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Rycaratton enm rate, ut delav and wtstases, b sure and glvo Post oaa i (ull, fuchudipg Statoand Usauts, osk # iy L) Tiacle eltlioe by dratt, cayceet, “%.0u WELK, OT IR PAQSIOrAd ler1e R, &1 ANE TR, VEAMR 30 CITS SUDACRIRCIR, 3 atv,delivered, Sndsy exeopied 2 eeate per week, d rered, Suuday (Gulvdod, ) cnta ver wosk., THE TRILUNT COMPARY, ‘aeunr Madisan a1 Dearbinniona., Ullcago, (il s s TO: S, ACADEAIY OF MUB(C--Hatuted siveat, hotyeen Nad. fyou and Monroa, Engngoment of dlisa Kathartne Rogars Randolph, ** Komeoatd Jullet, MVIOKER'S THEATRE~Madlcon xtreat, between Bearboro nod Stata, Kugigoment o1 Alles Cardotis Lo Clured, ** Rast Lyzine.™ HOOLEY'S THEATRE-~Randoloh wsirest, between Clarkand LaSallo, Tl ¥ ireiaian. ark Snervn Hoate. aelly & Loun's iinatrels. LRS! 131 stroet, betwenn e, OPEA TR N ST TS Perforsaaneo, GRAND OPERA-HUDHE-C strost, opporite Sm——— SQCIETY MEETINGS, NOTIOE. ~Tharo wilt be specisl mesting of the birs of Unity Choroh &‘J;'. |c°mv m‘::r{ ihoqm itingh, chraer of Nottb Doerbornast 5 X . 97, 1814, 0t 8gipock, By orderof favitey vatad, Oot. 7y St £ G EBRT, Borotan. BUBINESS NOTICES. 10 ONEARD ALL—ADRE YOU SUUFRRING FROM 1 Concd cold, aa{hme bronchiis, or soy of the sariong e Rrts Jure St Liser vt nd Lime, ' AT And ylicackus v 5 'This 14 no quack prparation, [ ribod by tho froalty, Maualicrured L AT Chomise, Boaton, Sold by wl drog {lhe Chigage Tribune, Monday Morntng, Ootober 20, 1874, Thio French sre beginning to sbow that En- litn and Dutch tradars furnished tho largo sup- plea of fire-nrms and smmuvition which bave enobled the Carlists to carry oOn & ¥Igorous cam- paign. ‘Thoro is somo probability in tho state- s Gev, Brown has labo: ¥ oxplained to Gov. go why it s impossible to roturn the 2zrer lately wbducted from Ilinofs. We + that Lo did mot alzo explain why it was sery to kiduap o mau of whose guilh, ho sny3, he bag abundaut proof. RS (len Butler has secendod the stwmp in tho Fevex District, and wiil stay thare # great patt of the timo botween now and election dny, His cpeechoa are sald to be very effective. He ic £e “smart” o man o Dick Turpln, and & beiter ome In that ho is loyal to the patty. Turpin never went. into polities. 1o Chieago Bar is very saneh Intorested fn scenring o cousolidation of the Supreme Court Guond Dislatons, We print this morning sn le reciting tho recent action of the Bar tion, giving tho history of aitempted ation with the ond mentivned ia viow, end mming ap the sdvantages of one comt-room, ndpoiat fs furnished by the series of lettors 12 our special correspondent which have besn :ppearing in Tux TRIZUNE of Iste. One of theso leitens I given elsewhore in $hio ieove. s oatis :utes a comparison betweon tha old and now men ic Sonih Carolina not entirely favorable to the wtier, Tullmann, who ettompted 10 kil Princo Ris- narck foversl maonths ago, hud been uuabls to procure counsel, aud tha Ultramontsmsts are mauch excited at the cowardico and subserviency of tho Bar in his district. The trial will take lnco at Wirzburg, which s & ccntro of Tlira- toontans inflncuce, 80 the mad coopor will not want Lor trionds. er————— Gen. Grant cannot bo brought to dleclaim intontions of seeking o third term. Ho says It will bo timo to docltne a renomination when it is a%ered. Ssuator Edraunds is getting resdv sn » ggwnxenco” to tho countrs $hat tho zonomina- tion wil nover be offered. Sarely thers 19 more Indiraction about this simple business than one would bave supposed to bo profitable or neced- sary. Father Hyacinthe hes been utterly cast out by the Old;Cathiolics of Goauve. The delicacy of his doctrino {a not relished by the sturdy Con- alstory of the city, and it bas refased him per- migelon to deliver week~dzy lecturos in tho Mad- eline Church. Hyeointhe Les inginunted him- welt between Catholiwm oaud Protostantiam, and ho has consequently been reduced to uothe ing in much quicker timoa than ko suppoged pos- uiblo. Tho Episcopal Convention in New York has ‘beon arouced to the necessity of repressiog Rit- ualiatic practicos. Basolutions looking to the preparation of remedial canona hova been intro- <uced and received with sufficient favor to show that the aplrit of reform isabroad in tho Church, No legisiation will stop tho sdvance of Rituale ism. Tho Oonvontion, of cowrse, understunds that. Tho most that cenona aand rubtics can do iutodrive Bitualists from the Charch. This, also, tho Convention undomstands, A Toxan correspoudent sends word to the zoaders of Tng Trisvss in corroboretion of what kes boen abundently teotified bafore, that thore Lave been o politieal outragos in that Btate, and no spirit of rebellion. We slso print tuls morning & clreular from Northeiners resl- dent in Alabama, donying the reposts of anti- Ropublican demonstyations o that State, Tho outrage buainess has been quito ovordone by 4o Northorn Ropublicon mauagers. It {s amall womtozt for thom to reflect that, had it not been for the old-tims fables of rebelkon in the South, the October olootions might havo been moroe dio~ watrous to tho Ropublican party thon they were, s e Amopg the ecmond this morning will be found one by the Reov. Robort Oollyer on *“Thinga 014 nnd New”; ouo by Prof, Bwing om *The Bible;” by Dr. Stocking ca “Tho Star Chambor” foquisition of Dr, Sey. mour'sdoetrinal beliofe; andby Dr., Q. K. Titany on * Deaowmivationnl Difforoncos” It will bo obsorved that the sormons eolected qove sr 88 wido & inmgo A8 aeny four that weio dolivered yestorday from Chle wgo pulpits, Trof, Swing's discourss s espes Hally intercstiug, sinco it defloes sn ssticlo lo sho creed clieclibed Ly him, which has lately besn subjected to searshing sualyels ond evtls susm. It {8 rofreshing to hear from Prof, Swiug bimeelt, albut, beis o tauk herstio wnd ot & go.d OM-Bokiool Presbyterian, what ho thinke of o Bivle. Tho Chicago produca murgets wero gonorally weukon Satwdag, Mooy pork wew woderately active and So per bxl lowar, closlug at 190,00@ 1025 oadh, and 916230 voller the year, Lerd waa Quist nud emilor, wt 812.20@12.0735 per t1 fw oash, aud S1L1IEILITAC seller the ear. Moats wero quict and firmat G@03{c for showiders, v¥{o for short ribs, and 113¢@ 1137c for wweot pickled hams, Highwinos were quiot and casfer, at 97%fe par gaullon. Lake freights woro dull and unchanged, stde