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TUE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1878, C T 4} ‘ ] o The Trilbmre, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. RT MAIL—IN ADVANOE—TPOSTAGE PREPATD. i 183 T, Fpectmen copiea seat fren. Give Post-Otlice sddress in full, In¢foding Btato and Tounty. o temitiances may be made elther by draft, express £oat-Ofice arer, or In regittered letter. atour rlsk. 1PRMS TO CITY SUBACRINERS. Tally, delivered, Sunday excepted, 23centa per week. Daky, delliered, Sanday included, DOcents ver week. Addrens THE THIRUNE COMPANT, Corner Madiron and Dearborn-mta., Chicago, Tl Orderator the dellvery of Tuz TIHUNR 8t Kvanston, Englewend, and f1yde Fark teft o the counting-room il recelve promyt attention. et ety NCIT OFFICES, TRIBUN Tne Cnicano Trineae has extabilshedbrach offices for the recelpt of subscripiions and sdvertiserments &1 oilowe:; "R YOMR—Toom 20 Teidund Mutdiog. F.T. ox Fannxs, Mamrer. ~ PARIE, Franco—No. 16 Rue de ls Grange-Bateilers. 1. Mansen, Agent. 0, Kng.—American Exchange, 449 Stend, Nxxny F. G1LL1o, Agent. BAN FRANCISS —~Palaco totek AMUBE MeVicker's Theatre, Mniltson street, between Dearborn and Rtate, Kn- eagement of Mim Katle M . OCLi." 11ooley’ Thentre. Ttandolph strect, defwern Clark and Latalle, gogement of Rubson and Crane, **Our Dachelon.” Eae Tinverly's Thentre. Destborn street, coraér ot Monroo, Ebgagement of Fayerly's Minstrels, Acndemy of Music, Tinlsted street, between Madlion and Momroe. Va- rlety, noveity, and speelaily performances, . IHamlin's Theatre. Clarkstreet, opposite the Court-Wours. Fogsgement of the Uelchauty & lengler Combinutton, Vatiety totertalament, MeCormick Iall, Clark sircet, corner of Kinzle, T iustrate ** ltome, the Kternat . Cromwell wiil ' ORIESTAL LONGE NO. 53 A. ¥, & A, M.l 121 to-ut, Visitars ‘conilaliy instied t6 nices 1) 1o In Ny ecis) ConnMunication tils (¥ Hday) evening ‘elock, for work on M € i, M. llecren. "Ity o L TUCKET, Hecretarys COVENANT LODGE, NO, 520, A. F. & A, 1. elalCotamyuleation this (Friusy}” evening, it Cors Tuthtan Ham 1 2 K ingie-st., at 7:30 o'clock, for work on M. Deirec. The memhors are ail re« nu]xixl:'d ot l‘1|ll -l'“l]l;“m“ bruthren are alsu fratere Raily invited. by order s i 11, W. WOLSKLEY, W, M. WILLIAM REUSL, Secreiary, at velock, of the Masier. —~Rpo- FRIDAY, OCTOBER 325, 1878, Greenbacks at the New York Stock Ex. chongo yesterdny closed at 998. Hazzanp, the Indiana bank defaulter, is at Inrgo ngain, 1Mo wns lucky onough to ba handed over to a Sheriff of the Kean atamp, and hns gono to maot Fraxg CunNINGuaw, tho diamond-thief who coolly walked out of tho Cook County Jall a fow days ago, President 1aves and, Sccrotary Sneraan yesterdsy attonded the Cumberland, Md,, Agricultural Fair, and delivored spoochies touching upon business and fiuancial topica of intorest to farmors. Asn matter of coumso, both pointed out tho importance of actual money to the prosperity of the producing slasses, Secretary Evanra timo last evening to ddliver su address on national quostions to an imimonso nudionce,of his fellow-citizens + at Cooper Institute, in Now York Clty, Ilis treatment of tho curronoy question waa emi. nently logical nud sound, and in entire har. mony with the viows of the intelligent au. ditory which ho addressed. The opinion preval mong tho military authoritios that the ronegade Oheyenuos have not crossed the Missouri River, and may yot bo intercopted. Threo companies of tho Bixth Infantry loft Fort Buford yes. terdny by atoamer in the hope of hieading off the lostiles who outran 'I'uonynorom and nlipped past Mices, Gisnox oud Mivys are ovidently not working togethor in perfect uuison, and the Indisns appear to be reaplng tha benefit of that fact. : 2 The books of the New York Mine, which TiLorx's agents stolo st Marquette in ordor to prevent the Government from obtaining proof of the income-tax frauds, have been restored to the Notary who had possossion nt tho timo thoy were roplevined in that * wild Western way " which Tawyer MHaz. LAXD was 80 surprised at, It will bo remermn. bered that Jndge Baxtem, of the United States Court at Detroit, spoke in a very poremptory mannerof tho necessity of te- turning those books, snd they have been roturnod. The storm of Wednesday along the Atlan. tic const and for soma distance in the in. terior proves to havo beou of almost unex. smpled fury and destructivenesa, Eight vessuls were suuk in Philadolphia harbor, and 400 buildings were mors or lews dam. sgol in that city, tho loss being about 2,000,000. ‘The stoamer Exprews, ply- ing Letween Baltimore and Washington, was 1ot by the storin near tho mouth of . the Totomac, and literally overwhelmed and sunihilated by the awful power of the angry waves. Twenty livus were lost. Vesols wherover overtuken by the burricane were complotely at its mercy, and the wrecks nnd casualtics whon all nscertained wust foot np o formiduble total, Tho shareholders in the City of Glasgow Bauok will be called upon to pay up §3,000 per sharo of $500. I'his will make up the deflcioncy of $30,000,000 found by ihe Ex- swinery, na the capital stock was 5,000,000, I'iere were about 1,200 shareholderu in sll, 10 that this assessment, which can Lo col- sceted to the extont that the property of the stockholders lnsts, will probably baukrupt many merchants, and causo alwost 83 wide- spread a dlsaster o8 it the lows wors divided among tho depositors, Neverthless,it cannot bo denicd that the sharoholders in the bank, ‘who were carcless enough to bo decsived by the Directors or greedy enough to wink at the unlawful speculations, deserve to suffor ruther than depositors who bhad no share in tha profits aud no volce in the msnagament, tho duties of the Bheriff’s office, he Lad the respeet and good-will of -the legal profession in au anusual dogroe, because Lp showed 4 disposition to sink politicl and persousl cousiderutiong in the earnest endeuvor to' reudsr 0 the public & Snib-rato quality of servico, 'Fo-day the lawyers are hiu bit. turest oppononts, and are exerting thelr iu. Hucuce to defuat bis re-clection. T'he reason for thiy cLango of fecling is net bard to dis- cover, Kexw hzs pob fulillled the promiso of his eurly lncumbeney. Iustead of coy- Qunting Lis office upou steictly Lutivess prin- ciples, amd trosting to an appreciative people for Irin tewatd, he hus prormitted ignotance,: ineflicioney, and dortiiption to take the placs of intolligence, promptnees, and integrity. 