Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1877, Page 4

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Laan UsalUVAL Y LTRIBUNE: FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1877 propor, The end songht was to bresk up tho olection of a partisan jndiciary by enn- bling the minority in ovory districtto olectnt lonst ono Judge. This wonld give to onch circuit Jndgesof opposing politica, ~ At pres- ent, in circuits whera political nominations are made, tho Judgo {s sclected from tho political party which happens to be in a mn- demonntration on tho side of Tarkey, Fonr members of the Cabinet—Lord Sarisnunyy 8ir Starronp Nortacorz, Lord Oanvanvow, and Mr, Cnoss—threatoned a withdrawal if this warlike policy wora earried into effect, and Bracoxsrierp was compelled to choose botween n dissolutlon of the Ministry and tho abandonmont of his bollicoss pro- and Tnrkey can ovorcomo hor when she has nono of theso disadvantagestocontend with ? 6till loaving Gormany ont of qnestion, Ros. sin will have a powerfnl alloy in Roumania, The Roumaniana aro not cowardly like the Borviang, not inofMolont and scotterod like the Bosnians, nota servilo, broken-down raco liko the Bulgarian poasants, who hiave beon m . s Adminlatration In the policy that has bes form Iands'in Mollonry County assossod, e apatetionta ! l?lrn]ngonlnlnn.wm ba sny, atan averaga of 850 an ncre, and thon | Juained by tho raescss of fal poller, and by the ho mny with some equity nsk that intangible nefits it will canfer npon both whita and bl i} ; 1 property bo also taxed b its fall valno. But, [ §icP>cns With sincors rospact, I am yonrs, 80 long aa lands in MoHonry are taxed only — At o valaation of B15 an nore, 1ot the samo [ The Bpringfleld Raglster argucs that becanse rulo bo applied to all other proporty, | the Indicted Commissioners wero nolle proa'd at ' The feminino vindicatore of the Malno politietan and Now York atock-jobber ars as rockloss with {acts aa they aro brilliant with epnthota,” 1t mayy 0o confatsed that Mr. Towles makes ont a boties case for himsolf In twonty lines than Gall flamil. ton makes against him In & colnmn and a half, Mer. Burdelte, of the Burlington 1Harwkeye, 18 noon to prblish & baok fall of his hest wity" TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ' BT MAL—IN ADVANCE—POSTAGR FREPAID AT > THIS OFPICE. Tho exporionce of the Btate in hunting gcnflv-i;hg-m an :;“il‘,;“%i“&‘ mny“-n‘: o v Including his let‘:m.“na’vn befors pnp. . woul wron slate them ont ol Ished, *'The Rire and F. th ” ;:fl!!?“.“,".‘h."p'-‘r“ :.‘.1‘“!.{"'u i "%5 gramine, Flo chose the latter, and the | jority in that locality, nud thus a Democratio | ground down 1nto tha very dustby their Turk- | tha onpital stock of railronds for taxa. ofMce, Thora ta o zl andistetbatod middle " “'. f. .5 :onnnhe:np;;u?ud‘m:n v:r-):t'lw:::'. : By o e rony RocknLor " | difienlty was bridged over. The Liberals | lawyer, however commendable and desirabla ishoppressors, Thoy nro a proud, independ. | tion onght to bo instractive. In 1873 the this Togic somewhdo—perhapa it's PER1oLAT. | Paper humorists in the conntry, St 3:3 | thus ware the menns of delaying, it they | a4 a Judge, cannotbo elected in a Republican [ ent poople, dominated by n warliko German | Stato Doard fonnd capital stock o the | fq s & middle-man, But then he has disteib- A party of Proteatant lourists had the TR Nl LA %% | have not wholly preventod, the step which | circuit, nor s Republican Judge in a Demo- | Princo, and strong in military powor. It can | amonnt of $133,000,000 ripo for taxation. | uted n good deal, Tho fact Is that tha nolte pros. effrontery and 1l ste o take up & collection [y WREKLY EDITION, POSTPAID, would involve England in the war na tho foo | eratio ciremt. Under this now rulo tho vot- | rolse an effective Army of 100,000 men. Binco thon the rallronds have inoreased ; all vrlu enl.c;:::'l:l because CAnrexrar, o ma&n‘n‘: 4]t Bisting, n'" lrnlnlmmyl of thalr fajth Qneeapy, per year. *,1:2 | of Russin and tho ally of Turkoy. It isfo | ers of tho cirenit can elact Judgos, whataver | Thore are other smaller Powers which wonld | tho property is still here ; nothing has been | Witness, had run away, and an nccount-book,” | trho hasbeen laboring In Rome. It wan slmost g Y :{kt'n 8% | bo seo;! 'ho':hef :h:irynnocm wfl{bo perma- { may bo thelr politics. The Sonato struck ont | come to tho oid of Russia in such a compli. | taken nwny 3 novertholess tha *intangible " | essoutial o the prosecution, had been stolen. Yiolation of tho laws of hosplislity to use tne “Toatage pre, nent, o Thero is no comfort in Washington for the whisky-thievea in any part of tho conn. try. Secretary SmenMax will not ovon let bygones bo bygones, as Afessrs, LawnENcs and Reep aro daily discovering in thelr offorts to efiect n comfortablo arrangemont for the “first batch.” There is n rostless oud onorgetio tendoncy manifested in the Slatine Chapel for auch a purpose. Bartloy Campbell hns at last pitshod hig fontin *‘fama'a etornal esmping-gronnd." The Phitadelphia Prese says that hls now play, ‘v Herolne in Rags,” s an insplration ot genlus, 8 moat brilliant achfovement of histelonlc tajent, and n triamph of deamatlc art, ' **Wo are undor no obligations to bellove anything that Charles Mackay says, bacaase hy y I." remarka tho Independent, e once described - Brondwny, In Naw York, as o steoet lined witha this provision relating to minority represont- ation, but tho Houso haa restoredit. Itisto bo hoped thoBenato will yield, and thus securo to tho Btate a judiciary protected from the posaibility of ropronch on tha ground of political partisanahip, * It is notorions that the judiclal civouits aro apportioned by tha parly majority in the Legislatare so as to sccuro the election of party candldatea to the Bonel, and that, ox- cation, nmong thom Bervis, Bosnin, Mon- tenegro, Persin, nud Gredee,—tha latter TPower now only being restrained from rising ngalnat the Turks by fear of England, Tho niliance of England and Austria docs not involvo the overthrow of Rusain, Sho can succesafully dffy both of them and omergo vietoriously from tho conflict. If Germnny should effoct an allinneo with Rus- uin, tho two Powers might dofy all Europe, Erectmen coples rent freo. ‘Torrevent delay and mistakes, be eraand give Poste Cffce addresa fn fiu), fnclnding State and County, Temittances may be mads either hy draft, expross, Tost-Othicaorder, or In regfstered lettors, at our risk, TENMS TO CITY SUDSCRINERS. Tafly, dellrered, Sundsy excepted, 2% cents per weok. Laily, deilvered, Sunday facinded, 80 cents per week Addren THE TRIBUNR COMPANY, Lorner Madison aod Dearborn-sts., Chicago, Lk —ee TAMUSEMENTS, ' ——— u’\’l‘l‘?fi:’lho : 81:‘2 ;':;;; :::(:;da::‘unzx’::: It was too much brandy sauco, taken to pre- pare the recinlont for the usages of the Black something lika 10,000,000, and tho most of | ffills people, to whom he was by mialster, that that was in ono road. Idlangible property | did the business for Geonaw Burimn. Thie fa n handly bafo dependence ns n source of | will reliove many offico-seckers of tho great load rovenuo from taxes, Bhadows aro rarely | on their mind,—the burden of approhonsion prodnetive; and tho attompt t6 tax both the w?t‘;: 0:.