Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 10, 1877, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

e Tribmnc. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. BY MAIL—IN ADVANCE—TOSTAGE PREPAID AT 'TINIS OFPICK. * - pangFaton, pwrndn 1year. aye month,.... Mailed lonn dlrem four wew Titerary and Reihii eeki) Faraotayesr, WEBKLY EDITION, FOSTPAID, Dne copr, per year, .. Gunor twen ?' :“ A caples sent free imen coples sent free, '[r:n!'!nl elay and mistakes, be nre and giea Poets Cfter address In full, Inclading 8tate and County. Temittsnces may be made elther by draft, express, Post-Ufice order, or fa reglatered letters, at our visk. TERME TO CITY SUBSURIDERS, Tafly, dei!vered, Nunday exevpted, 23 cents per week. Lany, deifvered, Sunday facludeit, 20 cents per week Adttress THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, ‘Corner Madison snd Dearborn-sts., Chicago, Nl TRIBUN BUlLDl;VG DIRECTORY. i Boom, Occupants, T CIARTER OAK LIFF (Insurance Dep't.). 3 OVRTiN AWALLACE, 3. T. DALE. % QU N & L e s 4 DUEBRR WATCT- SR Conpay. &l DBINS & APPLET YOIK WATCH COMPANY. 70 KN, = & WM, C. DOV, A..J, BROWN. . ROBBINS. o, WRIGHT & TYNRELL. 10, CHARTER OAK LIFE (Lotn Dep't.). 112, FAIHCNILD & BLACKMAN. 13, UENRY E. BRELYE. W. D. COOPER. ORGAN. T. W, BRIDGE. UTLISHING COMPANY. . 10. CEST 13, N D. SATLD "l MANAGING 15, ASSOCIATE rm‘l‘ol.fl. S0, 1. C. EARLE. 27, W, J. BARNEY & CO. 28, WILLIAM BIUSS. 2, T, F. NORCIUSS. J. A, McELDOWNEY; PATH LYCEUM BUREAU. ATCH ‘U, ’<lbll\‘ H’l’rnl . CITY EDITOR. JDces fu the Dullding to rent by W, C. DOW, woum ¢, AMUSE! TS, Adeluit Thengre. S onroe streer, rearhorn: . Engagement o CousTeRgS iy, s o T Garifook Mur- Ser U ieruoun and cveiiig, linverly's Thentre, Randolph sireet, l)l‘('"'"l Clark aul Lagsile, Fine gaandolat, sreel; hebmeen, STk drordete Cater 2000 Aud ¢Yenlng. e Rll‘"lv.u‘r’u ’l‘lmnlre- Madtron street, 0 betw anid Rlate, Engagement of Julin e ehondh, arborm **Cortolanus,* Academy of Music. . lialsted street, between Madtwon and Mouroe, Vs« tlety entestalument. Al n and evening. New Clark street, hetween ) EnslpoT's Platio Coneott © Grecnbacks at the New York Gold Ex. * chiange yesterday closed nt 91}, J. B. Euarice bas been elected to the United States Senate for the term ending 1879 Ly the Rump Legislature at New Or- : leans. Mr, Evstice hes heeu throngh thiz ' severe crleal onco before, but hay thus far i handled none of the stipend attzehing to tho "y oflice, The controversy over the ustalo of James * Lick, the San Frunrisco millionnire, Iins beon brought to an end Ly an ewicable nrange- ment, wheraby the trusleoy securo the greater ;" portion of the heruest, Joux H. Lick, who + obtalned the right to bear the family vame " through a premaritnl informality for which ho was not to blame. gets BHiS,000 out of tho eatste, and underiakes to salisfy the " ather heirs al an expense of $72,000. By this compromise the trustoes are cunbled to . carry oul the provisions of tho trust-dued, us * the balance remaining in their hands is esti- mated at $2,800,000, The nnmud report uf Altm’uey»GeLcml Tarr was sent to Congress yesterdny, and an obstract of its contents is given in tho Wash. . ington dispatches this moruning. 'L'he legal . mspects of the Howthern race question ! recelve considerable sttention in Ile il report, Judge Tarr mointaining that ~1 for the Bouthern States to obtain rum(cal representation on the Lasis of the “1 enfrancbised calored people, and then ta pro- 21 vent the free exercise of the franchise by this clement of the voting population through i1 intimidution or violeuce, i3 a perversion of ‘31 the Federul Constitution nnd an injustico lo 1, the ottier Staten of tiia Vnion, Lato ndvices from !ww Orlonny report no , chango in the situation more warlike in \; character than that denoted in the afternoon ” dispatcbes. -Tho Nicrorts militia and 1):u\hu:men are masters of tho field, and tho TPackanp Government, fogether with the 31, greater part of tho Loghluture, are in ?! sato of sioge in the State House, il thbie wupplies of provisions being eut b off, and all commuuication with the ‘outside world provented. ‘The Demo- v} eratic plan s snid to e the obtaining 7| of an onder from the Supremo Court re. straiuing tho Packanp Government from the " exercise of ofileinl fauctions, nnd, in the event of disobedlence of the order of the 1» Court, to arrest aed imprison all parties for cflultmpt No urmed collision iy occurred, and no interference is contemplated in Gen, * Avaux's iustructions uuless uecessary to * prevent bloodshied. . A pnnhug crenustance in connection h with the testimony iu the Oregon caso i3 very .oloctively e3plained by tho aid of collateral incldenu. 1t was shown that the 8,000 lflnt by telegraph to Salem was returucd ta ! the New York bankers from whom the draft 31 was obtained, and this fact, at first Llush, ‘r'ivonld soeamn to prove that noue of the mouey 7' was used after all. But the Oregou Lepub- ;1! licans have a theory which comnpletely upsets g.(!hhmnthndon. It is that the funds for. l ('wdod from Now York to pay the “‘ex. l penses " of OmoNtN and his co-conspirators )i were sent to Oregon by express, but had not izeached thelr destiuntion on the 6th of De- ; t'amber, the day fized Ly law for casting tho 1 Electorsl vote, The draft of $8,000 was thiereupon telographed to ailay thy fears of !tha distrusttul pastics to the scheme, aud, of mm, when the express package arrived [three or four days later, tho druft was ro- | ¢arned by telegraph to New York, ‘The Chicsgo produce murkels were un- mottled yesterdsy. Provisions were active and irregular, and wheat strong. Mess pork closed 7§c per brt higher, st $17.67§@17.90 cash and $18.15@18.17} for Fobruary, Lard closed 100 per 100 1bs bigher, at §11.42) cash and §11.50@11.75 for February, Jleats were Veasier, closing at 6 for new . shoulders, P“”d' %0 for do wbostriby, and Yjc for rfl short-clears. Highwines were emsier, at $1.07@1.07} per gallon, Flour was in mod- erato demand and firm. Wheat closed 1je higher, at $1.287 cash and §1.20} for Febru- ary. Corn closed 4o lower, at 44}c cash and 4430 for February, Oats closed }o higher, at 5o ensh and Bijc for February. Rye was stendy, at 72, Barley was quict, nt 65@ 653)e cash and 6Gjo for February. Iogs were dnll, nnd 10@15c lower during tho forenoon, but closed fairly sctive and firm, At £6.15@7.10, Cnttlo were quiet, ot $2.50@ 5,60 for inferior tochoice. Sheep were quiet, at £3.00@5.30 for poor o extrn. Last Satuaday evoning thero was 1n store in this city 3,435,068 bu wheat, 1,249,669 bu corn, 630,214 bu oats, 185,774 burye, and 1,128, 864 bu barley. Ono hundred dollnrs in gold wonld buy $105.7% in greenbacks at thé close, Tho Obio Democrats call for o National Democratic Convention to meet at Washing- ton Feb, 12 next. 