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1 THE CHICAGU YRIBUNE: Thye Tribawe, TERMS OF SURSCRIPTION, TIIURSDAY, MAY 30, 1875, fuso payment after the money has been voted, or to robuko the dishonest covetons. ness of tho Canadian Govetnmentin a publio and emphatic manner, . If tho verdict is permitted to stand as it is ot present, it will destroy tho principle of co tho issue, and, in consequence, wns signally defeated. The caucus proposition was voted down,—yeas 125, nays 131,—nas was also a motion Ly Woob to Iny the Senale resolution on the table. Then the cancus Ieader moved to fix tho date of adjonrnment {nrbulent, Communistic, and eriminal popn- lation. This prohibition practically deprives Con- gress of protection. It amob should, after this law, assail the House of Repro- sentatives, and do personal violenco to peR 1L Sreenens, will go far to foil the reliomes of thieso dasperata conspirators, and to cloct & new Congrosa which will atamp out this revolutionary Incendisrism and give tho country peaco and tranquillity, With a united North, and the desire of tho whole other city; and the Board, buving the power to reculate them, and having omitted to do soy has been grossly and willfally neeligent of ita ofticial dutles. The offense charged agalnst the Board of Alilermen ts, that it susoiclousty persisied in granting valuable privileges to the keepers of yeara’ imprisonment upon her for doing what hier husband would have done had shic heen the gullty partner of their wedded life with perfecy finpunity. i ‘The experiment of co-catucation of the srxes '0STAOE PREPAID, fruit-standa and other peddiing establishments | 13 to be tried hereafter at the Jata Woman's - %1200 | at June 24, but an amendment offercd by | tho Speaker or members, thers would bo no | arbiteation, It is minda in manifest violation | poople for tho rostoration of commercial | on the sidesalks and atrects, In viotation of the | Hotel, 5o | CLYuER, of Pennsylvania, naming June 17, | power anywhero to protect that body or to | of tho spirit of all sucly proceedings, Cer- | prosperity and politlenl order, those in. | lawand in deflance of the legal opiniop of the m— ik | was adopted by n decisive mnjority. disperso the rioters. The Sergennt-at-Arme [ tain plain questions wero submitted to the | famous sconndrels may yet bo thwarted, aud | Carporation Connscl, the protest of te Com- * Litiot & vear, nor monih. o380 Se——— and tho Marshal, with no forco Lut n poss | Commission for adjnstment. As Mr, Evanrs | at tho noxt cleotion find themselves retired w“"mfl‘! of Public Worke, and the vetoof the O‘Danovnn-llnusn—lu Iying dangerously il Eri ;:;HHY $ 1.30 France for many years hns beena com- | of civiliaus, wonld be utterly powerless | showed in his nbie discussion of the subject, | from publie offico by their indignant snd 5 “?an llu?mn‘llnr lhchnrr. 'l'lm is lmownl tln of pantre Aerntatieals Clnb of ftr., b5 petitor of onrs to romo extent In fecding | cither to nrrest tho rioters or protect the | theso questions were surrounded by limita. O oA ias aavled these indict: misroprosented constitnonts, Ercclnien coptes pent tree. Give Fort-Chlee addross in foll, Including Btate and County. B » Hemittancon may he made efther by draft, express Tost-Cliice order, orin'veglstered ietters, at our risk. TERMS TO CITY SUBSCRINERS, Tzlly, delivered, Ennday excepted, 25 cents per week, Lelly, delivered, undey ncioded 30 cents ner week. Adcren THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Larner Madison snd Dearhorn-at Oriers for the deltvary of Tue TRINUXEAL Evansion, Ingicwood, ard Hyde Park leftin the countiog-room Wliireceive prumut attentios ments, He wilfho donbt sce that they are car- ricd to a successful conclusfon, ‘Th precedent cstablished by hitn may be valuahle for the guldance of the Judges of Chicago and other citles fn the future. e — Unclo Dick's majorlty last October was 22,500, The State ean be earried by the Democrats this year by 25,000 if they get up the right kind of Platform and a good ticket, —Cinctnnatl Enquirer, Don't you mean a plurality! The election returns were ns follows: litshop (Dem.).... West tltep, Tond (Warkman: Jonnson (Greenback) ‘Thompeon {Probibition) Total opposition . Demacralic minorit, ‘The topal vole was sliort of that cast the year before In 1878 by 95,357, The Republicun vote was 81,000 below that iiven for Hayes, and the Dewmouratic voto was 62,000 less than that cast tor Tinnex, This fall the Repubdlican vote will ba “out,"and the *Greasera® will be routed by 20,000 mujority atthe tesst, e e —— To the Editor o} The Tribune, Cittrano, May 2l —In your cditorial to-day rela- tive to the **Four hiil,""yon way the ML forbits the furtlier relirement’ and canceliation of lognl- tunder nutes, and_ directs thule retssne and **nc- ceptance bn 'payment af custam duttes,” In your Juihiished text of the Wil thers 14 no retorence to he necoptance of legal-tenders i puyment of contom dutler. Pieasa statu If the bill s yon pube Tistu It 4 vorrect of not, and oblize, yourn truly, g, Wa presume the bill as published Is correct, The tatement that the DIL “dircets the ace ceptance of the votes in payment of dutles" s a nilsconcention on the purt af the writer of the words *‘when any of snld notes may bo re- Jdeemed or be received into the Troasury under any law trom any source whatever,” cte. 1low- cver, after tho 1st of next January, the legal- tender notes will be recelved In payment of duties the same as gold, and pald out for evory- ‘thing, tncluding interest on the public (}:bt. et e Kelly, n student at tho Deaf-Muts Cole lege, now plays In the Eagle nino at Washinzton, Tlo can only abuse tho uwnplre tn the desf-and. dumb alphabet, Tho Papal Nunotos at Vienns, Paris, Mad. nil, and Lisbon, will ba ealled home to Roma, sndpromotad to the Cardinalata at o Consistory to belield at tha eloso of Jnn e, The late Col. Danfart.-Rochorean, the de. fender of Diclfort and so the hero of tha Franco. Pruseian war, happened to bo a Protestant and an advanced Repablican, and so got tareo and foar line obitanrtos of tho culdest sore in tho Monarch. 