for wheat to Bufinlo. Flour was dull and ensfer. Wheat was active snd 240 lower, closing at Bilfo cash or sollor the tonth, and 8620 for Decem- ber. Corn was active and xbout 2)¢c lower, closing ut 700 cash, and 070 for November, Oats waere activo, and 1@2c lower, closing nt 470 ueller tho montn, and 45¢ for Novembor. Ttyo was In fair demand, and etendy at BI@8ige. Torloy was quiet and easior, clomng at 81,16 for casl, and $1.08 for Novembor. Hoge wers in setive domand at steady rmtes, sales making at $5.00@0.26 for poorto choico. Cattlo wore dull and weak, with sales chiefly at £2.25@3.76. Bheop wore in good demand and gold at £2.60@ 4.50, The Communists of Chicogo—being voters who eall for » redistribution of other mon's vroporty—have made some nomipations, aund propose to show thelr strongth at the approachs ing eloction. Ono of tho candidates for Con- greas is Mr. Froncis A, Hoffman, Jr, 8 young gontlomen of - uncertain and flick- ering genlus, who geinod some eminenco and 00 renown by his epoeches during tho broad riot b yoarngo. It haa mover occurred tothe Communists—nobody hns over told thom—that some men are vastly suporior to otbors in in- telloctunl and moral attoluwents, Horo is ob- viously an iufringement of iho natural ordor of things, Wiso mon skonld tench and good men should preoch for the love of their fellows, and nothing else. It Mr, Hoffraan 19 not wise and good ho fs not fit to go to Cougreas; if ho is either, his first dnty is to import gome good senso aud correct principles to his bonjghtod fricads and admirers. THE WEER BEFORE ELECTION, Tho present week will bo & busy ono among the politiciaue of this and other States. In Wis- cousiu, Michigan, snd Minnesota, peculiar in- terest will bo given to tho election, becauso the Leglalatures to be choren will havo cach s Nen- ator of the Unitad § tates to olect, A fow years ago thera wero but 9 Opposition Bonators out of o totnl of 74. This number had incrensed in Murch, 1873, to 24, Including sessrs, Schurz» Fonton, Tipton, avd Bumnor. Since then, in- cluding tho elections that have taken placo, the Opposition bave gained one Senator in Con- necticnt, one in Viiginie, ono in Texes, one in Weat Virginie, one in Indians, and aro cortaln of one in Tennesses; they love lostone in Nebrasks, The other States where Senators ara to be chosen, aud which are now represonted by Ropublicang, are Florids, Mzive, Massechu- sotts, Michigen, Minnesota, Novads, New Yorlk, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin, Any serfous opposition glvon In these States wonld reduca the Bepublican majority in the Senato below tho two-thirds lino, Henco the importanco of these elections in & party point of view. Wo priot e lettor this morning from an in- tellizent correspondent iu Michigan, which saya tho Bepublican pariy le subjected, among ite otlber misfortunes, to the burden of trying £o ra. wleot Znch Cusndler to the Bonate, Ouvcorre- spendony, revieslog tho conditlon of mattors as thiny look at preaont, thinks {t not uulikely that tho Oppesition will eloet several Congressmon and the Governor, and will make such gains in tho State Legialature ss, with the anti-Chandler Ropubilcane, will tmanro lis defeat. In the weantime, tho oftice-holders ara sacrifleing eserything apd eversbody to elect Chandler, Chandler's raw-hoad style of politica fs out of date, and tho party would bo stronger it he wero dofeated. Looking o the Stato from the stand- point of en ontskdor, we juago that the Repubiio- ang will carry it, thongh they may lose two or threo members of Coupresa. In Wisconsin also tho Ropublicans are torn with & schiam oz the question of ro-electing & Senator. An opposition to Senator Carpouter han dsveloped itself In verious paris of the State among Republicans, and it will not be surprising if the Oppositfon shall clect 8 mazjority of the Legislature and meke s gain of ozo or two mem- bers of Congress. The defeut of two such Sena- tora es Chaudler and Corpentor must bave o morkod and benefleial eifect upon tho country, Tho eloctions in Ohio and Indiana havo already had such an effect upon the Repullicans that even 1r, Colfax, as sn Indisnapolis corro Epondent statos, 1o forced to oay that the Re- publican party “‘must unload”; that ls, got rid of its objectionable mop, 20d cosrect tho acknowledged abuses that exist, In Nlinois thero isnothiug material at siake, in 2 party point of view, except thealeotion of mom- bers of Congruze. 'Thore has boon 3 very inde- peudont stylo of making Congreasional noming- tions this year. Tho presont delegation coosista of fonricen Iepublicans aud five Democrats. Tho Republican orgaus claim that they will Lold their own. We think this is altogether ua- Hkely. The same causes which havo oparated in Ohio ond Indlena will operate hero, and, whilo the margin for losses i8 lavgorketro than iv sither of thosa States, thero aro somo close districts which uio likely to bo lost. The vote on.tho fitute tickat will be clonar than {4 hiea beon for ton yonra. The complexion of the noxt Natlons! Houso of Representntives is likely fo be Democratic,. The douiro forn change is vory atrong even among Republicans, This desire will 1ind oxproasion generally intho way of absentecism from the polls, The Republican party isstill a majority of the country numerically, but its euthusiaum has boen dampened by Gazutism, which may La defined o8 that ospeot of politics in which the Presidency of the United States Is viewed as's porsonsl porquisite, If tho Republicans loso the next House of Ropresentativesand thereby jeop~ ardize the campalyn of 1876, thoy may charge it 10 the sccount of Grantism, a8 here dofned, [OOSR p Aq thie suioido manin becomos opldomie about this time, untiolpato & oxop wheroof tha oauve iv dlesppointad affeatlon, The atory is told by the London correppondont of au Eastorn newapapor of & youn lady in England who st tho oxample for tho presunt outbrosk, Bhe was young, she wag fair, nnd who had not o cars, when the dou- tor camnu to ese hor iuvalid father, Sbe made ap hernind to marry that omlable phbyafolan, aud gavo bim two yaora in which to doclars his inteutions. Bhe engraved bie juitinls ovor her heart,ond waited, Whontho twoyears oxpired she eallod tho old goutleman aside, told her lovo, und mads hin suoffer of marsiags, Tho worthy dostor laugbingly