Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 24, 1877, Page 4

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THE CHICAGO 'FRIBU Y. SEPTEMBER tho Bouthern people. Proper cducational | with this, these protected gentry have | riod off and discharged o tho Gnlf through facilitios are more necesanry in that section resorted to frauds, The fact that theso tho western part of tho State. Theso simple of the country than any other accessory of | sugars have beon frandulently colored and | and cheap remedies, itis entimated, will re- good citizenship, Tho common-gchool kys- | the Trassury swindled has boon notorious for | lievo the Lower Mississippi of fnlly fifteon feet tom will be the basis of political rehabilita- | Sears. Mr. Bristow would, probably, had | at Vicksburg at high water, nnd roclaim tion. 1tis needed byboth bincks andwhites. | ho been lett in office, havo cxposed and { the cntire valloy bolow Memphis. Porhaps The former do not stand alono in .their | prosecnted the criminals ns ho did the | two millionsof dollars, judiciously expended over his difficnitics, Tho foct of the overls. suo, which amounted to abonk1, 000,000, was successtally concealed for neveral years, and the great financier held his head as high ns sny man in Philadclphin. At present he atands a fine chance of spending the remain. der of hia days in the Penitentiary ns a com- to havo no clnim upon them. This proposi- | to ho made about It 18 that it fa neat and at tion, singularly enough, is rosiated by tho | tractive in a tvpographical way, and alords syl Times, which favoms the other. DBut the dence of considerablo spirit in Its editorlal . same Republican {deas which demand the [ Pression. Ita raiton d'elrs I not altogethey ono justify the other, Tho present theory {':“‘]" but "’?“ 18 "°|" eancntial i1 It ean vever in that overy porson who docs mot ¥olon. heless sotvo the problem of existence by living, L The orininal purpose, wo belleve, was t tafly place himacle outeide the polo of 10 | gy cxsentially a aw nublication, but this ot aes The Tribune, TERNMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Y MAIL~IX ADVANCE—TOSTAGE PREPAID, 1fly Pdftlon, onie vear. 11.3‘(: Fartect & sear bl mon ek 1o W | mon felon. illiterncy; what wore known before tho Whisky Ring, 'The present Administration | by the Govenment, will afford moro relief [ Church of England by uniting with somo | dently been subordinated te gencral fenturcs of Hu o and 2 ———— . War ns the **poor whiles™ nre as ig- has taken stepsto broak up the business, | for the overflowed lauds, withont impalring | non-conformist soct is atill o mombar of | polities, lteraturo, ond art, It there be an am. it 230 The ingmined hostility of the averge | ;o oit a clam of poople ns can bo | and hos inatituted proceedings to compol tho | navigation in the lcast, than two hundred | that Chnreh, and is entitled to shara All tho | bitlon to establish in Chiicago some sucl Jourrial 608 | Domocrat to anything in the form of nregis- | ¢1q in any civilized conntry. Tho mnes of | criminala o pay the monoy of which they | millions wonld nccomplish by the embank-. | benefits and privileges granted it by tho | 88 the Nation In New York, with tho diferencg try law, anything that resiriots the fres ex- erciso of the Democratic privilego of - voling enrly afd often, is said to linve operated to the detriment of tho party’s prospegta in the coming State eloction in Ohio, In meny places where the Democrats aro in tho major- ity large numbers have refused to comply with the law requiring the registration of thoir names, nnd the loss of many valuable votes to the State ticket will be the result- On the other hand the Republieans have genorally taken pains to register, the color®d mien being especinlly particular to put them- selves in tho woy to,vote when the timo comes. The Democraio leaders feel that thoy have no strength to spare, and that the intractablo dirposilion shown by the rank oud file in this matter of registration may prove to be a serious blow to their chances. Stato, . of more falrly reflecting Western sentim Ohuceli ovor the body:of ot a catlon, tha ambitlon {s & worthy ono and slioutd re r the body of eriminals and men | yg enconrnged; but 80 high & name can only 1y known to bave led debaachod or wickod | setlaved by hard work, closa application, ibersl lives. In'ono wonrd, it is rather a form of | policy, and the utilization of tho vl\q“‘ l,m;:: Btate disctpline than of church or religion, | thatcan be commanded for co-operation {n such and the minister is merely a Governmont | an undortaking. employo instend of a freo agont, WELT pmk',,, ” gags that the c This and oll other cognate probloms aro | his book, “EIl x'erklni at Large,” :fl:fi:::: necossary resnlts from tho association of | bought for less than and s not for sale,” Stato and Church ; their disoussion, and the | We are glad to zc that # ELt" has the deccn.cy geadusl giving-oway to the reformers’ de. | to class himeell with lunatics, convicts, and mands, ono ‘after nnother, surely presago | Conarossmen, and aro fully preparcd to holleya the disostablishment of the Qhuroh of En- that, if he valuea any one of his books at $5,000, gland, It is tho natural soquoence of dises- tele:nok llknl_!"ffi__ tablishment fn Ireland, though necessarily The moral of Mr. HExnY J. FURDER'S opers. more tedious of accomplishment. A people | tions (speclally deduced by TRE TRIDUNE'S owy who have odtcated thomselves to nearly all | actuary and worked out to nine places of deq. the privileges of freo and constitutional | Mals) is, that, when policy-holders in a doubtral government will not be satisfled many years company find themsclses going, they should fa)) longor to romain bound down to certain at l‘t_mm nnd get it oft their winde. They may ompty forms in puroly olvil relations, nor OB INREN "_'d_rirfl.m.“'_— consont to bear tho burden of o heavy and ‘The Inscription on M. Tu1zns’ coffinls: * Loyyy unintolligent voters can only be rdduced, | have defrauded the United States. On this | ment echome which the plander lobby wl.ll and the good of popular sullrage can only | sabject, our Washington correspondout, | pross upon Congross, be reachied, by increasing the numbers of | under data of Sept. 22, sya: - those who ahall know how to read and write, e x;‘:ht ;‘f“ :::“;“'":‘:'fl‘r: ':'-I’Enlrf“‘l:“;‘;rrl::“;l( ';"'Kx d:lAN JERS ()l"'flr B‘IJI”I?