1t papers of Parls. # ‘Tha Crown Princess of Denmark (Prineesy Lowlsa, of Sweden) atanda alx feat two inchos, |y very fond of dancing, bnt doesn't want to dsnce with any one wmaller than sho 15, 8o the foor. managers ars put to It to keep er in acceptable partners, nons of the Auakim, Huggoitive advertisoment from n Wnsh. inzton newapaper: *'A lady possemsing youth, eauty, Intelligenco, and rettuemont, desires to form the aeqauinlance of sumo Scnator or ember with Inflnence cnough to restore hor to uflice, Address Nerrin Lee, City Post-Ollfes, " An Indiann paper roonlls tha fast that ang of the candidates on the Natlonal-tiesenback.Lator State ticket nttracted some nttentlon winlo a mem- berof the Lezistatare a hal-tozen years ago by Introducinza Uil entitled ** An act o prevent tha ravagosof wild-cats and foxes on sucking pigs, " Charles F. Williams, *tho . eonverted clown,* wha was sentenced Lo be shot as a honnty. Jumper. ectved several terna for bigamy and ne. mault, was a pablic singor, a circus clown, and o Muthodust clergyman and revivalist, has Just been sentup for twolyears by a New Mapiitire court for theft, -] Tulison hins o boyish face, clean shaven, o neareliing cye, and the Intent expression pecnliar todeaf peonle, Ho does most of Uis work at nlght, partly vecanse ho got Into the habit when teleyrapting, and partly heeanse he Gnds that he can work then with lesa Interraption and mora sut- fafaction, Congressman Hondrick B, Wright distrib. nites 5,000 luavos of bread at his Lome cvery holl. day, and slways Onds plonty of luwsry people vlnd to get thom; and yot, ho says, the raseatly newapapers abuse him and question Lly molives, e wishiea that al) men had as good hearts in thelr bodles as ho has, d—n ‘om. In bis part in ** Diplomncy,” a play whichi is now running at the Princo of Wales' Theatre, Charles Sugden, the Engllah actor, who was tho co-respondent I thy recent divorco suit brouzht by tio Eorl of Desart ngalnst his wife, '"‘Q‘ 0 sug- gostlve line. **Wheore did you vicep last ight? was the cue, to which tho roply was, **At—well, no matter where," King Osear 1L, of 8wadan, nnd M. Jnles Balssac, of Parls, havo baan clsctod curraspond- enta of the Frankfort Acalemy of Nctencas, hoing the flrat foroigners on whoin sach a distinetion nns boen conferred. Ths works which merited for them this honor were, respectivuly, o translation of Guctha's **Faust* {nty Swadish vorso und a book on **'Tho Origln of Kellgiony,* Olivier Pain, ona of ths Froach Commnn- fsts who passed through Chlcero four years g0 with Hourl Rochofost, having, afier belng hetd by the Russlany ns a prusoner from the capture of Ilevna, ut last been releused, made hls way hack to Geneva to be confrontod on.hin arrlval thero by 8 Swhwpollco oflclul, who led nlm o the Ituliap frontlor and Invited him not to return, Mr, B. W. Hitchcack, ths manager of tho Now York Baby Show and Conzresa of Deauty, where the mothers and extithitors wera 50 heart- tesly wwindled, has been di York court as **a poor debto; having taken oa . oath that he was only worth tne clothes ko wore. 1f any dopendence could bo placed upon his word, thoro would bo cause hero for rejolee ng. Ono of tho medienl witnosios In ths Vos. burgh nolsoning case at Werscy City sald that whon howpoke of **the sunlight of health" ho meant the subsidenco of gastric doransumonts, Ane other, un being askod If ho was o apoeclaliut, sald ho was **a speclallst in the world of wonders, but." ho added, **ail my atinitics have cuma to Hrlef, and left mo wodded to tho rude, rude reof," ‘I'ae examintng counsel sald II‘B might stard down, Mudamo Restell liea In n negleoted lot in Sleepy Ilollow Comotery, at Taregtown, Tho graws has grown wild, no sione s vver her Rrave, and rolic-hunters actually carrled away so much of the earth from It beforo it was tuf that it has sunk conslderably, 1t s evon m lted by the curious than thutof Washington Ievlug. Curiously enough, the only monumeut i the lot, over the grave uf bue grandchilden, 1s o marblo fgure of & aleeptny lufant, Tho fathor of Raoul Rigault, the young desperado who took w0 prominent a part In the uxcorses of (ho Commune, has just committed suicide. Ho was & man of 07, and n Moderate ltcpubilican, and fn 1871 broko off his acqualntanco with hifs sun, who bocamosthe Direcsor of thy Come munist police, was a loader and personal sharer in nany of the most atroclous criines of tho Kods, sad, bolng mado prisoncr, waa shiot olf-hand in the streut, Ellon Summors, agod 24, died of consumip- tlon In & Now York hospital lust wook, having only 8 fuw houcu befure beon remouved from the lodge Ing-rous ut o police-station, oud was bincled in Uhe Votter's Plull, Bio was a rider with tho Groat London Clrcus a yuar ago, but took n cold loas Angustand became it When sho racoversd slie wae too weak to ride agaln, and sold candy, soda-water, aud othar rofroshumonte n the clecus, Pinully, sho left tho show and want bick to New York and lived as sho could, A fow days ago she went to lzooxlyn to find somo acquaintances and ask for akl, batthoy haa moved away, and she tnally sought refugo in tho poiics lodging-room. The denth of tho Hou, John Bustt Ilar- rison is announced, v was the son of Presldont Harrison, und the father of Gen. Deujamiu Hare son, of Indiana, 1Mo represented tho Fiest Oblo Congresslonal District In Congress from 1834 to 1857, s at tho timo of his death wad not far fron 70 ye! When the Domocratic and Repube Mean parties divided tho peanls batiwects thom, s0 that third parties disappeared from an infuential attitude lu public aRalre, Mr. Ilarrison became Domocralic, Aftor his rotiremont from Conreds hopursuzd the oven touor of his way s a farmel on the historical farm at Noeth Bend, and waa ro spacted for his clear fategrity and bis kindly man ners, —Uincinnati Commaercial, A short general summary of the vital sty tistica of ¥rance for 1870 14 published in th Joure nat Oficlel. 