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4 Zhe Tibane. TERMS OF S8UBSCRIPTION. BY MATI—IN ADVANCN—POSTAGR PREPATD, nl"yl’.'fl(llol. nne yn:;. $ 1] X rar, Sndwy Wilon: * Liver Dronble Bhe ill\‘lrfll! F.dftion, t i+ Weekly, one ye 'afts0r A vEaT. peF WRERLY BDITION, POSTFAID. On¢ copy, per. A Bpectmon GivePort-Oftes address n fafl, fncluding Btate and County. Remittances tnaybe mada efther by draft, express, Fost-Office orden, or in fegistered tetters, at aur risk. ' TERNS TO CITY SUNSCRIBERS, Daily, deltvered, Bunday excepted, 25 cents per week. Dafly, Gelivered, Gunday included, 30 centa per week. Addren THE TRIBUNE COMPAKRTY, Corner Madison and Dearborn-sts., Chicago. 1ML, Orderafor the delivery nf Tie TRintxx at Evanstob, Englewood, and fyde Park leftin the counting-room, whiirecelve promot attention. . [ TRIBUNE BRANCH OFFICES, TwE CriicA00 TRINUNE ha establiahed branch ofleds for the recelpt of subscrivtions and advertlsements as foliows: NEW YONK—Room 20 Tribune Bullding, F.T. Mo- Fappex, Manager. PARIS, France—No, 16 Itus do Ia Grange-Datellere. B, Mannxw, Agent. -American Exchange, 449 Strand. flooley?’s Theatre. Randolnh street, between Clark Par Theatrs Company. **Burticanea and LaSalles " Hnverly’s Theatre. Monroe street, corner of Deatborn, Rice's Extrava: guaxa Comblaation. *‘Conrad the Corsalr, New Chicago Theatre, Glark nireet, oppostte tho Sherman Jlouse. Vartety Olto. MONDAY, MAY 27, 1878, In Now York on Saturday greonbacks waro ‘worth 99@994 on the dollar in gold and sil. ver coin, ——— A letter from a correspondent on {ho political outlook in Oblo, which wo print this morning, will be rend with intorest. "Tha completo possession by tho Domocrats of the Governmental machinery of the State has furnisbed the Republicans with n fund of campaign capital bigger and more cffoctive than they hnd darod to hopo for; and they alrendy count with confidence upon con. viucing the people of Ohio that tho present samplo of Democratic * Reform™ i3 o dose not to be repeated fo 0 years to como. ——— A Boston dispatch . announces the rotire- tirement of Mr. Ronear Hannts from the Presidoney ' of the Clicago, Burlington & Quincy Railrond Company on acconnt of im- paired honlth, His rosignation was nocopted ot a meeting of tho Direotors held Satnrday, and Mr. Fonoes was electod to 4l the vacan. cy. Mr. Hannis hns beon for many yenrs intimntely identified with tho causes which bave led to the prosperity of tho roady and which have made tho O., B. & Q. world- famous for its admirable managemont, and it {s no reflaction upon tho ability of his suc- cessor to say that his withdrawal from the Presidency is & sorions loss to the Compnny, Tho recent acquittal of Vena SassuLrren, tho woman who attompted tho assassination of Tnzrorr, the Olief of Polics, Las con- vinced tho Russlan Governmont of tho weak- ness of the jury system in cascs of that character, Tho woman was unquestionably guilty of firing the shot which wounded TrerorF; the fnot, the - intont, nud tho ihotive woro abundantly “shown— and yo tho jury, sympathizing with tho prisoner, and doublless rogrotting thnt her aim had not been fatal, brought in n vordict of scquittal. Horoaftor this olass of Leroines in Ruasia will bavo to deal witha Judge who holda office at tho pleasure of the Gov. eromont, aud who Las no sympathy with poopla who nvonge political griovances by tho pistol or knite, Beyond a doubt the Demooratlo soven of Forren's Beleot Committes would decide to conduct their one-sided hunt for frand with _closed doors, if such n courso wers not morally cortain to disgust even tho fow re. maining people who consoientiously anticl. pote that some good may come of the in. vestigation. To conduct tho affalr in sccret would bo to publish to the world n plain declaration that fairness was not intended. Moroover, escrot sessions of the Commitieo or of its Bub-Committees aro an impoasibllity, No Republican momber—- leaving BuTizs out of the question—would hold himself bound by any such docision of tho majority, and the Uruth would Lo gleaned thoroughly evory day by the enter- priving news-gatherers of the prevs. Tho Committeo will bo compelled to hold publie sossions. e T—— By roferonco to our army nows from the Departent of Dakota, it will bo scon (bt Gan. Tensy has ordered six companios of the Third Infoutry from Helona and Cgmp Baker, Montana, under command of Lient.. Col. Jonx 1, Brooxs, to the orossing of tho Marins Rtiver, north of Fort Benton; also the catablishmont of a eummer camp ot Boar Butte, in the Dlack Hills, near Orook and Deadwood Oities. Theso military oamps, withs the oua to bo estalilished by Col. Brap- iy, of the Ninth Infantry, to cousist of nino mles of cavalry and infantry, together scouting forca composed of the fa- e Seventh Oavalry, which will operata in the stumplug-ground of tho hostiles mome. whoro along the Missonrl and Yellowstone River, and the fo-c- of ecavalry under Col. Mz to be s nb from Fort McKin- noy, Wyoming, wevent any sorious dis. turbances Laking 1t this summer among the Indians, Tax Tutnune of yesterday contalned an sp- peal for a department in tho Cook County Hospital for 1y; - vomen, and thoge af- flicted with d:. ‘uliar to women, Wo aro informed 3 are now dovoted to this purposo pore. . .wo wards,—a modical aud surglcal one,—znd that a fow patients of the classes named are regularly cared for in the iustitution. But there fs mo ward set apart for this purpose. exclu- slvely. It is, and has loog been, the opiuion of the physiclans in charge that such o department ghould exist separately from other parla of the Hospital, and they have becn for saveral months past considering & plan whereby, with a small additional expense, such a ward could be opened in an unoccupied portion of the Hospital buildiog. Had it not been for the iconoclastio sgitation of certuin of the County Commissioners who are at- tempting to turn the parcly medical man. agewent of the Hospital into a political wmachine, instead of leaving it where it be- longs, in professional hands, this plan for a much-needed reform 1n the interest of up. fortunate and sick wowen would have been presented for the cousiderstion of the suthorities cro thia. We aro positively as. sured that thero {5 an sbundance of room, T'1IE CHICAGO. TRIBUNE: MONDAY, BMAY 27, 1878, . now net oceupled in tho Mospital, for A ward of more than fifty beds for Iying-in women. 