declined, on the ground thst Juap yeur was (wo years dictant, whareapou thy Jovedorn marden threatoned to die. Sho wade o wilt, Jeaviog all Lo propersy to thoman who &id wot 1eelpreeate, and siarvod Lorssl? for ten drys, P hor courtitution proviog tou etrong tv give way, she wiote ber lover a uoto, and, pertnking of cold poisou, Jett hin ber helr, with imatrietions to ro ta Ttaly for a whilo, aud novar THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1674, Inquiro whers she was buried. Young ladics about to commit sulcido should es that tho ten days of atarvation preceds ile cold polson. This formuls will roduce the number considers sbly. THE CHARLEY ROSS CASE, The abduction of little Charley Roas is one of tho saddost cases which bas ever beon mede public, not any in the ovent tsalf, but in the distressing consequonces which hnve resulted from it to the family. ‘The sltornate hiopes aud despuir which tho father and mother lave wuf- fered ; tho elanders which havo boen heaped upon them; tho cruol, practical jokes which hinve baen played upon them by heartlesa people, wnd tho maliclous mannor in whick certain Jour- nale bhave followod them for the more sake of sensation, bave beon hitherto unparafloled in such coges. 'The little boy was sbducted by two men oo the 1at of July Jast, whilo playing with his brother, and was carried off in & buggy bo~ yond tho reach of his parents, The fathor of~ fored & roward of 2300, which only brought out @a sponymous communioation that tho boy would not be returned for less than 10,000, It sas not until rino days after theab- duction they tho Philudelphis polico took avy steps towards ferroting out the abductors, and then commanced opetationa by {ssulog a desorip- tivo circular, waich wasso loosoly und vaguely drawn thet numercas junoceut parties wore ar- zested upon suspicion ; menanwhilo, the father kopt recolviug anonymous lotters offaring to surrender tho child for a atated sum. Tho police nuthorities, howaver, woald not allow him to net upon them, upon the ground thut public justice onght not to bo dotested, The City of Philadol. phin then offered & reward of 40,000 for such Information a8 would lead to the discovery of tho child, Tho lsrgensss of the reward in- duced Allan Pinkerton and pumerous de- tectives, both public snd privats, to go to work, aud Mr. Ross had hopes somothing would Lo dono. Something was dono, but that somethiog was of such a natuve that it only sdded o the distrens of the family. On the 25ihof July, news came of the arrest of a man in Richmoud, Va., having the corpyo of a chfld supposad to bo Charloy Ross, but it turned out to be a child 10 months of ago, On the 4th of August, n women was srrosted in West Philadelphin with a clild which subse quontly she proved was hor owa. Thou came a dispatoh from Bonnington, Vt., thut a woman had boen arrested there with & child answering the deseription of Charloy Ross, Liketho others, this child was skown to belong to another. Thus Mr. Ross wae kept travoling from point to point, alwaya in eager anticipation of finding his chuld, but always disappointed. Then camo tho news from Odoll in this State, with which our readors ard gamiliay, containing an oocount of the arrest of two men and a woman haviog a child suppos- cd to be Oharley Rosa in thelr possession, who turnad ont to bo the son of ono Jamos Hendor~ gon, Noxtcoms tho story of a mythical Pitis- burg detoctive, who waa on the very ove of dis- covering the child,~a story which wss eoon exploded liko tho xeet. Similar staries followed each other in rapid stccession from Washington, JeftersoLvillo, Ind., Lincoln, Néb,, and soores of other places of o similar charnctor, each ono of which sxcited hopes in the mindes of the prronts only to bo cruslly dissipated. Other dispatches have been received from pariies who aro confi- dent they have seen the chill In addition to these distressing disappointments, tho family liavo bacn in the comstant rezsipt of threatonivg, sourrlious, and cowwrdly lestors from uonymous sources. Bonsational uewspapers, under glar- iug boad-lines, have prioted oll sorto of vilo slanders, cruel deseriptions of tho fam- Iy and heartless narratives of thelr grief, aud some havo even accused them of belog coxrupt and mercenwry, and of having connived a$ tho abduction of thoir chlld for the sako of guin, Tho sacrednosa of tholr grief-strickon home has bean intruded upom by prying sud ungentlo- manly reporters and correspondents, who havo written up most falso and crael lotters, Those henrtlees alanders, eruel perecutions, and heart-breshing alternations botween hope ond devpoir bavo at last 8o worked upon 2fr. Rows that thoy hove driven him insane, aud his physician roports him in 8 sinkivg conditlon. The {riends of tho family, unavle to stop tho malice ond recldessness of thesa consational jourmals in any other way, bavo brought sult for Iibel sagafust the most of them, which will probably have the of- lect to silence the rest of the puck. The poor aother who waite and watches against hope for $h:0 roturn of hor child will have tho profound sympaihy of tho publio, ond the heastless wretches who bavoadded to hor troubles by their fiendish ecruolty nothiog but its profoundest oontempt and indignstion. SOUTHERN SOHOOLS, The eighth roport of the Goueral Agont o tho Peabody iuud, Dr. Bernades Soars, wag sapmitted to the Trostees of the Fund, fn Now Yoik City, ten days ogo. Dr. Scars strongly condemny tho offect of the civil-rights agitation upon tho achool-syetem of the South, He ro- gurde mixed sckools a8 an inpossibility,. The attempt to compel the co-oducation of tho chil- dren of both colors, if porsisted fo, will close ovety public school belaw Mason and Dixon's line, In theso viows, the Spocial Committee, appointed by the Trustees to report on the sup- Jeet of mixod schools, hoartily concurs, Tha Committee conuiuis of Jobn H. Clifford, 8, Wetmore, aud Willlam 3, Evarts. De, Scara’ report takos up each State in dotail. Wo sub. Joln bis moro fmportant statoments ¢ Virginia shows a healthy zosl for public in- struction, 1t 18 now-boin, but vigorous. The City of Richmond, which liae 4,903 children at s#chool, will herenftor suppovt its own schools without outefde nid, Virginia has roceived 598, 425 from tho fund duving tho paet year. Nosth Oarolina has beon