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L} e —————er i e e A THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1875. TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. RATYS OF SURACRITTION (FAYANLE IX ADVANCE). Poxtagn Prepaid at this OMee. Datly Edition, poat-Dald, 1 yeaf serercarsereeer, B 100 Parts of yearstsama rate. Mafled to any sddrese FOUR WERES for. 1.00 Bundap Editlon: Lt ligio it &89 50 tarary and Rol ) ., por Clab of twanty, por oap . 1116 The postage in 13 ounta a year, whiol we will propay. Bpecimen copl-4 sent fres. To pravent duay and mistakes, bo snre and give Post-Offce adireas {n full, including Btatean- County, Remittance may bo made sither by draft, ezpross, Post-Office yrder, or in registered lotters, at our risk, TERMS TO CITT SUDICRINKRN, Daily, feliversd, Bunday ezcepted, 23 cents per week, Duly delivered, Sunday incinded, 30 cents per wook. Address THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Corner Madinon aud Dearborn-sts,, Chicago, Ik ey AMUSEMENTS, MOVIOKER'S THEATRE—Aladizon street, between Dearborn nd Biate. Engagement of John McCullough, **The Gladiator,” WOOD'S MUSEUM-—~Monros street, between Deare ‘born and Stata. “ Led Astray," Afternoon and evening, TIOOLEY’S TOEATRE—Tandolph street, betweon Clark and LaSalle. Engagement of the Californin Minstrals, Afternoon and evening. ADELPHI TREATRE--Dearborn street, cormer Montoo, Varloly performance, Afternoon ane evening, PLYMOUTH CHUROH—Michigan avenus, znmy-flflh stroet, Comcert by Thomua’ Orchy near oatra, ternoon and evening. BUSINESS NOTICES. TO OONSUMPTIVES-MANY $IAVE BERN HAP- ;7 to give thele wvumun, in favor of the usa of * Wiibor's nre -1iver Oll snd fime." Hzpertonce has proved it tobo a valuable reme for consumption, satbms, dl’)h- ris, and all di s of the throat and Inngs, Mannfac. tured anly drugglats’ y A, H. Wilbor, Ohomlst, Hoston.™ Bold by jerally Uhe Chicagy Cribune, " Wednosday Mormng, Ootobor 13, 1875 Groenbacks at' tho New York Gold Ex- change yesterday opened at 85F and closed at 864, the two extremes of the dny, Towa falls into lino along with Ohio for hard-money and Republionnism, S Kink. 'Wwoop, the old War Governor, will once more tako the reins, and ancient Mr. Lerrren will relapso into the obscurity and quist go desira- ble and proper for political fossils, The Re- publican mpjority in Iowa 15 put down at .85,000, » gain of over 7,000 upon the voto of 1878. The President, who is stopping at the Palmer House, leaves for ‘Washington this afternoon, In conversation with some gone tlemen last ovening Lio gavo 8s a reason for the shortness of his stay that, as ho had not yeb appointed a Secretary of tho Interior, he :ls roturning to the Capital to porform that luty., It is worthy of note that when tho County Commissioners adopted the rosolution ro- quosting the Grand Jury to investigate tho letting of the Hars contract, thoy declined %0 accept Commissionors Crovon's suggeation to moke the resolution a littla more compro- bensive, and include the abstract purchase, nnd other earlier transactions which have been rogarded with suspicion by the public. Tho suggestion was a timely one, and if the majority of the Board had desirod to mnke cdpital on their honesty thoy would have Acted upon it. ———— The rupturs in the ranks of the Opposition widens rapidly, and threatens to seriously in- terfero with tho original scheme for offico- getting, Mr. Keerry's withdmwal in conse- gquonce of the unfair apportionment in the Hzamve intercst hns already borne fruit. Tho Tenth Ward Opposition last night espoused the Keerry cause, and voted not to sond del. egates to Mr, Hearno's Convention. A great deal of indignation was manifested, and the feeling bodes ill for the existenca of the Irigh- Gorman coalition ro necessary to an Opposi- tion victory this fall, StaNrry ia certainly in tho heart of un. £nown Africa. Thero can be no doubt about it this time. We print elsawhere the first of his lotters written to and published simul- tnneously in the London Telegraph and Now York Herald, the two nowspapers whose joint explorer and correspondent ho is. 1is story tendslika a leaf strayed from wonder-land, telling ot quoer countries and peoplo, of ter. tible struggles with hunger and thirst, of bloody battles with ferocious natives, and, above all, of important discoveries and ob- servations of great interest to the world at large. e ———— It is & matter of no especial consequence that the Illinois Bupreme Court has dr}:uidsd agninst the Citizens' Association in passing upon tho crosserrors in the quo warranto case. The main question was embraced in the first decision, which virtually held that our eluotion-laws may bo disrogarded with impunity so {or 08 subsoquent redross is in. volved. It being thus settled that tho char- ter of 1872 waa odopted, in spite of all the Wogalities and informalitiey alleged, it mat. tera little that tho ryest of the caso bas been similarly Qisposed of. 'The Court finds that, although the votey Wegally cast in certaln wards oxceeded the entire majority given in the clty at large, thia faot is not sufficiont ; tho averment aud proof should have been that a 1najority of gll the legal votea woro against the charter, To mind not eminently judicial the one thing implics the other, and only & simplo Process of induction is required to show that if the illegal votcs cast on the aide of the charter (there being neither averment nor proof of uny illogal voles cast on tho other aido) cx- ceoded the msjority ua declared, it follows nocessarily that tho alleged majority was the result of such illegal votes, But whero toch- oicality steps in induotion steps out, we gup- pose ; hence the decislon on the cross-errors. poor to prime. Oattle and sheep were with. ont important change. On Baturday evening Inst there was in storo in this city 897,287 bu wheat, 875,670 bu corn, 824,526 bu oats, 104,657 bu rye, and 210,461 bu barley. Ono hundred dollam in gold would buy $116.00 in grecnbacks at the clo: The vote of Oblo nt tho Inst threo Stato olections held in October, 1872.3-4, were as follows : 17217 ) for Secretary of Btat WA (Do Yor Secratery of Biate: Nopublican MAJOFIty .. avev 1873—Novra (Rep.) for Gavernor, .. AvLrx (Dem.) for Governor, Domocratloe MAJOHY.cverursieeres 1814—Wrrory (Rep,) for Becrotary of Stato, .. DLt (Dem.) for Becretary of State, Domocratio majonty, ‘. It will bo obsorved that the Democratic mnjority last fall exceeded thntof the Re- publicans ip 1872, when they mndo a cloan sweop by wore than 3,000 mnjority, The Democratio majority in Iomilton County (Cincinnati) in 1872 wns 5,67, In October, 1873, it was 701. In Octcbor, 1874, it waa $,637. Cuyahoga Connty (Cloveland), in Oc~ tober, 1872, gave n Ropublican majority of 8,607. In 1873 it gave a Ropnblican majori- ty of 2,601, * Last fall it went Democratic by 707 majority. THE OHIO ELECIION. The bour for closing the polls last evening throughout the great State of Ohio brought -issue moro money does not rest upon an ex- to an end n political contest almost without a parallel in point of intense and wide-spread interest. Probably no State election was ever tho subject of an equal smount of solic- itudo. The hard-fought campnign is over, and the nation can draw a long breath of relief, for, in tha issue botween honest- money and rag-money, the superior intelli. gence, tho sterling good sense and solid judgment of tho people of Ohio have pro- vailed, and victory rests upon tho side of the right. Tho ioflation and repudiation folly foisted npon the campaign by the Democracy has been repudiated so completely and em. phatically as to admit of no question, The “ tidal-wave,"” g0 jubilantly and often roferred to In connoction with the reaction of 1874, hos subsided, and with it sre wrecked and stranded the high hopes which had been built. uwpon tho eand. Rise- Up Wiyt Arxex s now ordered to &it down, to retire to ngricultural pursaits, to ruminate on the consequences of an nt- tompt to mislend the peoplo and cajole them into the skillfully-laid trap of * more money."” Tho honest, straightforward policy upon which tho Republican party based ita hopes of success, and the earneat, thoughtful utter. ances of tho able and sincore men who have epoken and written by day and by night in behalf of the renl and pormanent good of the whole people— theso have borno glorious fruit, and tho re- ault is an occasion for universal rejoising. It will make the dollar in overy man's pockot, behe rich or poor, A better, bigger dollar than it was befora ; it will strengthen tho credit and good namo of the Unitod Btates all the world over. At the presout writing, 1:30 a. m., thers romaina not the shadow of a doubt that Romnenrorp B. Harxs las been elected Govarnor of Ohio, and that WiLrraw Avvey lns not; that, in short, the Republican Btato ticket has Dbeen olected. From among the returns a¢ hand it is difenlt to ostimate closely the majority; tho result, Lowever, is boyond question. ~ Great Repub- lican gyins aro everywhere reported, with the exception of the coal and iron distriots, whoro Democratic gains were anticipated. But oven here the Democrats Liave been wofully disap- pointed in the nctual figures. Hamilton County, which includes Cincinnati, is put down for a Republican majority of 2,500, a gain of 3,200 over the Gubornatorinl vote of 1873, and Onyshogn County, in which Oleveland is situated, gives s Re- publican gain of 8,400, A large voto wns polled, tho stay-at-homes of 1873 having turned out en masse; the Liborals of that year going with HarsTeap and Scrurz in their re- turn to the Ropublican fold for this occasion atloast ; while tho Prohibition or Temper- ance ticket has cut but a sorry figure in the campaign. All issucs woro put aside save tho vital question of renl-money or sham-monoy. The Ropublican majority, as gleaned from our latest dispatches up to half-past 1 o'clock this morning, sesms certain to be at least 5,000, and it will undoubtedly be increased by additional returns, e ——— THE DOCTRINE OF ‘‘MOBE MONEY. When people say they * want more monoy,” what is 1t really that they mean to express ? While every individual, of course, wants to Ppossess personally an increased amount of money, the desiro that the Government shall pectation that the Governmont is to issuo it to him secrotly ; the expectation ia that in somo way an expausion of the currency will indirectly inure to Lis beneflt, What is really desired by many is that thers will be more speculation,~more property purchased upon hopo of a rise; moro buying on time; more borrowing to invest in Hpecu- Iation ; less confidence in futuro fluances, and in the money of the future; in short, more inflation of prices. OQut of theae things men expoct to grasp wealth, and close their uyes detorminedly o the inovitable result. ‘We have had asenson of *more mouey,” of ‘‘chesp monoy,” of an abundancs of money. Wo have had a season of unex- smpled trading, speculation, and wild risks, Wo hiave had un opidemie of fortune.making without labor or production. We havo had money go cheap that it could be borrowed on altnowt any form of seourity ; any kind of company could issue any kind of stocks and, onds, and sel! them or borrow monoy on them. Wo had * jore monsy" to an extent :Il:‘t the country kad nover seen beforo, Weo The Chicago produce markets were irrogular yosterday, breadstulls being genarally weak, Mews pork was quict and firm, closing ot 22,65 seller the month, and $19.26 seller tho yew, Lard wos in fair dowand, and 124@16c per 100 lbs higher, cloaing at B18.46 cash and B12.85 scller tho year, Meats were quict and frm, ot 9}@9§0 for $wuimer shoulders {boxed), 18{o for short ribs do, and 8)@18{c for short clears do. Mighwines were quiet and steudy, ot B4 por gallon, Lake freights wera dull gad sasier, at U@8fc for wheat to Buffalo, Flour was in light demand aud steady, Wheat was quite sctive aud 14@20 lower, closing at $1.09 cash and $L.0T} seller Novowber, Corn was loss activo, and 1 1je lowor, closing at G8¢ for October snd Bdjo for November. Oals were in fuir suquest, nud declined 1o, closing at 34 for October aud 82{o for November. Ryo was firer, at 72}@7dc. Barloy was quist and easior, closing at 970 cash and Yo for November, Hogs were in good demand, and were fimn, Bales were ot $7.00G8.00 for Roods anufactured to such an extont that it Loy taken two years after the mills and furnaces closed to gell and get rid of the over-production st o loss, We Lave had during this senson of abundant monoy per. sonal extravagance and waste pushed to un extent hithertounknown among the American poople,—eunding, of courss, in