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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE MONDAY, OCTOBUR 16, 1876 — CI[ N FBANO ble to' the monarchy of the Dourhons. M: near that d old hero Winfleld Scott, who TIIE CHUR Bishop's Uttarancess== A gra':: :j::ramontnnes Startled. AP E 1 Letter which Troubles 4 l:'Mm-tulw Monarchists. . TR tar Not Mado to Bo Glued to the Tarone of an Emperor. Tho Al dence New York Timse, §Z',,'{f’ ‘3‘1—’-"5};:.& Gullbert, Blshop of "m'mnled the Ultramontancs by & pas- et » enunelating cojmon-Acnse and lib- A t1sa curlous foct that nous prdples, e vould publlsh this letter. :‘n:h:g.',m};:;fi:z the Church organs are also ¢ hiereditary monarchy of Henrl g ;:x::-ll‘\!:nt rlzut of Kings. The Bishop o o Lias put his inger upon the sore spoly ol Gap one directly, fearluesly ns 8L. Paul, "’": l:;;; of the evil, His pastoral was carc- b cealed ly the Ultramontane organs, fally COnET it in & roundabout way. The picameto i Times obtained some " f the Times ol mflvc:“““'::;: it, and gave them a8 of u libera! Catholle Blsh- " ';:lenwfl:eugu were rotranslated into ch, and attracted the attentlon of the press B ,1.' A Bonapartist paper manoged to get i (iho]mltarul and published it in extenso, ”M: {ving murtal offense to tho Ultramon- e ygm They refused to notice what the o organ WY ted with abuscof the Ifheral B ld their shameless allics, tlte Bonapart~ b Wien fairly transinted this ls Dfi'!:n:«m 2aving that the Church urgans ars phrs tane and ;lunurchh‘al, while the Bona- gt ublican papers are liberal, But rlet and Ji¢ ce hetween the two warth no:;:c-“""““ i}g,'fi.’.f.’ff.iu Journuls are athelstical, veligfonn In all fts forms; the and Sflr':;"‘ft ,,-QL;.L Is relizious, but deniea the M]‘]:m( the l}huruh 1o interfere In civil aflalre, Rt o ond s spirituul role. The latter unvfitm selves upun Uie ground of Washe ince and the founders of the gton, Jlnmtiton, e vl At Nopuliies e foriney adopl the vlows ‘(NScl!cHO“ and Voltatre, The Republicans O ert that religlon 18 not ut all necessary and ettt T hed s Lhe Honapartistuclalin that Ut orm of religlon {8 necessury to man and some {0 Pt caiius tbat it lias "o rlebt Lo - Yo with tempurary nifalrs, Roughly stated, {fi,fi,um pusition of the two partiva. That of the third, the Chureh party, will bu developed a m‘tlu turihier on, after 1 have quoted the words f the Bishop of Uap. Let me say here that o Hcipies of tho Lonupartists are those hlcll: lie at the bottom of tne United 3 pstitutfon. 1 remember one States Co» I dir, when vury young, to ave ex- s doubts aoout tile’ feat of Joshus, o shout the_miracles of the Church, My A0 replied Mishop McUlll, “when one can :\u‘llnw he doctrine of the ‘Crinity e need not hesitate a¢ smnller matters; that is o affalr o {atb?" Ihelieve that thot saying had more ofect npon my religious oplulans thin m:xvtnlnz found {5 the Bible or fn auy of the sucred writ- {oge. Faith, fn fact, lies at the botlom of our religion. Now the que: tlon comes whether or ot veligion should luterfere in temporary mat- ters. 1t did formerly, and the Church ruled the world with an {ron rod, but the time for that has passed: the Church hus to give up its tem- ral power; and the t‘ucnllnn of theday s to ol 8 medus vivend! with modern soclety. What fs the trouble,and why is it, When the benefits of rellizion upun society are s0 generally recognized, that so much hostillty s shown to {tt Mgr. Guithert teles to examine this ques- tlon, sud to find & solutlen tor it. He thinke 1hat the maln couse i that religlon, or the Church, a)lies [taclf with one partlcular political party, and then enters,futo a temporal struggle, the results of which wre doubtful. When one speaka of religlon [ France, he meuns the Cath- le Church, and the Chureh has ullied ftselt with the Legithulsts, am) - gives §ts Infinenco to lleari V. Naturally this arouses the antugonism of all the other parties. The Republicans op- poseall ldea of rellgion; the Bouapartists op- pose the interference of_relfizion witli temporal wllalrs, That ls, a8 I buve renmrked, the ground fukeu Ly the foutndera of our Repubfic, and thele jdeak, ¢arrled fnto pructice, baye worked well for acentury. Before goine further into Mgr. Gultbert's astoral, et me eay that {t was read in Valence juthe month of June last, published on the 1st of July, and earefully concealed until_a copy of It beppened to full fnto the hunds uf u corro. spondent of the Times. The Bishop had tha wurage to write these 1iberal words, but hesl- tated o give them to the press, knowirg that thes woult be budly recelved at the Vatlean. Andyet ] havean idea—~thongh I may, of course, bein trror—that an eminent Atnericau Cardinal sbares the views ol Mgr. de Gup, When speaks B Iug particularty to the pasters be says: It Innfect that, wlheneverthe public belleves the r\ufl Is fdentined with a polltical porty, it ue:'er [hn‘?) eul'L::unu:r {:lw fl':l wr.m;ln ul’ 'thhl: , who thien becuate thie advervarics of Bty et s cenmutaber. 1500, the. hatreds and the manifestations of ‘4 hostile nature against French prests, which dld not permit them to goout Inany of the great estles wenring thelr suutanoa. ‘The cause, the greal cause, in our upinion, §s only 100 well known. Men who wers certainly rospect~ able, ani who Lind the beat of futentlony, thought Tt well to fdentify religion with politica, Thoy due sited, according to {he common expression, to uito the altar with the throng, the throne with the ultar, Dut then, when the throne crumbles which :;,J‘glnr:x.x;x;huxu:a the altar must necessurlly be cakened, Lnueratsud this well, the ltar'in not mada to be #iued to the throne of an eror or u King, nor even to the seat of a Presldent, nor to the fauteulls of #Senate, nor the bencbiewof u Chamber, piace le fn & bigher and werener regivn, whore it vanrest wud command the respect of the honest ioen of allparties, whocome togetherto bow before It aud to seek throngh their p.agers the conwoln- tlon thet they need. " ‘Mhe Church nesthor adopts not proscribiea by preference any regimo or politi- @lbarty; it gets on with all without ditinction; Lhas lived under hereditury, elcctive, absolute, and constitutionn) monarchics, nuder fendal nris :lncncm nud ollgurehical republics, us well ns uns ler lbilullhu govermments, Everywhere it has been mel ly treated; under all tho foring of Government dn-uflexeu; it hus often encountered injustice a1d guleageous persecutionn, and sometinos peaco lv:! berty. Let un caneidor at the prescnt bour wi “‘x [ Tmlu;( upon the globe, whers wa ene counter all surts of regimes with all the difforent e les between them.” Evideatly the Chnrch ma rdagiid ed, protected even; it can be freg as well i I'an L snd unjustly duprived of its rights, ertor, Sreatertor, therofore, 4 Very sid and futal Eo toattacl the Chareh to-uny patticulur form adivermment. AR let s not miz the cle, ¥ s it Lake care not to mix tself up, with thi Bovieal qudrrele of our time, ‘he clorgy ought Vs canouss any purly, because iore ard ul- i ictors aud’ vnnqun'h.vd. aud they owo g ol Lo one as th otlier, Tholr mivsiun a o pro- wmufanwnll and peace among ol Upon thery ) complisl Rission with which 1t ta charged, T "Lhc l’Halmp of Gn;»nhuwu yen clcurl( o which :mly the Fronch clerey 1 allfed, and ho showa n u:quul elearness the mistuka. that s made, Midkoy tmea it in Quisotid folly to” attempt "‘“"Lllltnuartunw throue, Lo uny one of Pt -Mll Toties that have extsted, ‘Uhe Bish- of s melie word culluge, of ghivelig, aud soudiire, o ‘lcrhu._, o express bis fdeas of the union o m';ll; the aftar und the Lhrone, and there is s Dr“‘._“’]‘lllmpt fn them. Huvims told_what . mL-tsmu_ld not do, the Blshon tells as '-Iwnr::epel;'a{nfil:f without golug beyoud the rhe priest, likoany other citze ¢ i {8 porfectl, ".’fn"o‘g,:’;:uh}:l” i politient apinfone, wnd \hers muuv.