Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 1, 1877, Page 12

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ILYE PAGES, made out £25, but suhaeguen ered to & befare ua. amb, while they do not leave | game bitl got fnto a new lot that, w. and in Mulloy'a account the original figures | Mr, Stewanl. absolutelv gufltless, we are wars | amd when' the st came back the were 815, but afterwarl altered to £25. The ( ranted n saving that. that ment marked *atill dead.? e flem of MeCafTeey is notably incorreet, for | allght retike at the handy of hia neiehbor, will | o era (theateleal criti " e charges full tine, whereas it fs well known | be permitted to retain hs oflice. 16 xeenis that o ‘l",'j”:'.g," ateleat critics, of couren) wey, that twenty-three of the seventy-nine da Mr. Steward, who s really a high-minded and ‘“‘"‘"("-~ oue articles are the Tanghip,, charzes for he was en trial in the Crix chivalrous Georzian, i ohe of the ol days | Stock uftho towe, ST tine will come wy Contet for contplracy to defraud the counts, and | autdeilent to the War made the discovery that | yours siii be hon " When soruchdy that about Ofteen ore days were spent i at- | his larder was so Insufliciently proviled withi | Feads them. ) 12 THE CIIICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, I877—=TWI PARIS. ) COUNTY BOALD sears repreernted the Arrondlsscment of Lau- | squirrel, not as a cross betsween the black and Tl][ deac in an Asscembly. Witk Oditlon Barrot he | fox equirrel, a3 was supposed, but as a distinet tlzned the acensatton of the Gulzot Mintstry, | variety, found oceasfonally ln- Ilinole, thougi, and, throuzhout the duration of the Sccorid | 8o far as known, a rarity (n any loeality, 1le B Empire, was one of the tmost promi- | has one siele specimen in hiseollection. It | Last Meeting of the Old Setsas nent members of the Liberal opposition, | was first classilfied as. & distinet va- x In 1860 he was returued ns Deputy by the | riety by the maturalist Prince Paul, of Exit Holden. Fourth Paris Cirenmecription; and, when tha | Wurtemberg, who visited this country disasters in the Prussian war overthrew the | some years ngo, .and whose reputation forwary) name xay The MacMahon and American Dinners to Gen. Grant. i —— : . I he | ns nacientist s deacrvedly high. ‘The animal fs " % ee | tending to hislowa farm. The billhe presented | necessaries as to be quite o uscless artic Opening of the French Parliament-.. | Third Nancleon be becue, o o emtr o e | e e pack el pierel aepoens ey | 1e's Enormous Pav-Ttoll Approved-a- | (il e, LS Winh S e ot LG one | ST Sromant 't ot (he bt 5 i e GLADSTONE, Shouts of * Vive Ia Republique!"” pacity he_exercised almost autocratle power, | linagawer. If the black-bellied squirrel wan pot Ter Dicm of the Members. objected, feat his bl inlahit be fooked Into, and_he bas 8o high a regara for bis family that with M. Cremicux and Fourichon, On' Gam- | so cxcentional an wa at first supgosed, though, APTINT ROQR e oty oeeopit it to o soycither: AL | rie Tarkish Story me to Ml Dotgay, hetta's arrival by balloon, he lost a great xm{t lwr_|n(rn'.'l slv'uvrn Ly Mr. Hates cortuinly wae, A The final meeting of tho ofd Connty Boord CURRENT GOSSID. Hlnwnu!wu ilrlalll’lm‘clml an?xl:yn|'§'3'.f'~"."&mf' Nativity, an Sketches of a Few Celebrated Deputies—The Dealh | of his importance, and since 1871 had retired | few days azoan item appeared intne Alton Sy ly Constantinopte Correenandence 1. H A% Leiehraies Repuitels into private llfe. M. Glals-Bezoin was in poll: | newspapees to the effect that some sportsmen | was held yeaterday afternvan, all the members B but stealthily, to tho abiding-place of turver S TiE LAnlat Ty, of 3. Clais-Bezoin, tics & Radical, and in private hud the speclal | fn the vicinity had shot a white rquirrel, and | being present excent Mr. Tabor. CONTRAST, ot hens belunging to aneiehbor. Whetlier hun- | . 1 have been sent a Turkish paper containtng o repitation of wearing worse hats than auy | this exfutsite animal Mr. Bates has just stutfed ‘A communieation was rend from the * ex- 1 gaze from my window out to-night, ger had rendered Mr. Steward falat, or whether, | blography of Mr. Gladstone, which colitains gq other person in France. e had in s Telsure | and mounted. It s a larce fox @quirrel in te, " who measured Sexton's brick-work on At the thno of the night's high roon, unacenstomed 1o excrelke,—fur Mr. Stewnrdy | ;ang curious, and, to me ot least, vey fac Spertal Correspondence of The Tribune. moments tried his hand at literature, and a | eversthine cxeept fta color, which Is as white as [ PCrs " who meas 5 And the snowirift ahiino In the Mmpid lght | thuudhh poor, was not given to bedstly labur,—he | oy00°F yage had it translated, and will glye. Panis, France, Nov. .—The ex-President con- | play entitled *Un Cos Tendable,”” from his | anow, Aowing tatl and ail, specimen fa that | the Court-llouse, protesting uznf:!ls_t thelr pay Of the mildly-beaming moon, wna_clumsy, {8 not exactly knowni but Mr, Srabat PR e Rlve {hy tinues to fill a large place in the possip of the ( pen, Is sald to be his best cffort. of a perfect athine, and 13 s inz beautiful, | betug cut down, and asking for 8225 each. The In aflent softriess the shadowa Jo Stewnrd stutubled at the door of the hen-houge | transtation, carly n, {0 faly, on) day. Gen, Noyes' reception, about which I Hanny 8. Micnen. A someshat simifar squirrel, and even more of | gocument was 1aid over for the conslderation On the river and vale belows and mw‘llc‘fl'lflx'!; n“::?ll;f‘l‘znlal'llxlfi:r\lz\;:)éaxig}{lr:lll u:c amltting hcr_-: nnd there an expression tog wrote you fv my last, was the first of ‘a long e —mm—— an oddityan the collection, Ia & large fox squir- | |\ r4he newy Boant: While the decp, deep bino of the midaightenky A laley witimato } strong for Enelish' taste. The biography 4y SILYER. rel, killed some time aco, the under part of houl. A negro cama out of his quarters which is of the ordinary volor, while the bacle is series of fetes which have been given in his LIEN'S PAT-ROLL. Mects the monntain-tops of snow, nquired, In the rude, uncultivated volee of | 13Ken from fhe Zaman of the September (o1 r , 3 - o 8tyle), the vrgan of the Salonfea Governm, honor. On the Thursday following the evening P apure white. This apecimen, thouzh not so The pay-roll for the County Clerk for Noven: 3 ehils race: ent, u? the reception, Gen. n:ml Mrs. é,,,,,;, with a | An Open Letter by the Ion, Schoyler Col- | beantiful, Is quite as nuch of an oduity as the | bor was presented. ‘Tt sgevegated $24,810.05, ““;'x‘:':':‘;' ;T::T::fi ::y‘?;ri.;:r?r:l‘z\e . ¥Ilm dnfl"" i sl \Vlmllknovlcdgu it mnv( mmmlu of Turklsh gf, select mumber of other distloguished gucsts, : “nn;. et one Jately kilied near Alton. aml was aecompanied by an explanatory letter With the rippling rills and the snalltng sky spnns‘em 4l was the. gentleman's only re- ;::mfl }:‘m&:‘:rmm?