“ rl-}vn;;‘t‘lm'l“ ;:n 3:‘ ::-:g&t: :lp-‘ pointmen men, smbstanco aud tho shiadow, tho property nud after appointment, drink by a plpu'-)lnu transit the title, is n vain wasts of time, nnd will from tho bottle, or nip It fn tho silonce of tho hardly compensate for the exbibition of B Dbttt b ; A p; night. :mlllléh m’:(h“ l‘t‘lw“ "::I"h and Fifth avonoe ay Troasury Dopartmont to roview and ns far i rty eandidat cleat- | England, however, may mako tho fatal mis. | ignorance and demngogism which atlonds th ———— nilt up with white marble houncs. T o cept in raro cases, party cang e8 aro cloof 8! Y dolph |\r{~‘n?.v'!‘:e‘l’w:en Mt:"ll:.? and_Lasaite. | a4 possiblo undo somoe of tho performances el to the C(rc“;l Cou’rfi. In tha'northern | take of ;mnumr w’nr in behalt of Tnrkey. | cffort. . Col. WarrEnsox, of the Courler-Journal, op- Mark Twaia was: loudly ‘oalled for after niaenmentof iho Almea Opera-Boufte Trospe. **La | of tho precoding Administration in referanco district of tho Btte, ontside of Cook County, | Her anlmosity ngainst Russia is so intense S—— poscs poraonal journallsm. e thinks it tenda | the prodnction cf his new piay in Washington, bnt Via Pacisienze.” to tho whisky cases, The faot that in Chi. parly lines exeludo Domocrata from the | that the Cross of Bt George may yot bo | ,THE STANDARD OF THE PROPHET. todovelop tho basor passtoug, ete. That do- | wan not ablo to respond, baring beon dotained e + PicVicker's Thentro. cngo the natural protectors of the Govern. Tho startling nowa is sont from London | pendsupon whother the porsonaligies are put that tho Bheils-ul-Tslam, who ia the hond of | Inwitha harrow or spread on neatly with a tho Church in Tarkey, nud to whom the hw:nltm;uh hlnrh.' ‘l!l. (IA a &nh;’lullfut that nlm trowing style of doing the busincss acems to grim caravan which starts shortly from Con- Sttt e._*___u"' stantinopla for Mocea to proclaim in all the Boma of ths papers express s fear that, {2 Pres- citiea through which ho pnssos that the | 1dent Harxs gocs South, ho will receivo a moro faithfnl aro onlled to fhe war ngainst Rnsain, | affcctionate welcome from the Democrats than and that bo will bloss the Bultan na the load. | he il from the Republicans. d\\r;.-ll, he elghte seven Domocrats onco, and it didn’t hurt bim, ook :’;:hl“:m":_ ga;n‘::m’.“v’l‘:h‘l‘ffif; Very likely ho can do still better with a littls f » Th Il bo plenty of Republicans ropresented the Baltan as declaring, in apito protive sl D emubfea to pepper and salt them,—~there 13 no doubt of English advics to tho contrary, that he | aboutthat. - Madison street, between Dearborn and State. Hartford by {lincas. s A telegtam was read from **Bweothearta and Wives” aad * Tom Cobb.” him, in which ho sald “ho had prepared two spseches for the occnsion, —one for a succoss, anq theother for a failare, —and rogrotted that he coald not bo prosent to deliver both, . Tho telogrph oditor of tha Boston Ad. gertiser transtatod CArlyle's lotter to reads ** A feat is contemplated that 4will foreo not Rusal only, but all Earope, to doclare war against the Unlted Btates," A mora probable roadinzis: **Declarg warsgalostue, |, e., Great Drltaln. The ronait of tho Advertlaer's reading was to give all the sollg men & shaking-up and apoil thelr appetites for breakfast, An excosdingly nasty play named * Pink Dominoes " {s having & grent auccess at Me, Chacles Wyndham's Criterion Theatre in London, The fonnd waving by tho side of tho standard of the Prophot, protecting tho Mohammedan fanaties in thelr work of plunder, rapine, and murder which the unfurling of that standard means, with the indignant protests of tho rost of the oivilized world declsiming ngainat tho unholy nllianco, Benely, and in some of the middle, castorn, westorn, and southern districts the samo ox- clusion ia applied to Republicans, In‘mnny instances the best mon aro thus oxcluded from Judgeships by reason of their politics. In this connty, this party rulo has not been applied for many years, and Democrats and Tepublicans aro olected andre-cleoted Tudges Ly the goneral vote, withont roferenco to tho personal politics of the Judges. In other districts the party rale is insisted upon, and now, when three Judges are to boe olocted in cach ciroult, thero is, 1t appears lous, strongor ronson than aver for nllowing tho mont'a interests somohow mannged to re. vorsa their positions nnd get on tho side of the thievesdoos not nocessarily imply that thia i tobo the ond of tho wratched business; and the same fa trite of somo of tha peonliar com. promiscs that woro effected in 8t. Xouls. Becrotary Suenyax proposes to gob at tho bottom, of theso transactions, apd tho dis- tllors bogin to wonder if tharo is any such thing as rest for the weary nuder the presont order of things at Washington, ————— THE FRESIDENT'S POLIOY, 1t mny not Lo ont of the way to direet tho Muasenm. N ‘Monroe street, between Stato and Dearhorn. Vaude- ville snd novelty. Engagement of Den Thompson. * Joahus Whitcomb.™ Adelphl Thentre. Monroe street, corner Dearborn. Varlety performe _ance. INTANGIDLE TAXATION, The State Benato on Wednosday had an. othor day's discussion of Low to punish In. dustry and thritt, There aro vations opin. jons in'the Sonate ns to the propor means to bo ndopted, but thero is n genoral ngreament A ODGE, A, . and A, M.—Ttal), dsy) evening, at 9.0 w'elock, fur work an the M. A, Deerec, Vinitops cordially and tratornally invited to AR, E.N. TUCKER, Sec'y. that tho possession of ‘property, tho saving [ wonld unfurl the standard of the Prophot T TS ! only argument made n'its behnlt fa by Mr. Labon. 