Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 10, 1875, Page 8

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—~'TWELVE PAGES. THE CHICAGO TRIDUNE: SATURDAY. JULY " 10,” 1876, TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. ensicr, at 8ia for shoulders, 11c for short | not follow, and was not permitted to lead. | ten and coffeo as it was, the tnzation on and nlduf the presont boundary. Tho‘exper.ionco steamers, have gone down, ln1fing with them | o result in n reaction of feeling, and 5 ribs, and 12¢ for short clears. Highwines [ Outsido of the fomily circle, Where ho wns the revonue from theso tiaree sources would | of Germany shows that commercinl vinion ia | 1,303 persons, the most prominent of which | Lienco auch protests na thowo juet ise:ed by RATES 07 ATRMCRIPTION (FATARLE 1N ADVANCE) | o\ nominally unchangel, at £1.17 per | beloved and revered, Fraxg Bratwanume will i hnve heon as follows: apt to b followed by political union. Tho | aro the following: Tho Behiller, off the | fho Bishop of Vordun. In attempting to Poxtne brepaldnt thle Ofice. x| gallon. Lako freighta wer o dull nt 2ja for | bo best rememberod as a Aoldier ef tho Ro- | Articles, Jow tre, Mecovee, | German tates begnn with tho Zollverein | feilly Inlnds, 80; tho Gottonborg, off the | yecuro eortain political results by religions Pl e 48 ;lv: conin, ‘i:{}g corn to Buffalo. Flour was in better de- | publio, an nccomplished officer, wits an un. '."’,:‘;::““‘,3{{;“ i » | and ended with a nation, 1t s not imposat- | Australinn conat, 166; the Cadiz, 62 the Fu | means, tha French clorgy hnvo evidontly al Hunday be .00 TP * mand, and firmer. Whent *was nctive and 1}e | blemished record; and a8 & man Wao, with | Woolen good: blo that preseut objectiona on oither side to | Bing, n Chineso stenmer, 60; the American | Jowed the roligious agonciea to slip out of Parta ot a year st the 1ame rate. i higher, closing at $1.06} cash and $1.003 | all his faults .and weaknesses, maintainel a Total,... the annexation of Canada may h{: removed in n}.lp Violettn, 42; the Vicksburg, col- | their control, and nro now meeking to got ;::,‘\::.S.x;.—.:(':.‘..:?ul::‘:::?nl:|::: towa eadVERES | ellor Angnst. Corn was n ctive and 1jo high- | high character for official and persocal integ- In 1372, tho actual tax on theso articles was the future. Formerly tho Canadinns opposed | lision with lcebergs, 40; the Thornabin, | them in thoir grasp again. They rro not fpectmai copies sent fr er, closing at 7030 cash ar.d 72 for Angust. | rity. - 20,000,000, and tho rerenus 332.000,000, | Aunexation on necount of AIAVEfy' ond tho | 20; the Cortes, 26; tho George Batters, | only exposing thommolves to the nttasks of e dud Countys Onts were quiet and jo higher, closing at S SOLRT IR Conggros repented the tas on ten nnd coffes, | Questions growing out of it. ‘hoe objeo- | 21; the Iiride, Borar, Berlin (Japan- | the Radicals and Liborals, but of the wholo by duatt, expross, Past- | 53fe for July, and 40}e for Angust. Rye was QORISR ! tions wero removed by the War and emanci- [ eve), and the Alice, 20 each; and the pation, Now their chief objections aro a | Lochnagar, 16, Thers have heen other se- preotectivo tariff and n bad currency. Thoso | vers disnsters on the Bouth American, Chi- will also be oventually removed, not for Can- | nese, and English consts, which involved a ada's sake, but for our own, 'Then other ob- | gerious loss of life, but it ia impossible to Jections may arise, and again disappear. But | estimato thom, ns the telegraph furnishes no itis neither impossible nor unlikely that a | record. 'The scason hns been nnusually char- time may come in the near future when the | acterized by tornndoos and hurricanes, and preponderance of sentiment in Conada wmay { of theso thore have been cighteen which favor a union with the United States, nud | have boen accompnniod by loss of life, 8a when it does it will probably meet with a | follows: In Hong Kong, 600; Georgia, 817; cordial reception this side of tho 8t. Law- | Chili, 60; Louisinna, 20; France, 11; M ronee, ond encounter no serious obstucles | souri, 6; Mississippi, 11; Arkansas, 5 Mich. from Groat Britain. igan, 8; Wisconsin, #; Illinois, 8; Bouth Carolina, 2; and Kansas, 1; total, 044 Thirty-ivo fires have been reported, by which . 804 lives have been sacrificed. Only threo of theso have been sccompanied Ly n hoavy loss of life, being tho burning of n match-factory at Gottenberg, Swadon (50); stenmers at New Orleans (756); and the recont Holyoko, Mass,, church disaster (92). Explosions, mainly in this country, have killed 207 people, as follows: Fire-damp, 122; boilers, 48; gunpowder, 21; fire- works, 0; nitro.glycerine, 4 ; chemicals, 3. Tho rallroads, in this conntry at least, have not been so prolific in the destruction of life ns usnal. Although 47 disasters have been reported, but 48 peopls have been killed, the Inrgest number in any single disaster being but 7. The list of injured, however, foots up 284, T.ast in the list come snow-slides, which have buried 56, Tho total list foots i i al clasges i Pari intod in the laat | Teducing 1ho total tax on thesa several imfi;‘:&p?;?: .;::I,::,‘l,:r:,:‘:::': some :lehlill of goods to §40,000,000, and reduced the rey- relntive to the Philadelphin Centenninl which | 9810 to 320,000,000, Iiit, had Cougress ro- duced the tax on the cottsn and woolvn gooda 25 por cont, the loss of ravenue would have Leen only 26,000,000, wiila the reduction of OfLceoraer, or in registercd lotiars, at unr risk. nactive and stronger, at €100 bid. Darloy TENMS TO CITY SUBACRINZHS. Dally, delivored, Kunday cxcevte vonta parweek.