Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 21, 1878, Page 10

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: BATURDAY DECEMBLR 21, 1878—SIXTEEN PAGELS. T.“E LOU“TE rn'.'lnz. running, Incumberleg, or In any way | resumption problem and resumption L nterforing with the promilses of the Moldime | facts and the probability is, that, when the next Company, at 37 and 3G st Lnko street, or [ House assembies, the fact of resumption Wit ul“l v\lnlmrrlvllwn-l(n it fih el rlslx:llllhhu}lhnnn mmlrnl}(vlongm ents » is Ionor declinud to jump atconclnstons with- | w! md themselves nowhere, In tho same Decision Refinrdizg Appallate out ‘Imnr}nu Iva,h :ldu." If the Receiver wos l}(l)l mu:'nnor clhlelr q“tf“:nm are ulmliru‘u(nf T(;lem‘ isdiction. charging his duty he could be removed. He | catfons "Lhe busincss outlook s brighter, Court Jurisdiction fned to muuy the nninr of {njunctlon. uloum{ predictions are being falsified by events. White was on the Receirer's bond, and I'h?l‘e And tho :cst(m{ul:lm of cfilnté;lm}c?lnn Mlh‘;: im- waa no allegation that White was not perfeetly | provement of buslncss wi e follow! )y An The George W. Gage Estate--The solvent. Ifthe Recelver was permitting the re- | alatomont of the discontent which was a potent the earth fz would be acted upon hy retrospect- ive and Iateral lines of attraction, which would tena greatly 1o diminish its velocity, TFinally, when nt the exret cebtre of tho rarth, it woukl hecome motiontees, the atteaction oo cvery side belng taual. Mr. McCnrroll's explanation of tho gyToscope 12 ‘based upon these two propositions or laws. fle holds thatavertical wheel in motion does not nress on the same points of its bearings that it does when at rest; that there Is clearly an nn- data on the same lino with the nraver poens of Hholley and Gocthe. Per contra, the Athenaum saga: Our aathor will make few converts, for he will obtaln few renders, ¥ie has something to say, but 1t I8 donoifil §f versa {8 1he best medinm by ald of srhich 1o aay It Tt Jaat Jessta medinia_in which he works with diMculty. . . . Mr Taylor has lttle Iyric facalty. Tits verse fa heavy, folemn, and deflelent In masical finw, Tt han what i called color, but this even ia Inappropriate and unakilfal. rallroads and other sources, and thore are h [ dreds of young men conatantly graduating from engincering schools, competent to do such work, who would jump at the chance for very modcante pay. Theduty of the levelers will be simply to obtaln needed elevations, fix monuments for reference, and forward their notes at frequent intervals to tho oflice, whera thelr work should be carofully checked, the calculations made, lo- thean discoverfes, § did not write aoyhody or anrthing aboutit. I intended that Chicago anid Tlilvols will get tha benefit of this, ani ba the first lo glean tha ileld. Prof. Morgan, of Rochenter, N, Y., was here Inst summer nvest:- anting thia sme subjeet, but saw nothing save the ruins 1 have mentfoned above, ¢ I desiro to say here that my discoverics srg tobo o free gift to our own [ustitutfon, snd | write at this time so ea to give ample time to == Brachvogel Molding C Tof iblo: 1 | Tactor ln al the olectl e euiiaen et | Brouess for an expedition of tha, Hilorleal 1y employed. + Brachvo oldin, ompan; moval of the property, he was responsible; [actor In al 10 electlon: on, and the charts drawn in accordance - ociety to the ruins. 1t the Historical Socl ] SPARKS OF SCIENCE. O veis, il ¢ 185 Lanpontiol forces o Sy the property way destrayed, he wonld have’ to with. An rapldly 06 the charts for the town- | dcaires to take this matter In hand and seag . S ENCE. onc-half the wheel, whero the tangentisd furco acts contrary to pravity, will he represented by y minus z, aod the otherhall, whose particles —————— foot the bill. Tha Recelver was ordered to flie DRAINAGE. a report of his actlon aluce his appointment, the Record of Judgments, New Suitsy Dle | L0 %0 um‘;c?"unt‘;;. by .\lmr!ny morning, ships can be comnpleted, covics thereof should be fuenished to the respective Rond Commis- party fn the spring to take up thls matter, [ wiil be on hand to guide them and fhow them BAVAGE AND CIVILIZED NATIONS. 1 that t 8l e SRy MOrRIGL | e Si te Gammiey R e i DAl | e b e ks Jram || oo mslties eateted ", Yuilra dcalyy S 2 and that the Ucorge E. White Luinber Com- s Application to Country Rani - raining as thsir (ownships may dee L H, At s receut) metting of the London Autiso-f sreTalling in lhe e ot wraritation. by 4 2ot vorce-Rolitindsy Eley pany, James D. Kline, and Johin Venabaker be Ing an Easontial to Good Tesults. time o time g do to conform to tho churts, Tt e T vologleal Institute, a papee by Prof, Danfel Wil- | 718 ' RECHINECT FoF OY gravity, which hias summonced toappear in court Monday afternoon To the Lditor of The Tribune, The State will bo called upon for noap- DIPHTHERIA. son, of Toronto, was read on ‘*Some Amcnclnn been the puzzle of the gyroscope. dectded 1ast Juna by the l-l- s?nnger'lounlung the mattors and {nings com- | Dwrant, 11l,, Dee. 13.—I read some time :}“r:'r'lflal_llt_x;‘robed’w;ll 'nl.:m eg:ml:l'o‘(u';,h:rlz& i A iob o o X 3 ships e S oo “:"n'?‘"5:‘“."1‘15':“15.“"\733‘2 o:n::r‘;v:;:::‘fl:: Mr. |»1kc"f,?.“ dfi'" ok e flfi:‘m,‘;:: that of The City of Chiea- | P12/ © MACHRIA % 00, since an interesting pamphlet written' by sr. | they choose. Tut if They decldo 50 o do they | Trae and False Diphtheria—Disgnosts ana Drevaleat opinon hat the contact with mora e bis allcRed Mime. mudifation. in | £0 V. The Valcan Iron-Works, and tlie opinion | An ccount ws wiren In vesterilay's Tingxa | Nichols, of Springfleld, abn fh sabject of | muat, for the general wood, conform to estab- Troatment, our appreciation of the Jaws that govern the solar aystom. . SCIENCE NOTES. Dr. Blacher has recently reported (in the Courier JMelica’) rome excclient rosuits from treatment of puimonary consnmption, In its first two perlods, with glycerine fnstead of cod- Hyer oll. Mr. John B. Gourh, fn a lecture in England, referring to the question whether aleohol was o food or a medicine, remarked that in his opia- {on {i was “very muel like sitting down on a Pon}'nt'a nest,—stimulating but not nourish- ng. Mr, Gjere, who _lias been elected President of the Cleveland (Eng.) Institute of Engineors, ocenpied the chair ut” the first mecting of the sesalon, held on Momlng Nov. 11, Mis address was sothewhat remarkable, as_enibracing a con- sideration of somo very recondito phenomenn. He endeavored to show that the ron trade was affected by the maximum and minimum of eolar spoté, and this fed bhim to consider that our manulacturing industries wonld be aiain beeon{ng prosperous by the year 1830, At'a meeting of the Rayal Astronomlical Society Iu London, Nov. 8, Lonl Lindsay, M. ', President, In the chalr, avccln] attentlon was drawn to a copy of the Sidereal Messenger, which had been presented to the Socfety by Mr. Burn- ham, of Chicago, ot the desire of Mr. Ranyard, to whom he had flrst presented it on the veea- alon of the late Eclipse Expedition. The cony waa sald to he the only complete or nearly coms plete one in England, and to be inore perfect than any of the ‘copies in the publfe libraries of Ameriea. Tho 1ast part of the Proceadings of the Paris Anthropological Society contnins n very inter- esting account of the autopsy of M. Asseline, performed {n pursnance of an agreement for what s called nutual antopsy entered Into be- tween a number of French anthropologiste. It was far {rom being Larren of result, as the depth of o certain fssura in the broin, which has been bitherto considered an Indieation of “inferfority, will be removed from that category in future, ‘The black glass made In Venlce Is famous for the Intensity of its color, and many attempts hayve been nade to (discover to what special in- gredient this Is due. I s now snid that M, Kayser, 8 Nurembery chemlst, hos ascertalned by mn!