Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 6, 1876, Page 6

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[ THE CHICAGO 'TRIBUNLE: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER ¢, 187%6—TWELVE PAGES.'- . SAN JUAN. slcur 18 compelled to walt wnile the innumerablo pitractions uf the bazaar detaln Madame and Jighten her purse. ‘aking the evidence of the Magasing, and the heet deessmakers, and the best-ressed wonien n publle places of resort, the followlng arc the PRINCIPAL POINTS AS TO LADIXS' ATTIRE the coming winter: The most popular eolors are prune, a very dark plum-colur, and gros.vert, a verydark green. Jut the only real novelty In colors Is the newr combination of colors. 'The haudsomest goods thia fall are tho striped with contrasting slindes, —as prine and gold, grecnand gold, brown with a mixed stripe of lighfer brown, gold and crim- throngh Los Pinos Agency, and up the Uncom- > l-hgr:-. Frelghtin, Ey w{"nn van be done on I- llRIS' he entire ronte. This makes It chcaper than by n&klnz. Muny of l'hn mluer: n{u 'E"l‘: l}tn:{n, sud they are anxious for a road to 8alt Lake i City, The Utah_Bouthern Rallroad {s only 180 How It Has Chn"ged Since the miies distant. Owlng to the roundabout way German War. of getting here, provisions ara higl, flonr llmI!“K fl'.\ [ ‘lmmlrcd, ‘hnv:on thr,cu All Ab Pashi 1 th ounds for and sugar our s, ‘. Ylurny fa at an altitude of uEEmo fect, bch':_g 1,400 out Wi!ltet aghions an o fect lower than Del Norte, There aro several Magasing des Modes. Hot Springs both above and Lelow the tawn,— gome of them having a temperature of 130 de; ormore. In tho Park, cight miles’below, s n | M, Parodl’s Play of **Ttome Vaincue,” vory large one, about cight feet across and tlon. Ters {s not passion learned according to Dolleatt,—pasafon counterfelted according to thorules of the French stage,—pnaalon carved in stone, ss [t wera: hut hers la passion Mised, molten, overflowing, overpowering ail, ke a Inva-flood,—passion” which knowe, sees, fecls but one thing, and n\rcopulrrcalstlh‘lv to its end, In ahort, when, Into the midst of this group of pompous pr(nnla, atilted Benators, and lovers attitiwdinizing with an cye to llm nudlence, springs this frantie, unconfrollable mother, saob- bing, pleading, denouncing, lll'l!ltmdln': the lifo of her childy the effeet ts marvelous; Itis Nature bestde Arty it s Blmkaycum by the silo of Racine, The dni !v ress com- Hity of murdeg in the sccond degree. Ila hns seen tried in several courts, and Wil probably appeal to the Buprome C —— . A FONMGER, Kpecial Dispatch to The Tyidbune, PrrADRLPIIA, Pa., Dec. 5,—A dispaten from Wilmington, Del., to tha TVmet, says Gen, Danlel Woodall, for along time United States Iuternal Revenue Asecasor, and now engaged In manufacturing businees at Middtetown, Del. has been discovered tobe a forger to the amount of $20,000, and hoa fled the Btate. sence, sent Lo a nelghboring sei Tisted! the kil of & counto ot o mynt 201 en. into the wilderness to dincover the mln«l‘n ik f\ucr 8 moat fatiguing search, lasting nccm‘"' l|’mn-n. thiey cane upon the mangled x’unnx;ml 5 smnlnu and his dog, whilo near thein lay u: o dead punthers, Two of thewm, youni oncs, ('“ ?IWH of having been shot by Dunning, ’w‘l‘m’ lis niother mether death wiilo lightiig po ;| ng, who lad plunged his hunting-knire l“"‘ ier vital parts, where it was found | '(‘lm scarchers, Dunning, whilo following g}, e had probably heen Intercepted by theee l:m"‘ voraclous anlmals, and met his denth While :;;-:: The Great Mining District of Colorado. Tlow to Get There, and What the Journey Costs. Londing Mining Camps---Bilverton, Ow- tecting his person frum the 4 ’ son, and very dark blue striped with light Dlus | pare her to Itachel, and in concen- enasking Juws ray, and Mineral City. twelve decp, the water of which {3 very hot, It at the Theatre Fraucalse and gold, (The Eum here n?nuuoncd (] yellow | trated forca and encrgy sho cannot Lot NECROLOGICAL. tlie suotlicr, whoso youn ones hi lig llnlu.uz sends off by an underground outlet, Which ap- or gold-colored silk, shot through), Theso atriped | suggest that type; but, 10 those of us who RELIGIO! e T \ g, | BoimR Lo rods elow, v lores slechn o 2% | ho Grand Aoting of Sara Beruhacds in | Guods, or sk, of tho sxach e B i | mmbemugorntios Miles Berniarat mootns 16on opiTuANY : el Yy [+ inpregnated wi sulp! e 0/ ho exac e o he contemporarices, Co rnhinrd Reems less = A e Rickness of the mm"ltfl“ Vear's Troduct By lomeiron. EY. Stapregy o Grand Acting o r% Srat mlpe': and the effect, whero grood taste rc‘s’!dcl utntucm‘pw and im| lenx,—murn impetuous, Tennn HAvTE, Iml..chc. 6.—Col, Thomas | The """"I'“'r":' ;'.' the Monument st Phifa. mated ab $2,000,000. .1 spoke of | the Hole of the Vestal's Mother. Overthe cholee, is cxtremely beautiftul, ‘Tho | mabile, and natural in her intensity, She cor- | Dowllng, aprominent citizen of Indiana, a elphin Fresented by Tlebraws, Tk tari ““;t“"'dc”{t‘ o daaeh ouu;lr no;‘ul‘v‘y uf]lhc l:c:m}‘t 'lis‘\l'ury d‘nrk V\":O:I:{'A flnlnly hnl‘n |pnkm of lhtu dlvl;m |1lru‘c( I’rnvine- member of the DcmocrnucmNntl’rl:‘nnl thmt"::b P Ang‘:’;{;fiflr""fg? :}Gw )‘fik x’fl’:’t ; ndence &f The Tridune. s pecullarly situated. s tho highes wods, of one color, but w! ho surface matel- ies, and nwakens p strong desire to see her | tee for t -8ix years, resldent Trusteo of Lthe £ ettt Jenten; SILVS:::‘;:IN?E:I‘?HI:I"(C:: Colo., Nov, 20.— | town ' Americs, "1t has feo nd. snow "g‘o“ll Bpecial Correspondencs of The Tribune, Baae, " - fhsomo rola T wile Hho- current. of fecling | 1Wabas ety Al yors Grounds to-day cccurred o coremon: L projcctors had hoparl would tako ‘Hraamiich the he nctual progress of the Exhibition Hin for reasons beyond thelr control, m’a‘n‘ l;::::wmuhd to this Lll{ of Natlonol Thankaglying, ‘l’lnFno:'e the unyelling aud dedlcating of the monum e symbolle of Religious Liverty, erccted elm. contributions from the members of ":y Order of Wnal Berith fn the “Uniis States. The daywas cold and cheerlese, mnkln‘ the exerclses in the open nir anything Lt ] Wabash & Erlo Canal, and founder of the Terre Haute Erpress, dicd at his house hero to-day. 1af Dispatch fo Th Tribune. Drxon, fl‘lc.. Dee, b.—Iohn Iteilly, ono of our most enlerlpflslnx and highly-respected mer- chants, died here to<lay afters long and pro- tracted flincss, Mr. Reflly scttled {n Dixon {n 1432, and, by dilfgenco aud close application to business, amasscd quito o large in-upurty. Somo of the most substantlul buildings in‘our city were bullt by Wim. For several years pust ho nsse, or figured, teimmed with the new embroldercd bralds or galoons, And hera artistic taste makea all the * differenco between beauty and hideousncss, Costumca are daily scen on the strects fn black or dark- Dlue trimmned with gold bratd In profuston; dark brown ornamented with cream-color; dark green with crimson or any dark shade, trimmed with embrofdered galloon which combines all tho colorsof n buuquet, Theae combinations are utterly dovold of beauty, and no Paristun or Ong cannot stop very long at anyof the ns ot Mexican plnzaa between the Upper Arkansas and the Rio Grande without being convinced that the people look upon San Juan, or San ¥aun as they pronounce It, as tho greatest, n hio menee of richest, reglon o the continent. Fromn Puchlo to 8anta Fe the samo feeling pre« vallsj and therc s a race between all the cities, the luxurics of Au¥u!t. It s shut out from Panig, November, 1370.—From London to the world half of tho year. Mineral Cits, | Paris is a complete chango of atmospheres, in standing at fn altitude of 12,500 fect, fs tho o centre Jt( tha Uncompahgre Dhl.rlct:"r ¢ peaks more scoscs than one. From fog aud sinoke to riseup at anangle of about 46 degrecs, al- blue sky and sunshine} from o cortaln ponder- furdlnrr' good chaices for l\mncllng. Tho_as- | ousness—not to sny cumbrousness—ot action, to says of oro from some of the best lodcs show | a nervous, restless activity; from Gladstone, 1o, 8218, £527, and 81,823 In sflver por tony | Besconatld, and tho Bchool-Boord clections, to overtop v:d’ilyhlgh e Onogxnly g1 20+ 14 | Gambetta, the manucuvres of the Right and cllinb. .