-| Wos in better demand, and firmer nt $1.01 Diatly, delivered, Bundsr Includ for September. Hogs ‘wera in nctive de- 1 ) s erctoforo attracted attention in this Ridion THE Tiib Y bicago, 1, | mand and mled steady. Hales at $6.75@7.00 Rnve Werilay 4 Al o for common to prime heavy, nnd at $7, ',@ country. Tho dispatch states that the French DAY'S AMUSEMENTS, 7.4 for uommnnpla stin Night, Cattle wore | Government lna received word fram tho B [ =it s pooulo wosldl ave: bugu 828 78 : 2 sl % ylish Commissioner at London that tho Amor- pooy 8 HOOLET'. THRATRN=Tandoln dtrist, betwacy | A0ILand ntohanged, Tha sbeep trade ‘was i i 000,000, e ican Govornmunt has decided prices may bo Sl " A L L o Ortarac P urasin cnd ereming, | A0l and nominal, aftized to goods for exhibition withiont fa- | 1iere then, laa fale ustration of the dif- e : Y N n P forance butween a tarilf for ** revenua only " cl[nl'mg thehuport dutien, Lo ongumlpmp: and atariff for protectios. Under o tarilf for osition was that the prices aflixed should in 5 Yo, Uisrok f L what is cludo the American, dutics, which, of conrse, r?\‘i:.’lul::o‘:: fl)’ ',I‘n::::)u'l; _“:"“S:::{; £ a tarlll f of the allegation it the followin| waga Dhiludelphia Ligh profoction ldck‘fin ?or protection, the m;mlry pays o tax of a5, Varicty Eoteriaiament. Alaruoon 4id venin. I‘YWIy 3 gt ; nRmegli-fox ;’w B | provent European exhibitors from showing T a ot ity S bRl st s G 'li’m; me"r fl lfl:n i e Pms;‘ l‘m'WI the chnpnoss of thelr goods and wares. I mh;h tho peoplo reacies the ‘Trensury, It Biknone's Staius-Troupa tad, | Ench ono, it says, hns oxpoctations of being | jyyor ords, tho pig-iron ond pig-honded % Y . peop 3 s o s st uh;mk b}; I’msxd‘enlml 1’?““‘"3“ .wmml:]hmo o | Rolleylten wero inviling Furopeans to con- r;xxo‘sus fu‘ ?:’lo zse:;:mry_m At o "', viz: L, B Wasuncasg, ?“N A tribute their producta for the purposo of mag- ol : “W'h 0 privi Hm iy P i -Tr] G} .f a‘j’f’h e Loaas, Ricitanp J. Oar eany, JonN M. Parsten, nifying and beautifying the show, with pricea to have the samo profit on each dollar's wo Che Cnrage JDUTLL, | Judge Davio Davis, er:Senstor Lirstax Tawas. | 57 g Tt B0 THEE Ot Tigher | of production that would bo s fair raturn for e “"‘:" sud Jm}g"u;’ B c":;i tGiving !0 | than thoy would havo boon without i“{{:::‘:‘;;:‘:n‘h“:bfi‘c‘:‘z‘;“:;: ‘11;:‘1"“!;:3"“ gfinl::t each one o csy candidates & wine i i i e ot Saturdsy Mornls July 10, 1875. q 4 the Philadelphin tariff, It was not, howaver, ale iyl y._ ' gle term, it will consama twenty- |, bognu to recoil upon the prospects of tho grentost systom of robbery over per- elght years, or until the year 1905 | ). vibition that they wore compelled to petrated in ony counlry..n_rl);] ‘\lfluuh 1wm.\ld ) But & mojority of them might expect two, 7 I track nnd allow European ox- Ua tolerated by no other oivilized poople out- “rIrH SUPPLE}IENT' and ono of them would never be satisfed ;3{;?,;‘: b;:: pll::o ::eir goods harf ab tho | 8ide of China, and tha resolution should be wilit losd, Lian: thve, [ terus, whiel would Europonn cost. The manufacturers of Franco repented by every convention in the United The Secretary of tho Trensury will soon add twenty yonrs moro to the timo tho offico | 1 Englnml‘ 1iad refused to ecnd anything. States, e 3 isstie Lo Collectors of all ports of entry o cir- ::;‘;‘}“‘;X”n::‘l’;:;‘ :“1‘: - l‘l‘:‘”:;‘\_l‘:‘:‘gy'nx";: Ttnly hns docided ot to sond, probolly from | gANADA AND THE UNITED BTATES, cular embodying the construction placed by Bail il i tho same renson, and other nations ware pre- | Tt cannot be denied that the London Stand- the Attorney-Genernl upon the law relating | & 0‘ ."°?“ I““’ Préaidential 1‘“"‘1‘;‘““’; I“I paring to do tho snme, Tho prospact, there- | grd reflacts a very largo and important 10 the time in which damngo allowances may | @ m;‘!g . kg ‘l‘o ns w; have heard of | ¢, \vag fair that Europo would be entirely | gentiment in England. It is tho organ of tha bo ascertained. Custom-House ofticers will m:’m l*?“;if; et °"°d '0"‘_’_“;" “‘° A 51Y | ynreprosonted in tho Contenuial Exhibition. | dominaut Tory party, with s circulation of bo instructed to intepret tho law in accord. | nothing o C ?N-‘U":m the oll 8yen- § 7 prospect, however, has now been | 140,000 snbseribors. It has twice 08 many anco with Judge Piranerost's decision, more of tha Wabnash,” all .of wlom, like aducational, socin], and scientifio prog-ess of the world, Fanaties are not more prudent counselors than impostors, and, when both go Into the mirnclo business, the prospect ia cerinin that this mixture of politica and re. Tigion will spoedily be ovorwhelmed., The Oallio clorgy, therefore, as n incrsora of nnfety, are engaged in this attempt to curk the elomenty thoy set in motion themr«lves, 'They evidently fear, having sown the wind, that they mny reap the whirlwind.| [ Corner Madison MVICRIN'S THRATIE-Madlon strsele, hotyncn The Indianapolis Jorrnal saya that Nlinois E:fi:’f"“‘:f«’;’;m:::fl i has wronght herself ivto the notion that she P is the modern Mother of Presidents, and in ADELPIN THEATRE—Dearharn streat, entnor Mon- San Dominge wants soma immigrants,— f colored preferred. A person by the namae of GonzaLes, who happened to be Proridonk when tho Iast mails left the island, his fe sued nn official circular, which ia beiny dis. { tributed through the Bouthorn States. ITe ! offers freo importation of all necessary house« hold goody, tools, machinery, ete., and | rom- isen that tho immigrants shall bo exenipted from military servico in timo of poace, The great trouble about all this is, that, by tho timo n man could get to San Domingo, Goxe ; zares would probably be shot, or boiled, or otherwise disposed of, and what security would there ba then for the fulillment of his promisea? Tho Bouthern blacks had botter ACADFMY OF MU »on and Honroe e Prasger Family. THE HOMES OF THE POOR, The part of London known as Holborn has & population of 95,000 persons. Mare than half of them, or 8,000 families, live and dio in single rooms. The St. Giles district con- taing 8,000 families which are in the samo pltiable plight. Fathor, mother, children of all agos, nud often a lodgor or two, herd to- gether into one squalid hole, reached by crazy stairs and by holls reeking with filth, affording an outlook through its grimy windows upon a dead, blank wall or a fever- Lreeding ynrd; not s home, but a hell, Clennliness, physical or moral, is an impossi- bility. Bin of every sort grows strong and rank ont of this mass of festoring humanity, Districts like theso are plague-spots on civili- zatlon. Thoy exist in overy Inrgocity. Now York hns them, and Boston, and even tho great Wostern cities, whore the = The reports EANP {n tho Ifarlom Tuver may bo distortad or woxageeratod. It seoms inorediblo that s punbor of ablo-bodied men, proficient athletos, accom- plished swimmers, should ldso all prosence of ol s averiod by changing tho rulo. Tho alternt- | gubscriisrs, though not renders, ns tho Lon. | €50uscs of ol usages cannot = Lo :f!::mfi:? ey ;".'3&?.:3“.