Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 23, 1878, Page 3

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY. DECEMBER 23, 187 D. A. WELLS ON SUGAR. 3 r WANTEB-FIALE RELP, Rookkeopers, Clerka, &ocs INERY FIOUSE WITR &PE- Al LOwers andl frathers wantstvo with ertablistied trade, Address rultation. What thev.will finnlly agrea on re- nainsito be scen, but it Is certainiy possble that they witl seo thattheirtrue conrse I8 a close allfance” with the FEastern wing of thelr party and the adaption of Eastern and Western ideas and policies, This wouid Include, of course, an .abandonment of all currency delusions, nnd op- position toevery part of the currency programme of the Weat, with a unlon on new policies which would forve the okl questiona ont of the way. AJ TIR AVERAGE CONGRESSMAN, Three things inainly orevent ths fmmediats adoption of such a programme, and these are timidity, ignorance, and a curlons respect for rome'wmpty aod viclous tratitions. It Is amaz- ing to see the muddied”eondition of mind into which the averae member of either [{ouse and of either party regarus the currenvy question, and how {uconaruous and absurd ara tha expe- dicnts suggested, Morcover, alinost eyerybody wants to be re-clected, and stands {n the more agonizing fear of what his constituents may think. Leaders of public opinton are few in nnmber, and even they Inck holdnessand prefer towait. Amone the teacditions which are of the most mischievous eharacier .8 the Bouttern statesman's regard fof local and State bLonka, e forgets that the okl nocial and busincss sy tem of his section ban disappearced, and that the 8inte banks, which were ail solid enough a quar- ter of d contury ago, cannot be revived, He has a vagte susplcion that the Natlonsl banking sya- tem must be wrong, moinly because he remncm- ‘bered that Andrew Jackson had o fight with the National bank of his day, a totally different affair, snd then come the ‘spcrulators amon, his constituents and promise him a new era good thnes by the help of real ete., and so the poor nan hesitate: 1L ha cannot deviso nome system of * whinoine the devil around the stump'* and having sound money and yet not baving sound money. But matters have gune 8o far that thero ‘is littie donbt that & bold lcader summoned the Bouthern Democrats to follow him for a_sound currency and a sound and natjonal pollcy he could sweep them all fu with MNttle difculty, £o far tho lead fa lacking and the miachleyous return of the Republicans to their old 8onthern sectional policy may, h{ forcing the Bouthern mon to a continted attitude of self-<lefense, pre. vent any wovement looklng to the reformation of elther party. That fs what Mr. Blaine's resolution may accomplisl, and It Is purely mis- chievous for the country. e eg— CURRENT OPINION. An English Warning Not to Go on Warring npon Silver. London News, vre. 4, s The stoppaze of all legistation in (be ditée- tlon of remonetizing silver, such as the Presf- dent of the Unlted States recommends, will tend to agpravagate the existiog depreciation of sllver, or at Jeast “to nentralize soma of the causes which now tend to rafse the value of thut metal, We may antlcipato, therefore, a re- newal of the attempts which are now helng made to induce the Indlan Government to tnke ort cut out of the dilficulties which'the de- preciation of stlver causes it, America, it will be snld, rejectsa nilver, as_ Germany and other countries have done, and Indis must sguard against the losses which this universol rejection s causing. ‘Tho danger of such attempts, It 18 greatly to be feared, is serlous, and we must repeat the warnings we have lately given ngainst them. That certaln coantrics hnve rejected the double or.alternate stondard snd bave preterred gold, instead of the silver and goid, not to speak of the Inconvertibla paper tiey lormerly possesscd, s certalnly no reason for saying that silver Is belng nniversally rojected, or'why a sliver-using country should giveup o sitver for a guld standard, Buch a sflver-using country, provided it has no inconvertible paper, has nlready got tho kind of currency which the Americans, alter years of suffering aod loss, are at length about to possess. What the Amerl- cans are doing, then, does not furnish the slight- est excuse for such a country changing from sil- ver to gold, even if the change were practicable. The words of the American President, which we have quoted, are in truth na applicable to India at the present moment as they are to the United Btates. **Iu the present financinl condl- posed these were aewing-machines, and lis giant Intellect leaped to the conclusion that a oreat fraud had been perpetrated. ie rushed before a Commities with Lis discavery, and an investigation was ordered, which discloged the fact that the machines are new and expeusive pleces of mechanism nsed fn the hinding de- partment, and aro saving every year more than thelr entire cost. And now Finley yearos for Agother mare’s nest. caanot afford to glve his eompetltor a single ad- vantage or allow the smallest leak or waste in bis transactions, fle must have the most per- fect and economical machinery; he must he ready to tnrow aside as old iron and hrass what. hias cost him hundreds of thonsands of dollara tha moment anythine hetter offers; he can- not afford tn psy a miidle man profit, and he cannot affora to pav wharfagc at a prn!fl 10 any onc elde. If the reinery waain Brooklyn and the imported sugar Isnded In Jerses City, the mere truckage scrusk the cities woald go far to annihiiste any profit. Al refineries which through deficlency or capital have been unahle to withetand this force have necessarily been driven to the wall, No legislation can save them. Itisfrom these men, atded by the Cu- ban planters, that the ery of adulteration has been rafaed,” “Is there any foundatlon for this cry?"” *Not one svecifie charke has been made by anybody against any particulnr firm as having been guilty of adulteration. Limelsused inthe refining of sugar: bisulphateof lime is used gon- erally, and some time agv, ns an aid to crystal- 1izing and refining, & muriate of tin was used. But the extent to which the muriate of tin was everused was not yreater than one partin 100.000, and its use is now and has loog been entirely discarded by the great retinerfes. It It s usedd anywhere at the present time it is In Louisiana, where the producers of sugar are deficlent in knowledge or advantages, In ‘Jdohnson’s Encyclovedia’—the last yvolnme ublished In 1877—Frof. Chandler, the present 'resident of the New Yorle Board of Itcaith, de- clarcs that he hew repeatedly analyzed samples of sugars from all the great refiieries in New York snd has not in suy instance found suy- thing in the way of sdulteration. The manu- facture of glucose (which is identical with the sugar thst 14 developed o barley by the process of malting, and is_ lke the sugar exist- Iog in grapes aod fruits) has been de- vefoped, “and _zlucose §s produced fn dil- ferent parts of the country on an enormous scale. A large part of the sirup which the people in New York cat on their buckwheat- cakes is nxlucmci sud Is Incvery way healthy and palatable. [t is manufactured from Indian corn, one establishment in Buffalo using 10,000 bushels of corn a day in the manufacture. Itis Ideotical with barley sugar, ana ls being used laryrely by maisters and bhrewers in the manu- facture of heer. It is alsouscd by manufsc- turers of tobacco, as It has a molsture not found in corn-sugar, and also constituies a banic ma- terisl of