'Tho virths amounted Lo YUS, UEZ, cx €ludive of those stillborn, and tho deattiv to 8: 5 074{ %0 thattho increase of popalation was 1:82,+ the British; Lut lattcrly ehe has not raised food enongh ta supply the wants of her own reople, and hins begun {o import from this country. The reports of onr Consul at Havre show a steadily-increasing demand for Amor- lcan provisions in France, and two steamers, which ha¥§been fitted up with refrigerating chambers, have taken to that country in the Iast six mouths Lalf a miillon pounda of fresh meat. During March and April 750,- 298 bushels of onr wheat was landed at- Hasre, and 425,000 bushels of corn, besides 69,332 bushels of oats dnring April. But the great trade i3 in bacon, lard, tallow, Lesf, buttor, and cheese, members of the House, No military could be employed, and the mob would have un- checked control of the Natfonat Capital, pro- tocted in thelr possession by tho prohibitions of the Democratic Army bill, It is to bo hoped that tlio Senato will have the courngo ond monliness to show the connlry, by a unanimous vote, that that Lody hns no sympathy 1n the revolutionary ond eriminal action by tho House; and that tho rauks of the army be restored, and that this appenl and promise to Communism bo stricken from the biil as too contemptible and disgraceful to bo permitted to stain tho statute-book, tions before the submission wasmade, Thus the American Commissioners at Genevn enti: mated the valne of the inshore Canadian fisheries enjoyed by Americans to be not moro than 21,000,000 for o perpetual right. This estimate made no account of the con. ocrsion of tho right of frea importation of Conndian sk nnd fish.oil into the United States, 'which waa admitted by Loth sides to bo o very valuable privilege, Tho Ialifax Commission was thus confined by the terms of the subimisslon, as ovidenced In the declara- tiona of one of the partics to It, lo a consid. eration of (ko difference in valuo botweonu tho Amerfean calel inshora in Canadian waters and the Conadinn eatch on the Ameriean const and thae gnins by the remis. slon of Amorican dutics,. The extreme award that could honestly lave beon wnde was 81,000,000 for a perpetual right, counting tho cateh and tha re. misston of duties as worlhless; but, if tho remission was valuable, the awnrd shonld have been the differenco between this volue and 1,000,000, ono way or the other, The Commission disregnrded theso terms nalto- gethor, aud ascertalned the benetits derived Ly the Americans from flsheries outsido of the purview of the nrbitration, whilo it ro- fused to estinato the value of the right of importation, which was within the scopo of tac investigation, ‘Tho proper way to correct an injustico of this flagrant kind is to repudiate it alto- gotber, Congress should pointedly refuso to. voto tho sum awarded. Buch a vote would bo notice to Great Dritain, Canadn, Bolgium, and ull other notions interested in procuring corrupt arbitrations, that thero is oue Governmont, at least, which will not submit to be cheated in this Lase ond dis reputable manner. o ——— EFFECT OF THE “FORT BILL" The pnssage by the Sonate of tha Forr Curroucy bill, which now only awaita tho signaturo of tho President to becomo n law, conatitutos ona of the most important pleces of legislation adopted by the present Con. gress, It is notablo that tha bill passed the Benato by almost the identical vota given to tho Silver bill,—those voting afifrmatively for the ono voting afirmatively for tho other, and those voting in the noga. tive onthe Bilvor bill also voting in the negative on tho Cnrrency bill. The only ex- coption we lhave romarked ia that of Mr. Braive. Drase voted againet the Silver Lill but for the Currency bill; Laaur, who voted agninst the remonatization of silver, was absont and not paired. ‘I'he pairs in- dicate the samo rulative montiment, and tho coincidence ia enrried out by the fact that Fort In tho author of both these suceossful mensures, Thoe text of the Lill fsay fol. lows: fle Ut enacled, ete., That from and after thn passage of this act 1t shall nat be lawtul for the aecretiry of the Treasnry, or uther ofilcer undee to “cdncel vr retira any mnore of the Wnited States lepal-tender notes: and when any of sald notesmay bie redeemed or be reveived into the Tr 1ty undcr any Iaw Irom any soucce whxlever, and abail belony (o Lhe United States, they shall not by tired, canceted, or destroyed, but “they snall be ierd, and pald out again, and kept in cirenas tions: provided, nothing hereln ehn) penhibst the cancellation and destriction of mutitated notes, and the Isauo of other notes of 1lke denomination in thelr stend, 18 now provided, Al suis und pasts of acts In conillct nerewith are ieeeby repenled. Tho first important intluence of the pas- snge of this bill in that it probably mnarks tho cossation of curroucy-tinkering by the pros- ent Congress, It is in tho nature of n comn- promiso Latween the ultra Resumptionists, who lold that thero can bo no actual re- sumption without nctual rotirement and cancellation of the greenbncks, nnd the ultra Greonbackers, who hold that there should Lo no resumnption whatever. ‘I'his Lill tokes n middlo ground. It stops tho process of contraction at the point now reached, but does not authorize nn increaso in the volumo of greonbacks, It also. pro. vides for thorelssne of greenbacks aftor redemption, and thus removes tho grent bugbear of the Greonbackers, If the two oxiremo factions kecp good faith, this law will provent oll futuro efforts on eithor side to defeat the renlization of resumption Jan, 1, 1879, on Secrotary Bxenyax's plan, 'Fhe second important influence of the law ia that it denotes tho opeming of a new era of genuine oxpansion of the monoy resunrces of the country without n resort to tho fullacy of inflating or debaging the currency by now issues of Irredeemablo notes. The law do- prives tho Baocrotary of the Treasury of a dangorous privilege‘of hoarding greonbacks for o timo, only o rush them upon the mar- kot whon it shall seom good to him, but maintains, 80 far as Government notes are concerned, an aqual volume of monoy con- alantly ot the disposition of the people, ‘Thoro will bo neither contraction nor infla. tion of Government notes in the future, but a cortain fixed amount which, after resump- tion, will have an invariable value gauged by specio. p’I‘ho expansion we have alluded to will como from tho culargoment of tho bank issues and the contributions of gold and sil- veor from themints, The Froe-Bauking lnw, ‘which enables an indefinito issue of circulat- ing notes, is still In operation, with the dit. ferenco that a now issuo of bank.notes will no longer roquire tho roduction of green- backs in proportion of 280 of greonbacks re- tired for every 8100 of bank-notes nowly is. sued, The now issucs of bank.notes will bs governed entiroly by tho domands of trade, thongh-they miy be accelerated by role¥ing tim National Bavks of the War taxes and roquirlig a socurity in United Btatea bonds of only a par valuo with the notes fssued. Dut the now bankejssues will not bo the only olement of expansion ; tho new speclo pro- duced by tho American mines, smounting to 90,000,000 or :3100,000,000 & yoar, will also bo added to tho stock of money in the event of yesumption. All men who boliove in ex. ponsion as ono menstro of reliof for the hard times will cousult their own interosts, thove- fore, by demanding that the Resumption law shall now ba left to work out it own destiny. ‘Tho status of the national finances, under tho Iaw ns it stands, {s about as lollmvu;tl‘hu total volumo of greonbacks, limited by law of Congress aud the Supremo Court's con. atructlon thercof, was §100,000,000. A pro- cess of contraction was bogun by Hecretary McCurrocit after tho War, uuder au. thority of Congross, aud wont on till the volume outatanding was reduced to about $850,000,000, It stood at about this figura for five years beforo the panfe. 