\"enu x’vggfi;ls;v:\l‘nfl{fi.:"b' . Nom. 29, sl is el S 3 wero ON TnR c? c-m"l”nv ™, ‘;Sfifl— {r DeAR Sint MINERAL from Gen. Licb, iu which it was stated that his Of a radiant day in Jane. v Stealin’ hens, fs yel' inquired the negro, | the salus of ita Information a8 to what goes :: ENTERTAINED AT TN ELYSKE, e oar o DELE IINERALS. wen had had to wark until 1 o'clock at night The warinth, and color, and pulsing life with disgusting directne: onitelde Turkes: At dinner, Mme. de MacMahon had Gen. Grant | To your request to write you a brief letter for —— to extend the taxes, Were type of my own heart's plow, “Say another word Uil shioot! ¥ replied | =t Gladstonc, the disturber, who ia in Englay on her right, faclug the Duc de Broglle, while | Publication on the slver question (or to allow | gngiigh Conl, Copper, Zine, and Iron Pro. | M, Guenther spoke fn recard tothe pay-roll, With ta eazer fondness and high hoocs rife— | Mr. Steward, almost overpowered with thelack | the deciared enemy of Oitomans and, sty k) an unsigned onc 1 wrote to your paper last year % 9 of reflnement apparent In the vlack man's volee, | more, of the rellrion of Ielam; who fo at the other end of the table Marshal MacMahon i G4 intel with my’ name), T eheeciul dnrlln;‘ for 1830, but no one could tell whether: he was In favor | But to-night It fa covercd swith snow! \3V00 18 e, Aughow 1™ was the ot unkind | yoarshes beeo. heaping up Il Sars ‘l"r n‘ufi, Liad Mre. Grant on the right, vis-a-vis tho Duct. [ t0 bo reprinte (4 1 el e of its approval br not from what he sald. | = yy gimer.san wil shine ont ngain, but desicrately provoking Inguiry of the negro, | churzos nainst {alamism and the Mussuim o' cese Decazen. Next to tho Duc do Broglfe came | Summarize my convictions on the subject Ina | The general summary snows that tho quantl- | 364004 ‘211 tht conld bo mado out of his re- Aud awaken the birds and bees s Annoyed ue.nrl‘; to death, and alck to bis soul | who, while we are fighting the Russians Mre. Noyes and Admiral Gloquel des Touches, | {07 propositions that scem to me almost | Ly of cont produced in England fn 1876 was | 10 o0y in 1o was in favor of * giving the ’fl,..“;,;”: e il moite e over the bad grammar thus thrust at him, Mr., | Moldavians, Wallachians, Montencgring '|§.I,']° o 8 2] axfomatic. 133,344,766 tons; In 1875 the quantity wns 131, ;4 o Y > Steward raised Iiis revolver and shot the black | parians, and lerzegovinians, one cominy g pposito these araln wero Mrs. 8ickles, Gen. 2 - o 3% (10 e " | devii his ducs.! ‘To the grass, and the lowers, and trees; 2 on Noyes,and Mre, Torbert. ‘The wife of the Amer- 1. This Is In theory, and should be in practice, { 887,105 tons; In 1874 it was 125.043,257 tons; y X Mr. Sonna oblectod to the pay-roll, and could Bat, ah! for my heart can no Summer comey | W81 dead in his tracks, It would hiave been ob- | nfter the other, secka publicly 1o ralso amainyy #tg Governnient of th@@neople, for the people, | while In 1873 it had reached the then unpreces I8 el rroitud 1] B ervia Ll g Ve fean Minister wore a white mofree eilk, which 1y 97,010,747 s not understand how it was that, at $4 per day, No warmth can It ever know; . g?r:flgpllli‘(:llflgr: Tn'bifl'.‘,fln"fl.«:r’ffi‘fim x:’r(lm';lc‘«{ \rl(:rtilhflz'“g‘(:rn(;fgc *l::‘cl\nw:{:fi-ufi;hl({r;";;“" wan_ greatly ndmired, and which sutted her to | DY the bcople,” whera the popular will should | dented helght of 127,016,747 tons. CoalIs to 8o | oo ve 4y ynon had earped $150 during the | With it tonder volcos foravor dum, nelzhbors of Mr. Stewardt 80 the Iatter cot vat | Into the eravest. crimes and the most s perfection. Tho dinner was much more lively | Do obeyed. ) great an exteat, If dndirectly rather thon directs | o0, ™ i Coh e o document referred to 1t l1es dend beneath the snow! of the way as specdily as possible, maguaul- | tnrpitude, This motive {s €hat ~(Gladsiope: than such ofiicial affairs usually are, atthough | % £ to-day gold and sflscr were both cqually | Iy, the staple commodity of Britleh commerce, | yq Finance Committee, OstiRosit, \Wis, 3. B Manatow. | mously fefusing to tako with him any of the | though honored and generally known in thy the little Aificulty about tho langunge wouid | 1egal-tender, as whien we Incurred our War-delit | that the unchecked Increase In its production [ “Mr. Fitezerald dil not want the oag-roll —— {‘i"""”fl"h b "‘fl fhn ffil]fi'; Julnlthacgnding . world; cvew amane the Baclish, s an Engiis. crop up now and then,—to tho discomfort of tho and suspended apecle-payments temporarily, a | during years when great complalnts as to sluck- [:um'd on hastily. Ile wanted the men who GIANTS. - A’H‘"" unger sud that of wnlly. i ran | man, reality & Bulzaran, who nsirpeq proposition, as a preliminary to resumption In | ness of trade have been rifo will e observed ll,‘l!h‘;fléma'wfilfi:l"gg ‘k",‘l’“";."": Mr. Fitzgerald 183, to now demonetize silver, ond pay ol | with eatfsfaction. The statistics, however, are wished the Board to infer that some onc clse debts, pubiic and private, in gold alone, could | less satisfactory when more carcfully | ywas to pet the money, not carry the populut vote of auy district in'the | gcanned. Jn the first place, while | ~ Mr, Fltzgerald Wi the Doard might fafer Natlon, North or South, East or Weat, and, if | (. ! % ot it pieased. He waated tho men to gt 'y show the continued activity | whatity ) a';‘;';,“{,(;':mm;m pla“volé, would ba ol | oy, collicrics, they indieate unmistakably, at {:::l;fl"f;“',’l'iyw';“‘e"x"a’:lfi‘;p“l‘_"'b"" but ot betors * 8, Nocanvass was ever made In any district of | the same time, that coal-minlog lias been car- Mr. McUaltrey wanted tho rules suspended the Nation, prior (o the get of 1573, for the de- | ried on at o diminished rate of profits, though | and the pny-ml{ approveil, mnnflu}fl! Uf‘flfll‘iffl no 1’;77'“““!' l“‘“mlr':“'" of | not, us may be inferred from the continued pro- | Mr. Guenther made another of his cliaracter- ::{";fl"‘,g:' it ) Dfifa el ‘,'1'“',',‘,‘;',,!’ o ;{,;'::_ ductlon, at a rate which {s wholly unremuncra- l!,:icr:)f;fffi:‘“l’;""y‘x‘l'fl{";‘gl:,";’fl"r‘|‘!” In favor of "“3 ganization demandod 1t 0o petitions from the | tive. The 133,344,760 tons ralsed In 1878 aro ( PAFOR S00 RE SO0 SO0t oy o pay-roll be cople of any ecction of the Union sought ft; | valued at £46.670,001; the 127,010,747 tons of | 1qi1 over temporarlly, but tho motion was np;«l?ot tho h{mdrndl of financial plana for the | coal won In 1873 were valued at £47,031,230. {’““cd. F o N reliofl of the country, for the payment of tha | ‘the fall in price is not an unmixed calamity, Mr. Senne called attentfon o the fact that deht, or for coln-resumption, which ‘wers pub- | If tho prices of the Jatter part of 1872 nnd tha { 4,4 present pay-roll was 8 Jargo increaso over lished and advocated, nune of them proposed | carlier part of 187 haa long continued some | forpier mourl 8, and for this reason he wanted such an act for tho amelloration of our financial | branches of English monufacturo must have | tine to examine the document beforo passing ills,—~not one, , ceascd to exist, The progress of the export | ypon ft, 4. Thedemonctizingact, therefore,was passed, | trada {s another point which attracts attention, Mr, Cleary took tho floor fn defensa of tha Dot at oll as responsive to auy demand, or de- [ The coal exported to fureign countries in 1870 | « zang of hands,” and was crected with loud #irey or petition of the people; and was so fn- | in the form of coal, coke, or patent fuel applause. He mistook tho applause for an ate menlousty concealed in & colnage actthatneither | was 16,220.077 tous, of the declared walue | yon, 1o crowd him down, and culled upon the the Presldent who signed it, nor tho present | of £8,004,403. The coal exported fn 1875 was | Chafr 1o preservo order, remarkineg at the tima President who has to executo it if not repealed, | oul: h.m.ym tons, or 1,554,101 tons less than | ¢ he foarod that that ofticer would find it n know what hiad been dono till Iougg attor ft had | fn_1876. Now, the total production of coal in | gifiieylt task, however, beeause ho had s lot of gone into cffect. 