penie, bank. ruptoy, prostrution, and rujn, What is really wanted, or what ja really de. sirable, {s a revival of businews; the incrense of the productions of Iabor sud okill ; ap in. cronse of every branoh of wduatry, whereby overy man shall produce something more «than ho consumes and have Bowething to sell, Wo want manufacturers employed, not in making goods merely for salo, but to f1] orders; we want them g0 engsged in pro. ducing to meot an actun! domand that they way ewploy labor, not spasmodically, but coutinuously, doing an uniformly increasing business, with a corresponding uniforum. ity of wages to their labor. All this doos not require an inflation of ourrenoy, but 9u Improvement of ita charaoter, There is wouey enough to by Lad, but there is & want of conflden¢e in the futnro of that money. That monoy to-day ia cquivalent in value lo certain quantities of otlier commodities, but what will it pnrchaso one, two, or six months henco? Therefore money is not loaned on long time, Lecanso no man knoweth whether at the expiration of that timo it will be worth one-half or one-third of ita present valug, and 1o amount of interest will warrant sucha risk ns that, ‘We are recovering, slowly it is true, from the long debanch of choap money not repro- ronting labor or indnatry. But confidence is of slow growth. The deplorabla folly of the post i too recont; tho future i3 too mncer- tain and portentous, and henco confidencs ja wanting. Whatever is done is doingon a anbatantial basis. Manufactures are produced to order, there isno more ovor-production, nnd consequently no losses, There has beon suflering for tho want of employmont be- canso of the reduction of production in cer- tain lines of mauufactures, and this ruffer- ing must continue until industry has been vinced on a substantial basis, and moncy has altained a fixed nand certaiu value, This branch of the general slagnation would bo greatly relleved if our rovonuo laws would place our manufacturors on an equnl footing with those of other civilized countries, and give them tho markots of the world in which to buy their materials and the freedom to sell theirsurplus whorover they can find o market. Had they hnd this opportunity in 1873, they could have converted their enor- 1mons stooks into cash, iustend of having them rot nud perish on their hands. Thers is no sound reason why our manufactures should not bo produced Inrgely in excess of tho domestie consumption, and the surplus sold the world over. Then wo would have more money, but it would represent labor,—it would be monoy earned, and not money printed without cost. A full recovery from a long scason of rivt nud dissipation is not the work of & day. ‘What tho country hns been pnssing through since 1873 is but tho natural consequonce of inflation,—** moro money " than there was legitimate demand for, and monoy which had not boon earned. Good times cannot bo pro. duced by the mngiclan's wand nor by sot of Legislature. Inflation and dilution can only soaro cnpital, and destroy confidence the moro. Even if they produce n tamporary fever fo got rid of bad and sinking monoy, it is bot a weak postponoment of ths inevita- blo end—panic and dissstor. Anotler infla- tion ndded to tho nlready existing superflnous volumo of dopreciated currency may nfford desperste and half-bankrupt speculators an opportunity to uuload thoir buvdons upon othors, and, like the fox in tho well, gat out on tho horns of the drowning goat, but the final end of inflation must be the samo, To cure the dlsonse we muat get rid of the cause which produces and perpetuates it, and that is, we must have honoat money. Until then thore will bo no real recovery andno per- manent relief. ORE OF PIATT'S WEAK INVENTIONS, Mr. Down P1arr's visit to Paris doo~ not scem to have cured him of his mania for jourualistic sonsations. He hns concocted and sent to his Washington papor a story so wildly and viciously untrue that it hos been taken up by the Dowmooratio ropudistion newspapers snd passed around ns a delieate morsal. Tho burden of Mr. P1art’s latest in- vention is that, pending tho discussior. of the Congressional resolution of 1869 declar- ing that the United Btates intercs'-boaring obligations shall bo paid in coin, ko was sp- proachod by a friend who offered him somo Government bonds, which Lo doclined ; that 1his friend told him that tho resolution was n Wall stroet schema to incrense the value of tho bonds, and that it would cortainly pass because nearly all the Congressmen had been provided by the clique with more or losg of the bonds. The only probable feature of this story is that Mr. Prarr declined to receive the bouds, He always refuses bonds. Thatis why he went to Washington. He wanted to givo the country the benefit of his virtuous example, and ho basspent most of his timo indeclining proffers of bonds, stocks, monay, houses, and gratuitica of all kinds. Every- body who bns ever heard of DoNn Purr has likewise heard of this as his dintinguishing characteristic. 80, of course, he declined United States bonda whon it was likely they ware to be paid in gold ; it was just like him to do so, Alr. Prarr's charge is that the majority in Congress were bribed to pasg this resolution. The chargo has no better foundation than the possibility that such talk was circulated ‘by the Domocratio repudintionists at the time, aven if it has this much basis, Itisan casy matter, even at this late day, to show how groundless and sbsurd it is. To begin with, this resolution merely carried out tho pledge of the Republican party on which the Presidential cawpaign of 1868 was fought and won, The National Republican plat- form of 1868, adopted by the Chicago Con- vention, contained the following resolution: We denounce all forms of repudistion aa a national crimo; and tho national honor requires the puyment of the publlc indebtednoss fu the attormost good faith toall creditors at homs and abroad, not only according €0 8As Letter but the epinit of the lavce under whiok @t was oontracted, The Democratio platform of the anme year declarod, on the other hand, that *whero the obligations of the Governm.ent do not ex- pressly state on their face, or tho law under whick they wero isaued does not provids thoy shall bo paid’in coin, thoy ought, in right and in fustice, to bo paid in the lawfal moncy of the United