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THE CHICAGO ‘I'RIBUNE: SATURDAY, MAY 19, IBW—TWELVE PAGES, m ed was to plander, leaving no timo for the | ly be in motion, as Germany hns guaranteed | buildings and grounds, Principals and | places, but they may not Iny in Wait and | except on hollday occnalons, does nof 4 ;:::!I?;::el: all)nuc‘:.l %i:%h’iee‘! Ju‘::lt:::. mxnafi‘. nnforcon?unt of tho lnwng. and partly becauso | the integrity of the iatinn Government Matrons, Truatess and **Doards” for { pounco mpon men who oro rondy to take | wear the beard severc and eye of lmmg: e r‘ nn'e 4 | lumbia dispatch of tho 17th says: the consumption of negroos was necossnry sgalast any effort to, restors tho tem- | nil theso establishments. —Thero Tinwe also | thom. Minors may refuss to continue at ro. | cut (as tho Improved Sitaksrrana hath it); ang - The Sonth Caroling Sonate nd. Hotés met In | to sccure the support of Unitod Btates boyo. | poral power to the Papacy, Evon it | been established Normal Collogos,—Northiorn, | duced rates, or snspend work undor a do. :;?_:":";_‘:‘e;g&;:“ ";;-Ll;::m’; fues Conrese Jolnt scaslon yesterday o ballot for the Chief Jna- | nots and gunboata, Tho Northern Ku-Klusx, | the attempt should not bo made, Central, Sonthorn, and in due timo Enstern | maud for botter pay, but they may not as- he “:m, 1880 m,.g;{mn' when he:g l:“lfv: r i-'m‘ ticeship of the Stata. Assocato Justico A. J. | 1o mninly by ward-bummer editors of dend- | tho mere fact of Clericnl ascondoncy wonld | and Western; a Stato Univorsity at Chom. | sanlt othor men who desiro to do tho work at | 154,67 448 reatly muse amend his In am"-ml':z': ;xm;:\“ o lf'.‘:h?:lduu . ”fifi"fifiia‘lfl"'flg'&f bent nowspapers, have ontlivad their masked | at onco disturh the relations botween Franco poigu, aLoma for tho orphan chfldren of | terms which the employara offor. Buch a | snts respect,or Tie Trinuxg will be compelled, %y tn tho Assoclato Justicoship, tho clection for | brothren of tho Soutl, and still how! for tho | and Gormany. Franco 38 ovidently on the { soldiors of the late War,—which pethaps {s | law will bo a protection for workingmon 05 | however reluctantly, to abandon hiin forthwith, which wii! probably take place next weok. - | consumption of negroes ns the necossary edge of a volcano when such a man ns Gax- | one of tho grontest nbusas of all; now thero | well as for omployors. Every man Liag the | In palllation of bis offenso, it may be sufclent Justico WiLtanp is a native of New York. | provonder for themsclves and others living | peTTA doclaves thero cxiats at tho side of the | are to bo duplicated State Prisona and Stato | right to oarn his living in nu honest farhion | to state that :,lm le‘cll;l‘ru wn]abwrmon some years Gov. Haxpron wanted tho Hon. Hen | npon Governmont pap. They want the cas- | hend of Biate n preponderting InQuence teform Behools, All theso fnstitutions aro | at snywages and on any terms he may chooso ;Fv(:,“l‘l:‘dll:‘l E:: : "':l"‘!\l‘ doth I‘nChhmwn and Molvzn elocted to fil the yocancy thus -cre- | pet-bag rogime roatored to tho Bouthern | with which no Ministry can copo, and whon | provided with costly sites, costly bulldings, | to accept, and Govornment owes him pro- | HarHSRIH, S0 pm?]“‘n_ed fm}’ ,‘:A;.'-:' Bl ;:ue ated, and yestorday all tho Republicansin | Btates, and protend they want it for | hewarns the President not to altompt this | and thocost of furnlshing and aunual ro- | tection ngainst throats and violence in exor- | 4y pq by fatcor destiny, or the fact of lle: the Sensto nnd Honso united in making | the purposs of proventing such ont- | adventuro, na ** the chassapota will go off of poirs and additions to furnishing would | elsing this priviloge. Bo railronds, mnnu- | nojding an oftice. his olcction unonimous. Thus it will | ragos ns tho atlack on Judgo Ontsorat | themaclves.” Tho latest nows from Parls is atartls even tho propriotors of the elaborate- | facturers, miners, and other employers have -- be moen o gropt deal of the former po- | in Kemper Gounty, Minsissippl, aod in order | to the effoct that the Houso has been pro- Iy-provided hotela iu this city. Theso es- | tho right to conduct thefr businoss with tho Litienl bittornoss hns dimappearsd. Ex-Gov. | to punish the offenders. 'This pratenso is | rogued for o month. This tidea the dangor | bablishments aro each suppliod with & strong | holp of willing workmon without danger to CraupearALy speaka well of Gov. Haueron's manifestly false, for tho renson that'the |-over for that length of time. Dut tho ac. | force of salaried officors, besides tho usual { lifo nud property. Suppose o manufacturer Administration. 1In regard to Harea' South. | earpet-baggers nevor prevented outrages | tion of tho Prosident has produced o ex- | array of Trusteos, Visitors, Regents, Com. | shonld hire n gang of bullios to nesault snd ern policy, ho said of it what Hayes himself | whon they wpre in power, but only pro- | citement 1 Europo hardly less than that misslonors, aud othors, These institutions, | mnltroat lnborors who liad refused to con- has sald, * Thot it is au oxperimont, the wlis- voked and nggravated them, and never | caused by tho existing war. All the ropro- tho mnjority of them, aro Lomes for the em- | tinuo work at wages he hnd fixed, would not dom of which will only be kuown when it | punished anybody after tho outrages were | gentatives of other nations in Paris have ex- ploses, When men fall at tho Bar or in | the wholo mass of workingmen rovolt .and $ins lind o fair frial. Timo alono will show," | committed. 'The fault is that tho outrages | pressed n foll sense of {ho gravity of the | the Church, and have bocome o burdon [ rovengo their porsacutod followa? Yot this he says, *whather the Prosident’s policy s have becomo too fow and desultory sinco tho | occasion. 