‘333f.':‘i;“.?i‘:l;"-’é’;;l':?..? affort - - =), Bangis, nre ml_fln to snoritico thowmselves on | .o presented to the Kelloyites, either to | don Timer. It preaches tho political gospel bmught‘ forward. Thero are ueetiqnu Farthqua! tosavohim. Mr. Wistrast B. Contis, of Chlea- D. G. Lopewy, Supervising Special Agont | the altar of their counlry. snnko their exhibition upon tertis of justica | for tho party that controls tho British Gov. | ©f Chicago which = aro covered with | Eamine go, 18 &aid to ba ona of tho tontlemen who took «‘1‘{ th]ujfr:wrrr ‘l’sn:flgf::;hfll ie‘ffl"::g :; SN oHART ALATS snd fairness to European exhibitors, or to g0 | ernment at tho presout time, Its utterances gz:;pma:l;fi filnuf:::u:h“s?:fufifii :‘be:’ufi:; part in this amszing spectacle. He han tho repu- ashington, aftel ment & . LAIR, e " 3 without their products altogether, Which | may not, therefore, .bo dismissed as tho ex- nenrly one-third of & century. The resulty | 'The denth of Fraxew P. Bras, Jr., will 3 ety b g 4 T e et feithfuloess nnd ability | #ervota recull o the minds of thousands of hia | Would havo mady their exhibition a loco! in- | pression of mera porsonsl aud potty spite. e i in to keep his | countrymen tho somewhat active part which stond of an international exposition. The re- | Yot tho attitudo which it nssumes toward the SR A il D et fha 1 e ol in e pélitioe of s éaiatiy, ' Ka | S0k wilLba ek theis pxbibition may be euc- | oited States Lo not uny the less: pueriloand memory green, for it Yo ‘.’ “';:’ eyane fed | member of tho * Bram family,” o sy cossful in Apito of them, nud that it will bo | jmpotent on this nccount. It merely betrays o ;‘f;‘,,;‘,;".f,“,‘;:fu“r;’ oy | 1 asi (o bave fnlesitsd poliiat peana. | [7oductive of soma wecy.aastul cts selats | o exison o o dogged il igotad snlmos- of conducting Custom-Tlouso business; and | inence, His vencrable father, now in his to the cost of goods and the exactions of the | jty smong the Tory ¢lasscs of Groat Britain, tation of belng the slrongest man in the world. ‘Why did ho not uso his strongth on this oceasion inthe interest of humanity? Is his splondid physioal development useful only to win prizes for bont-ractng, aod foof-racing, and lifing? Mr, Cummis cavnot offer an oxplanaticn any too soon for the sake of his own ropu- undrained, unsewered streets, which swarm with men, women, and childron, sud which aro and muat bo the nurseries of sin, The horrora that were strong enough to spur Crances Drorene’ jnded imagination to fresh efforts of creation fortunately do not yet ex- TLarge ns theso figures seem, it must be ro- membered that thoy represont but a small . s tation in & lighor fleld than that i ioni i ist west of New York. But thoir development | Percentage of the destruction of human lifo = v : : high protectionista. which thy ht h bondoned long ago v 5 of mere animal oxortion. Tha sad fate of AN~ who frst inaugurated and Mnrtc(i{{orwm‘d tha ?:ux: ':u:m};;fl ::’;re ;lfl;al‘;n:;zz:x;ei;zg;ywh:: gh P wmf gmz:‘:im p,:vau:loir ntelligen Nf‘! m!fd is only a question of timo, if tho causes now | from other than natural causes. Thoy aro | ol 0y the poculiar olrcumstonces attoud- buainess in the Chicago Custom-House, 2 ¢ " ouly the large disasters which have been deemed of suflicient interest to telegraph as itews of public importance, They do not in. clude the thousands of minor disasters con- stantly occurring all over the world, which would ewell the aggrogate far up into the thousands, if not into the millions, If there were addod to these the immenso number tnken off by suicido, murder, war, and mas- sacre, ond other violent forms of death which it is impossiblo to estimato, tho result would be frightful to contemplate. Increas. ing this still further by the number who die from sick.:oss, it does not soem that thero is any danger that the world will be over- crowded with population, at work are left unchecked. The Church connot meet tho ovil. Occasionally a deter- mined effort, carricd on through years of dis- courngoment, will doa great work, like that of the New York Five.Pointa' Mission, but this lies oytsida the domain of regular relig- ious oxertion. Gampyem says, in his * Illus- trated Homes,” that o hundrod thousand dollars will do far more towards regenorating the poor if spent in building o hundred clean and comfortable cottoges than in constructing one ornato church. Individaal philanthropy has so far been one of tho most potent forces at work in tho roformation of this evil. ThePzanony sud Bunperr-Courrs buildings in London, aud many unknown inatances of similar lib- orality on o smaller scalo, aro examples of this, But the blossed force which JEmMY Bextaax called *‘enlightened selfishnesa lins perhaps done most. It pays to build cloan, hoalthy tenoments for the poor; and landlords are finding it out. Not only do such quarters commond higher ronts, but the ront i8 paid, snd the wear and tear of the building are much amaller, and the number of persons who can be comfortably honsed is nctunlly -much larger than the number whe ecan be uncomfortably lodged. In Bt Giles, London, whero tho death-rate in thrice that of the rest of tho city, tho number of inhabitants is 410 to the ‘ncre. ‘The districts improved by Sir Syoney TARIFF IN WISCONSIN, ;004 naturs, a5 = T a3y cilol o \’Vuhing!an by Gan, J‘“.w“. A The 'ilfldguhlicnn Convention of Wisconsin £ The Standard hoving exbibited the bad The Nationa! Banks have been called npon | far back ns 1820, and began the publieation L rd in their platform the follow- s o by the Comptroller of the Curency for re- | of the Globe newspaper, which was tho rec- K:‘ “lll’:: ::‘:ludirm - rrl:uion St sl oo mtfhul denut}ncln;; Asn‘:fl;’lcgurml]igun’g:;u ports showing their condition at the closo of ognized organ of tha Dorgooratic party un ioff f,’n an important b?,....,h of politico-eco- :;obr:\c?::n::;nu?c .