&m 2ot and Took out from ‘orie of the | Left, Sara Bernliardt, ana tha winter-fashions. should bo grand rather than ferrible, and which wonkl allow some {ntermingling of the finer nnd softer einotions. One thing fs evident and sig- niflcant this play, with its apostrophes to llb- erty and anclent grandeur, its scuthing entire upon priesteraft and tyranny, woull never have been permitted by the Censors of tho Second Emplre,—no, nor of the Flrat. Cnanres LANDOR. s ) The stattia occuples n sl 8 ¢l become the American of good standing would consent to Tas sonted nec he First Ward o o ceuples n site opposite 1 ::‘::;‘,t,l:f ?‘:':nm;? “,’:;!,L:‘ ;;):“"“,wn" Et | neigbborhood-summits, it ho desives to [ Iwsscurioustosce the city sinco the war: | attract unlvcrgnl attention by so “*loud ? n cos- CRIME. our éfffi;&:}wmMfi‘]fl“‘;‘fl{h‘h ,.é:,'_.uc,w, all, :‘l:“‘,‘r"’,":hfig“:l':km ;flfl;'.llt'fl by tho Itallans g e flaming post- | f5%, 0 de of tho . country. | whethior the Arcds Triomphc was fn tho same | twme. On the other hand, very dark atecn The funeral takes place Thursdny next. aliort: thme, since, on Belmont avenue, near the Dorado. The merchants put out flaming p hero is Engincer Mountain for instance: | piace: whothar the Colnmn Vendome looked | trimmed iwith brafl embroldercd with silico LYNCH-LAW. "Special Dirpatch fo Tne Tribune. Nomen's Favilion, ieroconaregateda number crs, showlng o tempting schedule of prices, atd | From the sumunit, ot nu aititude of over 15,00 P 1t h gl Torth, In o | eSuctly thesomo color, but proceeding from tho Dirateh to Loutscille Courler-Journal, . SrRINavIRLD, 111, Dec, 5,—Mrs, Hattle X, wife a ly Icbrowh, Including the fol. feet, from which, srithin o radius_of two inflcs, | Muck the worss for wear; aud 5o 98/ an array of adyantages in the way of good roads aud short distances into the mines. TOE SCRAMBLE 13 80 OREAT hat these price-llsta, rough-drawn maps, snd dlstance-tables, find thelr way to tho Missourt darkshddo up to the lightest tints of the same, through o pattern of vines, wreathe, or arabesques, produces nn admirable effect,” 8o does seal l»rown. trimmed with galloon of the sauio color, embrofdered in browns, which pro- ceed from seal up to wood and tho faintcat lowing from New York: Judge llose Albany' Mesers. Solonon Lntx,H B, 'flfi'{l“)\".{ bert )\ehcr, Adolph L. Sanger, and_Dr, fillln. Fer. of New York City; Jullus hlnu, Esq., Pres- dent of the Ordor; AL Lzeklel, the ulptor, Presidont, Embich, of D, G. L., No, 5; Mr. Al of J. M, Mliggios, city cditor of the Stale Regia- ter, died this mornlng, o her 85th yenr. Sho Tind been fn §Il health for some thne, The fm- mediate cause of her death was & conwestivo chill. The remalns will be taken to Griggaville for interment, Hannopspung, Ky, Dee. 1.—Tho wife of Mr. J. E. Cogar, & promiuent citizen of Mercer, and well known In Jessanine, Fayotte, and Franklin Countles, and at preaont the praprie- tor of a large retall atoro at Bhaker Landing, start the waters 'of the Anfmas, Gunnison, 1len: | scrics of absurd queriea. Exterually, Parls gon Creck, Clmmaron, HBear Creck, and the DOES NOT BEEM MUCH CHANORD. great Uncompahgeo, one con overlovk the | They are rebuflding the wingof the Tutlerles whole Ban Juan country. Right down, a mile and o half away, on the nmmxynhgre, ey | Which the petroleuses of the Commune de- : 1 ] fred I\ Jones, the Rev, Ge Jac Chivago and St. Louts, | tho houscs, tants, and prospect-holes or Mincral | 8troyed; but that quartor of tho great pllelooks | touch ofy creatn-color; gray, embroldered in 4 —— 3 orgo Jacobe, and {2‘2;{‘3,‘"{;,;“‘1;:‘:,‘“ e einghithor, |, ey, situated at Himbering, Qiemantlod stll. * Also, tho Bols do Doulogna ts | shaded ghya; and so &a through tho catatogus ;}:’:“&'f;‘:";&;m‘iflyg‘;n',’,f;g:,“';‘;"‘:;‘;s MORTUARY. others.” A hrocession of o ladges was formud Towns like Pucblo, Caron City, Saguache,and | Hining ln th San Juin conntry shiorn of much of its anclent glory, though the | of present colors, t Bpectal Dispalch to The Tribune. cpot, nnd pro- snultod by negro man, Dave Patterson, who made a desperate but unsuccessful attempt to commit & horrible and namecless outrago upon her, Mrs. Cogar, belng called out of the house early in the morniug, was seized by the negro, who was lying In walt, and who excercised his utmost ciforts to accomplish his foul purgusc. Happily for Mrs, Cogar, Whosg throat and body wero térribly brased fn her efforts to free her- gelf trom fis grasp, her crics for help were heard by Mre. Newton and a colored servant, who rushed to her rescus in time to save her, though sho was comrmuly ex- hausted when reached by her friends, The alarm was given, and the neighbors immediately collected and pursucd Patterson ncrossthe Ken- tucky River, and caught him in Clover Dottom, fn\ uml(unk County, and after taking him back to the acenc of his cr{mc. and having hitn iden- tiited by his vietim, took him out and hanged hhn near Mount Z{on Church, in the vieinity of Mrs, Newton's. Dave Patterson’s body wes Lrought to town late yesterdny evenfng and placed fn the engine-house, but his morning it was non est. 'The hanging {a regarded ns a well- merited punfshment by the community, which fccls n decp sympathy for the vsthuuble wife of Mr. Cogar. 3 A rape was committed on Friday lust in 8harp's District by two y-)unfi men, Shelton by name, upon the person of Mlss Mnddux., The criminals were arrested and brought belore the Maglstrates Rin that nelghborliood yesterday, who, it is reported, allowed them balf, notwith- standiug the urmu!l Jury is now and has been in gesston for two weeks, "Great indignation fs felt at tho unprecedented actionof the Magistrates. EVEXING-DRESSES s of the thinnest materials—tarlotane, silk gauze, Indta muslin, and many others—ara ornsment= ed with o kind of silk ‘embroldery oxactly im- itating the natural flowerss and hero the skill and taste of the ¥French artlsan are more appur- ent than in any other feature of this winter's adernments. Anything more exqulsite than somo of these garnltures, in shape, color, and disposition or grouplng, I have neyer scen,— glant-of-battle roscs over cream color: forget- me-nots upon_ sllver-white guure; morning- glorics upon what I8 called {:rny of dawn,"’— 5 ceeded to the sito of the monument. cises wero commenced by the Rev. G’{gfik%x\!\‘i" Jncnbslnvomn;,i tho Divino blessing. i’ Followlng this Mr, 8. Kahn mnfc an addresy of welcome, and Mr. Ezekiel, the artlst, was in. troduced, ‘ln o few well-chosen svorids hie pre- scuted the statuc, and at _the conclusion of hiy remarks it was unvelled, displaying to the spece talors ono of the handsomest and tmost artfstic groups which has yet bLeen placed on the gruu\lda. The conception of the artist shows a female figure, cleven feet high, ns u centreplece, clad somowhat nsa Goddess of Liberty, ang wearlng n liberty cap, emblazoned with tll{rleen f“" atars, emblemntic of the original States, Ter 161t hand rests upon the fasce, the seroll of the Constitution, aud o wreath of Taurel; the right Is extended in forbiddivg gesture, gving Brulectlun to the Genjus of YFulth, who stunda cstde ber, symbolized in & nude youth, with his right haid raised appeslingly to heaven, whfle thie Jeft hand holds a vesscl o which the undying flame of religlon I8 showh in an finag- inary flre. At thofeet of the femnlefs the Amctiean eagle, with outstretehed winga, with its talons burled deep in_the neck and body of a serpent, representing Rellglous Intolerance, ‘The serpent’s body is parttally colled around o bundle of rods, and extends to the rear of the group, belug concealed so far as America s con- cerned, showlng that {t Is not known bere. The welght of the statue is fifteen tons and the cost TIAS MANY DRAWBACKS, stately procession around the Lake still goes on ehtefly from lack of good roads, and from the 5 SAnEot matets near st hand. hiore nas been | i ne atteruoons, But the Louvrs and its gal 2 great 1ack of mills to treat the ores, During | lerles stand aaof old, with the old plesures In tho past scagon smnclters have becn erected at | the old places; the long arcudes of ghc Rue do Silyerton, They turn out about three tons of | Rivoll still Al with evor-changing throngs, who Dbullion per day. Nearly everything Is separated 3 from the .