‘“‘ F and thus bring lo tho masses the means for Soaeavorni ‘m m:ro l':‘m“" ' o dangors now atarafthe Russinna in rom the (lov- noquiring political information. Tho publio | ernment Tk uda In the it L acurity st 'illmt:m Foreulg:‘:nlurvcnunn hu:he gnt. school will be tho most importa step to- | the payment of back datles, There gentlemen 0y ara rept ot Dicla, as thoy have wardg the harmonizing of the two races, tepresent that many of the lsrge New York re- boen at Plovna, notive operations for this The information which it will open up to finers, it compelled to pay back duties on the | year must censo. A winter campaign in the 1 il 1to th that their ine colored sugars which have been Imported, would | alimala of Bulgaria is out of the question. all olasses will roveal to them that thelr in® | yg yerionaiy ceipple, If not Gnanclally ruined. terests aro mutual, and that no’ conflict ean | For yonrs the * protected " rofiners have Almmul: tlvlmyozlln‘ h:\" bo::t:nvll:g (tcr the exist botween them which is not dotrimental | poen plandering thé Tronsury, and now sny construction of wintor quarters; tho tempo-, to the political and material intervats of thoir | gyat to be compelled to rofund will ruiu rt;:y ::mht;ne'ntl:nol !:,:d br:gogubz ;r!a n:‘nfn ‘;:; section of the conntry. A them financially, That our readerg may form zu“ Theso n::: ovidlone ‘for 'a - defest In impreasing thicso two points upon his | an fden of the magnitudo of this robbery, wh)l-;h the nmslnnp comuisnders 5obs o Sonthorn nudionces, the President haa not | w4 give tho weights of the sugar of the two po merely vindicatod himself from the slander | neincipnl grades imported in 1876 averts but tho fact that they are under con- of degerting the negracs, but ho hes still | Sugar not abore No. 7, pgunds ..... 370,200,220 sideration is important, It carries the imag- furthor gaived o point in receiving almost Bugar sbove No. 7 and nut above % inntion forwerd to the time when both sides everywhera sort of popular pledge that the | 1 FoURSe-e 720,402,047 | will rost on thoir arms. Thon tho voico of Bouth will keop faith in the responsce which Total, pounds... . 3,000, 701,276 | diplomacy will again bo hoord; for the old Lij remarka havo ellcited. Asteal of one cent a pound on this amonnt | maxim which toaches that tho laws are sus- of sugnr smounts to $10,967,312, which Is | ponded nmid the din of armaigplics tho con- ©ge copy, per sen Club of twe Fpeefmen coples rent free. 7Ta provent delay and mixtakes be surs andgive Poste Oftce address tn Sull, tacinding State and Connty. Jtemitiances may be mada efther by draft, express, Tost-Office order, or In tegiiered Jenters, at our riek. TEOMS TO CITY BURSCIIERA, Tofly, deliverei, Sundsy excepted, 23 cents per week. Tatly, delivered, Snnday incluced, 30 conta nes week. Address TIE THIDUNK COMPAST, ‘Corner Madison and Deatboriste., Chicago, il Orders fot the deilvers of Tuz TRinCRE at Evauston, Engleweod, and Hyde Pack left 1o the counting-room Wil recelye bromt attention. TAMUSED Me¥icker's Thentre. % Madison street, hetwren State and Desrborn. Eoe gazement of Fdwin Booth. ~'*The Merchant ot Venlee,” Mesdammes Don, Sinstiogs, Mago, eto.jdessrs. looth, Whezlock, Plerce, eic. Maoley’s Theatre, Tiandolph strect, between Clark and Tadalle. En- gagement of Georgo 8. Knjght, *'0it0." Mesdames SWorretis, Thompson, ete. s Mesrs, Knight, Thompaon, White, cte. s e - There has becn much unnecessary dis- cussion over the * Ohfo clerks’ " business. Thera are, it scems, a Jargo number of per sons employed in thp Government offices at Adetpht Thratre, protty good protection taken from the Pab- | verso proposition, Whon tho Russlans bavo | gpooial taxntion in order to support par- AvoLrna Tuiens, born Marscilles, Aj Monros o ¢t Dearborn. Engagement | Washingtor t th Ohio. THE SUGAR FRAUDS. i P r pp! pi , born Marseilles, Apnl 15 T e Vrant L. FeaTno. 81 Blooum. E,“::;‘:f“:h"“"‘,’“m“gm o e nanere, | - Worriated ofow days ngo some partica- tio Trepsury in o single yoar, withdrawn {nto camps about Bistova and Ni- | tioulor scctarian organization undor tho-| 1797\ died at Bt, Germaln-on-Lavo, Scpi. g, Lars of tho franda committed in the importa- | We Liave not got tho figuras showing how | kopolis, and the Turks have settled inShum. tion of silks and silk goods, and the whole | much money has beon paid to thess people | I nnd the other foriified towns of tho Quad- Protection party and all jts organs have been 84 drawbacks on exported sugnr. *Dut that | rilateral, thore will bo newn from Bt. To. ¢rantio upon the subjoct. Tho American silk | Schemo s sn admirablo one under which | tersburg and Constantinopls, from Vi manufacturers aro protected by a duty of 60 o porpotrato frauds. Indeed, it is not & | cnna, Berlin, and London. The Foreign por cont, lovied on all importad silks. Thia | oW one. Col, Baxtow, in his “Thirty | Sccrotarics will flut on their thinking-caps, tax, with the promiums on gold, freight, im- Years in the Bennte,” gives one of his own | and, sinco tho inferests involved aro impor- porters' profits, aad other itoros, make tho specches, in which ho exposad the sugar and | tant, they will think hard. Tord Dennr will protection equal to 75 per cent currency. molasses drawbnck allowed by Iaw in that | think of Egypt snd tho Bucz Coual; of ‘e onormity of this tax invites fraud and dny. Under tho Tariff law of 1833, thero was | Kbiva, the Porsian Bes, and the British pos- falso swearing; it offors alarge roward for a drawbnek of five conts per pound on oxports | sossions in India. Connt ANpRasst may ro- emnggling. It permits the expenditure, say, of sugar refined in this country. It also pro- | floct on tho schome for a Pan-Blavio empire, of 85 per cont ta cover the cost of smuggling | vided for a drawback on all rum modo from | and tho want of homogeny in the Austrian or other frauds, and leaves a margin of 40 imported molasson. Undor tho operntion of | poople, Princo Bimeanck will tako v inter- por cent profit. When tho smugglod goods this not, in 1837 tho drawback on exported | cst in the Gormaus who are not subjocts of ace worth ten ot twelve millions of dollars | sugar oxceeded tho duly on the imported | the Goerman Emperor. Tho Turks will sunually, this profit on smuggling s a largo | BUEAT £861; in 1638 tho excess of drawback | dream of driving the invndors from fheir soil, one. 