\nlmri:fim io:: LO:\an i{ business on Wednesdny, June 80. The dor hia editorship from thet time until 1845,— PR o 2 ) L s G yoes A nomio science. They enid: repents the offense on the ocension of a din- Comptroller has decided upon retiring all | & period covering tha stormy Administrations v g P T 8 , That we are in favor of & tarlll far revenne onls, %0 | yor yiven to Lord Durseny, Governor-Gen- notea uf the denomination of $5 now circu. | of Jackson and thoss of VaN BuneN and | ,gjusted as 1o bathe lesst burdensome and most fa- Lf o . ) itk lnted by tho First, Third, and Traders' Na- [ Tyuen. During that period Lo was an oraclo | vorable to the interesta of labor and industry, sral of Canads, inan article which ex 3’“‘ tional Banks of Chicago, tbe First National | to tho Democratic party, and personally had If any man were to propose a tax inany ""f“‘ ignorancy and vonom. Aa Lord Dur- Tk of Paston, Ill., and tho First National | an {inportant sharo in shaping tho policy of | Stata for any other purposo than pablic rev- Frmy improved the opportunity ‘0 romove Bank of Canton, 1. This course is necessi- | tho Government., Durinig this sama period | onue, ho would be denounced as a lunatic, or from the English "‘"‘"1 the impression that tated by the fact that many well-oxecuted | hia family grew up to manhood, and were | &y ona proposing a robbory. Yot, during | tho nequisition of Cannda is a partof the counterfoits of notes of this denomination | naturally deeply attached to the Demo- | tho last fifteen years, tho General Goveru- American policy, the Standard bluntly and on theso bauks are now afioat, aud can bo | cratic party. The Bras ns, howaver, after the | ment hns imposed by law, and the people inhospitably doubts his word, and roturns to gotten rid of by no other means. enforced rolirement of the father from | hnve pnid, three to four dollars of tax for [ the chargo. It puts forth the rather remark- E e tho Gloke by President Powx, nttached them- | ench dollar that has gone into the Public ablo suggeation that the United States Gov- Gon, SnERMA ovidently regrets keenly tho | selves to tho Bextox wing of the party, and | Treasury, During tho War, all things and all ernment igonly rcs(.rm}md[r‘o‘m pannemEnnon oceasion nfforded in his memoirs for what be | wero thus placed in partial, and eventunlly | quostions wero subordinnted to the ono | tho St. Lawrencs torritory * by Providence, charnctorizes s willful and malicions misin. | direct, pppositionto the exireme Southern | point of preserving the National existence, [ Woll, it certainlyiunot restrained by any droad terpretation of his referonco to Fraxz BLa's | faotion, which had insisted wpon displacing | and during this period of peril and anxiety of the consequences from the British Govern. military enveor. Whatover the impression | Mr. Bram fo make room for Mr. Tuosas | the Congrees of tho country was msed by | ment. A Government. eannot expect to in. lo intended to convey in the book of his | Rircime, of Richmond, V., who was called | the Pennsylvanians and Now Englanders to | 8pire much terror among tho American poo- estimate of Gen. Bram as a soldicr, Gen. | to Washington to edil, the Glods. impose upon the country, for the benefit of | Plo Wh"’“ loading journalists confess that it “3eRMAN now lenves no room for doubt. In | MontaoMERY Brars, tho elder son, fter | privileged classes, n systom of taxation which | couldn't put moro than 40,000 effectives into an interview yestorday with tho Bt Louis | leaving the ormy, took up his residence iu | In many respocts was without parallel among | the field to defend the integrity of Bolgium, correspondent of Tz Taimuse, he pald o | Marylaud, and Fruve Bram went to St. | natlons. Gradually tho conntry has been | Whoss indopoudenco it has guarantaod by glowing tributa to the dead soldier, whom ho | Louls, whero hio bigan the practico of the | awaking to tho outrage, but tho natngul | troaty. If Tingland could not have raised ite culogizod ns ono of tho truest patriots, most | law. Though s good lawyer, and personally | cowardice of partios, and the controlling | hnad fo protect tho noutrality of Belgium, Lonest nnd bonorablo men, and one of the | popolar, he was of too excitabla a nature to | influonce of tho privileged classes, hos pre- | Which it hos guarantecd in its own interest, most courageons soldiers this country ever | stick to bis profussion, IHeace ho sorvod | vented any orgunized effort to ropeal the | it conld ecarcely havo dono more sa against produced. To Fraxg Brar ho accords full | throngh the Mexican war, cnormity. The porticipants in the spoils of | the American nation, §,000 miles away, noross credit for preventing the secession of the | Ho romained s Democrat, but held alaof | the protective policy are Domocrats and Re- | the Atlantio Ocean, It would be as ensy o Btate of Missouri, and for saving to the Uniou | from tho extreme Pro-Slavery wing until1854, | publicans, but the etrongest and most effect- matter, cortalnly, for the American Ropublic, ing it, naturally suggest an inguiry aato tho tondencios of special physical training. It has boon alleged that the course of lifo required of athletea ls bratalizing and degrading, The con= duet of tho stroog men who permitted the drowning of young HANNERAMP doos not Justily any brosd generalizations, inssmuch as they wore controlled more by fear than by any othor fooling. They woro panto-stricken, sud 80 nna- blo to colleat thoir thoughts that no ons of thom suggested mesna of saving the drowning man which could easily have beon obtained. —_— The real