'The business of hix offico has been hieglectod | and mismannged to the rerious injury of parties whosa rights and interests wero in- volved, and he and his bondsmen nre to-dny tho dofendants in saveral suits to recover damngon on account of the gross maladmin- istration of his office, Beveral cases of this kind aro rhentioned T our columns this morning, all going to show why it is that the mémbors of the Bar nre ns & rule opposed to' Keax's ro-olection, 2 P Caroliun plan, in that 1t substitates fraud for wiolence. Florida to organizo Red Bhirts and Rifle lubs an a means of broaking up mootings and redncing the Hepnblisan vote; they go abont it in a perfectly péatetul way, but are confidont of securing the desired result with no less certainty on that nceonht. By law pamsed by the Democratic the power to tions fs veated in missioners of Registeation, who aro made the sole jndgesof the qualifications of voters. ‘They aru nuthorized to ** purge ” tho regis- tration lists of all namos which in their judgment onght not to bo registered, and they sro using this authority with an eys aingla to the election of the Democratic caudidates. The process“of purgation will be applied in sach a way s to make suro of the olection of two Democratic Uongroess- men, the wholesale disfranchisement of Ile- publican voters being the ond and alm of the framers of tha law. plan, - THE UNDERVALUATION FRAUDS IN NEW YORK. consideration of the subject of frauds on the customs rgvenno at the port of New York by undervaluation as to open fho mouths of the gnilty parties themselves, and compel n freo discussion of the queations involved Ly tho Eastern presa. enraged about, the morchant appraisers at 43 francs, the DBulletin would have pronounced him an * uprigkt judge,"—a very Dawmies come to judgment! simply impossibla that frauds have beenoom- mitted, beapuso of the high charsctor of the ‘houses implicated. tation of popper: The Floridd plan_difora from the Bouth It is mot found necessary in Legialature “rognlate” the elec- the County Com- Thix is the Florida It is n groat gain to have so pushed the The New York Daily Bulletin i3 ont ina flaming nrticle denonncing the Becrotary of the Trensury, and Collector Mennerr, and rder | the mercantils community of the West gon- ernlly. Kercauar receded from his valuation of 72 francs por doxen for kid gloves to 49 franca 145t tho nulawful dictation of the Colloctor.” This 18 pracisely the poeition Tutg Trmosa took a week ngo, francs appraisement wag n compromiso * sog. gosted,” It not dictated, by tho Collector, nnd we sald then that he * hiad no legal nor mornl right to make compromisos with morchants ns to tho foreign market value of merchan- dise,” Bomeo AT, ern importors,—the former has posted thom na systematio defrauderd of tho revenue, and the Intter Lecauso his compromigo figures are 80 far below the ronl forelgn wnarket valuo of tho gloves in qnes. tion as to operate aa a prohibition of the im. portation of kld gloves by nnybody outsidd the corrupt ring in New York. We havo it upon tho vory best authority that kid gloves equal to tho * Alesandor " cannot be bought in Europo at o cent less than 64 francs per fozon. twa stools, and he richly deservoa his fate; sinco, a8 tho Bulletin says, he had no right to evon guggest a compromise on the subjoct. It declares that Goneral-Appraiser Weo assumed that the 49. Gen. Mesgmr maoy have plensed merchauts, Lut ho has angsred Brewanr & Co. nud the Wests boeatise ha Gon. Menrirr Las fallon betweon But this is not in fact what the Bulletin i Had Gen. Mennrrrsustained The Hullelin insists thad 14 is Tt sayn: by Now lot §t he remembered: (1) That the Armg concerned In thess Importations are of thn highest atanding In the mercantile communlity, and (he last ta be supposcd capavle of concocting a frand npou the (uvernment; dervalae the go conspltacy botwesn wome ten urs dozen of 'the. most reputable of ourcity merchants, for upon no other ground ¢an we accoint for tho unitormity i 2) that, if tholr invoices do dn- s, (i must bu theremitof u f all the firma: () that, unontho , there must have been collaaion ho- noinber of nianafacturess nla HBu- igbest degres dangerous, bocaneo Muble to expo. sure_and defeat from intavested comypotitors, and wunld, thorefore, bo a tbingZ nol 10 be IBought of by merchants authlug of cumoon honesty. ‘posressed of common tunvo, 10 say I'his i3 very fino a¢ o special ples for the parties, on the ground of respectability. But, unfortunately for the JZHulletin's fina thsory, precisely this thing, which it declares eannot be done, has beon done, and dono in Now York City by firms as respectablo as any of tho housos juvolved in the kid-glove controversy, from the Government servico in 1874, upon the repoal of the Moieties act (aud who is B, G. Jawne, who resigned now reporied by the World as baving been omployod by the kid-glove importing ring), dld vot retive until he had prosecuted about elghty cases of alleged frauds upon the cus- toms rovenue committod at the port of Now York, magnitude and of every concelvablo charnc. tar, My, Javsn prosscuted all butb five or iz “I'hoso cnses involved frauds of great Ont of tho eighty cases commenced, {o o successful concluon, and recove ered for the Qoveruwment, if our rocollection sorves, about thvoo willion dollars! Many of theso cases wore againat houses of, until then, excellont roputution, Mewbors of thoso honses ware deacons and promiuent membors of churchos, and of the fret socinl standing, tion, double ipvoi¢lng, false weights and measurcs, and evory other form of corrup- tion known to the business of frandulent importing. through the aid of corrupt customs officors in ‘every dopartment of tho sorvice, ‘Thoy were bribed by the score; and many of thess bribed individuals wore formerly prominent .persons in the connnunity, and others friends sand relatives of distivgulsbied uen then in bigh official station, ‘The cases luvolved undervalun- ‘Thess frauds wore commwitted Lat us givo s single coso in point. Impor- bt 797, 608 1ba, 009, 201 1be. B . 