Statos,"—that is, in green- backs, This was the most consplcuous issue of the campnign, It was'the wingle hopo of the Domocratio party that they conld elect their candidate by appealing to the dishones sontiment of the country in favor of ropudia- tion. The Republicans, however, insisted squarely upon the preservation of the na- tional faith. The result was that Gon. Geaxt was electod by su overwhelming majority, the Republican majority in Congress was in- croased, and every Republican Congressman was pledged to vote for the payment of the bonds in gold. ‘This was the wstruction given them directly by the people. At thio laost session of the Forueth Con- groas a resolution for the payment of interost- bearing obligutions in gold had been passed by the Republican majority, but Mr, Joun- 80¥, then President, had refused it his aig- neture, The new Congross (Forty-first), which had been electod during tho Presiden- Ual campuign on this issue, passed the reso- lation Ly an incroased wajority, and Geun. Guant approved it. ‘I'ho votein the Fortieth Congroeas was 31 to 24 in the Benate, and 118 to 67 in tho House; the vote of the Forty- first Congresa was 42 to 18 in the Benate, and 98 to 47 in the House, 1t was passed &3 o strict party measuro, and the Democraty volod solidly sgainstit. The vital part of the resolution resds: “It is horeby pro. vided and declared that the faithof the Unnal_l States is solomnly pledged to the P8 wmont ia coln or its equivalent of all the obii- gntions of tho United Btates not bearing in- toreat, known ns Unitod States notes, and of all tho Intorest-bearing obligations of the United Btatos, excopt in casen where the law suthorizing the fssue of any such obligation Lins expressly provided thnt the same may bo paid in Inwfol monoy or other currency than gold nnd siver.” In their relations to this isrue the Republican aud Democratic partics stand to.day just where thoy did then. The absurdity of Doxy Pratr's story may bo beat illustrated, porhaps, by reflecting that it would have been n wasto of noney for any Wall street clique to distribute United States bonds among Ropublican Congressmen to voto for a measure for which the peopls had instructed them to vote, on which o Drosidential - campnign had been won, ond ngainst which thoy would not have dared to vote, Tha Wall street men are too shrewd clnss to wasta thoir mouey in thisa way. The Domocratio membors evi- dontly did not get nuy bonds, for they all voted against tho resolution. 'The result of the clection hnd nlready given tho bLonds gold valuo, and the resolution did not partic. ularly enhancoe that value, becauso its effects had been snticipatod. 8o Mr. Doxw Prarr's story must be dismissed eithor as & pure in. vention or tho recollaction of an absurd ru. mor of the time sct up by the repudintionists, which Purr lLos revived with n vicious pur- poso nnd knowing it to be false. ‘Tho only effect of the story will be to increnss Mr. Piatr's unenvinble repntation for untrust. worthiness and irresponsibilit; ——— HOME POLITICS. The eall for n Domoeratic County Conven- tion, published in yesterdoy's papers, is n significant and a bopeful fact. Tho names apponded to it aro mainly thoso of solid, rop- utable, and iutelligent citizons, It is n pro- test against impurity in politics; an appoal to intolligence to arm ngainst brute force; an outery of honest men agninst the bumuwers, the parnsites, the bankrupt beggars for of- flees rich in perquisites, and the corruptionists who proposa to keep in their own hands the power that they Lavo so grossly mismanaged and abused during the lnst two yoars. 'The men who have signed this call bave nt Inst roalized what wo pointed out to them long ago, that thoy wero be- fng used as the mero calspaws for unscrupulous political tricksters, who cajoled them into quietness and proposed to rise, partly on their shoulders, to place, pow- er, and pelf, Thoy have done a manly and o sonsible thing in cutting loose from their ny- socintes. Tho nct givea nolice that thay aro 10 longer to bo reckoned on in snpport of n self-appointed candidate for County 'Freas- nrer, and a line of rifl-raff and adventurers for tho minor offices, and n second or third rate man in place of one of the nbleat and most widely-cstecmed of our Judges. It will bo o thousand times botter to be defented in a fight for honesty than victorious in n straggle for the speils. It is o matterof small moment that the signers eall themselves Democrats, aud npparently intond to bring abont the nomination of n partiean ticket, What- ever their views on national politics may b, they are in this matter sooking an honest rdministration of home affairs, In thisposition thoy are right. Any man who domands on honest Municipal Governmentis right, aud he who opposes such a Governmont mnat be wrong, Tho triumph of the Oppo- sition will mean the perpstuation of tho scan- dalous politics of the last two years. It will mean the success of the ballot-box stuffer H tho joy of the jail-bird ; the enrichment of ovory officinl thief ; tho constant employment of those of our rulers who diversify peddling county contracts by peddling votes ; tho car- nival of fobbery aud corraption. The Oppo- sition party raprosonts mo principle ; it is simply tho embodimant of alnck of principle, The liquor question, on which it rods into power, haa been settled in the wayit wished, and is 88 much of A dead ismo mnow 08 the Thirteonth Amendment. What has thie conlition to fight for now, except tho spoils? It {5 a matter of prime importance to defont its nominees, or a good share of them, Whethter thiy is done by a Republican, or Democratie, or Citizons' ticket, it should bo dono, It should bo the common aim of all respoctable, tax-paying ecitizens, Tho defeat of the Tweep party will inauro o counting of the public moneys, The money ought to bo counted. We have had a costly expericnce in neglecting this precaution a fow years ago. "The political goasip with which the papers teem is mainly a calendor of the names of bummers. Who are thoso ‘people” who propose to rulo ovor us? Thoy are wen who have failed in their own business, as Tweep did 1n his original trade, and who now olaim the right to administer o far more complicated bueinoss; ond, if they get a chanco, will doubtless do as Tweep did, Thoy are pack- ing