same of the pasts for our confection- ary. q_" the charzes of adulteration of sugars have any foundation in fact,” said Mr, Wells, in vonclusfon, *1it Is time that those who them should desist from gencralizations und come forward with the proof and direct evi- deuce. There has been vague dentnclation long enough.!? the valae of No. 1 in proportion as there waaa demand to fill_contracts! I rather think the hulders of tne No. 1 wheat would feel that they hal a ecomer on ft, and could pnt the pricc to a polat only lmited by the necessitles of those” who needed the wheat. And g0 by the demonetization of silver there was & corner made on gold. With 2old and sflver both legal money, the one checks any advance ' fn the valae of the other. But take away eithar metal, and the advance of the other will be limited only by the neceasity for its ure as money, A yesr aothe New York Tribune attempted tn be propictic. and, among other foolish things, prophesfed that if ailver was remotetizel gold would ndvaope to 111 What was the result! Gold fell from 102ly to less than 1 per cent, and to-day atands at 100} Why! Becaune the demand for gotd had heen lessened In proportion to the amount of sliver to be tsnued. Make the coinageof silver free, and pold can never advance heyond the value of the sllver, But we are told” that sliver has depreclated. Tt {8 true that it las, if you take high-priced, cornered vold as the rd, but not a8 regards anytulng els ur hundred and twelve and a half grains sllyer will to-dav purchase as much of any co modits as the pold dollar ever would belore in thie history of this country. Gold has advanced, and to-day §100 fa gold will purchase as much 23 8120 In gold would I oitis andard cd In thix vountry when the silver dollar of 41237 grains | par today, without reference to its legal-tender function, and the gold dollsr sbout 17 per cefit abuve p 11 this proposition fs_rot true, how can Frauce keep $000,- 000,000 of legal-tender sfiver, worth threc cents on dallar less than one dollar of 419} grains, Iu drealatton side by side with $1,000,000,00 of gold, If Encland sends her gold to France its purchas- ing power Is lusa by 20 per ceut thao it Is in the United States.” Enciand to-dav is Luylng our wheat, and corn, and pork at 17 per cent Jean than she ever paid before. And 50 in any country where sliver Is practivally demonetizeil will the purchasing power of British gold be increased. 1t we make the colnage of silver free, ana England buys our products, she must poy the prices based on the double standand, tor then her guld will have no such fictitlous value In this conntry as it hss to-dav. That the stlver will not drive the gold uut of the vountry is proven by the fact that Frauce has more gold than any other natlon while silver Is & full legs! tender, slthough fts bullon price in Lob- don would be only 80 cents on the dollar. By the single atandard we are selling our products at constautly decreasing prices ss the runhwnz power of gold advances. If this ong contioues 1t wiil baokrupt the natiun, The history of the past, the cxpenence of mankind, the great fundamental laws of trade, all teach us that the money of » country {s like the life-blood circulatiog fn the humasn and that if we would have finsnclal we must have a arculatiog medium In volume suflicient for the requirements of trade, and that, like the blood, this money must bekeot in circulation. Stagpation s death, Now, who would draw oue-biglf the life-bluod from the yelns of astronz man snd expect him to mi his work{ If you take away one-lall th money (for gold and sflver alone are mones), you hisve taken away one-half of the life-blood of trade and commerce, and cun you cxpect the prostrate piant to arise to his task aud carry on his broad shoulders the industries of e nation? A, H, Castri. ———— THE SILVER DOLLAR. New York lanks Changing Thelr Tune. dpecral Ditpatch b [he Trivune. Naw Youg, Dec. 2L.—The position assumed by tho self-constituted Clearing-Honse Commit- tee which visited Washinyston, aud after & con- ference with Secretary Sherman annonaced that the remonetized silver dollar would only be re- celved on deposit for return in kind, seems like- 1y to be overturned by the uctlon of the banks themselves. While two or three banks have already annoanced to depositors that siiver wiil POLITICAL. A Bird's-Eye View of the Situa- tion. Reminigcences, Statistics, and Reflections About the Su- gar Interest. T ANTED—TRESS-FEEDER (R0 STRAM); GOOD 191 pIAY Jeady worki WAgEd fYom 83 to 84 per Week. LA Miscellaneous, VWASIED-TOOT AND SHOE SALESMEN-A largs manufacturer, with three factories who has been aelling the johning trade esclavively, whiits three salcamen to Travel on cneamisvion In the \Western Biafes 16 vell the recall trade. Addrosm, stating teads and reterence, BOOTS AND SHOKS, Journal vmee, Buscow, Maw. ANTED— MEY T0 TAKE AGENTS GCIDR four months free: 50) Army describe 10, U9 ar- Ueles. c|r5"\llllnn.lfl_\(ll. J4.P.SCOTT, P9 Deéarbor Polioies of the Two Parties—Reotional Agi- tation and Grant. Field-Dayn in Congress, Hnp. Poore's Wavhington tnrrespondence, Benator Blalne's (afr frienda werd out in great atrength oo Wednesday to heer his great speech, and the Southern ladies went alro, that they might applaud cbeir favorite Lamar, There was, of course, s stunning display of tollettes, and the wearers thereof appearcd to enjoy the exciting scene, But a faint [dea of & debate can be gathered from the report of it,— even the verbalim reports fn the Congressional , swhich are carefully cut, and pruocd, and elaborated, It {s only thore who listen from the wnlierles who hear the bitter invectives, the brilllant repartecs, and the biting sarcasm in which Congressmen uceasionally Induige, some of them striking with the stunning force of an electric ecl or & prize-fighter’s tist. Remedy for Less of Datles.Eeonomical Produc. tionfle Dispeies Adulteration, and Defends the Use of Glucose. Blaine's Ambitions and Parposes-~Sonthern Demo. erals Refurning to Bonnd Curreney Views, Newo York World, Dec. 21. “Immense industry Is this sugar interest,’” aaid Mr. David A. Weils yesterday, as hedropped another lump of sukar into his after-dinner cof- fee: * for the superfining ot sugar cmploysfrom fifteen to twenty thousand directly and 40,000 mare men (ndirectly. and it forniehes support to 100,000 familics, Then 1t consumes 30.000,000 pounda of Lone-black, 300,000 tous of roal, and 80,000 car-fonds of ataves and hoops. Uf sugsr refined, the amount In this country at present is 600,000,000 pounds per annum,” Here Mr. ‘Wells stopped to take breath, aud the reporter continued to hold Lis own, “OI this sugar all hut about 12 per cent Is im- ported. Suppuse thal It came In vesecls of 500 tons csch, then It would require 1,500 ves. sels to bring it 10 this country, Hardly any sugar roes Into consumption unless it 18 reiined. Unrefined suear is not fit to be consumed, and Is pervaded by s disqust- ing insect analozous to the une that produces {teh, and It actuslly impsrts fnflammation to those persons who sre obliged to -handld the unrefined sugar habitually. Hugzar has alwaya been a large source of revenue. Under the United 8tates Customs provision previously to 1800 only two grades were recognized—refined and unrefined. At that thne the methods of rofiniug were so crude It was not diflicult to draw the distiuction between the two classes of sugars, At that time also tlherc were bat two grades of sugar recognized in commerce, the muscovado and the clayed eogars, and the process