Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 16, 1876, Page 6

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TIIE COURTS. The Recciver of the Chicago & Pacific Road Wants to Bor= row $175,000. He Wants It to Put the Road in Good Condition for the Bondholders. Somo Interesting Items About the Chicago Pickle Factory. The Manlton Hotel in the Toils of the Court, on Potition of the Prin- oipal Oreditor, CIIICAGO. TIA CHICAGO & PACIFIC RAILROAD. John M. Whitman, Receivorof tho Chicago & Paciic Rallroad, filcd a report o few days ago n the case af the Lacknwanna lron & Coal Company nnd others agalnet the Chicago & Pacific Mallrond Company and others, setting out the candition and afairs of the Company when he took posscssios The rolling-stock cansiats of 5 loce senger coaches, 2 baggage and expross cars, 48 box- ears, G0 lat-cars, and 4 cambination or stock cars. ‘Tha portlon of the rond hetween Chicazo and Elgin in generally good, From Elgin to Byron there is conslierable ballaating, ditching, bridge-approach- e#, otc., needed, which will require the use of & ‘The bridger and rolling stack aro In goad repalr, but the locomotiven require im- mediate repairs, and an ndditlonsl frelght-engine & Thero nre not enough freight-cars to nccommodato the ehippers, and two tralnn wero abandoned last weel on that account, and tha Re- cefver recommends tho purchase of twenty-fiva Thero fan Men on tho Kilbuek Ttiver hridge in favor of Mesers, Wells, Fronch & Ca., tho buflders, and another on the bridge over Tock River in favor of the Amorlcan Bridge Com- pany, which must be pald eoon. Fiderable due for right of way and also for unpnid The Interscctions with the Chlengo & Northwertern Railway at Elgin and at the city Jimits require steel ralls ot once, ‘Thave not been patd for some time, and they onght tobe watd their May wages now, at least, foltowing la an npproximato cstimate of the amount wanted at the preeent moment: For purchare of rolling etock, ctc. ..., 8102, Dallasting and necessnry repnirs of otives, 4 pag- conntenctlon teain, ‘box-cars at once, There Is alko con- The lahorers i " i H Dobbine & Co... 21,000,00 French & €0l ze Conipany ..., Awerican lirid Yesterday tho Hecelver filed a netition sett! 000 hmmedintely, ol r He utsu states thut he pecded 81 inthug: the statement fin his report. that he han recelved in cash $U10, count of earnins . hinks that when the deflcits {n tho rolling stockare supplied, hls month- 1y grosw recelpts Wil nvernge Diat ho must s o make thexe © ¥OWIE CXIFS MONL The complalunnts in the suit are will- ne to advance the wecesary money, they buing creditors to the amount of $1.700,000, If ha is an- thorized to make the luan und give the necessary certiticates of indebteducss, . "The Ttecelver therefore usks to be allowed to bor- row at least €175, 000, giving certlticates of in- of 81,000, puyable fn ‘rcent’ luerest, ta ho and to buy rolling 260, to apend $10, 000 debitednesa in tmontln and oo, with 10 pald aut of the'Arst earn; roek to the mount of $1u: In necessary repairs, 5,000 in taxes, and "to ‘pay thie back amounts dio the cmployes, and for Hght of way anid for the Hquidation of the Tiens on The Amotlon iu be allo: will bo made Suturdsy moming beforo Judge Blod- d to muke thix loan THR CRYSTAL LAKE PICRLI Willlum 8. Clalr, Ro Plckilng and Preseryin torday n the Cireult Court retting out that e hus on hand quite n large_amount of unufactured plekden ready for the market, which e s holding for a bigher price, and thind be sold 0w, ux prices are lower than they will be Me further says that §tho can et an otfer for the manufactured stock that will produce more in proportion tiau when monufactured lis thinks it wonld be better to uccept it The Tute Tte- celverfJ, N, Connon, incurred #onio debts while coting for the Compatly which have not been and- fted and ascertalned, and Mr. St. Clalr axka that Cannon be ordered o make out iist of sueh debts €0 tiat they can be settied, May wero $1,73: NG AND I'RESERVING cr of the Cryetal Loke Worke, flled o Teport yea- that they fhould not Tha recolpts during .50, -and the expenditures $1,- TIE MAULTON HOUSE, Judgo Farwell was occupied ul noan b hesting u motlon for u i of dohu LAl dnd_others, exceutors of the catale Tite William propriotor of esterday fter- iver In the cose 11 Manlton Howse, strcets, Tho biil, which wax iilod April 8, charved t \Witliam Ll hid contributed lzie antounts to- wwarde erecting ind oquipping the Maulion iloune: that Maulton hoad been running 1ot o loss, hud sitlidrawn Jarge sums, and \was josolsent. settlemont wos tlerclora’ desired.s Voluminous afidavita were filed for and ngnlust the motion, and, after consaming the afternoon in urguments, the caso was taken under ndylsement, “ond u hearing will b glven Suturday (o-morrow) RANSOM J. MONSE, 1. B, Jenkiny, Asslgnca of Rnneom 1, Morse, has received a Iarge yuinbier of bids for tha stock of Morsc, in reply 10 advertiscments, and yent openud thom In presenco of @ larde sumber of anxious would-o_huyers, cents on the dollar un the Lo opura-glusecs, spectacles, and eye-glusses, followliz Widd were nlko recelved for the Jewe A, Lubenstein, h cente; A, Dobon, 204 borry, 4 centa; B M J, G. Lungguth bid 20 co prico for all the ¥y . ad dol Jtoh eru for cash, But it waw ops a8 to accepting them, Mr. ario’ number ot d 10 the bids, whercapon the Amslguce antpurniced that ho would decida’ whether the bid of Rohrmann, which 14 the highent, would 20 accepted, but Intimated that (L wonld not, nnid shat fusther bids would bo requesten, liat tho yroperty should bring ut least 60 pur cent 1. B, Chambers & Co. 1T) wigo Dlodgett will have'n Jury In the United tes Clrenlt ‘Conrt nest Tuekday, il be called, aud_In thoke for” tho collvetion of lafme, where 'the plalntift's attorne: ihere v no defense, tho defendant wilt be aliiyed 0 pototrial unless hio flle an aMldavit showing tguod defensa and fts character. suken aro eliminated, the Judgo will hear nny cases pta July 1hat can bo dikposed of in o day. erk haw inade up the calendar, which comprisca amination of William 3. True, Presldent hel Loum Comprany, win contintied yeater- hut uo new or Importuut vid A Goge and A, W, Kason were also eximined tosupport tho aliega® tluns made i the petition of the Arsiznecs, UNITED §TATES COUNRTH, Anson € McMalon, af Lincoln, 111, filed a bil} M. Dund and Sumuel 5, 'Metarty o from Infringing hie patent for an fn- rention for caring hog uid chic BANERUPTCY MATTERN, Leon Hirech, of Aurora, flled o volnntary Hon in bankrptey yesterday. 1ix auveeured debts wmount 1o $5, 747,00, and thire i+ sl something 111 quecta consist of Jand iaducd at $200; o stock of goods worlh £,000 In tho hiandn of Samuvl Ktictel, to whom thiey wero weolgned for boneilt of creditors tirg-insurance polic {ay beforo the leglste ‘wcta were elicited, ulvo, apen ace s to the nmount 81,000 In favor of his a claim for $84 agafnat the Chicago, gton & Quiney Iailrond Companv, putition was roferred foToghstor Coon, ut Murengo, In the cars of Cregler, Clurk & Co, an order wuy mado directiug the Sherlff to surrender to Uradford Hancock, Provislonul Asslguee, al) the 0ode of thu Lankrapts in bis possewsion, which ad been sulzed under an sttachnient or execution i fuvor of A. M. Lurley aud the Natlonal Bunk of Commerce, on peyment of the Eherlir 's fecs. Alvo that tho judgment creditors should be allowed to preserve their licns on thy p ho property which hud further ordered Uint these Judgments be pald withe in uixty day, unlcss before that thne auits should bo the Asaignec to conteat the claima, A, J. Gill wasappolnted Frovisionsl Aestinec of Nathau T. Kinlth, snd an order wan made for u compoxition meeting to be held Juno 24, % wore fastied to Louls ¥, Stelunmun and cda of tho rale of een atiached. A comporition ‘meeting will be held July 8, In thie cane of Morria Salkuy, Slmuiona & Stoddund’ were tried yesterdny and adjudicated bankrupt. t, E. Jeuklos was yostenlay appolated Assignee of Jacob Weil. A tiest dividend of per cent was declared in thie estate of Thomas Foster, Au Asnlgnee will the catate of tsuse 1. Mckarland, “Ih adjourned fArs of Alexander Ucllan will be held u BUI'KRRIOR COURT IN uitl Tdward . Ellls Legan 8 suit fo tresyions azalnst Joliu J, 8, Wilson, laying dewages at $10, 000, Ut suit for $3, Ellas Grecnobania gud Uerhard Preeyan sucd Maria E. and Laurin P, [#1liard for §4, 000, lake wued Justin B, Bradlcy for 81,500, Heojamin L. Hunt and Etzsbeth "I’ Dubl lust Jub K, lowley, J. E. Youns, uung, Syth Wadbams, Taage 1. 