'Fho ensuingnonth will bo one of | o8 their friends, they go, to Bpring- | would be procisely the same principlo asthat likely to redound to the peace and wolfare of carpot-baggars have protty much run away | viclent agitation in France, and §t°1s fust | field and hove o new institntlon | nuderlying an organized striko in which the that Btate.” from tho Southiern States; thara fa o neces- | possiblo that tho Arsombly may be recnlled | established for thelr support. Tha pretext | strikera destroy proporty, burn houses, ruin —— sity for roviving the consumption of negroos | by one of those populsr uprisings which | is charity; the purpose is to furnish liomes | tools, and nssault men who wantto take their Tho Omnbia Repullican undertakes to su- | to gupply the voraclous appetites of the | has takon placo in Franco, and which are at the public expense for Professars, Prinal- | places. swor Tne Trnose's question, * What havo | Northorn ward-bummora and - dend-boat } suddon and aweeping when they do occur, pals, Matrons, and others who have become | Tilinois haa led tha other Btates of the you to propose as a subatitata for the policy | editors with ofiices. An accssional political | It Is to bo hopedhthat moro ‘penceful connsels | gonteel nuissnces and dend-bea(S. Onco ¢s- | Unjon in'many oxcollont laws for the pro- of tho Presidont?” Aftor masticating the | murder likotho Kompor Comnty affair will | will prevall. War, with France,can hardly be tablished, thesa institullons bacomo per- | teotion of public rights, and hore ia aunother question through half a column, this is all 1t | not Al the bill, and they arc satiafied that | less than annibilation. = potual, and the cost of maintaining thom | opportunity for sotting a good cxample, producos: * Wo shall continuo to protest | another doso of carpet-baggors wonld wtart e grows somally. sinco tho laws of nonrly all tho States aro ngainst n conrse which gives up tho 8outh | up the outrages to somothing like the extent ‘Theso institntions and tho extravagant ap- | gingulnrly doficiont in this matter. "The bill snd the country to the onomles of liberty.” | to which they prevailed before. The ward- propristions for them are forcod on mom- | presonted to Gov. Ourrox for his slgnaturo This not only dodges the question, but A%+ | bummer editors aud dend-bent nowspapers bers; they dare not vote ngainst them. | {s by no means nu extremo measuro, but on- sorts & falsehood Ly innuondo, Tho fdea it | evidently do not want the Misslssippl raflians Nearly every Ropreseutative Distriot iasnow | tirely rensonable in its requiremonts, and trie to convoy is that Haves has ** givon ap | punished, for, it that wero their purpose, somo kind of an institution, big or little, and | gufficlontly loniont in ita penaltics. Wa liave the South to the enemies of liborty,”—meon- | they wonld suggest something besides the tho log-rolling for nppropriations for theso is | no doubt that tho Governer will scc and dis- ing to the Democrats. That sheot knows | resurrection of carpet-baggers, nho never frrosistiblo. Thero ia o petty institution, the | chargo his daty iu signing it vary woll that all the Bouthorn States but | punished thom, but only encouraged their Eyo and Ear Infirmary, located in Chicago; A thros had passod into the hands of the Dom- | pagassinations and massseres. Thon it must tho npproprintion for this ia nbont 317,000 |, The Feening Journal yesterday struck & ocrats boforo HAyes was ovor nominated,~ | bo the offices they havo in their minds, for two years, nnd to securo this the twenty. | bonanza and inade the most of it thus: that Florida foll into their possession after —— one Representatives and seven Sonators from the eclection nnd befors Haves' inaugura. | THE GRAVITY OF THE FRENOH CRIEIS. Cook Conntyare expected and requiroed tovoto tion. Al this while Opanr was | In an srticlo upon the gravity of the neatly two millions of dollars to support a Presidont ond tho military employed | Frenoh crisls, printad in our last issug, tho vast systerh of Institutions all over tho to uphold the corpot-bag Governments. | situation was disonssed from & singlo point Stato. The ropresentatives of Cook County When 1iAves camo in, Ko found South Caro- | of viow,—the dismissal of the Ministry on do not represent public sontimont whon, In linn in possossion of tho Domocrats,—all ox- | nccount of its rofusal to oppos the repesl consideration of the $8,000 or $10,000 voled copt the ‘State-House, Ho found Loulsiann of the Pross laws by the Houso. Thera ia annually to support the Eyo and Enr In- in about tho same condition of ** gononosa.” | anothier phase of the question, however, of firmary in this city, thoy vote nway immenso There was precions kittlo loft to *give up,” | much graver importance, and likely to bo far- suma for all manner of uscles: institutions, and that littlo, for all purposos of affording | ronching in its consequonces, involving, ns to oupport which this county hnsto pay n protection to the bincks, not worth keeping. | M. Gaxsxrra sald in his closing spoech, tax of $200,000 a year. It would bo chieaper 1t will puzzlo tha Orpalia Republican, or any | *‘war ot home and sbroad.” Wo refor to to snpport tho Infirmary by privato subserip. other pig-headed yrint, {o enumarate any- | the Ultramontana intrigues which for some tion than, in_consideration of its support by thing that Haves ylelded which was of tho | timo past have distracted Franco aud ovon the'Stato, this county should pay 200,000 slightost practicsl value to the colored | affacted Ttaly with thelr baloful influenco. annually to build institations wholly unnoe- paople,—anything which afforded thom tho { That tho ronder may thoroughly sppreciato ossary ol over thoStato, We have no doubt Tointest aid or comfort, or protected them in | the bearings of Ultramontanism upon tho mombors of tho Leglsiaturo genorally recog- lifa, liberty, or pursuit of Lappinoss, in the | prosent crisis, this srticlo must bo somewhat nizo this ovil, but so localized ‘havo bacome smallest degroo. rotrospective in chiaractor. theso institutions, thot they havo not the As soon as it was ovident that Russia hnd conrage to oppoao, much less brenk up, tho Turkoy were drifting into a war which rank nbuses, 'This Loglslatuto hns exoceded would seriously cngago tho attention of the all its prodocessors in promoting this schomo othor European Powors, tho Ultramontano of plunder, which promlscs to mako taxa- | York telegruplicd this meas of mendacity back Bishops of Franco commenced to ngitale in tion in this Stato excoed anything known in | to the Evening Journal, which swallowed the bohalf of the tomporal power of tha Pope. tho days when the Btate owod an enormous balt;~hook, line, bob, and einker. But there Violont charges wore delivered, setting forth dobt. - Though tho dobt has been paid, tho | are some thiugs about the matter which no fel- that tho Pope was a prisoner, and farionsly Legislature is dotorminod that taxation shall low cau find aut. For {natance, on the cditorial denouncing the Italisn Govornmout. Al bo kopt at the maximum, pago of the Journal, the'first article reads: Inst tho Clericals beocame s0 embuldl;n‘ed 08 a "‘Zifuxf.:""‘fi'.,‘,’i‘cg{.; "fr‘u?n"ff-‘plw':: "Z%?:L’."