||y.§-, ;m,,Z tho yg,“u}’,' and this ia stand gazing at the fne photographs in its win: packed over the range on_burros and mules. | 0ws, or at the gorgeous costuties In the Moga- At Lake City the works are reducing about tifty sln du Louyre; the opera and theatros aro filled tons of ore per day. Next scason will witness | nightly;—and yet, to tho visitor, Parls sccms :;‘,‘I'l'-‘ll:n"f;“’u' {’:fi{""‘:‘:‘!“';" A‘:ll; l:"“'"’ki,erfi:"; lr:‘u"}:: much chianged. 1t s less joyous, less brilliant, ; 2 ) leas polite. There Is less of a fin gloss tocvery- e, o] - z{mm‘gi‘lv’&&:‘.’ g GeRtin QR At an thing. ‘Ibe Porislan gentleman on the Boule- THERE ARE THRER RATLROADS| vards and In the omnibuses aro less dalnty in contendlng tor the §an Juan trade. ‘The Denver | apparcl—less smiling, and mocking, and jest- ppa; 2 & Rio Graude {s uow belug extended from Lu | glyposed: - A posed—than of yore. They arc moro serl afifn‘f,rfr {:‘?'uslufl%f,: '{fi;{mf;‘: flefia ,t,'f“f,‘;;l‘ ous, more indifferent, sod less finfshed fu road-bed to Clear Creek, twenty-ilve miles | manner,—move lke business-men than goy southwest of Lake City. But fts prescnt plaua | loungers or beaux. Also,—perhaps as & conse- are to build from Fort Garlund to Dol Norte, t § bl and make that place {is terminus for lln‘: rost suonsa of Mhesahioge—it it ludipuiably eaa o0 ¢ Itis still eat. "The Atehison Fopeka & Sants Fe Rail- | 10F 8 ludy to go about without eecort. Tond hos been fewling sbout for n line up tue | unusual, and almost unknown, for o youug, Arkangas from Pueblo, its present torminus, and | unmarried French lady to be scen alone in the 18 ltkely to Juy its track up the left-haud fork [ streets or shopsj but I saw scores of young, :r‘ul fi:‘;fl‘%hg“‘fl“"n:':'o":“fill‘lhc:‘f;l;fl-:; . Ffi'x well<dressed English and Amerlean women, who e Horic. rlio Donver, South Park & Busle | Were certaluly young enough to be cousidered 18 building wp the canon from Morrison to Fair- [ 88 possibly unmarried, who nppeared to be lay s thenee it {8 proposed to build to the Ar- | traversing the thuroughfares and doing thelr neas, then crossing the ravge and down the | hopplng without the slightest -molestation; plng g Gunulson. & M 1t sees evldent, from all these preparations, with n consplotous absence, In fuct, of the ride that capitulists regard to the San ness or doubtful compliment which once they a8 thn‘w = i o wALEonRiy, swere certain to meet. If this bea genufuc and PUTURE GREAT MINING SECTION radical change, aud not a mere superficial ap- of tho Rocky Mountaine, Many mlucrs who pearance, tho German war has been worth to liwve been to’the Black Hilla and othier famous | g, 11 the milijards sl has pald. districts give thelr prefenco to San Juan, | Taneo pLLe Of course it requwes more capltal But it Is fn the department of Fashlon whers to develop mining propertles than in | Parisis admitted to relgu supreme, that the almost auy other vountry, ‘Lhere i no placer- GREATHIT CUANGE IS OBSERVADLE. mining, except in the Sun Miguel country, south = ¥ | ot Sll\'::rluu, aud on oue or {:\\'0 su'c:ung'lu the Oues Foslstatartistu I dragec-[ dio o vl Sunre o Cristo Muuniains. Silver is the prin. | “/2rtists? advisedly, for here, i€ anywhero, clpal ore taken wvut u tne bc»t-develo];;a dig- | dress becomes n Fine Art—wrought first of all tricts, the Anlmas aud Loke; oud this will | for French women. The Amgrican, the English doubtless be tho preat proutict, Except in Sumi- | woman, the German, and other Goths and Vau- ‘l;in"curu‘:tlr)\:ltvll:fi:l:ul?l 8 Touiil, rie, wnd i the | gqja wero welcome to the overflowlizs of tho 1t s now two years siuce any considerablo sacred cups, to the sorvices of the attendants in work began In thi San Juan mines. Uutil this | the outer courts of the Temple of Fashion; but season but. llttle machinery for getting aut tho | the real High-Pricatesses therein spent the di- %fi:“,;fidtht:‘;““"'fi:"‘fl"{g:‘“fl“g]"fié‘m‘“:;‘1’-'“““.‘;:‘:: vine aillatus only for beauty, grace, and style of owuers they were spectiators ratlier than pro- | BatTe growth. What was worn by wealthy ducers, The past scason about $250,000 hus | forclgners who pld thelr monoy to haye thelr been talen, and put futo_ market, irom the | cboled, what was cxhibited In the gd-euc Magu- sllyer distriets of Animas, Loke, aud Uncom- 8lng, wos exncu)\' what was ot worn by Madame puhgre._'U'nls includes the country about Bil- 1a I\(urquue de Menneville, In the Faubourg 8t, vertou, Lake City, Howardsville, sud Eurcka. Germain, But Paris s no lonwer, among the About’ 8,00 fm _gold hos been | Sreme de la creme, o theatro of dispiay. It is the taken out frow the Summit district. A | {nshion smong the best soclety to dress in preat nmount of guod ore {8 plled Dblack, piaiuly, with even an affectation of sim- up at many of the mines, awalting trentment, plleity “and obsence of ornmment, Novelty, New maeliinery has been'goiug into the various | coguuttisiness, or richuses of costume, is rele- Qistricts all the full, By text July ‘there will | Gated) by & shiruic of the exquisits shoulder or bu euougl mills 10 take up nll the ore on liand, | & ruising of the line eyebravs, to vutside bi.- aud enough probubly to work up next scason’s | burians, nclresses, au otherundesirable people, product. Al thio tiners are sauguine. None The result seems to me to bave been a little de- ©f them scum to want to sell on¥, A San-Junn | Pressing to the vative talent, which needs ul. mine-owner that don’t think e has got o bo- | W8 ' & centrs or circle of home-growth to call nanza i o raro artlele. ‘Phis grest confidence | out ita best resourees, Most of the costuming witl put n great deal of capital and work iuto f euls l°° ‘"“l'f heen left this fall l(" the great win o LS C! 1) Muguslus, whose custouiers are, of course, 1or :;le-gducr.“' Sudhs pellimaty;thas Mexsiyedcs lhu'grcut{q' part, trausfent visitors of the Me- QALERA, IIL, Dee. G.—John A. Leekley,.n prominent Odd-Fellow, and a member of the cxtenslve agricultural house of Bparo & Lecek- loy, in this city, died Jast weck, and was buried under the ausplces of the above-mentloned Order nt 9 o'clock thig afternoon, The services were held ot tho First Methodist Episcopal Church, and the funeral cortege was very Im- posing. Deceased was o hlzlnlg—respcclcd eitt- zen of Galena, whose loss will be greatly felt In business and soclal circles. La Veta, scem all placarded over with signs, Jike **San Juan Hotel,” “San Jusn Headquar- ters,” % San Jusn Saloon”; and some of the leading mines up there are canonized in tho name of o restaurant or depot for miners’ sup- plica. At Pueblo, where the Atchlson, ‘Topeka & Sauta Fe Ratlrond comes fn, they have n good chance at *pllgrims;" for those that arrive from the East by rall find this their jumping-off place alter crossing the plaius, aund here they begin to arrange for getting to the uines. They may be fuduced to buy teams and stock-up with supplies at that polut; or they may barguln with some frelghter to tako them through. Al sorts of prices prevall. Whtile by rail and conch 1t will cost $34 to get from Pueblo to Lale City, often, by making up & party, ono can get through by spuelal conveyance for $15 or 820, Youcan now go from La Vets, the railway- termiuus, to Lake City In tbree days, by BARLOWY, SANDLRSOK & c0.'5 coAcirs, By the way, this Is the samo firm that wero fnvestigated coucerning straw Dbids n mall- seryice by,the Tast Congress, They own nearly