'The rignificance of this call 5 {o ba found in the fact that Feb. 14 s the day fixed for the opening and counting of the Electoral vote. Is there a plan ma- turing to collect in Washington, under the nawme of a convention, all the roughs thatthe Democratic party can control in the large cities and all the experienced bulldozers of the Bouth to intimidate the Senate into n compliance with the outrageona demand that the Democratio House shall act s a Nationsl Returning Board ? If ordera to {his offect bave gono forth from Mr. Tu.pen's Liberty Street Burean, it will not be premature inthe Government to have saflicient troops on hand to keep the pence. The HaxrToN Government in Sonth Caro- lina having made provision for the lunatics, conviets, and others maintained at the ex- penso of the State, Gov. CnaMBERLAIN hag given public cxpression to hia gratitude at having this very serious embarrassment taken off his hands. The Governor evidently thinks he is that much ahead, innsmuch as the support of the lunatics and convicts by the Democratie taxpayers hins no offect upon the pending question, who is the legal Gov- ernor of the State. It was & voluntary and very graceful act upon the part of the Dem. ocrats to look nfter their friends embraced in theso two clasies. 'Thero are numerous other lunatics in the party, and it is full of thoso who onght to Do conviets, but there is no hope of disposing of them ns easily as soerus to liave been done with their brethren in confluement. B —— Affuirs ave rapidly coming to ahead in Now Orleans, 'The Democratio faction, wnder Nicriorys, has taken the initiative by a forci- ‘bl moveutent which has resnlted in the seiz- ure of the Supreme Court snd some of the polico stations. Tho city is full of White- Liners, thousands in number, regularly nrmed aud drilted with ritles and wsrtillery, and, al. though no lives have yet been lost, it is im- possible to sny how soon such may be the eass, 'Tho slightest cause mny, in the pres. ent slate of frautic excitoment, initiste o most horrible riot. All eyes will now bo tarned to Washington, looking for the action of the President, Whnt that sction will be, e himself Lox stated. Ho is determined not to interfero with either Government nnless there shonld bo Lloodshed nud it becomes necessary to keep the peace, but to walt until the Congreasional Committecs bave reported which Government iy the legnl one and en. titled to recoguition and protection, ‘This is the only position which the President conld {ake, and the best one, Mleanwhile, it is not impossiblo that the Nicrorrs faction will bring about the very emergency which the President sets forth na a condition of inter- ferenco, In view of the small amount of revenuo derived from the {mportation, Mr. SeeLre hing introduced in tho House o bill abolishing all import duties on books, It ix alveady the privilege of all persona to got tooks for thelr own use free of duty, but it is very in- convenlent to send for thew ; express charges are costly, and buyers aro liable to severe imposition in prices. 'Thero certainly should Lo no objection to the bill in ooy qunarter, s it not only ls in tho interest of personsl con. venience and cconomy, but cannot hurt Auwerican book sales, as wo ¢nn manufacture one-third cheaper than the English book- waker, The only books we want are those not reprinted here and pertain to specialties in some profession, wo that the sale of En. glish books hero s limited to that class which American publishers cannot afford to reprint, It will prove a great convenience to literary people of all clasaes if those duties ar taken off, since then they con order throngh a hook-seller at the lowest wholesale rated, and it cannot interfere with the Amer. fenn publishers, becauno they con manuface ture cheaper and underscll their English competitors. Let tho bill pass, A geveral Lowl from the Washington cor- respondents of Democratio newspapers may be expected in consequenco of the fact that Gen, Suerinay was al the Capital yesterday and in consultation with the President, Gen- eral of the Army, and Socretary of War, ‘Ihis cireumatanco will doubtless be herlded a4 proot of tho existenco of a plot ta overawe nnd intimidate the House of Representatives by the presence in Washiugton of a large body of troops under the coumand of Gon, Hurpax 3 wherens, to the mind of auy sensible perdon, or perhaps of uny personnot paid to telegraphsenuational eanardstojuflame tho Demacracy to the requisite degroe of ex- citement and violence, it will readily occur that Gen, Buznmoax Is probably in Washing- ton to confer withhis superior officers ou the subject of the threstening sspect of affalrs in Louisiana, that State bejvg ewmbraced in the Military Division under Gen. Suxninax's commaud. This would be a reasonable and intelligent inference, and would probably not be far from the truth ; but there is not now and never hns been the slightest basis or justification of the Democratic assertions of & purpose on the part of President Gast to interfero with the dellberations of the Iouse. In yesterduy's debate in the Sonote, the rewarks of Mr, Suerusy, of Olio, on the subject of the Lodisiaun election and the relative merits of the claims of Loth parties to the Electoral vote of that State, uttructed general atlention as coming from a man who had devoted himyelf especinlly to this Lranch of the Presidential cowplieation, und whose views were entitled to boragarded ay insowe Tueasure those of tho Republican party on this question, Mr. Bamenmay, speaking from persounl observation aud actual knowledge such sy no other member of the Benate can claim, excepting thoso now coguged in the Lowsiana investigstion, mainteined with greut force and earneatuess that in ac- cordunco alike with tho laws of Louisiana and the dictates of right aud justice, thoe Ite- turning Board could not o otherwise than give certificates to the Haves Electors, and be declared that if Tiozx weve declared 1dacud on the stresgth of the Louisiana ¥3to Lis term of office would by dishonored | from the beginning, and his official garmenta atnined with the blood of hundreds of the victims of the Demoeratic plan of carrying tho election in that State. Mr. Booy, of