1870 only excceded that fn 1875 by 114«1,u$l wild and nnciviitzeil persons to deal with. This - G, If this is really **a government of the peo- | tons, and so the result ts arrived at that the | pqae td the confusion, but the Colanel strug- ple, and for the people, and by tha people,' an | consumption of coal in Epglaod in 1870 did not eled through it i, and advozated the suditing act thus passcd, though it may have legal ef- [ Increase, but in fact diminished by some 800,000 | Ge'ypa pay-roll at onco. {ect, is o popular wronw that shouid bu correct- | tons, as compared with the consumption In 1873, Gen, Lieb was then heard in_defensa of the ed by the servants of the peuple promptiy and | The whole of the increased amount produced pav-roll and the management of his olfice. cheerfully,—not haltingly, or crudgingly, or re- | was exported to foreign countrics as now mate- “The mution tosuspend therules was then put luctantly, or evastvuly. i riat for thic use of manufncturcrs there, Instead | 5ng carried, whereupon Mr. Fitzgerald offered 0. If tho explicit lancuage of our National | of belng_emplosed fo making manufactured | 5 ppgolution providing that tho warrants on the Constitution means anything, gola and silver | goods in Englavd. To compare other years It treasurs bo drawn In favor of the cinployes, in- are caually the constitutionnl "colu of our land, | will be necessary to quote the fiwures for | gang ot Gen. Licb, which the Chalr declared 7, If the explicit lanruage of the flrst act of | conl alone, excluding” coke nnd patent | gueof order. fl‘cn. gnnt"i ““fl}“""“fl;’?: ~:] tlmh‘nlclf. dzc; {ucl. " Inm 1871 d“ra r fl“;"fim (153.'5 u.’gm The vay-roll was then nnnrovm}. ?xgm., strengthen e pablic credit,” and whic! ons, iving a icclared ‘aluo ol .| h= Fltzgerald vot! a the neg- strongrthen it with our_ creditors and the world, uw;' in 1S, 12712231 tons, valued a}:;"' Betino, and Fllsg! log B mesns anvthing, the Nation pledged Itsclf, In | ot no less than £0,853.418; i 1871, 13,097,007 The pay-rolls for the Insane Asslum, Poor- March, 1510, to pay ftn dcbts “i coin or ita | tons, valued at £123706M: " tn 1574, ILISLOTL | gyaie Pard I sital wera. takon up AAd Ap- equivalent,"2not in gold a'one, tons, valued at £1L,350,458; in 1875, 13,078,050 proved in the same way, 8. If_the explicit language of the Funding | tons, valued at m,ia-.wl; in 1870, 15,690,403 | } PAY TUB MEXN THEMSELVES, New York Sun. < uzl distance and finnily eluded his nlumueral. the nnr;m f! nnAanlllslnm.‘\n IZI“ ‘p’,?‘" to becnmg conspiclious among whogq werg several uncul- | a somebody, ceording to the blogrraphic: Iy ?pblwi wl. E:I‘H' t:f'(il;(o," ;'ll“): l“hg mflg tured laboring mudsills of the” Afriean persun- | tices whlcliy have renched us mn.-m',;u';“}u",l‘" alt an fnch of bolng clght foct high, was found | gjon, who apneared to be exnsperated for soma | (adstoue was horn in 1790, the affeyring of the yesterday o bis rooms, sittiug io front of the | reason; and, finallsy at daybreals, ho entered | hendlori passion (the orifnal hore defles liters) stove, chatting with his wife, tho Nova Scotfa | the cabin "of a loncly colorod person | translation) of n Bulzarian named Demite, the giante: The Captaln {8 a gravo gentleman, | and asked for rest * and broakfust. | servant of n ply merchant named Nestord, Nlving who takes life serlously. Tn his boyhood he co- Illo was kindly welcomed, aud the | inthe Village of Tchavrn, fn. the canton of ool ed: frugal hoceake was soon smoking befors him, | Kustendil. Up to tho age of 16 years he nssiat. Joyeda rood common-school edugation, which | yio”foll to like a hungry man, without tha | ed hla father in tho business of le-keeping, byt ho has elnce supplemented with wido reading, | slightest preilminarles, and even unconsclous | then, Impelled by his perverso nature, he he especially on tho subject of physical dovelop. | that hiis host had taken a seat at the table. The | trayed (here araln I hava to leave the original) ment. His pet theory s that meutal develop- | host bad not been invited to do so. ‘There was | the plz merchant's dauzhter, who was between ent leads to growth of body and physical di no inthnation on tho part of Mr. Bteward that | 14 and 15 yenrs old, and being In contequence aont ieece 1o g y atd physical de- | g vy expected to doso. Hadid it of hisown | unable to remain in'the village, hefled toYersgy selopment to growth of mind, always provided | volitiou, and with that agncgation of the pro- | and entered the servico of a *mayor,’ orServlan that the development {s normal. prieties which is peculin®to his race when the fe-merchant. Subsequently zolng to London - The Captain'is satisficd tiht the meo is not | raco is not properly kept under. 1t might hinve | in tho compoany of tlhe pies whivh his master degenerating plysleally, and that bigzer men | buen well, we grunt, for Mr, Bteward to Jift his | sent there for sale, he anchored there, and hay. duced i ’" bl a revolver and shoot the disgusting person, as he | ingsucceeded In carning his bread, we do not aro produced nowadays than ever boforc. Go- | jiad previously ahiot one of Lis brethren; but | know how, he wanted to pass himself off for an lath, ha says, Is described s six cubits and a | when a man Is exceedingly hunzry heis apt to | Englishman, and for this purpose he chanzed span {n stature, but who knows certainly ow | foriet sume matiers which otherwlse would not | his Bulgarian name of Grozadln to Gladstone; much o cublt or a apan was? Besides, the Jows | bo consldered or permitted for o moment, and | and, pushed by fortune, was able to acquirg wero n small people, and would havo re- bestdes, Mr, Steward was uaturally under somo | great influcnce and lmrurl:mre In England un. piey excitement at the time. til e attained the position of Prime Minfster, garded with wonder & man who, among o taller | ™ Vg ara particular to give tho dotalls of this | Gladstono in so destitute of virtuo and human. race, might have attracted no special notice. So | aflulr that M, Stoward may beus fully vindl- | ity that he worships zold more tian the Mess. of the biz Greak dnd Roman heroea; in ‘the ab. | cated as possible. Under ordinary circumstauces | ah, and for gold *1s capable of slandering the sence of definite information as to their inches, | to eat with a negro would be a crime, of course, | Holy Virgin.. The Ottoman Government once tho Captain waves them aside. When he visited | It was o mistake in this Instance, but only o | offered him o salary of £50,000 It ne Euglnnd, in 1871, the year of his marriage, he | mistake, Mr. Beward was cmbarrassed and | would - come and reorzanize Its finan. devoted considerable time to an {nvestigation Imnyfi. That he did not belong to that portlon | clal system, but on fts subscquently reject- of the lezends of English iants. .| whichlabored is evident froin his unsuccessful | inz his scrvices, the Just of the gold, “Flrst,” ho sald, *'I went to the Tower of | effort relotive to the fowls, ‘That o would not | which lias not gune Into his purse, fobied fo thy London, where I found the suits of armor of | have vaten with a negro i thu reprular coursg of | Instinets of the Bulgariun, las made him perpe- the threo giants, Og, Gog, and Magoz. They | cvents is too mnulfeat to require argument. Weo | trate all the infamles which ono knows, and relleved euch other, you know, In_guarding the | have heard that, after fnishinz his meal, he | which hie atill continues tolmmunnlo, ngalneg gate of the tower, and were the Captdins of the | pitehed his host out of doors and sct him ou his | Mussulinan religlon ond {lavernment, Tfiy uard that attended nt Stato ¢xecutions, The | head in a plavful manner, at the same thne in. | gluttony for gold makes Gladstone liok yellow, argest of the three sults fathat of Og, 1t is | quiring inn gentlemanly way rezarding the ad- | Accondiug to those who know himy he fs of composed of steel bands linked together to givo | Visability of punching tho