conventions aud raking judges of eloc- tion out of tho grog-shop aud the gntter, And it is to the credit of tho Democratio party that it repudiates the alliance, The cagerness of our local offiolals to avail themsclves of overy opportunity to go on a doad-beat mprea has botrayed the County Board into ths silly suceptance of & bogus invitation to visit Rock Inland stone-quarries, ‘Thore aro no stone.quarrics at Rock Iuland, and nobody hns over invited the County Board, and a bogus note which spoke of o ** freo wet lunch ™ was sufficient to dazzla the vision and whot thoe appetite of a mojority of tho County Commissloners, who immediately votod to go. Toeverviok, the inflation brawler, B bis Toledo spoeck tha other day, sald : * Goldis a fraud—nothing but a fraud—always was a {raud, and any man is a fraud who says gold is not o fraud." A test of this brawler's honesty might be applied by offering him a #5 greenbock and a $5 gold piece and 206 which of the two he would take,—the rag or the ** fraud.” T — OBITUARY, THE AT.-BRY. ALETANDER PENBOSE ¥ONDES. ‘The cable oo Hunday biought the intelligenco of tho death of a very eminent Beottish theoto- wlay, the Rt.-Rov. ALrxanpru Pexmoss Foruzs, D. G, L., Bighop of Breckin. Ie was boru In 1617, sducated at Oxford, gained the Bovex Bau- serit soholarship in 1841, and graduatod in 1844, o was sbortly after ordained, and iu 1847 wuc- ceeded Bishop Moim ms Bishop of Breckin, Among s works are commentarios on the Can- ticies, the Litany, tho Seven Penitential Psaims, sud the T'e Doum; an explanation of the Nicena Creed and of the Thirty-nlne Articles; numer- ous volumes of sermons; and ** The Remans of tue Late Aurauk Wxsr Hapory, B, D., Rector of Barton-on-the-Heatt, 1874." Mo was the leader of the High-Church party iu Bootland, aad, as hia diocesse way lurgely Low-Churcn, bils difu was devoted to almost oonataunt warstars, which was sometimea waged with great bitter- noes, Ho was unwarried, sod hss lately beon engsged In editing the monkish records of the Lives of the early Bcottish Baints, DB, HLECE, The Cologue Qaels, records the death at Capetown, Aug.17, of Dr. Brxcx, who had at~ tainod & wide-aproad reputation as an African lingulst, o was born at Borl, in 1827, his father boing n theological profousor at Bonn. 1o commencod tha study of African tongues In 1850, (n 1855 sccowpaniea Bishop Cotzsso to Natal, and spont many months among the nativos of Caffrarls studying thoir dialocts, and in 1857 was msdo Qovernmont {ntarpieter, In 1869 s fiuished lis great work, & comparativo grammar of South African Isughages, at IHartford, Conn,, who has beon a very activo man in the tho Hon, durpoN TRUMDULI. pulitics of that Btato, IIe woa a momber of tho Leglalature far eleven yonra, 1o has also beon Comnnissioner of tho Beliool Fund, State Nank Commissivner, and for many yesrs prommontly identifled with tho Charter Oak Bank snd Pheo- nlx Life Insuranco Compang. Ho died at the oxtronio aga of 9, and waa one of the eoldiura of the War of 1812, e Iu consideration, it is to Lo presumed, of their laborious offorts to try TintoN and Slovrron nud ovorybody and evoryihing oxcupt tha caso beforo them, and of thew signal incapacity to como to an agreomont upon snything, tho Berourn jury is holding meesings, appointing cominittoes, drafting momorials, and otherwiso organizing a pressure upon the Brooklyn Board of Bupervisors for increased compensation. Tho principal ground of their claim is that, nas tho Doard Las nlready pmd their board bul and othor extra expenses, it s equally Iegitimate to add furtber to their Iawful feea enouglh to compunsnte them for thelr loza of time. The question which their 1 ct on natarally BURRCALs in, what equity thoro w In the law which compela a dozen mon, at tho fostsnce of any litigious individanl, to ottle thatindividual's disputes= nccording to the law—for their lgno_- tauco of which thoy are solocted instend of & Judge. Another quory which the Brooklyn tax- payors are lial'e Lo tako homo to themselves i3, why thoy ehould thus bo eailad upon to foot the bills rather tban tho Judge who tolerated montho' discussion of evorsbody and overything except tho caso, and the lawyers who by tho wouk talked of eversbods and evorything oxcept the caso? Tho wholo Is & 8 gnificant .1 lustration of tho absurdity of the jury systom, which fa boightoued by the fact that, oven in the matter of exira pay, the jury cannct agree,~but ten out of tho twelvo uniting in asking i, EC i e AN A Pronch Jeasg Pouenoy hos turned up, by namo (A11sT0 Gnranpr. HBuspicions wero first aronsed apainst Lim by the disappesranco of eildron in his noighborkood and screams hoard in bis sbop. Thoe populuco became slarmed, battored down Lis doors, and discovored & young boy bound hand aud foot and Graxor torturing him, Mo was taken into custody and tho crowd then roarchod his house, The cellar floor was dug up, and buried in tho ground woro fonnd many childreu's ekoletons. Tho brute is 2% years of age, and, it has boon found, commenced his fiondish carcer ot a8 early an agons Jruse Doscnoy. Up to this poiot the cascs are paral- lel, but the diepoeition of the two will differ. Thero is notbing moudlin or scotimontal in Fronch justico. Women will not whine over Gnanpt, nor motaphssicians speculalo about him, nor charitablo fostitutions seek bim ns curiosity, Ho will bo hanged speedily, and that will be an end of lia torturing chiklron. ———— A few days since wa recorded the fnct that an English clergyman, upon the complant of an- other of hiy profossion, had sonteneed a poor wator-crees gatherer to throe moutba’ imprison. ment for trospnss upon the grounds of tho lat- tor. Englich pajers now state tuat tho Rev. Epwazp Moour, of 8Spalding, has vent a littlo girl to prison for picking a flower. Tho same clergymen recently sentencod a man to nine sears' lmprisonmeut for somo trifling offenge, but tho Queen intortored and reloasod him. In viow of the petty tyranny of theso nglish cler gymen who ha; pen to bo country Justices, it is 0 bo rogretted that Moopy and SaNkey did not dovoto s portion of thoir time to the miniaters of England, who soom to oced ordinary ho- manity and chanty morathan the laity, ——— The Fpringflold (Mass.) Republican thinks that Masenchusetts may bave the distiuction of furnishing both tho orator aud tho poot for tho DPhitadelphis Contennial, a8 thore I3 roason to bo- liove tlat the choice of orator will fall upon Cnancrs Fravcia Apaws, aud that oithor Mr, LoxoreLow or Mr, Lowswt, will read the poom. Fortnnatoly for those three gentlemon, their deeignation for tho Contennisl honors does not dopend upou Masanchueotts. 