all the stage-rontes in Southern Cotoraio and New Mexivo, aud have got rich in the business, which they have carrled on for over fiitcen yoars. No sooner is o new mining camp opened that promises to be anything, thau they put on a line of coaches, if there are any roads that can be inade pass- able. The charges for fare are from 15to 25 cents per mile,—(ifty pounds of bagrage belng ullowed. All extra bazpgage goes ot exprés rate,—818 per hundred belng toxed from La Veta or Del Norte to Lake City and other cumps of that district. No wonder thet tho miners have o Dbiz dlsgust on when you mcotion _cogeh to them. In thele “mi- gzrations they get along very well with o Mexf- can burro, or trudge their “way olong the trall with p-.ml( and plek. The greater portion of those Who are the {)Iuncers n new mining is- tricts have but little surplus cash tu start ouy und the matter of transportation {s the most serlous expense In their way. In the. East, whereatrip of o thousand miles can be tade for wavut §20 in scasons of railway-competition, it i not such u stratn oun pockets. Bul, in the Far West, FARES AND FODDER ARE H1011, From the Missuurl River ucross the plains they wre doubled, and lrom pluins into mountaivs guadrupled, The fure from Onigha or Kansas Clty to Pucblo bs $35. ‘The emigraut fore is $10 fuss, In purties of five or muore, better rates can be oltiwned; und, for sueh 08 chovse to buy sup- plics to bring with then, reasonaliie churges ara e, A gsuod shiare of thu settlers have tome seross thu plains by teaw, the pust seagon, cnping their effeets and - mibnlug outfits hottiem. [t takes from thivty to ity ya from the Misseurl River to the miues, but the advantage galned {s having made tae way atauch le:e expense; and, 08 tenmns are bigh ot the mines, vne can sell-out at o big mavein, often sutliclent to pay the e 0 0l tae trip, A span of guod mules ore siuch the best for hauiing wud west of Del Norte, when ore o few of tho most beaut!ful; but the number 1a almost iilimitable. ~Black tulle with silver ornaments, or with gold 1f extremely delleate, 1 wurn nlso for_evening-dress, This embroid- ery 18 far moro durablo than the material of the dress, and, as it {8 made scparate from the materinl, it ean be removed and tronsferred more than once in the course of a winter, Cashmere, beautiful and becoming as it Is, I3 very nearly left out In the cold this wiuter, Comblned” with slik, 1t is still worn for unpre- tending home-costumes, but s not used for street-wear, All goods designed for out-door wear nppear with roughened surfaces or figures. This s true aleo of heavy cloths for cloais, in which fne, smooth beaver fs forsaken for cloths with damagk or guflfed surfaces, Clonks arcall very long,—sometimes reaching to the botton of the dress. Guod tasts will not, however, sanction these extremes. 'The most gracelu shapo is o hulC-Aitting palctot, threc-quarters the length of fhe costwine, trimmed with dark fur or brald to match cxactly the cloth, They should not be expensive efther in mutorial or construction, since they can never bo regarded aadrest; thelr obvlods place is that of acom- fortable wrap for ordinury occasions, since all handsome costumes are mado with small sncques or “paletots,” delicately outlining, but not ltting tightly, the figure. Even in Tarts, however, It I8’ [:cghmlng to be acknowl- edeged that such Furmcnu urg not warm coough for widwinter; Nence the introduction of the long clonk or wrap, covoring everything. A8 TO DRRSSES, slirts are as scanty and as much drawn back as ever. 'The lower part of the tunic or overakirt Is draped In wrinkles in front, and all the drap- ing bebind musd be o fuot or more below the woist; nothind “‘bouflant™ approaches the walst In front or behind. ~Double-breasted walste, and tunics or polunnises in which the buttons run dingunally from one sids the walst to the bottom of the skirt on the other side, are popular, 'The basque and the long tunie or polonalse maintain_ almost cqual ground, For atroet-dressus, the long draped polonalse is geu- crally chosen, especially whien worn with a pale- tot tu mateh, For cveéning or dinner dresses, one s alimost aa much worn as the other, though the tunie, cecentrically varied, moy cluim t| preference as yet. IEART SEASE. Special Dispatch to The Tribuna. Fonr WAYsE, Ind; Dec. 5—Coroner Webb to-dny held ou inquest on the body of Henry Gable, a well-known druggist, who waa found dead in his bed this morning.. A verdict of death from heart-disease wus rendered. —e———— RUSSIA’S COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF, Tho Grand Duke Nicholas and His Chief-of- Stam. New York Sun, The Grand Duke Nicholas, who has been ap- polnted by the Czar to the command of the army of the Danube, and who yesterday left8t. Petersburg for'his headquarters ot Kischener, Bessarabla, {s one of the three living brothers of Alexander 1L He fa the third sonof Czar Nicho- 1as 1., and used to be that famous wonarch's grent favorite, on nccount of s being the only son who resembled hitn both In face and stature. The likencss belween the two 13 moral as well as physienl. The son e, ag the fatler was,n staunch dlsciplinarfan, endowed with an obsti- nate, despotic will, ahater of cvery form of Nberallsm ond progress, and a drill ser- geant to the backbone. The son's fn- tellcet, however, scems to Lo fur ine ferfor to that of tho father, Ilo 1as always reputed throughout Russia to be the most stupid and dull of ull the Princes of the Imperlal house. (s brothers, tne Grund Duke Constontine and Michacl, always made fun of hlin at court, and spread the most uncompli- mentary atories about hin. Even Alexander himself, before lie becams Emperor, could not resist thie impulse to play jokes on his brother. But the worst of all the jokes i3 sald to Imve been that’ which lis fnther played on im when on hir death-bed he ordered his son to marry his second cousin, the Princess of Old- enburg, daughter of Prince Potar of Oldenburg, The Princess Alexandra Willielmina wns the Jeast beautiful young lady that coufd have beeu found at aoy European Court twenty years ago, 1t {5 sald that the Urund Duke cried lfko n chlld when he had to go to his wedding; but the match was not to be broken of, He was thon a handsomne six-footer of 25 yeara of age, and the presence of a Mitlo red-halred, red-taced, plain-locking w&:mun by Lia slde and certainly not contributoe to Increase his prestige. For a few years the Grand Duke trled, however, to muke thie best of this match, Ile had two sons born to him, purclmucd largs farms In the vicinity of the Caplta}, and gave all his sparo tlme to cattlo and punltr{‘,‘ the breed- jog of which wos always a fovorite parsult of his wife and of nll the ‘membors of the Olden- 20,0004 A, L. Sanger, Esq., Chairman of the Centen- nial lenmmee, then aceepted the work of art, and i tho course of bis remarks sald: * AL tho last Conventlon of the Iudepeudent Order of B'nal Berith, held at Chicago in the month of January, 1874, 8 reeolution” was adopted, by ‘which thie Order decided that, under [ts super- visloin and management, o pleco of statuary should be unveiled on the one hundredth an- niversary of Amerloan {ndependence, In ecom- memoration of religiuus lberty. Mindful that wne of the missions undertaken by the Onler was to develop nnd elevate tho mientsl and nioral character of our race, Ly a llberal support ot gelence ard nrt, and the Inculeation of “the hotlest an purest principles of philanthrops, honor, and patriutism, the Conventlon properl; nssumed the duty of glving effect toasentl- ment not only Mnherent to the Israelites of Amerlen, but unfyersal among all people of en- lightenment, We belicved that the recogniticn of the principle of rellrious Hberty should b made historle, and its nfluence, under which so many have found happluess, be suitably acknowledged. It s not in our special char- acter of Jews that we offer thls tribute, for we do not conceive that it 18 ptrictly os Jews that we enjoy rauvalvus liberty, that beig o blessing which 1s offered freely toall. The ob- ject of every good Government {s tu protect the peraons and property of {ts subjects, and n guaranteelng frecdoia of conscience the nation has its widest cholee In tnepses lection of able citizens to ndminister the 1aws and to defend the Btate, In thus being admltted to a perfect equulity with their fellow- men, the Jews have contributed to the wealth, the cuiture, and the progress of the country, and wherever tho opportunity has been afforde: for the netive oxerclse of thelr talents or thelr virtuds, they have proved that, in eyery worthy quality of the heart or net of the lutellect, they ave the poers of thelrassoclates. We must ever nekuowledge that’ one of the greatest blessings of this country Is the absence of an cstablished A ROBBERY AND A MURDER, Speclal Dispateh to The Tridune. Quixcy, Ill., Dee, b.