8neh o ward, did it oxist, wonld bo con- stantly full of unforinnate women twhom now the county, to ita discredit, allows to suffer almost shelterless, ——— Thirteon working days remain up to June 10, the day nnmed for final adjonrnment by tho Scnata resolution,—thirleen daysinwhich must be done work which, nt tha rate work hasbeoh done so far daring the session, would consure At lenst eix months, The House has not yot concurred in the adjonrnment resolu- tion, bat it is understvod that an effort will be mado on Wednesday of this weok Uy the Democralle caucns to pnss tho resolution. ‘Whatever the decision mny be, it may put down as soitled ' that the Honse Demoersts will be ready to fdjourn before many vitally important mens- ures shall havo received attontion. With them the mamn purposs of the scasion will have beon accomplished whon their Revolu. tionary Committos is in full running order, with Snb-Commiltecs sppointed to go in search of fraud.evidence, and tho main Com- mittee authorized to carry on the work and publish its report aflor the session of the Houso onds. An entive wock was lost dar. ing tho pondency of the Porren resolution; anothor week has beon wasted 80 far ns nooded logislation is concernud; and, with the ono nbsorbing iden of unseating Haves and installing Tizoen possossing the brain of tho Houeo majority, it is boyond hoping for that the poople's businosa will ba attend. ed to, The Chiengo Z'imes prints a cook-nnd-bull story in ita Washington dispatches about an alleged intorview between Becretary Spen aaNand oue ANDERRsON, cratwhile of Feli- cinnn Parish, Louisians, and said to bo one of the principal witnessos for tho Demoornts bofore tho Porrern Committes, This man ANDERsoN was a Supoervisor of Election in East Felicinua, and one of thoso who niade tho protost necessnry to bring frauds beforo tho Returning Board. Hoe is now expected Ly tho Domocrats, wo beliove, to swear that he then sworo to a lio, or something of that kind, and also to give ovidence ns to the nuthenticity of that dreadfal and wmystorious lotter which the Democrats sny Secretary SazaMan wroto to Wenper, the other Felici- ann Suporvisor, and on which it is hoped to convioct Suremax of high crimes aud mede. moanors. The Timesstory is to the cifect that Bacretary 8nensman sent for this man AxpERsoN |- thiat the lattor went to tho Sec. rotary's office; that the Becretary began to question Liim; thet Axprasox soon discove cred & short-hand roporter who wna taking down’ what he said; and theroupon he de. vounced Bucnyax aa having betrayod him into u trap, at tho same time brandishing a cuno {u a mnonor to completoly torrify tho Beoretary, who sank back Iuto o chair! And all this swash is tolegraphed from Washington to the oxtent of a column with tho purpose of injuring Seere- tary Sueman, Tho fact is that Beoretary SBuenaan, liko the Prosident and other mon of grent nffairs,.always has o short-hand re- porter in his office. It was very proper to take down Awoeasox’s talk. Anpensoy nced not havo gone to the Seoretary’s oflice if he had not scon fit to do so, and, having gone thoro, bo ought not to have said anything which he would ba nshamed to have repro- duced, or which would be in conflict wvith the testimony he proposes to give before the Committeo, It thore is any trath a% all in ‘the'story'told by tho’ -Times, it s probably that Axpenson went to Becrotary Smensax's offico with the hopo that he waa to bo bought off with na offico or mouoy, and, finding that thero was no uch intention, ho got mad, turned bulldozer, swuug his cane about, and was ordered out. S———— THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIO COMMITTER, It iy the practics of political parties to ap- point a National Executive Comnmittes, con- sisting of ona mombor from cach State, to which Is confided tho intorosts of tho party. It is natural to selact for sorvico on this Committeo the loading nnd ablest reprosentn- tives of party soutimont. As an instance, wo may mention that WiLnun ¥, Bronet waa for somo yeors a membar of the Democratic Na- ' tionnl Committee from thls State; aftor- wards, Mr, Ovnus I, McComuck, and now Mr. W. C. Gouny, “Thero is no question, then, but that such a Nationa! Commiltes ropresonts tho sentiment of the party at largo os fairly ns any similar body of wen conld. The Demosratio National Committes mot in Washington last week. Of conrse the Porren investigation was the most con. splcuoua topio suggested for cousiderntion, fome of the older and shrewder poli. ticlaus on the Committea endoavored to ovado tho responsibility by con. tending that it woa not within the proviuce of the Committes to cxpress their opluions about general pnrtj‘ Issues, but this protoxt was altogether too thin, and the pro. pouderanca of seutiment was such as to de- feat ony such subterfnge. Then a fow of the more conservative or mora sonsible nem. bers, like Seuator MoDonawp, of Tudiuna, and would-bo Benator Goupr, of llinols, strongly urged the adoption of a resolution deolaring that it is not the Democratio pur- Poso Lo juterfere with the Preaidontial title, But thoro proved to Lo only six or seven mombers in favor of this assnranco out of tho entire thirty-sight coustituting the Com. mittes, Too bulldozers and revolutionists bad an overwholing wajority, ‘I'hoy wora led by Joun G. Tuoxrsox, of Ohlo, who de- clared that tho **Detnocrats can afford to be called revolutionists and Grensers, for the re. sults of the investigation will prove the wisdom of ordering 1t.” Another prowtuont niomberisroported assaying : “ This country is full of peopls who want Hayes put out, and we must not do anything to pre. ventit." Boa formal resolution was adopt- od by tho National Democratio Committes spproving the Porrza Mezicanizing move- ment, and in nowiso disclaiming the ulti. mato Greasor alm of tho scheme, 1In fast, Tuoxrsox, the londing revolationlst, and others probably in sympathy with him, wero appointed a Bpecial Comtmittcs to co-operate with the Corigressional Cowmmittee in regard to the fall elections. It is notablo that while some individual Democrats in Cangress, like Hannison of Illinols, Breemens of Georgis, and Mirrs of ‘Cexns, have been making violent efforts to convipce the people that Ziey are opposed to a revolutionary ovorthrow of the Haves Goverument, thers has uot been a siogle ofticial indication that this is not the alm of the party ovement. Every opporlunity to make a party deafal of the charge of revolu. ton has been refected. The Republicans in Congross ot the very first offered to vote for the Porres rosolution it the Domocrate would avow jmpeachment to be their du. sign, because impeachmont would be & con. stitutional procedurs; but tho 