Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| -4 TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION. TATABLE IN ADVANCE-~POSTAGE FREPAID AT TIS OFFICE. afly Edition, pontpald, t year. "arts of A year, permonth, Malled to an resa four woeks for. " H!md\ Editlon: Literary and Religl o Y " Trieweek ipatd, 1 yen Farts of 8 JoRr, for MO WRRKLY EDIT. . One copy, per year. - Club of nive. jub of twenty., Postage prepald, 1 Epecimen coples rent free, To prevent delay and mistakes, be snira and give Poste , Office addrew 1o full, focluding Slsto and County. Ticmittances mxy bo mado elther by draft, express, .A’est-Oflico order, or in regiatered letters, at our risk. FERMS TO CITY SUBSCRIDERS. “Daily, deltvered, Bunday excepted, 23 cents per week, ally, dellvered, Bunday included, 30 conts per week Adilresas THE TRIBUNR COMPANY, Corner Madison and Dearborn-sts,, Chicago, ik TRIBUNE FOR THE SUMMER, ._Partieslearing tho city for the summer can have Tnr DAILY TR1AUNSR forwarded to any address upon leaying orders atour counting-room, The paper will be promptly matled in asingle wrapper, postago vald, AMUSEMENTS, Tlooley’a Thentre. Froupe, Wand/a Musenm. Monroe trect, between Dearborn anil State, Gunaker of Moscow.” Afternoon and venings Adlelph] Thentre. Monroe street, corner Dearborn, Varloty performe wuce. ¢ Expoaltion Bnilding---Crystnl Garden, Lake Shore, foot of Adams sreot. Promenade Cone Tt —e SOCIETY MEETINGS, WASIINATON CHAPTER, NO. 4 A, for Tull mieendnnee deslred | 1y ordce of 4 ORTESTAL LODGE, No. Tall, 133 LuSalle-nt duyy'eveniig, at T:00'clock the B, W, B N, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 18®. Greenbacks at the New York Gold Ex- change yesterday closed at 883, For this region to-day thero i no pleasant prospect of nceded showers, but slightly warmer and clear weather is predicted. A resolution to adjourn Congress noxt Monday was yestorday reported in the House by the Committee on Ways and Means, and adopted. 'The concurrenco of the Bonate is necessary, however, and in the present un- finished and doubtful coudition of various important matters, it is altogethor probable that tho resolution will not receive the ap. proval of that body. It turns out that the House Democrats blundered ridiculously in their hury to leg- jglate tho Congressional Printer out of office. ‘I'hey incorporated in the Sundry Civil bill a clauss intended to have this effect, but in re. nlity it has no cffect, since tho offico abol- shed was that of Buperintendent of Publio Printing, which has no existence, whils Crarp, tho Congressional Printar, was un- disturbed. The nomes of BeN Harrwon and Davip D. Paartr, ex-United States Sonator and late Commissioner of Internal Revenue, ara urged upon tho Indians Republican Cen- tral Committeo ag in every waoy desirable to be placed upon the State ticket in the placo mnde vacant by the withdrawal of Mr, Onta. Either of theso ablo and worthy gentlomon would add great strength to tho ticket and briug to tho canvass the important elements of porsonal popularity and lively enthusi- asm. ————— Tho eoxtravagant quality of BLeNar's pa- triotism was queerly illustrated in the matter of the contract for supplying headstones for soldiers’ graves. One of the bids was ruled out by the truly loyal Becretary becauso it was proposed to furnish Italion marble, and with his consont Italian stone should never, no never, be put over Amorican soldiers! 8o an Jown man got tho contract to supply puro American stone at a purely American profit. Tho House Military Committeo have prepared n roport on the subject in which Byrexar is consured for unduo favoritism, but no corruption is charged. The Michigan Republicans held their Con- vention yesterday, and put in nomination a Eull Btato ticket, headed by tho Hon, Cuantes M. Crosswitn, of Adrinn, who wns nomi- nated for Governor by acclamation. Bpenker of tho Lower Iouse, President of tho State Sonate, and President of the Con- stitutional Convention of 1807, Mr. Cnoas- wee, has made himsolf thoronghly known lothe poople of Michigon as » man emi® acntly and peouliarly fitted for the Governor- thip, and his cloction by a handsome ma- fority hardly admits of & doubt. ‘I'he rve. nainder of the ticket is of the!samo high srder of fitness and integrity, nn“ tho work of tho Convention yesterdsy will bear the fruit of victory in November, Gen. BuenaaN has ot all times shown o disposition to underrato the gravity of the situntion in the Indian country, and to over- cstimato tho ability of inferlor numbers to cope with overwhalming odds, Ho throws cold water on the urgent recommondation of QGen, Surmoax that the cavalry regiments bo secruited up to thoir masimum strength by tho enlistment of 2,600 men, and ex- presses the opinion that cither of the {wo columns commanded by Gens. Cnoox ond Tenkr are ablo to dofeat nny force the Indians can bring against them. It is evi- dent, from tho coutiopsnass with which both Onroox sud Tenny bave moved since Birmine Buwn demonstrated the fighting capacity of the Bioux, that those experienced Indicn-fighters aro not so confidont as Gen, Buenyay 18 of the ability of one white sol. dier to whip o dozen redsking, Surnsay may know more about the Sioux war than Buenipaw, Caoox, and 'Tzrny combined, but thero is just a chance that he may know less, and on that chance may hang angther Littlo Big Horn on a largor scale. — Tho Chicago produce markets were moder. ately activo yosterdny and genorally firmer, Moss pork closed 10@12§c por brl higheg, at B18,62}@18.65 for August and $18.62)@18,86 Jor Beptember, Lard closed 2)@Uo per 100 ibs higher, at $10.05 cash and $11.02}@11.05 for Heptomber. Meats wore stoadier, at 7jo for boxed shoulders, ¥jo for do short ribs, nud 1040 for do short clears, Lako freights wero firm, at 1jc for corn to Boffalo, Rail froights were unchanged. Highwines wore quiet, ot $1.10} pergallon. Flour was more oetive, Wheat closed 2o higher, at 00{c for August and 9430 for Beptomber., Corn closed Jo higher, at 470 cash and 46jo for Beptemn- ber. Oats closed 1o higher, at $2¢ cash or s.ller October, Rye was steady, at 63@5550, Barloy closed firmer, at 71 asked for Bop- tember. Hogs wero dull and lowor at the opening of the wmagket, but closed firm ot 'y.fi__. = 5 ‘The Tribwre, aro h street, between Clark and LaSalle, Tony 1) 3, T8 Regolur convocationils Frily erenluiiat (:00 reluck usiness and work o 1110 A{TiE Stasler Decree, A LKL I B, WRIGIT, Secretary, . 33, Au, F. and A, M.