58,607 lbs, At 1) ceuta poy roud tho duty lost amouated to $8,800.05. Lut fuvre was a fraudulent dawaye allowauce on 60,074 ‘puuunu wbich ulso escaped duty entirely, ouiounting st 15 cenle per poune $10,404.10." This frsusulent duwave slluwance wwas diacovered by sulerence Lo tuo asized books of tle b, from which it sppeared that Ju the salvs account's concession on_ wccuunt of datnage 1o the e3tuit uuly of $110.L3 was wade. Ly this case the weigheg was bribed, snd lle daoiage-silowanco exaiminer alsu muad have been brived. It was sot- tied ob the payment of tho invoica valge of the mercnandise, 341, 748, The bouse up to that tune bad buvB regarded 2s highly rusocctabie, Bowetimes the unporters wure short of oasl, gnd gave their votes for the price de- msudad by the bribed official. A note of this charsotor for §2,000 was produced on tho lcaring of one of Jaxux'v cascs. Que caso showed tho bribury of fifty-two customs officialy. The books of the houso impli. catod stigwed the puyment of bribes to every viads of officer, frem opeer and packer up to lignidating clerk. There was an eatab. lishod mcbednls of rates for entry for eaocl gmde of officsr. = you know,” beeauss the houscs are ro very respectnble! by Jaxne’s investigation wers o sickeniog, so shamefnl, and involved so many highly respectable New York, as it deved forth tha Agninst weth engged in the work of convieting them,~—in the work of restoring to the Treasnty the monoy of whickr {t had been robbed, Tho very merchants who had been found guilty appenred befors the Committeo on Ways nnd Means of the Iouso of Rep- rosomtatives and actually overawed tho mem- bors of it Into & rocommendation for repeal’ of tha Moleties nct, or_ ot least tnduced the Committes to believe that would bo botter. collacted if it were ra- ponled, practics of shielding wrong-doing Looause of the respectability of the wrong-doers. Tle press of Now York will do well to consider carefally the ground upon which it treads beforo it is too Iata to ratirs ffom tho shame- Ml bummess. true grit, now i the time for him to show it in tho interest of an honost coltection of tho revonuo in Now York as woll as elso- where, " malarial rogious of the Bouth, nud purified the atmosphere. Northorn olimo disporta himseif in penciling window.pictures, has had mors serions work in the Valloy of Death, and at last hos trie umphed in his conflict with the Yollow mon- ster. Thera aro yot sufferers who will linger along and die, but the spread of tho pesti- lonce {u atoppod ; and thoso who hava thus far ascapdd enn broatho moro freoly at the blossed assurance of safoty brought Ly tha frost, aud those who flod from their homes can now roturn, for the dangdr is over. ' The good news has spread festor than tho fover, ond from evory part of tho country tho rof- ugees aro hurrying home to their frionds. Lifols taking the place of doath all through the Mississlppi Valloy. Tho silent citits aro waking up. ‘The deserted flelds and planta- tions are onco more filling with laboruts, The harvest will be gathéred. Tho whauls of business onco more bogin to revolva, after thoir long red, nnd the tide of trade resnmea jts flow through ils accustomed channels, The horrible reality of fevor will soon bo only a memory, bitter in its assoclations to nany poor souls, dark as it stretches to the graveyord wliere so many thousands have gono to their rost, but blessed and illumin. ated with tho benefloenco of clarity and sympathy that flowed in upon thom when evoryihing clse was dark, 2 Now thnt the worst is over nnd tho limits ro “defiisled beyond which the postilenco cannot go, it is possible to roughly cstimate tha full extont of tho disssier it has cansed. Oa tho 24th of July last a brief dispatch from Now Orloans said; publishes n statement that fourtcen cases of yellow fover havo ocourred, soven fatal, 'The Donrd of Health hopea to check the spread of tha discase.” On tho next day, Dr Cuorrin, who afterwards sscrificed hls life tn hig scrvice for Lumanity, officially 'an- nounced its prasence in New Orlonns to Buargeon-Genoral Woopwontn, of tho Mo rino Hospital sorvice. 'In the three months which_ have clapsed siuce the Doard of Tloalth hoped to check its sprend, that littlo oloud of fever, *nobiggerthann man's kond,” 1ing oxtonded over pottions of soven Statos, finding its extreme nertliorn limit at Oairo, and ‘embracing an aroa ot least 140 miles wido alorig the enstorn bLank of tho Missls. slppi Rivar, with exceptioual coses in por- tions of 'Wexas nnd Arkausas. In these throo months fully 100,000 porsons have Loon nttacked by the pestilence, and at least 20,000 have died, and more ore to follow who took tho disease beforo vent of frost. in fonr cases hos boon fatal, sLowing that the fover has boon aa destruotive to lifa aa 8 battle, whero the samo proportion of fa. tality to.thoso struck usually provalls, Itis almost imposalble to estimate the matorlal Tousas, bt thoy will embrace” millions upon millions of dollars, caused by the stoppage of vation of lubor, and tho waste in ungathered Larvests, BSonth, not only in the thousands of homes comparative dopopulation of small futerioy individuals, men, women, and children, vied with ench other in sending monay, clothing, aml eupplies to the Iufected distriets, It stiowed tha henrty sympathy aud kindly feeling of our people, and disproved the aile- gotion that there fs any seciional fesling hore ngainst the Bouth. Thera are not want- ing numerous aigna to sliow that it hias made adeep impradslon upon the people of the Bouth,: The Iton. Jonx F. Houae, who was nominated for Congresn the other day by the: Yomd®ats of the Bixth Tennessed Disteict, said in his nccepiance of the homination: * Grander than the viotory of the Appoiat- tox is the victory won by the people of tho North in thelr noblo and gonerous contribu- tions to the siricken nnd suffering Boutl. Upon that fated flold the Bouth surtendared her swonl. Within the shadow of the dark doing of tho pestilence, bosido tho new-mado graves of hor herold sous and daughtors, with bowed head and tonrful eyos, she extonds her hand and surrenders hor heart to the genors ons and magnanimons North, Goo's own hand has bridged tho bloody chasm.” Thaese are noble words and they will meot with n quick and sympathotio ¥esponso in tlie North. But haw long will it lnat? Iow long will it be baforo the animobities of politics will effaco tho memory of benovolenca? Whnt effect has it had npon South Oarolina, for in- stanca, where no man who isa Ropubliean or who kympnthizes with Northern senti- ment can giva oxpression to his opinions ox- cept at the paril 6f his life? Gon'’s own hand has bridged the chasm, bat will man's hond destroy it two yoears from mow? Will the Bouth, in 1880, remomber the action of the North in 1878, or will sho be ruady to turn and rend ds? But tho Bullelin says, ** It can’t be doue, Bah! The digclosures mado names, that the press of docs to.dry, thun« aonlhenias, Aghinaf morchants? Oh, wno? CGovernment officiala who ita eonvlcted the the. rovenus, Tt s timo to pnt & stop o tho disrepntablo It Bocrstary Biuenuay has . THE ERD OF THE PESTILENCE. Thé chilling northors havo awept over tho Jack