofan; but in the Franco-Prussian war and in his defonee, or rather absonco of defense, of Motz, ho sunlk the eoldior in tho politiclan. It wns = too gront attachmont to the Imporisl fummly that ruinod him. Iu Baznine, tho patriot was lost in tho partisan, It ing boon often said that Bazaino was made 2 senpegoat by his countrymen. T'o some oxtent ho miay have boen g, scapegont. But there must havo beon gomothing to warvant it, There muat bave boen some ground for singling him out from the many Frouch Genorals who mot with defent, Aftor tho battle of Borny, on Aug. 14, Bazalno should have marchod to join MacMakon, Ho lost & day, however, and that loss was tho dofeat of F'rauco, Iud ho boen prompt to make up his mind what he liad bettor do, aud rapid iu the ox- cention jof his decision, ho might havo jolned Macdahon and provented the Sedan calamity, for ko had 170,000 meon under hin com- mand, and who oan esy what theso 170,000 st Bodan might have accomplished? It is onld that ho was provented from joiniug Mnodalon by the Dlocking up of tho roads with srmy bog- gago. But that au oxperionced Goneral liko Bazalno should have 170,000 mon and all the accompanying baggago move along pne road, whon It was possible to have them move along throo or four, was unpardonable. Tho rosult of thiy orowding of the military was that columns of his army liad to wait & wholo day for an op- portunity to move. Daltorios of srtillory wore unnble to movo for five wholo hours in conso- quenco of iho obatruction of tho rond. Itis suspected that Bozulue did not mtend to join MaoMabon at all, o wroto to MacMalion that Lo might jolu him and that he might not. Bazaino's orimo was ihat lo might bavo jolned MaoMalion and did notby that by not joining him Lo was tho possible caugo of tho disastornt Bedan, But thils was uot tho prooiro chargo of which Bazaino was cone- victed. What sont him to prison was Lis falluro %0 do all that bonor and duty domanded of kim bofore urrendering in opon flold. Thoovidenco sooms to support tho charges. From tho {hir- toonth doy aftor thoe investmont of Motz was hogun,’thatis from Sopt. 1, 1870, Bazaino took no actlon whatover, For nearly two mouths ho romained complotoly, idle. Ho had rations onougl to support his army for woll nigh sixty days within tho walls of Metz; Lo had over 160, 000 en with him, and thoy wors tho bravost and best drilled eoldiers fn Franco; ho had tho advantago of position and s vast supply of tho munitious of war. Opposed to him wero 200,000 Prussians. But, holding ouo of tho grontost strongholds in the world, ho was moro than able to copo with 200,000 mon., Mo did not ovon attempt to do {t, howovor. After iwo months of idlonces ho surrandered to tho Prus- sians fivo forts, 643 picces of cannon, oll tho * war material which haa beon accumulating at Motz for ovor half n contury, tho contents of al] tho arsonals, and all his mou, The secrot of his inactivity s that Lo looked upon the defeat of Napoleon at Scdan as tho donth-blow to Frauco, ITo bad cost bis for- tunca with thoso of the Emporor, Nupoloon's dofoat was in his oyos France's defeat. Mo did not wish, strango to say, that Fravco should win aftor hor Emporor had lost, Bazaino was alweys anti-Ropublican, When the Em- peror was sont to Wilhelmehole, the Ropublic was proclaimed. The Republicans of TFronce wisbied to demonstrale to the peoplo of Tronco that thoy could eave tho country after tho Empirchad lost it. DBazaino did not care to cast any refloction on his Imporisl mastor by saving Franco for tho Republio. Tho Emporor had stood, in his oyos, for Franco. When tho Eiperor was mede o prisonor, thore was no Franco loft for bim, o hoped that it ho should sarrondor Motz to the Gormans ho would bo por- mitted to keop hismen together, to restoro ordor in Frauce, to re-onthirono the Kuperor, protect the Princo Impoerinl sud his mother. Ie would hava'nothing to do with tho Republie. Had he boon succossful in reinstating the Em- peror and re-establishing tho Empiro, Bazaino would be in Trouce to-day what Moltko isin Germany. Ho vory unwigoly gavo to party what belongod to Franco, and Lo has had to pay for it. ‘Woro Lo & cousclous traitor, no man, friend or foo of France, would think any punishment‘too hoavy for himto onduro. But he waa not a traitor. o was only o wenk partisan, 1fohas suffored enough; and few will