— ated coinmunication this (¥ris forbusiness, 1y order of N, TUCKER, Beeretary. surroptitiously, small advance ; salos word mostly at $6.26@ Cnttle were dull and weak, rolling at #2.00@5.124 for inferior to extra. Bheep wers in domand at $2.50@4.75, dred dollars in gold wonld bLuy $112,00 in grecnbacks at the close. ’ — The progress made thns far in the Tlos. pital investigation by the Hospital Com- mitteo of the County Doard does not afford much encourngement to hope for a thorough overhanling of that institution and the cor. rection of the pbuses complained of. abuses no omo can doubt who reads the teatimony of Mrs, Epoan, who ia entitled to rcspect for the courageous stand she has taken in this mate ter. Bho has shown hor sincerity Ly asking to be placed under oath,—n formality which the Committeo neglected in the case of the witnesses summoned to break down her testimony in advance. with one or two honorable exceptions, con- duct the investigation ps though thoy were on trial along with the Hospital officers—ns indeed they are if, as is alleged, they have noglected to romedy the ovils whan brought to thoir notice. Consequently their roport, however thick it may lay on the whitewash, will bo taken with many grains of allowanco for the peouliar circamstances of the caso. Procror Kyxorr was thoroughly anuffed out yestordsy, and must now be:numbered among the wounded and missing. Not oon- tent to let woll enough alone, ho rashly sup- plomented the report of tho Judiciary Com- mittes oxonerating lim from tho implioation of dishonorablo conduct in suppressing tho Oarpwern dispatch by engaging in a savage and malignant assault upon® Mr, Dramg, whom ho nccused of having simulated the sickness which followed the almost fatal sunstroko which laid him low. tomptiblo slander of an absont adversary brought down upon Kxotr a perfect torrent of furious robuke and seathing denunciation from Messrs, Foye and Iavnz, of Maine, and Mr. McCreeny, of Iows, who fairly flayod the venomous Kentuckian, dignation at his shameful courso was aronsed in the Democratio members of the Commit- teo and of the House, and Mr, Hurp, who had submitted the roport, moved to withdraw it, and tho House 8o ordered, thus inflicting upon the Chairman of the Judiciary Comit- mittee n disgraco ns severo and significant as it was justly merited. GOLD AND SILVER VALUES, Tha interest in the silver question grows with its consideration. The opponents of silver dollars flercely denounce the resump. tion of silver coinago as o legal-tenderasn measura of repudiation. ask, * Would you pay your debts in a coin that hos doprecinted overlooking the own proposition, *“We demand that you pey your debts in advanced in velue 15 por cent.” Mens- ured by gold, silver has doclined ; moasured by silver, gold has advanced ; but gold, mensured by labor aud all othor commodities, renl eatate included, has advanced largely of TFrom the valuable and intoresting tables compiled by Senator Joxes, and printed with his celebrated specch on silver and gold, we learn that tho ratio of silver to gold has ranged for nearly 200 years at about 15} of silver to 1 of gold, In1GBO silver stood 16.40 to 1in France, From 1687 to 1800 it rangod from 14,74 to 15,42 in Hamburg, and from 1800 to 1850 it stood 15.60 to England from 1851 to 1860 it rangod from 156.21 in 1859 to 15,57 in 18! to 1866 it remained below 14}, and the gradual decline in silver and incroase in gold sinco thon haa been ns follows ‘The nct of Congress of 1878 demonetlzing the silver dollar was, however, tionally, on the part of its authors and pro- jectors who were not in Congress, passed That s to say, it was not a DIl to which public attention was called; was not discnssed with reference to The bill, so far as it wasknown gonerally, was a bill consolidating and mod- crnizing tho regulations of the mints. Until within a fow wonths the gencral publio wero Ono hnn- Committee, A sense of in- They indiguantly 16 per cont?” other their coin that hes 15.83. In From 1801 218,15 i 010,80 62 We quoto thesa tables to show how slight and temporary have beon the variations of the ratio during more than 200 years. avorago has beon s0 long at 156§ to 1 that that figure has boen ndopted by common consont 08 nstandard, During the period from 1848 to the close of 1872 silver was ot & preminm In 1872 the product of gold wes smaller than it had been since 1851, while in 1874 it sunk to $95,000,000, and in 1876 it way $07,000,000, ngninst $193,000,000 in From 1850 to 1861 the avernge annual production of silver was less than $41,000,- 000; from 18G1 to 1871 it ranged from $42,- 000,000 to 861,000,000 ; in '72 it was $05,- 000,000; '73 it was $76,000,000; '75 it was 72,000,000, IIore, then, wo Lave tho joint cause of the comparative advance of gold— a scarcity in tho production of gold and an incronse in the production of sil- vor. When tho gold increaso took place in 1850-1854, tho silver advanced nud the gold declined in value. nataral cause for the variation in tho values of these two motals, wo must add the polit- ienl reasonm, that of tho domonetization of gilvor by Gormany.. This has thrown upon the markets of the world about two hundred millions of silver, hitherto nsed as coln, but now offercd es bullion, ther contributed to tho disturbance of the markots by creating & domand for an equal amount of gold, This called forn sum of gold groater than the world’s wholo produe- tion of gold for the years 1874 and 1874, This action has but wupplemented the effect of tho large falling off in tho gold product and the increaso in that of silver. 5 Bilvor, under these combinod ecircum- stances, Los lost some of its purchasing powaer, a3 compared with gold, and Gormany will have to pay more silver for the gold than sho would have to do o year ago, gold has to be drawn from othor countries, thereby producing a genoral scarcity, which enhances tho value of the motal not only as compared with Ler own doprecinted silver, but with al} other commodities, of this has been to add to the weight of every man's dobta when computed by tha gold standard, and to the sum of toxcs, national, Btate, and municipal bouds, rail. road nnd oll other bonds and mortgages. Now, tho cormorant class of creditors may be largely benefited by this onhancement of tho value of tho gold dollar, bat tho public does not share in that benefit, but is greatly injured. Itmay be atomporary advantage to tho creditor to grasp at all his debtor pos- gesses, but In tho ond tho destruction of the debtor isa gonoral injury, large advance on the amount of all indebted. nosd cripples every mon who s in debt, ar- rests trade and