21 ocial attontion of that class of partisans | pcoplo of ench cirenit to eolect whon tho omorgency arose. With ons pow. The Eastern war threatens to fnclude overy- chere, th editor of Zrufh, who saya’ he thinks 1t ; qordar anmienns e Thdls S Wi | Thi think that tho orgeatsation of the e | Tudgs of whatover - peliticn. giv. | and necumulation of capital, is 0 crlmo ngninst oy ou. | body. Already a mceting s been held in ] £00d that wivea shonld bo made to understand that husbands havo privaleges In regard to other wome en,—a principle s0. shocking and so ntterly sob. veralvs of common morallty. and decent soclety that it {a surpnsing T'ruth has notboon auporossed, or called to acconnt by the oficera of tho law, The Marquis Manfredl Lonza di Mereato Binncs, latoly sp'oadidly mareled In Now York, was extled from ftaly In 1872 for varfons toasony, mono of them dishonoradle, On roaching thia country ha was at first unable to obtain omploy- mont, and was nbliged to tsko the position of waltorat Delmonico's. Coming andor the notlca of Dr. lowaed Crosby, ho was rocommendod (o the favorabla .motico of a large sitk importing house, and rost: rapldly to the chargo of its entira forolgn correagondonce. ¥lia bride fa a danghter of Dr, Willlaos A, Hammond, ex-Sargoon. Goneral of the Unitesl States Army, and now one of the most prominent and woalthy phystcians in Now York.™ . Tho play of **Tngomar” latoly prosonted In this ciy has Jong boon papular, yot probably not ona yareon In o hnndred can name th: author offt. Jlaference to the **Familiar Quotations * will shesw that the linas, ‘Two sould with but & singis thou; ! 7w iokrta that Leat a4 oo, o eI are thoro attrlbutod to Marla Lovell, and sald to bo translated from tho Gormsn. Tho original Oer man anthar, littls known in thls country, fs Eigina ¥rant Josoph von Mnench-Bellinghanscn, wiva died In Vienna, May 21, 1871. Tha play from whach *‘Ingomar" fs taken is known In German 8314 Dor Sohn dor. Wildnfss," It was firat trans. Irido] §nto Knglish in 1848 by -Charies Aunthon, of ety York, undor the title of **Tho S8an of tha ‘Wildarnces," but this version was aftorwarda su. ‘pesedod by that of Maria Lorell, ! A now and thrilling divorco.auit is that of Mre, Mary Roo agalnst her husband, William Ttoe, recently Inetitutod in Nowburg-onethe-Hadson, Bha was formorly Mary 8, Norton, of Chicago, and has boon warried abont ten yeara, Bhe alleges ro- pented acta of cruelty ngainst him, Once he struck Lier becanao sho sald she thonght Prestdent Grant drank too much; anothor time ho choked hor for noglecting to bring the nowapaper to the breakfast tablo. Friends of dofendant teatified that thowifa had & vary violont tomper, and that on one acea- slon she slapped tho faco of Becrotary-of-War Slanton {n Washington, 1t scems to have boen a very happy family, Roo was formerly an officer in tho army, whero, perhaps, his hablte of command and hia chivalrous disposition wete: developed. Ile ln sald to bo a w-:ithy man, owning property worth $500,000, 1t In the first number of the new serios of the Zanterne, the papor froshly started by Henrl Ttochefort, the editor recounts tho sad foto which ovcrtook the stafl of the Marsesllalss, the lied Joutnal started In 1860 and" malntained only for & fow montha, The list of victims s as follows: Victor Nolr, abut down with a revolver by Priacs Plorro Bonaparte; Milllore, shot without trial; Flourens, hacked to doath with sabres; Corcolles, dead on board tho Guerrloro; Vordure, . dead In Now Caledania; RancandJules Valles, condemncd {0 death; Humbert, condemned to hard labor for °| Ute; Hourl Rochetort, Oltvice Paln, Arthar Arnold, Paschal Groussot, Asal, Malon, Lissagaray, Collot, Monrot, sentenced to transportation, * These," adds 3. Ilent! Rochefort, **aro the recompenses awarded by the epublic to those who worked with the greatest enorgy In favor of its advent In spite of the cass-tales of the Emplre, " | At the laat nemorial Old Bogth mesting in Boston, Friday, the Rov. 8, F. Smith told the, ¢ircamstanca uuder which ha composed the hymn of ‘*America.,” A collection of German musle had boon turnodover to him by Lowell Mason, with thoreqacat that ho makaany sclections from It he - might fancy, and adapt words to them, Inithls collection he chanced upon the old tuns to which ‘*God Bave tho King" i sung In Enzland. The music Inspired him, and ho wrote outthe words now known through the length ana breadth of the land, and sung to the ssmo air, **Porhapa the * tuns-belonge tq England, porhaps to Germany, pechaps to some other nation, Butitfs a besntle ful fact that, whilo Amorica fumishes the words, wo are able to link ourselves with England, if not #lso with other conntries, bocanuso they or one of them farnishod the tune, " ' Tha Rav, Josoph Jook's attack upon Har. vard Collegoas tho **hot-bed. of in@delity has been answered by the Boston Posf, which says that nearly every orthodox donomination ia represonted in thoe bpdy of Instructors, - An Eplscopallan and 8 Congrogationsligt bave juss beon slected to tho corporation, **COn the Board of Overssers, come posed of thirty«two members, thore are such Epls- copalians as Phillips Drooks, Itichard 11, Dans, dr.y J. W. C. Noble, and Theodors Lyman. The Rov, Alexander Mackenzle, tha Bocratary of this Bozrd, is an Orthodox Congregationalist, In the cato of the Matthowa” Bcholarship, lately estab- lished by Mr. Nathan Maithews, of Boston, ite benefits are to ba given by preferonce to students Inteniling to be clergymen in the Protestant Epis- copal Church. Thera are throe religlons societies in the Univenity, vigorous orzanizations, holdlng fegular mootings,” . | Miss Milly Do Granvills, the woman with sniron-jaw, began hor brilliant and jawful careor In & Chicago botel, whoro she used frequontlyto awmuse the guests and begallo her own sad fancles by lifting dining-room chaira with hor testh, Hor #uccces caused *'tho man with an fron D'Atalio by name, to die of envy; his widaw Ls now close friend of Miss De Granville, but nover cone sents 10 witnass hor darlng and unparalleled acts, fearing that they would bo too painful a reminder ot the departed and lamented ** original™ lron- faw, It {s to be hoood that the matorisl for & romance provided by this touching narrative will not be allowed to piss into oblivion without im- provement,—at least, not while tho historiographor 0f tha circus to which Miss Do Granvlilo §s attached bas sirength to wield a pon. ; John L. Arms—sn fmproved philanthropist sacioty and morality, and hened it should bo subjected to pvory praventive and punitive