'Democrats unitedly refusod to make such an adwisaion, because thoy do not provoas to vrocsed in a f 1 l lawfal way that would lond to n ddefeat of their conspiracy. Mr. Mivnts, in tho Dsmo- cratio ocancus, offered n resolation declaring that there was no intontfon to disturb Haresin the occupancy of his office, but this resolution roceivod only 50 voles out of about 160, Me, Steruens, of Georgin, in the open Iouse, sndonvored to gob in a resoln. tion equivalent to tho samo thing by ene larging the scope of the investigation, bt he ‘was hooted and hissod down by hisown party, Finally, the Democratio National Committee, ropresenting the Domocratio politicians of tho country, rejected, by an overwholming majority, the same proposition to forawoar o rovolutionary purpeso, but spproved the Porren schieme as it stands. ' In the face of these facts, wo contend that individnal dls. claimers are of no foroe or meaning, and that it is ovidently the aim and intention of tho Democrats to resort to unlawful and rovolutionary action to got rid of Ilares, if they can suoceed in socuring a majority in both Houses of the noxt Congress, omphaflo manbor that tho regnlar srmy shonld bo so malntained and disposed in fu- tnra as to act in co-operation with the mili- tin, whenever its sorvices wero called for by the State aathoritios. Mr. Aoz Hewirr's Army Disorganization bill is only a eunning transeript of Baxnixo’s bill, making protenso of yiolding to the pop- ular demand by ohanging some dotails, but substantially arriving at the same result by another ronte, Baxntna would have it ent down, and Hewrrr, had not his bill met with a sudden check, would have starved it out. Hewrtr's proposition was to reduco the cavalry regimonts from 10 to 6, and the in. faptry from 23 to 15, leaving the artillory at 3, which wonld bave mnde the total rednc~ tion from 40 to 20, instond of 25 as intended by Banniya, Bannrsa proposed to cutdown the pay directly, while Hewrtr would reach the same result by reducing the allowances, Baxxtxa's iden was to break up the army by oxpelling a large number of its officors, while HwITT nired to starve them ont and then break up the regimonts on tho plon that thero wera not officors enough to serve them. DBoth these demagoguos mado their nssault upon the army, and wore suppbrted by thoir party, with the jutention not only to woaken, but td vilify and degrado it. Tae plea of economy and retrenchmont made by the Democratic domagogues in do- fenso of their effort to emasculate and dis- organizo tho nrmy ia o specions and shallow that it will not engnge the merious attention of any one. - It is too flimsy an oxcuse oven ‘for Domocrata to accopt. Thero are other and more weighty reasous that nacconnt for - this infamous assault -upon our little army. ‘Tho first of thoso is the natural Demooratio hatrod of the blns coats, engondered of thair ‘succoss fo tho War of tho Rebellion, and particularly of the officors farnislied by the Military " Academny’ whoso ecxperience and FPAILURE OF THE WOMEN'S8 HOTEL. The now Women's Hotel in Now York, bnilt out of the bonnty of the late A. 7. STeWART, is announced nsa failure almost before it is in full operation, aud our Now York correspondent clsewhero gives some very interesting details anticipating the failure, which is now annouuced by tole- graph. It was obvions at the very outsot that the hotel could nover succeed upon tho conditious imposed npon its boarders. Thoy made it impossible for any woman to pay the oxpenso in the first place, and, in the second, thoy imposed restrictions that no woman of independenco would endure, Under theso restrictions, the Women's Hotol becamo substantislly n woman's prison, and every applicant was subjectod to o system of esplonago by detectivos, and to a series of questions aud investigatlons concorninghor | prowoss led the Northern armies to oge, past lifo, and character that amounted | vietory. Sccond, thoy hnve partisan to positive insult. No woman having gelf- | ronsons for weakening the army, By ruspoct or dignity of charactor would submit toit. Again, the exponse of the Lotel was an nbsolute obutaclo to its success, Instead of ‘having’ the price of. rooms graded from 'the upper floor to the entresol, 50 na to give them a choice of apartments, from ono to throe or four dollars per weck, according to location, and of farnishing menls « ks carte, ‘80 thnt overy woman could subsist herself according to ;hor purse, the expense was so groat that the class of gnesta for whom it ‘was intendod counld not go there. : They placing . tho Goveroment in a defenso- less condition and proventing it from rondoring asaistance when called upon, as it aid last summer, the businoss of this country will bo plnced at the moroy of the Communo, which will dictats its own rains ousterms and enforce them upon tho alterna- ‘tive ‘of the destruction of property, these \demagogues receiving. their reward.in the votes of the rabble, Third, they look still furthor than this, Becuring their placos by pandering to the Commune, they mienn could obtain cheaper, botter, mora comforta- | ravolution. To carry “out this pro- ble, and moro homelike accommodations iu | grammo, the srmy must not stand the ordinary boarding-houses of the .city. |'in 1he woy, Tho process of oust. Another radical mistaka woa made -in the rulo that forbade thom to have sewing-mn- .chines In thelr rooms. This was a clenr in. vasion of personal right, Nearly all women who sow for a living have their own ma- chines, and prefor to sew in theirown rooms rather than fn publio alops, and, as'theso rooms were intended for their homos, it was tho place for their machines, Our corre- spondent's Iotter shows that the Hotel has' not been condnoted in accordauce with Mr, Stewant's original plan in any par- ticular, Ho intonded the house as a com- fortable and convenlont home for women; instead of that, it hoa beon fitted up in such & sumpiuous mannor a8 {o drive womon awny from it. Ho did not intend it should be conducted for profit, and, bad ho lived, ‘would probably have been contented if the rovenus from it had pald exponses and taxes nud loft sufficlont surplus to make good the | the business of the country, to block up every natural woar and tear, Tiad his fofs | nyonue of its commercial prospority; and to been carried out,’ the’ d Haye | plungd the wholg caunitry into anarchy and been crowded, and women would 6von havo | chaos. Do tho businoss mon of the Unitod paid a premium to obtain rooms, As it is, | Btatos renlizo the dangors that are ahoad of there aro