production, and paralyzes The In nddition to this Germany has fur- Lhis Tho offect Yo demond n uninten- THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: FRIDAY, AUGEw: 4, 1876, ; not aware that the silver dollar had | ters wore thisves, and whosamngistrateawore | however, that it became apparent from the boen nbolished as An American coin. | scoundrels.” If this wholesale mssoction is | arposa in the Chicngo 7Ymes, Brooklyn Ar. An ovil effcet of this act is now | true, then the Southorn whites cannot eseapo | gus, Cincinnatt Enguirer, New York Exrpress, oxperienced in the foct that it proventa | the responsibility for so low and disgraceful | and other Democratie nowspapers, that tho United States from boing s markot for | A state of civilization. Let us soe. Taking | Tinpry woa n professional railroad-wrecker, the surplus silver of Germany; it contracts | the entire South, Delnware, Maryland, Wost | a hrck politician, one of the persons who the market and thereby contributes to the | Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri were never | constructed the Copperhiend pence platform undervaluo of silver and to the overvalno of | taken ont of the hands of the nntive whites. | of 1864, a promotor of the politicnl frauds in gold. It tonds to nggravate hard times, | Virginia aud Tenncssca were only re- | New York State, anda more sham nnd pro- paralyzing all kinda of property, ospecinlly | atrainod o very short time by the | teuse of roform. 8inco wo wera thus en- renl estate. No man will venturo to buy renl | process of reconstruction, QGeorgis and | lightenod ns to TrmvEN's real character by an catate, nor, indeed, make any contract for | Texas Lave for Jears shaped tholr | old follow-Oopperhend like Brongy, who has tho futuro, bocause of the already largo ad- | own dostinies in thelr own way. Arkansns, | beon his personal and political crony for vance and constantly-incrensing demand for | Alabama, and North Carolina were some | moatly hnlf n contury, we hove baen caroful ond valuoof gold. Payments in coin are no | time since, and Mississippi and Florida more | not to mislead any more roaders, and have longor possible in silver, and thosa who have | recently, turned over to the tender mercies of | taken somo pains to expose the insolent de- mado pnrtial payments will bo unabloto | “homerale.” And so, in the ontiro section | coption which Mannie, of the TWorld, prac- complete them, or to make salea of what they | south of Masow & Drxox's lino, thero romain | ticed upon us by advertising TinDEN 08 n hold but two States—South Carolina and Louls- | Reformer. 1f, however, somathing like Brano's bill | isun in part—thnt can bo fairly said to bo Bince the campnign fairly opened by the shonld pass Congross, the United States | under the control of tho Ropublican party [ presontation of both candidates, and since would thoreby crento n markot for silver, | or tho peoplo of the North, Novw if, after the record of both lhas besn thoroughly scan- requiring nt least twico tho amount of silver | the peoplo of the Bouth—the Bouthorn ued, tho facts prove that all Broney said which Gormany Ligs to sell. The passago of | Whites, tho ex-Confedorates—hnvo gained | about TrupEn before e was nominated is this act would nt once counteract tha effact of | supromacy over fourteon out of the sixtecn | literally true, and, if anything, falls short of the demonotization of silver in Germany, It | States wo have named, and thore still cxists | tho truth. For fustanco, the Zimes donouno- would relense from actunl use s coin almost | the condition of semi.barbarism which Ar. | ed Trupen ag o ¢ Rebel sympathizer,” and gold enongh to Bupply tho extraordinary de- | Lastan deseribes, how M it hopoed that n | sustained its position by the fact that he was mand in Germany, aud thus contribute to | solid, sectional union with tho Copperheads | 8 member of the Resolulions Committea in the restoration of silvor to ita rolative valuo | of tho North will sccomplish the political | the Democratic Conventlon of 1864 which with gold. Ah nuxilinry to this end, sud to | and wenlthecrenting rovolution desired ? And | framed theinfamous platform declaring that the restoration of specio values, would bo to | if this bo not tho hopo and purpose, is thero | the War for tho Union was a fallure. Wo fund the greonbacks and euter wholly upon | notsome other and moro sinister design? havo found that not only was this true, but a standard of money values in place of fluc- Mr. Laxan says that tho South lins united | that TroeN rofused to sign a eall for o war- tunting crodits, with the Demmocracy to seouro an Adminis. | meeting in New York (immodintoly after tho But, say tho ndvocates of tho adoption of | tration that ““will giva amnesty and roatorn. firing on Sumter) * lo sustain the laws and an exclusive gold standard, Germany will | tion of tho privileges of American citizen. | Constitution of the United Btates,” The sond back to us for payment our national | ship,” Wo foar not. It caunot bo amnesty, | Z'imes further charged that ** Truoex repro- bonds, This is mero nonsense, .If the Gor- | —for how many whites in tho South ara de- | sonts tho greater part of tho Tammany maus send back our bonds, they must do so | prived of the rights of citizenship? Nono | gang,” and we nctually find that ho was an to exchpnge them for ailver, aud this is not | who havo appliod. Even Beavnroann, who intimate political associate of Twxnp's ; that at all likely. And just hero it may bo eaid | raised the black flag, has been amuestiod. | he was in receipt of Twesp's checks; that that the Germans bought all our bonds they | The Republican party has oponed the ‘door | ha instructed all tho Democratic politicians hold with silvor, then the only money they | to all who desire it, oxcapt Jeer Davis, who | in tho Btato to report to Twrep the nctual hind, and even at the worst they would ob- | is dobarred on'account of hia Andersonvillo | vote immediately after tho closing of tho tain the same monoy that thoy bonght with. | atocities, The Democratic majority in the | polls, so that it might bo known how large a Germans, being mon of intelligenco, and | for tho most part of cx-Confederates. Aud | Stato; and, finally, thatho never dared to Lolding tho bonds as an investment and not | as to-the * rights of citizonship,” wo fearthe | como out sgainst Tweep until the entiro for specnlation, will send their demonetized | purposo of the united South is to uso tho | gong had been oxposed and brought to bay silvorhicre to purchiase other