—An oflicer from Sedalla, Mo., was fn this city yesterday in pursuit ofa man who gave hla name as Joln F, Hoitz, of Morgan County, Iilinols, Holtz had been in neizhborhood ot Bcdalla last week,-and repre- sented that he wanted to buy land for n stock- farm. Ho proposed to purchaso the farm of & citizen named Camp, near BScdalla; and, after the bogaln was noarly completed, as the latter supposed, HMoltz borrowed a horso from Camp to go a short dlstance fnto the country to look at another farm, and has not alnce returned. The ollivers claim to have followed him till witbin o few wiles of the river opporite this city, and there lost the trail, Tho description glven of him pofuts him out ns a noted shurper. The spmie partics state that word was recelved at Sedalla last Saturday of tho recent murder of Robert Boggs by Frank Owens, both of Pettla County, Missouri. It appcars that George aud Frank Owens and Robert "Bogirs started, about three wecks ago, for Texas, going overland with a lot of wagous and teams, sud taking thelr fam- ilies nlong._ After they bad got fnto the Indian Territory, Boggs got drunk, and threw his wife out of thie wagon. Frank Owens interfered fu her bebalf, aud the Interference grently curaged Boggs, who threatened to kill” Frank. After the ull'flnulty Thad been adjusted, George Owens went to Bogas to try to arrange matters so that no further trouble might ensue; but the latter stoutly asseried that he would stab Frauk on thie first opportunity. Trunk appears to have Deen standing concenled whers he could hear IN TATS there 1s great varicty, ‘The majority, whether round or not, are of felt, almost covered with feathiers. ‘Thero Is tho Cavalicr hat, with broad brim, and lovg, drouplog plumes the Tyroise, worn with o bright wiug; the turban, or “toque,! which must be cutirely covered with fonthors,—many of thcee "have, nlso, the fu..chers sowa with jots, The Galnsborough or Duchess of Devoushire hat, whith was 8o pop- ulur fn the summer und early fall, has fallen s 1ittle from fuyor, from having been rcproduced 50 much ln common materials; but it s atill worn, a8 {t deserves to be, slnce It 8 in itsclt e 3 the whol Vel 4 Stepning out, ho | burg family, Theso domestic occupations rey- | Chureh, Desplte tho unwise and unpatrlotle I caes to- puckingun e nouutahliss,, 1Lt REACH $2,000,000, AT LEAST, Bt anit tha vesull 1 that, Whil@ oho ases | pletureaque, und to- somo Taves wonderTully be- | draw ot Rk donds Tie. fhon | deret him %3 ‘wmors sidiculous. o the oyes of | oflorts of tiosy wha would hitroduce seclariu witolly monopolize the trausportution business does not luok ut nll extravaguut, a huudred costumes wiich sre new, graceful, | coming. A 'listle bonnet, to be worn without the {dle and fast Russinn arlstocracy. Mean- ism Into the Cummuuon} t fs_certain that the left the unmr:my and traveled on_foot'to Vinlta, where he took o train on the Missourl, Kansas & Pexas Rallrond, snd has not siuce Loen heard from, — BILL TIOMPSON. + Speclal Dispatch o The Tribune. 8. T.ouss, Dee. 5,~1lie notorlous Bill Thomp- son, who shot and killed Sherift C. B. Whituey, of Ellsworth, Kan., in 1878, was landed ot the Kansas State Penltentlary yesterday by Sherifls Hamilton and Baker, of Ellsworth and Saline Countles, A reward of $500 had been standing for Thompson’s capture, and the offiers of tho slaw bad tracked the murderer persistontly for two years past. Hewas found, about flve weeks ago, by Capt, Sparks, of the Texas Rangors, at the lLousc of Neal Kang, o noted desperado, Ofteen nfles south of Austin, Texas, He was brought under n, guard of mnine Rangers to the Kaonsas ljne, where he was turned over to Bherl® Humiiton and taken to Ellsworth, Not deeming 1t safe to longer keep him, aa threats of resciie had Yeen made, ho was taken to Sallon and lodged in 2all. There, strings, shiaped jn front somcthing like an old- fashioned vottage-bonnet, but lucking the cluso sittes of that, and nlo?lug down balnnd to rest upon the hair, something like a Normandy cap, secmed the_pretticst thing in womau's head- goar which T eow fn Paris, One was of black jeit, surrounded by a wreath of black ostrich- feathers, with a group of tips united by n velvet bow {n frout, Uehiud, a phik rose sud bud ot the new shade cnlled * coral’ a very palo pink, were ot in the featherswreath, To speak my mind freely, I know of fow things more arilstle, suitable, and becoming then the Parls styles for 1adica this winter, wero 1t not for vne thing,—1 mean TIUE LITTLE TIAINS In the centre of tho skirt Dbohind, which the ladles pounce upon, Eh:kn , and earry In one hand, “exactly ns they did last suinmer in Amerfen, They cannot put_both hands fn their muffa: thoy are perplexed beyond inessure in carrying an utmbrella; where they aro ungrace- ful, they discloso 0 masa of drapery which they valnly struggle to hold In {ts plucoj whers they are wrraceful, it 1s evidently at the cost of *‘eter- nal vigilance ' or somo sacrifice of cleunlinesst In fact, why women who are so ingenlous and skillful ju o thousand other directions should between thereand the mines. Wtle Dol Norte (s the gateway to the mines, ft is further away from them thun one would cuppuse, Judging from tho stecet-talk, ong 1uielit think that the tressure-land was right at hands Lut, Instend of that, he will tind, onJuok- ng about and asklug for modes ol conveyunce, that bio hus A DIG TASK DEFORE TIM, ‘The mines ure o hundred milles uwuy, up, up in the mountalus, 5,040 or 0,000 hichier than Del Norte, Whether une izocs by stage, mule- team, or burro, it is o hurd teudge. The road Hes up the Rtio Grunde Kiver, through wogonswheol Gap and Autcelope Fork. The latter pluca is 1ifty miles nbove Del Norte. {lere the rouds forl,—one goluz to Lake City, thirty-seven miles, and the other to Sflvorton, sixty miles. ‘The wagon-road, for twenty wile before reache ing Lake City, Is very rough diffieult. To reach the various camps beyoud, vne has to nbandon team, take his puck-anhnal, and plek the trall. The camps llc up Henson Creek,—the first being Galena ™ City, ten miles uw.z‘y‘ then, after climbing 2 hign peak culle 'l')nulneer Mountain, whilch has an altitudu of 15,500 feet, and pussing over theother wisilom displayed by the founders of tuis Gov- ernment in rejectitg any feligious test ass qualitication for the “excrulso of the fuil rights of citizenship, and in their solemn enactiient, by which any Interference with the fres exerclee of religion I8 prohiblied, will endure to thelr eternal praise, and, in time, bo ackuow! tred by the adoption of tho samoe humune sentiment among the chartered rights of every elvilized community. 