mecret of tho onthusiasm of the Bntish publio ovor the Sultan of Zanzibar is vory manifest. Not many months ago wo bad colored potentate,—tho most homeopathio po- tentate it ia truo, but still & potontate,~and the people of the United Btales roceived him well, The Aldormen of the United States robbod their reapectiva city treasuries in his honor. The hotel-keepars af the United States trotted out thele moat tempting menus, The newapapera of the United States magnified his impottasco, Consoquontly hta colorad Majeaty was deoply at- fected, and a great dosl of advertising was done by him in favor of tho Unitod Btates among thoe simple heathen of tho Bandwich Islsuds. Tho Briton is now * playing for even." He tondics to tho sabla Bultan. The newspapers are busy invonting for him bon mots aud tender com- pliments directed toward tlolr Bovereign sod thomaglves, and a general biaze of enthusiaam is the rosult. In fact, tho British populace ia nearly «a anobbish whon & King comes along ss the American varioty., It follows s lead more T00 MANY MIRACLES, Tho London Z'imes, in an article upon the religious condition of France, devotes con- sidorablo space to the political aspects of the pilgrimnges to the miracle oxhibitions at Paray-le-Monial and other places. While it expresscs tho opinion that theso pilgrimnges are outbursis of a roal though mistaken ro- vival of religious belief, it nevertheloss nc- copts tho opinion of M. Anour and other French politioal observers, that these pil- grimngos are also political dovices, and it lo- catos their origin in the horrors of the Com- mune, The working poopla hated the clergy becauso they saw in the Churoh the implaca- ble foo of Republicanism. Hence ocourred the drendful scenes of the Commune during ’ credulously. . side the City of St. Louis, wlhan, upon the Passage of the Nebrasks act, | ive efforta mado in Congress to modify tho | if it folt dinposed, to scize Canadn, a3 it wonld ;‘::snun zom:olnng‘:);naw‘%r:nafit: n:"‘l?g ita lost days,—~tho desecration of all sacred | o= S Bk i - ho joined the opposition which became | tariff have been mnde by Republicans. Tho | bo for the German Empire to seize Belgiumy | ¢ v 214 t0 o legs than in the most fash- things, tho pillaging of churclos, and tho Under dnto of June 28 our corresponding. | known as the Regublican party. succesaful maintenance of the high protect- | 80 far 88 the opposition of Great Britain is member of the Black Hills scientiflo party | He wes an nctive member of Congross ( ive taxes has beon duo mot only to the dex. | concorned. 8o, when tho Standard sdds writes of tho progress of the expedition in ifs | whon the War broke out, and was a candi- | tority of tha protected class in Congress, but | that *England would fight for Canada as Bearch for gold. Nono hns beon | date for the Tupublican nomination for | also to the ignorance of a large majority of | for Kent,” it indulgos ina bit of ridioulous found in paving quantities, and Cali- | Spenker ot the ecstra session of Congress | Congressmen upon the subjoct of financo | brag, unless, indeed, tho assortion was mennt fornin Jor summarizes the results of | which met in July, 1861, He soon nftoren. | and taxatlon. This is especially the caso | for sarcasm. The Standard might better Prof, Jexser's exploration in the romark that | tered the anny, anil servod to tho end of the | among tho ropresentatives of the Bouthorn | have abided by its first explanation, viz. : that *'ther ain't no poor man's diggine.” In spite | War bravely aud gallantly. States, who have been innocent tools in im. | it is *‘Providenco” whioh restralns the of the military and tho Indinns, about five | Fraxx Bruin was & man of more than ordi- | posing the most enormous bounty taxes upon | Pounce of the Americun Eagle, snd not the * Lundred minors have fo,und their way to the | nary natural chilities, TTo was woll educatod, | thoir people, In 1870, '71, and '72, there waa [ POWEr of Great B'E“““' Iills, ond are prospectiing vigorously. Prof. | had a genial disposition, wns a most enter- [ a large surplus revenuo, and the popular The simple fact is that the people of tho Jexwey preserves rigid secrecy in reforence | taining companion, nnd though o good hater | domand for o roduction of taxes was | UnitedBlates aro not contemplating the ao- to his geological iny estigations, but as the | aud frequently misled by strong impulscs | too emphatic to be disregarded, Thero | quisition of Canada by forco. miners owo no allogiance to the Interior | nnd projudices, he was, novertholess, entitled | were several abortive offorts to reduce Tho people of the United States have not Department there in no danger that tho fact | to the high personal esteem in which he was | the protective tax, but the Protootionists, | for sixty years takon any steps looking to the of tho dlscovery of rich deposits of gold will | held by his essaciates nnd kindred. e | doponding on tha genoral ignoranco of the | annexation of tho Caunadas, simply bocause bo concealed for any great length of time. | fought the Anti-Slavery fight nobly and well, | Democratic members, proposed to ropeal the | the Canadians thomsclvea have not given Sugh news would be sure to leak out, but, as | and nover relaxed in the contest. Itisimma- | pure revenue tax on tea and colfes, and the evidenco of any disposition to become a part there hias been 110 such leak as yet, thore is | terial-that his hostility to tho extrome Pro- | whole Democratic party in Congress, with | Of the Republic. The same reason will con- no occaslon for n fresh opidomic of gold- | Slavery Domocracy had an origin in an offenso | two or throo exceptions, voted to repeal that | tinue to dotar the Amorican poopla eo long 83 fever, e or slight to his fumily; Frang Bramr, on | tax! The Protectionists wers refoiced. :';“’f:“"“' “i“; this ‘(’]m,“" 1“:’"‘;’ l‘;:fld of new S e Houthorn soll, battled with tho **peculiar in- | They had reduced revenua without an; rritory, and no desirs - niroduce any h::_tofl":?m':,’: 1,::3:&"“,:;2“?