'To o rational mnn, who justifles taxa- | over duty was $12,690; ond in 1839 this ex- | nnd tho Tussians of retrioving their repnta- tion only to produco revemuo, {the | cos8 raached $20,15¢, "Theso'rosults implied | tion as invincible soldiors, It will bo strange remedy for this business is to roduea | that the rofinors ot only refined, butaxport- | 1f, out of all this reflcction, no nogotiations the tax, say, to 40 per cont, thus relioving od moro sugar than wau imported. Theso | spring. Tha weight of influonge, for materinl the public, randering emuggling unprofita. figures showod that, according to theso claims | rossons, will bo in fawor of tho abandonment ble, and putting mora revenue in the JTreas- for drawbacks, thers was not a ponnd of im- | of the war; a certain sort of humsnity will ary. The Protection organs, however, have ported suger used or imported by any one | also speak with loud voico, nnd tho pres- nothing to say concorning the scandalons | bat the rofiners, Wwho had not oven a | siro on both combatants to make paace will and wholesalo frands committed in the name | pound of their own refined sugnr to kell to | bo strong. o of Protection in tho sugar trade, Do used in the Unitod Statey. Not only did | Russia’s socond danger will then bo fully A centary, or perhaps two conturies ago, | tho sefiners draw from the Tremsnry tho | perceived. Her financial resources nro al- whon the Dutch were tha groat merchants, a | Whole duty o sugar, but n largo sum in ex- | most exhausted. Sho has men to fight, but standard in sagae was catablished, by which | cess. Tho uperations of tho drawbnck on | not money to food them, clotho them, or pay color dstermined the quality, and of caurse | Tum mado from imported ‘mnolasses wors | thom, Tho breaking out of tho war found tho valuc, of sugar, When tho United Btates | equally starlling. Molasscs was equal to the | the Trenaury but poorly . supplied, and the sob up the business of Government they prodaction of rum, gallon for galfon. In | drain npon it sinco hns boen onormous. At adoptod thb Dutch standard, and though | 1830 the wholo importation of foroign mo- | the loast enlcalation, 1t will ba necessary to the wosld (including, we balieve, tho Dutch) | lassca was 592,868 gollons, whilo the export | rige 450,000,000 rubles, or §360,000,000. hos long sinco nbondonod - it, the United | of Now England rum, sworn to have beon | Russian credit abroad isbad. The patriotism Btatos have adhered to this staudard, just as | modo from this molasses, waa DG,600 gal- | of the country moy bo ralied on for subscrip- thoy have to the old restrictive sad prohibi. | lons, leaving 1oas than 86,000 gallons of mo- {«4ions tonnother popular lonn; bit the prin- tory Navigtion laws# Every Custom-House, | lasses for tho consumption of the wholo | cipal means of raising tho sum desired must tharefora, is supplied with oertain jurs | country, and excluding tho rum mode andnot | b by fresh issuca of papor currency. The containing sugar, ‘Whioh jars aro la- exportod. The repesl of thelaw préventod | curroncy already out has dapreciated, and ls, boled sccording to the color,—ns: not | tho distillors of rum from drawing from tho | doproclating rapidly. Asmorois printed, tho over No, Ty over 7, sud mot over 10; | Treasury, liko tho sugar.rofiners, tho draw- | pnrchmsingpower of cach ruble will decrense. over 10, and not over 18; over 13, and not | back on & groater quantity of exports than | mng waste involved in financial nensures Sver 10+ over 16, ad. not over 20; ovor 20, | Wes 'aotually Imported into the United Blatcs. | jiko theso is ruinous; and the Russisn includinglonf, crushed, powderod, ote.,—and | If this drawbock on sugar Jod to gross and | Governmont, while taking a just pride in tho duty ia lavied on_imported augar accord- | palpable frauds and robberien as far back a8 | yhe recuperstive powers of the country, fug to ita color, 03 comparad with this old | 1838, in the enrly and puror days of tho Re- | may woll hesitate to call upon them for ench Dutchstandard, In the old days, when the | public, what may be expooted of tho men | o purposo, The fnancial resson, in con- Whig party made Protection ita leading prin- who stand convicted of coloring thelr sugar | junction with the diplomatic yeason, may clple, tho Bouthern Whigs justified tha pol. | in order to swindle the Tronsury of 1ta law- | provail over tho hate and study of revongo icy beosuss of the protection it afforded to ful revonuo? which now animates the Government. Either Southern sugar-planters, and oven in the e ronson alone would be insuficlent; both to- great compromiss ‘Tariff law whish created & MIBSISSIPPI LEVEES, gother may bo irresiatible; } bellion in 1613, tho Souths fusistod on pro- | Tho @rostest and modt, dangorous of the | ©ip 3 T01a by permitted to fight thin Yooting ngnz. Wo have in tho Usitod Statos | turostoned Southers wuids'on tho Tronsury 8 | o ocvion out. It s an irreprossible conflict, sugar rofinoriés, lorge sud smll, which my tho scheme for building levees for protecting | 2,1 only » mistaken humsnity will try to Do conalderod as numbering twonty,—or st tho boitcl:]l lands I«;tml.haulnwnr Miesissippi intorrupt. It can only be postponed, not Ionst some twonty firma control the bpslness. :‘mm,""r ‘";',“‘ all °d" ;Jvurnmnnt canlbo forover quieted, by the aris of pescomsking. Our tarill on suger sinca 1861 hus boon ad. | beguiled ar bulldozed inlo commanoiag | 1 i pght stops now it will bo resumed justed exclasively in the intorost of these ro- such s .’lh':amb: f pab ; dw '"bi lar‘ privato porhops a quarter of & contury Lence, por- finora, to tho omormous taxation (without ""“:g‘ o od, ‘;‘" m;: 9 (;ul.utiw 1 fmvg"' hiops sooner. Tha ultimato losses, both of revenuo) of the consumers. From thme to bo u:;h yisnd dun do;i.fh n;l m° "t“m ' | oo and traasures, will bo greater thon than it they wont down to Wealington and hod | osted aud sauandaced o ths farllo OB, | 4 o wnatier is finished now. Wo do not {ho tarif ixod up to ult themaelros, Tn 1370 | Tho bigher tho Swbankpons ob B0 f 110 | ot thay it will bo fintahed mav, If tho there was & now arrangemont of duties, 3:’“ ba:ul:?