sluggish in oduea. tional matters, Reform was promloed a year g0, but the promise bas not boen fulfllied, Ald to tiv proount of 812,800 hza bosn given, The South Carolioa wchool-fund {s hopelessly loarresrs. * Exsopt in tho City of Charloston, scarooly avy schools in the State aro lkept throughout the yoar, They are, moreover, so pootly supportad sod badly managed that no aid wo oan plve will maico thom otsractive to {ntolll gont familios,” Under such clrounetances, nid segmod inadvieabls, Only €200 was spout in ‘4tho prostrato State,” In Georgia theve is ‘s doplorable state of pop. nlor ignorance,” Out of 400,000 peraons boe twoon 0 aud 18, 250,000 attond no school. Thir ty-fivo por cong of the popalation over 10 yosra old oannot reud. Tho citicn wre uiganizing pube o foatzuction with groat zeal, but the biure zad the countey dlstriot are indifforent, Tho puills expenditure on sebioals, last year, was 950,000, Tho Peaborty Vuud contyibuted $10,550 more, Floriéa kas a good echool-syster, but hor population s filitorato, Oue of 200,000, 74,0u0 ean notthor read voy weite, The Btate apont £80,000 on echools, private peracns $7,800, and the Fund £10,200. b Alabnma Is doing s littlo more thanshe has horetoforo to edncato hor citizonn, but tho work 16 lemontably behind-hand. She recsived £10,000 from tho Fund, Misaleaippl roports good progress, BSchools aud 6cholara are fucrenslug, Kho gob 84,400 from the Funa. Louiuiana shows the offects of mixed achools, “Ihe white population are smid to take littlo part in them hoyond paying their tazes, . . Int tho country parinhes fow whito chitdren are attonding suy school.” Tho Iund donstion was 83,250, Texan changed 1is achool-laws for the worke in May, 1878, It now has o very dofective cduca~ tional system. It had no aid last year, . “ Arkanans, without foxmally abolisbing its sys- tom of public Inatruction, seoms Incllned to re- dneo ¢ to its minimom of officiency.” 1f tho Panbody Fund had not donated $8,400, tho Btate schools conld not liavo boon kopt opon chrough tho year. Tonneenos Is dolng remarkably well. It * has made extraordwary efforts for the multiphea- tlon and elevation of its public schools,” Thers are 18,600 puplls in tho achools supported, in wholo or In part, by the Fand. ’ West Virginia allows osch county to support ocliools or not, s o majority of the inhabitants plenéo. Tha vote hus been nimost unsnimous ovorywhere for tho requixed {nx, Education is sliyanciug, The aid given was 815,000, Itis but matural thel tho South, oursed in many prrts of it for many years with a spectos of govarnment that seems to aim at the groatest misory of tho grestest numbar, shonld bo ripe for any change in thoe form of goverumont whicl promises rellof, The feoling has found scant exprossion hithiorto, for fonrof charges of dls- loyalty. Tho recent talk at tho North about the third term has emboldened Southernera to speal thelr minds on the subject. Tho whispored dis- content finds vent in the leading editorisl in the New Orloaus Times for the 18th inet, Tho Times oxprencly discliums any iden of sansationalism in prosonting its views, and declares that it sposks without referonca to Graut or the third term It discugkes only thiec main {ssue. Qur repab- lican form of govornment, it mays, is fit only for times of profound posce. Tho touch of wac shatters it. - If the North had observed the Oonatitution, it would not have venquiohod tho Coufadersoy, Wo moy odd that George Cary Eggleston shows, In his ** Iebel's Rocolleo- tion" in the ourrent Atlantic, that tho Cunfed- ersoy was itself & military despotiam, ana that Southarnors, for the sake of their now~faugled Oonstitution, ouffered all its powers to be usurped and its limitations to be disregarded. Tho Times axgues thac tho preeent condition of the South shows conclueively that that section aust have another system, It deolaros that no Stato in the Union onuld put down an organized rebellion within its own borders without Fedoral aid, *Not ouo of thern, but, loft to itaclf, would tumblo to pieces liko n cobhonse,” Au Admin. isteation 18 officlent only sa long as it is popular, Tho outburst of a rabble blocks all this wheols of governmont, What i3 needed is o atrong, coutral power, to which tho Stetey should bear the samo rolation that the counties now do to the States. Then we sbould bave peaco and prospority, It isno argument, says the Zimes, to point to the success of other Republics; for g a ainglo, simplo, strong, and homogensous Ropublio the same thing as the involved, rasp- ing, and tesry machivery with which wo aro now laboring 7" It spealks of the sisplification of our judiclal oystem os ome of tho ndmirable minor results of “awaeeping away Btate lines,” aud tolls tho North it cannot yet apprecisto the sharp significance which this question liag at tho Bouth, but that it had bettorbs warned in f1me. This stadled, earncat oxposition of tho advantagos of obliterating State lines reads strangely in a journal published in a section which etaked and lost'its sll for tho enke of Stato's rights. Wo bave denled self-government to Louisiana until it Las forgotton ko sweets of independonco, and crics out its willingnosa to rendor itself unto Cisar, £ p— THE PROGREIS OF PERACE, The advocatos of the cango of Universal Peace £ro not unfrequently looked upon, by iatolligent people even, u8 unpractical Idealists, striving aftor an unsitainable objeet, westing their ener- gies in ondoavors to accomplish the impossible, oud peglectivg the good thoy might do fu the vain attempt to do thot which it is not givon man to nccomplish, Thero are uo aigns that war is to be shortly o of tho thinga of tho past. Thoad- vocates of Poaco have not accomplished all which thoy desiro, but they have eccoraplished much. Poace sesocintions bad their origin iu s humeno reaction against the wors of the Fimt Treuch Empiro, The Bret Socicty of the Friouds of Peaes was formed in Now York by tho sect of Quskors in 1815, Tho yenr following another was organized in London. Thoso two Bocieties mot with 8 vast deal of immedints encourage- ment, Thoy grow to such dimeneions that in 1843 thioy Lield s Pezco Congroas {n London, aud resolved to send on address to tho Govern- ments of all civilized notions requesting them o all futuro treaties to fntroduce a provisiou that, in caso of