{lls that manganese s the substanco used, To confirtn this result, M, Kayser meited in a small furnace a nixture ol sand and sulphur, fn_which he intruduced 15 per cent of peroxide of manganese. Ha thus obtalned a ginss of o deep black color; in very fine threads ur thin splinters it was of & sombre violet. In one word, {4 exactly presented, in respect to color, the same properties as genuine blaek Venetian glass. Paper on the color of human_ halr, by Mr, . C. Borby,which appears In the Journal of' the An- thropoloyical Inatitute dencribes some rescarches in whict he has endeavored to fsolate the pig- ments of the hair, and to subject them to chiem- jeal and speetroscopie serutlny, He concludes that hair i a coloriess and’ horny substance tinted In diferent specimens by three, or bossi- hiy four, distiuet plementary bodies, r. Borby obtalus from dilfeicut kinds of human bair a reddixh, o yellow, and o black plgment. Possi- bly the red,which 18 an unstablo budy, may pass into the ‘yrlluw by n process of oxidation. " Very red Falr {s charscterized by the proceds of thered conntituent,unmoditied by other pigmeunts; dsrk- given by Judge Pleasants hms just veen filed. | of the peculiar allegations made agaiust prairie roads. Ilis conttibntton, In my opinlon, This was an action of ejectment, and the judg- | Machris & Co., packers at 351 Tlalsted aireet, | is timely and sound.—worthy of carcful constd- ment of the court below was for the Iron. | Andof thediligenteflurtsooncof thelrereditors | araijon by our ltoad Commissioners. T shonld e i . Vesterday thre Works. The Appollate Court afiemed tho | H0sullect o debt agaimt thom, | Vesterda¥ Hhise | hardly tnink, however, that it would be neces- opinon, but chose Lo Rive written reasons for | same firm—oug b Hoffinan & Co., | £ary to 2o to England for steam rollers, If tte *afMirmance, the jurlsdiction of the Court | who claim 8754535 by Crowley & | protection has done anything for this country 1t liaving been questioned. Shechan, who want 8738.34: and o thirl by | oucht to have developed onr manufacturcs. Patrlck Casl, claiming 20, - They all make 1 1) 11 attentlon to Is, that Judge Pleasants, in the opinfon, sald the Bu- | 4000 oridrottons that Machrls & Co. bought But what I would here call attentlon to [s, thal oreme Court Ly the Constitution only had | guods, pru,,,|f|.,“ to pny for thein at a !mfim mere surface trentment of our roads, whether original Jurfediction in mandamus and habeas- | day, and Just before tho thne came concealed or that treatment bo rolling or gravel, or both, corpus cases ond cascs relating to the | Uisiosed of their property, and nllo‘wed their | caunot safeiy be relled upon unless it be supple- royenue, Bec. 11 of Art. VI of the | dtoreto be taken nodsesalon ofiby a Constables | mented by thorough drainage. [ do not quote CON 35 N ST, Courts should be formed after 1874, | to have ascertained the dumages for widening | ground, but fn the tiiscussion and advoeacy of with such power aa the Uencral Assembly | Sullivan strect from Seduwick to Huribut | various modos of treatment thero s danger should provide, but giving appeals to the Su- | strect. Anuthicr to tix tie dutages for opening | that the provision that should stand first in any cot W 1 the north line of vreme Court {n all criminal cases, and cascs fn | § 8170t (LY, (oot o Waran b Sk Bl ro;_::‘ -ncclflm:lunn vlm-'{'hn ]“fi sight o, ; which a frenchiso or freehold orthe valldity of | Eijlis* Addition south to Fean avenue, the new e point is just this: Thorough drainage u statnto was involved, and In such other cases | strect to be called Aldine strect, Also o third | docs the greater part of the work™ wthout the as might be provided Ly law. That article | for extending Weat Indisna street from Western | ald of surface treatment. But surfece treat- gave tho Legislature unlimited power astothe | 10 Grand avenue, ment without drainage is practically worthless. catablishment of such courta with that one | yeupem T, ,,,mc,:’;,‘;‘;:‘fi,‘f,'"n“m_ 1970, mar. | A lard, smoothly.rolled road 18 delightful tn proviso, and in pursuance of the power Ap- | rfed to Ada C, Shock, and he lived with her un- | ® dry season, and looks liken durable work. pellato Courts wero established with certaln | i) tho fiest of the present month, when ho was | 1ut unless ample provision has been made for specified powers, Thelr jurisdiction was ex- | shocked m'lunm that she Lad been too futimate | the sure and rapld removal of water from the clusive, In the first place, ns far as given, and | With one €. A. Bartlett. ditchies, its Auished surfaco will ba codangered o o ancept when o amorat mapinore | e i YHeriy gpted s doreeof | by the e vy snd protractsd siom. A than 81,000, or the questions involved of suich | ground of druukenn: rolled rond, unless meadamizea to a depth ordl- Importance that the Judges agreed to allow M. ;“mm lu'::y%mcr:[::!lfle'lll:n;nm::cfl:}:nllz::dm;; them to go tothe Suprcmie Court. Butevon that “I.’.' 3 ,’,\,:,p e&h]";mc:{"';'p nlfljoumml Festerday pottery, but a few inches below the waterlal §s large grant of jurisdiction did not exhaust the Tuige UI'u:l'zc-t;.'i enll l.o-ll:w 18 150 to 168, (n- | Open and porous. Tho offects, even of very powers of the Legisiature, and (6 could still | qyeive, with 133, Sykes va. Irwin, on trial, heavy rolling, are decidedly 8 rfln[unll‘ lgengn have conferrod It in the fonr omitted or | Judges Jameson and Booth will hear wotfons “‘"k"“"”;“"' :{.‘“ ‘l]’""{‘“ ey ddaond A excepted classes nbovo mentloncd, or any of | to-day, Judge Booth motlona for new trials 7""‘ ago “’l‘[’m ““ cil&n Itrlk(!!pu throuph thom, provided only that ft should not be | Jultcs Moors snd Karwell defauit capes, Julee Ty e e of he . armor. - in final. Buch further grant, being purely addf- 9,.|_|5n:.,.dg.4m, 8018 ST 2,010, 5,502, 5010 1 ordlnary © weather tho effects of this tional, would not conflict with the Constitution George W. Campbell was vestorday appolnted | 8oakoize may not buhupnnmr;t. m:t‘}elf l‘m rot fn respect either ta the subject of furiadiction or | Assiges In Dankruptey of David Meycr, B O b aF o7 tha action of thawe, to any substantlal rizht of partles litigant, but | _ Joln M. Dundy was élocted Ansigico of Joun | Jonz-continucd, rafos, o6 by A8 B8 O8 by FC at st only dn respect to o matter of mere | MeCluer Rutter, }" url ';“f 'ttln’nnumxm!i. 'atid the bighor the procedure. By an ameadment ta the uct, ap- | - W E. denkine waa appointed Assigneo of | 18 2otk cortat o onert e nire veals sbould “lie_ from Clreuit Courts, cte., | Henry H. Walker. TOSur worthy Road Commissioneraretort: #We direetly to the Supreme Court in all erlminal A dividend of ubont K0 ver cent was declared a 5:' r:rmyu 1o have water in our ditches,” cases und all cases in which o franchise, | to the preferred creditors of Willlm Denulson, | SORE PEOPRSC 10 ATe WO I8 B SHTIE, Arn ox- or Irechold, or the validity ot a statute USITED STATES COURTA, g ""‘"l'[ 10 iy discetinn. the Eeaniita of \vas fnvolved, n cass the warty nppeal- [ Edward A, Stevens, Ucorgo 1L Burt, and | Berlmenting b 808 rog SRCck it U8 S OF ing or protecutlug such writ of crror should | others, filed s creditors’ bill yeaterday ngainat | ¥ iz Tritnosm. The others contintie: * We 80 clect, cxcept In cascs of chancery, Ty that | Philip Goldwan, 11, Metz, 8r, Theodore Gold- l"’vo o Ko Gur foads sfrash, Ao Hiave proyision Appellate Courts had jurisdiction in | many and Jdacob Ticlersdorf, 'basing it on threo | 12 e the dratos broad and deep. Wo have thuse four ciasses of casce, eXeept whero thu | judzments for the agpregate of $5,00.5% The :I‘meln.ut the culyerts, replacing those that arty chose to uo directly tuthe Supreme Conrt, | sual charges of frand anil prefercntial asslen- | § 08 SUY 50 65 Juu'mll But have you not [hero was, therefore, only an_apparent conflict | ments are mnde, anid o discovery s asked, and | 1o¥e FAHERAOTES o ST JC LGL AP S T ‘a8 1o & inere matter of Drocedure, The consti- | the payment uf the comulainanta? judgmients, R eautiona waded throtizh the mud ever tutional right to have four cinsses of cases | Tho Remiugton Sewine-Machiug (:ummme' ""l",’ Ly \iearly every falll The truth it heard in any event by the Buoremo Court, was | begati o sult for £5.000 avainst Wikliom I, | $PEWE 800 BEIDR €VORE R o i8I GO not dmpaired by frst requlring that the opinlon | Briges, Hiran Clingman, A’ B. Cliogmau, aud | 15 l!o'\\l P aatat hora fully. aFodo of an inferior