8o fur ds these ntlempts to violate the constitutional guarauty of rellzious free- dom aflect Judalsm, this monument 18 our an- swer, and this our protest agalnst any unlusfil ;-uurom-ln'r’mnt upon theelvil'rights of American Tecinen,’ Addrerses were nlso. made by Messrs, Jullu Bier, M. Ellinger, the o, Horatlo (iates Joncs, and Mr. Solomon Latz. Aniong _ the spectato were o number of clergymen of the dilferent denominations, who teok great luterest fu the oxerelses, A while hils oficlal position was constintly grow- ing in importance, From a mere honorary chicf of the Engincer Corps he rose to the position of the Inspector-Ueneral of Cavalry, to that of the Comtnander-lu-Chiet of the Imperial Guards and of the military districe of B8t. Petersburg. To nearly atl of these positionsa he arrived by right of seniority, after his eldest brother lad levomno Emperor, and bad consequently to give thom up, ITis brother Constantine would haye hud priority ovor him i€ he had not been brought upaa » sallor and a etatesman, and placed af the hoad of the Marlue and of the Counell of Btate, . With the growth fn importanco of his posl. tlou, which took him away from his farns aud tied him moro clnsel¥ to the Court and the Capl- tal, the personal babits of the Grand Duke secm nlso to have changed. Poultry and cattle gavo laco to ballet and ballet glrls, for which the Roinanoff dynasty has at all timea had a par- ticular weakness, ‘Thinga went so far that one of hls favorite dancors liad o house built for )]!JL‘:R dircctly opposite the palace of the Grund c, 11is appointment to the post of Commander- {n-Chlof of the army now being concontrated on “['se mfulng eamps mustdopend on the valleys and serviceable, he sces far more rarely one g0 for farm-| mfiu:u. The Guunlson, thirty miles | tXqulsite or rechercho—so much u work of ort, balow Luke City, {s yery fertile,and all gralnsand 1 1nct—that [t seems to be o product of Nature yegetables can be ru:ged in abundance, It s rather than of cunuing fingers, and 1s o thing of not w matter of surprise that these londs ure | brauty in (taelt, without u thought of use on Lelng taken ug rapidly, and ot wavy polnts the part of thoe spectators. In fact, the city furmed on n large scale. Twenty thousand | 1814 people to be provisioned next yeir will bea A STATH OP 'nm«srnox' Btiulus to the ranchien to puti large crops, | and thera {8 no doubt that It 18 far less delight- They fbt old-time prices,—from U to & cunts per | ful to the visitor than it wos in the eay days wouiid for potntocs, and & to b ceuts tor wheat, | Of the Enpire, The streets are not so clean; “orn cannot be rased, owlng to the cold nights. | the gendarmes arc uot so scrupulous in point It will have to be imported from Kansas, of attlre ur luummrsi the great orgunized com- There §s plenty of 1ucl ut hand for all’ future l"wlflhflkc those of the amnibuscs, rallways, wanta. The mountaius abound In good timber, | and others, aro less eourtcons—more brusguo Tiiere are extunsive outcroppings of coal on the | 8td careleas—to the general public and the Gunnison, At Owroy a company has been | Stranger. ‘The * paterual” eye docs ot so formed to work the Lunks In that v{cluuy. sharply oversce tho functionary, nor tha power With railroads to the principal towis, and | onee so strongly concentrated in the Imperial fz00d wagon-roads connectiig the varions campa | band o promptly correct abuses, Bt In fad dlstricts; with plenty uf machinery; sup- | Spite of o thousaud things which make Yarig Dlies near ot hand at oll times; with farms aud | 188 channing to the tourlst than In tho days of gardens {u the vulley, and herds grazing on the Tinperial splendor, I think that, wero I a Frenche Thountai sides: wich fucl abundunt, and plenty | 1nat, Ishould have juore hope for my country of water in ul the streans, Sau Juan muy yet | i the Porls of ¢ What' do you thini of }muu{uu all llmi.tmu mullt A‘im‘;ulu clalin ’X’ur m:drgl’“bfii' :\:‘r‘u Le;dh‘l)at :hg:‘l‘;{:'::“ fo }‘g! the ensure] ok 3 7 - h"l:unu.lxfir.“t ronsuceland ot ‘tha “Noeks | o uhite, Emplra—h}; all the same,” ho sald; —————— The Cultivation of Chiceory. The production and manufacture of chiccory for usc s an ndulteration uf coilee fa carried o2 extensively In this country, the factory where 1t {8 ground und put iuto niurketable shupe belng. ched 2 t i1 e tho Danube must be attributed to the samo | on the esst bauk of the San Joaquly Rivery ;:lz,)[x,fi 'éfln'f"‘.{uf-‘h’; Bw;fi;u&fl. n:xrlllfi fl“&“f& — e wwe den't feel ony difference; everything i8.| submit to this intolerablo annoyance and eervi- .2}’} l:’gl)’ :{.'.'f&“’n'm‘,‘f"i’&'fi\‘.é'é"&z‘g"xl’iull'efi';afi'r’;?; cnuse which brought hiin to oll the other posts | few miles southesst of Stockton. A large ared foot, and tho tral lics alung the wild' Uncom- CANADIAN NEWS. Just ;‘v’i“‘fl?,'&}"x’n l}u“ylcat,:'or: fifileg, ‘n(v.heurv: 8o %“‘31“ ‘:‘n! o of the things “whichno fellalican | prevent arescue. Hisitrind will come off {n March l!llu oceuples, |1|xth mi_u] this glillnvri-?ndlmefi y 09 of l\ml‘l‘ll lx; u):?t vicinlty |1ut 'u':.? dfi}'fi:églmn‘:{ll; pabig er, ¥ Uy, Spect b Lo 7 L a 10.) Sac ou, « | vext. 10 senfor military Princoof the Emplre, Agood | growth of chiccory, und the riv . {‘rggl‘(”‘;fl)xlg‘l‘lte‘;. 0.}11;?1?“ n?:gla‘x)x;': c‘:«:‘r‘“l l.:“uf,m:l at Ditpatch to The Triduns, noine,—that the forws of goverument are re- PROM DRESS TO THE THRATRES diselpliuatian, aud now probablyan experienced | seem to be partl eularly well adapted to f- COLLINGWuOD, Dee. 5,—The propeller City of | publican. and thut to talk republicanium is loy- Owen Sound, the last boat expected this soason, | Mlty, and not treuson, It does this much, at arrived to-nipht from Chicago with s full cargo least, that the people grow sccustomed to [ tain Creek and the summit of the range, and luxuriant growth, ‘Iho chiccory grows wild down Cement Creek, Silverton_can bo reached, Is an easy transition here, whers the actresscs E""“ ‘rofusion along the lanes and Dyways b TIIE MONTICELLO ELOPERS, are beginning to set the fashions for even tho Speciab-Dispatch to The Tribune. military ndjpinistrator, ko has never hind schance 10 shiow any ability ns o General for, althouuh T ) It distant twenty-two miles, Going from this 3 ¥ . 3 best soclety [n matters of costume., Theroaro | Dms Moinms, Lo, Dec b—It was supposed | aiready a mian of 45 years of age, he has uever | England and most purts of Europe. place up Afmu{u Creek, thero nro!ag\'cml unm;:- ot general frelght. "A"',l d_ul you thine 'i,lfi“ tu “lu‘i‘:yb 1, 5’1‘,'1“ in | fair attractions at oll the promiucnt places of | guat the Rov. N. L.’L’hlulpl and Mrs. lli):rnel, been dnder fire, species af d"".d”l‘l"" 1 "“hfr ""1‘: Kl.lfi:um .‘x’x‘é —Howurdsville, .\lugz)e Gulch, Eurekn, on Spectal Dispateh to Ths Tridune, 5‘;}‘.‘.“;‘{1‘" n]‘é‘,m:,’?'mu °h‘,‘“£fl.,“ proviuces, 1?[ amusencnt; but no great celubritlvs norany- |y, skipped out from Montleello, Lad gone lhadurumlDuI;nrwlllé "“"fl"'";? “)!‘ aulp- :allxu‘hotulxl%u: “."".lym,;"“cf,'fl, n..:'.finpe of the Torks of the Anlmas, oll within twolve mlles of QuEbEc, Dee, boLiout.-Uov, Caron had o | the olect s nh‘:uv; tlu{l." B thing pre-cminently characteristic, excopt at 3 orted by his Chief of Btufl, Gen, Nepokoytals- ere 18 o icreut resoni Stlverton. Orver the ranve are Argentine and Teliurlum City, in Burris Park, . 