Missouri, attempted a wenk reply to tha formidable nrgument of Mr. Snemtay, but, finding himself drawn intoa tight place by tho questions propounded by Messts, BovTwers and SnerMAN, lie wos re. dnced to the necessity of admitting that he didn't know what he was talking about. How to deny the averments of crime in the Lowsiann indictment, or how to admit and justify them, is a theory of the defenso which the Democratio counsel in Congress have as yet been unabla to ngreo npon. —— e The Nicmorts White-Liners have mus- tered in bnttle array in Now Orleans, taken possession of the Snpreme Court building and police stations, and inducted their Judges and policemen into office, Thoy elnim the right to do theso things by virtue of having polled a majority of voles in the Inte election. But how did they polt? Cer- tainly not in o way that would be tolerated in ony Northern State. At the very time tho White-Line rifle-clubs ware carrying matters with a bigh hand, tho Senato Commitiea was taking testimony ns to the mauner in which tho election wns conduct. od. Tho witnesses were explnining how the White-Liners secured 1,757 votes in East Feliciana for TiLoex and Nicuoris to threo for Hayrs and PacgAnp, in a parish where at the previous election the Republican major- ity was 841. Wa quolo from the Now Orlenns Asrociated Press report : . The Senate Committee resumed tho examination of the election In East Felfciana to-day: dotx W, 10annzry, 8 white planter, teatified that the color- ed people were Intimidated, and afraid to vote the Republican ticket, and that his hands were threat- ened If they voted the Republican ticket they conld not iive In the parish, and that ke wonld be afraid of Ms {ife had he voted the Republican ticket, JANES Law, colored, testified that he had beenn lender In the Republican party in his pnrieh, and was elected to the Legislature fii had. throngh fear, left the parith bel election, hoving been theeatencd and Ais atore set on fire} alro that the colored people belleved it was unsafe to vote the Republiean ticket. e nar. rated the killing of Joux Garn, and other acts of vlolence testified to by other witaesses, Hero {s n sample of the testimony in re. gard to matters in Enst Baton Rongo, where a previous Rapnblican majority of 990 was wiped out, and » Democratic majority of 000 substitated : 1L F, Bretves (colored) testifed ho raw fifly colared men marched up to the polla by o guard of white men and voted tho Democratic ticket, belug requirad to shaw thelr tickets beforovoting, Jaon- 80N CuiaxcEY (colored) swore ho votell the Demo- cratic ticket because the whiten said he wonld have 1o or bedriven ont of the country, Etiza Brronus (colored) testifled: Last August masked men came 10 ker hause and tled a rope around the neck of ber husband, Moxnor Bescnty, snd carrlod him off. Noverhad seen him aloce, Ile had attended the Republican mecting & fow days before. Catn 18a15Es (ealored) atated he knesw of tho hanging of Hesuy ManTis, Lovis Fosren, § Lzws, and A. ltwopes. The latter two were taken with him, ‘They ordered Wi to dlig o grave for the first two, ‘They then put rupes round thele necks, and told witness 1o ro home. Ile afterwards saw them ztoa tree. They were all okl mon, and not. fount Pleasant fizht, DAvID JosEs (col- fed he wur & Deputy United States Mar- shalat the Port Hudean polls at the last electlon, 1L C. Yousa mado him stop distributing Kepub- lican ticketw, and colored people tald him they were afralil to vote the Republican ticket, TBUMBULL'S RESOLUTIONS, Tise Damocratic Conveution at Bpringfield ou Mondsy was u somawhat romarkable as- sembilage, ~remarkablo beecaise of the polit- jeal character of the men who oporated it, and because of tho sentiments expressod in tho resolutions, We nced not remind our readors that converts are the most intoler- ant. Moro than twenty years ago, Judge ‘Tuuanuy sbandoned the Democratio party, and for cighteen years way tha most Litter and walignant persecutor of the men whom he bad left. He was unrolenhing and un- compromlsing; he saw no good in the Dem- ocratic party; he held it to be a school of po- litical infidelity, and, s0 for s he conld lead ar persnade, ho did all he could to exter- minate {t, During the same eighteen years, Gen, Fanxswonri, the original Abolitionist, though not quite as vindictive rs TruxnULL, pursued the Democratio party; while Gen. Pavven, with fire and sword, invaded the soil of sovercign States to compel the Demu- cratic party to submlssion to the laws Trusmoury and FARNAWORTR Wero enacting in the way of conflscation and disfranchine. ment, These three gentlemen offlcored the Democratio moeting at Springfield, and these three men committed tho Democratic party 0 a declaration that a rofusal to declaro Trr~ DEN President will bo trenson, which must bu treatod as tremson. It must be remembered that in 18064-'65, when the Democrats were trying to elect MoCrerray and Pexpreroy, Mr. T'nomsvey, in orderto prevent the possibility of such a rosult, inveuted and devised the twenty. second Joint rule, giving n majority of oither Touge the power to veto any eloction made by the Electoral Ccllege. Under this same rulo, hod SBeysoun in 1808 obtained n ma- Jjority in the Electoral College, that clection would have been, under Twumnuits rule, vetoed by the Ileuse of Repruseutatives or Benate, by refecting tho vote of Georgia, |In 1873 Mr., Tnumpuet left the Senate, and sinco then his famous yulo hns boen dropped out of existence, Mr., 'I'nustnyry hus now gons back to the Democratic porty, aud ho has ¢arried his rule with him, and, to preserve Lis consistency, be, as Chuirman of the Committee, reported the resolutions in which that wost extroordinary, unprecedented, aud revolutiouary rulo was declared to ewbody the mero pfiirmance of the fundamental principle that each Ilouso of Congress has of right the power to voto tho election of n Presidentnade by thoe Elect- oral College, "Fhuso resolutions are cunning- 1y devised to make the Democratio party in- dorse and adopt some of the worst actions of Mr, Tnusmpviy while ho wasn judiciul ad. viser of the Republicaus, 'Iie first resolution declures that a count of the Electoral votes by thePrasident of the Senete, * without the concurrence and dirces tion of both Houses of Congress, would bo contrary to usage, revolutionary in charac. ter, and dangerous to the rights of the peo- ple.” Thisisa clear perversion of law and fuct; the President of (ho Benate, by uui- form usaye, always countiug