tribunal should firat be taken, It | G. W. Cliugman, this assertion, which is amply sustained by ex- was the express intentlon of the Lewisiature to CIRCUIT COURT. T i ‘and will only romind your roaders of confer such additional jurisdiction on the Ap- [ - Henry A, Barllug, A, fl. Davis, and E. D, | FREet S 0 S B0 GHonT B0t Wil up and pelate Courts, subject to the deciSlon of thu | Mandell, Trustees, fllad o biil agatost John T, | 400 ot “m) slightest provocation. \Vaste arty appeallng. Tho appeal allowed by the | Mutthews, June Matthews, Emliy and Dilion B. | fHRe P &8 K00 ew‘f., desceiption = niui: Jeaves. Practico et from the lower courts directly o | Hutchinson, Ewlly 8, ulchlnsan, It Vv, | Somihe road of every description s letics, the Bupreme_Court remalned under theact to | tlyman, and others, 1o forecluss a trust-decd dams that rotard the flow and sonk the road establish Appellate Courts, The cou- | for 85,000 on Lots 27 to 4B inclusive, ind, T, | Y04 Siciinrly so at that eritleal perlod, the filct, thercfore, between the two acts, | Matthews' Subidivision of Lots 1 and 20, fn s n'“" thawa, %(m" roads are falrly unn'nbla it any, touched only tbo appelice, and [ Kedzie's Bubdivision of part of the 8, W. i of n"'“ fin the droughts of summer and fall, or his right to tho ultimate judgment of the Su- | ec. 23, 39, 18, i S st the feutier, Scind day oue reae Court was fully preserved. The provis- TROBATE COUNT. roads will ull be rolled, bat I would drain them fl»m al the Amcnduu-f’rnuucu act by finplicas Inthe cstate of Ilumplircy Moynilian, the | o ® o iy the unl} thorough, lasting, ond tlon justifled the same conclusion, “The juris- | will of tho deceased was proved, admitted to selentitic way that has ‘Yot been ‘discovered, viz.: diction then inquestion over tho four claeses of | record, and letturs testamentary lsaucd to Har- by tiles. Somo day they will be macadamized, cascs was conferred both by fmplieation and by | low N. Drake, the Londs being ilxed at the sum | i) would tile anyway. With rolling or Withe cexpress words In many diiferent sections, Ao ns | of §122,000, i out, with wravel or without, the road must by fine’n}‘c‘nu umr‘u‘: turldngbx..n(vfil I‘.:m mw:r of :}n- .h‘uhfa Kntlck‘;rbo:-rl:ar Ilulcncd,&lurlnw a2 Iurzla dratned. That Is the Alpha and Omeya of rod- zislature under the Coustitution so to confer | pari of yesterday alfternoon, to the arguments g o 3 1 was equally clear, Of Counsil Tor e adninistratric aud the hetra | Waking, placa between what you will lished grades nnd use established sizes. So with the farmer. His individnal freedom of ac- tion {a In nowlse Interfered with: but, if he de- sire to avall himnsclf of the roadside tile as an outlet for his matne, he must strike that outlet at designated points, The wisdom of our legislatora will nndonbt- edly provide, by proper enactments tnder the drainage amendment, for such refractory cases &3 may require treatment, The usual resort for the scttlement of land disnutes of that character Is to special commis- siuncrs aopotnted by the local court, and I would point ont now greatty thoir Iahors woula be slmplificd by _the exact and suthoritative in- formatlott of a_dralnage chart. Tho same cone siderations npply to the many schemes for im- provement of rivers and streams, Ievee hullding, ete, A flood of light would Le thrown upon them that could haraly fail to provent scrious mistakes, , By the sdoption’ of this plan, Illinols will at once systemntize n vast work now in confusion and, by nlaving herself ntreast the progress of thG times, set an exampla for other pratrie Btates to follow. fler lacation makes her the Keystone State of tho West. Her broad acres of rich black soll aro too flat to be serfously Impoverished of thelr richest portion by washing rains, and when the compret subsoil that has been her bane is thorouehly drafned, it will prove her blesaing, retalning to growlng crops the nourishment thut gravelly solls would nllow to escape. W. F. Mattss, C. E. ———— ABRAHAM LINCOLN IN 1848, Thurlow Weed reminds tho pablle that Abrab Lincoiu made Mepublican apocches In Ma chuseltd 0 1648, ~Chicago Zvibuns, Nov. 7. clyilized races s necessarily fatal to savage tribes, and brought forward many facts in sup- yort of his position, He owsed, however, that it fs only by the gradual adoption ot the usages of civilization, and by amalzamation with morg progressive peoples, that inferlor varieties of mankind can eseape the extinction to which they seem doomed. Of this process of blending between the two, and the couseyuent evolu- tlon of mnew varietles of men, he ad- duced numercns lnstances, In concluding his paper, Prof. Wilson cited the - fallowing curlous and striking testimony i oroof of the fact that traces of mixed Indian blood ure ca- peclally common In the Province of Quebee: 1 do not think that people generally reatize the great extent to which there s an infueion of In- dian blood in the French Capadian population. In the nelchborhiood of Quebec, in the Uttuwa Vuoitey, snd to a preat extent about Montreul, 1 hardly think among the oriiinal sctilers there 18 o farilly In the lower ranis. and not many in the bighdr, who have not some traves of Indian blood. At Ottmws, where we have o large French nupulatfon, T hardly meet a man—nnd the women show the traces where I shoulil not eay, rom the nersonal ap- pearance, that there 1s a dash of the red man,” Prof. Wilron added that in the new Province of Manitoba the orighnl po;.n- lation {s n halbreed ones and 1t has begun its political existance with g nopulation numbering from 10,000 to 12,000: a race of elvil- 1zed bunters and farmers, the offspring of red and white parentage. This Is {n_addition to the much Iarger nnmber of children of mixed bluoa, who, following the fortuncs of thelr Indiar mothiers, grow upmambers of the nomail hunter tribea, There, more than clsewhere, he gces an analogy to that which may be assumed to have vroduced the Melauochrol of Enrope's prebitstorie azes, when the fntruding Aryon firat came fnto contact with Turanian or AlluphyHan tribes of that Neolithic period when the arts of the metallureist were tbere already—as they are now {n the unsettled teeritorics of the New World—beefnning to sunersede the . ingetifous processez of a parely stone and bone, orof a natlve copper period, To the Editor of The Trdune. . Nauvoo, Ill., Dec, 18.—A few weeks ago an article clalming that the external and interoal use of coal ofl In diphtheria would cure the dls- eass went tho rounds of the newapaper press, having been published in Thn WxsrLY Tnis. unm at the time, Nov 27, 1873, ¢ Inasmuch sa such treatment of that dread dlscase can be not only uscleas, bdut also de- structive, I ask a smatl place {n your columnsin the way of reply, ete. Without touchlog upon the past history of diphtheria, I wish to state & fow facta upon the anstomical and pathological characters of tho affection aud its treatment. Firat, diphtheria 15 not a local affection, but & systemic onc, The cause of the malady Is a blood contamination or polroniug. Becond, in order for tho disonse to ba present In any given case, a Abrinous cxudation must be preent upon some of the mucous surfaces of the body,—generally in the throdt, mouth, or nose,—being present often in the bronchi, and somctimes generally throughout the alr passs ages. 1t sometimes also forms In wounds in the skin In varlous portions of the body, This exudation {s termed a false membrane, is Iymph thrown out, and, belogx at first semi- transparent, It soon becomes opaque, und becomes at omce the distinctive local characterlstic of the disease. When forming where it can be uiten and readily examined, v at first ooks llke the uncooked white of an cgz, soon becoming, however, gradually opaque, liks the cooked white of exyz. It soon after assumes & tough and thoroughly-organized leathery op- pearanee, and haying, soonet or later, different colors, dua to discoloration from food and drinks taken, or ¢ decomposition fn tho mem- brano ltself. As befoce stated, this false membrane must e present, else the case is not one of diphthe- rin. Bimilar pscudo-meinbrancous ‘formatlons are found In true croup nnd in some cases of