{w uhlfl "th oj oran od‘;u h” TRusainus are let alone, They aro slow to which inoreasod tho profits of the mo- { d0ULLILIE DO LS Gorton Bt ':' 'k" Jearn, but not incapabla of loarning. They nopoly still groster, Dut. in 1875 | FUTHe MMM E E iotom worke | aro now buildiug tha railroad batwoon they wont to Washington again, and ':g P"l”t“h 4 °‘ fioud:“l“tb f KT‘Q“E Giurgeyo ond Bimnitza, which they should all tho advocates of a ‘‘free brenkfast” ip"‘";' ¢ ‘l}m:kl 'lha h“Lh ng of | yve completed months ago. A Yankeo united and lovied on sdditionsl duty of 25 fl‘"’.‘ e e “‘_"“’ Goneral wauld by this time”have Lad his por contum on sugar. It worked thus: The Ioadmg 4 W';n"’ a " o ::l; ut the | - iiread system down to Tirnova, and tho pugar which the rofiners import was taxed ovon ayatqm °.‘ PW&:" on is founded pn | o oiong will have theirs advanced to that 13 centa nnd 2 cents per pound; 25 per cent ignorance, and i “: nmcsrh folly; What point ently in tho spring, A more impor. focrense of theso rates was oqual to 7-16, h“"d‘d:m"g an :’h to deaw down tho tont losson impressed upon tho Russinns ju and § cent per pmum;,‘| but (\"n the other l‘::llu:ri't l': or than high embankments to respect for thoir enemies. Thoy havo learnbd ades fit for consumption, wheroe the dut, * that, in this age of improved arms, one man L 2} or 8 conts, the increase por pouné Tho statoment of Oapt. Jomw Oawpow in | 4 :l;cut [ Bo%d a8 lnx;lhar. and, if Lo fights was much groster. This increnso had the | 8¢ Cincipaatl L'on.l‘numl covers the €8s | yoping fnirenchmonts, vather botter then effcot of throwing nearly the whole importa- exactly, Hasaya ‘“that, instend of calling | ;o 1vor 1n the open fleld, Thelr tactics in tion of sugar into tho hands of the refiners. | o0 the Government to appropriata tans of | 4y, "gypure will be to crush the Turks by 1t gavo them a large bounty. But this did millions for the construotion, of laveey, let | ;yornoyering numbers, and they will pro- not satisfy them. Thoy induced Congress thero boan ontlet into Lake Borgno, com- | ou0q" iy g gystomatio way to do this, If tho to vote them a drawback on all refiued sugar menced ten miles bolow Now Orloans, The | Jo0"aceq not produce peacs, spring will exportod by them, This drawback business distauca trom the river to lh:n tako i but 8 | g3 1he Ryssiana more powerful than aver, workf In thls wayt Bugar lmported by | fowmiles The surfaco of the siver i 1nd tho cdfhpaign of 1878 will be in avery thom of & oolor requiring thom to'pay 2} higher than most of tho swamp between it | |\ 0004 o bellliant contrast to that of 1877, cenita duty, when” exported aftor boing re- and the lake. A few mud-dredgeaand atump- pullers to extract the cypress stumnps would is f th ad Anol is elassad se pugns el tie rAde 0 soon ont & diteh from the river to the lake, which the duty is 8} cents. On 1,000 pounds imported th 5 Qut: and the current through would rapidly en- of sugar imparted they pay $35 duty; when largeit, na there would be a fall of moro 1 t th ugsr they recelye fro boy expozt the wame sugsr they recelye from ) o oWl 001y the milo, and the curront 35, the Troasury §: would soon open a wido and deep channel, Protection is but gegteel robbery,~—a sort ‘slms,—n Qirect enco It is estimated that this outlet would lower of mmp-hotse giins, rect encouragoment |\, "o four to five feot at New Orloans, . ‘Thers Lave b ot to pauperism. or e e oo | and the subaidoncs would bo felt s far up na wlere persons supportoed by the authoritics, A andsupplied with coal, and bread, and moat, Vickabueg® 'Tha Commercial, referring to this subject, says: 4 have been found to be runniog boanding. o o Mo Orleasi baing inrsribusd houses on supplics furnishod by tho puble, | ""“ ’:‘:::o‘a J:" T";:l saiket :sn“"l ned * ‘These sugar-refiners, not content with a tar. ml- s, nonemdfmunn Tig objoctien au:mnf: iff arranged for their benefit, not content | giss plan of rellof was that it might spoil the with a direct bounty of one cent a pound | oyster-beds. The 7eal troublo Was, tho iltustrac paid them ‘from the Treasuryon their ex- Z‘.‘.’é‘fi‘.‘:{‘d‘.‘:fim‘.fi} ::; r;:n“u;;. gr :m ports, have resorted to & wystem of fraundu- evstem. The river, howoveri broko throt lont importations that far eclipsss tho rus- oo ad walle, 8¢ Bonot e -;: s calities of the silk business. The plan was | oyaters, relleved the cily, and burst up, we have~ s follows: Color, and nob quality, belng | T¥a10010 hope, 8 big Job. the standard by which duties on sugar are ‘The Loulsiana Lsvos Committes ars paid levied, and the rofuers having got the im- | for protecting the country from overflow, vortation business mainly in ther own hands, { The way they dolt la extromely simple and thoy arranged with tha foreigy sagar pro- efloctive. Thoy neglect to fill up the Bon. ducers aud others to 1ake refined | net Oarro crovasse, whioch s about half & sugar,—ibat is, sugar fit for use by the pub. mile wide, and the water flows through it lis without any fusther refining; and then fifteen feet doep, discharging the flood into thoy bad the same sugar’ colored by the use | Lake Ponchartrain, bobind the city. This of burnt wolasses and perhaps other com- outlet bas lowered the river thrge ta four pounds, snd this sugas, actually refined, snd foet, and has done immense good, not only subject ta & duty of 3} to 4 cents per pound, in protecting the city from oyerflow, but all they veceived because of the color at 2§ ta 2} | the country above it for a hundred miles up cents per pound duty. This suga, thus the river, and that is the reason why the flow ariificlally colored, required only s simmple | Of the crovasse was not long ago checked. washing to extract the color, whonit was | Inadditionto the natural outlet a¢ Bounet resdy for the market as refined sugar, and, it Oarre, snd the one that can be cheaply and exported, sutitled to o drawback of 8} centa oaaily made into Lake or rather Bay Borgue, apound. Tosum up: Under the cover of other outlets can bs chesply opened at La “ protecting” fwenty firms, opersting ma- Fourche, Plaquemine, Monchac, sud Bayou chinery aud comparatively few workmen, Lattanache, all below the mouth of Hed the tarif has impoged on ths peopls of the River. Thes, by the diunlol".ol the high United Btates an enormous bounty equal to. | water of the Red River twenty miles above a taxof 1to 3oceats per pound on sl the Alsxandria by a canal a fow miles loog into sugar in the United States; aad, not coatent namo, and with all tho