81LYERTON {8 the oldest camp i the San Juan mincs, The to bosk fn the ambrosial atmosphere of the Golden Statej but it nppears not. Mr, Burnes was surprised, o few days ago, by a lotter from leaves of tlig two, although those of the uhlm{r are much the lurger, coaracr and darker colur L "I'he roots of the chiecory are fleshy aud ml i and grow about the size ©of a parsuip or curroly the Theutre Francalse, ilere, o play In fivo acts l’)‘ a young suthor, M, Parod], entitled * Rome alncue,’ haa been running with inimenso suc- 'y, ouc of the best superlor ofilcers the Russlan gimy possesses, - Hitnertv ho has been kept Dback solely because of his being o Pole by birth, and hisappolntiment to go Importunt a pust now severo attack of paralysia yesterdoy, and cannot | I have so mnany falr friends among the read- possibly survive moro than a few dsys, The | €r8 of Tnz Tiusunx that Iam tompted to add namsof the How. Mr. Ryan, of Montreal, Is a few lines upon a tople which, in Paris, not formore than eix wecks. Beats must bo cel b ‘as v b even the masculine intetloct can ignore— 2 5 an unclo of Mrs. Burnes, who roskdea near War- [ 88 WS RRPOIHAZ LAy o reclatcs he abill- | They maturo in October, when they arb taie fl;:‘rhoil: s nul;:‘!:lém‘:: { mh%fi:::‘:i‘l’ 'hl:“m\; mcnlloncg;:':};?:!fln‘g Tis Toivuna, it ennily cattivas Bowever. (iats i :g:{f%r‘:u' Tzfign(‘lng:}:n ln um!u'vne':fix‘u'gngél ]&é’r‘: ren, Hil,, just over the Wisconsin line, stating hvmof'u]xl‘;‘ ‘. Tho Goneral was Citlet of the from the gruxm} um:l read out l.fl;ynwm{“*:s‘u s 1} & can confess, Lo\ 6T o ol LXDOC N D, . vi A summer-time u population of somo 800, TonoNT, Dec. B-tdward tanlon, Chame whls?nululluw. “puyn tfintt: flh]cct,"luhn\':“ g fornance is auch a8 to gifdden the heart of a | that Mrs. Barnes quite unexvectedly appesred | Staffof the army corps commanded by Gen, | platforme. fuw days expos! tis thought by many shrewd mincre that this wil be the city of the mines, though Lake City hae now 8 guod deal the start, Bilverton lles on a flat ueurly surrounded by thres inountains, over 18,000 feet high, Theroare mines and tunocls on every hand, and well up the mouutatn sides, There lios been grest need of miila and reduce tlon-works; but some bave been built, and several more will be beluro next season's nfnlng operations begin, Wugon-roads to the wllu{)uo not in good cons ditfon,—neither that to Del Norte, nor the ons 1o Baguacbe, These will doubtless be fmproved 18 tho country settles up, 8o that ore will not save to be packed tonarket on Mexican jucks, ‘Tne connection with uther towns and camps in the mountains (s slmost wholly by trail, and one wust put aside his team ond mount the burroto muke the rounds, Even the tralls aro very aifil- cult, aud at many polnts dangerous, wlyudlug ulong over chasme or through deep cunons, By next summer, nrolmbl(. wagon-rouds will con- uect the important districts, and those to the vulley greatly improved, A _ goot road manager, The play itsclf1s of the old ¥ clussic " order,—that i8 10 say, French clusslc, of tho Cornellls type, formal aud conventional to the Inst degree, It s full of stilted declamations, which are delivered by the actore fn the ap- proved style of the Tlicstre Francalse; the elo- cutlon 8 precisg, clegont, and according to the established canons; _ the gestures ara dignitlod, ceful, and exnctly ape propriate, Thus {t will ba percelved that all he conditfous are met for producing o heavy drama of intolerable tediousness, ‘Lhat it es- cuped this result is due, first to the double meuuln? of much of thoe text; and, sccondly, to the genfus of a young actress who plays, sfngu- larly envugh, " the rolo of the “herolns's mother,—Mile, Bara Bernhardt. ‘Tho plot of “'Ihe Fall of Romo™ Is simple enough: Haon- nibal Is appronching the gates; the guds yleld only unfayorable oniens, The cause of thia is discovered by the privats to e tho unfaithfule nees of one of the Vestals to her vows, Bho ia brought hofore the High-Priest, and condemned ta be burled aflye; her muther pleads for her theroon ayvisits sud that, ono day, whils he was mkh:h- her out for a ride, 4 man’ whom she called Phillips enime alung with o buggy, and AMrs, Barncs immediately transforrod herself to the other bugey, and the tiwaln ot once drove off, intennely aoclable, without giving a why or wherefore, “And the gstonishied uncto wishes to know why this fs thus, If hie reada Tus TRIB- UNE he kuows all about it by this time. makos them sufiicleatly dry for tho xqmuu_; furnace, which {8 made I|¥lhu form ol g rjl:q;h‘n suspended over a hot fira” aud kept zevol ‘A?n until the roots ure parched to & crisp. This ; thedrylng process reduces thenm ubont pue-four in nul{;. Xlwr rupsting, the routs are grulu(:{; toa voarss powder, like ground cotfee, WA is barreled and sent to market. Thers l{“flr to be & good demand for oll the ;rndmudo vy factory of which we speak, aud it ts no do! protfitable and remuncrative apeculation. i ‘Tha beyernge mado frotn pure clieeory 8 (0 pleagant to thie taste, (.‘Iwmlrnlmmlf sf8 pro &5 !l. to possess few of tho clements fu cominy with coffee and very little of thie nutritive pm-‘ crtles commouly aserlbed to It, In cases ‘\"“ it fs used forn long thne its cffects ard 'clm deleterlous, especiully upon zhexxuw?uadsl\: o One varlety of the chiccory Is cultivated It afil gland us o salad, the' tops having 8 plu'urm‘ pungent flavor, and even tho commmon Vil i L sometimes eaten hore when other E?uu are scarce, but it Is very coarst und uranh i rather too suggestive of the diet upm;xe w Luders during tho war of 183, Hewent then through the Whole campalgn on the Danube, otid taus became thoroughly familiar with the reglon {n which he will have to operate now, It {a more than probable that the Grand Duke Nicholas will bu o mnero fizurchead during the fortheoming war, and that bis Chiel of Stal will be tho sctual Commander-in-Chiel. e — THE 'HOPPER QUESTION. 7v {he Edilor of The Tridune. ProsrER, Miun,, Dee. 1.—In your issus of Noy. 23 (weekly) I seo a communication headed s Toppers and Potuto-Bugs,” which I think la & good oue, but requiresa littlo Jight. Wil you allow mo to ask the writer, Daniel Q. Lane, Des Molues, Ta., for the general good, to answer in Tun Trisune the following questions: Hirat—Is oue application of the sulphur- burning suflliclent; or how many thues 18 1t to be repentedi Second—Ab whiat timoe of tho day, and what plon oarsman, who won the_stngle seull ruce {n | ssslsted=not to vay tuspired—by fominine fatlu- the internatioun) regattast Phitudelphia, replics | SHCER-0 ::E‘l’:‘::\fxl‘:ll; %‘:':‘m?.“.g",‘;:},{.fl“::l;‘; toachallenge from John Higzius, the English | gy eatimuble gentleman of’ your clty who de- oarsman, e snys hie expects to meet sevoral | seribed his wife's dress as “bolng imado with Ameriean and Cinatllun oursuen o the spring. | *two polonalses around the skirt;" but, as re- and connot Jeave home, but offers to ullow | gards the detalls of costume, I do not think 1 }llggluu £160, and row him for $1,600 a side on | could venture fur out to sea without a pllot. Torouto Hay, lHanlon mlio stutcs that hels | Of pilots, however, I have bhad not one, mmnndw row auy mau In tho world, barring ::lm.l lmlh-dim:\‘xl; nn;l, it nl gentlemun 3 usfres o novel and amusing experlence, e will 0““,‘5";"&""&?"‘:‘1““ ’i""\fl’lfll‘mnntuunlfl fing) 14 no waste of time to gacnn. a few fulr com- Commlul&n&- for 'fulam‘tlmla. Is n Lk city, lh; SE:{{,“,.‘,}‘.‘,‘,“;‘;‘,’E.‘“" Shiet smpoiuiss ofIptle comes to Ottawa with the ¢xpress purgose o ‘ cncouraging the opaulng up o¥ ldlrzrl. umber Thio: tares_groat Moguains of Tarls areat 3 present that ol tho Louvie, the Bon Marche, and :m”ifir‘:g'l‘“fl:‘:}'fl""- Chad an luterview with | fhe Petit 8t Thomas, Thu Magusin du Louvre a adjolus the well-known hotel of that namnoe; fu- MonTRLe Cri uutvf‘:’:.?-‘l\z“:"x:eetln ot | detd, 60 much has the Mugustn been cnlurged ho council of the Board of ‘Trade this after- und fncorporated with the hotel, that the latier noon, the questlon of frelglit as relating to tho seains rathier o Jodglng-house and restauraut at- trado of this city was discussed, and it was do- "l““i"d "_‘,' & 5,'"“-"“' i Lu this respect the Mugu- termlned to britig up the wholo matter ut the slu has changed much from its old estate, It TRIAL FOR IIOMICIDE, Bpectal Dispatch so The Tribune, 3 Tonp DU Lac, Wis, Dee. 6.—The Court- Houso to-day wus Jammed to witneas the trial of J. J. Bchore fur kllllug John Gill, Two days have been spent and ouly five jurors liave been sceured, Tho trial excltes fntense futercst, GIN attempted to enter tho kitchen of Bchorr to sea & girl With whom ho had been on tov intl- mate terms, Schory worned him away three thnes, und thon lred, killing him instautly. This dceurrad Nov, b, 1676, 3 ¢ " wus, # few yeors ago, a sort of Btewart's; o [ e J e stawe of tho *hoppers, i it Lo be doust Nebuchadnezzar wus for a time comipe to Towny T beeded, TV <Gl | dextquaricry meeting, 4 focl s Bdverso to | Quidt, orderty sstablishinent, with woil-brad at- A P ey CONTFESSION, Phiri~tlow lare’ 1s tho feld for which a | foedstocklor (Cal.) Judependenty ¥ou Ve ruuge to San Miguel, The & dj b fh'"e‘ 2 | awoug dty werchauta. tendsuts aud the most. Techibrebs goods. It 18 | point of surrendering, Opimfa, the Vestal, re- | CLEVELAND, O, Dee, 5.