‘!fl:l?.{ to demand that Prosident MaoMamon amounting to $330,80, gold. Considerlog the should roinstato o Pop by main forca, Syt o e dimate o ustln, S The Italan Governmont compluined of ‘There {8 no doubt of tho truth of that; but these intemperate donunclations,. and the the thing thot oxcites our speclal wonder is, Frouch Government ismicd o circular warn- that tho very cablegram which the Journal ing the Bishops to deswst. The Left there~ characterlzes a8 “cmpty,” I8 the same one {4 npon called for tho facts, snd was informed publishcs on the preceding page, leaded ont, by M. Snrox, then at the hoad of tho Cabl not, that tho Bishops had obeyed the warn- and prefaced by a quarter ot & column of start. 1ing display heads {n big type. Thoauthor of she iug, ndding that tho Italian Government had observed tho Guaranteo law, nnd that the ployars, but a bill for the proteotion of the | giypatch Is tho ssmo chap that sent the turgid community and the workingmen themsolves. | torrent of monstrous M’:chooda to the Clm;guo Tho bill comprises two sections, viz.: Tho | Zimes from Washington last winter about the Popa was only o volunlary prisonor. ‘The ono intended to proventlocomotive-enginoors | Presidential count ond Commission. True to anyonncomont was mnot altogether satis. an o strike from damaging tho property of | hisinstinet for fabrication, ho bad scarcely set, factory, aud a furions debato sprang tho rallroads, nnd fmpeding doliborately the | foot 0?'1?“"“ before bo reeled off & cable dis- up, making Ultramontanism tho chiof traflo of the travellog and shipping publio; nfl;d}_ wvffl;"n“&uflgif:’xl(fl;:l l;-to llhu conflfet, feature of French politics. Meanwhilo now tho socond is caloulatod to restrain any setof | 204 " WARILE 48 of the immincnt daoger olamouts appeared in tho quarrel. Tho Blabops issued o ciroular of an inflammatory charactor. Petitlons wore gent in to tho of tho situation’ and Eogland of her * fearful atrikers in any business or omployment trom peril.” The dispatch most likely was written Houso in favor of the temporal power. The Pope, by o specinl Lriof, instituted tho Chan. provonting by throats or . violonce tho ocon- | during the voyage, and telexraphed to the pation of the placss thoy have vacated by | Zimes from Quecnostown as soon as he landed othor mon who are willing to tako thom at | theroon bis pative hesth. Wherever it was terma rejoctod by the strikera. Tho ponaity written, it 18 very certaln that whatever it con- cellor of tho Catholio University of Lille, provided by this bill ie excoedingly rensona. | talncd that was new was lles, a0d whatever 1t The Ministry rofused to rocognize the ap- bloj the limitation of the fino in tho one | Contalned that was truo was old. olntment. On the 4th of May, AL Gas- caso Is $100 and in the other $200, whils in - gm‘, in tho conrso of debate, delivored s neither onso oan conviotion undor the statute lul:;lot I"\?‘-fi:(::ané”::,:: 'f,l:u:':: ‘ll,y) {':x:le;:‘g: powerfal speech against tho Clericals, show- bo followod by more than ninoty dsys' im- | sroxe, thls distingulshed writer shows that this ing that the anti-Clerical soutimont pervades prisonment. little Btate has successfully res!sted Turkey for the powerful faction of the Left which he Ag to the locomotivo ongineors' strikes, | 417 years, and for 830 years has prescated tho lends, ond which is ju tho majority of the recont experlence in tho Enstern Statos has { unique spectacle of a State governed in peace Houso. In this speech ho took the brond shown to what desporate’ nieasures the strik. | 804 defended [n war by a succeaslon of twenty ground that tho Gollican Church had beon ors will resort in the absonce of restraining m'h“p." ;v‘%,‘:;g";g £0 thuls oriorilong; Lask complotely overskadowed by the Ultramon. laws, ond how porioosly thoy may injure m(’)l:.n;fly 26 the me: u? ,A‘::!n‘-x ora_encountersd tane Church, and that the lattor, supported commerce with an absolute powor to suspend | MouKittan. Pasita, und foronce with uaperior force, by Papal infallibility, * bas mada tho French tho oporations of a_prominent roilvond. In | Fouf SiORHL Lot Enitl thaits ok “kan: National Church o feudal Institution, whoso tho caso of tho Doston Niailrond, tho total | SuLix wasamonk tho slaln. At Meddn, on Aug. supremo and dirccting cbief s entbroned number of siriking enginoors did not proba- | 14, 5000 ks wote fetebies by QRS of the boyond tho frontiers, and which conatitutes bly oxccod 100, yet it was estimated that | battsllonsof Montenoiro defestod Dnviscit asita in the hoart of France s completa imperium thelr refusal to sllow tho tralng to run—for | b bsen i Oct, %'."i’x"nu'»'-‘.':i'.'. T 16000 in imperio, whogo nction escapas tho ordinary this was the arbitrary powor they assumed— | men, drove I“"k" ?i)onwflflwln batlations awsof tho country,” e closed his specch throw 4,000 men out of employment in all | yaa, Ml'.fv:( o o it V'fior'n‘za s with an gppeal to tho Governmont to tho avocations apd business dopendont,on [ stregih of 0,000 mon. Thus reluforcod, thoy oppose tho common enomy, who, without roilrond transportation, and disturbed snd :‘.}‘:2:5353:‘.‘{2:?@5‘@2’6&%&"%‘:fifégfl.‘ffl%‘fi."{ acknowledging the laws of Franco, monnced rotarded tho commerco of large parts of |1 H hind bim, On Oct, Denviscit peace at homo and socurity abroad, and throo or four Btates, Inthe csse of the Pasua effocted an advanco from the lallllh.