dignity and fufluence, | 1877 Patriam dilril. Veritatem colult," e mr——— of n Stato churgh. Thia nasaclation will be The great Falr {8 raging at 8t, Louls, the sy, tho noxt gr?at barrior to give way before tho | tendance is unusually large, and tho strects of growth of liberalism in Great Britain, the city wear noarly ns busy an aspect ns do o thioso of Ch n 3 ¥ ity o BAE s & obs Wik elgis | Doveof Chlsspona T PR ST longes comparisou with the BiLt TweEp and Qov. 8roxs, of Mississipp!, hos shot off his Democratlc debt of New York., On tho 1at of | mouth on the subject of the Kempor County Januaty last It was $330,000,000, conslsting of | riots, and tho gonernl opinfon ia that It wy nino acparate loaus, five of which, amounting to | loaded with a blank cartridge. £200,000,000, were negotiated under the Iimperial el ——— regimey the remainder, $180,000,000, bos been Onevery well-regulated nowspaper-ofiice doop contracted since the German wam Tho Ger- | o Americalsthe jogond: “No peddlers, beg. mans lovied s fln or conflscation of twenty-odd | gars, Harvard-graduates, or OsxAN-Pasha tels. imillions; the Communists cost the clty over | grams waated hero.” sixty millions; the rest of the Increase has beon T for public works carried on gigantically. The America’s parting salutation to tho English payments for Intercst sud into the Binking riflemen: * Thero goes Johnny Bull with by Fund that tho debt cals for arc $21,000,000 por | bull's-cye out.” uxmulm, nm: .”:}m total taxes collected from tho people are £54,000,000 8 year. The population P Fart a Jush abot tora mitlons, nnd” that of | L Urars, s and g sestdus of that confestino New Yorx something over onc million. The e —et—— debt of New York ia not yot lalf that of Paris, Perhiaps OsMAx Pasha is Caanruey Ross. whilo the taxes arg imore than half. Paris has — e —— been mado tho most beautiful, tho cleanest, PERSONAL. osnd most attractive city io tha world, New i York has llttle to show for her $140,000,000 of Mr. Montgomery Soars, tho wenlthy yonng geht, oxcont dirty streets, filthy. alleys, rotten | Dostonian, who was married the other day to Min lers, and fat tax-eating thioves, But Tarls has | Choate, gave hia bride & wedding present ol a res|- boen extravagant and proflizate fn her expend!- | denca costing $110,000. tures, and it earo i mot taken her mdustrial It is once in a while recalled that Mr. Will. classes RUL be crushod under their municlpal | fam Cullen Bryant practiced law for a shord time, dobts - and s disgusted by adofeat tn ono anlt thrauzh T T <« | atechnicality, in wo lA L‘nndon lelller of recont dato saya: pml:elulun lu,x'n::dm:l‘;' lc::::nh o AR e lonsof gold ponaearo olog o btk 4nd | G, Job O, Fromont. haa bean. sued fox oy the aypork i Al \Orceidh | Sivcunent ey 15, 106k, and. a1 ot o R o St et TP il Improvements, purchades, new ronds, now parke, ly: Dt 1 s aalary and o atroate, alcis I8 nbout t0 dovoto baif & mililon | 4oublo rations from his appolutment. in connection with works relating to an extension i Iy contioetin wRILsraTk SelaL e o ool || Mtian Viclodla, Alexsndrine Wellosloy, sk Himik nocansaty o compiota. the. circlo of that | Gaughter of Lady Charles Wollcsioy and grand. nnr’::éfl“?’:fl““‘l{"'.m&g‘ Tmiflelm“ ngfun‘rfia daughtor of tnf late Duko of Wellington, was ro- aro ining to show their magnificenco above the | cently msrried at St. Qoorge's, Hanovor Square, Brobt hanrding. “The Grand. Oporae ouso tow 4 ateoct boarding, Tbe Grnod Ot aotray, | (o Mr. lan Trauk Hamilion, M. P.. for Dubla ow blocks, 80 a8 nj of tho departmen! 0 Bpringfiel 7 Aoys : 0 h o ci o1 4 A _“':o;;’lh goat, when Wnd, | host thing In Senator Hoar's specch was tho clow Diillions: and tnoy say. trade. is bad and that 0fty | ing sentonce of Lfa Clvil-Bervice roform sdvocacy: +Beuple died of atarvation in London Just year, and | * Whon Maithow bocame an apostie, he coaned to lousande of chlldren, and oven grown peopie,aro | it at tho recalpt of customs.' This would boa T::'&vff.i'.',‘n'."n'::“',}nfifl"umme.';'c'-f"fl"e'flgflt and hord: | good text for tho soung Chriatian soldlor Colloctor riien are foing down, and rates and pricea of pro- | Slunons' discourso on reform.™* vistons aro goiug up. The Dramatio News soys: ‘1t {s mora than probable that Doucicault will become the tenant of th Fifth Avenus Thestre, It Is under. . 82004 that ho has offered a rental ot $35,000, in- clualve of taxcs, That 1s abons $0,000 less than toe rental of Mr, Daly. 1f Doncicault succeeded In gettiog the hovse, Lo would put in as manages- «eas Miss Katharino Rogors." Gen, Averill's old soldicrs have formed an association. Wonder 1f Thil Bhoridan remembers the odd dispatch ho ‘once sont to the General, ordoriog bim to **rejoin the main command by the Toast diroct route "'t Of canrse ba meant by the lcast oxbansting route; but if Averil] had con- strued his onders literally he might have marcted North by way of Pensacols, Mobils, Galveston,sad 8an Francisco. Jafnes Cobb, of Salt Lako Oity, s in pur- . sult 'of John W. Yonng, Brigham's most hopeful sop, In oeder to provent him fror® marrylng Mix Cobb. Young is a polygamist, and Cobb objects to him on that ground. It fs sald the Federal sutlioritios will bring the Mormon rascal up with & round turn if he has proceeded as far s marrisgs Igthiucasd, The girl Lias loft her home, and i harbored by bim. A story was sot gflont in the Spirit not long 3g0 to the offsct that B, L. Davenport's death waa due to the adminlstration by a Boston quack of fifty acid plile, which destroyed the coats of tha stom- ach. Dr. Henty A, Martin, In & lotter to the Hos- ton Post, dotails bis treatment of tho dead actor He prescribed Aifty capsulos, each contalning fve grains of salicylic acid, to botakon Ja ve daysi but neltherthe character nor amount of the pre scription was unususl. and the corrosiva erfects of the **acld" on the costa of the stomscn would b no greatar than those of wi gruel. Ta a spooch, Bir Wiltrld Lawson said that in the House of Commons each party had ‘s whip who called his honnda togethel when he wanted them. A circular was sept jn the mornng for the politicat hounda to_sssomble, saylng, **Yau an earaostly requested to sttond in the Houso of Com mons this evening, Whon busincss of such ant such & patore comes on.” If the ¢lrcular came wilkont a stroke under the word **earnostly,” mesnt that thera wan some business that mizbt come on} If thero was ouo stroke under **esmest: Iv," it meant that the momber ought to come; It two, that ko should come; If threo, that ho must coges if four, **stay awayat your peril." It may intercat lady readors to know that, At tha reception givon Proaldent Ha; and party atibe Galt House, Louls! whita milk, trimmed wita whits 1 flawers, with diamonds as ornamy i Mc¥arland, of the party, was dressed fn pearl: colored silk from Wortb's, wjih white dowers and diamonds; aud Mles Kvarts inblack allk and velvet, with diamonds. The ball waa the wmost briliiant aver given fn Loulavlile,—**exceadiug Insplen- s (ho local chronlcior, *Seven that gives rand Duke Alexis Avo years ago.” Amosg the gueats wore Gon, and Mrs. 