tho vote, unless otherwise directed by the joint action of the two Hlouses. The second resolution readas Reacleed, That (nthe absenco of any statute, rule, or order regulating the counting of the Elects oral vote, the two louves of Coms have the . under the Convittution, to couut the votesof Elvetors, to decide all questions arlslng thereun, and dectaro the results and that no vote should bo recelved and counted for President and Vice-Presls deat wlibout the concurrence of both Houses of Congress. “Fhle bus been the construction of the proslaions of the Conetitution reapecting the sube Ject caalown by an unbroben tiruge since the it election of Prestent (o the present tine, aud by the sdoptian by botls Houses of Conzressmen unau. Imously of the rule Luown a+ the twenty-second Jolnt zule du Februery, 1863, under which the Elcctoral votes were counted by Congress {n 1865, 1 1602, god In 1673, which ruls wat acquicsced lu sud malotained o long a8 both Honses of Congress were controlicd Ly the sawe politicsl party. The first Lronch of this resolution i . HE CHICAGO 'I'KIBUNI: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 187% flatly contradicted by the second brauch. If, in the nbsence of any rule or Inw, it requires the concurrence of both Houses of Congross to receive and count the voto of any Btate for President ; if this be the inberent, con- stitutional prerogative of either House, and that the Electoral vote of n Btate is cast sub. ordinate to the right and power of either House to refect it, then why did Mr, frox. pteLin 16865 find it necessary for tho first timo in the history of the nation to frame n mmle having the force of law, to secire to each ITouso a power which it posacssed inde- pendently of such rule? In 1800 Congress refused to recognizo any such principle, and rejected a bill to put such a rule in the shapo of nlaw., ‘Tho nssertion that the power of efther Houso to reject the vote of any State, on any ground, hLas been the ** unbroken unsnge” from the first clection to tho present time, ia directly negatived by the fact that the votoof no State was ever rojected, and no objection to the counting of sny vote was ever entertnined until tho adoption of Trum- purr'srulo in 1863, which was invented by him to provent the possibility of the election of a Democratic President, ond which rule wos abolished when Thustsvrn left tho Henate, The Constitution of the United Btates pro- vides that the President of the Senate shall openall the certificates of the Electoral votes, and, when theso are counted, the person hav. ing tho majority of the wholo number of Electors appointed *shall be President.” In no part of the Constitution {athera a word thot directly asserts, or that by implication enn be tortnred into, a recognition of any power in either House of Congresa to reject a vote, aud thereby veto the election of President made by the Electors, 'The whols theory of the Constitution ia to remove the election of President as far as possible from the control of Congress, by lodging it exclu- sively with the States. Tho choice of Eleet. ord is to bo made as directod by the laws of the States ; each State bas its own election law, The State of Illinois and the State of Indinna have their own election laws, and the vote for Presidential Electors in each of these Btates is canvassed and nuthenticated in the manner and by the persons designated by law, The canvass of the vote for Elect- orain Indians, ns made under the laws of Indiann, is conclusive upon Congress and upon all mavkind, So with the vote of Illinois as cauvassed nnder tho laws of the State. Congress, much less ono Houso of Congzess, can no more lawfully sit aa n Can- vassing Board to reject the voto of Indiana or of lllinois than can the Legislature of Kontucky, The Electors appointed in Illinols and Indinnn wore appointed ns directed by the laws of those Btates, and to rojoct them, orto reject the vote of any State where Electors were nppointed under the law of such State, would bo an usurpation and n revolution without tho least palliation or resonnble pretext. The election law of Ioft for charity, for roligion, for literature, art, science, or education, for the relief of the poor, or the good of mankind. With the excoption of the amount bestowed upon the Vanderbilt Unlversity at Nashville during his life-time, owing to the importumties of n wife whom he married when over 70, not one cent has been contributed to any object that did not minister to the convenience, comfort, or business aims of ConnsLvs Vaupensirr, The narrowness and selfish- noss of this bequest appear in their proper light when it is considered what a vast amount of good might have beon nccom- plished with but half the smount that was left to Wirttan H., and tho loss of which he could nover have felt. Ile might have erect- ed new meats of learning that wounld have senthis name down to a grateful pospterity, or strongthened existing institutions. Hemight have furthered meritorious schomes of benev. olence and enlarged the scope of other use. fuloess, He might have brought relief, like Grorax Pranopy, to thousands of deserving poor men, by giving them opportunities of acquiring homes for their families, Ie might have bestowed charity upon widows and orphans who would have risen up and colled him Llessed. Ife could liave built a monument {o his memory that would have endured to the end of timo in the thankful hearts of men and women, and that wonld have held hisnnme in everlasting romem- brance. Never had man greater oppor- tunitics, and never did man noro complete. 1y neglect them, After a lifo of sixty years spent in grasping and clutching nt wealth, aod after having accumulated a fortune at tho rate of n million of dollars for every year of that time, he dies with only one charit- able act in that life, and thot one inspired by his wife, The end is that his name will soon pnss away and be forgotten. The lesson is that few men can devote their lives to the piling up of o great forlune except Ly living coldly and selfishly for themsclves alone. Itis not impossible that the vast fortune itself may be largely frittered away in litigation, since already & legateo has stated that the relatives, outside of WiLt- M H. Vavoenoer's family, will never let the will stand as it is. THE OHIO AND INDIANA DEMOCRATS. Tho fiat that went forth from Mr, T~ pex's Liberty Street Bureau,. commanding the simultancous rallying of the Democrats on the 8th inst., found a ready obedienco from only the Iilinols, Indinns, and Ohio clans, and the programmo has failed, so far a8 it was intendod to inflame the partisan passions of the whole country aud unite the Democrats in a common effort to reaint by violence the inauguration of Mr. Hayxs un- der any nud all circumstances. We comment in another articlo upon the utterance of the Tllinols bulldozers; they wero abont the most incendiary of thelot. Ohio and Indi- aun procecded upon a somewhat different ) plau, The Indiana position is particularly Lonisiann moy be pecnliar; it may be alaw | worthy of note. Indinna hns tho snich a3 wonlduot botoleratedin Dlinols; but | candidate for Vice-President on the it is the law, and tho Constitution of the United States makes that law final and con- clusivo a3 to the appointment of Presidontial Electors in that State. But Mr. 