disogreomont, tho controversy should bo referred to tha mediation of one or moro friendly Powors. Tho address was received very favorably by sovorsl of the great Powors, enpecially by Tranco snd the United States, Rotwoon 1848 and 1851 08 mavy ay four Peaco Congressea woro held. Tho firat mot at Bruesols, o second nt Parig, the third at Frankfort, and the lngt at London. Tho most important was that which mot ot London, Mombors of tho British Farliament sud men ominont in Preach politiea took part in it doliberatious. Thors wore present at that Congross as mauy ag thirty= ono delegatos from America, Exotor Hall, snoe cloug aa it is, conld hardiy oontain tho delogaton. Thoy woro very wrgont in their appeal to the framers of publio opinion, to olergynion, odu- catory, oditors, publiclsts, sud writora generally, to dovoto thelr onerglos to the propagation of prielples conducive to paxce, Tho necessity of oxpontug tho folly of Interuationsl, traditioual, and commerclRl jesluusios, o ofton the canso of war, wae polutod out, They fa- vored orbliration as & substltute for war, but especlally agawet the malntomauos of standlyg wmnles Qid thoy dircot tholr influence. 1n 1689, the Fonate of the Uulted States yecommonded to the Presidont thot ho ghowd fuecrt into all future treaties botweon this country and othor Powera a clauge covenante ing to subimit all suatters of dispute srisiog ua- der tho' troaty to the doclulon of erbitrators, Shoutly aftor this n diClonlty with Turkoy was wottlod fu sccordaueo with the recomtnendution, In the treaty of Paria it was siipulatod thatif auy difterouco aroso betwoon tho Sublire Porte sud aoy of tho coutractiug partios, ho skould, botoce heving tecourss 1o arae, @ive the Powers whivh bad subsoribed to the treaty an opportunity to intorvene, and, ¢ possible, to provent an appeal o war. In 1849, Rionrd Cobdon colled tho ate tion of tho Dritish Partiamont to tho question of jntornatioual erbltration. Ilo was not lsi- ened to. ‘In 1860, & mors successful attompt was mako by Mr. lloury Richard, Tho cauue of Peaco has slnce found numerous able advocuton on English woil. During the Frauco- Prussian war numeroun protosts were Imado ogalost war by tho English peoplo, The do- feated Fronch were aubstautially aided in pro- visions by thelr Inglish neighbors, ‘The Mn- glish Parliamont voted July 8, 1873, to send an nddress to the Queen requesting her to instruct tho Hecrotary of Toreign Affeirs to onter into correspoudence with the othor Powers, in order to perfect a systom of Iniernational law, snd to catobhsh a permanent system of arbitration. This wag o wiso recommendation, Tho uncor- tafuty of the law of nations is ouc of tho most fertllo caugen of war. ‘Tho frienda of Peaco kuow this, sud aro, thereforo, ondoavoring to have n code of the law of nations drawn up and rocog- nized by the groat Powors ae authoritative. Such a codo would go some way toward favoring the caune of peece. Asbitration i no chimera, It hos boen suc- cesgtul already in more cases than ono, In 1853, & mattor indispute betwaon tho United Btates and Canads, relativo to the Canndian fisheries, 'waa sottled by arbitration, as had hoon agreed upon in tho troaty. In 1801, a dificulty botween Now Grenads aud this country was settled in the Katoe way. Tho King of Belgium wae arbitras tor in 1805 batweon ths Unitod States and Paru. Eungland, in 1870, sottlod o mattor in controvorsy botwoou Spain ond Hgypt. Tho Tresty of Washington (s atlll fresh in the minds of every one, In viow of all that bas bosn alroady accom- plisbed by the advoeates of Peace, it would bo rash to put limits to what thoy may do in thoe fature. The Peacs movement is ono of the greatost movomonts of this entorprisivg ago; aud, sbort as has boon fts duration, it has done cnough to warrant tho bolicf that, howaver far off tho ngo of the univorssl brotherhood of man may yot be, tho efforts ot Pozce Leoguos and Poaco Asuocintions are very far from being en- tiroly fruitless. T TTTa—— RELIGION AND REVOLVERS, The Canton of Borno coutains 00,000 people, one-cighth of whom sra Cathoiles. Four-fifths of tho lattor ave Ultramontanes, They are nat- urally wroth at tho expulsion of all their pastors by tho civil suthoritios, The banished pricats signod & proteat against Stato interference with the Churoh. Thereupon the Cavton of Berno maintained the Protostant right of private judg- mont by kicking the Catholic protestors ovar the border and Alling tho vacant places withs choico asgortment of Old Cathollos. Then thore was trouble. Tho Ullramontanes roceived tho mew priests with showers of old boots and stomes. Tho monotouy of ‘the celebration of tho mass wos diversified by run- ning the gauntlet while going to and from the chureh, At lass n ouro was found. One of the now priests is ‘s man of atalwart framo, long rosident in Ameriea.” Among other littte me- mentoes of hie stay in this country, be possesse ed n sovolver. Ho fostoned thia on the outside of his clesical habit, and notified tho Ultramon- tene Mayor that he meant to uae it whenevor ho wes attncked. Hia congregation ia now porfoct- ly docflo. Neighboring priests aro now borrow- ing tho weapon in turn. Tbhe Ultra~ montane who fipge rocks at hils pastor in scorn of tho brimstone and charcoal of the woxt world Is profoundly in awo of tho samo cloments worked up into powder in this. Novortheless, he retaina hin love for his ox-priest, and eeads for him when- ever achild is to bo baptized or a porson wishes tho last offices of tho Church. Ho rogards the new priest aa a sohiumatic, unablo to adminiater thesc sacraments, Tho oxpelled clergy hover around tho frontier in order to roadily respond to such calle. They answer them, howover, with some risk. The trontior i3 studded with Bwiss gondarmos, who have ordors to arrest any banisbed priest who roturns, The result is that the ex-vicars skulk into and out of Berno in disguise. Oceasion. ally they aro recogmized and pursued. Ra- cently, ono of them, attired in straw hat and rough blonse, visited an old parlshionor upon his dsathebed, administored tho gacra- ments, and started home. Two gondarmes recog- nized him, Tho olinse began. Tho priost made good time, but the bdullets of tho gondarmes wera too guick tor Lim. Fear of belsg bit muedo him stop on the very baok of the River Dout, whick foriug the