'I'ho then Becrotary of the Treasury, nunder the pres- sure of certain Wall stroet influences, roissued about $16,000,000 of the greeubacks that hiad been rotived, nud the volume outstand. ing at the time tho Nesumption act was passed was about #374,000,000, Under the operation of the Resumption law, the groen- bucks Lave been raduced to about 810,000, 000, and thoro thoy must now staud, The inerease of National Bank notes hins nvernged sbout a million and a Lalf a month, so it js safe to estimato that anothor year will add atlenst $20,000,000 of notes, During the eame time $40,000,000 of logal-tender silver will bo contributed by the miuts, aud the yield of new gold will not be less than $30,000,000. There will then be $110,000,+ 271,025 103 ‘Trx Cnteano Taint e has established branch ofiless for the recefpt of subserivtions and advertisements s follows: KEW YORR--Tloom 22 Tribune Bulldlog, F. T. Mc- Fanpx. 18, Frauce—No, 10 Nue de 18 Grange-Batellere. HLER, Agent, LOXDON, Eng.~Amerfcsn Exchange, 440 Strand. Iexuy F, G STEPHENS' AANL TER. As wo expeoted, Patten's letter to n ‘‘eympothizing friend” hns brought n hornots’ mest abont his ears, Intended to deceiva the publie, it only made tho revoin. tionary designs of thoCongressional cabal the more apparent. Tho conservativo cle- mentof the Domocratio party has takon the alorm, Yestordny Judge Key, who has never abnted his loyalty to the Democrats, addressed n lotter to the Bouthorn people cnlling upon them to repudiate tho programmne of tho revolutionists, even it it should becomie nccessary to abandon the Demo- cratio candidatos and act with the Ropub- licans in order to insnro such n reault. To- day the vonerablo Arexaxpzn II. Sreenevs, whoso Democracy hns mnever boen called in question, and whoso experience ronders his predictions prophatic, issues another appenl to Democrats of tho entire conntry to cut looso from the men who are sceking to botray them into an unlawful act, certain to bo followed by nnarchy. We print Lis letter clsowhers, llo denounces tho whole procceding ns **most unnwise, most unfortunate, and most mischievous,”" and snys that ** nothing short of an immediato, goneral, and firm concert of action of the lnw.nud-order abiding peopla of all parties, TRopublicans and Democrats, thronghout the Union, can arrest the most fonrful conse- quences,” Br. Srrroens’ letter was called ont prime. rily Ly statomonts in Porren's lettor, in which the latter endenvored to explain nway the sunmary and unfair refusal to hear Mr. Steruens for five minutes on ono of the days whon the Democratio majority wns railroading through the Porren resolution avd insisting upon shutting out tho Harxs amendment, Mr, STernENs furnishes thetrue cxplanation. He had previously written from o sick bed to Porren, in which he had pointed out the unfnirness and im- policy of the one-sided investigation pro. posed, and bad notified Porren that howould oppose such aacleme it ablo fo apponr in tho House. This lotter Porren showed to his co-conspirators, and they de- termined that Stermess should not Lo heard, When the old Domocratio veteran rosa to speak, he wns hooted down, ‘and Por- rERstood by the bulldozers, By suppressing this fact, Porrzr has convieted himsclf of bosoness, not moerely because he had pro- viously treated Mr. Brernevs unfairly, but by virtunl misropresentation in his letter, in which he conconled tho fact of having Leon previously informed of Mr, Breemexs’ pur. pose, 'The incident is important as indieat- ing the dosperation of the cabal, nnd the unscrupulous mothods to which thoy were and nro rendy to resort in order to carry out their designs. % Mr, Stzrurxs riddles othor positions taken by Porren on tho floor and in Lis public lot- ter. Io shows the absurdity of Porren's protonded reason for excluding the Harx resolution on the ground that It was not ‘germona” to the mattor in band., Mr. Sreeuens, hko mosts honest moi, concoive all frauds to belong to the samo family and to bo of tho same character, and ho 18 not so much of a partisan as to maintain that n fraudulent count in Oregon, becauss Domo- cratic, 18 not as germane to an investigation of frauds as fraudulont couut in Louisiana or Florida which was Republiean. To Por. Ten's ploa, that tha Hare resolution contnined recitaly to which the Democrats could not nssent, Mr, Brcruexs ropllos that both rosolutions contained charges, aud thero would be no assent to olthor in admitting these chargos for fuvestigation. Finally, Mr, Steeurss cannot understand why, if Porrra be lionest in disavowing a purposo to disturh Presidont Haves, ho did not nllow Casey Youva's amendment to go in, which distinotly stated that the President should fot bo disturbod in n title constitu- tionally sottled by the preceding Congress, The trua explauation s, that Porren is not honest in such a profession, as he him. olf las confessed by a pointed refercnce to tho ndoption of & guo warranto statute, which would be ns rovolutionary n proceeding ns o 1mere resolution deposing Haves, **This af- falr," says Mr, SBreruens, * will provo inthe ond elther a contemptible farce or a horrible tragedy.”