&;; stitution " until it was extinct, Sesiast xRt ot Ih betinly taee 7 | outside dissatisfiod or discordnt, clomont. Hauto, hd.ry Koo misal, (b dispaiiosepe. | 2 was a good eoldior, Though rash, im. | Tho practical effect of tho repeal of the | This renson ia sufficlent to sccount for tha Tocted s loudly nlacs ion the mm’,’ whore tho | Peive, and likely to take offonse at soeming | duty on tea and colfee may be lllustrated by United Btates Governmont holijng off from tiatorond mf gd ot wittor and then mado | Y00 Of apprecintion, he wos brave and col- | giving the figures on thoso two articles, and | Caneds, without secking an irroverent Tt lguk PP e °Fy e lected in-tho fleld, skillful in handling troops, | on cotton and woolen goods, in the year cxplanation in tho uncalled-for interposition ,; ":1 to .:lp:;: ul :ngmdo 0‘;!::“‘;:: b Y | subordinate to his superiors, and fought | 1872, that being the last year on which there | of Providence, or a silly one in the fear of :nl:d o mu‘:‘m'“ ‘”um e I.‘:l‘r)u alwaya cornestly and with his wholo heart | was a duty on toa and coffes, It should bo | ® Proposed attack of a Britih army of 40,000 dead. The plan was bdd’ with great onlisted in tho causa. remembered, however, that a tax on an arti- m!&rdb & Saalias aklll, and but. fop e bravery and| o nt T in politics that he betrayed the | clo not produced in this country, sa tes or orrenm, however, seemed incline ml:““ of the oxpress messonger tho villains we@muu of personal nmbm.on, and the Im- | coffes, is collacted updn the whole amount to guah in the other extremo. Heo protested uld have accomplished th a patience with which he witnessed the ad- | copsumed, and 1a all pald into the Trensury too much for the Canndian devotion to the ""dh amv SRy o sl % | vanco of othors, In politica he was fowr- [ og revenue, Such a tax-isapure revenuo | Mother Country, and Canadlan indisposition an a[v‘:“ucmud a;n I:lnblcn in lhoexprs&l- loss, but his fearlessness dofented bim. Iis | tar, whilo o duty on an orticle produced in to harbor the thought of identification with c:x;. et w“ycf na-p::\“:!r h‘ lul'lumlnlg © | sought in 1861 to carry tho Speakership by | this country, ss woll as in othor conntrios, is | the UnitedSlates, His Lordship's statement I" .?:“ :“:‘ S en D;d"‘ D‘I’fl A °““é storm, but the Republican party, belioving | also tax upon the wholo amount of such | that a dosire to maintain Intact thelr conneo. bg“"y m“:l be bm?ugh! !:{v:nr ci:?a:tul’llm the time rotuired more discrefion in that | rticte consumed in this country, which Is [ ton with England ia the ** prevailing passion rats things are going & mew quidifcation will | 2% selected another, The death of Mr. | a1f paid by the people, but only thet portion | ©f the Cenadians,” la scarcely sustained by be ezacted of railroad employes,—that of eqr. | L¥C0LN sud the clevation of ANpuew JOEN- | of guch tax as s paid on the imported quan. | the rocent movement to establish a Supremo 1ylug plenty of xecas and kngwlag how ta ues | *°", furnished another occasion for & dlsplay | (ity {s rocelved by the Treasury, The pro. | Gourt of last appaal in Canads, and cut off them 8 of fenrlessncss, Ho donounced the policy of | tected olnssos raceive tho other part, Wo | the judicial intervention of England's high £ 3 the Republican Congress, and ot onco en- | give the values of cotton goods and woolen suthority, It is also antagonized by the A Chicago inventor comes forward with a | volled Limsclf in the Democratic party. [ goods, imported and produced in the United tendenoy of the Canadian people to adopt a rival tothe Keery motor, and has progressed | Horo Lo sought high honors and a leadorship. | ftates, and aluo the tax lovied on each, with | Beners! polioy of * Homa Itule,” and to build 80 far 0s to bo willing to state that by th | To secure a nomination, he bravely published, | (1,0 amount of revenue collectod from each, { it 08 the model of American nstitutions. In confbination of air and water ho has produced | ou the ove of the Democratic Convention of | ung tho amount of tax distributad ns pro. | the formation of separate States under the a pressure of 10,000 pouuds to the aquarc | 1868, his famous Bnonneap letter, in which | yuction” bountles, The figures are for 18723 Dominion, their reprogentation in their S8en- inch. Further the Chicago invontor refuses | he took tho strongest Southern grounds on Patd nta | 8te, the adoption of the Amencan denomina~ to particularizo, He is running a race with | the question of Reconstruction, ‘I'lat letter ,07,‘)'5";;1 u{a‘fiu ”"“A'I'lt'% tion for money, & partial imitation of our Kervy to resch the Patent-Ofiice firat with a | £ot hiin tho nomination for Vico-President on 00 TN09,018 Al Judicial systom, and the assimilation of mani- model, although, ignorant of the precise | the Democratio ticket, but that letter R fold characteriatics of the United States, the principles of the other wachine, ha doos not | oxtinguhlied whatever hope or chance & £atd inte | Canadiana scarcaly bear ont Lord Durrxani's know that the two inventions will conflict. 8o | the Democratia party had of carrying 1000500 8 03000 § 45k00%5 | 2asertion that tho fate of Canada Is * unalter- crecy and reticence are maintained in Chicago | the election in the North, While the B4100,000 14,640,000 ably fixed” as a part and parcel of the British a3 well as in Philadelphia, and the publio are. | country was ringing with denunciations of 20,178,000 15,105,000 15,708,000 | Emupire. vastly more interested In what remaine to bo | that letter, he bravely took the stump and 18,023,000 47,118,000 Nooe. | (There are two or three other considers. told than in what thoy have. already heard | defended it. After that campaign he was tions whichare entirely overlooked in the view Let the rush for new motors proceed by all alected to fill & four yearw' vacancy in the ten and ooffee, the total tax | which Lord Durreamy takes of the destiny means, Possibly some of the mechanica who | Senate, where oocasionally he would evince | was $12,325,748, all