1t 1t Sherwun, und HKlirubeth ©, Hunt to et ovide certaln alteced frandulen deeds to the 5 W. (ractional g aud toe 1GW fiuee hosens at 10 2.m. to-duy for dividend miecting In the case o Tickering bro alnst Lameron THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1876—TEN PAGES. tlonali{ of the .1 CIRCUIT COTRT. A. D, Slocomh commenced a st in trespase zaitet the Chicapo West Divialon Rallway ¥ 1o recover §5, 000 dnmages. Tradiey ot al, rued dohy thiaa Skudera in debt for $1,200 CRIUNAL COURT. Willlam O'Conner, (ieorge Ferguson, Michnel O'Conner, nd Patricke ("Conner wore teiod for Jar- ceny and’ recelving stolen property. The former was found guilty and given elyhicen montha at tho Tlouse of Carractlon, ~ The athera were dlscharged, hlxl‘vmmpll rearrosted on another charze. Willtam Sforsan and Albert Ewnmona wore tried for Inrceny and acquitted. Chntler Thorn and ticorge Olmated were tried for Iarcony, fonnd guilty, and givenone year cach In the Dirklewell. fractional 1§ of See. 7,14 Morrova and Ma- TIHE CALL. Jrnar Brooarrr--Motion for new trial in Cul- lerton case. Aleo ect chancery cases nnd bunkrupt- cy feaniex, g QAR50 ta 07, K09, 67110 673, and 57010 583, inclusive, No, 57, Pago va. Keeler, an trial. GE JAuERON~Call at 0 &, m. 210, 218 to 222 8, 240, and 232 to 241, Inclusive, 225, No casc on trinl. JUpag Roaknse—700 to R10, Inclusive, No. Schiusscr va, Cutlver, on trial. ot cane 2,751, McDonald v Na case on trinl, Adunar MeAry, cases 2,070, McCotnell ve, Bldway, and 505, Cook va, Coffman. Also 640, 045, (14, (HY, G0, d 65 on’ dudge Tlooth's calondar, ' No. 2, ugn va, L C. I, It Cowy un trml, | 6E FAnwrL—Set cns ¥ dunar Wittiaws—No call. Arguments in River- #lde Improvement Company casca, JADAMENTS. TITED STATES CIReEIT Cornr—CONFRASIO: Mechanics” Savings 1y f Providence, I I, v Rich by, $ CoSprasians—\V, N, Thom; 8. Tlayen, $3,087,60,—E. 8. Watera v 'y A, Storrs, 389,05, —George A, Perking ve, William H. Powell, $1,130.07. —The llome Na- tlonal Baule of Chicnga ve, Georga W. itancy and Ucorgc 1S, Ranoy, $1,150,84. Jenaz * Gany—Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Ma- chine Company va, Frank A, Bowen, $151.10,— JohnBrand ctal, va. Charles Schamhast, 8005, 25 o, d, Stéttaner ¢t al. ve.” lieajamii "Fronch, Cinewtt Count—Jrnar Bootn—Touis Tllach- horn et nl, va, dohn 8 Willinma; verdiel, $494,27, —T. P. Oftawny ctal. vs. Jumek Baxter, $215. IOWA SUPREME COURT. IMPORTANT TAX-TITLE DECISION. Speclal Corvespondence of The Tribune, Drs Moixes, In., June 14.~Tho Suprome Contt yesterdny decided n cnee of tax-titles which will he of lmportance to every land-holder in the State, and which will cause considerable consternation amonyg tax-title holdere, Tt will also lead to al- most unlimited lttgation In this State. ‘The fol- oylg I8 tho opfalons “John Hurrelt ve, James d. Lore.—Appeal [rom Mitls Caunty.—Uetition alieges that plaintiit is entitled to immediate possession of certain land In controversy, under & tax-deed oxccuted Jan. 6, 1808, and recorded Jan, 8, the wumo year. Tho datendant alleges ho 1n ahinlulo owner of tho land, aud how been In- poweeesion andoccupancy sinco Fehruaey, 1872, “Fhe plaintil_ denics defendant's answer, and sctsnp statutory bar of limitation, The Conrt_helow gave verdict” for dofendant, and plalnbifl appeals, *tIt wan shown by testimons that the defendant occupled and wade Improvements (n 1872, and fn- closed (he premisca with a fonce in 1873, **The Supreme Court ray 1t Is conceded the tax- deed wan recorded In 18G9, and the jnry declde the defendant was in posacssion in March, 16872, und up (o 1874, whon this actjon wan comnienced, 1o wan, therefore, In posscasion when the flvo years expleed from the recording of the tax-decd, 'he platsltil clnims that the «tatutery bar dees not npply o the purchake when the land was unoc- cupled nt the dats of eale, or reconling of the doed. The defendant clainis that the rtutnto bos glnato ran frowm the recording of the deeds und, an ho was In posession ten months hefore the ex- [iratlon af tha dye yeirs, tho barof tho statate s« complete. Nothing ia said In the statute 01 to possceslon; the statutury bar scems ta be complete at tho expiration of five yeurs. If, nftor the explration of five years, the purchaser'or owner In compelled to reaort to an nction for the purpose of vindicating his title or ionkeaston, the har of tho statute operates on, and 5, that the action cammot bo maintain satuto wos borrowed from Ienosylvaning thers- fare, the construction of auch statute by the Courts of tiut Stato will be adopted by us, A the holder of a tax-title has the opportinity nnder onr stat- ute to bring an actlon ut the time the deed i ro- conded, we bellove It to bo perfeetly fair to launch Lho atututo from that time, 'In the awenca of any authority, and construlng the statute for oursclves, we have o hositation - holding that such i th only falr constraction which can he ndoptod. The right o beltug an actlon to quiot the Lt is cqunlly open to both the owner and purcharer, The llmis tation or rizht to bring an_action applies to both cqually, ‘Thore s no renson why onc munt bring an nction within the five years, wnd not tha other, The statuta Is cluar id explicit that noction shail Tic unless brought within the given peeiod. Withe in that period " the defendant” was in_posseasion, and, the action not belng bronght unt the fiva yonrs had clapsed, the bar of thy statule ls there- fore complete, VIt {s insisted that the tax-deed draws with it the constructive poswerlon of thy property, when the samo consists of unaccupled Jand, and the put- tlng the decd on record amonnta to sich an arsor- tion of_title aa to compel the owner to bring action within five years thercufter, in order to pro- vent the har of the statate from helng complety na 1o timo; but the purchance, becauso ho i decidod o be i pomeslon, 14 not reqnired to da'vo, “Tho Atatute iteelf warrants wuch conatruction; and such A~ countruction {8 founded on_the' thought that” the owuer, In ullowing hls londs o bo sold for 'taxes, e sbandoned all clatm or fitlo ' thereto. The 0- rition taken is not trues for it fa well known that many persone, from . sheer necensity, periit thelr Lund to be sold for tasen; and others throngh care. oSy b sald rith anfoty, that fniocare o' owner thersby Intond to abandon Wis title, o I, therefore, noither cause nor renson for ko On the contrary, we hold, in nccord with nnch ‘well-kuown history, that tho owner ln con- tinually clufming title, wni he t within the updrit and letter of Revislon, Bec, 3,601, Codu 3,275, At tho wime time, it Qs true that the purchnser is pivo clalming 1itle from the thme the deed Is re- carded. Both are thus placed on an cquallty: and ghisg, It weemn 1o uw, i3 the only Justand cquitablo rule within the letter and splrit of the statute, No Iinrduliip I thuw inposed upon the purchavor, a8 al} tho titles i onr Stute aro derived from the United Stutes,and aro of record in the several countien, Tha purchser can, therefore, readily ascertaln ugainst whom ta bring the action. The decislun of thg Conrt below i aftirined ™ “I'his ducision will work a completo revolution in the tus-sals buslneas In (hls Stute, It really amounts fo thi: That the rat parly who gots uc- tuul posscuelon of luid suld (oF tuxes, after the ex- prution uf the tatute of Tindtution, wiil hold the itle, Thus, f th owher well 1 a third pasiy, and Tie take posesnton, and sult s not brought by the holder of the tux-deod before the expleation of five enra from the rocording of his tux-deed, to quiot 1l titlo, i paety in pisncanton Wil hold the tand. Cantrary Lo the genera) rule of taw, the decd ear- vien with f4 no tidy of posseasion, Thlv will compel | tux-title purchnser o ocoupy tho lands they = parchuse, or perfcct thele title within the tlne preseribed by statute. Spec- ulatora i tax-(ltica wilk not adiniro thia dectrion very much. Tl Coust yesterdny declded that Colo 1,207 ot #eq. —the act ntlowlng countivs to constract ditchs e and uvyess the cost against adjacent lands beno- fited thereby—1s constitutionnl. Alw I snuther cas, thut greenbacksare mancy, and #l -Lmu of larceny under our statules, which duclare bank-notea are subjects of lurceny, - —— AN INCIDENT, To the Editor of The Tribtine, CiiicAao, Sune 15, —Not yery lony ago T waa rld- tng on the cars, and un ncident occurred that scemed o 1o Ao henutital that T want to toll it for the encouragement of womaukind, There were 1o old men #itting bebltid we, strongors to sach ather, bat, Bko lttle children, comparing agosand their lives. ‘They were 70 and 70 years old, both farmens, and both biad recently Inst ther wives, — ane o recently that hia leart was full of hiy sor- row, and his cyes overtlowed i Lo tatked, Thoy ared men, and of cotrse used no e uge. Safd one ' Bhie nover wpaku an un- ord to e fu all the Aty years T lived with lier. I huve been visiting my ehildron, and going from place to plnce, bat § am Jonely u) tho T, sud f° migs Cher w0 much.’ Thy other old wife was slck for muny months;* ‘hme, " iy guccesn b lifo {sas nineh herd as mbue, Bhe was agfuitlful, truo wile, ulwuys buxy, slwayw dolng hor part, ani wow sho fs gone. ¥ ain vo rext leas altthe time, nnd can stay nowhero fong, 1 Boje Ushall auou go to her, for 11fe 13 so drcary und lonely. ™ Aud %0 thuy talkéd, comforting and uym- [pthizing with each wlber, 'What o testimony to o 1iven of those bwo wouien, farmers® wives, wha fudl Tived quict, humble Jived, porformed thelr dally dutles, brotught up thelr Clidren, and left thia monument fu the hearts of tholr husbunds! Are thor plenty of wticls woinen how, ani ato ther plenty of fusbands who vo appreciatd thelr wives? Whnt wauld thor read tho thrs 58, Towers va, ) Buys hie, men end women have sald to alvertisements In Lhe paper that T did to-day, ‘'Dlvorces legally aud quictly obe talned, 7 Pureanal’ appuraics bunceessary, For lucompatitility," ete, ¥ . it e Canadian Vessnls in Unlted Ktates Canals, The Toronto loke of Tuesday makes the imn- portant aunnuncement that the Unfted States Qove ermnent, yielding to tho remonstrances nddressed {0 it Uy the Cunndiun Government, hus decided to imposg no further obstruction upon the fu! on ity part of the terme of the twenty article of the 'Treaty of W il stantinlly conceded to tunadian vesvels the riiht of navigating United btates cansls on the same terma a8 the v s of this country. Attunfll\l{ to the Globe, the Canndlan Govemnnicnt has recelved of- ficlal Inforimation from Washington to the effect that justructions huvo been fssued to the Collector t Platiaburg, N, o allow eu with fmported goods to pass that port ruiico to Albuy, wnd to any othor tnter- port between Philiipsiung “and Alvany, auder sich conditions as would govern the tuviga- tion of United §1ates barges and vessels going from Canada un 410" of the Novired Btatutes, but under lstions as would apply to for- aly s geverally wien lnporting forelga car, goea under Sec, 4,107 0f the Revised Statutes of the Unlted Btatew, but without regardto the xove Dresiatia it snetlon which apply eapeciatly ta Imported gaods teaneported In band. and ta al- low free trandt to all relarn eargoes shown by the manifest of Canadian versels fo be dostined for anndn, 1t s further stated that insteo o ilarin purort to thore addresced to (e Cols lector at Plattsburg will ba fasucd to the Cotlectors of Customs at Buffalo and Omwego, N. Y., A Durlington, V&, _‘The Surveyorof Ciatoms it A bany, and'the’ Dennty-Collector at Trog, N Yo, will e notifed to the same effect. — A HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Amerlen In Ravolutionnry Times, Tn **Men snd Women {n Amotien Two Hundred Yoara Ago,* the marksmanship of the men who filed the Amerlean ranke, ana the deficlency of the Dritish regnlar troops In ihat particutar, fs (usteated by maug aucedotes drawn from both Engllsh and American sonrces, A corrospondent of the ald Virginta Gazette told this story: *+0ne af the gentlemen appolnied to command n company of riflemen, ta ho raiked Inone of tho frontier counticaaf Pennaglvania, had so wnany applleatlans from the people In his nelzhborhood 1o be enrolled for the service that s greater num- ber prescuted than hls Instructlons nermitted him to cnzave, and, helng unwilling to give offenso to anv, thought of tho fullowing expedient. e, with a nlece of chinlk, drew onn board the fznre of a nosc af the common slze, which he placed at the distance of 150 yards, declarlug that thos who should come nearest the mark should be on- Jisted, Sixty odd hit the object, Gen. Gnge, take care af yanr nose,* Jolin Andrewa, whoeo corecspondence has fur- nisbed very valuable material for the ook, do- acribed another sceno dnring the British occnpn- tion of Haston, which showed tho Yankee enpacity for metaphorical as well aa Hternl sharpshiooting, e wrote: *41t'n common for the oldicra to firo at o target fixed I the stream nt tha bottom of the cammion, A conntryman staod by @ fow daya ugo, and Inughied very hoartily st whol reghinent's i and notonchein able to hitit, 'K‘henm:crnhucr\'u* him and neked why e [aughert | +Perhaps you'l be affronted 1€ T tell you,” replled the countryman, No, ho would not, lie eald. *Why then,* says hie. “Tlnugh to sce how awkward they fire. Why I'll be bonnd T it it ten times ropning.' (Al Wil your' replied the oflicer. *Came try. Roldlers, yo nnd hring five of e hest gans, and Joad Cthem for thishonest man.' ' Why, you need not bring so many: let me have any one that comos Lo hand, ' replied the other; *but T choose (o load, myself.® ceordingly loaded, and asked the uficer where he should firo. He replled, *To the right,* when hie p@led trigger, and drove tho ball an nenr the Fight as possinle. " The oicer was anxed, and enid hecould not do 1t again, as that was only by chance. Tle londed again. *Where shall 1 fired" Tothelsft," when he performeil ns well as before. inc, once more, ' sava the oflicer. Tle prepared for tho'third time. ' *Where shall | firo naotor! *In the contra,’ v taok am and tho ball went s ox- act in the middle as possible, The ofiicers, as well aw the roldiure, starcd, nnd thonght tho dovil was inthoman. *Why, " sald the counteyman, *Fll tell you nuow, T have gotn buy at hoie that will tors”up an apple and shoot out ull i secds aa 1t's coming down, ™ The fullowing naasago from a revolntionars rol- dlor's manukcript showe tho stralts to which the Coloniats were sometimes rediced, and nt o eame thme gives e o glimpac of Washington as Lo up- peared to the men who followed lim i the luiig btruggle for Independence: **1 dolisered my lettor to Gen. Washington In per- won, and was deeply mpreesod with anemotion T cannot describ In contomplating that great man hix august person, his majestic mien, hin dignifed and commanding deportment, —tlie 1ore consplen- ous, perhaps, at that moment, from the fact that lie waw in the nct of sdmonishing a militia Colonel with somo”snimation. " lle "directed u yonns officer to accompany me und saperintend tho delivery of the powder at Myatic, % miles distant, Whilst dolvering It at tho powder- Youae, § ubagivad fo o ofiers -l X linppy 10 eee'so muny barrels of pawder hose.’ [Te whik- pored n weeret In my car, with un fndiscretion which marked the novice In milltary afaira, *Theso bar- rels aro filled with rand.” *And whoreforer® 1 in- l}uln‘(l. ‘To decolve the enemy,” he replicd should any apy by chance huppen o look (. Such was the wretched nppolntment of that army upon which rested the hopes of American lfberty. The privations which Continental oficerannd ol diers endured have been descanted upon often enoush, but it is only through euch anccdotes as this that we cat climp:a of thelr wretehed conditlon s they knew i(: +40f tha deplorable stuntion of the Continantal oflicers, even uf the highest grade, somoe fdea may be formed from the fact 1 am ahont to relato, and sehich may bo rolicd on a8 perfectly correct. . Dr, Eoywoux, Joluing tho ary of oo, Greone fa North Carofina, called at tho hut of Gen. IT uger, the sccond In command, bat wus rofused wd- alanion. The Doctar inststed on his rizht to entur; the sentinol, In conforinlty to lin urdats, denfed 1t, The altercallon was honrd by the General, who, recounlzinig.the valco of his riond, desired’that he migit bo allawed to pve Into ths lut. *Pardon e, Doctor,' euld tho Genoral. who lay on the ground, weabped up in an old miiitaey cloak, *for civing you ko ungraclous o reception: but the fact s the” chances of war have robbed me of overy comfort, and T confined myself to solitade and an old cloak while my washérsoman prepares for a futare oceauion the ouly ehirt Town.” I an ofiicer of dlstiugulahed rank, univerunlly beloved and res Fpectid, for whure sccomniodation there was not wn Tndividual in the servico who would not have mado vacrifices, wos thus clreumatunced, whab st huye been the miserles of tho lower grades, and wretchednese af the private rentlyl Wanbingion's ately nunger and dignited relt. aswertion nec well whown in tho story of an Englixh girl who dined with him: *+One day, afier dianer, the Congrom was the toast; len, Washington viewed me very attentive- Iy, and eurcastically suld, *Mis Moncriefe, yon Gt delnk your wite." - Embarrsued by thlsre- proof, I kuow niot how o act; at last, a8 1f hy so- Crat thipulae, T addressed myself 10 the Amorlcon commander, and, taking tho wine, 1 said, * Gon, llows is the toust.’ Vexed at my temerlty, the wholo company, espoctally Gen. Washinglon, con- pured me: wiien my pood (elenit Gen, Putnain, e wrunl, apologized.and sseurod them | dld not inean Vo oitend. *ifcridee," reptied he, overything suid or dono by such o child ouzht ruther to imuse aifront you,' (e, Washingtor fgued at this oh- worvation, then eald, * Well: Miee, { will overlook your indiscretion on condition thut you drink my i\m\llh or ten, Putnam's, the first tine you ding at. sir Wil water. 111 oficlal mannerafter ho hecame Prestdent fa ‘pletured fi thix nceount of hix To ** At o'cluck the visitor was introdnced to the dining-room, from which slt scatahad boen res moved for thio timo, " On entering e wuw the' tall, manly figure of Washington, clad In black wilk vel: vet, his hair in full drewn, powdered and gathored Dehind In n arge allk Big: yellow gloves on his hunds, lolding u cocked tint with & black cockads Init, and tho edges adoried with a bluck feather abont an fnch deep, Mo wors.knco and shoe bucklor, and w lons word, 1le itood nlways in frontof the fireplace, with his face toward the doorof entrance. The vivltor way conducted (o him, ond his name distinetly annomneed. 