1f It did, not one of thom would ba solected, That Stato hae a babit of patronizing modiocrity and doprocating suporionty in its public men that is ot vory on- couraging, to say tho loast. The Massachusetts prophet 18 not without honor save in his own Btate. —— WearzaveLY, convicted of complicity in the abductlon of Cuauiry Ross, has given o now turn to the search for the missiug boy by sug- gesting exploration of the Catholic Orpliau Auy- Inms. Nobody sesma to hiavo thought of it bo~ fore, and yet thore 18 no place at which the ab- duotors whon prossed by pursnit woald have boen mora likely to bave placed bim, It sppoars, lonever, thatthe suggestion was a mere con- Jocturo on WesTERYBLT'S part, snd thst ho doeen’t kuow tho boy's whereabouts, 50 that the Cutancey Ross mystery romnins as much o myse tery au ever, —_—— Joggernaut is in & bad way, oming to the fall of a stove from hia pagoda at Poores. The full of the atone Is s sorions matter, as thero is a prophiecy that when the first stone is usfastonod the Templo ehall not staud. Tho Temvle was Luilt i tho middlo of the twelfth century, and duriog the Jast 700 yoors not a trowoel has been laid upon itin the way of repaws, Whatever doerits Boddhism may bave, it soems to have boon n most exccllont religlon i the matter of contracts, and ono that might bo adopted with profit iu these lattor days, 4o far 84 publte build- ings are conceracd. —_— To those who pooh-pooh the Presldent's Des Motnes spooch, the Albany Evening Journal obe sorvos: The greatost of Gormau and Continental atatesmen treata the Ultrucncuane eonflct as 1o ono parmmount queatiou of Europo. The grestest of Euytliuh utatce- saen turns aaldo from the ordinary Beld of_politica to 63108 the pretonsions and alne of the Vaticsls a4 thio most subtlo aud threstenlng danger of the timea, Whiat tho furoniost mau in Gormany and the foremuat man i England hold, the foremost man in America i ofticlal poltion enforces when ho Mfia the lasia be- twcen patriotlsm and intsliigence on ihe ono stde and supursiition and priesieratson tho other tos leading placo in public thought, e Whon Marr CanrexTes, In hun lotter to Daxa of tho Sun, ¥sld A. O, Buzit, Waslington cor- respoudont of the Bt. Louls Republican, way ‘“‘anjndictod har,” the latter respondod from Ohto, inviting OaurexTER to repoat the assertion within siriking-from-the-shoulder rango, To this tho Milwaukoo Sentinet (Canrenren's orgau) roturts by publishing the nawes of other people who Lave callod Boxil & har, And now, of course, Doxit will ronew Lis challenge from long range. Thus It is that freedom of dlscus- Hion s mwntained, e The New York Herald dou't go a nlckel on the politicians, but pius its falth to the nineteenth century, Itenys: * Weare not golug to repu- diate a dollar of aurdebt, or to question whother we ehall pay it in gold or jesuo a psper dollar that will not mean gold some tme or other. Iln short, thia is the tuetesntl contury, sud we are not golug ta beocome pirates or fools," —_—— Logansport, Ind. hss boen hesrd from. Thonks to the Julor-Ocoan's enterprive iu ob- tainiug a three-lue dispatoh from that place, we kuow tuat on Monday excitement was at fever bieat thero regarding the Ohlo election, selesii bl sies Of the Bpriugfold (Meoea) Revublican's Con< tonnisl tickow, —Avaus for Prexident with Bris- 20w for Vico Prosident,—the New Haveu Falla- diun vemarks : * We vonture the pradiction that 3r, Buwrow wowd bo more lkviy to head the tioket. His locality fa maro in hi favor, he 18 8 youngor man, aud looks auif ho had more blood In hia voms. It maynot hoso blue, bub 1t 18 of a quality tho peapla like bolter," In Ohlo the Democratio Binto Committos pnt Estu, Rotnz, of the Cincinnatl Volkagreund, on tho ntump to answer Scnvnz's spoeches, Mr. RtoTE tried to mako Democratic spoochon, bnk Lis native Gorman good souse gol the better of hum, and {n e firat oftort ho deolared himeolt for houest monoy, i T Tho Cinclanati Commiercial puts the problem fn'n nut-sholl: *More money moans meaucr mouey." ST PERGONAL. Col. E. D. Townsoud, U. 8, A, Isat the Palmer House. John L. Btowart and bride aro guests at the Trotmont, Col. . M. McClaughoy, Jollet, is a guostat the Bherman. William and Johin Sandors, Now Zealand, stop at the Palmer, Tho Mon, J, H., Lyman, of Massachusatts, atops at the Pacifie, Tuo Hon. Jamos Ludington, of Milwaukeo, stopa at tho Tremout, D. Bruco Pecblos, Rdinburg, Scotland, stops at the Gardoer House, Tho Hon. J. 3. Houthworth, of Woodstock, is rogistered at the Sherman, Gen, iloward Las finishiod preaching in Ore- gon ; ho is beginnivg to praetice, A ron of Baueroft Davis is to marry o daughe ter of Bouator Frolmghuyson to-morrow. **Brick " Pomeroy throatens to start & paper i Chicago. A a briok-brat it counot be born to live. Tho Hon, 0. C. French, Granville, Miss., and tho Hon. J. E. K. Horrick, Hull, Mass,, are ot the Suerwan. Mies Mary E. Chaney, & banker's daughter of Bedalia, blindly sllied berselt to the bind leader of (ho town band. Qen. J. B, Roberteon, Baporiotondent Texas Immigration Company, and A. Parkor, of Aus- tin, Texnn, aro beardera at the Pacific. Joho ©. Gault, Gov. Buperintendont, and A, V. 1L Carpounter, Genoral Tickot Agout of tha Mii- waukeo & 8t. Paul Raitvoad, put up at tho Pacific. Hoput an enemy in hin wmonth to steal away lug brains, but tho onemy, sfter n protracted #oarcll, returned without anyihiug.—Courier- Journal. . Tho Hon. A. J. Bryaut, recontly elected Mnyor of 8an Francleco, with his wife, aro at Dpresont guests of Mr. David Keolloy, 937 Pratrio avonuo. Harriet Hosmer will contributo s group ropre- senting emanciputivn to tho womon's dopirtment of tho Centenulal Exhitition,—tho largest ideal work slio bias execnted. Qoesip pays Holen Huntia trysted to a rich Colorado Quakor.—Erchange. Who would have suppssod o Quaker would go to Helon Hunt for a wifo?