ponalty that can bo dovised by Isw, 'Tho man who earns 82 a day by hatd labor, and inatead of sponding it all savos ono-half of it, bocomos at thoe ond of two yonrs n capl- talist, having at hia disposal a sum equal to tho entire labor onrnings of a year., This industry, cconomy, and thrift, instead of boing worthy of respoct and encouragement, is regarded by the Xllinois Stato Benate ns o crime ngainst labor, and. ns an attempt this man to gmsp tho wonlth® which the Almighty intonded shonld bo tho common heritage of tho human family, The man who by his solf-denial and unflagging industry thus ncoumulates a fow hundred dollars naturally scoks to make it productiva ; ho thereforo londs it to a neigh- bor, who with 1t purclinses threo horses, giv- ing a noto for tho money. Buch a procced- ing os this, in tho cetimation of the Benata of Nlinois, morits punishment, nnd thore. fore it demands that the owner of the horses shnll bo taxed for tho support of the Stalo, County, Oity, and Town Govornmonts, and for parks and all other purposos—on tha vnluo of the horses. It thon roquires that tho man holding the note shall be taxed thereon for an equal smount ; and thus the $300 saved from labor is compellod to pay a tax, ranging from 2 to 8 per. cent, on 600, Tho majority of tho Ilinofs Sonate insiats that this {s not doublo taxation, and thatit is tho perfection of economical wisdom to tax Dboth the substance and the shadow, . Tho Genoral Rovenus law was adopted in 1872, and in it wna incorporated o provision for taxing, in addition to all tho visible or dlacoverable property of porsons and corpo. rations, the cnpital stock of #ll corporations, Undor this law the practice has boon tovaluo all 'zonl and porsoual property of all kinds; and In the osse of corporntions to assess the capltal stock, ndding thoroto the dabts of the corporation, nad from the nggrogato dednct the nssossod valuo of the real and personal proporty. . Tho valnes of roal and personnl property are assessod at from one.fourth to one-third their actual value, The operation isthus + Compnny with $200,000 capital in- vested in land, machinory, tools, and mate. rlals; dobts, $100,000; asscssod on enpital stock, $200,000; dobts, $100,000; property (one-third), £67,000; total taxablo valua. tlon: proporty, $07,000; enpital and debts over value of proporty, $233,000; aggrogate valne to bo taxed, §300,000, The thoory is, that tho capital stook and the proporty of tho compnay in whioh the capital is invosted ore two distinet aubstantial proporties, capablo of boing sepnrated and of being taxed as distinot identities. For saveral yoars tho Legislaturo lias Dbeen floundering in the wildest thoories on this subject, but it still adheres to the doctrine that 8 man who owns one-fifth of, the prop- orty of a corporation, and holds a cortificate from the company reciting that faot, owna and posseesos property oquivalont for tnxablo purposes to the valuo of two-fifths,—one-fifth belng bis actual intorest and tho other fifth belng his oertificate, The Illinols Senate inalsts that the property itsolf and the cor- tificatos of tho rospootive shares of onch of tho ownors of tho property aro both taxabla ontities, and deuounces ns troason ngainst labor tho assertion that this ia double taxa- tion, Forsomo renson, nat very clearly under. slood, tho Logislature ot its prosont sesalon has atricken out of the amended bill from tho lists of property to bo taxod the words ** capital stock,” and subsfitnted therefor tho words **intangiblo property.” Hore- after the taxablo property in'Iilinoisis to be “tangiblo " or ““intangible,” and the in. tangible to Include credits, dobts, and cer. tfMcatos of atock, ‘The nggrogats valuation of the real and poronal property of this Btate for taxable purposes is about $1,000,000,000. The ac. tual valuo is about $8,000,000,000. Tho valuation of such proparty is, thereforo, on ou overage, not oxcoeding one.thipd, This is fully pnderstood; but the ignorance aud malice which seck o punish organized or ‘nssociated savings or capital wora displayed in an amoendment proposed by Bonator Jos. vy, to the effsct that in nssessing intangi. ble property tha State Board shonld always put {6 down at ita * sotunl value,” or nt 100 cents on the dollar, Now the Constitution of the Stata roquires that the valuation shall be uniform, and for this purposs we have 8 County and n Btats Board of Equalization, 1t farms, aud live stock, and town lots are to ba assessed af one-thind of thelr value, then intasgible property must be asssssed propor- tlonately, Bt tho ignoranco of the cauting cry against capital demands that, it four or five men, each holding a'sum of monsy in. sufficlent to engsgoe in a manufosturing in. dustry, shall unite thelr means and thus be able to embark in actual enterprise, that then theso men shall be treated as public ene. mies, and be taxed 200 per cent greater than their neighbors, and be taxed not only on all they possess,.but upon the titls papers of the property in sddition. Now, if we oro to Lave asdlosements at full valuatfon, let thom be gemeral. Lot Afr. Joarrw's schiemo bo put in operation, pud have tho coralally invited. K. BT, JOII PR TN AL ey ! E— = — _— ——1 FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1877, ecful army aloig the wholo line of tho Dan- | A0ttic'so determing the “policy of the Poles? ube from ita mouth to tha Borvian frontier, | fn tho mattor, Probably the Zones will tako a and another driving the Turks beforo it | hand i next, Thera is hope that the Equator through Asin Minor, tho Sultan moy wall may bo prevalled upon to arbitrate, howaver, imagine that the emorgoney has como, provided the ‘Turks keop their own side of the Tho unfurling of this standard, tho | Ecliptic. Thus ovents crowd npon cach other. *‘Sanyak-Sherif,” will prosant a now phase The mcmhmnnm - o tho confial, Tho standard i ua 6 88 | .01 Yundred dallacs aptoca on. the S5 By Molinmmodaniam taclf. It was part of the | sajonrning on tho 2ith they will have this £ flowing curtains that sdorned tho room of | taxs to thalr favald families, and a triflo moro Momamuan's favorite wifo, and hns always | for Incldentals. These conalderations, ft s beon carefully guarded from profane oyes in | sald, doclded the Senato to defer adjournment tho Barnglio, It matters litle how old it is, gm May 15, as proposed by the Ifouse, to Msy or what it is, howover, to Mohammedans, Y It is to them the symbol of tholr faith, the