rascal's head. This | middling helght, with a vellow face, wearlug opportunity tor wotfon, Itisallin one plec needs confirmation, however, and we think Mr, | closely-cut *whiskers {n the Eurapean style, and {8 buckled together at the back. el Bteward's case 1a sufllciently catablished without | and, as a sirn of his Satanie spitit, his forelicad was gccompanfed by Dr. Buckland, Bur- [ it. . tlo Is a high-toned genticman, soclally and | and upper forchead are bare: Lis evil temper geon in ler Mafesty's Life Guornds. The | politically, and wo have no hesltatlon in saving | has made his halr fall off, so that from s dis- armor of Og was taken down from {ts | that the next time he runs for Alderman howill | tanco he might bo taken for quite bald, Iic hay Marshal, at least. As soon ns they decently could, the two Presidents beat n quiet retreatto the comfort of the smoking-room, where they foughit their old battles anew, and did thelr beat to drive away duil care in clouds of fragrant Maryland and monopoly Caporal. M. Vigh- naud, of the Legation, interpreted; and, as the two sllent men lingered an unconscionablo time over the refreshing weed, it {s reasorigble to tn- fer that each found the other's company td his liking. 1 belleve ’ TOLITICS WERE CAREPULLY ESCREWED during the conversation, Bince bis arrival here, Indeed, Gen. Grant has sltogother abstalned from expreasing his oplnfon on the present crisls. “‘hnlficr it may be, ho keeps it guictly 0 himself—ta®the unutterable indigznatlon of the Interviewers. These {rrevercnt gentlemen have given the concicrgze ot the Hotel Bristol a rest lntely, ‘They fimd that their elabrate at- tempts to “draw ” the ex-President do not pro- duce results proportionate to the expenditura of thne and trouble they involve. 'Iis but a brief respite! One correspondent—a young and fmpetuous Slav from the distant stcppes of Tussin—was, to my certaln knowledee, burning withardor for the interview ,n:s(cn'lny. He asked me what sort of u “recoption e might expeet. At the inquiry, I feit an iward thrlll of sympathetic plty for the General. I gave the remorsc. ]cu man such a gloomy account of tho horrors and humllistions hkely to attend tho course of g¥isitors that for n mommciit he was moved$ and 1 should hardly bo astonished if, on mature re- flection, the contemplated aguression were abandoned. No thanks, General! Virtue is its own reward, On Tucsday there was % A OHRAND BANQUET in tho magniicent hall of the Grand Hotel, which, In honor of the occasion, was. tastefully decarated with flowers and banners, conspleuous ¢ Gallie Tri-Color. veral hundre CRLS— 24 Y " < vl ! 6 vouchers for joun : g 2 H ||III.".1|ldnll)EL the clita of the A'merl:nnm&:l;uy under it fo *“‘the -qumf coln of that date,” | 1873 proposed to fifllflm l';flnflfl duty upon }‘;E‘c’:.‘é."‘én 4-?;" L:c mado out iy favor of thyu head into the helmet. Then I fuserted my aris THE INDIAN BASKET TRICK, ;Im'lf h!génnn:hl l:"‘l' lmn"l. tcfi;. llxr scen ind tnaoy well-known members of thio | which was gold aud silver, aud notgold alone, | | coal, on the graund that coul was au article of | pep’ who had done the worl, and thia tima It | into tho stoeves sud tried to stralghten my . arpers Mvjasing fruding boyond tho lowerlipa * deelivetra ? i), Freucl - press—sat. down, o “n rechercho | 0. 16 In 1501, 149, and 1870, corn and dats | first neceasity, the export of which would not | wag entertained by tho Chair.' ilo sald ha bnd body, but 1 could not doit. Tho armor was [ Ever siuce tho capturo of tho strango Empire [ 13 one word, lie hus n strango physiuguomy, dinner. Gen. ond Mre. Grant occupied the | Were bothiand equally legal-tender for debts, | bo chiecked by aduty,and that thustheduly | froquced tho resolution because Licb's emn- | too short for me. But the helmet and the foot — e — ¢ India by tho English, or for more than 100 fcces wero a llttle too large, The giant must | © ¥ . . " iavo been & monstrous fellow in freadth and | Years, the clvilized peoples have been hoarind W,MA,SLE?MW,{?%";& walght, but not more than seven feet three or | of tho marvelous feats performed by the native Bar Orrr, Miehr,, Nov, 28,—Tho statement I four inchies in height. Jugelers. Noturally, Nloudin’s announcement e "'l d. ¥ g 0 “1next weat Lo the Dritish stuseum, wheto | of tho Indian- buskel trick made o great seusa- | T8 TBINUNE of Monduy conceruing Jawes M. hangs the skeleton of Murphy, the Irish giunt. Wight, Master U, 8. N., wha perished on the Tt Ie suapenaed by a wira inesrad fa the fapop | ton: The curtaln aroso and discloscd o wicker ] i m, that ho is of this place, is true, the theskull, 1 had taken o measuring tapo with | basket of oblong shape standing upon what ;I-lc'::odncn putting lis “’,mm'em .Cmm‘fi, me. Idid not measure the skeleton from tho | appeared to bea light table without any cloth A he had ltved, Master Wich top of the hiead to the bottom of tho foct be- | eover upon it. The juggler entered, dragging where he hiad ncver llved, Master Wight wass catiss the vertebrm of tho snine, separated inltfo | 'vanatitul youth, dressed nsan Indfan Prince. Colcago lad. ITowas born fu oncof thesad by layers of cartilage, in thoskeleton were wired y y | dest periods Chicagro ever knew, viz., tho Jast clpselr " Sogetiier,iat 1 took tho Jenth | ¥earing & rolo of whitd cashmero embroldered | gt UG CEIENRD SEEFLEC Fol 0 e of the various parts of the Lody, and | with gold, whilo upon his head waved apes- | ory,o mwn’wcro’d.ro fuz nwag alinost datly of especlully of tbo legs, measuring’ them | cock’s plumo held by adiamond atar, b olors il Tt l‘:" I sar artl h" from tho anklc Joint” to the hip joint,. “3Merey! merey 1" cried the child cholera, this being the ti year of the visita- I lhave forzotten the exact number of feet and W e I dia a tion of that scourge. While younz James was inches, but when I comparced them with meas- o—no mercy. Rouaro an Indian, anda | grayingzhis first broaths In the world, Watter urements of the corresponding parts of my own | Prince, and must die,”” was tho savage re- Butler, Esq., wos drawing his last oncs, fust body, I found that I was the bigger man of tho | sponse, 'm “;c“ ‘wi-xhueornct of Mirrkoaanl two. Murphy was only about scven foet seven | %I am only a ghtld,” crled the innocent boy. | ASTORa the g e b fnctics hig, tiough_tho stories make bim nfua | 4That will noEprovent my Killing vou.r Fourth avenue—dylug of chblera, Thls hins fect high. Either the system of measuremont | With plercing shricka tho child broke away | Kinuing of his lito correaponds very well w munt have been changed, or else thero was hume- | and rushed to the side wing, only to bo sclzed | the closo of it, ding the public bugging, as well as glants, In thoss days, there by his oxecutioner, who, lifting hiny in his Ho grew up in Chicago, attend Mh ufim I noxt vislted Warwhek Castle, and cxam- | arms, plunged bim {uto the basket, which he | #chools, first the Mmlg oud next t! o e tned the armor worn by Guy, Earl of Warwick. | closed, strapping down tho cover. Then ho | til the year 1885, when he was preparc ‘"“: Guy is said to havo been nino feot three inches | drew hfa sword, and boviog testod lis abarpness | Lish School. But as the family more {o helghit. On a measurement of the armor, | by striking it nto the floor, ko' thrust it in the | 8WaY ~to Bay City, ho apent r? yu}r‘&% howerer I found that. lts wearer was all of ire | basket agaln and again, whila tho victim in tha | furu work ip Wisconsln, In the apring uf 15 inches shorter thun I am. Iwas shown the | inside gave the most heart-rendine crics of pafn | 1é camo to Bav City, and _attende "i’m"" g Earl's porrido pot with 8 capucity of forty | and axony, “Each