1o re- celvod hly vialtor with » dignffiod bow, In & manror avoldingto shukie hunds, even with beat frlends, As visitues came they formed n circle ronnd the Foomn: and, wts quarter post 3, the door closed, and the circle was formed for that day, 1o then Dewnn on the right, und spake Lo euch vialtor, call- Ing Wm by naine and exchanginga few words, W hen hie biad camplatud his cirenit lio resumed his first poxition; and the visitors, approachiug him in succowelon, uwed and rotleed, By 4 a'clock this ceremony s avor. Thewe facis have been Tearmed 1h general from 1o reminlecences of Gen. Sulll- win Howe's table on the other klde of the van. Ilo fx not less Interesting o3 he lll'ml‘nr! In the account of Mra, \\'u».mm!vmxrn receptionn, Mrs, Washington's luvces woro every Friday evontug, al which occaslon tho General was ulwaye prevenl. 1t wan sn oceaslon far emulons nigd asplring bellew Lo cusay to win his attentlon. Hut he was never (amiliar his conntenance uniformly, even there, presorved Ity habitnal gravity, A lady of hin famnily anid It was hia habit, ulko, when with. out compuny, snd that she only 'remembered h fo have once made u hearty luugh fn a narrative and Incldent in which sho wos n_ party, ‘Tl truth wav, his deportment wun anavolabiy i sobriety, stopping «hurt of sadness, ~ I Inepired n voneration and ex| Tl oF oAt M Wak wlote st utHlarute ok ay thongh he was in wearch of ine words, but t! la_prevonce feoliug of awo rarely rienced fy the prescnco of auy wa. il n might utter thono only adupted to his prposes. " Wo havo space for bul une moro extract, In which wo shull see I'rankiln usdie sppeared W the wien of his Hue: **Soon after my returnto Parin T dined and apent the svenlng with the Immortsl Frankiin, Arriving at an carly hour I discovered (he philosopher fn u distunt room, reading In the oxact posturo In which he dn eopresented Inanadiniruble engraving from hls portrall, hiv loftarm rasting upon the right hand. i1 nhiling among tbe most cellued sacloty of both hembspheres had communicated to Lis manners a blandueas and urbanity well sustulued by hls na- tive gnce uud elegance of deportment. {1y voner ablo Jocks waviug over hils shonliders, and the dig. nity of Wa personnl sppearsuce,’ commanded geverence and reapect; and et hla mantiers were 40 pleswant and fuciusting, that one felt at cone and unrestralued fu hly pressnce. He luquired whether LEnew thathe was a mustelan; and he condducted mie neross the room to on fnatrument of Lin own luvention which he called 'ho Armonica. The murle was prodaced by & pecullar comblnation of hemispherical tlasace, ~ At my wollchation ho layed u‘ruxl it, anil performed some Scotch pase Torats wilh freat sitelt —— The Biggest Bear Story. The Reno (Nev.) Garelle repeats it thus: ** I've toughl ‘vra standin’ and runnlu’, but the toughust citizen 1 ever upte ablack an. e woa alttin’ fn the parul vutin’ wanzundia berrics, whicn my dog smelt bim und went ome. 1 sneaked up snd beyan pgveavalin’' bim by shootin' at bis eire aud fect. [ theu took uronnd hiw, and with three whote cut oft his tull. Old Dlacky beerd mo ahoottn, uud turnly’ around, svs Lis il layin' there, llurlckcll thupaud Jooked st the trudo- ek, and £ece T a minuto ot war was consdu', Lt out for a trup, with vnly v cartoidges lot gnd hima comin’, Well, 10 vwky & lonz stary short, 1shot twice, hlttin® him hoth times, and by beggun 10 glt Bot, 40 ho took up the tree aiter wie, aud I knocked him down threo thaes before . Tm broke. Mo rtarted on tha fonrth trip, and (d1't know what o do il 1 thought of wy deriy- ger which shut a fuar-onnce ball, -~ 1 drew fier out, ticd o string to the trizrer, and us old Hlicky came up With his mouth wide open 1 dropped hor {u, 1y budn't time to epll ber out, and su ho swallowed and I pulled the string. (0 went tho gun, snd so Licly b, Tnever sco unvihing of Lear of platol b IIE METIIODISTS. Second Day’s Proceedings of the Pastors’ Theological Union. An Ablo Addross on Public Speaking by the Rev, Dr. Thomas, A Plea for the Culture of Extom- poraneous Elogquence. TITE METITODISTS, The seroml dny'a sesslon of the Pastors' Theos lozleal Union met at the First Methodist Churcly, Evanston. at 0 o'clock yesterday mornli, The follgyring-named clerggmen were present, in addition to the long liat atrendy puhiiehed (n Tuk Trinuxg yesterday, mking the total number 100: L. L. Knot, Evanston: F, M la, M.: W W. Thomas, D. D., Aurora; W, Wasrlngton, Tusco- Chleagu; John Tiiteheock, Chemung, 11 cago; Willlam Brush, . D., Anatin, Texn Willing, Chicago; 1. Lampert, Chicago; 1. Tirown, Alguna, In. ; J. 1L Colt, Markesan, Win, § .. Mealister, Northport, Mic Ington Helglts, Pack; 1. N, Stoddard, East Paw Paw, 1.5 8, A, W. Jewett, Chieago;¥iobert I, Sheppard, Chi- cago; Willlam Craven, De Selma, 1015 A, /1, Jut- kina, Chicagos A. B, Smart, Winnebago, 1,3 (. W. Durteh, Menominee Falls, Wia, ; Thomas Strobridge, Kankalkee, T3 E. W, Drew, W 15 Joneph Caldwell, Genon, 101, Sammel Earngey, Richmond, 1i.; Chieago; Richard G, Tlobbs, Harrlngton, Eycamaore, 111 eca, 1. ;0. 1L Tiffany, D. D., Chieago; C. a. P. Solllvan, Se curlomary opening services, tha Ttev, Dr. M. Raymand was called on for a farther dive cusalon of the theme of **Soteriology." e wna listened to with the closest atteution, being ane of the recagnized nathorities of the chiireh upon the subject of Syatematie Theology. The Docter has for several yeurs been preparlng a work npon this snbject, ani read from hix munuxcript, cupyliz un hour, he requested the sudlenco to #ing o hymn, and then resumed, concluding at 11 o'clock, when an Intermission of five minutes was Chaplain McCabe wax then called forward, and lud fy ninging a hymn, after which the licy. Dr. 1L W. Phoman, of Aurorn, dellvered an addrers ‘The Att of Enbllc $peaking, ™ Tie thought (It In training students, that branch looking to the comuunicatlon of knowledge way overlow nnl that the practice of extomy wus_dylig ont. orancatn wprechun sts wero furmerly % extemporancaus spenkers, #peaker knew of but twoor three in Rock Rivor come _ hofore his * andience, 10 look ut his henrere, and to bo Inoked at by them. Tt {8 worth _consfdering how he tay not oifend Tha spenker, whila o should avold glving offenso o the oye, shonld rost In this, withoul rezard to anything higher, but shoald take About all that ean Lo done i thin respect b to appear natural, and to bo be- foro the audlenco withont feollng or eaming to bo To should pag nttention to position and The speafier xiould bo tealned to nees, aud ol- tho sense of slizht, it Into conslderatlun. hecome entirely welf-fo ow the splrit of his sub Znch ono mugt be hin o next thig for s i the esr of the audicnce. hisown gesturcs. c wpeaker 18 to’ addrosn “'he_Duclor sald ho at- tended a lecture In Princton recently with Bra, Liills, and & man In the audlonca nald he wished *tthe Mothodlsta wonld 6l out thelr preachers more." Next to looklug comes hearing, and It Is stranoe whut nolses some men ehould ba culturo and artieulation, and the monave ment of the volce, I order to nvold offending the tante of an audlenice, the perfect control of the mpeaker. eapecinlly, shonld avold linitating the voleo of their teachers, or of same favorltc orator, After finwning tnder the eye und addressing the ear of an nudicnce, the public speakor comcs to address the intelicet aud heart of the uudience, and thix ix his grent work, taking the atand unless b Ho mnst fiest master hin The volce should Aman is not e komething to say, If Nio iins noth- fugt to suy. ho i probubly out of place, ) in the warld want« to be an Independent thin speaker shonld not only hiave his subjoct well thought vut, but shiould b opportune in hie chalee Tiers then I3 womu differenco of Lt tho Doctor thought that tho v d Iule-prophiets were instinct with thio Tho public epcaker should Uving subjects, and take ndvantage of the and lnspiration of the day. 1t i cqually fmportant that _the speaker shonld have un object, and this shonld 1116 wpeakins shoald by u, PLLEA FOR SOMETHING, Soveral renowned xpeakers wero ulludod to as Hlus- "o diiforence can bo reailil In the lctarers and singers who travel The eloquenco of the inspired writers UFHOFo to necomplieh. 1tfe of the tinmcs. concrally sugget ‘wis due to thelr huving g laving an vbject, a snbject, and culture |n volee tho *tart of speaking™ is must do I8 to establish n connection hetween him- self und hixsnbjeet. e hour without getting hold of his subject, but It's n {Lauzliter. ] Then he mnst ot hold of It In 1o strangzest thinz i the world ihatany one should fall aslecp under preachl The Dactor aatd that when hewent to the I'arl Avenue Church there wero flve or kix who eat In he front souts with ear-trumpete, wan a briws band, | Laughter. to give oach Sometimes lie s 1in wifo raid It “The epeaker shonld By audience thiuk _rapldly, fn_thelr utteatlon by o an {mpresdon, | 1t athier Klowly. ¥ome menns, and the he can't do it with his_eubjoct, let the sab "The Doctor then brlelly” roviewed the ¢ clarsed of wpenkers, to tho great umusement and edification of his hoarers, kind of spenking that was fall of fmpnles and hureali, he helloved “that it was tho loplenl mind anid loving heart whlch did the Tusting w with all possible pro While he adinlred the paration, 1t 11 dificult to sic: In the Doctor’s ovinon, the most diffenlt thing iy the world 14 to hecome an eftective extem- porc apoaker: and he could not but bolleve that shonid bo cltivated In tho Thls sentiment elicited nuwicrous hensty *tAmens, ™ and the Dactor’ rexslon upon hiw lirgo awdienco of publicapeakord. Tho noon recess was then takon, THR AVTERNOON SEISION wwan opened with devatlonal oxarciven by the Rev. . D. Sheppard, of Chicogo, after which Dr. Henicnway presentod the Troantirer's report, stowed cash contributed by membory, S d for reports, 81, 15: recolved for ad address made o 3 5 amounted to $120, 09, leaving a bulance of §11, 24, The report was adoptud, iifany hopod that soma action wonld bo ta- ken to inform tho Methodint clerzymen of the Northweat of the nature of the Union, and of the beneit which thowe uttending §t receive. that, If the objects of the Union were more thor- oiehly understond, Evanston would bo overrnn with minfetors noxt yeur, Bomao discunslon ensiied npon the subject of Dr, e expressed hiv entlro gratiti- cation with the nddress, Wit thought that, If (8 was trie extemporancous apeakime was dybig ont, it wia thne to remed; Thotus’ address, The téwtlmony encral that” prenchors who wroto nud pieine Lroke down_ carllor and more aurcly than estemporancous speakers. 