of manufacture was {n the msin simply placing cano juice in open pans uver a fire and clarifying it by sklmming and the addition of lime.” For the purpose of clarifying the differ- eot grrades ot thess two clusdes of sugars the Dutch merchants in Java established a standard based on tue principle that tle color of any variaty of sugars was the cocfliclent of its value'and so long us there existed but two classcs of sugars this standard was approxi- mately correct. In 1860 the tiovernment noan- doued nsscasing sugar s refined and unrefined, and {ntioduced classitication according to the Dutch standard, and these clnasifications would have remalned adapted 1o the wants of com- meree and the reventie had it not been for the great improvements of the menufacture of su- Kara, by which u sugur of a high degree of roc- charing strength 18 wanutactured into aimost any desirablo shade of color, Under such clr- cumstances the revenue Jaws as they stand were largely ovaded by reason of the luw assessing dutics exclusively by the color of sugars, and muking no distiuction, for want of correspund. ence, between color and sacchasive strencth.! *Cau you furnish an illustration?? sald the reporter, adily, For example, the prescot tarifl as- nel duty of 13{ cents per pound on sugara grading in volor as No. 7, aud 244 cents on su- ggars grading tn color as No. 105 but by the new pracesa’of manufucture it i8'possible to bring in us belonging to the lower class (No. 7) & sugar whicls, fu point of strength and value, ought to pay duties ns No. 10. The sugar produced by the new process 18 mainly maunfactured in Cuba and Demerara. The ioss exverienced through this evasion of the spirit of this law s not less than £1,000,000 annually, avd by some 18 esti- muted at more, llow to stop this cvasion snd loss of duty is the questiou ut {ssue. The uan- ufacturers of the new-process sugurs and their Disvateh to Newn York Heratd tind.), WasstingToN, Dee. 20.—Aithough the sessfon fas run so far jesa than three weeks, and has peen singularly free from cxciting events, the githerloz of prominent nen from ali parts of t 1c country has had au fmportant effect upon thie temper and policies of parties. There have been mo Important debates, for the discussion of the Blalne resolutiona after the first day at- tracted little attention, but there have been nu- merous and constant private consultations which are iikely to bear jmportant resuits in he future. i TNE POLICT AND THR MAN. - The leaders of cach party are casting abont tor n policy Tor 1880, and it is as to polcies, aml not concerolug men, that they are consulting. Candidates will depend on platforms, and neither party will have, it fs well understood, 2 large latitude in selecting its ticket. Tho Western Democrats speak of Tburmag, the Eastern of layard. The Bouthern Democrats are for the present silent, but all are united fn declaring agatnst Mr. Tilden as uttetly unavall able and out of the questlon. [fo had his chance and flung it away, they say, and he can lave no further pretensions. Fuw Democratic dark horses are nnmed, though one hears occa- sioaliy of (len. Hancock. On the Republican side Gen. Grant undoubt- edly looms up more and more. The President 1arcported to have suld toa friend that Graot seemed to him most probable, because tha vrumiuent rivals, Senators Blaine and Conkling, would be able to defeat cach other, and, he shrewdly added, the Kepubllcan politicians are not likely to risk a dark hotso again yory soon, Tt moy bo as well to add that the roports that the Uresldent 1s n Urant man are without foun- datlon, Hetakes no part jn personal politics and has no caodidate. REPUDLICAN POLICY. But persona are less discussed than pollcies at this thie. Tho Republicaus came here pretend- Ing to be united for sound currency, sud were {oclined to make that thelr platform jn 18580, But they presently discovered that not oniy are they not united on this question, but many even of their professed hara-muney people are weak in the 8, Mesara. Burchord and Fort, who are attacking the Natlonal banks, represent, It ta scen, n pretty formidable element of Re- publicans eiven over tosilver and otber cur- rency delnsions, and vot inclined to be put dowi. Mr. Blaine, who traveled extensively through the Weat and Northwest during the fa)l, gained probably o realizing sense of this fact, and it s this, perhaps, which led him to put himself, and, so far oa he could, his party, uoon a revival of acctional sgltation aud suspl- con. WAYTE TAL sceiption. Inquire at 229 FWALTED-IT AN oL 3 itherd baot snd shoe houe, three frac-clam sale men ta trsvel o fowa, Southern 1litnols, Misvourd, and Kinsas, Tiest refereaces required. Adress 1 77, Tribune ofiee, \WANTED=A GUUD, MAN FOR _EVERY STATR 1o vell our goods by simple. Falr waiary naid. rences reqoired. LA BELLF SIANUPACTURING DICIArk-st, 1 Capt. Cowdon's Ylan. Capt. John Cowdon’s plap for solving the Missisalppi Iliver problem (s bold and original, Herctofore the only plan proposed of keeping the river in its channel and protecting tho sd- Jacent country has been to build levees along ihe banks. Capt. Cowdon nrovoses, in effect, to lower the bed of the niver. lic claims that this can be dona for 810,000,000, while the eatt- mate of the Gavernment Englneer o lovee tho river Is for 840,000,000, add that of Capt. Eads to carry out hia plan Is $50,000.000. Capt. Cow- don was hefore the House Commlittes on Com- merce & few dags ago, and explamed bis plan at some length, with maps, diagrams, ete. The Committce was favornbly impressed with tils statement, and will give him another hearing. & “Domentics \v ANTED—A GIRL_FOR SECOND WORE. CALL imunedlately, at'32 Uentre-av. Miscelaneou: dy Palace, 311 Went Madison-st. PO SITUATIONS WANTED~MALE. Bookkecpers, Olerks, &¢ce GITUATION WANTED_AR THAVELING BALES: 1aan for a whalesAle cruskery huuse, by & risa of some experience. Adirems ¥ ii, Tribune oifice. i:o'nn::ZIb'-nfTr B. BOYT on- it 1 (DK A and for on Maluteft. ewt tron be.- Stonpoc renia welt, " iy sl thia ands fa ono of ibe best renting 11135 Furty-first-st. this {s all modern Antsh, txalstory and busernient octagon front brick dweliag. ndlote waler, eewar; did gmi Dotss. okl Bot. By 00! . w0 Atory and basement brick dwell- Y gt front, Sarpenter-at., e- al Conditlons of Demaoratie Victory. Benator Lamar s very confldent of a Demo- cratle victory {n 1880. Al the party has to o s to “organize wiscly aod tolerantly, and then work vizorously and harmoniously,” These ad- Jectives seem to he well chosen, and their espe- clal fitness appears when they are ahifted about a little. Thus {t wouldi't do to tavor organlnng y vhfurmul_v." for that would rule out straddling onall publte questivns; and it wouldn'tunswer to favor working **tolerantly,” for that would stop bulldozing and ballot-hox stuffing, and thus de- feat Democratic reform. on Cal ) een Madison Washington: reata now at $5U per wioathy Ite s n. $4.0 eash—12-room (nearly new) framed dwlling, and Job 508125, 100 feet west of Slewart-av., on Fifiieth- st I£thin1a not worth €410 nnthing aln't. Lok at it @ buy yon s home when you can DOUNIng house Sont $2,000s 1 1. Eloss to Ear-an d iing: 12 1t 18 elose to car-sbops an Mocl-{'lrdl‘ L o oy _COUNTRY REAL ESTATT. Folt WESTENN l‘ll:fl at Rome, Peurla Why Houtherners Are Lazy. Vicksburg (Min.) Herald ( Dem.), Thers arc various rcasons why numbers of Bouthern pcople are lazy. The climato {s some- what to blame, whisky fs cleap, finc-cut, vlug, and twist tohacco Is abundant, and Inst but not. least, the whittling around country stores is ns ool a3 it was ever known to be before, No- body is afrald of starring in this country, and if we do not rase everything we need to cat, and our Governors refuse to call the Lemsla- tures tonether to *grant relief,” have we uot lcit the glurious priviiege of growling and ** cussing "1 3 L. whic has i 18 seziirely inelosed witli acres ander coltivation, sil dis 00 acres of beariog Applestrues ures pasture: onn large coticrete huuse Cellars; one frAme huuse OF # Fuoin Stapendous Frauds in Bugur-Inspections at the New York Custom.liouse—Analysis ot Sume of tha Adulterated Reflnrd Sugars. New York, Dec. 20.