-nuunel”m"w prout No wan bellve the bent for psp) 8 1UMU of Guvernmunt would Le 106 Lepubite fonior pich 8 country s bo éan protur the Rtehibie s prps Mouarehy, ur'tie Monarchy to apricad to ek ¢ |6 Free, alsu, o8 o wan aud 10bas defend fy "lmvm- his personal optuion, and Lo belonya Lo tho ok brutienco o modoration which WEaL e Dlepne Laviug a sueerdalut misaion, Hut Halro wity ‘mu 1e the ulienpt 1o make radiglon sols remuln g wtrane 4 Lecuuss peliglon nnr\m ta e Do u umunr ‘f"m"‘ uud 1o use It for Tilgloue st el & bolitfcal party, " for thut 1u & suc- Clugel, "¢ Whith e ouly cowprowise the Thia 1s strong 1 Ty trong Ienguage (or a prelate Lo uee (-ru':)\\m“'-“" Tyhero the Clurch b bocn i be Ly o tedd to the canse of Monurchy, but ol iy l"l"[ m’P docs 1ot healtate to spealc raans o(u ;ld e clergy and the clerll Gline of Jle rance have apeuly capoused thy 1t f e Ve The Bishop addet 4V 10 foreues aud 10 foretell the conse- m‘mfi 'ul fuch w course, und that without pre. Nl relintg S B Prophet—thy couvnquenico rum Yoo u.l.muuuuu. and, at the preevit hour, the P {'I" 3 Sithurt hatreds ngaluat the Church' wae 5 rnr“tuh-m. a9t i8 eulled, —that (u o say, ) l_hu vlerey, who are wrangly supposed Stisen ho vxtremo ldeas aud the cxaguorations Spoc agh WprGent Jouraa) “"w"r' Aivislons andof sirugsgte of thc‘h'L“ ol several furma of Guvernment, h e ey ":u 19 pussionule varileuns, §a it not ov)e Lsion L) )m|rmuh|munu In the agu of re. £rtat) e excliatun of tiw others tial you wii T n“utw agalust you the houtility nfv all the I ”miln!m in mdre deplorable, agelnst ro- 1t iyt Lt (e o U8 confeesed that Mgy, Gullbert «:L::,"' Rail vy the head, and hasoy tven the r’:zfi Yorel or"mu Bresent ant-religions yeuction, Wl’lnur?r‘""m ave Lad ‘gothing more fm- oty it this, fr (L must muke the clergy Uany .331“-,““‘,“““,“{‘."'“ lu( their L;xu;uso. But t$ 5¢0 the dauger and feel it, but dary ay nothtng, becatse ™ Vatlean 1s fuyoras Blshops who live an ambltion to wear a Card nal's biat one of these days, Hke Mgr, Freppel, of Augers, try to win it by showing ultra-Ultra. montane opinlons. But they are wrnnfi!. Pope Tlus has but a few years of hils life left him, and his succeasor may be Cardinal Bonaparte, Cardl- nal MiCloskey, or @ardinal Mannjug, though the lnttor {8 lesn probable than the otlier Lwo. It'1s not tmprobable that one of the two first vamed mn{v yeb st In 8¢, Peter's chalr, and both are lberal inen, or inen finbued with the spirit of their epoch, and who appreciate the necessity of ;:umng the Cburch fnaccord with the progress e age, e ——— THE ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. Approaching Reanlon nt Washinglon—est Polnt's Centennial, - To the Editor of The Tribuns, Cni1caco, Oct, 14,—At the close of the Revo- lutionary War the officers and soldlers were made to undergo great ‘suflering on account of the insuffeient provision made for thelr pay, and the great depreciation In the value of what they were pald fn. There arose great disentis. faction. Whilat the army still hovered around the fortificatfons at West Point and at Fishkill, in 1783, and prior to thelr Jeaving for thelr homes, Gen, Knox and a few others’ originated * The Soviety of the Cineinnatl" to perpetuate the friendships of the fleld, and provido a mode of meeting and Keeping track of each other, Of this Boclety Gen. Washington vecame and cone tinued President so long as he lived; and the Soclety continued to mcet together untfl the last had passed away. Whilst the armies commanded by Sherman were still in the fleld nt Raleigh, near the close of thelr grand march, and the successful terminus of all their great work, officers, under the same faspiration which governed those of the Revolutionary offt cers, formed the Soclety of ' The Army of the Tenncssee.” 'The other Armies of the Cumber- land, Oblo, and Georgia, which had been chiefly carvod out of the Army of the Tennessee, also, for grenter convenlence, origluated separate so- cleties, though these, as those of the East, were bound by one commou brotherhood of feellng, The Army of the Tenuessce was composed al- most exclusfvely of officers from the Stateswest of the mountains. 8ince the grand review at Washington at the cod aud the departure tor thelr several homes but very few have been back to the Caoltal.and very few have scen their original commander, Gen, U, 8, Grant, TUR ANNUAL MERTING OF THE SOCIETY I8 this yearat Washlugton, on the 19th inst., and {s one'which for all the officers, and mare especially for all of thoge who have been gradu- atea of West Polut, possesses unusual {nterest, and also, with very many of the latter, causes sincers regret, In all this great West, from every city and vllln;zc, there will hasten to Washinuton some oflk ceedings, The Socleties of the Tennessce and of the Cumberland are engaged fn erocting statues to the mcmuxi}y of thelr great deceased eom- manders,~—McPherson and” Thomas, the former of whicls 18 ahout to bie unvetled and.presented toits Soclety, 1tis mot simply the ofiicora of the Tennessee who will gather there, but those of the other great annies of the West aud of the Fotomac, “which have been so successfully commanded fu the President. It Is not either slmpl{l the mere annual meet- ing of the Soclety, or the nere unveiling of the statue, which gives to thls meeting at Washlng- ton unusua! intcrest, but it is hecause thare they all will meet and ioke officlal leave of thelr great cammander, who flrst guve Inspiration to the Armyof the Tennessec, opened to it {ts glorious career, aud gave hope to the Govern- ment, e it was who, ga it were, sprang from the volunteer pcople in thelr midst in the bum- ble ranlk of Captain, employed us mustering officer or fuurdmzbfldgca in'the early part of 1861, and who bas risen through n?l grades of "ronk upward g0 as to atain the higheat—TPresident—~in the gift of the people. Ile, as milltary commander and as President, has done all things with fafth- {fulness and honor, reflecting elory on the army Le commanded,—a glory in which eachoflicer and soldier fn all these armies particlpates. It fa also to meet there Sherman, that other great commander of the same armics, the friend and successor of Grant, who began with them at the heglnulng and remained ever with them to the end. OGN, TIOMAS AXD GEN, M'PHERSON are well worthy of the monuments which the Army of the Cumberland and the Army of the ‘Tennessce are creettug to their memorles, for better officers never commanded an nrmy, Thomns, of all others, somchow wound himeelf around the Iuuer affections o! afiicers and soldlers, whilst thoy conflded {n his skill, What the death of McPherson In the field caused to be sald of him, could with equal juatice be &nid of Thomas, Gen, Gront, in wrging the promotion of Gen, McPherson éwlmn before Vicksbutg), dealgnated him to the Presldent as *'ous of ‘tie_nbiest of cu;fvlncerl and most skillful of "Generals.” Wiien lio fell, in o lettor to McPherson's nch grandmother, Gen. Grant enld, ** Every oflicer und soldler who scrved under your grandson folt the highest reverconce for bis patriotisin, bis geal, his great and alinost unequuled ability, his amfability, and all the manly virtues that can endow o commander.” Aguln, in Marel, 1864, whon Gen, Grant was Jeaving the Army ot the Tencssee to go to the Potomac s Goueral ol the armies of the United Btatos, tw banding over the