1o wad hardly prepared to belleve that cxten ous preaching was dyine out among Me £ thut was the fuct natlon of the mortify some that the Bethodlits were not dolng thel stint of wark In tho Northwest, and were ot lead- He thought that thore who breuthed inturally und apoke correctly could not fall to develop physically. Dr. Perrine expressed nunibor of germe: of tho drvas, ond stated his vl thelr wermons 1t wumpiclon untertain tugan they phoulil hia antlafaction at tho t in Dr. Thomar' ad- upon sevural polnts in A mncinber suggested that an_ exprossion bo ob- tained from tho Justurs present na to how mnuny read thelr sermons, and Kow niany preach extems Considorable amusemont was afforded by put the questions ax folloy 1, "Thoso who habltustly read thelr scrmuns—No “Thoso who bubltuslly or tanuscript of uny klud— 3. Thass Who habftually use notes or skotehos— Thirty-veven reaponses., 1ir. Thomna brleily explainod eome of his tate- ments which were eriticized. fnterested In the romarkn of his brethren o 10 burdun Bia wacunory with theta. preach without notes irty responnes, U had been o BALTISY AND TIH LORD'S BUPPER. then gave nn address upon the snh. uld ffaptinn He Inaisted Lord's Bupuer?® le had given yery lttle thought to the methods and forma ukod In worship ax to thelr externals. % L9 Tequinite for the Henco, ho be- 1t wus & matter of Indifference whether or not haptinin alionld bo fnafated on wa a proraqui- alte ta tho Lord's supper. After a eoniz by the itev. W, A. Spencer, a col- lection wan taken up tp dofr mecting, when the ltev. W drena upon 4 ho Heart-Life uf the Mintster, ™ M 1 the Union with snother nd S Willing's erany wus by Yarkhurst, Mr. Spencer, and 3peinen of the Epencer fuvore ‘I'he vxercincs of the Union will be continued to- ‘Phis ovenlug thy Rev. W, . Wil deliver an addre Cunservatism, * which will doubtless be Inter- i upon ** Hndl- THY CANADIAN HERETIC, Spectul Dicpaich (o The Tribune, June 15 —In tho Goneral As. sembly to-duy dlacuaston of the McDonnell cuse was Father Chinlquy vald be, a8 well e Mchounell, trembled st the thonght of cterual punfshiment, aud prayod God thelr church wight be mintaken in the doctrine regarding it. called to order by the Moderutor, who vaid the Av- sembly had 1o donbt as to the truth of the doctrine Parce addltlonal v tion ToitoNTo, Unt, of eternal pumlehint, were made to.day withno maro prospect of an end Delng reached than there was yeatorday, cxe At mienihers ot the Aewenbly Are minifetin grvat fpatience and to e taken. Optnlon 1+ ¢ wenerally (hat however the cise iy In n Wil nothe affected. Tt was decided to hold the next annual meeting at alifax, Nova Scotia, SPIRTTUTALISTS, Speciat Dispaich {0 The Trivune. MisyEAronts, Minn, June 15,—The Stale Sulritual Convention met In this chty ta-day, Mrs. J. 1, Severntice wan elected President, THE VANITIES OF NATIONS. Court-Etiquotto and Diplamatte Documeonts ~-<Tittes of Itulors---Dacorntions--En- blema-Cockades, Mottoes, War-Crles, aml Natlonnl Alrs, Chambders® Journal, There I a bt af humorons description In Ma- caulny's histary which reads almost like a pago of Tunyan. In his plcture of (he Congross held at Ryawick in 1007 are to ho fonnd plenipotontinrics talking overy langnage fn Europe—members of the allied powers quarreling among themaclves for precedence, and Azhting fur the title of eacellency —preliminars consultations withaut end as to the number of hiorscs and carrioges, pages and Jnckeyn, to which each momber was entitled, and an to the right of merving-men to wear awords or to carey canea—tho chlefs of elther rlde principally engaged in watching each other's legs, s an to guard againat A prematura movement of thelr own, ar belng In- consiatont with thelr dignity. Theeo and Kindred vanlties may hnvo snggested the collecting together of the particulara rolating to ceremonlals, tities, forms, decorations, and the polite attentlonw of natlonta nation, which Mr, Fredorle Marahall pre- sented 1o us fn his hund-haok to the vanitien of na- tlone, ‘The hook fa very entertawming, and In tenehing mfght well be served up ns a reliah to tho dry facts of history, Although the origin of conrt etiquetta in traceas hla to Philip the Good, Duke af Burgandy, It was In Spatn that i1 fantartlc growth waa most lnxuri- ant, Astory Is told of the wifo of Charles I1., whto, catebing; lior foot n tho Ktirrup as she foll ot lier horae, retnained 1n a helploss. conditlon in the presence of forty-three attendunts. Motlonless stood the attendants, and helpless hing the Hoyal Imly, becauso (ho cquerry was out of the way swhoto duty It was to wnhook the Queen's ankle on such accasfona, A prawer-by who venturod (o re- Teago tler Majeaty vt rowanled with gold for bis worvicen, but condomned to exilo for fis Indiscro- tlon. Th France, the King could not visit u sick eraon in bed unlées a Aecond bed ws prepared for Tiiy Majesty to ueenpy Quring the. Vit ahe. o subjuct conld Invo heen sullored to 1o 'down while i voveretan i fnu loa sy ponition. T thin way Louis XIIL visited Ticholien, and Le Grand Munarque condiled with Marshal 'Villars after 1 woundrecelved at Malplaguet. At Varsalllos, when Marlo LeczInska way frotting bociuso cards were Interdicted on the ocenafon of cotirt norning, sl was relleved by o courtlur's assurance that **the gume of piquet wos decp mourning. " In Enigland at thy presont day wo hnve s Horalds' College 1o settle who shall waik first in n proces- slon,—an important poiut, consfdering thot there uru tinety ranks of wen Slawicd iy ordor of pro- catlunce frope the soverelunto & burgoss, Popo Julius 1. drow up a lixt of precadance among Europenn soverolgny, twonty-six in number, of whose tltles 1L is noteworthy that four only exIst in thelr old form—the Imperdr of Gormany and the Khuga of England, Spaltt, and Portnenl, Tt 18 cavy to understand that' ceremonial woufd hold special {yagny b the steie elrcle of diplamacy. Tn 1001, the 8pinlsh ouvoy, nttacking the French Ambiassas dor ju the streets of Longon, hamatrung his horses g Kiled Wiy o, mercly In order (0 et to court beforo s rival, In cortaln cares, every dotall of diplonntic form was regulated hy the strictest equality. Thus, we have seen the French and Tm- perlallst envoys balanclng step at the door of the Jiywwick counelt-chumber, and when Maria ond bon Luis de llato met'to sottlo the marriage of Louiw XIV, with Martu Thercae, the two mints- ters atepped ‘sldo by slde Iutd a room hung in corrosponding hafver with thelr respectivi colors, and et déwn nt the same fustant on undis? tingnivhable chnlrs. The Firat Napoleon way fool- ishiy tenacious of precedence, and one year seized every copy of the Almanach de Gotha, bocause, in neenrdance with 163 custon of alpliabetieal arr mont, the Hst of relning housea therekn published wuy headed Anhalt’ Duchies, and not Nupoleon, Among other curivaities of court etlquetto, 1t will nhut Lo commonly kaown thal ou Ambusmdor wtill bus tho priviloge, thongh nover uesd, of pute ting on his hat In the' presence of tho soverclgn when he reads hin reception speech. Maritiin ceremonial wae fur more Importaut than other forms, as being at one time the measure of mari- timo supremucy, and based ‘on the theory that snlutes shoull render the saluter temporarily pow- erlcas, In the time of Jawes L, England n- Flsted unon the dleappenrance of UG iogs and enlia of ull other ships wa s salute 1o her own, and 1t wax not until the end of the last century that the resintance and disputes caused by such an overs beating requintion, was tnally settled, through tlio agraomont of Franco and Russla to dispense with Duritine aalutes in any form. At thin duy, thoy ura pure acta of courtesy botweon ships of war, Coming to the subject of tho form and wording of diplomatic documents, wo learn that thongh tie awthoritics could divide talk Into six uses—court, diplomatie, chitreh, Judlcial, school, snd valgas~ yet thut accldent of fashion Was 1h¢ oaly gaide In he choico of langnage far internatl catlons, and that thero nevur