fifteen inmates loft, no furthor | them? Do the rober and intelligent men of applications, and the establishment is losing | oll partles see the clouds that will break in o thousand dollars o day. It is & dead | storm next fall it those furious and desperata failura in jts vory incoption, Itis intimated domagogues are not throttled and command- that the administrators of tho cstate have ol to stop in their mnd carcer? purposoly changed Mr. Stewanr’s plans with the intention of . diverting tho Hotel from the original purposo, and then transforming {t into a publio botel. Wheother such wero tholr intentions or not, they have followed a course which has led direct. ly to that result, aod the Women's Hotal, which wus recontly inauguratod with such a display of fuss aud foathers, is no longer a Lotel for women. Br. Brewant's plans have been willtully disregardod, nnd Lis chare itable schomo Las beon promaturely dissl. puted, ! ing Mr. Havrs and soating - Trupew must bo mecured beforehand from any possibility of jnterruption. Having mado sure of their own places and revolutionized the Govern- _ment, thon the last desporats move in thoir game will follow. nnd they will have com. pleted thoir programmo by ousting 700 army officors who have boon true to thoir Govera. mont and flag, and fought for it, and re. placing them with an oqual numberof the +¢concilintod " Rebel officers who havo been falso to tho Government and fought ngainst it Then, and not until then, will it bo in 1order to incroaso tho army, Bo long ns the army ‘Is officored by those who fought for tha Union, it must be reduced to get rd of those , officers ! "It must not bo incroased until they havo made room for tho Southern Drigadieral To nccomplish this, these dom. ngoguos are willing and roady to prostrate BOPHISTRIES OF THE NEW YORK 0UETOMS The customs officials in this city cxpress a dostre to makea test caee of these matters, and thoy clatm ihat they will be able to show that the complainte wnda have uo foundation othor than the inability of merchants with small capltal to compete in oheai sales of the same goods with tho latge New Yorl merchants who command millions of capital, Thoy the merchanta of othor citics New York ofticials. Thoy s the duty and intercst of the im+ rters of New York cheorfully to furnish the Come Iselon with all Information, to show that thelr transactiond bavo been legitimate, and that they have been nble, with thelr largs pital, 1o 1mport 2ltka, gloves, and othor articlos mentioned 10 the tomplaints, more cheaply than Philadulphia, b ton, and Calcago merchants, with smuller the are able to do,—New York Tridune, The customs offlefals of Now York City lobor under o fatal dolusion if they bollove thoy can ostablish tho above propositions. Tho ‘‘complainta” against the OCustom- Houso mansgoment of New York ara not mado by morchauts of * swall capital,” The importers of Chicago, 8t. Louis, and Cincin. nati, who mnake theso complaints, command “millions of eapital” equally with thoir compotitors in New York {n the same branchod of trade. Thoro are no strongor houses, financially, in Now York Qity than the following 1in the Wostorn cities nomed: Fizwo, Luten & Co,, Jonw V. Fanwewn, & Co., D. B, Fux & Co., Kerrnr Dros,,.and IL A, Koax & Brothor, in Ohica~ ga; Doop, Bnown & Co., B. O, Davis & Co., in 8t Louls; and Bagrato & Co,, in Cincin. vatl. Those houses aro engsgod in a single branch of trade—dry goods and kindred articles. Thoy aro only & fow of the most prowinent houses and of a largs number that might be nomed as amply able, in every particulur, to competa with any housea that can be ummed in New York Oity, Othor branches of trade are equally well repre- sonted in the throo Wastern cities namod. And what is tras of theso oltles is trus of Boston, Philadelphla, and Baltimoro. In support of this assartion in regand to the merchnnts of Cliicago, weo clte tho fact that they have drawn from (ho therchauts of Now York Uity a largo share of the general jobbing trads of the country which’ was formiorly concentrated thore. ————— THE BOARD OF TRADE WANT THE ARMY STRENGTHENED, Tho Chiongo Board of ‘I'rado, at a meot- ing Inst week, passed a lresolution me. miorializing Congress to provide by law for tho incronss nnd walntonsnce of tho army, and suggested 100 rogiments of 1,000 men each, * to tho end that all parts of our conn- try may foel that it has somothung like ade- quate protection against the omorgonay like. ly to arlse of comptications from without or of demonstrations of violonce within our own country,” This resolution ropresentad the sentiments of tho busiuess men of Chi. cago, and was inspired, not by any vague prosentimenta of futuro danger, but by the actual experiencos of lnst summor, when tholr property was In dauger aud the com. merce of the wholo country was paralyzed by an incendiary and blood-thirsty mob of Communlsts and othor soclal disorganizers. 1t ropresents tho viow of Lusiness mon and of law-abiding citizens ovorywhers, who wonld fuol safer with the protection of tha Natfonal Govornment in assistauco of the State Gov- ornmenta thao under the State militia alone, Undoubtedly the number of men called for by tho Board is unnccossarily large, but it would bo better and spfer to incur the ex- ponse of nn increase {o 100,000 than to ex.' poso tho businces interests und proporly of the country to tho dangers that would be suro to follow it tho army, already too small by half, wore reduced from a skoloton to a shadow, ay the demagogues in Congress now propose, ‘Tho strougth of the army should bo fized at about 50,000, and this numbor could roadily serve na an active nationa! po- lice, always at tho call of the Stato Govern. ments, 1low fnvalusblo and judispensable that service may Lo, the oxperiencos of last products. Tu evary easo whero tho imer. chauty of Clicago have baen permitted to runch the manufacturor without the inter- h vention of tho ‘custows *officors of summer cloquently testify. ‘Lo Ualtimoro | New York they bave demonstrated American, in n recent orticle dufouding the | (heir ability mnot ‘only to * competa army, says: with but. “to beat " tlie” merchonts of 11 Mr. Aus Hzwitr bad been a4 Camden Statlon towards midnight on ‘the 20th of July, hsd had somu Individual cxperivace of the suzlaty tuas provalled whilo thobsauds of rlotura crowded toe adjacent strects, Whils 8 portion of the dopos was burulug, aud tlere was Lniversal aread of what might uext oceur—it ho bad ewvn aud known ail thiv, be mlghtbe coupetant to spesk of the relfef thut wad felt when a section of illcey urrived from Fore Mcilearyand & couplo of baudred of segulsre came over from Washiugton. 