—Al'a California. Dr. Backuw, a woll-known Presbytorian clergy- man of Daltimore, bas resignod Lis pulplt atter a pastointe of forly yeara, Ho rerigned for the purpose of giving way o & vounger man. Pauline Lucca Is beginning her series of fur- wella In Germany, Ble iy Lo tnako a provinces! tour thero, recolving 750 for each performance, afior which'sho promisea to rouro to private lito. Commodore Vandorbilt is buying up roal-estate In Boston. Doubtless Lo thioks of luyiug his bones beside thoso of O'Daldwin, tho prizo- fighter, 1t is fashionable now to live fn Bouton —whon one i3 doad. The Rev. Henry Morgan's sermon on * Soven- toon Ncasons Why Meu Don't Go to Church” te likenod by wisa peoplo to that famous eonys with 499 vorssa. Tho first reason why mon dou'’t Bo to church is becauso thoy dou’t want to, aud the scventeen.h roason iu tho samo. The Crown Princess of Cermany is Colonet of a regiment of hussars, In u 1oviow seconuty she appearod at tho head of hor cavaliers. Is thero 8 woman anywheto who wou:ld not consont to bo & Crown P’rincess, since such aro tho rowards of tho onorous poaition ? A man bearing the appropriate nom ¢ plume of **Jingle" 18 writing lotters on Chicago to the St. Lows papors, Heis & colossal liar, and holda Lis position morely by his aoitity in this direo- tion. Ho enys Chucugo is going to the dogs, snd his conrse stuff tickles tho 8t. Louls palata. Borgh takes young Bannott to task for pigeon- shootlug, and for permitting watchos to be 10 portod in the Lerald. In a rocont narrativo of a plgeon-loatch Mr. Bergh counted tho word *“kill " ouo hundred times. Ie might do bettor than that 10 somo choico chaptors of the Penta- teuch, or in n trontiso ou murder as a fluo art, **Whoever truats a child,” uays Mr. Boaoker, ‘*to tho tonder wercios of Gou? We bring them up oursetves, and”—slapr:ing his handa togother vory auggestively—' wo soo that they comu up, too.” ‘lliotoforo Mr. Beechor favors iho pro- posed rovival campaign of Llvsars, Moody and Baukey in Brookdyn, Jonou has boen advised by Lis sweotheart to commemorate hor birthday by purchasing u Ger- wan student's lamp, or u parlor-stovo, inntesd of flowers. Bonsiblo girh, thut! Dutif she instils many sconomical notions into Jouos, ha will bo- gin to think he can never afford to bo martfed. Tho sonsible girls muss guard against this pit- 1atl, Now they aro tolling that old atory about clay plpes aud Virginia tobacco, and 8 rockiess sacri- tico of pipes aftor oue smoking, a8 boibg truo uf Tenuysou. The New York Herald loarns thas it a4 aftor a muccessful combat with one of those clay pipea that Tonnyson wrote bls celobrated Lues on a tire dn & fco-house,—* Thus 500 tone of ico were soon reduced to mshes; fully 500." Lverybody will romomber them, The absutdities of Iitigation roached & climax in 8 Now York court not tung sgo, when a otuld of 3 yoars wza placed on the witness-stand xnd urgod to plead toa cauo of nggravated asssuft. ** Why," eaid the Judge, ** this s & farce " sud 60 it wea, Tho defendant, Mrtthew Russoll, was discharged. Iis paronts and those of another boy had quarrelod, aud the children wero made partiva to the procoedings. Tho exclusive poet of the Deuver Zribune haw contributed & luminous **Ode to Ortum,” the coucluding sianzes of whict road aa foliows: 1 would uot dy tn Ortum, With peschen tit for eatin', ‘When the wavy kora is gotui & the candldates are tivat " 0w, who would think of dyfu’ Ur oven yolting siok ¥ Herr Krueger, of 8poadan, Germany, was one of the few won who did not desurt Carl Seliurz 1o the dark hours of *48. When Bcharz escaped from Lho fortroay of Bpondau he obtained sheitsr undor Krucger's roof; and tha latter, falliug undor suspicion of having aided s notorious traitor, was stripped of his ostatos and throwo into privon. e lvéd, however, to partially rotriave lils fortanes, and diod ouly last mouth, full of years and honors. MOTRL ADRIVALY, Palmer—Williard Krlogaley, Sau Francisco; F. E, Weat, Washioglon, D, 0.; Bunuel Jaffs, Trintdad ; J. F.aud J, W, Boymour, Denver; 0. P, Tuttle, Parls, France; Russell Elllott, Indisnspolis; Mr, and Alr, Edmunton, Manchaster, Eug.; Robert Btephenson, Thtladelphis. ... Girand_Pucifie—I1, O. Hintwan, Terre House; Augustis Dowdell, Philadelyhla; O, B, Pock, Datroly J, JaMlchol, 88, Loute; A, A, Becwor ow York; v oy, b wlre) New York; 0, Bavery, Dos Molna: Eios Soott, Okaadeg B, J. or- tou and family, 8t Tuomas, Oal....Sherimun—Col, Jawes Forsythie, New York; Tuoodors Thotuas' Ore choatra Troup ¥or : F. M. Avery, Buth 0. D, dorhiai, Fort Wa AL Williim Ligolls, Poughe A Bjurr, Nashyillo: 1, Sow aud fusniy, Glnciams U, L, Cole, George . Uriscom, i, M. liyers, G, D, L, 3,0, Layug, aud o L. Euuuely, Plilabire] Juln D, Irwin, Toronto; G, G, Gillett, Fhiladelybia | A, B, Boutbard, Logauspost, Ind, Gurdacr House— Jobn Q, Klisworth, Tndisuapolis ; A. H. Lexton, Urand Rapids F. Ruud, Troy, N, ¥.; 0, G, Whipple, Alewnpl G D, boldusu, Urecn Bay, RELIGIOUS. Adjournment of the Methodyg Rock Rlver Conferonce Yosterday, Full List of the Appo'ntments of Proaoh ors for tho Next Year, Conventlon of Chrlstian sum!ny-Schooh e=sOther Maticrs, ROCK RIVER CONFERENCE. FINAL ADTOURNM2NT, Speeitt Dispatch to The Clacaao Tritane, Jovrer, HL, Oct 12—Tho thir:y-sixth soesioy of the Itack River Conferenco of the Mothodigg Chnreh closed at balf-past 6 o'clock thig ftor. uoon, A Inrge amount of miscollaneons 8. neest was tranancted during the day, besides iy reading and adoption of soveral 1mportany roports, The mout luteresting of tho Intter iy tho raport of tho Committca on Fducation, ey, bracing the Garrett Biblical Instituto, the North. westorn Univeraity at Evanston, th Jennings Heminmy, and tho Rock River Beminary, Drof, ¢, E. Mandoviile, Principal of Jooningy Bemluary, mado somo interosting statementy coucerning the prosponty and noeda of tha jg. wtitution, Dr. Fowlor mado & shnrt snorch in reparg % the Notthwoestern, full of hope and good chioes for tho future. Thu question of tho location of the next angg Conterenco camo up, And eidcited mush lively and good-humorod diseusaion, which gave oo 100 for tho diaplay of that wit and readiness [ reparige for which Bethodiat preachiors ary noted. Onlv two points wvere in comretition, Qalena and tho Centonary Church in Wess Cop, cngo. Chicago beat, of cou1so, and therq 1y next gossion will be hield, Tho afcernoow was devoted mainly o closing exereisos aud reports of committees, and aztien theroou, Bomo changes wore madn i tho tely. tion of somo of the members, —thnt i3, soms of those who wore on the uurunumomry list werg transierred to the nctivo lat, nnd vico veras, The followiug atatisticat sonted : ATATISTICAL REPORT—A] report was pro. Number of probatioriers 201 Nuruber of full morabers H Nuaaber of Jocal pr 5 Number of deaths.. 