searlet fever. Yot in those affcctions the dis- tictive characters are sufliclently ovident to enable us to furm a correct diagnosis, and ex- clude, s & matter of cause, tbo discass now under cousideration, Third, diphthoria {s one of the zymotic dis- easca,—id est, disensos In which the polson of contagion and infection fntroduced Into tho blood acts as n ferment. Fourth, it, like oll such maladfes,—as small- pox, measles, scariet fever, ete., otc,,—runs & definite course, and ia not Influencod, curatively, by remedies. Presuming, then, that the aboye statements are true, the treatment of this drend disorder 13 easliy reduced to a comraon, henca scfentifie, standpofnt. Belentifie, becauso tho selence of wmedicing bas, 08 vet, falled to find remedies capuble of arresting this catalytic_fermentation in the blood {n any such diseascs. If the pseudo- membrane 18 only a local maulifestation, local treatmeut with such Iwwertul remedies as coal- all, caustics, etc., will do no good, but biarm, by fricrensinz the local inflammation, and its at- tendant cxudation. They do no good,—a fact that I belteve will be nttested by nearly all persons who have hod un opportunity to observe thelr effects. when used in the discase under consideration,—be they medlcnl or non-medical persons. Mild local applications to sllay inflammation and frrita- tlr:m. and to disinfect thy decaying and putrid fals¢ membrane, are good, though they can fa even more readiiy— 3, To the Editor af The Tribune, Kewaxeg, 111, Dee, 10.—Whether Mr. Weed has so reminded the public, 1 do not know, If he has mado such o statement, hismemory Is at fanit. £ Mr, Lincoln ever entertained onc-half of the good intentluns, or performed one-hall the zood acts, that his friends have attributed to him, then no man who cver lived was holf as good as he must have been. The actual Lin- coln was very much llke other men; the ideal Lincotn has no known original. But by this I do not mean to deery him, for [ am one of his many admlrers, and I voted for him twics for Presi- deut, Imean to dspute the statemont that Mr., Linenin ever made a Republican apecch In 1848, and 1 think it could be safely nfifrmed that he never made such a speech before 1355, when the Republican party was first organized in Tiliuos. El will give some facts and rcasons for my asser- ons, ‘There was no Republican party In 1848,—only the Democratfe, Whig, and Free-Soll parties. Mr. Lincoln was thein member of Concriss, laving been elected in 1844, In a district where the bare suapicion that ho was tainted with antie slavery views would have defeated *him. Mr. Lincoln probably mado some speeches that year in Mossachusetts. I know that ho and his wife und two boys returned from a trip in the East. crn States late In Beptember, 1848, and camo up the Inkes on the steamer Globe. 1 took pase sage ou that vessel at Detroit, and became aequainted with hiin nbout the time we reached Mnckinaw. The late D. D. Driscoll, Esq., of Chicagzo, then of Toulon, Iil, an active young Whig, was aboard, and knew Mr. Lincofn sod his wvolitles, and he arranged to have a discusston between Mr. Lincoln and s young tawyer residing in one of the interior countles of Tilinols, who waas an Abolitionlst and an active THE TIFTH PAIR, Dr. Leander Nrunton writes s follows In the Contemporary Neview: There are wo nerves, known us the fifth palr, which are distributed to the skin of the liead, and to the mucous mem- brane of the eyes, nose, amd mouth. These nerves nye closely connected with tho heart and vessels, am! by stimniatlor their branches the circulation mav be greatly influenced, as in tho cnse of faiuting, It {s a curious fact that people of ali natfons nre accustomed, when In any diffi- culty, to stimulate one or another branch of the Afth nerve, and quicken thelr mental processes, Thus, some persons, when , puzzled, -serateh their benda: others rub thelr forcheads, and otbers stroke or pull thelr beards, thus stimu- lating the occipital, frontal, or meata! branches of those nerves. Many Germans, when think- fng, have n habit of strikiug their fingers ogguinst their noses, and thus st!mulating the nasal cutancous branches; while In this country sunie people stimulate the bronclies dlstributed to the wticous membrane of the nose by taking snufl, The late Lord Derby, when translating Homer, wus accustonred to” eat brandied cher- ries. One man will eat figs while composing a leadIng article; another wil suck chocolato cremes; others will smoke clearettesy und oth- ers 8l brandy and wuter. By these meansthey : 5 i by supporter of the Free-Soil party. 'The debate | uo way cut the diseasa short or cura ft. u]xhimlnx_c the lngual ;u\l buceal branclies ol thie ::;‘d’é‘:',";“ml‘;;::“‘:‘l:';l:‘l"l"c:l"‘;l‘{':c":;“l"l‘l"‘a‘;“,‘:z Judgnient afflrmed. In the estate of Patrick McClary, where the ;l‘;:lll'p“;'l“‘,'lfj'(‘,‘fé";‘l;“:fi&’: :lgflg‘fl{::':flflcr‘;l'l‘lf was begun that afternoon, and was ended on | &hen, zood byglcole nursing, good nourish- {Jr[a:l:um"\‘}:-'oh“u‘lldn“} cur ::',fl::l u,"fi}'.i‘f.;,fi'.‘.‘{"{. of the yellow principle; [n sandy-brown hatr the A LITILK LAW AS T0 CHEDITOUS MILLY. guestion has been raled ag ta the Hability of | J) Gitcstion at large, ne viewed from. an In- | Hhe EvbiuE of the next day, while the boat was n ment, stimulants il peeded, together with tonics to give strength to the vital powers, 8 all that con be done. Tlie use of ruch disagreeablo aud powerful ngents aa coal ofl I8 destructive, bes causo they dostroy the mafnand only life-saving potrers tha patient has to help biin to recovery and health, viz.: the appetite, and the digestivn aud assimilation of food. The local use of voul oil externally 18 bad enouzh and disagrecabls enough withiout pouring it into the stomach. No one would expect to cure small-pox by the Judye Moore yesterduy morning decided the | the admiulstratelx, . Mrs, McClary, for losses ), . cads of tho Frat National Banic ot Slowx. Clty | eustained Ly tho fafinre. of thio Uidte Savings | dbiree's standuotat, Tus petinency will, how Ya. the oxecutors of Georgo W, Gaze, ‘Ihts wus | Institation, in whiclialio had deposited moneys ¥ W, F. MaTTes, C, E. a ercditors’ b, filed In the life-thna of Gage, to | whilc the bask was rhanine avd evervbody sup- s * reach some of bis assete, but no Recviver” was | posed [t to bo sound. - Mr. Moran uppearcd for lon=T1 ever appointed. 'The case was delayed by betng | the administratelx and” Mr. Chilas for the heirs, | Tieview of the Situntlon. taken to the Supreme Court, Atter it camu | Judge Knickerbocker‘took the case underad- | but Littia Sclengo=DIfMoul back, It wns revived ogainst the executors of | visement. aud wiil deliver his deelsion ab an and Kemedies 'ropased—T Cage. They aopeared and nnswered, und the | early day. - stuno State of the West, facts were admitted, The exccntors admitted THE CALL MONDAY., To the Editor of The Tribune. black and red constitucnts are assoclated with a large proportionaf yellow matter: tn dark-brown halr the: black plizment increases at the expense of the otbers; while in black hair this dark col- oring substance completely overpowers tho as- noclated bodies. 1t 18 notable that Mr, Sorby found In some very black halr of o negro just as large a proportion of red pigment as In very red balr of European origin, We may, thercfore, aafely contluae that it this negro shonld have tion torauga the brain refiexly from toe mouth, sud to stinulate the heare reflexiy from the stomach, even before it 8 absorbed juto the blood. Shortly ufter it has been siwnllowed, however, it 1% nbsorbed from the stomach, and posses with the blood to the hcart, to the brain, aud to the other partaof the nerv- oua system, upon which It then begins to act direetlv. — Under tta influcuce the hieart beats more quickly, the blood clreulates 1ylnz at Milwaukee, ‘Tnere wers many very Intellizent emicrants to the Btate of Wisconsin on board, some of whom tay remember these facts. ‘The debate wus a very plensulit one, and .