Frost, who in oar e — REAL MONEY AND FALSE MOKREY, Whenever Col. Ropert G. InoEnsoLy tukes up s kubject, heuseally manages oithorto sny somothing new ‘About it or to put the old thoughts in a novel and striking fashion. s discourso on flul money, incidental to Tocture on * Hard Times " recently delivered in Boston, wae not an excaption to this tule, ‘We have been over ¢ Hanl Timoes™ often enough theatrically, and have hind enongh of them practieally, bus it doos not seom pos- siblo to oxposo too often the fallacy of flat money a3 a yemedial measure, nnd thero aro threo points in Col, IxcErsoLr's trontment of tho proposed curo which should receive tho most maturo consklorstion from thoso who nre kindly disposed toward the desperato exporimont of an ** absoluto money,” consist- ing of werAps of irreddomnble prper. Tho first point is that jnoney mug of nacensity bo & commodity representing tho product of a cottnin smount of labor. . It i the intermnodiato factor of trade, snd mmust thierofore rupresent value oqnivalont to thoe value of the things exchanged. Papor cor- tifieates ean only perform the funotion of money- whon thsy are exchangenblo into monay of real value, and (s is tho oase whother they be Government notes, bank notes, or individual notes, checks, drafts, or uny other expediont used to facilitato ex- ochonges. Col. Iugertoll puta the easo as fol- lowa: Gold and silver are_commoditios. Thoy ata the roducta of labor, ‘They are not lustrameutali- fos; they aze mot devices ta faciiitate oxchauges; they arc tho things exchanged for suietling elde, and othor thines are exchanued for them. The only guvica about It to fucilitato exchanges I8 the colning of thoao metais, so that you €an tenthfally say Lhut cotning of'gold snd silver 1s a duvioce to faciiitato exchanges, and tue exclinnges are facilic iatad in this way: Whenever the (lovernment or any Uovarnmont cortifics that in a certain pieco of old or Miver thero are o cortain nawmber of grains of a certain Ouencas, then Lu who glves it knows that Jo Is not giving too much, and o wno ro- cajved that he fs recefving cnongh, ¢o that Iwliil change the defiultlon tu tiils: The colige of the irectous metals s dnvice to fckilisio exchangos, s the procions metals themsolved are propurty: they are marchandise, thoy aro commodities, an whepover ono commodity 18 exchanged fur another it 18 barter, and gold snd silver ary sho last roine- went of barter. ‘The wimplost illnstration will suficos A farmer has a horso which he desires to ex- chango for winter oloihes for himsolf and family; the man owning tho clothes does not want the horuo, but wants other things, for which ho Is" williug to exohango the clothes. Money ia the thing upon which both ugroe as an equivalont of value, snd which othera will. aooopt in order Lo accom- modate trade. But such an agreed agent wust represont an amount of labor equal to that ropresented by the clothes, or the ownar of tho lattor will refuse to port with his property, under tho approhension that he cannot procare the things he wants with the money ho has accopted. Wo will gay that %100 in gold and silver represents the num. bor of days' Iabor required to produce that awount, and that these days of labor are equivalent to the labor required to produce clothiea tho farmor wauts. In thal oase tho farmer doos not hesitate to bar. ter his horss for the 9100, which he knows be ean in turn pasa over to the owner of the olothes, and with which tha lattor oan procuro tho things for which ho wauls to barter his clothes. But a Gov- croment flat, with no {ntrinslo value, will not sarve this universal desire to barter, because ils pomiunl valuo is artificial, aud msy chango Leforo tho second barter can bo mado. I'io second point is that, if the Goverue mont can make money by siuple decree, it has tho power to put au arbitrury prico upon olt kinds of property, withont rogard to supply or domaud. We will say a bushol of wheat ropresonls tho samo amoout of labor a8 $1 iugold or silver, Ou that bosls the furmer is willing to changs his bushe) of wheat for $1 fn gold or silver, be- cause ho is suro that Le can prooure theres with somo other commodity .ho dosizes, which represents precisely the sams amount of lubor, But whilo b i willing to sell buy “Tho Dicayune the ad- As o rule, sbout ona trade, tho paralysis of commerce, tho depri. It bus beenn fenrful blow to the that bavo beon desolatod, in tha losses of skiflful and ‘philanthroplo men, and in the towns, but in tho suddon stoppage -of labor and busineds’ just ot tho thoe whon ihé Bouth was Leginning to recover from the distross of war and panic sud needed every nion's work. Inali this dark pictore thero ara bLright spota of individual herolsm, Lus tho only broad gleamn of suuliglt is the guick aud sympathotic -bonovolencs of tho Nortly, which never tired of doing until the news camo that no more Lglp wae wanted, Tt rained npion the Bouth in n constant shower of blosslog, In ita promptuess, enthusiasmn, and spontuncity it oqualed it it did not war. pnga tho holp that came to Chicago in hor ' days of need. Hud it not boen for that be. nevolonce the South would have boyn & Gol- gotha, It could not have helped itself from its own' resources? It could supply scclis | bushel of whoat for ¥l in pold or wated nuraes and dootors who worked like | silver, ho guuy oxact §50 i flut horoes and Howard lations that could jn. | monoy, of wo intringio value, and diciously disburso the rulief sont to them, but boyond this it was powerless, The victims ware shut out from the world by a system of «quarantine as rigid as it could bo ade and & line of circumvallation as hand to crosy g the doad-line that yan arouud ths prison.pons in war times. ‘The North could not do much In tho way of judividual belp, though soma doctors and nurses wont thero to lend thoir aid, and mwany of them will romain there forevor. Northern uewspapers sent *their represontatives to gather tho news and keep the North advised of the progress of the pestilenco. Among them, ‘Tue Omcaso ‘Toiuyye bas been prowminent. Il correspond- ents have been where the plagup raged wilh the greatest violonce, and’ somo of them have dicd on the field of duty, but thelr places bave boen supplied, and it Las gover fuiled to forulsh cowpluto nows frum uvery part of the Houth aud to urgy on the great work of benevolence. Ilad it mot been for that beuevolonce, thousauds upon thousauds more of @ictime, huddled in tho quarnutine lazar houses, must heve périshod of discase or starvation. It did not come from the large ond wealthy cities