time the sword was pulled | &chool here till Junc, 1807; whon, on his own irallcos, his sword five fect long, his tiltlng-pols | out it was scen to be_covered with blood, while | mutlon, and by lis own efforts, he zlnt,n poiniel twelva feet longand twelve inches in elrcum- | the sobs and groans-from the Inside of the bus- | tO tho Naval Academy at Annnplo s} being ad- ference, and has two-thed iron fork with a | kot grow fainter and fainter, till at Jougth thoy | Witted to a ompetitivo examinat o s handle as largens o crowbar.” ccased, and @ ghoatly silonco ensuod, ~During | 2ion by arranzewent of tho “-‘"!' C‘ it bl laving dispascd of these ancient giants, | the sccue the excitement among the audicnco | East Baginaw, then ""-‘"i""C" Vit s tho Captain turncd bis attcntlon tothio modern | waa intensc. Ladles hid their faces beliind their | béing recommended by R O morning o s, T sl T ey | FESAT O, oty et ahotied bty | Sttaton: e applated o e Aclny by oe morning," he sal sallled from m; * Enough 'he smiling juggler bowed, and + I lodgings in s house belon) qu to the Duko n{ proceeded “to unstrap '.F\uj baskot, which he 11o s, thorefore, served tho Government tea jost of honor on a allgilnlly-elcvnlcd plutform n the ceatre of the seml-cireular rovm,—ono of the bandsomest und most richly-decorated in Paris, by the way. A capital band, stationed in the gallerics, enlivencd tha repast by a tasteful selection of dunee-nusie; aud whew, later on, tory Medoe and sprrkiluz Roederer had une luokened tongues and made overy ane fecl at home, Gen, Noyea, ju a few appropriate phrascs, proposed the "health of the jlustrions visitor whose presence we were met together to celes brate, . Gen. Grant responded in ashort speech, thanking everybudy for the warns reception ho nad met with, una_expressiug Lhe great pleas- ure he lad derived from his protructed tour in Europe, Am‘c the applauss hod * sub- sided, M. le TComte .de Lufayette, grand. son of the great General, mafe o tetling speect, in which Lo abmiticantly slluded to the digunitied way fu which tye ex-President had luld natde the'reius of pow®r and retired futo private life. | The nllusion to wnother Preal- dentwas thunsparent, und may peghaps nave had some share fn arousing TIHE VILULENT ATTACKS on American muntfers and Ameriean inatltu. tlons which uppeared next moruing In the columns of certuin reactionary prints, especlall the Gaulois. On the whole, I cunnot but thin the Itroducthun of Freneh polities, 8t o social wathering of this kithl o decided mistake, Tho, parts did not break up untfl un advanced hour® ol the wight. In the loug list of convives fizured the nomes, of Uen: . and Mrs. Grant, Gen, Noyes, Mrs. Noyes, Gen, Torbert, MM, Ge Lafayette and Rochnim- be + and ‘M. Evans, Mr. Munroo, Mrs. Emile de Girandln of the France, M. saut of the Figaro (these two dendly ier 1), Misa Hutchinson, the Rev. Mr. Hitehcock, and many more equally famitlar, 4 hetween man aud man,’” ns the phrase ir, no | would be an fugenious deviee for ralsing British - d told him that the: consideration of equity, honor, or consclence | taxcs out of the pockets of forelgn competitors fl?fi:‘gggfl::‘"‘%&u ,',3’,'},,.‘1‘3, “l;m‘ dgn‘c]“ ‘u:lm{ would require that debts incurred under and In | with British wanufacturers. But the figures | yo¢ o campaten, full view of such a promfse should be paid In | show that tho high price In that year restricted Mr, Guenthier mado _nnother speech, in the the dearer of these products, because tho other | export, and that low prices since hive stiinu- midst of which Mr, Fitzgerald withdrew his Lappened to be cheaper {rom overproductionor | lated ft. The deduction is obvious, that an resalution. any other causo whateyer. artificlally high prico caused by an export duty Mr. McUaftrey begmed leavo to mako s mo- 0. 1f the demonatizing act was a popular | would equally have checked exportation. tlon,—thie ast he wonld ever make verhaps,— wrong; i It was neither demanded, desired, or ‘The total wmount of iron ore produced in which was that Gen. Lieb be tendered a voto: of petitioned for by tho Dcnylu'. It it could not | 1878 in the United Klgxfix‘lum was 10,641,583 tone, | 100k for his efiiency os County Clerls, cte., oW, were @ new and original proposliion before the | und the value 0,825,705 The plziron pro- | gnipie storling qualitics us a cltizen, yeomle, who ought to bo the ralers of tha land, | duced fromtheorowns 0,555,007 tuns, and thevale The motion prevailed, and Gen. Lisb bowed ‘cpmmand even n quarter off tholr votes,—ought | uc of the raw materinl was ‘nctcnscu by tho ex- politely in rocoguition of the Lonor. it not to be promptly eo¥rectedi And, then, Yuuduureolmnlnmllnlmrlmmulunwlnl:lll,m;!,‘ A communication was read from Architect when the sfatus quo Is thus restored, would 1t | 103, Theso figures shuw a considerableincrease Egan presenting o largo perspective drawing of not bo an excellent time afterwards to propose | overtheproduction In 1875, In that year 15,82~ | 33570 HHouse, neatly framed, which was de- an International Commission of Europcan and | 030 tons of fron ore, valued at £5,095,410, were signed to ndom the walls of the Board raom. ’l‘\mv;‘llcm;’ '%\IonT ‘t(o dtllflrmlfinfl wl}nt A.lhm“;: i“llr“l;lfl nm{ M%da.'ufl éang‘_ :-! ;;lx iron, v'-lnnld at Ay, Fitzgerald moved that the work of art be ereafler be the relation of the two colna to eacl 115,043,774, produced. ho Increase las heen o vote of thanks nt;mlx;l H 2 4 il iondl giglllcllyi?‘llxa Clev!el:nt}.htrlc;t nmlhln ‘Econnm:i mfiff&fl":&? Halx vale betentored ave cndeavored, as briefly and tereely as he production of Heol ron bas increase: 2 il posaiblo, to aubmit. propositions that, to a van- | from SUTTT tous o 1854 ta 115000 tons fn | 5, MeGullrey maved as an amenidment that did mind, wotld scem to demonstrage them- { 1870. The Scotch oru requires a relatively Mr. Egan said ho had donated the pleture, sclves without wearlsomo argument, and henee | large quantity of coal, and the Jow | o0 wonld not accopt any pay, oit all extended referenco to the optlonaleplan rrlco ofcoul las asslsred production, The Mr. McCalTrey then withdrow bis motfon, and of resumption I have several times in the pust | total amount of - voal "used In the | ¢pom0 000" N e Fltzgerald prevalled, and years subinitted, as sure to avold runs, un- | making of pig-iron In 1870 was 15,608,391 toos, Egan was mado bappy. lcull?z l;f \;n;\lu?;, and p:u-:l)-nh n§ buulnnn‘l‘-’; .\h‘x(r:h o!x_ ltllllix Wil t:nm.l |}ml n él’x):l lon'? of BILLe, namely: for the Governwent to redeem, al coke. ‘The Koyal Conunlssion on reckons ‘The Committes on Public Charitiesreported In pwn _option, in gold, or silver, or a national | cd that throo tons of cual are used on the aver- - }:oml:::n pmmxlxfll wlh“" the uro:nmlck was |Ilm, aze l‘cc:l. rn.ulnke oo, “l’:lo' |l:olg-lrou. Tho fizures ":,:,‘;',‘;""‘ vaylng billa agxregatiog $7,70L51. Ap ssued, approximat| hut not quite equal to | quoted show that plg-iron 1a now more ccotom- "Thie Committee on Jall and Jail Accounts re- coln In value; gpd wslng tho feréenbacks thus | feally made. It appears from them that the $802, funded In the pireliaas of our § por cent loans: | quabtity of coal used per ton of pig-iron s con- m’xfi:’::v‘m amountiok to $302.10, and thoy 1o the open market, thus uvnmlnfi present con~ Jerably less on tho average thau 2Ig tons. In The Committes on Roads and Bridzes re- traction, and u|llmntuly reducing nll _our | addition to the fron-ore ralsed in the United orted recommending that $2,000 be paid to the Government foterest to 3 or 4 pereent, T Kingdom, we smelted in 1870 672,243 tons of rustecs of Hyde L'ark for, pn'vlug State stroct ln& secms to h&\'u hlll: lllulu chance of fincce lmponcld ore, :ml delrlved ?og.wo tons of ;:'llntrn; {n that town. = Approved. ' n Congress; and, ns {t s not nocessarily con- | or purplo org.from fmported cupreous pyrites, 4 ' P weated with tho rigiting of tho wronz dono in | whlci raised th total quantity ameited 10 17,- | Lo Comynittes on Public Bervico reparted on abolishing silver as poney and Iegal-tongder, I | 818,818 tons. The cuerent fssuc or the atatis- to 85,550, Adopted. 