—Tho Jerald's Akron | pound of sulphur fs suificlont§ —————— panning out renrurkably Heh; 'fim fl"fl.:'"z','" ————————— now an lmmense buzar, through which o great lurax. wud offers Lorsedf to thu death decreed, | special has the followlugs * San Juss Breutzer, HFourth—Does kil tuem, or merely drive The Nupolevnt. tonfo + iy to 100 fect, above the Tiver, snd thees is MISSIONARY WORK, e ot stione goce mrgiog, b joallig | aswapariles o hur couutey. T vim progress | tried and ucquiltid Jut sprog o robling e et il bo by S Lt oy | iy poleon TIE Lt oo Imyeuss veneER d lenty of water for slulclug oud bydmulles. | Nyw Yon, Dee, 5.—A large and fofuential | wense; it hus handsome goods at Taseanable -of the play the spectutor discerns thut | pyjted Btates Express Compuny’s safo of hopo thia v answered by Mr, Lane for | th founder of his house, An ‘row Iloward's Fork down” for twenty miles, there aro colurs 01l the way, The old” miners who bave'been tn the San Miguel district the past suwwmer are convinced that its placera are i l:lnllal mcux:l}- INTHR u'ndw,l i 0 g0l geuerally coarse, and elds from 3 10 luhgcenll per pan, - One bed is czumuleu to contain over 4,000,000 cubiz fect of gravel,worth g Slomimr cuble yard. No nugrcets have been i found. The country has been pretty much all ¥ token up from the sources of the San Migucl k down for thirty miles. Quite a lively cump “Rome™ means * Paris” ; the Carthaginians ure the Prussioua; and nuch of the text is of a grandiloquent choracter, abounding fn drawatic situations, and Iu eloquent ollusions to the city und tho French uation, Bume of these utterances roally have a noble ring in them, while othiers urea 8ort of clap-trap; but they never fall to bring duwn the lionse; aud, while they ave balin (o the wounded prido of Parlslans, thoy are curlous and Instructive to the stranger,, But the really redeeming feature of the the benelt of the mwany that ure suffering by the pest. WiLLiax BuuseLL. BETS DECLARED OFF, CixciNNaTH, Dev, b.—In view of the complica- tlous attending the Proildentinl election, the proprietors of Sullivan’s and Augs’ pool rooms have declared all bets on the gonerul result off, ‘l‘l’!‘.‘)‘( :&u refundiug the money to holders of poul y§ ed his portrait shortly before his death 58y 1% llelgnku with tlm’llvellun interest tfin’n‘m varlous portraite of his uncle extunt -nmu ) thne placing in my hands an oval nglu‘;nl ok an exquisite sctting, remarking: Thi e 80 highly that T always arry it sbout s Terceivig thut it boru evideuces of BAVIEE Ly ted Srom lie, I ventured to usk 1t A7 nistory. The uuswer wos ulh u«lul e hf al‘mmlcrl?luu ul:c, ‘{u ‘l'xl(::?p"m':u!:‘mmm Maujest, s extremely sl 5 : trmln wyh'om 1t was painted guve It L 10, y muu;«" mectivg of pustors and ofticers of all the Moth- prices; but, tor snything unigue, characterfstls odlst Eplscopal churches fu New York wus held ;,‘;‘&’,'g‘ “&“h&u{,flu‘;fi:ufimt ‘,’ 'l:i':‘;], 'flg“'.::.':,‘; this evening st Asbury Chiurch for the purposu u;l) its noso at it. The latter prefers o house wit of grousing the Church in genoral to a proper hin {ts own preciucts,—the Petlt 8t Thoinus, ufpndmun of the presenteondition and ueeds | which lacks, neverthicless, the varlety and rich- of the Missionary Buclety,, The sum of $050,000 | ness which {ts patrons of old dincage have also is required for thy ensuing year, 9 1ost fn the last threw revplutions, It lias, how- Resulutions wers adopted urging fmmediate | ever.cholee aud well-selected goods, und devotes stteution to the aunual collection in all churches, | ftself to the muking of costumes, the matorial wud the ewployment of every meuns to promoto | being bought fu the Magusin and made to vrder the tuterusts of the mission ‘work o Lume and | fn the latest atyle. $10,000, voluntarily sppesrvd yesterday and confessed bis gpilt,. s confesslon {8 supposed tu be the result of attending the Moody and Sankey muctings In Cbleago, Brenjzer hus re- stored to the Company about $3,000.' NEGRO MURDER IN BALTIMORE, Barionn, M, Dec, 5.—\Willlam Glles, aged 80 years, was killed last night by George Waters Inw drinking saloon on Btute strect, Both were ———— | I HURTOCE. . 0 ne Emperar's 1l ;&;l'l'tll:: s;:rmtt Aty I8 at present the headquartors | forelgn tlelds, S xm:'"b““-‘z t)lxr zng‘s:enn::::\rlnlng. :n’d, on iy Hetels ul‘::nxn OF BARA DERNIARDT, o urln Yot MURDER A ";,!,',',f,:.: l;mm ,:,,“‘:,‘:::h'"' \:::!;:‘: fi‘.‘:.‘;‘utgr,":fiu lx;ln‘llulllulmflur:;x‘x:nw{‘ “There have beon over 10,000 peapls in the 8an y whole, niost atlractive of the great houses, s At tho Bulon, or Art-Exlibition of 18780, she GERTy 8 H » Amost retnurkable elrcumstatco 1s ehronfeled | sufnded me of o clreumstauct, —how b Juan country the past seuson, Dadit e elieved x“‘;;:::m;: ‘t;‘n ;.lyfllf:hn:k:m.' by E:l;'l’}‘:r fil:uilul uuilind"i'sx:l:;lel:ly“ b:.':“&‘"m‘:&t‘: took ono of the Wighest prizes in seulptuee; her | LOUISVILLE, Ky Dee, B.—Ferguson, the po- | fu” liumiion, Madison County, the truth of | somewhero relitive to bis chilidbood—bo < these will beé fully 20,000 next suinmer. Through the winter not ouly dues homigration cewss en- » . acting proves her vight tu the highest honors é, tirely, but lirge numbers of the scttlers leave . o dramatie protession. In person, sleis nder, and of tho greatest clasticlty of ler gesturcs are {ncredibly swlfe and finpusstoned, “Beauly of gesture fs a characters fstle of uil the best wetors of the Fruucalse, Neemun who sbot ond killed Patrick Dolan fun ¢ Jong B was wont to lids himeelf beneath thlu A Juxuriant halr for which she wus 0 1‘1"31‘“?‘ " upon referriug to the story b repl LLV'I’ Tt dl mmmwlnnn:i dened "{;“;",L"’t}'.'?fl” e wat tinetly, uid ft seoms but yestervs t lu‘\l:‘rug: the most beautiful of womet, uud ome men neve which lus been vouched for by rellable purtles. Bome men never loso huart, but alwa; In the wilderuess of this mu{ny thers lived o sturdy countryman named John Dunulng, with his fuinily, In "o rude but of his uwn construe- tion. Ono day eatly Just week Dunnlig suw s bear pusslug bicar lus howe, whereupon be Qin- look | better mansgement, 1L Is u perfect lttle world on tho bright sidu, We wet ong lust night ut | n ftself, With the exception of bootsund shoes, the corner of Sluln aud Colony st 1lis | {t contalos every urticle that cun enter juto a ubrells Lad been Llown into’tatters, and be | ludy's tollet, sl tuero v o lunchi-roomn was fairly ’fuakul through, ‘To our * Pretty | for'tho refreshment of customers, a billlard- wet night.” bie answered cheerdly, * Well, yes, | roowm for tho umusenicnt of tho geutlemoen who un attompt of the lutter Lo resist arrest, was re- manded to jul without ball. h A CALIFORNIA MURDERER, Spacial Dispaich o The Tridune. the inountaus for & Jower altitude, until the wariu weather tukes oif the snows cuough to ul- low progpecting und minfug the uext season, s ¥ H ) whose mutions mizght, fndue i il Ay ] % » polativg to the | 2 8 prospustine Hirul s Siirerton, The caslest | T fobrvopert Thorn (e o e s foE | ey e T aons, o | B2 N ore s b LR 1 et Bt iy SRanet L s et rology o e e bt Mt o o I e ot of Bt e Lwas welah ] E)’ 4 ey AMCEY. || 2o BEBEREIT uat are certaloly very urtful ons, 93 | Berohurdt surpasses them ol s tho fire, th cd Edward Madden, editor of the Merced . NIj Y J g to pnoter U n to b Is frum the weet cide of tho 1aneec| Nke to vee i a man, they shorten awazingly the time which Moue | c¢oerzy, the eletrie unwn‘r. of her lmur:;séu: Lyibune, two years »,’;‘u. was yesterduy luu:nl D ;‘\:l:':::“"\v-p:mt‘I‘*‘fmuerur'n-‘ o return, Wl wife, beeonnaz wlarmed at his ab-

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