'Crumburn insisty that a mojority of tho members of cither Ilouso of Congress can arbitrarily veto the counting of tho vote of any Btate, and veto tho election of President made by the Electors appointed under the laws of the Htntes. JMr. Trusoury, having laid down his own invented rule as suporior to the Constitution, assertd that, in case there bo & failure to count tha votos of tho Electors, tho Houso of Ropresentatives s the exclusivo judge of the fact whether any person has recoived a ma- jority of all the votes, and, should it decide. that 1o person has been clected, then it may proceed to clect o Prodident of the United Htates, and any opposition thoroto will be proceeded ngainst ns treason and revolution, Mr. Tromovey, like all converts, is quick with his motion to hang all persons who do not agroo with him, aud he made this Con- vention nt Springfield declare, first, that tho votu shall be counted by the fico Houses of Congress ; aund, second, that the House alvne can decide that no person has beon elacted, nud that it may then elect a President, and if any citizon oppose such action he shall be hanged as a publio traitor, e formulates the law torend “Titoey is President, and death by Lauging to all who oppose him."” VANDERBILT'S WILL, The will of tho Inte milliopaire and rail- way msagnate, ConvNeLivs VaNpemnint, has been already published in Tur Cuicaco Trsuse, and is ‘vow a public document open to discussion, It will occasion a very geueral feeling of surprise that, notwith- standing his fortune amounted to ovor sixty millions of dollars, hiy wife roceives by tho will, as originally drawn, §0400,000, together with the famlly mansion aud all its nppn\nt- ments, to which he addsin n codicil 2, shaves of railway stock, equivalent to 2 00,. 000 more. 'This peeculiar disposition of his property, however, is In accordnuce with a muarriage settloment made in due form be- fore marriage with Lis second wife, by which shio agreed not to claim her lawful in- {erest, the compact belng miade in view of bis extromo age &t the time of tho marriage, the Comnmodore being then over 70, and of the additional fact that she had nothing to do with tho aceumulation of his fortune, To fivo of his living daughters he bLeo- quenths £2,600,000 ; to the sixth, the interest upon £100,000 in United States 10-40s, the principal to go to her leirs ; to the seventh, the interost on %300,000 of the samo clasy of bonds; aud to the eighth, the interest upon ¥500,000,—the total sum to tho daughters or their helrs, two or three of them being dead, being $8,700,000. Po his son, Counerivs J,, who borrowed so lavishly of Houace Gerrreyaud never repaid it, and who bas been considered the black sleap of the family, he loaves only the inter- est on #200,000 of 10-0 bonds, which. s amply sufficient under the circumstances, "Then follows a long list of smaller bequests, which are pretty liberal, especlally in the cense of grandsons by favorite children, This brings us to Lis favorite son, WiLtau II. VaxpenuieT, who has bad the responsible charge of Lis business for mavy yenrs, In tho will, g originally written, he left to him ahout #50,000,000, but in a very inconsider. ate and heartless mauner ho appends n codi- cil which takes away #11,500,000 of this amount and bestows it upon Wirrtas H.'s four gvondchillren, Such unfutherly con. dnet as this in reducing his favorite son to about $40,000,000, especially when that son hias Lut $10,000,000 in his own fortune, and leavirdy hi to struggle alone with the vieis- situdes of this rough aud fnkospitable world, especially iu these trying times, Is a sadcom. went npon the want of charity which bLas olways characterized the Commodore, ‘Fhe family is very well provided for. None of thew are likely to die fu the poor- house or to be compelled to trawp for a liv- fng. Butread the will all through, and see that of all these willions not one peuny s Democratio side. 3r. ‘TiLpex's plan, and that generally approved by tho Democrats, is to ineist that tho Democratic House of Reprosentatives has the right of its own mo- tion and single-handed to object to the counting of the vote of any State. The ap- plication of this plan would bo to throw the election into the Monse of Representatives, which wonld at once chooso Mr, TiLpen; but it would also give tho Senate tho right to choose the Vice-President. This would leave Mr, Hexpnicks outin the cold, and his vast army of rotainers in Indiana would not get the fall sharo of the offices and spoils which they have been led to expect with thelr favorito politician in the second place “in the Governmont, Of conrse, the Indiana Domocrata could not make up their minds, under theso ciroumstances, to subacribe to the egelfish ‘I''rory programme for throwing the election into the House, oud their resolutions fail to met forth a3 emphatically as the others the right of thoe House to act as a Returning Board, but claim that the right of counting tha vote rests with the twe Houses of Congress, and demand that they shall agree upon n law to that ond. This in itsolf is a pretty sonsible position, and the fact that it has been taken by the Indiana Democrats indlcates clearly enough that they ave not prepared to fight for TiLoEN alone, but that, nnless they can get Hexpnics as well as Titoe, they will quietly acquiesce {n tho inanguration of Mr, Tlavzs. 