of which was paid into | of Canada. Ho ignores the growth of ana. have become infected by the Krrry excite- | some of the old fire, but the hand of disonse | the Treasury, In the case of the cotton and | tive population thers, which is gradually ment, though thoy fail in their eforts for ab- | was then upon him, and hig efiorta were fow | woolen goods, the tax was 380,000,000, of | alienating the sentiment of the people from wolute origination, may in the end work out | aud far between. which the Treasury received $20,000,000 and | any neceasilous and dependent connection valuable improvements upon tho manipuls. | As & statesman, he had but » limited op- | the * protected " classes $00,000,000. When | with a country beyond the Atlantlo Ocasn. tion of forcs as developed up to this time, portunity to displsy eny judgwment or | the Wisconsin Republioans declared for a | It is not safe to predict what national dlspo- o thought. As a politician, be failed to com. | * tari for revenue only,” they hit the uall | sition may bedoveloped in Oanada with this ‘The Chicago produce markets were gener- | mand the confidence needed for success. 1lia | squarely on the head. Tha whole reveuna { new growth of native politiolaus. It isalso ally stronger yesterday, with less doiuy for | tulents and his personal integrity were con. | that year from tes, coffes, and woolen and cot. | tolerably certain that the time is not far dls. shipment. Moss pork was quiet and 15¢ per | ceded, but he was too erratio to succeed asa | ton goods was §82,000,000, The repeal of the | tant when reciprocity in trads will be estab. brl higher, cloaing at 819,50 cash, Rud $19,65 | party man. He was more brilliant than pro- | tax on tea and coffes reduced the aggregate | lished on & firm basis between the United for August. Lard was dull and 5o per 100 |-found; a good soldiar, but » poor politician; | tax and revenue $12,000,000and nomore, Now, | Btates and Canads, and this may lesd tta higher, clowing at $18.15 cash, and $18.20 | & brave man, and an bonest man, ho wore | had Congress reduced the taxon cotton and | to important political changes fa the mked for Auguit, dleats wize quist and | no oollar, ssknowledged o supesior, would | woolan gooda 36 per cant, and lafi ths tazon | santlment of tus peopls . en . both tho Piain Deaier oMica for the purposs of sontuliation 25 {0 thio beat method of organlziug for the approsch~ ing political campajgn, All Demacrats and Liborsls interested are invilod to sttend.—Clveland Figim Ueater, July 8, ¢ It must have besn s solemn, funereal meetiog. ) ‘Thore was no room for outhusiasm among such Democrata sa RANNzY, 8ravrpino, and PAYNE, ‘who bolleve in honeat par monoy. It must have required considerable consultation to devise any method of organization in behalf of the infla- tlon and repudiation tioket. It ia vory certaln the meeting did not enthuse in any romarkable dogroe. Tho Iuvitation to ** Libarale laterested ™ could only inoluda those who expoot to be candi- dates oo the shinplaster tloket. All the other Liberals will of voursa vote tolkill and bury both ticket and platform out of sight. Tho proupectiin Cuyahogs Odunty for the repadiation party s growing small by degrees, After the election there will be none 80 poor astodold Teveronce. murder of priesta and Archbishops, Panio- atrickon by theso foarful oxcesses, the aris- tocracy, as weoll ns the Church, saw no hopo for tho futuro except in a rovival of religious xzeal, which should spread through the , lower orders and rouso them into an enthusiasm which would result inaretorn of their old obodience and rever- enca, Hence the pilgrimages to thi shrine of Parny-le-Monial and its miracles, which have crented such wide-spread enthusiasm and zeal, Honco, says tho Z¥mes, *'AMon who would once have been ashamed to be seen inside a church aro now ready to carry banners in clerical processions. Evon mili- tary officers now preach lay scrmons. Stranger still, considorable crowds of work- ing poople hoave put themselves under the guidance of the priests, ' It may be only the wilder zenlots who publicly go to such places s Paray-le-3onial ; but the number of theso pilgrima is large, and, even if they should ba ot aside, thero would bes only s small dimi- nution from the great rovival of faith and zeal.” The latest advices show, however, that this overplus of roligious zeal is beginning to rosct upon itself, and that the machinery construoted by the Church is running wild. A Parig dispatch in our last issue states that the Bishop of Verdun has addressed a letter to o local paper atating that there ls * 1o mntis. factory evidence of the trutk of reported ap. pearances of the Virgin and miraculous cures effeotod by her,” and that the clergy, inatead of encouraging these munifestations, must do allin their power to enlighten the people and warn thom against the vagariea of blind oredulity, All this simply means that wmiraoles were gotting to be too common, One miracle, under propar management, might defy dstection, and work excellent ve- sults in carryingout the politico-religious pro- gramme of the Ultramontans olergy, but 1niracles were gatting to be as plenty as mush. rooms. Shrines were baing built everywhers, The image of the Virgin was gotting to be omnipresent, and performing miracalous oures in all paria of France, Paray.le- Monial w0 lopger {had the mo. nopoly. Bome greedy perions, undoubt- odly for galo, were organizing mirac- ulons displays, &od absurd mel’ and women, perhaps acluated by genuine relig- ous zesl and belief, wers making miraculous snnouncaments and drawing crowds of sealots all over Franoae to witneas their performances. ‘Thus, in commercial parlance, the market was overatocked. There are miraculous oures, mi. raculous marriages, miraculous prophecies, mirsculous lotteries, and even mirsoulous op- portunities for making monsey, There iz dan. ger, howerver, in an overstocked market of miracles. We are no longer living in the middle ages, when superstition, even of the grossest kind, could