alomo, but from evury town and village. Banks, Boards of "trade, theatres, conoest troupes, wuuloipal corporations, buse-ball clubs, &choaly, row- iug socictiod, churches, Obristion associsg tions, social clubs, sclentilo bodies, Tail- rouds, flrawen, wilitis, aud tho wholad mass of rejresuiting o labor, Lecause ho cannot tell what the §00 flu¢ will buy next day, When it coruow Lo this, the flué must bo ubandoued 83 money,—uu vquivalent of products,—oe Cougross must fix tho prices of alt commodi- ties at which the ownurs must part “with them in exohange for flaf; it must furthur ousct thut. nobody be puraitted to accapt moro of the flat in oxchango for o given artis clo than (ho law fxes ; and it wuss still fur. ther be propard to coerce men to ndhbero to those prices in flag, which will require.n waterinl increaso 1 tho anuy und vast cxten. sion'of the penitontiary wystow. ‘The fluf religion, theu, involves faith that Congress Las powor ot loast co-oqual with the Al wighty, wheroby it cen forusos or regulate the elomonts, tho seasons, tho soll, the Lealth, aud all the conditions that influence production. No power shiort of this could undertuke v fix purmanent priccs fur all thy products of lsbor, The third polat {5 one which will mako a practical appeul Lo all poople who pay tazes directly to thy Governnout, sud to all othurs wha rualize that they indirvotly contribale in tho pricea paid for everything they uso ond cousuwe. It {8 this: I the Govermaeut Las the power 1o ereals wousy, to tun of millious ufzdollars on & printing-pross at the cout of & fuw capls, why iu the uawe of cow. mon seasy doesn’t it rusort to this means for puylug its own cxpenscs, lstead of lovying foreed contributions wpon the labor of ita eitizona? If it had snch power, and conld enforvo i by moro flaf, wonldn't it employ this slmplo Mmonos inatend of bundening tha peopla? An attempt in this direction wonld bs a prastical test of tho flat doctrine 3 {t wonld dispense with a vast porsontiol of tax-asscssors and tax-gath- erors, nnd wo fney the army of office-ssck- ors would fall off i they hadto tako thelr 'pay in flat gorip whiol the Government would never redoem, and which ho man in hin sonses twould sotept in exchange for ahy- thing of real valus, 1'his'fh the reductio ad absurdum, which Inaxmsort farther illus. trates by saying: '* You ocannot live upon the promise [ho should have maid flat] of your owa CGovernment any ntore than yon conld live wport the hotey of your hired man, orupon bonds lssted by tho oecupants of the County Poor-House,” . CARDINAL CULLEN. he doath of Cardinal Currxn, of Ireland, {5 o matter of intereat to the Roman Catholio Church in Iraland, Befote the compnratively recont reotgantzation and ro-ostablishmont of the Roman Catholid Hierarchy in England, tho Irish prelates ropresanted mainly the Ohurch in the wholo Kingdom. Catrdinal Cutuey was o toan of grost learning and nbility, Tlo wis not & Fonlan, and sought to gain for his countrymen all thd advantages, civil and religious, under the British rule which ara enjoyéd in England or other pris of the Kingdom, Ile haa besn a zoalous prelate, and his onorgy nad the groat infla. enco of his ability have enabled hitn to re- press, it not crush out, in Irelatd whatis known i * Irlsh Natlonaliam,” which moans Irish indepondenco and nationality, 'The following sketch of his life is given In tho “ Amorican Encyclopmdia,” he not baing’ mentioned in the now * British Enoyolo- prodia "¢ PauL Corien was bora in the County Catlow, Ireland, Amll% y, 1603, Ilfs paronts eent him at an oarly 420 to ome, wheee he was educatdd at the Collegd of the Propaganda, sad wan, aftee i ordination, nppointed Professor of Iebrew. Ilv Tiad beon for aoveral years Hactor of tho Irish Col- lera when [hun IX. (1848) flad_to Coeta, and, ag all the Heetors of colleges fu Rome who werc not. forelgners had 1o leave the city, DP CULLEY was cheraed tamporarlly wilh. the caro of thelr estab. lhaliments, 1le showsd remarkable tact snd firm. nees In desling with -the Republican n}- thotltiew, and maved both the —Protisganda and the fotan Collejré It 8 eritica) moment by pluctog them under the protection of the Anteriean flag. Tho Primatial See of Armagh having bocone vacant by Lo death of Archhlvhop CAOLLY, atd tho Hullragans (ailing to sgree in the choico of his suc- cesvar, Piun IX. nominated Dr. CuLLwx to the ont. . Cousecrnted Feb, 24, J8:A), he went to Iro- and with tha title of. Dolegato Apoatolic added to that of Prinate. [l Immediately sot to work to sucuro fof the Catholics of Trelahd a system of pei- mary and sccondary education which niight pro- serve the papils from progeliytiom, calilng & Bynod at -Thatles, In which effoctus) nieasurcs wore pled for 1me foundation of & Catholio nni- verwity. In 1852, ou the doath of Archblshop Auitpar, Dr. Cutres was (ranainted 1o the Seo of Dubifn, thux losiag tie primatial zank lulierent In tho Sco of _Armagh, but confirmed for lifo (o' his poxittor, of Detegato Axoflnuu, which binced him atthe hoad of tho Irish blezarchv, “This chante vaw made to enable hiin to catry vut bis plans for tho extablishment of the Catliolld Umvarsily of Dublin, and to this work he beat himself, I'rop- erty n'the city was purchased, and. in 164 tho Univorsity conrsen wore_otened undor the Presi- doncy of Joux linwny Nywxans und & now uni. vereity building was_commenced at Lrumcondrd, ihe Archbishoo of New York preaching un the oc. ¢adlon of the laying of the corner-stone, Joly 20, %, In Jane, 1800, Dr. Cuttex was crosted Cardinal; and $n October, 1807, the Archbishops avd Bishops of Irelaad met in Dublin uudet his Presidency as Dolcgats Apostolic, and publishod resolutions declining 211 help from tato, and fum]umll\’l;: wixed education and secret societles, n the Courtcll of the Valican Cardinal Custny was consplcuous as an advocate of Piual [nfaliibility. Tlo in the firat Blahop of “Trish bitth who his been ratnod ta tho Cardinalate since thu Iteformation, and tho firat Curainal smong the countleas Prelates edudatsd in ttie College of the Propagsnda, The political prospect in Pennayivania is falr- 1y portrayed by the Philadelphla Jngwirer whon 1t gays: * There never was any doubt of s He- publican victory in Pennaylvania after the pres- ent excellont State and city tickets wero noml- nated, exceps n councetion with the posalbilicy of the Urecnback organieation doveloplug phe- numenal strength, It la tow seon, a fortnight boforo the day of election, that.it is it so mao- |. ner forinidable in ftself, and that while it will ho contributed to by both the old vartles,.the Democrats wiil add five oF more votoes for overy ono given to it by the Republicats. The cam- valgn ns it has progressed has developed the fact that the Kopubllecan yod Democratic lead- ers made a mistako sbout tha now party. Thuy were stinned by the clamor it made, and while the one was scured by 'its sotind and fary, real- ly signitying nothing, tho other was oversau- iuino of the help to be got from It. The truth is known now, and it 18 peectlved that the Re- publicans will not loso by it, and that the Dem- ocrats not only will not make by it, but be the worsa for It."