—(reat excitement ore- valled to-day (says the Tribune) in Custum- House ctrcles and in the sugar trade over the suspension by Appraiser Dutcher of three su- gar-samplers, upon informatlon furnished by Bpecial ‘I'rensufy Agents. For severa! months Bpecial Agents have been investigating alleged sugar frauds. Recently they have been exam- intog favolces of sugar of Importers on tile in tha Custom-tlouse, and in several instances re- port that there has been systematic chentlog of the Government, not only In weights, but In classification. For six years these frauds have been carried on by persons In the employ of sugar importers, hrokers, and otliers, wlhohave corrupted the Custom-House welgners and semplers. It Is underatood that masoy mer- chant samplers will be excluded from the docks aud warchouses, The samplers suspended to-day wers John Nugent. Jacob Nobluck, A. Archibald, B. Free- burn, These suspensions will ve followed by o number of other samplers and welghers.—a Special Arent remarking that *‘fn the entire force of samplera employed by the overnment only three were found to be ubove suspicion." of B rooms aud large cell sndcellars twa tensol houses: threo cora-cribh cape: st ubetantial Lara conerete 'y for 20 uwa: cuw yevers falling wells nf good water: windml stock scales, and other outbuildings. The house stapdv clowo ta theThinols 1ifver, and Is surrounded by oyer- £reens, fruit-irees, grape, ete. ‘The osner will sell at nancridieo or will trade Ui aboye for part cashi and part theast Kanaan, | For furibet par- Rome, Peu) ulate of the Nether: MUSICAL, 108 18 CALLED to our fue stock of UPRIHIT PIANOY, URGANS, FQUAKE PIANDS, from the plainest rascs to the richest variegated woods, or ebony snd kuld. For sale o rasy payments. Kver) instrument waeranted five yesrs. Plano-covers i wivols of every description. e 4 . W, KIMBALL. Coruer titate and Adsins-sts. UK OF THIE ALLET, DAVIS & €0.'8 “p"w‘ and ll}flll'l zluu. » W. KIMBALL, Corner Btate and Adams-sta. Grandson of a figner, It fs pretty rough to send thc grandsonof a signor of the Declaration of Independence to the Penitentlary, even If he has been decelved by wicked spoaks. ‘This has beeri done fu Phila- delpnia, We thought ttey drew tho line sume- where fn that eity, Tbey ulso hanced a Molly- Maguire murderer in Pennaylvania thoe other It they go in for exemblury and capital binent In that great State, there willbo & at Harrisburg, ADYVICH TO NLAINE. It Is part, of th Zossip of the day that when Mr. Biaine caine here last month ho exchanged views on the situation with sunie SBouthern men of Influence and sound judgment, and that he was urged by tlieso not to bring In his resolu- t!on, but to obenly abandon the Buuthern ques- tion, lend his influence 10 & rearganization ot the Southeru wing of the Republican party by drawing respectable and Influentinl men into its Teadershitp und dectaring himself boldly in favor of reconcilition. He was told, It ia'said, that thie Uemocratlc party fu mony or indeed most of A—rvu. T [ Barw. Cantnn Repotitory (Rap. ). The bar at the mouth ol the Mississlppl doesu't give the SBouthern Congressmen holf so NUTIEN L\RGE 1IN VOICE APNUTHER LARR SN TN cos uirtgbE mid annacs pianos. W, W. KIMBALL'S, armel d Ada the Bouthern Btates 18 50 reudy to spiit Lo pleces much auxlety as the bar al the montr of the | agents—mainly the merchantawho sell for them 'he Treasury Agents clalm to have discovered | onty be received upon that condition, the Preat- | 'y BEAOTIFUL (HRISTMAS P that nothing but the fubnical attitude of the | Hon of tha country, the welfare of the legitl- | Capitol. on cummission—uroposc to remedy the evil,snd | new frauds n tue classilication of finported y | A PATEIN RGN Northern fi""“"""“'“‘ bolds 1t together; | mate business and industry of every description have only one rate of auty ou all sugars upto | sugars, and many ssmplers il weln‘herg long deiikola pramiuent ‘Lank <ssld thls morniogy with will ba best promoted by abstalning from all at- W, tents to make radical chonges in existing financial logislation.”” 7The real lesson of the Amcrican resumption, as far as Indis I8 con- cerued, 18 thus quite tho contrary of what it will no doubt be argted to be. A Jaka on Comstock. St, Atbans Adeertirer, Itis sald that Anthony Comstock blindfolds Limselt before disrobing for the uight, ———— STATE TAXATION. Proposition for Ita Simplification, To the Editor af The Trilune, Cuicaao, Dec. 21.—8erious ubjection {s made to the machinery of the Revenue law, m that it requires u State Board of Equalization. Thers woutd be no oceasion for such a body it the revenue for Stace purposes could be ralsed by some means other than by a general tax on valuation. Two questions arisc: (1) Can the State reve- nue be raised by sume other mode; aud (2), if 80, I8 it ndvisable? I propose to consider briely theso questions 1o their order. The Constitutlon, Art, VL., 8cc. 1, provides: “The leglslative power shall bu vested in a Ueneral Assembly which sball consist of a 8en- atoand House of Representatives, both to be cleeted by the peopte.? If fu stopped here, any modowhich tho General Assembty might devise for the collectiun af a Btata revenus would be constitutional. But other urovisions have been {ncorporated which ure construed tv the courls as Jimitations upon leglslative power: heuce, ‘when u particular modu is presented, it excludes any other, **Expressio unlus est exclusio slterins.” Now, what modes have been pre- seribed? Thero are two: 1, Art, IX,, 8cc, 1, Is s follows: ** The General Assembly shall provide such revenua us may ba needful by levytug a tax by valuation, so that every person and corporation sball pay @ tux in rrupvnlou Ty, ber, vr its propesty,—such value *We ahall lssue no such notice, aud tae Presi- dents of uther banks have reached the sanie onclusion. ‘The ouly banka whichs will fasue such notice are thosc wleutified with the pre- cipitate action of the Clearing-fluuse, and are obliged to carry out thelr plan as ainatter of cunalstency. Their action was simply the result of prejudics, and uad nio reasonable Lasls for it If all the new dotlars which bave been colned, or likely to be colned during Becretary Sher- man's adininfstration, were thrown into New York at once, they would hardly be suflicient in amount to embarrass the banks.' A prominent Wall strect broker says the Clearing-House s ashamed of its activn, uud wost of the banks will take legsi-tender silver without rezard to thelr notices to depositors, President Thompson, of the Chase Nutional and Clearing-House Bank, was found In com- rm&whh_l‘mnldrnt Neal, of the Hurvey Coun- y Bank, Kansas, and asked i Lis bank would ukend silver deposits unconditionatly. Ile re- that the sppolotment of. respectabls sn foftuentfal en to the Important Federal offlves fostead of such ‘odious persons os Wells, Anderson, and others lke