'William Preston, ex-Scerotary lristow and wife, snd Qov. Hamp: ton, The eulte of rooms act apart for the Prests mely decorated n vacation of one manth in each yoar, during which his pny is continued, During thelast eight or ten years, under tho rather {roo nod ensy working of the Civil 8Servico, clerks had nn additional Yurlough of ten days, or even longer, to go bome and voto at tho fall eloc- tions. Tho Ohio clorks this year have clnimed the right to go home and volo ns usunl. Mr. Bowuaz hes mnde the rule that in his Depart. ment tho clarks may go home for that purpose, but during thoir absenco their pay ghall bo stopped. That s the proper and thoonly just rulo, In nccepting Government sarvico nt “Washington theso clorks did so with the disability of nbsoncs‘from their usnal home, They have no lawful or equita- blo clnim on the Government for compensa- tion while absant on their private businocsa. Voting is not n duty pertaining to the offices which theso men hold, and, if the men are not willing to undertake the cost of going home to vote, thoy have no right to nsk that the Government sball pay it. A Washington dispatch brings the inter- osting news that *n prominent practitionor ™ is proparing a bill to enlargo tha jurisdiction of tha Court of Claims. The dosign is to givo tho Court cognizanco of all claims ro. jectod by the Southern Clnims Commission on account of disloyaity, This schemo nat- urnily commends ftself to * the prominent practitionor” who is at the bottom of it, for it promises a wido fleld for tho exercisa of his peculiar talontd; Lut it will not bo ap- proved by the sober sonso of the country. Reconciliution is a good thing in its way, but thore may bo teo much of it. Tho South will be bottor oft tnreconcilod than theNorth would Lo aftor the Bonthern claima wero poid. We aro propared to for. givo tho Rebellion, but not to pay*for it. Wae are not willing to ontertain these claims individually oven for the purpose of disal- lowing them. They havo becn rojocted by the common opinion of all right-minded people North and South, and the preferment of thom agaln is an insult. To pay them wonld be to put n preminm on disloyalty. It may safely be prodicted, however, that bills for this purpose will bo plenty in-tho next Domocratio Houso ; and the Republicans will need to bo on their gnard against them. Tho country. would nover forgivo the party that should permit one of thom to pase, ocither tlirough indiferonce or negloct. PRESIDENT HAYE3 TO THE SOUTH. There are two things which we notice President 11axzs hns constantly kept hefora tho peoplo of the South on every occasion when hio hns had even s much as five min. utes in which to nddresa them.” One is tho duty, expected and prepared to be enforced, of conceding to tho colored people all tho political rights and privileges which thoy gained by tho War, and which are guaranteed 10 thom by the Cosstitution or by statutas tlio other is tho necessity in the South forn ‘goneral aystem of free, popular education, sembracing all classes of the people, His persiatont roference to theso two matters, which are the essontinls of politioal progress in the South, is suflicient evidenco that tho Presidont hias not beon carrfed away by the oliaracteristic Bouthern enthuslasm which has grooted him from the momeut of hiy ar- rival at Loulaville, and affords n good answor to the charge of the malcontenta that Lo has turned his back on the principles of the Republican party. Inregard to tha political status of the negroat the Bouth, the alm of the President’s policy has been to improvo and not to neglect it. 1o came into oftice after a long and un. succesaful trial of a policy which was the very reverso of the one he has followed, Ho found that the efforts of the National Gov- ernment to keep the carpet-baggurs in offlce Dy tho uso of the army and uavy had mot resulted in the protection of the blacks, but in their porsecution and waltrentment. This bad been mainly the policy during President OnaNt's two terms, ond there bad beonnoth- 1ug but Jocal wtrife, with occaslonal confliot of races and spilling of blood, resulting in the loss to the Republicgn party, one by one, of all the Southern Stiatos excopt Louisiana, whera alone thers was a shadow of claim under tha actual possession of the State by the Democrata, Soms change of policy was jmperative, Either the polioy of force must be strengthened, and the South abso- X?loly beld under by a vast army of occupa- tlon and the declaration of martial law, or the provocation of strife must be withdrawn and the race-problem intrusted to the holior and judgment of local selt-government. The 1atter course was chosen, partly vy prefer- ence aud partly from nocesity. President Haxes believed an effort at pacificgtion to bo tho wiser, but be would have been powerlgss to pursue tho policy of force and hatred hnd he been disposed to do 8o, Instead of bo- ing ablo to increase the army and navy, so rauch as was left of them would have been wiped out by the refusdl of a Douwa-fie. Houss 10 Yote supplies, 8o far, the resulta’ of the pesco policy hsve been as fruittul 28 bad been expected; but the President’s plaio talk o the Bouthesn people cught to convince them that this peace policy is meant to promote thelr dovotion to the Union and the Conatitution, snd that any refuyal on their part (o recogoize and carry out its purpose will surely result in suockia reaction as will enable bim to return to the policy of force with & popular support that will render it efficient. His counsal of & general system of popu- lar cdusabion is tho wisest that can bo given Wood's