+ Mr, Lincotn con« ducted his slde of 15 with, groat_ falrness and skill. Butheat nothne expressed nuy sym- pathy with the Free-8oil cause, which was csscn- tinlty the same ns that of the Republican party, Ou the contrary, ho was artfully led fnto “mak- X oy o paLTT—Cull of hix calendar, " -t inez on attack on the Liberty varty, because they | unplication of caustics, ote., to the pustules. mors. frecly, und thus the functional power of {"““fll‘{" o e e &;z“l:‘?::v' E‘J:"(";l‘l-#‘"-':'mm B | i Anverate Couee Adlonrmen 1o 2 p, m,q | - DwiouT, IiL, Dee. 10.—F ""‘"'“l"{ for the | (ukhead tha olection of Tienry Clay In 191 atil | Then why bresume to socura diohthorial - Aud; the varlous orzuns in the bndy Is increased no | MOUI hawe been 1ot Fhite, bus as bright & red 1 fop 0™ e "o “sevon thoussnd dollars, | den, 0. 1836, when puimians will be dellvered, - | welfare of the Btate, the tmmcnsely Important | voted for Dirney, when they ehiould, in his | also, why the discropancies-in the statements of Ll:::«ll:: nlhrln:ll‘l:lmm;gw e‘:mf\ 0% J,:”',‘{L’,;,f,{!,“,- As that of any red-halred Enropean, all hut nbout SLSCD of ‘which had beon | (JUBNE JaNiexn-2il t Sl 4, 413 o 450, | question of drainaze ts outside of politics, and o Y e e X oplinion, as Abolitioniats, have voted for Clay, and, by so dofng, they opened up the way to the annexation of Texas and the Mexlean war, with thu cousequent extension of sluvery, This zave bis opponent the advantage he had soueht, and hu ventiiated that particular Whig bumbug, to the great delight of the maojority of the nassen- eers, who wers in sympathy with Free-Bollism and nml--lnvur{v. Mr. Livcoln thon appeared to entertaln about tho average viewa of the members of his party, and to havo no sympathy with anything not in- dorsed by thiepreat ** embodiment of Whigrgery,” MNenry Clay, and he showed no true knowledge of the principles and purooses of tho Liberty party, and manifested no respect for them, Tio nest eveoing Mr. Lincoln addressed n ‘Whitr meeting frotn tho steps of the old wooden Court-House i Chicago,—a thing which he would llnrdlfl havo been {nvited to do bad no becaa Repnblican or a Frec-Soller, Mr. Lincoln, thoush ho became a Republian, was ucver a leader of Republican thoucht. flo was, while a Whig, innoculated with a love of compromise, and a dread of snything not la- beled Conservative. [la maulfested this at Freeport In 1858, whero Douglus had warned him that he would force from him an answer medical as well as noo-medical persons as to the treatment and cure of this discaso? The latter can get out of thelr orrors In the premises beeauso they aro mot meaically ine formed; the formor have to tako oue ortho other horn of the dilemma,—cither dishovesty or fznorance! ‘The answer to the former ques- tlon (discrepancics, etc.) is casy enougl, siinple enough, and strictly correct, viz.: Diphtberia and simple acuts’ pharyogitts, with a fol- licular sccretion, “are” now, ond have beun for a quarter of a century, confounded and classificd togother ss diphtheria—a harmless wud o deadly discase writicn about aud treated as 8 deadly malady, Simplo acute pharygltis 1 often an epldemin affection—1s more of a fover with more throat thao » constitutional disorder—is of short dura- tion, and is atrended with little or oo danger to Hife. ‘The affection {a characterized by oo ery- thematic redness of tha tonsils, pharynx, etc., and Is quite often attended by a doposit ot white follicular matcrinl of greater or less size. This secrution fs from the folllcles of the parts f- fected, nnd is entirely different from diplther- itie membiane, Dr, kilnt in ‘ Practice of Medicine, firat 'k Commission. pald out n the courso of mimiutstration wpon Noi ok (reveland can, therefore, be developed untrammeled by orders of tho Yro urt to the widow or for Y at Junue Moonz—~Contested motlons, those party vonsideratlous and Jealousics that expenses, etc,, leaving 1 their hauds about | Jrpax Koasus—iN, 310, 341, No case on:| are so frequently fatal to laudable elforts for $1,800. nl, o ‘o complafnant contended that by the ling | . Junas Hoorn—102, 250, 473, a7, 3733, 975, | the publlc rood, of the cross-bill It had acquired o (ién uvon ull | No caso on trial, Let us glance for a moment st the sttuation. the lpv.-nonnlllaupurty dnu%! u:lndluwv?n.-d nredr- 5::::: &Qtnfi;’;—gflggt‘fi;l‘flif:’\::% cm'" aso Tlhe 8tate has been well pigh ruined by mud. sonal assets of Gage, and which were aftorwards . =y Wiy | L 3 3 o) % Bromnt o0 1A Jo.tha handa of His exsaiors, | 4a0 contestsd mollons. No. 132, Fors va, ¥om, | With letharay, Lorn of a verialy despalrlig o i trlal, sonse ol helplessneas, the farmers lave bent 5‘.‘1‘.1.; :l" H:L.g:g:s-gm‘fdt{::t":h:h:xctclm:r:(le‘:;z v i under tho heavy yoke yoer after year. Tillng whatever personal asscts thoy recelved from the ren Srates Guniz oot had been heard of, but it ssemed out of reach, . 1. va. Pullip Goldman, $2, 174, estate of Gage, aubject to tho clalns of the | Bt e . B 3, 012, and, to the majority, a doubtful remedy atbest, s aent ‘et al. va, Kawo, 33,0 toburs, Cie- | ‘Then the beticr informed of our citizens took complainauta as & vrior Jien. ‘The defendants | zache et al, v, €ame, 34,011,04. IR contendnd that when they came to the | cinnatl & St. Louis Rallway Company vs, ilonry umynmern?. I'ho raitronds andthe tile men as- v['\lln dawmaces, | sisted, Inte }lnnmza on tho subject was disaeml- THIS LOOKS LIKE FRAUD, . 7o the EdUor of Ths Tribune. Vigainia City, M. T, Dec, 12.—Belleving that there will b quite an fmmizration to this Territory in the spring, and knowing your dis- vosition to gige fraud an airiog, I will requeat that you cive this communicstion a placo {n your. columos. The threo Jowa llnes of raflrond from Chicago isstio emigrant tickets to polots o Montaua, T beljeve the rallroads fssue the tickets In good faith, aud the only trouble with the tickets comiuences after leaving the radlrond and when' the “Dismoud R™ Transportation Company becomes respon- sible, This Company claims about 815 for thele part of tho cmigrant passage, abd the only privilege £ could tind with thelr ticket was that of camplog with thelr teamsters. [ bonght by ticket in good falth, uud wus somewhat surprised, on noproaching the agent of tha ** Dismond 8" Company (Mr. F. A. Kcisel) at the terminus of the Utuh Northern Raftrond, to be informed that digest wore easily, But, with this exeeption, the cifect of alcohol upnn the nervous eyatem may be described as oue of progressive purly- sfs. 'The higher centres. suffer, flrat, and* tle {udmnrm. 13 probably the first quality to be mpatred. Ouc of the most esteemed noveiists of the preeent dnv {uforms e thut although he can teko o great deal.of wine without {ta hav- fug auy apparcot effect on him, yot. o slogle Eluss of sherry {3 enoush to take the flne edye off his {ntelfect, He 18 ablo to write casfly il fluently in the evening, after taking dinner and drinking wino; but what ba then writes will not bess his own critfctam next mornlog, al- though, curiously enough, it moy seem to bun exccllent at the timo of writ- fog. A the effect of alcohiul progresses, Judgment becomes stll further fmpolred, all 1hough the othier facultics of the miid may re- wain, wot only undiminishied by the direct sction of the nlcohiol upon the brain, but urcnlf n- creased by the general excitement of the clreu. Iatfon, The imagination may thus bo tare vivid than usuul, and the emotions more lively, and both, belnez wore or less liberated from tho control of the judgment, maunifest themeelves fu sparkling wit' or withering invective. Bherl- Y posscasion of tho persoial property of | W. Henderwon; vordict, aobt, £, Gagu as exccutond, Hrey took ft discharzed | &320.~United States’ use R, C. Jenkine, Assignea | nated: cost of tile and rates of frelght reduced; of such prior clahn, and beld ft, and wera bound | Of Leander Nockwoll. va., Washington M, Witls, | Qitches dug by machinery, and tho whole State 1o distributo it underand fu_pursuance of the | Jobu 8. Wills, flichard (irexz, Naucy J. Wills.and | roused to a feverish interest by the results ob- statute in relation to the nssets of deceased | 3b: No Brainerd; vordict, $3,007.10, and miotion | (ained. Tho Lexislatura passod a Drainage law, persons, and upon the order of the Probato | , 3 atoNa—S, . Tlea. | Which the conrts pronounced unconstitutional, Courts that it Pgld uot come Lo thelr hands m’;uv':.';:,m ;figfm}gfi:5‘.'