command to Gon, Sherman, his next in rank, in o farewell letter to the latter, he most feelingly referred to the woy hoe had beon suse tafned by all the ofiteers of s commaund, but reierring more esgccmly to the way Gen, thr- man and Gen, Mcl'hersod had co-oberated with him. Sald he: *Iwant . . . thexpress my thunks to you aud _Gon. McElierson, as the men tu whom, above all others, I feel Indebtea for whatover 1 hava had of success, o . . L feclall the gratitude this letter would express, giv- g it the most flattering constructlon,” Tueso tributes show these oficers, Thomns and McPherson, to be worthy of the honors shown them, It s, however, regretted by muny that oue grand monument could not lave been orveted Yor all those great and worthy men who died on the battledleld, or from wounds or diacases contracted there, on which thelr names could have been inseribed and their memories perpetuated, s was done for those under Dade, who were massacred by the Indians {n the early Florida war, and which thelr com- panious of Weat Polut erected thero und_hotd sucred In remembranee of thafr brave doeds. Howover much both "Thomas and McPhcrson dld, thero wore very nany who svrved fafthe fully und fell bravel { whose memories deserve to be forever borue [n remembranee us well ay those two, APILIL PIPTEEN YBARS OF CONTINUOUS SRRVICE Lo thy country, as commander of Its armies, amd then as comniander of the army and the navy of the United 8tates, U, B, Grant will, ero another mueting of thiz Suclety, to which hic belungs, have probably closed his oftivial N, and re- tired, us most othiers have done, o the private e of ueltlzen, There §s o general desire of theollieers of the Unlon ariny to go now to Washington at thls rounton and testify to thelr communder thelr contiuued reapect aud appro- bation for ull his grewt and varled acrvices as wllitary commnnder und s President. !‘l'ms weetiug of the Aty of the Teptiesses is Ol ESPECIAL INTEUEAT to atl the Wear Polut graduntes, becauss It ts not only the ocension of doing hunor to tha memory of one who stood first with them, but beeuus whilst the nation celebratus its Conten- nial thoy also celcbrato thelrs, It ds just 100 yeursshice Lord Sterling reported to Gen, Washe ngton the expedicucy of stopping furthor work o Fort Clinton on the plain_as indefensible, and In-filunlug that grand old Fort Patnom, now crumbling to ruins, putlowed by fo many mem- wries of Revolutlunary officers und Revoluttonu- ry struggles near by, where Washington, Put- uaty, Kuox, and others 8o often rested, 1t 18 ulsu just 100 years since the Kevolutjonary Con- gread, on Oct, 1, 1730, passed resolution to ap- potut 8 commitiee nstructed (o brng in & plan ol a militury ucudemy. One hundred veurs have aiBu just explred, mid one of the graduates has uehjoved the highest statfon fn the United Stutes and clused his dutles as Prestdent und as Uenertl 60 as to reficet the highesy bopor o the Institution wnieh educated hiu. Whitst West Point men, o il departinents of sefenee, ou all the great Works of ongivecring, nuve curved thelr nowes’ high up on the cape stone of thy tomple of honur, it lina not fallen to it lot of any number to achieve favor in the Congress of his country or clvtl sorvice, [lere. tofore it hus strafizely” happened, ere $his war, that Waet Point tuok pride in the achievemonts of Jeflerson Dayks, who bud attaiwed the high- ceb powitions sud achieved great credit, s Nepresentutive, as Seuator, ang s Becretary of Wur, Wust Foint rejofees now the tuore that the one who went up mghe.l bas been the Uulon puldier, Geueral, aud Preadent, U, 'S, rant. 'l‘hlu graduated men of West Point tannot but regret that THEI MORUMENT, commemorative of the worth and nilitary skitl of ghelr cowrades, hud not been ed amidat seencs 60 haflowed at West Point, which the dead Juvéd so well, and to which thelr thoughts srent back i uld the years of their lives. Could their spirits but express & wish it woukd te, duubtivss, to be pluced where they loved so well tu be, amidst the cfim&muluuo of their boyhood Wwho ure Lurled rouud the cadets' monuent, cer nterested in the pro- | desired to be Interred here,—~to have their mon- umnetits where thefr great deeds would ever he present, to ineplre to emulation the youth who will suceeed them, as do the monuinents to ‘Daders command, that of ths hero Bndgwlctghor e that of the Revolutionary hiero, Kosciusko, aplrits of these great and good men will not reat easy with the pollticlans at Washington, with whom they never had part or lot, and whers thelr memories witl be forgotten in the political strife, the bargains and corruptions of theplace; where the monuments subserve nu other pur- ose than to enhadce the value of thie corner- ots of gpcculators. It would have been a rand event for West Point to have celebrated er Centennlal by the ercction of these moni- menta there, and by the assemblage of the of- fBeers of this Alnta Mater, and the voluntecr ofticers, who had done such glorlous deeds, and schileved immortal honors. Cd W, —— EIGHTY-ONE-TON GUY, A Beventeen-Hundred-Pound Shaot Hurled . Seven Mlles, “The London Dafly News of Sept. 28 has the following: ' Guns, great and amall, are fired every day over the sands from this eolitary snd remote corner of Essex, and the Inhabitants of Its little town and garrison ara so accustoned to loud And sudden nofscs a8 to scarcely notice sounds which would torture the untrained ear; but to-day has been » day of dread, and its ropulation, to the last man, woman, and chfid, haa been all day in a state df nervous excite- ment and- apprehension as to the possibilitles attending the discharge of such an unwonted monster as the elghty-oue-ton gun, with fts 870 pounds of powder, and it THREE-QUATITERS-OP-A-TON BHOT, ! The trials were to have begun at 10 o'clock, but It was two hours later hefore the order was given to make ready, The loading apparatus worked admirably under the control ol about & dozen artillerymen, and the timerequired to run the shot and” cartridge down from tho maga- zing, and to ram both home down the muzzle of the gun, was barery five minutes. The loadfog- carrfage and derrick were then drawn under the chase or barre) of the gun, the fire-bullers of the gun-carriage bavinz been removed fin order to gain more space, the clectric tube was fnserted, and the bugle sounded to prePnru for action. The extreniely cautious betook themaclves to safe distances, every one gave tho gun a wide berth, aad most of the spectators’ gazed out ecawnrd, In the lope of catching sight of the wonderful projectile o ts flight. The gun, throug an alteration ~ In the programine, was Iafd st an angle ot scven degrees, by which the muzzle was to some extent clevated, nnd about 6,000 yards away o range party, conelsting of half a dozen guiners In awagon and two smounted Bergeants in charge, were posted to keep ob- servations, and signal by flags to the tlring point. An Aamiraity tug was sald to be en- gaged in warning intruders from the dangerous zround, but she wos not to be discerned among e many vessels which crowded the horizon, and contributed something of bazard to the day's experiments. There was no targdt to take aim at, but a stralght range had bean pepged out for about four miles, and the tramplng of horsemen had made the path of the shot very lezible for some distance. The bugle sounded the order *Fire,’ an officer in the instrument room touched a stud, THR CRAGR CAME, and then the 1,700-pound shot was clearly seen cleaving its way through the air to an atitude of apparently several hundred yards; then descend- {ng aud diminlshing