has been any g ally admitted diplomatic tonzue, Somu of tha” most famons Earopenan treaties were In Latin, wiile Franeh hus been used in troaties druwn ho tween two Toutunic Governments, Nearly wyery natlon now uwes I3 own language for ity dinpatches, wid the curious words of u forgotton dute, wuch g Dbulls, hrlofs, Qrmans, concordats, and 8 legion of i, Bull wun the nime of the ball-shaped leaden seal amnexed to letters from the Pupe to the Ee peror, bearing on vne sldo the Imago of St. Pater and St. Vanl, and on th other the’ name of tho relgnlng Pope, The writing {8 in Gothle lufters, inscribed on the rough elle of thu parchment, Bulls of prace ure fastencd with allk cords; bully of justlee with hempen strings, lirlefs ore lews “lmportant; they are writfen on modern cliaracters on the smooth wlde of the parchiment, and nealed with thy Popu's own signet-rlne, A concordut Iy muu{ with the Loly Sce un relig- fouw questions onfy, The private letters of the Pope 1o his own handwrltlng are cnlled mofus propril, and are always headed” by hls own nauo I Uacin."Na mouriing 1n svr. Worn by Baropean Coutts for o doceused Pontlll, beeause, sceordyng fo the Ruman theory, tho Pops docs not die, We lenrn here, incldentally, thut sixteen refgning savoralis havo aldientod during the last 500 yonra, from Charles V. to Awmudeus, and thut “*letler of aboliton, remibslon, or logitimation are mealed with green wux, becawse that colar expressen. youth, honor, béauty, and Hberty. With so siuny diplomatle oris ot haud, 1t fs strange thitt thoro Is no model for a decturation of war, thoogh there ra ninctean kinds of war which may bo declared, here uro wars of Indopondenco, fusiirrectlon, revolation, conguest, of intorventions thoy miny bo offensive, defonsive, suxiilary, pubiic, private, sised, legal, iegal, religlous, olitical, ontional, civil, and Justly—whintover tho cpithuts niay mean—perfect and imporfoct. Pho practice of commencng treation with mention of the. Hol Trlnity haa boen for a Tong tme divwods and it (s wientloned a8 guito execptional that 'the Parls treuty o 1830 beiing with the words, ** A« nonde Diew tout Pubteunt,” "The slgnatures are In ul- jlabotical order Tiut foruorly, as 1nay o b leved, thero was a great tight fur'pluces of honor, and varlous duvlees wero adopted for the aatie faction of ull partios, we ot thu shenuturo of the quadraple alllunce in 1718, when ench power sizined firet the copy Wiieh ft i to koep, AL Alx- 1a-Chapelle, i 1748, the contracting partles sach algucd ono copy for ‘eich of the othcrs. By an- otlier wysteny, “ench powor wus named firei and signed st ulfernutely, ‘Creaties, lke wars, have been divided and wnbdivided dito - mumerona clamien, 1t will he wuflicient hore to way that the fve udsaltivd species wre, principal, lesor princis pal, uccensory, ndditionul, nud subeldlury. lur next ity s Gt Wwhieli s wed o groat iy nlty, and proceedeti from the titlcs of rulems, Aficr Ewmperor snd King ranka Grand Duke, which, orlginnily w Russlun destynution bestuwed by Pluy V. on Cosmno df Medlel, nurvives only i Gerinan aua relgning Utle, 1 :fector, which for centiiries win 6 grout power In Central Europe, aftor gradnal decay, wad lnally hont at Sudowas in e supprosslon, Gf Tloos-Cussel by Prusea. Ottor ttlen are Catr, Margrave, Palutine, Land: gravo (alao blotted out In 180 in tho pernon of the mler of Hewso-Hlowburg), Doge, Protector (hor- rowud by Nupoleon frots Crouiwell on forming the Confedvration of the Kine), Btadtholder, Hovpu- dur, Sultan, Callf (orighially contined to' the suic cesors of Mohammed), Shub, Shelk, und Khedivo, Ennlr fn appropriated Dy the dexcmiants of the Erophot, who aro very plentiful iy all clarses of Turklah'aud Arublan socicly, especinlly atong the boggare, and whoso priviiege wnd prido it e w welr green turbuns, The sovereign's titles of pos- scesiun wore often derived from fictitions rights over pluces and countrics with which h lind nu pyaatbly concurn. Tikis e ifng of Sardinia was Ring of Gyprus, Sicily, and Jerusaloms the King of Nuplea ulso luld clalm 1o Jerusalent; and vur own monarehn were styled Kingw of Franee unti) the end of the lust century, Ouly fifty years ugo the Kimsof Fortugal wasoiliclally styléd * Selgncir of Giuiuen, aud of the navization and commcree of Ethiopla, 'Arabia, Versln, and tho Indlea, A it wue unul to Invcribo all 'titles of posseesion, real or folgned, in treutics sud oflicisl doewments, when the uumed of two Kingy were found in th sume parchment ad ruling over the sume territory, to avald any dimgreeable result it wus usuat to fnkert aclnusy, colled w non-prejudicando, stipulating thut whatover Htles were “elafuod uobiody vlse ud- miticd theu, nud thul they wero wimply left in 8y ornament. Of radiglous tlites, Holisieis haa be- luied (o th Popw wxclusively anly elnco the four: teeiith century, Bishops and Kinge huving used it previously, The deslgnations bestowed on wov. oretgna by thy Holy Seu ury lust, and Austrla, Tho ruler of France ouce waw ¥ try Chrtatlun: to Fortugal belonged the titly of v ituful; to Fungary, that of Ap tho King of Yoland ' was Orthodox VAL it newd scarcely bu waid, wae the uder of the Falth, Tho title of Majesty was oncy religlous only, und wus adoptd by the Ewperors, who had heen previounly Serenity snd it wan Introduced by Hewry VILL Into d, whose Savereigu to that thue Lud been s [liw ighness und file Oravo; but it wis ot untl] the year 1741 that the Bmpiorurs would griut any other ttly than Soranity to (e Kinge of 1 cuctin, Tlighngss, whett worth out- by i op und Kings, wia relegated o Princes, who furbish- wd [Emnew with the prefizes of Royuf, Tuipeelul, or Hervnn, o tiened IEio o carloue vhapo, ne dld a certain Duka of Holsteln, who became Colsltato Regln—n name, a4 avir utlior observes, mora fuit- vd ton plant tin n Crince, Passing over Mon- txeellvney, and Eminence, juet noting naof the” German Emperor wia catle Ble Parple-lorn, "= title dorived from tho purple chamber at Constantinople, in which 1t wa necesrary that all the childeen of tha Enstern Emperore sfiould first see tho light, we clase the curfous acroll of titlen with the mizhtiest of_all, Ten-0, nr Heaven-ilighest, which the Sor- erelgns of Japan have horno without a brenk for nearly 2,500 years, the Tycoon, be it absorved, be- i only'a Viceroy, and Mikado a desceiptive np- peilation exactly tquivalent to Snblfmo lorte, —n (orm _wileh has & noteworthy explanation, A cor- taln ealiil pluced o frcinent of the famoun black stone of Mecen Into the gate of hix palace nt Hag- dad, which gate or porte becoming an object f veneration, gave Its name to the palace, nnd then o the Government. o, too, the Governmenta of Qrent Tirdtain, Frauce, and Spain, hove been Lnown as the Court of St Jumes, of the lleries, and of the Evearlal. T¢It be true, as Pope sang, that *CA maint Ineray twice w ralnt {n lawn, " wa nmr rightly think that conrted hero fa «doubly hierale. “At all events, there 18 no douht that the ionor conferred by the right of tying a hit of ribban In_one'n hutton-hole, of sdaring the breast with sllver awd fron, or of plucing o few capital Jetters after one's aurname, carries n cers faln power soclully and morally, The vrigin of all wach lecorations s traced by Mr, Marshal] to tho rine of tho monantic urders, for the Wstory of wiich we muxt refer our readers fo _the honk before us, Of the four knighthoos of Falestina—the Hos- pitallers of 8t Jalin, who sprang from Italian mer. chontws the 'Fomplars, orlenlly Frenchs tho Fra- ternity of St Lazarus; and the Tentonle Order, whowe kymbold were' the well-known cross white, red, geeen, aml black—hit ono now cven flckers, tha Hospitallers, Of the eluht Neat-clns oriders of the presept dni’. our Garter and the Swedish Seraphiim oo the oldeat; nuxt conies tho Anaunclidn of Savoy, duting from LH25 the (olds on Fivece follows, now the joint property of Spaln and Austria; then the Elephant of Denmark, in- stituted to commemorate the slunghter of an ele- Pl by u Duniéh Crisador with big imafded sword, t. Andrew uf Rnsaln, the Bikick Eaglo of Prassi, anit$8¢. Stephen of Atistrin, are ali modern, The #econd caterrory of orders inclures the Danclrog of Denmork, the White Englo of Pruda, and tho St of Bngland; togethir with tho purely millncy decorationsof 8t. Gearge of Wusein, the Iron Cross of (Gerinany, and our Vietorla Crons, In the third clars ara (ot L0 ordura. dichled among forty. three countries, O these, Davarin ls credited with thirteen, while France han but one, the Crows of the Leglon of Tonor, which by fn the hands of nore than 50,000 Frenchmen, and of about 4,000 Atranvers, In the eategory of Emblema our author places B T tlonal airs, ond such valuglorions devices. Tho aduption of n public elen by Statex—na the owl of Athens and the winged horsd of Corlnth—was cam- mon enongh in very remote times: bt though, of old, linnzes were enrrled it battle, and banhesa were known to the Ttomans, the uxo ' of flags in not very olil, having been Intrduced Into Western En- rojie by Uloviv, © Witd anhuials for some time wero a favorite deslgn, which, after Dagobert's oagle, gave way to