\'-’3"1):9:-"13‘.‘5.‘1‘.1!“&;, Whereupon tho people put thelr hand to the charged with any Eflnr llen and_could not be | —Anarcw Mueller ya, John B, Schule, S10 wheel anid correoted the Constitution by a tre- takeu from themn 5; Court of Chuncery. Mary Young va. Alohonse Lo Jeune, $31v, mendous majority. The laying of tile has com. Judge Moore sald he had had much difllculty Cinerir Cou ML obn Chamoeriln | paratively but Just bewun, and yet It is already in coming to a conclu: s §, Norton, §271.72. “1ho rage,” and probably mora tile will be lakl varicd a different tim ancis A. Frank vs, Allen | during the coming year than in all tho past tive , and his optnton hait | v Alezanderand The wuthorities wera | _ Juiie Nouxus editlon, pages says: ‘*These white I the tickets wero only futended for male | hopelessly ot varianco on the point, but hie | Schofleldi vurdict, § ut together, whether, unider any circumstances, be would, s | patched hove o rescmblance to diphtberitic ex- d':’,lf euld to liuve delivered his greatest spoech | pogsenzersy—a sccret ylhay keep to thew- lm?ugh: Tiobetter rata wa that the complain- —— = v 'I‘mnzln as it should be, and redounda to tho | United Statcs Seuator, vote for tho admission Hilation, and 1618 highly important. to discrimi- under th Influence of two bottlesof chumpagne, | gelyes until It 18 too Iato for the cmi- | ants did not acquire any lem A decres was Tnlucky In His Chironology, credit of the State: n falr fllustration of her in- | Into tho Union of a slave Siate, He sald thero | nate between the two, ‘Yhe follicular scerction ‘h{"‘ he “"‘, swallowed ot s slugle draughts | grant. Alter being somo thirteen days | tnereforo ordered to bu entered in fayvor of the Nurdetts, felligence and energy. But in this very awak- | in reply to Douglas that thero might b clr- | furms a pultsccous doposit, not a membraniform and persons of over-catitious temperanient, and. | gut from the terminus of the rallroad, we | defendants. Throstlewalte, of Weat H1I1, has just returned | enius fies o great danger thatshould beguarded | cumstauces whero he would, asSenator, volo for | layer like the deposit of Iirmvb- aud cannot be too-reserved manners, the removalot thoexeess- | wery Jeft afoot by reasou of the ludians robbinz URACHYOGXL VA, WHITH BT AL. from Omali, and 43 dues uverv main wio goes | ggalnatat the outset, or untold thousands of b ive restralut under which they bhabitually act renders them, for the time, wiore soclablc and agrecable. By-uud-by, however, tho otocr parts of the nervous system ure successlvely weak- cued, the toniue stammers, the vislon becotn: double, the legs fall, and the man fulls insen, ble. Itis evident, then, that oulythe first stuges of alcolalic aetion aro at all benetlcial, the later stoges being ug clearly fojurious. the admisslon of aslave State,—and tho battle” for that duy was lust for want of & courazcois pegative. And It was only partially regained Jate that aitcrnoon, when Luw)uv addressed the mututude from the balcouy of the Brewster House, in which, with the galluntry and courage of Bheridan in bls fumous tepulecol Gen, Early, he rallted the scattering forces, and told them that under no conceivable circumastances in Congress or out would he éver vote to admil another aluyo Btate, or to permit tho exteusion of slavery over anothier inch of our territorry, At these worda the uronpiug apirits of Republic- nna rovived, as their cheers testilled, In keeping with Mr. Lincolu's conservative spirit was s letter to Mr, Greeley, which, ooly nbout a month before he efened the preliminary Proclsmation of Emaucipation, druve mnny of the truest friends of the country almpst to de- Bpuir, 1 bavo drawn a plcture from the original, and no suftening of color or of cutling can effuce its foatures, He who dwelt nearcst o that original will recognize that truthituin, Mr. Lincoln's name, associated as it 1s with some of the sub- Huest da recorded Iu history, needs uo fulvo praisa Lo make it one of the most attractive and noblo of the world, TuorNIVEL, e ——— MORE ANCIENT BUT DESOLATE CITIES, Pversthing connected with tho extinet races of the North Amerlcan Continent has fora loug time excited great nterest amoug our sclentists, Many wonderful facts tn regard to them have been deyeloped, aud the time fs not distant when from the study of thelr citles, pottery, removed in strips like the latter,” Heo also on pags 8ll: * l'hnr{nzltll with a folltcular ‘secrction s often cal dipbtheria.” *The affeetlon in thesc case un( be dus to the cpi- demlc nfluence, but the dlseasa is comparative- ly trivia, aud heuce the rate of fatal- ity In diffcrent coses of so-called diphtherla will vary according to the nccuracy of dingnosis, or tho strict observauco of the proper application of the uame. T'lhe treatment of this slmple acate pharyngitis is tuost simple,—it needlu really hittlo or none, —the use of strong local appiications veing both useless ond njurious, Yet this L the ciscare that {s being written about nnd treated, daily, us diphtherls, by uot only a goodly portiou of the medicd] fraternity, but'also by the wise ones of thy general publtle! The object, then, that is almed at by tho wriler of this article, {s° to Jostruct, if possible, his readers somewbat, 30 to “euable them to draw the dividing Jino botween fucse two throat alfections, whereln paticuts foriu- nave coough to fall upon the one sidoof that line will bo in litle or nodsnger from thelr disense, whilat thuse unfortudute enough tu fuil upon the other sfde have to do with a malady which shows 8 death-rato of €0 to 70 per vent. Or, o other words, & dingnosis between trus and false diphthberls, ficuratlvely speakivg. Both affections are now, und Luve been fur years, quite prevalout througliout the United Btates, Lelng too of somcwhat of sn cpldewlc character in the case of each. It is believed that where diphtheria fs proverly separated from other throat diseases, aml wave- tully treuted, thiat tho death-rata will be greatly our train of its stack, snd the only consulation that could be got from the representative of the # Dizmond R ' Company, on anplication for ro. Hef, was *Go to h—I1 What do you suppose 1 .cdn do!" ‘Thos was the exact address of the geotlemanly “Diamond R" conductor to ls pesscigers, consuting of four ladles and ° gentiemen aud seven children, The ticket issued by the Chieago roads fs taken up at Omaha by the Northern Pscific Rallroud, nud avother fssued, bindiug the emi- grant to dellver sald ticket to tha **Dismond R" Cowmpouy luside of o vertain tine, which timo s the exact thue from Owaba to the terminus, or, at least, o nesr ft that it will bo necessary to Jook to tho transportation company’s ent fmmediately, ‘Lhe penalty of falling todoso will result in the forfelt of your privilege (1f o male pagsenger) of the vxtruordinary privilege of walking alongide of au ox-driver, hud sleeping In the sawe camp until your arrival at destination in Moutana. I could glve you agre deal more l'!nu ‘\:;?uldcmlcren- ;hulnulf.nz-r- skulis which were too old, or too young, or ¢oa | 88ent ol s Compauy. It a fwperfeet to be uecful n the lnveillunhun.rltna swidle in cyvery partledlar so far Repfegsor hus atudicd 1,249 skulls. of which | 95 Iu‘}:rn sition 1o vorry passenpers s con- 811 represented wodern ‘bignly-cvilizod races, | terned. Insupport of my sertion I cou refer, and 277 modern dferior races, whilethe ai any time the Company nay wish to question susining 123 beloveed to Komans, Etruscany, | the smatter, to well-known realdents of the Ter- Fuunicluns, sud otlier nations of sotlquity, He ritory, sud, us for iy own experience with the iuds that the wisdom-teeth ure more frequent- Comuvany, I wilisake great plessure,atan thne, Iy absent in the superfor thaw in the foferior | 1 furnishing the aftidavit of hulf o dozen fellow- thees of mankind, the exaet proportion belng passeagers fo corroboration of what 1 have sald, 42,42 pur cent {n skulls of the hizher races, MonTaNa, ayalust 19.68 per cent in the lower races. . Thiv | ; (SR ——— 13, of course, quite in accordauce with Mr, Dar- o+ A Joke ou Svoator Urover, . win's