standard of tholy Prophet, the badgo of Islam. Whon that standard is unfurled, @it sammons overy Mohammednan to the resoue of Islam. Itcalls npon 8,600,000 Moham- medans in European Turkey, over 40,000,~ 000 in India, 8,500,000 in Persin, and over 100,000,000 moro seattered through various parts of Asin and Africa, to rally to the de- fonze of Islam ngainst the *‘infidels,”. It is of courso impossibla that Turkoy could aver organizo thess immense hordes into rognlar oarmios, rogularly drilled and dlsciplined, to oucounter the. troops of Russla, It s not the purpose of Turkoy to do it. The unforling of this standard ia an invitation to massacre aod plunder all who do not bolieve in Mohammedanism. It is o declaration that avery Mohammedan who kills nino {nfidels, men, women, or ohil. dren, it matters not which, will roceive a passport to Paradise, If this nowa be trne, thon indeod i Turkey rushing upon her doom, and taking the first step to arrny the wholo OChristian world against her. When the standard of the Prophet is unfarled, Rnssla will not be alonain this war, The advocntes of the Olristlan roligion and of Cliristian olvilization, the whols world over, will riso nnd declnro that Turkish rulo shall foravor ond in Europe, and that tho Turkish ' tyrants shall be sent over tha"Bosphorus to their old Asiatlo possossions, e ‘Weonnury, Clerk of the South Cavolina Ben- ato, having been charged by tho Charleston News and Courier (Domocratie organ) with hay- inz bought liquor and clgars for Republican officials with Stato funds, hias * got even " with that paper by bringlng before the Benate soma Ictters which heclaims to have recelved seven years ngo from the owncrof the News and Cour der. The following arc samples of the docu- ments: Dran Woonnurr: Inclosod fnd bill ngatnat the Epeaker, arranzod for discownt of 20 por cent to tho paying oficer, Moaxa sald it should be paiil promptly, Let me know what the Port ltoyal Itall- nre. publican party as an officohiolding communi. ty meroly is of nu importance parmnmount to the wolfaro of tho country to the reply mado by the President to a well-known newspaper-owner in Cloveland. When this Cloveland editor represonted to the President that his Bonthorn policy wonld bo likely to rorult in n defeat of tho Ropublican party in Ohio nt tho October election (giving ns n reason that tho Republicans would stay nwny from tho polls in sufficiont numbors to bring this about), the President is reported to have eaid that it wonld not surprise Lim asfrent donl, and to have intimated that ho should not be at all alarmed at it, nor regard tho Re- publican party as doomed in caso the pro- diction should prove to bo. truo, Now, all this slnply means that Prosidont Haxrs 18 not ndministering the General Govornment according to ‘a certaln policy that has an cyo singlo to the purposs of oarrying the Stato of Ohio or any othor State at tho October olection, and that ho will not accapt any temporary dofect in any local election ns o sign of the popular disapproval of Lis course, or ns the final dotorinination of the political status of the conntry, or ns the ultimate offact of his policy on the Repnb. MNean party, In thls no sane man will dis- puto him; tho infatuated office.secker and tho despornte partisan alone mny deny it In withdeawing tho United Btates troops from tho probably unconstitutionn! and cor- tainly nuwiso cmployment of austaining State Govornments that cannot stand alono; in bringing about n poncoablo Reitloment of local dirsonsions that have laated for years, with n guarantee of civil and politieal righta for the blacks from the only peoplo who enn enforeo them; in squeceing down tho num. ber of offices to tho smallest number, and rodnoing tho number of officeholders to a working-forco; incutting down thoarmy 2,600 men; in establishing a tonuro of offico ini the civil servico during good behavior and eill- clont work; in refusing to condono the offensies against tho revonue and remit stolon taxes; in proparing to curtail Govornmont oxponditures far Lelow what has been re- parded ns possiblo,—Presidont Havea fs probably doing what he bolioves the welfaro of the country demands, and not trying to concilinto some disappointed and solfish par. tisans, There i8 reason to bellavo, however, that tho Clovoland oditor has not fairly repre. eontod the pooplo of Ohio in saying that the Stato will be lost to the Repnblicans in Octo- Lor by ronson of the Prosident’s policy, Such oxpressiona of publia feeling ns liave beon givon at tho polls since the Prosident’s policy lias become apparont have boon greatly to the ndvantage of tho Republican party, both inslde and outside of tho Btate of Ohio, aven including tho City of Clovelaud. Tho Ropub- ligans carried their city eloction in Cincine nati this spring by o majority of 4,000, thongh ‘tho clty returned two Douo. cratie Congrossmen lnst fall. The samo tendency hns boon noticod elsowhore. Ohi. .cago gave on unparalloled Republican major- ity this spring, though TiLpen carried the city Inst fall Ly 5,000 majority, and tho vie- tory this spring was so ovorwholming thnt £omo part of it moy be falrly crodited to tho influenco of tho President's policy, The Re« publicana carriod Indianapolis tho other day by 1,00 majority, which was n vast improve, mont over the October and Novembor cloc- tions, Thosa ovents are scarcely significant of ndefent in Obio next October, and if thero bo adefent its explanation will probably bo found i something besidss the Prosident's policy. But, defeat or no dofeat In Ohio the comiing fall, the Prosidout’s polioy has a pa- triotism which will outlast tho spite of the disappointed partisans who may possibly bring about temporary revorses in cortain lo- calitios, which will gain for the Republioan party two Btatos whero it shall loso one, and inspiran popular confidonce in its fitnoss for Government which n dozen towmporary local defeats will not shatter, THE JUDIOIAL LAW, The two Housts of the Legialature havo agroed upon the bill reorganizing the Cirouit Courts of the Btate outaide of Cook County, At prosent, these Circuit Courts are come posed of o single Judge, oloctedyin the olr. onlt whora bo Lolds court. ‘Thero are some- where about thirty of these Oircuit Comts, some of them having large territorial dis. tricts and small amountof business in each county, whilo others have uwanll districts and large amount of business, ‘The now law proposes to consolidate thesa oircults, reduc- ing