Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 11, 1877, Page 10

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Hi } . berries from THE CHICAGO (RIBUNE: SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1877—TWELVE PAGES. isthe spectator, There {x something Fubline in the character of the-head, whieh re- mints one of Minacl Angelo, The whole ts finely panted, the coloring much like Titien* This celebrated: picture has mysteriously dis- ppeared, Acwelter in the Atieum, calling nition to the fact, states that the painting was sold toan Enytishman tu Ist? for the sum of 660 Rorins, and since that, date all trace of ft has been lost. A drawing of the pleture, nade during the Inst centtry, Is in the posse: M. Vosinacr, by which Its fdentity, it recovered, an be established. CHINESE JOURNALISM. Shanghat has two daily papers published in cha Chinese lancunge. The Shen paow bas a Arculation of §,000, and is financially successful. ‘tcontaing a Ieading editorial, corresponitence rom Souchow and other places, iews-reports, tories, and general gossip. ‘Ihe Sin paou, or ‘Journal of News,” has tewer readers, and, ft s rumored, will not inch Jonger be continued. Ads made up ina form eimilar to that of its nore iortunate rival. Clitnese writers of ability and editcation (ud journalism well adapted to thelr capacity, and produce very readable artl- cles. ‘There ina reading-room connected with the Polytechnic Institution in Shanghal, Uirt it # rcldom visited. A monthly magazine of acl- ence is also published in the city, which fs ac cuinplishing much good. It is copiously iin s- brated, and well conducted, and is gradually Attulning a prosperous condition. ART-NOTES, It {s paid that Meissonnicr has presented to the Louvre the splendid portrait of Dumas fils Fhich was so ouch admired at the last Salon. Mr. Holman dunt has made such progress mith the large picture which has employed him Tor sotne time past in Jerusalem, that he hopes to take It with him to England, wiers he will Foon return. The engraving from his picture of “Tne Shadow of Death" ts nearly complete. ‘The London Lancet recommends, ftom a sants tary point of view. the use upun walls of palo detemper colur instead of paper-hamuduga. Yistemper cun be aubiieds if necessary, over myer of any description, and is a cheap and ef- actnal screen fur hiding offensive papers that bay iucumber the wall. SPARKS OF SCIENCE. FLOTRA ROUND ABOUT CHICAGO, Tue HEATH FaMi,y.—The Ertcacaw are one if the noblest famllies in the whole vegetable dng ton, he Vaccines, or Whortteberry family; crreinea, or true Heath family; the Pyro- em, ur iyrola farnily; and the Monotrope, or indtan-l o¢ family. To the frat division belong dhe differe ut specles of Whortleberries, Hucklc- terries, ang’ Cranberrics, and the pretty Snaow- derry, ‘he members of this group are abrabs pr small tree. & With iinely-divided branches, and often crergrey ‘a leaves. Some of the Peruvian apccies are sai,” to be parasitic, and a few are cp.plivtes,—tha’ 1s, subsist wholly upon alr. The Vaccrnem at ound in the Temperate parts of the worid, ang tare especially fond of damp, swampy situations. There are about 200apecies in the tribe, and of these wo have three; Huck leberry (Gaylussacta reae- noka), a muct-branele d shrub, crowing from one toth ree feet high, ixcarlug racemes of small, bell-shaped flowers, of a pinkish bue, in May or dune, and, later, strings of black fruit destitute of bloan, fs met with ocaasfonally at Glencoe and Calumet. The Laree Cranberry (Vaccinium tmacrovarp on) {§ abundant {n tho swamps at Miller's Sta ton. tis a handsome plant, with sleniler, cree, ing stems, small leaves, nodding, yose-culored f, were, appearing In June, and red. a balf an Inch to an inch tn a 1 Dwart Blueberry (Vaccinluin sees eariaea) has been found te Wtyde Parle and at Miller’s, ‘TOls [8 a sinvoth, dwart snrub, from six to tifteen fuchea high, lohabiting dry Inces, Tt blesxons, t early tn the spring, aud Its jarce, sect berries .tipen in duly, Many species or tix ? Vaccinfutn are culttyated fs ornamentar struts particularly in Great Britain, ‘Tho greater .wunber of them are un- tives of North Ameria \ The V. padiofoltam forms impenctrante thle ‘ets tn the lottlest parts of Madeira, where it pre ‘Wa from six Lo ten fect nigh. 5 ‘The Ericinee—a group numbering nearly 900 apetieres eull CrerETOLe whrubs, distinguished from other tural tribes 0 ¥ the authers, witch open by terminal poles or pores, through whitch the pollen ts disthared. “The order contains some of the most beautifal plants known, and many of tha are peculiar to our own con- Lnent. Here we find the lovely Trailing Ar- butus (Epes repens), sweetest of all the wild} flowers of New England, Sut to name the plant stocharm the senses with a memory of its exyulsite clusters of ruse-cofored flowers pecp- tug frown the chadow of rich evergreen leaves, and exhaling a deltelous spicy fragrance. “There secarcely # flower in all Nadare’s realin that su Atire the t with tis extreine beauty. Here, too, are the snperb Rhedodandrons, the Kal- milas, and the Agueas of North America aud Asia, and the Heaths aud Ling, or Heather, of Europe und 8 ‘The single ) species, most of them per the South of Africa, aud not representative belonging. to. America. ‘Khe Heatherbelle of Seottlsh song are the flowers of the E. cinerca and £, tetratix, A sprig of the former was the badge of the clan Macslonald. Tha = Ericas, or Heaths, ave lareety cultivated, greenhouses bef often devoted lothem exclustyely, Some ot the south Attain Heaths attain’ a much greater here bt tan aay of the European species, with (he exception of the E. urborea, which hes in wutitgae Of twenty feet inthe ‘the Ling. or Heather (Caltuna yal- ‘uted from the Erica and fteclf, This Nttle aheub it by vers large Lracts, calica moors or heaths, in Britan andon the European Continent, ana ts Jourd tn two of three focull tea fn New Enuland, Ps flowers, ot Varylug sin'des of rose-color, qyaint the moors vf lovely t'nts in the months | at duly and August, The'nes tar stored In their caps alfurds » prosaic and mi cleprized harvest to the honcy-bece, whose biyes are often trang ported tu te places where they sbuund, to te- mun during the season of their bloom. Cot- tates are olten thatched with the \ cathers, thelr walla are even builtar ity and suft, clusue beds are made ot its fineat branches, ‘Ther ale brewed fa the Inland of Islay, trom malt aud young tops of heather, fv supposed to be the sain’ beverage unclently i fayor with the Picts, A Lew species of the tiododendron m*enatives ot Europe and Siberla, but the greater part be- Jong to North America, and to the moantaing of fndia, ‘The mugniticent Rhododendre 1 max- dmus attalus {ts Tulleat develupoent. in the liointalnuus purts of Hennaylvanls aud south- 1, Where It crows frum bix to twenty’ leet aud in Juty presents a eunerh appear. tee, with Its deep green, shining le: wud tts core yrds off juwers, ranging incolor trom p We canine to bh ‘The H. arboreuin, inte pat ve Nepaul. vttainsa height of thirty or forty feot, and bears deaee heads of large'scarlet Hower + ‘The nest spiendi¢ foliage iv the whote tribe te produced by the He Faleonerl, of India, the Ieaves belug erzhteen or niueteen {uches Jong. The 2. Nuttall has fragrant white » the Jargest among the Rho- dodendrons. The K. Dalhouste is an alr-plaut, rowing on magnolias, laurels, and oaks, and swinging from tne tly of every slender brauch: drow three Ao six white, lomon-scented bells over four inches long. ‘The HK. Nobile, of Core lon, isa tiinber tree iifty to seventy feot high, with cvery branch ablaze with crinaun at ite tine of towerlg. dn July and August the Alps areagiow with the carmine blossums of tie Alpenruse, a name given to two small jes of the Rhododendron intabitng the The It ntyale {3 the must Alpine of bts, crowing tn Sikkirn at ay elevas tion of 17,000 feet. ‘The low Rt. chrysauthum, of Sitent, has golden-yellow flowers, ond te used ws a demedy furgoutand rheumatism. ‘Tbe