1t was not that the pollce wnd the wilitia were not compotent 10 handla tae mob, —fug thelr gailans bubavior was concluslve enmxan ou that polut, ~but atill there was s great sdditlonal assurance derived frow the presence of the Government forces that wad vesy cowforilog. » Every great city in the North that was ex- posed to tha savage mercies of the mob fu. cited by the Communists last July will bear tho same testimony, and If thsir volce could bo heard oa tho floor of Congrous in reply to theso pandorers to the Commune for partisan vurposes, thoy would demaod in the most tho metropolia of the East. -Formerly neatly all Awerican mauufacturers found it to thoeir interest to place thoir goods on the New York markst almost exclusively, But what- ovar portiou of thelr goods is now consumed iu the West finds jta primary market in Chteago, St. Lows, and Clncinuatl. What we maan to convey is that Western merchants haveample meaus ta buy insuchlarge quanti- tics that no middle-mas is pormitted to come botween them and the manafacturer. The importers of the West would be equslly abls to buy ascheaply of forsign manafaoctarors, if they woro permittad todo so. But through the abllity of such manufacturers to lay down their goods §a New York at an under. valuation, thus cheating the Goverument cut of a portion of its revenms. Weatera Thisistruo of tho trade ju all American - s morchants are prohibitod from entoring the foreign markets, Tho Now York Tritune asseris {hat tho Now York customs officinls 8ny that ** the charges of merchanta of other cities do not alloga fraud Ly New York offl- ofals.” This is just what they do alloge and whnt they aro proving. The notorious swindling practioed .in New York could not possibly go on, year after yoar, and tho Custom-TTouse offfeinls romnin wholly in tho dark. A Washington dispateh saya: Tho Commisalon Is naanimous in Its opinfon that the charges mads amalnst the New York Cnstom- House by Chieazo merchants and Collector 8siirn are entirely sabstantisted. [Indoeil, the Commis- Alon early In lons at New York wns over- wholmed by armis of tha very Ring towards witich the testimony taken doth in the Kastarn and Weatern cities tends. The evidenca 18 conclusjve that the fmportations of ailke and kid gloves {s comnletely {n thie handwof & awall iroporting Ring. The meniberd of that Rivg aro eimuly conslgnees, ’rhs! have scarcely any capital, and are mere agenta of Earopean misnafacturers, It is thtongh thesa consigntnanta to members of this Ring that the fm. menno nAystem of undervalustion Is possible, Very great frauds nre discovercd in sugar. Fernaxpo Woon, whuse attention wan called 10 tlic discoveries of the Conulssion, expressed the behief that the fraude In_linportations in sugar 1o New York amount to $3,000,000 snuuslly, The ktout fraul In thess wugar fmporiations e in tho rampling department, The samplers are, for the most part, comniton laborers on amall wages. Tho sampling & done on the dock. oftentimes when the ramplers aro ontirely unobscrvod. 'I'he duty 18 ase ressed by the color standard. Bugar when placed 1 hugslieads In the countey of exportation leaches sothat the boitom layers ara very black below, whatis kunownns the yrade of No.7, while the aiigar in the top af the hogshead 1n of a dno quality Of‘lll‘flfln augar of the gindo of No. 11. The requ- 1ationa require that threo samples shall be taken {rom exch hugshead, —one from the top, one from tho bottom. “and aone from the middle. These three sumpies, taken in equal quantities from cachh part of the hogeheads snd mixed toguthor, furnish ihe standard of color by which tho anty 18 paid. The Commissioners have diecovercd that these samplors corruptly take most of thelr sample sugar from the lowest layer, which renders tho carzo subject to the lowest rate of aaty. These mumplars very ensy can make tho value of tha cargo cost the tmporter a cent a poand fens, and nave hitm $1% 000 on the cargo, 0 n- ducements tu bribory are very gront, and the Com- misslun 1 underatood to have Important evidence showiog that frauds of this Kind ere practiced, Hecretaty SuxiwaN I8 dotermined to get 1o tho bottom of this buslaess, but, even if the Commis. #lon was to stop now, the orizinal charges pre- ferred by Culiecior WinLiax i{exnr Swirit will have becn fully sabstantiated. The Commission denles that the investigation 1u of a sectional char. . arter, A4 has been charged by some ‘of the Now York Ii ‘Tho complainta made by tho Chicago importers aro not greater than those by the im- porters of Philadelpaia and Boston, . How is all this to be explained on the grounds of Cnstom-Houso innoconco? It thosa officials aro innocent of all knowledge of what {s going on nuder their noscs, it is timo they stopped .down and out. Tho servico of fools is ns mischievous to the Goverument as that of knaves, ! 8 » | e— . BEN BUTLER'S DEMAGOGUE SPEECH. It is bard for ordinary mortals to fully understand Gon, Brxsasin T. Burren, He is such a Jnuus-faced or many.sided * states. man "—turning moro &ldes to the gazo of ‘the world in a short timo than an industrious fellow can shoke o stick at—that poople begin to think thoy undorstand him, whon, prosto! thero is a change, sud: Besgaruy is found to ba sorenely lying under the very thimble that evory one was rondy to swear did not cover him. Somotimes' he is very, consistent, and ot othora he fs correspond- ingly absurd., Now ho is & model of loyalty nud the quintessonce of patriotism,—ns wit ness his hanging & man' in Now Orloans for pulling down tho .Union flag, and ns witness his applieation of - the word ‘contrabsud " to it tho troublosome constitutional cage of tho negro, at a timo when the Robollion wns *‘a whita man's war." Or witnoss the giroitness with whioh ho smotherad the Democratio majority in the Houso with the, sower.gas” stonch of disloy- alty when ho forcod thom to choose botween the Confederato Frzrp and tho loyal Smirros for Doorkeoper, IIis sixty-odd timos he voted for Jerr Davia os a Democratio candi- date for the Prasidency ot the Oharleston Convention in 1800, as ngainst Brxeuey A, Douaras, will never be forgotton, nor his powder-ship fiasco at Fort Fisher. His coat- tail s visibla whenever o door is opened upona job in Congress, and his complicity with ‘tho Massachusotta ring of cor- rapt officlals, . under Granr's ' Adminis- trotion, was so strongly suspected, if not absolutely known in his own Btate, that he was dofeated in the race