them, if eoupled with o bold and wutspoken declaration of sympathy and frlendship by a man of Mr, Blalne's jufluence [y his party, wonid create av unce a formidable and rupeclahln now Rleoub- lican tarty fn_the South and carry off a larve port of tho white vote, and that {f, un the top ol thig, he shionld take the lead In 1 movement for the improvement of the Mlssis ;flx leyees, *nd a moderate advocacy of Géeal A4 mhlL Y {nternal and harbor fmprovemeuts In the South- crn States, n policy to which hie {8 on zeneral principles believed to be favorable, he could secure Jor himself vot ouly the entire Bouthern Republican delezation fa the Convention of 1540, but toe Electorat votes of five or six South- ern States, and ereatly benefit the whole coun- ry by ending alarm and auitation and creatiug two white parties ull over the South, ADVICH UNHEEDED. This report rests on protty good authority, and it is well known that Mr. Blaioc has always been kindly regarded by many Southern mou, who believe thut at bottom “he is not Hl-dis- posed toward them, and that at auy rate, as they ofteu say, he is the best and the moat kind- liearted of the Republican leaders, Butif it ls true, surely there is a preat poverty of {deas among the Republlean politicluns whcn one of thelr toremost men lacks elther the bolducss or the faith to solzu such an opportunity. Mr. Tlalne vhose to ruject these suguestions, and to commit his fortunes to a new soctlonalagitation. Ho Is a sirewd, but not a far-sighted wan, Ho bas donv what he could to tle his party to the stale issuc of **the Bouth,” end he may have Judred rightly in doing so, for the coldncss with Which his * wovement was treated by the Itepublican Scnators arose largely outof & Jealousy of bis vredomivance. At any rate uo” Republican has opposed him, nor is thero amoug the leading mon of his party here sny signs that they micau or even dusire to push No, 16 10 color, which (s assumed to be the ling which separntes refiued from unreflned sugars,’? *What would be the effect of such a lawi” »To prohivit tho lmportation ot the low grades of ugar fnto this country, which are the basie material on which refiners work, Thus, for example, to raise o revenuc of from 835,000, 000 to $10,000000 a specide duty on No, 16 sugara of nearly thres cents a pound 8 required to bo levied on'all wugars under No. 16, Such s duty on sugars custing three centsa—and some grades ol suwars range even lower lu price— woutd be 100 per vent, uiAl on sugars costing six centa it wonld amount o bul, G0 per vent, aud would correspundingly decrense as the values of tha suzars incrensed. A bounty would there- fore be offered by the tarifl for the refining or for the wanufacture of ol high-rade, suzars fn forelgn countries, and the retiners, being deprived of thewr material for profitable work, must necessarilv suspend operations. In this attempt to establish one rate of duty on ol sugars under No. 16 the Cuban plunters and thelr ngents are nciively onded by a considernbla number of refiners who have re- cently fatled in business, oud by others In thls country who nre fntel with the foreign producers as conslzuecs sud agents. The claim that the existing tan ralscs the prica of suzars to the consumers and probihits the totroduetion fntu the eountry of & grade of sugars mana- factured tn Cuba and elsewhere Gtied to go at onee into cousumption, uod whichire technically spuken of as grocery sugars, has absolutely no founaation, The refining of sugurs can at pressnt be curried on cheaper in the United States thun in any other country on the face of the giobe, aud for & cood smount of money a better quality of retined sugar could be titr- nshiod (o the consumner than could possibly be fmported under any torill provortioned 10 the value of tho sugirs or in caso oll dutles wers romoved ou sugars. ‘The duy s not far distant when, with cquitable Jegisla- tion, the United Biares will supply no small part of the world with refined suiurs, and wrest In the Government employ have confessed how the frauds were commitced, and who were en- gaged In them. One sumpler confessed that in eowe fnatances hogsheads filled with alow grude of sugar were Kept coustantly on the dock from which to draw samples. From this *dummy " hogshead the merchant samplers would draw sugar, which the Government sampler would ac- vopt and turn over to the Appralser for classid- cption, maKing au average loss to e Govern- ment in duties ot one-hall cent & pound. This hus been galog on for mxX years, the profit belng dlvided among the samplers, Certiticd snnlyses of some of the reflned sugars which A M. Earlo charges were aduiter- oted by tho Decastro & Dopner Kellulne Cun- pany have been submitted by Prof. C. F. Chan- cellor aud Prof, P, De P, Ricketts, and thess cheinis declure that they bave ““carefully analyzed sainples of sugar taken by Mr. Ricketts from original puckaves at your store [Mr. Farle'al. We find these sugars contain tin, copper, ond free acld.” Of anoiher sample Prof, Rizketts reports that It contalas ** tin and copoer, A s decidedly acid. A test for muriatic acid shows it to be present in excess. T Inclose n small batton of ’melnln extracted from a portion of this A E_ASBOETMENT OF THF. A LAHOKS)}ITHIAHE 1C, PRl At o clmoniale Address B 71, JITUATION WA +) opcanist nod cholr- ears experience. Good test ribnne oftice. y Lady Teachers and Servant-Qirls, The edltor of the Gazefe, of Sterilog, I, has becomo interested in tho school question, and among other itema to which he has glven atten- tlon Is thesalary of the lady teachors, aad how far ft'Wht o 18 EonTrast’ with £hé pay that serednt- girls recelve, In that city the averuge salary of the lady teachers is about $40 per month, which for the'year of nine months amounts to K360, Thelr averawe expenses aro: Washing for furty weeks ot 81 n week, $40; fifty-two weeks! board at $4.50n week, $234; clothes, $100; Incidentals, $20:—total, 8404,—a 1oss of $34 a year, 'Tho servant-girl receives $3 n week, or for the year 8104, Bhu pays nothing for boart ur washing; her clothes nced cost not more than 850, and her ncldental ex- penses not more Lhan $10,—lcaviug a balance of lsu In ler favor, sud, as compured with her scemingly moro favored sister, of §78. Even it the tedcher so desired, she could not find the thine to do her own washing and sewing during thu achool-year. Sho must dress well to retaln her situation, and, if she {ctends to be well-in- formed sud proverly qualifled for the work sha has undertoken, must spend money {or books, and tako thne to read them. On the uther haud, the servant-girl reauires onty a strong arm with which to do her work, and a willing heart to pleaso her ‘mistress. Yet there are youug wonien who would rather teach school at nloss of muney than_to ilo kitchonwork at & conslderable vrofit. No bousewurk s dishon- orable, aad, though many people are & long time Huding It out, yet fuw live Lo ofd age but reallze [t to by true, Hauce for the Goose Is Not Sauce for the 1 FOLLOWING, TAND FUSIICLASS PIANOS: Vin & G0 MQUARK GitAND L n & i AND, M. KNATE BQUATIE GRAND. 