towers of the great R. arbercum are eaten Iu India, and the Europeans make a Jelly of then, ‘Tbe Kalmlas sre evergreen shrubs, with showy fuwers, which are notable for the curious inanter in which the stamens are bent back run the piotil, and held by the anthers in litte depressions inthe corulld, uutil the pollen is lipe. ‘Then, when the tower is perfectly de- veloped, at Use touch of an insect, or at any jar ul the filaments, the stamens free themselves, with a sprug drom thei contined position, and svutter their pollen fu showers. ‘The iusect that may bave caused this singular action ¢ nor fait to get well powde aud to conve! the co avheraz tu ite body from cue Hower to thus aiding in the work of cross- lertttization, We have nelther Rhododendron nor Kalmia inwurflura, and of all the tteath tribe only tare ics. Along the lake-shore, near the Ketorm-School, and uear Miller's, the Bearberry {Arctostaphylos Uva-ursl) is scattered sparsely uthe iret toculity aud plentuully in the lat. Hots a trailing shrub, with thick, evergreen leaves, nearly white Howers lu rucciaes and clus ters. and red, inedible fruit. At Milles’s, Gib- son's, and other stations round about, the Wlu- terkiven (Gaultberla procumbens) 1s commou. Every one kuews tue little olaut, with Vineish bells banging in July trom the axils of the fragrant eaves, uud, after them, scarlet berics wdhenny through moat of the i + Inthe epring these berries are common eur market,—thelr ppicy tlavor commending It includes four well-marked sub- |! them to: some tastes, Hut preferahie to these are the tender leaves of the voung shoots, which contain an aromatic, highly-pungent od. At 4itbson’s and Miller's, the Leather-Leat (Cas- santa colyeniata) is also abundant. The shrub boasta of no beauty, being hav and scracgly, and having thick, scurfy, leaves. and small white flowers, appearing early in the springtime. The sub-order Pyrolew {ts very emall, tnchid- Ing only about twenty epectes, which are her- baceous, broad-leaved evergreens. Nino of them are found east of the Missisetupi, and four In our vicinity. The Round-Leavea Pyrota eral retandllfatiqy occ ark at Michigan City, the Shin-Leat : cllipttea) at Geneve and Riv- erate, and the P. secunda at Miller's and Pino Station. Allof them are scantily represent: ca at the places mentioned. The Pyrolas are lovely little plants, consisting of a cluster of evergreen rvot-lcaves, and a simple raceme of hodding white flowers shooting up from the centre. They plossom inJune and Julr, The Pipstssema, or Prince's Pine (Chimaphilia um- Dellata), te also rare with us, oceilrring tat Mich dgan City and Laporte. Its corymb of white or purplish fluwers, terminating the shovt, Ieat- vlad stems in June, erance, The plant la said to have valuablo ton- ic properties, The suborder Monotropene embraces ten species of strange, Icafless, almust colorless parasites growing on the ruots of pines, oake, and other forest-trecs. They aro natives of Europe, Asta, aud North Atnerica, where tlicy abide in coul, dry woods. The Indian Pipe (Monotropa uniflora) ls one only specice, crow- tng ut Riverside and Glencoc, but not common: ly inelther tocality. Itis a waxen, corps plaut, consisting of one or more round, thick steins springing from a ball of matted fibrous roots, furnished thinty with scales in the place of leaves, and beuding over nt the top, whero the flowers are cluatered, Mkethe howl af a pipe. It is tho very chost of a plant, with the weird, uncanny lovk of one that has unwarrantably burst trom {ts coflin, and como forth to haunt the daylight in the grewsome garb of the grave. The Ericacew serve their chief parpose in adorning the earth, The frult of some specica is grateful, and tho juices of a few ave used in medicine, ur ure valued for their pungent flavor. Dangerous narcotic properties exist in. ocrtaln Reucra, as the Mhododetidrone, the Krlmias, und others, The leaves of sumeof thcse ara pulsonous to animals, au the houey tuat is made from theirilowera is deleterious, It is sald that the honey which Zenophon deactibed as stupetylng the Greek soldicre, In the famous retreat of the 10,000, was collected from the Rhodadend: pouticum. Pallas, a Russian traveler, accuses the Azalca pontlca of fhe mia- ehicf, ‘The Kalmus auzustifolia is eallod Lamb- Kill Because its foliage polsous ticep, aval the K. lutifelta is said todo the same. ‘The beautiful Azaleas, which enilven our conservatories in the spring, came originally from Asia Misor, but a number of Jess shuwy specics are indixenous tn ine Eastern States. THE BRITISH VIVISECTION ACT, Prof. Huxley read a paper, at tle recent Dornestic-Economy Congress in Birmingham, on “Evementary Instruction in Physiotgy.” At tiha close of the essay, the author marte the fol- lowhig pertinent comments on the Vivisection act, which has caused such warm discusston in Great Britains: “1 think it Is ny duty,” said the B'rofessor, “to take this opportuulty of expretising my regret at condition of the law which permits o boy to trol for pike, or set lines, with tla fro bait, for (dle stausement; and, st the same time lays the teacher of that boy open to the penali of fing and imprisonment if he uses the sunie animal Lor the purpose of exhibiting onu of te most bea utiiul and instructive of physiologt mal sspectacta 3, the clrculution in thuweb of the foot. No onv cuvuld tndertake to affirm thata frog is nof inconvenienced by being wrapped up mao wet at and having bis tocs tled omts ar al it vannot be denied that Inconvemence isa surt of pain. But vou must.not inflict the least pain onn verte brated animal forsctcutitle purposes (theuh you nwy do a good deal in that way for fadt or tor sniaet) ee ithout due license of the Secrutary: of State for the Home Department, granted ui der the autlnorty of the Vivylsection act. So lt vomes about, tat in this present vear of grace 1877, tno pert.ous may be charged with cruelty to animals. Onc has impaled a frog, atad sui- fered the creature to writhe about in that cundition: for hours; the other hus pained the animal no more than onc of us would ts pained by tying strings around his fingers, and keeping him ‘m the noaltion of o brarenatie Patient. Tho tirat of- fender says, ¢ 2 did it because I find fieh ing very amusing,' -and the Magistrate bids him. depart. in peace; vay, probably wishes him coud sport. ‘The second pleads, *L wanted to impress a scientific truth, with a distinctness attahiable tn ho other wiy,on the minds of my acholnw,’ and. the Mugistrate fines him £5. £ cannot but: think this jaan avomalous aud not wholly crechitaule state of thinigs.’? CHINA. Baron V. Ricuthofen has lately publish ed, io Berlin, the fret number of a work, to cor oprise four volumes, on the geology und geogra phy of China, The author accompanied Count Euten- berg, in 1869, on his political mission to. China and Japan, aud, on the return of the expudi- tion, remained twelye years in the Cllestial Empire, for the purpose of studying the physi- cal features and the govlowieal structure of tho «ountry. Tho observations ob- taincd during theso years will bo en- wed Ju the present work, tu which 2ho initial yoluine” forms little mors than an introduction. Of the remaining voluires, oue will le devoted to the paleontology of Cli- na, and the other two to the coal-ields of tho Empire—which the author regards as more: val- uable than the deposits in the United States— and to the geologlcul structure of the land, the ellmatic phenomena, the population as affucted by these two ayencics, the river syste, cte., etc. By the onsistance of u Government grant he work Js sumptuously published, and is co- bloualy Nlustrated with maps and woodcuts, BRIEF TES, ‘The Scientific Mining Engineers of Spain wM celebrate the hundredth anniversary of tho foundation of tholr Society, at Madrid, durl ag August. The Trench Association for tho Advancem ent. of Seleuce meets at Havro Aug, 23. Dr. Broca, Professor to the Faculty of Medicine and Di- rector of the Authropological Schoo! of Parts, is