™ For tho present the Damocrats havo it in their own hands, If the conserys ativo clement of tho party respond prompt- 1y to such uttorances ay those of Xy and STEPHENg, then Porren and his co-conspirn- tors will bo only actors in a “ contemptible farco,” If uot, then the American puople will bavo the opportunity at the fall clections of averting tho **horrible tragedy " by vot. ing the Democratiug majority out of Con- gresy, Failing in this, then comes the Del- uge. THE ARMY . A majority of the House of Represonta- tives hns so monipulated the Army bill that, instend of Lecoming an expenditure of mon- ¢y for the nationsl dofenmse, it beconios a sourco of nationnl dauger. The army s to watch the southiorn boundary nlong the Mex- iean border, not only fo prevent the invasion of onr soil by Mexican thieveg, but o pre. serve the peace, Mexico being holpless, - In Tike manner, tho army has to watch the Can- adian boundary, over which at any moment a well-appointed and very numerous organi. zatfon of hostile Indinns may at oy time come to mnssacra the settlers, if not the smnll garrisons at the forts, The ontire In- dinu country, including distant Oregon and ‘Washington, have to b garrisoned to pre. voot war; and now this bill passed by the Houso transfers tho outire Indian Bu. resu to the War Department, aud places the Indians nnder the control and care of the army. The army has now a nomiunal strength of 25,000 men; this bill reduces it to 20,000, inclnding all branches of the service, Anarmy of 20,000 un paper leaves nn effective forco of not excooding 14,000 mon, and this is the entire number of national troops allowoed by the House of Ropresontatives. A strong offort was made to reduce oven the authorized force to 15,000, and this was only defonted by the votesof tenor fittoen Democrats who dif- fored from their party. But, in order to ron. dor tho army ns powerless as possible, the Democratic House insorted in the bill a pro. viso prohibiting (under ponalties of fine and imprisonment) tho employment of any part of the army s a Federal posss comitatus or otherwise, under pretext or for tho purposo of cxccuting the laws, oxcopt in such cases and under such circumstances ns such em. ployment of troops may be oxpressly author. ized by oct of Congress. Undor this prohibition the Government will not bo able to furnish United States Marshals with srmed men to arrest smug- glors, or persons carrying on illicit diatilla- tion of spirits, or counterfelting, or carrying on any violations of tho laws of the United Btates. Under this Inw the President will bo probibited from ordering troops into any Btate, when requested by tho Stato Govern- ment, to cnable thot State to suppress do- mestio violonce and jnsurrection. This is sn appenl by the Democratio party to the Communists who earry tho red flag. Itis n promise to them that if thoy shall undertake to burn mills and factories, seize rallronds, stop travel and tho transportation of mor- chandiso, violently depose muaicipal gov- ernments, and possoss thomselves of private aud public property, the President nor tho Genoral of tho armies shall not, whon requested by tho State Government, furnfsh o company of soldiers to preserva tho poace, or aid tho Btato authorities in waintaining tho Stato Iaw and tho State authority, Itisa declaration of immunity to criminals of all classes. All over the Southern States thoro s n system of socrot distillation of spirits, Thisis carriod on in the mountain distriets, and ench establish- went 18 guarded by armed and desporate men. Tho Marshals aro unable to make arvests, or brenk up tho business without the MeVicker's Thentre, Madtron (street, between Dearvorn and Btate. **Uncle Tom's Cabin,* Haaoley's Thentre,, Tandolrh streer, bets Clark nnd LaSalle, Pare Theatre Company. urricanes,” averly’s Theatre, Monroe street, corner of Dearborn, Riee ganzs Combinatlon, - *‘Conrad tho Corsal New Chlengn Thentre. Clark strect, opposito tho Bherman House, Vartety Olfo. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1878, Greenbacks at tho Now York Stook Ex- chango yestorday closed at 983, Tho Senate and House aro wido npart on tho Legislative, Judicial, and Exccutive Ap- proprintion bill, and the Sonate is practically upanimous in refusing to concur in many of the petty amendments adopted in tho Iouse, Our implacable contemporary, the Washing- ton L'osty sava: No nttentlon will be nald to the Radical yell of “te " Hovolutlon mieans ehvating und utting, W proposo nothing of talw order sulf-defense, \un wo nesertthat tho Demucratic party ia_entitled fn law, equity, and toruls to the control of the (ovérnment. und meand to have it, That eught to bo an tntelliivle declaration. 1t certamly I apaclile declazution, and ono that wo shail atand to, ‘Wa hereech our fmplacable contemporary to put on a thick palr of socks, punch a hole In the hat that covers Ita fervid head, and tuko some mild aperlont wediciue, Its {dens of *aell- defenso ™ aro pecutlar, It will ouly sbioot and cut throats 11t s reaisted in lts attempts to overtbrow the Qoveruwment—that is too Lumor of it ATTITUDE OF SOUTHERN DEMOORATS, Thero {4 one contingsucy which does not soem to hava occurred to the Northern Detn- ocratic demngogues in their conspiravy to Mexicanizo the Government, and that is, that they mny bo reckoning without their host in counting upon the Bouthorn Demo- crats to support their revolutionary achemes. ‘The mdications of Southorn discontent with the Porrxn crowd grow stronger and loud- er, and moro than one Southern paper is giv- ing very cmphatic voice to the disappointment felt by tho South over its treatment by the Northern Demooracy, The Vicksburg Jler- ald, one of tho most radical of Southern journals, in a rocent issue speaks out very boldly, and affirms with indignant emphasis that ** the South will no longer consent to be used s o catspaw, unless it Lias some of the chestnnts,” Says tho Jlerald, concerning these Northorn demogogues: * Thoy hava shown much ‘more anxiety to propare for futuro success, with themselyes in the lead, than thoy havo to give our section the least bit of justico.” Just at the time when tho South wants something done {owards its devolopment, it finds: * thero has grown up among them n vory strange anti-subsidy fecling,” and that, ** after the North has ro- celved inestimablo bonefita in this way, it is suddonly discovored that the principle is very wrong.” 