until lost to view, untli, af- ter what seemned a long Interval, it struck the earth, throwlng up a voleano of mud aud water, and, bounding up again, to fall and bury frevstd with another splash- far beyond, It was after- - wards reported that the shot made its first cone tact at o distance of 4,037 yards, and that the rleochiet carried it about aa’fur again. The next consideration wus the gun, and how had the carringe withstood the upaccustomed strain consequent on the hl‘x\wr clevation. Both gun end carriage wors in perfect condition, and then came a question as to what had heea the consequences of the atmospleric disturb- ance, An- officer went round to take i faventory of the damnnges, and the sot- diers' ivlyea came about him _with dis- mul records of broken windows aud shattered cellings. Most of the cottages along the sea- frout liad one or two broken panes of glass, acveral had thefr rooms littered with plaster from the walls and cellings, and one or two had their window-anshes blown completely out, but the most remarkable effeets were manifested at o greater distance. The plate-glass_window of Mr, Cause, grocer, opposite Mr, Kirkwood's canteen, fully 500 yards from the gun, was utter- I{‘ destroyed, and the glass, & quarter of an inch thick, scattered about the road, The barrack rate was burst open and its lock broken, several sashes hnd vanished, and there were broken windows In cvery strect, Buch subscquent round added sumething to the damage, but the greatest mischicf wns nucessarily done at the first discharge. Four other routids wete fired ot the same eluvation, namely, seven degrecs, and cach liot fell withit a few’ et of the same distance, two appearing to bury themselves at once, and the “other two boundiug after No, 1 fnto the German Ocean. The gun was then depressed Lo an angle ot only one degree, and two shots were then sent skimming over the water making ‘ducks and drakes’ seyeral times bofore they disappeared. Tae sccond was obaerved splashipg up foam at a dis- tanee of 11,500 yards, angd nearly seven emiles from the sliose, and na the * twist? {n the pro- fuctlle Rave it a conetant tendency to the right, t scomed to got uuplenunutl{ near to some shadowy-looking steamera in the hazy distance. 1t was consequently somewhat of arellof toa portion of the spectators when the order was givon to cease firlng for the day. * The gun, carringe, aud all the arrangements for the firing stood the test well, the only de- fect belug o sitght depresslon In tue rocoll line after the fourth round, but this proved of no dlzadvantage.” ——— A Practienl Witness in Court. Virginia (Nev.) Chranlcle. In Cox's court there was & charge of azsault against that old offender and potice favorite, “John Doe” and Mr, Dickson, the attorney, was examining o witness. Dickson—ilow hard did ho shake the man when lie grabbed him | Witness—I don't know. Pretty hard. Dickson—\Vhat do you eall pretty bard " Witness—Well, ft was pretty hard—thut's all say, Dicksun—Come, now, you surely lnve senge enough to let the Courl” know what you call s pretty hard," Witness—I guess [ can show the Court, It was like this— Here the witness roso from his seat, and, z‘)rlu;:lng upon the astonished attorney, grabbed Ui by tiie collar, and, with o strong, Impulsive Jerk, fanded bim on the floor. Then he gathers ed ndm up and fopped Wm across a chalv; then he hegan to bang him over the floor, jam him up agatust the wall, and batter him uruand over tee benehes, - ‘“Ilold on—1 understand?" shouted tho law- yer, “'This §s how he fetched him,” retorted the Witneas, giving him another 1ift, **Won't the Caurt rrle out s answer? 1 ob. Seet,” sald Mr. Dickson, eatehing nis breath, 11 you withdraw the q]lu:-u(m, all right,' sald this Judge; and, springing down froin his seat, he collured the witness sud took biin off. Wihen he aggaln mounted the bench, he remarks ed: “Thewltuess appears to have Introduced his tostimuny, but I &n- rule that the jury iz noru his answer.' 0 , Ly this timo the spectators were In o convule flon of laughter, and the attorney retired to brush his clothes, Tho cuse was disinlssed, Btrengtl of the Negro Vote, The negro vote of the United States numbera about 670,000, and Is distributed ainong the sev- eral States as follows Alsbania . + 80,400 Nebraska, Arkanuaa, 2,100 Novada, .. i Califoraia, . %60 New Hampshire, < 1, 700,New Jersay, ..., wee_A.200[New York,, +.+ 14,700 North e UL, 10000, b,200[0regon ... 4.4 Pennsyivanin, Livoryia. Tilinoly . . B :n‘ West Virginka, ., 8,500 « 80,70¢ Total suuy e B30, 110 REUN N e ——— What Stopped the Mill, _A few days sinee, Mr, Evan Stov Vulley, Bucks County, Pa.,while w mill, noticed that the mneflmvry wea 101 work- ug as it should do, and kept “petting slower. Floally ft slmost stopped. o jmmediately proceedod to investigatc the mutter ald ascer- taln the cause, Hx ratsed the stoues, inspected the machinery, anf dld other things without avall, Fiually he went to the water-gats and ralsed it up. “Fludiug thut the water did not dow ae (a3t 24 It shiould, he inserted s arm (0 he race, and, to his hopror, pulled ouy ons ot Minosota’ Masienippi. s Missourl.... i hils own children, aged sbout 8 years, v was, to all uppearances, dead, but, 18 he was carry- ug it to the house, {ts noss ‘wgmn to bleed, unil the volor catie back to lte fave Tho child wus reatscituted, und 43 @t preseut as well as if uuthing had over happened. LRow loug the A MERCILESS WOMAN, Elsie Hollenback’s Skill in Torturs ing Another of Her Sex. Some Samples from the Letters in the Catskill Scandal Case, Kew Tork World, 0c1. 13, It will bhe remembered by the readers of the World that several Indictments were found by the Grand. Jury of Green County last May againat Allce or Elsla Hollenbeck, upon the charges of having sent through the mail to Mrs. Mary F. Wetmore, wife of Dr. Calvin H, Wet- more, of Catekill, Ittiers of & scurritous na- ture, charging that lady with all manner of in- decent offenses, and boneting of the writer's criminal intimaey with her husband. It having become understood that the case was to be brought o for trfal 4o Catekill Wednesday last, A large sudience gathered in the old-fashloned County Court-Hause, and patiently waited throughout the unsenttmental hearing of & canse tn which it waa vespectively clalmed by learned counsel for prosecution and defense that an Infuriated man had pursued a harmlcss bull with s pocket- knife anainflicted s wound upon said antmal, and that an infurlated bull had pursued a harimn- lezs man and Inipaied {tsclf upon the point of said pocket-knife, After this trial had been coucluded, late fn the evening, The Peaple va. Hollenbeck was, to the great disgust of the au- dience, put overto & apecial sesslon of the Cuurt, about the 20th of November, THE WISTORY OF THE BCANDAT. 1t e clalmed hf Dr. Wetmore's friends that the case will never he brought to trial; but Mr, Anthony Comatock s that, come what may, his task of de: fending the purity of the United States malls shall be performed. Mra. Dr. Wetmore fa a pleasant, amlabte lovking lady, who, upon the death of her fitet husbaiud, sume nineteen Yyears ago, married the Doctor, and lived bap- Plly with bim tor a bricf season. Dr. Wetmore s a dork-complexioned, amooth-spoken man, about 47 years old. About ten years ago hie any his wife were Nving at Leeds, near Catskill. Near hdv, at a scttlement called Lime street, there dwelt in a humble condition of life o Jam- {ly of Gertnans called Hollenbeck. There were thiree girts in the family, of whom Elsle, then a girlof 18 or 19, was the youngest, They were described by the Doctor “to his wife after his first professional viait us * very lively girla.” A few years pasced on, and the Doclor, moving from Leeds, cstablished bimself {n good prac- tee in Catskill, In the meantime Elsle .had Ifkewlse removed to Catskill, mklnx{ up ber ahode as servant in the family of a Mr, l;luck- ley‘ aud becomlng a frequent visitor at the Doc- tor's oflice. About this time, s Mrs, Wetmore clalins, she discovered her husband’s infidelity. 