the whole number to thirteen, and to have Lereafter three Judges clocted in oach clrouit. The Judges are to arrange among themselves a3 to the counties in which each sball hold court within their circuits, and, fsiling to agree, the Chief Justice of tho Su- prome Court shall assign them ; and, in case ao additional Judge uhall be temporarily needed in o olrouit, the Chlef Justioo may aseign one of thtse Circult Judgesto hold tho pdditional court, When the bill passed the Houso sowe weeks ago, {t provided that thesa Judges should be olected st the samo timd, oud that esch voter should bave the privilege of cuwulating his vote among tho caudidates as he should doem ing to the minority the privilego, if suffi- clently numorons, of electing one of tho threo Judges. Tho authority of the. courls, aftor all, Yosts upon the dogreo in which thoy possess tha goneral confidenco and respoct. Taxpayers and litigants are not all membora of ona political party, eod the exclusion of one party from the cholco of aither of the Judges appointed ovor tho district is n procoeding which can hardly be justified In some Ropublican distriots, the majority may loso what they consider a legitimate portion of tha party spoils; but in tho odjoining distrist “their party friends in o minority will mako a cor- responding galn. Bo that, after all, in a moro party sonse, the losses and gaina will Lo equalized, but thoro will be the groat gon- oral advantago that in onch of the thirteen circuits both political parties will bo repre. sented on tho Bench. There will bo a Re- publiean Judgs in the Adams, Pike, Sanga. mon, and Crawford circnits, and n Democrat in the Winnobago, Vermillion, Kankakeo, and Rock Island circnits. Tho general con. fidenco and the popular respect for tho Courts can hardly fail to bo incrensed by the obliterntion of oxclusivo party seclections of {he Judges. CHICAGO MARKET BUMMARY. Tho Chicago produce markels were gonorally casler yestorday, with leen dolng. Mess potk clored 16¢ per brl lower, at 814,85214.874% for Jnno and $16.00 for July. Lard closed 173§c per 100 lns lower, at $9.52% for Juno and 80,024 for July, Meata were dull, at 5¢ por Ib for loose shouldern, 7%¢ for do short ribs, and 73c for,do short clears, Mighwines were quiet, at $1.10 per gallon, Flour waa quiet and steady. Wheat closad t¢ highar, nt $1.00% for May and 81,68% for Junc. Corn closod Aic lower, at b3%c cash and S4Xe for June, Oats closed ¥c lower, at 44c cash and 44%c for June. Ryc was stoady, ai 88c. Darloy was nominat, at 70c for May. Homs were quict and @10¢ lower, with sales of poor to extrant 83.10@5.70. Cattle _wero active and strongor, solling at $3,3530.00. Bhoep wore firm and unchanged. Ono hundred dllara fn gold would buy $107.12% in greenbacks atthe closo. ——— ‘What the country wants now to insure penco and acqulescence in the policy of tho Adminis- tratlon (s not wordy declamation nor Congres- slonal argument, but some gentle Granger who can mako two post-offices grow whero only one grow Uofore. ‘That secd, once planted, will bring forth frult for the healing of the nation. — A cablegram says that an officer of the Com- miseariat has been shot at Odessa for adultorat. ing flour for tho army. It whil ha soveral wecks before it can be ascertalned whother tho victim was an Amerlean supply-contractor fn the Ruaslan sorvice. It sounda just liko our own war times, oxeopting the shooting. —— out contamporarien e done, oL n 1 e e gorons ico ponson, —Clnclnnal Tines, . - True, tho most dangerous season for fco s about July or August. It it can puil -through thoso months, it is comparatively safo the rest of tho year. l Greonbacks at tho Now York Btock Ex- chango yesterday closed at 933, I ‘The openiug of the Pormanent Exhibition at Philadelphin yostorday in the Main Build- ing was anoventful affair. ‘The Prosident and a portion of his Uabinet, Gon. Gnaxr, ar.d a largo number of notables assisted in the inauguarntion of the onterprise. Tho Ex. hibition promises o bo an important ad- dition to the pointsof interest in Philadel- plia, e —— THE ENGLISH DRIFT TOWARDS WAR, Tho lettors which wo printed in our last isque froin Mr. Sasrrer and Moxounz D, Conwary, two very closo obsorvers, and tho general tenor of tho diapatzhos, clearly indi- cate the steady drift of England into war with Russia, notwithstanding the very cau. tious nud conservative declnration of the Ilomo Bocrotary in the GransTonn doblite, to tho effect that the Government will maintain tho'stricteat noutrality botweon the contond- ing Powers, while it mnintains its own fn. terests, and i consclons of its own carncst dosiro for pence. Mr, Bsranter Boys posi- tivoly of the feeling in England : Tho actual comnencoment of hostilitios by Rua. eln has ocenslonea an outburat of English anlmose ity against Ttussla which mny falrly be called foroclous, All disgulsea are thrown off, Tho real wish and purpose of the Anglo-Turkish party, steadily inalntalucd from tho heginning, are ot last openly proclalned. Tlhey mean nothing lees than that England should onee moro fight tho Lattlo of ‘Furkoy. That is what the Government moant Inat summor, and what tho countey, roused to indigna- tlon by the Dulzarian atrocities, refuscd to pormit. Mr, Conway confirms this statomont, ns will bo seon by the following oxtract: Day by day, with a raplaity one would have called imposalblo, the reaction ‘s scen returning gatnet Russla, The **atrocitica™ have becomo ntiquarian, o far as Turkey Ia concerned, while Ruesla's old alne aro paraded as If thoy oceurrod yestorday, The theatres oro bogluning to rofloct the changed popular sontiment. At the Globo Theatre a sung ls sung embodying the sentimont that eboald occasion agaln arlse for protecting English Intereats, she will be fonnd bestde the Turk, and **carrying on tha samo old game," Tho sonz haa boen recolved with cheera, 1t Is common tohiear **Atrocitics? T don't bellovein thom;" or **Think of what Ruasia did in Poland."” Assuming that England goos into this war, sho will not care to go into it alone, It s not hor custom, Bhe fights with money, and subsidics, and alliances, Bho has never car- ried on war alone in modern times, Bho hos nover mado a square stand-up, fight Jiko that batween Franco and Germany, Sho will at onco seek an ally, and that ally will be Aus- trin, whotn sho will attempt to dmg into the confliot, Leaving Germany out of the quos- tion as a possible ally of Russia in such a complication, and assuming that