Muscam. Monroe strret, hetween State and Dearbotn, Fo- gagementof Hernandes Fester, **dack Harkaway." Varlety Otlo. . New Chiengo Theatres Clark street, opposite Sherman Touse, Taverly's Miuntrols, Memrs. Howard, liymnn. Thatcher, Mey- wood, cfc. Expasitian Buililing. Michfgan avenue, foot of Adama stroet, Day snd eventng. e e MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1877 R N e S e ————— CHICAGO MARKET SUMMARY. The Chicage uroduca markets were irreguinr gaturday, Mces pork closed 20c per bl highor, at 811300 for Uctober and §12.72% for Javuary, Tard closed H@7C per 100 Iha higher, st $4.0. #.07% for October and $8,32% for tho year, Meats wera y¢ per Ib higher, at 8¢ for looso shouldera and 7i5¢ fordoshort ribs. Lake(freights wwere steady, atd33(@4c tor corn to Dufalo, igh- wines wero dull, #t$1.00 per gallon. Flour waa quict. Wheat closed ¥@1c higher, at $1.13% for September and §1,00% for October, Corn closed 1iclower, at423c cash and 423 for Ociobor, at Z:1%¢ eash o seller October, tG#Kc. Darley closed irm, nt etfer October, ogs were active osing ot 85,15@5, 85, Cattlo werg steady, ot §2.60@0.00, Sheep wero duil, at31.00724,50, Recetnts in Chicago during last sweek Included 50,800 bris flour, 700,563 by wheat, )4 bu corn, $18,002 bu oats, 5,050 hogs, 051 eattle. Thero was inepected Intostoro clty Saturdsy 407 cars wheat, G20 cars and 63,200 bu torn, 157 cars and 0,000 bu oats, 27 carn ryc,and U§ cars barley. Total (1,271 cars), 502,000 bu, Ono hundred dollars in gold would buy $103. 124 in greenbacks ab the close, s At tho Now York Gold Exchango on Batur- dny greenbacks ruled at 9T@97h. ¢ prinbmie et Y e ———m——— | Joun KxrLy maketh the confeasion of Tween Gen, Gnaxr was tho recipiont, on Satur- dny, of great honors ot the hands of the workmen of tha Connties of Northumber- land nnd Durham, at Newocastle, Eng. An enormous pracession, mado np of twoniy- two industrial organizations, escorted him to the public moor, upon which 50,000 people lailed hiw a8 a distinguished friend and pawerful champion of liberty. g ——— e ————— Pastor BUDINOTON'S son was arrested a fow nights sgo in, Brookiyn,, in, company.avith n couploaf burglars, Somaonohad just broken in a shopwindow and taken out somo shocs, and, when the young man waa arrested, hobada sct of brass knuckles {n his pocket, When tho caso camo up overything was lovely. The shioe- maker sworo that the young man didn't run way, though the ofiicer didn’t like to do o, and the young man was discharged. Then, of coursc, they had to discharge the burgiars too. The moral of the wholo matter is, that burglars, or those about to burgle, should take tho son of an Influential dilzen with them, Aunonncement is made this morning of he death at Paris yesterday morning of L Vennes, the eminent Fronch gatronomer, perhaps tho most eminent in the world, Tt wis o who, after many years of enormons Iabor in mathematical calculation, suddenly astonishied tho world by the information of tho existenco of tho planet Neptune, o star until then unknown, Ho died at the nge of 66 years und 6 months, The tyrannical character of BacMamox's prrposes in Franca is wofally apparent in the Iatest order of the so-called Minister of Justice, whick directs that all clectornl ad- dresses ** bo carefully read [by the Govern- wental censor] in ordor to provent outrages ngninnt tho President, violent menaces, or fulsohoods,” ‘'hia mnkes tho campaign in Trance outirely ez parte, nnd lonyed that un- Loppy untion but the fearfal slternative of Macagox or revolution. ————————— ‘The story of & Mothodist church fn Clave- Inod {a instructivo readlng Just now, Bo far as accounts go, it {s bullt, steeple and all. Tho other day the peopls gathered to dedlcats ft, Tho Bishop announeed thot there was a debt of 88,000 on the bullding. BSubscriptions wers taken up, and, beginning with three of 8300 cach, - rolled up to $4,000 sltogether. Thero thoy stopped. TheBishop then offcred a bene- dletion and dismisscd tho audience, remarking that tho church would be dedlcated when the debt was pald, aud not before. ‘Thls 1s tho sub- stance of the story boiled down. ticle from the (Jalazy by Mr. Ilorace Wurre, of Chicngo, showing the necessity of abol- ishiug the prereut injurious system of Pro- tcction in order to revive the manufacturing interests of the United States. It is not claimed that the prohibitory pldn of adjust. ing tariff dutles is the cause of tho cxisting commercinl paralysis, but it {u claiwed that tho care lles in oponing the markets of the world to American manufactures. ——— . To an unprejudiced spoctator up & tree, one who nover had any of tho pork, thers is some- thtng tnexplicable about this Twzap busincss. Everybody s propared to sweor that Twasp obitalned his charter by corrupt means, and that millions of dollars were stolon and squandered, but when Twxsp #andortakes to show where the monoy went to no one will admit that he recelved any of it. Twaep paid, but nobody rocelved, Thero was bribery, but no one was bribed. We can’t uanderstand this, but perhaps {t was thocat. Flappy thought—it was the cat! Seat! Misou~everybodyl Secretary Buenyax Is said to bo busy And- ing new constructions of the Presidont's or- der forbidding Custom-Houso and I'ost-Oflice wirc-pulling. . From tho fact that Secretaries Evanrs end Bcuonz entortaludopinipns on this subject utterly conflicting with those of Mr. Hurnmax, it would seem about the prop- er thing for the head of the Treasury Do portment to let the Prosident himself say just how much water, it any, he wishes to back ou this important question. Preslden- tinl orders are not revised statntos, and the off-hand decision of Rurnzaronn B, Haves would fix the meaning of this decluration of pasticnlar policy more offectually than could 8 wholo ecumenlenl conjunction of profes- sora of political mechauics. et ——— e An enthusfastic special carrospondent of Tus THIBUNE, whose nams’anil resldence are sup- pressed out of respect for hld surviving friends, scnt us one day Jast week & special felegram of 2,058 words in length. He was asked next day* to come to Chicagg to consult about the pro- pricty of his accoptiog the Belgian misslon. He EMBARRASSMENTS OF A STATR CHURCH. Notwithatauding the adjournment ot the Dritish Parliament, tho Burials Question continues to bo n conspioucus toplo for dis- cussion in England, and the London Z¥mes, which has been printing communications prosud oon, finally says that tho bill pro- poued before Parliament will unquostionably Decome & law bofore tho lapso of another year, and advises the clergy to forestall it by voluntarily yielding to ‘its demand. This demaud, which is stubbornly resisted in Eu. gland, would bo desmed s mere matter of ight in this countsy if the cantrary exigtad. 