for Congress, and loft at home for & while, that he might reflact and reform. OQut of thia curions compound of secming Incongruitics and ‘absardities somo quacr things are occasionally, evolved. A stondy-going, consistont person would say that a man 0 patriotio that ho would hanga follow for pulling down the American-flag would noever be found making a speech in Cgngross in pallintion of the acts of a mob thnt not only trampled the. country’s flag under their feot, but defled the authority. of soldlers woaring the uuiform of the Govern. mont, and by that overt act showed their contempt of law and ordor to tha fullest ox- teut that was possible, Nay, more. The man that Bureern hung had only construot. Ivoly Insulted tho mojesty aud sovercigaty of the Nutional Goverument, but the mob at Pittsburg added toashnilar insult tho several and distinet crimos of murder, areon, and {ncendiarisnt, And yet Bxnsawmix F, Borren stood up in his placo in tho Houso tho other day aud sald this: Evenlo the Federal Courts thies tection for the laboring ma Th ers tughit Lo slaogtcred, ‘os th been 1uone portiou of the couatr, d the Luuriy could nat vunish the criminule, aud It was uucon- stitutional Lo use tho army for thal purposs; but les o fow laborers Impode fyr ou huar Ew hole weoks] the course of comnlurce, or destruy or threaten the property of commorclal corporatione Snnd citizons}, nnd'the Treasary opencd wide its uors, swinging un wolden biuges, and tho whole W08 RO pro- awof lavor- recently military power of tho uxtion was called . forth to B:Kfy duwa oty arrot criwlnaly, uud protect pro?. ‘What tho conntry wonld like to know is, whethor Gou, Burien considers it wroug for tho military power of the nation to bo used to ‘‘put’ down rlot, mrrest criminals, and protoct property.” Of conrse suoch a quus. tion presupposes that the miljjury fa evoked by thie proper legal authorities, ws was the case whon Provident Hayrs was called upou last smummer for aid in suppressing riots by the Governors of Marylaud, West Virgints, and Ponnsylvania. Is it = coustitutional function of ' tho Government, Mr. Burres, to aid in suppreusing domestio violeucy and in putting down insurrection ? The language of the Constitntlon ia'clear and oxplicit upon this poiut, aud indicates when and how the -Governor of o Siato mey call for ald in maintaining order, in case the trouble beyoud the power of the local anthorities to overcoma, Not only so, but Gen, Burren was ouo of. thoso Demoorats who, duriog tho Iate Rebellion, argued that thera were certain war powers of the Gove ernment inherent in its life, and 'outslde of the printed lines .of the Constitution,~that is, a nation has a right to live in accordanco with its organio act, i possible; but if not, then in doflanca of it, And when we. graat tho promiss of those blatant Demooratio blatherskites ia Congress who spoke upon the Army Appropriation bill the other day, that it was the duty of each Btats to- pué down {ts own miobs, if it cin, let us wot reviva the .old exploded doc. trine of - States' Rights to the extent of declaring ,that the Federal Governmsnt is estopped by the Counstitution from respond. isg to the Macedonian cry, ** Combp over and help us,” thet ia lisble to come from. any Btate at any time, Mr. Burixs may pos- sibly romember the troublo Prosident Lix- corn had with the Btato of Kentucky whon hor goll was held to ba too sacred for the Union goldiors to cross over upon for the purpogo of patting down an insurrection that oxlsted fn the Sonth. Lot us not bo gulty of o similar {nconslstency, and ques- tion the right of the Prosidont of the United Statos to send all tho force at his command into any. Btate whoss Excoutiva calls for help 1n thie manner wnd under the conditions pre- scribad by law. An arméd mob in Pittsburg, killing thoe nniformed soldiers of the Com- monwenlth gont thither to keep the pesce and maintain order, aro guilty of the same crime, atnd deserve the same punishment, that the mob under Bravnzoanp did fn 1861 when thoy fired upon Fort Bumlor. And no Congressman of olther party, and no publio journnl ‘that regards the peace and safely of tho community, will hesitate to Loldly proclaim this wholesoms doctnine, Thoro is aunounced for to-day’s mooting of the OCounty Commissioners a resolution looking to the overturning of the medical manngemont of the County Hospital, It fs to bo hoped that no snch resolution will ba adopted. Buch n step would be ill-advised and hasty, The professional work of the Hospital i end has always been in the hands of astall of physicians who serve without compensation. Thia staff includes some of tho fnost modical talont fn the Northwest. It is composed of nino men who are Profes- sors in modlonl colleges (Rush, the Chicago, and the Woman's), aad of six men who have no colloga conncotion. The nuthority of theso moen In tho institution consists solely In presoribing for patients and meking surgical oporations and dressings. "The chargo of tho houso in all other par- ticulars is lodged with tho Warden and other non-professional officers. T'hero is no claim that the work of tho staff has not nlways beon wall and faithfully porformed. Indeed, ‘the names among the corps of such men ns Dra, Byrono, Dras, Jonweon, Guxy, Ly- ‘MAN, Roas, Bevaw, and Boove, would be a suficlont auswer to such olaim, wors it to bo made. ‘Thore is every reason to think that, with this work under the' control of the modical profession as heretofore, the care .and treatmont of tho sick will bo bost ac. complished, and tho cause of sciénco most fully subserved. -There s absolutely no reason to hiope that any change from “tho |, progent cxcollent order of things would be. beneficial, espocinlly tho chiange proposed, which would make tho positions of physi- clan and surgeon a matter of political pre- formont instend of o professional honor and roward, The oxperience with the County Insane Asylumshould be a warning. : To the Editor of The Tribuna Moust Oannort, 11, May & mo, and others interestod, an| a4 to the following guestion: niiliions of United ttates bonds hava beon retdrn- el _from Europo slnco Dec, 1, 1877! llow many milllons wero returncd n Aptll, 1878? Wero the 1aat 850, 000, 600 of 41§ per centa, which the Hecru- tary ‘of the Treasury lately nogotiated with tho Syndicate, 20l In this country or Europe? It is clatmed by those upposed to the remonetization of sllver that, in consequenca uf that act, many mill- fons of bouds have come back from foreign coun- tries. 