President of the Association this year. ‘Thu Soctete des Sciences Naturelles de Sitisse holds its aunual meetiug this year at Bey, ts the Canton of Vaud. The scasiun will cun tinue froin the 10th to the 27th of August, under the Presidency of M. Loujs Dutvur, of Lausanne, Sergius Kern, an engineer of St, Petersburg, announces the discovery of a new mineral called Davyum, alter Sir Humphrey Davy. {tls found in the residues got from platinum, and ts cun- ldered by M. Kern to rank between molybdu- pum and’ rutnenium, Prof. C. U. Shepard has recently traneferrcal tothe Museum of Amberst College hus larze, collections of iuincrals, fusalls, plants, ete. ‘Pt accession renders the collectlou uf theteoriten fu the Atmherst Muscum the lourth in tae world, and ite cabinet of minerals cqual to tle finest in the country, We learn from Nature that a wonderful white aytidinarine has been found in Perthshire, En- gland, which, when cut, bas produced one ut. the Moat ‘bratitant gems known. {tis vald to e jual the celebrated Koli-l-noor, {ta refraction being very freat by day wod night. {bic of a pure, pelluad white, and its hurduess fs 3.0 1 upecitia gravity’ 2.75, z A mavulucturing house fn Birmingham, En- @laud, hve produced a" pucket-bammock,’'” which is ualde Ol light but strong netting, aud can be so folded us to be carried over the shoul- der jike a bat Or iy w lair-sized coat-pocket. It ig so urranged with ropes, hooks, and screws, that it. can be used under almost’ uuy circu: stances, and forms a most comfortable sud.se- ure bed. Mr. John Williamson, of Scarborough, En- gland, a geologistof eminence, aud the discoverer of the celebrated Gresthorpe pluut-beds, dicd duly 15, at the age of Dr, dunes Bye, whose labors tn geology have made bis name well kouwn i British science, was killed ow the 10th of July by the fall of & cHif on whhsa he Was operating with bis baminer. He was 7} Yeare of age, The Vortuguese African explorers, Maj. Scepa Pinto ae Capt. Brito Caplio. borve act out for Loando with the best equipment ever provided for au African expedition. ‘They take with them oue uf the finest equatorials of the Polytechnle School of Paris, a sextart of yreut delfcacy, and wew apparatus for the study of terrestrial magnetism, with other instruments of superior quality. Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, President of the Royal Society aud Director of the Koyal Gar deus, Kew, arrived in Boston on the 9th of July, aud fumediate proceeded to the Rocky Mouut- aiusof Colorado aud Wyoming, to study the Hora cf that region. He was accompaulcd by Prof, Asa Gray, of Cambridge, Prof. Leidy, of Piiladelphia; aud Dr, Hayden, to whose Survey the party are temporarily auuexed. a Thackeray's **Old Friend.” In dlacuising “Grecowich Dinners,” « few iD * weeks since, a writer in (he 7ruh alluded to Ads. Thackeroy’s partlality tur beans and bacouw, exhales a delight(ul fra-- tin this excellent com- qially enamured of all the which one never, under any ctreumstances, rece except by chance. One win- ter afternoon, nbout 4:80 of the clock, a friend of the great novelist entering the coffec-room of the Athen, was surorised to find him din- ing by himself at an obscnre table, evidently anxtowsto shun observation. On inquiry Mr, ‘Thackeray confessed that he had been engaged: outto adinuer party at 7:30. but seeing triy ant onions on the menu, he tas unable to resist the temptation, and had sent an excuse to his intentou hoste,on the ground that he had ‘suddenly met an old friend and was unable to leave him.” This reminds one of Lord Galres- ton Inviting Pelham "to meet a lunch of yenl- evn!” THE CURRENCY. SOME QUESTION: To the Editor af The Tribune. Critcaao, Aug. 1.—In your editorial of this morning, entitled ‘wo Schemes Considered," you go on to give reasons why the watering of the currency, or, in other words, the increase of the volume of {rredcemable greenbacks, may in- volve usin peril and general rnin. Alt very gould; but L would ike to know by what means the advocates of an increased paper currene Propose to get the stuff into efrentation, Is it y another war, or new public improvements, or by donation, or how? You will ace that, {C this cannot be done, it is no use arguing what might be. Please enlighten and oblige, yours truly, 5 James BARKER. {If Congress deetred to increase the {rredleem- able legal-tender to the full lMmit of the law, ‘viz. ? to $40,000,000, they could direct the See retary of the Treasury to purchase bonds for greenbacks in the open market, and thereby re- issue the $40,000,000 of leral-tenders which have been retired during the Inst twelve years. How much premium would have to be pald for tho bonds cannot be forctold,—perhaps 20 to 25 per cent. The $40,000,000 of reissucd notes might purchase $10,000,000 of 5-20 bonds, which, of course, woul add $10,000,000 to the national debt, ns the notes would somo time have to be redeemed. What cffect it would bave on tho value of the whole currency for Cuncress to take steps backward ard to order an increace of the irredemable notes to the full limit of the original pledge given to the public creditors, viz. $400,000,000, can only be xucssed at, but it would most likely send gold up to 115 or 118 for f time, and greenbacks down to 85 or there- abouts. It is dificult to seo how such a meas- ure would tend to increase confidence on the part of creditors or business men, or help those who bad notes or mortgages to renew.—ED.] | Xot only did he binatton, but he was other plain dish A CURRENCY SUGGESTION, To the Editor of The Tribune, Cricaco, Aug. 10.—Everybody {sin favor of the stereotyped programme, viz.: (1) Remone- tization and free coliage of silver. (2) Repeal of the Resumption act; and (3) the removal of the war-taxes from bank circulatlou. If Con- Gress has any respect at all for the opinions and wishes of the people, it will hasten to grant these indlspensable reforms, But fs there uot still *!ouc thing needful" be- sides? Circenbacks are up to par with silver now; but why! Because, as tho aw now stands, they re to be redeemed in gold six- teen months hence. But, if that law were repenled and silver mado a legal-tender, areenbacks would sink as much below silver a9 ticy are now below gold, and silver would be ae effeetuady driven out of circulation as gold now is. The great problem fs how to make sil- ver circulate or be on o par with zreenbacks and bank bills. 4 would suczest that a ainking-fund equal to thirty-six miltions per annum, or three millions per month. be set apart to be Invested B silver chin und exchanged for greenbucke, his) would retire the wholo greenback elreulation of three hundred and sixty milkons in ten years, and would produce ho contraction, asa cireulaung silver dollar would bo issucd for overy paper dotlar retired. This tz clearly within the abliity of the Quyern- ment, and I'thitk that tho steady fasua of $3.00U.1N0 fn silver per month iu exchange for Rreenbacks would muintain the whole amount outstanding on a par with ellyer. 3 J. W. Kepzix. REDEMPTION-BONDS, To the Editor of The Tribune, * Crtcago, Aug. 10.