bonds, prepared | Democratis party to practically ropeal them | by the Republicaus. The Z¥mes charged to wait until the present tempornry causcaof [ s to the blncks, rather thon on. | that Treoen's ‘‘namo suggosts nothing that tho rigo in gold shall have passed, and silver | largo thom. BSuch hos boen the ox- | is nationally known of its owner,” and but again recover itg relativo valuo, perionce at all ovents, Mr. Lawan is | that, as n Presidontinl condidate, ho “had On this point Mr. JoxEs statos as' apropo- | right when he eays that statesmon | been brought forward by combination end sition, sustained by oll history at all times, | like Lord Denpy and Earl Russery could sot- | intrigue,” and the scandalous use of that nud confirmed by tho recorded testimony of | tlo the race-question, but it would not be by | “barl of mouey” at 8t. Louls was ample tho last two hundrod yonrs, that * when, at | intimidating the negroes, by oppressing | proof of the the truth of the assortion. The any given time or in any given conntry, the'| them, by murdering thom. Thoy would bo | Z¥mes enld that *all represontations that gamo outlay of capital, Iabor, materinls, ofe., | given and guaranteod tho folleat exerciso of | AMr. Truoen is n Roformer, or evor reformed thot is sufiicient to result in the production | political freodom ond equality. That wns | anything, are uttorly falso and fraudulent of one pound of gold, if removed from gold | always tho policy of Great Britain in dealing | ropresontations, constituting part of a grand and npplied to silyor mining, will produce | with cmnncipation; the policy of tho ex. | schemo of political decaption,” And, in fact, moro than 15} pounds of silver, tha labor, | Confederates of tho South is precisoly the hthn devolopm‘::tsdtb:l!; hnv&:ec? made sinco materiols, ete., will be romoved from the | roverso. 0 wns nominate; ow that, in the canal production of gold to that of silver. When, Mr, Lusan is in error in atiributing the | matters, he has mercly beon bonefiting from ot another time or in another place, the out- | tronbles of the Bouth to the interforence of | n reform practically inaugurated by Gov. lay sufficient to result in the production of | what he would call carpot-bsggers with | Drx, thot he has not deereased tho taxes of 16} pounds of silver, if devoted instend to | “Lome rule ”; thoy aro not entiroly politi. | Now York State, that ho bas spent large gold, will produco a fraction moro than one | cal. They come mainly, in fact, from tho | sums of monoy only to bring & single offonder pound of gold, it will, as o mntter of course, | unwillingness of the whites to work, That | to trial :End lot him escape, and that all his ho devoted togold.” Thisis tho result, not | js the real hindrance. Tho negroos, being | protestalions of reform are, as tho Zimer always instantaneous, but certain to follow, | free men, are no longor willing to subsist on | mid, * utterly folse and fraudulent.” The and it 1s this law which hes kept nnd | rations like thoe mules, and support tho whites | Times denounced Titpkx ss ‘“guilly of a must olways keep the relatious of value | in idlencss out of their surplus earnings, s | broach of trust” and ns divertiug to of tha two motals at 16} of the ono | they didinn condition of ulavery. The na- | his own uso other people’s monoy; and, to 1 of the other. Tha present | tive Americansof the North might as well | indecd, his connection with the railroads of doparture of the valuos of the two metala | expect to live in idlencas on the lobor of the | the country shows that e has accumulated from tho genernl avorago standsrd must | foreign population, and dony the right of | his vnst fortune of several millions by man. aeventually boremodiod. The inovitablolaws | citizonship and witbhold tho benofits of | ipulating and wrecking railronds, wiping.ont of cost of production will in duo time rond- | education from tho latter- at tho | local subscriptions and stocks, and ¢ reor- just the balance, and the two metals must | same time. Tho solution of » tha | ganizing" corporations for his own boenefit recover thoir relative values, Fluctuations | Southorn race-question lies in the | and that of thoso associated with him. will occur, have always occurred, but thoy | full and practical racognition of tho rights | Al that Tie Curoaco I'ntnuxe said soveral have given way to comparative pormanence, | of citizonship without distinction of color, | months ngo that was favorablo to Mr, Tix- Shall tho United States nttompt by legislation | and the rostoration of prosperity rests upon | DEN Was suggested by o notural disposition to provont that one of tho two metals which | the willingness of the Southern whites to | to treat a political opponent fairly, and woa is peculiarly an American product recover- | take off thoir conts and go to work like the | ntterod befora the later rovelations medo by ing the value it hos always bad in the world's | Northern whiten, Thisis the inovitabl the Times and other Demoeratio papers had commerce ? this tho *diro and inexorable necossity,” | damnod his charactor aa & mon and s a poli- e Mr. Laxan's smooth diction and amisble | tician. But the Ohicago Zimes, from tho MB. LAMAR'S SPEECH. rhetorio cannot concoal the fact that the | porsonal knowlodgo of its editor, understood Bfr. Laaus is one of the “ailver-tongued | it unity of the South in the intorests | Trupxy's sham from the very firat, and do- oratora” of the South, His words have the | ;. Democratio party at this time is with | nounced him up to the moment ho was nom. sweotness of honey, and his mothods are like tho purposo of ruling that party ns it did inated. Since Toe CmioAdo Trmune found tho purring of tho cat beforo it fastens its | 460 tho War, and that such will bo the | it bad boon docoived in rogard to Trozy's claws upon tho object inreach. Wedonot | ooy 3'1y Domocratio party succeeds to | chavacter, it has dono what. it could to show think him & bad wman, nor & vicious :an; We | 4y, sontrol of the Government is evident | him upin his true light; but the Chicago wish all tho Confederates of tha South wero | ¢, 4y faot that Confoderates govern tho | Z¥mes, without recanting anything it former- as falr and wall-disposed sa bo., Wo o nat policy of the presont Democratic majority in | 1y sald of him, and without denying in dotait think him exactly a bypocrite, though ho 18 | 4 o 4p5000 of Ropresontatives, oven though | the chargesit specifically made and which docoptive ; perhinps ho deceiven himaolf 0s | oo oinod 1y their designs on the future. | Bave boon sbundantly substantiated, has woll og others, and, allowing the wish to | gy, geotiongl polioy of tho Bouth was once | given him an ardent support over sinco he father tho thought, plotures things a8 he | 4 "4\ 10 or uin” and o control of tho | became the candidato of tho Confoderatcs, y b would like them to bo but are not. His | ;o0 00entin porty, and through it tho Gov- | The, inferenco is tos plain to roquire #padcli In the House nn.dm. sondition aud ernment, will ronder tho revival of that | comment, aims of tho South is a glittering network of policy fmminent. It s tho grent dangor sophisms, and is calculated to appeal to the ahond which wo hopo may nover again bo sympathy nnd tho instinct of fairness which precipitated upon this nation. 