‘unlll he Urought bLis attack to n closo with the Roading Rallrond, ns indeed in nearly all doclaration : *¢ L'ennemi deit lo clericalinme,” cases of engincers' strikos, particular pains Boforo the dsy was over, & reunion was ef. woro taken Dby the strikers to abandon foctedl betwoen tho Ministry and tho Left thoir engines end tralns in situations upon the following order of the day, which which were dangerous to lifo and proporty, was passed by an immenso majority: in obscure placos whore it was difflcult to The Chamber, considering that the recrndos. disposo of tho cars, passengors, or freight 4 o e sion tho greatest possiblo jnconvenionce oud f&:"x"&'&".‘:&", :',“J,:‘:,:';:“ Haisposs), loss, not ouly to the railroad but to the There was no union botween tho Cloricals and the Left, howover, The London Times of the moxt day, commenting upon tho do- bato, says 1t may bo sald that this discusslon acttics nothe ing. Detors recommending e Government 1o use publie, Now ralironds are quasi-publie inatitutions,. operated under franchises soldler ot Eui"" E“"'I granted by tho peoplo and with the expliolt 1t the purposs of Secrctary Evans In the reservation of cortain public advautages and | mutter of Btate Department appointments is benefits. If the locomotive-¢ngincera or | correctly reported, then wo protest uproariouss any other closs of porsons choose lo uso any | Iy but respectfully. Hls planof reform b giv- tbe logical meana at ite disporal It was nocaesary 10 defing exactly whero the rights of Church and §tato begin and end, for It is procisely In thy arbl. trary Interpretation of theso sights that tho Church, on tha one hand and the Stato on the other, find and can find the pretext and justification of thelr TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Y MAIL—TN ADTANCE—TOSTAGE PREPAID AT THIS OFFICH. Paty Eaton, postpaid: 1 sear. "arte of & gear. ver month Malled ta any sddres four weeka fo Bonday Kdision: Litera anE peB 38 gas 33 g, ——— The Cologne Gaseife alatributes the Turkish forces in Europo ss follows: At Widdin, 50,000 men} between Raliova and Nikopolls, oppasite the Valley of tie Aluta, 12,000: slong the Dap- ube from Rustchuk to Turtukal, 20,00; he. tween Bilstrls and Rassova, 25,0005 fy g Dobrudscha, 20,0005 at Varpa, 23415 at B xardachik,35,000; and between Schunlaund oy grad, 85,000 A resorve corps at present in course of formation at Tamboli and 8agra nuig. “bers cight battalions and two batterles; a gec. oud, also in a state of formation at Tirnows, comprlscs scven battalions and three battarles; & thind, betweon Sofla and Nischy includes sjg. teen battalions, six batterles, and a reglment of cavalry, ‘This would make o total of s Iittle over 200,000 men in European Turkey. et —— Bo marvelous are the changes developed by time, that the actlon of some of the aulordl. nates of the Guvernment at Washington in the Jawra Rens case {ndicates that before loug the Government will make a liberal offer to that much persecuted individual to pay him o bait million dollars to satiafy him for the damages he has sustained. Really tho obligdtions of “plighted falth ** and * sacred bonor " on the part of the Government attorneys toward Jacon are so overwhelming that it 18 possible his friends may yet call a publie meeting to pro- test agalnat his further Inconvenlence, especally by suits to recover from him his hard-carned share of tho publie revenues. tage pre fpectmen copies sent free. Toprevent delny and mistakes, he mr 4nd g1ve Fort ©ffice addresa fn full, Including Btate and Connty. Temittances may be made elther by draft, expross, Foat-Oftice onder, or fn registered letters. at our risk. = TERMS TO CITY SUDSCRIBERS, = Dally, delivcred, Bunday excepted, 23 Centa per week, Dadly, dolfvered, Bunday inctodod, 30 conts per woek Address THR TRIDUNE COMPANY, Corner Madison and Dearborn-sts.. Chlcago, Il i Rl AM MeaVicker’s Theatre. Madlson sireet, between Dearborn snd State. Engagement of Tosa Kytinge. Afternoon, *'Led Astray.” REvening, **Aflss Sarah Muiton." . Haveriy’s Theatro. Randolph street, between Clark and Lasalle. Eopagoment of tho Almee Opera-Bouffe Troupe. Afternoon, **La Perichole.” Evenlng, *'Ls Timbalo d'Argent.” Maoseum. Monroa street, between Btate and Dearborn. Vaade- villo entertatoment,” Engagement of Uen Thompson. ++Jushua \hizcomb,” Afterucon and evening. Forepnugh’s Clrcus. Lake Park, foot of Wasbington street. Afternoon and eventng. L e — —_— SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1877 ——— —— o ———————— CHICAGO MARKET SUMMARY. Tho Chicagy prodnca markets vore gencrally, firmer yesterday, with & falr nggreento of trading. Meas pork clozed 16e per brl higher, ot $14,22) for Juno ond $14.35 for Jaly, Lard closced o shada frmer, at $0.30@¢. 324 for Juno and $0.40 @9.42% for July. Meats wera %e higher, at 4Xc vor t for loaso shoulders, 7¢ for do ghort ribs, and 7ie for do short clears, 1lighwines wero un- changud, ot $1.07 per gatlon, Lako froights wero doil, at'8c Cor cornto Buffale. Flour was qalet and unchanged. Wheat closed 3)@4c higher, at £1.05 cant and $1,00% for vnne, Corn closed 1%ic higher, at 51e cash and 5i¢ for June. Oals closed 3¢ higher, ut 42Kc cash and 42%cfor June, Ity way dull, at 80@82c, Narley was nominal, at .70c for May. Ilogs were moderately activo sad firmer. Cattle wera dall and unchanged, with sales at $3,25(5,80. Sheep wero unchanged. Ouc hondred dollars in gold would buy £107.00 In greenbacks at tho closo. o Groonbncks at the New York Stock Ex. , chango yosterday closed at 933, Some fen mombors of the Btate Henato lave placed on record o protost ngaiust the possage by that body of the bill amending tho Htato Revenno law. Among the ronsons glven is the following : First—Begause sald Scnate amendments abro- gate the tax on capital stock of rallroads and tele- graphs attho very time when, aftar o Jong contest in the courts, such tax ls found to be valld and nccesssry to equaliza nsscssments, as between rich compnnies and poor ones; to relinguish which tax Intalose to the pnblic nearly a miillon dotlars an- nually of tascs domanded by Jjustice and cqual rights, 1t is nmistako to nssert that tha Courts found 1t to Lo necessary to tax eapital stooks in order to oqualizo assessmonts botweon rick companios and poor ones. The Courts said nothing