1t 16 also ¢laimed that none of the 350,000, « 090 Jately taken by the Syndicate havo baen sold in Europs. An carly anawer 10 tho above will obliga yours traly, 2 i, There ts no officlal record kept of the tonds sent to Europe for salo there, or sent from thero to this vountry for eate. The bankers and brokers of New York can give a rouzh estl- mate. Tho balance of trade bas been runniug 80 heavily in favor of the United Btates during. the last twolvo months that largo quantities of houds' have been remitted hither to pay trade- ow many balutices. Thoe great bauks of Europo—such as, those of London, Parls, Berlin, and Frankfort— export bonds to Now York to sull, rather than part with thole gold. It would be entirely within bounds to say that $75.000,000 of Unlted States bouds bave boen roturned to thia country sluce Decomber lnst, to pay balances- of trade In ° our favor, The smountof bonds returned fo A pril were from $12,000,000 to $15,000,000, as the re- ault of the maliclous liss and willful mlsrepre- scntationsof the Easternpapers in recard to passed awny, os tho European holders of American bonds soon discovercd that they had boen Imposed upon by the New York and Boston newspaperaj and they ara now buylog ‘back at higher prices thoe bonds they sold !o o panic, - A cable-dispateh, from London, May 4, says: Y, i . Ameriean Govarnment sccuritica may now be considered s completely recorered from the falls which (ollowed the pavsage of the Hilver bill, Ttailroad {ssties are. also for the et part firmer, @s the rovonue lements publivhed Indicate a general improvemiont, = As to the $50,000,000 of 43¢ per cents bought by the Syndicate, the origina! expectation was, that “ono-third of thom would be taken fn Europe and two-thirds in Awerica; but the European demaud for them 1s 80 great that' it will bo dlflcult to keop hall of them in this country, ‘The English and Germans nro large purchasers'of these 43¢ bonds, They are not remitting much gold for their pagment, but are stadlug over their 5-20 bonds, and aclling them {u New York, and, with the procceds, paying for the new bonds sold by tho Syndieate. Tho 5208 ‘nre ilable to Le soou calicd in by the Government, under its option; and the foreign holdurs, 4o apprehcusion of thls, are cxchang- lug them for the new 43¢ per cents {n the mudo stated,” Somo of the foreizn purchasers, Low- ever, aro mado fur cash, aud the mouoy is re- miited to the Treasury. As the English-Russin war-clond passes away, the demand for American’ bouds for fue vestinent will fucrease; but the areat balanve of trude’lu our fuvur furces thu European bunkers to soll them rathor Shan sbip vast smounts of gold. Wero it not for this, they would keep all they huve, and getall they could, e — - The Vicksburg (Misa,) /erald says: * 7Tl party buvy snuouuced fn caucus, Porran annouuced It In debate, that (hlw courss W tokon only Lo make thie fraud odlous, so that a almilue one Would not be attempted in the fu- ture, and that no attewpt would be mado tu unscat President Havks, I unr party stop Liero, this vestigation 1y do sume good; buf, 1t the; tempt 1o go furth attempt Lo onst the ident, thoy will du greut harm. *‘I'he moat * odious? part of the election “ fraud " was committed {n the Jlerald's own §tate, and by its advice and counsel. A Repub. Mean majority of 25,000 was Lulldozed vut of oxistence, and & majority of 50,000 for TiLDEN Was substituted. ‘Whis ,capped tho climax of all tlia_election villaloles commitfed fn this countey Lo Aty years, Tbo Vicksburg Herald {sa sweet duckto be gabbllng sbout * udlous frauds," 'r08; ————— that the venaruble ynst WaiTriun bas lh}u‘n‘?.‘:-“‘x:om Uell; but what doos be think about Yoaudt—New York dJune ‘Fuat 18 s very easy sort of parsgraph to get up. Goov, Sun-ny; doit some more, Frin. i ked recontly at Al iNr, 'ELLOW WAS Aske Ll at & o, u:‘-hfi‘;‘::w he liked bie twa; be ln-w’cml Not too swect, wnarm, " but he didn't say how ha liked Laxxs' frandu|egt Administration. g Or, frinstant jOviven Wewostt Honxes drives s ong-hoss shay, 1t a8 grand turg-out, but §¢ would b & st] ‘mnd;r tura-ous 1f he would turn Iaves vut of the Vuite lfowve. © A thoughtful citizon of Iiltcals who bas been visitiog Washlugton aud lookiug at whas is golog oo, sud who fa dolng things, and the sghemes that are’ belng hatched by the Bour- boos aud bulldozers, writes o private letter, from which we make the following extract It tebooves Hepuplicens —Indwed it bm&- memburd of all partlss—whou weking thele Con- gresslonal nomiuvations this summer to e (o ft Dat men of real shillty and atrengih of character Arv chosen. 'The pext” H 11 be imporiout conteats, and it | Westshould now begia Lo counclls of tha natian with dus prom; . ot fouses the eadarahip of botk parlceaar almost excinsively upon Eastarn and 5 men, Tha Southern policy, Tudeed, alwiys o been to continuo tho members 6f o Statey Congrerslonal, delegation In" oflite ‘e long a8 “might be, tho Cresult mnaturally hag by emmple length of service theso men. bers eame to the tap of 1l important commitiany nd took th leadorship of newer members In fne House. While [t is not desirable to follaw much 1y example abjectly, especially in theso days of ma> chine politica, §t' 1a imnowibla to deny’ that the principlen of Toeal selcction and of rotation 1 oftice ara frequently invoked to the detriment of '+ parly or a delegation. There are rood men to b had [n every Btate, and thie Northwent shonia have 2fain 8 Waannuns in the Honxe and & Monroy in the Senate. In particalar, the grent citics, centres of population, wealth, intelleet, and influence, should hiave an adequate representation so ng jp leave & due imureas ttpon natlonal legislation. At rosent, Chicago and S uis 8ry cun Eptiers in Congy el e ——— Mr. PoTTRR assurcs us upon Lis honar that the Democrats have no juteution of .assafling President ITavas' title. “This fs very grauty. ing. We beliove that it was Lord Masitron who, when asked by his captor, King \Vn.u.u_u, after the Dattle of the Doyno, it his cavalry would stand again, sald: “On my honor, [ think thoy will” *Iis houorl His houor|n sald thd King to himself, turning away, ok — L I Daticd avaives Tho constructors of Pennsylvanis platformy aro entitled to tho sympathy and charity of o men, but really it {s;coming it a little too strong when the Deinocrats lay the responatbllity upon the Bopubltcans for the distress In tho Btate; first, hecause the Kepublicans bave hiad & uigy protective tarlfl; socondly, because they liaye lowered tho dutles vu bituminous conl and cer. taln manufactures. e — A restdent of Newlngton, Conn., canght and marked