rogret that his world is onco moro wider than a prison-yard. Many of the nowspapors in New York City find it choaper to rely upon the volunteer offorts of a closs of vagrant roporters than to employa largo reportorial ptafl of thoir own., These Bo- homians a8 a claga are sharp aud intelligont, buy includo somo youug men of viclous habits who aro unmblo to procuro steady em- ploymont. Their practico is to collect nowa snd soll it to tho daily papers at so much a yard. Of course, & considorsblo amount of false nows ia contributed 1n this way, but long-continucy euccess in tis dubious mothod of earning money is not practicablo. A caso Lias recently como to light which shows how a bright and unscrupulous writer imposed on two of the most relisble pub- lieations in tho city—tho New York Zibuns and Appletons' Journal. Frauols Theodoro Johuson ia the namo of this persop. Ho las boon dotoctod, and it now appears thut among tho articlos which had a foundation only in his fouelful brain wero tho following: In the Tyibune, o roport of s meoting of tho Socloty 1lijosdoe Cuba, ' The Disappearance of an Eminont Gorman,” “'The Biography of the Fronch Ambassador Bortuoldi,” * Tha Cantem- plated Visit of the Duke of Saxe-Coburg to the Unitod Statos,” and s articlo on * German Oniminals in Amorica " in Appletons' Journat, “ An Eccontric Kivg," ** Bjorneen, tho 8wedish Writer,” ‘‘ Dimy of tho Grand Duko Aloxis,” * Violor Emaunuel Hunting the Ibox," * King Goorge of Greoce,” * A Forgotten Emporar,” and two or threo of thoso imposed ou tho Trib- une. All thoeo sro pronounced absotuto flotions. As litorary frauds they woro brilliant aud dig gracoful. But for tho ability of his composi- tions and tho clegance of his atylo, Alr. Johnson would bo at home on tha Chicago Zimes, —_— In tho flotsam and jotsam of ourrent journal- istic rubbish {8 o card lubeled ** William For- roster, No. 4,560." Byadding tho words, *“Poul- tantinry, Joliot, 1L, tho public will more roadily agsociate it with tho young bravo charged with, but not tried for, the murder of Nathan in Now York., Forreater pines tobo froe, not that ho may onjoy the swoets of Liberty, but in order to olear his namo of tho charge of murder and bring the real culprits to justico. He claims that hio hos been uscd as & shield to protoct cor- tain parties high in oflico, nnd that the polico were ucceszory to the plan. ¥lo narrates a story somowhat similar to that of Al Daba sud tho leader of tho Forty Thioves, Bupt. Konuedy, lho nsays, was anxious to procure his tdountification by a Cor- man who swore ho had soen 8 man walkivg the streat with bloody clathes on, He put a black patch on Forrester's Ince, and made him stand up Inarow with fitteon other prisonors, 'Lhio Gormnu wituess, not obsorving the mark, failed to Idontify the pricouor as the man ho had soon, Lenncdy then sont the Gorman back to soleot tho muo with & patel. Dr, Willls, tho DPrison Burgoon, snw through thoe inlquity ol this schomo, placed pimilur patclios on tho facos of the othor prisouers, and again baflled Kouuedy. Forrontor likowiso assorts that it was this guilty Booret which hurrled the lato Bupt. Jouxdau ta his gravo. o exprossos his willinguoss to waivo bis rights as o couvict und take his chances in » trisl for tho murder of Nathuu. 1ha chanoos of o trinl within tho noxt decade aro light. —_——— 'Tho now Eccloniustical Inw In Eugland has not yob beon put in force. It hns sucezeded in drawing out no little nowspaper controvorsy, howevar, soma of which is frralevant nud vidicu- lous, and rclutes to posturing and other mattors of tho oxtreme Ifigh Chwreh party. Dr. Pusoy, who haa given his name to a party, by oxphuin- ad his position in a card publisvhed in the London Times, 'Who only porson qunlified to Jend the Tligh Church parly, ho thinks, wonld linve boon Dr, J. 10, Nowman, for tha reason that he wonld hnve rostralued thoso who thought themsolvos moro advauced, It would soom, from this remark, that Dr Tusoy dopro- caled tho extromo viow of tho Bt Albuny echool, -+ Youngormen," ho suys, * thought thomsolves woro advanced than tho volerans of 1833, I, for my part, thaught that Phnoton wag Quiving tho ohariot of the sun, but thoy had ay wmuch right to thoir opluion as I to mine, sothoy wont thoir way; I hold on to minc.” Tho Cluch Assoolutlon, howovor, ho olalng, hus driven him and thone who thought with him into boing party with tho oxtromists, In this position ho oxprossos hily low oplufon of the now law, or rattior of the machinory for onforcing it, lnns much aa the low has not yot bean sottled, and quostions whothor tha substitullon of two ocoleainstionl courts for throo will oxpodite its oulorcoment. 