1t seems to be setiled that the In- dinna Domocrats will not wage war upon thoir opponents for tho mere purposo of sus- taining the House in a revolutiouary design to inaugurate Mr, Trroey and throw 1les. onicks back upon n post-office or pension. agoncy without influcnce or patronage, The ciroumatance simply shows how entiraly the greed for office governs all the Democratic utternuces and actions. ‘Tho Ohio Democrats lhave made them- selves consplcuously ridicnlous by threaten. ing resistanco ‘‘to the last extromity, even should that extremity be nn appeal to arms,” unless the Ohio system of countiug votes be rocognized aud adopted iu Loulsinna, Thoir resolution on this subject is as follows: Resolred, That the votes cast on the 7th of No- yumber, sud duly certlfied at the close of the elec. tion on that day by tho oficers authorized to ro- celvo and record them, alope detcrmiue the result of the election held In any procinet, county, or State, and that, whatever may by the returns then duiy and properly certified, they caunot lawfully be chauged by any oficer authorized to canvass them and announce the result, The Constitution of the United Btates says (though woe presume It makes very litle dif- ference to the Ohio Democrats what it says) that *“each Stata shall appolut Electors in such manner ns tho Legislature thercof may direct.,” The Legislature of Louisiana, there- fore, might Liave authorized the appolntment of Electors by the Ieturning Board, or by the*Governor, or by itself, or by a Committee of ita own body, or by anybody else. It chiose to order their appolutment by popular vote under the suporvision snd subject to the revision of a certain Roturning Bonrd for certain causes. What right has Ohlo, then, to step in and say that the vote of Loulsiana shall be counted according to thie laws of Obio and not accordiug to the laws of Loulsiana? Is this o fair samplo of thoe modern Democratio iden of Btate's Rights? Perhaps the Legislaturo of Louisi. ana would order the appointnent of Electors for that State in the same manner as Obio if the voting were done in tho same way, and perhaps the Obio Legislature would set up o Returning Board with supervisory and judi- clary powera if one of the pasties in itaState were in the habit of resorting to bulidozing, intimidation, violence, thrashing, killing, ete., to carry tho State over their opponents, e this ms it may, Louisians lus just es wuch right to adopt its plau as Ohio has to its own, snd it is simply ridiculous for the Democrats of & Republican Btate to threaten resistance **to tho last extremity, even should that extremity be an appenl to anns,” becauso Louisians has exercised a constitu- tional right. It is probable that neither the Ohio mor the Indinna Convention waa so belligerent int tone as it would have been had it been held some weeks ago. Btill, when Gen. Maxsox in Indiann referred to civil war, he was an- swered by the crowd, ** Let it come.” The impertinenco of Juntax in pushing himself forward and crowding out Voonmrrs, the $Tall Syenmoro of the Wabash," crented some dissension among the Indiana Demo- crats, and this may nccount for a partial sup- prcsalon of the warlike propensitica of the clowd,” But in Ohio nobody disputed the leadership with Prxprerox and Ewiso, and wo venturs the prediction that no one will nttempt in the future to rob these gentlomen of the *‘honor” of leadership in such & caunc, Our exchanges view the BENNETT-MAY bust- nest from varions standpolots, One contempo- rary suggests that “1he BeyNCTT affalr was slinply a new inethod of advertlsing the Heraid, like the STANLEYT Afrlcanus Expudllln 1, cte," as the reduction to thrce cents a copy, retall, hins not resulted in the inerease of circulation that was expected. Another explains the cause of BENNETT'S curlous eonduct that he was * ro clated at the appronching nuptials that he took to celebrating by himsclf, and, owlng to the unexpected strengith of the Croton water, failed to meet hla appolntment with the bride and the clergyman. Hine e re! But that theory 1)l hardly account for his be- havlor the night e broke the mirror, and kicked over the chairs, and scolded his ** mother-in- Taw," and alapped (gently) the rosy check of hls tlancee, and was promptly collared out of doors by the * old man,’" aud forbldden the house; nor will it account for the daughter Immediately after the ejectment slipping down-stairs, open- Ing the basement window, and letting In the scapegrace and sparking with him fn the parlor after the old folks had gone to bed, almost till broad daylight did uppear, and ghosts went trooping hotne to churchyards. “Mac,” of the 8t, Louis (2.-12,, has speculation fu_hls eye, and gets in abead of all contemporaries with this high and tempting bid: , Should these few lines meet t Gonbox BENseETT, he may co iazed for a Joctire tonr, nt 60 per cent of the gruss recelpte. DItto us 1o Mr. Farnemick Mavy, shauld those (o weutlenjen mect, v tio ileld uf honor, fire d moke up unharmed, they miay conshler the aged to lecture 8t 70 per cent of the gross recelpts, Should one of then b Kifled, the sursvor miy consider himrell engnged for the Adenu ae a lecturer at 0 per cent of the wrosd receipts, But whould they both be kllled—well, we \*hnl sce how anyihing can Le made out of them after that, We trist, however, that the seconds will not sllow a good courso of Jectures to be spoiled by a double fatallty, e —etr— Drs Moixes, la., Jon, 8. he funcral of Gen. WiLLIAN DEsSE N wan held at 2 p. m, to- Tie war one of the founders of wof Mr. Jades or hlmaelf en- CiticAo neNs and Conrant, and the Wieconain Gazette, now the Milwaukee Sentinel.— Prese diapateh. Tle statement thiat the deceascd was one of the founders of Trg Cuicaco TRIBUNE I8 erro- neous. Hewasnot oun of the founders, and never owned any Interest In the concern. Mr. WiLsoN was employed ns an assistant cditor previvus to 1855, for some time,—chicfly on the agricultural departinent, for which he had es- pecfal taste ond fitness. The orlginators of ‘Tur TriouNe were Jonx E. WneeLer, J. K. C. Fonnest, and James Kerny, The name of the paper wus proposed by Mr, Fonnest, and the firal fssue wus printed July 10, 1847,—thirty years ogo mext July. A fortnight afterwards Mr. Krrty, owing to slkness, sold out his third interest to TioyAs A. STRwAnT, and re- tired, On the 27th of September, 1847, Mr. Fonngst severed hils connection, disposing of Lls Interest. to Measra, WHEBLER anid STEWART, Such was the origin of Tiz TRinUNE, ———— Oncof the most {hrilling incldents of the Ashtobula disaster wns the actlon of the engi- neer of the forwardlovomotive, who, the instant ho felt the Lridgo settling down, pulled out the throttle-valve, making Iifs engino falrly leap out of thy horrible nbyss Into a pince of safety, Just 03 a sudden blow upon the flanks ofa spirited