abont the necessity for any such tax. This protest is {ho ssertion of tho most rockless prejudice, ond of prejudico founded on ignorance, The railronds of Tili- nots wera built by the expendituro of moncy. Tha laud they use was bought and paid for, tho materials of tha rondways, tho whole equipment, inclnding evory vestigo of prop- erty, was bought aud paid for, The moans of theso companies was derived from stock subscriptions ond from the sales of bonds. Everything tho companies own under or above ground that can be sold nnd converted into money is tho property of the companies, and is taxed ng all other property Is taxed, with a liboral discrimination of value ngoinat tho corporations. The monoy invested in thia property is largely owaod boyond tho State ; tho bonds are hold boyond tho Stato, though all the property of tho companics is within tho Stato. Now tho State of Illinols inslsts not only on taxing all tho proporty of every description owned by tho compnnies, but nadertakea to tax in addition theroto tho amount of tho bonds aud of the stock. It is hardly necessary to arguo this malter to stisfy any intolligent man outsido of tho Legislaturo that this 1 duplicate taxation; toxation of tho ontire property of the com- pany and then taxation of tho papor title to that property. 'Tho signera of this protest placo themsolves on rocord as insisting that tho Stato shall continue to, impose confison- tory tazatlon on all corporato proporty. Tho wolua of capital atock comea as noar to in- tangibility na nuything that could bo seloct- ed for taxation. Excopt a8 reprosonting tho taxablo property of tho company, it has no possible valuo, Bal, oven as a ropresontative’ of tho property, it haa no fixed valno, ‘Tho tangiblo property of arailrond moy have n materinl value of £0,000,000, Its stock may not bo worth 10 conts on tho dollar, Tho stock hing one valuo to-dny ond another to-morrow; ond it fu 1nero chango as what its quoted valuo mny bo when it {8 nasessed. Tho control of tho rond may fall into the hands of Jax Gourn, or somo othor railrond-wrecker, and the valuo of tho stock may be run down to o mini- mum, When tho operator has bought all ha neods, he can with equal dextority advance the value of tho stock and unlosd it on the market. Itis a more chance whother this ntock bo nasessed whon it fa down or up; in fact, tho markot value of the stock in Wall strect has no significanco as to tha valuo of the property roprosonted by that stock. Taxing stock by its quotations on Wall streot is on nbuaurdity, but {4 in keeping with the policy of taxing tho stock at all. Tho lnw of tho Stato has attracted tho atton- tion of the country, In thoso Biates whero this delusion hns had fts day and hss beon ropealed, tho porsistent igmo- ranco of tho IllinoisLeglalature is o matter of surprise. In this groat Btato, with its fm- menss copacity for production, with its flolda, its mines, and its water.power, not ono-third doveloped, this systom of logialn. tion to provent tho employmont of capital, to provent two or more men combining their moans, to provent any organization o put new and enlarged iudustries in oporation, and to punish with conflscation the usd of capital within the State, is ono of thosocases of glaring absurdity and folly which aro con. sistent only with fanaticlsm and dolusion, LEGISLATIVE EXTRAVAGANCE., | Two years ago the memorable conlition Logislature, which was justly rogarded os tho most extraondinary and profligato Assermbly that over mot in IHinols, made appropriations calling for a lovy of 1,700,000 a yéar for general Btato purposes, That included: 800,000 for the Btate-Honse, $185,000 wos appropriated for tho Feebla-Minded Instituto Building, $140,000 for tho Southern Iusano Asylum, and $250,000 for the State dobt. Nona of these oxpenditures are to be mads aut of the lovy for the coming two years. But the prosont Leglalature, with nono of (liesa opeelal expenditures to mako, has al- ready appropristed over §4,000,000 for the two years, aud the tax-levy will havo to bo onlarged to cover these appropriations, With the paymont of tho debt, the merely nominal chargo for intercst, and tha expend. iture of tho whole $3,500,000 for the State.Houso, it was expected that the ngccssary expenditures for the eupport of the Stato Government would be so0 small that it would roquire merely a nominal tax in addition to the direct revenues of tho fitate, It hnd even boon expected that the tax ‘on land for tho support of the Btate might in time be omitted altogether. DBut the Logislature now in e2esslon has oxceeded the last one in all manuner of extravagances eund waate, It has votod money with the most favish band, with a full kuowledgo on the purt of the wembers that the money is wasted. 'The most profligate system of ap- propriations has been tdopted. The State is being converted into one vast asylam for tha sick, infirm, disabled, deaf, dumb, blind, feeble-minded, idiotic, and insano; with Qur forelgn nowa of to-day is highly ecnsational, We would not 1ike to vouch for the accuracy of Its wmore startling statements, Next comes the “Mighly scnsatlonal news," preceded by startlng display headlogs: THE WAR! e —ee The Clerk of the House at Bpringfleld re. corded Thursdey Mr. REABURN as voting for the bill oxtending the term of Hahility of certaln nland towns to pay subsidics voted to rajle ronds. Yesterday Mr. READURN rose upand remarked that ko was fn Chlcago when tho vote was taken, Thero was just cnough votes o poss the bill. The announcement naturally produced & sonsation. Somobody had lied, and no mistake. Whatover tho merlts of the b, the mcasures taken by tbe lobby to pushft through were dsgracetul. * ENQLAXD TO DR PRECIFITATED INTO THE CON- rLcrit TOR CZAI WARKED OF THE INMINEXT DANGER OF THE BITUATION T TIIE OUIECT OF RUSSIA'S SLOW XOVEXEXTS ON TOE DANUBE EXPOSED, IMNENSE STRENOTI OF THE ARXY IN ROUNANIA— NUSAIA WANILY WATCHING ENGLAND AND AUSTINA, e —— . Tae Trinuxs wants the Journal to give Itthe namo of ono of the angols who talked with Jony on Patmoe. We woulil bo clad to favor our neigh. bor witt the desired Information, but aatho nams fa nowhero given in the sacred rocord, wo donot sce how we can,—Journal, Let tho Journal Scripturion turn to First Cor- fntlans, dftcenth chapter and fifty-first verse, where ie will find Bt. PAUL'S words whiclihe as cribes to *one of the angels who talked with Jonx of Patmos.” Our contemporary would do well to joln a Sunday-school class for a while, e t—— The Inter-Ocean exhibited to its readers yese terday, without extra charge, the tafl that wags the dog. Thero wero eight pages of *‘dog! ond 190 pages of “tail,’* tho latter Leing the tax-list sinceure, published at high rates and pald for out of money wrung from a tax-bue dentd people. This payment will enable the 7. 