4 tics omits snany tables fuund in- the s o omit any extended relgrenco to it. ¥ pittes reported Northumberland, 8traud, took a train and | turned, mouth upward, to the audlonce, show- | 8ud 8 half years, counting the fuur of his ot Marshal MacMahion has placed his box in the ——— 4, [rovious publications, Among added lists m’el:flr':'fl"cgu?mflnuu:r: Torthe past &‘3.::"&: vislted Chang, tho Chiucse guaot, theu on_ex- lnzfldt'obunflrcl' ompty. Inthe midst of the [ tendauco at tho Acadewmy. ‘v}‘!{-" l":fi'fi”ufif”xju Chambr of Deputies at the disposal of his LIGHT WANTED, 0 o 0e ot © dme using , tho Bie- | ltaowad . libition fu Mancliester. 'When [" frst enferod | applause which followed from the agwsea and | gty bo mado thrco crulpesy’To f,'x.‘flf.': \;:n'll\ln;n_,llxlmd Lias {nv oun[unu "u {gkc To th Fditor of The Tribune. 8 ?‘t;n.l % M;‘d h pfl;flfin:&l’l&rfl I?u th :ut«l)lc’li"llg; Mileage and " {.]l:e l}':ll‘!c{l n;tlk;t:{‘ ‘l'l]fi:k 3»]1:?‘z'mru (.:'l lllxlu_;'h rell emdbnudlu:wg,‘thu llg;lu'lr:;flun [§ {lncerwu m:r%‘:‘.‘lflv ey n'i‘:“ ;.!_; duating, was te ¥ ne ¢ pleassit ¢ dinge d - | names, as that & o e : c ¢ i i :»h’fif.fi?‘i n)'u..?,h,f?':‘u‘xifil'u‘-.-“r?e‘.'fi,'y3'5{3’;'&'.‘" 1.01:"( fort and convenlence of passengers on rallways, Hallway Company aud the Dowlals Iron Come Pairick Carrol 85 f{::hnap_ “P: mvn"fl::um;f&mwfi ‘2,“;‘;‘,’,,,‘;’ gfi"fi,:‘“:;; 88; tahis felénd; the oxecutiouer; which occaston ho lunched with ":na Wednewday, after five months of electorat ex- | The writer lsa dally suburban travoler an the | PARY, appear In toth categorles. 2.0 Ll 110 nins feet hich. - Hut on measurement, back to | Tho trick was performed with the aid of [ Duke, who was but a little older Cih tentot tho s e o Yorll | i Cenra. Ther o oty on thiog ek | Ao e il sl i fn tho e | 61 Sl i buk it .t B b | ootk i Do th by | bmels s st et s Gt i,c,-t.,x? 1,,,,.,‘;}',‘;{,’*,:,‘c;l.“}‘;‘,,‘,',',{?;':,‘,’{, the Cham- 1oz to make the morning and evening trips as m[u.crd‘mura briedly, The m'oducuon of copper | 4. I Joftmann n lttl,l‘;“z"v:: reaod taesbalfy A e Mot ;r'm"é’.“.fifl.l'é‘fi‘.’efi‘:‘r'.o?'"«'é"ii"u“fi"ofi"r I‘:N:‘ fcohio went out to China on the Hartford, M. DESNEAUX— pleasant as a loungo n the drawing-room at | ore was 70,253 togs, sngl tho value £317,188, fi: g'. {n:lx‘;lr'x“ x 9 Belm, the Frenchman that Baroum had, | But ft was a new thing rhun, and tho scene lv‘v:u through the Buex..Canal nr;d thln llaclvs‘:l:f “l'z‘: a_ folly, ruddy-faced old gentleman (with the | home. That fsjlight In the evenlng passenger | ‘Lhus it ap cars that more was ralsed than Iy | Jong SeCaftroy i was only sevea feet elght fnches hiah, Beim | remarkavly well played by Houdln and tho :fi"fl“ e E"',j:o““}".‘:}'fln‘;:,: a3 the Palos. e, f, L gl pr, Gt | a4 15, bt Sl e s, s ot o | il = St 8, Skt it Cab s | LG Ao ks by ko i | e Rariot i DSt M Vi ¢)y Lok cl ntes . G ! q 8y ¢ wPresident dare und, touching bis siver | The nest fmportant Improvement Mmust boin | veur were 71,425 tons, and £358,415, OF tin ore, | 11, C. Seano. 138 on Hroadway. b e Jealousy, Thoy S e m"“po“,_'fi':, noponl:’m‘ f | examined for promotion, and made Endg, bis this dircction, Cars must be well lighted,—Miat | 13,638 tons, worth bfluo,D:l. were produced, { William Fitzferaid. .. 170 15 18, s0 that ono can seo to rcad one's paper. | This, the most anclent branch of mining indus- On motion the rulcs were snspended, and the Tho mere expense of o good system | try in Great Britaln, thus continued to show no | Commlssionorsgot thelr muney by unanimously of lghtlng cars could not amount to | sy of improvement, but the reverse. In | yotiug * aye," much on these well-througed subur- | 1573 13,095 tous were ralscd, worth £735,- PRODATE COURT, ban tralus, Either gus or kerosene could | 600, The lead mines wero inoro prosperous; The samo Comiaitte reported on the matter be used, | 1 am pretty sure that three wood oll- | they produced 1,218,078 . tons, worth L79,000, | of selecting rooms for the use of the Probatu lamps in " the Tm of that number of dimly- | Of zinc, 23,013 tons were ralsed, worth £00,142— | Court, and rvcommended that roowms in the Hickering raml"zl (tho present complement on | & devreased quantity at & larger price thun In | 7éues bulding be solected, at & rental of $3,000 these care), which only render darkness the | thu previous year; of lron pyrites (sulphur nrc‘l&. Per anhiuin. more-vistble, would scarcely bo any moro expen- | 48,509 tons valued st £43,870, showing an ad- str. Bradlcy wanted the Court located In Bu- slye, whils they would Lo a vast help to those | vancing production und a much higher price; of | perlor Bl who travel, A It Is, our strect-cars fir thls re- | arscuic 4,223 tons were prodaced, a spect are notably bell, shortly explained the cirenmstances which ratsed hiut to' bis temporury dlenity, recom. nended the Chiamber o havie always In view ‘116 Interests of the Ile&mmlu and, remiinding 1€ of the services of M. Thiers, declared that the nan, whose loss they deplored, had of hiy country. * lle ulluded to the parting words of M. Grevy In Jund-and In- dlted the Deputics to joln i in the Loy ot “Vive la Palx! Vive lu Republiquel This specell was loudly applauded by the Left; and, ot its conclusion, the shout of Vive ls Republique !’ which reat tho air must have scemed full of dresey Imrurl 10 the Doua- partists and Ruyalists of the Right, whose clections will ero long be underes curious nvestigation. The Deputies limited their fur- ther exertions for the day to the namiug ot M, JJules Grevy Provistonal President of the Cham- bery, und MM. Rameau uud Lepere Provisional Vice-Presidents. Tlese three appointments were highly significaut of the spirit antmating the new House, All are unswerving Repube licans, M. Lepere 18 u personal Iriend of AL Gawmbetta, and M, Raweau is the ex-Muyor of \c{ufl‘lcl. i Nearly 5000 thi 553 members composing the Chamber wete present. Aniong them I noticed M. GAMBETTS, %ho has grown terribly stout and unwieldy of Tate. Mis Lair, too, bas turned quito gray, You would never belleve, did you not kuow It, that that ponderous and comwonplace-looking buurgeuls could ba hut 40 years of we, aud the wiclder of greater puwer, perbaps, at this nio- tuent, than uny other man iu France. Neur bim was visible the geucrous and Intelllgent was pl ar back, The followlnz liad exchanced a fow blows, when Barnum, | tha table. Midden by the looklng-plass, | cOMmission dating a year bac 1 who happened to bs in the *Musoum at the , | b crouched below %owuu tho tables | year ho reached the rank “{c‘“'.‘,",""l"';:',',‘,:.h e time, came rushing up stairs, SHold on!’| legs, and shricked and, sobbed untll thg | bectation was nL\cnleng: ey T s the Hold onl" he shouted. * It you want ‘to fight, | proper moment came 10r him to descend | Wasa yearin the "";" b szlodAbe navy walt until wo can_aonounce it It will bo & Fhmughnnn in the stage, and o pass around | Savantiab River, wi “l oot Matne, . Bug his firsteclass attraction.’ Both giants fell to | to thebox in tho front of the thoatre, A spourrs | the War, and up to tho coast 6 WONG -lq 4, lnnuh(n&. and at ouce mado up., “Col, Gostien s | full of & red liquid was placcd at o certaln | oyos Leing Infureit in this fePwict ROy, now io Callfornta. Ko s a very clover, futollt- | spot fnafue tho basket, aud the sword, oassiug | the navy and was asel o out of the lonsest ent fellow, but 1 could lick salt off tlo top of | through this, seetned to bo dripplug withblood, | Bus updn whicls o mado oue ef, the G iis head. 1 have met other so-calied glants, | It was mperative that the. {uzgler should not | Sips ever sccomplish Pensacols to Port but they are slunder fellows, saplings that hayo | poss iu frout of the table,elsu Lis lews would:| Vensels, golng f";‘lm . naklug tho yoyage shot up without pragortionsl development. | huve been reflccted thore, dnd that would have | Royal, arsund Florida, wnd SEOUE, "1, of One of these ls Col. Noab Orr, who now keeps & | disclosed the entiresccret. Houuln bocame dig- | both on the sea au 1 ton Tow, In 1670, ho was restaurant at Marysville, 0., whero he is very | satisticd with this trick; and made many fm. | the Novy Dfllmlm'u.n Jan fow, 18 e suiomer popular. Ha is over seven foet high.' rovements in it, whicli the jugglers of our day | @iveu **waltin 8t home, but in February, be Captaln has noticed that tho children gavo stlil further perfected, It IIJ’llplblE that | oud sutuma ol h!l‘ Il' O o, and spent tiia bara In this country, of emigrants from Europo, | this cannot bo tha way in which Indlan jugglers | 1877, he resume et r: T B shio Erow up ito larger nen, and womien than thelf | perform the trick fn the tnarket-place ar uther | Sumimer up the coust o tR HAUA U0, parcuts. Tho cause he finds fu the climate, and | public squares {n broud daylight. They have | Supply, in vars of @ oing sallors. Ou tha the mora generut apread o lutellicence, “The | no lookivg-glass tablos, no trups through tho | Government was inaklng &80T o ber, childgen learn how Lo take care of themselves, eart] N " $| yeusol's golug uut nl|:u ufll\luon 'whn'su Captaln, * 1 Spaiu aud other coustrics where [have | * Houdin's thedry concorning them was.that | Lo was asiguedy ta the Lueumy MU oy ot travclod, " said Mry. Butca, *in which ierols | thele basket Lud an opeulng fn It elther at ita | Commodore ltykn, was onsaf bls WETCl great ignoranad udlong the people, tho average | front or Its back, and that, while buckling and | the Naval Acat ciny, and e gt death was N stature s low." strapping down tho covor, with the knea fifted | Fesoocted by him. Ilis A5 & L0 igtia. The Caplaiu instanced Wall-street brokers, | up and b on the basket as If totighten | Years and ‘nearl weity aud manfiuess. Ho successfal professional gamblcrs, und Br. Bun- | the leather strap more sccurely, the child crept | gulsted for bis “‘“‘5 T an people. s de- ucll, the proprietor of the New American Mu- | oyt under the bent kuce and hid beveatn the | desplsed meanncss ati Intense. ‘The navy was eutn, us people who had reached a flue phyaival vg’lumlnnu‘ rohes of the i’ua:ulcr. ‘Then, while | Yotion ta the uavy wus and Lo salled witbout developuent in consequence of mental uctivity, | the sword fs plorcing the basket and the child’s | & great thing in b s cyos B e hotiets Dot in- Ha s opposed (o the use of strony drink, butls | sohs are moat hearrending, the crowd gathers | Buy fear, never bcd:"‘h ‘which bias Unally overs uot & teetotater. Mrs, Bates said that shie had | fnto & compact mass about it, and Into the | frequently ucar to inic of his manhood. Had ucver known the taste of tea or coflee, or any | crowd the child easily escapes without helng | taken bim In the "'°"'l',‘!-h cluimed bis dile 1 lquid except. water " or milic up o or il | seco. wnd rana mway. At tho proper momeut I e el arbls fricnds, who fecl, nole car, e Is now ears oid aud se eet comes ruan as if from & ance, 0 ? 0 el 3 ‘fllnu 2 | 8ud of cousse tha' astonisbment of the crowd 1a | Withsranding, that they have givea Bim to J Ky at a rental of $2,000, maller Mr. Fitzgerald wanted tho Court focated in plousant, and meny pre- | quantity, but of an enbanced value, Mangancso | the County Building, but soon became eatisfied fer them to the steani cars -lmply ou accotint of | worth 40.758, ochre and uwbcr, valued ab | that it was fopracticable, aud withdrew his mo- the cheerful Mght which adds so much to the | £4.478, wolfram at 72, fuor spar at £230, nlso | tion, % 5 goclality of a compuny of ‘mumugeu. Bome of | enter into the retu I'oml-!n:‘ Wur 8’ clay, The owner of Buperlor Dlock addressed the us set a considerable valua op_our halt and | and fire-clay to the amount of 3,U71,1% tons, | Board fu his own luterest, ad sald he would three-quarter tours in transitu, We would Ik | and the value of £744,24, wero produced, an {ue | furnish hig rooms for 32,000 fustead of $3,500 as tobe readinga hook or paper. This tinip to | teease of peurly 1,000,000 tons, although the { ne hud before proposed. on ndividual in $he course of the year | total sum received (or the Increased quantity Mr, Fitzzorald -moved that the whole matter smounts to a Jarge item, 1v0 hours! But where, ?vu an average price lower by 25 per cent. | be lald over for one week, and the motion pre- 88 on our cvealng tralu, there ura 400 people ‘here was o decrease in the fine Cornwall clay | yalled. dally, the loss 1s 900 hours per teip of time, | production, and a rise fu the amount of produc- MUTUAL ADMIRATION. which might by a tritlo outlay be utllized. The | tion of fire-clay from the coal-measu Mr. Conly intrixluced a resolution returning nowsmen ut least should favor such anim- | districts. ‘I'he ° finer clays for potiery | thanks to Mr. Holden for the able and impar- provewent, for they would sell many more | and porcelain nro largely cxported from this | tial wanner in which he bad presided as Chair- papers, country ta Dordt, in_Holland. Rouen, Stock- | man of the Board during the year, woich was Now, if the railroad companics object todolog | bolin, "Csrthazens, Copeuhagen, (ienos, ete, | adopted. anything in this direction on sccount of the ex~) We produued fn the coal countries oll shales Mr. McCaffrey moved that a voteof thanks he pense, 1 will guarantes (unds cuough to lizht a | welghing 010,788 tons, and worth £810,853, and | tendered Jubn Comiskey, Clerk of the Hoard, traln for the season by subscriptions trowm those | this branch of our mining shows an fncreuse. | fur the able manver in which be had pgr(mmgé who would be quite willing to vay at lewst & | Over 1,000,000 tons of salt wera seut down tho | his dugivs, and the motion prevailed, quarter per munth for such a purpose. weaver, The total production of white ana ]lr:li[mhmmu moved thut a vots of thanks be ‘Wil sume raitrond ofliclal give us light on the | rock salt was E.Zm.l‘.!.‘id tons, tothe value of £1,- | teudered the County-Attoraey fur his numerous subject, pro sud coul Lot us huve more Nght! | 186,028, Iu 1875, 2,816,644 tons had been le. st opinions ** and other service. L0 cleyen and u half jncies lu hieight, bel I'4 E. N/ A, duced, and they sold for £1,154,822 e Mr. Rountree vbjected, stating that he had | tall as ber husband, The Cubtain 13 @ broud- | unparsllcled, for the basket has in the mean. | country, face of M. Albert Grevy, ouc of the most popa-. T ———— 23,501 tons of barytes, worth £4,470; 253,150 | anothier mouth Lo éerve. ¥ shouldered, tnely-developed man 97 years of | thne bun‘;;'ewd apd sliown 0 be ewpty. ' e UE. lat aud bard-working members of the Chamaber, IRREVOCABLE, tons of fusall manures (oprollion, ¢ic) o the | Mr, Fitzuorald | suggested that Rountree | age. _He was born o Whiteaburyr, K. but waa ——— . 0 YE STARS OF RADIANT Hl m:fi";':;";'fi.'é""“g""fifi":' the st proy vnlueh oLd fil‘!m AndOLHL tone "'."’15’.',‘:.'::-; would better 1ake h.