7o legislature bns put tho cart beforo tho horee, ho thinks, This isn p}r\)gglo botweon the Biato and a branch of its Church from which our fovefathom linve snved 18, Our Churoh troublon nr of n difforout or- dor, nono the less mortifylug that the questions at fasue aro loss abstract und more human, Mr. 0. Jullin Dannfolt, the Sivodisly Gommition v tho. Contoniul” Tt 1 tiou in Philadolphia, 10 s boon fn thiy coun. try somo Uimo oxamining tho dotalls of tho plang and waking arrangomonta for tho exhibltion of tho products of Bwodon, lins roturned to hig na- tivo country, and will make a fuvorablo roport to tho Parlinmont In January. Boforo loaving bie stated that Bweden will probably mako n largo oxbibition of iconwwork, ching, onrthen and Mo~ Joliea ware, fur manufacturos and raw shing, and will follow tho mothod adopted at Vionna, of Lnvlug a cataloguo proparod aud publishod with a comploto statistical nccount of Swoden and Norway, Onoitom of hig couversation will be of ln&:fit :;: our (n:rmm. Mr. Dannfelt enid : ety yenr fmport fron smaller n.[:-nunuuzh (s u".:ie.?&,".fit.l’,'.".fl??fi“"“nfl‘éfi Tro gan wako dn tho bowt mannor At pricos from onge Tune to ono-third wh i u;xrucnxf.“bl tind Iy pafd lioeo to-dny. Thia any, You avo they nre et £ooll, 01 than thiey winh Lo sail y muntako tho vory Joweat prive, o iy ek sty ackota of Tiirapo. ~¥on mako th buy llgh sud sl chosp, soaimr: L oiico, Thio budy ot tho-1eopio=-tho Turmetn-ruag fos sk osorn, a3 thio manufucturers keoy o ool Looniny ether ool than fhele"Shv s o Lo h I LAY g o1 Lo Gahibition of products s gyeo 'l WILETs Sountey, with uxplanitloun of yricesand i fs, i vak dowiy o to bk o ¢ d-(u);:nl—nlnian Iina wow deawn. boths pooptde, e i Biern 0" two coun Y ot riow At fre mmensol, 6 a0y was allowodt " Bwook b woek aro tho uses of advorsity,” thoso uges bas boen dircovered mn'nunyol‘;; :; eminont Frouch physiotn, who assorty that grooning nand oryivg are of grent advantago to people undergoing surgical oporations, boeaune Naturo allnys avguish by thesa two monus, Lo citos the caso of aman who reducod hiy. vulye from, 120 to 60 in two hours by ecrying nud gronning, "ho discovory Is of valna i moro ways than one. The surgeon is not the only ono who will b& benofited. The dontint, pulling away at his cuy- tomor's tooth, will rejoico that hig gronning iy of no nccouut, but s raally relioving the ana Ruleh, - pud he will probably prolang that dolightful oporation and broak off tho tooth a {9\v timos for tho sake of tha bonollt to bo de- rived by tho draweo from groauing. Tho fond mothor applyiug tho old shoo to her oMspring will not Lo dotorred by the youngstor's cries from meling out & full measure of hot leather, a8 tho crfing s iu reality doing tho child as rauch good ag tho old shoo itself. Gentlo wowm- an, in hor toarfnl muods, will not hereaftor mol~ lity hor tyrant husband, who will tako the eharit- nblo viow that the erying is doing bLer good and. rolieving bier anguish, o will thorefora bo in- clined to lat hor woop, ——— Bir Bamuel Bakor bag put his foot fn it. Ilia onthusiasm ran ahead of his judgmont when ho praised the Khedive of Egypt a8 a stanch Abolitionist. 1l has recontly published a card. in tho London Times, in which he gives ex~ prosslon to his beliof that the Khedive is somowbat of a bypocrite. Whilo Sir Samuel was tolographing all over tho world tho wolcomo news that slavery was abol- ished in tho Nile Basin, ouo Abou Snood was, busily engaged fu importing slaves. Sir Samuol was comforted by the promiso that thia teaftor should bo brought to triat at tho carliest oppor- tunity, and thorofore indulged iu tho congratula~ tions which wero 4o oxtenwively shared In thia country as woll as Evgland. But now it appears that Abon Baood, iustend of maling the ac~ quaintance of tho oxcentionor, has beon pro- mulo«]vlu oftice. All of whick goes to show that the faith of an Egyptinn dospot is not to bo ro- lied on moro rocklessly than ihat of an ordinary politician, —_— Alr, A, 8. Brownlow, brother of {he * Paraon,® wantod