'The Herald hits theso dema- gogues another hard, solid blow in a vital place. Tt tells thom quite plainly that the Houth {a gotting tired of their apprehensions that tho South may commit some error, and enys, in this connection : Eomo of tho Northorn Democrats have abused us roundly for our pncifie action 1n_the imatter of tha Gecision of thy Vresidontinl yueation, aud tho bal- ance of them take it oat In giving ue advice but no help. When we were suflering from 110gro rule, thoy mivlecd us to bo qulcr, aud now that vwe ark a liitle fair-play In the matter of Covernmental ald, they advise us 10 o 'oulvt. Tho Northern Dewuerat seoms to think that the only holitical husiners tho Southern Democrats should engage n i¥ to bo quiet nnd vuto for Nurthorn Democeats at every nationnl electlon, In our oplnlon, thin wiil not answer in the South much louger, The Soath 1s convervative, and cares nothlnz for nationat po- sitlons, She s willing 1hat our friends in tho tall havo wl theso, but when she asks for | the world knows to he reusonable and 0 doean't want to bo anubbed and glven a of advice. This is pot o very oncouraging outlook for tho conspirators, who, in order to carry out thelr rovolutionary plottings, must rely upon n Bolid South, Thoro s still another con- tingoncy which is not so remote ay the one to which wo have alluded, and ‘Postmaster. Goneral Key in kis lotter to the Bouth vory aptly covors this contingenoy fu tho follow- ing extracts Memomborlug the enconrscoment which tho Nortnern Democrnts In 1860 und 18501 extended to the Sunthens States to sccede, snd Lhe manner 1 which their promiscs of ald und comfort wera ful- Alled, cun tiv Southera people alfurd 1o joln (his rovelutionary movement with tha Sertubily witeny the Inevituvle hour of pertl comes they will aguin Dby Jeft unnvsisted und alone to mect the storm from the Nuorth, 0 tnore united by this attempt 10 1ovivoun o whose scttlviment was furced by wultic opintun upen sn unwiliing Congress? * Bueh o reminisconco asthls, coming froma Domverut and an ox-Coufederate, will carry grent weight with it ju the Bouth, Post. master-Genernl' Key comes from a State which I8 very consorvative, ¥ts people, its partics, its promiuent papers, like (hoso in Nashvillo, Ohattanoogs, and Mem- phis, do not act impulsively, and they have been moasuring theso Porren. ‘I'1LoeN demagogues for koo time past, and have not displuyed any remarkuble dogres of sympatby with their rovolutlonary course, ‘L'ounossce, bordoriug ns it does upon cight Southern Btates, I8 tho koystous of the Southern arch, 1f they cannot control that Biate, it It rcfuses to bo dragged into the clvil war which is sure to result it tho con. wpivacy of tho Northeru Greasers s carried 2 H The Alabama Democratic State Conven- tion, which mot at Montgomery yesterday, .appears to bo very mmch divided on the nomination for Governor. Ou the third ballot threo eandidates were running nearly even, tho.foromost Incking abont forty votes to securo tho nomination, The Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Iilinois lins determined to under- take somo fomperance work on its own nc- count, tho Convention yostordsy hnving adopted the recommendation ‘offthe Commita tooon the Sin of Drupkenncss looking to tho orgonization of a thorongh systom of work through a Contral Bacioty, with paro. chial Lranchies in completo affiliation. ———— Bpeaking of the recent meeting of the so- called Natlonal ‘Dowocrutic Committee ot Washington, the flepublican of that clty re- markss Tho Greaser Tunta ut the Arlineton lotcl yeater- day was diaturbed by tho me"“l ouposition of the Eastern moneyed Aynatumiento to the Porren. Mexicanl.ation ravolation. Like teuo Mesicans, thoy slastied vach other right and left, and with gzreut difiiculty axreed npon tho splrit and scope of il Pronunciamento, otherwiso knuwn as tho Ad- droes of. the Democeatio Natlonsl Zommitice. Dazo Prisce, of Boston, tnd beon detatled to write It but turngd out 10 be wot In symoathy sith (reager Puttin's rovolutlonury schame, The Yaudungo was decldedly dteresting, pbechatet e il ‘Tho Fonr bill passed tho Bonate none too 5000, A dny later would have seen legal- tenders retired to tho amount of 1,606,096, ‘The notos hiad already undergono tho process of cancelintion to a partinl extent, but Secro- tary Suensax, being disposed to carry out the fall pirit of the law pnssed by so deel. sivo o majority, will now replaco tho muti- Inted currency with o now issue to nn equal amount. # Crangson N. Pot7en's lato letter Is a pot- tering lctter, at once deceptlve nud quibbling, and tull ot revolutlunary ductrine. He speaks of alegal remedy for any frauds that' may sub- sequently to o Prosidentinl Inanguration be dis- covered. This fa the Mexicun doctrine to a dot. I'hie beaten party always sutsequently diccover {rauds, and then Issuo » * pronunciamento ” and proceed to oust the Prestdunt by ‘revolution. Porren is a regular % Gre ol It is now Austrin's turnfo croato unensi- ness Ly military monsures which dogoto clear approlionsion of tho possibility of such notion Ly tho Derlin Congross ns will bo en tircly unsatisfactory to tho Austrian Govern- ment. Austrin s arming vigoronsly, with an ovidont view to giving greater welght to hor position in the Congross, nnd has nspi. rations of coutrol in Esstern affairs which Brsyanc s raported to encourage. In order that our children's chilldren unto the uttermost gencration may have some idea of the productfons of the American Republic In its prime, it would seom to bo In order to solder up ln sheot-iron cylinders or pack away fn suw- dust a number o statesmen, ao as to llave them onhand for the wnext Centennfal Exposition. Grovrn preserved In alcohol, or SamueL Cox under glass, would be roegarded as o sweet boon nivety-clght years hency, e e— Qen. Gnaxt's reply to den, Dick TAvron's recent articlo [n the North Amerlcan Jtrview will auply repay the time that will be required to rend it. The General had been interviewed by | a Herald man o Parls, and makes an exceed- inuly interesting statement. His description of the streugth of tho Rebeliton and the assistance it received from the Northern Copperheads s very poluted. "Tho opposition of tho Sonate Repablicans to tho Ilouso Lill for the reduction and disorganization of the army will be warmly supported by the commercial duterests of the country, Already noveral oxpressions of disapproval havo becn sent forth by commercial organ. izations. Yosterday the Philadelphia Ex- change aud tho Cincinnati Board of Trada | M4 of “’m"d,s"m’ ort. Tho ** moonshiners,” passed resolutions condomuing the House | 85 thoso poaplo arg called, had moro friouds Army bill und urging itu dofent, in the Domocratio Houso than Liad the law, - - or tho revenue, or an honest ndminlstration Yeatordny's procoulings of the Porren | of suthority; so the President was pro- Comumittes were placod under tho ban of | bibited from permitting n Marshal to tako secrecy, so that tho decision of the plotters | with him a squad of soldiers to