‘,' Hiaoks fih"ezhfe c;:ulfi. 2 | brouglit up ucar l(lf‘l'evulnn!::l. 0., whero he rollcd QuIrs, — of the irrepressible ** ol wort . hundry minerals, includ o month bence the Board might nol ncline oge fu wi , s of Eugllsh parentage; his “ radlant —or “Popdl as. his intimates D S e b skl China stons, were ralsed to thevalugol 13,730 | {o thank bim, st which evers body Iaugbed. WS L o en. ol Euailat parentages b | When s man s rooked to the spot ™ by foar, | O g starsof sdlaBREL, of bige, Ui, A strauge man uud o strange f, A'crituon Are hae crept space " and the total value of the raw waterlal vaised | "3z, Holden then uroso to bid bis associates | Masgarot's-lithe-Ficlds, London: oca he branch out before Lo leaved! 1 bray you vell your oycs o bright, —Lalt bully, ball gallunt,~reckiess, impudent, Tuto this perfect oval face: from Bugu.;h inines In 1876 was £53,GOLSEL | an sifectionate furcwell, and to wish them great - . A Maine buzz-eaw recently beat Zach Chand- | Andecaticr durknoss, gloom of nighty parse, ardeot, brutal. The jel-black bLair, Ler dusting bale b Jeweldecked; Gold to the value of £1,133, wnd silyer to that of | progpurity. e spuke ut some length, telling MR. BTEWARD'S MISTAKE, | ter's vest, It took elght fingers without wink- | Toshadow all mr wo. and peculiur Juw betray -thp mulatto descent, e eyes aro black s nlght, £106,223, wele awoog the wietals produced trom fiw ‘the fiog-peus and Lien-coops on the County O Hoehéstep Da . Y Unident 9% 1 0 ye rippling, murm'riag streams, ud, With 4 pair of Bushine wud expressive black (0 eycs, great, burning stars of nightn) the ores thus won. Farm had becn replaced by extensive sud clab- oaan ATl Yg= (ted Ezchange, Oate wilei o lttariay sunlielt gl Syes, Eive the whule head i CUActer whih ————— orate bufldings: bow the rookery on | Ve N-Btoward was choswn Aldepman tn Tarn- | 4y 00 poiots s gun at knosk him | Ipeey you ceaso yuur gentle siioion -Ehlluul rcpe&l. charia, Duriog the seance, 3. | * L}:‘fl,‘dm‘:’&‘lfl:mg"; ulte mesks 'T0 W. DE P, Eigbteenth ~street had been supplanted | I0ghamyUa., gnd after hiaclection uwuch-rz:d down, Jewillbe tes .w’:“'umm % oflguw;rmn})d m":'(""- retnieny, the Benate ¢ ¢ . 4 g . i ouut! i a Lremitie the Alffl[l)s;,!::l‘u‘e tu snd chatted for The Mo widely, then are velled . 23 a bospital by the group of buililings now Jo- | that ouce, ut"hisold howe fu Bibb Couuty, be f1nd out whether it is loaded or not. . ( 4 te P Ili l‘lldl!lllux whom geutle Paul, u day or two A0, 38 the " borrible™ Cremleus) by | suou k:.';' theuglivet man in Frunce. His noso ls—welly s bad eaten with a negro. We sre unacquainted X 4 barsting Sowers with Mr. Steward, but we Lisve not entlrely lost | _ Birect<ars aud wagons will yet bo artren by | 328 Hhlrand wieta i by bours. will | compressed air, just as Fourth-of-July orations { And caused me view tho worl ::,;::;2:‘ “:\.l:fl‘\'l: .mu::'m?u".::;‘:gmm, Aare uow drlvon.'—jst. Louls Giobe-Democrat.. That ue'er ooce Alicd with sad surprise, 1u vassiousts quiver on each chee! streets, aud how tbe Court-House had been be- Ehe le another's wife, e last yo un and was proceediog. He concluded by re- (O misery for my resiless Utet) e e e T ek 1t yoar fect? | Furniu thanks to the Buird for tha couriésy k: Or have tha years brought but s alm, durl wralth which jod alweys been shown bim, and ussured e ; With blue-velned tids, whose nnthmlha wu‘v‘“’: the months brought o you, O my cated ot the corucrof Wood and Harrison et : - Toray you cease Lo bloowm. quarter of anose. ilis face i3 seamed all ov, We part beueath the glow i . b 2 was d not clieve Mr. Steward | OM Unde Ned could nover bave become a | o ye Uitds, ne'ec sing agsini , e eivotie Hs. the s U cesin wd?fc{ OFIEN, sabgaed from chsndolier. ‘j,d -fl‘:fd ;:En:ln' mn‘i::%‘ fi‘b&&: 3:::;».. :lfizmuh"g u'-:,?‘ t; 'l‘:;:lh'i‘:nlfi:::? ':Inmr' g:ll:; ue;xx: heed :1“1;11: flt:: ':::; was guilty, that perbaps member of any colbred society, because, no wat- \‘3..: silvary uotes but m\h';n pllla s $1e wears constaut sty ut the corners of Lis | §19 Lfne away wuh drooping hosd; © uad 20d teader aze tho golden ylooms hold them Ju grateful rewewbrunce fu all his o : o a littlg | 1S st bls qualiuations, he Would always bo | Your eweetsst warblings winz vy moush,uud bis eyes Luvea luuk ul scttled vacuney Brvoris e deoparaialy il That oftitmcs skine sthwart my wewory: vk fonte © these wero clrensastances which might kp a little | hige pala, A causo th bitter tears {0 star about thet. Fortuuately for L, M, Cremieux | oo soer irorh Dramukle tears e P L LT e 46 Board then adjourned sine dic, and it js | W8 towara justifviog tne offenso. Tho peopls | 4y 4 gocia) guthering o fow days aluce, the | ¥Fom soul thera flled wish gloom. fluup 5@‘!::' :e( wit ;z:‘ :rllt::ul;‘l:;‘f :;a ufi\‘:fl‘ hl:;r ‘Iinu (3t crushes, to remember, s01) AR Of putalant mood 4B seorntul - to be boped that tha fust bus been seed of the | of Turslaghan naturally ,“‘:‘ Lol W‘“:‘:- l“'fl'" followiug toast was proposed and drank: % In | 0 Neturs. in woadroas glory, Luprepossessing exterlor: uud cvldsntly iy do- | - Cuicavo. Lous Srsssmen | Tscen qouth, of beaaty duricand rure, Ring. : . ever, that they went vight to work holdiug asceuding tie bill of prosperity may wo nsver- | Thou idsat nok my sad, sad ey, bfi' sl Im‘:’-’ g R u‘f\fifi: Whose heart la Itke & woman's Iu it power TUB CROWNING OUTRAGE Indignation meetings, Withiout ' stopping to | meeta » 770008 heatt now ‘,'fi?i“u'r::wfw‘da fold‘fil-‘fud\ll:fi feust ut Wbicb, Ly ko by, be Somie Duthes Saulirelss o e e s g ricotable true, of the old Board uiay bo sald ta L the auditing | 1oy inquiries. There was talk of lyuclog | You but your Snger fo water, Youpultit | dyhapee, iy joyi. 16 dcath low e, Lot us ¢ as the youngest. look nd deathicss loyaity, of thelr last quarter's per dlem. With few ex- An odd squirrel was exposed for sale, with | Of which vain waltiug la the -7 Hdower, ceptivng the bitle they rendered are far frow others seut Lo the B, Louls market, the odalty | 1ace 8 stretch of eniply, wavted yeuts | corrects especlally is this tue case in the mileass cuusiating Ju the fact that 1ho aulwal was jet | Tafogh thodim mitof these, my folllogtears; | 10 expenso scoounte, which sppear above,” Iu Llack bolow, whils of the color of the ordinary Bleok aea ball-sbow's from Junc's kies of blas, former quurters the ftew of Yexpeuso ™ hag Myr. Bteward, bui milder counscls pro- | Out ai for the hole. ‘This is very much | Aud [ but'pray, wilh quiv'sing eigh, It was felt that if Mr. Bteward had | like putting wooey lua Chicago suvivgs-bank. | Forlongand drcamless sleep=— . e with o nearo bo bad forfclied all cialus to | Huehstle dmerican. : ver b woker BA Wecp— k 'y public Teapest, s0d ki failure (0 votify tho peo- | A Lowell, Mast.. frm recently scat & 1ot of | Faicilo oas wilh baskdsepsin |, oy, M. Cremleux I'nu just luat un old colteague, and Fravee one of ber oldest aud wost fowtiar | bublic wicu, by the death of M. GLAIS-BEZOIN 1oz squirrel upon the back and the upper half B : o t ull hua o who were ex| d to vote for him for | Lills West for collection. The Lst caae back lost a8 the advancad e of 37, fLe was boru 1n th | of 146 tidcs and 13l Bir. Baic, thonaxtior, | SR Anbeukny wesry, world-worabeary = | beenrarely goco, whlls o this they Luyo sl bt | B30y Mitaa O the ohfeaso fn uction satieally | vith the rouuitc oot i e Mt caino back | Tl los—foreves otk o 2 gy asns Vvpartoseut of Cotes du Nosd, sid e sauny | wist, ao espericoced uaturalist, reloguized the | Nov. 2{ 1477, Fauxy Daiscorl, the orginal docwwent ghows, wed Ly | added to ths origioal Wsoow bave belug marked *dead.”” Throvmuntha after tha | Cuscaco, Nov. 87, 1877, . v

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