a turtio fu 1838, Mo found vim again 10 1863 and last month, In Lis forty years' pil. grimagoe the tortolse has traveled a tmllo and ] halt west, crossing two bridizes and three raf]. way tracks. Ho would make a formlidatle com. petitor with Mr. EATON for the Benatorial sue cesslon in that State, A French explorer has broken fn a number of zebras, which ho proposea to employ as beuats of burden ina voyage across Afrlea. Horses will not live in the fnterlor of the contincut un account of the tsctac fly, but the zebra ta an an. imat of quite another stripe. ——— Throogh the Eaze of coal dust that anng over the Plttaburg Convention, one thing was clearly evident—that SAMuEL J. RANDALL will not be the first, last, nud only cholce of Penusylvania in the Natloual Democratic Convention of 1850, ——ee— “Mr. WiLLtAs E. CANDLER," says a Wash- ington telegram, s understood to be engaged With the Ropublicans fn looking into the Fiorl- da case.” Why, wo thonght that Mr. Ciax. {pLER bad sald that HAYES never——. ———— ! The Implacabla Domocrat now, as hie walks past the Custom-flouss or the Post-OfMce, shakes his head and remarks to himself that when " tho tsurper 1s oustcd and he {s fn- stalled—, ——— ,PERSONALS, Mrs, Elder Danford No. 6, of Salt Laks, has obtained & divorce from her part of that dise tingulshod gontleman, and becume Mes, Bishop MoAlllster No. 10. Miss Bonnott, o slstor of the propriotor of tho Herald, 1 about to marry an Irlsh Feer, who fs also an Orangemsn, As the lady Is an uncompro- mising Cathollc, the telicities of the unlon witl Ue apparent. Mias Emelia Gavin, the elocutionary Tall Daughter of Cnicago, Is being very favorably ro- calved by the New- Yorxers, to Judge from the crit- icisma jo the papers upon the entertalomont last weok at Chickering Hall, . ‘Mayor Howell, of Brooklyn, on Wednes. dasy roviewed a Sunday-school army of 40,000 children fn processi Ono may jadge from thns array that Madsm Hestell did not ply her voeation on the oast alde of the river. Tho alleged Rov, Adirondack Murray ro. cently nformed his congregation that he was abont to take a Oficon wmonths’ vacation, and trould cx- pect them to have & 200,000 church ready for bis occapancy when Lo returas, Iu tho Vosburgh poisoning enso at Jorsey Clty, tho other day, **Dr. John J. Craven, man- ufactaring chemist and vhyalclan,* belug asked what gout was, sald bo was blesscd If ho kuew, aud further dopossd and said that, when he spoke of ‘‘the sunshine of healf ho meant **a com- plate subsldenco of the tric affoctions of tho stomach,* Sardou's theme for his dlsconrss when ho comes up next month for admisafon to tho ranks of the French Immortale will ba the Influenco of tevolutlons on dramatic art, His prodccossur, Aubran's, play, *La Fillo d'Eschyle,” o clover drama thot was just Lrought ont the day Lefore the revolution of 1830 broke oat, furnisbes bim with the taxt. ‘Whenever you ask tho Prince of Walos to alnnor, you ars expected to submita list of tho Rucsts 1o his Royal llighness, 30 as to bosure that they are pervons. he likes to meet, Tha Vie- tountess Maadevills (formerly Miss Yzoaga, of Naw York) 1s ono of his especial favorites, and her name almost invarlably appears upon such ilsts, bat her husband's name doosn't sppear be- sido 1t, as u rulo, The lato Prof. Hoeanr, 8o Thurlow Weed stster, was in 1815 anamatour actor of note, to whom & good angagement bad been offered If ho would ndopt the dramatic profession. ' The Prine cipal of tho Albany Asademy, him a grataltous acadomic course, sud, susrenduriug the aporontice’s indenturcs, lenry turacd his back on tho theatrs to loavo & more en- durlog and a wider fame as & scientist, - Mr, M. H. Sanford's Amerioan horses in England are not mooting with remsrkable luck thus far, At the Newmarkes spring mceting only ona started, tho Glenclg-Ultlma fAily Ultra, § yoars old, which, carrying 113 pounds, mong the last three In a feld of sleven in & Welter Ilaudi- capover the Ditch mile, However, the Yauked turfman's horses have & hablt of running badly st the begluning of tho season, and are vory likely to turn op winoers ia the fall, Col, Foruey, writing from Parls, dwells opon tho contrast botwoen the London snd Patis Bunday, and then passes to a cousideration of the apparent condition of the people of the two towns. Ho finas that the Fronch laborer or mechanle xets much more enjoyment out of hie life of toil than hle ueighbor across the chaonol. Lo thinks, 100, that crime 1s less frequont In Parle, Moreover, o concludes that the French Catholle rellgion ls quite asreputabla ae the English Protestant; that the Freach have made moro sacrifices for humau rights in the best sense than the Engliahi and that 1 polut of financlal lutegrity Franco stauds ou a4 high & plane as England. Miss Adelaide Lenuox, tho English actross, an fmpartial public will ba detighted to Jeurn, kas made a lot of froe advortislog out of Jarrett & Patmer, Bbo told in & lecturo that voncrable story abous the gt who couldn's ®et an engagemeat from them till she painted and put on falso halr, and & pasto ring, snd a hesp of style generaliy, ‘when they cagorly discovered in her the germs of wroat dramalic genius, The lirropressiblo inana- Rers got mad, and threatened to appeal tg tho law. Hbe Invited them to do so, and tuen they ad ta own up that they couldn't malotatn the action, in- asmuch as they coulan't show progl that they bad suflered Joss sud dsmage Dy reason of ber specch. Thon Mlss Adelaide Lenuox Jsugbed ja hes box- pleatad eleeve. Tho German Coptaln of the Halsatia, tha veassl that (ook Isyard Taylor, Mark Twalo, snd Muratlatelcad to Earope, says Mr. Taylur recelved scveral hundred bottles of beor from diferead |1 befors be startedj and Mark T'wain Is tho 1most serious wan he ¢ saw. Of Mr. Halstead, theCaptata ‘sald to s reporter: *<1 did pot seo wuch of him; his wite was sca-sick aud not Ja very good bealth. You know he dida't intead to ac- company her s fiees, but on the evcalng of my 1lth hecame down and seald, *Captsi, I don't koow but that I msy go with you,' On the nost worning he ¢ame $o me and said he had made 0p his mind to ssll. *Wny, you bave got no vunl: robe,* Jeald, *What of that? [ can borrow yours, auswored Mr. Halstead,” and tho Captaln, cbucx- ling, added, ‘*Aecht Ameriksalich,” wh.ch, srinslated loto the veroscalur, meaus, ‘*Truly American, by Goal!"” o words to thad efect. Liow many of the bottles of beer reaiatil¥d uuopeords by reporter forgot Lo necertaing but, 8s the voyase was very tousl, {tls probable tuat all tue beer was oot cousumeds