views. By Wankntay Corramendence Linelunatt daguir In tho case of Frederick Lrachvogel va, | West ol tho Slissourl River, returned laden with | dotlars may bo lost to the Commonwealth. George E. White, ‘The Brachvogel Molding | trophics of the chase, o With all the application of modern skill and ma- Company, and others, & supplemental petition +You gay you shot it yoursclli" sked acritls | chinery, draining by tile f{a 1tkely to remain an was flied vesterday morning in Judie Furwe cal fricud, examnining the cik-horus with a great | expensive operation, and to presont one inexor- court praying for the removal of the Reeeiver | deal of Intereat," ub]c ‘condition to the fartner by which alone sue- beretolore appoluted, and for other relfef, Tho +Yes, replied Throstlewaite with sn awful | ceas may bo had, That condition is that that bill sets forth that slnce the appointneut of the | sinkiue of tha heart. work shall bu thoroughly well done, ‘There s Rucelver tho property of the Lrachvogel Mold- | *1'm,"safd the friend, *and how old are you | practivally no lml(\m{ measure, It eltber pays {ug Compuuy has been Interfered withs th now " argely, o {8 o heavy loas. pretended salo of the premises on W R Throstlewaito whispered falutly, “Thirty- But'tbe Inying of "iile properly is a sclentific stroet waa on the 3d lnstant mada to George E, | pine,” and then lost kis volee, and the friend re- | operation, involving many counlderatious that White; thot on_said 84 day of December tha | tred. few furmers are trained to fully declde upon, sald George E. White made a prutended sate of Tinastlewalte finids a Jittle brass plate set In | Among these are two polnta very rmluemly the samo property to sald Jumcs . Kiine; agatn | tho end of the horns, engraved, ‘4. Hovley, | neglected, to which Iwould call special atten- on the same day Kiine made anothicr pretended | gnusmith, Cincinnatl, Aprll, 1518.And it makes | gon, sule of raid property to the George E. White | him awfully mad 10 have anvhudy come |n and 'khe firat 1a the quantity of water likely to be Hardwood Lumber” Compauy, this last sale | @sk himn if it s really true that shot & deer | thrown upon the land from the contiguous betng evidenced by o pretended il therofur, | when he was only 4 years old, lands mbove, In attempting to decidu this whict was on the 14th lust, tiied for record fu - —————— ‘(}uflllnll, the farmer will often b met with tha the Recorder’s office, but is not yot recorded. Jews In Congress, illenlty that ho §s unable to foresed the future ‘Y'he bill further alleges that the Sueritt, on the Harnig’s Wrekiy. of draitage operations affecting him, and can. 14th of Novewber last, took possesslon of tne | Mr.Edwin Elnsteln,Congressmann-clect from the | not say whether tho water fro certain arcas premises on West Lake street, aud mafutalued | 8eventh district, iv the second faeraeiite who has | witi bo thrown upon hin or ngt. In tals prairie such posscasion uutll the svpointment of a Re- | been eleeted to Cougreen from this city, thellrut | country this uncertainty ofton’ exteuds back cetver, ‘The Receiver took possession, but it s | baving been Emaneul H, Hart, who served from | over considerable t makiog tho declsion aleged hos falled fn every partienlur to per- | 1651 to 18535, ‘mes suve that Mal. | fmportant und perplexioi, . foru the dutics of I3 trust or obov the orders | Noali was once 8 member from this city, but ‘e second _pulut §s of sth) greater impor- of this Court; hutrcrmm the salid George E. | ucitherin Lanman's Concroastunal Record nor fu | tauce, aud refers to the outlet, My purpose White und his_confederules nud ugents to tnan. | Poore’s l-lgmirml'flml Directory docs his uame | hiere (s not merely 10 emphasizo the well-known ave and coutrul tho affuirs and property of the | sopear, Philadelphia el utcesalty for a free, rellable discharge from the corporation tu wauifest fraud of tho rights | from 1857 to 13615 Boaton farm-malns, but to volat out the extreme difil- snd interests of the creditors and stockhbolders | 0 1877, and has just re-clected him. Judah P, | culty in, I think T may say, the majority of of the waid corporation. ‘The bill uiso | Benlumin wos United Ktates Honator from Lou- | casea of attawlng this desiaeratam. “In many charyes thot White colluded and confederated | islana from Is58 until 1501, These, wo believe, | instances 1 know that the entire n syateun with Jumes D, Kline to wreck and pluuder sald | 8re the ovly Jews who have served fo Cougress, | has beeu located too near the surfacy beo- cprporation, and to chieat and defrand its ered- e —— causo of this diflculty, For a blockade ftors, and ull ot the stockholders thereln, who Ewlng Pushing Illmself for overnor, established by tho perversencss of a neigbbor, WISDOM-TEETII AND EVOLUTION. * 1t appears,” sald Mr. Darwin fu his ¢ Dy scent of Man,! “as if tho posterfor molar or wisdom-teeth were tending to hecoma rudlinen. tary In the more clvilized races of man.” To test the sounduess of this concluslon, Prof, Mauteguzen has corcfully examlued the rlch eranlulogical collection in the National Museum ot J\Xllllffl‘wlflg’{ st Florence, and has published the resuits ot his {uvestigution in the form of un clsburats paver, which occuples the greater purt of tho last number of lis excellent Archivio per " Antropo'ogia, Betting natue those % diwnlutshed, Buooks R. Hauirroy, AL 1. o, did uot or would not ald or abet the confeder- Gen, Ewing's trlends are quick to take ndvan. | legal treatment will hereafter bo all powertul, and varlous relica a very foteresting, though fm; NS oGt e Benator Grover 1s the subjoct of aueat little | gtes fn the sald objects or desizus of their con- | tage of I grian's refusal, and are pushog iim | but the physical obstacles sre not so readily dis- | perfect, history of thele manuers, babits, und He Nover 8ald e Wouldn't, NEW LAWS OF MOTION, Joke, which 3 pointed beeausu it {8 true. Last | federacy, In furtherance of wald desigus and encretivally s the party's beat candidate for | posed of. I caunot zo futo furtner detall here, Govertor. ‘They are right, 1o |8 tho best cm- | B0d tite the numerous fustauces that oceur to Lodiment of th * Oblo jdea®® now living, ‘The | we. But many who bave drulucd will bear mo defenders of that dca swear thut resumption | out fn thenssertion that many hundred farmers will bava nothing to do with thelr ugitation of | in this Btate would weleome next year a well- ft; that it is bound to vo on furever. 10 this is | Jald tile by their rosdside tuto which they could ther determinution, Ewlng {s their man, Hu [‘bave the privilege of turnlug thelr mnlns.‘ and will €0 on forever I thesame directlon, no mat- | that they would also be grateful for reltuble fu- ter what happens, while ‘Thuron s likely to | formotion rewurdiug the future of draluage turn up beaded in the opposite direction if the | vperations above them, luizte of eveats shows kiin that fs tho pupular | ‘Tho Suct 1s that we are plunging futo this custoins may bo constructed. Frowm a single bona the skilitul auatomist can tell tho size aud tho entire habits of the sutwal to which 1t Le- longed, and so from the deserted citics and the articles remainipg I them, found in Arizona sud aloug the Colorado River, cibuologists will be able to speak with reasonable certaluty about the people who {u vast numbers oucy fubabited those nuw desvlate regionr, A gentlemay, un. der date of Dec. 0, writes from Anlmas Ulty, Lu Pluta Col., to 8 tricnd in this city s follows: New York Times. summer he was a newber of the Spectu! Tudlan 3ir. Jumes McCarroll, of this chty, claims to | Coutulasion, sud whs up fu trezon with thet bave discovered some new laws of motion which | Nez-Perces udiung, and had telegrapbed sbesd explaft the motlous of the gyroscope,~sowe- | slong the railroad for such travsportativy as tuiog that science has hitherto been ubablu to | wosld convey the whole party, ‘The assembling do. One of bis propusitions Is that a body is of | Uf teamd coliceted quite a crowd of people, wlio uulforia weleht when fu repose auly. He argues | throuked the depot, uud gazed aud vuzed upoy the velebritics, without auy particular idea ol that whea 