break np an in refereuco to tho holdiug of their wcssfons | illicit distillory, or selza n gang of countor. L '] with open or closwed doors {8 not | feilers or smugglors, It the officer caunot known with certainty, ‘Thero ju | do this uuarmed, then bo is to lot crimo go renson to beliovo, howovor, that (he Bloxi- | untouched and the procesces of the law canizors have o great dread of the watchfol- | uncxccuted, ness and the etinging criticism of tho Re- Twanty yenrs ago thero wason the statutes publican press upon theie jug-handlo opera- | a Democratic law which authorized any white tions, nud will thorofore couduct their labors | mnn to apply to auy United States Commis- in seeret, sloner for p warrant to arrest any colored man, 7 z womay, or child upon the charge of being o It happened that the Io:n.m Hista Pumo— slavo ; and tho warrant waus issuod ag a mat- cratic Convention und thoe First District Re. ter of righ 4, placed in tho Lands of th sublican Couggressionnl Couvention botls met, | 167 ©f Fighit, aud, placed in the kands of the ¥ arshal, ho was directed to 8oize tho nogro, yesterdny, tho former at Cedar Roplds and S W and to uso whatever force ho might deem tho Iatter at Washington. The Democrats N s necessary, calling upon the military of the nominated o Stato tickut and adopted reso- iy ? United Stotes to furnish him with the forco lutions ; the lepublicans nominated a Con. raclarat to put the law, tho power, aud tho CGlovern. gressioun! tickst und adopted rosolutions, 3 o 4 3 ment of the Btate ot doflauce., For this pur. It will Lo seen that the Convoutions were e 4 posa the navy furnished on one occasion n widety at varianco in their declarations re- R garding two fmportant quustions, as witnass; icroq of e mllond mul warings that Joh The Demacrats, 2 Tne l-'v;wbllmm. Boatow ks posieadan In ordar {0 exeonte g love Ut thel | Thatthe Wledom uf tho | 8 Warrant ’"’F the ‘l;“‘:“m of a uegro pauclul xystem of thu inuncial policy of the | to glavery. or ] purpose troops Republi n".’-.'xm-.f;"nlm:g{?r mfl; ::‘.‘:f.‘.?::fml:yp’l'lfu’ :'e':'mr wero on \'nrlnula occaslons employed to cap- woncyeld mononalles of which it bas preduces ture human beings and roturn them to slave wual 1 H i it o l::‘l'n;’s‘i: ahe ot 31.‘.“:‘ ‘a} 'IM‘: y m:fi_wg ery. It was tho Domocrtio doctrine for hnlt Tohpraclues coutraction munihe beforo the date |\ cantury that tha Governmentof the United that was aestroved overyilixed for the resumption caternitse which gavg'of sbecls u:nn:ml: by | Btates should soud its troops into any Btate, ; d e — Mr. RAKDALL, o {nfer from something that took place at Pittsburz lnst week, will not b the noxt Democratie nomineo for President, Wa do not conceal the fact, however, that Mr. ‘T1LDRN may, in comuion gratitude, trapsfer to him some of his Firat Preferentlal Mortgago bonds upon the Democratic party, and securo for him the Vice-Presidentlal nomiuation in 1550, At Little Ruck, Ark., the othee day, & carcs less chombermuld threw o plteher of water out of a hutel window aud soused eleven candidates for thu Detnoctatie nomfuation tor Covgress, Providentially it happened at 11 o, m. wh moit of the statesmen were takiug suthin' at the barfusido, clec the loss wight have been proportionately greater. The decadence and fall of tho Woman's Hotel is thus told in lmmortal verke: ‘Thero wae onco & Woman's Hi But 1t was not patronized wells 1t hereatter won't vary From tho kind ordinary, Dut Judge lirtox ls madder than thunder, e s bl by Whilo su many cliurches are having trouble with thelr preuchers, thelr Blshops aro causing no end of annoyance to our Democratle friends. After Gov, B., of Ohtg, comes ex~Judge B., of the Baltimore Orphdus® Court, forger. The Democrats had butter oo in for the Congregn- tioual form, ———— Eashl Not a word! Tho rural Democrat of oy et Lo lador, o Gusernaent, BVIoK | 1o loyed by the Marshul ey will rush toln del 4 ohtod s read the papers, ana | Y08 Pereont. Tho stillborn numbered 44,040 uad wil, Toctelore, we wee'to 81} clavat ‘} o employe y the Alnrsl 0o pogse | e eencuem— oug, they will rush upou certaln defeat, The 000 commerce of 0 dues not res 16 pap th arriages 201,346, Py are two Moubco it by e measures.iha suriy valuor and proc | £0 onnblo him to oxecuta tha ordors and da. THE HALIPAX AWARD, conservative {nflueuce of that Stato alonn more mouey lu_ciroulation Juno 1, | S\t L R e ne been redls- | the marriaga Tabs fgnee G063 aren, e reaponel-mutiig the. refundin of 1879, than on June 1, 1878, baesides Ll immense stock of gold withdrawa from the vaults and bed-licks by actual resumption, Resumption, therefore, is tho right road to genulue expansion, ond the Greenbackers will stand in thelr own light by further op. position to its accomplishment. scanty to ba vory Interesting, though they are nob without elgnificance. They show (hat while France, with a population of 30,020,000, that i, Lall as much againas that of Kngland—namely, 24,000, 000—had an fucreaxo of populationamount- ing 10 132,000, tho fucreaso inu the latter countey reached 203,000, —half a3 wuch agatn as France, While in England there 14 one birth to twentys eight inbavitants, in France thure i¥ not quite vue birth to thirty-six, That povulation dues uol In- crease i Franco so rapldly as in other countrive familiar to us 14 notning new, bat it s well to kuow the latest record of tne fuct.~Loudon Timze Adelaide Lennox, tho English actress ot New York who got into that suat with Jarrett & er, sud who compluine that professional and wausgerial jesloudy bave kept ber dowa in this counlsy, wriles 1otho Now York papers a lurmoyuné alatement, concluding: *'Finally, fSunaucial eme barrasaments overtook the good woman with whom 1 hiave lived most of the timo since I camu to Now York. Sbe lost hier fow boarders; tho gus was cub off;the coal was out ; there wasnothing to est. Thea Ithougltol tholecturc; but wien it was written I wag oo weak through lack of food todeliverit. When I was stronz euongb. 1 weut on the platformat Btelawsy Hall und delivercd wy monologue. toldthe truth; and now I ask, is thero onc wan, oue mansgor, in New York who will ses that jus- tice ls douor 1f there i not, thero s mo future before me; for I sw helplues, friendless, alone ia this country, without woney. without clotbing. without Lread, aud almost withoat buman wywe patby. Ule ioz ta Buancial dis-[ine punile debt at a Jow | €fees of the United States Qourts, especinlly t . u.umm:uy. undirate of intorest, if the Stato authorities objected, aud particu. i Thit the revolutionary | 1aly if tho object was to yeturn a humau be- et V'b“lhfl pemo- | ing to slavery. Tho member who, fu thoso R Sreee, With tia appraval days, would have proposed in Congress to fu. b frauds shonid b s ;‘l"m“'i“ml::“fi: i N+ | cludo in the Anuy bill & probibition of the Lsdleated, eats (he Presdential use of troops to exccute the Fugitive-Slave Al i :f:‘:;":“,?“‘lf;““fl";‘;h"::' law would have been expelled Ly tho Demo- . |eoustitutiona) attack oa | arats for proposing trenson, torermiem, of elective | iy Demoerntic unuy probibition not only "The is hardly any chance for a diffcrenco | CFilPles the exccution of tha law, and tho ex. ©of opiuion as to what the verdict of tho peo- elcullonoi tho decroesund onlersof tho United plo of Towa witlibe upon the merits of these | States Courts, but It grautn immuuity to all cyntradictery propositio crime. 1bisa dircet {uvitation to another general soizure of the railwuys, and to a gen. In tha vote in the House yesterday on the | eral resort to force by the Communists, It is sdjournment question there wero manifested | a notico to them that thoy can go abead and the fiest pronvunced symplowms of tho split | fight the militia to thair hearts’ content, be- 1 in the Democratic parly caused by the revo- | cause no United States troops will be per- lutionary policy which tho Porres crowd | mitted to interfere ; that the constitutional Lave undertakon to insugurats, ‘The coucus | guarantee that when requested Ly a Stato Tuesday ovening bad voted to postpons con. | Government wilitary aid shalt be furnished sidcration of the adjournwment question uatil | to suppress domestic violence ond iusurrec. Juue &, but notico was then given by several | tion is suspended, the Constitution itself Dumocruts that they would not be Lound by | abolished, and tho commaud of the army csucuy action in this matter. Disregurding | taken from the Executive, aud sl this that this warning, Fruxaxpo Wooo sttempted to | th Dedocrats woy secure the vote of the stricted; hence on the Bocond Tuesday of October he'll vote in the wrong dstrict, and i batlot will be throwu out. Hsshl Not a word{ ———————— e Mr, Ilaury has introduced iu the Bunato a bill providing for tho payment of tho Hull. fux award. A long writtou report in the nature of n protest nccompanies tho biil, but the Exeeutivo Department of the United States is authorized to pay the- award, with. out further communieation witk Congress, if tho I'reaidont wlall think proper, Tho strong objection to this solution of the dificuliy growlug out of tho Halifux arbitration is that it secks o shift reaponsibility, from Congroas to Lo Prosident. The responsibibly be- longs to Cougress. T'he Benato as part of tho treaty-aking power aud thoe Ifouse of Representutives as the only body that can origiuute reveuus billsare called uponto ratify. thecorruptverdiot of the Halifax Upnunission or to reject it. Tho isiue is plain, and Con. gress ought to weet it promptly and decl. sively. Itought not at tho samo tinio to exbaust it functions snd to charge the President with an investigation which sproperly belongs to it. If the award is o violation aud & mockery of the spirit of fair arbitration, Cougress should so decide, It cannot reusonably expect the Fresident to perform its disagrocable dutivs forit; 1o ve. i3 o barrier thoy will find it jmpossible io posy, The warning of Judge Key is a timely one, and will recall to the Bouthern poople how Iguominiously these Northern Uopperheads, after ogging them into resistance to tho Governwment, aban. doned them to thelr fate, It 4 a warning which will not only have a healthy influence in Tenncsseo, but in the Blates furthor south, ‘They bLave nothing to hope from Tioex or Lis faction. If they expect subsidies or tho ' paymont of claiws, they lave ouly to look to his cam. paigu declaration that, iu case he wero eluct. ed, nono of these claims should bo allowed, If they aro vash envugh to expect any holp from tho Greasers fn case of another civil war, they have only to recall the cowardly retreat of theso fellows in 1861, after encour. oging thewmintorebellion. Theletterof Judge Ky, the decloration of such an influential paperos the Vicksburg Herald, that these demngogues Are showing too 1auch * anxiety for futura snccess with themselves at tha heed,” tho conservative uttersncos of other prominent papers, and the the solemn warn- inge sud protests of such o mon o4 ALETAN- At arecent convention of tho Disciples of Curist, Gov, Bisuop, of Obio, sald bis bighest awbition was to be asuccessful Bunday-school worker,” In facp, lhie would he wero slto- Rutber as tho Christians are, except those Cin- clupatf Bouthorn bonds. e e —— 11 o Reprosentative from Ohlo were to dlo or resign, thus causing u vacancy fn the Cowne gressional delegation, how would bis successor be clected—by what districed e eeet—— 1t is azainat tho rules of tho House to sclt Nquor fu tho restaurant, but & Congressman cuu Zo fa and get s mouth measured for s new breath just 4s easy— — - MATT CAHPENTBR'S wan Mflrnlr says: “This vovers the grouod (o INinoly, Wisconsin, and Minuesota, in every oue uf which Btates there 18 & wember of the family struggiing for Congrese.”” If it Is truo that ex-Uov. Wasi. DUKN, of Wisconsin, desires to bea candidate for Cungress, bas lie not as good 8 right to ruu as Matr CaRrexTEs, of Washington! Tho IMf- huls Wasususss declares that he is not s candi- date for Congress. CaueesTsg has not ssid that Ae declines, but he 1s understood to be like Liurkis, o ————— =% he Health Board and Board of Alderwen of New York bave been iudicted for witiful viols- tion of tue laws aud neglect of offficlal duty. ‘The accusation against the Board of Health is, that it has falled to suppress certaln cstablish- wonts ynguged iu manufacturlug (samong other thbiogs) odors offcnsive to the health and com. fort of the city, Thess establishinents, 15 s charged, bave destroyed nelzbborhoods, und swelled the desth-list above the rate of any —— ‘The bistory of the Pottering Committes will bo produced as & sequel to tho * Huntiug of the Boark.” We fear that Mr, Porrsu's Snark muy prove to be a Boojum. A ——— ‘Fhe averago mewmber of Congress sbout this time of yearls *thinkingon the frosty Cau- cuses.” s “EuoTuRnN " Chivalry—Seutencdog & Geor- &lan wowan to death and fually Loposiog & tea