0.to “wag" along until its mortgage notes mature. 5 ENGLAX. Nrw Yong, May 16, —A London says, etc,, ete., cle, Then follows nearly o column of KEgrAx's scnsational slush, which had been cabled to and publisbed in the Chicozo Times of Thursday morning. Some fool telegraphed the trash to the New York Sun. The Sun accepted the fabrication, and republished it as aspecial to itselt from London! Another fool fn New ERIL, ecial to the Sun from e ] The Seunte sooms to Lave reconsidorod and passed tho Stato Board of Health bill,—a sehiemo to make move offices and expenso to the taxpayers under the protonso of benefit- ing tho public henlth, which is oli bosh. It is o tax-eaters’ johe ‘Tho eritical situation in France continued througlout yesterday, buing rathor aggra- vated than improved by tho prorogation of tho logislative bodics for o month. 'This nct, of itsolf sufficient o soverely tax the moder- otion and restraint of the dominant party, was rendored vastly mors dangerous to the peaco and quiet of tho Ropublicin conso- quence of the extrsordinary mesaage which accompanied tho Presidont's notico of disso.’ lation. With all tho frecdom and elastic- ity of Amoricon politica, & Prosident of tho United States would hardly dare oddress to a hostile mafority in cither Lranch of Congress o communlcation at onco 8o insulting, threatoning, and dictatorial as that which MaicManox caused to be resd yeaterday in connection with tho decreo ordering a rocessa of ono month. Intense indignation and rago among the membera of tha Laft sought oxpression on tho tribune, only to bo steruly reprossed by tho President of the Chambor, while in_tho Senate the scono was scarcely less ylolu and exciting. The fecling which was supprosscd in the Asaembly soon found vent in s manifesto by tho Doputies and n proces verbal by the Ropublican Benators, apponling’ to the peoplo for support sud confidenco in this hour of distrust and poril to France, "I'ho Ropublicon journala invito tho exscution of MaoManon's threat by the publication of articlos severely condemning his course, and the prodiction is wado that the Imporialist programme will. bo carried forward to the aytont of o general removal of Republicon officials, n prosecntion of newspnpers unfa- vorablo to the Government, and a further prorogation of tho Ausombly for three months aftor tho pending recess expirea. Evorything pointa to dangerous, troublous times in Franco, Thero was published yestorday 196 large nowspaper pages of what was called tho “Dlinquent Tax List of Cock County,” It was o frand in overy sonso of tho word, It was not a delinquont list, but mercly a tronseript of all the subdivicions of prop. orty in tho county, because nobody thinks of poying taxes in this county before judg. ment is applied for, which adds meroly o fow cents a lob. Yet the lmpression 1s an- nually conveyod to tho outside world that pretty much all tho laxpsyers of Cook County aro delinquont and too poor to pay. Dutit is n more sorious fraud in another way. 1t roprosents o cost of $50,000 in ronnd figures to tho taxpayers,—about $20,000 for tho preparation of the list, $20,000 for the printing thereo, and $10,000 for the final record. The sawe and ounly purpose which it sorves might be attained 8t n cost not to exceed $100,—that'ls to zay, tho publication of & fow lines in every paper published in tho countyto the effoct that judgmont would bs applicd for inthe Court against all property on whioch the taxes were not paid boforen cortain date. Thiswauldbo good and sufliciont notico to every property- owner who hsd not paid his taxes, if tho Inw wero changod to suit, But the present Loglalaturo has refused to reliove Cook County of this $50,000 plunder, aud overy otlier county in the Htato of a proportionats burden, bocause it hiolps support some impo- cunious nowspaper from whick local politi- cal favors are oxpected. It wns the custom of the former ‘Preasnrer of ook County (Buffalo Mizrzs) to farm out the job to tha Inter-Ocean for 310,000, nnd probably tany of tho County Trensurers throughout the Htate share the profits, The publication only serves to supply faws on which to base lawauits contesting the payment of taxos. Yet the Illinols Legislatura voted down a bill introduced by Mr, MaTTuews to prohibit these bungling and costly ' jobs. It will be the duty of the Qovernor to call the special ottontion of the next Logislaturo to this pliaso of public robbory, since we presume there is no way of avelding it beforo that time, Some years ago there” were in ceriain of tha Southern States bauds of outlaws whosa business it was to prowl about at night with maskod faces and slaughter uegrocs. This sport was protty effectually checked by cer- tain gamo-laws of tho United Btates known 03 tho Ku-Klux acts. For some timo after, however, thero were enough spasmodic out- rages to keop the carpet-baggers in oflice, which went nnpunished, partly because tho principal business of cprpet-bag politiclans Buch of the sainls as have lLad Oanadian wvillages named in thelr homor scom to bo strangely remiss in their dutiesas godfathers, for thoy cortainly pormit all sorts of calami- ties to happen to thoir unhappy proteges. 