3 motiou o body varies o welzht ac- | wihat they meant to do or lshu they were, Seu- cording to it velocity sud the directlon ur lue | ntor Grover i extremely digutiied, sud seldom purposcs, the said White fraudulently controlied aud directed the bookkeepers and secretaries of sald curporation to make fulse aud fraudulent cntries on the books of accouut, or sows of them, in the futerest of sald Waite, and sguinat tue futerest of satd corporstion, ete., cte. ‘lhe complainant further states thut on the 16th fust, u fudzmeut was entered by coufesslon in the Buperior Court of Cook County agaloet oue John Penshaker, au ewploye sud coufed- Benator Conkilng is greatly amuscd over the publication ol what purported Lo be a epecial dispozel from Washington In the New York Graphle,saying that the Senator from New York had abaudoned all Presidential urlnlllaul fur 1550, and would bereafter devote bimacif to see curlug the renomivation of ex-President Gravt. This dlspatch was written in New York, sud made the tusls of s glowing editorial oo the mwany virtues of Mr, Conkliug, Ho has pever ] uld That be would ot bo the next Republiced crale of_sald White, for 910, and fu tavor of drafnuge business with characterlstic Westen: #A fricnd of mine told mo vesterday that ho | 5 L1ty ot or s augla e attee sunkes with | #hcaks dulcs sy, o Out 1 separiabls or | Janies” . Kllu, on which u:'uuunm; B, b | At ————— bHuck Aud enerie, Qub with very little scicnce, | saw an aniclsin Seruer's ggting U tho e, | cavdidatu for the Presidoncy, ue perpendiculur @ ceotre of pravity fu e politencss. 1o was walklug up sud 2 ¥ lch the Bhe evic ac . c! ct race that ooce inhabited this portion of YL ius, 1 thal 1L shakee WNove R i bombaldn il r A Ly e lanhid T iasued, in nutlee of which the Bheritl has levied Gsrtield the Wisest Chillds ach townstlp, Road Commtisioner, wud farmer | tiuct ed i o upon und taken pusseasion of sald prewlses, and now bolds Lhe same; the complalants chargs thut this levy wus fraudulently {ustieated and directed by sald White, aud i3 but snotber effort ou the part of White and Kliue, alled Pena- baker, Lo wreck and pluuder sald Brachvogel Molding Cou:Pnny. wnd cheat abd defruud its creditors, aud that White and Kline are now cugaged fu removiug the property from sald premises. ‘The uvetitloners pray that the Ie- culver may be directed to nurcu aud report his wctlon tuibis Court, aud il N They Muy Declive. New York Wortd (Den.). That 13 & pretty snd iogentous idea of the Grant wanegers o start thelr caudidato for the ruce in 1850 with a big bauquet sud ball fn Bus tou, to which the Marquis of Loroe and Prive cess Lowsa srv 10 be luvited. Howerer, uob- Withstaudiug the deep lwpreasion which Mester Ulysses Grant, Jr., left upon the Roysl bouse- hold fu Englgnd, it s just amopg tue vossibil- tles that tho Marquis sud Priocess ey deciivg Cincinnati Commereiul, is worklng iudcpendently, pnd the result prom- Garfleld fs tho shlest cbitd we have In public | iscs tobe Hie the buildiugs ju o ordlary ity Hte, e 13 eorned, cloquent, brave, but in | block,—all hights, sizes, and sbapes, with s worldly wisdow ke ceased Lo grow at about 14 | utier absence of co-oeration or harmony. years of age. Of course he docsn't make any The spevitie for this state of conlusion s a voniceulment of bis opinion. Perls the thougnt | well-digested drainage-chart of the Btate, judi- that bo should conceal gu opinton even long | clously supported by law; sad for the sclentite cuough for it to ripen. e digs uv Lis thoughts | coustruction and malntenanve of such & churt I cvery day to seedf they are sproutiug, it | venture to urge upou the cominyg Legislature posaible he duca not kuow that the Democracy | $he creation of a State Departjucot of Engiocee- ary the champaion fraud-hcuters of Awmerical | lug, with sucis lexal sauction os way be deemed Colurado, aud whose uniy lewrucy le broken pot- tery and sulued bouses.” Who the party is that wrote this up, 1 uw unable to flnd vut, as § cun- Vot Zet & copy ol Scridner in this country, How- ever, 1 am vertain of one thlug: bis knowledge of the subjuct ust be limited, for, with the ex- cepticn of mysell, [do not belleve there lia wan liviog that has scen woy of the ruins, ex- cept the few Iving close to the Auimas, Rio Maucos, sud Rio de Cnuly. For the pust year 1 bave Leca acting s guide to the Ute expedi- low & live borizoutal to HLself; 1o other words, | fall upen a little, shock-heuded, ragged gumin, bt tho further body recedes from the centre | He paused 1o bis walk uear the boy, aud saw: of wravity the less becomes the attraction of the * My wou, 1ay 1usk you bow far it 18 to the satth upon i, und the lohter it grows, Mr. M- m{z of the Nez-Perces i Curroll seknowledges that u ponud, if weighed in **Yes, slr,’? promptly suswered the boy, aod uballoon «t un clevation of 3,000 tect, would tiy | then came to a full ston, 1Le scales ub the uorwal tzure, but says that *How far is §11" asked the Senator. the conditions a4 to the scales would bo so |* *Dawn ir 1 kuowl” suswered the boy with changed ulou s Lo Devessitato Lhis upparent To- | perfect Kravity. sult, whils u difference in weizbt would actually R ——— exisl. From this Mr. McCarroll establishes the Personal, S P ary v e tTec digcharge the functious of talls to the kite of it shall be fuund | [s b not uware that Sepator ‘Tuurmnau s onx- aary 1o give [ts deterwinations due effect. | Hou, aud 1 brourht the troovs throurh the vary | 49 ¢ 5 Sariitivetai Ahit va boly Tmesiog i Aurds. it e s Talled b perfortn tha datics. of bie | fau b ame et ts i e Geter slevtion, | “Tie Degartuent ecd nok b6 eumbersomo nor | Beart of the citics and towss formerly octupiey | Sesers. Cisudler, Losu, aud Robesoa. suraight Nue clianees at cach womweut fia div- | Will tho young twau Lu e blonda overcaat, | trust tbat. bu may ba Tho. clict ofiicer sbould e & Btate. eu | by this mysterious Lut extiuet race. lustcad of i I iucl tiguted ! ravity fu the carth, | aud u livertolured but, Wbo savy “Thy huart Loiby la Ciuclivath, Luveatigus lnd‘, cul uvotly, ity welgnt, bowed down with grease sua bair * out on West Mr. u' arrull’s secoud proposstion fs that | Hillut 1 s, w., plesse repeat bl coucert this Newtou's luw of talliug bodies, that the velockty | eveuing at the sawe vlace, sud stand @ little Jucrcaacalu proportion to thesyuare ol distauce fs | away trum the lamp-post, so the audicnce cay delective, au‘duulv Lolds goud above the plane | get » good crack ot blin with 8 luwp of coal, Of the curth's surface. e conten Lut W withuut erdangenos tbe property of the Gus the Lody to full through su vpen space through | Cowpany f tonded sale to Walte *ler the eolor of o L] wortguwde made 10 vumes D. Klise by sald corporation ou the 17th uf August. 1573, way be decreed vold; uleo the sale by Wolte to Klce, und by Kliue to the George” E. White Hurd- wood Luiuber Cowpuuy; uad that the said Murdwood Lumber Coupan: | uienty, may be restrained f —— Au Unfrocked Priest. One of 8lr Guruet Wolseley's subjects ls 8 m.; erally unfrocked Ureek priest, who was fouu! guilty of luceat, sud handed over by tbo Turk: fah authorities to his conyrcgation for puoish- wment, The congregation scututccd bim to w0 paked tor tweuly years, sud by bas already served geven, r appoluted by the Governor. He'wiil suios | touud perfecy round wowos, two and 1hree-atory houscs, Eral , whole juis, and erfect pots, beaunifully nroameuted aud glazed, usteud af b 1 vound stou touls, vleces of copper, snd graves, sud kilos where the pottery was made, * Expecting to eet bowe to Cbicago, whero be- fore g uwn lhistoshal Suclery [ ool exvlain et~ Buslucss Outlook. Ao York Times, . d ol some cxperlenco as o draf ‘The reasons which uow induce Messrs, Kelley | glueer, und vne or more rupld draughtsu sod Ewloy to abstulu from funtlier oppusttion to The field workshould be dooe by levelers a measure whose accomplistuucut two weeks | aud uselstonts. The luvelers uced not be hizu- beuve 13 oggured, will be atitd wore cozent next | priced mes, Fhoe work cun be coustautly Decewber, There f3a vast alference betwern | cieked by data that can be oltatoel from the

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