! ——— * Kxnx (e & roformer,” says the Tima, '‘for his pay-roll for Septomber was but 86,133, while PRANK AoNaw's for the same month in 1876 was §7,002 Reduction of $1,167 by Kmnw, Great reduction fest by the good Kxnw, who bates the Irish and don't want thelir votos." When Mr. Kxun read this In yesterday's Times he ealled upon’ the editor thereof and timidly suggested that gerhaps that was drawlag It s little too strong. ' The fact s, Mr, BToRxT,” sald be, *that the Judges, who arc mostly Ro- publican, made that.reduetion you speak of, ‘They fix the nuinbot of ¢mploycs, ana they cut off elovon men aftor I came in; but by giving those who remained heayy vay, the County Board snd I made exponses s large as we could. I made s fight axatnss the decrcase in the men, but the Judges beat me. So, If you please, do not say anything more about that retrenchment, for it was & dit of Republican work.™ P Ma), Horrmax, Hepublican candidats for 8herill, fs at present out o the ‘county towus wakiug a succeauful canvass there, Iis absguoe, which is known ta the Zimes, explalus tho flood of libslous assaults on him which have appeared 10 that paper thls weok, The Major wilt returu {o-duy or to-morrow, aud the moucnt that fact ls kouwn at the Zimesofita the slanders will coase. Thers was & curloas onc tn yustepday's paper, which caused much smusement smong the lawyers, 1t was presumably written by s reporter new to this cotiftsy and fte laws. It was a story to the elfect that thg Clork of tho Criminal Court bad Issucd a-replevin writ to reolevy some whisky which had been sctzed by the United Btaies, and that Horsxax was on sume boud. It hsanot hitberto been ‘kuown that the Criminsl Conrt meddled in civil mat- tori; or that State Courts were fn tha Labit of Interforing with the Uulted Staws autboritics, *but one rcads the Tinus and learus. —e— . It happened Ju Hanover County, Virginia, Los weok, Mr. WiLL1AN Cumszias aud his jovely youny wife wers scated toguther in the pacior. “The alf was chilly, and the busband sugeested a flre, There had been wo five on the parlor Learth aince last svtlog; butin u fow mivpies the back-lows were pllod up sud a chosrlul blazo went up the climnoy, and 1o 8 few minates later o terrific oxplusion took place. 3Mm, Cuntstiad was {nstantly eoveloped In flumpea aud futally burued. Mr. CRHISTLAN was alsd seriously buraed, but it s thouzhs be miay ro. cover, Neighbors hearlug the nolso arrived ln tinse to extinrulsh the flames. Me, CurisTian now rpelemnbers that lust sUmmer be Ll w bundls of powder In the Hruplace, sud fargot ba takoitvut, Morali Keep your powder “iu u borg," aud you msy be able to keep your protty wife. 8 Fur some doys the Times has hean publishing under the misleading bead of “Pollikal? g vwnber of ‘wild Diiry-tales coucernlug the coming eloctton. ‘Ilio thyeme of yesterdsy's ro- mance wad the colured votp of this city, wlilcly It was stated was abous g0 desert the Repub. Hewn party aud g over to Kxgw and the Democe racy. It is probable that the wuly person who euad (o noveletie sud (auded it true was Kary Lunsall, for Whoty $t wus ewbluebie erieen Ils paymeuts Lo the 7imw are rsporied to be large, and this little fable woa thrown In gratis tocheer hfm up. For every omo who knows politien knows thist the colured votets o trme to the party which made thewn voters. Tlhey may pout and scold ocenstonally, even as white men do, but when election day comes thefr voting fa as atraight as Horduin's record, It in trus—and pity 'tls 'tis truo—that thére nro n few of them twho have heen corripted by asso- clatlon with Denfoetats, ind who have leatned the Democratie trick of asking money for their votes, and of offering themselves to the Demo- ¢ernis for a price.: But wneh it comes to the pinch they do mot daliyor. They spotl the Egyptins, but do not vote with them. This may not be good morals, but In politics and war 18 may Le allowabls to live on the enomy, and they have lcarned bow todolt. If forevery colored volo KErx. zets, 800 votes wers taken from Horestan and mved to him, he would stiil be defeatad by 5,000, carrics free gotd, of which nesrly n doliar an ‘enrn on fts surface, It 18 not magnetic, ang as successtully tesisted smplo anit compnimn bathis of acld, * In this Fespect it tescimi anceular fron, but In no other. . One of fta sy faces shows n fracturo {hat reveals n crsstaiiig structare, tha colob of which fa htesl uray tinged with yetlow, 1t has defied the best (o . chincla In the blacksmith shop, and Ty s broken or chilpped under heavy blows, 1f ity composition cnt he Imitated, thicre will be pro. duced the bardest and toughest alloy kuawy, RELIGIOUS, FORFEIGN MISSIONS. CrstciNnAe, O, Octs $h<The Chridtian For. clzn Misslonary Conyentlon closed It labors ny, nooti to-ady. Prof. Loos, of West Virginia, re. ported the French, Danish and Enel(sh miestony in proaperotis condition. The Rev. Samuef Asres, of Kentreky, from the coloted consen. ton, gave a vivid Acevunt of work among the coloried pid of Americn. Gov. R. M, Bishag, in hehnlf of tho committeeon hequests, rejorto $10,000 buqueathed by C. : of Cincinnatl. ("N, Sulemanian, native Tutk tow belng edncnted at the Ken tueky University, prescnted s paper on ** Cop. stantinopio ‘a8 ‘0 Missionary Fickl,"” A Indy present timmediately offared 8500 1n ald of such amission. At a meefing of Woman's S|, cty it was announced Yhat the val sfatfuny ?l this socicty It the West “Indics aro forish. "5\ Genornl Cohvention e thia aftornom, aud received tho report of o Board of Mun. agers on the condition of the missionary sworg In the United States, he Rev, A, J. Hobys delivered tire aumual address this everding. ——— et Congressman-Elecs D La MarrR, of Indlnn- spolis, chosen by the Greenbackers and Iremo- crats, 18 a native of New York and 52 yedrs old. Ile wottd be pleked out as d man of mark (n any publfc assomblago. Ile fs described as six feet high, walghs 180 pounds, {s squars-shoulder- ed and spard, with dark