8he attempted to put astop to what she bad ducorarcdhtuerqby incurring the deadly hatred of “Elsie.’ 21518 NOLLENDECK. Miss Alice (or Elsie) Iullenbeck stands six fect high in her stockinge, and has the promi- nent cheek-bones and the plercing black eyes of an Indian damael. She could not by any means Le called a handsome woman; buia falr-clear complexion, set in 0 dary a frame of baur, gives her a striding and not unprepossessiug appeare once. ‘This [s the woman who stands azeuscd of having written and seut to the wife of the man whose mistress she was the letters, some of which arc given betow. According to Mrs. Wet- more, these lotters cover a perjod of ncarly three years, and were recelved on an average of one o week, Often they came unscaled; Iu- doud, 1t {s sald they fnvariably did, untl) the Inte fostmaster decfded (hnvlufi read one or two) that they were unfit for the eyes of his young employes, and thereafter himself sealed them. Why Mrs, Wetmore recelved them so long o sle lence, remains to he learned upon the trial, Fie nally, however, the matter came tothe knowledge of the 8oclety for the Buppression of Vice, and Miss Hollenboek was nrrested on the double charge of libel and of sending obsccue matter through the mafls. Upon the arrest Mrs, Wet~ more left her husband, ¢ because,” she says, » after the girl's arrest T was ofrald to live with the Doctor,! A few extracts from these re- markable letters may be appended to Hllustrate the nature of Elsfc’s attack upon Mrs. Wet. more. They are all In the snme handwriting— o wretched serawl, mispelied and ungramatical, but fine to a degree (n devilishness. AND TIE LETTERS SiIE WROTB. Tlere Is an extract from the first one. The Mr. Wygant referred to was a dentlst, who has alnce removed from Catskill: fndeed “there Is scnrcely o letter but contains the name of some citizen, bank President, lawyer, or merchant of theutmost reapectabiifty with whom the poor woman {s accused of Improper Intimacy ¢ Well, Mary, 1 hope you had a good time yester. day running wround town and reporting that I and the Doctor were in Hudson Saturday. You make & langhing-stock for Catskill, That was o mistake, 1 was with Wygant {n Albany, and stopped ot the same placa you nnd him stopped at, but did not go Dy the same name. The * Bill"" referred to In the following was a Lrother of Dr. Wetmore's, who at the time was very {l] and hns since dicd: Mary, T meant to knock h—) out of yor Saturday if you followed me, Did you go to sce Hill, or were {;:u looking for W flnnn Cal says [Cal menna Dr, Wetmore] when 111l dies ho s alng to buy that place for o concort-saloon, and then he say® "”{ {meaning her brother-in-law's family] can't harbor Wygant's woman any niore, . .. If 1 wos you, Mary, I'd_be glad when he dies, be. cause Cnlynnn‘t tell anything more that happened on the Chatham traln.” 1¥ce Cal often. 1 was out home and Cal came out every Sunday night. APPLYING TIHE TORTURE. The following letter, Mrs. Wetmore nsserts, was dirceted in ber husband’s hartdwriting, The first part of it Is devoted to scurrilous abuse: Mary, when yondraw s pistol on me take good atm, for 1 have a little dog that barka seven times, Two weeks 830 you was in church, and 1 see you, #0 while Mrs. Buelln was praying 1 gotup and wont down o fee Cal, for of coursc [ know hie wis alone. Of couree we had a nice time. Why did you not come down? Istayed an hour with Cal 1n your ruom. ‘This 15 of a coarser sort: Mary, when you follow me yon had hetter ar. rauge your earthly business, for your watching and dodging will then be over, Thon 1| will et Cal put & mirhle over your grave with thle lascription: +* Here lies the hady of old dodge; nhie hns dodged all good; she dodred all bad, but 'all_her dodging waa In vain; sho could not dodge tho devil." “HE GAVE ME A NEW NONNET—I SEE YOU .. WEAR YOUR OLD ONE." ‘The following (s n fair examplo of the ox- quisite taunting with which all the letters abound Mary, 1 thought Iwonld write you again for a Christmas present. [ hear good people way that Cal does nurlclfll{ right not to disgrace hlnaclf by guing with youi he can do better, you knuw, for 1 ' not forsaken him, You bave not sven what s Desutlfnl preseut ] bave had of material for a new bonnet. | aee you wear your old ona yet, 1 sup. pose Cul did uot feel able to get two at the wame limt. and of course I would not go without, nor wonld Cal huve me. " PLEASR TELL CAL." # The letters also contain mcesagee to the Do tor, A8, for example: Mary, It ls & pleasare to write to you, and there. fora I'will write you all the news, Cal and me had a eplendid enow-storm ride. The litle snow. starm wus bad, but the lttle snow-storm that ruged withuot was nothing 1o us, for everything was lovely within the carrlage. Mury, will you pieuse tell Cal that | don’t care Lo go 10 Lime atrect on Satprdsy night, but will xo on Bunuay night at 8:20. " That will be earlier than tha thne you went wilh Wygant. Tell Col [ am much obliged for the Christmas present ho seat mo thle morniug, Also: Mary, we arc going (o the Prospect to-nichts wa will hate a fne Time, 'Tell Cul the hoy fetched the letter &11 rigbt to-duy. — Please teil Cal A7 it ralna [ will not meet bim toenlght, for 1 d» not want 1o spoll thio new dres hia bought we: wo, If 15 ralus tu-nlght, tell hiw to come up to thy heuvss, This {6 nll at preacnt, with lovota Cal, INPEUNAL MALIONITY, There are all kinds of Jetters, Here f2 anoths 1 er apecles: Mary, | thiuk you are sworse (hsn the beasts of the el or Tha fawde of the air, fur they wil) taks tholr colupanion’s part, but it scems » delignt for you to uln),'mce your hustand. No matter how inuch paint and " halr-dys X{Du use, yuu stil) are nuthing bul Wygant's casi-off. . . . Alter this month I'm golug o | ay. snd 1ehall tainly expect Cal up every week, wo piease el lum come And vblige e, Yuu can come aloug uf you choose, bat I'ta thinking you wou't. BY_GOD, 1 MEAN TO DO IT—KI$S CAL FOR ME. Oue more Wit show another speciea of tieud- fahnces: Mary, T have almost been the means of partin) wman and wife, and, by God, | medn to accumplinhy i inthe end, Yoa may depend upon il, you tave not sven the worst of 4§ yet, for [ stali doall I can to destroy your happiuess. . . . Well, Mu:. y0u can't hindur na, for we will have youz man in o t the end and you can't Lutp yoursell. What are you poing Lo do ‘about lt? A'd—n goud-by. Kisw Cal OrF e, Theso are fair specimens, and the Jeost ob- Jectiouable of sumethiug lke YW letters re- ceived Ly Mra. Wetmore. The refusal of thet luly to deceda to o money settlement may in thelr light be now understood. Atpresent M, Wetniore lives with her siater, and “the Doctor cotitinuits in the cojoyment of a lucrutive prac- e, e ——— A Brave \Womun, Toraute Glode The Plctou Timss ives the folluwing accouut teele oue bad Leen fn the water uo ose kuows. | of the goriug to death by a bulk of Mr. Aaron P. Cameron, of Hilller, on Saturday, 16th ulthmo: ' It appears that Mr. Cameron was taking a bull from the field to the atabie, When near the door of the stadle the hrute beeame enraged and ynate an at- tack upon Mr, Cameron, who ran fzom haa and at the same thoe