8t. Hyncinthe, St. Johns, aud Bt. Stephen's havo all suliered flery visitations, and now 8t. Hippolyte has had o fearful hurricano, scottering destruction and death inits course. THE LAW T0 RESTRAIN STRIKERS. Gov, Ourrox shonld not hesitate o mo- ment to afiix his signaturo to tho bill which has passed both Housos of ' the Iilinols Log- felature designed to punish . overt nota ngainst the public and individuals by organ. izod strikers, Itisnotin any senao a bill for the bonedit of railronds or any other om- i Tha' Clacinnat! Gaseeite speaks of Chicago as “the placo .where the people ought to wash thelr feet to the lake, but do mot.” True, be- coauso the water of tho lake {s used for drinking purposes. The drinking-water of Cinciouati, however, gives color to the presumption that the feet of her entire population are bathed ia tlo Oblo River daily e e— A correspondont writcs Trig Trinuna desir- Ing to know tho titlcs of some of the best Works on Turkey snd Russta, The standard worksare #The Ottoman Power In Europe,” by E. A Frugsan; SciorLen's “Turkestany” Wate Laon's “Russls,” and Cunzon's # Travels i Armenls,” all of which can be procurcd at any important bookstore. tehing aro chron- ieled in the dispntehes this morning. Sawmorn Onn, at Mt. Vernon, Mo, for tho murdor of o farmer named Davis, in Christian County, nnd Crranres Touazy, & ticgro, at-Americus, Ga., for the murderous outcomo of o brutal nsanult upon Mrs. CAmawav. Among tho witnosses of the execution was the hnsbhnd of tho murdered woman, whoso chiof errand in coming to town was to obtain a licenso to got married again, though ho monaged to kill iwo birdas with one atone by droppiug in at tho taking-off of the man who mada him ‘widowor. ——————— The most comical thing wo have ever seen (2 the Bpringficld Journal is its reminder that Tus Trinung, under its previous cditor, supported Guzeeey for Presidont. Tho polnt of the #ronk g, that the editor and proprictor of the Journal who trics to slur Tne TiBUSE Was GnusLer’s most zeslous supporter (o tha Btate. Civilized warfaro is o thing which tho *Turkinh mind Las no concoption of. Tho horriblo atrocities of a year ngo in DBulgarin aro being roponted as fast as circumstances will permit, and thore ia small hopo that the Christian element of any town in tho posses- sion of tho ‘Turkish fdrees will escape tha borrible fate of tho Sclaves of Turtukai, who, on the 16th inst., wero put o the sword by the Turks,—all but the younger womon, who weve reserved for a more terrible fote. ‘Tho criea of tho vietimn of this monstrous violations of tho rules of warfare were Loard by the Roumanian outposts, and two Bulga- riang who cscaped the general maaspere con- firmed the roport. ————— It Is eald that no home {8 large cnough to hold a man ood his mothor-in-law, Does this ruld also apply to steamboats] The fact that the Prestdential (amily go to Europoon the Indlany while Santonts and wife satled Thursday oo the Nurenburg, would scem to have o bearlog upon this question. ———— A country paper calied the Sentind apesks of ‘Ius TrInUNE'S haviog gone off with GuxrLeY and tho Democrats sgainst - GRANT, and then 1t turns round and denounces Titz TrisuxE for * not oW * golng oft " with Bakmand the Demo- crats agalust tho Republican President Haxes, na it aud other linplacabled aro dolng, Desultory fighting Ja reported from tho vicinity of Kors, and from Turkish sources an account is recoived of an attempt by the Russlans to bombard that fortross with heavy sioge guns, tho attempt failing by reason of a miscalculntion of the range. Alinor engsgements bave takon placa in tho vicinity of Vau, Erivan, and Ardahan, and heavy battles aro. prodictod near Ba- toum and Toprak-Kalar, ‘Ihe Tarks have found effectivo olliea in the Circassians on tho eastorn coast of tho Black Sea, and largo shipmonts of arma nnd equipments oro boing forwarded by water to pointa noar tho Russlan lines of communication. En. counters botwoen these somi-clvilized war. riors and the trained Russian troops have almost invariably resulted in favor of the Inttor whoro the fighting was on opon ground, and the irregular nuxiliaries aro likely to ba offoctivo only as skirmishers and Bying battalions, Yostorday the Presbyterian Goneral As. semnbly was'busied in completing ita organi. zation, os far as possible, by the sppoint. ment of comuittoes aud by tho reforeuco of various rosolutions to be reportod on lere- after, Tho Assombly is bardly undor way as yet, and will not bo until next wook. Dy that timo tho standing committees will begin to make their reports, and nothing will ro. tard tho transadtion of business, ' The hand- shokings will be over, ths members will bo settled in the homes where they oro ontertained, aud after tho rest of Bunday will be ready to listen, to discuss, ond to vote. Yestorday the rest. lessness incident to tho commeucemont of such a session . wos quite manifest; it will, however, soon disappesr, 8s the Commis. sloners learn to understand the Moderator and themselves, An ingerosting feature of tho roport in to-day’s Issuo 1s the announce-~ ment of tho rcligious scrvices of Sunday, for which’ gssignments have thus far been mado trom among the clerical delogates. e ————— Tho Des Molnes Jeglster, Springficld Journal and Omaha Jepublican, who have gone oft with Braise and ths Democrats {n opposition to the Republlean President RAYES, havo the theok to prato about pasty fealty uud political conslte caey. 4] . s ueu, 'On Oct, 20 Modun was taken, and the Gtto- man General Aed to Scutarl, leaving garrlsona In Spus and Podagorliza, Thu arwlstica atrestod this course of disautors, when tho Houthern army {Denvincn) had been reduced from 43,000 to 23,600, and tha Nocthern (Moukuran) from 45,000 t0 18,000, The most amazing feature of this long suo- ceasfon of victorles is tho smalluess of tho army which achloved them. Even including refugees, it has never oxceeded 25,000 mun. The recoril shows beyond’ all question that the Moutenegrin 1sthe bravest and wost formldablo ——————— 1 A woman ™ suggests to an Bastern paper tno employment of Women as ushers of places of amusement, A most * excellent suggestion. Good-leoklng men would not bave to stand Io- th alsles then, e —— The Journal yesterday published as war nuwn! on fts tirst page aud *“leaded,” nearly s ool umw of matter which appearcd in tho Fost of the duy before. How is this for enterpriset ——— The Des Molines Reglster is as tickled over Garv's letter as It was whicn 1t went tLrough poor B. ¥, ALLEN for tho, funds nevessary to Keep It vut of bankruptey. . The Globe-Democrat clalins to have sbolished personal journalivm