—Permit me to surgest a mode that would ald greatly in bringing ereen- backs tu pur, and perhaps tully accompli tho object without materially changing the amount of currency ineirenlation. If the Resumption law could be repealed or suspended, and the sli- ver dollar meinonetized rnd made a fult legal tender, thers redemption-bqnds would make Sreenbacks at onco equal to coin: 1. Let thero be authorized an issue of about 100,000,000 of rcdemption-bonds principal aud interest payable In United States coin. 2% Tho prirefpal of the bonds te bo payable Inteu or twenty vears, and the interest quar- terly or sem{<atinually; but the Government. toliohl the votton ot calling them in at any thue upongiviag: three months? notice, and pay> ing them fn coin. & The rate wf interest to be GB per cent per annum, or whasuver rato imay bo necessary to keep the bonds ot par. {Who could tell id ade vance what that :rate would bel—Ep.) 4. ‘Thu bonds ter be fasued at par in green- Lacks, and itn same of $1,000 or iuitipics thereof; and only to persons wanting thom fu exchange for grettbacks. ‘The greentucks recolved for these bonds te be held for the sole purpose of paying th m out in exchange fur the bonds, upon the de- mandof tho holders thercut; but the boods presented for such exchange to have been {s- sucd notices than three months prior to their presentation, ly this ineans tha bonds would be equal to both coin and grees backs; and theretoro the coln and greenbacks would be equal to each ‘Then with cobi aud yreenbacks equal to cach other, there would be no desire on the pore of holders of greambacka to present them for redemptlun-bonds, unless there should re- ally be au excess of grovnbacks beyond the busl- ness demands of the asuntry. If the general stagnation of business sould lead to changing tuo many’ greendacks into bonds, this would secon he corrected by the demands of business calling the greendacks uut again in exchange for the bonda; while the brovlsion thut the bona Gffered for exchange shall Lavo been issued throes months before pre- seutation will present a too rapid retiromenut of greenbacks, and wholly prevent their being ex. changed for bands when sexuzht to be done for the ale hurpose of getting temporary intervat on capital. “ "The rato of interest might be high, but tho cost to the Government would be only nominal, Whatever It tight be would be more’ than bal- anced by the raeaees of tke voneral pros- perity that would follow. Peruapa at tlrat $50,- ),000 of Fedetautlon might be called for,—but the demand would never average that sum,— while on the bonds not issucd ‘there of courss would by no Intercet paid. Vox il, ee VERSES, What gladness fills tha wanderer’s heart, When, atter many yeare Which have bued passed ju vegup unrest, And often mixed with tears, Tle seve ayatn those loving on Whom tine can never change And lests auce moro We vice of ber Whose love uoigght can estrange, ‘The world perhaya' has been nokind, Nor gave to him who sou;ht One wort tu case # sorrowing mind, Nor e'en a alogle thought: But ‘tie not thus ta thet old cot Where dwells the wiother deur, For. thouyh by alt th world forgot, Ue Gude a welcome there. And would he tell to willing ears Of all that be bas known else may be, ‘Till death shal. come to taice her hence, Ser luve and sympetby W. @. Curcauo, August, 1377. — Advantages of Crylng. A French physician ts out ina long disserta- tou un the advantages of erouniog and crying fo generat, and especially during surgical opera- tions. He contends that groanlog and crying are two grand operations by which nature alleys anguish; that those patients who ave way to their natural {cclings more speedily recover froin accicents and operations than those who suppose it unworthy a manto betray such symptoms of cowardice as either to groan or cry. Tio tells of 9 man who reduced his pulse from 198 to sixty iu the course of afow hours by giv- ing {ull yent tu bis emotions. If ple aru at all upbappy about avytuing, let thei go ito their roolus aud comfort themselves witha loud huo-beGs and they wll fecl 100 per cent better terward. Iu accordance with tho above, tho crying of clildrea should nut be too greatly discouraged. IL it is systematically repressed, the result way be Bt. Vitus’ dance, epileptic Hts, or some other Giscasc of the aystem. What is patural is.nearly always useful, and nothing can be more natural than erying of children when anvthing occurs to Bive thein either physical or mental pain. PITTSBURG. Workingmen‘’s Meeting—A Labor Party Calied For, Spectat Correspondence of The Tribune, Pirtsnung, Pa., Aug. 8.—Since the collapse of the atrike, the dismissal of the military, and the resumption of railroad-traffic, the city has been unusually quict, Last night the working- men caused a silght ripple of excitement by assembling on the North Side to the number of over 2,000, and representing nearly every de- partment of industry. The object of the gathering was to organize a Workingmen’s party, similar to that formed at Phiia- detphia Inst winter, for the purpose af influencing’ lectelation to the tutercare of the taboring cinsses, The meeting was very or- derly. The Chairman stated, at the outset, that it was not a tireenback or Surereign-of-[ndustr) mecting. It bad wo affiliation with capttal, whtch, a8 now controlled, was the poor man's enemy. The prinefpul speaker was Mr. Dantel Fisher, a cabinet-maker from the South Sue, He is quite a young man, and. at knowledged that his expericuce was linited; but he pitched Into the ‘ bloated-bondholder ? class with a zeal that made up fur any omission in that direction. He satd the claims of crist- ing poiiticnl parties, that they were friendly to the workingman, were false. The laboring class had no friends but thenteelves. They consti- tuted a large majority of the population of the country, and, if they” would only organize and work together, they could secura such legisls- tion as they needed. Several other apecches were made, similar in spirit to that of Mr. Fisher; after which the tollowing resolutions were unanimously adopted: Witengas, The workingmen of the Inited Stales have been subjected to great opposition for the lant three years; an Wueneas, Thotr wages have again and again decn reduced by larze corporations and private wm- ployers, until ihey are nu tonger able to maintain teurelves and thelt families; anu Wuenras, Hundreds and thonsands of indus- trions working people have been driven into the ranks of pauperiem and crime, and ruined in thelr health, oy overwork and bad pay: aud Witrngas, ‘Ve working peuple have, time and again, petitioned onr State ana national legislators for laws that would redroas our weonue, ant bave invariably heen treated with silent contempt; therefore, bo dtesotred by this m ‘That the time bar arrived for the work pie of Amnerica to resist by alltegitiinate means tho turther oppression of capital and the robbery It perpetraies on lavor. Resolved, That the condition to whicn capltalista of thiscountry have reduecd the worsing people jaa fou! staln upon this wo-cailed Repabile, Hesotred, That the working classes can no longer look for retiress through the present political par- tes, whe have only used them as voting cattle: bit mast organize a Labor party, having our lines strictly drawn, The meeting adjourned to meet again to night. Toe movement fs viewed with alarm by local politicians, who profess to sea in It not only the geri of Cominunism, but an clement which threatens to project itself Into the next. minoivipal canvass and unsettle things Rener- ys a ——{—_ — THE LAST SONG OF HIAWATHA, Hear a story of aX. Once an ecdanumie Nations Anil a Democratic party Said unto the loyat arwy: U'er misguided 5 We no longer will tui Get yo tu tao fart nity Where the suvage 1a tian hovera; . Battle with the savage Indian, Ifa May-yo need 10 shelter Ye shall fast until Octover; ‘Then we will dieband you wholly,"* And the army heard and wondered, Miroured nut, but much tt wondered. Odicers went forth to borrow For their dally brea. and shotter; Anu tue men looked on thelr children, Baying, ** Ye must auarve, my children, For we caunotinte plowsbarcs Heat our ewords—they are the Nation Then arose a cry of wailing, As of very hungry children, O'er the Muakoday, the meadow, O'er tho sult piains and the mountainas And the Heron, the Shub-ahuh-gah, ‘Wept with aympathetic anguleh. Should you ask mo how It ended, If the Nation, thenceforth peacefal, Had no need of any aoldiera, Had no need of sword or cannon Iehould anawer, J should tell you: Once # mub rushed through tas citles, Burning, plundering, destroying, Beating dawn tho brive pollcemun, Driving off tho brave miiltin; ‘Then the people, much aifrizhted, Caled unto the faltarul army, Saying, **Suve us, U our orutherst Coine and save ur cefenders) iy the swift expresa-traln hasten From the country's farthest limit, Where the savage Indian hovers: Como 