an offico. It was not & groat oflico to which his huugry soul aspivod. It wag meroly that of Rogistor of Washington Couuty, Loun. 3ir. A, 8. Brownlow.isues a cireular, in which ho males a pitoous apponl to bia constituonts tlat wero to bo. Ifore ia somo of it I am o Touncasooan by birth, and oll i st by Ml sl st e wora tho Stato and i tho couuty ‘thirty-fivo years, lsburing in your midat ag an humblo mcchunie, until I amy broke down, Homo soven years nqo I fost my wifo s 8hio Joft o with five orpliani childron to take curo ofy I marriod the secoud wife, aud sbe Iy wokly, My friend, Mr, Juryls, s nman of property, 1iv owns two farms on tho Clierokee, and has Lud this littlo otlico twelvo mouths, and durfug that thne Lo bua boon keepiug Achiool at Bell's sehoul-bouse, and hired . Clurles Dawwer to sttond 1o his busfuchs i 141 ollico, Ho hid fivemoro months to teach at Bell' in order to muke out hiw schoul, aud now b hus ono Tinsto Zine, of ludoc uolorlely, wt bis Depity, ‘and 2 0 8aid Zino iflectedt, Now, fellow-cifize Tt e foe ths ruan Jacvis to grab G ety 2L On mature dchiberation, it is elear that 3fr. A, 8. Brownlow omitted ono of kis initials, —_———— A peoulinr_charactor hus recontly died in Harrisburg, Ho was tho editor of tho Harns- burg Telegraph; (Adwmiulstration), and of courso Postmastor. His munagomont of aairs was full o2 contradictious. Iis pupor nover had o lino of tolographic news u its coluians during his connection with it, and yot, as n sheor party organ, biad o largor ciroulation than tho Patriol, an_ably-conducted papor, with ny copivus aud woll-golected tolographio nows as could bo ox- pocted in B city of only 80,000 inhab- itaote. His job-offico] was as far Dbehind 88 hiw paper, for mot a singlo stoam- pross was admitied into it, In addition to thoso two fogsilizod Iustitutions he ran o chonp bookstoro opposite tho nowspapor-oifico, and divided his time equally among the four i~ stitutions namod,—tho Pont-Ofllea, tho nows papor-abice, tho Job-ollico, und tho ochuap book- Btoro. And this wna tha condactor of the oriun of tho “Party of L'rogross™ In tho Cupital of the sccond Stato of the Union! Even Mothor Enrth s rising up in Judgmont sguinst the gad compuniod, Jirab u gosewell sypours it South Chicazd to warn thom ugninst oxtortion, and thon anothor is discoverad nt Cor- noll. Why not make an effort to seo if Naturo hae not boen &g gonerous to Chicngo as to ber suburbs? ow A& MICHIGAN STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, Corvespondence of The Chivan T'ribuie, Lansixa, Mioh,, Aug. 10.—~The report of tho Btato Loard of Agrienlluro for tho yoar 1873 will bo ready for distithution uftor tho meeting of tha Boura this mouth, It is a hook of 183 Piigos, Tho cuntonts ombraea wo abstraet of the report of tho Agrieultural Collogo; * Rural Adorumonts and Beaulifying Ilomes,” by the Ilon, A, B, Dyckman; tho addross of X, A. Willard bofore 'tho Michigun Dairymon’s Assa- ciations o address botoro the Avmmdi Tarwers' Club by tho Rev. R. G. Linl; “lhosing Uomos” by R laigh, Jr ¢ Farming iu the Uppor Penbianla,” by tha How, Deveruux 5 Agrloultural Lunorers in agd aud Amorica,” by tho Ion, Lonry 4, 0 yield of vropd tu 18725 reporty of the Aprioultusal Bociotios of Burry, Gonosoo, Hitlee dalo, Ionin, Inghnm, Kont, Isubolla, Jackion, Lipoer, Macomb, Muson, Monomineo, Onkland, Oceunn, Prosque Islo, foiu-.ruwoa, Luseols, aud Vau luren Countics ; ¢ Whipplot and Draught,” by M, Niles ; * Olosa Broeding,” by M. Bliles ; *‘Boil-Lxhaustion and Hotution of pi," Ly R, U, Kedzie; o paper on the nsmo topie by Prof, B, W, Johnson 3 % The Agiical- tural Culloge of Michigan and 1ty Intlusnce,” by Georgo Geddo, otg,, oto, THE NORTHWESTERN BOUNDARY SURVEY. Ovrawa, Can,, Ang. 12.—Intotligence was re- coivad to-day from Capt, Cameron, tho ohiof of tho Doundary Burvo; oniminsion, Ho wus withiin sight of the Rocky Mountains, Mo puesed through a scction of country In which It wus an- rrulmmlnd that difticulty with the Indians might b0 mot, without having encountered anything o he kind, "Tho Northwest polico forco’ witl 10l Jow tho same ronute, to some vxtont, and the unli~ cations avo that they will be also undisturbod. Aunothor survoying party have loft for Mani- toba to engage m the Caunda Pacifio Railway guevoy, 'Thoy broposo going via 8t. Yaul, Miua, B wrin and mischiof to « .