halr, short-ctovped, reddish-brown side whiskers, high cheok-bones, a face strongly lned, and small Ulue oyes. . He has o deop. bass volce that grows ducoer s he becomes more earnest, Is on fire with his sub- Ject from the start, hnaineither grace, fallness, nor htimot, but goes straf@ht to tha polfnt with Intensity, 1o has been & Methooist alesgyman for twenty-nine®years, and went through tho WWar lu the Elghth New York Heavy Artiltery, . B The Times saya thal Brapray's pay-roil In Beptember, 1874, was 85,374, and that Kurx's in Beptember, 1878, was 0,135, showing that cx- penses had tucreased bub $500, while offlca worlk hadincreased 25 per cents True, but tho pur- chasing power of money has incremsed 85 per cont sinco 1874, The work for which Branray pald 83,500 four years azo ought to be dotic now for 84,300, Provislous have shrunk fn price, clothing has shruuk, waues have shrook,—ev- erything has shraok but the pay of Knnw's Bailifts. - But {f that were reduced how would MOODY STILL A CARD, Bpecial Disnioh {0 TH Triduns PITTSHURG, A, Oct 241} L. Moody, tiw evangelist, spoks in the Fleat Preshyierisy Church diere to-night on ** What Christ Ig ¢, Un.”” Thao charah, holllag abont 2,000 people, was denscly packod, Greus crowds unihered fy front of “tho church as early as 5 o'clock, 5- though the doors were not ojiencid until nearly 7. It Is éstimated that at least 0,000 peraons, 3 mdjotity of them women, were furnel away, Moudy was assisted by Whittleand McGanahap, UNIVERSALISTS, PROVIDENOE, . 1., Oct. 3%,~In thé Univer- sallss General Convention this nflornoon it way voted to hold the next mestinr in Minneapolis, W D 14 they pay that 10 per eeut contributlbn toward ;‘:gn':flnm Obugtay of Now Yoll lorleivn their employer's re-election? ‘Thus. Is the wind e 5 tempored to the shorn lamb. CASUALTIES. e t—— The relfef steamcr that reached Memphia on Tuesday reports that atths mouth of White River those on board discovered a snd case of inbumunity and suffering. A Mr. ZADRE, who had lost a wifeand thrae children by the yellow fover and four other relatives in (ho saine house, has not been permitted to leave his homa or see any one in his house. The cilfzens bave quarantibed the house and placed a guord wround It. His only compahgis n youne babe, which needs attentivn that o man cannot give, Ha aopealed tothe rellef-boat through a goie thrawn from his wiudow, but they were powerlesa ‘to break the bonds which beld blm prisoner. PERISHED IN THE. ATTEMPT, Special Dispaleh to The Tridune. JanesviLLe, Wis, Oct: 24.—The gun of Jullng Sherer, who was drowned with Chartes A. Col. vin at Lake Koshkong on Monday, was fonnd to-day ted to & stake, and alf hls clothing way fouid immediately under, showing beyond a doubt that Sherer had divestod himsclf of his gui aud clothes togo to tho ald of Calvin, and waus drowned {n attpmpting to sava bis friend's lify. Bliarer’s funeral to-day was very larzly attended, the procewsion Lelng nearly a wile fn leogthe ° —— FATAL EXPLOSION, Spactal DGR 10 The Tritnne. CanLINVILLE, Ik, Octs 21.—A tertible acdt- dent occurred to-day o fow miles west of this ity. A large saw-miill belonging to Willls Tar- nur, was biown to plecea by tho exploston of o tolier, Ji M. Thotnoton was killed, and Willls ‘Fuener aml-the firean, iamed Dave Patkine. tuh, badly senbled. Botn will recorer, a3 thae injuries are not serlous. PINER TRAMUS KILLED, . Speclat Dixpatoh to The Tribuns Nasuvitiz, Toon, Oct. 2h.—Two freight trains collfded st Juthrie, Ky, botwecn 4 mol 5 o'clovk trs evening, resulting in the kiling of three tramps who were steallog a rlde on the teatns. No other lives wero Tost. Dawage uoe kupveu, ‘The Hownrd Association occaples threo Inrgo stores tn Memphls, and i *hose spacious rooms arg deposited the conteibutions of . the chari- tablo from all parts of theworld, A corte- apondent says thut there is a very large vurlety of entirclyuselesa articies, such as canned fruits, domestie wine, botes o wsecotid-hand clothing, hats, caps) boots and shoes, ** So much of this” stufl s #0 utterly nseless that we must laugh AL the donors’ lack of kuowledge of enf wants, but when wo think of the gencruus spirit that has prompted theso liberal donutfons, we feul more Mk erying.! — . Most peopla ars ignorant of the natars, value, and extent of our oxporta; nor aré thoy sware of thu fact that they have doubled in valus dur- fug the last twenty years. Many descriptions of cutlery have ncarly driven Eoglish and other forvign cutlery out of the market, The Amerl- can chopping-ax 15 sent all over the world. Itis sold tn Europo for loss money auod Is a botter article than fs m;oduv:fll there. IAn;l and hatch- eis of our manufsciore are sold ail over South o Abicrica. Coutral Amictics, and fa Masieo: conduct, resuiting In tho desth of a woman ln clitldblrth, came to light hero this afternovn. Tabla cutlery,and chiscls, augers, haminers, ity | [n tho lttlo City of Dayton, an the Kentucky and braces, and joinors' tools are lergely ox-'| sido of tha Ohlo River, thora lives Leo Myers, s vorted. woll-to<lo tailor. Last night Mr. and Mn. Myers loft thele home to attend thie wedding of a sister in Cloclunatl, After speading the,evet- ng in the festivitles with their relatives, thor startod home about 10 o'clock i & hack, Ehort lyatter leaging tho homd of tho sister, Mrr Myers was taken with severc labor-palns, Ar- riving at tha Cincinnati end of the Nuwport & Clncinnati bridge, thedriver of thecoach refused to gouny farther, ktattug that he was not fa millar with the road on” thu other sldewf i river. Me. Myers offered toscomnpensate him lu any sum he might nanie, but his offers and ver- s 5 FULLY AND CRUELYY. Tmprudénce tn tho Firmt Placo, nnd Tnhoe wanity i the Seconid, Result in the Death of nn Unfortutiate Woman Near Cincine uatl, Apectal Dispateh to The Tribune, CincinNary, Oct, 2h—A caro of juhumsn s — e The offlclal retarns of the Isto election tn Tn- diana have beon rocelved by the 'Bocretary of Btate, and the Democrasle plurality Ls 18,738, The totel voto is as followa: Iyt o nnds six Domo- crats, six Republlcans, and ono Nationsl, Saffi- clent 18 known of the Legislature that It will probably ro-elect Yoonuzass tothe United Biaten Bauate. suasion were of 110 uvall, Bupposhyg the strect ————————— cdrs wero stopped fur the afght, the” re- “Thers s no occasion fur haste, men and | coursdleftfor alr. Myers waa to muk the hestol 1t afont, e stirted, carrylig his wife ond reats ine atintervals, untll Anally hereached Newport, Descending from the bridge leudlug to Front streat, they applled at the saluon 1! Jaki Wenderath, situated on Front street In that nelghborhood, for udmittance. ‘This waa refusd them. ‘They them boarded & passing dummy of tno Newport & Daysou Street-Raulrod Company, lu_the hope” that they micat reach bume, Thu car bad proceeded bat asbott distonce, the truck bulng extremely rosgh sthen the unforitnate wolnun's pakns hecaie = {ntense thay stic coutd no lonzer bear thow, The dumm$ was stopped and she was varried tuto tho = Firt Ward lMouse, kept by Schreaflenborger, ot Frout slrect, opposts the Quylos l‘uundry. Hhe hud been thery bist & short time when she #ava birth to a tube. A messenger was dispatened in guest of & pls- slclan, but betore the arelvul of Dr. Gtuuiel, at 8q, ., tho woman had breathed her lust. Tho ehild taalive, well and bourty, I8 was takeuts o the relatlves of Me. Myers. Aa soon a3 3 coffin could be procured the.remaius of tbe woman wera Fremovéd 1o her fate pealdvste 8 Dagton, Ky, brethren!