2a fast us trans can bring you." And they caine, the brave, the war-worn} Loyal still they came, though hungry; Stalked, tn sulid mertial column, Through tho city-etrceta beleagucred— ‘Marebod with tramp as tiem and ateady ‘As when, on the Weatern desert, They the savazo Indian routed. And tte mob ded faat before thom, Cried out, **Sanvo qui peut,” in English, Fled away and awiftly vanishod From the reguiation rile, ‘Tacn tho peaple raid, **0 soldiers, You have raved our Jives and money: You have done {t well and bravviy; ‘We will pay you In October. * > An the Heron, the Slah-shuh-gab, u'er the Muskouay, the meadow, Sereamed, ** Methinks ‘twere well youdid ao. m ———— CURRENT OPINION, The Sun thinks that tho employment of the regolar army recently in Pennsylranin and eleowhero waa unconatituttons!, and hinta that Prealdent Hayes onght to be impeachad for using national troops for police duty, Wo take it that exports will agroc that this racy asanything the Sun ever produced on Childs ortha Count Johannes. —Albany Acening Journal. Tho Mississippt platform is meant for tho North, and its ovident parposo is to convince the North that the Miaeissinpi Democrats are not un worthy the confidence which the Administration has expreased in the whole Southern people, Whether these words wero meant or nut, those who subscribed to them are anxious to appear well, and. that anxtoty ie in iteelf, we submit, a grest and gratlfring advance,— Utica (N, ¥,) Llerald (Lep.). ‘The singlo frantic desire, the sole yearning purpose, the one thing forwhich the average Ame! ican politician forgeta bis food by day and jays awake o' nights, is to raies the downtrodden work- inginan from penury to affluence, frum toit to {dl new ain yous No! shon jf more than the workiagina: Ile knows, or should know, that betterment by 1eyal definitions of compensatio: kind and quality of work and time of ‘labor are nothing but organized salecy: Legislation cannot overthrow natural luws, ‘There ta no royal road to wealth or anything elec, but everything must be gained py toil, —/udiunapolis News, In nommmating Judge West, the Repub. Ucane of Ohlo have duno 9 novel thing. The Curious spectacle is mfforted of 3 blind man lea fog a political colu ‘hatthe canvans will Nese spirited or fers ably conduc! count, no one who ts acqualoted with the nominee will believe, The eclection of Judge Weat by tho Repubhicana we think the wheest that could have been made, Only oue other inatance of modern mes reminds us of the action of thy unio Kepab- ficang, and that was the ciectlon of Prof, Fawcett to the Hawlish Parliament. Prof, Faweett at- tected attention from the marked ability be dle played in treating public questions. political Ossaya Aro models in their way, vices ia Fartiameat, vo far from vlesppuinting his friend: have becu the suviect of frequent remark ane Provided Judze Weat Is elected, there neca be doubt of the manner in which ho will acquit bi weit, Altnouzh the victim of a misfortune affec ing his ywual organs, be inay be counted on ta re- fect creust upon himself and the State. —Piteburg Chronleve (ep. The affect of the recent storm in certain localities Is iMustrated inthe following from the Clinten MeWitt County, Ul.) Public: ** We want itdletinotly understuod that the Public will hence: forth oupose ali schemes for the sinking of a coul- abait iu thle city. Coal-miners ar it a desirable populatmn, for they everiastingiy munity in which thoy live tau state of constant dread, . 4. Freodou anu liberty sounds well, but pracicaily there fs but little of the commod: ina miudng town. No coal-mines wanted 1 Cll jon." ‘The opening of wines.at Clinton would | Crease the dewaud fur labor, aud thus benefit the laboring class. So far av the viows uf the Public Can ine uence capitalists In that section, It ta pretty clear that that will not be done, and oll becauee uf the artatrary course of such’ minere os those at Brataw , who not only puta price upon their our (which they have an unduubted right to also assumed to coutro) tho capitsl and of thelr cwployers.—Springfels (1U.) Tho is something more than usually mesn and contemptible in the style of warfare adopt-sd by the Blaine clique of pulllicians in re- ward to Secretary Schurz, b set bas nut, ose ruin, been romarkable for pursaing politics wit! ota) disregard of pecuniary emolument, sud if its tiem’ berw have been sblo to give tbeie survics to the Nati wal Committee free of expense, it bas beenin virtu eof their command of mouey earned by incth- odsox which they bave, as & whole, litde reason on that ace tote proad. The Impartial observer will he dis. posed to resard the paverty whtch compelied Wr rz to take payment for his camparen rervices as decidedly more honorable than the compentenc; which placed shrewder and more esleniattn zatat men above the neecraity of maxing any sneh ite: In any case, Mr. Scharz fx ent.tled to be Alef when he etates that his campaign labors left him. very decidedly out of poc Aw a general thing, the political experience of the Haine echoo! haa been quita the reverse of this.—Aew Fork Limes (Rend. ‘Two of the gronteat necessities of the time ate nndonbtedly a considerable inercase in the standing army of the United Staten, and the estad- Hishmens of such forms of governmental saper- vision of railwayn ae will promote eafety of travel and transportation, and check abuacs that have ne- come national calamities, One of the principal obstacles to be surmounted hy the sdracates of either of theee roforma will be the opposition that wil spring from advocates of ulten Stato-rivnte doctrines, The country shonit, therefore, aert- Bualy: consider the real meaning and effect of the Application to present and future emergencies he ready infinite Misery ap the American peuple. the Congress of the United States, after careful and mature deliberation, manifesting aue regaril for the rights and interests of atl parties and: sec Hons, should be enabled to devise eflective and theorles that ale of i have amount ntiqniated ted an ed ani tresed the country, the advocate of ultra-State rights theories would forbid the application of theao remedies and perpetuate all ald evil Ue would torn back civilization towards the barbarism of the Dark Ages, when no general principle of Justice could be enforced on acecunt of the an- tazoniam of [gnorant, brntal, and despotic fendal lords; and when no geneine nation could be estah- Mahed on acconnt of the fallare to apply with unilarmity any of the new truths dlscorered in Jan's progress from besotted ignorance, injustice. and savage cruelty, to. higaer plane of enilzhten- ment, bonesiy, and humanity. —PhiladelpAla Presa, Mr, Hayes seoma fully equal to the task of reconclltng the people to his Administration, cre- ated agit was by fraud. ‘She ineolence of ailice which characterized every department of the Gov- ernment, from ushers to the Secreiary, under Grant. pave diaanienren, Now the humotest citl- zen may approach the ufticlals of the Gavernment—— the President himecif—certain of receiving the Kindest reception and the most courteous conauter- ation, The waoiv character of the Government hata been changed, Whether yuu approucn Mr, Mayes or one of the Cabinet, or any of the suburdi- nates, you are made tu feol that yuuaren citizen of A tepublic, and that the oficials of the Government are the chogen servants of the public interests, If devotton to the material interests of every eectionof the country and uniiorm courtesy can popularize this Administration, it will be popularized. 1 think the object of Mr. Hayos Isto bring as many Southern pe-ple in contact with himself and his Cabinet as posible, and toimpresa them favorably, You nay. tee how great # popularizing movement this in, “Tho President fs hlmscl? a gentloman of tar more tian ordinary aocial attractions, and Atl the inembers of hile Cabinet are men of clegance and culture, Every Southern man that meets then {fs agreeably impreseed, and, curdingly, becumes ameng his felonda, ausaciates, and class n eulogiet of the President, if not of the Loulsiana Returning Voard and tae Electoral Commission.