called bis dog und endray ored to urge him toan attack upon the hatl Mrs, Cameron happened Lo hear her hustnnd's call to _the daf, and at once ran to his asaiste ance, Wihen she reached the spot $he Infurfated beast had knockerd Mr, Cameron down and wus @oring aod treading upon hin 1o a frightiul maunner, Mr. Cameron had struggled Lard to defend himself, and had caught hold of the ring inserted in the animal's nose. This he held with a death-like grip when Mrs, Cameron came up. In an lnatant the brave and noble woman toak In the whole situsation, and made an effort, Lo rescue her husband thal can onlfcbnllnnn our wander and admiration, She with & great cffort released Mr, Cameran's grip upon the ring, and, taking a firm hold upon It herselt, lterally forced the bull away, and as it were llwmllr dragged him to the Held again, where she fastened him §n. There was no one to as. st her except a (ittle boy, who was able o do nothiug inore than open ond close tho gate. She then returned to her husband, and cargied him, brulsed and mutilated, to the house. The saddest feature of all is that the vicious brute had done its work only too well, Mr. Cameron survived but a short time," ——————— ENGLAND AND THE EAST. An Uncomfortable Positlon—Mr, Gladstone's Propusitions~Lord Derby's Propol The Uncertainties of Foreign Affairs—En= giand and Itussin, orrespondznce New York Times, Loxpoy, Sept. 30.~Oplinion at the present moment {s very much In suspense with regrard to the war, and it would, of course, be Wile to aend epcculations by mail on the prulnhnuy of events the a:tual course of which vou will learn by telegraph. Evergthing will depend on the action of " thc Bervians, and the inference which _may be ~drawg {rom it as to the policy of Ruesia. Of course, the antf-Turks arc as anti-Turkish as ever, and inafst upon what {a practically the aholition of the Turkish Government in iis European terris tories, and equally, of course, the fast believers in the Guvernincut arg as much bellcvers as be- fore. But within the fintermediate area of opinion doubt 1s the chief feature, Mr. Glad- stunc’s propositions are sure to be ltnpractica- ble, and caleulated to drive the Turks into o fit of desperate deflauce, while Lord Derby's pro- sals, a3 far as they are understood, ure houglit to be inadeguate to the oceasjon. “ 1 do not think that I could give you a better idea of what moderate and thought{ul opinion is on this subject at the moment than by the follow- lnkz extract from the Economist ! We cannot think Lord Derby's mode af answer- ing the popular English demiand of the moment more satisfactory 1hsn the modes which he op- ! poses, and which be abows to he unsound. Nor can we accept his promise of peace ns at all more trustworthy., The'evil e far deeper than can he cured in this way. The Tarkish Empire 1a break. ingup, and the snccesgor or euccemors to it can only fle fixed by long and painful conflict. A tem- porary truce might be arranged, as Lord Derby sketches, though even this we doubl, but the per. manent difiicuities of the subject will lust for our generation, and it Is among the firat dutfes of En- glish etateamen to see that we do not necdlessly thrust ourecives upun o scenc of strife where we have no object to gatn and no duty to perform. This may be taken as the opinlon of the more reflecting part of the commeretal world, 1 may al50 mention thot the Eéonomist expeets another car of cheap wheat, 1n no case, it says, docs t appear likely that there can be any great rise in price, unicss it be on the eve of next harvest, i a deficiency should then be threatened, Except in regard to the prospects of the war and the progress of fire-arms, soclety here is very staguant. Trad® has Indeed shown some fechle nymrloma of reviyal, butthe general condition of things I8 much the same. The un- certalnty which within the Jast day or two has become 'so conepleucus in forelgn” affalrs, and the fear that Russia {s about to assume an ottl- tude swwhich will place England in o very uncom- fortable ahd embarragsing position, hes tended to check the political ferment which Las for some time been going on jo this country, and which has been real enough in its way, though fts futensity and expanac have been greatly exag- gerated. As Ihave said, nobody knows wit to think, and the spltators are frightened into sflence, * Buth Mr, Gladstone and Lord Beacons- fleld are greatly to blame for thelr rash lan- usge, The cflcct of the movement against ’f‘u:ficy, of which Mr, Gladstone bas taken the lead, lias been to give danzerous encouragement 1o the Servians and Russlans; and, on the other land, the contemptuous nnd gibing toues in which Lord Beaconsficld spoke of the samng people_ns having been utterly foilol, and erushed, and reduced to an abject suppllant for Euglish_help, bava also had thie effect of atimu- lating thelr aesire to show what “mf can do, ‘There s still a cry for an autumn sessfon; but, unless Russia makes some startling move, it Is very unlikely that Parliament will meet before the usual timne, 1t Is wel) known that the Lib- erals are not in & position to take oftice, and that whatever moy be the dissatisfaction of the na- tlon with the Government, the latter has a stanch and sufficient majority fn the Hounse of Commons to reslst any sttack. More- over, the curlous position which Mr. Gladstone has ‘assumed paralyzes the Liverals fn the recavery of their political orgonizatfon, 1le has resizned the leadership, and yet ho continues to take the lead wheneyer the fancy selzes him. Lord Ilartiugton, the nominal head of the Lib- crals, hns to stand asfde when its former chlel comes forward, and there {s no one to keep the divided scctions of the party together. More- over, Mr. Gladstooe, who ol his Tife hos been o wild, erratic creature, continually jumplng out of windowa rather than take the trouble to go quictly down stalrs, is now perfectly emanci- lmu.-d from every kind of check and control. Ie has no colleagues around with whom he can consult, and the consequence is that ft is Impos- siblu to suy ot any mopient what he may or ray ot say or do, Under these clreumstances it {8 foreseen that if there were now to be a meeting of Parliament {t would do no pood, slnce the Government {8 secured ngainst defeat by its command of votes, and the only result would, therefore, be to give thie Liberafs a fatal oppor- tunity of exhibiting at once thelr impotence and thelr cxasperation, and wenkunlnf the repu. tation of the Government abroad without strengthenfug thelr own position at home. — ——— A Prosidential Joke, Jihaca (. ¥.) Journal, At thereception given by President White to Tresldent Grant, s a professor was being futro- duced to Grant, the person presenting him ro- morked: 4 Ar, President, liera s a man (o whom you will probably be somneiwhat Interested.” # How soi't 11is father, leaving a leg behind Wim, went to the Wur us n surgeon. Then this gentfeman, his unly son, ltkewlse onllsted as o surgeon ns suoh u3 he graduated. Next his two slsters, whose husbands were already In the War, one as Captain ot engincers and tiie other aa o “sur- Heou, also went as nurses, And finally, the mother ehut up house ana went to burse wounded sodfers.” The professor {o question, who wus fidzeting ond bllasmn-wlm cmbarrassment, quickly ree wmarked: #Yes, we were all there; the whole fawnjly," “'The whole famnily all thero!™ queried the President, with well-fvigned astonishtucot in the tone. i Y Yed, slry all thare.