England, Austrin, and Turkoy orray thomsolves agninst tho Czar In » triple alliance of gread, desper. ation, and fanaliclsm, and what then? Itis even then possible for Ru-sin to como out victorious, England is mo bot- tor propared for war now than she was in tho Crimesn conflict, Hor army stands to-day no batter off in material, offiolenoy, and fighting swongth than it did then. Bhe has fallen far to the rear of the Continantal Powers in thelr gianntio military strides since those days. Russis, on the othor liand, Las developed an onormons army and placed it upon a superb war foot. ing, to fulfill, as the Ozar ominously sald in hisspecch to the troops, * the wmbislon of Russia.” Bho has armoed thom with tho bost style of modern arms,’ Bhe has kapt her corpa up to the maximum, Bho las strongth. ened her inland and Black Sen fortifications, Bhe has constructed a notwork: of railronds, built not a0 much for commerolal &s for war purposes, Theso roads bring her within two days of her Army of the Danube, and within four days of her Army of the Caucasus, now sweeplng like o whirlwind through Armenia. Bho no longer has to transport troops, mu. unitlons, and supplies over a thousand miles of country in wagons, They move with tho utmost expedition, It s only about two weeks sgo that' one army moved across the Pruth, and its cane lons are now heard along the wholejns of the Danube, from ita mouth to the Bervian frontier. It was about the same time that the other army left Tiflis, and now its ad- vanoo is almowt within sight of Erzeroun, in the very heort of Armonia. It was only by the most desperats efort that Eogland, France, Sardinin, aad,Turkey conquored Rusala in the Orimeun war, when sho was laboring under colossal disadvantages, What prospoct is there that England and Austyia I — e — Tho publio will awalt the roturn of tho ox- Btate's-Attornoy with iInterest. It will' be ' proper for bim to stato why he loaned toLawyer STn that account-book, through the abscnce of which ft becamo necessary to nolle pros. the indicted Cottaty Commlssioners, . The Sultan has issued an irade deponing \{ tho Princo of Roumania. Tho Inttor, how- over, will continuo ns tho visiblo hond of hls Principality, having taken tho come awandgf .tho army proparatory to sssuming tho offensivo as an nuxiliary of tho Russinn forces. It would not bo at all remarkable if the Prince of Roumanin should have an im- portant share in doposing the Sultan, — ——— Because Tz Timone is not a * parasite in politics, sumo of its contemporarics call it an “arlstocrat” in polltics. Timo and tho preg. ress of Clvll-Service Reform. and poneral ons lightenment will teach them that this doca not {ollow as a logleal soquonca. The marine underwriters of London suf- fered their 1nout sorious loss for o year or mors in the wreck of the steamship Dakota on the rocks at Point Limas, forty-five miles B'hm Liverpool. Tho vosscl alone was worth %! 8450,000. Thero is no news of tho missing 3 City of Brussols and hor procions human ? froight, Tlopo of her kafoty is rapidly dying out in London, whero the spoculative rate of insnrance upon the overdas vossol advauced yeaterday from 15 to 40 guinoas per cont, —— Paxnietox is teying to crawl from uniler tha very dirty rubblsh whote ho way feft by a Damoe cratlo investigating committee, and becoma the eandidato of his party 1 Ohlo for United Statos Senator,—/ariford Post, PrxpLron! PanpLEToN!. Who's UzypLx- ‘ToN? ! 5 ——— ‘There fa much abuso of the Sultan for unturl- ing the old flag of the Lrophet. .Yet the *old flag™ of the proflt has been the banner of tho practical statosmen of this country for along time, and nobody sald much about it. B ——— . The striking coopers of Olovoland Yoator- 1 dsy came in confliot with the mnjosty of tho Iaw in the form of & detachmont of polico, and woro forcibly puf'to roat after thoy had refused to obey an ordor to disperso, They 1had undertakon to provent the oporation of an jnflexiblo law—the supply of a demand for worlmen to fill the places themselves lind vacated. Asido from withdrwing themaelvos ] in a body from tho shops whore they were omployed, they attethpted to shut out from i employmont a largo number of man who wi}3, wero willing snd anxious to work for the "4 wagos, 'Tho law says this sliall not bo dono —that no man shall hinder anothor from earning is daily brend. Tho Cloveland etrilkers loarned a losson which their brothors throughout thecountry will do wall to hiced, and abandon the idea that Inbor troubles can La settled by violence and intimidation prac- ticod upon men who are willing to work, Aftor the burning of the Bouthorn Hotel at Bt. Louls, thero was a good deal of talk about the safety of tha inns of this country, and Soe- retary ScnuRrz has gono 8o far as to examine the most of thoso in his Department. road wants of the Lugisints My DEan Josxe T feature of tha logl the Mouso fn the sama h S[‘y way, and thero will bo : lchrmmn tarkey and trimmings for both yon ang Dx¥Fowraix tolls me yon want yoar proposal for Fiate l'llnllni and I inclosn two proj Eoflnll, one privato, the olhor public. We have put the, prico #110 conts & linc. If the offer can ba amendod or Improved, let us know, What wo want s Lo get aa fnud a price os wo can, and 1lvn you 20 per cont on he Rross amount, whateyer {t may b, b staini ikt i Buxert Cox wrote that Gzonan H, Burier wos the leading “paragraphist {n the United Btates, What was the cause of the grudge of Mr. Cox against the Paragraphera’ Assoclation that he should writo this thing? Bergeant BaTes (s In demand, Even bets are offercd that o docsn’t dare to caniy tho old flag through Braina's district in Maine, People ‘who know Bates think he will try it. Thoy oy he s very plucky, f —— Tho Hon, CiianrEs O'Coxon hasa captivat- Ing plan of government. In nspecchin New York Tuesday night ho sald tliat he would sholish legislativo representation by districts, have only ono Housein the Legislature, and elect Qovernora and Presidents cach mouth by Tot. ‘That would give every man a chanco to be catled somcthing beside General, clevato tho Qovernorship, quicken politics with now am- bitlons, make Prestdents’ pollcics liko thirty-lay paper, requiring good Indorsoment, and giving us & “chopplur sea” Government fnstead of ‘“dead awclls.! The O'Conorfan theory s essentially Hiberntan fn characteristics,a I nny- brook-Falr prescntation to invite contentions and to furnish wakes. Wo aro afraid it will get no furthor than Its projector. f