1 CHICKERING SQUALK GRAND, Above pianos n perféct order. Guod as mew. Wit be w0ld Jow fur cash. (£ WE GFFET UNFAALL PIANOK AND ORGANS DURING TIHE HEMAINDEIR OF THE MONTIL, D't fall 10 give us acalt befure purcnarog. BIOLRY & CAMP, I~ and 1w Siat FO RENT—IIOUSES, Seuth Nide, r KNT-5361 WAWASIT-AV.. 4-6TONY STONE- low can we help it f Bilver isa lezat | 71O BEEFESE NARABEAT:, SRS Ao Suppose, 10 the course of exchanee, | von.tor $ onth untit 1aL of Mar.and very che Mr. Neal shottid pend tae 81.000 10 dadiy, WHAL | Uheratier, to & Brst-cites tousnt, *Jtigeire of JACO sinJtodet Violate the law and at the same | Wil vi Washinglonsst, tme luse a customer! Noj 1 shoulda't do it West Side 1 should nccapt the deposit, and be glad to et 21t MONTH, 10-100M TOUSE, 30 L 5 10-ruoin lioee, 1023 Weat Adams- Mr, Neal—“And if hisor some other New LS 81 hrick, 424 Irving-place, Inquiru on York bauk were oot willlug to carry vur eX- e e change, we have plenty of bids for busincss FO RENT-ROOMS. from Boston, Chicago, snd Bt. Louls. If New | ~~~ 2~ “gauiy Slaes Yo 1l not nandle our monoy on the same | yrg ey ICELY FURNISHED FONT ALCOVE oolis, R0d ULLEr Warin rooms, cheap, ST Wa- I tender. 3 In a certificate of aunalysis, dated Dec, 10, Prof. Ricketts says thnt every test tondu with one samblo fndicates the presence of artiticlal elucose, derived from somy substauce uother thao canc-sugar clesrog. T ————— THE SILVER OUESTION, v the Kditor of The Tribune. Cnicago, Dec. 21.—We are told that bistory ropeats ftscll, and s0 It secius to bave done In the “demonctieation of silver and tho conse- quent advance 1o the purchaslug power ot gold. It we turn to the bistory of Euglaud fu the year 1005, we fod sliver practically demone- tized, not indeed by fraudwlent legisiatiou, but ter otber fes. our money and business will go elsewhere, We do not care particularly [t d to New York," b d Mr. Thompson, “it is ___WANTED TO RENT, only u matter of nterest, The bunka of TANTED-TO KEST—HOOMS-PRIVATE FAM- Slom Y50k il Ay a€rva i o iierertar | Ny il ing 15 seumod a8 uncrcepton: %'lf:\"lrxl\!:;‘:lv(:::vfilu{%c'lo“:“:d‘v’v‘l‘;:ru‘-n!:un\';"‘ tact, will_8ud (¢ to thelr interest to cxll on us. We 3 . We sball not sacrifice our business even if thvy do.”” | SRTEMT wu can see, jaas poapie only. . Wa a9 Bt €mploy il PGall perwially wiien requaned, UNE BULILDING. % Las iy & aibigular Borror of n new devacturas they | Bpeaking of ivelute. Biver. Conf 1n | Genoral Assewbly sall direct, wnd niot othier- | 1ad Amirted i the Iportation of sagars. fa y | Con iud teduced thelr weliht uearly one-balf. Taok EXCHANGE-IIOUSE. ANw LOT (CLEATT cat all now questions, aud, 80 far as oue can [, (BSHKIE O ok ot Wit e alowayy | Wise.t’. This 18 the tnoda uow in vogue. the futroduction of these high-grude sugars at a | The coloof that day was the bawmered hand- 0 fhr Good second-iand Mano. lnaulre of J. W. learn bere, kiow bo other way to win o 185y | Paris, the New York Aation, which lsalways | "3 "rhe sume section furtner provides | jow rute ot duty by reason of the low color | made coln, Tho metal was divided with shears, | fever, und so did the doctor, elcrzeman, andun- | UAYe tliotos, Ti muddled about the twu money metals, says: ss follows: *But the General Ane "Tho fact {s, wo presume, that there wasn great | oibly shall luve puwer to tax ped- deal of huwan nal in the Conferauco, and eacn | dicrs, auctioneers, brokers, hawkers, mer- country wanted il and let 1t hava the gold; bt then thls was woll | jueyters, Inkecpers, grocery-keepers, Hquore which {s arbitrarily imparted to them fn the prucess of wunufacture,” “ Jlow cun thls be remedied P ** By the use of an instrument catled'a polari- scope, which so correctly determines the gm:rv. to alarm and array the North agalost the i Sout AMONG THH DEMOCHATS, Among the Demnuciats there has been a good deal of gulet but carnest discussion shous tho tertak 110 EXCIHANGR=140- ACKE PATRL FIVE MILKS o liuuse, b 10, ulred thelr cestificates has refused to pay over Vani liousc and losiu Caleaga, Price, Elguty the sum for which his lite was insured. ‘The | milestrum city, 5 and afterwards shaped and stamped by the hamwer; and the rims not belug marked made It an easy thing to clip the caln. ‘'The process ot milling the coln had just been Invented and s uelghvars to take the sliver | chan commnission merchanta, showmen, graph, or express interests or business, vendors of patents, and perdois or corportions ownlug or usiog franchises and privileges, In such man- hail from Wme to thne direct by won- for her to have the slnizlo stundard aud gather | NOT A LS k the "fi"d "":,o ?"::!"' ;md .h: lllfi!l{lht 'h.d“ w‘.r‘ eral 1a ‘I;lllflul'nl as to the cluss upou which it practicing thu highest forin of enlighiened sell- R a {iliieas, but when Germuuy followed her oxam. | The samo article, Suc. % Is a8 follow, plo stie bugan to find that dear money was not ‘l’l" whall not deprive the General Assembly Ldcatical with prosperitv, and nuw her ciforts o IR otwer o roavguizs othor aubjects or 0t- are 1o stop tho demonetization ot silver which | $0 B PUYEL/CUNALON tawunar a riay b cone wskes 8 demand for gold aud causes low prices | Sro0, 0™ ihe priaciples of taxation {u this wp-ncen farn, thirteen hesd of esttle, Lorses, hoxe bk the el ore day Is not far distant when an losurance com- ki s 1l 1arin tinplemeats: goud, Tuture. 'Wheo Covereas adjourned Just Juno | KER%e 000 A7 BOPIEES" Lot v much showiung | dealers, tolboridaoe, fervus, tuabrance, bele | surengt of any ulven saiplo of sugar that o | put (o operation in a small wav, but th great | paov will not fésue u poly unicws It contalis » giiekrms by wamure, o iscin e ateiwosd, 14e Soutnern Democrats had been persuaded that thele trua pollzy for 1580 wus to ally theme selves with the West. The Western Detnocruts, of course, scajously fostered this notlon, but they demauded thelr own terins, which were, that the Southorn wing of the purty should Join (hew {u resisting resump- tlon, o abolfshing tho Nationsl bauks aud in the support, gencrally, of the Greenback wove- ment, 1o was §if consequenive of thls bargain between the West and tho South that the cargo of sugar i4 ever buught or suld cxcept ou tho test of this fnstrument. The latroduction, however, is resiated, beesuse if 1t were adopted -lllnull.nllw of catering sugurs at any other ihan toclr true valuo would by vented, aml a large aud profitable bus!- uow ocenpying Cuba and Demerars plunters would b broken up. If New Yurk and other Amerfan cittes wera to ruprescnt muost o the, sucar retueries aud take suine uction in this thaticr, thers vould be dause fn ng the ‘natruiment upon the | Winamac, Fud.: waut cottace and lot o cliy, death of 1ts holileri—only Opcrative so lonz & S L blace of TentiuE i the man s bealthy enough 1o pay woney imtu the hands of tho'vompauy. 'Ihis would be a tritle one-sided, we knmrh bat the insured man’s family would knuw what to expect atter DISHORVIC ' o e ud lui} we ask st Bouiea lu the Biat and vituperation thot the volce of resvon and couie mon sense could not meke {teclf hoard. England has becn tryiog this, It was very fing bulk of silvercoln wasthehand-inade, hammered coln. To such mu extent bad the evit of clipplog coin grown that laws were enacted waking the clipper Hable to the penale ties for high treason. Hut, Mke all lexfslation Inst the laws of tradu, 1t did no good, and stiver became practically demonetized ung gold had sdvanced unill the puines, worth st the hlghest 23 shilifugs by law, passed tor 80 shillloge, though It was o D'ea“l offouss Obscene-Liternture Dealer FPurdoned. BostoN, Dec, 20.—E. H. Heywood, the well- knuwn labor and 1narrlacé reformer, who has _ MISCELLANEOUS. Fouthern Dewocratic platforms almost slways o ! h wold- but one opjuion in redpect to It wmong the | to give or take more n itinge 7 MEX IO~ ANUPACTURERS UN- Soriirod i it exticti. Cumency. delusons :‘.’," ;’H&?