™ < “Why,' sald the cunqueror of Lee, his stern countenance relaxing with something very like asmile, L understand Jou tw sy thae the Inthier lft a ley al fiome.” Qur readers, especially students, will enjoy this ieldent none the leas when they Know tiat this family of more than Bpartun patriotisin was i!m of the popular Professor, Dr. Ziba Hazard otter. A Wise Man of Weatth, Padadeipkia Telegraph, The Duke of Sutherlnnd, us (s well known, s a mlghty potentatu In s;mlund, where herelgns with undisputed snd beneticens sway over a vast tereitory, —vast, that or Svatlaud, Much of Lis donialy, however, 15 Larren aud anprodues tive, and avout four years o he projected a schiome to bring this Uscless Inud into » state of enltvatton e aelected 2000 acres of witd and useless moorland, and undertook to subdue (¢ by steamiepower “The lund wos 30 swampy and tony tust It wos Jmpossible 1o do anytbiug with 1t by ordiniary appliances, tncluding even the commor steam-plot, But he had constructed a plow of an extraordinary character, with which sl twelve atesti-cuiiucs he hiaw converted his 3,000 acres of uslces tand Into four excellent furins, on Which admtrable ¢crops are cow grow. ing. Guod houses have been Luilt, the delds ciiclosed, ana she desert has been mudo 1o blos- sot a3 the Tose,—but oy the tearful cost of £30 wo aure, or §00,000 for the whole. S 1oweslidos In Utah. In suminer, Cottonwood District is the most delfebiiu) of coul retreats, in winter, u lofty anow-bank, with bicre und thera s gray projece tion. In the winter suushine it would, but for tha occastonal putches of timber, present » palu- fully dnzzling expanse of white; und a4 ft 18, aurious stow-blinduess Is not uucommon, When awarm south wind Ulows for 3 day or two, there [s greater danger of snow-slides.” 1o Jane uury, 1573; the suow full o without inters misslou for eigbt duye, tliing the deepest gulches, futo which ~tho few stray an- imuls pluufed oud floundered helplessly, In the cireular mouutaln bolluws, with a good growth of timber, the suow drifted from ten to furty fect dwep, leaviug thelargest trece looking Distant rettlements were quite frolated, and the narrow passes thersto Howaver, In the brat- ke mere shenby. the slde chamiers aml vaw g stacked full of ora a8 fast as It In a few more dnys the sun came out bright and elear, and, though the thermom- «ter rarely rises ahove the freczing-point during the first two mooths of the year in the hi) catnps, yet the warmth looten the snow not where Uhe alope was great and the tlinber not sufficfent Lo hind it,. avalonches of from one came thandening Into before ~them. et swept off that part of Alta ottonwaod, 1ying on the sln) the timber of thelr own cabins or emothered in the snow, and man burfed five or six hours, unti) relic them out. One woman was found sitting up- n her eabin, with a babe In her srms, dead. The cabin tad withstood the avalanche, but the snow poured In at the doora and winduws, and they were froren or smothered. Thirty-five lives were Jost in Utan that winter by snow-siides. Six men were burled [n one gulch 1,000 fect under packed fce Seurch for them was, useless, at length the breath of June dissolved their snowy prison, and the Lodies were revealed, fresh and fair as if th brwc,fil. H, Beadle in ———————— Fight With a Catamaunt, The Honesdale Chronicle says that Gegrge of Scott, Wayne County, Penn., while rough the woods In that township one day fast week, un his way to hunt pigeons, saw crouching onthe limb of a maple-tree, ahout ten feet from the graund, a large catamount, and thoughtlessly fired a load of shot at the ankmal. 1t dropped to the rround and glared sava, ot the hunter, Glilesple eluded 1t, and quls put the contents of the other barrel into its lace und eyes. This Ulinded the infuriatcd Least, but it wus not {nclived to surrender, and sorang about wildly after its assallant, by the sound of his feet. s gun, and by several heavy Llows succeeded in rendering it unconscious, when he'cut it The catainount was three fect four lnches long, and weighed sixty pounds. e 10 a hundred ncres One of the lar City, Little Cq had just ceased 1o rper's Magazine for He clubbed it with hroat with a kolfe. A Rush of Buffalo, Mr. Joaquin Miller tells a curlos Californla story, which recalls that of the cattle in Harte's *‘Gabriel Conroy.” He describes an emigrant train passing over the pralrie and meeting 8 herd of butlalo at full apeed and moved by one of ; the apparently insane Impulses which somo- ¢ tines seize tlicse animals. fimmense herd had passed—there was nv wagon, there were no men, oxen, horses left: vven their bodles were obliterated, The one survivor Wwas a woman, who was carried out of the horrfe ble struggle on the back of one of the herd— i kuew: her first consciousness' ‘was that she stood in safety upon a littie lallock and the whirlwind had gone by, o ——— s CITY REAL EST. B e B e SE e ur Rt s U U In an {ustant the Twa Etate-st., lots, enst front, betwees Thirty-sixth and Thirty-seventh-na, Will be suld at & greatmacrifice for earh, ‘Tho owner, 8 nou-resfdent, orders theis closed out a4 uralan abstract. AMUEL GRHR. ul Estate and L SUBURRBAN REAL ES']'A'I“P.. ALE—WHO WANTS A BEAUTIFUL LITTLE suburban home for aboni one-third its value, and et t¢ for the game money that you Yow oileriok Loused sud lous in my L 00U, 80 nnd the balance fn secure une of thei before bound to scll off ali my house new in the apring. OR SALII-$100 WILL BUY one block Trom depo; Chicago: $15 down and $3 mohi own free; abytract ) BROWS, 142 Lazalle MEI)UNTII\’ REA FORBALE—x32 3N ouuty. 1., with 200 o ROOU Liurses. reapers. muwers, rakes, planters, eic.; sl the crops on the farnl, ramed dwelilng, bamp, crius 00d fences, Iasting waters farm, i log, Wil be ‘s0ld a1 83U per B N o S N EFINANCIAL, HMOUNTS TO LOAN AT VERY LOWEST RATER on Cty or farm sécurity: larke amounia at 7 and Angopereont, M. WICKS 0 Tor rent? 1 am ferent suburhs at payment down of Trom 8100 to gofie, for' I am ap, and UTIFU anze, 7 miles from cneapest property wau une of the best 0w it furins In 1inols. 14, 146 Madlson, MADE ON_DIAMN LAUNDERS priva ark. footns 5 sud staliliabicd 1834 WATCIHLE, DIAMONDR. he reguisr rates, JACU) AN ON CITY INPROVED PROPER- 5 it Unlon ¥ e Compaty, 113 Carkeat. - DN;BUYII-IrdDI,\“JOAy éz’;f'fl“s (il’ !‘!.Nfl TO 84,0 n Ampro 3 N Tackdos, ST ek, 1TOPerLY NEY T0 LOAN=AT 8 PEK CEXT OY FATIVE in 1iitaols. 3oney on hand. no dela; title and good sécurity, * B, BANFORD, M SOLICE, ~ FINENER, clalims bought st fal? ral inoney loau offce, 374 State: O giinoa s £ 5,000 at 8 per cen B0t bt cents )AL per cent, 2,600 8L 8 per ceuty vod Lmy Taved Cliteago property: money In hand; 1, mortage touas, 114 D FAND 8 PEICCENT=MUNEY 70 LOAN IN S s, Ol Lproved city proje Toum_10, 153 "Lasull 4,020 and ipward, 1A EV TO LOAN ON CITY gLoor uver; commin & BOND, 1 Washiggion-st. 7 0t cugy or Hyde iar| ‘ashington-st. TS°TO SUIT, TO LOAS At current rates. TUI SGANT DIICK 0TS ANENET dOUSEANY "[o heNT=eis PRI i Va; refercuce required. VILEL RENT FL house, Harsard an Tnquire at Bas NT—TWO,_NEW 51 allu: r‘uu,\'j' TIOURES, o Elven Nov. Aseni, BT0 wnd 272 TO A RMALL rliome Slunday 010 BOOMS, MODEUN near Cotiage Urove: X 1\ AND BAREMENT s, Wit ait muodera un wad Fout low. " Apyly 82 % 2 e, excellent locatt LeEWES, No. 245 Noi r-A FLOOR OF 81X TOC ouseRecping. 