® saya the New York Tridbune. Mr, TiLoex, Mr. MirsLs, Mr, Cores, Mr. Woot- LeY, Mr, WzaD, aud the other coparconers will frat have uu opportunity to state under oath, aud subject to the palus and punalties which uttach to peripry, what they know ahout the cipher dispatchies. It {8 quite possible that furtber evidenco may then scetn superluous. But unsworn denisls aro cheap.’ ———————— Mr. Eowanp H. Giunirrs, of fowa, who bas becn clocted o Copgress by the Nationals and Domocrats, Is vatlve of Hartford, Coun, Ife loft Hartford a year sgo, weut to tawa, aud tried toget an honest liviog by making brick, FalMug tn that busincss, aud scefug no other opening bofore bl except to becoms a trampor rua for Congress, bo prudently jolucd the Fiat- fstsand the Democrats, aud will be provided for for two years ta cum 4 e ——————— e * ‘Thero sliould be no talk asbotween the fricnd: of Horxkine sud WiLsoN, caudldates for the Legislature {n the Becond Distrit, of phitmping for on or the uther of them. 1t the Ropublie- an voters of tho district will keop cool and ro- salvuto divida thelr votes conscleutiousty be- tween the two rogular candidates, we think they will have no trouble from BrRapwiLL by tho time tho clection comes around. HYMENEAL. Rwectal Diwalch fo The Tribune. Janmeviram, Wis,, Oct. $1,—Misa Carrie ¥, cobs, niseo of tha Hon. Churles U, Wiams, M. C.yand oue of our leadiug suclety belles, w3t warrid ab 13 o'clock 1o<luy, at the redblence of Mr, \Vlllln‘m? to Mr, Frederlek 1t Ducll, o Buffaly, N. Y. Tue y couble tuuk e sveniug % .m‘thm };mfrn rlmmu. & upu ud Trivund. Kworux, In., Oct. 24.—Mr. Jones, a prott nent “uqu lawyer of Macon City, Mo., und Mias 1da Thompson sere mareled fn this ¢ty this evening, The wedding took pluce fu tue varlurs of the Patterson House, nud Was ui tmprowptn aifutr, the purtios being strangers here. ‘Thio guests of the housy to Uie numees of twenty oF 16ote were prescht ad wittess the ceruimony, which was verformed by tho lies: D. . Shaw,”'Mr. Thompsan, the bride's fstuch I an extensive operator fo Western miucs. i Uridal presentto hia daucht-r was o very :xl- aut set of diamonds, 'Thy cutire party Ieft ¢ evenjuy truln for Macou City. e — e GUILTY. Parensoy, N, J., Oct, 31.—Tho casc of J, P MeBonnell, editor ot the Pm-n’«fl 4 Labor Standard, tndleted fur Mibel in at; 1 some of the laboringmen “scabs,’’ after & maining ont tity hours brought laa vordict guilty, - ‘Tho editorof the Thnea has bullt a platform for Mr, Kznw, on which 1s written, % No Irish need vote for ine, for they sre thicves, thugs, cut-throats, mnd supvorters of Kemox" On the Bth of Novemnber Mr, Kenn will mount his platlorm, the Irish votcrs will gather around, Horrsax will cat the rope, and the new Snoril will receive cungmtnlations over thie success of his first execution. e ——— * he Rev. J, WiLL1am Jowus, Bocretary of the Bauthero [listorieal Soclety, writea that o satis. factory arrangemeut has beon perfected batwoen the oftlcers of the Assaciation and the Wer De- vartwent t Washington for the cxehange of copies of the Coufederate archives, and that the exchange wilt begin us soon us the lists of the dysired oplus cuu be made out, ——— There s conalderable tuquiry hourly at tho Detnocratic Headquarters tu regard to tha ar- rival of Judce TRx'S asscasucos for campaign purpoics. A large number, of * workers ! spy fouklug tors job, but won't it & Huger until they kuow the wouey is on deposit. Irompt payment {o sdvance is their salo rule o’ desllog with candidates for oflice. L ury fn the e - te Coudurt uf & Dog. Duniles (Segtiand) Adeertiser, A Bronghty Ferey ady, wrlting to her (rendd frow Dublin, teives un acconut of o strauze o currenes by Which her husbard was saved (1o belug run down tn & forpy-boat, 1w zentlew w was just abont to step Intu the ferry boit crose the piver, when a larze sotrlever TS o upon bim, caught hold of his tronsers \nmm‘ teeth, wnd wt b spme flio Kept up 2 "ml" it howl, It was unly sfter omshlerable dm:law that he could gt himselt released, sint b7 it time the ferry-buat hud been ahoved off B the riyer. The gentieman naturally fuit 80 annoyed ad being prevented from cros-ws oo his feelings wers changed when, & mivute | ho asw the ferry-bost run down by a »ies whivls buat. ‘The pasiensers were Remark: o ———— Mp. WinLiam A, DBuaci, who bas attaloed some distiogtion es & crimioal lawyer, says that Iu tho eyes of the people. it not of the law, Mr, TILDEN rannot separgte bimstlf from those who acted for him aud who were Iu Lis conlidence, Tu vtber words, tbe privcipul wust be licld ve- sponsible for the acts of bis authorized sgents. - ——— nia canvass has developed the fact that UALUSUA A, GLoW Is tho 1u0st Ropular cowpalgn orator ju tho State. Thore are mwurg demiands for him than for any other spesker, Ho is sueaged for neurly overy vvoulug btweey now sl eleetion. had spproached without nothtuz thrown fu ater, but, fortunately, thi: crew of the st were suceveful uvlv?: toem all, somme FEET very wuch exbausted, however. Wit ‘1\ N i1 of the sloiutar means by which be by e saved front the ucelient, the gentitmail Ao 1ot help nothang the conduct of the dose 900, Tolluwed cosgly at his hecls. e tric " S wieans Lo et il of 3t durhuz the day. bt B alternooy the animal was still toliow i and ho wis oblkred G take it home With, The dog bas vow Leen tnotalhad us wat ““..,m} the house, und bas u((h‘ud)‘ shown gredt 8 e —gp——— Au Auriferous Meteor, L, Fumy Sentingl. u o A remgrkable soeclaren v? meteoric Iron, more a ik stesl, hag been broushit lu biere from the . whave daeirt. it welaba sbout w pound, aud ! ieat to the gentlumfin and bis fauily i J i [l {