1t consista simply of the privilege that non- confofhists (a torm which iucludes all soots that do not worship ‘according to the forms of the Church of England) shall be admitted {o the public burylug-grouuda of the parish, and allowed to bury their dead and conduct thelr fuuerals after their own fash- fon., Under American ideas of Gov. ernment, which is completely separa. tod from all religions forms and areeds, 1ho common rights to the public flaces, with- out distinction of religion as well as ¢ race, color, o previous copdition of servitade,” 1s univorsally admitted. 1t devolves upou any sect thiat desires to be exclusive even in tho burying of the doad to provide churchyards or cemoteries of thelr own, where they can make such seotarian vules or practice such secthrian forms as moy not be dotrimental to the public health or morals. It is hard to conocive that so progressive apd democsatio » country as Enpjand finds 1% necessary to discuss the question. A pew feature has developed in the div- cussion of tho Burials act since the closa of the Parlisment. Soma of theclergy contend that, if the law is to bo changed, it ought also to provide exsmption of the clergy trom being called upon tg read the services over tha body of any person whom they decide came. i “The next, with dirges dire, and sad array, Slow, Lo the churchyard tomb weraw kit borne, andon his towb la fuscribed, * e ulc;‘ravbed that OsusN Pasha was—" R A Texas woman was asleep the othor evening on her front sYoop when & rattlesnake crawled Qown her back, ‘Tho local reporter's account of the affair s somewhat deficient in detalls, bat, Judging from what s woman 1s capable of {n tho lins of vueal excrtlon when a caterpillar in- sinuates himsol? between her shoulder-blades, wo should gay that her yells must have been “distinctly sudible along the whole loe of the Texas Pacitic Railroad from Benator Laxan to Ban Diego. e ——s The Bervian Ministers have disbanded their troops which were cullected on the frofitier, snd hastened to fuforin the Subline Porte that they liad only been 1obilized in order to take part in tho usual sytumn maneuvres. And the Turklsh Premier soys, ‘*No offense; pray accept tho most distiogulshed evideuccs of my bigbest diplowatic cousidoration,” with the remurk, however, sotto yoce, *Just you wall, young an, just you walt!" According to the cable advices, the reporis of the engngements between the forces of 1he Czarowiteh and of Myuysxr Act at Biela lave been exaggerated, the result having Leen of po advantage to either side. 1fifis true, as yeported, that Osuax Pasha has ‘been remnforoed by the coluran of 20,000 men under Cuersrr Pasha, who also brought a fresh supply of ammauniton, and that another Curkish column with a convoy of provisions Las penctruted the Ruaslan obstacles and arrived within two hours’ march of Plevos, a rouowal of operations upon a gigantio sealo at the lutter place may be expected shortly. Aore fighting has oceusred in Bchipke Pass, ‘but without decisive results. P ] Our dispatchos from Philadelphis this morning give a full history of the extenaive stack frauds perpetrated by MosroN, Prosi- dent of the Market Stroet Rallwey ju Phila- delphia, togetber with a statement by the guilty man of the causes which led to the commission of the crime. He was deeply iuvolved §n stock speculotions, aud, being suddenly coufronted with s loss which he could not meet, be resorted to an overissue of the stock of the corporation of which ho was President, sud used the bogus stuff as collateral to secure the psyment of large «ums of monay which he bemrowed to tide dent and his friends was with floral designs, the work of Louisville ladics smony thom a bed of tuberodss, with the inftials of Mias Lucy Webb Hayes lo violats.r Loulaville sepms o have lef} nothing andone to make tho visit 8 memorable ong 1o its fuests ‘There are two old citizens of Now York, Meusrs, E, D, and 1. P., who look allke, so alike that bag for tho difference In tueir statare ther could not be dlstloguished apari. One of them 1ives on West ixteentts stroet, the otharon Clin- ton pluce, & continuation of “Eightb. 1o its prime, Clinton piace wes so anatocratic street but a8 soclety marched up towa its oud-fashlvned resldents gavo placo to lodgers, mald and fcmalo aftcr thele kind, sad that kind wsuslly the kind whoea past and present matrimoolal sliisnces will Bot bear oo cjose & scrotiny, Mr. D., bowevef, occuples bls old manaton there, and will not move. A faw nights ago be was walking down lown pretty 1ate §n the evenlng, when s eharp wprigkle of rain came on, and baviag po umbrella be hailel a cab. Thedriver jumped down and tucked biw in, and 24 he was about 10 monnt the box remasked +West Giztacuth strcel, sar, v coorse!’ ** NOi " The driver atared, bat drove to the destination indicated. Arrived, Mr. D wounted $be steps, opened 1 door, and beckon- 108 10 the driver, Who waa sasked thrqugh sud through, pald bim his full fare snd sdded balf-3- doliar, with the remark, *‘TLat's foryau, Pat” Pat scceptod the *'poutbalre™ witn & gratefud twuch of the bat, and with 8 koowlog wink esids “*1'll kape puwm ahout thls, Mister Phclpel® . —————— *We bava scea 1t stated, and do verlly beliove, that, whcn the tralo-robbers the other day felt called upon, in the courss of duty, to gothrough tlio passcugers of that express-tralny they touvud that onc man was the Director of s saviogs bank, and retarucd to him bis well-fillod pocket- book with many spologics, ssylog that sBoy never robbed genticmen in tho sawe profession. A ——— ‘The States {s the ttle of a now weekly jouraal published fu Chicage, aud. edited, wo Leleve, by Eosser Jamisso, Esq., formerly City At- torney, The titlg s ratber striking, though it sounds sa i it bad beensuggested by a Canadlan or one of the * Argunauts of M43, accustomed to the rgoé of tho Far West. The first remark ths Calcaiien Rives, & large figod can be cas-

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