27 ildren. . Baptiums {GiliES a c Chinrehes Trolable $ 2,019,000 Parsonage 1i Probintle vaido, $ mim For Conference claimanta, . 1:;'?%,. " Clage 012,54 For misslonn {EFO ShUTCHS P 14001 ety 20513 For Bourd of Church Extension e 14484 ¥or Tract Hoclety. ..., WLl For Bunday-8chool Unlon, 5189 For Freediyen's Atd Soclel 1,510 ¥or oducation. ... i co auonat rafad for suprt of Bishops,.. 5 Amount ralsad for bulldlve aud jimprov- ing cliwrchos and_parsnage 10481508 Tndebtedn: L 18,0700 ri: 164,38, tecelpts for mintuterial support 1:229,00 AUNDAY-ACIOOLS, Number of Sunday-schnol.. ... 2 Number of ofticers and feucliors oI Number of scholars of all ages, 18 Scholura 16 yeers old and over, 1313 Heliolnrs under 15, excopt infan 8,ix1 Number of echolars in infant cisaees. BXS Avorogo ttendanco of oseborasud scicl: " Numier of oficers and teachers who ate it mewmbors or probationers.. 294 of schioiars whia sre church. burs or probationers.,, 419 umber of rouverstions rl,:d 15043 0 Ted o, n Nua! b 301 Number of /o, cirg taken, 105 Number of Picture-Losauu Fsbora tikeis,, mieston work in Indis, and shortly atter Bishop Willam L. Harrs read tho following AL Chicago Instriet—A. Clticego ; Clark stro:t, jowe:t; Wabash une, Joln Willistgasn; Triuity, Ot . Tigaoys Michizan Aveuue, M. M.’ Purkburet; Langley Street, Williain O, Wiliiug ; State Strvet, Whiliawn A, Speacer Uraco Cu Johtl Atkinson § Grant Plsce, Tamen laue P Marah ; Cootenary, Bamuel If, Adr Strect, Jobn M, Osldwell; Furk Avenus, Nt 3 Axtoll'y Westeri Avenue, Rolsrt O, Buepbent’; Fullaa Siroet, Rowsloe 8, Cantine ; Dicksoy ktreet, Edwnn 0, Arnold ; Salut Paul, Hepry 1. Mlflln; Halste Hreel, tonry HLll; Blmpaon, Aloxander Youker; Eowu treaty 1o by mupplin g n"t‘,'mnx'l,"; !: ::pml Engletiood, Asrou Gurney ; Cornel Hi¥onswor, Simuel Luthrop ; Togers Puly N O to aopple napplied 3 vapston, Tvaniton, Becond - Ohirch, soln J. Toblas Wik mette, to be suppliod ; Wighwood, 10 Lesupplied ; Lix ortyville, Wilom A, Adrou; Lake, Nathaslel Critce ett aud Tnanc Whitcomb ; Wantkega, Whllam D, Atch on, 10 bo supplied ; Irviug Park, to be sup ric Redge, Earw 30 Bormg; Nortateld, o wrplicd ; Dospities, to bo suppifhds Elk Grove, b wuppliod 5 Lalatng, Awmoa 1f, Mllier: Burriugton, Usorge K. Hoover; Austin, Harmon T. Clendendogi Ok Park, Audi J. Beott; River Porest and May woud, to ho suppliea ; Wheaton, Silas Searl; Tazaer, Jalin O, Foster; Genova, Nicholss MeStokes ; ]‘SAID Via, Hooper Crows; 8t, Oharlos, Honors Destiy; e o and Lyousviile, William 1L, Holutea; Dowisert e ot i el G ako IMitchen: gent Wee ‘o ALichig: cern’ snd member s Aseant Cuureh, uarterly Oonferenco; Miner Baj o Ddtemstr 1o COareetr s Teats aud member of Fyanatou Quarteidy Conference; Cliarles H, Fowler, Prouident Northiwestern Unirersity und moniter of Evanstow Quarterly Confsrence} Chiarlen . Teuadell, Bocretary of Ouicugo Rellet Sor clnty sud inowiLer of Trinily ' Church Quarterly ooy forenco; Josuph I, Leonard, Chaplain to Beamen sud muiuer 0t Urace Cuuroh * Quarterly cgnlmdfl:'l‘. Heulabury, Suporintendent Mision. b'eumcn':y Friend Hoclasy aud mowber of Cenlonary «uarterly Couferenco, 3 ‘lmuu';d Anatract—V, P, Oray, Prosidin, wfil{dflr. Roackfurl Firat Churct, Gilen W, Wiler; liockiont feurt Stres, Willlam A, Smith; Roc Md'srmi. Streot, Willat O, Burus; Rockford, Winnabego ired Froses A, Heod; Wisholago, Almous, B, Baati liyros und’ Weatitaid, Larton I, Cartwrights dere First Onurch, Wiltmn I, IHalght; Bucond Chureh, Sagiuel T. ghow;: Iuscdo, Joba Iteaveu; “Tackton, Juwmes , Norris; Kound Tl Olvor . Burch, Superintendent; Poplar drone ani Capron, (vorge L 8. Htuff; larwood sod Cheniusks John Hitalicock ; Bl Foot, ouathan 3, Clendennlogi ichmond, Samuel Farngy 3 Solon auit Bpriog Orove John - Uowper s Aetloney and Hingwoad, Mane® LT Nuuda, Ssmuul Huwes ; Diindau, Toomss Sweet 3 Woodstocl'und Frauklinyillo, Alongo Newtea s bed igin, 'W. O. Dandy : Hurmony and Hantley, 34 B Yorling atongo, Hensy J. Huton ; Cuerry Vilicy, A, IL Bchoontuakor, oue (o e supy Mbitatd,” Jiln ‘:d-sm-;uxrx;r:fim‘h::;um u Jubn H. Vincent, Secro Union aid Tract Baclety and meser of Coust Btroet uarterly Conforence, S reann Dhatreiwiltam 1T, Tiball, Presding 1ldor ; Freeport Firet Church, Fostua P, Claveliodi Froaport Embury Church, Fraok A lardln; Gilech James Uaumo ; Galens Oirouit, tobe supplied ; Cou Georgo LI, Wells; Bcales Aloun Closa; Appla Rivér, Thomos Calvin Drookine; Kors, Lk Lens, Alonzo Catnphell § Um;'mq suppiled; Dakots, James u, ol Dursnd, Peter O, Htire; Bherland, uam.ut e K. cutonica, Wealoy ¥, Dolap; Forreslon, [435 [b Hyrlugof; Lanark, Carles X, Bucks: Moun! Curre George B, \'lil)mq:hrnnn;.h“,rflll;:' Ki‘ tiogg Mfi' o, Jamds P, 3 : Kt rabot, Darid W: Linaj Woodtlue, (o o suppiod anuon, to be suj ed, e bntotst oot 8, Harringlan, freddiof Bldur Diton, Lge LUstrietdh Aabiae, Tiowsd 1oy, Edward M. ; GBinneefeid: Doty Luvh Qurtls: Blackbeiry ) homau ; Durlinglon, Wiliam 11, ecordsf ol el 3o, Bt nming ;ll.mn 1, B, Shadford ; Courtland and Log:.l h;'-a:g U. Frick; Creston, Mose O, sneun.d Dulk i S, B el Falkon Tossphs B Barid ;. Gsnoa, Joseph Cabnalt icaneavillo, deorgs W, Lery Kingiton, G Ve St Leaf 1ver, O, K, Huith ; Leo Centrs, H, 30 Sp0get Tigut House, T, b, Sattordold; Lyhidon, d. CoAl it5ita, R, H. WWiikigeon ; Milledgori e e b s Moreisou, James Borbridgo; douns ‘Murtls, & b3 Adatas; Oregan, 0. W, Cairj boloy J. O CREGE Rochclle, 0. ¥, ' Maitison ; Hock Falle Co 1o $i0] Bierlin mtdwny,hmu‘h“ ‘:;‘fuu\h p ferudath ; Byeamory, g 3 s odtcliom, Fredipd Mendvia foua Blret, 8. Puiue; Asiivglon, B, Cougd Elder ; Auror e aiteties T 0. Yousg ] Melryln sul Butletie, T.C. i, her§ Norih y'ralrie, to bs suppil i i fd‘.‘m' aacd ; Pleno, . Fhn: leaire oy ¢, icown ; Freadou, Jubn @, Cam) 5&5‘1‘17:’&‘.';“1',.,;“. Pullo ortbu; o W isdy . Both: 'Rl e Faw Puw, MG Soiled ; Proshetatown, Nelson O. Fremsti Yeimeetor, Jotn B i . Ouw ,°'m}v'15'm"$‘a'-' sk wich, A, 1, Needham ; loward aud w 8. H X, Joun B, Durus; 8ps ‘“‘fil‘.}\'fiffl; ?:lp uuu,;ufim\\'unu;. Q. O Lovaisst