18 8o conapicudus a quality of the Anglo-Saxon Those who opposs tho reintroduotion of tho'silver dollar into circulation state that n . ono of the first consequences would be to mind, lis purpose wes to claim a fair TILDEN “BEFORE AND AFTER.” caugo one hundred millions or more of tho and oven show, which ho donied the | ThoChiengo Z'imes hnsdiscovered o more's | gold coin in the .United States to bo ox- South onjoys, and to disarm opposition | nest, It hos found an- utterance of Tme | ported. Well, if that occurred, it would not in certain quarters by dissvowing any ulte- | Ouscaco Tumuns sqne months ago, made | be given away. Bomething of equal value rior and deopor motive. It was an apology | before oitlior political party had nominated | would bo received forit. Suppose it were for tho banding togather of tho solid Con- | candidates, in whick 3r, TiLoeN was refer- | exchanged for silver, the deal would operate fodernte Bouth with one of tho political | red to in n complimentary mnuner, and in | in this way: Tho first ten millions would parties of tho country, and assuch it was an | which it was predicted that gentloman might | bring a promium of, say, 15 per cent in sil. ncknowledgment that tho condition demands | Lo put forward by tho Domoeratans a “ Iie- | vor; the next ton millions a promium of 14 on oxplanation. Mr, Laman's explanation is | form™ candidate. Wo lind not beon at any | perocont; and cach ton millions would reduoe not satisfactory, dospite tho apparont good- | paing to oxamine tho grounds on which | tho promium nt least 1 per cont. By will it conveys, and tho claim thot®tho | Afxron Manure, in tho World, put him for- | the time tho hundrod millions wero ox- “Bouth " is noting a8 a unit with the Domo- | ward as o *“Reformer.” But, nssuming that | ported and oxchanged for silver, the cratio party from “n dire and inoxorabls | what Manore claimad for bim to bo true, wo | lattor would bo worth 95 or 96 per cont necessity.” warned ‘Ropublicans who go to National.| insteadof 85 or 86 per cont of gold ns at The * necessity "‘of a pooplo of an cntire | Conveutions that it was possiblo tha Damo- | presont. In this oxchange of motals our soction, embracing somo sixteon States, aot- | orats might place TiLpex as n ** Refotmn " | bankers and brokers would clear five or six fog as a politienl unit on a sectional basis | candidate fn the fleld, andbeneo tho necessity | millions of dollars. Wo have mado a very (the most formidable menace to tho in- | for the Republicaus to nominato n candidate | moderato statemont of the effect of the ex- togrity of this country) must be very grent | who should command tho confidonce and | change. It ia more likely that silver wonld to bo justified. AlIr. Lusan seays 1t s bo- | support of all men favoring n rforin of tho | advanca almost to par with gold, bacanse the causo ‘‘tho institutionsof the ‘Bouth' have | public service. ''hero hns been abundaut | exchange of coins would rendor eilver com- been slntterod and destroyqd,” forgetting | ovidence that this advico was followed when | poratively searce in Europe and gold plenty that it was this very same spirit of soctional | Gov, Hayrs was nowminated, sud ho las ai- | there. The one metal would advanco in pur- unity that brotght on the condition of things | tracted, sa. it was oxpected ho would | chasing power in proportion ss it becamo rondering it nocessiary to shattor and destroy | attraot, the hearty support of tha vast ma- | scanty, and the othor would decline in value tho *peculiar institutions™ of tho Bouth. | jority of all those who look to the next Ad. | in proportion as it bocame abundant, Ho says that *‘her industries have been dls- | ministration for a reform of the Goverument e — organized," forgetting that tho Confedorates, | service, The Congressional opponents of the silver inn decada of profound peace, have done After printing one or two such articles | dollar advance the following as ono of their little to rostore thoir industries, but have | as wo hove described, which sufficiently | reasona for opposing tho repoal of the bill rathor spont their timo in oppressing the | manifested a disposition to troat Alr, Tinpey | that wassneakingly slipped through Congross very people and the only people among | fairly es an opponent, there woro evidonces | in February, 1878, dewonetizing the silver. them willing to work, 1o snys that *‘ overy | forthcoming that we had misapprehended | dollar coins foot of her fertile soil s sterilized by an all- | his charnoter, Most of theso eame from | FourtA—It Involves the question of the suddon devouring taxation,"” forgetting that the local | Democratio sources boforo o was nominated. {E,::::,‘,.‘:,{,;’“.;‘?,",,Efla’;3,‘“,‘:..,’.:‘.'}‘;:&‘1‘3‘:’1 ony and affairs of all the Bouthern Btates but one aro | It was then that Tux ‘I'nmnune begsn to get | producinga now panie In the money market. under tho absolute control of the native | glimpees at the true inwardness of Blippery There aro 1,000 millions of our bonds held whitos and ex-Confederates, aud that they are |"Sam, Sovera! prominont Dnmou—n\m news- | abroad. Not one of them can bo roturned on responsiblo for such &' lamentable condition. | papers, and notably the Chioago Z'imes, de- | the Government, for none are due, and won't Ho says that * her educational interests are | veloped faots and evonts which proved Tir- be for ton or adozen yoars, How, then, waning and languishing,” forgetting that o | pex to be a wily politician fustoad of nre- | could they bo * euddenly returned”? large part of the South has no publio schools | former, an sssociato of Tween's instoad of | Bome of them might bo sent Lero for excopt thoso that woro cstablished thero | his prosecutor, a firein-the-rear Copper- | sale, but they would be bought nnd during the brief supremnoy of the Republic. | head iustoad of o patriot, and a | paid for in silver dollars or their an party, aud which havo siuco been closed | mere protender to public virtuos for | equivalent ot the market price. 