1o Thom psot aMCro Hprovel Y WANTED-MALE HELP, “' \\Tgémpl;,‘menl Agencies, ASTED-0 TIE AND WOND CIlOPPERS, 10 forthe nineries, 8 farm s, & vie. ¥ ACANGELL, comor of Lake. to erkerors: ANTED=50 TIRMARE x .0 WA Ton:roen 1on TMiains roe Tares Ao DRI ern A, ¢ th Clark-st., op-atairs, VW ANTED=16 TiAlLRG DORERS, 2% TIF: makers, 23 conl. o SPENDECK & OB, 33 Wedt Tamsolphar © oF - 1l Miscolinneotn. ANTED—$300 A MONTH 18 A CERTAT A Ao TR A CERTATSTY, TO MANUFACTURING CO.. 17 Tfibane Datidin TANTRD — TWENTY-FIVRE COAL. ATIET ] “ ihe couatr; M L“lhiflflffls 70 ®oinlo ‘\ J ANTRED=MENSWE WANT TO UIVE 5, Al package n'lll‘l FAch, ta 3, 0 men to engage permanently in th the United States, Wa g ir week during the year, _Aadre: VY AKmin_SU, wirLoTiesr oy ] ot a chiance to make wagea by cafling on 1Y DE TS, Touse. 110urs, 71094 1, and 7t o *© oA VWANIED=PARTIES TO HANDLE THEIR O canit in 8 Jight, prafitahiebuai o ntlon e, Esob by oo Somii e v VW ANTED=MEN 10 55 roms jarge and amall ELTY COMPANT: ANTED — SAL| MAN -~ WELL ‘ with the Lous }flrnllh'lll"““ and 'll\;'l!AE‘n trade of Chiicagn. To the right PATLY & permancy (’.“(l&r}n:'.llli I'KJ) given, Address L. K. Ine“]“'s & Ot ANTED= X TOOT AND §M0F, BALRSNAN ‘V 1l goods 10 the States of ulnnnrl’."}nfll"m 113 i‘&‘.’ n;g;r.eb'e“‘- u:!nm!l wu!t'n htht trade !Iu m:n ¢ bt Tirateciaas, relinbie meu 1 s Adireisorapy 0 0o We ittt S e VWASTRD=SALESMAN—TO RELL. 0N COME: Add sfon a ifne of slippers (n the Northweaters Stai chix . O, Box 137, Ly, pase, " ouere Sulcd “n\?:'r 2 Ioqutre st f,, ANTED_FEMALE HELP, e Domesticn. NTED-A GIRL TO 1O RITCNRN N iS50 Ok {1 14 oo pac Tor ArARKS | wiu wantatoifve in a suburban village. Ad- ; ARTIELRS, et ., Foom 1 A Y IN A CROCKERY STORE ieiath, T e Rktian i dre A3, Tribune utlice, TANTE, HERFECTATILE GINL TO WORRK I o T, S S o VVASTED=A GInt 70 1 AL lousks VWARTEDG Qs 10 o GeSERAL louse FANTED=ACOSIPRTEST GITtl, SER ‘V hous work. Apoly ati7e A\Illfll(l’};(n,!ll (’)E\EnAL Nenmstrenuon. “YASTI’.D—OSE GOOD_ TRIM 140 Toaking. 16 Sontn Clurpae L& FOR DI Mincellnnecouns, ANTED-LADIES AND GENTLEMEY O n WA TR R RES AND GENTLENE OF noot L MR et 5 ¢quc: ADply 8t 10) Went Smlison s, oo Lo LT eawAle. e e ——— SITUATIONS WANTED — MALE. P e SR L s dond LS '‘Crisdos. SITUA'I‘ION WANTEU—BY A PRACTICAL CUT- Ler of slx yeam' cxperience. Go Adarcan . BT HAMMEIL Liverty. borc creoco givea. J_{al{é‘]:_!ol‘s WANTED.FEMALLE. Domestics. SITUATIOFS WANTED~1 WOULD LIKE TO SAY touy many patrona that 1 sm Lomo aud dolng usiness ut iny pew oftice, 00 Btateat., the laniest And must eleganily Sited up male and (eimale employment e el M, e bt R artm arge. Male del RO E RCRARIAR: reniare nJE‘.’.‘,"!fi‘iu?i’:’K‘:‘{““ Two otlices inono, Norilwesicru_Empioyment Ottices SIgATION Taspens oY AcourTY prar, cond wark and sewini, ) Food ‘refcrence. | Plense call ak 1045 1adisosayr 1ot JITCATION WANTED=RY A Gl N GIRL T0! e AT Y, 5 A AN O TO Ly. Apply Mondsy and Tuesday st 933 btato-at., upe ratrs.” J. T, - Nenmstrouses. ITUATION WANTED-IT A TOUNG WOMAN TO | 20 810 take care of chlldren, of secona k. West Taylor-at, _Good reference. RuE 8 Employment Agencios. ITUATIONS WANTED-GOOD GE! N, NOT-. e Sedlot. wmd ChosimaC paaAR: WSO ar 74 8L, Mrs. BALEHAM'S ofll S ITUATIONS WWANTED-FAMILIES IN W. ok Fond Scandinasian and Ocr a an Temale help con b suppited at MitS. D S ullice, 80 31 waukee av: BOARDING AND LODGING. West Nide. ‘)3 S8OUTH PEQRIA-ST.. NEAR WABIINGTON— - Nlcely-furnislied rooins with very best buard, \n 2 private bourudiust- BOusC. 0 3 ANG £3.50 po el LGy auiets nad convi Ciocars, Tl ‘1(),1: BOUTH DESVL. —FOR MENT, K b):ely furplshed l Dl’PWllll&'{..’lfl? lal xm s, with ur without bosrd. =2 FAST VAN DTRE STATE-ST.— T6 Hand o 5 b 3 18 Sarats Ihdies or genu 0 85 ber weak Hoteis, 4 door +0! onron-rl, 1thin o s walkof Moody sud Sauky rnacie, Fheedto 81,50 pet day: 1 ta €1 e oM BOARD WANTED. JROARD_IN A DESIGARLE LOCATION BV tieuisn snd wife: g it lwunfi-{n‘g UYHA;PI 2] el Toons fron fest of Yoferences cun be given, Adureds B Thibune office, ¥ WABASH-A A (AR CHANGE Foi 21 eating-house a; hotel. .0 Box3ui Lo 7Ol SALE=A COMPLETE: DISTIELEIN IN COo County. near the ity imita, witl) bout 4 acres o Rrounds can be goL ready 10 1D @l once: capaciey o 5,000 galle » B 3 c 5 i o™ doy ke "l N3 JFOR BALESTHE §T0C{ANIT NACHINEITE U1 A ety A g R ST A e Lo e alrady iy euth A Sons gAves for BTl AduFess & S0, THhanG mlier: ™ 701t SALE s JE=FOR SOUTIl SIDR eapacity, 250 to 300 o {Vaaran ALEZS "HAILEOAD . r purtl uiara, addrees XCHANG! nproved real esiste, & borkepacking- b dafi! AR e Fareya fo, A L TS Chicago, 'id e L HAVE $150 TO PLACE IN BONME LIGIT DUSTS e, or will luan au empluyer that miuount for s good sitiation; nermancncy wiors deajratie than salsry. Sovarraiof work. O A, bosUtbee Box 4, Cuamde n, 0. o TE WAVE FORTT WUSINESS CHANCES ON WAL (Y PR, TAT v hats 70 Lasalterst., Thom 14, T TURTGAT, 701 SALT—FINT. TONED BTEINW Goxa § Qo e SR Eiraes, JON F YOU WANT TO RENT A PIANO, G Bt He makes ventiog a Foecialt, st near Ads ed 1850, 'O, RENT=NEW T-0CTAVE VTANGS: TOwRST Fices lu i . REEDY AV i i phniges o city, BELD'S TESLE OF MUAIG, WANTKD=TWO LADY TEAMATIC RINGER whocan alie piny plato, furs drel-ciaa concert salnon. - Oaiy goid taieat fequired, aleo #ood standing, Al Lo gente gy alticurs, Tenorand buri Qoud sulary and loti etupluyinent guarsnived: Bunduy wtid Monduy st the Toleds, between 11 & m, wod 13 py Inquire for Mr. AND CARRIAGEN, 0 harness at WES1ON o U 100 g, 10N Ensp Ainple thine givei to, teal sl orses sold under Tantee. tock on hand at private \ LARGE ABSOUTMENT FIRST.! £\ and_carsiages, conslatlug of ¥ pnsseners. 618 weniger rockawayd. and side i1 en lirveckes, Rrewstors, sud other well-known makers, but Iitile usewd. nico ord Sl ey TN U b ke, orier, Bfl«,\“v FOIX 1101 —"('i\n’ AND CANRIAGE i lurses will recy cate; clt; Addredy A: VEODG eI ST JRtEIO avy Block, nurshwest corner Greet: aud Madison-uis 20 wud 10 REX: -‘.\'1%5 V¥ ISHED HOUM>, 1 iy l0sk. Mindolph- o OFEFICES, NT—CIIOICB°0 rl"ll?b'.. NEATE on oy «l SINUEIth, FIOS €20 70 862, HOWE N SEEEREOL S § I ats. $r0in 1% d. with atiachu ou lachines t3 v Private Loan Uls UR FARLOU BEDSTEAL COMPANY Cure, carpeis, stoves, crockery, utc. 4 KINDIFE paT(UF DEAITeAd, oL (iaal A the loweet caal prices Salearodin td3 Weat dladle N everyining th g | Aot aij kluds of il D DEVUT, 81 Esst JRRSON AL 1’ V!: k! . '\c SOUNTAS T PEN A\ compileated scrounts adjusted. expert prowptly doou. Adldreas Wi Lusslisds, DCKROACH AND BED-DUGS—TOUSES GN. fiepantble e (octly civap Uy comract (waenint: - Houses exafnti Or nddross ORIRLEN 50t Washingriiease ross AUTHUL HOTOGRAPHIC-A KEW NO. 8 & DALLMEYFR ]: Sl fur ssie (oW lr cad. pHERAS L] AND CLOSEDZ Tk requirtug mi 1 w e ARTNERS WANT. Dl s e ST RN ANTEBCTE WARE TE WARAGE: “Antercat 1o canniry sors 1 Tnlrlor Wowis - Sa10 siore s Guer iy 3 coord who are engaked (n ihe manufacture of agric lell'l] fuy- plrments snd miiling busluess. The stare s conducted I‘n‘"lfi nm:‘u:z'nr'wlhlh“»"u‘: 'Ph.‘ui"ll'l{ works aud dyrldlg e business lias ke 4 Cupital vormd, §3,00 6 S10-eL 4 o o ity fur & YUUUK had comjvtent for the fot, dutg sl ity watablihed: - Tnauire - of CI‘K‘IAH?!‘ UANA & V0., 47 wid 44 Lake-at Clie TDIYONCES LEGALLY A ORTAINED 1u every Stale sid Terrltory for tncomputiuiiiy, €L, Jiealdeuce unnocusdary. Fe aftar dacre, 13 yeard esperien Y [PTNS o GALLY AN %UIK Statn for tucuimpatbility, Feeafter decrae. | SIM3S, 87 Ashilaug It LY 0 S R 3 Slty roforcuc oGk, Ciioaes. b O s i ey 1l BALE-CHKAP=RICHL 0. COIEN 'o.uq.“,‘u ..a'.lu.urlv : 3 i fic‘&u s 8l naw. otice_ [, 05T-LAST KIGNT. A 4 bro: whlte will he 5 Wey OUT 7 O'CLOG it Wrier AL 7 30aTeitd, 13 hande pich, & rtu frous n v ies 1 A lbaru) 1w T B L % L LTS Lirery AGENTS WANTED, WAKTED-TO SKLL A 6TAPLE 4Gy, Juguire 8t 324 Siaterbu., Lelweoo b sud A\ TANTRO—T0 EXCIANGE A NEW S.8TONF Lrlek howse, subject to & wwull lneumbrunce. for g u:?l“:xlfiux 3:?!: hulml or Illx;ll' "y will work foe s N ! ug otsy, yuutg au el Addrecy U HDRSRLLY S Hiltva it 4 e