horse canses him 1o clear & chasn or burst awvay from some eudden dauger. Although it saved oo lives, it was none the lessa wonderful in- stance of quickness, coolness, and gelf-possese slon, rud the engincer saved all thut it was pos- slble for hiin to enve—himselt and s engine, As_the Springfleld’ Zepublican neatly pute it: “Thought never fiasted quicker from the mind to tho fingers or tinglod more flercely through twenty tons of metal,' Jtwas on act of cools noss and courage which under other clreum- stonces might have made this engineer a hero. a; I'n —t— The debt of New York Clty continues to fn- Increaee. The Tribune of that city states that thio Comptroller’s monthly statement, just issucd, shows that the total amount of warrants drawn pagable from taxation in December was $3, 505.773 the total for 1870 was 835,027,684.00; the total payments from tle fasuc of baml-w:ru In December 854,147,383, and fu the entlre year 88,407,430.01. The grand totu} of payments by warrant in December was #8,011,607.01, aud in the whole year $72,276,531,59 on 6,650 warrants, The city debt, less tho sinking fund, was $110,~ TIRTH.00 ut the end of 1875, and $110,811,- 810.89 at the end of 1876, The cash in the City Treasury on Dec. 30, 137 109,174.82, ———— In his message to the Leglslature of Loulsiana Gov. Kr1LoGo sags: iTho S e of mucceestul proscention for por Htleul crlme g yet to occar ‘fn Loultlana. 1n- siances are unhapplly not wanting where bold cf+ forts mada to entoree (he lnws have been promptly fullowed by tho useussinations of Joilges, prost- cuthiiz olicery, und ShierlTs. Tt n polited out by the Contederates that (n Usotygia and Alabama and ather Southern Statee, “which lhuve been **re. degtaed, " 1€ 1w called, from Tepublicun sule, peice provatls and pollt cul murders are compnra- tively unknowms The very statement of this [rosionttiun cacries with it canfesslon of guilt, t discloacs the fact that the disorders in the Bouth arg ereatud by thouppanents of Itepublicantun for the purposo of obtalnlug control of the Govern- ent, und that wutil they obtaln po<ncasion of the otlices, whether they have wuch o maforlty of the leval voters as would f“-lly entitls 1hen to those oftices o not, [Iullll(‘n\ turmoll MoxteosmeRy m.,\m‘n paper, the Washington Unlon, has commenced the work of disclplining all the Dewocrats whosa volee 18 not for wak.! The other duy R pitched fito Mr. W, I Rovents, editor of the New Orleans Zimes, The lumr uuhll slics the following card s an. b, 1877, —70 the Kdilor of qit: 0 think 1t proper Lo correct cere tal faccuraeles In the Cnlon of this date n ree aard to myself. Iwas never the bearor of o com- munlcation of any character from )‘.r. LAMAR f0 Gov., HaTks, I was uever charzed by Gov, 1ATEs with any communication o Mr, LA¥AR or other Suuthern men, ‘I'here has been no communicatlon between Gov. #aves uud other Southeen lesdord that L um aware of. W, 1. Rosrite. i Mr. Repriern, lu a letter to the Clncinnat} Commerclal, refercing to the unpopularity In Georgla of BEN HILL'S recent views, says: Yo maintaln fasur with tho Georzia hemoceracy, mon Lus tu be a pretty ery 1e little room for to Grorgia ond the ve developruent. It L the party next,and uxus hae It caate, y afliem (hat Tooxny And wiaat has Tuoxpy Ktatw pride lue ex iv Leorgla dest, the South ne thwatlon lut, Even tion and 1 heard o rglan o i tadical i dfosiieg: douer He han crlir the Demucrtic conven- tots In Georgla and called tiem ** basiy," Gen. LoxosTEET is sald to have returned to the bosom of the Democratic party., s tor- mer politlcal assoclates inade hls lfe uuen- durabloe by persceution and ostraciam, sud he finally succwinbed, and now comes out for Nicuorrs s (overnor of Loublane, but i3 still cold on Trnoey. Oune cause of his chauge buck is his dislike of PAcKARD. - e —— Mr. Fren Mardoesn'tscem to have derlvedas mucl sathfaction from Licting young Besyerr a vt aeross the face with o rawhide as ho foudly hoped. Ihe ecems to have waked up the wrong Beotcbmau, who has “leaded ™ bis form and wanted'to **double-lead " hiia, e, 2. ‘The French Partioment, for the purpose of encouraging exports of certaln erticles, bas granted premtums or bountles thereon. Ger- many has retatiated by fmpostaz diferential duties exastly oflsctting the bousty. - e — Thavks. We oblized to the editor of the 8pringtield Reyister fur publlbivg quite con- picuously o part of Tus TRIBUNE'S prospectus for 77, but wish e had given the subscription rates sleo, as it I putting our malling clerks to some trouble and the offlee to postage cxpense In answering letters of tquiry s to terms from those who desire to subscribe that saw the fa. . vrorable notive In the Leglster. PERSORAL. Mlen Ella Frothinghsm's translation of Grill. parzer's *+Bappho " 1a well spoken of by some of the eriticn. The play was first Lrought ontat Vi. enna In 1818, The Academy of Belences In Parls meett in tha worst ventilated hall In the clty, and the cry of **Physician, heal thyaclf," has lately been sound. ing In thelr ears, Maj. Tarnes was selected to act ns Chief ernld and read the Rogul proclamation at Delll on New. Yenr's Day becanse he happencd 1o be the tallest oficer in {ho liritish Army. Hisdress for the akeas slon cost 81,000, Dr. Btronsberg, nithough banished from Ilcrl!n. hay not coma Lo the end of his tether, It 19 sald thathe has Leen offered the direction of his late Zlrow fron-mines by two Prosian noblemen, who have parchased them, Mr. Tapper hias published o number of rhymey in the New York Evening Post addressed to Aterlen. The editor of the Fost cautlonsly #peaka of the lines as ** fluent.