'The Ger- up in several of tho Btates by the Bouthern | pemonaland partisan purposes. We rend what | mans purchased the bonds originally with Democrats, who refuse *‘ to pay taxes to edu. | tho Chicago Z%imes hadl to say on the subjeot, | silver thalers,—silver being the logal-tender cate the niggers,” and thereby deprive the | becfuso we knew that Stoney, an oldor man | of that country since the days of Jurivs paor whites ulso of educational facilities, than TiupeN, was familiar with tho latter’s | Oxsam, (and also a legal-tender in this The purpose of Mr, Laman's speech was to | record asan old political bedfellow. Wo | country slnco the foundation of the show that the organization of the Southasa | were surprisod and chagrined ot the over- | nation until threo years ago). Dut why soctional Laals for political dotion at the pres- | estimate wo had previously mode. Tad | should forcigners return our bonds? Thoy ent time is from *¢ tho instinetive and imper- | Bronzx corrccted us at the time, elther | know that the principal and interest will bo ativo law of sclf-preservation.” And he asked | in his own newspaper or by communication | paid in coin, The bonds draw a higher rate “‘how it could be expocted to find quiet, or- | to this jouroal, as it was his duty to do, wo | of interest than thoy can get for their money derly, law-sbiding communities whero the | could have corrected tho error immediately, | at home. People hero would only buy them Governors wero lawless fulons, whose minis. | It was not for some lttle time afterwards, .| on spoculation, and only to fho oxtent they 1t is far more likely, howover, that these | Houso of Represontatives actunlly consists | Domocratic majority was noeded to earry tho | 1o, | member of the Deinocratic Stato Central Executive had coin to invost in them. If the bonds wera offered very low, speculators would purchese what thoy could carry for a rise, aud soll them when the prico wont up. But what would tho Britlsh and Gormans do with tho silver raccived for the bonds? Bend it back and invest it in whoat, ment, cotton, tobneco, and tho like, 'hon we would have both the Londs and the silver. Ag silvor advanced in valuo foroignora would buy them back at tho higher prico, We could stand this operation as long ns.thoy could. 'I'ho moroe silver they sent over hore to purchnse produco or bonds, the moro valu. abla it would becomo in Europo. The fact is, it 1s only nocessary to open this country to tho frea uae of silver coin to restoro it to an oqual value with gold. This country can easily absorb twice or three times the nmount of the surplus silver of Gormany, if our irre. deemnble paper currency were funded out of circulation, OBITUARY, N 3(188 DETSEY M. COWLRY, In the death of Miss Bersgy M, Cowrzs, who passed nway on tho 25th of July, at the *‘old homestead,” Austinburg, 0., not only the large dircle of friends who know her best, but all who come under the Influence of strong, sympathetic, and Christlan women, sustained a dcplorablo loss. Blo was oncof the few twomen who by quiet, undemonstrutive attention to the detalls of solemn duty have cxerted o resistless control for good over thelr fellow creatures, and wherdver ¢ Aunt Berery? was known there were deep grief and mourning when she left this world forever., Miss CownES was born in Dristol, Conn. Her father, the Rev. Dr. Gines Ilooknn Cowwcs, was pastor of the Congregational Church in that town. During the year 1811 hio recelved o call from the chureh at Austinburg, and, accept- ing, started for Lis now fleld of labors, trans- porting his wifc and eight children in a carrlage ond two wagons. The journcy was made in thirty daye, and the good pastor catered upon his work. It wus onthe froutler, for Oblo was oy West ¥ then, that Miss Cowrss rocelved her first impresstons of 1ife and its responsibill- ties, and even os a child ohe developed many of the characterlatics that fn her womanhood woun for her the love and. admiration of all who knew her. Endowed with remarkable power of annlysis and comparison, it was plain that her sphere embraced the imparting of informatlon, and while yet quite young she established two infant schools. Forty years ago sho gradunted at Oberlin, and took up higher branches of cducation, and there is not one who ever eane under her teachings who does not re- member with affection the kindly cfforts of ““Aunt Betsey,” as she was eatled, to smooth the rugged poths and lighten the labors of school-life. Nor were her attentions exclusively bestowed upon her schioul. Bho took & broad and com- prohensive view of existence, and saw no roason for grooves in the carcer of ncn and women. Tho same moral excellence that bent some of Hier facultics to smoothing the naperities of tho rond to learning bent other qualifications to- ward the amclioration of the lot that tangles tho lnes of tho oppressed, and In the work of com- fortlog the poor and helpless, the slave, and In hor sympathetic care for the sick and wounded during the Rebellion, shobeeame a monunient of Christian charty, and a light untothe fect of all who suffered or were heavy-laden. Bome seyen years ngo, Miss CORNELIA, sister of Miss Bersey, turned her face away from the world and was gathered unto her fathers. This bereavement plunged Miss BeTsEy into a feel- Ing of grief that time and her nrduons labors never fully effaced. The twain had passed thelr lives together, and there are many who still ro- member the trio composed of Miss Brreny, Misa CorNELIA, and thelr brother Lrwis (now dead), who twenty-five years ago modestly wors the title of the best ballad-singera in the West. At Free-Boll aud Republican gatherings their volees rang out {n the stirring songg that in thelr fervor became the hymns of the day. Just before her death “Aunt- Bersey wos actively employed {n alding in the bullding of the now Congregattonal Church at Austinburg, n work that grew out of her exertlons, and one in which all her pride was cnlisted, When she dicd it was almost finished, and the funeral .serviees were held from the edifice hallowed with therecollections of her interest ln it. 3iss CowrLES was o slster of thelats Dr. E. W. CowLes, of Oloveland, an aunt of Mr, Avrrep Cowwes, of Tum Tripune, of Judgo S8anuer CowLes, of Ban Francisco, end of Mr, Epwix Cowees, of the Cleveland Leader, Her lifc