Tt Isdoclded, Our army 18 to bo permitted to fall to pleces. It will bo a eadaver, In timo of dauger the Domocratic party will find the skclo- ton [n thelr house labeled “Our’ party's ocogomy,” The fight for tho removal of Colloctor ; Mennray, of the Elghth Intornal Revonue + District of Illinois, {s bocoming quito iutor- ‘cating. Tbe Colleotor is now on the ground n Washington, ready and anxious to moet ho charges of tho persons who have inter. + ¢atod thomselves in bringing about a change, \The rccordy, so far ns thoy cast ony light on he queation, show Collestor Mxauta to z avo beon o vory cfflofont officer, aud it 3 will require something besides the mors ,\Z, 5 ausertion of derogatory chorges by partics %" 2 porsonally interosted in his romoval to gain tho desired object. It Ia no longer a torm of zeproach in official circles in Washington to + bo_called “ a Baistow man; ” and as this is 1 S one of the charges ngalust Collector llz.i-, nuM, bo is quite certain of a fair and full earing, ond an opportunity to show the motivo which prompts this concertod moye- ————— Three * Presentation Nuns " were made by Blshop Brar.opea In Now York yeaterday,—tho first in tho country vl thekind, ~How we bavo Rot along without them so long nun can proba- bly toll, | . > Applicants for prominent post-officos are now slyly told by the Postmaster-Goneral that MuLLETT put up thobulldings, and tho cffoct s eald to bo very satisfactory. They ‘“go avay," ———— T 4 Tho way Col. PutL.Lirs, of the Bpringeld Jour- nal, protrudes hls tongue, bears downon his pencil, and projucts himselt through a column of brevicr, to auswer a playful paragraph of Tux ‘TuiBuxe, {s smusing, His last effort is divided liko nn old-fashioned préacher's scrmon,—cach paragraph numbered with the precisfon of a Dabbage calculator. But thoro s just one idea to be eliminated from it all, and this is, that ponding tho sottloment of that Post-Office the Presideat’s policy will be “discussed’ fn the Journal. Butthe Colonel's fdea of * discus- slon" 1580 funuy that we forbear to consider dtscriously, It s of the Avkansas varioty, and conslsts mainly in denunclation, cut up, as abovo stated, foto firatly, sccondly, cte. —— ,BasT IIARTE aud MAnx ‘Twamv, by unfted {ntellccts, have In thelr now drams, ¢ Ah-8tn," been enabled to bring the muls upon the stage, for there 1s moro than ous 4A-Sin the play, ——— Guonas M, Piwxxr, the recent self-surren- dered forgoer of Government cortificates of {n- debtedness in Callfornla, is the Pisxax-cull of rascality in that part of the Unlon, CRaRLET RE#D hias about made tp his mind that tho ex-Secrctary of the Treasury was more of'a MoBRILL retormer than Becretary Smxn. MY, ‘The replies of the Springfield Repudlican to Gaiw Hamivton show that the editor s deter- mined to go {n on his Bowrss. England will be thankful for prayers for those people who are in bonds—Turkish bonds, for fnstance. PERSONAL. bo seoma o bo—has lnvonted s contrivance for —— s ewitching boys off from car steps, There nued be The Boston Tom Paine disciples have | noheslsation tn prosounciog Mr, Arms t4ded over thalr Snancisl dificaltlos, sad will keep | benefactor of the age. 1f ha can now thels hall forits original purposes. olt.wlmun‘:. bors. r'l:a are m:o; on carat imply nulsancos at home terrors The Rov. John Miller, lately susponded i rackive O eatiiate ¢ contoraporaries aud o et mavrong enemr In Beewewall Jucke | B O s i e san, who could nover forzive him for his marcisge Ocleans, and tho Tines of m;'my. sndeacelblog S aivareed wito of exiton, Thomes, ot | 4Lt nt e e O ey e, whisGen: Jeckein beltaved canleaty | 4 o B e a2 ta ta Beripluzes, : oral way thiat as s00a as th boy spriugs upon the Alr. Bowlos answors Gail Hamilton's at. car stop and before his deadish grin has had time. tack on him In tbe New York Triduze with & | tosoften, ho s sclecd Graly from behind, while a briof paragraph, exprossing rearot that Mr. Dlalus | Largo and clastlc instrumout liko & gobli swlich ad Jay Gould should do tholr fzhtlng bouiud pet-*| delivers four savago blows tpon that part of the ticoat barticados. 1o roprints fn the Springficld | boy wharw bis tronscra are tho tightest. The boy Lepublican both Oall lavillton's latier and Whits- | is then thrown sovoral foot Jato bie pir 304 left for law Reld's edisorial lpdorement ot it and 414 (‘hq shtmauthgeides,¥ v i The vendlct of the Coroner’s jury that Archi- tect (1) MuLLerr's fncompetency caused the ‘*buckling " of the roof of the Now York Post. Oftice, and tho deatn of thresnen, furuishes the mbising link for his proper classification in xoology. Thls kind of a Osh belongs to the Branchiostoma, which is described as Laving “a thin, lanceolato, transtucent body, without & ccnteal heart or distinct braln, sod without spe- clul orgaus of sonse.” To which wight bo added that thkis fsh makes a good deal of nolse in Buing up, but vory little fo coming down. It re- malns £o bo scen whether a photograph can do any better {n the way of sccurate description. Now put his body in the museum of the Smith. sonfan Institution. l ‘Tho perfect uvanimity of sentiment on the subject of tho Eastern situation which was eclared to provall in the English Oabinet eeis to havo boen of o sort that frequently reaka up Governmonts and rendors neces. +,3ary 8 new deal in the Minisiry, The Lon- : +dou correspondent of tho Liverpool Post hna foarned, evideatly on the best of authority, that at the timo of the introduction of Mr. LADSTONZ'S resolutions the Cabinet was on the verge of tho fatal abyss which <7 Iwomas Cintrix so earnestly warned ‘_‘fi%.hn nation of in his vigorous leiter ~‘;2::t & week ogo. Dismarur sud Drzsy i wers flerce for a violent and sensational troke of policy—nothing less than the armed occupation of Constantinople and the ' 0f tho Bosphorus by the British ;u Tha Grastoxx resolutions, the letter af' Canryrx, and the monster demonstration | 4 ¥ e ———— Dox C. Haxpassow, editor of the Allegan (Mich.) Journa!, has fssued s circular lotter agsainat the sttacks on the President’s Boutherny pollcy made by Jamzs Reoratu, of Boston. The dacument has met the spproval of Sccre- tary BUERMAY, as the following letter shows: Tusasusy Drvavrausur, Wasutxarox, Msy 8, 1877, —D. C. llendersgn, .&'ah—-nnu Sia: Your noto nicloaing your asticle |n the Allogan Jouraul 13 received, resd with plcasuro and iotercst. 025470 correctly siared tha Renesa) purppe ot ) D

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