txontier. The officers came up and soized him. o broke away and plungod iuto the stream, J¢ wao deep und he conld nob swim. Io was drowning in o very wattorof-fact way, when the gondarmes flshed him ont and carried him, damp und dripping, to tho Profect. It lhappencd, however, that tho part of tho Doubs whouce ho was talten is Fronch water, He was therofore restored to Frenoh soil. Bo tho case sitends to-day. Tho new pricsts are ministering to their turbulent flocks with yevolvers, and the old ones aro sewrying through tho Canton with gendarmes ai their heols, A CARNIVAY OF GHOSTS, Tho millions of Epiritualisty jn the United Btawca flnd thbeir Mocea, just now, inalittle farmhouse which lics seven milos nurth of Rut- ond, Yermont. Itisthe home of Wm, H. and Horatio G, Eddy, and it is haunted by hundreds of ghosts. Col. Honry B, Olcott has been inves- tigating tho phenowena for the Now York Sun and the @raphic. His series of letters in tho latter paper havo been profusely itlustrated. Wa condouso from both yourcos &n account, appa- vontly authentic, of the Eddy brothers and thelr doings. Thoy wera tormontsd by spirite from thelr bicth, Thelr fathor, s prosalo farmer, first os- enyedl to cast out thodevils by beating and stary- ing the victims, Whon this folled, ho used his hndren’s spirituslistio gifts to make monoy, Thoy gave exbibitlons. Ho saperintonded the show and pocketed tho proceeds, The boys and their sister (sow dead) woro mobbed, stoned, Loaten, burnt, and shot, They wero twisted into rgowizing positioos, aod tled thoro for hours, whito tho manifoutations want on, Wuen they came homo, they would gladly bave relingutehed their inconvenlent powers, but they could not. It fu notoworthy, by -tho way, that these powors woro {oherltod, 3fws, Eddy, tho mothor of tho boys, was & elalrvoyaut, Hor mothor had the sane facultics, Her groat-grandwother wos wontenced to doath for witchoratt in 1694, but was soscued from Balem Jall by friends, and sevrolly sont to Beotland, Tho childran could mot go to sohool, for they wero accompanted thither by rapplogs that drovo tho othor eokolars wild with fear, They have consequently had Mttlo edusation, Thoy sro, and alweys kave been, uopopulre, T e e Thoy sre shy, grulf, soneitivo moen, Thelr rep- ufation for Integrity is good, but the neighvors think they ave in feaguo with the devll. With this preface abont themaclvee, wo pacs to what they, or tho epirits around them, hisvo dona. ‘fhere havo boen thousands of muuifesta- tlonv, Very mauy have consisted only of foats of clnlrvoyance, moving furnituro, ond rapping out commuuications. Two preat classes of facts romnin,—iho flonting In air of human bodles and tho materlnlization of spint forma, Horatio Eddy, when he wne In hin eeventh year, was ono mzht enrrled thyeo miles through the air to o uelghbioriug mountain-top, and left to get homo na ho could, Col. Oleott uivos no nuthority for this stors, which may bo founded on & mere casa of slecp-walking, but ho quotoy the teatimony of two out of three oye-witnessea to tho fact that anothor brothor, mow dend, was ecarriod out of a wiudow and over the house. ‘Thero are hun- drods of instances to bo given under tho second grand divislon,—tho materialization of aplirite, The ghosts of known and uoknown persons have appeared in tho houso aed iu the noighborhood, in darknoss and in light. People lavo talked with them and have folt tham. Tley have baon distinetly seen, Col, Oleott welghod tha spirit of 2n Indian gurl, Honta, twico. Sho stood on n Fairbauks goxdo and weighed 83 pounds the firet time and G5 tho noxt. 1o turned the full forco o'l & powerful batterynpon hor without producing any apparent cffoct. Nearly alt the pheaowmena attonding the appearaucos of * Ratie King " in London and iu Philadelphia have boen repoated in or around tho Eddy homostead. Very many poruons hnve witusased them, Sinco Col. Olcott began his investigation ho hins recoived innumerublo lotters from all ovor tho country asking him to procure information on differcut points from ibe spirits, Mont of the lotior, it in necdleas to add, are very sily. They servo to ehorw, novartheless, how wide~ sprond public Intorest in this subjoct fe, Is Splritunlism o cheat, or s it true? T'hore aro wany, many people wlo would give a good desl to hiavo that question definitoly decided. the Leo Avonue, tho Rev. Hyete Smith, pastor, has beon oxpelled from tho Baptiut Associstion for horesy. Tho charge was brought againat them of the advocacy and practico of open com- munion, Tho Cburch letter, which had boen adopted unenimously, statod that while thoy did not beliovo in free commanion, they did not caro to tako tho reaponeibility of repulsing any one, and concluded as follows : Wo ruggont, Lretliren, thst, us iliero ara donbilas in ali th churches comprising tho Assoclation inore or lopa who eutertain the sune views of the sgommun-~ fon queation for wiiich we are called fo accawnt, and are yet undisturbod in full mewbersbip, and sowe of them_oceupgiug oificial positions in tho eluzehos, it will havo en uufortuuato appoyranca fo thinke ng men for thoso ehurches ¥ cxocolad, in ihelr asso~ ciatfonal ufi:fil)’. o dizeiplius which thoy fall {0 en- forea upon thelr own memborshin, Whatever may bo the ourrent opinion, formed in great part from cxagger- ntod reports, e aze thoroughly Baptisls, our home s with tho Daptisto, and with 1o Othor peopley Aftor a vory bittor and passionate discussion, the Asrooiation voted to erago its name from tho rolls, whoreupon tha prator ontered his protost, and solds ‘Wo tirinly believo and declara that your ot of ex- pulson of our churel from the Assodinklon is & groas Violation of that law of Goapal liborty, tho weintonzuce of which males the proudest page i tho history of tho Baptist denomination, Your voto of dlsfellowshiy will {11 o wise vary tho attitudo or fuo action of Lee Avenuo Baptiat Church, Kho goes forth from your ody beaing upon hor brow tho mark of tho oross, having tho ajgn nnd geal of the Holy Ghoat in the con- voryion of a wultifude of souls es the unauswersblo declation of Divino approbation, It God be for na, who can bo agalust us ¥ Tho leaven of liberty s acsivo in every ohurch within the bounds of the Asso~ ciation, and sball coatinuo to work “until the wholo mensure {8 leavenod,” It {s & day of Obristinn union and koly feflowship, Tho sge of prosoription and occlexiastical tyrauny hos pueaed away, and uo mandate of counclls or sazocta- tlons cou vall it Dack, 1t is now stated that two or threo othior prom- inent Baptiat churches will sever tholr eonnec- tion with the * hard-shell™ faction, ond unito with tio Lee Avenuo Church in a new sasocize tion. The world moves. The Chincse pirates havo apparently learned a wrinkle or ¢wo from tha Europeuns who havae crrrion civilizotion to thoir country, aud in a recent Instauco oxhibited s poculiarity which was wortlly of Yankos Ingenmnity., It was understood that tho stesmer Bpark, bound from Canton to AMacao, had awong its passen- gers tho propsiotor of & Canton gambling- house, who waa carrying with bim $18,000, the fruit of his businoss. When the stonmor loft tho port, eighteon piraten shipped as passongers., When distant from port = little way, they com- monced operations with & fictitions squabble among themsolvas, The Captain and mate en- doayored to part them, when the struggle be- gen iu carnest. Tho Captain, mate, purser, crow, and fengincor of tho steamor wero ahot or cut to pleces, aud one Europesn ond s fow na- tivo passongors cecaped with serious wounds, After taking posscasion of the stoamor, they runsacked the bLoggege of tho pas- gongoers, and etole from tho purser some $7,000 ln uotea of the Hong Kong banks aud eilver. After securing the plunder they wero mot by o confoderato funk, and the stoamer steorod to Mecno. A gunbost was sent out to scour the Couton River, but furled to ba of serv- ico io capturing any of tho couspiratore. ‘The Captalu of tho Spark was found to have no loss than thirty-Lwo wounds in his body, showing tho desporate eharactor of tho ficht in which ho had boan ongaged. It i3 aad to think that the gambler whooo spoils had boen the incontive to 80 much bloodahod should heve beon **downy enough to atay at Lomo and let Lotter mon ba slanghtered, while Lis monoy and person were securo, —_— Thero fs a doublo lock smong the coopars of tho City of Now York, The cmployers have locked out thoir omployes and tho jatter, expect- inguueh action for o very lonz timo, bavoe boen busy preparing for tha progont omergenoy. Thoe cange of tho difficulty is tho offort on tho part of tho employors to break down the Coop- ers’ Union, which s ono of the strongast trade zoclaties in the United Btates, They rofuse to ewmploy henceforwara aay cooper Lolouging to tho Union. This detormination was reached soma timo ago, and tho announcoment mado to tho foremon on Thursday lust, The employors hed given no roason for thelr doterminne tion, relymg morely npon their altornative to flght tho mattor {through, Thelr action throwa out of employment 5,000 ablo-bodied 1uen, who Liavo beon rocoiving wages of 84 a day. It fa claimod that this rato was higher than the employers were inclined to pay, sud thet the prosent conflict a to bo declslve, An attempt wag mado fivo years ago of tho same kind, but aftor o long atrugglo was abandonod by tho ome ployo:s ns unsuccossful, Bat If tho boesas fool themsolves sirongor to-day then thoy did at that time, {t1a olaimod that tho Union is proportions stoly stronger, end that the chiancos of ultimate sucoexa ero about ogual, — Tho intelligont Uto fa bocoming civilized, Great wonavche, whon thoy 1ight, like 1o have wome valid reggon for fightiog, and the Utes ©eama to tho coucluslon that they must ecalp a fow Apsches becaues ono of thelr number bad “*thoovil oye,” Tho hiead Chiof of the Utea wae sick, ond his fonr wives bad died, He aitributed bis widowerhood and slokness to the witchoraft of & Mencalero Apache, e gavo di- vectlons to bis follonora to slay thiv offendor oud savo the Jifo of tholy Chief. A band of Utea i full flg, with war-paiut enough to'rencw a Block of framo bulldings, otarted down so tha agenoy at Clinavion, Now 3foxlon, whoro tho Jicorllls Apachos wore coming to draw thelr rations, When tho hostllo partles mot, the Utes demanded tho Jito of Mesealoro, who hod bee witohed their Chint, Tho Apschios refused to surrondar the otender, whoreupon the Utsngave nokico that they would fight, Tho Apacheswere’ nccompaoied os mousl by 8 hordo of rquaws and papooses, ond the werliko announceyiont cauvod & seatioring which llgd tho white pottlere of Cunavron with disway, The coptending partien tovk up positions noar thu town, and thera awaited an ouporlinity to Sghs. Meunvihiilo somo of their puriy lay i wmbusk for the Mauraloro who had cangod the trouble, and nsenvelnatod him uceording to Lo populer Iudian code, a4 5oon oy ho modo hin npp:ar;uu-u. Batlstled with oblaining his ucnlp, the prudent Utos withdrew frow tho feld, and the Jiearills Apachos, conelnding that it was none of their bhuginess aflor oll, and that the harm was now dono aud could not ho ropaired withont great personal inconvenionco to themsolvos, followed thelr guod exi lo und rotired also, ey A correspondons of the Cinclonati Conner- inl, writing from Alabama, tolts an amuaing an- " oadote of n uegro, sarvant of an ox-Confederate goldiov. Tho old darkoy was much attachod te tho ofiloor, and Lind eavod his lifo &t great pan sonal risk on o notable occasion, Tia oflicer wan vecontly candidate for an unlmportant offico, and his opponent & worthlers ecalawag withooy propoerty, braius, or character. Before elaction, tho old darkey Lesitatingly confided to his ome ployer and friend the fact that ho conld not Yoto for him. e rdwmitted with tears that ke w24 battor qualitied for Lho ofice, was & * by emarter," would mako a bottor ofilcor, paid more toxes (becauso his oppanant pald none), hag been a friend to tha colorad people, sud that ha (tho old negro) would rather die than hav to vole ngainat him., Wiy, thon, will you not vote for moe?" queried the other, “'Unuso I Lliave to support de nomineo. Al us colored Ppeo~ plo'a got (o etiok togedor, or awful things would happen to ue, gurs.” This anocdote, which ox- hibits tho blind dovotion of the colored men of tha South, might bo told elsewhers with equal offeck, 'T'hte “‘awful things,” howaver, throaten to bimppen to the party this time, —_—— M. D, Conway attonded the meotings of the Congross of Ovientalists in London, and thero met & Jady Who had jusb returned from Ching, whero both her hushand and herdelf had been missionary