was ns calm and placid as her faco in death, o perennfal benedietion upon all toward whom she atrotched forth her handa. ————— Speaking of tho clcetion prospects in tho Bouth, tho New York Herald (Independent Democratic) says of North Carolina: 1In North Carolina the Ropublicans are making an earnnet canvass, Thero Is an old Whig element In this 8State which, during the War, wns restless, North Carolina la Jerhaps tho only Southern Stato whero tho_color-}ne does not cxlst in politics, There §s less intolerance and proscription thoro than claewhere. Tho ltepublicans have nominatod for Guvernor Judgo SkTTiE, & member of one of tho oldest famillcs, who gcrved in the Cenfederate army and In now on the Supreme Bench, The value of such o uomination Is scen in the Vigorans cawmpalgn which has been opened. Already the Itepublicans mako fnroads wpon tholr opporients, ‘Fhe tlon, Lor W. Husruuzy, of Goldsbos a Commlttee, and rocent) o Henator, has fore mally pronounced for Iarrs. Judge BETTLE has takoi tho stump, and 18 aeslated by he two sons of tho Jate SB1erkN A, DovaLas, who are supporting tho Republicans, “The lssue ls doubtful, Tho Domocrats, however, will have to make a hard fight to win. —_—— Bpeaking of TiLpex, Tne TBUSE sAys: *¢Tls, a8 8 Dontocrat, stands before the people In some- what the samo light that Dutstow docs asw Re- publlcan, " —Chlcago Thmes. ‘This wus sald boforo old 8TOREY exposed the fraudutent pretenslons of TILDEN to the charac- ter of a reformer, Ou the 97th of June old BroREY 8ald fn ono of his papers:” M Al representations and pretenslons that Mr, TiuoeN te a reformer, or has ever reformed any- l{xlm{, are %‘I;T‘ly ‘{l;!;: lu'n:'fj ,r:'mulx‘:‘luuA representa- tions, consl i L agrand scheme o lifteat deception, ¥ o a After this positive assurance from thoe Confed- crate editor of the Zimes that TiLDBN wasa “fraud” and a political deeeption,” there ap- peared nothing more In Tug TRIBUNE compar- {ng him to Buistow In any reapeet or degree, ———————— At the Bt. Louts Convention, Mr., DorsmEi- aen, TILDEN'S loft bower (MORRISsEY belng the right bower) sald: *! Gentlomon, you lmmv\zun danot represont 500 voters in the Clty of New York, and your only ob- ect in to creats & defectlon, that you may rwflt y It." The plain Iln&\ll:nllun Qf lb{l 18 that all but annmber los than 50U of the' virtuous followers of Boss Twxen luve gone oyer to Sax T'nneN, It the KeiLy crowd at bt. Louis do not represent, Tammanylte voters, who f4 it thal represonts the reat of that largo ‘gang of preclous rascals who hove so long misruled und plundered Now York City? The plaln Inference from Mr. Dunsuriden's atatement 18 that TILOEN represents (he greater part of the Tununany gang,—0ld Storey. Yet this saino conslstent individual s now urgiug his readers to support this representa- tive of the Tummany gang of thieves and scoundrelal ——————— PERSONAL Supt, Walling, of New York, holds the opinion that Charley Joss i dead. 1luplaces thecase (n tho samo rank with the Tweed cecapo and the Na- thaa murder, Phe 100th birthday of Mr, Windsor Howe was celebrated by hia friends and family at Dolton, Mass,, last Monday, Tho aged man was able to appear at the tablo and direct tho fostivitios with a proud aud cheveful ale. Ex-Sonator Trumbull has been at Saratoga con- forring with Gov, Tilden us to the best weans of sccuring & Democratio succoss, Itis understood that an_unalterable part of tho ex-Scnator's plans 1s an ofclal position for Limeelt, either at home or abroad. A persons] letter from Martinsburg, West Va.. to the Columbua (Q.) Journal gives the followlng Iaughabio sucidents **Tho Thdenites bad a ncet- ing ond torchlight-procession hore lsut Friday evealnyg. Patterson of Colorado, Harrlson of Ii- linols, wnd Hardenbergh of New Jorsey,all M. C's., addressed the unterrified. Durlng Pattersonty marks hé bawled out: * Who s dov. Hayes) gy, kn](law‘u hlmy'li\;’!nhnny Hitting {n n treo nm:; elled out: o, . {\'nrl"' I shot at.him during the "Pho New Orleans Republican puts It in lang thnt the ex-prize-fghicr, Hoss Mortlesey, ean dorataud when It sayn: +'Thie election ‘of 5 pi- publican Mayor In Chicagd wan frat knockeger: for Tinyos; the massacto In South Caroljge o™ fizst blood for Tilden, iy “{L movemont I8 on foot to collect mbs, hls country for a memorial to Dlishop B Dristol Cathedral, Thoss who hav J?.'}:;.':'“' pleasuto of studying In youth the cribhed and !n‘: bad **Analogy "' will deubtless come forward groat entlinsiasm to honor the anthor, v Carl Schurz reminds Mr, Ottendorter, of New York Staats-Zeltung, that ho ltely spoky Tilden as '* & domagogue, popularity-huntes, [t ono suspected of dlahonorable rafiroad tryy tlons." And now Ottendorfer affects to m,,';:; Criptiony h whyBchurz ls not for ** Tildon and Reform,n Mr. James Lick's conngol demanded a bill of ticalars of the physlelan who enod him for sgry) amounting to 855,000, and got onc specityinga,or} *visits, extonding over & poriod of twenty-ong ye, and oloven months. The Judge thougit thyy enough avidently, for o denlod & motlon fors o thor bill, 4 Tho danghter of the Hon. James Loga Leavenworth, Kan., publishos o card nrung::;l" *‘a base falachood " tha current statoment that sy, was engaged to bo marzied Lo a certain Bentlomgy who deaerted her at tho altar. Sho adds vigorou|, that the n\’mur of the atatoment {8 “Amfllldau{ seoundrol,* Tho Itev, Robert Collyer deliverod the addren ot thodedlcation of the new public hnll at 8ho. makertown, on the North Pennsylvania Rallroag fow daysngo. At tho suggeation of & friend, by romarks wera chiefly of an autoblographical g, ture, ‘The hall has been bullt st private oxpen by a gentleman who preferred to pay all tho by rather than havo the now bullding devoted to thy uses nf‘ any particular sect of religionists, Tobert W, Wolr, Professor of Drawlngand Paigy, ing ot the West Polnt Military Academy, has begy retlred by order of ®ho President, laving sery falthfully until ho 1s over 62 yeara of age, cmbra. ing moro than forty-two years' connection with [ Department. The actlon Ispersmptory under yy statutes, Sccond Lieut. Charles W, Larned, of ity Seventh Cavalry, who graduated at West Pointjs 1871, wiil succeed to the position, The Earl of Lewes, a very young and green sel of English nobllity, has been obliged to appear fy court and pray for an injunction forbidding thy negotintions of certaln notes of band drawn by him amounting to £11,000. He alleges that thy only conslderation he rocelvod was £6, and thy the transaction was a ‘‘do* on the part of {y Earl of Bective in olluelon with & monoy-lender, Wo hope Mr. Anthony Trollops will make a noty of the affair. ¢ Prince Milan, of Bervia, now tho most conspic. uoua fignre in Europo, was married only elphy months ago. His wife, the Princoss Nathalle, very youngand extremely beantiful. During e briof appearanco In Parlsian soclety, 8 fow manthy bofore hor betrothal was announced, sho was muy notlced for tho dignity and simpllcity of her mas. nors. 8hobelieves In hor stars, and haa confidencs inthebrillisnt future which the fortune-telien bava predicted for hor. Tho revelationsof Baron Qrant concernlnginy tarpitude of leading financial writera in Londonhu directed attentlon to the sama class In this country, 1t is n notorlous fact thatthe only position onsa Amorlcan newspaper in which it 1 posaibla for ons to grow suddenly and violently rich Is that of finan. clal editor, The New York Graphle cites neven) Instances of fortunca mpidly scquired by porsons thus mtuated. It seems that Mr. Loonard Jerome mado a start as financial editor on the New York Herald and Times, The moncy-editors in Chlcago, on the other hand, have always been ressonsbly ‘poor and boneat, A Washington dispatch of Wednesday last ss, **Senator Morton mot with & painful accidont st the Capltol this morning, which kept bim from tho Senate Chamber untll mear tho close of the votloz. on tho Delknap articles of impeachment! ‘While sltting In a heavy revolving chalrin one of tho commitice-rooms, the Benstor, in ondeavoring o move the chalr forward, waa thrown loth floor, the cholr tumbling over and striking him o the back of the head, rondoring him unconeclon forafow minutca. Ho is eufforing conslderable paln from the accldent, which 1s intensified by bolls on tho back of hisneck, He recovered s ficigntly to appoar in his seat and vote on tho lait arficle In the Bolknap indictment.” ‘The Jolly old monka of Dunmow, mare than fout conturies ago, decided that o filtch of bacon shonld be given to the couple who conld honestly swear that they had lived together b year and a doy with- oul quarreling. The prizo wns eoverat times ad- iudged, but finally tho custom fell into di conscquenco of the rofusal of the Lordof tho. 1o supply the bacon.¢.Bome years ago, a revivalof the snclent ceremony took place under the roman- tic Impulse of Ar, Harrison Alnsworth, who had written a novol on the subject. 8ince then thers have been fow claimants until this year, when two presented thomselves, vie. : Mr. Smith, the Viear of Harwell, in Dorks, and his wife; and Mr, James ‘Boosoy, Clerk at Trinity Church, Ventnor, and hs spouse. The former faled to put In an appearance, but Mr. and Mra, Booscy proved their case, and, amid loud chodring and the firing of cannon, the oath wes administered and the fltch carrled off In triumph, , Minister Plerrepont again appears in an unfasor- ablo light—wo might ssy, two unfavorable lights. Tho correspondence af the swindling Spiritualist mediuin Filnt, latoly captored in Now York, was foand to confain a letter from Rdwarda Plerrcpont to ** Dear Lady Mary* (a spirit), asking for Ia- formation to cetablish missing links between s nobdle family in England and the Plerrepont famlly of oxbury, It thus appears ,that the Minlster: elcct waa very anxlons (o prove up lis clalins W blood before the aristoeracy of England. Anothel recont token of the sbounding snobbery of our Mine fater to England fs affordod by his speech at the banquet of tho Lord Mayor to the English Bishopt ond Archbishops, On this occasion he I reprosented ns having eald that in tho deep: est heart of England ‘‘thore lay the noblest feoling of religlous sontiment and principle which they on the other sido the world observed n feu years ago when they saw this great, proud, an¢ arrogant (oh, oh,) nation bowed down to tho dust, and calling upon the Alinighty Power to ralso from death tolifoher Prince.” Wo **onthe othersklethd world* obsorved nothing of the kind; and, for- tunately, thero are few persons of intelligence who, in 3fr, Plerrepont's position, would call the English an ‘*arrogant * natlon, or pay a fulsome compliment to the Princo of Wales, HOTEL ARRIVALS, Gardner House—W, W, linckman, T, B. Dates, and_Georgo Bn’un. Clncinnati: O, L. Garrison, 8t. Louls; G. Y. Richardson, Waterbury, Vi.1J. R. Bldwell, McGregor, Ta, : D, 1, Canteld, ¥ilia: delphing 7. Mahan, Lima, O.; B, Judkins, C. T Dickson, and W' dking, Cinclunatis R. 11, Laurencebul <.oSherman House— and wifo (Mlés Kuto Claxton), Now York; N. Todd, Boston; Col, Joseph Forsyth, New Yorl Jacob White, Virginia City: the Hon, A, M. Ttos, llon, N, Y.} tho ftun. J,'R, ‘Terhuns, Now York; L. B. Ray, Morris, 1 rof, J, 1. McMaho, Cleveland; e Hon. C. DBorchert, Mil- wuukeo; tho Ifon, 1L M, lllll, Erly, Pa.; the Ifon, D. C. Whoollng, W, Va.{ P, A, Pronk, 8an Francisg “Syemont House—The Ton, Wo B, Ogden, Now York; the llou. I, K. Folsom, Loulaville; Gottfrled Be{f and Axel Berg, Swedenj the Hon. 3 ‘Waterman, Rycas more; James O'Nell, 'Theodore Homllton, and Charles A, Bk nion Bguare éflcw York) Compan ullivant, Burr Onks: Gen, Ueorge A, Custer, Mri. Capt. Yutes, Mre, Capt. S8mith, and Mri. Lieut. Calhoun, U, 8, A.; D, R, Pattérson, Pbil- adelpila; A, Lemoine, 'New 'Orleans; ¥. L Waugh, * England; John uher, Cunandal+ fum, N. Y.; Gustave Levy, Montreal; Loult Uncinnatl,.., Grand Paclf¢—0, A, Swine- ford, Daraboos E. W, Wintor, Hudeon, Wis.:Jo Parlic, Buflalos Jokn Allen. Peorl ! sud J. W, Bugbee, Indlanapolls: 1I. Hrentano, , Loula Iarvoy, and Pat Shields, st Louls; W. Lv Hiarding, Kanuas Oity; A. E, Einore, Fort Jlows ard; Auguet L. Smith, Milwaukees M. D, Thatch er, Colorado; Baron Campe and Carl Froias, Geg- many; J.nzl-.‘llumhmak-. Hooslo Fallsj J. Lob n son, Wi ————— Discussing tho Firo Department, old BTossY says: lylenluce the number of Assistant Fira-Marahals from eight to three, the latter number belug ull that were sllowed prior to the Medlillan period. The anclent falsifier very well knows -that until after the inauguration of CoLvix the number of Assistant Firo-Marshals never ex« cecdod three, but, as the truth did not answyr - lils purpose, bo filled {n o fulschood, —————m— (ORCESTERSHIRE, The enjoyment of our dinuers, eto., dupendd largely upon the skill and cara employed In cook: ing, snd often subjects young und imcxperlouced housokeopers to serious suxiety, The use of Les & Perrius' Worcestershire Sauce adds greatly to the relfoh, by the delicious flavor it fmparta to meats, fleb, game, otc., cto. ‘Those who know jts qusil tlea considor it sn {ndlspcnsable ab the Lresi(sdty dinner, aud lunch table,