fu St. Louls, This witl bo gratifying news to the surviviog frienda of Macautay, : | | The Courler-Journal asks It Jgssn GRANTISS better writer than Col. Fuuv. Jesax when you get a specimen or two. ' \ When there 1s - a woman (n the case,” lhla Journal would show discretion by conspicuonsi? mindiog its own busivess. The New York Custom-flouse Investigation 8 proving thet Qovernment *sborts® made of ticials' feed, X Applicants for the position of Possmaster 110 now called ulllce-scc-Kxy-r8. PERSONAL. Ar. Tennyson, it is sald, proposes to write Anothor historical drama. James Russell Lowell doesn't propose to sefuse the Austrian Misslon before Itis ofered t0 bie, end pethaps cot afterwanis, 1t is now stated that tho vacancy in the United Statce Supreme Court will be Slled by the #ppatntment of Prof. Thoodose W. Duight, of the Columbls Law 8chool. A correspondent of the London Acadeny writes: **We look o vain fn Germany Just nov both fo the feld of Sction and in that of potits for young writors; I cannot pamo oze.*" The claim ogalnst the Bpanish Govern. ment for $30,000 recently socured by Judge Dents widow relata 1o 8 Cubsu uatate confacated sloce (he late wag on the Liland began. Tbe stzy s thlsholgut, and what remains 1s tho bllad fapati. dlhm of the one and tho brutal Intalerance of the other, Cardinal Guineny protested against the resolution, and a dispatch in our last issue states that several of the Bishops bLavo pub. lishod latters adhering to the Cardinal's pro- test. The situation suddenly sprung upon 1ho Prench people by the diswmissal of the Cabinet for its attitude towards tho Press bill is pll the more dangerous when {t ia consid. eved that the Presidont himsclf {s an Ultra. maontane, and that he has sclected a new Cab- inet from the Right, which ie strongly Oler- ical. In the light of this situntion, GamneT. TA's warning, that tho action of the Govern. ment, if porsistod in, would fnvolve war at bomo and abroad, may bo clearly under- stood. 12 the Prosident dissolves the Houso, Franco must almoat inevitably plungo into civil war, If tho Clerical party attaing the ascendoncy, there is danger from Germany. 1If tho Government rhould be mad enough to sttempt to enforce the temporal power of the Yopo, thoe German legions would inslant- | } i —— They scem to bo getting slong pretty well in Bouth Caroliva. Tbe Obdef Justice hav. ing died some timo ago, there was a vacancy ountho Bench, The Republican members . wanted Judgo Wiwraup, o sound Repube lican, promoted tg the vacanoy, Gov. . Hasrron agreed to help them scoure the prize. A majority of tho Democrats, under tho lead of a Bourbon named Gasry, bitterly opposed the eloction of Judge Wittaupj special facilitivs of their own to the injury | enin threo parts, to-wit: o tho publlo, tho public las o portact right, | couacrial Uouslites by the SopolTACRt oY oot through its roprosentative Logislature, to commerclal experience; socond, in solecting pass lawa to rostraln and panish thom. N eriarraud, hons exeept SHACALOL hwe Thero {s nothing in tho proposed statuto In | yess will bo appointed; third, ono of thu essentiol exceascs. The dogma of infallibility infuences thls Btato which in aoywisa interforca with | §ualtScations squired of all Conuls Wit be M iae the thourht and wiil of the Catnollc' Kplscopacy, the right of the locomotive-enginecrs to | country in which they aru statloned, which protests, In the namo of (his dogma, ngainet striko when they and thelr employers gsn- I this bo true, lct the mnen of the West wall all futerforence of the civil power in tho govern. When ey pioyers gatle | 4 th 1 the B b theh Taent of 1o Church, even when the most masifest not ogree upon wagos, bub they areq \nSKoDyend i wen of the Mat wlb thew rolations with lay soclety sro concornod, With merely forbidden to abandon tholr locomo- | hercs b0 Ht Bt o enn T““ T tegret It must bo sald that th deats did not attain tives at auy other polnt than their regular | Sror eruien size. of ALk Lyl schedale dostination,—that Is, an eoginoor | graspers grow to shadowless Lalr-lines of hu- starting with a passonger-train from Chicsgo | wanitys and the famlshea ofiice-scekers ofoall to Milwaukes cannot, upon rocelving a tole. | other States go to the funerals of thelr idcas of graphio order for a strike, abandon Lis traln Civil-Service Reform. Uunder this griping con- and passengers somowhere on the lake shoro '“'“‘"'"}:fi :‘h" ‘:"l‘l“,'," Mr. ?"‘l‘,‘"l will ‘,‘r‘:.d 0o without subjecting Limself to the penalties | 68 102 e L B o L] der delicate culture, uplift tho modest heads fized by the law. of tho now doparturcs In forcl gu-oflice refornt. The intimidation clause applies not merely | Western m&npmw “ealk Turkey ' and *walk to locomotive-engincers, but to all classes of | Spanish,’* but the wsthetics of the service can employes on railroads and in every other | tiud full fruition in no place save in Boston. Let business. Aen msy atrike as Leretoforo on | s be thaokful that we have it bandy. account of wa| time, or amount of work; | ST TR they may l:mg\:.'up timr places at ,,ml ‘The people of Washiugtan da not scem to be * | tired of talkiug about FrEp DougLass and Lis cither iudividunlly or by combinatlons, bt | yoiyre and they are not at all coptented with thoy aro prohibited by the proposed law from | pi; golemn asseveration that it was all @ joke. willfully and maliclowsly intjmidatiog, im- | They can ses no joke, for instance, In hls scan- peding, or obatruoting, eycept by duo | dalous cssertion that the fpbabitants of that coursa of lsw, the operation and con. | Rodly city goabout the streets with their hats » L duct of avy business in which they [ pulled dowa over their eyea aud thelr arms sy have boon employod, - Thus sailroad folded, trying 10 look like Congressmen. Thbls englneers ms, ult s railroad, bpt they 1s, wa must conféas, a dark aud treacherous fo- i P e {l they | sination. - We overlooked it fo gbo revlew of may not threaton, or shoot, or maul other | yy, cage, or perhaps we might not bave becn 60 engineers who are willing to run their loco- | yeplent with Faxp Douariss. Theru sre the motives, Puddlers may sbaudun thelr | best ressons for statlog that the Washiogtonlan,