‘"“,‘,‘Q; flt‘:'{n‘"&a‘}' Liad euouggh wold- | ongritution.” A wmsscs, 11 the duty dostred by tho forelzu pro- | for Ezulnum Uankruptey stared the natlon i :’::th:" Ly Elfl,‘(‘s‘rr‘!xl:}l(fzc:u?mlr’:‘“h:l;u::;":t:: JIEI A Ve BU LG TG und that so many dudividual Democrats of | UU€ Laiphiy ""fl'i thew, wa have two distinct modes. ‘The | (uvers s eranzed by Uongress, the sugsr-nitin- | the fate. Lord Macaulay, the histortan, says of | jor ereaistior through e e e BTty Wil lo teate tuiscliy st g Wik whom better thlngs were expected, because Qeuoral Assumbly tay adont eithor or both. | iz jgiercat will perish stuoug us; on the con- | the thue: The ovlis produced by this state of | ghacene book entitled * Cupid's Yokes,” has Sihd To Tielr Dusiness, by ‘sddrcuing D 5 they were known ta have perfectly sound cur- :“‘,’,“:5“;:: ‘:‘( ‘:"') “Tne Uenural Assembly is not “""’""1 10 rals0 thU | yriry, i1 ull Augurs of eVery wrads aro wsaeased | tno currency wers ot auch as liave weuerally | been pardoned by Prestdent Hiayes, and was sot S yency views, surprised and exasperated their 0. Yord une (Ren,). ruvenuo by tax on a valuation, but muy been thought worthy to oceupy a prominent | at liberty yesterday. ' 10 PUY-BULL "BOU R MONTHS with duties cxuctly fu uru, rilon to thelr values, the American retitieries will tako the 1lrst pisce in the world fn this great branch of fudustry, Andl theré coutd hunlly bu & iucasure concelved wiich woull be moro ifkely Lo bring prosperity tothy Athantic ciuies aud restore the value of their real estate thas to gwe to the great re- Hulng tuteresta of the country this awmple weusitre of wiuitable legisiation.” Even now as tha law stands, large clasves of slizurs canno’ be tmportea fto this country. Over tour nundred wilion pounds ol swrars which wers prohibited from coming futo the Umted States, found thelr way luto Great Britain lagt yeor, snd wero used by British retiuers with prodt. The last fow years bave been disastious Lo the sugare sefiniug buness, Almost oae-lalf of tie sugar- refiuerics in Now York, Bultimore, Vatladelphla, aud Buston bave fulled.” Can it be that Tilden has already begun to “work up? the Bolld Bouth for 18801 There are a gouod wany susplelous outpivings which i % e make 1L look as {1 hio liad. Leadlug Southern | AL rettired to by levied sunustiicput List wus atatesmon Hke Kl aud Qordon are openly for | 23 schedule) I thel nothing i the Constitu- him, aud in every Southern State there are in- § gy which, in m |1»-hmmm. prolitbita the Leg- flueutisl politichius who ssy thoy are Iu favor ot | fgiaiyre from ,-.{.. tg Bl necessary rovenus for e beat tuaw 1 1830, sud who finmedlately add | Biate purposes by ine sscond mode, that they don't bellove any of the chare ow, to tho advisability of the proposcd auotost fildes, The Soutn sces that snce: chauge: without New York 18 fuspossible, aud if Tilden 1. Iv will distribute the burthens of the Btate can conviuce them that If B can't carry Now | reyenuo mure eveuly and justly throughout the York oo otlier Democrat can, ha is sure of thelr | Htate, lor every dticen in tha Stato will directly solld support, It looks now as If bu were slow- | op ndicectly conributo s stare in proportion us Iy dutilitog u belist of that sort into the South- | Ly dorives Denetita, crn wiud, He did it in 1870, 8od Lo theroforo | 4, [t will obvate theunpleasant feellng which kuows huw todo it again. will over exist between counties aud localities, adon that mode snd provide for it by the svcond mode, Uuder the Constitution of 1848 a two-mil) tex Northiern friends by submlttiug to or standing ou Ureenback and lullaiion platforms. Mr. Thurman became the hvad und fucus of this uilluuce, but the Jall electins showed the Bouthern men that he awd those who urged Wim on had totally ‘iislead them as to the stremgth of the move- wmeat, They ssw at once tlst the fall campatgs which they bad made at the lustancs of thefr Western allivs for soft joney bad, in fact, serioualy endangercd the Dewocrtle suc- cesy In 1850, and {t 1s no secret here thut Bena- tors Lumur aud Dutler, who pepeistoutly re- sisted this movement, are now acknowicdged by their fricads to be justificd Yy eveuts. further Western allinuze is now oyt of thu question, ‘e Soutbiern wien, nost of whom were urigloally for sound movey, are returniog wlnco in liatory," vet it may well ba doubied te prico aud whero can bo seeu. D5, whether all thie misery wiich had been lufliciod on the Fuglish natton” n a quurter of 8 century by bad Kings, bal Minlsters, vuwld Parlisments, sud bad Judges was vquul to the mh«-r{ Al o & snle yeur by bad crowns sud bad shillings.” It secued as 1 the whole commervial jue terests of the nation bad recelved thele deathe blow, o vain did Purltament pass laws sitempting Lo regulate the pric of gold,~laws waking 1t penal to give or take Yhore than 3 shillings for a guinea. But, Lapoily for Eugland, In that, her crisls, she coula call to her assistance such iwinds as Jovke, and Now- ton, und Sowurs, sud Moutugue, t whuin was submitted the great problem. They at ouce de- cided what kb was not by penal luws tnat the S, WRINGING-MAL uce,' vullar troning imschiugs, cotunderiug-machl ot D3l ud . GELR & Cih, b3 Wal THE TRIRUN ¥ ORDER T ACCOMMODATE EHROUS hiougaont the ¢y we have calab.uhed pALro Braich Uticos [n the differoal Divtalons, us deslenatad Defow, whers advrrifsenients will be (aken for the sy price s charged st the 3lain Ollice, snd will be recrived Dt 8 0'Llock p. . GUFIDK 1he Week, Bud ULUIY j, w, wpaididers: A WIAND 18 WASIL cland, 2awell, sud 3 i cati It found +4, fur saiv chy DSOME, KiNDL AND GENTI i ‘ut Q. rear of ¥ I \‘7 ANTED—10 IEAVY 1050 to Mickigan (o 4, 244 >uath Waterssl. 2 2-HEAT SLAIGHS, ) vearvnt | o SREATSE AN TEAMS, [ lliuiv;i. (5. ~ PERSONAL. _ baul logs, " luulre st foons NFORMATION WANTED-OF J was loat f1003 his LY NEW 253 CUTTERY, price of yold coutd b brougut dows, bat by o ¢ foF grovery of d frumn their wanderiugs, aud are considering S 8 loug sé it fs for the Interest of counties to * What is the explauationof thist r«.‘ulllwt of tho clipued sliver, und 1 nmu¥d- Auy peraon that wil Wil | hveryy will bu sold n,uuruq-'ah;.nch et asd whether Lhey ar not surer of prosperity fur Toombe® Estiuiata of Grant, keep their ancssment down, lu order to beat ancs with their recommendations the * Revofu. | BudJdanice saticr will cuitery 10 ek Giuy, M C.WALKEIR 20 ad 2L “The position 1e taken bi' some who have Leon disapooiuted and rutued in thelr ventures, that thuss who bave succceded have done so throuzh the wreucy of fraud, and that sugars lareely sdulterated have been furced upon the warket, ‘Lhero f8 no foundation for such an as- Bprciat to_Cineiwnati Cummarcial. somia uther codnty, , «Wasminurox, D, C., Dev. 20.—Gen, Robert 8, It wall esable cach county to approximate ‘oombs, of Georgla, belng usked by your curre- | & more uut{yin rato of valuation for local taxa- tundent about Uraot for next President, re- | bou without the luterferunce of a Btate Board; e Well, 1€ by tho decrees of the Alnughty | [S8uItini rantively tn more equal dutributio UENNIs MALER, Windsor I{ bt thelr own section and of success fu 1850 if they. stull foru ao eillance with the Esstern Demo- cruly, sud snite with these ln placlug thelr parcy firmly ou what are called **old Demlocratic princloles.” uge act? was pudsed, sud Sir Isuae Newton made Warden ol the Mt Cnder bis energetic udminfairation the anount colned was ralicd from £15,U00 to £120,000 per week, vt wo are told thut eve~ this wount **was scanty when A DVANCES 3L ST 55 ks, v, STSEASE | don byt \ WATCH Ly'omice, 1) I i, Eatabilelied 1351 DE] liwouns 5 un TilE BAST AND THN SOUTIL 3 sertion and supposition. ‘Tue elfeet of the in- | compared with the dewands ol tue nation.” V. MADE AT CURRENY The argument s that the East aud the South | W ro uot tu be free for four years moru from | 4, “fhe ekpouso of collecting the same will | yruduction of thy ftelegruph, the Fatlrosd, and And o “historian telle us, *Till the nate {\'v'x"??wmmu«mxlnnuvm» FIDK! united cuth voudrol the Conventlon' ln 1880 aud | Hadical power, thon I sbould say, Qive usa full | be notblog compared with ths mods now fu | thy steamsbin has been to break down barriers | ulled siiver was In cireulation the' guinea cot- ke CO.e T P, wad o viun llun, not & sueaking sheep. Grantisslon. 