— Luitortal Correspondence\ from Washaigton of New Orleans Democrat (Dem.), What is the working of the trade-union ralo restricting the number of anprenticce? After all trades have adopted the same rate, and the greater number of the boys that necd to learn tradesare excluded from iho way ty learn, what then? They muet live, After all have heen driven to common Janor that can be, and all that have received nome schooling, and that, in the abe sence of any decent way to get intan trade, have furned to precarluas menna uf aubsintenco ‘in the Itghter ways of clerks, helpere, burtenidsrs, beor- duckurs, “delvors, — guming-housa attendants, and fo on, an tur the consequent proportion has been driven to genteel ways of living by thieving and crime, and by living on fancy women, ailll thera remain a large nuinber who aro reanived ty become capable of earning a living, and who yet are excludad oy thiw trade union rule from learning a trade in © decent way, Whatisthe reanitr ‘They get o half bold of the trade in some irceguiar way, und then, ey should be serving on apprenticeship, they set up as journoymen, and force the tradc union to tase them ii hy and to demand full waxes for them theaame aa If tuey wero work- men. In this way the trade union, whose firat ob- fect should oe to raise the character of its mem: 44 workmen, and thoraby false their pay, is perverted tothe dubasing of tho trade, and this dvbuaes tho wagea of all, —Cinctnnatt Gazelle, ‘The Aitminiatration has entored npon a genera! policy of conducting the affatea of tho Gov- ernment on sensiole buainuss principles. If tto- periments of the public service havo heretofore ecn considered og places where anforttnate und Inctiiclent perauns could sucure employment anil puy which they did not warn, this fe to bo no longer the car ‘The country hasdemunded economy in the management of the Government. ‘Tas opub- Iican party hay promised it, President Iayen pro- poses to keepthe party pledges, and to taat end obverve the obvious principles of busincas which will bring xbont auch a result, Comuiedion have been appointed to inquire into the service of tho Castom-Houscs, and as the result, inecures have beon | abolish inofiicient mien dlemisned, and — the rrico put upon o practical baalness fovting. The vane polte has been obsceved inal! of the departmunta. ‘ho hours of service have been so Increased as to conform with those observed In private concerns, Burcads nave been reorganized, and scores of wur- plus or inefficient employes discharged. In all of who branches of tho public sersice in which thure havo been reports of locsences of waste, there nas been a caroftl invoutigation, or ancl a procoss of and exaiuation is now golngon. Contracts in every brauclt of the servico have been rovised and scores uf wastes stopped. Everywhere there fe evidence of a vrvater degrée of Vigtinnco uni business-like cara than has bean observable fur Years, Inileed, tho evidences of tha purpors of tha ‘Admiintatration to practice buainose on econmnical at that wo predict that there f jobbery reaulling from lack of watchfulneas on pe pate of Prosident Mayes and his Cabinet.—Loston Journat (Rep. ). It ix both annoying and amusing to ob- servo tho supremo nestmntion of pluperfcet pro- bity induiged In by thors who pdvocate that tho bonds they hold shall bo paid, not In gold and sil- ver, but in old only, They are cverfastingly tn= siting that the public honesty wall bo kept up at shigh standard, Their devution to the national credit: in positively romantle; there is nothing equal to it ence a Congress compuscd Intzely of holners of national bonds da law promleing that these bonds, payale In greonbacks, should be para ingot, worth at, that fime tv percent wore tun gold, That Connrens pretended to he **atrenuthening the public craddit," tut it was real- Ty adding 30 por cent to the valuo of every bond held. by its moinbers. So the advocates of an exclu. atve gold payment of these same bouds affuct higher standard of bonesty than other peapl they pretend to be wholly concerned abont tne ti tions! faith and anxious that the dovernment should not degrade It by paylng its debts in a do- eciated metal, while in fact thelr concern for the tonal faithia nothing mdre than a mask fora home to piit10 percentintheirpockets, . . . ver payinent means 100 cents tu the dollar, or Irty-uix inches to the yard; exclusiva gold pay> ents moans 110 cents (o the dollar, ur thirty-utne inches to the yard, Thiale manifest, for the sil- ver dollar existed before tho gold dollar; tho liter was not suthorized until yeare after tho former been authorised and catab- Ushed; and when the gold dollar was comed ft was inade tu conform {to tts alle ver predeccesor—thue showlug that tho latter is the orlyinal and standard coin or the orginal and ndard yardstick, ‘Tho gol advocates arc ine ting that the old silver yardetick, tno oricinal and standard ono, shall be set aside and all debis measured with the gold tics. so that creditors may get 110 cents for every dollar or thirty-nine inches nd they havo the offrontery to in- dishonest" for anydady to ob- such robbery, The average Lastern credl- of hoveaty see: a be exacting, frat iO ercent and then JO percent more on hisc! han the Jaw of tho contract entities him t biaidea of disnoneaty fs an unwillingness to aubmi to the extortion,—si. Louis /epublican (Dem), nan ae aes STERLING'S NEW HOTEL. Srentino, 11., Aug. 10.—Our fine new hotel the Galt Honse—erected by Tuomas A. Galt, Esq., ut an expense of $75,000, will be formaily opened on the 2let iuet., by Mr. J. HH. Giruy as lessee, and on that evening the citizens of Sterl- ing are preparing to give Messrs, Galt aud Gray @ grand complimentary banquet, reveption, and ball, to which the State ofllcers and prominent citizens, railroad men aud others from yurious artaof the West uro invited. It ts Intended bat this 6! be ous of tho grandest cvents of tho kind ever celebrated in this State, The Galt House has beeu two years In building, Itisa substantial brick edilive, with four stories and basement, with all modern improveusents, and covers au area of 100 by L4 fevt. It will be the Ancst dnd most clegantly furnished hotel west uf Chicago, SeUEEEEEERASaeeEEE ADetectlve's Experience Among the Strikers, Patladeloata Pree.» When Gov, Hurtranft was about starting tos! open tue blockade ub the Pennsylvania Ituilroad he sald to Mayor Baileys I want two of your deto-tives,—cool, kee “hands,—who van be de- snded upon in caso of au emergency.” And eteetives W. S, Rowland aud Henry Weyl were accordlogly dotatled and ordered to report to tho Governor for duty, They bad a bard job tosce tue Governor, When they approached his headquarters, two worse-looking Alullle Ma- guires couldn't have been found iu the coal regions, But they managed to obtaln an su- dicnco at last, aud this isthe story of their cx- ploits as told by Detective Rowlaid to a Jrees reporter: ‘At Altoona things began to look livcly. There were not abey, strikers vislule, but the wonlen there wery awfully vindictive, aod wero jeerlug the troops and saying: ‘You'll never get through the tuouel alivo; the boys will biuw it up un you.’ Weyland L went off the wot uut dinong the cruwd, Nobody suspected us, and we frauternized freely with thu strikers everywhere, aud vasily obtained taelr confidence by saying that we wero cuginecrs from Baldwin's Locomotive Works 10 Philadelphia, aod bad struck there. They bad thelr heauquarters in wxin-mill, aod were no lack of leaders and no wantof disposition to do mischiot if the opportanty were favorable, Tuey were well organized for this thing, and enzineers, brakemen, and trackmen all underatoud tach other, We heard from one uf the men at Altoona of aacheme which might have proved attecessfuland worked great destruction wad it not been hapolly thwarted. It was pro- posed by the strikers to run an engine up the mountaln, and as soon ae it was Known that the train with the troops was coming to Jet her gu slashing down. You can imagine what would have been the result if this bad been done. But dt srasn’t.? Heporter—What did you do? Detective—"Tant’s a State secret for the Present. At all events, the Governor avo or- ders after this that the train be run by the block system. That ta, it don’t move until the line for four miles ahead fa known tu be clear of ob- structions, We sent two detachments on foot ‘hrough the tunnel ahead of the train, und every precaution was taken to prevent accldents, = We gob throngh all right. Vittsburg was Uvely. We soon found ourselves among the strikers, and in twenty minttes wo were all right. f had a chat. with one man which explains a point now Ine volved In mystery, He sail that hie, with o good many more of the strikers, when this thing begun, imate up their ininds to stop the runaing of trains on the Pennsylvania Rail- road until the Goveeninent had tu tuke charge of the line. 'There was, he said, ‘ac in the charter of the Company which gare the State Government the right, alter a cers tain thine, tu take possession of tho road if its owners do ty transport the mails.’ ‘This wild tdea lad evidently gained considerable be- lief anung the more Ignorant of the men, and a tore ignorant lot Puever saw anywhere. We were there ostensibly trylag to obtaln work, and Inmaking our ‘rounds wo found ten or twelve apulicants for every Job vacant. It was the same in Allegheny, and pretty much the same in East Liberty. I tell you the people there are just now beglunlug to appreciate tio extent of their folly.” ———a—___ THE STRIKERS’ PROBLEM, To the Editor of The Tribune, Winatxatoy, Will Co., Aug. 6,—Herctofore Thave left the strikers’ problem to be worked out by others, and nuw for the firs. time give public expression to my private viows, fully conyinced that the solution of the moment- wuts problem {nterests and concerns tho whole people, —that, as it sprung from the people, it 1s tur the people to answer. Aside from tho ine lated condition of labor and tho “ price cure rent" during and immediately after tho War, Wt is quite casy to deciplier the causes which brought about the grand change from bad to worse. Everything has been in such a gascous and balloon-like shape since the War that at most any moment It only required o slight movement of the lanco of dlstruat in the hand of disquict to puncture the ‘bubble and Jand us unon tho verge of chaos. The thrust was given. But before noting It, pleaso let us understand that at no time has there been a dearth of capital, nor labur, nor provisions, There {s vow, ond always has been, a sulllelent amount of currency to carry on the vusiness of the country and employ avery la borer, each receiving a° Just coinpensution tor nis hire, Capital Is accumulated tavor.. A man tnt has $10), has the muscle of that num. ber of ten at $t per day at hls command, and is entitled to the profit uud employment of his concentrated labor? as mitch as the man whe exhausts his capital or labur upon his daily bread, Capital and labor being xtndred, should go band tu hand, walising In tnutual conidence, uclag inembors of the same family. As svonas there is am Jack of vontklence, there {fs a strike of sume kind, the blow coming sometiines from capital, ant at other tines trom labor, If capital first atrikes, labor {s apt to strike back, and vice versa, Now, we are ready to ask and answer, Whore dld the rst. shock come from? Up to the tlmo of the inauguration of the Granger movement. in this cuuntry all was peace and harmony. Labor at the haa of the Granger made a thrust at capi- tal as accumulated aud represented by rail- roads, Our railroad capital was mostly froin abroad, and the inost of our raliroad svcuritics und a cardinal oxponent in Jay Cooke & Co. With the liret stroke of the Graog capitallat became alarmed and hdrew his capital. This caused the failure of Jay Cooke & Cu., and the general panic which Ja atlll felt. Now, though the Granger has accn fils tnis- tuke and old his head (fer no original Granger can now bo found), the — virus of discord thus engendered bas Infected other ciasses, and the war uson capital stlil gous on, without walting for tae thought of the war of the members’ upon the bolly in the public tuat when the hands andl feet ond inouth ceased to ndminister to tho wants of the wleged superiluvus momber the belly went back on them, and they made “a common dic of it.” Bo when the enzincer says to ‘l'on Scott, I will not feed you at a salary of $50,000 w year, he forgets that scott's experience is worth more than hls, and that same experience (which is Scott's capital) is nursing the interests und planning for thu employment and supplies of tuat acli-same cugincer, | ‘Their interests are mutual, You strike the belly, although ft is supplicd by the hands and carried uround b the feet, and you wit and wither both hands and fost. Tom Scott, oF his skill and good mavagement «uring the present riko, hus saved to his eng!noers tholr engines il thelr homes, and to the Company his life salary. fflis occupation gano and theirs go with It, us Well o¢ the accumulated Sxpericiey of years, Let capital and labor go hand in hand. ‘The panics has closed manufactorics, there fs nvt tho call for transportation thera was, then let tho engineer share the burdens of the spans and Ict nelther attempt to op- Drees thy other. Tlie fault is a want of prbrate and public confitence, The remedy Is the qui- eting of the public pulses, ‘Lo kenp children outof mischief divert thelr minds from mils- elicf, employ them. A farmor with a number of employes lias just sald that his best year was when he “had to study nichts to keep his tnoo profitably employer days, Tho great trouble 4, the public” attention has busied it- tf moro in arreating than employing labor. ic harvest is nearly passed and thu summer nearly ended, and the wants of the future un- rovided for, Thero’s fiozee pane abcad un- esa arrested, tow many laborers have sup- plics forthe winter? How many there are that. eannut cet ciployment! What effort, Con- gressional or otherwise, lias been made to either vapital or Inbor? Absolutely nothing has been done for years Iu Congresa neither of the political parties have thought of or work- ed for that. Congress could bave aided both, and by aiding could haye kept both in amaltys but inated of that both partics are responsible to a largo extent Ip trying to make the work- Inginen thunk that capital and pantperet party were uppresslog them. Instead of contributiug to tho ald of industry, they have spent their time in and out of Congress in beamcaring chemeclyes with polltical war-palnt and fn try- ing to sinirch cach other, Let Congress assem. bloand pass a series of measures promoting gud cultivating the industrica of tho country, Let Congress Usten to the memorial already before it for an international railway. Les them work out our ship canal, open up a fecder from the lake tu tho head of the hankazes River, All over the country there are projects that it will py, even the Government to taxe hold of. Bete er have rings? than tatrikes.”