flowers, figires, croases, (lames, and rnints, “Fhe oritfamme ot Charlemagne wa 4 hino hunner with kix red roces, probably o called fram Ita_ilomed-sliuped onds, Its mucceasor, tha oriflnnme of Bt Denls, wan of red’ sfilr und_though wsed as tho oflicial standard of France down to Agincourt, seems to huve been rather u devotionsl thinw n polltical banner. © Tho golden fleura-de-lgs, © which studded the frst royal standard of France, havo Leen varlonsly Interpreted. They have been called Innce-heads by sonie, bees.by othera; with athers, Iya 18 only a corruption of Loya—tho slgunture of the irst twelve Louls. By the additfon of & white the blue flag’ In process of time became it ot untf tha reln of Henry IV, did the definitely hecome royal. Two hundred M white i yeatn afterwards—in 1780~the unlon of the royal whilte with the rebeilious red and hlue—tho colors of the City of Parls—furmed the tricolor cockude; e e tricolor flyg of rud white, nad blug bolng unfurled a yonr liter, uid faly ultered (o Its proaent combination of ‘hlue, white, and red. Our own Unfon-jack, with the ‘crosck of Kt. Andrew and 8t. Goorge, Was constitnted by a proclamation of damen ., und recolved subsequently St. Latrick's crasa for Ireland. Thestripeaof the American stand- ard reprodunted In 1777 the thirtecu Lnited States, thestaranymbolizingtho Unlon. The Duteh fing, or: ango, white, and blae, waa the eurifeat of the trl- colors;the kign of wilch hos been [mituted not only by France, bat by Helgium, Italy, und_somy minor States. OF devieea birne on ahloly of arma the dunble-lieaded englo beeame the ditinctive tlgn of the Gurman Ewpiro In Sl et it 1# now alko Russjan, differine in shape and color fram, thu older wymbol, Pruwin got hor englo from the Teutonle Order of Knizhta, when Albert of Brandenburg, tho lnst Graud Madter, Hequired tha Duchy of Prussia, Tho English shichl orlginally Borc only ane llons the three which it nftorwards dinplayed for n timo bocame leapards, but resumed their old form In tho fifteenth ceutary, Wit ref- crence to tho shances of armorlal whiviie, the only point wo nued noto here I thut the Jozengo In ns- pillx,vvt-nr:‘-ll by all natlona to women a3 representing o distaft, sckndes, mattocs, war-crios, and ntlonal alr have u cortiln ilteratiire of their'own, Tho tuft of graes worn by Marlborough's soldiors waw tho irst military cockade employed ona larze scale, and hoving blossowmed into a knot uf ribbuns, or vom tlmes merely a bunch of papors, the cockud be- camo gonornl fn Europeun armies towands the widdle” of tha ecighteenth century. Our bluck cuckade, which Ix Hanoverlan, lias buon appro. pristod n Franco by nearly every ona who keeps a carclege, tio cocknde of natioun colors belng ro- sarved for the woldlers of sorvants nnd dignitarica. o crowns, thoig +* poliaiod perturbations * of Kingn, wo 'may noto that the fanr Seur-de-lya on the crown of “Lngland reprosent our elnims on France, and the four Multose crosses symhullzo oar soverclg's title of Defender of the Faith. The fron eravn of Lombardy, now prenceved at Viennn, Wit vo-called from un ffon ring made out of u nail of the true croes, which was plnced Inside the crown as o support. Tho Pope's triple crown, tha menninz of whilch has been surtously explaliod, reprenciita the matorlal puwer of the Fontiil, &y tho Mltre Is the omblem of his epiritual sovoreignty, The Vatlcun treusury bousts of seven or elght of theso taras, one of which, glyen by the Queen of Epatn in 1855, wolgha only 3 pounds, and cost £12,000 serliny, Savoy has n motto conslating of the lottors FLE LT, which nobody can interoret: Austrin's notfo s AK1LO.Usy stanlfylig, dn Latin, that #he rulee over the universe; < MIt Gott fur Konlg und Vaterland ™ Is Prawsian, Neither France nor Enggland huy o national motfa, our own * Dlew ot mon Droit ™ helonging morely to_the royal arun, On the other hand, 0ut war-cty of St. George for England, and the Spanish Santligo, are puroly natfonal, while most of thu ether cries reputed natlonal' wore peculiar te a ehioftain ora party. Natlonal alre propcrly ko called seein to be scant in niber, and vory modern; our own hymu, cou Josed by Dr. Caray, and ufet sung in 1740. belng ho ofdeat, Timsin' hus & natlonsl hymn, but not France, such airs as the Mursclllalse and Vurtant pour Ta Syrle heinge republican and warhike, but not nutlonul. Nor cin uny of the patriotic chanty of Germany* claln to_bo ‘national ‘in the senwo of Delng aliiciully recognized, For sote intoreating goesip about Ambassndors aud alicnd, Wo must refer the reader to Mr, Murs all'aboule, In his last chapler, on Glory—tho vanity of vanitios—wo aro_rightly 'rombuded that tore than half of tho accepted glarkes of the wor huve prung from cIvil wourees; that the progre of scloncer, undurts, and lelters bas ralwed up u Iurger mass of apotlcns famo than nlt which {he world lias knowi from the power of the wword; and that, dazzled by the wplendor of s nrray, we scarcely realize the moral blunk which the ciirse of war croaton, Lic vuppreasion of il right and eon- science which accompanfes it Thin fs the glor, which, llko tho elrels in o Water, by brosdapeond. ing diaperaes to nanght, I quest of which man plays such fantustic iricks us ¥ mako the amzols weop.™ Ifglory attalned by the exercive of virtuo bua vanity, eursly the glory of war fn ** the wicke edness of folly, even of foolishness nnd maducss, " e ——— Gon, Sooy Amith und the Dotrolt River Tun- nol, Detrolt Tribane, June 15, The followink letter from 'Gen, W, Sooy Smith, of Maywood, 11L . in relution 1o the praposed. tun- el'inder the Detroit Itiver, hias been forwarded to the Muyor, and will be subimitied by Lim 1o the Councll Cunnnitiee, who uow have tho tunnel proj- ceb unier conslilerations LF the Committoe of the Common Councll, ap- ofntud b luuk Into my plan and prupodl (or Bulld- g 0 tuniel wo desire, T will visit Detrolt and cons fer with them on the kubj My plan hax never been explalned to any one, and TwHE mlie the pro- pownl {n such ahaps @8 o ‘make such explanation unneccusury, except o to the fiual reault, which shall be o tunnel nuder tho Detrolt Mtiver,' at any olnt that may be found hest at or noar thy ity of otrolt, which shull b Srutlclent cypacity snd of unguestionablo wtrength and durability, Tea- sonsble prlce (to e ugreed upon In the Tegtnntne) to b pald to me ouly when the work In completed sl ready for usc, 1 will furaish bonds In the full mount of thie price fixed, for the falthful perfor- manca of the work, and I don’t think the cout of tho tunnel will much exceed that of a drt-class, doublo-track bridee. Tam willing to submit my plans conddentinlly to a Hoard, consiating of suy Hve of the ublest ciglncers in the Unlted Stutes, atel Bourd to be nowinated_ by the Amerlcan So- ulcty of Civll Engineers, Yours respecttully, W. Soor Satir, SPECIALTIES IN MEDICINE. From the Toledn Blaile, We publish on our elghth pge a lengthy artl clo describing the system of the noted speclaliat, Dr, R. V. Pleree, of Buffalo, N. Y., in which he sets forth with conelderable foree and clearncss his reasons for devoting his whole thne und de- votlon to u eligle. department of mediclie—tho treatment of Ungering chronde diseases. The sumo artjele alvo takes up tho subjects of dfag- nosds, methods of consultution and treatment, ete., and will bo found to contaln inany valuable hints to the tnvalid, Dr. Pleree 13 tho author of uwork which bas already attalned u large clreu- Istion—"** 'Iho Peoplu's Common SBense Medieal Advlser "—contaluing somoe ulue bundred nu- fucrously-Hlustrated puges, and devoted to med- felne Iy ull {ts branches, a work weil caleulated for the guilance and {nstruction of the people at large, il which sy be had for $1.50 (poss pald) by addresstug the sutbor, Dr. Perco bat now been befors the general public long enongh to cnuble the formation of careful eatimate of the efticieney of Lis treatment wnd hls medi- vines, and the verdict, we are glad to know, bas Leeu nniversally favorable to both. CONVICT LABOR. Tho Workingmen Ask for the Abolition of tho Present Systom. Speeches by Ald, Lawler, John ) B Scanlun; and Others. A mass-meeting of the warkingmen of Chieagy wan held at the Twelfth-street Tarnor-Hail Insg evening, tho ohject holng to take somo netlon TookIng townrd preventing the employment of cone vict tabor 1n cutting the stone for tho new Court. Hoise. There wero about 500 personn preent, and the greatest enthnsinsm prevailed, The County Commisxuncea had been invited to attend, byl fone except Commissfonor Mulloy put in ag appearance, and he managed to bo ont of cn) when wanted for o speeeh, Tho County Attorney had promised to be prescnt with his **optnion* of tha altuntion, but ho was otherwlse engaged, and contented himeelf with sending a letter assiring the niceting that one of the riipulations in every contract to Lo let on tho Conrt-Tlonsa will be that 10 convlct Inbor aliall lie employed, Tite mecting wan called to order abont 8:730, ant Johin MeGilverny was nominated Chalrman, Upoy taking the chair he mado n few remarke, which were kindly recelved, wherenpon he Introduced Ald. Laswler s the (rst epeaker, Mr, l-(\ Ter snld e felt flattured at helng rocop. nlzed so heartily by the workingmen, whose friend ho hnd nlways been. (Applanse.] The queation ficfore the meetlng wan an linportant ot the warkingmen heing ealled upnn to grappie with und contend apninst convict inbor, He would not have the convicts live Injdlenesn. but he would bave them aud thelr Tabor stund or full fu honeat compotition with hostest men! The ablect of the meeting wae to_advance this end, aud to cxpecinlly protest noainst convieta belng npl)rcuuced an thoy hiave Leen to tho detriment of the honest artisans, ll¢ hud had au_interviow with {he members of the Caounty Board Iu the last few days In reference to the employment of convict Inbor i the cuttiug of the stono for the now Courtllonsc. 