1| vogue, A-darge part of the wmachwery of tha have respect for the suan because he Killa or | Auditer'soffics s cmployed with the State rov- wins.” 1hgve vever furgutten how gracolully | soue. Adtato Boand 14 necessary, coshing uot Leweated’ Les and our aoldiors at the surrcus | less than$5,000 per aunam, the result of whose der. (iract I8 better for thu South, lion though | labor is 18 unsatisfuctory to the wembens as 1o ho i, tuau a shecp who strives L wake a llon of | the peojie. himgell.? As to Democratle candidatus, Gen. But tie wmalu expeuse 1y einbraced uoder the ‘Noumba refysed to cumnit hlmsell hicad of brintiug, couwissious, defaleation, de- A —_— tinquerties, whereby at least 13 per ceat i3 loat ;¥he “Bin® Damsads an Investigation. ou the roud batween the aporopriativn by the +The New Yok Sun steps to the frout with a | Ucuertl Adsembly and the tlual receipt by the double-leaded deband that thecipher tlegrums | State Iesurer, At P . shall bs fuvestigateds’ OF gourss the editur of ,J\,“'n,fl“"@&f "%‘5‘.‘.35‘,"'&'3.&1"?-1’54’:’3" the Sua knows that tho reasou why the tele- | of wousauds of dollure asnuualy, aud the gratus are not fnvestizated iy the certiin kuawl- | eapeae the State of collecting the suiia laalbuolute- edge thutibo New York Tribis bas niady & cors | iy bhing. The wachivery requisite for collec- rect represeutution of thew, 2 tlouby the proposed mode will be very simpie, ud plutform: that the nomluation of xceptional waw, one In whoss character and princioles tha North would have contidence, on # good platform would give a better chance of carryiug the country thau auy other way that ollers, and that, fu fact, victue way tura oul te h« |'x‘|;:r- profituble thun @ multitude of green- 1ASH PAlly Full 01D G /'Soney o tuan u wateliss diamonds, ofevery descripiion ut GULUSSIL'S Toa OIS (1ewared), v kast Madion-st. ONEY TO LOAN UN RKAL ESTAT . at1owest rates, E, B, DREY) ol uutionality und brive cowpetitors down to tne commou Jevel whers prout s souru for through the medium of very saubl gaing aud All over Eurono wnd ICuts Ar sprivging up which undertake to supply ult classes of come wodities under one head, it befis found by ex-' perionce that the sae force wokch can Laudic snd sell 31,000,000 worth of goous cau handle sud welt four or tive Lwes that wmount with but vory Mitle it auy additional expense, sud thit by buying fu tmincnse guantiiics sales could bo ¢feeeed st & vrotit wbicth “vould be utterly rulnous to 1l ordioary retalicr, fu sucur refuing the wax wun protit capable of bung resllzed uoder suy chicutstunees 18 ot du excess of oneegith of 8 cent per pouad, and more frequently we run JEVADA HOTKL, 148 AN 130 WABASIL N AP o 55 Yiie id Dot 8 $1.20 bur days a libersl Teductivn (o weekly’ AUBASI-AV, ¢ very uw ouse und ace tinued, fu spite of the tuw, to pass fur S0 shil- Tiogs.™ * When the milled silver pecame pleati- ful the guinea fell, ot to 2 shiRives, which ‘waa the highest prive allowed by Juw, Lut to 21 shilliugs wud sixpence,” ang Wy are also told by thu bistorlan that the great phtlosouliee Locke leld **that 8 fail In the price vl wold would 1n- wvitably fullow, uad could by #o Auman potcer or ingean 1y be ude 10 precede e recolage of thesllver,!” tere was 8 practicsl gemouctiza- tion of sllver, with a large sdvance fn the value of woid, wuich wus ouly checked by tho frue cotaaro of shlver. Aud suin the United States thero bas been @ large aavanco in the purchusiug power of guld which can wlove be checked by a8 Jrew colnagy ol osilver. Can wo salely Lruure this Jesaon of history! Weare about to ANDS HOU « Lt h Matison-ut, = Perimanc Losrd L rausivil, 8140 bet dng Dy bourd »: VW AN 0s0n Hu sk, 17Tt site I"stiies Houss - Warts rootus, with buard, 87 per weck. 11ay-board. ¥4 Truual: i s _ Booms, };AIIU 5 IN HOLILAY BUOKS- Lrade erer, burcliated at avecia) pricess | gouda we otler thens st ridiculausl) inust bo swidi Bo reasousble vffer v ke io trade; we oller wucycioped! trles, puetry, Action, juvenflea slowims ole. GILUELE, 21 "South Clark at. Upew evesloge sad wa Curistnas Tay, TCIES AND . l'Almh‘ LOTOF DIAMUNDS, EMBRAC Ea 4 w Lhie, uid Buger Hucs solitalres wad clustcte, aud chialus, very cheap W cluse Luan oltice 123 Clark-st., Ko acks. Privately somo of the Southern men ac- kuowledeo that they did wol comprebend the real weanjvi of the greenback movement unul they found thewselves pait of it. ‘Vhen they dlscovercd that tho Urecnbackers weant uothiug less than repudiation. 1" suid ous of these wen, “did pot mean re- pudistion, und the veople geverally buve ‘uo such thouglit, aud when 1 discovered what ' it Fealiy wcaut § drew out as. quictly us 1, could t duriug the und ‘wade up wy wind 1o Lave uo mure Lo do. P | Nowmuilssious uced be paid vo advertisiug | down Lo one-sixteenth of a cent. Bixteco bounds | resunie specis paviucnts, 18 it safe (o bass vur e with the Greenback leaders, but Lo help get the: Fluley Found u Murc's Neat. uucssary. Jauxs ¥, Roor. | uf "sugur would theretore have to be reiued to curreney on ol ity sppreciating standard) | \WANTED-TWO LALGE SEC ea B e country back o souud moucy a8 fust, 48 possi- Representative Finloy, of Ohlo, came uesr ” —— e ———— ulve thy reiner 1 cent, und 1,600 pounds to pay | If we do {t weans bui one thing,—a coustaot | to Lat rowod dusde weswrc; aho vdlce ol 2. Ule, for this thiug 8 too duugervus Wb Lrided | discoveriog a mare's uest tho other day, I the bun $1. To realizy 10 brobit, therelore, suticient | contraction of ull kinds ot busibess aud depre- | desk. te e abuwascs, aud Labice.” Address B VoY A with." course of & wild. search witer fraud; ho dlscor- | ¢ Detrots bree_trese. to warraut toe prosecution of tie bisiess, au | clation of sll kluds of property. 10 No. L and | S 0 o e VOvAS LZY50X OF THE FALL CANVASS. cred that niugstitehiug-machioes bud been pur- ft 1 & poor dav wheu Now York detectives | fumunse quantity of raw uaterfal st be | No. 2 wheat wero both recutar on delivery, uud LUST AND YOUY L UREATEST The experivuce of the fall Canyess Lvs there- s Public’ Printiing Ot o't securs (rom ticy to seveoty-iive ©elews.” | handied, wiikch heveasarily tovoives an bnmense | the Board of Trade should dectde Qb coutigets | @ o0 o Bt POCK e fore Riven tho Soutbern Deuivcratic leadegs | chased for the Pyblic Priutine Otlice, st an sk~ f Javivg sccured thew, the detectives sit down | wmount'of capital, WIth cumpetition sedaced | voutd atune be Uiled io No. 1, does woy one sup- | FOUMRRAERI LG TR I 7ot AL €IE vause fur serious thougtit und fur earuest con- | gregats cost of nearly $15,000. Fluley sup- | ipd talie d reat. Lo gu Barros Hmits, 1U4s clrar that the redar | pose for a wowent that jt would not eobiaoce | oiyx Jeweiy. uwu!r‘rnn ou [KOELLN. 2 Wabash e K

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