laborors, Thialady foared that, wero shio to tell all sho know about Chineso mig~ slonary Hfo, the contributions from Bunday~ schools and othor sources wousd bo groatly di- mivished. The fect wag, that the groat mass of tho Chinese woro in less need of missionary Inbor thau tho same elassest 1n England, In wde dition to this, tho genorsl Impreseion that mis. slonarlos woro subject to hardships was entirely erroncous, Her own life in Chiun had been olmost luxurions, For soclety sho had had Epglish and Amoricsn marchents sod their fawilios, loarned Chinesa echolure, and travelars from all parts of the world. Tho storics of hard~ ship and privation, narrated bofore miznionary mootings, and inatilled into tho children at Sune day-achool, might hava beon true onco, but that tinio waslong ago. Tho Jellybya will ploage malio & note of it. ——— In Mosaachusetts, whore the proportion of ‘women to men makos lite s paradise to the lat- tor, the women aro boing driven to ail sorts and descrintions of magouline porformances. The Inteat foat I8 thot of pedostrianism. A. racs of 135 yards was arzengod attho Northampton Falr, between Ed, W. Moulton and his wife, the lady recoiving o start of 25 yards, and winning in 8 cunter. From this it may bo inferred that tho Now England wing of tho Dross-Reformers had ot & corrasponding atars of thelr Weatorn alllca, and that Mrs, Bwissholm's * got-ins”and Mrs, Tlynt's ** ohemiloons ™ (patont) had already come into genoral wse, No woman with an ** alle gono ¥ feoling conld ran 100 yards in 133 so0e ouds, unloss, Indeed, stimalatad by the sight of amouss or induatrions apider. Can it be that tho now germonts inoreass the rapidity of the sox? The Shab of Pereis, daring hia recont Euro pean trip, it appeawy, kopt & diary, which bug beon published. It is reported to bo a very dull, stupid book, fullof trivialitics, endless in its ex: proseions of wondor at everything, aud thon oughly uninteren:ing, as havo boon all books of Royal birth, Thoro I only ono pieco of informa- tion in the book which is uew, antl thig is very ptartling. Tho Bhal says: “Tho poopls of TLondon think very much of thoir police; anyone who shows disrospect to tho police must be killed™ Jrom which it appears that Loodon la ‘woroo off than Chicago. Hore, if auyone shows disrospest to tha police, ho is simply ponnded on tho bead & ittle, or kicked into a gutter, and then arzestod for disorderly conduct, prsalles oo Sy AMUSEMENTS. HOOLEY'S THEATRE. Last week Mr. Hooloy changed tho Baturday night variety of epiercainment by the subaiitu- tion of & time-honored ond nearly threadbare drama for tho Shakspearean serics, Had the pleco been auything but “East Lynne,” the Liouso would hevo been larger than it was, Thas dreary story of sin and porrow following upon & fortnight of much of the samo gort of recreation was not o morsol caleulated to entico mauy to Hooloy's. 1t wea of littlo 2vail that a vory caro~ fuland expertonced gentleraan, who corabined tho techoleal slill requived for the work witk tho natural taste of & cultivated porson, bad written an_eutirely new vorsion of tho story, and lad infusedioto it moro inlerest then his loss compatens predocessor had succecdod in doing. Lo had eondened tho story coneldern~ bly und thrown {n 80 wany bight poesages, aud done this with so much judgment, that the aus dienco was relieved with sseing something liko a comedy. i After s recont performanca of ** East Lynno in this city, wich Lucillo Western . hot wolt- known rolo of Lady Jsabel, the rondition of tho pecs a¢ Hooloy's Sacurday ovenlng way very setisfactory ludocd, Misy Hawthorno played with a spirit’ and uervous ela- tion po utterly the oppostto of Aliss’ Westorn's later porformances a¢ to cutertain and amuso, ny wnYl 28 captivato tho symprthics of the au- dience. The kecnon in which sho acknowledged Lor jonlousy of a supposed zival to her husbaod wero ko uatural, both om her own bar and that of Mr. ilurdoel, who playad Archibaid Curlyle, that the audienco “was undecided whothot to laugh At her feavs, ag her hustoud did, o wipe ita oyos int sympathy with such very cvident distress, Indoed, Miss Hawthorno's pevsonation wag, in ovory respect, natural wod Womauly. Miss Westarn'has o patens upon the stiited claracterization, as thoso who saw her It spring will roedily call to mind, Ar, Murdooh was Tather youthful-looking to bo intrusted with such profound professionat wocrots 08 succoadad in damolishing his domestic happiness, but, being eacy and solf-posscescd, was all 1hat Wad necossary, Ar, O'Noil played Sir Francis Levison with onso snd forcs, There wnover wug suoh a vool, supercitions porsonage,—at least, it tus mob heen " tho bad fortuns of many tomoet him. In onoor two passagey of extrémo rudeness to the woman ho seduced, Mr. O'Neil found It pocosaary toadd an emphasia a8 complotely out of taste ag nocalled for, But wo havo uo fault to find with a veryclevor piece of charaoter delineation, We hava, howover, & word to eay with rogard to his costuming, Iike tho conssrvatory scone which waw used lnse :1\-;:“;«*:1; htfi‘bfllou n‘ann wotn}}mh ot hu[:. A inugo from tho too fraquent light pantaloons aud broadeloth cont, d(alur old r;dnn]:ls though th? bo, would =dd to Mr, O'Nell'a appoarance, A daeh of Lair oo his face might not have the #aule offeot, but would be oqually acceptable now and then. A atock actor iy likely to benome too famillar {f he dlaregard tho leglttwato ree fourves of make-up pnd glvgu]ee. Also Miunio Doylo looked & protty enongh Barbara Hare to have justided any suse f!u{unu of captivating sn admirer of uul“ll"l Rrts he:gen, but” her vorco {8 rther jnfloxible and Mr, Brown 83 Zord Aft, Severn maintained the good impression he bos alroady mado ns s caree sul and promising young actor, end dire, Mao« tler, as & wattor of coure, personated Cornelis with an aoouraay which would hava couvinced ¢ streoger that 1t wus hev natnral dispoultion to b u erosssgrained sud gelf-important old zmald. To-night * Tho Virginian™ wiit boplayod. TUX OTHER TREATRES, Carlotta LeOlorq will appear to-night and to mosrow o8 Lady Isqbel in * Enst Lyno " Mia K. Rogoers Raudolph sppeara at, the Aczdomy ¥ Jubiet, for this evening only; * Ohing-Chow 10," and othor specislties, at the Grand Opess Hnuu, and tho adwirable Geargla Mtostrolss »' complete the List Of ainvecnsouti