be practiced without challenge, People are doubting, disousaing, queationing. Sclence ia keen and everonthe alert to bring all theological and purported supernatural manifestations to the test of its material processss, Hanoe, miracles in the hands of earsless snd bug, ng m_mwhwsqu ionable quarter of London, The criminal record, too, hns been much lighter. The Int. tor fact has been strikingly shown in Glas. gow. Binco 1870, 2,000 vile houses have beon torn down and roplaced by decent dwellings. In 1869, the number of crimes committed was 10,809, This has gradually docreased pari passy with the improvement, until it s now but 7,869, The experimont of law {8 now about to be tried. Tho Artisans’ Dwellings bill which {s pasaing through Parlinment s a tentative moasure whicli, should it succeed, will bo: vigorously followed up. It provides the ma- chinery which municipal corporations may use {if they wish, but it does not oblige them touseit. It will attract attention, therefore, sa an experimont in municipal government a8 woll aa in social science, THE BACRIFIUE OF HUMAN LIFE, 'The sacrifico of human life during the past siz months has been simply appalling, oa will be shown by the statistica which we print below, In making up this record we have made use only of the great disasters which have been reported by telegraph. The minor casualties it is imposaible to estimato, Epi- demica havo been the most severe dostroyers of life, nlthough neither the cholera nor tha plague have ravaged any part of the world. In the Fiji Islanda alone, 50,000 people have perished by’ measles and other diseases in. troduced since the annexation of thoso islands to Great Britain. This unusual fatality, from a compamtively innocuous disease, the Lon- don 7'imes oxplains upon the ground that the Europoan nations have bocome bardoned to it, and that it was destructive to thess laland. era because they wers having it for the first time, and wera not aconstomed to this boon of British civilization. Earthquakes come sscond in the list of deatroying elements, having killed over 20,000 people. We bave no rec. ord of the losa of life by the recent earth. quakes and acoowpanying voleanio disturb- anced in Icoland, but thare have been four other earthquakes from which the lose of life has boon given approximately, as follows ; In New Grenads, 16,000; in Asla Minor, 2,000; in the Loyalty Islands, where the earth. quake was accompanied by a terrible tidal- wave, 2,000 ; and at Ban Cristobal, Mexico, 70, A famine in Asis Minor during the early partof theyear swapt off 20,000 peopla befors rellef could resch the aflicted region. Floods come next in the disastrous catalogue, their ravages having been almost exclasively oon- fined to Earops, The overflow of the Gs- ronne in the mouthern part of France de. stroyed 8,000 lives, and that of the Danube in Pesth, 600. While our own country wes severely ravaged by floods during the spring, especially in the Southwest and io Penusylvanis, their déstrunotion was oconfined to property, We can ind no evidence that more than six lives were lost by them,al- though many of them were very sudden and .swept everything before them, belng acoom. panied, as they wers, with huge massos of ice. . The tasrine dlsasters of‘t‘l:l ant ix monthy bave been peouliarly destructive of Lt Ritty-tour Hfllll.P nassly all of das O —— OETIUARY, FRANK PRESTON DLATE, 7R, The telegraph bringa the announcement of the * death of Feavnk P. Bram, Jr., at 8t. Louls, abous midnight on tha 7th inst, Tho news was nob unexpeoted, slthough some hopes of his re- covery had been based upon the transfualon of blood process, whick was succesafnlly mwio » fow weeks mince, The deceased was born Ia Lexington, Ky., oo the 10th of Pebruary, 1831, graduated at the Oollege of New Jersoy in 111, and immediately began the practice of the law in Bt Lounis, iis law practico was continned without interruption until the outbresk of the Mezican war, when he entersd the srmy in the ranks and served until 1847, In 1848, he was for a time editor of the Missouri Demooral, and made his sppesrance in politioal lfe In the Freo Boll wing of the Democratio party ss & supporter of Vax Duaen for the Presidenon and an an opponent of the extenulon of slavery into the Territories, In 1862 and In 186k he was a member of ¢he Missourd Legislature, and in 1858 wss elected to Oongress as & Republican, At the next slectlon his Dom=; ocratlo opponent was retarned, and he contasted the mast, He waa also elooted 101800 and 1502 At the outbreak of tha War of the Rebeilion he entered the servive as Colonel of volunteers, waa appointed Brigadler-Ganeral in Auguat, 1601, snd Major~Genaral in 1863, resigning bis seat ln ‘ongress in 1863, He commanded the Second ivision of the Fiftaanth Corps a4 Vicksburg, snd the Saventoenth Corps in the Army of the Tonnesses in Buxamiw's campaigns from Chate tanoogs to Atlanta, in the march to the ses, sad in the Oarolinas, Of Gen, Bram ss s soldior, Gen, BEERMAN pithily sayw: * Detween him (Lo~ aax) sad Gen, Brain thers existed s nators! rivalry. DBoth were meu of greal ocourage ! talent, but were politicians by natars and expe- rlence, and i3 may be that for this reason they ware mistrusted by regular offioars Lke Geny. BonorxLy, THOMAS, And myself. . « ¢ I regarded both Gens, Loaax sod Brarm 58 ¢ voluntaers * who looked to personal fame sod glory as suxiliary and secondary tothelr politiost ambltion, and not as professionsl soldiers.” 13, 1808, Mr, Brirs was appolntsd Colleotor sd Bt Louls, and Commissionarof the Padlfio Disastiatied with the Administration, be retared 10 the Domoaratic party, and fn 1668 was the cad*, didate for Vice-President on the ticked with 851+ uouR. In 16870, be was siscted to tha United Btates Sauste from Missouri, to fill a vasanth his tarm explring Maroh 4, 1878, slnce v tme he bas besn incapacitated from publio @ private work by llinsss, Thsse are the l‘"fi Buwet hig lite, Andoklysis of Lis earets W $oUud wisena ) . - g

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