? There la that withholding which tondeth to penury. It is better not to rua even retrenchment ine to the ground. Too much depletion ts Worts than inilation, Let both — parties vie with each other in devising ways and means for baulshing the biy scare from the country. Lot the currency alone, that will regulate Iteeff. Get the louins und apindles aguiou. Scatver by som Uational act @ little Goverument capital broadcast, and that will draw out from old matd’s stockings, the miscr's hole, and banker's safe the boarded, because rightened moueyed resources of the country, As the lute Ion. W. B. Ogden once sald of the erratic George Francis Train Gokingly), The only thing be- tween bim und ureatuesa is a lack of contidence dn Limsclt.” Without joke, that’s the lack of the country at this hour. Hestore wasted con- Aidenve by prudential antt wise induatrial logis- tetlun, au the peace and, prosperity of the epublie nassured. Truly, ° ts JNO, W. Munait., a eee NU LETTER, Dear love, hast thou forgotten me so soont Each morn 1 look {n vain for soma sweet words ‘My beart’ grows sick and tired with bope dee ferred. Ab, love! bast thou forgotten me s0 soon? ‘a long that lie between our boartes through ev'ry moment of the Toy smile doth move me with den sway; But, ah} the miles are long betweeu out ucusis, ‘Tho male ‘And No letter! Ab, the days aro long and ead! ¥e, send me Dut ong Wurd Acrues the space, And all tho Earth will wear a fadeless grace, No letter! Ab, 1 the days a1 long and ea Winoson, Aug. 7, 1877. ‘auxY DaiscoLt, ae A Busy Sportsman, Ga'orstun (hex) News, Mr. Bartlett, tiving ucar Red Rivor, in Clay County, bas killod 273 bead of deer, (a a cir- cumfyreace of Len miles from bis house. Io addition to thesa, he bas Killed countless num- bers of antelope sud other sual gume. [t te no uncommon sight for our cattle-wen to ace buuches of wild horses, No eifurta are inade for their capture. Helyy bas the blde of the buffalo that darcd invade our town, FANTAT Eee ee, trom the Hon, Thurlow Weed Dr, RADWAY'SR. R. R, REMEDIEG After Using Them for Several Years, mftn: Having for pry. vonptingty a tent bug Raw Tone, Jan.4, 1877.— e131 yeara ured your medicines alter expertenclax thelr etiicacy with full conigegttt iano leas pleasure than « daty to thanktuiieece: ‘nowledge the advantage wa have dertved from these: ha pillgare tesorted to ae often &s occasion fear ii always with tho desired oftect.. ‘tho Iteady (at mnot bo better described than itis hy Its name. yy. ly i tintment frequentiy and freely. atinint Inyg Anding the promised ** rel Traly youn ts ed} ‘THURLOW. E Def ae. Web, R. R. R. HADWAY'S READY RELIER Curos the Worat.Pains in from Onot, : ‘Twenty Minutes. Afrer reading thie advertieement ne rom pain, RADIVAY'S [EAL FUR EVERY PAIN. The Only Pain Remedy ‘That instantly stops the most exernetatin: Mammaton, and cures Cougesttons, w vitngs, stomach, Bowels of other glauc ous Spplication FROM ONE TO TWENTY MINUTES, to matter how violent or excructating the pain, HEUMATIC, Ned-Riaden, lnirm. Cripnted, wate uraigic, oF prostrated with uisenso may suffer, MADWAY'S READY RELIEP WILL AFFORD INSTANT EABE. inflammation of the Kidnoys, Inflammation of the Biaddor, Inflammation of the Bowels, Congestion of the Lung: Bore Throat, Difficult. Brenthing, Palnitation of tho Heart, ‘Tystorica, Croup, Diphthoris, Catarrh, Influengs, Hondache, Toothache, Nouralgia, Rhoumatism. Cold Chilis, Aguo Cuills, Chilblaing, and Yrost Bites, ‘The appitention of the READY RELIEF to spyaridanere the pein or aillculiy exists wu eet : : Thirty to sixty drops tn half atumbler of water witty te ara cseaaaeet Tote aa tware EADY KELIEF with thems, A tow drone in ed ‘dl werent sickness ur pata from change ot water, ¢ tbelter French Branay or Ditteraus a stimulany FEVER AND AGUE, FEVER AND AGUF cured for Scents, There omer axene totite word oe ro Pever fet Vue ond all othr Malariona, Hilto Fret. Typhi -fllow, and other Fevers (miter b AS ATI) ‘yautek oa RADWAS'S I EADY RELIEP, Filty cone any one sntep fa ThE ts A ©) Ht wasehwarey, aud ts) + CUI ath, al er’ a FUTcANy TEALTH! BEAUTY! strong ang pure Nich Blood—Increase of Flesh Welmnt~clearstin ‘and Beautiful Complextouvecurd DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvent ‘as made the most astonishing cures: eo quick, sorspld 0 tag changes the body wilercuca under the laducuce af this truly wonderful inedic.ne, that Zyery Day an Increaso in Flesh and Welght is Scen and Felt, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. Every drop of the Barsapariliian Rerolvent communt rouxh the I:o0d, Bweat, Urine, and other Duds jud Jutera of tha syalain, the vigor of Iite,tor tt prepares he wastes of the hody with new and sound mererial ‘fotula, Byphilii, Conguimption, Giendular Disease, Jleera 1h the Throat, South, ‘Tumors, Nodes in (ne dlunda and otaer fariaots ‘system, Bore Eyes, Btrum: sous Dtecharyea trum the in Diseases, Erupions, Fover surce, beald Heed ‘Worn, ‘eats ftheum, ‘Lrysipclas, “Actie, lack Worihe In the tlesh, ‘Tumura, Cancers tn ihe ind all wastes of thu tite prinelzio, are Wie ig cuFatlvo rango of thte wonder of modern chemistry, ad's few days’ uso Wilt prove to any pers usin Le fob _ither of these forms of diacaso Ite potent power tocunt nein. Ifthe patient, daily becoming reduced by the wastes ana decompusttton that are contloually progressing, cuceeeda in atroat ina there wastes, and repairs the sain «with now matertal made from healtny bluvd—and tole she Sarsaparillian will aud does securo—a cure ts cer- iaint tor wien once this remedy commences tte woth St purification, aud ducceeds in dinsintaiing tho lows a aston, Sta repata wilt Ue rapid, and every, day the saftent will feol bimaclt stronger, tho food dixenting netter. appetite improving, and flesh and weight ix srensli ‘Not only doea the Sarssparititan Nesolvent excel ail a ‘dial ‘agente in the cure of Chront:, Scrotuluus, uustitutional and Skin dlscascs, but it le tho only pe ve cure {or Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Orinary and Womb Diseases, Gravel, Diabetes, Dron: svoppage uf Water, Iucuntingncs oF Urine, right wlsease, Albuminuria, aod iu all casce wusre thers art OF the water tah Ix cl rlek-duat depos fevhick,cloud: this ‘aliuatances like tho white of ea € sf Hulteaile oF thera, ia a orb Weklng, Uurntng ecusation Bi os satus ta the amatl of the back and sloug the ols. Tumor of Twelve Yours’ Growth Oured by Radway'’s Resolvont Ovarian Tumor tn the maid ** thero Ww! ot a el betters aniarter, an i ira. ‘The wurat tut vena) GUS Of the bowels over ihe qrolu. vrito shia o you forthe benedt of utters, Suu ean aublish if you chocee. = MANNAL HF, KNAPP. PRICE, + «+= &l Por Dottle AN IMPORTANT LETTER. wx Agpon, Mich. April 80, 2875,—Dr. 1 fiave been taking yo is, aad aleounoy iho 1 ry 8 the alxlomnen, whit 108, iMost eminent phyalclans of our Aleaical College pre nounced incursuic, Shey ware like knots onatree, My welpht was Fit} pounds when E commenced with your renied!esy 10 now It te two hundred and ten founus, but they arg net all yone yet. Lave taken twenty-four Dattica of Ke: “pltent. ulue of ielief and twenty-four bottles ot His (Kot the inedicines from G, Grenyill. Please cod 6 ‘Foleo and True,” ua SER Tae MB, C. ERATF, Another Letter from Mrs, C. Mrapf. Da. Rapway—Kind Gir: I take Soelibert ad you agi ve tt a ae a Retief al ou; 020 y to address 0, pty health ta greatiy funproved uy cho useot jour inedicines, ‘threa of the tumura are elite) gong and the fourth Us nearly sv. Dropsy ts gone, dealt guilt {top} vine d my wetght decreasing ve i the woudertul cure your me from Uhl, ong from Canad: quite e wumnber from this pla ry taste fngutre icing has done for me, ove ‘ 0 Jackie and any calle thie suinmer to, ug. Ww Wacquainted with Mrs. Krapt. shew eatimeble lady, aud very beusvolent. ahs has ben he means of selling many Dattiveos the Besolvent by tbe rugalats of AnD Arbor, to persons aMlcted with, (ater eBecteu by ie." Toure reapecttn sree ec :BERBACH d& CO. Ana Arbor, Mich., Aug. 173. —_—_——— DR. RADWAY’S REGULATING PILLS! rfectly tasteless, elegsatty costed with sweet uD. purges renuiate: purify eieaune aut atrcrutnens a way'e Pills, for the cure of ail dlaordere of tho Sum: ely Iiuney, Bladder, Nervous dis: he, Constipatiun, Coativencse, Indlzté- pala.” Dillourness, Bitous Faver, Inga, 2 toterna: ro,” Warrantes ect Eure. Eurriy vegetable, euutalsiog ao uneroury, m8" (Dg oyMiptoms resulting from Organs: ‘a Piles, at of the Bieod e rex Nausea. hewot Vision Dots or ivehe before te ry ; Sad Dull Balin the Goad Begcieney ot Fetypeations neds ¢ Beat ant @, and budden Plusbesof Hest buraing ean doses Oo! ills will free t) fromall the abovernainta duordere, ‘Prices perbos, bold by Druughis. READ FALSE AND TRUE. ADWAY & CO.. No. $2 was, birt » siepinatsa wots rhoussoes will bescat rose

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