1o had hren kindly received, nnd wan glad to find that hody fp sympathy with the workingnien_In thetr 1ght for thele rlghts, [Applavee,] e hud = alsc seen several prominent cmiployers, also, and Tio found them on the eve of oruanizing to foin fx tho workingmen's buttle. 1lo closed with urgin the Inborurs to unite, stand together shoulder (s whoulder, nnd ho bofleved they' would Lo mion than successfnl. IfE DEPRECATED BTRIKES, and hoped to be recounized ns the loader ani {rleml"ul‘ the laboring classes in the Cotninog Jounell. J. F. Scanlan waa the next speaker. 1Mo sald Inbor and civilizatlon were handmaids, —as the one was elevated, the other was promoted, The question of convict labor wax but in its infaney,—it was an Infemous mys. tom for robblug the poor af tlielr Dread andd bntter,—ind It was pertinent and proper that tho laboring mon should Yo aroused upon the subject und throttie it _ Convict Iabor, he mafd, was not a benetit to the public, but (¢ eariched the fow who were the friends of claay legislation. The State-1lonse, built with convict Iabor, had cost no less than it wonld have heen bullt for hy honest labor. Ho woulld not hive the convicts live in {dlencas, but ratherthnn that thoy should Interfora with honest artivans ho would have them euployed I digzing 1 #hip canal to open np the Siatd to o larger und more extended commerce, Tt had been anggested that they might nlso be utilized In the manufacture of toys and other hnported nrticlon, which woulil funo'wlse conflict with the Interests of hiome Induntry, It was nol, howaver, wht would bo done with the convicts and thelr labor, It how to da it, The speaker muggontord the polla a3 tho remedy, and the vlectlon of reprosontatives pledged to Wipe out convict Inbor, = This, how- ever, could not Lo done at once, bt n very fmportant victory had already Deen pmined in scenring © the sympathy of the ‘uuul{' Boord. Tho speaker cancluded by argning that the lavorers had the claracter of the Inbor to be um‘)luycd on the new Court-1louse in their own handin " If g contractor on that bullding ghould dare to employ convict Iabor, he recours mended that the workingmen should PLACE AN INJUNCIION upon the work and not allow the erection of the Court-Houre except with honest Jubor, [Ap. Mlausc.] Hlo would follow the contractors n oll tho courta of fho State it If was neccasary, When a member of the Legirlnturo 1n” 1873, hio Introduced o resolutior vreviding for prohibiting the employment of con. victs In the manufacture’ of carnlc: “work and tht cutting of stone. 1t passed, but had since beer Tost wight of, ho waa sorry to say. e hopod to set it revived by the fricnds ‘of the worklugmen fi the next Leglulature, which would e a yreat triumph and the Innuzzaration of # work which would prove whoun 1o thousands of mechanics all over the country. 1[]/\ planse, Michael Huloy, of Grundy County, s gentleman who divides his time between rnnnbing a canal bual and making greenback speeclios, was tho nest speaker, e sald hie had slways been o friend of the worklng clussce, in which tonnection ho recit- «d many tearful incidents in his politieal diasters, "The lfwulu:r was cnlled to order among his tears and {nformed that he was talking away from his pubject, which brought him to wiveente tho deop- eotng aud wilenbie of tho Hlinofs & Michimn Ca- nal, imd (o sugiesl that convict lubor be utilized n that way. The followingz resolutions wero then introduced and adopted enthusinaticaliy: Wurnnas, The Pruwlll Aystem of contract con- vict labor [ Infurlous to the working clasaes, and of no betiofit Lo any one except it bo the contractor of such Tubor: thérefore, Rzesolved, That it he tho senao of thls meeting that convict Iabor shonld not be broughit Into com? petition with honest Iahor, Revolved, That tho present aystem of contract convict Iabor should be abollshed. Rieaolred, Thot the County Cominiasloners bo res spactfully requesied to have all work connected with tho new Court-Honse done In Chicago, so tho peaple may be benetited by the sum Alter several other ahort addresscs, all of tho same genoral charactor, tho meeting ndjourned, — £ AL Pant de Cassagnac as n Duollst, Correspondance London Talegraph, Panis Muy 13,—All Parls has heen engnged to-duy In discussing an {ncldent which arose out of the proceedings in the Chamber of Deputics on Thursday, when M, Rouvler elalined that a prosceution should bo nstituted by the Govern- ment, in _congequence of an fnfamous charge which had been brought agatnst him in the 2o aro of that duy, M. Paul’ de Cassagnae took a (enidingg purt In” the debato, and an ultereation took placo between hin and M., Rouvier, in which_severnl other members of the Loft afterwards jolned, Among the most prominent of the latter was M. Clemenceau, the pet can- didate of the Radicals of Montmartre, whose conduct ns Mafre of thut orrondissement at the time of the aseassination of Gen. Clement Th a8 and Lecomtelus never been elearly explaf It i l)relzy well known that thiv niost re- markable fact in M, Clomencenu's earecr is the orumxclt{ with which he s kept from thme to fing chalenging the celebrated journalist and duellst, M. Paul de Cassagznae, to inartul co That gentieman, who, It Is whispered, boas re. cently undergone a religlous couversion, has, hawcever, always firmly refused to neeept the deflunce of the demacratie Deputy, urging that hogaw 1o reason for fightlng further thun th desire of M. Clemencenu, Hitherto littlo nts tention has boen given to tha matter h{ the pubs lie generally, as {t was indiagputable that o man ke M. Paul de Cassagnne, who has fought no less then fourteen ducls; with every varlety of nrms, and some of them with the most expert swordsuten of France, could well afford to de- aplse the provocation of_a_new aspirant to this ceullar kind of fune, - Following the sitting of blursday, hawever, M, Clemeuceat took steps which could nat he disregarded. On Frida; wrate u letter to M, Paul de Cosangzane, in which he sald: * You declared ut tho tribune that you would place yourself ut the disposal of any bne who felt uggrieved at your conduct as a Jodrnal- fst. You have lrcqueutllv sbused mein your newspaper, and I huve callod at your office; but could never find you,” ‘This communieation M. Clemenceau had published In the Radien] papers. “Tho reply of M. faul de Cassagnae was forwurd- od ]‘cslcflh(, and appearcd fn his paper, the Fays, last nlght, Itis withering hu ity ct’!m-l:, aud Is expected to put an effectual end Lo the bonsting of M. Clemencenu and his friends, I Rlve you some cxtracts from this document, which Is the sole tufl:lc of conversatfon tn the cales and on the boulevards, Bays M, Paul de Cuasagnae, addressing M, Clementeay ** You desire to be woimebady, You are already a doctor without patlents, u writer without brainé u npeakor without & bpeech, s0 you want o constis tuty youesulf my sacrificer; andonall your sides your party point you, out saylng, *That ls the man Who wanta to elay Cassnenac! Your speculution e been tucrative. It mado you Munielpal Coun- cillorand afterwards Deputy, You have fought once; I have done wo fonrteen Lmos, with overy kind of weapon without exception.’ {have had enough of I Thave refused (o fight two wen— Lulller s yourself. Lulller fuln the galleys; you, 1010 cantlots, ura far Lo mamoit n 'tho Chimber of Deputies, ' For my part, 1 have prisad the po- rlod of tiery passion; and | Bave no mora fnpurtant buwdnens tian to stand as & pedestal for suoh s you to tount to notoriety upon. You wra therefure condomned 1o play the role which secms tu yicld you womuch proft and enjoyment—that of thy gentleman who wante to kill Cassagnac, " The Rudieal papers of to<lay giva a fecblo re lofnder of M. Clemencean’s, Tnwhieh o d elares that he hus no destro to kill M. Cussag- e, but only to show what he had beeomiy, which, “since his reforination, 1s a task without dunger” Lat. e = What & Shark Swallowed, tiadapas (L. ) Register, M. 1 A, Wi i ereper of Skl Bhoa) ) k’ house, writew thut on the Uth of May Cupt. Whllaws * wnd blmself captured o shatl weasuring O feet 8 juches from Up to i (O cutting It open, there was found in jts stomacl Iy nluunimhcrunlclu 4 watch, two metal battons, und s bucile, whichhad” evidently come from pale of gotalouns. Tho mogstcr hud pruball) wade a wical ull of ¥010u Baur UBloFtUNess

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