* and the Zribune, taking this vlew of thelr merit, **rune them in** as prose, Mlss Clara Morrls fatnted npon the stage durlng & recent representation of **Miss Multon™ at the Unlon Square Theatro in New York. Ilcrhealth fs ina most precatious condition, and many of her warmest admirers and friends urgo her to retire permanently from tho stage. A new volume of natlonal poetry under the title of ** Lyrn iiibern ea dacra™ ts in courss of propa- ratlon by the Rev. Dr. W. MacIlwalne, Incambent of Bt. George's, Belfast. A number of contrlbu- tors and nanstant editors of acknowledged gualif- catlons hae been aunounced. In taking o temporary forcwell of Ne w York a Wallack's Theatre, Saturday night, Mr, Boucleault addressed himselt spoclally to the ladles fn the sudlence, reminding them that they are the potent factors [u an sudience, and have [tin thelr power to moke Jmpure plags unfashionable, Horace Greeley heartlly detested clams, and yet Bayard Taylor, at the dedication of the Ureeley monument, spoke of the face of the statue as be- sng turned In the direction of the city that Greeley so much loved. It is'turned In the directlon of Coney Istand,—a clty inhabited principally by clame, The movement in England for the legallzation nt marriage with s deceased wife's elster 18 aesuming conelderable proportions. The Queen has fre- quently sanctioned such marriazes fn the colonles, and & regulariy-organized associntion {8 now en- unged In giving expresslon to public oplolon on the rubject in Englond, The London Spectator rays of Mr. Tenngson's last effort: ** *Harold' is a fine dramatic piece, und has moro fire and ropld movementa In It than *Queen Mary,' but we cannot agrec with thows who think that ¢ Ifarold* Is equal to, much lesy ruperior to, Mr, Tennyson's study of the morbid hopes tud gloomy reverses of the grest Tudor wreek, " Victorin Woodhnll objects decidedly to Emma Abbolt's qulet assumption of superlority In her protest agatnst belng mentioned In connection with the famous free-love sisters, **\When Emma Ab- ‘bott has been through the crucible of public criti- clem, as I have been," writes Mrs. Woudhull, **may It not turn out that I may be the one who wonld have cause to resent the uve vf my name in connection with herst™ The band of Algerians that dwelt Ina Moorish ‘bazasr on tha Centennial grounds last enmmer havo bired a vacant store on Brosdway In New York, where they offer, at anoderate price, the farcinating and dirty parghili, and the no less dirty chibouk, The danciug girls are stlll con- neeted with the cstabifshment. Notwithatanding all tho unusual attractions, the patrouage remafns small. **Americans caro 1o damn for amuse- ments," obsarves the manager aententlously, In his last Galaxy article, **On Resding Shak. speare,” Mr, Jichard Grant White soys: ‘¥Ihls superiority of tho general public taste In dramatic literature during the Ellzabethan era 15 one of the remarkabla phenomena in literary history; and it is one that remains’ unaccounted for, and fIs, T think, altogether inexylicable, except upon the as- sumption that theatrea nowadays rely for thelr support upon a public of low Intellcctual grade and i taste for gross Ingury and materlal splen- One of the most striking lines in Mr, Tupper's drama of **Waahlogton ' wau the followiog: A falr gower ls burdened with preposterous ap- peliative ‘The New York Times shows how the process of pormutation and combination can bo applied to Dootey of this description: Many s lulml:ntd fair 1a preposterously flowery with appeliati Nady & Lurdened preposterous a sppelintively flow- ©'Nreposterous Bowers at s falr ars burlensomely ap pellative. A system of weather observations hos recently been entablished in France. M. Leverrier has lsaued a clrcular announcing that every commane which purchases a public ancrold barometer, places It for Inspectlon In a public ballding, and enters intoan cugogement to send rogularly weather telegrame, will recelve warninge, either directly from the Parls Observatory, or through a departinental ofice eatabllehed In cach chief centre, A Jarge ancrold barometer has been placed In the most prominent part of the Parle Ialles for the use of tho country people who come dafly to sell thelr garden prod- uco. Thedlal 1 one metre iftyin dismeter, and 1slighted at night.™ Pottuvllle hawbeen taken in and done for, Thosa who donot know of Pottsville are jguorant of mi Ingaffairs, and prabobly bave never heard of tl Pottsvillo Miners' Journal, There In suchn nows paper, and it was once flourishing and fufluentt Of late It has fallen Into decay; the proprictor h died, and his wdo: ut the coricern npon ¢ warket, Locol in| In tho newspaper and & deslre to ses the eale convummated made the wholo village an casy prey 1o the veheming of an fngen: fous sharper. o sald s had como forthe purpose of buying the Jouraul ; clatmed 10 bave a millions alro uncle In Callfornia, and to be himself a cousin of Hlester Clymer, When ho deposited checks n tho village bank, and drew against them to the awonnt of $200, there wes no ecrivus objectlon to bonoring his drufts, Since then ho hos notbeen #cen, nor hus there Leen any natisfaction of his liotel-blll, Pottaville weeps; and, un the whale, it 14 not easy to sec how a village with such a newe could do anything Letter, Somebody was offended In New York, a few days 210, by the brother of someLoly ¢ unile af- fule hiae given rive to much gosslp and unfecling talk. We are pleased to see In the York Thmiea a Mupovition to treat it In s more delfeate veln, That Journal discusses the wholu subject In 1ho tone of elevated philosophy, It hopes the duty of recording anvther occurrence of the kind wiil nut devolve upon the press of Awerica. ** This wort of thing,™ It #ays, ** Interferes with an ed! or's uscfulness, and strikes o blow at his digulty. The opinton of the Alumnl of Trinity Collego iy clesr upon this polnt, It fe the fecling tn thag large and influential body that * begorra, It kob %0 be shitopped,’ and leading articles to that effect witl doubtless soon be pubiished jn the —, thag 1v t0 say, where they will do the wost roud." Now Iu the time to encoursge high-toned treatment of personal affalrs. Let us not even say what it Je that has happened to the mysterious sownebady ale ready alluded to, 1t 8 enough that he le an ath- lote, and not the buest in the world; that Jobn Morrigscy might have been a better mau (o bis Place; and that the allusion to the sufferer aa *+the spolied son of an unworthy father," ls only alittlo Iesn tuan brutal i its truthful malice. HOTEL ABNIVALS. Tremont House—Jolin . Yerris, Philadelphla; the lion. Lawis Ellsworth, Naperville; the Ifon, l' P. Partridge, Sycamore:the Hon. W. N, Marsh, @ City s Al E. Morton, New York; the IHon. s H. Tow, Laoing, Mich. ; (. P, Lee, Fond du Lac; E, M. lisstings, Mineapolie; Col. A. B, 311 lery onusa; & ©. Abbolt, | Syrscussj O, Campbell and W. UL Colung- Vood, " Pittsburss C. T Montreals A, B. Morwon sud_D. G, Clarks I'be Hun, H, Busb, Kiein, Fitiabor: Greew N daunce, Mich, : Gen. . L. Liné: 1;,. New York; the Hon. J. H. Alartin, ('ulmudu, thie Ton. A, M. Hlerrington, Genesa: 6. ute : unm e Lo, ' Hamil ""i'l Hil- vore, 1 lubuulll. l(. L l’l-kuv Dr. M. y M U Dickey, Imndu lles, )l Ausora; Boston: I. ork Heb l"hdm.lelohh‘ J.” 0. Hay llumbl:lou. u- murg, u-:c{ . Lo ulu. % Josegb, Mo.; 9 n4a: ; me u: i Baa Y-Ix 0! i

Other pages from this issue: