Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 3, 1878, Page 4

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s B , aLlondon.™ il THER CHICAGO Tlye Tribane, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. DY MATL—IN ADVANCE Jraty Fittion, ane year. Atk of n e |,x';5f-v} Tier: Literary. Wer Klv, ame year.. 1nrtnof & year, par moi WRRRLY RDITION, POSTPAID. £.ir rony, per yeui Clubuf four.. Epecimen con Gire Post-Oflice address County. Ttemlttances may be made either by draft, express. Tost-Ofice order, or in registered lotter, at aur risk. TEHNS TO CITY RUBSCRIBRRS, Tafly, delivered, Eunday excepted, 23 centa per week. Unlty, deitvered, Buniay Incloded, 80 cente per week. Address THE TRIBUNE COMPANY, Corner Madison and Deatbozn-sta., Chicago, 11l Orders for fhs dellvery of Tur TRIBUNE at Kvanston, Foglewood, and liyde Park ioft fn the vountlng-routn will receive promp TRIBUNE BRANCII OFFICES. fall, Including Stste snd T CRICAGS TRINTNE has estabiished branch offices for the recciptof sabacriptions and sdvertisementa ss follows: NEW YOR F.T.Moe Fapnex, Manager. PANIE, France—No. 16 Rug dels Grange-Batellere. 1. Manten, Agent. LONDON, Eng.—American Exchange, 449 Swand. Hrxry ¥. Gu.io, Ageat. #AN PRANCISC K—Ttoom 20 Tridune Bulldlag. ‘e Hotel, AMUSBEMENTS, BoVieker's Theatre. Madison street, between Deazborn and Btate, ** Lost Haoley’s Thentro. Randotph streer, hetwren Clark and Evangelino Combinstion. **kivangell Klaverly's Theatre. Dearborn street, corner of Mouroe, **The Danltes.”! Mamlin's Thenatre, Clark street, oppasite the Caurt-Touse Eugsgement of Frank Chantray. **Kit." Now Chicago Theatre, Clark street, opposite the Sherman Houss. - **Hases ‘mau'a Toechter.” Academy of Masle, Halsted atreet, between Madien aad Moaros. Flety entertalnment., . Va- Exposition. Laksahore, foot of Ads treet. b White Btoeking Fark, Gamobetween tho Milwaukee and Chicago Clubs at 16y m. ORIENTAL LODGK, No. 33, A. ¥, & A, M.—Tla| 122 Lasalle-st, * Visitors fraternaily ‘inviied, 8pectal Communteation this Thofaday evening. at 7:3 o'clock, ) feF 0! " for workod the 3d Uregres,, By onler ot thediuaier, THURSDAY, OOTOBER &, 1878, Ureonbacks at the Now York Btock Ex. change yestorday closed at 00§, The Rev. Hznnr Wawo Brromss lectured ‘to a large audience in the Tabarnacle last evening on ‘“The Reign of tha Common Poople.” Ho took ocoasion to ssy some 1 sensiblo things about the kind of money the wominon peopla need and onght to have. The business in Colorado was done in fine shape. Tho Republican State ticket ia elected by a majority that will reach 2,500, aud Berrorp, tho Republican candidate for Congress, has carried overy county except two of thoso thus far roportod. Not a little -of thin sweeping victory isdue to the grossly- dishonest and intensely-cxasperating action of the Democratic Honse in cheating Colo- rmdo out of tho Representative whom she elocted two yoarssgo. The defrauded poople Liave had thair rovenge. A rathor ifiterosting caso in law is pending in the Circuit Court, wherein is involved tho question of tho power of tho State Board of Hoalth to *sit down on" a regularly-licensed medical practitioner for no graver offense than tho advertirement of his business in the nowspapers, Doctors of all sclhiools have hold modical advertisers in' supromo con- tompt, but it romains to be scen whather the * Courts will recognize thia inter-profossional projudico ns law to the oxtent of sustaining the coustitutionslity of the statnto which empowers the State Board of Health to re- yoke a licenso for such a cause. There is ono member of the Wisconsin Board of Charities and Reform who hasa poor opinion of whitewash as a purifier of tho wnoral atmosphere of Btate institutions. Prof. 0. H. Haaxins, of Milwaukeo, who was absont in Karopo while his colleagues of tho Btate Board were ongaged in the invos- tigation of the Delavau scandal, is out ina vigorous protest to Gov. Bmzit ngainst the report of the Board. Ho thinks that De Morre, the Buperintendent, and Woobsuany, the Steward of the Deaf and Dumb Insti. tute, should both have been prompily dis- misicd from the positions they wers proved to hovo shamefully disgraced. —— ‘Tho nomination of Mr. Kenx for Bheriff Ly tho County Convention of the Nationaly isunother indication of the genera! dlsposi. tion of the soft-money party and the Demo- crats to ** pool their issues,” Whethor the Bherif of Cook County believes in flut woney or not ia A matter of not the slightest cousequence, but Mr. Keax was soleoted be- causo ho i the mon most likely to be nomi- nated by the Dumoorats, The Fialists nnd Democrats in this county are simply follow- ing the Masuachusetts and Jows' examplea. If thero are any people in tho Democratia party who ero opposed to the fiat oraze, they will probably come to the conelusion before Joug that they must cunse soting with that party unloss they ave willing to help along & «cause which they kuow to be both dishonest und unwise. A cablo dispatch sunounces the complete failaro of tho negotintions for a better undor- standing between Germany and the Vatican, Drswaxck on the one hand refuses to budge from the stern requirement of obedience to tho May lawa by the cecleslastics who were doposed for refusal to obey thew, and who still refuso; while,con the other band, the Vatican, much as it would like a vestoration of umicablo relations with the powerful Em. pire of Germany, dare not make the required concessions through fear of alienating its strongest adherents. The Papal Nuncios at the Courts of Austria and Bavaria Lave been charged with the work of attempting to obtain & modification of Businox's wltimatum, but there is little likeliiood that their wission will prove succossful, ‘The sudden and unlooked-for death yeatar- day morning of Mr, Lxww E. Mricuau, a wmumber of Taz Trisuxe local staff, produced swong the newspaper fraternity a profound shock, sy the probability of & fatal resuls of what was deewed ounly a temporary indivpo- sition was not entertained even by those nearest to bim in the last bours. To & wido circlo of friends and scquaiutances, by whom Alr, Mraousu was greally catvemed by rea- son of his sttractivo tralts aud sterling abili- tics, tho news was no lews s sbock, Aside frow = high order of tslent and a broad culture Stiing him for an honorabls plago in journslisi, be had tu the counss of g long eonnection with this paver won ag enviable reputation na an nuthorily in base-ball mat. tors, and bad come to Lo regarded, in the Wost at lenst, na a conzervator ot this branch of athletic sports inits bost and purest es- tate, Admirers and promoters of the *‘na- tional game " will recognizo in his nntimoly taking-off a losa that will not essily be ro- pared, while.as a man and » jonrnalist he will be aadly missed and affoctionately re. membered. For brevily, clearness, and good sense fixq platform adopted by the Republicans of * the Milwaukes Congressional Distriot s to b bighly commended. Thers are but four shord planks, bt they are strong and serviceable ones, Tho first exprasses continned faith in tho Ropublican purly an the parly of frecs dom and cquality for all men and of fidality (o the nation's obligations; the second re. joices at the evidences of returning prose pority rosnlting from the near approach of the conntry to a fixed monotary basis; the third reafirms the polioy set forth in the recent address of the Republican Btate Committee,—that of making all paris of the carrency, whether paper or coin, of o ceriain and established valua; and the fourth expressos confidence in the integrity and Lionesty of the National Administration, The Convention nominated L. P. Frisor, o prominent lawyer, as candidate for Con. gross. THE BUSINESS OF A HARD-TIMES YEAR, It has been *resolved,” from Maine to Toxaa and from California to Florida, that the country is fn a condition of hard times such as the ‘*oldost inhobitant " hes never witnessed or ondured. There are at thiy time 10,000 dolefal oralors proclaiming daily all over the land the horrorsof the hard times that are oppressing the poople, *8tarving millions " js & term in common use, #o cominon that & stranger in the land would supposa that the American people wers suflering from a famine,—that men, women, and children were engaged in a lifas stmggle for the crnsts from tho rich men's tables, and that just at this moment the * lecherons bondholders ” had possosaion of all the broad, and meat, and food gonorally, to say nothing of the clothing, nod werq dealing them out in small quantities to tha starving millions aforesald. What are the facta? During the yoar which closed on the 1st of July, 1878, thera was a greater quantity of the product of labor produced in tha United Btates than in any previous yonr; the increase was not only in quantity but in tho valucs. During the same yoar the rail. roads, aud canals, and the sail vessels and stosmers within the. United Siates trons. ported, moved, carried, and delivered n greater bulk aud weight—that is, quantity of the prodicts of human labor and of groater nggregate valuo—than wns ever transported in any one year in tho history of the country, ‘Theso {acts, which are indispuiable, establish of necossity— » 1, That during the year ending July 1, 1878, there was more productive labor em- ployed than in any previous year; and 3, That the nggrogate value of the prod- uot, notwithstanding tho decline in prices, cxeseded tho value of the labor product of any preceding year, It is aluo true that the cost of lving—tha prico of honse.rent, of food, aud of clothing —waa much bolow that of any year since 1861, and that, while wnges were in lika manner reduced, thers was mors labor om- ployed, and a greater produat marketod, transported, bought and sold, and consumed, than in any yoar pravious to the setting in of hard times ; and that the wages of 1877.'78, if leas in proportion to the number of per- nons employoed, had, considering the reduaed coat of living, o groater purchasing power than the wagos of any yoar preceding the ora of bard times, Notwithetanding the -** dreadful hard timos,” aud that ¢ millions of hanly lIabor- ers” havo been unemployed, the United Btates not only fed and clothod the wholo population, aud added nearly 8200,000,000 {o the savings of iudividual luborars aud prodacers, but it also sold to foreigu coun- trles more American productions during the yenrs 1877-'78 than in any proceding year ; and the aggrogate valua of these exports was nearly $100,000,000 greator in gold than the value of the exports of 1872-'7T3—the year of uncqualed paper prosperity—counted in car- rency. We avail ourselves of an intoresting articlo in the Now York Jublio on this sab. Jject, and espocially its tables, to show how great was tha surplus product of labor in thix country inn yoar of hard times as com.’ pared with the surplus of 1873, which is clnimed to have been the last year of pros. perity. Pirst as to quantities of exports s QUANTITY, Articles. 1 Wheat, bu Cor, b Oats, bughels Tarley, Itye, Flour, Larrels I'hat is n protty fair showing of a surplus of breadstuffs sold to tho people of other countries, and tho product of a laud whero, according to Burrxu and Keanner, “starv. ing nullius " can fiud no work, no wagos, no brend. It must be remembered that thows sales were meraly of tho sarplus bread, and they sold for something over $16,000,000, This, in n year of *starving labor," was double the valuo of the sales of the ‘same products in the year of inflution, ‘Though the prices of cotton and petro- lenm were greatly reduced, the guantity of cach sold in 1878 wea largely increased, ‘fhoy compared in 1678 with 1873 as fol lows; 1873, 1878, Cotton, pounds.. 1,200,000,000 1,607,661 Petrolenm, galjous., 158,108,414 280,304,541 Au fucrease of 33 per cent in the quantity of cotion, and of 80 per cent inthoquantity of petroleum. Burely, the country jsgolng to ruin and beggary. QUANTITIES, 1878, e o 4007, i 18 44,040, 141 13, 284,073, 203 ‘The valuo of thows thingu—surplus prod- ucts of unemployed labor—was about ¥143,- 000,000, Another branch of produots, however, was also sold,—surplus products of Iabor, after meoting thoLowe wants,—and some of these Were R4 1878, Colions oo yaidi 1.1,181;'1.' by S0 R0 8 cloth. yar 5,777,774 120,50, 505 Leatuicr, wule IR AN Turpentiue, gulloug.. 5,114,070 7,633, Sua Zluc, Da. WUSS 55,0 ‘The price of cotton baving felou since 1873, the iucreasod cuaytity ouly produced $178,415,270 in 1874, sgainst 9224,593,382 in 1873. Even with this reduction of ucarly fitty willions of dollary, tho total values of tho exporis we have named cogutul up B575,066,046 Ju 1878, ogainst 347,145,000 1u 1573, botl compuicl 1 poper curreucy, yonrs wera, however 1878, coin valu IHTY coin valnes Excess in 1878, Uonsidering 1 78 wna, aa repredented, ayear of desolation, bankruptey, ruin, and atarvation, of nnemployed labor, nnd starviog milliona ‘of people unable fo get money onough to buy food, the sals of 8148,000,000 more surplus prodacts of labor than in tha year of magnificent prosperity is n showing that may be cnlled a very fair one, nnd in one which, ontside of France, exhibits greatar evidences of general and individnal prospority than 18 shown in the tradb of any othor nation in the world. THE ENGLISH REACTION. “ AUl that glittors is not gold.” The En- glish nro beginning to renlize the truth of the old adage. The results of the Berlin Congroess were accepted by thom in tho ligh of 8 victory over Russia, and Dricoxsriznn returned from Prussia as the diplomatio lion of Europe. 'Therse were some amall men like Griveronk, not in the immediats sunshine of Royaity aud with no garters on their knees or medals on their breasts, who spoke words of soher warning and nttered signifiennt prophecics. Thoy could see furthor than the people, and long experience had tanght them the hollowness of show and the thinnees of tinsol, But Bsacossmrup came homa a hero, illumined with the light of a supposed groat viotory won over the carpet knights that had gathered about Bismanck's round table. Thepeople wont crazy, Thoystrowed Lis path with roses. Thoy rent the air with salvos of arlillery and tummnltuous cheers from thousands of honeat British throats, Ho wasdined, and wined, and fetod. Ha was pre- sented with addroases of congratulation, nnd the Quesn tied the garter about his manly knoe; nud may have wished that Heaven had made her such a man. All England took a'holiday, and the British Lion wagged his tail with dolight and roared with joy. A fow short woaks have passed and the fizz haa gone, s0 that.we may look in tho glass aud seo what it really lolds. The English people, having rocovered their sober senses, now begin to fuquire how Russia has beon checkmated, and what England hes goined, 'They find that sho haa oceupipd Cyprus, oud that the island is o smitten with epidomics that no one wants to go there, and that sho has incurred an ouor- mous liability, for what? ‘To. guarantee Turkey against Russian encroschments in thofuture, And what is Turkey todo? She is to guarautes certain reforms in Asin Minor, Thoso reforms cannot be exeonted without money. Whore ia the money lo come from? Turkey has none, owes En. gland millions of pounds, aud is morlgaged to Russia for millions more,~—n martgaga which may bo foraclosod any day. As soon 8¢ Englandsuggested it was nbout time for her to begin tho reforms, she suggoested it was about time to negotiate aloan, whereupon England rofused to socommodate her. Nico ontlook this for the reform business]! o Now that they havo got over thoir crazo, the English find nlso that thoy have paid 80,000,000 for national defonses,—that is, they Lave pnid out that much money for a parado of their fest and Sepoy troops. For what purpose? To intimidate Russla. At the very . time they were intimidating Rus- ela, at the very timo they were hurmhing ovor Deacoysrizio, Ruwin wme prossing down through Turkestan with resistloss might, and now the English are 8o afraid of their Indinn frontior that they must spend millions moroe in a war against Afghaulstan, The well-informed London correspondent of the Now York i¥orid places the whole situa- tion in a nutshell whon ha says: What Ruasla has gaincd Ia this: - Release from a most perllous situation in which ahe fiad blaced hersolt; the partitlon of ‘Turkey; plenty of timo 10 get ready for hor next move; and the patalys of Knglana by means of o troaty which cnal Jtussin to provoke & war whenever sho may choose, aod obliges nx to bt it under any aud all ciroum- siances, ready or not ready, ablo or mot able, T the sum end sahatance of the Treaty of which xome of tho papers describud’ hore ®reatest triumph ever won Ly statcamsn- Eugland must ook on and ses the Turkish nrovinces hurrlod aud vlundered; vhe must take up arms 10 defend Turkey at any moment which may be convement to Risels: sho has nlso ren- dered bernolf answerabla for the good gavernmont of Aulatic Turkcy, whereas the Porta itacl( s quite rowutlesa to securs that, Why did Lord Bxace ONNPIELD commit the country o all this? | de- clare that [ canuot find any ono who {3 able to giva a reasonsblo answor to the quostion, Terhaps, with all the Danubian provinees in confusion, with Greese threatoning war, with Albania and Bosaia in robellion, with Tuarkoy impotent to make any reforms ifu Axla Minor, with war imminent on her In. dian frontier, the English people may re- member the sobor warning of GrapstoNne ‘Yhoy may, if they look sharply, already seo Lis prophocles coming to pass. It is not wonderful that Disxazox smilod when hLe hoard of BracoxsrieLy's lttle Constantinople Convention, 8501, 147,000 1107300, 000 THE BANK FAILURE IN QLASGOW. ‘The failure of the Bank of the City of Glasgow, Beotland, has beon ta sane oxtent foresoen, but the failure is, novertheless, ono that, oven if it do not uxtend to othor banks, will prove most dissstrous. Tho figares of Uabulitles put down mre $50,000,000. This ononnous loss will fall naiuly on depositors, tho practice of depositing wmoney in banks belng universal in Reotland, even morv so perhaps thun in this couutry. The bank. note ciroulation is comparatively gmall, The British Evoyclopedia gives a list of the banks in Scotland, Al the banks are of compars- tively long standing, boginuing with the Bank of Sootlaud, founded {u 1693, and the Hoyal Bank, founded in 1727, 'The City of Glas- gow Bank was organized in 1839, being tho youngest of all the Scolch banky, "Thu Inteat ligures coucerning this bank aro for 1874.'3, and ot that tiwe the bank Ldd 1,273 partners, 125 branches, 5,000,000 paid up capital, §2,- 115,000 surplus or reserve, 41,000,000 de- posits, and the sharos woro worth 240, The bauk is uot a chartered institution, and all the partoors are Jiable to the whole extent of thelr fortunes for the dobts of the Lank, The Heotch banks all allow intorest on deposits, and it is stated that moro than Lalf the de- posits in the Beotch banks are in suma of $50 to 1,000,—~the banks practically serving ns savinge banks. Inanswer to 8 parliameutary inquiry as to what class of the community it is that innkes the smallest deposits, it was answered by an experienced oficer of a Bootch bavk, some years ago: Tuey are generally tho laboring clasees in towns lke tilasgow; 1l conptry e ko Pertl d Abcrdeon, It [o frow wervante und ddiermen, and it class'of tue communily who saye smuil sume from sbole casulugs Wl they come to bo s bank doposil. Toers fu nows fucillty for thelr placing woney fo the provident bauks, which recelve woney 11l the deponit mmounts o £10. Whey it comed 10 £10 4t 14 equal to the minlvum of & bank doposit. To systews of bauking o Scolland bs an extension of tao providvut-yink eysiem. Half« yoarly of yearly thuso 1o the bank aud udd (s savlugs of thoir lador, with the Jutcr- cat tlat baw uccrucd upon tho devonts from tha revious bull-vear of yedr, 10 the priucipal; aud tu his wuy It goes om, withuut betuz ot wil reduced, sccumulating (ab compound luicreat) till tao de- ositor s sble eitler 1o auy or Luild 4 huuwe, when t cuus o be £100, Or £I00, or L0, or 41 be i sblu to comumence busitess un o muster 1 tue los fu which bo as BILLUTIO bect & servant, A grost of the depositors of the bank wre of that dencriptiva, aud 8 great patt of the woel thriying of ar far ad wabufuciyrers iave atsen from such beginui Unlder tuis systew of doing busine s the The cofn valus of the exports named in both | wumber of dope TRIDUNE: TIIURSDAY, gow in probubly vory I Va deposita ot thit thme veachiug &3a0,000, 000, Tn 1857, this City of Glasgow Bank, with an- other bank, was compelled Lo stop payments; Lt it soon recovered and resumed business, Tho banks of Scotland are allowed to issne notes, convertible into coin on domand, and the fasno ia limited to & certain amount, Aftor that amount of cirenlation is reached, thoro mnst bo & roserve of coin bLeld in the Lanks equal to the excess of cireulation, The failure of thia bank is dua to the uni- versal dopression in business, and the decline in valus of all property and securities. The money was loaned on cradits which at the timo wers considered all-snficient. Theno credits were stocks and bonds of all descrip- tions, and also the commeteinl papor of largo manufacturing establishments, which have fallen under the decline in value of manu- factured goods, and the inability to sell, ‘The {inability of the bLank to recover its loans, or to convert the mecnritios into cash, hag brought the bank to a ocollapse. How far this failare of the Glty of Glasgow Bonk will affect the credit of other banks, and espeoially the joink.atock banks of FEn. gland, rornins to bo segn, Thera i evident- Iy & growing siringency in money affairs in England, and all the banks of the Kingdom are likely to sulfer from it, Great Dritsin mus$ have food. Wa published a few days ngo an estimate by an Eonglish paper that Great Britain would noed this year 105,000,- 000 bushels of whent to supply the deficlency in the domestic production. England is also a large importer, nacessarfly so, of othor food than breadstnfls, and that country Is hronght face to face with the fact that all this supply must bo paid forin cash. Tho old means of paying for imports with British manufactures are no longer available. The oxport of British mannfactures has fallen off 80 seriously that there 4 a constant dread that the drain of gold will be so gront ss to imperil the condition of the English banks, A large proportion of this gold mnst como to the United States, - While there may bo an economy ia the importation of all other American proilluctions, there mnst ba a suficlonay of breadstuifs and pro- vislons purchssd by England, and, as that | has to be paid for in gold, it must coma bither. Never in the history of the United Btates was its flunuoinl condition o prosper- ons and promising as mow. An immonse surplus of produdtions, an' absalute market for all that surplns, and the proceeds of that salo bronght baok to us mainly in coln, With our own Govornment aredit at par with coin, there is nothing to provont this coyatry, un- loss the lunsoy of depreciated paper, from becoming the depository of unprecadented wealth,—woalth measured by tha coln of tho olvilized world. coming hore in exchange for our surplus products. And it is in utter dis- regard of tha fact that overy stgamor coming to our shores is bringing ooln to our mar- kots, to aur banks, and to tha Goyernment, that the ulmost efforts aro making to break down the national and commoeroinl credit, and plange the country into the wreck and ruin of inconvertible, dopreciated paper wmoney. A WARNING TO THE ' DEBTOR OLASS" Tho sincero beliovors in the mission of flat money simply picturs an era of currency inflation whon the makeshift for money will bp chesp, oasily obtamed, and a legal-tender in dischargo of their debts, 'This {s the sort of money they want. But theydo not fole low tho matter.gny further, or they might discover how this condition of things may turn to their ‘disadvantage. If wo admit that money, so called, will be cheaper, mora plentiful, and moro casily obtmined (though there is considerable doubt abont the last featuro), then we have a oon. dition of things which will serve as & warnfog {o tho creditor class, Thoy will demond the prompt poyment of debts tha vory moment the debta becomo due, in order that they may relnvest their monoy Leforo it shall becoma cheaper atill. Thero will bo a univarsal indisposition on the part of croditors to extend loans and remow wortgages, except on the basis of a coin con- trget., May not this turn of alfulrs give the debtors wore trouble than can bo offset by tho seoming advantaga of cheapor monay ? Lot us take a caso in point. Wo will say that a farmer owen $10,000 on hisland, which falls dne noxt Decomber, and which he kunows ho will not bs ablo to pay at maturity, Ho docs not want to sacrifice tho land, but desirea and expouts to renew the mortgage, aud poy it off in inatallmentn, as ho s con- vincod, he will o able to do it given time. The money next Decomber in which pay- ment might bo tondered will be practicully at par with coin. The owner of the mort. gngo is a capitalist and money-londer, who would gladly renew the mortgago afalow rate of interest if he were convinced that the Resumption act would be carried ont in good faith, aud that logal.tender curroncy would still be at par with coin in two yenrs or five years when the new mortgnge will foll duo. But supposs, in the moantime, thut thero shall havo boen elected to Qon. gress, undor the auspices of the Domocratic and National parties, a suflclent num. bor of Fialists to threaten tho ropea! of the Rosumption act aud thoe issue of irredecmablo Govornmont eurrengy in such quautity aa to deprocinte its purchpsing value. "Then the capitalist will say: * I cannot af- ford to ronow this mortgage and take tho risk of boing pald o mouoy worth ouly half ns muck as the money now dua me” Ho will than give tho debtor the option of pay- ing the mortgage iu full at once, or of wak. Iug & new worlgago payable by spegial cou- tractin com. If the debtor cannot pay at once, snd refusos to make a specinl coin ocontract for futuro puyment, thon tho owner of the mortgage will praceed to foreclose, soll the property for what ft will bring, probably buy it in himself, and get a judg- ment for the balance agalnat the delinquoent debtor, This ia g process which will not bo uncommon, if the issue of irrodeemable pa- per currency In large quautities shall become imminent, sud it will ruin thousauds of in. dividual debtors who are mow helplug to cleot men to Congress to vote for the very thing that may bo fatal to them. It {s not alone in tho case of mortgsgo in- .debteduess that the succyss of the Fiat doc. trine will tLus work injury to those who now advocato it; tho sawo apprebonsion of a constant declive in the wvalue of such cur- reucy will domopd (hat all commercial transactions oun time sbull be 1inade ou tho basis of special coin contracts, Tho counfry merchaut who cowmes to Clicago or goos to Now York to buy goods will find that he cannot got sixty deys’ time without specially agreeing to pay coin, sud' thus assuming oll the risk of tho further decliue iu the currency meanwhile. Indeed, the very furmers who ste now chumoring for the issue of irrodoomablo paper currency will bo among the first to catch the plary, aud will rofuss to part with an pcre of sround, or to sell a Lorse, or cow, or bushel OCTOBER . 3, 1878 o7 s pnilin cash at current rate: wranan eavencit to pay coin ab the time mnl rate fixed npon for the foture, The men who waut to borrowr money to earry on thoir Lnsiness will discover that thoy onn do 80 only by agreeing to pay the dobt in coln, or clso thoy will ba forced to submit to ex. tortionato rates of intereat, whioh will ba the monoy-londer's only way® to hedge on the probable losa he will inonr by the shrinkago it the valne of the cnrrenoy betweon tho time ho loans it and the time for repay. ment, 5 The announcement that thers is to be onothor era of depreclatad currency, which will ba the effeot of a trinmph of the Dema- orats and Nationals, will bo like a great bombshell thrown into the finaucial operns tions of the country. Men nowin debt, wha might pay aud save their property in the ond, will be forced into insolvenoy and ruin. Merchants and manufacturers compolled to borrow money will ba forced to pay ratos of interest that will eat up their business, or to taka all the risk of the currenoy depreciation by ngreelng to repay in coin, which will bring about the sama rosult, Tho *‘debtor class " now shrioking for more and cheapor money will do well (o pause long enough to give . the roverse+side of tha ploturs soma mature consideration ¢’ they will find that tus prospoot is not so one-sided, sud the piotare not so rose-tolored, as they hava fancied it. A correspondent in Iowa senilsua a copy of Anew kind of miik produced and obtainable In that Btatc, 8o cheap, 1t consists of a green card bearlog the followloe devices: Fiat Lactls. Redecemable at tho option of the cow, Thisls ° parwith *ab- *835393d8~-u] punoj; 2q M AGT NEL SO WERII WL, | 3 ONE QUART e, of abeulute milk, ' B3 H =] 28 | Circalation and not redemp: Eg tion Is what we wapt. Strange to sav, this milk dnes not take with tho public. An aep of Congress making it a Ielony to deny that thoae tickets are nllk wiil be necessary to compet even fiat people to ace cept theso tickets as milk, Already 100 of these **quarts " will not be accepted In payment of 4 pint of the ald-fashloned milk. Fven children refuse to swallow this kind of mi'k. It docs ot satisty tha stomach, One mflch-cow s held to be worth moro than a ton of theao fiat “quarts.” If the Gavernment can create doj- lars out of papor by merely printiog ** This is o dollar” on paper, why not create mitki It dollars and milk ean bo creatcd by law out of paper, why nog beef Why not issue curds, bearing the Jegen HIS 18 A LBflAL-TBNDEB{ von § A BARREL OF FLOUR, e It it can print a plece of paper and declara that it is money, why not make tioces of paper each a legal-tender for a barrel of four! et —— Along about 1746 tho peoplo of Massachusotte consldered that monoy was scarce and timos hard, and it was determined to relicve the sup- posed stringoncy by fasping a lot ot Irredecmu. ble notus, * based ou the falth and resources of the Commounwealth.” Thu object thon was pre- cisely that in view by tho Fiatisis now, viz.: to cheapen tho currency to eyable men fn debt to Mquidate thoir obligations, The laboring classes wero enlisted fn the project under the delusivo ropresentation that watering the currency would anliance wages, Increaso emaployment, snd make timea good,—the smne Identical argument used by tho Fiatists at this time. Thoresult was that ip 1740 this paper mouey was at a discount of 88 parcent, Tho evils causcd by thia stats of things yro graphieally deseribed by contem- porary historiags. Without guotiug thes, it is of Interest to read what I;Ascuorr, tho historian, LY H . ‘Tho firat effocts of {ho unreal enlargement of the currency appeared beucficial; and men rojoiced in tho sueintiw Impnlwo wiven ta trado, It was pres- ently found that mpocle wae rapelled from country by (1o uyatem: that the paper furnished byt o depreciated currency. fuctuutlug in valou Wwith pyvery new emission; that fron the lotorest uf dgbtors there wus betwsen th coluniea some rival- ahip In Insuce; that the incroneg ut pupor, far from romodying the ucarejty of money, excited o thirst for new 1ssnexs; llmthun the party of delitors, Ifit prevailed In the Luglslature but guce in ton years, tould flond the country with ille of credit, men II?N an interest to remnia jn debi; that the Income of widows and grptand, aad all who had salarios or annuitics, waa rulnously atfected by the finctua- tione; thyt udministralors wera tempted 1o delay the scttlement of ealutey, a8 cach year diniinlsbed the vuluJ of the fnhezitances which wera to b pald; and, fina]ly, that comnierce was cmugtud n ts sources by the unccrtainty attending the ex- prossiuns of valua i cvery contract, This was the expericnce of Aasaachusetts Wwith frredeemably poper money wore thun a century and a hnlf ago, but the lesson it ceach 18 gooa for to-dny. Bomu person writes 8 note to Tan Tuinuna aver the appropriate signaturo of #A Fool,” {n which Le euys he sought to pay a Mr. Sitanp the sum of $6.58, and Mr, Buany declined to ro- celve the mopcy on secount of au cditorlal para- eraph In this paper stating the declslon af At- torney-Goneral Davexs about the tender of subsidiary coins, X{ % A Fool * destred The Trin- UNE to culighten him on tho mutter ho should havestatad what kind of mooey hiotoudervd. Tho opinion of the Attorney-Uencral wus to the effecy that subylidlary colu fs not a legal-tepder to the omount of $3 In paving a debt which exceeds 5 [u tho present case, fur instance, where the debt 1s $0.5, the*Atiorney-Geuerul 14 af opinfon that the statute does not permit tho debtor to tender 85 fn subsidiary cotn) and then pay 81,58 In standard gold or ellyer, or logal-tonder bllle, Tho instrugtions of the ‘Tronsury Department to custom olticlals, based upon this opivion, {s that, in cases whero the payment exceeds £5, then subsidlary coln shall be rocetved only for the fesctioual part of ono dollar, aud the sninor colva for making chouge' of fess than 10 conts, ‘Thot rule dn the present case would Fequire, tn order to maka the tutal paywent of $4.58, that $6 should bu In Joual- tendcr notes, or gold or silver staudard cuin, the 60 cents of subsldiary siiver, and the § cents ouly in winor colus, Byt private ludividuals, of course, are pot flnally buund by the opluloy ot the Attornoy-General, and niay contest the mutter in the courts if they sce fitto du so. o ep———— England's quarrel whib tho Afghens will vrobably svous end o war. 1t is notos scrious an undertaking to fight Afgentstan ss it would have beeu to have grappled with Ruasia, aud Eugland will not spead a4 juuely Hime in blus- ter, 'I'he Loudon Zimes rugards the retusal of the Ameer to recelve the British Embussy ge equivalent to o deglaraction of war, The Liing SRY§: Vo latest ncws from the Tndien frontivr leaves Htile doybt that we must expect war, Uperationy, in fact, hsve comuwnced uiready, ‘Fhe Awecr doultless futended Lo inake the breach with Ka- ®land irreparaplo. Buch will e the sifect of his 5:2'?::};‘ \\;;uuwt .t’u’hv vt.ull ll‘le 10 lfl{w‘:flfl‘lfl G heow ays Auha{n-l'a betors winidY, i “w.fl":,fl 4 long ay toward Gulsbing tho war, Wy gan conliaug il n the spring, I thu Awcer ds slill obdurate. The blow, when given, must bo vifectaal. Toe London Vews ulsa fuvora prompt actlon. Wihen tho British mlselop was refused s passuee to the Capital uf Afghanistau the cawwandsnt of Alliusjid told Maj. Usvaasant thas but for bis persousl friendanlp he would shoog hiwy on the spot. It 18 sald Russia will net juterlers, Jge smelepeg Four yeom ogo My, (izokes E. Wiurs packed & delegation and thrast hiwselt ov tho Kepublicans of tho #irsy Distrlct for Scnator. ‘The result was that he was disastrousty beaten. He recelved only 2,978 votes, sgaluat 3,350 for Lis opponent; the majority seaingt hlm was 1038 TE wverwhalming (dufust wud wot b -York Custom-House: eaneo the distrfet was Deiocratie. On the contrary, t was Republiéan. All the othet Ltepublican candidates carrled 16 casily, The Republieans clected “thelr two can didates for the House,—~1)u Bois and Bran- WELL,—the Democrats getling but one. For Congress, the Republican vote "was 3,007 and the Uemocralic votq was only 2,000, heng a majority. of 401; whilo Winira was whipoed 1,08, [Ilo was beaten In evory ward, including his own, as tho figures show, viz.: Trard. White, Haines, mK 3,158 oo g TR follows: 4,000 all'to pleces by the. Republican voters of the district, and that, too, on his own sido of the river. It ha persists in remalning on ¢he track, he will hio defented vastly worse than before. flis cgotistical folly cost the Republicana a Sen- ator for four years, and his rapetition of it will cost thom & Senator four years more, and he may drag down other portions of the ticket, Including a Representative, in defeat witn him, ‘Thera 18 110 uso trylng to blufl Anxgn TivLom off the track to make room for him, as it will do no good; tha voters witl sit down on hin owraln, and nothing can prevent them. . e —— Total . ... el Theso returns show that hewas cut Tho drummor must go," not because KeAt- NEY saya {t, it becausa he has becomo too expensive & luxury, and beeauso there are better and mors economleal mothods of dotug busi- ness. ‘The question’has been discussed for n long time in a quiet way by tho wmembers of busiucss lirins who vmploy travellug agents to rolielt trade, and some firat-class housos have already obpndoned tho system. Others are con- templatingit. The8t LoulsJournal of Commerce relates the experivnce ol a well-known house In New York, which had the choles of payiug 85,000 for a storo in o great thovoughfare or 8500 for ono in a qulet cross-street, and chose the latter, devating the §4,500 saved In rent to advertising. This was the firet step to an enor- mous tortune, ‘The Journal tinds u casc In this city that gives polnt to its argument In favor of advertising comuared with arumming, It says: o wholesalo grocory house, which a faw carried wixtesn dritimers, at un expe; per annuni, and did an almost orofic han abandoned the drummer sysicm, ap ne-foarth their cost annually in newspuper adverttsing, dividing the balance among custons era. Asnnatural rosnlt, thelr trado has increased tenfold, und tha net pratit to tne honse i 1677 wera 810,000, Vi 111 da utill butter, than they ever could under the de mer syetem, Uamnperitors don't like it mueh, but 1t§n novertheless A siiccess—an inimunee succuss, Bome of the hegviest houses in Milwaukeq have alirady abandoned tho system, and vthars are contemplating doing so. . The Boston Advertizer of Bept. 23 has thls to say, editorlally, concerning the receutly-put. Ished reports of the inveatigation the New 1 Evory merchant having businoss Jrfixe Customs House. and avery citlizen iptoreatod In the hupeet and eflicient collvetian of thy reyonua, will be fne tereatod In the reporia of the Epeclal Commiysion appointed ta_Invoatizata the cunduct of entoms business at New York, which wo publish thig morning, Theae revorts show that frregulurltles of vorioue kinds hnve long beon practiced thure, which wera corrupting tho rervico, qufranalng thy revenue, and aperiting ay a divcrimination sulus fmoortora In other eltios. — Yhexu vopurts _reyual marue cloarly tho reavons for the chanyes Lhal wera wade 1nst euminur iy the Now York Custom-House, and will recommend tho action of the Presidont (o all good citizens, ‘Thore have Lren a good many mnquirien futo Custom-House managoment front tiig o tine, but that canduct lu{ thin Commis- Alon npnears to have been un ly intéllicent, venotrating, und uscful to the ——— A tonder-hearted Boston corrcspondent ex- presses his fears that Bex Burier will die of gricf and a brokon heart In case he Is dcleated, s Honace GrEeLsy dld. Ho Jays great stress on the fact that the (lencral is rapldly growing old, that ho fs scraining overy nerve to et elected, and that the unfavorabls comments ot tho press—oll of which he sees and reads— nottlo him wonderfully, All this may be true, but we don't udvise any elector in Massachu~ sctts to voto for Butren for fear of breaking his “heart by defeating him. Indeed, a)most any Insurauco company would tako a risk on that bard heart of his and warrant (¢ not to break, for a very small sum, let the outcome of the fall clection bo what it may,, If he feclsiha tash of tho press, ho is only getting 8 low ratent tuterost on a big debt of abuse that he contract- ed loog ago, e ly try. e E— Becrotary Evants [s not 8 succrss as o story teller, but ho sometlines nspires to . joke, Ho perpetrated one ut the President’s exvense the other day, when ata Cublnel mecting he pre- pented the credentlals of Ciun Loy Pry, the Chiness Ambussador. ‘Thoy were writton {u Chinese characters stmllar to those seen on tua- chests and packoges of fAro-crackers, on a yel- lowish strip of paper abont veven fest Jung ami one fuot wide, neatly rolicd on sstick of sandul- woud, 'The characters wers very lnrge and hewvy, belng sbout thrbe-fourths of ap fnch fu helght., When Evaurs commenced to road, a translation, which hiad been made by Yusa Wing, the Ameriean aducated attache, ha grave- 1v bauded the original to Presldent LAY S, suy- ing: “ Will you be so gonil a4 to look qver the original, Mr, President, to sce If the trauslation £ literald® 4 e —— Peaple In Ohio who havg known Beuator ‘TuunMan's hard-meney opinions ever since the duys of JacksoN akd BeNTON harve not yet got over their astonlylment at bis cowardly flop on the currency questiop, ln the hope of placgting the flat-shinplaster ndvocates, It ls nat forggotten that, fn 1374, Sengtor TRURMAN, addrossing the Senate, azked I8 1t was the pur- posc, agalnst all the lzhts of exgerlence tho worldover, 1o banfsh gold aud sltver from tho country for all thue ' to cume, and o Ynsiuoss upon nothing but frredecmable paper, depond- Ing for Ita vohime upon the wil) and caprice of the moment, or the views of members of Con- wress seeking re-clection o asplring to Ligher places. o declared our fathers meant thls should bd a hard-money Government, e Botne carcful statlsticign who delishte fn the horritils has been 1o the palis of keeping an account of the number of people whom death has carried off during the past month. J[e savs tuut in Kurope and Amerlea fully 12,000 people arg known to have porished by the sword, by flood, by fever, nud by railway, coal-mine, aud stepimbopt disasgers, Nearly 4,000 have dled of fover lu the Bouth, 600 in the Jhasius staaniship colltsion, 400 by the groat flood ut Aliskolus, Hungury, 330 by the coal-mino explosion In Bouth Wales, 100 by scveral rallroad accidents In Greas Nritaln, 100 by lake, railway, ond other vasyaluies fu this conutry, and sume 4,000 by su- wageuients beiwoen Austrians, Boantaus, Turks, upd Albankng. The Bt. Paul L'ioneer-I'ress |y considerghly agitated to learn that President 8TE8LY, of tho Apploton Unlversity, 4 likely to ba tus pomi- nee of tha Hepublivaus tu the Bixth Congres- slonal District of Wisconsin, Jt is bocause Prof, Hrerk wus ouee a candifate oy (hu Greenback tleket for a Btate oflis that mekos # Jook like an abaudoument of thelr sound- mousy vriuciples on the part of the Republic- sos that disturbs the Iiuncer, But that stal- wurg Journal nay e comforted to know that the (irpenbackers will probably run 8 men of thelr own, s0 that STERLE'S caudidacy canuot bo wuch of a give-sway to the (ireenbackors. brmbdile b sidecd Little Hollaud is sull tugelug away at the Acluscp war with the aborlyines. The contest bias wiready lusted eight years, uod has coat the Duteh an lwmeuss sum of money, A corre- spoudent lately writlug from Anisterdam says: “I'io Aclicen war is likely to rutn our fnspces, Scarcely liaa the Chmber accoried 8 credis of scveral mlitlonk for tae war taun the Goverament Hada iLself undor Luw nccuseity of asking for bew b e 18 axkv for ¢lgot 1wlhifons, Ju wrder 10 cover the dulici: cutalivd” by the war— -which lus wleeady buvolved a loan of furty-ihrex willwne of forine—ih Goverutieut bas bad to yorwuade tho Clhaniber o cownuat to 8 1ax "which i ntipred np lively discoutent amonz alle w Shoan i U BUtBWCSt purtion of 150 Srcat i whicl at the neareat voint fa | miled fram Jnva: out Nunnl:r‘:;‘": and Acheen the poriian ot mate from dnva, e Ditch bave afwaya viey Acheen with cecat Jealotisy aml dinilke, (naa et an they regand the vicinity of u fro Nndenond. ent Stato s antting a bl examplo to thelr Malay vopniation, which la in & state of scrfago fittle pe. maved from slaver, 1n fact, there 19 0 pacty oy Toilsnd which 1% endearoring o o for the alay s indavavreity much what WiLaenrower did for tho hincks 1n- damnlcn. The Achicencas are 1] 1noat advanced af Lho nnilva £ces of Summitra, any Are evidontly a very furmidubly foe, with a yreat deal of staylng power, e E—— — The London T¥imes prints, with evident astay. fskment, the letlfer of the Rev. Dr, Nicnours, of 8t Louls, dascriving his adventyre ity lLieary in the Adirondacks. It wili bo remembore] that he was attacked by four bears on an tslagg only cighty feet long and about fifty feet while, nud had ouly ashot-gun and six cartridoes fyp the encounter. Four shots were required 1op the big bear, leaving only twd shots for 1)y other three, With ono of his remalning cart. rldges tho Doctor killed & secondsbear, ad wuy the other cartridyre two bears. It i no wonder that many persons lave read this story with g, credality; but It s dua to the eternal dienity o history .to say that Dr, Nionotis' vernvity g beyand question. le {8 tho most prumineny Presvyterfan clorayman in 8t Louls, and b5 acted us Modorator of the General Assenlily, where, perhaps, ho had some experlence of heary to propare hin for his inte adventure. Jt may bie, however, that the two bears the good Doc. tor killed with one shot were “very smiali vues,” o —p—— Ongof Mr. (irorar E. Wirrra'a: * frionds» asks why he can'tdo electod Benatorin case Col, Anxait TATLOR can by snovod off ths track to maks room for him. ‘Thare are-two reasons, ‘The first 1s, there s not horsc-powor enough iy the distriet to wet Tavron off {n faver of ‘Warre; and the sevond is, that the voters wonld not support him anyhow even it TAvLon way bulldozed off. 1f both men run, Col. Tavroy will receive cortalnly three out of overy four Republicant votes cast.: Winta would by uy. where in tow face, and the Democrat woulld bo elected. o S~ . Thero ts.a tinge of romance abonut thy mar. rlage of the Howe Onsox Brooks, of Denver, Col, to Mra, NaNcY MICHARL, of Las Anxeles, Cal., which took pluce recontly, The groom g 70 years of age wnd the bride 63, Forty-lve Fears azo the Judgo was the accapted sultor of the Iady he hos now wed. The relentivss pur. vuse af fate separated thwr voung hearte, and the ludy and gentleman have both since married twice and lost, ha niz wives aud she her hus- baunds, Something llke a year ago thelr path” Crugsed agaty, apd the Judee hus now marnsl hts tirat cholee, Nriy e —— Ex-Senator Doutwert furmally withdraws from tho uanvasa in the Beventh Massachusetts Diatrlet, for the reason, as he says, that “my fortune, never but foderate, has boen dimin. ished rather than ineregsed durlng the last fit teen yeara of m public life. As the shadowsof ze begln to fall upon me | feel moro than ever betoro thig duty of making some turther pro- viston for my famlly, 1f, houorably, it can Lo qone.” A goad many peoplo think Uengross a zood place to go tu to n& rich, C. H.Panrgn, of Belolt, Wla., haa undertaken the feat of ridiug inta Cungress ot two humes travellng In different diroctions. o hos one foot on the back of the Flat horse, whichis golng for unllnited, trredeemuble flat shin- plasters, aud the ofhor vn the back of the hard- woney’ Dempcratie hurse, which {s golue for gold, silver, and convertible ereenbacks. (Scs the Elkborn resolutions.) s own resolutiva sccms Lo be gnything ta get Into Congross. e —— 9 ‘The country has been looking for a week to scu what 1} 18 that the Democratle party in cone ventiondssembled “polnta with pride' at. At frat ft waa supposed to bo its bard mouer record; or dte patriotism In putting down the Rebellion; or 13s opposition to lssuing green- backs; or fte allisnce with the Fintista; or tne New York riots; or pernaps fe was the lfo and public sorvicos of Bamupnd. TiLbeN thatl poluts az with pride. e p—— POLITICAL NOTES. At TelloRive, Jefferson County, Il Jast week, Congresétan TowNanuny met with a cold re- ception, Ifo anly had o dozen or so for a1 audlence, aud o Aght broke up the meeting. TikeNanD 8TUVE, the Natlongl candidatein the Springfleld Diatrics, has bought a newspaper to Loost bim futo the Sonute, It his editorlals ars 10 botter than ks history of liluols, bis chances. are bads o In the Forty-fith District the Nutionals can find no ono to run fur the Senate. The distrkt Is Democratie, though LiNpany, the Kepublican candidaty, was elected to the House fu 18i0 by au fmmense majority, . Ty Hzxnr Tow Asrrny, the Natloual candidate for the Leglalnturs in the Thirtieth Distrk, wae the Gresnback candidate for State Trear urer in 1876, e then recelved 1,033 votes to Chompalgn and 211 in Platt. o is a very por- ular mou, and stunds g good chuyee of beatlaZ Dax, the Doweeratie cundidato. 4 J. E. Dyas, Chalrman of the Edgar County Repubilicans Camimittey, savs the confercace b Parls Jast Friday was pot unanlmous i ite coo <Jusion uot Lo put up a caudidate for Congrest Ne, himeelf, W, H. Barlow, ot Etlingham, aud otbers, fusiated on o vomiuaglon; but CHArKER who Fan two years age, carrled thy majority wits hfwm, The amenitics of Juurnallsm just now ar balng currlod ta thoir full extont, ‘The ellier ol the Stals Kegister cully Col, Dawpart, of the Pourla Democrat, * the d—deat fool tu Hiinois" ‘The Denocrat retorts by caliing (len. Paued g bigoted, mrmw-]llnlndwl. vrejudiced’ dema- mogue.” SouTiieu fa the writlng vditorof 1e Jtagiater, and Gunsi MARTIN of the Dewoersdy and theso twb! follows wil) gop thelr busses W Hghtisg with shotyuns, Cal. B4y Bucguaszen will nover reach (b 8cnate, 1lu hulldozud the Copyentlon, but be can't bulluoze the voleps, A Janee od Tospeetyble pumbor of thy Domucratlc volerd of Madison County have ulliod themselves il the Urecnbackers and nuininated Col. Bt WuErLER, ex-Bhertif, qud o genulne Bourbud emocraty far Betatap, This undanbitedly ¢ cures thu defeat of Buekmantauand sue sl tlui of PAusiuson, the Republicau. Tho flon. W, % Buszoy, of Carlyle, roporkt tho Forty-sccond Leglalative District as iv supplied with coudidates: . Two Republiash two Domocrsts, one Indupendons Deinocrit and oie National, Two yedrs ago thero Were five candidates, ayd two Jepublizans aud o0 Democrat werg glectod. Joxks aud Nicuokh the Hepublican Sundiantes thls yoar, arsbolt fanuery, men of good wtanding, sud populsr ‘Fhere la no doubt of their election. —_— ) In 1578 a “Reform ¥ wave swept -over fll& sccifon of the Stute, and resulted fu electing Jou Byire Tresurer of Liviugston Couuty, Ve M, Zunon Tyeasuror of Patuamn County, 80 A, Wiprrakss Troasurer of Woodford County ‘Fhig ' Hsform * wave kept on yweopiug ! 1o 1873, sud the saine wen wore retyrued l; offlces, ‘Then-came the pesuly: BTiTF rau o with 817,000 tho next week Zusgy skivpe ouf with $3,000; and thrce weekeARa WilP 7AKEY disappesrod with $41,000.—~ Foutiad Seatl nel, Jix HESBINGTWX sepins [0 bo baviug tLius allbig own way |p Kune Couyuty. lis n‘“‘a vouvetlon b Geueyy lagt Sajurday decbt to fuss with the Natiouala Jt they woud bel? wend IERRINGTON Lawk to tho Houre. Dull‘l!: County, Lowever, Js yet fo be heant from; 3u¢ shoutd HesrinaToY Lulldoas the ui.nl;nw']' veptlon, as he buy duns’ bepetoiaie, there "A Ly 8 bolt of suct diwvustbos as ta elfectuals kvock Jin's ambltion Lo by Bpeaker 1wt B4 widdie of vesy August,

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